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A TENNYSON CONCORDANCE
Uniform in Size witti ttiis Volume
A GUIDE TO THE BEST FICTION IN ENGLISH.
By Ernest A. Baker, M.A., D.Litt., F.L.A. New edition, entirely
re-written and greatly amplified, forming an invaluable guide to English
and American fiction. With a classified Index of 170 pages.
A GUIDE TO HISTORICAL FICTION.
A companion volume to the above. By the same Author. New
edition, entirely re-written and greatly amplified, forming an invaluable
illustrative aid to the study and teachmg of the history of all countries
and all ages. With a classified Index of 150 pages.
THE BEST BOOKS: A READER'S GUIDE.
By William Swan Sonnenschein. New and revised edition (con-
taining about 150,000 titles) of a work that has for many years been
a universal reference - book and guide to literature, in the hands of
librarians, students, general readers, and book-lovers. 3 vols.
A CONCORDANCE
TO THE
POETICAL AND DRAMATIC WORKS
OF
ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON
INCLUDING THE POEMS CONTAINED IN
THE "LIFE OF ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON,"
AND THE "SUPPRESSED POEMS," 1830-1868.
By ARTHUR E. BAKER, F.R.Hist.S., F.L.A.
SECRETARY AND LIBRARIAN, TAUNTON.
AUTHOR OF
" A BRIEF ACCOUNT OF THE PUBLIC LIBRARY MOVEMENT IN TAUNTON," ETC.
LONDON
KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH, TRUBNER & Co., Ltd.
BROADWAY HOUSE, 68-74 CARTER LANE, E.G.
1914
-tr.
.. ^.. R
%h %'\
TO THE MEMORY
OF
MY MOTHER,
MY FIRST AND BEST TEACHER,
THIS BOOK IS
AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED.
" Utitil the day break, and the shadows flee aivayT
?R5580
PREFATORY NOTE
It may, perhaps, not be out of place to say a word or two as to how I came to undertake the
compilation of this work. Some years ago, when occupying the position of Deputy - Librarian in a
public library in the North of England, I received numerous enquiries from readers
Work. ^* ^^^^ institution for a Concordance to the Works of Tennyson. Realising that here
was a distinct desideratum in the library of the student of English Literature, I there
and then decided to undertake the compilation of such a Work. Taking from one of the Book-
presses a copy of the poet's Works, and opening it, my eyes fell on the following quotation : —
" Make knowledge circle with the winds ;
But let her herald, Reverence, fly
Before her to whatever sky
Bear seed of men and growth of minds."
— Love thou thy land.
I jotted down the lines under their respective key-words, and thus the work was commenced.
Shortly afterwards it happened that I removed to my present position in the South of England ;
consequently the matter was for some time "shelved"; but at the end of 1907 I returned to the
subject, and after about eight years of what has been to me a labour of love, I present my humble
labour to the public, with a sincere hope that students, and lovers of Tennyson, and others, will find
it of interest and utility.
The volume consists of Verbal Indexes to the Poetical and Dramatic Works of the author comprised
in the Complete Edition, published by Messrs Macmillan & Co., to the Poems contained in
the Life of Lord Tennyson by his son, and published by the same publishers ; also to the
Supjyt'essed Poems, edited by J. C. Thomson, and published by Messrs Sands & Co.
The Concordance has been arranged in strict alphabetical sequence ; the different senses or
grammatical functions of a word are frequently distinguished under separate headings ;
Arrangement. • i i i
the dialect words are paraphrased ; all proper names are included, and occasionally
some indication has been added of their identity.
Line-references are given, thereby greatly facilitating the finding of a quotation or
Liii6~r6f6r6nc6S«
reference, particularly in the larger poems.
vii
viii PREFATORY NOTE
As each one has to number the lines for himself in all but school editions of Tennyson's Works, I must
explain the method, or rather methods, of numbering for the purpose of this Concordance.
numbering Lines. ^^ ^^^ Poems the lines have been numbered without regard to the typographical peculiarities
of the standard edition, which has two columns to a page. The following lines, here reprinted
as they stand in that edition, were numbered 1-6, thus : —
1 These to His Memory — since he held
them dear,
2 Perchance as finding there unconscioiisly
3 Some image of himself — I dedicate,
4 I dedicate, I consecrate with tears —
5 These Idylls.
6 And indeed He seems to me
— Idylls of the King. Dedication.
That is to say, a line broken into two by the printer was counted as one ; a line broken by the poet was
counted as two.
In the Dramatic Works, another and merely mechanical system was adopted. There every line of
print as it occurs in Macmillan's one-volume edition of the Complete Works was numbered separately, even
if only containing a single word. Thus : —
1 Cranmer. To Strasburg, Antwerp,
2 Frankfort, Zurich, Worms,
3 Geneva, Basle — our Bishops from their
4 sees
5 Or fled, they say, or flying — Poinet,
6 Barlow,
— Queen Mary, Act i., Scene ii.
Metrically, of course, there are only three lines here, not six. A method of numbering that is not to be
avoided in the prose portions of the plays has intentionally been extended also to the blank verse, in order
to facilitate rapid reference to copies of the text in which the lines are not already numbered. On receiving
a reference, say to line 560 of The Falcon, a reader using Macmillan's standard edition in one volume can
quickly reckon out the page and even the column in which the quotation appears, by remembering that
the column contains approximately fifty lines of print. Had the lines been numbered metrically he would
have had to count from the beginning of the piece. Only the lines of the text proper, not the stage-
directions, have been numbered.
Cross-references are supplied in the case of compounds and dialect forms — e.g., Life
OroflHKlBrences.
{See also After-life, Loife).
In the Collected Works, two poems appear bearing the same title — viz.. To the Queen. The one which
Titi appears on page 474, immediately preceding the Lover's Tale, has been described as To the
and Headings Queen ii, in contradistinction to the one which appears on page 1. Then there are a few
0 oenu. poems with no distinct titles, but simply headed thus : To , Song, Sonnet, etc. To avoid
confusion, these are referred to in the Concordance by the first two or three words of each poem.
PREFATORY NOTE
IX
No quotations are furnished for the following words. A few quotations, however, may be found
under those marked with an asterisk {Poetical Works) or dagger {Drainatic Works)
\
Omitted Words. ,
but they
are there to
illustrate some especial
use, and by no
means represer
currence of the word :
—
A
But
tif
Ourself
Too
About
By
In
Out
'Twas
Above
Can
♦Indeed
Over
'Twere
Adown
Cannot
Into
Perchance
'Twill
tAfter
Canst
Is
♦Round
♦Under
Again
tCould
It
♦Scarce
Until
Against
Couldst
Its
Scarcely
Unto
Ago
Did
Itself
Seldom
Up
Ah
Didst
Lest
Shall
Upon
Albeit
*Do
Let
Shalt
Us
tAll
Does
May
She
♦tVery
Almost
Done
May'st
Should
♦fWas
*Along
Dost
Me
Shouldst
Wast
Aloof
Doth
*Mid
Since
We
Already
Down
Might
So
♦tWell
Also
fDownward
Might'st
♦tSome
Were
Although
Each
tMine
♦t Something
Wert
Alway
E'er
More
Soon
What
Always
^Either
Most
Still (adv.)
Whate'er
Am
Else
Must
♦tSuch
Whatsoever
Among
Ere
My
Than
♦tWhen
An
Even
Myself
That
Whence
And
tEver
Near
The
Whene'er
tAny
*Every
Nearly
Thee
Where
Are
For
*Need
Their
Whereat
Around
Forth
Ne'er
Theirs
Whether
Art
From
tNeither
Them
Which
As
'Gainst
♦Never
♦Then
Whicheve
At
• Had
*No
Thence
While
Athwart
Hadst
♦None
There
Who
Atwain
Has
Nor
Therefore
Whom
Atween
Hast
Not
These
tWhose
Away
Have
Nothing
They
Why
*Ay
Having
tNow
Thine
♦Will
Back
He
0
tThis
Wilt
Be
Hence
O'er
Tho'
With
Because
Henceforth
Of
Those
Within
Been
Her
Off
Thou
Without
*Before
Here
Oft
Though
Would
Behind
Herself
Often
Thro'
Wouldst
Being
Him
Oh
Through
Ye
Below
Himself
On
Thus
Yea
Beneath
His
Once
Thy
Yes
Beside
*How
♦tOnly
Thyself
Yet
Between
Howe'er
♦Onward
Till
You
Betwixt
However
Or
'Tis
Your
Beyond
Howsoe'er
Our
To
Yours
Both
*I
Ours
Together
Yourself
X PREFATORY NOTE
It was originally intended, in order to curtail the heavy expenditure entailed in publication, to omit
various adjectives and other words; but as enquiries were made regarding their omission, it was decided
later to insert these words as far as it was possible. As, however, the letters A-D {Poetical Works only)
had already been printed, it was impossible to make these entries, consequently many ordinary adjectives
under the above letters are omitted.
Poems in '^^^ following poems in the Life occur also in the Collected Works, or in the
Duplicate. Suppressed Poems, and are, of course, treated only once : —
As when a man that sails in a balloon. (See Suppressed Poems under Dream of Fair Women.)
Check every outfiash, every ruder sally. (See Suppressed Poems.)
Farewell, Macready, since to-night we part. (See Collected Works under To W. C. Macready.)
First drink a health, this solemn night. (See Suppressed Poems under Hands all Round.) A few readings peculiar to
the Life are, however, recorded in their place.
Grod bless our Prince and Bride ! (See Suppressed Poems.)
Grave mother of majestic works. (See Collected Works under Of old sat Freedom.)
Helen's Tower, here I stand. (See Collected Works, under Helen's Toxver.) The sole variant is duly recorded,
however.
Here often when a child I lay reclined. (See Suppressed Poems under Mablethorpe.) Important variants in the
Life are recorded.
Me my own Fate to lasting sorrow doometh. (See Suppressed Poems.)
Rise, Britons, rise, if manhood be not dead. (See Suppressed Poems under Britons, guard your own.) Important variants
in the Life are recorded.
Row us out from Desenzano, to your Sirmione row ! (See Collected Works under Frater Ave Atque Vale.)
The North wind fall'n in the new-starred night. (See Suppressed Poems under The Hesperides.)
Therefore your Halls, your ancient Colleges. (See Suppressed Poems under Cambridge.) The significant variants are
all recorded.
Thy prayer was " Light — more Light — while time shall last ! " (See Collected Works under Epitaph on
Caxton.)
The poem Lover's Tale appears in the Collected Works and also in the Suppressed Poems. The
portion common to both versions have not been indexed twice; they have been neglected in making
the Concordance to the Suppressed Poems.
The volume contains approximately 150,000 quotations and references ; and as each quotation or
reference was written on a separate slip, which was then placed in its alphabetical
Checking. order, and afterwards classified according to the sense or grammatical function of the
key-word, it can better be imagined than described what an immense amount of labour
and time was thus bestowed upon the work.
In this respect my acknowledgments are due, and are hereby tendered, to Miss Beatrice Hewlett
(the hon. librarian of the Crewe Green Parish Library, Cheshire), and to my two sisters, Miss Mary
E. Baker and Miss Miriam Maud Mary Baker, for their valuable assistance in this
Appreciation. • - ,
portion of the work. At the same time, I beg to tender my hearty thanks to those
who have from time to time written me encouraging letters, which have greatly assisted me in
PREFATORY NOTE
XI
my arduous task, and in this respect I would specially mention Mr Lionel R. M. Strachan, English
Lecturer in Heidelberg University, for the great interest he has invariably evinced in the compilation
of the work — particularly for his valuable help in the checking of the proofs — and for his readiness
at all times to render assistance.
A. E. B.
Taunton,
1914.
CORRIGENDA
Page 132 Dawn (verb) Tiresias 206 read Dawn (s).
252 Gave (See also Gied, Giv) read Gave (See also Gev, Gied, Giv).
256 Gev (give) read Gev (gave).
258 Give (See also Gev, Gie) riad Give (See also Gie).
334 Hope (verb) Supp. Confessions 31 read Hope (s).
832 Alight (lighted) read Alight.
832 Alighted. See Lighted — delete.
CONTENTS
PAGE
SHORT TITLES AND ABBREVIATIONS xv
CONCORDANCE TO THE POETICAL WORKS OF ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON . . i
CONCORDANCE TO THE DRAMATIC WORKS OF ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON . . 829
CONCORDANCE TO THE POEMS CONTAINED IN THE "LIFE OF ALFRED, LORD
TENNYSON," BY HIS SON 1137
CONCORDANCE TO THE "SUPPRESSED POEMS," 1830-1868 1165
ADDENDA ............. 1209
xm
LIST OF SHORT TITLES AND ABBREVIATIONS
Achilles over the T. .
(adj.)
(adv.)
A gate and a field .
Akbar's D., Hymn .
Akbar's D., Inscrip.
Along this glimmering
Arabian IVights
Are those the far-fanned
A spirit liaunts
A surface man
Batt. of Brunanburh
Beauty, Good, etc.
Because she bore
Blow ye the trumpet
Bold Uavelock .
Bright is the moon
Britons, guard .
By an Evolution.
Check every outflash
Church^warden, etc.
Com. of Arthur
Come not, when, etc.
(compar.) .
Could I outwear
D. of F. Women
D. of the Duke of C.
B. of the 0. Year
Bay-Dm., Pro.
Sleep. P.
Sleep. B.
„ Depart.
^ " ^v- ■
Ded. of Idylls .
Ded. Poem Prin. Alice
Beep glens I found
Bef. of Lucknow
Bemeter and P.
Be Prof., Two G.
„ Human C.
Early-wise
England and Amer.
Epit. on Caxton
Epit. on Gordon
Epit. on Stratford
Every day, etc.
Faded ev'ry violet
Far off in the dun
First drink a health
Flow, in cran. wall
Frater Ave, etc.
Achilles over the Trench.
adjective.
adverb.
A gate and a field half ploughed.
Akbar's Dream. Hymn.
Akbar's Dream. Inscription.
Along this giinunering gallery.
Recollections of the Arabian Nights.
Are those the far-famed Victor Hours ?
A spirit haunts the year's last hours.
A sm-face man of many theories.
Battle of Brunanburh.
Beauty, Good, and Knowledge are three sisters.
Because she bore the iron name.
Blow ye the trumpet, gather from afar.
Bold Havelock march'd.
Bright is the moon on the deep,
Britons, guard your own.
By an Evolutionist.
Check every outflash, every ruder sally.
Church-warden and the Curate.
Coming of Arthur.
Come not, when I am dead.
comparative.
Could I outwear my present state of woe.
Dream of Fair Women.
Death of the Duke of Clarence and Avondale.
Death of the Old Year.
Day-Dream, Prologue.
„ Sleeping Palace.
„ Sleeping Beauty.
„ Departure.
„ Epilogue.
Idylls of the King. Dedication.
Dedicatory Poem to the Princess Alice.
Deep glens I found, and sunless gulfs.
Defence of Lucknow.
Demeter and Persephone.
De Profundis : The Two Greetings.
„ The Human Cry.
Early-wise, and pure, and true.
England and America.
Epitaph on Caxton.
Epitaph on General Gordon.
Epitaph on Lord Stratford de Eedclifie.
Every day hath its night.
Faded ev'ry violet, aU the roses.
Far off in the dun, dark Occident.
First drink a health, this solemn night.
Flower in the crannied wall.
Frater Ave atque Vale.
Frenchman, etc.
From shape to shape
Full light aloft
G. of Swainston
Gardener's D. ,
Gareth and L.
Geraint and E.
God and the Univ.
God bless our Prince
Gone into Darkness
He was too good
Hear you the sound
Heavy Brigade
Here, I that stood
Here often when a child
High. Pantheism
Hither, when all
Hold thou, my friend
Home they brought him
How glad am I
How is it that men
How strange it is
I keep no more
I, loving Freedom
In Mem., Pro.
„ Con.
W. G. Ward
I met in all
{inter j.)
In the Child. Hosp..
(intrans.) .
June Bracken, etc.
L. C. V. de Vere
L. of Burleigh .
L. of Shalott .
Lancelot and E.
Leonine Eleg. .
Life of the Life
Light Brigade .
Lit. Squabbles .
Little Aubrey .
Locksley H., Sixty
Long as the heart
Lotos- Eaters, C. S.
Love, Pride, etc.
Mariana hi the S.
Marr. of Geraint
May Queen, N. Y.'s
„ Con.
M. d' Arthur .
Frenchman, a hand is thine !
From shape to shape at first within the womb
Full light aloft doth the laverock spring.
In the Garden at Swainston.
Gardener's Daughter.
Gareth and Lynette.
Geraint and Enid.
God and the Universe.
God bless our Prince and Bride.
Gone into darkness that full light.
He was too good and kind and sweet.
Hear you the sound of wheels ?
Charge of the Heavy Brigade at Balaclava.
Here, I that stood in On beside the flow.
Here often when a child I lay reclined.
Higher Pantheism.
Hither, when all the deep, unsounded skies
Hold thou, my friend, no lesser life in scorn.
Home they brought him slain with spears.
How glad am I to walk.
How is it that men have so little grace ?
How strange it is, 0 God, to wake.
I keep no more a lone distress.
I, loving Freedom for herself.
In Memoriam, Prologue.
„ Conclusion.
„ William George Ward.
I met in all the close green ways,
interjection.
In the Children's Hospital,
intransitive.
Jime Bracken and Heather.
Lady Clara Vere de Vere.
Lord of Burleigh.
Lady of Shalott.
Lancelot and Elaine.
Leonine Elegiacs.
Life of the Life within my blood.
Charge of the Light Brigade.
Literary Squabbles.
Little Aubrey in the West !
Locksley Hall, Sixty Years after.
Long as the heart beats life within the breast.
Lotos-Eaters. Choric Song.
Love, Pride, and Forgetfulness.
Mariana in the South.
Marriage of Geraint.
May Queen, New Year's Eve.
„ Conclusion.
Morte d' Arthur.
XV
XVI
M. d' Arthur, Ep.
Me my own fate
Merlin and the G.
Merlin and V.
Methought I saw
Miller's D.
Move eastward .
My life is full .
N. Farmer, N. S.
O. S.
New Timon
North. Cobbler .
Not a whisper .
Not such were those
Not to Silence
Ode on Well. .
Ode Inter. Exhib.
O God, make this age
Oh, Beauty
O leave not thou
Of old sat Freedom .
Old ghosts
On Jub. Q. Victoria
On One who effec. E. M.
One was the Tishhite
Open. I. and C. Exhib.
Oriana
O sad No more!
Pallid thunderstricken
(part.)
Pass, of Arthur
Pelleas and E.
Poets and their B.
Popular, Popular
Pref. Poem. Broth. S
(prep.) . .
Prin. Beatrice .
Princess, Pro. .
„ Con. .
Pro. to Gen. Hamley
Prog, of Spring
Prom, of May .
(pron.)
Remember you .
Remembering him
Rise, Britons, rise
Romney's R.
Roses on the T.
St. S. Stylites .
Shall the hag
Sir J. Franklin
Sir J. Oldcastle
Sir L. and Q. 0.
Sisters (E. and E.)
Speak to me
Spec, of Iliad .
Spinster's S's .
Spurge with fairy
Steersman
Sugg, by Reading
LIST OF SHORT TITLES AND ABBREVIATIONS
Morte d' Arthur, Epilogue.
Me my own fate to lasting sorrow doometh.
Merlin and the Gleam.
Merlin and Vivien.
Methought I saw a face whose every line.
Miller's Daughter.
Move eastward, happy earth, and leave.
My life is full of weary days.
Northern Farmer, New Style.
Old Style.
The New Timon and the Poets.
Northern Cobbler.
Not a whisper stirs the gloom.
Not such were those whom Freedom claims.
Not to Silence would I build.
Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington.
Ode sung at the Opening of the International
Exhibition.
O God, make this age great that we may be.
Oh, beauty, passing beauty.
O leave not thou thy son forlorn.
Of old sat Freedom on the heights.
Old ghosts whose day was done ere mine began
On the Jubilee of Queen Victoria.
On One who affected an Effeminate Manner.
One was the Tishbite, whom the raven fed.
Opening of the Indiaa and Colonial Exhibition
by the Queen.
Ballad of Oriana.
0 sad No more ! 0 sweet No more !
The pallid thimderstricken sigh for gain.
participle.
Passing of Arthur.
Pelleas and Ettarre.
Poets and their Bibliographies.
Popular, Popular, Unpopular !
Prefatory Poem to my Brother's Sonnets.
preposition.
To H.R.H. Princess Beatrice.
Princess, Prologue.
„ Conclusion.
Prologue to General Hamley.
Progress of Spring.
Promise of May.
pronoun.
Remember you the clear moonlight?
Remembering him who waits thee far away.
Rise, Britons, rise, if manhood be not dead.
Romney's Remorse.
Roses on the Terrace.
substantive.
St. Simeon Stylites.
Shall the hag Evil die.
Sir John Franklin.
Sir John Oldcastle, Lord Cobham.
Sir Launcelot and Queen Guinevere.
Sisters (Evelyn and Edith).
Speak to me from the stormy sky !
Specimen of a Translation of the Iliad in
Blank Verse.
Spinster's Sweet- Arts.
Spurge with fairy crescent set.
Steersman, be not precipitate in thine act.
Suggested by reading an article in a newspaper.
Supp. Confessions
Take, Lady
That is his portrait .
That the voice .
The child was sitting
The form, the form .
The lamps were bright
The lintwhite .
The night, etc. .
The noblest men
The winds, etc.
There are three things
Therefore your Halls
They say, etc. .
They wrought, etc
Third of Feb. .
Thou viay'st remember
Though night .
Thy soul is like
'Tis not alone .
To a Lady Sleep.
To A . Tennyson
To C. North .
To F. D. Maurice
To J. M. K. .
To One who ran down En:j.
To Prof. Jebb .
To Marq. of Dufferin
To Master of B.
To Prin. F. of H.
To thee with whom
To W. H. BrookfUld
Townsman, etc.
(trans.)
Trans, of Homer
V. of Cauteretz
V. of Maeldune
Vicar of this .
Voice and the P.
Voice spake, etc,
W. to Alexandra
W. to Marie Alex.
Walk, to the Mail
Wan Sculptor .
We lost you
Well, as to Fame
What rustles
What time I wasted
Wherever evil
While I live
Why suffers
Will Water
Window. At the W.
„ Marr. Mo
Woman of noble
Yon huddled cloud
You ask me, why.
You Tnight have won
Young is the grief
Youth, lapsing
Supposed Confessions of a Second-rate Sensi
tive Mind.
Take, Lady, what your loyal nurses give.
That is his portrait, painted by himself.
That the voice of a satisfied people may k(!ep
The child was sitting on the bank.
The form, the form alone is eloquent.
The lamps were bright and gay.
The lintwhite and the throstlecock.
The night with sudden odour reel'd.
The noblest men methinks are bred.
The winds, as at their hour of birth.
There are three things that fill my heart
with sighs.
Therefore your Halls, yom" ancient Colleges.
They say some foreign powers have laid their
heads together.
They wrought a work which time reveres.
Third of February, 1852.
Thou may'st remember that I said.
Though Night hath cUmbed.
Thy soul is like a landskip, friend.
'Tis not alone the warbling woods.
To a Lady Sleeping.
To Alfred Tennyson, My Grandson.
To Christopher North.
To the Rev. F. D. Maurice.
Sonnet To J. M. K. .
To One who ran down the English. I
To Professor Jebb.
To the Marquis of Dufferin and Ava.
To the Master of Balliol.
To the Princess Frederica of Hanover on her
Marriage.
To thee with whom my true affections dwell.
To the Rev. W. H. Brookfield.
Townsmen, or of the hamlet, young or old.
transitive. )
On Translations of Homer.
In the Valley of Cauteretz.
Voyage of Maeldune.
Vicar of this pleasant spot.
Voice and the Peak.
A Voice spake out of the Skies.
A Welcome to Alexandra.
A Welcome to Her Royal Highness Maria
Alexandre vna. Duchess of Edinburgh.
Walking to the INIail.
Wan sculptor, weepest thou.
We lost you for how long a time.
Well, as to Fame, who strides the earth. I
What rustles hither in the dark ?
What time I wasted youthful hours.
Wherever evil customs thicken.
While I live, the owls ! I
Why suffers human life so soon eclipse ?
Will Waterproof's Lyrical Monologue.
Window. At the Window.
„ Marriage Morning.
Woman of noble form and noble mind !
Yon huddled cloud his motion sliifts.
You ask me, why, tho' ill at ease.
You might have won the Poet's name.
Yomig is the grief I entertain.
Youth, lapsing thro' fair solitudes.
A CONCORDANCE to the POETICAL WORKS
OF
ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
A inouthing out his hollow oes and oe»,
Aage (age) owd « as 'appy as iver I can,
Aair (hair) an' cryin' and tearin' 'er 'a
A&le (ale) Says that I meant 'a naw moor a
Git ma my «, (repeat)
I've 'ed my point o' a ivry noight
an' doesn bring ma the a ?
an' droonk wi' the farmer's a,
An' the taable staiiin'd wi' 'is a,
tha mun nobbut hev' one glass of a.
'Aapoth (half-pennyworth)
sense,
Aaste (haste) thaw summun said it in 'a :
Abaddon A and Asmodeus caught at me.
Abase A those eyes that ever loved
Abash'd so forlorn As I am ! ' half a him ;
Enid, all a she knew not why,
man of thine to-day A us both,
A Lavaine, whose instant reverence,
beauty of her flesh a the boy,
Abate A the stride, which speaks of man
Abbess Our simple-seeming A and her nuns,
till in time their A died.
Was chosen A, there, an A, lived For three brief
years, and there, an A, past
' Abbey ' Come out,' he said, ' To the A :
But we went back to the A,
fellow hath broken from some A,
The helmet in an a far away
Abbey-ruin Carved stones of the A-r
Abbey-wall I see the moulder'd A-w's,
Abbot An a on an ambling pad,
Abdiel Titan angels, Gabriel, A,
A-bealin' (bellowing) An' thou was a-b likewise,
Abear (bear) for I couldn a to see it.
An' I can't a 'em, I can't,
Abeat Eats scarce enow to keep his pulse a ;
A-begging I never came a-b for myself,
Abeyance Those winters of a all worn out.
Abhor I hate, a, spit, sicken at him ;
Abhorr'd they fell and made the glen a :
Abhorrent A of a calculation crost.
Abide ' Trust me, in bliss I shall a
Tho" much is taken, much a's ;
In whose least act a's the nameless charm
you failing, I a What end soever :
hate me not, but a your lot,
A : thy wealth is gather'd in,
A a little longer here.
Dare I bid her a by her word ?
but a Without, among the cattle
A : take counsel ; for this lad
shalt a her judgment on it ;
' I will a the coming of my lord,
thou art man, and canst a a truth,
Yet better if the King a,
The Epic 50
Oiod Roa 3
Nortlu Cobbler 34
N. Famie); O. S.,3
„ 4, 36, 68
7
., 65
Village Wife 77
Spiiuta-'s S's. 99
Oiod Mod 20
Joanes, as 'ant not a 'a o'
JV. Farmer, 0. S., 49
27
Si. S. Stylites 172
Princess ii 427
Enoch Arden 288
Marr. of Oeraint 765
JSalin and Balan 71
Lancelot and E. 418
Pelleas and E. 78
Princess ii 429
Guinevere 309
692
696
Princess, Pro., 51
,, Con., 106
Gareth and L. 456
Holjf Grail 6
Princess, Pro., 14
Talking Oak 3
L. of Shalott ii 20
Milton 5
Qwd Roa 89
N. Farmer, 0. S., 64
Church-warden, etc., 13
Balin and Balan 105
Dora 141
Princess iv 440
Lucretius 199
Lancelot and E. 42
Enoch Arden 473
Palace of Art 18
Ulysses 65
Princess v 70
405
Sjnteful Letter 11
In Mem. Hi 15
,, Iviii 11
Maud I xvi 25
Gai-eth and L. 273
730
Marr. of Geraint 584
Geraint and E. 131
Balin and Balan 501
Last Tournament 109
Abide (continued) tho wife Whom he knows false, a
which thou wilt a, if thou bo wise,
Wretch you must a it . . .
Abidest a lame and poor. Calling thyself
Abiding A with me till I sail To seek thee
Able-bodied Grew plump and a-b ;
Abler A quarter-sessions chairman, a none ;
Abode at the farm a William and Dora.
those four a Within one house
Wherein the younger Charles a
she a his coming, and said to him
stately Queen a For many a week,
mightiest of my knights, a with me.
Clave to him, and a in his own land.
Time and Grief a too long with Life,
Abodest While thou a in the bud.
Abolish Caught at the hilt, as to a him :
Abominable The A , that uninvited came
shapes of lust, unspeakable, A,
and shatter it, hold it a, \
Abreast One walk'd a with me.
Abruptly broke the sentence in his heart A,
Absence she mourn'd his a as his grave,
in his a full of light and joy.
Absolution find A sort of a in the sound
Absolution-seller a-s's, monkeries
Absorb in its onward current it a's
Absorbing A all the incense of sweet thoughts
Abstraction They do so that affect a
A-buried I'll hev 'im a-b wi'mma
Abu Said (Sufee Poet) him A S—a. sun but dimly
seen
Abuse (s) ' lest from the a of war,
bore without a The grand old name
Perchance from some a of Will
Abuse (verb) wayward grief a The genial hour
my Leonard, use and not a your day,
Abused God's great gift of speech a
Abysm fell into the a Of forms outworn,
weigh 'd him down into the a —
into the a. The A of all A's,
downward too into the a.
Abyss and the waste wide Of that a,
to sound the a Of science,
lighten thro' The secular a to come,
0, from the distance of the a
upheaven from the a By fire, to sink into the a
again ;
bubble bursts above the a Of Darkness,
Acacia Was lispt about the a's,
The slender a would not shake
Academe The softer Adams of your A ,
this your A, Whichever side be Victor,
A-callin' a-c ma ' hugly ' mayhap to my faace
kep a-c' o' Roa till 'e waggled 'is taail
Acanthus-wreath many a wov'n a-w divine !
Guinevere 515
Ancient Sage 35
Foi'lorn 52
Tivo Voices 197
In Mem. cxxv 13
The Goose 18
Princess, Con., 90
Dora 1
„ 169
Talking Oak 297
Geraint and E. 139
Guinevere 146
„ 430
„ 440
Lover's Tale i 107
Two Voices 158
Marr. of Geraint 210
(Enrnie 224
Lucretius 158
Boadicea 65
Lover's Tale ii 86
Geraint and E. 42
Enoch Arden 247
Lover's Tcde i 425
Sea Dreams 61
Sir John Oldcastle 93
Isabel 31
Lover's Tale i 469
Princess ii 359
North. Cobbler 106
Akbar's Dream 94
Princess ■« 126
In Mem. cxi 21
Epilogue 24
In Mem. cv 9
Locksley H., Sixty, 265
A Dirge 44
Lover's Tale i 796
Columbus 137
A ncient Sage 39
Locksley H., Sixty, 146
TvM Voices 120
Princess ii 176
In Mem. Ixxvi 6
,, xciii 11
Pass, of Arthur 82
Roonney's R. 52
Princess vii 251
Maud I xxii 45
Princess ii 197
230
Spinster's S's. 91
O^od Rod 105
Lotos-Eaters, C. S., 97
Acjcens
Added
Accent a^ (i„ypry low In Vlandishraeni, Isabel 19
[[ 3L6'TfpUes^ina"ifa)tter,c L. of Burleigh 5
I Wixh li>3aring' cha'ir and lower'd «) Aylmer's Field 267
Accept God a him, Christ receive him. Ode on Well. 281
do a my madness, and would die Mmid I xviii 44
to a this cloth of gold, Gareth and L. 398
that I a thee aught the more ,, 766
a thee aught the more. Scullion, ,, 839
a this old imperfect tale. To llie Qmen ii 36
dark lord a and love the Sun, Demeter and P. 137
Acceptance Blithe would her brother's a be. Maud I x 27
Access closed her a to the wealthier farms, Aylmer's Field 50'i
down the lane of o to the King, Oareth and L, 661
Acclaim tumult of their a is roll'd laying Swan 33
And followed with as, Will Water. 138
let a people's voice In full a, Ode on Well. 143
Is wrought with tumult of a. In Mem. Ixxv 20
Accompanied and oft a By Averill : Aylmer's Field 137
Accompanying brethren slowly with bent brows ^1, Lancelot and E. W^^
Accomplice The a of your madness unforgiven, Princess vi 276
Accomplish ' Which did a their desire. Two Voices 217
A thou my manhood and thyself ; Princess vii 365
A that blind model in the seed, Proff. of Sirring 114
Accomplish'd (See also All-accomplish 'd, Full-accomplished)
Who, thro' their own desire a,
I have a what I came to do.
My mission l>c o ! '
Accomplishment win all eyes with all a :
Misa the full flower of this a.'
Accord (s) when both were brought to full «,
Faith and Work were bells of full a,
Accord (verb) I a it ea.sily aa a grace. '
Accorded Prince A with hi.s wonted courtesy,
According That mind and soul, a well,
would work a as he wiU'd.
lady's love, A to her promise,
A to the Highest in the Highest
for my sake, A to my word ? '
To pray, to do a to the prayer.
Account (s) dodged me with a long and loose a.
a hard friend in his loose as,
of the crowd you took no more a
Account (verb) Eat and be glad, for I
a you mine '
whatsoever he a's Of all his treasurci
Accounted Is thy white blamelessness a blame ! '
Accoutrement Among piled arms and rough a's,
Accrue Delight a hundredfold a.
Accurate your fine epithet Is a too.
Xylmer's Field 776
Columbus 65
Akhar's Dream 199
Tliefonn, tliefonn 4
Gareth and L. 1297
Last Tournament 722
In Mem. W. G. Ward 2
Gareth and L. 975
Lancelot and E, 638
In Mem., Pro., 27
Holy Grail 784
Pel leas' and E. 162
A ncient Sage 90
Romney's R. 130
A hhar's Dream 8
Sea Dreams 149
„ 162
Lancelot and E. 105
Geraint and E, 647
Lover's Tale iv 233
Merlin and V. 799
Princess v 55
In Mem. cxvii 8
Merlin and V. 533
Accurst-Accursed Thro' you, my life will be accurst.' Tlie Letters 36
Accursed, who from the wrongs
AKiiraed, who strikes nor lets the hand
A ccursid were she ! ' (repeat)
Accusation Like bitter a ev'n to death,
people's talk And a of uxorioiisness
breathe but a vjist and vagne,
Accuse sent for Blanche to a her
A her of the least immodesty :
Accused You never once a me,
Acbiean nor join'd The A's—
Ache (8) {See (dso Finger-ache, Haftche)
In coughs, a's, stitches.
And ills and a't, and teethings,
Ache (verb) would not let your little finger a
The night that throbs and a's
n't in the ^rasp of an idiot iwwer,
Aehievable if our end were less a
Achieve f tone ! He will a his greatness
spoken true Of all we shall a,
Achieved »word and golden circlet were a.
a, The loneliest ways are safe
Achieving wmo have striven, A calm,
Achilles Hco the great A, whom we knew,
'Dkh rose A dear to Zeus ;
Gareth and L. 347
435
Kapiolani 21, 24
Love and Duty 81
Man: of Geraint 83
Merlin and V. 701
Princess iv 239
Oeraint and E. Ill
Happy 69
Achilles over the T, 16
^. S. Stylites 13
Holy Grail 554
Godim 22
Lover's Talc i 33
Despair 43
Princess Hi 283
Tiresias 168
Mechanojjhilus 26
Pelleas and E. 1 70
Ixist Tilurnament 101
Two FOTV.ftv209
Ulysses 64
Achillea over the T. 2
Acknowledge in my heart of hearts I did « nobler. Lancelot undE. 1211
A-cleanin' as we was a-c the floor.
Aconite Their rich ambrosia tasted a.
Acorn An a in her breast,
nor yet Thine a in the land.
Acom-ball wear Alternate leaf and a-b
Acquiescing the Queen But coldly a,
A-crawin' (crowing) cocks kep a-c an' crawin'
Acre {See also Five-acre, Haacre) dinner To
the men of many a's,
Acreage No coarse and blockish God of a
A-creeapin (creeping) wur a-c about my waiiist ;
Acrimony flow'd in shallower acrimonies :
A-ciyin' then I seed 'er a-c, I did.
Act (b) a saying, hard to shape in a;
swift mind. In a to throw :
king demand An a unprofitable,
In a to render thanks,
which 1 clothed in a,
a tiger-cat In a to spring
by single a Of immolation
And all creation in one a at once,
One a a phantom of succession :
makes Such head from a to a,
least a abides the nameless charm
creatures native unto gracious a.
How much of a at human hands
bold in heart and a and word was he,
graced the lowliest a in doing it.
dream she could be guilty of foul a,
hearts who see but a's of wrong :
So splendid in his a's and his attire,
Balin graspt, but while in a to hurl.
From noiseful arms, and a's of prowess
one last a of knighthood shalt thou see.
the swift mind. In a to throw :
king demand An a unprofitable,
beautiful in Past of a or place,
with her highest a the placid face
power on thine own a and on the world,
A first, this Earth, a stage
may show In some fifth A
Act (verb) up and a, nor shrink For fear
For who can always a ?
be born and think, And a and love.
Not he, not yet ! and time to a —
Acted weaker grows thro' a crime.
If more and a on, what follows 'i
after madness a question ask'd :
thro' the journey home, A her hest,
Acting («*e also Over-acting) A the law we
live by without fear ;
Action ' Which in all a is the end of all ;
until endurance grow Sin«w'd with a,
enough of a, and of motion we,
I myself must mix with a,
A life in civic a warm,
shape His a like the greater ape,
unfathom'd woe Reflex of a,
mould it into a pure as theirs.
Acton (Sir Boger) See. Roger Acton
Actor let the dying a mouth his last
Adair (Ellen) See Ellen Adair
A-dallackt (overdrest) An' hallus a,-d an' dizen'
Adam The gardener .1 and his wife
when A first embraced his Eve
The softer A's of your Academe,
there be Two A's, two mankinds,
Adam's wine I a' nowt but A w :
an' a beslings-puddin' an' A w ;
Add a A crimson to the quaint Macaw,
Nor a and alter, many times,
a my diamonds to her pearls ;
months will a themselves and make
Added set the words, and a names I knew.
' Swear ' a Enoch sternly ' on the book.'
Spinster's Ss. 49
Demeter and P. 105
Talking Oak 228
260
287
Last Tournament 23
Oicd Roa 106
Maud I XX 32
Aylmer's Field 651
Sjnnster's Ss. 26
Aylmer's Field 563
Oitd Roa 80
Love thou thy land 49
M, d' Arthur 61
„ 96
Gardener's D. 162
Princess i 195
,, M 451
, , Hi 284
325
329
,, iv 452
„ vIO
,, vii 27
In Mem. Ixxxv 38
Co7n. of Arthur 17Q
Gareth and L. 490
Mar?: of Geraint 120
„ 438
,, 620
Balin and Balan 368
Hdy Grail 1
Pass, of Arthur 163
229
„ 264
Lover's Tale i 135
216
De Prof. Two G. 56
Tlie Play 1
" !
Princess Hi 265
In Mem,, cxi 9
„ Con., 127
Tlie Flight 73
Will 12
Princess ii 229
Geraint and E. 813
Pelleas and E. 203
(EvMie 148
„ 122
„ 165
Lotos-Eaters, G. S., 105
Locksley Hall 98
In Mem. cxiii 9
,, cxx 11
Lover's Tale i 747
Tiresias 129
Locksley H., Sixty, 152
d out, Village Wife 37
L. (J. V. de Vere 51
Day -Dm., L' Envoi 41
Princess ii 197
Columbus 54
Nmih. Cobbler 5
„ 112
Daij-Thn., Pro., \i>
Will Water. 15
Lancelot and E. 1224
Guinevere 62.'j
Audley Court 61
Enoch Arden 842
Added
Added {amlinved) Put on more calm and a
suppliantly :
Had surely a praise to praise,
faith, I fain had a— Knight,
weight is a only grain by grain.
Then Balan a to their Order
a, of her wit, A border fantasy
a plain Sir Torre, ' Yea, since I cannot
'A fair large diamond, a plain Sir Torre,
a wound to wound, And ridd'n away
Were a mouths that gaped,
a to the griefs the great must bear,
each other They should have «),
Your viceregal days Have a fulness
Adder I thought it was an a's fold,
harm an a thro' the lust for harm.
Addition Balin, ' the Savage '—that a
Princess vi 215
In Mem. xnxci 8
Garetiv and L. 1162
Marr. of Geraint 526
Balm and Balan 91
Lancelot and E. 10
198
230
567
1249
Guinevere 205
Lover's Tale i 263
To Marq. of Dufferin 11
Liymr's Tale i 691
Ancient Sage 271
Balin and Balan 53
Addle (earn) Mun be a guvness, lad, or summut,
and a her breiid : ^- J'^^rmet;, iV. ^.,26
Address Began to a us, and was moving on , _. . i^rincess ii lo*
AddreBsd-Addrest faces toward us and addressed Their ,
motion: , >' ,/^ qo
now (w?(^rm'*« to speech— Who spoke few words ,, <^?";'^f,
suddenly addrest the hoary Earl : Man: qf Geraint 40^
address d More to the inward than the outward Lwer s IcUei iZ\J
Adeline Faintly smiling A, ■ ."^^^l^^i
Shadowy, dreaming A ? (repeat) Adeline 10, 39
Spiritual A ? (repeat) •> ^'^> Y*
Who talketh with thee, yl ? -. ^t
Thou faint smiler, A ? " Ji
Than your twin-sister, J ^^STw, «?
Adieu uttered it. And bade a for ever Love and Duty 8d
What more ? we took our last a, Tl^ ^«/^y 85
M, a, ' for evermore. I^ ^em. Ivii lb
For tho' my lips may breathe a, m '^'^^':''J±
Adit yourself and yours shall hayo Free a; ^^?"''^fJ!^ VJ9
Adjust a My vapid vegetable loves Ta^Am^ Oafc 18^
^S^al Chains for the ^ of the Ocean ! Cohmlncs 19
Chains ! we are A's of the Ocean, n ^°
Ocean— of the Indies— ^'s we— „;■'%■.. i«^
Admire a Joints of cunning workmanship Vision of bin 1»&
not to desire or a, if a man "^"''^^^41
Admired which when now a By Edith Aylmers field 231
Admiring sat beside the couch, A him, Mar,: of Geramt^
the two Were turning and a it, ;» ... ^^1
Admission beat a in a thousand years, /liT^ ZiH
Admit Nor other thought her mind a's In Mer.i. a:rau 2
The time a'« not flowers or leaves .. „ '^ ^r
Ado why make we such a? Ma;/ Queen Con. bQ
Adoration Meet a to my household gods, Jt^ ila
shaken voice. And flutter'd a, Me>iin ""^J^lg
Adore How many measured words a meanore 'to
To stand apart, and to a, xr^.,l^ 1 -., 9fi
on the meadow grass, and a, Maud I v 2b
Strong in the power that all men a, '^-wits
Adored was a; He, loved for her J^^'^V/ tHci
A her, as the stateliest and the best Mar,: of Geraint 20
Call'd on the Power a by the Christian, ^"f^K ^S
Adoring ^ That who made, and makes, ^^^^^'n uZ^nl
Kneel a Him the Timeless .> ^^ IT^A
Adorn brought to a her with, The jewels. Last ToimmmentJU
Adom'd her 1 loved, a with fading flowers. Lo^_er s Taleui 40
A-dressin- an' jessmine a-c^ it greean, ^i^znsier s .S s. 105
A-drooping locks «-rf twined Round thy neck ^Irteimc w
Adulation^ golden eloquence And amorous a, Lancelot and h. 650
Adulterer My knighte are all a's like his own, Last Tmrn^ent 84
' :i , Go back to thine adulteress and die ! ' Leath of (Enone 47
Adulteress Go back to thine a and die ! ' ',' v 1 , Jtr
Adultery mother of the foul adulteries Aylmer s Fiehl 376
arfXte.s, Wife-murders,- ^"^l^jfi}v,
Advance (a) But these are the days of a, rr ^r ■ ro
Advance (verb) ' The years with change a : f'^'J'^'^'fc,
How gain in life, as life a's To F. D. Maurue 39
Let all my genial spirits a In Mem , <^on.t7
' A and take, as fairest of the fair, Marr. of Geraint 553
Afire
Advance (verb) {cmdinued) ' A and take thy prize , r. c^o
The diamond ' ; Lancelot and h. oUo
wreaths of all that would a. To Victor Hugo 5
Advanced Something far a in State, Ode on Weil. 275
a The monster, and then paused, Gareth and L, l^i
who rt, Each growling like a dog, Geraint and A. 558
the King himself .1 to greet them, " j „ , ?7q
Advancing up and down A nor retreating. bisters (A. anrf /i.) i/»
Advantage He took a of his strength to be .^'^'"'*^* f i^^
Forebore his own a, (repeat) Guinevere 661, 666
Advent Wink at our a : help my prince Princess iii IbO
dividing clove An a to the throne : ,, '^ ^*
Expecting still his a home ; /« ™. ^-t ^1
Adventure battle, bold a, dungeon, wreck, yly/wi«-s Y'leM y»
mad for strange a, dash'd away Bahn and Balan ^8J
then, with small a met. Sir Bors ^o/y (^jm/ 660
Bound upon solitary «, saw PelleasandE. lib
Adversary robbers mock at a barbarous a. BoMicea IS
hearing her tumultuous adversaries ," ., I
Advice he wouldn't take my a. ^ ^ Grandmother 4
Adviser Horace, you the wise A Poets and their B. b
A-dying For the old year lies a-d. H- of the U. 1 earh
^akides So rang the clear voice of ^ ; Achilles over the T. 21
cry of .£ Was heard among the Trojans, ,, -«
^gis Pallas flung Her fringed «■, rr " ir • . a-^
iEoIian ^ harp that wakes No certain air. Two Voices 4db
Scarce living in the .E harmony, Lover s Tale i ill
JEon the great ^ sinks in blood, In Meni. cxzmi 16
Whirl'd for a million a's , ., .. .^,^ V' .^^"f* ^^k
Many an jE moulded earth before her highest, Locksley H., bixty, Mb
Many an ^ too may pass ,r , •" j, i,r a
Shall not a after ce pass and touch Making of Man 4
iEonian Draw down yE hills, and sow In Mem. xxxv 11
yE music measuring out The steps ,, n'?'^'" 1i
.E Evolution, swift or slow, TM Ring 44
Aerially And less a blue, Margaret b\
a murmur heard a, _ ^ ,^T^"^« ^^
iEtna as ^ does The Giant of Mythology Lover s Taleiv 17
and ^ kept her winter snow Demeter andl.Ub
Afear'd (afraid) But Squire wur a 0' 'is son, /^"7« ^*^/« YX
alius a of a man's gittin' ower fond, Spmstei-s b s. ZJ
I wasn't a, or 1 thinks leastwaays as I wasn t a ; Oiod Koa »b
Affair For 1 never whisper'd a private a i- Jir Wn
kinsman travelling on his own a Merlin and V. 717
Affect They do so that a abstraction f /Jf'^f' * J;'' '^3^.
Affection The still a of the heart . Millers D. 22o
he spoke, Part banter, part a Princess, Fro. , 167
old and strange a of the house. .> * ^^
cared not for the <x of the house ; i. ^^
like a flash the weird a came : » ^■t{(!
wing'd a's dipt with crime : «, " , ^?k 77
My old a of the tomb, (repeat) In Mem. Ixxxv 75, 77
With what divine a's bold ,,,'' ^ ?TqT
^, and the light of victory, Ga^f^ «'^5 L. 331
a mood Of over-strain'd a, Merlin and V. 522
' Stabb'd through the heart's a's 7 ^ " j r. lor?
with full a said, ' Lancelot, Lancelot and E. 1355
if A Living slew Love, Lo^^. « Taleum
Affiance when I dwelt upon your old a, f?^T,?"U^?
in whom I have Most joy and most a, Lancelot and E. 1357
Affianced a years ago To the Lady Ida : Princess n'^
^, Sir? love-whispers may not >> ••• qkr
with Melissa Florian, 1 With mine a. „ "* -5^0
Affirm ^'s your Psyche thieved her theories, ,> . »^
Affirm'd she a not, or denied : r " , -^^ 01 «
Affirming .4 each his own philosophy- Lucretius 216
^thtt his father left him gold, Marr. of Geraint 451
A that as long as either lived, Lover s Tale iv 277
Affluence (See also Heart- Affluence) You, that . , ^ „• t^-r, o«
wanton in a, On Juh. Q. Victoria 28
Affright nothing there her maiden grace a ! Maud I xvin 71
like a man in a mortal a ; ^'n/ '^"ivTAm
Affrighted Round a Lisbon drew Ofe on Well. 103
Affronted A with his fulsome innocence ? Pelleasand A. ^bb
Afire (on fire) the house is a,' she said. Oiwt /toa oa
Afire
Afire {om(inyed) ' But the stairs is a^' she said ;
A-flyin' wool of a thistle a-/ an" seeadin'
Afraid fi^ee Afear'd, Half-afraid.
Afric On capes of A as on cliffs of Kent,
African Indian, Australasian, A,
After-a^ ITiro' a-a's in the love of Truth,
After-beauty that a-b makes Such head
After-days It grows to guerdon a-d :
After dinner It seems in a-d talk
Twas but an a-d's nap.
After-folness from the a-/ of my heart.
After-hands whence a-h May move the world,
After-heat It might have drawn from a-h.'
After-life my dead face would vex her a-l.
she will pass me by in a-l
After-love A-l's of maids and men
Aftermath a sweep Of meadow smooth from a
After-mom Which left my a-m content.
Tluit man can have no a-m,
Ailemoon In the a they came unto a land
In which it seemed always a.
Bright was that a. Sunny but chill ;
Half-sickening of his pension'd a,
' That a the Princess rode
all That a a sound arose
in the all-golden a A guest,
But in the falling a retum'd
It made the laughter of an a
Here in the never-ended a,
For brief repast or a repose
and yester a I dream'd, —
Aftertime I am sung or told In a,
relic of my lord Should be to a,
some old man speak in the a
o, And that full voice which circles
sole men we shall prize in the a,
I am sung or told In a,
relic of my lord Should be to a,
some old man speak in the a
After-years a-y Will learn the secret of our
Arthur's birth.'
Agape A rabbit mouth that is ever d —
ye seem a to roar !
Agaric learned names of a, moss and fern,
as one That smells a foiil-flesh'd a
Agate Tnrkis and a and almondine
bottom a'8 seen to wave and float
AgKvi One tall A above the lake.
A-gawin' (going) I beant a-g to break my rule.
A-gawinin' (staring) an' foalk stood a-f/' in,
Age ('S^^ n/^'^' AAge, After-age, Mother-age)
hath he lain for a's and will lie.
' I know that a to a succeeds,
makes me talk too much in a.
And the great a's onward roll.
Now the most blessed memory of mine a.
thrifty too beyond her a.
until be nows Of a to help us.'
old aore breaks out from a to a
Of different a't, like twin-sisters
aalTer'd long For a's and for a's ! '
float about the threshold of an a,
an a, when every hour Must sweat
Old a hath yet hia honour
Immortal a beside immortal youth,
thro' the a's one increasing purpose
I the heir of all the a's,
As all were order'd, a's since.
Tis rain ! in such a bramy a
fooad Mr spiritM in the golden a.
tonsured h«ad in middle « forlorn,
when this Aylmcr cumo of a—
buffe oathedral fronts of every a,
paby, death'in-lifo. And wretched a —
•very dime and a Jumbled together ;
Oicd Rod 80
Spinster's S's. 79
W, to Marie Alex. 17
On Juh. Q. Victwia 61
Akhar's Dream 101
Princess iv 451
Love- thou thy land 27
MiUer's D. 31
Day-Ihn., Revival 24
Lover's Tale i 146
Princess Hi 263
In Mem. Ixxxi 12
Hiwch Arden 891
Princess v 91
Window, No Answer 25
Audley Court 14
In Mem. ciii 4
EpUogiie 73
Lotos-Eaters 3
4
Enoch Arden 669
Aylmer's Field 461
Princess Hi 169
,, vi 379
Jn Mem. Ixxxix 25
Geraint and E. 591
Merlin and V. 163
Last Toum&Tiient 584
Guinevere 395
Akbar's Dream 169
M. d' Arthur 35
99
107
Princess H 44
„ ^412
Pass, of Arthur 203
267
275
Com. of Arthur 158
Maud I xZ\
Gareth and L. 1306
Edwin Morris 17
Gareth and L. 747
The Merman 32
Princess ii 327
The Daisy 84
N. Farmer, 0. S., 4
North. Cobbler 81
There
27i€ Kraken 11
Two Voices 205
Miller's D. 194
To J. S. 72
Gardener's D. 279
DoralQ
,,127
Walk, to tli£ Mail 79
Edwin Morris 32
St. S. Stylites 100
Golden Year 16
„ 68
Vlysses 50
TiUumvs 22
Locksley Hall 137
178
Day- Dm., Sleep. P., 54
Amphion 65
To E. L. 12
The Brook 200
Aylmer's Field 407
Sea Dreams 218
Lucretius 155
Princess, Pro,, 16
A-glare
Princess, Pro., ii 50
Princess ii 127
„ 153
448
„ 1^-251
Ode on Wdl. 76
„ 226
259
Grandmother 20, 100
97
Spiteful Letter 8
Milton 4
Wind(yw, When 14
In Mem. Ixxiii 12
Mmid I i 30
„ iv 35
„ Ilv2\
Gareth and L. 79
" .1^29
Geraint and E. 115
Merlin and V. 185
553
Lancelot and E. 953
Holy Grail 340
431
Pass, of Arthur 4
Lover's Tale i 125
196
357
Sisters (E. and E.) 141
Columbus 202
Tiresias 19
„ 104
Despair 40
„ 88
Ancient Sage 98
„ 146
Locksley II. , Sixty, 10
46
81
83
„ 108
137
151
„ 281
Epilogue 71
To Virgil 25
May we find, as a's run, Open. I. and C. Exhib. 11
darkness Dawns into the Jubilee of the A's. On Jub. Q. Victoria 71
Tlie Ring 77
„ 160
„ 289
Happy 46
Romney's R. 64
Parnassus 3
By an Evulutimi. 9
17
St. Telemo/chus 41
Making of Man 3
Tlie Dreamer 7
Poets and Critics 2
Age (continued) ' The climax of his a f
Amazon As emblematic of a nobler a ;
some a's had been lost ;
second-sight of some Astrsean a,
reasons drawn from a and state,
you got a friend of your own a.
To such a name for a's long,
For many and many an a proclaim
tho' the Giant A's heave the hill
at your a, Annie, I could have wept (repeat)
And a is a time of peace,
I hear the roll of the a's.
Milton, a name to resound for a's ;
to-morrow, And that's an a away.'
left for human deeds In endless A ?
take the print Of the golden a —
many a million of a's have gone
Wretchedest a, since Time began.
His a hath slowly droopt,
sadder a begins To war against ill uses
suffering thus he made Minutes an a :
flatter his own wish in a for love.
Who paced it, a's back :
more fitly yours, not thrice your a :
Built by old kings, a after a,
I found Only one man of an exceeding a.
In the white winter of his a,
weight as if of a upon my limbs,
she, my love, is of an a with me
poisons of his heart In his old a.'
the fool this A that doubts of all —
in that flight of a's which are God's
but thine a, by a as winter-white
And oldest a in shadow from the night,
and the human heart, and the A.
For these are the new dark a's.
And cap our a with snow ? '
The poet whom his A would quote
well might fool a dotard's a.
Some thro' a and slow diseases,
A 's after, while in Asia,
an a of noblest English names.
When was a so cramm'd with menace ?
Bring the old dark a's back without the faith,
well, it scarce becomes mine a —
Gone at eighty, mine own a,
tho', in this lean a forlorn.
Light among the vanish'd a's ;
the morning when you came of a
girls of equal a, but one was fair.
My ring too when she comes of a.
For A will chink the face,
gloom of A And suffering cloud
And over the flight of the A 's !
What hast thou done for me, grim Old A
I have climb'd to the snows of A ,
all but deaf thro' a and weariness,
and ere the crowning A of a's,
When I make for an A of gold,
Helter-skelter runs the a ;
Agent (SeecdsoA^pnt) Thro" many «',s making strong. Love thou thy land 39
Aghast {See also Half-Aghast) all that mark'd him
were a. Gareth and L. 1399
not a word ! ' and Enid was a ; Geraint and E. 18
men and women staring and a, ,, 804
a the maiden rose. White as her veil, Guinevere 362
Agincourt ' this,' he said, ' was Hugh's at A ; Princess, Pro., 25
Agint (Agent) Yer Honour's own a, he says to me Tomorrow 63
Agitated j^ople around the royal chariot a, BoOdicea 73
Aglala a double April old, A slept. Princess ii 111
my sweet yl, my one child : „ i; 101
Came i'sycho, sorrowing for A, ,, •yi 29
A-glare all tho Hells a-g in either eye, Akbar's Dream 115
Aglow
Aglow ' yiy Rose ' set all your face re,
Agned-Cathregonion And up in A -O too,
Ago3,n (gone) whoy, Doctor's abeiin an' a :
Agony ancient melody Of an inward a,
one voice an a Of lamentation,
kill'd with some luxurious a,
modest bosom prest In a,
as cried Christ ere His a
wail of women and children, multitudmoua agomes,
Roman slaughter, multitudinous agonies.
With agonies, with energies,
Travail, and throes and agonies of the life,
into wastes and solitudes For a,
up the side, sweating with a.
Brain-feverous in his heat and a,
one voice, an a Of lamentation,
All joy, to whom my a was a joy.
and in his a conceives A shameful sense
these in my a Did I make bare
my dull a, Ideally to her transferr'd,
Dead of some inward a— is it so ?
Twisted hard in mortal a
A-grawin' (growing) hes now be a-g sa howd,
Agreed a That much allowance must be made
80 it was a when first they came ;
A to, this, the day fled on
his wish, whereto the Queen a
then they were a upon a night
he sent, an' the father a ;
An' Molly an' me was o,
Agrin His visage all a as at a wake,
Agi'ippuia and the Roman brows Of A
Agypt (Egypt) Thim ould blind nagers in A,
A-hawking We ride a-h with Sir Lancelot
Ahead ho rode on a, as he waved his blade
Aid (a) knew not whither he should turn for a.
for lack of gentle maiden's a.
He needs no a who doth his ladv's will.'
following thy true counsel, by thine a,
Aid (verb) Us, who stand now, when we should a
the right—
0 Lord, A all this foolish people ;
« me, give me strength Not to tell her,
a me Heaven when at mine uttermost,
Aiding serve them both in a her —
Aidless to leave thee thus. A, alone,
to leave thee thus, A , alone,
Aldoneus car Of dark A rising rapt thee
Ail mother thought, What a's the boy ?
What a's us, who are sound,
Ail'd What a her then, that ere she enter'd,
told his gentle wife What a him,
Aileth Whata thee? whom waitest thou
Ailing ' Anything a,' I ask'd her, ' with baby ?
only — you Were always a.
Ailment Yours has been a slighter a,
Aim(s) Embrace our re's : work out your freedom.
For fear our solid re be dissipated
works Without a conscience or an a.
so I wake to the higher a's
he kept his mind on one sole a,
a's Were sharpen'd by strong hate
Because all other Hope had lower a ;
Ready ! take a at their leaders-
Look to your butts, and take good a's !
Aim (verb) one would a an arrow fair,
Aim'd fairy arrows a All at one mark,
Nay, but she re not at glory ,^
A at the helm, his lance err'd ;
better a are your flank fusillades —
Aiming near storm, and a at his head,
In a at an all but hopeless mark
Aimless three days, a about the land.
Air (atmosphere) Till the & And the ground
Or breathe into the hollow a,
Roses on the T. 3
Lancelot and E. 300
N. Fdmier, O. S., 2
Claribel 7
M. d'Arthiir 200
Vision of Sin 43
Aylmer's Field 417
793
Boadicea 26
» ..?!
In Mem. conn 18
Corn, of Arthur 76
Lancelot and E. 253
494
854
Pass, of Arthur 368
Lover's Tale i 656
793
,, a 47
136
To W. n. Brookfield 10
Locksley //., Sixty, 98
Village Wife 107
Aylmer's Field 409
Princess Hi 36
176
Lancelot and E. 1169
Ouinevere 96
First Quarrel 18
Spinster's S's. 49
Princess v 521
,, a 85
Tonwrroto 69
Merlin and V. 95
Heavy Brigade 9
Com. of Arthur 40
Lancelot and E. 765
Pelleas and E. 281
Akhar's Dream 154
Poland 13
St. S. Stylites 223
Enoch Arden 785
Man: of Geraint 502
Princess vvi 268
M. d' Arthur 41
Pass, of Arthur 209
JJemeter and P. 39
Miller's J). 93
Walk, to tlie Mail 105
Enoch Arden 518
Geraint and E. 504
Adeline 45
The Wreck 61
Tlie Ring 311
Locksley H., Sixty, 17
Princess ii 89
,, Hi 266
In Mem. xxxiv 8
Maud III TO 38
Merlin aiid V. 626
Guinevere 19
Lover's Tale i 455
Def. of Lucknoiv 42
Riflemen form / 16
In Mem. Ixxxvii 25
Aylmer's Field 94
Wages 4
Geraint and E. 157
Def. of Lucknmv 57
Aylmer's Field 727
The Ring 346
Pelleas and E. 391
Nothing will Die 27
Snpp. Confessions 58
Air (atmosphere) {enntimi.ed) fires and fluid
range Of lawless a's,
The living a's of middle night
a is damp, and hush'd, and close.
Life in dead stones, or spirit in a ;
Wide, wild, and open to the a.
Or when little a's arise,
With melodious a's lovelorn,
reveal'd themselves to English a,
a Sleepeth over all the heaven,
Like softened a's that blowing steal.
The very a about the door
earth and a seem only burning fire.'
the summer a's blow cool
the languid a did swoon.
Falls, and floats adown the a.
warm a's lull us, blowing lowly)
was no motion in the dumb dead re,
round them sea and a are dark
made the a Of Life delicious,
murmur broke the stillness of that a
Felt earth as re beneath me,
A soft re fans the cloud apart ;
deep re listen'd round her as she rode,
I yearn to breathe the a's of heaven
Are touch'd, are turn'd to finest a.
And clouds are highest up in o,
All the re was torn in sunder.
Like Fancy made of golden re,
green From draughts of balmy re.
black yew gloom'd the stagnant re,
sweet half-English Neilgherry re
breath Of tender a made tremble
at a touch of light, an a of heaven,
rush of the re in the prone swing,
to flush his blood with re.
Drank the large re, and saw,
towering o'er him in serenest re,
flushing the guiltless re. Spout
soul flies out and dies in the re.'
sweet as English re could make her,
each light re On our mail'd heads :
' for this wild wreath of re,
went The enamour'd re sighing
with a tender foot, light as on re,
shake To the same sweet re.
Naked, a double light in re and wave,
like a broken purpose waste in re :
In that fine re I tremble.
Thro' the long-tormented a Heaven
Flash'd as they turn'd in re
€lash, ye bells, in the merry March re !
diviner re Breathe thro' the world
And snowy dells in a golden re.
.bird in re, and fishes turn'd
cloud in my heart, and a storm in the re !
no ruder re perplex Thy sliding keel,
Calm and deep peace in this wide a,
And circle moaning in the a :
Was as the whisper of an a
As light as carrier-birds in re ;
seem to have reach'd a purer a.
Sweet after showers, ambrosial re.
And shook to all the liberal re
drink the cooler re, and mark
The memory like a cloudless a.
With summer spice the humming re ;
the stirring re The life re-orient
Thy voice is on the rolling re ;
ruin'd woodlands drove thro' the re.
essences turn'd the live re sick
fed With honey'd rain and delicate re,
Melody on branch, and melody in mid re.
solid turrets topsy-turvy in re :
under one long lane of cloudless a
Ms
Siipp. Confessions 148
Arabian Nights 69
A spirit liaunts 13
A Character 9
Dying Sivan 2
Adeline 33
„ 55
Elednore 2
„ 38
Two Voices 406
Miller's D. 103
(Enone 268
May Quem, N. Ts. E. 27
Lotos-Eaters 5
„ C.^.,31
89
D. of F. Women 65
Love thmi thy land 63
Gardener's D. 69
147
,, 212
Ttthonus 32
Godiva 54
Sir Galahad 63
72
Lady Clare 2
TJie Captain 43
Tlie Voyage 66
Sir L. and Q. G. 9
Tlie Letters 2
The Brook 17
„ 202
Avhner's Field 5
86
Sea Dreams 34
Lucretius 178
274
Princess, Pro., 155
V 244
318
'^' lo
88
,, vii 69
167
214
3.54
Ode on Well. 128
Light Brigade 28
W. to Alacandra 18
W. to Marie Alex. 43
Tlie Daisy 68
The Victim 19
Wiiidmo, Gone 6
In Mem. ix 9
,, a» 13
,, xii 15
,, xvii 3
,, XXV 6
,, xxxiii2
,, Ixxxvi 1
,, Uexxix 7
" • V?
,, XCIV 11
„ ci%
,, cxvi 5
Maud I i 12
,, odii 11
,, xviii 21
Gareth and L. 183
255
Balin and Balan 461
Air
6
Alia
Air (atmosphere) {contin ved) their foreheads felt
the cooling a, Balin and Balan 589
for God's love, a little a ! Lancelot and E. 505
a that smites his forehead is not a Holy Grail 914
choice from a, land, stream, and sea, Pdleas and E. 149
my rase, that sweeten'd all mine a — ,, 403
started thro' mid a Bearing an eagle's nest : Last Tournament 14
stump Pitch-blacken'd sawing the a, ,,67
heather-scented a, Pulsing full man ; „ 691
spouting from a cliflf Fails in mid a, Guinevere 609
could not breathe in that fine a ,, 645
outward circling a wherewith I breathe, Lover's Tale i 167
seem'd a gossamer filament up in a, ,, 413
moon. Half -melted into thin blue a, „ 421
flowing odour of the spacious a, ,, 478
to all that draw the wholesome o, „ 500
the gentlest a's of Heaven Should kiss „ 738
A morning a, sweet after rain, ,, Hi 3
Bore her free-faced to the free a's ,, iw 38
veil, that seemed no more than gilded a, ,, 290
and horrible fowls of the a, Jtizpah 39
♦0 diviner ^.' (repeat) Sisters (E. and E.) 4
Breathe, diviner A\ , , 13
but as welcome as free a's of heaven ,, 197
Ctod's free a, and hope of better things. Sir J. Oldcastle 10
jewell'd throne thro' the fragrant a, V. of Maeldune 59
where the water is clearer than a: „ 77
all that suffers on land or in a or the deep. Despair 45
Yon summit half-a-league in a — Ancient Sage 11
And now one breath of cooler a ,, 117
side by side in God's free light and a, The Flight 81
The woods with living a's Early Spring 19
light a's from where the deep, ,, 21
there In haunts of junglc-poison'd a To Marq. of Ihtfferin 31
pierce the glad and songful a, Devieier and P. 45
we will feed her with our mountain a, The Ring 319
np the tower — an icy a Fled by me. — ,, 445
marvel how in English a My yucca, To Ulysses 20
her bare To breaths of balmier a ; Prog, of Spring 13
Air (strain of music) .^Eolian harp that wakes No
certain a, Two Voices 437
With the a of the trumpet round him, Princess v 162
slightest a of song shall breathe In Mem., xlix 7
She is singing an a that is known to me, Maud / v 3
while I past he was bumming an a, ,, xiii 17
playest that a with Queen Isolt, Last Tournament 263
num An a the nuns had taught her ; Guinevere 163
plajr That a which pleased her first. Lover's Tale i 21
amid eddies of melodious a's, „ 450
' A and Words,' Said Hubert, The Ring 24
Air (manner) 1 know her by her angry a, Kate 1
A cold a pass'd between us, The Ring 380
'Air (hair) was stroakin ma down wi' the 'a, Spinster's Ss. 19
An' 'is 'a coom'd off i' my 'ands (hod Raii 100
Air'd into the world, And a him there : Aylmer's Field 468
Atrtng A a snowy hand and signet gem, Princess i 121
Airm (arm) blacksmith 'e strips me the thick ov 'is a, North. Cobbler 85
Airth But a was at pace nixt mornin', Tomorrow 25
Aisle ' Dark porch,' I said, 'and silent a, The Letters 47
but in the middle a Reel'd, Aylmer's Field 818
ambrosial a's of lofty lime Princess, Pro., 87
giant a'l, Rich in model and design ; Ode Inter. Exhib. 12
■ombre, old, colonnaded a't. The Daisy 56
often I and Amy in the mouldering a have stood, Locksley //., Sixty, 31
AJalon like Joshua's miwn in A ! Locksley Hall 180
Ajar Thky have left the doors o ; Sisters (E. and E.) \
A-Joompin' (jumping) An' hallus a-j' about ma Spinster's Ss. 89
Akbar (^Hogul Emperor) a-fk'd his Chronicler Of A Akhar't Dream 2
turning hIowIv toward him, A said ,, 4
Akin (Stf tdsu Half-akin) Maud to him is nothing a : Maud I xiii 38
lawful and la wlcHH war Are scarcely even a. ,, II v 9!)
■wallow nnd the «wift are near a, Vam. of Arthur 313
Akrokeraunian 'I'he vast A walls. To E. L. 4
A-la&id (l3ring) fun 'urn theer a-l on 'is faitce N. Fann/r, 0. S., 33
Alarm when fresh from war's a't, I), of F. ^^'<mlen 149
Alarm [continued) I shook her breast with vague a's — The Letters 38
our sallies, their lying a's, Def. of Lucknmo 75
a's Sounding 'To arms ! to arms ! ' Prog, of Spring 103
Alas with many a vain ' A \' Doubt and Prayer 2
Albert ' And with him A came on his. Talking Oak 105
Albert (Prince Consort) Hereafter, thro' all
times, A the Good. Ded,. of Idylls 43
Albion laborious, Patient children of A O'li Juh. Q. Victoria 59
Alcestis The true A of the time. Romney's R. 91
Alchemise a old hates into the gold Of Love, Akbar' s Dream 163
Alcor Red-pulsing up thro' Alioth and A, Last Tournament 480
Alder blowing over meadowy holms And a's, Edicin Morris 96
Came wet-shod a from the wave, Amphion 41
But here will sigh thine a tree, A Fareivell 9
Balin's horse Was fast beside an a, Balin and Balan 29
Ale [See also A5,le) mellow'd all his heart with a, The Brook 155
A mockery to the yeomen over a, Aylmer's Field 497
A-leaning Weak Truth a-l on her crutch, Clear-lieaded friend 18
Ale-house Jack on his a-h bench Maud I iv 9
Alexandra Sea-king's daughter from over
the sea, A ! W. to Alexandra 2
Danes in our welcome of thee, A\ ,,5
all Dane in our welcome of thee, A\ ,,34
AlexandroTna (See also Marie, Marie Alexandrovna)
Prince his own imperial Flower, A. W. to Marie Alex. 5
sultry palms of India known, A. ,,15
gives its throne a wife, A\ , , 25
thy j'oung lover hand in hand A \ ,, 35
and change the hearts of men, Al ,,45
Alfred— yl ! „ 50
Alfred (King of England) Truth-teller was our
England's A named ; Ode on Well. 188
Alfred (Duke of Edinburgh, 1844-1900) A—
Alexandrovna ! W. to Marie Alex. 50
Alice My own sweet A, we must die. Miller's D. 18
Pray, A, pray, my darling wife, ,, 23
But, A , what an hour was that, , , 57
Sweet ^, if I told her all ? ' ,, 120
Go fetch your A here,' she said : ,, 143
But, A, you were ill at ease ; ,, 146
foolish song I gave you, A, on the day „ 162
none so fair as little A May Queen 7
In there came old A the nurse, Lady Clare 1.3
said A the nurse, (repeat) Lady Clare 17, 23, 33, 41, 45
Alien I am but an a and a Genovese. Columbus 243
Alif The A of Thine alphabet of Love.' Akbar's Jh-eam 31
A-liggin' (Ijring) wheere thou was a-l, my lad, 02vd Roa 87
Alighted (See also Lighted) To Francis just a from
the boat, Audley Court 7
Alioth Red-pulsing up thro' A and Alcor, Last Tournament 480
Alive That thou, if thou wert yet a, Supp. Confessions 100
Joying to feel herself a. Palace of Art 178
pass away before, and yet a I am ; May Queen, Con., 1
palace-front A with fluttering scarfs Princess v 509
not always certain if they be a Grandmother 84
there's none of them left a ; ,, 85
strive To keep so sweet a thing a:' In Mem. xxxv 7
Dark bulks that tumble half a, ,, Ixxll
at fifty Should Nature keep me a, Maud I vi 32
with beatings in it, as if a. Holy Grail 118
marvel among us that one should be left a, Def. of Luchimo 78
And doom'd to burn a. Sir J. Oldcastle 183
But we old friends are still a, To E. Fitzgerald 42
The love that keeps this heart a The Flight 35
the dead are not dead but a. Vastness 36
'All (hall) sin fust a coom'd to the 'A ; JV. Farmer, 0. S., 55
walks down fro' the 'A to see. North. Cobbler 91
Alia both, to worship A, but the prayers, Akbar's Dream 9
are faint And pale in A's eyes ,, n
A be my guide ! \Q
' Mine is the one fruit A made for man.' 40
pulse of A beats Thro' all His world. \\ 41
Vet '^,' says their sacred book, 'is Love,' ' 73
Yea, A here on earth, who caught , 84
was not A call'd In old Irfm " §6
Alia
Alone
Alia {continued) Who all but lost himself in A^ Alcbar's Ih'eam 93
One A ! one Kalifa ! ,,167
' All praise to A by whatever hands ,, 198
All-accomplish'd modest, kindly, a-a, wise Bed. of Idi/lls 18
All-amorouB Brushing his instep, bow'd the a-a Earl Geraint and E. 360
Allan With Farmer A at the farm Dwa 1
a day When A call'd his son, ,, 10
bells were ringing, A call'd His niece ,, 41
said A, 'did I not Forbid you, Dora?' ,, 91
.4 said, 'I see it is a trick ,, 95
seal, that hung From A's watch, ,, 136
.1 set him down, and Mary said : ,, 139
All-arm'd A -a I ride, whate'er betide. Sir Galahad 83
All-assuming The a-a months and years In Mem. Ixxxv 67
All-comprehensive express ^ I -c tenderness, ,, 47
Allegfiance from all neighbour crowns Alliance and a, (Enmie 125
my rose, there my a due. Sir J. Oidcastle 59
One full voice of a, On Jiib. Q. Victoria 22
Allegory I send you here a sort of a, To With Pal. of Art \
the third fool of their a.' Gareth and L. 1085
four fools have suck'd their a ,, 1199
Allen (Francis) .See Francis, Francis Allen
All-enduring like the a-e camel. Lover's Tale i 136
Alley From the long a's latticed shade Arabian Nights 112
plaited a's of the trailing rose. Ode to Memory 106
a's falling down to twilight grots, ,, 107
every hollow cave and a lone Lotos-Eaters, C. S., 103
And a's, faded places, Amphion 86
firefly-like in copse And linden a : Princess i 209
as she rode The woodland a's, Balin and Balan 439
There among the glooming a's Lockdey H., Sixty, 219
All-fragrant slip at once a-finUi one. Princess vii 70
All-generating a-g powers and genial heat Of Nature, Lucretivs 97
All-golden in the a-g afternoon A guest. In Mem. Ixxxix 25
All-graceful ^-ff head, so richly curl'd. Day- Dm., L' Envoi 38
All-heal with a ounch of a-A in her hand, Vastness 12
Alliance from all neighbour crowns A (Enone 125
longs For this a : Sisters {E. and E.) 29
Allied However she came to be so a. Maud I xiii 36
Allies backward reel'd the Trojans and a ; Achilles over the T. 31
All-in-all Is like another, a i a.' Two Voices 36
with that mood or this. Is a-i-a to all : Will Water. 108
Philip was her children's a-i-a ; Enoch Arden 348
her good Philip was her a-i-a, „ 525
take them a-i-a. Were we ourselves Princess o 200
' trust me not at all or ai a' (repeat) Me^iin and V. 384, 398, 449
Love Were not his own imperial a-i-a. Sisters (E, and E.) 'itil
Out of His whole World-self and a-i^-a — De Prof. Ttoo G. 49
What England is, and what her a-i-a. The Fleet 2
fleet of England is her a-i-a ; ,,13
been till now each other's a-i-a. The Ring 53
Within us, as without, that A-i-a, Akhar's Dream 146
All-kindled A-k by a still and sacred fire, Enoch Arden 71
Allot The sphere thy fate a's : Will Water. 218
Allotted (part-) quit the post A by the Gods : Lucretius 149
show'd an empty tent a her, Geraint and E. 885
Allow one of less desert a's This laurel To the Queen 6
fly no more : I a thee for an hour. Gareth and L. 892
A me for mine hour, and thou wilt find ,, 902
our true King Will then a your pretext, Lancelot and E. 153
answer for a noble knight ? A him ! ,, 202
Will well a my pretext, ,, 586
Allowance much a must be made for men. A ylmer's Field 410
Made more and more a for his talk ; Sea Dreams 75
To make a for us all. In Mem. li 16
Allow'd leave To see the hunt, a it easily. Marr. of Geraint 155
loyal worship is a Of all men : Lancelot and ^.110
Lightly, her suit a, she slipt away, „ 778
Scorn was a as part of his defect, Guinevere 43
thro' his cowardice a Her station, ,, 516
Allowing (See also Half-allowing) A it, the Prince
and Enid rode, Man: of Geraint 43
Alloy Bright metal all without a Rosalind 21
All-perfect A-p, finish'd to the finger nail. Edioin Morris 22
All-puissant noble breast and a-p arms, Marr. of Geraint 86
All-seeing or of older use A-s Hyperion—
All-shamed I rode a-s, hating the life
All-silent Sigh fully, or a-s gaze upon him
All-subtilising A-s intellect :
All-too-full a-t-f in bud For puritanic stays
Allure beacon-blaze a's The bird of passage.
Allured A him, as the beacon-blaze allures
a The glance of Gareth
the sweet name ^1 him first.
Allusion phrases of the hearth, And far a.
Ally (Alfred) Goldkn-Hair'd .4 whose name is one
Ally (s) True we have got — such a faithful a
Ally (verb) d Your fortunes, justlier balanced,
Almesbury sat There in the holy house at A
she to ^4 Fled all night long
when she came to A she spake
As even here they talk at A
saw One lying in the dust at A,
Almighty (See also Amoighty) 0 God A, blessed
Saviour, Thou
Sir Aylmeb-Aylmeb, that a man.
Almond-blossom Tlie sunlit a-b shakes —
Almondine Turkis and agate and a :
Alms set himself. Scorning an a, to work
free of a her hand — The hand that
life of prayer, Praise, fast and a ;
She gave herself, to fast and a.
cripple, one that held a hand for a —
fling free a into the beggar's bowl,
From the golden a of Blessing
Almsdeed wear out in a and in prayer
Alo&n (alone) an' if Sally be left a,
Hallus a wi' 'is boooks,
one night I wur sittin' a,
Aloe Of olive, a, maize and vine.
Lucretius 126
Geraint and E. 852
Merlin and V. 182
In Mem. Ixxxv 48
Talking Oak 59
Enoch Arden 728
728
Gareth and L. 1315
Last Tournament 399
Princess ii 316
To A . Tennyson 1
Riflemen form I 24
Princess ii 65
Guinevere 2
„ 127
„ 138
„ 208
Pass, of Arthur 77
Enoch Arden 782
Aylmer's Field 13
To tlie Queen 16
The Merman 32
Enoch Arden 812
Aylmer's Field 697
Holy Grail 5
„ 77
Pelleas and E. 542
Ancient Sage 260
Locksley II., Sixty, 87
Guinevere 687
North. Cobbler 105
Village Wife 27
Owd Rod, 29
The Daisy 4
Alone (See also Alo&n) moon cometh. And looketh down a. Claribel 14
While I do pray to Thee a,
A and warming his five wits, (repeat)
My friend, with you to live a.
Death, walking all a beneath a yew,
A I wander to and fro,
A merman bold. Sitting a. Singing a
mermaid fair. Singing a.
Springing a With a shrill inner sound.
For sure thou art not all a.
broad river rushing down a,
' Ah,' she sang, 'to be all a, (repeat)
' but I wake a, I sleep forgotten,
She thought, ' My spirit is here a,
' Sweet Mother, let me not here a
So be d for evermore.'
Is this the end to be left a,
' But thou shalt be a no more.'
And day and night I am left a
When I shall cease to be all a,
And you and I were all a.
Came up from reedy Simois all a.
from that time to this I am a.
And I shall be a until I die.
I will not die a, (repeat)
some one pacing there a.
Nor these a, but every landscape fair,
Nor these a : but every legend
prolong Her low preamble all a.
Flash' d thro' her as she sat a.
And all a in crime :
But I shall lie a, mother,
why should we toil a,
Let us a. Time driveth onward
Let us A. What is it that will last ?
Let us a. What pleasure can we have
' Not so, nor once a ;
That standeth there a.
Falls off, and love is left a.
leave thee thus, Aidless, a,
Suj}p. Confessions 12
The Old, I. 6, 13
Ode to Memm-y 119
Love and Death 5
Oriana 8
The Merman 3
The Mennaid 3
19
A deline 25
Mine be the strength 2
Mariana in the S. 11, 23
35
47
59
68
71
76
83
95
Millet^'s D. 136
(Enone 52
„ 193
„ 194
(Enone 246, 257
Palace of Art ^Q
89
125
174
214
272
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 20
Lotos-Eaters, C. S., 15
43
45
48
D. of F. Wmnen 203
D. of the 0. Year 50
To J. S. 16
M. d' Arthur 41
Alone
Ambassador
Alone (c(nitinued) For not a this pillar-
punishment, Not this a
I might be more a with thee,
In which we sat together and a,
both with those That loved me, and a ;
About the hall, among his dogs, a,
She lying on her couch a,
Ah, let uie rusty theme a !
fell Sun-stricken, and that other lived a
who speaks with Him, seem all a,
'A,' I said, 'from earlier than I know,
When ill and weary, a and cold,
^, a, to where he sits,
When I contemplate all a
light Went out, and I was all a,
Which not a had guided me,
she will let me a.
For am I not, am I not, here a
I am here at the gate a ;
When will the dancers leave her a ?
That thou art left for ever a :
a And all the world asleep,
sought The King a, and found, and told
and they were left a,
endured Strange chances here a ; '
I was all a upon the flood,
shaped, it seems. By God for thee a,
leave me all a with Mark and hell.
leave thee thus. Aidless, a,
didst sit a in the inner house.
To me o, Push'd from his chair
Our general mother meant for me a,
They tell me we would not be a, —
many weary moons I lived a — A,
day waned ; A I sat with her :
I will be idl a with all I love.
Found, as it seem'd, a skeleton a,
dark eyes ! and not her eyes a,
I am all a in the world,
fo, go, you may leave me a —
was there a : The phantom
I lying here bedridden and a,
when! left my darling a.'
a on that lonely shore —
I am left a on the land, she is all a
Nor canst not prove that thou art bod^ a,
Nor canst thou prove that thou art spirit a,
when I Sat all a, revolving
but we were left a :
sitting on the wreck a.
Thou o, my boy, of Amy's kin
wearying to be left a,
first dark hour of his last sleep a.
gazing from this height a,
he dasb'd up a Thro" the great gray slope
Or Might must rule a ;
And be sung not a of an old sun set,
To forage for herself a ;
I parted from her, and I went a.
would he live and die a 'I
bot I wept a, and sigh'd
Listen ! we three were a in the dell
of that Power which a is great,
Along xix tall men haling a seventh a,
Alongside if t'one stick a t'lither
A-lorlng When I was a-l you all along
Alphabet Tlio Alif of Thine a of Love.'
Alphabet-of-heaven-in-inan A-o-h-i-m Made
Alpine In Ra/.ing up an A height,
an A harel)ell hung with tears
Alps Hun-smitten A before me lay.
Alraschid Se/- Hutmn Alraschid
Altar {Sr/; aJio Iile-altax, Monntain-altan)
to the village u.
And Mw the a cold and bare.
St. S. Stylites 60
85
Love and Duty 60
Ulysses 9
Oodiva 17
Day-Dm., Sleep. B., 2
WUl Water. 177
Enoch Arden 570
620
Princess vii 311
The Daisy 96
In Mem. xxiii 3
„ Ixxxiv 1
„ axv 20
,, cxiii 3
Maud / i 74
„ vi 65
„ xadi 4
21
,, Jliii 4
Com. of Arthur 118
Oareth and L. 541
Geraint and E. 244
810
Lancelot and E. 1046
1367
Last Tmimament 536
Pass, of Arthur im
Lover's Tale i 112
117
245
252
,, ii 2
140
„ iv 47
139
166
First Quarrel 8
RizpaJi 79
Sisters (E. and E.) \\Z
Columbus 164
The Wreck 97
Despair 33
„ 63
Ancient Sage 59
60
„ 230
Tlie Flight 77
Locksley H., Sixty, 16
m
hi
238
Pro. to Qen. Hamley 9
Heavy Brigade 16
Epilogue 29
Dead Propliel 41
Open. L and C. Exhih. 29
The Ring 437
Happy 5
„ "69
Bandit's Death 19
Ood and the Univ. 5
Gareth and L. 811
Churcli-warden, etc., lO
First Quarrel 65
Akhar'a Dream 31
vocal— „ 136
Two Voices 362
Princess vii 115
T/ie Daisy 62
Leads her
L. of Burleii/h 11
Tlie Letters 4
The Letters 7
Enoch Arden 72
Princess v 377
The Victim 7
Boddicea 2
Com. of Arthur 461
Balin and Balan 410
Sisters (E. and E.) 210
239
Ancient Sage 33
Forlorn 34
Pa'rnassus 17
Sir Galahad 33
Gareth And L. 599
Tiresias 147
Lii Mem. xli 3
Maud I xviii 24
Com. of Arthur 455
In Mem. Iv 15
The Victim 67
(Enone 153
Wai Water. 15
Ayhner's Field 418
Princess v 262
Miller's D. 94
Princess ii 306
Maiid IiS9
(Enone 97
Lotos-Eaters, C. S., 88
Romney's /?. Ill
The Daisy 16
Guinevere 23
Altar {continued) ' Cold A, Heaven and earth shall meet
fire. That burn'd as on an a.
at the a the poor bride Gives her harsh groom
The Priest in horror about his a
Burnt and broke the grove and a
sacred a blossom 'd white with May,
Beheld before a golden a lie
from the a glancing back upon her,
to pray Before tfiat a — so I think ;
There, brooding by the central a,
Tower and a trembling . . .
fire from off a pure Pierian a,
Altar-cloth Fair gleams the snowy a-c,
as thine a-c From that best blood
Altar-fasbion'd smooth rock Before it, a-f.
Altar -fire As mounts the heavenward a-f,
Altar-flame made my life a perfumed a-f ;
Altar-shrine before The stateliest of her a-s's,
Altar-stairs Upon the great world's a-s
Altar-stone To the a-s she sprang alone,
Alter Sequel of guerdon could not a me
Nor add and a, many times.
Persuasion, no, nor death could a her :
as the fiery Sirius a's hue,
Alter'd For I was a, and began
tho' you have grown You scarce have a :
Alum chalk and a and plaster are sold
AmaracuB Violet, a, and asphodel.
Amaranth propt on beds of a and moly,
in heaven With Milton's a.
Amaryllis A milky-bell'd a blew.
A-maying Had been, their wont, a-7n
Amaze (See also Half-amaze) In much a he stared
On eyes TJie Brook 205
Up went the hush'd a of hand and eye. Princess Hi 138
Suddenly honest, answer'd in «, Geraint and E. 410
sister's vision, fill'd me with a ; Holy Grail 140
And some of us, all in a, Heavy Brigade 35
a Our brief humanities ; Epilogue 56
set the mother waking in a Demeter and P. 57
Amazed {See also Half-amazed, Part-amazed) A
and melted all who listen'd Enoch Arden 649
Averill solaced as he might, a : Ayhnm-'s Field 343
half a half frighted all his flock : „ 631
A he fled away Thro' the dark land, Pnncess v 48
' A am I to hear Your Highness : ,, t'i 324
a They glared upon the women, ,, 360
brake on him, till, «, He knew not Cmn. of Arthur 39
those who went with Gareth were a, Gareth and L. 197
and all hearers were a. ,, 655
Enid ask'd, a, ' If Enid errs, Marr. of Geraint 131
the armourer turning all « ,, 283
plover's human whistle a Her heart, Geraint and E. 49
when he found all empty, was a; ,, 216
A am I, Beholding how ye butt ,, 676
He much a us ; after, when we sought Baliu and Balan 115
A were these ; ' Lo there ' she cried — ,, 465
more a Than if seven men had set Lancelot and E. 350
the Queen a, ' Was he not with you ? ,, 572
He a, ' Torre and Elaine ! why here ? ,, 795
So that the angels were a, JMy Grail 451
ye look a, Not knowing they were lost Last Tuuruament 41
babble about his end ^1 me ; ,, 671
I sware. Being rt : but this went by — ,, 674
dead world's winter dawn A him, Pass. <f Arthur 443
nor lights nor feast Dazed or a, Lover's Tale iv 311
mask that I saw so a me, The Wreck 117
I stood there, naked, a Despair 77
still in her cave, A , Death of (Enone 70
Amazement stood Stock-still for sheer «. Will Water. 136
all the guests in mute a rose— Lover's Tale iv 305
which made tho a more, 334
Amazing See Maftzin' '
Amazon Glanced at the legendary A Princess ii 126
Ambassador My father sent a's with furs { 42
Ambassador
Angel
Ambassador (continued) Sir Lancelot went a, at first, Merlin and V, 774
-1, to lead her to his lord Guinevere 383
Ambassadress ' are you a'es From him to me ? Princess Hi 203
Amber (adj.) lights, rose, «, emerald, blue, Palace of Art 169
Purple or a, dangled a hundred fathoms V. of MaMdune 56
Like the tender a round, Margaret 19
and the a eves When thou and I, Camilla, Lover's Tale i 52
Ran a towards the west, and nigh the sea „ 432
Amber (s) fans Of sandal, a, ancient rosaries. Princess, Pro., 19
Ambition No madness of a, avarice, none: Lucretius 212
lawless perch Of wing'd a's, Ded. of Idylls 23
Down with a, avarice, pride, Ma\id I x 47
Ambrosia Hebes are they to hand a. Princess Hi 113
Their rich a tasted aconite. Dei)ieter and P. 105
Ambrosial oak-tree sigheth, Thick-leaved, a, Claribel 5
her deep hair A, golden (Enone 178
Sweet after showers, a air, In Mem. Ixxxvi 1
Ambrosially fruit of pure Hesperian gold. That smelt a, (Enmte 67
Ambrosius fellow-monk among the rest, .1 , Holy Grail 9
monk A question'd Percivale : „ 17
Then s^mke the monk .1, asking him, ,, 203
I told him all thyself hast heard, A, ,, 737
Ambuscade In every wavering brake an a. Geraint and E. 51
Ambush (See also Lilac-ambush) Lances in a set ; D. of F. Women 28
Ambush 'd meanings a under all they saw, Tiresias 5
Ambushing poisonous counsels, wayside a's — Gareth and L. 432
Amen yet I take it with A . Lancelot and E. 1223
.1 ! Nay, I can burn. Sir J. Oldcastle 172
Amend might a it by the grace of Heaven, Geraint and E. 53
Amends Can thy love. Thy beauty, make a, Tithonus 24
She made me divine a Maud / to 13
Well, we will make a.' Gareth and L. 300
A hereafter by some gaudy-day, Marr. of Geraint 818
Courteous — a for gauntne.ss — Merlin and V. 104
our a for all we might have done — Columbus 34
Amethyst chrysoprase, Jacynth, and a — ,, 86
Amid gap they had made — Four a thoasands ! Heavy Brigade 24
Golden branch a the shadows. To Virgil 27
Why not bask a the senses By an Evolution. 6
bracken a the gloom of the heather. June Bracken, etc., 9
Amiss There's somewhat in this world « Miller's D. 19
Kind to Maud ? that were not a. Maud I xix 82
pray you check me if I ask a — Guiiievere 324
Amity idioted By the rough a of the other, Aylmefs Field 591
Ammon my race Hew'd A , hip and thigh, 7>. if F. Wmnen 238
Ammonian A Oasis in the waste. A Uaxiiuler 8
Ammonite Huge A's, and the first bones of Time ; Princess, Pro., 15
Amo ' lo t'a ' — and these diamonds — The Ring 70
This very ring To t'a ? „ 1-34
This ring ' lo t'a ' to his best beloved, ,, 210
cried ' I see him. To t'«, lo t'a.' ,, 223
call thro' this ' lo t'a ' to the heart Of Miriam ; ,, 234
' lo t'rt, all is well then.' Muriel fled. ,, 271
You love me still ' lo t'a.'— „ 291
' lo t'a, lo t'a' ! ' flung herself ,, 397
even that ' lo t'a,' those three sweet Italian words, ,, 406
Amoighty (Almighty) ' The a's a taakin o'
you to 'iss^n, (repeat) N. Fanner, 0. S., 10, 26
Amorous (See cdso All-amorou^ Human-amorous)
with argent-lidded eyes A, Arabian Nights 136
Of temper a, as the first of May, Princess i 2
High nature a of the good, In Mem. cix 9
Amorously kiss Thy taper fingers a, Madeline 44
shall we dandle it a ? Boddicea 33
A-mountin' we 'card 'im a-m oop 'igher an' 'igher. North. Cobbler 47
Amourist your modem a is of easier, earthlior
make. Locksley IT., Sixty, 18
Amphion In days of old yl, AmphionW
Amuck Ran a Malayan a against the times, Aylmer's Field 463
Amulet What « drew her down ,, 507
kept it as a sacred a About mo, — The Ring 442
Amurath (Turkish Emperor) Or A of the East ? Sir J. Oldcastle 97
Amy I said, ' My cousin A, speak, Locksley Hall 23
0 my A, mine no more ! „ 39
A's arms about my neck — Locksley H., Sixty, 13
Amy (cmitinued) A loyed me, A fail'd me, A was
a timid child ; Locksley H., Sixty, 19
often I and A in the mouldering aisle have .stood, ,, 31
Lies my A dead in child-birth, ,, 36
Hero to-day was A with me, ,, 53
of .fl 's kin and mine art left to me. ,, 56
our latest meeting — A — sixty years ago — ,, 177
Amygdaloid trap and tuflf, .1 and trachyte. Princess Hi 363
Ana Ere days, that deal in a. Will Water. 199
Anadem Lit light in wreaths and a's, Palace of Art 186
A-naggin ' Moother 'ed beiin a-n about the gell Chvd Rod 69
Anakim I felt the thews of ..4, InMem.ciii^l
Analyse and a Onr double nature, Supp. Confessions 174
Anarch wearied of Autocrats, A 's, and Slaves, Tlie hreamer 10
Anathema Thunder '■A,' friend, at you ; To F. D. Maurice 8
Anatolian Ghost Crag -cloister ; A G ; To Ulysses 43
Anatomic not found among them all One a.' Princess Hi 307
Ancestor those fixt ayes of painted a's Aylmer's Field 832
Anchor (s) with silver a left afloat, Arabian Nights 93
there was no a, none. To hold by.' The Epic 20
Nor a dropt at eve or morn ; The Voyage 82
A's of rusty fluke, and boats Enoch Arden 18
Cast all your cares on God ; that a holds. ,, 222
lay At a in the flood below ; In Mem. ciii 20
my love Waver'd at a with me. Lover's Tale i 65
Anchor (verb) Why not yet A thy frailty there, Supp. Confessions 124
To a by one gloomy thought ; Two Voices 459
Anchor'd Tho' a to the bottom, such is he.' Pnncess iv 257
A tawny pirate a in his port. Merlin and V. 558
Half-swallow'd in it, a with a chain ; Holy Grail 803
Anchorite a Would haunt the desolated fane, St. Teleinachus 12
Ancients (s) For we are ^4 's of the earth. Day- Dm,, L' Envoi \9
Ancle See Ankle
'And (hand) an" thy muther coom to 'a, N. Farmed', N. S., 21
But I puts it inter 'er 'a's North. Cobbler 72
an' poonch'd my 'a wi' the hawl, ,, 78
Fur I couldn't 'owd 'a's off gin, „ 84
An" 'e spanks 'is 'a into mine, ,, 92
new Squire's coom'd wi' 'is taail in 'is 'a, (repeat) Village Wife 14, 121
'e 'ed hallus a booiJk i' 'is 'a, ,, 26
an' our Nelly she gied me 'er 'a, ,, 111
An' that squeedg'd m t'a i' the shed, Spinsta-'s S's. 39
Or sits wi' their 'a's afoor 'em, ,, 86
An' 'is 'air coom'd off i' my 'a's Oivd Rod 100
Anemone (See. also 'Enemies) bum'd The red a. D. of F. Women 72
Crocus, a, violet, To F, D. Maurice 44
among the gardens, auriculas, a's. City Child 4
'Ang'd (hanged) Noiikswur'a for it oop at'soize — N'. Fanner, 0. S., 36
Angel (adj.) So sweet a face, such a grace. Beggar Maid 13
With books, with flowers, with A offices. Princess vii 26
a dearer being, all dipt In A instincts, ,, 321
Rings to the roar of an a onset — Milton 8
And be found of a eyes Helen's Toicev 11
The toll of funeral in an A ear D. of the Duke of C. 10
Angel (s) (See also Earth-Angel, Hangel)
When a's spake to men aloud, Supp. Confessious 25
once by man and a's to be seen. The Kraken 14
Like that strange a which of old. Clear -headeil friend 24
thyself a little lower ' Than a's. Tim Voice^s 199
temper'd with the tears Of a's To With Pal. of Art 19
slept St. Cecily ; An a look'd at her. Palace of Art 100
a's rising and descending met ,, 143
March-morning I heard the a's call ; May Queen, Cmi., 25
saw An a stand and watch me, St. S. Stylitcs 35
Is that the a there That holds ., 203
Three a's bear the holy Grail : Sir Galahad 42
And, stricken by an a's hand, ,, 69
been as God's good a in our house. Enoch Ardeit 423
Fair as the A that said ' Hail ! * Aylmer's Field 681
himself Were that great A ; Sea, Dreams 27
devil in man, there is an a too, ,, 278
His a broke his heart. ,, 280
' lest some classic A speak In scorn Princess Hi 70
the woman's yl guards you, ,, r 410
No A, but a dearer being, ,, vii .320
Angel
10
Annie
Angel (b) (coh/ih ued) Whose Titan a's, Gabriel, Abdiel, Milton 5
My guardian a will sjieak out In Mem. xltv 15
1 found an a of the night ; ,, Ixix 14
An a watching an urn Wept Maud I viii 3
ship and sail and a's blowing on it : lialin and Balan 365
a's of our Lord's report. Merlin and V. 16
I pray him, send a sudden A down Ijincelot and E. 1424
So that the a's vrere amazed, Holy Qrail 451
a't, awful shapes, and wings and eyes. ,, 848
I, and Arthur and the a's hear, Last Toumuinent 350
we are not a's here Nor shall be :
face, Which then was as an a's,
I to her became Her guardian and her a,
Come like an a to a damned soul,
like the waft of an A 's wing ;
Till you find the deathless .1
mountain-walls Young a's pass.
hear a death-bed ,1 whisper 'Hope.'
Angelo The bar of Michael A .
Anger (b) Delicious spites and darling a's,
Then wax'd her a stronger.
as with a kind of a in him,
his a reddens in the heavens ;
their ravening eagle rose In a,
troubled, as if with a or pain :
all their a in miraculous utterances,
an a, not by blood to be satiated.
The bitter springs of a and fear ;
Till I with as fierce an a spoke,
vassals of wine and a and lust,
strength of a thro' mine arms,
And when his a tare him,
ruth began to work Against his a
or hot, God's curse, with a —
beast, whose a was his lord.
As acme wild turn of a,
turn of a bom Of your misfaith ;
Vivien, frowning in true a,
breaths of a iJuflTd Her fairy nostril
his a slowly died Within him,
too faint and sick am I For a :
first her a, leaving Pelleas,
storm of a brake From Guinevere,
as a falls aside And withers
so fluster'd with a were they
and in a we sail'd away.
great God, Ares, burns in a still
climbing from the bath In a ;
And a's of the Gods for evil done
and quench The red God's a,
And who, when his a was kindled,
moment's a of bees in their hive '{ —
sound of a like a distant storm.
wild horse, a, plunged To fling me.
Rolling her a Thro' blasted valley
Anger (verb) A 's thee most, or a's thee at all ? .
Anger charm 'd Sat a-c from sorrow,
Anger'dfadj.) (.See «/*<> Half-anger'd) The flush
of a shame O'erflows
Those dragon eyes of a Eleanor
(Weth spake A, 'Old Master,
Sick ? or for any matter a at me ? '
most of these were mute, some o,
I was jealous, a, vain,
Anger'd (verb) jealousies Which a her. Who a
JameM T
'So Merlin riddling a me ;
a saying that a her.
But he a me all the more,
an' be a me more and more.
Kh ! how I « Arundel asking me
Angerly Again thou blushest a ;
Angle (comerl We nib each other's a's down,
Angle (race of people) Saxon and A from
Over the broad billow
Guinevere 596
Lover's Tale i 393
673
In the. Chad. Hasp. 38
Locksley H., Sixtj/, 278
Early Spring 12
Romney's R. 148
In Menu Ixxxvii 40
Madeline 6
T}i£ Goose 30
Enoch Arden 392
Princess iv 386
Ode on Well. 120
Grandmother 65
Boadicea 23
„ 52
Maud / X 49
„ // i 17
43
Gareth and L. 948
1340
Geraint and E. 102
661
Balin and Balan 488
Merlin and V. 521
531
691
848
891
Lancelot and E. 1087
Pelleas and E. 289
Gxdnevere 361
Lover's Tale i 9
V. of Maeldune 25
54
Tiresias 11
n 41
„ 62
„ L58
The Wreck 17
Vastness 35
T)ie Ring 119
Akhar's Ih-eam 118
Kapiolani 11
Lucretius 75
Aybner's Field 728
Madeline 32
D. ofF. Women 2r>5
Gareth and L. 280
Baiin and Balan 276
Last Tournament 210
Happy 66
Tlie Brook 100
Com. of Arthur 412
Last Tmirnament 628
First Quarrel 64
66
^r J. Oldcaslle 135
Madeline 45
In Mem. Ixxxix 40
Bait, of Brunanburh 118
Angled But a in the higher pool.
a with them for her pupil's love :
Angling loft That a to the mother.
Angrier I never ate with a appetite
Angry Hungry for honour, a for his king.
Hortensia pleading : a was her face.
— it makes me a now.
makes me a yet to speak of it —
Anguisant (King of Erin) With A of Erin,
Morganore,
Anguish Life, a, death, immortal love,
' Thine a will not let thee sleep,
' Or that this a fleeting hence,
down in hell Suffer endless «,
Beauty and a walking hand in hand
She loveth her own a deep
Shall I heed them in their a ?
My deeper a also falls,
My a hangs like shame.
inher a found The casement :
Sweat, writhings, a, labouring
in the sudden a of her heart
became A intolerable.
Life with its a, and horrors, and errors —
Animal (adj.) With a beat and dire insanity ?
Animal (s) "rhe single pure and perfect a,
Animalism Hetairai, curious in their art,
Hired a's,
Ankle-Ancle From head to ande fine.
One praised her ancles, one her eyes.
At last I hook'd my ankle in a vine,
Behind his ankle twined her hollow feet
Ankle-bells To make her smile, her golden a-h.
Ankle-bones feet unmortised from their a-b
Ankle-deep And brushing a-d in flowers,
Ankle-wing as it were with Mercury's a-w,
Anlaf (Danish King) Sparing not any of "Those
that with A ,
Earls of the army of A Fell
nor had A With armies so broken
Annal-book Merlin did In one great a-h,
Annals Holding the folded a of my youth ;
Told him, with other a of the port,
with a day Blanch'd in our a,
Bead the wide world's a, you,
glorious a of army and fleet,
Anne is gone, you say, little A ?
I had not wept, little A , not since
Annie {See also Annie Lee, Hannie) While A
still was mistress ;
and make a home For A :
a home For A , neat and nestlike,
Enoch and A, sitting hand-in-hand,
set A forth in trade With all that seamen
moving homeward came on A pale,
to break his purposes To A ,
A fought against his will :
Bought A goods and stores,
A seem'd to hear Her own death-scaffold
would work for A to the last,
A's fears, Save, as his A's,
' A , this voyage by the grace of God
A , come, cheer up before I go. '
A, the ship I sail in passes here
' A , my girl, cheer up, be comforted,
When A would have raised him
A from her baby's forehead dipt
same week when A buried it,
but A, seated with her grief,
'^1,1 came to ask a favour of you. '
A , now — Have we not known each other
A — for I am rich and well-to-do.
A with her brows against the wall
ask'd ' Then you will let me, A ? '
for A 's sake, Fearing the lazy gossip
Miller's D. 64
Princess Hi 93
The Ring 356
Geraint and E. 233
Princess vB14
,, vii 132
Grandmother 44
Lover's Tale iv 135
Com. of Arthur 115
Arabian Nights 73
T^vo Voices 49
235
Lotos-Eaters, C. S., 124
D. ofF. Women \h
To J. S. 42
Boadicea 9
In Mem. xix 15
Ma%id II iv 74
Guinevere 586
Pass, of Arthur 115
Lover's Tcde i 702
„ a 138
Despair 48
iMcretius 163
Princess vii 306
Lucretius 53
Talking Oak 224
Beggar Maid 11
Princess iv 268
Merlin and V. 240
579
552
In Mem, Ixxxix 49
Lucretius 201
Batt. of Brunanburh 46
53
81
Com. of Arthur 158
Gardener's D. 244
Enoch Arden 702
Princess vi 63
Locksley H., Sixty, 104
Vastness 7
Grandmother 1
63
Enoch Arden 26
48
59
69
138
149
156
158
169
174
180
183
190
200
214
218
232
235
271
280
285
305
311
314
323
334
Annie
11
Answered
Annie {continued) Philip did not fathom
A 's mind :
one evening A's children long'd To go
And A would go with them ;
For was not A with them ?
' Listen, A , How merry they are
Tired, A ? ' for she did not speak
And A said ' I thought not of it :
* A, there is a thing upon my mind,
0 A, It is beyond all hope,
answer'd .1 ; tenderly she spoke :
^ A, as I have waited all my life
fearing night and chill for A,
At A 's door he p>aused and gave
'A, when I spoke to you,
A weeping answer'd ' I am bound.'
'Take your own time, A, take
A could have wept for pity of him ;
chanced That A could not sleep,
never merrily beat A 's heart.
The babes, their babble, A ,
home Where A lived and loved him,
His gazing in on A , his resolve,
tell my daughter A, whom I saw
For, A, you see, her father was not the man
1 cannot cry for him, A :
Why do you look at me, A ?
at your age, A , I could have wept (repeat)
I mean your grandfather, A :
But soihng another, A,
Shadow and shine is life, little A,
children. A, they're all about me yet.
my A who left me at two,
my own little .4, an ^ like you :
in this Book, little A , the message
Get me my glasses, A :
Hall but Miss A , the heldest,
but Miss A she said it wur draains,
Hoanly Miss A were saw stuck oop,
An' es for Miss A es call'd me afoor
taake it kindly ov owd Miss A
0 A, what shall I do ? '
A consider'd. ' If I,' said the wise little A,
That was a puzzle for A .
Enoch Arden 344
362
364
371
388
390
395
399
„ 402
„ 422
435
443
447
448
451
,, 466
467
490
513
606
685
863
882
Qraiuiniother 5
15
17
„ 20, 100
23
36
60
76
77
78
96
„ 106
Village Wife 8
11
59
„ 105
„ 109
In the Child, ffosp. 47
48
55
A L, The prettiest little
Annie Lee (See also Annie)
damsel Enoch Arden 11
A later but a loftier A L, ,, 748
Annihilate eagle's beak and talon a us ? Boddicea 11
Announced ^1 the coming doom, and fulminated Sea Dreams 22
Annulet And into many a listless «, Qei-aint and E. 258
Answer (s) Our thought gave « each to each, Sonnet To 10
The sullen a slid betwixt : Two Voices 226
There must be a to his doubt, ,, 309
I spoke, but a came there none : ,, 425
To which my soul made a readily : Palace of Art 17
Not rendering true a, AI. d' Arthur 74
some sweet a, tho' no a came. Gardener's I). 159
let me have an a to my wish ; Dwa 30
before thine a given Departest, Titlwnns 44
an a peal'd from that high land. Vision of Sin 221
Rejoicing at that a to his prayer. Enoch Arden 127
such a voluble a promising all, ,, 903
And Leolin's horror-stricken a, Aylmer's Field 318
hush'd itself at last Hopeless of a: ,, 543
therewithal an rt vague as wind : Pnncess i 45
In this report, this a of a king, ,, 70
Her a was ' Leave me to deal with that.' ,, Hi 149
a which, half-muffled in his beard, ,, v 234
oozed All o'er with honey'd a ,, 242
I lagg'd in a loth to render up ,, 299
shall have her a by tho word.' ,, 327
Last, Ida's o, in a royal hand, ,, 371
what a should I give ? ,, mi 6
The noblest a unto such Is perfect Lit. Squabbles 19
it seem'd that an a came. The Victim 24
Answer (s) (continued) Bark an a, Britain's
doubts and a's here proposed,
What hope of a, or redress ?
But Death returns an a sweet :
A faithful a from the breast,
win An a from my lips,
Make a, Maud my bliss,
old Seer made a playing on him
said your say ; Mine a was my deed,
being still rebuked, would a still
Made a sharply that she should not
So moving without a to her rest
He made a wrathful a : ' Did I wish
he flung a wrathful a back :
Made a, either eyelid wet
Is that an a for a noble knight ?
Full simple was her a, ' What know I ?
all their a's were as one :
And when his a chafed them,
Percivale made a not a word.
Well then, what a ? '
voice about his feet Sent up an a
when she drew No a, by and by
a mournful a made the Queen :
Not rendering true a,
Had made a silent a :
to that passionate a of full heart
an a came Not from the nurse —
all the night an a shrill'd.
Answer (verb) And a's to his mother's calls
I shall know Thy voice, and a
Or a should one press his hands '(
He a's not, nor understands.
' But thou canst a not again.
Or thou wilt a but in vain.
0 will she a if I call ?
you dare to a thus !
To that man My work shall a,
He will a to the purpose.
Scarce a to my whistle ;
in gentle murmur. When they a
could a him, If question'd,
to a. Madam, all those hard things
Madam, you should a, we would ask)
told me she would a us to-day,
a, echoes, dying, dying, dying, (repeat)
a, echoes, a, dying, dying, dying.
{A, 0 a) We give you his life.'
' 0 wife, what use to a now ?
A each other in the mist.
Love would a with a sigh,
whatever is ask'd her, a's 'Death.'
wilt thou not a this ?
musing ' Shall I a yea or nay ? '
but a scorn with scorn.
it shall a for me. Ljsten to it.
But shall it ? a, darling, a, no.
To a that which came :
he had Scarce any voice to a,
Doth question'd memory a not,
if my neighbour whistle a's him —
Highlanders a with conquering cheers,
Who then will have to a,
' give it to me, ' but he would not a me —
Answer'd To which he a scoffingly ;
in that time and place she a me.
But William a short ;
William a madly ; bit his lips,
he a me ; And well his words
plagiarised a heart. And a
in mimic cadence a James —
She a to my call,
A all queries touching those at home
Echo a in her sleep From hollow fields :
a sharply that I talk'd astray.
raven ! Boadicea 13
In Mem. xlviii 3
,, Ivi 27
,, Ixxxv 14
,, ciii 50
Maud I xviii 57
Gareth and L. 252
1175
1249
Man: of Geraint 196
■„ 530
Geraint and E. 76
146
Merlin and V. 379
Lancelot and E. 201
671
Holy Grail 284
673
Pelleas and E. 534
Last Tournament 713
761
Guinevere 162
„ 841
Pass, of Arthur 242
Lover's Tale iv 96
Sisters (E. and E.) 259
The Wreck 143
Demeter and P. 61
Supp. Confessions 159
My life is full 10
Tivo Voices 245
246
310
312
Miller's D. 118
Dora 26
Love and Duty 29
Locksley Hall 55
Amphion 68
L. of Burleigh 50
Enoch Arden 653 .
Princess ii 345
" ...^^^
,, Hi 166
„ ivQ, 12
,, iv 18
The Victim 15
„ 55
In Mem. xxviii 4
,, XXXV 13
Maud I i 4
,, xviii 59
Cmn. of Arthur 426
Gareth and L. 953
Merlin and V. 386
397
Holy Grail 12
„ 434
Lover's Tale i 277
,, iv 161
Def. of Lucknow 99
Columbus 213
Bandit's Death 27
Two Voices 37
Gardener's D. 231
Dora 22
„ 33
Edwin Mo7Ti.i 24
Talking Oak 20
Golden Year 53
Will Water. 106
Aylmer's Fidd 465
Princess, Pro., 66
,, Hi 140
Answer'd
12
Approved
Answer'd {condnuetf) I a nothing, doubtful in
when have I a thee ?
Gods have a ; We give them the wife ! '
Doubt not ye the Gk)ds have a,
The * wilt thou ' «, and again
and a me In riddling triplets
Gareth « them With laughter,
Sir Gareth a, laughingly,
thou hast ever a courteously,
reviled, hast a graciously,
A Sir Gareth graciously to one
ask'd it of him, Who a as before ;
« with such craft as women use,
not dead ! ' she a in all haste.
Enid a, harder to be moved
truest eyes that ever a Heaven,
I am a, and henceforth
ever well and readily a he :
Lancelot spoke And a him at full,
in ber heart she a it and said,
he a not, Or short and coldly,
whom she a with all calm.
He a with his eyes upon the ground,
Lancelot a nothing, but he went,
a not, but, sharply turning,
she a, and she laugh'd,
Gawain a kindly tho* in scorn,
a them Even before high God.
he a not, * Or hast thou other griefs ?
was a softly by the King
I should have a his farewell.
To all their queries a not a word,
Julian, sitting by her, a all :
he a her wail with a song —
Answering a under crescent brows ;
a now my random stroke
a not one word, she led the way.
to the court of Arthur a yea.
Ant one whose foot is bitten by an a,
What Ls it all but a trouble of a's
Antagonism in the teeth of clench 'd a's
And toppling over all a
And, toppling over all a,
Anthem a sung, is charm'd and tied
sound of the sorrowing a roH'd
Anther With a's and with dust :
Antibabylonianism And loud -lung'd ^r«
Antichrist He leans on ^1 ; or that his mind,
Tliat mock-meek mouth of utter ,1,
Antiquity A front of timher-crost a,
Anton (a knight) This is the son of A, not the
Arthur born of Gorlois, Others of ^ ? '
And gave him to Sir /I,
else the child of A , and no king,
Antony (Mark) >'^e. Mark Antony
Anvil Hilvcr hammern falling On silver a's,
iron-clanging a bang'd With hammers ;
Ansrthing He never meant us a I but good.
iJehoId, we know not a ;
can nee elsewhere, a so fair.
Henceforth in all the world at «,
Apartment die<l Of fright in far u'a.
Ape (s) In Ijed like monstrous u'a
And let tho a and tiger die.
Hi* action like tho greater «,
moods of tiger, or of a ?
Ape (Terb) should « Those monstrous males
as far As J could a their treble,
Aphrodite Here comes to-day, Pallas and A,
Idalinn A lioautiful.
Apocalyptic a« if he held The A millstone,
Apollo strange song J heard A sing,
another of our (}<k1«. the Sun, A,
Apology But ended with a so sweet,
No loM than one divine u.
myself Princess iii 272
„ mi 4
The Victim 78
BoSdicea '23.
In Mem. Con., 54
Com, of Arthur 401
Gareth and L. 208
„ 1007
1167
„ 1269
1414
Marr. of Geraint 205
Geraint and E. 352
542
694
842
Merlin and V. 879
Lancelot and E. 269
286
786
,, 886
■ 997
13.52
1387
Holy Grail 739
Pelleas ami E. 132
,, 333
462
598
Guinevere 44
„ 615
Lover's Tale iv 3-33
340
Tlve Dreamer 16
Princess ii 428
In Mem. xxxix 2
Geraint and E. 495
Com. of Arthur 446
Pelleas and E. 184
Vastness 4
Princess iv 465
Marr. of Geraint 491
Geraint and E. 834
D. of F. Women 193
Ode on Well. 60
Talking Oak 184
Sea iJreams 252
Sir J. Oldcastle 74
170
Enoch Arden 692
King.' Com. of Arthur 74
171
„ 222
233
Princess i 217
,, V.504
Enoch Arden 887
In Mem. liv 13
Marr. of Geraint 499
Geraint and E. 649
Princess vi 371
St. 8. Stylites 174
In Mem. cxviii 28
,, atxll
Makiuf/ of Man 2
Princess Hi 309
,, iw 92
CEnone 86
., 174
Sea Dreams 26
Tithonus 62
Lua-etius 125
Geraint and K. 394
louver's Tale iv 169
Apostle shrive myself No, not to an yl.*
Apothegm My curse upon the Master's a.
Appal A me from the quest.'
Appall'd cliff-side, a them, and they said,
In our most need, a them,
Apparel in her hand A suit of bright a,
store of rich a, sumptuous fare,
a as might well beseem His princess,
clothed her in a like the day.
Appeal (s) She the a Brook'd not,
' Thou makest thine a to me :
tho' it spake and made «
she lifted up A face of sad a,
Appeal (verb) a Once more to France or England
Appeal'd a To one that stood beside.
And with a larger faith a
Appealing A to the bolts of Heaven ;
Appear Shadows of the world a.
made a Still-lighted in a secret shrine.
Falling had let a the brand of John —
things a the work of mighty Gods.
Thy marble bright in dark a's.
Which makes a the songs I made
Shall I a, 0 Queen, at Camelot,
beauties of the work a The darkest faults :
and now the morn a's,
Miriam your Mother might a to me.
Appear'd The very graves a to smile,
now that shadow of mischance a
blew and blew, but none a :
the work To both a so costly,
a, low-built but strong ;
never yet Had heaven a so blue.
Appearing A ere the times were ripe,
dark in the golden grove A,
Appeased holy Gods, they must be a,
Appertain all That a's to noble maintenance.
Appetite I never ate with angrier a
Applauded mildly, that all hearts A,
Applause (See also Self-applause) might reap
the a of Great,
the Trojans roar'd a ;
Shall he for whose a I strove,
To laughter and his comrades to a.
Apple full-juiced «, waxing over-mellow,
swung an a of the purest gold,
a's by the brook Fallen, and on the lawns.
and ate The goodly a's,
The warm white a of her throat,
peak of the mountain was a's,
Apple-arbiter beardless a-a Decided fairest.
Apple-blossom Fresh a-h, blushing for a boon.
cheek of a-h. Hawk-eyes ;
Apple-cheek'd a bevy of Eroses a-c,
Apple-tree and o'er the brook Were a-t's.
Appliances With half a night's «,
Application And liberal a's lie In Art
Appraised A his weight, and fondled
A tho Lycian custom,
Apprehend And thro' thick veils to a
Approach (s) less achievable By slow a'es.
Preserve a broad a of fame.
Approach (verb) and let him presently A ,
a To save the life despair'd of,
A and fear not ;
Morning-Star, a, Arm me,'
' A and arm mo ! '
Approach'd « Melissa, tinged with wan
A V)etween them toward the King,
as the great knight A them :
A him, and with full affection said,
Approaching A , press'd you heart to heart.
A thro' the darkness, call'd ;
Approve And wishes me to a him.
Approved She wore the colours I a.
Sir J. Oldcastle 147
Roviney's R. 37
Gareth and L. 1331
Lancelot and E. 1253
Columbus 71
Marr. of Geraint 678
709
758
Geraint and E. 948
Princess vi 139
In Mem. Ivi 5
,, xcii 4
Merlin aiid V. 234
; Columbus 57
D. of F. Women 99
Talking Oak 15
Princess iv 372
L. of Shalott ii 12
Mariana in the S. 17
Aylm^r's Field 509
Lucretius 102
In Mem. loovii 5
„ Con., 21
Lancelot and E. 142
Sisters (E. and E.) 105
The Flight 18
The Ring 137
TJie Lettm-s 45
Enoch Arden 128
Princess v 336
Marr, of Geraint 638
Balin and Balan 333
Holy Grail 365
In Mem. Con. , 139
Last Toumamerit 380
The Victim 47
Man: of Geraint 712
Geraint and E. 233
„ 958
Princess iii 262
Spec of Iliad 1
In Menn. Ii 5
Geraint and E. 296
Lotos-Eaters, C. S., 33
Marr. of Geraint 170
Holy Grail 384
388
Last Tmimament 717
V. of Maeldune 63
Lucretius 91
The Brook 90
Gareth and L. 589
The Islet 11
Holy Gmil 384
Lover's Tale iv 93
Day-Dm., Moral 13
Enoch Arden 154
Princess ii 128
Two Voices 29Q
Princess iii 284
Oile on Well. 78
St. S. Stylites 216
Enoch Arden 830
Princess vii 353
Gareth and L. 924
1112
Princess iii 24
Gareth and L. 441
Lancelot and E. 180
1355
Miller's D. 160
Lancelot and E. 1000
Maud I xix 71
The Letters 16
Approved
13
Aristocrat
Approved (conimued) A him, bowing at their own
deserts Tlie Brook 128
and all the knights A him, Balin atid Bcdnn 210
Approven he by miracle was a King : Guinevere 296
Approvingly often talk'd of him A , Aylmer's Field 474
'Appy (happy) as 'a as 'art could think, North. Cobbler 15
1 loovs tha to maake thysen 'a, Spinster's S's. 57
maiike 'is owd aage as 'a as iver I can, Owd Rod 3
A-pre&chin' Fur they've bin a-p viea down, ChurcJi-warden, etc., 53
Apricot blanching a like snow in snow. , Prog, of Spring 30
April (adj.) When A nights began to blow, Millers D. 106
A hopes, the fools of chance ; Vision of Sin 164
And breathes in A autumns. Tlie Brrn^l; 196
clad her like an .l daffodilly Princess ii 324
Can trouble live with .1 days, In Mem. Ixxxiii 7
Thro' all the years of A blood ; „ dx 12
and my regret Becomes an A violet, ,, cxv 19
For all an A morning, till the ear Ldmcdot and E. 897
gustful A mom That puff'd Holy Grail 14
Green prelude, A promise, glad new-year Lover's Tale i 281
April (b) ('Twas ^1 then), I came and sat Miller's D. 59
And A s crescent glimmer'd cold, ,, 107
balmier than half-oj)ening buds Of A , Tithonvs 60
May or .1 , he forgot. The last of ^1 The Broiik 151
Her maiden babe, a double A old. Princess ii 110
To rain an A of ovation round Their statues, , , vi 66
From A on to ^1 went, In Mem. xxii 7
Make .1 of her tender eyes ; „ a^ 8
That keenlior in sweet A wakes, ,, cxvi 2
(For then was latter ^1) Com. of Arthtir 451
in A suddenly Breaks from a coppice Marr. of Ge)-aint 338
With ^4 and the swallow. T/ie Ring 60
Apt supple, sinew-corded, a at arms ; Pritwess v 535
a at arms and big of bone - Marr. of Geraint 489
A-ra&gin' (raging) fire was «-/• an' raavin' Owd Rod 110
Arab delicate A arch of her feet Maitd I xvi 15
Arabi (Leader of Egyptian Revolt, 1882) And
Wolseley overthrew A, Pro. to Gen. Hamley 31
Arabian nodding together In some ^1 night ? Maud I vii 12
I know not, your A sands ; To Ulysses 35
plunge old Merlin in the A sea : Garcth and L. 211
Arac (Prince) Not ev'n her brother .1, Princess i \b'i
rumour of Prince A hard at hand. ,, t? 112
speak with y4 : ^1 '» word is thrice ,, 226
midmost and the highest Was A: ,, 257
The genial giant. A, roll'd himself ,, 274
but we will send to her,' Said ^1, ,, 325
whereas I know Your prowess. A, , , 404
Down From those two bulks at A's side, ,, 499
From yl's arm, as from a giant's flail, ,, 500
but A rode him down : ,, 532
A, satiate with his victory. ,, vii 90
Arbaces A, and Phenomenon, and the rest, Tlie Brook 162
Arbiter See Apple-arbiter
Arbitrate to-morrow, a the field ; Last Tmirmiment 104
Arbitration Before his throne of « ,, 162
Arbour They read in a's dipt and cut, AmjjhionS^
Arbutus there ? yon a Totters ; Lucretius 184
Arc thro' a little a Of heaven, To J. S. 26
Bear had wheel'd Thro' a great a Princess iv 213
sine and a, spheroid and azimuth, ,, vi 256
Run out your measured a's, In Mem. cv 27
bridge of single a Took at a leap ; Gareth and L. 908
Arcady To many a flute of ^. In Mem. xxiii 24
Arch (b) (See also Innocent-arch, Portal-arch) Thro'
little crystal a'es low Arabian Nights 49
shadow'd grots of a'es interlaced. Palace of Art 51
Many an a high up did lift, ,, 142
round and round, and whirl'd in an a, M. d' Arthur 138
to three a'es of a bridge Crown'd Gardener's D. 43
Yet all experience is an a wherethro' Gleams Ulysses 19
we past an a. Whereon a woman-statue Princess i 209
Or under a'es of the marble bridge ,, ii 458
bloom profuse and cedar a'es Charm, Milton 11
the delicate Arab a of her feet Maud I xvi 15
Arch (b) (continued) round and round, and
whirl'd in an a,
Straining his eyes beneath an a of hand,
thro' the a Down those loud waters,
Arch (verb) fires that a this dusky dot —
Archbishop A, Bishop, Priors, Canons,
Arched See High-arched
Arching (See (dso Slow-arching) now a
leaves her bare To breaths
Architect You, the Patriot A,
Archives of crimeful record all My mortal a.
Archway Gleam thro' the Gothic a in the wall,
so thou pass Beneath this a,
a shatter'd a plumed with fern ;
While I shelter'd in this a
Arctic would dare Hell-heat or A cold,
Arden (surname) (See also Enoch, Enoch Arden)
' You A, you ! nay, — sure he was a foot Higher
Eh, let me fetch 'em, A,'
Arden (forest) face again. My Rosalind
in this A —
'Are (hare) An' 'e niver not shot one 'a,
Ares great God, A , burns in anger still
hail of A crash Along the sounding walls.
yesternight. To me, the great God A,
Argent The polish'd a of her breast
To yonder a round ;
Argent-lidded Serene with a-l eyes Amorous,
Argive On .1 heights divinely sang,
Argosy argosies of magic sails.
Arguing A boundless forbearance :
seem As a love of knowledge and of power ;
Argument Half -buried in some weightier a,
A-rilin' thowt she was nobbut a-r ma then.
Arimathsean Joseph See Joseph
A-ringing we heard them a-r the bell.
Arise Scarce outward signs of joy a,
Come forth, I charge thee, a,
I feel the tears of blood a
Or when little airs «,
Many suns a and set.
A, and let us wander forth,
I will a and slay thee with my hands.'
yearning for thy yoke, a,
mighty wind a's, roaring seaward.
Expecting when a fountain should a :
The thoughts that a in me.
pillars of the hearth A to thee ;
' A, and get thee forth and seek
A and fly The reeling Faun,
Morning a's stormy and pale.
And ah for a man to a in me,
A, my God, and strike, for we hold
war would a in defence of the right,
saw the dreary phantom a and fly
saying, ' A , and help us thou !
A And quickly pass to Arthur's hall,
these from all his life a, and cry.
Until my lord a and look upon me ? '
Till yonder man upon the bier a,
my dear lord a and bid me do it,
Until himself a a living man.
And by the great Queen's name, a
A, go forth and conquer as of old."
I will a and slay thee with my hands.'
A in open prospect — heath and hill,
A , my own true sister, come forth !
Arisen (See also Half -arisen) mountains have a
since With cities
Arising at Bible meetings, o'er the rest A,
from the floor, Tusklike, a,
horse, A wearily at a fallen oak,
goblet with a priceless wine A,
Ilion falling, Rome a,
Aristocrat what care J, A , democrat, autocrat-
Pass, of Arthur S06
„ 464
Lover's Tale i 58
Epilogue 52
Sir J. Oldcastle 159
Prog, of Spi'ing 12
On Jub. Q. Victoria 42
St. S. Stylites 159
Godiva 64
Gareth and L, 268
Marr. of Geraint 316
Locksley H., Sixty, 259
Ancient Sage 116
Enoch Arden 854
871
Sisters (E. and E.) 119
Village Wife 42
Tiresias 11
„ 96
„ 111
I). ofF. Women \5%
St. Agnes' Eve 16
Arabian Nights 135
In Mem. xo:iii 22
Locksley Hall 121
Aylmer's Field 317
Princess ii 57
Lucretius 9
Ovxl Rod 74
First Quarrel 21
Supp. Confessions 49
Ode to Memory 46
Oriana 77
Adeline 33
Miller's D. 205
239
M, d' Arthur 132
Tithonus 40
Locksley Hall 194
Vision of Sin 8
Break, break, etc. 4
Princess vii 217
In Mem, Ixxxv 79
,, cxviii 25
Maud I vi 1
„ X 67
// i 45
Maud' II I vi 19
36
Com. of A rthur 44
Gareth and L. 983
„ 1131
Geraint and E. 650
667
„ 666
706
B(din and Bnlan 482
Pass, of Arthur 6i
„ 300
Lover's Talc i 397
Tlie Flight 96
Merlin and V. 675
Sea Dreams 195
Ba/in and Balan 316
425
Lover's Tale iv 228
To Virgil^
Maud I xQ5
Ark
14
Arm
Ark sought'st to wreck ray mortal a, Tioo Voices 389
1 leave this mortal a behind, Jn Mem. odi 6
Rich as with priceless bones Bcdin and Sedan 110
Arm (s) (<S?# also Airm, Hairm) enormous polypi
Winnow with giant a's The Kraken 10
And with a sweeping of the a, A Character 16
Of wrath her right a whirl'd, Th« Poet 54
Sweet faces, rounded a's, Sea Fairies 3
Fold thine a's, turn to thy rest. A Dirge 3
right a debased The throne of Persia, Alexander 1
A glowing a, a gleaming neck, Miller's D. 78
When, a in a, we went along, ,, 163
Round my true heart thine a's entwine ,, 216
The kiss, The woven a's, seem ,, 232
Puts forth an «, and creeps (Enone 4
when I look'd, Paris had raised his a, >> 1^9
that my a's Were wound about thee, ,, 202
Sat smiling, babe in a. Palace of Art 96
my a was lifted to hew down D. of F. Women 45
humid a's festooning tree to tree, ,, 70
mailed Bacchus leapt into mj a's, „ 151
kneeling, with one a about her king, ,, 270
He held a goose upon his a, The Goose 5
He took the goose upon his a, ,, 41
an a Rose up from out the bosom M. d' Arthur 29
rose an a Clothed in white samite, ,, 143
behold an a. Clothed in white samite, ,, 158
with pain, reclining on his a, ,, 168
One a aloft — Gown'd in pure white. Gardener's D. 125
in the circle of his a's Enwound us both ; ,, 216
thrust him in the hollows of his a, Dora 132
To Francis, with a basket on his a, Audley Cohort 6
Sleep, Ellen, folded in thy sister's a, ,, 63
sleeping, haply dream her a is mine. „ 64
'Sleep, Ellen, folded in Emilia's a ; ,,65
in my weak, lean a's I lift the cross, St. S. Slylites 118
leg and a with love-knots gay. Talking Oak 65
She sank her head upon her a ,, 207
close and dark my a's I spread, ,, 225
I wither slowly in thine a's, Tithonus 6
Roll'd in one another's a's, Locksley Hall 58
Glows forth each softly-shadow'd a Day-Dm. Sleep. B. 13
And on her lover's a she leant, ,, Depart. 1
Mute with folded a's they waited — Tlie Captain 39
Her a's across her breast she laid Beggar Maid 1
We rush'd into each other's a's. The Letters 40
laid the feeble infant in his a's ; Enoch Arden 152
strong a's about his drooping wife, ,, 228
babe, who rear'd his creasy a's, ,, 751
he rose, he spread his a's abroad ,, 912
grovelike, each huge a a tree, Aylmer's Field 510
a's stretch'd as to grasp a flyer : ,, 588
sideways up he swung his a's, Sea Di'eavis 24
waved my a to warn them off ; ,, 132
raised your a, you tumbled down ,, 141
soft a, which, like the pliant bough , , 290
roll thy tender a's Round him, Lucretius 82
her « lifted, eyes on fire — Princess, Pro., 41
long a's and hands Reach'd out, ,, i 28
lapt In the a's of leisure, ,, w 168
holding out her lily a's Took both his hands, ,, 303
Herself and Lady Psyche the two a's; ,, Hi 35
then Oaring one a, and bearing in my left ,, iv 183
drew My burthen from mine a's ; ,, 192
A Niobijan daughter, one a out, ,, 371
She stretch'd her a's and call'd ,, 496
From Arac's a, as from a giant's flail, ,, v 500
Ida stood With Psyche's babe in a : „ vi 31
on every side A thousand a'$ ,, 37
glittering axe was broken in their a's, „ 51
a'$ were shattor'd to the shoulder blade. ,, 52
and with the l>abe yet in her a's, j, 74
reach its fatling innocent a's ,^ 138
in your own «'« To hold your own, ^^ 177
breast that fed or a that dandled you, 181
Arm (b) (continued) from mine a's she rose Glowing Princess vii 159
and Jenny hung on his a. Grandmother 42
he turn'd and claspt me in his a's, , , 55
So dear a life your a's enfold The Daisy 93
She cast her a's about the child. The Victim 32
He stay'd his a's upon his knee : ,,54
And moves his doubtful a's, and feels Jn Mem. xiii 3
When Science reaches forth her a's „ xxi 18
Laid their dark a's about the field, (repeat) In Mevi. xcv 16, 52
They mix in one another's a's In Mem. cii 23
That watch'd her on her nurse's a, „ Con. 46
To find the a's of my true love Maud II iv 3
So well thine a hath wrought for me to-day." Com. of Arthur 127
«'s Stretch'd under all the cornice Gareth and L. 218
with a kindly hand on Gareth's a , , 578
bears a skeleton figured on his a's, ,, 640
lifted either a, ' Fie on thee, King ! ,, 657
His a's, the rosy raiment, and the star. ,, 938
Sun Heaved up a ponderous a ,, 1045
writhed his wiry a's Around him, ,, 1150
Lifted an a. and softly whisper'd, ,, 1361
a's on which the standing muscle sloped, Man; of Gerainl 76
' 0 noble breast and all-puissant a's, ,, 86
Not to be folded more in these dear a's, ,, 99
Claspt the gray walls with hairy-fibred a's, ,, 323
Down by the length of lance and a Gerainl and E. 463
and she cast her a's About him, % ,, 761
His a half rose to strike again, but fell : Balin and Balan 223
If a of flesh could lay him.' ,, 299
either lock'd in cither's a. ,, 632
woven paces and with waving a's. Merlin and V, 207
curved an a about his neck, ,, 241
made her lithe a round his neck Tighten, ,, 614
gentle wizard cast a shielding a. ,, 908
rose. Her a's upon her breast across, ,, 910
sloping down to make A 's for his chair, Lancelot and E, 438
battle-writhen a's and mighty hands „ 812
innocently extending her white a's, „ 932
armlet for the roundest a on earth, „ 1183
an a to which the Queen's Is haggard, „ 1226
Caught from his mother's a's — ,, 1405
often in her a's She bare me, ,, 1410
milky a Red-rent with hooks of bramble, Holy Grail 210
she rose Opening her a's to meet me, „ 395
Open'd his a's to embrace me as he came, ,, 417
every moment glanced His silver a's ,, 493
Hold her a wealthy bride within thine a's, „ 621
in her white a's Received, Last Tournament 23
Why ye not wear on a, or neck, or zone ,, 36
Eight a of Arthur in the battlefield, „ 202
wert lying in thy new leman's a's.' ,, 625
For feel this a of mine — ,, 690
milkwhite a's and shadowy hair Guinevere 416
while yet Sir Lancelot, my right a „ 429
Then she stretch'd out her a's and cried ,, 606
an a Rose up from out the bosom Pass, of Arthur 197
rose an a Clothed in white samite, „ 311
behold an a. Clothed in white samite, „ 326
with pain, reclining on his a, „ 336
on one a The flaxen ringlets of our infancies Lover's Tale i 233
Bent o'er me, and my neck his a upstay'd. ,, 690
Love's a's were wreath'd about the neck of
Hope, „ 815
I wound my a's About her : ,, H 200
softly put his a about her neck ,, iv 71
Holding his golden burthen in his a's, ,, 89
To greet us, her young hero in her a's ! ,, 171
bearing high in a's the mightly babe, „ 295
bearing on one a the noble babe, „ 370
sisters closed in another's a's, Sisters (E. and E.) 155
' Emmie, you put out your a's. In the Child. IIosp. 56
It's the little girl with her a's lying out ,, 58
little a's lying out on the counterpane ; „ 70
I spread mine a's, God's work, I said, Sir J. Oldcastle 136
As I lean'd away from his a's— The Wreck 102
Arm
Arm (s) {conlimicd) ' Woman '—he graspt at my
Ah, clasp me in your a's, sister,
0 would I were in Edwin's a's —
1 feel'd thy a es I stood
Amy's a's about my neck —
' Mother ! ' and I was folded in thine a's.
hero, my child, tho' folded in thine a's,
And dying rose, and rear'd her a's,
happy had I died within thine a's,
and Kome was a babe in as,
' 0 what an a,' said the king.
Arm (verb) to a in proof, and guard about
Morning-star, approach, A me,'
' Approach and a me ! '
Arm-chair Her father left his good a-c,
small goodraan Shrinks in his a-c
When asleep in this a-c '(
So I sits i' my oiin a-c
Arm'd (.*^ also All-arm'd, Full-arm'd, Plump
one that a Her own fair head,
Sleep must lie down n, for tho villainous
fair, strong, a— But to be won by force —
who alway rideth a in black.
These a him in blue arms, and gave
damsel came. And a him in old axms,
wholly a, behind a rock In shadow,
horsemen waiting, wholly a.
And each of them is wholly a,
issuing a ho found the host and cried,
ho a himself and went,
There two stood a, and kept the door ;
and we ride, A as ye see,
• knights ^4 for a day of glory before the King.
a by day and night Against the Turk ;
Armlet a for the roundest arm on earth,
n for an arm to which the Queen's
Armour And as he rode his a rung.
This mortal a that I wear.
His own forefathers' arms and « hung.
Your very a hallow'd, and your statues
When rt clash'd or jingled,
he had ask'd For horse and a :
so ye cleave His a off him,
hew'd great pieces of his a off him,
youth who scour'd His master's a ;
slay him and will have his horse And a,
and possess your horse And a,
three gay suits of a which they wore,
bound the suits Of a on their horses.
Their three gay suits of a, each from each,
heap'd The pieces of his a in one place,
glimmer'd on his a in the room.
' Take Five horsea and their a's ; '
palfrey heart enough To bear his a ?
Bled underneath his a secretly,
A light of a by him flash,
moved Among us in white «, Galahad,
one that on me moved In golden a
horse In golden a jewell'd everywhere :
In silver a suddenly Galahad shone
In silver-shining a starry -clear ;
Wherefore now thy horse And a :
Behold hia horse and a.
he that hath His horse and a :
In blood-red a sallying.
And all her golden a on the grass,
Armour'd And a all in forest green.
Armourer riding further past an a's, Who,
Whereat the a turning all amazed
Armoury from Jehovah's gorgeous armouries,
Arms (weapons) a, orpmcer of brain, or birth
Thase men thine a withstood,
one might show it at a joust of a,
broke a close with force and a :
Uia own forefathers' a and armour hung.
15
Aromat
a— The Wreck 120
Tlie Flight 5
„ 45
Spinsters S's. '2b
Locksley H., Sixty, 13
Detiieter ami I'. 22
40
The Ring 222
Death of (Enone 31
The Daxon 9
Tlie Tourney 12
Svpp. Confessions 65
O'areth and L. 925
1112
Talking Oak 103
Princess v 454
Maud J vii 4
S2)inslers Ss. 9
•armed)
I'rincess, Pro,, 32
Maud I i 41
Gareth and L. 104
636
931
1115
Oerainl and E. 57
121
143
,, 407
Balin and Balan 22
Lancelot and E. 1247
Pelleas and E. 65
Last Tonmavient 55
Montenegro 3
Lancelot and E. 1183
L. of Shalott III 17
Sir Galahad 70
Princess, Pro., 24
V 413
„ vi 363
Gareth and L. 474
1095
.' . llf^
Marr. of Geraint 258
Geraint and E. 63
75
97
374
386
409
490
502
Balin and Balan 326
Udv Grail 135
., 410
;, 412
„ 458
„ 511
Pelleas aiul E. 355
373
;; 378
Last Tournament 443
Tiresias 45
Last Tournament 170
Marr. of Geraint 266
Milton b
To tlie Queen 3
England and Amer. 7
M. d' Arthur 102
Edioin Morris 131
Princess, Pro., 24
Arms (weapons) {contimicd) clash'd in a, By glimmering
1 /vi
lanes
piled a and rough accoutrements,
horses yell'd ; they clash'd their a ;
two armies and the noise Of a ;
none to trust Since our a fail'd —
supple, sinew-corded, apt at a ;
whose a Champion'd our cause and won it
Roll of cannon and clash of a,
Arthur yet had done no deed of a,
many of these in richer a than he,
Closed in her castle from the sound of a,
his a Clash'd ; and the sound was good
A for her son, and loosed him from his vow.
Gareth ere he parted Hash'd in a.
Mounted in a, threw up their caps
' Bound upon a quest With horse and a —
few goodlier than he) Shining in a.
These arm'd him in blue a,
strength of anger thro' mine a,
and take his horse And a,
Hath overthrown thy brother, and hath his a
damsel came, And arm'd him in old a,
His a are old, he trusts the harden'd skin —
on a nightblack horse, in nightblack a,
a On loan, or else for pledge ;
a, rt, a to fight my enemy '(
A ? truth ! I know not :
thought to find A in your town,
if ye know Where I can light on a,
heard me praise Your feats of a,
true heart,' replied Geraint, 'but a,
' .1 , indeed, but old And rusty.
Who being apt at a and big of bone
Yniol's rusted a Were on his princely person,
will not light my way with gilded a,
Three horses and three goodly suits of a.
Two sets of three laden with jingling a,
take A horse and a for guerdon ;
one with a to guard his head and yours,
paid with horses and with a ;
loosed the fastenings of his a,
grow In use of a and manhood,
while she watch'd their a far-off Sparkle,
earth shake, and a low thunder of a.
glittering in enamell'd a the maid
From noiseful a, and acts of prowess
a Hack'd, and their foreheads grimed
Lend me thine horse and a,
Pelleas lent his horse and all his a,
one might show it at a joust of a,
Grold, jewels, a, whatever it may be.
and shoutings and soundings to a,
The warrior hath forgot his a, ^
alarms Sounding ' To a ! to a ! '
clatter of a, and voices, and men passmg
Arms (ensigns armorial) His a were carven only ;
V)ut if twain His a were blazon'd also ;
then was painting on it fancied «,
guess'd a hidden meaning in his a,
quartering your own royal a of Spain,
Arm's-length Paris held the costly fruit Out at a-l,
Army crying there was an a in the land,
compassed by two armies and the noise
Charging an a, while All the world
To preach our poor little a down,
councils thinn'd. And armies waned.
Earls of the a of Anlaf Fell
nor had Anlaf With armies so broken
Her dauntless a scatter'd, and so small,
glorious annals of a and fleet,
Amo unfamiliar A, and the dome
Amon from Aroer On A unto Minneth. '
Aroer from yl On Amon unto Minneth.'
Aromat from the blessed land of A —
Princess, Pro., v 5
55 '
250
„ 346
427
„ 535
,, vi 61
Ode on Well. 116
Com, of Arthur 46
52
Gareth and L. 163
311
530
689
„ 697
/45
931
956
„ 1037
,, 1115
1139
1381
Marr. of Geraint 219
282
289
418
422
435
474
477
489
543
Geraint and E. 21
124
188
218
486
511
Lancelot and E. 64
395
460
619
Holy Grail 1
„ 264
Pelleas and E. 345
J'ass. of Arthur 2/0
Lover's Tale iv 235
Def. of Lucknow 76
Ancient Sage 138
Prog, of Spring 104
Bandit's Death 24
Gareth and L. 412
Merlin and V. 474
Lancelot and E. 17
Columbus 115
Ginone 136
Princess iv 484
,, V 345
Light Brigade 30
Maud I X 38
Merlin and V. 573
Batt. of Brunanhurh 53
82
Tlie Fleet 11
VaMness 7
The Brook 189
D. of F. Women 239
238
JIolj/ Grail 48
Arose
16
Arthur
Arose n, and I releas'd The casement,
a wind a, And overhead the wandering ivy
The rain had fallen, the Poet a,
and a Eager to bring them down,
not to die a listener, I a,
a the labourers' homes,
footstool from before him, and a ;
wind a and rush'd upon the South,
a Once more thro' all her height,
That afternoon a sound a of hoof And chariot,
Star after star, a and fell ;
on one side a The women up in wild revolt.
Then thorpe and byre a in tire,
Thro' four sweet years a and fell,
Since our first Sun a and set.
Till at the last a the man ;
till I could bear it no more, But a,
Nor ever a from below,
on the further side A a silk pavilion,
a, and raised Her mother too,
in their halls a The cry of children,
damsel l)idden a And stood with folded hands
with smiling face a,
and all the knights a, And staring
King a and went To smoke the
words of Arthur flying shriek'd, a,
She clear 'd her sight, she a,
call'd rt, and, slowly plunging down
from the ruin a The shriek and curse
Aroused So sleeping, so a from sleep
A the black republic on his elms,
a Lancelot, who rushing outward
Arran^^e Dispute the claims, a the chances ;
^1 the board and brim the glass ;
Arranged « Her garden, sow'd her name
men and maids A a country dance,
A the favour, and assumed the Prince.
Arras (adj.) In Arthur's a hall at Camelot :
Arras (s) hung with a green and blue,
Array (s) Singing of men that in battle a,
Array'd with her own white hands A
took them, and a herself therein,
took it, and a herself therein,
there the Queen a me like the sun :
Arraying morn by morn, a her sweet self
Arrival will harangue The fresh a's of the week
Arrive A at last the blessed goal,
Arrived A and found the sun of sweet content
a, by Dubric the high saint.
Arriving A all confused among the rest
^ at a time of golden rest.
Arrogance They said with such heretical a
Arrow viewless a's of his thoughts were headed
The bitter a went aside.
The false, false a went aside.
The damned a glanced aside.
Within thy heart my a lies,
Hhoot into the dark A'g of lightnings.
A random a from the brain,
look'd a flight of fairj* a's aim'd
Fly twanging headless a's at the hearts,
When one would aim an a fair.
Or into silver a's break The sailing
Before an ever-fancied a, made
rt whizz'd to the right, one to the left,
lest an a from the bush Should leave me
jingle of bit«. Shouts, a'«,
Struck by a poison'd a in the fight.
Arrowing « light from clime to clime,
Arrowlet V)lows a globe of after a's,
Arrow-seed like the a-x's of the field flower.
Arrow-slain With loss of half his people a-s ;
Arrow- wounded your a-w fawn Came flying
Arsenic A , « , sure, would do it.
Art discovery And newness of thine a hu pleased
Tioo Voices 403
(Enonem
Poet's Song 1
Enoch Arden 871
The Brook 163
Ay Inter' s Field 147
327
Princess i 97
,, vi 159
" -Kl
,, mi 50
122
Tlve 'victim 3
In Mem., xodi 3
,, xxiv 8
„ cocoiii 12
Maud I Hi 10
„ nam
Oareth and L. 910
Marr. of Geraint 535
Geraint and E. 964
Merlin and V. 68
Lancelot and E. 552
Holy Grail 192
„ 213
Last Tournament 139
Dead Prophet 31
St. Telemachus 28
Akbar's Dream 189
DoAj-Dm., L Envoi 21
Aylmer's Field 529
Guinevere 106
To F. D. Maurice 31
In Mem., cvii 16
Aylmer's Field 87
Princess, Pro., 84
„ iv 602
Merlin and V. 250
Palace o/ArtQl
Maud I v8
Marr. of Geraint 17
139
849
Geraint and E. 701
Lancelot and E. 906
Pri'iicess ii 96
In Mem. Ixxxiv 41
Tlie Brook 168
Com. of Arthur 453
Princess iv 224
Merlin and V. 142
Sir J. Oldcastle 15
TJie Poet 11
Oriana 37
„ 39
„ 41
„ 80
To J. M. K. 14
Two Voices 345
Aylnwr's Field 94
Princess ii 402
In Mem, Ixxxvii 25
,, ci 15
Geraint and E. 531
Balin and Balan 419
LaM Tournament 535
Tiresias 94
Death of (Enone 26
Akbar's D, H^jmn 5
Gareth and L. 1029
The Poet 19
Merlin atid V. 565
Princess ii 270
Maud II V 62
Ode to Memory 88
Art {continued) knowledge of his a Held me
words, tho' cuU'd with choicest a,
I and he. Brothers in A ;
' will you climb the top of ^ .
liberal applications lie In A like Nature,
Her a, her hand, her counsel
Hetairai, curious in their a.
At wine, in clubs, of a, of politics ;
in a's of government Elizabeth and others ; ah of
war The peasant Joan and others ; a's of grace
Sappho and others
with inmost terms Of a and science :
Two great statues, A And Science,
Science, A, and Labour have outpour'd
shapes and hues of A divine !
piece of inmost Horticultural a,
And owning but a little a
From a, from nature, from the schools,
on mind and a, And labour,
The graceful tact, the Christian a ;
That all, as in some piece of a,
letters, dear to Science, dear to A,
served King Uther thro' his magic a ;
Knowing all a's, had touch 'd,
knew the range of all their a's,
since ye seem the Master of all A,
Or A with poisonous honey stol'n from France,
Heirlooms, and ancient miracles of A,
Kepell'd by the magnet of A
with the living hues of A.
A and Grace are less and less :
And here the Singer for his A
You see your A still shrined in
a nation purer through their a.
the fault is less In me than A.
A ! Why should I so disrelish
seem'd my lodestar in the Heaven of A,
Of ancient A in Paris, or in Rome.
This A , that harlot-like
I replied 'Nay, Lord, for A,'
'Art (heart) as 'appy as 'a could think,
Artemisia (Carian) See Carian Artemisia
Arthur (Epic poem) 'he burnt His epic, his King A,
Arthur (King) Until King A's table, man by man,
fallen in Lyonnesse about their Lord, King A :
spake King A to Sir Bedivere : (repeat)
replied King A, faint and pale :
'King ^'s sword, Excalibur,
spoke King A, breathing heavily :
replied King A, much in wrath :
Then spoke King A, drawing thicker breath :
answer made King A, breathing hard :
as he walk'd, King A panted hard,
murmur'd A, ' Place me in the barge,'
like that A who, with lance in rest,
my Lord A, whither shall I go ?
slowly answer'd A from the barge :
sail with A under looming shores.
King A, like a modern gentleman
cried ' A is come again : he cannot die.'
For many a petty king ere A came
man was less and less, till A came.
after these King A for a space,
for he heard of A newly crown'd,
A yet had done no deed of arms,
A, looking downward as he past,
A, passing thence to battle,
W hen A reach'd a field-of- battle
till A by main might, And mightier
A call'd to stay the brands
in the heart of A joy was lord.
A said, ' Man's word is God in man :
' Knowest thou aught of A's birth ? '
learn the secret of our A's birth ? '
By this King yl as by thee to-day,
D. of F. Women 9
„ 285
Gardener's D. 4
„ 169
Day-Dm. Moral 14
Aylmei-'s Field 151
Lucretius 52
Princess, Pro., 161
, , ii 161
447
„ iv 200
Ode Inter, Exhib. 5
„ 22
Ilendecasyllabics 20
In Mem. xxxvii 14
„ xlix 1
„ Ixxxmi 22
„ ex 16
„ cxxviii 23
Ded. of Idylls ^0
Com, of Arthur 152
Gareth and L. 307
Merlin and V. 167
468
To tlie Queen ii 56
Lover's Tale iv 192
The Wreck 22
Locksley H., Sixty, 140
245
Epilogue 79
Poets and tlieir B. 11
To W, C. Macready 8
Romney's R. 9
10
39
87
115
131
North. Cobbler 15
The Epic 28
M, d' Arthur 3
5
„ 13, 66
72
103
„ 113
„ 118
148
162
„ 176
204
222
227
„ 239
„ Ep. 17
22
24
Com. of Arthur 5
12
16
41
46
„ 55
5, 75
96
109
120
124
„ 133
147
159
162
Arthur
17
Arthur (King) {continued) A bom of Gorlois, Others
of Anton ? ,r ^ . 7 ■
Hold ye this A for King U ther s son <
Knighted by A at his crowning,
like a loyal sister cleaved To ^1,—
before his time Was A born,
Brought A forth, and set him in the hall,
clamour'd for a king, Had .4 crown'd ;
.1 were the child of shamefulness.
Ye come from A's court,
and A sat Crown'd on the dais,
from the casement over A, smote Flame-coloui',
friends Of A, gazing on him,
A row'd across and took it —
sad was A'a face Taking it,
therefore yl's sister?" ask'd the King,
when did A chance upon thee first ? '
Back to the court of A answering yea.
.1 charged his warrior whom he loved
A said, ' Behold, thy doom is mine.
A's knighthood sang before the King :—
Rome or Heathen rule in A's realm '?
A spake, ' Behold, for these have sworn
and A strove with Rome.
A and his knighthood for a space
knight of A, working out his will,
A gave him back his territory,
both thy brethren are in ^'s hall,
thou shalt go disguised to A's hall,
A's wars in weird devices done,
three Queens, the friends Of A,
Merlin's hand, the Mage at A's court,
everywhere At .4's ordinance,
heard A voice, the voice of A,
Said A, ' Whether would ye?
A, ' Have thy pleasant field again,
^, 'We sit King, to help the wrong'd
heard that A of his grace Had made
,4 cried To rend the cloth, (repeat)
this was .4 's custom in his hall ;
^4 mightiest on the battle-field —
'Comfort thyself,' said A,
A mindful of Sir Gareth ask'd,
and A glancing at him. Brought
without the door King A's gift, ^
most ungentle knight in As hall.
A's men are set along the wood ;
a stalwart Baron, ^'s friend. ^
' I well believe You be of A's Table,
being A's kitchen-knave !—
this mom I stood in A's hall,
^4 all at once gone mad replies, , , „ ,
champion thou hast brought from .1 s haU f
And quickly pass to .4 's hall,
' Here is a kitchen-knave from A s hall
' No star of thine, but shot from A's heaven
meek withal As any of A's best.
Com. of Aiihur 170
„ 172
175
192
212
229
236
239
249
257
274
278
298
305
317
338
446
447
467
481
485
507
514
;; 515
Oat-eth and L. 24
78
82
152
225
230
306
308
318
340
371
393
„ 400, 417
410
496
601
624
652
. 677
757
788
818
836
838
855
863
916
984
, 1036
1100
1169
knight of ,4, here lie thrown by whom I know not, „ i|^^
on the day when A knighted him." " 1254
tmth if not in A's hall. In A's presence ? o J^^^
yl 's harp tho' summer- wan, , ^ „ ,, " 1417
challenge the chief knight Of ^ s haU ? nfr^.„M 1
Geraint a knight of A 's court, Marr. of (^maivt^
Weeping for some gay knight in .1 s hall. >» g
For .4 on the Whitsuntide before »> ^^„
Cavall, King A's hound of deepest mouth, » ^^^
That eat in ^ 'shall at Camelot. »» ggg
Shalt ride to yl'« court, '» ggj
rising up, he rode to A's court, r<^„A^i ««/? w 77^
A knight of yl's court, who laid Geraxntand E.ll^
made a knight of J 's Table Round, ^ .. '^"
will not go To yl , then will A come to you, » "^
yl laugh'd upon him. 'Oldfnend, »
Arthur
^^'^^^l {-n^.""'^^) «Pi"<^ °^ b- y°«^^ '^'^""''Lm and Balan 22
On A s nearv > , . . v\
« Fair Sirs," said A, ' wherefore sit >» ^J
we be mightier men than all In A's court ; >» ^*
«I too,' said ^4, 'am of A's hall, » '
A lightly smote the brethren down, » .„
.4 seeing ask'd ' Tell me your names ; "73
Said A ' Thou hast ever spoken truth ; "89
yl'shost Proclaim' d him Victor, »> ^„.
Then ^, 'Let who goes before me, " .,„
learn what .4 meant by courtesy, »> j„g
^, when Sir Balin sought him, » 236
all the kindly warmth of A 'a hall » > „,,
(for J 's knights Were hated strangers >. ^^^
<;i(wf romp's hall, and yet So simple! .» |^j^
ve men of A be but babes." " oon
io thy guest. Me, me of ^"s -Table. » g^
some high lord-pnnce of ^ s nail, >» .-q
if from A's haU, To help the weak. » |'
A the blameless, pure as any maid, \r.^ii" „r,d V 7
The slights of A and bis Table, ^erhn and K.^7
foUow'd, Sir, In A's household V— "28
A bound them not to singleness '» ^g
' This ^ pure! , ,, j " 53
If I were A, I would have thy blood. " ^o
Perchance, one curl of A's golden beard. » ^^
A him Ye scarce can overpraise, '» , .q
^'in the highest Leaveu'd the world, » . ^
While all the heathen lay at A's feet, » ^^^
wily Vivien stole from A'a court. >' jgg
J walking all alone, Vext " 197
leaving A's court he gain'd the beach ; "250
In A's arras hall at Camelot : " 297
I rose and fled from A's court " -03
many-corridor'd complexities Of ^s palace: .. '^^
the royal rose In ^'s casement " --g
A, blameless King and stainless man ? r^^rAot and E 32
jousts. Which A had ordain'd, LaruxLot awl lu. 0|
A. long before they crown'd him King, >> ^
A came, and labouring up the pass, )> ^^
yl, holding then his court Hard " ^^^
Has J. spoken aught ? , ^,. " 121
'^, my lord. A, the faultless King, >» ^gg
I am yours. Not A's, as ye know, '» ^g^
After the King, who eat in A's halls. » ^gg
• Known am I, and of .4 "shaU, and known, .. |-
till our good A broke The Pagan " 285
you know Of A's glorious wars." " 237
having been With A in the fight " ^^2
where he sat At yl's right, with smiling face arose, „ ^^
A to the banquet, dark in mood, " ggg
' Our true A , when he learns, " gQj
A's wars were render'd mystically, " ^^^g
of A's palace toward the stream, '» -j^221
In which as A's Queen I move and rule : >' ^253
For some do hold our A cannot die, >> ^2^4
So A bad the meek Sir Percivale " ^270
But A spied the letter in her hand, " ^290
• My lord liege A, and all ye that hear, » ^^26
yl answer'd, ' 0 my knight, " jggj
A leading, slowly went The marshali d >. ^^^g
Then A spake among them, ' Let her tomb » g^
yl, who beheld his cloudy brows, ^^ ^ ., ., , „„ . , " 1410
Alas for A's greatest knight, a man Not after A s heart ! ,, 141
A and his knighthood call'd The Pure, Soly UraU^^
one of those who eat in A's hall ; " 7<
Sin against A and the Table Round, >» „;
when King A made His Table Round, .« ^^J
not A's use To hunt by moonlight ; »> .3.
Said .4, when he dubb'd him knight; " 20'
Did yl take the vow ? " "22'
For dear to A was that hall of ours, " 221
Which Merlin built for yllong ago ! »' 23'
statue in the mould Of A, made by Merlin, .. ^4,
twelve great windows blazon A s wars, »»
Arthur
18
A-singein'
ArUmr (King) (coniimicd) A finds the brand Excalibur. llohj Grail 253
' Lo now," said A, ' have ye seen a cloud ? „ 286
voice Shrilling along the hall to A, call'd, 'But I,
Sir yl, saw ,, 289
the great table of our A closed ,, 329
Had Camelot seen the like, since A came ; ,, 332
A's wars are render'd mystically, „ 359
the gate of . I "s wars." „ 539
I remember'd yl 's warning word, ,, 598
thou shalt be as A in our land.' ,, 606
foUow'd — almost yl 's words — ,, 669
sevenclear stars of yl's Table Round — ,, 684
Or was there sooth in vl 's prophecy, „ 709
there sat .1 on the dais-throne, ,, 721
and A turn'd to whom at first He saw not, „ 751
A kept his best until the last ; ,, 763
KiHG A made new knights to fill Pelleas and E. 1
and A made him knight. >, 16
I will be thine A when we meet.' ,, 47
.-1 made vast banquets, and strange knights ,, 147
For A, loving his young knight, ,, 159
A had the jousts Down in the flat field ,, 163
our A made Knight of his table ; ,, 319
* Gawain am I, Gawain of A's court, „ 371
he, Gasping, ' Of ^'s hall am I, ,, 514
Had made mock-knight of A's Table Round, Last Tournament 2
For A and Sir Lancelot riding once ,, 10
brought A maiden babe ; which A pitying took, ,, 21
So she, delivering it to vl, said, ,, 30
A tum'd to Kay the seneschal, ,, 89
A rose and Lancelot follow'd him, ,, 112
words of A flying shriek 'd, arose, ,, 139
Right arm of A in the battlefield, ,, 202
D^onet, skipping, ' A, the King's; ,, 262
so thou breakest J's music too.' ,, 266
thank the Lord I am King yl 's fool. ,, 320
call the harp of A up in heaven ? ' , , 333
With A 's vows on the great lake of fire. ,, 345
1, and A and the angels hear, ,, 350
^i with a hundred spears Rode far, ,, 420
• Lo there," said one of yl's youth, ,, 429
But .1 waved them back. ,, 437
He ended : A knew the voice ; ,, 455
yl deign 'd not use of word or sword, ,, 458
in the heart of A pain was lord. ,, 486
other was the Tristram, y! 's knight ! ,, 634
Had A right to bind them to himself ? ,, 684
A make me pure As any maiden child ? ,, 692
That night came A home, and while ,, 755
disruption in the Table Round Of A, Guinevere 18
knight of A 's noblest dealt in scorn ; ,,40
Which good KinK A founded, years ago, ,, 221
the bard Sang A s glorious wars, ,, 286
And that was A ; and they foster'd him ,, 295
to lead her to his lord A, ,, 384
silk pavilions of King yf raised ,, 394
think How sad it were for A, should he live, ,, 496
' Oh yl 1 ' there her voice brake suddenly, ,, 607
There came on A sleeping, Pass, of Arthur 30
yl woke and call'd, ' Who spake ? ,, 45
Then spake King A to Sir Bedivero :
(repeat) Pcm. of Arthur 65, 136, 181, 234
ever yot had A fought a fight Like this I'ass, of A rthur 93
and ev'n on yl fell Confusion, ,, 98
while A at one blow, Striking ,, 167
Until King yl's Table, man by man, ,, 172
fall'n in Lyonnesse about their lord, King A. ,, 174
replied King A, faint and palo : ,, 240
' King yl '* sword, ExcaliVmr, „ 271
Jtpoko King yl, breathing heavily: ,, 281
replied King yl, much in wrath : ,, 286
Then spoke King yl, drawing thicker breath: ,, 316
answer made King yt, breathing hard : ,, 330
as he walk'd. King A panted hard, ,, 344
murmur'd yl, ' Place me in the barge.' ,, 372
Arthur (King) (contimied) like that yl who, with lance
in rest, Pass, of ArUmr 390
my Lord yl, whither shall I go? „ 395
slowly answer'd yl from the barge : » 407
friends Of A, who should help him ,, 456
city and palace Of yl the king ; Merlin and the G. 66
on the forehead Of yl the blameless ,, 73
A had vanish'd I knew not whither, ,, 77
Arthur (Sir, a local magnate) To show Sir A's deer. The Brook 133
Arthur (A. H. Hallam, 1811-1833) With my lost A's loved
remains. In Mem. ix 3
My A, whom I shall not see ,, 17
That holy Death ere yl died „ Ixxx 2
My A, found your shadows fair, „ Ixxxix 6
Artificer yl and subject, lord and slave. Lover's Tale, ii 103
Artist Well hast thou done, great a Memory, Ode to Menwry 80
A more ideal A he than all, (repeat) Gardener's IJ. 25, 173
wife, an unknown a's orphan child — **5fea Dreavis 2
golden moods Of sovereign a's ; Princess, v. 195
portrait of his friend Drawn by an a. Sisters (E. and E.) 135
What yl ever yet Could make pure light Romney's R. 9
wife and children drag an A down ! ,,38
' This model husband, this fine yl ' ! ,, 124
Artist-like A-l, Ever retiring thou dost gaze Ode to Memm-y 92
'Arty (hearty) glad to seea tha sa 'a an' well. North. Cobbler 2
Arundel (Archbishop of Canterbury) (See cdso Caiaphas-
Arundel) Against the proud archbishop yl — Sir J. Oldcastle 16
this mitred yl Dooms our unlicensed preacher ,, 104
how 1 anger'd yl asking me To worship ,, 135
Arviragus there the heathen Prince, yl, Holy Grail 61
A-sailing a-s with wind an' tide. First Quarrel 42
Ascalon that was old Sir Ralph's at A : Princess, Pro. 26
Ascend Take wings of fancy, and a, In Mem. Ixxvi 1
thy deeds in light, yl's to thee ; Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 10
Ascended shouts A, and there brake Gareth and L. 801
as Kapiolani a her mountain, Kapiolani 28
Ascending A tired, heavily slept till morn. Enoch Anleri 181
with the dawn a lets the day Strike Geraint and E. 692
with slow sad steps A, fill'd Last Tournament 144
Ascension spheroid and azimuth. And right a, Princess vi 257
Ascent in steepness overcome, And victories of a, Lover's Tale i 387
Ash (tree) (See also Esh) Young a'es pirouetted down Amphion 27
Delaying as the tender a delays Princess, iv 106
Nor hoary knoll of a and haw In Mem. c 9
AshaS,med (ashamed) an' I wur dreiidful a ; Nm-th. Cobbler 40
Ashamed (See also A8ha9.med, Half-ashamed, Shaamed)
Shall 1 believe him a to be seen ? Maud I. xiii 25
' A boon, Sir King (his voice was all a), Gareth and L. 442
yl am I that I should tell it thee. Man: of G&i'aint 577
Your hand shakes. 1 am a. Romney's R. 25
A-shawin' (showing) mun be fools to be hallus a-s your
claws. Spinster's S's. 61
Ashbud hair More black than a's in the front of March.' Gardener's IJ. 28
Ashen-gray seems But an a-g delight. Maud I. vi 22
Ashes And heap their a on the head ; Love thou thy land 70
And all 1 was, in a. Tithonus 23
Who will not let his a rest ! Tun anight have v}on 28
Slipt into a, and was found no more. Ayhner's Field 6
A to a, dust to dust ; Ode on Well. 270
And from his a may be made In Mem. xviii 3
And dust and a all that is ; ,, xxxiv 4c
who knows ? we are a and dust. Maud I i 32
I spring Like flame from a.' Gareth and L. 546
champion from the a of his hearth.' „ 899
who lay Among the a and wedded ,, 904
youth gone out Had left in a : Merlin and, V. 246
dead a and all fire again Thrice in a second, lever's Tale iv 323
but now to silent a fall'n away. Locksley H. , Sixty, 41
Had the fierce a of some fiery peak St. Telemachus 1
Ashore I've ninety men and more that are lying sick a. The Revenge 10
And a day less or more At sea or a, ,, 87
But the blind wave cast me a, Despair 61
Ashy quivering brine With a rains. The Voyage 43
Asia Ages after, while in yl, Locksley II., Sixty, 81
A-singein' Fur 'o smell'd like a herse a-s, Oivd Rod 110
A-singin'
19
Asmodeus
I
A-singin' Theer wur a lark a-s 'is best
Ask -I the sea At midnight,
When I a her if she love me,
A 's what thou lackest,
a thou not my name :
You a me, why, the' ill at ease,
he has a mint of reasons : a.
' Annie, I came to a a favour of you.'
This is the favour that I came to a.'
what is it that you a ? '
0 then to a her of my shares,
That Sheba came to a of Solomon.'
you, should answer, we would a)
' 0 a me nothing,' I said :
a for him Of your great head —
A me no more : (repeat) Princess
would but a you to fulfil yourself :
1 a you nothing : only, if a dream,
A her to marry me by and by ?
And a a thousand things of home ;
Let no one n me how it came to pass ;
If one should a me whether The habit,
I will not a thee why
Or if I a thee why.
Or to « her, ' Take me, sweet,
Before thou a the King to make thee knight,
and loathe to a thee aught.
I scarce can a it thee for hate,
or thyself be mad, I a not :
' So this damsel a it of me Good —
' I charge thee, a not. but obey.'
'Then will I a it of himself,'
I swear I will not a your meaning in it :
1 am silent then. And a no kiss ; '
a your boon, for boon I owe you
wherefore a ; And take this boon
will ye never a some other boon ?
Who feels no heart to a another boon,
has tript a little : a thyself,
never could undo it : a no more :
I a you, is it clamour'd by the child,
a me not Hereafter ye shall know me —
a you not to see the shield he left,
should a some goodly gift of him
' A me not, for I may not speak of it :
yield me sanctuary, nor a Her name
and they spared 1 o a it.
pray you check me if I a amiss —
Ye a me, friends, When I began to love.
Ye know not what ye a.
I a you now, should this first master
let me a you then. Which voice
Edith wrote : ' My mother bids me a '
Did he believe it ? did you a him ?
a ' Why left you wife and children ?
Ask'd {See also Hax'd) for I a him, and he said,
once I a him of his early life,
I a him half-sardonically.
she knew it not, And would if a deny it.
till I a If James were coming.
To learn the price and what the price he a,
a her ' Are you from the farm 1 '
wonder'd at her strength, and a her of it :
And a ; but not a word ;
and n iTiat which I a the woman
her we a of that and this,
and when I a her ' how, '
' Tell US,' Florian a, ' How grew this feud
mutual pardon a and given
a but space and fairplay for her scheme ;
Ay or no, if a to her face ?
again The ' wilt thou ' a,
whatever is a her, answers * Death,'
therefore Arthur's sister ? ' a the King.
a him if these things were truth —
North. Cobbler 46
Sripp. Coiifessimu 125
Lilian 3
Two Voices 98
Z>. ofF. Women m
Toil ask me, why, 1
The Epic 33
Enoch Arden '285
313
427
iSea Dream* 115
Princess ii 346
„ 353
„ Hi 59
,, vi 313
vii 1, 5, 6, 9, 10, 11, 15
Princess vii 146
„ 148
WduLow, Letter 6
In Mem, xiv 12
Maud 1 xviii 49
,, XX 17
„ // Hi 2
6
,, iv 87
Garetli and L. 145
356
„ 361
877
974
Marr. of Oeraint 133
197
Geraint and E. 743
Merlin and V. 254
306
309
375
382
602
686
771
Lancelot and E. 191
„ 653
912
Holy Grail 758
Guinevere 141
„ 145
„ 324
Lover's Tale i 144
,, 150
„ iv 265
Sisters IE. and E.) 29
181
J/iC Rinrf 225
Romney's R. 128
Dvra 145
Edivin Morris 23
59
Enocli Arden 44
The Brook 105
„ 142
„ 209
Sea Dreavis 113
116
146
Princess i 231
„ Hi 29
76
„ V 46
282
Window, Letter- 9
In Mem. Con. 55
Maud Hi
Com. of Arthur 317
398
Ask'd {continued) A me to tilt with him,
he had a For horse and armour :
1 a for thy chief knight,
bound to thee for any favour a ! '
a it of him. Who answer'd as before ;
after madness acted question a :
« her not a word, But went apart
Arthur seeing a ' Tell me your names ;
Balin was bold, and a To bear
at feast Sir Galon likewise a
a this very boon. Now a again :
died Thrice than have a it once —
proof of trust — so often a in vain !
they a of court and Table Round,
when he a 'Is it for Lancelot,
and eyes that a ' What is it ? '
a us, knight by knight, if any Had seen it,
' 0 brother,' a Ambrosius, — 'for in sooth
then he a, ' Where is he ?
scarce had pray'd or o it for myself —
sharply turning, a Of Gawain,
Lancelot,' a the King, ' my friend,
' Dead, is it so ? ' she a. ' Ay, ay,' said he,
' Have ye fought ? ' She a of Lancelot.
a, ' Why skipt ye not. Sir Fool ? '
she a, 1 know not what, and a,
and a If I would see her burial :
in his fantasy, I never a :
she rais'd an eye that a ' Where ? '
then he suddenly a her if she were.
once my prattling Edith a him ' why ? '
'Anything ailing,' I a her, ' with baby?'
a the waves that moan about the world
and I a About my Mother,
' Why weird ? ' I a him ;
Had a us to their marriage,
paused — and then a Falteringly,
a ' Is earth On fire to the West ?
of the nations ' a his Chronicler Of Akbar
her name ? what was it ? la her.
Askew all his conscience and one eye a ' — (repeat)
Asking {See also Hazin') grant mine a with a smile, Tithonus 16
Nor a overmuch and taking less, Enoch Arden 252
a, one Not fit to cope your quest. Gareth and L. 1173
therefore at thine a, thine. Marr. of Geraint 479
not so strange as my long a it, Merlin and V. 312
braved a riotous heart in a for it. Lancelot and E. 359
a him, ' What said the King ? Holy GraU 203
a whence Had Arthur right to bind Last Tournament 683
Arundel a me To worship Holy Cross ! Sir J. OldcasUe 135
A-slee&pin' (sleeping) cat wur a-s alongside Roaver, Owd Rod 33
Asleep {See also Deep-asleep, Half-asleep, Warm-asleep)
Gareth and L. 27
473
658
977
Mwrr. of Geraint 204
Geraint and E. 813
880
Balin and Balan 49
199
347
Merlin and V. 323
919
920
Lancelot and E. 268
1104
„ 1249
Holy Grail 283
540
„ 638
691
739
764
Pelleas and E. 384
„ 593
Last Toxirnam^ent 256
Lover's Tale i 706
„ a 70
,, iv\Z
94
328
Sisters {E. and E.) 58
Tlie Wreck 61
Demcter and P. 64
Tlie Ring 102
„ 197
430
Death of (Enone 94
St. TelemMchus 18
Akbar' s Dream 1
Cliarity 35
Sea Dreams 180, 184
smiling a, Slowly awaken'd,
but I fall a at morn ;
Falling a in a half -dream !
Since that dear soul hath fall'n a.
To fall a with all one's friends ;
If e'er when faith had fall'n a.
When a in this arm-chair ?
But come to her waking, find her a,
himself alone And all the world a,
vext his day, but blesses him a —
half a she made comparison
fell a again ; And dreamt herself
He fell a, and Enid had no heart
not seem as dead, But fast a,
when they fall a Into delicious dreams,
First falls a in swoon, wherefrom awaked,
I have done it, while you were a —
we believed her a again —
ere the dotard fall a ?
fall of water lull'd the noon a.
But such a tide as moving seems a,
A-smilin' An' Squire wur hallus a-s,
Asmodeus Abaddon and A caught at me.
Eleanore 84
May Queen, N. Vs. E. 50
Lotos-Eaters, C.S. 56
To J. S. 34
Day-Dm., L'Envoi 4
In Mem. cxxiv 9
Maud I vii 4
„ II ii 81
Com. of Arthur 119
Gareth and L. 1286
Marr. </ Geraint 651
653
Geraint and E. 369
Lancelot aiid E. 1161
Lover's Tale i 161
791
Rizpah 19
In live. Child. Hosp. 69
Locksley H., Sixty, 153
Romney's R. 83
Crossing the Bar 5
Village Wife S3
St. S. Stylites 172
la
20
Aspasia not for all A's cleverness, Princess ii 344
Aspect Of pensive thought and a pale, ^ Margaret 6
More bounteous a's on me beam, Sir Galahad 21
Under the selfsame a of the stars, Lover's Tale i 199
Aspen (.?«■ rt/so Aspen-tree) Willows whiten, a's quiver, L. of Shalott ilO
And here thine a shiver ; A Farewell 10
Aspen-tree in the meadows tremulous a-t's Lancelot aiid E. 410
showers, And ever- tremulous a-t's, ,, 524
Asphodel Violet, amaracus, and a, (Enone 97
weary limbs at last on beds of a. Lotos-Eaters, O. S. 125
Along the silent field of A . Demeter and P. 153
Aspick Showing the a's bite.) D. of F. Wonunl&O
A-sque&lin' an' a-s, as if tha was bit, Owd Roa 89
and thou was a-s' thysen, ,, ..10'
Ass (an animal) whisper'd ' A'es' ears,' among the sedge, Princess ii 113
one of thy long a'es' ears. Last Toitmammt 273
swine, goats, a'es, rams and geese „ 321
' Then were swine, goats, a'es, geese ,, 325
Ass {a stupid fellow) Sam, thou's an a for thy paa'ins : N, Farmer, N.S. 3
we boath on us thinks tha an a. (repeat) ,, 12, 38
an a as near as mays nowt — ,, . . . ^^
Assail To a this gray preeminence of man ! Princess Hi 234
Assail'd brother king, Urien, a him : Com. of Arthur 36
They that a, and they that held Lancelot and E. 455
Assassin earls, and caitiff knights, ^'s, Marr. of Geraint d6
Sanctuary granted To bandit, thief, a — Sir J. Oldcastle 113
Assault Sharp is the fire of a, Def. of Liccknow 57
Ever the mine and a, our sallies, ,, 75
Assay ' I shall a,' said (Jareth Gareth and L. 783
A it on some one of the Table Round, Merlin and V. 689
Assaye Against the myriads of A Ode on Well. 99
Assemble plans, And phantom hopes a ; Will Water. 30
Assembled Narrowing in to where they sat a Vision of Sin 16
Assent I gave a : Yet how to bind Princess, Con. 7
Assented Enoch all at once a to it, Enoch Arden 126
Assert a None lordlier than themselves Princess ii 143
a's his claim In that dread sound Ode on Well. 70
Assign'd purpose of God, and the doom a. Maud III vi 59
quest A to her not worthy of it, Lancelot and E. 825
kiss the child That does the task a, „ 829
Assize Se£ 'Soize
Association A fresh a blow. In Mem. ci 18
Assoil'd And the Holy man he a us, V. of Maeldune 126
Assume law The growing world a, England and Amer. 17
lose the child, a The woman : Princess i 137
Assumed Arranged the favour, and a the Prince. ,, iv 602
A from thence a half -consent , , vii 82
A that she had thank'd him, Geraint and E. 646
Assuming See All-assuming
Assumption heart In its a's up to heaven ; In Mem. Ixiii 4
fjuench'd herself In that a of the bridesmaid — Sisters (E. and E). 234
Assurance A only breeds resolve.' Two Voices 315
Assure may now a you mine ; Merlin and V. 549
Assured See Half-assured
Assyrian oil 'd and curl'd vl Bull Smelling of musk Maud I viii
A kings would Hay Captives Locksley H., Sixty, 79
A-itanning (standing) ' What's i' tha bottle a'« theer ? ' North. Cobbler 7
A-steppin' yon laady a-s along the streeiit, ,, 107
Astolat {See alto Lord of Astolat, Maid of Astolat)
Elaine, the lily maid of A , Lancelot and E. 2
Ilan to the Castle of .i , ,, 167
And issuing found the Lord of yl ,, 173
then the Lord of yl : ' Whence comest thou, ,, 180
said the Lord oi A,' Here is Torre's : ,,195
And came at last, tho' late, to yl : ,,618
came The Lord of A out, to whom the Prince ,, 627
the Lord of A^ 'Bide with us, ,, 632
About the maid of A , and her love. ,, 723
' The maid of A loves Sir Lancelot, ,, 725
Sir Lancelot loves the maid of A.' „ 726
But far away the maid in A, ,, 745
To A returning rode the three. ,, 905
Then spake the lily maid of A : „ 1085
Ho that day there was dole in yl. ,, 1136
the lily maid of A Lay smiling, ,, 1242
A-tuggin'
Astolat {continued) I, sometime call'd the maid of A, Lancelot and £.1273
Astride men and boys a On wy vern. Holy Grail 349
A-stroakin' (stroking) as I be a-s o' you, Spinster's S's. 19
Astrsean second-sight of some A age, Princess ii 443
Astrology brought to understand A sad a, Maud I xviii 36
Astronomy their cosmogonies, their astronomies : Columius 42
Dead the new a calls her . . . Locksley II., Sixty, 175
A and Geology, terrible Muses ! Parmissus 16
Asunder each as each. Not to be pluck'd a ; Holy Grail 777
They might be pluck'd a. „ 780
save they could be pluck'd a, ,, 782
To tear the twain a in my heart, ,, 786
As if 'twere drawn a by the rack. Lover's Tale ii 57
shook us a, as if she had struck The Wreck 108
'At (hat) doesn not touch thy 'a to the Squire ; ' North. Cobbler 25
says Parson, and laays down 'is 'a, ,, 89
A-taakin' (taking) what a's doing a-t o' mea ? N. Farmer, O.S. 45
A-talkin' Me an' thy muther, Sammy, 'as
bean a-t o' thee ; ,, iV.<Si. 9
Atar infuse Rich a in the bosom of the rose. Lover's Tale i 270
Ate A with young lads his portion Gareth and L. 480
Sat down beside him, a and then began. ,, 872
Sir Gareth drank and a, and all his life ,, 1280
let the horses graze, and a themselves. Geraint and E. 211
Geraint A all the mowers' victual ,, 215
I never a with angrier appetite ,, 233
a with tumult in the naked hall, ,, 605
That ever among ladies a in hall, Lancelot and E. 255
drank the brook, and a The goodly apples, Holy Giuil 387
our solemn feast — we a and drank. Lover's Tale iv 221
Atheist Authors — essayist, a, Locksley H. , Sixty, 139
On whom the women shrieking '.1 ' Akbar's Dream 91
Atheling {See also Edmund Atheling) Also the
brethren. King and A, Batt. of Brunanhurh 100
Athelstan (King of England) A King, Lord
among Earls, ,, 1
Athene (Pallas) See Pallas, Pallas Athene
Athens when A reign'd and Rome, Freedom 9
Athlete Until she be an a bold. Clear-headed friend 21
an a, strong to break or bind Palace of Art 153
Athos Tomohrit, A, all things fair, To E. L. 5
Atlantic waste A roll'd On her and us Third of Feb. 21
I wish they were a whole A broad.' Princess, Con. 71
same bones back thro' the A sea, Columbus 214
Atmosphere Floating thro' an evening a, Eleanore 100
For love possess'd the a, Miller's D. 91
Cold in that a of Death, In Mem. xx 14
Atom If all be a's, how then should the Gods Lucretius 114
Vanishing, a and void, a and void, ,, 258
Boundless inward, in the a, Locksley H., Sixty, 212
Atomic Being a not be dissoluble, Lucretius 115
Atom-stream I saw the flaring a-s's And torrents „ 38
Atomy Crowded with driving atomies, Lover's Tale ii 174
Atonement morning shine So rich in a as this Maud I xix 6
Attach phantasm of the form It should a to ? Lover's Tale i 647
Attain A the wise indifference of the wise ; A Dedication 8
Attain'd (&e«/so Half-attained) have « Rest in a happy place QSnone I'&O
Attempt Vivien should a the blameless King. Merlin and V. 164
Attend each ear was prick'd to a A tempest, Princess vi 280
And in his presence I a To hear In Mem. cxxvi 2
Attendance And make her dance a ; Amphion 62
You come with no a, page or maid, Geraint arm E. 322
Attended So she goes by him a, L. of Burleigh 25
Attest A their great commander's claim (Me on Well. 148
Attic And round the a's rumbled, The Goose 46
single sordid a holds the living and tho dead. Locksley II., Sixty, 222
Attire She in her poor a was seen : Beggar Maid 10
So splendid in his acts and his a, Marr. of Geraint 620
Attired women who a her head, ,, 62
than Geraint to greet her thus a ; ,, 772
Attorney See 'Tumey
Attracted a, won, Married, made one with. Lover's Tale i 133
Attribute all the gentle a's Of his lost child, Ayhner's Fidd 730
Or, crown'd with a's of woe In Mem. cxviii 18
A-tuggin' Roiiver a-t an' teiirin' my slieiive. Oivd Roa 60
A-tuggin'
21
Awake
A-tuggin' {corUinued) a-t an' tearin' mo wuss nor afoor,
A-tumin ' be a-t ma hout upo' Christmas Eave ' ?
A-twizzen'd (twisted) Wi' haafe o' the chimleys a-t
Aubrey (Ellen) iSec Ellen, Ellen Aubrey
Audacious .See Outdacious
Audible Shaped by the a and visible, Moulded the a
OwdRoum
„ 59
„ 22
i
and visible ;
Audibly Half inwardly, half a she spoke,
Audience at the palace craved A pf Guinevere,
Audley A feast Humm'd like a hive
Audley Court Let us picnic there At yl C
Auger hammer and &se, A and saw,
Auger-hole Boring a little a-h in fear.
Aught — what, I would not a of false —
Unfaith in a is want of faith in all.
less than swine, A naked a —
Augury how shall Britain light upon auguries happier ?
Now with prosperous auguries On Jub.
Lover's Tale ii 104
Marr. of Geraint 109
Lancelot and E. 1163
Audley Court 4
3
Enoch Arden 174
Oodiva 68
Princess v 402
Merlin and V. 389
Last Tournament 309
Boddicea 45
). Victona 9
Augustine (of Hippo) and besides. The great A wrote
Columbus 52
Aunt came Trustees and A 's and Uncles.
maiden A Took this fair day for text,
' Why not now ? ' the maiden A.
the maiden A (A little sense of wrong
She fixt a showery glance upon her a,
Aurelian (Roman Emperor) the Palmyrene That
fought A,
Aorelius (King of Britain) A lived and fought
and died,
A Emrys would have scourged thee dead,
Auricula among the gardens, a's, anemones,
Ausonian stay'd the .4 king to hear
Austerely master took Small notice, or a,
Australasian the long wash of A seas Far off,
Indian, A, African,
Edwin Morris 121
Princess, Pro., 107
„ 208
218
„ Con. 33
it 84
Com. of Arthur 13
O'areth and L. 375
City Child 4
Palace of Art 111
Lucretius 8
The Brook 194
On Jub. Q. Victoria 61
Australian black A dying hopes he shall return, Locksley H., Sixty, 70
Author A's — essayist, atheist,
Authority ^1 forgets a dying king,
see that some one with a Be near her
All people said she had a —
And simple words of great a,
A forgets a dying king.
Autocrat Aristocrat, democrat, a —
wearied of A's, Anarchs, and Slaves,
Autumn (adj.) then one low roll Of A thunder.
Autumn (s) (See also Fall) A and summer Are
gone long ago ;
^, in a bower Grape- thicken'd
Till A brought an hour For Eustace,
That a into a flash 'd again,
And breathes in April a's.
parcel -bearded with the traveller's-joy In A,
A 's mock sunshine of the faded woods
breadth Of .4, dropping fruits of power:
after A past — if left to pass His a
And A, with a noise of rooks,
A laying here and there A fiery finger
storms Of A swept across the city,
and bless Their gamer'd A also,
Spring and Summer and A and Winter,
like May-blossoms in mid a —
mist of a gather from your lake,
Autumn-changed Then; and then yl-c.
Autumn-dripping in a death-dumb a-d gloom.
Autumn-fields In looking on the happy A-f,
Autumn-sheaf Than of the gamer'd A-s.
Autumn-tide High over all the yellowing A-t,
Avail (s) ' I count it of no more a, Dame,
Avail (verb) Let this a, just, dreadful,
Nor branding summer suns a
Avail'd hath this Quest a for thee ? '
Avalon Lay, dozing in the vale of A,
Avanturine Like sparkles in the stone A .
Avarice No madness of ambition, a,
evil tyrannies, all her pitiless a,
Down with ambition, a, pride,
139
M. a Arthur 121
Princess vi 236
238
Com. of Arthur 261
Pass, of AHhur 289
Maud I x65
The Dreamer 10
Last Tournament 153
Nothing loill Die 18
Elearurre 35
Gardener's D. 207
Enoch Arden 456
The Brook 196
Aylmer's Field 154
610
Princess vi 55
A Dedication 9
In Mem. Ixxxv 71
,, xcix 11
Demeter and P. 71
147
Vastness 29
The Ring 255
329
The Oak 8
Last Tournament 756
Princess iv 42
Two Voices 114
iMst Tournument 241
Geraint and E. 715
St. S. Stylites 9
In Mem. ii 11
Holy Grail 765
Palace of Art 107
Gareth and L. 930
Lucretius 212
Boddicea 80
Maud J X 47
Avarice {continued) the lust. Villainy, violence, a, Columbus 172
Opulent A, lean as Poverty ; Vastness 20
Avaunt 'A,' they cried, ' our lady loves Pel leas and E. 369
Ave 'A, A, A,' said, ' Adieu, adieu ' /«, Mem. Ivii 15
singin' yer ' ^'s ' an' ' Fathers ' Tomorrow 96
Ave atque Vale Came that ^A a F ' of the Poet's Frater Ave, etc. 5
Ave Mary But '.4 J/,' made she moan. And 'A M,'
night and morn.
And 'A M,' was her moan.
Avenge Peace ! there are those to a us
felon knight, I a me for my friend.'
' I will a this insult, noble Queen,
God's A on stony hearts
I cried to the Saints to a me.
crying ' I dare her, let Peelfe a herself ' !
Avenged it was a crime Of sense a by sense
Avenging learn his name, A this great insult
Avenue (See also Lily-avenue) Down at the far
end of an a,
And ever-echoing a's of song.
city glitter'd. Thro' cypress a's,
flash'd again Down the long a's
thro' the slowly-mellowing a's
Entering all the a's of sense
in yon arching a of old elms.
Aver a That all thy motions gently pass
I , clasping brother-hands, a I could not,
Averill A A at the Rectory Thrice over ;
might not A, had he will'd it so.
Not proven' A said, or laughingly ' Some other race
of A's' —
his brother, living oft With A,
A was a decade and a half His elder,
He wasted hours with A ;
and oft accompanied By A :
To let that handsome fellow A walk
foam'd away his heart at A 's ear : whom A solaced
A seeing How low his brother's mood
Forbad her first the house of A,
A wrote And bad him with good heart
A went and gazed upon his death.
Long o'er his bent brows linger'd A ,
Averring A it was clear against all rules
Averse with sick and scornful looks a,
Avilion To the island-valley of A ;
' He passes to the Isle A,
To the island-valley of A ;
A-wa£litin' (waiting) An' she wur a-iu fo'mma,
Awa9.ke (awake) but I wur a,
Await Some draught of Lethe might a
slow-develop'd strength a's Completion
come ; for all the vales A thee ;
Yea, let all good things a Him who cares
and happier hours A them.
A the last and largest sense
Awaiting Beheld her first in field a him,
Awake (adj.) (See also AwaS,ke, Half-awake)
night I lie a,
lying broad a I thought of you and Effie
deep-asleep he seem'd, yet all a,
That I might kiss those eyes a !
but watch'd a A cypress in the moonlight
I have walk'd a with Truth.
the rose was a all night for your sake.
The lilies and roses were all a,
shook his drowsy squire a and cried,
her mother grasping her To get her well a ;
Held her a : or if she slept.
Wherein we nested sleeping or a,
our palace is a, and morn Has lifted
Awake (verb) bee Is lily-cradled : I alone a.
strike it, and a her with the gleam ;
may death A them with heaven's music
and a to a livid light,
A ! the creeping glimmer steals,
Mariana in the S. 9
21
Princess iv 501
Gareth and L. 1220
Marr. of Geraint 215
Death of QSnone 41
Bandit's Death 14
Kapiolani 32
Vision of Sin 214
Marr. of Geraint 425
Enoch Arden 358
Ode on Well. 79
The Daisy 48
Gareth and L. 785
iMSt Tournament 360
Lover's Tale i 630
The Ring 172
In Mem,, xv 9
In Mem. Ixxxv 102
Aylmer's Field 37
46
53
58
82
109
138
269
342
403
502
543
599
625
Princess i 178
D. of F. Women 101
M. d' Arthur 259
Gareth and L. 502
Pass, of Arthur 427
North. Cobbler 34
Owd Rod 33
Two Voices 350
Love tJiou thy land 57
Princess vii 216
Ode on Well. 198
Li Mem. Con. 66
Ancient Sage 180
Mair. of Geraint 540
All
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 50
Con. 29
Lotos-Eaters 35
Day -Dm. L' Envoi 28
Tlie Daisy 81
Maud I xix 4
, , xxii 49
51
Marr. of Geraint 125
677
Guinevere 75
Lover's Tale i 231
Akbar's Dream 200
CEnone 30
Lancelot and E. 6
Lover's Tale i 761
The Wreck 7
The FliglU 4
Awaked
22
Babe
Awaked {See also Half-awaked) myself have a, as
it seems, Maud III vi 56
falls asleep in swoon, wherefrom a, Lover's Tale i 791
Awaken if the King a from his craze, Gareth and L. 724
Awaken'd (.See also Half-awaken'd) Slowly «, grow
so full and deep Elednwe 85
Awaking A knew the sword, and turn'd Pdleas and E. 489
A-waUdn' mumin' when we was a-w togither, Spinster's S's. 23
Award would seem to a it thine, (Enone 73
Aware After a lingering, — ere she was a, — Enoch Arden 268
Enid was a of three tall knights Oeraint and E. 56
she by tact of love was well a Lancelot and E. 984
Awe springs of life, the depths of a, Two Voices 140
shall hold a fretful realm in a, Locksley Hall 129
heart beat thick with passion and with a ; Princess Hi 190
To feel once more, in placid a, In Mem. cxxii 5
but all in a. For twenty strokes Lancelot and E. 719
he wellnigh kiss'd her feet For loyal a, ,, 1173
tenderness of manner, and chaste a, Pelleas and E. 110
with the excess of sweetness and of a, Lover's Tale ii 155
Awearied For I was much a of the Quest : Hdy Grail 744
Aweary She said, 'I am a, a, (repeat) Mariana 11, 23, 35, 47, 59, 71
She wept, ' I am a, a, Mariana 83
And I am all a of my life. (Enone 33
Awed a and promise-bounden she forbore, Enoch Arden 869
Still It a me." Sea Dreams 205
And my dream a me : — well — ,, 247
eyes A even me at first, thy mother — Demeter and P. 24
Awe-stricken hold A-s breaths at a work divine, Maud I xl7
Awful But all she is and does is a ; Princess i 140
Awl See Hawl
Awning ample a's gay Betwixt the pillars, Princess ii 25
A blood-red a waver overhead, St. Telemachus 52
Awoke And last with these the king a, Day-Dm. Revival 17
night-light flickering in my eyes A me.' Sea Dreams 104
desire that a in the heart of the child, Maud I xix 48
Leodogran a, and sent Ulfius, Com. of Arthur 444
these a him, and by great mischance Marr. of Geraint 112
Refused her to him, then his pride a; ,, 448
strongly striking out her limbs a ; Oeraint and E. 380
every evil deed I ever did, A Holy Grail 374
mantle clung. And pettish cries a, Last Tournament 214
owl-whoop and dorhawk-whirr A me not, Lover's Tale ii 117
Awry wherefore do we grow a From roots Suj)p. Confessions 77
To woman, superstition all a : Princess ii 137
Stampt into dust — tremulous, all a, Romney's R. 113
Axe {See also Battle-aze) ere the falling a did part Margaret 38
see the woodman lift His a to slay my kin. Talking Oak 236
Nor wielded a disjoint, „ 262
hammer and a, Auger and saw, Enoch Arden 173
The woodmen with their a's : Princess vi 44
glittering a was broken in their arms, ,, 51
train of dames : by a and eagle sat, ,, vii 128
• Churl, thine a ! ' he cried, Balin aiid Balan 295
Azelike That a edge untumable, I^rincess ii 203
Axle war Rides on those ringing a's ! Tiresias 93
Ay Why ? For its a a, a a. Windmv. Ay. 18
A-year my two 'oonderd a-y to mysen ; Spinster's S's. 12
but my two 'oonderd a-y. ,, 22
fro' my oan two 'oonderd a-y. j, 58
Aylmer {See also Lawrence Aylmer)
Sir A A that almighty man, Aylmer' s Field 13
A followed A at the Hall „ 36
like an A in his Aylmerism, ,, 123
Sir A half forgot his lazy smile ,, 197
Sir A past, And neither loved ,, 249
did Sir A know That great pock-pitten „ 255
had Sir A heard — Nay, but he must — „ 261
did Sir A (deferentially With nearing chair ,, 266
Sir A A slowly stiffening spoke : ,, 273
They parted, and Sir A A watch'd. ,, 277
Things in an A deem'd impossible, , , 305
Sir A reddening from the storm within, ,, 322
To shame these mouldy A's in their graves : ,, ,396
when this A camo of age — 407
Aylmer [continued) and Sir A watch'd them all, Aylmer's Field 552
and with her the race of yl , past. ,, 577
Aylmer- Averill There was an ^1 -^ marriage once. ,, 49
Aymerism like an Aylmer in his ^, ,, 123
A-yowlin' a-y an' yaupin' like mad ; Otcd Rod 88
An' the dogs was a-y all round, ,, 107
Azimuth sine and arc, spheroid and a, Princess vi 256
Azores At Flores in the A Sir Richard Greville lay. The Revenge 1
Azrael the black-wing'd A overcame, Akbar's Dream 186
Azure Her eyes a bashful a, and her hair Th^ Brook 71
he stared On eyes a bashful a, ,, 206
Immingled with Heaven's a waveringly, Gareth and L. 936
A , an Eagle rising or, the Sun Merlin and V. 475
Shallow skin of green and a — Locksley H,, Sixty, 208
and, men, below the dome of a Akbar's D. Hymn 7
Azure-circled High over all the a-c earth, Lover's Tale i 390
B
Ba3.con (bacon) B an' taates, an' a beslings puddin' North. Cobbler 112
BaS.ked (baked) fever 'ed b Jinny's 'ead as bald Village Wife 102
Bad.1 and honour thy brute B, Aylmer's Field 644
came a Lord in no wise like \x> B. ,, 647
Babble (s) the b of the stream Fell, Mariana in tJie S, 51
The babes, their b, Annie, Enoch Arden 606
night goes In b and revel and wine. Maud I ocxii 28
But 6, merely for b. „ II v AS
Merlin's mystic b about his end Last Tournament 670
laughter and b and earth's new wine, To A, Tennyson 2
And you liken — boyish b — Locksley H,, Sixty, 6
B, b ; our old England may go down in 6 ,, 8
— words, Wild b. Romney's R. 32
Babble (verb) by the poplar tall rivulets h and fall. Leonine Eleg. 4
I 6 on the pebbles. The Brook 42
Howe'er you b, great deeds cannot die ; Princess Hi 254
brook shall b down the plain. In Mem, ci 10
Began to scoff and jeer and o of him Marr. of Geraint 58
because ye dream they b of you.' Merlin and V. 690
ye set yourself To b about him. Last Tournament 340
Babbled b for the golden seal, that hung Dora 135
b for you, as babies for the moon, Princess iv 428
Had b ' Uncle ' on my knee ; In Mem. Ixxxiv 13
He moving homeward b to his men, Geraint and E. 362
While thus they h of the King, Lancelot and E. 1260
their tongues may have b of me — The Wreck 41
I myself have often b doubtless Locksley II., Sixty, 7
she said, I b, Mother, Mother— The Ring 115
Babbler garrulously given, A & in the land. Talking Oak 24
she, like many another b, hurt Guinevere 354
mothers with their b's of the dawn, Tiresias 103
Babbling runlets b down the glen. Mariana in tJie S. 44
his wheat-suburb, h as he went. The Brook 123
My words are like the b's in a dream Of nightmare,
when the b's break the dream. Ancient Sage 106
Babby {See also Babe, Baby) An' then the
6 wur burn, North. Cobbler 16
an' she an' the b beal'd, ^^ 37
An' the b's faiice wurn't wesh'd ,, 42
Thou's rode of 'is back when a b, Owd Roa 5
Babe (See also Babby, Baby) Sat smiling, b in arm. Palace of Art 96
With his first b's first cry, Enoch Arden 85
Nursing the sickly b, her latest-born. ,, 150
Pray'd for a blessing on his wife and b's ,, 188
be comforted, Look to the b's, 219
To give his b's a better bringing-up " 299
know his h's were running wild Lik e colts 304
A gilded dragon, also, for the b's. '' 540
The 6's, their babble, Annie, ',, 606
lived and loved him, and his b's \\ 685
rosy, with his b across his knees ; \\ 746
and a ring To tempt the i, " 751
mother glancing often toward her 6, " 754
saw the b Hers, yet not his, 7f,9
Babe
23
Baffle
Babe (amtinued) I shall see him, My h in bliss :
The h shall lead the lion.
the 6 Too ragged to be fondled
One b was theirs, a Margaret,
the h, Their Margaret cradled near
Her maiden h, a double April old.
Father will come to his h in the nest,
vassals to be beat, nor pretty h's
my h, my blossom, ah, my child,
My b, my sweet Aglaia, my one child :
With Psyche's h, was Ida watching us,
Ida stood With Psyche's 6 in arm :
with the b yet in her arms,
h that by us, Half-lapt in glowing gauze
burst The laces toward her b ;
Laid the soft b in his hard-mailed hands.
Not tho' he built upon the b restored ;
' Here's a leg for a 6 of a week ! '
for the b had fought for his life.
bring her b, and make her boast,
From youth and b and hoary hairs :
Mammonite mother kills her b for a burial fee,
red man's b Leap, beyond the sea.
now we poison oiu- b's, poor souls !
in the flame was borne A naked 6, and rode
to Merlin's feet. Who stoopt and caught
the&,
naked b, of whom the Prophet spake,
lad and girl — yea, the soft b !
ye men of Arthur be but b's,'
As clean as blood of b's,
his wife And two fair b's,
seven-months' b had been a truer gift.
broken shed, And in it a dead b ;
brought A maiden b ; which Arthur ^
pitying took.
But the sweet body of a maiden b.
cursed The dead b and the follies
In honour of poor Innocence the b,
bearing high in arms the mighty 6,
And over all her h and her the jewels
bearing on one arm the noble b,
Whereat the very b began to wail ;
a truth the b Will suck in with his milk
b in lineament and limb Perfect,
and the wail Of a beaten b,
Saving women and their b's,
a cotter's b is royal-born by right divine ;
many a time ranged over when a b,
senseless, worthless, wordless b,
all her talk was of the b she loved ;
She used to shun the wailing b,
In your sweet b she finds but you —
bending by the cradle of her b.
linger, till her own, the b She lean'd to
found Paris, a naked b, among the woods
I was lilting a song to the b.
Screams of a 6 in the red-hot palms
and Rome was a 6 in arms.
Babe-faced He came with the b-f lord ;
Babel let be Their cancell'd B's :
clamoiir grew As of a new-world B,
Baby (adj.) Moulded thy 6 thought.
Baby (s) in her bosom bore the h, Sleep,
As ruthless as a 6 with a worm.
Then lightly rocking b's cradle
from her b's forehead dipt A tiny curl,
His b's death, her growing poverty,
What does little b say,
B says, like little birdie,
B, sleep a little longer,
B too shall fly away.
Ixibies roll'd about Like tumbled fruit
babbled for you, as babies for the moon,
I knew them all as babies,
Enoch Arden 898
Aylmer's Field 648
„ 685
Sea Dreams 3
„ 56
Princess ii 110
,, iii 13
,, iv 146
„ vd>2
101
512
,, m 31
74
133
149
208
,, vii75
GrandTnother 11
64
In Mem. xl 26
,, Ixix 10
Maud I i 45
„ xvii 19
.. 7/^63
C(mi. of Arthur 384
Gareth and L. 501
1341
Balin and Sedan 361
Merlin and V. 344
707
711
Holy Qrail 399
Last Tmimainent 21
48
163
„ 292
Lover's Tide iv 295
298
370
375
Cohimbvs 37
De Prof. Two G. 11
The Wreck 123
Lochsley H., Sixty, 64
125
The Ring 151
„ 304
353
„ 358
365
415
„ 483
Death of (Enone 54
Bandit's Death 20
The Daiom 2
9
Mand II i 13
Princess iv 77
487
Elednore 5
Gardener's D. 268
yValk. to tlie MaU 108
Enoch Arden 194
„ 235
706
Sea Dreams 301
„ 303
„ 305
„ 308
Princess, Pro., 82
„ iv 428
Grandmotlier 88
Baby (s) (cov/inued\ The b new to earth and sky, Tn Mem. xlv 1
I cannot bide Sir B. Pelleas and E. 190
I have gather'd my b together— Rizpah 20
My b, the bones that had suck'd me, ,, 53
kill Their babies at the breast Columbus 180
' Anything ailing,' I asked her, * with b ? ' The Wreck 61
Baby-germ gamboll'd on the greens A b-r/. Talking Oak 78
Baby-girl a b-g, that had never look'd on the light : Despair 71
Babyism In b's, and dear diminutives Aylmer's Field 539
Babylon Shall B be cast into the sea ; Sea Dreams 28
and life Pass in the fire of B ! Sir J. Oldcastle 124
For B was a child new-born, The Davm 9
Babylonian The foundress of the B wall, Princess ii 80
Baby-oak magnetise The b-o within. Talking Oak 256
Baby-roae The b-r's in her cheeks ; Lilian 17
Baby-sole tender pink five-beaded b-s's, Aylmer's Field 186
Baby-wife nor wail of b-io, Or Indian widow ; Akbar's Dream 196
Bacchanal like wild B's Fled onward Lover's Tale iii 25
Bacchante B, what you will ; Romney's R. 6
Bacchus mailed B leapt into my arms, D. of F. Women 151
Back wear an undress'd goatskin on my b ; St. S. Stylites 116
How she mouths behind my b. Vision of Sin 110
Read rascal in the motions of his b Sea Dreams 167
hear my father's clamour at our b's Princess i 105
Her b against a pillar, her foot ,, iii 180
Them as 'as coats to their b's an' taakes If. Farmer, N.S. 46
The daily burden for the b. In Mem. xxv 4
b turn'd, and bow'd above his work, Man: of Geiuint 267
brutes of mountain b That carry kings Merlin and V. 576
long b's of the bushless downs, (repeat) Lancelot and E. 400, 789
Look at the cloiiths on 'er b, North. Cobbler 109
Backbiter Face-flatterer and b are the same. Merlin arudL V. 824
Back'd See Bow-back'd
Bacon (Francis) See Verulam
Bacon See Ba&con
Bad (adj. ) 0 base and b ! what comfort ? Princess v 78
for she wur a b un, shea. iV. Farmer, O.S. 22
the poor in a loomp is b. „ N.S. 48
What is she now ? My dreams are b. Maud / i 73
And here beneath it is all as 6, ,, IIvl4^
good ye are and b, and like to coins, ffoly Grail 25
Ya was niver sa 6 as that. Church-warden, etc. 26
Bad (b) I fear to slide from b to worse. Two Voices 231
sa o' coorse she be gone to the b ! Village Wife 98
I wur gawin' that waJiy to the b, Owd Rod 71
Bad-bade (verb) I made a feast : I bad him come ; The Sisters 13
and do the thing I bad thee, M. d' Arthur 81
utter'd it, And bade adieu for ever. Love and Duty 83
bade him cry, with sound of trumpet, Godiva 36
bad him with good heart sustain himself — Aylmer's Field 544
He bad you guard the sacred coasts. Ode on Well. 172
my three brethren bad me do it, Gareth and L. 1410 ,
' Fair Sir, they bad me do it. ,, 1417
Thro' which he bad her lead him on, Geraint and E. 29
6rt^^ the host Call in what men ,, 285
Prince 6a<£ him a loud good -night. ,, 361
In this poor gown he 6a«? me clothe myself, ,, 702
Nor waved his hand, Nor bad farewell, Lancelot and E. 987
who bad a thousand farewells to me, , , 1056
Lancelot, who coldly went, nor bad me one : ,, 1057
So Arthur bad the meek Sir Percivale ,, 1264
I left her and I bad her no farewell ; ,, 1304
when he saw me, rose, and bad me hail, Holy Grail 725
and do the thing I bade thee. Pass, of Arthur 249
bad them to a banquet of farewells. Lw>er's Tale iv 186
bad his menials bear him from the door, ,, 260
We bad them no farewell, ,, 386
bad them remember my father's death, V. of Maeldwie 70
bad his trumpeter sound To the charge, Heavy Brigade 8
I bad her keep. Like a seal'd book, The Ring 122
6a(? the man engrave ' From Walter ' on the ring, ,, 235
Badger live like an old b in his earth, Holy Grail 629
Badon broke the Pagan yet once more on B hill.' iMncdot and E. 280
on the mount Of B I myself beheld ,, 303
Baffle ' Thy glory b's wisdom. Akbar's Dream 28
BafSed
24
Band
Baffled Havelock b, or beaten. Def. of Luckrmo 91
B her priesthood, Broke the Taboo, Kapiolani 29
Baffling winds variable, Then h, a long course of
them ; Enodi Arden 546
' blown by 6 winds, Like the Good Fortune, , , 628
Bag not plunge His hand into the 6 : Golden Year 72
with b and sack and basket, Enoch Arden 63
Bagdat By B's shrines of fretted gold, Arabian Nights 7
mooned domes aloof In inmost B, , , 128
Bagpipe b's, revelling, devil's-dances. Sir J. Oldcastle 149
Bailey -gate storm at the B-g ! storm, Def. of Litckrwio 37
Bailiff his b brought A Chartist pike. Walk, to the Mail 70
how he sent the b to the farm The Brook 141
how the 6 swore that he was mad, ' ,, 143
He met the 6 at the Golden Fleece, ,, 146
He found the b riding by the farm, ,, 153
Bairn (See also Bame) ' See your b's before you go ! En^h Arden 870
But fur thy b's, poor Steevie, Spinstei-'s S's. 82
thou was es fond o' thy b's ,. 83
tci' my hi' 'is inoitth to the winder Owd Roii 92
Bait the b's Of gold and beauty, Ayliner's Field 486
Christ the b to trap his dupe and fool ; Sea Dreams 191
hinted love was only wasted b, The Ring 360
Baited so spum'd, so b two whole days — Sir J. Oldcastle 163
Bake whose brain the sunshine b's ; St. S. Stylites 164
Baked (See also Ba&ked) Over all the meadow b
and bare. Sisters (E. and E.) 8
Baking not eam'd my cake in 6 of it ? Oareth and L. 575
Bala south-west that blowing B lake Geraiyit and E. 929
Balan Balin and B sitting statuelike, Balin and Balan 24
on the left Of B B's near a poplartree. ,, 30
Balin and B answer'd ' For the sake ,, 32
Then Balin rose, and B, ,,43
and my better, this man here, B. „ 55
fury on myself, Saving for B : ,,63
Than twenty Balins, B knight. ,, 69
Then B added to their Order „ 91
Said B * I ' ! So claim 'd the quest ,, 137
B wam'd, and went ; Balin remain'd : ,, 153
He took the selfsame track as J5, ,, 290
and B lurking there (His quest was unaccomplish'd) ,, 546
shield of B prick'd The hauberk ,, 559
had chanced, and B moan'd again. ,, 604
Balance (equipoise) As the wind-hover hangs in b, Ayliner's Field 321
Balance (verb) who would cast and 6 at a desk, Audley Court 44
Like souls that b joy and pain. Sir L. and Q. G, 1
Balanced (See also SeUf-balanced) Your fortunes,
justlier b, Princess ii 66
Well, she b this a little, ,, Hi 165
And 6 either way by each. Lover's Tale iv 269
Balcony Under tower and b, L. of Shalott iv 37
And lean'd upon the b. Mariana in the S. 88
Bald Jinny's 'ciid as b as one o' them heggs, Village Wife 102
Baldness (*« also Earth-baldness) Began to wag
their b up and down. Princess v 19
Baldric from his blazon'd b slung L. of Shalott Hi 15
Bale dropping down with costly b's ; Locksley Hall 122
tho" they brought Vjut merchants' b's, In Mem. xiii 19
Balin B and Balan sitting statuelike, Balin and Balan 24
on thp right of B B's horse Wa« fast „ 28
B and Balan answer'd ' For the sake „ 82
Then B rose, and Balan, „ 48
B the stillness of a minute broke „ 51
B. ' the Savage ' — that addition thine — „ 53
Than twenty li's, Balan knight. „ 69
Thereafter, when Sir B entcr'd hall, „ 80
heretofore with these And B, „ 93
Embracing B, ' Good my brother, „ 139
Balan wam'd, and went ; B remain'd : „ L53
B marvelling oft How far beyond „ 171
Arthur, when Sir B soiight him, said ,, 198
B wan bold, and ask'd To boar „ 199
' No shadow' aaid Sir i? ' 0 my Queen, „ 206
B bare the crown, and all the knights „ 209
chanced, one morning, that Sir B sat 240
Balin (continued) Follow'd the Queen; Sir B heard her Balin and Balan 250
and £ started from his bower. ,, ,280
B cried ' Him, or the viler devil ,, 299
B answer'd him ' Old fabler, ,, 306
Said 5 ' For the fairest and the best ,, 339
B said ' The Queen we worship, ,, 348
A goblet on the board by £, ,, 362
This B graspt, but while in act to hurl, ,, 368
Sir jB with a fiery ' Ha ! ,, 393
B by the banneret of his helm , , 398
iJ drew the shield from off his neck, ,, 429
And B rose, ' Thither no more ! „ 483
Said B to her ' Is this thy coiuiesy — , , 494
Sir ii spake not word, But snatch 'd \ ,, .553
JB's horse Was wearied to the death, ,, .560
they clash'd. Rolling back upon B, ,, 562
£ first woke, and seeing that true face, ,, 590
' 0 5, -B, I that fain had died To save ,, 599
B told him brokenly, and in gasps, ,, 603
' 0 brother ' answer'd B ' woe is me ! ,, 618
£ answer'd low ' Goodnight, ,, 627
and slept the sleep With B, ,, 632
Balk'd with a worm I b his fame. D. of F. Wmnen 155
Ball (globe) ' No compound of this earthly b Two Voices 35
Ball (game) Had tost his b and flown his kite, Aylmer's Field 84
Flung b, flew kite, and raced the purple fly, Pnncess ii 248
others tost a b Above the fountain-jets, ,, 461
Quoit, tennis, 6 — no games? ,, m 215
And we took to playing at b, V. of Maddune 94
Ball (round object) whereon the gilded h Danced Princess, Pro., 63
like a b The russet-bearded head roll'd Geraint and E. 728
he made me the cowslip b. First Quarrel 13
Ball (orb) To him who grasps a golden b. In Mem. cxi 3
Ball (the sun) The day comes, a dull red b Maud II iv 65
Ball (the heel) Dagonet, turning on the b of
his foot. Last Tournament 329
Ball (entertainment of dancing) But I came on
him once at a b, The Wreck 47
Ball (plajrthing) Is to be the b of Time, Vision of Sin 105
Ball (See also AcOm-ball, Blossom-ball, Cannon-ball,
Cowslip Ball, Football)
Ballad time to time, some 6 or a song Princess, Pro., 241
something in the h's which they sang, , , Con, 14
flung A i to the brightening moon : In Mem,, Ixxxix 28
A passionate 6 gallant and gay, Maud Ivi
To the b that she sings. Maud II iv 43
carolling as he went A true-love b, Lancelot and E. 705
lay At thy pale feet this b Bed. Poem Prin. Alice 20
Ballad-burthen Like b-b music, kept, The Daisy 77
Ballast we laid them on the b down below ; The Revenge 18
Balliol loved by all the younger gown There at B, To Master of B. 3
Balloon See Fire-balloon
Balm steep our brows in slumber's holy b ; Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 21
desires, like fltful blasts of b Gardener's D. 68
spikenard, and b, and frankincense. St. S. Stylites'lW
caress The ringlet's waving b— Talking Oak 178
Beat b upon our eyelids. Princess Hi 123
Be thme the b of pity. Merlin and V. 80
Strowmg b, or shedding poison Locksley H., Sixty, 274
who breathe the b Of summer-winters To Ulysses 10
' From the South I bring you b, Prog, of Spring 66
whatever herb or b May clear the blood Death of (Enone 35
Balm-cricket The b-c carols clear In the green A Dirge 47
Balm-dew drop B-d's to bathe thy feet ! Talking Oak 268
Balm'd swathed and b it for herself. Lover's Tale i 682
Balmier kisses b than half -opening buds Tithoniis 59
B and nobler from her bath of storm, " Lucretius 175
Baltic shaker of the B and the Nile, Ode on Well. 137
side of the Black and the B deep, Maud III vi 51
Baluster And leaning there on those b's. Princess Hi 119
Balustrade stairs Ran up with golden b, Arabian Nights 118
Bamboo Your cane, your palm, tree-fern, b, To Ulysses 36
Band (bond, strip) bind with b's That island queen Buonaparte 2
Sleep had bound her in his rosy b, Caress'd or chidden 6
A 6 of pam across my brow ; Tfie Letters 6
Band
25
Bard
I
Band (bond, strip) (contimied) single b of gold about
her hair, Princess v 513
No spirit ever brake the b In Mem, xdii 2
bars Of black and b's of silver, Lover's Tale iv 59
an" twined like a 6 o' haay. (hod Rod 22
Band (a company) held debate, a 6 Of youthful
friends, In Mem. Ixocxvii 21
in a dream from a & of the blest, Maud III vi 10
if he live, we will have him of our h ; Oeraint and E. 553
thanks to the Blessed Saints that T came on
none of his b ; Bandit's Death 40
b will be scatter 'd now their gallant captain is dead, ,, 41
Bandage raised the blinding b from his eyes : Princess i 244
Banded (See also Snowy-bajided, Yellow-banded)
but after, the great lords B, Com. of Arthur 237
Bandied B by the hands of fools. Vision of Sin 106
Bandit redden'd with no b's blood : Aylmer's Field 597
bridge, ford, beset By b's, Oareth and L. 595
I saw three b's by the rock Oeraint aTid E. 72
Struck thro' the Dulky 6's corselet home, ,, 159
now so long By b's groom'd, ,, 193
Was half a 6 in my lawless hour, „ 795
One from the b scatter'd in the field, ,, 818
Scaped thro' a cavern from a b hold, Holy Grail 207
Thieves, b's, leavings of confusion. Last Tmtmame7it 95
Sanctuary granted To b, thief. Sir J. Oldcastle 113
tho' I am the B's bride. Bandit's Death 6
But the B had woo'd me in vain, „ 10
Bandit-haunted past The marches, and by b-h holds, Gei-aint and E. 30
Bane courtesies of household life. Became her b ; OviTievere 87
mockery of my people, and their b.' „ 526
Bang Let us b's these dogs of Seville, The Revenge 30
good manners b thruf to the tip o' the taail. Spiitster's S's, 66
Bang'd palace b, and buzz'd and clackt. Day- Dm.., Revival, 14
iron-clanging anvil b With hammers ; Princess v 504
Banished born And b into mystery, De Prof. Two G. 42
Banishment causer of his b and shame, Balin and Balan 221
Bank {See also Biver-bank, Sea-bank) In cool
soft turf upon the b, Arabian Nights 96
wave-worn horns of the echoing b. Dying Swan 39
Shadow forth the b's at will : EleaTwre 110
From the b and from the river L. of Shalott, Hi 33
broad stream in his b's complaining, „ w 3
The little life of b and brier. You might have won 30
With many a curve my b's I fret The Brook 43
maidens glimmeringly group'd In tho hollow b. Princess iv 191
shadowing bluflf that made the b's. In Mem. ciii 22
Behind a purple-frosty b Of vapoiur, ,, cvii 3
Full to the b's, close on the promised good Maud I xviii 6
Rough-thicketed were the b's and steep ; Oareth and L. 907
star of mom Parts from a 6 of snow, Marr. of Oeraint 735
Tho' happily down on a 6 of grass, Oeraint and E. 507
like a 6 Of maiden snow mingled Last Tournament 148
leaves Low b's of yellow sand ; Lover's Tale i 535
thaw the b's o' the beck be sa high, Village Wife 83
Plunges and heaves at a 6 Def. of Lvjcknmo 39
slushin' down fro' the b to the beck, Owd Rod 41
Here on this 6 in smne way live tho life Akbar's Dream 144
Bankrupt b of all claim On your obedience, Romney's R. 70
Banner (See also Flame-banner) Here droops the b
on the tower. Day -Dm., Sleep. P., 13
hedge broke in, the b blew, Day-Dm. Revival 9
unfurl the maiden b of our rights. Princess iv 503
undulated The b : anon to meet us ,, v 254
With b and with music. Ode on Well. 81
March with b and bugle and fife Maud IvlQ
hail once more to the b of battle unroll'd ! Maud III vi 42
So when the King had set his b broad. Com. of Arthur 101
with black b, and a long black horn Oareth and L. 1366
b's of twelve battles overhead Stir, Balin and Balan 88
deeds Of England, and her b in the East ? Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 21
B of England, not for a season, 0 b Def. of Imcknow 1
topmost roof our b of England
blew, (repeat) Def. of Lucknotc 6, 30, 45, 60, 94
topmost roof our b in India blew. Def. of Lucknmo 72
Banner (continued) on the palace roof the old
b of England blow.
Thraldom who walks with the 6 of Freedom,
b's blazoning a Power That is not seen
Banneret a slender b fluttering.
Balin by the b of his helm Dragg'd
Def. ofLucknoiv 106
Vastness 10
Akbar's Dream 137
Oareth and L. 913
Balin and Balan 398
Banquet (See also Marriage-banquet, Mid-banquet)
Each baron at the b sleeps, Day-Dm., Sleep. P., 37
beeswing from a binn reserved For b's, Aylmer's Field 406
distant blaze of those dull b's, ,, 489
with this our b's rang ; Princess i 132
With b in tho distant woods ; In Mem. Ixxxix 32
flowers or leaves To deck the b. , , cvii 6
Spice his fair b with the dust of death ? Maud I xviii 56
at the b those great Lords from Rome, Com. of Arthur 504
Faint in the low dark hall of b : Balin and Balan 343
(She sat beside the b nearest Mark), Merlin and V.\S
made him leave The b, and concourse Lancelot and E. 562
Arthur to the b, dark in mood, ,, 564
ev'n the knights at b twice or thrice „ 736
against the floor Beneath the b, ,, 743
While the great b lay along the hall. Holy Orail 180
Then Arthur made vast b's, Pelleas and E. 147
bad them to a 6 of farewells. Love>''s Tale iv 186
cries about the b — ' Beautiful ! „ 239
To make their b relish ? Ancient Sage 18
Banqueted Let the needy be b, On Jub. Q. Victoria 35
Banquet-hall Into the fair Peleian b-h, (Enone 225
Banter (s) he spoke, Part b, part affection. Princess, Pro., 167
They hated h, wish'd for something real, ,, Con., 18
Banter (verb) With solemn gibe did Eustace h me. Gardener's D. 168
Banter'd I b him, and swore They said Golden Year 8
With which we 6 little Lilia first : Pnncess, Con. , 12
Bantling Then let the b scald at home, Pri7icess, v 458
Lo their precious Roman b, Boddicea 31
Baptis (Baptist) Fur I wur a B wonst. Church-warden, etc. 11
tha ?«?/,« speak hout to the i?'e5 here i' the town, ,, 51
Bar (barrier) (See also Harbour-bar, Window-bars)
Sang looking thro' his prison 6's? Margaret 35
salt jxjol, lock'd in with b's of sand. Palace of Art 249
My spirit beais her mortal b's, Sir Galahad 46
Low breezes fann'd the belfry b's. The Letters 43
Save for the b between us, loving Enoch Arden 880
I linger by my shingly b's ; The Brook 180
Baronet yet had laid No b between them : Aylmer's Field 118
nor conscious of a h Between them, , , 134
squeezed himself betwixt the b's. Princess, Pro., 112
Who breaks his birth's invidious b. In Mem. Ixiv 5
Unloved, by many a sandy b, ,, ct 9
Rave over the rocky b, Voice and the P. 6
those that hand the dish across the h. Oareth and L. 155
may there be no moaning of the b. Crossing the Bar 3
When I have crost the b. „ 16
Bar (band) long night in silver streaks and b's, Ijtver's Tide, ii 112
b's Of black and bands of silver, ,, w 58
Bar (iron rod) casting b or stone Was counted best ; Oareth and L. 518
Bar (bony rid!ge) The b of Michael Angelo In Mem.. Ixxxvii 40
Bar (ray) stream 'd thro' many a golden b, Day-Dm., Depart. 15
Bar (tribunal) himself The prisoner at the b. Sea Dreams 176
Bar (body of barristers) year or two before Call'd
to the b, Aylmer's Field 59
Bar (division of music) Whistling a random 6 of
Bonny Doon, The Brook 82
Bar (verb) doors that b The secret bridal chambers Gardener's D. 248
block and b Your heart with system Princess iv 462
Thro' the gates that b the distance Faith 6
Barbarian Till that o'ergrown B in the East Poland 7
gray b lower than the Christian child. Lockdey Hall 174
' Who ever saw such wild b's. ? Girls ? — Princess Hi 42
B's, grosser than your native bears — ,, iv 537
Barbarous These women were too b, „ H 298
Barcelona At B — tho' you were not Coluinlms 8
Bard b has honour'd beech or lime. Talking Oak 291
0 little h, is your lot so hard, Spitefid Letter 5
6's of him will sing Hereafter ; Com. of Artliur 414
Bard
26
Barrier
Bard (cotititm^) not then the Riddling of the B's"! Gareth and L. 286
Was also B, and knew the starry heavens ; Merlin and V. 169
her b, her silver star of eve, Her God, ,, 954
many a /*, without offence, Ltmcdot and E. Ill
all the sacred madness of the h, Holy th-ail 877
thy Paynim 6 Had such a mastery Last Towmainent 326
• Yea, one, a /* ; of whom my father said, Gninevere 111
the h Sang Arthur's glorious wars, ,, 285
we chanted the songs of the B's V. of Maddune 90
B whose fame-lit laurels glance To Victor Hvgo 4
B'.% that the mighty Muses have raised Pamassns 2
Bare (a!dj.) plain was grassy, wild and h, Hying Sioan 1
God, before whom ever lie h PalMce of Art 222
argent of her breast to sight Laid b, D. of F. Women 159
And saw the altar cold and b. The Letters 4
our love and reverence left them & ? Aylmer's Field 785
walks were stript as 6 as brooms. Princess, Pro., 184
strip a hundred hollows b of Spring, „ vi 65
Flashed all their sabres b. Light Brigade 27
B of the body, might it last. In Mem. xliii 6
breathing h Tlie round of space, ,, Ixxxvi 4
shield was blank and b without a sign Gareth and L. 414
Worn by the feet that now were silent, wound
B to the sun, Marr, of Geraint 322
in my agony Did I make b Lover's Tale ii 48
Over all the meadow baked and b. Sisters {E. and E.) 8
strip your own foul passions b ; Locksley H., Sio'Iy, 141
His friends had stript him b. Dead Prophet 14
An' haafe on 'im i as a bublin'. Owd Roa 102
honest Poverty, b to the bone ; Vastriess 19
now arching leaves her b To breaths Prog, of Spring 12
Bare (to bear) hoofs 6 on the ridge of spears Prin/xss v 489
and b Straight to the doors : ,, vi 348
first that ever I b was dead Grandmother 59
b The use of virtue out of earth : In Mem. Ixxxii 9
This h a maiden shield, a casque ; Gareth and L. 680
down upon him 6 the bandit three. Geraint and E. 84
he, she dreaded most, b down upon him. „ 156
B victual for the mowers : ,, 202
b her by main violence to the board, ,, 654
Balin b the crown, and all the knights Balin and Balan 209
Trampled ye thus on that which b the Crown ? ' „ 602
he that always b in bitter grudge Merlin and V, 6
grefit and guilty love he b the Queen, Lancelot and E. 245
In battle with the love he 6 his lord, , , 246
all together down upon him B, ,, 482
came the hermit out and b him in, ,, 519
often in her arms She ft me, ,, 1411
none might see who b it, and it past. Holy Grail 190
his creatures took and b him off, Guinevere 109
Bare (to lay open) Falsehood shall b her
plaited brow : Clear-headed friend 11
To b the eternal Heavens again, In Mem. cxxii 4
Bared The rites prepared, the victim h. The Victim 65
tho' it spake and b to view In Mem. xcii 9
b the knotted column of his throat, Marr. of Geraint 74
It her forehead to the blistering sun, Geraint and E. 515
Barefoot For b on the keystone, Gareth and L. 214
Bare-footed Kf came the beggar maid Beggar Maid 3
I'.l and bare-headed three fair girls Gareth and L. 926
Bare grinning Flash'd the b-g skeleton of doath ! Merlin and V. 847
Bare-headed Some cowled, and some 6-/t, Princess vi 77
Bnro-footed and b-h three fair girls Gareth and L. 926
BarenesB To make old b picturesque In Mem. cxxviii 19
Bargain they closed a b, hand in hand. The Brook 156
May rue the b made.' Princess i 74
Barge Slide tho heavy b's trail'd L. of S/utlott i 20
Then saw they how there hove a dusky b, M. d^ Arthur 193
' Place me in the b,' And to the h they came. ,, 204
slowly answered Arthur from the b : „ 239
b with oar and sail Moved from the brink, ,, 265
and a b Be ready on tho river, Ixtncelot and E. 1122
tf) that stream whereon the ft, ,, 1141
slowly past the ft Whereon tho lily maid ,, 1241
the 6, On to the palace-doorway sliding, „ 1245
Barge {continued) ft that brought her moving
down, Lancelot and E. 139
that unhappy child Pa^t in her 6 : Last Toumamsnt 45
Then saw they how there hove a dusky 6, Pass, of Arthur 361
' Place me in the ft.' So to the 6 they came. „ 372
slowly answer'd Arthur from the ft : ,, 407
ft with oar and sail Moved from the brink, ,, 433
Barge-laden creeps on, B4, to three arches Gardiner's D. 43
Bark (vessel) (See cdso Crescent-bark) a ft that,
blowing forward, bore M. d' Arthur Ep. 21
I find a magic 6 ; Sir Gakihad 38
swiftly streara'd ye by the ft ! The Voyage 50
lading and unlading the tall b's, Enoch Arden 816
this frail ft of ours, when sorely tried, Aylmer's Field 715
I sit within a helmless.ft. In Mem. iv 3
unhappy ft That strikes by night ,, xvi 12
spare thee, sacred ft ; ,, xmi 14
ft had plunder'd twenty nameless isles ; Merlin and V. 559
Down on a ft, and overbears the ft, Lancelot and E. 485
Bark (of a tree) silver-green with gnarled 6 : Ma'riana 42
And rugged b's begin to bud. My life is full 18
Could slip its ft and walk. Tidking Oak 188
Bark (verb) B an answer, Britain's raven ! ft and
blacken innumerable, Boddicea 13
Let the fox 6, let the wolf yell. PeUeas and E. 472
and the dog couldn't 6. V. of Maeldune 18
Barketh B the shepherd-dog cheerly ; Leonine Eleg. 5
Barking ft for the thrones of kings ; Ode on Well. 121
Bark's-bosom Borne in the ft-ft, Batt. of BruTianburh ^9
Barley Long fields of ft and of rye, L. of SJudott i 2
In among the bearded ft, ,,29
And raked in golden 6. Will Water. 128
Barley-sheaves He rode between the b-s, L. of Shalott Hi 2
Barley-spear b-s's Were hollow-husk'd, Deimeter and P. 112
Barmaid ' Bitter ft, waning fast ! Vision of Sin 67
Bam got to the 6, fur the ft wouldn't burn Owd Rod 103
but the ft was as cowd as owt, ,, 111
Bame (bairn) Bessy Marris's 6. (repeat) N. Fanner, O.S. 14, 21
Baron (title) Each ft at the banquet sleeps, Day-Dm., Sleep. P., 37
The b's swore, with many words, ,, Revival 23
gaunt old B with his beetle brow Priiicess ii 240
bush-bearded B's heaved and blew, ,, « 21
In doubt if you be of our B's' breed — Third of Feb. 32
Lords and B's of his realm Com. of Arthur 65
B's and the kings prevail'd, ,, 105
fought against him in the B's' war, Gareth and L. 77
A knight of Uther in the B's' war, ,, 353
a stalwart B, Arthur's friend. ,, 818
B saying, ' I well believe ,, 835
the ^ set Gareth beside her, ,, 851
Setting this knave, Lord B, at my side. ,, 854
His B said ' We go but harkon : Balin and Balan 9
Heard from the B that, ten years La-^ticdot and E. 272
Count, ft — whom he smote, he overthrew. ,, 465
Bracelet-bestower and B of B's, Bait, of Bninanburh 4
Baronet hoar hair of the B bristle up Aylmer's Fidd 42
B yet had laid No bar between them : ,, 117
No little lily-handed B he, Princess, Con. 84
Barr'd All ft with long white cloud Palace of Art BiZ
Every door is ft with gold, Locksley Hall 100
door shut, and window ft. Godiva 41
home-circle of the poor They ft her : Aylmer's Fidd 505
But now fast 6 : Princess v 367
and entering ft her door, Lancelot and E. 15
ribb'd And 6 with bloom on bloom. Lover's Tale i 416
Barren But it is wild and ft, Amphion 2
Tho soil, left ft, scarce had grown In Mem. liii 7
Barren-beaten He left the ft-ft thoroughfare, Lancdot and E. 161
Barricade Should pile her b's with dead. In Mem. cxxvii 8
death at our slight ft, Def. of Luckn&w 15
Barrier trumpet blared At the ft Princess v 486
burst All b's in her onward race In Mem. cxiv 14
Back to the ft ; then the trumpets lAincelot and E. 500
almost burst the b's in their heat. Holy Grail 336
voice that billow'd round the b's Last Tournament 167
Barrier
27
Battle
Barrier (continued) Russia bursts our
Indian b,
h that divided beast from man Slipt,
Barring out graver than a schoolboy's h o ;
Barrow grassy b's of the happier dead.
behind it a gray down With Danish b's ;
Pass from the Danish b overhead ;
Barter not being bred To b,
Base (adj.) him thai utter d nothing b ;
Counts nothing that she meets with b,
' Ungenerous, dishonourable, b,
0 b and bad ! what comfort ?
is he not too b ?
And myself so languid and b.
And therefore splenetic, personal, b,
Nor know I whether I be very b
Not only to keep down the b in man,
spared the flesh of thousands, the coward and
the&,
Base (s) (See also Meadow-bases) Wrapt in dense
cloud from b to cope.
The seas that shock thy b !
Upon the hidden b's of the hills.'
people hum About the column's b,
The broken 6 of a black tower,
a pillar'd porch, the b's lost In laurel :
He has a solid b of temperament :
roots of earth and b of all ;
fangs Shall move the stony b's of the world,
roar that breaks the Pharos from his b
great the crush was, and each b,
It sees itself from thatch to b
drown The b's of my life in tears.
a hundred feet Up from the /; :
lash'd it at the b with slanting storm ;
at the b we found On either hand,
earthquake shivering to your b Split you,
gathering at the b Re-makes itself,
Upon the hidden b's of the hills.'
iceberg splits From cope to b —
wander round the b's of the hilk,
plunge to the b of the mountain walls,
Basebom Call him b, and since his ways
and no king. Or else b.'
Based (•S^^ also Broad-based, Firm-based)
feet on juts of slippery crag
b His feet on juts of slippery crag
Basement Modred brought His creatures to the b
Baseness ' He knows a bin his blood
e<)ual b lived in sleeker times
Is there no b we would hide ?
She finds the b of her lot,
there is no b in her.'
To leave an equal b ;
Puts his own 6 in him by default
Basest Altho' I be the b of mankind,
The b, far into that council-hall
All that is noblest, all that is b,
Bashful reddens, cannot speak. So b,
Bashfulness His b and tenderness at war,
His broken utterances and b,
Basilisk hornless unicorns, Crack'd b's,
Baisis All but the b of the soul.
Bask or to 6 in a summer sky :
To you that b below the Line,
Why not b amid the senses
Bask'd b and batton'd in the woods.
wealthy enough to have b
Basket To Francis, with a 6 on his arm,
holiday. With bag and sack and b,
set down His b, and dismounting
skin Clung but to crate and b,
Basking city Of little Monaco, b, glow'd.
summer b in the sultry plains
Bassa by the shore Of DugLos ; that on B ;
Lockdey H., Sixty, 115
St. Tdemachus 60
Princess Con. 66
Tithomis 71
Enoch Arden 7
„ 442
„ 250
To the Queen 8
On a Mourns- 4
Aylmer's Field 292
Princess v 78
Ma\id I iv 36
„ t>18
„ a; 33
Marr. of Oeraint 468
Guinevere 480
Happy 17
T^oo Voice.s 186
England and Amer. 15
M. d' Arthur 106
St. S Stylites 39
Aylmer's Field 511
Princess i 230
„ iv 254
,, w 446
,, vi 58
339
353
Requiescai 3
In Mem. xlix 16
Jialin and Balan 171
Merlin awl V. 635
Holy Grail 497
Pelleas and E. 46.5
„ 609
Pass, of Arthur "^^
Lover's Tale i 604
„ a 121
V. of Maeldune 14
Ctm. of Arthur ISO
234
6 His
M. d" Arthur 188
Pass, of Arthur 356
Guinevere 104
Two Voices 301
Princess v 385
In Mem. li 3
,, Ix 6
Merlin and V. 127
830
Pelleas and E. 81
St. S. Stylitejs 1
Lucretius 171
Vastness 32
B(din and Balan 520
Enoch Arden 289
Pelleas and E. Ill
Hidy Grail 718
Love thou thy land 44
Wages 9
To Ulysses 5
By an Evolution. 6
In Mem. xzxv 24
The Wreck 45
Andley Coui-t 6
Enoch Arden 63
Geraint and E. 210
Merlin and V. 625
The Daisy 8
Prog, of Spring 77
Lancelot ami E. 290
Bassoon (continued) liquid treble of that 6, my throat ; Princess ii 426
Bassoon heard The flute, violin, b ; Maud I xxii 14
Basting be for the spit, Larding and b. Gareth and L. 1083
Bastion A looming h fringed with fire. In Mem. xv 20
Bastion'd from the b walls Like threaded spiders, Princess i 107
Bat After the flitting of the b'a, Marinna 17
this Mock-Hymen were laid up like winter b's Princess iv 144
b's wheel'd, and owls whoop'd, Priticess, Con., 110
b's went round in fragrant skies. In Metn. xcv 9
For the black b, night, has flown, Maiid I xxii 2
A home of b's, in every tower an owl. Balin and Balan 336
When the 6 comes out of his cave, Despair 89
Batchelor Molly Magee wid her b, Danny O'Roon — TonKrrroio 10
Bath the b's Of all the western stars, Ulysses 60
His wife a faded beauty of the B's, Aylnm-'s Field 27
Balmier and nobler from her b of storm, Lucretius 175
dipt in b'a of hissing tears. In Mem. cxviii 23
Pallas Athene climbing from the b In anger ; Tiresias 40
fuse themselves to little spicy b's, Prog, of Spring 33
The B's, the Forum gabbled of his death, St. Tdemachus 74
Bathe Balm-dows to b thy feet ! Talking Oak 268
Coldly thy rosy shadows b me, Tithonus 66
Soft lustre b's the range of urns Day-Dm., Sleep, P., 9
she b's the Saviour's feet In Mem. xxxii 11
Bathed (.S«« (dso New-bathed) lying b In the
green gleam Princess i 93
Vivien b your feet before her own ? Merlin and V. 284
So b we were in brilliance. Lover's Tale i 313
So fair in southern sunshine b. Freedom 5
B in that lurid crimson — St. Tdemachus 18
Batin' (beating) set me heart b to music wid ivery
word ! Tomorrow 34
Batten And b on her poisons ? Lover's Tale i 777
Batten'd bask'd and b in the woods. In Mem. xxxv 24
Battenest Thou b by the greasy gleam Will Water. 221
Battening lie B upon huge seaworms The Kraken 12
Batter some one b's at the dovecote-doors, Princess iv 169
Batter 'd (See also Bone-batter'd) flints b with
clanging hoofs ; D. of F. Women 21
He b at the doors ; none came : Princess v 337
Cyril, b as he was, Trail'd himself ,, vi 154
And b with the shocks of doom In Mem,, cxviii 24
and so left him bruised And b, Pdlcas and E. 547
Battering B the gates of heaven St. S. Stylites 7
Battery-smoke Plunged in the b's Light Brigade 32
Battle (s) (See also Field-of-battle, Mahratta-battle)
We heard the steeds to h going, Oriana 15
The b deepen'd in its place, ,, 51
The distant b flash'd and rung. Two Voices 126
Peal after peal, the British b broke, Buonaparte 7
all day long the noise of b roll'd M, d' Arthur 1
drunk delight of b with my peers, Ulysses 16
boyish histories Of b, bold adventure, Aylnur's Fidd 98
That beat to b where he stands Princess iv 578
And gives the b to his hands : ,, 580
prove Your knight, and fight your b, ,, 595
Breathing and sounding beauteous 6, ,, « 161
doing b with forgotten ghosts, ,, 480
I and mine have fought Your b: „ vi 225
FVom talk of b's loud and vain. Ode on Well. 247
Some ship of b slowly creep. To F. I), Mam-ice 26
War with a thousand b's, Maiid I i 48
months ran on and rumour of b grew, ,, /// vi 29
Far into the North, and b, ,,37
hail once more to the banner of 6 unroll'd ! ,, 42
Arthur, passing thence to b, felt Co7n. of Arthur 75
long-lanced b let their horses run. ,, 104
like a painted b the war stood Silenced, ,, 122
in twelve great b's overcame The heathen hordes, „ 518
Grant me some knight to do the b for me, Gareth and L. 362
King had saved his life In b twice, „ 494
thou send To do the b with him, ,, 619
To bring thee back to do the b „ 1294
loving the b as well As he that rides him.' „ 1301
ride with him to b and stand by, Marr. of Geraint 94
BatUe
28
Beam
Battle (b) (continvM) ' Do b for it then," no more ; Marr. of Geraint 561
In the great h fighting for the King. „ 596
soldiers wont to hear His voice in b, Geraint and E. 175
In 6, fighting for the blameless King, „ 970
l»nners of twelve b's overhead stir, Balin and Balan 88
My father died in b for thy King, Merlin and V. 72
ever-moaning b in the mist, ,, 192
after furious b turfs the slain ,, 657
In h with the love he bare his lord, iMncdot and E. 246
in the four loud b's by the shore Of Duglas ; „ 289
hast been in h by my side, „ 1358
twelve great Vs of our King. Hdy Grail 250
Knights that in twelve great b's „ 311
with one Who gets a wound in b, Pelleas and E. 529
Fought in her father's b's ? wounded Last Tournament 592
Isolt ?— I fought his b's, for Isolt ! „ 604
In open b or the tilting-field (repeat) Guinevere 330, 332
In twelve great b's ruining ,, 432
Far down to that great b in the west, „ 571
ere he goes to the great Bl „ 652
ere that last weird b in the west, Pass, of Arthur 29
is this b in the west Whereto we move, , , 66
last, dim, weird b of the west. „ 94
old ghosts Look in upon the b ; „ 104
King glanced across the field Of 6 : „ 127
held the field of b was the King : ,, 138
all day long the noise of b roll'd ,, 170
The darkness of that b in the West, To the Queen ii 65
In b with the glooms of my dark will. Lover's Tale i 744
God of b's, was ever a b like this The Revenge 62
Floated in conquering b or flapt Def. of Liicknow 2
kings Of Spain than all their b's ! Columbus 23
And we took to playing at b, V. of Maddune 95
For the passion of b was in us, ,, 96
Till the passion of b was on us, „ 111
Gaining a lifelong Glory in b, Batt. of Bi-unanburh 8
That they had the better In perils of 6 ,, 85
himself Blood-red from b, Tiresias 113
flay Captives whom they caught in b — Lochdey H.. Sixty, 80
mad for the charge and the b were we. Heavy Brigade 41
Stately purposes, valour in b, Vastness 7
crimson with b's, and hollow with graves, The Dreamer 12
Storm of b and thunder of war ! Rijlemenfmin ! 3
Battle (verb) For them I b till the end, Sir Galalutd 15
Battle-axe Bloodily, bloodily fall the b-a, Boadicea 56
fall b upon helm, Fall b, Com. of Arthur 486
Clang b and clash brand ! (repeat) Com. of Arthur 493, 496, 499
crash Of b's on shatter'd helms. Pass, of Arthur 110
Battle-bolt b-b sang from the three-decker Maud I i 50
Battle-club b-c's From the isles of palm : Princess, Pro., 21
Battle-cry battle or flapt to the b-c ! Def. of Luckno^o 2
and could raise such a b-c V. of Maddune 23
Battled (adj.) glow Beneath the b tower. D. of F. Women 220
Battled (verb) Who b for the True, the Just, In Mem. Ivi 18
Battle-field Be shot for sixpence in a b-f, Aitdley Court 41
Descends upon thee in the b-f: Com. of Arthur 129
Arthur mightiest on the 6-/— Gareth and L. 496
Right arm of Arthur in the b, Last Tournament 202
A galleried palace, or a b. The Ring 246
Battle-flag and the b-fs were furl'd I^ocksley Hall 127
Battlement 'ITie b overtopt with ivytods, Balin and Balan 335
Battle plain 8j>ring8 Of Dirc6 laving yonder b-p, Tiresias 139
Battleshield Hack'd the b, Batt. of Brurmnbii/rh 13
Battle song hear again The chivalrous h-s Maud I x5A
Battle thunder thine the b-t of God,' Boadicea 44
the h-t broke from them all. The Revenge 49
with her b-t and flame ; ,,59
Battle-twig (earwig) ' Twur es bad es a b-t 'ere Spinster's S's. 80
Battle-writhen b-w arms and mighty hands Lancelot and E. 812
Baulk (beam) 'card the bricks an' the b's Owd Rod 109
Bawl throats of Manchester may b, Third of Feb. 43
Milliona of throats would 6 for civil rights, Princess v 387
Rbamed to h himself a kitchen-knave. Gareth and L. 717
b's this frontloBs kitchen-knave, ,, 860
Bawl'd you b the dark side of your faith Despair 39
Bay (arm of the sea) {See also Lover's Bay) spangle
dances in bight and b, Sea-Fairies 24
glassy b's among her tallest towers.' (Enone 119
where the b runs up its latest horn. Audley Court 11
farmer's son, who lived across the b, ,,75
lower down The b was oily calm ; ,,86
That he sings in his boat on the b ! BreaJc, hreak, etc. 8
I bubble into eddying b's, The Brook 41
By b's, the peacock's neck in hue ; The Daisy 14
In caves about the dreary b. Sailor Boy 10
long waves that roll in yonder b ? Maud I xviii 63
pleasant breast of waters, quiet b, Lover's Tale i 6
borne about the h or safely moor'd ,, 54
growing holier as you near'd the i, ,, 338
into the sympathy Of that small ft, ,, i 435
curving round The silver-sheeted b : „ ii 76
Moved with one spirit round about the &, ,, Hi 17
their gloom, the mountains and the B, „ iv 16
After their marriage lit the lover's B, ,,28
I with our lover to his native B. ,, 155
and flung them in bight and b, V. of Maeldune 53
that dropt to the brink of his 6, The Wreck 73
that b with the colour'd sand — ,, 135
Bay (a tree) the boar hath rosemaries and h. Gareth and L. 1074
that wear a wreath of sweeter b, Poets and t/ieir B. 7
Bay (at bay) Where he greatly stood at b, Ode on Wdl. 106
heard The noble hart at b, Marr. of Geraint 233
Bay (verb) Not less, tho' dogs of Faction b, Love thou thy land 85
Baying chiefly for the b of Cavall, Marr. of Geraint 185
Bay-window from some b-vj shake the night ; Princess i 106
lands in your view From this b-io Sisters (E. and E.) 52
Beach rib and fret The broad-imbased b, Supp. Confessions 128
To watch the crisping ripples on the b. Lotos- Eaters, C.S. 61
rounded by the stillness of the h Audley Court 10
Here about the b I wander'd, Lockdey Hall 11
on this b a hundred years ago, Enoch Arden 10
here and there, on sandy b'es The Daisy 15
The breaker breaking on the b. In Mem. Ixxi 16
the scream of a madden'd b Maud 1 Hi 12
shore-cliff's windy walls to the 6, Geraint and E. 164
leaving Arthur's court he gain'd the h ; Merlin and V. 197
tremulously as foam upon the h Guinevere 364
the narrow fringe Of curving b — Lover's Tale i 39
the fig ran up from the b V. of Maddune 58
Beacon (s) like a h guards thee home. In Mem. xvii 12
prophet's b burn'd in vain, Ancient Sage 142
Beacon (verb) Not in vain the distance b's. Locksley Hall 181
Beacon-blaze h-h allures The bird of passage, Enoch Arden 728
Beacon-star Each with a b-s upon his head, Guinevere 241
Beacon-tower Fixt like a b-t above the waves Princess iv 493
Bead {See also Frost-bead) And number'd h, and
shrift. Talking Oak 46
Beaded {See also Black-beaded, Five-beaded) And
woolly breasts and b eyes ; In Mem. xcv 12
Beak hawk stood with the down on his b, Poet's Song 11
swoops The vulture, b and talon, Princess v 383
ever-ravening eagle's b and talon Boadicea 11
And all unscarr'd from b or talon. Last Tmirnament 20
Beaker b brimm'd with noble wine. Day-Dm., Sleep. P., 36
Be&l'd (bellowed) she b ' Ya miin saiive little
Dick, Oivd Roa 81
an' she an' the babby b. North. Cobble)- 37
an' 'e 6 to ya ' Lad coom hout ' Church-warden, etc. 28
Beam (ray) So many minds did gird their orbs
with b's The Pod 29
' Or will one 6 be less intense, Two Voices 40
into two burning rings All ?»'s of Love, D.ofF. Women \7h
deep-blue gloom with b's divine : ,, 186
the white dawn's creeping b's, ,, 261
fresh /) of the springing east ; M. d' Arthur 214
like a lane of b's athwart the sea, Golden Year 50
b's, that thro' the Oriel shine, Day-Dm., Sleep. P., 34
Pure spaces clothed in living b's, Sir Galahad 66
b of Heaven Dawn'd sometime Aylmer's Fidd 684
Was it the first b of my latest day ? Lucretius 59
Beam
29
Princess ii 138
,, iv 44
„ v258
In Mem, Pro., 24
,, lxxiil5
Maud I Hi 3
,, xiv 21
Matr. of Geraint 262
Hdy Grail 116
„ 117, 188
122
155
187
Pass, of Arthur Zd,2
Lover's Tale i 672
a 173
Beam (ray) (continued) a h Had slanted forward,
' Fresh as the first b glittering on a sail,
h Of the East, that play'd upon them,
A 6 in darkness : let it grow.
A chequer-work of h and shade
Pale with the golden b of an eyelash
Like a 6 of the seventh Heaven,
smitten by the dusty sloping b',
Stream'd thro' my cell a cold and silver h,
down the long b stole the Holy- Grail, (repeat)
Grail Past, and the b decay'd;
A crimson grail within a silver 6 ;
b of light seven times more clear than day :
Smote by the fresh b of springing east ;
crown of Vs about his brows —
And solid b of isolated light,
Beam (timber) (See also Baulk, Bigtree) shape
it plank and b for roof
Beam (verb) More bounteous aspects on me &,
Beam'd Love's white star B thro'
h, Beneath a manelike mass
ghostly grace B on his fancy,
Be&n 'ere a b an' yonder a pea ;
Bear (an animal) grosser than your native Vs —
dog, and wolf and boar and b
Albeit grizzlier than a b, to ride
Bear (constellation) B had wheel'd Thro' a great arc
Bear (verb) (See also Abear, Bore) That Vs relation
to the mind.
' His sons grow up that b his name,
how canst thou b my weight ?
I know you proud to b your name,
whatever sky B seed of men
As we b blossom of the dead ;
1 will not 6 it longer.'
And b me to the margin ;
Less burthen, by ten-hundred-fold, to b,
B witness, if I could have found
in truth (thou wilt b witness here)
that which Vs but bitter fniit ?
and he Vs a laden breast.
Three angels b the holy Grail :
Which Va a season 'd brain about,
h me with thee, smoothly borne,
beseech you by the love you b Him
' Too hard to b ! why did they take me
boat that Vs the hope of life
thought to 6 it with me to my grave ;
Vs about A silent court of justice
jam the doors, and b The keepers down,
not he, who Vs one name with her
The king would b him out ; '
Earth Should b a double growth
think I b that heart within my breast,
much I b with her :
hear me, for I b, Tho' man, yet human,
if thou needs must h the yoke,
skater on ice that hardly Vs him,
But help thy foolish ones to b ;
Help thy vain worlds to b thy light. ,,
To b thro' Heaven a tale of woe, ,, xii
Come then, pure hands, and b the head ,, ocviii 9
I loved the weight I had to 6, ,, axro 7
A life that 6's immortal fruit ,, a^ 18
To that ideal which he /j'«? ,, lii 10
She often brings but one to ?>, ,, Iv 12
He Vs the burthen of the weeks ,, Ixoax 11
growing, till I could 6 it no more, Ma,ud I Hi 9
Vs a skeleton figured on his arms, Gareth and L. 640
heart enough To b his armour ? Geraint and E. 490
h him hence out of this cruel sun ? ,, 544
take him up, and h him to our hall : ,, 552
pray the King To let me b some token Bctlin and Balan 188
said ' What wilt thou 6 ? ' „ 199
and ask'd To h her own crown-royal „ 200
Princess vi 46
Sir Galahad 21
Gardener's D. 166
Aylmer's Field 67
Lancelot and E. 886
N. Farmer, O.S. 46
Princess iv 537
Co7n. of Arthur 23
PeUeas and E. 193
Princess iv 212
Tioo Voices 177
256
(Enone 237
L.C.V.de VerelO
Love thou thy land 20
94
7%« Goose 32
M. d: Arthur 165
St. S. Stylites 24
55
„ 129
Lockdey Hall 65
143
Sir Galahad 42
Will Waier. 85
Mvce eastward 9
Enoch Arden 307
781
830
„ 896
Sea iJi-eams 173
Lucretius 169
„ 235
Princess i 182
„ ii 180
334
,, Hi 81
„ iv 424
,, m205
Hendeaisyllabics 6
In Mem. Pro., 31
32
2
Bear (verb) (continued) ladies living gave me this to
best and purest, granted me To 6 it ! '
Thee will I 6 no more,'
Vs, with all Its stormy crests
Then will I h it gladly ; '
But I myself must b it.'
seize me by the hair and b me far,
see thou, that it may b its flower,
cannot b to dream you so forsworn :
added to the griefs the great must b,
B with me for the last time
And b me to the margin ;
B witness, that rememberable day,
that perfectness Which I do 6 within me :
bade his menials b him from the door,
How could I b with the sights and the loath-
some smells
Him, who should b the sword Of Justice —
Why should we b with an hour of torture,
sorrow that I 6 is sorrow for his sake,
and I and you will b the pall ;
B witness you, that yesterday
younger kindlier Gods to 6 us down,
creed and race Shall b false witness,
The flood may b me far,
Beard b Was tagg'd with icy fringes
His b a foot before him, and his hair
' By holy rood, a royal 6 !
My b has grown into my lap.'
paw'd his b, and muttered ' catalepsy.'
answer which, half-muffled in his 6,
father's face and reverend b
b That looks as white as utter truth,
Broad-faced with under-fringe of russet b,
took his russet b between his teeth ;
one curl of Arthur's golden b.
to part The lists of such a b
shaggy mantle of his b Across her neck
no more sign of reverence than a b.
b that clothed his lips with light —
and his white b fell to his feet,
we kiss'd the fringe of his 6
Beard-blown b-b goat Hang on the shaft.
Bearded (See also Black-bearded, Bush-bearded,
Bearded, Long-bearded, Parcel-bearded
bearded) In among the b barley,
Some b meteor, trailing light,
the b grass Is dry and dewless.
tho' you were not then So b.
Beardless h apple-arbiter Decided fairest.
Bearer Save under pall with Vs.
Bearest love thou b The first-born
Bearing (part.) b on My shallop thro'
Ii a lifelong hunger in his heart.
b hardly more Than his own shadow
and, as h in myself the shame
Oaring one arm, and b in my left
as underhand, not openly b the sword.
B all down in thy precipitancy —
b in their common bond of love,
sent him to the Queen B his wish,
started thro' mid air B an eagle's nest :
b round about him his own day,
b high in arms the mighty babe,
b on one arm the noble babe,
from our fiery beech Were b off the mast.
Bearing (mien) face nor b, limbs nor voice,
thro' these Princelike his b shone ;
And all her b gracious ;
gazed upon the man Of princely b,
I dream 'd the & of our knights
Bearing (bringing forth) b and the training of a
Bearing (armorial) gateway she discerns With
armorial Vs
Bearing (force) To change the & of a word,
Bearing
6.' Balin and BalanMO
351
432
Lancelot and E. 483
„ 1106
„ 1108
1425
Holy Grail 887
Pelleas and E. 300
Gicinevere 205
„ 454
Pass, of Arthur Z'Si
To the Queen ii 3
Lover's Tale i 89
„ iv 260
In the Child. Hosp. 25
Sir J. Oldcastle 87
Despair 81
The Flight 64
Locksley H., Sixty, 281
To Prof. J ebb 2
Demeter and P. 131
Akbar's Dream 98
Grossing tlie Bar 14
St. S. Stylites 31
Godiva 18
Day-Dm., Revival 20
22
Princess i 20
„ V 234
,, vi 103
Gareth and L. 280
Geraint and E. 537
713
Merlin and V. 58
245
256
279
Last Tournament 668
V. of Maeldune 118
125
Princess iv 78
Lichen-
, Busset-
L. of Sludott i 29
, , Hi 26
Miller's D. 245
Columbus 9
Lucretius 91
Aylmer's Field 827
Ode to Memory 91
Arabian Nights 35
Enoch Arden 79
Aylmer's Field 29
355
Princess iv 183
Maud I i 28
Gareth and L. 8
Bcdin and Balan 150
Lamcdot and E. 1169
Last Toui-nament 15
Lover's Tale i 510
,, iv 295
„ 370
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 4
Com. of Arthur 71
Marr. of Geraint 545
Holy Grail 394
Pelleas and E. 306
La.st Tournament 120
child Princess v 465
L. of Burleigh 43
In Mem, cxxviii 16
Beast
30
Beat
Beast {'See also Be&st, Man-Beast) but a little
more Than h's,
l)eople here, a 6 of burden slow,
one deep cry Of great wild Vs ;
I a /* To take them as I did ?
and even b's have stalls,
Like a h with lower plea-sures, like a h
The many -headed b should know.'
, like s b hard-ridden, breathing bard,
there surely lives in man and b
(What b has heart to do it 'i
b or bird or fish, or opulent flower :
biting laws to scare the Vs of prey
envy not the b that takes His license
Move upward, working out the b,
Like Paul with b's, I fought with Death ;
Wherein the b was ever more and more,
wet woods, and many a 6 therein,
none or few to scare or chase the b ;
between the man and b we die.'
slew the b, and fell'd The forest,
between the man and b they die.
lift her from this land of Us Up to my throne,
b and man had had their share of me :
/>'», and surely would have torn the child
Have foughten like wild b's
noise of ravage wrought by b and man,
Care not, good b's, so well I care
skins the wild b after slaying him,
first as sullen as a 6 new-caged,
In lieu of this rough b upon my shield,
maws ensepulchre Their brother b,
yell, Unearthier than all shriek of bird or b,
l>eauteous h Scared by the noise
weak b seeking to help herself
b's themselves would worship ;
in the lowest b's are slaying men, And in the second
men are slaying b's,
great b's rose upright like a man,
the b's Will tear thee piecemeal.'
b — he, she, or I ? myself most fool ;
B too, as lacking human wit —
made his b that better knew it, swerve
what evil b Hath drawn his claws
Reel back into the b, and be no more ? '
And men from b's — Long live the king
thro' ever harrying thy wild b's —
art grown wild b thyself,
like a subtle 6 Lay couchant
subtle b, Would track her guilt
my realm Reels back into the b.
As ignorant and impolitic as a b —
That gray b, the wolf of the weald,
the multitudinous b, The dragon,
fierce b found A wiser than herself,
curb the b would cast thee in the mire,
Misters, brothers, — and the b's —
Have we risen from out the b, then back into the 6 again ?
bouse with all its hateful needs no cleaner than the b.
Two Voices 197
Pcdace of Art 149
283
Edwin Moms 71
St. S. Stylit.es 109
Locksley Hall 176
You might luive toon 20
Aylmer's Field 291
Sea Dreains 68
Lucretius 233
„ 249
Princess v 393
In Mem. xxvii 5
,, cxviii27
Com. of Arthur 11
45
59
79
80
163
217
226
Gareth aiid L. 437
„ 1308
Geraint OAid E. 93
856
Bcdin and Bcdan 196
488
545
421
498
575
Merlin and V.
starved the wild b that was linkt
But I hear no yelp of the b,
caged b Yell'd, as he yell'd of yore
barrier that divided b from roan Slipt,
that stare of a b of prey.
is prized for it smells of the b,
Beftst nor a mortal b o' the feiild.
An' 1 says 'Git awaJiy, ya b,'
Beastlier /i than any phantom of his kind
BeastUke b as 1 find myself, Not manlike
Beat (s) {See alto Heart-beat) nigh to burst with
violence of the b,
Beat (verb) {See <dso Be&t) The cloud fleets, The
heart b's,
The heart will cease to b ;
And the blue wave b the shore ;
Holy Grail 234
821
824
Pdleas and E. 475
476
551
LaM Tourrwjiient 62
125
358
635
637
Guinevere 10
„ 59
Pass, of Arthur 26
Coluvibus 128
Batt. of Brunanburh 110
Tiresias 15
„ 151
Ancient Sage 276
Locksley H., Sixty, 102
148
HapTpfy 32
By an Evolution. 11
19
St. Tele7>mchvs 45
60
V/uirity 10
TJie Dawn 14
North. Cobbler 38
Owd Roa 62
Lucretius 196
„ 231
Gareth and L. 763
Nothing will Die 12
All Things ivill Die 12
43
Beat (verb) {continued) From winter rains that
his grave.
My frozen heart began to b,
B time to nothing in my head
And her heart would b against me,
I should know if it b right,
dog howl, motherror the death-watch b,
wind, that b's the mountain, blows
' B quicker, for the time Is pleasant,
b me down and marr'd and wasted me,
b the twilight into flakes of fire,
heart of existence h for ever like a boy's ?
where my life began to b ;
Music in his heart B's quick
My spirit b's her mortal bars,
But never merrily b Annie's heart.
b's out his weary life.
May b a pathway out to wealth
Long since her heart had b remorselessly,
B breast, tore hair, cried out
Had b her foes with slaughter
but convention b's them down :
B balm upon our eyelids,
wave May b admission in a thousand years,
My hea,irt b thick with passion
vassals tx) be b, nor pretty babes
That b to battle where he stands ;
and they will b my girl
clash'd their arms ; the dxum B ;
One pulse that b's true woman,
greater than all knowledge, b her down,
faith in womankind B's with his blood,
b with rapid unanimous hand,
dance with death, to b the ground
ciggk B's out the little lives of men.
'What is it makes me b so low ? '
Hath still'd the life that b from thee,
my heart was used to b So quickly,
A flower b with rain and wind,
darken'd he^jt that b no more ;
hearts that b from day to day,
plays with threads, he b's his chair
My pulses therefore b again
That b's within a lonely place,
But seeks to 6 in time with one
crash'd the glass and b the floor ;
At last he b his music out.
hearts of old have b in tune,
But let no footstep b the floor,
my heart was used to b So quickly,
heart b stronger And thicker,
B'to the noiseless music of the night !
li, happy stars, timing with things below,
B with my heart more blest than heart
My heart would hear her and b,
My dust would hear her and b.
Is it gone ? my pulses b —
But the broad light glares and b's,
■ the hoofs of the horses b, b, The hoofs of the
B into my scalp and my brain,
heart of a people b with one desire ;
fierce light which b's upon a throne,
and by this will b his foemen down.'
B thro' the blindless casement
Invaded Britain, ' But we b him back,
Not b him back, but welcomed him
B, till she woke the sleepers,
while the sun yet b a dewy blade.
And b the cross to earth, and break
Vivien, tho' ye b me like your dog.
Across the iron grating of her cell B,
~ blood b's, and tho blossom blows,
felt the sun B like a strong knight
let my lady b me if she will :
And b's upon the faces of the dead,
Ttoo Voices 261
„ 422
MiUer's D. 67
„ 177
„ 179
May Queen, Con. 21
To J. S. 1
On ft Mourner 12
Tithonus 19
„ 42
Locksley Hall 140
154
Day -Dm. Arrival 27
Sir Gala/iad 46
Enoch Arden 513
730
Aylmer's Field 439
799
Lucretius 277
Princess, Pro., 34
,, Hi 123
155
190
,, iv 146
578
i;88
251
,. mlSO
,, vii 238
329
Boadicea 79
In Mem, i 12
,, ii 8
,, ivS
„ m 12
,, vii 3
,, via 15
,, zix 2
,, Iviii 6
,, Ixvi 13
In Mem. Ixxxv 57
„ 110
„ 115
,, Ixxxvii 20
,, zcvi 10
,, xcvii 10
,, ev 17
,, cxix 1
Maud I via 8
,, xviii 77
81
82
,, xxii 69
71
„ II i 36
,, ti;89
horses b,
„ v8
„ nivi'id
Ded. of Idylls 27
Com. ofA7tfiurm9
Man: of Geraint 71
746
748
Geraint and E. 404
446
Balin and Balan 458
582
Holy Grail 82
„ 671
Pellea^ and E. 23
335
Pass, of Arthur 141
>1
Beat
31
Beauty
Beat (verb) (conlinued) tho' there h a heart in either eye ; Lover's Tale i 34
Death drew nigh and b the doors of Life ; ,, 111
noons £ from the concave sand ; ,, 140
felt the blast B on my heated eyelids : , , Hi 28
— Hearts that had b with such a love ,, iv 69
- It 6— the heart— it ft : Faint— but it 6 : „ 80
They b me for that, they b me — Rizjjah 48
and b Thro' all the homely town Columbus 82
"^eart alive b's on it night and day — The Flight 35
— ^heart that once had h beside her own. Lockstey H., Sixty, 58
"--when life has ceased to b. Happy 52
—* B, little heart— I give you this and this ' Rom)ietJs R. 1
- ' B upon mine, little heart \ b,b\ ,,94
' B upon mine ! you are mine, my sweet ! ,,95
- — ' li little heart' on this fool brain ,, 155
_ pulse of Alia b's Thro' all His world. AUxir's Dream 41
h back The menacing poison ,, 164
- Harmony Whereto the worlds b time, D. of Lite Ixkke of C. 16
Beat (verb) An' it b's ma to knaw wot
she died on, Churck-warden, etc. 6
Beaten (-^e aim Barren-beaten, Breaker-beaten,
Hollow-beaten, Thrice-beaten, Weather-beaten)
Ji with some great passion at her heart, Princess iv 388
B I had been for a little fault Com. of Arthur 341
seems no bolder than a b hound ; Geraint and E. 61
forward by a way which, b broad, „ 436
b back, and b back Settles, Merlin and V. 371
took To bitter weeping like a b child, „ 855
Of every dint a sword had b in it, Lancelot and E. 19
lance had b down the knights, Holy Grail 363
There was I b down by little men ,, 789
a traitor proven, or hound B, Pdleas and E. 440
save for dread of thee had b me. Last Tunrnamerit 525
many a heathen sword Had b thin ; Pass, of Arthur 167
Drooping and b by the breeze, Lwxr's Tale i 700
better ha' b me black an' blue First Quarrel 72
Havelock baffled, or b, Def. of l/ucknow 91
thus was I b back, Columbus 55
Beating (See cdso Batin) When will the heart
be aweaiy of b ? Nothing will Die 6
in joyance is b Full merrily ; All Things will Die 6
Do h hearts of salient springs Adeline 26
music in his ears his b heart did make. Lotos-Eaters 36
heard with b heart The Sweet-Gale Edwin Morris 109
bosom b with a heart renew'd. Tithonus 36
B it in upon his weary brain, Enoch Arden 796
b up thro' all the bitter world, „ 802
two-cell'd heart b, with one full stroke, Princess vii 307
B from the wasted vines Ode on Well. 109
Rose-red with b's in it, as if alive, Holy Grail 118
own steps, and his own heart B, Pelleas and E. 417
Heart b time to heart, Lover's Tale i 260
found her b the hard Protestant doors. Sisters (E. and E. ) 240
warriors b back the swarm Of Turkish Montenegro 10
O the deathwatch b I Forlorn 24
Beatitude Fulfils him with b. Supp. Confessions 62
Beauteous The reflex of a 6 form. Miller's D. 77
To find my heart so near the b breast, Tliefyrm, tliefwm 7
when the h hateful isle Retum'd Enoch Arden 617
Breathing and sounding b battle, Princess v 161
In whispers of the h world. In Mem. Ixxix 12
Come, b in thine after form, ,, xci 15
the b beast Scared by the noise Merlin and, V. 421
Paris, himself as 6 as a God. Death of (Enone 18
Paris, no longer 6 as a God, ,, 25
Beaatifnl spirit-thrilling eyes so keen and b : Ode to Me^nory 39
And said the earth was o. A Character 12
Her b bold brow, The Poet 38
B Paris, evil-hearted Paris, (Enone 50
Idalian Aphrodite b, ,, 174
How b a thing it was to die For God D. of F. Women 231
Twin-sisters differently b. Edwin Morris 33
ever thus thou growest b In silence, Tithontis 43
' She is more b than day.' Beggar Maid 8
his own children tall and b, Enoch Arden 762
Beautiful {coulinuaV) the stars about the moon Look b, Spec, of Iliad 12
made His darkness h with thee
Perfectly b ; let it be granted her :
pride flash'd over her b face.
Silence, b voice !
0 b creature, what am I
Not b now, not even kind ;
He had not dreixm'd she was so b.
Beyond my knowing of them, b,
B in the light of holiness.
' Grod make thee good as thou art b,'
' Is Guinevere herself so b ? '
And enter it, and make it 6 ?
Forgetting how to render b Her countenance
The b in Past of act or place.
Of all his treasures the most b,
cries about the banquet — 'B !
That which is thrice as 6 as these.
Of all my treasures the most b,
pity, if one so b Prove,
both are b : Evelyn is gayer,
Both b alike, nor can 1 tell
So b, vast, various,
one was dark, and both were b.
Bountiful, b, apparell'd gay,
Beautiful-brow'd B-b (Enone, my own soul,
Beautifully So lightly, b built :
dress her b and keep her true' —
that beauty should go b : (repeat)
Beauty (See also After -beauty) solid form
Of constant b.
He spake of b : that the dull
I see thy b gradually unfold,
Light Hope at B's call would perch
they live with B less and less,
' But now thy b flows away,
I loved his b passing well.
love B only (B seen In all varieties To
And Knowledge for its b ;
Good only for its b, seeing not That B, Good,
and Knowledge, are three sisters
B and anguish walking hand in hand
' I had great b : ask thou not my name :
B such a mistress of the world.
Her b grew ; till Autumn brought
many a group Of beauties,
glorious in his b and thy choice.
Can thy love. Thy b, make amends.
Thou wilt renew thy b morn by morn ;
Her constant b doth inform Stillness
His wife a faded b of the Baths,
Edith, whose pensive b, perfect else,
made pleasant the baits Of gold and b,
sank down shamed At all that b ;
murmurs of her b from the South,
All b compass'd in a female form,
beauties every shade of brown and fair
underneath the crag, Full of all b.
brief the moon of b in the South.
Another kind of b in detail
We hunt them for the b of their skins ;
became Her former b treble ;
All of b, all of use,
Willy, my b, my eldest-born.
So Willy has gone, my b, my eldest-born.
She's a b thou thinks —
— wot's a b 1 — the flower as blaws.
Maaybe she warn't a 6 : —
His b still with his years increased,
this orb of flame. Fantastic b ;
Who shall rail Against her b ?
of the singular b of Maud ;
Done but in thought to your b,
0 child, you wrong your b,
and B fair in her flower ;
In Mem. locxiv 12
Maud 1 a 4
„ iv 16
„ V 19
,, xvi 10
„ // V 66
Lancelot and E. 353
Holy Grail 103
105
136
Pelleas and E. 70
Pass, of ArUiur 17
Lover's Tale i 96
135
„ iD234
239
248
318
338
Sisters (E and E) 35
'^76
Ancient Sage 84
The Ring 161
Prog, of Spring 62
(Enone 71
Palace of Art '^A:
Geraint and E. 40
„ 681, 684
Si'2^p. Confessions 150
A Clmracter 7
Eleanore 70
Caress'd or chidden 3
Mariana in tlie S. 67
T/ie Sisters 23
With Pal. of Art Q
D. of F. Wmnen 15
93
Gardener's D. 58
207
Talking Oak 62
Tithonns 12
„ 24
„ 74
Do.y-Dm. Sleep. B. 15
Aylmer's Field 27
70
487
Lucretii/^s 64
Princess i 36
„ ii 34
» 437
„ m 337
„ iv. 113
„ 448
,, v\m
„ vii '2^
Ode. Inter. Exhib. 23
Grandmother 9
„ 101
N. Fanner, N. S. 14
15
28
The Victim 34
In Mem. xxxiv 6
,, cxiv 2
Maud I i 67
,, Hi 6
„ iv 17
25
Beauty
BeaxAj (cotUinued) dream of her 6 with
teader dread,
To know her b might half undo it.
The b would be the same.
Kemembering all the b of that star
gazed oa all earth's b in their Queen,
To make her b vary day by day.
The prize of b for the fairest there,
having seen all beauties of our time,
won lor thee, The prize of 6.'
Your 6 is no 6 to him now :
pat your b to this flout and scorn
that 6 should go beautifully : (repeat)
thine The wreath of b, thine the crown
Guinevere, The pearl of b :
Your b is your b, and I sin
b of her flesh abash'd the boy,
As tho' it were the b of her soul :
so did Pelleas lend All the young b
And title, ' Queen of £,' in the lists
the sight Of her rich b made him
cannot brook to see your b marr'd
Qaeen of B and of love, behold This
day my Queen of £
great Queen My dole of b trebled ? '
' Her b is her b, and thine thine,
her b, grace and power, Wrought
b such as never woman wore.
In giving so much b to the world,
A b which is death ;
did he know her worth. Her b even ?
Who could desire more 6 at a feast ? '
b that is dearest to his heart —
veriest beaxUies of the work appear
One bloom of youth, health, b,
Ineffable b, out of whom, at a glance,
A b with defect — till That which knows,
Science grows and B dwindles —
Like worldly beauties in the Cell,
that only doats On outward b,
You would not mar the b of your bride
give place to the b that endures,
0 that endures on the Spiritual height,
A b came upon your face.
My b marred by you ? by you !
lose it and myself in the higher b,
b lured that falcon from his eyry on the fell.
32
Bedivere
Maud 1 XV i 14
„ II a 12
Ded. of Idylls 46
Com. of Arthur 463
Marr. of Geraint 9
485
498
555
Geraint and E. 330
675
„ 681, 684
Merlin and V. 79
Lancelot and E. 114
1186
Pelleas and E. /8
79
83
116
238
298
Last Towmament 208
„ 558
„ 559
Guinevere 143
549
Lover's Tale i 212
„ a 190
„ iv 151
240
249
Sisters IE. and E.) 105
120
Tiresias 55
Ancient Sage 86
Locksley H., Sixty, 246
The Ring 143
„ 164
Happy 24
„ 36
„ 37
„ 51
» 57
„ 58
„ 59
never caught one gleam of the 6 which endures — ,, 60
Became Therefore revenge b me well. The Sisters 5
And well his words b him : Edwin Morris 25
And one b head-waiter. Will Water. 144
crime of sense b The crime of malice, Vision of Sin 215
b Her former beauty treble ; Princess vii 24
B no better than a broken shed, Holy Grail 398
Thereon her wrath b a hate ; Pelleas and E. 224
courtexies of household life, B her bane ; Guinevere 87
' Sir Lancelot, as 6 a noble knight, ,, 328
1 to her b Her giuirdian and her angel, Lover's Tale i 392
Italian words, b a weariness. The Ring 407
Hor Past b her Present, Death of (Enone 14
in the mist at once B a shadow, ,, 50
dre.-im li a deed that woke the world, <S'^ Tdemachus 70
Beck (Brook) (.v^ r//v< Howlaby beck, Wrigglesby beck)
Within the dark and dimpled b. Miller's I). 80
Thou's coom'd oop by the b ; Village Wife 79
thaw the banks o the 6 bo sa high, ,, 83
fur 'e lost 'is taail i' the h. „ 86
An' 'cos o' thy farm by the b, Spinster's S's. 73
Kur I seed the b oo<jmin' down Owd Roa 40
sluHbin' down fro' the bank to the b, ,, 41
An' ya Mtood oop naiikt i' tho b, Church-warden, etc. 29
Beok (caJl) move, mj friend. At no man's b. Princess Hi 227
Beckon Time and Orief did 0 unto Death, Lover's Tale i 110
Beokon'd She ended here, and b us : Princess ii 182
Beokooiiag And b unto those they know ; In Mem, xiv 8
Become B's dishonour to her race— Two Voices 255
£ the master of a larger craft, Enoch Arden 144
it b's no man to nurse despair. Princess iv 464
then wilt thou b A thrall to his enchantments, Gareth and L. 268
B's the sea-cliff pathway broken short, Moiin and V. 882
had the boat B a living creature Holy Grail 519
tilt with a lance B's thee well — Last Towmainent 637
well, it scarce b's mine age — Locksley H., Sixty, 151
Bed (See also Bulrush-bed, Deathbed, Moss-bed,
River-bed) Upon her b, across her brow. MariciJia 56
Thou wilt not turn upon thy b ; A Dirge 15
And after supper, on a b. The Sisters 16
I blest him, as he knelt beside my b. May Queen, Con. 16
But sit beside my b, mother, ,, 23
and I listened in my b, ,,33
propt on b's of amaranth and raoly, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 88
limbs at last on b's of asphodel. ,, 125
Like one that feels a nightmare on his b M. d' Arthur 177
so to 6 : where yet in sleep ,, Ep. 16
farmer vext packs up his b's and chairs, Walk, to the Mail 39
had pack'd the thing among the 6's,) „ 44
to the college tower From her warm b, ,,90
In b like monstrous apes St. S. Stylites 174
See that sheets are on my b ; Vision of Sin 68
Started from b, and struck herself a light, Enoch Arden 494
with yet a b for wandering men. ,, 698
kept the house, his chair, and last his b. „ 826
then homeward and to b : Sea Dreams 40
In her 6 at peep of day ? ,, 302
then to b, where half in doze Princess i 246
hall glitter'd like a 6 of flowers. ,, ii 439
Half-naked as if caught at once from b » ii^ 285
I took it for an hour in mine own 6 ,, w 434
they hover about my b — Grandmother 83
an' a sittin' 'ere o' my b. N. Farmer, 0. S. 9
An' 'e maade the b as e' ligs on ,, N. S. 28
flush'd the b Of silent torrents, The Daisy 33
along the valley, down thy rocky b, V. of Cauteretz 7
When on my b the moonlight falls. In Mem. Ixvii 1
From off my b the moonlight dies ; ,,10
And tends upon 6 and bower, Maud I xiv 4
Hung over her dying b — ,, xix 36
On a 6 of daffodil sky, ,, xxii 10
Were it earth in an earthy b; ,,70
By the curtains of my b „ H iv 54
hurl'd his huge limbs out of b, Marr, of Geraint 124
brook o'er a shingley 6 Brawling, ,, 248
now get you hence tob:' Lancelot and E. 388
Full lowly by the corners of his 6, ,, 826
Then take the little 6 on which I died ,, 1117
on the black decks laid her in her b, ,, 1147
but creatures of the board and b, Pelleas and E. 267
drier than a fountain b In summer : ,, 507
that feels a nightmare on his b Pass, of Arthur 345
they fasten'd me down on my b. Rizpah 46
I blubber'd awaay o' the b — North. Cobbler 61
such a lot of b's in the ward ! ' In the Child. Hosp. 54
you leave 'em outside on the b — ,, 56
women who tended the hospital b, Def. of Lucknoio 87
I have hung them by my b, Columbus 200
an' my oan b o' sparrow-grass, Spinste)''s S's. 104
when Moother 'ed gotten to b, Oivd Roa 53
Too laate, tha mun git tha to &, ,, 117
I am fitter for my b, or for my grave. The Ring 433
leech forsake the dying b for terror of his life ? Hap^y 98
she sat day and night by my b, Cliarity 33
Brings the Dreams about my b. Silent Voices 2
Bedded With all its casements b, Audley Court 18
Bedivere (A Knight of the Bound Table) The bold
Sir B uplifted him, M. d' Arthur 6
Sir B, the last of all his knights, ,, 7
spake King Arthur to Sir £ : (repeat) ,, 13, 66
To him replied the bold Sir ^ : ,,39
answer made the bold Sir £ : (repeat) 31, d' Arthur 69, 115, 151
Then went Sir B the second time M, d' Arthur 82
Bedivere
Bedivere (ccmtinued) Then quickly rose Sir B, and ^ ^^^a^r 133
Him dir B RemorseMly regarded » ^70
Then loudly cried the bold Sir B, » ^^^
stood Sir J5 Revolving many memories, iqJ.' irk I^k
Ulfius, and Brastias, and B, (repeat) Cam. of Arthur 136. 165, 445
B, the first of all his knights Com. of Arthur m
That story which the bold Sir B, . Pass, of ArtMir 1
B, Who slowly paced among the slumbering „ o
33
heard the bold Sir B and spake :
Then spake King Arthur to Sir B
(repeat) ^
B, for on my heart hath fall n
Then spake the bold Sir B :
The bold Sir B uplifted him,
To him replied the bold Sir B :
answer made the bold Sir B : (repeat)
Then went Sir B the second time
Then quickly rose Sir B, and ran.
Him Sir B Remorsefully regarded
loudly cried the bold Sir B :
stood Sir B Revolving many memories,
Bedmate A 6 of the snail and eft and snake.
Bedridden infancy Or old 6 palsy,—
I lying here 6 and alone.
Bedtime B, Dicky ! but waait till tha ears
Bee (See also Bwk) At noon the wild 6 hummeth
Chaunteth not the brooding 6
Or the yellow-banded 6's,
With the hum of swarming b's
• Not less the b would range her cells,
the golden b Is lily-cradled :
With all her b's behind her :
here by thee will hum the b,
like the working 6 in blossom -dust,
Alade noise with b's and breeze
thoughts would swarm as b's about their queen.
And murmuring of innumerable b's.'
the b's is as fell as owt.
b's are still'd, and the flies are kill d.
As we shake off the 6 that buzzes at us ;
b's That made such honey in his realm.
Nor thou be rageful, like a handled 6,
moment's anger of b's in their hive ?—
That trembles not to kisses of the b :
No louder than a b among the flowers,
Bee& (bee) We was busy as b's i' the bloom
Beech Moving in the leavy b.
b and lime Put forth and feel
like a purple b among the greens
' I wish'd myself the fair young b
bard has honour'd b or lime,
Coquetting with young b'es ;
seated on a serpent- rooted b,
We paused : the winds were in the 6 :
that b will gather brown,
Whereon a hundred stately b es grew.
While squirrels from our fiery b
perpetual pine, nor round the ^ ;
Beechen-bough lodge of intertwisted b-b s
Beef he had not b and brewis enow.
Beelike Than b instinct hive ward,
Beer sung their songs an' 'ed 'ed their 0,
Beeswing richest b from a binn reserved
Beetle (adj.) gaunt old Baron with his 6 brow
Beetle (8.) At eve the 6 boometh
Beetling from the b crag to which he clung
Beeves men brought in whole hogs and quarter 0,
Befall Shame might b Melissa,
If aught of things that here b
I hold it true, whate'er b ;
Befit tale for summer as b's the time,
As b's a solemn fane :
Befool'd being much b and idiotcd
Before Or see (in Him is no b)
Pass, of Arthur 65, 136, 181, 234
Fass. of Arthur 143
147
175
207
Pass, of Arthur 237, 283, 319
Pass. ofxirthur^S^
301
338
894
487
Hdy Grail 570
Aylvwr's Fidd 178
Columbus 164
Ouxl Rod 18
Claribd 11
A Dirge 16
Elednore 22
„ 29
Tvx> Voices 70
CEno7ie29
Amphion 36
A Farewell 11
Enoch Arden 366
Princess, Pro., 88
„ i 40
„ vii 222
N. Farmer, N. S., 40
WindoiO, Winter 10
Lancelot and E. 785
Holy OraU 214
Andmit Sage 269
Vastness 35
Prog, of Spring 4
Romney's R. 82
North. Cobbler 15
Margaret 61
On a Mo^tmer 14
Edwin Morris 84
Talking Oak 141
291
Amphion 28
The Brook 135
In Mem. xxx 9
ci 3
Pdleas and E. 26
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 3
Prog, of Spring 32
Last Tournament 376
Gareth and L. 457
Princess, iv 199
Owd Roa 35
Aylmer's Field 405
Princess, ii 240
Claribel 9
Aylmer's Field 229
Geraint and E. 602
Princess, Hi 147
Ode on Wdl. 138
In Mem. xxvii 13
Princess, Pro., 210
Ode on Well. 250
Aylmer's Field 590
In Mem. xxvi 10
Beg I will b of him to take thee back :
I cannot steal or plunder, no nor b :
Began ' When first the world b,
' Before the little ducts b
The sweet church bells b to peal.
My frozen heart b to beat,
those great bells B to chime,
trees b to whisper, and the wind 6
5 : ' I govern'd men by change.
At this a hundred bells b to peal,
For when my passion first b,
where my life b to beat ;
So fares it since the years b,
prone edge of the wood b To feather (repeat)
B to chafe as at a personal wrong,
drooping chestnut-buds b To spread
And then b to bloat himself.
Till she b to totter, and the child
' He b. The rest would follow.
So I b, And the rest foUow'd :
but as his brain B to mellow,
when the college lights B to glitter
B to address us, and was moving on
' Are you that Lady Psyche,' I b,
b A blind and babbling laughter,
greatest sailor since our world b.
I 6 to be tired a little.
What seem'd my worth since I b ;
The total world since life b ;
Whose life in low estate b
A breeze 6 to tremble o'er
wind b to sweep A music
In tracts of fluent heat b,
Wretchedest age, since Time b,
B to move, seethe, twine and curl :
Sat down beside him, ate and then b.
B to scoff and jeer and babble
that I 6 To glance behind me
B to break her sports with graver fits,
No sooner gone than suddenly she b :
plain that then b To darken under Camelot ;
when the day b to wane, we went.
such a blast, my King, 5 to blow,
Then she b to rail so bitterly.
Autumn thunder, and the jousts b :
and both B to struggle for it,
B to gall the knighthood, asking
b To vex and plague her.
by and by b to hum An air
Ye ask me, friends, When I 6 to love.
So know I not when I & to love.
B to heave upon that painted sea ;
Four bells instead of one b to ring,
his own b To pulse with such a vehemence
At once b to wander and to wail,
then b the story of his love
Whereat the very babe b to wail ;
An' the wind b to rise, ,
when the storm on the downs b,
water b to heave and the weather to moan,
But at length we 6 to be weary,
and there I 6 to weep,
cry so desolate, not since the world o,
' And since — from when this earth b —
' The years that when my Youth b
She b to spake to herself,
for since our dying race b,
111 To waste this earth b —
I that loved thee since my day b,
his fresh life may close as it 6,
And a beggar h to cry ' Food, food
Beget Many a chance the years b.
Begetters woridly-wise b's, plagued themselves
Beggar (s) Are there no b's at your gate,
' If I'm a i born,' she said,
Beggar
Dora 123
Geraint and E. 487
Tvx) Voices 16
„ 325
„ 408
„ 422
Palace of Art 158
May Queen, Con., 27
D. of F. Women 129
M. d' Arthur, Ep. 29
Talking Oak 9
Loclcsley Hall 154
WUl Water. 169
Enoch Arden 67, 373
474
Sir L.'and Q. G. 16
Sea Dreams 154
244
Princess, Pro., 200
243
„ i 180
208
„ u 184
261
,, OT 136
Ode on Well. 86
Grandmother 74
In Mem., Pro., 34
,, xliii 12
,, Ixiv 3
,, xcv 54
,, ciii 53
,, cxviii 9
Maud II V 21
Gareth and L. 234
872
Marr. of Geraint 58
Geraint and E. 862
Merlin and V. 180
Lancelot and E. 96
Holy Grail 217
488
795
Pdleas and E. 250
Last Tournament 153
410
683
Guinevere 67
,, 162
Lover's Tale i 145
163
„ ii 192
,, m20
„ iv 81
99
354
375
First Qjiarrd 89
Rizpah 71
The Revenge 113
V. of Maddune 91
T/ie Wreck 93
Despair 59
Ancient Sage 53
155
Tomorrmo 54
Lockdey //., Sixty, 65
Epilogue 23
To Virgil 38
Prog, of Spring 89
Voice spake, etc. 5
Miller's D. 206
Aylmer's Field 482
L. C. V. de Vere 67
Lady Clare 37
Beggar
34
Being
Beggar (s) {contimied) I am a b born,' she said,
ner, he loved, a b : then he pray'd
tho' she were a b from the hedge,
fling free alms into the b's bowl,
And a b began to cry, ' Food, food
Beggar'd and I fell £ for ever —
Beggar Maid Bare-footed came the b m
' This h m shall be my queen ! '
Beggar- Woman silken rag, the b-w's weed :
Begged then they b For Father Philip
At last she b a boon.
Begin fret Of that sharp-headed worm Vs
And rugged barks b to bud,
That to b implies to end ;
When meres b to uncongeal,
call me loud when the day b's to break :
0 look ! the sun b's to rise,
lights b to twinkle from the rocks :
Bsto move and tremble.
Till the graves b to move. And the dead b to
dance.
B's the scandal and the cry :
Which made a selfish war b ;
The noise of life b's again.
From whence clear memory may b,
overhead B's the clash and clang
sadder age b's To war against
b's to play That air which pleased her
an' saw she b's to cry,
Evelyn b's it ' 0 diviner Air. '
listen how the birds B to warble
Beginner fair b's of a nobler time,
Beginning (part.) world's great work is heard B,
B to faint in the light that she loves
B at the sequel know no more.
And he 6 languidly —
The boat was b to move,
Beginning (b) end and the b vex His reason :
blind b's that have made me man,
break The low b's of content.
And be the fair 2> of a time.
Begone ' You must b,' said Death,
B : we will not look upon you more.
B ! my knave ! — belike and like
thou b, take counsel, and away,
Begotten (See also Wajit-begotten) My father
hath b me in his wrath.
Beguile To b her melancholy ;
Beguil'd well, well, well, I Tnay be b
B^un help me as when life b :
into my heart, and b to darken my eyes.
My brain had b to reel —
A juster epoch has b.
The light of days when life b,
Altho' the months have scarce b^
this bare dome had not b to gleam
0 weary one, has it 6 ?
Beheld 6 Thy mild deep eyes upraised,
1 6 great Herb's angry eyes,
Since I 6 young Laurence dead,
ere a star can wink, b her there.
I b her ere she knew my heart,
when the boy b His mother,
B the dead flame of the fallen day
b His wife his wife no more.
Turning b the Powers of the House
I b her, when she rose The yesternight,
The Priest b him, And cried
And what I am b again
b The death-white curtain drawn ;
I b From eye to eye thro' all their Order
likewise I 6 Excalibur
when her son B his only way to glory
h Far over heads in that long-vaulted
B the long street of a little town
Lady Clare 71
Enoch Arden 117
Marr. of Geraint 230
Ancient Sage 260
Voice spake, etc. 5
Lover's Tale i 670
Beggar Maid 3
16
Geraint and E. 680
Enoch Arden 364
Princess i 146
Supp, Co7ifessions 186
My life is full 18
Two Voices 339
„ 407
May Qioeen 10
May Qneen, Con. , 49
Ulysses 54
Will Water. 32
Vision of Sin 165
You might have won 16
To F. D. Maurice 30
In Mem. vii 10
„ xlv 10
,, Con. 61
Gareth and L. 1129
Lover's Tale i 20
North. Cobbler 71
Sisters (E. and E.) 4
The Flight 61
Co7n. of Arthur 457
In Mem. cxxi 11
Maud I xxii 9
Lover's Tale iv 158
274
First Quarrel 21
Two Voices 298
Lucretius 246
In Mem. Ixxodv 48
Guinevere 466
Love and Death 7
Princess iv 547
Gareth and L. 713
1002
Balin and Balan 283
Maud I xxZ
„ m 89
Lockdey Hall 185
Rizpah 16
In the Child. Hasp. 60
Epilogue 6
Pref. Poem Broth. S. 23
To Ulysses 22
To Mary Boyle 41
The Dreamer 26
Supp. Confessions 73
(Enone 190
L. C. V. de Vere 28
Gardener's D, 122
276
Doi-a 137
Enoch Arden 441
758
Aylmer's Field 287
Princess v 175
The Victim 37
In Mem. czxiv 21
Maud I xiv 33
C&m. of Arthur 269
„ 295
Gareth and L. 159
318
Marr. of Geraint 242
Beheld {conti7iiied) Geraint B her firat in field,
Tum'd, and 6 the four, and all
b A little town with towers,
I never yet 6 a thing so pale.
Have I 6 a lily like yourself.
true eyes B the man you loved
b Balin and Balan sitting Statuelike,
B before a golden altar lie
B the Queen and Lancelot get to horse.
b the King Charge at the head
Arthur, who b his cloudy brows,
every knight b his fellow's face
Another hath b it afar off,
b That victor of the Pagan
b three spirits mad with joy
B at noon in some delicious dale
glancing up b the holy nuns All round her,
some b the faces of old ghosts
When I b her weep so ruefully ;
b All round about him that which
never yet b a thing so strange,
when before have Gods or men b The Life
b A blood-red awning waver
Behest Then not to disobey her lord's b,
Behold Where'er they fell, b. Like to
' B, it is the Sabbath mom.'
B this fruit, whose gleaming rind
Mayst well b them unbeheld,
when I look'd again, b an arm,
B her there. As I beheld her
' Who is this ? b thy bride,'
some one spake : 'B\it was a crime
In such a shape dost thou b thy God.
in me b the Prince Your countryman,
B your father's letter.'
reverent people b The towering car,
' B the man that loved and lost,
B me, for I cannot sleep,
B a man raised up by Christ !
An inner trouble I b,
B, we know not anything ;
B their brides in other hands ;
B, I dream a dream of good,
0 happy hour, b the bride
Arthur said, ' B thy doom is mine.
' B, for these have sworn To wage my wars,
did Enid, keeping watch, b
B me overturn and trample on him.
b me come To cleanse this common
father, I b him in my dreams
B it, crying, ' We have still a King.'
b a woman at a door Spinning ;
when they led me into hall, b.
looking up, B, the enchanted towers
' In happy time b our pilot-star I
' B me. Lady, A prisoner,
B his horse and armour.
b This day my Queen of Beauty
Till the High God b it from beyond,
B, I seem but King among the dead.'
when I look'd again, b an arm,
in her b Of all my treasures
Behind this darkness, I b her still,
when these b their Lord,
Beholden But being po b to the Prince,
shame the Prince To whom we are b ;
Beholding B how the years which are not Time's
B one so bright in dark estate,
B how ye butt against my wish,
B it was Edyrn son of Nudd,
b her Tho' pale, yet happy,
b him so strong, she thought
Behoof break them more in their b,
To mask, tho' but in his own b,
Being changes should control Our b,
Marr, of Geraint 540
„ 558
Geraint and E. 196
615
620
847
Balin and Balan 23
410
Merlin and V. 102
Lancelot and E. 303
1354
Holy Grail 191
897
Last Tournament 664
Guinevere 252
393
666
Pass, of Arthur lOS
Lover's Tale i 773
,, iv 53
„ 303
Demeter and P. 29
St. Telemachus 51
Geraint and E. 450
The Poet 22
Two Voices ifyz
(Enone 72
., 89
M. d' Arthur 158
Gardetier's D. 275
Love and Duty 49
Vision of Sin 213
Aylm^'s Field 657
Princess ii 214
„ iv 468
OcU 071 Well. 54
In Mem. i 15
,, vii 6
,, axcxilS
„ odi 18
„ liv 13
,, a»14
,,caxcix 11
„ Con. 69
Com. of Arthur ^Q7
507
Gemint aiid E, 118
843
894
Lancelot and E. 763
Holy Grail 245
391
577
813
Pelleas a7id E. 63
240
373
Last Tournament 208
Pass, of Arthur 16
146
326
Lover's Tale iv 317
Tiresias 52
Akbar's Drea7n 142
Marr. of Geraint 623
727
Aylmer's Field 601
Marr. of Geraint 786
Geraint and E. 677
781
879
Pelleas a7id E. 117
Princess vi 61
Maud / w 48
Love thou thy land 42
Being
Being (cMUinued) all the current of my b sets to
and spoils My bliss in b ;
No Angel, but a dearer 6,
Her peaceful b slowly passes by
And all the wheels of B slow.
His b working in mine own,
And strike his 6 into bounds,
b he loved best in all the world,
and he felt his b move In music
glad new-year Of B, which with earliest
Beknaved Gareth following was again b.
Bel 'I'ill the face of ^ be brighten'd,
Belaboor'd so b him on rib and cheek
Belaud blush to b myself a moment —
Beldam Then glided a vulturous B forth,
Beleaguerer Blown by the fierce b'a of a town,
Belfry white owl in the b sits, (repeat)
Low breezes fann'd the b bars,
Belied liars 6 in the hubbub of lies ;
Belief Think my b would stronger grow !
but my b In all this matter —
Beyond mine old b in womanhood,
I am quicker of 6 Than you believe me,
and he believed in her b.
or that which most Enchains b,
Believable that he sinn'd is not b ;
Believe (See also Make-believes) Why not
b then ?
But I b she wept.
I b, if you were fast my wife,
Save Cfhrist as we 6 him —
Gods there are, for all men so b.
there is iron in the blood, And I 6 it.
we b him Something far advanced
nor b me Too presumptuous,
I heard a voice, ' b no more '
you wrong your beauty, b it.
Shall I b him ashamed to be seen ?
I well b You be of Arthur's Table,*
I do 6 yourself against yourself,
world will not b a man repents :
I well b this damsel, and the one
we b all evil of thy Mark —
and half b her true :
I well b that all about this world
I well b she tempted them and fail'd,
I might 6 you then, Who«knows ?
noble it is, I well b, the noblest —
if I could b the things you say
I may not well b that you b.'
I am quicker of belief Than you b me,
with him, to 6 as he believed.
Our Lady says it, and we well b :
greatest hardly will 6 he saw ;
lie to me : I 6. Will ye not lie ?
I should all as soon b that his,
to h it — 'tis so sweet a thought,
can well b, for he look'd so coarse
' O soul of little faith, slow to b !
who b These hard memorials
speak the truth that no man may b. '
were used to b everlasting would die :
Did he b it ? did you ask him ?
That no man would b.
Believed The woman cannot be b,
b This filthy marriage-hindering
when he came again, his flock b —
and saw, but scarce b
often she b that I should die :
I b that in the living world My spirit
Queen b that when her son
Not less Geraint b it ;
I b myself Unconquerable,
He spoke, and Enid easily b,
and half b her true, (repeat)
35
thee.' Loeksley Hall 24
Lucretiiis 222
Princess vii 320
Requiescat 7
In Mem. I 4
In Mem. Ixxxv 43
,, Con. 124
Geraint and E. 103
Balin and Balan 211
Laver's Tale i 282
Gareth and L. 786
Boiidicea 16
Princess t> 341
Hendecasyllabics 18
Dead PropJut 25
Achilles over the T. 20
The Owl I. 7, 14
The Letters 43
Maud I iv 51
Svpp. Confessions 13
Com. ofArihurlSS
Lancelot and E. 955
„ 1204
Holy GraU 165
Lover's Tale ii 134
Merlin and V. 760
Supp. Confessions 123
Talking Oak 164
Enoch Arden 414
Aylmer's Field 573
Lucretius 117
Princess vi 231
Ode on WeU. 274
Hendecasyllabics 15
In Mem. cxxiv 10
Maud I iv 17
,, xiii 25
Gareth and L. 835
Geraint and E. 744
900
Balin and Balan 612
Merlin and V, 93
186
541
819
„ 922
Lancelot and E, 361
1097
„ 1196
„ 1205
Holy GraU 487
604
„ 896
Last Tournament 645
Guinevere 350
Lover's Tale i 275
In the Child. Hosp. 7
Columbus 147
195
Tiresias 50
Despair 54
The Pino 225
Meckanophiius 28
The Letters 32
Aylmer's Fidd 373
,, 600
^Sea Dreams 34
Princess vii 100
„ 157
Gareth and L. 158
Marr. of Geraint 28
Geraint and E. 835
874
Merlin and V. 400, 893
\
Believed {conliwued) and he b in her belief.
One with him, to believe as he b.
in vows when men 6 the King !
every knight B himself a greater
we 6 her asleep again —
And if I 6 in a God, I would
Believing B where we cannot prove ;
own soul to hers, B her ;
JS, ' lo mine helpmate, one to feel
Only, b I loved Edith,
b that the girl's Lean fancy,
people b that Peelfe the Goddess
Bell {See also Ankle-bells, Bindweed-bell, Chapel Bell,
Church-bell, Flower-bells, Marriage-bell) Nine
Bell
Holy Grail 165
487
iMst Tournament 649
677
In the Child. Hosp. 69
Despair 70
In Mem., Pro., 4
Pelleas and E. 84
Guinevere 485
Sistei-s {E. and E.) 138
Tfie Ring 335
Kapiolani 8
times goes the passing b :
dropping low their crimson b's Half-closed,
with white b's the clover-hill swells
The bridle b's rang merrily
The foxglove cluster dappled b's.'
The sweet church b's began to peal,
in the towers I placed great b's that swung,
those great b's Began to chime,
midnight b's cease ringing suddenly,
At this a hundred 6's began to peal,
sound of funeral or of marriage b's ;
ffom them clash 'd The b's ; we listen 'd ;
when the b's were ringing, Allan call'd
I do not hear the b's upon my cap,
blow The sound of minster b's,
shrill 6 rings, the censer swings,
There comes a sound of marriage b's.
were wed, and merrily rang the b's, (repeat)
Merrily rang the b's and they were wed
heard the pealing of his parish b's ;
hark the b For dinner, let us go ! '
the chapel b's Call'd us : we left
half open'd b of the woods !
like a b Toll'd bv an earthquake
Let the b be toll'd : (repeat)
Clash, ye b's, in the merry March air !
Saaint's daay — they was ringing the b's.
' lights and rings the gateway b,
I hear the b struck in the night :
The Christmas b's from hill to hill
Before I heard those b's again :
The merry merry b's of Yule.
One set slow b will seem to toll
A single peal of b's below,
That these are not the b's I know.
Ring out, wild b's, to the wild sky.
Ring, happy b's, across the snow :
The dead leaf trembles to the b's.
Is cap and b's for a fool.
Not a b was rung, not a prayer was read ;
she tower'd ; her b's, Tone under tone,
ye, that follow but the leader's b '
thence at intervals A low b tolling,
came on me The hollow tolling of the b,
by slow degrees the sullen b Toll'd quicker.
Four b's instead of one began to ring.
Four merry b's, four merry marriage-bells,
b's Lapsed into frightful stillness ;
again the b's Jangled and clang'd :
the b's. Those marriage-bells.
Heard yet once more the tolling b,
we heard them a-ringing the b,
butted each other with clashing of b's,
the clash and boom of the b's rang
The tolling of his funeral b
Ring little b's of change
b's that rang without a hand,
where the loyal b's Clash welcome —
Bridal b's with tolling ! . . .
A spike of half-accomplish'd b's —
lin-lan-lone of evening b's Far-far-away.
A II Things will Die 35
Arabian Nights 62
Sea-Fairies 14
L. of Shalott Hi 13
Two Voices 72
„ 408
Palace of Art 129
157
D. ofF. Women 247
M. d' Arthur, Ep., 29
Gardener's D. 36
221
Dora 41
Edtoin Morris 56
Talking Oak 272
Sir Galahad 35
The Letters 48
Enoch Arden 80, 511
512
615
Princess ii 432
470
„ vi 193
331
Ode on Well. 53, 58
W. to Alexandra 18
N. Farmer, JST. S. 13
In Mem. viii 3
x2
„ xxviii 3
16
20
, , Ivii 10
,, civ 5
8
,, cvi 1
6
„ Con. 64
Maud I vi 62
„ IIv2i
Merlin and V. 131
Holy Grail 298
Lover's Tale ii 83
,, Hi 10
18
20
21
29
62
,, iv2
29
First Qttarrel 21
V. of Maeldune 108
„ 110
Tiresias 192
Early Spring 41
The Ring 411
„ 482
Ftyrlom 70
To Ulysses 24
Far-far-away 6
BeU
36
Best
Bell (coutinued) Faith and Work were b's of full
accord, In Mem., W. G. Ward 2
many a pendent 6 and fragrant star, Death of (Enone 13
people nag the b from love to Thee. Akbar's Dream, Inscrip. 4
m praise of Whom The Christian 6, Alchar's Dream 149
Twilight and evening h. Crossing the Bar 9
Bell'd See Milky-Bell'd
Bellerophon White Rose, B, the Jilt, The Brook 161
Bellicent (Queen) the Queen of Orkney, B,
(repeat) Com. of Arthur 190, 245
last tall son of Lot and B, Gareth and L. 1
Then B bemoan'd herself and said, „ 72
son Of old King Lot and good Queen B, , , 1231
Belling L^*- '"^ * roky hollow, b, heard Last Tmirnament 502
Bell-like many a deep-hued b-l flower Eleanore 37
Bell-mouth'd whom the b-m glass had wrought, Princess iv 155
Bellow'd (See also Be&l'd) ever overhead
B the tempest, Merlin and V. 957
Bellowin^r {See also A-bealin', HoUower-bellowing)
B victory, b doom : Ode on Well. 66
b thro' the darkness on to dawn, Gareth and L. 177
Hell burst up your harlot roofs B, Pelleas and E. 467
Bellringrer Friars, b's. Parish-clerks — Sir J. Oldcastle 160
Belong'd boooks, I ha' see'd 'em, b to the Squire, Village Wife 71
an' 'is gells es 6 to the land ; ,, 112
my Fathers 6 to the church of old. The Wreck 1
Belon^ring things b to thy peace and ours ! Aylmer's Field 740
I knew it — Of and b to me, Lucretius 44
Beloved (See also Much-beloved, Well-beloved)
Revered, b — 0 you tfutt hold To the Queen 1
0 this world's curse, — 6 but hated — Love and Duty 47
For love reflects the thing b ; In Mem. Hi 2
Maud the 6 of my mother, Maud I i 72
the liquid note b of men Comes Marr. of Geraint 336
friend, the neighbour, Lionel, the 6, Lovei-'s Tale i 653
6 for a kindliness Rare in Fable On Jub. Q. Victoria 4
This ring ' To t'amo ' to his best 6, The Ring 210
Belt (s) (<See a/«o Blossom-belt, Sword-belt) A
gleaming crag with b's of pines. Two Voices 189
Unclasp'd the wedded eagles of her h, Godiva 43
glories of the broad b of the world, Enoch Arden 579
A b, it seem'd, of luminous vapour, Sea Dreams 209
ridge Of breaker issued from the 6, „ 212
same as that Living within the b) „ 216
past into the b and swell'd again „ 222
Half -lost in b'* of hop and breadths of wheat ; Princess, Con. , 45
From 6 to ii of crimson seas Jn Mem. Ixxxvi 13
By summer b'$ of wheat and vine „ xcviii 4
a mighty purse, Hung at his b, Geraint and E. 23
seem a sword beneath a 6 of three. Merlin and V. 510
faltering sideways downward to her b, „ S.W
crimson in the b a strange device. Holy Grail 154
round thee, maiden, bind my b. ,, 159
Belt (verb) woods that b the gray hill-side, Ode to Memory 55
and from the woods That b it rise Lover's Tale i 536
fleefH that b the changeful West, Prog, of Spring 98
Belt (built) an' b long afoor my daiiy Owa Roa 21
Belted with puff'd cheek the 6 hunter blew Palace of Art 6i
B his body with her white embrace, Ixtst Tournament 513
Bemoan'd llien Bellicent b herself and said, Gareth and L. Tl
Bench Jack on his ale-house b has as many Maud I iv 9
1 saw. No b nor table, painting Holy Grail 829
Down on a b, hard-breathing. Pelleas and E. 592
Bench'd stately theatres B crescent-wise. Princess ii 370
Bencher wrinkled b'i often talk'd of him Aylmer's Field 473
Bend chafes me that 1 could not b One will ; D. of F. Women TS7
How sweet are looks that ladies li Sir Galahad 13
fathers b Above more graves, In Mem. xcmii 15
On me she b'g her blissful eyes ^^ Co7i. 29
tyranny now should b or cease, Maud III vi 20
O ay— the winds that b the brier ! Lmt Tournammt 731
Bending erect, but b from his height Aylmer's Field 119
b by the cradle of her babe. The Ring 415
Bengal For which, in branding summers of B, The Brook 16
Bent lowly b With melwUous airs Adeline M
Bent (continued) From yon blue heavens above us b L. C. V. de Vere 50
b or broke The lithe reluctant boughs Enoch Arden 380
b as he was To make disproof of scorn, Aylmer's Field 445
Nor b, nor broke, nor shunn'd Princess, Pro. , 38
seal was Cupid h above a scroll, ,, i 242
B their broad faces toward us ,, iv 551
Her head a little b ; and on her mouth ,, vi 269
The King b low, with hand on brow, The Victim 53
a straight staff i in a pool ; High. Pantheism 16
thrice as large as man he b To greet In Mem. ciii 42
either spear B but not brake, Gareth and L. 964
h he seem'd on going the third day, Ma'rr. of Geraint 604
B as he seem'd on going this third day, ,, 625
since her mind was b On hearing, Pelleas and E. 114
round him 6 the spirits of the hills Guinevere 283
but he B o'er me, and my neck Lover's Tale i 690
so feeble : she b above me, too ; ,, 693
the mast 6 and the ravin wind ,, ii 170
And the pikes were all broken or 6, The Revenge 80
Bow'd the spoiler, B the Scotsman, Batt. of Brunanburh 21
The plowman passes, 6 with pain, Ancient Sage 144
Bequeath'd This ring b you by your mother, The Ring 75
Bereave nothing can b him Of the force Ode on Well. 272
Berg' goes, like glittering b's of ice, Princess iv 71
Berkshire weed the white horse on the B hills Geraint and E. 936
Berried about my feet The b briony fold.' Talking Oak 148
Berry With bunch and b and flower (Enone 102
red berries charm the bird, Gareth and L. 85
With ever-scattering berries, and on Last Tournament 173
Married among the red berries. First Quarrel 40
and the branch with berries on it, Columbus 73
And the crimson and scarlet of berries V. of Maeldune 61
But in every 6 and fruit was the ,, 62
Clomb the mountain, and flung the berries, Kapiolani 6
handle or gather the berries of Peelfe ! „ 20
Into the flame-billow dash'd the berries, ,, 33
Beryl sardius. Chrysolite, b, topaz, Columbus 85
Beseech 1 do 6 you by the love you bear Enoch Arden 307
Beseem might well b His princess, Marr. of Geraint 758
Beseem'd true answer, as b Thy fealty, M. d' Arthur 74
true answer, as b Thy fealty. Pass, of Arthur 'iA'i,
Besiege so Vs her To break her will, Gareth and L. 616
Besieged (See also Strait-Besieged) h Ygerne
within Tintagil, Com. of Arthur 198
Besotted A drowning life, b in sweet self, Princess vii 314
So far b that they fail to see Balin and Balan 359
Besought B him, supplicating, if he cared Enoch Arden 163
the knight b him, ' Follow me, Geraint and E. 807
B Lavaine to write as she devised Lancelot and E. 1103
B me to be plain and blunt, ,, 1301
Bess (horse) Black B, Tantivy, Tallyho, The Brook 160
Bess (Christian name) Milk for my sweet-'arts, B ! Spinster's S's. 1
Mew ! mew ! — B wi' the milk ! ,, 113
I says ' I'd be good to tha, B, Oivd Rod 75
Bessy Harris 'bout B M's barne. N. Farmer, 0. S. 14
B M's barne ! tha knaws she laaid ,, 21
Best (See also Earthly-best, Heavenly-best) at b
A vague suspicion of the breast : Two Voices 335
they say : Kind nature is the b : Walk to the Mail 64
b That ever came from pipe. Will Water. 75
He gave the people of his i : You might have won 25
His worst he kept, his h he gave. ,, 26
You chose the b among us— a strong man : Enoch Arden 293
Their b and brightest, when they dwelt Aylmer's Field 69
so true that second thoughts are b ? Sea Dreams 65
Arising, did his holy oily b, ,, 195
sit the I) and stateliest of the land ? Lucretius 172
who love b have b the grace to know W. to Marie Alex. 28
I could have wept with the b. (repeat) Grand7)iother 20, 100
fur them as 'as it's the b. N. Farmer; JV. S. 44
And do their little b to bite Lit. Squabbles 6
And cancell'd nature's b ; In Mem. Ixxii 20
Fair words were b for him who fights Gareth and L. 946
as the stateliest and the b Marr. of Geraint 20
my dear child is set forth at her b, ,, 728
I
Best
Best {continued) arms for guerdon ; choose
the b.'
desired the humbling of their b,
fairest and the b Of ladies living
I, and all, As fairest, 6 and purest,
I have seen ; but b, B, purest ?
From homage to the b and purest,
women, worst and b, as Heaven and Hell.
Win shall I not, but do my i to win : _
Young as I am, yet would I do my b.'
with meats and vintage of their b
Lives for his children, ever at its b
when they love their b, Closest
she deem d she look'd her 6,
having loved God's b And greatest,
' Let love be free ; free love is for the b :
What should be 6, if not so pure a love
Arthur kept his b until the last ;
' ITien,' I said, ' I'm none o' the 6.'
he would have been one of his 6.
our Lawrence the b of the brave :
their marksmen were told of our b,
sees the B that glimmers thro' the Worst,
an' I knaws it be all fur the b.
Is girlish talk at b ;
rank with the b, Garrick
so fickle are men — the 6 !
and body is foul at b.
Phra-Chai, the Shadow of the B,
The b in me that sees the worst in me,
the Highest is the wisest and the b.
Bestial Courteous or b from the moment, ^
Best-natured ' Which was prettiest, B-n ?
Bestrode he 6 my Grandsire, when he fell,
Bethink B thee, Lord, while thou and all
Bethlehem Not least art thou, thou little B In
Judah,
Bethought Then she b her of a faded silk,
and b her of her promise given
6 her how she used to watch,
Betide All-arm'd I ride, whate'er b,
I meet my fate, whatever ills b !
Betray wouldst b me for the precious hilt ;
Break lock and seal : b the trust :
They know me not. I should b myself.
and said, ' B me not, but help —
Simpler than any child, b's itself,
wouldst b me for the precious hilt ;
you knew that he meant to b me —
Betray'd ' Thou hast 6 thy nature and thy name,
B my secret penance, so that all
let them know themselves 6 ;
b her cause and mine —
' Thou hast b thy nature and thy name,
Betraying statesman there, b His party-secret.
Betrothed (.%« oZso Long-betroth'd) hbr far-off
and b,
b To one, a neighbouring Princess :
I spake of why we came, And my b.
B us over their wine,
Betrothment how the strange 6 was to end :
Betted they b ; made a hundred friends.
Better how much b than to own A crown.
Were it not b not to be ? '
Is boundless b, boundless worse.
Surely 'twere b not to be.
'Twere b not to breathe or speak,
A murmur, ' Be of & cheer.'
'Twere b I should cease Although
are men b than sheep or goats
Something b than his dog,
B thou wert dead before me,
B thou and I were lying,
held it 6 men should perish one by one,
5 to me the meanest weed
37
Geraint and E. 218
637
Balin and Balan 339
350
356
376
Merlin and V. 815
Lancelot and E. 221
222
266
907
1093
1381
1383
Holy Grail 763
First Quan-el 61
Rizpah 28
J)ef. of Luckmno 11
Ancient Sage 72
Spinster's S's. 52
Epilogue 43
To W. C. Macreday 6
Tlie Ring ^92
Happy 28
To Ulysses 41
Romney's R. 44
Faith 1
Gareth and L. 631
Princess i 234
,, m242
St. S. Stylites 105
Sir J. Oldmstle 24
Marr. of Geraint 134
602
647
Sir Galahad 83
The Flight 95
M. d' Arthur 126
Van might Jmve won 18
Enoch Arden 789
Pelleat and E. 360
Guinevere 371
Pass, of Arthur 29i
Charity 12
M. d' Arthur 73
St. S. Stylites 68
Aylmer's Field 524
Princess v 76
Pass, of Arthur 241
Maud II V 34
consin
The Brook 75
Princess i 32
„ 120
Maud I xix 39
Princess v 474
Princess, Pro. 163
Ode to Memory 120
Two Voices 3
" 'il
48
„ 94
429
To 'j. S. 66
M. d' Arthur 250
Locksley Hall 50
56
57
179
Amphion 93
Better [continued) griefs Like his have worse or b,
B not be at all Than not be noble.
B to clear prime forests,
Methinks he seems no b than a girl ;
You hold the woman is the b man ;
Almost our maids were b at their homes,
b or worse Than the heart of the citizen
peace or war? b, war ! loud war
far b to be bom To labour
myself have awaked, as it seems, to the b mind ;
It is b to fight for the good
A worse were b ; yet no worse would I,
But truly foul are b, for they send
b were I laid in the dark earth,
sigh'd ' Was I not b there with him ? '
b have died Thrice than have ask'd
B the King's waste hearth and
are men b than sheep or goats
b that than his, than he The friend,
B have sent Our Edith thro'
B a rotten borough or so
Go, therefore, thou ! thy Vs went
Thine elders and thy b's.
Thy b born unhappily from thee,
in the distance pealing news Of /;,
My brother and my b, this man here.
By striking at her b, miss'd,
That they had the b In perils of battle
And then I will let you a b.'
ever cared to b his own kind,
his work. That practice 6's?'
voice that — you scarce could b that.
B fifty years of Europe than a cycle
for I love him all the b for it—
B the waste Atlantic roU'd On her
For himself has done much b.
I loved him b than play ;
an' I loved him b than all.
I had b ha' put my naked hand in a hornets' nest.
you had b ha' beaten me black an' blue
Bettering ill for him who, 6 not with time,
Beugh (bough) togither like birds on a 6 ;
Beverley Burnt too, my faithful preacher, B !
Bevy a & of Eroses apple-cheek'd,
Bewail Let golden youth b the friend,
Bewail'd maidens with one mind B their lot ;
Beware b Lest, where you seek
Bewitch'd thaw it wur summat b
Bib their bottles o' pap, an' their mucky Vs,
Bible oft at B meetings, o'er the rest
read me a £ verse of the Lord's good will
But as a Latin B to the crowd ;
Bicker To b down a valley.
And Vs into red and emerald,
men may 6 with the things they love,
and the points of lances b in it.
Bicker'd Flicker'd and b From helmet
Bid Friends, I was b to speak of such a one
of him I was not b to speak —
lest I should 6 thee live ;
Dare I b her abide by her word ? ^
6 him bring Charger and palfrey.'
my dear lord arise and 6 me do it,
And 6 me cast it.
we shall never b again Groodmorrow —
I b the stranger welcome.
She needs must b farewell to sweet Lavaine
and b call the ghostly man Hither,
Send ! b him come ; ' but Lionel was away-
when he came to 6 me goodbye.
I had b him my last goodbye ; ^
Edith wrote : ' My mother Vs me ask
Not there to b my boy farewell,
as 'uU hallus do as 'e's 6.'
B him farewell for me, and tell him—
Bid
Enoch Arden 741
Princess ii 93
,, in 127
218
w410
1)428
Maud I i 23
„ 47
Maud I xviii 33
„ III vi 56
57
Gareth and L. 17
947
Marr. of Geraint 97
Balin and Balan 292
Merlin and F. 918
Guinevere 524
Pass, of Arthur 418
Lover's Tale i 652
Sisters (E. and E.) 224
Riflemen form ! 17
Will Water. 185
192
Aylmer's Field 675
Princess iv 82
Balin and Balan 54
Me)iin and V. 499
Bait, of Brunanburh 84
By an Evolution. 4
Sea Dreams 201
Princess iii 299
SisUrs (E. and E.) 14
Locksley Hall 184
Enoch Arden 196
Third of Feb. 21
Spitqful Letter 4
First Quarrel 12
14
50
72
WiU 10
North. Gobbler 54
.Sir /. OldatMe 80
Tlie Met 11
To Mary Boyle 53
In Mem. ciii 46
Princess, vi 171
North. Cobbler 82
Spinster's S's. 87
Sea Breams 194
Rizpah 61
Sir J. Oldcastle 18
Tlie Brook 26
Princess v 263
Geraint and E. 325
449
Merlin and the G. 70
Aylmer's Field 677
710
Princess vii 9
Maud I xvi 25
Geraint and E. 400
665
707
Balin and Balan 622
Merlin and V. 270
Lancelot and E, 341
1099
Lover's Tale iv 101
First Quarrd 78
Rizpah 41
Sisters {E. and E.) 181
To Marq. of Duffenn 42
Owd Rod 79
Romney's Ii. 147
Bidden
38
Bird
Bidden I knock'd and, b, enter'd ;
Rise ! ' and the damsel h rise arose
The foot that loiters, 6 go, —
Bidding b him Disband himself, and scatter
And in my vision 6 me dream on,
Bide ' Were this not well, to b mine hour,
Will you not 6 your year as I & mine ? '
Philip answer'd ' I will b my year,'
why she should B by this issue :
bound am I to i with thee.'
B ye here the while.
* Go ! I 6 the while. '
To whom the Lord of Astolat, ' B with us,
if I 6, lo ! this wild flower for me ! '
B,' answer'd he : 'we needs must hear
I cannot b Sir Baby.
yourselves : how can ye b at peace.
But never let me h one hour at peace.'
thou canst not b, unfrowardly,
will draw me into sanctuary, And b my doom,'
I 6 no more, I meet my fate,
Princess in 130
Merlin and V. 68
Last Tournament 117
Geraint and, E. 797
Lover's Tale u 119
Two Voices 76
Enoch Arden 438
439
Princess v 326
Gareth and L. 805
Merlin and V. 97
99
Lancelot and E, 632
644
756
Pdleas and E. 190
265
387
597
Guinevere 122
The Flight 95
Bind {continued) rent The woodbine wreaths that b her, Amvhion 34
Bided ever b tryst at village stile, Merlin and V. 378
They heard, they b their time. Bandit's Death 14
Bideford Men of B in Devon, Tlie Revenge 17
Biding leave Thine easeful b here, Gareth and L. 128
Bier {See also Chariot-bier, Litter-bier) This truth
came borne with b and pall, In Mem. Ixxoev 1
cast him and the b in which he lay Geraint and E. 572
Till yonder man upon the b arise, ,, 657
Wreathed round the b with garlands : Lover's Tale ii 79
those six virgins which upheld the b, ,,84
and all The vision of the 6. „ Hi 11
those that held the b before my face, , , 16
on the sand Threw down the b; , , 33
She from her 6, as into fresher life, ,, 42
I stood stole beside the vacant b, , , 58
I hate the black negation of the b, Ancient Sage 204
Who saw you kneel beside your b, Happy 54
The bridal garland falls upon the b, D. of tlie Duke of C.\
Big being apt at arms and b of bone Marr. of Geraint 489
Cried out with a b voice, ' What, is he dead ? ' Geraint atid E, 541
as b i' the mouth as a cow. Village Wife 103
Bigger With me, Sir, enter'd in the b boy, Princess ii 404
No 6 than a glow-worm shone the tent ,, iv25
Bight the spangle dances in 6 and bay, Sea-Fairies 24
and flung them in 6 and bay, V. of Maeldune 53
Bill (beak) With that gold dagger of thy b The Blackbird 11
A golden b I the silver tongue, ,, 13
Bill (parliamentary measure) I had heard it was
this b that past, Walk, to tlie Mail 67
My lord, and shall we pass the b Day-Dm., Revival 27
Bill (an account) But 'e niver loookt ower a &, Village Wife 51
Bill of Sale {Kbo s gleam'd thro' the drizzle) Enoch Arden 68&
Billow (See also Flame-billow) to the b the fountain
calls : Sea-Fairies 9
a b, blown against, Falls back, Two Voices 316
the wanton b wash'd Them over, Lover's Tale ii 9
the upblown b ran Shoreward ,, 178
flow'd away To those unreal b's: ,, 196
jarring breaker, the deep-sea b, Bait, of BruvMnbiirh 97
Saxon and Angle from Over the broad & ,, 119
Billow'd heard The voice that b round Last Tournament 167
Billowing Blanching and 6 in a hollow of it, Lucretitis 31
Enring'd a b fountain in the midst ; Princess ii 28
and his river b ran, Maud I iv 32
Billy (horse) ' B,' says 'e, ' hev a joomp ! '— Village Wife 83
But B fell bakkuds o' Charlie, „ 85
Billy-rough -un (horse) Fur he ca'd 'is 'erse B-r-u, „ 84
Bin {See also Corn-bin) In musty Vs and chambers, Will Water. 102
Bind cords that b and strain The heart Clear-lieaded friend 4
We must b And keep you fast, Rosalind 42
We'll /> you fast in silken cords, ,, 49
b with bands That island Queen Buonaparte 2
an athlete, strong to break or b Palace of Art 158
Life, that, working strongly, b's— Love thou thy land 34
Faster b's a tyrant's power ;
dream That Love could b them closer
my vow B's me to speak,
Psyche, wont to b my throbbing brow,
b the scatter'd scheme of seven
he may read that b's the sheaf,
the frame that b's him in His isolation
I took the thorns to b my brows,
May b a book, may line a box,
King Will b thee by such vows,
would b The two together ;
what is worthy love Could b him,
yet thee She fail'd to b,
round thee, maiden, 6 my belt.
' B him, and bring him in.'
B him as heretofore, and bring him in :
Far less to b, your victor, and thrust him
let my lady b me if she will,
vow that b's too strictly snaps itself —
Had Arthur right to b them to himself ?
To b them by inviolable vows,
B me to one ? The wide world laughs
What ! shall I b him more ?
b the maid to love you by the ring ;
Binding b his good horse To a tree,
Bindweed-bell fragile b-b's and briony rings ;
Bine When burr and b were gather'd ;
berries that flamed upon b and vine,
Binn beeswing from a b reserved For banquets.
Birch {See also Birk) Our b'es yellowing and from
each Pro. to Gen, Hamley 1
Bird {See also Birdie, Wild-bird, Carrier-bird, Sea-
bird) voice of the b Shall no more be heard, All Things wUl Die 24
Vision of Sin 128
Aylmer's Field 41
Princess ii 202
250
,, Con. 8
In Mem. xxxm 13
,, odv 11
,, lxix7
,, Ixxviid
Gareth and L. 270
Marr. of Geraint 790
Lancelot and E. 1379
1385
Holy Grail 159
Pdleas and E. 232
271
293
„ 334
Last Tournanunt 657
684
688
695
Lover's Tale iv 346
The Ring 202
Pelleas and E. 30
Tlie Brook 203
Aylmer's Field 113
V. of Maeldune 61
Ay liner's Field 405
heart of the garden the merry b chants.
b would sing, nor lamb would bleat.
Not any song of b or sound of rill ;
singing clearer than the crested b
lusty b takes every hour for dawn :
Sang loud, as tho' ho were the b of day.
These b's have joyful thoughts.
Slides the b o'er lustrous woodland,
every b of Eden burst In carol,
Like long-tail'd b's of Paradise
fly, like a b, from tree to tree ;
b that pipes his lone desire
Like the caged b escaping suddenly,
lightning flash of insect and of b,
beacon-blaze allures The b of passage,
Philip chatter'd more than brook or b ;
' The b's were warm, (repeat)
Returning, as the b returns, at night,
and every b that sings :
b Makes his heart voice amid
b or fish, or opulent flower :
the b, the fish, the shell, the'flower.
As flies the shadow of a b, she fled.
not see The b of passage flying south
earliest pipe of half-awaken'd b's
wild b's on the light Dash themselves dead.
b's that piped their Valentines,
a b, That early woke to feed
Make music, O b, in the new-budded
There is but one b with a musical throat.
And b in air, and fishes turn'd
B's' love, and b's' song
B's' song and b's' love, (repeat)
We'll be b's of a feather,
Be merry, all b's, to-day,
Like b's the charming serpent draws,
Wild b, whose warble, liquid sweet,
Flits by the sea-blue b of March ;
So loud with voices of the b's,
low love-language of the b
happy b's, that change their sky
Poet's Mind 22
Mariarui in tlie S. 37
D. of F. Women 66
179
M. d' Arthur, Ep. 11
Gardener's D. 96
99
Locksley Hall 162
Day-Dm. , L' Envoi 43
Ep. 7
Edward Gray 30
You might liave won 31
Enoch Arden 269
575
729
The Brook 51
Aylmer's Field 260
Sea Dreams 43
102
Lucretius 100
249
Princess ii 383
, , Hi 96
210
, , iv 50
495
,, 1)239
,, vii 251
W. to Alexandra 11
T/ie Islet 27
Tlie Victim 19
Windo^o, Spring 1
3,5
14
„ Ay. 1
In Mem. ocxxiv 14
Ixxxviii 1
xci 4
X(!ix2
cii 11
cxv 15
Bird
39
Biting
Bird {contimied) I hear a chirp of 6*5 ;
Beginning, and the wakeful b ;
B's in the high Hall-garden (repeat)
£'s in our wood sang
And the b of prey will hover,
Till a silence fell with the waking 6,
My b with the shining head,
red berries charm the b,
b's made Melody on branch ,
'0 b's, that warble to the morning sky, 0 b's
warble as the day goes by,
' What knowest thou of b's,
and as the sweet voice of a 6,
Moves him to think what kind of b it is
by the b's song ye may learn the nest, '
Among the dancing shadows of the b's,
all about were b's Of sunny plume
we will live like two b's in one nest,
than all shriek of b or beast,
the b Who pounced her quarry
took his brush and blotted out the 6,
foul b of rapine whose whole prey
Then as a little helpless innocent b,
b's of passage piping up and down,
once the shadow of a 6 Flying,
Beneath the shadow of some 6 of prey ;
head all night, like b's of prey,
like wild b's that change Their season
sent his soul Into the songs of b's,
the b That will not hear my call,
togither like b's on a beugh ;
And a pinnace, like a flutter'd b,
b's make ready for their bridal-time
Some b's are sick and sullen when they moult,
not arter the b's wi' 'is gun,
a score of wild b's Cried
And the shouting of these wild b's
And we left the dead to the b's
flight of b's, the flame of sacrifice,
b with a warble plaintively sweet
b's could make This music in the b ?
shell must break before the 6 can fly.
listen how the b's Begin to warble
whisbper was sweet as the lilt of a 6 !
av the b 'ud come to me call,
thy chuckled note, Thou twinkling b.
The summer b is still.
Faint as a climate-changing b that flies
I envied human wives, and nested b's,
my ravings hush'd The b,
b's that circle round the tower
B's and brides must leave the nest,
bright b that still is veering there
My b's would sing, You heard not.
scaled the buoyant highway of the b's,
Sing like a b and be happy,
waked a 6 of prey that scream'd and past ;
Warble b, and open flower,
Birdie Sleep, little b, sleep !
Without her ' little b ' ? well then.
sleep. And I will sing you '6.'
What does little b say
Let me fly, says little b, •
B, rest a little longer.
Baby says, like little b.
Bird's-eye-view b-e-v of all the ungracious past
Birk Shadows of the silver b
ere thy maiden b be wholly clad.
Birth amis, or pmoer of brain, or b
The old earth Had a b.
Her temple and her place of b,
winds, as at their hour of b.
At the moment of thy b,
range of evil between death and b,
hadst not between death and b
In Mem. cxix 5
,, cxxi 11
Maud I mi 1, 25
9
ay; 28
,, xxii 17
,, IIiv45
Garetfi and L 85
182
that
1075
1078
Marr. of Qeraint 329
331
369
601
658
Geraint and E. 627
Balin and Balan 545
Merlin and V. 134
478
728
Lancelot and E. 894
Holy Grail 146
Pellcas and E. 38
608
Last Tournament 138
Pass, of A rthur 38
Lover's Tale i 321
,, £«159
North. Cobbler 54
The Revenge 2
Sisters (E. and E.) 71
73
Village Wife 41
V. of Maeldune 27
33
36
Tiresias 6
The Wreck 81
Ancient Sage 21
154
Tlie Flight 60
Tomorrow 33
„ 45
Early Spring 38
Pref. Poem Broth. S. 18
Deineter and P. 1
53
109
The Ring 85
„ 89
„ 332
To Mary Boyle 18
Prog, of' Spring 80
Parruissus 14
Deaih of CEnone 87
Akbar's D., Hymn 7
Sea Dreams 282
283
284
293
295
297
303
Princess ii 125
A Dirge 5
Prog, of Spring 50
To tlie Queen 3
All Things loiU Die 38
Sujjp. Confessions 53
The Winds, etc. 1
Eleanor e 15
If I were loved 3
'Two Voices 169
Birth (continued) From that first nothing ere his
Would God renew me from my 6
slew him with your noble b.
Titanic forces taking b In divers
'He does not love me for my b,
marriage, and the b Of Philip's child :
one act at once. The b of light :
The time draws near the b of Christ :
Beyond the second b of Death.
Who breaks his b's individous bar.
Evil haunts The 6, the bridal ;
Memories of bridal, or of b.
The time draws near the b of Christ ;
Becoming, when the time has 6,
shaping an infant ripe for his b,
mine by a right, from b till death.
By the home that gave me b,
' Knowest thou aught of Arthur's b ? '
learn the secret of our Arthur's b.'
the cloud that settles round his b
had tended on him from his b,
creatures voiceless thro' the fault of b,
that weird legend of his b,
mystery From all men, like his b ;
govern a whole life from b to death,
like each other was the h of each ! (repeat)
Gives 6 to a brawling brook.
Rose of Lancaster, Ked in thy b.
Have I not been about thee from thy b ?
and was noble in l as in worth,
sweet mother land which gave them 6
Youth and Health, and b and wealth,
how far ? from o'er the gates of B,
the 6 of a baseborn child.
Birthday Each month, a b-d coming on,
the night Before my Enid's 6,
given her on the night Before her 6,
I send a b line Of greeting ;
on your third September b
And sent it on her b.
She in wrath Retum'd it on her b.
And on your Mother's b — all but yours —
This b, death-day, and betrothal ring.
Your b was her death-day.
forgotten it was your b, child —
Your fifth September b.
Every morning is thy b
b came of a boy born happily dead.
Biscay The B, roughly ridging eastward,
Bishop Archbishop, B, Priors, Canons,
Ay, an' ya seed the B.
an' sits o' the B's throan.
an' thou'll be a 5 j^it.
Bit (s) or b's of roasting ox Moan
Nobbut a 6 on it's left,
an' a nicetish b o' land.
Vext me a b, till he told me
I am going to leave you a b —
' tha mun break 'im off 6 by 6.'
jingle of 6*s, Shouts, arrows,
like a 6 of yisther-day in a dhrame—
Now I'll gie tha a 6 o' my mind
if tha wants to git forrads a b,
Bit (verb) 6 his lips. And broke away.
crack'd the helmet thro', and b the bone,
clench'd her fingers till they b the palm,
an' a-squealin, as if tha was b,
Bite (s) Showing the aspick's b.)
An' it wasn't a b but a burn,
Bite (verb) b's it for true heart and not for harm,
And do their little best to b
B, frost, b ! (repeat)
b far into the heart of the house,
Biting b laws to scare the beasts of prey
Modred b his thin lips was mute,
b Tioo Voices 332
Miller's D. 27
L. C. V. de Vere 48
Day- Dm., L' Envoi 17
Lady Clare 9
Enoch Arden 708
Princess Hi 326
In Mem, xxviii 1
,, zlv 16
,, Ixiv 5
„ xcviii 14
,, xcix 15
,, civ 1
,, cxiii 14
Maud I iv 34
,, xix 42
„ Ilivl
Com. of Arthur 147
159
Gareth and L, 130
179
Geraint and E. 266
Last Tottrnainent 669
Guinevere 298
Lover's Tale i 76
,, 197, 201
„ 526
Sir J. Oldcastle 53
Columbus 148
V. of Maeldune 3
Tiresias 122
By an Evolution. 8
Far-far-away 13
Chanty 28
Will Water. 93
Marr. of Geraint 458
633
To E. Fitzgerald 45
The Ring 130
„ 211
„ 212
„ 248
., 276
„ 301
„ 378
„ 423
AkbAr's D., Hymn 2
Charity 34
Enoch Arden 529
Sir J. Oldcastle 159
Church-warden, etc. 17
„ 20
50
Lucretius 131
N. Farmer, O.S. 41
N.S. 22
First Quarrel 36
80
Nm-th. Cobbler 88
Tiresias 93
Tomorrow 8
Church-warden, etc. 21
49
Dora 33
Man: of Geraint 573
Lancelot and E. 611
Owd Rod 89
D. ofF. Women im
Oiod Rod 90
Princess, Pro., 174
Lit. Squabbles 6
Window, Winter 7, 13
11
Princess v 393
GareUi and L. 31
Bitten
40
Blame
Bitten {See also Root-bitten) h the heel of the
going year.
b into the heart of the earth,
one whose foot is b by an ant,
Scratch'd, b, blinded, marr'd me
Bitter (See also Seeming-bitter, Wormwood-
bitter) Failing to give the b of the sweet,
0 sweet and 6 in a breath,
My own less 6, rather more :
If I find the world so b
Then the world were not so b (repeat)
canst abide a truth, Tho' b.
she tempted them and fail'd, Being so b :
b death must be : Love, thou art b ;
Bitterer Yet b from his readings :
Bitterly B weeping I turn'd away : (repeat)
' B wept I over the stone :
long and 6 meditating,
spake the Queen and somewhat b.
Bittern See Butter-bump
Bitterness Sweet in their utmost b,
Have fretted all to dust and b.'
wake The old b again.
By reason of the b and grief
they were, A & to me ! —
his spirit From b of death.
Bivouac Gone the comrades of my b,
Blabbing physician, b The case of his patient —
Prophet, curse me the b lip,
Black (See also Coal-black, Jet-black) B the
garden-bowers and grots
In the yew-wood b as night,
foreground b with stones and slags,
that hair More b than ashbuds
in its coarse b's or whites,
The streets were b with smoke
To b and brown on kindred brows.
who alway rideth arm'd in b,
B, with b banner, and a long b horn
ready on the river, clothed in b.
Part b, part whiten'd with the bones
B as the harlot's heart —
Wear b and white, and be a nun
stoled from head to foot in flowing b ;
bars Of b and bands of silver,
better ha' beaten me b an' blue
An' yer hair as b as the night,
b in white above his bones.
B with bridal favours mixt !
B was the night when we crept away
the dumb Hour, clothed in 6,
Black (Sea) side of the B and the Baltic deep,
Black-beaded Glancing with b-b eyes,
Window, Winter 6
18
Pelleas and E. 184
Last Tournainent 526
D.ofF. Wmnen2SQ
In Mem. Hi 3
,, vi 6
Maud / m 33
,, 38,94
Balin and Balan 502
Merlin and V. 820
Lancelot and E. 1010
Aylmer's Field 553
Edvjard Gray 6, 34
33
Boadicea 35
Guinevere 271
Supp. Confessions 117
Princess vi 264
In Mem. locxxiv 47
Com. of Arthur 210
Last Tournament 41
Lover's Tale i 143
Locksley H., Sixty, 45
Maud II V 36
57
Arabian Nights 78
Onatia 19
Palace of Art 81
Gardener's D. 28
W. to the Mail 107
In Mem. Ixix 3
,, Ixxix 16
Gareth and L. 636
1366
Lancelot and E. 1123
Holy Grail 500
Pelleas and E. 468
Guinevere 677
Lover's Tale ii 85
,, iv 59
First Quarrel 72
Tomorrow 32
Locksley H., Sixty, 44
Forlorn 69
Bandit's Death 25
Silent Voices 1
Maud III vi 51
Lilian 15
Black-bearded stem b-b kings with wolfish eyes, D. of F. Women 111
Black Bess (Horse) B B, Tantivy, Tallyho, The Brook 160
Blackbird (See also Merle) 0 B ! sing me some-
thing well : The Blackbird 1
while the b on the pippin hung Audley Court 38
The b's have their wills, (repeat) Early Spring 5, 47
Black-blue b-b Irish hair and Irish eyes Last Tournament 404
Blackcap The b warbles, and the turtle purrs, Prog, of Spring 55
Black'd B with thy branding thunder, St. S. Stylites 76
Blacken pierces the liver and b's the blood ; The Islet 35
bark and b innumerable, BoOdicea 13
B round the Roman carrion, ,, 14
upon a throne, And b's every blot : Ded. of Idylls 28
City children soak and b Locksley H., Sixty, 218
b round The corpse of every man Romney's R. 122
Blacken'd (See also Pitch-blacken'd) So b all her world
in secret. Princess vii 42
the walls B about us, ,, Cmi 110
His countenance b, and his forehead Balin and Balan 391
Blackening b over heath and holt, Locksley Hall 191
And b in the sea-foam sway'd Holy Grail 802
B against the dead -green stripes Pelleas and E. 554
Blackening (continued) b, swallow'd all the land, Guinevere 82
Was b on the slopes of Portugal, Sisters (E. and E.) 62
Blackest lie which is half a truth is ever the b of lies, GrandmotJier 30
To lie, to lie — in God's own house — the b of all lies ! The Flight 52
Black-heart unnetted b-h's ripen dark. The Blackbird 7
Black-hooded Black -stoled, b-h, like a dream M. d' Arthur 197
Black-stoled, b-h, like a dream Pass, of Arthur 365
Blackness In the gross b underneath. Supp. Confessions 187
With 6 as a solid wall. Palace of Art 274
The b round the tombing sod, On a Mourner 27
dark was Uther too, Wellnigh to b ; Co7n. of Arthur 330
she make My darkness b ? Balin and Balan 193
Blackshadow'd there, b nigh the mere Gareth and L. 809
Blacksmith i border-marriage — one they knew — Aylmer's Field '2Q3
b 'e strips me the thick ov 'is airm, North. Cobbler 85
Black-stoled B-s, bla9k-hooded, like a dream M. d' Arthur 197
7>-,s, black-hooded, like a dream Pass, of Arthur 365
Blackthorn never see The blossom on the b. May Queen, N. Y's. E. 8
Blackthorn-blossom b-b fades and falls and leaves
the bitter sloe, T!ie Flight 15
Black-wing'd the b-w Azrael overcame, Akbar's Bream 186
Blade (of grass) varying year with b and
sheaf Day- Dm., Sleep. P. 1
In bud or b, or bloom, may find, ,, Moral 10
While life was yet in bud and b, Princess i 32
while the sun yet beat a dewy 6, Geraint and E. 446
voice clings to each b of grass, Lancelot and E. 107
From buried grain thro' springing b, Demeter and P. 146
Blade (of sword) pure and true as b's of steel. Kate 16
My good b carves the casques of men, Sir Galahad 1
She bore the b of Liberty. The Voyage 72
struck out and shouted ; the b glanced, Princess v 540
Geraint's, vi^ho heaved his b aloft, Marr. of Geraint 572
b so bright That men are blinded Com. of Arthur 300
but turn the h and ye shall see, ,, 303
these will turn the b.' Gareth and L. 1095
the b flew Splintering in six, Balin and Balan 395
■waved his b To the gallant three hundred Heavy Brigade 9
drove the b that had slain my husband Bandit's Death 34
Blade (of dagger) with the 6 he prick'd his hand, Aylmer's Field 239
' From Edith ' was engraven on the b. ,, 598
Blade (shoulder-bone) (See also Shoulder blade)
arms were shatter'd to the shoulder b. Princess vi 52
Blain face deform'd by lurid blotch and b — Death of (Enone 72
Blame (s) But he is chill to praise or b. Two Voices 258
Joyful and free from 6. D.ofF. WmnenSO
Shall smile away my maiden 6 ,, 214
The crime of malice, and is equal b.' Vision of Sin 216
Nor yours the b — for who beside Ayhner's Field 735
Which he has worn so pure of b, Ode on Well. 72
I had such reverence for his b. In Mem. li 6
white blamelessness accounted b ! ' Merlin and V. 799
mine the 6 that oft I seem as he Last Tournament 115
Received unto himself a part of b. Lover's Tale i 786
lines I read Nor uttcr'd word of 6, Pro. to Gen. Hamley 18
Blame (verb) in truth You must b Love. Miller's D. 192
' I have been to b — to b. Dora 159
I have been to b. Kiss me, my children.' ,, 161
Am I to 6 for this, St. S. Stylites 124
she had a will ; was he to & ? Pnncess i 48
yet I b you not so much for fear ; tt i'o 506
' Ida — 'sdeath ! you b the man ; ,, "in 221
' b not thyself too much,' I said, ' nor b „ i^i 255
They are all to b, they are all to b. Sailor Boy 20
knot thou the winds that make In Mem, xlix 10
6 not thou thy plaintive song,' ,, Hi 5
Nor b I Death, because he bare , , Ixxxii 9
Nor count me all to 6 if I ,, Con. 85
She did not wish to b him — Maud Ixx5
' Damsel,' he said, ' you be not all to b, Gareth and L. 1171
who should 6 me then 'i ' Merlin and V. 661
' To b, my lord Sir Lancelot, much to b I Lancelot and E. 97
the girl was the most to I. First Quarrel 26
An' I felt I had been to 6 ; ,,90
You praise when you should b Epilogue 4
Blame
Blame (verb) {continued) the Priest is not to b,
Blamed Shall love be b for want of faith ?
Let lore be 6 for it, not she, nor I :
b herself for telling hearsay tales :
Blameless b is he, centred in the sphere
Wearinj the white flower of a 6 life.
Fearing the mild face of the b King,
Yourself were first the b cause
The b Kiig went forth and cast
fighting hr the b King.
Arthur ths b, pure as any maid,
Vivien should attempt the b King.
Arthur, 6 5ing and stainless man ? '
And I myself, myself not b,
Blamelessness thy white 6 accounted blame ! '
Blanch breakecs boom and b on the precipices,
6 the bones cf whom she slew,
ripple would hardly b into spray
Blanche Two wflows, Lady Psyche, Lady Ji ■
who were tutcrs. ' Lady B'^
brought a mesage here from Lady B.'
we saw The Laly B's daughter
Lady B alone O faded form
sent for B to accuse her face to face ;
Lady B erect Stod up and spake,
but B At distance follow'd :
With kisses, ere t)e days of Lady B :
she had authority ^The Lady B :
' Ay so ? ' said B : 'imazed am I
B had gone, but leftHer child
Not tho' B had swor\ That after that dark night
Blanched (6ee o^so Sunmer-blanched) Upon the 6
tablets of her heart
B with his mill, they fuind ;
won it with a day B in »ur annals,
How 6 with darkness mi^t I crow !
wave, That b upon its si(i.
Blanching Or scatter'd b on\he grass,
confluence of watercourses^ and
chanted on the b bones of Cen ? '
b apricot like snow in snow.
Bland Shakespeare 6 and mild\
small his voice, But b the smip
And bless thee, for thy lips ai b,
like the Ijountiful season b.
Blandishment an accent very lo\^n b
Blank made 6 of crimef ul record
As b as death in marble ;
b And waste it seem'd and vain ;
rain On the bald street breaks thi
some but carven, and some b,
shield was b and bare without a si
B, or at least with some device
God wot, his shield is b enough,
he roll'd his eyes Yet b from sleep,
one to the west, and counter to it, An
the world as b as Winter-tide,
the goodly view Was now one b,
Blanket When a b wraps the day.
Blankly Had gazed upon her b and gone by
Blare (s) With b of bugle, clamour of men,
Lured by the glare and the b,
Blare (verb) Warble, 0 bugle, and trumpet, &
To 6 its own interpretation —
Blared trumpet b At the barrier
Blaspheme So they b the muse !
0 God, I could b, for he fought
Blasphemy troops of devils, mad with b,
filth, and monstrous blasphemies,
B ! whose is the fault ?
B ! ay, why not,
B ! true ! I have scared you
But the b to my mind lies
Blast (s) {See cdso Trumpet-blast) burst thro'
with heated b's
41
Blazon'd
Happy 105
III Mem. li 10
Gareth and L. 299
Merlin and V. 951
Ulysses 39
Ded. of Idylls 2S>
Geraint and E. 812
„ 826
„ 932
« ,. " ^70
Balm and Baian 479
Merlin and V. 164
779
(Jolumbus 185
Merlin and V. 799
Boddicea 76
Tiresias 150
Tfie Wreck 137
Princess i 128
„ 232
„ a 319
„ 321
„ 447
„ iv239
290
,, vi 82
„ 114
239
„ .324
,, vii 56
72
day.
Isabel 17
Enoch Arden 367
Princess m 63
In Mem. Ixi 8
Lover's Tale i 45
Day-Dm., Arrival 12
I/iccretius 31
Princess ii 199
Proff. of Spring 30
Palace of Art 134
Princess i 115
In Mem. cxix 9
Maitd I iv. 3
Isabel 20
St. S. Stylites 158
Princess i 177
,, vii 42
In Mem. vii 12
Gareth and L. 406
414
Lancelot and E. 194
197
820
Holy Grail 255
Last Tournament 221
Death of (Enone 4
Vision of Sin 80
Merlin and V 161
Ode on Well. 115
V. of Maeldune 73
W. to Alexandra 14
Lancelot and E. 943
Princess v 485
„ iv 137
Happy 15
St. S. Stylites 4
Pass, of Arthur 114
Despair 107
„ 109
„ 111
» 112
\ofF. Women 29
Blast {B) {continued) The b was hard and harder. The Goose 50
l«f 1 """n «!."? l^"" ?r ; ^' ^' Arthur. Ep. 15
desires, like fitful b's of balm Garden^',^s £. 68
Cramming all the b before it, j^^ksley Hall 192
HvJT 1 "f^^"*^ ""w^ ^^/ ^^^'^' The Voyage 85
like the b of doom. Would shatter ^noch Arden 769
f i,t f *'^"?P^t« ^'■°P» the g^*^. • PHmess, Pro. 42
the b and bray of the long horn ^ 252
storm and 6 Had blown the lake 'The Daisy 70
1^ i'w ^,^^ i°* '^"^t^'"' ^*^°** 5 To F. D. Maurice 22
6 * that blow the poplar white, /,, Mem. Ixxii 3
Fiercely flies The b of North and East, cvii 7
^° f K* h f^^ overhead Thunder, Holy GraU 184
m the b there smote along the hall i86
such a b, my King, began to blow, " 795
So loud a b along the shore and sea, " 796
could not hear the waters for the b, " 797
That turns its back on the salt b, Pelleas and E. 544
felt the 6 Beat on my heated eyelids : Lover's Tale in 27
A, ; ^I't ^° ^'"™'"g «li?nf Rizpah 18
the b of that underground thunderclap Def. of Lmknono 32
a sudden j» blew us out and away F. of Maeldune 10
to put fortih and brave the h ; Pref Son. 19th. Cent. 8
Tnr Au""^^ *°f ^. ^°°^ °^ *h® ^ ^/^e Wreck 91
still d the b and strown the wave. Freedom 34
Blast (verb) I heard them b The steep slate-quarry, Golden Tear 75
like a poisonous wind I pass to b Pelleas and E. 569
Blasted a sunbeam by the b Pine, Princess vii 196
was b with a curse : 2>. ^y ^. p^^wiej^ 103
years which are not Time's Had b him- Aylmer's Field 602
I? and burnt, and blinded as I was, Holy Grail 844
A°7^°''f u^^^l suit was 6- Zocfofey ^. , Sixty 5
And sent him charr'd and 6 "^ HavmiM
Rl«Sw^ a' i^^T "°'^ than lightning ! Pama^si^ 12
Blatant Ob Magazines, regard me rather- HendecasyllaUcs 17
Rioi^^w ';°"^ "^"^ *° ? ^ ^^°'^' ^««^ Ix 63
Blaw (blossom) — wot's a beauty ?— tho
Blaze (s) (See also Beacon-blaze) The b upon the
waters to the east ; The h upon his island ovcr-
. head ; The 6 upon the waters to the west ; Enoch Arden 594
distant 6 of those dull banquets, Aylmer's Field 489
voice amid the 6 of flowers: Lucretius IQl
bat hf ty m the 6 of burning fire ; Spec, of Iliad 20
Her shadow on the b of kings : In Mem. xcviii 19
wayside blossoms open to tho b. Balin and Balan 449
The incorporate b of sun and sea. Lover's Tale i 409
wl-^" '.l"'*!"'. ^^^^^K^ \ . , . Epilogue 54
betwixt the whitening sloe And kingcup b. To Mary Boyle 26
PI. ,^? K^ * 'if noonday b without, St. TdLachus 50
Blaze (verb) B upon her window, sun, Windmo, When 15
the sun 6 on the turning scythe, Geraint and E. 252
b the cnme of Lancelot and the Queen.' Pelleas and E. 570
smouldenng scandal break and b Guinevere 91
Ji by the rushing brook or silent well. 400
B, making all the night a steam " 599
Blazed many a fire before them 6 : Spec, of Iliad 10
b before the towers of Troy, ^ J ^^
joy that b itself in woodland wealth Balin and Balan 82
thing was b about the court, Merlin and V. 743
i> the last diamond of the nameless king, Lancelot and E. 444
heart s sad secret h itself gog
heavens Open'd and b with thunder liky Grail 508
the heavens open d and 6 again gjg
in a moment when they b again " 523
Blaz^^ X^^itlaii^^ "'" ""' '"'"''• ""^"^ "-^'^^-^ 77
Blazon B your mottos of blessing ^F. to Alexandra 12
It t g^^f * ^^ndows b Arthur's wars, ZTo/y ^ai7 248
who shall b it ? when and how ? — 255
Blazon'd from his b baldric slung x. „/ silalUt Hi 15
Sweat on his 6 chairs; Wa^;fc. to <Ae Jfai7 76
No b statesman he, nor king. You anight have won 24
Blazon'd
42
Blew
Blazon'd (continued) b lions o'er the imperial
Bright let it be with its b deeds,
The giant windows* b fires,
b fair In diverse raiment
tiome b, some but carven,
if twain His ai'ms were b also ;
all true hearts be b on her tomb
Eurple b with armorial gold,
imps b like Heaven and Earth
monsters b what they were.
The prophet b on the panes ;
shield of Gawain b rich and bright,
All the devices b on the shield
Blazoning silken case with braided b's,
banners b a Power That is not seen
Bleach'd wizard brow 6 on the walls :
lay till all their bones were b,
Bleat b Of the thick-fleeced sheep
bird would sing, nor lamb would b,
motherless 6 of a lamb in the storm
Bleating I hear the b of the lamb.
Sent out a bitter b for its dam ;
Bled when her Satrap b At Issus
B underneath his armour secretly,
Bleed strain The heart until it b's,
For which her warriors 6,
Bleedeth my true breast B for both ;
Blemish stain or 6 in a name of note,
' Small b upon the skin !
Blench make thee somewhat b or fail,
Blend all their voices b in choric Hallelujah
Blent hatred of her weakness, b with shame.
Bless But that God b thee, dear —
And b him for the sake of him (repeat)
' God b him ! ' he said, ' and may he
And b me, mother, ere I go.'
b him, he shall sit upon my knees
Grod b you for it, God reward you
softly whisper 'B, God b 'em :
And forty blest ones b him,
God b the narrow sea which keeps
God b the narrow seas !
O for thy voice to soothe and b !
And 6 thee, for thy lips are bland.
That which we dare invoke to b ;
And cried, ' God b the King,
vext his day, but b'es him asleep —
God b you, my own little Nell.'
the Saviour lives but to b.
that men May b thee as we b thee,
dream of a shadow, go — God b you.
He b'es the wife.
Love yom- enemy, b your haters,
and b Their garner'd Autumn also,
and ' b ' Whom ? even ' your persecutors ' !
a woman, God b her, kept me from Hell.
Blessed See Blest
Blessedness Or is there b like theirs ?
Blessin' for a b 'ud come wid the green ! '
Blessing tell her that I died B her,
spent in b her and praying for her.
tell my son that I died b him.
b those that look on them.
B the wholesome white faces
B his field, or seated in the dusk
With b's beyond hope or thought,
With b's which no words can find.
0 b's on his kindly voice
And b's on his whole life long,
0 b's on his kindly heart
be tended by My b !
God's b on the day !
Pray'd for a i on his wife and babes
calhng down a b on his head
And b's on the falling out
tent Princess v 9
Ode mi Well. 56
The Daisy 58
Palace of Art 167
Gareth and L. 406
„ 413
Lancelot and E. 1344
Godiva 52
Princess i 223
„ iv 345
In Mem. Ixxxvii 8
Gareth and L. 416
Lancelot and E. 9
1149
Akbar's Dream 137
Merlin and V, 597
Lancelot and E. 43
Ode to Memwy 65
Mariana in the S. 37
In the Child. Hosp. 64
May Queen, Con. 2
Princess iv 392
Alexander 2
Geraint and E. 502
Clear-headed friend 5
Epilogue 35
To J. S. 63
Merlin and V. 832
Dead Prophet 66
In Mem. Ixii 2
Making of Man 7
Princess vii 30
Miller's D.'iSb
Dora 70, 94
„ 149
Lady Clare 56
Enoch Arden 197
424
Aylm^r's Field 187
372
Princess, Con. 51
70
In Mem. Ivi 26
„ cxodv 1
Gareth and L. 698
„ 1286
First Quarrel 22
Rizpah 64
De Prof. Two G. 17
To W. H. Brookfield 14
To Prin. F. of H. 4
Locksley H,, Sixty 85
Demeter and P. 146
Akbar's Dream 76
Charity 4
In Mem. xxxii 16
Tmnorrow 64
Enoch Arden 879
884
885
Princess Hi 256
Dcf. of Liicknmo 101
Demeter and P. 125
Miller's D. 237
238
May Queen, Con. 13
14
15
Love and Duty 88
Lady Clare 8
Enoch Arden 188
327
Princess ii 6
Blessing {continued) from Heaven A 6 on her labours Princess ii 479
Blazon your mottoes of 6 and prayer !
My b, like a line of light,
We yield all b to the name
crown'd with b she doth rise
Why do they prate of the b's of Peace ?
she was deaf To b or to cursing
Thy b, stainless King !
take withal Thy poet's b,
hold the hand of 6 over them,
saved by the b of Heaven !
' Bread — Bread left after the b ? '
Fi'om the golden alms of B
Blest-Blessed And forty blest ones bless him,
W. to Alexandra 12
In Mim. xvii 10
,, xxxvi 3
xl 5
Maud I i 21
Geraint and E. 579
Merl'n and V. 54
To tlie Qjvecn ii 46
Lovir's Tale i 754
Def. oj Lvxknow 104
Sir J. Oldcastle 154
Lockshy H., Sixty 87
Ayhner's Field 372
Sammy, I'm blest If it isn't the saame oop yonder, N. farmer, N.S. 43
soul laments, which hath been blest,
fruit of thine by Love is blest,
Thy name was blest within the narrow door ;
Marie, shall thy name be blest.
As if the quiet bones were blest
what may count itself as blest.
Thrice blest whose lives are faithful prayers,
my heart more blest than heart can tell,
Blest, but for some dark undercurrent
' Blessed be thou. Sir Gareth !
They might as well have blest her :
blest be Heaven That brought thee
Blessed are Bors, Lancelot and Percivale,
blessed be the King, who hath forgiven
Blest be the voice of the Teacher
fancy made me for a moment Uest
She desires no isles of the blest.
As she looks among the blest,
in a dream from a band of the blest,
fellowship Would make me wholly blest :
follow Edwin to those isles, those islands jf
the Blest !
I blest them, and they wander'd on :
A thousand times I hlest him,
bless'd herself, and cursed herself,
say to Philip that I blest him too ;
Perceived the waving of his hands tiat blest.
saw not his daughter — he blest her :
And they blest him in their pain.
Blew breeze of a joyful dawn b free
B his own praises in his eyes,
hunter b His wreathed bugle-hor-
sweet Europa's mantle b unclaspi,
The glass b in, the fire b out.
Her cap b off, her gown b up,
full-fed with pei-fume, b Beyad us.
The hedge broke in, the ban»Jr b,
A light wind b from the gat*^ of the sun,
from the tiny pitted target '
the wind b ; The rain of heaven,
b the swoU'n cheek of a trmpeter,
bush-bearded Barons hesed and b,
he b and b, but none api^ar'd :
stood four-square to all ne winds that b !
Last, the Prussian trurpet b ;
A milky-bell'd amaryl^ b.
all the bugle breezes /ReveilMe
Altho' the trumpet t^o loud,
cloth of gold, the trmpets b,
other b A hard andleadly note
that ye b your bos' in vain ? '
and lights, and of^e again he b ;
O'er the four riv<« the first roses b,
and anon The trmpets b ;
trumpets b Procwming his the prize,
sun Shone, anc^he wind b, thro' her.
And b my mery maidens all about
to the summi' and the trumpets b.
ever the win'^> and yellowing leaf
Far off a soiary trumpet b.
D. cf F. Women 281
Talking Oak 249
W. to Marie Alex. 38
39
In Mem. xviii 6
,, xxvii 9
,, xooxii 13
Maud I. xviii 82
„ 83
Gareth aiut L. 1258
Geraint and E. 578
Holy Grail 616
874
Guinevere 634
Kapiolani 2
Tliefonn, tlieform 6
Wages 8
Maud II iv 84
„ III vi 10
Balin and Balan 148
The Flight 42
Two Voices 424
May Queen, Con. 16
The Goose 15
Eiioch Arden 886
Guinevere 584
To Prin. F. of H. 3
The Revenge 20
Arabian Nights 1
A Character 22
Palace of Art6S
„ 117
The Goose 49
„ 51
Gardener's 2). 113
Day -Dm., Revival 9
Poet's Song 3
Ayhner's Field 93
427
Pnncess ii 364
•y21
„ 336
Ode oil Well. 39
„ 127
T/ie Daisy 16
In Mem. lawiii 7
,, xcvi 24
Com. of Arthtir 480
Gareth and L. 1110
1229
1371
Geraint and E. 764
Lancelot and E. 454
„ 500
Holy Grail 99
» 748
Pelleas and E. 167
Last Tournament 154
Guinevere 529
Blew
43
Bloat
Blew (cotilinved) from the North, and h The
mist aside, Pass, of Arthur 12i
and b Fresh fire into the sun, Lover's Tale i 318
and h Coolness and moisture and all smells ,, Hi 4
and 6 it far Until it hung, ,, 35
ever that evening ended a great gale h, The Revenge 114
topmost roof our banner of England
6. (repeat) Def. of Lucknow Q, 20, 45, &0, M
topmost roof our banner in India b.
the old banner of England b. „
a sudden blast b us out and away
whirlwind blow these woods, as never b before,
All at once the trumpet b,
Bleys (Merlin's master) (so they call him) B,
B Laid magic by, and sat him down,
B, our Merlin's master, as they say.
Blight (s) B and famine, plague and earthquake,
The b of low desires —
b Of ancient influence and scorn.
And b and famine on all the lea :
like a 6 On my fresh hope,
b Lives in the dewy touch of pity
if the blossom can doat on the b.
Blight (verb) Which would b the plants.
Shall sharpest pathos b us,
h thy hope or break thy rest,
Blighted ' your pretty bud. So b here.
Blind (sightless) (See also Half-blind, Hoodman-blind)
All night long on darkness b.
this dreamer, deaf and b,
men, whose reason long was b,
parch'd and wither'd, deaf and b,
those, not b, who wait for day,
almost b. And scarce can recognise
mate is h and captain lame,
h or lame or sick or sound,
for he groped as b, and seem'd
wept her true eyes b for such a one,
b with rage she miss'd the plank,
I cried myself well-nigh b,
And shall I take a thing so b.
He would not make his judgment b,
not b To the faults of his heart
He mark'd not this, but b and deaf
were I stricken 6 That minute,
one hath seen, and all the b will see.
on the splendour came, flashing me b ;
thrice as 6 as any noonday owl,
Being too b to have desire to see.
Mute, b and motionless as then I lay ;
B, for the day was as the night
Almost h With ever-growing cataract,
' Henceforth be b, for thou hast seen
Or power as of the Gods gone b
leave him, b of heart and eyes.
For wert thou bom or b or deaf,
no man halt, or deaf or b ;
Fur the dog's stoan-deaf , an' e's h,
an' seeam'd as b as a p)Oop,
A barbarous people, B to the magic,
Blind (screen) (See also Lattice-blind)
your shadow cross'd the b.
Blind (verb) lest the gems Should b my purpose,
Ere yet they b the stars,
To b the truth and me :
He shall not 6 his soul with clay.'
good King means to b himself,
b's himself and all the Table Round
lest the gems Should b my purpose,
b your pretty blue eyes with a kiss !
Blinded ('See also Half -blinded, Self-blinded)
those whom passion hath not b,
blissful tears b my sight
and b With many a deep-hued
Droops b with his shining eye :
72
106
V. of Maeldune 10
The FligU 12
Happy 75
Com. of Arthur 153
155
360
Lotos-Es., a. S., 115
Aylme^-'s Field 673
Princess ii 168
Tlie Victim 46
Maud I xix 102
Lover's Tale i 694
Tlie Wreck 19
Poet's Mind 18
Love and Duty 85
Faith 2
Tlie Ring 317
A deline 44
Tioo Voices 175
„ 370
Fatima 6
Lore thou, thy land 15
St. S. Stylites 39
Tlie Voyage 91
„ 93
Aylmer's Field 821
Pnncess iv 134
177
Grandmother 37
In Mem. Hi 13
,, axvi 14
Maud I xix 67
Balin a7id Balan 318
Lancelot and E. 426
Holy Grail 313
„ 413
866
872
Lover's Tide i 607
610
Sisters (E. and E.) 191
Tiresias 49
Ancient Sage 80
„ 113
„ 175
Locksley H., Sixty, 163
Owd Rod 2
„ 101
Merlin and the O. 26
Sometimes
Miller's D. 124
M. d'AHhurlhZ
Tithonus 39
Princess Hi 112
,, vii 331
Merlin and V. 783
784
Pass, of Arthur 321
Romney's R. 101
Ode to Memory 117
Oriana 23
Elednore 36
Fatima 38
Blinded (continued) I, b with my tears, ' Still
strove
Not with b eyesight poring
so bright That men are 6 by it —
Blasted and burnt, and 6 as I was,
Scratch 'd, bitten, b, marr'd me
Too early 6 by the kiss of death —
May leave the windows b.
He stumbled in, and sat B ;
Blinder Nature made them b motions
' Gawain, and b unto holy things
Blind Fate Rail a,t ' B F' with many
Blindfold Drug down the b sense of wrong
from what side The b rummage
Blinding Struck up against the b wall.
Dash'd together in b dew :
his fire is on my face B,
raised the b bandage from his eyes :
suck the 6 splendour from the sand,
all in mail Burnish'd to b,
Are b desert sand ; we scarce can
Blindless the b casement of the room,
Blindly That read his spirit b wise,
And, while now she wonders 6,
' The stars,' she whispers, ' 6 run ;
And staggers 6 ere she sink ?
muffled motions b drown
b rush'd on all the rout behind.
Blindness That in this b of the frame
for talk Which lives with b,
curse Of b and their unbelief,
Blink those that did not b the terror,
Blinkt B the white morn, sprays gi-ated,
Bliss Then in madness and in b,
Weak symbols of the settled b,
Above the thunder, with undying b
' Trust me, in 6 I shall abide
move Me from my 6 of life,
I rose up Full of his b,
A man had given all other b,
I shall see him, My babe in b :
and spoils My b in being ;
A central warmth diffusing b
1 triumph in conclusive b,
0 b, when all in circle drawn
With gods in unconjectured b,
A wither'd violet is her b :
For fuller gain of after b :
Nor have I felt so much of b
Make answer, Maud my b,
My dream ? do I dream of b ?
Sun, that wakenest all to b or pain,
thrills of b That strike across the soul
b stood round me like the light of Heaven,-
tell him of the b he had with God —
sunder'd With smiles of tranquil b,
0 b, what a Paradise there !
whose one b Is war, and human sacrifice —
Twelve times in the year Bring me b,
' Sleep, little blossom, my honey, my b !
1 had one brief summer of b.
Blissful hei'e are the b downs and dales.
While b tears blinded my sight
As from some b neighbourhood,
sleep down from the b skies.
With b treble ringing clear.
b palpitations in the blood,
B bride of a & heir,
led him thro' the b climes.
On me she bends her b eyes
Blister'd B every word with teai's.
Blistering bared her forehead to the b sun,
Blithe New-year b and bold, my friend,
B would her brother's acceptance be.
Bloat b himself, and ooze All over
D. of F. Women 108
Locksley Hall 172
Com. of Arthur 301
Holy Grail 844
Last Tournament 526
Romney's R. 103
,; 146
St. Telemachus 49
Locksley Hall 150
Holy Grail 870
Doubt and Prayer 2
In Mem. Ixxi 7
Balin and Balan 416
Mai-iana in the S. 56
Vision of Sin 42
Lucretius 145
Princess i 244
,, vii 39
Gareth and L. 1027
Akbar's Dream 30
Marr. of Geraint 71
Tim Voices 287
L. of Burleigh 53
l7i Mem. Hi 5
,, xvi 14
,, xlix 15
Geraint and E. 466
In Mem. xciii 15
Sisters (E. and E.) 249
Tiresias 59
Gareth and L. 1402
Balin and Balan 385
Madelitie 42
Miller's D. 233
CEnone 132
Palace of Art 18
D. ofF. Wo7nen 210
Gardener's D. 211
Sir L. and Q. G. 42
Enoch Arden 898
Lucretius 222
In Mem, Ixocxiv 6
,, lococxv 91
,, Ixxxix 21
,, xciii 10
,, xcvii 2*0
, , cxvii 4
,, Co7i. 5
Maud I xviii 57
,, xix 3
Gareth and L. 1060
Lover's Tale i 363
495
674
ii 143
V. of Maeldune 78
Tiresias 111
The Ring 6
Romiiey's R. 99
Bandit's Death 9
Sea- Fairies 22
Ch'iana 23
Two Voices 430
Lotos-Ealers, C.S. 7
Sir L. and Q. G. 22
Princess iv 28
W. to Alexandra 27
In Mem. Ixxxv 25
„ Con. 29
Forlorn 81
Geraint and E. 515
D. of tlie 0. Year 35
Maud I x27
Sea Dreams 154
Bloated
44
Blood
Bloated forehead veins B, and branch'd ;
merry 6 things Shoulder'd the spigot,
Block (s) {See also Yiile-block) on black Vs A
of thunder.
as a 6 Left in the quarry ;
(Huge h's, which some old trembling
Block (verb) h and bar Your heart with system
Block'd knew mankind, And h them out ;
Blockish No coarse and h God of acreage
Blonde rosy h, and in a college gown,
Blood And leave Its riders of your h
Ice with the warm h mixing ;
Which mixing with the infant's h,
till his own 6 flows About his hoof.
was no h upon her maiden robes
I feel the tears of h arise
her sacred h doth drown The fields,
A matter to be wept with tears of h !
Till her h was frozen slowly,
It was the stirring of the h.
' He knows a baseness in his h
The pnident partner of his h
my swift 6 that went and came
my vigour, wedded to thy h,
She mix'd her ancient h with shame.
phantasms weeping tears of b,
'J'he guilt of h is at your door :
And simple faith than Norman h,
ever-shifting currents of the h
That Principles are rain'd in b ;
Who sprang from English b !
his brow Striped with dark h :
Vex'd with a morbid devil in his 6
' The slight she-slips of loyal b,
felt my b Glow with the glow
stays the h along the veins.
grapes with bunches red as b ;
Ah, blessed vision ! b of God!
Let Whig and Tory stir their b ;
To make my 6 run quicker,
And I,' said he, ' the next in b —
Burnt in each man's 6.
scatter'd B and brains of men.
In their b, as they lay dying,
' We are men of ruin'd 6 ;
down thro' all his b Drew in
now there is but one of all my 6
distant kinship to the gracious 6
to flush his b with air,
redden'd with no bandit's b :
Runs in a river of b to the sick sea.
swept away The men of flesh and 6,
Confused the chemic labour of the 6,
thought that all the b by Sylla shed
keep him from the luat of b
strikes thro' the thick b Of cattle,
lust or lusty b or provender :
made her b in sight of Collatine
none of all our 6 should know
thoughts enrich the b of the world.'
6 Was sprinkled on your kirtle.
That was fawn's b, not brother's,
blissful palpitations in the b,
what mother's h You draw from,
The brethren of our b and cause,
da1)bled with the b Of his own son,
' I've hoard that there is iron in the b,
faith in womankind Beats with his b,
Mourn for the man of long-enduring b.
Shall lash all Europe into b ;
pierces the liver and blackens the b ;
To spill his b and heal the land :
anger, not by & to be satiated.
Into my heart and my b !
I seem to fail from out my h
Bcdin and Balan 392
Guinevere 267
breadth
Privxxss Hi 291
„ vii 230
Lover's Tale ii 45
Princess iv 462
„ m328
AylTner's Field 651
Princess ii 323
To the Queen 21
All Things will Die 33
iSupp. Confessions 61
155
The Poet 41
Orianu 77
Poland 4
„ 14
L. of Sludott iv 30
Two Voices 159
301
415
Fatima 16
(Enone 161
The Sisters 8
Palace of Art 289
L.C.V.de Fere 43
56
D. ofF. Wmmn\^
Love tlwu thy land 80
England and Amer. 10
M. d' Arthur 212
Walk, to the Mail 19
Talking Oak 57
Timonus 55
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 4
44
Sir Galalmd 45
WiU Water. 53
„ 110
Lady Clare 84
The Captain 16
48
55
Vision of Sin 99
Enoch Arden 659
892
Aylmer's Field 62
„ 459
597
768
Sea Dreams 237
Lucretius 20
„ 47
„ 83
„ 98
„ 198
„ 238
Princess i 8
„ m181
„ 273
„ 275
„ iv 28
Princess v 404
„ vi 71
„ 104
230
,, vii 329
Ode on Well. 24
To F. D. Maurice 34
Tlie Islet 35
The Victim ^i
BoOdicea 52
Window^ Marr. Morn. 16
In Mem. ii 15
Blood (continued) Or crush her, like a vice of b,
. Moved in the ckambers of the b ;
Oh, sacred be the flesh and b
This use may lie in b and breath,
b creeps, and the nerves prick
Defects of doubt, and taints of b ;
0 Sorrow, wilt thou rule my b,
Delay est the sorrow in my b,
branches of thy b ; Thy b, my friend,
My b an even tenor kept,
Ring out false piide in place and 6,
Thro' all the years of April b ;
By 6 a king, at heart a clown ;
Till all my b, a fuller wave,
And the great .^Eon sinks in b.
Remade the b and changed the frame,
drip with a silent horror of 6,
sweeter b by the other side ;
never yet so warmly ran my b
household Fury sprinkled with b
true b spilt had in it a heat
soul of the rose went into my b,
A cry for a brother's b :
Am I guilty of 6 ?
fear they are not roses, but b ;
sun with smoke and earth with b,
and clarions shrilling unto b,
And mine is living 6 :
he had glamoui' enow In his own b,
that best 6 it is a sin to spill.'
ev'n Sir Lancelot thro' his warm h
Pi'ince's 6 spirted upon the scarf,
fail'd to draw The quiet night into her 6,
6 Of their strong bodies, flowing,
nay ; I do not mean b :
fearing for his hurt and loss of b,
nature's prideful sparkle in the b
vicious quitch Of b and custom
Fill'd all the genial courses of his b
Born with the 6, not learnable,
starve not thou this fire within thy 6,
Reputed to be red with sinless 6,
If I were Arthur, I would have thy 6.
As clean as b of babes,
for my h Hath earnest in it
sin that practice burns into the b,
pale b of the wizard at her touch
Red as the rising sun with heathen h,
the b Sprang to her face and fill'd
And half his b burst forth.
For twenty strokes of the b,
far b, which dwelt at Camelot ;
when the b ran lustier in him again,
Ev'n to the death, as tho' ye were my 6,
Was rather in the fantasy than the b.
what are they ? flesh and b ?
no further off in b from me Than sister ;
White Horse in his own heathen b —
my b danced in me, and I knew
Our race and b, a remnant
b beats, and the blossom blows,
slept that night for pleasure in his b,
have risen against me in their b
No b of mine, I trow ;
be no nibies, this is frozen b,
Showing a shower of 6 in a field noir,
flesh and b Of our old kings :
flesh and 6 perforce would violate :
comforted the b With meats and wines,
reverencing king's 6 in a bad man.
To save his b from scandal,
drew Down with his b, till all his heart
a brow Striped with dark b :
countenance with quick and healthful 6 —
And hourly visitation of the b.
In Mem. Hi 15
,, xxiii 20
,, xxxiii 11
,, odv 13
12
,, liv 4
,, lix 5
In Mem. Ixxxiii 14
In Mem. Ixxxiv 8
,, locxxv 17
,, coi 21
,, cix 12
,, cxi 4
,, cxodi 12
,, cxxvii 16
Con. 11
Maud lis
,, xiii 34
,, xviii 3
,, aria; 32
44
" ..
,, ocxii 33
„ //i34
„ ii 73
„ ■»78
Com. of Arthur 37
103
Gareth and L. 10
210
600
1398
Marr. of Geraint 208
532
568
Geraint and E. 338
777
827
»» 804
927
Balin and Balan 175
453
557
Merlin and V. 53
344
„ 556
762
949
Lancelot and E. 308
376
517
720
„ 803
881
„ 960
1132
„ 1256
Holy Grail 69
„ 312
366
663
„ 671
Pelleas and E. 138
461
La^t Tournament 201
418
438
„ 686
„ 689
724
Guinevere 37
„ 514
Pass, of Arthur 97
380
Lover's Tale i 97
206
rA^:
Blood
45
Blossom
Blood {contimied) stream of life, one stream, one life,
one 6, Lover's Tale i 239
As mountain streams Onr b's ran free : „ 327
I was as the brother of her b, „ 559
my 6 Crept like marsh drains ,, ii 52
I weant shed a drop on 'is b, North. Cobbler 114
Now reddest with the b of holy men, Sir J. Oldcastle 54
a cross of flesh and 6 And holier. ,, 137
Blue 6 of Spain, Colwnbits 114
blue b and black 6 of Spain, ,, 116
innocent hospitalities quench'd in b, „ 176
and the boast of our ancient b, V. of Maeldune 88
red with b the Crescent reels Montenegro 6
All the field with 6 of the fighters Flow'd, Batt. of Brunanburh 24
wholesome heat the b had lost, To E. Fitzgerald 24
crowd would roar For 6, for war, Tiresias 65
Spain in his b and the Jew — The Wreck 15
are both of them tum'd into b, Despair 91
Her b is in your bloom. Ancient Sage 166
evil thought may soil thy children's b; „ 275
yer Honour's the thrue ould b Tojnorrow 5
on that founder of our b. Locksley H., Sixty 32
shriek'd and slaked the light with b. „ 90
Like drops of 6 in a dark-gray sea, Heavy Brigade 43
O follow, leaping 6, Early Spring 25
Their idol smear'd with b, Freedom 28
crescent moon, and changed it into b. Happy 44
Diffuse thyself at will thro' all my b, Prog, of Spring 24
hopes, which race the restless 6, ,, 115
herb or balm May clear the 6 from poison, Deaih of CEnone 36
as he yell'd of yore for Christian b. St. Telemachus 46
dust send up a steam of human b, ,,53
hour Dark with the 6 of man ,, 80
warms the 6 of Shiah and Sunnee, Akbar's Dream 107
gentleman, heart, b and bone. Bandit's Death 2
For he reek'd with the b of Piero ; ,,13
a ray red as b Glanced on the strangled face — „ 31
Rang the stroke, and sprang the b, The Tourney 9
Blood-eagle red ' B-e ' of liver and heart ; Dead Prophet 71
Blooded See Cold-blooded, Pale-blooded
Bloodier the hands of power Were b, Aylmer's Field 453
Bloodily B flow'd the Tamesa rolling Boadicea 27
B, 0 fall the battle-axe, ,, 56
Bloodless now, the b point reversed, The Voyage 71
b east began To quicken to the sun, - Marr. of Geraint 534
Blood-red dabbled with b-r heath, Maiid Ii 2
flames The 6-r blossom of war ,, III vi 53
the b-r light of dawn Flared Lancelot and E. 1025
but always in the night B-r, and sliding down
the blacken'd marsh B-r, and on the naked
mountain top B-r, and in the sleeping mere
below B-r. Holy Grail 473
In b-r armour sallying. Last Tournament 443
himself B-r from battle, Tiresias 113
Bloodshed hold were all as free From cursed h, Gareth and L. 599
Bloody shovell'd up into some b trench Audley Court 42
sec the raw mechanic's b thumbs Walk, to tlie Mail 75
Where the 6 conduit runs. Vision of Sin 144
take such b vengeance on you both ? — Princess iv 534
Bloom (s) (.See cdso Chestnut-bloom, Milk-bloom,
Orange-bloom) inlay Of braided b's unmown, Arabian Nights 29
lovely freight Of overflowing b's. Ode to Mevwry 17
throng with stately b's the breathing spring The Poet 27
Whence that aery b of thine, Adeline 11
violet eyes and all her Hebe b, Gardenefr's D. 137
In bud or blade, or b, may find, Day-Dm., Moral 10
many a slope was rich in b To E. L. 20
fair in our sad world's best b. The Brook 218
scatter'd, each a nest in b. Aylmer's Field 150
cheek and bosom brake the wrathful b Pnncess iv 383
bud ever breaks into b on the tree, The Islet 32
The chestnut towers in his b ; Voice and the P. 18
b profuse and cedar arches Charm, Milton 11
not for thee the glow, the b. In Mem. ii 9
And every spirit's folded b „ xliii 2
Bloom (s) {continued) Which sicken'd every living b, In Mem. Ixodi 7
over brake and b And meadow, ,, Ixxxvi 3
And passion pure in snowy 6 ,, ax 11
azure 6 of a crescent of sea, Maud I iv 5
wild-wood hyacinth and the 6 of May. Balin and Balan 271
and her b A losy dawn kindled Pelleas and E. 71
ribb'd And barr'd with b on b. Lover's Tale i 416
We was busy as beeas i' the b North. Cobbler 15
Edith— all One b of youth. Sisters (E. and E.) 120
' How far thro' all the b and brake Ancient Sage 19
wake The 6 that fades away ? „ 94
Her blood is in your &. ,, 166
lifts her buried life from gloom to b, Demeter and P. 98
rounder cheek had brighten'd into b. The Ring 351
vernal b from every vale and plain To Mary Boyle 9
Bloom (verb) She saw the water-lily b, L. of Shalott Hi 39
Lotos b's below the barren peak : Lotos-Eat&rs, C.S. 100
6's the garden that I love. Gardener's D. 34
That if it can it there may b, In Mem. viii 23
from marge to marge shall ?> the eternal landscape ,, xlvi7
Will 6 to profit, otherwhere. ,, Ixxxii 12
hearts are warm'd and faces b, „ Con. 82
my white heather only b's in heaven Romney's R. 110
B's in the Past, but close to me to-day Roses on the T. 6
Bloomed thro' The low and b foliage, Arabian Nights 13
Blooming The maid-of -honour b fair ; Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 28
By Cupid-boys of b hue — ,, Ep. 10
her b mantle torn, Princess vi 145
Blossom (s) {See also Almond-blossom, Apple-
blossom, Blackthorn-blossom, Lake-blossom,
May-blossom, Orange-blossom) Atween the
b's, 'We are free.' The Winds, etc. 8
Bursts into b in his sight. Fatima 35
He prest the b of his lips to mine, (Enmie 78
The b on the blackthorn, the leaf May Queen, N. Vs. E. 8
As we bear b of the dead ; Love thou thy land 94
b fades, and they that loved Walk, to the Mail 57
The maiden b's of her teens Talking Oak 79
break In full and kindly b. Will Water. 24
as Nature packs Her b or her seedling, Enoch Arden 179
With here a b sailing, The Brook 56
Gather'd the b that rebloom'd, Aylmer's Field 142
Into a land all sun and b. Sea Dreams 101
caught the b of the flying terms. Princess, Pro. 164
Pereh'd on the pouted b of her lips : ,, 199
Fruit, b, viand, amber wine, and gold. ,, iv 35
my babe, my b, ah, my child, ,, ■» 82
lay my little b at my feet, „ 100
the b wavering fell, ,, m" 80
Scatter the b under her feet ! W. to Alexandra 9
Or rosy b in hot ravine, The Daisy 32
they tumble the b, the mad little tits ! WiTidow, Ay. 9
The tender b flutter down, In Menn. ci 2
flames The blood-red b of war Maud III vi 53
sun, and rain ! and the free b flows : Cmn. of Arthur 409
near her, like a b vermeil-white, Marr. of Gei-aint 364
tints the b of the quince Balin and Balan 267
wayside b's open to the blaze. „ 449
that will strike my b dead. Lancelot and E. 971
blood beats, and the b blows, Holy Grail 671
groves that look'd a paradise Of 6, Guinevere 390
little b, O mine, and mine To A. Tennyson 4
Had set the b of her health again. Sisters (E. and E.) 151
And stan''d with a myriad b V. of Maeldune 40
B and b, and promise oib, „ 51
if the b can doat on the blight, The- Wreck 19
tastes the fruit before the b falls. Ancient Sage 75
Jet upward thro' the mid-day b. Demeter and P. 47
hillock, Would break into b ; Merlin and the G. 108
' Sleep, little b, my honey, my bliss ! Romney's R. 99
From each fair plant the b choicest-grown Akbar's Dream 22
Blossom (verb) A little garden b. Amphion 104
wilderness shall b as the rose. Aylmer's Field 649
buds and b's like the rest. In Mem. cxv 20
And b in purple and red. Maud I xxii 74
Blossom
46
Blowing
Blossom (verb) (continued) where the winter thorn B's at
Christmas, JTbZy Grail 52
b an' spring from the grass, Tomorrow 89
B again on a colder isle. To Prof. Jebb 12
Blossom-ball Made b-b or daisy-chain, Aylmer's Field 87
Blossom-belt Above the garden's glowing b-Vs, Princess v 363
Blossom-dust like the working bee in b-d, Enoch Arden 366
Foot-gilt with all the h-d Merlin and V. 282
Blossom'd (adj.) (See also Daisy-blossomed, Heavy-
blossom'd) white robe like a h branch Princess iv 179
On the b gable-ends Mated I in 9
O b portal of the lonely house, Lover's Tale i 280
Blossom'd (verb) branch'd And b in the zenith, Enoch Arden 586
b up From out a common vein Princess ii 313
when the wreath of March has b, To F. D. Maurice 43
Great garlands swung and b ; Lover's Tale iv 191
Blossom-flake elmtree's ruddy-hearted b-f To Mary Boyle 3
Blossom-fragrant ?;-/slipt the heavy dews Princess v 243
Blossoming (See also Many-blossoming) and the
happy b shore ? Sea-Fairies 8
Blot (s) With b's of it about them, Ayhner's Field 620
"Tis the b upon the brain Maud II iv 60
a throne. And blackens every b : Ded. of Idylls 28
Gareth's eyes had flying b's Gareth and L. 1031
square of text that looks a little b, Merlin and V. 671
Far-off, a b upon the stream, Lancelot and E. 1392
A 6 in heaven, the Raven, Guinevere 133
Blot (verb) B out the slope of sea Princess vii 38
Blotch face deform'd by lurid b and blain — Death of (Enone 72
Blotted (See also Mist-blotted) took his brush
and b out the bird. Merlin and V. 478
Blow (s) (See also Death-blow, Head-blow) 0 cursed
hand ! 0 cursed b ! Oriana 82
stood like one that had received a b : Sea Dreams 161
red-hot iron to be shaped with b's. Princess v 209
clench'd his purpose like aft! ,, 306
b's rain'd, as here and everywhere ,, 501
With their own b's they hurt themselves, . ,, w 49
Back to France with countless b'^s. Ode on Well. Ill
knife uprising toward the /; ' The Victim 66
Phantom sound of b's descending, Boadicea 25
breasts the b's of circumstance. In Mem. lodv 7
Bat in the present broke the b. „ Ixxxv 56
shocks of Chance — The b's of Death. ,, xco 43
That must have life for a b. Maud II i 27
red life spilt for a private b — ,, t> 93
mightier of his hands with every 6, Com. of Arthur 110
Three with good b's he quieted, Gareth and L. 813
mightful hand striking great b's Marr. of Geraint 95
lash 'd at each So often and with such &'s, ,, 564
Descended, and disjointed it at a & : Balin and Balan 296
Kill'd with a word worse than a life of b's ! Merlin and V. 870
each had slain his brother at a & ; Lancelot and E. 41
hardly won with bruise and b, „ 1165
while Arthur at one b. Striking Pass, of Arthur 167
live to fight again and to strike another b.' The Revenge 95
Rode flashing b upon b, Heavy Brigade 32
Blow (verb) (See also Blaw) The stream flows.
The wind b's, Nothing will Die 10
make the winds b Round and round, ,, 23
The wind will cease to ft ; All Things will Die 10
loud the Norland whirlwinds b, Oriana 6
Round thee 6, self-pleached deep, A Dirge 29
And tell me if the woodbines 6. My life isfidl 25
Crazing where the lilies b L. of Shalott i 7
That all about the thorn will h Tvm Voices 59
When April nights began to b, Miller's D. 106
gales, as from deep gardens, b Before him, Fationa 24
the wind b's the foam, and all my heart (Enone 62
by the meadow-trenches b the faint sweet cuckoo-flowers ; May Queen 30
from the dry dark wold the summer airs b
cool May Queen, N. Vs. E. 27
and all the flowers that b, „ Con. 7
Lotos b's by every winding creek : Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 101
b's More softly round the open wold, To J. S. 1
Blow (verb) (continued) Nor ever wind b's loudly ; M. d' Arthur 261
or then While the gold-lily b's, Edwin Morris 146
I saw Your own Olivia b, Talking Oah 76
light as any wind that b's So fleetly ,, 129
The full south-breeze around thee b ,,271
winds from all the compass shift and b, Godiva 33
wildweed-flower that simply b's ? Day-Dm., Moral 6
B, flute, and stir the stiff-set sprigs, Amphion 63
weed That b's upon its mountain, ,, 94
she makes The violet of a legend b Will Water. 147
It was the time when lilies b. Lady Clare 1
And the wind did b ; The Captain 34
To b these sacrifices thro' the world — Aylmer's Field 758
Low, low, breathe and b, Princess Hi 3
and 6, J5 him again to me ; ,, g
B, bugle, b, set the wild echoes flying, (repeat) ,, ivb 17
B, bugle ; answer, echoes, dying, (repeat) ,, 6 12
-B, let us hear the purple glens replying : „ H
A moment, while the trumpets b, „ 581
let the mournful martial music h ; Ode on Well. 17
To Britain, when her flowers begin to 6 ! W.to Marie Alex. 7
Wet west wind how you b, you b I Windmu, No Answer 14
B then, b, and when I am gone, ,, „ 17
And make them pipes whereon to b. In Mem. oaxi 4
With blasts that b the poplar white, ,, locxii 3
fan my brows and b The fever from my cheek, ,, Ixxxvi 8
from the garden and the wild A fresh association h, ,, ci 18
There in due time the woodbine b's, „ cv 7
By ashen roots the violets 6. „ caw 4
And all the breeze of Fancy b's, „ cocxii 17
woodland lilies, Myriads b together. Maud I odi 8
lily and rose That b by night, ,, II v 75
and rain ! and the free blossom b's : Com. of Arthur 409
' B trumpet, for the world is white with May ; ,, 482
J5 trumpet, the long night hath roll 'd away ! ,, 483
-B thro' the living world — ,, 484
' B trumpet ! he will lift us from the dust. ,, 491
B trumpet ! live the strength and die the lust ! ,, 492
' B, for our Sun is mighty in his May ! ,, 497
B, for our Sun is mightier day by day ! ,, 498
flower. That b's a globe of after arrowlets, Gareth and L. 1029
flowers that close when day is done, B sweetly : , , 1068
King gave order to let b His horns Marr. of Geraint 152
we b with breath, or touch with hand, Holy Grail 114
blood beats, and the blossom b's, ,, 671
But such a blast, my King, began to 6, ,, 795
clash the shield, and b the horn. Last Tournament 436
I hear the trumpet b : They summon me Guinevere 569
Nor ever wind b's loudly ; Pass, of Arthur 429
trust that Heaven Will b the tempest To the Queen ii 47
whirlwind b these woods, as never blew before. The Flight 12
gather the roses whenever they b, Romney's R. 107
Let 6 the trumpet strongly while I pray. Doubt and Prayer 10
Blower ' 0 hunter, and 0 6 of the horn, Harper, La.st Tournament 542
Blowing (See also Blawin', Equal-blowing, Merrily-
blowing, Trumpet-blowings) When will the
wind be aweary of b Over the sky ? Nothing will Die 3
south winds are b Over the sky. All Things vrill Die 3
myrrh-thickets b round The stately cedar, Arabian Nights 104
Winds were b, waters flowing, Oriana 14
Aloud the hollow bugle b, ,,17
/? a noise of tongues and deeds, Ttoo Voices 206
Like soften'd airs that b steal, ,, 406
wind is b in tijrret and tree, (repeat) The Sisters 3, 33
(while warm airs lull us, b lowly) Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 89
a bark that, 6 forward, bore King Arthur, M. d' Arthur, Ep. 21
wind 6 over meadowy holms And alders, Edwin Morris 95
and b havenward With silks, and fruits, Golden Year 44
Summer woods, about them b, L. of Burleigh 19
B the ringlet from the braid : Sir L. and Q. G. 39
and 6 bosks of wilderness. Princess i 111
The horns of Elfland faintly h\ „ iv 10
' Fear not, isle of b woodland, Boddicea 38
No joy the b season gives. In Mem. xocxviii 5
Over glowing ships ; Over h seas, Maud I xvii 13
Blowing
47
Boan
Blowing {continued) south-west that 6 Bala lake Fills Geraint and E, 929
ship and sail and angels & on it : Bcdin and Balan 365
he waits below the wall, B his bugle PeUeas and E. 381
Brake with a wet wind b, Last Tourrmvient 137
breezes of May 6 over an English field, JJef. of Lucknow 83
Wild flowers b side by side in God's The Flight 81
Fame b out from her golden trumpet Vustness 21
When the storms are b. Forlorn 6
Blown (See also Beard-blown, Broad-blown,
Full-blown) your branching limes have b
Since I beheld L. C. V. de Vere 27
petals from b roses on the grass, Lotos-Eaters, Q. S, 2
round the spicy downs the yellow Lotos-dust Sab. „ 104
Death is b in every wind ; ' To J. S. 46
and roughly set His Briton in b seas Ode on Well. 155
The golden news along the steppes is b, W. to Marie Alex. 11
The rooks are b about the skies ; Ju Mem. ocv 4
Be b about the desert dust, ,, Ivi 19
Nor harp be touch 'd, nor flute heb; ,, cw 22
far-off sail is b by the breeze Maud I iv 4
And the musk of the rose is b. „ axcii 6
when the Prince Three times had b — O'areth and L. 1378
the face, as, when a gust hath b, Last Toiimavient 368
her father left us just before The daffodil was b ? Laoer's Tale i 294
The wind had b above me, ,, 622
fhost of Gawain b Along a wandering wind, Pass, of Arthur 31
am b along a wandering wind, „ 36
we came to the Isle we were b from, V. of Maeldnne 127
thy fame Is b thro' all the Troad, Death of (Enwiie 37
Like Indian reeds b from his silver tongue, The Poet 13
when a billow, b against. Falls back, Two Voices 316
And trumpets b for wars ; D. of F. Women 20
gale had caught. And 6 across the walk. Gardener's D. 125
b by baflling winds, Enoch Arden 628
b across her ghostly wall : ,, 661
gale That b about the foliage underneath, Princess Hi 121
from inmost south And b to inmost north ; n *"^ 432
B from over every main, Ode Inter. Exhib. 26
Had b the lake beyond his limit. The Daisy 71
after trumpet b, Spake to the lady Marr. of Geraint 551
by strong storm B into shelter at Tintagil, Merlin and V. 10
Her bright hair b about the serious face Lancelot and E. 392
silver horn from o'er the hills B, Holy Grail 110
after trumpet b, her name And title, Pelleas and E. 115
night, a rumour wildly b about Came, " Guinevere 153
all their dewy hair b back like flame : ,, 284
B by the fierce beleaguerers of a town, Achilles over the T. 20
B into glittering by the popular breath, Roraney's R. 49
Blowzed Huge women b with health. Princess iv 279
Blubber 'd I b awaay o' the bed — North. Cobbler 61
Blue (adj.) (See cdso Black-blue, Dark-blue, Dead-
blue, Deep-blue, Faint-blue, June-blue, Light-
blue, Sea-blue, Steel-blue, Warm-blue) And
less aerially b, Margaret 51
the lights, rose, amber, emerald, 6, Palace of Art 169
and gave a shield B adSo, Gareth and L. 932
never yet Had heaVen appeai''d so 6, Holy Grail 365
better ha' beaten me black an' b First Qiuirrel Tl
ship stood still, and the skies were 6, The Wreck 115
Some far b fell, Early Spring 34
Blue (a) clove The citron-shadows in the b : Arabian Nights 15
Were glistening to the breezy 6 ; Miller's D. 61
star Shook in the stedfast b. D. of F. Women 56
While yon sun prospers in the b, Blackbird 22
navies grappling in the central b ; Locksley Hall 124
And sweet the vapour-braided b, The Letters 42
B's and reds They talk'd of : Vs were Aylme)-'s Field 251
such a star of morning in their 6, ,, 692
years That breathed beneath the Syrian b : In Mem. Hi 12
The little speedwell's darling &, ,, IxxxiiilO
And drown'd in yonder living 6 ,, cxvl
morning star that smilest in the h, Gareth and L. 999
like a shoaling sea the lovely b Play'd Geraint and E. 688
but under open b Came on the hoarhead
woodman Balin and Balan 293
Blue (a) {continued) Venus ere she fell Would often
loiter in her balmy b, Lover's Tale i 62
little star Were drunk into the inmost 6, ,, 309
from the sky to the b of the sea ; V. of Maeldnne 46
sign of aught that lies Behind the green and b ? Ancient Sage 26
6 of sky and sea, the green of earth, ,, 41
Green Sussex fading into b Pro. to Gen. Hamley 7
domes the red-plow'd hills With loving b ; Early Spring 4
moon of heaven. Bright in b, The Ring 2
Broaden the glowing isles of vernal b. Prog, of Spring 60
Glows in the b of fifty miles away. Roses cm the T. 8
Sing the new year in under the b. The Throstle 5
round me and over nie June's high 6, June Bracken, etc. 2
Bluebell frail b peoreth over Rare broidry A Dirge 37
merry b rings To the mosses underneath ? Adeline 34
Rose-campion, h, kingcup. Last Toiirnament 234
Blue-eyed A Prince I was, b-e, and fair Princess i 1
Bluff (adj.) B Harry broke into the spence Talking Oak 47
Bluff (a) echo flap And buffet round the hills,
from b to b. Golden Year 77
shadowing b that made the banks. In Mem. ciii 22
Blunder'd the soldier knew Spme one had b : Light Brigade 12
Blunt (adj.) So /> in memory, so old at heart, Gardener's D. b^
felt so b and stupid at the heart : Geraint and E. 747
Besought me to be plain and b, Lancelot and E. 1301
Blunt (verb) discourtesy To ?» or break her passion.' ,, 974
b the curse Of Pallas, hear, Tiresias 154
Blunted being rudely b, glanced and shot Holy Grail 75
Being b in the Present, grew at length Lmer's Tale ii 131
Blur but for one black b of earth Demeter and P. 37
Blurr'd (adj. and part.) one was patch'd and b
and lustreless Marr. of Geraint 649
light betwixt them burn'd B by the creeping mist, Guinevere 5
And b in colour and form, Dead Propliet 22
B like a landskip in a ruffled pool, — Rmnney's R. 114
Blurr'd (verb) And b the splendour of the sun ; In Mem. IxxH 8
Blurt they 6 Their furious formalisms, Akbar's Dream h^
Bluah (a) She look'd : but all Suffused with b'es — Gardener's D. 154
The b is fix'd upon her cheek. Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 32
loose A flying charm of b'es o'er this cheek. Princess ii 430
' What pardon, sweet Melissa, for a i ? ' ,, Hi 66
b and smile, a medicine in themselves ,, mi 62
And the sick man forgot her simple b, Lancelot and E. 864
Quick b'es, the sweet dwelling of her eyes Sisters {E. and E.) 165
the b Of millions of roses that sprang V. of Maeldune 43
Solved in the tender b'es of the peach ; Prog, of Spring 34
That b of fifty years ago, my dear, Roses on the T. 5
Blush (verb) As it were with shame she b'ei, L. of Burleigh 63
Said Cyril : ' Pale one, b again : than wear Those
lilies, better b our lives away. Princess Hi 67
Since I J to belaud myself a moment — Hendecasyllabics 18
Pass and b the news Over glowing ships ; Maud I xiyii 11
B it thro' the West ; (repeat) ,, 16 24
/J from West to East, 5 from East to West, ,, 21
You should have seen him b ; Merlin and V. 481
The linnet's bosom b'es at her gaze, Prog, of Spring 17
Blush'd Katie laugh 'd, and laughing b, The Brook 214
how pretty Her blushing was, and how she b again. Princess Hi 100
suddenly, sweetly, strangely b Maud I viii 6
She neither b nor shook, Lancelot and E. 965
Then b and brake the morning Pelican and E. 157
Bluaheat Again thou b angerly ; Madeline 45
Blushing (adj.) On a i mission to me, MaudlxxlW
Blushing (part. ) Fresh apple-blossom, b for a boon. Tlie Brook 90
B upon them b, and at once He rose Merlin and V. 741
Blushing (s) how pretty Her b was, and how she
blush'd again. Princess Hi 100
Bluster B the winds and tides the self-same way, D. of F. Women 38
'tis well that I should b '.— Locksley Hall 63
And b into stormy sobs and say, Lancelot and E. 1067
Blustering b I know not what Of insolence and love. Princess v 396
Sir Kay, the seneschal, would come B upon them, Gareth and L. 514
Bo&dicea (British Queen) B, standing loftilv charioted,
(repeat) ' Boddicea 3, 70
Bo&n (bone) an' 'e got a brown pot an' a b, Village Wife 48
Boane
48
Body
Boane (bone) when an* wheere to bury his b. Otod Roa 8
Boanerges Our B with his threats of doom, Sea Dreams 251
Boar dog, and wolf and & and bear Came Cmn. of Arthur 2Z
wherewithal deck the Vs head ? Flowers ? nay,
the h hath rosemaries and bay. Gareth and L. 1073
Board (table) ' This was cast upon the I, (Enone 79
cast the golden fruit upon the 6, ,, 226
I pledge her silent at the h ; Will Water. 25
cups and silver on the burnish'd I Enoch Arden 742
There at a i by tome and paper sat, Princess ii 32
And on the I the fluttering urn : In Mem. xcv 8
Arrange the h and brim the glass ; ,, cvii 16
seating Gareth at another h. Sat down Gareth and L. 871
boil'd the flesh, and spread the h, Marr. of Geraint 391
knife's haft hard against the b, Geraint and E. 600
bare her by main violence to the 6, ,, 654
Along the walls and down the b ; Balin and Balan 84
A goblet on the h by Balin, ,, 362
all the light that falls upon the b Holy Grail 249
"Who spake so low and sadly at our b ; ,, 701
left me gazing at a barren &, ,, 893
Are ye but creatures of the b and bed, Pelle-as and E. 267
Before the 6, there paused and stood, Lover's Tale iv 307
Board (ship) he served a year On 6 a merchantman, Enoch Arden 53
Am I so like her ? so they said on b. The Brook 223
I leap on 6 : no helmsman steers : Sir Galahad 39
Board (for a game) That pushes us off from the b, Maud I iv 27
Board (floor) Pattering over the h's, (repeat) Grandmother 77, 79
Board (list, register) hastily subscribed, We enter'd on
the Vs : Prinxxss ii 74
Boarding B's and rafters and doors— Def. of Lucknmo 67
Boast (s) To shame the b so often made, Lme thou thy land 71
And bring her babe, and make her b, In Mem. xl 26
that ye blew your b in vain ? ' Gareth and L. 1229
to mar the b Thy brethren of thee make — „ 1242
Abash'd us both, and brake my b. Balin and Balan 71
and the b of our ancient blood, F. of Maeldiine 88
crime, of her eldest-born, her glory, her b, Despair 73
Boast (verb) you know it — I will not b : Princess iv 353
the dipt palm of which they b ; The Daisy 26
and b, ' Behold the man that loved and lost. In Mem'i 14
heard them b That they would slay you, Geraint and E. 73
b's his life as purer than thine own ; Balin and Balan 104
Boasted each of them b he sprang from the
oldest race V. of Maeldune 4
Boastful ruled the hour, Tho' seeming b : Aylnier's Field 195
Boat (See also Pleasure-boat) leaping lightly
from the 6, Arabian Nights 92
Down she came and found &b L. of SJialott iv 6
Francis just alighted from the h, Audley Court 7
B, island, ruins of a castle, built Edwin Mcrrris 6
That he sings in his b on the bay ! Break, h-eak, eic. 8
Anchors of rusty fluke, and b's updrawn ; Enoch Arden 18
To purchase his own &, and make a home ,, 47
He purchased his own b, and made a home For Annie, ,, 58
sell the b — and yet he loved her well — ,, 134
The horse he drove, the b he sold, ,, 609
b that bears the hope of life approach ,, 830
till as when a b Tacks, Princess ii 185
fc'« and bridges for the use of men. ,, m 47
The b is drawn upon the shore ; In Mem. cxxi 6
The market b is on the stream, ,, 13
There found a little 6, and stept into it ; Merlin and V. 198
the b Drave with a sudden wind across ,, 200
He saw two cities in a thousand b's , , 561
Up the great river in the boatman's b. Lancelot arul E. 1038
with exceeding swiftness ran the b, If b it were — Holy Orail 514
or had the 6 Become a living creature ,, 518
blackening in the sea-foam sway'd a 6, ,, 802
I burst the chain, I sprang into the h. ,, 807
And felt the b shock earth, , , 812
Then from the 6 Ileapt, ,, 819
be yon dark Queens in yon black b, Past, of Arthur 452
The b was beginning to move, First Quarrel 21
an' go to-night by the i.' ,, 88
Boat (continued) the b went down that night— (repeat) First Quarrel 92
till I saw that a b was nearing us — The Wreck 123
and there in the b I lay With sad eyes , , 125
his b was on the sand ; The Flight 37
And lay on that funereal b, To Marq. of Dxifferin 34
Had parted from his comrade in the b. The Ring 308
Vs of Dahomey that float upon human blood ! The Daion 5
Boated I b over, ran My craft aground, Edunn Mo'rris 108
They b and they cricketed ; Princess, Pro. 160
Boat-head did I turn away The l-h Arabian Nights 25
as the b-h wound along The willowy hills L. of Shalott iv 24
Boatman wrought To make the boatmen fishing-nets, Enoch Arden 815
By the great river in a Vs hut. Lancelot and E. 278
Up the great river in a &'s boat. ,, 1038
Boatswain China-bound, And wanting yet a h. Enoch Arden 123
Boboli Or walks in B's ducal bowers. The Daisy 44
Bode thither wending there that night they b. Lancelot and E. 412
And Lancelot b a little, till he saw ,, 461
There 6 the night : but woke with dawn, ,, 846
And 6 among them yet a little space ,, 921
And there awhile it b ; and if a man Holy Grail 54
spake not any word. But 6 his hour, Last Tournament 386
Bodied Is b forth the second whole. Love thou thy land 66
Bodily were she the prize of b force, Marr. of Geraint 541
Body I wrapt his b in the sheet. The Sisters 34
A b slight and round, and like a pear Walk, to the Mail 53
I was strong and hale of b then ; St. S. Stylites 29
touch my b and be heal'd, and live : ..79
bodies and the bones of those That strove Day-Dm., Arrival 9
' Here lies the b of Ellen Adair ; Edward Gray 27
There lies the b of Ellen Adair ! ,,35
Bore to earth her b, drest In the dress L. of Burleigh 98
He cast his 6, and on we swept. The Voyage 80
Like that long-buried b of the king, Aylmer's Field 3
adulteries That saturate soul with b. , , 377
His b half flung forward in pursuit, , , 587
as not passing thro' the fire Bodies, but souls — , , 672
that break B toward death, and palsy, Lucretius 154
unlaced my casque And grovell'd on my b, Princess vi 28
and to dance Its b, and reach ,, 138
There lay the sweet little b Grandmothei- 62
I look'd at the still little J— ,, 66
this weight of b and limb. High. Pantheism 5
phantom bodies of horses and men ; Boadicea 27
and back return To where the b sits, In Mem. xii 19
cheeks drop in ; the b bows Man dies : ,, xxxv 3
Bare of the b, might it last, „ xliii 6
in the ghastly pit long since a b was found, Mavd lib
sworn to bury All this dead b of hate, , , xix 97
Hath b enow to hold his foemen down ? ' Com. of Arthur 253
blood Of their strong bodies, flowing, Marr. of Geraint 569
And let the bodies lie, but bound Geraint and E. 96
And being weak in b said no more ; Lancelot and E. 839
' Faith of my b, ' he said, ' and art thou not — Pelleas and E. 318
But the sweet & of a maiden babe. Last Tournament 48
Belted his b with her white embrace, ,, 513
A b journeying onward, sick with toil. Loverr's Tale i 124
breathless i of her good deeds past. ,, 217
soul and heart and b are all at ease : ,, 556
had the ghastliest That ever lusted for a &, ,, 648
She took the b of my past delight, „ 681
' i and soul And life and limbs, ,, iij 282
sank his b with honour down into the deep, TJie Revenge 109
He veils His flesh in bread, b and bread
together.' Sir J. Oldcastle 157
' No bread, no bread. God's b\' ,, 159
Thou canst not prove that thou art b alone. Ancient Sage 59
they laid this b they foun' an the grass Tomorrow 73
nurse of ailing b and mind, Loclcsley H., Sixty 51
lustier i, larger mind ? ,, 164
out of his b she drew The red ' Blood-eagle ' Dead Prophet 70
You say your b is so foul — Happy 25
Your b is not foul to me, and b is foul at best. „ 28
If my h come from brutes, (repeat) By an Evolution. 5, 13
Where I sank with the 6 at times ,, 18
Body
49
Bone
Body (contimied) that dark 6 which had lain Of old Death of (Emnie 93
bodies and souls go down in a common wreck, Tlie Dawti 13
Bog (See also Irish Bog) last month they wor diggin'
the h, Tomoirow 61
bad scran to the b's whin they swallies the man „ 66
sorra the h that's in Hiven ,, 67
aisier work av they lived be an Irish 6. ,,72
Boggle (ghost) Theer wur a bin it, Jf. Farmer, 0. S. 30
Bog-wather foun' Dhrownded in black b-w Tomorrmo 62
Boil hell beneath Made me b over. St. S. Stylites 171
Boil'd burn'd in fire, or h in oil, , ,, 52
b the flesh, and spread the board, Marr. of Geraint 391
Bold {See also Half-bold, Over-bold) so clear and b
and free As you, Rosalind 17
Kate loves well the b and fierce ; Kate 29
But none are 6 enough for Kate ,, 30
wide in soul and b of tongue, Two Voices 124
New-year blithe and b, my friend, D. of the 0. Year 35
A man more pure and b and just To J. S. 31
the' keen and b and soldierly Sear'd Aylmer's Field 192
You are b indeed : Princess Hi 250
Among the wise and the b. Ode on Well. 52
If you be fearful, then must we be b. Third of Feb. 19
men are b and strongly say their say ; — W. to Marie Alex. 32
With what divine affections b In, Mem. xciv 2
b to dwell On doubts that drive the coward ,, xcv 29
b in heart and act and word was he, Com. of Arthur 176
And wholly b thou art, and meek Oareth and L. 1168
Am I so b, and could I so stand by, Marr. of Geraint 102
B will I be — Balin and Balan 194
Balin was b, and ask'd To bear ,, 199
B was mine answer, ' Had thyself Holy Grail 277
' Art thou so 6 and hast not seen the Grail ? ' ,, 279
This heard the b Sir Bedivere and spake : Pass, of Arthur 50
death And silence made him b — Lover's Tale iv 73
Had they been b enough then, Def. of I/ucknow 66
still be b Not only to slight praise To Duke of Argyll 3
Bolden'd b by the silence of his B^ng, — Holy Grail 857
Bolder And me this knowledge b made, To J. S. 5
seems no b than a beaten hound ; Geraint and R. 61
Not risen to, she was b. The Ring 361
Boldest drawn of fairest Or b since, Ode to Memory 90
their oldest and their b said. Death of CEnone 100
Boldly for such a face had 6 died,' D. of F. Women 99,
Enoch faced this morning of farewell Brightly
and b. Enoch Arden 183
And b ventured on the liberties. Princess i 205
I offer h : we will seat you highest : ,, Hi 159
B they rode and well, Light Brigade 23
Boldness Should licensed b gather force, In Mem. cxiii 13
B and royal knighthood of the bird Merlin and V. 134
Bole (See also Elm-tree-boles) stanzas that you made
About my ' giant b ; ' Talking Oak 136
wind And double in and out the b's, Princess iv 262
a thousand rings of Spring In every b, ,, v 238
glancing thro' the hoary b's, he saw, Pelleas and E. 50
Bolster'd An' the fences all on 'em b oop Oiod Rod 32
Bolt (See also Battle-bolt) and if a 6 of fire Would
rive Sup}}. Confessions 10
b's are hurl'd Far below them in the valleys, Lotos-Eaters, C.S. Ill
Appealing to the b's of Heaven ; Princess iv 372
Scarce had she ceased, when out of heaven a b Merlin and V. 934
Pray Heaven, they be not smitten by the b,' Holy Grail 221
slant His b from falling on your head — Happy 81
b of war dashing down upon cities The Dawn 8
Bolted gate Is b, and the master gone. Tiresias 201
Bond (adj. ) dwarf 'd or godlike, b or free : Princess vii 260
Bond (s) Unmanacled from b's of sense. Two Voices 236
break or bind All force in b's that might endure. Palace of Art 154
Seeing obedience is the b of rule. M. d' Arthur 94
Then broke all b's of courtesy, Aylmer's Field 323
Which breaks all b's of ours ; ,, 425
broke the b which they desired to break, ,, 778
all her b's Crack'd ; and I saw Lucretius 37
bis dearest b is this, Princess vii 277
Bond (s) (continued) Has broke the b of dying use. In Mem. cv 12
Than some strong b which is to be. cxvi 16
Gareth loosed his b's and on free feet Gareth and L. 817
all Their bearing in their common b of love, Balin and Balan 150
I purity Beyond the limit of their b, Merlin avd V. 27
For such a supersensual sensual b ,j 109
our b Had best be loosed for ever : ,, 341
world howling forced them into b's, ,, 744
yours, Not Arthur's, as ye know, save by the 6, Lancelot and E. 135
Not violating the b of like to like.' ,, 241
daughter fled From b's or death, , , 277
Our 6, as not the 6 of man and wife, ,,' I191
Our b is not the b of man and wife. , , 1206
needs must break These b's that so defame me : ,, 1421
More bondsman in his heart than in his b's. Pelleas and E. 239
may be ye shall slay him in his b's.' ,, 272
let who will release him from his 6's. ,, 294
gazed upon the man Of princely bearing, tho' in b's, ,', 306
sprang Gawain, and loosed him from his b's, ,, 315
bound, save by white b's and warm, ,, 353
brakest thro' the scruple of my b, Last Tournament 568
Seeing obedience is the b of rule. Pass, of Arthur 262
Is but a burthen : loose the b, and go. To the Queen ii 17
it was a b and seal Of friendship, Lover's Tale ii 181
Were these not 6'<? nay, nay, Sisters (E. and E.) 167
that mystic b betwixt the twins — „ 256
For I broke the 6. The Wreck 59
snap the b that link'd us life to life, Happy 61
since my will Seal'd not the b — Princess v 399
To dissolve the previous seal on a b, Maud I xix 45
Bondslave bound by precontract Your bride, your b ! Princess iv 542
Bondsman My will is b to the dark ; In Mem. iv 2
More b in his heart than in his bonds. Pelleas and E. 239
Bone (See also Ankle-bones, Bo&n, Boane, Breast-
bone, Collar-bone, Cross-bones) To feed thy
b's with lime. Two Voices 326
green Christmas crams with weary b's. Wan Sculptor 14
lay the mighty b's of ancient men, M. d' Arthur 47
burn a fragrant lamp before my b's, St. S. Stylites 196
bodies and the b's of those That strove Day -Dm., Arrival 9
' You are b's, and what of that ? Vision of Sin 175
From the fashion of your b's. ,, 182
his b's long laid within the grave, lAccretius 256
Ammonites, and the first b's of Time ; Princess, Pro. 15
chanted on the blanching b's of men ? ' ,, a 199
cut this epitaph above my b's ; ,, 207
stuck out The b's of some vast bulk ,, m 294
' As these rude b's to us, are we to her ,, 296
and spilt our b's in the flood — ,, iv 532
Echo round his b's for evermore. Ode on Well. 12
Be glad, because his b's are laid by thine ! ,, 141
Thy roots are wrapt about the b's. In Mem. ii 4
As if the quiet b's were blest ,, xviii 6
Old warder of these buried b's, , , xxxix 1
grins on a pile of children's b's, Maud I i Ma
And my b's are shaken with pain, ^^ II v ^
b's for his o'ergrown whelp to crack ; ,,55
being apt at arms and big of b Marr. of Geraint 489
crack'd the helmet thro', and bit the 6, ,, 573
when his good b Seems to be pluck'd at Geraint and E. 559
and he fears To lose his b, and lays his foot ,, 562
arks with priceless b's of martyrdom, Balin and Balan 110
lay till all their b's were bleach 'd, Lancelot and E. 43
part whiten'd with the b's of men, Holy Grail 500
Fool to the midmost marrow of his b's, Pelleas and E. 258
Like a dry b cast to some hungry hound ? Last Tournament 196
lay the mighty b's of ancient men. Pass, of Arthur 215
I have number'd the b's, Rizpah 10
but b of my b was left — ,, 51
the b's that had suck'd me, the b's that had laughed „ 53
Do you think I was scared by the &'« ? ,, 55
every b seem'd out of its place — In the Child. Hosp. 13
can prayer set a broken &? ' ,, 20
' Behold the b's of Christopher Colon ' — Columbus 210
' These same chains Bound these same b's , , 214
D
Bone
50
Bore
Bone (co)itinued) in these spasms that grind B against b. Columbus 221
the white North has thy b's ; Sir J. Franklin 1
There blanch the b's of whom she slew, Tiresias 150
black in white above his b's. Locksley H., Sixty 44
moulder'd nest On its barkless b's, Dead Prophet 19
honest Poverty, bare to the b ; Vastness 19
save breaking my b's on the rack ? By an Evolution. 9
gentleman, heart, blood and b, Bandit's Death 2
Bone-batter'd being all b-b on the rock, Yielded ; Gareth and L. 1050
Bonnet Or the frock and gipsy b Maud I xx 19
Bonny Doon Whistling a random bar of B D, The Brook 82
Book {See also Annal-book, Boook, Statute-book)
Take, Madam, this poor b of song ; To the Queen 17
burnt His epic, his King Arthur, some twelve b's ' — The Epic 28
these twelve 6's of mine Were faint ,, 38
old Sir Robert's pride, His b's — Audley Court 59
faces grow between me and my b ; St. S. Stylites 176
eyesight poring over miserable b's — Locksley Hall 172
prose O'er 6's of travell'd seamen, Amphion SI
Nor yet the fear of little b's Will Water. 195
the priest, above his b Leering Vision of Sin 117
And bought them needful b's, Enoch Arden 332
Then desperately seized the holy B, ,, 495
she closed the B and slept : ,, 499
swear upon the b Not to reveal it, ,, 838
'on the b.' And on the b, half -frighted, ,, 842
After his b's, to ilush his blood with air. Then to
his b's again. Aylmer's Field 459
' Show me the b's ! ' Sea Dreams 148
' The b's ! the b's ! ' but he, he could not ,, 150
great jB's (see Daniel seven and ten) ,, 152
' 0 miracle of women, ' said the b, Princess, Pro. 35
(I kept the b and had my finger in it) „ 53
which brought My 6 to mind : ,, 120
on lattice edges lay Or 6 or lute ; ,, ii 30
' can he not read — no 6'« ? ,, Hi 214
but brooding turn The b of scorn, ,, v 142
rout of saucy boys Brake on us at our b's, ,, 395
to and fro With 6's, with flowers, ,, vii 26
was cramm'd with theories out of b's, ,, Con. 35
in this B, little Annie, the message Grandmother 96
Still in the little b you lent me. The Daisy 99
May bind a 6, may line a box, In Mem. Ixxoii 6
One lesson from one b we leam'd, ,, Ixxix 14
Discuss'd the b's to love or hate, „ Ixxxix 34
With festal cheer, With b's and music, , , cvii 22
in their hand Is Nature like an open b; „ Con. 132
She sits by her music and b's Maud I xiv 13
a palm As glitters gilded in thy B of Hours. Gareth and L. 46
Read but one b, and ever reading Merlin and V. 622
and his 6 came down to me.' ,, 650
'Ye have the 6: the charm is written in it : ,, 652
' Thou read the b, my pretty Vivien ! ,, 667
cities on their flanks — thou read the b\ „ 676
' From our old b's I know That Joseph Holy Grail 59
For so they say, these b's of ours, ,, 65
' for in sooth These ancient b's — ,, 541
Of Geoffrey's b, or him of Malleor's, To the Queen ii 42
gie fur a howry owd b thutty pound an' moor. Village Wife 45
An' 'e'd wrote an owd b, his awn sen, ,, 46
I am written in the Lamb's own B of Life Colurnbais 88
dipt In some forgotten b of mine To E. Fitzgerald 47
He would open the b's that I prized. The Wreck 21
We had read their know-nothing b's Despair 55
their knowing and know-nothing &'s ,,93
knows not ev'n the b he wrote, Ancient Sage 148
knew no b's and no philosophies, ,, 218
there were b's and dresses — left to me. The Ring 113
I bad her keep. Like a seal'd b, „ 123
scarce have learnt the title of your b, „ 126
'The b's, the miniature, the lace are hers, ,, 288
my friend. To prize your various b. To Ulysses 47
thought to myself I would offer this b to you, June Bracken, etc, 4
' Alia,' says their sacred b, ' is Love,' Akbar's Dream 73
Bookleamed See Boooklam'd.
Bookleaming See Boooklamin'.
Bookless Your flight from out your 6 wilds Priiicess ii 56
Boom (s) air was torn in sunder, Crashing went the b The Captain 44
clash and b of the bells rang V. of Maeldune 110
Boom (verb) His captain's-ear has heard them b Ode on Well. 65
b and blanch on the precipices, Boadicea 76
Boometh At eve the beetle b Claribel 9
Booming Listens the muffled b indistinct Lover's Tale i 637
Boon (adj.) Fled all the b companions of the Earl, Geraint and E. 477
Boon (s) b from me. From me, Heaven's Queen, (Enone 126
Fresh apple-blossom, blushing for a b. Tlie Brook 90
At last she begg'd a b, Princess i 146
widow crying to the King, ' A b. Sir King ! Gareth and L. 334
No b is here. But justice, ,, 345
'A b, Sir King ! Thine enemy. King, am I. ,, 351
'A b, Sir King ! I am her kinsman, I. ,, 365
came Sir Kay, the seneschal, and cried, ' A b, Sir King ! ,, 368
the wholesome 6 of gyve and gag.' ,, 370
b, Sir King (his voice was all ashamed), ,, • 442
youth and worth a goodlier b\ , , 449
'A b. Sir King — this quest ! ' then — ,, 647
' To what request for what strange 6,' Merlin and V. 264
B, ay, there was a b, one not so strange — ,, 287
ask your b, for b I owe you thrice, ^ ,, 306
take this 6 so strange and not so strange,' ,, 310
Whenever I have ask'd this very b, „ 323
Yield my b. Till which I scarce can yield ,, 351
Why will ye never ask some other 6 ? ,, 375
Who feels no heart to ask another 6. ,, 382
Not ever be too curious for a 6, „ 486
Lo, there my 6 ! What other? ,, 494
To snare her royal fancy with a b Lancelot and E. 71
tale of diamonds for his destined b) „ 91
Boook (book) 'e 'ed hallus &b^ 'is 'and. Village Wife 26
Hallus aloan wi' 'is b's, „ 27
An' b's, what's 6's ? „ 28
niver knawd nowt but b's, an' b's, „ 52
why shouldn't thy b's be sowd ? ,,69
I hears es soom o' thy b's mebbe worth , , 70
Heaps an' heaps o' b's, I ha' see'd 'em, ,, 71
moast on 'is owd big b's fetch 'd „ 73
Sa 'is taail wur lost an' 'is b's wur gone ,, 87
B's, es I said afoor, thebbe neyther 'ere nor theer ! ,, 113
Boooklam'd (bookleamed) An' I 'oaps es 'e beant h: „ 23
Boooklamin' (bookleaming) an' we haates 6 'ere. ,, 24
Booot (boot) I could fettle and clump owd h's North. Cdbbl&r 13
And browt me the 6's to be cobbled ,, 94
Boor-tree (elder-tree) in wan grave be the dead b-t, Tmnwrow 87
Boot [See also Boobt) Leisurely tapping a glossy 6, Maud I xiii 19
an' the mud o' 'is b's o' the stairs, Spinster's Ss. 99
Boot (in addition) Will pay thee all thy wages,
and to b. Gareth and L. 1005
Booth sport and song, in 6 and tent. In Mem. xcviii 28
Bootless proxy-wedded with a h calf Princess i 34
Booty chance of 6 from the morning's raid, Geraiiit and E. 565
Border (adj.) A 6 fantasy of branch and flower, Lancelot and E.W
Border (s) Morn broaden'd on the 6's of the dark, D. of F. Women 265
From out the 6's of the morn. On a Mmimer 24
Close on the 6's of a territory, Mai-r. of Geraint 34
on the 6 of her couch they sat Guinevere 101
There on the 6 Of boundless Ocean, Merlin and the G. 116
Border'd the yellow down B with palm, Lotos-Eaters 22
Border-marriage land was ringing of it — This
blacksmith b-m — Aylmer's Field 263
Border-race such counter-terms, my son. Are b-r's, Ancient Sage 251
Bore (to burrow) hedgehog underneath the
plaintain 6's, Aylmer's Field 850
Bore (to bear) winds which 6 Them earthward till ,
they lit ; The Poet 17
The broad stream 6 her far away, L. of Shalott iv 17
B and forbore, and did not tire, Tum Voices 218
That b a lady from a leaguer'd town ; D. of F. Women 47
Branches they 6 of that enchanted stem, Lotos-Eaters 28
6 him to a chapel nigh the field. M. d' Arthur 8
And rising 6 him thro' the place of tombs. „ 175
Bore
51
Born
Bore (to bear) {contimied) blowing forward, b King
Arthur, M. d' Arthur, Ep. 21
in her bosom b the baby, Sleep. Gardener's D. 268
But Dora b them meekly, Dora 36
knowest I b this better at the first, St. S. Stylites 28
Not this alone lb: ,,61
I b, whereof, 0 God, thou knowest all. „ 70
and love her for the love she b ? Lockiley Hall 73
she Not less thro' all b up, till, Godiva 62
Right down by smoky Paul's they b. Will Water. 141
Three fair children first she b him, L. of Burleigh 87
B to earth her body, drest In the dress ,, 98
She b the blade of Liberty. The Voyage 72
A light-green tuft of plumes she b Sir L. and Q. G. 26
B him another son, a sickly one : Enoch Arden 109
grieving held his will, and b it thro'. ,, 167
do the thing he will'd, and b it thro'. ,, 295
weight of the dead leaf 6 it down : ,, 678
And Enoch b his weakness cheerfully. , , 827
To be the ghost of one who b your name The Brook 219
yet she b it : yet her cheek Aylmer's Field 505
loneliness of grief jB down in flood, ,, 633
her own people b along the nave Her pendent hands, ,, 812
motion of the boundless deep B thro' the cave. Sea Dreams 92
motion of the great deep 6 me on, ,, 111
They b her back into the tent : Princess iv 193
Yet I 6 up in part from ancient love, ' ,, 803
Yet I 6 up in hope she would be known : ,, 320
b down a Prince, And Cyril, one. ,, v 518
me they b up the broad stairs, ,, vi 374
He b but little game in hand ; The Victim 42
And b thee where I could not see In Mem. xxii 17
And thus he b without abuse ,, cxi 21
In either hand he b What dazzled all; Gareth and L. 386
And he that b The star, when mounted, , , 950
with a costrel b The means of goodly welcome, Marr. of Geraint 386
best by her that b her understood. , , 511
6 Down by the length of lance and arm Geraint and E. 462
b him to the naked hall of Doorm, ,, 570
She b me there, for born from death was I Merlin and V. 44
He b a knight of old repute to the earth, Lancelot and E. 492
he 6 the prize and could not find The victor, ,, 629
thus they & her swooning to her tower. ,, 968
reverently they b her into hall. ,, 1266
b them down. And broke thro' all. Holy Grail 479
b him to a chapel nigh the field, Pass, of Arthur 1 76
And rising 6 him thro' the place of tombs. ,, 343
she that b Camilla close beneath Lover's Tale i 202
converse sweet, In which our voices b least part. ,, 542
A whirlwind caught and bus; ,, ii 197
so they b her (for in Julian's land „ iv 36
B her free-faced to the free airs - ,,38
So b her thro' the solitary land ,, 90
Sir Richard b in hand all his sick men The Revenge 15
stately Spanish men to their flagship 6 him ,,97
She b a child, whom reverently we call'd Sisters {E. arid E.) 268
and the love I b them both — ,, 281
we, who b the Cross Thither, Columbus 191
And so, when I b him a girl, The Wreck 33
Nature who knew not that which she 6 ! Despair 34
on an earth that 6 not a flower ; ,, 44
wheat Of Egypt b a grain as sweet To Prof. Jebb 6
As we b down the Gods before us ? Demeter and P. 132
yesterday They b the Cross before you Happy 48
In a while I b him a son, Bandit's Death 15
Borest Ah little rat that b in the dyke Merlin and V. 112
Boring B a little auger-hole in fear, Godiva 68
Bom {See also Bum, Devil-bora, Eldest-bom,
Equal-bom, First-born, Gentle-born, King-
bom, Lame-bom, Latest-bom, New-bom,
Royal -bom. Sickly-bom, Spleen -bom)
Nothing was b ; Nothing will die ; Nothing vnll Die 36
All things were b. A U Things will Die 47
And Thou and peace to earth were b, Supp. Cmifessions 26
Thb poet in a golden clime was b. The Poet 1
Bom (continued) Two children in one hamlet 6 and bred ; Circumstance 8
Thou wert b, on a summer morn, Elednore 7
Truth is 6 Beyond the polar gleam Two Voices 181
features of her child Ere it is J : CEnone 253
never child be b of me, Unblest, „ 254
which mood was b Scorn of herself ; Palace of Art 230
call me before the day is b. May Queen, N. Vs. E. 49
thousand times I would be b and die. D. of F. Women 204
Was never b into the earth. To J. S. 32
With that fair child betwixt them b. On a Mourner 25
B out of everything I heard and saw. Gardener's D. 66
days went on, there was b a boy To William ; Dora 48
sinful man, conceived and b in sin : St. S. Stylites 122
group Of beauties, that were b In teacup-times of hood Talking Oak 62
' But I was b too late : the fair new forms, Golden Year 15
glimpse of that dark world where I was b. Tithonus 33
And thought and time be b again, Day- Dm., Sleep. P. 50
serving-man As any b of woman. Will Water. 152
I'm a beggar b,' she said. Lady Clare 37
I am a beggar 6,' she said, ,, 71
' If you are not the heiress b, (repeat) ,, 83, 85
honour Unto which she was not b. L. of Burleigh 80
Every moment dies a man, Every moment one
is 0. (repeat) Vision of Sin 98, 122
but when her child was b, Enoch Arden 522
In those far-off seven happy years were 6 ; ,, 686
B oi a. village girl, carpenter's son, Aylmer's Field 668
Thy better b unhappily from thee, „ 675
A CITT clerk, but gently b and bred ; Sea Drea^ns 1
chiefly you were b for something great, Princess iv 307
Ere you were b to vex us ? „ vi 248
dead before he was b, (repeat) Gi'andmother 59, 68
naw, naw, tha was not b then ; N. Farmer, 0. S. 29
The linnet b within the cage. In Mem. xxvii 3
The light that shone when Hope was b. „ xa^ 32
In these brief lays, of Sorrow b, ,, xlviii 1
In that dark house where she was b. „ Ix 12
It is the day when he was b, „ cvii 1
And, b of love, the vague desire „ ex 19
But I was b to other things. ,, cxx 12
Result in man, be b and think, ,, Con. 126
it seem'd far better to be 6 To labour Maud I xviii 33
On the day when Maud was b; ,, xix 40
0 Rivulet, b at the Hall, „ ocxi 8
Is a juggle & of the brain ? ,, II ii ^
tickle the maggot b in an empty head, ,, ij 38
Some calling Arthur b of Gorlois, Others of
Anton? Com. of Arthur no
all before his time Was Arthur S, ,, 212
Or b the son of Gorlois, after death, Or Uther's
son, and b before his time, ,, 240
Else, wherefore b ? ' Gareth and L. 119
saying thou wert basely b. „ 355
God wot, so thou wert nobly b, ,, 1064
Stript from the three dead wolves of woman b Geraint and E. 94
creatures gently b But into bad hands „ 191
B with the blood, not leamable, Balin and Balan 175
We two were b together, and we die ,, 629
bore me there, for b from death was I Merlin and V. 44
turn of anger 6 Of your misfaith ; ,, 531
but b of sickness, could not live : Lancelot and E. 880
sons B to the glory of thy name and fame, ,, 1372
Well is it that no child is b of thee. Guinevere 424
children b of thee are sword and fire, ,, 425
Like the last echo 6 of a great cry, Pass, of Arthur 459
Life knows not when young Life was b, Loner's Tale i 156
falsehood of all starcraft ! ) we were h. „ 200
So were we b, so orphan'd. ,, 218
Because my grief as yet was newly b ,, 613
Back to the mother's house where she was b. ,, iv 91
b Not from believing mind, ,, 104
and that day a boy was b, Heir ,, 128
But the boy was b i' trouble. First Quarrel 2
The boy was b in wedlock, ,, 6
For the lawyer is b but to murder — Rizpah 64
Born
52
Bottom
Bom {cMitimied) all my doubts were fools B of
the fool
in the second year was b A second —
fatal kiss, B of true life and love,
In Judah, for in thee the Lord was h ;
for in thee the word was b again.
slain my father the day before I was b,
who wailest being b And banish'd into mystery,
grief for ever 6 from griefs to be,
as if she were basely o !
B of the brainless Nature who knew not
For wert thou b or blind or deaf,
a bitter word, not once since we were b ;
She the worldling b of worldlings —
Stronger ever b of weaker,
before her highest, man, was b,
you my Miriam b within the year ;
As we forget our wail at being 6.
You will live till that is b,
For on a tropic mountain was I b,
words ! Words only, b of fever,
and him, and the day I was b.
birthday came of a boy b happily dead.
Where is one that, b of woman,
Borne (See also Eagle-borne, Fancy-borne)
Adown the Tigris I was b,
From off her shoulder backward b :
And many a merry wind was b,
When on my goodly charger b
bear me with thee, smoothly b,
Enoch lives : that is 6 in on me.
I have b it with me all these years.
ovation round Their statues, 6 aloft,
Now to glorious burial slowly b,
B down by gladness so complete,
This truth came b with bier and pall,
And daughters had she b him, —
but a son she had not b.
Before him at his crowning b,
down the wave and in the flame was b A naked babe, ,, 383
wild Limours, £ on a black horse, Geraint and E. 458
B by some high lord-prince of Arthur's hall, Balin and Balan 466
Else never had he 6 her crown, ,, 666
Across the silent seeded meadow-grass B, clash'd : Pelleas and E. 562
Sisters {E. and E.) 141
„ 269
Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 3
Sir J. Oldcastle 25
27
V. o/Maeldune 8
De Prof. Two G. 41
Tiresias 80
Tfie Wreck 36
Despair 34
Ancient Sage 175
The Flight 86
Locksley H,, Sixty 25
164
205
The Ring 285
„ 465
Forlorn 63
Prog, of Spring 67
Romney's R. 30
Charity 24
„ 34
Making of Man 1
Arabian Nights 6
Palace of Art 118
Day -Dm,, Depart 14
Sir Galahad 49
Move Eastward 9
Enoch Arden 319
,, 895
Princess vi 67
Ode on Well. 193
In Mem. xxxii 10
,, Ixxxv 1
Com. of Arthur 189
192
296
b about the bay or safely moor'd
my name was b Upon her breath
B into alien lands and far away.
I, too, was b along and felt the blast
great love they both had b the dead,
we had always b a good name —
You never have 6 a child —
thou wouldst have her flag B on thy
coffin —
great flame-banner b by Teneriffe,
B in the bark's-bosom,
wail came b in the shriek of a growing wind,
nurse Who had b my flower on her hireling heart ;
b in white To burial or to burning,
earth has never b a nobler man.
b along by that full stream of men,
I have b Rain, wind, frost,
think that I have b as much as this —
bearing in myself the shame The woman should
have b,
That a calamity hard to be 6 ?
likewise for the high rank she had 6,
b With more than mortal swiftness,
The love they both have b me,
heathen men have b as much as this,
Lover's Tale i 54
443
802
, , Hi 27
„ iv 181
Rizpah 35
.. 80
Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 17
Columbus 69
Batt. of Brunanburh 49
The Wreck 87
„ 143
Ancient Sage 207
Epit. on Gordon 4
St. TelemachusiS
St. S. Stylites 15
A ylmer's Field 356
Maud 1 xiii 3
Guinevere 695
Lover's Tale ii 72
Sisters {E. and E.) 280
Sir J. Oldcastle 185
Bom-unborn with their offspring, b-u, Locksley H. , Sixty 98
Borough half The neighbouring o with their Institute Princess, Pro. 5
may they see Beyond the b and the shire ! Hands all Round 28
Better a rotten b or so Than a rotten fleet Riflemen form in
Borrow'd B a glass, but all in vain : Enoch Arden 240
A cap of Tyrol b from the hall. Princess iv 601
Bora (a knight) Sir B, our Lancelot's cousin, sware, Holy Grail 200
The pelican on the casque of our Sir B , , 635
Once,' Said good Sir 5, 'he dash'd across me ,, 640
' Then Sir B had ridden on Softly, , , 647
to B Beyond the rest : , , 652
Sir B Rode to the lonest tract of all the realm, , , 660
Said good Sir B, ' beyond all hopes of mine, ,, 690
Sir B it was Who spake so low ,, 700
Ay, ay, Sir B, who else ? , , 707
for Sir B, on entering, push'd Athwart , , 752
saying to him, ' Hail, B ! if ever loyal man , , 756
and B, ' Ask me not for I may not speak ,, 757
Blessed are B, Lancelot and Percivale, ,, 874
Boa thundering shores of Bude and B, Guinevere 291
Boscage to thee, green b, work of God, Sir J. Oldcasde 129
Bosk and blowing b's of wilderness. Princess i 111
Boskage Thridding the sombre b of the wood, D. of F. Women 243
Bosom {See also Bark's-bosom) b's prest To little
harps of gold ; Sea-Fairies 3
woodpecker From the & of a hill. Kate 5
From brow and b slowly down Mariana in the S. 14
rising, from her b drew Old letters, ,, 61
long to fall and rise Upon her balmy 6, Miller's D. 183
fingers backward drew From her warm brows and b (Enone 177
an arm Rose up from out the b of the lake, M. d' Arthur 30
in her b bore the baby. Sleep. Gardener's D. 268
and fall about thy neck, And on thy b Love and Duty 42
and b beating with a heart renew'd. Tithonus 36
her b shaken with a sudden storm of sighs — Locksley Hall 27
I will pluck it from my 6, ,, 66
moral shut Within the b of the rose ? Day- Dm., Moral 8
I will not vex my b : Amphion 102
snowdrop of the year That in my b lies. St. Agnes' Ike 12
charm have power to make New lif eblood warm the b, WUl Water. 22
Him, to her meek and modest b prest In agony, Aylmer's Field 416
fondled on her lap, Warm'd at her 6 ? ,, 687
sun their milky b's on the thatch, Princess ii 103
an erring pearl Lost in her 6 : -" ,, iv 61
lay me on her b, and her heart Would rook , , 103
over brow And cheek and 6 brake the wrathful bloom , , 383
half The sacred mother's 6, panting, ,, viliS
And hid her 6 with it ; ,, 214
And slips into the b of the lake : ,, vii 187
and slip Into my b and be lost in me. ' , , 189
The b with long sighs labour'd ; ,, 225
Slide from the b of the stars. In Mem. xvii 16
sword That rose from out the 6 of the lake. Com. of Arthur 297
Yniol's heart Danced in his b, Mair. of Geraint 505
his beard Across her neck and b to her knee, Merlin and V. 257
and in her b pain was lord. Last Tournament 239
arm Rose up from out the 6 of the lake, Pass, of Arthur 198
our baby lips. Kissing one b. Lover's Tale i 238
infuse Rich atar in the 6 of the rose, ,, 270
Cast the poison from your b, Locksley H. , Sixty 241
The linnet's 6 blushes at her gaze, Prog, of Spring 17
Bosom 'd and b the burst of the spray, V. of Maeldune 103
Bosom-friend My 6-/ and half of life; InMem.lixZ
Bosom-peak And budded b-p's — who this way Lucretius 191
Bosom- sepulchre Sympathy hew'd out The b-s
of Sympathy ? Lover's Tale ii 32
Bosom-throne Had nestled in this b-t of Love, „ i 624
Boss the silver b Of her own halo's The Voyage 31
Boss'd b with lengths Of classic frieze, Princess ii 24
goblet on the board by Balin, b With holy
Joseph's legend, Balin and Balan 362
Botanic They read B Treatises, A mphion 77
Bottle ' What's i' tha b a-stanning theer ? ' North. Cobbler 7
Thou gits naw gin fro' tho b theer, ,, 10
yon big black b o' gin. ,, 70
An' 'e points to the b o' gin, ,, 90
Smash the b to smithers, the Divil's in 'im,' ,, 104
And 'a taken to the b beside. Spinster's iS's. 56
their b's o' pap, an' their mucky bibs, ,, 87
Bottom (adj.) As b agates seem to wave and float Princess ii 327
Bottom (a) creation pierce Beyond the b of his eye. A Character Q
Bottom
53
Bountiful
Bottom (s) {coiUinued) made a plunge To the b, and
dispersed, Jinoch Arden 380
fox — where started — kill'd In such a b : Aylmer's Field 254
Tho' anchor'd to the b, such is he.' Princess iv 257
the sand danced at the b of it. Balin and Balan 27
b of the well, Where Truth is hidden. Merlin and V. 47
glances from the b of the pool, The Ring 371
Bongh (iSee also Beechen-bough, Beugh) beneath
the dome Of hollow b's. Arabian Nights 42
garlanding the gnarled b's With bunch CEnone 101
Whose thick mysterious b's in the dark mom ,, 213
came To rest beneath thy b's. — (repeat) Talking Oak 36, 156
Olivia came To sport beneath thy b's. ,, 100
till thy b's discern The front of Sumner-place. ,, 247
bent or broke The lithe reluctant b's Enoch Arden 381
one soft arm, which, like the pliant b Sea Dreams 290
grasping down the b's I gain'd the shore. Princess iv 189
and while the holly b's Entwine In Mem. xxix 9
I found a wood with thorny b's : „ Ixix 6
And sow the sky with flying b's, „ Ixxii 24
Unwatch'd, the garden b shall sway, ,, ci\
Came on the hoarhead woodman at a 6 Wearily
hewing. Balin and Balan 294
He burst his lance against a forest b, ,, 329
canker'd b's without Whined in the wood ; „ 345
and old b's Whined in the wood. ,, 385
made him quickly dive Beneath the b's, „ 423
and on the o's a shield Showing Last Tournament 432
and the wind among the b's. „ 489
shot forth B's on each side, Lover's Tale i 230
beechen b's Of our New Forest. Sisters {£. and ^.) 112
Look, he stands, Trunk and 6, The Oak 14
Bought {See also Bowt) have b A mansion
incorruptible. Deserted House 20
B Annie goods and stores, and set Enoch Arden 169
b them needful books, and everyway, ,, 332
b Quaint monsters for the market of those times, ,, 538
We b the farm we tenanted before. The Brook 222
B ? what is it he cannot buy ? Maud I xS2
sold and sold had b them bread : Marr. of Geraint 641
who b me for his slave : Tlie Flight 19
Boulder found a glen, gray b and black tarn. Laiicelot and E. 36
Bound (adj.) {See also China-bound, Seaward-bound)
^ on a matter he of life and death : Sea Dreanis 151
' Was he so J, poor soul ? ' ,, 169
B for the Hall, I am sure was he : Maud 1 x 25
B for the Hall, and I think for a bride. ,, 26
' B upon a quest With horse and arms — Gareth and L. 708
i5 on a foray, rolling eyes of prey, Get'aint and E. 538
B upon solitary adventure, Pellea* and E. 275
Whither are you b ? For Naples The Ring 57
Bound (limit) make The b's of freedom wider yet To the Qiieen 32
Transgress his ample b to some new crown : — Poland 8
And mete the b's of hate and love — Two Voices 135
Beyond the utmost b of human thought. Ulysses 32
You that have dared to break our b. Princess iv 539
And music in the b's of law, In Mem. Ixxxvii 34
And strike his being into b's, „ Con. 124
b's of heaven and earth were lost — Com. of Arthv,r 372
shun to break those b's of courtesy Ijtncelot and E. 1220
Drew from before Sir Tristram to the b's. Last Tournament 185
Back to the sunset b of Lyonnesse — Pass, of Arthur 81
charged the winds With spiced May-sweets
from h to b. Lover's Tale i 318
Nor understandest b nor boundlessness, Ancient Sage 48
and the b's Determining concession ; To Duke of A r^yll 2
Narrowing the b's of night.' Prog, of Spring 91
all the b's of earth. Far-far-away ? Far-far-away 14
I spy nor term nor b, Mechanophilus 20
Bound (spring) but a single b, and with a sweep Geraint and E. 727
Bound (verb) wild winds b within their cell, Mariana 54
Two lives b fast in one Circumstance 5
Sleep had b her in his rosy band, Caress'd or chidden 6
Art thou so J To men, Two Voices 109
Which only to one engine b ,, 347
Bound (verb) (coidmued) In front they b the sheaves. Palace of Art 7S
earth is every way B by gold chains M. d' Arthur 255
' I am 6 : you have my promise— Enoch Arden 437
I am always b to you, but you are free.' ,, 450"
Annie weeping answer'd ' I am 6.' 451
she knew that she was b — 462
B in an immemorial intimacy, Aylmer's Field 39
nor by plight or broken ring B, ,, 136
you think me b In some sort. Princes i 158
given us letters, was he b to speak ? ,, 181
y 6 by precontract Your bride, ,, iv 541
each beside his chariot b his own ; Spec, of Iliad 3
lost the links that b Thy changes ; hi Mem. xli 6
Had b us one to the other, Maud I scix 38
B them by so strait vows to his own self, Com. of Arthur 262
vows, as is a shame A man should not be 6 by, Gareth and L. 271
b my lord to cast him in the mere,' ,, 803
' jS am I to right the wrong'd, ,, 804
straitlier 6 am I to bide with thee.' ,, 805
I 6 to thee for any favour ask'd ! ' ,, 977
b the suits Of armour on their horses, Geraint and E. 96
6 them on their horses, each on each, ,, 182
B are they To speak no evil. Balin and Balan 145
Arthur b them not to singleness Merlin and V. 28
They b to holy vows of chastity ! ,, 695
then he b Her token on his helmet, Lancelot and E. 373
but free love will not be 6.' ,, 1379
'Free love, so b, were freest,' ,, 1380
bright boy-knight, and b it on him, Holy Grail 156
' All men, to one so b by such a vow, „ 565
Seized him, and b and plunged him into a cell ,, 675
Give ye the slave mine order to be b, Pelleas and E. 270
rose up, and b, and brought him in. ,, 288
Not to be b, save by white bonds ,, 353
and b his horse Hard by the gates. ,, 413
B on her brow, were Gawain and Ettarre. , , 435
the King hath b And sworn me to this brother-
hood ; ,,448
earth is every way B by gold chains Pass, of Arthur 423
So Z» to me by common love and loss — Lover's Tale iv 345
Harry was b to the Dorsetshire farm First Quarrel 19
only done my duty as a man is 6 to do : The Revenge 102
I had not 6 myself by words, Sisters (E. and E.) 137
I was b to her ; I could not free myself ,, 160
b Not by the sounded letter of the word, ,, 161
broken chain that b me to my kind. Locksley H., Sixty 52
the laughing shepherd b with flowers ; " To Virgil 16
b to follow, wherever she go Stark-naked, Dead Prophet 45
for twenty years B by the golden cord The Ring 429
Bound See also Brow-bound, Charm-bound
Boundary Close at the b of the liberties ; Princess i 172
Bounded motions & in a shallower brain : Lockdey Hall 150
a spirit b and poor ; Maud I iv 38
Death's dark war-horse b forward Gareth and L. 1401
Then 6 forward to the castle walls, PeUeas and E. 363
6 forth and vanish 'd thro' the night. ,, 487
Seeing it is not b save by love.' Last Tournament 703
Bounden {See also Long-bounden, Promise-bounden)
and lying b there In darkness Hdy Grail 676
those he overthrew Be b straight, Pelleas and E. 236
but thrust him 6 out of door. ,, 314
Thus to be 6, so to see her face, ,, 326
tho' she hath me 6 but in spite, ,, 329
Let me be b, I shall see her face ; ,, 331
Bounding b forward ' Leave them to the wolves.' Bcdin and Balan 588
Boundless Feels that the deep is h, Ancient Sage 192
Sent the shadow of Himself, the b, Locksley H., Sixty 211
B inward, in the atom, b outward, „ 212
Boundlessness Nor understandest bound nor &, Ancient Sage i8
Bounteous Of whom were any b, merciful, Gareth and L. 423
Bounteous Isle And we came to the B I, V. of Maeldune 83
Till we hated the B I and the sunbright hand , , 92
Bounteously b made. And yet so finely, Aylmer's Field 74
Bountiful Spare not now to be b, On Jub. Q. Victoria 29
B, beautiful, apparell'd gay, Prog, of Spring 62
Bounty
54
Boy
Bounty God only thro' his b hath thought fit, St. S. Stylites 186
Here he lives in state and b, L. of Burleigh 57
Or Heaven in lavish b moulded, grew. Aylmer's Field 107
Bourg Ye think the rustic cackle of your b Marr, of Geraint 276
They take the rustic murmur of their b „ 419
Boum-Boume and rang Beyond the bourn of sunset; PriTicess, Con. 100
from out our bourne of Time and Place Grossing the Bar 13
Bovadilla B, one As ignorant and impolitic Columbus 127
Bow (respectful inclination) 0 the formal mocking b, Tite Flight 29
Bow (an instrument) spirit ever strung Like a new b, Kate 11
Bow (rainbow) great ft will waver in the sun, Palace of Art ^Z •
And every dew-drop paints a b, In Mem. cxxii 18
For there beyond a bridge of treble b, Gareth and L. 1086
Bow (part of a ship) figure-head Stared o'er the ripple
feathering from her b's : Enoch Arden 544
huge sea-castles heaving upon the weather b. The Revenge 24
Bow (b) See Foam-bow, Saddle-bow, Torrent-bow
Bow (verb) B myself down, where thou hast knelt, Supp. Confessions 80
B down one thousand and two hundred St. S. Stylites 111
gay domestic B's before him at the door. L, of Burleigh 48
as when a field of corn B's all its ears Prirvcess i 237
She Vs, she bathes the Saviour's feet In Mem. xxxii 11
cheeks drop in ; the body Vs Man dies : ,, xxxio 3
made him flush, and b Lowly, to kiss his hand, Gareth and L. 548
0 ay — the winds that b the grass ! Last ToM-nament 735
To thee, dead wood, I b not head nor knees. Sir J. Oldcastle 128
Bow-back'd supporters on a shield, B-b with fear : Princess vi 359
Bow'd Like Thine own mother's when she b Above
Thee, Siipp. Confessions 23
A group of Houris b to see The dying Islamite, Palace of Art 102
power in his eye That b the will. M. d' Arthur 123
She b upon her hands, Dora 103
She 6 down her head, ,, 105
She b down And wept in secret ; ,, 107
My knees are 6 in crypt and shrine : Sir Galaliad 18
Enoch as a brave God-fearing man B himself down, Ihioch Arden 186
Enoch was so brown, so b, So broken — ,, 703
' My Grod has b me down to what I am ; „ 856
b her state to them, that they might grow Princess ii 166
She 6 as if to veil a noble tear ; ,, Hi 289
handmaid on each side B toward her, ,, iv 276
j8 on her palms and folded up from wrong, ,, 288
She b, she set the child on the earth ; „ vi 120
thine own land has b to Tartar hordes W. to Marie Alex. 23
save Thy sailor, — while thy head is 6, In Mem. vi 14
When have I 6 to her father, Maiid I iv 13
not to her brother lb; I 6 to his lady-sister ,, 14
the budded peaks of the wood are b „ vi i
redden 'd her cheek When I 6 to her ,, xix 66
Gareth b himself With all obedience Gareth and L. 487
Low b the tributary Prince, Marr. of Geraint 174
with back tum'd, and b above his work, ,, 267
lifted adoring eyes, B at her side Geraint and E. 305
b the all-amorous Earl, ,, 360
low b the Prince, and felt His work ,, 920
h black knees Of homage. Merlin and V. 577
then b his homage, bluntly saying. Last Tournament 206
he b to kiss the jewell'd throat, ,, 751
and b down upon her hands Silent, Guinevere 158
and b her head nor spake. ,, 310
power in his eye That b the will. Pass, of Arthur 291
B the spoiler. Bent the Scotsman, Batt. of Brunanburh 20
b myself down as a slave to his intellectual throne. The Wreck 66
Edith b her stately head, T/ie Tourney 13
Edith Montfort 6 her head, ,, 15
Bower (See also Oarden-bower, Tree-bower) Creeping
thro' blossomy rushes and b's of rose-blowing
bushes. Leonine Eleg. 3
day Was sloping toward his western 6. Mariana 80
Dwelling amid these yellowing b's : A spirit haunts 2
Youngest Autumn, in a 6 Grape-thicken'd Ele&n&re 35
Then to the b they came, . (Enone 94
they came to that smooth-swarded &, ,, 95
And I was left alone within the b; „ 192
honeysuckle round the porch has wov'n its wavy b's, May Queen 29
Bower (continued) Leaving the promise of my
bridal ft, D. of F. Wometi2\S
bulk Of mellow brickwork on an isle of b's. Edwin Mmris 12
Pursue thy loves among the b's Talking Oah 199
Droops the heavy-blossom'd 6, Locksley Hall 163
Then fled she to her inmost b, Godiva 42
but even then she gain'd Her b; ,,77
The peacock in his laurel b, Day-Dm,, Sleep. P. 15
From havens hid in fairy b's. The Voyage 54
she moved To meet me, winding under woodbine b's, Tlie Brook 88
from a 6 of vine and honeysuckle : Aylmer's Fidd 156
broader-grown the b's Drew the great night Princess vii 48
music, 0 bird, in the new-budded b's ! W. to Aleocandra 11
Or walks in Boboli's ducal b's. The Daisy 44
and make her a b All of flowers, Window, At Uie W. 5
- V out of her & All of flowers, ,, 12
light Dies off at once from b and hall. In Mem. viii 6
That sweeps with all its autumn 6's, ,, a;4 10
have clothed their branchy b's With fifty Mays, ,, Ixxvi 13
With thy lost friend among the 6's, ,, m 15
glowing like the moon Of Eden on its bridal 6 : ,, Co?i. 28
And tends upon bed and b, Mavd I xiv 4
out of b and casement shyly glanced Gareth and L. 313
walk of lilies crost it to the b : Balin and Balan 243
long white walk of lilies toward the b. „ 249
and Balin started from his b, „ 280
Kemembering that dark b at Camelot, ,, 526
' Had ye not held your Lancelot in your b, Pelleas and E. 182
spied not any light in hall or 6, ,, 419
In her high b the Queen, Working a tapestry. Last Tournament 128
then slowly to her b Parted, ,, 238
Thro' many a league-long b he rode. „ 374
saw The great Queen's b was dark, — „ 758
in thy b's of Camelot or of Usk Guinevere 503
vanish'd from my sight Beneath the b Lover's Tale ii 43
they were swallow'd in the leafy b's, „ Hi 57
All the b's and the flowers. Sisters (E. and E.) 10
Fainting flowers, faded b's, „ 11
Over all the woodland's flooded b's, „ 20
piping underneath his beechen b's ; To Virgil 14
wealth of tropic b and brake ; To Ulysses 37
Bower'd (See also Close-bower'd) garden b close With
plaited alleys of the trailing rose, Ode to Memory 105
Bower-eaves Look out below your b-e, Margaret 66
A BOW-SHOT from her b-e, L. of Shalott Hi 1
Boweth Earthward he b the heavy stalks A spirit haunts 7
Bowing Approved him, b at their own deserts : The Brook 128
and 6 o'er the brook A tonsured head ,, 199
She spoke, and b waved Dismissal : Princess ii 99
b over him. Low to her own heart Marr. of Geraint 84
b lowly down before thee, Altar's D., Hymn 3
Bowl (See also Wassail-bowl) Nor robb'd the farmer of
his h of cream : Princess v 223
Nor b of wassail mantle warm ; In Mem. cv 18
fling free alms into the beggar's b, Ancient Sage 260
BowI'd a herd of boys with clamour b Princess, Pro. 81
Bowl-shaped saw, B-s, thro' tops of many thousand
pines Gareth and L. 796
Bowman See Master-bowman
Bow-shot A B-s from her bower-eaves, L. of Slmlott Hi 1
Bow-string His b-s slacken'd, languid Love, Eleanore 117
Bowt (bought) An' 'e b owd money, es wouldn't goa. Village Wife 49
An' 'e b little statues all-naakt „ 50
Box (a case) (See also Deal-box) A long green & of
mignonette. Miller's D. 83
and the b of mignonette. May Queen, N. Y's. -£.48
May bind a book, may line a b. In Mem. Ixxvii 6
Box (compartment) Old b'es, larded with the steam Will Water. 223
Shall call thee from the b'es. ,, 240
Box (boxful) 'e snifft up a 6 in a daiiy, Village Wife 40
Box (a shrub) breath Of the fading edges of i!*
beneath, A spirit haunts 19
Boy (See also Cupid-boys, Orphan-boy) A merry b
in sun and shade ? Two Voices 321
' A merry b they call'd him then, m 322
Boy
55
Bracken-roott
Boy (contimied) To be the long and listless S Late-left
My mother thought, What ails the b ?
' No fair Hebrew b Shall smile away
' You will not, b ! you dare to answer thus !
there was born a 6 To William ;
Mary sat And look'd with tears upon her b,
let me take the b,
he may see the b, And bless him for the sake
Well— for I will take the b ;
So saying, he took the b that cried aloud
the b's cry came to her from the field,
Mary saw the b Was not with Dora.
Dora said, ' My uncle took the b ;
now I think, he shall not have the b,
I will have my b, and bring him home ;
b set up betwixt his grandsire's knees,
but when the b beheld His mother,
now, Sir, let me have my b,
and with his b Betwixt his knees,
was as a 6 Destructive,
So seems she to the b.
Eager-hearted as a 6 when first he leaves
heart of existence beat for ever like a b's ?
A something-pottle-bodied b
O well for the fisherman's b,
two years after came a 6 to be The rosy idol
Now let me put the b and girl to school :
Philip put the b and girl to school,
the youngest, hardly more than b,
like her mother, and the b, my son.'
Prattling the primrose fancies of the b,
So much the b foreran ;
b might get a notion into him ;
girl and b, Sir, know their differences ! '
Last he said, ' B, mark me !
' B, should I find you by my doors
twenty b's and girls should marry on it,
a herd of b's with clamour bowl'd
embower the nest, Some 6 would spy it.'
daughter and his housemaid were the b's :
' Wretched b, How saw you not the inscription
With me. Sir, enter'd in the bigger b,
' Poor b,' she said, ' can he not read —
when a b, you stoop'd to me From aU high places,
more Than growing b's their manhood ;
As b's that slink From ferule
B, when I hear you prate I almost think
B, there's no rose that's half so dear
idle b's are cowards to their shame,
• B's ! ' shriek'd the old king,
rout of saucy b's Brake on us at our books,
B, The bearing and the training of a child
The little b's begin to shoot and stab,
Among six b's, head under head.
Godfather, come and see your b :
' 0 b, tho' thou art young and proud.
We give them the b.'
Cut the Roman b to pieces in his lust
For they controU'd me when a b ;
A sober man, among his b's,
When he was little more than b,
and b's of thine Had babbled ' Uncle ' on my knee ;
and b's That crash'd the glass and beat the floor ;
And like an inconsiderate b,
b Will have plenty : so let it be,' (repeat)
Read with a b's delight,
To take a wanton dissolute b For a man
so the b. Sweet mother, neither clomb,
ye are yet more b than man.'
the b Is noble-natured.
the b Was half beyond himself for ecstasy,
the might and breath of twenty b's.'
Issued the bright face of a blooming b
fears And horrors only proven a blooming b.
' B,' said he, ' I have eaten all.
Miller's D. 33
93
D. of F. IFo»«CTi213
Dora 26
„ 48
„ 57
„ 66
„ 69
„ 99
„ 101
„ 104
„ 111
„ 114
„ 119
„ 122
„ 131
» 137
„ 152
Walk, to tlie Mail 40
81
Talking Oak 108
Locksley Hall 112
„ 140
Will Water. 131
Break, break, etc. 5
Enoch Arden 89
312
„ 331
563
791
The Brook 19
Aylmer's Field 80
271
274
„ 300
324
371
Princess, Pro. 81
148
i 190
a 193
404
m214
ivA3Q
457
v21
152
159
309
328
394
464
,, Con. 61
83
To F. D. Maurice 2
SaiZor Boy 7
The Victim 40
Bo&dicea 66
In Mem, xxviii 18
liii 2
Ixii 6
Ixxxiv 12
locxxvii 19
cxxii 14
Maud I vii 7, 15
10
„ X 58
Oareth and L. 55
„ 98
467
„ 523
1106
1408
1425
Germnt and E. 217
Boy {continued) ' I take it as free gift, then,' said
the b,
b return'd And told them of a chamber,
bone Seems to be pluck'd at by the village b's
as a & lame-born beneath a height,
old sun-worship, b, will rise again,
Hither, b — and mark me well.
' Live on, Sir B,' she cried.
men and b's astride On wyvern, lion,
beauty of her flesh abash d the b,
as the wholesome mothers tell their b's.
b Paused not, but overrode him, shouting,
on whom the b, Across the silent seeded meadow-grass , , 560
thronging fancies come To b's and girls Lover's Tale i 555
so love that men and b's may say,
that day a b was born, Heir of his face and land,
Another, if the b were hers :
But the b was born i' trouble,
the b can hold up his head,
The b was born in wedlock,
He fought the b's that were rude,
I was near my time wi' the b,
But say nothing hard of my b,
I kiss'd my b in the prison,
hear that cry of my b that was dead,
But I go to-night to my b,
For I cared so much for my b that the Lord
if my b be gone to the fire ?
and gain her then : no wavering, b !
for all that, my b, Some birds are sick
boooks wur gone an' 'is b wur dead.
Here was a b — I am sure that some of our
children
•» Here was a 6 in the ward,
what ! the kingly, kindly b ;
thou comest, darling b ; Our own ;
Down yon dark sea, thou comest, darling b.
To younger England in the b my son.
said to me ' Pity it isn't a b. '
for oft On me, when 6, there came
what had he lost, the b ?
For the b's wor about her agin
a bouncin' b an' a gell.
Thou alone, my b, of Amy's kin
a shatter'd wheel ? a vicious b
Not there to bid my 6 farewell,
haunt him when a b, Far-far-away ?
Turn'd him again to b, for up he sprang,
that the b never cried again.
birthday came of a 6 born happily dead.
Boyhood Then, in the b of the year.
Sweet love on pranks of saucy b :
One whispers, ' Here thy b sung Long since
Wander'd back to living b while I heard
Eyes that lured a doting b
Feed the budding rose of b
I was then in early b,
Oeraint and E. 222
260
560
Balin and Balan 164
457
502
584
Holy Grail 349
Pdleas and E. 78
197
544
756
„ iv 128
332
First Qiuirrel 2
.. 5
6
14
82
Rizpah 22
23
45
74
75
78
Sisters (E. and E.) 39
72
Village Wife 87
In the Child. Hosp. 11
13
Sir J. Oldcastle 88
De Prof. Tioo G. 10
34
To Victor Hugo 14
The Wreck 34
Ancient Sage 217
227
TomoiTOW 43
Spinster's S's. 82
Locksley H., Sixty 56
215
To Marq. of Dufferin 42
Far-far-away 8
St. Telemachus 68
Bandit's Death 28
Charity 34
Sir L. and Q. G. 19
Princess vii 344
In Mem. cii 9
Locksley H., Sixty 3
10
143
258
Boy-knight saw the bright b-k, and bound it on him, Holy Grail 156
Boy-love this b-l of yours with mine.
Boy -phrase my b-p ' The Passion of the Past.'
Braaln (brain) moor sense i' one o' 'is legs nor
in all thy b's.
' Sottin' thy b's Guzzlin' an' soakin'
Brace b Of twins may weed her of her folly.
and then against his 6 Of comrades.
Braced Had b my purpose to declare myself :
Bracelet With b's of the diamond bright :
Bracelet-bestower B-b and Baron of Barons,
Bracken when the 6 rusted on their crags,
Nowt at all but b an' fuzz,
Breast-high in that bright line of b stood :
Among our heath and b.
When I look'd at the b so bright
As the green of the b amid the gloom
Bracken-roofb Furze-cramm'd, and b-r,
Locksley H., Sixty 6
Ancient Sage 219
N. Fanner, N.S. 4
North. Cobbler 23
Princess v 463
Geraint and E. 87
Sisters [E. and E.) 143
Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 14
Batt. of Brtinanburh 3
Edwin Moi-ris 100
N. Farmer, 0. S. 38
Pelleas and E. 56
The Ring 318
June Bracken, etc. 3
9
Last Tournament 377
Bracket
56
Branch
Bracket statuette Of my dear Mother on your b here — Tlie Ring 110
Brag (s) Said Gareth, ' Old, and over-bold in h ! Gareth and L. 1107
Brag (verb) h to his fellow rakes of his conquest Charity 18
Bragging armies so broken A reason for b Batt. of Bmnanhurh 83
Brahmin J5,*and Buddhist, Christian, and Parsee, Akbar's Dream 25
Braid wound Her looser hair in b, Oordener's I). 158
fire-flies tangled in a silver b. Locksley Hcdl 10
Forth streaming from a 6 of pearl : Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 6
Blowing the ringlet from the b : Sir L. and Q. G. 39
the b Slipt and uncoil'd itself, Ma-lin and V. 888
Braided {See also Vapour -braided) b thereupon All
the devices blazon'd iMiicelot and E. 8
precious crystal into which I b Edwin's hair ! The Flight 34
Brain (See (dso Bra&in, Full-brain, Half-brain) ai-ms,
or power of b, w birth To the Queen 3
Right to the heart and b, tho' undescried, Isabel 22
From the 6 of the purple mountain Poet's Mwid 29
falling axe did part The burning b from the true heart, Margarei 39
A random arrow from the b. Two Voices 345
From some odd corner of the b. Miller's D. 68
In my dry b my spirit soon, Fatima 26
Devil, large in heart and b, To — With Pal. of Art 5
great thought strikes along the b, D. of F. Women 43
dawn's creeping beams, Stol'n to my b, ,, 262
Drawn from the spirit thro' the b, To ./. S. 38
nourish a blind life within the b, M. d' Arthur 251
Simeon, whose b the sunshine bakes ; Si. S. Stylites 164
Better the narrow b, the stony heart, Love and Duty 15
mist of tears, that weigh'd Upon my b, ,,44
that his b is overwrought : Locksley Hall 53
blinder motions bounded in a shallower 6 : ,, 150
On secrets of the b, the stars, Day-Dm., L'Fnvoi 11
Which bears a season'd b about. Will Water, 85
were scatter'd Blood and b's of men. The Captain 48
Beating it in upon his weary b, Enoch Arden 796
tickling the brute b within the man's Lucretius 21
but as his b Began to mellow, Princess i 179
Besides the b was like the hand, ,, ii 150
Then while I dragg'd my b's for such a song, ,, iv 154
Whose b's are in their hands and in their heels, ,, 518
upon whose hand and heart and b ikle on Well. 239
Perchance, to charm a vacant b, Tfie Daiij/ 106
dash the b's of the little one out, Boadicea 68
But, for the unquiet heart and b, In Mem. v 5
And marvel what possess'd my ft ; ,, xivl6
I make a picture in the b; ,, Ixxx 9
As but the canker of the 6 ; ,, xcii 3
Pallas from the b Of Demons? ,, cxiv 12
I think we are not wholly b, „ ca!:x 2
And like is darken'd in the 6. ,, cxxi 8
would not marvel at either, but keep a temperate b ; Maud I iv 40
What was it ? a lying trick of the 6 ? ,, Hi 37
Is a juggle born of the 6 ? ,, ii 42
'Tis the blot upon the 6 That wi^^ show ,, ivQO
Beat into my scalp and my b, ,, v 10
So dark a forethought roU'd about his b. Merlin and V, 230
may make My scheming b a cinder, ,, 933
Skip to the broken music of my b's Last Tournament 258
' Save for that broken music in thy b's, ,, 267
and clove him thro' the b. ,, 754
nourish a blind life within the b. Pass, of Arthur 419
springing from her fountains in the b, Lover's Tale i 83
clear brow, bulwark of the precious b, ,, 130
Past thro' into his citadel, the 6, ,, 631
O'erbore the limits of my b: „ 689
meaning of the letters shot into My 6 ; ,, ii9
In my b The spirit seem'd to flag ,, 50
thro' my eyes into my innermost b, ,, 95
Flatter'd the fancy of my fading 6 ; ,, 107
love is of the b, the mind, the soul : ,, i'" 156
her b broke With over-acting, Sisters (E. and E.) 235
My b had begun to reel — In the Child. Hosp. 60
brute bullet broke thro" the b Def. of Lucknow 20
For I am emptier than a friar's b's ; Sir J. Oldcastle 7
rang into the heart and tho h, V. of Maeldune 110
Brain (continued) My h is full of the crash of wrecks. The Wreck 4
for my b was drunk with the water, Despair 65
statesman's b that sway'd the past Ancient Sage 134
Set the feet above the b and swear the b is in
the feet. _ Locksley H., Sixty l^Q
oust the madness from your b. ,, 241
Works of subtle b and hand, Open. I, and C. EyJiib. 7
' Beat little heart ' on this fool b of mine. Romney's R. 155
Who was a shadow in the b, Mechanoj>hilus 15
Brain-feverouB B-fm his heat and agony, Lancelot and E. 854
Brain-labour And prodigal of all b-l he, Aylmer's Field 447
Brainless Insolent, b, heartless ! ,, 368
Brainpan Than if my b were an empty hull. Princess ii 398
Brake (s) Close-matted, bur and b and briar, Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 46
gloom Of evening over b and bloom And meadow. In Mem, Ixxxvi 3
And bristles all the b's and thorns ,, cvii 9
In every wavering b an ambuscade. Geraint and E. 51
' How far thro' all the bloom and b Ancient Sage 19
wealth of tropic bower and b ; To Ulysses 37
downy drift against the b's, Prog, of Spring 27
Brake (verb) at their feet the crocus b like fire, (Enone 96
B with a blast of trumpets from the gate. Princess, Pro. 42
from my breast the involuntary sigh /J, ,, iii 192
over brow And cheek and bosom b the wrathful bloom , , iv 383
titter, out of which there b On all sides, ,, v\Q
a rout of saucy boys B on us at our books, ,, 395
then b out my sire. Lifting his grim head ,, vi 271
For on them b the sudden foe ; Tlie Victim 4
Suddenly from him b his wife, „ 70
No spirit ever b the band That stays him In Mem. xciii 2
fires of Hell b out of thy rising sun, Maud II i 9
b on him, till, amazed. He knew not whither Com. of Arthur 39
they swerved and 6 Flying, ,, 119
great lords Banded, and so b o\it in open war.' ,, 237
neither clomb, nor b his neck. But 6 his very heart
in pining for it, Gareth and L. 56
That lookt ha If -dead, b bright, „ 685
there 6 a servingman Flying from out of the black wood, ,, 801
either spear Bent but not b, ,, 964
Clash'd his, and b it utterly to the hilt. ,, 1148
and thrice they b their spears. Marr. of Geraint 562
then b short, and down his enemy roll'd, Geraint and E. 160
Abash'd us both , and b my boast. Thy will ? ' Balin and Balan 71
I b upon thy rest, And now full loth ,,• 499
the storm B on the mountain and I cared not Merlin and V. 503
and the skull B from the nape, La.ncelot and E. 50
b a sudden-beaming tenderness Of manners , , 328
then out she 6: 'Gk)ing? „ 925
when the next sun b from underground, ,, 1137
B from the vast oriel-embowering vine ,, 1198
Stoopt, took, b seal, and read it ; ,, 1271
' But when the next day b from under ground — Holy Grail 338
Then blush'd and b the morning of the jousts, PelUas and E. 157
comes again ' — there she 6 short ; ,, 295
Reel'd in the smoke, b into flame, and fell. ,, 519
It chanced that both B into hall together, ,, 587
and the Red Knight B in upon me Last Tournament 72
B with a wet wind blowing, ,, 137
B up their sports, then slowly to her bower ,, 238
maid, who brook'd No silence, b it, Guinevere 160
storm of anger b From Guinevere, „ 361
there her voice h suddenly, , , 607
b the petty kings, and fought with Rome, Pass, of Arthur 68
wan wave 5 in among dead faces, ,, 130
while they h them, own'd me King. ,, 158
B the shield-wall, Batt. of Brunanbiirh 11
Brakest b thro' the scruple of my bond, Last Tournament 568
Bramble arm Red-rent with hooks of b, Holy Grail 211
and b's mixt And overgrowing them, Pelleas and E. 422
Bramble Rose B r's, faint and pale, A Dirge 30
Branch (s) (^ee a/so Willow-branches) Like to some
b of stars we see L. of Shalott Hi 11
B'es they bore of that enchanted stem, Lotos- Eaters 28
With winds upon the b, „ C. S. 27
curved b'es, fledged with clearest green, D, of F. Women 59
Branch
BrancAi (s) (contirmed) paused. And dropttheisheheld, Gardetwr's D. 157
Whose topmost b eg can discern The roofs Talking Oak 31
And Irom thy topmost b discern The roofs 95
From spray, and b, and stem, " iqq
^^f'f^ and shook holding the b, Enoch Arden 767
whirl d her white robe like a blossom'd b Princess iv 179
the b eg thereupon Spread out at top, 205
and shook the b'es of the deer " q^^ 98
??**ir.f ^^ *^^^l"^u°, ^'*f ^"'^^ '' 1^^ Mem. XV 13
On all the 6 e« of thy blood ; Ixxxiv 8
lie, while these long b'eg sway, Maud I xmu 29
Melody on 6 and melody m mid air. Gareth and L. 183
high on a 6 Hung it ji^^in and Balun 432
lore from the o, and cast on earth, 539
""^i^^I '■*i"T * ^'V'P* '"i *^® Tushins Merlin and V. 957
A terder fantasy of i and flower, Larvcelol and E. 11
putt d the swaying b es into smoke Rohi Grail 15
were our mothers b'es of one stem ? Lover's Tale u 25
and the 6 with bernes on it, . Coluvdncs 73
Golden b amid the shadows, To Virgil 27
Who lops the moulder d b away. Ha^ids all round 8
gliding thro the bes over-bower'd Death of (Jimne 6
Branch (verb) But b e.^ current yet in kindred veins. ' Princess ii 245
o er the friths that b and spread in Mem. , Con. 115
a name that i es o er the rest, Balin and Balan 182
Branch d cloisters, b hke mighty woods, Palace of Art 26
whisper of huge trees that b And blossom'd in
,.*nTu\- • r Enoch Arden h%h
that h Itself Fine as ice-fems Aylnvers Field 221
throve and b from clime to clime, In, Mem. cxviii 13
dress All b and flower'd with gold, Marr. of Geraint 631
forehead veins Bloated and b ; iMin and Balan 392
Branching: empires b, both, in lusty life !- W. to Marie Alex. 21
trace On paler heavens the b grace Of leafless elm, To Ulysses 15
Branch-work Beneath h-ir of costly sardonyx Palace 0/ Art 95
Brand (a mark) a part Falling had let appear
Rr»n//'/«^J!!.iw^~ / T . V .. Aijlnie,-'s Field 509
Brand (a sword) (Aee also Levin-brand) The b, the
buckler, and the spear- r,co Voices 129
Ihou therefore take my b Excalibur, M. d' Arthur 27
Ihere drew he forth the b Excalibur, 52
' And if indeed I cast the b away, ' " gs
The great 6 Made lightnings in the splendour !! 136
80 flash d and fell the b Excalibur : 142
The hard Vs shiver on the steel, Sir Galalmd 6
And, ringing, springs from b and mail ; 54
-6, mace and shaft, and shield- Prin^ss v 503
Arthur call d to stay the Vs Com. of Arthur 120
So this great b the king Took, 308
Flash b and lance, fall battleaxe " 486
Fall battleaxe, and flash b ! (repeat) ", 487, 490, 502
l^Jang battleaxe and clash b ! (repeat) 493 495 499
Gareth la^h'd so fiercely with his b Gareth and L. 968
bir Gareth s b Clash d his, 1147
neither hunting-dress Nor weapon, save a "
golden-hilted b, Marr. of Geraint 166
Swung from his b a windy buffet out Once, Gen-aint and E. 90
and tearing out of sheath The b, Balin and Balan 393
Where Arthur finds the b Excalibur. Holy Grail 253
1 he 0 Excalibur will be cast away. 257
Shield-breakings, and the clash of b\ Pass, of Arthur 109
o s that once had fought with Rome, I33
There drew he forth the b Excalibur, " 220
' And if indeed I cast the i away, " 256
The great b Made lightnings in the splendour '' 304
So flash'd and fell the b Excalibur : 3IO
Sons of Edward with hammer'd b's. Ualt. of Brunanburh 14
Brand (verb) power to burn and b His nothingness
into man. Maud I xmii 39
^us after, of whose fold we be : Merlin and V. 764
Jiarth and Hell will b your name. Forlorn 51
Brandagoraa King ^ of Latangor, Com. of Arthur \U
Brandish d caught him by the hilt, and b
him (repeat) M. d'AHhurUb,UO
caught him by the hilt, and b him (repeat) Pass, qf Arthur 313, 328
57
Breadth
Brandishing iJ in her band a dart Boddiceall
Brass crag-platform smooth as burnish'd b I chose. Palace of AH 5
iwo handfuls of white dust, shut in an urn
.«^*' , , , ,, Lotos - Eaters C.S. 68
A flying splendour out of b and steel, Princess vi 365
Brastias (a knight) Ulfius, and B, and Bedivere,
(repeat) ,^ ^ ^ , Cmn. of Arth^ir 1S6, 165, U6
Rr-ot T K """"i ^''','^y^i \^- Com. of Arthur 173
5^L r» h1? « tr 'n "". *"' * *' ' Spinster's S^s. 84
Brave (ac^j. Bthe Captain was : r/ie Captain 5
few his knights, however b they be- Com. of Arthur 252
but all b, all of one mmd with him ; 255
Truth-speaking b, good livers, Gareth and L. 424
ti she left Not even Lancelot b, Merlin and V. 805
All b, and many generous, and some chaste. 817
Each was as bin the fight v. ofMaeldune 5
Tir^i!'!'^x f^^^^tl V. . LocksleyH., Sixty m
Brave s) our Lawrence the best of the b : Def. if Lucknow 11
Follow d by the b of other lands, Qdl on Well. 194
whatsoe er He wrought of good or b Emlooue 76
Brave (verb) never : here I b the worst : ' Edwin Morris 118
However we b it out, we men are a little breed. Maud I iv 30
Braved She b a riotous heart in asking for it. Lancelot and E. 359
Bravery Lancelot, the flower of b, ng
5^11'/* ^ *'°''^^* with the /; among us. Def of Lucknow 71
R^II "^ ^feature wholly given to b's and wine, Marr. of Geraint 441
Brawl (verb) Cease to wail and b ! Two Voices 199
1 *f *t °^* ^^^^ *?? ^^""^ ™^y ^- ^a^«c« of A rt 210
eft the drunken king To b at Shushan Princess Hi 230
b Iheir rights or wrongs like potherbs ^ 458
our free press should cease to 6, ThiJrd of Feb. 3
Rr«ilJf fwu . ?°**^ ^^^S t^^y *• ^ii- Squabbles 20
Brawling brook o er a shingly bed B, Marr. of Geraint 249
x^^^^^^A their monstrous games ; St. Telemachus 40
Bray 'oud rung out the bugle's b's, Qriana 48
in the blast and b of the long horn Princess v 252
Brazen-headed O'erthwarted with the b-h spear (Enone 139
?«^^^.v * the belting wall of Cambalu, Columbitsm
Bread (^See also Bread) I speak the truth, as I live by b ! Lady Clare 26
Taking her 6 and theirs: Enoch ArdenlU
wine And b from out the houses brought, Spec, of Iliad 6
chalk and alum and plaster are sold to the poor for b, Maud I i 39
Where b and baken meats and good red wine (hireth and L. 1190
l!iiH *■ !f f^u ^^®u ' "^ jnchet b. Ma,i: of Geraint 389
sold and sold had bought them b: 541
smote itself into the b, and went ; iMy Grail 467
But, 6, merely for 5. Sir J. Oldcastleli.
J* — B left after the blessing ? n ro
now He veils His flesh in b, body and b " i f,7
'N06, no 6. (repeat) "159 |g(
Hast thou brought b with thee ? " ' 198
I have not broken b for fifty hours. " 199
For holding there was b where b was none— No b. " 2OI
I am not like to die for lack of b. " 205
B enough for his need till the labourless day V. of Maddune 86
rtream, now and then, of a hand giving b and wine. Tlie Wreck 114
Master scrimps his haggard sempstress of her
Tl™a,«^*'M^\ ,, Locksley II., Sixty 2Q1
Bread Mun be a guvness, lad, or summut, and addle
R^a^iif *»■ r i. • ,. , , , . ^^- J'^(iJ'»i^r, N. S. 26
Breadth A s of tropic shade and palms in cluster, Locksleu Hall 160
left but narrow ft to left and right iJnoch Ardm 674
shattenng on black blocks A b of thunder. Prin^,>, Hi 292
whence they need More b of culture : ^ 188
ab Of Autumn, dropping fruits of power : " ,.;; 54
She mental b, nor fail in childward care, " ,,,v 28S
tower Half-lost in belts of hop and 6's of wheat ; " Con 4^
w_^h all thy b and height Of foliage. In Mem. tol
highway running by it leaves a 6 Of sward to left
tJ^^^'^^^l A * ^ . Sisters (E. a7id E.) 80
she wiTnll fh^ f f '*"""*' ^^- V Lucknow 23
bhe with all the b of man, Locksley II., Sixt.y 48
Break
58
Breaker
Break (b) Across a b on the mist-wreathen isle Hiioch Ardoi 632
At b of day the College Portress came : Princess ii 15
I climb'd the roofs at h of day ; The Daisy 61
Break (verb) {See also Bre3,k) passion fann'd, About
thee b's and dances : Madeline 30
breaking heart that will not b, Oriana 64
athlete, strong to b or bind All force Palme of Art 153
' No voice b's thro' the stillness , , 259
You thought to 6 a country heart L. G. V. de Vere 3
Nor would I b for your sweet sake ,, 13
call me loud when the day begins to b : May Queen 10
lest a cry Should h his sleep by night, Walk, to the Mail 74
same old sore 6's out from age to age ,, 79
Faltering, would b its syllables, Love and Duty 39
He b's the hedge : he enters there : Day-Dm., Arrival 18
But b it. In the name of wife, ,, U Envoi 53
B up the heavens, 0 Lord ! St. Agnes' Eve 21
barren commonplaces b In full and kindly blossom. Wm Water. 23
B lock and seal : betray the trust : You might have won 18
B, b, b, On thy cold gray stones. Break, break, etc. 1
B, b, b, At the foot of thy crags, ,, 13
But had no heart to b his purposes To Annie, Enoch Arden 155
I think your kindness b's me down ; ,, 318
Help me not to J in upon her peace. ,, 787
Which b's all bonds but ours ; Aylmer's Field 425
Who broke the bond which they desired tob, „ 778
trifle makes a dream, a trifle b's.' Sea Dreams 144
that b Body toward death, Lticretius 153
which b's As I am breaking now ! ,, 241
In iron gauntlets : b the council up.' Princess i 89
wherefore b her troth ? ,,95
To b my chain, to shake my mane : u ** ^24
Kill up with pity, b us with ourselves— „ Hi 258
tho' the rough kex b The starr'd mosaic, ,, iv 77
did I b Your precinct ; ,, 421
On me, me, me, the storm first b's: „ 499
You that have dared to b our bound, ,, 539
she's yet a colt — Take, b her : „ v 456
takes, and b's, and cracks, and splits, ,, 527
fear we not To 6 them more in their behoof, ,, to 61
Nemesis B from a darken'd future, ,, 175
We b our laws with ease, ,, 323
your Highness b's with ease The law ,, 325
roar that b's the Pharos from his base ,, 339
sorrowing in a pause I dared not b ; „ vii 249
b the shore, and evermore Make and b. Ode on Well. 260
War, who b's the converse of the wise ; Third of Feb. 8
Tho' all the storm of Europe on us 6 ; ,, 14
B, happy land, into earlier flowers ! W. to Alexandra 10
everywhere, The blue heaven b, W. to Marie Alex. 43
To b the blast of winter, stand ; To F. D. Ma^irice 22
the bud ever b's into bloom on the tree, The Met 32
b the works of the statuary, Boddicea 64
immeasurable heavens B open to their highest. Spec, of Iliad 15
Must I take you and b you, Window, The Answer 3
I must take you, and b you, ,, 5
take — b, b — B — you may b my heart. ,, 7
J3, 6 and all's done. ,, 10
B, thou deep vase of chilling tears, In Mem. iv 11
To evening, but some heart did b. „ viS
On the bald street b's the blank day. „ vii 12
B's hither over Indian seas, ,, xxvi 14
that my hold on life would b Before I hoard ,, xxviii 15
That 6's about the dappled pools : ,, xlix i
Who b's his birth's invidious bar, ,, Ixvv 5
and b The low beginnings of content. , , Ixxxiv 47
And b the livelong summer day ,, Ixxxix 31
b's The rocket molten into flakes Of crimson ,, rxviii 30
Or into silver arrows b Tho sailing moon ,, ci 15
the rolling brine That b's the coast. ,, eoii 15
Will let his coltish nature b „ cxi 7
And every thought b's out a rose. ,, cxxii 20
million emeralds b from tho ruby -budded lime Maud I iv 1
Can b her word were it even for me ? ,, xvi 29
B not, 0 woman'e-heart, Ded. of Idylls 44
Break (verb) {continued) B not, for thou art Royal, but
endure, Ded. of Idylls i^
' Climb not lest thou b thy neck, Gareth and L. 54
To 5 him from the intent to which he grew, ,, 140
so besieges her To b her will, and make her wed ,, 617
Running too vehemently to b upon it. Marr. of Qeraint 78
Here often they 6 covert at our feet.' ,, 183
Then will I fight him, and will b his pride, ,, 221
and in April suddenly B's from a coppice ,, 339
That lightly ?/s a faded flower-sheath, ,, 365
fight and ?) his pride and have it of him. ,, 416
I will b his pride, and learn his name, , ,, 424
In next day's tourney I may 6 his pride.' ,, 476
b perforce Upon a head so dear in thunder, Geraint and E. 12
as a man upon his tongue May 6 it, ,, 43
chance That 6',s upon them perilously, ,, 354
nature's prideful sparkle in the blood B into
furious flame ; , , 828
b Into some madness ev'n before the Queen ? ' Balin and Balan 229
and b the King And all his Table.' , , 458
knight, we 6 on thy sweet rest, ,, 470
now full loth am I to fi thy dream, ,, 500
Began to b her sports with graver fits. Merlin and V. 180
in the slippery sand before it i's ? ,, 293
fled from Arthur's court To b the mood. , , 298
that wave about to b upon me And sweep me , , 302
tiny-trumpeting gnat can b our dream When
sweetest ; Lancelot and E. 137
crying Christ and him. And b them ; ,, 306
Would he b faith with one I may not name ? , , 685
discourtesy To blunt or 6 her passion.' ,, 974
(He meant to 6 the passion in her) ,, 1079
Would shun to 6 those bounds of courtesy ,, 1220
To b her passion, some discourtesy ,, 1302
I needs must b These bonds that so defame me : , , 1420
b thro' all, till one will crown thee king Holy Grail 161
' I never heard his voice But long'd to b away. Pclleas and E. 256
said Tristram, ' I would b thy head. Last Tournament 268
and after the great waters b Whitening ,, 464
make the smouldering scandal b and blaze Guinevere 91
Stands in a wind, ready to b and fly, ,, 365
b the heathen and uphold the Christ, ,, 470
— let my heart B rather — Lover's Talei 738
Not to 6 in on what I say by word ,, iv 352
B, diviner light ! Sisters (E. and E.) 23
one of those who would b their jests on the
dead, In tlie Child. Hasp. 8
B thro' the yews and cypre.ss of thy grave, Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 12
would b down and raze 'The blessed tomb Columbus 98
Years that make And b the vase of clay, Ancient Sage 92
B into ' Thens ' and ' Whens ' ,,104
when the babblings b the dream. ,, 107
Scarce feels the senses b away ,, 152
shell must b before the bird can fly. ,, 154
B the State, the Church, the Throne, LocJcdey H., Sixty 138
thro' this midnight b's the sun Pref. Poem Broth. S. 21
Might b thro' clouded memories Demeter and P. 10
And b's into the crocus-purple hour ,, 50
b The sunless halls of Hades into Heaven ? ,, 135
b's her latest earthy link With me to-day. The Ring 47
Your ' Miriam b's' — is making ,, 50
No pliable idiot I to i my vow ; ,, 402
made one barren effort to b it at the last. Happy 72
groundflame of the crocus b's the mould, Prog, of Sirring 1
The mortal hillock. Would b into blossom ; Merlin and the G. 108
blight thy hope or b thy rest. Faith 2
Bre9,k (verb) fur I beant a-gawin' to b my rule. JV. Farmer, 0. S. 4
I weant b rules fur Doctor, ,, 67
B me a bit o' the esh for his 'ead, ,, If. S. 41
Tis'n them as 'as munny as b's into 'ouses ,, 45
an' sweiir'd as I'd b ivry stick North. Cobbler 35
' tha mun b 'im off bit by bit.' ,, 88
runs out when ya b's the shell. Village Wife 4
Breaker (one who breaks) A ^i of the bitter news
from home, Aylmer's Field 594
f0^
Breaker
59
Breath
Breaker (one who breaks) (mntinued) Nor those horn-
handed b's of the glebe, Princess ii 159
Breaker (wave) long swells of b sweep The nutmeg
rocks The Voyage 39
following up And flying the white h, Enoch Arden 21
hard upon the cry of ' b's ' came ,, 548
a ridge Of b issued from the belt, Sea Dreams 212
The mellow b murmur'd Ida. Princess iv 436
roaring b's boom and blanch on the precipices, Boadicea 76
The b breaking on the beach. In Meni. Ixxi 16
And the fringe Of that great b, Com. of Arthur 387
And steps that met the b ! Soly Grail 816
chafed 6 s of the outer sea Sank powerless, Lover's Tale i 8
the b's on the shore Sloped into louder surf : ,, Hi 14
Javelins over The jarring b, Batt. of Brunanburh 97
came thro' the roar of the b a whisper, Despair 13
The b's lash the shores : Pref. Poem Broth. S. 2
Breaker-beaten For leagues along that 6-6 coast Enoch Arden 51
Breakest so thou b Arthur's music too.' Last Tournament 266
Breaking (part) (See also Ever-breaking) Just
6 over land and main ? Ttoo Voices 84
heart is 6, and my eyes are dim, CEnone 32
They say his heart is 6, mother — May Queen 22
The thunders b at her feet : 0/ old sat Freedom 2
while on all sides 6 loose Her household Hod The Goose 53
Old elms came b from the vine, Amphion 45
Long lines of cliff 6 have left a chasm ; Enoch Arden 1
Nor let him be, but often 6 in, , , 701
he saw An end, a hope, a light 6 upon him. Aylnier's Field 480
b that, you made and broke your dream : Sea Dreams 143
which breaks As I am 6 now ! Lucretius 241
nation weeping, and 6 on my rest ? Ode on Well. 82
B their mailed fleets and armed towers, Ode Inter. Exhib. 39
Or b into song by fits, In Mem. xxiii 2
The breaker 6 on the beach. ,, IxxilQ
And b let the splendour fall „ Con. 119
why come you so cruelly meek, B a slumber Maud I Hi 2
B up my dream of delight. ,, xix 2
and 6 into song Sprang out, Com. of Arthur 320
heard The world's loud whisper b into storm, Marr. of Geraint 27
Then 6 his command of silence given, Geraint and E. 390
Vivien 6 in upon him, said : Merlin and V. 600
Outram and Havelock 6 their way through Def. of Lucknow 96
0 young life B with laughter De. Prof. Two (?. 18
Who b in upon us yestermorn, Akbar's Di-eam 114
Breaking (s) (See also Shield-breaking) Until the b
of the light, Clear-headed fi-iend 25
Yours came but from the 6 of a glass, Sea Dreams 248
crave His pardon for thy 6 of his laws. Gareth and L. 986
Red ruin, and the b up of laws, Guinevere 426
making a new link B an old one ? The Ring 51
save 6 my bones on the rack ? By an Evolution. 9
Breast (s) Naiad Throbbing in mild unrest holds him
beneath in her b. Leonine Eleg. 12
Showering thy gleaned wealth into my open 6 Ode to Memory 23
Fold thy palms across thy b, A Dirge 2
Take the heart from out my 6. A deliiie 8
To find my heart so near the beauteous 6 Tkefo^-m, thefwm 7
Dominion in the head and 6.' Tivo Voices 21
' His palms are folded on his 6 : ,, 247
A vague suspicion of the 6 : ,, 336
fiU'd the 6 with purer breath. Miller's D. 92
1 crush'd them on my 6, my mouth ; Fatima 12
Over her snow-cold 6 and angry cheek CEnone 142
His ruddy cheek upon my 6, The Sisters 20
hundred winters snow'd upon his b. Palace of Art 139
as I lie upon your 6 — May Queen, Con. 59
polish'd argent of her 6 to sight D. of F. Women 158
and my true 6 Bleedeth for both ; To J. S. 62
So muscular he spread, so broad of b. Gardenen-'s D. 8
wave of such a 6 As never pencil drew. ,, 139
breathing health and peace upon her b : Audley Court 68
An acorn in her 6. Talking Oak 228
crimson comes upon the robin's 6 ; Locksley Hall 17
press me from the mother's 6. ,,90
Breast (s) (continued) and he bears a laden 6, Locksley Hall 143
in its 6 a thunderbolt. ' ,, 192
old Earl's daughter died at my 6 ; Lady Clare 25
Her arms across her b she laid ; Beggar Maid 1
I shook her 6 with vague alarms — The Letters 38
silent court of justice in his 6, Sea Dreams 174
stood out the b's, The b's of Helen, Lwretius 60
blasting the long quiet of my 6 ,, 162
Beat 6, tore hair, cried out upon herself , , 277
think I bear that heart within my 6, Princess ii 334
Rest, rest, on mother's b, ,, Hi 11
My secret, seem'd to stir within my 6 ; ,,44
from my 6 the involuntary sigh Brake, ,, 191
I smote him on the b ; ,, iv 164
now her 6, Beaten with some great passion ,, 387
Her noble heart was molten in her 6 ; ,, ri 119
if you loved The 6 that fed or arm , , 181
Thy helpless warmth about my barren 6 , , 202
something wild within her 6, ,, mi 237
Sent from a dewy b a cry for light : „ 253
Chop the b's from off the mother, Boadicea 68
And dead calm in that noble b In Mem. xi 19
And onward drags a labouring 6, ,, xo 18
Be tenants of a single b, , , xvi 3
Against the circle of the 6, ,, xlv 3
A faithful answer from the b, ,, Ixxxv 14
That warms another living b. ,, 116
They haunt the silence of the 6, ,, xciv 9
And woolly b's and beaded eyes ; , , xcv 12
A single murmur in the 6, , , civ 7
and in my 6 Spring wakens too ; ,, cxvVJ
And enter in at 6 and brow, ,, cxxii\\
A warmth within the b would melt ,, caxciv 13
opulence jewel-thick Sunn'd itself on his 6 Maud I xiii 13
Lord of the pulse that is lord of her 6, ,, rm 13
ruddy shield on the Lion's b. ,, III vi 14
o'er her 6 floated the sacred fish ; Gareth and L. 223
The massive square of his heroic 6, Man: of Geraint 75
' O noble b and all-puissant arms, ,, 86
weep True tears upon his broad and naked 6, ,, 111
thro' his manful b darted the pang ,, 121
Sank her sweet head upon her gentle 6 ; ,, 527
fell'd him, and set foot upon his 6, ,, 574
Drave the long spear a cubit thro' his b Geraint and E. 86
Her arms upon her 6 across, Merlin and V. 910
pleasant b of waters, quiet bay, Lovet-'s Tale i 6
anger falls aside And withers on the 6 of peaceful love ; ,, 10
Her 6 as in a shadow-prison, „ iv 58
her b Hard-heaving, and her eyes upon her feet, , , 307
her thin hands crost on her 6 — In the Child. Hosp, 39
kill Their babies at the 6 Columbus 180
And from her virgin 6, and virgin eyes Tiresias 46
ah, fold me to your 6 ! The Flight 5
pluck from this true b the locket that I wear, ,, 33
well-used to move the public 6. To W. C. Macready 3
gave Thy 6 to ailing infants in the night, Demeter and P. 66
my loving head upon your leprous b. Happy 26
let me lean my head upon your 6. Romney's R. 154
blade that had slain my husband thrice thro' his b. Bandit's Death 34
Breast (verb) b's the blows of circumstance. In Mem. Ixiv 7
Breast-l3one white 6-6, and barren ribs of Death, Gareth and L. 1382
Breast-deep all night long b<l in corn. Princess ii 387
Breasted See Full-breasted, Man-breasted, White-
breasted.
Breast-high B-h in that bright line Pelleas and E. 56
Breath (See cdso Morning-breath) Her subtil, warm,
and golden 6, Su2)2}. Confessions 60
6 Of the fading edges of box beneath, A spirit liaunts 18
There is frost in your 6 Poet's Mind 17
the 6 Of the lilies at sunrise 1 Adeline 36
I lose my colour, I lose my 6, Eleiinore 137
No life that breathes with human 6 Two Voices 395
fill'd the breast with purer 6. Miller's D. 92
As half-asleep his b he drew, Tlie Sisters 28
Long labour unto aged 6, Lotos-Eater's, O. S. 85
Breath
60
Breathed
Breath (continued) Dan Chaucer, the first warbler,
whose sweet b D, of F. Women 5
Drew forth the poison with her balmy b, ,, 271
but empty b And rumours of a doubt ? M. d' Arthur 99
spoke King Arthur, drawing thicker b: ,, 148
Clothed with his b, and looking, ,, 182
my ears could hear Her lightest b ; Edvnn Morris 65
but ever at a 6 She linger'd, Godiva 44
My b to heaven like vapour goes : St. Agnes' Eve 3
' Greet her with applausive o. Vision of Sin 135
While we keep a little b ! „ 192
The b of heaven came continually Enoch Arden 535
my latest b Was spent in blessing her ,, 883
a low b Of tender air made tremble The Brook 201
ice-ferns on January panes Made by a b. Aybner's Field 223
on a sudden rush'd Among us, out of b. Princess iv 375
b of life ; O more than poor men wealth, ,, 459
body that never had drawn a b. Grandmother 62
0 sweet and bitter in a 6, In Mem, Hi 3
And scarce endure to draw the b, „ xx 15
And so the Word had b, and wrought „ xxxvi 9
This use may lie in blood and b, „ xlv 13
spirit does but mean the b I know no more.' ,, lvi7
Death's twin-brother, times my b ; ,, Ixviii 2
new life that feeds thy b Throughout In Mem. Ixxxvi 10
East and West, without a b, In Mem. xcv 62
To where he breathed his latest b, „ xeoiii 5
Who wakenest with thy balmy b „ xcix 13
1 trust I have not wasted b: ,, cxx 1
Be quicken'd with a livelier b, , , cxxii 13
Awe-stricken b's at a work divine, Maud I xl7
Prickle my skin and catch my 6, ,, odv36
Catch not my b, 0 clamorous heart, ,, xvi 31
Not die ; but live a life of truest b, Maud I xviii 53
Seal'd her mine from her first sweet b. ,, xix 41
mix'd my b With a loyal people shouting ,, III vi 34
with the might and b of twenty boys.' Gareth and L. 1106
Sent all his heart and b thro' all the horn. „ 1369
Here ceased the kindly mother out of b ; Man: of Geraint 732
fits of prayer, at every stroke a b. Geraint and E. 155
Sweet lady, never since I first drew b ,, 619
and the b Of her sweet tendance ,, 925
b's of anger puflF'd Her fairy nostril Merlin and V. 848
At last he got his b and answer'd, ' One, Lancelot and E. 422
whereat she caught her 6 ; ,, 623
blow with b, or touch with hand. Holy Grail 114
She felt the King's 6 wander o'er her neck, Guinevere 582
but empty b And rumours of a doubt ? Pass, of Arthur 267
spoke King Arthur, drawing thicker b : „ 316
Clothed with his b, and looking, „ 350
I feel thy b ; I come, great Mistress Lover's Tale i 21
Thy b 18 of the pinewood ; ,,23
faints, and hath no pulse, no b — „ 268
rose as it were b and steam of gold, ,, 402
my name was borne Upon her b. ,, 444
by that name I moved upon her b; ,, 560
Love drew in her b In that close kiss, ,, 816
about my brow Her warm b floated ,, H 141
at once, soul, life And /> and motion, ,, 195
And parted lips which drank her b, ,, 204
Took the b from our sails, and we stay'd. Tlve Revenge 42
but never a murmur, a b — V. of Maeldune 19
their b met us out on the seas, ,, 37
thro' life to my latest b ; T/iC Wreck 79
thro' the roar of the breaker a whisper, a b, Dexpair 13
And now one b of cooler air Ancient Sage 117
A ft, a whisper — some divine farewell — ,, 225
to feel his b Upon my cheek — The Fiigld 45
b that past With all the cold of winter. The Ring 32
and felt An icy b play on mo, „ 131
an icy b, As from the grating of a sepulchre, „ 399
leaves her bare To b's of balmier air ; Prog, of Spi-iiig 13
Blown into glittering by the popular b, Romney's R, 49
a b From some fair dawn beyond Far-far-away 10
oi>en-door'd To overy b from beavon, Ahbai's Dream 180
Breathe in her first sleep earth b's stilly :
Or b into the hollow air,
odorous wind B's low between the sunset
But b it into earth and close it up
'Twere better not to b or speak,
'To b and loathe, to live and sigh.
No life that b's with human breath
I least should b a thought of pain,
wind b's low with mellower tone :
How hard he b's !
to sit, to sleep, to wake, to b.'
I do not b, Not whisper, any murmur
When that, which b's within the leaf,
As tho' to b were life.
I yearn to b the airs of heaven
A carefuller in peril, did not b
And b's in April-autumns.
love-whispers may not b Within this vestal limit,
Low, low, b and blow,
let us b for one hour more in Heaven '
' Alas your Highness b's full East,'
Where shall I b ?
that each May b himself, and quick !
b upon my brows ;
To let the people h ?
diviner air B thro' the world and change
To b thee over lonely seas.
That 6 a thousand tender vows,
The slightest air of song shall b
And b's a novel world, the while
And, while we 6 beneath the sun.
To b my loss is more than fame,
summer's hourly-mellowing change May b,
Leonine Eleg. 7
Supp. Confessions 58
Elednore 124
Wan Scidptor 12
Two Voices 94
„ 104
395
Miller's D. 26
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 102
D. if the 0. Fear 37
Edwin Morris 40
St. S. Stylites 21
TalUng Oak 187
Ulysses 24
Sir Galahad 63
Enoch Arden 50
The Brook 196
Princess ii 221
, , Hi 3
69
231
«77
316
,, vii 353
„ Con. 104
W. to Marie Alex. 44
In Mem. xvii 4
,, xlix 7
J) CXVt V
,, la^v 14
,, Ixxvii 16
,, xci 10
I find no place that does not 6 Some gracious
memory ,, c 3
Nor landmark b's of other days, ,, civ 11
Thro' which the spirit b's no more ? • ,, cv20
For tho' mjr lips may b adieu, ,, cxxiii 11
Left the still King, and passing forth to b. Com, of Arthur 369
only b Short fits of prayer, Geraint and E. 154
' You b but accusation vast and vague. Merlin and V. 701
No keener hunter after glory b's. Lancelot and E. 156
there b's not one of you Will deem this prize , , 540
' Look, He haunts me — I cannot b — Pelleas and E. 227
thought I could not b in that fine air Guinevere 645
B but a little on me. Lover's Tale i 26
outward circling air wherewith 16, ,, 167
& with her as if in heaven itself ; ,, 391
Which pass with that which b's them ? ,, 481
B, diviner Air ■ Sisters (E. and E.) 13
none could b Within the zone of heat ; Columbus 52
can I b divorced from the Past ? Despair 113
And all that b are one Slight ripple Ancient Sage 188
who b the balm Of summer-winters To Ulysses 10
Breathed B low around the rolling earth The Winds, etc. 3
She b in sleep a lower moan, Mariana in tite S. 45
Rose slowly to a music slowly b, CEnone 41
B, like the covenant of a (Jod, Gardener's D. 209
I J In some new planet : Edunn Morris 114
I b upon her eyes Thro' all the summer Talking Oak 210
tho low wind hardly b for fear. Godiva 55
on him b Far purelier in his rushings Aylmer's Field 457
while I J in sight of haven, he. Poor fellow, The Brook 157
he had b the Proctor's dogs ; Princess, Pro, 113
And look on Spirits b away, In Mem. xl 2
That /» beneath the Syrian blue : ,, liiVl
Where all things round mo b of him. ,, Ixxxv 32
To where he b his latest breath, , , xcviii 5
He 6 the spirit of the song ; ,, cxxvlO
living words of life B in her ear, ,, Con. 53
Whenever slander b against the King — Com. of Arthur 177
God hath b a secret thing. ,, 501
twice they fought, and twice they b, Man: of Geraint 567
Queen's fair name was b upon, Geraint and E. 951
,B in a dismal whisper * It is truth.* Balin and Balan 527
Breathed
61
Bridal-gift
Breathed {continued) emerald center'd in a sun Of silver
rays, that lighten'd as he 6 ; Lancelot and E, 296
Whereof the chill, to him who b it, Pass, of Arthur 96
Has b a race of mightier mountaineers. Montenegro 14
No sound is b so potent to coerce, Tiredas 120
warm winds had gently b us away from the land — The Wreck 63
Breather those we call the dead Are b's of an ampler
day In Mem. cxviii 6
Breathuiigr {See also Hard-breathing) B Light
against thy face, Adeline 56
Old letters, o of her worth, Mariana in the S. 62
A hint, a whisper b low. Two Voices 434
B like one that hath a weary dream. Lotos-Eaters 6
spoke King Arthur, b heavily : M. d^ Arthur 113
answer made King Arthur, o hard : „ 162
alighted from the boat. And b of the sea. A\vdley Court 8
* Sleep, b health and peace upon her breast : ,,68
Sleep, b love and trust against her lip : ,, 69
her b's are not heard In palace chambers Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 17
warm-blue Vs of a hidden hearth Broke Aylmer's Field 155
like a beast hard-ridden, b hard. „ 291
b down From over her arch'd brows, Princess ii 38
B and sounding beauteous battle, ,, v 161
In Angel instincts, b Paradise, ,, vii 321
Closer is He than b, and nearer than hands High. Pantheism 12
Would b thro' his lips impart In Mem. xvivi 15
slowly b bare The round of space, ,, Ixxxvi 4
By meadows b of the past, ,, occix 7
Bright English lily, b a prayer Maud 1 xix 55
hear him b low and equally. Geraint and E. 372
she glided out Among the heavy Vs of the house, „ 402
Beside the placid Vs of the King, Ouinevere 69
spoke King Arthur, b heavily : Pass, of Arthur 281
answer made King Arthur, b hard : , , 330
b on esich other, Dreaming together Lover's 'tale i 261
and joy In b nearer heaven ; „ 389
6 hard at the approach of Death, — ,, 585
Is b in his sleep, Earlv Spring 23
changest, b it, the sullen wind. Prog, of Spring 110
Breathing-Bpace ballad or a song To give us b-s.' Princess, Pro. 242
BreathiBg- while Except when for a ft-w at eve, Aylmer's Field ^^9
Bred (See also Home-bred, Wisdom-bred) Two
children in one hamlet born and b ; Circumstance 8
upon the board, And b this change ; (Enone 227
for his sake I b His daughter Dora : - Dora 19
not being 6 To barter, Enoch Arden 249
A CITY clerk, but gently bom and b ; Sea Dreams 1
her will B will in me to overcome Princess vZbl
From out the doors where I was b, In Mem. ciii 2
'e wur burn an' b i' the 'ouse. Spinster's S.'s 69
opiate then B this black mood ? Momney's R. 62
Brede in glowing gauze and golden b. Princess vi 134
Breed (b) looks not like the common b That with the
napkin dally ; Will Water. 117
In doubt if you be of our Barons' b — Third of Feh. 32
we men are a little b. Maud I iv 30
Breed (verb) Assurance only 6's resolve.' Two Voices SlSi
graze and wallow, b and sleep ; Palace of Art 202
like h's like, they say : Walk, to the Mail 63
could he understand how money b's, The Brook 6
much loth to b Dispute betwixt myself Princess i 156
in thunderstorms, And b up warriors ! „ v 440
earth's embrace May 6 with him, In Mem. Ixxxii 4
Breeding Softness h scorn of simple life. To the Queen ii 53
Breeze {See also Biver-breeze, South-breeze) The
Vs pause and die, Claribel 2
Low-flowing b's are roaming the broad valley Leonine Eleg. 1
When the 6 of a joyful dawn blew free Arabian Nights 1
fann'd With b's from our oaken glades, Eleiinore 10
Coming in the scented b, ,,24
Little h's dusk and shiver L. of Slialott ill
And heard her native b's pass, Maria/tva in the S. 43
A b thro' all the garden swept. Day -Dm., Revival 6
Warm broke the b against the brow, The Voyage 9
Low b's fann'd the belfry bars, The Letters 43
Breeze {continued) Made noise with bees and h from
end to end. Princess, Pro. 88
long b's rapt from inmost south ,, iv 431
roll'd With music in the growing 6 of Time, ,, m 56
such a b Compell'd thy canvas, In Mem. xvii 1
all the bugle Vs blew ReveilMe ,, Ixviii 7
And round thee with the b of song ,, Ixxv 11
A 6 began to tremble o'er The large leaves ,, xcvM
And all the b of Fancy blows, ,, cxxii 17
tells The joy to every wandering b ; ,, Con. 62
blown by the 5 of a softer clime, Maud I iv 4
sighing for Lebanon In the long b ,, ocviii 16
For a 6 of morning moves, ,, xxii 7
Drooping and beaten by the b, Lover's Tale i 700
Thoughts of the Vs of May blowing Def. of Lucknow 83
sat each on the lap of the b; V. of Maeldune 38
a balmier b curl'd over a peacefuller sea, The Wreck 133
lark has past from earth to Heaven upon the
morning b ! The Flight 62
Flies back in fragrant b's to display Prog, of Spring 64
Brendan (Irish Saint) who had sail'd with St. B
of yore, V. of Maeldune 115
Brethren {See also Brother) so that all My b
marvell'd greatly. St. S. Stylites 69
And of her b, youths of puissance ; Princess i 37
Not ev'n her brother Arac, nor the twins Her b, ,, 154
The b of our blood and cause, ,, vi 71
To where her wounded 6 lay ; ,, 90
0 let me have him with my b here ,, 123
bite And pinch their b in the throng. Lit. Squabbles 7
grieve Thy 6 with a fruitless tear ? In Mem. Iviii 10
till Doubt and Death, 111 6, ,, Ixxxvi 12
both my b are in Arthur's hall, Gareth and L. 82
b, and a fourth And of that four the mightiest, , , 614
younger b have gone down Before this youth ; ,, 1102
to mar the boast Thy b of thee make — „ 1243
my three b bad me do it, ,, 1410
Among his burnish'd b of the pool ; Marr. of Geraint 650
B, to right and left the spring, Balin and Balan 25
Arthur lightly smote the 6 down, ,, 41
Thy chair, a grief to all the 6, ,, 78
My b have been all my fellowship ; Lancelot and E. 672
came her b saying, ' Peace to thee, „ 996
those two b slowly with bent brows Accompanying, ,, 1138
So those two b from the chariot took ,, 1146
friends in testimony, Her b, and her father, ,, 1300
Where all the b are so hard. Holy Grail 618
Also the b, King and Atheling, Batt. of Brurmnburh 100
Breton on the B strand ! B, not Briton ; Maud II ii 29
Back from the ^ coast, ,, 43
touching B sands, they disembark'd. Merlin and V. 202
cried the B, ' Look, her hand is red ! Last Tournament 412
Breviary read but on my b with ease. Holy Grail 545
Brew'd found a witch Who b the philtre Luaretius 16
Brewer gloomy b's soul Went by me. Talking Oak 55
Brewis "The kitchen b that was ever supt Gareth and L. 781
Briar {See also Brier) bur and brake and b, Day-Dm,, Sleep. P. 46
Bribe a costly b To guerdon silence. Princess i 203
which for b had wink'd at wrong, Geraint and E. 939
Bribed B with large promises the men Marr. of Geraint 453
Brick When we made Vs in I^ypt. Princess iv 128
mantles all the mouldering Vs — Locksley H., Sixty 257
as graw'd hall ower the h ; Owd Roil 26
'card the Vs an' the baulks , , 109
Brickwork Tudor-chimnied bulk Of mellow b Edwin Atorris 12
Bridal (adj.) Leapt lightly clad in b white — Lomer's Tale Hi 44
Thy Soldier-brother's h orange-bloom Break Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 11
The b garland falls upon the bier, D. of the Duke of O. 1
Bridal (a) Then reign the world's great Vs, Princess vii 294
Evil haunts The birth, the b ; In Mem. xcviii 14
Memories of b, or of birth, „ xcix 15
Will clothe her for her b's like the sun.' Marr. of Geraint 231
clothed her for her Vs like the sun ; , , 836
Bridal-gift poor bride Gives her harsh groom for b-g
a scourge ; Princess v 378
Bridal music
62
Brief
Bridal music No h m this ! But fear not you ! The Ring 474
Bridal-time birds make ready for their h-t Sisters {E. and E. ) 71
Bride (See aho Harlot-bride, Widow-bride) like
a 6 of old In triumph led, Ode to Memory 75
For merry b's are we : Sea-fairies 33
pierced thy heart, my love, my h, Oi'iana 42
Thy heart, my life, my love, my b, „ 44
happy bridesmaid makes a happy b.' Tlie Bridesmaid 4
happy bridesmaid, make a happy 6.' (repeat) ,, 8 14
down I went to fetch my b : Miller's D. 145
far-renowned b's of ancient song D. of F. Women 17
Hope and Memory, spouse and b, On a MourTier 23
And gain her for my b. Talking Oah 284
' Who is this ? behold thy b,' Love and Didy 49
Draw me, thy b, a glittering star, St Agnes' Eve 23
The Bridegroom with his b\ ,,36
Passionless b, divine Tranquillity, Lucretius 266
I myself, my h once seen, Princess i 72
But chafing me on fire to find my b) ,, 166
help my prince to gain His rightful b, ,, Hi 161
/ bound by precontract Your b, „ iv 542
To fight in tourney for my b, }> *' 353
the poor b Gives her harsh groom ,, 377
My b. My wife, my life. ,, vii 359
Blissful 6 of a blissful heir, W. to Alexandra 27
B of the heir of the kings of the sea — ,, 28
mother unto mother, stately b, W. to Marie Alex. 9
Be cheer'd with tidings of the b, In Mem. xl 23
Be sometimes lovely like a 6, ,, UxQ
Behold their b's in other hands ; „ xc 14
And I must give away the b; , , Con. 42
0 happy hour, behold the b ,,69
As drinking health to b and groom ,, 83
Bound for the Hall, and I think for a b, Maud I x26
My b to be, my evermore delight, ,, xviii 73
He linkt a dead man there to a spectral 6 ; ,, TIv 80
Some comfortable b and fair, Gareth and L. 94
tall and marriageable, Ask'd for a & ; ,, 103
red-faced 6 who knew herself so vile, ,, 110
doom'd to be the b of Night and Death ; ,, 1396
ere you wed with any, bring your b, Marr. of Geraint 228
mended fortunes and a Prince's 6 : ,, 718
sweeter than the b of Cassivelaun, ,, 744
promise, that whatever b I brought, ,, 783
did her honour as the Prince's 6, , , 835
found his own dear 6 propping his head, Geraint and E. 584
stainless b of stainless King — Merlin and V. 81
glowing on him, like a b's On her new lord, ,, 616
he never wrong'd his b. I know the tale. ,, 729
Sees what his fair b is and does, ,, 782
Hold her a wealthy b within thine arms, Holy Grail 621
makest broken music with thy b, Last Tournament 264
Isolt of Britain and his b, „ 408
twain had fallen out about the b „ 545
Lionel, the happy, and her, and her, his b ! Lover's Tale i 755
cold heart or none— No b for me. Sisters (E. and E.) 202
placed My ring upon the finger of my b. ,, 214
Till that dead bridesmaid, meant to be ray b, ,, 264
a heedless and innocent b — Tlie Wreck 13
not Love but Hate that weds a h against her will ; The Flight 32
would I were there, the friend, the b, the wife, ,, 43
6 who stabb'd her bridegroom on her bridal night — ,, 57
one has come to claim his b, Locksley H,, Sixty 263
for evermore The B of Darkness.' Demeter and P. 100
1 sang the song, ' are b And bridegroom.' Tlie Ring 25
Birds and b's must leave the nest. ,, 89
not forgiven me yet, his over-jealous b, Happi/ 6
You would not mar the beauty of your 6 ,, 24
how it froze you from your b, ,,71
tho' I am the Bandit's b. Bandit's Death 6
and never a ring for the b. Charity 6
when he promised to make me his 6, ,, 11
Bridegroom {See also Groom) For me the
Heavenly B waits, St Agnes' Eve 31
ITie B with his bride ! ,,86
Bridegroom {continued) And learning this, the b will relent. Guinevere 172
' Have we not heard the b is so sweet ? , , 177
bride who stabb'd her b on her bridal night — Tlie Flight 57
I sang the song, 'are bride And b.' The Ring 26
when the 6 murmur'd, 'With this ring,' ,, 438
Bride-kiss Would that have chill'd her b-k ? Last Tournament 590
Bridesmaid B, ere the happy knot was tied, Tlie Bridesmaid 1
A happy 6 makes a happy bride.' ,, 4
' O happy b, make a happy bride.' (repeat). ,, 8 14
Edith would be b on the day. Sisters (E. and E.) 208
saw The b pale, statuelike, ,, 212
In that assumption of the b — ,, 234
Till that dead b, meant to be my bride, ,, 264
Bridesman Bantering b, reddening priest, Forlwn 33
Bridge {See also Brig, Castle-bridge) Where from
the frequent 6, Ode to Mernory 102
Or from the b I lean'd to hear Miller's D. 49
But Robin leaning on the h beneath the hazel-tree ? May Queen 14
Across the brazen b of war — Love tkou thy land 76
arches of a 6 Crown'd with the minster-towers. Gardener's D. 43
half has fall'n and made a b ; Walk, to the Mail 32
curves of mountain, b, Boat, island, Edunn Morris 5
/ hiing with grooms and porters on the b, Godiva 2
By b and ford, by park and pale. Sir GaZahad 82
And half a hundred b's. The Brook 30
There is Darnley b, It has more ivy ; ,,36
that old b, which, half in ruins then, ,, 79
naked marriages Flash from the b, Aylmet's Field 766
under arches of the marble b Hung, Princess ii 458
o'er a 6 of pine wood crossing, ,, Hi 335
knell to my desires, Clang'd on the b; „ iv 175
boats and 6's for the use of men. ,, m47
all night upon the b of war Spec, of Iliad 9
The cataract flashing from the 6, In Mem. Ixid 15
paced the shores. And many a &, ,, Ixoaovii 12
b, ford, beset By bandits, Gareth and L, 594
this a 6 of single arc Took at a leap ; ,, 908
when mounted, cried from o'er the b, ,, 951
at fiery speed the two Shock'd on the central b, „ 963
Beyond his horse's crupper and the b, „ 966
drave his enemy backward down the 6, ,, 969
watch 'd thee striking on the b ,, 992
For there beyond a 6 of treble bow, , , 1086
Then the third brother shouted o'er the b, „ 1096
They madly hurl'd together on the b ; ,, 1120
hurl'd him headlong o'er the 6 Down to the river, ,, 1153
victor of the b's and the ford, ,, 1232
b that spann'd a dry ravine ; (repeat) Marr. of Geraint 246, 294
Earl Yniol's, o'er the b Yonder.' „ 291
after went her way across the b, „ 383
I saw you moving by me on the 6, ,, 429
Like him who tries the b he fears may fail, Geraint and E. 303
way, where, link'd with a many a b, Holy Grail 502
Galahad fled along them bhy b, ,, 504
every b as quickly as he crost Sprang into fire , , 505
gain d her castle, upsprang the b, Pelleas and E. 206
A 6 is there, that, look'd at from beneath Lover's Tale i 375
on the tremulous b, that from beneath ,, 412
Standin' here be the b, TomoiTow 2
live the life Beyond the b, Akbar's Ih'eam 145
we dipt down under the b Bandit's Death 22
Bridge-broken his nose B-b, one eye out, Last Tournament 59
Bridle The gemmy b glitter'd free, L. of SJmlott Hi 10
The b bells rang merrily ,, 13
Bridle-hand Down with the b-h drew The foe Heavy Brigade 53
Bridle-rein glimmering moorland rings With
jingling b-r's. Sir L. and Q. G. 36
tied the b-r's of all the three Together, (repeat) Geraint and E. 98, 183
And sadly gazing on her b-r's, ,, 494
held His people by the b-r of Truth. Akbar's Dream 85
Brief In endless time is scarce more b Two Voices 113
days were b Whereof the poets talk, Talking Oak 185
' 0 tell her, b is life but love is long. And b the sun
of summer in the North, And b the moon of
beauty in tho South. Pnncess iv 111
Brief
63
Bring
Spitefxd Letter 21
Doitht and Prayer 13
Brief (continued) B,h is a, summer leaf,
if Thou wiliest, let my day be h,
Brier {See also Briar) whom Gideon school'd
with 6'*-. Buonaparte 14
The little life of bank and h. You might have won 30
drench 'd with ooze, and torn with Vs, Princess v 28
I have heard of thorns and b's. Window, Marr. Morn. 20
Over the thorns and 6's, ,, 21
the winds that bend the h ! La^t Tournament 731
wild h had driven Its knotted thorns Lover's Tale i 619
rough 6 tore my bleeding palms ; ,, ii 18
Brig (bridge) An' I'll run oop to the h, N. Farmer, N. S. 55
Brigade Glory to all the three hundred, and all
the B ! Heavy Brigade 66
Brigade, Heavy See Heavy Brigade
Brigade, Light See Light Brigade
Bright (adj.) See also Over-bright, Rosy-bright, Summer-
bright)
Clear and b it should be ever, Poet's Mind 5
B as light, and clear as wind. ,, 7
met with two so full and b — Such eyes ! Miller's D. 86
I made my dagger sharp and b. The Sisters 26
but none so 6 as mine ; May Queen 5
Make b our days and light our dreams. Of old sat Freedom 22
B was that afternoon. Sunny but chill ; Enoch Arden 669
B with the sun upon the stream Sea Ih-eams 97
b and fierce and fickle is the South, ' Princess iv 97
B let it be with its blazon'd deeds. Ode on Well. 56
Phosphor, b As our pure love. In Mem. ix 10
Thy marble b in dark appears, ,, Ixvii 5
The voice was low, the look was b ; „ Ixix 15
And b the friendship of thine eye ; ,, cxix 10
To-day the grave is b for me, , , Con. 73
b and light as the crest Of a peacock, Maud I xvi 16
soft splendours that you look so 6 ? ,, xviii 79
dawn of Eden b over earth and sky, „ II i 8
in a weary world my one thing b ; „ III id 17
Geraint with eyes all b replied, Marr. of Geraint 494
strange b and dreadful thing, a court, „ 616
she knew That all was b ; ,, 658
Beholding one so b in dark estate, ,, 786
keep him b and clean as heretofore, Geraint and E. 937
She with a face, b as for sin forgiven, Lancelot and E. 1102
her look B for all others, Pdleas and E. Yil
our eyes met : hers were b, and mine Were dim Lover's Tale i 441
an' I keeaps 'im clean an' b, North. Cobbler 97
Far from out a sky for ever b. Sisters (E. and E.) 19
an' yer eyes as b as the day ! Tomorrow 32
How b you keep your marriage- ring ! Romney's R. 59
morning that looks so b from afar ! By an Evohdion. 10
When I look'd at the bracken so b June Bracken, etc. 3
Bright (s) level lake with diamond-plots Of dark
and b. Arabian Nights 86
Remaining betwixt dark and b : Margaret 28
Of this flat lawn with dusk and b ; In Mem. Ixxxix 2
B and Dark have sworn that I, Demeter and P. 96
Beyond the darker hour to see the b, Prog, of Spring 88
Brighten cheek brighten'd as the foam-bow Vs (Enone 61
stars above them seem to b as they pass ; May Queen 34
Thy sweet eyes b slowly close to mine, Tithonus 38
it b's and darkens down on the plain. Windma, On the Hill 2
it b's and darkens and b's like my hope, And
it darkens and b's and darkens like my fear, ,, 18
And b like the star that shook In Mem., Con. 31
b's at the clash of ' Yes ' and ' No,' Ancient Sage 71
b's thro' the Mother's tender eyes, Prin. Beatnce 4
Brighten'd cheek b as the foam-bow brightens QSnone 61
For so mine own was b : Aylmer's Field 683
Till the face of Bel be b, Boadicea 16
Your pretty sports have b all again. Merlin and V. 305
The rounder cheek had b into bloom. Tlie Ring 351
Brightening (See also Ever-brightening) Like sheet
lightning, Ever b Poet's Mind 26
B the skirts of a long cloud, M. d' Arthur 54
Unseen, is b to his bridal morn. Gardener's D, 73
Brightening (continued) Enid listen'd b as she lay : Mair. of{jleraint 733
B the skirts of a long cloud. Pass, of Arthur 2'22
And slowly b Out of the glimmer. Merlin and the G. 88
Brighter broader and b The Gleam flying onward, ,, 95
Brightest Their best and b, when they dwelt on hers, Aylmer's Field 69
Brightly Enoch faced this morning of farewell B Enoch Arden 183
Brightness as babies for the moon. Vague b ; Princess iv 429
false sense in her own self Of my contrasting 6,
overbore Marr. of Geraint 801
set apart Their motions and their b from the
stars, Lover's Tale i 174
The 6 of a burning thought, „ 743
Brilliance star The black earth with b rare. Ode to Memory 20
So bathed we were in b. Lover's Tale i 313
Brim (b) By garden porches on the 6, Arabian Nights 16
He froth'd his bumpers to the b ; D. of the 0. Year 19
New stars all night above the b The Voyage 25
Brim (verb) I b with sorrow drowning song. In Mem. xix 12
Arrange the board and b the glass ; ,, cvii 16
Brimful heart, B of those wild tales, D. of F. Women 12
Brimm'd (See alao Broad-brimm'd) B with delirious
draughts of warmest life. Eleanore 139
And beaker b with noble wine. Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 36
Brine Lulling the b against the Coptic sands. Buonaparte 8
Fresh- water springs come up through bitter b. If I were loved 8
hear and see the far-off sparkling b, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 98
Gloom'd the low coast and quivering b The Voyage 42
Should gulf him fathom-deep in 6 ; In Mem. x 18
To darken on the rolling b That breaks „ cvii 14
Bring b me my love, Rosalind. Leonine Eleg. 1 4
' B this lamb back into Thy fold, Supp. Confessions 105
Music that b's sweet sleep down Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 7
And in its season b the law ; Love tlimc thy larul 32
Certain, if knowledge b the sword. That
knowledge takes ,, 87
For nature b's not back the Mastodon, The Epic 36
Watch what thou seest, and lightly b me word.' M. d' Arthur 38
Watch what I see, and lightly b thee word.' ,, 44
I bad thee, watch, and lightly b me word.' ,, 81
A word could b the colour to my cheek ; Gardener's D. 196
I will have my boy, and b him home ; Dora 122
b me offerings of fruit and flowers : St. S. Stylites 128
Love himself will b The drooping flower Love and Duty 23
sweet hours that b as all things good, „ 57
sad hours that b us all things ill, ,, .^8
Nay, but Nature b's thee solace ; Lochsley Hall 87
my latest rival b's thee rest. ,, 89
B truth that sways the soul of men ? Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 52
And b the fated fairy Prince. ,, 56
' B the dress and put it on her, L. of Burleigh 95
B me spices, b me wine ; Vision of Sin 76
Will b fair weather yet to all of us. Enoch Arden 191
I warrant, man, that we shall b you round.' ,, 841
and arose Eager to 6 them down, ,, 872
b Their own gray hairs with sorrow to the
grave — Aylmer's Field 776
And b her in a whirlwind : Princess i 65
b's our friends up from the underworld. ,, iv 45
an' doesn b ma the aale ? N. Fanner, 0. S. 65
The seasons b the flower again. In Mem. ii 5
And b the firstling to the flock ; ,,6
So b him : we have idle dreams : „ a; 9
And not the burthen that they b. ,, xiii 20
If one should b me this report, ,, xiv 1
And all was good that Time could b, ,, xodii 18
They b me sorrow touch'd with joy, ,, xxviii 19
Which b's no more a welcome guest ,, xxix 5
And b her babe, and make her boast, „ xl 26
She often b's but one to bear, „ Iv 12
1 6 to life, 1 6 to death : „ Ivi 6
Then b an opiate trebly strong, ,, Ixxi 6
In verse that 6'.s myself relief, ,, Ixxv 2
B orchis, b the foxglove spire, ,, Ixxxiii 9
Demanding, so to b relief ,, Ixxxv 6
Ah, take the imperfect gift I b, „ II7
Bring
64
Broidry
Bring (continued) B in great logs and let them lie, In Mem. cvii 17
Which every hour his couriers h. „ cxxvi 4
She may b me a curse. Maud I ilZ
how Goid will h them about ,, i« 44
to ride forth And b the Queen ; — Com. of Arthur 449
b him here, that I may judge the right, Gareth and L. 380
And could not wholly b him under, ,, 1144
To b thee back to do the battle with him. ,, 1294
ere you wed with any, b your bride, Marr. of Oeraint 228
Call the host and bid him b Charger and palfrey.' Oeraint and E. 400
' Go thou with hira and him and b it Balin aiul Balan 6
I b thee back, When I have ferreted Merlin aiul V. 54
charged by Valence to b home the child. ,, 718
one dark hour which b's remorse, ,, 763
Joust for it, and win, and b it in an hour, Lancelot and E. 204
let me 6 your colour back ; ,, 387
b us where he is, and how he fares, ,, 547
' Bind him, and b him in.' Pelleas and E. 232
Bind him as heretofore, and b him in : ,, 271
to flout me, when they b me in, , , 330
third night hence will 6 thee news of gold.' ,, 357
Watch what thou seest, and lightly b me word.' Pass, of Arthur 206
Watch what I see, and lightly b thee word.' ,, 212
I bade thee, watch, and lightly b me word.' ,, 249
b's And shows them whatsoever he accounts Lover's T(de iv 232
b's and sets before him in rich guise ,, 247
To 6 Camilla down before them all. ,, 285
be none left here to b her back : ,, 367
b on both the yoke Of stronger states, Tiresias 69
God curse him and b him to nought ! Despair 106
morning b's the day I hate and fear ; Tlie Flight 2
which b's our Edwin home. ,, 92
B the old dark ages back without the faith, Locksley H., Sixty 137
Moother 'ed tell'd ma to b tha down, Owd Rod 50
Twelve times in the year B me bliss, The Ring 6
Hubert 6's me home With April ,, 59
once more I b you these. Ho-ppy 22
' From the South I b you balm. Prog, of Spring 66
The shepherd b's his adder-bitten lamb, Death of (Enone 38
B me my horse — my horse ? Mechanophilus 9
And b or chase the storm, ,, 14
B's the Dreams about my bed. Silent Voices 2
Bringer something more, A 6 of new things ; Ulysses 28
Bringest Thou b the sailor to his wife, In Mem. x 5
^Come quick, thou b all I love. ,, xvii 8
thou b Not peace, a sword, a fire. Sir J. Oldcastle 35
Bringeth poetess singeth, that Hesperus all things b. Leonine Eleg. 13
Bringing And b me down from the Hall Maud I xxi 2
the new sun rose b the new year. Pass, of Arthur 469
Briogiog-up give his child a better 6-m Enoch Arden 87
To give his babes a better b-u „ 299
It is but b u: no more than that : Princess, Pro. 129
Brink Betwixt the green b and the running foam^ Sea-fairies 2
now shake hands across the b Of that deep grave My life is full 6
barge with oar and sail Moved from the b, M. d' Arthur 266
the woman walk'd upon the b : Sea Dreams 112
Leapt fiery Passion from the b's of death ; Princess vii 156
And voices hail it from the b ; In Mem. cxxi 14
But if a man who stands upon the b Geraint and E. 472
barge with oar and sail Moved from the b, Pass, of Arthur 434
lianas that dropt to the b of his bay, T/i£ Wreck 73
Briony about my feet The berried b fold.' Talking Oak 148
fragile bindweed-bells and b rings ; The Brook 203
Briony- vine b-v and ivy- wreath Ran forward Aniphion 29
Bristle (s) Figs out of thistles, silk from b's, Last Tournament 356
Bristle (verb) half stands up And b's ; Walk, to the Mail 32
'fhe hoar hair of the Baronet h up Aylmer's Field 42
And b's all the brakes and thorns In Mem. cvii 9
Britain The name of B trebly great — You ask me, why 22
And keeps our B, whole within herself, Princess, Con. 52
Our B cannot salve a tyrant o'er. Third of Feb. 20
welcome Russian flower, a people's pride, To B, W. to Marie Alex. 7
Girt by half the tribes of /{, Boildiceah
call us B's barbarous populaces, , , 7
Tear the noble heart oi B, ,,12
Britain {contimied) Bark an answer, B's raven !
shall B light upon auguries happier ?
Nor B's one sole God be the millionaire :
Chief of the church in B,
flying over many a windy wave To B,
Roman Csesar first Invaded B,
Brought the great faith to B
dread Pendragon, B's Kings of kings,
Isolt of B and his bride,
Isolt of B dash'd Before Isolt
for crest the golden dragon clung Of B ;
The voice of B, or a sinking land,
0 banner of B, hast thou Floated
Nor thou in B, little Lutterworth,
Boadicea 13
„ 45
Maud III in 22
Com. of Arthur 454
J/a/T. of Geraint 338
746
Balin and Balan 103
Lancelot and E. 424
Last Tourtmrnent 408
588
Guinefoere 595
To the Qiieen ii 24
Def. of Lucknow 1
Sir J. Oldcastle 26
Broke into B with Haughty war- workers Batt. of Brunanburh 120
Makes the might of B known ; Open. I. and C. Exhib. 19
B fought her sons of yore — ,, 21
B fail'd ; and never more, ,, 22
B's myriad voices call, ,, 35
One with B, heart and soul ! ,,38
At times our B cannot rest. To Marq. of Dufferin 1
British Peal after peal, the B battle broke, Buonaparte 7
With a stony B stare. Maud 1 xiii 22
And curse me the B vermin, the rat ; ,, II v 58
Howiver was B farmers to stan' agean o' their feeat. Ouxi Rod 46
Briton set His B in blown seas and storming showers. Ode on Well, 165
Up my B's, on my chariot, Boadicea 69
Breton, not B : here Like a shipwreck'd man Maud II ii 30
Beyond the race of B's and of men. Com. of Arthur 331
B's, hold your own ! (repeat) Open, I, and C, Exhib, 10, 20, 30, 40
Britoness haled the yellow-ringleted B — Boadicea 55
Brittany (See also Breton) From overseas in
B return'd. Last Tournament 175
Her daintier namesake down in B — „ 265
Was it the name of one in B, ,, 396
He seem'd to pace the strand of j5 ,, 407
Before Isolt of B on the strand, ,, 589
Broach-turner Dish-washer and b-t, loon ! — Gareth and L. 770
Broad Grows green and b, and takes no care, Lotos-Eaters, C, S. 28
Make b thy shoulders to receive my weight, M. d' Arthur 164
muscular he spread, so b of breast. Gardener's D. 8
Alas, I was so 6 of girth. Tailing Oak 139
rain. That makes thee b and deep ! ,, 280
those that saunter in the b Cries Aylmer's Field 744
I wish they were a whole Atlantic b.' Princess, Con. 71
Make b thy shoulders to receive my weight. Pass, of Arthur 332
Broad-based B-b upon her people's will, To the Queen 35
B-b flights of marble'stairs Ran up Arabian Nights 117
Broad-blown b-b comeliness, red and white, Maud I xiii 9
Broad-brimm'd 6-6 hawker of holy things, ,, a; 41
Broadcast shower the fiery grain Of freedom b Princess v 422
Broaden Freedom slowly b's down From precedent You ask me, why 11
To b into boundless day. In Mem. xcv 64
B the glowing isles of vernal blue. Prog, of Spring 60
Broaden'd Morn b on the borders of the dark, D. of F. Women 265
Broadening (See also Ever -broadening) b from her
feet, And blackening, Guinevere 81
Broader Sun Grew b toward his death Princess Hi 364
B and higher than any in all the lands ! Holy Grail 247
b and brighter The Gleam flying onward. Merlin and the G. 95
Broader-grown b-g the bowers Drew the great night Pnncess vii 48
Broad-faced Bf with under-fringe of iiisset beard, Geraint atid E. 537
Broad-flung tide in its 6-/ shipwrecking roar, Maud I Hi 11
Broad-limb'd there alone The h-l Gods at random thrown To E. L. 15
Broad-shoulder'd great b-s genial Englishman, Princess, Con. 85
Brocade That stood from out a stiff 6 Aylmer's Field 20i
He found an ancient dame in dim b ; Marr. of Geraint 363
Broceliande And in the wild woods of B, Merlin and V. 2
Ev'n to the wild woods oi B. ,, 204
Broider'd (See also Costly-broider'd, Star-broider'd)
' A red sleeve B with pearls, ' Lancelot and E, 373
sleeve of scarlet, 6 with great pearls, ,, 604
Broidering Among her damsels b sat. Merlin and V, 138
Broidery-ftame take the b-f, and add A crimson Day- Dm., Pro. 15
Broidry Hare b of the purple clover, A Dirge 38
Brok
66
Bronze
Brok (broke) an' Charlie 'e b 'is neck, Village Wife 85
Broke {See also Brok) Peal after peal, the British
battle h, Buonaparte 7
A nobler yearning never b her rest The Form, the form 2
AVhat time the foeman's line is 6, Two Voices 155
From out my sullen heart a power B, ,, 444
thro' wavering lights and shadows b, Lotos-Haters 12
love the gleams of good that b From either side, Love thou thy land 89
murmur b the stillness of that air Gardeners D. 147
bit his lips, And b away. Dora 34
She b out in praise To God, ,, 112
I 6 a close with force and arms : Edvrin Morris 131
Bluff Harry b into the spence Talking Oak 47
struck his stafif against the rocks And 6 it, — Golden Year 60
The hedge b in, the banner blew, Day-Dm., Revival 9
The linden b her ranks and rent Amphion 33
Warm b the breeze against the brow, The Voyage 9
When you came in my sorrow b me down ; Enoch Arden 317
with jubilant cries B from their elders, ,, 378
bent or 6 The lithe reluctant boughs ,, 380
long-winded tale, and b him short ; The Brook 109
tide of youth B with a phosphorescence Aylmer's Field 116
B from a bower of vine and honeysuckle : ,, 156
Then 6 all bonds of courtesy, ,, 323
/{ into nature's music when they saw her. ,, 694
Who b the bond which they desired to break, ,, 778
you tumbled down and b The glass Sea Dreams 141
you made and J your dream : ,, 143
on those cliffs B, mixt with awful light, ,, 215
ever when it b The statues, ,, 223
on the crowd B, mixt with awful light ,, 235
His angel ft his heart. ,, 280
nor b, nor shunn'd a soldier's death, Princess, Pro. 38
when the council b, I rose and past ,, i 90
dances b and buzz'd in knots of talk ; ,,133
she b out interpreting my thoughts : ,, Hi 275
b the letter of it to keep the sense. ,, iv 338
in the furrow b the ploughman's head, ,, v 221
at our disguise B from their lips, ,, 272
cloud that dimm'd her b A genial warmth and light ,, m 281
courts of twilight b them up Thro' all the ,, Con. 113
even if they b In thunder, silent ; Ode on Well. 176
We b them on the land, we drove them Third of Feb. 30
Right thro' the line they b ; Light Brigade 33
Burnt and b the grove and altar - Bo&dicea 2
Who b our fair companionship. In Mem. xodi 13
idly b the peace Of hearts that beat ,, Iviii 5
But in the present b the blow. , , locxxo 56
And strangely on the silence b ,, xcro 25
Has b the bond of dying use. ,, cv 12
And the sunlight b from her lip ? Maud I id 86
million horrible bellowing echoes J ,, Hi 24:
light laugh B from Lynette, Gareth and L. 837
there he b the sentence in his heart Geraint and E. 41
b the bandit holds and cleansed the land. ,, 944
Balin the stillness of a minute b Balin arid Balan 51
but God B the strong lance, Lancelot and E. 26
She b into a little scornful laugh : ,, 120
till our good Arthur b The Pagan ,, 279
when the next day b from underground, ,, 413
heard mass, b fast, and rode away : ,, 415
But sin b out. Ah, Christ, Holy Grail 93
when the sun b next from under ground, ,, 328
bore them down, And b thro' all, ,, 480
fairy-circle wheel'd and b Flying, and link'd again,
and wheel'd and b Flying, Guinevere 257
after tempest, when the long wave b „ 290
wicked one, who b The vast design „ 669
Gleams of the water-circles as they b, Lover's Tale i 67
light methought b from her dark, dark eyes, ,, 368
bliss, which b in light Like morning ,, ii 143
softly as his mother 6 it to him — ,, iv 31
all The guests h in upon him ,, 238
the battle-thunder h from them all. The Revenge 49
her brain b With over-acting. Sisters (E. and E.) 235
Broke (continued) mother b her promise to the
dead,
the brute bullet b thro' the brain
I have b their cage, no gilded one,
silent ocean always 6 on a silent shore,
and the dwelling b into flame ;
Sisters (E. and E.) 252
Def. of Lucknmo 20
Sir J. Oldcastle 3
V. of Maeldune 12
32
B into Britain with Haughty war-workers Bait, of Brunanburh 120
funeral bell B on my Pagan Paradise, Tiresias 193
For I b the bond. Tlie Wreck 69
a tone so rough that I b into passionate tears, ,, 122
And we b away from the Christ, Despair 25
heart of the mother, and b it almost ; ,,74
B thro' the mass from below. Heavy Brigade 29
then the tear fell, the voice b. The Ring 367
light of happy marriage b Thro' all Death of (Enone 102
B the Taboo, Dipt to the crater, Kapiolani 30
Broken {See also Bridge-broken, Brokken, Heart-
broken) Half shown, are b and withdrawn. Two Voices 306
Each mom my sleep was b thro" Miller's D. 39
Let what is b so remain. Lotos-Eaters, C S. 80
all the man was b with remorse ; Dmra 165
Oh, his. He was not b. Walk, to the Mail 17
The clouds are b in the sky. Sir Galahad 73
Spars were splinter'd ; decks were b : The Captain 49
Mine was b, When that cold vapour Vision of Sin 57
A limb was b when they lifted him ; Enoch Arden 107
I seem so foolish and so 6 down. ,, 316
every day The sunrise b into scarlet shafts ,, 592
Enoch was so brown, so bow'd, So b — ,, 704
My grief and solitude have 6 me ; ,, 857
The tented winter-field was b up Aylmer's Field 110
A creeper when the prop is b, „ 810
Then the great Hall was wholly b down, „ 846
Till like three horses that have b fence. Princess ii 386
Your oath isb: we dismiss you : ,, iv 360
glittering axe was b in their arms, ,, vi 51
sanctuary Is violate, our laws b: ,,60
Her iron will was 6 in her mind ; ,, 118
' Our laws are 6 : let him enter too.' ,, 317
It will never be b by Maud, Maud I ii 2
This fellow hath b from some Abbey, Gareth and L. 456
Because my means were somewhat b into Marr. of Geraint 455
My pride is b : men have seen my fall,' ,, 578
my pride Is b down, for Enid sees my fall ! ' ,, 590
each of whom had b on him A lance Geraint and E. 88
From which old fires have b, „ 822
There was I b down ; ,, 851
hast b shell. Art yet half -yolk, Balin and Balan 568
the high purpose b by the worm. Merlin and V. 196
these have b up my melancholy.' ,, 267
false voice made way, b with sobs : ,, 857
Becomes the sea-cliff pathway b short, ,, 882
cried ' They are b, they are b ! ' Lancelot and E. 310
It can be b easier. ,, 1208
and so full, So many lances b — Holy Grail 331
lance B, and his Excalibur a straw.* Last Tournament 88
saw the laws that ruled the tournament B, „ 161
what music have I b, fool ? ' ,, 261
B with Mark and hate and solitude, „ 643
Not to be loudly b in upon. Lover's Tale i 687
the Spanish fleet with b sides lay round The Revenge 71
And the pikes were all b or bent, ,, 80
My sleep was b besides with dreams In tlie Child. Hosp. 65
I have not b bread for fifty hours. Sir J. Okleastle 199
With armies so b A reason for bragging Batt. of Brunanburh 82
And Hope will have b her heart. Despair 92
that poor link With earth is b, The Ring 476
wait on one so b, so forlorn ? Romney's R. 17
We return'd to his cave — the link was b — Bandit's Death 29
Broken-kneed See Brokken-knee^ld
Broken-wise Peering askance, and muttering b-w, Merlin and V. 100
Brokken (broken) as if 'e'd 'a b 'is neck, Owd Roa 63
Brokken-knee^d (broken-kneed) an' the
mare b-k, Church-warden, etc. 4
Bronze on his right Stood, all of massiest b : Balin and Balan 364
E
Bronzed
66
Brother
Bronzed on the cheek, And bruised and h,
Brooch Pull off, pull off, the h of gold,
read and earn our prize, A golden b :
Brood (s) If there were many Lilias in the &,
tell her. Swallow, that thy h is flown :
He sees his h about thy knee ;
Because her h is stol'n away.
O sound to rout the b of cares.
Her own b lost or dead.
Heathen, the b by Hengist left ;
Brood (verb) with downcast eyes we muse and 6,
About him b's the twilight dim :
To muse and 6 and live again in memory,
That b's above the fallen sun,
happy birds, that change their sky To build and b ;
nevermore to 6 On a horror of shatter'd limbs
sunshine seem'd to b More warmly on the heart
What use to 6 ? this life of mingled pains
Brooded stillness of that air Which b round about her ;
while she b thus And grew half -guilty
tender love Of him she b over.
B one master- passion evermore,
Broodeth But where the sunbeam b warm,
Brooding ragged rims of thunder b low,
Sit b in the ruins of a life.
Across my fancy, b warm,
but b turn The book of scorn,
wordless Vs on the wasted cheek —
But b on the dear one dead.
But over all things h slept
felt that tempest b round his heart,
There, b by the central altar,
She that in her heart is b
Brook (b) (See also Beck, Mountain-brook, Yabbok
brook) Past Yabbok b the livelong night. Clear-headed friend 27
Lancelot and E. 259
Lady Clare 39
Princess Hi 301
„ Pro. 146
„ iv 108
582
In Mem. xxi 28
,, Ixxxix 17
Com. of Arthur 28
Guinevere 16
Sonnet to 1
Two Voices 26d
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 65
To J. S. 51
In Mem. cxv 16
Maud Ii65
Lover's Tale i 327
To Mary Boyle 49
Gardener's Z). 148
Guinevere 407
Lover's Tale i 617
,, ii 60
In Mem. xci 14
Palace of Art 75
Love and Duty 12
Day- Dm., Pro. 10
Princess v 141
,, vii 112
In Mem. xxxvii 17
,, Ixxviii 7
Geraint and E. 11
Ancient Sage 33
Locksley H., Sixty 23
b that loves To purl o'er matted cress
deep b groan'd beneath the mill ;
I thirsted for the b's, the showers :
long 6 falling thro' the clov'n ravine
0 mountain b's, I am the daughter
' The torrent b's of hallow'd Israel
and leap the rainbows of the b's,
Here, by this h, we parted ;
yet the b he loved,
' 0 6,' he says, ' 0 babbling b,'
and the b, why not ? replies.
Philip's farm where b and river meet.
Philip chatter'd more than b or bird ;
Beyond the b, waist-deep in meadow-sweet.
and bowing o'er the b A tonsured head
Little about it stirring save a b !
where the b Vocal, with here and there a silence,
part were drown 'd within the whirling b :
Cataract b's to the ocean run,
b's of Eden mazily murmuring,
Oh is it the b, or a pool.
Spring that swells the narrow b's,
The b alone far-off was heard,
On yon swoll'n b that bubbles fast
The b shall babble down the plain,
slopes a wild b o'er a little stone,
a broad b o'er a shingly bed Brawling,
And at the inrunning of a little b
By grove, and garden-lawn, and rushing b,
saw deep lawns, and then a b,
and o'er the b Were apple-trees, and apples by the 6 Fallen,
But even while I drank the b,
Stay'd in the wandering warble of a 6 ;
Blaze by the rushing b or silent well.
blue valley and the glistening b's.
With falling b or blossom'd bush —
Gives birth to a brawling b,
echoes of the hollow-banked b's
the chillness of the sprinkled b Smote
black b's Of the midforest heard me —
Ode to Memory 58
Miller's D. 113
Fatima 10
(Enone 8
37
D. ofF. Women 1^\
Locksley Hall 171
The Brook 1
15
20
22
38
51
118
199
Aylmer's Fidd 32
145
Princess, Pro. 47
The Islet 17
Milton 10
Window, On the Hill 4
In Mem. Ixxxv 70
„ xcv 7
„ xcix 6
„ ci 10
Marr. of Geraint 77
248
Lancelot and E. 1388
Holy Grail 230
380
383
387
Ijost Tournament 254
Guinevere 400
Lover's Tale i 331
405
526
566
633
ii 11
Brook (b) (continued) I cast them in the noisy h
beneath. Lover's Tale ii 41
moanings in the forest, the loud b, ,, 114
b's glitter 'd on in the light without sound, V. of Maeldune 13
I found these cousins often by the b, The Ring 158
b that feeds this lakelet murmur'd ' debt,' ,, 171
following her old pastime of the b, „ 354
the secret splendour of the b's. Prog, of Spring 21
thunder of the b Sounded ' (Enone ' ; Death of (Enone 23
Brook (verb) I must b the rod And chastisement Supp. Confessions 107
I would not b my fear Of the other : D. of F. Women 154
We b no further insult but are gone.' Princess vi 342
shall I 6 to be supplicated ? Boddicea 9
I scarce could b the strain and stir In Mem. xv 12
Who cannot 6 the shadow of any lie.' Gareth and L. 293
I cannot b to gaze upon the dead. ' Balin and Balan 586
I cannot b to see your beauty marr'd Pelleas and E. 298
thine eyes not b in forest-paths. Prog, of Spring 31
Brook 'd B not the expectant terror of her heart, Enoch Arden 493
but she 6 no more : Aylmer's Field 798
She b it not ; but wrathful, Lucretius 14
She the appeal B not, but clamouring out Princess vi 140
until the little maid, who b No silence, Guinevere 159
Brooking b not the Tarquin in her veins, Lucretius 237
peculiar treasure, b not Exchange or currency : Lover's Tale i 447
Brooks B, for they call'd you so that knew you best.
Old B, who loved so well to mouth To W. H. Brookfield 1
Broom walks were stript as bare as b's. Princess, Pro. 184
Gilded with b, or shatter'd ihto spires, Lover's Tale i 400
Broth wicked b Confused the chemic labour Lucretius 19
Brother (See also Brethren, Soldier-brother, Twin-
brother) my b's they : B's in Christ — Supp. Confessions 28
vexed eddies of its wayward b : Isabel 33
Each to each is dearest b ; Madeline 21
Oh rest ye, 6 mariners, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 128
I knew your b ; his mute dust I honour To J. S. 29
Who miss the b of your youth ? ,,59
Thy b's and immortal souls. Love them thy land 8
I and he, B's in Art ; GardcTier's D. 4
She is my b's daughter : Dora 17
Come, blessed b, come. St. S. Stylites 204
Sun flies forward to his b Sun ; Golden Year 23
Men, my b's, men the workers, Locksley Hall 117
b's of the weather stood Stock-still Will Water. 135
Hob-and-nob with b Death ! Vision of Sin 194
My dearest b, Edmund, sleeps, The Brook 187
My b James is in the harvest-field : „ 227
Leolin, his b, living oft With Averill, Aylmer's Field 57
his, a b's love, that hung With wings „ 138
thro' the bright lawns to his 6's ran, ,, 341
' B, for I have loved you more as son Than b, ,, 351
b, where two fight The strongest wins, ,, 364
' 0 ft, I am grieved to learn your grief — , , 398
How low his b's mood had fallen, ,, 404
Sent to the harrow'd b, praying him ,, 607
shall thy 6 man, the Lord from Heaven, ,, 667
they see no men. Not ev'n her b Arac, Pnncess i 153
' My 6 ! ' ' Well, my sister.' ,, ii 188
Here lies ah by a sister slain, ,, 208
That was fawn's blood, not 6's, ,, 275
be swerved from right to save A prince, aft? ,, 291
/give thee to death My 6 ! „ 308
Till, one of those two b's, half aside ,, v 302
' 0 6, you have known the pangs we felt, , , 374
B's, the woman's Angel guards you, ,, 410
' He saved my life : my b slew him for it.' ,, ri 108
to wait upon him. Like mine own b. , , 299
Help, father, b, help ; „ 305
' Your 6, Lady, — Florian, — ask for him ,, 313
but the Prince Her b came ; ,, 345
Did those twin b's, risen again ,, vii 89
My friend, the b of my love ; In Mem. ix 16
More than my b's are to me. ,, 20
' Where wert thou, b, those four days ? ' ,, xxxi 5
Roves from the living b's face, ,, xxxii 7
Brother
67
Brought
Brother {continued) 'More than my 6's are to me,' — In Mem. Ixxix 1
I met her to-day with her 6, but not to her h I bow'd : Maud I iv 14
and chuckle, and grin at a b's shame ; ,,29
Her 6, from whom I keep aloof, ,, m 46
Blithe would her b's acceptance be, ,, x 27
All, all upon the b. ■ ,, xiii 43
her b lingers late With a roystering company) ,, xiv 14
Her b is coming back to-night, „ xix 1
only Maud and the b Hung over her dying bed — „ 35
This b had laugh'd her down, „ 60
her b comes, like a blight On my fresh hope, ,, 102
her 6 ran in his rage to the gate, ,, Hi 12
A cry for a b's blood : „ 34
' 0 that ye had some 6, pretty one, Com. of Arthur 335
my husband's b had my son Thrall'd in his castle, Gareth and L. 357
Our noblest b, and our truest man, , , 565
second b in their fool's parable — ,, 1004
' What doest thou, b, in my marches here ? ' ,, 1034
Hath overthrown thy b, and hath his arms.' „ 1037
the third b shouted o'er the bridge, ,, 1096
My b and my better, this man here, Balin and Balan 54
Embracing Balin, ' Good my b, hear ! „ 139
on his dying 6 cast himself Dying ; ,, 593
' B, I dwelt a day in Pellam's hall : ,, 605
'06' answer'd Balin ' woe is me ! ,,618
darken thine, Groodnight, true b.' ,, 626
' Groodnight, true 6 here ! goodmorrow there ! ,, 628
two b's, one a king, had met And fought Lancelot and E. 39
each had slain his 6 at a blow ; ., 41
brought the yet-unblazon'd shield, His b's; „ 380
rosy- kindled with her b's kiss — ,, 393
Sir Modred's b, and the child of Lot, ,, 558
Came on her b with a happy face ,, 791
Full ill then should I quit your b's love, ,, 944
the b's heard, and thought With shuddering, ,, 1021
'Sweet b'g, yesternight I seem'd ,, 1034
' Fret not yourself, dear b, nor be wroth, ,, 1074
' O 6, I have seen this yew-tree smoke. Holy Orail 18
what drove thee from the Table Round, My 6 ? ,,29
' Sweet 6, I have seen the Holy Grail : ,, 107
b, fast thou too and pray. And tell thy b knights to fast
and pray, „ 125
and himself her & more than I. ,, 142
' Sister or b none had he ; _ ,, 143
b, In our great hall there stood ' ,, 166
b, had you known our mighty hall, „ 225
b, had you known our hall within, ,, 246
b, when I told him what had chanced, ,, 271
(^, the King was hard upon his knights) ,, 299
0 b, had you known our Camelot, „ 339
'0 6,' ask'd Ambrosius, — ,, 540
0 b, saving this Sir Galahad, • ,, 561
my b, Why wilt hou shame me to confess ,, 566
was the one, B, and that one only, ,, 579
0 me, my b ! but one night my vow ,, 607
For, b, so one night, because they roll ,, 685
' And that can I, B, and truly ; ,, 712
B, I need not tell thee foolish words, — „ 855
Art thou the purest, b ? Last Tournament 192
b, thou nor I have made the world ; „ 203
is the King thy b fool ? ' „ 852
ay, my b fool, the king of fools ! „ 854
A goodly b of the Table Round ,, 431
Slain was the 6 of my paramour ,, 448
So b, pluck and spare not.' Ijover's Tale i 351
'5,' she said, 'let thisbe call'd ,, 461
1 was as the b of her blood, ,, 559
deem'd I wore a b's mind : she call'd me 6 : ,, 741
Deem that I love thee but as b's do, ,, 767
Praise to our Indian b's, Def. of Luchnow 69
Drove me and my good b's home in chains, Columbus 134
He with his 6, Edmund Atheling, Batt. of Brunxinburh 5
Christ, our human b and friend, Despair 25
the tears, O b, mine or thine. Ancient Sage 186
Sisters, b's — and the beasts — Locksley H., Sixty 102
Brother (continued) Rip your b's' voices open, LocTcsley H., Sixty 141
True b, only to be known By those who love Pref. Poem Broth. S. 7
Sons and b's that have sent, Ope». /. and C. Exhib.
B's, must we part at last ?
Is b of the Dark one in the lowest.
He, the b of this Darkness,
Will my Indian b come ?
Well spake thy 6 in his hymn to heaven
Meanwhile, my b's, work, and wield
Father, and my B, and my God !
Brother-brute ever butted his rough h-b For lust
Brother-hands I, clasping b-h, aver I could not,
Brotherhood And all men work in noble b.
To fight the 6 of Day and Night-
hast thou so defamed Thy b
hath bound And sworn me to this b ; '
Unlawful and disloyal b —
Brother-in-law that mock-sister there — B-i-l
Brother-knight Lo ! he hath slain some b-k,
Brother-like kiss'd her with all pureness, b-l,
Brother-oak honours that, Thy famous b-o,
Brother-sister are you That b-s Psyche,
Brother-slayer Not from the skeleton of a b-s,
Brother-star b-s, why shine ye here so low ?
Brother-worm and its last b-w will have fled
Brought (-See also Browt, Far-brought) Is not my
human pride b low ? Supp. Confessions 14
from the outward to the inward b, Elednore 4
The oriental fairy b, ,,14
I marvell'd how the mind was 5 To anchor Two Voices 458
slowly was my mother b To yield consent
Although the loss had b us pain,
light-foot Iris b it yester-eve,
I won his love, I b him home.
and b Into the gulfs of sleep.
Where'er I came I b calamity. '
then at my request He ft it ;
every morning b a noble chance. And every chance
b out a noble knight.
till Autumn b an hour For Eustace,
B out a dusky loaf that smelt of home,
his bailiff b A Chartist pike.
h the night In which we sat together
all the mothers 6 Their children.
The pint, you b me, was the best
Lord Ronald b a lily-white doe
lily-white doe Lord Ronald had b
then with what she b Buy goods and stores —
b the stinted commerce of those days ;
letter which he b, and swore besides
She b strange news.
which he b, and I Dived in a hoard of tales
which b My book to mind :
these 6 back A present, a great labour
He b it, and himself, a sight to shake
She b us Academic silks,
' I 6 a message here from Lady Blanche.'
from the Queen's decease she 6 her up.
— or b her chain'd, a slave,
Home they b her warrior dead :
B from under every star.
And bread from out the houses b,
As tho' they b but merchants' bales.
Such precious relics b by thee ;
And he that 6 him back is there.
He b an eye for all he saw ;
she b the harp and flung A ballad
And b a summons from the sea :
Large elements in order b,
and b to understand A sad astrology,
B Arthur forth, and set him in the hall.
Or b by Merlin, who, they say,
B down a momentary brow.
champion thou hast b from Arthur's hall ?
ere his horse was b, Glorying ;
32
Demeter and P. 95
116
Romney's R. 143
Akbar's Dream 27
MechanopMlus 29
Doubt and Prayer 8
Lucretius 197
In Mem. Ixxxro 102
Ode Inter. Exhib. 38
Gareth and L. 857
Pelleas and E. 322
449
Sisters {E!'and E.) 174
173
Balin and Balan 549
Geraint and E. 884
Talhing Oak 296
Princess ii 254
Last Tournament 47
Gareth and L. 1097
Despair 85
Miller's D. 137
229
"(Enone 83
The Sisters 14
D. of F. Women 51
„ 96
The Epic 48
M. d' Arthur 230
Gardener's D. 207
Avdley Court 22
Walk, to the Mail 70
Love and Duty 59
Godiva 14
WiU Water. 75
Lady Clare 3
61
Enoch Arden 137
817
Aylmer's Field 522
Sea Dreams 267
Princess, Pro. 28
119
i43
200
ii 16
319
m 86
^139
ml
Ode Inter. Exhib. 25
Spec, of Iliad 6
In Mem. xiii 19
„ xvii 18
,, xxodi 4
,, Ixxxix 9
27
,, dii 16
,, cxii 13
Maud I xviii 35
Com. of Arthur 229
347
Gareth and L. 653
916
934
Brought
68
Brow
Brought {continued) b a helm With but a drying
evergreen
Gareth b him grovelling on his knees,
Enid b sweet cakes to make them cheer,
and he b me to a goodly house ;
like a madman b her to the court,
promise, that whatever bride I b,
b a mantle down and wrapt her in it.
Prince had b his errant eyes Home
And wine and food were h,
as they b upon their forays out
men b in whole hogs and quarter beeves,
they b report ' we hardly found,
who iirst B the great faith to Britain
b By holy Joseph hither,
b report of azure lands and fair,
as he That b her hither.
To save thy life, have b thee to thy death.
miss'd, and b Her own claw back.
He lightly scatter'd theirs and 6 her off.
He 6, not found it therefore :
I by mere mischance have b, my shield.
red sleeve Broider'd with pearls,' and b it :
Ketuming b the yet-unblazon'd shield.
And b his horse to Lancelot where he lay.
the shield was b, and Gawain saw
have 6 thee, now a lonely man Wifeless
saw the barge that b her moving down,
Joseph, journeying B to Glastonbury,
b thee here to this poor house of ours
they fell from, 6 us to the hall.
Joseph b of old to Glastonbury ? '
bounden straight, and so they b him in.
rose up, and bound, and b him in.
Waited, until the third night b a moon
b A maiden babe ; which Arthur pitying took,
b to adorn her with. The jewels,
when both were b to full accord,
And hither b by Tristram for his last
Modred b His creatures to the basement
and my tears have b me good :
he that b The heathen back among us,
every morning b a noble chance. And every
chance b out a noble knight.
Looking on her that b him to the light :
the shuddering moonlight b its face
rare or fair Was b before the guest :
He slowly b them back to Lionel.
caught and b him in To their charm'd circle,
For we b them all aboard.
On whom I 6 a strange unhappiness,
So took her thence, and b her here,
He had b his ghastly tools :
Hast thou b bread with thee ?
b out a broad sky Of dawning over —
Whatever wealth I b from that new world
I had b your Princes gold enough
I b From Solomon's now-recover'd Ophir
This creedless people will be 6 to Christ
That day my nurse had b me the child.
Dead ! ' Is it he then b so low ? '
Until I b thee hither,
I b you to that chamber on your
I b you, you remember, these roses,
b you down A length of staghorn-moss,
' hast thou b us down a new Korto
when I met you first — when he h you ! —
Brow This laurel greener frcym the b's
Among the thorns that girt Thy i,
when with b'g Propt on thy knees,
An image with profiilgent b's,
Upon her bed, across her b.
Falsehood shall bare her plaited b :
Frowns perfect-sweet along the b
o'er black b's drops down A sudden-curved frown : (repeat)
Gareth and L. 1115
1124
Marr. of Geraint 388
713
725
783
824
Geraint and E. 24o
289
„ 567
602
Balm and Balan 94
103
112
168
187
600
Merlin and V. 499
564
719
Lancelot and E. 189
373
379
493
„ 662
1370
1391
Hdy Grail 51
» 617
,, 720
735
PeUeas ami E. 236
„ 288
393
Last Tournament 20
715
722
747
Guinevere 103
202
Pass, of Arthur 151
„ 398
Lover's Tale i 160
650
,, iv204:
„ 371
376
The Revenge 19
Sisters (E. and E.) 89
267
In the Child. Hosp. 69
Sir J. Oldcastle 198
Columbus 77
101
105
111
189
The Wreck 59
Dead Prophet 6
Dernier and P. 8
The Ring 129
Happy 73
Romney's R. 78
Akbar's Dream 116
Charity 9
To the Queen 7
Supp. Confessions 6
69
145
Mariana 56
Clear-lieaded friend 11
Madeline 15
34,46
Brow {continued) a & of pearl Tressed with
redolent ebony,
Even as a maid, whose stately b
Her beautiful bold b,
With thy soften'd, shadow'd b,
wearing on my swarthy b's The garland
His broad clear b in sunlight glow'd ;
From b and bosom slowly down
Look up, the fold is on her b.
blow Before him, striking on my b.
and the charm of married b's.'
drew From her warm b's and bosom her deep hair
steep our b's in slumber's holy balm ;
Whereto the other with a downward 6 :
lying dead, my crown about my b's,
dropping bitter tears against his 6
But the full day dwelt on her b's,
Love with knit b's went by,
whose bald b's in silent hours become
I waited long ; My b's are ready.
glimmer steals From thy pure b's,
Her sweet face from b to chin :
Warm broke the breeze against the b,
A band of pain across my 6 ;
sleepy light upon their b's and lips —
we know the hue Of that cap upon her b's.
And gain'd a laurel for your b
Annie with her b's against the wall
o'er his bent b's linger'd Averill,
often placed upon the sick man's b
breathing down From over her arch'd b's,
and the Roman b's Of Agrippina.
gaunt old baron with his beetle b Sun-shaded
Psyche, wont to bind my throbbing b.
Star-sisters answering under crescent b's ;
lilylike Melissa droop'd her b's ;
manlike, but his b's Had sprouted,
With hooded b's I crept into the hall,
made the single jewel on her b Burn
till over b And cheek and bosom brake
raised the cloak from b's as pale and smooth
veil'd her b's, and prone she sank,
she laid A feeling linger on my b's,
With b to b like night and evening
fear not ; breathe upon my b's ;
King bent low, with hand on b,
gladness even crown'd The purple b's of Olivet.
Urania speaks with darken 'd b :
I took the thorns to bind my b's,
Lift as thou may'st thy burthen'd b's
So, dearest, now thy b's are cold,
turn'd To black and brown on kindred b's.
fan my b's and blow The fever from my cheek,
Be large and lucid round thy b.
And enter in at breast and b,
Broad b's and fair, a fluent hair and fine,
a b May -blossom, and a cheek of apple-blossom,
Brought down a momentary b.
Then seeing cloud upon the mother's b,
with droopt b down the long glades he rodo ;
drawing down the dim disastrous b
a wizard b bleach'd on the walls :
two brethren slowly with bent b's
Accompanying,
kiss'd her quiet b's, and saying
Arthur, who beheld his cloudy b's,
the circlet of the jousts Bound on her b,
circlet of the tourney round her b's,
under her black b's a swarthy one Laugh'd
laid His b's upon the drifted leaf and dream'd.
a b Like hillsnow high in heaven,
dropping bitter tears against a b
To pass my hands across my b's,
clear b, bulwark of the precious brain,
lirood More warmly on the heart than on the b.
Arabian Nights 137
Ode to Memory 13
Tlie Poet 38
Adeline 46
Kate 23
L, of ShaZott Hi 28
Mariana in the & 14
Two Voices 192
Fatima 25
(Enone 76
„ 177
Lotos-Eaters, 0. S. 21
D.ofF. Women m
162
M. d' Arthur 211
Gardener's D. 136
245
St. S. "Stylites 165
206
Tithonus 35
L. of Burleigh 62
The Voyage 9
The Letters 6
Vision of Sin 9
„ 142
Yoit might have won 3
Erioch Arden 314
Aylmer's Field 625
700
Princess ii 39
84
240
250
428
„ wl61
„ 204
„ 225
„ 273
382
„ V 73
„ 107
„ ml21
„ 131
,, OT'i353
The Victim 53
In Mem. xxxi 12
xxxvii 1
Ixix 7
Ixxii 21
Ixxiv 5
Ixxix 16
Ixxxvi 8
xci 8
cocxii 11
Gareth and L. 464
588
„ 6.53
Marr. of Geraint 777
Balin and Balan 311
597
Merlin and V. 597
Lancelot and E. 1138
ll.'iO
13.54
Pdleas and E. 435
454
Last ToumaTnent 216
406
„ 666
Pass. ofA7-thur379
Lover's Tale iSl
130
328
Brow
69
Bugle
Brow (continued) for her b's And mine made garlands Lover's Tale i 342
Beyond the nearest mountain's bosky b'g, ,, 396
knotted thorns thro' my unpaining b's, „ 620
sprinkled brook Smote on my b's, ,, 634
great crown of beams about his b's — ,, 672
walk'd abreast with me, and veil'd his b, ,, ii 86
and from his 6 drew back His hand to push ,, 92
about my b Her warm breath floated ,, 140
Upon my fever'd b's that shook and throbb'd „ Hi 7
walk'd behind with one who veil'd his b. ,, 12
Cold were his b's when we kiss'd him — Def. o/Lucknoio 12
in your raised b's I read Some wonder Colu7nbus 1
Why, what a 6 was there ! The Wreck 48
The broad white b of the Isle — „ 135
dreamer stoopt and kiss'd her marble b. LocMey H., Sixty 38
out of the field. And over the b and away. Heavy Brigade 64
Unfurnish'd b's, tempestuous tongues— Freedmn 38
But seen upon the silent b when life Rappy 52
when I let him kiss my b; , , 65
, round her b's a woodland culver flits, Prog, of Spring 18
I till the heat Smote on her b. Death of CEnone 98
' Me they front With sullen b's. Akbar's Dream 52
Brow-beat while the worn-out clerk B^'s his desk
below. To J. M. K. 12
Brow-bound eyes, B-b with burning gold. D. of F. Women 128
Brow'd See Beautifol-brow'd, Dark-brow'd, Lai^e-brow'd
Brow-high the hemlock, B-h, did strike my forehead Lover's Tale ii 19
Brown in a silent shade of laurel b Apart Alexander 9
Her streaming curls of deepest b Mariana in the S. 16
B, looking hardly human, strangely clad, Enoch Arden 638
Enoch was so 6, so bow'd, ,, 703
beauties every shade of b and fair Princess ii 437
all her autumn tresses falsely b, „ 449
I watch the twilight falling b To F. D. Maurice 14
To black and b on kindred brows. In Mem. Ixxix 16
park and suburb under b Of lustier leaves ; ,, occviii 24
Unloved, that beech will gather b, „ ci3
bracken so bright and the heather so b, June Bracken, etc. 3
Browsed b by deep-udder'd kine, Gardener's D. 46
Browt (brought) I b what tha seeas stannin' theer. North. Cobbler 70
h me the boocits to be cobbled „ 94
So IJ tha down, an' I says Owd Roa 97
I b 'im down, an' we got to the barn, ,, 103
An' I b Roa round, but Moother ,, 113
Braise Hard-won and hardly won with b and blow, Lancelot and E. 1165
Braised cursed and scom'd, and b with stones : Two Voices 222
that there Lie b and maim'd. Princess vi 72
Had b the herb and crush'd the grape, Lt Mem. xxxv 23
swordcut on the cheek, And b and bronzed, Lancelot and E. 259
and so left him b And batter'd, Pelleas and E. 546
Nor 6 the wildbird's egg. Lover's Tale ii 21
h and butted with the shuddering War-thunder Tiresias 99
Brunanburh Slew with the sword-edge
There by B, Batt. of Brunanburh 10
Brunelleschi Arno, and the dome Of B ; The Brook 190
Brunette A quick /;, well-moulded, Princess ii 106
Brush (pencil) took his b and blotted out the bird. Merlin and V. 478
Brush (tail of fox) ' Peter had the b. My
Peter, first : ' Aylmer's Field 254
Brush (verb) to b the dew From thine own lily, Siipp. Confessions 84
Brush 'd 6 'Thro' the dim meadow toward his Aylmer's Field b^Q
when, this gad-fly b aside, Princess v 414
and h My fallen forehead in their to and fro, Lover's Tale i 700
Brushing And b ankle-deep in flowers, In Mem.. Ixxxix 49
with his brandish 'd plume B his instep, Geraint and E. 360
Brushwood elm-tree-boles did stoop and lean Upon
the dusky b D. of F. Women 58
Brute {See also Brother-brute) Take my b, and
lead him in, Vision of Sin 65
Thou madest Life in man and b\ In Mem., Pro. 6
No longer half-akin to 6, ,, Con. 133
he had not been a Sultan of b's, Maud II v 81
b's of mountain back That carry kings Merlin and V. 576
0 great and sane and simple race of b's Pelleas and E. 480
Come from the b, poor souls — Despair 36
Brute {co7itinued) no souls — and to die with the b — Despair 36
and burn the kindlier b's alive. Locksley H., Sixty 96
B's, the b's are not your wrongers — ,, 97
let the house of a J to the soul of a man, By an Evolution. 1
If my body come from b's, (repeat) „ 5, 13
I, the finer b rejoicing in toy hounds, „ 7
and rule thy Province of the b. ,,16
these Are like wild b's new-caged — Attar's Dream 50
The Ghost of the B that is walking The Dawn 23
Brutus (Lucius Junius) See Lucius Junius Brutus
Bubble (s) watch'd Or seem'd to watch the dancing b, Princess Hi 24
colour'd 6 bursts above the abyss Romney's R. 52
Bubble (verb) I b into eddying bays, The Brook 41
On yon swoll'n brook that b's fast In Mem. xcix 6
And yet b's o'er like a city, with gossip, Maud I iv 8
Bubbled at mine ear B the nightingale Princess iv 266
The milk that b in the pail, In Mem. Ixxxix 51
oilily b up the mere. Gareth and L. 816
Bubbling See Life -bubbling
Bublin' (young unfledged bird) An' haafe on
'im bare as a 6.' Owd Rod 102
Bucket rope that haled the b's from the well, St. S. Stylites 64
helpt to pass a b from the well To Mary Boyle 39
Buckled B with golden clasps before ; Sir L. and Q. G. 25
Buckler The brand, the b, and the spear — Two Voices 129
Clash the darts and on the b beat Boddicea 79
snatch'd a sudden b from the Squire, Balin and Balan 554
Bud (b) (See also Chestnut-bud, Sea-bud) While
thou abodest in the b. Two Voices 158
chestnuts, when their b's Were glistening Miller's D. 60
flowers, and b's and garlands gay, May Queen 11
folded leaf is woo'd from out the b Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 26
Sweet as new b's in Spring. D. of F. Women 272
all-too-full in b For puritanic stays : Talking Oak 59
kisses balmier than half-opening b's Of April, Tithonus 59
In b or blade, or bloom, may find, Day-Dm., Moral 10
burst In carol, every b to flower, ,, L' Envoi 44
While life was yet in b and blade. Princess i 32
' Pretty b ! Lily of the vale ! „ vi 192
b ever breaks into bloom on the tree, The Islet 32
longs to burst a frozen b And flood In Mem. locxxiii 15
0 when her life was yet in 6, ,, Con. 33
flower tell What sort of b it was. Lover's Tale i 152
from within Burst thro' the heated b's, „ 320
No b, no leaf, no flower, no fruit ,, 725
and all smells of b And foliage from the dark , , Hi 5
spies the summer thro' the winter b, Ancieiit Sage 74
fleets the shower, And burst the b's. Early Spring 14
' your pretty 6, So blighted here, The Ring 316
Thy warmths from 6 to 6 Accomplish Prog, of Spring 113
Bud (verb) And rugged barks begin to b, My life is full 18
times, when some new thought can b, Golden Year 27
out of tyranny tyranny b's. Boddicea 83
And b's and blossoms like the rest. In Mem. cxv 20
Budded See New-budded, Ruby-budded
Buddhist Brahmin, and B, Christian, and Parsee, A kbar's Dream 25
Bude the thundering shores of B and Bos, Guinsvere 291
Buffet (s) with a stronger b he clove the helm Gareth and L. 1406
Swung from his brand a windy b Geraint and. E. 90
Buffet (verb) echo flap And b round the hills. Golden Year 77
Strove to b to land in vain. Princess iv 185
Buffeted See Tempest-buffeted
Bugle (adj.) all the 6 breezes blew Reveillee In Mem. Ixviiil
Bugle (s) Aloud the hollow b blowing, Oriana 17
Loud, loud rung out the b's brays, ,, 48
A mighty silver b hung, L. of Shalott Hi 16
Blow, b, blow, set the wild echoes (repeat) Princess iv 5, 17
Blow, b ; answer, echoes, dying, (repeat) ,, 6, 12
and bray of the long horn And serpent-throated b, „ v 253
With blare of 6, clamour of men. Ode on Well. 115
Warble, 0 b, and trumpet, blare ! W. to Alexandra 14
March with banner and b and fife Mavd I v 10
raised a b hanging from his neck, Pelleas and E. 364
waits below the wall, Blowing his 6 ,, 381
and on shield A spear, a harp, a b — Last Tournament 174
Bugle
70
Buried
Bugle (s) (continued) S's and drums in the darkness, Def. of Luchnow 76
Bugle-hom belted hunter blew His wreathed &-A, Palace of Art &A:
when you want me, sound upon the h-h. Lochsley HaU 2
call me, sounding on the b-h, ,, 145
Build 6 up all My sorrow with my song, (Enone 39
built When men knew how to b, Edwin Morris 7
I would b Far oflf from men a college Princess, Pro. 134
She had founded ; they must b. ,, ii 145
I, that have lent my life to b up yours, ,, iv 351
6 some plan Foursquare to opposition.' ,, « 230
On God and Grodlike men we b our trust. Ode on Well. 266
b's the house, or digs the grave. In Mem. xxxvi 14
change their sky To b and brood ; ,, cxv 16
Grave him an isle of marsh whereon to b ; Holy Grail 62
he groan'd, ' ye b too high.' Pelleas and E. 555
b a wall betwixt my life and love, Lover's Tale i 176
none but Gods could b this house Ancient Sage 83
Builded The house was b of the earth, Deserted House 15
Building like enow They are b still, Gareth and L. '2!JQ
Built {See also Belt, Half-built, Low-built, Sand-
built, Woman-built) b up everywhere An
under-roof Dying Swan 3
I B my soul a lordly pleasure-house. Palace of Art!
Thereon 1 6 it firm. ,, 9
In this great mansion, that is b for me, ,, 19
' My spacious mansion b for me, ,, 234
palace towers, that are So lightly, beautifully b: ,, 294
b When men knew how to build, Edwin Mwris 6
And b herself an everlasting name. ' Godiva 79
B for pleasure and for state. L. of Burleigh 2!2,
b their castles of dissolving sand Enoch Arden 19
b, and thatch'd with leaves of palm, ,, 559
Ehodope, that b the pyramid. Princess ii 82
vapour streak the crowned towers jB to the Sun : * ,, iiiBi5
' The plan was mine. I b the nest ' „ iv 365
conscious of what temper you are 6, ,, 400
Far oflf from men I 6 a fold for them : ,, i; 390
tho' he b upon the babe restored ; „ vii 75
And towers fall'n as soon as b — In Mem. xxvi 8
Who 6 him fanes of fruitless prayer, ,, Zm 12
New as his title, b last year, Mavd / a; 19
city of Enchanters, b By fairy Kings.' Gareth and L. 199
and whether this be b By magic, ,, 247
Fairy Queens have b the city, son ; ,, 259
And 6 it to the music of their harps. ,, 262
seeing the city is b To music, therefore never
6 at all, „ 276
And therefore b for ever.' ,, 278
B that new fort to overawe my friends, Marr. of Geraint 460
that low church he b at Glastonbury. Balin and Balan 367
Had b the King his havens, ships. Merlin and V. 168
there he 6 with wattles from the marsh Holy Grail 63
Which Merlin b for Arthur long ago ! ,, 226
Climbs to the mighty hall that Merlin b. „ 231
B by old kings, age after age, ,, 340
some ancient king Had b a way, , , 502
saw High up in heaven the hall that Merlin b, Pelleas and E. 553
B for a summer day with Queen Isolt Last Tournament 378
There be some hearts so airily b, that they, Lover's Tale i 803
Timur b his ghastly tower of eighty thousand Locksley H., Sixty 82
Served the poor, and b the cottage, ,, 268
Son's love b me, and I hold Mother's love Helen's Tower 3
b their shepherd-prince a funeral pile ; Death of (Enone 63
whose pious hand had b the cross, St. Telemachus 9
Bulbul Died roimd the b as he sung ; Arabian Nights 70
' 0 B, any rose of Gulistan Shall burst Princess iv 122
Bulge cheek B with the unswallow'd piece, Geraint and E. 631
Bulk Tudor-chimnied b Of mellow brickwork Edwin Morris 11
bones of some vast b that lived and roar'd Princess Hi 294
Down From those two b's at Arac's side, „ v 499
and grown a 6 Of spanless girth, ,, w 35
Dark b's that tumble half alive. In Mem. Ixx 11
strike him, overbalancing his b, Last Torwrnament 460
Bulk'd an old-world mammoth b in ice, Princess v 148
Bull grasp'd The mild b'* golden horn. Palace of Art 120
Bull {continued) oil'd and curl'd Assyrian B Smelling
of musk JUaud I m 44
Kay near him groaning like a wounded b— Gareth awl L. 648
whom his shaking vassals call'd the B, Geraitit and E. 439
brainless b's, Dead for one heifer ! ' Balin and Balan 578
like a b gotten loose at a faair. North. Cobbler 33
and the b couldn't low, and the dog V. of Maeldune 18
Bull (Inn Sign) ' Thk B, the Fleece are cramm'd, Attdley Court 1
Bull (Edward) See Edward Bull
Bullet {See also Cannon-bullet, Musket-bullet, Biiie-
buUet) B's fell like rain ; The Captain 46
b struck him that was dressing it The Revenge 67
And caught the laming b. Sisters {E. and E.) 65
the brute b broke thro' the brain Def. of Lucknmu 20
B's would sing by our foreheads, and b's would rain ,, 21
Bulrush sword-grass, and the b in the pool. May Queen, N. Y's. E. 28
mid-thigh-deep in b'es and reed, Gareth and L. 810
Bulrush-bed plunged Among the b-b's, and clutch'd
the sword, M. d' Arthur 135
plunged Among the b-b's, and clutch'd the sword. Pass, of Arthur 303
Bulwark now they saw their b fallen, Geraint and E. 168
Bummin' (buzzing) b' awaay loike a buzzard-clock N. Fai-mer, 0. S. 18
Bump'd I b the ice into three several stars, The Ejiic 12
Bumper He froth 'd his b's to the brim ; D. of the 0. Year 19
Bunch {See also Fruit-bunches, Vine-bunches) With
b and berry and flower CEnmie 102
grapes with b'es red as blood ; Day-Dm., Sleep, P. 44
Craft with a 6 of all-heal in her hand, Vastness 12
Bundle now hastily caught His b, waved his hand, Enoch Arden 238
Buoy {See also Harbour-buoy) We left behind the
painted b The Voyage 1
The b that rides at sea, and dips Gareth aiid L. 1146
Buoy'd range Of vapour b the crescent-bark, Day-Dm., Depart. 22
B upon floating tackle and broken Enoch Arden 551
Bur {See also Burr) b and brake and briar, Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 46
like a wall of b's and thorns ; Sea Dreams 119
Burden {See also Burthen) people here, a beast
of b slow. Palace of Art 149
prepared The daily b for the back. In Mem. zxo 4
Burdock eft and snake. In grass and b, Holy Grail 571
Burgeon space to b out of all Within her— Princess vii 271
Now b's every maze of quick In Mem. cxv 2
Burgher Knight and b, lord and dame, L. of Shalott iv 43
Burial (adj.) Mammonite mother kills her babe for a 6 fee, Maud I i 4:5
Burial (s) at a 6 to hear The creaking cords Supp. Confessions 35
Fresh from the b of her little one, Enoch Arden 281
A summer b deep in hollyhocks ; Ayliner's Field 164
That hears his b talk'd of by his friends. Princess vii 152
Now to glorious b slowly borne, Ode on Well. 193
Pray for my soul, and yield me b. Lancelot and E. 1280
place of b Far lovelier than its cradle ; Lover's Tale i 529
and ask'd If I would see her & : ,, ii7\
At some precipitance in her b. ,, iv 107
Past thro his visions to the b; ,, 357
borne in white To 6 or to burning. Ancient Sage 208
Those that in barbarian b's kill'd the slave, Locksley Hall, Sixty 67
Beyond our b and our buried eyes. The Ring 296
Buried {See also A-buried, Half-buried, Long-buried)
I b her like my own sweet child. Lady Clare 27
that same week when Annie b it, Enoch Arden 271
And when they b him the little port ,, 916
Old scandals b now seven decads deep Aylmer's Field 442
Half b in some weightier argument, I/wcretius 9
have they not b me deep enough ? Maud II v 96
Dead, whom we b ; more than one of us Balin and Balan 122
rummage b in the walls Might echo, „ 416
see that she be b worshipfully.' Lancelot and E. 1329
maiden b, not as one unknown, ,, 1334
I kiss'd 'em, I b 'em all — Rizpah 55
She died and she was b ere we knew. Sisters {E. and E.) 241
So feyther an' son was b togither, Village Wife f
as God's truer images Are daily b.' Sir J, Oldcastle 1
I will have them b in my grave. Columbus '^
his Riverence b thim both in wan grave Tomorrow
There, there ! he b you, the Priest ; Happy ll
Burleigh
71
Burst
Burleigh •See Lord of Burleigh
Burleigh-house B-h by Stamt'ord-town. L. of Burleigh 92
Burlesque Had ever seem'd to wrestle with b, Princess, Con. 16
Bum (stream) Over the pools in the b water-gnats Leonine Eleg. 8
tall firs and our fast-falling b's ; Gareth and L. 91
Bum (burnt place) An' it was'nt a bite but a b, Owd Rod 90
Bum (verb) cricket chirps : the light b's low : D. of the 0. Year 40
While the stars b, the moons increase, To J. S. 71
And b a fragrant lamp before my bones, St. S. Stylites 196
And b the threshold of the night. The Voyage 18
but my cheek Began to b and b, Princess Hi 46
b's Above the unrisen morrow : ' „ iv9i2
made the single jewel on her brow B ,, 274
Wherefore in me b's an anger, Boddicea 52
Burst the gates, and b the palaces, ,, 64
fires b clear, And frost is here Window, Wilder 4
And with the thought her colour b's ; In Mem. vi 34
And calm that let the tapers b „ xcv 5
This maple b itself away ; ,, ci 4
Cold fires, yet with power to b Maud I xviii 39
beneath there b's A jewell'd harness, Gareth and L. 687
Made her cheek b and either eyelid fall, Marr. of Geraint 775
Made her cheek 6 and either eyelid fall. Geraint and E. 434
sin that practice b's into the blood, Merlin and V. 762
Made my tears b — is also past — Guinevere 542
Amen ! Nay, I can b, so that the Lord Sir J. Oldcastle 173
And doom'd to b alive. ,, 183
So, caught, I 6. 5? ,,184
God willing, I will b for Him. „ 193
for the bright-eyed goddess made it b. Achilles over the T. 29
great God, Ares, b's in anger still Tiresias 11
noonday crag made the hand b; ,,35
— but how my temples b ! The Flight 73
and 6 the kindlier brutes alive. LocJcsley H., Sixty 96
fur the bam wouldn't b Owd Rod 103
What star could b so low ? not Ilion yet. Death of (Enone 83
' Who 6 's upon the pyre ? ' ,, 99
Bum (bom) Cooms of a gentleman b : N. Farmer, N. S. 38
Gentleman 6 ! what's gentleman 6 ? ,, 42
An' then the babby wur b. North. Cobbler 16
For 'e warn't not b to the land, Village Wife 44
'e wur b an' bred i' the 'ouse. Spinster's S's. 69
Bum'd (<See also Burnt) B like one burning flame
together, L. of Shalott Hi 22
green grasses b The red anemone. D. of F. Women 71
Or b in fire, or boil'd in oil, St. S. Stylites 52
that, which in me b. The love, Talking Oak 10
eye. That b upon its object thro' such tears Love and Duty 63
At times the whole sea b. The Voyage 51
sacred fire. That b as on an altar. Enoch Arden 72
But still the foeman spoil'd and b. The Victim 17
Last night, when the sunset b Maud I vi8
b Full on her knights in many an evil name Pelleas and E. 289
one low light betwixt them b Guinevere 4
great light of heaven B at his lowest Pass, of Arthur 91
And & alive as heretics I "Sir J. Oldcastle 48
o'er the great Peleion's head B, Achilles over the T. 29
The prophet's beacon b in vain. Ancient Sage 142
Burning A love still 6 upward, Isabel 18
All earth and air seem only b fire.' (Enane 268
Larger constellations 6, mellow moons Locksley Hall 159
The tapers b fair. Sir Galahad 32
with life-long injuries b unavenged, Geraint and E. 696
On tlieni the smell of 6 had not past. Sir J. Oldcastle 177
borne in white To biirial or to h. Ancient Sage 208
Burnish to scream, to b, and to scour. Princess iv 520
Bumish'd sitting, b without fear The brand. Two Voices 128
That glitter b by the frosty dark ; Princess v 261
and all in mail B to blinding, Gareth and L. 1027
Burnt [See also Bum'd) B like a fringe of fire. Palace of Art 48
he b His epic, his King Arthur, The Epic 27
Mere chaff and draff, much better b.' ,,40
B in each man's blood. The Captain 16
and b, Now chafing at his own great self Aylmer's Field 536
the good Sir Ralph had b them all— Princess, Pro. 236
Burnt {continued) grandsire b Because he cast no
shadow.
Nor b the grange, nor buss'd the milking-maid,
other thoughts than Peace B in us,
B and broke the grove and altar
the rest Slew on and b, crying.
So b he was with passion,
smoulder'd wrong that b him all within ;
many of those who b the hold,
but one night my vow B me within.
Blasted and b, and blinded as I was,
£ as a living tire of emeralds,
and in it Far cities b,
took and hang'd, Took, hang'd and b —
B — good Sir Roger Acton, my dear friend !
B too, my faithful preacher, Beverley !
B, b ! and while this mitred Arundel
Not b were they. On them the smell of burning
b at midnight, found at morn,
the smoke. The pyre he b in.'-
Princess i 6
„ i>222
., 246
Boddicea 2
Com. of Arthur 439
Marr. of Geraint 560
Geraint and E. 107
Holy GraU 264
„ 608
„ 844
Pelleas and E. 35
Guinevere 83
Sir J. Oldcastle 46
79
80
104
176
Locksletf H., Sixty 97
'The Ring SAO
Burr (See also Bur) When b and bine were gather'd ; Aylmer's Field 113
Burrowing I have ferreted out their b's.
Burst (s) Preluded those melodious b's
Caught in a & of unexpected storm,
more than mortal in the b Of sunrise,
but given to starts and b's Of revel ;
B's of great heart and slips in sensual mire,
after some quick b of sudden wrath,
now the storm, its b of passion spent,
interspaces gush'd in blinding b's The
incorporate blaze of sun
and bosom'd the b of the spray.
Burst (verb) B's into blossom in his sight.
shrine-doors b thro' heated blasts
all at once the old man b in sobs : —
with hoggish whine They b my prayer.
Or to b all links of habit —
every bird of Eden b In carol.
All heaven b's her starry floors,
Now high on waves that idly b
b away In search of stream or fount,
B his own wyvern on the seal,
the great organ almost b his pipes,
rose of Gulistan Shall b her veil :
Ready to b and flood the world with foam :
clad in iron b the ranks of war,
in the saddle, then b out in words.
Descending, b the great bronze valves,
b The laces toward her babe ;
made the serf a man, and b his chain —
B the gates, and burn the palaces,
That longs to 6 a frozen bud
fiery-hot to b All barriers
And yearn'd to b the folded gloom.
Ready to 6 in a colour'd flame ;
should b and drown with deluging storms
should make your Enid b Sunlike
pavement echoing, 6 Their drowse ;
fringe of coppice round them 6 A sprangled
pursuivant,
b his lance against a forest bough,
pearl-necklace of the Queen, That b
And half his blood b forth,
b away To weep and wail in secret ;
almost b the barriers in their heat,
I b the chain, I sprang into the boat.
Hell b up your harlot roofs Bellowing
from within B thro' the heated buds,
Methought a light B from the garland
b through the cloud of thought Keen,
B vein, snap sinew, and crack heart,
wish yon moaning sea would rise and b the shore,
Merlin and V. 55
D. ofF. Women 6
Aylmer's Field 285
Princess, Pro. 40
,, i54
,, •yl99
Balin and Balan 216
Merlin and V. 961
Lover's Tale i 408
V. of Maeldune 103
Fatima 35
D. of F. Women 29
D(yra 158
St. S, Stylites 178
Locksley Hall 157
Day-Dm., L' Envoi 43
St. Agnes' Eve 27
The Voyage 69
Enoch Arden 634
Aylmer's Field 516
Princess ii 474
ivl2S
474
504
'ij275
m75
148
W. to Marie Alex. 3
Boddicea 64
In Mem. Ixxxiii 15
,, cxiv 13
,, cxxii 8
Maud I vi 19
„ // t42
Marr. of Geraint 788
Geraint and E. 271
Balin and Balan 46
329
Merlin and V. 452
Lancelot and E. 517
1244
Holy GraU 336
» 807
Pelleas and E. 466
Lover's Tale i 320
„ 366
„ ii 164
&ir J. Oldcastle 123
Tlie FligU 11
Russia b's our Indian barrier, Locksley H., Sixty 115
B like a thunderbolt. Crash 'd like a hurricane, Heavy Brigade 27
fleets the shower, And b the buds, Early Spring 14
Burst
72
Caerleon
Burst (verb) {continued) Sun B from a swimming
fleece Demeter and P. 20
smoke of war's volcano b again Prog, of Spring 97
colour'd bubble b's above the abyss Romney's R. 52
Bursting thistle h Into glossy purples, Ode on Well. 206
Burthen (load) (See also Burden) Less b, by ten-
hundred-fold, St. S. Stylites 24
Or seem to lift a b from thy heart Lm>e and Duty 96
vapours weep their b to the ground, Tithonus 2
With the b of an honour L. of Burleigh 79
No b, save my care for you and yours : Enoch Arden 419
breathless b of low-folded heavens Aylmer's Field 612
One b and she would not lighten it ? ,, 703
reaching forward drew My b from mine arms ; Princess iv 192
We flung the b of the second James. Third of Feb. 28
And not the b that they bring. In Mem. xiii 20
He bears the b of the weeks But turns his b into gain. ,, Ixxx 11
Were all a 6 to her, and in her heart Pelleas and E. 112
now yearn'd to shake The b off his heart Last Tournament 180
friends — your love Is but &b: To the Queen ii 17
careful b of our tender years Trembled Lover's Tale i 222
Holding his golden b in his arms, ,, iv 89
Burthen (refrain) [See also Ballad-Biirthen) Again
they shriek'd the b — ' Him ! ' Edwin Morris 123
As tho' it were the 6 of a song, Enoch Arden 797
Again and like a b, ' Him or death.' Lancelot and E. 903
Bliry You'll b me, my mother, just beneath May Queen, N. Vs. E. 29
b me beside the gate. And cut this epitaph Princess ii 206
B the Great Duke With an empire's Ode on Well. 1
Let us b the Great Duke To the noise ,,3
I will b myself in myself, Maud Ii76
have sworn to b All this dead body of hate, ,, xix 96
They cannot even b a man ; „ II v 2^1
some kind heart will come To b me, b me Deeper, ,, 103
when an' wheere to b his boane. Owd Roa 8
Burying Driving, hurrying, marrying, b, Maud II v 12
Bush [See also Myrrh-bush, Rose-bush) rushes and
bowers of rose-blowing b'es, Leonine Eleg. 3
girls all kiss'd Beneath the sacred b The Epic 3
' Hear how the b'es echo ! Gardener's I). 98
Holding the b, to fix it back, ,, 127
What ? — that the b were leafless ? Lucretius 206
in the b beside me chirrupt the nightingale. Grandm,other 40
Or underneath the barren b In Mem. xci 3
He dragg'd his eyebrow b'es down. Merlin and V. 807
Above the b'es, gilden-peakt : Pelleas and E. 429
lest an arrow from the b Should leave me Last Tournament 535
With falling brook or blossom 'd b — Lover's Tale i 405
sprang without leaf or a thorn from the b ; V. of Maeldune 44
sick For shadow — not one b was near — Tiresias 36
from the b we both had set — Ilappy 102
low b'es dip their twigs in foam. Prog, of Spring 51
Bush-bearded huge b-b Barons heaved and blew. Princess v 21
Bush'd So b about it is with gloom, Balin and Balan 95
Business her b often call'd her from it, Enoch Arden 264
Two in the tangled b of the world, Princess ii 174
Buss B me, thou rough sketch of man, Vision of Sin 189
Buss'd nor 6 the milking-maid. Princess v 222
Bust show'd the house, Greek, set with b's: ,, Pro. 11
There stood a 6 of Pallas for a sign, ,, i 222
Busted See Full-busted
Busying 5 themselves about the floworage Aylmer's Field 203
Butcher'd or b for all that we knew — iJef. ofLucknow 91
Butler Here sits the B with a flask Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 25
The b drank, the steward scrawl'd, ,, Revival 10
Butt (cask) woman like a b, and harsh as crabs. Walk, to tlie Mail 49
drew, from b's of water on the slope, Princess, Pro. 60
straddling on the b's While the wine Guinevere 268
Butt (target) Look to your b's, and take good aims ! Riflemen form 1 16
Butt (verb) Beholding how ye b against my wish, Geraint and E. 677
b each other here, like brainless bulls, Balin and Balan 578
cow shall b the ' Lion passant ' Locksley H., Sixty 248
Butted b his rough brother-brute For lust Lucretius 197
b each other with clashing of bells, V. of Maeldune 108
bruised aiul b with the shuddering War-thunder Tvredas 99
Village Wife 2
„ 114
„ 119
iV. Farmer, 0. S. 31
Adeline 28
Talking Oak 220
Enoch Arden 138
Sea Dreains 15
Maud / a; 32
Ma7r. of Geraint 372
Columbus 169
Enoch Arden 256
Merlin and V. 432
Lancelot and E. 139
785
Butter B an' heggs— yis— yis.
B I warrants be prime,
But I sarved 'em wi' b an' heggs
An' I niver puts saame i' my b,
Butter-bump (bittern) Moast loike a b-b,
for I 'eard 'um
Butterfly Hast thou heard the butterflies
flutter'd round her lip Like a golden b ;
Buttoned See Close-buttoned
Buy B goods and stores — set Annie forth
b strange shares in some Peruvian mine.
Bought ? what is it he cannot b ?
Go to the town and b us flesh
scarce a coin to 6 a meal withal.
Buying sold her wares for less Than what she
gave in b
Buzz It b'es fiercely round the point ;
vermin voices here May b so loud —
shake off the bee that b'es at us ;
Buzzard-clock (Cockchafer) bummin' awaay
loike a b-c N. Farmer, 0. S. 18
Buzz'd palace bang'd, and b and clackt, Day-Dm., Revival 14
dances broke and b in knots of talk ; Princess i 133
b abroad About the maid of Astolat, Lancelot and E. 722
Buzzing {See also Bummin') And b's of the honied
hours. In Mem. Ixxxix 52
By-and-by I will show it you b-a-b. Bandit's Death 8
Bygones trim our sails, and let old b be. Princess iv 69
' Let bhe\' 'B\ First Quarrel 67
' B-g ma' be come-agains ; ,,69
By-lane Till the filthy b-l rings to the yell Maud I i 38
Byre (cow-house) Then thorpe and b arose in fire, The Victim 3
Byway where this b joins The turnpike ? Walk, to the Mail 4
Byword fatal b of all years to come, Godiva 67
Caake (cake) Doant maake thysen sick wi' the c. Oiod Rod 34
Cabin all day long till Enoch's last at home. Shaking
their pretty c, Enoch Arden 173
And down in the c were we, Tlie Wreck 89
lay like the dead by the dead on the c floor, ,, 112
Call'd from her c an' tould her to come away Tomorrow 20
Cabin'd Be c up in words and syllables, Lover's Tale i 480
Cabinet And moving toward a cedarn c, Man: of Geraint 136
Cabin-window I see the c-w bright ; In Mem. x 3
Cackle With c and with clatter. The Goose 12
rustic c of your bourg The murmur of the
world ! Marr. of Geraint 276
The c of the unborn about the grave, Merlin and V. 507
Cackled It clack'd and c louder. The Goose 24
Cadence a hand, a foot Lessening in perfect c. Walk, to the Mail 55
in mimic c answer'd James — Golden Year 53
but when the preacher's c flow'd Aylmer's Field 729
In clanging c jangling peal on peal — Lover's Tale iii 22
Cadmean sprang No dragon warriors from C teeth, Lucretius 50
Cadmus Our C, out of whom thou art, Tiresias 13
for I loathe The seed of C— „ 117
Thou, one of these, the race of C — „ 134
Caer-Er^ On C-E's highest found the King, Ga/reth and L. 500
Caerleon Held court at old C upon Usk. Man: cf Geraint 146
When late I left C, our great Queen, ,, 781
And all that week was old C gay, ,, 837
longer time Than at C the full-tided Usk, Geraint and E. 116
they past With Arthur to 0 upon Usk. ,, 946
Dost thou remember at G once — A year ago — Balin and Balan 503
By the great tower — C upon Usk — ,, 606
Who never sawest C upon Usk — „ 570
dealt him at Caerlyle ; That at C ; this at
Camelot : Lancelot and E. 23
And at G had he help'd his lord, ,, 297
A minstrel of C by strong storm Merlin and V. 9
Caerleon
73
Can
Caerleon {continiced) as he sat In hall at old C, the
high doors Pelleaa and E. 3
to find C7and the King, had felt the sun „ 22
to tilt against the knights There at C7, „ 66
but will ye to C? I Gto likewise : ,,106
when they reach'd G, ere they past to lodging, „ 125
Then at V for a space — her look Bright ,, 176
Caerlyle this dealt him at C; That at Caerleon ; Lancelot and E. 22
Ctesar tame and tutor with mine eye That dull cold-
blooded C.
Roman legions here again, And G's eagle :
for whose love the Roman C first Invaded
Britain,
Rome of C, Rome of Peter,
fallen every purple (7s dome —
Lightning may shrivel the laurel of C,
Cage (b) Lay silent in the muffled c of life :
The linnet bom within the c,
I have broke their c, no gilded one,
I took it, he made it a c,
the narrower The c, the more their fury.
Cage (verb) Ye c a buxom captive here and there.
Caged See New-caged, Newly-caged
Cageling as the c newly-flown returns,
Caiaphas-Amndel These Pharisees, this C-A
Cain lust of gain, in the spirit of C,
Daughter of the seed of C,
And set a crueller mark than Cs on him.
Cairn And cleaves to c and cromlech still ;
Caim'd And the c mountain was a shadow.
Caitiff (adj.) bandit earls, and c knights,
I will tell him all their c talk ;
Caitiff (b) hand striking great blows At c^s
I would track this c to his hold,
In shadow, waiting for them, c's all ;
The ds\' ' Nay,' said Pelleas, but forbear ;
As let these c's on thee work their will ? '
Cajole and juggle, and lie and c,
Ca^e {See also Ca4ke) brought sweet c's to make
them cheer,
* Have I not earn'd my c in baking of it ?
Calaber (Quintus) See Quintus Calaber
Calamity Where'er I came I brought c.'
His heart foreshadowing all c,
Nor all CTs hughest waves confound,
That a c hard to be borne ?
Calculated mind Mine ; worse, cold, c.
Calculation Abhorrent of a c crost,
Calendar'd names Are register'd and c for saints.
Calf (of the leg) proxy- wedded with a bootless c
Calf (young of the cow) See Cauf
Caliphat I came upon the great Pavilion of the C.
Call (s) And answers to his mother's c's
Hope at Beauty's c would perch and stand,
At length I saw a lady within c.
Whistle back the parrot's c.
She answer'd to my c.
When they answer to his c,
a stable wench Came running at the c,
A martial song like a trumpet's c !
But heard the c, and came :
Then at his c, ' 0 daughters of the Dawn,
yet I say the bird That will not hear my c.
An' Parson as hesn't the c, nor the mooney.
av the bird 'ud come to me c,
we couldn't ha' 'eard tha c,
in his heart he cried, ' The c of God ! '
muttering to himself, ' The c of God '
And one clear c for me !
Call (verb) And thro' wild March the throstle c's,
Yet, my God, Whom c I Idol ?
Day and night to the billow the fountain c's :
She saw me fight, she heard me c,
We would c aloud in the dreamy dells,
C to each other and whoop and cry
D. ofF. Women \Z9
Gam, of Arthur 35
Marr. of GerairU 745
Locksley H., Sixty 88
To Virgil 30
Parnassus 4
Princess vii 47
In Mem. xxvii 3
Sir J. Oldcastle 3
The Wreck 83
Akbar's Dream 51
Merlin and V. 542
901
Sir J. Oldcastle 179
Maud / i 23
Forlorn 39
Happy 18
To tlie Queen ii 41
Merlin and V. 638
Marr. of Geraint 35
Geraint and E. 66
Marr. ofOeraint 96
415
Geraint and E. 58
PeUeas and E. 280
„ 323
Charity 29
Marr. of Geraint 388
Gareth and L. 575
D. ofF. Women m
Enoch Arden 683
WU15
Maitd I xiii 3
Romney's R. 152
Enoch Arden i^^Z
St. S. Stylites 132
Princess i 34
Arabian Nights 114
Supp. Confessions 159
Caress'dj or chidden 3
D. ofF. Women 85
Locksley Hall 171
Will Water. 106
L. of Burleigh 50
Princess i 227
Maud Iv 5
Com. of Arthur 47
Gareth and L. 923
Lover's Tale iv 160
Village Wife 91
Tomorrow 45
Owd Roa 49
St. Tel&nachus 27
42
Crossing tlie Bar 2
To the Queen 14
Supp. Confessions 180
Sea-Fairies 9
Oriana 32
The Merman 26
26
Call (verb) {continued) if any came near I would c,
and shriek. The Mermaid 38
0 will she answer if I c ? Miller's D. 118
You must wake and c me early, c me early, (repeat) May Queen 1, 41
If you do not c me loud when the day begins to
break ; ,,10
They c me cruel-hearted, but I care not what
they say, ,, 19
If you're waking c me early, c me early,
(repeat) May Queen, N. Y's. E. 1, 52
c me before the day is born. ,, 49
in the wild March-morning I heard the angels c ; May Qiieen, Con. 25
in the wild March-morning I heard them c my soul. " ,, 28
1 am that Rosamond, whom men c fair, D. of F. Women 251
for themselves and those who c them friend ? M. d' Arthur 253
Or change a word with her he c's his wife, Dora 44
Father ! — if you let me c you so — „ 140
' They c me what they will,' he said : Golden Year 14
as of old, the curlews c, . Locksley Hall 3
Hark, my merry comrades c me, ' ,, 145
Yet say the neighbours when they c, Amphion 5
guest, Shall c thee from the boxes. Will Water. 240
But when he c's, and thou shalt cease ,, 241
What do they c you ? ' ' Katie.' The Brook 211
the voice that c's Doom upon kings, ' Aylmer's Field 741
do not c him, love, Before you prove him, ' Sea Dreams 170
From childly wont and ancient use I c — Lucretius 209
I — would c them masterpieces : Princess i 145
Brutus of my kind ? Him you c great : ,, m 285
Should I not c her wise, who made me wise ? „ 396
c down from Heaven A blessing on her labours „ 478
She c's her plagiarist ; ,, m 94
' There sinks the nebulous star we c the Sun, ,, ivl9
And c her Ida, tho' I knew her not, And c her sweet,
as if in irony. And c her hard and cold which
seem'd a truth : „ vii 96
the children c, and I Thy shepherd pipe, ,, 217
again the people C it but a weed. The Flower 24
c us Britain's barbarous populaces, Boddicea 7
and c To what I feel is Lord of all, In Mem. Iv 18
To clap their cheeks, to c them mine. In Mem. Ixxxiv 18
c The spirits from their golden day, ,, xciv 5
To whom a thousand memories c, ,, cxi 10
But trust that those we c the dead ,, cxmiiSt
you may c it a little too ripe, Maud I HQ
Whatever they c him, what care I, ,, x 64
Who shall c me ungentle, unfair, „ oyiii 14
Scarcely, now, would I c him a cheat ; „ 29
That heard me softly c, ,, // iv 76
Merlin's master (so they c him) Bleys, Com. of Arthur 153
those who hate him in their hearts, C him bascborn, ,, 180
And there was none to c to but himself. ,, 202
Than make him knight because men c him
king, Gareth and L. 420
Look therefore when he c's for this in hall, ,, 583
Proud in their fantasy c themselves the Day, ,, 633
But that I heard thee c thyself a knave, — ,, 1163
0 damsel, be you wise To c him shamed, ,, 1260
And tho' I heard him c you fairest fair, Marr. of Geraint 720
his own ear had heard C herself false : Geraint and E. 114
C for the woman of the house,' ,, 263
bad the host C in what men soever were his friends, ,, 286
Yet fear me not : I c mine own self wild, ,, 311
For, c it lovers' quarrels, yet I know „ 324
C the host and bid him bring Charger and palfrey.' ,, 400
whom her ladies loved to c Enid the Fair, ,, 962
The people c you prophet : let it be : Merlin and V. 317
she will c That three-days-long presageful gloom ,, 319
1 c it, — well, I will not c it vice : ,, 368
Know well that Envy c's you Devil's son, „ 467
And then did Envy c me Devil's son : ,, 497
Master, shall we c him overquick To crop „ 724
Could c him (were it not for womanhood) ,, 786
Could c him the main cause of all their crime ; ,, 788
For fear our people c you lily maid In earnest, Lancelot and E. 386
Call
Call (verb) {anUinued) « Me you c great : mine is the
,Tj?Tf®®^*' .,^ , ,. Lancelot and E. 4i6
J ather, you c me wilful, and the fault Is yours T^q
Would c her friend and sister, sweet Elaine " 865
I needs must follow death, who c's for me • C and "
I follow, I follow ! let me die.' ' lOjj
I know not what you c the highest ; " 1 0SO
and bid c the ghostly man Hither, " Toqg
To this I c my friends in testimony, " 1099
Art thou not he whom men c light-of-love ? ' Pdlea^'and E. 361
"Trik. nl^^?+f Arthur up m heaven ? ' Last Tournament 333
j-trike against the man they c My sister's son- Guvneoere 572
how dare I c him mine ? The shadow of another ^^^'^^^e o'^
JNor shun to c me sister, dwell with you • " 676
B^tVfor'f?"" ^^'^ ^'^'^fu"* my house ' Pass, of Arthur 155
Both for themselves and those who c them friend « 421
WhTTn^^H ^^''^ ^^'^ People c ' The Hill of Woe. ' ' Lover'^ Tale i 374
Why should he c me to-night, Riznah '?
and you, will you c it a theft ?- n%zpali6
he used but to c in the dark, " co
he c's to me now from the church " of
Good-night. I am going. He c's. " og
Th.,?r*°'" 'V'* "'^^l^^^ rr. N<yrth. Cobbler 87
Their favourite— which I c ' The Tables
An- W^fixr 'is son, ^'''^vi&r^ti:^^
if'wtat w '' Vy. *° HYi' '- '^ cSmt 53
^what we c The spirit flash not all at once Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 4
the waters— you hear them c ! Besnair 47
c on that Infinite Love that has served us despair 4/
mI Fdwin"!^!^'?^*' ^"i' ^^^ S^^*^^" °^^^^''' ^'"^^'^i ^9^ 196
My ±.dwin loved to c us then yt- /,7,-„i/ on
What did they c her, yer Honour ? Tolw^owl
Ih I'tV''/.*^ ''".''•^ ^J^insZ'sl-7. 4
while I heard the curlews c, LorhSii TT <f,v>-/., '^
curse your fellow-victim ? c'him dotard in your ^ ' "^ ^
rage
used to c the very flowers Sisters, brothers— " 101
Dead the new astronomy c's her . . " 175
g^^r'psisrtithyou, ' n.^rl>^^3l
rwoTd^^hro-^^thTfi^tVr^-^^^^^^^ '^"^J
Down I ^t^l^ ^"'" ^""'^°" '^^ ^'^ MaryBoyltl
Spn^l^ <^ t ?r"' ^ ^"""l companions, i»/erfo>i «nrf <L G.IQ^
gT« nnt i. nft K ''^ ^^* yourselves free ! ' Kapiolani 2
r T. ^.f V, *i^° J'^"^' Silent Voices 3
c me rather, silent voices, 7
Uld voices c her from without. ^ Mnriri'nn fiS
•A merry boy they c him then, r^f r™322
FW-off the torrent c me from the cleft : "" (EnZeH
r to m^'f'^nS'.v." °^"«. ^o'^Plaining loud, k rf'^,<A«r- 210
came a day When Allan c his son, and said. Bora 10
bells were nngiog, Allan c His niece and said : 41
lilZ^.r^^'^.l ^°' ^u ""J"^'^ All-perfect, Edwin Mo^is 21
her business often c her from it, A'woc/t A rdp« 264
playy with him And c him. Father Philip. ^'^^''^ I54
- for Father Philip (as they c him) too: " ^H^
'After the Lord has c me she shall know, " sio
He c aloud for Miriam Lane and said " SSfi
^°ti';ffK^'''KP^* '^^ '^°^ ^^^ *^™ = r^e'^roo^- 120
o to the bar, but ever c awav /i -.,/^»..'- c- /j en
C all her vitil spirits into ea^h ear To listen : ^^^'"^ ' ^'""^^
the great Sicilian c Calliope to grace his golden "
enter'd an old hostel, c mine host To council, PrUwetTlll
Above an entry : riding in, we c ; ' ** ' ^.t
the chapel bells C us : we left the walks ; " ,v 47i
Girl after girl was c to trial: " •«228
she c For Psyche's child to cast it from the doors ; ' ', 237
74
CaU'd
Call'd (continued) stretch'd her arms and c Across the
tumult
pique at what she c The raillery, or grotesque
C him worthy to be loved, '
prest Their hands, and c them dear deliverers
or c On flying Time from all their silver tongues—
I hey c me in the public squares
They c me fool, they c me child ;
and Arthur c to stay the brands
and c A hoary man, his chamberiain,
And one— they c her Fame ; and one,—
they c To Gareth, ' Lord, the gateway is alive,'
Sir Gareth c from where he rose
Of any save of him whom I c—
Why came ye not, when c ? and wherefore now
Come ye, not c ?
And c her like that maiden in the tale,
c For Enid, and when Yniol made report
Or hasty judger would have c her guilt,
whom his shaking vassals c the Bull,
And c for flesh and wine to feed his spears.
They c him the great Prince and man of men.
wherefore Arthur c His treasurer,
The people c him Wizard ;
And c herself a gilded summer fly
So Vivien c herself. But rather seem'd
Who c her what he c her —
C her to shelter in the hollow oak.
Since, if I be what I am grossly c,
And c him dear protector in her fright,
she c him lord and liege. Her seer, her bard
Lancelot Would, tho' he c his wound a little
hurt
Approaching thro' the darkness, c ;
And c her song 'The Song of Love and Death,'
and c The father, and all three in hurry
I, sometime c the maid of Astolat,
Whom Arthur and his knighthood c The Pure,
but some C him a son of Lancelot,
And Merlin c it ' The Siege perilous,'
Shrilling along the hall to Arthur, c.
Across the forest c of Dean, to find Caerieon
And this was c ' The Tournament of Youth • '
She c them, saying, ' There he watches yet
he c, 'I strike upon thy side— The cailiffs ! '
the poor Pelleas whom she c her fool ?
rider, who c out from the dark field.
And when I c upon thy name as one
By these in earnest those in mockery c
' Isolt Of the white hands ' they c her :
Who c him the false son of Gorlois :
he, the King, C me polluted :
His hope he c it ; but he never mocks,
Arthur woke and c, ' Who spake ? A dream.
And c him by his name, complaining loud,
'let this be c henceforth The Hill of Hope ; '
I wore a brother's mind : she c me brother :
he c me his own little wife ;
he c in the dark to me year after year-
one of those about her knowing me C me to join
^h^l^ ' u-^A ,. ^^(ers (E. and E.) 123
btie bore a chud, whom reverently we c Edith • 268
An' es for Miss Annie es c me afoor ' Village Wife 105
boftly she c from her cot to the next aq
how many-thirty-nine-a it revellion- Sir j! Oldcastle 47
Enon^f f *^« '^^'"^ ; San Salvador I c it ; Columbus 76
Brooks, for they c you so that knew
you best ^ ^ , ^ , ToW.H. Broohfieldl
standing shouted and Pallas far away C ; Achilles ore,- tlJ T. 18
our trembling fathers c The God's own son. Tiresias 16
and he c to me ' Kiss me ! ' and there- The Wreck 104
On me, when boy, there came what then I c, Ancient Sage 217
rfr^mif^K-^^^^^;^. . T<mJrow4.
O irom her cabin an tould her to come 20
Princess iv 496
587
,, vi 6
92
„ vii 104
7»i Mmn. Ixix 11
13
Com. of Arthur 120
144
Gareth arul L. 114
234
645
859
1247
Marr. of Geraint 742
755
Geraint and E. 433
439
601
961
Baim and Balan 4
Merlin and V. 170
„ 258
M 261
864
894
915
946
„ 953
Lancelot and E. 852
1000
1005
1023
1273
Holy Grail 3
„ 144
„ 172
„ 289
Pelleas and E. 21
., 158
„ 262
279
474
575
Last Tournameni 73
135
„ 398
Guinevere 288
„ 620
632
Pass, of Arthur 45
378
Lover s Tale i 461
741
First Qimrrel 10
Rizpah 47
CaU'd
75
Came
Call'd {conti7med) Thin a slip of a gossoon c,
c me es pretty ea ony lass i' the Shere ;
poet c the Bringer home of all good things.
he c ' Left wheel into line ! '
They c her ' Reverence ' here upon earth,
Then I c out Roa, Roa, Roa,
I raised her, c her ' Muriel,
and c arose, and, slowly plunging down
c ' Forbear In the great name of Him who
died for men.
Alia c In old Ir&n the Sun of Love ?
An' ya c 'im a clown, ya did,
C on the Power adored by the Christian,
Callest G thou that thing a leg ?
Callin' o' use to be c 'im Roa, Roa, Roa,
Tomorrow 78
Spinster's S's. 13
Lochsley H., Sixty 185
Heavy Brigade 6
Dead Prophet 27
Qiod Rod 91
The Ring 449
iS^. TdeniMchus 28
62
Akbar's Dream 86
Clmrch- Warden, etc. 30
Kapiolani 32
Vision of Sin 89
Oiod Rod 1
Calling (part) {See also A-callin', Callin') Hark !
death is c While I speak AU Things will Die 28
C thyself a little lower ' Than angels. Tioo Voices 198
To hear the dewy echoes c From cave to cave Lotos-Eaters, O. S. 94
Then c down a blessing on his head Enoch Arden 327
And c, here and there, about the wood, ,, 383
Maud, Maud, They were crying and c. Maud I xii 4
Were crying and c to her, Where is Maud, ,, 26
Some c Arthur born of Gorlois, Others of Anton ? Com. qf Arthur 170
c two That still had tended on him Gareth and L. 178
and c ' Damsel, is this he. The champion „ 915
And chafing his pale hands, and c to him. Geraivi and E. 582
And chafing his faint hands, and c to him ; „ 585
Moaning and c out of other lands. Merlin and V. 962
But he pursued her, c ' Stay a little ! Lancelot and E. 683
the King Look'd up, c aloud, ' Lo, there ! Holy G'rail 219
named us each by name, C ' God speed ! ' ,, 352
And c me the greatest of all knights, ,, 595
Then c her three knights, she charged them, Pdleas and E. 219
C me thy white hind, and saying to me Last Tournament 569
rollers on the cliffs Clash'd, c to each other. Lover's Tale i 58
And voices in the distance c to me ,, ii 118
cuckoo of a joyless June Is c out of doors : Pref. Poem Broth. S. 4
cuckoo of a worse July Is c thro' the dark : ,, 12
Are c to each other thro' a dawn The Ring 37
all Stood round it, hush'd, or c on his name. Death of (Enone 66
very well just now to be c me darling and sweet, Charity 7
Calling (b) There came so loud a c of the sea, Enoch Arden 910
Calliope called C to grace his golden verse — Lucretius 94
Calm (adj.) reign the world's great bridals, chaste and c : Princess vii 294
C is the mom without a sound, (7 as to suit a
calmer grief. In Mem. xi 1
if calm at all. If any calm, a c despair : ,,16
His eye was c, and suddenly she took Merlin and V. 854
' May her life be as blissfully c. The Wreck 139
The night was c, the morn is c. The Flight 10
Calm (b) The summer c of golden charity, Isabel 8
No tranced summer c is thine, Madeline 2
My shallop through the star-strown c, Arabian Nights 36
I cannot hide that some have striven, Achieving c. Two Voices 209
' There is no joy but c ! ' Lotos-Eaters, G. S. 23
lower down "The bay was oily c ; Audley Court 86
star of phosphorescence in the c, ,,87
Then foUow'd c's, and then winds variable, Enoch Arden 545
That mock'd him with returning c, Lucretius 25
fain Would follow, center'd in eternal c. ,,79
to mar Their sacred everlasting c ! ,, 110
Not all so fine, nor so divine a c, ,, 111
Put on more c and added suppliantly : Princess vi 215
C and deep peace on this high wold, l7i Metn. xi 5
C and still light on yon great plain ,, 9
C and deep peace in this wide air, ,, 13
if c at all. If any c, a calm despair : „ 15
C on the seas, and silver sleep, ,, 17
And dead c in that noble breast ,, 19
The touch of change in c or storm ; ,, ayvi 6
And c that let the tapers burn Unwavering : ,, axv 5
And tracts of c from tempest made, hi Mem. cxii 14
And moulded in colossal c. ,, Con. 16
Long have I sigh'd for a c : Maud I ii 1
Calm (s) (continued) And presently thereafter
follow'd c,
whom she answer'd with all c.
sway and whirl Of the storm dropt to windless c,
Calming C itself to the long-wish 'd-for end,
Calpe From C unto Caucasus they sung,
Calumet celts and c's, Claymore and snowshoe.
Calumny Sweeter tones than c ?
Calve See Cauve
Cama throne of Indian C slowly sail'd
Cambalu breach'd the belting wall of C,
Came (See also Coom'd, Eem) From the dark fen
the oxen's low C to her :
In marvel whence that glory c Upon me,
I c upon the great Pavilion of the Caliphat.
It would fall to the ground if you c in.
It would shrink to the earth if you c in.
But if any c near I would call.
Fancy c and at her pillow sat,
A moment c the tenderness of tears,
C two young lovers lately wed ;
The sun c dazzling thro' the leaves,
Down she c and found a boat Beneath a willow
Out upon the wharfs they c.
There c a sound as of the sea ;
C out clear plates of sapphire mail.
' Or if thro' lower lives I c —
I spoke, but answer c there none :
I c and sat Below the chestnuts.
That went and c a thousand times.
From off the wold I c, and lay
From my swift blood that went and c
Hither c at noon Mournful (Enone,
C up from reedy Simois all alone.
Went forth to embrace him coming ere he c.
river of speech C down upon my heart.
Then to the bower they c. Naked they c
They c, they cut away my tallest pines,
in the dark morn The panther's roar c muffled.
The Abominable, that uninvited c
On corpses three-months-old at noon she c,
Too proud to care from whence I c.
As I c up the valley whom think ye should I see.
Till Charles's Wain c out above the tall white
chimney-tops. May Queen, N. Y^s. E. 12
To die before the snowdrop c, May Queen, Con. 4
There c a sweeter token when the night ,, 22
up the valley c a swell of music on the wind. ,, 32
And up the valley c again the music ,, 36
once again it c, and close beside the window-bars, ,, 39
In the afternoon they c unto a land Lotos-Eaters 3
mild-eyed melancholy Lotos-eaters c. , , 27
Where'er I c I brought calamity.' D. of F. Wmnen 95
Strength c to me that equall'd my desire. ,, 230
You c to us so readily, D. of the 0. Year 7
mighty voice C rolling on the wind. Of old sat Freedom 8
(for so we held it then), What c of that ? ' The Epic 27
C on the shining levels of the lake. M. d' Arthur 51
And to the barge they c. ,, 205
Then c a bark that, blowing forward, ,, Ep. 21
Artist he than all, C, drew your pencil from you. Gardener's D. 26
C voices of the well-contented doves. ,, 89
some sweet answer, tho' no answer c, ,, 1,59
little words, More musical than ever c ,, 233
while I mused c Memory with sad eyes, ,, 243
farewells — Of that which c between, ,, 252
Then there c a day When Allan call'd his son, Dora 9
then distresses c on him ; ,,49
Dora c and said : ' I have obey'd my uncle ,, 58
all thro' me This evil c on William at the first. ,, 61
Far off the farmer c into the field ,, 74
when the morrow c, she rose and took The child ,, 80
c and said : ' Where were you yesterday ? ,,87
the boy's cry c to her from the field, ,, 104
Remembering the day when first she c, „ 106
Com. of Arthur 391
Lancelot and E. 997
Lover's Tale ii 207
Maud I xviii 5
The Poet 15
Princess, Pro. 18
A Dirge 17
Palace of Art 115
Columbus 108
MarianM 29
Arabian Nights 94
113
Poet's Mind 23
37
The Mermaid 38
Caress'd or chidden 5
The form, the form 9
L. of Shalott ii 34
,, Hi 3
,, iv 6
42
Mariana in the S. 86
Tioo Voices 12
„ 364
„ 425
MiUer's D. 59
72
„ 111
Fatima 16
CEnone 15
„ 52
„ 63
„ 69
„ 94
„ 208
„ 214
„ 224
Palace of Art 243
L. C. V. de Vere 12
May Queen 13
Came
76
Came
Came (continued) they c in :
mother,
I never c a-begging for myself,
all his love c back a hundred-fold ;
c again together on the king With heated faces ;
but when the boy beheld His
Dora 137
„ 141
„ 166
Audley Court 36
C to the hammer here in March — " ,, 60
I went and c ; Her voice fled Edvnn Morris 66
out they c Trustees and Aunts and Uncles. „ 120
There c a mystic token from the king ,, 132
those that c To touch my body and be heal'd, St. S. Stylites 78
c To rest beneath thy boughs. — (repeat) Talking Oak 35, 155
c. To sport beneath thy boughs. ,, 99
* And with him Albert c on his. ,, 105
here she c, and round me play'd, ,, 133
c Like Death betwixt thy dear embrace Love aiid Duty 47
cheek and forehead c a colour and a light, LocJcsley Hall 25
from the valleys underneath C little copses climbing. Amphion 32
C wet-shod alder from the wave, Q yews, a dismal
coterie ; ,,41
Old elms c breaking from the vine, ,, 45
Cruelly c they back to-day : Edward Gray 18
was the best That ever c from pipe. Will Waler. 76
For since I c to live and learn, ,, 81
I think he c like Ganymede, ,, 119
C crowing over Thames. ,, 140
thy betters went Long since, and c no more ; ,,186
In there c old Alice the nurse. Lady Clare 13
great in story, Wheresoe'er he c. The Captain 20
Joyful c his speech : ,,30
And he c to look upon her, L. of Burleigh 93
We c to warmer waves, and deep Across ITie Voyage 37
Again to colder climes we c, „ 89
C in a sun-lit fall of rain. Sir L, and Q. O. 4
Bare-footed c the beggar maid Beggar Maid 3
A youth c riding toward a palace-gate. Vision of Sin 2
And from the palace c a child of sin, ,, 5
C floating on for many a month and year, ,, 54
there c a further change : ,, 207
two years after c a boy to be The rosy idol Enoch Arden 89
c a change, as all things human change. ,, 101
hearing his mischance, C, for he knew the man ,, 121
Then moving homeward c on Annie pale, ,, 149
blessing on his wife and babes Whatever c to him : ,, 189
when the last of those last moments c, ,, 217
when the day, that Enoch mention'd, c, ,, 239
Expectant of that news which never c, ,, 258
' Annie, I c to ask a favour of j'ou.' ,, 285
' I c to speak to you of what he wish'd, ,, 291
This is the favour that I c to ask. ' ,, 313
When you c in my sorrow broke me down ; ,, 317
Scarce could the woman when he c upon her, ,, 345
and no news of Enoch c. ,, 361
I know not when it first c there, ,, 401
c the children laden with their spoil ; ,, 445
Then the new mother c about her heart, ,, 524
breath of heaven c continually And sent her ,, 535
upon the cry of ' breakers ' c The crash of ruin, ,, 548
sunny and rainy seasons c and went , , 623
his lonely doom C suddenly to an end. ,, 627
None of these C from his country, ,, 653
and he c upon the place. ,, 681
and c out upon the waste. ,, 777
a langour c Upon him, gentle sickness, ,, 823
There c so loud a calling of the sea, ,, 910
For here I c, twenty years back — T/ie Brook 77
her father c across With some long-winded tale, ,, 108
' Have you not heard? ' said Katie, ' we c back. ,, 221
C from a grizzled cripple, whom I saw Sunning
himself Aylmer't Field 8
With half a score of swarthy faces c. ,, 191
like a storm he c, And shook the house, ,, 215
The next day c a neighbour. ,, 251
c Her sicklier iteration. ,, 298
— when </ti» Aylmer c of age — ,, 407
(7 at the moment Leolin's emisaary, ,, 518
Came (continued) But passionately restless c and went, Aylmer's Field 546
And c upon him half -arisen from sleep, ' '" '
And when he c again, his flock believed —
Then c a Lord in no wise like to Baal,
when the second Christmas c, escaped His keepers,
C, with a month's leave given them,
forth they c and paced the shore,
when I c To know him more, I lost it,
' It c,' she said, ' by working in the mines : '
C men and women in dark clusters round,
Yours c but from the breaking of a glass,
blood by Sylla shed C driving rainlike
but satiated at length C to the ruins.
C murmurs of her beauty from the South,
I spake of why we c, And my betroth'd.
and a stable wench C running at the call,
when we c where lies the child We lost
At break of day the College Portress c :
c to chivalry : When some respect, however slight,
(what other way was left) I c'
arrow^- wounded fawn C flying while you sat
as you c, to slip away To-day, to-morrow,
stood, so rapt, we gazing, c a voice.
That Sheba c to ask of Solomon.'
if you c Among us, debtors for our lives
Will wonder why they c :
often c Melissa hitting all we saw with shafts
C furrowing all the orient into gold,
so it was agreed when first they c ;
Then c these dreadful words out one by one,
when your sister c she won the heart Of Ida :
Hither c Cyril, and yawning *0 hard task,'
demanded who we were, And why we c ?
He ceasing, c a message from the Head.
On a sudden my strange seizure c Upon me,
we c to where the river sloped To plunge in cataract,
For many weary moons before we c,
c On flowery levels underneath the crag,
all The rosy heights c out above the lawns.
How c you here ? ' I told him :
as we c, the crowd dividing clove An advent
Then c your new friend :
What student c but that you planed her path
Then c these wolves : they knew her :
I c to tell you : found that you had gone,
c a little stir About the doors,
G all in haste to hinder wrong,
C in long breezes rapt from inmost south
A man I c to see you : but, indeed.
Yet that I c not all unauthorized
While I listen 'd, c On a sudden the weird seizure and
the doubt :
This went by As strangely as it c,
touch of all mischance but c As night to him
morions, washed with morning, as they c.
He batter'd at the doors ; none c :
C sallying thro' the gates, and caught his hair.
With message and defiance, went and c ;
Then c a postscript dash'd across the rest.
And like a flash the weird affection c :
c As comes a pillar of electric cloud,
Like summer tempest c her tears —
after him C Psyche, sorrowing for A.glaia.
' Our enemies have fall'n, have fall'n : they c ; (repeat)
on they c. Their feet in flowers, her loveliest :
At distance follow'd : so they c :
When first she c, all flush'd you said
these men c to woo Your Highness —
but the Prince Her brother c,
maidens c, they talk'd. They sang,
down she c. And found fair peace once more
with her oft, Melissa c ; for Blanche had gone,
on a day When Cyril pleaded, Ida c behind
with me oft she sat : Then c a change ;
a touch C round my wrist, and tears upon my hand
JJ
584
600
,,
647
838
Sea Dreavis 6
32
71
„ 114
„ 226
„ 248
Liicretitis 48
Princess^
Pro. 91
i>
i 36
99
119
99
227
99
ulO
15
)J
135
3>
217
fi
271
9 7
296
99
318
}|
346
}>
354
99
432
9J
467
JJ
Hi 18
99
36
57
9)
87
39
123
99
136
99
168
183
99
290
)9
319
99
335
365
J)
iv 221
9)
283
99
298
99
315
99
321
99
342
99
373
99
401
99
431
99
441
467
95
559
99
569
573
jj
v26i
jj
337
J)
340
99
370
99
424
99
477
99
523
J9
vi 15
9)
29
t) „
38,43
77
9 9
83
99
250
99
328
9)
345
mi22
jj
43
9)
56
J )
78
92
99
138
Came
77
Came
Came (continued) when she c From barren deeps to conquer
Ma
all with love ;
when we ceased There c a minute's pause,
C thro' the jaws of Death,
Remember how we c at last To Como ;
Up there c a flower,
at last it seem'd that an answer c.
And looking back to whence I c,
' I murmur 'd, as I c along,
The path we c by, thorn and flower,
c In whispers of the beauteous world.
This truth c borne with bier and pall,
But if they c who past away,
c on that which is, and caught The deep pulsations
c at length To find a stronger faith his own ;
And out of darkness c the hands
they went and c, Remade the blood
if an enemy's fleet c yonder round the hill,
when the morning c In a cloud, it faded,
C out of her pitying womanhood,
She c to the village church,
Last week c one to the county town,
However she c to be so allied,
snow-limb'd Eve from whom she c.
Let no one ask me how it c to pass ;
And at last, when each c home,
He c with the babe-faced lord ;
hard mechanic ghost That never c from on high
C glimmering thro' the laurels At the quiet evenfall.
Everything c to be known,
for he c not back From the wilderness,
know not whether he c in the Hanover ship,
man was less and less, till Arthur c.
wolf and boar and bear C night and day,
But heard the call, and c :
when they c before him, the King said,
c to Cameliard, With Gawain and young Modred,
I know not whether of himself he c,
Why, Gawain, when he c With Modred hither
c an ancient man. Long-bearded,
They c from out a sacred mountain-cleft
Then c a widow crying to the King,
C yet another widow crying to him.
Then c Sir Kay, the seneschal, and cried,
Then c in hall the messenger of Mark,
suppliant crying c With noise of ravage
out of kitchen c The thralls in throng,
Out of the smoke he c, and so my lance Hold,
' Well that Ye c, or else these caitiff rogues
Wherethro' the serpent river coil'd, they c. ,, 906
three fair girls in gilt and rosy raiment c : ,, 927
Then when he c upon her, spake ' Methought, ,, 991
The savour of thy kitchen c upon me ,, 993
damsel c. And arm'd him in old arms, ,, 1114
unhappiness Of one who c to help thee, ,, 1238
Why c ye not, when call'd ? ,, 1247
a page Who c and went, and still reported ,, 1338
anon C lights and lights, and once again he blew ; ,, 1371
Remembering when first he c on her Marr. of Oeraint 140
Before him c a forester of Dean, ,, 148
C quickly flashing thro' the shallow ford „ 167
And thither c Geraint, and underneath „ 241
C forward with the helmet yet in hand ,, 28.5
c again with one, A youth, ,, 38.5
thither c the twain, and when Geraint Beheld her ,, .539
and errant knights And ladies c, „ 546
There c a clapping as of phantom hands. ,, .566
and c to loathe His crime of traitor, ,, .593
c A stately queen whose name was Guinevere, ,, 666
therewithal one c and seized on her, ,, 673
C one with this and laid it in my hand, „ 699
I c among you here so suddenly, „ 794
Remembering how first he c on her, „ 842
from the place There c a fair-hair'd youth, Oeraint and R. 201
when the fair-hair'd youth c by him, said, ,, 20.5
Princess vii 163
,, Con. 4
Light Brigade 46
The Daisy 69
The Flovxr 3
The Victim 24
In Mem. xsdii 7
xxxvii 21
xlvi 2
Ixxix 11
Ixxxv 1
xc\Z
xcv 39
xcvi 16
cxxiv 23
Con. 10
id I i 49
vi20
64
viii 1
£c37
adii 36
xmii 28
49
xix 61
II US
ii 3.5
iv77
t?51
53
59
Com. of Arthur 12
24
47
166
243
346
Gareth and L. 25
240
„ 260
„ 333
350
367
384
„ 436
694
722
819
Came {continued) c upon him, and he sigh'd ;
Crost and c near, lifted adoring eyes,
I thought, but that your father c between,
Suddenly c, and at his side all pale Dismounting,
She rested, and her desolation c Upon her,
G riding with a hundred lances up ;
ere he c, like one that hails a ship,
out of her there c a power upon him ;
Neigh'd with all gladness as they c,
C purer pleasure unto mortal kind
o'er her meek eyes c a happy mist
And you c — But once you c, —
thither c The King's own leech to look
For whatsoever knight against us c
and c To learn black magic, and to hate his kind
the great Queen C with slow steps,
under open blue C on the hoarhead woodman at a
bough
scream of that Wood-devil I c to quell ! '
a wanton damsel c. And sought for Garlon
no quest c, but all was joust and play,
turn'd to tyrants when they c to power)
They said a light c from her when she moved :
and his book c down to me.'
C to her old perch back, and settled there.
Her eyes and neck glittering went and c ;
How c the lily maid by that good shield Of
Lancelot,
Arthur c, and labouring up the pass,
Then c an old, dumb, myriad-wrinkled man,
across him c a cloud Of melancholy severe.
Past inward, as she c from out the tower.
Then c on him a sort of sacred fear.
Then c the hermit out and bare him in,
C round their great Pendragon, saying
since the knight C not to us,
c at last, tho' late, to Astolat :
c The Lord of Astolat out.
One old dame C suddenly on the Queen
C on her brother with a happy face
She c before Sir Lancelot, for she thought
Then c her father, saying in low tones,
c her brethren saying, ' Peace to thee,
the King C girt with knights :
c the fine Gawain and wonder'd at her, And
Lancelot later c and mused at her.
To answer that which c :
I know That Joseph c of old to Glastonbury,
And when she c to speak, behold her eyes
touch with hand. Was like that music as it c ;
' Then c a year of miracle :
' Then on a summer night it c to pass,
Had Camelot seen the like, since Arthur c ;
to the Gate of the three Queens we c,
C like a driving gloom across my mind.
And on the splendour c, flashing me blind ;
Open'd his arms to embrace me as he c,
I saw not whence it c.
return'd To whence I c, the gate of Arthur's wars.'
C ye on none but phantoms in your quest,
And now I c upon her once again,
c a night Still as the day was loud ;
My madness c upon me as of old,
I c All in my folly to the naked shore.
But if indeed there c a sign from heaven,
out of those to whom the vision c
and the sunshine c along with him.
And as he c away, The men who met him
strange knights From the four winds c in :
out they c, But Pelleas overthrew them
Then when he c before Ettarre,
from a tiny cave C lightening downward,
c the village girls And linger'd talking,
Then a long silence c upon the hall,
C Tristram, saying, ' Why skip ye so,
Geraint and E, 249
9)
304
314
jj
510
)}
518
)|
589
I)
540
M
618
9>
756
>9
765
»»
769
99
845
) J
922
Balin and Balan 35
jj
126
)9
245
)|
294
ft
548
ij
609
Merlin and V. 145
) J
518
567
jj
650
} J
903
)>
960
Lancelot and E. 28
*»
47
170
jj
324
jj
346
>9
854
99
519
J)
528
544
99
618
99
626
99
730
9)
791
99
908
99
994
996
)J
1261
99
1267
Holy OraU 12
99
102
115
166
99
179
99
332
99
358
370
jj
413
99
417
99
515
539
jj
562
99
585
99
682
9)
787
99
792
99
873
99
895
Pel leas ai
dE.6
99
141
148
jj
220
>J
237
99
426
508
99
609
Latt Tournament 9
Came
78
Cameloi
Came {continued) they c Not from the skeleton of a
brother-slayer, Last Tournament 46
Fool, I c late, the heathen wars were o'er, ,, 269
Who knew thee swine enow before I c, ,, 304
That night c Arthur home, ,, 755
In the dead night, grim faces c and went Before her,
when she c to Almesbury she spake
a rumour wildly blown about C,
remembering Her thought when first she c,
when at last he c to Camelot,
there was no man knew from whence he c ;
There c a day as still as heaven,
Lancelot c, Reputed the best knight
C to that point where first she saw the King
then c silence, then a voice,
Then c thy shameful sin with Lancelot ;
Then c the sin of Tristram and Isolt ;
Until it c a kingdom's curse with thee —
There c on Arthur sleeping, Gawain
c A bitter wind, clear from the North,
C on the shining levels of the lake.
So to the barge they c.
therewithal c on him the weird rhyme,
Then from the dawn it seem'd there c,
There c a glorious morning, such a one
first we c from out the pines at noon,
sounds of joy That c on the sea-wind.
Last we c To what our people call
yet to both there c The joy of life
Hither we c. And sitting down upon the golden moss,
then c in The white light of the weary moon
Had I not learnt my loss before he c ?
Could that be more because he c my way ?
the wind C wooingly with woodbine smells.
I c upon The rear of a procession,
c a broad And solid beam of isolated light,
I c one day and sat among the stones
Then c on me The hollow tolling of the bell,
hand she reach'd to those that c behind,
Julian c again Back to his mother's house
wrapping her all over with the cloak He c in,
' Here ! and how c I here ? '
An hour or two, Camilla's travail c Upon her,
Suddenly c her notice and we past,
So sweetly and so modestly she c To greet us,
And crossing her own picture as she c.
So she c in : — I am long in telling it,
some other question'd if she c From foreign lands,
he was a child, an' he c to harm ;
when Harry c home for good.
And Harry c home at last,
Harry c in, an' I flung him the letter
watch'd him, an' when he c in I felt
when he c to bid me goodbye.
I c into court to the Judge and the lawyers.
like a flutter'd bird, c flying from far away :
sailed away from Flores till the Spaniard c in sight.
And the rest they c aboard us.
For a dozen times they c with their pikes
and the stars c out far over the summer sea,
their high-built galleons c. Ship after ship,
I c on lake Llanberris in the dark,
Then c the day when I, Flattering myself
And the doctor c at his hour,
Whv there ? they c to hear their preacher.
And c upon th» Mountain of the World,
I have accomplish'd what I c to do.
Then c two voices from the Sepulchre,
what was mine, c happily to the shore.
And we c to the isle in the ocean.
And we c to the Silent Isle
And we c to the Isle of Shouting,
And we c to the Isle of Flowers :
And we c to the Isle of Fruits : „^^
And we c to the Isle of Fire : .^t>.
Gvinevere 70
138
154
182
260
289
292
381
403
419
487
488
550
Pass, of Arthur 30
123
„ 219
373
„ 444
457
Lover's Tale i 299
- „ 310
326
373
385
539
639
665
666
,, ii 36
74
.172
,, in 1
9
48
,, iv 14
87
97
127
154
170
286
302
330
First Quarrel 23
30
35
57
75
78
Rizpah 33
Tlie Revenge 2
23
52
53
56
58
Sisters {E. and E.) 95
„ 139
In the Child. Hosp. 68
Sir J. Oldcastle 42
Columbus 26
„ 65
95
„ 141
I'', of Maeldune 9
11
27
37
55
71
Came (continued) And we c to the Bounteous Isle, V. of Maeldune 83
And we c in an evil time to the Isle ,, 105
And we c to the Isle of a Saint ,, 115
And we c to the Isle we were blown from, ,, 127
c back That wholesome heat the blood To E. Fitzgerald 23
dreadful light G from her golden hair, Tiresias 44
But I c on him once at a ball. The Wreck 47
wail c borne in the shriek of a growing wind, „ 87
then <; the crash of the mast. ,, 92
an answer c Not from the nurse — ,, 143
0 Mother, she c to me there. ,, 148
That you c unwish'd for, uncall'd. Despair 5
there c thro' the roar of the breaker a whisper, ,, 13
Hoped for a dawn and it c, ,, 27
foam in the dusk c playing about our feet. ,, 50
From out his ancient city c a Seer Ancient Sage 2
The Nameless never c Among us, ,, 54
oft On me, when boy, there c what then I call'd, ,, 217
And yet no comfort c to me. The Flight 18
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 5
You c, and look'd and loved the view
C that ' Ave atque Vale ' of the Poet's
hopeless woe,
from all the world the voices c
c On three gray heads beneath a gleaming rift.
Given on the morning when you c of age
then a woman c And caught me from my nurse
She c to you, not me.
Vext, that you thought my Mother c to me ?
one silent voice C on the wind.
And she that c to part them all too late,
one day c And saw you, shook her head,
I c, I went, was happier day by day ;
She always c to meet me carrying you.
She c no more to meet me, carrying you,
A beauty c upon your face,
c, my friend. To prize your various book.
You c not, friend ;
There no one c, the turf was fresh,
so to the land's Last limit I c —
c of your own will To wait on one so broken,
shouted, and the shepherds heard and c.
shape with wings C sweeping by him.
Love and Justice c and dwelt therein ;
(repeat)
that I c on none of his band ;
would it matter so much if I c on the street ?
— a widow c to my door :
birthday c of a boy born happily dead.
Camel c's knelt Unbidden, and the brutes
And like the all-enduring c, driven
Cameliard Leodogran, the King of C,
And thus the land of C was waste,
came to C, With Gawain and young Modred,
Camelot road runs by To many-tower'd C ;
island in the river Flowing down to C.
shallop flitteth silken-sail'd Skimming down to C :
river winding clearly, Down to tower'd C:
A curse is on her if she stay To look down to G.
she sees the highway near Winding down to G :
long-hair'd page in crimson clad, Goes by to tower'd C ;
with plumes and lights And music, went to C-.
As he rode down to C: (repeat)
She look'd down to C.
Frater Ave, etc. 5
Demeter and P. 66
82
Tlie Ring 77
117
138
140
154
216
312
348
352
385
Happy 51
To Ulysses 46
To Mary Boyle 17
Prog, of Spnng 72
Merlin and the G. 110
Romney's R. 16
Death of (Enon^ 56
St. Telemachus 25
Akbar's Dream 181, 194
Bandit's Death 40
Charity 8
„ 26
„ 34
Merlin and V. 575
Lover's Tale i 136
Com. of Arthur 1
20
243
L. of ShaZott i 5
14
23
32
ii 5
14
23
32
L. ofShalott Hi 14, 23, 32
L. of Shalott Hi 41
Heavily the low sky raining Over tower'd C; ,, iv 5
With a glassy countenance Did she look to C. ,, 14
Thro' the noises of the night She floated down to C: „ 23
her eyes were darken'd wholly, Tuni'd to tower'd G. ,, 32
Silent into C. » 41
they cross'd themselves for fear, All the knights at C: „ 50
Walking about the gardens and the halls Of C, M. d' Arthur 21
Shot thro' the lists at C, ,,224
plain That broaden'd toward the base of C, Gareth and L. 188
then enter'd with his twain C, ,, 303
king. Was ev'n upon his way to C; ,, 392
helping back the dislocated Kay To C, „ 1214
Camelot
79
Capital
Camelot (contimied) That eat in Arthur's hall at 0. Marr, of Oeraint 432
Adown the crystal dykes at O Geraint and E. 470
strange knights Who sit near C at a
fountain-side, Balin and Balan 11
' Too high this mount of C for me : ,, 226
Remembering that dark bower at C,' „ 526
But Vivien, into C stealing, lodged Merlin and V. 63
In Arthur's arras hall at C : ,, 250
this dealt him at Caerlyle ; That at Caerleon ;
this at C : Lancelot and E. 23
let proclaim a joust At C, ,, 77
Shall I appear, 0 Queen, at 0, ,, 142
go to joust as one unknown At C for the diamond, ,, 191
To ride to C with this noble knight : ,, 220
knew there lived a knight Not far from C, ,, 402
when they reach'd the lists By C in the meadow, ,, 429
' What news from 0, lord ? ,,620
To C, and before the city-gates Came on her brother ,, 790
His own far blood, which dwelt at C ; ,, 803
helmet in an abbey far away From C, Holy Grail 7
o'er the plain that then began To darken under C : „ 218
For all the sacred mount of C, ,, 227
never yet Had C seen the like, since Arthur came ; „ 332
O brother had you known our C, „ 339
Lancelot slowly rode his warhorse back To C, Pelleas and E. 584
mock -knight of Arthiir's Table Round, At C, Last Totirnavient 3
trumpet-blowings ran on all the ways From G, „ 53
At C, ere the coming of the Queen.' Gvinevere 223
And when at last he came to C, ,, 260
And in thy bowers of 0 or of Usk „ 503
Walking about the gardens and the halls Of C, Pass, of Arthur 189
Shot thro' the lists at C, „ 392
Clouds and darkness Closed upon C ; Merlin and the G. 76
Camest Come not as thou c of late, Ode to Memory 8
Whilome thou c with the morning mist, (repeat) ,, 12, 21
friend, who c to thy goal So early, In Mem. cxiv 23
but thee, When first thou c — Holy Grail 22
can no more, thou c, 0 my child, Demeter and P. 4
Camilla thou and I, C, thou and I Were borne Lover's Tale i 53
bore C close beneath her beating heart, ,, 203
What marvel my C told me all ? (repeat) ,, 557, 579
C, my C, who was mine No longer in the dearest sense ,, 586
And as for me, C, as for me, — ,, 764
Sometimes I thought C was no more, ,, ii 69
An hour or two, C's travail came Upon her, ,, iv 127
To bring C down before them all. ,, 285
Camp Thro' the courts, the c's, the schools, Visuyti of Sin 104
And at her head a follower of the c, Princess v 60
a murmur ran Thro' all the c and inward raced ,, 111
Back rode we to my father's c, ,, 331
' See that there be no traitors in your c : ,, 425
King, c and college tum'd to hollow shows ; ,, 478
' Follow me, Prince, to the c, Geraint and E. 808
when they reach'd the c the King himself ,, 878
Campanili What slender c grew By bays, The Daisy 13
Campion See Bose-campion
Camulodiine near the colony G, Boddicea 5
Lo their colony half-defended ! lo their colony, C ! ,,17
lo the colony C, (repeat) ,, 31, 53
city, and citadel, London, Verulam, C ,,86
Can 'Tis but a steward of the c, Will Water. 149
truth, that flies the flowing c, ,, 171
' Fill the cup, and fill the c : (repeat) Vidmi of Sin 95, 119, 203
' Fill the c, and fill the cup : (repeat) „ 131, 167
Cana like him of C in Holy Writ, Holy Grail 762
Canada loyal pines of C murmur thee, W. to Marie Alex. 19
To G whom we love and prize. Hands all Round 19
Canadian V, Indian, Australasian, African, On, Jub. Q. Victoria 60
Canal The boat-head down a broad c AraMan Nights 25
the clear c Is rounded to as clear a lake. ,, 45
Cancel Hours That c weal with woe. Ancient Sage 96
Cancell'd Is c in the world of sense ? ' ^ Tioo Voices 42
Powers, who wait On noble deeds, c a sense misused ; Godiva 72
And c nature's best : In Mem. Ixxii 20
At length my trance Was c, ,, xcv 44
Cancer Cured lameness, palsies, c's. St. S. Stylites 82
Candle an' just as c's was lit, North. Gobbler 87
Candle-light and with solemn rites by c-l — Princess v 292
Cane court-Galen poised his gilt-head c, ,, i 19
home in the c's by the purple tide. The Wreck 71
Your c, your palm, tree-fern, bamboo, To Ulysses 36
in the sultry plains About a land of c's ; Prog, of Spring 78
Canker (b) As but the c of the brain ; 'in Mem. xcii 3
Canker (verb) No lapse of moons can c Love, ,, xxviS
Canker'd See Worm-canker'd
Canning Or stow'd, when classic G died. Will Water. 101
Thou third great G, stand among our best Epit. on Stratford 1
Cannon with knobs and wires and vials fired A c ; Princess, Pro. 66
the volleying c thunder his loss ; Ode on Well. 62
Roll of c and clash of arms, ,, 116
Your c's moulder on the seaward wall ; ,, 173
G to right of them, G to left (repeat) Light Brigade 18, 39
C in front of them Volley'd and thunder'd ; ,, 20
C behind them Volley 'd and thunder'd ; ,, 41
cobweb woven across the c's throat Shall shake Maud III vi 27
Cannonade In the crash of the c's The Revenge 78
Hark c, fusillade ! is it true what was told Def, of Lwcloimo 95
Cannon-ball and death from their c-6's, ,, 14
musket-bullets, and thousand of c-&'s — ,, 93
Cannon-bullet Nor the c-h rust on a slothful shore, Mavd III vi 26
Cannon-shot Cs, musket-shot, volley on volley, Def. of Lucknoio 34
Fell like a c. Burst like a thunderbolt. Heavy Brigade 26
Canon Archbishop, Bishop, Priors, Gs, Sir J. Oldcastle 160
Canonized See Half-canonized
CanopuB and lit Lamps which out-burn'd C D.ofF. Women li6
Canopy in the costly c o'er him set, Lancelot and E. 443
Canter 'ear my 'erse's legs, as they c's awaay. N. Farmer, N. S. 1
proputty, proputty — c an' o awaay? ,, 60
Canterbury-bell Roses and lilies and G-h's.' Gity Ghild 5
Canvas In the north, her c flowing. The Captain 27
By glimmering lanes and walls of c Princess v 6
such a breeze Compell'd thy c, In Mem. xvii 2
Launch your vessel, And crowd your c. Merlin and the G. 127
Could make pure light live on the c % Romney's R. 10
Canvass Doubtless our narrow world must c it : Aylmer's Field 774
And so last night she fell to c you : Princess Hi 40
Canvass'd He c human mysteries, A Gharacter 20
Canzonet A rogue of c's and serenades. Princess iv 135
Cap (s) Nor wreathe thy c with doleful crape. My life is full 14
Her c blew off, her gown blew up. The Goose 51
I do not hear the bells upon my c, Edwin Morris 56
we know the hue Of that c upon her brows. Vision of Sin 142
knightlike in his c instead of casque, Princess iv 600
man's own angry pride Is c and bells for a fool. Maud I vi 62
Mounted in arms, threw up their c's Gareth and L. 697
put on the black c except for the worst Rizpah 65
staghom-moss, and this you twined About her c. Romney's R. 80
Cap (verb) ' That c's owt, says Sally, North. Gobbler 71
And c our age with snow ? ' Ancient Sage 98
Capability love for him have drain'd My capahilities
of love ; In Mem. locxoco 12
Capable neither c of lies, Nor asking overmuch Enoch Arden 251
Cape (headland) tower, and hill, and c, and isle. Mine be the strength 6
So they past by c's and islands, The Captain 21
We past long lines of Northern c's The Voyage 35
By grassy c's with fuller sound Sir L. and Q. G. 14
lake and lawn, and isles and c's — Vision of Sin 11
Then after a long tumble about the G Enoch Aiden 532
fold to fold, of mountain or of c ; Princess vii 3
On c's of Afric as on cliffs of Kent, W. to Marie Alex. 17
Or olive-hoary c in ocean ; The Daisy 31
would not pass beyond the c That has the poplar
on it : Lancelot and E. 1039
round from the cliffs and the c's, V. of Maddune 55
stood on each of the loftiest c's ,j IQQ
set me climbing icy c's And glaciers. To E. Fitzgerald 25
From isle and c and continent. Open. I. and G. Exhib. 4
Cape (a covering) with ermine c's And woolly breasts In Mem. xcv. 11
Caper Making a roan horse c and curvet Lancelot and E. 792
Capital North to gain Her c city, 27te Ring 482
Capitol
80
Cared
Capitol the pillar'd Parthenon, The glittering C ;
Caprera which here The warrior of (7 set,
Captain melting the mighty hearts Of c's and of
kings.
The c of my dreams Ruled in the eastern sky.
Brave the C was :
harsh and cruel Seem'd the Cs mood.
Then the C$ colour heighten 'd,
beneath the water Crew and C lie ;
Now mate is blind, and c lame,
He got it ; for their c after fight,
Without the c's knowledge :
Communing with his c's of the war.
young c's flash'd their glittering teeth,
to meet us lightly pranced Three c's out ;
every c waits Hungry for honour.
Foremost c of his time,
those deep voices our dead c taught The tyrant,
To a lord, a c, a padded shape,
the crew were gentle, the c kind ;
band will be scatter'd now their gallant c is dead
Captain 's-ear His c-e has heard them boom
Captive 'sdeath ! and he himself Your c,
The c void of noble rage.
Ye cage a buxom c here and there.
seized upon my papers, loosed My c's,
void of joy, Lest she be taken c —
flay Cs whom they caught in battle —
Car reverent people behold The towering c,
Fixt by their c's, waited the golden dawn.
thro' which the c Of dark A'ldoneus rising
Caracole round the gallery made his horse C ;
Carddos (King) C, Urion, Cradlemont of Wales,
Caravel frailer c, With what was mine,
Carbonek the enchanted towers of C,
Carcanet Make a c of rays,
a c Of ruby swaying to and fro,
c Vext her with plaintive memories of the child :
• Because the twain had spoil'd her c.
Tristram show'd And swung the ruby c.
Carcase make the c a skeleton.
Many a c they left to be carrion.
Card Insipid as the Queen upon a c ;
Care (s) and the c That yokes vnth empire,
He hath no c of life or death ;
sure it is a special c Of God,
Thee nor carketh c nor slander ;
And little other c hath she,
Grows green and broad, and takes no c,
a low voice, full of c, Murmur'd
took with c, and kneeline on one knee,
Come, G and Pleasure, Hope and Pain,
Thy c is, under polish'd tins,
Cast all your c's on God :
mother cared for it With all a mother's c :
no kin, no c, No burthen, save my c for you
The common c whom no one cared for,
Seam'd with the shallow c's of fifty years :
takes a lady's finger with all c,
each by other drest with c Descended
She had the c of Lady Ida's youth,
either she will die from want of c,
out of long frustration of her c,
mental breadth, nor fail in childward c,
Comb, when no graver c's employ,
Which once she foster'd up with c ;
Is this the end of all my c ? '
If any c for what is here Survive
Her c is not to part and prove ;
And falling with my weight of c's
O sound to rout the brood of c's,
A song that slights the coming c,
Let c's that petty shadows cast.
Ring out the want, the c, the sin,
And if the song were full of c,
Freedom 4
To Ulysses 26
D. ofF. Women 176
263
The Captain 5
„ 14
„ 29
68
The Voyage 91
Aylmer's Field 226
717
PrtTwess i 67
„ v20
255
313
Ode on Well. 31
69
Maud 7 a; 29
The Wreck 129
, Bandit's Death 41
Ode on Well. 65
Princess v 277
In Mem, xxvii 2
Mo'lin and V. 542
Columbus 131
Tiresias 102
Loclcsle^i H., Sixty 80
Ode on Well. 55
Spec, of Iliad 'n
Demeter and P. 38
Last Tournament 206
Com. of Arthur 112
Columbus 140
Holy Grail 813
Adeline 59
Last Tournament 6
28
419
740
Boddicea 14
Batt. of Brunanburh 105
Aylmer's Field 28
To the Queen 9
Supp. Confessions 48
63
A Dirge 8
L. of Shalott a 8
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 28
D. ofF. Women 2\9
M. d' Arthur 173
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 55
Will Water. 227
Enoch Arden 222
263
418
Aylmer's Field 688
814
Princess, Pro. 173
,, iii 19
85
„ V 85
,, vii 101
283
To F. D. Maurice 1
In Mem. via 16
xii 14
Dcxxviii 9
xlviii 5
IvU
Ixaxdx 17
xcix 10
wis
ci>i 17
cxxv 9
Care (s) {continued) Shall I not take c of all that I think, Maud I xv7
Forgetful of his princedom and its c's. Marr. of Geraint 54
he thought, ' In spite of all my c, ,, 115
Told him that her fine c had saved his life. Lancelot a^id E. 863
so forgot herself A moment, and her c's : Last Tournam^ent 26
took with c, and kneeling on one knee, Pass, of Arthur 341
oifices Of watchful c and trembling tenderness. Lover's Talei 226
But there from fever and my c of him ,, iv 143
the Lord has look'd into my c, Rizpah 75
lad will need little more of your c* In the Child. Hosp. 17
days' of fever, and want of c ! The Wreck 147
Muriel nursed you with a mother's c ; The Ring 349
made you leper in His loving c for both, Happy 91
With politic c, with utter gentleness, A Icbar's Dream 128
Care (verb) You c not for another's pains, Rosalind 19
random eyes. That c not whom they kill, ,, 38
Nor c's to lisp in love's delicious creeds ; Caress'd or chidden 11
She still will take the praise, and c no more. The form, the form 14
Nor c to sit beside her where she sits — Wan Sculptor 10
I c not what the sects may brawl. Palace of Art 210
Too proud to c from whence I came. L. C. V. de Vere 12
but I c not what they say, * May Queen 19
I c not if I go to-day. ,, Con. 43
But if you c indeed to listen, hear Golden Year 20
Like wealthy men who c not how they give. Tithonus 17
be happy ! wherefore should I c ? Lochsley Hall 97
To choose your own you did not c ; Day-Dm., L' Envoi 30
And that for which I c to live. ,, 56
I c no longer, being all unblest : Come not, when etc. 8
What c I for any name ? Vision of Sin 85
' His head is low, and no man c's for him. Enoch Arden 850
if my children c to see me dead, ,, 888
Would c no more for Leolin's walking Aylmer's Field 124
Slight was his answer ' Well — I c not for it : ' ,, 238
I c not for it either ; ' ,, _ 248
wherefore need he c Greatly for them, Lucretius 150
' G not thou ! Thy duty ? What is duty ? , , _ 280
c not while we hear A trumpet in the distance Princess iv 80
myself, what c I, war or no? »> ^ 278
And, right or wrong, I c not: ,, 290
nor c's to walk With Death and Morning ,, vii 203
Him who c's not to be great. Ode on Well. 199
what do I c for Jane, let her speak of you Grandmother 51
shall we c to be pitiful ? Boadicea 32
Nor c's to fix itself to form, In Mem. xxxiii 4
I c for nothing, all shall go. ,, Ivii
I c not in these fading days ,, Ixxv 9
Whatever they call him, what c I, Maud I x 64
But now shine on, and what c I, ,) xnlii_ 41
C not thou to reply : „ ^^ ***' 7
G not for shame : thou art not knight but knave." Gareth ayid L. 1006
' And c not for the cost ; the cost is mine.' Geraint and E. 288
Nor did I c or dare to speak with you, ,, 871
He c's not for me : only here to-day lAmcelot and E. 126
nor c's For triumph in our mimic wars, ,, 311
she cried, ' I c not to be wife, „ 937
I c not howsoever great he be, ,, 1069
And this am I, so that ye c for me Holy Grail 615
C's but to pass into the silent life. ,, 899
And pass and c no more. Pelleas and E. 77
wherefore shouldst thou c to mingle with it, Last To^irnament 105
since I c not for thy pearls. ,, 314
C not for her ! patient, and prayerful, „ 607
I the King should greatly c to live ; Guinevere 452
Not greatly c to lose ; >> 495
And c not thou for dreams from him, Pass, of Arthur 58
Do you think that I c for my soul if my boy Rizpah 78
I c not for a name— no fault of mine. Sisters (E. and E. ) 77
Not es I c's fur to hear ony harm, ViUage Wife 22
Ah why should we c what they say ? In the Child. Hosp. 71
heart of the father will c for his own.' The Wreck 98
Fly— c not. Birds and brides must leave Tlie Ring 9Q
their music here be mortal need the singer greatly c ? Parnassus 18
Cared Which you had hardly c to see. L. C. V. de Vere 32
nor heard of her, nor c to hear. Nor c to hear ? Edwin Morris 138
Cared
81
Casd
Caxed (continued) Nor c for seed or scion ! Amphion 12
if he c For her or his dear children, Enoch Arden 163
Yet sicklier, tho' the mother c for it ,, 262
G not to look on any human face, „ 282
question'd, aught of what he c to know. ,, 654
Held his head high, and c for no man, ,, 848
prov'n or no. What c he ? Ayhaer's Fidd 55
Me ?— but I c not for it. „ 244
slowly lost Nor greatly c to lose, her hold on life. ,, 568
The common care whom no one c for, ,, 688
Nor ever c to better his own kind, Sea Dreams 201
c not for the affection of the house ; Princess i 26
And some they c not ; till a clamour grew ,, iv 486
but she nor c Nor knew it, ,, vi 149
Which little c for fades not yet. In Mem. viii 20
Nor c the serpent at thy side ,, ex 7
Now I thought that she c for me, Maud I xiv 25
Nor c a broken egg-shell for her lord. Oeraint and E. 364
Was c as much for as a summer shower : ,, 523
storm Urake on the mountain and I c not for it. Merlin and V. 503
cackle of the unborn about the grave, I c not for it : ,, 508
G not for her, nor anything upon earth.' Holy Grail 612
I c not for the thorns ; Pelleas and E. 404
who c Only to use his own. Lover's Tale iv 311
For I c so much for my boy that the Lord Rizpah 75
meller 'e mun be by this, & I c to taaste. North. Gobbler 101
he c not for his own ; The Flight 78
Fur I niver c nothink for neither — • Spinster's Ss. 62
Nor ever c to set you on her knee, The Rin^ 386
Caxeful At you, so c of the right. To F. D. Mauitce 10
All in quantity, c of my motion, Heiidecasi/llabics 5
So c of the type she seems. In Mem. Iv 7
' So c of the type ? ' but no. ,, Ivi 1
And that which knows, but c for itself, To tlie Queen ii 57
Carefuller A c in peril, did not breathe Enoch Arden 50
Careless G both of wind and weather, Rosalind 7
To wait for death — mute — c of all ills, Jf 1 were loved 10
like Gods together, c of mankind. Lotos-Eaters, G. S. 110
And Enoch's comrade, c of himself, Enoch Arden 568
Where c of the household faces near, Aylmer's Field 575
but he that holds The Gods are c, Lucretius 150
0 ye Gods, I know you c, ,, 208
Rapt in her song, and c of the snare. Princess i 221
So c of the single life ; In Mem. Iv 8
Now with slack rein and c of himself, Balin and Balan 309
eats And uses, c of the rest ; Merlin and V. 463
Then answer'd Merlin c of her words : ,, 700
Merlin answer'd c of her charge, ,, 754
G of all things else, led on with light Lover's Tale i 77
G of our growing kin. Open I. and G. Exhib. 23
Careless-order'd All round a c-o garden To F. D. Maurice 15
Caress (s) The trance gave way To those c'cs, Love and Duty 66
Or for chilling his c'es Maud I xx 12
white hand whose ring'd c Had wander'd Balin and Balan 512
Thy hurt and heart with unguent and c — Last Tournament 595
that no c could win my wife Sisters (E. and E. ) 258
at home if I sought for a kindly c. The Wreck 31
Caress (verb) ' Thrice-happy he that may c The ringlet's
waving balm — Talking Oak 177
be not wrathful with your maid ; G her : Merlin and V. 381
Caress'd G or chidden by the slender hand, Garess'd or chidden 1
Carest c not How roughly men may woo Lucretius 272
Careworn contracting grew Cand wan ; Enoch Arden 487
Carian Artemisia The G A strong in war, Princess ii 81
Caring not for his own self c but her, Enoch Arden 165
No longer c to embalm In dying songs In Mem., Gon. 13
Carketh Thee nor c care nor slander ; A Dirge 8
Carnage Leaving his son too Lost in the c, Batt. of Brunanburh 73
Could we dream of wars and c, Locksley H., Sixty 189
Carnation See Bose-camation
Carnival Love in the sacred halls Held c Princess vii 85
Carol (s) Flow'd forth on a c free and bold ; Dying Swan 30
Heard a c, mournful, holy, L. of Shalott iv 28
She, as her c sadder grew, Mariana in the S, 13
Losing her c I stood pensively, D. of F. Wom^n 245
Carol (s) {continued) swan That, fluting a wild c ere
her death, M. d' Arthur 267
every bird of Eden burst In c. Day -Dm., L' Envoi 44
The hall with harp and c rang. In Mem, ciii 9
swan That, fluting a wild c ere her death, Pass, of Arthur 435
And lavish c of clear-throated larks Lover's Tale i 283
Carol (verb) merrily, merrily c the gales, Sea-Fairies 23
The balm-cricket c's clear In the green A Dirge 47
if I should c aloud, from aloft All things The Mernvaid 52
Or c some old roundelay, Oareth and L. 506
That you should c so madly ? The Throstle 8
Caroline Margaret and Mary, there's Kate and G : Alay Queen 6
CaroUeth the grasshopper c clearly ; Leonine Eleg. 5
Carolling (-See also Down-carolling) and beside The c
water set themselves again, Balin and Balan 44
and c as he went A true-love ballad, Lancelot and E. 704
Carouse ' 0 Soul, make merry and c, Palace of Art 'd
Where long and largely we c Will Water. 91
Carp Near that old home, a pool of golden c ; Ma^iT. of Oeraint 648
Carpenter Cooper he was and c, Enoch Arden 814
Born of a village girl, c's son, Aylmer's Field 668
Carpet c es fresh es a midder o' flowers i' Maay — Spinsters S's. 45
Carriage as I found when her c past, Maud I ii3
Carried see me c out from the threshold of
the door ; May Queen, JV. Y's. E. 42
But him she c, him nor lights nor feast Lover's Tale iv 310
Carrier-bird As light as c-b's in air ; In Mem. xxv 6
Carrion For whom the c vulture waits To tear
his heart You might have won 35
Blacken round the Roman c, Boadicea 14
And deems it c of some woodland thing, Gareth and L. 748
troop of c crows Hung like a cloud Merlin and V. 598
Many a carcase they left to be c, Batt. of Bi-unanburh 105
Carry the king of them all would c me. The Mermaid 45
Warriors c the warrior's pall, Ode on Well. 6
brutes of mountain back That c kings in castles, Merlin and V. 577
Fur 'e'd fetch an' c like owt, Owd Rod 6
Carrying always came to meet me c you. The Ring 352
She came no more to meet me, c you, ,, 385
Cart A^ee Go-cart
Carve to c out Free space for every human doubt. Two Voices 136
you may c a shrine about my dust, St. S. Stylites 195
My good blade c's the casques of men, Sir Galahad 1
monstrous males that c the living hound, Princess Hi 310
c's A portion from the solid present, Merlin and V. 461
Beyond all work of those who c the stone, Tiresias 53
Carved Caucasian mind G out of Nature for itself, Palace of Art 127
A million wrinkles c his skin ; „ 138
for if I c my name Upon the cliffs Audley Gourt 48
thou, whereon I c her name, (repeat) Talking Oak 33, 97
read the name I c with many vows ,, 154
Wept over her, c in stone ; Maud I viii 4
Had c himself a knightly shield of wood. Merlin and V. 473
our Lady's Head, G of one emerald Lancelot and E. 295
her scarlet sleeve, Tho' c and cut, ,, 807
Scribbled or c upon the pitiless stone ; Sir J. Oldcastle 5
one c all over with flowers, V. of Maeldune 106
Homer's fame, Tho' c in harder stone — Epilogue 59
Carven {See also Crag-carven) Some blazon'd,
some but c, and some blank, Gareth and L. 406
His arms were c only ; ,, 412
shield of Lancelot at her feet Be c, Lancelot and E. 1342
And c with strange figures ; Holy Grail 169
Carven-work from the c-w behind him crept Lancelot and E. 436
Caryatid great statues, Art And Science, Gs, Prhicess iv 201
Cascine What drives about the fresh G, The Daisy 43
Case (covering) {See also Wing-case) And warm'd
in crystal c's. Amphion 88
fearing rust or soilure fashion'd for it A c of silk, Lancelot and E. 8
entering barr'd her door, Stript off the c, ,,16
meekly rose the maid, Stript off the c, ,, 979
shield was gone ; only the c, Her own poor work, ,, 990
The silken c with braided blazonings, ,, 1149
Case (circumstance) profits it to put An idle c ? In Mem. xxxv 18
blabbing The c of his patient — Maud II v 37
Case
82
Cast
Case (circumstance) (continued) it was all but a
hopeless c : In the Child. Hosp, 14
And it was but a hopeless c, ,,16
Casement [See also Chancel-casement) Or at the
c seen her stand ? L. of Shcdott i 25
I arose, and I released The c, Two Voices 404
And all the c darken'd there. Miller's D. 128
And fires your narrow c glass, ,, 243
As one that from a c leans his head, D. of F, Women 246
gardener's lodge. With all its c's bedded, AucUey Court 18
Many a night from yonder ivied c, Locksley Hall 7
Flew over roof and c : Will Water. 134
and he clamour'd from a c, ' Run ' The Brook 85
The c slowly grows a glimmering square ; Princess iv 52
All night has the c jessamine stirr'd Maud I xxii 15
Down from the c over Arthur, smote Flame-colour, Com. of Arthur 274
out of bower and c shyly glanced Eyes Oareth and L. 313
Beat thro' the blindless c of the room, Marr. of Geraint 71
rang Clear thro' the open c of the hall, ,, 328
Push'd thro" an open c down, Balin and Balan 413
royal rose In Arthur's c glimmer'd chastely Merlin and V. 740
Unclasping flung the c back, Lancelot and E. 981
Down in a c sat, A low sea-sunset glorying La^t Tournament 507
and in her anguish found The c : Guinevere 587
From that c where the trailer mantles Locksley H., Sixty 257
Close beneath the c crimson with the shield ,, 34
Casement-curtain She drew her c-c by, Mariana 19
Casement-edge That morning, on the c-e Miller's D. 82
Cask when their c's were fiU'd they took aboard : Enoch Arden 646
Casket since The key to that weird c, Ancient Sage 254
Casque And loosed the shatter'd c, and chafed his hands, M. d'A rthur 209
My good blade carves the c's of men. Sir Galahad 1
knightlike in his cap instead of c. Princess iv 600
unlaced my c And grovell'd on my body, ,, m 27
This bare a maiden shield, a c ; Gareth and L. 680
jangling, the c Fell, and he started up Geraint and E. 388
dismount and loose their c's Balin and Balan 573
there first she saw the c Of Lancelot on the wall : Lancelot and E. 805
a crown of gold About a c all jewels ; Holy Grail 411
I saw The pelican on the c of our Sir Bors ,, 635
I remember now That pelican on the c : ,, 700
That ware their ladies' colours on the c. Last Tournament 184
And loosed the shatter'd c, and chafed his hands, Pass, of Arthur 377
Cs were crack'd, and hauberks hack'd The Tourney 7
Cassandra Talk with the wild G, (Enone 263
C, Hebe, Joan, Romney's R. 4
Cassia turning round a c, full in view, Love and Death 4
Cassiopeia had you been Sphered up with C, Princess iv 438
Cissivelaun (British king) hear it, Spirit of G ! Boadicea 20
sweeter then the bride of C, Flur, Marr. of Geraint 744
Cast (mould) take the c Of those dead lineaments Wan Sculptor 1
Not only cunning c's in clay : In Mem. cxx 5
Cast (vomit) Lies the hawk's c, Aylmer's Field 849
Cast (throw) Jephtha vows his child ... to one c
of the dice. The Flight 26
Cast (verb) Low on her knees herself she c, Mariana in the S. 27
' Let me not c in endless shade Two Voices 5
I c me down, nor thought of you, Miller's D. 63
' This was c upon the board, (Enone 79
And c the golden fruit upon the board, ,, 226
those That are c in gentle mould. To J. S. 4
Memory standing near C down her eyes, ,, 54
• And if indeed I c the brand away, M. d' Arthur 88
Dora c her eyes upon the ground, Bora 89
who would c and balance at a desk, Audley Court 44
' Yet, since I first could c a shade. Talking Oak 85
Had c upon its crusty side Will Water. 103
overboard one stormy night He c his body, The Voyage 80
C all your cares on God ; Enoch Arden 222
C his strong arms about his drooping wife, ,, 228
•Enoch, poor man, was c away and lost, „ 713
Repeated muttering ' c away and lost ; ' ,, 715
she c back upon him A piteous glance, Aylmer's Field 283
But they that c her spirit into flesh, ,, 481
He had c the curtains of their seat aside— ,, 803
Cast (verb) (continued) Shall Babylon be c into the sea ; Sea Dreams 28
The mountain there has c his cloudy slough, Lucretius 177
grandsire burnt Because he c no shadow. Princess i 7
entering here, to c and fling The tricks, ,, ii 62
eddied into suns, that wheeling c The planets : ,, 118
Psyche's child to c it from the doors ; ,, to 238
turn'd her face, and c A liquid look on Ida, ,, 368
But a c oop, thot a did, N. Farmer, 0. S. 14
in a golden hour I c to earth a seed. The Flower 2
She c her arms about the child. The Victim 32
Or c as rubbish to the void. In Mem. liv 7
And if thou c thine eyes below, ,, Ixi 5
Tho' if an eye that's downward c ,, Ixii 1
To chances where our lots were c „ xcii 5
Let cares that petty shadows c, „ cv 13
I seem to c a careless eye On souls, ,, cxii 7
Uther c upon her eyes of love : Com. of Arthur 193
written in the speech ye speak yourself, ' C me
„ 305
307
Gareth and L. 401
418
683
803
1011
1153
1403
Marr. of Geraint 73
609
672
807
Geraint and E. 46
572
595
705
707
„ 761
932
away !
time to c away Is yet far-off.'
rend In pieces, and so c it on the hearth,
rend the cloth and c it on the hearth,
cloth of roughest web, and c it down,
bound my lord to c him in the mere.'
rough dog, to whom he c his coat,
but straining ev'n his uttermost C,
saw That Death was c to ground.
Who, moving, c the coverlet aside.
At this she c her eyes upon her dress.
And c it on the mixen that it die.'
she could c aside A splendour dear to women,
she c about For that unnoticed failing
c him and the bier in which he lay
c his lance aside. And dofE'd his helm :
this poor gown I will not c aside
arise a living man, And bid me c it.
and she c her arms About him,
c his eyes On each of all whom Uther left
Stumbled headlong, and c his face to ground, Balin and Balan 426
And there in gloom c himself all along, ,, 434
Tore from the branch, and c on earth, the shield, ,, 539
on his dying brother c himself Dying ; ,, 593
As Love, if Love be perfect, c's out fear. So Hate,
if Hate be perfect, c's out fear. Merlin and V. 40
C herself down, knelt to the Queen, ,, 66
Where children c their pins and nails, ,, 430
The gentle wizard c a shielding arm. ,, 908
For if his own knight c him down, Lancelot and E. 313
stay'd ; and c his eyes on fair Elaine : „ 640
Leaf after leaf, and tore, and c them off, ,, 1199
The brand Excalibur will be c away. Holy Grail 257
all but hold, and then — c her aside, ,, 622
binding his good horse To a tree, c himself down ; Pclleas and E. 31
c himself down, And gulf'd his griefs ,, 515
but c himself Down on a bench, hard-breathing. ,, 591
a knight c down Before his throne of arbitration ImsI Tournament 161
Like a dry bone c to some hungry hound ? ,, 196
So dame and damsel c the simple white, ,, 232
and c thee back Thine own small saw, ,, _ 711
And c him as a worm upon the way ; Guinevere 35
* And if indeed I c the brand away. Pass, of Arthur 256
Are morning shadows huger than the shapes
That c them, To the Queen ii 64
we found The dead man c upon the shore ? Lover's Tale i 295
I c them in the noisy brook beneath, „ ii 41
But c a parting glance at me, ,, iv i
' He c's me out, ' she wept, ' and goes ' ,, 103
She shook, and c her eyes down, ,, 329
Yet c her not away so suddenly, , , 366
' C awaay on a disolut land wi' a vartical soon 1 ' North. Gobbler 3
And c it to the Moor : Columbus 111
I heard his voice, ' Be not c down. ,, 158
C off, put by, scouted by court and king — ,, 165
C at thy feet one flower that fades To Dante 7
A planet equal to the sun Which c it. To E. Fitzgerald 36
Cast
83
Cattle
Cast (verb) (continued) To c wise words among the multitude Tiresias 66
when he c a contemptuous glance The Wreck 25
the crew should c me into the deep, ,, 94
But the blind wave c me ashore, Despair 61
curb the beast would c thee in the mire. Ancient Sage 276
Crime and hunger c our maidens Locksley H. , Sixty 220
C the poison from your bosom, ,, ' 241
shadows which that light would c, Epit. on Caxton 3
The roses that you c aside — Happy 22
Which, c in later Grecian mould, To Master of B. 6
And c aside, when old, for newer, — Akbar's Dream 134
vanish'd in the shadow c by Death. Z>. of the Duke of C.Z
Castalies I led you then to all the C ; Princess iv 294
Castanet The starling claps his tiny c's. Prog, of Spring 56
Caste Which stamps the c of Vere de Vere. L. C. V. de Vere 40
I hate the rancour of their c's and creeds, Akbar's Dream 65
Castile The noble and the convict of C, Colurnbus 117
Castillano Weigh'd nigh four thousand C's ,, 136
Casting {See also Shadow-Casting) by two yards in
c bar or stone Was counted best ; Gareth and L. 518
unhooded c off The goodly falcon free ; Merlin and V. 130
Castle (adj.) She stood upon the c wall, Oriana 28
Atween me and the c wall, ,, 35
The splendour falls on c walls Princess iv 1
Guinevere Stood by the c walls to watch him
pass ; Com. of Arthur 48
Then from the c gateway by the chasm Descending ,, 370
Then rode Geraint into the c court, Marr of Geraint 312
And while he waited in the c court, ,, 326
met The scorner in the c court, Balin and Balan 387
Moving to meet him in the c court ; Lancelot and E. 175
Then bounded forward to the c walls, Pelleas and E. 363
Castle (s) (-See also Sea-castle) c, built When men
knew how to build, Edwin Morris 6
See the lordly c's stand : L. of Burleigh 18
And built their c's of dissolving sand Enoch Arden 19
The lady of three c's in that land : Princess i 79
Well, Are c's shadows ? Three of them ? >) w 414
Shall those three c'« patch my tatter'd coat? ,, 416
dear are those three c's to my wants, ,, 417
To that fair port below the c The Daisy 79
Seeing his gewgaw c shine, Maud I xl8
he that held Tintagil c by the Cornish sea, Com. of Arthur 187
Closed in her c from the sound of arms. Gareth and L. 163
husband's brother had my son Thrall'd in his c, ,, 358
And saddening in her childless c, ,, 528
holds her stay'd In her own c, ,, 616
And on one side a c in decay, Marr. of Geraint 245
And keeps me in this ruinous c here, ,, 462
till the c of a King, the hall Of Pellam, Balin and Balan 331
from the c a cry Sounded across the court, ,, 399
brutes of mountain back That carry kings in c's, Merlin and V. 577
Ran to the C of Astolat, Lancelot and E. 167
and again By c Gumion, where the glorious King , , 293
The Princess of that c was the one. Holy Orail 578
A c like a rock upon a rock, „ 814
when she gain'd her c, upsprang the bridge, Pelleas and E. 206
Catlike thro' his own c steals my Mark, Last Tournament 516
And fly to my strong c overseas : Guinevere 113
Round that strong c where he holds the Queen ; ,, 194
Castle-bridge until he stood There on the c-b Pelleas and E. 443
Castle-gate sought for Garlon at the c-g's, Balin a-)id Balan 610
Castle Perilous She lives 'va.C P: Gareth and L. 611
pitch'd Beside the C P on flat field, ,, 1363
Castle-wall her orchard underneath Her c-w's, Holy Grail 594
Castle- well pool or stream. The c-w, belike ; Lancelot and E, 215
Casualty Howbeit ourself, foreseeing c, _ Princess Hi 317
Cat {See also Tiger-cat) When c's run home and light
is come. The Owl i 1
yelp'd the cur, and yawl'd the c ; The Goose 33
like dove and dove were c and dog. Walk, to the Mail 58
Her gay-furr'd c's a painted fantasy, Princess Hi 186
the two great c's Close by her, ,, . vi 357
Within the hearing of c or mouse, Maud II v 48
I will be deafer than the blue-eyed c, Holy Grail 865
Cat {continued) an' scratted my faace like a c, North. Cobbler 22
they kep the c an' the dog, Toinorrow 71
a c may loook at a king thou knaws but the c
mun be clean. Spinster's S's. 34
fond o' thy bairns es I be mysen o' my c's, ,, 83
till the Lion look no larger than the C, Till the G
thro' that mirage Locksley H., Siody 112
c wur a-sleeJipin alongside Roaver, Owd Rod 33
to-daay, when she hurl'd a plaate at the c Church-warden, etc. 25
Catacomb water falls In vaults and c's. In Metn. Iviii 4
Catalepsy paw'd his beard, and mutter'd 'c' Princess i 20
Catalonian Minorite By him, the C M, Columbus 194
Catapult Your cities into shards with c's, Princess v 138
Hurl'd as a stone from out of a c Gareth and L. 965
Cataract (a fall of water) {See also Sea-cataract)
In c after c to the sea. (Enmie 9
snowy peak and snow-white c Foster'd ,, 211
ocean-ridges roaring into c's. Locksley Hall 6
stream of life Dashed downward in a c. Day- Dm., Revival 16
Beyond the darkness and the c. Vision of Sin 49
we came to where the river sloped To plunge in c, Princess Hi 291
And the wild c leaps in glory. ,, iv i
c and the tumult and the kings Were shadows ; , , 564
Set in a c on an island-crag, ,, ?; 347
C brooks to the ocean run. The Met 17
The c flashing from the bridge, In Mem. Ixod 15
senseless c, Bearing all down in thy precipitancy — Gareth and L. 7
thro' the crash of the near c hears Geraint and E. 172
the sea Drove like a c, and all the sand Holy Grail 799
and swept in a c off from her sides, The Wreck 90
hollow ridges roaring into c's, Locksley H., Sixty 2
Or c music Of falling torrents, Merlin and the G. 46
Hear my c's Downward thunder To Master of B. 15
in blood-red c's down to the sea ! Kapiolani 12
Cataract (a disease of the eye) Almost blind With
ever-growing c. Sisters {E. and E.) 192
Catch (s) ' but 'tis eating dry To dance without a c. Last Tournament 250
Catch (verb) Whereof I c the issue, as I hear Dead sounds (Enone 248
C me who can, and make the catcher crown'd — Golden Year 18
C the wild goat by the hair, Locksley Hall 170
C her, goatfoot : nay. Hide, Lucretius 203
To c a dragon in a cherry net. Princess v 169
I would c Her hand in wild delirium, ,, m 92
c The far-off interest of tears ? In Mem. i 7
And c at every mountain head, In Mem. Con. 114
Prickle my skin and c my breath, Maud I xiv 36
C not my breath, 0 clamorous heart, ,, ccvi 31
To c a friend of mine one stormy day ; „ 77 w 85
for my wont hath ever been To c my thief, Gareth and L. 822
' Overquick art thou To c a loathly plume Merlin and V. 727
cheek did c the colour of her words. Lover's Tale i 569
The hope I c at vanishes and youth The Flight 16
Prophet-eyes may c a glory slowly gaining Making of Man 6
Catcher and make the c crown'd — Golden Year 18
Catching Seem'd c at a rootless thorn, Geraint and E. 378
Cate many a viand left, And many a costly c, Gareth and L. 849
Caterpillar Picks from the colewort a green c, Guinevere 32
Cat-footed C^ thro' the town and half in dread Princess ilOi
Cathay Better fifty years of Europe than a
cycle of C. Locksley Hall 184
Cathedral sunshine laves The lawn by some c, D. of F. Women 190
gray c towers. Across a hazy glimmer Gardener's D. 218
But huge c fronts of every age, Sea Dreams 218
And in the vast c leave him. Ode on Well. 280
Catherine O, C, in the night. Forlorn 13
Catholic Cross I cling to the C C once more. The Wreck 3
Catholic Faith hope was mine to spread the Cf, Columbus 230
Catieuchlanian Hear Icenian, G, hear Coritanian,
(repeat) Boadicea 10, 34, 47
Gods have answer'd, G, Trinobant. ,, 22
Shout Icenian, C, shout Coritanian, ,, 57
Catlike C thro' his own castle steals Last Tournament 516
Cato A dwarf-like Ccower'd. Princess vii 126
Catspaw Him his c and the Cross his tool, Sea Dreams 190
Cattle strikes thro' the thick blood Of c, Lucretius 99
Cattle
84
Cause
Cattle {continued) And c died, and deer in wood,
The c huddled on the lea ;
ahide Without, among the c of the field.
half of the c went lame,
drive Innocent c under thatch,
Catullus All composed in a metre of C,
Thro' this metrification of C,
Sweet C's all-but-island,
C, whose dead songster never dies ;
Caucasian Which the supreme C mind Carved
Where our Cs let themselves be sold.
Caucasus From Calpe unto G they sung,
Elburz and all the (7 have heard ;
Cauf (calf) ' Cushie wur craazed fur 'er c '
' thank God that I hevn't naw c o' my oan.'
Caught (See also Cotch'd) eddying of her garments c from
thee The light Ode to Memory 31
And there a vision c my eye ; Miller's I). 76
C in the frozen palms of Spring. The BlackUrd 24
She c the white goose by the leg, The Goose 9
She dropt the goose, and c the pelf, ,, 13
c him by the hilt, and brandish'd him Three times,
The Victim 18
In Mem. xv 6
Gareth and L. 21 A.
V. of Maeldune 31
Locksley H., Sixty 96
Hendecasyllabics 4
10
Frater Ave, etc. 9
Poets and their B. 8
Palace of Art 126
Aylmer's Field 349
The Poet 15
W. to Marie Alex. 13
Spinster's S's. 115
116
(repeat)
the last night's gale had c.
And there he c the younker tickling trout —
C in flagrante — what's the Latin word ?
Thou wouldst have c me up into thy rest,
Abaddon and Asmodeus c at me.
O up the whole of love and utter'd it.
Like truths of Science waiting to be c —
The page has c her hand in his :
Lady's-head upon the prow C the shrill salt,
O the sparkles, and in circles,
C each other with wild grimaces,
now hastily c His bundle, waved his hand,
O at his hand, and wrung it passionately,
O at and ever miss'd it, and they laugh'd ;
M. d'Arih7ir 145, 160
Gardener's D. 124
Walk, to the Mail 33
34
St. S. Stylites 18
„ ■ 172
Love and Didy 82
Golden Year 17
Day-Dm., Sleep P. 29
The Voyage 12
Vision of Sin 30
35
Enoch Arden 237
328
752
about the fields you c His weary daylong chirping. The Brook b2
great pock-pitten fellow had been c? ' ' ~
C in a burst of unexpected storm,
And c the blossom of the flying terms,
and the flood drew : yet I c her ;
Right on this we drove and c.
And falling on my face was c and known.
as if c at once from bed And tumbled
On one knee Kneeling, I gave it, which she c.
Like tender things that being c feign death.
Were c within the record of her wrongs,
Came sallying thro' the gates, and c his hair,
not less one glance he c Thro' open doors
And reach'd the ship and c the rope.
He c her away with a sudden cry ;
And Fancy light from Fancy c.
And c once more the distant shout,
c The deep pulsations of the world,
C and cuff 'd by the gale :
and c By that you swore to withstand ?
Last year, lea glimpse of his face,
For how often I c her with eyes all wet,
Who stoopt and c the babe, and cried
c And stay'd him, ' Climb not lest thou break
The listening rogue hath c the manner of it.
C at the hilt, as to abolish him :
Yniol c His purple scarf, and held,
Edyrn's men had c them in their flight.
Her by both hands he c, and sweetly said,
he sharply c his lance and shield,
' And passing gentle ' c his hand away
C in a great old tyrant spider's web,
one of Satan's shepherdesses c And meant to
stamp him
plunged, and c And set it on his head.
The heathen c and reft him of his tongue,
and him they c and maim'd ;
whereat she c her breath ;
Aylmer's Field 256
285
Princess, Pro. 164
iv 182
188
270
285
470
ul08
143
340
342
Sailor Boy 3
The Victim &^
In Mem. xxiii 14
,, Ixxxvii 9
,, xcv 39
Maud I vi 5
" . 79
,, xiii27
„ xix 23
Com. of A rthur 385
Gareth and L. 53
778
Marr. of Geraint 210
376
642
778
Balin and Balan 287
371
Merlin and V. 259
758
Lancelot and E. 54
273
275
623
Caught (coniinueH) Lady of the Lake C from his
mother's arms — Lancelot and E. 1405
the holy cup Was c away to Heaven, Holy Grail 58
c his hand. Held it, and there, half -hidden by him, ,, 753
she c the circlet from his lance, Pelleas and E, 173
C his unbroken limbs from the dark field, ,, 585
Then Tristram laughing c the harp, Last Tournament 730
c him by the hilt, and brandish'd him Three times,
(repeat) Pass, of Arthur 313, 328
round and round A whirlwind c and bore us ; Lover's Tale ii 197
they turn'd, and c and brought him in ,, iv 376
old Sir Richard c at last. The Revenge 98
And c the laming bullet. Sisters (E. and E.) 65
Had c her hand, her eyelids fell— ,, 148
C in a mill and crush'd — In the Child. Hosp. li
So, c, I burn, Burn ? heathen men have borne Sir J. Oldcastle 184
I c the wreath that was flung. The Wreck 40
flay Captives whom they c in battle — Locksley H., Sixty 80
And his eloquence c like a flame Dead Prophet 34
And c her chaplet here — and there To Marg. of Dufferin 30
woman came And c me from my nurse. The Ring 113
C by the flower that closes on the fly, „ 344
Who never c one gleam of the beauty Ilaypy 60
cand held His people by the bridle-rein Akhar's Dream 84
And he c my little one from me : Bandit's Death 22
died of a fever c when a nurse Charity 41
Cause embattail and to wall about thy c To J. M. K. 8
more c to weep have I : My tears, no tears of love, Wan Sculptor 6
Nor in a merely selfish c — Two Voices 147
' In some good c, not in mine own, ' ,, 148
This woman was the c. D. of F. Women 104
only love were c enough for praise.' Gardener's D. 105
no c ; James had no c : but when I prest the c, The Brook 97
who most have c to sorrow for her — Aylmer's Field 678
such extremes, I told her, well might harm The
woman's c. Princess Hi 145
Or, falling, protomartyr of our c. Die : „ iv 505
twice I sought to plead my c, ,, 552
betray 'd her c and mine — ,, w 76
and storming in extremes, Stood for her c, „ 177
why, the c's weigh'd. Fatherly fears — ,, 215
in our noble sister's c ? More, more, for honour : ,, 312
I would not aught of false — Is not our c pure ? ,, 403
you The sole men to be mingled with our c, ,, 411
our side was vanquish'd and my c For ever lost, ,, m 24
whose arms Champion'd our c and won it ,, 62
The brethren of our blood and c, ,, 71
To dream thy c embraced in mine, ,, 200
She pray'd me not to judge their c from her ,, vii 235
that know The woman's c is man's : ,, 259
With such compelling c to grieve In Mem. xxix 1
Ring out a slowly dying c, ,, cvi 13
can he tell Whether war be a c or a consequence ? Maud / a; 45
I cleaved to a c that I felt to be pure Maud III vi 31
We have proved we have hearts in a c, ,, 55
good c is theirs To hate me, Gareth and L, 820
' Sound sleep be thine ! sound c to sleep hast thou. ,, 1282
Am I the c, I the poor c that men Reproach you, Marr, of Geraint 87
I am the c, because I dare not speak ,, 89
' Graver c than yours is mine, To curse ,, 308
you that most had c To fear me, fear no longer, Geraint and E. 824
Yourself were first the blameless c ,, 826
And made her good man jealous with good c. Merlin and V. 605
Some c had kept him sunder'd from his wife : ,, 715
Could call him the main c of all their crime ; ,, 788
now remains But little c for laughter : Lancelot and E. 597
that I gave No c, not willingly, for such a love : ,, 1298
hither had she fled, her c of flight Sir Modred ; Guinevere 9
come my way ! to twit me with the c ! Lover's Tale i 661
So much God's c was fluent in it — Sir J. Oldcastle 17
some less c, some c far less than mine ; ,, 187
For every other c is less than mine. ,, 188
To this great c of Freedom drink, my friends,
(repeat) Hands all Round 11, 35
Death for the right c, death for the wrong c, Vastness 8
Causer
85
Cedar
Causer c of his banishment and shame, BaZin and Balan 221
him The c of that scandal, fought and fell ; The Ring 215
Causeway from the c heavily to the swamp Fall, Last Tournament 461
Cauve (calve). Wi' aaf the cows to c N. Farmer, O.S. 52
Cavalier A c from off his saddle-bow, D. of F. Women 46
Cavall (King Arthur's hound) chiefly for the
baying of C, Marr. of Oeraint 185
Cave (see also Chamel-cave, Temple-cave) And sweet
is the colour of cove and c, Sea-Fairies 30
O C's That house the cold crown'd snake ! (Enone 36
within the c Behind yon whispering tuft ,, 87
rock-thwarted under bellowing c's, Palace of Art 71
To hear the dewy echoes calling From c to c Lotos-Eaters, C'.S. 95
Thro' every hollow c and alley lone ,, 103
Dry clash 'd his harness in the icy c's M. d' Arthur 186
A narrow e ran in beneath the cliff : Enoch Arden 23
a c Of touchwood, met a single flourishing spray, Aylmer's Field 511
All sand and cliff and deep-inrunning c, Sea Dreams 17
Ran in and out the long sea- framing c's, ,, 33
dark c's that run beneath the cliffs. ,, 90
motion of the boundless deep Bore thro' the c, ,, 92
I found Only the landward exit of the c, „ 96
along the valley, by rock and c and tree, V. of Caiiteretz 9
In c's about the dreary bay, Sailor Boy 10
help and shelter to the hermit's c. Oareth and L. 1209
A c. Sir Lancelot, is hard by, ,, 1275
woodman show'd the e From which ho sallies, Balin aiid Balan 131
Look to the c' ,, 306
As on a dull day in an Ocean c The blind wave Merlin and V. 231
But into some low c to crawl, ,, 884
massive columns, like a shorecliflf c, Lancelot and E. 406
shot red fire and shadows thro' the c, „ 414
across the poplar grove Led to the c's : ,, 805
city to the fields. Thence to the c : „ 848
rivulet from a tiny c Came lightening downward, Pdleas and E. 425
Dry clash'd his harness in the icy c's Pass, of Arthur 354
the c. Storm, sunset, glows and glories of the
moon Lover's Tale ii 109
stately vestibules To c's and shows of Death : ,, 126
Strewn in the entry of the moaning c ; ,, Hi 2
Dragon's c Half hid, they tell me, Tiresias 143
When the bat comes out of his c. Despair 89
seem to draw From yon dark c, Ancient Sage 10
I peer'd thro' tomb and c, Demeter and P. 70
CEnone sat within the c from out Death of (Enone 1
still in her c. Amazed, and ever seeming stared ,, 69
in his c The man, whose pious hand had built St. Telemachus 8
Reason in the dusky c of Life, Akhar's Dream 121
dragg'd me up there to his c in the mountain, Bandit's Death 11
We return' d to his c — the link was broken — ,, 29
slept Ay, till dawn stole into the c, , , 31
Cavern shoulder under gloom Of c pillars ; To E. L. 18
a hut, Half hut, half native c. Enoch Arden 560
I long to creep Into some still c deep, Maud II iv 96
And told him of a c hard at hand, Oareth aiid L. 1189
Scaped thro' a c from a bandit hold. Holy Grail 207
Beneath a low-brow'd c, where the tide Plash'd, Lover's Tale i 55
Is scoop'd a c and a mountain hall, „ 517
The hollow c's heard me — «, H 11
Chiefly I sought the e and the hill ,, 33
old man before A c whence an affluent Ancient Sage 7
Gnome of the c. Griffin and Giant, Merlin and the G. 39
Cavern-chasm mark'd not on his right a c-c Balin and Balan 312
Cavern-mouth c-m. Half overtrailed with a wanton
weed Lover's Tale i 524
All day I sat within the c-m, „ H 37
Cavern-shadowing wilderness, And c-s laurels, Lucretius 205
Caw The building rook '11 c May Queen, N. rs. E. 17
Cease The stream will c to flow ; The wind will c
to blow ; The clouds will c to fleet ; The heart
will c to beat ; All Things will Die 9
trust and hope till things should c, Supp. Confessions 31
When I shall c to be all alone, Mariana in the S. 95
A wither'd palsy c to shake ? ' Two Voices 57
V to wail and brawl ! ,, 199
Cease (continued) Not make him sure that he shall c ? Two Voices 282
And the wicked c from troubling,
fold our wings, And c from wanderings,
In silence ; ripen, fall and c :
When midnight bells c ringing suddenly,
'Twere better I should c
the wise of heart would c To hold his hope
Shall I c here ? Is this enough to say
I will not c to grasp the hope I hold Of saintdom
Yet c I not to clamour and to cry,
I muse on joy that will not c,
thou shalt c To pace the gritted floor,
For blasts would rise and rave and c,
I cannot c to follow you.
Nor did her father c to press my claim,
But c to move so near the Heavens, and c
That our free press should c to brawl,
hearts that change not, love that cannot c,
the Judge of us all when life shall c ;
Her quiet dream of life this hour may C.
They have their day and c to be :
jaws Of vacant darkness and to c.
And those cold crypts where they shall c.
That the man I am may c to be !
Pass and c to move about !
iron tyranny now should bend or c,
c not from your quest until ye find.'
wherefore c, Sweet father, and bid call
I would that wars should c,
silver year should c to mourn and sigh —
Ceased heart of Poland hath not c To quiver,
A little c, but recommenced.
I c, and sat as one forlorn.
She c, and Paris held the costly fruit
' Here she c. And Paris ponder'd.
But all these things have c to be,
She c in tears, fallen from hope and trust :
Before he c I turn'd,
He c ; and Miriam Lane Made such a voluble
answer
And then the motion of the current c,
cloud That not one moment c to thunder,
I c, and all the ladies, each at each,
Scarce had I c when from a tamarisk near
She c : the Princess answer'd coldly,
I c ; he said, ' Stubborn, but she may sit
G all on tremble : piteous was the cry :
when we c There came a minute's pause,
We c : a gentler feeling crept Upon us :
him who had c to share her heart,
sod and shingle c to fly Behind her.
Here c the kindly mother out of breath ;
She c ; his evil spirit upon him leapt,
He c, and then — for Vivien sweetly said
She c, and made her lithe arm round his neck
Scarce had she c, when out of heaven a bolt
He spoke and c : the lily maid Elaine,
She c : her father promised ;
Then, when he c, in one cold passive hand
' He c ; and Arthur turn'd to whom at first
leave this land for ever.' Here he c.
But never a moment c the fight
And when I c to speak, the king,
now thy long day's work hath c.
Nor ever c to clamour for the ring ;
when life has c to beat.
Ceasing C not, mingled, unrepress'd,
He c, came a message from the Head.
' So speaking, and here c,
Cecily Wound with white roses, slept St. 0 ;
Cedar (See also Cedar-wood) The stately c,
tamarisks,
A c spread his dark -green layers of shade.
Beam'd thro' the thicken'd c in the dusk,
in halls Of Lebanonian c :
May Queen, Con. 60
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 20
52
D. ofF. Women 2^7
To J. S. 66
Love thou thy land 81
Gardener's D. 236
St. S. Stylites 5
42
Sir Galahad 65
Will Water. 241
The Voyage 85
Princess iv 455
„ vii 87
195
Third of Feb. 3
W. to Marie Alex. 46
Grandmother 95
Requiescat 6
In Mem., Pro. 18
,, xxxiv 16
,, Iviii 8
Maud / a; 68
„ // iv 59
„ IIIvi2Q
Lancelot and E. 548
1098
Epilogue 11
To Mary Boyle 57
Poland 3
Two Voices 318
„ 400
(Enone 135
„ 168
May Queen, Con. 48
D. of F. Women 257
Gardener's D. 121
Enoch Arden 902
Sea Dreams 117
„ 125
Princess iv 117
258
359
W438
ml42
Con. 3
In Mem. xocx 17
Maud I xix 30
Gareth and L, 761
Marr. of Geraint 732
Balin and Balan 537
Merlin and F. 17
614
934
Lancelot and E. 242
„ 1130
„ 1201
Holy Grail 751
Lover's Tale iv 368
The Revenge 57
Columbus 14
Epit. on Stratford 2
The Ring 389
Hapjjy 52
Arabian Nights 74
Princess Hi 168
Holy Grail 853
Palace of Art 92
Arabian Nights 105
Gardener's D. 116
„ 166
Princess ii 352
Cedar
86
Chair
Cedax {continued) bloom profuse and c arches Charm,
Sighing for Lebanon, Dark c,
Cedar-tree A voice by the c tin the meadow
red man dance By his red c-t,
Cedar-wood A mile beneath the c-w.
Milton 11
Maud 1 xviii 18
V 1
,, xidi 18
Elednore 8
Princess v 333
Cede learn if Ida yet would c our claim,
Ceiling (See also Hall-ceiling) men Walk'd like the
fly on c's ? Columbus 51
Celandine in varnish 'd glory shine Thy stars of c. Prog, of Spring 39
Celebrate To c the golden prime Arahian Nights 131
Celebrated thine the deeds to be c, Boiidicea 41
Celibacy Into the suburb — their hard c, Sir J. Oldcastle 107
Celidon gloomy skirts Of C the forest ; Lancelot and E. 292
Cell From many a wondrous grot and secret c The Kraken 8
And wild winds bound within their c, Mariana 54
' Not less the bee would range her c's, Two Voices 70
From c's of madness unconfined, ,, 371
Made havock among those tender c's, Lucretius 22
And weave their petty c's and die. In Mem. 1 12
track Suggestion to her inmost c. ,, xcv 32
The tiny c is forlorn, Maud II ii 13
Thro' c's of madness, haunts of horror „ III vi 2
in your frosty c's ye feel the fire ! Balin and Balan 446
c's and chambers : all were fair and dry ; Lancelot and E. 4Syj
When they gain'd the c wherein he slept, ,, 811
Across the iron grating of her c Beat, Holy Grail 81
Stream 'd thro' my c a cold and silver beam, ,, 116
Till all the white walls of my c were dyed ,, 119
I never stray 'd beyond the c, ,, 628
bound and plunged him into a c Of great piled stones ; ,, 675
such a craziness as needs A c and keeper). Lover's Tale iv 165
They had fasten'd the door of his c. Rizpah 42
Like worldly beauties in the C, The Ring 143
Cellar in the c's merry bloated things Cfuinevere 267
Celled See Full-celled, Two-cell'd
Celt (race of people) Teuton or C, or whatever
we be, W. to Alexandra 32
The blind hysterics of the 0 ; In Mem. cix 16
Celt (stone implement) c's and calumets, Claymore and
snowshoe, Princess, Pro. 17
Censer incense free From one c in one shrine, Eleanore 59
The shrill bell rings, the c swings, Sir Galahad 35
A c, either worn with wind and storm ; Gareth and L. 222
Censure England's honest c went too far ; Third of Feb. 2
It might be safe our c's to withdraw ; ,, 11
Cent mellow metres more than c for c ; The Brook 5
Center'd See Centred
Centre Earth is dry to the c, Nothing will Die 20
Till toward the c set the starry tides. Princess ii 117
thoughts that wait On you, their c : ,,11) 444
in the c stood The common men with rolling eyes ; »> ^ 359
Whose faith has c everywhere, In Mem. xxxiii 3
The c of a world's desire ; ,, Ixiv 16
In the c stood A statue veil'd, ,, ciiiW
Safe, damsel, as the c of this hall. Gardh and L. 604
To c in this place and time. Lover's Tale i 552
the c and crater of European confusion, Beautiful City 1
Centre-bit c-h's Grind on the wakeful ear Maud / i 41
Centred-Center'd music centred in a doleful
song Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 117
centred in the sphere Of common duties, Ulysses 39
Would follow, center'd in eternal calm. Lucretius 79
one emerald center'd in a sun Of silver rays, Lancelot and E. 295
Century When the centuries behind me like a fruitful
land Locksley Hall 13
A maiden of our c, yet most meek ; The Brook 68
thro' the centuries let a people's voice Ode on Well. 142
Had I lain for a c dead ; Maud I xxii 72
years will roll into the centuries, Guinevere 626
speak to the centuries, All the centuries. On Jub. Q. Victoria 48
The c's three strong eights have met To Ulysses 7
Ceremonial Hail the fair C Of this year of her
Jubilee. On Jul. Q. Victoria 23
in his heart rejoice At this glad C, ,,37
Of this great C, „ 50
Ceremony Long summers back, a kind of c — Princess i 124
in the darkness, at the mystical c, Boddicea 36
suit of fray'd magnificence. Once fit for feasts
of c) Marr. of Geraint 297
And there be wedded with all c. „ 608
They twain were wedded with all c. ,, 839
Cha&nge (change) I thowt shall I c my staate ? Spinster's S's. 44
Cha9,nged (changed) But arter I c my mind. North. Cobbler 105
Cha&ngin' (changing) all the while I wur c my gown, Spinster's S's. 43
Chace-Chase (See also Sunmer-chace) That stand
within the chace. Talking Oak 4
And overlook the chace ; ,,94
Look further through the cAace, ,, 246
Then crost the common into Darnley chase The Brook 132
Chafe yet it c's me that I could not bend D, of F. Women 137
Began to c as at a personal wrong. Enoch Arden 474
Chafed c his hands, And call'd him by his name, M. d' Arthur 209
And when his answer c them. Holy Grail 673
c his hands, And call'd him by his name. Pass, of Arthur 377
I took And c the freezing hand. The Ring 452
Chaff Mere c and draff, much better burnt. ' The Epic 40
will be c For every gust of chance, Princess iv 355
And vacant c well meant for grain. In Mem. vi 4
and grope, And gather dust and c, ,, Iv 18
Chaffering C's and chatterings at the market-cross, Holy Grail 558
Chafing c at his own great self defied,
But c me on fire to find my bride)
and the squire C his shoulder :
c his pale hands, and calling to him.
c his faint hands, and calling to him ;
Chain (s) (See also Daisy-chain, Buby-chain) to chain
with c's, and bind with bands
loosed the c, and down she lay ;
such a c Of knitted purport,
Bound by gold c's about the feet of God.
But dallied with his golden c,
Twof ooted at the limit of his c,
To break my c, to shake my mane :
From growing commerce loose her latest c,
made the serf a man, and burst his c —
boat, Half-swallow'd in it, anchor'd with a c ;
I burst the c, I sprang into the boat.
Bound by gold c's about the feet of God.
seem'd as tho' a link Of some tight c
sat as if in c's — to whom he said :
He workt me the daisy c —
but am led by the creak of the c.
They hang'd him in c's for a show —
O's, my good lord : in your raised brows
C's for the Admiral of the Ocean ! c's For him who gave
a new heaven,
c's for him Who push'd his prows
Os ! we are Admirals of the Ocean,
Drove me and my good brothers home in c's,
the c's, what do they mean — the c's ? '
' These same c's Bound these same bones
wept with me when I return'd in c's.
She that link'd again the broken c
c's of mountain, grains of sand
The slave, the scourge, the c ;
all the gold from each laburnum c
Down hill ' Too-quick,' the c.
Chain (verb) to c with chains, and bind with bands
And c's regret to his decease,
Chain'd My right leg c into the crag,
— or brought her c, a slave,
so c and coupled with the curse Of blindness
dog : it was c, but its horrible yell
Chaining But c fancy now at home
Chair (See also Arm-chair, Elbow-chair) If one
but speaks or hems or stirs his c.
In yonder c I see him sit.
And the long shadow of the c
Two years his c is seen Empty
farmer vext packs up his beds and e's,
Aylmer's Field 537
Princess i 166
Geraint and E. 27
582
585
BuoTiaparte 2
L. of Shalott iv 16
Two Voices 167
M. d' Arthur 255
Day-Dm., Revival 31
Aylmer's Field 127
Princess ii 424
Ode Inter. Exhib. 33
W. to Marie Alex. 3
Holy Grail 803
„ 807
Pass, of Arthur 423
Lover's Tale i 595
„ iv 362
First Quarrel 13
Rizpah 7
„ 35
Columbus 1
19
23
28
134
211
213
231
Locksley H., Sixty 52
„ 208
Freedom 12
To Mary Boyle 11
Politics 12
Buonaparte 2
In Mem. xxix 3
St. S. Stylites 73
Pnncess v 139
Tiresias 58
Bandit's Death 35
To Ulysses S]
Sonnet To 5
Miller's D. 9
126
To J. S. 22
Walk, to the Mail 39
Chair
87
Chanced
Chair (continued) Sweat on his blazon'd c's ;
And in his c himself uprear'd,
But kept the house, his e, and last his bed.
With nearing c and lower'd accent)
I cry to vacant c's and widow'd walls,
They come and sit by my c,
spirits sink To see the vacant c,
The c's and thrones of civil power?
He plays with threads, he beats his c
Why sits he here in his father's c ?
Gareth went, and hovering round her c Ask'd,
pushing could move The c of Idris.
in their c's set up a stronger race
Thy c, a grief to all the brethren,
sloping down to make Arms for his c,
In our great hall there stood a vacant c.
Merlin sat In his own c, and so was lost ;
Galahad would sit down in Merlin's c.
now his c desires him here in vain,
fill'd his double-dragon'd c.
Push'd from his c of regal heritage.
Led his dear lady to a c of state.
I mash'd the taables an' c's,
an' the mark o' 'is 'ead o' the c's !
An' I slep i' my c hup-on-end,
An' I slep' i' my c ageiin
Sa I kep i' my c, fur I thowt she was nobbut
she skelpt ma haafe ower i' the c,
Chairman A quarter-sessions c, abler none ;
Chaise Within the low-wheel'd c,
Chalcedony C, emerald, sardonyx, sardius,
Chalice The c of the grapes of God ;
C and salver, wines that. Heavens knows when,
Chalk all his joints Are full of c ?
Tumbles a billow on c and sand ;
e and alum and plaster are sold to the poor
Chalk'd c her face, and wing'd Her transit
Chalk-hill On the c-h the bearded grass Is dry
Chalk-quarry white c-q from the hill Gleam'd
Challenge madness made thee c the chief knight
a jubilant c to Time and to Fate ;
Challenging c And overthrowing every knight
Chamber (See also Chaumber) faults were thick
as dust In vacant c's,
thick-moted sunbeam lay Athwart the c's,
door that bar The secret bridal c's of the heart,
breathings are not heard In palace c's far
apart.
till he find The quiet c far apart.
In musty bins and c's,
till the comrade of his c's woke.
To one deep c shut from sound,
all The c's emptied of delight :
The field, the c and the street,
Moved in the c's of the blood ;
About its echoing c's wide,
In the c or the street,
But hire us some fair c for the night,
the boy retum'd And told them of a c,
the two remain'd Apart by all the c's width,
High in her c up a tower to the east
cells and c's : all were fair and dry ;
Past to her c, and there flung herself
The lucid c's of the morning star,
Shut in the secret c's of the rock.
Death in our innermost c,
read Some wonder at our c ornaments.
That c in the tower.
What c, child ? Your nurse is here ?
You took me to that c in the tower,
I brought you to that c
Chamber-door (See also Chaumber-door) As
lightly as a sick man's c-d,
Chamberlain call'd A hoary man, his c,
Then spake the hoary c and said,
Walk, to the Mail 76
Day- Dm., Revival 18
Enoch Arden 826
Aylmer's Field 267
720
Grandmother 83
In Mem. xx 19
„ xxi 16
,, Ixvi 13
Maud I xiii 23
Oareth and L. 33
Marr. of Oeraint 543
Oeraint and E. 940
Balin and BaZan 78
Lancelot and E. 438
Holy GraU 167
176
181
901
Last Tov/mament 144
Lffoer's Tale i 118
„ iv 321
Nmth. Gobbler 37
Spinster's S's. 100
Owd Roa 54
„ 65
,. 74
„ 76
Princess, Con. 90
TalMng Oah 110
Columbus 84
In Mem. a; 16
Lover's Tale iv 193
Atulley Cmirt 47
To F. D. Maurice 24
Maud / i 39
Princess iv 377
Miller's D. 245
„ 115
Gareth and L. 1416
Vastness 21
Balin and Baian 12
To the Queen 19
Mariana 79
Gardener's D. 249
Day -Dm., Sleep B. 18
,, Arrival^
Will Water. 102
Aylmer's Field 583
Princess vi 376
In Mem. viii 8
11
,, xxiii 20
Maud / m 74
,, IlivSS
Oeraint and E. 238
261
265
Lancelot and E. 3
407
609
Lmer's Tale i 28
521
Def. of Lucknow 15
Columbus 2
The Ring 94
„ 95
„ 111
„ 129
Enoch Arden 776
Com. of Arthur 145
148
Chamian Apart the G Oracle divine Aleocander 10
Champaign river-sunder'd c clothed with corn, (Enone 114
high Above the empurpled c, drank the gale Princess Hi 120
shadowing down the c till it strikes On a wood, ,, v 526
Champion My c from the ashes of his hearth.' Gareth and L. 899
c thou hast brought from Arthur's hall ? ,, 916
but have ye slain The damsel's c ? ,, 1099
Lady Lyonors Had sent her coming c, ,, 1192
Champion'd G our cause and won it Princess m 62
Chance (s) I shut my life from happier c. Two Voices 54
Many a c the years beget. Miller's D. 206
For that is not a common c To J. S. 47
every morning brought a noble c, And every c brought
out a noble knight.
April hopes, the fools of c ;
' Drink to Fortune, drink to C,
It is beyond all hope, against all c,
He gave them line : and how by c
rate your c Almost at naked nothing.'
With open eyes, and we must take the c.
dread His wildness, and the c's of the dark.'
will be chatf For every gust of c,
my flitting c Were caught within the record
she's comely ; there's the fairer c :
or was it c. She past my way.
Dispute the claims, arrange the c's ;
And grasps the skirts of happy c.
To c's where our lots were cast
steps of Time — the shocks of C —
And leaps into the future e,
can a sweeter c ever come to me here ?
if it had not been For a c of travel,
an often c In those brain-stunning shocks,
some c to mar the boast Thy brethren
good c that we shall hear the hounds :
What c is this ? how is it I see you
A common c — right well I know it —
Guilty or guiltless, to stave off a c
Their c of booty from the morning's raid,
ye surely have endured Strange c's here alone ; '
M. d' Arthur 230
Vision of Sin 164
191
Enoch Arden 403
The Brook 150
Princess i 160
,, Hi 143
„ iv 244
„ 356
„ V 142
460
„ vi 97
To F. D. Matirice 31
In Mem. Ixiv 6
,, xcii 5
,, xcv 42
,, cxiv 7
Maud I i 62
,, ii 8
Gareth and L. 88
1242
Marr. of Geraint 182
Oeraint and E. 309
,, 331
353
„ 565
810
Queen demanded as by c ' Know ye the stranger
woman ? ' Merlin and V. 128
This c of noble deeds will come and go Unchallenged, Holy Grail 318
Our fear of some disastrous c for thee On hill.
Ready to spring, waiting a c :
Some evil c Will make the smouldering scandal
c and craft and strength in single fights,
every morning brought a noble c. And every c
brought out a noble knight. ,, 398
Above the perilous seas of Change and O ; Lover's Tale i 806
c's of dividend, consol, and share — The Wreck 30
Like a clown — by c he met me — Locksley H., Sixty 256
Chance (verb) when did Arthur c upon thee first ? ' Com. of Arthur 338
However that might c !
boast Thy brethren of thee make — which could
not c —
Chance-comer You set before c-c's.
Chanced It c one evening Annie's children
At last one night it c That Annie could not sleep,
Now it c that I had been,
and if their c a joust,
then by what thereafter c.
At last, it c that on a summer morn
It c the song that Enid sang was one
with her mind all full of what had c,
King's own ear Speak what has c ;
Then c, one morning, that Sir Balin sat
All that had c, and Balan moan'd again.
And as it cthey are happy, being pure.'
' These jewels, whereupon I c Divinely,
one morn it c He found her in among the garden
yews,
I told him what had c. My sister's vision.
And then I c upon a goodly town
It c that both Brake into hall together
727
Giiinevere 12
90
Pass, of Arthur 106
Gareth and L. 458
1243
Will Water. 6
Enoch Arden 362
„ 489
Princess i 31
Gareth and L. 519
1214
Marr. of Geraint 69
345
Oeraint and E. 778
809
Balin and Balan 240
604
Merlin and V. 745
Lancelot and E. 58
922
Holy Grail, 271
„ 573
Pdleas and E. 586
Chanced
88
Changed
Chanced {contimted) For thus it c one morn when all .
the court, Guinevere 21
c that, when half of the short summer night was gone, The Revenge 65
and it c on a day Soon as the blast Def. of Lucknow 31
Chance-gift eating not. Except the spare c-g St, S. Stylites 78
Chancel A broken c with a broken cross, M. d' Arthur 9
I peer'd athwart the c pane The Letters 3
A broken c with a broken cross, Pass, of Arthur 177
and mute below the c stones, Locksley H., Sixty 43
Chancel-casement Upon the c-c, and upon that
grave May Queen, N. T's. E. 21
Chancellor The c, sedate and vain. Day- Dm., Revival 29
C, or what is greatest would he be — Aylmer's Field 397
Chance-met cross-lightnings of four c-m eyes ,, 129
Change (s) Truth may stand forth unmoved of c, Swpp. Gonfessions 144
oxen's low Came to her : without hope of c, Mariana 29
And airy forms of flitting c. Madeline 7
run thro' every c of sharp and flat ; Garess'd or Ghidden 4
I said, ' The years with c advance : Tioo Voices 52
'Then comes the check, the c, the fall, ,, 163
upon the board. And bred this c ; CEnone 227
fit for every mood And c of my still soul. Palace of Art 60
Full-welling fountain-heads of c, ,, 166
but all hath suffer'd c : Lotos- Eateis, G.S. 71
' I govem'd men by c, and so I sway'd D. of F. Women 130
thro' all c Of liveliest utterance. ,, 167
Lie still, dry dust, secure of c. To J. S. 76
Meet is it c's should control Our being, Love thou thy land 41
So let the c which comes bo free „ 45
Of many c's, aptly join'd, „ 65
And sick of home went overseas for c. Walk, to the Mail 24
And fear of c at home, that drove him hence. ,, 68
With all the varied c's of the dark, Edwin Morris 36
shrivelling thro' me, and a cloudlike c, St. S. Stylites 199
Changed with thy mystic c, Tithonus 55
spin for ever down the ringing grooves of c. Locksley Hall 182
And, rapt thro' many a rosy c, Day-Dm., Depart 23
The flower and quintessence of c. ,, V Envoi 24
voice grew faint : there came a further c : Vision of Sin 207
came a c, as all things human change. Enoch Arden 101
So much to look to — such a c — ,, 461
and the c and not the c, Aylmer's Field 831
dismal lyrics, prophesying c Beyond all reason : Pnncess i 142
woman wed is not as we. But suffers c of frame. ,, v 463
Then came a c : for sometimes I would catch ,, mi 92
Till notice of a c in the dark world ,, 250
the c. This truthful c in thee has kill'd it. ,, 349
Iperceived no touch of c. In Mem. xiv 17
The touch of c in calm or storm ; ,, ayid 6
Each voice four c's on the wind, ,, axemii 9
I have lost the links that bound Thy c's ; hero upon
the ground No more partaker of thy c. ,, xli7
we talk'd Of men and minds, the dust of c, ,, Ixxi 10
There cannot come a mellower c, ,, Ixxod 3
For c's wrought on form and face ; ,, Ixxxii 2
Recalls, in c of light or gloom, ,, Ixxxv 74
Or touch'd the c's of the state, ,, Ixxxix 35
When summer's hourly-mellowing c May breathe, ,, xci9
abyss Of tenfold -complicated c, ,, xciii 12
For c of place, like growth of time, ,, evil
O earth, what c's hast thou seen ! ,, cxodii 2
His very face with c of heart is changed. Geraint and E. 899
in c of glare and gloom Her eyes and neck Merlin and V. 959
Naked of glory for His mortal c. Holy Grail 448
vdth living waters in the c Of seasons : Pelleas and E. 511
Above the perilous seas of C and Chance ; Lover's Tale i 806
In marvel at that gradual c, I thought „ Hi 19
their bridal-time By c of feather : Sisters {E. and E.) 72
Glance at the wheeling Orb of e. To E. Fitzgerald 3
Over the range and the c of the world The Wreck 70
After all the stormy c's shall we find Locksley H. , Sixty 156
Far away beyond her myriad coming c's „ 231
Ring little bells of c From word to word. Early Spring 41
By c's all too fierce and fast Freedom, 22
c of the tide — what is all of it worth ? Vastneas 30
CShange (b) (fumiinued) glimmer of relief In c of place. To Mary Boyle 48
That after many c's may succeed Life, Prog, of Spring 116
Change (verb) (See also Chainge) All things will
c Thro' eternity. Nothing vnll Die 15
It will c, but it will not fade ,,31
All things will c. ,,38
Not swift nor slow to c, but firm : Lwe thou thy land 31
Or c a word with her he calls his wife, Dwa 44
' It cannot be : my uncle's mind will c ! ' ,, 47
full music seem'd to move and c Edwin Morris 35
iris c's on the burnish'd dove ; Locksley Hall 19
She c's with that mood or this. Will Water. 107
' C, reverting to the years. Vision of Sin 159
Then came a change, as all things human e, Enoch Arden 101
If our old halls could c their sex. Princess, Pro. 140
you began to c — I saw it and grieved — „ iv 298
one that wishes at a dance to c The music — „ 589
When your skies c again: ,, vi 278
Some patient force to c them when we will, ,, Con. 56
and c the hearts of men, W. to Marie Alex. 44
But hearts that c not, love that cannot cease, ,, 46
Nor c to us, although they c ; In Mem. xxx 24
Will c my sweetness more and more, ' ,, xxxv 15
And every winter c to spring. „ Uv 16
Thy ransoni'd reason c replies ,, Ixi 2
fly The happy birds, that c their sky „ cxv 15
To c the bearing of a word, „ cxxviii 16
the wind will never c again.' Ga/reth and L. 1140
Let Gareth, an he will, C his for mine, „ 1300
and the wine will c your will.' Geraint and E. 663
The music in him seem'd to c, Balin and Balan 217
Must our true man c like a leaf at last ? Lancelot and E. 686
The twain together well might c the world. Guinevere 301
like wild birds that c Their season in the night Pass, of Arthur 38
Nevertheless, we did not c the name. Lover's Tale i 464
Yet must you c your name : Sisters (E. and E.) 69
To c with her horizon, ,, 226
A wish in you To c our dark Queen-city, To Mary Boyle 65
Changed (See also Chaanged, Autumn-changed,
Counter-changed) Till all the crimson c,
and past Mariana in the S. 25
' 0 cruel heart,' she c her tone, ,, 69
You c a wholesome heart to gall. L. C. V. de Vere 44
but ere my flower to fruit C, D. of F. Women 208
thy flute-notes are c to coarse. The Blackbird 18
We all are c by still degrees. Love thou thy land 43
flower of knowledge c to fruit Of wisdom. Love and Ditty 24
C with thy mystic change, Tithonus 55
And her spirit c within. L. of Burleigh 64
the rim O every moment as we flow. The Voyage 28
Moved with violence, c in hue. Vision of Sin 34
but that name has twice been c — Enoch Arden 859
my mind is c, for I shall see him, ,, 897
tost on thoughts that c from hue to hue. Princess iv 210
Our mind is c : we take it to ourself.' ,, 362
and her hue c, and she said : ,, vi 107
Walk'd at their will, and everything was c. „ 384
And one is sad ; her note is c. In Mem. xon 27
crying, How c from where it ran ,, xxiii 9
A grief, then c to something else, „ Ixxvii 11
0 grief, can grief be c to less ? ,, Ixxviii 16
Thy place is c ; thou art the same. ,, cxxi 20
Remade the blood and c the frame, ,, Con. 11
Of her whose gentle will has c my fate, Maud I xviii 23
mood is c, for it fell at a time of year ,, /// vi 4
Till with a wink his dream was c, Com. of Arthur 441
but the wind hath c : Gareth and L. 994
' Hath not the good wind, damsel, c again ? ' ,, 1054
being young, he c and came to loathe His crime Marr. of Geraint 593
To fear me, fear no longer, I am e. Geraint and E, 825
But kept myself aloof till I was c ; And fear not,
cousin ; I am c indeed.' ,, 872
have ye seen how nobly c ? >, 897
His very face with change of heart is c. ,, 899
her hue 6' at his gaze : Balin and Balan 279
iini.
Changed
89
Charger
Changed {continued) And e itself and echo'd in her
heart, Lancelot and E. 782
I doubt not that however c, „ 1218
I was c to wan And meagre, Holy Grail 571
find thy favour c and love thee not ' — Last Tcnimament 500
Denouncing judgment, but tho' c, Guinevere 421
I e the name ; San Salvador I call'd it ; Columbus 75
And c her into dust. Ancient Sage 162
We never c a bitter word, The Flight 86
And then had c ? so fickle are men — The Ring 392
clove the Moslem crescent moon, and c it into blood. Happy 44
I that heard, and e the prayer „ 55
A man who never c a word with men, St. Telemachus 10
Changeless thee the c in thine ever-changing skies. Akbar's D., Hymn 4
Changeling Or sorrow such a c be ? In Mem. xvi 4
like a fairy c lay the mage ; Com. of Arthur 363
But only c out of Fairyland, Gareth and L. 203
Changest Who c not in any gale, Jn Mem. ii 10
And c, breathing it, the sullen wind, Prog, of Spring 110
Changeth old order c, yielding place to new, M. d' Arthur 240
old order c, yielding place to new ; Com. of Arthur 509
old order c, yielding place to new, Pass, of Arthur 408
Changing {See also Chaangin', Ever-changing,
Never-changing) In c, chime with never-
changing Law. To Duke of Argyll 11
Channel {See also Mid-channel) Tho' every c of tho
State Should fill Yvu. ask me, why 23
tho hoary C Tumbles a billow on chalk and
sand ; To F. D. Maiirice 23
brooks Are fashion'd by the c which they keep), Lowr's Tale i 567
We seem'd like ships i the C First Quarrel 42
may The fated c where thy motion lives De Prof. Two G. 19
Chant In the heart of the garden the merry bird c's. Poet's Mind 22
' C me now some wicked stave, Vision of Sin 151
e the history Of that great race, Jn Mem. ciii 34
From prime to vespers will I c thy praise Pelleas and £. 349
to the e of funeral hymns. Happy 48
Chanted C loudly, c lowly, L. of Shalott iv 29
C from an ill-used race of men that cleave Lotos-Eaters, G. S. 120
And c a melody loud and sweet, Poet's Song 6
c on the blanching bones of men ? ' Princess ii 199
So they c : how shall Britain light Boadicea 45
So they c in the darkness, ,, 46
whose hymns Are c in the minster. Merlin ancl V. 766
She c snatehes of mysterious hymns Lancelot and E. 1407
Had c on the smoky mountain-tops, ~ Guine'oere 282
and c the triumph of Finn, V. of Maddune 48
And we c the songs of the Bards „ 90
Chanter C of the Pollio, To Virgil 17
Chanting But mine own phantom c hymns ? In Mem. cviii 10
murmur of their temples c me. Me, me, Demetefr and P. 72
Chaos C, Cosmos ! Cosmos, C ! (repeat) Lochsley H., Sixty 103, 127
Chapel bore him to a c nigh the field, M. d' Arthur 8
To c : where a heated pulpiteer. Sea Dreams 20
The portal of King Pellam's c Balin and Balan 405
In the white rock a c and a hall Lancelot and E. 405
where the vale Was lowest, found a c, Holy Grail 442
bore him to a c nigh the field, Pass, of Arthur 176
Is it you, that preach 'd in the c Despair 1
We have knelt in your know-all c )> 94
Yonder in that c, slowly sinking Lockdey H., Sixty 27
Chapel bell the c b's Call'd us : we left the walks ; Princess ii 470
when they toll the C b ! Loeksley H., Sixty 261
Chapel-door and against the c d Laid lance. Holy Grail 459
I touch'd The c-d's at dawn I know ; ,, 536
meet you again tomorra,' says he, ' l>e the c-d.' Tomorrow 16
this body they foun' an the grass Be the c-d, ,, 74
Chai>el -green she stept an the c-g, „ 27
Chapel-yard in the precincts of the c-y, Merlin and V. 751
Then paced for coolness in the c-y ; ,, 757
Chap-fallen The e-/ circle spreads : Vision of Sin 172
Chaplet And caught her e here — To Marq. of Dufferin 30
Char Nor ever lightning c thy grain, Talking Oak 277
Character'd laws of marriage c in gold Isabel 16
How dimly c and slight. In Mem. Ixi 6
Charade C s and riddles as at Christmas Princess, Pro. 189
Charge (imputation) Redeem'd it from the e of
nothingness— M. d' Arthur, Ep. 7
Set up the c ye know, Merlin and V. 703
Merlin answer'd careless of her e, ,, 754
Charge (care) father left him gold. And in my c, Marr. of Geraint 452
And all in c of whom ? a girl : Geraml and E. 125
whom Uther left in c Long since, ,, 9,33
Modred whom he left in c of all, Guinevere 195
Charge (directions) he gave them c about the Queen, ,, 591
thy c Is an abounding pleasure to mo. Gareth and L. 981
Charge (attack) surging c's foam'd themselves away ; Ode on Well. 126
O the wild c they made ! Light Briga/le 51
Honour the c they made ! ,, 53
Plunged in the last fierce c at Waterloo, Sisters {E. and E.) 64
The crash of tho c's, Batt. of Brunanburh 89
The c of the gallant three hundred, Heavy Brigade 1
bad his trumpeter soiind To the c, ,,9
The trumpet, the gallop, the c, „ 13
0 mad for the c and the battle were we, ,, 41
Glory to each and to all, and the c that they made ! ,, 65
Charge (to enjoin) Come forth, I c thee, arise. Ode to Memmy 46
1 c thee, quickly go again M. d' Arthur 79
I c you now. When you shall see her, Enoch Arden 877
I c thee by my love,' Gareth and L. 55
' I c thee, ask not, but obey.' Marr. of Geraint 133
e the gardeners now To pick the faded creature „ 670
I c thee ride before, Geraint and, E. 14
I c thee, on thy duty as a wife, ,, 16
I c you, Enid, more especially, ,, 414
I count it of small use To c you) ,, 417
I c thee by that crown upon thy shield, Balin and Balan 481
I c you, follow me not.' Lancelot a7id E. 507
I c you that you get at once to horse. ,, 539
Leave me that, I e thee, my last hope. Guinevere 568
I c thee, quickly go again, Pass, of A rthur 247
I c you never to say that I laid him Rizpah 58
' Never surrender, I c you, Def of Lucknow 10
Charge (to impute) if he did that wrong you c
him with, Sea Dreams 279
Charge (to rush) C for the guns ! ' ho said : Light Brigade 6
I myself beheld the King C at the head Lancelot and E. 304
Charge (to load) See Double-charge
Charged (ordered) Then Arthur c his warrior whom
he loved Com. of Arthur 447
c by Valence to bring home the child. Merlin and V. 718
calling her three knights, she c them, Pelleas and E. 219
Charged (attacked) c Before the eyes of ladies and
of kings. M. d' Arthur 224
down we swept and c and overthrew. Ode on Well. 130
c Before the eyes of ladies and ef kings. Pass, of Arthur 392
Charged (filled) C both mine eyes with tears. D. of F. Women 13
and c the winds With spiced May-sweets Lover's Tale i 317
Charged (loaded) It is c and we fire, and they run. Def. of Lucknmo 68
Charged (entrusted) so much wealth as God had
c her with— Lover's Tale i 213
Charger When on my goodly c borne Sir Galahad 49
on my c's, trample them under us.' BoUdicea 69
and take my c, fresh, Gareth and L. 1300
At once Sir Lancelot's c fiercely neigh'd, ,, 1400
cried, ' My c and her palfrey ; ' Marr. of Geraint 126
His c trampling many a prickly star ,, 313
So Enid took his c to the stall ; ,, 382
Call the host and bid him bring C and palfrey.' Geraint and E. 401
Who saw the c's of the two that fell „ 431
While the great c stood, grieved like a man. ,, 535
See ye take the c too, A noble one." ,j 555
(His gentle c following him unled) ,, 571
fly, your c is without, ^^ 749
When Edym rein'd his c at her side, ,, §20
found His c, mounted on him and away. Balin and Balan 418
glad, Knightlike, to find his c yet unlamed, „ 428
so they overbore Sir Lancelot and his c, and
a spear Down-glancing lamed the c, Lancelot and E. 487
from his c down he slid, and sat, ,, 510
Charger
90
Chasm
CShai^er {continued) Full-arm'd upon his c all day long Pdleas and E. 216
Charging C an army, while All the world wonder'd : Light Brigade 30
at the midmost c, Prince Geraint Drave Geraint aiid E. 85
Charier C of sleep, and wine, and exercise, Ayliner's Field 448
Chariot to the lychgate, where his c stood, ,, 824
a sound arose of hoof And c, Princess vi 380
Up my Britons, on my c, Boddicea 69
her people all around the royal c agitated, ,, 73
each beside his c bound his own ; <^ec. of Iliad 3
The double tides of c's flow In Mem. xcviii 23
So those two brethren from the c took Lancelot and E. 1146
The prophet and the e and the steeds. Lover's Tale i 307
horses whirl'd The c's backward, Achilles over the T, 25
died Among their spears and c's. „ 33
watch the c whirl About the goal Tiresias 176
Chariot-bier let there be prepared a c-h Lancelot and E, 1121
sad c-b Past like a shadow thro' the field, ,, 1139
Charioted Far in the East Boadic^a, standing loftily c, Boddicea 3
So the Queen Boadic^a, standing loftily c, >» 70
Charioteer the C And starry Gemini hang Maud HI vi 6
sheer-astounded were the c's To see the dread, Achilles over the T. 26-
Charitable To save the offence of c, Enoch Arden 342
Charity summer calm of golden c, Isabel 8
And thou of God in thy gi'eat c) n 40
with shafts of gentle satire, kin to c. Princess ii 469
those fair charities Join'd at her side, ,, vii 65
A patron of some thirty charities, ,, Con, 88
Valour and c more and more. To F. D. Maurice 40
"When one small touch of C Could lift Lit. Squabbles 13
In reverence and in c. In Mem. cxiv 28
C setting the martyr aflame ; Vastness 9
Charlatan Defamed by every c. In Mem. cod 23
Charles (the Second) Wherein the younger C abode Talking Oak 297
Charles (the First) From our first C by force we wrung
our claims. Third of Feb. 26
Charles's Wain Till O W came out above May Queen, If. Y's. E. 12
Charley-Charlie and C ploughing the hill. Qrand-jnother 80
And Harry and C, I hear them too — ,, 81
And little King C snarling, Maud I xii 30
but "e leaved it to C 'is son. Village Wife 42
but Ce cotch'd the pike, ,, 43
But C 'e sets back 'is ears, ,, 67
And Squire were at C agean ,, 74
Ya wouldn't find C's likes — „ 75
Theerabouts C joompt — „ 81
thowt it wur C's ghoast i' the derk, ,, 82
But Billy fell bakkuds o' C, an' C „ 85
Charlock shone far-off as shines A field of c Gareth and L. 388
Charm (s) and the c of married brows.' (Enone 76
A heart that doats on truer c's. L. G. V. de Vere 14
all his life the c did talk About his path, Day-Dm. , Arrival 21
A Touch, a kiss ! the c was snapt ,, Revival 1
c have power to make New lifeblood Will Water. 21
Each, its own c ; and Edith's everywhere ; Aylmer's Field 165
loose A flying c of blushes o'er this cheek, Princess ii 430
nameless c That none has else for me ? ' ,, « 70
mar their c of stainless maidenhood.' Balin and Balan 268
For that small c of feature mine, pursued — Merlin and V. 76
Merlin once had told her of a c, ,, 205
see but him who wrought the c Coming and going, „ 212
Vivien ever sought to work the c, ,, 215
make me wish still more to learn this c ,, 329
c 80 taught will charm us both to rest. „ 332
when I told you first of such a c. ,, 359
I felt as tho' you knew this cursed c, „ 435
I dreamt Of some vast c concluded in that star „ 512
Giving you power upon me thro' this c, „ 514
try this c on whom ye say ye love.' ,, 525
this fair c invented by yourself? ,, 540
I needed then no c to keep them mine ,, 547
wizard who might teach the King Some c, ,, 584
the c Of nature in her overbore their own : ,, 595
they found — his foragers for c's — ,, 619
nave the King, who wrought tho c, ,, 643
9U ' Ye have the book : the e is written in it : „ 652
Charm (s) (continued) To dig, pick, open, find and read
the c
And every square of text an awful c,
And in the comment did I find the c.
mutter'd in himself, ' Tell h£r the c !
told her all the c, and slept,
in one moment, she put forth the c
Wrought as a c upon them,
haze to magnify The c of Edith —
0 they to be dumb'd by the c ! —
She with all the c of woman.
Take the c ' For ever ' from them,
the c of all the Muses often flowering
1 hear a c of song thro' all the land.
What c in words, a c no words
Charm (verb) wish to c Pallas and Juno sitting by :
seem'd to c from thence The wrath I nursed
Perchance, to c a vacant brain,
bloom profuse and cedar arches C,
c's Her secret from the latest moon ? '
red berries c the bird,
charm so taught will c us both to rest.
then he taught the King to c the Queen
changing market frets or c's
C us. Orator, till the Lion look
Do your best to c the worst,
Charm-bound the eye Was riveted and c-b,
Charm'd (See also Anger-charm'd, Love-charm'd) c
and tied To where he stands, — D. of F. Women 193
C him thro' every labyrinth Aylmer's Field 479
the king her father c Her wounded soul with words : Princess vi 345
So much the gathering darkness c : , , Con. 107
sitting round him, idle hands, C ; Gareth and L. 513
golden mist C amid eddies of melodious airs, Lover's Tale i 450
Charming with a phosphorescence c even My Lady ; Aylmer's Field 116
Merlin and V. 660
673
683
809
966
967
Guinevere 144
Sisters (E. and E.) 130
V. of Maddune 25
Locksley H., Sixty 48
72
To Virgil 11
Prog, of 8 f ring 47
Far-far-away 16
A Character 14
Princess v 436
The Daisy 106
Milton 12
In Mem xxi 19
Gareth and L 85
Merlin and V. 332
„ 641
Ancient Sage 140
Locksley H., Sixty 112
147
Lover's Tale ii 188
Chamel Ev'n in the c's of the dead,
Chamel-cave When Lazarus left his c-c,
Charr'd and c you thro' and thro' within,
sent him c and blasted to the deathless fire
Chart (verb) c's us all in its coarse blacks
Chartered craft seaworthy still , Have c this ;
Chartist his bailiff brought A C pike.
Two Voices 215
In Mem. xxxi 1
Pelleas and E. 467
Happy 84
Walk, to the Mail 107
Pref. Son., I9th Cent. 4
Walk, to the Mail 71
Chase (s) (See also Chace) and in the c grew wild, Talking Oak 126
Follow, follow the c !
sleek and shining creatures of the c.
And reason in the c :
And being ever foremost in the c,
the tide within Red with free c
Chase (verb) rose To c the deer at five ;
'C,' he said : the ship flew forward,
do I c The substance or the shadow ?
To c a creature that was current
And bring or c the storm,
Chased (engraved) hilt. How curiously and
strangely c,
meadow gemlike c In the brown wild,
hilt, How curiously and strangely c.
Chased (pursued) c away the still-recurring
So shape c shape as swift as,
• A light wind c her on the wing,
but c The wisp that flickers where no foot can tread.' Princess iv 357
Window. On the Hill 11
Princess v 155
Com. of Arthur 168
Geraint and E. 959
Last Tournament 691
Talking Oak 52
Tfie Captain 33
Princess ii 408
Merlin and V. 408
Mechanophilus 14
M. d' Arthur 86
Geraint and E. 198
Pass of Arthur 254
Caress'd or Chidden 7
D.ofF. Women S7
Talking Oak 125
Com. of Arthur 167
Merlin and V. 427
To Marq. of Dufferin 29
Demeter and P. 15
Lying Swan 17
The Merman 20
' I have seen the cuckoo c by lesser fowl,
c the flashes of his golden horns
Who might have c and claspt Renown
and c away That shadow of a likeness
Chasing C itself at its own wild will,
C each other merrily.
Chasm (See also Cavern-chasm) ' Heaven opens inward,
c's yawn, Two Voices 304
in the icy caves And barren c's, M. d' Arthur 187
lines of cliff breaking have left a c ; And in the c are
foam and yellow sands ; Enoch Arden 1
till drawn thro' either c, ,, 670
from the gaps and c's of ruin left Sea Dreams 225
^i
Chasm
91
Cheer
Chasm (amtinued) Thro' one wide e of time and frost Princess, Pro. 93
By every coppice-feather'd c and cleft, ,, ti> 23
from the castle gateway by the c Com. of Arthur 370
little elves of c and cleft Made answer, Guinevere 248
clash'd his harness in the icy caves And
barren c's, Pass, of Arthur 355
The yawning of an earthquake-cloven e. Lover's Tcde i 377
Flies with a shatter'd foam along the c. ,, 383
Clove into perilous c's our walls Def. of iMcknow 55
black passes and foam-churning c's — Sir J. Oldcastle 9
blur of earth Left by that closing c, Demeter and P. 38
of the c between Work and Ideal ? Romney's R. 63
Chasm-like With e-l portals open to the sea, Holy Grail 815
Chaste world's great bridals, c and calm : Princess, vii 294
All brave, and many generous, and some c. Merlin and V. 817
Chasten we love the Heaven that c's us. Geraint and E. 789
Chastisement brook the rod And c of human
pride ; Sujyp. Confessions 108
May not that earthly c suffice ? Aylmer's Field 784
Chastity With the clear-pointed flame of c, Isabel 2
she rode forth, clothed on with c : Godiva 53
she rode back, clothed on with c: ,,65
They bound to holy vows of c ! Merlin and V. 695
To lead sweet lives in purest c, Guinevere 474
Chatelet The last wild thought of C, Margaret 37
Chattel Live c's, mincers of each other's fame, Princess, iv 515
Chatter Would c with the cold, and all my beard St. S. Stylites 31
I c over stony ways, The Brook 39
I c, c, as I flow To join the brimming river, ,, 47
crane,' I said, ' may c of the crane, Princess Hi 104
then to hear a dead man c Is enough Maud II v 19
Chatter'd Philip c more than brook or bird ; The Brook 51
They c trifles at the door : In Mem. Ixix 4
Chatterer Begotten by enchantment — c's they, Holy Grail 145
Chattering (ptui;.) c stony names Of shale and
hornblende, « Princess Hi 361
Chattering (si Chafferings and c's at the market-cross, Holy Grail 558
Chaucer (Dan) See Dan Chaucer
Chaumber (chamber) i' my oan blue c to mo. Spinster's S's. 80
Thou slep i' the c above us, Owd Roa 49
Roaver was theere i' the c ,,88
Chaumber door (chamber door) thy e d wouldn't sneck ; ,,64
Chaunt (See also Chant) I would mock thy c anew ; The Owl ii 8
And solemn c's resound between. Sir Galahad 36
Chaunteth C not the brooding bee A Dirge 16
Cheap had holden the power and glory of Spain so c The Revenge 106
Cheat (s) Yet, if she were not a c, (repeat) Maud I vi 35, 91
Scarcely, now, would I call him a c ; ,, xiii 29
Cheat (verb) love to c yourself with words : Princess vii 334
C and be cheated, and die : Maud I i 32
Cheated (See also Half-cheated) Cheat and be c, and die: ,, 32
Cheating c the sick of a few last gasps, ,, 43
Check (s) ' Then comes the c, the change, Two Voices 163
With motions, c's, and counterchecks. ,, 300
Check (verb) too noble' he said 'to c at pies, Merlin and V. 126
the good nuns would c her gadding tongue Guinevere 313
c me too Nor let me shame my father's memory, ,, 317
pray you c me if I ask amiss — ,, _ 324
Check'd and c His power to shape : Lucretius 22
Here the King's calm eye Fell on, and c, Gareth and L. 548
there he c himself and paused. Pelleas and E. 527
Cheek (See also Maiden-cheek) The red c paling,
The strong limbs failing ; All things will Die 31
laughters dimple The baby-roses in her c's ; Lilian 17
then the tears run down my c, Oriana 69
That dimples your transparent c, Margaret 15
Tie up the ringlets on your c: ,,57
And your c, whose brilliant hue Rosalind 39
Leaning his c upon bis hand, Elednore 118
Returning with hot c and kindled eyes. Alexander 14
Tho' one should smite him on the c. Two Voices 251
c Flush'd like the coming of the day ; Miller's D. 131
Her c had lost the rose, and round her neck CEnone 18
his c brighten'd as tho foam-bow brightens ,, 61
eye Over her snow-cold breast and angry c Kept watch, ,, 142
Cheek (continued) His ruddy c upon my breast,
with puff'd c the belted hunter blew
From c and throat and chin,
along the brain. And flushes all the c.
with swarthy c's and bold black eyes,
A word could bring the colour to my c ;
clapt him on the hands and on the c's,
laughter dimpled in his swarthy c ;
and pat The girls upon the c,
' Then flush'd her c with rosy light.
Thy c begins to redden thro' the gloom,
and thy tears are on my c.
Then her c was pale and thinner
On her pallid c and forehead came a colour
the barking cur Made her c flame :
While, dreaming on your damask c.
The blush is fix'd upon her c.
The colour flies into his c's :
C by jowl, and knee by knee :
Flamed in his c ; and eager eyes,
Cooling her false c with a featherfan,
yet her c Kept colour : wondrous !
On glassy water drove his c in lines ;
when the king Kiss'd her pale c,
blew the swoll'n c of a trumpeter,
flying charm of blushes o'er this c,
but my c Began to burn and burn,
till over brow And c and bosom brake
my Sire, his rough c wet with tears.
And so belabour'd him on rib and c
wan was her c With hollow watch,
I love not hollow c or faded eye :
wordless broodings on the wasted c —
' The c's drop in ; the body bows
A touch of shame upon her c >
Come ; let us go : your c's are pale ;
To clap their c's, to call them mine,
fan my brows and blow The fever from my c,
beam of an eyelash dead on the c.
The Sisters 20
Palace of Art 63
140
D. of F. Women 44
127
Gardener's D. 196
Dora 133
Edwin Morris 61
Talking Oak 44
165
Tithonus 37
45
Locksley Hall 21
25
Godiva 58
Day -Dm., Pro. 3
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 32
,, Arrival 19
Vision of Sin 84
Aylmer's Field 66
289
„ 505
Princess i 116
,, m264
364
430
, , Hi 45
,, iv'383
t)23
341
,, vi 144
,, vii 7
„ 112
In Mem. xxxv 3
,, xxxvii 10
,, Ivii 5
,, Ixxxiv 18
, , Ixxxvi 9
Maud I Hi 3
Roses are her c's. And a rose her mouth (repeat) Maud I xvii 7, 27
but speak Of my mother's faded c ,, xix 19
this was what had redden'd her c ,, 65
and a c of apple-blossom. Hawk-eyes ; GareUi and L. 589
Struck at him with his whip, and cut his c. Marr. of Geraint 207
Whom first she kiss'd on either c, „ 517
Made her c burn and either eyelid fall, ,, 775
Made her c burn and either eyelid fall. Geraint and E. 434
so there lived some colour in your c, ,, 621
spearman let his c Bulge with the unswallow'd
piece, „ 630
However lightly, smote her on the c. ,, 718
White was her c : sharp breaths of anger puff'd Merlin and V. 848
Seam'd with an ancient swordcut on the c, Lancelot and E. 258
c did catch the colour of her words. Lover's Tale i 569
bent above me, too ; Wan was her c ; ,, 694
c's as bright as when she climb'd the hill. ,, Hi 47
As well as the plump c — Sisters (E. and E.) 184
kiss fell chill as a flake of snow on the c : The Wreck 32
to feel his breath Upon my c — The Flight 46
Yet tho' this c be gray. Epilogue 7
Each poor pale e a momentary rose — The Ring 315
rounder c had brighten'd into bloom. ,, 351
her lips Were warm upon my c, ,, 399
From off the rosy c of waking Day. ATchar's Dream 202
Cheek'd See Apple-cheek'd
Cheep c and twitter twenty million loves. Princess iv 101
Cheeping birds that circle round the tower Are c
to each other The Ring 86
Cheer (s) flowers would faint at your cruel c. Poet's Mind 15
Died the sound of royal c ; ^' 2f '^^'^^ iv 48
Naked I go, and void of c : Two Voices 239
A murmur, ' Be of better c' ,, 429
Welcome her, thundering c of tho street ! W. to Alexandra 7
With festal c, With books and music, In Mem. cvH 21
And I make myself such evil c, Maud I xv2
Cheer
92
Cheer (s) (corUinued) With all good ., He spake and ^^^^^ ^^^ ^ ^^^
Emd'broi:^lit sweet cakes to make them c, Man. ofGeraint 388
cried GerTint for wine and goodly c Geratnt and E. 283
lUy maid had striven to make him c. Lancelot and K 327
Y Jt with good c he spake, , Pdleasand £.240
mghlanders answer with conquering c\ Def ofl^know^9
hard rocks, hard life, hard c, or none, Sir J. Old^af" 6
guest may make True c with honest wine- Pro. to Gen. Eardey 16
men gallopt up with a c and a shout, -Sf*^ ^"rtSo
ClieeT(vert) Annie, come c up before I go.' En^oh Arden 200
' Annie mv girl, c up, be comforted, r'h i ■ tToq
Chee^d Au7hl .her Foul with love. M^££ 9
But he c me, my good inan, tTmZxxU^
And we with singing c the way, I^ Mem. xxnb
Be c with ti J"gf. «f J^^X^^d Com. of Arthur 267
he spake and c his iable Kouna '^""■- J _
Nor ever c you with a kindly smile, -T "> f S^
Cheerfil It wiunigh made her c ; _ Geramt andK 443
^^^gVew so c that they deem'd her death ^"'^'^'^irL 827
ChelrfuUy Enoch bore his weakness c. Enoch Ard^n^l
ChlSminded Be .-«, talk and treat Of all things ^^jlf^^ffgj^
Cheerfulness hold out the lights of c; TheDawnlb
Cheque violates virgin Truth for a com or a c. S.m zSS 15
Cheauer-work A c-w of beam and shade _ r 7 7 w 7/ fi^
cffih c that which bears but bitter fruit ? ^'Y^f.^f %
The love of all Thy daughters c Thee, ^ed.^ Idylls 53
erace Thy climbing life, and c my prone year, Garethand i 95
CheSd fe'd, and /him, 'and -ved his life. ^-^ ^^^^ ?§^
Cherry To catch a dragon in a c net, MeruTand V 52
Cherub There is no being pure, My c ; Princess vi 246
Chess our wine and c beneath the planes, ^riwcess t;* ^40
Chest (part of bddy) like monstrous apes they ^^^ ^_ ^^^
Liri?n^,"^//eelinbeadorc , ^ ,,^iK;fI
big voic^'big .. big xnerciless hands ! In '^j^^^-fes
Ches?(W^reroSett?eivoryc ^^e Xe«.. 17
J:fther:.Vythth'you knelt- ^/.i^^n, 112
There the c was open— all The sacred relics ,, *■*"
SSSt KTrtd™. «•. near, that hu,^ Um.', D. 56
I came and sat Below the c's, » ^gg
While those full c's whisper by. " oni
in the c shade I found the blue Forget-me-not. „ /'i^
Parks with oak and c shady, /• «/ f "''^^^^^ ^9
I see the slowly-thickening c towers Pro^. 0/ -Sprz«? 42
Chestnut (fruit) <^, when the shell Divides threefold ^^^ ^^^^^ ^^ ^^^
TheT^attering to the ground : _, ^ . ^« ^^'^^ ^^' ^
Chestnut-bloom that islet in the c-b Flamed m ^^^^^.^ ^.^^^ ^^
ChestS-buf 'drooping c-l's began To spread ^ir X. ^^ 16
Chew'd c The thrice-turn'd cud of wrath, rrtncess ivo
cK Sir C, that scarce hast broken shell Balm and Balan 568
Or else Sir C-dismount and loose their casques . 57rf
Chid be friends, like children being c ! ^^T/ Tir 63
Cher and forbid her to spoak To me, .-T >,^j^ 1
Chidden ' CaRESb'd or c by the slender hand, Carm'd or Ch^Men 1
Chief answer'd Lancelot, the c of kmght« : ^^ ^_ ^^ ^g^
(repeat) . rr- 18^
eueas thee c of those, After the King, .> ;i°^
Cs of cs and princes fall so fast, jvl^fr sFjdd 763
an Eagle rising or, the Sun In dexter c ; Merhn <^r>dV.m
the thit seem'd the c among them said PeZZeas ani E. 62
ChUd (^e.«Z,o Bairn, ChUder, Children) Fed thee, a ^^^^^^^
c, lying alone, 07
A glorious c, dreaming alone, • i '
One walk'd between his wife and e, Two Vot^a 41Z
features of her c Ere it is born : her c ! ^none ^l
' never c be born of me, Unblest, ,. ^"J*
Child
Child (^--f)J^-''' b^ ^ ^«**- " ^ y°^ *%%Ven, iV. r-. E. 44
dream of Fatherland, Of c, and wife. Lotos-Eaters 40
With that fair c betwixt them bom. On a Mourner 2b
Dora took the c, and went her way -^oJ-a '^
none of all his men Dare tell him Dora waited with the c ; , , /b
she rose and took The c once more, ■■ »J-
Whose c is that ? What are you doing here i
answer'd softly, ' This is William's c\'
take the e, And bless him for the sake of him that s gone !
work for William's c, until he grows Of age
a-begging for myself. Or William, or this e ;
three hours he sobb'd o'er William's c n,„ji.-„ /o^i- 1 9S
cling About the darling c : ?''^ ??£,%; m
O, the c too clothes the father Locksley Hall 91
barbarian lower than the Christian c. w^ll'wnter 'U
that cs heart within the man's Begins ^lifr/S; 24
' I speak the truth : you are my c. Lady Llare l\
I biuied her like my own sweet c, And put my c in her ^
' Nay now, my c,' said Alice the nurse, (repeat) ,, 33, 41
Alas, mv c, I sinn'd for thee.' . i' . t
C, if it were thine error or thy crime Come not, when, etc. 7
90
93
126
142
167
from the palace came a c of sin,
And give his c a better bringing-up
how should the c Remember this ? ,^ ^ . , ,.
the third c was sickly-born and grew Yet sick her,
fears were common to her state. Being with c : but
when her c was born. Then her new e
marriage, and the birth Of Philip's c :
darling Katie Willows, his one c !
His only c, his Edith whom he loved
Nursing a c, and turning to the warmth
— who could trust a c ?
Their c' 'Ourc!' 'Our heiress!
and because I love their c They hate me :
and read Writhing a letter from his c.
Of such a love as like a chidden c.
He seldom crost his c without a sneer ;
praying him To speak before the people of her c,
The poor c of shame The common care
all the gentle attributes Of his lost c,
Is not our own c on the narrow way,
The childless mother went to seek her c ;
in the narrow gloom By wife and c ;
His wife, an unknown artist's orphan c—
Virdn Mother standing with her c
the c Clung to the mother, and sent out a cry
And mine but from the crying of a c.
' C ? No ! ' said he, ' but this tide s roar,
Good man, to please the c.
voice (You spoke so loud) has roused the c again.
flock'd at noon His tenants, wife and c.
Half c half woman as she was,
they must lose the c, assume The woman :
odes About this losing of the c ;
when we came where lies the c We lost in other years.
Your language proves you still the c.
At her left, a c, In shining draperies,
turn'd to go, but Cyril took the c,
the c Push'd her flat hand against his face
call'd For Psyche's c to cast it from the doors ,
on the purple footcloth, lay The lily-shimng e ;
For this lost lamb (she pointed to the c)
and a hope The c of regal compact,
S.''bS::my'blSsorih, my c, My one sweet c, whom
wheSejr/Thrc is hers-for every little fault, The
c is hers ;
My babe, my sweet Aglaia, my one c :
Who gave me back my c ? '
You have spoilt this c ; she laughs at you
Our chiefest comfort is the little c
c shall grow To prize the authentic mother
Vision of Sin 5
Enoch Arden 87
233
„ 261
„ 522
„ 709
The Brook 67
Aylmer's Field 23
185
264
297
423
517
541
562
608
687
731
„ 743
829
841
Sea Dreams 2
242
244
249
250
267
281
Pro. 4
101
n37
141
nlO
58
108
362
365
ii>238
287
361
421
V 80
82
87
101
105
116
430
432
Princess
Child
93
Child
CShild (continued) the training of a c Is woman's wisdom.'
Set his c upon her knee —
'Sweet my c, I live for thee.'
Knelt on one knee, — the c on one, —
She bow'd, she set the c on the earth ;
not yours, but mine : give me the c '
The mother, me, the c ;
give her the c ! (repeat)
twilight mellowing, dwelt Full on the c ;
Ida spoke not, rapt upon the c.
Blanche had gone, but left Her c among us,
old world of ours is but a e Yet in the go-cart,
love not this French God, the c of Hell,
But I wept like a c that day,
wept like a c for the c that was dead
King is happy In c and wife ;
She cast her arms about the c.
The c was only eight summers old,
' They have taken the c To spill his blood
Poor c, that waitest for thy love !
They call'd me fool, they call me c :
find in c and wife An iron welcome
Familiar to the stranger's c ;
c would twine A trustful hand, unask'd, in thine,
Half -grown as yet, a c, and vain—
With wisdom, like the younger c :
No, like a c in doubt and fear :
Then was I as a <; that cries,
I play'd with the girl when a c ;
0 c, you wrong your beauty,
1 have play'd with her when a c ;
For then, perhaps, as a c of deceit,
Made her only the c of her mother,
desire that awoke in the heart of the c,
one fair daughter, and none other c ;
split the mother's heart Spitting the c,
surely would have torn the c Piecemeal among them,
Wherefore Merlin took the c,
Or else the c of Anton, and no king,
Arthur were the c of shamefulness,
dried my tears, being a c with me.
So that the c and he were clothed in fire,
same c,' he said, ' Is he who reigns ;
The shining dragon and the naked c
this King thine only c, Guinevere :
the good mother holds me still a c !
' Mother, tho' ye count me still the c, Sweet mother,
do ye love the c ? '
' Then, mother, an ye love the c,'
Hear the c's story. '
' An ye hold me yet for e, Hear yet once more the story
of the c. „ 99
all day long hath rated at her c, , , 1285
' My fair c, What madness made thee challenge ,, 1415
Had married Enid, Yniol's only c, Marr. of Geraint 4
dear c hath often heard me praise ,, 434
0 noble host. For this dear c, ,, 497
' See here, my c, how fresh the colours ,, 680
Look on it, c, and tell me if ye know it.' ,, 684
worn My faded suit, as you, my e, ,, 706
my dear c is set forth at her best, ,, 728
your fair c shall wear your costly gift ,, 819
wail ye for him thus ? ye seem a c. Geraint and E. 547
Make knight or churl or c or damsel seem Balin and Balan 162
plumed with green replied, ' Peace, c ! Merlin and V. 90
neither eyes nor tongue— 0 stupid c ! ,, 251
Your pardon, c. Your pretty sports have brighten'd
all again.
In you, that are no c, for still I find Your face
a mere c Might use it to the harm of anyone,
One c they had ; it lived with her :
charged by Valence to bring home the c.
1 ask you, is it clamour'd by the e,
bitter weeping like a beaten c.
Princess v 465
,, vi 14
16
91
„ 120
141
153
Princess v 168, 179, 183
Princess t) 192
„ _ 220
, , vii 57
„ Con. 77
Third of Feb. 7
Grandmother 64
„ 68
The Victim 26
„ 32
„ 33
43
In Mem. vi 28
,, Ixix 13
,, xc 7
„ ci20
cm; 18
, , cxiv 9
20
,, cxxiv 17
19
Mavd I i 68
iv 17
vi 87
xiii 30
40
xix 48
Com. of Arthur 2
39
217
221
233
239
350
390
392
399
413
Gareth and L. 15
34
37
39
Child [continued) ' True, my c. Well, I will wear
it : Lancelot and E. 370
' Do me this grace, my c, to have my shield ,, 382
Sir Modred's brother, and the c of Lot, , , 558
the diamond: wit ye well, my c, ,, 771
kiss the c That does the task assign'd, ,, 828
Meeker than any c to a rough nurse, ,, 857
Milder than any mother to a sick c, ,, 858
'0 my c, ye seem Light-headed, ,, 1062
Yet, seeing you desire your c to live, ,, 1095
kiss'd me saying, "Thou are fair, my c, „ 1409
I saw the fiery face as of a c Holy Grail 466
winding wall of rock Heard a c wail. Last Tournament 12
thro' the wind Pierced ever a c's cry : ,,17
Vext her with plaintive memories of the c : ,, 29
that unhappy c Past in her barge : ,,44
Queen White-robed in honour of the stainless c, „ 147
whimpering of the spirit of the c, „ 418
Arthur make me pure As any maiden c? ,, 693
' Will the c kill me with her innocent talk ? ' Guinevere 214
' Will the c kill me with her foolish prate ? ' „ 225
They found a naked c upon the sands ,, 293
' Tho simple, fearful c Meant nothing, ,, 369
too-fearful guilt, Simpler than any c, ,, 371
' Liest thou here so low, the c of one I honour'd, ,, 422
Well is it that no c is born of thee. , , 424
wife and c with wail Pass to new lords ; Pass, of Arthur 44
Or Cowardice, the c of lust for gold. To the Queen ii 54
Which to the imprison'd spirit of the c, Lover's Tale i 204
Had thrust his wife and c and dash'd himself ,, 380
you may hear The moaning of the woman and the c, ,, 520
at last he freed himself From wife and c, „ iv 380
I was a c, an' he was a c, an' he came First Quarrel 23
told it me all at once, as simple as any c, , , 58
You'll have her to nurse my c, ,, 70
when he was but a c — Eizpah 25
The wind that 'ill wail like a c * ,,72
You never have borne a c — ,, 80
My father with a c on either knee, A hand upon the
head of either c, iSisters (E. and E. ) 54
Here's to your happy union with my c ! ,, 68
widow with less guile than many a c. ,, 182
desire that her lost c Should earn ,, 250
here She bore a c, whom reverently we call'd Edith ; ,, 268
gratefullest heart I have found in a c of her
moral c without the craft to rule,
304
366
684
„ 716
718
771
855
Lancelot and E. 146
years —
the c didn't see I was there.
I had sat three nights by the c —
and we went to see to the c.
I sorrow for that kindly c of Spain
Out of the deep, my c, (repeat)
I am roused by the wail of a c,
The c that I felt I could die for —
That day my nurse had brought me the c.
I thought of the c for a moment,
I shall look on the c again.
' 0 c, I am coming to thee.'
I pray'd — ' my c ' — for I still could pray —
Was it well with the c ?
Godless Jeptha vows his c . . .
that smiles at her sleepin' c —
Amy was a timid c ;
dead the mother, dead the c.
Edith but a c of six —
wife and his c stood by him in tears.
And warms the c's awakening world
from her household orbit draws the c
the c Is happy — ev'n in leaving her !
can no more, thou earnest, 0 my c,
Queen of the dead no more — my c !
C, those imperial, disimpassion'd eyes
here, my c, tho' folded in thine arms,
C, when thou wert gone, I envied human wives,
do ye make your moaning for my c ? '
the c Of thee, the great Earth-Mother,
In the Child. Hosp. 32
„ 44
59
68
Columbus 212
Be Prof. Two G. 1, 5, 26, 29
The Wreck 7
36
59
84
124
134
138
141
TJie FligJtt 26
Tomorrow 26
Locksley II., Sixty 19
36
258
Bead Prophet 57
Prin. Beatrice 5
7
11
Bemeter and P. 4
18
23
40
52
65
99
ChUd
94
Chillness
Child (continued) c, Because I hear your Mother's voice in
yours,
for we, ray c, Have been till now each other's all-in-all,
you the livelong guardian of the c.
This ring bequeath'd you by your mother, c.
C, I am happier in your happiness
What chamber, c ? Your nurse is here ?
but the c Is paler than before,
forgotten it was your birthday, c —
Kiss me c and go.
Mother, dare you kill your c ?
I see the picture yet, Mother and c.
a c Had shamed me at it —
The Ring 27
52
:; ?l
90
95
„ 326
„ 378
489
Forlorn 37
Romney's R. 81
111
Bandit's Death 15
Charity 28
The Dawn 9
Locksley H., Sixty 36
Akbar's Dream 12
Village Wife 13
55
Tomorrow 85
" , 86
Spinster's S's. 84
Enoch Arden 37
In Mem. Ixxix 15
,, cxx 10
Gareth and L. 53
Lover's Tale i 188
221
249
a 183
Merlin and the G. 115
Princess vii 284
To Victor Hugo 4
Children [coniinued) the c call, and I Thy shepherd
pipe. Princess vii 217
Late the little c clung : Ode on Well. 237
But all my c have gone before me, Grandmother 18
But as to the c, Annie, they're all about me yet. „ 76
Phantom wail of women and c, Boddicea 26
and he loved to dandle the c,
the birth of a baseborn c.
For Babylon was a c new-born,
Child-birth Lies my Amy dead in c-b,
Dying in c-b of dead sons.
Childer (children) thebbe all wi' the Lord my c,
all es one, the c an' me,
has now ten c, hansome an' tall,
Him an' his c wor keenin'
But I niver not wish'd fur c.
Childhood when the dawn of rosy c past,
Ere c's flaxen ringlet turn'd
up from c shape His action like the greater ape.
One, that had loved him from his c,
In the Maydews of c,
pillars which from earth uphold Our c,
As was our c, so our infancy,
A monument of c and of love ; The poesy of c ;
Him the Mighty, Who taught me in c.
Childlike lose the c in the larger mind ;
Child-lover Lord of human tears ; C-l ;
Children [See also Child, Childer, Men-children)
May c of our c say, To the Queen 23
And c all seem full of Thee ! Supp. Confessions 21
Two c in two neighbour villages Circumstance 1
Two c in one hamlet born and bred ; ,,8
I have been to blame. Kiss me, my c' Dora 162
Not in our time, nor in our c's time. Golden Year 55
mothers brought Their c, clamouring, Godiya 15
Three fair c first she bore him, L. of Burleigh 87
Three c of three houses, Enoch Arden 11
In this the c play'd at keeping house. ,, 24
With c ; first a daughter. ,, 84
To see his c leading evermore Low miserable lives ,, 115
■ When he was gone — the c — what to do ? „ 132
if he cared For her or his dear c, „ 164
Her and her c, let her plead in vain ; ,, 166
by the love you bear Him and his c ,, 308
yet he sent Gifts by the c, ,, 338
PhiUp was her c's all-in-all ; ,, 348
Annie's c long'd To go with others, ,, 362
But when the c pluck'd at him to go, ,, 369
I fain would prove A father to your c ; ,, 411
Up came the c laden with their spoil ; ,, 445
And his own c tall and beautiful, ,, 762
Lord of his rights and of his c's love, — ,, 764
My c too ! must I not speak to these ? ,, 788
But if my c care to see me dead, , , 888
A childly way with c, and a laugh Ringing Aylmer's Field 181
they talk'd. Poor c, for their comfort : „ 427
Bodies, but souls — thy c's — ,, 672
Will there be c's laughter in their hall ,, 787
That love to keep us c ! Princess, Pro. 133
they had but been, she thought. As c ; ,, i 137
baser courses, c of despair.' ,, m213
every woman counts her due, Love, c, happiness? ' ,, 245
c, would they grew Like field-flowers ,, 251
But c die ; and let me tell you, girl, ,, 253
C — that men may pluck them from our hearts, ,, 257
0 — c — there is nothing upon earth ,, 259
Whose name is yoked with c's, ,, v 418
Kiss and be friends, like c being chid ! „ vi 289
For by the hearth the c sit
Who takes the c on his knee,
Timour- Mammon grins on a pile of c's bones,
wolf would steal The c and devour,
and the c, housed In her foul den,
at tourney once. When both were c.
And c of the King in cloth of gold
all the c in their cloth of gold Ran to her.
The cry of e, Enids and Geraints
As c learn, be thou Wiser for falling !
In c a great curiousness be well,
Where c cast their pins and nails.
To one at least, who hath not c,
Lives for his c, ever at its best And fullest ;
And mirthful sayings, c of the place.
Where c sat in white with cups of gold.
The c born of thee are sword and fire,
Who either for his own or c's sake,
When Harry an' I were c,
dogs of Seville, the c of the devil,
' We have c, we have wives,
God help the wrinkled c that are Christ's
I am sure that some of our c would die
They are all his c here,
we past to this ward where the younger c
are laid :
' Little c should come to me.'
I find that it always can please Our c, the dear
Lord Jesus with c about his knees.)
Lord of the c had heard her.
Women and c among us, God help them, our c
' C and wives — if the tigers leap
Grief for our perishing c,
women and c come out.
Their wives and c Spanish concubines,
they play'd with The c of Edward.
clouds themselves are c of the Sun.
Day and Night are c of the Sun,
evil thought may soil thy c's blood ;
Happy c in a sunbeam sitting
City c soak and blacken soul
laborious. Patient c of Albion,
Household happiness, gracious c,
Father's fault Visited on the c !
Innocent maidens, Garrulous c.
That wife and c drag an Artist down !
' Why left you wife and c ?
nurse my c on the milk of Truth,
Ah, that will our c be.
Chill But he is c to praise or blame.
Then fearing night and c for Annie,
Bright was that afternoon. Sunny but c :
As wan, as c, as wild as now :
and dark the night and c !
and dark and c the night !
Whereof the c, to him who breathed it,
' not even death Can c you all at once : '
But he sent a c to my heart when I saw him
kiss fell c as a flake of snow on the cheek :
His winter c's him to the root,
Chill'd heavens Stifled and c at once ;
Would that have c her bride-kiss ?
He c the popular praises of the King
The very fountains of her life were c ;
fell from that half -spiritual height C,
Chilling c his caresses By the coldness
like a phantom pass C the night :
Chillness Whose c would make visible
c of the sprinkled brook Smote on my brows,
In Mem. a;a; 13
,, Ixvi 11
Mavd / i 46
Com. of Arthur 27
29
Gareth and L. 533
Marr. of Geraint 664
668
Geraint and E. 965
Balin and Balan 75
Merlin and V. 364
430
506
Lancelot and E. 336
Holy Grail 555
Last Tournament 142
Guinevere 425
513
First Quarrd 10
The Revenge 30
„ 92
SisUrs (E. and E.) 183
In the Child. Hosp. 11
19
27
50
72
Def. of Ly/;know 8
II
89
100
Columbus 175
Batt. of Brunanburh 92
Ancient Sage 242
245
275
Locksley H., Sixty 14
. 218
On Jub. Q. Victoria 59
Vastness 24
The Ring 176
Merlin and the G. 56
Romney's R. 38
„ 129
Akbar's Dream 162
The Dawn 24
Two Voices 258
Enoch Arden 443
670
In Mem. Ixxii 17
Guinevere 168
174
Pass, of Arthur 96
Lover's Tale iv 77
In the Child. Hosp. 2
The Wreck 32
Ancient Sage 119
Aylmer's Fidd 613
Last Tournament 590
Guinevere 13
Sisters (E. and E.) 266
To E. Fitzgerald 20
Maud I XX 12
Gareth and L. 1336
Supp. Confessions 59
Lover's Tale I 633
Chime
Christian
Chime (s) speak for noise Of clocks and c's,
oft we two have heard St. Mary's c's !
Chime (verb) the blue river c's in its flowing
and those great bells Began to c.
Set her sad will no less to c with his,
changing, c with never changing Law.
Chimera (Ts, crotchets, Christmas solecisms,
Chimley (Chimney) haiife o' the c's a-twizzen'd
Princess i 216
To W. H. Brookfidd 3
All Things will Die 1
Pcdace of Art 158
Enoch Arden 248
To Duke of Argyll 11
Princess, Pro. 203
Owd Bod 22
Chimney (See also Chimley, Chimney-top) And half the c's
tumbled. The Goose 48
And c's muffled in the leafy vine. AvMey Court 19
For now her father's c glows In Mem. vi 29
Chimney-top above the tall white c-t's. May Queen, N. Y's. E. 12
Chin smooth 'd his c and sleek'd his hair, A Character 11
His double c, his portly size. Miller's D. 2
From cheek and throat and c. Palace of Art 140
Close up his eyes : tie up his c : D. of the O. Year 48
Her sweet face from brow to c : L. of Burleigh 62
reddening in the furrows of his c, Princess vi 228
many-winter'd fleece of throat and c. Merlin and V. 841
China laws Salique And little-footed C, Princess ii 134
China-bound Reporting of his vessel C-b, Enach Arden 122
Chink (sound) Even in dreams to the c of his pence, Maud I x i'3
Chink (crevice) walls Were full of c's and holes ; Godiva 60
Found in a c of that old moulder'd floor ! ' The Ring 280
Chink (verb) For Age will c the face, Happy 46
Chink'd C as you see, and seam'd — Lover's Tale i 131
Chirp (a) (See also Matin-chirp) I hear a c of birds ; In Mem. cxix 5
Chirp (verb) The cricket c's : the light burns
low: D. of the 0. Year iO
Chirping about the fields you caught His weary
daylong c. The Brook 53
Chirpt gray cricket c of at our hearth — Merlin and V. 110
Chirr'd not a cricket c : In Mem. xcv 6
Chirrup The sparrow's c on the roof, Mariana 73
titmouse hope to win her With his c at her ear. Maud I xx 30
Chirrupt beside me c the nightingale. Grandmother 40
Chivalry came to c : When some respect, Princess ii 135
urged All the devisings of their c Gareth and L. 1349
Choice wherefore rather I made c To commune Two Voices 460
Teach that sick heart the stronger c, On a Mourner 18
And told him of my c. Talking Oak 18
glorious in his beauty and thy c, Tithonus 12
But you have made the wiser c. You might have won 5
Which weep the comrade of my c. In Mem. xiii 9
your sweetness hardly leaves me a c Maud I v2i
c from air, land, stream, and sea, Pelleas and E. 149
her c did leap forth from his eyes ! Lover's Tale i 657
Choicest-grown blossom c-g To wreathe a crown Akhar's Dream 22
Choke Should fill and c with golden sand — You ask me, why 24
' A quinsy c thy cursed note ! ' The Goose 29
yellow vapours c The great city Maud II iv 63
Chok'd I c. Again they shriek'd the burthen — Edwin Morris 123
Heaven, and Earth, and Time are c. St. S. Stylites^ 104
Her voice C, and her forehead sank Princess vii 247
hopes are mine,' and saying that, she c, Lancelot and E. 607
His mercy c me. Guinevere 616
C all the syllables, that strove to rise Lover's Tale i 711
Choler old, but full Of force and c, Golden Year 61
Cholera C, scurvy, and fever, Def. of Lucknow 84
Chooch (church) An' I alius comed to 's c N. Farmer, 0. S. 17
Choorch (church) voated wi' Squoire an' c an'
staiite, I, 15
Choose To c your own you did not care ; Day-Dm., L'Envoi 30
'Twere hardly worth my while to c In Mem. xxxiv 10
arms for guerdon ; c the best.' Geraint and E. 218
of overpraise and overblame We c the last. Merlin and V. 91
Chop (s) His proper c to each. Will Water. 116
Among the c's and steaks ! . , _ 148
Chop (verb) C the breasts from off the mother, Boddicea 68
Chop-house Head-waiter of the c-h here, WiU Water. 209
Chord (See also Master-chord) clear twang of the
golden c's Sea-Fairies 38
note From that deep c which Hampden smote England and Amer. 19
and smote on all the c'a with might ; Locksley HaU 33
Chord (continued) ' Screw not the e too sharply lest it
snap. '
Consonant c's that shiver to one note ;
The deepest measure from the c's :
Will flash along the c's and go.
speak His music by the framework and the c ;
Sweeps suddenly all its half-moulder'd c's
would drop from the c's or the keys.
Chorus Go ' (shrill'd the cotton-spining c) ;
Aylm^r's Field 469
Princess Hi 90
In Mem. xlviii 12
,, Ixxxviii 12
Holy Grail 879
Lover's Tale i ] 9
The Wreck 27
„ , , Edwin Morris 122
0 YOU c of indolent reviewers, Hendecasyllabics 1
All that c of indolent reviewers, ,, 12
whereupon Their common shout in c, mounting, Balin and Balan 87
Chose crag-platform, smooth as burnish'd brass I c. Palace of Art 6
That sober-suited Freedom c. You ask me, why 6
for your sake, the woman that he c, Dora 63
You c the best among us— Enoch Arden 293
C the green path that show'd the rarer foot, Lancelot and E. 162
Chosen Who madest him thy c, Titlwnus 13
Gods,' he said, ' would have c well ; The Victim 58
' Had I c to wed, I had been wedded earlier, Lancelot and E. 934
Was c Abbess, there, an Abbess, Guinevere 696
happy to be c Judge of Gods, Death of OLnone 16
Chousin' an' I wur c the wife, North. Cobbler 83
Christ (See also Christ Jesus, Jesus, Lamb)
Brothers in C— a world of peace Supp. Confessions 29
C, the Virgin Mother, and the saints ; St. S. Stylites 112
So I clutch it. Cl'Tisgone: ,, 207
Save C as we believe him— Aylm^r's Field 573
as cried C ere His agony to those that swore ,, 793
Not preaching simple (J to simple men, Sea Dreams 21
C the bait to trap his dupe and fool ; ,,191
God accept him, C receive him. Ode on Well. 281
The time draws near the birth of C : In Mem. xxviii 1
Behold a man raised up by C ! ,, xxxi 13
The time draws near the birth of C ; ,, dvl
Ring in the C that is to be. ,, ewi 32
Ah C, that it were possible For one short hour Maud II iv 13
As the churches have kill'd their C ,, v 29
Sware at the shrine of C a deathless love : Com. of Arthur 466
' The King will follow C, and we the King ,, 500
we that fight for our fair father C, , , 510
Follow the deer? follow the C, the King, Gareth and L. 117
Hath prosper'd in the name of C, Balin and Balan 99
the Roman pierced the side of C. 114
scarce could spy the C for Saints, '' 409
saintly youth, the spotless lamb of C, Merlin and V. 749
all his legions crying C and him, Lancelot and E. 305
Ah, C, that it would come. Holy Grail 93
C kill me then But I will slice him Pelleas and E. 337
' My churl, for whom C died, Last Tournament 62
Have everywhere about this land of C Guinevere 431
To break the heathen and uphold the C, ,, 470
And so thou lean on our fair father C, ,, 562
God my C— I pass but shall not die.' Pass, of Arthur 28
and shrieks After the C, 111
wrinkled children that are C's Sisters (E. and E.) 183
ears for C in this wild field of Wales— Sir J. OldcasUe 13
and raze The blessed tomb of C ; Columbus 99
This creedless people will be brought to C , , 189
And we broke away from the 0, Despair 25
A THOUSAND summers ere the time of C Ancient Sage 1
transfigured, like C on Hermon hill, Happy 38
In that four-hundredth summer after C, St. Tele^nachus 4
Christian C's with happy countenances — Supp. Confessions 20
barbarian lower than the C child. Locksley Hall 174
she, who kept a tender C hope, . Sea Dreams 41
The graceful tact, the C art ; In Mem. ex 16
Nor any cry of C heard thereon, Pass, of Arthur 128
C conquerors took and flung the conquered C into
flames. Locksley H., Sixty 84
That ever wore a C marriage-ring. Romney's R. 36
at length he touch'd his gaol, The C city. St. Tdemachus 35
as he yell'd of yore for C blood. ,, 46
eighty thousand C faces watch Man murder man. ,, 55
Brahmin, and Buddhist, C, and Parsee, Akhar's Dream 25
Christian
96
Circle
Christian {continued) I shudder at the C and the
stake ; Akbar's Bream 72
in praise of Whom The C bell, ,, 149
The C's own a Spiritual Head ; ,, 153
Cali'd on the Power adored by the C, Kapiolani 32
Christian Church if it be a C 0, people ring the bell
for love to Thee, Alcbar's D. Inscrip. 4
Christ Jesus of Him who died for men, C J [' iSt. Telemachus 64
Christless C code, That must have life Mand II i 26
Pellam, once A C foe of thine BcUin and Balan 97
fury of peoples, and C frolic of kings, The Dawn 7
Christ-like The tenderest C-l creature Charity 32
Christmas {See also Christmas day, Christmas-eve,
Christmas-mom) in the pits Which some
green C crams with weary bones. Wan Sadftor 14
all the old honour had from C gone, The Epic 7
The cock crows ere the C morn, Sir Galahad 51
lastly there At C ; ever welcome at the Hall, Aylmer's Field 114
when the second C came, escaped His keepers, , , 838
We seven stay'd at C up to read ; Princess, Pro. 178
play'd Charades and riddles as at C here, „ 189
told a tale from mouth to mouth As here at C.' ,, 192
Chimeras, crotchets, G solecisms, ,, 203
The C bells from hill to hill In Mem. xxviii 3
weave The holly round the G hearth ; „ xxx 2
Again at G did we weave The holly round the G
hearth ; ,, Ixxviii 1
where the winter thorn Blossoms at G, Holy Grail 53
Christmas day we were married o' C d, First Quarrel 39
Cliristmas Eave Oia.G E, an' as cowd as this, Owd Rod 31
goa that night to 'er foolk by cause o' the 0 E ; ,,52
' be a-turnin' ma hout upo' U E"l ,,59
Christmas-eve {See also Christmas Eave) At Francis
Allen's on the C-e, — The Epic 1
How dare we keep our C-e ; In Mem. xxix 4
And sadly fell our G-e. ,, xxx 4
And calmly fell our 6'-e : ,, Ixxviii 4t
And strangely falls our O-e, , , cvi
Christmas-morn church-bells ring in the G-m. M. d' Arthur, Ep. 31
Christopher Colon (Columbus) ' i3ehold the bones
of C G ' — Columbus 210
Chronicle ran thro' all the coltish c. The Brook 159
dash'd Into the c of a deedful day, Aylmer's Field 196
we keep a c With all about him ' — Princess, Pro. 27
So sang the gallant glorious c ; ,, 49
The total c's of man, the mind, ,, n 881
Chronicler ask'd his G Of Akbar ' what has darken'd
thee to-night ? ' Alcbar's Dream 2
Chrysalis This dull c Cracks into shining wings, St. S. Stylites 155
Or ruin'd c of one. In Mem. Ixxxii 8
But she from out her death-like c. Lover's Tale Hi 41
Chrysolite sardius, C, beryl, topaz, Columbus 85
Ghrysoprase c, Jacynth, and amethyst — ,, 85
Chuch (church) the c weant happen a fall. Church-warden, etc. 10
as long as I lives to the owd e now, ,, 15
Chuch- warden (church-warden) I bean c-w mysen
i' the parish fur fifteen year, ,, 8
Well — sin ther bea c-w's, ,, 9
An' then I wur chose G-w „ 38
plaate fuller o' Soondays nor ony c-w afoor, ,, 40
Chuckle c, and grin at a brother's shame ; Maud I iv 29
Chuckled It clutter'd here, it c there ; The Goose 25
Church {See also Chooch, Choorch, Christian Church,
Chuch) As homeward by the c 1 drew. The Letters 44
a moulder'd c ; and higher A long street Enoch Arden 4
c, — one night, except Por greenish glimmerings Aylmer's Field 621
pious variers from the c. To chapel ; Sea Dreams 19
And in the dark c like a ghost In Mem. Ixvii 15
A single c below the hill „ civ 3
She came to the village c, Maud I viii 1
fragrant gloom Of foreign c'es — ,, xix 54
kill their c, As the c'es have kill'd ,, II v2S
Chief of the c in Britain, Com. of Arthur 454
walls Of that low e he built at Glastonbury. Balin and Balan 367
A little lonely c in days of yore, Holy Grail 64
Church {continvM) first may be last— I have heard it in c— Rizpah 66
he calls to me now from the c , , 84
To the deaf c— to be let in— Sisters {E. and E. ) 238
Back to the pure and universal c, isir J. Oldcastle 71
Tether 'd to these dead pillars of the G — ,, 121
Authority of the G, Power of the keys ! ' „ 161
Sylvester shed the venom of world- wealth Into the c, „ 167
chiefly to my sorrow by the G, Columbus 56
Holy G, from whom 1 never swerved ,, 63
my Fathers belong'd to the c of old. The Wreck 1
Christian love among the C's Locksley H., Sixty 86
Break the State, the G, the Throne, ,, 138
Her spirit hovering by the c. The Ring 478
Touch'd at the golden Cross of the c'es, Merlin and the G. 68
all but sure I have — in Kendal c — Bomney's E. 19
temple, neither Pagod, Mosque, nor G, Akbar's Dream 178
Church-bell The sweet c-b's began to peal. Two Voices 408
Toll ye the c-b sad and slow, D. of the O. Year 3
clear c-b's ring in the Christmas-morn. M. d' Arthur, Ep. 31
Church-commissioner Now harping on the c-c's, The Epic 15
Church-harpy scare church-harpies from the master's
feast ; To J. M. K. 3
Churchmen Should all our c foam in spite To F. D. Maurice 9
the c fain would kill their church, Maud II v 28
Church-tower graves grass-green beside a gray c-t. Circumstance 6
morning grows apace, and lights the old c-t, The Flight 93
Churchwarden (See also Chuch-warden) Until the
grave c doft'd. The Goose 19
Churchyard wall — in the night by the c w. Rizpah 56
Churl {See also Village-churls) low c, compact of
thankless earth, Godiva 66
The c in spirit, up or down In Mem. cxi 1
The c in spirit, howe'er he veil ,, 5
Mark would sully the low state of c : Gareth and L. 427
Then riding close behind an ancient c, Marr. of Geraint 261
transitory word Made knight or c or child Balin and Balan 162
not worthy to be knight ; A c, a clown ! ' „ 286
' G, thine axe ! ' he cried, ,, 295
said the c, ' our devil is a truth, „ 302
' Old fabler, these be fancies of the c, ,, 307
laugh'd the father saying, ' Fie, Sir C, Lancelot and E. 200
A c, to whom indignantly the King, ' My c. Last Tournament 61
sawing the air, said the maim'd c, ,, 67
That doest right by gentle and by c, ,, 74
' Take thou my c, and tend him curiously ,, 90
Cicala At eve a dry c sung, Mariana in the S. 85
Cider flask of c from his father's vats, Avdley Court 27
Cinder may make My scheming brain a c, Merlin and V. 933
Circle (s) {See also Eagle-circle, Fairy-circle, Home-
circle, Sea-circle, Water-circle) round about
the c's of the globes The Poet 43
In the same c we revolve. Two Voices 314
In lazy mood I watch'd the little c's die ; Miller's D, 74
The greensward into greener c's. Gardener's D. 134
in the c of his arms Enwound us both ; , , 216
Sun will run his orbit, and the Moon Her c. Love and Duty 23
Thro' all the c of the golden year ? ' Golden Year 51
music winding trembled, Wov'n in c's : Vision of Sin 18
Caught the sparkles, and in c's, „ 30
mouldy dens The chap-fallen c spreads ; ,, 172
yell'd and round me drove In narrowing c's Lucretius 57
a group of girls In c waited. Princess, Pro. 69
The c rounded under female hands ,, ii 372
Thro' c's of the bounding sky, In Mem. xvii 6
And in a c hand-in-hand Sat silent, ,, xxx 11
Against the c of the breast, ,, xlv Z
With all the c of the wise, ,, Ixi 3
In c round the blessed gate, „ Ixxxv 23
0 bliss, when all in c drawn About him, ,, Ixxxix 21
memory fades From all the c of the hills. ,, « 24
held All in a gap-mouth'd c his good mates Gareth and L. 511
remnant that were left Payniro amid their e's. Holy Grail 664
The c widens till it lip the marge, Pelleas and E. 94
The phantom c of a moaning sea. Pass, of Arthur 87
shower'd down Rays of a mighty c Lover's Tale i 418
I
Circle
Circle (s) (continued) Scarce housed within the c of this
^*^' ,, ,^^.. . ^ , . Lover's Tale ii79
caught and brought him in To their charm'd c iv 377
Whirling their sabres in c'5 of light! ' Heavy Brigade Si
Circle (verb) Make knowledge c with the winds ; L<m thou thy land 17
tho I cm the grain Five hundred rings Talking Oak 83
We c with the seasons. jym prater. 64
full voice which c 5 round tho grave, Princess ii 45
And c moaning m the air : /„ Mem. xii 15
It c 5 round, and fancy plays, Qq^ g j
birds that c round the tower Are cheeping The Ring 85
Circled {See also Azure-circled, Crimson-circled, Musky-
circled. Ruby-circled) G thro' all experiences, pure
T ''^^' -^i, ^, CEnone 166
I prosper, c with thy voice ; /„ j^g^ ^xxx 15
c with her maids. The Lady Lyonors Garetk and L 1374
and settling e all the lists Uarr. of Geraini 547
Circlet prize A golden c and a knightly sword, PeUeasandE 12
Pelleas for his lady won The golden c, ' 14
he will fight for me. And win tho c : " 119
And win me this fine c, Pelleas, " 128
The sword and golden e were aqhieved. " 170
she caught the c from his lance, " J73
yea and he that won The c ? " 321
their wills are hers For whom I won the c; " 325
the e of the jousts Bound on her brow, " 434
The c of the tourney round her brows, " 454
—on her head A diamond c, Lover's Tale iv 2S9
Circling past her feet the swallow c flies. Prog, of Spring 44
Circuit The c's of thine orbit round In Mem. Ixiii 11
Circumstance strong Against the grief of c Supp. Confessions 92
saw The hollow orb of moving O Palace of Art 255
And breasts the blows of c, Jn Mem. Ixiv 7
This ever-changing world of e. To Duke of A rgyll 10
Cirque Within the magic c of memory, Lcrver's Tale ii 159
Citadel Troas and Ilion's column'd c, CEnone 13
Mast-throng'd beneath her shadowing c 118
A moulder'd c on the coast. The Daisy 28
Fell the colony, city, and c, Boadicea 86
Past thro' into his c, the brain. Lover's Tale i 631
Citadel-crown'd Tempest-buffeted, c-c. wiU 9
Cited Some c old Lactantius : Columbus 49
Citizen (See also Fellow-citizen) gravest c seems to
lose his head. Princess, Con. 59
heart of the c hissing in war Maud I i 24
like a statue, rear'd To some great c, Tiresias 83
Citron-shado'w clove The c-s's in the blue : Arabian Nights 15
City (See also Mother-city, Queen-city, Soldier-city)
Full of the c's stilly sound, 103
a c glorious— A great and distant ff— Deserted' House 19
Thro' the open gates of the c afar. Dying Swan 34
Below the c's eastern towers : Fatima 9
Or in a clear- wall'd c on the sea, Palace of Art 97
When I and Eustace from the c went Gardener's D. 2
grew The fable of the c where wo dwelt. 6
News from the humming c comes to it " 35
O'er the mute c stole with folded wings, ' I86
in the dust and drouth Of c life ! Edwin "Morris 4
Bej'ond the lodge the c lies, Talking Oak 5
cities of men And manners, climates, Ulysses 13
/ shaped The c's ancient legend into this : — Godiva 4
Mammon made The harlot of the cities : Aylmer's Field 375
A C clerk, but gently born and brod ; Sea Dreams 1
There rose a shriek as of a c sack'd ; Princess iv 165
we dash'd Your ct<ies into shards with catapults, ,, » 138
cross of gold That shines over c and river. Ode on Well. 50
when the long-illumined cities flame, 228
Flash, ye cities, in rivers of fire ! W. to Alexandra 19
e Of little Monaco, basking, glow'd. The Daisy 7
the c glitter'd, Thro' cypress avenues, 47
Yet here to-night in this dark c, "95
The c sparkles like a grain of salt. 'iviU 20
they rioted in the c of Cdnobellno ! BoOdicea 60
Fell the colony, c, and citadel, gg
And oxen from the c, and goodly sheep Spec, of Iliad 4
97
Claay
Ci\iy (continued) breathed his latest breath, That C. In Mem xcviii 6
I come once more : the c sleeps : ^n mem. xcvni 0
bubbles o'er like a c, with gossip, " MavA Th, S
For a tumult shakes the c, Maud I xvS
vapours choke The great c sounding wide : " fiV
paced a c all on fire With sun and cloth of gold. Com of Arthur 479
At times the summit of the high cflash'd; ' G^^eta^L ill
the whole fair c had disappeared. " ili
Here is a c of Enchanters, " Jgo
' Lord, there is no such c anywhere, " oor
Out of the c a blast of music peal'd, " 000
(Your c moved so weirdly in the mist) " 04K
there be any c at all. Or all a vision : " 94Q
Fairy Queens have built the c, son ; " ^q
hold The King a shadow, and the c real : " orr
seeing the c is built To music, " ^^
a c of shadowy palaces And stately, " qAo
nay, the King's— Descend into the c : ' " r^o
thro' silent faces rode Down the slope c, " ytn
Vivien, into Camelot stealing, lodged Low in "
urSf far-off ciHes while they dance- ^""^'^ ""'^ ^1?!
He saw two cities in a thousand boats " k«i
heads should moulder on the c gates. " ^04
arisen since With cities on their flanks— " 676
Past up the still rich c to his kin, Lancelot and E. 802
Far up the dim rich c to her kin ; oVk
thro' the dim rich c to the fields, " 047
across the fields Far into the rich c, " om
crown thee king Far in the spiritual c : ' Holy Grail 162
all the dim rich c, roof by roof, " 990
And on the top, a c wall'd : "422
I past Far thro' a ruinous c, " 400
crown me king Far in the spiritual c ; "483
I saw the spiritual e and all her spires " 526
from the star there shot A rose-red sparkle to the c " ^so
But when ye reach 'd The c, ' "708
0, when we reach'd The c, " iVS
Andfollow'dtothec. Pelleas and E. 686
AZ'^nlli^F^ '1^°^^' rf '^^?^y ^''""'^ ^"'^ Tournament 127
And down the c Dagonet danced away ; ocq
and in it Far cities burnt, "Ouiri^-^X^
saw the King Ride toward her from the c, ^umezere^
As of some lonely c sack'd by night. Pass, of Arthur 43
bounds, as if some fair e were one voice 450
the full c peal'd Thee and thy Prince ! To theQueen ii 26
The c deck'd herself To meet me, Columbus 9
when a smoke from a c goes to heaven AchiUes over the T 7
men contend in grievous war From their own e, in
The madness of our cities and their kings. "Tiresias 71
from within The c comes a murmur void of joy loi
All day long far-off in the cloud of tho c, ' The Wreck 29
From out his ancient c came a Seer Ancient Sage 2
I am weaned of our c, son, ^ -.f
But some in yonder c hold, my son, " go
night enough is there In yon dark c : " 253
storms Of Autumn swept across the c, Demeter and P 71
North to gam Her capital c, The Rina 489
ruin, this little c of sewers, HaZf^l
To the c and palace Of Arthur the king ; Merlin and theG 65
passing it glanced upon Hamlet or c, \nA
Beautiful c, the centre and crater Beautiful Cihil
at length he touch'd his goal. The Christian c. St. TdeLmhuizl
war dashing down upon caies and blazing farms. The Dawn 8
press of a thousand cities is prized 14
rnJi^L'' r f*""" ^f * ^""^ n " '"^ ^^?^' 1 Riflemen, Form / 18
City-gate before the c-g s Came on her brother Lancelot and E 790
City-gloom Droopt in the giant-factoried c-g, Sea Dredms 5
City-house this pretty house, this c-h of ours ? Citv Child 7
City-roar a shout More joyful than the c-r that hails
r™-Tit?TTu '■ ^'°^J V . . Princess, Con. m
X^^J^^y . ^^^ ^®®P ^ *o^ch of sweet c Geraint and E 312
CmliBation Or an infant c be ruled with rod Maud I iv 47
Claay (clay) hoickt my feet wi' a flop fro' the c. Spinster's S's 30
it wur clatted all ower wi' c. Aa
G
Clack'd-Clackt ]
Clack'd-Clackt It dacKd and cackled louder. The Goose 24
The palace bang'd , and buzz'd and clackt, Day-Dm., Revival 14
Clad [See also Ivy -clad. Lady -clad. Vine -clad
Winter-clad) Or long-hair'd page in crimson c! Z. of ShcdoU ii 22
bhe c herself m a russet gown, £ady (ji^^^g 57
looking hardly human strangely c, Enoch Arden 638
c her hke an April daffodilly p,i„,,,^ ^ 324
bix hundred maidens c \n purest white, 472
c in iron burst the ranks of war, " " iv 504
Mixt with myrtle and c with vine, 2%g jgigi jg
three were c like tillers of the soil, Gareth and L 181
boat Become a living creature c with wings ? Holy Grail 519
Leapt lightly c m bridal white- Iter's Tale Hi 44
ere thy maiden birk be wholly c. Prog, of Spring 50
Claim (b) a thousand c s to reverence closed To the Queen 27
Smile at the c s of long descent. X. c. F. de Vere 52
she will not : waive your c : p.^^,,,, ^ 296
lo learn if Ida yet would cede our c, 333
sware to combat for my c till death. " Qgn
■ With c on c from right to right, " 4^7
Nor did her father cease to press my c, ' " ^i 37
asserte his c In that dread sound Ode on Well. 70
Attest their great commander s c 24g
From our first Charles by force we wrung our c's. Third of Feb 26
Dispute the c's, arrange the chances ; To F. D. Maurice 31
And each prefers his separate c /„ Mem cii 18
crush d in the clash of jarring c's, Maud III vi 44
lays c to for the ady at his side, Marr. of Geraint 487
Who had a twofold c upon my heart, Lover's Tale i 210
their c to be thy peers; To Victor Hugo 6
I am bankmpt of all c On your obedience, Eomney's R. 70
rinirFio',^f'nf''"^^^^"?''l*fu^ T Akbar's Dream 4Z
Claim (verb) Of sounder leaf than I can c ; You might have won 4
in his walks with Edith, c A distant kinship Aylmer's Field 61
much that Ida c s as right Had ne'er been mooted, Princess v 202
Who but c 5 her as his due? MaudlxxW
Came not to us, of us to c the prize, Lancelot and E. 544
Wilt spring to me, and c me thine, Guinevere 565
should this first master c His service. Loner's Tale iv 265
-one has come to c his bride, Lochsley H., Sixty 263
ryJj'^^VT^^^'''^^V'% , Bandit's nLthl
Claim d So c the quest and rode away, Balin and Balan 138
Munel c and open d what I meant For Miriam, The Rina 242
Claiming c each This meed of fairest. (EnrnieSQ
stood once more before her face, G her promise. Enoch Arden 458
Nay, but I am not c your pity : Desvair 37
Clamber'd c half way up The counter side ; Golden Year 6
narrow street that c toward the mill. Emch Arden 60
Icoerattopwithpam. Princess iv 208
Piornni^iL''" °^ '''■''^ ^^ T "Y "?: P^^y' ^f^ Flight 22
Clambenng and c on a mast In harbour, Enoch Arden 105
Clamour (s) And fill d the house with c. y^e Goose 36
^Jl fii^M I't, f''''' w-!u* ^^'^ Water. 187
and fill d the shores With c. ^woc^i Jr,ie« 636
a herd of boys with c bowl'd and stump'd Princess, Pro. 81
lo hear my father s c at our backs { IO5
A c thicken'd, mixt with inmost terms " a 446
till a c grew As of a new-world Babel, " {^ aqq
trampling the flowers With c: " » 248
Far-off from the c of liars behod j^«„^ 7 i^ 5I
C and rumble, and ringing and clatter, 7/ ^ 13
TJ^^'^iiM"^ the rooks At distance, Marr. of Geraint 249
Clamour (verb) and to c, mourn, and sob, . St. S. Stylites 6
Yet cease I not to c and to cry, 40
Nor ever ceased to c for the ring ; The Rina 389
Clamour d 'Dead c the good woman, Enoch Arden 8i0
^T u /r""!,? casement, ' Run ' The Brook 85
Take Lilia, then, for heroine, ' c he, Princess, Pro. 223
Melissa c ' Flee the death ; ' tt> ] 66
And while the people e for a king Com. of Arthur 235
'«* Clash
Clamour'd (continued) I ask you, is it c by the child. Merlin and V. 771
Clamouring c, 'If we pay, we starve ! ' Godiva 15
c etiquette to death, Unmeasured mirth ; Princess v 17
but c out Mine— mine— not yours, ^^ 149
c on, till Ida heard, Look'd up, " ^bO
pulses at the c of her enemy fainted Bokdicea 82
the damsel c all the while, Gareth and L. \\U
Clan beyond the passions of the primal c ? Locksley H Sixty 93
Clang s) overhead Begins the clash and c In Mem' Con. 61
Clang (verb) An eagle c an eagle to the sphere. Princess Hi 106
, wildswan m among the stars Would c it, {■„ 435
the wood which grides and c's 7« Mem. cvii 11
O battleaxe, and clash brand ! (repeat) Com. of Arthur 493 4% 499
ring thy name To every hoof that c's it, Ttresia's 138
Clang'd left and right The bare black cliff c round him, M. d' Arthur 188
knell to my desires V on the bridge ; Princess iv 175
left and right The bare black cliff c round him. Pass, of Arthur 356
again the bells Jangled and c : Lover's Tale Hi 53
Olangmg (bee also Iron-Clanging) you hear The windy
rior, ^-^°*n^^"'^.'''*f.u^°''^ ' . .... Gardeners D.B8
Clap (8) Dead c s of thunder from within Sea Breams 55
stammering cracks and c's that follow'd. Merlin and V 942
Clap (verb) C s her tiny hands above me, Lilian 4
crested bird That c's his wings at dawn. D. of F Women 180
c their cheeks, to call them mine. /„ Mem. Ixxxiv 18
J he starling c s his tiny castanets. Prog, of Spring 56
Clapper Than in a c clapping in a garth. Princess ii 227
Clapping Laughing and c their hands between, The Merman 29
Ihan in a clapper c in a garth. Princess ii 227
all within was noise Of songs, and c hands. In Mem. Ixxxvii 19
from distant walls There came a c as of phantom
PTo«+ ^'^'^^^^ I, 1, J J • , .X Marr. of Geraint bm
Olapt and c her hands and cried, ' I marvel Palace of Art 189
c his hand On Everard's shoulder. The Epic 21
c him on the hands and on the cheeks, Bo^a 133
c his hand in mine and sang— Audley Court 39
And feet that ran, and doors that c, Day-Dm., Revival 3
c her hands and cried for war, Princess iv 590
Lancelot '—and she c her hands— Gareth and L. 1290
mused a little, and then c her hands Merlin and V 8m
Dagonet c his hands and shriU'd, Last Tournament 353
ba I ban t c eyes on im yit, ViUage Wife 123
1 c my hands. Hnnmi S*?
Clara Vere de Vere (-Sfee oZso Vere de Vere) Lady ^
rr '^ r '^ ^' (>:epeat) i. V. V. de Vere 1, 9, 17, 25, 33, 41
Trust me, GVd V l. O. V.de Vere 49
1 know you, CVdV C7
C, C F d F, " gi
^^^A To give his cousin Lady 0. 'tody Clare A
And that is well,' said Lady C. ^ 12
' It was my cousin,' said Lady C, " 15
And you are mo< the Lady C ' " 20
Said Ijady C, ' that ye speak so wild ? ' "22
She was no longer Lady C : " go
Lady C, you shame your worth ! " qq
beggar born,' she said, ' And not the Lady C " 72
And you shall still be Lady O.' " 33
Clariance Claudias, and 6' of Northnmberland, Com. of Arthur 113
Claribel Where 0 low-lieth (repeat) Claribel 1 8 21
Claiion shouts, and c's shrilling unto blood. Com. of Arthur 'l03
Clash (8) I heard the c so clearly. Sea Dreams 136
Koll of cannon and c of arms, Qde on Wdl. 116
overhead Begins the c and clang Jn Mem., Con. 61
crush dm the c of jarring claims, Maud III vi 44
bhield-breakings, and the c of brands, Pass, of Arthur 109
long loud c of rapid marriage-bells. Lover's Tale Hi 23
by their c. And prelude on the keys. Sisters (E. and E.) 1
And the c and boom of the bells v, of Maeldune 110
reasons had He to be glad of The c of the war-
glaive- _„ , Batt. of Brunanburh 78
brightens at the c of ' Yes and ' No," Ancient Sage 71
struck from out the c of warring wills ; Prog, of Spring 95
hear The c of tides that meet in narrow seas.— Akbar's Dream 58
and your fiery c of meteorites ? God and the Univ. 3
Clasn (verb) I ly on to c together again, Lucretius 41
Clash
99
Clear
Clash (verb) [continued) 0 hard, when love and duty c ! Princess ii 293
but you c them all in one, ,, v 180
C, ye bells, in the merry March air ! W. to Alexandra 18
C the darts and on the buckler Boadicea 79
Clang battleaxe, and c brand ! (repeat) Com. of Arthur 493, 496, 499
C like the coming and retiring wave, Gareth and L. 522
each would c the shield, and blow the horn. Last Tournament 436
at her girdle c The golden keys To Marq. of Dufferin 3
where the loyal bells C welcome — The Ring 483
And I c with an iron Truth, The Dreamer 6
Clash 'd Dry c his harness in the icy caves M. d' Arthur 186
from them e The bells ; we listen'd ; Gardener's D. 220
shameless noon Was c and hammer'd Godiva 75
Touch'd, clink'd, and c, and vanish 'd, Sea Dreams 135
and one, that c in arms. Princess v 5
they c their arms ; the drum Beat ; ,, 250
he c His iron palms together with a cry ; ,, 353
all silent, save When armour c or jingled, ,, vi 363
C with his fiery few and won ; Ode on Well. 100
As the music c in the hall ; Maud I xxii 34
his arms C ; and the sound was good Gareth and L. 312
Sir Gareth 's brand C his, and brake it utterly „ 1148
thrice They c together, and thrice they brake their
spears. Marr. of Geraint 562
they sat. And cuj) c cup ; Bdin and Balan 85
when they c, Rolling back upon Balin, ,, 561
table of our Arthur closed And c Holy Grail 330
And c with Pagan hordes, and bore them down ,, 479
meadow-grass Borne, e : FeUeas and E. 562
Dry c his harness in the icy caves Pass, of Arthur 354
slowly-ridging rollers on the cliffs C, Lover's Tale i 58
Two trains c : then and there he was crush'd Charity 21
Clashing (See also Iron-clashing) there were cries and
c's in the nest, GareOi and L. 70
Enid heard the c of his fall, Geraint and E. 509
With all her golden thresholds c, Lover's Tale i 605
butted each other with c of bells, V. of Maddune 108
Clasp (fastening) Buckled with golden c's before ; Sir L. and Q. G. 25
Clasp (embrace) In glance and smile, and c and
kiss, In Mem. Ixxxiv 7
Clasp (verb) I'd c it round so close and tight. Miller's D. 180
He c's the crag with crooked hands ; The Eagle 1
but everywhere Some must c Idols. Swpp. Confessions 179
c These idols to herself ? Lucretius 164
c it once again, And call her Ida, Princess vii 95
C her window, trail and twine ! Window. At the W. 2
Trail and twine and c and kiss, ,, 4
Let Love c Grief lest both be drown'd, In Mem. i 9
Some landing-place, to c and say, , , xlvii 15
Thy passion c's a secret joy : ,, IxxxviiiS
and c the hands and murmur, LocTcsley H., Sixty 192
Ah, c me in your arms, sister. The Flight 5
Clasp'd-Claspt (See also Ivy-claspt) clas-pt hand-in-hand
with thee. If I were loved 9
Die, dying clasp'd in his embrace. Fatima 42
I saw her, who clasp'd in her last trance -D. of F. Women 266
Are clasp'd the moral of thy life, Day-Dm., L' Envoi 55
But he clasp'd her like a lover, L. of Burleigh 67
Claspt hands and that petitionary grace The Brook 112
fell on him, Clasp'd, kiss'd him, wail'd : Lucretius 280
That claspt the feet of a Mnemosyne, Princess iv 269
in hands so lately cZaspi with yours, ,, vi 184
But he turn'd and claspt me in his arms. Grandmother 55
Ckispt on her seal, my sweet ! Window, The Answer 2
A hand that can be clasp'd no more — In Mem. vii 5
And hands so often clasp'd in mine, , , a; 19
Of comfort dasp'd in truth reveal'd ; ,, xxxvii 22
land Where first he walk'd when claspt in clay ? ,, xciii 4
He is claspt by a passion-flower. Maud I xiv 8
ivy-stems Claspt the gray walls with hairy-fibred
arms, Marr. of Geraint 323
claspt and kiss'd her, and they rode away. ,, 825
flinging round her neck, Claspt it, Last Tournament 750
but I clasp'd her without fear : Lover's Tale ii 202
And claspt her hand in his : ,, Hi 52
Clasp'd-Claspt (continue) round him closed and claspt
again. Lover's Tale iv 378
she that clasp'd my neck had flown ; LocTcsley H., Sixty 15
Here we stood and claspt each other, ,, 180
Who might have chased and claspt Renown To Marq. of Dufferin 29
You claspt our infant daughter, Romney's R. 77
Clasping That round me, c each in each, Talking Oak 143
I, c brother-hands, aver I could not, In Mem. Ixxxv 102
Claspt See Clasp'd
Class Of Knowledge fusing c with c, Freedom 17
Clat (mess) But wa boiith was i' sich a c Spinster's S's. 33
their mucky bibs, an' the c's an' the clouts, ,, 87
Clatted (soiled) it wur c all ower wi' claay. ,, 46
Clatter With cackle and with c. The Goose 12
Clamour and rumble, and ringing and c, Maud II v 13
and a c of hail on the glass. In the Child. Hosp. 62
c of arms, and voices, and men passing Bandit's Death 24
Claudias Urien, Cradlemont of Wales, C, Com. of Arthur IIB
Claum (climb) I c's an' I mashes the winder hin, Owd Roa 83
Claumb'd (climbed) I c up agean to the winder, ,, 99
Clause lead my Memmius in a train Of flowery c's Lucretius 120
the little c ' take not his life : ' Princess v 470
Clave loved one only and who c to her — ' Ded. of Idylls 11
c Like its own mists to all the mountain side ; Lancelot and E. 37
and all his kith and kin C to him, Guinevere 440
cTo Modred, and a remnant stays with me. ,, 442
Claw Nature, red in tooth and c With ravine, In Mem. hi 15
miss'd, and brought Her own c back, Merlin and V. 500
what evil beast Hath drawn his c's Last TournaTnent 63
Naay, but the c's o' tha ! quiet ! Spinster's S's. 36
mun be fools to be hallus a-shawin' your c's, „ 61
Clay (See also ClaJiy) grave Was deep, my
mother, in the c ? Supp, Confessions 86
They should have trod me into c, Oriana 62
And on my c her darnel grow ; My life is full 22
Doing dishonour to my c' Two Voices 102
common c ta'en from the common earth To With Pal. of Art. 17
growing coarse to sympathize with c. Locksley Hall 46
And the leaf is stamp'd in c. Vision of Sin 82
Rose from the c it work'd in as she past, Aylm£r's Field 170
He shall not blind his soul with c' Princess vii 331
Half -conscious of their dying c, In Mem. Iviii 7
land Where first he walk'd when claspt in c ? ,, xciii 4
Not only cunning casts in c : ,, cxx 5
judge all nature from her feet of c. Merlin and V. 835
death, that seems to make us loveless c, Lancelot and E. 1014
From the same c came into light Lover's Tale i 194
make And break the vase of c, Ancient Sage 92
Claymore C and snowshoe, toys in lava. Princess, Pro. 18
Clean (See also Clean) As c and white as privet
when it flowers. Walk, to the Mail 56
whole, and c, and meet for Heaven, St. S. Stylites 213
will never make oneself c. Grandmother 36
make all c, and plant himself afresh. Geraint and E. 905
keep him bright and c as heretofore, ,, 937
As c as blood of babes, as white as milk : Merlin and V. 344
I decreed That even the dog was c, Akbar's Dream 53
CIe3.n c as a flower fro' 'ead to feeiit : North. Cobbler 44
an' I keeaps 'im c an' bright, ,, 97
but the cat mun be c. Spinster's S's. 34
es c Es a shillin' fresh fro' the mint ,, 75
An' thy farmin' es c es thysen,' ,, 77
Clean-cut There were some for the c-c stone, V. of Maeldune 112
Cleaner house with all its hateful needs no c than the beast, Happy 32
Cleaner-fashion'd fork of thine Is c-/— Merlin andV. 60
Cleaning See A-cleanin'
Cleanse working out his will. Toe the world. Gareth and L. 25
c this common sewer of all his realm, Marr. of Geraint 39
c this common sewer of all my realm, Geraint and E. 895
Cleansed broke the bandit holds and c the land. ,, 944
Cleanser saved a life Worth somewhat as the c of
this wood. Gareth and L. 828
Clean-wud (clean-mad) An' I thowt as 'e'd goan c-w, Owd Rod 61
Clear (adj.) (See also Silver-clear, Staixy-clear)
C, without heat, undying, Isabel 3
Clear
100
Climb
Clear (a.dj.) {continued) With chisell'd features cand sleek. A Character 30
G and bright it should be ever, Poet's Mind 5
Bright as light, and c as wind. ,, 7
so c and bold and free As you, Rosalind 17
C as the twanging of a harp, Kate 8
So healthy, sound, and c and whole, Miller's D. 15
Make Thou my spirit pure and c St. Agnes' Eve 9
0 hark, 0 hear ! how thin and c, Princess iv 7
nobbut a curate, an' weant niver git hissen c, N. Farmer, N. S. 27
1 feel so free and so c Mavd I xix 98
world Was all so c about him, that he saw Com. of Arthur 98
0 as a lark, high o'er me as a lark, Holy Grail 833
Name, surname, all as c as noon. The Ring 237
a faith as c as the heights of the June-blue
heaven, June-Bracken, etc. 7
Clear (adv.) came A bitter wind, c from the North, Pass, of Arthur 124
That sings so delicately c, Marr. of Geraint 332
long es she lived she kep 'em all c, Village Wife 53
Clear (verb) Better to c prime forests, Princess Hi 127
Will c away the parasitic forms ,, i«i269
balm May c the blood from poison. Death of (Enone 36
Clear-cut But a cold and c-c face, Maud I ii 3
Cold and c-c face, why come you so cruelly meek, ,, m 1
Clear'd And a whirlwind c the larder : The Goose 52
flash of semi-jealousy c it to her. Aylmer's Field 189
moving everywhere C the dark places Geraint and E. 943
She c her sight, she arose. Dead Prophet 31
Clearer like a light that grows Larger and c, (Enone 109
The fires are all the c. Window. Winter 16
every turn and depth Between is c in my life Lover's Tale i 149
Clearest Yet c of ambitious crime. Ode on Well. 28
Clear- faced Until they found the c-f King, Lancelot and E. 432
Clear-featured that c-/ face Was lovely, ,, 1159
Clear-headed C-h friend, whose joyful scorn. Clear-headed friend 1
Clearness ' are like the rest ; No certain c, Two Voices 335
The starry c of the free ? In Mem. Ixxxv 86
The critic c of an eye, ,, cm; 3
c of his fame hath gone Beneath the shadow Lover's Tale i 789
no shade of doubt. But utter c. Ancient Sage 236
Clear-pointed fed With the c-p flame of chastity, Isabel 2
Clear-stemm'd c-s platans guard The outlet, Arabian Nights 23
Clear- voiced The c-v mavis dwelleth, Claribd 16
Clear-wall'd Or in a c-io city on the sea, Palace of Art 97
Cleave (to adhere) love thee well and c to thee, (Enone 160
' The man will c unto his right.' Lady Clare 46
O to your contract : Princess iv 409
if I fall, c to the better man.' Geraint and E. 152
To love one maiden only, c to her, Guinevere 475
The shadow of another c's to me, , , 618
c's to cairn and cromlech still ; To the Queen ii 41
The lecher would c to his lusts. Despair 100
• C ever to the sunnier side of doubt, Ancient Sage 68
0 to one another still ? Open. I and C. Exhib. 34
Cleave (to divide) Clear Love would pierce and c. If I were loved 6
ill-used race of men that c the soil, Lotos-Eaters, O. S. 120
To c the rift of difference deeper yet ; Princess v 301
When mighty Love would c in twain In Mem. xxv 10
master-bowman, he. Would c the mark. ,, Ixxxvii 30
To c a creed in sects and cries, ,, cxxviii 15
and so ye e His armour off him, Gareth and L. 1094
May this hard earth c to the Nadir hell Merlin and V. 349
Cleaved (For I c to a cause that I felt Mavd III vi 31
ever like a loyal sister c To Arthur, Com. of Arthur 191
some she c to, but they died of her. Gareth and L. 113
So to this king I c : my friend was he. Sir J. Oldcastle 61
Cleaving The fruitful wit C, took root. The Poet 21
Cleft (b) (See also Mountain-cleft) Far-off the
torrent call'd me from the c : (Enone 54
thro' mountain c's the dale Was seen Lotos-Eaters 20
every coppice-feather'd chasm and c, Princess iv 23
gather'd trickling dropwise from the c, Merlin and V. 274
little elves of chasm and c Made answer, Guinevere 248
saw The c's and openings in the mountains Lover's Tale i 330
Cleft (verb) He e me thro' the stomacher ; Princess ii 407
spire of land that stands apart C from the main, ,, iv 282
Cleft (verb) {continued) Has risen and c the soil, and
grown a bulk Princess vi 35
Which c and c again for evermore. Ancient Sage 43
Clelia C, Cornelia, with the Palmyrene Princess ii 83
Clematis O'erflourish'd with the hoary e : Golden Year 63
among the meadows, the clover and the c, City Child 9
Rose, rose and c, (repeat) Window. At the W. 3, 10
and the dark-blue c, clung, V. of Maddune 39
Clemm'd (clutched) an' c owd Tloa by the 'ead, Owd Roa 99
Clench those, who c their nerves to rush Love and Duty 77
Clench'd {See also Half-clench'd) taunt that c his
purpose like a blow ! Princess v 306
c her fingers till they bit the palm, Lancelot and E. 611
c His hands, and madden'd with himself Pelleas and E. 459
Muriel c The hand that wore it. The Ring 261
Cleopatra-like C-l as of old To entangle me Maud I vi 27
Clergyman that good man, the c, has told me
words of peace. May Queen, Con. 12
Clerk {See also Parish-clerks) worn-out c Brow-
beats his desk below. To J. M.K.W
now we left The c behind us, I and he, Edwin Morris 97
That was a God, and is a lawyer's c, ,, 102
A CITY c, but gently born and bred ; Sea Dreains 1
mitre-sanction'd harlot draws his c's Into the
suburb— Sir J. Oldcastle 106
Cletch (brood of chickens) But Nelly, the last of the c, Village Wife 9
Cleverness not for all Aspasia's c, Princess ii 344
Click merry milkmaids c the latch, The Owl I 8
C with the pick, coming nearer Def. of Lucknow 28
Cliff {See also Sea-cliflf, Shore-cliflf) light upon the
wall Of purple c's, Ode to Memory 54
mountain-shade Sloped downward to her seat from
the upper c. (Enone 22
Along the c to fall and pause and fall Lotos-Eaters 9
bare black c clang'd round him, M. d' Arthur 188
Upon the c's that guard my native land, AvMey Court 49
girt the region with high c and lawn : Vision of Sin 47
lines of c breaking have left a chasm : Enoch Arden 1
A narrow cave ran in beneath the c : ,,23
sand and c and deep-inrunning cave, Sea Dreams 17
on sand they walk'd, and now on c, ,, 37
claps of thunder from within the c's ,, 55
enter'd one Of those dark caves that run beneath
the c's. _ „ 90
on those c's Broke, mixt with awful light ,, 214
those lines of c's were c's no more, ,, 217
we wound About the c's, the copses, Princess Hi 360
0 sweet and far from c and scar „ j^ 9
A stroke of cruel sunshine on the c, ,, 524
On capes of Afric as on c's of Kent, W. to Marie Alex. 17
And leave the c's, and haste away In Mem. xii 8
From scarped c and quarried stone ,, hi 2
like a crag that tumbles from the c, Marr. of Geraint 318
Between the steep c and the coming wave ; Guinevere 280
as a stream that spouting from a c Fails ,, 608
left and right The bare black c clang'd round him. Pass, of Arthur 356
Hbbe far away, seen from the topmast c, Lover's Tale i 1
slowly-ridging rollers on the c's Clash'd, ,, 57
the red passion-flower to the c's, V. of Maddune 39
all round from the c's and the capes, ,, 55
And c's all robed in lianas that dropt The Wreck 73
blanch into spray At the feet of the e; „ 138
1 climb'd on all the c's of all the seas, Denuter and P. 63
Cliff-side broken rocks On some c-s, Lancelot and E. 1253
Climate manners, c's, councils, governments, Ulysses 14
Climax and he : ' The c of his age ! Princess ii 50
Climb {See also Claum) Where he was wont to leap
and c, Supp. Confessions 165
' Cry, faint not, c: the summits slope Two Voices 184
could she c Beyond her own material prime? ,, 377
You seem'd to hear them c and fall Palace of Art 70
' will you c the top of Art. Gardener's D. 169
long day wanes : the slow moon c's ; Ulysses 55
I leave the plain, I c the height ; Sir Galahad, 57
street c's to one tall-tower'd mill ; Enoch Arden 5
Climb
101
Cldse-'
Climb (continued) stairs That c into the windy halls of
heaven : Lucretius 136
but we Set forth to c ; Princess Hi 354
as one that c's a peak to gaze O'er land and main, ,, vii 35
Be near us when we c or fall : Jn Mem. li 13
G thy thick noon, disastrous day ; ,, Ixxii 26
I c the hill : from end to end ,, c 1
I could c and lay my hand upon it, Gareth and L. 50
* G not lest thou break thy neck, 54
felt the knot G in her throat, Lancelot and E. 741
G's to the mighty hall that Merlin built. Holy Grail 231
' There rose a hill that none but man could c, ,, 489
in a dream I seem'd to c For ever : 836
I would not or I could not c — Guinevere 644
clomb Ev'n to the highest he could c, Pass of Arthur 463
G first and reach me down thy hand. Sir J. Oldcastle 204
sister of the sun Would c from out the dark, Tiresias 31
And c the Mount of Blessing, Ancient Sage 280
wounded warrior c's from Troy to thee. Death of CEnone 39
if ever a woman should c to the dwelling Kapiolani '22
Climb'd (See also Claumb'd) They c as quickly, for
the rim Changed The Voyage 27
as he c the hill, Just where the prone edge Enoch Arden 66
he had c across the spikes, Princess, Pro. Ill
we c The slope to Vivian-place, ,, Gon. 39
I c to the top of the garth, Grandmother 38
I c the roofs at break of day ; JDaisy 61
And thither I c at dawn Maud I xiv 5
I have c nearer out of lonely Hell. ,, xviii 80
sweet son, had risk'd himself and c, Gare^ and L. 60
And c upon a fair and even ridge, Marr. of Geraint 239
Guinevere had c The giant tower, ,, 826
on his foot She set her own and c ; Geraint and E. 760
For one from out his village lately c Balin and Balan 167
c That eastern tower, and entering barr'd Lancdot and E. 14
Then to her tower she c, ,, 397
lea thousand steps With pain : Holy Grail 835
came Arthur home, and while he c, Last Tournament 755
G to the high top of the garden-wall Guinevere 25
cheeks as bright as when she c the hill. Lover's Tcde Hi 47
heard a groaning overhead, and c The moulder'd
stairs ,, iv 136
c one step beyond Our village Ancient Sage 206
I c on all the cliffs of all the seas, Demeter and P. 63
I c the hill with Hubert yesterday. The Ring 152
I have c to the snows of Age, By an Evolution. 17
c from the dens in the levels below, The Dawn 17
Climbing In ever c up the c wave ? Lotos-Eater's, G. S. 50
And ever c higher ; D. of F. Women 32
And c up into my airy home, St, S. Stylites 217
valleys underneath Came little copses c. Amphion 32
A lily-avenue c to the doors ; Aylmer's Field 162
Was c up the valley ; at whom he shot : , , 228
then, c, Cyril kept With Psyche, Princess Hi 354
tum'd his face And kiss'd her c, , Geraint and E. 761
Cried to me c, ' Welcome, Percivale ! Holy Grail 425
over all the great wood rioting And c, Lover's Tale i 404
set me c icy capes And glaciers, To E, Fitzgerald 25
Pallas Athene c from the bath In anger ; Tiresias 40
Evolution ever c after some ideal good, Locksley H. , Sixty 199
saw Him, c toward her with the golden Death of CEnone 15
Climbing (b) Maud with her venturous c's Maud / t 69
Clime Thk poet in a golden c was born, . The Poet 1
thro' mine ears in that unblissful c, D. of F. Women 82
Put forth and feel a gladder c' On a Mourner 15
— what to me were sun or c 1 Locksley Hall 177
In divers seasons, divers c's ; Day-Dm., L'Envoi 18
O hundred shores of happy c's. The Voyage 49
Again to colder c's we came, ,, 89
on the tables every c and age a Jumbled together ; Princess, Pro. 16
For many a time in many a c Ode on Well. 64
And led him through the blissful c's. In Mem. Ixxxv 25
who throve and branch'd from c to c, ,, cxviii 13
blown by the breeze of a softer c, Maud I iv i
prayer of many a race and creed, and c— To the Queen ii U
Clime (continue) arrowing light from c to V ''■'■'> ilJSi^A's p,] Hymn 5
Cling As close as might be would he c Talking &>'^ --27
They c together in the ghastly sack — Aylmer's Field 764
' My mother c's about my neck, Sailor Boy 17
flower that c's To the turrets and the walls ; Maud II iv 33
all night long a cloud c's to the hill, Geraint and E. 691
voice c's to each blade of grass, Lancelot and E. 107
glory c To all high places like a golden cloud Pass, of Arthur 53
I c to the Catholic Cross once more, The Wreck 3
c to Faith beyond the forms of Faith ! Ancient Sage 69
Who c's to earth, and once would dare ,, 115
That we might c together, Happy 92
Clinging Not c to some ancient saw ; Love thou thy land 29
Unshaken, c to her purpose. Princess y 344
necks Of dragons c to the crazy walls. Holy Grail 347
C to the silent mother ! Locksley H., Sixty 99
Clink (a) the tinsel c of compliment. Princess ii 55
Clink (verb) Thou hear'st the village hammer c, In Mem. cxxi 15
Clink'd Touch'd, c, and clash'd and vanish 'd. Sea Dreams 135
Clinking Hammering and c, chattering stony names Princess Hi 361
Clinkt blade flew Splintering in six, and c upon the
stones. Balin and Balan 396
Clip And c your wings, and make you love : Rosalind 45
Tho' fortune c my wings, WiU Water. 50
Clipt They read in arbours c and cut, Amphion 85
from her baby's forehead c A tiny curl, and gave it : Enoch Arden 235
many thousand days Were c by horror Aylmer's Field 603
Or keeps his wing'd affections c with crime : Princess vii 316
had c free manhood from the world — Last Tournament 446
a scrap, c out of the ' deaths ' in a paper, fell. The Wreck li6
Cloak (b) And the red c's of market girls, L. of Shdott ii 17
Pitiful sight, wrapp'd in a soldier's c. Princess v 56
raised the c from brows as pale and smooth , , 73
Wrapt in a c, as I saw him, Matid 1 159
Sir Gareth loosed A c that dropt Gareth and L. 682
wrapping her all over with the c He came in, Lover's Tale iv 86
Cloak (verb) wife-worship c's a secret shame ? Balin and Balan 360
c's the scar of some repulse with lies ; Merlin and V. 818
Cloak'd The Shadow c from head to foot. In Mem. xxiii 4
Cloaths (clothes) Sally she wesh'd foalks ' c JNorth. Gobbler 29
Look at the c on 'er back, ,, 109
CloStthes (clothes) an' a-buyin' new c. Village Wife 37
Clock The slow c ticking, and the sound Mariana 74
The windy clanging of the minster c ; Gardener's D. 38
The heavy c's knoUing the drowsy hours. ,, 184
There rose a noise of striking c's, Day-Dm. , Revival 2
speak for noise Of c's and chimes. Princess i 216
the dark, when c's Throbb'd thunder ,, vii 103
c Beats out the little lives of men. In Mem. ii 7
And hark the c within, Maud I xviii 64
lights the c ! the hand points five— The Flight 94
Clock-work little c-w steamer paddling plied Princess, Pro. 71
Clod before the heavy c Weighs on me, Supp. Gonfessions 184
and the c, Less dull than thou, Gareth and L. 1391
Clog (s) A c of lead was round my feet. The Letters 5
To lighten this great c of thanks. Princess vi 126
Clog (verb) fulsome Pleasure c him, and drown Maud I xvii
Cloister (See also Crag-cloister) row Of c's, branch'd
like mighty woods, Palace of Art 26
while our c's echo'd frosty feet. Princess, Pro. 183
world-old yew-tree, darkening half The c's. Holy Grail 14
Walk your dim c, and distribute dole Guinevere683
Sometimes I frequent the Christian c, Akbar's D., Inscrip. 5
Clomb Imprisoning sweets, which, as they c Arabian Nights 40
C to the roofs, and gazed alone for hours Princess vii 32
neither c, nor brake his neck, Gareth and L. 56
And glad was I and c, but found at top Holy Grail 427
turn'd and slowly c The last hard footstep Pass, of Arthur 446
c Ev'n to the highest he could climb, ,, 462
C the mountain, and flung the bierries, Kapiolani 6
Close (an enclosure) I broke a c with force and
arms : Edwin Morris 131
I lay Pent in a roofless c of ragged stones ; 8. St. Stylites 74
Are wither'd in the thorny c, Day-Dm., Arrival 11
Close (an end) sweet c of his delicious toils — Palace of Art 185
i
Close
102
Clothed
Clo^„(akn fcni)' (J;<wrffeiwd)r The c, ' Your Letty, only
" yours ; ' Edwin Morris 106
Of love that never found his earthly c, Love and Duty 1
Death dawning on him, and the c of all. Enoch Arden 832
At c of day ; slept, woke, and went the next, Sea Dreams 18
Then comes the c' ,, 29
and the bitter c of all, Princess vi 117
drove us, last to quite a solemn c — ,, Con. 17
all, they said, as earnest as the c ? , , 21
Such a war had such a e. Ode on Well. 118
Herb ; it is here, the c of the year, SpiteftU Letter 1
Here is the golden c of love, Window. Marr. Morn. 3
To such a stern and iron-clashing c. Merlin and V. 419
Perchance, because we see not to the c ; — Pass, of Arthur 21
Restrain'd himself quite to the c — Lover s Tale iv 10
Laud me not Before my time, but hear me to the c. ,, 243
My c of earth's experience May prove Tiresias 216
gloom of the evening, Life at a c ; Vasiness 15
were alone in the dell at the c of the day. Bandit's Death 19
Close (adj. and adv.) order'd all Almost as neat and c Enoch Arden 178
princedom lay C on the borders of a territory, Marr. of Geraint 33
So c are we, dear Mary, To Mary Boyle 59
but c to me to-day As this red rose, Roses on the T. 6
I was c on that hour of dishonour. Charity 28
my hot lips prest C, c to thine QHnone 204
I never can be c with her, Balin and Balan 186
c upon it peal'd A sharp quick thunder.' Holy Grail 695
C beneath the casement crimson Locksley H., Sixty 34
they stood So c together. The Ring 258
Now wraps her c, now arching leaves her bare Prog, of Spring 12
Close (verb) C the door, the shutters c. Deserted House 9
breathe it into earth and c it up Wan Sculftor 12
In love with thee forgets to c His curtains, Adeline 42
C up his eyes : tie up his chin : D. of the 0. Year 48
With one wide Will that c's thine. On a Mourner 20
To c the interests of all. Love thou thy land 36
And this be true, till Time shall c, , , 79
Death c's all : but something ere the end, Ulysses 51
till he heard the ponderous door C, Aylmer's Field 338
to c with Cyril's random wish : Princess Hi 101
hearts So gentle, so employ 'd, should c in love, ,, vii 67
before his journey c's, He shall find Ode on Well. 205
and the daisy c Her crimson fringes In Mem. Ixxii^ 11
Until we c with all we loved, ,, cxxxill
' 0 dewy flowers that c when day is done, Gareth and L. 1067
To c with her lord's pleasure ; Geraint and E. 214
— so that fate and craft and folly c, Merlin and V. 57
Down, down, and c again, and nip me flat, , , 350
and c the hand Uf)on it ; Lancelot and E. 1114
but he that c's both Is perfect, he is Lancelot — Last Tournament 708
And who shall escape if they c ? Heavy Brigade 16
Both the days Now c in one. The Ring 79
closed her eyes, which would not c, „ 299
Caught by the flower that c's on the fly, ,, 344
his fresh life may c as it began. Prog, of Spring 89
Close-bower'd Sir Balin sat C-b in that garden Balin and Balan 241
Close-button'd turned once more, c-b to the storm ; Edwin Morris 136
Closed (See also Half-closed) A thousand claims to
reverence c To the Queen 27
I c mine eyelids, lest the gems M. d' Arthur 152
all grace Summ'd up and c in little ; — Gardener's D. 13
She turn'd, we c, we kiss'd, Edwin Morris 114
I had hoped that ere this period c St. S. Stylites 17
for the promise that it c : Locksley Hall 14
C in a golden ring. Sir L. and Q. G. 27
she c the Book and slept : Enoch Arden 499
when she c 'Enoch, poor man, was cast away ,, 712
Crept to the gate, and open'd it, and c, ,, 775
Until they c a bargain, hand in hand. The Brook 156
c her access to the wealthier farms, Aylmer's Field 503
fain had she c them now, , , 805
c by those who mourn a friend in vain, Lucretius 142
And thus our conference c. Princess ii 367
until they c In conflict with the crash ,, v 490
darkness c me ; and I fell. ,, 542
Closed (continued) My spirit c with Ida's at the lips ; Princess vii 158
So c our tale, of which I give you all ,, Con. 1
the gates were c At sunset, ,, 36
few words and pithy, such as a c Welcome, farewell, ,, 94
where warm hands have prest and c, In Mem. xiii 7
such as c Grave doubts and answers ,, xlviii 2
whose dying eyes Were c with wail, ,, xc6
pulses c their gates with a shock Maud 7 i 15
gates of Heaven are c, and she is gone. ,, xviii 12
now by this my love has c her sight ,, 67
C in her castle from the sound of arms. Gareth and L 163
But when they c — in a moment— ,, 1222
Dash'd on Geraint, who c with him, Geraint and E. 462
while he spoke C his death-drowsing eyes, Balin and Balan 631
C in the four walls of a hollow tower,
(repeat) Merlin and V. 209, 543
and the thicket c Behind her, ,, 973
And c the hand upon it, and she died. Lancelot and E. 1135
great table of our Arthur c And clash 'd Holy Grail 329
and then a fawn ; and his eyes c. Pelleas and E. 39
Drew back a space, and when they c, ,, 573
' 0 c about by narrowing nunnery-walls, Guinevere 34'2
On the waste sand by the waste sea they c. Pass, of Arthur 92
'Sir King, I c mine eyelids, lest the gems ,, 320
Ideal manhood c in real man, To the Queen ii 38
round him c and claspt again. Lover's Tale iv 378
I c my heart to the gloom ; The Wreck 38
If utter darkness c the day, Ancient Sage 199
c her eyes, which would not close. The Ring 299
Clouds and darkness C upon Camelot ; Merlin and the G. 76
kiss'd his hand, another c his eyes. Death of (Enone 58
Close-latticed C-l to the brooding heat, Mariana in the S. 3
Close-lapt c-l in silken folds, Lover's Tale i 153
Closelier once mine, now thine, is c mine, Merlin and V. 446
Close-matted a wall of green C-m, Day-Dm. , Sleep P. 46
Closeness such a c, but apart there grew. Holy Grail 884
Closer C is He than breathing. High. Pantheism 12
But thou art c to this noble prince, Com. of Arthur 314
C on the Sun, perhaps a world Locksley H., Sixty 184
Close-set wore A c-s robe of jasmine Aylmer's Field 158
Betwixt the c-s ivies came a broad Lover's Tale ii 172
Closet not to myself in the c alone, Maud II v 49
Closeted (See also Long-closeted) with that woman c
for hours ! ' Princess Hi 56
Closing (part) There— c like an individual life — Love and Duty 79
And c eaves of wearied eyes In Mem. Ixvii 11
As c in himself the strength of ten, Gareth and L. 1339
c round him thro' the journey home, Pelleas and E. 202
Closing (s) And at the c of the day L. of Shalott iv 15
Clot Is a c of warmer dust, Vision of Sin 113
Cloth (See also Altar-cloth, Cloth of Gold, Face-cloth)
a c of palest gold, Which down he laid Gareth and L. 389
Arthur cried to rend the c, (repeat) ,, 400, 418
we should lap him up in c of lead, ,, 430
c of roughest web, and cast it down, ,, 683
sparkle of a c On fern and foxglove. Sisters (E. and E.) 117
What have I here in the c ? Bandit's Death 8
Clothe That c the wold and meet the sky ; L. of Shalott i 3
O, the child too c's the father Locksley Hall 91
C's and reclothes the happy plains, Day-Dm., Sleep P. 2
often toil'd to c your little ones ; Aylmer's Field 699
lingereth she to c her heart with love, Princess iv 105
tender ash delays To c herself, ,, 107
Will c her for her bridals like the sun.' Marr. of Geraint 231
So c yourself in this, that better fits ,, 717
Herself would c her like the sim in Heaven. , , 784
In this poor gown he bad me c myself, Geraint and E. 702
' And lo, I c myself with wisdom, Merlin and V. 255
her love did c itself in smiles About his lips ! Lover's Tale i 658
earth -baldness c's itself afresh, Demeter and P. 49
Clothed river-sunder'd champaign c with corn, (Enone 114
C in white samite, mystic, wonderful,
(repeat) M. d' Arthur 31, 144, 159
ridge to ridge, C with his breath, ,, 182
she rode forth, c on with chastity : Godiva 53
Clothed
103
Cloud
Clothed {continued) she rode back, c on with chastity : Godiva 65
Pure spaces c in living beams, Sir Galahad 6t)
with thy worst self hast thou cthy God. Aylmer's Field 646
thought flash 'd thro' me which I c in act, Princess i 195
these have c their branchy bowers With fifty Mays, In Mem. Ixxvi 13
C in white samite, mystic, wonderful. ' Com. of Arthur 285
So that the child and he were c in fire. ,, 390
And truth or c or naked let it be, ,, 408
see her now, C with my gift, Mart, of Geraint 753
And c her for her bridals like the sun ; ,, 836
And c her in apparel like the day. Geraint and E. 948
barge Be ready on the river, c in black. Lancelot and E. 1123
a love C in so pure a loveliness ? ,, 1384
C in white samite or a luminous cloud. Holy Grail 513
golden beard that c his lips with light — Last Tournament 668
C in white samite, mystic, wonderful,
(repeat) Pass. o/Jr<AMr 199, 312, 327
ridge to ridge, C with his breath, Pass, of Arthur 350
e with living light, They stood before his
throne ,, 454
When he c a naked mind with the wisdom The Wreck 65
But c with The Gleam, Merlin and the G. 94
When the dumb Hour, c in black, Sileni Voices 1
Clothes (See also Clo&thes, CloS,thB) wholesome
food. And wear warm c, St. S. Stylites 109
And c they gave him and free passage Enoch Arden 650
Like coarsest c against the cold : In Mem. v 10
She is not fairer in new c than old. Marr. of Geraint T22
Clothing upbearing parasite, C the stem, Isabel 35
Cloth of Gold With inwrought flowers, a, c o g, Arabian Nights 149
city all on fire With sun and cog, Com. of Arthur 480
pray'd him well to accept this cog, Gareth and L. 398
seeing he hath sent \13 c o g, „ 428
children of the King in c o ^ Glanced Marr. of Geraint 664
all the children in their c o y Ran to her, ,, 668
all the coverlid was cog Drawn to her waist, Lancelot and E. 1157
Clotted Or, c into points and hanging loose, M. d' Arthur 219
Or, c into points and hanging loose, Pass, of Arthur 387
Cloud (s) {See also Thunder-cloud) When will the
c's be aweary of fleeting ? Nothing viiU die 5
The c fleets. The heart beats, ,, 11
One after another the white c's are fleeting ; All Things wiU die 5
The c's will cease to fleet ; , ,,11
Like little c's sun-fringed, Madeline 17
with the evening c, Showering thy gleaned wealth Ode to Memory 22
morn Forth gushes from beneath a low-hung c. ,, 71
while Slowly, as from a c of gold, _ Elednore 73
Nor any c would cross the vault, Mariana in the S. 38
Wrapt in dense c from base to cope. Two Voices 186
Embracing c, Ixion-like ; ,, 195
That every c, that spreads above And veileth love, ,, 446
A c that gather'd shape : (Enone 42
one silvery c Had lost his way between ,, 92
o'er him flow'd a golden c, and lean'd ,, 105
As she withdrew into the golden c, ,, 191
narrow moon-lit slips of silver c, „ 218
death, death, thou ever-floating c, ,, 238
A c of incense of all odour steam'd Palace of Art. 39
All barr'd with long white c the scornful crags, , , 83
c's are lightly curl'd Round their golden
houses Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 112
Hold swollen c's from raining, B. of F. Women 11
' The light white c swam over us. ,, 221
Brightening the skirts of a long c, M. d' Arthur 54
as one large c Drew downward : Gardener's D. 78
The light c smoulders on the summer crag. Edwin Morris 147
sign betwixt the meadow and the c, St. S. Stylites 14
A soft air fans the c apart ; Tithonus 32
looking like a summer moon Half -dipt in c : _ Godiva 46
The c's are broken in the sky. Sir Galahad 73
And c's are highest up in air. Lady Clare 2
made the wild -swan pause in her c, Poet's Song 7
c Cuts off the fiery highway of the sun, Enoch Arden 129
Sailing along before a gloomy c Sea Dreams 124
Where never creeps a c, or moves a wind, Lucretius 106
Cloud (b) {continued) and molten on the waste Becomes a c: Princess iv 78
As of some fire against a stormy c, ,, 384
Settled a gentle c of melancholy ; ,, 570
As comes a pillar of electric c, ,, v 524
thro' the c that dimm'd her broke A genial warmth , , vi 281
The c may stoop from heaven and take the shape , , vii 2
sees a great black c Drag inward from the deeps, ,, 36
C's that are racing above. Window. On the Hill 6
Gone, and a c in my heart, ,, Gone 6
No is trouble and c and storm, „ No Answer 8
Such c's of nameless trouble cross In Mem. iv 13
dote and pore on yonder c That rises upward ,, a:» 16
A rainy c possess'd the earth, ,, xxx 3
With fruitful c and living smoke, ,, xxxix 3
Thro' c's that drench the morning star, ,, Ixxii 22
' Can c's of nature stain The starry clearness ,, Ixxxv 85
But in the darkness and the c, ,, xcvi 21
We steer'd her toward a crimson c ,, ciii 55
The flying c, the frosty light : „ cvi2
Like c's they shape themselves and go. ,, ca;a;m 8
high in heaven the streaming c, ,, Con. 107
man walks with his head in a c of poisonous flies. Maud I iv 54
In fold upon fold of hueless c, ,, vi B
when the morning came In a c, it faded, ,, 21
sun look'd out with a smile Betwixt the c and the moor ,, ix i
till the c that settles round his birth Gareth and L. 130
In counter motion to the c's, ,, 1315
under c that grew To thunder-gdoom palling
all stars, „ 1358
Turn thy wild wheel thro' sunshine, storm,
and c ; Marr. of Geraint 348
wheel and thou are shadows in the c ; ,, 357
and by and by Slips into golden c, „ 736
Then seeing c upon the mother's brow, ,, 777
make your Enid burst Sunlike from c — ,, 789
all night long a c clings to the hill, Geraint and E. 691
Hung like a c above the gateway towers.' Merlin and V. 599
Drew the vast eyelid of an inky c, ,, 634
across him came a c Of melancholy severe, Lancelot and E. 324
Dispersed his resolution like a c. ,, 884
All over cover'd with a luminous c. Holy GraU 189
' Lo now,' said Arthur, ' have ye seen a c ? „ 286
Clothed in white samite or a luminous c. ,, 513
— a smile beneath a c. But heaven had meant it „ 705
o'er it crost the dimness of a c Floating, Pelleas and E. 37
colours like the c Of sunset and sunrise, ,, 53
upward-rushing storm and c Of shriek and
plume, Last Tournament 440
Far over sands marbled with moon and c, , , 466
they cannot weep behind a c : Guinevere 207
and wail their way From c to c, Pass, of Arthur 40
glory cling To all high places like a golden c
Forever: ,, 54
Brightening the skirts of a long c, ,, 222
Streams like a c, man-shaped, To the Queen ii 40
sails, White as white c's, floated from sky to sky. Lover's Tale i 5
Moved from the c of unforgotten things, ,, 48
Stay'd on the c of sorrow ; ,, 255
daylight of your minds But c and smoke, ,, 297
would have flung himself From c to c, ,, 302
Shading his eyes till all the fiery c, ,, 306
Held for a space 'twixt c and wave, ,, 417
Into a clearer zehith, pure of c. v ,, 514
Diffused and molten into flaky c. , , 641
life, burst through the c of thought Keen, ,, ii 164
billow ran Shoreward beneath red c's, ' ,, 179
a little silver c Over the sounding seas : ,, m 36
Willy — the moon's in a c — Eizpah 86
melted like a c in the silent summer heaven ; The Sevenge 14
San Philip hung above us like a c ,, 43
c that roofs our noon with night, Sisters {E. and E.) 17
days Of doubt and c and storm, Columbus 156
at dawn from- the c glitter'd o'er us V. of Maeldune 84
ridges drew the c and brake the storm Montenegro 13
glorious goddess wreath'd a golden c, Achilles over the T. 5
Cloud
104
Coast
Cloud (b) [continued) All day long far-off in the c of the city, The Wreck 29
c of the mother's shame will enfold her ,, 100
only a c and a smoke who was once a pillar Despair 29
and higher, The c that hides it — higher still, the
heavens Whereby the c was moulded, and
whereout The c descended. Ancient Sage 12
beacon burn'd in vain, And now is lost in c : ,, 143
past into the Nameless, as a c Melts into Heaven. ,, 233
But still the c's remain ; ' The c's themselves are
children of the Sun. ,, 241
A c between the Nameless and thyself , ,, 278
An' the sun kem out of a c Tomorrow 37
And roU'd them around like a c, — Heavy Brigade 40
One year without a storm, or even a c ; The Ring 284
Would Earth tho' hid in c not be follow'd Happy 97
C's and darkness Closed upon Camelot ; Merlin and the G 75
Or does the gloom of Age And suffering c Romney's R. 65
my reign Was redden'd by that c of shame Akbar's Dream 64
methought The c was rifted by a purer gleam ,, 78
Cloud (verb) ever swarm about And c the highest heads, Columbus 120
Clouded So spake he, c with his own conceit, M. d' Arthur 110
(For all my mind is c with a doubt) — ,, 258
Being so c with his grief and love, Holy Grail 656
So spake he, c with his own conceit, Pass, of Arthur 278
(For all my mind is c with a doubt) — ,, 426
c with the grateful incense-fume Tiresias 183
all the Thrones are c by your loss, D. of the Duke of C. 6
Cloudier c on her knight — Linger'd Ettarre : Pelleas and E. 177
Cloudlet From little c's on the grass. In Mem., Con. 94
Cloud-pavilion'd The c-p element, the wood. Lover's Tale ii 108
Cloud-tower C-t's by ghostly masons wrought, In Mem. Ixx 5
Cloud-weaver C-w of phantasmal hopes and fears, To Victor Hugo 2
Cloudy made him look so c and so cold ; Geraint and E. 48
Clout an' the clats an' the c's, Spinster's S's. 87
Clove (s) nutmeg rocks and isles of c. The Voyage 40
Clove (verb) c The citron-shadows in the blue : Arabian Nights 14
the crowd dividing c An advent to the throne : Princess iv 283
Laid him that c it grovelling on the ground. Gareth and L. 972
with a stronger buffet he c the helm ,, 1406
said Mark, and c him thro' the brain. Last Tournament 754
C into perilous chasms our walls Def. of Lv/:know 55
And c the Moslem crescent moon, Happy 44
Cloven (See also Earthquake-cloven, Furrow-cloven)
Was c with the million stars Ode to Memory 35
That not a worm is c in vain ; In Mem. liv 9
Till Gareth's shield was c ; Gareth and L. 971
earth beneath me yawning c With such a sound Lover's Tale i 602
My heart was c with pain ; ,, it 200
Clover Rare broidry of the purple c. A Dirge 38
among the meadows, the c and the clematis. City Child 9
Clover-hill with white bells the c-h swells Sea-Fairies 14
Clown thou art mated with a c, Locksley Hall 47
knave nor c Shall hold their orgies You might have won 11
Shakespeare's curse on c and knave ,, 27
this is proper to the c, Tho' smock'd, or f urr'd and
purpled, still the c, Princess iv 246
turnspits for the c. The drunkard's football, ,, 516
Glorifying c and satyr ; i, « 187
By blood a king, at heart a c ; In Mem. cxi 4
Not all mismated with a yawning c, Geraint and E. 426
not worthy to be knight ; A churl, a c ! ' Balin and Balan 286
Like a c — by chance he met me — Locksley H., Sixty 256
An' ya call'd 'im a c, ya did. Church-warden, etc. 30
Club (See also Battle-club) talk'd At wine, in c's,
of art. Princess, Pro. 161
Clump (mend) I could fettle and e owd booots North. Cobbler 13
ClunjT You should have c to Fulvia's waist, D. ofF. Wom^n 259
llien they c about The old man's neck, Dora 163
friendly mist of mom C to the lake. Edwin Morris 108
When I c to all the present Locksley Hall 14
evil fancies c Like serpent eggs together, Enoch A rden 479
from the beetling crag to which he c Aylmer's Field 229
sootflake of so many a summer still C to their fancies) Sea Dreams 36
and the child C to the mother, ,, 245
then, a moment after, c About him. Princess ii 312
Clung (continued) about his motion c The shadow of his
sister, Princess v 257
Late the little children c : Ode on Well. 237
C to the shield that Lancelot lent him, Gareth and L. 1320
dawn ascending lets the day Strike where it c : Geraint and E. 693
but that other c to him, Fixt in her will, Merlin and V. 187
c about her lissome limbs, ,, 223
curved an arm about his neck, C like a snake ; , , 242
while the skin C but to crate and basket, ,, 625
c to him and hugg'd him close ; ,, 945
to his crown the golden dragon c, Lancelot and E 434
knightly in me twined and c Round that one sin. Holy Grail 774
fell thick rain, plume droopt and mantel c. Last Tournament 213
A voice c sobbing till he question'd it, ,, 759
C to the dead earth, and the land was still. Guinevere 8
for crest the golden dragon c Of Britain ; ,, 594
c In utter silence for so long, Sisters (E. and E. ) 216
from the ladders to which they had c, Def. of Lucknow 58
C closer to us for a longer term Columbus 197
and the dark-blue clematis, c, V. of Maeldune 39
I c to the sinking form. The Wreck 105
She c to me with such a hard embrace, The Ring 435
Cluster (s) (See also Swi-olaater) Below the starry
c's bright, L. of Shalott Hi 25
tropic shade and palms in c, Locksley Hall 160
red roofs about a narrow wharf In c ; Enoch Arden 4
lithe reluctant boughs to tear away Their tawny c's, „ 382
Came men and women in dark c's Sea Dreams 226
Cluster (verb) The foxglove c dappled bells.' Two Voices 72
Clustered sunny hair C about his temples (Enone 60
Clutch So I c it. Christ ! 'Tis gone : St. S. Stylites 207
And lives to c the golden keys, In Mem. Ixiv 10
Clutch'd (See also Clemm'd) c the sword. And strongly
wheel'd and threw it. M. d' Arthur 135
stoop'd and c him, fair and good, WiU Water. 133
So my mother c The truth at once, Princess Hi 60
He, standing still, was c; ,, iv 260
wakening, fiercely c the shield ; Gareth and L. 1304
C at the crag, and started thro' mid air Last Tournament 14
c the sword, And strongly wheel'd and threw it. Pass, of Arthur 303
Or c the sacred crown of Prester John, Columbus 110
Clutter'd It c here, it chuckled there ; The Goose 25
Coal On the c's I lay, A vessel full of sin : St. S. Stylites 169
left his c all turn'd into gold Maud / a; 11
c's of fire you heap upon my head Romney's R. 141
Coal-black flow'd His c-b curls as on he rode, L. of Shalott Hi 31
Co&mb (comb) raake out Hell wi' a small-tooth c — Village Wife 76
Coamb'd (combed) theer an' then I c 'im down. Church warden, etc. 32
Coarse sense of touch is something c, Talking Oak 163
growing c to sympathise with clay. Locksley Hall 46
daughter of our meadows, yet not c ; The Brook 69
thou, My lord, eat also, tho' tho fare is c, Geraint and E. 208
I can well believe, for he look'd so c In the Child. Hasp. 7
Coarseness According to the c of their kind. Princess iv 346
Coast show'd an iron c and angry waves. Palace of Art 69
All round the c the languid air Lotos-Eaters 5
all in shade, Gloom'd the low c The Voyage 42
leagues along that breaker-beaten c Enoch Arden 51
Then moving up the c they landed him, ,, 665
seaward-bound for health they gain'd a c, Sea Dreams 16
she told it, having dream'd Of that same c. ,, 207
He bad you guard the sacred c's. Ode on Well. 172
left the last free race with naked c's ! Third of Feb. 40
A moulder'd citadel on the c, TJie Daisy 28
A lucid veil from c to c. In Mem. Ixvii 14
rolling brine That breaks the c. ,, cvii\b
shipwreck'd man on a c Of ancient fable and fear — Maud II ii 31
Back from the Breton c, ,,43
province with a hundred miles of c, (repeat) Merlin and V. 588, 647
about a stone On the bare c. Guinevere 52
After the sunset, down the c, ,, 238
All down the lonely c of Lyonnesse, ,, 240
mountains ended in a c Of ever-shifting sand, Pass, of Arthur 85
while we roam'd along the dreary c, Lover's Tale iv 145
while I wander' d down the c, Locksley H., Sixty 53
Coast
105
College-council
Coast (continued) Phra-bat the step ; your Pontic c ; To Ulysses 42
Coasted See Silver-coasted
Coat (See also Coftt) three castles patch my tattor'd c ? Princess ii 416
rough dog, to whom he cast his c, Gareth and L. 1011
And such a c art thou, ,, 1013
Coat Them as 'as c's to their backs N. Farmer, N. S. 46
Coat-of-arms Is worth a hundred c's-o-a. L. C. V. de Vere 16
Coax'd kept and c and whistled to — Gareth and Z. 14
Co&x'd An' c an' coodled me oop North. Cobbler 80
Cobbled browt me the booots to be c ,, 94
Cobham Some cried on C, on the good Lord C ; Sir J. Oldcastle 43
Cobra Those c's ever setting up their hoods — Akbar's Dream 166
Cobweb The petty c's we have spun : In Mem. cxxiv 8
the c woven across the cannon's throat Mavd III vi 27
I well could wish a c for the gnat, Merlin/ind V. 370
Seems but a c filament to link Lover's Tale i 376
Cobweb'd See Many-cobweb'd
Cock .The c sung out an hour ere light : Mariana 27
the c hath sung beneath the thatch The Owl 1 10
At midnight the c was crowing, Oriana 12
Before the red c crows from the farm May Queen, N. Y's. E. 23
I heard just now the crowing c. D. of the O. Year 38
sitting, as I said, The c crew loud ; M. d' Arthur, Ep. 10
And barking dogs, and crowing c's ; Day-Dm., Revival 4
The c crows ere the Christmas morn. Sir Galahad 51
0 PLUMP head-waiter at The C, Will Water. 1
The C was of a larger egg ,, 121
Which was the red c shouting to the light, Geraint and E. 384
And the c couldn't crow, V. of Maeldune 18
The c has crow'd already once, The Flight 3
c's kep a-crawin' an' crawin' Owd Boa 106
Cockatrice basilisks, and splinter'd c's, Roly Grail 718
Cockchafer See Buzzard-Clock
Cock-eyed I loodk'd c-e at my noase North. Cobbler 26
Cockney (Look at it) pricking a c ear. Maud / a: 22
Coco slender c's drooping crown of plumes, Enoch Arden 574
Cocoon Spins, toiling out his own c. Two Voices 180
we as rich as moths from dusk c's. Princess ii 19
Coco-palm some dark dweller by the c-p Prog, of Spring 68
Code Christless c. That must have life Maud II i 26
Codlin fresh as a c wesh'd i' the dew. North. Cobbler 110
Coerce No sound is breathed so potent to c, Tiresias 120
Coffin (See also Corpse-coffin) in his c the Prince
of courtesy lay. G. of Swainston 10
thou wouldst have her flag Borne on thy c — Bed. Poem Prin. Alice 17
That within the c fell, Fell— To Marq. of Dufferin 43
brother come ? to find Me or my c? Romney's R. 144
Cognizance Some goodly c of Guinevere. Balin and Balan 195
memory of that c on shield Weighted it down, ,, 224
Stared at the priceless c, ,, 430
one that hath defamed The c she gave me : ,, 485
Cogoletto I stay'd the wheels at C, The Daisy 23
Coil Hard c's of cordage, swarthy fishing-nets, Enoch Arden 17
roots like some black c of carven snakes, Last Tournament 13
Coil'd convolvuluses That c around the stately stems, Enoch Arden 577
long loops Wherethro' the serpent river c, Gareth and L. 906
serpent c about his broken shaft, Demeter and P. 77
Coin Light c, the tinsel clink of compliment. Princess ii 55
Him that made them current c ; In Mem. xxxvi 4
and like to c's, Some true, some light, Holy Grail 25
With scarce a c to buy a meal withal, Columbus 169
All the chosen c of fancy flashing To Virgil 7
violates virgin Truth for a c or a cheque. The Dawn 15
Coinage Ringing like proven golden c true, Aylmer's Field 182
strown With gold and scatter'd c, Geraint and E. 26
Coin'd When he c into English gold some treasure The Wreck 67
man had c himself a curse : Locksley H., Sixty 87
Cold (adj.) (See also Snow-cold, Cowd) All c, and dead,
and corpse-like grown ? Supp. Confessions 17
And dew is c upon the ground, The Owl I 2
Quiet, dispassionate, and c, A Character 28
Ere the placid lips be c ? Adeline 20
Because my memory is so c. Two Voices 341
Is not more c to you than I. L. C. V. de Vere 24
surely now our household hearts are c : Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 72
Cold (Sidj.) (continued) Night is starry and c, my friend, D. of the 0. Year 34
c Are all thy lights, and c my wrinkled feet Tithonus 66
' Shy she was, and I thought her c ; Edward Gray 13
And saw the altar c and bare. The Letters 4
Full c my greeting was and dry ; ,, 13
round him ere he scarce be c. Begins the
scandal You might have won 15
LuciLiA, wedded to Lucretius, found Her master c ; iMcretius 2
The loyal warmth of Florian is not c. Princess ii 244
motionlessly pale, C ev'n to her, ,, vi 102
And call her bard and c which seem'd a truth : „ '"H ^^
you think 1 am hard and c ; Grandmother 17
We loved that hall, tho' white and c. The Daisy 37
When ill and weary, alone and c, ,,96
C in that atmosphere of Death, In Mem. xx 14
A spectral doubt which makes me c, ,, xli 19
So, dearest, now thy brows are c, ,, Ixxiv 5
Is c to all that might have been. ,, Ixxv 16
He looks so c : she thinks him kind. ,, xcvii 24:
And smile as sunny as c, Maud I vi 24
she was kind Only because she was c. ,, xiv 27
made him look so cloudy and so c ; Geraint and E. 48
' Poor men, when yule is c. Holy Grail 613
glanced at him, thought him c. High, self-contain'd, Guinevere 405
till all his heart was c With formless fear ; Pass, of Arthur 97
subject of thy power, be c in her, Lover' i Tale i 782
in the hold were most of them stark and c. The Revenge 79
C were his brows when we kiss'd him — Def. of Lucknow 12
of the mind Mine ; worse, c, calculated. Romney's R. 152
Cold (s) (See also Cowd) I fear My wound hath
taken c, M. d' Arthur 166
and in thirsts, fevers and c, St. S. Stylites 12
Would chatter with the c, ,,31
In height and c, the splendour of the hills ? Princess vii 194
Like coarsest clothes against the c : In Mem. v. 10
How dwarf 'd a growth of c and night, ,, lxi7
fire of Heav'n has kill'd the barren c, Balin and Balan 440
smitten in mid heaven with mortal c Past from
her ; Last Tournament 27
hour of c Falls on the mountain in midsummer
snows, ,, 227
I fear My wound hath taken c, Pass, of Arthur 334
the c Without, and warmth within me, To E. Fitzgerald 28
would dare Hell-heat or Arctic c. Ancient Sage 116
thaws the c, and fills the flower Early Spring 45
a breath that past With all the c of winter The Ring 33
Cold-blooded That dull c-b Cajsar. D. of F. Women 139
Coldness The faithless c of the times ; In Mem. cvi 18
By the c of her manners, Mavd I xx 13
Cold-white white against the c-w sky. Dying Swan 12
Colewort Picks from the c a green caterpillar, Guinevere 32
Collar A grazing iron c grinds my neck ; St. S. Stylites 117
She cried, ' The c of some Order, which Last Tournament 741
Collar-bone cloak that dropt from c-b to heel, Gareth and L. 682
CoUatine made her blood in sight of C Lucretius 238
CoUeaguing C with a score of petty kings. Com. of Arthur 67
College ' we knew your gift that way At c : The Epic 25
For I remember'd Everard's c fame , , 46
I was at school — a c in the South : Walk, to the Mail 83
By night we dragg'd her to the c tower ,, 89
My c friendships glimmer. WiU Water. 40
I was there From c, visiting the son, — Princess, Pro. 7
but we, unworthier, told Of c : ,,111
build Far off from men a c like a man's, „ 135
swore he long'd at c, only long'd, ,, 158
A talk of c and of ladies' rights, ,, 233
when the c lights Began to glitter „ i 207
At break of day the C Portress came : „ ii 15
A rosy blonde, and in a c gown, „ 323
Her c and her maidens, empty masks, ,, im 187
King, camp and c turn'd to hollow shows ; ,> « 478
So their fair c turn'd to hospital ; ,, vii 17
' Look there, garden ! ' said my c friend, ,, Con. 49
And heard once more in c fanes In Mem. Ixxxvii 5
College-council Should eighty-thousand c-c's To F. D. Maurice 7
College-time
106
Come
College-time save for c-t's Or Temple-eaten terms, Alymer's Field 104
Colon (Columbus) See Christopher Colon
Colony near the c Camulodiine, Boiidicea 5
Lo their c half-defended ! lo their c, ,, 17
Then a phantom c smoulder'd on the refluent estuary ; ,'.28
Lo the c, there they rioted in the city of Cunobeline ! „ 60
silent c hearing her tumultuous adversaries ,, 78
Fell the c, city and citadel, ,, 86
Colossal Let his great example stand C, Ode on Well. 221
Colosseum Gain'd their huge C. St. Telemachus 45
Colour {See also Flame-colour) sweet is the c of cove
and cave, Sea-Fairies 30
I lose my c, I lose my breath, Eleanore 137
A magic web with c's gay. L. of Shalott ii 2
A word could bring the c to my cheek ; Gardener's D. 196
came a c and a light, Locksley Hall 25
The c flies into his cheeks : Day-Dm., Arrival 19
Then the Captain's c heighten'd, The Captain 29
the c flushes Her sweet face from brow to chin : L. of Burleigh 61
She wore the c's I approved. The Letters 16
a rough piece Of early rigid c, Aylmer's Field 281
yet her cheek Kept c : wondrous! ,, 506
sense of wrong had touched her face With c) Princess, Pro. 220
April daffodilly (Her mother's c) ,, m 325
In c's gayer than the morning mist, ,, 438
shook the woods. And danced the c, ,, Hi 293
' Sir Ralph has got your c's : ,, iv ^9i
With Psyche's c round his helmet, ,, z; 534
But such as gather'd c day by day. , , vii 118
But distant c, happy hamlet, The Daisy 27
And with the thought her c burns ; In Mem. vi 34
Be all the c of the flower : ' ,, xliii 8
The c's of the crescent prime ? ,, cxvi 4t
Saying in odour and c, 'Ah, be Among the roses Maud I xxi 12
0 rainbow with three c's after rain, Gareth and L. 1160
my child, how fresh the c's look. How fast they
hold like c^s of a shell Marr. of Geraint 680
and play'd upon it. And made it of two c's ; Geraint and E. 292
And so there lived some c in your cheek, ,, 621
In c like the satin-shining palm Merlin and V. 224
With c's of the heart that are not theirs. ,, 822
Took gayer c's, like an opal warm'd. ,, 950
And lichen'd into c with the crags : Lancelot and E. 44
The low sun makes the c : ,, 134
The shape and c of a mind and life, ,, 335
let me bring your c back ; ,, 387
secret blazed itself In the heart's c's ,, 837
But did not love the c ; ,, 840
cell were dyed With rosy c's leaping on the wall ; Holy Grail 120
In c like the fingers of a hand Before a burning taper, ,, 693
Damsels in divers c's like the cloud Pelleas and E. 53
That ware their ladies' c's on the casque, Last Tournament 184
With all the kindlier c's of the field.' ,, 224
And glowing in all c's, the live grass, ,, 233
1 yeam'd for warmth and c which I found In
Lancelot — Guinevere 647
The c and the sweetness from the rose. Lover's Tale i 172
Her cheek did catch the c of her words. ,, 569
shadowing pencil's naked forms C and life : ,, it 181
And blurr'd in c and form. Dead Prophet 22
concentrate into form And c all you are, liomney's R. 8
Colour'd See Emerald-colour'd, Leaden-coloured,
Vary-coloured
Colourless for all his face was white And c, M. d' Arthur 213
for all his face was white And c. Pass, of Arthur 381
Colt 'Then ran she, gamesome as the c. Talking Oak 121
babes were running wild Like c's about the waste. Enoch Arden 305
He pointed out a pasturing c, The Brook 136
Squire had seen the c at grass, ,, 139
the c would fetch its price ; ,, 149
she's yet a c — Take, break her : Princess v 455
Ran like a c, and leapt at all he saw : Com. of Arthur 322
never c would more delight To roll Romney's R. 13
Colt-like c-l whinny and with hoggish whine St. S. Stylites 177
Columbus How young C seom'd to rove, The Daisy 17
Column Six c's, three on either side.
So like a shatter'd c lay the King ;
people hum About the c's base,
The watcher on the c till the end ;
And in we stream'd Among the c's.
To left and right, of those tall c's
bared the knotted c of his throat,
massive c's, like a shorecliff cave.
So like a shatter'd c lay the King ;
masses Of thundershaken c's indistinct,
From c on to c, as in a wood,
names. Graven on memorial c's,
Co-mate one of my c-m's Own'd a rough dog,
true c-m's regather round the mast ;
Arabian Nights 144
M. d' Arthur 221
St. S. Stylites 39
„ 163
Princess ii 435
„ vi 354
Marr. of Geraint 74
Lancelot and E. 406
Pass, of Arthur 389
Lover's Tale ii 66
it; 189
Tiresias 124
Gareth and L. 1010
Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 5
Comb (s) See Coamb, Comb of Pearl, Hornet-comb
Comb (valley) they past a narrow c wherein Gareth and L. 1193
Comb (verb) With a comb of pearl I would c my hair ; The Mermaid 11
I would c my hair till my ringlets ,, • 14
Combat (s) And when the tide of c stands, Sir Galahad 10
To prick us on to c ' Like to like ! Princess v 304
Not dare to watch the c, Geraint and E. 154
In c with the follower of Limours, ,, 501
Combat (verb) sware to c for my claim till death. Princess v 360
a knight To c for my sister, Lyonors, Gareth and L. 608
He needs must c might with might. Epilogue 28
Comb'd (See also Cod,mb'd) as I c I would sing and
say. The Mermaid 12
I curl'd and c his comely head, The Sisters 31
Combing C her hair Under the sea. The Mermaid 4
c out her long black hair damp from the river ; Princess iv 276
Comb of Pearl With a cop, On a throne ? The Mermaid 7
With a c 0 p I would comb my hair ; ,,11
Made with her right & c op Merlin and V. 244
Come (See also Coom, To-come) Spring will c
never more. All Things voill die 15
Ye will c never more, , , 48
He will not c,' she said ; Mariana 82
When cats run home and light is c. The Owl i 1
C not as thou earnest of late, Ode to Memory 8
C forth, I charge thee, arise, ,, 46
C from the woods that belt the gray hill-side, ,, . ^^
Dark-brow'd sophist, c not anear ; Poet's Mind 8
Hollow smile and frozen sneer C not here. ,,_ _ 11
0 hither, c hither and furl your sails, Sea-Fairies 16
C hither to me and to me ; Hither, c hither and frolic
and play ; ,,17
Hither, c hither and see ; >» 28
0 hither, c hither, and be our lords, ,, 32
C away : no more of mirth Is here Deserted House 13
C away : for Life and Thought Here no longer
dwell ; ,,17
How could I rise and c away, Oriana 57
1 dare not die and c to thee, ,,96
LuU'd echoes of laborious day C to you, Margaret 30
C down, c down, and hear me speak : ,,56
C down, c home. My Rosalind, Rosalind 33
C's out thy deep ambrosial smile. Eleanore 74
Thought seems to c and go In thy large eyes, ,, 96
C only, when the days are still. My life is full 23
Fresh- water springs c up through bitter brine. // / were loved 8
The knights c riding two and two ; L. of Shalott ii 25
' The curse is c upon me, ' >, Hi ii
night c's on that knows not morn, Mariana in the S. 94
I saw the dragon-fly C from the wells Two Voices 9
' Then c's the check, the change, the fall, >> 163
In days that never c again. >> 324
Herh c's to-day, Pallas and Aphroditfe, (Enone 85
Should e most welcome, seeing men, „ 129
(power of herself Would c uncall'd for) ,, 147
sounds at night c from the inmost hills, „ 249
her child ! — a shudder c's Across me : ,, 253
Lest their shrill happy laughter c to me ,, 258
the stars' c forth Talk with the wild Cassandra, ,, 262
I made a feast ; I bad him c ; The Sisters 13
There c's no murmur of reply. Palace of Art 286
Come
107
Come
Come {continued) shepherd lads on every side 'ill c from
far away,
The night-winds c and go, mother,
I only wish to live till the snowdrops c
again:
and the sun c out on high :
And the swallow, 'ill c back again
When the flowers c again, mother,
And you'll c sometimes and see me
If I can I'll c again, mother,
Don't let Eflie c to see me
sweet is the new violet, that c's beneath the
skies,
if it c three times, I thought,
to wait a little while till you and Effie c —
we should c like ghosts to trouble joy.
' C here. That I may look on thee."
C's up to take his own.
And gently c's the world to those
Nothing c's to thee new or strange.
So let the change which c's be free
The Spirit of the years to c
keep a thing, its use will c.
Merlin sware that I should c again
land, where no one c's, Or hath c,
' Arthur is c again : he cannot die. '
' C again, and thrice as fair ;
' C With all good things, and war shall be no more
News from the humming city c's to it In sound
of funeral
Nor heard us c, nor from her tendance
Call'd to me from the years to c,
the time Is c to raise the veil.
for this orphan, I am c to you :
His mother, he cried out to c to her :
but now I c For Dora : take her back ;
I go to-night : I c to-morrow morn.
And when does this c by ?
and here it c's With five at top :
For that the evil ones c here.
That here e those that worship me ?
I do not say But that a time may c —
C, blessed brother, c.
Aiid down the way you use to c,
Spun round in station, but the end had c.
O might it c like one that looks content,
slow and sure c's up the golden year.
The fatal byword of all years to c,
C, my friends, 'Tis not too late to seek
Man c's and tills the field and lies
there c's A glimpse of that dark world
crimson c's upon the robin's breast ;
tho' my mortal summers to such length of years
should c
Slowly c's a hungry people,
Knowledge c's, but wisdom lingers, (repeat)
Never c's the trader, never floats
C's a vapour from the margin,
Faint murmurs from the meadows c,
C, Care and Pleasure, Hope and Pain,
He c's, scarce knowing what he seeks :
The flashes c and go ;
' Love may c, and love may go,
Till Ellen Adair c back to me.
she c's and dips Her laurel in the wine,
earth of light and shade C's out a perfect round.
To c and go, and c again,
' That all c's round so just and fair :
Why c you drest like a village maid,
' If I c drest like a village maid. ,, oy
When beneath his roof they c. L. of Burleigh 40
C not, when I am dead. Come not, when, etc. 1
There c's a sound of marriage bells. The Letters 48
Here is custom c your way ; Vision of Sin 64
Therefore c's it we are wise. ,, 100
May Queen 27
33
May Queen, N. ¥'s. JS. 14
15
■' i?
;:
Con. 5
38
58
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 74
D.ofF. WomenV2^
D.oftheO. YearM
To J. 8. 3
■ > 74
Love thou thy land 45
55
^The Epic 42
M. d' Arthur 23
„ 202
„ Ep. 24
26
Gardener's D. 35
144
„ 180
274
Dora 64
„ 138
„ 142
Audley Court 70
Walk, to the Mail 7
112
St. 8. Stylites 98
125
190
204
Talking Oak 115
Love arid Dviy 76
93
Golden Year 31
Godiixi 67
Ulysses 56
Tithonus 3
„ 32
Locksley Hall 17
67
135
„ 141, 143
„ 161
191
Day- Dm., Sleep P. 6
55
,, Arrival 17
St. Agnes' Eve 26
Edward Gray 29
32
WiU Water. 17
„ 68
„ 229
Lady Clare 18
67
Come [continued] day that is dead Will never c back
to me. Break, break, etc. 16
' Save them from this, whatever c's to me.' Enoch Arden 118
(Sure that all evil would c out of it) ,, 162
make him merry, when I c home again. ,, 199
C, Annie, c, cheer up before I go.' ,, 200
Look to the babes, and till I c again ,, 219
if he c again, vext will he be To find ,, 301
when Enoch c's again Why then he shall repay me — ,, 309
' C with us Father Philip ' ,,368
If Enoch c's — but Enoch will not c — ,, 431
C out and see.' But she — she put him off — ,, 460
when the dead man c to life beheld His wife ,, 758
let them c, I am their father ; but she must not c,
For my dead face would vex her after-life. ,, 889
' Whence c you ? ' and the brook, why not ? replies,
I c from haunts of coot and hern,
men may c and men may go, (repeat)
The Brook 22
The Brook 33, 49, 65, 184
Yes, men may c and go ; and these are gone, The Brook 186
days That most she loves to talk of, c with me. ,, 226
you will be welcome — 0, c in ! ' ,, 228
Cries ' C up hither,' as a prophet to us ? Aylmer's Field 745
link'd their race with times to c — , , 779
Then c'a the close,' Sea Dreams 29
Too ripe, too late ! they c too late for use. ,, 67
then c's what c's Hereafter : ■ ,, 177
' His deeds yet live, the worst is yet to c. ,, 314
recollect the dreams that c Just ere the waking : Lucretius 35
' C out,' he said, ' To the Abbey : Princess, Pro. 50
' C, listen ! here is proof that you were miss'd : ,, 177
No matter : we will say whatever c's. , , 239
Should c to fight with shadows and to fall. ,, i 10
what, if these weird seizures c Upon you ,, 82
ye c. The first-fruits of the stranger : ,, ii 43
For Solomon may c to Sheba yet.' ,, 349
C from the dying moon, and blow, ,, Hi 6
Father will c to thee soon ; (repeat) ,, 10, 12
Father will c to his babe in the nest, ,, 13
Then c's the feebler heiress of your plan, ,, 237
Nor willing men should c among us, ,, 318
Would rather we had never c ! ,, iv 243
there are those to avenge us and they c: ■ „ 501
Thy face across his fancy c's, „ 579
in the night Had c on Psyche weeping : ,, » 50
c's With the air of the trumpet round him, ,, 161
You did but c as goblins in the night, ,, 220
(our royal word upon it, He c's back safe) ,, 225
As c's a pillar of electric cloud, ,, ' 524
' C hither, O Psyche," she cried out, ' embrace me,
c. Quick while I melt ; ,, fi 284
C to the hollow heart they slander so ! > > 288
C down, 0 maid, from yonder mountain ,, vii 192
And c, for Love is of the valley, c. For Love is of the
valley, c thou down And find him ; ,, 198
but c ; for all the vales Await thee ; „ 215
When c's another such ? never, I think, ,, 244
Then c's the statelier Eden back to men : ,, 293
trust in all things high C's easy to him, ,, 330
the new day c's, the light Dearer for night, ,, 346
I love thee : c, Yield thyself up : ,, '363
But yonder, whiff ! there c's a sudden heat, ,, Cow. 58
To thee the greatest soldier c's ; Ode on Well. 88
C to us, love us and make us your own : W. to Alexandra 30
Jenny, my cousin, had c to the place. Grandmother 25
she c's and goes at her will, ,, 79
Often they c to the door in a pleasant kind of a dream.
They c and sit by my chair, ,, 82
neighbours c and laugh and gossip, ,, 91
summun 'uU c ater mea mayhap N. Farmer, 0. 8. 61
C, when no graver cares employ, Godfather, c and
see your boy : To F. D. Maurice 1
(Take it and c) to the Isle of Wight ; ' ,, ' 12
C, Maurice, c : the lawn as yet Is hoar with rime, ,, 41
Nor pay but one, ,but c for many, , , 47
I c to the test, a tiny poem Hendecasyllabics 3
Come
^""mv W^"lf Ih^''"'^ ^'^^* "'' °''*' ^""^ J^"'"^ P«^^ -^P^- «/ Iii<^d 13
Talp mv Invi f V^^*""^ T,""" '7^ "' ^°^ &°'^«' irindcm;. On the HiU 14
lake my love, for love will c, Love will c but
once a life.
Sun c's, moon c's. Time slips away.
Flash, I am coming, I c,
And yet we trust it c's from thee,
From out waste places c's a cry,
Or ' here to-morrow will he c'
A happy lover who has c
saying ; ' Cs he thus, my friend ?
C Time, and teach me, many years
C stepping lightly down the plank '
c The man I held as half-divine ;
C quick, thou bringest all I love.
C then, pure hands, and bear the head
And c, whatever loves to weep,
The praise that c's to constancy.'
To thee too c's the golden hour
And hopes and light regrets that c
The wonders that have c to thee.
Peace ; c away : the song of woe
Peace ; c away : we do him wrong
let us go. C ; let us go : your cheeks are pale ;
With so much hope for years to c.
The foolish neighbours c and go.
There c's a glory on the walls :
likeness, hardly seen before, C's 9ut—
There cannot c a mellower change,
Ah dear, but c thou back to me : '
But he, the Spirit himself, may c
The violet c's, but we are gone.
With thousand shocks that c and go,
I c once more ; the city sleeps ;
Behind thee c's the greater light :
With faith that c's of self-control,
And back we c at fall of dew.
can a sweeter chance ever c to me here ?
Cold and clear-cut face, why c you so cruelly meek
C shdmg out of her sacred glove.
Then let c what c may, (repeat)
One is c to woo her.
That old man never c's to his place :
shook my heart to think she c's once more ;
her brother c's, like a blight On my fresh hope,
And then, oh then, c out to me For a minute
C out to your own true lover, '
C into the garden, Maud, (repeat)
C hither, the dances are done.
But c to her waking, find her asleep,
Gtet thee hence, nor c again
The day c's, a dull red ball '
Has c to pass as foretold ;
cs from another stiller world of the dead,
he c's to the second corpse in the pit ?
some kind heart will c To bury me,
I c to be grateful at last for a little thing :
Ye c from Arthur's court,
will not die, But pass, again to c ;
c to see The glories of our King :
King be King at all, or c From Fairyland,
Lest he should c to shame thy judging of him.'
the seneschal, would c Blustering upon them.
Now therefore have I c for Lancelot.'
And therefore am I c for Lancelot.'
And look who c's behind,'
C, therefore, leave thy lady lightly
Look, Who c's behind ? '
and wherefore now C ye, not call'd ?
I but c like you to see the hunt,
To find, at some place I shall c at,
C's flying over many a windy wave To Britain,
Constrain'd us, but a better time has c ;
By the flat meadow, till she saw them c ;
Look, Here c's a laggard hanging down bis head,
108
Come
I No Answer 20
When 1
Marr. Morn. 13
In Mem., Pro. 23
Hi 7
»i24
via 1
xii 13
xiii 13
xiv 7
9
acvii 8
xviii 9
11
xxi 12
xxxix 6
xl 7
xli22
Ivii 1
3
5
lix 14
fel3
Ixvii 4
Ixxiv 4
arc 21
xciii 6
ev 8
cxiii 17
cxix 3
cxxi 12
Con. 100
Maud / 1 62
in 1
t)i85
xi 5, 12
xii 28
xiii 24
xviii 10
xix 102
a;a;44
46
xxii 1, 3
54
//it 81
iv 56
>)
66
t;44
70
102
„ III viz
Com. of Arthur 249
„ 422
Gareth and L. 243
246
513
623
„ 644
752
957
1211
1248
Marr. of Geraint 179
219
337
716
„ 832
Geraint and E. 60
Come i^^^nn^) C. we will slay him and will have
said the second, 'yonder c's a knight '
And if he want me, let him c to me '
You c with no attendance, page or miid
c with morn, And snatch me^om him a.s hv vJni-.
C slipping o'er their shadows on "he Tani ^ ''"^'''"" '
And now their hour has c ; '
I c the mouthpiece of our King to Doorm
If he will not go To Arthur, then wiU Trth.i r . f
sometime you would c To these my hsts *° ^°"'
now behold me c To cleanse this common sewer
overthrowing ever knight who c's.
S vpfS *°,^ '"y/'llainy, c to shame.'
Art yet ha f-yolk, not even c to down—
and now The night has c.
'C from the storm,' and having no reply
to have my shield In keeping till Ic'
who will c to all I am And overcome" it ;
Is It Lancelot who hath c Despite the Wound
This will he send or c for : ""« wouna
when the ghostly man had c and gone.
Or c to take the King to Fairyland «
C, for you left me taking no farewell
phantom of a cup that c's and goes ? '
thought That now the Holy Grail would c again • But
mi'^ht ft", t'"''*' ^^^' ^'^"^*' "-^^^ it wouldT '
might It c To me by prayer and fasting ? '
we know not whence they c ;
chance of noble deeds will c'and go
madness has c on us for our sins '
And hither am I c ;
fail'd from my side, nor c Cover'd
and in the strength of this C victor
and c thou too. For thou shalt see the vision
and the vision had not c ;
C, as they will ; and many a time they c.
But lately c to his mherita.nce,
t°\2^}:?^ *^® ^'^^*^ islands had he c,
bo that he could not c to speech with her
If he cs again '—there she brake short •
C ye know nothing : here I pledge my troth.
Then, when I c within her counsels
they c no more Till the sweet heavens have fill'd it
and say his hour is c,
C— let us gladden their sad eyes,
Tnstram, waiting for the quip to c,
C, thou art crabb'd and sour :
as the water Moab saw C round by the East
C, I am hunger'd and half-anger'd— '
And out beyond into the dream to c '
Traitor, c out, ye are trapt at last '
then she, 'The end is c, And I am shamed
i< or if there ever c a grief to me
knowest thou now from whence I c—
think not that I c to urge thy crimes
I did not c to curse thee, Guinevere '
But hither shall I never c again, '
Merlin sware that I should c again To rule
waste land, where no one c's. Or hath c
He c s again ; but— if he c no more— '
I c, great Mistress of the ear and eve •
0 Love, 0 Hope ! They c, '
Death gave back, and would no further c
thronging fancies c To boys and girls
seas upon my head To c my way !
should he not c my way if he would 1
why shovU he c my way Robed in those robes
C like an angel to a damned soul,
C like a careless and a greedy heir
C's in upon him in the dead of night
thought His dreams had c again. '
Send I bid him c ; ' but Lionel was away—
To c and revel for one hour with him
' you are sure it '11 all c right,'
Geraint and E. 62
„ 126
237
322
356
471
697
796
815
839
894
Balin and Balan 13
492
569
„ 621
Merlin and V. 895
Lancelot and E. 383
448
565
635
1101
» 1257
1274
Holy Grail ii
92
„ 95
„ 147
„ 318
„ 357
„ 468
,, 470
„ 481
» 483
„ 572
„ 911
Pelleas and E. 18
86
205
295
341
348
» 509
Last Tournament 86
„ 222
„ 260
272
483
719
721
Guinevere 106
110
„ 200
„ 433
„ 532
533
Pass, of Arthur 191
370
^ » 451
Lover's Tale i 22
47
115
554
661
667
670
673
675
a 154
tt»78
101
182
Quarrel 1
I
First
Come
109
Coming
Ciome (continued) I'll c for an hour to-morrow, First Quarrd 46
C, c, little wife, let it rest ! „ 62
I am sure it '11 all c right.' (repeat) „ 74, 91
• 0 mother, c out to me ! ' Bizpah 2
what are you ? do you c as a spy ? ,.11
C ! Here's to your happy union with my child ! Sisters {E. and E.) 67
Pray c and see my mother. ,, 191
'Pray e and see my mother, and farewell.' „ 196
know they c, They smile upon me, ,, 278
when I saw him c in at the door. In the Child. Hosp. 2
Had ? has it c ? It has only dawn'd. It will c by
and by. „ 23
' Little children should e to me.' ,, 50
women and children c out, Def. of Luchnow 100
He might be kindlier : happily c the day ! Sir J. OMcasde 23
might have c to learn Our Wiclif's learning : ,, 64
who will e, Grod willing, to outlearn the filthy friar. „ 117
He that thirsteth, c and drink ! ,, 134
Who c's ? A thousand marks are set upon my head. ,, 194
he unchain'd for all the world to c' Columhus 215
' C to us, 0 c, c ' V. of Maddune 98
that also has c from Thee ; Be Prof. Human C. 7
from within The city c's a murmur void of joy, Tiresias 101
C from the brute, poor souls — Despair 36
When the bat c's out of his cave, ,, 89
' And idle gleams will c and go. Ancient Sage 240
C, speak a little comfort ! The Flight 17
he c's, and finds me dead. ,, 72
my own true sister, c forth ! the world is wide. ,, 96
That matters not : let c what will ; „ 103
an' tpuld her to c away from the man. Tomorrow 20
whin Dan didn't c to the fore, ,, 43
av the bird 'ud c to me call, ,, 45
for a blessin' 'ud c wid the green ! ' , , 64
to-morrow — you, you c so late, Locksley H., Sixty 214
one has c to claim his bride, ,, 263
I that loathed, have c to love him. „ 280
On you will c the curse of all the land, The Fleet 3
C's at last to the bounteous On Jub. Q. Victoria 10
far-ofif friendship that he c's no more, Demeter and P. 90
She c's to dress me in my bridal veil. The Ring 98
My ring too when she c's of age, ,, 289
Let her c ! And we will feed her with our mountain air, ,, 318
There will c a witness soon Forlorn 25
Dreadful ! has it c to this, ,, 43
C back, nor let me know it ! Happy 5
wall of solid flesh that c's between your soul ,, 35
May lea little nearer, ,, 55
' I c with your spring-flowers.' To Mary Boyle 17
C, Spring, for now from all the dripping eaves Prog, of Spring 5
She c's ! The loosen'd rivulets run ; , , 9
C, Spring ! She c's on waste and wood, ,, 22
C, Spring ! She c's, and Earth is glad ,, 48
Will my Indian brother c ? Romney's R. 143
If my body c from brutes, (repeat) By an Evolution. 5. 13
ghostly murmur floated, ' C to me, CEnone ! Death of CEnone 79
But c. My noble friend, Akbar's Dream 17
Or makes a friend where'er he c. The Wanderer 6
But seldom c's the poet here. Poets and Critics 15
c's a gleam of what is higher. Faith 6
Come-agains By-gones ma' be c-a ; First Quarrel 69
Comelier comely, yea, and c than myself. Gareth and L. 610
taller indeed. Rosier and c, thou — Last Tournament 710
Comeliness a broad-blown c, red and white, Maud I xiii 9
Ck>mely ' C, too, by all that's fair,' Princess ii 114
say she's c ; there's the fairer chance : , > ^ 460
c, yea, and comelier than myself. Gareth and L. 610
Yet, since the face is c — Geraint and E. 551
Comer (See also Chance-comer, New-comer) But
spring, a new c, A spring rich Nothing will die 21
Comest Thou c morning or even ; Leonine Eleg. 15
Tliou c not with shows of flaunting vines Ode to Memory 48
Thou c atween me and the skies, Oriana 75
Thou c, much wept for : In Mem. xvii 1
' Whence c thou, my guest, Lancelot and E. 181
Comest (continued) thou c, darling boy ; (repeat) De Prof. Two G. 10, 34
Cometh At midnight the moon c, Claribd 13
she c not morning or even. Leonine Eleg. 15
He c not,' she said ; (repeat) Mariana 22, 34, 46, 58
I know He c quickly : Fatimn 23
he that c, like an honour'd guest. Ode on Wdl. 80
and there c a victory now. Boddicea 46
Comfort (b) (See also Coomfut) The c, I have found in
thee : Miller's D. 234
dreadful eternity. No c anywhere ; Palace of Art 268
Comfort thyself : what c is in me ? M. d' Arthur 243
Then follow'd counsel, c, Love and Duty 69
Where is c ? in division of the records of the mind ? Locksley Hall 69
C ( c scorned of devils ! ,,75
* I may see her now. May be some little c ; * Enoch Arden 276
Why, that would be her c ; ' „ 809
but a voice Of c and an open hand of help, Aylmer's Fidd 174
they talk'd. Poor children, for their c : ,, 427
what c ? none for me ! ' Princess w 78
Take c : live, dear lady, ,, 80
I think Our chiefest c is the little child ,, 430
Sole c of my dark hour, ,, »i 194
That out of words a c win ; In Mem. xx 10
Of c clasp'd in truth reveal 'd ; ,, xxxvii'iZ
And find his c in thy face ; ,, cia; 20
take again That c from their converse Geraint and E. 950
saying in low tones, ' Have c,' Lancelot and E. 995
If here be c, and if ours be sin. Last Tournament 575
Comfort thyself : what c is in me ? Pass, of Arthur 411
Come, speak a little c ! The Flight 17
And yet no c came to me, ,, 18
'Take c you have won the Painter's fame,' Romney's R. 43
groans to see it, finds no c there. ,, 45
Comfort (verb) (See also Coomfut) They c him by
night and day ; Stipp. Confessions 45
But, Efiie, you must c her May Queen, Con. 44
' It c's me in this one thought to dwell, D. of F. Women 233
C thyself : what comfort is in me ? M. d' Arthur 243
Take, give her this, for it may c her : Enoch Arden 899
said the kindly wife to c him. Sea Dreams 140
Reach out dead hands to c me. In Mem. Ixxx 16
C her, c her, all things good, Maud II ii 75
And c her tho' I die. , , 83
The love of all Thy people c Thee, Ded. of Idylls 54
' C thyself,' said Arthur, ' I nor mine Rest : Gareth and L. 601
Because I saw you sad, to c you. Merlin and V. 441
C your sorrows ; for they do not flow Guinevere 188
C thyself : what comfort is in me ? Pass, of Arthur 411
C yourself, for tho heart of the father The Wreck 98
Comfortable Nor wholly c, I sit, WiU Water. 158
Comforted ' Annie, my girl, cheer up, be c, Enoch Arden 218
look up : be c : Sweet is it to have done the thing Princess v 66
' Be c : have I not lost her too, ,, 69
' Be c,' Said Cyril, ' you shall have it : ' ■ ,, 105
and c my heart, And dried my tears, Com. of Arthur 349
let me go : be c : Pelleas and E. 355
He answer'd, ' 0 my soul, be c ! Last Tournament 573
after these had c the blood With meats ,, 724
Queen Smiles on me, saying, ' Be thou c ! ColwmbTis 188
Let the weary be c, On Jub. Q. Victoria 34
Yet be c ; For if this earth be ruled D. of the Duke of C. 7
Comforting An image c the mind, In Mem. Ixxxv 51
Comic Too e for the solemn things they are. Princess, Con. 67
Comin' remimbers wan night c down be the
sthrame. Tomorrow 7
Coming (See also Comin', Coomin') C in the scented
breeze, Elednore 24
heart Went forth to embrace him c ere he came. CEnone 63
C thro' Heaven, like a light that grows ,, 108
the New-year's c up, mother, May Queen, N. ¥'s. E, 7
A noise of some one c thro' the lawn, D. of F. Women 178
Each month, a birth-day c on, WiU Water. 93
Philip c somewhat closer spoke. Enoch Arden 398
' Ay, ay, I mind him c down the street ; . ,, 847
His wreck, his lonely life, his c back. „ 862
Coming
CoXQhig (continued) If James were c. 'C every day.' > The Brook 106
ff?!.°^f''/,WM^'rf°"^' ■ • Aylmer's Field 23i
and c fitfully Like broken music, ajq
A crippled lad, and c turn'd to fly, , " kJq
like swallows c out of time Will wonder Pri^u^ess ii 431
Or at thy c, Princess, everywhere, W. to Marie Alex. 42
she to be c and slandering me, Grandmother 27
Flash, I am c, I come. Window. Marr. Mom. 13
they are c back from abroad ; Mand I i 65
i see my Oread c down, • g
Her brother is c back to-night " ^^^ j
She is c, my dove, my dear ; She is c, my life, my fate ; ',' xxii 6]
tone IS c, my own, my sweet ; gj
But c back he learns it, Geraint aUd E. 498
And c up close to her, said at last : gyn
c up quite close, and in his mood " 724
So c to the fountain-side beheld Balin arU Balan 23
A STORM was c, but the wipds were still, Merlin andV 1
C and going, and he lay as dead 213
Such trumpet-blowings in it, c down " 423
C and going, and she lay as dead, "644
C upon me— 0 never harp nor horn. Holy Grail 113
and c out of gloom Was dazzled by the sudden
K l'^^*' Ar^rr, ■ FeUeas and E. lQ4t
but a sound Of Gawam ever c, and this lay — 396
feet Thro' the long gallery from the outer doors "
Range, Guinevere '^.i
lo guard thee m the wild hour con, 446
for wasn't he c that day ? pi^.^ q'^^^^^ 47
it IS c— shaking the walls— Rizpah 85
c nearer and nearer again than before- Def. of Lucknow 28
c down on the still-shatter'd walls 92
hands, when I heard him c would drop The Wreck 27
' I am c to thee in thine Ocean-grave.' 132
'0 child, I am c to thee.' " J34
light of a Sun that was c would scatter Despair 23
But a sun c up in his youth ! Dead Frophet 42
Silver crescent-curve, C soon, xhe Ring 14
c home— And on your Mother's birthday— 247
c nearer— Muriel had the ring— " 259
she sees Her maiden c like a Queen, " 430
he was c down the fell- jfappy 82
?«^„^L''° '^ *'°'^' • T^ Snowdrop 5
SUMMKB IS c, summer IS c. The Throstle 1
bummer is c, is c, my dear, Ig
'^, " "f?'','.,^"™^^ ^^® downward thunder Dea^A 0/ (Enone 22
i< lush d like the c of the day ; Miller's D 132
Narrow'd her goings out and c's in ; A ylmefs Field 501
Half-bhnded at the c of a light. Com. of Arthur 266
himself Had told her, and their c to the court.
(repeat) jl/a„. 0/ Geraint 144, 846
bne look d on ere the c of Geraint. , 6I4
'I will abide the c of my lord, dlraint and E. 131
And she abode his c, and said to him I39
Would listen for her c and regret Her parting "
^f ' * ^r- r> . / . Zan<;cZo< and E. 866
ere the c of the Queen, (repeat) ' Guinevere 223, 233
Before the c of the sinful Queen.' 270
(My friend is long in c.) Sir J."oidcasUeU8
you have dared Somewhat perhaps in c ? Columbus 242
kiss so sad, no, not since the c of man ! Despair 60
Command (s) He, that ever following her c's, Ode on Well 211
?rl'^''l7'^°ll9 I« Earth and Earth's, /„ Mem., Con. 130
Ihy hfeis thineat her c. Gareth and L 983
gave c that all which once was ours Marr. of Geraint 696
one c I laid upon you, not to speak to mo, Geraint and E. 77
Debating his c of silence given, 3gQ
Then breaking his c of silence given, ' ' 390
Wroth that the King's c to sally forth Lancelot and E. 560
I'hat only seepos half-loyal to c,- Last Tournament 118
r«J™«*«/r^lKWWu\""K' V. .0 Death of (Enone 99
Command (verb) Will he obey when one c's ? Two Voices 244
Man to c and woman to obey ; Frincess v 450
I cannot all c the strings ; /„ Mem. Ixxxvni 10
itrength of the race to c, to obey, Def. of Lucknow 47
110
Companionship
Commander Attest their great c's claim With
« honour; / Ode on WeU. U8
Oommeasure C perfect freedom. (Enone 167
Commenced However then c the dawn : Princess ii 138
c A to-and-fro, so pacing till she paused 301
Comment thoughtsinrubric thus For wholesale c,' " m 51
and heard in thought Their lavish c Merlin and V 151
crost, and cramm'd With c, gjg
And none can read the c but myself ; And in the "
c did I find the charm. g82
like the critic's blurring c make Sisters (E. and JS. ) 104
Six foot deep of burial mould Will dull
their c's ! Romneu's R 126
Commerce Saw the heavens fill with c, Locksl^ Hall 121
brought the stinted c of those days ; Enoch Arden 817
two crowned twins, C and conquest, Frincess v 421
From growing c loose her latest chain, Ode Inter. Exhib. 33
bo hold I c with the dead, /„ Mem. Ixxxv 93
No more shall c be all in all, Maud HI vi 23
that c with the Queen, I ask you, . Merlin and V. 770
if if ty years of ever-broadening C ! On Jub. Q. Victoria 52
Commercing c with himself, He lost the sense Walk, to the Mail 21
Commingled C with the gloom of imminent war, Ded. of Idylls I'd
Commission A bought c, a waxen face, Maud I x 30
c one of weight and worth To judge between Columbus 12i
Commissioner See Church-commissioner
Common (adj.) and fears were c to her state, Enoch Arden 521
'Loss is c to the race '—And c is the commonplace. In Mem. vi 2
That loss is c would not make My own less bitter, ,, 5
Too c ! Never morning wore To evening, " 7
Their c shout in chorus, mounting, Balin and Balan 87
but love s first flash in youth. Most c : Lancelot and E. 950
Common (s) crost the c into Darnley chase The Brook 132
Commonplace barren c's break In full and kindly
blossom. _ ^nu Water. 23
And common is the c, And vacant chaff In Mem. vi 3
To lift us as it were from c, Sisters (E. and E.) 223
shrunk by usage into commonest c ! Locksley H., Sixty 76
Common-sense Rich in saving c-s, Ode on WeU. 32
crown d Republic's crowning c-s, To the Queen ii 61
1 nests Who fear the king's hard c-s Sir J. Oldcastle 66
Commonwealth from it sprang the C, which breaks Lucretius 241
Commune (s) For days of happy c dead ; In Mem. cxvi 14
Held c with herself, Geraint and E. 368
Commune (verb) To c with that barren voice, Two Voices 461
Communed I c with a saintly man. Holy Grail 742
But c only with the little maid, Guinevere 150
And while I c with my truest self. The Ring 181
Communicate We two c no more.' In Mem. Ixxxv 84
Communing C with herself : ' All these are mine, Falace of Art 181
C with his captains of the war. Frincess i 67
Communion An hour's c with the dead. In Mem. xeiv 4
was a very miracle Of fellow-feeling and c. Lover's Tale i 251
Como Remember how we came at last To C ; The Daisy 70
past From C, when the light was gray, ,, 73
Compact (adj.) churl, c of thankless earth, Godiva 66
issued in a court C of lucid marbles, Frincess ii 24
Compact (s) He said there was a c ; ,, i 47
there did a c pass Long summers back, ,, 123
Our formal c, yet, not less ,, 165
and a hope The child of regal c, ,, iv 421
' that our c be fulfill'd : ,| ,, 115
she would not keep Her c' " 324
Companion on her bridal morn before she past From all
her old c's, ^ a 263
Too harsh to your c yestermorn ; ,',' m 199
When wine and free c's kindled him, Geraint and E. 293
Fled all the boon c's of the Earl, ,, 477
Meanwhile the new c's past away Lancelot and E. 399
My boon c, tavern-fellow— Sir J. Oldcastle 90
Kindly landlord, boon c— Locksley H., Sixty 240
Down to the haven. Call your c's, Merlin and the G. 125
Companionless I, the last, go forth c, M. d' Arthur 236
I, the last, go forth c, Fass. of Arthur 404
Companionship Who broke our fair c. In Mem. xxii 13
Company
111
Confusion
Ck>mpany Where sat a c with heated eyes,
The little wife would weep for c,
^ ,yes ! — but a c forges the wine.
her brother lingers late With a roystering c)
twos and threes, or fuller companies,.
' Where is that goodly c,' said I,
Spread the slow smile thro' all her c'
' Belike for lack of wiser c ;
A glorious c, the flower of men,
in companies Troubled the track of the host
Compaiison And half asleep she made c
Compass (s) And in the c of three little words,
winds from all the c shift and blow,
Might lie within their c,
And his c is but of a single note,
sorrow of my spirit Was of so wide a c
The c, like an old friend false
Compass (verb) To c our dear sisters' liberties.'
To c her with sweet observances,
you should only c her disgrace,
made him leper to c him with scorn —
Compass'd And c by the inviolate sea.'
With what dull pain C,
Then c round by the blind wall of night
All beauty c in a female form,
Sat c with professors :
Tho' c by two armies and the noise
That, c round with turbulent sound,
And c by the fires of Hell ;
So, c by the power of the King,
He c her with sweet observances
Compassion ' Full of c and mercy— (repeat)
Compel I c all creatures to my will.' (repeat)
Compell'd such a breeze C thy canvas,
Compensated For often fineness c size :
Compensating nor c the want By shrewdness.
Competence Seven happy years of health and c,
gracious children, debtless c, golden mean ;
Complaining broad stream in his banks c,
C, ' Mother, give me grace To help me
call'd him by his name, c loud,
call'd him by his name, c loud,
Complaint Not whisper, any murmur of c.
What end is here to my c ?
Completer gipsy bonnet Be the neater and c ;
Completion awaits C in a painful school ;
fulfill'd itself, Merged in c?
Complexity many-corridor'd complexities Of Arth
palace :
Complicated See Tenfold-complicated
Compliment Light coin, the tinsel clink of c.
Composed All c in a metre of Catullus,
Compound ' No c of this earthly ball
Comprehensive See All-comprehensive
Comprest rais'd her head with lips c,
Comrade C's, leave me here a little.
Hark, my merry c's call me.
And Enoch's c, careless of himself.
His c's having fought their last below,
till the c of his chambers woke.
Which weep the c of my choice.
Is c of the lesser faith
labour him Beyond his c of the hearth,
and then against his brace Of c's,
His craven pair Of c's making slowlier
To laughter and his c's to applause.
— thy shame, and mine. Thy c —
And some are wilder c's, sworn to seek
Gone the c's of my bivouac,
parted from his c in the boat.
Conceal she knows too. And she c's it.'
And half c the Soul within.
Marriage will c it . . .
Conceal'd it aeem'd Better to leave Excalibur c
it seom'd Better to leave Excalibur c
Vision of Sin 7
Enoch Arden 34
Maud 7 » 36
, , xiv 15
Mart, of Geraint 57
Holy Grail 432
PeUeas and E. 95
Last Tournament 245
Guinevere 464
Batt. of Brunanburh 39
Marr. of Geraint 651
Gardener's D. 232
Godiva 33
Aylmer's Field 485
The Islet 28
Lover's Tale ii 135
Colurnbus 70
Princess Hi 288
Geraint and E. 39
The Fleet 17
Happy 16
To the Queen 36
D.ofF. Women 278
Enoch Arden 492
Princess ii 34
444
„ V 345
WiU7
In Mem. cxxvii 17
Com. of Arthur 20Z
Marr. of Geraint 48
Rizpah 62, 63
Geraint and E. 629, 673
In Mem. xvii 2
Princess ii 149
Enoch Arden 250
82
Fastness 24
L. of Shalott ivZ
Mariana in the S. 29
M. d' Arthur 210
Pass, of Arthur 378
St. S. Stylites '2f2.
In Mem. Ixxxi 6
Maud I XX 20
Love thou thy land 58
Gardener's D. 239
ur's
Merlin and V. 732
Princess ii 55
Hendecasyllabics 4
Two Voices 35
The Letters 19
Locksley Hall 1
145
Enoch Arden 568
Aylmer's Field 227
583
In Mem. xiii 9
,, cxxviii 3
Gareth and L. 485
Geraint and E. 88
167
296
Sir J. OldcasUe 102
Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 12
Locksley H., Sixty 45
The Ring 308
Princess Hi 60
In Mem. v 4
Forlorn 10
M. d' Arthur 62
Pass, of Arthur 2dO
Concealment maiden-meek I pray'd C ; Princess Hi 135
Conceit (s) (See also Self-conceit) So spake he, clouded
with his own c, M. d' Arthur 110
; So spake he, clouded with his own c. Pass, of Arthur 278
Conceit (verb) C's himself as God that he can v
make Last Tournament'.S55
Conceive and in his agony c's A shameful sense • Lover's Tale i 793
Conceived sinful man, c and born in sin : St. S. Stylites 122
Concentrate if I fail To conjure and c Romney's R. 7
Concession and the bounds Determining c ; To Duke of Argyll 3
Conciliate so potent to coerce, And to c, Ttresias 121
Concluded At last a solemn grace C, Princess ii 453
dreamt Of some vast charm c in that star Merlin and V. .'512
Conclusion To those c's when we saw In Mem. Ixxxvii 35
a semi-smile As at a strong c — Lover's Tale iv 282
Concourse banquet, and c of knights and kings. Lancelot and E. 562
Concubine Sent like the twelve-divided c Aylmer's Field 759
wives and children Spanish c's, Columbus 175
Condemn'd prisoner at the bar, ever c : Sea Dreams 176
Condensation cramm'd With comment, densest c, Merlin and V. 678
Condition with sound of trumpet, all The hard c ; Godiva 37
Hear my c's : promise (otherwise You perish) Princess ii 295
And these were the c's of the King : Gareth and L. 107
Conditioning ebb and flow c their march. Golden Year 30
Condole See Condowl
Condoned treacheries — wink'd at, and c — Columbus 226
Condowl (condole) frinds 'ud ponsowl an' c wid her, Tomorrow 47
Conduct (verb) C by paths of growing powers. In Mem. Ixxxiv 31
Conduit Where the bloody c rung, Vision of Sin 144
Cone (See also Cjrpress-cone, Mountain-cones) In
masses thick with milky c's.
Confederacy between her daughters o'er a wild c.
Conference And thus our c closed.
Confess I c with right) you think me bound
As I c it needs must be ;
Why wilt thou shame me to c to thee
I will find the Priest and c.
Confessed thunders often have c Thy power.
Confidence In e of unabated strength,
Confined C on points of faith.
Conflict c with the crash of shivering points.
Folk and his friends that had Fallen in c,
Confluence A riotous c of watercourses
Confound did all c Her sense ;
Nor all Calamity's hugest waves c.
On whom the victor, to c them more,
God the traitor's hope c ! (repeat)
Confounded (See also Worse-confounded)
wrath his heart c.
Saw them lie c.
Confuse Nor thou with shadow'd hint c A life
pass on ! the sight c's —
Confused Makes thy memory c :
Remaining utterly c with fears,
wicked broth C the chemic labour of the blood,
Arriving all c among the rest
C by brainless mobs and lawless Powers ;
C me like the unhappy bark
Thro' all that crowd c and loud,
' C, and illusion, and relation,
Enid look'd, but all c at first.
Those twelve sweet moons c his fatherhood.'
Confusion The airy hand c wrought,
Is there c in the little isle ?
There is c worse than death,
Unsubject to c, Tho' soak'd and saturate,
Man to command and woman to obey ; All else c.
At first with all c : by and by Sweet order lived
C's of a wasted youth ;
yet-loved sire would make C worse than death,
Once for wrong done you by c,
Thieves, bandits, leavings of c.
From flat c and brute violences,
disloyal life Hath wrought c in the Table Round
and ev'n on Arthur fell C,
Miller's D. 56
Boadicea 6
Princess ii 367
n.58
In Mem. lix 4
Holy Grail 567
Bandit's Death 18
To W. C. Macready 2
Lover's Tale i 51 1
ii 150
Princess v 491
Batt. of Brunanburh 71
Lucretius 30
- Mariana 76
■ WiU 5
Geraint and E. 169
Hands all Round 10, 22, 34
Shame and
The Captain 61
The Tourney}^
In Mem. xxxiii 7
Parnassus 15
A Dirge 45
Palace of Art 269
Lucretius 20
Princess iv 224
Ode on WeU. 153
In Mem. xvi 12
Maud II iv 71
Gareth and L. 287
Marr. of Geraint 685
Merlin and F. 712
Palace of Art 22Q
Lotos-Eaters, C.S. 79
83
Witt Water. 86
Princess « 451
,, vii 18
In Mem., Pro. 42
„ xc 19
Merlin and V. 307
Last Tournament 95
124
Guinevere 220
Pass. ofArUmr 99
Pass, of Arthur li4i
Beaviifvl City 1
Forlorn 26
Confnsion
Confusion (continued) for on my heart hath
fall'n C,
centre and crater of European c,
Confuted come a witness soon Hard to be c
Conjecture (s) make C of the plumage and the
ConjectS'(verb) C's of the features of her child ^'"^' ''^ &t' H
rnniTr,*rinr'^tJ'^^"'?\^°^^e^'"^'"^^^*' In Mem., Con. 86
Conjecturing C when and where : this cut is fresh ; Lancelot and E. 21
Conjure if I fail To c and concentrate Romneu's R 7
Conquer From barren deeps to c all PHZ::!:ii{A.
Is rack d with pangs that c trust ; /„ j^g^ i g
you are Lancelot ; your great name, This c's : Lancelot and E. \b\
Arise, go forth and c as of old,' p^ss of Arthur 64
lake and mountain c's all the day. Sisters (E. and E.) 100
Love wi 1 c at the last. locksley H., Sixty 280
That only cs men toe peace, Akbar's Drelm 15
Conquer d (See also Woman-conquer'd) A cry above
A+*!'t+''^^T+v, i*u X. .. InMem.cxxxi?
At last she let herself be c by him. Merlin and V. 900
knowing he was Lancelot ; his great name C : Lancelot and E. 580
Conqueror (See also Woman-conqueror) Christian
c'5 took and flung Locksley H., Sixty 8i
Conquest two crowned twins, Commerce and e, Princess vi21
brag to his fellow rakes of his c Cfuiritv 18
^^^^x^^^u ,A?'"^® ^J"^'" °^ " ™''*^® ^^°^ ««"'••■ J^wwn 0/ -Sin 218
With a 1 his c and one eye askew '—(repeat) Sea Dreams 180, 184
My a wiU not count me fleckless ; princess ii 294
Who reverenced his c as his king ; Bed. of Idylls 8
To whom a c never wakes ; /„ j^, J. ^^^ 8
Without a c or an aim. _„ • , o
Thee as a cat rest: " ^!?'^.S
Their c, and their c as their King, Guinevere 469
as IS the c of a saint Among his warring senses, fiSQ
Conscious («ee oZso Half-conscious) nor c of a bar "
Between them Aylmer's Field ISi
blowly and c of the rageful eye That watch'd him, 336
c of ourselves, Perused the matting ; p^l^,,, ^ 67
And partly c of my own deserts, ,•„ oqk
We, c of what temper you are built, " 400
r^r.TJ,t "?'? H^^°. °*?^'" ^^i^"^' Romn^y's R. 62
Consecrate I dedicate, I c with tears- Bed. of Idylls 4
t'c c to lead A new crusade against the Saracen. Columbus 102
Consent (See also Half-consent) To yield c to my ^oiumous w^
desire ; Miller's D 138
w 'T^ ^'^'"^ ^f ' ^^i" ^,\°^ "' ^°** marriage, JEwocA Jrden 708
Was handed over by c of all To one who had not
Consequence Were wisdom in the scorn of c' '^ * rpXtll 1 In
And duty duty, clear of c's. Prinie^iii 152
canhetell Whether warbeacauseorac? Maud T r 4.n
Conservative That man's the true C Handsa^lRm,^A7
Consider 'C well,' the voice replied. TwoVokAl
C, William : take a month t^ thiAk, """ Boratl
c them, and all Their bearing in their common
P-„_,.]^3j .„„. , , ., BalinandBalanliQ
Consider d Again she c and said : /„ the Child. Hosp. 55
Sn« ?S^ rf ^^f yybj"-« H«r «°cret meaning /„ Mem.lv 9
Consistent hberal-mmded, great, C ; r;„~, qq
Consol chances of dividend, c, and share— The Wreck 30
SSot'^'L^Swl"^ ""^"^' ""' " ^^^^^■'^ ^-^ ^- «^«
S^nli^*^ became C in mind and frame- Two Foic«5 366
Consort And a gentle c made he, £ 0/ Burleiah T\
Consowl (console) 'ud c an' condowl wid her, To^^S 47
Constancy The praise that comes to c' ' i/mZ^iI
may yours for ever be That old strength
rn««tr^«^«- Ai *i, *. ^ Open. Land C.Exhib.U
?^?f ^*I^"" T^'*" **'°. ''i:^^*^'. °°°' ^' ^««- of Brunanburh 63
Constellation Larger c'« burning, mellow moons and » "w 00
happy skies Locksley Hall 159
With c and with continent, Prmcm i 224
Sphere-music of stars and of c's. iWsLfs
Conatram'd thro' that young traitor, cruel need Parnassus »
^ "'*' .afarr. of Geraint 716
112
Converse
Lover's Tale i 468
Tithonus 6
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 13
/w Mem. Ixxxiv 1
, , carctM 1
Akbar's Dream 48
PoZace o/^r< 212
Marr. of Geraint 533
Elednore 107
Constraining C it with kisses close and warm
Consume Me only cruel immortality C's : '
Consumed utterly c with sharp distress, '
Contained See Self-contained
Contemplate When I c all alone
C all this work of Time,
c The torment of the damn'd '
Contemplating no form of creed, But c all,'
but lay C her own unworthiness ;
Contemplation And luxury of c :
Contempt (See also Self-contempt) touch 'd on
Cor.^JIf'T^^ 7'^^ """'^. '^^ Princess ii 135
Contend C for lovmg masterdom. /„ Mf^m «V 8
Content (adj.) (-See oZso Ill-content. Well-content) I ^" ^^'»- "^ »
had been e to perish, Locksley Hall IQZ
might It come like one that looks e, Lov^ ami Duty 93
Which left my after-morn e. /„ ^,^_ ^^^ 4
He rested well e that all wa^ well. Geraint and E. 962
Nor rested thus c but day by day, Lam^elot and E. 13
yueen, she would not be e Save that I wedded her 1 qi 4
Must be c to sit by little fires. ' Holv Grail au
he well had been e Not to have seen, ^ "^ 653
C am I so that I see thy face But once a day : Pelleas a^ E. 243
that had left her 111 c; The Revenge 51
Not findable here— c, and not c, ' ^30
born of worldlings— father, mother— be e LocksleuH Sixtv 25
I shall hardly be e Till I be leper '^''^ ^^^^ g
He rests c, if his young music wakes To Marv Bmifp 6^
Content (s) (-See also Self-content) breast That once ^ ^
W?ff nf f*° '"^ '* f % u ^'^^ /""«. i^^ form 8
With meditative grunts of much e, JFa/i. to the Mail 87
found the sun of sweet c Re-risen The Brook 168
and break The low beginnings of c. /„ ji/g^. ;^^^j^ 43
nor more c. He told me, lives m any crowd, xcmii 9^
Contented (-See aZso Well-contented) leapt into my
arms, C there to die ! DofF Women 152
Continent With constellation and with c, ' Princess i 224:
Maoris and that Isle of C, w. to Marie Alex. 18
From isleand cape and c, Open. I and C. Exhib. 4
and sow The dust of c's to be ; 7n ilfem. a:ar:n. 12
Continue you saw. As who should say ' C Lover's Tale iv 5
Contradiction seem d to live A c on the tongue, In Mem. cxxv 4
Contract Cleave to your c: Princess iv 409
Contracting Philip s rosy face c grew Enoch Arden 486
Contrast love will go by c, as by likes. Sisters (E. and E) 42
Contrivance With great c's of Power. Love thou thy land 64
Contrived where the two c their daughter's good— Aylmer's Field 848
Contriving c their dear daughter's good — 701
Control (s) (See also Half-control, Self-control) keep "
it oui^, 0 God, from brute c ; Ode on Well. 159
U triendship, equal-poised c, /„ Mem Ixxxv 33
Control (verb) changes should c Our being, Love thou thy land 41
Controll d For they c me when a boy ; /„ Mem. xxviii 18
Oontrolletn C all the soul and sense Of Passion Eleanore 115
Convent (-See also Hill-convent) while I lived In the
white c down the valley St. S. Styliies 62
Convention but c beats them down : Princess, Pro. 128
Dwell with these, and lose C, ^ gg
to-morrow morn We hold a great c : " tv 511
Convent-roof Deep on the c-r the snows St" Agnes' Eve 1
Convent-tower shadows of the c-t's Slant down ' 5
Converse (s) (See also Honey-converse) We may hold "
c with all forms Ode to Memory 115
War, who breaks the c of the wise ; Third of Feb 8
But open c is there none, /„ Mem. xx 17
Ihy c drew us with delight, ^^ j
rode In c till she made her palfrey halt, Gareth and L. 1360
he suspends his c with a friend, Marr. of Geraint 340
told her all their c in the hall, 520
Edyrn, whom he held In c for a little, Geraint'and E. 882
1 hat comfort from their c which he took 950
c sweet and low— low c sweet. Lover's Tale i 541
Am not thyself in c with thyself, A ncient Sage 65
Converse
113
Corner
Converse (verb) Hears him lovingly c, L. of Burleigh 26
Convert That was a miracle to c the king. Sir J. OldcasUe 178
Convey'd c them on their way And left them Gareth and L. 889
Convict The noble and the c of Castile, Columbus 117
Convolution saturate, out and out. Thro' every c. WiU Water. 88
Convolvulus The lustre of the long c'es Enoch Arden 576
with a myriad blossom the long c hung ; V. of Maeldune 40
Cony Or conies from the down, Enoch Arden 340
Coo Deeply the wood-dove c's ; Leonine Eleg. 6
Coodled (cuddled) An' coax'd an' c mo oop North. Gobbler 80
Coo'd it c to the Mother and smiled. The Wreck 60
Cook'd c his spleen, Communing with his captains Princess i 66
Cool (adj.) while she wept, and I strove to be c, Maud II i 15
fair days— not all as c as these, Balin and Balan 273
Is all as c and white as any flower,' Last Tournament 416
Cool (s) as we enter'd in the c. Gardener's D. 114
Cool (verb) ' Drink to lofty hopes that c— Vision of Sin 147
saw it and grieved — to slacken and to c ; Princess iv 299
Cool'd placed upon the sick man's brow C it, Aylmer's Field 701
Or c within the glooming wave ; In Mem. Ixxxix 45
ere his cause Be c by fighting, Gareth and L. 703
Cooling C her false cheek with a featherfan, Aylmer's Field 289
Coolness paced for c in the chapel-yard ; Merlin and V. 757
blew C and moisture and all smells of bud Lover's Tale Hi 5
Coom (come) But Parson a c's an' a goas, N. Farmer, O. S. 25
an' thy muther c to 'and, ,, N.S. 21
C's of a gentleman burn : ,,38
Wrigglesby beck c'a out by the 'ill ! ,, 53
C oop, proputty, proputty — ,, 59
WaXit till our Sally c's in, North. Cobbler 1
one night I c'» 'oam like a bull ,, 33
' My lass, when I c's to die, ,, 103
C thou 'eer— yon laady a-steppin' ,, 107
but 'e dosn' not c fro' the shere ; Village Wife 23
sa I knaw'd es 'e'd c to be poor ; ,,46
C ! c ! fey ther,' 'e says, ,, 69
fur they weant niver c to naw good. ,, 96
When Mollv c's in fro' the far-end close Spinster's S's. 2
Rob, e oop ere o' my knee. „ 11
C give hoaver then, weant ye ? ,,63
let Steevie c oop o' my knee. ,, 67
Dick, when 'e c's to be dead, Otod Rod 11
'ud c at the fall o' the year, „ 23
I'll c an' I'll squench the light, ,, 117
an' 'e beal'd to ya ' Lad c hout ' Church-warden, etc. 28
Coom'd (came) An' I hallus c to 's chooch N. Farmer, O. S. 17
said whot a owt to 'a said an' I c awaay. ,, 20
afoor I c to the plaace. „ 34
sin fust a c to the 'All ; ,,55
afoor 'e c to the shere. ,, N.S. 28
'e c to the parish wi' lots o' Varsity debt, ,, 29
An' I c neck-an-crop soomtimes, North. Cobbler 20
An' when we c into Meeatin', ,, 53
fur New Squire c last night. ViUage Wife 1
new Squire's c wi' 'is taail in 'is 'and, (repeat) ,, 14, 121
Thou's c oop by the beck ; ,,79
fur he c last night so laate — ,, 123
Bui 'e c thruf the fire wi' my bairn Owd Bod 92
He c like a Hangel o' marcy ,, 93
An' 'is 'air c off i' my 'ands ,, 100
fur a lot on 'em c ta-year — Church-warden, etc. 13
They says 'at he c fra nowt — ,, 17
an' c to the top o' the tree, ,, 38
Coomfut (s) (comfort) But she wur a power o' c. North. Cobbler 79
Fur she hedn't naw c in 'er, ViUage Wife 12
Coomfut (verb) When I goas fur to c the poor Spinster's S's. 108
Coomin' (coming) upo' c awaay Sally gied me a kiss North. Cobbler 56
Fur I seed that Steevie wur c,' Spinster's S's. 40
but, 0 Lord, upo' c down — ,, 44
'cep' it wur at a dog c in, ,, 60
By a man c in wi' a hiccup ,, 98
Fur I seed the beck c down Oivd Bod 40
an' the times 'at was c on ; ,,44
Coontryside (Countryside) booots to be cobbled
fro' hafe the c. North. Cobbler 94
Cooper C he was and carpenter, Enoch Arden 814
Cooperant Is toil c to an end. In Mem. cxxviii 24
Coortin (courting) gied tha a raatin that sattled thy
c o' me, Spinster's S's. 48
Coostom (custom) Foalks' c flitted awaay North. Cobbler 28
An' c agean draw'd in like a wind ,, 93
Coot I come from haunts of c and hern, The Brook 23
Cope c Of the half-attain'd futurity. Ode to Memory 32
Wrapt in dense cloud from base to c. Two Voices 186
one Not fit to c your quest. Gareth and L. 1174
slinks from what he fears To c with, Pelleas and E. 439
sound as when an iceberg splits From c to base — Lover's Tale i 604
the c and crown Of all I hoped and fear'd ? — ,, ii 27
Cophetua came the beggar maid Before the king C. Beggar Maid 4
C sware a royal oath ; ,,15
Coppice in April suddenly Breaks from a c Marr. of Geraint 339
scour'd into the c's and was lost, Geraint and E. 534
from the fringe of c round them burst Balin and Balan 46
Coppice-feather'd every c-/ chasm and cleft, Princess iv2S
Copse danced about the may-pole and in the
hazel c, May Queen, N. Y's. E. 11
shadowy pine above the woven c. Lotos-Eaters 18
did we hear the c's ring, Locksley Roll 35
Came little c's climbing. Amphion 32
Then move the trees, the c's nod. Sir Galahad 77
In c and fera Twinkled the innumerable ear The Brook 133
firefly-like in c And linden alley : Princess i 208
we wound About the the cliffs, the c's, ,, Hi 360
Here is the c, the fountain and — Sir J. Oldcastle 127
seas leaning on the mangrove c, Prog, of Spring 76
Coptic Lulling the brine against the C sands. Buonaparte 8
Coquette the slight c, she cannot love. The form, the form 12
Coquette-like or half c-l Maiden, Eendecasyllabics 20
Coquetting C with young beeches ; Amphion 28
Cord The creaking c's which wound and eat Supp. Confessions 36
The wounding c's that bind and strain Clear-headed friend 4
We'll bind you fast in silken c's, Bosalind 49
Lower 'd softly with a threefold c of love D. ofF. Women 211
Bound by the golden c of their first love — The Bing 429
while she stared at those dead c's Death of (Enone 10
A silken c let down from Paradise, Akbar's Dream 139
Cordage coils of c, swarthy fishing-nets, Enoch Arden 17
Corded See Sinew-corded
Cordon draw The c close and closer Aylmer's Field 500
Core Else earth is darkness at the c. In Mem. xxxiv 3
To make a solid c of heat ; ,, cmi 18
Corinna wrought With fair C's triumph ; Princess Hi 349
Coritanian hear C, Trinobant ! (repeat) Boddicea 10, 34, 47
Gods have heard it, 0 Icenian, O C ! Boddicea 21
Shout Icenian, Catieuchlanian, shout C, Trinobant, ,, 57
Corkscrew up the c stair With hand and rope Walk, to the Mail 90
Com {See also Cum) river-sunder'd champaign clothed with c, (Enone 114
land of hops and poppy-mingled c, Aylmer's Field 31
Ruth among the fields of c, ,, 680
when a field of c Bows all its ears Princess i 236
glutted all night long breast-deep in c, ,, it 387
Steel and gold, and c and wine, Ode Inter. Exhib. 17
sweating underneath a sack of c, Marr. of Geraint 263
Take him to stall, and give him c, „ 371
fell Like flaws in Summer laying lusty c: ,, 764
spice and her vintage, her silk and her c ; Vastness 13
A thousand squares of c and meadow. The Bing 149
Corn-bin horse That hears the c-b open. The Epic 45
Cornelia Clelia, C, with the Palmyrene Princess ii 83
Comer ' Sometimes a little c shines. Two Voices 187
From some odd c of the brain. Miller's D. 68
in dark c's of her palace stood Uncertain shapes ; Palace of Art 237
crow shall tread The c's of thine eyes : WiU Water. 236
sitting-room With shelf and c for the goods Enoch Arden 171
From distant c's of the street they ran „ 349
or Ralph Who shines so in the c ; Princess, Pro. 145
my own sad name in c's cried, Maud I vi 72
Found Enid with the c of his eye, Geraint and E. 281
A damsel drooping in a c of it. ,, 611
folded hands and downward eyes Of glancing c, Merlin and V, 70
Corner
114
Count
Comer (continued) Or whisper'd in the c? do ye know it ? ' Merlin and V. 772
knelt Full lowly by the c's of his bed, Lancelot and E. 826
dragon, grifl&n, swan, At all the c's, Holy Grail 351
deal-box that was push'd in a c away. First Qvxirrd 48
Cornice Now watching high on mountain c. The Daisy 19
Stretch'd under all the c and upheld : Gareth and L. 219
Cornish held Tintagil castle by the C sea, Com. of Arthur 187
name of evil savour in the land, The C king. Gareth and L. 386
Mark her lord had past. The C King, Last Tournament 382
sands Of dark Tintagil by the C sea ; Guinevere 294
Corn-laws And struck upon the c-l, Audley Court 35
Coronach Prevailing in weakness, the c stole Dying Swan 26
Coronal My c slowly disentwined itself Lover's Tale i 361
dost uphold Thy c of glory like a God, ,, 488
Coroner c doubtless will find it a felo-de-se, Despair 115
Coronet Kind hearts are more than c's, L. C. V. de Vere 55
Corp (corpse) a c lyin' undher groun'. Tomorrow 62
Corpse {See also Corp) On c's three-months-old at
noon she came, Palace of Art 24:3
C's across the threshold ; D. of F. Women 25
Step from the c, and let him in D. of the 0. Year 49
he comes to the second c in the pit ? Maud II v 88
A yet-warm c, and yet unburiable, Gareth and L. 80
My mother on his c in open field ; (repeat) Merlin and V. 43, 73
night with its coffinless c to be laid Def. of Lucknow 80
I'd sooner fold an icy c dead of some The Flight 54
She tumbled his helpless c about. Dead Prophet 65
Pain, that has crawl'd from the c of Pleasure, Vastness 17
And found a c and silence, The Ring 217
lies, that blacken round The c of every man Eomney's R. 123
Corpse-cofEm. end but in being our own c-c's at last, Vastness 33
Correspond Not for three years to c with home ; Princess ii 70
Corridor Full of long-sounding c's it was, Palace of Art 53
Corridor'd See Many-corridor'd
Corrientes and flowers. From C to Japan, To Ulysses 4
Corrupt Plenty c's the melody That made thee famous
once. The Blackbird 15
Lest one good custom should c the world. M. d' Arthur 242
C's the strength of heaven-descended WiU 11
Lest one good custom should c the world. Pass, of Arthur 410
Corruption c crept among his knights, Merlin and V. 154
Corselet thro' the bulky bandit's c home, Geraint and E. 159
Cosmogony their cosmogonies, their astronomies : Columbus 42
Cosmopolite That man's the best C Hands all Round 3
Cosmos Chaos, C! C, Chaos! (repeat) Lochsley H., Sixty 103, 127
Cossack C and Russian Reel'd Light Brigade 34
Cost (s) care not for the c ; the c is mine.' Geraint and E. 288
Cost (verb) story that c me many a tear. Grandmother 22
it c me a world of woe, , , 23
They still remember what it c them here, The Ring 201
Costliest Black velvet of the c— Aylmer's Field 804
Costly the work To both appear'd so c, Marr. of Geraint 638
' Let her tomb Be c, Lancelot and E. 1340
Costly-broider'd Laid from her limbs the c-b gift, Marr. of Geraint 769
Costly-made half-cut-down, a pasty c-m, Audley Court 23
Costrel youth, that following with a c bore Marr. of Geraint 386
Cot and kiss'd him in his c. Enoch Arden 234
Here is the c of our orphan. In the Child. Hosp. 28
Softly she call'd from her c to the next, „ 46
Thro many a palace, many a c, Demeter and P. 55
Cotch'd (caught) but Charlie 'e c the pike, Village Wife 43
Thou'd niver 'a c ony mice Spinster's S's. 55
An' 'e c howd hard o' my hairm, Owd Rod 58
c 'cr death o' cowd that night, ,, 114
I c tha wonst i' my garden. Church-warden, etc. 33
Coterie Camo yews, a dismal c ; Amphion 42
Cottage Or even a lowly c whence we see Ode to Memory 100
' Make me a c in the vale,' she said, Palace of Art 291
Love will make our c pleasant, L. of Burleigh 15
she seems to gaze On that c growing nearer, , , 35
Fair is her c in its place, Reguiescat 1
Served the poor, and built the c, Lochsley H., Sixty 268
sound ran Thro' palace and c door. Dead Prophet 38
Cottager She was the daughter of a c, Walk, to the Mail 59
Cottage-walls robed your c-w with flowers Aylmer's Field 698
Cotter a c's babe is royal-born by right divine ; Locksley H., Sixty 125
Cotton (s) Whose ear is cramm'd with his c, Maud / a; 42 '
Cotton (verb) If tha c's down to thy betters. Church-warden, etc. 48
Cotton-spinner We are not c-s's all. Third of Feb. i5
Cotton-spinning Go' (shrill'd the c-s chorus) ; Edwin Morris 122
Co-twisted New things and old c-t, Gareth and L. 226
Couch Kings have no such c as thine. Dirge 40
She lying on her c alone, Day -Dm., Sleep B. 2
And flung her down upon a c of fire, Aylmer's Field 574
light of healing, glanced about the c. Princess vii 59
Rolling on their purple c'es Bocidicea 62
And Enid woke and sat beside the c, Marr. of Geraint 79
which she laid Flat on the c, and spoke exultingly : ,, 679
left her maiden c, and robed herself, ,, 737
wearied out made for the c and slept, Merlin and V, 736
flung herself Down on the great King's c, Lancelot and E. 610
Low on the border of her c they sat Guinevere 101
And the crowded c of incest in the warrens Locksley H., Sixty 224
Couchant c with his eyes upon the throne, Guinevere 11
Couch'd (See also Low-couch'd) tame leopards c beside
her throne. Princess ii 33
c behind a Judith, underneath The head ,, iv 226
The wine-flask lying c in moss. In Mem. Ixxxix 44
c at ease, The white kine glimmer'd, (repeat) ,, xcv 14, 50
c at night with grimy kitchen-knaves. Gareth and L. 481
They c their spears and prick'd their steeds, Lancelot and E. 479
at her will they c their spears, Three against one : Pdleas and E. 273
Lancelot passing by Spied where he c, Guinevere 31
Cough c's, aches, stitches, ulcerous throes St. S. Stylites 13
Council ((See aZso College-council) ' And statesmen at
her c met To the Queen 29
manners, climates, c's, governments, Ulysses 14
In iron gauntlets : break the c up.' Princess i 89
But when the c broke, I rose and past ,, 90
enter'd an old hostel, call'd mine host To c, ,, 174
' everywhere Two heads in c, ,, ii 173
Great in c and great in war. Ode on Well. 30
c's thinn'd. And armies waned. Merlin and V. 572
CouncU-hall The basest, far into that c-h Lucretius 171
His voice is silent in your c-h Ode on Well. 174
Counsel (advice) silver flow Of subtle-paced c Isabel 21
Then follow'd c, comfort, and the words Love and Duty 69
Her art, her hand, her c all had wrought Aylmer's Field 151
Nor dealing goodly c from a height ,, 172
You prized my c, lived upon my lips : Princess iv 293
In part It was ill c had misled the girl ,, vii 241
to whom He trusted all things, and of him required
His c: Com. of Arthur 147
man of plots, Craft, poisonous c's, Gareth and L. 432
Abide: take c : for this lad is great ,, 730
thou begone, take c, and away, ,, 1002
take my c : let me know it at once : Merlin and V. 653
he turn'd Her c up and down within his mind, Lancelot arid E. 369
Then, when I come within her c's, Pelleas and E. 348
I would not spurn Good c of good friends. Sir J. Oldcastle 146
My c that the tyranny of all Led backward Tiresias 75
And following thy true c, Akbar's Dream 154
mix the wines of heresy in the cup Of c — ,, 175
Counsel (advocate) a sound Like sleepy c pleading ; Amphion 7i
A man is likewise c for himself, Sea Dreams 182
Counsel (verb) Speak to me, sister ; c me ; The Flight 75
Counsell'd but old Merlin c him, Com. of Arthur 306
Counsellor He play'd at c's and kings. In Mem. Ixiv 23
My noble friend, my faithful c, Akbar's Dream 18
and bravest soul for c and friend. ,, 69
Count (title) c's and kings Who laid about them Princess, Pro. 30
C, baron — whom he smote, he overthrew. Lancelot and E. 465
C who sought to snap the bond Happy 61
Count (reckoning) ' Heaven heads the c of crimes D. of F. Women 201
Count (verb) I can but c thee perfect gain. Palace of Art 198
or touch Of pension, neither c on praise : Love thou thy land 26
C's nothing that she meets with base. On a Mourner 4
but c not me the herd ! Golden Year 13
But I c the gray barbarian lower Locksley Hall 174
Deep as Hell I c his error. The Captain 3
Count
115
Court
C the more base idolater of
Count (verb) (continued)
the two ;
conscience will not c me fleckless ;
what every woman c's her due, Love, children,
Nor, what may c itself as blest.
Shall c new things as dear as old :
I c it crime To mourn for any
To c their memories half divine ;
Thy likeness, I might c it vain
To-day they c as kindred souls ;
Nor c me all to blame if I
' Mother, tho' ye c me still the child,
I c it of small use To charge you)
be he dead, 1 c you for a fool ;
' I c it of no more avail, Dame,
may c The yet-unbroken strength
I should c myself the coward if I left them,
You c the father of your fortune.
The gells they c's fur nowt.
Thy frailty c's most real,
I c them all My friends
I c you kind, I hold you true ;
CSounted casting bar or stone Was c best ;
So died Earl Doorm by him he c dead.
And only queens are to be c so.
Countenance Christians with happy c's —
With a glassy c Did she look to Camelot,
If I make dark my e, I shut my life
Then her c all over Pale again as death
o'er his c No shadow past, nor motion :
Else I withdraw favour and c From you
She sets her forward c
His c blacken'd, and his forehead veins
his face Shone like the c of a priest
Forgetting how to render beautiful Her c
to see the settled c Of her I loved.
Counter rogue would leap from his c
one to the west, and c to it. And blank :
My knights have sworn the c to it —
We run more c to the soul thereof
Coiinterchange Witch-elms that c the floor
Counter-changed c The level lake with diamond-
plots
half-disfarae. And c with darkness ?
Countercharm c of space and hollow sky.
Countercheck With motions, checks, and c's.
Countermarch would fight and march and c.
Counterpane girl with her arms lying out on
the c'
little arms lying out on the c ;
Counterpressure But c's of the yielded hand
Counter-scoff fiery-short was Cyril's c-s,
Counter- term such c-t's, my son. Are border-races
Counter-yell yells and c-y's of feud And faction,
Countest See thou, that c reason ripe
Counting C the dewy pebbles, fix'd in thought ;
C the dewy pebbles, fix'd in thought ;
Country His c's war-song thrill his ears :
None of these Came from his c,
0 Prince, I have no c none ;
If love of c move thee there at all,
neither court nor c, tho' they sought
Who loves his native c best.
Countryman and in me behold the Prince Your c,
Country-side {See also Coontryside)
c-s descended ;
Countrjrvroman countrywomen ! she did not envy
gives the manners of your countrywomen ? '
A foreigner, and I your c.
County Not a lord in all the c
that almighty man, The c God —
County Member not the C M's with the vane :
County Town Last week came one to the c t,
Couple (a) a c, fair As ever painter painted,
then, the c standing side by side,
Aylmer's Fidd 670
Princess ii 294
„ m244
In Mem. xxvii 9
a:Z28
Ixxxv 61
xcl2
xcii 2
xdx 19
Con. 85
Gareth and L. 34
Geraint and E. 416
548
715
Holy Grail 325
The Revenge 11
Sisters {E. and E.) 28
ViUage Wife 18
Ancient Sage 51
Epilogue 18
The Wanderer 13
Gareth and L. 519
Geraint and E. 730
Lancelot and E. 238
Supj). Confessions 20
L. ofShalottivlS
Two Voices 53
L. of Burleigh 65
Enoch Arden 709
Aylmer's Field 307
In Mem. cxiv 6
Balin and Balan 391
Pelleas and E. 144
Lover's Tale i 97
„ m 39
Maud I i 51
Holy Grail 254
Last Tournament 80
659
In Mem. Ixxxix 1
Arabian Nights 84
Merlin and V. 466
Maud I xviii 43
Two Voices 300
AuMey Court 40
In the Child Hasp. 58
70
Sisters (E. and E.) 163
Princess v 307
Ancient Sage 250
To Duke of Argyll?,
In Mem. xxxiii 13
M. d' Arthur 84
Pass, of Arthur 252
Two Voices 153
Enoch Arden 653
Princess ii 218
Ode on WeU. 140
Marr. of Geraint 729
Hands all Round 4
Princess ii 215
tree by tree. The
Amphion 52
Princess Hi 41
,, iv 151
317
L. of Burleigh 59
Aylmer's Field 14
Walk, to the Mail 12
Maud I x37
Aylmer's Field 105
The Bridesmaid 5
Locksley H., Sixty 107
In Mem. cxxvi 4
Guinevere 396
Two Voices 327
L. C. V. de Vere 45
Enoch Arden 546
„ 629
Princess Hi 213
In Mem. cix 8
,, cxiii 16
,, cxvii 12
, , cxviii 19
,, cxxviii 4
Geraint and E. 927
Merlin and V. 880
Lover's Tale ii 14
De Prof. Two G. 20
Heavy Brigade 21
Sir J. Oldcastle 120
Gardener's D. 222
Marr. of Geraint b'23,
To the Queen 25
Couple (verb) then let men c at once with wolves. Pelleas and E. 536
Coupled No power — so chain'd and c with the curse Tiresias 58
Courage A c to endure and to obey ; Isabel 25
' C ! ' he said, and pointed toward the land, Lotos-Eaters 1
C, St Simeon ! This dull chrysalis St. S. Stylites 155
Till thy drooping c rise. Vision of Sin 152
C, poor heart of stone ! Maud II Hi 1
C, poor stupid heart of stone. — ,, 5
if dynamite and revolver leave you c to be
wise:
Courier Which every hour his c's bring.
By c's gone before ;
Course (s) {See also Water-course) Their c, till thou
wert also man :
.You held your c without remorse, j
winds variable, Then baffling, a long c of them ;
Like the Good Fortune, from her destined c.
Or baser c's, children of despair.'
outran The hearer in its fiery c ;
And roll it in another c.
And all the c's of the suns,
move his c, and show That life is not as idle ore,
faith That sees the c of human things.
Fill'd all the genial c's of his blood
The c of life that seem'd so flowery to me '
Paused in their c to hear me,
and sway thy c Along the years of haste
Three that were next in their fiery c.
Course (verb) To c and range thro' all the world.
Coursed we c about The subject most at heart,
C one another more on open ground
Court Her c was pure ; her life serene ;
Four c's I made. East, West, and South and North, Palace of Art 21
round the cool green c's there ran a row Of cloisters, , , 25
I earth in earth forget these empty c's, Tiihonus 75
' 0 seek my father's c with me, Day-Dm., Depart. 27
old-world trains, upheld at c By Cupid-boys ,, Ep. 9
in a c he saw A something-pottle-bodied boy Will Water. 130
Thro' the c's, the camps, the schools, Vision of Sin 104
A silent c of justice in his breast. Sea Dreams 174
often, in that silent c of yours — ,, 183
' I have a sister at a foreign c. Princess i 75
I stole from c With Cyril and with Florian, , , 102
In masque or pageant at my father's c. ,, 198
a c Compact of lucid marbles,
' We of the c, ' said Cyril. ' From the c '
we crost the c To Lady Psyche's :
rolling thro' the c A long melodious thunder
Descended to the c that lay three parts In shadow.
So saying from the c we paced,
there rose A hubbub in the c
push'd us, down the steps and thro' the c,
Deepening the c's of twilight broke them up
pleased him, fresh from brawling c's
I keep Within his c on earth.
Ye come from Arthur's c.
to the c of Arthur answering yea.
Merlin's hand, the Mage at Arthur's c,
then will I to c again, And shame the King
brave Geraint, a knight of Arthur's c.
Next after her own self, in all the c.
himself Had told her, and their coming to the c.
(repeat) ,, 144, 846
Held c at old Caerleon upon Usk. ,, 146
with the morning all the c were gone. ,, 156
rode Geraint into the castle c, ,, 312
while he waited in the castle c, ,, 326
the good knight's horse stands in the c ; ,, 370
Shalt ride to Arthur's c, and coming there, ,, 582
rising up, he rode to Arthur's c, ,, 591
ride with him this morning to the c, ,, 606
bright and dreadful thing, a c, ,, 616
her own faded self And the gay c, „ 653
lord and ladies of the high c went In silver tissue ,, 662
like a madman brought her to the c, „ 725
it 23
48
100
475
Hi 20
117
iv 476
555
Cow. 113
In Mem. Ixxxix 11
,, cxxvi 7
Com. of Arthur 249
446
Gareth and L. 306
897
Marr. of Geraint 1
18
Court
116
Court {continued) neither c nor country, though they _
sought Marr. of Geraint 729
I can scarcely ride with you to c, ,, 749
such a sense might make her long for c ,, „ °Xa
In this poor gown I rode with him to c, Geraint and E. 700
A knight of Arthur's c, who laid his lance In rest, ,, 7/5
Was but to rest awhile within her c ; ,, 855
we be mightier men than all In Arthur's c ; Balin and Balan 34
c and King And all the kindly warmth ,, 235
stall'd his horse, and strode across the c, ,, 341
He rose, descended, met The scorner in the castle c, ,, 387
from the castle a cry Sounded across the c, ,, , „ ,2
the mask of pure Worn by this c, Merlin and V. 3b
because that f oster'd at thy c I savour
narrow c and lubber King, farewell !
thro' the peaceful c she crept And whisper'd :
wily Vivien stole from Arthur's c.
leaving Arthur's c he gained the beach ;
I rose and fled from Arthur's c
the thing was blazed about the c,
the c, the king, dark in your light,
Arthur, holding then his c Hard on the river
Moving to meet him in the castle c ;
great knight, the darling of the c,
much they ask'd of c and Table Round,
she heard Sir Lancelot cry in the c.
Above her, graces of the c, and songs, Sighs,
we two May meet at c hereafter :
ye will learn the courtesies of the c,
Thence to the c he past ;
So ran the tale like fire about the c,
And all the gentle c will welcome me,
I go in state to c, to meet the Queen.
I hear of rumours flying thro' your c.
Nun as she was, the scandal of the C,
' Gawain am I, Gawain of Arthur's c,
Gawain of the c, Sir Gawain —
Then he crost the c, And spied not any light
Creep with his shadow thro' the c again,
My tower is full of harlots, like his c,
tonguesters of the c she had not heard.
QtJKBN Guinevere had fled the c,
one morn when all the c. Green-suited,
lissome Vivien, of her c The wiliest and the worst ;
Lured by the crimes and frailties of the c,
I came into c to the Judge and the lawyers,
showing c's and kings a truth
Fonseca my main enemy at their c.
Cast off, put by, scouted by c and king —
Than any friend of ours at C ?
You move about the C, I pray you tell King Ferdinand
Courted a well-worn pathway c us To one green
wicket
Courteous And mighty c in the main —
Sir, I was c, every phrase well oil'd,
C or bestial from the moment,
C — amends for gauntness —
Gawain, sumamed The C, fair and strong,
• Too c truly ! ye shall go no more
Too c are ye, fair Lord Lancelot,
some one thrice as c as thyself —
Courtesy To greet the sheriff, needless c !
Then broke all bonds of c,
With garrulous ease and oily courtesies
in his coffin the Prince of c lay.
men have I known In c like to thee :
amends For a c not retum'd.
stout knaves with foolish courtesies : '
waving to him White hands, and c ;
Geraint, from utter c, forbore.
Host and Earl, I pray your e ;
' I pray you of your c, He being as he is,
I see ye scorn my courtesies,
such a grace Of tenderest c,
To learn what Arthur meant by c.
38
139
149
197
297
743
870
Lancelot and E. 74
175
„ 268
344
648
698
„ 699
706
734
1060
1124
1190
Holy Grail 78
PeUeas and E. 371
379
„ 418
441
Last Tournament 81
393
Guinevere 1
" 21
„ 28
" ^It
Rizpah 33
Columbus 37
„ 126
„ 165
„ 198
.. 222
Gardener's D. 109
Aylmer's Field 121
Princess Hi 133
Gareth and L. 631
Merlin and V. 104
Lancelot and E. 555
„ 716
972
Last Tournament 706
Edwin Morris 133
Aylmer's Field 323
Princess 1 164
G. of Swainston 10
12
Maud I vi 14
Gareth and L. 733
„ _ 1377
Marr. of Geraint d81
403
Geraint and E. 641
671
862
Balin and Balan 158
Courtesy {coniinued) high-set courtesies are not for
me.
Whom all men rate the king of c.
' Is this thy c — to mock me, ha ?
wonted e, C with a touch of traitor in it,
ye will learn the courtesies of the court,
Deeming our c is the truest law.
Obedience is the c due to kings.'
myself Would shun to break those bounds of c
And loved thy courtesies and thee,
such a c Spake thro' the limbs and in the voice-
one Murmuring, ' All c is dead,'
King by c. Or King by right—
The greater man, the greater c.
For c wins woman all as well As valour
trustful courtesies of household life.
And of the two first-famed for c —
Had yet that grace of c in him left
Yield thee full thanks for thy full c
Court-favour willing she should keep C-f:
Court-Galen c-G poised his gilt-head cane.
Court-lady And should some great c-l say.
Courtliness He moving up with pliant c,
thought, and amiable words And c,
Courting See Coortin
Courtly Not her, who is neither c nor kind,
looking at her, Full c, yet not falsely,
Courtship Discussing how their c grew.
Cousin a silent c stole Upon us and departed :
Trust me, c, all the current of my being
Saying, ' Dost thou love me, c ? '
0 my c, shallow-hearted !
To give his c, Lady Clare.
' It was my c,' said Lady Clare,
Her and her far-off c and betrothed.
My lady's c. Half-sickening of his pension'd
And had a c tumbled on the plain,
Jenny, my c, had come to the place.
Had made his goodly c, Tristram, knight,
' 0 c, slay not him who gave you life.'
' Fair and dear c, you that most had
poor c, with your meek blue eyes, ^
fear not, c ; I am changed indeed.'
My sister, and my c, and my love,
c of his and hers — 0 God, so like ! '
' Take my free gift, my c, for your wife ;
And Muriel Erne— the two were c's —
I found these c's often by the brook.
Cove dimple in the dark of rushy c's,
sweet is the colour of c and cave.
And shadow'd c's on a sunny shore,
waves that up a quiet c Rolling slide,
And steering, now, from a purple c,
curl'd Thro' all his eddying c's ;
The sailing moon in creek and c ;
then the two Dropt to the c.
Sat by the river in a c, and watch'd
Covenant Breathed, like the c of a God,
Coventry / waited for the train at C ;
wife to that grim Earl, who ruled In C :
Cover (s) I slide by hazel c's ;
Cover (verb) Have mercy, mercy ! c all my sin.
C the lions on thy shield,
Cover'd His blue shield-lions c —
All over c with a luminous cloud,
fail'd from my side, nor come C,
what I saw was veil'd And c ;
Coverlet Across the purple c.
Who, moving, cast the c aside.
Coverlid The silk star-broider'd c
And all the c was cloth of gold
Covert Rode thro' the c's of the deer.
Here often they break c at our feet.'
Coverture In closest c upsprung.
Cow He praised his ploughs, his c's, his hogs,
Cow
Balin and Balan 227
257
495
Lancelot and E. 638
699
712
718
1220
1363
Holy Grail 22
Last Tournament 211
341
633
" 707
Guinevere 86
„ 323
„ 436
To Victor Hugo 13
Princess vii 58
„ il9
Marr. of Geraint 723
Geraint and E. 278
Guinevere 482
Maud / 1) 27
Lancelot and E. 236
In Mem., Con. 97
Edwin Morris 115
Locksley Hall 24
30
39
Lady Clare 4
,, 15
The Brook 75
Aylm^er's Field 460
Princess vi 319
Grandmother 25
Gareth and L. 394
Geraint and E. 783
„ 824
841
J73
Lover's Tale Hi 43
iv 327
363
The Ring 147
158
Ode to Memory 60
Sea-Fairies 30
Eleanore 18
,, 108
The Daisy 20
In Mem. Ixxix 10
„ ct 16
Com. of Arthur 378
Lancelot and E. 1389
Gardener's D. 209
Godiva 1
„ 13
The Brook 171
St. S. Stylites 84
Gareth and L. 585
1217
Holy Grail 189
„ 471
852
Day-Dm., Sleep. B.3
Marr. of Geraint 73
Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 9
Lancelot and E. 1157
Sir L. and Q. G. 21
Marr. of Geraint 183
Arabian Nights 68
The Brook 125
Cow
117
Cramm'd
N. Farmer, 0. S. 37
52
Village Wife 103
Spinsters S's. 2
Locksley H., Sixty 248
Church-warden, etc. 5
16
54
Two Voices 108
Princess v 309
In Mem. xcv 30
AferZm and V. 789
Pe«ms ajwi E. 438
TAe Revenge 4
Cow (conimwai) theer warn't not feead for a c ;
Wi' aaf the c's to cauve
as big i' the mouth as a c,
wi' her paails fro' the c.
peasant e shall butt the ' Lion passant '
an' wa lost wer Haldeny c,
an' I doubts they poison'd the c,
an' it poison'd the c.
CJoward The fear of men, a e still.
Where idle boys are c** to their shame,
dwell On doubts that drive the c back,
were he not crown'd King, c, and fool. '
a c slinks from what he fears To cope with,
* Fore Gk)d I am no c :
* I know you are no c ;
I should count myself the c if I left them, ,, 11
spared the flesh of thousands, the e and the base, Happy 17
Cowsu^ce full of e and guilty shame, Princess tv 348
being thro' his c allow'd Her station, Guinevere 516
Or c, the child of lust for gold. To the Queen II 54
Cowd (cold) sa c ! — hev another glass ! Straange an' c
fur the time ! Village Wife 20
Of a Christmas Eave, an' as c as this, Owd Rod 31
but the barn was as c as owt, ,, 111
she cotch'd 'er death o' c that night, ,, 114
CJower'd A dwarf -like Cato c. Princess vii 126
Had often truckled and c When he rose Dead Prophet 62
Cowering See Low-cowering
Cowl And turn'd the c's adrift : Talking Oak 48
leaving for the c The helmet in an abbey Holy Grail 5
Cowl'd Some e, and some bare-headed. Princess vi 77
Beside that tower where Percivale was c, Pelleas and E. 501
Cowslip Spring Letters c's on the hill ? Adeline 62
To stoop the c to the plains, Rosalind 16
c and the crowfoot are over all the hill, May Queen 38
As c unto oxlip is, Talking Oak 107
The little dells of c, fairy palms, Aylmer's Field 91
what joy can be got from a c out of the field ; In the Child. Hasp. 36
Cowslip BaU he made me the c b, First Quarrel 13
Cowslip Wine hev a glass o' c w ! Village Wife 5
Cra&dle (cradle) An' I tummled athurt the c North. Cobbler 35
Nelly wur up fro' the c Village Wife 103
bring tha down, an' thy c an' all ; Owd Rod 50
Cra&zed (crazed) Warn't I c fur the lasses mys^n N. Farmer, N. S. 18
' Cushie wur c fur 'er cauf ' Spinster's S's. 115
Crab like a butt, and harsh as c's. Walk, to the Mail 49
Crabb'd Thro' solid opposition c and gnarl'd. Princess iii 126
Come, thou are c and sour : Last Tournament 272
Crack (s) deafen'd with the stammering c's Merlin and V. 942
c of earthquake shivering to your base Pelleas and E. 465
Crack (verb) chrysalis C's into shining wings, St. S. Stylites 156
splinter'd spear-shafts c and fly. Sir Galahad 7
earthquake in one day C's all to pieces, — Lucretius 252
living hearts that c within the fire Princess v 379
and takes, and breaks, and c's, and splits, ,, 527
whelp to c ; C them now for yourself, Maud II v 55
Burst vein, snap sinew, and c heart. Sir J. OldcasUe y21i
Crack'd The mirrow c from side to side ; L. of Shalott iii 43
all her bonds C ; and I saw the flaring atom-streams Lucretius 38
The forest c, the waters curl'd. In Mem. xv 5
And c the helmet thro', and bit the bone, Marr. of Geraint 573
And once the laces of a helmet c. Last Tournament 164
whin I c his skull for her sake. Tomorrow 41
Casques were c and hauberks hack'd The Tourney 7
Crackle The tempest c's on the leads. Sir Galahad 53
Crackling His hair as it were c into flames, Aylmer's Field 586
heard A c and a rising of the roofs, Holy Grail 183
Cradle (See also Cra9,dle) To deck thy c, Eleiinore. Eleanore 21
Then lightly rocking baby's c Enoch Arden 194
sway'd The c, while she sang this baby song. Sea Breams 292
on my c shone the Northern star. Princess i 4
rock the snowy c till I died. >, iv 104
Love, Warm in the heart, his c, Lover's Tale i 158
we slept In the same c always, ,, 259
place of burial Far lovelier than its c ; ,, 530
Cradle {continued) bending by the c of her babe. The Ring 415
paler then Than ever you were in your c, moan'd, ,, 432
Cradled (See also Lily-cradled) Their Margaret c
near them. Sea Dreams 57
Cradle-head half-embraced the basket c-h ,, 289
Cradle-time Familiar up from c-t, so wan, Balin and Balan 591
Cradlemont Urien, C of Wales, Claudias, Com. of Arthur 112
Craft (art, etc.) before we came. This c of healing. Princess iii 320
less from Indian e Than beeliko instinct ,, iv 198
Yet Merlin thro' his c, Com. of Arthur 234
man of plots, C, poisonous counsels, Gareth and L. 432
answer'd with such c as women use, Geraint and E. 352
Nor left untold the c herself had used ; ,, 393
moral child without the c to rule, Lancelot and E. 146
The c of kindred and the Godless hosts Guinevere 427
chance and a and strength in single fights, Pass, of Arthur 106
c and madness, lust and spite, Locksley H., Sixty 189
Had never served for c or fear, To Marq. of Dufferin 27
C with a bunch of all-heal in her hand, Vastness 12
0 the flattery and the c Forlorn 3
Then you that drive, and know your C, Politics 5
Craft (vessel) I boated over, ran My c aground, Edwin Morris 109
At times a carven c would shoot The Voyage 53
Become the master of a larger c, Enoch Arden 144
pushing his black c among them all. Merlin and V. 563
seamen made mock at the mad little c The Revenge 38
Of others their old c seaworthy still, Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 3
Crag (See also Island-crag) And the c that fronts the Even, Eleanore 40
A gleaming c with belts of pines. Two Voices 189
barr'd with long white cloud the scornful c's, Palace of Art 83
All night the splinter'd c's that wall the dell D. of F. Women 187
And the wild water lapping on the c' M. d'Arthur 71
' I heard the water lapping on the c, ,, 116
based His feet on juts of slippery c „ 189
when the bracken rusted on their c's, Edwin Morris 100
The light cloud smoulders on the summer c. ,, 147
My right leg chain'd into the c, I lay St. S. Stylites 73
still hearth, among these barren c's, Ulysses 2
swings the trailer from the c ; Locksley Hall 162
He clasps the c with crooked hands ; The Eagle 1
At the foot of thy c's, 0 Sea ! Break, break, etc. 14
from the beetling c to which he clung Aylmer's Field 229
came On flowery levels underneath the c. Princess iii 336
like a jewel set In the dark c : ,, 359
find the toppling c's of Duty scaled Ode on WeU. 215
They tremble, the sustaining c's : In Mem. cxxvii 11
like a c that tumbles from the cliff. And like a c
was gay with wilding flowers : Marr. of Geraint 318
And lichen'd into colour vsrith the c's : Lancelot and E. 44
And found a people there among their c's. Holy Grail 662
Clutch'd at the c, and started thro' mid air Last Tournament 14
and c and tree Scaling, Sir Lancelot ,, 17
And the wild water lapping on the c' Pass, of Arthur 239
' I heard the water lapping on the c, ,, 284
based His feet on juts of slippery e ,, 357
last hard footstep of that iron c ; ,, 447
path was perilous, loosely strown with c's : Lover's Tale i 384
issuing from his portals in the c ,, 430
Revenge herself went down by the island c's The Revenge 118
the pine shot along from the c V. of Maddv/ne 16
down the c's and thro' the vales. Montenegro 8
The noonday c made the hand burn ; Tiresias 35
When I had fall'n from off the c we clamber'd The Flight 22
Crag-carven left c-c o'er the streaming Gelt — Gareth and L. 1203
Crag-cloister C-c ; Anatolian Ghost ; To Ulysses 43
Crag-platform huge c-p, smooth as burnish'd brass Palace of Art 5
Crake (See also Meadow-crake) flood the haunts of
hern and c ; In Mem. ci 14
Cram green Christmas c's with weary bones. Wan Sculptor 14
' Give, C us with all,' Golden Year 13
c him with the fragments of the grave, Princess iii 311
Well needs it we should c our ears with wool ,, tu 65
Like any pigeon will I c his crop, Gareth and L. 459
Cramm'd (See also Furze-cramm'd) ' The Bull, the
Fleece are c, Audley Court 1
Cramm'd
Cramm'd {continued) And e a plumper crop ;
Not like your Princess c with erring pride,
Titanic shapes, they c The forum,
she was c with theories out of books.
Whose ear is c with his cotton,
every margin scribbled, crost, and c With
comment,
When was age so c with menace ?
Cramming C all the blast before it,
Cramp (s) stitches, ulcerous throes and c's,
Crsimp (verb) c its use, if I Should hookit
I will not c my heart, nor take Half-views
To c the student at his desk.
118
Win Water. 124
Princess Hi 102
„ vii 124
„ Con. 35
Maud I xi2
Merlin and V. 677
Locksley H., Sixty 108
Locksley HaU 192
St. S. Stylites 13
Day -Dm., Moral 15
Will Water. 51
In Mem. cxroiii 18
I saw her
Cramp'd (/See oZso Iron-cramp'd) for women, up till ...o-o
this C under worse Princess xii m
weakness or necessity have c Within themselves, 1 iresias »/
Crane c,' I said, ' may chatter of the c, Princess tw 104
steaming marshes of the scarlet c's, ^, Prog, of Spring 7b
Crannied Flowek in the c wall, , Flow, m Cran. wall 1
Cranny I pluck you out of the crannies, ,, ^
In an ancient mansion's crannies and holes : „," T. -i^ooi
A light was in the crannies, Holy GrflSdS
Crape Nor wreathe thy cap with doleful c. My hfeisfuMU
Crash (b) came The c of ruin, and the loss of all Enoch Arden 549
In conflict with the c of shivering points, Pnwessv'^l
There at his right with a sudden c, . /£ 170
thro' the c of the near cataract hears Geratnt andlL. 1//
c Of battleaxes on shatter'd helms, ^"-^^jJ i''^'^"'" ^o
maim'd for life In the c of the cannonades The Revenge 78
The c of the charges, Batt. of BnmanburhS^
My brain is full of the c of wrecks, The Wreck ^
then came the c of the mast. » ^^
the c was long and loud- ^ ^^ Happy m
Crash (verb) The fortress c'es from on high, In Mem.cxxmil'i
I thought the great tower would c Balm andBalan 515
hail of ArSs c Along the sounding walls. i^trestas yb
Crash'd boys That c the glass and beat the floor ; In Mem. ^^«^* 20
and so they c In onset, Baiin and Ba^ano55
the stormy surf C in the shingle : Lov^s Tale in 54
as if she had struck and c on a rock ; The Wreck 108
C like a hurricane. Broke thro' the mass Heavy Brigade ^8
Crashing C went the boom, P'P"S^f',^
c with long echoes thro' the land, ^VJ'^^S ^f '^ ^?2
c thro' it, their shot and their shell, Def. of Lu.chiow 18
Crass (cross) as ye did-over yer C ! Tomorrow 90
An shure, be the C, that's betther nor cuttm „ «*
Crasst (crossed) ' niver c over say to the Sassenach whate ; ,, 48
Crate the skin Clung but to c and basket, Merlin andy.bZb
Crater the centre and c of European confusion, BeauttfuH^ity >-
Broke the Taboo, Dipt to the c, Kapiolani 6\
Crathur' (whisky) been takin" a dhrop o' the c Tomorrow ll
Crave household shelter c From winter rains Two Voices /bU
I c your pardon, 0 my friend ; In Mem. Ixxxv lUU
damsel back To c again Sir Lancelot of the King. Gareth and L 88/
See thou c His pardon for thy breaking ,, . ^ ^°^
C pardon for that insult done the Queen, Marr. of Geramt 08,i
Btay'd to c permission of the King, Balm and Balan ^88
dazzled by the sudden light, and c Pardon : Pelleas and h. 1U&
Might I c One favour ? Romm.^ s K. 69
Craved He c a fair permission to depart, Marr of Geramt 4U
Lancelot at the palace c Audience of Guinevere, Lancelot and iL. iio/
Craven Silenced for ever— c— a man of plots, Gareth and L. idl
' A c ; how he hangs his head.' Geramt and E. 127
c, weakling, and thrice-beaten hound : Pelleas and h. ^91
my c seeks To wreck thee villainously : Last Tournament 548
c shifts, and long crane legs of Mark— ,, 729
Craw (crow) theer's a c to pluck wi' tha, Sam : N. Farmer, ^-S.b
Crawin' (crowing) cocks kep a-crawin' an' c' Owd Moa lUb
Crawl Why inch by inch to darkness c? Two Voices 200
The wrinkled sea beneath him c's ; Af^ooA
But into some low cave to c. Merlin and K. 884
Crawl'd (-See oZso Scaped) C slowly with low moans to
where he lay. Balm and Balan ^<^
Pain, that has c from the corpse of Pleasure, Vastness U
But 'e creeapt an" 'e c along. Church-warden, etc. 19
Crawling scorpion c over naked skulls ;-
Crayon Mary, my c's ! if I can, I will.
Craze if the King awaken from his c.
Crazed {See also Craazed, Half-crazed)
(and I thought him c,
so c that at last There were some leap'd
arrogant opulence, fear'd myself turned c,
I c myself over their horrible infidel writings ?
for War's own sake Is fool, or c, or worse ;
coals of fire you heap upon my head Have c me.
I was all but c With the grief
CrazinesB such a c as needs A cell and keeper),
For such a c as Julian's look'd
Crazy when I were so c wi' spite.
Never a prophet so c !
Creak but am led by the c of the chain,
Creak'd The doors upon their hinges c ;
Cream fruits and c Served in the weeping elm ;
robb'd the farmer of his bowl of c :
Cream- white Her c-w mule his pastern set :
Crease (weapon) cursed Malayan c, and battle clubs
Create Life eminent c's the shade of death ;
Creation Yet could not all c pierce
And all c in one act at once,
serene C minted in the golden moods
And love C's final law—
To which the whole c moves, _
Creature Did never c pass So slightly,
But not a c was in sight :
happy as God grants To any of his c's.
As hunters round a hunted c draw
the gentle c shut from all Her charitable use,
The c laid his muzzle on your lap.
Like some wild c newly-caged.
So stood that same fair c at the door.
The sleek and shining c's of the chase.
The lovely, lordly c floated on
Like c's native unto gracious act.
Thy c, whom I found so fair.
leave at times to play As with the c of my love
0 beautiful c, what am I
A c wholly given to brawls and wine.
To pick the faded c from the pool,
they themselves, like c's gently bom
c's voiceless thro' the fault of birth,
1 compel all c's to my will.' (repeat)
To chase a c that was current then
There sat the lifelong c of the house.
Creed
Demeter and P. 78
Romney's R. 88
Gareth and L. 724
Lover's Tale iv 163
V. of Maddune 75
Despair 78
Epilogue 31
Romney's R. 142
Bandit's Death 38
Lover's Tale iv 164
„ 168
First Quarrel 73
The Throstle 10
. Rizpah 7
Mariana 62
Gardener's D. 194
Princess v 223
Sir L. and Q. G. 31
Princess, Pro. 21
Love and Death 13
A Character 5
Princess Hi 325
V 194
In Mem. Ivi 14
„ Con. 144
Talking Oak 86
167
Enoch Arden 417
Aylmer's Field 499
565
Princess ii 272
301
329
0I55
in 89
vii 27
Pro. 38
lix 12
Maud I xm\0
Marr. of Geraint 441
671
Geraint and E. 191
„ 266
„ 629, 673
Merlin and V. 408
Lancelot and E. 1143
In Mem
or had the boat Become a living c clad with wings ? Holy Grail 519
Are ye but c's of the board and bed,
His c's to the basement of the tower
and his c's took and bare him off.
Had I but loved thy highest c here ?
but the c's had worked their will,
glorious c Sank to his setting.
0 unhappy c ?
diseaseful c which in Eden was divine,
1 worshipt all too well this c of decay,
like a c frozen to the heart Beyond all hope
tendorost Christ-like c that ever stept
Credible I almost think That idiot legend c.
Credit (s) Hadst thou such c with the soul ?
His c thus shall set me free ;
Credit (verb) The world which c's what is done
Credited See Scarce-credited
Creditor They set an ancient c to work :
Credulous c Of what they long for,
Credulousness darken, as he cursed his c,
Creeap (creep) But c along the hedge-bottoms,
Creeapt (crept) But 'e c an' 'e crawl'd along.
Creed compare All c's till we have found the one
The knots that tangle human c's.
And other than his form of c,
cares to lisp in love's delicious c's :
A dust of systems and of c's.
Pelleas and E. 267
Guinevere 104
109
„ 656
Rizpah 50
Batt. of Brunanhurh 29
Forlorn 44
Happy 33
,, 45
Death of (Enone 73
Charity 32
Princess v 153
In Mem. Ixxi 5
,, Ixxx 13
,, Ixxv 15
Edwin Morris 130
Geraint and E. 875
Sea Dreams 13
Church-warden, etc. 50
19
, Supp. Confessions 176
Clear-headed friend 3
A Character 29
Car ess' d or Chidden 11
Two Voices 207
Creed
119
Cried
Creed (continued) I sit as God holding no form of c, Palace of Art 211
Against the scarlet woman and her c ; Sea Dreams 22
Who keeps the keys of all the c's, In Mem. xxiii 5
wrought With human hands the c of c's ,, xxxvi 10
shriek'd against his c — ,, Ivi 16
Believe me, than in half the c's. „ xcyi 12
To cleave a c in sects and cries, ,, cxxviii 15
The prayer of many a race and c, and clime — To the Queen tt 11
drear night-fold of your fatalist c, Despair 21
cramping c's that had madden'd the peoples ,, 24
Despite of very Faith and C, To Mary Boyle 51
I hate the rancour of their castes and c's, Akbar's Dream 65
when c and race Shall bear false witness, ,, 97
Like calming oil on all their stormy c's, ,, 160
Neither mourn if human c's be lower Faith 5
Creedless This c people will be brought to Christ Columlms 189
Creek marish-flowors that throng The desolate c's and
pools among, Dying Swan 41
The Lotos blows by every winding c : Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 101
The sailing moon in c and cove ; In Mem. ci 16
Creep (See also Cree&p) Wind c ; dews fall chilly : Leonine Eleg. 7
These in every shower c -4 Dirge 33
a languid fire c's Thro' my veins Eleanore 130
c's from pine to pine, And loiters, CEnone 4
And thro' the moss the ivies c, Lotos-Eaters C. S. 9
lost their edges, and did c Roll'd on each other, D. of F. Women 50
C's to the garden water-pipes beneath, ,, 206
c's on, Bai^e-laden, to three arches of a bridge Gardener's D. 42
The slow-worn c's, and the thin weasel Aylmer's Field 852
Where never c's a cloud, or moves a wind, Lucretius 106
Could dead flesh c, or bits of roasting ox ,, 131
Some ship of battle slowly c, To F. D. Maurice 26
And like a guilty thing I c In Mem. vii 7
When the blood c's, and the nerves prick „ 12
Must / too c to the hollow and dash myself Maud I i 54
Felt a horror over me c, >) ^y 35
Always I long to c Into some still cavern deep, ,, II iv 95
The slow tear c from her closed eyelid Merlin and V. 906
C with his shadow thro' the court again, Fdleas and E. 441
like a new disease, unknown to men, C's, Guinevere 519
down, down ! and c thro' the hole ! Def. of Luchnow 25
who c from thought to thought. Ancient Sage 103
he — some one — this way c's ! The Flight lO
fire of fever c's across the rotted floor, LocJcsley H., Sixty 223
c down to the river-shore, Charity 15
Creeper as falls A c when the prop is broken, Aylmer's Field 810
With c's crimsoning to the pinnacles, _ The Bing 82
Creeping (See also A-cree&pin, Forward-creeping,
Silent-creeping) C thro' blossomy rushes and
bowers Leonine Eleg. 3
And crystal silence c down. Two Voices 86
Upon the tortoise c to the wall ; D. of F. Women 27
c on from point to point : _ LocJcsley Hall 134
comes a hungry people, as a lion c nigher, ,, -r,^^^
Still c with the c hours »<• ^y««« ^^e 7
Crept (See also Creeapt) The cluster'd marish-mosses c. 'Mariana 40
deep inlay Of braided blooms unmown, which c . , - , on
Adown Arabian Nights 29
' From grave to grave the shadow c : Two Voices 274
And out I stept, and up I c : Edwin Morris 111
And down my surface c. Talking Oak 162
C down into the hollows of the wood ; Enoch Arden 76
Another hand c too across his trade ,, 110
He c into the shadow : at last he said, , , o87
c Still downward thinking ' dead >> 688
C to the gate, and open'd it, „■ " • U^r
With hooded brows I c into the hall. Princess iv 22b
As on The Lariano c To that fair port The Daisy 78
a gentler feeling c Upon us : In Mem. xxx 17
till he c from a gutted mine Maud I x 9
Mt life has c so long on a broken wing „ III ml
thro' the peaceful court she c And whisper'd : Merlm and V. 139
some corruption c among his knights, , " j ti I^^
from the carven-work behind him c Lancelot and E. 436
C to her father, while he mused alone, ,, 748
Crept (continued) all that walk'd, or c, or perch'd,
or flew. Last Tournament 367
in the pause she c an inch Nearer, Guinevere 527
my blood C like marsh drains thro' all my languid
limbs ; Lover's Tale ii 53
the night has c into my heart, Rizpah 16
C to his North again. Hoar-headed hero ! Batt. of Brunanburh 64
Black was the night when we c away Bandit's Death 25
Crescent (adj.) (See also De-crescent, In-crescent)
many a youth Now c, who will come Lancelot and E. 448
Crescent (s) Hundreds of c's on the roof Arabian Nights 129
And April's e glimmer'd cold, Miller's D. 107
beneath a moon, that, just In c, Audley Court 81
When down the stormy c goes. Sir Galahad 25
As when the sun, a c of eclipse. Vision of Sin 10
A downward c of her minion mouth, Aylmer's Field 533
To which thy c would have grown ; In Mem. Ixxxiv 4
To yon hard c, as she hangs ,, cvii 10
Half-lost in the liquid azure bloom of a c of sea, Maud I iv 5
With this last moon, this c— De Prof. Two G. 9
red with blood the C reels from fight Montenegro 6
Crescent-bark range Of vapour buoy'd the c-b, Day-Dm., Depart. 22
Crescent-curve Set in a gleaming river's c-c, Princess i 171
Silver c-c. Coming soon. The Ring 13
Crescent-lit while the balmy glooming, c-l, Gardener's D. 263
Crescent-moon And clove the Moslem c-m, Happy 44
Crescent-wise thro' stately theatres Bench'd c-w. Princess ii 370
Cress brook that loves To purl o'er matted c Ode to Memory 59
I loiter round my <^es ; The Brook 181
Crest She watch'd my c among them all, Oriana 30
lapwing gets himself another c ; Locksley Hall 18
and light as the c Of a peacock, Maud I xvil6
With but a drying evergreen for c, Gareth and L. 1116
The giant tower, from whose high c, they say, Marr. of Geraint 827
stormy c's that smoke against the skies, Lancelot and E. 484
And wearing but a holly-spray for c. Last Tournament 172
while he mutter'd, ' Craven c's ! 0 shame ! ,, 187
Fall, as the c of some slow-arching wave, ,, 462
To which for c the golden dragon clung Guinevere 594
c of the tides Plunged on the vessel The Wreck 89
' A warrior's c above the cloud of war ' — The Ring 338
Crete Had rest by stony hills of C. On a Mourner 35
Crevice shriek'd. Or from the c peer'd about. Mariana 65
fretful as the wind Pent in a c : Princess Hi 81
Crew (s) the seamen Made a gallant c, The Captain 6
beneath the water C and Captain lie ; ,, 68
And half the c are sick or dead. The Voyage 92
They sent a c that landing burst away Enoch Arden 634
And ever as he mingled with the c, ,,- 643
a c that is neither rude nor rash. The Islet 10
mann'd the Revenge with a swarthier alien c. The Revenge 110
harass'd by the frights Of my first c, Columbus 68
ran into the hearts of my c, V. of Maeldune 33
the c should cast me into the deep, ' The Wreck 94
the c were gentle, the captain kind ; ,, 129
Crew (verb) sitting, as I said. The cock c loud ; M. d' Arthur, Ep. 10
Crichton I call'd him C, for he seem'd Edwin Morris 21
Cricket (See also Balm-cricket) The c chirps ; the
light burns low : D. of the 0. Year 40
not a c chirr'd : In Mem. xcv 6
As that gray c chirpt of at our hearth — Merlin and V. 110
Than of the myriad c of the mead, Lancelot and E. 106
And each was as dry as a c, V. of Maeldune 50
Cricketed They boated and they c ; Princess, Pro. 160
Cried he took the boy that c aloud Dora 101
when the boy beheld His mother he c out ,, 138
Leolin c out the more upon them — Aylmer's Field 367
mock'd him with returning calm, and c : Lucretius 25
c out upon herself As having fail'd in duty ,, 277
clapt her hands and c for war. Princess iv 590
So thrice they c, I likewise, ,, Con. 104
I c myself well-nigh blind. Grandmother 37
Like those who c Diana great : Lit. Sqvxzbbles 16
So thick they died the people c, The Victim 5
And c with joy, ' The Gods have answer'd : „ 38
Cried
120
Cross
Cried (eontimied) my own sad name in corners c, Maud I vi 72
Arthur c to rend the cloth (repeat) Gareth and L. 400, 417
when mounted, e from o'er the bridge, Gareth and L. 951
Then c the fall 'n, ' Take not my life : „ 973
C out with a big voice, ' What, is he dead ? ' Geraint and E. 541
Here the huge Earl c out upon her talk, „ 651
had you c, or knelt, or pray'd to me, , 844
more than one of us C out on Garlon, Balin and Balan 123
lost itself in darkness, till she c — ,, 514
I c because ye would not pass Beyond it, Lancelot and S. 1042
So many knights that all the people c. Holy Grail 335
' That so c out upon me ? ' ,, 433
left alone once more, and c in grief, ,, 437
' Queen of Beauty,' in the lists C— Pelleas arid E. 117
his helpless heart Leapt, and he c, ,, 131
from the tower above him c Ettarre, ,, 231
' And oft in djring c upon your name.* ,, 385
And woke again in utter dark, and c, Last Tournament 623
We c when we were parted : Lover's Tale i 253
the bones that had laughed and had c — Rizpah 53
Sir Richard c in his English pride, The Revenge 82
An' I c along wi' the gells. Village Wife 96
Fur, lawks ! 'ow I c when they went, ,, 111
Some c on Cobham, on the good Lord Cobham ; Sir J. OldcasUe 43
a score of wild birds C from the topmost summit V. of Maeldune 28
Once in an hour they c, ,,29
An' I could 'a c ammost, Spinster's S's. 47
c the king of sacred song ; Locksley H., Sixty 201
And the Muses c with a stormy cry Dead Prophet 2
till I c again : ' 0 Miriam, if you love me The Ring 262
I c for nurse, and felt a gentle hand ,, 418
I c to the Saints to avenge me. Bandit's Death 14
that the boy never c again. ,, 28
Crime thorough-edged intellect to part Error from c ; Isabel 15
And all alone in c : Palace of Art 272
* Heaven heads the count of c's D. of F. Women 201
When single thought is civil c, ' You ask me, why, 19
if it were thine error or thy c Come not, when, etc. 7
it was a c Of sense avenged by sense Vision of Sin 213
' The c of sense became The c of malice, , , . . 215
keeps his wing'd affections dipt with c : Princess vii 316
Yet clearest of ambitious c. Ode on Well. 28
to dodge and palter with a public c ? Third of Feb. 24
And ever weaker grows thro' acted c, Will 12
Unfetter'd by the sense of c. In Mem. xxvii 7
Day, mark'd as with some hideous c, ,, Ixxii 18
I count it c To mourn for any overmuch ; „ Ixxxv 61
Perhaps from madness, perhaps from c, Maud I xvt 22
came to loathe His c of traitor, Marr. of Geraint 594
call him the main cause of all their c ; Merlin and V. 788
that most impute a e Are pronest to it, ,, 825
all her c. All — all — the wish to prove him ,, 864
blaze the c of Lancelot and the Queen.' Pelleas and E. 570
Lured by the c's and frailties of the court, Guinevere 136
think not that I come to urge thy c's, , , 532
A shameful sense as of a cleaving c — Lover's Tale i 794
or such c's As holy Paul— Sir J. OldcasUe 109
curbing c's that scandalised the Cross, Columbus 193
But the c, if a c, of her eldest-born. Despair 73
crown'd for a virtue, or hang'd for a c ? ,,76
C and hunger cast our maidens Locksley H., Sixty 220
' Who was witness of the c ? Forlorn 7
His c was of the senses : Romney's R. 151
Whose c had half unpeopled Hion, Death of (Enone 61
his kisses were red with his c. Bandit's Death 13
Crimson (adj.) (See also Silvery-crimson) above, C,
a slender banneret fluttering. Gareth and L. 913
c in the belt of strange device, A c grail Holy Grail 154
All pall'd in c samite, ,, ..^^7
We steer'd her toward a c cloud In Mem. ciii 55
c with battles, and hollow with graves, The Dreamer 12
Crimson (s) long-hair'd page in c clad, L. of Shalott ii 22
IMll all the c changed, and past Mariana in the S. 25
In the Spring a fuller c comes Locksley Hall 17
add A c to the quaint Macaw, Day-Dm., Pro. 16
Crimson (s) {continued) rocket molten into flakes Of c In Mem. xcviii 32
Sunder the glooming c on the marge, Gareth and L. 1365
In c's and in purples and in gems. Marr. of Geraint 10
the c and scarlet of berries that flamed V. of Maeldune 61
Close beneath the casement c Locksley H. , Sixty 34
Was all ablaze with c to the roof. The Ring 250
but — when now Bathed in that lurid c — St. Tdemachus 18
Crimson (verb) C's over an inland mere, Eleanore 42
Crimson-circled Before the c-c star In Mem. Ixxxix 47
Crimson'd glow that slowly c all Thy presence Tithonus 56
Grimson-hued c-h the stately palmwoods Whisper Milton 15
Crimson-rolling when the c-r eye Glares ruin. Princess iv 494
Crimson-threaded When from c-t lips Silver-treble
laughter trilleth : Lilian 23
Cripple a story which in rougher shape Came from a
grizzled c, Aylmer's Field 8
he met A c, one that held a hand for alms — Pelleas and E. 542
Crisp To make the sullen surface c. In Mem. xlix 8
Crispeth The babbling runnel c, Claribel 19
Critic No c I — would call them masterpieces : Princess i 145
Musician, painter, sculptor, c, ,, ii 178
And like the c's blurring comment Sisters (E. and E.) 104
And the C's rarer still. Poets and Critics 16
Critic-pen Unboding c-p. Will Water. 42
Croak c thee sister, or the meadow-crake Princess iv 124
When did a frog coarser c upon our Helicon ? Trans, of Homer 4
For a raven ever <^s, at my side, Maud I vi57
Once at the c of a Raven who crost it. Merlin and the G. 24
Croak'd A blot in heaven, the Raven, flying high, C, Guinevere 134
Crocodile C's wept tears for thee : A Dirge 22
Crocus at their feet the c brake like fire, (Enone 96
From one hand droop'd a c : Palace of Art 119
C, anemone, violet. To F. D. Maurice 44
And we roH'd upon capes of c V. of Maeldune 47
in this roaring moon of daffodil And c, Pref. Son. 19th Certt. 8
groundflame of the c breaks the mould. Prog, of Spring 1
Croft Thro' c's and pastures wet with dew Two Voices 14
Started a green linnet Out of the c ; Minnie and Winnie 18
an' thy windmill oop o' the c. Spinster's S's. 73
Cromlech And cleaves to cairn and c still ; To the Queen ii 41
Crone rhymes and scraps of ancient c's, Lover's Tale i 289
Garrulous old c, The Ring 120
Crook C and turn upon itself Locksley H., Sixty 236
Crooked Lame, c, reeling, livid. Death of (Enone 27
Crop (of a bird) And cramm'd a plumper c ; WHl Water. 124
Like any pigeon will I cram his c, Gareth and L. 459
Crop (verb) call him overquick To c his own sweet rose Merlin and V. 725
Crept They might have c the myriad flower of May, Balin and Balan 577
Cross (s) (See also Catholic Cross, Crass, Market-Cross)
A broken chancel with a broken c, M. d' Arthur 9
1 lift the c, and strive and wrestle St. S. Stylites 118
I smote them with the c ; „ 173
Fly happy with the mission of the C ; Golden Year 43
Made Him his catspaw and the C his tool, Sea Dreams 190
They mark'd it with the red c to the fall. Princess vi 41
Under the c of gold That shines Ode on Well. 49
roU'd Thro' the dome of the golden c ; ,,61
the c And those around it and the Crucified, Com. of Arthur 272
like the c her great and goodly arms Stretch 'd Gareth and L. 218
Thorns of the crown and shivers of the c, Balin and Balan 111
beat the c to earth, and break the King_ ,, 458
lone woman, weeping near a c, Stay'd him. Last Tournament 493
A broken chancel with a broken c, Pass, of Arthur 177
the copse, the fountain and— a C ! Sir J. OldcasUe 127
how I anger'd Arundel asking me To worship Holy C ! , , 136
I said, a c of flesh and blood And holier. ,, 137
we, who bore the C Thither, were excommunicated Columbus 191
curbing crimes that scandalised the C, ,, 193
He that has nail'd all flesh to the C, Vastness 28
My soldier of the C ? it is he and he Happy 12
My warrior of the Holy C and of the conquering sword, ,, 21
yesterday They bore the C before you ,, 48
Touch'd at the golden C of the churches, Merlin and the G. 68
under the Ces The dead man's garden, ,, 105
sunset glared against a c St. Telemachus 5
Cross
121
Crown
Cross (verb) Nor any cloud would c the vault Mariana in the S. 38
he was wrong to c his father thus : Dora 148
Should my Shadow c thy thoughts Too sadly Love and Duty 88
Should it c thy dreams, 0 might it come ,, 92
the lonely seabird des With one waft of the wing. The Captain 71
Not for three years to c the liberties ; Princess ii 71
It c'es here, it c'es there, Maud II iv 70
never shadow of mistrust can c Between us. Marr. of Oeraint 815
shadow of mistrust should never e Geraint and E. 248
Your leave, my Ibrd, to c the room, ,, 298
He shall not c us more ; ,, 342
I forbear you thus : c me no more. ,, 678
To e our mighty Lancelot in his loves ! Lancelot and E. 688
To c between their happy star and them ? Lover's Tale i 730
Cross-bones carved c-b, the types of Death, WHl Water. 245
Cross'd-Crost (See also Crasst) And they cross'd
themselves for fear, L. of Shalott iv 49
Sometimes your shadow cross'd the blind. Miller's D. 124
And cross'd the garden to the gardener's lodge, Audley Court 17
then we crost Between the lakes, and clamber'd Golden Year 5
And seldom crost her threshold, Enoch Arden 337
Abhorrent of a calculation <Tos<, ,, 473
crost By that old bridge which, half in ruins The Brook 78
where the waters maxry— crost, Whistling a random bar ,, 81
Then cro«< the common into Darnley chase ,, 182
He seldom crost his child without a sneer ; Aylmer's Field 562
then we crost To a livelier land ; Princess i 109
back again we crost the court To Lady Psyche's : ,, « 100
We cross'd the street and gain'd a petty mound ,, iv 557
But when we crost the Lombard plain The Daisy 49
The shade by which my life was crost, In Mem. Ixvi 5
little thumb. That crost the trencher Marr. of Geraint 396
Croat and came near, lifted adoring eyes, ' Geraint and E. 304
A walk of lilies crost it to the bower : Balin and Balan 243
every margin scribbled, crost, and cramm'd With
comment, Merlin and V. 677
was it earthly passion crost ? ' Holy Grail 29
with the bones of men, Not to be crost, „ 501
every bridge as quickly as he crost Sprang into fire ,, 505
crost the dimness of a cloud Floating, PeUeas and E. 37
Then he crost the court. And spied not any light ,, 418
her thin hands crost on her breast — In the Child. Hasp. 39
Wiclif-preacher whom I crost In flying hither ? Sir J. Oldcastle 38
Cross'd ! for once he sailed the sea LocJcsley H., Sixty 29
at the croak of a Raven who crost it, Merlin and the G. 24
shadowy fighters crost The disk, St. Tdemachus 23
When I have crost the bar. Crossing the Bar 16
Crossing (part) And, c, oft we saw the glisten The Daisy 35
I past him, I was c his lands ; Maud I xiii 6
Rivulet c my ground, ,, xxi 1
Guinevere was c the great hall Cast herself down, Merlin and V. 65
c her own picture as she came. Lover's Tale iv 286
we saw your soldiers c the ridge, Bandit's Death 21
Crossing (s) Who sweep the c's, wet or dry. Will Water. 47
Cross-lightnings c-l of four chance-met eyes Aylmer's Field 129
Cross-pipes carved c-p, and, underneath. Will Water. 247
Cross-road stake and the c-r, fool, if you will, Despair 116
Crost See Cross'd
Crotchet Chimeras, c's, Christmas solecisms. Princess, Pro. 203
Crouch 'd with playful tail C fawning in the weed. (Enone 201
I c on one that rose Twenty by measure ; St. S. Stylites 88
I c upon deck — The Wreck 120
She c, she tore him part from part, Dead Prophet 69
heard as we c below. The clatter of arms, Bandit's Death 23
Crow (s) (See also Craw) Perch'd like a c upon a thrce-
legg'd stool, AuMey Court 45
many-winter'd c that leads Locksley Hall 68
ere the hateful c shall tread The corners WiU Water. 235
a troop of carrion c's Hung like a cloud Merlin and V. 598
soVjer rook And carrion c cry ' Mortgage.' The Ring 174
Crow (verb) she heard the night-fowl c : Mariana 26
Before the red cock c's from the farm May Queen, N. Y's. E. 23
The cock c's ere the Christmas morn, Sir Galahad 51
And the cock couldn't c, V. of Maeldune 18
and c's to the sun and the moon, Despair 90
Crow (verb) continued he c's before his time ;
Crowd (s) I saw c's in columned sanctuaries :
The c's, the temples, waver'd.
To me, methought, who waited with a c,
A c of hopes, That sought to sow themselves
To tear his heart before the c !
those that held their heads above the c.
Among the honest shoulders of the c,
while none mark'd it, on the c Broke,
c's that in an hour Of civic tumult
they gave The park, the c, the house ;
preach'd An universal culture for the c,
as we came, the c dividing clove An advent
I know Your faces there in the c —
thereat the c Muttering, dissolved :
the c were swarming now. To take their leave,
civic manhood firm against the c —
For me, the genial day, the happy c,
let the sorrowing c about it grow.
Till c's at length be sane and crowns be just,
dark c moves, and there are sobs and tears ;
c's that stream from yawning doors,
more content. He told me, lives in any c,
To fool the c with glorious lies.
Thro' all that c confused and loud,
turn thy wheel above the staring c ;
such blows, that all the c Wonder'd,
and in this Are harlots like the c,
c Will murmur, ' Lo the shameless ones.
Then of the c ye took no more account
And by the gateway stirr'd a c ;
rough c, Hearing he had a difference with their priests,
The Flight 3
D.ofF. Women 22
114
M. d'Arthur, Ep. 20
Gardener's D. 64
You might have won 36
The Brook 10
Sea Dreams 166
„ 234
Lucretius 168
Princess, Pro. 94
109
iv28B
510
522
Cow. 37
57
75
Ode on Wdl. 16
169
268
In Mem. Ixx 9
,, xcviii 26
, , cxxviii 14
Maud II iv 71
Marr. of Geraint 356
564
Merlin and V. 831
Lancelot and E. 99
105
Holy Grail 424
673
no precaution used, among the c, Guinevere 519
But as a Latin Bible to the c ; Sir J. Oldcastle 18
And then in Latin to the Latin c, ,,31
a c Throng'd the waste field about the city gates : ,, 39
I saw your face that morning in the c. Columbus 7
the c would roar For blood, for war, Tiresias 64
the heart of a listening c — The Wreck 47
dark -muffled Russian c Folded its wings Heavy Brigade 38
That all the c might stare. Dead Prophet 16
lawless crown As of the lawless c ; Freedom 32
there past a c With shameless laughter, St. Telemachus 38
draw The c from wallowing in the mire Akbar's Dream 141
Crowd (verb) They come, tliey c upon me all at once — Lover's Tale i 47
Launch your vessel. And c your canvas.
Crowded C with driving atomies,
Crow'd C lustier late and early,
maid. That ever c for kisses.'
The cock has c already once.
Crowfoot cowslip and the e are over all the hill,
Merlin and the G. 127
Lover's Tale ii 174
WiU Water. 126
Princess ii 280
The Flight 3
May Queen 38
Crowing (See also A-crawin', Crawln') At midnight the
cock was c, Oriana 12
Came c over Thames. Will Water. 140
Crown (diadem, etc.) Revered Isabel, the c and head, Isabel 10
better than to own A c, a sceptre,
With a c of gold. On a throne ?
under my starry sea-bud c Low adown
Gliding with equal c's two serpents led
his ample bound to some new c : —
from his cold c And crystal silence
Ilion's column'd citadel. The c of Troas.
from all neighbour c's Alliance and allegiance,
rolling to and fro The heads and c's of kings ;
Last May we made a c of flowers :
only toil, the roof and c of things ?
Ode to Memory 121
The Merman 6
The Mermaid 16
Alexander 6
Poland 8
Two Voices 85
(Enone 14
„ 124
Palace of Art 152
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 9
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 24
soldier found Me lying dead, my e about my brows, D. ofF. Women 162
And, King-like, wears the c :
Three Queens with c's of gold —
those moments when we met. The c of all,
the angel there That holds a c ?
'tis here again ; the c ! the c !
That a sorrow's e of sorrow is
The mountain stirr'd its bushy c.
In robe and c the King stept down,
Of old sat Freedom 16
M. d'Arthur 198
Edwin Morris 70
St. S. Stylites 204
208
Locksley Hall 76
Amphion 25
BeggarMaid 5
Crown
122
Crush'd
Crown (diadem, etc.) (continued) doom Of those
that wear the Poet's c : You might have won 10
slender coco's drooping c of plumes, Enoch Arden 574
And so she wears her error like a c Princess Hi 111
gold That veins the world were pack'd to make your c, ,, iv 543
one that sought but Duty's iron c Ode on Well. 122
crowds at length be sane and c's be just. , , 169
he wears a truer c Than any wreath ,, 276
It wore a c of light, The Flower 10
And you my wren with a c of gold. Window. Spring 11
flit like the king of the wrens with a c of fire. ,, Ay. 16
I wore them like a civic c : In Mem. Ixix 8
The fool that wears a c of thorns : ,, 12
He look'd upon my c and smiled : ,,16
But ill for him that wears a c, ,, cxxvii9
has past and leaves The C a lonely splendour. Ded. of Idylls 49
More like are we to reave him of his c Gareth and L. 419
Thorns of the c and shivers of the cross, Balin and Balan 111
' Thou shalt put the c to use. The c is but the
shadow of the King, ,, 202
Balin bare the c, and all the knights Approved him, ,, 209
Before another wood, the royal c Sparkled, „ 462
' Lo there ' she cried — 'ac — ,, 465
I charge thee by that c upon thy shield, ,, 481
Drove his mail'd heel athwart the royal c, „ 640
Else never had he borne her c, ,, 566
Trampled ye thus on that which bare the CI' ,, 602
wreath of beauty thine the c of power. Merlin and V. 79
he, that once was king, had on a c Of diamonds, Lancelot and E. 45
from the skull the c RoU'd into light, ,, 50
he had the gems Pluck'd from the c, ,, 57
Since to his c the golden dragon clung, ,, 434
statue in the mould Of A rthur, made by Merlin, with a c, Holy Grail 239
the c And both the wings are made of gold, ,, 241
a c of gold About a casque all jewels ; ,, 410
And from the c thereof a carcanet Of ruby Last Tournament 6
high on land, A c of towers. ,, 506
then this c of towers So shook to such a roar ,, 620
Three queens with c's of gold : Pass, of Arthur 366
The loyal to their c Are loyal to their own far sons, To the Queen ii 27
great c of beams about his brows — Lover's Tale i 672
the cope and c Of all I hoped and fear'd ? „ ii 27
clutch 'd the sacred c of Prester John, Columbus 110
feed the rebels of the c, ,, 131
A c the Singer hopes may last, Epilogue 38
I should wear my c entire Helen's Tower 9
Thou loather of the lawless c Freedom 31
Wilt neither quit the widow'd C Prin. Beatrice 15
To wreathe a c not only for the king Akbar's Dream 23
The shadow of a c, that o'er him hung, D. of the Duke of C. 2
CJrown (five shillings) [See also Half-crown) and
he gave the nngers a c. Grandmother 58
Crown (verb) this high dial, which my sorrow c's — St. S. Stylites 95
C thyself, worm, and worship thine own lusts ! — Aylmer's Field 650
you fair stars that c a happy day Maud I xviii 30
c thee king Far in the spiritual city : ' Holy Grail 161
and one will c me king Far in the spiritual city ; „ 482
However they may c him otherwhere. ,, 902
To c it with herself. Lover's Tale i 63
who c's himself Above the naked poisons ,, 355
It still were right to c with song Epilogue 36
Crown'd (See also Citadel-crown'd, Fire-crown'd,
Glory-crown'd) ' The simple senses c his head : Two Voices 277
night divine C dying day with stars. Palace of Art 184
A name for ever ! — lying robed and c, D. ofF. Women 163
I shall be saved ; Yea, c a saint. St. S. Stylites 153
Catch me who can, and make the catcher c — Golden Year 18
reissuing, robed and c, To meet her lord, Godiva 77
Like Heavenly hope she c the sea. The Voyage 70
and true love C after trial ; Aylmer's Field 100
two fair images. Both c with stars Sea Dreams 241
C with a flower or two, Lucretius 229
and c with all her flowers. Ode Inter. Exhih. 41
And, c with all the season lent, In Mem. xxii 6
c The purple brows of Olivet. „ xxxi 11
Crown'd (continued) When c with blessing she doth rise In Mem. xl 5
I see thee sitting c with good, ,, Ixxxiv 5
Or, c with attributes of woe ,, cxviii 18
for he heard of Arthur newly c. Com. of ArOiur 41
clamour'd for a king, Had Arthur c ; ,, 236
Arthur sat C on the dais, ,, 258
the King stood out in heaven, C, ,, 444
And c with fleshless laughter— Gareth and L. 1383
he c A happy life with a fair death, Geraint and E. 967
had I c With my slain self the heaps Balin and Balan 177
were he not c King, coward, and fool.' Merlin and V. 789
Her godlike head c with spiritual fire, ,, 837
Arthur, long before they c him King, Lancelot and E. 34
Lancelot's azure lions, c with gold, ,, 663
the gilded parapets were c With faces, PeUeas and E. 165
there before the people c herself : , , 174
c the state pavilion of the King, Guinevere 399
dying thus, C with her highest act Lover's Tale i 216
with my work thus C her clear forehead. ,, 345
where that day I c myself as king, ,, 592
Julian, who himself was c With roses, ,, iv 296
There c with worship — Tiresias 175
whether c for a virtue, or hang'd for a crime ? Despair 76
Her shadow c with stars — Ancient Sage 201
songs in praise of death, and c with flowers ! ,, 209
C with sunlight — over darkness — LocTcsley H., Sixty 92
C so long with a diadem Never worn by a worthier, On Jui. Q. Victoria 7
Love for the maiden, c with marriage, Vastness 23
maiden-Princess, c with flowers, The Ring 485
the c ones all disappearing ! Parnassus 13
C her knights, and flush'd as red As poppies when
she c it. The Tourney 16
Crowning Knighted by Arthur at his c — Com. of Arthur 175
And c's and dethronements : To the Queen ii 45
Crown-farm Sold the c-f's for all but nothing, Columbus 132
Crown-royal bear her own c-r iipon shield, Balin and Balan 200
Why wear ye this c-r upon shield ? ' ,, 338
' Why wear ye that c-r ? ' „ 348
Crown-scandalous wear ye still that same c-sV ,, 390
Crowsfoot Made wet the crafty c round his eye ; Sea Dreams 187
Crucified either they were stoned or c, St. S. Stylites 51
the cross And those around it and the C, Com. of Arthur 273
Crucifix Or the maid-mother by a c. Palace of Art 9S
Cruel c as a schoolboy ere he grows To Pity — Walk, to the Mail 109
' C, c the words I said ! Edward Gray 17
more harsh and c Seem'd the Captain's mood. The Captain 13
no tenderness — Too hard, too c : Princess v 516
O c, there was nothing wild or strange. Merlin and V. 860
Cruel-hearted They call me c-h, but I care not May Queen 19
Crueller C : as not passing thro' the fire Aylmer's Field 671
' 0 c than was ever told in tale, Merlin and V. 858
which was c ? which was worse '( Locksley H., Sixty 88
Cruelty Infinite c rather that made everlasting Hell, Despair 96
Cruet gentlemen, That trifle with the c. Will Water. 232
Crumble touch it, it will c into dust.' Holy Grail 439
and they c into dust. Locksley H., Sixty 72
Crumbled Till public wrong be c into dust, Ode on Well. 167
Fell into dust, and c in the dark — Lover's Tale i 95
Crumpled More c than a poppy from the sheath. Princess v 29
the rest Were c inwards. The Ring 454
Crupper Beyond his horse's c and the bridge, Gareth and L. 966
length of lance and arm beyond The c, Geraint and E. 464
Crusade to lead A new c against the Saracen, Columb'us 103
load One last c against the Saracen, ,, 239
Crush (s) great the c was, and each base, Princess vi 353
Crush (verb) Like a rose-leaf I will c thee, Lilian 29
Will c her pretty maiden fancies dead Princess i 88
Or c her, like a vice of blood. In Mem. Hi 15
this Order lives to c All wrongers Gareth and L. 625
when I thought he meant To c me. Holy Grail 416
he sail'd the sea to c the Moslem in his pride ; Locksley H., Sixty 29
Crush'd (See also Half-crushed) I c them on my breast, my
mouth ; Fatima 12
sin, that c My spirit flat before thee. St. S. Stylites 25
like monstrous apes they c my chest : ,, 174
Crush'd
123
Cry
Crush'd (continued) Lady Psyche will be c ;
she c The scrolls together,
record of her wrongs, And c to death :
I found, tho' c to hard and dry,
Had bruised the herb and c the grape,
Mangled, and flatten'd, and c,
c with a tap Of my finger-nail
c in the clash of jarring claims,
c The Idolaters, and made the people free ?
c the man Inward, and either fell,
her feet unseen C the wild passion out
Then c the saddle with his thighs,
Caught in a mill and c —
he was c in a moment and died,
Princess Hi 63
,, iv 393
„ V 144
The Daisy 97
In Mem. xxxv 23
Mavd III
Maud II a 21
„ /77ot44
Gareth and L. 1 36
Balin and Balan 562
Lancdot and E. 742
PeHeas and E. 459
In the Child. Hosp. 14
Charity 21
Crushing Kaw from the prime, and c down his mate ; Princess ii 121
Crust one slough and c of sin, St. S. Stylites 2
saw Thee woman through the c of iron moods Princess vii 342
Crusted flower-plots Were thickly c, one and all : Mariana 2
Crutch Weak Truth a-leaning on her c. Clear-headed friend 18
Cry (s) [See also Battle-cry, Wax-cry) I cry aloud : none
hear my cries, Oriana 73
one deep c Of great wild beasts ; Palace of Art 282
the deep behind him, and a c Before. M. d' Arthur 184
A c that ahiver'd to the tingling stars, ,, 199
the boy's c came to her from the field. Bora 104
lest a c Should break his sleep by night. Walk, to the Mail73
In one blind c of passion and of pain, Love and DtUy 80
Begins the scandal and the c : You might have won 16
In him woke. With his first babe's first c, Enoch Arden 85
Forward she started with a happy c, ,, 151
all the younger ones with jubilant cries Broke ,, 377
hard upon the c of ' breakers ' came ,, 548
send abroad a shrill and terrible c, „ 768
gave A half -incredulous, half-hysterical c. ,, 853
knew he wherefore he had made the c ; Aylmer's Field 589
Clung to the mother, and sent out a c Sea Breams 245
A mtisic harmonizing our wild cries, ,, 255
The plaintive c jarr'd on her ire ; Princess iv 393
To lag behind, scared by the c they made, ,, « 94
rose a c As if to greet the king ; ,, 248
clash'd flis iron palms together with a c ; ,, 354
She nor swoon 'd, nor utter'd c: ,, «i 2
went up a great c, The Prince is slain. ,, 25
piteous was the c : ,, 142
and out of languor leapt a c ; ,, wi 155
Sent from a dewy breast a c for light : ,, 253
Whose crying is a c for gold : The Baisy 94
He heard a fierce mermaiden c. Sailor Boy 6
Greater than I — is that your c ? Spiteful Letter 17
He caught her away with a sudden c ; The Victim 69
Forgive these wild and wandering cries, In Mem., Pro. ^1
From out waste places comes a c, , , iii 7
And with no language but a c. ,, liv20
To raise a c that lasts not long, ,, Ixxv 10
strange Was love's dumb c defying change ,, xcv27
The roofs, that heard our earliest c, ,, cii 3
With overthrowings, and with cries, „ cxiii 19
To cleave a creed in sects and mes, ,, cxxviii 15
A c above the conquer'd years ,, cxxxi 7
A wounded thing with a rancorous c, Maud I xM
And there rises ever a passionate c ,, II i 5
there rang on a sudden a passionate c, Ac for a brother's
blood: )j 33
rings on a sudden a passionate c, ,, iv 47
loyal people shouting a battle c, ,, /// vi 35
' Ay,' said the King, ' and hear ye such a c ? Com. of Arthur 337
Died but of late, and sent his c to me, ,, 361
there were cries and clashings in the nest, Gareth and L. 70
Gareth crying prick'd against the c ; ,, 1221
rose a c That Edyrn's men were on them, Marr. of Geraint 638
Sent forth a sudden sharp and bitter c, Geraint and E. 722
c of children, Enid's and Gteraint's ,, 965
from the castle a c Sounded across the court, Balin and Balan 399
Pellam's feeble c ' Stay, stay him ! ,,420
Utter'd a little tender dolorous c. Lancelot and E. 817
Cry (s) (continued) overhead Thunder, and in the thunder
was a c. Eoly Grail 185
I saw tho Holy Grail and heard a c — ,, 291
ye know the cries of all my realm Pass thro' this hall — ,, 315
Such was his c : for having heard the King Pelleas and E. 10
thro' the wind Pierced ever a child's c : Last Tournament 17
She ended, and the c of a great jousts ,, 51
mantle clung, And pettish cries awoke, ,, 214
Nor heard the King for their own cries, „ 472
cities burnt, and with a c she woke. Guinevere 83
I cry my c in silence, and have done. ,, 201
Then on a sudden a c, ' The King.' ,, 411
but in going mingled with dim cries Pass, of Arthur 41
are these dim cries Thine ? ,,47
Nor any c of Christian heard thereon, , , 128
King am I, whatsoever be their c : ,, 162
heard the deep behind him, and a c Before. ,, 352
A c that shiver 'd to the tingling stars, ,, 367
Like the last echo born of a great c, ,, 459
witness, too, the silent c. To the Queen ii 10
sent my c Thro' the blank night to Him Lover's Tale i 751
I flung myself upon him In tears and cries : ,, ii 90
Cries of the partridge like a rusty key ^^ 115
guests broke in upon him with meeting hands And cries „ iv 239
Rush'd at each other with a c, ,, 373
hear that c of my boy that was dead, Rizpah 45
strangled vanity Utter'd a stifled c— Sisters (E. arid E.) 200
there was a phantom c that I heard as I tost
about. In the Child. Hosp. 63
and heard their musical c — V. of Maddune 97
when the brazen c of ^akides Achilles over the T. 22
Never a c so desolate, Bespair 59
Gone the c of ' Forward, Forward,' Locksley H., Sixty 73
Let us hush this c of ' Forward ' ,,78
Cries of unprogressive dotage ,, 153
leave the dog too lame to follow with the c, ,, 226
the Muses cried with a stormy c Bead Prophet 2
0 scorner of the party c Freedom 25
mighty was the mother's childless c, A c Bemeter and P. 32
he, the God of dreams, who heard my c, ,, 91
lover thro' this ring Had sent his c for her forgiveness, The Ring 233
1 myself was madden'd with her c, ,, 405
Nor lend an ear to random cries, Politics 7
from out the long ravine below, She heard a
wailing c, Beath of (Enone 20
following, as in trance, the silent c. ,,86
the c from off the mosque, Akbar's Bream 149
on the sudden, and with a c ' Saleem ' 184
till the little one utter'd a c. Bandit's Beath 26
Cry (verb) I c aloud : none hear my cries, Oriana 73
Call to each other and whoop and c The Merman 26
every smouldering town Cries to Thee, Poland 6
Cries to Thee, ' Lord, how long shall these things be ? ,,9
Than c for strength, remaining weak, Two Voices 95
' C, faint not : either Truth is born 181
' C, faint not, climb : the summits slope ,, 184
We did so laugh and c with you, B. of the O. Fear 25
Yet cease I not to clamour and to c, St. S. Stylites 42
for a tender voice will c. Locksley Hall 87
C down the past, not only we, Godiva 7
bade him c, with sound of trumpet, , 36
c For that which all deny them — WiU Water. 45
let the wind sweep and the plover c ; Come not, when, etc. 5
C to tho summit, ' Is there any hope ? Vision of Sin 220
I c to vacant chairs and widow'd walls, Aylmer's Fidd 720
Must c to these the last of theirs, ,, 792
I c to thee To kiss thy Mavors, Lua-elius 81
Earth Reels, and the herdsmen c ; Princess v 529
I cannot c for him, Annie : Grandmx)ther 15
Than if the crowded Orb should c Lit. Squabbles 15
With morning wakes the will, and cries, In Mem. iv 15
thought That cries against my wish for thee. ,, a;c 24
C thro' the sense to hearten trust ,, cxvi 7
Then was I as a child that cries, ,, cxxivlQ
I to c out on pride Who have won Maud I xii 17
Cry
124
Curious
Cry (verb) {continued) rose cries, ' She is near, she is near ; ' Maud I xxii 63
I will c to the steps above my head ,, II v 101
A c from out the dawning of my life, Com. of Arthur 333
Who will c shame ? Gareth and L. 942
and c, ' Thou hast made us lords, ,, 1131
mother-maidenhood of Heaven, C out upon her. Balin and Balan 522
children cast their pins and nails, and c. Merlin and V. 430
she heard Sir Lancelot c in the court, Lancelot and E. 344
I c my cry in silence, Guinevere 201
' 0 mother ! ' I heard him c. Bizpah 42
an' saw she begins to c, North. Cobbler 71
I should c to the dear Lord Jesus to help me, In the Child. Hosp. 49
Before thy light, and c continually — C Sir J. OldcasUe 85
that men C out against thee : Columbus 153
So dark that men c out against the Heavens. Ancient Sage 172
weep my fill once more, and c myself to rest ! The Flight 6
Cries to Weakest as to Strongest, Lochsley H., Sixty 110
Nay, your pardon, c your ' forward, ' ,, 225
Too many a voice may c That man Epilogue 72
Far off a phantom cuckoo cries Pref. Poem Broth. S. 19
sober rook And carrion crow c ' Mortgage.' The Ring 174
Nor even a Sir Joshua, some will c, Romney's R. 47
some c ' Quick ' and some c ' Slow,' Politics 9
Shall the rose C to the lotus Ahbar's Dream 37
And a beggar began to c ' Food, food Voice spake, etc. 5
Cryin' (paxt) an' c and tearin' 'er 'aair, North. Cobbler 34
but we hard it c, ' Ochone ! ' Tomorrow 84
Crying (part) (See also A-cryin', Cr3an', Keenin') c to
each other And calling, Enoch Arden 382
C with a loud voice * A sail ! ,,913
And c upon the name of Leolin, Aylm^r's Field 576
Some c there was an army in the land. Princess iv 484
An infant c in the night : An infant c for the light : In Mem. liv 18
But, c, knows his father near ; ,, cxxiv 20
They were c and calling. Maud I xii 4
Were c and calling to her, ,, 26
many another suppliant c came With noise Gareth and L. 436
Then came a widow c to the King, ,, 333
Came yet another widow c to him, ,, 350
Gareth c prick'd against the cry ; ,, 1221
flying back and c out, ' 0 Merlin, Merlin and V. 943
And all his legions c Christ and him, Lancelot and E. 305
c that his prize is death.' ,, 531
maiden sprang into the hall C on help : Holy Grail 209
c with full voice ' Traitor, come out, Guinevere 105
Whereat the novice c, with clasp'd hands, ,, 311
Two friars c that if Spain should oust Columbus 96
c after voices that have fled ! Lochsley H., Sixty 251
Crying (s) mine but from the c of a child." Sea Dreams 249
Whose c is a cry for gold : The Daisy 94
and 0*3 for the light. Pass, of Arthur 116
Or at my c ' Mother ? ' The Ring 141
Crypt My knees are bow'd in c and shrine : Sir Galahad 18
And fall'n into the dusty c WiU Water. 183
those cold c's where they shall cease. In Mem. Iviii 8
Crystal And down the streaming c dropt ; Princess vii 165
In a shallop of c ivory-beak'd. The Islet 12
Became a c, and he saw them thro' it. Merlin and V. 630
c into which I braided Edwin's hair ! The Flight 34
Cube hard-grain'd Muses of the c and square Princess, Pro. 180
Cubit lived upon a pillar, high Six c's, St. S. Stylites 87
numbers forty c's from the soil. ,, 91
Drave the long spear a c thro' his breast Geraint and E. 86
Cuckoo The c told his name to all the hills ; Gardener's D. 93
I built the nest,' she said, 'To hatch the c. Princess iv 366
' C ! c ! ' was ever a May so fine ? Window. Ay 10
' I have seen the c chased by lesser fowl, Com. of Arthur 167
Than the gray c loves his name. Lover's Tale i 257
The c of a joyless June Is calling out of doors : Pref Poem Broth. S. 3
I'he c of a worse July Is calling thro' the dark : ,, 11
a phantom c cries From out a phantom hill ; ,, 19
There I I heard Our c call. To Mary Boyle 6
A clamorous c stoops to meet her hand ; Prog, of Spring 45
Cuckoo-flower As perfume of thee-/? Margarets
blow the faint sweet c-f's ; May Q,ueen 30
Cud chew'd The thrice-turn'd c of wrath
Princess i (
Cuddle as good to c an' kiss as a lass as ant nowt ? N. Farm^, N. S. 24
Cuddled (See also Coodled) An' we c and huddled
togither, Qwd Rod 112
CuflTd Caught and c by the gale : Maud Ivi5
Cuirass on his c work our Lady's Head, Lancelot and E. 294
and a spear Prick'd sharply his own c, ,, 489
Cuisses and c dash'd with drops Of onset ; M. d' Arthur 215
and c dash'd with drops Of onset ; Pass, of Arthur 383
Cull I c from every faith and race Akbar's Dream 68
Cull'd whitest honey in fairy gardens c — Eleanore 26
Because all words, tho' c with choicest art, D. of F. Women 285
but one, by those fair fingers c. Gardener's D. 150
In mine own lady palms I c the spring Merlin and V. 273
Culminate lead The new light up, and c in peace, Princess ii 348
Culmination All starry c drop Balm-dews Talking Oak 267
Cultivation months of toil. And years of c, Amphion 98
Culture An universal e for the crowd, Princess, Pro. 109
whence they need More breadth of c : ,, « 188
Culver round her brows a woodland c flits. Prog, of Spring 18
Cunning-simple So innocent-arch, so c-s, Lilian 13
Ciinobeline rioted in the city of C ! Boadicea 60
Cup I drink the c of a costly death, Eleanore 138
I pledge her not in any cheerful c. Wan Sculptor 9
Three fingers round the old silver c — Miller's D. 10
incense of all odour steam'd From out a golden c. Palace of Art 40
That was the last drop in the c of gall. Walk, to the Mail 69
My little oakling from the c. Talking Oak 231
Will haunt the vacant c : Will Water. 172
' Fill the c, and fill the can : (repeat) Vision of Sin 95, 119, 203
' Fill the can, and fill the c : (repeat) ,, 131, 167
c's and silver on the burnish'd board Sparkled Enoch Arden 742
The magic c that fill'd itself anew. Aylmer's Field 143
Only such c's as left us friendly-warm, Lucretius 215
There they drank in c's of emerald, Boadicea 61
The crowning c, the three-times-three, In Mem. Con. 104
they sat, And c clash'd c ; Balin and Balan 85
to hurl his c Straight at the speaker. Merlin and V. 30
Except indeed to drink : no c had we : ,, 272
made a pretty c of both my hands ,, 275
phantom of a c that comes and goes ? ' Holy Grail 44
' The c, the c itself, from which our Lord ,, 46
the holy c Was caught away to Heaven, ,, 57
Lancelot might have seen, The Holy C of healing ; ,, 655
hast thou seen the Holy C, ,, 734
children sat in white with c's of gold. Last Tournament 142
And them that round it sat with golden c's ,, 289
white slips Handed her c and piped, ,, 296
the c was gold, the draught was mud.' ,, 298
c's Where nymph and god ran ever round Lover's Tale iv 196
Warm as the crocus c. Early Spring 29
wines of heresy in the c Of counsel — Akbar's Dream 174
Cupid The rentroll C of our rainy isles. Edwin Morris 103
The modish C of the day. Talking Oak 67
The seal was C bent above a scroll. Princess i 242
Cupid-boys By C-b of blooming hue — Day-Dm., Ep. 10
Cur yelp'd the c, and yawl'd the cat ; The Goose 33
the barking c Made her cheek flame : Godiva 57
c Pluckt from the c he fights with, Gareth and L. 701
Curate and with Edward Bull The c ; Edwin Morris 15
said the fat-faced c Edward Bull, (repeat) ,, 42, 90
'e's nobbut a c, an' weant niver git hissen clear, N. Farmer, N. S. 27
An' thou'U be 'is C 'ere, Church-warden, etc. 45
Curb ' Wild natures need wise c's. Princess v 173
mine the voice to c The madness Tiresias 70
c the beast would cast thee in the mire. Ancient Sage 276
Curb'd strongly groom 'd and straitly e Princess y 456
Curdled half the wolf 's-milk c in their veins, ,, vii ISO
Cure (curacy) The curate ; he was fatter than his c. Edwin Morris 15
Cure (remedy) declined. And trusted any c. Palace of Art 156
Wonderful c's he had done, 0 yes, In the Child. Hosp. 5
Cured C lameness, palsies, cancers. St. S. Stylites 82
And c some halt and maim'd ; x 137
could only be c, if c, by the surgeon's knife, Despair 80
Curious Hetairai, c in their art, Lucretius 52
Curious
125
Curve
Curious (continued) Too c Vivien, the' you talk of
trust, Merlin and V. 358
Not ever be too c for a boon, ,, 486
You are c. How should I tell ? Despair 3
Curiousness In children a great c be well, Merlin and V. 364
Curl (s) his ridges are not cTs And ripples Supp. Confessions 130
In many a dark delicious c, Arabian Nights 139
In a golden c With a comb of pearl, The Mermaid 6
flow'd His coal-black c'i as on he rode, L. of Shalott Hi 31
fingers drew Her streaming c's of deepest brown Mariana in the S. 16
and the light and lustrous c's — M. d Arthur 216
dim c's kindle into sunny rings ; Tithonus 54
And moves not on the rounded c. Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 8
took him by the c's, and led him in, Vision of Sin 6
from her baby's forehead dipt A tiny c, and gave it : Enoch Arden 236
The hand that play'd the patron with her c's. Princess, Pro. 138
Melissa shook her doubtful c's, ,, Hi 75
From the flaxen c to the gray lock ,, iv 426
on their c's From the high tree the blossom wavering
fell, „ vi 79
And down dead-heavy sank her c's, ,, 147
And winds their c's about his hand : In Mem. Ixvi 12
little head, sunning over with c's, Maud I xxii 57
Perchance, one c of Arthur's golden beard. Merlin and V. 58
and the light and lustrous c's — Pass, of Arthur 384
One golden c, his golden gift. The Flight 36
begun to gleam Thro' youthful c's. To Mary Boyle 42
Curl (verb) c round my silver feet silently, The Mermaid 50
May serve to c a maiden's locks. In Mem. Ixxvii 7
Began to move, seethe, twine and c : Gareth and L. 234
Curl'd about His dusty forehead drily c, Miller's D. 6
I c and comb'd his comely head, The Sisters 31
on herself her serpent pride had c. Palace of Art 257
the clouds are lightly c Round their golden
houses, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 112
Faint shadows, vapours lightly c, Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 5
All-graceful head, so richly c, ,, L' Envoi 38
The forest crack'd, the waters c, In Mem. xv 5
For us the same cold streamlet c ,, Ixxix 9
a mist Of incense c about her, Com. of Arthur 288
breeze c over a peacef uller sea. The Wreck 133
Curlew all around it, as of old, the c's call, Locksley Hall 3
while I heard the c's call, Locksley H., Sixty 3
Cum (Com) Till I gied 'em Hinjian c. Village Wife 118
Currency brooking not Exchange or c : Lover's Tale i 448
Current (See also Full-current, Main-current, Sea-
current) Till in its onward c it absorbs Isabel 31
From those four jets four c's in one swell Palace of Art 33
The ever-shifting c's of the blood D. of F. Women 133
' all the c of my being sets to thee.' Locksley HaU 24
upward runs The c of my days : Will Water. 36
turn'd The c of his talk to graver things Enoch Arden 203
Fast flow'd the c of her easy tears, , , 865
then the motion of the c ceased. Sea Dreams 117
crystal c's of clear morning seas. Princess ii 328
You turn'd your warmer c's all to her, ,, zu 301
glowing in the broad Deep-dimpled c underneath, Gareth and L. 1089
and driven My c to the fountain whence it sprang, Lover's Tale i 503
But in the onward c of her speech, ,, 565
Noises of a c narrowing, Locksley H., Sixty 154
alchemise old hates into the gold Of Love, and make
it c ; Akbar's Dream 164
Curse (s) A c is on her if she stay L. of Shalott ii 4
She knows not what the c may be, ,, 6
' The c is come upon me,' cried The Lady „ Hi 44
I said, ' I toil beneath the c. Two Voices 229
' My youth,' she said, ' was blasted with a c : D. of F. Women 103
This is the c of time. To J. S. 17
this world's c, — beloved but hated — Love and Duty 47
My Shakespeare's c on clown and knave You might have won 27
And left their memories a world's c — Aylm^r's Field 796
A c in his God-bless-you : Sea Dreams 164
I remember'd that burnt sorcerer's c Princess v 475
when she turn'd, the c Had fallen, In Mem. vi 37
we have made them a c, Maud / i 21
Corse (s) (continued) She may bring me a c.
the sparrow-hawk. My c, my nephew —
God's c, it makes me mad to see you weep.
Thy c, and darken'd all thy day ;
' That is love's c ; pass on,
woman-worshipper ? Yea, God's c, and I !
Until it came a Kingdom's c with thee —
their c's and their groans.
Maud I i 73
Marr. of Geraint 445
Geraint and E. 616
Balin and Balan 620
Lancelot and E. 1353
Last Tournament 447
Guinevere bbQ
Columlnis 68
chain'd and coupled with the c Of blindness and their
unbelief, Tiresias^bS
blunt the c Of Pallas, hear, ,, 154
never gloom'd by the c Of a sin, The Wreck 139
If a c meant ought, I would curse you Despair 64
follies, furies, c's, passionate tears, Locksley H,, Sixty 39
man had coin'd himself a c : ,,87
And ' The C of the Prophet ' in Heaven. Dead Prophet 28
On you will come the c of all the land, The Fleet 3
stings him back to the c of the light ; Vastness 18
My c upon the Master's apothegm, Romney's B. 37
arose The shriek and c of trampled millions, Akbar's Dream 190
I sent him a desolate wail and a c. Charity 14
Curse (verb) I c not nature, no, nor death ; In Mem. Ixxiii 7
c me the blabbing lip. And c me Maud II v 57
I c the tongue that all thro' yesterday Gareth and L. 1322
To c this hedgerow thief, Marr. of Geraint 309
I did not come to c thee, Guinevere, Guinevere 533
I would c you for not having let me be. Despair 64
m.ay the Great God c him and bring him ,, 106
'C him ! ' c your fellow- victim ? Locksley H., Sixty 9
Cursed c and scorn'd, and bruised with stones : Two Voices 222
And bless'd herself, and c herself. The Goose 15
C be the social wants that sin against the strength
of youth ! C be the social lies that warp us from
the living truth ! C be the sickly forms that err
from honest Nature's rule ! C be the gold that
gilds Locksley Hall 59
face Would darken, as he c his credulousness. Sea Dreams 13
C me and my flower. The Flower 8
I have c him even to lifeless things) Maud I xix 15
and c the tale, The told-of, and the teller. Balin and Balan 542
c The dead babe and the follies, of the King ; Last Tournament 162
' I had sooner be c than kiss'd ! ' — First Quarrel 83
I, Earth-Goddess, c the Gods of Heaven. Demeter and P. 102
Snarl'd at and c me. Merlin and the G. 28
he sobb'd and he wept. And c himself ; Bandit's Death 30
I had c the woman he married. Charity 24
I had c her as woman and wife, ,, 31
Cursing (part. ) I stood With Florian, c Cyril, Princess iv 171
I was c them and my doom, Maud I xix 51
And c their lost time, and the dead man, Geraint and E. 576
Cursing (s) she was deaf To blessing or to c ,, 579
Curtain [See also Casement-curtain) In the white
c, to and fro. She saw Mariana 51
with thee forgets to close His c's, Adeline 43
haunted with a jolly ghost, that shook The c's, Walk, to the Mail 37
He had cast the c's of their seat aside — Ayltner's Field 803
I beheld The death-white c drawn ; Maud I xiv 34
the death-white c meant but sleep, ,, 37
By the c's of my bed ,, II iv 54
at one end of the hall Two great funereal c's, Lover's Tale iv 214
drama's closing c is the pall I Locksley H., Sixty 62
Curtain-fold from out the silken c-f's Gareth and L. 925
Curtsey made me a mocking c and went. Grandmother 46
Curtseying c her obeisance, let us know The Princess
Ida waited : Princess ii 20
Curve (s) (See also Crescent-ourve) the rainbow lives
in the c of the sand ; Sea-Fairies 27
c's of mountain, bridge, Boat, island, Edwin Morris 5
In c's the yellowing river ran. Sir L. and Q. G. 15
With many a c my banks I fret The Brook 43
To left and right thro' meadowy c's, In Mem. c 15
Or the least little delicate aquiline c Maud I ii 10
in kindly c's, with gentlest fall, De Prof., Two G. 23
turn upon itself in many a backward stream-
ing c. Locksley H., Sixty 236
Curve
126
Dagonet
Curve (verb) And out again I c and flow
Curved (See also Sudden-curved) c an arm about
his neck,
Curvet Making a roan horse caper and c
Curving And c a contumelious lip,
a procession, c round The silver-sheeted bay :
Cushie ' C wur craazed fur 'er cauf '
Cushion On silken c's half reclined ;
The c's of whose touch may press
Tom, lig theere o' the c,
Custom (habit) one good c should corrupt the world
Appraised the Lycian c,
Disyoke their necks from c,
And moved beyond his c, Gama said :
For this was Arthur's c in his hall ;
And reverencing the c of the house
pick the vicious quitch Of blood and c
I rode, Shattering all evil c's
one good c should corrupt the world.
' There is a c in the Orient, friends —
This c — ' Pausing here a moment.
This c steps yet further when the guest
Cutsom (business) See Coostom
Here is c come your way ;
Cut (s) this c is fresh ; That ten years back ;
Cut (verb) c's atwain The knots that tangle
they c away my tallest pines,
I was c off from hope in that sad place,
C Prejudice against the grain :
where the hedge-row c's the pathway, stood,
some little cloud C's off the fiery highway
C off the length of highway on before,
This hair is his : she c it off and gave it,
And c this epitaph above my bones ;
C the Roman boy to pieces
What is she, c from love and faith,
c off from the mind The bitter springs
Struck at him with his whip, and c his cheek,
es he couldn't c down a tree !
' Lad, thou mun c ofif thy taail,
thou'll 'gree to c off thy taail
to git 'im to c off 'is taail.
an' 'e wouldn't c off the taail.
' Groin' to c the Sassenach whate '
c his bit o' turf for the tire ?
Cut See also Clean-cut, Clear-cut
Cuttin' betther nor c the Sassenach whate
Cutting (See also Cuttin') c eights that day upon the
pond,
Cycle (s) Young Nature thro' five c's ran,
plann'd With c's of the human tale,
Better fifty years of Europe than a c of Cathay.
together at her will Thro' all her c's —
But when their c is o'er,
lead The closing c rich in good.
Cycle (verb) Falls off, but c's always round.
Cycle-year Will mould him thro' the c-y
Cygnet the swan's Is tawnier than her c's :
Cymbal people rejoice With shawms, and with c's,
Cypress With c promenaded.
Nor waves the c in the palace walk ;
watch'd awake A c in the moonlight shake,
Made c of her orange flower,
rise three dark, tall c'es, — Three c'es,
The mountain, the three c'es, the cave.
Break thro' the yews and c of thy grave,
the poplar and c unshaken by storm
the palm Call to the c ' I alone am fair ? '
Cypress-cone c-c's I'hat spired above the wood ;
Cyril I stood With C and with Florian,
C whisper'd : ' Take me with you too.'
I stole from court With C and with Florian,
' We of the court ' said C. ' From the court
' Comely, too, by all that's fair,' said C
' Let me die too,' said C, ' having seen
The Brook 182
Merlin and V. 241
Lancelot and E. 792
Maud I xiii 20
Lover's Tale ii 75
Spinster's S's. 115
Elednore 126
Talking Oak 179
Spinster's S's. 94
M. d' Arthur 242
Princess ii 128
143
„ vi 229
Gareth and i. 410
Marr. of Geraint 380
Geraint and E. 904
Holy Grail 477
Pass, of Arthur 410
Lover's Tale iv 230
236
244
Vision of Sin 64
Lancelot and E. 21
Clear-headed friend 2
CEnone 208
D. ofF. Women 105
Love thou thy land 22
Gardener's D. 86
Enoch Arden 130
673
„ 894
Princess ii 207
Boadicea 66
In Mem, cxiv 11
Maud / a: 48
Marr. of Geraint 207
Village Wife 30
64
66
74
78
Tomorrow 14
65
Tomorrow 94
The Epic 10
Two Voices 17
Palace of ArtUQ
Locksley Rail 184
Lucretius 248
Voice and the P. 26
In Mem. cv 28
Two Voices 348
Epilogue 77
Lancelot and E. 1185
Dying Swan 32
Amphion 38
Princess vii 177
'The Daisy 82
In Mem. Ixxxiv 15
Lover's Tale i 536
,, ii 109
Ded, Poem Prin. Alice 12
V. of Maeldwne 15
Akbar's Dream 38
Lover's Tale ii 38
Princess i 52
81
103
n 48
115
210
Cyril (continv^) ' You are that Psyche,' C said,
(repeat) Princess ii 256, 278
Said C, ' Madam, he the wisest man ,, 350
C took the child, And held her round ,, 362
Said C : ' Pale one, blush again : ,, Hi 67
As if to close with C's random wish : ,, 101
Hither came C, and yawning ' 0 hard task,' „ 124
then, climbing, C kept With Psyche, ,, 354
C, with whom the bell-mouth'd glass had wrought ,, iv 155
I stood With Florian, cursing C, ,, 171
And where are Psyche, C ? both are fled : ,, 241
for C, howe'er He deal in frolic, as to-night — ,, 249
Go : C told us all.' „ v 36
C met us. A little shy at first, ,, 44
To whom remorseful C, ' Yet I pray Take comfort : ,, 79
such as her ! if C spake her true, ,, 168
fiery -short was C's counter-scoff, ,, 307
and bore down a Prince, And C, one. ,, 519
C seeing it, push'd against the Prince, ,, 533
Beside us, C, batter'd as he was, ,, vi 154
When C pleaded, Ida came behind ,, vii 78
Csnnis And what she did to C after fight, ,, v 366
Czar Jack on his ale-house bench has as many lies as a C ; Maud I iv9
Daale (dale) (See also Howlaby Daale) an' the d was
all of a thaw, Owd Rod 39
Daay (day) 'e shall stan to my dying d ; North. Cobbler 95
'e snifft up a box in a d. Village Wife 40
I'll tell tha some o' these d's. „ 58
niver 'a Uked tha sa well, as I did that d, Spinster's S.'s 29
I warrant ye soom fine d — „ 63
Thaw thou was es soiiber es d, „ 75
an' belt long afoor my d Owd Boa 21
Eh ? good d\ good d ! thaw it bean't not mooch
of a d. Church-warden, etc. 1
I minds when i' Howlaby beck won d ,, 27
Dabbled all d with the blood Of his own son, Princess vi 104
Its lips in the field above are d with blood-red heath, Maud I i2
Dabbling d in the fount of fictive tears, The Brook 93
D a shameless hand with shameful jest, Princess Hi 314
Daffodil (/See aZso Daffodilly) and found The
shining d dead, Maud I Hi 14
On a bed of d sky, „ xxii 10
And the shining d dies, „ /// vi 6
left us just before The d was blown ? Lover's Tale i 294
in this roaring moon of d And crocus, Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 7
Daffodilly That clad her Uke an April d Princess ii 324
Dagger I made my d sharp and bright. The Sisters 26
and thrust The d thro" her side.' D. of F. Women 260
With that gold d of thy bill The Blackbird 11
A d, in rich sheath with jewels on it Aylmer's Field 220
Tumbled the tawny rascal at his feet, This d with him, „ 231
left alone he pluck'd her d forth „ 470
and the d which himself Gave Edith, „ 596
Shot sidelong d's at us. Princess ii 450
had she found a d there Merlin and V. 851
Sib, do you see this d ? Bandit's Death 5
one day He had left his d beliind him. „ 12
felt I cotdd end myself too with the d — „ 37
I with this d of his — do you doubt me? „ 42
Dagonet D, the fool, whom Gawain in his mood Last Tournament 1
And little D on the morrow morn, „ 240
D replied, ' Belike for lack of wiser company ; „ 244
while he twangled little D stood Quiet „ 252
And little D, skipping, ' Arthur, the King's ; „ 262
but lean me down, Sir D, „ 273
D with one foot poised in his hand, „ 285
And little D mincing with his feet, „ 311
D, turning on the ball of his foot, „ 329
D answer'd, ' Ay, and when the land Was freed, „ 338
D, ' Nay, nor will : I see it and hear. „ 348
Dagonet
127
Damsel
Dagonet (continued) D clapt his hands and
shrill'd, Ldst Tournament 353
And down the city D danced away ; „ 359
Dahomey boats of D that float upon human blood ! The Dawn 5
Daily Z) and hourly, more and more. Eleanore 71
Daily-dwindling With d-d, profits held the house; Enoch Arden 696
Window. No Answer 26
Margaret 53
Palace of Art \2,2
Com. of Arthur 258
M. d' Arthur 218
Holy Grail 721
Pass, of Arthur 386
Two Voices 276
Gardiner's D. 165
The Daisy 88
City Child 10
In Mem. Ixxii 11
Maud I xii 24
Lover's Tale i 193
The Wreck 38
The Ring 323
I
Dainty Are but dainties drest again
Dainty-woeful thro' the dew Of d-w sympathies.
Dais I himg The royal d round.
and Arthur sat Crown'd on the d,
Dais-throne like a rising sun High from the d-t —
And there sat Arthur on the d-t,
hke a rising sun High from the d-t —
Daisy Touch'd by his feet the d slept,
linger'd there Till every d slept,
I pluck'd ad, I gave it you.
Daisies and kingcups and honeysuckle-flowers.'
the d close Her crimson fringes
And left the daisies rosy.
But I and the first d on his grave
The d will shut to the shadow,
tiny fist Had graspt a d from your Mother's grave —
hardly a d as yet, little friend. See, there is hardly
a d. The Throstle 11
Daisy Blossomed Wash'd with still rains and d b ; Circumstance 7
Daisy-chain Made blossom-ball or d-c, Aylmer's Field 87
He workt me the d c — First Quarrel 13
Dale (See also DaMle) here are the blissful downs and d's, Sea-Fairies 22
And long purples of the d. A Dirge 31
And the nvulet in the flowery d May Queen 39
thro' mountain clefts the d Was seen far inland, Lotos-Eaters 20
She went by d, and she went by down. Lady Clare 59
moon like a rick on fire was rising over the d. Grandmother 39
Till over down and over d In Mem., Con. 110
all in loops and links among the d's Lancelot and E. 166
Beheld at noon in some delicious d Guinevere 393
Dalliance O the d and the wit, D. of F. Women 147
Dallied But d with his golden chain, Day-Dm., Revival 31
Dally That with the napkin d; WiU Water. 118
' and meets And daUies with him in the Mouth
of Hell.' Balin and Balan 615
For dare we d with the sphere E-pilogue 44
Dallying In Ueu of idly d with the truth, Lancelot and E. 590
Tristram, ever d with her hand, Last Tournament 626
Dam (obstruction) The sleepy pool above the d. Miller's D. 99
As waits a river level with the d Princess iv 473
Dam (mother) Sent out a bitter bleating for its d; „ 392
Damask-work sloping of the moon-lit sward Was d-w, Arabian Nights 28
Dame Knight and burgher, lord and d, L. of Shalott iv 43
To have a d indoors, that trims us up, Edwin Morris 46
no liveUer than the d That whisper'd ' Asses' ears,' Princess ii 112
Like that great d of Lapidoth she sang. „ vi 32
When d's and heroines of the golden year „ 64
behind, A train of d's : „ vii 128
found an ancient d in dim brocade ; Marr. of Geraint 363
But that old d, to whom full tenderly „ 508
' Yea, surely,' said the d, ' And gladly „ 690
no more avail, D, to be gentle than ungentle Geraint and E. 716
nor lets Or d or damsel enter at his gates Balin and Balan 107
lived there neither d nor damsel Merlin and V. 606
Sir Valence wedded with an outland d : „ 714
One old d Came suddenly on the Queen Lancelot and E. 729
ever in the reading, lords and d's Wept, „ 1284
when now the lords and d's And people, „ 1346
with her knights and d's was Guinevere. Pelleas and E. 588
D, damsel, each thro' worship of their Queen Last Tournament 146
So d and damsel gUtter'd at the feast „ 225
So d and damsel cast the simple white, „ 232
What d or damsel have ye kneel 'd to last ? ' ,„ 550
Damn (See also Dangtha) One truth will d me with
the mindless mob, Romney's R. 120
Damn'd (See also Dang'd) I am i already by the Priest Sir J. OldcasUe 200
ay, why not, being d beyond hope of grace ? Despair 109
contemplate The torrent of the d ' Akbar's Dream 49
Damosel twelve small d's white as Innocence, Last Tournament 291
Damp (adj.) air is d, and hush'd, and close, A spirit haunts 13
combing out her long black hair D from the river ; Princess iv 277
Damp (s) heat, haU, d, and sleet, and snow ; St. S. Stylites 16
sometimes Sucking the d's for drink, „ 77
Damsel (See also Damosel) Sometimes a troop of
d's glad, L. of Shalott ii 19
The prettiest Uttle d in the port, Enoch Arden 12
Safe, d, as the centre of this hall. Gareth and L. 604
' D, ye know this Order lives to crush All wrongers „ 625
But on the d's forehead shame, „ 656
by this entry fled The d in her wrath, „ 675
Mutter'd the d, ' Wherefore did the King Scorn me ? „ 737
' D, the quest is mine. „ 745
* D,' Sir Gareth answer'd gently, „ 772
And when the d spake contemptuously, „ 806
wilt thou yield this d harbourage ? ' „ 834
placed a peacock in his pride Before the d, „ 851
left The a by the peacock in his pride, „ 870
Whether thou wilt not with thy d back „ 881
and calling, ' D, is this he, „ 915
Said Gareth, ' D, whether knave or knight, „ 943
The d crying, ' Well-stricken, kitchen-knave ! ' „ 970
' So this d ask it of me Good — „ 974
' D, thy chaise Is an abounding pleasure „ 981
Thy shield is mine — ^farewell ; and, d, thou, „ 988
' Fair d, you should worship me the more, „ 1022
' Hath not the good wind, d, changed again ? ' „ 1054
have ye slain The d's champion ? ' and the d cried,
' No star of thine, „ 1099
' Old, d, old and hard. Old, with the might and breath „ 1105
grizzled d came, And arm'd him in old arms, „ 1114
the d clamouring all the while, „ 1134
But the d said, ' I lead no longer ; „ 1156
' D,' he said, ' you be not all to blame, „ 1171
nor meet To fight for gentle d, he, „ 1177
At any gentle d's waywardness. „ 1179
Then tum'd the noble d smiUng at him, „ 1188
The d's headlong error thro' the wood — „ 1215
' Nay, noble d, but that I, the son Of old King Lot „ 1230
0 d, be you wise To call him shamed, „ 1259
wherefore, d ? tell me all you know. „ 1328
thou thyself, with d and with dwarf, Marr. of Geraint 581
have his horse And armour, and his d shall be ours.' Geraint and E. 63
possess your horse And armour, and your d should
be theirs.' „ 75
Friend, let her eat ; the <Z is so faint.' „ 206
While your good d rests, return, „ 224
speak To your good d there who sits apart, „ 299
found A d drooping in a comer of it. „ 611
nor lets Or dame or d enter at his gates Balin and Balan 107
Make knight or churl or child or d seem „ 162
D and lover ? hear not what I hear. „ 282
Then to her Squire mutter'd the d ' Fools ! „ 564
that twice a wanton d came, „ 609
1 well beUeve this d, and the one „ 612
and the d bidden rise arose And stood Merlin and V. 68
Queen Among her d's broidering sat, „ 138
hved there neither dame nor d then „ 606
And set it in this d's golden hair, Lancelot and E. 205
O d, in the light of your blue eyes ; „ 660
And, d, for I deem you know full well „ 689
This will I do, dead d, for your sake, „ 962
rose And pointed to the d, and the doors. „ 1263
had I dreamt the d would have died, „ 1305
Ye loved me, d, surely with a love „ 1394
D's in divers colours like the cloud Pelleas and E. 53
And all the d's talk'd confusedly, „ 57
^O d,' answer'd he, ' I woke from dreams ; „ 103
her knights And all her d's too were gracious „ 122
O d, wearing this unsunny face To him who won „ 180
But after, when her d's, and herself, „ 186
She that saw him cried, * D's — „ 189
This her d's heard, And mindful of her small „ 200
With all her d's, ho was stricken mute ; „ 251
Up ran a score of d's to the tower ; „ 368
Damsel
128
Dare
Damsel (continued) And down they ran, Her d's, crying to
their lady, P^^ ^""^ ^- 376
Froz'n by sweet sleep, four of her d's lay : ,„ " ^Txa
Dame, d, each thro' worship of their Queen Last Tournament 140
' Fair d's, each to him who worships each „ ^^7
dame and d glitter'd at the feast Variously gay : „ ^^|
So dame and d cast the simple white, „ ^^^
dame or d have ye kneel'd to last ? ' ,. ", « 7 ^oa
Damsel-errant A d-e, warbling, as she rode Balm and Balan^o
Youth, we are d's-e, and we ride, Pdleas and h. b4
Dan that had no likin' for A Tomorrow^
An' D stood there for a minute, « ^
whin D didn't come to the fore, 5> ^^
Dan Chaucer D C, the first warbler, I>. of F. Women 5
Danae lies the Earth aU 2> to the stars, Princess mtlSZ
Danaid prove The -D of a leaky vase, » ** ^^^
Dance (s) (-See o^so Devil's-dances) echoing d Of ^ , . ca
reboant whirlwinds, Suvp. Confessions 96
Yet in the whirUng d's as we went. The form, m form^
star that with the choral starry d Join'd not. Palace of Art 25d
Leaving the d and song, ■»• 0/ ^- Women 216
men and maids Arranged a country d. Princess, ^^^.m
d's broke and buzz'd in knots of talk ; » .* ^^^
Like one that wishes at a d to change The music— „ tv OW
In d and song and game and jest ? In Mem. xxuc »
And d and song and hoodman-bUnd. j> ixxvtn 1^
wheels the circled d, and breaks The rocket » a^c^t" ^^
No d, no motion, save alone What lightens „ cvfo
And last the d ;— till I retire : ,, ^on. iU£>
A dinner and then a d For the maids and marriage-
makers, -^^^""^ ^ '=?. |4
She is weary of d and play.' »» ^^* ^^
Come hither, the d's are done, i. " j r i yioo
with d And revel and song, made merry over Death, Gareth and h. 14^J
Eush'd into d, and like wild Bacchanals Lmer's Tale m 25
whirling rout Led by those two rush'd into d, » o&
An' the fall of yer foot in the d ^"TST?"" qh
Dance (verb) About thee breaks and d's : c^^-'^^oa
And the spangle d's in bight and bay, ^^ ^ Sea-Fatries Zi
but to d and sing, be gaily drest. The form,i^e form 6
for she says A fire d's before her, (Ewowe 264
And make her d attendance ; ^^ . . Amfhion 62
And the dead begin to d. Vision of Sin 16b
I make the netted sunbeam d The Brook 17b
But fit to flaunt, to dress, to d, to thrum. Princess iv 519
to d Its body, and reach its f atUng innocent arms „ vy I6i
let the torrent d thee down To find him in the valley ; ,, mi 2uy
To d with death, to beat the ground. In Mem. 1 12
Now d the lights on lawn and lea, .. 'v^^
Till the red man d By his red cedar-tree, Maud I^\^
flickering in a grimly light D on the mere. Gareth and L. B2<
Down upon far-ofi cities while they dr- Merlin and V. 114
eating dry To d without a cateh, a roundelay
Tott to ' Tjos^ Tournament 250
D to the pibroch !— saved ! Def. of Lwknow 103
D in a fountain of flame with her devils, Kapioiani 10
Danced we d about the may-pole and in the ,7, tt, t^ n
hazel copse, May Q««m, /VT's £. 11
Till all the tables d again, ^ /^"F^n^ll
d The greensward into greener circles. Gardener s v. i^a
Z) into light, and died into the shade ; ,. ^^%
And madly d our hearts with joy, ^ ^'^ ^ri'^^^e^
the gilded ball B Uke a wisp : Pnwess, Bro-^
O'er it shook the woods, And d the colour, „ *" ^^f
For I that d her on my knee, ,/« Mem., Con.f
Yniol's heart Z> in his bosom, Marr. of Geraint 505
and the sand d at the bottom of it. Balm and BalanZl
For all my blood d in me, and I knew ^ Holy Grail ^bb
D Uke a wither'd leaf before the haU. (repeat) Last Tournament 4, 242
And down the city Dagonet d away; » ^o^
as d in 'er pratty blue eye ; North. Cobbler 50
Dancer To the d'5 dancing in tune ; Maud I xxn lb
When will the d'« leave her alone? ,» *:J
A wreath of airy d's hand-in-hand ^ , Gwtwwre 261
Dancing Tho' if, in d after Letty HUl, 5,. Edwin Moms 55
Dancing (continued) that keeps A thousand pulses d, In Mem. cxxv 16
To the dancers d in tune ; Maud 7 ^^t 16
burst in d, and the pearls were spilt ; Merlin and V. 452
Till the d will be over ; Maud I xx 43
d of Fairies In desolate hollows. Merlin and the G. 41
Dandle shall we d it amorously ? ,.^''^*''^ ?k
I bore him a son, and he loved to d the child, Bandit s Death 15
Dandled nor pretty babes To be d, Princess iv 147
breast that fed or arm that d you, » «» lol
Dandy-despot What if that d-d, he, Maud 7 ct 42
Dane Saxon and Norman and 7) are we, But all of
us D's in our welcome of thee, W. to Alexandras
For Saxon or D or Norman we, » 31
We are each all 7? in our welcome of thee, „ ., ^q
Dang'd (damned) an' be d if I iver let goa ! Village Wifem
Danger Uke of shocks, D's, and deeds, „, '^"* ^^
Her household fled the d, The Goose 54
I take my part Of d on the roaring sea, ."^^j^^.i^
I see the d which you cannot see : Geraint andE. 421
Dangled D a length of ribbon and a ring Enoch Arden 750
when my father d the grapes, ^f ««» -' » 71
d a hundred fathom of grapes, V. of Maddune 5b
Dangling one with shatter'd fingers d lame, Last Tournament bO
Dangtha (damn you) Woa then, wiltha ? d ! N. Farmer, ■^•'S'. 40
Daniel great Books (see D seven and ten) Sea Dreams 152
Danish behind it a gray down With D barrows ; Enoch -^rdenl
Pass from the D barrow overhead ; „ 442
Danny (*Se« oZso Danny O'Roon) an' 7) says ' Troth,
an' I been Dhrinkin' Tomarrow 11
for D was not to be foim', » ^
For the Divil a D was there, ,> ^
' Your D,' they says, ' niver crasst over „ 48
Danny O'Roon (.See oZso Danny) MoUy Magee wid her
batchelor, 7) O'T?— " ="
meet your paaxints agin an' yer D O'E afore God „ 01
young man D O'R wid his ould woman, „ "o
about Molly Magee an' her I> 0'2?, ,, ^^
Dante there the world-worn D grasp'd his song, Palace of Art ld&
Danube The D to the Severn gave In Mem. xix 1
Let her great D rolUng fair Enwind her isles, „ xcmii9
Dare why d Paths in the desert ? Supp. Confessions 78
d to kiss Thy taper fingers amorously, Maddme 4d
I d not think of thee, Oriana. Oriana 9d
I d not die and come to thee, » 96
' The doubt would rest, I d not solve. Two Voices 616
' You will not, boy ! you d to answer thus ! Bora 26
none of all his men D tell him Dora waited „ 76
Then not to d to see ! Love and Duly rf8
' I will speak out, for I d not he. Lady Clare d8
But I must go : I d not tarry,' Princess iit 95
« D we dream of that,' I ask'd, „ . 297
7 d All these male thunderbolts : "*"?««
he that does the thing they d not do, „ ® 160
What d's not Ida do that she should pnze V t t? t. \ri
d not ev'n by silence sanction hes. Third of Feb. 10
How d we keep our Christmas-eve ; In Mem. xxix 4
Nor d she trust a larger lay, » xlmii 16
And d we to this fancy give, .. '*»»^
By which we d to Uve or die. » txxxvfJ
D I say No spirit ever brake the band „ xciii 1
That which we d invoke to bless ; ,, /?*»''-l
Who can rule and d not lie. Maud I x bb
That I d to look her way ; " '^ ki
D I bid her abide by her word ? r^ . '.'rj n 00
Who d's foreshadow for an only son Ded.of Idylls 2V
not once d to look him in the face.' Gareth and L. 782
I am the cause, because I d not speak Marr. of Geraint W
yet not d to tell him what I think, • » , t- loc
How should I d obey him to his harm ? Geraint and h. Idb
Not d to watch the combat, » ^^4
Nor did I care or d to speak with you, „ , ^^ °'i
' What d the full-fed hars say of me ? il^e^^^n "t/ "i n^^
And no man there will d to mock at me ; Lancdot and E. lua^
What rights are his that d not strike for them ? Last 1 oumament 52 /
how d I caU him mine ? Gttm«;ere 617
Dare
129
Dare (continued) They swore that he d not rob the mail, Rizuah sn
names who d For that sweet mother land Tir^ZTl 99
but if thou d— Thou, one of these, '"'' yJ
would d Hell-heat or Arctic cold. Ancient Saae U%
I d without your leave to head Pro t^al TJn3J]l
For d we dally with the sphere * *^ -J^f^Jl 1^
Mother, d you kill your cfild ? ^|^^^„* ^
crymg'Irf her, let Peelfe avenge herself'! KavZlaXii2
Dared ' He d not tarry,' men wiU say, TwoToteTlOl
But when at last I ei to speak, MillerTL 12^
I had not d to flow In these words toward you To / \ ft
my word was law and yet you d To slight it. ' Dora 98
Yet d not stu- to do it, ^„/,„>^'» pjlw «n«
^To leap the rotten pales of prejudice, '^iLllfi iS
You that have d to break our bound, ^nncessn 141
sorrowing in a pause I d not break ; " ^i otq
Bnot to glance at her good mother's face, Man. of Geraint 766
sue thought. He had not d to do it, toX
' They d me to do it,' he said, " j?i^^„Jti
'The farmer d me to do it,' he said ; ^*^P"* i
But they d not touch us again. r*-, p-„,J' Iro
d her with one little ship and his English few Sevenge 72
you have d Somewhat perhaps in coming ? ' Columbia 242
When thickest d did trance the sky, "Mariana A
Which upon the d afloat, r*^^T- q
evel lake with diamond-plots Of d and bright. Arabian Niahi^m
twisted silvers look'd to shame The hoUow-vauIted a '^'^ ^126
Or dimple m the d of rushv coves n^ 4 ''\t tr^
thro' t^e wreaths of floaS'rupcurl'd. ^'^ MXl 3^
AH within is das night: Tt^^J,.^VK
Ere the Ught on rf w^as growing, OAaZM
Remaining betwixt <i and brgt : MalZZ 28
shoot into the rf Arrows of li?htnings. To jIk ?4
?Tf nl^^'^ "^y countenance, -"^^^ )^- -^1 J|
' If all be <i, vague voice,' I said, "^^^^
seem'd all d and red-a tract of sand. Palace "of Art§,
moon was setting, and the d was ovei^ all ; MavoZmcJn 26
te^if ^ T'1!J* '°°f ^««P'«d the hollow'^, D^oiF }Vomen 18
Mom broaden'd on the borders of the d' ^ women l^
1 he unnetted black-hearts rinen d TJ.JhT7j.-yn
Shot on the sudden into d. ^ ' ^^ ^^f^'jM
TiitwThf.tLToi^^*'^^'^- |....:^?;;|
l^ove. If thy tresses be so d. How d those hidden
eyes must be ' n^,. n ^-701
The twilight died into the d. ^"^-^"^•' ^^^ fj
I^floatTiira^t?- "^ ^^^^''^ -^ '^' %^Tf f J I
But o'er the d a glory spreads, ^'' ^"^^ g
With wakes of fire we tore the d ; The Vovaae 52
And d and true and tender is the North. PrincZfv 98
I dread His wildness, and the chances of the d.' 244
bhpt round and in the d invested you, " 4^
That ghtter bumish'd by the frosty d\ " « 261
bttle seed they laugh'd at in the df " Hm
like night and evening mixt Their d and gray, " ill
And watches m the dead, the d, ^' " ,„vino
D in Its funeral fold. n^, ^ " J n k^
D is the world to thee : /7,-?/, P^ ^T"^^" ^l
My wUl is bondsman to the d ; ^'^^>f "^^^'"^ I
And aU the place is d, and aU'The chambers ^" '^''"^^^ ?
Darken
In Mem. viii 12
„ xvii 15
„ feijii 5
„ Ixxxix 14
„ Con. 93
A/attd / i» 43
„ vi 17
„ ix 15
Dark [continued) For all is d where thou art not
bahny drops in suiimier d Slide from the bosom
Ihy marble bright in d appears,
Immantled in ambrosial d,
A shade falls on us Uke the d
For the drift of the Maker is d,
Thro' the livelong hours of the d
Then returns the d With no more hope of li"ht
l-or d my mother was in eyes and hair. And d '
m hair and eyes am I ; and d Was Gorlois
yea and d was Uther too, ' Cn^ ^t a ,1 qo^t
D my doom wL here, and i It will be there. *°'" '""'' **" Ig
feps s^r.-.cr'^r"' ""'" ""^ ^- i
Arthur to the banquet, d in mood t^«..i T j p ei .
Was T fnn /7 Q »^w^T:K„^ i, " ■ 5 Lancelot and E. 564
Hl^^^I^iSS.. isoit.Th, ^"-=^-^™
name was ruler of the d— Isolt ? a^K
Mark's way to steal behind one in the d~ " ms
Ihat here in utter d I swoon'd away. And woke "
again m utter d, and cried, «„c
Out of the d, just as the hps had touch'd, " 7.9
look d and saw The great Queen's bower was d,— " 75^
so late ! and d the night and chill ' A' ■ iaa
so late ! and d and cMU the night! Gmnevere 168
Fell into dust, and crumbled in the d-~ Lover's^TalP /qt
m the d of mme Is traced with flame. '^ ^ ""'^ 907
We past from Ught to d. " f^j.
All thro' the livelong hours of utter d, " ofn
spray wind-driven Far thro' the dizzy d. " ,•,• Yqq
Down welter'd thro' the d ever and ever. " gno
the nightingale's hymn in the d. 7?,v<,/"/o 70^
call'd in the d to me year after year- ^'''^ f^^i li
I have been with God in the d^ ^''^''^ ^7
he used but to call in the d, " i^
I came on lake Llanberris in the d, Sisteri (T? n^Ji'v \ o^
B thro' the smoke and the sulphu^ £? Ti'rA ^ fr>
B with the smoke of hmnan sacrifice, % J^JZZ fx
Breaking with laughter from the d ; ' Be Prof tZc ?«
I cannot laud this life, it looks so d- ToW w r Z% j} 10
sister of the sun Would climb from out the d, ^' ^' ^^ "^TirSl!
till mme grew d For ever, ^res^as 61
in the d of his wonderful eyes. tr nP 7 jJ
te°iii-is"a's? "' "^ "'^™ " "» ^- ^2^^^' s
the world is d with griefs and graves, So d that " ^^^
men cry out against the Heavens. ,,71
an thin wint into the d. m " Lk
Bright and B have sworn that I, n,^ Tomorrow 22
Ltr '^-t-f .^s srwsr "^ ^°'- »' ">= ^ ""« |
one betwixt the d and light had seen Her, " ^\
Stark and d in his funeral fire. t^ m„,, "r r. o^
dead cords that ran B thro' the mist -^3^ fm^ ^- ??
festal hour B with the blood of iS who "•'^ ^'""*' "
murder'd man. ^. m
Thro' a dream of the d ? i>t.Telemachus 80
i> no more with human hatreds ^'^ ^^T^.^f
Must my day be d bv reason /^ ji y -, iJ^^"' ^
And after that the d ' ' ^^^ ""^^ '\« ^^i^- 2
Dark-blue i?-6 the deep sphere overhead ^ Crossing the Bar 10
Dark-brow'd D-b sophist, come not anear • ''4^^f,'^'$r^^o
And never more d my doors again ' n oA
shores that d with the gatherme wolf j 7 > ic-?';''„^H
face Would d, as he cuLd h^creduk,usness ^Talf^ ^^l
And sorrow d's hamlet and hall. "'''"^''^' %^« ^'^^^,^5
It brightens and d'. down on the plain. Window^nle'mii 2
Barken
130
Darling
Darken (continited) d's and brightens like mjr hope,
And it d's and brightens and d's hke my
fear,
drifts that pass To d on the rolling brine
Not close and d above me
Tho' many a light shall d,
I would not mine again should d thine.
May yon just heaven, that d's o'er me,
fla^ of youth, would d down To rise hereafter
o'er the plain that then began To d under Camelot ;
deed seem'd to be done in vain, D ;
the days d roimd me, and the years,
And why was I to d their pure love,
into my heart, and begun to d my eyes.
as I saw the white sail run, And d,
lost in the gloom of doubts that d the schools ;
Storm in the South that d's the day !
His shadow d's earth :
Darken'd {See also Derken'd, Self-darken'd) And
her eyes were d wholly.
And all the casement d there.
pines That d all the northward of her Hall.
all the sails were d in the west,
You stood in jrour own light and d mine.
And d sanctities with song.'
And life is d in the brain.
D watching a mother decline
He held d into a frown.
And d from the high light in his eyes,
Till his eye d and his helmet wagg'd ;
So when his moods were d, court and King
Thy curse, and d all thy day ;
his face Z>, as I have seen it more than once,
D the common path :
when the outer Ughts are d thus,
Because my own was d ?
And all my life was d,
The landskip d. The melody deaden'd,
' what has d thee to-night ? '
d with doubts of a Faith that saves.
Darkening d thine own To thine own likeness ;
swarms of men D her female field :
And d the dark graves of men, —
shadow of His loss drew like eclipse, D the world
world-old yew-tree, d half The cloisters,
D the wreaths of all that would advance,
And, d in the light.
Darker Your hair is d, and your eyes
made those eyes D than darkest pansies,
lonelier, d, earthlier for my loss.
loved to make men d than they are.
Dark-eyed She was dark-haired, d-e :
Dark-green spread his d-g layers of shade.
Dark-hair'd She was d-h, dark-eyed :
Darkling name Went wandering somewhere d in his
mind.
Darkness something in the d draws His forehead
earthward,
something which possess'd The d of the world,
and lashes like to rays Of d,
All niglit long on d blind.
When in the d over me The four-handed mole
Whv inch by inch to d crawl ?
And d in the village yew.
on her threshold lie Howling in outer d. To
Gross d of the imier sepulchre
Had wink'd and threaten'd d,
I would I were The pilot of the d
shake the d from their loosen'd manes,
were shrivell'd into d in his head,
Beyond the d and the cataract,
as they klss'd each other In d,
worshipt their own d in the Highest ?
May Pharaoh's d, folds as dense
and I was hcavod upon it In d :
Window. On the EiU 18
In Mem. cvii 14
Maud I xi9
„IIIviA3
Balin and Balan 625
Merlin and V. 931
Lancelot and E. 1318
Holy Grail 218
„ 275
Pass, of Arthur 405
Lover's Tale i 727
Rizpah 16
The Flight 40
Fastness 11
Riflemen form.' 2
D. of the Duke of C. 13
L. of Shalott iv 31
MiUer's D. 128
Aylmer's Field 415
iSea Dreams 39
Princess iv 314
In Mem. xxxvii 24
„ cxxi 8
Maud I xix 8
62
Marr. of Geraint 100
Geraint and E. 505
Balin and Balan 235
620
Holy Grail 273
PeUeas and E. 550
Lover's Tale i 35
729
The Flight dQ
Merlin and the G. 31
Akbar's Dream 2
The Dreamer 11
Aylmer's Field 673
Princess vii 34
In Mem. xxxix 9
Ded. of Idylls 15
Holy Grail 13
To Victor Hugo 5
Ancient Sage 151
Margaret 49
Gardener's D. 27
Aylmer's Field 750
Merlin and V. 876
Lover's Tale i 74
Gardener's D. 116
Lover's Tale i 74
Last Tournament 457
Supp. Confessions 167
Arabian Nights 72
„ 137
Adeline 44
My life is fuU 11
Two Voices 200
273
-, With Pal. of Art 16
D.ofF. Wo7nen61
M. d' Arthur, Ep. 2
Audley Court 72
Tithonus 41
Godiva 70
Vision of Sin 49
Aylmer's Field 431
„ 643
771
Sea Dreams 93
Darkness (continued) Muses' beads were touch'd Above
the d Princess Hi 22
d closed me ; and I fell. „ v 542
So much the gathering d charm'd : „ Con. 107
There I heard them in the d, Boddicea 36
So they chanted in the d, „ 46
A beam in d :, let it grow. In Mem., Pro. 24
Let d keep her raven gloss : „ 1 10
Else earth is d at the core, „ xxxiv 3
drop head-foremost in the jaws Of vacant d „ 16
That slope thro' d up to God, „ Iv 16
How blanch'd with d must I grow ! „ Ixi 8
Death has made His d beautiful with thee. „ Ixxiv 12
matin songs, that woke The d of our planet, „ Ixxvi 10
which makes the d and the light, „ xcvi 19
But in the d and the cloud, „ 21
A treble d, Evil haunts The birth, „ xcviii 13
Ring out the d of the land, „ cvi 31
The Power in d whom we guess ; „ cxxiv 4
out of d came the hands That reach thro' nature, „ 23
over whom thy d must have spread Mavd I xviii 25
many a d into the light shall leap, „ /// vi 46
Swept bellowing thro' the d on to dawn, Gareth and L. Ill
would she make My d blackness ? Balin and Balan 193
mark'd not on his right a cavern-chasm Yawn over d, „ 313
514
Merlin and V. 190
466
Lancelot and E. 1000
Holy Grail 49
„ 677
PeUeas and E. 213
458
Guinevere 417
583
To the Queen ii 65
Lover's Tale i 524
597
And lost itself in d, till she cried —
He walk'd with dreams and d.
And counterchanged with d ?
Approaching thro' the d, call'd ;
After the day of d, when the dead
and lying bounden there In d
d falling, sought A priory not far off,
their own d, throng'd into the moon.
She made her face a d from the King :
And in the d o'er her fallen head,
forego The d of that battle in the West,
far on within its inmost halls, The home of d ;
and the d of the grave, The d of the grave and utter night,
And vex them with my d ? „ 732
in the end. Opening ond, „ u' 125
so those fair eyes Shone on my d, „ 158
Seem'd stepping out of d with a smile. „ iv 220
What end but d could ensue from this Sisters {E. and E.) 175
bleat of a lamb in the stonn and the d without ; In the Child. Hasp. 64
" ' ' ' • . . - jy^j ^j Lwcknow 76
ToPrin.F.ofH.2
Tiresias 52
„ 115
„ 159
„ 202
Ancient Sage 8
„ 173
„ 198
„ 199
Locksley H., Sixty 92
Pro. to Gen. Hamlet^ 29
Prin. Beatrice 3
On Jub. Q. Victoria 67
Demeter and P. 2
82
„ 100
„ 116
Merlin and the G. 75
81
llomney's R. 53
Locksley Ilall 164
Lancelot and E. 338
Tomorrow 39
Bugles and drums in the d,
he past away From the d of life —
world of sight, that lives Behind this d.
Stood out before a d, crying,
not to plunge Thy torch of life in d,
and the master gone. Gone into d,
fountain pour'd From d into daylight.
Who knows but that the d is in man ?
and forget The d of the pall.'
If utter d closed the day, my son —
Crown'd with sunMght— -over d —
Flare from Tel-el- Kebir Thro' d,
and griefs, and deaths, Were utter d —
Are there spectres moving in the d ?
the d Pawns into the Jubilee of the Ages.
bird that flies All night across the d,
following out A league of labyrinthine d,
and for evermore The Bride of D.'
Then He, the brother of this D,
Clouds and d Closed upon Camelot ;
For out of the d Silent and slowly
bubble bursts above the abyss Of D,
Dark-purple lying in d-p spheres of sea.
Dark-splendid the face Tbefore her lived, D-s,
Darlin' wid a heart and a half, me d.
Darling {See also Darlin') The d of my manhood, and,
alas!
how pale she had look'd D, to-night !
Seventy years ago, my d, (repeat)
' Me, not my d, no ! '
Her feet, my d, on the dead ;
Gardener's D. 278
Aylmer's Field 380
Grandmother 24, 56
The Victim 68
In Mem., Con. 50
Darling
131
Daughter
Darling {continued) the moon-faced d of all, — ■
You are not her d.
and render All homage to his own d,
But shall it ? answer, d, answer, no.
Then the great knight, the d of the court,
our orphan, our d, our meek little maid ;
not a mother's heart, when I left my d alone.'
All very well just now to be calling me d
Damel And on my clay her d grow ;
Damley There is D bridge, It has more ivy ;
Then crost the common into D chase
Dart (s) with their fires Love tipt his keenest d's ;
Brandishing in her hand a d
Madly dash'd the d's together,
Clash the d's and on the buckler
dying now Pierced by a poison'd d.
Maud I i 72
„ xii 32
„ XX 49
Merlin and V. 397
Lancelot and E. 261
In the Child. Hosp. 28
The Wreck 97
Charity 7
My life is full 22
The Brook 36
„ 132
D.ofF. Women 113
, Boadicea 71
» 74
79
Death of CEnone 34
Dart (verb) forward d again, and play About the prow. In Mem. xii 17
Darted thro' his manful breast d tne pang Marr. of Geraint 121
Darter (daughter) the Squire an' 'is ^s an' me. Village Wife 7
talkt o' my d es died o' the fever at fall : „ 10
ivry d o' Squire's hed her awn ridin-erse „ 35
niver hed none of 'er d's 'ere ; ,,54
'Er an' 'er blessed d — „ 60
Then 'e married a great Yerl's d, Church-warden, etc. 20
Dash D them anew together at her will Lucretius 247
birds on the light I) themselves dead. Princess iv 496
Waves on a diamond shingle d, The Islet 16
d the brains of the little one out, Boadicea 68
and d myself down and die Maud I i 54
upon all things base, and d them dead, Gareth and L. 23
I each at either d from either end — „ 535
To d against mine enemy and to win. „ 1355
D back that ocean with a pier, Mechanophilus 5
Dash'd (rushed) D downward in a cataract. Day-Dm., Eevival 16
Again we d into the dawn ! The Voyage 24
d Into the chronicle of a deedful day, Aylmer's Field 195
I, uttering a dry shriek, D on Geraint, Geraint and E. 462
I But, mad for strange adventure, d away, Balin and Balan 289
' he d across me — mad. And maddening what he rode ; Holy Grail 641
Pelleas overthrew them as they d Against him one
by one ; Pelleas and E. 221
d up alone Thro' the great gray slope Heavy Brigade 16
Dash'd (flung, hurled) As d about the drunken leaves Amphion 55
D together in blinding dew : Vision of Sin 42
grief Bore down in flood, and d his angry heart Aylmer's Field 633
or into rhythm have d The passion of the prophetess ; Princess iv 139
and d Unopen'd at her feet : „ 470
roll The torrents, d to the vale : „ v 350
Then came a postscript d across the rest. ,, 424
D on every rocky square Their surging charges Ode on Well. 125
Roll as a ground-swell d on the strand, W. to Alexandra 23
And wildly d on tower and tree In Mem. xv 7
Christless foe of thine as ever d Horse against
horse ; Balin and Balan 97
He d the pummel at the foremost face, „ 402
with violence The sword was d from out my hand, Holy Grail 826
Isolt of Britain d Before Isolt Last Tournament 588
and d himself Into the dizzy depth below. Lover's Tale i 380
and d herself Dead in her rage : Tiresias 152
And d half dead on barren sands, The Ring 309
Into the flame-billow d the berries, Kapiolani 33
Dash'd (siruck) Madly d the darts together, Boadicea 74
He d the rowel into his horse, Pelleas and E. 486
sudden fire from Heaven had d him dead, Happy 83
Dash'd (broke) we d Your cities into shards with
catapults, Princess v 137
Dash'd (bespattered) his greaves and cuisses d with drops
Of onset ; M. d' Arthur 215
And where it d the reddening meadow, Lucretius 49
d with death He reddens what he kisses : Princess v 164
d with wandering isles of night. In Mem. xxiv 4
That life is d with flecks of sin. „ Hi 14
Deep tulips d with fiery dew, „ Ixxxiii 11
his greaves and cuisses d with drops Of onset ; Pass, of Arthur 383
Dashing d down on a tall wayside flower, Guinevere 253
Dashing (continued) D the fires and the shadows of
dawn V. of Maddune 99
the bolt of war d down upon cities The Dawn 8
Date but when his d Doubled her own, Aylmer's Field 80
Beyond the conmion d of death — The Ring 108
Dating d, many a year ago. Has hit on this. To E. Fitzgerald 49
Daughter (See also Darter) His little d, whose sweet
face He kiss'd, Two Voices 253
It is the miller's d. Miller's D. 169
I am the dot a. River-God, Qinone 38
We were two d's of one race : The Sisters 1
The doiA hundred Earls, L. C. V. de Vere 7
A d of the gods, divinely tall, D. of F. Women 87
The d of the warrior Gileadite, „ 197
Eustace from the city went To see the Gardener's D ; Gardener's D. 3
Go and see The Gardener's d: „ 30
Who had not heard Of Rose, the Gardener's d? „ 52
The d's of the year, One after one, „ 200
She is my brother's d : Dora 17
for his sake I bred His d Dora : „ 20
woo'd and wed A labourer's d, Mary Morrison. „ 40
d of a cottager. Out of her sphere, Walk, to the Mail 59
Cry, like the d's of the horseleech, * Give, Golden Year 12
preaching down a d's heart. Locksley Hall 94
' The old Earl's d died at my breast ; Lady Clare 25
With children ; first a d. Enoch Arden 84
evermore the d prest upon her To wed the man „ 483
tell my d Annie, whom I saw So like her mother, „ 882
A d of our meadows, yet not coarse ; The Brook 69
And how it was the thing his d wish'd, „ 140
sons of men D's of God; Aylmer's Field 45
Averill walk So freely with his d? „ 270
Pale as the Jephtha's d, „ 280
He never yet had set his d forth „ 347
Grossly contriving their dear d's good — „ 781
devising their own d's death ! „ 783
where the two contrived their d's good, ,, 848
knowledge, so my d held. Was all in all : Princess i 135
His d and his housemaid were the boys : „ 190
turning round we saw The Lady Blanche's d „ ii 321
d's of the plough, stronger than men, „ iv 278
A Niobean d, one arm out, „ 371
' Fair d, when we sent the Prince your way „ 398
Then those eight mighty d's of the plough „ 550
I would he had our d: » ^ 214
vainlier than a hen To her false d's in the pool ; „ 329
those eight d's of the plough Game „ 339
Sea-kings' d from over the sea, W. to Alexandra 1
The sea-kings' d as happy as fair, „ 26
Yell'd and shriek'd between her d's, (repeat) Boadicea 6, 72
he loved A doi omr house ; In Mem., Con. 7
love of all Thy d's cherish Thee, Ded. of Idylls 53
Had one fair d, and none other child ; Com. of Arthur 2
Give me thy d Guinevere to wife,' „ 139
Give my one d saving to a king, „ 143
And d's had she borne him, — „ 189
' D of Gorlois and Ygeme am I ; ' „ 316
Then at his caU, ' O d's of the Dawn, Gareth and L. 923
were she the d of a king, Marr. of Geraint 229
The voice of Enid, Yniol's d, rang Clear „ 327
fair Enid, all in faded silk. Her d. „ 367
after, tum'd her d round, and said, „ 740
I doubted whether d's tenderness, Or easy nature, „ 797
behind them stept the lily maid Elaine, his d : Lancelot and E. 177
But I, my sons, and little d fled „ 276
D, I know not what you call the highest ; „ 1080
Isolt, the d of the King ? Last Tournament 397
The mother fell about the d's neck, • Sister's {E. and E.) 154
told the living d with what love „ _ _ 253
England's England-loving d — thou Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 15
He saw not his d — he blest her : To Prin. F. of H. 3
d yield her life, heart, soul to one — The Flight 28
hold the Present fatal d of the Past, Locksley H., Sixti^ 105
Her maiden d's marriage ; Prin. Beatrice 10
True d, whose all-faithful, filial eyes „ 13
Daughter
132
Forlorn 39
Bomney's B. 77
Columbus 47
In Mem. c 12
Geraint and E. 255
V. of Maeldune 109
Daughter {continued) D of the seed of Cain,
You claspt our infant d,
David King D call'd the heavens a hide,
Daw And haunted by the wrangUng d ;
And all the windy clamour of the d's
the d's flew out of the Towers
Dawes (Jocky) .See Jocky Dawes
Dawn(s) (.See oZso Summer-dawn) When the breeze ,r- i, i
of a joyful d blew free, .^'■"^'""/afti
Thou dewy d of memory, (repeat) 0& to Memory 7, 45, 124
dew-impearled winds of d have kiss'd, ,, J^^
Vast images in glimmering d, , ^w" Vmces 305
white-breasted hke a star Fronting the d he moved ; tfcnowe s»
The tearful glimmer of the languid d D. of F. Women 74
crested bird That claps his wings at d. » ^°^
With that sharp soimd the white d's creeping
He S^ot see the d of day. D. oftUO. Year 11
A bridal d of thunder-peals, ^ ^^^ $'f "^/^^i 971
hull Look'd one black dot against the verge of d, M. d Arthur ^li
Thelusty bird takes every hour for d: » ^ is
till on to d, when dreams Begin to feel the truth , ," u 77 iT^
light of London flaring hke a dreary d ; LocksleyUaU 114
iiain we dash'd into the dl . rr- ■ ^ ^'J'^^f^li
God made himself an awful rose of d, (repeat) Vision of Sin 50, ZZ^
when the d of rosy childhood past, Enoch Ardendl
Faint as a figure seen in early d » ^"?'
the chill November d's and dewy-glooming downs, „ o^y
since the mate had seen at early d . , , "t^- tj iqi
follow Such dear familiarities of d ? Aylmer s Field 161
as d Aroused the black republic on his elms, >,. . ^^°
I gave the letter to be sent with d ; Princess i 245
However then commenced the d : » ** ^^°
sad and strange as in dark summer d's »> ^^/^
at eve and d With Ida, Ida, Ida, rang the woods ; „ 4^^
He rose at d and, fired with hope, *«*'«"• -^^"2/ -^
Green-rushing from the rosy thrones of d ! , , n ^ ^n
(repeat) Voice and the P. 4, 40
Fixt by their cars, waited the golden d. Spec, of Iliad. ZA
In that deep d behind the tomb. In -Mem. xlyib
Thy tablet glimmers to the d. » /ctm 10
Risest thou thus, dim d, » ia;a;ti 1
said ' The d, the d,' and died away ; v iS"; 01
Risest thou thus, dim d, again, »» ^''^^ ;t
A light-blue lane of early d, ' » ^^*.^ '
And thither I climb'd at d And stood Maud I xiv5
Now and then in the dim-gray d ; » . . ^^
They sigh'd for the d and thee. » ^^" ?^
O d of Eden bright over earth and sky, „ ^j » °
In the shuddering d, behold, ,. */> °^
Voice in the rich d of an ampler day— -fed. 0; ■'j*^"« ^^
Swept bellowing thro' the darkness on to d, Gare</t and L. 177
honour shining like the dewy star Of d, » ^^^
How once the wandering forester at d, » 4^°
Will there be d in West and eve in East ? „ 71J
Then at his call, ' O daughters of the D, „ »^^
In the half-light— thro' the dim d— . » 1^°*
As the gray d stole o'er the dewy world, Geraint and £>. d»o
with the d ascending lets the day Strike . " , „ , on
one fair d, The light-wing'd spint Balm and BalanM
thou rememberest well — one summer d — » °^
passiijg one, at the high peep of d, Merlm andV.oiM
the high d piercing the royal rose » '''•'
woke with d, and past Down thro' the dim rich , -n o^o
city Lancelot and L. o4b
the blood-red light of d Flared on her face, „ 1025
I touch'd The chapel-doors at d I know ; Holy GratlbSb
her bloom A rosy d kindled in stainless heavens, PeUeas and E.TZ
Glanced from the rosy forehead of the d, » ^OJ
Pure on the virgin forehead of the d ! ' » ^05
hull Look'd one black dot against the verge of d, Pass, of Arthur 4^9
stillness of the dead world's winter d Amazed him, „ 442
Then from the d it seem'd there came, „ 457
kindled from within As 'twere with d. Lover's Tale i 74
opposite The flush and d of youth, ,, lo9
Day
Dawn (s) {continued) at d from the cloud glitter'd o'er us V. of Maeldune 84
and the sunbright hand of the d, » ^^
Dasliing the fires and the shadows of d r^ r. r" t^ n i
Waste d of multitudinous-eddying light— De Prof., I wo O.i
mothers with their babblers of the d, Tiresias 106
And we tum'd to the growing d, we had hoped for a d mdeed, JJespair 22
Hoped for a d and it came, > • . c." oci
see The high-heaven d of more than mortal day Ancient ^age 2S4
light the glimmer of the d ? Locksley H., ^ixtyZAJ
Sun of d That brightens thro' the Mother's Pnn. Beatrice 6
Virgil who would write ten lines, they say, At d. Poets and their Ji. 6
at d Falls on the threshold of her native land, Demeter and P.Z
the reaper in the gleam of d Will see me .. ■'■^^
Are calling to each other thro' a d The BmgSl
in the gleam of those mid-summer d's, » -"-"^
In the night, and nigh the d, Forlorn 8d
A whisper from his d of life ? a breath From some
fair i^ beyond , n ^^J^p '""^. It
Her husband in the flush of youth and d, ^^,"^hri t ql
d Struck from him his own shadow on to Rome. ^t. lelemachus o^
and it laugh'd like a d in May. J^andit s Death 2(J
slept, Ay, till d stole mto the cave, n " 1 a 9i
Red of the D ! (repeat) The Dawn 1,6, 21
D not Day ! (repeat) » ^]\ ^°
Dawn (verb) let your blue eyes d Upon me , ?.TTqm
such a one As d's but once a season. Lover's Tale i 300
Than our poor twiUght d on earth— Tiresias 20b
That d's behind the grave. ^ . ^ ^ £pi%«e 78
darkness D's into the Jubilee of the Ages. On Juh. Q. / *^tona 71
Dawn'd D sometime thro' the doorway ? A ylmer s Field 685
twilight d ; and mom by morn the lark /j^Tu'Z f^
Had ? has it come ? It has only d. /« <^e ChiU. Hosp. 2d
One from the Sunrise D on His people, Kapiolam 25
Dawning (part.) (.See also Dark-dawning) clear ^ r • „ at
Del^ht, the infant's d year. -Swpp. Confessions 67
All the spirit deeply d in the dark i^'W,£ si
he saw Death d on him, and the close of all. Enoch Arden 832
Dawnii^ (S) thro' that d gleam'd a kmdUer hope „ ^^
ATry from out the d of my life. Com of ^ fur 333
All in a fiery d wild with wind Lancelot andh 102U
days Of dewy d and the amber eves Lovers Tale t 52
brought out a broad sky Of d over— Columbus 78
Loi^beforethed. Forlorn 54.
Day (.See also After-days, Birth-day, Christmas Day,
Daay, Death-day, Easterday, Gaudy-day, Jidge-
ment Day, Judgment Daay, Judgment Day,
Marriage Day, Mid-day, Middle-day, Nine-days',
One-day-seen, To-daay, To-day, Yisther-day) ^ ,, ^ 09
As noble tin the latest d\ ^ ^ To the Queen ^
a world of peace And confidence, d after d ; Supp. Confessions 30
They comfort him by night and d ; » . ^
She only said, ' The d is dreary, Mariana 33
All d within the dreamy house, » "^
the d Was sloping toward his western bower. ,, '»
Wears all d a fainter tone. . , ^j /^r \n
Flinging the gloom of yesternight On the white d ; Ode to Memory 10
the prime labour of thine early d's: t, ^,",,- joa
AU 5 and all night it is ever drawn , "^"e^'S^q
D and night to the billow the fountam calls : &ea-Jf airies^y
We will sing to you all the d : "c.„^^ r
It was the middle of the d. ^V^^ ^^«« »
Now is done thy long d's work ; rtrt^lTsg
How could I look upon the d? ^T^Lo
I would sit and sing the whole of the d ; The Merman 9
I would sing to myself the whole of the d ; The Mernrn^ 10
Looking at the set of d, m „ *!^ yo
LuU'd echoes of laborious d Come to you, Margaret 29
And gave you on your natal d. "63
all d long you sit between Joy and woe, jfnJlind 47
delight of frolic flight, by d or night, rf. •, ff/Z 1
My life is full of weai^ d's, ^^V ^»^ ^ /^^
Come only, when the d's are still, .cL/^a ji 1
These she weaves by night and d L- of ^f^\l\^
And at the closing of the d . ." , „ oq
But d increased f ram heat to heat, ilfarm«a m the S. 39
Day
133
Day
Day (eontinued) But sometimes in the falling d Mariana in the S. 73
From heat to heat the d decreased, „ 78
' The d to night,' she made her moan, ' The d to
night, the night to mom, And d and night I
am left alone „ 81
Would sweep the tracts of d and night. Two Voices 69
How grows the d of human power ? ' „ 78
One hope that warm'd me in the d's „ 122
In d's that never come again. „ 324
Whose troubles number with his d's : „ 330
That we may die the self-same d. Miller's D. 24
Flush'd like the coming of the d ; „ 132
song I gave you, Alice, on the d When, arm in arm, „ 162
For hid in ringlets d and night, „ 173
And all d long to fall and rise „ 182
The d, when in the chestnut shade I found „ 201
wheresoe'er I am by night and d, (Enone 267
And, whUe d sank or movmted higher, Palace of Art. 46
Thro' which the livelong d my soul did pass, „ 55
yoimg night divine Crown'd dying d with stars^ „ 184
Of all the glad New-year, mother, the maddest
merriest d ; May Queen 3
call me loud when the d begins to break : „ 10
many a bolder lad 'ill woo me any summer d, „ 23
drop of rain the whole of the livelong d, „ 35
To-morrow 'ill be of all the year the maddest merriest d, „ 43
we had a merry d ; May Queen, N.Y's. E. 9
I long to see a flower so before the d I die. „ 16
Grood-night, sweet mother : call me before
the d is bom. „ 49
ere this d is done The voice, that now is speaking, „ Con. 53
AU its allotted length of d's, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 35
Eating the Lotos d by d, „ 60
All d the wind breathes low with mellower tone : „ 102
eyes of anger'd Eleanor Do hunt me, d and night.' D. of F. Women 256
He will not see the dawn of d. D. of the 0. Year 11
Make bright our d's and light our dreams. Of old sat Freedom 22
From those, not blind, who wait for d. Love thou thy land 15
cutting eights that d upon the pond, The Epic 10
Looks freshest in the fashion of the d: „ 32
So all d long the noise of battle roU'd M. d' Arthur 1
the halls Of Camelot, as in the d's that were. „ 21
In those old d's, one summer noon, „ 29
And the d's darken round me, and the years, „ 237
Rise like a fountain for me night and d. „ 249
Begin to feel the truth and stir of d, „ Ep. 19
This morning is the morning of the d Gardener's D. 1
memory folds For ever in itself the d we went To
see her. „ 75
Sang loud, as tho' he were the bird of d. „ 96
But the full d dwelt on her brows, „ 136
I, that whole d. Saw her no more, „ 163
d by d, Like one that never can be wholly known, „ 205
chambers of the heart. Let in the d.' „ 250
May not be dwelt on by the common d. „ 271
came a d When Allan called his son, Dora 9
d's went on, and there was bom a boy To William ; „ 48
And d by a! he pass'd his father's gate, „ 50
Remembering the d when first she came, „ 106
And either twilight and the d between ; Edwin Morris 37
I spoke her name alone. Thrice-happy d's ! „ 68
seems a part of those fresh d's to me ; ,, 142
leap'd and laugh'd The modish Cupid of the d. Talking Oak 67
ah ! my friend, the d's were brief „ 185
'TLs little more : the d was warm ; „ 205
Some happy future d. „ 252
staring eye glazed o'er with sapless d's. Love and Duty 16
we that d had been Up Snowdon ; Golden Year 3
A tongue-tied Poet in the feverous d's, „ 10
Happy d's Roll onward, leading up the golden year. „ 40
The long d wanes : the slow moon climbs : Ulysses 55
strength which in old d's Moved earth and heaven ; „ 66
a saying leamt. In d's far-off, Tithonus 48
with what another heart In d's far-off, „ 51
thou shalt lower to his level d by d, Locksley Hall 45
Locksley Hall 99
110
158
183
Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 16
„ Arrival 10
„ Depart. 7
31
Amphion 10
WiU Water. 36
» 154
„ 199
„ 219
Lady Clare 8
The Captain 13
25
L. of Burleigh 36
The Voyage 58
Beggar Maid 8
Vision of Sin 80
Break, break, etc. 15
Enoch Arden 25
147
Day {continued) tum to, lighting upon d's like these ?
When I heard my d's before me,
island unto island at the gateways of the d.
we sweep into the younger d :
Stillness with love, and d with light.
That strove in other d's to pass.
And deep into the dying d
Beyond the night, across the d,
song was great In d's of old Amphion,
fountain upward runs The current of my d's :
draws me down Into the common d ?
Ere d's, that deal in ana,
Thy latter d's increased with pence
Grod's blessing on the d !
Dhy d more harsh and cruel
On a d when they were going O'er the lone expanse.
Where they twain will spend their d's
Down the waste waters d and night,
' She is more beautiful than d,'
When a blanket wraps the d,
the tender grace of a d that is dead
Enoch was host one d, Philip the next,
And pass his d's in peace among his own.
Many a sad kiss by d by night renew'd „ 161
So all d long till Enoch's last at home, „ 172
ship I sail in passes here (He named the d) „ 215
the d, that Enoch mention'd, came, „ 239
in d's of difficulty And pressure, „ 254
Beheld the dead flame of the fallen d „ 441
Thro' many a fair sea-circle, d by d, „ 542
or all d long Sat often in the seaward-gazing gorge, „ 588
No sail from dtod, but every d „ 591
There Enoch rested silent manip^ d's. „ 699
the dull November d Was growing duller twilight, „ 721
brought the stinted commerce of those d's ; „ 817
meet the d When Enoch had retum'd, „ 822
I have not three d's more to live ; „ 851
Coming every d,' She answer'd. The Brook 106
five d's after that He met the bailiff „ 145
if you knew her in her English d's, „ 224
the d's That most she loves to talk of, „ 225
Thinn'd, or would seem to thin her in a d, Aylmer's Field 76
dash'd Iiito the chronicle of a deedful d, „ 196
Slept thro' the stately^ minuet of those d's : „ 207
The next d came a neighbour. „ 251
second d. My lady's Indian kinsman rushing in, „ 592
many thousand d's Were clipt by horror „ 602
Darkly that d rose : „ 609
At close of d ; slept, woke, Sea Dreams 18
birdie say. In her nest at peep of d ? „ 294
baby say. In her bed at peep of d ? „ 302
Was it the first beam of my latest d ? Lucretius 59
Whether I mean this d to end myself, „ 146
Shatter'd into one earthquake in one d _ „ 251
all a summer's d Gave his broad lawns Princess, Pro. 1
Took this fair d for text, „ 108
On a sudden in the midst of men and d, „ i 15
the d's drew nigh that I should wed, „ 41
three d's he feasted us. And on the fourth „ 118
At break of d the College Portress came : „ ii 15
In gentler d's, your arrow-wounded fawn „ 270
then d droopt ; the chapel bells Call'd „ 470
the d fled on thro' all Its range of duties „ Hi 176
and mould The woman to the fuller d.' „ 332
thinking of the d's that are no more. „ iv 43
So sad, so fresh, the d's that are no more. „ 48
So sad, so strange, the d's that are no more. „ 53
0 Death in Life, the d's that are no more.' „ 58
was not thus, 0 Princess, in old d's : „ 292
yet this d (tho' you should hate me for it) „ 341
won it with a d Blanch'd in oiu" annals, „ vi 62
a d Rose from the distance on her memory, „ 111
With kisses, ere the d's of Lady Blanche : ,,114
while the d, Descending, stmck athwart the hall, „ 363
till on a d When Cyril pleaded, „ vii 11
Day
134
Day
Day (continued) out of memories of her kindlier d's,
But such as gather'd colour d by d.
shares with man His nights, his d's,
the new d comes, the light Dearer for night,
For me, the genial d, the happy crowd,
another sun, Warring on a later d,
A d of onsets of despair !
Peace, it is a,d oi pain (repeat)
not been down to the farm for a week and a d ;
But I wept like a child that d,
I climb'd the roofs at break of d ;
And in my head, for half the d ;
passion that lasts but a d ;
the d that follow'd the d she was wed,
autumn into seeming-leafless d's —
stars from the night and the sun from the d !
merry for ever and ever, and one d more.
Sun sets, moon sets. Love, fix a d.
wait a little. You shall fix a d.'
And honour all the d.
Our little systems have their d ;
They have their d and cease to be :
On the bald street breaks the blank d.
And roar from yonder dropping d :
Week after week : the d's go by :
Is on the waters d and night,
There twice a d the Severn fills ;
And was the d of my delight As pure
The very source and fount of D
the d prepared The daily burden for the back.
Old sisters ot&d gone by.
Draw forth the cheerful d from night :
' Where wert thou, brother, those four d's ? '
A life that leads melodious d's.
As on a meiiden in the d When first she wears her
orange-flower !
A link among the d's, to knit
But he forgets the d's before
The d's have vanish'd, tone and tint,
D's order'd in a wealthy peace,
The twilight of eternal d.
Of hearts that beat from dU) d,
She sighs amid her narrow d's.
And tease her till the d draws by :
His inner d can never die,
The d's that grow to something strange,
D, when my crown'd estate begun
D, mark'd as with some hideous crime,
Climb thy thick noon, disastrous d :
I care not in these fading d's
Can trouble Hve with April d's.
For now the d was drawing on,
sun by sun the happy d's Descend below
Whatever way my d's decline,
And break the livelong summer d
And will not yield them for a d.
cast Together in the d's behind,
call The spirits from their golden d.
To broaden into boundless d.
The d's she never can forget
D, when I lost the flower of men ;
And each reflects a kindlier d ;
These two have striven half the d.
Nor landmark breathes of other d's,
It is the d when he was bom, A bitter d that early i
We keep the d. With festal cheer,
For d's of happy commime deadj
O d's and hours, your work is this.
Are breathers of an ampler d
And think of early d's and thee,
In that it is thy marriage d
Since that dark dad like this ;
We wish them store of happy d's.
But these are the d'a oi advance,
and slurring the d's gone by,
Princess mi 106
5>
118
J)
-263
))
346
99
Con. 75
Ode on
Well. 102
„
124
235, 238
Grandmother 33
64
Daisy 61
„ 74
G. of Swainston 9
The Islet 4
A Dedication 10
Window. Gone 5
9,
Ayi
When 4:
12
j^
16
In Mem
., Pro. 17
jj
18
99
vii 12
JJ
XV 2
xvii 7
)>
11
xix 5
,,
xxiv 1
3
,,
XXV 3
»
xxix 13
»
XXX 30
>»
xxxi 5
xxxiii 8
„
xlB
15
xliv 3
»
5
xlvi 11
116
JJ
Iviii 6
„
IxlO
14
Ixvi 15
JJ
Ixxi 11
j'
Ixxii 5
JJ
18
26
JJ
Ixxv 9
JJ
Ixxxiii 7
„
Ixxxiv 10
„
27
Ixxxv 41
,1
Ixxxix 31
a;c 16
»)
xdi 6
xciv 6
'j'
xcv 64
JJ
xcvii 14
xcix 4
cl8
JJ
CM 17
J,
civ 11
ink „
cvii 1
JJ
21
JJ
cxvi 14
99
cxvii 1
cxviii 6
cxix 8
JJ
Con. 3
J
8
"j
84
"Maud I i 25
33
Day (continued) riding at set of d Over the dark moor land, Maud I ix 5
I siaall have had my d. (repeat). „ xi 7, 14
But this is the d when I must speak, „ xvi 7
O this is the d ! „ _ _ 9
Go not, happy d, (repeat) ,9 xvii 1, 3
And you fair stars that crown a happy d „ xviii 30
Among the fragments of the golden d. „ 70
On the d when Maud was bom ; „ xix 40
Sat with her, read to her, night and d, „ 75
And half to the rising d ; „ xxii 24
The d comes, a dull red ball „ // iv 65
paid our tithes in the d's that arc gone, „ v 23
To catch a friend of mine one stormy d; „ 85
Voice in the rich dawn of an ampler d — Ded. of Idylls 36
wolf and boar and bear Came night and d, Com. of Arthur 24
And even in high d the morning star. „ 100
lords Of that fierce d were as the lords „ 216
those first d's had golden hours for me, „ 357
Blow, for our Sun is mightier dhy dl
So make thy manhood mightier dhj d;
thou shalt serve a twelvemonth and a d.'
ancient kings who did their d's in stone ;
drink among thy kitchen-knaves A twelvemonth and a d,
some fine d Und.o thee not —
My deeds will speak : it is but for a d.'
That same d there past into the hall
call themselves the D, Moming-Star,
towers where that d a feast had been Held
To fight the brotherhood of D and Night —
D and Night and Death and Hell.'
O dewy flowers that close when d is done,
O birds that warble as the d goes by.
As on the d*when Arthur knighted him.'
all d long hath rated at her child. And vext his d,
but blesses him asleep — .
Seeing he never rides abroad by d ;
sprang the happier d from imderground ;
To make her beauty vary d by d.
And dhy d she thought to tell Geraint,
There on a d, he sitting high in hall,
milky-white. First seen that d :
And on the third d will again be here,
this nephew, fight In next d's tourney
Danced in his bosom, seeing better d's.
the third d from the himting-mom Made
So bent he seem'd on going the third d,
Bent as he seem'd on going this third d.
Yet if he could but tarry a d or two,
when the fourth part of the d was gone.
In former d's you saw me favourably,
but overtoil'd By that d's grief and travel,
dawn ascending lets the d Strike where it clung
hardest tyrants in their d of power.
So past the d's.
And clothed her in apparel like the d.
Proclaim'd him Victor, and the d was won.
those fair d's — not all as cool as these
The whole d died, but, dying, gleam'd
' Brother, I dwelt a din Pellam's hall :
Thy curse, and darken'd all thy d ;
on a festal d When Guinevere was crossing
on a dull d in an Ocean cave The blind wave
Had I for three d's seen, ready to fall.
Sweet were the d's when I was all unknown,
Well, those were not our d's :
Nor rested thus content, but d by d.
Dull d's were those, till our good Arthur
in the fight which all d long Hang
when the next d broke from underground,
If any man that d were left afield,
But on that d when Lancelot fled the lists,
our knight, thro' whom we won the d,
after two d's' tarriance there, retum'd.
so d by d she past In either twilight
and every d she tended him,
Gareih and L. 92
157
305
446
476
577
587
633
847
857
887
1067
1076
,9 1240
1285
1334
1421
Mart, of Geraint 9
65
147
151
222
476
505
597
604
625
627
Geraint and E. 55
315
377
930
„ 948
Balin and Balan 90
273
314
605
620
Merlin and V. 64
231
296
501
612
Lancelot and E. 13
279
287
413
459
525
529
569
848
850
Day 135
Day (contimied) Alas for me then, my good d's are done.' Lancelot and E. 947
Day
And in those d's she made a httle song,
So that d there was dole in Astolat.
That d Sir Lancelot at the palace craved
After the d of darkness, when the dead
A little lonely church in d's of yore,
For on A d she sent to speak with me.
beam of light seven times more clear than d :
ride A twelvemonth and a d in quest of it,
early that same d, Scaped thro' a cavern
' But when the next d brake from under ground —
but moving with me night and d, Fainter by d, but always
in the night
when the d began to wane, we went,
while I tarried, every d she set A banquet richer than the
d before
then came a night Still as the d was loud ;
twelvemonth and a d were pleasant to me,'
Seven d's I drove along the dreary deep,
Let visions of the night or of the d Come,
Riding at noon, a dor twain before,
and slowly Pelleas drew To that dim d,
all d long Sir Pelleas kept the field
but rose With morning every d,
Full-arm'd upon his charger all d long Sat by the walls,
I see thy face But once a d :
Give me three d's to melt her fancy,
So those three d's, aimless about the land,
risen against me in their blood At the last d ?
And each foresaw the dolorous dtohe:
Arm'd for &doi glory before the King,
behold This d my Queen of Beauty is not here.'
wan d Went glooming down in wet and weariness :
Our one white d of Innocence hath past,
new life — the d's of frost are o'er : New life, new love,
to suit the newer d :
I have had my d.
I have had my d and my philosophies —
King Was victor wellnigh d by d,
fool,' said Tristram, ' not in open d.'
So on for all that d from lawn to lawn
Built for a summer d with Queen Isolt
Then pressing dhy d thro' Lyonesse
he went To-day for three d's' hunting, —
There came a 5 as still as heaven,
golden d's In which she saw him first,
and every d Beheld at noon in some delicious dale
in the golden d's before thy sin.
The d's will grow to weeks,
The sombre close of that voluptuous d,
that d when the great light of heaven Bum'd
when the dolorous d Grew drearier
The voice of d's of old and d's to be.
whiter than the mist that all d long
So all d long the noise of battle roU'd
the halls Of Camelot, as in the d's that were.
In those old d's, one summer noon,
the d's darken round me, and the years,
Rise like a fountain for me night and d.
the three whereat we gazed On that high d,
Bear witness, that rememberable d,
make it wholly thine on sunny d's.
d's Of dewy dawning and the amber eves
when d himg From his mid-dome in Heaven's
all her flowers, And length of d's,
with the growths Of vigorous early d's.
Before he saw my d my father died,
I said to her, ' A rf for Gods to stoop,'
for that d Love, rising, shook his wings,
d which did enwomb that happy hour, Thou art blessed
in the years, divinest d !
Then had he stemm'd my d with night.
Yet bearing round about him his own d,
come To boys and girls when summer d's are new,
where that d I crown'd myself as king,
1004
1136
,; 1162
Edy Grail 49
64
101
187
197
206
338
471
„ 588
„ 683
„ 750
„ 808
„ 910
PeSeas and E. 20
30
168
215
216
244
356
391
462
606
iMst Tournament 55
209
214
218
278
316
;; 319
„ 335
347
373
378
501
530
Guinevere 292
„ 380
392
„ 500
„ 624
688
Pass, of Arthur 90
122
135
137
170
189
197
405
417
454
To the Queen ii3
Lover's Tale i 14
51
65
105
133
191
304
316
485
502
510
555
592
Day {continued) for the d was as the night to me ! The night
to me was kinder than the d ; The night in pity took
away my d. Lover's Tale 610
All (i I watch'd the floating isles of shade, ,, ii5
All d I sat within the cavern-mouth.
The d waned ; Alone I sat with her :
From the outer d. Betwixt the close-set ivies
I CAME one d and sat among the stones
what height The d had grown I know not.
had lain three d's without a pulse :
till the great d Peal'd on us with that music
that d a boy was bom, Heir to his face and land,
for wasn't he coming that d ?
For the down's are as bright as d,
you were only made for the d.
past away with five ships of war that d,
drew away From the Spanish fleet that d,
fought such a fight for a d and a night
And a d less or more At sea or ashore,
tho' I loiter'd there The full d after,
lake and mountain conquers all the d.
my crowning hoiu", my d of d's.
Then came the d when I, Flattering myself
Not I that d of Edith's love or mine —
Edith would be bridesmaid on the d. But on that
d, not being all at ease.
Thro' dreams by night and trances of the d,
but the good Lord Jesus has had his d.'
Say that His d is done !
for fifteen d's or for twenty at most.
it chanced on a d Soon as the blast
we were every d fewer and fewer.
to be a soldier all d and be sentinel
Ever the d with its traitorous death
Then d and night, d and night,
♦ Hold it for fifteen d's ! '
might be kindlier : happOy come the d !
so spum'd, so baited two whole d's —
more than once in d's Of doubt and cloud
To whom I send my prayer by night and d —
slain my father the d before I was bom.
And we stay'd three d's, and we gorged
till the labourless d dipt under the West ;
thunder of God peal'd over us all the d,
I shall join you in&d.
arm'd by d and night Against the Turk ;
All d the men contend in grievous war
I, wearing but the garland of a d,
When, in our younger London d's,
A clearer d Than om poor twiUght
All d long far-off in the cloud of the city,
the sun of the soul made d in the dark
That d my nurse had brought me the child.
Ten long sweet summer d's upon deck,
the sons of a winterless d.
Ten long d's of summer and sin — if it must be so —
But d's of a larger light than I ever again shall
know — D's that wiU glimmer, I fear,
little one found me at sea on a d,
the storm and the d's went by, but I knew no more —
' Ten long sweet summer d's ' of fever.
And gone — that d of the storm —
Three d's since, three more dark d's
to the glare of a drearier d ;
What mlers but the D's and Hours
The d's and hours are ever glancing by.
But with- the Nameless is nor D nor Hour ;
For man has overlived his d
If utter darkness closed the d,
sight and night to lose themselves in d.
When only D should reign.'
D and Night are children of the Sun,
No night no d ! — I touch thy world again —
And send the d into the darken'd heart ;
dawn of more than mortal d Strike on the Mount of Vision !
37
139
.171
„ Hi 1
" . 9
„ iv 34
64
128
First Quarrel 47
Rizpah 4
„ 19
The Revenge 13
47
83
86
Sisters (E. and E.) 98
100
124
139
142
208
274
In the Child. Hasp. 22
71
Def. of Lwchnow 9
31
49
74
79
92
105
Sir J. Oldcastle 23
163
Columbus 155
233
V. of Maeldune 8
67
„ 113
To W. H. BroohfUld 14
Montenegro 3
AchiUes over the T. 9
To Dante 6
To E. Fitzgerald 54
Tiresias 205
The Wreck 29
55
59
64
74
77
86
» 111
147
„ 148
Despair 6
„ 28
Ancient Sage 95
99
102
150
199
203
244
245
249
261
284
Day
136
Dead
Day (continited) morning brings the d I hate and fear ; The Flight 2
the mom is cahn, and like another d; „ 10
on that summer d When I had fall'n „ 21
love that keeps his heart alive beats on it night and d — „ 35
an' yer eyes as bright as the d ! Tomorrow 32
paiirints had inter'd glory, an' both in wan d, „ 53
sleeps the gleam of dying d. Locksley H., Sixty 42
watching till the d begun — „ 91
force to guide us thro' the d's I shall not see ? „ 158
On this d and at this hour, „ 175
planets whirling round them, flash a million miles ad. „ 204
I shelter'd in this archway from a, dot driving showers — „ 259
my Leonard, use and not abuse your d, „ 265
stood like a rock In the wave of a stormy d ; Heavy Brigade 57
I that loved thee since my d began, To Virgil 38
The light of d's when life begun. The d's that
seem to-day,
now thy long d's work hath ceased,
maintain The d against the moment, and the
year Against the d ;
Uve With stronger life from dtod;
Two Suns of Love make d of human life,
light and genial warmth of double d.
Men that in a narrower d —
Pref. Poem Broth. S. 23
Epit. on Stratford 2
To Duke of Argyll 6
Hands all round 6
Prin. Beatrice 1
22
Open I. and C. Exhib. 25
lavish all the golden d To make them wealthier Poets and their B. 3
Your viceregal d's Have added fulness To Marq. of Dufferin 10
My memories of his briefer d WUl mix „ 51
, that the d, When here thy hands let fall Demeter and P. 8
And robed thee in his ^ from head to feet — „ 21
a worm which writhes all d, Fastness 17
Voices of the d Are heard across the Voices of the dark. The Ring 39
when you came of age Or on the d you married. Both
the d's Now close in one.
made The rosy twilight of a perfect d.
on her birthday, and that d His death-day,
one d came And saw you, shook her head,
I came, I went, was happier dhj d;
on that d Two lovers parted by no scurrilous tale —
In summer if I reach my d —
When frost is keen and d's are brief —
years ago. In rick-fire d's, When Dives loathed
the times,
O'er his uncertain shadow droops the d.
While the long d of knowledge grows and warms,
Thy scope of operation, d by d,
stvtmbled back again Into the common d,
To you my d's have been a life-long lie,
To flame along another dreary d.
And on this white midwinter d —
d long labour'd, hewing the pines,
vanish'd hke a ghost Before the d,
more than he that sang the Works and D's,
d by d, thro' many a blood-red eve,
off the rosy cheek of waking D.
one d He had left his dagger behind him.
alone in the dell at the close of the d.
and the d I was bom.
she sat d and night by my bed,
Dawn not D ! (repeat)
Storm in the South that darkeas the d !
if Thou wiliest, let my d be brief. So Thou wilt
strike Thy glory thro' the d.
Must my d be dark by reason,
after his brief range of blameless d's,
Daylight Ind to Ind, but in fair d woke,
Flood with full d glebe and town ?
Seems to the quiet d of your minds
J^ong as the d Lasted,
„ 78
,, 187
„ 212
„ 312
„ 348
„ 426
To Ulysses 9
„ 19
To Mary Boyle 28
Prog, of Spring 8
101
111
Romney's R. 33
41
„ 58
To Master of B. 9
Death of (Enone 62
68
To Virgil 6
St. Telemachus 3
A kbar's Dream 202
Bandit's Death 11
19
Charity 24
33
The Dawn 11, 16
Riflemen, form ! 2
Doubt and Prayer 13
God and the Univ. 2
D. of the Duke of C. 9
Buonaparte 4
Two Voices 87
Lover's Tale i 296
Batt. of Brunanbiirh 38
d made itself Ruddy thro' both the roofs of sight, Tiresias 2
whence an affluent f oimtain pour'd From darkness into d, A ncient Sage 8
vapour in d Over the mountain Floats, Kapiolani 16
Daylong you caught HLs weary d chirping. The Brook 53
Dayshine Naked in open d?' ' Nay,' she cried, Gareth and L. 1092
Dazed the sudden light D me half-blind : Princess v 12
And d all eyes, till Arthur by main might. Com. of Arthur 109
Dazed (continued) Some flush 'd, and others d. Com. of Arthur 265
nor lights nor feast D or amazed, Lover's Tale iv 311
d and dumb With passing thro' at once Demeter and P. 6
end myself too with the dagger — so deafen'd and d — Bandit's Death 37
Dazing from the lava-lake D the starlight, Kapiolani 15
Dazzle not shown To d all that see them ? The Ring 144
Dazzled both his eyes were d, as he stood, M. d' Arthur 59
The rhymes are d from their place Day-Dm., Pro. 19
boyish dream involved and d down Princess iv 450
Be d by the wildfire Love to sloughs „ v 441
In either hand be bore What d all, Gareth and L. 387
And d by the livid-flickering fork, Merlin and V. 941
So that his eyes were d looking at it. Pelleas and E. 36
Was d by the sudden light, „ 105
both his eyes were ti as he stood, Pass, of Arthur 227
Dazzling The sun came d thro' the leaves, L. of Shalott Hi 3
Dead (adj.) {See also DeS,d, Half-dead) All cold, and
d, and corpse-Uke grown ? Supp. Confessions 17
I would that I were d ! ' (repeat) Mariana 12, 24, 36, 48, 60, 72
Oh God, that I were d ! ' Mariana 84
Nor canst thou show the dead are d. Two Voices 267
like a shadow, and the winds are d. (Enone 28
He look'd so grand when he was d. The Sisters 32
Since I beheld yoimg Laurence d. L. C. V. de Vera 28
Roman soldier found Me lying d, D. of F. Women 1 62
And the old year is d. „ 248
But he'll be d before. D. of the 0. Year 32
I see the true old times are d, M. d' Arthur 229
who was d. Who married, who was like to be, AuMey Court 29
I hope my end draws nigh : half d I am, St. S. Stylites 37
this wonder, d, become Mere highway dust ? Love and Duty 10
Better thou wert d before me, Locksley Hall 56
Can I think of her as d, and love her „ 73
And haU the crew are sick or d. The Voyage 92
Come not, when I am d, Come not, when, etc. 1
She talk'd as if her love were d, The Letters 27
tender grace of a day that is d Break, break, etc. 15
Still downward thinking ' dor dto me ! ' Enoch Arden 689
If you could tell her you had seen him d, „ 808
Not to reveal it, till you see me d.' ' D,' „ 839
But if my children care to see me d, „ 888
Were d to him already ; bent as he was Aylmer's Field 445
D for two years before his death was he ; „ 837
We mwsi forgive the dead.' ' Dead ! who is d?' Sea Dreams 270
He suddenly dropt d of heart-disease.' ' Z) ? he ?
of heart-disease ? what heart had he To die of ? d\' „ 274
crush her pretty maiden fancies d Princess i 88
Peace be with her. She is d. „ i» 136
And strikes him d for thine and thee. „ 584
cold reverence worse than were she d. „ v 92
I would the old God of war himself were d, „ 145
Home they brought her warrior d : „ vi 1
she said, ' he Hves : he is not d : „ 122
he is d, Or all as d! : „ 169
Till the Srni drop, d, from the signs.' „ vii 245
lift thine eyes ; my doubts are d, „ 348
if to-night our greatness were strack d. Third of Feb. 17
was d before he was bom, (repeat) Grandmother 59, 68
not always certain if they be alive or d. „ 84
And when I am there and d and gone, Window. No Answer 11
Where lies the master newly d ; In Mem. xx 4
But, he was d, and there he sits, „ xxxii 3
' But brooding on the dear one d. In Mem. xxxvii 17
Nor can I dream of thee as d: „ Ixviii 4
Regret is d, but love is more „ Con. 17
and found The shining daffodil d, Maud I Hi 14
Had I lain for a century d ; „ xxii 72
Strike d the whole weak race of venomous worms, „ II i46
Who knows if he bed? „ ii 71
She is but d, and the time Ls at hand „ iii 8
There is some one dying or d, „ iv 48
D, long d. Long d\ „ vl
And wept, and wLsh'd that I were d; Com. of Arthur 345
Thrall'd in his castle, and hath starved him d ; Gareth and L. 358
Emrys would have scourged thee d, „ 375
Dead
137
Dead
Dead (adj.) (continued) Fell, as if (2 ; but quickly rose
and drew, Gareth and L. 967
and all wing'd nothings peck him d ! Marr. of Geraint 275
be he d I know not, but he past to the wild land. „ 442
once without remorse to strike her d, Geraint and E. 109
and so left him stunn'd or d, „ 464
'What, is he <Z?' ' No, no, not d ! ' „ 541
sure am I, quite sure, he is not d.' „ 545
if he be not d. Why wail ye for him thus ? „ 546
And be he d, I count you for a fool ; Your wailing
will not quicken him : d or not, „ 548
yet lay stUl, and feign'd himself as d, „ 588
were I d who is it would weep for me ? „ 618
Take warning : yonder man is surely d ; „ 672
Except he surely knew my lord was d,^ „ 721
died Earl Doorm by him be counted d. „ 730
D, whom we buried ; more than one of us Balin and Balan 122
yonder lies one d within the wood. Not d ; „ 468
like brainless bulls, D for one heifer ! ' „ 579
Coming and going, and he lay as d Merlin and V. 213
Ck)ming and going, and she lay as d, „ 644
And in the hollow oak he lay as d, „ 969
I fear me, that will strike my blossom d. Lancelot and E. 971
Give me good fortune, I will strike him d, „ 1071
she did not seem as d, But fast asleep, „ 1160
broken shed. And in it a <2 babe ; Holy Grail 399
dry old trunks about us, d, Yea, rotten „ 495
And one had wedded her, and he was d, „ 586
' Lo ! Pelleas is d — he told us — Pelleas and E. 377
' Z>, is it so ? ' she ask'd. ' Ay, ay,' said he, „ 384
I to your d man have given my troth, „ 389
one Murmuring, * All courtesy is d,' Last Tournament 211
The leaf is d, the yearning past away : „ 277
Is all the laughter gone d out of thee ? — „ 300
High on a grim d tree before the tower, „ 430
Heard in d night along that table-shore, „ 463
' my man Hath left me qx is d;' „ 495
child of one I honour'd, happy, d before thy shame ? Guinevere 423
strike him d, and meet myself Death, „ 575
strikes them d is as my death to me. Pass, of Arthur 74
That quick or d thou boldest me for King. „ 161
I see the true old times are d, „ 397
Hope was not wholly d, But breathing hard Lover's Tale i 584
I had lain as d. Mute, blind and motionless „ 606
D, for henceforth there was no life for me ! „ 608
but mine was wholly d, „ 724
Some one had told me she was d, „ ii 70
low knell tolling his lady d — D — „ iv 33
All that look'd on her had pronoimced her d. „ 35
but after my man was d ; First Quarrel 6
an' I wish I was d — „ 52
hear that cry of my boy that was d, Rizpah 45
bullet struck him that was dressing it suddenly d, The Eeoenge 67
nay, murder'd, doubtless d. Sir J. Oldcastle 60
Some d of hunger, some beneath the scoui^e, Columbus 177
he had stricken my father d — V. of Maddune 1
men dropt d in the valleys „ 31
D of some inward agony — is it so ? To W. H. Brookfield 10
the winds were d for heat ; Tiresias 34
and dash'd herself D in her rage : „ 153
D to the death beside me. The Wreck 113
I would thank him, the other is d, Despair 70
From the d fossil skull that is left in the rocks of
an earth that isd? „ 86
Would fain that he were d ; Ancient Sage 126
Found, fear'd me d, and groan'd, The Flight 23
an icy corpse d of some foul disease : „ 54
he comes, and finds me d. „ 72
'Ud 'a shot his own sowl d for a kiss Tomorrow 40
her wits wor d, an' her hair was as white „ 60
an' dhropt down d an the dead. „ 80
D the warrior, d his glory, d the cause Locksley H., Sixty 30
Lies my Amy d in child-birth, d the mother, d
the child. D — and sixty years ago, and d
her aged husband now — 36
Locksley H., Sixty 174
181
Dead Prophet 1
5
9
Epit. on Gordon 2
To Prof. Jehh 11
Vastness 36
The Ring 286
„ 451
454
462
471
Forlorn 1
„ 9
Happy 50
„ 83
Dead (adj.) (continued) earth be d as yon d world
the moon? D the new astronomy calls
her. . . .
D, but now her living glory lights the hall,
D ! And the Muses cried with a stormy cry
Z> ! ' Is it fee then brought so low ? '
D, who had served his time,
somewhere d far in the waste Soudan,
Tho' d in its Trinacrian Enna,
The dead are not d but alive,
she my Miriam d within the year.
D ! I took And chafed the freezing hand.
D ! — and maybe stung With some remorse,
— but d so long, gone up so far.
In fright, and fallen d.
' He is fled — I wish him d —
He is fled, or he is d,
and when The Priest pronounced you d,
fire from Heaven had dash'd him d,
As d from all the human race as if beneath the mould ; If
you be d, then I am d, „ 95
D with the dead ? To Mary Boyle 14
mountain rolls into the plain. Fell headlong d ; Death of (Enone 52
then a shower of stones that stoned him d, St. Telemachus 68
rabble in half -amaze Stared at him d, „ 72
band will be scatter'd now their gallant captain is d, Bandit's Death 41
birthday came of a boy bom happily d. Charity 34
when all but the winds were d. The Dreamer 1
Dead (s) (See also Living-dead). Ev'n in the chamels
of the d, Two Voices 215
Nor canst thou show the d are dead. „ 267
' We find no motion in the d.' „ 279
And of the rising from the d. Palace of Art 206
Once heard at d of night to greet On a Mourner 32
As we bear blossom of the d ; Love thou thy land 94
And grassy barrows of the happier d. Tithonus 71
He gazes on the silent d : Day -Dm., Arrival 13
' O love, thy kiss would wake the d\' „ Depart. 20
was deadly wounded Falling on the d. The Captain 64
And the d begin to dance. Vision of Sin 166
Yes, as the d we weep for testify — Aylmer's Field 747
We must forgive the d.' ' D\ who is dead ? ' Sea Dreams 270
shine among the d Hereafter ; tales ! Lucretius 129
Sat watching like a watcher by the d. Princess v 62
And watches in the d, the dark, „ vii 103
Thy living voice to me was as the voice of the d, V. of Cauteretz 8
voice of the d was a living voice to me. „ 10
And scratch the very d for spite : Lit. Squabbles 8
That name the imder-lying d. In Mem. ii 2
And hear the ritual of the d. „ xviii 12
But Sorrow — fixt upon the d, „ xxxix 8
How fares it with the happy d? „ xliv 1
Do we indeed desire the d Should still be near „ U 1
The d shall look me thro' and thro'. „ u 12
Eternal greetings to the d ; „ IvH 14
So hold I commerce with the d ; ,, Ixxxv 93
Or so methinks the d would say ; „ 94
That could the d, whose dying eyes „ xc 5
hold An hour's communion with the d. „ xciv 4
The noble letters of the d : ,, xcv 24
And woodlands holy to the d', xcix 8
I dream'd a vision of the d, ciii 3
But trust that those we call the d ,, cxviii 5
Should pile her barricades with d. „ cxxvii 8
Her feet, my darling, on the d ; „ Con. 50
I hear the d at midday moan, Maud I vi 70
For I thought the d had peace, „ II v 15
which makes us loud in the world of the d „ 25
For it is but a world of the d; „ 40
comes from another stiller world of the d, „ 70
the Uving quiet as the d, Com. of Arthur 123
I cannot brook to gaze upon the d.' Balin and Balan 586
Among the d and sown upon the wind — Merlin and V. 45
And by the cold Ilic .Tacets of the d ! ' 753
and the d, Oar'd by the dumb, Lancelot and E. 1153
Dead
Dead (s) (continued) If one may judge the living by the d, Lancelot and E. 1368
the d Went wandering o'er Moriah — Holy Grail 49
Moans of the dying, and voices of the d. Pass, of Arthur 117
beats upon the faces of the d, My d, 141
Behold, I seem but King among the d.' " 145
and so the d have kings, " 143
' He passes to be King among the d, " 449
She is his no more : The d returns to me, and I go
down To kiss the d' Zover's Tale iv 49
tnat great love they both had home the d, 181
drew back with her d and her shame. The"Bevenge 60
they stared at the d that had been so valiant 105
mother broke her promise to the d, Sisters (E. and E.) 252
one of those who would break their jests on the d, In the Child. Hasp 8
Voice of the d whom we loved,
women in travail among the dying and d,
God's Own voice to justify the d —
And we left the d to the birds
hours Now silent, and so many d,
lay like the d by the d on the cabin floor,
And wish the d, as happier than ourselves
an' dhropt down dead an the d.
single sordid attic holds the living and the d.
all my steps are on the d.
stood stark by the d ;
She gabbled, as she groped in the d,
Persephone ! Queen of the d no more —
as having risen from out the d,
the d are not dead but alive
Priest, who join'd you to the d,
Dead with the d ?
would sound so mean That all the d,
Thin as the batlike shrilUngs of the D
Silent Voices of the d,
De&d hallus coom'd to 's chooch afoor moy Sally
wur d,
toaner 'ed shot 'um as d as & naail.
an' she weant 'a nowt when 'e's d.
But 'e tued an' moil'd 'issen d,
boooks wur gone an' 'is boy wur d,
an' one o' ye d ye knaws !
Dick, when 'e cooms to be d,
an' I taaked 'im at fust fur d ;
Dead-blue And a lack-ltistre d-b eye,
Deaden and learns to d Love of self,
Deaden'd landskip darken'd, The melody d,
Dead-heavy down d-h sank her curls,
Dead Innocence call'd The Tournament of the D I,
Dead Uarch the I) M waiLs in the people's ears :
Dead-pale D-p between the houses high.
Deaf (See also DeSi) ' Much less this dreamer, d and
blind,
parch'd and wither'd, d and blind,
my end draws nigh : half d I am,
she was d To blessing or to cursing
mark'd not this, but blind and d
For wert thou bom or blind or d.
no man halt, or d or blind ;
And d to the melody,
all but d thro' age and weariness,
Be not d to the sound that warns,
Deal an' maiikin' ma d wi' their shouts,
Deafen'd d with the stammering cracks and claps
end myself too with the dagger— so d and dazed
Deafer I will be d than the blue-eyed cat,
' 2),' said the blameless King,
Deal You know so ill to d with time,
Nor d in watch-words overmuch :
Ere days, that d in ana, swarm'd
Her answer was ' Leave me to <Z with that
nor d's in that Which men delight in,
d's with the other distance and the hues
for Cyril, howe'er He d in frolic,
learn With whom they d.
Shall we d with it as an infant ?
Def. of Lucknow 11
88
Columbus 203
V. of Maeldune 36
Tiresias 211
The Wreck 112
Ancient Sage 205
Tomorrow 80
Locksley H., Sixty 222
„ 252
Dead Prophet 19
73
Demeter and P. 18
144
Vastness 36
Happy 93
Mary Boyle 14
Romney's R. 132
Death of (Enone 21
Silent Voices 4
N. Farmer, O.S. 17
35
N.S. 25
52
village Wife 87
Spinster's S's. 62
Owd Rod 11
„ 100
A Character 17
Ode on Well. 204
Merlin and the G. 32
Princess vi 147
iMst Tournament 136
Ode on Well. 267
L. ofShaloUiv^
Two Voices 175
Fatima 6
St. S. Stylites 37
Geraint and E. 578
Balin and Balan 318
Ancient Sage 175
Locksley H., Sixty 163
Merlin and the G. 27
St. Telemuchus 41
Riflemen form! 8
Spinster's S's. 88
Merlin and V. 942
Bandit's Death 37
Holy Grail 865
869
L. C. V. de Vere 63
Love thou thy land 28
Win Water. 199
Princess Hi 149
215
„ iv 86
250
u 513
BoMtcea 33
138
Deal (continued) d's comfortable words To hearts
wounded
Deal-box An' I hit on an old d-b that was push'd
Deal'd sa I hallus d wi' the Hall,
Dealing (part.) ' For memory d but with time,
Nor d goodly coimsel from a height
Dealing (s) And full of d's with the world ?
Thy elect have no d's with either heresy or
orthodoxy ;
Dealt Oh ! deathful stabs were d apace,
My nerves have d with stiffer.
hoard of tales that d with knights.
For Wisdom d with mortal powers,
this d him at Caerlyle ; That at Caerieon ;
knight of Arthur's noblest d in scorn ;
Our mutual mother d to both of us :
Dean (forest) Before him came a forester of D,
Across the forest call'd of D, to find
Dean (dignitary) prudes for proctors, dowagers for
they vext the souls of d's ;
Dear And she is grown so d, so d,
D is the memory of our wedded lives,
d the last embraces of our wives
As thou are lief and d, and do the thing
I hold thee d For this good pint of port.
I am not all as wrong As a bitter jest is d.
To wed the man so d to all of them
The discords d to the musician,
declared that ancient ties Would still be d
' D as remember'd kisses after death,
there's no rose that's half so d to them
D to the man that is d to God ;
For those are few we hold as d ;
Yet both are near, and both are d,
D, near and true — no truer Time
follow them down to the window-pane of my d,
frost is here, And fuel is d,
D as the mother to the son,
(And d to me as sacred wine To dying lips
Shall count new things as ^ as old :
Knowing the primrose yet is d,
And this hath made them trebly d.'
That if 7 be (Z to some one else,
But 1i I he d to some one else,
I should be to myself more d.
If I be i If I be 5 to some one else
With d Love's tie, makes Love himself more d.'
These to His Memory— since he held them d,
d to Science, d to Art, D to thy land and ours,
d to Arthur was that hall of ours,
As thou are lief and d, and do the thing
an' soa purr awaay, my d,
Dl dl d] I mun part them Tommies —
Dearer a little d than his horse.
All he shows her makes him d
the light D for night, as d thou for faults
tho' he make you evermore D and nearer,
the fuel is all the d,
Our wood, that is d than all ;
therefore d; oiit not so new. Yet therefore
tenfold d
reverence, D to true young hearts
by white bonds and warm, D than freedom.
I held you at that moment even d than before ;
fame with me To make it d.
Dearest ' Never, d, never : here I brave the worst : '
Were it our nearest, Were it our d,
Take you his d, Give us a life.'
Is he your d? Or I, the wife ? '
And which the d I cannot tell ! '
♦ We have his d, His only son ! '
shrieking ' 7 am his d, 1—7 am his d ! '
Which was his nearest ? Who was his d?
The beauty that is d to his heart —
To show you what is d to my heart,
Dearest
Lover's Tale i 717
First Quarrel 48
Village Wife 115
Two Voices 376
Aylmer's Field 172
MiUer's D. 8
Akbar's D., Inscrip. 7
Oriana 50
Will Water. 78
Princess, Pro. 29
7« Mem. xxxvi 5
Lancelot and E. 22
Guinevere 40
Lover's Tale i 246
Marr. of Geraint 148
Pelleas and E. 21
d's. Princess, Pro. 141
162
MiUer's D. 170
Lotos-Eaters, C.S. 69
70
M. d' Arthur 80
Will Water. 211
Vision of Sin 198
Enoch Arden 484
Sea Dreams 258
Princess ii 265
„ iv 54
„ V 159
To F. D. Maurice 36
46
The Victim 59
A Dedication 1
Window. On the Hill 17
)> Winter 2
In Mem. ix 19
„ xxxvii 19
„ xl 28
„ Ixxxv 118
„ cii 16
Maud I XV 3
5
6
» . 9
„xviii 61
Ded. of Idylls 1
„ 40
Holy Grail 222
Pass, of Arthur 248
Spinster's S's. 57
92
Locksley Hall 50
L. of Burleigh 33
Princess vii 347
A Dedication 3
Window. Winter 15
Maud I xxii 38
Marr. of Geraint 809
Lancelot and E. 419
Pelleas and E. 354
Happy 90
Romney's R. 56
Edwin Morris 117
The Victim 14
27
51
60
63
71
77
Lover's Tale iv 249
252
I
Dearest
139
Death
Deaxest {continued) Of all things upon earth the d to me.'
which of all things is the d to me,
What soimd was d in his native deUs ?
Deamess with a d not his due.
A distant d in the hill,
Death Oh ! vanity ! D waits at the door.
Hark ! d is calling While I speak to ye.
Patient of ill, and d, and scorn,
To hold a common scorn of d !
He hath no care of life or d ;
stooping low Unto the d, not sunk !
Shall we not look into the laws Of life and d,
0 weary life ! O weary d !
A gentler d shall Falsehood die.
Life, anguish, d, immortal love,
when he taketh repose An hour before d ;
He saw thro' life and d.
In your eye there is d,
D, walking all alone beneath a yew,
' You must begone,' said D,
Life eminent creates the shade of d ;
1 drink the cup of a costly d,
With secret d for ever, in the pits
And range of evil between d and birth,
wait for d — mute — careless of all ills,
' Thou hadst not between d and birth
Know I not -D ? the outward signs ?
Has ever truly long'd for d.
Oh life, not d, for which we pant ;
That I should die an early d :
0 d, d, d, thou ever-floating cloud.
Walking the cold and starless road of D
And d and life she hated equally,
And sweeter isn is d than life to me
D is the end of life ;
Give us long rest or d, dark d, or dreamful ease.
There is confusion worse than d,
The downward slope to d.
, bright d quiver'd at the victim's throat ;
1 was ripe for d.
who knew that Love can vanquish D,
Once thro' mine own doors D did pass ;
D is blown in every wind ; '
fluting a wild csirol ere her d,
But Dora lived unmarried till her d.
suit had wlther'd, nipt to <i by him
did not all thy martyrs die one d ?
and whole years long, a life of d.
hope ere d Spreads more and more and more.
Like D betwixt thy dear embrace and mine,
Like bitter accusation ev'n to d,
every hour Must sweat her sixty minutes to the d,
D closes all : but something ere the end.
Till mellow D, Uke some late guest,
No carved cross-bonas, the types of D,
Pale again as d did prove : ,
gray and gap-tooth'd man as lean as d,
Let us hob-and-nob with B.
' D is king, and Vivat Rex !
Hob-and-nob with brother D !
h\ those two d's he read God's warning
His baby's d, her growing poverty,
than he saw D dawning on him,
peace which each had prick'd to d.
no force, Persuasion, no, nor d could alter her :
cordon close and closer toward the d,
a letter edged with d Beside him,
AveriU went and gazed upon his d.
for the second d Scarce touch'd her
hapless loves And double d were widely murmur'd,
woimded to the d that cannot die ;
from the people's eyes Ere the great d,
devising tneir own daughter's d !
Stumbling across the market to his d,
Dead for two years before his d was he ;
Lover's Taie iv 319
348
Far-far-away 4
Locksley HaU 91
In Mem. Ixiv 19
AU Things wiU Die 17
28
Suvy. Confessions 4
34
48
„ 98
172
„ _ 188
Clear-headed friend 16
Arabian Nights 73
A Spirit haunts 15
The Poet 5
Poet's Mind 16
Love and Death 5
^
13
Elednore 138
Wan Scviftor 13
If I were loved 3
„ 10
Two Voices 169
„ 270
396
398
MiUer's D. 90
(Enone 238
„ 259
Palace of Art 205
May Queen, Con. 8
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 41
53
„ 83
D.ofF. Women 16
115
„ 208
„ 269
To J. S. 19
46
M. d' Arthur 267
Dora 172
Edwin Morris 101
St. S. Stylites 50
54
156
iMoe and Duty 48
81
Golden Year 69
Ulysses 51
Will Water. 239
245
L. of Burleigh 66
Visum of Sin 60
74
179
, 194
Enoch Arden 571
705
832
Aylmer's Field 52
418
500
595
599
604
617
662
773
783
820
837
Death {continued) dark retinue reverencing d At golden
thresholds; Aylmer's Field M2
Boxmd on a matter he of life and d : Sea Dreams 151
gout and stone, that break Body toward d, Lucretius 154
nor shunn'd a soldier's d. Princess, Pro. 38
I would make it d For any male thing „ 151
As blank as d in marble ; „ i 177
Let no man entee in on pain of D ? „ H 195
/ give thee to d My brother ! „ 307
To give three gallant gentlemen to dJ „ 335
I spoke of war to come and many d's, „ Hi 150
you will shock him ev'n to d, „ 212
act Of immolation, any phase of d, „ 285
Sum Grew broader toward his d and fell, „ 364
' Dear as remember'd kisses after d, „ iv 54
O -D in Life, the days that are no more.' „ 58
MeUssa clamour'd ' Flee the d;' „ 166
On all sides, clamouring etiquette to d, „ v 17
those that mourn half-shrouded over d „ 74
record of her wrongs, And crush'd to rf : „ 144
dash'd with d He reddens what he kisses : „ 164
and had not shunn'd the d, „ 178
sware to combat for my claim till d. „ 360
trust that there is no one hurt to d, „ i)i 242
think that you might mix his draught with d, „ 277
well-nigh close to d For weakness : „ vii 119
Leapt fiery Passion from the brinks ot d; „ 156
nor cares to walk With D and Morning „ 204
Or pines in sad experience worse than d, „ 315
All in the valley of D Rode the six hundred. Light Brigade 3
Into the valley of D Rode the six himdred. (repeat) „ 7, 16
Into the jaws of D, „ 24
Came thro' the jaws of D, „ 46
first time, too, that ever I thought of d. Grandmother 61
' d is sure To those that stay and those that roam, Sailor Boy 13
My father raves of d and wreck, „ 19
Far worse than any d to me.' „ 24
The wages of sin is dt : Wages 6
Thou madest D ; and lo, thy foot In Mem., Pro. 7
To dance with d, to beat the ground, „ i 12
0 Priestess in the vaults of D, „ m 2
No hint of d in all his frame, „ xiv 18
Cold in that atmosphere of D, „ xx 14
If D were seen At first as D, „ xxxv 18
To that vague fear imphed in d; „ xli 14
If Sleep and D be truly one, „ xliii 1
(If D so taste Lethean springs), „ xliv 10
Beyond the second birth of D. „ xlv 16
There must be wisdom with great D: „ li 11
1 bring to life, I bring to d: „ Ivi 6
Sleep, D's twin-brother, times my breath ; Sleep, D's
twin-brother, knows not D, „ Ixviii 2
Sleep, kinsman thou to d and trance „ Ixxi 1
I curse not nature, no, nor d ; „ Ixxiii 7
knowing D has made His darkness beautiful „ Ixxiv 11
That holy D ere Arthur died „ Ixxx 2
But D returns an answer sweet : „ Ixxxi 9
I wage not any feud with D „ Ixxxii 1
Nor blame I D, because he bare „ 9
For this alone on D I wreak „ 13
till Doubt and D, 111 brethren, „ Ixxxvi 11
sire would make Confusion worse than d, „ xc 19
shocks of Chance — The blows of D. „ xcv 43
Mixt their dim lights, like life and d, „ 63
gleams On Lethe in the eyes of D. „ xcviii 8
And imto myriads more, of d. „ xcix 16
As one would sing the d of war, „ ciii 33
Or dive below the wells of D ? „ cviii 8
on the depths of d there swims The reflex „ 11
She cannot fight the fear of d. „ cxiv 10
Like Paul with beasts, I fought with D ; „ cxx 4
I slip the thoughts of life and d ; „ cxxii 16
Unpalsied when he met with D, „ cxxviii 2
whatever is ask'd her, answers 'D.' Maud I i4
To the d, for their native land. ^ H
Death
140
Death
Death (continued) Singing of D, and of Honour that cannot
die,
thought like a fool of the sleep of d.
for sullen-seeming D may give More life
Spice his fair banquet with the dust ot d?
The dusky strand of Z> inwoven here
And given false d her hand,
mine by a right, from birth till d.
Far into the North, and battle, and seas of d.
chance what will, I trust thee to the d.'
bom the son of Gorlois, after d,
thro' the strait and dreadful pass of d,
chance what will, I love thee to the d ! '
' King and my lord, I love thee to the d ! '
And Modred's blank as d ; and Arthur cried
names himself the Night and oftener D
Despite of Day and Night and D and Hell.'
white breast-bone, and barren ribs of 2),
doom'd to be the bride of Night and D ;
D's dark war-horse bounded forward with him.
saw That D was cast to ground, and slowly rose,
revel and song, made merry over D,
maybe pierced to d before mine eyes,
doubtless he would put me soon to d,
Long for my life, or hunger for my d,
Leave me to-night : I am weary to the d.'
So pains him that he sickens nigh to d ;
were himself nigh wounded to the d.'
he crown'd A happy life with a fair d,
His passion half had gauntleted to d,
Balin's horse Was wearied to the d,
To save thy life, have brought thee to thy d.
bore me there, for bom from d was I
an enemy that has left D in the living waters,
D in all life and lying in all love.
Fame that follows d is nothing to us ;
Flash'd the bare-grinning skeleton of d !
little daughter fl^ From bonds or d,
Prize me no prizes, for my prize is d !
crying that his prize is d.'
had died the d In any knightly fashion
' Him or d,' she mutter'd, ' d or him,' Again and like
a burthen, ' Him or d.'
Ev'n to the d,' as tho' ye were my blood,
D, like a friend's voice from a distant field
call'd her song ' The Song of Love and Z»,'
sweet is d who puts an end to pain :
' Love, art thou sweet ? then bitter d must be : ' Love,
thou art bitter ; sweet is (Z to me. O Love, if d be
sweeter, let me die.
Sweet d, that seems to make us loveless clay,
I needs must follow d, who calls for me ;
Phantom of the house That ever shrieks before a d,'
I shall guard it even in d.
her d Was rather in the fantasy than the blood,
bruise and blow. With d's of others,
therefore my true love has been my d.
for this most gentle maiden's d
as would have help'd her from her d.'
after heaven, on our dull side of d,
Maud I vl6
„ xiv 38
,, / xviii 46
56
60
„ 68
„ xix 42
„ IllviZI
Com. of Arthur 134
240
395
468
470
Gareth and L. 417
638
887
1382
1396
„ 1401
1403
1423
Marr. of Geraint 104
463
Geraint and E. 81
„ 358
499
919
968
Balin and Balan 220
„ 561
600
Merlin and V. 44
148
194
464
847
Lancelot and E. 277
„ 506
531
870
902
960
Death {continued) strike him dead, and meet myself i?, Guinevere 576
My God, thou hast foi^otten me in my d : Pass, of Arthur 27
Light was Gawain in life, and light in d Is Gawain, „ 56
1005
1008
1010
1014
1017
1023
1115
1131
1166
1277
1291
1311
1382
And I was thirsty even unto d ; Holy Grail 377
storm Roimd us and d ; „ 492
rotten with a hundred years of d, „ 496
Your sleep is d,' and drew the sword, PeUeas and E. 447
But here will I disedge it by thy d,' „ 578
this honour after d, Following thy will ! Last Tournament 34
heart in one full shock With Tristram ev'n to d: „ 181
And stings itself to everlasting d, „ 452
hates thee, as I him — ev'n to the d. „ 518
and I will love thee to the d, „ 720
To help it from the d that cannot die, Guinevere 66
she thought ' He spies a field of d; „ 134
many a mystic lay of life and d „ 281
Fear not : thou shalt be guarded till my d. „ 448
The doom of treason and the flaming d, „ 538
strikes them dead is as my d to me.
or thro' d Or deathlike swoon,
fluting a wild carol ere her d,
govern a whole life from birth to d, Lover
Time and Grief did beckon imto D, And D drew nigh
wakeful portress, and didst parle with D, —
So D gave back, and would no fm-ther come.
and his spirit From bitterness of d.
Is to me daily life and daily d :
I died then, I had not known the d ;
from whose left hand floweth The Shadow of D,
Which seeming for the moment due to d.
But breathing hard at the approach of D,
Smit with exceeding sorrow unto Z>.
from a dismal dream of my own (Z,
may d Awake them with heaven's music
So Love, arraign'd to judgment and to d,
vestibules To caves and shows of D :
A beauty which is d ;
down-himg The jaws of D :
till helpless d And silence made him bold —
He reverenced his dear lady even in d ■
' not even d Can chill you all at once :
He falling sick, and seeming close on d.
For some new d than for a life renew'd ;
which might Be d to one :
And all her sweet self-sacrifice and d.
D from their rifle-bullets, and d from their cannon-
balls, D in oiu" innermost chamber, and d at our
slight barricade, D while we stood with the
musket, and d while we stoopt to the spade, D
to the dying, and woimds to the wounded,
D — for their spies were among us,
D at the glimj)se of a finger
D from the heights of the mosque and the palace,
and d in the ground !
Ever the d with its traitorous d
Lord of life Be by me in my d.
I woke, and thought — d — I shall die —
That I am loyal to him till the d,
it was all of it as quiet as d,
I bad them remember my father's d,
From dio d thro' life and life.
In seas of D and sunless gulfs of Doubt.
Fell the shipcrews Doom'd to the d.
Drew to this island : Doom'd to the d,
storm and sin and d to the ancient fold.
He helpt me with d, and he heal'd me with sorrow
' as in truest Love no D.'
' The wages of sin is rf,'
Dead to the d beside me,
a scrap, dipt out of the ' <i's ' in a paper, fell.
Glared on our way toward d,
I am frighted at fife not d.'
With songs in praise ot d,
on Edwin's ship, with Edwin, ev'n in d,
dhrame of a married man, d alive, is a mortial sin.'
I myself so close on d, and d
While she vows ' till d shall part us,'
that crowning barren D as lord of all.
Beautiful was d in him, who saw the d,
B and Silence hold their own.
That on dumb d had thriven ;
She tore the Prophet after d,
with all its pains, and griefs, and ds,
Gods against the fear Of B and Hell ;
thou that hast from men. As Queen of X>,
B for the right cause, d for the wrong cause,
Beyond the common date of d —
theft were d or madness to the thief,
drew the ring From his dead finger, wore it till her d.
to laugh at love in d !
74
119
435
Tale i 76
110
113
115
143
169
496
499
508
585
601
748
760
785
nl26
190
205
{■0 72
74
76
258
374
Sisters {E. and E.) 35
255
Bef. of Ltuiknow 14
„ 19
23
24
79
Sir J. OldcasUe 174
Columbus 87
„ 227
V. of Maeldune 20
70
Be Prof., Two G. 52
Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 14 -
Batt. of Brunanburh 23
51
The Wreck 2
58
80
93
„ 113
Bespair 11
" 1*
Ancient Sage 209
The Flight 46
Tomorrow 51
Locksley H., Sixty 4
:; 237
Bead Prophet 26
77
To Prin. Beatrice 2
Bemeter and P. 142
1^
Vastness 8
The Ring 108
204
218
231
Death
141
Dedicate
Deatti (continued) D and marriage, B and marriage !
To share his living d with him,
D will freeze the supplest limbs —
Too early blinded by the kiss of d —
beyond the doors of d Far-far-away ?
My life and d are in thy hand.
A silence follow'd as of d, and then A hiss
And then once more a silence as of d.
Baths, the Forum gabbled of his d.
But D had ears and eyes ;
I could make Sleep D, if I would —
sod Draw from my d Thy living flower
Wait till D has flung them open.
Has vanish'd in the shadow cast by D.
face of Z) is toward the Sun of Life,
Deathbed Kind ? but the d desire Spum'd
as by some one d after wail Of suffering,
I hear a d-b Angel whisper ' Hope.'
Death-blow d-b struck the dateless doom of kijigs,
Death-day her birthday, and that day His d-d,
birthday, d-d, and betrothal ring.
Your birthday was her d-d.
Death-drowsing while he spoke Closed his d-d eyes,
Death-dumb in a drd autumn-dripping gloom,
Deathful-grinniiig d-g mouths of the fortress.
Death-hymn wild swan's d-h took the soul
Death-in-life Lay lingering out a five-years' d-i4.
and palsy, d-i-l. And wretched age —
Deathless {See also SeemingHdeathless) That Gods
there are, and d.
magic cirque of memory, Invisible but d.
Deathlike Luminous, gemlike, ghostlike, d,
Deathly-pale d-f Stood grasping what was nearest,
Death-pale -D-j>, for lack of gentle maiden's aid.
Deathruckle Vows that will last to the last d.
Death-scaffold seem'd to hear Her own d-s raising,
Death's-head not a d-h at the wine.'
Deathsong Some d for the Ghouls To make
Death-watch dog howl, mother, or the d-w beat,
0 the d beating !
Death-white beheld The d-w curtain drawn ;
Knew that the d-w curtain meant but sleep.
Debased right arm d The throne of Persia,
Debate beat the floor ; Where once we held d.
Debated while the King d with himself If Arthur
Debating Leodogran in heart D —
D his command of silence given,
Debt Love the gift is Love the d.
Deep, indeed, Their d of thanks to her
my d to him, This nightmare weight of gratitude,
We have a voice, with which to pay the d
coom'd to the parish wi' lots o' Vjirsity d,
Vext with lawyers and harass'd with d :
1 feel I shall owe you a d.
That I owe this d to you
the whole dear d of all you are.
Fur I finds es I be that i' d,
easy es leaves their d's to be paiiid.
This father pays his d with me,
how dear a d We owed you, and are owing yet To Marq. of Dufferin 18
that ample woodland whisper'd ' d,' The brook
that feeds this lakelet murmur'd ' d,' The Ring 170
Debtor d's for oiu- lives to you, Princess ii 355
And the man said ' Am I your d ? ' By an Evolution. 2
Decad Thro' sunny d's new and strange, Day-Dm., L'Envoi 22
Averill was a d and a half His elder, Aylmer's Field 82
Old scandals buried now seven d's deep „ 442
Decay (s) Upon the general d of faith The Epic 18
And on one side a castle in d, Man. of Geraint 245
worshipt all too well this creature of d, Happy 45
Decay (verb) The woods d, the woods d and fall, Tithonus 1
Decay'd and learn If his old prowess were in aught cZ; Zancelot and E. 584
and the Grail Past, and the beam d, Holy Grail 122
Decaying Stench of old offal d, Def. of Lwknow 82
Decease from the Queen's d she brought her up. Princess Hi 86
Forlorn 67
Happy 8
„ 46
Romney's R. 103
Far-far-away 11
Death of (Enone 40
St. Telemachus 65
69
74
Akbar's Dream 187
Bandit's Death 32
Doubt and Prayer 6^
Faith 7
D. of the Duke of C. 3
" ^^
Maud I xix 77
Pass, of Arthur 118
Romney's R. 148
Lucretius 236
The Ring 213
„ 276
301
Balin and Balan 631
Last Tournament 756
Maud III vi 52
Dying Swan 21
Enoch Arden 565
Lucretius 154
„ 121
Lover's Tale ii 160
Maud I Hi 8
Lancelot and E. 965
765
Fastness 26
Enoch Arden 175
Princess iv 87
Ancient Sage 17
May Queen, Con. 21
Forlorn 24
Maud I xiv 34
37
Alexander 1
In Mem. Ixxxvii 21
Com. of Arthur 238
„ 141
Geraint and E. 366
MiUer's D. 207
Princess ii 141
„ vi 299
Ode on Well. 156
N. Farmer, N. S. 29
Maud I xix 22
87
90
Geraint and E. 319
ViUage Wife 65
94
The"Flight 20
Decease {continued) And chains regret to his d, In Mem. xxix 3
Deceased Nor will be when our summers have d. Maud I xviii 14
Deceit weave me a snare Of some coquettish d, „ vi 26
I may be beguiled By some coquettish d, „ 90
For then, perhaps, as a child of d, „ xiii 30
Deceive. See Desave
Deceived I never will be twice d. The Letters 30
Meet is it the good King be not d. Balin and Balan 533
One had d her an' left her First Quarrel 25
Is it I who have d thee or the world ? Columbus 151
December The gloom of ten D's. Will Water. 104
Their meetings made D June In Mem. xcvii 11
Decent d not to fail In offices of tenderness, Ulysses 4D
Decide ' D not ere you pause. Princess Hi 156
at once D's it, ' sdeath ! against my father's will.' „ v 298
' D it here : why not ? „ 310
Decided beardless apple-arbiter D fairest. Lucretius 92
Decision The intuitive d of a bright Isabel 13
Kept watch, waiting d, made reply. Qinone 143
Since, what d ? if we fail, we fail. Princess v 322
Deck (s) d's were dense with stately forms M. d' Arthur 196
d's were shatter'd. Bullets fell like rain ; The Captain 45
Over mast and d were scatter'd Blood and brains „ 47
Spars were splinter'd ; d's were broken : „ 49
On the d's as they were lying, „ 53
and while he stood on d Waving, Enoch Arden 243
light Shall glimmer on the dewy d's. In Mem. ix 12
The man we loved was there on d, „ ciii 41
I stood on a giant d and mix'd Maud III vi 34
Bright with a shining people on the d's. Com. of Arthur 376
Loyal, the dumb old servitor, on d, Lancelot and E. 1144
on the black d's laid her in her bed, „ 1147
all the d's were dense with stately fonns, Pass, of Arthur 364
With her hundred fighters on d. The Revenge 34
soldiers look'd down from their d's „ 37
wound to be drest he had left the d, „ 66
he rose upon their d's, and he cried : „ 100
he fell upon their d's, and he died. „ 104
Ten long sweet summer days upon d. The Wreck 64
every soul from the d's of The Falcon „ 109
that I Stumbled on d, half mad. „ 118
I crouch'd upon d — „ 120
who saw the death, but kept the d, Locksley H., Sixty 63
Deck (verb) To d thy cradle, Eleanore. Elednore 21
flowers or leaves To d the banquet. In Mem. cvii 6
wherewithal d the boar's head i* Gareth and L 1073
d it Uke the Queen's For richness, Lancelot and E. 1118
add my diamonds to her pearls ; D her with these ; „ 1225
D your houses, illuminate All your towns On Jub. Q. Victoria 18
Deck'd — ^Deckt deck'd her out For worship without end; Princess vii 168
A life that all the Muses deck'd In Mem. Ixxxv 45
and deckt in slowly-waning hues. Gareth and L. 1195
Array'd and deck'd her, as the loveliest, Marr. of Geraint 17
for he had decked them out As for a solemn sacrifice Lover's Tale iv 300
The city deck'd herself To meet me,
Declare Such as no language may d.'
D when last OUvia came
Had braced my purpose to d myself :
Declared d that ancient ties Would stiU
Decline (s) Looks thro' in his sad d,
Decline (verb) sap dries up : the plant d's.
to <Z On a range of lower feelings
Whatever way my days d,
Darken'd watching a mother d
Declined once more like some sick man d.
And thou, as one that once d.
Decrease That now dilate, and now d.
Decreased From heat to heat the day d.
Decree ' By shaping some augiist d.
To mould a mighty state's d's.
Decreed d that thou should'st dwell
and d That Rome no more should wallow
I d That even the dog was clean.
De-crescent Between the in-crescent and d-c moou,
Dedicate ld,ld,l consecrate with tears —
Columbus 9
Two Voices 384
Talking Oak 99
Sisters (E. and E.) 143
Princess ii 264
Adeline 13
Two Voices 268
Locksley Hall 43
In Mem. Ixxxv 41
Maud I xix 8
Palace of Art 155
In Mem. Ixii 5
„ xxviii 10
Mariana in the S. 78
To the Queen 33
In Mem. Ixiv 11
Demeter and P. 120
St. Telemachus 77
Akbar's Dream 52
Gareth and L. 529
Ded. of Idylls 3
Dedicate
142
Deep
Dedicate (continued) Shut in from Time, and d to
Dee Bala lake Fills all the sacred D.
Deed Fruitful of further thought and d,
Blowing a noise of tongues and d's,
a life of shocks, Dangers, and d's,
' I take possession of man's mind and d.
our great d's, as half-forgotten things.
Would serve his kind in d and word,
Delight our souls with talk of knightly d's,
the Powers, who wait On noble d's,
' They perish'd in their daring d's.'
I am yours in word and in d.
Divorce the Feeling from her mate the D.
Nor d's of gift, but gifts of grace
' His d's yet live, the worst is yet to come,
and your great d's P'or issue,
Howe'er you babble, great d's cannot die ;
on the highest Foam of men's d's — ■
Bright let it be with its blazon'd d's,
thine the d's to be celebrated.
In loveliness of perfect d's.
Her secret meaning in her d's,
What fame is left for human d's
On songs, and d's, and lives,
0 true in word, and tried in d,
Perplext in faith, but pure in d's,
Flow thro' our d's and make them pure,
some good knight had done one noble d,
And the d's sake my knighthood do the d.
My d's will speak : it is but for a day.'
for the d's sake have I done the d,
' Say thou thy say, and I will do my d.
said yovu" say ; Mine answer was my d.
far-sounded among men For noble d's ?
So grateful is the noise of noble d's
Because I knew my d's were known,
doubtless, all imeam'd by noble d's.
love of God and men And noble d's,
And each incited each to noble d's.
the great d's Of Lancelot, and his prowess
do and almost overdo the d's Of Lancelot ;
some brave d seem'd to be done in vain,
This chance of noble d's will come and go
every evil d I ever did. Awoke and cried,
honour and all noble d's Flash'd,
flower Waits to be solid fruit of golden d's,
uprear'd By noble d's at one with noble vows.
Did mightier d's than elsewise he had done,
here and there ad 01 prowess done
And worship her by years of noble d's,
miss to hear high talk of noble d's
she, for her good d's and her pure life,
and in the mist Was many a noble d,
Delight our souls with talk of knightly d's,
breathless body of her good d's past.
Love and Longing dress thy d's in hght,
this ballad of the d's Of England,
Virtue must shape itself in d,
light upon the ways of men As one great d.
crown with song The warrior's noble d —
P'or so the d endures ;
And d and song alike are swept Away,
nation's heart. Is in itself a d.'
His dream became a d that woke the world,
prayers. That have no successor in d,
By d's a light to men ?
Desm who d him not. Or will not d him.
And d's it carrion of some woodland thing.
But d not I accept thee aught the more,
who d this maid Mi^ht wear as fair a jewel
d this prize of ours is rashly given :
damsel, for I d you know full well
1 d As of the visioas tliat he told —
If I should d it over nice —
And d me grateful, and farewell 1
thee : Lover's Tale i 438
Geraint and E. 930
Two Voices 144
206
CEnone 164
Palace of Art 209
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 78
Love thou thy land 86
M. d' Arthur 19
Godiva 72
Day- Dm., Arrival 14
Lady Clare 74
The Brook 95
Sea Dreams 192
» ...314
Princess Hi 242
254
V 320
Ode on Well. 56
Boctdicea 41
In Mem. xxxvi 11
„ ly 10
„ Ixxiii 11
„ Ixxvii 3
„ Ixxxv 5
„ xevi 9
Gareih and L. 411
572
577
832
„ 901
1175
Marr. of Geraint 428
437
Geraint and E. 858
Balin and Balan 471
Merlin and V. 413
414
Lancelot and E. 81
469
Holy Grail 274
„ 318
373
Pelleas and E. 278
Last Tournament 100
123
680
Guinevere 458
476
„ 499
693
Pass, of Arthur 105
187
Lover's Tale i 217
Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 9
20
liresias 86
„ 162
Epilogue 37
„ 39
» 67
82
St. Telemachv^ 70
Akhar's Dream 10
„ 111
Gareth and L. 120
748
839
Lancelot and E. 239
541
„ 689
Lover's Tale iv 22
Tiresias 191
The Wanderer 16
Deem'd she d no mist of earth could dull
well had d he felt the tale Less than the teller :
Things in an Aylmer d impossible,
the peace, that I dno peace, is over
Smile at him, as he d, presumptuously :
wherein she d she look'd her best,
they d her death Was rather in the fantasy
wellnigh d His wish by hers was echo'd ;
I loved you and I d you beautiful,
I d him fool ? yea so ?
She d I wore a brother's mind :
Deeming Vivien, d Merlin overborne By instance,
D our courtesy is the truest law,
Deem'st D thou that I accept thee
Deep (adj. and adv.) (See also Ankle-deep, Breast-deep,
Elbow -deep, Fathom - deep. Knee -deep, Love-
deep, Mellow-deep, Mid-thigh-deep, Waist-deep)
Tho' d not fathomless,
grow so full and d In thy large eyes
So full, so d, so slow,
King Arthur : then, because his wound was d,
rain. That makes thee broad and d !
And d into the dying day
One sabbath d and wide —
D as Hell I count his error.
King Arthur. Then, because his woimd was d,
Love lieth d : Love dwells not in lip-depths.
I can't dig d, I am old —
look you here — the shadows are too d.
I heard that voice, — as mellow and d As a psalm
Six foot d of burial mould Will dull
thou knowest how d a well of love
Deep (s) (See also Forest-deeps) Below the thunders
of the upper d ;
Until the latter fire shall heat the d ;
drove The fragrant, glistening d's,
Round thee blow, seLE-pleached d.
From his coiled sleeps in the central d's
And drives them to the d.'
The abysmal d's of Personahty,
roaring d's and fiery sands, *
Nine years she wrought it, sitting in the d's
He heard the d behind him,
the d Moans round with many voices.
Where either haven open'd on the d's.
Trembled in perilous places o'er a, d:
I from out the boundless outer d
I thought the motion of the boimdless d
motion of the great d bore me on.
To the waste d's together,
great black cloud Drag inward from the d's.
From barren d's to conquer all with love ;
Glimmer away to the lonely d.
But they — they feel the desire of the d —
The d has power on the height, And the height has
power on the d ;
A d below the d.
Which heaves but with the heaving d.
That stir the spirit's inner d's,
A higher height, a deeper d.
and we to draw From d to d,
cloud That landlike slept along the d.
There rolls the d whore grew the tree.
That tmnbled in the Godless d ;
To seek thee on the mystic d's.
Powers of the height. Powers of the d,
by the side of the Black and the Baltic d,
high upon the dreary d's It seem'd in heaven,
gathering half the d And full of voices,
F'rom the great d to the great d he goes.'
in the d's whereof a mere,
by night to let the boundless d Down
boat Drave with a sudden wind across the d's.
On some wild down above the windy d,
fell the floods of heaven drowning the d.
Ode to Memory 38
Enoch Arden 711
Aylmer' s Field 305
Maud III vi 50
Balin and Balan 222
Lancelot and E. 907
„ 1131
Pelleas and E. 120
297
309
Lover's Tale i 740
Merlin and V. 800
Lancelot and E. 712
Gareth and L. 766
Ode to Memory 34
Elednore 85
„ 95
M. d' Arthur 5
Talking Oak 280
Day- Dm., Depart. 7
St. Agnes' Eve 34
The Captain 3
Pass, of Arthur m
Lover's Tale i 466
Eizpah 56
Sisters (E. and E.) 103
The Wreck 52
Romney's R. 125
Akhar's Dream 170
The Krdken 1
„ 13
Arabian Nights 14
A Dirge 29
The Mermaid 24
Palace of Art 20i
223
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 115
M. d'Arthur 105
184
Ulysses 55
Enoch Arden 671
Sea Dreams 11
88
91
„ 111
" .?^^
Princess vii 37
„ 164
To F. D. Maurice 28
Voice and the P. 19
21
33
In Mem. xi 20
„ xlii 10
„ Ixiii 12
„ ciii 39
56
,, cxxiii 1
„ cxxiv 12
„ cxxv 14
Maud II ii 82
„ III vi 51
Com. of Arthur 373
380
411
Gareth and L. 798
Merlin and V. 113
201
„ 658
Holy Grail 533
eajp-'
Deep
143
Delaying
Holy Grail 808
Last Townamenl 133
„ 685
Pass, of ArOmr 21Z
352
445
466
The Revenge 109
Deep (s) (continvM) Seven days I drove along the
dreary d,
From the great d to the great d he goes.'
wash'd up from out the d?
Nine years she wrought it, sitting in the d's
He heard the d behind him, and a cry
From the great d to the great d he goes.'
Down that long water opening on the d
sank his body with honour down into the d.
Out of the d, my child, out of the d,
(repeat) De Prof., Two G. 1, 5, 26, 29.
To that last d where we and thou are still. De Prof., Two G. 25
From that great d, before our world begins, „ 27
Out of the d, Spirit, out of the d, „ 32
rolls the heavens, and lifts, and lays the d, Tiresias 22
word of the Poet by whom the d's of the world
are stirr'd, The Wreck 23
the crew should cast me into the d, „ 94
between me and the d and my doom, Despair 5
suffers on land or in air or the d, „ 45
Slight ripple on the boundless d Ancient Sage 189
that one ripple on the boundless d Feels that the d
is boundless, „ 191
One with the boundless motion of the d. „ 194
Noises of a current narrowing, not the music
of a d ? Locksley H., Sixty 154
Light airs from where the d, Early Spring 21
she peers along the tremulous d, Demeter and P. 14
drown'd in the d's of a meaningless Past ? Vastness 34
far As the gray d, a landscape The Ring 150
hoary d's that belt the changeful West, Prog, of Spring 98
Not the Great Voice not the true D. Akbar's Dream 59
D under d for ever goes, MecJianophilus 35
wholly vanish in your d's and heights ? God and the Univ. 1
which drew from out the boundless d Crossing the Bar 7
Deep-asleep d-a he seem'd, yet all awake, Lotos-Eaters 35
Deep-blue Floods all the d-b gloom D. of F. Women 186
Deep-chested D-c music, and to this result. The Epic 51
Deep-domed as the d-d empyrean Rings Milton 7
Deepen d's on and up ! the gates Roll back, St Agnes' Eve 29
same old rut would d year by year ; Aylmer's Field 34
Ay me, the sorrow d's down. In Mem. tdix 14
the gloom Of twilight d's round it, Balin and Balan 233
Deepen'd (See also Ever-deepen'd) The battle d in
its place, Oriana 51
and in him gloom on gloom D : Balin and Balan 287
DeepenifS (See also Down-deepening) d thro' the
silent spheres Heaven over Heaven Mariana in the S. 91
D the courts of twilight broke them up Princess, Con. 113
D thy voice with the d of the night, V. of Cauteretz 2
Deeper bmy me D, ever so little d. Mavd II v 104
plunges thro' the wound again. And pricks it d : Pelleas and E. 531
D than any yearnings after thee Last Tournament 586
Tho' one is somewhat d than the other, Sisters {E. and E.) 25
Deep-hued With many a d-h bell-Uke flower Elednore 37
garden rose D-h and many-folded ! Balin and Balan 270
Deep-inrunning sand and cliff and d-i cave. Sea Dreams 17
Deeply-wounded Or mythic Uther's d-w son Palace of Art 105
Deep-meadow'd it lies D-m, happy, fair with
orchard-lawns M. d' Arthur 262
it lies D-m, happy, fair with orchard-lawns Pass, of Arthur 430
Deep-seated D-s in our mystic frame. In Mem. xxxvi 2
Deep-set the ti-s windows, stain 'd and traced, Palace of Art Ad
Deep-tranced they dwelt D-t on hers, Bcdin and Balan 278
Deep-udder'd dewy-fresh, browsed by d-u kine, Gardener's D. 46
Deep-wooded on the d-w mountain-side. The Wreck 72
Deer To chase the d at five ; Talking Oak 52
Rode thro' the coverts of the d. Sir L. and Q. G. 21
To show Sir Arthur's d. The Brook 133
Like flies that haimt a wound, or d, Aylmer's Field 571
Betwixt the monstrous horns of elk and d, Princess, Pro. 23
and shook the branches of the d „ Con. 98
And cattle died, and d in wood. The Victim 18
follow the d By these tall firs Gareth and L. 90
FoUow the d ? follow the Christ, the King, „ 117
Deer (continued) There tript a hundred tiny silver d, Last Tournament 171
But at the slot or fewmets of a d, „ 371
The d, the dews, the fern, the founts, „ 727
Defacement royal crown, Stampt all into d, Balin and Balan 541
Defacing Defaming and d, till she left Merlin and V. 804
Defamed D by every charlatan, In Mem. cxi 23
one that hath d The cognizance she gave me : Balin and Balan 484
hast thou so d Thy brotherhood Pelleas and E. 321
Defaming D and defacing, till she left Merlin and V. 804
Default own baseness in him by d Of will and nature, Pelleas and E. 81
Defeat Whether ye wish me victory or d, Geraint and E. 80
I must not dwell on that d of fame. Guinevere 628
trumpets of victory, groans of d ; Vastness 8
Defect each fulfils D in each, and always thought
in thought, Princess vii 304
D's of doubt, and taints of blood ; In Mem. liv 4
an hour's d of the rose, Maud I US
have in it an absoluter trust To make up that d: Lancelot and E. 1193
Scorn was allow'd as part of his d, Guinevere 43
A beauty with d — till That which knows. Ancient Sage 86
Defence war would arise in d of the right, Maud III vi 19
and my squire Hath in him small d; Balin and Balan 477
on all the d's our myriad enemy fell. Def. of Lucknow 35
Clean from our lines of d ten or twelve „ 62
Defend thou might'st d The thesis which thy words Two Voices 337
and three knights D the passings, Gareth and L. 614
And there d his marches ; Marr. of Geraint 41
and there d Your marches, Geraint and E. 889
And would d liis judgment well, Tiresias 190
Defended (See also Half-defended) works that d the
hold we held with our lives — Def. of Lucknow 7
Deferentially Sir Aylmer (d With nearing chair Aylmer's Field 266
Defiance With one smile of still d Sold him The Captain 59
and flung d down Gagelike to man. Princess v 177
With message and d, went and came ; „ 370
Defiant Sullen, d, pitying, wroth, Aylmer's Field 492
Deficiency Who'll weep for thy d ? Two Voices 39
Defied chafing at his own groat self d, Aylmer's Field 537
Defileth he d heavenly things With earthly uses ' — Balin and Balan 421
Define Hold thou the good : d it well : In Mem. liii 13
Defined His isolation grows d. „ xlv 12
Deform'd Vext with unworthy madness, and d. Aylmer's Field 335
His face d by lurid blotch and blain — Death of QSnone 72
Defying We drink d trouble. Will Water. 94
Was love's dumb cry d change In Mem. xcv 27
Degrade And throned races may d ; „ cxxviii 7
Degree and by d's May into uncongenial spirits Mine be the strength 10
But by d's to fullness wrought. You ask me, why, 14
We aU are changed by still d's, Love thou thy land 43
and thro' soft d's Subdue them to the useful Ulysses 37
What for order oi d? Vision of Sin 86
More than is of man's d Must be with us. Ode on Well. 242
by slow d's the sullen bell Toll'd Lover's Tale Hi 13
Deign'd Arthur d not use of word or sword. Last Tournament 458
Deity lays that will outlast thy D? ' D? nay, Liicretius 72
i) false in human-amorous tears ; „ 90
Such is Rome, and this her d : Boddicea 20
Nor take thy dial for thy d, Ancient Sage 109
Delay (s) Raw Haste, half-sister to D. Love thou thy land 96
And dull the voyage was with long d's, Enoch Arden 655
winning easy grace. No doubt, for slight d. Princess iv 331
' Ah, the long d.' Window. When 10
Delay (verb) now d not : take Excahbur, And fling him M. d' Arthur 36
tender ash d's To clothe herself. Princess iv 106
Delaying long, d no more. In Mem. Ixxxiii 4
but d's his purport till thou send Gareth and L. 618
D not thou for ought, but let them sit, Balin and Balan 18
'i) no longer, speak your wish, Lancelot and E. 924
* now d not : take Excalibur, And fling him Pass, of Arthur 204
While you still d to take Your leave of Town, To Mary Boyle 1
Delay'd — d at first Thro' helping back Gareth and L. 1212
till d By their mountain-Uke San PhiUp The Revenge 39
Delayest D the sorrow in my blood, In Mem. Ixxxiii 14
Delaying D as the tender ash delays To clothe herself, Princess iv 106
A sweet new-year d long ; In Mem. Ixxxiii 2
Delaying
144
Dense
Delaying (conlinued) D long, delay no more. In Mem. Ixxxiii 4
0 thou, new-year, d long, „ 13
Delayingly And yet she held him on d Enoch Arden 468
Delegate she send her d to thrall These fighting hands Pdleas and E. 336
Delicacy But could not out of bashful d ; Marr. of Geraint 66
Delicate (See also Fairily-delicato) Fair speech was his,
and d of phrase. Lover's Tale iv 273
Delicate-handed dilettante, D-h priest intone ; Mavd I viii 11
Delicately Most d hour by hour He canvass'd A Character 19
And Enid took a Uttle d, Geraint and E. 212
Delicious made the air Of Life d, Gardener's D. 70
Were not his words d, Edwin Morris 71
Delicto what's the Latin word ? — D : Walk, to the Mail 35
Delight (s) triple-mailed trust, and clear D, Supp. Confessions 67
So took echo with d, (repeat) The Owl ii 4
d, Life, anguish, death, immortal love, Arabian Nights 72
and feedeth The senses with a still d Margaret 17
Whose free d, from any height of rapid flight, Rosalind 3
seeming-bitter From excess of swift d. „ •82
And that d of frolic flight, „ 47
Falling into a still d, Elednore 106
1 die with my d, before I hear what I would hear „ 140
' Some vague emotion of d Two Voices 361
My heart, pierced thro' with fierce d, Fatima 34
' I marvel if my still d Palace of Art 190
great d and shuddering took hold of all my mind. May Queen, Con. 35
When she made pause I knew not for d; D. of F. Women 169
Thesole d is, sitting still. The Blackbird 10
The common mouth. So gross to express d. Gardener's D. 56
drunk d of battle with my peers, Ulysses 16
To shape the song for your d Day-Dm., Ep. 6
and all The chambers emptied of c^ : In M^m. mii 8
And was the day of my d As pure „ xxiv 1
With shower'd largess of d In dance „ xxix 7
And what d's can equal those „ xlii 9
Thy converse drew us with d, „ ex 1
when we meet, D a hundredfold accrue, „ cxvii 8
Maud the d of the village, Maud I ilO
and seems But an ashen-gray d, „ vi 22
echo of something Read with a boy's d, „ vii 10
and my D Had a sudden desire, „ xiv 19
darkness must have spread With such d as theirs „ xviii 26
My bride to be, my evermore d, „ 73
Breaking up my dream of d. „ xix 2
I sorrow after The d of early skies ; „ II iv 25
The d of happy laughter, the d of low replies. „ 29
a dream, yet it yielded a dear d „ Illvi 15
Guinevere, and in her his one d. Com. of Arthur 4
He, reddening in extremity of d, Geraint and E. 219
Inflate themselves with some insane d, Merlin and V. 834
Sprang to her face and fiU'd her with d ; Lancelot and E. 377
slmlling, ' Hollow, hollow all d ! Pass, of Arthur 33
And hollow, hollow, hollow all d.' „ 37
She took the body of my past d, Lover's Tale i 681
without hope, without any d In anytliing Despair 7
Delight (verb) in her web she still d's To weave L. of Shalott ii 28
D our souls with talk of knightly deeds, \J!k. d' Arthur 19
how the sun d's To glance and shift about Lucretius 188
nor deals in that Which men d in. Princess Hi 216
1) myself with gossip and old wives. Holy Grail 553
D our souls with talk of knightly deeds, Pass, of Arthur 187
and d thyself To make it wholly thine Lover's Tale i 13
never colt would more d To roll himself Romney's R. 13
Delighted B with the freshness and the sound. Edwin Morris 99
I am all as well d, Maud I xx 40
Delighteth nightingale d to prolong Her low preamble Palace of Art 173
Delirium I would catch Her hand in wild d, Princess vii 93
DeUus the Sun, Apollo, D, or of older use Lucretius 125
Deliver D not the tasks of might To weakness. Love thou thy land 13
U me the blessed sacrament ; St. S. Stylites 218
Thy tribute wave d : A Farewell 2
Ignorance D's brawling judgments. Merlin and V. 665
Kise and take This diamond, and a it, Lancelot and E. 546
Deliver'd Z> at a secret postcm-^ate Com. of Arthur 213
Deliverer and call'd them dear d's, Princess vi 92
Delivering D, that to me, by common voice (Enone 84
D seal'd dispatches which the Head Prhicess iv 379
D, that his lord, the vassal king, Gareth and L. 391
So she, ti it to Arthur, said. Last Tournament 30
Dell Out of the live-green heart of the d's Sea-Fairies 12
We would call aloud in the dreamy d's. The Merman 25
diamond-ledges that jut from the d's ; The Mermaid 40
The furzy prickle fire the d's, Two Voices 71
all night long, in falling thro' the d, D. of F. Women 183
the sjjlinter'd crags that wall the d „ 187
The little d's of cowslip, fairy palms, Aylmer's Field 91
How richly down the rocky d The Daisy 9
And snowy d's in a golden air. „ 68
moved in the hollows xmder the d's, V. of Maddune 107
What sound was dearest in his native d's ? Far-far-away 4
were alone in the d at the close of the day. Bandit's Death 19
rang out all down thro' the d, „ 36
Deluge some new d from a thousand hills 7/ / were loved 12
Pour with such sudden d's of light Lover's Tale i 315
or a d of cataract skies, Def. of Lucknow 81
In the common d drowning old political common-
sense!
Delyer careful robins eye the d's toil,
careful robins eye the d's toil;
Demand (s) To make d of modem rhyme
obedience make d Of whom ye gave me to.
Demand (verb) if a king d An act improfitable,
The sense of human will d's
D not thou a marriage lay ;
thy love to me. Thy mother, — I d'
sent Her maiden to <i it of the dwarf ;
Sent her own maiden to d the name,
Garlon, mine heir. Of him d it,'
if a king d An act improfitable.
Demanded she d who we were. And why we came ?
And then, d if her mother knew.
Was this d — if he yearn'd To hear
when the Queen d as by chance
And when the King d how she knew,
Demanding And then to me d why ?
D, so to bring relief
Demigod Elysian lawns. Where paced the D's of old.
Democrat what care I, Aristocrat, d.
Demon Pallas from the brain Of D's ?
some d in the woods Was once a man,
who will hunt for me This d of the woods ? '
Whereout the D issued up from Hell.
Celtic Demos rose a D,
A d vext me,
and drove the d from Hawa-i-ee.
Demon-god is the d-g Wroth at his fallj? '
Demonstration rounded under female hands With
flawless d :
Demos Celtic D rose a Demon,
D end in working its own doom.
Demur He yielded, wroth and red, with fierce d :
Demure The little maiden walk'd d.
Den We heard the lion roaring from his d ;
' Trooping from their mouldy d's
and the children, housed In her foul d,
climb'd from the d's in the levels below.
Denial Or by d flush her babbling wells
Who will not hear d, vain and rude
Denied He oft d his heart his dearest wish,
' Come with us Father PliiUp ' he d ;
at first Was silent ; closer prest, d it not,
she aliirm'd not, or d :
' ye never yet D my fancies —
d to him, Wlio finds the Saviour
Denouncing Uke a Ghost's D judgment.
Dense the decks were d with stately fonns
folds as d as those Which hid the HoUest
race thro' many a mile Of d and open.
But that these eyes of men are d and dim,
all the decks were d with stately forms.
Locksley II., Sixty 250
Marr. of Geraint 774:
Geraint and E. 431
To the Queen 11
Gareth and L. 558
M. d' Arthur 95
In Mem. Ixxxv 39
„ Con. 2
Gareth and L. 147
Marr. of Geraint 193
411
Balin and Balan 118
Pass, of Arthur 263
Princess Hi 135
iv 233
In Mem. xxxi 3
Merlin and V. 128
Lancdot and E. 575
The Epic 29
In Mem. Ixxxv 6
Princess Hi 343
Maud I X 65
In Mem. cxiv 13
Balin and Balan 124
137
317
Locksley H., Sixty 90
Merlin and the G. 29
Kapiolani 33
St. Telemachus 19
Princess ii 373
Locksley U., Sixty 90
„ 114
Princess v 358
Two Voices 419
D.ofF. Women 222
Vision of Sin 171
Com. of Arthur 29
The Dawn 17
Princess v 334
Lover's Tale i 628
Enoch Arden 336
„ 368
Princess iv 232
Lancdot and E. 1112
Sir J. OldcasUe 114
Guinevere 421
M. d' Arthur 196
Aylmer's Field 771
Balm and Balan 424
Pass, of Arthur 19
364
Deny
145
Desire
Deny What ! A it now ? Nay, draw,
and cry For that which all i them —
And would if ask'd d, it.
To hold your own, A not hers to her
father, tender and true, B me not,'
you will not A my sultry throat
Denying D not these weather-beaten limbs
Denjringly How hard you look and how A !
Depart He craved a fair permission to A,
friend, too old to be so young. A,
and still A From death to death
Departed a silent cousin stole Upon us and A:
She watch'd it, and A weeping for him ;
James A vext with him and her.'
St. S. StyliUs 206
Will Water. 46
Enoch ArAen 44
Princess m 178
Lancelot anA E. 1111
Eomney's R. 22
St. S. Stylites 19
Merlin and V. 338
Marr. of Geraint 40
Balin anA Balan 17
De Prof., Two G. 51
EAwin Morris 116
Enoch ArAen 246
The Brook 110
then A, hot in haste to join Their luckier mates, Geraint and E. 574
So these A. Early, one fair dawn, Balin and Balan 20
And thence d every one his way. Holy Grail 360
Departest then before thine answer given D, Tithonus 45
Departing With frequent smile and nod A Marr. of Geraint 515
Deplore Where shall we lay the man whom we A? OAe on Well. 8
Such was he whom we A. „ 40
Still mine, that cannot but A, In Mem. Ixxxv 109
Depress'd With lips i as he were meek, A Character 25
Depth (See also Love-deptbs) The springs of life, the
A's of awe, Two Voices 140
Tears from the A of some divine despair Princess iv 40
on the A's of death there swims The reflex In Mem. cviii 11
You cannot find their A ; for they go back, Lover's Tale i 80
tho' every turn and A Between is clearer „ 148
dash'd himself Into the dizzy A below. „ 381
dwelling on the light and A of thine, „ 492
There on the A of an imfathom'd woe - „ 746
Derive D's it not from what we have In Mem. h 3
Derk (dark) tliowt it wur CharUe's ghojist i' the d, Village Wife 82
Derken'd (darkened) — they niver A my door. „ 60
Desave (deceive) an' she didn't intind to A, Tomorrow 59
Descend A, and proffer these The brethren Princess vi 70
D below the golden hills In Mem. Ixxxiv 28
D, and touch, and enter; „ xciii 13
Why then my scorn might well A On you „ cxxviii 21
Would the happy spirit d, Mavd II iv 81
fire of God D's upon thee in the battle-field : Com. of Arthur 129
nay, the King's — D into the city : ' Gareth and L. 540
The Holy Grail, A upon the shrine : Holy Grail 465
Descendant On him their last A, Ayhner's Field 834
Descended (See also Heaven-descended) tree by tree. The
country-sided; Amphion 52
Then all d to the port, Enoch Arden 446
D to the court that lay three parts Princess Hi 20
As we d following' Hope, In Mem. xxii 11
his dream was changed, the haze D, Com. of Arthur 442
The Sun of May d on their King, „ 462
the stream D, and the Sun was wash'd away. Gareth and L. 1047
robed them in her ancient suit again. And so d. Marr. of Geraint 771
finds himself d from the Saint Arimathsean
Joseph ; Balin and Balan 101
D, and disjointed it at a blow : „ 296
He rose. A, met The scomer in the castle court, „ 386
setting, when Even A, the very sunset V. of Maeldune 66
and whereout The cloud A. Ancient Sage 14
beheld The Life that had A re-arise, Demeter anA P. 30
Descending angels rising and d met Palace of Art \A^
A they were ware That all the decks M. A' Arthur 195
Once she lean'd on me, D ; Princess iv 27
D, burst the great bronze valves, „ vi 75
the day, D, struck athwart the hall, „ 364
Phantom sound of blows A, Bohdicea 25
D thro' the dismal night — Com. of Arthur 371
D in the glory of the seas — „ 400
And then d met them at the gates, Marr. of Geraint 833
d they were ware That all the decks Pass, of Arthur 363
D from the point and standing both. Lover's Tale i 411
some, d from the sacred peak Of hoar Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 9
Self-darken'd in the sky, d slow ! Prog, of Spring 28
Descent Smile at the claims of long d. L. C. V. de Vere 52
Descent (continued) She might by a true A be untrue ; Maud I xiii 31
Fierce in the strength of far d, Lover's Tale i 382
farm can teach us there is something in d. Locksley H., Sixty 26
Descried wall Of purple cliffs, aloof d : Ode to Memory 54
Descry I could d The stem black-bearded kings D. of F. Women 110
Desenzano Row us out from D, Frater Ave, etc. 1
Desert (merit) Royal grace To one of less d allows. To the Queen 6
bowing at their own d's : The Brook 128
And partly conscious of my own d's. Princess iv 305
Desert (waste) why dare Paths in the d ? Sufp. Confessions 79
Of that long d to the south. Fatima 14
Which makes a d in the mind. In Mem. Ixvi 6
every blazing d till'd, Locksley H., Sixty 168
science making toward Thy Perfectness Are
blinding d sand ; Akbar's Dream 30
the Star that lights a A pathway, Locksley H., Sixty 275
Deserve A That we this night should pluck Princess iv 413
what might that man not A of me, „ v 104
Deserved Since we A the name of friends. In Mem. Ixv 9
Design wherein were wrought Two grand A's ; Piincess vii 122
the vast A's Of his labour'd rampart-lines, OAe on Well. 104
giant aisles, Rich in model and A ; OAe Inter. Exhib. 13
A miracle of d ! Maud II ii 8
learnt and wam'd me of their fierce d Lancelot and E. 274
found The new d wherein they lost themselves, „ 441
broke The vast d and purpose of the King. Guinevere 670
Design'd was there Not less than truth d. Palace of Art 92
Not less than life, d. „ 128
Desire (S) oh, haste. Visit my low d ! Ode to Memory 4
flow'd upon the soul in many dreams Of high d. The Poet 32
' Which did accomplish their d, Two Voices 217
To yield consent to my d : Miller's D. 138
The skies stoop down in their d ; Fatima 32
my d is but to pass to Him that died for me. May Queen, Con. 20
things have ceased to be, with my d of life. „ 48
Strength came to me that equall'd my d. D. of F. Women 230
vague d's, like fitful blasts of balm Gardener's D. 68
to say That my d, like all strongest hopes, „ 237
this gray spirit yearning in d To follow Ulysses 30
The bird that pipes his lone d You might have won 31
thro' the smoke The blight of low d's — Aylmer's Field 673
thro' their own d accomplish'd, ,, 776
That lent my knee d to kneel, Princess Hi 193
fail so far In high d, they know not, „ 280
And every hoof a knell to my d's, „ iv 174
Melt into stars for the land's d\ W. to Alexandra 21
welcome her, welcome the land's d, „ 25
But they — they feel the d of the deep — Voice and the P. 19
sparrow and throstle, and have your <i! Window, Ay 14
That thou should 'st fail from thy d. In Mem. iv 6
That not a moth with vain d Is shrivell'd „ liv 10
The centre of a world's d ; „ Ixiv 16
If any vague d should rise, „ Ixxx 1
I seem to meet their least d, „ Ixxxiv 17
bom of love, the vague d That spurs „ ex 19
Submitting all things to d. „ cxiv 8
might ensue D of nearness doubly sweet ; „ cxvii 6
Dear friend, far off, my lost d, „ cxxix 1
and my Delight Had a sudden d, Maud I xiv 20
A d that awoke in the heart of the child, „ xix 48
but the deathbed d Spurn'd by this heir „ 77
the heart of a people beat with one d ; „ III vi 49
d To close with her lord's pleasure ; Geraint and E. 213
monk and nun, ye scorn the world's A, Balin and Balan 445
low d Not to feel lowest makes them level all ; Merlin and V. 827
Suddenly flash'd on her a wild d, Lancelot and E. 357
but you work against your own d ; „ 1096
her hand is hot With ill d's. Last Tournament 415
when old and gray. And past d\' „ 628
love me ev'n when old, Gray-hair'd, and past d, „ 653
Ay, ay, 0 ay — a star was my d, „ 733
words And courtUness, and the d of fame, Guinevere 482
or d that her lost child Should earn Sisters (E. and E.) 250
O therefore that the unfulfiU'd d, Tiresias 79
sank with the body at tunes in the sloughs of a low d. By an Evolution. 18
K
Desire
146
Devising
Desire (s) {continued) Till, led by dream and vague d. To Master of B. 17
creeds be lower than the heart's d ! Faith 5
and woke D in me to infuse my tale of love Princess v 240
save my soul, that is all your d : Eizpah 77
d to keep So skilled a nurse about you always — The Sing 373
Desire (verb) If I were loved, as I d to be, If I were loved 1
Her open eyes d the truth. Of old sat Freedom 17
Why should a man d in any way To vary Tiihonus 28
And Id to rest. Co-me not, when, etc. 10
not of those that men d, Sleek Odalisques, Princess ii 76
d you more Than growing boys their manhood ; „ iv 456
She d's no isles of the blest. Wages 8
Do we indeed d the dead In Mem. li 1
not to d or admire, if a man could learn Mavd I iv 41
Rich in the grace all women d, „ x 13
save yourself d it, We will not touch Marr. of Geraint 310
Yet, seeing jrou d your child to live, Lancelot and E. 1095
now his chair d's him here in vain. Holy Grail 901
howsoever much they may d Silence, Guinevere 206
Who could d more beauty at a feast ? ' Lover's Tale iv 240
more than one Here sitting who d's it. „ 242
Wan, but as pretty as heart can d, In the Child. Hosp. 40
Desired You are not one to be d. L. C. V. de Vere 8
long d A certain miracle of symmetry, Gardener's D. 10
they hated, Had what they d : The Captain 38
broke the bond which they d to break, Aylmer's Field 778
— and many men D her ; one, good lack, no man d. Gareth and L. 106
needs Must wed that other, whom no man d, „ 109
d his name, and sent Her maiden to demand it Marr. of Geraint 192
_ But now d the humbling of their best, Geraint and E. 637
Desiring D what is mingled with past years, D. of F. Women 282
Z) to be join'd with Guinevere ; Com. of Arthur 77
Wasted and pined, d him in vain. Pelleas and E. 496
And I, d that diviner day, To Victor Hugo 12
Desk worn-out clerk Brow-beats his d below. To J. M. K. 12
' Oh ! who would cast and balance at a d, Audley Court 44
Erect behind ad oi satin-wood, Princess ii 105
To cramp the student at his d, In Mem. cxxviii 18
Deskwork a dozen years Of dust and <?: Sea Dreams 18
Desolate O spirit and heart made <i ! Supp. Confessions 189
Your house is left imto you d ! ' (repeat) Aylmer's Field 629, 797
* My house is left unto me d.' „ 721
* Our house is left unto us a! ' ? „ 737
became Imbecile ; his one word was 'd;' „ 836
D? yes ! Z> as that sailor. The Ring 306
Desolation Against the d's of the world. Aylmer's Field 634
No d but by sword and fire ? „ 748
and her d came Upon her, and she wept Geraint and E. 518
wind of the Night shrilling out D and wrong The Dreamer 15
Despair Plagued her with sore d. Palace of Art 224
And nothing saw, for her d, „ 266
must mis. with action, lest I wither by d. Locksley Hall 98
Whisper'd ' Listen to my d : Edward Gray 22
shake The midriff of d with laughter, Princess i 201
Or baser courses, children of d.' „ Hi 213
Tears from the depth of some divine d „ iv 40
hold That it becomes no mart to nurse d, „ 464
A day of onsets of d\ Ode on Well. 124
If any calm, a calm d : In Mem. xil6
Can calm d and wild unrest Be tenants „ xvi 2
D of Hope, and earth of thee. „ Ixxxiv 16
and ever wann'd with d, Maud 7 i 10
was but a dream, yet it lighten'd my d „ /// vi 18
He half d's ; so Gareth seem'd to strike Gareth and L. 1133
Gray-hair'd, and past desire, and in d.' Last Tournament 653
Despair'd approach To save the life d of, Enoch Arden 831
Despise my flesh, which I d and hate, St. S. Stylites 58
whom the strong sons of the world d ; The Brook 3
But that his pride too much d's me : And I myself
sometimes d myself ; Marr. of Geraint 464
Despised See Half-despised
Despite D of Day and Night and Death and Hell.' Gareth and L. 887
till he felt, d his mail, Strangled, „ 1151
Lancelot who hath come D the woimd Lancelot and E. 566
many a year have done d and wrong To one „ 1209
Despite {continued) d All fast and penance. Holy Grail 630
the Gods, d of human prayer. Are slower to forgive Tiresias 9
D of every Faith and Greed, To Mary Boyle 51
Despondence Listless in all d, — read ; Aylmer's Field 534
Despot {See also Dandy-despot) the fire Y^ere smoulder
their dead d's ; Princess v 380
Nothing of the lawless, of the D, On Juh. Q. Victoria 12
How can a d feel with the Free ? Riflemen form ! 11
Destined opposite Of all my heart had d Guinevere 492
Destiny No one can be more wise than d. D. of F. Women 94
hung their heavy hands. The weight of d : Princess iv 554
Destitute All the lowly, the d. On Jub. Q. Victoria 31
Destroyed void. Dark, formless, utterly d. Supp. Confessions 122
And this d him ; for the wicked broth Lucretius 19
That not one life shall be d, In Mem. liv 6
Destructive was as a boy D, Walk, to the Mail 82
Detaching d, fold by fold. From those still heights Vision of Sin 51
Detail Another kind of beauty in d Princess iv 448
Detention for the rest. Our own d, why, „ v 215
Determined Thus Enoch in his heart d all : Enoch Arden 148
Detestable She might not rank with those d Princess v 457
Dethronement And crownings and d's : To the Queen ii 45
Develop'd {See also Slow-developed) Beyond all
grades d ? Gardener's D. 241
Development present The world with some d. Two Voices 75
And new d s, whatever spark Be struck Prog, of Spring 94
Device our d ; wrought to the life ; Princess Hi 303
Were Arthur's wars in weird d's done, Gareth and L. 225
by some d Full cowardly, or by mere unhappiness, „ 767
Or some d, hast foully overthrown), „ 998
D and sorcery and unhappiness — „ 1235
All the d's blazon'd on the shield Lancelot and E. 9
Blank, or at least with some d not mine.' „ 194
thread And crimson in the belt a strange d ; Holy Grail 154
Among the strange d's of our kings ; „ 730
Restrain'd him with all manner of d, Pdleas and E. 204
Devil {See also Divil, Wood-devil) What D had the
heart to scathe Flowers Supp. Confessions 83
That pride, the sin of d's, „ 109
A glorious D, large in heart and brain, To , With Pal. of Art 5
And oft some brainless d enters in, Palace of Art 203
Quoth she, ' The D take the goose. The Goose 55
Vex'd with a morbid <i in his blood Walk, to the Mail 19
let him go ; his d goes with him, „ 27
scarce meet For troops of d's,
D's pluck'd my sleeve.
Comfort ? conif ort scorn'd of d's !
glaring, by his own stale d spurr'd.
True D's with no ear, they howl in tune With
nothing but the D ! '
if there be A <i in man, there is an angel too,
A d rises in my heart,
and the D may pipe to his own.
thou could'st lay the D of these woods
St. S. Stylites 4 '
» 171
Locksley Hall 75
Aylmer's Field 290
Sea Dreams 260
278
Sailor Boy 23
Maud I ilQ
'Balin and Balan 298
Balin cried ' Him, or the viler d who plays his part,
To lay that d would lay the D in me.' ' Nay,'
said the churl, ' our i is a truth, „ 300
Or d or man Guard thou thine head.' „ 552
Know well that Envy calls you D's son : Merlin and V. 467
And then did Envy call me D's son : „ 497
and stirs the pulse With d's leaps, Guinevere 522
dogs of Seville, the children of the d. The Revenge 30
I never turn'd my back upon Don or d yet.' „ 31
Was he d or man ? He was d for aught they knew, „ 108
Are we d's ? are we men ? Locksley H,, Sixty 99
Dance in a fountain of flame with her d's, Kapiolani 10
only the D can tell what he means. Riflemen form.' 25
Devil-bom You tell me, doubt is D-b. In Mem. xcvi 4
Devil's-d.ances bagpipes, revelling, d-d. Sir J. Oldcastle 149
Devised Besought Lavaine to write as she d Lancelot and E. 1103
Then he wrote The letter she d ; „ 1109
her lips. Who had d the letter, moved again. „ 1288
Devising And moist and drv, d long, Love thou thy land 38
d their own daughter's death ! Aylmer's Field 783
urged All the d'i of their chivalry Gareth and L, 1349
Devising
Devising (continued) But bode his hour, d
wretchedness.
Devoir Now weary of my service and d,
Devolved D his rounded periods.
Devon A tributary prince of D,
I am Geraint Of D —
' was it for him she wept In D ? '
Men of Bideford in D,
Devotion gaze upon him With such a fixt d.
Devour wolf would steal The children and d,
Devour'd bank that is daily d by the tide —
Dew (See also Balm-dew, Night-dew) Winds creep ;
d's f aU chilly : ^ '
to brush the d From thine own lily,
Her tears fell \vith the d's at even ; Her tears fell
ere the d's were dried,
And d is cold upon the ground,
woodbine and eglatere Drip sweeter d's
violet woos To his heart the silver d's ?
But ever trembling thro' the d
Some red heath-flower in the d,
Thro' crofts and pastures wet with d
And d's, that would have fall'n in tears,
as sunhght drinketh d.
slowly dropping fr^rant d.
quick-falling d Of fruitful kisses,
fresh-wash'd in coolest d The maiden splendours
dark wood-walks drench'd in d,
And tho' mine own eyes fill with d,
A thought would fill my eyes with happy d ;
my thighs are rotted with the a! ;
I am wet With drenching d's,
And flung him in the d.
and there rain'd a ghastly d
Dash'd together in blinding d :
till the gracious d's Began to glisten
blossom-fragrant slipt the heavy d's
the d Dwelt in her eyes,
And on these d's that drench the furze,
When all our path was fresh with d,
Deep tuUps dash'd with fiery d.
The sweep of scythe in morning d.
And back we come at fall of d.
still The d of their great labour,
than the sward with drops of d.
The deer, the d's, the fern, the founts.
The d of tears is an unwholesome d,
fresh as a codlin wesh'd i' the d.
my eyes are dim with d,
and fills The flower with d ;
scatters on her throat the sparks of d,
drank the d's and drizzle of the North,
Dew'd and, d with showery drops,
Dewdrop when two d's on the petal shake
And every d-d paints a bow,
glanced with d or with gem Like sparkles
Dew-fed and in the moon Nightly d-f;
Dew-impearled d-i winds of dawn have kiss'd,
Dewless bearded grass Is dry and d.
Dew-lit And those d-l eyes of thine.
Dewy-dark lawn was d-d. And d-d aloft
Dewy-fresh The fields between Are d-f,
Dewy-glooming November dawns and d-g downs,
Dewy-tasseU'd In the green gleam of d-t trees :
Thro' all the d-t wood.
Dewy-warm eyeUds, growing d-w With kisses
Dexter Eagle rising or, the Sun In d chief ;
Dhrame (dream) like a bit of yisther-day in a dr—
An' to rf of a married man, death ahve,
Dhrink (drink) give me a thrifle to d yer health
Dhrmkin' (drinkii^) an' I been I) yer health
Dhrop (drop) been takin' ado' the crathur '
Wid a diamond d in her eye,
Dhropt (dropt) an' d down dead an the dead.
Dhrownded (drowned) foun' I) in black bog-wather
147
Die
Irtist Tournament 386
Lancelot and ^.118
A Character 18
Marr. of Geraint 2
410
Geraint and E. 398
The Revenge 17
Merlin and V. 183
Com. of Arthur 27
Def. of Lucknow 39
Leonine Eleg. 7
Supp. Confessions 84
Mariana 13
The Owl I 2
A Dirge 24
Adeline 32
Margaret 52
Rosalind 41
Two Voices 14
MiUer's D. 151
Fatima 21
(EnoTie 106
„ 204
D.ofF. Women 54^
75
To J. S. 37
Gardener's D. 197
8t. S. StylUes 41
115
Talking Oak 232
Locksley HaU 123
Vision of Sin 42
Princess ii 316
„ v243
„ vii 135
In Mem. xi 6
„ Ixviii 6
„ Ixxxiii 11
„ Ixxxix 18
„ Con. 100
Marr. of Geraint 568
Geraint and E. 690
Last Tournament 727
Lover's Tale i 765
North. Cobbler 110
The Flight 97
Early Spring 46
Prog, of Spring bQ
81
Lotos-Eaters 17
Princess vii 68
In Mem. cxxii 18
Gareth and L. 929
Lotos-Eaters, C.S. 30
Ode to Memory 14
Miller's D. 246
Adeline 47
(Enone 48
Gardener's D. 46
Enoch Arden 610
Princess i 94
In Mem. Ixxxvi 6
Tithonus 58
Merlin and V. 476
Tomorrow 8
51
98
12
11
28
80
62
Diadem Crown'd so long with a d
Diagonal I moved as in a strange d.
Dial this high d, which my sorrow crowns —
Nor take thy d for thy deity.
Diamond Then fiUip'd at the d in her ear ;
With bracelets of the d bright :
rode to tilt For the great d in the i jousts,
since a d was the prize,
king, had on a crown Of d's, one in front,
Lancelot won the d of the year,
Now for the central d and the last And largest,
my love is more Than many d's '
yeam'd to make complete The tale of d's
]oust as one unknown At Camelot for the d,
maiden dreamt That some one put this d in her hand,
And you shall win this d, — as I hear It is a fair large d, —
' A fair large d,' added plain Sir Torre,
Blazed the last d of the nameless king.
' Advance and take thy prize The d;' but he answer'd,
D me No d's !
Rise and take This d, and deliver it,
he took. And gave, the d :
Rode with his d, wearied of the quest,
leave My quest with you ; the d also : here !
whether he love or not, Ad is ad.
kiss'd the hand to which he gave. The d,
I gave the d : she will render it ;
with mine own hand give his d to him,
' Ay, ay, the d : wit ye well, my child,
' Your prize the d sent you by the King : '
the tale Of King and Prince, the d sent,
And laid the <i in his open hand.
The nine-years-fought-f or d's :
What are these ? D's for me !
pray you, add my d's to her pearls ;
once fair Was richer than these d's —
flash'd, as it were, D's to meet them.
Those d's that I rescued from the tarn,
' lo t'amo ' — and these d's —
or to find My Mother's d's hidden
Diamond-drift showering wide Sleet of d-d
Diamond-ledge d-l's that jut from the dells ;
Diamond-plot d-p's Of dark and bright.
Dian set a wrathful D's moon on flame,
Diana Like those who cried 2) great : ^„. ^,j-^umes lo
Diaper'd Engarlanded and d With inwrought flowers, Arabian Nights 148
Dice vows his child .... to one cast of the d. The Flight 26
Dick if thou marries a bad un, I'll leave the land
toD— , ^ ^ , N. Farmer, N. S. 58
Awhen ecoomstobedead OwdRoa 11
Ya mun saave httle D, an' be sharp about it gl
and soa little D, good-night. " ug
Dicky Bedtime, D ! but waait till tha 'ears " ig
But D, the Ghosist moastUns " 3g
An' I'd clear forgot, little D, " g^
Dictator The rnulberiy-faced D's orgies Lucretius 54
Dido wars, and fihal faith, and D's pyre ; ^'o Virqil 4
Die (See also Doy) The breezes pause and d, Claribel 2
aweary of beating ? And nature d ? Never, oh !
never, nothing will d ; Nothing wiU Die 7
Nothing will d. Nothmg will d; 13
Nothing was bom ; Nothing will d; "37
Yet all things must d. m Things wiU Die 8
i-or all things must «i. (repeat) 13 49
AU things must d. " ' ^,
And the old earth must d. " ^j
Men say that Thou Didst d for me, for such as me, Supp. Confessions 3
On Jub. Q. Victoria 1
Princess, Con. 27
St. S. Stylites 95
Ancient Sage 109
Godiva 25
Day-Dm., Sleep B. 14
Lancelot and E. 31
33
46
68
73
91
191
212
227
230
444
504
546
551
616
691
695
703
713
760
771
821
824
827
1167
1212
1224
1229
1237
Last Tournament 37
The Ring 70
„ 142
Vision of Sin 22
The Mermaid 40
Arabian Nights 85
Princess vi 368
Lit. Squabbles 16
draws His forehead earthward, and he d's.
he shall rise and on the surface d.
A gentler death shall Falsehood d,
I dare not d and come to thee,
D in their hearts for the love of me.
I d with my deUght,
No tears of love, but tears that Love can d.
Live forgotten and d forlorn.' (repeat)
168
The Kraken 15
Clear-headed friend 16
Oriana 96
The Mermaid 30
Elednore 140
Wan Sculptor 8
Mariana in Uie S. 60, 72
Die
Die (continued) I wept, ' Tho' I should d, I know
Than once from dread of pain to a.
To flatter me that I may d ?
Not simple as a thing that d's.
My own sweet Alice, we must d.
That we may d the self -same day.
I watch'd the little circles d ;
I should d an early death :
I wiU possess him or will d
148
Two Voices 58 Die
„ 105
204
" 288
Miner's D. 18
» 24
90
Fatima 39
Grow, Uve, d looking on his face, D, dymg clasp d m his ^^
mo^her^a. harken ere I d. (repeat) CEnone 24,|5, 46, 53,Jk T7,
151, 173, 183, 195
194
And I shall be alone until Id. » 245 256
mother, hear me yet before I d. (repeat) „ 207, 220, 230, 24^, |^
shadow all my soul, that I may d. „ 244
Weigh heavy on my eyelids : let me d. ,, ^46 257
I wiU not d alone, (repeat) » p^ „. j^J 284
' I have found A new land, but I d.' ■^<"««« "J ^^^ ggg
And save me lest I d ? , ^ ■, ,, n. Arv'^TTlfi
I long to see a flower so before the day I d. May Queen, N. Y. s.^E^lb
To d before the snowdrop came, » '^q
up to Heaven and d among the stars. ,, ^^^^^ ^-^^
Waiting to see me rf. , ,, ^ ji 152
leapt into my arms. Contented there to d '. » 2^^
a thousand times I would be bom and d. » 231
How beautiful a tMng it was to d For God » ^^^^ g
Old year, you must not d ; j^- ^'j '- ^ ^^
Old year, you shall not die. (repeat) " ' gg
I've half a mind to d with you, Old year, if you must d. „ ^o
To see him d, across the waste His son and heir „ ^
Shake hands, before you d. . "45
WsefbSflTTfcpalmsandtemples you^^^.^^^^^il
Nor shall see, here or elsewhere, till Id M. d Arthur 104
I fear My wound hath taken cold, and I shall d. ,, ^^
I fear it is too late, and I shall d.' " E« 24
' Arthur is come again : he cannot d. " j^ Q jg
see My grandchild on my knees before Id: Shdites 50
did not all thy martyrs d one death ? St. <S. ^tylites ou
I d here To-day, and whole years long, " j^g
strive and wrestle with thee till Id: » 220
I prophesy that I shall d to-night, ^^ gj
Of all the western stars, until I d. Tithonus 4
after many a summer d's the swan. rjQ
happy men that have the power to d, ^^^^^ 23
' But I would d,' said she. „, p 49
When will the hundred summers d, ^^WUl Water 234
The thick-set hazel d's; r„>,, Clare 48
the lady repUed, ' Tho' I should d to-night.' . . ^fl}"^^'-^^
Every mon^ent d's a man, (repeat) ^t««'« «/ -^^^ ^7, 121
S r^wlKel cTS- d, ro« «.a. /..c .on 13
rSrhoiJ^fp^tseTnid. ^itiSfJ
not to d a listener, I arose, , t^-„i^ a a a.
Sd left the living scandal that shall d- ^2/?^«-'s ^^^^ 444
wounded to the death that cannot d ; Sph' Dreams 276
what heart had he To d of ? dead ! ^ zSraZ 274
the soul flies out and d's in the air.' P^Tiidl
gossip and spite And slander, d. ■" " gio
' Let me d too,' said Cyril, " ^^^205
speak, and let the topic d. , , . , n "
we like them well : But children d ; and let me tell
you, girl, Howe'er you babble, great deeds cannot d ; „ ,^'^^
O love, they d in yon rich sky, » ^gg
To follow up the worthiest till he d : » g^g
protomartyr of our cause, D: , , , ,, " « 14
wakes A Usping of the innumerous leaf and ds, "85
And either she will d from want of care, " ^^^^
the question settled d.' " ci 4
' She must weep or she will d. " oog
Let our girls flit. Till the storm dl " viiS
O my friend, I will not have thee dl » *'
(continued) often she beUeved that I should d
Sweet dream, be perfect. I shaU d to-night.
Stoop down and seem to kiss me ere I d.
Their's but to do and d:
fairer she, but ah how soon to d !
Echo on echo D's to the moon.
Give her the wages of going on, and not to d.
I may d but the grass will grow.
He thinks he was not made to d;
all the magic light D's oS at once
Or dying, there at least may d.
impart The life that almost d's in me; That
d's not, but endures with pain.
Before their time ? they too will d.
do not d Nor lose their mortal sympathy.
Which telling what it is to d
use A Uttle patience ere Id;
Man d's : nor is there hope in dust:
Half-dead to know that I shall d.'
The purple from the distance d's,
And weave their petty cells and d.
Yet in these ears, till hearing d's.
His other passion wholly d's,
His inner day can never d, ^
From ofi my bed the moonlight d s ;
0 last regret, regret can d !
demands By which we dare to live or d.
Their every parting was to d.
1 think once more he seems to d.
Ring out, wild bells, and let him d.
And let the ape and tiger d.
And ready, thou, to d with him.
Dear heavenly friend that canst not d,
I shall not lose thee tho' I d.
Cheat and be cheated, and d :
and dash myself down and d
Singing of Death, and of Honour that cannot d,
I must tell her, or d.
And do accept my madness, and would d
Would d ; for sullen-seeming Death may give
Not d ; but Uve a life of truest breath.
Yet so did I let my freshness d.
To faint in his light, and to d.
ring in my heart and my ears, till I d, till i d.
And comfort her tho' I d.
When thou shalt more than d. , , ,
Crack them now for yourself, and howl, and d.
And the shining daffodil d's.
That old hysterical mock-disease should d. ^
For here between the man and beast we d.
there between the man and beast they d.
An old man's wit may wander ere he d.
he will not d. But pass again to come,
Uve the strength and d the lust !
' Strike for the King and d ! , „ , ,
Uved and died for men, the man shaU d.
He passes and is heal'd and cannot d —
I finish this fair quest. Or d therefore.
' Then shall he d.' j ^ • , , 1
marvel d's, and leaves me fool d and trick a,
two things Shalt thou do, or thou shalt d.
cast it on the mixen that it d.'
Far Uefer by his dear hand had Id,
if he d, why earth has earth enough To hide him.
I wiU not look at wine until I d.'
Henceforward I will rather d than doubt,
will henceforward rather d than doubt,
here d—D : let the wolves' black maws
I too could d, as now I Uve, for thee,
and we d Together by one doom :
* I dread me, if I draw it, you will d.
But he, ' I d abeady with it : draw-
in daily doubt Whether to Uve or d,
added wound to wound. And ridd'n away to d i
' Being so very wilful you must d.'
Die
Princess vii 100
149
150
Light Brigade 15
Requiescat 5
Minnie and Winnie 12
Wages 10
Window, No Answer 4
In Mem., Pro. II
viii 6
24
„ xviii 16
„ xxix 16
„ XXX 22
„ xxxi 7
„ xxxiv 12
XXXV 4
16
xxxviii 3
" n2
„ Ivii 9
„ Ixii 10
„ Ixvi 15
,, Ixvii 10
„ Ixxviii 17
„ Ixxxv 40
xcvii 12
;; -'po
,, eoi 4
„ cxviii 28
,, cxxi 2
,, cxxix 7
cxxx 16
Maud I i 32
54
„ xvi 34
,, xviii 44
46
" 53
„ xix 11
„ xxii 12
, II i 35
a 83
„ Hi 9
t)56
„ IIIviQ
33
Com. of Arthur ^
79
405
421
;: 492
494
Gareth and L. 383
503
775
978
" 1251
Marr. of Geraint 586
672
Geraint and E. 68
554
; 667
738
" "^45
Balin and Balan 486
583
629
Lancelot and E. 513
514
521
" 568
783
Die
149
Died
Die {continued) He will not love me : how then ?
must Id? Lancelot and E. 893
h^ the night repeating, ' Must Id?* „ 899
I must d for want of one bold word.' „ 927
I lore you : let me d.' „ 930
0 Love, if death be sweeter, let me d. „ 1012
CaU and I follow, I follow ! let me d.' „ 1018
she shriUing, ' Let me d ! ' „ 1026
1 should but d the sooner ; „ 1098
and let me shrive me clean, and d.' „ 1100
lay the letter in my hand A little ere I d, „ 1114
some do hold our Arthur cannot d, „ 1258
Not knowing he should d a holy man. „ 1429
In moments when he feels he cannot d, Holy Grail 916
I d thro' mine imhappiness.' Pdleas and E. 332
One rose, my rose ; a rose that will not d, — „ 408
He d's who loves it, — if the worm be there.' „ 409
but here. Here let me rest and d,' „ 515
help it from the death that cannot d, Guinevere 66
I, whose vast pity almost makes me d „ 534
I waged His wars, and now I pass and d. Pass, of Arthur 12
God my Christ — I pass but shall not d.' „ 28
Nor shall see, here or elsewhere, till I d, „ 322
I fear My wound hath taken cold, and I shall d.' „ 334
I fear it is too late, and I shall d.' „ 348
Where all of high and holy d's away. To the Queen ii 66
To d in gazing on that perfectness Lover's Tale i 88
And cannot d, and am, in having been — „ 121
I died then, I had not seem'd to d, „ 494
Love would d when Hope was gone, „ 818
I seem'd to faint and fall. To fall and d away. „ ii 97
What did he then ? not d : he is here and hale — „ iv 40
And leave him in the public way to d. „ 261
iil do' my lying in ! First Quarrel 70
I kiss'd my boy in the prison, before he went out to d. Rizpah 23
' My lass, when I cooms to d, North. Cobbler 103
For to fight is but to d ! The Revenge 27
We d — does it matter when ? „ 88
With a joyful spirit I Sir Richard Grenville d\' „ 103
I am sure that some of our children would d In the Child. Hosp. 11
every man d at his post ! ' (repeat) Def. of Lucknow 10, 13, 52
Kill or be kill'd, Uve or d,
I am not Uke to d for lack of bread.
I woke, and thought — death — I shall d —
would rush on a thousand lances and d —
Nobly to do, nobly to d.
The child that I felt I could d for—
I would fling myself over and d !
no souls — and to d with the brute —
we were used to beUeve everlasting would d :
If every man d for ever.
With lum, where summer never d's, with Love,
I will wander till I d about the barren moors,
war will d out late then.
gallant three hundred whose glory will never d-
for evermore. Let the people d.'
Catullus, whose dead songster never d's ;
Thine is it that our drama did not d,
why The sons before the fathers d.
And all the Shadow d into the Light,
Do not d with a he in your mouth,
No — you will not d before.
Tell him all before you d, Lest you d for ever
would he live and d alone ?
d with him side by side ?
I will live and d with you.
They lose themselves and d On that new Ufe
king who loved me. And cannot d ;
And can no longer. But d rejoicing.
To win her back before I d —
Go back to thine adulteress and d ! '
his dying words. Which would not d,
Form, be ready to do or d !
beggar began to cry ' Food, food or I d ' !
Died D round the bulbul as he sung ;
41
Sir J. OldcasUe 205
Columbus 87
V. of Maeldune 24
Tiresias 123
The Wreck 36
„ 118
Despair 36
„ 54
„ 82
The Flight 44
56
Locksley H., Sixty 173
— Heavy Brigade 10
Dead Prophet 4
Poets and their B. 8
To W. C. Macready 9
To Marq. of Dufferin 47
Demeter and P. 138
Forlorn 57
„ 61
„ 75
Happy 5
,, 8
„ 108
Prog, of Spring 35
Merlin and the G. 80
„ 112
Romney's ^.118
Death of CEnone 48
St. Telemachus 76
Riflemen form ! 22
voice spake, etc. 6
Arabian Nights 70
Died (continued) Singing in her song she d,
D the sound of royal cheer ;
' His face, that two hours since hath d ;
She d : she went to burning flame :
desire is but to pass to Him that d for me.
The dim red morn had d.
Many drew swords and d.
Myself for such a face had boldly d,'
Contented there to dl * And there he d :
* I d a Queen. The Roman soldier found Me
her that d To save her father's vow ;
To whom the Egyptian ; ' 0, you tamely d !
And when the zoning eve has d
And on the mere the wailing d away.
Danced into light, and d into the shade ;
Had once hard words, and parted, and he d
and in harvest time he d.
when William d, he d at peace With all men ;
like endless welcome, hved and d.
The twilight d into the dark.
Or stow'd, when classic Canning d,
old Earl's daughter d at my breast ;
Then before her time she d.
Then the music touch'd the gates and d :
When the years have d away.'
And that mysterious instinct wholly d.
Surely the man had d of solitude,
tell her that I d Blessing her, praying for her,
And tell my son that I d blessing him.
he d at Florence, quite worn out,
knolls That dimpling d into each other,
scandals that have lived and d.
Remembering her dear Lord who d for all,
(I thought I could have d to save it)
a low musical note Swell'd up and d ;
the first embrace had d Between them,
laid about them at their wills and d ;
teaching him that d Of hemlock ; our device ;
her heart Would rock the snowy cradle till I d.
Better have d and spilt our bones in the flood —
My dream had never d or hved again.
Ida has a heart ' — just ere she dr—
and d Of fright in far apartments.
And he d, and I could not weep —
God's will that I, too, then could have d :
an' 'e d a, good 'un, 'e did.
So thick they d the people cried,
And cattle d, and deer in wood,
That holy Death ere Arthur d
And He that d in Holy Land
' The dawn, the dawn,' and d away;
So many a summer since she d,
Whose old grandfather has lately d,
past in bridal white. And d to hve,
AureUus lived and fought and d, And after him
King Uther fought and d.
King Uther d himself. Moaning and wailing
the savage yells Of Uther's peerage d,
D but of late, and sent his cry to me,
served about the King, Uther, before he d ;
some she cleaved to, but they d of her.
King Who hved and d for men,
but, overtaken, d the death Themselves
So d Earl Doorm by him he counted dead,
and the spiteful whisper d :
when he d, his soul Became a Fiend,
The whole day d, but, dying, gleam'd
' I hold them happy, so they d for love :
I that fain had a To save thy life.
My father d in battle against the King,
My father d in battle for thy King,
One child they had : it lived with her : she d :
while his anger slowly d Within him,
better have d Thrice than have ask'd it once —
the Uving smile D from his lips,
L. of Shalott iv 35
48
Two Voices 242
The Sisters 7
May Queen, Con. 20
D.ofF. Women 61
95
98
152
161
195
258
On a Mourner 21
M. d' Arthur 272
Gardener's D. 203
Dora 18
„ 55
„ 144
Love and Duty 68
Day-Dm., Depart. 24
Will Water. 101
Lady Clare 25
L. of Burleigh 88
Vision of Sin 23
Poet's Song 16
Enoch Arden 526
621
878
885
The Brook 35
Aylmer's Field 149
443
Sea Dreams 47
134
„ 211
Lucretius 3
Princess, Pro. 31
„ Hi 302
„ iv 104
532
„ vi 17
„ 235
370
Grandmother 72
73
N. Farmer"N. S. 52
The Victim 5
18
In Mem. Ixxx 2
„ Ixxxiv 42
„ xcv 61
Maud I vi 66
„ a; 5
„ xvtii 66
Com. of Arthur 13
206
257
361
„ 366
Gareth and L. 113
383
Geraint and E. 177
730
„ 958
Balin am, Balan 128
314
581
„ 599
Merlin and V. 42
72
716
891
•918
Lancelot and E. 324
Died
150
Dipt
Died (continued) d the death In any knightly fashion
Then take the little bed on which I d
And closed the hand upon it, and she d.
I dreamt the damsel would have d,
this she would not, and she d.'
From Camelot, there, and not long after, d.
ere the summer when he d,
The rosy quiverings d into the night.
And all talk d, as in a grove all song
' My churl, for whom Christ d,
and he d, Kill'd in a tilt,
till in time their Abbess d.
My dead, as tho' they had not d for me ? —
And on the mere the wailing d away.
Trust me, long ago I should have d,
I had d. But from my farthest lapse,
Before he saw my day my father d,
Had I d then, I had not seem'd to die.
Had I d then, I had not known the death ;
So d that hour, and fell into the abysm
So that hour d Like odour rapt
Had d almost to serve them any way.
His master would not wait until he d,
An' I almost d o' your going away.
And he fell upon their decks, and he d.
She d and she was buried ere we knew,
my darter esd o' the fever at fall :
But arter she d we was all es one,
each of them liefer had d than have done
and the harvest d from the field,
twelve of their noblest d Among their spears
prayer for a soul that d in his sin.
But it d, and I thought of the child
perhaps, perhaps, if we a!, if we <J ;
dead the cause in which he d.
Rain-rotten d the wheat,
d in the doing it, flesh without mind ;
till Self d out in the love of his kind ;
she did not grow, she d.
happy had I d within thine arms,
In tne great name of Him who d for men.
An' it beats ma to knaw wot she d on,
he was crush'd in a moment and d,
She d of a fever caught when a nurse
Diest if thou d, The King is King,
two things shalt thou do, or else thou d.
Diet X> and seedling, jesses, leash and lure.
As if they knew your d spares
Differ Or do my peptics d ?
men at most a as Heaven and earth.
Difference When thy peculiar d Is cancell'd
Might I not tell Of d, reconcilement,
girl and boy. Sir, know their d's ! '
when some heat of d sparkled out,
That have as many d's as we.
To cleave the rift of d deeper yet ;
Not like to like, but like in d.
Ay me, the d I discern !
Hearing he had a d with their priests.
Difficulty in days of d And pressure, bad she sold
With d in mild obedience Driving them on :
Diffuse D thyself at will thro' all my blood.
Diffused Thy God is far d in noble groves
J) the shock thro' all my life,
D and molten into flaky cloud.
Diffusing A central warmth d bliss
Dig builds the house, or d's the grave,
d, pick, open, find and read the charm :
I can't d deep, I am old —
Digg'd An' 'e d up a loomp i' the land
Diggin' last month they wor d the bog.
Digging See Diggin', Hall-digging
Dignity maiden dignities of Hope and Love —
Dilate in a day, A joyous to d, an toward the light,
That now d, and now decrease,
Lancelot and E. 870
1117
„ 1135
„ 1305
„ 1325
Holy Grail 7
16
„ 123
Pelleas and E. 607
Last Tournament 62
Guinevere 320
692
Pass, of Arthur 142
440
Lover's Tale i 87
89
„ 191
494
496
796
800
„ iv 124
259
First Quarrel 54
The Revenge 104
Sisters (E. and E.) 241
Village Wife 10
V. of Maddune 6
30
Achilles over the T. 32
The Wreck 10
„ _ 84
Despair 56
Locksley H., Sixty 30
Demeter and P. 112
Fastness 27
„ 28
Romney's R. 105
Death of CEnone 31
St. Tdemachus 63
Church-warden, etc. 6
Charity 21
„ 41
Com. of Arthur 494
Marr. of Geraint 580
Merlin and V. 125
To E. Fitzgerald 10
WiU Water. 80
Merlin and V. 814
Two Voices 41
Gardener's D. 257
Aylmer's Fidd 274
705
Princess v 181
301
„ vu 278
In Mem. xl 21
Holy Grail 674
Enoch Arden 254
Geraint and E. 104
Prog, of Spring 24
Aylmer's Field 653
In Mem. Ixxxv 55
Lover's Tale i 641
In Mem. Ixxxiv 6
„ xxxvi 14
Merlin and V. 660
Rizpah 56
Village Wife 48
Tomorrow 61
Lover's Tale i 580
Aylmer's Fidd 77
In Mem. xxviii 10
Dilating wind of prophecy D on the future ;
Dilation her eye with slow d roU'd Dry flame,
Dilettante snowy-banded, d, Delicate-handed
Dim (adj.) eyes are d with glorious tears,
About him broods the twilight d :
My heart is breaking, and my eyes are d,
eyes grown d with gazing on the pilot-stars.
Till all the paths were d,
He saw not far : his eyes were d :
Perhaps her eye was d, hand tremulous ;
We sung, tho' every eye was d,
Is d, or will be d, with weeds :
I remain'd, whose hopes were d,
Thou watches't all things ever d And dimmer.
Myself would work eye d,
the hall was d with steam of flesh :
and d thro' leaves Blinkt the white mom,
So strange, and rich, and d ;
these eyes of men are dense and d,
and mine Were d with floating tears.
Dim (verb) work in hues to d The Titianic Flora.
Dim-gray Now and then in the d-g dawn ;
Diminutive In babyisms, and dear d's.
Dim-lit while he past the d-l woods,
Dimm'd broad valley d in the gloaming :
thro' the cloud that d her broke .
trust in things above Be d of sorrow,
and the sorrow d her sight.
Thy glorious eyes were d with pain
Dimmer all things ever dim And d,
Dimness o'er it crost the dot a, cloud Floating,
Dimple Till the lightning laughters d
Ot din the dark of rushy coves.
That d's your transparent cheek.
Dimpled laughter d in his swarthy cheek ;
Dimpling knolls That d died into each other,
Upon the dappled d's of the wave.
Dim Saesneg with his hard ' D S' passes.
Dim-yellow With her fair head in the d-y light.
Din From the groves within The wild-bird's d.
The dust and d and steam of town :
But when the heart is full of d,
for me that sicken at your lawless d,
Dine You'll have no scandal while you d,
shall we fast, or d?
an' we be a-goin to d.
Dinner {See also After-dinner)
thousand d's.
hark the bell For d, let us go ! '
A grand political d To half the squirelings
A grand political d To the men of many acres,
A d and then a dance For the maids
Man with his brotherless d
Dinnerless when I left your mowers d.
The lusty mowers labouring d,
Dint Sharp-smitten with the d of armed heels —
every d a sword had beaten in it.
Sharp-smitten with the d of armed heels —
Dinted and crush'd, and d into the ground :
his strong hands gript And d the gilt dragons
Diotima beneath an emerald plane Sits D,
Dip (s) the last d of the vanisning sail
The d of certain strata to the North.
Dip (verb) the prime swallow d's his wing,
and d's Her laurel in the wine,
D forward under starry light,
d Their wings in tears, and skim away.
D down upon the northern shore,
and d's and springs For ever ;
these low bushes d their twigs in foam,
Dippest And d toward the dreamless head.
Dipping d his head low beneath the verge,
ships from out the West go d thro' the foam.
Dipt (See also Half-dipt) the sky D down to sea and
sands.
Princess ii 172
„ vi 189
Maud I via 10
Two Voices 151
263
(Enone 32
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 87
Talking Oak 298
The Voyage 75
Enoch Arden 242
In Mem. xxx 14
„ Ixxiii 10
„ Ixxxv 29
„ cxxi 3
Marr. of Geraint 628
Geraint and E. 603
Balin and i?aZaM'384
Holy Grail 342
Pass, of Arthur 19
Lover's Tale i 442
Gardener's D. 170
Maud I xiv 32
Aylmer's Fidd 539
Guinevere 251
Leonine Eleg. 1
Princess vi 281
In Mem. Ixxxv 10
Lancelot and E. 889
Freedom 10
In Mem. cxxi 4
Pelleas and E. 37
Lilian 16
Ode to Memory 60
Margaret 15
Edwin Morris 61
Aylmer's Field 149
Lover's Tale i 44
Sir J. Oldcastle 21
Marr. of Geraint 600
Poet's Mind 21
In Mem. Ixxxix 8
„ xciv 13
Locksley H., Sixty 149
To F. D. Maurice 17
Geraint and E. 490
North. Cobbler 111
with the steam Of thirty
Will Water. 224
Princess ii 433
Maud I XX 25
31
„ 34
The Dawn 3
Geraint and E. 234
251
M. d' Arthur 190
Lancdot and E.\9
Pass, of Arthur 358
Maud lit
Last Tournament 182
Princess Hi 302
Enoch Arden 245
Princess Hi 170
Edwin Morris 145
Will Water. 17
Move eastward 10
In Mem. xlviii 15
„ Ixxxiii 1
Gareth and L. 1146
Prog, of Spring 51
In Mem. xxxix 5
Lover's Tale i 509
The Flight 91
Palace of AH ^2
Dipt
151
Dismember
Dipt (continued) But ere he d the surface, rose an ami
d. And mix'd with shadows of the common ground !
one green sparkle ever and anon D by itself,
d and rose, And tum'd to look at her.
When I d into the future (repeat)
with her d Against the rush of the air
d in all That treats of whatsoever is,
and d Beneath the satin dome and enter'd in,
a dearer being, all d In Angel instincts,
I sleep till dusk is i in gray :
And a in baths of hissing tears.
Beneath a low door d, and made his feet
Sparkle, imtU they d below the downs.
But ere he d the surface, rose an ann
till the labourless day d under the West ;
son, who d In some forgotten book of mine
dark hull d under the smiling main,
never yet hath d into the abysm,
we d down under the bridge
Broke the Taboo, D to the crater,
Dirce who found Beside the springs of D,
and the springs Of -D laving yonder battle-plain,
Direct Now over and now under, now d.
Dirt these, tho' fed with careful d,
Disappear earth yawns : the mortal d's ;
and as the phantom d's,
Disappear'd the whole fair city had d.
And up the rocky pathway d,
cup Was caught away to Heaven, and d.'
as he spoke Fell into dust, and d.
Became a shadow, sank and d,
Disarm'd The proud was half d of pride,
Who let him into lodging and d.
Thither I made, and there was I d
Disarray Drove it in wild d,
Disarray'd found. Half d as to her rest,
Disaster all d unto thine and thee !
Disbuid bidding him D himself, and scatter
Discaged Until she let me fly d to sweep
Discern d The roofs Of Sumner-place ! (repeat)
till thy bough d The front of Sumner-place.
Till a gateway she d's With armorial bearings
Ay me, the difference I d !
I wake, and I d the truth ;
Discerned into my inmost ring A pleasure I d.
Discerning d to fulfil This labour,
Disciple and yet Was no d, richly garb'd,
Disclaim'd each D all knowledge of us :
Disclosed -D a fruit of pure Hesperian gold,
Discomfort this d he hath done the house.'
blew my merry maidens all about With all d ;
Disconsolate On the nigh-naked tree the robin piped B,
Discontent lent The pulse of hope to d.
She look'd with a.
muttering d Cursed me and my flower.
Discord soul Of D race the rising wind ;
too Hke The d's dear to the musician.
A monster then, a dream, A d.
Discordance no d in the roll And march
Discouraged I grew d, Sir ; but since I knew
Discourse In such d we gain'd the garden rails.
Discourtesy ' Meseems, that here is much d,
I pray you, use some rough d
This was the one d that he used. „ 988
some d Against my nature : ,, 1302
Discover'd Aix precious things, d late, Day-Dm., Arrival 1
Discoverer The first d starves — his followers, Columbus 166
Discovery For the d And newness of thine art Ode to Memory 87
Discredit heaven, how much 1 shall d him ! Marr. of Geraint 621
Far liefer than so much d him.' „ 629
Discuss We might d the Northern sin To F. D. Maurice 29
Discuss'd d the farm, The fourfield system, Audiey Court 33
D his tutor, rough to common men. Princess, Pro. 114
D a doubt and tost it to and fro : „ ii 445
D the books to love or hate, In Mem. Ixxxix 34
M. d' Arthur 143
Gardener's D. 134
Audiey Court 89
Talking Oak 131
Locksley Hall 15, 119
Aylmer's Field 85
Princess ii 379
„ iv 30
„ m320
In Mem. Ixvii 12
„ cxviii 23
Balin arid Balan 403
Lancelot and E. 396
Pass, of Arthur 311
V. of Maddune 86
To E. Fitzgerald 46
The Wreck 127
Ancient Sage 39
Bandit's Death 22
Kaviolani 31
Tiresias 14
„ 139
Lucretius 62
Amphion 89
Ode on WeU. 269
Locksley H., Sixty 253
Gareth and L. 196
Geraint and E. 243
Holy Grail 58
„ 436
Death of (Enone 50
In Mem. ex 6
Lancelot and E. 171
Holy GraU 575
Heavy Brigade 60
Marr. of Geraint 516
Gareth and L. 1101
Geraint and E. 798
Gareth and L. 20
Talking Oak 31, 95, 151
247
L. of Burleigh 42
In Mem. xl 21
„ Ixviii 14
Talking Oak 174
Ulysses 35
Ancient Sage 4
Princess iv 229
QLnone 66
Lancelot and E. 1072
Holy Grail 749
Enoch Arden 677
Two Voices 450
Talking Oak 116
The Flower 7
Love thou thy land 68
Sea Dreams 258
In Mem. Ivi 22
D. of the Duke of C. 14
Princess Hi 153
„ Con. 80
Gareth and L. 853
Lancelot and E. 973
Discussing D how their courtship grew. In Mem., Con. 97
Discussion That from D's lip may fall With L<yve thou thy land 33
Disdain (See also Half-disdain) And my ci is my reply. L. C. V. de Vere 22
with some d Answer'd the Princess, Princess iv 61
With some surprise and thrice as much d Tum'd, Marr. of Geraint 557
not with half a Hid under grace, Lancelot and E. 263
Sir Lancelot leant, in half d At love, „ 1238
Disdain'd if the Queen d to grant it ! Balin and Balan 191
Tolerant of what he half d, and she, Perceiving
that she was but half d, Merlin and V. 178
Disease (See also Heart-disease, Mock-disease) But
sickening of a vague d, L. C, V. de Vere 62
wretched age — and worst d of all, Lucretius 155
Ring out old shapes of foul d ; In Mem. cvi 25
A d, a hard mechanic ghost That never came Maud II ii 34
She like a new d, unknown to men, Guinevere 518
and the loathsome smells of d In the Child. Hasp. 25
I'd sooner fold an icy corpse deed of some foul d : The Flight 54
Some thro' age and slow d's, Locksley H., Sixty 46
All d's quench'd by Science, „ 163
mar the beauty of your bride with your d. Happy 24
Diseased (See also Half-diseased) But ours he swore
were all d. The Voyage 76
The land is sick, the people d. The Victim 45
You thought my heart too far d ; In Mem. Ixvi 1
Disedge served a little to d The sharpness Geraint and E. 189
But here will I d it by thy death.' Pelleas and E. 578
Disembark'd touching Breton sands, they d. Merlin and V. 202
Disengage I strove to d myself, but f ail'd. Lover's Tale i 692
Disentwined My coronal slowly d itself „ 361
Disfame See Half-disfame.
Disgraaced (disgraced) I'd feal mysen cleiin d. North. Cobbler 102
black Sal, es 'ed been d ? Spinster's S's. 25
Disgrace Alone might hint of my d ; Two Voices 360
lying, hidden from the heart's d, Locksley Hall 57
why, the greater their d ! Aylmer's Field 384
Heap'd on her terms of d, Maud II i 14
an' often at home in d. First Quarrd 15
If you should only compass her d, The Fleet 17
Disgraced (See also Disgra&ced) Memmian naphtha-
pits, d For ever — Alexander 1
d, Dishonour'd all for trial of true love — ■ Pelleas and E. 474
Disguise common light of smiles at our d Princess v 276
Disguised thou shalt go <i to Arthur's hall, Gareth and L. 152
For hence will I, d, and hire myself „ 169
Thou art so well d, I knew thee not. Sir J. Oldcastle 197
Dish harpies miring every d, Lucretius 159
And those that hand the d across the bar. Gareth and L. 155
Think ye this fellow will poison the King's d? „ 471
thrust the d before her, crying, ' Eat.' Geraint and E. 655
Dishallow ' Ye, that so d the holy sleep, Pelleas and E. 446
Dishehn'd she saw me lying stark, D and mute, Princess vi 101
Dishonour Doing d to my clay.' Two Voices 102
Becomes d to her race — „ 255
So loathed the bright d of his love. Com. of Arthur 195
His honour rooted in d stood, Lancelot and E. 876
knights At that d done the gilded spur. Last Tournament 435
I was close on that hour of d, Charity 28
Dishonourable ' Ungenerous, d, base, Aylmer's Fidd 292
Dishonour'd D all for trial of true love — Pelleas and E. 477
Dishorsed each, d and drawing, lash'd at each Marr. of Geraint 563
D himself, and rose again, and fled Balin and Balan 330
Dish-washer D-w and broach-turner, loon ! — Gareth and L. 770
Disjoint Nor wielded axe d. Talking Oak 262
Disjointed Descended, and <Z it at a blow : Balin and Balan 296
Disk studded wide With d's and tiars, Arabian Nights 64
Ray round with flames her d of seed. In Mem. ci 6
flight of shadowy fighters crost The d, St. Tdemachus 24
Dislink'd D with shrieks and laughter : Princess, Pro. 70
But she d herself at once and rose. Merlin and V. 909
Dislodging heroes tall D pinnacle and parapet D. of F. Woinen 26
Dismay were the words Mutter'd in our d ; Heavy Brigade 47
Dismay'd Wa.s there a man d ? Light Brigade 10
we tum'd to each other, whispering, all d. Heavy Brigade 44
Dismember May never saw d thee, Talking Oak 261
Dismiss
152
Divine
Dismiss D me, and I prophesy your plan, Princess iv 354
Your oath is broken : we d you : „ 360
Dismissal She spoke, and bowing waved D : „ U 100
Dismiss'd d in shame to live No wiser than their mothers, „ iv 513
Dismotmt d and loose their casques Balin and Balan 573
Dismounting d like a man That skins the wild beast Geraint and E. 92
Geraint, d, pick'd the lance That pleased him „ 179
d on the sward They let the horses graze, „ 210
at his side all pale D, loosed the fastenings „ 511
Disobey deep harm to d, Seeing obedience is the
bond of rule. M. d' Arthur 93
I needs must d him for his good ; Geraint and E. 135
Then not to d her lord's behest, „ 450
Deep harm to d. Seeing obedience is the bond
of rule. Pass, of Arthur 261
Disorderly Z) the women. Alone I stood Princess iv 170
from the high door streaming, brake D, Lancelot and E. 1348
Disparagement with some prelude of d, Read, The Epic 49
Flush'd slightly at the slight d Lancelot and E. 234
With silent smiles of slow d ; Guinevere 14
Dispassionate Quiet, d, and cold, A Character 28
Dispatch Delivering sealed d'es which the Head Princess iv 379
Dispell'd I loved, and love d the fear Miller's D. 89
Dispense D with careful hands : Mechanophilus 34
Dispenser drowsy hours, d's of all good, 'Gardener's D. 185
Dispensing D harvest, sowing the To-be, Princess vii 289
Dispersed made a pltmge To the bottom, and d, Enoch Arden 380
D his resolution like a cloud. Lancelot and E. 884
Displaced If this false traitor have d his lord, Guinevere 216
Display \a d A tunic white as May ! Prog, of Spring 64
Display'd D a splendid silk of foreign loom, Geraint and E. 687
Dispraise In praise and in d the same. Ode on Well. 73
hissing d Because their natures are little, Maud I iv 52
Dispread See Wide-dispread
Disprinced one rag, d from head to heel. Princess v 30
Disproof as he was To make d of scorn, Aylmer's Field 446
Disproven nothing worthy proving can be proven,
Nor yet d : Ancient Sage 67
Dispnte (s) breed D betwixt myself and mine : Princess i 157
for she took no part In our d : „ Con. 30
Or deep d, and graceful jest ; In Mem. Ixxxiv 24
Dispute (verb) D the claims, arrange the chances ; To F. D. Maurice 31
Disquiet But long d merged in rest. Two Voices 249
Disrelish Why should Iso d that short word ? Romney's R.ll
Disrobed If gazing on divinity d (Enone 157
D the glimmering statue of Sir Ralph Princess, Con. 117
Disrooted (See also Half-disrooted) Whate'er I was D,
what I am is grafted here. ,, H 220
Disruption sought To make d in the Table Round Guinevere 17
Dissecting wayward modem mind D passion. Edwin Morris 88
Dissembling Fright and foul d, Forlorn 32
Dissipated shrink For fear our solid aim be d. Princess Hi 266
Dissoluble Gods Being atomic not be d, Lucretius 115
Dissolution clench their nerves to rush Upon their d, Love and Duly 78
Dissolve d the previous seal on a bond, Maud I xix 45
Dissolved Z> the riddle of the earth. Two Voices 170
d the mystery Of folded sleep. D. of F. Women 262
now the whole hound table is d M. d' Arthur 234
thereat the crowd Muttering, d : Princess iv 523
now the whole Round Table is d Pass, of Arthur 402
Dissolving See Half-dissolving
Dissolvingly to all my frame, D and slowly : EleOnore 132
Distance mountain Which stands in the d yonder : Poet's Mind 30
Some blue peaks in the d rose. Dying Swan 11
such a d from his youth in grief, Gardener's D. 54
in the d overlooks the sandy tracts, Locksley Hall 5
And a song from out the d „ 84
Not in vain the d beacons. „ 181
and shows At d like a little wood ; Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 42
A trumpet in the d pealing news Of better, Princess iv 81
deals with the other d and the hues Of promise ; „ 86
but Blanche At d follow'd : „ vi 83
a day Rose from the d on her memory, ,,112
and broken system made No purple in the d, „ 196
And see the sails at d rise, In Mem. xii 11
Distance (continued) The purple from the d dies,
O, from the d of the abyss
The d takes a loveUer hue.
That out of d might ensue
or like a clamour of the rocks At d,
drumming thunder of the huger fall At d,
warmth of Arthur's hall Shadow'd an angry d :
soimd As from a d beyond d grew
and set me far In the gray d,
Heaven Will blow the tempest in the d back
And heralded the d of this time !
that same nearness Were father to this d,
In Mem. xxxviii 3
„ xciii 11
„ cxv 6
„ cxvii 5
Mart, of Geraint 250
Geraint and E. 174
Balin and Balan 237
Holy Grail 112
Last Tournament 640
To the Queen II 47
Lover's Tale i 562
a 29
in the d, From out the yellow woods upon the hill „ 79
And voices in the d calling to me „ 118
and murmiu" down Truth in the d — Columbus 120
Are there thunders moaning in the d? On Juh. Q. Victoria 66
Thro' the gates that bar the d comes a gleam Faith 6
Distant in her throat Her voice seem'd d. To J. S. 55
cry came to her from the field. More and more d. Dora 105
Distill'd D from some worm-canker'd homily ; To J. M. K. 6
hoard of happiness d Some drops of solace ; Lover's Tale i 714
Distilling D odours on me as they went Gardener's D. 187
Distinct D with vivid stars inlaid, Arabian Nights 90
D in individuaUties, Privx:ess vii 291
Distress flow Of subtle-paced coiuisel in d Isabel 21
Small thought was there of life's d ; Ode to Memory 37
And utterly consumed with sharp d, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 13
then d'es came on him ; Dora 49
Who show'd a token oi d? In Mem. Ixxviii 13
No limit to his <Z ; Maud II v 31
Distribute Walk your dim cloister, and d dole Guinevere 683
Distrust See Self-distrust
Disturb ' Woman, d me not now at the last, Enoch Arden 874
Disturb'd D me with the doubt ' if this were she,' Princess iv 217
one glittering foot d The lucid well ; Tiresias 41
Disyoke D their necks from custom. Princess ii 143
Ditch cannot see for slime, Slime of the d : Holy Grail 772
from the d where they shelter we drive them Def. of Lucknow 59
Dive they shall d, and they shall run, Locksley Hall 169
Or d below the wells of Death ? In Mem. cviii 8
or d's In yonder greening gleam, „ cxv 13
made him quickly d Beneath the boughs, Balin and Balan 422
wilt d Into the Temple-cave of thine own self. Ancient Sage 31
Dived I Z) in a hoard of tales that dealt with knights, Princess, Pro. 29
Diver See Marsh-diver
Diverse woman is not undevelopt man. But d : „ vii 276
Dives When D loathed the times, To Mary Boyle 29
Divide God d the night with flying flame, D. of F. Women 225
these two parties still d the world — Walk, to the Mail 77
shell D's threefold to show the fruit (repeat) The Brook 73, 208 •
Eternal form shall still d The eternal soul In Mem. xlvii 6
D us not, be with me now, ,, cxxii 10
shriek of a mother d the shuddering night. Maud / i 16
She seem'd to tZ in a dream „ /// vi 10
Could scarce d it from her foolish dream : Marr. of Geraint 686
Divided d quite The kingdom of her thought. Palace of Art 227
Z) in a graceful quiet — paused, Gardener's D. 156
a walk Of shingle, and a walk d it : Enoch Arden 1S7
nor was his love the less Because it was d. Lover's Tale i 229
d asl am From either by the stillness Sisters (E. and E.) 281
The barrier that d beast from man St. Telemachus 60
Dividend chances of d, consol, and share — The Wreck 30
Dividing <Z the swift mind. In act to throw ; M. d' Arthur 60
the crowd d clove An advent to the throne : Princess iv 283
d the swift mind, In act to throw ; Pass, of Arthur 228
Divil (devil) blessed feiilds wi' the d's oiin team. N. Farmer, 0. S. 62
an' 'e's the D's oiin sen.' North. Cobbler 76
the D's in 'im,' said I. „ 104
' The D take all the black Ian', Tomorrow 64
Divine (adj.) (See also Half-divine) Scarce of earth nor all d, Adeline 3
You are not less d, Margaret 46
Apart the Chamian Oracle d Alexander 10
I think. That my youth was half d. Vision of Sin 78
Left by the Teacher, whom he held d. Lucretius 13
Love by right d is deathless king, W. to Marie Alex. 29
Divine 153
Divine (adj.) (continued) Thou seemest human and d,
To count their memories half d ;
Known and unknown ; human, d ;
not leamable, d, Beyond my reach.
see the hifihest Human Nature is d.
creature which in Eden was d,
she the faultless, the d ;
Divine (verb) A deeper tale my heart d's.
Nor the meaning can d,
She is not of us, as I d;
Divinely D thro' all hindrance finds the man
Some warning — sent d — as it seem'd
Divinity the dull Saw no d in grass.
If gazing on d disrobed Thy mortal eyes
lift the woman's fall'n d Upon an even pedestal
Division in d of the records of the mind ?
' betwixt these two D smoulders hidden ;
Are they not sign and symbol of thy d from Him ?
Made strange d of its suffering With her,
Divorce D the Feeling from her mate the Deed.
d thee not From earthly love and life — Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 3
Divorced I prophesy your plan, D from my experience, Princess iv 355
In Mem., Pro. 13
„ arc 12
„ cxxix 5
Bdlin and Balan 175
Locksley H., Sixty 276
Haffy 33
Locksley H., Sixty 5
Two Voices 269
L. of Burleigh 54
Maud II V 69
Lancelot and E. 333
Lover's Tale iv 21
A Character 8
(Enone 157
Princess Hi 223
Locksley Hall 69
Princess Hi 79
High. Pantheism 6
Lover's Tale ii 128
The Brook 95
To
can I breathe d from the Past ?
Do ' Ye (i it to me, when ye <i it to these ' ?
Doat sisters That d upon each other,
A heart that d's on truer charms.
if the blossom can d on the blight,
eye, that only d's On outward beauty,
and d's On this of yomrs.'
Dock'd For which his gains were d,
Doctor Ulted out By violet-hooded D's,
then the D's\ 0 to hear The D's !
* Here's a leg for a babe of a week ! ' says d ;
whoy, D's abean an' agoiin ;
D's, they knaws nowt,
D's a 'toattler, lass,
I weant break rules fur D,
D, if you can wait, I'll tell you the tale
An' b 'e calls o' Sunday
Our d had call'd in another,
— so quiet, our d said ' Poor little dear,
I walk'd with our kindly old d
And the d came at his hour.
Doctrine if we held the d sound
Dodge to d and palter with a public crime ?
Dodged He d me with a long and loose account,
Doe Lord Ronald brought a lily-white d
The lily-white d Lord Ronald had brought
And follow'd up by a hundred airy d's,
DofTd Until the grave churchwarden d,
cast his lance aside, And d his helm
Dog (See also Shepherd-dog)
mother.
Not less, tho' d's of Faction bay.
At first like dove and dove were cat and d.
Something better than his d.
Like a d, he hunts in dreams,
he strode About the hall, among his d's.
He parted, with great strides among his d's.
And barking d's, and crowing cocks ;
He praised his ploughs, his cows, his hogs, his d's ;
My men shall lash you from them like a d ;
the d With inward yelp and restless forefoot
he had breathed the Proctor's d's ;
swine were sows, and all the d's ' —
wild d, and wolf and boar and bear Came
' D, thou liest. I spring from loftier lineage
one of my co-mates Own'd a rough d,
a d am I, To worry, and not to flee —
advanced, Each growling like a d,
Vivien, tho' ye beat me like your d,
I better prize The living d than the dead lion :
There like a d before his master's door !
Trembled and quiver'd, as the d,
these Inquisition d's and the devildoms of Spain.'
Despair 113
In the Child. Hasp. 26
-. With Pal. of Art 11
L. C. V. de Vere 14
The Wreck 19
The Ring 163
358
Sea Dreams 7
Princess ii 376
421
Grandmother 11
N. Farmer, O. S. 2
5
66
67
First Quarrel 9
North. Cobbler 87
In the Child. Hosp. 1
41
„ 43
In Mem. liii 9
Third of Feb. 24
Sea Dreams 149
Lady Clare 3
„ 61
Princess vi 87
The Goose 19
Geraint and E. 596
I did not hear the d howl.
May Queen, Con. 21
Love thou thy land 85
Walk, to the Mail 58
Locksley Hall 50
79
Godiva 17
„ 31
Day-Dm., Revival 4
The Brook 125
Aylmer's Field 325
Lucretius 44
Princess, Pro. 113
i 193
Com. of Arthur 23
Gareth and L. 960
1011
1014
Geraint and E. 559
Balin and Balan 582
585
Pelleas and E. 263
284
The Revenge 12
Dog {continued) Let us bang these d's of Seville,
shook 'em off as a <i that shakes his ears
And mangle the living d that had loved him
and the d couldn't bark,
they kep the cat an' the d,
swear 'cep' it wur &t a, d coomin' in,
Eighty winters leave the d. too lame
Fur the d's stoiin-deaf, an' e's blind,
Roa was the d as knaw'd when an' wheere
An' the d's was a-yowlin' all round,
I decreed That even the d was clean.
He was loved at least by his d:
"Dogg^A and d us, and drew me to land ?
Dogwhip-weals From ear to ear with d-w.
Doing See here, my d :
their own d ; this is none of mine ;
With all its d's had and had not been,
No, no, you are d me wrong !
died in the d it, flesh without mind ;
Dole (moiuming) that day there was d in Astolat.
Dole (gift) distribute d To poor sick people.
Doom
The Revenge 30
54
In the Child. Hosp. 9
V. of Maeldune 18
Tomorrow 71
Spinster's S's. 60
Locksley H., Sxty 226
Owd Roa 2
„ 8
„ 107
Akbar's Dream 53
Bandit's Death 35
Despair 2
Last Tournament 58
Edwin Morris 5
St. S.Stylites 123
Princess iv 566
First Quarrel 4
Vastness 27
Lancelot and E. 1136
Guinevere 683
hath not our great Queen My d of beauty trebled? ' Last Tournament 558
Dole (verb) I mete and d Unequal laws Ulysses 3
Domain See World-domain.
Dome (s) (See also Mid-dome) stay'd beneath the d
Of hollow boughs. Arabian Nights 41
stream'd Upon the mooned d's aloof „ 127
Arno, and the d Of Brunelleschi ; The Brook 189
and dipt Beneath the satin d Princess iv 31
roll 'd Thro' the d of the golden cross ; Ode on Well. 61
Save that the d was purple, Gareth and L. 912
fallen every purple Csesar's d — To Virgil 30
this bare d had not begun to gleam To Mary Boyle 41
roll her North below thy deepening d. Prog, of Spring 49
and men, below the d of azure Kneel Akbar's D., Hymn 7
Dome (verb) d's the red-plow'd hills With loving blue ; Early Spring 3
Domed See Deep-domed.
Domestic Many a gallant gay d Bows L. of Burleigh 47
Domine ' Libera me, D ! ' you sang the Psalm, Happy 49
' Libera nos, D ' — you knew not one was there „ 53
Dominion D in the head and breast.' Two Voices 21
Think I may hold d sweet, Maud I xvi 12
Thro' all the vast d which a sword, Akbar's Dream 14
Don I never tum'd my back upon D or devil yet.' The Revenge 31
Done See Ill-done
Donjon The ruinous d as a knoll of moss, Balin and Balan 334
And if thou keep me in thy d here, Pelleas and E. 242
Donn'd Then ashed the helm, Gareth and L. 690
Donovan's back wid the best he could give at ould D's wake — Tomorrow 42
Doom (s) chord which Hampden smote WDl vibrate
to the d. England and Amer. 20
Hard is my d and thine : Love and Duty 54
thunder Roaring out their d ; ■ The Captain 42
you have miss'd the irreverent d You might have won 9
in their eyes and faces read his d ; Enoch Arden 73
his lonely d Came suddenly to an end. „ 626
like the blast of d, Would shatter all „ 769
the voice that calls D upon kings, Aylmer's Field 742
Announced the coming d. Sea Dreams 22
Boanerges with his threats of d, „ 251
death-blow struck the dateless d of kings, Lucretius 236
But lies and dreads his d. Princess vii 154
Bellowine victory, bellowing d : Ode on Well. 66
thou fulfillftst thy d Making him High. Pantheism 9
Fall, and follow their d. Voice and the P. 20
On souls, the lesser lords of d. In Mem., cxii 8
And batter'd with the shocks of d „ cxviii 24
While I rose up against my d, ,, cxxii 2
I was cursing them and my d, Maud I xix 51
I embrace the purpose of God, and the d assign'd. „ III vi 59
and striking found his d. Com. of Arthur 325
Arthur said, ' Behold thy d is mine. „ 467
the King Throned, and delivering d — Gareth and L. 321
own false d, Tliat shadow of mistrust Geraint and E. 247
My madness all thy life has been thy d, Balin and Balan 619
Doom
154
Door
Dark my d was here, and dark It
Doom (s) (continued)
will be
bom together, and we die Together by one d : '
A d that ever poised itself to fall,
loved him, with that love which was her d.
Galahad, when he heard of Merlin's d, Cried,
draw me into sanctuary, And bide my d.'
Pray for him that he scape the d of fire, And weep
for her who drew him to his d.'
that I march to meet my d.
The d of treason and the flaming death,
that my d\s,\ love thee still.
I know not what mysterious d.
became as mist Before her, moving ghostlike to hLs d.
J[\dia mine To war against my people
' My house hath been my d.
On that sharp ridge of utmost d ride
whose issue was their d,
echo shall not tongue thy glorious d,
uncall'd, between me and the deep and my d.
Demos end in working its own d.
for man can half-control his d
at the doubtful d of human kind ;
the dead, who wait the d of Hell
Doom (verb) King will d me when I speak.'
Doom'd D them to the lash.
kings of old had d thee to the flames,
<? to be the bride of Night and Death ;
Who rose and d me to the fire.
And d to bum alive.
Fell the shipcrews D to the death.
Drew to this island : D to the death.
Doomsday as grand as d and as grave :
To and thro' the D fire,
Doon (Bomiy) See Bomiy Doon.
Door (See also Chamber-door, Chapel-door, Chamnber
door. Dovecote -doors, Sirine - doors. Tavern-
door) Oh ! vanity ! Death waits at
the d.
The d's upon their hinges creak'd;
Old faces glimmer'd thro' the d's,
The costly d's flung open wide.
Right to the carven cedam d's,
poplars four That stand beside my father's d.
Leaving d and windows wide :
And no murmur at the d.
Close the d, the shutters close.
An image seem'd to pass the d, (repeat)
The very air about the d Made misty
As near this d you sat apart.
The guilt of blood is at your d :
carried out from the threshold of the d ;
thro' the d Hearing the holy organ
standeth there alone, And waiteth at the d.
Badin and Bcdan 623
630
Merlin and V. 191
Lancelot and E. 260
Holy Grail 177
Guinevere 122
347
450
538
559
576
605
Pass, of Arthur 70
154
Lover's Tale i 805
Tiresias 65
„ 136
Despair 5
LocTcsley H., Sixty 114
277
To Virgil 24
Romney's R. 132
Gareih and L. 324
The Captain 12
Gareth and L. 374
1396
Sir J. Oldcasile 172
183
Batt. of Brunanhurh 23
51
Princess i 187
Helen's Tower 10
All Things will Die 17
Mariana 62
66
Arabian Nights 17
115
Ode to Memory 57
Deserted House 3
7
Mariana in the S. 65, 74
Miller's D. 103
158
L. C. V. de Vere 43
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 42
D.ofF. Women 190
D. of the O. Year 51
a new face at the d, my friend, A new face at the d. „ 53
thro' mine own d's Death did pass ; To J. S. 19
There strode a stranger to the d, (repeat) The Goose 3, 39
d's that bar The secret bridal chambers of the heart, Gardener's D. 248
And never more darken my d's again.' Dora 32
The d was oft the latch : they peep'd, „ 130
whined in lobbies, tapt at d's, Walk, to the Mail 37
I say, that time is at the d's St. S. Stylites 192
This same grand year is ever at the d's.' Golden Year 74
Every d is barr'd with gold, Locksley Hall 100
all Should keep within, d shut, Godiva 41
And feet that ran, and d's that clapt, Day-Dm., Revival 3
He lifts me to the golden d's ; St. Agnes' Eve 25
The stalls are void, the d's are wide, Sir Galahad 31
One fix'd for ever at the d, WiU Water. 143
gay domestic Bows before him at the d. L. of Burleigh 48
Paused for a moment at an inner d, Enoch Arden 278
there At Annie's d he paused and gave his hand, „ 447
when they follow'd us from Philip's d. The Brook 167
A lily-avenue climbing to the d's ; Aylmer's Field 162
Withdrawing by the counter d „ 282
Door (continued) should I find you by my d's again, Aylmer's Field 324
tiU he heard the ponderous d Close, „ 337
month by month the noise about their d's, „ 488
oaken finials till he touch'd the d ; „ 823
jam the d's, and bear The keepers down, Lucretius 169
stood that same fair creature at the d. Princess ii 329
call'd For Psyche's child to cast it from the d's ; „ iv 238
came a little stir About the d's, „ 374
I will go and sit beside the d's, „ v 96
He batter'd at the d's ; none came : „ 337
one glance he caught Thro' open d's of Ida „ 343
' Fling our d's wide ! all, all, „ vi 334
bare Straight to the d's : to them the d's „ 349
long-laid galleries past a hundred d's „ 375
roll the torrent out of dusky d's : „ vii 208
Thy name was blest within the narrow d; W. to Marie Alex. 38
Often they come to the d Grandmother 82
D's, where my heart was used to beat In Mem. vii 3
I creep At earliest morning to the d. „ 8
as if a. d Were shut between me and the sound : „ xxviii 7
Shall enter in at lowly d's. „ xxxvi 8
They chatter'd trifles at the d : „ Ixix 4
crowds that stream from yawning d's, „ Ixx 9
Another name was on the d : „ Ixxxvii 17
From out the d's where I was bred, „ ciii 2
D's, where my heart was used to beat „ cxix 1
Thou listenest to the closing d, „ cxxi 7
And touch with shade the bridal d's, „ Con. 117
Look, a horse at the d, Maud I xii 29
even then I heard her close the d, „ xviii 11
Did he stand at the diamond d „ II ii 16
Modred laid his ear beside the d's, Com. of Arthnr 323
shone the fields of May thro' open d, „ 460
Ate with young lads his portion by the d, Gareth and L. 480
saw without the d King Arthur's gift, „ 676
so Sir Kay beside the d Mutter'd in scorn „ 705
broken into Thro' open d's and hospitality ; Marr. of Geraint 456
Glanced at the d's or gambol'd down „ 665
d, Push'd from without, drave backward Geraint and E. 272
thought she heard the wild Earl at the d, „ 381
A walk of roses ran from dtod; Balin and Balan 242
And all in shadow from the counter d „ 246
Beneath a low d dipt, and made his feet „ 403
found a d, And darkling felt the sculptured
ornament Merlin and V. 733
and entering barr'd her d, Lancelot and E. 15
guide me to that palace, to the d's.' „ 1129
There two stood arm'd, and kept the d ; „ 1247
rose And pointed to the damsel, and the d's. „ 1263
lords and dames And people, from the high d streaming, „ 1347
behold a woman at a d Spinning ; Holy Grail 391
against the chapel d Laid lance, and enter'd, „ 459
Pass not from dto d and out again, „ 714
at the last I reach'd a d, „ 837
in my madness I essay'd the d ; „ 841
the high d's Were softly sunder'd, Pdleas and E. 3
Unbind him now. And thrust him out of d's ; „ 257
There like a dog before his master's d ! „ 263
but thrust him bounden out of d. „ 314
straight on thro' open d Rode Gawain, „ 382
Pelleas, leaping up, Ran thro' the d's „ 539
Sprang from the a into the dark. „ 603
And while they stood within the d's. Last Tournament 113
machicolated tower That stood with open d's, „ 425
but sprang Thro' open d's, „ 473
Flush'd, started, met him at the d's, „ 512
Like to some doubtful noise of creaking d's, Guinevere 72
There rode an armed warrior to the d's. „ 409
Thro' the long gallery from the outer d's Rang „ 413
waiting by the d's the warhorse neigh'd „ 530
lo, he sat on horseback at the d ! „ 589
open'd on the pines with d's of glass. Lover's Tale i 41
Death drew nigh and beat the d's of Life ; ,,111
had Heaven from all her d's, „ 604
To stand a shadow by their shining d's, „ 731
Door
155
Doubt
Door (continued) bad his menials bear him from the d.
There were our horses ready at the d's —
They had fasten'd the d of his cell.
to keep the wolf fro' the d,
our Sally as kep the wolf fro' the d,
They have left the d's ajar ;
and a noise of welcome at the d's —
found her beating the hard Protestant d's.
they niver derken'd my d.
when I saw him come in at the d,
Boardings and rafters and d's —
what a d for scoundrel scum I open'd
The d's of Night may be the gates of Light ;
let them spurn me from the d's,
A d was open'd in the house —
but she put thim all to the d.
sound ran Thro' palace and cottage d.
Opens a d in Heaven ;
cuckoo of a joyless June Is calling out of d's :
Door-handles tum'd when none was at the d, And bolted
d's that open'd of themselves : The Ring 412
The d is open. He ! is he standing at the d, Happy 11
some fair dawn beyond the d's of death Far-far-away 11
— a widow came to my d : Charity 26
Door'd See Open-door'd
Door-handle D-h's tum'd when none was at the door, The Ring 412
Doorm D, whom his shaking vassals call'd the Bull, Geraint and E. 439
Lover's Tale iv 260
„ 385
Rizpah 42
Nor(h. Cobbler 29
59
Sisters {E"and E ) 1
149
240
Village Wife 60
In the Child. Hasp. 2
Def. of Lucknow 67
Columbus 170
Ancient Sage 174
The Flight 55
69
Tomorrow 44
Dead Prophet 38
Early Spring 7
Pref. Poem Broth. S. 4
we may meet the horsemen of Earl Z>,
One took him for a victim of Earl D,
Another, flying from the wrath of D
at the point of noon the huge Earl D,
said Earl D : ' Well, if he be not dead,
And bore him to the naked hall of D,
retum'd The huge Earl I) with plunder to the hall
Earl D Struck with a knife's haft hard
But when Earl D had eaten aU he would.
So died Earl D by him he counted dead.
I took you for a bandit knight of D ;
I come the mouthpiece of our King to D
* and lo, the powers of D Are scatter'd,'
Door-poorch (door-porch) my oan d-p wi' the
woodbine
to pictur the d-p theere,
Doorwa3,y (doorway) An' then as I stood i' the d.
Doorway (See also Doorwaay, Palace-doorway)
sometime thro' the d ?
God shut the d's of his head.
out by this main d past the King.
Doost (dust) Loovs 'im, an' roobs 'im, an' d's 'im,
Dora at the farm abode William and D.
Now D felt her uncle's will in all.
Thought not of D.
Now therefore look to D ;
for his sake I bred His daughter D :
' I cannot marry D ; by my life, I will not marry D.'
his ways were harsh ; But D bore them meekly.
And D promised, being meek.
D stored what little she could save.
Then D went to Mary.
and thought Hard things of D. D came and said :
D took the child, and went her way
none of all his men Dare tell him D waited with the child ;
D would have risen and gone to him,
D cast her eyes upon the ground, „ 89
' did I not Forbid you, D?' D said again : „ 92
The wreath of flowers fell At D's feet. „ 103
Then D went to Mary's house, „ 110
Mary saw the boy Was not with D. „ 112
D said, ' My uncle took the boy ; „ 114
now I come For D : take her back ; „ 143
take D back And let all this be as it was „ 154
and D hid her face By Mary. „ 156
But D lived unmarried till her death. „ 172
Dorhawk-whirr and d-w Awoke me not. Lover's Tale « 116
Dormouse blue wood-louse, and the plump d, Window, Winter 9
492
524
„ 530
536
546
570
592
599
609
730
786
796
801
Spinster's S's. la")
Owd Rod 24
Dawnd
Aylmer's Field 685
In Mem. xliv 4
Gareth and L. 671
North. Cobbler 98
Dora 2
„ 5
» 8
„ 15
„ 20
„ 23
„ 36
„ 46
„ 52
„ 56
„ 58
» 71
„ 76
» 77
Dorset-Dorsetshire There was a fanner in Dorset of
Harry's kin. First Quarrel 17
So Harry was bound to the Dorsetshire farm „ 19
Dose fiunes Of that dark opiate d you gave me, — Romney's R. 31
Dot hull Look'd one black d against the verge M. d' Arthur 271
hull Look'd one black d against the verge Pass, of Arthur 439
The fires that arch this dusky d — Epilogue 52
Dotage Cries of unprogressive d Locksley H., Sixty 153
Dotard call him d in your rage „ 9
ere the d fell asleep ? „ 153
Dote d and pore on yonder cloud In Mem. xv 16
Double (adv.) And then we drank it d ; Will Water. 96
Double (verb) wind And d in and out the boles. Princess iv 262
Double-charge Now d-c it with grape ! Def. of Lucknow 68
Doubled d his own warmth against her lips. Gardener's D. 138
old man Was wroth, and d up his hands, Dora 25
but when his date D her own, Aylmer's Field 81
Double-dragon'd fill'd his d-d chsiir. Last Tournament 144
Doubling d all his master's vice of pride, Marr. of Geraint 195
Doubt (S) a special care Of God, to fortify from d, Supp. Confessions 64
Moved from beneath with d and fear. „ 138
If so be that from d at length, „ 143
Koof'd the world with d and fear, Elednore 99
carve out Free space for every human d. Two Voices 137
These things are wrapt in d and dread, „ 266
There must be answer to his d. „ 309
' The d would rest, I dare not solve. „ 313
The d my mother would not see ; MiUer's D. 154
In d and great perplexity, Palace of Art 278
but empty breath And rumours of a d? M. d' Arthur 100
(For all my mind is clouded with a d) „ 258
lying thus inactive, d and gloom. Enoch Arden 113
Such d's and fears were common to her state, „ 521
One spiritual d she did not soothe ? Aylmer's Field 704
Discuss'd a d and tost it to and fro : Princess ii 445
Disturb'd me with the d ' if this were she,' „ iv 217
came On a sudden the weird seizure and the d : „ 560
for spite of d's And sudden ghostly shadowings „ 571
Deeper than those weird d's could reach me, „ vii 51
I have heard Of your strange d's : „ 336
my d's are dead, My haunting sense of hollow shows : „ 348
In ei if you be of our Barons' breed — Third of Feb. 32
A spectral d which makes me cold, In Mem. xli 19
O turn thee round, resolve the d ; „ xliv 14
such as closed Grave d's and answers „ xlviti 3
What slender shade of d may flit, „ 7
Defects of d, and taints of blood ; „ Hv 4
Nor can my dream resolve the d : „ Ixviii 12
D and Death, 111 brethren, let the ^ancy fly „ Ixxxvi 11
And d beside the portal waits, „ xciv 14
bold to dwell On d's that drive the coward back, „ xcv 30
trance Was cancell'd, stricken thro' with d. „ 44
You tell me, d is Devil-born. „ xcvi 4
There lives more faith in honest d, „ 11
He fought his d's and gather'd strength, „ 13
To seize and throw the d's of man ; „ cix 6
Our dearest faith ; our ghastliest d; „ cxxiv 2
No, Uke a child in d and fear : „ 17
Mix not memory with d, Maud II iv 57
A d that ever smoulder'd in the hearts Com. of Arthur 64
in daily d Whether to live or die, Lancelot and E. 520
Lost in a d, Pelleas wandering Waited, Pelleas and E. 392
This tender rhyme, and evermore the d, „ 410
fault and d — no word of that fond tale — Last Tournament 578
but empty breath And rumours of a d ? Pass, of Arthur 268
(For all my mind is clouded with a d) — „ 426
' But solve me first a d. Lover's Tale iv 254
Naw d : But I liked a bigger feller to fight North. Cobbler 99
fluttering in a d! Between the two — Sisters (E. and E.) 33
raise the full High-tide of d „ 178
in days Of d and cloud and storm, Columlus 156
And D is the lord of this dunghill Despair 90
Cleave ever to the sunnier side of d, Ancient Sage 68
and yet no shade of d, But utter clearness, „ 235
lost in the gloom of d's that darken the schools ; Vastness 11
Donbt
156
Dragon
Doubt (s) (continued) after hours of search and d and threats, The Bing 278
Still — at times Xd,a. fear, —
darken'd with d's of a Faith that saves,
Donbt (verb) It is man's privilege to d,
I fear All may not d,
evidence, By which he d's against the sense ?
I d not thro' the ages
' True,' she said, ' We d not that.
* D my word again ! ' he said.
Unto we d not that for one so true
2) not ye the Gods have answer'd,
For can I d, who knew thee keen
I d not what thou wouldst have been :
Who d's thee victor ?
I do not <i To find, at some place
Henceforward I will rather die than d.
And will henceforward rather die than d.
nor did he d her more. But rested in her fealty,
I d not that however changed.
To d her fairness were to want an eye, To d her
pureness were to want a heart —
heard a voice, ' D not, go forward ; if thou d,
the beasts Will tear thee piecemeal.'
enow To make one d if ever the great Queen
never d each other more.
I with this dagger of his — do you d me ?
an' I d's they poison'd the cow.
D no longer that the Highest is the wisest
Donbted A and drowsed, nodded and slept,
and d him No more than he, himself ;
I d whether daughter's tenderness,
Donbtfol I answer'd nothing, d in myself
the old man, Tho' d, felt the flattery,
some were d how the law would hold,
Donbting thought To sift his d's to the last.
Doubtless ' D — ay, but ever since In all the world
Dove (See also Ringdove, Wood-dove) Let Thy d
Shadow me over,
And oft I heard the tender d
Came voices of the well-contented d's.
Like d's about a dovecote, wheeling round
they that loved At first like d and d
iris changes on the bumish'd d ;
I would not one of thine own d's,
morning d's That sim their milky bosoms
The d may murmur of the d,
A troop of snowy d's athwart the dusk,
The moan of d's in immemorial elms,
O merry the linnet and d,
O somewhere, meek, unconscious d,
as&d when up she springs To bear
then flew in a <i And brought a summons
She is coming, my d, my dear ;
My own d with the tender eye ?
And while your d's about you flit,
round her forehead wheels the woodland d.
Dovecote Like doves about a d, wheeling round
Dovecote-doors some one batters at the d-d,
Dowager prudes for proctors, d's for deans.
Do-well D-w will follow thought.
Dower lent you, love, your mortal d Of pensive thought
Dower'd D with the hate of hate,
Dowerless but both Were d, and myself,
Down (hiU) here are the blissful d's and dales,
the yellow d Border'd with palm,
Roimd and round the spicy d's
She went by dale, and she went by d,
behind it a gray d With Danish barrows ;
Green in a cupUke hollow of the d.
But in the leafy lanes behind the d,
early roses from his wall, Or conies from the d,
after scaling half the weary d,
November dawns and dewy-glooming d'*,
Close to the ridge of a noble d. .^ ^^
And on the i'a a rising fire : jSkl iti
Akbar's Bream 169
The Dreamer 11
8upp. Confessions 142
178
Two Voices 285
Locksley Hall 137
Princess, Pro. 169
176
Ode on Well. 255
Bocidicea 22
In Mem. cxiii 5
„ cxiii 8
Gareth and L. 1296
Marr. of Geraint 218
Geraint and E. 738
745
966
Lancelot and E. 1218
1376
Holy Grail 824
Last Tournament 564
Happy 92
Bandit's Death 42
Church-warden, etc. 16
Faith 1
Com. of Arthur 427
Gareth and L. 125
Marr. of Geraint 797
Princess Hi 272
Merlin and V. 184
Lover's Tale iv 270
Com. of Arthur 311
The Ring 363
Supp. Confessions 180
MiUer's D. 41
Gardener's D. 89
224
Walk, to the Mail 58
Locksley Hall 19
Lucretius 68
Princess ii 102
„ m 105
„ iv 168
„ mi 221
Window, Ay 13
In Mem. vi 25
„ xii 1
„ ciii 15
Mavd I xxii 61
„ II iv 46
To E. Fitzgerald 7
Prog, of Spring 57
Gardener's D. 224
Princess iv 169
„ Pro. 141
Ancient Sage 273
Margaret 5
The Poet 3
The Bing 167
Sea-Fairies 22
Lotos-Eaters 21
„ C. S. 104
Lady Clare 59
Enoch Arden 6
9
97
340
372
610
To F. D. Maurice 16
In Mem., Con. 108
Down (hill) (continued) And rise, 0 moon, from
yonder d, In Mem., Con. 109
Till over d and over dale „ 110
face of night is fair on the dewy d's, Maud III in 5
some wild d above the windy deep, Merlin and V. 658
And there among the solitary d's, Lancelot and E. 163
O'er these waste d's whereon I lost myself, „ 225
Sparkle, until they dipt below the d's. „ 396
the long backs of the bushless d's, (repeat) „ 400, 789
For the d's are as bright as day, Bizpah 4
and the storm rushing over the d, „ 6
when the storm on the d's began, „ 71
lived With Muriel's mother on the d, The Ring 148
Among the quarried d's of Wight, To Ulysses 32
There on the top of the d, June Bracken, etc. 1
Down (feathery substance) silk-soft folds, upon yielding d, Eleanore 28
rosy thigh Half-buried in the Eagle's d. Palace of Art 122
wild hawk stood with the d on his beak, Poet's Song 11
in broider'd d we sank Our elbows : Princess iv 32
When in the d I sink my head. In Mem. Ixviii 1
Art yet half-yolk, not even come to d — Balin and Balan 569
Down-carolling D-c to the crisped sea. The Winds, etc. 6
Downcast her eyes were d, not to be seen) Maud I ii 5
Down-deepening D-d from swoon to swoon, Fatima 27
Down-droop'd-Down-dropt Eyes not down-dropt nor over-bright, Isabel 1
Down-droop'd, in many a floating fold, Arabian Nights 147
Wit h down-dropt eyes I sat alone : CEnone 56
Downfa II 'tween the spring and d of the light, St. S. Stylites 110
Down-glancing a spear D-g lamed the charger Lancelot and E. 488
Down-lapsing fancies, by d-l thought Stream'd onward, D. of F. Women 49
Down-streaming the dread sweep of the d-s seas
Dovm-way Pleasure who flaunts on her wide d-w
Dowry Large dowries doth the raptured eye
Doy (die) But sin' I mun d I mun d,
an' if I mun d I mxm d.
Doze Fell 'm.a,d; and half-awake I heard
half indl seem'd To float about
Did I hear it half m&d Long since,
In a wakeful d I sorrow For the hand,
Dozed Miriam watch'd and d at intervals,
As the pimpernel d on the lea ;
Then d awhile herself, but overtoil'd
Id; 1 woke. An open landaulet Whirl'd
Dozing Lay, d in the vale of Avalon,
Draain (drain) Miss Annie she said it wur d's,
Draff chafi and d, much better burnt.'
Drag will have weight to d thee down.
And that d's down his life :
poor Psyche whom she d's in tow.'
Should d you down, and some great Nemesis
and d's me down From my fixt height
a great black cloud D inward from the deeps,
That seem to keep her up but d her down —
And onward d's a labouring breast.
To d me down to seventy-nine,
wife and children d an Artist down !
if the rebel subject seek to d me from the throne
Dragg'd we d her to the college tower
What Roman would be d in triumph thus ?
I d my brains for such a song,
a madden'd beach d down by the wave,
D him, and struck, but from the castle
so by force they d him to the King.
He d, his eyebrow bushes down,
d me up there to his cave in the mountain,
and the weight that d at my hand ;
Dragging Grimy nakedness d his trucks
a dream Of d down his enemy made them move.
Reversion ever d Evolution in the mud.
Draggle An' Sally wur sloomy an' d
Draggled Tho' somewhat d at the skirt.
Dragon The golden gorge of d's spouted forth
A gilded d, also, for the babes.
To catch a d in a cherry net,
D's of the prime, That tare each other
Enoch Arden 55
Vastness 16
Ode to Memory 72
N. Farmer, 0. S. 64
68
The Epic 13
Princess i 246
Maud I vii 1
,. . „ 77^26
Enoch Arden 909
Maud I xxii 48
Geraint and E. 376
Sisters (E. and E.) 85
Palace of Art \01
Village Wife 11
The Epic 40
Locksley Hall 48
Sea Dreams 177
Princess Hi 103
„ vi 174
.307
„ vii 37
270
In Mem. xv 18
To Ulysses 8
Bomney's B. 38
I By an Evolution. 15
Walk, to the Mail 89
Lucretius 234
Princess iv 154
Maud I Hi 12
Balin and Balan 399
Merlin and V. 640
807
Bandit's Death 11
39
Maud I xl
Lancelot and ^.814
Locksley H., Sixty 200
North. Cobbler 41
Last Tournament 219
Palace of Art 23
Enoch Arden 540
Princess « 169
In Mem. Ivi 22
Dragon
Dragon (continued) the shape thereof A d wiiK^'ri r.«, ^f a ,i on^
The shining d and the naked child ° ' ^""'- ""^ '^'^^''' ^^^
Thro' twenty folds of twisted d, rn,Jh ^ r rin
Smce to his crown the golden d'clung, And down his "^ ^- ^^*^
robe the d writhed in gold r i , j r. .o.
behind him crept Two /^ id i^an^rfoi and ^. 434
saw The golden d sparkUng over'aU • tjJ:, r -j Wi
weigh'd the necks Of d's chnging "^"^^ ^""""^ S?^
On wyvem, lion, d, griffin, swan, » ttl
i)'; cave, HaU hid, theyteU me, Ttresu, 16
rolling of ix"s Bv marble of wafer »* .- . ." ^
Dragon (inn sign) At the 1) on the heath ' ^"'^v- ''^ t.^' ^
Dragon-boughts cZ-6 and elvish emblerSnc^s r T ''^ f%l^
Dragon'd 6'ee Double-Dragon'd ^ Gareth and L. 233
Dragon-fly ' To-day I saw the d-f v,,„„ ^ ■ «
glancing Uke a d-f In summer <!n.> ,^ r T *^'''^** ^
_ d Shot by me Uki a fl™ puS fire ^"T ''f PZ^]^*. ^
"^ 2i t&f '^^^^ FlSthJ roofs and sacking " ^ ^'^^ " ''
Drain (verb) a hp to d thr&e dry ^'^ff}^'f!'^}^.
.-i'sThechaUceofthe^apesofS- Lofsley HaU 88
Dunnage with the rf of your sewer • ' r t, ^^^^•"'•*,i^
°'^''. ofhlrt^c^-^-'^^^^^ «^«^ - «P0ke^ ^ ^ ' ' ^
love for him have d My capabihties of Iovp • r {^"^^f ''^ 266
scheme that had left Z flaccid and f ' ^" ^'m* ^7.^ I},
bl«^Of their strong bodies, flom^nl; d their ^""^ ^ ' ^^
the Ct that d her dear lord's Ufe ^r""' "//^'^^'l* ^69
Z> of her force, again she sat r ^f^'"'' "'*^ ^- ^^^
raised the school; and d the fen Last Tournament 540
Drake So witty that ye plav'd at duck. ^nH ^' '^''^^^^ ^•' '^''"'2' 268
Drama . Vicxoi^in A VicK Romance ' LastTourr^ment 344
Thine is it that our rf did not S ' r„ J'^r m"" ^T q
In some fifth Act what this wM 'i) means • Tr"?'/''^ a
Drank ' We d the Libyan Sun to sleen n / x^ ul^^ ^^"hi
The butler d, the steward scrawl'd ' nJlZ. ^^"^""If^
And then we d it double ; ' ^'^wh^.TT^ ^^
and d The magic cup that fiU'd itself ^ , 7 . ?^?^,^-i ^o
D the large air, and saw, ^,„ \\ ^.
Sf at his table : d his costly wines ; "^'^ ^'^'""^^ l\
d the gale That blown about the foliage Princess in 120
and d hmiself mto his erave -rrincess m izu
And d, and loyaUy d to him! ^rlfn^-^OA
There they d in cups of emerald, r'SIT It
Nor ever d the inviolate spring r ^^?^*^^« 61
Sir Gareth d and ate, ^ ^ r.rJ'' ^T' ilf^n
Earl Limours D tiU he jested with all ease, SSf^f A gS
they d and some one sang, ' nj^ Tt i tl
then you d And knew no more m\ ^"^ ^J^lf^'cB
a ss ra-Ks" - - - - - s„p^r'K;lL
And parted hps which d her breath, ' ^ i ■ Sol
Well then--our solemn f east-we ate and d, " •' ioi
show'd he d beyond his use ; ' " Hi
d the dews and drizzle of the North p,^., '/ c • oT
Draped sweet sculpture d from head to foot, '^ PhZI^VA
DraS'^A?h'Ir?effrc3!nTh'-^PPT''^' ■ ^«^- «^ Srsfl
ntoi^* D • ^ } , '' .^, ^'^'■^y In shming draperies. Princess ii lOQ
Drai^t Bnmm'd with dehrious d's of warmest life. Eorl 139
Some d of Lethe might await T.tv^ Q^n
gather'd green Fro^^d'. of bahny air. ^/^ aS 0 J 9
nux the foaming d Of fever p " ■ "^ ^: • „V?
think that you Lght mix'&is d with death. Prir^ess ^^_ 251
157
Draw'd
TitWigYlt (continued) A shot, ere half thy d be done 7^4 -n
the cup was gold, the d was mud.' ^ ' r„,, ,, ^^"*- fooJ
keeps A d of that sweet fountain Last Tournament 298
Love pledge Hatred in her bitter d's ^^^'' ' ^'^^ ' }!^\
deny my sultry throat One d of icv water p " , r,oo
Drave I d Among the thickest and bore doml a Prince ^'T^'^V^ \f^
Then he d The heathen; ""^« uown a i-nnce, Princess v 517
Who d the heathen hence by sorcery r'^'.^f ^S' r"''o^?
He d his enemy backward down the^bridge ^'""''^ "'^^ ^- ^2^
d her ere her time across the fiekS -^"^'^"^ '""^ -^^ ^^^
' He took them and he d them to his tower r . v " ^?o
tow'S^''' Brake in upon me and 1 tIfm~to his ^''^''"^'"^'^^ ^8
Draw -D down into his vexed pools c, .^ i' • ,^2
something in the darkness d's His forehead ^^" ^"'*-^^**""*^ 1^3
the mountain d'5 it from Heaven above 'w .. j^- /ol
And d itself to what it was beforer 'Cl ^''^^ E
D's different threads, and late and soon rn.nv"-'^''\ ^o
plunging seas d backward from the land vIT. fT, 11^
To her full height her stately stature S'. • n nf^w^^'^ ?no
Watch what main-currents d the yeare • ' r.' 4 fi."'^'''}?^
'Mj end d's nigh ; 'tis time that fwero gone ' MV^Vr^.H
and d's The greater to the lesser, ^ ^^ '^/''^A,"'- 163
end d's mgh ; I hope my end d's nigh : .<??% '^f/ v ^'J
deny it now ? Nay, d, ^, d nigh '' '^^ '^^2/^*^«* 36
And d's the veil from hidden worth n„„ n " ^ • 2pl
i> me, thy bride, a gUttering star, Day-Dm., Arrival i
what d's me down Into the common day P wmw, ^ f.
Some that she but held off to d him on • ' pi ^J'f- ]^r,i
And d them all along, and flow ' "^^l ^p'^''*,^If
hunters round a hunted creature d The cordon ^ ; , ^'^°,,.A
yet he d's Nearer and nearer ^y W's i^teM 499
what mother's blood You d from fight • L^mretius 194
Ask me no more : the moon may'dlhe sea ; ^'''"'''' \^\
and d The stmg from pain ; •' «*» „ v%%\
i> toward the long frost and longest night a nJh *• fi
So d him home to those that mourn ^ Dedication 11
And scarce endure to d the breath ^^" *^ ^
The time d'5 near the birth of Christ- " "^"^-i^?
Z* forth the cheerful day from night •' " ^•^"'1
Like birds the charming serpent d'5 " " '^'^^ f^
Z> down Ionian hills, and sow The dust " ^^^^''^f
d The deepest measure from the chords- " ^'^'^y.]}
And tease her till the day d'5 by " ^'^"* H
virtue such as d's A faithful answer " , ^ }i
and we to d From deep to deep " '^^f?! ^'^
The time d'5 near the birth of Christ • " ""• ^?
To d, to sheathe a useless sword ' " 5?^ ■'■
• But they must go, the time d'5 on, „cxxvtu 13
A soul shall d from out the vast " ^"'^' ^^
dark undercurrent woe That seems tn /7 t,^ V^ .123
To turn the broach, d water ^^"^'^ ^ i™»" 84
and ever fail'd to d The quiet night into '''^'^ ^- ^^^
her blood. , ,
as the worm d'5 in the wither'd leaf z^'"''' ?-/,^«'"f «« 531
long have watch'd how Lancelot d^5 GeramtandE. 633
Gasping to Sir Lavaine, ' Ke lice-head • ' f"" Tf ^t,"^ 'fl^.
' I dread me, if I ti it, you will dJe^ * Lancelot and E. 511
' I die already with it : d — Z>,' " " ^1^
For I will d me into sanctuair A' ■ ^^'^
' My end d'5 nigh ; 'tis time thkt I were srono p Guinevere 121
sail Will d me to the rising of the si /' ''^ f^t^'"'- ^^l
Whereof to all that d the iholesomr^r ^'"'' ^"^^ \^
mitre-sanction'd harlot d'5 his clerks ' c- 7 ^'?^ , ^0
In his own well, d solace as he rnay ^'' *^- ^^-^"'^^^ ^^
but seem to d From yon dark cave,' . TiresmsSQ
from her household orbit d'5 the cMd t -^V^^^* ^^^pe Q
serpent-wanded power D downward info tto^oo ?. ''• ^^^'^'^ce 7
woSld fail, to d I'he crowd from walloiw'^'' Am"'^' ^^"^ \^1
nor the sod D from mv death Thv lil^nctT ^Mar's Dream 140
Orawa c„„.fo,„a«ea„3'L'Sfal''iSd'*"^^°'''' -^SrcSSrsI
Drawing
158
Dream
Drawing D into his narrow earthen urn,
d nigh Half-whisper'd in his ear,
bright river d slowly His waters
And o'er him, d it, the winter moon,
Then spoke King Arthur, d thicker breath ;
And newer knowledge, d nigh,
slowly d near, A vapour heavy, hueless,
For now the day was d on,
each, dishorsed and d, lash'd at each So often
And d down the dim disastrous brow
And d somewhat backward she replied,
And d foul ensample from fair names,
o'er him, d it, the wiater moon,
Then spoke King Arthur, d thicker breath ;
Ode to Memory 61
(Enone 185
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 92
M. d' Arthur 53
„ 148
Day-Dm., Sleep P. 51
Vision of Sin 52
In Mem. Ixxxiv 10
Marr. of Geraint 563
Balin and Balan 5iQ1
Last Tournament 523
Guinevere 490
Pass, of Arthur 221
316
d down from both The light and genial warmth To Prin. Beatrice 21
the star of eve was d light From the dead sun, Death of (Enone 64
Drawn Thence thro' the garden I was d — Arabian Nights 100
all which thou hast d of fairest Or boldest since. Ode to Memory 89
All day and all night it is ever d Poet's Mind 28
D from each other meUow-deep ; Elednore 67
creeps from pine to pine, And loiters, slowly d. (Enone 5
dew, D from the spirit thro' the brain. To J. S. 38
the dusky highway near and nearer d, Lochsley HaU 113
But aU my heart is d above. Sir Galahad 17
robe Of twilight slowly downward d. The Voyage 22
till d thro' either chasm, Enoch Arden 670
With reasons d from age and state. Princess v 357
all their foreheads d in Roman scowls, „ vii 129
sweet httle body that never had d a breath. Grandmother 62
And then I know the mist i&d In Mem. Ixvii 13
It might have d from after-heat.' „ Ixxxi 12
0 bliss, when all in circle d „ Ixxxix 21
The silvery haze of summer d ; „ xcv 4
The boat is d upon the shore ; „ cxxi 6
1 beheld The death- white curtain d ; Maud I xiv 34
Gareth overthrew him, lighted, drew. There met
him d, Gareth and L. 1122
souls the old serpent long had d Down, Geraint and E. 632
coveriid was cloth of gold I) to her waist, Lancelot and E. 1158
what evil beast Hath d his claws athwart
thy face ? Last Tournament 63
Irish eyes Had d him home — what marvel ? „ 405
Had d herself from many thousand years. Lover's Tale i 550
As if 'twere d asimder by the rack. „ ii 57
the portrait of his friend D by an artist. Sisters (E. and E.) 135
living water, d By this good Wiclif mountain Sir J. Oldcastle 131
Sphinx, with wings d back. Folded her Uon paws, Tiresias 148
magnet of Art to the which my nature was d. The Wreck 22
still d downward for an hour. The Ring 477
Dread (s) once from d of pain to die. Two Voices 105
' These things are wrapt in doubt and d, „ 266
Deep d and loathing of her solitude Palace of Art 229
and half in d To hear my father's clamour Princess i 104
Sick, am I sick of a jealous d ? Maud I x 1
And dream of her beauty with tender d, „ xvi 14
But save for d of thee had beaten me. Last Tournament 525
Dread (verb) might I d that you. With only Fame Princess Hi 241
I d His wildness, and the chances of the dark.' „ iv 243
But lies and d's his doom. „ vii 154
No inner vileness that we a! ? In Mem. li 4
but, so thou d to swear, Gareth and L. 272
I rather d the loss of use than fame ; Merlin and V. 519
I I d me, if I draw it, you will die.' Lancelot and E. 513
if she knows And d's it we are fall'n. — To the Queen ii 33
I almost d to find her, dumb ! ' Lover's Tale iv 339
Dreaded he, she d most, bare down upon him. Geraint and E. 156
Dreadfnl D\ has it come to this, Forlorn 43
Dreading d worse than shame Her warrior Tris.tram, Last Tournament 384
Dream (s) (See also Dhrame, Hall-dream) swaet d's
softer than unbroken rest Ode to Memory 29
Heaven flow'd upon the soul in many d'a The Poet 31
a name to shake All evil d's of power — „ 47
To lapse far back in some confused d Sonnet To 3
Dreaming, she knew it was a d : Mariana in the S. 49
said the voice, ' thy d was good, Two Voices 157
Dream (s) (eonttnued) And did not dream it was a d; Two Voices 213
men Forget the d that happens then, „ 353
Like glimpses of forgotten d's — „ 381
' I talk,' said he, ' Not with thy d's. „ 386
Before I dream'd that pleasant dr— Miller's D. 46
Breathing like one that hath a weary d. Lotos-Eaters 6
my voice was thick with sighs As in a (i, B. of F. Women 110
captain of my d's Ruled in the eastern sky. „ 263
Into that wondrous track of d's again ! But no
two d's are Uke. „ 279
Make bright our days and light our d's. Of old sat Freedom 22
Black-stoled, black-hooded, like a d — M. d' Arthur 197
on to dawn, when d's Begin to feel the truth „ Ep. 18
sweeter than the d Dream'd by a happy man. Gardener's D. 71
The pilot of the darkness and the d AvAley Court 72
should one give to light on such a. d?' Edwin Morris 58
Should it cross thy d's, Love and Duty 92
A white-hair'd shadow roaming like a d Tithonus 8
Like a dog, he hunts in d's, Lochsley Hall 79
Fool, again the d, the fancy ! „ 173
Whose odoiu^ haunt my d's ; Sir Galahad 68
But, as in d's, I could not. Vision of Sin 57
. Uncertain as a vision or a d, Enoch Arden 356
Who feels a glimmering strangeness in his d. The Brook 216
teeth that ground As in a dreadful d, Aylmer's Field 329
After an angry d this kindlier glow Faded „ 411
oft from out a despot d The father panting woke, „ 527
Had you ill d's ? ' Sea Dreams 85
' That was then your d,' she said, „ 105
Now I see My d was Life ; „ 137
you made and broke your d : A trifle makes a d,
a trifle breaks.' „ 143
I ask'd the woman in my d. „ 147
But will you hear my d, „ 203
and she grieved In her strange d, „ 230
d awed me : — well — but what are d's ? „ 247
Went both to make your d : „ 254
what d's, ye holy Gods, what d's ! For thrice I
waken'd after d's. Lucretius 33
We do but recollect the d's that come Just ere the
waking : „ 35
that was mine, my d, I knew it — „ 43
I thought my d would show to me, „ 51
Seven and yet one, like shadows in a d. — ■ Princess, Pro. 229
truly, waking d's were, more or less, „ i 12
And feel myself the shadow of a d. „ 18
and read My sickness down to happy d's ? „ ii 253
Intent on her, who rapt in glorious d's, „ 442
I myself the shadow of a d, „ Hi 188
We had our d's : perhaps he mixt with them : „ 220
I found My boyish d involved and dazzled „ iv 450
To dream myself the shadow of a d : „ v 481
it seem'd a,d,I dream'd Of fighting. „ 492
and in my d I glanced aside, and saw „ 507
let me make my d All that I would. „ 519
and d and truth Flow'd from me ; „ 541
My d had never died or Hved again. „ vi 17
lonely listenings to my mutter'd d, „ vii 110
' If you be, what I think you, some sweet d, „ 145
only, if a rf. Sweet d, be perfect. „ 148
' A d That once was mine ! „ 309
Princess with as wise a d As some of theirs — „ Con. 69
wildest d's Are but the needful preludes „ 73
all men else their nobler d's forget. Ode on Well. 152
Let us dream our d to-day. Ode Inter. Exhih. 31
come to the door in a pleasant kind of a d. Grandmother 82
Her quiet d of life this hour may cease. Eequiescat 6
D's are true while they last, and do we not live
in d's ? High. Pantheism 4
So bring him : we have idle d's : In Mem. x 9
I do not suffer in ad; „ xiii 14
What vaster d can hit the mood Of Love „ sclvii 11
So nms my d : but what am I ? „ Uv 17
That Nature lends such evil d's ? „ lv6
A monster then, a.d, A discord. ^ li>i 21
Dream
159
Dream'd-Dreamt
Dream (s) {continued) Yet feels, as in a pensive d, In Mem. Ixiv 17
Nor can my d resolve the doubt : „ Ixviii 12
Or threaded some Socratic d ; „ Ixxxix 36
And dream my d, and hold it true ; „ cxxiii 10
Behold, I dream a i of good, „ cxxix 11
What is she now ? My d's are bad. Matid / t 73
Kept itself warm in the heart of my d's, „ vi 18
Even in d's to the chink of his ponce, „ a; 43
Breaking up my d of delight. „ xix 2
My d? dot dream of bli^ ? „ 3
Half in d^s I sorrow after The delight „ // iv 24
And I wake, my d is fled ; ,, 51
divide in a d from a band of the blest, Maud III vi 10
it was but a d, yet it yielded a dear delight To have
look'd, tho' but in a d, upon eyes so fair, „ 15
but a d, yet it lighten'd my despair „ 18
Vext with waste d's ? Com, of Arthur 85
Till with a wink his d was changed, „ 441
0 star, my morning d hath proven true, Gareth and L. 1000
And heated the strong wamor in his d's ; Marr. of Geraint 72
lay late into the mom. Lost in sweet d's, „ 158
All overshadow'd hj the foolish d, „ 675
Could scarce divide it from her foolish d; „ 686
And ears to hear you even in his d's.' Geraint and E. 429
D's ruling when wit sleeps ! Balin and Balan 143
Let be : ye stand, fair lord, as in a d.' „ 258
Lancelot with his hand among the flowers ' Yea —
for a d. „ 260
poisoning all his rest. Stung him in d's. „ 384
And now full loth am 1 to break thy d, „ 500
As one that labours with an evil d. Merlin and V. 101
ride, and dream The mortal d that never yet was
mine — „ 117
He walk'd with d's and darkness, „ 190
Ev'n in the jumbled rubbish of a d, „ 347
tiny-trumpeting gnat can break our d Lancelot and E. 137
1 behold him in my d's Gaunt „ 763
a d Of dragging down his enemy made them move. „ 813
plagued with d's of something sweet Boly Grail 625
in a d I seem'd to climb For ever : „ 836
damsel,' answer'd he, ' I woke from d's ; Pelleas and E. 104
so lay, Till shaken by a d, „ 517
Or art thou mazed with d's ? „ 525
The sudden trumpet sounded as in a d Last Tournament 151
Tristram waking, the red d Fled with a shout, „ 487
And out beyond into the d to come.' „ 721
if she slept, she dream'd An awful d ; Guinevere 76
down the long wind the d Shrill'd ; Pass, of Arthur 40
Arthiu- woke and call'd * Who spake ? Ad. „ 46
And care not thou for d's from him, „ 58
Black-stoled, black-hooded, like a d — ,, 365
they fall asleep Into dehcious d's, Lover's Tale i 162
As from a dismal d of my own death, „ 748
One golden d of love, from which may death „ 760
Were wrought into the tissue of my d: ,, " 113
Like sounds without the twilight realm of d's, „ 120
thought His d's had come again. „ iv 78
Thro' d's by night and trances of the day. Sisters (E. and E.) 274
broken besides with d's of the dreadful knife In the Child. Hos-p. 65
Not yet — not all — last night a d — Columbus 66
The Lord had sent this bright, strange d to mo „ 91
wrought To mould the d; To E. Fitzgerald 30
Beyond all d's of Godlike womanhood, Tiresias 54
And mixt the d of classic times „ 194
And all the phantoms of the d, „ 195
With a dim d, now and then, The Wreck 114
quiet at length out of plejisant d's, Despair 66
words are like the babblings in a a! Of nightmare,
when the babblings break the d. Ancient Sage 106
brainless will May jar thy golden d Freedom 16
d's that scarce will let me be. To Marq. of Dufferin 41
Led upward by the God of ghosts and d's, Demeter and P. 5
he, the God of d's, who heard my cry, „ 91
saw the world fly by me like a d. The Sing 180
Or is it some half memory of a d ? „ 422
Dream (s) {continued) 0 foolish d's, that you, that I, Happy 89
you were then a lover's fairy d. To Mary Boyle 43
Till, led by d and vague desire. To Master of B. 17
thro' her d A ghostly murmiur floated, Death of (Enone 78
and the d Wail'd in her, „ 81
His d became a deed that woke the world, St. Telemachus 70
shadow of a d — an idle one It may be. Akbar's Dream 5
I pray'd against the d. „ 7
I vow'd Whate'er my d's, I still would do the right „ 13
And yet so wild and wayward that my d — „ 172
Desolation and wrong Thro' a d of the dark ? The Dreamer 16
Brings the D's about my bed. Silent Voices 2
d of a shadow, go — God bless you. To W. H. Brookfield 13
Dream (verb) As a young lamb, who cannot d, Supp. Confessions 170
And did not d it was a dream ; Two Voices 213
sweet it was to d of Fatherland, Lotos-Eaters 39
To d and d, like yonder amber light, „ C. S. 57
More things are wrought by prayer Than this world
d's of. M. d' Arthur 248
Ellen Aubrey, sleep, and d of me : Audley Court 62
And sleeping, haply d her arm is mine. „ 64
Ellen Aubrey, love, and d of me.' „ 73
borne as much as this — Or else I d — St. S. Stylites 93
She sleeps, nor d's, but ever dwells Day-Dm,., Sleep B. 23
D's over lake and lawn, and isles Vision of Sin 11
to d That love could bind them closer Aylmer's Field 40
Indeed, We d not of him : Princess ii 59
' Dare we d of that,' I ask'd, „ Hi 297
We shudder but to d our maids should ape „ 309
To d myself the shadow of a dream : „ v 481
To d thy cause embraced in mine, „ vi 200
Let us d our dream to-day. Ode Open. Exhib. 31
Perchance, to d you still beside me, The Daisy 107
D in the sliding tides. _ Requiescat 4
That made me d I rank'd with him. In Mem. xlii 4
Nor can I d of thee as dead : „ Ixviii 4
rather d that there, A treble darkness, „ xcviii 12
Nor d of human love and truth, „ cxviii 3
And d my dream, and hold it true ; „ cxxiii 10
Behold, Ida, dream of good, „ cxxix 11
Did I d it an hour ago, ' Maud I vii 3
And d of her beauty with tender dread, „ xvi 14
My dream ? do I d of bliss ? „ xix 3
And d he dropt from heaven : Com. of Arthur 183
what d ye when they utter forth May-music Gareth and L. 1079
d's Of goodly supper in the distant pool, „ 1186
To d she could be guilty of foul act, Marr. of Geraint 120
I full oft shall d I see my princess „ 751
d That any of these would wrong thee, Balin and Balan 143
Or d — of thee they dream'd not — Merlin and V. 115
ride, and d The mortal dream that never yet „ 116
Ride, ride and d until ye wake — ,, 118
' Man d's of Fame while woman wakes to love.' „ 460
because ye d they babble of you.' „ 690
I cannot bear to d you so forsworn : Pelleas and E. 300
Too wholly true to d untruth in thee, Guinevere 541
Let no man d but that I love thee still. „ 560
Let no one d but that he loves me „ 674
More things are wrought by prayer Than this
world d's of. Pass, of Arthur 416
Or if thou d aiight farther, d but how Lover's Tale i 769
And in my vision bidding me d on, „ ii 119
But who could d that we, who bore the Cross Columbus 191
Indian warriors d of ampler hunting grounds Locksley H., Sixty 69
but d not that the hour will last. „ 106
Could we d of wars and carnage, „ 189
He d's of that long walk To Mary Boyle 55
Dream'd TiU 1 d 'at Squire walkt in, Owd Boa 55
Dream'd-Dreamt {See also Dream'd) In midst of knowledge,
dream'd not yet. Two Voices 90
Before I dream'd that pleasant dream — Miller's D. 46
sweeter than the dream Dream'd by a happy man, Gardener's D. 72
I too dream'd, until at last Day-Dm., Pro. 9
' I dream'd Of such a tide swelling Sea Dreams 86
I dream'd that still The motion of the great deep „ 110
Dream'd-Dreamt
160
Drew
Dream'd-Dreamt {contmued) told it, having dream'd Of that^ ^^^^^^ ^^
same coast. ,,1,1. 256
Sphere-music such f.'^^U^lf'Sk^ Princess v 492
it seem'd a dream, I dream d Ut tigntmg.
I dream'd there would be Spnng no more, /« Mem. teg l
I dream'd a vision of the dead, " , ^ ^ g,^
And her smile were all that I dream'd, ^<^^ ^ ^ ^^
her smile had all that I dream'd, r-„,wfc ^w'k 1413
They never dream'd the passes would be past,' Gareth awl L. I4ig
They never dream'd the passes could be past. ^/ /^^„,-„/ a54
ireaL herself was such a faded form ^Xzi{ and F US
Or dream^f thee they dream'd not— Merlin and V . iio
I dreamt Of some vast charm concluded » j f 91 1
the mSen dreamt That some one put this diamond Lancelot and E. 211
He had not dream'd she was so beautiful. » _
Who dream'd my knight the greatest kmght » ^gg
' And if / dream'd,' said Gawam, " ,^^
this night I dream'd That I was all alone » ^^^^
I dreamt the damsel would have died, v.lUa^"nnd E 152
for he dream'd His lady loved hin, T aft Tour nmtmt 120
I dream'd the bearing of our knights ias< i owr«am«nJ i^u
laid His brows upon the drifted leaf and dream d. „ ^
He dream'd ; but Arthur with a hundred spears 'huineverelt
if she slept, she dream'd An awful dream ; uutnevere^^o
such a feast As never man had dream'd ; »> ^gg
and as vet no sin was dream'd,) _ 'i p \ i«q
Hadtnot dream'd I loved her yestermom? Sisters g^^.f -j^l^Q
I dream'd last night of that clear summer noon, .^T^^Lm 45
sphere-music as the Greek Had hardly dream'd of. Akbar s Vream^^
and yester afternoon I dream'd, — » -|^„g
I dream'd That stone by stone I rear d Th^' Dreamer 3
he dream'd that a Voice of the Earth went The ^rmmer^
Dreamer ' Much less this d, deaf and bhnd, GddenYearQl
fools they,-we forward : d's both : AvuZ'TFieMlQl
visions in the Northern d's heavens, Ayimers -^ *«"^ -^^
^t^headeddstooptandkiss'dher ^"f'lde^'chZll
heard an answer ' VVake Thou deedless d, ^i- ^^^^^^^ i]
Dreamily A glonous child, d alone, ^^^^ 28
In d of my lady's eyes Mariana in the S. 49
D, she knew it was a dreani : nav-Dm Pro 3
While, d on your damask cheek, ^"■V ^^•■> ^^°- ^
To see you d— and, behind, r,xrre<iMS 15
wrathful petulant, D some nval, ,,. . j^-7iXk
^tr^Vy d of ? Who can tell? ' ^— ^^S^i K
SrVof sS^ »d'of^^^ -- CoiVJSl^
nodded and s «P^^-d -w^^^^^ S;M 1 1316
Sd of h^e Tove'p^r SnSt, i>ia-. 0/ (?era^| Ig
he pray'd for both he slept Z> of both: „ ^.-^""^ ' ^'^^ ' |S
Z) together (d of each other They should have added), "j,^^i^J\i
What is this you're d ? , „.7,. /;_„^7 260
nreamlike I>. should on the sudden vanish, ^?^yXT. in«
SjSworld thou be wise in this d-w of ours, Ancient 6age 108
KSS* She ?nly faS, ' My hf e is d, (repeat) Mariuna 9, 45, 69
She only said, ' The night is d, (repeat) .. S3
She only said, ' The day is d, >» gj
Then, said she, ' I am very d, » , ^ . 395
Dregs 1> of life, and lees of man : '^ PAncissiv 187
Dr^ch stoop'd To d his dark locks 11^ ^i 6
And on ttiese dews that d the furze, ^« toir22
Thro' clouds that d the morning star » '^ '
Drench'd long, rank, dark wood-walks d in dew, D. of F-J^omei 70
For I was d with ooze, and torn with bners, !,iiU2
So d it is with tempest, to the sun, 'klvah 8
l,t»etilSrali-"^' . ^ , ^, ^ /« tke CUM. Ho^. 10
Dress (8) (-S'eeoZ^o Hunting-dress) This d and that by ^^^,^^147
turns you tried, ^ , ihirleiah 95
' Bring the d and put it on her, X. oj -«wrte^?ft yo
drest In the d that she was wed in PriZess ii 189
' What do you here ? and in this d P -^ nncess n loy
you look weU too in your wonmn s d : .. ^^ ^
^ay, the plainness of her d'es ? ^''^ '^ *^ -^^
Dress (s) (continued) all her d Wept from her sides Gareth and L. 216
put on thy worst and meanest d Marr. 0/ Geraw< 130
he came on her Drest in that d, (repeat) „ 141, o4rf
And aU her fooUsh fears about the d, (repeat) „ 14^, »44
(His d a suit of fray'd magnificence, „ ^^
At this she cast her eyes upon her d, „ ^^
The d that now she look'd on to the d „ old
Enid fell in longing for ad „ o^^
Put on your worst and meanest d,' ^ '.' , r- 007
your wretched d, A wretched insult on you, OeratntandJi. 6M
there were books and d'es— left to me. The Eing 113
D'es and laces and jewels and never a ring . ^"^P%*^
Dress (verb) d the victim to the offering up. Fnncess iv 130
to flaunt, to d, to dance, to thrum, . '' , r^ in
d her beautifully and keep her true '— Geraint and E. 40
Love and Longing d thy deeds in Ught, Bed. Poem Prm. AhceJ)
Pretty anew when ya d'es 'em oop, Spinster si, s. 8&
She comes to d me in my bridal veil. The King 98
Dressed -See Drest „ , . , . ...
Dressing (.S'ee aiso A-dressin') Z> their hau: with ^, ,, ,0
the white sea-flower; ^ ^H^Tr^vl
flout and scorn By d it in rags ? Geraint and E. 67b
bullet struck him that was d it suddenly dead, The Revenge bl
I am d the grave of a woman with flowers. Chanty^
I am d her grave with flowers. ». ^*
Drest-Dressed to dance and sing, be gaily drest, The form, the form 6
Why come you drest hke a village maid, Lady Llare 01
' If I come drest hke a village maid, t . r." 7 • i. oa
her body, dres< In the dress that she was wed in, L. of Burleigh. M
each by other drest with care Descended Princess in 19
' What, if you drest it up poetically ! ' .. ^'^■Ji
Are but dainties drest again : .V'''^^"?). ^°- iVZ^'^x
he came on her Drest in that dress , (repeat) Marr. of Geraint 141, 8«
A tribe of women, dress'd in many hues, Geravnt and J^. &y»
With a grisly wound to be drest The Revenge 6b
Drew She d her casement-curtain by, . •^'^"''^„" {^
Thro' rosy taper fingers d Her streaming curls Marmna m the ». 10
rising, from her bosom d Old letters, " i, ,- ii
once he d With one long kiss my whole soul ^atima iJ
With rosy slender fingers backward d ^, ^?^ oa
As haU-a^leep his breath he d, ^ ^^^'^e S^'j^^f^ 28
as mom from Memnon, d Rivers of melodies. P'TS,^ % ^" -^A^
Many d swords and died. -»• of F. Women Q^
they d into two burning rings All beams of Love, „ ^'^
D forth the poison with her balmy breath, ,^ 'J, . ,, ii
There d he forth the brand ExcaUbur, M. d Arthur b^
and d him under in the mere, (repeat) » l^o, ioi
O'er both his shoulders d the languid hands, ^ , " , n /,«
Came, d your pencil from you, Gardener s D. ^<o
as one large cloud D downward : " iln
wave of such a breast As never pencil d. ». ^^
Light pretexts d me ; „, 77 • " n 7 wn
and d My Uttle oakling from the cup, Talking Oak ^60
As homeward by the church I d. The Letters 44
as their faces d together, groan'd, Enoch Ardenli
thro' all his blood D in the dewy meadowy y oou
talking from the point, he d him in, 2^/^ '»';?^5 Iff
What amulet d her down to that old oak, . Aylmer s i leld 507
the great ridge d, Lessening to the lessening music, Sea Dreams J^U
One rear'd a font of stone And d. Princess, Pro. bO
the days d nigh that I should wed, .» • ■ • *i «2
Id near; I gazed. » *!*/|°|
the flood d ; yet I caught her ; , » *" :f "t'
One reaching forward d My burthen from mine arms ; „ ^j*^
roU'd on the earth and rose again and d : » *. ^"i'
D from my neck the painting and the tress, „ '*'* ^^
he d Her robe to meet his lips, » ^.,0
Whence d you this steel temper ? » .. ^„
I> the great night into themselves, »» ^** *^
voice from which their omens all men d. Ode on WeU.^^
Round affrighted Lisbon d The treble works, » . -^^^
And up the snowy Splugen d, T^FVl
Thy converse d u^ withdelight, /« ^'"!.VflJ
D in the expression of an eye, » ^ , .
The shadow of His loss d Ukc eclipse, -Oed. of Idylls i*
Drew
'^w (■'^^tinued) D aU their petty princedoms under
thosTgreat lords D back in wrath, ^'^^ "Z^''^*"'- 18
King Z? in the petty princedoms under hini, " %\n
To whom Sir Gareth d (And there were none Gareih\nd T 74^
t ell, as If dead ; but quickly rose and d, * "'^ ^- 2?
ilch^ ^TVu ^"' ^^ l^?*- ^°"g^* °o more, " i5$A
lighted, d, There met him drawn " ffj?
ffii.f^R'^K.*^*^^'^d^benhesawthestar " }217
a himself Bright from his old Hart Hfo jV , ^'.' . '^^ '
^ from thosrdead wdv^ TheFr hrS ^ay suite 'Zaft^^'f'^' f^t
Sweet^lady, never since I first d Eh '"' "'^ ^- ^^^
these her emblems d mine eyes
Bahn d the shield from off his neck
D the vague glance of Vivien,
and d down from out his night-black hair
rf Ihe vast and shaggy mantle of his beard
magnet-hke she d The rustiest iron
d back, and let her eyes Speak for her.
n the vast eyehd of an inky cloud.
161
Drive
UtiSk {continued) Together, in the d's that nass Tn H^rtor, i- »r • • , o
For the <i of the Maker is Hart ^^ ^° ^^^"^ In Mem. cvix 13
619
Balm and Balan 265
429
464
511
Merlin and V. 255
573
615
634
sft £^TLd'S^I^^'° (^"^^ «^« ^-^ b-" -^) ^-^''«»^ ^."It
she d Nearer and stood.'
draw— Draw,'— and Lavaine d,
D near, and sigh'd in passing, ' Lancelot.
/^ me, with power upon me, till I grew
The heads of all her people d to me,
Inere d my sword.
slowly Pelleas d To that dim day
find a nest and feels a snake, he d •
and d the sword, and thought, ' What'
and either knight D back a space
D from before Sir Tristram to the bounds
and when she d No answer, by and by
weep for her who d him to his doom '
kings who d The knighthood-errant of this reahn
d Down with his blood, till all his heart
There d he forth the brand ExcaUbur
and d him under in the mere, (repeat)
O er both his shoulders d the languid hands.
Death d nigh and beat the doors of Life •
ever d from thence The stream of Ufe *
and iKJve d in her breath In that close kiss,
upon the sands Insensibly I d her name.
fed we from one fountain ? d one sun ?
^^J^^^^ ^ ^^^ H^ ^^"d to push me
bhe d It ong ago Forthgazing on the waste
Four galleons d away From the Spanish fleet
d back with her dead and her shame
one quick peal Of laughter d me thro'
But 1 d them the one from the other-
eveiy one d His sword on his feUow tl) slay him,
x> to this shore ht by the suns
D to this island : Doom'd to the death.
i^Zif''}:^^'^^^ Pl*"'"*^ from our best
as we d to the land ;
and dogg'd us, and d me to land ?
horsemen, d to the valley— and stay'd;
d The foe from the saddle and threw
d perchance a happier lot Than oure
out of his body she d The red ' Blood-eagle '
And d him over sea to you
D from thyself the Ukeness of thyself
d down before his time Sickening
d the nng From his dead finger, '
Uncl(^ed the hand, and from it d the ring,
D to the valley Named of the shadow,
that which d from out the boundless deep
Dried Her tears fell ere the dews were d •
iied his wings : hke gauze they grew ;
all his jmce is d, and all his joints
comforted my heart, And d my tears.
^•« ,^"* felt his eyes Harder and d
ofsm"oke?***™°°^'*""*^ city lies, Beneath its d
Thro' scudding d's the rainy Hyades
349
515
1350
Holy Grail 486
» 601
„ 820
Pelleas and E. 29
437
447
r ^ " 573
Last Tournament 185
Guinevere 161
348
460
Pass, of Arthur 96
„ 220
„ 314, 329
. , " 342
Lover's Tale i 111
238
816
n'7
24
92
176
The Revenge 46
» 60
Sxsters (E. and E.) 116
V. of Maddune 35
7. T, , » 67
De Prof., Two G. 38
Bait, of Brunanburh 50
To E. Fitzgerald 37
The Wreck 136
Despair 2
Heavy Brigade 3
53
Epilogue 50
Dead Prophet 70
To Marq. of Dufferin 22
Demeter and P. 92
The Ring 217
269
Merlin and the G. 86
Crossing the Bar 7
Mariana 14
Two Voices 13
Audley Court 46
Com. of Arthur 350
Pelleas and E. 507
Talking Oak 6
Ulysses 10
For the d of the Maker is dark
Wrapt in d's of lurid smoke '
In d s of smoke before a rolling wind
and sank Down on a d of foliage '
with his d Of flickering spectres
a downy d against the brakes, '
Drifted These d, stranding on an isle
Drifting d up the stream In fancy
Drill d the raw world for the march of mind
Drink (s) sometmies Sucking the damps for d
this, at times, she mingled with his d
Yea ev'n of wretched meat and d '
hire thyself to serve for meats and d's
grant me to serve For meat and d
Kay, The master of the meats and d's
mellow master of the meats and d's '
And mighty thro' thy meats and d's am I (reneat^
with meats and d's And forage for the ho^e ^
pinch a murderous dust into her d '
and then I taakes to tlie d. '
she druv me to d the moor,
All along o' the d, fur I loov'd her
, ' Pilgrunages ? ' ' Z>, bagpipes,
d?ath ('^^^'^^^ Shrink) Id the cup of a costly
I will d Life to the lees :
We d defying trouble,
'I am old, but let me d;
' D, and let the parties rave ;
' D to lofty hopes that cool —
D we, last, the pubhc fool,
' i> to Fortune, d to Chance,
D to heavy Ignorance !
D deep, until the habits of the slave,
To d the cooler air, and mark t„ ii# r — •" "*
Will d to liim, whate'er he be " ^*"'- ^*^^*?. l^
' A then,' he answer'd. 'Here!' n "■ . j ??"^?„
D therefore and the wine will change your will ' ^""''''' ""^ ^- ^.
^^^f ^1^^ ™y ^^'■'' '"^-i ^^^^^ bid me do it " ^
And d with me ; '
Not eat nor d ? And wherefore wail for one
you never open'd Up, Except indeed to d ■ '
f oi^ot to ^ to Lancelot and the Queen,
D, d. Sir Fool,' and thereupon I drank
Nor d: and when thou passest any wood
Summat to d— sa' 'ot ? '
He that thirsteth, come and d !
Then d to England, every guest • /y
To this great cause of Freedom d, my friends (renean
To this great name of England d, '""os, trepeat)
_ men may taste Swine-flesh, d wine-
Drinketh as sunlight d dew.
DrinMn' thaw theer's naw d i' Hell •
Drmking (See also Dhrinkin', Drinkm')
to bride and groom
Men were d together, D and talking of me •
Dnnking-song why should Love, hke nien in d-s's
°"'«ru "'^^^'"^ ^"^^ eglatere D sweeter dews
When the rotten woodland d's
SSJi ^S^S ^ ^""^' '^""^^ «^ '^'-^'
°"''fpicf(^?itiry?||I^-^^^P^) ^withSab.an
Dript belike the lance hath d upon it-
Drive s) What d's about the fresh Casein^
Dnve (verb) and seest me d Thro' utter dark
And d's them to the deep.'
Nature's evil star D men in manhood.
And shoals of pucker'd faces d •
On doubts that d the coward back
Is enough to d one mad. '
sword Whereby to d the heathen out:
A.u ^e**','?en from your Roman wall.
and d them all apart.
As d health
Mavd I iv 43
„ // iv 66
Com. of Arthur 434
Last Tournament 388
Demeter and P. 26
Prog, of Spring 27
Enoch Arden 552
Sea Dreams 108
Ode on Well. 168
St. S. Stylites 77
Lucretius 18
Maud I XV 8
Gareth and L. 153
445
451
„ 560
„ 650, 862
1276
Merlin and V. 610
North. Cobbler 16
30
60
Sir J. Oldcastle 149
Eleanore 138
Ulysses 6
Will Water. 94
Vision of Sin 75
123
147
149
191
193
Princess ii 91
,, 664
674
Merlin and V. 272
Lancelot and E. T37
Last Tournament 297
534
North. Cobbler 5
Sir J. Oldcastle 134
Hands all Round 2
11,35
A " 23
Akbar's Dream 54
Fatima 21
North. Cobbler 58
In Mem., Con. 83
Ma^id I vii 5
„ xviii 55
A Dirge 24
Vision of Sin 81
Maud lis
Owd Roa 42
Adeline 53
Last Tournament 200
The Daisy 43
Supp. Confessions 94
Palace of Art 204
Love thou thy land 74
In Mem. Ixx 10
>i xcv 30
Maud II V 20
Com. of Arthur 281
512
Gareth and L. 515
I.
Drive
162
Dropping
Drive (verb) {continued) ' D them on Before you ; '
(repeat) Geraint and E. 99, 184
d The Heathen, who, some say, shall rule the land Lancelot and E. 64
' Out ! And d him from the walk.' Felleas and E. 220
And d him from my walls.' „ 229
from the ditch where they shelter we d them Def. of Lucknow 59
and d Innocent cattle under thatch, Locksley H., Sixty 95
Then you that d, and know your Craft, Politics 5
Or you may d in vain, „ 8
To d A people from their ancient fold Akbar's Dream 60
Driv'n-Driven (See also O'er-driven, Wind-driven)
morning driv'n her plow of pearl Far furrowing Love and Duty 99
the herd was driven, Fire glimpsed ; Com. of Arthur 432
' O King, for thou hast driven the foe without, Gareth and L. 593
driven by evil tongues From all his fellows, Balin and Balan 125
Their plumes driv'n backward by the wind Lancelot and E. 480
Thy holy mm and thou have driven men mad, Holy Grail 862
camel, driven Far from the diamond fountain Lover's Tale i 136
driven My current to the fountain whence it sprang, — „ 502
the wild brier had driven Its knotted thorns „ 619
driven by one angel face. And all the Furies. Sisters (E. and E.) 158
I am driven by storm and sin and death The Wreck 2
s}ie had never driven me wild. Locksley H., Sixty 20
the foe was driven. And Wolseley overthrew Pro. to Gen. Ilandey 29
shrillings of the Dead When driven to Hades, Death of QLnone 22
Driveth Let us alone. Time d onward fast, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 43
Driving The svmlight d down the lea, Rosalind 13
blood by Sylla shed Came d rainlike Lvycretius 48
D, hurrying, marrying, burying, Maud II v 12
difficulty in mild obedience D them on : Geraint and E. 105
Drissle Thicker the d grew, deeper the gloom ; Enoch Arden 679
(A bill of sale gleam'd thro' the d) „ 688
drank the dews and d of the North, Prog, of Spring 81
Drone See Pulpit-drone
Droned d her lurdane knights Slumbering, Pelleas and E. 430
Droonk (drunk) hallus as ti as a king, North. Cobbler 27
D wi' the Quoloty's wine, an' d wi' the farmer's aale. Village Wife 77
Droop Fair-fronted Truth shall d not now Clear-headed friend 12
I cannot veil, or d my sight, Elednore 87
D's both his wings, regarding thee, „ 119
D's blinded with his shining eye : Fatima 38
The purple flower d's : CEnone 29
D's the heavy-blossom'd bower, Locksley Hall 163
Here d's the banner on the tower, Day-Dm., Sleep P. 13
mantles from the golden pegs D sleepily : „ 20
Where on the double rosebud d's „ L'Envoi 47
his own head Began to d, to fall ; Aylmer's Field 835
d's the mUkwhite peacock like a ghost. Princess vii 180
left hand D from his mighty shoSder' Merlin and V. 243
and seeing Pelleas d. Said Guinevere, Pelleas and E. 178
O'er his uncertain shadow d's the day. Prog, of Spring 8
Droop'd-Droopt a leopard-skin Droop'd from his shoulder, Qinone 59
From one hand droop'd a crocus: Palace of Art 119
So she droop'd and droop'd before him, L. of Burleigh 85
thinking that her clear germander eye Droopt Sea Dreams 5
then day droopt ; the chapel bells Call'd Princess ii 470
The lily like Melissa droop d her brows ; „ iv l&l
above her droop'd a lamp. And made ,, 272
And how my life had droop'd of late, In Mem. xiv 14
His age hath slowly droopt, and now lies Gareth and L. 79
he let them glance At Enid, where she droopt : Geraint and E. 247
plume droopt and mantle clung, Last Tournament 213
Drooping (See also A-drooping, Half-drooping, Low-
drooping) found A damsel din a comer of it. Geraint and E. 611
aaswer'd in low voice, her meek head yet D, „ 641
D and beaten by the breeze, Lover's Tale i 700
Droopt See Droop'd.
Drop (s) (See also Dhrop) There will not he a. dot rain May Queen 35
and, dew'd with showery d's, Lotos-Eaters 17
greaves and cuissas dash'd with d's Of onset ; M. d' Arthur 215
That was the last d in the cup of gall. Walk, to the Mail 69
Thro' glittering d's on her sad friend. Princess vi 283
And balmy d's in summer dark In Mem, xvii 15
As d by d the water falls In vaults and catacombs, „ Iviii 3
than the sward with d's of dew, Geraint and E. 690
Drop (s) (continued) Thicker than d's from thunder. Holy Grail 348
greaves and cuisses dash'd with d's Of onset ; Pass, of Arthur 383
Like water, d by d, upon my ear Fell ; Lover's Tale i 576
few d's of that distressful rain Fell on my face, „ 698
hoard of happiness distill'd Some d's of solace ; „ 715
I weiint shed a rf on 'is blood, North. Cobbler 114
wi' hoffens a (i in 'is eye. Village Wife 34
Taiiste another d o' the wine — „ 120
ye shant hev a d fro' the paiiil. Spinster's S.'s 65
Like d's of blood in a dark-gray sea. Heavy Brigade 43
The falling d will make his name Epilogue 60
you spill The d's upon my forehead. Romney's R. 24
Drop (verb) that grace Would d from his o'er-brimming
love, Supp. Confessions 113
o'er black brows d's down (repeat) Madeline 34, 46
D's in a silent autumn night. Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 34
Till all my limbs d piecemeal from the stone, St. S. Stylites 44
All starry culmination d Babn-dews Talking Oak 267
a larger egg Than modem poultry d, Will Water. 122
To d thy fooUsh tears upon my grave, Com£ not, when, etc. 2
And d's at Glory's temple-gates, You might have won 34
And the lark d down at his feet. Poet's Song 8
Till the Sun d, dead, from the signs.' Princess vii 245
d me a flower, D me a flower. Window, At the W. 6
D me a flower, a flower, to kiss, „ H
D's in his vast and wandering grave. In Mem. vi 16
To d head-foremost in the jaws „ xxxiv 15
' The cheeks d in ; the body bows Man dies : „ xxxv 3
D's flat, and after the great waters break Last Tournament 464
would d from the chords or the keys, I'he Wreck 27
till I feiild mysen ready to d. Owd Rod 84
gold from each laburnum chain D to the grass. To Mary Boyle 11
Dropp'd-Dropt (See also Dhropt, Down-drooped, Down-dropt,
Half-dropt, Low-dropt) before my eyelids dropt their
shade, D. of F. Women 1
a tear Dropt on the letters as I wrote. To J. S. 56
She dropt the goose, and caught the pelf. The Goose 13
And dropt the branch she held, and turning Gardener's D. 157
tho' my teeth, which now are dropt away, St. S. Stylites 30
' Her eyehds dropp'd their silken eaves. Talking Oak 209
Dropt dews upon her golden head, „ 227
shrivell'd into darkness in his head, And dropt before him. Godiva 71
Down they dropt — no word was spoken — The Captain 51
Nor anchor dropt at eve or mom ; The Voyage 82
Dropt her head in the maiden's hand. Lady Clare 63
He suddenly dropt dead of heart-disease.' Sea Dreams 274
And dropt a fairy parachute and past : Princess, Pro. 76
Like threaded spiders, one by one, we dropt, ,, i 108
We dropt with evening on a rustic town „ 170
Two plummets dropt for one to sound the abyss „ ii 176
Dropt thro' the ambrosial gloom to where below ,, iv 24
I clamber'd o'er at top with pain, Dropt on the sward, „ 209
And down the streaming crystal dropt ; „ vii 165
Nor find him dropt upon the firths of ice, „ 206
a flower, a flower, Dropt, a flower. Window, At the W. 14
And dropt the dust on tearless eyes ; In Mem. Ixxx 4
Dropt off gorged from a scheme that had left Maud I i20
And dream he dropt from heaven: Com. of Arthur 183
then the two Dropt to the cove, „ 378
A cloak that dropt from collar-bone to heel, Gareth and L. 682
' And thence I dropt into a lowly vale, Holy Grail 440
Dropt down from heaven ? Last Tournament 685
with his head below the surface dropt Lover's Tale i 636
And the men dropt dead in the valleys V. of Maeldune 31
it open'd and dropt at the side of each man, „ 85
that dropt to the brink of his bay, The Wreck 73
She dropt the gracious mask of motherhood, The Ring 384
Dropping (See also Slow-dropping) Some d low their
crimson bells Arabian Nights 62
lean'd Upon him, slowly d fragrant dew. Qinone 106
d bitter tears against his brow M. d' Arthur 211
d down wilh costly bales ; Locksley Hall 122
D the too rough H in Hell and Heaven, Sea Dreams 196
a breadth Of Autmnn, d fruits of power; Princess vi 55
d bitter tears against a brow Pass, of Arthur 379
Dropping-wells
163
Dae
Droppiog-wells Laburnums, d-w of fiie. In Mem. Ixxxiii 12
Dropt iSee Dropp'd
Dropwise gather'd trickling d from the cleft, Merlin and V. 274
Dross scurf of salt, and scum of <i, Vision of Sin 211
Drought On stony d and steaming salt ; Mariana in the S. 40
Drouth (See also Drowth) I look'd athwart the burning d Fatima 13
My one Oasis in the dust and d Of city life ! Edwin Morris 3
in the dust and d of London life She moves „ 143
Drove (S) I watch the darkening d's of swine Palace of Art 199
Not one of all the d should touch me : swine ! ' Merlin and V. 699
Drove (verb) {See also Druv) foUage, d The fragrant,
glistening deeps. Arabian Nights 13
His own thought d him, like a goad. M. d' Arthur 185
d his heel into the smoixlder'd log, „ Ep. 14
fear of change at home, that d him hence. Walk, to the Mail 68
Across the bomidless east we d, The Voyage 38
But whence were those that d the sail „ 86
Storm, such as d her under moonless heavens Enoch Arden 547
The horse he d, the boat he sold, „ 609
thought Haunted and harass'd him, and d him forth, „ 720
d The footstool from before him, and arose ; Aylmer's Field 326
D in upon the student once or twice, „ 462
and round me d In narrowing circles Lucretius 56
With that he <i the knife into his side : „ 275
tale of her That d her foes with slaughter Princess, Pro. 123
On glassy water d his cheek in lines ; „ i 116
Right on this we d and caught, „ iv 188
And d us, last, to quite a solemn close — „ Con. 17
We broke them on the land, we d them on the seas. Third of Feb. 30
and goodly sheep In haste they d. Spec, of Iliad 5
gold of the ruin'd woodlands d thro' the air. Maud I i 12
and she d them thro' the waste. Geraint and E. 100
and she d them thro' the wood. „ 185
He d the dust against her veilless eyes : „ 529
D his mail'd heel athwart the royal crown, Balin and Balan 540
Whom Pellam d away with holy heat. „ 611
And d him into wastes and solitudes Lancelot and E. 252
Tell me, what d thee from the Table Round, Holy Grail 28
D me from all vainglories, rivalries, „ 32
heapt in mounds and ridges all the sea D like a cataract, „ 799
Seven days I d along the dreary deep, And with
me d the moon and all the stars ; „ 808
His own thought d him Uke a goad. Pass, of Arthur 353
I flung him the letter that d me wild. First Quarrel 57
and d them, and smote them, and slew, Def. of Lucknow 71
Z> me and my good brothers home Columbus 134
B thro' the midst of the foe. Heavy Brigade 30
D it in wild disarray, „ 60
D from out the mother's nest Open. I. and C. Exhib. 27
I d the blade that had slain my husband Bandit's Death 34
and d the demon from Hawa-i-ee. Kapiolani 33
Drown her sacred blood doth d The fields, Poland 4
Whose muffled motions blindly d In Mem. xlix 15
d His heart in the gross mud-honey Mavd I xvi ^
they should burst and d with deluging storms „ // i 42
Might d all life in the eye, — „ ii 61
A stone about his neck to d him in it. Gareth and L. 812
and then like vermin here D him, „ 823
melody That d's the nearer echoes. Lover's Tale i 533
Nor d thyself with flies Ancient Sage 268
Drowndid (drowned) Wheer the poor wench d hersen. Spinster's S's. 25
Drown'd (See also Dhrownded, Drowndid) I d the
whoopings of the owl St. S. Stylites 33
part were d within the whirling brook : Princess, Pro. 47
the glens are d in azure gloom „ iv 525
tall columns d In silken fluctuation „ vi 354
Love clasp Grief lest both be d. In Mem. i 9
Was d in passing thro' the ford, „ vi 39
And d in yonder living blue „ coov 7
in which all spleenful folly was d, Maud I Hi 2
Would she had d me in it, Lancelot and E. 1412
rest of her D in the gloom and horror Lover's Tale iv 62
such a vehemence that it d The feebler motion „ 82
d in the deeps of a meaningless Past ? Vastness 34
Drowning I brim with sorrow d song, In Mem. xix 12
Drowning (continvfd) fell the floods of heaven d the deep. Holy Grail 533
and the transient trouble of d — Despair 67
d old poUtical common-sense ! Locksley H., Sixty 250
Thousands of voices d his own Vastness 6
Drowse Let not your prudence, dearest, d, Princess ii 339
heel against the pavement echoing, burst Their d ; Geraint and E. 272
Drowsed Doubted, and d, nodded and slept. Com. of Arthur 427
ravine Which d in i,'loom, seld-darken'd Death of (Enone 76
Drowsing See Death-drowsing
Drowth (See also Drouth) Thro' the heat, the d, the dust, Sisters (E. and E.) 6
Drug (s) ' What d can make A wither'd palsy Two Voices 56
Drug (verb) D thy memories, lest thou learn it, Locksley HaU 77
D down the blindfold sense of wrong In Mem. Ixxi 7
Druid Each was hke a D rock ; Princess iv 280
grove and altar of the D and Druidess, Boddicea 2
Druidess grove and altar of the Druid and D, „ 2
Drum (See also War-drum) The munnurs of the d
and fife Talking Oak 215
Thy voice is heard thro' rolling d's Princess iv 577
they clash'd their arms ; the <i Beat ; „ u 250
Now, to the roll of mulBed d's, Ode on Well. 87
Bugles and d's in the darkness, Def. of Lv^know 76
Drunk (See also Droonk, Sow-droonk) And d
delight of battle with my peers, Ulysses 16
Ah, sweeter to be d with loss. In Mem. i 11
D even when he woo'd ; Marr. of Geraint 442
Till, d with its own wine, and overfull Lover's Tale i 271
Were d into the inmost blue, „ 309
D in the largeness of the utterance Of Love ; „ 472
for my brain was d with the water. Despair 65
Drunkard Shaking a little Uke a d's hand, Enoch Arden 465
The d's football, laughing-stocks of Time, Princess iv 517
let the d, as he stretch'd from horse Last Tournament 459
Drunken (See also Love-drunken) Before I well have
d, scarce can eat : Geraint and E. 662
Druv (drove) she d me to drink the moor, North. Cobbler 30
But the heiit d bout i' my heyes Owd Bod 84
Dry (adj.) (See also Dusty-d^) Earth is tZ to the
centre. Nothing will Die 20
the bearded grass Is d and dewless. Miller's D. 246
the silver tongue. Cold February loved, is d : The Blackbird 14
youth Keep d their light from tears ; Of old sat Freedom 20
And moist and d, devising long. Love thou thy land 38
passion sweeping thro' me left me d, Locksley Hall 131
Full cold my greeting was and d ; The Letters 13
Whose pious talk, when most his heart was d, Sea Dreams 186
I found, tho' crush'd to hard and d, The Daisy 97
Be near me when my faith is d, In Mem. 1 9
But with long use her tears are d. „ Ixxviii 20
For imderf oot the herb was d ; „ xcv 2
cells and chambers ; all were fair and d ; Lancelot and E. 407
and moist or d, Full-arm'd upon his charger Pdleas and E. 215
I never said ' on wi' the d,' First Quarrel 77
but thaw tha was iver sa d, North. Cobbler 9
And each was as ti as a cricket, V. of Maeldune 50
Dry (verb) ' The sap dries up : the plant declines. Two Voices 268
if thou be'st Love, d up these tears Lover's Tale i 780
Dryad-like D-l, shall wear Alternate leaf Talking Oak 286
Dry-tongued the d-t laurels' pattering talk Mavd I xviii 8
Dubb'd Said Arthur, when he d him knight ; Holy Grail 137
Dubric To whom arrived, by Z) the high saint. Com. of Arthur 453
holy D spread his hands and spake, „ 471
D said ; but when they left the shrine „ 476
For by the hsuids of D, the high saint, Marr. of Geraint 838
oft I talk'd with D, the high saint, Geraint and E. 865
Duck grew So witty that ye play'd at d's and
drakes Last Tournament 344
Duct ' Before the little d's began Two Voices 325
Due (adj.) feud, with question unto whom 'twere d : (Enone 82
Up in one night and d to sudden sun : Princess iv 312
and d To languid limbs and sickness ; „ vi 376
one so saved was d All to the saver — Lover's Tale iv 279
Due (s) Uttle d's of wheat, and wine and oil ; Lotos-Eaters, C. 8. 122
clothes the father with a dearness not his d. Locksley Hall 91
So many years from his d.' Lady Clare 32
Dae
164
Dusty-white
Due (s) {continiud) what every woman counts her d. Love, Princess Hi 244
but as frankly theirs As d's of Nature. „ v 204
Who give the Fiend himself his d, To F. D. Maurice 6
they miss their yearly d Before their time ? In Mem. xxix 15
And render human love his d's ; „ xxxvii 16
Which else were fruitless of their d, „ xlv 14
lazy lover Who but claims her as his i ? Maud I xxW
and let the dark face have his d ! Def. of Lucknow 69
Tho' a prophet should have his d, Bead Prophet 50
Dug {See also New-dog) falling prone he d His fingers
into the wet earth, Enoch Arden 779
But iron d from central gloom, In Mem. cxviii 21
Doglas loud battles by the shore Of D ; Lancelot and E. 290
Duke BuEY the Great D With an empire's lamentation,
Let us bury the Great D Ode on Well. 1
Truth-lover was our English D ; „ 189
King, d, earl. Count, baron — Lancelot and E. 464
DuQ (adj.) the d Saw no divinity in grass, A Character 7
You never would hear it ; your ears are so d ; Poet's Mind 35
How d it is to pause, to make an end, Ulysses 22
And d the voyage was with long delays, Enoch Arden 655
d and self -involved. Tall and erect, Aylmer's Field 118
Dull (verb) d Those spirit-thrilUng eyes Ode to Memory 38
' Weep, weeping d's the inward pain.' To J. S. 40
burial mould Will d their comments ! Romney's R. 126
Dxill'd And d the murmur on thy lip, In Mem. xxii 16
Duller something d than at first, Witt Water. 157
Dumb (See also Death-dumb) And the far-oS stream is d, The Owl i 3
in a little while our lips are d. Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 44
The streets are d with snow. Sir Galahad 52
Winds are loud and you are d, Window, No Answer 19
ran Thro' lands where not a leaf was d ; In Mem. xxiii 10
lo, thy deepest lays are d „ Ixxvi 7
D is that tower which spake so loud, „ Con. 106
Then I cannot be wholly d ; Mavd II v 100
and the dead, Oar'd by the d, went upward Lancelot and E. 1154
one hath sung and all the d will sing. Eoly Grail 301
and cast her eyes down, and was d. Lover's Tale iv 329
I almost dread to find her, d\' „ 339
• She is but d, because in her you see „ 341
• Now all be d, and promise all of you „ 351
D on the winter heath he lay. Dead Prophet 13
dazed and d With passing thro' Demeter and P. 6
Dumb'd the wholesome music of the wood Was d Balin and Balan 437
0 they to be d by the charm ! — V. of Maeldune 25
Dune (See also Sea-done) long low d, and lazy-
plunging sea. Last Tournament 484
glory lights the hall, the d, the grass ! Locksley H., Sixty 181
Dong round and round In d and nettles ! Pelleas and E. 471
Dungeon histories Of battle, bold adventure, d, Aylmer's Field 98
In damp and dismal d's underground, Lover's Tale ii 149
airs of heaven After a d's closeness. Sisters (E. and E.) 198
rib-grated d of the holy human ghost, Happy 31
Dunghill Upon an ampler d trod. Will Water. 125
And Doubt is the lord of this d Despair 90
Duomo Of tower or d, sunny-sweet, The Daisy 46
Dope Christ the bait to trap his d Sea Dreams 191
Dusk (s) Beam'd thro' the thicken'd cedar in the d. Gardener's D. 166
A troop of snowy doves athwart the d, Princess iv 168
And in the d of thee, the clock Beats out In Mem. ii 7
1 sleep till d is dipt in gray : „ Ixvii 12
this flat lawn with d and bright ; „ Ixxxix 2
shapes That haunt the d, with ermine capes „ xcv 11
now the doubtful d reveal'd The knolls „ 49
So till the d that follow'd evensong Gareth and L. 793
Till the points of the foam in the d came Despair 50
or seated in the d Of even, Demeter and P. 125
Dusk (verb) Little breezes d and shiver L. of Shalott i 11
Dusky-rafter'd The d-r many-cobweb'd hall, Marr. of Geraint 362
Dust (See also Blossom-dust, Doost, Lotos-dost, Tooch-
wood-dust) tho' the faults were thick as d In
vacant chambers, To the Queen 18
right ear, that is fill'd with d. Hears little Two Voices 116
soil'd with noble d, he hears His country's war-song „ 152
A d of systems and of creeds. „ 207
Dost (continued) Two handfuls of white d, shut in an urn
of brass ! Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 68
I knew your brother : his mute d I honour To J. S. 29
Lie still, dry d, secure of change. „ 76
parch'd with d; Or, clotted into points M. d' Arthur 218
The pillar'd d of sounding sycamores, Audley Court 16
My one Oasis in the d and drouth Of city life ! Edwin Morris 3
For in the d and drouth of London Life „ 143
you may carve a shrine about my d, St. S. Stylites 195
With anthers and with d : Talking Oak 184
dead, become Mere highway d ? Love and Duty 11
And vex the unhappy d thou wouldst not save. Come not, when, etc. 4
Is a clot of warmer d. Vision of Sin 113
Are but d that rises up, (repeat) „ 133, 169
D are our frames ; and, gilded d, Aylmer's Field 1
scrapings from a dozen years Of d and deskwork : Sea Dreams 78
Have fretted all to d and bitterness.' Princess vi 264
Till pubUc wrong be crumbled into d, Ode on Well. 167
Ashes to ashes, dtod; „ 270
if the wages of Virtue be d. Wages 6
Thou wilt not leave us in the d : In Mem., Pro.' 9
The d of him I shall not see „ xvii 19
Ye never knew the sacred d : „ xxi 22
And d and ashes all that is ; „ xxxiv 4
Man dies : nor is there hope in d : ' „ xxxv 4
sow The d of continents to be ; „ 12
And Time, a maniac scattering d, ,,11
grope, And gather d and cha£E, „ Iv 18
Be blown about the desert d, „ Ivi 19
we talk'd Of men and minds, the d of change, „ Ixxi 10
To stir a httle d of praise. „ Ixxv 12
And dropt the d on tearless eyes ; „ Ixxx 4
The d and din and steam of town : „ Ixxxix 8
Our father's d is left alone „ cv 5
The life re-orient out of d, „ cxvi 6
That we may lift from out of d A voice „ cxxxi 5
who knows ? we are ashes and d. Maud I i 32
Spice his fair banquet with the d of death ? „ xviii 56
My d would hear her and beat, „ xxii 71
That sting each other here in the d; „ II HI
And my heart is a handful of d, „ v3
he will lift us from the d. Com. of Arthur 491
who swept the d of ruin'd Rome Gareth and L. 135
turning roimd she saw D, and the points of lances Geraint and E. 449
held Her finger up, and pointed to the d. „ 453
He drove the d against her veilless eyes : „ 529
Or pinch a murderous d into her drink. Merlin and V. 610
in the d of half-forgotten kings, Lancelot and E. 1338
Fell into d, and I was left alone, (repeat) Holy Grail 389, 400, 419
she, too. Fell into d and nothing, „ 397
Fell into d, and disappear'd, „ 436
And touch it, it will crumble into d.' „ 439
whirl the d of harlots round and round Pelleas and E. 470
he knew the Prince tho' marr'd with d, Guinevere 36
I saw One lying in the d at Almesbury, Pass, of Arthur 77
parch'd with d ; Or, clotted into points „ 386
heart of Hope Fell into d, and crumbled Lover's Tale i 95
Down in the dreadful d that once was man, D, „ iv 67
Having of dead men's d and beating hearts. ,, 140
D to d — low down — let us hide ! Rizpah 37
Thro' the heat, the drowth, the d, the glare. Sisters (E. and E.) 6
The guess of a worm in the d Despair 30
And changed her into d. Ancient Sage 162
Her d is greening in your leaf, „ 165
and bums the feet would trample it to d. The Flight 68
and they crumble into d. Locksley H., Sixty 72
Only ' d to d! ' for me that sicken „ 149
D in wholesome old-world d „ 150
she swept The d of earth from her knee. Dead Prophet 32
may roll with the i of a vanish'd race. Vastness 2
Stampt into d — tremulous, all awry, Romney's R. 113
The /send up a steam of human blood, St. Telemachus 53
d of the rose-petal belongs to the heart Akbar's D., Inscrip. 9
Dusty-dry all but yester-eve was d-d. Lucretius 32
Dusty-white The river-bed was d-w ; Mariana in the S. 54
Dutch
165
Dyflen
Dutch sometimes a D love For tulips ;
Duty for a man may fail in d twice,
I must be taught my d, and by you !
and D loved of Love —
centred in the sphere Of common duties,
Go to him : it is thy d : kiss him :
To all duties of her rank :
Like one who does his d by his own,
Swerve from her d to herself and us —
As having fail'd in <i to him,
Thy d ? What is d? Fare thee well ! '
0 hard, when love and d clash !
My brother ! it was d spoke, not L
she replied, her d was to speak, And d d, clear
of consequences,
day fled on thro' all Its range of duties
they That love their voices more than d.
Some sense of d, something of a faith,
Till one that sought but D's iron crown
path of d was the way to glory : (repeat)
find the toppling crags of D scaled
The path of d be the way to glory :
1 done moy d boy 'um, (repeat)
I done moy d by Squoire an' I done moy d
As it were a d done to the tomb,
I charge thee, on thy das & wife,
It was my d to have loved the highest :
for a man may fail in d twice,
I have only done my i as a man is bound to do
Dwarf (s) D's of the gynaeceum, fail so far
after seen The d's of presage :
there rode Full slowly by a knight, lady, and d ;
Whereof the d lagg'd latest,
sent Her maiden to demand it of the d ;
my faith, thou shalt not,' cried the d ;
Made sharply to the d, and ask'd it of him,'
His d, a vicious under-shapen thing,
thou thyself, with damsel and with d,
Selfish, strange ! What d's are men !
for all but a d was he,
Dwarf (verb) d's the petty love of one to one.
DwarPd rise or sink Together, d or godlike,
How d a growth of cold and night,
their ever-rising life has d Or lost
Dwarf-elm like an old d-e That turns its back
Dwarf-like among the rest A d-l Cato cower'd.
Dwell Where she would ever wish to d,
Life and Thought Here no longer d ;
His light upon the letter d's,
May those kind eyes for ever d !
Wherein at ease for aye to d.
My Gods, with whom I d !
others in Elysian valleys d,
' It comforts me in this one thought to d,
thou may'st warble, eat and d.
And d's in heaven half the night.
would d One earnest, earnest moment
To din presence of immortal youtli,
d's A perfect form in perfect rest.
Where the wealthy nobles d.'
D with these, and lose Convention,
pretty home, the home where mother d's ?
there — there — they d no more.
But more of reverence in us e2 ;
the vigour, bold to d On doubts that drive
And d's not in the light alone,
She d's on him with faitliful eyes.
But in my spirit will I d.
So dark a mind within me d's,
wastes where footless fancies d
for she d's Down in a deep ; calm,
I d Savage among the savage woods,
' She d's among the woods ' he said
and in me there d's No greatnass,
As when we d upon a word we know,
Gardener's D. 192
M. d' Arthur 129
Dora 97
Love and Duty 46
Ulysses 40
Locksley Hall 52
L. of Burleigh 72
Enoch Arden 333
Aylmer's Field 304
Lucretius 278
„ 281
Princess ii 293
„ 308
„ Hi 151
177
„ iv 512
„ Con. 54
Ode on Well. 122
„ 202,210
215
224
N. Fanner, 0. S. 12, 24
56
Maud I xix 49
Geraint and E. 16
Guinevere 657
Pass, of Arthur 297
The Revenge 102
Princess Hi 279
„ iv 447
Marr. of Geraint 187
193
198
204
412
„ 581
Sisters (E. and E.) 199
The Wreck 42
Merlin and V. 492
Princess vii 260
In Mem. Ixi 7
The Ring 463
Pelleas and E. 543
Princess vii 126
Supp. Confessions 54
Deserted House 18
Miller's D. 189
„ 220
Palace of Art 2
„ 196
Lotos-Eaters C. S. 124
D.ofF. Women 233
The Blackbird 4
To J. S. 52
Love and Duty 36
Tithonus 21
Day-Dm., Sleep B., 23
L. of Burleigh 24
Princess ii 85
City Child 2
Boiidicea 63
In Mem., Pro. 26
„ xcv 29
„ xcvi 20
' „ xcvii 35
„ cxxiii 9
Maud I xvl
„ xviii 69
Com. of Arthur 291
Balin and Balan 485
614
Lancelot and E. 449
1027
Dwell {continued) Why did the King d on my name
to me ?
I must not d on that defeat of fame.
d with you ; Wear black and white.
Love d's not in Up-depths.
Shakespeare's bland and universal eye D's
pleased,
thou should'st d For nine white moons
thou shalt d the whole bright year with me,
noble Ulric d's forlorn.
Dweller some dark d by the coco-palm
Dwelleth The clear-voiced mavis d.
Dwelling D amid these yellowing bowers ;
<i on his boundless love,
Her fancy d in this dusky hall :
thus he spake, his eye, d on mine,
their eyes are dim With d on the light
Unto the d she must sway.
Phihp's d fronted on the street.
How mend the d's, of the poor ;
With one great d in the middle of it ;
This is a charmed d which I hold ; '
the sweet d of her eyes Upon me
who sack'd My d. seized upon my papers,
and the d broke mto flame ;
Old Empires, d's of the kings of men ;
climb to the d of Peelfe the Goddess 1
Dwelling-place So unproportion'd to the drp,)
Dwelt The fable of the city where we d.
But the full day d on her brows,
keep me from that Eden where she d.
May not be d on by the common day.
And d a moment on his kindly face,
Ev'n as she d upon his latest words.
Her hand d lingeringly on the lateh,
D with eternal summer, ill-content.
best and brightest, when they d on hers,
But when I d upon your old affiance,
There d an iron nature in the grain :
mournful twilight mellowing, d Full on the child ;
A doubtful smile d like a clouded moon
the dew D in her eyes.
There they d and there they rioted ;
I past To see the rooms in which he d.
These two — they d with eye on eye,
Methought I d within a hall.
From which he sallies, and wherein he d.
they d Deep-tranced on hers,
• Brother, Ida. day in Pellam's hall :
Lifted her eyes, and they d languidly On Lancelot,
and d among the woods By the great river
His own far blood, which d at Camelot ;
Yet larger thro' his leanness, d upon her.
So d the father on her face,
happy as when we d among the woods,
I saw That man had once d there ;
shot A rose-red sparkle to the city, and there D,
D with them, till in time their Abbess died.
to those With whom he d, new faces,
fragments of forgotten peoples d,
Who hath but d beneath one roof with me.
And heaven pass too, d on my heaven,
the sudden wail his lady made D in his fancy :
he d and whence he roll'd himself
while we d Together in this valley —
Love and Justice came and d therein;
(repeat) Akbar's Dream 181, 194
Dwindle Thou shalt wax and he shall d, Boiidicea 40
Science grows and Beauty d's — Locksley H., Sixty 246
Dwindled d down to some odd games In some odd nooks The Epic 8
Dwindling See Daily-Dwindling
Dyed walls of my cell were d With rosy colours leaping Holy Grail 119
splash 'd and d The strong White Horse „ 311
Dyeing blood spirted upon the scarf, D it ; Marr. of Geraint 209
Dyflen Shaping their way toward D again, Batt. of Brunanburh 98
Lancelot and E. 1402
Guinevere 628
„ 676
Lover's Tale i 466
To W. C. Macready 14
Demeter and P. 120
139
Happy 10
Prog, of Spring 68
Claribd 16
A spirit haunts 2
Marr. of Geraint 63
„ 802
Holy Grail 485
Lover's Tale i 492
Ode to Memory 79
Enoch Arden 731
To F. D. Maurice 38
Holy Grail 514:
Lover's Tale i 114
Sisters {E. and E.) 165
Columbus 130
V. of Maddune 32
Prog, of Spring 99
Kapiolani 22
Lover's Tale i 187
Gardener's D. 6
136
191
271
Enoch Arden 326
454
519
562
Aylmer's Field 69
Princess Hi 139
„ vi 50
191
270
„ vii 136
Boddicea 63
In Mem. Ixxxvii 16
„ xcvii 9
„ ciii 5
Balin and Balan 132
277
605
Lancelot and E. 84
277
„ 803
„ 835
„ 1030
1036
Holy Grail 430
„ 531
Guinevere 692
Pass, of Arthur 5
84
156
Lover's Tale i 72
„ iv 150
Tiresias 145
Death of Qinone 29
Dying
166
Ear
Dying {See also Slowly-dyii^) I wovld be d eTennore,
So d ever, Elednore 143
Then d of a mortal stroke, Two Voices 154
Die, d clasp'd in his embrace. Fatima 42
They say he's d all for love. May Queen 21
When Ellen Adair was d for me. Edward Gray 16
as they lay d, Did they smile on him. The Captain 55
foretold, I), that none of all our blood Princess i 8
He, d lately, left her, as I hear, „ 78
Blow, bugle ; answer, echoes, d, d, d. (repeat) „ iv 6, 12
And answer, echoes, answer, d, d, d. „ 18
Or d, there at least may die. In Mem. viii 24
The year is d in the night ; „ cvi 3
I felt she was slowly d Vext with lawyers Maud I xix 21
D abroad and it seems apart „ 29
When he lay d there, „ II ii 67
There is some one d or dead, „ iv 48
d, gleam'd on rocks Roof-pendent, sharp ; Balin and Balan 314
laughter d down as the great knight Approach'd Lancelot and E. 179
methought I spied A d fire of madness Holy Grail 768
' And oft in d cried upon your name.' Pelleas and E. 385
Moans of the d, and voices of the dead. Pass, of Arthur 117
d thus, Crown'd with her highest act Lover's Tale i 215
And the lion there lay d, The Revenge 96
D so English thou wouldst have her flag Bed. Poem Prin. Alice 16
Death to the d, and woimds to the wounded, Bef. of Lucknow 17
women in travail among the d and dead, „ 88
glory and shame d out for ever Bespair 75
and d while they shout her name. Locksley H., Sixty 128
B, ' Unspeakable ' he wrote ' Their kindness,' To Marq. of Bufferin 35
but then A kinsman, d, summon'd me to Rome — The Ring 178
And d rose, and rear'd her arms, „ 222
I sat beside her d, and she gaspt : „ 287
You that know you're d . . , Forlorn 58
/ am Merlin, And / am d, Merlin and ike G. 8
worn-out Reason d in her house May leave the
windows Romney's R. 145
I&md now Pierced by a poison'd dart. Beath of (Enone 33
B in childbirth of dead sons. Akbar's Bream 12
Dyke Adown the crystal d's at Camelot Geraint and E. 470
Ah little rat that borest in the d Merlin and V. 112
From wall to d he stept, he stood, Achilles over the T. 15
Thrice from the d he sent his mighty shout, „ 30
Dynamite if d and revolver leave you courage LocJcsley H., Sixty 107
E
Each E month is various to present the world Two Voices 74
E mom my sleep was broken thro' Miller's B. 39
And steal you from e other ! Aylmer's Field 707
Who hate e other for a song. Lit. Squabbles 5
scarce could hear e other speak for noise Of clocks
and chimes, Princess i 215
with e light air On our mail'd heads : „ v '24A
while e ear was prick'd to attend A tempest, „ vi 280
and e base. To left and right, „ 353
Christmas beUs from hill to hill Answer e other in
the mist. In Mem. xxviii 4
E voice four changes on the wind, „ 9
and prey By « cold hearth, „ xcviii 18
That will not yield e other way. „ cii 20
and join'd E office of the social hour „ cxi 14
Where e man walks with his head in a cloud of
poisonous flies. Maud I iv 54
hiss'd e at other's ear What shall not be
recorded — Geraint and E. 634
With e chest lock'd and padlock'd thirty-fold. Merlin and V. 655
the knights, Glorying in e new glory, Last Tournament 336
Do e low office of your holy house ; Guinevere 682
IIow like e other was the birth of e ! Lover's Tale i 197
E way from verge to verge a Holy Land, „ 337
No sisters ever prized e other more. Sisters (E. and E.) 43
Sway'd by e Love, and swaying to e Love, Prin. Beatrice 19
birds that circle round the tower Are cheeping to e other The Ring 86
'Eftd (head) bummin' awaay loike a buzzard-clock
ower my 'e, N. Farmer, 0. S. 18
Break me a bit o' the esh for his 'e „ N. S. 41
clean as a flower fro' 'e to feeat : North. Cobbler 44
' When theer's naw 'e to a 'Ouse Village Wife 17
but 'e niver not lift oop 'is 'e : „ 88
fever 'ed baaked Jinny's 'e as bald as one o' them
„ 102
Spinster's S's. 76
100
Owd Rod 54
99
Enach Arden 872
Aylmer's Field 66
208
Locksley H., Sixty 228
Merlin and V. 133
Merlin and the G. 101
wi' a bran-new 'e o' the Queean,
an' the mark o' 'is 'e o' the chairs !
an' the Freea Traade nmn'd 'i my 'e,
an' clemm'd owd Roii by the 'e,
Eager and arose E to bring them down,
e eyes, that still Took joyfid note of all things
joyful.
But Edith's e fancy hurried with him
rising race were half as e for the light,
they hfted up Their e faces, wondering at the
strength,
But e to follow, I saw,
Eager-hearted E-h as a boy when first he leaves his
father's field, LocJcsley Hall 112
Eagerness in his heat and e Trembled and quiver'd, Pelleas and E. 283
Eagle {See also Blood-eagle, Heagle) Half-buried in the
E's down, ■ Palace of Art 122
Shall e's not be e's ? wrens be wrens ? Golden Tear 37
wonder of the e were the less, But he not less the e. „ 39
Unclasp'd the wedded e's of her belt,
An e clang an e to the sphere,
a poising e, bums Above the unrisen morrow : '
A train of dames : by axe and e sat,
Lean-headed E's yelp alone,
Till o'er the hills her e's flew
Again their ravening e rose In anger.
Must their ever-ravening e's beak and talon
Tho' the Roman e shadow thee,
Or e's wing, or insect's eye ;
Roman legions here again, And Caesar's e :
For this an E, a royal E,
an E rising or, the Sun In dexter chief ;
and started thro' mid air Bearing an e's nest :
Follow'd a rush of e's wings.
They rose to where their sovran e sails.
Left for the white-tail'd e to tear it,
rose as it were on the wings of an e
That young e of the West To forage for
herself
Eagle-borne ' Peace to thine e-b Dead nestling,
Eagle-circle sweep In ever-highering e-c's
Eagle-like e-l Stoop at thy will on Lancelot
Eagle-owl Round as the red eye of an E-o,
Eagle-peak I stared from every e-p,
Eaglet Foster'd the callow e —
Ear (organ of hearing) {See also Captain's-ear, Ear-
stunning) Pour round mine e's the livelong
bleat Ode to Memory 65
You never would hear it ; your e's are so dull ; Poet's Mind 35
at first to the e The warble was low. Dying Swan 23
With dinning sound my e's are rife, Elednore 135
The right e, that is fiU'd with dust, , Two Voices 116
His country's war-song thrill his e's : „ 153
A second voice was at mine e, „ 427
the jewel That trembles in her e : Miller's B. 172
drawing nigh Half-whisper'd in his e, (Enone 186
a sound Rings ever in her e's of armed men. „ 265
Or hollowing one hand against liis e, Palace of Art 109
Like Herod, when the shout was in his e's, „ 219
music in his e's his beating heart did make. Lotos-Eaters 36
a clear under-tone Thrill'd thro' mine e's B. of F. Women 82
horse That hears the com-bin open, prick'd my e's ; The Epic 45
murmuring at his e ' Quick, Quick ! M. d' Arthur 179
Rings in mine e's. The steer forgot to graze. Gardener's B. 85
my e's could hear Her liglitest breath ; Edwin Morris 64
pits of fire, that still Sing in mine e's. St. S. Stylites 185
Godiva 43
Princess Hi 106
„ iv 82
„ vii 128
211
Ode on Well. 112
119
Boddicea 11
39
In Mem. cxxiv 6
Com. of Arthur 35
Gareth and L. 44
Merlin and V. 475
Last Tournam£nt 15
417
Montenegro 1
Batt. of Brunanburh 107
The Wreck 69
Open. I. and C. Exhib. 28
Last Tournament 33
Gareth and L. 21
Balin and Balan 535
Gareth and L. 799
Demeter and P. 68
(Enone 212
(And hear me with thine e's,)
Talking Oak 82
Ear
167
Earl
Ear (o^an of hearing) (continued) K the sense is hard
To 2ilien e's, Love and Duty 52
song from out the distance in the ringing of thine e's ; Locksley HaU 84
Then filUp'd at the diamond in her e; Godiva 25
And whisper'd voices at his e. Day-Dm., Arrival 24
In her e he whispers gaily, L. of Burleigh 1
Worried his passive e with petty wrongs Enoch Arden 352
a whisper on her e, She knew not what; „ 515
likewise, in the ringing of his e's, „ 613
Twinkl«i the innumerable e and tail. The Brook 134
Call'd all her vital spirits into each e Aylmer's Field 201
And foam'd away his heart at Averill's e : „ 342
His message ringing in thine e's, „ 666
won mysterious way Thro' the seal'd e
True Devils with no e, they howl in tuno
Or lend an e to Plato where he says,
twinn'd as horse's e and eye.
my very e's were hot To hear them :
no livelier than the dame That whisper'd ' Asses' e's,'
To dying e's, when unto dying eyes
we should cram our e's with wool And so pace by :
at mine e Bubbled the nightingale and heeded not.
Each hissing in Ids neighbour's e ;
infuse my tale of love In the old king's e's,
while each e was prick'd to attend A tempest,
the Dead March wails in the people's e's :
And the e of man cannot hear,
But I should turn mine e's and hear
Not all ungrateful to thine e.
Yet in these e's, till hearing dies,
Till on mine e this message iaiis,
A willing e We lent him.
heart and e were fed To hear him,
words of life Breath'd in her e.
centre-bits Grind on the wakeful e
(Look at it) pricking a cockney e.
Whose e is cramm'd with his cotton,
With the evil tongue and the evil e,
hope to win her With his chirrup at her e.
It will ring in my heart and my e's, till I die.
An old song vexes my e ;
Modred laid his e beside the doors,
weary her e's with one continuous prayer,
and the sound was good to Gareth's e.
felt his young heart hammering in his e's.
He sow'd a slander in the common e,
she could speak whom his own e had heard
prick'd their Ught e's, and felt Her low firm voice
And e's to hear you even in his dreams.'
a heavily-galloping hoof Smote on her e.
Sea breams 260
L^icretius 147
Princess i 57
134
a 113
it) 51
65
265
v\5
241
vi 280
Ode on Well. 267
High. Pantheism 17
In Mem. xxxv 8
„ xxxviii 12
„ Ivii 9
„ Ixxxv 18
„ Ixxxvii 30
„ Ixxxix 22
„ Con. 53
Maud / 1 42
„ a; 22
42
51
„ XX 30
„ //i35
„ a 47
Com. of Arthur 2,2^
Gareth and Z. 19
312
322
Marr. of Geraint 450
Geraint and E. 113
193
429
448
hiss'd each at other's e What shall not be recorded — „ 634
tho' mine own e's heard you yestermorn — „ 740
in the King's own e Speak what has chanced ; „ 808
Then hand at e, and hearkening from what side Balin and Balan 415
Woods have tongues, As walls have e's : „ 531
And sowing one ill hint from e to e. Merlin and V. 143
That glorious roundel echoing in our e's, „ 426
All e's were prick'd at once, Lancelot and E. 724
Her father's latest word humm'd in her e, „ 780
till the e Wearias to hear it, „ 897
the world, the world, All e and eye ; „ 941
a stupid heart To interpret e and eye, „ 942
And took both e and eye ; Holy Grail 383
by mine eyes and by mine e's I swear, „ 864
From e to e with dogwhip-weals, Last Tournament 58
' A sound is in his e's ' ? „ 116
trumpet sounded as in a dream To e's but half-
awaked. „ 152
one of thy long asses' e's, „ 273
Modred still in green, all e and eye, Guinevere 24
To vex an e too sad to listen to me, „ 315
and past his e Went shrilling, ' Hollow, Pass, of Arthur 32
murmuring at his e, ' Quick, Quick ! „ 347
I come, great Mistress of the e and eye : Lover's Tale i 22
drop by drop, upon my e Fell ; „ 576
Ear (oi^an of hearing) (continued) And thro' the hasty
notice of the e Lover's Tale i 615
address'd More to the inward than the outward e, „ 721
marriage-bells, echoing in e and heart — • „ iv 3
A crueller reason than a crazy e, „ 32
Flying by each fine e, an Eastern gauze „ 291
we shook 'em off as a dog that shakes his e's The Revenge 54
But Charlie 'e sets back 'is e's. Village Wife 67
pibroch of Europe is ringing again in our e's ! Def. of Lucknow 97
lyre Is ever sounding in heroic e's Heroic hymns, Tiresias 181
Nor lend an e to random cries. Politics 7
at his e he heard a whisper ' Rome ' St. Telemachus 26
But Death had e's and eyes; Akbar's Bream 187
The toll of funeral in an Angel e D. of the Duke of C. 10
Ear (as of com) Bows all its e's before the roaring East ; Princess i 237
And pluck'd the ripen'd e's, „ H 2
For now is love mature in e.' In Mem. Ixxxi 4
some scatter'd e's. Some e's for Christ Sir J. Oldcastle 12
'Ear (hear) Dosn't thou 'e my 'erse's legs, N. Farmer, N. S. 1
that's what I 'e's 'em saily. „ 2
woii then woii — let ma 'e mys€n speiik. „ 8
that's what I 'e's 'im saiiy — „ 59
But I 'e's es 'e'd gie fur a howry owd book Village Wife 45
An' I liked to 'e it I did. Spinster's S's 18
ye knawed it wur pleasant to 'e, „ 21
so es all that I 'e's be true ; „ 56
wait till tha 'e's it be strikin' the hour, Owd Roa 18
thaw I didn't hailfe think as 'e'd 'e, „ 91
an' I 'e's 'em yit ; „ 106
An' Parson 'e 'e's on it all. Church-warden, etc. 37
'EJUrd (heard) An 'e 'um a bummin' awaiiy N. Farmer, O. S. 18
Theer wur a boggle in it, I often 'e 'um mysen ;
Moiist like a butter-bump, fur I 'e 'um about
an' about, „ 30
we 'e 'im a-mountin' oop 'igher an' 'igher, North. Cobbler 47
An' nawbody 'e on 'er sin. Village Wife 98
Ye niver 'e Steevie sweiir ^ Spinster's S's. 60
I 'e 'er a maiikin' 'er moan, „ 115
we couldn't ha' 'e tha call, Owd Rod 49
tummled up stairs, fur I 'e 'im, „ 63
as soon as 'e 'e 'is naiime, „ 93
An' I *e the bricks an' the baulks „ 109
Earl (See also Yerl) 0 the E was fair to see !
(repeat) The Sisters 6, 12, 18, 24, 30, 36
The daughter of a hundred E's, L. C. V. de Vere 7
that grim E, who ruled In Coventry : Godiva 12
eagles of her belt, The grim E's gift ; „ 44
' The old E's daughter died at my breast ; Lady Clare 25
Wherein were bandit e's, and caitiff knights, Marr. of Geraint 35
There musing sat the hoary-headed E, „ 295
Then sigh'd and smiled the hoary-headed E, „ 307
But none spake word except the hoary E : „ 369
while the Prince and E Yet spoke together, „ 384
Then suddenly addrest the hoary E : ' Fair Host
and E, I pray your courtesy ; „ 402
So spake the kindly-hearted E, „ 514
' E, entreat her by my love, „ 760
fetch Fresh victual for these mowers of our E ; Geraint and E. 225
And into no E's palace will I go. „ 235
And feast with these in honour of their E ; „ 287
' E, if you love me as in former years, „ 355
bow'd the all-amorous E, „ 360
thought she heard the wild E at the door, „ 381
To the waste earldom of another e, „ 438
Fled all the boon companions of the E, „ 477
Rode on a mission to the bandit E ; „ 527
And their own E, and their own souls, „ 577
the huge E cried out upon her talk, „ 651
Then strode the brute E up and down his hall, „ 712
I knew this E, when I myself Was half a bandit „ 794
the huge E lay slain within his hall. „ 806
King, duke, e, Count, baron — Lancelot and E. 464
Athelstan King, Lord among E's, Batt. of Brunanburh 2
Seven strong E's of the army of Anlaf „ 53
E's that were lured by the Hunger „ 123
Earldom
168
Earth
Earldom From mine own e foully ousted me ; Marr. of Geraint 459
Thou shalt give back their e to thy kin. „ 585
' This noble prince who won our e back, „ 619
Because we have our e back again. „ 701
To the waste e of another earl, Geraint and E, 438
ye shall share my e with me, girl, „ 626
Earlier (See also Season-earlier) I will turn that e
page. Locksley Hall 107
Break, happy land, into e flowers ! W. to Alexandra 10
But that was in her e maidenhood, Holy Grail 73
Earliest Because they are the e of the year). Ode to Memory 27
The e pipe of half-awaken'd birds Princess iv 50
like a guilty thing I creep At e morning to the door. In Mem. vii 8
With one that was his e mate ; „ Ixiv 24
The roofs, that heard our e cry, „ cii 3
she placed where morning's e ray Might strike it, Lancelot and E. 5
So what was e mine in e life. Lover's Tale i 247
nor tell Of this our e, our closest-drawn, „ 278
with e violets And lavish carol of clear- throated larks „ 282
first gray streak of e summer-dawn,
A soul that, watch'd from e youth.
Ancient Sage 220
To Marq. of Dufferin 25
Early {See also Rathe) gaze On the prime labour
of thine e days : Ode to Memory 94
Make thy grass hoar with e rime. Two Voices 66
love dispell'd the fear That I should die an e death : MiUer's D. 90
His e rage Had force to make me rhyme in youth, „ 192
Whole weeks and months, and e and late, The Sisters 10
In the e e morning the summer svm 'ill shine. May Queen, N. Y's. E. 22
And once I ask'd him of his e life, Edwin Morris 23
leave me here a little, while as yet 'tis e mom : Locksley Hall 1
Faint as a figure seen in e dawn Enoch Arden 357
mate had seen at e dawn Across a break „ 631
a rough piece Of e rigid colour, Aylmer's Fidd 281
Some pleasure from thine e years. In Mem. iv 10
e light Shall glimmer on the dewy decks. „ tar 11
Her e Heaven, her happy views ; „ xxxiii 6
to him she sings Of e faith and plighted vows ; „ xcvii 30
A light-blue lane of e dawn. And think of e days and thee, „ cxix 7
Half in dreams I sorrow after The delight of e skies ; Maud II iv 25
Enid, my e and my only love,
soul twines and mingles with the growths Of
vigorous e days,
I was then in e boyhood, Edith but a child
of six —
When over the valley. In e summers.
Early-silvering Thus over Enoch's e-s head
Earn {See also Addle) E well the thrifty months,
lease Of life, shalt e no more ;
metaphysics ! read and e our prize,
popular name such manhood e's,
Geraint and E. 307
Lover's Tale i 133
Locksley H., Sixty 258
Merlin, and the G. 18
Enoch Arden 622
Love thou thy land 95
WiU Water. 244
Princess Hi 300
Merlin and V. 787
child Should e from both the praise of heroism, Sisters {E. and E.) 251
Eam'd Thus e a scanty living for himself :
Has e himself the name of sparrow-hawk.
' Have I not e my cake in baking of it ?
Earnest (adj.) {See also Too-earnest) all, they said,
as e as the close ?
her full and e eye Over her snow-cold breast
dwell One e, e moment upon mine,
Earnest (seriousness) words were half in e, half in jest,)
take it — e wed with sport,
jest and e working sicle by side.
By these in e those in mockery call'd
Earnest (pledge) e of the things that they shall do :
Are e tliat ho loves her yet,
blood Hath e in it of far springs to be.
Earning save all e's to tlie uttermost
Ear-stonning e-s hail of Arfis crash Along the sounding
walls,' Tiresias 96
Earth O you that hold A nobler office upon e Than arms, To the Queen 2
E Ls dry to the centre. Nothing will Die 20
Tlie old e Had a birth, AU Things will Die 37
And the old e must die. „ 41
in her first sleep c breathes stilly: Leonine Eleg. 7
And Thou and peace to e were bom. Supp. Confessions 26
whene'er E goes to e, with grief, „ 38
Enoch Arden 818
Marr. of Geraint 492
Gareth and L. 575
Princess, Con. 21
Qinone 141
Love and Duty 37
Gardener's D. 23
Day-Dm., Ep. 11
Princess iv 563
Last Tournament 135
Locksley Hall 118
In Mem. xcvii 15
Merlin and V. 557
Enoch Arden 86
Earth (continued) Hating to wander out on e,
To the e — until the ice would melt
Breathed low around the rolling e
star The black e with brilliance rare,
sure she deem'd no mist of e could dull
Over the dark dewy e forlorn.
Over its grave i' the e so chilly ; (repeat)
And said the e was beautiful,
spirit of man, Making e wonder,
It would shrink to the e if you came in.
The house was builded of the e,
Adeline, Scarce of e nor all divine,
The choicest wealth of all the e.
But breathe it into e and close it up
What is there in the great sphere of the e,
tme. To what is loveliest upon e.'
Dissolved the riddle of the e.
To that last nothing under e ! *
Have I not found a happy e ?
Hear me, O E, hear me, O Hills,
0 happy e, how canst thou bear my weight ?
There are enough unhappy on this e.
All e and air seem only burning fire.'
common clay ta'en from the common e To ■
Lord of the visible e,
oft the riddle of the painful e Flash'd thro' her
mouldering with the dull e's mouldering sod.
Was never bom into the e.
note. Should thus be lost for ever from the e,
round e is every way Bound by gold chains
Felt e as air beneath me.
Unfit for e, imfit for heaven.
Heaven, and E, and Time are choked,
men on e House in the shade of comfortable roofs.
The fat e feed thy branchy root,
dark E follows wheel'd in her ellipse ;
strength which in old days Moved e and heaven ;
In days far-off, on that dark e,
1 e in e forget these empty courts,
And the kindly e shall slumber,
perish one by one. Than that e should stand at gaze
one low churl, compact of thankless e.
For we are Ancients of the e.
This e is rich in man and maid ;
This whole wise e of light and shade Comes out
Like all good things on e !
That are the flower of the e ? '
Bore to e her body, drest In the dress
Move eastward, happy e, and leave
' Cold altar. Heaven and e shall meet
No public life was his on e,
he dug His fingers into the wet e,
this, a milky-way on e, Like visions
one kiss Was Leolin's one strong rival upon e ;
Never since our bad e became one sea,
e Lightens from her own central Hell — ■
All over earthy, like a piece of e,
blood by Sylla shed Came driving rainlike down again on e, Lucretius 48
never yet on e Could dead flesh creep, „ 130
two sphere lamps blazon'd like Heaven and E Princess i 223
close upon the Sun, Than our man's e ; „ « 37
broad and bounteous E Should bear a double growth „ 179
there is nothing upon e More miserable „ Hi 259
Leapt from the dewy shoulders of the E, „ « 43
sweet influences Of e and heaven ? „ 192
fixt As are the roots of e and base of all ; „ 446
Part roll'd on the e and rose again „ 497
twists the grain with such a roar that E Reels, „ 528
she set the child on the e; » ^. ^^^
lies the E all Danaii to the stars, „ vii 182
black e yawns : the mortal disappears ; Ode on Well. 269
Supp. Confessions 57
81
The Winds, etc. 3
Ode to Memory 20
„ 38
„ 69
A spirit haunts 10, 22
A Character 12
The Poet 52
Poet's Mind 37
Deserted House 15
Adeline 3
Eleanor e 19
Wan Sculptor 12
/// were loved 2
Mariana in the S. 64
Two Voices 170
333
MtUer's D. 25
(Enone 36
„ 237
„ 239
„ 268
— , With Pal. of Art n
Palace of Art 119
213
261
To J. S. 32
M. d' Arthur 90
„ 254
Gardener's D. 212
St. S. Stylites 3
104
106
Talking Oak 273
Golden Year 24
Ulysses 67
Tithonus 48
,, 75
Locksley Hall 130
„ 180
Godiva 66
Day-Dm., L'Envoi 19
Will Water. 65
67
202
Lady Clare 68
L. of Burleigh 98
Move Eastward 1
The Letters 7
You might have won 23
Enoch Arden 780
Aylmer's Field 160
557
635
760
Sea Dreams 99
wide hall with e's invention stored.
And gath<;ring all the fruits of e
The gloom that saddens Heaven and E,
I cast to e a seed.
Ode Inter. Exhih. 2
41
The Daisy 102
The Flower 2
Earth
169
Earth
Earth (continued) To a sweet little Eden on e that I know, The Islet 14
E, these solid stars, this weight of body High. Pantheism 5
You have bitten into the heart of the e, Window, Winter 18
Be merry on e as you never were merry before, „ Ay 2
Light, so low upon e, „ Mart. Morn. 1
Where he in English e is laid. In Mem. xviii 2
This e had been the Paradise It never look'd „ xxiv 6
A rainy cloud possess'd the e, „ xxx 3
Else e is darkness at the core, „ xxxiv 3
The baby new to e and sky, „ xlvl
The silent snow possess'd the e, „ Ixxviii 3
No lower life that e's embrace May breed „ Ixxxii 3
he bare The use of virtue out of e : „ 10
To wander on a darken'd e, „ Ixxxv 31
To myriads on the genial e, „ xci.v 14
A lever to uplift the e And roll it „ cxiii 15
As dying Nature's e and lime ; „ cxviii 4
They say. The soUd e whereon we tread „ 8
0 e, what changes hast thou seen ! „ cxxiii 2
yet I keep Within his court on e, „ cxxvi 7
The brute e lightens to the sky, „ cxxvii 15
under whose command Is E and E's, „ Con. 131
eft was of old the Lord and Master of E, Maud I iv 31
Put down the passions that make e Hell ! „ a; 46
This lump of e has left his estate „ xvi 1
Has our whole e gone nearer to the glow „ xviii 78
Were it e in an earthy bed ; „ xxii 70
dawn of Eden bright over e and sky, „ // i 8
kisses sweeter sweeter Than anything on e. „ iv 10
she was fairest of all flesh on e. Com. of Arthur 3
Eeddening the sun with smoke and e with blood, „ 37
0 e that soundest hollow imder me, „ 84
the bounds of heaven and e were lost — „ 372
and the soUd e became As nothing, „ 442
And loveUest of all women upon e. Mart, of Geraint 21
better were I laid in the dark e, „ 97
1 will track this vermin to their e's : „ 217
' I have track'd him to his e.' „ 253
if he die, why e has e enough To hide him. Geraint and E. 554
draws in the wither'd leaf And makes it e, „ 634
Sir Lancelot with his eyes on e, Balin and Balan 253
Leapt in a semicircle, and Ut on e ; „ 414
beat the cross to e, and break the King „ 458
Tore from the branch, and cast on e, „ 539
O Merlin, may this e, if ever I, Merlin and V. 345
May this hard e cleave to the Nadir hell „ 349
men at most differ as Heaven and e, „ 814
spikes and splinters of the wood The dark e „ 938
who loves me must have a touch of e ; Lancelot and E. 133
Might wear as fair a jewel as is on e, „ 240
hard e shake, and a low thunder of arms. „ 460
He bore a knight of old repute to the e, „ 492
An armlet for the roundest arm on e, „ 1183
for all her shining hair Was smear'd with e, Holy Grail 210
heaven appear'd so blue, nor e so green, „ 365
Which never eyes on e again shall see. „ 532
Cared not for her, nor anything upon e.' „ 612
But live like an old badger in his e, With e about
him everywhere, „ 629
And felt the boat shock e, „ 812
Until this e he walks on seems not e, „ 912
At random looking over the brown e Pelleas and E. 32
One rose, a rose that gladden'd e and sky, „ 402
the one true knight on e. And only lover ; „ 494
Clung to the dead e, and the land was still. Guinevere 8
seem'd the heavens upbreaking thro' the e, „ 391
note, Should thus be lost for ever from the e, Pass, of Arthur 258
round e is every way Boimd by gold chains „ 422
will not pass, till e And heaven pass too, Lover's Tale i 71
My inward sap, the hold I have on e, „ 166
pillars which from e uphold Our childhood, „ 220
High over all the azure-circled e, „ 390
and the e They fell on became hallow'd evermore. „ 439
Scarce housed within the circle of this E, „ 479
Sooner E Might go round Heaven, „ 481
Earth (continued) all the separate Edens of this e, Lover's Tale 551
had the e beneath me yawning cloven „ 602
all from these to where she touch'd on e, „ iv 167
loved His master more than all on e beside. „ 257
Of all things upon e the dearest to me.' „ 319
Crazy with laughter and babble and e's new wine, To A. Tennyson 2
Turning my way, the loveliest face on e. Sisters (E. and E.) 87
sent Our Edith thro' the glories of the e, „ 225
gleam from our poor e May touch thee, Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 18
Twice do we hurl them to e from the ladders Def. of Lucknow 58
chains For him who gave a new heaven, a new e, Columbus 20
suck in with his milk hereafter — e A sphere. „ 38
a tent Spread over e, and so this e was flat : „ 48
half-assured this e might be a sphere. „ 60
Spain once the most chivalric race on e, Spain then
the mightiest, wealthiest realm on e, „ 204
boasted he sprang from the oldest race upon e. V. of Maeldune 4
her dark orb Touch'd with e's light— De Prof., Two G. 10
Glode over e till the glorious creature Batt. of Brunanhurh 29
One night when e was winter-black. To E. Fitzgerald 21
Two voices heard on e no more ; „ 41
clearer day Than our poor twilight dawn on e — Tiresias 206
My close of e's experience May prove as peaceful „ 216
without any delight In anything here upon e ? Despair 8
no soul on the e below, „ 19
own selves on an e that bore not a flower; „ 44
We never had found Him on e, this e is a fatherless Hell — „ 57
left in the rocks of an e that is dead ? „ 86
And e as fair in hue! Ancient Sage 24
blue of sky and sea, the green of e, „ 41
' And since — ^from when this e began — „ 53
stir the sleeping e, and wake The bloom „ 93
Who clings to e, and once would dare Hell-heat „ 115
In vain you tell mo ' J5 is fair ' „ 169
And we, the poor e's dying race, „ 178
e's dark forehead flings athwart the heavens „ 200
The lark has past from e to Heaven The Flight 62
gone as all on e will go. Lochsley H., Sixty 46
E at last a warless world, „ 165
for is not E as yet so young ? — „ 166
Can it, till this outworn e be dead „ 174
smiling downward at this earthlier e of ours, „ 183
Is there evil but on e ? „ 197
Many an Mon moulded e before her highest,
man, was bom. Many an iEon too may
Eass when e is manless and forlorn, E so
uge, and yet so bounded — „ 205
e will be Something other than the widest „ 231
E may reach her earthly-worst, „ 233
E would never touch her worst, „ 270
111 To waste this e began — Epilogue 23
And so does E ; for Homer's fame, „ 58
E passes, all is lost In what they prophesy, „ 64
unlaborious e and oarless sea ; To Virgil 20
They call'd her ' Keverence ' here upon e. Dead Prophet 27
she swept The dust of e from her knee. „ 32
angel eyes In e's recurring Paradise. Helen's Tower 12
This e has never home a nobler man. Epit. On Gordon 4
His isle, the mightiest Ocean-power on e, The Fleet 6
cry that rang thro' Hades, E, and Heaven ! Demeter and P. 33
one black blur of e Left by that closing chasm, „ 37
glancing from his height On e a fruitless fallow, „ 118
in the harvest hymns of E The worship „ 148
as this poor e's pale history runs, — Fastness 3
and all these old revolutions of e ; „ 29
Stranger than e has ever seen ; The Bing 38
An ever lessening e — and she perhaps, „ 46
Gleam'tZ for a moment in her own on e. „ 297
lost the moment of their past on e, „ 464
that poor link With e is broken, „ 476
E and Hell will brand your name. Forlorn 51
Would E tho' hid in cloud not be follow'd Happy 97
name that e will not forget Till e To Ulysses 27
She comes, and E is glad To roll her North Prog, of Spring 48
lured me from the household fire on e, Romney's R. 40
Earth
170
East
Eontney's R. 128
Parnassus 7
Far-far-away 2
„ 14
The Play 1
Death of (Enone 9
St. Telemachus 18
Akhar's Bream 84
„ 96
105
141
The Dreamer 2
3
17
25
Poets and Critics 3
D. of the Duke of C. 8
13
Merlin and V. 81
Demeter and P. 49
OcZe to Memory 61
Demeter and P. 102
128
Aylmer's Field 750
Locksley H., Sixty 18
183
Xofe a«<Z Z)Miy 1
iiS^. Agnes' Eve 15
19
Aylmer's Field 784
"0(Ze on IFeZZ. 279
7w Mem. xxxvii 13
„ arZiw 11
Earth {continued) throbs Thro' e, and all her graves,^
Sounding for ever and ever thro' E
e's green stole into heaven's own hue,
all the bounds of e, Far-far-away ?
Act first, this E, a stage so gloom'd
In silence wept upon the flowerless e.
• Is e On fire to the West ?
Yea, Alia here on e, who caught and held
mists of e Fade in the noon of heaven,
Let the Sun, Who heats our e to yield us grain
draw The crowd from wallowing in the mire of e,
' The meek shall inherit the e '
dream'd that a Voice of the E went wailingly past
Moaning your losses, 0 E,
The Eeign of the Meek upon e,
Minds on this round e of ours
For if this e be ruled by Perfect Love,
His shadow darkens e :
Earth-angel 0 Heaven's own white E-a,
Earth-baldness e-b clothes itself afresh,
Earthen Drawing into his narrow e urn,
Earth-Goddess I, E- G, cursed the Gods of Heaven.
I, E-G, am but ill-content With them,
Earthlier myself Am lonelier, darker, e for my loss
your modem amourist is of easier, e make,
smiling downward at this e earth of ours.
Earthly Of love that never found his e close,
As this pale taper's e spark,
So in mine e house I am.
May not that e chastisement suffice ?
Lay your e fancies down,
For i am but an e Muse,
May some dim touch of e things Surprise thee
the song of woe Is after all an e song : „ Ivii 2
The head hath miss'd an e wreath : „ Ixxiii 6
Till slowly worn her e robe, „ Ixxxiv 33
For she is e of the mind, „ cxiv 21
he defileth heavenly things With e uses ' — Balin and Balan 422
was it e passion crost ? ' Holy Grail 29
e heats that spring and sparkle out „ 33
how should E measure mete The Heavenly-
unmeasured Lover's Tale i 473
divorce thee not From e love and life — Bed. Poem Prin. Alice 4
happier voyage now Toward no e pole. Sir J. Franklin 4
Trusting no longer that e flower would be heavenly
fruit — Despair 35
filial eyes Have seen the loneliness of e thrones, Prin. Beatrice 14
Miriam, breaks her latest e link With me to-day. The Ring 47
Earthly-best or if she gain her e-b, Locksley H., Sixty 233
Earthly-heavenliest Most loveliest, e-h harmony ? Lover's Tale i 279
Earthly-wise blessed Lord, I speak too e, Holy Grail 627
Earthly-worst Earth may reach her e-w, Locksley H., Sixty 233
Earth-Mother child Of thee, the great E-M, Demeter and P. 97
reap with me, E-m, in the harvest hymns „ 148
Earth-narrow whether this e-n life Be yet but yolk, Ancient Sage 129
Earthquake {See also World's-earthquake) Blight
and famine, plague and e, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 115
flood, fire, e, thunder, wrought Such waste Aylmer's Field 639
wholly out of sight, and sink Past e — Lucretius 153
Shatter'd into one e in one day „ 251
like a bell ToU'd by an e in a trembling tower, Princess vi 332
crack of e shivering to your base SpUt you, Pelleas and E. 465
An e, my loud heart-beats, Lover's Tale ii 193
a wave like the wave that is raised by an e grew, The Revenge 115
another wild e out-tore Clean from our lines Def. of Lti,cknow 61
an e always moved in the hollows under the ^Jells, V. of Maeldune 107
Shrine-shattering e, fire, flood, thunderbolt, Tiresias 61
Gone Uke fires and floods and e's Locksley E., Sixty 40
Thunder, or the rending e, or the famine. Faith 4
Earthquake-cloven yawning of an e-c chasm. Lover's Tale i 377
Earth-shock'd Above some fair metropolis, e-s, — „ ii 62
Earth-sweeping upbare A broad e-s pall of whitest lawn „ 78
Earthy Were it earth in an e bed ; Maud I xxii 70
All over e, like a piece of earth, Sea Dreams 99
Earwig See BatUe-Twig
Ease Two lives bound fast in one with golden e ;
' Why, if man rot in dreamless e,
Alice , you were ill at e ;
Wherein at e for aye to dwell,
long rest or death, dark death, or dreamful e.
You ask me, why, tho' ill at e,
control Our being, lest we rust in e.
Seeing with how great e Nature can smile.
With garrulous e and oily courtesies
We break our laws with e,
but your Highness breaks with e The law
I would set their pains at e.
wrought All kind of service with a noble e
Drank till he jested with all e.
She lied with e ; but horror-stricken he,
he let his wisdom go For e of heart.
Them surely I can silence with all e.
they lost themselves. Yet with aU e,
And found no e in turning or in rest ;
Who read but on my breviary with e,
ruffians at their e Among their harlot-brides.
But on that day, not being all at e,
And yet my heart is ill at e,
Eased And e her heart of madness . . .
Easeful wilt thou leave Thine e biding here.
Easier With fuller profits lead an e life.
But evermore it seem'd an e thing
your modern amourist is of e, earthlier make.
East Till that o'ergrown Barbarian in the E
And slowly rounded to the e
light increased With freshness in the dawning e.
Four courts I made, E, West and South and North,
Smote by the fresh beam of the springing e ;
dark E, Unseen, is brightening to his bridal mom.
went To greet their fairer sisters of the E.
The ever-silent spaces of the E,
Yet hold me not for ever in thine E:
Across the boundless e we drove.
The blaze upon the waters to the e ;
I to the E And he for Italy —
darken'd in the west. And rosed in the e :
King of the E altho' he seem.
Bows all its ears before the roaring E ;
Nor stunted squaws of West or E ;
touch'd Above the darkness from their native E.
' Alas your Highness breathes full E,'
beam Of the E, that play'd upon them,
a feast Of wonder, out of West and E,
Circumstance 5
Two Voices 280
Miller's D. 146
Palace of Art 2
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 53
You ask me, why 1
Love thou thy land 42
Lucretius 174
Princess i 164
„ vi 323
325
In Mem. Ixiii 8
Gareth and L. 489
Geraint and E. 290
Balin and Balan 525
Merlin and V. 893
Lancelot and E. 109
442
901
Holy Grail 545
Last Tournament 427
Sister's (E. and E.) 209
The Flight 97
Forlorn 82
Gareth and L. 128
Enoch Arden 145
Geraint and E. 108
Locksley H., Sixty 18
Poland 7
Mariana in the S. 79
Two Voices 405
Palace of Art 21
M. d' Arthur 214
Gardener's D. 72
188
Tiihonus 9
„ 64
The Voyage 38
Enoch Arden 594
The Brook 1
Sea Dreams 40
Lucretius 133
Princess i 237
„ ii 78
„ Hi 22
„ 231
„ V 259
Ode Inter. Exhib. 21
The bitter e, the misty summer And gray metropolis The Daisy 103
voices go To North, South, E, and West ; Voice and the P. 14
Far in the E Boiidic^a, standing loftily charioted, Boiidicea 3
Flown to the e or the west. Window, Gone 7
O Father, touch the e, and light In Mem. xxx 31
heaved a windless flame Up the deep E, „ Ixxii 14
E and West, without a breath, „ xev 62
What lightens in the lucid e „ co 24
Fiercely flies The blast of North and E, „ cvii 7
Blush from West to E, Blush from E to West, Till
the West is E, Maud I xvii 21
breeze that streams to thy delicious E, „ xviii 16
there be dawn in West and eve in E? Gareth and L. 712
pale and bloodless e began To quicken Marr. of Geraint 534
There lived a king in the most Eastern E, Merlin and V. 555
in her chamber up a tower to the e Lancelot and E. 3
star Led on the gray-hair'd wisdom of the e ; Holy Grail 453
' One night my pathway swerving e, „ 634
Let the fierce e scream thro' your eyelet-holes, Pelleas and E. 469
water Moab saw Come round by the E, Last Tournament 483
Smote by the fresh beam of the springing e ; Pass, of Arthur 382
deeds Of England, and her banner in the E ? Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 21
Or Amurath of the E? Sir J. Oldcastle 97
made West E, and sail'd the Dragon's mouth, Colun^bus 25
our most ancient E Moriah with Jerusalem ; „ 80
Up from the E hither Saxon and Angle Batt. of Brunanourh 117
Who wert the voice of England in the E. Epit. on Stratford 4
East
171
Echo
East (continued) clash The golden keys of E and
West. To Marq. of Dufferin 4
she lent The sceptres of her West, her E, „ 6
Easterday For it was past the time of E. Gareth and L. 186
Eastern Below the city's e towers : Fatima 9
captain of my dreams Ruled in the e sky. D. of F. Women 264
Far up the porch there grew an E rose, Gardener's D. 123
Beyond the fair green field and e sea. Love and Duty 101
' There lived a king in the most E East, Merlin and V. 555
an E gauze With seeds of gold — Lover's Tale iv 291
Who reads your golden E lay, To E. Fitzgerald 32
e flowers large, Some dropping low Arabian Nights 61
But she was sharper than an e wind, Audley Court 53
The foaming grape of e France. In Mem., Con. 80
climb'd That e tower, and entering barr'd her door, Lancelot and E. 15
at the e end. Wealthy with wandering lines Holy Grail 251
Eastward Past e from the falling sun. Balin and Balan 320
singing in the topmost tower To the e : Holy Grail 835
East-wind In tlie stormy e-w straining, L. of Shalott iv 1
Easy (See also Easy) For it's e to find a rhyme.
(repeat) Window, Ay 6, 12
sleepless nights Of my long life have made it
e to me. Merlin and V. 680
He will answer to the purpose, e things to
understand — Locksley Hall 55
Fast flow'd the current of her e tears, Enoch Arden 865
Were no false passport to that e realm, Aylmer's Field 183
I said no, Yet being an e man, gave it : Princess i 149
winning e grace, No doubt, for slight delay, „ iv 330
If e patrons of their kin Have left the last free race Third of Feb. 39
doubted whether daughter's tenderness, Or
e nature, Marr. of Geraint 798
down the highway moving on With e laughter Tiresias 200
Flowing with e greatness and touching The Wreck 50
E95y an' a says it e an' freeii N. Farmer, 0. S. 25
Lets them inter 'eaven e es leaves their debts to
be paiiid. Village Wife 94
but they wasn't that e to please, „ 117
Eat The creaking cords which wound and e Supp. Confessions 36
princes over-bold Have e our substance, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 76
thou may'st warble, e and dwell. The Blackbird 4
we sat and e And talk'd old matters over; Audley Court 28
e wholesome food. And wear warm clothes, St. S. Stylites 108
I will not e my heart alone. In Mem. cviii 3
' A thousand pips e up your sparrow-hawk ! Marr. of Geraint 274
I will enter, I will e With all the passion „ 305
those That e in Arthur's hall at Camelot. „ 432
' Friend, let her e ; the damsel is so faint.' Geraint and E. 206
My lord, e also, tho' the fare is coarse, „ 208
And rising on the sudden he said, 'El „ 614
it makes me mad to see you weep. E\ „ 617
E and be glad, for I account you mine.' „ 647
thrust the dish before her, crying, ' E.' „ 655
' No, no,' said Enid, vext, ' I will not e „ 656
man upon the bier arise. And e with me.' „ 658
Before I well have drunken, scarce can e : „ 662
Not e nor drink ? And wherefore wail for one, „ 674
E's scarce enow to keep his pulse abeat ; Balin and Balan 105
And one said ' E in peace ! a liar is he, „ 607
i Who meant to e her up in that wild wood Merlin and V. 260
j e's And uses, careleas of the rest ; „ 462
' After the king, who e in Arthur's halls. Lancelot and E. 184
I knew For one of those who e in Arthur's hall ; Holy Grail 24
but e not thou with Mark, Last Tournament 532
Is it worth his while to e, Voice spake, etc. 7
: "Eat (heat) What's the 'e of this 'illside to the 'e North. Cobbler 6
Eaten (See also Temple-eaten, Worm-eaten) after all
had e, then Geraint, Marr. of Geraint 397
' Boy,' said he, ' I have e all, Geraint and E. 217
when Earl Doorm had e all he would, „ 609
And myself, I had e but sparely, V. of Maeldune 69
Eater See Lotos-Eaters
Eating E the Lotos day by day, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 60
Until the ulcer, e thro' my skin, St. S. Stylites 67
and e not. Except the spare chance-gift „ 77
Eating (continued) And e hoary grain and pulse the
steeds. Spec, of Iliad. 21
And a morbid e lichen fixt On a heart Maud I vi 77
the village boys Who love to vex him e, Geraint and E. 561
'tis e dry To dance without a catch. Last Tournament 249
Eavedrops Then I rise, the e fall, Maud II iv 62
'Eaven (heaven) Lets them inter 'e eiisy es leiiv&s Village Wife 94
Eaves (See also Bower-eaves, Moimtain-eaves)
dropp'd their silken e.
One, almost to the martin-haunted e
Fly to her, and fall upon her gilded e,
closing e of wearied eyes I sleep till dusk
Who munnurest in the foliaged e
Makes daggers at the sharpen'd e.
With hands for e, uplooking and almost Waiting
And murmur at the low-dropt e of sleep,
now from all the dripping e Tlie spear of ice
Ebb (s) We left the dying e that faintly lipp'd
Have e and flow conditioning their march,
float or fall in endless e and flow ;
I could rest, a rock in e's and flows,
from my farthest lapse, my latest e,
Sway'd by vaster e's and flows
Ebb (verb) brood, And e into a former life.
According to my humour e and flow.
When the tide e's in sunshine,
Ebb'd sat round the wassail-bowl. Then half-way e :
(possibly He flow'd and e uncertain,
' O mine have e away for evermore.
Ebbing felt them slowly e, name and fame.'
Ebony brow of pearl Tress'd with redolent e,
cups of emerald, there at tables of e lay,
Echo (s) So took e with delight, (repeat)
Lull'd e'es of laborious day Come to you.
An e from a measured strain.
Her eyelids
Talking Oak 209
Aylmer's Field 163
Princess iv 94
In Mem. Ixvii 11
„ cvii 8
Lover's Tale i 311
a 122
Prog, of Spring 5
Audley Court 12
Golden Year 30
W. to Marie Alex. 27
Marr. of Geraint 812
Lover's Tale i 90
Locksley H., Sixty 194
Sonnet To 2
D. of F. Women 134:
Princess vi 162
The Epic 6
Aylmer's Field 218
Merlin and V. 439
437
Arabian Nights 138
Boadicea 61
The Owl a 4
Margaret 29
Miller's D. m
To hear the dewy e'es calling From cave to cave Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 94
Were faint Homeric e'es, nothing-worth. The Epic 39
the great e flap And buffet round the hills, Golden Year 76
Like hints and e'es of the world Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 7
Like e'es from beyond a hollow, Aylmer's Field 298
crashing with long e'es thro' the land, „ 338
E answer'd in her sleep From hollow fields : Princess, Pro. 66
An e like a ghostly woodpecker, „ 217
Blow, bugle, blow, set the wild e's flying, (repeat)
Blow, bugle ; answer, e'es, dying, dying, dying, (repeat)
Our e'es roll from soul to soul.
And answer, e'es, answer, dying, dying,
A step Of lightest e,
barrier like a wild horn in a land Of e'es,
And now and then an e started up.
The proof and e of all human fame,
E on e Dies to the moon.
A hollow e of my own —
Like e'es in sepulchral halls.
As e'es out of weaker times,
E there, whatever is ask'd her,
an e of something Read with a boy's delight,
a million horrible bellowing e'es broke
And the woodland e rings ;
great Queen, In words whose e lasts,
old e'es hidden in the wall Rang out
Like the last e bom of a great cry,
And mellow'd e'es of the outer world —
melody That drowns the nearer e'es.
e'es of the hollow-banked brooks Are fashion'd
If so be that the e of that name Ringing
Whose e shall not tongue thy glorious doom,
A dying e from a falling wall ;
Silent e'es ! You, my Leonard,
Echo (verb) Hear a song that e's clearly.
The haunts of memory e not.
With sounds that e still.
' Hear how the bushes e !
Then made his pleasure e, hand to hand,
E roimd his bones for evermore.
iv 5, 17
6,12
15
18
215
„ «487
„ vi 369
Ode on Wdl. 145
Minnie and Winnie 11
In Mem. Hi 11
„ Iviii 2
„ Con. 22
Maud I i 4:
„ vii 9
„7/i24
„ iv 38
Marr. of Geraint 782
Pelleas and E. 366
Pass, of Arthur 459
Lover's Tale i 208
533
566
644
Tiresias 136
Ancient Sage 263
Locksley H., Sixty 265
L. of Shallot i 30
Two Voices 369
D. of F. Women 8
Gardener's D. 98
Aylmer's Field 257
Ode on Wdl. 12
Echo
172
Edmnnd
Echo (verb) (eontintted) The last wheel e'es away. Maud I xxii 26
the great wave that e'es round the world ; Marr. of Geraint 420
rummage buried in the walls Might e, Balin and Balan 417
Echo'd (adj.) hear her e song Throb thro' the ribbed
stone ; Palace of Art 175
Echo'd (verb) further inland, voices e — ' Come M. d' Arthur, Ep. 27
For while our cloisters e frosty feet, Princess, Pro. 183
And e by old folk beside their fires Com. of Arthur 417
second e him, ' Lord, we have heard from our
wise man Gareth and L. 200
E the walls ; a light twinkled ; „ 1370
and the forest e ' fool.' Merlin and V. 974
And changed itself and e in her heart, Lancelot and E. 782
he wellnigh deem'd His wish by hers was e ; Pelleas and E. 121
That timorously and faintly e mine. Sisters (E. and E.) 164
that underground thunderclap e away, Def. of Lucknow 32
a song Which often e in me, Eomney's R. 85
All her harmonies e away? — To Master of B. 12
would not die, but e on to reach Honorius, St. Tdemachus 76
Echoing (See also Ever-echoing) the e dance Of reboant
whirlwinds, Suff. Confessions 96
with e feet he threaded The secretest walks The Poet 9
And the wave-worn horns of the e bank, Dying Swan 39
was thrown From his loud fount upon the e
lea : — Mine he the strength 4
shiver of dancing leaves is thrown About its e
chambers wide, Maud I vi 74
E all night to that sonorous flow Palace of Art 27
Illyrian woodlands, e falls Of water. To E. L. 1
e me you cry ' Our house is left unto us desolate ' ? Aylmer's Field 736
And heel against the pavement e, Geraint and E. 271
That glorious roundel e in our ears, Merlin and V. 426
the father answer'd, e ' highest ? ' Lancelot and E. 1078
e yell with yell, they fired the tower, Last Tournament 478
Or ghostly footfall e on the stair. Guinevere 507
Echo-like Then e-l our voices rang ; In Mem. xxx 13
Eclipse Gaiety without e Wearieth me, Lilian 20
As when the sun, a crescent of e. Vision of Sin 10
The shadow of His loss drew hke e, Ded. of Idylls 14
Ecliptic Sear'd by the close e, Aylm^'s Field 193
Ecstasy So tranced, so rapt in ecstasies, Eleiinore 78
the boy Was half beyond himself for e. Gareth and L. 524
To holy virgins in their ecstasies. Holy Grail 867
Eddied e into suns, that wheeling cast Princess ii 118
Eddy (s) vexed eddies of its wayward brother : Isahd 33
There the river e whirls, L. of Shalott ii 15
In crystal eddies glance and poise, Miller's D. 52
I cannot keep My heart an e Princess vi 322
The fancy's tenderest e wreathe. In Mem. xlix 6
No doubt vast eddies in the flood „ cxxviii 5
Charm'd amid eddies of melodious airs, Lover's TaJe i 450
Eddy (verb) those that e round and round ? In Mem. liii 12
Eddying (part) (See also Multitudinous-eddying) Were
flooded over with e song. Dying Swan 42
I bubble into e bays. The Brook 41
cold streamlet curl'd Thro' all his e cov&s ; In Mem. Ixxix 10
Eddying (s) The e of her garments caught from thee Ode to Memory 31
Eden Saw distant gates of E gleam. Two Voices 212
Could keep me from that E where she dwelt. Gardener's D. 191
Summer isl&s of E lying in dark-purple spheres Locksley Hall 104
And eveiy bird of E burst In carol, Da.y-Dm., L'Knvoi 43
Set in this E of all plenteoasness, Enoch Arden 561
Then comes the statelier E back to men : Princess mi 293
a sweet little E on earth that I know, The Islet 14
The brooks of E mazily murmuring, Milton 10
Kings E thro' the budded quicks. In Mem. Ixxxviii 2
the moon Of E on its bridal bower : „ Con. 28
O dawn of E bright over earth and sky, Maud II i 8
Like that which kept the heart of E green Geraint and E. 770
And all the separate E's of this earth. Lover's Tale i 551
dLsea-seful creature which in E was divine, Happy 33
Eden-isle Your Oriental E-i's, To Ulysses 38
Edge (See also Casement-edge, Sword-edge) the fading
e's of box beneath, A spirit haunts 19
bright and sharp As e's of scymetar. Kate 12
Edge (continued) Stream'd onward, lost their e's,
three times slipping from the outer e,
where the prone e of the wood began (repeat)
here and there on lattice e's lay
That axelike e unturnable, our Head,
grass There growing longest by the meadow's e.
The memory's vision hath a keener e.
sweeping down Took the e's of the pall.
Edged (See also Shrill-edged, Thorough-edged) scoi
E with sharp laughter.
Found a dead man, a letter e with death
Beside him.
Edge-tools ill jesting with e-t !
Edict waiting still The e of the will
Edith (See also Edith Montfort) his E, whom he loved
As heiress
often, in his walks with E, claim A distant kinship
shook the heart of E hearing him.
E, whose pensive beauty, perfect else,
and roU'd His hoop to pleasure E,
make-believes For E and himself :
the labourers' homes, A frequent haunt of E,
Each, its own charm ; and E's everywhere ; and E
ever visitant with him. He but less loved than
E, of her poor :
But E's eager fancy hurried with him
oriental gifts on everyone And most on E :
E whom his pleasure was to please,
was E that same night ; Pale as the Jephtha's
daughter,
its worth Was being E's.
would go. Labour for his own E, and return
remembering His former talks with E,
the keen shriek ' Yes love, yes E, yes,'
dagger which himself Gave E, redden'd with no
bandit's blood : ' From E ' was engraven on
the blade,
many too had known E among the hamlets round,
D. ofF. Women 50
The Epic 11
Enoch Arden 67, 373
Princess ii 29
203
Geraint and E. 257
Lover's Tale i 36
„ iii 35
>
Clear-headed friend 2
Aylmer's Field 595
Princess ii 201
Lover's Tale ii 161
Aylmer's Field 23
61
63
70
85
96
148
165
208
215
232
279
379
420
457
582
597
615
Now follows E echoing Evelyn. Sisters (E. and E.) 15
one is somewhat graver than the other — E than
Evelyn.
but the paler and the graver, E.
once my prattling E ask'd him ' why ? '
memorial Of E — no, the other, — both
E — all One bloom of youth, healthy,
haze to magnify The charm of E —
believing I loved E, made E love me.
Not I that day of E's love or mine —
E wrote : ' My mother bids me ask '
simple mother work'd upon By E pray'd me not
to whisper of it. And E would be bridesmaid
on the day.
when we parted, E spoke no word.
Our E thro' the glories of the earth,
she That loved me — our true E —
daily want Of E in the house, the garden,
E had welcomed my brief wooing of her,
scarce as great as E's power of love,
bore a child whom reverently we call'd E ;
But you love E ; and her own true eyes
I think I likewise love your E most.
E, yet so lowly-sweet.
Near us E's holy shadow,
E but a child of six —
Peept the winsome face of E
Ralph would fight in E's sight, For Ralph was
E's lover,
E bow'd her stately head,
Edith Montfort (See also Edith) E M bow'd her head.
Educated Sir Robert with his watery smile And
e whisker.
Have all his pretty young ones e,
Edmund ' 0 babbhng brook,' says E in his rhyme,
the week Before I parted with poor E ;
My dearest brother, E, sleeps.
27
38
58
108
119
130
138
142
180
207
215
225
„ 235
„ 246
254
261
269
284
293
Locksley H., Sixty 49
„ 54
258
260
The Tourney 1
;; 11
Edwin Morris 129
Enoch A rden 146
The Brook 21
78
„ 187
Edmund Atheling
173
Elaine
Edmund Atheling {See also Atheling) He with his
brother, E A ,
Edward (the Elder, King of the T'^g"''^'i 901-925)
Sons of E with hammer'd brands.
they play'd with The children of E.
Edward (III., King of England) Gray with distance
E's lifty summers,
Edward (Christian name) Then, and here in E's
time,
Edward BuU With Edwin Morris and with E B
Then said the fat-faced curate E B, (repeat)
Edward Gray ' And are you married yet, EG?'
love no more Can touch the heart of E G.
' To trouble the heart olEG'
And here the heart ot E G\'
And there the heart otEGl'
Edward Head Sir E H's : But he's abroad :
Edwin (See also Edwin Morris) ' Friend E, do not
think yourself alone
And I and E laugh'd ;
So left the place, left E,
crystal into which I braided E's hair !
follow E to those isles, those islands of the Blest !
0 would I were in E's arms —
— on E's ship, with E, ev'n in death,
My E loved to call us then
flowers of the secret woods, when E found us there,
sail at last which brings our E home.
Edwin Morris (See also Edwin) With E M and with
Edward Bull
But E M, he that knew the names,
Edym answer, groaning, * E, son of Nudd !
' Then, E, son of Nudd,' replied Geraint,
E answer'd, ' These things will I do,
night of fire, when E sack'd their house,
rose a cry That E's men were on them,
E's men had caught them in their flight,
Beholding it was E son of Nudd,
E moving frankly forward spake :
Till E crying, ' If ye will not go To Arthur,
And one from E. Eveiy now and then. When E rein'd
his charger at her side,
went apart with E, whom he held In converse
E and with others : have ye look'd At E ?
E has done it, weeding all his heart
_ This work of E wrought upon himself
Eerie My people too were scared with e sounds.
Eery elfin prancer springs By night to e warblings.
Effect (s) And thine e so lives in me.
Thro' manifold e of simple powers —
Effect (verb) tho' she herself e But httle :
Effeminacy Rolling on their purple couches in their
tender e.
all his force Is melted into mere e ?
Effeminate • £ as I am, I will not fight my way
Effie Little E shall go with me tomorrow
Don't let E come to see me
And E on the other side,
1 thought of you and E dear ;
But, E, you must comfort her
there to wait a little while till you and E come —
Ef9aence perennial e's, Whereof to all that draw
Effort I made one barren e to break it at the last.
Eft A monstrous e was of old the Lord
A bedmate of the snail and e and snake,
Egalities That cursed France with her e !
Egbert doing nothing Since E — why.
Egg (See also Hegg) The goose let fall a golden e
we stole his fruit. His hens, his e's ;
Roof-haunting martins warm their e's :
The Cock was of a larger e
evil fancies clung Like serpent e's
Sleeps in the plain e's of the nightingale,
lay their e's, and sting and sing
'twere but of the goose and golden e's.'
Batt. of Brunanburh 6
14
92
On Jub. Q. Victoria 40
Locksley U., Sixty 83
Edwin Morris 14
„ 42, 90
Edward Gray 4
:; &
28
36
Walk, to the Mail 15
Edwin Morris 77
93
137
TheFligld 34
42
45
46
80
82
92
Edwin Morris 14
„ 16
Marr. of Geraint 576
579
587
634
639
642
Geraint and E. 781
784
814
819
;; 881
896
906
912
The Ring 408
Sir L. and Q. G. 34
In Mem. Ixv 10
Prog, of Spring 86
Princess Hi 264
Boadicea 62
Marr. of Geraint 107
Geraint and E. 20
May Queen 25
May Queen, N. ¥'s. E. 43
Con. 24
29
44
' 58
Lover's Tale i 499
Happy 72
Mated I iv 31
Holy Grail 570
Aylmer's Field 265
384
The Goose 11
Walk, to the Mail 85
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 17
Will Water. 121
Enoch Arden 480
Aylmer's Field 103
In Mem. Ill
Gareth and L. 40
Egg (coiitinued) good mother, but this e of mine Was finer
gold Gareth and L. 42
even in their hens and in their e's — • Holy Grail 560
Nor bruised the wildbird's e. Lover's Tale ii 21
She hears the lark witliin the songless e. Ancient Sage 76
Egg-shell Nor cared a broken e-s for her lord. Geraint and E. 364
Eglantine Vine, vine and e, (repeat) Window, At the W. 1, 8
presently received in a sweet grave Of e's. Lover's Tale i 529
Beneath the bower of wreathed e's : „ ii 43
Eglatere woodbine and e Drip sweeter dews A Dirge 23
Egypt (See also Agypt) O my life In jB ! D. of F. Women 147
the time When we made bricks in E. Princess iv 128
fierce Soldan of E, would break down Columbus 98
torpid mummy wheat Of E bore a grain as sweet To Prof. Jebh 6
Egypti^ To whom the E: '0, you tamely died ! D. of F, Wome^i 258
Egypt-plague our arms f ail'd — this E-p of men ! Princess v 427
Eight (adj.) (See also Height) Was proxy- wedded with
a bootless calf At e years old ; „ i 35
close behind her stood E daughters of the plough, „ iv 278
Then those c mighty daughters of the plough „ 550
those e daughters of the plough Came sallyhig thro' „ v 339
And e years past, e jousts had been, Lancelot and E. 67
E that were left to make a purer world — Aylmer's Field 638
The child was only e summers old, The Victim 33
Eight (s) cutting e's that day upon the pond. The Epic 10
Eighteen Pass me then A term of e years. Lover's Tale i 287
E long years of waste, seven in your Spain, Columbus 36
Eighty Whose e winters freeze with one rebuke Ode on Well. 186
Timur built his ghastly tower of e thousand human
skulls, Locksley H., Sixty 82
E winters leave the dog too lame to follow „ 226
Forward far and far from here is all the hope of
e years. „ 254
starved the wild beast that was linkt with thee e
years back By an Evolution. 11
e thousand Christian faces watch Man murder man. St. Telemachus 55
Eighty-thousand Should e-t college-councils To F. D. Maurice 7
Eight-year-old See Height-year-old
Either e hand. Or voice, or else a motion of the mere. M. d' Arthur 76
On e side AH round about the fragrant marge Arabian Nights 58
And e twilight and the day between ; Edwin Morris 37
Powers of the House On e side the hearth, Aylmer's Field 288
with his hopes in e grave. „ 624
familiar with her. Easily gather'd e guilt. Princess iv 236
seeing e sex alone Is half itself, „ vii 301
For groves of pine on e hand. To F. D. Maurice 21
And drops of water fell from e hand ; Gareth and L. 220
In e hand he bore What dazzled all, „ 386
And each at either dash from e end — ,, 535
she lifted e arm, ' Fie on thee. King ! „ 657
and e spear Bent but not brake, and e knight
at once, „ 963
at e end whereof There swung an apple Marr. of Geraint 169
Whom first she kiss'd on e cheek, and then On e „ 517
Made her cheek bum and e eyelid fall. „ 775
day by day she past In e twilight ghost-Uke Lancelot and E. 849
at the base we found On e hand. Holy Grail 498
yell'd the youth, and e knight Drew back a space, Pelleas and E. 572
Wheel'd round on e heel, Dagonet repUed, Last Tournament 244
At once from e side, with trumpet-blast. Com. of Arthur 102
e hand. Or voice, or else a motion of the mere. Pass, of Arthur 244
As tho' there beat a heart in e eye ; Lover's Tale i 34
Love wraps his wings on e side the heart, ,, 467
My father with a child on e knee, A hand upon
the head of e child. Sisters (E. and E.) 54
He joins us once again, to his e office true : Happy 106
Thy elect have no dealings with e heresy or
orthodoxy; Akbar's D., Inscrip. 7
With all the Hells a-glare in e eye, Akbar's Dream 115
And each at e dash from either end — Gareth and L. 535
Elaborately Who read me rhymes e good, Edwin Morris 20
Elaine E the fair, E the loveable, E, the lily maid Lancelot and E. 1
behind them stept the lily maid E, „ 177
E, and heard her name so tost about, „ 233
hly maid E, Won by the mellow voice „ 242
Elaine
174
Embowering
Elaine {continued) Who parted with his own to
fair E : Lancelot and E. 381
stay'd ; and cast his eyes on fair E : „ 640
' So be it,' cried E, And lifted her fair face „ 681
' Torre and E ! why here ? „ 796
Then rose E and glided thro' the fields, „ 843
call her friend and sister, sweet E, „ 865
I had been wedded earlier, sweet E : „ 935
on her face, and thought ' Is this E?' „ 1031
Elbow In every e and turn. Ode to Memory 62
deep in broider'd down we sank Our e's : Princess iv 33
Elbow-chair She shifted in her e-c, The Goose 27
Elbow-deep Or e-d in sawdust, slept, WUl Water. 99
Elbowed See Half-elbowed
Elburz E and all the Caucasus have heard ; W. to Marie Alex. 13
Elder (s) led The holy E's with the gift of myrrh. M. d' Arthur 233
Thuie e's and thy betters. Will Water. 192
with jubilant cries Broke from their e's, Enoch Arden 378
passion of youth Toward greatness in its e, Lancelot and E. 283
led The holy E's with the gift of myrrh Fass. of Arthur 400
Elder (adj.) The Tory member's e son. Princess, Con. 50
Elderly I knew them all as babies, and now they're e men. Grandmother 88
Elder-thicket saw The white-flower'd e-t from the field Godiva 63
Elder-tree See Boor-tree
Eldest-born Whatever e-b of rank or wealth Aylmer's Field 484
And Willy, my e-b, is gone, you say, Grandmother 1, 87
Willy, my beauty, my e-b, the flower of the flock ; „ 9
Willy, my e-b, at nigh threescore and ten ; „ 87
Willy has gone, my beauty, my e-b, my flower ; „ 101
her e-b, her glory, her boast, ■ Despair 73
Eleanor Those dragon eyes of anger'd E D. of F. Women 255
Eleanore To deck thy cradle, E. Elednore 21
Crimsons over an inland mere, E\ „ 43
Of thy swan-like stateliness, £ ? „ 48
Of thy floating gracefulness, E? „ 51
Every lineament divine, E. „ 54
Who may express thee, E? „ 68
I stand before thee, E; „ 69
Serene, imperial E ! (repeat) „ 81, 121
In thy large eyes, imperial E. „ 97
So dying ever, E. „ 144
Elect (chosen) Thy e have no dealings with either
heresy or orthodoxy; Akbar's D., Inscrip. 7
Elected by common voice E umpire, (Enone 85
Election E, E and Reprobation — Eizpah 73
Electric e shock Dislink'd with shrieks and laughter : Princess, Pro. 69
E, chemic laws, and aU the rest, „ ii 384
came As comes a pillar of e cloud, „ v 524
this e force, that keeps A thousand pulses dancing, In Mem. cxxv 15
with some e thrill A cold air pass'd between us. The Ring 379
El^ant See Uigant
El%y elegies And quoted odes. Princess ii 376
Element The e's were kindlier mix'd.' Two Voices 228
may soul to soul Strike thro' a finer e Aylmer's Field 579
And in their own clear e, they moved. Princess vii 28
Large e's in order brought, In Mem. cxii 13
One God, one law, one e, „ Con. 142
I saw The holy e's alone ; Holy Grail 463
I am not made of so slight e's. Guinevere 510
The cloud-paviUon'd e, the wood, Lover's Tale ii 108
Elemental And learnt their e secrets. Merlin and V. 632
Eleusis Who laid thee at E, dazed and dumb Demeter and P. 6
Eleventh when the e moon After their marriage lit the
lover's Bay, Lover's Tale iv 27
Elf the little dves of chasm and cleft Made Guinevere 248
Elves, and the harmless glamour of the field ; Pass, of Arthur 52
and glancing at E of the woodland, Merlin and the G. 38
Elf-god ' I saw the little e-g eyeless once Merlin and V. 249
Elfin rich With jewels, e Urim, on the hilt. Com. of Arthur 298
whose e prancer springs By night Sir L. and Q. G. 33
Elfland The horns of E faintly blowing ! Princess iv 10
Elizabeth (Queen) The spacious times of great E D. of F. Women 7
in arts of government E and others ; Princess ii 162
Elizabeth (Aunt) there is Aunt E And sister Liha „ Pro. 51
And here we lit on Aunt E „ 96
Elk the monstrous horns of e and deer, Princess, Pro. 23
Ellen (See also Ellen Adair, Ellen Aubrey) Sleep,
E, folded in thy sister's arm,
' Sleep, E, folded in Emilia's arm ;
By E's grave, on the windy hill.
' You said that you hated me, E,
Ellen Adair {See also Ellen) ' £ ^ she loved me well,
When E A was dying for me.
Speak a Uttle, E AV
' Here Ues the body ot E A;
Till E A come back to me.
There lies the body ot E Al
Ellen Aubrey {See also Ellen) E A, sleep, and dream
of me:
Sleep, E A, love, and dream of me.'
Elle vous suit sent a note, the seal an E v s,
Ellipse Earth follows wheel'd in her e ;
Elm {See also Dwarf-elm, Witch-elm) The seven e's,
the poplars four
The mellow ouzel fluted in the e ;
fruits and cream Served in the weeping e ;
Old e's came breaking from the vine,
Aroused the black republic on his e's,
always friends, none closer, e and vine :
varies from the lily as far As oak from e :
The moan of doves in immemorial e'a,
approaching rookery swerve From the e's,
Kock'd the full-foUaged e's,
swaying upon a restless e Drew the vague glance
in Juhan's land They never nail a diunb head
up in e),
in yon arching avenue of old e's,
Of leafless e, or naked hme,
few lanes of e And whispering oak.
Elm-tree rook 'ill caw from the windy tall e-t,
topmost e-t gather'd green From draughts
e's ruddy-hearted blossom-flake Is fluttering
Elm-tree-boles Enormous e-t-b did stoop and lean
Eloquence A fuU-cell'd honeycomb of e
and golden e And amorous adulation,
his e caught like a flame From zone to zone
Eloquent The form, the form alone is e !
her e eyes, (As I have seen them many a hundred
times)
'Elp (help) es I otips es thou'll 'e me a bit,
Elsewise Did mightier deeds than e he had done,
Elsinore when E Heard the war moan
Elusion E, and occasion, and evasion ' ?
Elvish dragon-boughts and e emblemings Began to move, „ 233
Elysian others in E valleys dwell, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 124
fields Are lovely, lovelier not the E lawns. Princess Hi 342
Elysium dimly-glimmering lawns Of that E, Demeter and P. 151
Emancipation on whom The secular e turns Princess ii 289
Embalm e In dying songs a dead regret, In Mem., Con. 13
Embark ' I will e and I will lose myself, Holy Grail 805
may there be no sadness of farewell, When I e ; Crossing the Bar 12
Embassage till their e return'd. Balin and Balan 93
Embassy Such touches are but embassies of love. Gardener's D. 18
Embatlidng E all with wild and woeful hues. Lover's Tale ii 64
Embattail To e and to wall about thy cause To J. M. K. 8
Embattled when we saw the e squares. Princess v 246
Till this e wall of unbelief My prison, Doubt and Prayer 11
Embellish overflowing revenue Wherewith to c state, Qinone 113
Emblem Graven with e's of the time, Arabian Nights 108
Like e's of infinity. Ode to Memory 103
Caryatids, lifted up A weight of e. Princess iv 202
rich in e and the work Of ancient kings Gareth and L. 304
Half-tarnish'd and half-bright, his e, shone. „ 1118
these her e's drew mine eyes — away : Balin and Balan 265
Emblematic Amazon As e of a nobler age ; Princess ii 127
Embleming and elvish e's Began to move, Gareth and L. 233
Embodied When truth e in a tale In Mem. xxxvi 7
Emboss'd bronze valves, e with Tomyris Princess v 365
Embower However deep you might e the nest, „ Pro. 147
Embowering See Oriel-embowering
Audley Court 63
65
Edward Gray 12
First Quarrel 79
Edward Gray 9
16
24
27
32
35
Audley Court 62
„ 73
Edwin Morris 105
Golden Year 24
Ode to Memory 56
Gardener's D. 94
„ 195
Amphion 45
Aylmer's Field 529
Princess ii 337
„ V 183
„ vii 221
„ Con. 97
In Mem. xcv 58
Balin and Balan 463
Lover's Tale iv 37
The Ring 172
To Ulysses 16
To Mary Boyle 67
May Queen, N.Y's. E. 17
Sir L. and Q. G. 8
To Mary Boyle 3
D. of F. Women 57
Edwin Morris 26
Lancelot and E. 649
Dead Prophet 34
The form, the form 1
Lover's Tale ii 144
Village Wife 65
Last Tournament 680
Buonaparte 9
Gareth and L. 288
Embrace
Embrace (s) face He kiss'd, taking his last e.
Die, dying clasp'd in his e.
And dear the last e's of our wives
came Like Death betwixt thy dear e and mine
and silent in a last e. '
such have sUpt Away from my e's.
Twisted hard in fierce e's,
the first e had died Between them,
As parting with a long e She enters
No lower life that earth's e May breed
That yet remembers his e,
A little while from his e,
We stood tranced in long e's
175
Enchantment
Two Voices 254
Fatima 42
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 70
Iiove and Duty 48
Locksley Hall 58
WiU Water. 182
Vision of Sin 40
Lucretius 3
In Mem. xlll
„ Ixxxii 3
„ Ixxxv in
„ cxxii 3
Belt^ his body ^Th heT v.hite e. Last Tou^miLUlS
\- that hast never known the e of love, TirS lfi4
bhe clung to me with such a hard e, The^Zn ^t
gone ! and gone in that e ! ^^^ T^o
body which had lain Of old in her e. Death of"(Fnn^7l±
Embrace (verb) my heart Went forth t^ e him coming ^ g^^e 63
\V ho wiU e me in the world-to-be : ^ Enoch ArTeT^t
E our amis ; work out your freedom. PrinlesTiim
' e me, come, Quick while I melt ; I- or^
we e you yet once more With all forgiveness, " 2q4
By faith, and faith alone, e, ^ ' Jr, mZ VrH
E her as my natural good ; ^"^ ^''"•> "^r?- 3
I e the purpose of God, - mJI^ ttt^^^- In
Sen'^Km.^f^,'^^' ^^ '^^"^ ^= BalinaA'Ilir5tl
upen d his arms to « me as he came, »-,/„ ^miZ 41 7
To dream thy cause e in mine, ^ Priw«,,^2nn
E her with aU welcome as a friend, il/arr o7SI^ 834
the great Queen once more e her friend, gZ'c^LZTe 947
E me, and so kiss'd me the firet time, ' Eolv Grail 596
we kiss'd, we e, she and I, uoiyuratl &Jb
Embradng (^ee 0^50 Imbrashin') E cloud, Ixion-like ; Two rXriSs
and while we stood hke fools E va • L ■ 1 1 «
E Balin, ' Good my brother ht^r ' EnW^^'^'A'T v.o
when he saw the ^neen^^^l ' tZ'J^a^E It
Embrasure rafters and dooW-an e' J^anceiot and E. 510
A million «'. break f n,rS the ^by-budded lime MaiTivl
A hveher e twmkles in the grass • * =|
Emer'^Ste^'I^Str^^^^^^^^^ W^^S^^^^^
Emi^ar^i'Sier^ate'^""''^'^ ^' ^^-'^ ^«'« ' '^
Emiha ' Sleep, Ellen, folded in E's arm ; E, Audlev Court 65
r^mssa^ Oame at the moment Leo in's e, Aylmer't Vielti -SIR
'Sw^t E M, love no more Can touch the heart " 7
^'h^hLThfm"''^''m°"l^' ,„. ^« ^^^ Child:Eosf. 33
ii iiad heard him. Softly she call'd from her cot 46
for E, you see. It's all in the picture there : " 49
Yes, and I will,' said E, " ro
\E, you put out your arms, " %
but E, you tell it him plain, " %
And fears for our delicate E " ««
and ^ had past away. " 70
Hide mpZ'J^',' °^ ^'"S^' ^^'^ ^«'^^ 361
play 1 he Spartan Mother with e, Princesi ii 28^
EmpanopUed £ and plumed We enter'd in, rrmcessiz^^
Emperor E, Ottoman, which shall win : To F D Maurice 32
Emperor-Idiot hive of Koman hars worship an e-i. BoldZZ 19
Emperor-moth But move as rich as £-m'.. Princess pTiU
Empire (See also Ocean-empire) the care That yokes
i-i'^'^V' . ,^ ^1, ■• To the Queen 10
hke a household god Promising e; On a Mourner 31
ere he found E for life ? Gardener's D 20
hated by the wise, to law System and e ? Love and Duty 8
' Three ladies of the Northern e Princess i 238
Persian, Grecian, Roman lines Of e, n 131
BuEY the Great Duke With an e's lamentation, Ode'on Well 2
Fair e's branchmg, both, in lusty hfe !— W. to Marie Alex. 21
See, e upon e smiles to-day, 33
Is thistle tone of e? To the Queen ii Id,
And all the maiden e of her mind. Lover's Tale i 589
Gave glory and more e to the kings Columbus 22
T J ^°,?? ^" }^^ ""^ ^ngli^h E whole ! Bands aU Round 14
And all her glorious e, round and round. 24
Fifty years of ever-widening E ! On Jub. q! Victoria 54
All new-old revolutions of E — Vastness 30
Old E's, dwellings of the kings of men ; Prog, of Spring 99
a world-wide E mourns with you, D. of the Duke of C. 5
Employ Come, when no graver cares e, To F D Maurice 1
extremes e Thy spirits in the darkening leaf. In Mem. Ixxxviii 5
Employ d bo gentle, so e, should close in love, Princess vii 67
Empress Queen, and E of India, On Jub. Q. Victoria 6
Empnse The garland of new-wreathed e : Kate 24
Emptied e of all joy. Leaving the dance and song, D. of F. Women 215
allluent Fortune e all her horn. ode on Wdl. 197
and all The chambers e of delight : /« Mem. viii 8
Emptier lor I am e than a friar's brains; Sir J. Oldcastle 7
£mptmess ' Irom e and the waste wide Two Voices 119
The sins of e, gossip and spite And slander, Princess ii 92
Empty An e river-bed before, Mariana in the S. 6
Pour d back into my e soul and frame D. of F. Women 78
Two years his chair is seen E before us. To J. S. 23
but e breath And rumours of a doubt ? M. d' Arthur 99
summer pilot of an e heart Unto the shores of nothing ! Gardener's D 16
1 earth in earth forget these e courts, Tithonus 75
I sit, my e glass reversed, lym ly^ter. 159
Lest of the fulness of my life I leave an e flask : 164
It is but yonder e glass That makes me " 207
^scarecrows, I and you! Vision of Sin M
Hollow hearts and e heads ! jj^
Than if my brainpan were an e hull, Princess ii 398
e masks, And I myself the shadow of a dream, m 187
her e glove upon the tomb Lay by her " {^ 595
nevermore endue To sit with e hands at home. Sailor Boy 16
A hollow form with e hands.' /„ Mem. iii 12
and feels Her place is e, fall hke these ; ^m 4.
Living alone in an e house, Maud I vi Q
To tickle tlie maggot born in an e head, II v3
And when he found aU e, was amazed ; Geraint and E. 21
As all but e heart and weariness (552
And show'd an e tent allotted her, " 5^5
Her own poor work, her e labour, left. Lancelot and E. 991
Hurl d back again .0 often m e foam, Last Tournament 93
but e breath And rumours of a doubt ? Pass, of Arthur 267
I, groamng, from me flung Her e phantom : Lover's Tale ii 206
Pmnfr^l^'w^^'^w'^V . .u ■ hi the Child. Hosp. 29
Empurpled His golden feet on those e stairs Lucretius V6b
f™«S ^^""Z^ *k • f> f ""aTP^^u' ^?"^ ^^^ sale Princess iii 120
Empyreal and whirl'd About e heights of thought, In Mem. tc, S8
Empyrean deep-domed e Kings to the roar MuTonl
Emrys (King of Britain) Aurelius E would have
Fn.n,an"r'!^f *''''^^.f '^•' • Gareth and L. 375
S^nii y! ^^ glittering m e arms the maid Lancelot and E. 619
EnamouT'd by them went The e air sighing, PriTicess vi 79
Encamahze with shameful jest, E their spirits : 1^315
SSi "k"'"^ r '?? P'f ^ ^ to-morrow. Last Tournament 104
Enchanted Branches they bore of that e stem, Lotos-Eaters 28
Is that e moan only the swell Of the long waves Maud I xviii 62
e towers of Carbonek, A castle hke a rock H^t Gm"/ glS
as thou sayest, it is .son, GaretZ^t IH
Enchanter Here is a city of £'«, built 6Ve<;i ««// r l qq
charm Upon the great i' of the Time, SI«Sf216
Enchantment wilt thou become A thraU 'to his e's, SS aS i.' 2 Jg
Enchantment
176
Endure
Enchantment (continued) Begotten by e— chatterers they, Eoly Grail 145
all his guests Once more as by e ; Lover J^ ^fV''" fv\
Enchantress A great e you may be ; L.l>.y .ae y ere ou
Encircle £'s all the heart, and feedeth ^Vff^x^
Enclosing hollow shades e hearts of flame. Palace of Art J4i
every marge e in the midst A square of text Merlin andV. b7U
EncompMS love of all Thy sons e Thee, ^ed.of Idylls 52
Encompass'd sleep i; by his faithful guard, r^^''-^''^-,%Al
Encounter A little in the late e strain'd, Geraint and h. 1&»
End (s) (^ee aZso Gable-ends, Hend) ' And cruel love, • .t, c, rrn
whose e is scorn, Is this the e to be left alone, Mariana inthe *. 7U
apprehend A labour working to an e. Two Voices 297
' The e and the beginning vex His reason : .. ^^°
♦ I see the e, and know the good.' » J^
' Which in all action is the e of all ; ..-,., ^'^"c H
Death is the e of life ; ah, why Lotos-Eaters, C. 6. 41
wood is all thine own, Until the e of time.' D. of F. Women 84
Sleep till the e, true soul and sweet. ft. 7 j ^
Love, that endures not sordid e's, Love thou thy landb
' My e draws nigh ; 'tis time that I were gone. M.d Arthur JLM
Here, then, my words have e. ^'^r^S^J , ■/ q«
my e draws nigh ; I hope my e draws nigh : k>t. 6. btylitesA^
The watcher on the column till the e ; » ^J*9
The e\ the e ! Surely the e ! t 'i r, , is
The set gray life, and apathetic e. Love and Duty iS
And that which shapes it to some perfect e. » ^^
Spun roimd in station, but the e had come. »> '^
How dull it is to pause, to make an e, Ulysses j^
something ere the e, Some work of noble note, ,/' 7i«
if I Should hook it to some useful e. Day-Drn., Moral Lb
Enough if at the « of aU A little garden blossom. Amphion 106
For them I battle tiU the e, ^^ Sir Galahad 15
A life that moves to gracious e's You might have won b
Down at the far e of an avenue, Enoch Arden rf6»
his lonely doom Came suddenly to an e, ,"7:,-7jQni
rioted his life out, and made an e. Aylmer s Field d91
thro' every labyrinth till he saw An e, ,, ^
nor wanted at his e The dark retinue » o*^
Crown'd with a flower or two, and there an e— Lwretius J^y
noise with bees and breeze from e to «. Princess, -f^r?- °°
from e to e With beauties every shade „ }}. ^^
if our e were less achievable By slow approaches, „ «* ^°^
I fight with iron laws, in the e Found golden : „ »^ '^
But great is song Used to great e's : ,. ^
some grand fight to kill and make an e: « ^^
you failing, I abide What e soever : » « f^
at the further e Was Ida by the throne, ,, vi rfoo
For worship without e ; nor e of mine, » "" ^
Yoked in aU exercise of noble e, ?. ^^^
Gone, tiU the e of the year, ^]''^'"<,A
Over the world to the e of it Window, Marr.Morn. 16
0 what to her shaU be the e ? i^i Mem. vi 41
'Is this thee? Is this thee?' » f " |^
And move thee on to noble e's. » '^^ f^.
Are sharpen'd to a needle's e ; » '*^* *
What e is here to my complaint? ,. '^ff*?
Now looking to some settled e, .. '^^^ =*'
1 climb the hill: from e to e » .?. ;L
breathers of an ampler day For ever nobler e's. „ "xviii I
Is toil coiiperant to an e. ,, » ^xxviuZi
Calming itself to the long-wish'd-for e, Maud I xviiib
never an e to the stream of passing feet, » j^i\.yt.
And each at either dash from either e— Gareth and h. MD
At one e one, that gave uiK)n a range ,, .,Vpo
at either e whereof There swung an apple Marr. of Geraint IbJ
O to what e, except a jealous one, ilf erZtn OTwi K. &^»
and to this e Had made the pretext Lancelot and ii. &»1
sweet is death who puts an e to pain : » |^°
An c to this ! A strange one! » ^^^^^
one there is, and at the eastern e, Holy Grail ^51
When the hermit made an e, ^ .m " . oca
run itself AU out like a long life to a sour e— Last Tournament ^b»
mystic babble about his e Amazed me ; i> ^^^
whitens ere his hour Woos his own e; .. . "^°
Serving his traitorous e Guinevere I'J
End (S) (continued) ' The e is come, And I am shamed for
' My e draws nigh ; 'tis time that I were gone.
Was this the e ? Why grew we then together
in the e. Opening on darkness.
Then at the far e of the vault he saw
And stranger yet, at one e of the hall
And when the feast was near an e,
an' I work an' I wait to the e.
It was full of old odds an e's,
they watch'd what the e would be.
What e but darkness could ensue
if life's best e Be to end well !
A less difiuse and opulent e,
of a HeU without help, without e.
at last the e is sure,
globe from e to e Might sow and reap in peace
An' sattle their e's upo stools
when he heard what an e was mine ?
And loves the world from c to e.
End (verb) That to begin implies to e ;
tho' they could not e me, left me maun'd
Whether I mean this day to e myself.
Not manlUie e myself ?— our privilege-
how the strange betrothment was to e :
There will I hide thee, till my life shall e,
if life's best end Be to e well !
who can tell how all will e ?
Demos e in working its own doom,
e but in being our own corpse-coffins at last,
I felt I could e myself with the dagger—
Guinevere 110
Pass, of Arthur 331
Lover's Tale ii 22
„ 124
„ iv 56
213
229
First Quarrel 7
49
The Revenge 73
Sisters (E. and E.) 175
Tiresias 130
„ 189
Despair 26
The Flight 103
Epilogue 12
Owd Mod 24
Charity 17
The Wanderer 7
Two Voices 339
Tithonus 20
Lucretius 146
» 232
Princess v 47*
Guinevere 114
Tiresias 131
Locksley E., Sixty 103
„ 114
Vastness 33
Bandit's Death 37 :
The Dreamer 19, 23, 27, 31 :;
The Wanderer 1 ;
Princess ii 7
all's well that e's weU, (repeat)
Thk gleam of household sunshine e's.
End "See also Far-end
Endear the falhng out That all the more e s.
Ended (See also Never-ended) Heee e Hall, and our .
last light ^- d' Arthur, Ep. 1
Thus far he flow'd, and e ; Golden Year 52
When, ere his song was e, fT^""*i7fi
TiU this was e, and his careful hand,— Enoch Arden 17b
E he had not, but she brook'd no more : Aylmer s Field 798
but when the wordy storm Had e, Sea Dreams 32
She e here, and beckon'd us : Princess it 182
She e with such passion that the tear, » . »« ^^
For when the jousts were e yesterday, Marr. of Geraint 6J2
But e with apology so sweet, Geraint arid E. 394
Half -wroth he had not e, Balm and Balan 427
She e, and the cry of a great jousts Last Tournament bl
But when the twangling e, skipt again ; „ ^^
He e : Arthur knew the voice ; t, " r ^ .i. a?
mountains e in a coast Of ever-shifting sand, Pass of Arthur i^
ever that evening e a great gale blew, j he Revenge 114
Have e mortal foes ; Ancievi Sage 158
Ending She, e, waved her hands : Pr^^c^'^ f gf
tiie mocker e here Turn'd to the right, Garelh and L. 294
And e in a ruin-nothing left, . Merlin and V. 883
e, he moved toward her, and she said. Last Tournament 704
Endless ' Let me not cast in e shade Two Voices^
memory of the wither'd leaf In e time is scarce ^^^
more brief , . „ , "t a.., 7a
river winding slow By herds upon an e plain. Palace of Art. <4
down in hell Sutler e anguish, ^"^''F" ' fht.m
Farewell, like e welcome, lived and died. /-"i^* "'f^ Duty faS
And float or fall, in e ebb and flow ; W. to Mar»e Alex.^
Paid with a voice flying by to be lost on an e sea- , . /^f,?,^. i
And we shaU sit at e feast, ■^"7:^^12
What fame is left for human deeds In e age I* ,, *f7'*^^
Slain by himself, shall enter e night. . G^areiA '^rtdL.b^
glory and shame dying out for ever m e tune, . ^^P^y'.i
poet whom his Age would quote As heir of e fame- ^«eten« Sage 147
border-races, holding, each its own By e war : , , " j f q^7
Endow E you with broad land and territory Ixincelot ondE. 9&7
Endurance untU e grow Sinew'd with action, i^d 25
Endure A courage to e and to obey ; 7, 7 ^ „f ^w i «i4
AU force in bonds that might e, -f a^-^^ <'f ^^^ ^^^
Endure
177
Engraven
Endure (continued) Love, that e's not sordid ends, Love thou thy land 6
But while the races of mankind e. Ode on Well. 219
I will nevermore e To sit with empty hands Sailor Boy 15
Would she have heart to e for the life of the worm Wages 7
That dies not, but e's with pain, In Mem. xviii 17
And scarce e to draw the breath, „ xx 15
Whose loves in higher love e ; „ xxxii 14
0 living will that shalt e „ cxxxi 1
Let the sweet heavens e, Mavd I xi8
As long as my life e's I feel I shall owe you „ xix 86
Break not, O woman's-heart, but still e ; Break not,
for thou art Royal, but e. Bed. of Idylls 44
E's not that her guest should serve Marr. of Geraint 379
But can e it all most patiently.' „ 473
canst e To mouth so huge a foulness — Balin and Balan 378
thought to do while he might yet e, Lancelot and E. 495
strength of the race to command, to obey, to e, Def. of Lucknow 47
E ! thou hast done so well for men, Columbiis 152
every heart that loves with truth is equal to e. The Flight 104
For so the deed e's ; Epilogue 39
But while my life's late eve e's. To Marq. of Dufferin 49
vanish and give place to the beauty that e's, The
beauty that e's on the Spiritual height, Happy 36
caught one gleam of the beauty which e's — „ 60
Endured Have all in all e as much, St. S. Stylites 130
Nor yet e to meet her opening eyes, Princess iv 195
they knew her ; they e, Long-closeted with her „ 321
ye surely have e Strange chances here alone ; ' Geraint and E. 809
Nor yet e in presence of His eyes Lover's Tale i 423
while I mused nor yet e to take So rich a prize, „ Hi 49
Enduring (See also All-enduring, Long-enduring) ' Yet
hadst thou, thro' e pain, Two Voices 166
Sow the seed, and reap the harvest with e toil, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 121
'Enemies (anemones) Down i' the woild 'e N. Farmer, O. S. 34
Enemy (See also Hennemy) ' Our enemies have f all'n,
but this shall grow Princess vi 53
' Our enemies have fall'n, have fall'n : (repeat) Princess vi 33, 38, 43, 48
moan of an e massacred, Boddicea 25
tho' the gathering e narrow thee, „ 39
pulses at the clamouring of her e fainted „ 82
1 trust if an e's fleet came yonder Maud 7 » 49
' A boon. Sir King ! Thine e. King, am I. Gareth and L. 351
He drave his e backward down the bridge, „ 969
being but knave, I throw thine enemies.' „ 1023
To dash against mine e and to win. „ 1355
arms, arms, arms to fight my e ? Marr. of Geraint 282
down his e roll'd. And there lay still ; Geraint and E. 160
an e that has left Death in the living waters. Merlin and V. 147
roU'd his e down. And saved him : Lancelot and E. 26
the knights Are half of them our enemies, „ 99
a dream Of dragging down his e made them move, „ 814
and said, ' Mine enemies Pursue me, Guinevere 139
Ev'n in the presence of an e's fleet, „ 279
on all the defences our myriad e fell. Def. of Lucknow 35
in a moment two mines by the e sprung „ 54
Fonseca my main e at their court, Columbus 126
For there was not an e near, V. of Maddune 93
so often in Strife with their enemies Batt. of Brunanburh 18
Love your e, bless your haters, Locksley H., Sixty 85
' Kill your e, for you hate him,' still, ' your e „ 94
Energy spurr'd at heart with fieriest e To J. M. K. 7
By its own e fulfill'd itself, Gardener's D. 238
suit The full-grown energies of heaven. In Mem. xl 20
come and go. With agonies, with energies, „ cxiii 18
To those still-working energies I spy Mechanophilus 19
Enfold So dear a life your arms e The Daisy 93
that large grief which these e In Mem. r 11
mother's shame will e her and darken The Wreck 100
Enfolded Two mutually e ; Love, the third. Gardener's D. 215
And in her veil e, manchet bread. Marr. of Geraint 389
Enfolding E that dark body which had lain Death of (Enone 93
Enforced £ she was to wed him in her tears. Com. of Arthur 204t
Engarlanded E and diaper'd With inwrought flowers, Arabian Nights 148
Engine Which only to one e bound Falls ofE, Two Voices 347
Enginery Loom and wheel and e. Ode Inter. Exhib. 15
Engirt E with many a florid maiden-cheek. Princess Hi 350
England And more than E honours that. Talking Oak 295
show you slips of all that grows From E to Van Diemen. Amphion 84
dewy meadowy morning-breath Of E, Enoch Arden 661
thanks to the Giver, E, for thy son. Ode on Well. 45
For this is E's greatest son, „ 95
And E pouring on her foes. „ 117
keep our noble E whole, „ 161
Truth-teller was our E's Alfred named ; „ 188
E's honest censure went too far ; Third of Feb. 2
What E was, shall her true sons forget ? „ 44
some love E and her honour yet. „ 46
Harold's E fell to Norman swords ; W. to Marie Alex. 22
It told of E then to me, The Daisy 89
harsher sound ever heard, ye Muses, inE? Trans, of Homer 3
God-gifted organ-voice of E, Milton 3
freedom in her regal seat Ot E; In Mem. cix 15
Or how should E dreaming of his sons Ded. of Idylls 31
boundless homes For ever-broadening E, To the Queen ii 30
Thou — E's England-loving daughter — thou Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 15
this ballad of the deeds Of E, „ 21
Banner of E, not for a season, Def. of Lucknow 1
upon the topmost roof our banner of E blew.
(repeat) Def. of Lucknow 6, 30, 45, 60, 94
the old banner of E blew. „ 106
appeal Once more to France or E ; Columbus 58
Who dost not love our E — To Victor Hugo 9
E, France, all man to be Will make one people „ 10
To younger E in the boy my son. „ 14
E may go down in babble at last. Locksley H., Sixty 8
Yet know you, as your E knows Pro. to Gen. Hamley 23
Who wert the voice of £ in the East. Epit. on Stratford 4
Then drink to E, every guest ; Hands all Round 2
New E of the Southern Pole ! „ 16
the great name of E, round and round, (repeat) „ 12, 36
To ^ under Indian skies, ,,17
To this great name of E drink, „ 23
if you shall fail to understand What E is, The Fleet 2
Should this old E fall Which Nelson left „ 4
The fleet of E is her all-in-all ; „ 13
that which gilds the glebe of E, To Prof. Jebb. 7
a valorous weapon in olden E ! Kapiolani 4
England-loving England's E-l daughter — thou Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 15
Ei^lish (See also Half-English) first reveal'd themselves
to E air, Eleanore 2
one, an E home — gray twilight pour'd Palace of Art 85
E natures, freemen, friends. Love thou thy land 7
Who sprang from E blood ! England and Amer. 10
Gallant sons of E freemen. The Captain 7
if you knew her in her E days. The Brook 224
sweet as E air could make her, she : Princess, Pro. 155
Nor ever lost an E gun ; Ode on Well. 97
Truth-lover was our E Duke ; „ 189
since E Harold gave its throne a wife, W. to Marie Alex. 24
we may stand Where he in E earth is laid, In Mem. xviii 2
feet like sunny gems on an E green, Maiid I v 14
I see her there. Bright E lily, „ xix 55
Sir Richard cried in his E pride. The Revenge 82
dared her with one little ship and his E few ; „ 107
Dying so E thou wouldst have her flag Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 16
we were E in heart and in limb, Def. of LuckTww 46
When he coin'd into E gold some treasure The Wreck 67
no version done In E more divinely well ; To E. Fitzgerald 34
an age of noblest E names, Locksley //., Sixty 83
who long To keep our E Empire whole ! Hands aU Round 14
Or marvel how in E air My yucca. To Ulysses 20
All flaming, made an E homestead Hell — To Mary Boyle 37
Englishman A great broad-shoulder'd genial E, Princess, Con. 85
The last great E is low. Ode on Well. 18
' We be all good English men. The Revenge 29
held his own Like an E there and then ; Heavy Brigade 19
Engrail'd over hills with peaky tops e. Palace o/^rt 113
Engrain'd walk with vary-colour'd shells Wander'd e. Arabian Nights 58
Engrave I bad the man e ' From Walter ' on the ring, The Ring 235
Engraven ' From Edith ' was e on the blade. Aylmer's Field 598
M
Engraven
178
Enoch
EIngraven {continued) Some younger hand must have e the
ring— The Ring 238
Enid Had married E, Yniol's only child, Marr. of Geraint 4
E, but to please her husband's eye, „ 11
E loved the Queen, and with true heart „ 19
Allowing it, the Prince and E rode, „ 43
Told E, and they sadden'd her the more : „ 64
E woke, and sat beside the couch, „ 79
' If E errs, let E learn her fault.' „ 132
The voice of E, Yniol's daughter, rang „ 327
the sweet voice of E moved Geraint ; „ 334
song that E sang was one Of Fortune and her
wheel, and E sang : „ 345
Moved the fair E, all in faded silk, „ 366
' E, the good knight's horse stands in the court ; „ 370
the Prince, as E past liim, fain To follow, ,, 375
E took his charger to the stall ; „ 382
E brought sweet cakes to make them cheer, „ 388
rest On E at her lowly handmaid-work, „ 400
Raised my own town against me in the night Before my
E's birthday, „ 458
looking round he saw not E there, ,, 506
red and pale Across the face of E hearing her ; „ 524
my pride Is broken down, for E sees my fall ! ' „ 590
E, for she lay With her fair head in the dim-yellow
light, „ 599
And E fell in longing for a dress „ 630
And E started waking, with her heart „ 674
E look'd, but all confused at first, „ 685
E listen'd brightening as she lay ; „ 733
call'd For E, and when Yniol made report Of that
good mother making E gay „ 756
E, all abash'd she knew not why, „ 765
make your E burst SunUke from cloud — „ 788
how can E find A nobler friend ? „ 792
But E ever kept the faded silk, „ 841
No, not a word ! ' and E was aghast ; Geraint and E. 18
So the last sight that E had of home „ 24
E leading down the tracks Thro' which he bad „ 28
E was aware of three tall knights On horseback, „ 56
E ponder'd in her heart, and said : (repeat) „ 64, 130
E waited pale and sorrowful, „ 83
E, keeping watch, behold In the first shallow shade „ 118
E stood aside to wait the event, „ 153
Geraint Had ruth again on E looking pale : „ 203
And E took a little deUcately, „ 212
he let them glance At E, where she droopt : „ 247
Foimd E with the comer of his eye, „ 281
* E, the pilot star of my lone life, E, my early and my
only love, E, the loss of whom hath tum'd me wild — „ 306
E, you and he, I see with Joy, „ 320
E fear'd his eyes. Moist as they were, „ 350
flow E never loved a man but him, „ 363
But E left alone with Prince Geraint, „ 365
He fell asleep, and E had no heart To wake him, „ 369
then to E, ' Forward ! and to-day I charge you, E, „ 413
E answer'd, ' Yea, my lord, I know Your wish, „ 418
Went E with her sullen follower on. , „ 440
And E heard the clashing of his fall, „ 509
So for long hours sat E by her lord, „ 580
Till E shrank far back into herself, „ 607
' No, no ' said E, vext, ' I will not eat • „ 656
But E answer'd, harder to be moved „ 694
E said : ' In this poor gown my dear lord „ 697
E, in her utter helplessness, „ 719
' E, I have used you worse than that dead man ; „ 735
And E could not say one tender word, „ 746
' Then, E, shall you ride Behind me.' ' Yea,' said E,
' let us go.' „ 750
' The voice of E,' said the knight ; „ 780
fear not, E, I should fall upon him, „ 787
But E in their going heid two fears, „ 817
E easily believed. Like simple noble natures, „ 874
past to E's tent : and thither came The King's
own leech ,, 922
Enid (continued) And E tended on him there : Geraint and E. 924
E, whom her ladies loved to call E the Fair, a
grateful people named E the Good ; and in their
halls arose The cry of children, E's and Geraint's „ 962
sat betwixt her best E, and lissome Vivien, Guinevere 28
Enjoy all the saints E themselves in heaven, St. S. Stylites 106
Enjoy'd all times I have e Greatly, have suffer'd greatly, Ulysses 7
Enjoying E each the other's good : In Mem. xlvii 10
Enjoyment There methinks would be e more Locksley Hall 165
Enlighten Strengthen me, e me ! (repeat) Ode to Memory 5, 43, 122
Enna moved Like Proserpine in E, gathering flowers : Edwin Morris 112
in this pleasant vale we stand again. The field of E, Demeter and P. 35
Tho' dead in its Trinacrian E, To Prof. Jebb 11
Enoch (See also Arden, Enoch Arden) E was host one
day, Philip the next, Enoch Arden 25
E would hold possession for a week : „ 27
if they quarrell'd, E stronger-made Was Master : „ 30
Shriek out ' I hate you, E,' „ 33
E spoke his love, But Philip loved in silence ; „ 40
But she loved E ; tho' she knew it not, „ 43
E set A purpose evermore before his eyes, „ 44
Than E. Likewise had he served a year „ 52
E and Annie, sitting hand-in-hand, ,, 69
While E was abroad on wrathful seas, „ 91
E's white horse, and E's ocean spoil „ 93
Friday fare was E's ministering. „ 100
thither used E at times to go by land or sea ; „ 104
the master of that ship E had served in, „ 120
Would E have the place ? And E all at once assented to it, „ 125
Then E lay long-pondering on his plans ; „ 133
Thus jB in his heart determined all : „ 148
Whom E took, and handled all his limbs, „ 153
first since E's golden ring had girt Her finger, „ 157
For E parted with his old sea-friend, „ 168
So all day long till E's last at home, „ 172
E faced this morning of farewell Brightly „ 182
E as SL brave God-fearing man Bow'd himself „ 185
0 E, you are wise ; And yet for all your wisdom „ 210
' Well then,' said E, ' I shall look on yours. „ 213
E rose. Cast his strong arms about his drooping wife, ,, 227
when the day, that E mention'd, came, „ 239
still foreboding ' what would E say ? „ 253
(Since E left he had not look'd upon her), „ 273
speak to you of what he wish'd, E, your husband : „ 292
For, if you will, when E comes again „ 309
But E Uves ; that is borne in on me. „ 319
PhiUp gain'd As E lost : for E seem'd „ 355
so ten years Since E left his hearth and native land,
Fled forward, and no news of E came. „ 360
can you be ever loved As E was ? „ 427
' I am content,' he answer'd, ' to be loved A Uttle after E.' „ 429
If E comes — but E will not come — „ 431
Pray'd for a sign ' my £ is he gone ? ' „ 491
E sitting on a height. Under a palm tree, „ 500
where was E ? prosperously sail'd The ship „ 527
E traded for himself, and bought Quaint monsters „ 538
the loss of all But E and two others. „ 550
And E's comrade, careless of himself, „ 568
Thus over E's early-silvering head „ 622
There E spoke no word to any one, „ 667
There E rested silent many days. ,) 699
E was so brown, so bow'd. So broken — „ 703
' E, poor man, was cast away and lost ' » 713
E yeam'd to see her face again ; „ 717
E shunn'd the middle walk and stole Up by the wall, „ 738
griefs Like his have worse or better, E saw. „ 711
E set himself. Scorning an alms, „ 811
round again to meet the day When E had return'd, „ 823
And E bore his weakness cheerfully. ,> 827
E thinking ' after 1 am gone, „ 834
' Swear ' added E sternly ' on the book.' „ 842
Then E rolling his gray eyes upon her, ,, 844
E said again, ' My God has bow'd me down „ 855
for E hung A moment on her words, „ 872
While E slumber'd motionless and pale, ), ^08
Enoch Arden
179
Equal
Enoch Arden (See also Arden, Enoch) E A,a rough
sailor's lad
Did you know E A oi this town ? '
Proclaiming E A and his woes ;
Enormous e polypi Winnow with giant arms
Stretch'd wide and wild the waste e marsh,
E elm-tree-boles did stoop and lean
Enrich E the markets of the golden year.
thoughts e the blood of the world.'
To e the threshold of the night
Enring'd E a billowing fountain in the midst ;
Enroll Your Highness would e them with your own,
In many a figured leaf e's
Enroll'd good livers, them we e Among us,
Ensample drawing foul e from fair names,
Ensepulchre let the wolves' black maws e
Enshrouded cold worm Fretteth thine e form. —
Ensign drowsy folds of our great e shake
Enskied seem d at first 'a thing e '
Ensue that which might e With this old soul
out of distance might e Desire of nearness
Ensued, then e A Martin's summer of his faded love,
EntaU <SeeTa&il
Entangle To e me when we met,
Entangled The girl might be e ere she knew.
Entanglest All my bounding heart e
Enter But e not the toil of life.
oft some brainless devil «'s in,
He breaks the hedge : he e's there :
lingeringly on the latch. Fearing to e :
Let no man e in on pain of death ?
' Our laws are broken : let him e too.'
friend or foe. Shall e, if he will.
in a tade Shall e in at lowly doors.
She e's other realms of love ;
Descend, and touch, and e ;
' E Ukewise ye And go with us : '
And e in at breast and brow,
She e's, glowing Uke the moon
Slain by himself, shall e endless night.
Then Yniol, ' E therefore and partake
I will e, I will eat With all the passion
Said Yniol ; ' e quickly.'
nor lets Or dame or damsel e at his gates
There will I e in among them all.
Late, late, so late ! but we can e still.
too late ! ye cannot e now. (repeat)
And e it, and make it beautiful ?
but e also here, Diffuse thyself at will
Enter'd {See also Newly-enter'd)
le,
Each e Uke a welcome guest.
Enoch Arden 14
845
868
The Krdken 9
Ode to Memory 101
D. of F. Women 57
Golden Year 46
Princess ii 181
In Mem. xxix 6
Princess ii 28
i239
In Mem. xliii 11
Gareth and L. 424
Guinevere 490
Balin and Balan 487
A Dirge 10
Princess v 8
I'd E. Fitzgerald 16
Two Voices 392
In Mem. cxvii 5
Aylmer's Field 559
Maud I vi 28
Aylmer's Field 272
Madeline 40
Margaret 24
Palace of Art 203
Day-Dm., Arrival 18
Enoch Arden 520
Princess ii 195
„ vi 317
337
In Mem. xxxvi 8
xll2
xciii 13
ciii 51
cxxii 11
Con. 27
Gareth and L. 642
Marr. of Geraint 300
„ 305
360
Balin and Balan 107
Lancelot and E. 1052
Guinevere 169
Guinevere 170, 173, 176, 179
Pass, of Arthur 17
Prog, of Spring 23
another night in night
Arabian Nights 38
Two Voices 411
blew Beyond us, as we e in the cool.
struck it thrice, and, no one opening, E ;
What ail'd her then, that ere she e,
e one Of those dark caves that run beneath the cUlIs
e an old hostel, call'd mine host To council,
hastily subscribed, We e on the boards :
as we e in. There sat along the forms.
With me. Sir, e in the bigger boy,
I knock'd and, bidden, e ;
dipt Beneath the satin dome and e in,
we e in, and there Among piled arms
Empanoplied and plumed We e in,
' Enter Ukewise ye And go with us : ' they e in,
Left her and fled, and Uther e in,
when I e told me that himself And Merlin
then e with his twain Camelot,
And «, and were lost behind the walls.
E, the wild lord of the place, Limours.
Thereafter, when Sir BaUn e hall.
Laid lance, and e, and we knelt in prayer.
The younger sister, Evelyn, e —
Muriel e with it, ' See ! —
Has e on the larger woman-world
Gardener's D. 114
Enoch Arden 280
518
Sea Dreams 89
Princess i 173
„ ii 74
„ 101
" ...404
„ Hi 130
„ iv 31
„ V 54
» ..484
In Mem. ciii 52
Com. of Arthur 201
364
Gareth and L. 302
Marr. of Geraint 252
Geraint and E. 277
Balin and Balan 80
Holy Grail 460
Sisters (E. and E.) 152
The Ring 279
„ 486
Entering {See also Half-entering) e filPd the house with
sudden light. Aylmer's Field 682
for on e He had cast the curtains of their seat aside — „ 802
You likewise will do well, Ladies, in e here, Princess ii 62
E, the sudden light Dazed me half -blind : „ v 11
E then. Right o'er a mount of newly-fallen stones, Marr. of Geraint 360
and e barr'd her door, Stript off the case, Lancelot and E. 15
e, loosed and let him go.' Holy Grail 698
Sir Bors, on e, push'd Athwart the throng to Lancelot, „ 752
E aU the avenues of sense Past thro' into his citadel. Lover's Tale i 630
and e the dim vault, And, making there a sudden light, „ iv 52
Enterprise Far-famed for well-won e, Kate 22
Here on the threshold of our e. Gareth and L. 298
Entertain'd talk and minstrel melody e. Lancelot and E. 267
Entertainment the slender e of a house Once rich, Marr. of Geraint 301
Enthroned or the e Persephonfe in Hades, Princess iv 438
Entranced E with that place and time, Arabian Nights 97
Entreat ' Earl, e her by my love, Marr. of Geraint 760
Entreaty manifold entreaties, many a tear, Enoch Arden 160
Entry Above an e : riding in, we call'd ; Princess i 225
A column'd e shone and marble stairs, „ v 364
in the Vestal e shriek'd The virgin marble „ vi 350
two great entries open'd from the hall, Gareth and L. 665
by this e fled The damsel in her wrath, „ 674
a lion on each side That kept the e, Holy Grail 818
Strewn in the e of the moaning cave ; Lover's Tale Hi 2
Entry-gates Stood from his walls and wing dhis e g Aylmer's Field 18
Entwine Round my true heart thine arms e Miller's D. 216
E the cold baptismal font. In Mem. xxix 10
Envied I e your sweet slumber, The Flight 9
Envious See Half-envious
Envy (s) far aloof From e, hate and pity, Lucretius 77
No lewdness, narrowing e, monkey-spite, „ 211
Know well that E calls you Devil's son. Merlin and V. 467
then did E call me Devil's son : „ 497
E wears the mask of Love, Locksley H., Sixty 109
Envy (verb) Her countrywomen ! she did not e Princess Hi 41
I e not in any moods The captive void In Mem. xxvii 1
I e not the beast that takes His Ucense „ 5
Ehivying LeoUn, I almost sin in e you : Aylmer's Field 360
And e all that meet him there. In Mem. Ix 8
Enwind Danube rolling fair E her isles. In Mem. xcviii 10
Enwomb O day which did e that happy hour. Lover's Tale i 485
Enwound the circle of his arms E us both ; Gardener's D 217
E him fold by fold, and made him gray Guinevere 603
Epic (adj.) Princess, six feet high, Grand, e. Princess, Pro. 225
Epic (s) ' he burnt His e, his King Arthur, The Epic 28
With scraps of thundrous E lilted out Princess ii 375
Epicurean (adj.) majesties Of settled, sweet, E life, Lucretius 218
Epicurean (s) like a stoic, or like A wiser e, Maud I iv 21
Epitaph {See also Hepitaph) cut this e above my bones ; Princess ii 207
Epithet And pelted with outrageous e's, Aylmer's Field 286
and your fine e Is accurate too, Merlin and V. 532
Epoch A juster e has begun. Epilogue 6
Equal (adj.) Gliding with e crowns two serpents led Alexander 6
who wrought Two spirits to one e mind — Miller's D. 236
Let us swear an oath, and keep it with an e mind, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 108
we are ; One e temper of heroic hearts, Ulysses 68
crime of sense became The crime of maUce, and is
e blame.' Vision of Sin 216
Maintaining that with e husbandry Princess i 130
Toward that great year of e mights and rights, „ iv 74
I saw That e baseness lived in sleeker times „ v 385
scorn'd to help their e rights Against the sons of men, „ vii 233
the track Whereon with e feet we fared ; In Mem. xxv 2
But lives to wed an e mind ; „ Ixii 8
First love, first friendship, e powers, „ Ixxxv 107
Faith and imfaith can ne'er be e powers : Merlin and V. 388
To leave an e baseness ; „ 830
As Love and I do number e years, Lover's Tale i 195
A planet e to the sun Which cast it. To E. Fitzgerald 35
The girls of e age, but one was fair. The Ring 160
every heart that loves with truth is e to endure. The Flight 104
your passionate shriek for the rights of an e humanity. Beautiful City 2
For aU they rule — by e law for aU ? Akbar's Dream 110
Equal
180
Eustace
EQual (s) The woman were an e to the man. Princess i 131
and this proud watchword rest Of e ; „ vii 301
in true marriage hes Nor e, nor imequal : „ 303
' Ye are e's, equal-born.' Loclcsley H., Sixty 110
Each religion says, ' Thou art one, without e.' Akbar's D., Inscrip. 3
Equal (verb) what delights can e those In Mem. xlii 9
Equal-blowing Beneath a broad and e-b wind. Gardener's B. 77
Equal-bom ' Ye are equals, e-b ' E-b ? Locksley H., Sixty 110
Equall'd Strength came to me that e my desire. D. of F. Women 230
Equal-poised O friendship, e-p control. In Mem. Ixxxv 33
Equatorial Not such as here — an e one. Lover's Tale iv 190
Equinox feel in head or chest Our changeful e'es, Will Water. 238
Erased See Sand-erased
Erect Tall and e, but bending from his height Aylmer's Field 119
anger-charm'd from sorrow, soldierlike, E : „ 729
Tall and e, but in the middle aisle Reel'd, „ 818
Strode from the porch, tall, and e again. „ 825
E behind a desk of satin-wood. Princess ii 105
Lady Blanche e Stood up and spake, „ iv 290
E and silent, striking with her glance „ vi 152
Erin With Anguisant of E, Morganore, Com. of Arthur 115
Ermine with e capes And woolly-breasts and beaded
eyes ; In Mem. xcv 11
Erne (Miriam) See Miriam, Miriam Erne
Erne (Muriel) See Muriel, Muriel Erne
Eros a bevy of E'es, apple-cheek'd. The Islet 11
Err forms that e from honest Nature's rule ! Locksley Hail 61
O my princess ! true she e's, Princess Hi 107
she that has a son And sees him e: „ 261
For nothing is that e's from law. In Mem. Ixxiii 8
' If Enid e's, let Enid learn her fault.' Marr. of Geraint 132
Errant (See also Damsel-errant, Knighthood-errant)
and e knights And ladies came, Marr. of Geraint 545
To lead an e passion home again. Lucretius 17
Prince had brought his e eyes Home from the rock, Geraint and E. 245
Errantry See Knight-errantry
Err'd Aim'd at the hehn, his lance e ; Geraint and E. 157
if ancient prophecies Have e not, Guinevere 450
Errest ' Nay — but thou e, Lancelot : Holy Grail 881
Erring an e pearl Lost in her bosom : Princess iv 60
Error intellect to part E from crime ; Isabel 15
Shall E in the round of time Still father Truth ? Love and Duty 4
Deep as Hell I count his e. The Captain 3
Dismal e ! fearful slaughter ! „ 65
Child, if it were thine e or thy crime Come not, when, etc. 7
some gross e lies In this report. Princess i 69
so she wears her e like a crown „ Hi 111
The damsel's headlong e thro' the wood — Gareth and L. 1215
When he flouted a statesman's e. The Wreck 68
Life with its anguLsh, and horrors, and e's — Despair 48
'Erse (horse) Dosn't thou 'ear my 'e's legs, N. Farmer, N. S. 1
Fur he ca'd 'is 'e Billy-rough-un, ViUage Wife 84
Esau a heart as rough as E's hand, Godiva 28
Escape (S) and tumbles and childish e's, Maud I i 69
From which, was no e for evermore ; Merlin and V. 210
From which is no e for evermore.' ,, 544
Escape (verb) who scarce would e with her life ; In the Child. Hosp. 66
if they be bold enough, who shall e ? Def. of Liicknow 40
if I do not e you at last. Despair 114
And who shall e if they close ? Heavy Brigade 16
can e From the lower world within him. Making of Man 1
Escaped {See also 'Scaped) when the second Christmas
came, e HLs keepers, Aylmer's Field 838
From which I e heart-free, Maud I ii 11
Escaping Like the caged bird e suddenly, Enoch Arden 269
Esh (ash) Break me a bit o' the e for his 'ead, N. Farmer, N. S. 41
Eshcol vines with grapes Of E hugeness ; To E. Fitzgerald 28
Espalier e's and the standards all Are thine ; The Blackbird 5
Espied stood. Until the King e him. Holy Grail 755
Essay must thou dearly love thy first e, Ode to Memory 83
Essay'd e, by tenderest-touching terms, Merlin and V. 898
Then in my madness I e the door ; Holy Grail 841
Essayist Authors — e, atheist, novelist, Locksley H., Sixty 139
~ I floated free, As naked e. Two Voices 374
O sacred e, other form, In Mem. Ixxxv 35
Essence (continued) his e's turn'd the live air sick, Maud I xiii 11
In thine own e, and delight thyself Lover's Tale i 13
Estate (condition) Whose life in low e began In Mem. Ixiv 3
Day, when my crown'd e begun To pine „ Ixxii 5
Beholding one so bright in dark e, Marr. of Geraint 786
Estate (lands) (See also 'Staate) now lord of the broad e
and the Hall, Maud / i 19
This lump of earth has left his e „ xvi 1
an orphan with half a shire of e, — Charity 13
Estate (verb) E them with large land and territory Lancelot and E. 1322
Esteem talk kindlier : we e you for it — Princess v 212
Esteem'd we trust that you e us not Too harsh „ Hi 198
Esther those of old That Ughted on Queen E, Marr. of Geraint 731
Estuary colony smoulder'd on the refluent e ; Boddicea 28
Ethereal over those e eyes The bar of Michael Angelo. In Mem. Ixxxvii 39
Eternal (adj.) Lay there exiled from e God, Palace of Art 263
every hour is saved From that e silence, Ulysses 27
Pure Ulies of e peace, Sir Galahad 67
Or that e want of pence. Will Water. 43
Dwelt with e summer, ill-content. Enoch Arden 562
center'd in e calm. Lucretius 79
E honour to his name, (repeat) Ode on Well. 150, 231
Nor palter'd with E God for power ; „ 180
shall bloom The e landscape of the past ; In Mem. xlvi 8
E form shall still divide The e soul from all beside ; „ xlvii 6
on the low dark verge of life The twilight of e day. „ 1 16
E greetings to the dead ; „ Ivii 14
E process moving on, „ Ixxxii 5
Which masters Time indeed, and is E, „ Ixxxv 66
To bare the e Heavens again, „ cxxii 4
Lo ! I forgive thee, as E God Forgives : Guinevere 544
quiet fields of e sleep ! V. of Maeldune 80
bawl'd the dark side of your faith and a God of e rage, Despair 39
pity for our own selves till we long'd for e sleep. „ 46
march of that E Harmony Whereto the worlds beat
time, D. of the Duke of C. 15
Eternal (s) Shiah and Sunnee, Symbol the E ! Akbar's Dream 108
Eternity All things will change Thro' e. Nothing will Die 16
even and mom Ever will be Thro' e. „ 35
even and morn Ye will never see Thro' e. All Things wiU Die 46
So in the Ught of great e Love and Death 12
He names the name E. Two Voices 291
But dreadful time, dreadful e, Palace of Art 267
The sabbaths of E, St Agnes' Eve 33
Music's golden sea Setting toward e, Ode on Well. 253
O skill'd to sing of Time or E, Milton 2
girth of Time Inswathe the fullness of E, Lover's Tale i 483
You that shape for E, On Jub. Q. Victoria 43
Seem'd nobler than their hard Eternities. Demeter and P. 107
Etiquette clamouring e to death. Princess v 11
Ettarre for the lady was E, And she was a great lady Pelleas and E. 97
Linger'd E : and seeing Pelleas droop, „ 178
from the tower above him cried E, „ 231
Then when he came before E, „ 237
Bound on her brow, were Gawain and E. „ 435
Eunuch-hearted art thou not that e-h King Last Tournament 445
whine And snivel, being e-h too, „ 450
Europa sweet E's mantle blew unclasp'd, Palace of Art 117
Europe Better fifty years of E than a cycle of Cathay. Locksley Hall 184
guard the eye, the soul Of E, Ode on Well. 161
Once the weight and fate of E hung. „ 240
Tho' all the storm of JE on us break ; Third of Feb. 14
But the one voice in iE : we must speak ; ,, 16
avenging rod Shall lash all E into blood ; To F. D. Maurice 34
Surely tiie pibroch of E is ringing Def. of Lucknow 97
gain'd a freedom known to E, known to all ; Locksley H., Sixty 129
European never floats an E flag, Locksley Hall 161
the centre and crater of E confusion. Beautiful City 1
Europe-shadowing wheel'd on E's wings, Ode on Well. 120
Eustace I and E from the city went Gardener's D. 2
My E might have sat for Hercules ; „ 7
E painted her. And said to me, „ 20
E turn'd, and smiling said to me, „ 97
' E,' I said, ' this wonder keeps the house.' „ 119
With solemn gibe did E banter me. „ 168
Eustace
181
Ever-tremuIons
Eustace {continued) till Autumn brought an hour For E, Gardener's D. 208
Evangel Heaven-sweet E, ever-living word, Sir J. Oldcastle 28
Evangelist something seal'd The lips of that E. In Mem. xxxi 16
Evasion Elusion, and occasion, and e ' ? Gareth and L, 288
Eve {See also Christmas E&ve, Christmas-eve, Yester-eve)
At e the beetle boometh Claribd 9
At e a dry cicala sung, Mariana in the S. 85
And when the zoning e has died On a Mourner 21
Nor anchor dropt at e or mom ; The Voyage 82
From fringes of the faded e, Move eastward 3
Except when for a breathing- while at e, Aylmer's Field 449
As thro' the land at e we went, Princess ii 1
at e and dawn With Ida, Ida, Ida, rang the woods ; „ iv 432
sitting at home in my father's farm at e
Will there be dawn in West and e in East ?
No later than last e to Prince Geraint —
Her seer, her bard, her silver star of e.
Heard on the winding waters, e and mom
days Of dewy dawning and the amber e's
while my life's late e endures,
star of e was drawing light From the dead sun,
day by day, thro' many a blood-red e,
E after e that haggard anchorite Would haunt
Eve (proper name) since the time when Adam first
Embraced his E
Shadowing the snow-limb'd E
Evelyn E be^ns it ' O diviner Air.'
Now follows Edith echoing E.
graver than the other — Edith than E.
E is gayer, wittier, prettier.
The younger sister, E, enter'd —
told your wayside story to my mother And E.
For E knew not of my former suit,
round my E clung In utter silence for so long,
bright quick smile of E, that had sunn'd
this I named from her own self, E :
traitors to her ; our quick E —
Even (adj.) Upon an e pedestal with man.'
And climb d upon a fair and e ridge,
Even (s) {See also Yester-even) For e and mom
Ever will be Thro' eternity.
For e and mom Ye will never see Thro' etemity
Grandmother 90
Gareth and L. 712
Marr. of Geraint 603
Merlin and V. 954
Lancelot and E. 1408
Lover's Tale i 52
To Marq. of Bufferin 49
Death of (Enone 64
St. Telemachus 3
12
Day-Dm., L' Envoi 42
Maud I xviii 28
Sisters {E. and E.) 4
15
27
36
152
190
205
216
243
271
285
Princess Hi 224
Marr. of Geraint 239
Nothing will Die 33
All Things will Die AA
Thou comest morning or e; she cometh not morning or e. Leonine Eleg. 15
Her tears fell with the dews at e ;
And the crag that fronts the E,
Whisper in odorous heights of e.
gave a shield whereon the Star of E
setting, when E descended, the very sunset
Light the fading gleam of E?
or seated in the dusk Of e,
Evenfall. thro' the laurels At the quiet e,
Mariana 13
Elednore 40
Milton 16
Gareth and L. 1117
V. of Maddune 66
Locksley H., Sixty 229
Demeter and P. 126
Maud II iv 78
Evening (adj.) {See also Evening-Star) And with the e cloud, Ode to Memory 22
To the shepherd who watcheth the e star.
You are the e star.
Floating thro' an e atmosphere,
Eyed like the e star, with playful tail
same strength which threw the Homing Star Can
throw the E,'
We should see the Globe we groan in, fairest of
their e stars.
The mellow lin-lan-lone of e bells
Sunset and e star.
Twilight and e bell,
Evening (s) in stillest e's With what voice
Many an e by the waters did we watch
It chanced one e Annie's children long'd
At e when the dull November day
We dropt with e on a rustic town
With brow to brow like night and e mixt
it was e : silent light Slept on the painted walls
all of an e late I climb'd to the top
Never morning wore To e,
air. That rollest from the gorgeous gloom Of e
It leads me forth at e,
knight, That named himself the Star of E,
Dying Swan 35
Margaret 27
Elednore 100
(Enone 200
Gareth and L. 1109
Locksley H., Sixty 188
Far-far-away 5
Crossing the Bar 1
Adeline 30
Locksley Hall 37
Enoch Arden 362
721
Princess i 170
„ vi 131
„ vii 120
Grandmother 37
In Mem. vi 8
„ Ixxxvi 3
Maud II iv 17
Gareth and L. 1090
Evening (s) {continued) mixt Her fancies with the
sallow-rifted glooms Of e, Lancdot and E. 1003
or ever that e ended a great gale blew, The Revenge 114
gloom of the e, Life at a close ; Vastness 15
Evening-lighted From the e-l wood, Margaret 10
Evening-Star call themsleves the Day, Moming-Star,
and Noon-Sun, and E-S, Gareth and L. 634
Evenness I lost myself and fell from e. Sir J. Oldcastle 164
Even-sdoping Near him a mound of e-s side, Pelleas and E. 25
Evensong I know At matins and at e, Supv. Confessions 99
till the dusk that follow'd e Gareth and L. 793
Event such retraction of e's As often rises In Mem. xcii 15
And one far-off divine e, „ Con. 143
Enid stood aside to wait the e, Geraint and E. 153
thou remaining here wilt learn the e ; Guinevere 577
Move with me to the e. Lover's Tale i 298
there, my latest vision — then the e ! „ Hi 59
He flies the e : he leaves the e to me : „ iv 1
the e Glanced back upon them in his after life, „ 23
Eventide Either at morn or e. Mariana 16
For at e, listening earnestly, A spirit haunts 4
Then, on a golden autumn e, Enoch Arden 61
Everard {See also Everard Hall, Hall) clapt his hand On
E's shoulder, and, ' I hold by him.' And I,' quoth E, The Epic 22
For I remember'd E's college fame „ 46
Everard Hall {See also Everard, Hall) parson Holmes, the
poet EH, „ 4
Ever-breaking heard an e-h shore That tumbled In Mem. cxxiv 11
Ever-brightening Fifty years of e-b Science ! On Jui. Q. Victoria 53
Ever-broadening Fifty years of e-b Commerce ! „ 52
ocean-empire with her boundless homes For e-b
England, To the Queen ii 30
Ever-chai^ing a power to make This e-c world of
. circumstance, To Duke of Argyll 10
the never-changing One And e-c Many, Akbar's Dream 148
thee the changeless in thine e-c skies. Akbar's D., Hymn 4
Ever-climbing but that e-c wave, Hurl'd back again Last Tournament 92
Ever-deepen'd By the long torrent's e-d roar, Death of (Enone 85
Ever-echoing And e-e avenues of song. Ode on Well. 79
Ever-fancied Before an e-f arrow, made Geraint and E. 531
Ever-fleeting And rippled like an e-f wave, Gareth and L. 215
Ever-floating death, death, thou e-f cloud, (Enone 238
Evergreen (adj.) that e laurel is blasted by more than
lightning ! Parnassus 12
Evergreen (s) And in it throve an ancient e, Enoch Arden 735
O hollies and ivies and e's. Spiteful Letter 23
With but a drying e for crest, Gareth and L. 1116
Ever-growing Almost blind With e-g cataract. Sisters {E. and E.) 192
How long thine e-g mind Hath still'd Freedom 33
Ever-heightening And every phase of e-h life, De Prof., Two G. 7
Ever-highering In e-h eagle-circles up To the great Sun Gareth and L. 21
Everlasting The marvel of the e will. The Poet 7
she took the tax away And built herself an e name. Godiva 79
Nor sound of human sorrow mounts to mar Their sacred
e calm ! Lucretius 110
Lamp of the Lord God Lord e, Batt. of Brunanburh 28
Knowing the Love we were used to believe e would die : Despair 54
Infinite cruelty rather than make e Hell, „ 96
In the name Of the e God, I will live and die with you. Happy 108
Ever-living Heaven-sweet Evangel, e-l word, Sir J. Oldcastle 28
Ever-loyal Their e-l iron leader's fame. Ode on Wdl. 229
Ever-moaning An e-m battle in the mist, • Merlin and V. 192
Evermore My bride to be, my e delight, Maud I xviii 73
Ever-murder'd e-m France, By shores that darken Aylmer's Fidd 766
Ever-ravening e-r eagle's beak and talon Boddicea 11
Ever-rising A hundred e-r mountain lines, Ancient Sage 282
now their e-r life has dwarf'd The Ring 463
Ever-scattering wearing but a holly-spray for crest.
With e-s berries. Last Tournament 173
Ever-shifting e-s currents of the blood D. of F. Women 133
long mountains ended in a coast Of e-s sand. Pass of Arthur 86
Ever-showering And rode beneath an e-s leaf. Last Tournament 492
Ever-silent The e-s spaces of the East, Tithonus 9
passive sailor wrecks at last In e-s seas ; Ancient Sage 137
Ever-tremulous falling showers, And e-t aapen-trees, Lancelot and E. S2A
Ever-vanishing
182
Exceed
Despair 84
Pelleas and E. 493
On Juh. Q. Victoria 54
Erer-vanishing Motherless evermore of an e-v race,
Ever-veering her e-v fancy tum'd To Pelleas,
Ever-widening Fifty years of e-w Empire !
Every {See also Ivery, Ivry) E heart this May .„ r.- n
morning in joyance is beating All Things will Die b
' if e star in heaven Can make it fair : Sea Dreams 83
and e bird that sings : t, • " n ■'^?i
on the tables e clime and age Jumbled together ; Princess, Pro. lb
Brought from imder e star, Blown from under e main, Ode Inter. Exhih. 25
We siuig, tho' e eye was dim, ^" "''"""
From e house the neighbours met,
Their e parting was to die.
Defamed by e charlatan,
Now burgeons e maze of quick
For e grain of sand that runs. And e span of shade
that steals. And e kiss of toothed wlieeLs,
And e dew-drop paints a bow,
And e thought breaks out a rose.
The joy to e wandering breeze ;
And catch at e moimtain head.
And e eye but mine will glance At Maud
And mightier of his hands with e blow.
And under e shield a knight was named :
And overthrowing e knight who comes.
A home of bats, in e tower an owl.
But e page having an ample marge. And e marge
enclosing in the midst
And e square of text an awful charm,
And e margin scribbled, crost, and cramm'd
And e voice is nothing
and e day she tended him. And likewise many a night :
In Mem. xxx 14
xxxi 9
xcmi\2
cxi 23
cxv 2
exvii 9
cxxii 18
20
Con. 62
Cow. 114
Maud I XX 36
Com. of Arthur 110
Gareth and L. 409
Balin and Balan 13
336
Merlin and V. 669
„ 673
677
Lancelot and E. 108
850
Holy Grail 191
505
Last Tournament 676
678
Pass, of Arthur 422
To the Queen ii 50
In the Child. Hosp. 13
But e knight beheld liis fellow's face
e bridge as quickly as he crost Sprang into fire
for e knight Believed himself a greater
And e follower eyed him as a God ;
earth is e way Bound by gold chains
Waverings of e vane with e wind.
Here was a boy in the ward, e bone seem'd out
of its place —
' Never surrender, I charge you, but e man die at
his post ! ' -O^/' of Lucknow 10
' E man die at his post ! ' »> 13
as ocean on e side Plunges and heaves at a bank „ 38
For e other cause is less than mine. Sir J. Old/:astle 188
But in e berry and fruit was the poisonous pleasure V. of Maeldune 62
in this pavement but shall ring thy name To e hoof
that clangs it, Teresias 138
tho' e pulse would freeze. The Flight 53
Made e moment of her after life A virgin victim The Ring 220
O God in e temple I see people that see thee, and
in e language I hear spoken, Akbar's D., Inscrip. 1
in due time e Mussulman, Brahmin, and Buddhist, Akbar's Dream 24
E moment dies a man, E moment one is bom.
(repeat)
And e height comes out.
Evidence That heat of inward e,
Evfl (adj.) a name to shake All e dreams of power —
if Nature's e star Drive men in manhood.
For that the e ones come here, and say,
one, in whom all e fancies clung
Thought on all her e tyranni&s.
That Nature lends such e dreams ?
And grapples with his e star ;
With the e tongue and the e ear,
And I make myself such e cheer,
Struck for himself an « stroke ;
' as a false knight Or e king before my lance
A name of e savour in the land,
who driven by e tongues From all his fellows.
King, who sought to win my love Thro' e ways :
his e spirit upon him leapt, He ground his teeth
As one that labours with an e dream,
Then every e word I had spoken once. And every e
thought I had thought of old. And every e deed I
ever did, Holy Grail 371
Vision of Sin 91, 121
Spec, of Iliad 13
Two Voices 284:
The Poet 47
Love thou thy land 73
St. S. Stylites 98
Enoch Arden 479
Boadicea 80
In. Mem. Iv 6
„ Ixiv 8
Maud I X 51
„ XV 2
„ //i21
Gareth and L. 6
385
Balin and Balan 125
„ 475
537
Merlin arid V. 101
Evil (adj.) (continued) I rode. Shattering all e customs
everywhere I^oly Grail 477
A great black swamp and of an e smell, „ 499
her anger, leaving Pelleas, burn'd Full on her knights
in many an e name PeUeas and E. 290
I cannot brook to see your beauty marr'd Thro' e spite : „ 299
' I am wrath and shame and hate and e fame, „ 568
What e beast Hath drawn his claws athwart thy
fj^Qg p Last Tournament 62
Among their harlot-brides, an e song. „ 428
some e chance Will make the smouldering scandal Guinevere 90
he foresaw This e work of Lancelot and the Queen ? ' „ 307
Like to the wild youth of an e prince. Lover's Tale i 354
we came in an e time to the Isle of the Double
Towers ^- "/ Maeldune 105
Nor care^for Hunger hath the E eye — Ancient Sage 264
An e thought may soil thy children's blood ; „ 275
Evil (s) range of e between death and birth, // / were loved 3
What pleasure can we have To war with e ? Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 49
This e came on WilUam at the first. Dora 61
And all good things from e. Love and Duty 59
(Sure that all e would come out of it) Enoch Arden 162
let us too, let all e, sleep. Sea Dreams 309
Out of e e flourishes, Boadicea 83
E haunts The bu-th, the bridal ; In Mem. xcyni 13
That whatsoever e happen to me, Marr. of Geraint 471
I heard He had spoken e of me ; Balm and Balan 58
Bound are they To speak no e. " , T,Hn
What e have ye wrought ? Merlin and V. 67
Nay— we believe all e of thy Mark— „ 3' ^ -7 c^
times Grew to such e that the holy cup Holy Grail 57
for they do not flow From e done ; Guinevere 189
angers of the Gods for e done TiresiasG2
Is there e but on earth ? Lockdey H., Sixty 197
fashion'd and worship a Spirit of E, Kapiolam 1
Evil-hearted Beautiful Paris, e-h Paris, „,*?*, f9
Evil-starr'd fell my father e-s ;— Locksley Hall 15o
Evolution sounding watch ward ' E ' here. Locksley IL, Sixty 198
E ever climbing after some ideal good, „ 199
Reversion ever dragging E in the mud. „ _ 200
Ionian E, swift or slow, The Ring 44
Re-volution has proven but E Beautiful City 3
Ewe (See also Yow, Yowe) snowy shoulders, thick as
herded e's. Princess iv 479
Example To make me an e to mankind, St. S. Stylites 188
let them take E, pattern : " . . . ?^^
But, your e pilot, told her all. Princess ii» 137
Let his great e stand Colossal, Ode on Well. 220
Unused e from the grave Reach out dead hands In Mem. Ixxx 15
' And is the fair e foUow'd, Sir, Merlin and V. 19
their e's reach a hand For thro' all years, Tiresias 126
Excalibur Thou therefore take my brand E, M. d' Arthur 27
take E, And fling him far into the middle mere : „ 36
Then drew he forth the brand E, " lo
it seem'd Better to leave E conceal'd „ 62
Saying, ' King Arthur's sword, E, „ 103
And hid E the second time, « llj
But, if thou spare to fling E, „ 131
So flash'd and fell the brand £: „ 14^
' There likewise I beheld E Before him Com. of Arthur 295
Whereof they forged the brand E, Gareth and L. 67
Where Arthur finds the brand E. Holy Grail 253
The brand E will be cast away. , „ » ^l
his long lance Broken, and his E a straw.' Last Tournament 8»
Striking the last stroke with E, Pass, of Arthur 168
Thou therefore take my brand E, „ 195
take E, And fling him far into the middle mere : „ 204
Then drew he forth the brand E, » 220
it seem'd Better to leave E conceal'd „ 230
Saying, ' King Arthur's sword, E, „ 271
And hid E the second time, ,« 2/a
But, if thou spare to fling E, „ ^^^
So flash'd and fell the brand jB : „ 3iu
Exceed one whose rank e's her own. In Mem. Ixjt
in his behalf Shall I e the Persian, Lover's Tale iv 347
Exceeding
183
Exceeding With slow, faint steps, and much e pain,
That each had suffer'd some e wrong.
With more e passion than of old :
but there I found Only one man of e age.
Smit with e sorrow unto Death.
Excellence Even his own abiding e —
Methought all e that ever was Had drawn herself
Excess From e of swift delight.
At which, like one that sees his own e,
Exchange brooking not E or currency :
Excitement Yearning for the large e
Exclaim'd e Averring it was clear against all rules
Excommunicated were e there.
Excuse With many a scarce-believable e,
for my e What looks so little graceful :
Made such e'5 as he might,
Execration with a sudden e drove The footstool
Exempt she herself was not e —
Exercise Charier of sleep, and wine, and «,
Which men delight in, martial e ?
Yoked in all e of noble end,
The sad mechanic «, Like dull narcotics.
Exile (See also Self-exile) a three-years' e from thine
eyes.
Exiled Lay there e from eternal God,
Existence deep heart of e beat for ever
Exit found Only the landward e of the cave.
Expand Heaven over Heaven e's.
Ej^Minse And down the river's dim e
On a day when they were going O'er the lone e,
Expect king e's — was there no precontract ?
Expectant E of that news which never came,
Brook'd not the e terror of her heart.
Thou doest e nature wrong ;
Expectation eyes Of shining e &xi on mine.
her father's chimney glows In e of a guest ;
Expecting E when a fountain should arise :
E still his advent home ;
Experience tho' all e past became Coasolidate
full-grown will. Circled thro' all e's,
remark was worth The « of the wise.
Yet all e is an arch wherethro' Gleams
he bears a laden breast. Full of sad e,
is what Our own e preaches.
and strange e's Unmeet for ladies.
I prophesy your plan, Divorced from my e,
pines in sad e worse than death,
A lord of large e,
E, in her kind Hath foul'd me —
Mv close of earth's e May prove as peaceful
tell them ' old e is a fool,'
Experienced See Much-experienced
Experiment In setting round thy first e
And, yonder, shrieks and strange e's
but a most burlesque barbarous e.
Barbarous e, barbarous hexameters.
Expert howsoe'er e In fitting aptest words
Expiation anger of the Gods for evil done And e lack'd —
Elxplain She answer'd, ' ever longing to e,
Explain'd The shame that cannot be e for shame.
B2xpound not of those that can e themselves.
Expounder Take Vivien for e ;
Express How may full-sail'd verse e.
Who may e thee, Eleanore ?
The common mouth. So gross to e delight,
e All-comprehensive tenderness,
may not kings E him also by their warmth
Express'd-Exprest no other thing exjn-ess'd But long
disquiet
In yearnings that can never be exprest By signs
Thro' light reproaches, half exprest
a robe Of samite without price, that more exprest
Than hid her.
Expression But beyond e fair
Drew in the e of an eye,
St. S. Stylitea 183
Geraint and E. 36
Geraint and E. 335
Holy Grail 431
Lover's Tale i 601
504
549
Rosalind 32
Aylmer's Field 400
Lover's Tale i 448
Locksley Hall 111
Princess 1 177
Columbus 192
Enoch Arden 469
Princess Hi 52
Guinevere 38
Aylmer's Field 2,2G
Locksley Hall 95
Aylmer's Field 448
Princess Hi 216
„ vii 361
In Mem. v 7
Balin and Balan 59
Palace of Art 263
Locksley Hall 140
Sea Dreams 96
Mechanophilus 36
L. of ShaloUiv 10
The Captain 26
Princess Hi 207
Enoch Arden 258
493
In Mem. Ixxxiii 3
Princess iv 153
In Mem. vi 30
Vision of Sin 8
In Mem. vi 21
Two Voices 365
CEnone 166
Edwin Morris 66
Ulysses 19
Locksley Hall 144
Will Water. 176
Princess iv 158
„ 355
„ vii 315
In Mem. xlii 7
Last Tournament 317
Tiresias 216
Locksley H., Sixty 131
Ode to Memory 81
Princess, Pro. 235
Trans, of Hom,er 2
In Mem. Ixxv 5
Tiresias 63
The Brook 107
Merlin and V. 698
318
319
Eleanore 44
68
Gardener's D. 56
In Mem. Ixxxv 46
Akbar's Dream 109
Two Voices 248
D.ofF. Women 283
In Mem. Ixxxv 15
Merlin and V. 222
Adeline 5
In Mem. cxi 19
Exprest See Ezpress'd
Expunge tam by tarn E the world :
Exquisite E Margjiret, who can tell
kisses press'd on lips Less e than thine.'
For in all that e isle, my dear,
Maud with her e face.
Extending innocently e her white arms.
Extreme (adj.) Winning its way with e gentleness
Extreme (s) The falsehood of e's !
Princess vii 41
Margaret 36
Gardener's D. 152
The Islet 26
Maud 7 1> 12
Lancelot and E. 932
Isabel 23
Of old sat Freedom 24
such e's, I told her, well might harm The woman's
cause. Princess Hi 144
storming in e's. Stood for her cause, „ v 176
fierce e's employ Thy spirits in the darkening leaf, In Mem. Ixxxviii 5
And save it even in e's, Guinevere 67
Extremest In this e misery Of ignorance, Supp. Confessions 8
whom to have suffering view'd had been E pain ; Lover's Tale ii 130
Extremity He, reddening in e of delight, Geraint and E. 219
Exult Fade wholly, while the soul e's. In Mem. Ixxiii 14
while my hand e's Within the bloodless heart Prog, of Spring 83
Eye (s) (See also Hawk-eye, Hey, Lynx-eyes, Prophet-
eye) stream be aweary of flowing Under my e ? Nothing will Die 2
river chimes in its flowing Under my e ; All Things will Die 2
knows Nothing beyond his mother's e's. Supp. Confessions 44
beheld Thy mild deep e's upraised, „ 74
Floats from his sick and filmed e's, „ 166
Glancing with black-beaded e's, Lilian 15
E's not down-dropt nor over-bright, Isabel 1
Light-glooming over e's divine, Madeline 16
Serene with argent-lidded e's Amorous, Arabian Nights 135
his deep e laughter-stirr'd With merriment „ 150
Those spirit-thrilling e's so keen Ode to Memory 39
Thou of the many tongues, the myriad e's ! „ 47
Unto mine inner e, Divinest Memory ! „ 49
Large dowries doth the raptured e „ 72
all creation pierce Beyond the bottom of his e. A Character 6
And a lack-lustre dead-blue e, „ 17
Blew his own praises in his e's, „ 22
rites and forms before his burning e's The Poet 39
circles of the globes Of her keen e's „ 44
In your e there is death. Poet's Mind 16
listen, listen, your e's shall glisten (repeat) Sea-Fairies 35, 37
all about him roU'd his lustrous e's ; Love and Death 3
tears of blood arise Up from my heart unto my e's, Oriana 78
his large cahn e's for the love of me. The Mermaid 27
Thy rose-lips and full blue e's Adeline 7
And those dew-lit e's of thine, „ 47
What ht your e's with tearful power, Margaret 3
your e's Touch'd with a somewhat darker hue, „ 49
and let your blue e's dawn Upon me „ 67
My froUc falcon, with bright e's, Rosalind 2
Thro' lips and e's in subtle rays. „ 24
But we must hood your random e's, „ 37
Thy dark e's open'd not, Eleanore 1
languors of thy love-deep e's Float on to me. „ 76
grow so full and deep In thy large e's, „ 86
Thought seems to come and go In thy large e's, „ 97
bright black e's, her bright black hair, Kate 2
In dreaming of my lady's e's. „ 28
As when with downcast e we muse and brood. Sonnet to 1
Returning with hot cheek and kindled e's. Alexander 14
win all e's with all accomplishment : The form, the form 4
Below us, as far on as e could see. If I were loved 14
Thine e's so wept that they could hardly see ; The Bridesviaid 2
And her e's were darken'd wholly, L. of Shalott iv 31
Her melancholy e's divine, Mariana in the S. 19
To look into her e's and say, „ 75
' Whose e's are dim with glorious tears. Two Voices 151
' He owns the fatal gift of e's, „ 286
forget The busy wrinkles round his e's ? Miller's D. 4
I see his gray e's twinkle yet At his own jest — gray
e's Ut up With summer lightnings „ 11
But ere I saw your e's, my love, „ 43
And there a vision caught my e ; „ 76
when I raised my e's, above They met with two so
full and bright— Such e's ! „ 85
Eye
184
Eye
Eye (S) (continued) E's with idle tears are wet.
Look thro' mine e's with thine.
May those kind e's for ever dwell ! They have not
shed a many tears, Dear e's,
Droops blinded with his shining e :
My e's are full of tears, my heart of love, My heart
is breaking, and my e's are dim,
With down-dropt e's I sat alone :
The while, above, her full and earnest e
Thy mortal e's are frail to judge of fair,
She with a subtle smile in her mild e's.
And I beheld great Herfe's angry e's,
to vex me with his father's e's !
gaze upon My palace with imblinded e's,
hand and e's That said, We wait for thee.
Flush'd in her temples and her e's,
all things fair to sate my various e's !
Oh your sweet e's, your low replies :
The languid light of your proud e's
There's many a black e, they say,
Than tir'd eyelids upon tir'd e's ;
With half -shut e's ever to seem Falling
e's grown dim with gazing on the pilot-stars.
Charged both mine e's with tears.
The star-like sorrows of immortal e's,
stern black-bearded kings with wolfish e's,
with swarthy cheeks and bold black e's,
nor tame and tutor with mine e
Those dragon e's of anger'd Eleanor
But tho' his e's are waxing dim.
Close up his e's : tie up his chin :
And tho' mine own e's fill with dew,
Memory standing near Cast down her e's,
Her open e's desire the truth.
broke From either side, nor veil his e's :
both his e's were dazzled, as he stood,
might have pleased the e's of many men.
Laid widow'd of the power in his e
Valuing the giddy pleasure of the e's.
' Now see I by thine e's that this is done.
looking wistfully with wide blue e's As in a pictiu-e,
chained Before the e's of ladies and of kings.
shall I hide my forehead and my e's ?
made those e's Darker than darkest pansies,
Her violet e's, and all her Hebe bloom,
A thought would fill my e's with happy dew ;
following her dark e's Felt earth as air
while I mused came Memory with sad e's,
this whole hour your e's have been intent
Make thine heart ready with thine e's :
And I will set him in my imcle's e
To make him pleasing in her imcle's e.
Dora cast her e's upon the ground,
like a pear In growing, modest e's,
his nice e's Should see the raw mechanic's
film made thick These heavy, homy e's.
with what delighted e's I turn to yonder oak.
I breathed upon her e's
sunbeam slip, To light her shaded e ;
Streaming e's and breaking hearts ?
staring e glazed o'er with sapless days.
When e's, love-languid thro half tears
Gave utterance by the yearning of an e,
With quiet e's unfaithful to the truth,
Shines in those tremulous e's
sweet e's brighten slowly close to mine,
with what other e's I used to watch —
I dipt into the future far as human e could see ;
(repeat)
And her e's on all my motions
dawning in the dark of hazel e's —
What is this ? his e's are heavy :
an e shall vex thee, looking ancient kindness
Miller's D. 211
„ 215
„ 220
Fatima 38
QLnone 31
„ 56
„ 141
„ 158
„ 184
„ 190
„ 255
Palace of Art A2
103
170
193
£. C. F.'deFere29
59
May Queen 5
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 6
55
87
B.ofF. Womm 13
91
111
127
138
255
D.ofihe'b. Tear 21
48
To J. 8. 37
„ 54
Of old sat Freedom 17
Love tJiou thy land 90
M. d' Arthur 59
91
122
128
149
169
225
228
Gardener's D. 26
137
197
211
„ 243
„ 269
273
Dora 67
„ 84
„ 89
Walk, to the Mail 54
74
St. s"stylites 201
Talking Oak 7
„ 210
Love and Duly 2
16
„ 36
62
94
Tithonus 26
„ 38
,. 51
and left me with the jaundiced e ; iS, to which all
order festers,
Locksley Hall 15, 119
22
28
51
„ 85
132
Eye (s) (continued) No e look down, she pa.ssing ; Godiva 40
heads upon the spout Had ctmning e's to see : „ 57
but his e's, before they had their will, „ 69
Nor look with that too-earnest e — Day-Dm., Pro. 18
A fairy Prince, with joyful e's, „ Arrival 7
How dark those hidden e's must be ! ' ,, 32
' 0 e's long laid in happy sleep ! ' „ Depart. 17
So much your e's my fancy take — „ L'Envoi 26
That I might kiss those e's awake ! „ 28
What e's, like thine, have waken'd hopes, „ 45
this heart and e's, Are touch'd, Sir Galahad 71
crow shall tread The corners of thine e's : Will Water. 236
She look'd into Lord Ronald's e's. Lady Clare 79
gladness lighten'd In the e's of each. The Captain 32
He saw not far : his e's were dim : The Voyage 75
One praised her ancles, one her e's. Beggar Maid 11
To glass herself in dewy e's That watch me Move eastward 7
I saw with half-unconscious e She wore the colours The Letters 15
Where sat a company with heated e's. Vision of Sin 7
Hair, and e's, and limbs, and faces, „ 39
Glimmer in thy rheumy e's. „ 154
I cannot praise the fire In your e — „ 184
then would Philip, his blue e's All flooded Enoch Arden 31
Enoch set A purpose evermore before his e's, „ 45
His large gray e's and weather-beaten face „ 70
And in their e's and faces read his doom ; „ 73
She could not fix the glass to suit her e ; Perhaps her e
was dim, hand tremulous ;
rose, and fixt her swimming e's upon him,
his e's Full of that lifelong hunger.
His e's upon the stones, he reach'd
Enoch rolling his gray e's upon her.
That once again he roll'd his e's upon her
Her e's a bashful azure, and her hair
Katie snatch'd her e's at once from mine,
sweet content Re-risen in Katie's e's,
he stared On e's a bashful azure,
Whose e's from under a pyramidal head
eager e's, that still Took joyful note
the cross-lightnings of four chance-met e's
Till Leolin ever watchful of her e,
conscious of the rageful e That watch'd him.
With a weird bright e, sweating and trembling,
her fresh and innocent e's Had such a star of morning
hid the Holiest from the people's e's
Then their e's vext her ;
And those fixt e's of painted ancestors
thinking that her clear germander e Droopt
night-light flickering in my e's Awoke me.'
then my e's Pursued him down the street,
all his conscience and one e askew ' — (repeat)
Made wet the crafty crowsfoot round his e ;
Grave, florid, stem, as far as e could see,
show'd their e's Glaring, and passionate looks,
I fixt My wistful e's on two fair images,
' Dead ! who is dead ? ' ' The man your e pursued.
And here he glances on an e new-born,
her arm lifted, e's on fire —
turns Up thro' gilt wires a crafty loving e,
twinn'd as horse's ear and e.
raised the blinding bandage from his e's :
such e's were in her head,
all her thoughts as fair within her e's.
Abase those e's that ever loved to meet
wander from his wits Pierced thro' with e's,
glowing round her dewy e's The circled Iris
her lynx e To fix and make me hotter,
settled in her e's The green malignant light
Up went the hush'd amaze of hand and e.
we had limed ourselves With open e's,
as she smote me with the light of e's
She spake With kindled e's :
Rise in the heart, and gather to the e's,
unto dying e's The casement slowly grows
Stared witii great e's, and laugh'd with alien lips,
241
„ 325
463
„ 684
844
904
The Brook 71
„ 101
„ 169
„ 206
Aylmer's Field 20
129
210
336
585
„ 691
772
802
832
Sea Dreams 4
103
164
„ 180, 184
' » 187
219
235
240
272
Lucretius 137
Princess, Pro. 41
172
i57
244
a 37
326
427
441
„ Hi 26
46
131
138
143
192
„ 334
„ tv 41
51
1
Eye
Eye (s) (coTitinued) She wept her true e's blind for such
a one,
with e's Of shining expectation fixt on mine.
Not yet endured to meet her opening e's,
an e Hke mine, A lidless watcher of the public weal,
Fear Stared in her e's, and chalk'd her face,
gems and gemlike e's. And gold and golden heads ;
the crimson-rolling e Glares ruin,
slink From ferule and the trespass-chiding e.
Alive with fluttering scarfs and ladies' e's,
loved me closer than his own right e,
old lion, glaring with his whelpless e,
grief and mother's hunger in her e,
her e with slow dilation roU'd Dry flame,
meet it, witli an e that swum in thanks ;
So she, and tum'd askance a wintry e :
The common men with rolling e's ;
I love not hollow cheek or faded e :
Nor knew what e was on me,
the dew Dwelt in her e's,
I on her Fixt my faint e's, and utter'd
with shut e's I lay Listening ; then look'd.
and mild the luminous e's,
yearlong poring on thy pictured e's,
lift thine e's ; my doubts are dead,
guard the e, the soul Of Europe,
he tum'd, and I saw his e's all wet,
thank God that I keep my e's.
and the e of man cannot see ;
A jewel, a jewel dear to a lover's e I
fine Uttle feet — Dewy blue e.
Tell my wish to her dewy blue e :
lighten into my e's and my heart,
cross All night below the darken'd e's ;
But since it pleased a vanish'd e.
Mine e's have leisure for their tears ;
Paradise It never look'd to human e's
if that e which watches guilt And goodness,
Oh, if indeed that e foresee Or see
We sung, tho' every e was dim.
Her e'« are homes of silent prayer,
those wild e's that watch the wave
Make April of her tender e's ;
See with clear e some hidden shame
With larger other e's than ours,
185
Eye
Princess iv 134
152
195
324
377
480
494
„ i>38
„ 509
531
„ vt99
>, 146
,, 189
210
330
360
» vii 7
53
136
144
Such splendid purpose in his e's.
That ever lookM with human e's.
And if thou cast thine e's below,
Tho' if an e that's downward cast
Or in the light of deeper e's
And closing eaves of wearied e's
I find a trouble in thine e,
him, who turns a musing e On songs,
And dropt the dust on tearless e's ;
And over those ethereal e's
He brought an e for all he saw ;
dying e's Were closed with wail.
And woolly breasts and beaded e's ;
whose light-blue e's Are tender over drowning flies.
These two — they dwelt with e on e.
She dwells on him with faithful e's,
gleams On Lethe in the e's of Death.
But each has pleased a kindred e.
The critic clearness of an e,
and thee mine e's Have look'd on :
Drew in the expression of an e,
I, who gaze with temperate e's
I seem to cast a careless e On souls.
And bright the friendship of thine e,
Or eagle's wing, or insect's e ;
She did but look thro' dimmer e's ;
Sweet human hand and lips and e ;
On me she bends her blissful e's
By village e's as yet unborn ;
e to e, shall look On knowledge ;
„ 226
340
348
Ode on Well. 160
Grandmother 49
106
High. Pantheism 17
Window, On the Hill 3
j> Letter 4
,. 14
„ Marr. Mom. 15
In Mem. iv 14
, via 21
, xiii 16
, xxiv 7
, xxvi5
9
, XXX 14
, xxxii 1
, xxxvi 15
, xlS
HI
15
, Ivi 10
Ivii 12
, Ixi 5
Ixii 1
11
Ixvii 11
la^ii 10
Ixxvii 2
Ixxx 4
Ixxxvii 39
IXXXtX \j
xc 5
xcv 12
xem2
xcvii 9
xcvii 35
xcmii 8
cl7
cix 3
21
cxi 19
cxii 2
7
cxix 10
cxxiv 6
cxxv 6
cxxix 6
Con. 29
59
129
Eye (s) (continued) (for her e's were downcast, not to be seen)
An e well-practised in nature,
her e seemed full Of a kind intent to me.
And a moist mirage in desert e's,
once, but once, she lifted her e's,
Let not my tongue be a thrall to my e.
Innumerable, pitiless, passionless e's,
often I caught her with e's all wet,
every e but mine will glance At Maud
In violets blue as your e's.
Was it he lay there with a fading e ?
But only moves with tlio moving e,
it well Might drown all life in the e,—
I sorrow For the hand, the lips, the e's.
My own dove with the tender e ?
look'd, tho' but in a dream, upon e's so fair
O passionate heart and morbid e, '
Felt the light of her e's into his life
And dazed all e's, till Arthur by main might
From e to e thro' all their Order flash '
Bewildering heart and e —
Fixing full e's of question on her face,
dark my mother was in e's and hair. And dark in
hair and e's am I ;
the Queen replied with drooping e's,
Gareth answer'd her with kindling e's, (repeat)
Nor fronted man or woman, e to e — ■
The mother's e Full of the vristful fear
Gareth likewise on them fixt his e's
shyly glanced E's of pure women,
the listening e's Of those tall knights,
the field was pleasant in our e's,
The field was pleasant in my husband's e.'
Return, and meet, and hold him from our e's,
the King's calm e Fell on, and check'd,
A head with kindling e's above the throng.
Round as the red e of an Eagle-owl,
Gareth's e's had flying blots Before them
And Enid, but to please her husband's e,
this she gather'd from the people's e's :
darken'd from the high light in his e's,
maybe pierced to death before mine e's,
with fixt e following the three.
Let his e rove in following.
To whom Geraint with e's all bright replied,
Nor did she lift an e nor speak a word,
At this she cast her e's upon her dress.
Myself would work e dim, and finger lame,
Help'd by the mother's careful hand and e,
the Prince had brought his errant e's
Found Enid with the comer of his e,
Crost and came near, lifted adoring e's,
would not make them laughable in all e's.
Made his e moist ; but Enid fear'd his e's,
With e's to find you out however far,
his e darken'd and his helmet wagg'd ;
let her tme hand falter, nor blue e Mo'isten,
drove the dust against her veilless e's :
Bound on a foray, rolhng e's of prey,
Half-bold, half-frighted, with dilated e's.
He roll'd his e's about the hall,
o'er her meek blue e's, came a happy mist
Yet not so misty were her meek blue e's
with your meek e's. The tmest e's
with your own tme e's Beheld the man
having look'd too much thro' aUen e's.
King went forth and cast his e's On each
Sent me a three-years' exUe from thine e's.
Sir Lancelot with his e's on earth,
Lo ! these her emblems drew mine e's —
Then Lancelot lifted his large e's ;
hast thou e's, or if, are these So far besotted
Then fiercely to Sir Garlon ' E's have I That saw
Es too that long have watch'd how Lancelot
The longest lance his e's had ever seen,
be seen)
Maud I ii 5
iv 38
„ vi 40
. 53
„ via 5
„ xvi 32
„ xviii 38
„ xix 23
„ XX 36
„ xxii 42
„ // i 29
a 37
61
iv 27
46
„ /// vi 16
32
Com. (
/ Arthur 56
109
270
300
312
327
469
Gareth and, L. 41, 62
112
172
236
314
327
337
342
429
547
646
799
1031
Marr. of
Geraint 11
61
100
104
237
>
399
>
, 494
528
>
609
628
9
738
Geraint and E. 245
„
281
„
304
>»
326
»i
350
»>
428
„
505
„
512
»5
529
„
538
>l
597
9t
610
»
769
II
772
II
841
l»
846
II
892
>»
932
Balin and Balan 59
it
253
II
265
»>
277
»>
358
„
372
II
375
II
411
Eye
186
Eye
Eye (S) {continued) he lifted faint e's ; he felt One near
him ; Balin and Balan 594
Closed his death-drowsing e's, and slept „ 631
stood with folded hands and downward e's Of
glancing comer, Merlin and V. 69
her slow sweet e's Fear-tremulous, „ 85
With reverent e's mock-loyal, „ 157
neither e's nor tongue — 0 stupid child ! „ 251
sweetly gleam'd her e's behind her tears „ 402
isle-niu-tured e's Waged such unwilling tho' successful war „ 570
lady never made unwilling war With those fine e's : „ 604
Not one to flirt a venom at her e's, „ 609
let her e's Speak for her, glowing on him, „ 615
So lean his e's were monstrous ; „ 624
often o'er the sim's bright e Drew the vast eyelid „ 633
densest condensation, hard To mind and e; „ 679
A snowy penthouse for his hollow e's, „ 808
Without the will to lift their e's, „ 836
His e was calm, and suddenly she took To bitter weeping „ 854
He raised his e's and saw The tree that shone „ 938
Her e's and neck glittering went and came ; „ 960
Queen Lifted her e's, and they dwelt Lancelot and E. 84
gleam'd a vague suspicion in his e's : „ 127
she, who held her e's upon the ground, „ 232
Lifted her e's, and read his lineaments. „ 244
And noblest, when she lifted up her e's, „ 256
she lifted up her e's And loved him, „ 259
let his e's Rim thro' the peopled gallery „ 429
stay'd ; and cast his e's on fair Elaine : „ 640
0 damsel, in the light of yoiu" blue e's ; „ 660
he roU'd his e's Yet blank from sleep, „ 819
His e's glisten'd : she fancied ' Is it for me ? ' „ 822
his large black e's. Yet larger thro' his leanness, „ 834
' Nay, the world, the world. All ear and e, with such
a stupid heart To interpret ear and e, „ 941
Speaking a still good-morrow with her e's. „ 1033
old servitor, on deck. Winking his e's, „ 1145
saw with a sidelong e The shadow of some piece „ 1173
Close imdemeath Ws e's, and right across „ 1240
and e's that ask'd ' What is it ? ' „ 1249
men Shape to their fancy's e from broken rocks „ 1252
From the half-face to the full e, „ 1262
raised his head, their e's met and hers fell, „ 1312
He answer'd with his e's upon the ground, „ 1352
Seeing the homeless trouble in thine e's, „ 1365
To doubt her fairness were to want an e, „ 1376
lifted up his e's And saw the baige that brought „ 1390
1 trust We are green in Heaven's e's ; Holy Grail 38
her e's Beyond my knowing of them, beautiful, „ 102
His e's became so like her own, „ 141
sent the deathless passion in her e's Thro' him, „ 163
lifting up mine e's, I foimd myself Alone, „ 375
And took both ear and e ; „ 383
And kind the woman's e's and innocent, „ 393
' While thus he spake, his e, dwelling on mine, „ 485
On either hand, as far as e could see, „ 498
Which never e's on earth again shall see.J „ 532
like bright e's of familiar friends, „ 688
his e's, An out-door sign of all the warmth „ 703
' A welfare in thine e reproves Our fear „ 726
I saw it ; ' and the tears were in his e's. „ 759
A dying fire of madness in his e's — „ 768
angels, awful shapes, and wings and e's. „ 848
by mine e's and by mine ears I swear, „ 864
light that strikes his e is not light, „ 913
So that his e's were dazzled looking at it. PeUeas and E. 36
and his e's closed. And since he loved all maidens, „ 39
For laige her violet e's look'd, „ 71
for those large e's, the haimts of scorn, „ 75
while they rode, the meaning in his e's, „ 109
green wood-ways, and e's among the leaves ; „ 139
in mid-banquet measuring with his e's „ 150
tower fill'd with e's Up to the summit, „ 166
glory fired her face ; her e Sparkled, „ 172
but felt bis e's Harder and drier „ 506
Eye (s) (continued) hard his e's ; harder his heart
Seem'd ;
Rolling his e's, a moment stood, then spake :
PeUeas lifted up an e so fierce She quail'd ;
nose Bridge-broken, one e out, and one hand off.
He look'd but once, and vail'd his e's
Come — ^let us gladden their sad e's.
Made dull his inner, keen his outer e
The black-blue Irish hair and Irish e's
steel-blue e's, The golden beard that clothed
Lay couchant with his e's upon the throne,
Modred still in green, all ear and e.
Heart-hiding smile, and gray persistent e :
Hands in hands, and e to e.
Makes wicked lightnings of her e's,
her hand Grasp'd, made her vail her e's :
richer in His e s Who ransom'd us,
these e's of men are dense and dim,
both his e's were dazzled as he stood,
might have pleased the e's of many men.
Laid widow'd of the power in his e
Valuing the giddy pleasure of the e's.
' Now see I by thine e's that this is done,
looking wistfully with wide blue e's As in a picture,
charged Before the e's of ladies and of kings,
shall I hide my forehead and my e's ?
Straining his e's beneath an arch of hand,
I come, great Mistress of the ear and e :
tho' there beat a heart in either e ;
Leapt like a passing thought across her e's ;
Oh, such dark e's ! a single glance of them
a common light of e's Was on us as we lay :
Shading his e's till all the fiery cloud,
down to sea, and far as e could ken,
light methought broke from her dark, dark e's,
endured in presence of His e's To indue his lustre ;
our e's met : hers were bright,
gaze upon thee till their e's are dim
still I kept my e's upon the sky.
Of e's too weak to look upon the light ;
Leaning its roses on my faded e's.
And what it has for e's as close to mine
how her choice did leap forth from his e's !
e's — I saw the moonlight glitter on their tears —
And could I look upon her tearful e's ?
Fixing my e's on those three cypress-cones
Flash'd thro' my e's into my innermost brain,
Like morning from her e's — her eloquent e's.
All unawares before his half-shut e's,
so those fair e's Shone on my darkness,
and the e Was riveted and charm-bound,
over my dim e's. And parted lips which drank her breath,
— hea- e's And cheeks as bright as when she climb'd
she rais'd an e that ask'd ' Where ? '
dark e's of hers — Oh ! such dark e's ! and not her e's alone,
Wonder'd at some strange light in Julian's e's
Have jested also, but for Julian's e's,
breast Hard-heaving, and her e's upon her feet,
Dazed or amazed, nor e's of men ;
She shook, and cast her e's down,
and begun to darken my e's.
sun as danced in 'er pratty blue e ;
sweet e's frown : the lips Seem but a gash,
the sweet dwelling of her e's Upon me
her own true e's Are traitors to her ;
wi' hoffens a drop in 'is e.
Sa I han't clapt e's on 'im yit,
and the smile, and the comforting e —
and his e's were sweet,
YOU that were e's and light to the King
and woke, These e's, now dull, but then so keen
And from her virgin breast, and virgin e's
Menoeceus, thou hast e's, and I can hear
These eyeless e's, that cannot see thine own,
these e's will find The men I knew,
Pdeas and E. 512
581
601
Last Tournament 59
„ 150
222
366
404
667
Guinevere 11
24
64
100
520
663
684
Pass, of Arthur 19
227
259
290
„ 296
317
337
393
„ 396
464
Lover's Tale i 22
34
70
75
236
306
„ 336
368
423
„ 441
491
572
614
621
651
657
696
„ ii 38
95
144
153
157
187
203
Hi 46
iv 94
165
205
223
308
311
329
Eizpah 16
North. Cobbler 50
Sisters (E. and E.) 106
165
284
Village Wife 34
" 1?L
In the Child. Hosp. 13J
V. of Maeldune ll7l
ToPrin.F.ofH.l]
Tiresias •
IC
175
Eye
187
Face
Eye (s) continued) in the dark of his wonderful «'s. The Wreck 55
sad e's fixt on the lost sea-home, „ 126
When the rolUng e^s of the Ughthouse Despair 9
leave him, bUnd of heart and e's. Ancient Sage 113
Nor care — for Hunger hath the Evil e — „ 264
in the sidelong e's a gleam of all things ill — The Flight 31
my e's are dim with dew, „ 97
Wid a diamond dhrop in her e. Tomorrow 28
an' yer e's as bright as the day ! „ 32
An' ye'll niver set e's an the face „ 50
the dhry e thin but was wet for the frinds „ 83
E's that lured a doting boyhood Lockdey H., Sixty 10
kiss'd the miniature with those sweet e's. „ 12
sphere of all the boundless Heavens within the human «, „ 210
Aged e's may take the growing glimmer „ 230
in the wars your own Crimean e's had seen ; Pro. to Gen. Hamley 12
Those e's the blue to-day, Epilogue 9
be found of angel e's In earth's recurring Paradise. Helen's Tower 11
Thy glorious e's were dimm'd with pain
brightens thro' the Mother's tender e's,
True daughter, whose all-faithful, filial e's
make them wealthier in his readers' e's ;
Shakespeare's bland and universal e Dwells
Thine e's Again were human-godlike,
e's Awed even me at first, thy mother — e's That oft
had seen the serpent-wanded power
who was he with such love-drunken e's
landscape which your e's Have many a time
sin^ace e, that only doats On outward beauty,
a ribald twinkle in his bleak e's —
Beyond our burial and our buried e's,
closed her e's, which would not close,
the glazed e Glared at me as in horror.
floated in with sad reproachful e's,
I lifted up my e's, he was coming down the fell —
Whose e's have known this globe of ours,
Watching her large light e's
These will thine e's not brook in forest-paths.
Her light makes rainbows in my closing e's,
gray Magician With e's of wonder,
Her sad e's plead for my own fame
mine from your pretty blue e's to your feet,
I blind your pretty blue e's with a kiss !
One kiss'd his hand, another closed his e's,
lure those e's that only yeam'd to see,
had left His aged e's, he raised them,
are faint And pale in Alla's e's,
all the Hells a-glare in either e.
But Death had ears and e's ;
gladdening human hearts and e's.
Haven't you e's ? I am dressing the grave
And the hard blue e's have it still,
Eye (verb) careful robins e the delver's toil,
careful robin's e the delver's toil ;
Eyeball warm blood mixing ; The e's fixing.
Eyebrow He dragg'd his e bushes down.
Still makes a hoary c for the gleam
Eyed (adj.) {See also Blue-eyed, Cock-eyed, Dark-eyed, False-
eyed, Falcon-eyed, Gold-eyed, Gray-eyed, Mild-eyed,
Ettill-eyed, White -eyed. Wild -eyed) a wild and
wanton pard, E like the evening star,
Eyed (verb) And every follower e him as a God ;
Eyelash The lifting of whose e is my lord,
golden beam of an e dead on the cheek,
mom Has lifted the dark e of the Night
Eyeless ' I saw the little elf-god e once
These e eyes, that cannot see thine own, —
Eyelet-holes fierce east scream thro' your e-h,
Freedom 10
Prin. Beatrice 4
13
Poets and their B. 4
To W. C. Macready 13
Demeter and P. 18
EyeUd (<S^ee also Sster-eyelids)
mom Roof not a glance
Pacing with downward e's pure.
Her e quiver'd as she spake.
Weigh heavy on my e's : let me die.
1 kiss'd his e's into rest :
Than tir'd e's upon tir'd eyes ;
Ray-fringed e's of the
23
The Ring 21
„ 150
„ 163
„ 199
„ 296
„ 299
„ 450
» 469
Happy 82
To Ulysses 2
Prog, of Spring 19
31
46
Merlin and the G. 6
Romney's R. 55
96
101
Death of (Enone 58
St. Tdemachus 36
51
Akbar's Dream 11
115
187
Hymn 2
Charity 2
„ 10
Marr. of Geraint 774
Geraint and E. 431
All Things will Die 34
Merlin and V. 807
The Brook 80
(Enone 200
Last Tournament 678
Princess v 140
Maud I Hi 3
Akbar's Dream 201
Merlin and V. 249
Tiresias 108
Pdleas and E. 469
Clear-headed friend 6
Two Voices 420
Miller's D. 144
(Enone 244
The Sisters 19
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 6
Eyelid (continued) With half-dropt e still,
I BEAD, before my e's dropt their shade,
I closed mine e's, lest the gems Should bUnd
' Her e's dropp'd their silken eaves,
forehead, e's, growing dewy-warm With kisses
A little flutter'd, with her e's down,
And here upon a yellow e fall'n
Beat balm upon our e's.
on my heavy e's My anguish hangs
Made her cheek burn and either e fall,
Made her cheek bum and either e fall.
Made answer, either e wet with tears :
Drew the vast e of an inky cloud,
saw The slow tear creep from her closed e
I closed mine e's, lest the gems Should blind
Falling, unseal'd our e's, and we woke
My heart paused — my raised e's would not fall,
felt the blast Beat on my heated e's :
Had caught her hand, her e's fell —
Vailing a sudden e with his hard
Eye-reach Eagle, laid Almost beyond e-r,
Eyesight Not with blinded e poring
Eye-witness would'st against thine own e-w fain
Eyry lured that falcon from his e on the fell,
FaS,ce (face) fun 'um theer a-laiiid of 'is /
an' scratted my / like a cat,
An' the babby's/ wum't wesh'd
I'll looiJk my hennemy strait i' the /,
Tommy's / be as fresh as a codlin
call'd me afoor my awn foillks to my /
wi' a niced red /, an' es cleiin Es a shillin'
a-callin ma ' hugly ' mayhap to my /,
I seed at 'is / wur as red as the Yule-block
an' ya thraw'd the fish i' 'is /,
FaSir (fair) like a bull gotten loose at a /,
Faaithful (faithful) ' F an' True '—(repeat)
' A / an' loovin' wife ! '
Fable (s) we grew The / of the city where we dwelt.
Read my httle /:
Like a shipwreck'd man on a coast Of ancient
/ and fear —
Old milky f's of the wolf and sheep,
Rare in JF" or History,
my soul uncertain, or a /,
Fable (verb) aught they / of the quiet Gods.
Fabled why we came ? I / nothing fair,
Fabler Balin answer'd him ' Old /,
Fabric F rough, or fairy-fine,
Face (See also Fa^ce, Fine-face, Half-face) Old f's
glimmer'd thro' the doors,
Sweet f's, rounded arms, and bosoms
I was down upon my /,
O pale, pale /so sweet and meek,
Breathing Light against thy /,
and slowly grow To a full /,
While I muse upon thy /;
So, friend, when first I look'd upon your /,
He said, ' She has a lovely /;
glow'd The clear perfection of her /.
God's glory smote him on the /.'
'His /, that two hours since hath died ;
little daughter, whose sweet / He kiss'd,
Whose wrinkles gather'd on his /,
And turning look'd upon your /,
Grow, live, die looking on his /,
tell her to her / how much I hate Her presence,
O happy Heaven, how canst thou see my /?
She was the fairest in the /:
Two godlike f's gazed below ;
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 90
D. of F. Women 1
M. d' Arthur 152
Talking Oak 209
Tithonus 58
The Brook 89
Lucretius 141
Princess Hi 123
Maud II iv 73
Marr. of Geraint 775
Geraint and E. 434
Merlin and V. 379
634
„ 906
Pass, of Arthur 320
Lover's Tale i 265
571
„ Hi 28
Sisters (E. and E.) 148
Sir J. Oldcastle 20
Gareth and L. 45
Locksley Hall 172
Merlin and V. 793
Happy 59
N. Farmer, O. S. 33
North. Cobbler 22
42
74
110
Village Wife 105
Spinster's S's. 75
91
Owd Rod 56
Church-warden, etc. 30
North. Cobbler 33
Owd Roil 15
Spinster's S's. 72
Gardener's D. 6
The Flower 17
Maud II a 32
Pdleas and E. 196
On Jub. Q. Victoria 5
By an Evolution. 5
Lucretius 55
Princess Hi 136
Balin and Balan 307
Ode Inter. Exhib. 18
Mariana 66
Sea-Fairies 3
Oriana 53
„ 66
Addine 56
Elednore 92
„ 129
Sonnet To 9
L. of ShaloU iv 5,2
Mariana in the S. 32
Two Voices 225
242
„ 253
329
Milter's D. 157
Fatima 41
(Enone 228
„ 236
The Sisters 2
Palace of Art 162
Face
188
Face
Pace (continued) 0 silent f's of the Great and Wise, Palace of Art 195
I shall look upon your/; May Queen, N. Y's. E. 38
round about the keel with f's pale, Dark f's pale
against that rosy flame, Lotos-Eaters 25
With those old f's of our infancy „ C. S. 66
turning on my / The star-Uke sorrows D. of F. Women 90
Myself for such a / had boldly died,' „ 98
My father held his hand upon his /; „ 107
Here her / Glow'd, as I look'd at her. „ 239
His / is growing sharp and thin. D. of the O. Year 46
a new / at the door, my friend, A new / at the door. „ 53
Imitates God, and turns her / To every land On a Mourner 2
reveal'd The fullness of her / — Of old sat Freedom 12
Lift up thy rocky /, England and Amer. 12
all his / was white And colourless, M. d' Arthur 212
Among new men, strange f's, other minds.' „ 238
If thou should'st never see my / again, „ 246
Then he turn'd His / and pass'd — Dora 151
and Dora hid her / By Mary. „ 156
came again togeth^ on the king With heated f's ; Audley Court 37
hid his / From all men, Walk, to the Mail 20
A pretty / is well, and this is well, Edwin Morris 45
saw Their f's grow between me and my book ; St. S. Stylites 176
I know thy gUttering /. „ 205
before my / 1 see the moulder'd Abbey-walls, Talking Oak 2
seen some score of those Fresh f's, „ 50
Turn your /, Nor look with that too-earnest eye — Day-Dm., Pro. 17
Grave f's gather'd in a ring. „ Sleep. P. 38
And yawn'd, and rubb'd his /, and spoke, „ Revival 19
' There I put my / in the grass — Edward Gray 21
the dusty crypt Of darken'd forms and f's. Will Water. 184
Were their f's grim. The Captain 54
colour flushes Her sweet / from brow to chin : L. of Burleigh 62
Her / was evermore unseen. The Voyage 61
So sweet a /, such angel grace, Beggar Maid 13
Panted hand-in-hand with /'s pale, Vision of Sin 19
Hair, and eyes, and limbs, and/ 's, „ 39
Every /, however full. Padded rovmd „ 176
His large gray eyes and weather-beaten / Enoch Arden 70
And in their eyes and f's read his doom ; Then, as
their f's drew together, groan'd, „ 73
his /, Rough-redden'd with a thousand winter gales, „ 94
I shall look upon your / no more.' „ 212
Spy out my /, and laugh at all your fears.' „ 216
Cared not to look on any human /, „ 282
' I cannot look you in the / 1 seem so foolish „ 315
And dwelt a moment on his kindly /, „ 326
but her / had f all'n upon her hands ; „ 391
stood once more before her /, Claiming her promise. „ 457
Philip's rosy / contracting grew Careworn and wan ; „ 486
He could not see, the kindly human /, „ 581
Enoch yeam'd to see her / again ; ' If I might look
on her sweet / again „ 717
my dead / would vex her after-life. „ 891
With half a score of swarthy f's came. Aylmer's Field 191
a hoary / Meet for the reverence of the hearth, „ 332
her sweet / and faith Held him from that : „ 392
mixt Upon their /'s, as they kiss'd each other „ 430
/ to / With twenty months of silence, „ 566
careless of the household f's near, „ 575
His / magnetic to the hand from which „ 626
the wife, who watch'd his /, Paled „ 731
he veil'd His / with the other, „ 809
pendent hands, and narrow meagre / „ 813
The rabbit fondles his own harmless /, „ 851
sitting all alone, his / Would darken. Sea Dreams 12
altho' his fire is on my / Blinding, Lucretius 144
sown With happy f's and with holiday. Princess, Pro. 56
(A little sense of wrong had touch'd her/ „ 219
prince I was, blue-eyed, and fair in /, „ 1 1
I saw my father's / Grow long and troubled „ 58
keep your hoods about the/; „ ii 358
Push'd her flat hand against his / „ 366
She sent for Blanche to accuse her / to /; „ iv 239
And falling on my / was caught and known. „ 270
Face (continued) Half-drooping from her, turn'd her /, Princess, iv. 368
Stared in her eyes, and chalk'd her /, „ 377
I know Your /'s there in the crowd — „ 510
Bent their broad f's toward us and address'd „ 551
so from her / They push'd us, down the steps, „ 554
Thy / across his fancy comes, „ 579
And every / she look'd on justify it) „ v 134
therefore I set my / Against all men, „ 388
Took the face-cloth from the/; „ vi 11
The haggard father's /and reverend beard ,, 103
then once more she look'd at my pale /: „ 115
And turn'd each / her way : „ 144
when she learnt his /, Remembering his ill-omen'd song, „ 158
thro' the parted silks the tender/ Peep'd, „ vii 60
at which her / A little flush'd, „ 80
Hortensia pleading : angry was her /. „ 132
all for languor and self-pity ran Mine down my /, „ 140
Pale was the perfect/; „ 224
His dear little / was troubled, Grandmother 65
Before the stony / of Time, Lit. Squabbles 3
His / was ruddy, his hair was gold, The Victim 36
Till the / of Bel be brighten'd, Boddicea 16
they hide their /'s, miserable in ignominy! „ 51
are you flying over her sweet little / ? Window, On the Hill 13
Ay or no, if ask'd to her/? „ Letter Q
Whom we, that have not seen thy /, In Mem., Pro. 2
Roves from the living brother's /, „ xxxii 7
And tears are on the mother's /, „ xl 10
I strive to paint The / 1 know ; „ Ixx 3
And shoals of pucker'd f's drive ; „ 10
Looks thy fair / and makes it still. „ 16
As sometimes in a dead man's /, „ Ixxiv 1
And in a moment set thy / „ Ixxvi 2
For changes wrought on form and /; „ Ixxxii 2
I see their unborn f's shine „ Ixxxiv 19
saw The God within him light his /, „ Ixxxvii 36
swims The reflex of a human /. „ cviii 12
And find his comfort in thy /; „ cix 20
Not all regret : the / will shine Upon me, „ cxvi 9
Many a merry / Salutes them — „ Con. 66
And hearts are warm'd and/ 's bloom, _ „ 82
make my heart as a millstone, set my / as a flint, Maud I i31
But a cold and clear-cut /, „ ii 3
Cold and clear-cut /, why come you so cruelly meek, „ Hi 1
Passionless, pale, cold/, star-sweet „ _ 4
pride flash'd over her beautiful /. „ iv 16
Maud with her exquisite /, „ v 12
A / of tenderness might be feign'd, „ vi 52
A bought commission, a waxen /, „ a; 30
His /, as I grant, in spite of spite, „ xiii 8
Last year, I caught a glimpse of his /, „ 27
And he struck me, madman, over the /, „ II i 18
And the/ 's that one meets, „ iv 93
the / of night is fair on the dewy downs, „ III vi 5
One among many, tho' his / was bare. Com. of Arthur 54
find nor / nor bearing, Umbs nor voice, „ 71
And ere it left their /'s, „ 272
gazing on him, tall, with bright Sweet /'s, „ 279
her / Wellnigh was hidden in the minster „ 288
And sad was Arthur's / Taking it, „ 305
Fixing full eyes of question on her /, „ 312
Southward they set their /'s, Gareth and L. 182
on thro' silent /'s rode Down the slope city, „ 734
not once dare to look him in the /.' „ 782
And cipher /of roimded foolishness, „ 1039
Slab after slab, their /'» forward all, „ 1206
'Follow the/ '5, and we find it. „ 1210
nor rough /, or voice. Brute bulk of limb, „ 1329
' God wot, I never look'd upon the /, „ 1333
Issued the bright / of a blooming boy „ 1408
the sweet / of her Whom he loves most, Marr. of Geraint 122
knight Had vizor up, and show'd a youthful /, „ 189
Guinevere, not mindful of his / „ 191
kept her off and gazed upon her /, „ 519
Across the /of Enid hearing her; „ 524
Face
189
Face (continued) all his f Glow'd like the heart of a
Da^'noUo glance at her good mother's/, '^""'- "^ ^"""^''^ ^l
But rested with her sweet /satisfied- " 77«
to her own bright / Accuse her Geraint n«yi V n n
Greeted Geraint full /, but stealthily, ^'™"" ""^ ^' iJR
Your sweet f's make good fellows fools " qqq
Ye mar a comely /with idiot teare. Yet, since the "
/»«comely— some of you, ««
felt the warm tears falhng on his /• " ««
he tum'd his / And kiss'd her climbing, " ?S
Fearing the mild / of the blameless Kiir, " i?X
His very / with change of heart is chanSd. " ^
itTi? ^^L^'"'^ stf PS. the morning on her /; Bcdin and Balan 2^
all the light upon her silver/ Flow'd 9^
wtT km'Iu'''''^ S^'i -^'* ^^<^ ^^st fcl^e panes, ," 3^
He d^h'd the pummel at the foremost/, 4^
Stumbled headlong, and cast him / to ^ound. " %i
Balin first woke, and seeing that true /, " ^
and they hfted up Their eaeer f'l j^ 7" j rr V^
she Wt^ up A /^of saTa^S ' ^'"■^^" ""^ "^^ ^S
I find Your / is practised when I spell the Unes, " 367
So tender was her voice, so fair her/, " m\
ookuponhis/!— butif hesinn'd, " ^i
harlots paint their talk as weU as / " iSt
heaving shoulder, and the/ Hand-liidden, ' " ^r
aaa niarr d his /, and mark'd it ere Ids tune. 247
all mght long his / before her lived, As when a "
painter, poring on a/, 001
and so paints him that his /, " ooi
so the / before her lived. Dark-splendid, " qqt
Rapt on his /as if it were a God's. " 5^A
blood Sprang to her / and fill'd her with dehght ; " 377
Her bright hau: blown about the serious f " SQ2
with smilmg/arose. With smiling/ " fd
sharply tum'd about to hide her /, " ^
Where could be found / daintier ? " fidi
And lifted her fair / and moved away : " ^%
Some read the King's /, some the Queen's, " fJi
bat on his knee, stroked his gray/ " ifl,
Came on her brother with a happy / " 70,
Her / was near, and as we kiss the child That does "
the task assign'd, he kiss'd her/. 000
In the heart's colours on her simple /; "si?
t ull often the bright image of one /, " rc?
like a ghost she lifted up her/, " ^.t
Not to be with you, not to see your /— " WTa
the blood-red light of dawn Flared on her /, " loS
So dwelt the father on her /, and thought " Io30
She with a /, bright as for sin foi^venT " {\m
Wmkmg his eyes, and twisted all his /. " \\Tk
her /, and that clear-featured / Was lovely " 1 1 ^
but that oareman's haggard /, As hard and still as is
the / that men Shape to their fancy's eye 1250
looking often from his /who read " joRS
ByGodfor thee alone, and from her/, " iw
Dngiit / s, ours, Full of the vision, 2fifi
his / Darken'd, as I have seen it more than once, " 272
I saw the fiery /as of a child That smote itself 466
And knowing every honest / of theirs " t^n
And one hath had the vision / to / " ono
"i7 *"°"^ "•'6 the countenance of a priest 14S
gilded parapets were crown'd With f's, " i«k
tlie heat Of pride and glory fired her / " 1 70
O damsel, wearing this unsunny/ " To^
those three knights all set their f's home, " 1 aV
Content am I so that I see thy/ " 0%
Thus to bebounden, so tosee her/, " q^
Let me be bounden, I shall see her /; " ooj
M^^f na^w/'^ ''^''' ''''^''' "'^-^^ ^-' tournament 63
Before him fled the / of Queen Isolt " 3^
Face
Face (continued) Anon the/, as, when a gust hath
blown,
That sent the / of all the marsh aloft
the / Wellnigh was helmet-hidden,
trampled out his / from being known
Men, women, on their sodden f's, '
mist, like a face-cloth to the /, Clung
Modred's narrow foxy /,
grim/'s came and went Before her,
Till ev'n the clear /of the guileless King,
Fired all the pale / of the Queen,
grovell'd with her / against the floor :
She made her/ a darkness from the King:
I might see his /, and not be seen.'
^ ^*'%xr*."''i^^'' i.^^^' ^'"^^^ *^en was as an angel's,
the wan wave Brake in among dead f's "
And beats upon the / 's of the dead, '
for all his / was white And colourless
new men, strange/ '5, other minds.' '
If thou should'st never see my / again
dwelt on my heaven, a / Most starry-f kir. Lover
placid / And breathless body of her good deeds
slept In the same cradle always, / to /. '
in the shuddering moonlight brought its / '
drops of that distressful rain Fell on my/ '
when their / 's are forgot in the land— ' '
the /, The very / and f onn of Lionel '
those that held the bier before my/, '
His lady with the moonlight on her/ • '
Heir of his / and land, to Lionel. ' '
Sent such a flame into his /,
I, by Lionel sitting, saw his/ Fire,
lifted up a / All over glowing with the sun
I had but to look in his /.
But I tum'd my / from him, an' he tum'd his f an'
he went.
praised him to liis / with their courtly The Revenae 99
Turmng my way, the loveliest / on earth. The / iievenge jy
of one there sitting opposite. Sisters (K n«A V \ 87
and for a / Gone in a moment^trange. ^ ^ ^'^ ol
Sun himself has limn'd the / for me. " ini
So that bright/ was flash'd thro' sense and soul " Tno
tlie/ again. My Rosalind in this Arden— ■ " 7 Vu
There was the/, and altogether she. " T^o
driven by one angel /, And all the Furies. " \r^
but his voice and his / were not kind, /„ the ChJd Nn.-n ^%
and let the dark / have his due ! Tllanks to the ^'
Last Tournament 368
439
455
470
» . 474
Guinevere 7
„ 63
„ 70
» 85
» 357
„ 415
» 417
588
595
130
141
380
406
414
Tale i 72
216
259
650
699
759
it 93
Hi 16
iv 57
129
177
322
380
Quarrel 16
First
kindly dark/ '5 who fought with us
wliite/'s of Havelock's good fusileers,
I saw your/ that morning in the crowd,
thought to turn my /from Spain,
/ and form are hers and mine in one
flash The / 's of the Gods— '
a ghastlier/ than ever has haunted a grave
I will hide my/, I will tell you all.
The small sweet / was flush'd.
Then his pale / twitch'd ; ' O Stephen,
the / I had known, O Mother, was not the f
and away from your faith and your / '
waken every morning to that/ I loathe to see
an tJie / of the thraithur agin in Hfe •
pelt your offal at her/.
Peept the winsome / of Edith
Fled wavering o'er thy/, and chased away
sighs after many a vanish'd /,
the / Of Miriam grew upon me,
as a man Who sees his / in water,
a sudden / Look'd in upon me like a gleam
And the /, The hand,-my Mother. ^
Among them Muriel lying on her/—
I will front him / to /. ■
For Age will chink the/,
A beauty came upon your /,
Def. of Lwcknow 69
» 101
Columbus 7
„ 57
De Prof., Two G. 13
Tiresias 173
The Wreck 8
„ 12
„ 60
„ 101
„ 116
Despair 110
Tfie Flight 8
Tomorrow 50
Locksley H., Sixty 134
^ ,, 260
^emeter and P. 15
Vastness 1
The Ring 184
370
» 419
424
448
Happy 19
» 46
„ 51
Face
190
Fail
Face (continued) and with Grief Sit / to /, To Mary Boyle 46
On human /'s, And all around me, Merlin and the G. 20
And rough-ruddy / 's Of lowly labour, „ 59
Less profile ! turn to me — three-quarter /. Bomney's B. 98
' My Rose ' set all your / aglow, Boses on the T. 3
ghastlier than the Gorgon head, a /, — His f def orm'd
by lurid blotch and blain — Death of (Enone 71
saw The ring of / 's redden'd by the flames „ 92
set his / By waste and field and town St. Telemachus 29
Christian /'s watch Man murder man. „ 55
Glanced from our Presence on the / of one, AJd>ar's Dream 113
ray red as blood Glanced on the strangled / — Bandit's Death 32
So I turn'd my / to the wall. Charity 27
with a sudden glow On her patient / „ 36
she is / to / with her Lord, „ 42
The / of Death is toward the Sun of Life, D. of the Duke of C. 12
I hope to see my Pilot / to / Crossing the Bar 15
Face-cloth Took the f-c from the face ; Princess mil
mist, like a f-c to the face, Clung Guinevere 7
Faced {See also Babe-faced, Broad-faced, Clear-faced,
Fat-faced, Free-faced, Full-faced, Moon-faced,
Mulberry-faced, Plain-faced, Red-faced, Smooth-
faced, White-faced) Enoch / this morning of
farewell Brightly Enoch Arden 182
He / the spectres of the mind In Mem. xcvi 15
Face-flatterer F-f and backbiter are the same. Merlin and V. 824
Facet The f's of the glorious mountain flash The Islet 22
glance and sparkle like a gem Of fifty f's ; Geraint and E. 295
Fact that plain /, as taught by these, Two Voices 281
Wherever Thought hath wedded F. Love tJiou thy land 52
Taught them with/'s. Princess, Pro. 59
A / within the coming year ; In Mem. xcii 10
and, laughing sober / to scorn, Locksley H., Sixty 109
Faction Where / seldom gathers head. You ask m£, why 13
Not less, tho' dogs of F bay, , Love thou thy land 85
Not swaying to this / or to that ; Ded. of Idylls 21
and counter-yells of feud And /, To Duke of Argyll 9
Faculty all my faculties are lamed. Lucretius 123
Fade It will change, but it will not / Nothing will Die 31
Fix'd — then as slowly / again, Eleanore 93
Ripens and f's, and falls, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 37
Ay, ay, the blossom f's. Walk, to the Mail 57
whose mai^n f's For ever and for ever Ulysses 20
since the nobler pleasure seems to /, Lucretius 230
When can their glory /? Light Brigade 50
flower of poesy Wliich little cared for/'s not yet. In Mem. viii 20
Before the spirits / away, „ xlvii 14
Be near me when I / away, „ 1 13
F wholly, while the soul exults, „ Ixxiii 14
And year by year our memory fs „ ci 23
Now f's the last long streak of snow, „ cxv 1
Let it flame or/, and the war roll down Maud III vi 54
' Sweet love, tliat seems not made to / Lancelot and E. 1013
Cast at thy feet one flower that f's away. To Dante 7
Shall / with him into the unknown, Tiresias 215
and wake The bloom that/'* away ? Ancient Sage 94
The phantom walls of this illusion /, „ 181
blackthorn-blossom f's and falls and leaves The Flight 15
we watch'd the sun / from us thro' the West, „ 41
glimpse and / Thro' some slight spell, Early Spring 31
Faik things are slow to / away, To Prof. Jebb. 1
Moon, you / at times From the night. The Ring 9
mists of earth F in the noon of heaven, Akbar's Dream 97
but, while the races flower and /, Making of Man 5
Faded (adj.) /places, By squares of tropic summer Am-phion 86
From fringes of the / eve. Move eastward 3
His wife a / beauty of the Baths, Aylmer's Field 27
then ensued A Martin's summer of his / love, „ 560
Autumn's mock sunshine of the / woods „ 610
Lady Blanche alone Of /form and haughtiest lineaments, Princess ii 448
/ woman-slough To sheathing splendours „ » 40
I love not hollow cheek or / eye : „ vii 7
This / leaf, our names are as brief ; Spiteful Letter 13
thro' the / leaf The chestnut pattering to the ground : In Mem. xi 3
I did but speak Of my mother's / cheek Maud I xix 19
Faded (adj.) (continued) Then she bethought her of a/
silk, A / mantle and a / veil, Marr. of Geraint 134
That lightly breaks a / flower-sheath. Moved the
fair Enid, all in / silk, „ 365
All staring at her in her / silk : „ 617
to her own / self And the gay court, „ 652
dreamt herself was such a / form „ 654
charge the gardeners now To pick the / creature from the
pool,
I myself unwilUngly have worn My / suit.
That she ride with me in her / silk.'
But Enid ever kept the / silk.
And tearing off her veil of / silk
From Camelot in among the / fields To furthest
towers;
as one Who sits and gazes on a / fire.
The / rhymes and scraps of ancient crones.
Leaning its roses on my / eyes.
Fainting flowers, / bowers.
On icy fallow And / forest.
Faded (verb) the heart Faints, / by its heat,
by Nature's law. Have / long ago ;
this kindlier glow F with morning,
it /, and seems But an ashen-gray delight.
/ from the presence into years Of exile —
then the music /, and the Grail Past,
And the Quest / in my heart,
till they / like my love,
but the promise had / away ;
Fifty times the rose has flower'd and /,
fonn of Muriel /, and the face Of Miriam
Fading (See also Slowly-fading) breath Of the /
edges of box beneath.
The / poUtics of mortal Rome,
And / legend of the past ;
I care not in these / days To raise a cry
Was it he lay there with a / eye ?
Flatter'd the fancy of my / brain ;
Of her I loved, adorn'd with / flowers.
Closer on the Sun, perhaps a world of never
/ flowers.
Light the / gleam of Even ?
F slowly from his side :
Growing and / and growing (repeat)
671
706
762
841
Geraint and E. 514
Last Tournament 53
157
Lover's Tale i 289
„ 621
Sisters (E. and E.) 11
Merlin and the G. 85
D.ofF. Women 29,9,
Talking Oak 74
Aylmer's Field 412
Maud I vi 21
Balin and Balan 156
Holy Grail 121
600
Lover's Tale ii 10
Despair 27
Oti Jub. Q. Victoria 1
The Bing 184
A spirit haunts 19
Princess ii 286
In Mem. Ixii 4
„ Ixxv 9
Maud II i 29
Lover's Tale ii 107
„ Hi 40
Locksley H., Sixty 184
229
L. of Burleigh 86
Maud I Hi 7, 9
Green Sussex /into blue With one gray glunpse Pro. to Gen. Hamley 7
Faggot we will make it f's for the hearth. Princess vi 45
Fsul I shall not / to find her now. Two Voices 191
till thy hand F from the sceptre-staff. (Enone 126
So wrought, they will not/. Palace of Art 148
Lest she should / and perish utterly, „ 221
for a man may / in duty twice, M. d' Arthur 129
You scarce can / to match his masterpiece.' Gardener's D. 31
You cannot / but work in hues to dim „ 170
Who may be made a saint, if I / here ? St. S. Stylites 48
Thy leaf shall never /, nor yet Talking Oak 259
decent not to / In offices of tenderness, Ulysses 40
' The many /: the one succeeds.' Day-Dm., Arrival 16
Her heart within her did not /: Lady Clare 78
Rose again from where it seem'd to /, Vision of Sin 24
it f's at last And perishes as I must ; LiLcretius 264
Who / to find thee, being as tliou art „ 268
Ere half be done perchance your life may /; Princess Hi 236
/ so far In high desire, they know not, „ 279
if we /, we /, And if we win, we /: „ v 322
What end soever : / you will not. „ 406
She mental breadth, nor / in childward care, „ vii 283
Forgive them where they / in truth, In Mem., Pro. 43
I seem to / from out my blood „ ii 15
That thou should'st / from thy desire, „ iv 6
Swell out and /, as if a door „ xxviii 7
Thou / not in a world of sin, „ xxxiii 15
Where truth in closest words shall /, „ xxxvi 6
Lest Ufe should / in looking back. „ xlvi 4
No life may / beyond the grave, „ Iv 2
I shall pass ; my work will /. „ IviiS
mt
Fail
Fail (c^mtinued) Could make thee somewhat blench or/, In Mem. Ixii 2
1 hy spint should / from ofiE the globe ; ixxxiv Sfi
that keeps A thousand pulses dandng, /. " -xt-u Ifi
shaU I shriek if a Hungary / ? Mn,Ji^.. i«
solid ground Not / b^eaih my feet ^""^ ^ '^/f
fill up the gap where force might / Gareth and L 1352
^tl ^^ "^^"J^^, ^^^ ^P^e he fears may /, Geraint and E. 303
fin/n^nf ^ ^^r^^, wife-worship Balin and Balan 359
fane plots may / Tho' harlots paint Merlin and V. 820
It ye/, Oive ye the slave mme order PeOeas and E 26Q
spoutmg from a clifif F's in mid air, Q,Sv7re 609
1 hat saved her many tunes, not /- To ihi Queen ii 62
Pray God oiur greatness may not/ Hands all Round Zl
if you shaU / to understand What England is, The FUetl
should those/, that hold the helm, ^ ' Frog, of Spring id
H,f f ^^ conjure and concentrate " Rhmnev', Rli
And?et';fofR^"''P'J" "^"''^•^' AUar'TDZlm
F^f'spi^Sr^lZk never/, ^""^IS^XJ
her heart / her ; and the reaper reap'd, V '' it
She/ and sadden'd knowing it; Enoch A rdZ 2^7
aU her force 2? her; and sighing, ^'^"' ^'^"^^ S7I
thought and nature / a little, " 709
As having / in duty to him, Lr^etius 278
the year in which our olivet /. PriZlTi 125
none to trust Since our anus /— ^nncess t iZb
Old studies/: seldom she spoke : " ,„/o{
she had / In sweet hmniUty ; had / in all • " 99a
for a vast speculation had /, t!}.,,^ , ,• q
either / to make the kingdom one. Com of Arthur li
T^nO^i'"'' V'^T^^ "^^^ ^""^ ^'' blood, MaTofGit:i^k
/ of late To send his tnbute : KniiJ „^^ n i 5
But on aU those who tried and/, M^UnfJvtm
many tried and /, because the charm ^^ ^- sS
I well believe she tempted them and/, " aVq
?Ko'S7i/iT,uSr?SS°™ ^"'•''' «»* «-■' ™
the great heart of knighthood in thee / PeUeas and E 596
They/to trace him thro' the flesh and blood LastTTur^^nFnt ml
the purport of my throne hath /, pj, oFIr^ur 160
BreVerfVl^nTrr"' '"'^' ^^^^oteehle: J^'w^/rSr JS
utterfn^ Ap? \*hi V•^''.iT^*' ^- ^f P- Women 286
(vhVn ihe'mtd^i^}?"'' ^«^^^'= .. , ^ 405
Ito°^h?lfw:^l"Tot'^^?.'^"«'^' . (?™S^"4?
*lBin how / was I To dream thy cause embraced Princess vi 199
' tw7uS ImiT' !/^f added-Knight, GarfthZTllll
and / For h.f^ . ?^^\ ^ ^^^ ^f f e- ^«^'« ""'^ -»«^" 254
and /, J< or hate and loathing, would have past 387
1/ would know what manner of men they be.' " 574
Mm, Bahn, I that / had died To save thy life, " 590
/ Have all men true and leal, l/er^m avd V WK
WoS/ttfh'^ "^'d' 'd' ''" ^'""' ^^" "^^^'^ '^
Faint°(^°V'BriyHr"'^ '"f' r'V' ^-- to^oJ^^HaZeylt
i!amt (adj.) Bramble roses, / and pale, a Dirae SO
Wherefore those / smiles of thine, Adeline 21
Wherefore that / smile of thine, ^^^''^ tl
Thou /smiler, Adeline? " ^8
And /, rainy lights are seen, Maraaret 60
by the meadow-trenches blow the / sweet ^
cuckoo-flowers ; »,/„,, ^1,, .^„ o^
these twelve books of mine Were / Homeric echoes, Thil^c 39
191
Fair
Faint (adj.) (continued) To whom replied King Arthur, /
and pale: M d^ Arthur 12
with slow steps, With slow, / steps, St. S. Stylites 183
Jf shadows, vapours lightly curl'd, F murmurs
from the meadows come, Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 5
sketches rude and /. Aylme^'s Field 100
I on her 1- ixt my / eyes. Princess vii 144
?iw h."^''^' "^ n":^ u . . , Window, Answer i)
The / horizons, all the bounds of earth. Far-far-away 14
F she grew, and ever famter, l. of Burleigh 81
1 he voice grew /: there came a further change : Vision of Sm 207
^ as a figure seen in eariy dawn Enoch A rden 357
the hues are / And mix with hollow masks In Mem. Ixx 3
Ihis haunting whisper makes me /, i^xxi 7
let her eat ; the damsel is so /.' Geraintand E. 206
chafang his / hands, and calling to him ; 535
seem'd to change, and grow F and far-off. Balin and Balan 218
J> in the low dark hall of banquet : 3^3
dying brother cast himself Dying ; and lie lifted / eyes ; " 594
I was /to swooning, and you lay Foot-gilt Merlin and V. 281
all too / and sick am 1 For anger : Lancelot and E. 1086
To whom replied King Arthur, / and pale : Pass, of Arthur 240
there came, but /As from beyond the lunit of the woritl 457
the heart-it beat : J'-but it beat : Leer's Tale iv 81
famt-stomach'd / as I am, ^,v j, oidcasUe 192
as a chmate-changmg bird that flies Demeter and P. 1
P^inW^i^ TP/^'?i"n'^"*.)^y'^' . u Akbar's Dream m
^T ^l-l -^k^ ^*"- ^*^" ^*y ^^^^ '^«" *Vp- Confessions 2
1 / m this obscurity, (repeat) Ode to Memory 6, 44, 123
My veiy heart / s and my whole soul grieves A spirit haunts 16
flowers would /at your cruel cheer. Poet's Mind 15
Cry, / not : either Truth is born Two Voices 181
Ory, / not, climb : the summits slope 1^4
JF"s hke a dazzled morning moon. Fatima 28
and the heart F's faded by its heat. D. of F. Women 288
They /on hill or held or river: Princess iv U
Beginnii^ to / in the light that she loves Maud I xxii 9
lo / in the light of the sun she loves. To / in his
Ught, and to die. j^
my whole soul languishes And f's, Lover's Tale i 268
at his feet I seem'd to / and fall, ^ qq
Faint-blue Af-b ridge upon the right, Mariumi In the S. 5
Fainted at the claniouniig of her enemy / Boadicea 82
P»i„w w *'''?.' J ^^ "Jtervals, Lover's Tale i 546
FarntCT Wears all day a /tone. The Owl HI
She rephes, m accents /, z. of Burleigh 5
lamt she grew and ever/, " q^
F by day, but always in the night Blood-red, Holy Grail 4T2
/onward, hke wild birds that change Pass, of Arthur 38
?ullrf^ TnJ^'"^r' ^"'^ ^ ^- "f Maeldune 22
slower and /, Old and weary. Merlin and the G. 99
Is it turning a / red ? y^ Dawn 22
Faintest / sunlights flee About his shadowy sides : The Krala-r, A
The smallest rock far on the/hill, Com.ofAriurQt
Has push'd toward our / sun To UlviiJ^ 2S
Snn J^.'^fl ^-^ ^ /".* !-f aint-stomach'd ! Sir JOlUllelA
5Sw IS^^'y'^'l^^ ^•'^e^J s '^^i^rs (E. and E.) 11
Famther Then laugh'd again, but/, Guinevere 58
Fainflt^'TlW P ^^'tf^'^«",C'*'"e upon ine A little /: Gareth and L. 994
Fain^ Tho / mernly-far and far away- Enoch Arden 614
1< smiling Adeline, j^ J- S
Faintly-flush'd How /-/, how phantom-fair, TheDa^7d
Faintly-shadowed as he tracefa/-. track, Lancelot afdEl^
K ^?nS3 "7^T\ ^"? /-t' points Of slander, Merlin and V. 172
Famt-st9mach'd f-s ! famt as I am, .y^v j oidra^a, 199
Fair (adj., s., adv.) {See also FuU-fair, Phantom-fair, Silver-fair
Starry-fair) But beyond expression / ' Adeline "^
gleaming rind ingrav'n, ' For tfie most /,' ^ZnTlS
Thjr mortal eyes are frail to judge of /, 1 it
Fairest— why fairest wife ? am 1 not/? " iqa
Methinks I must be /, for yesterday, " Jqq
unmvited came Into the / Peleian banquet-hall " 99?
O the Eari was / to see ! (repeat) The Sisters 6, 12, Is!
divinely taU, And most divinely /. n. of F. Wo^n 88
Fair
192
Fair
Fair (adj., s., adv.) (continued) in / field Myself for such
a face had boldly died D. of F. Women 97
" No / Hebrew boy Shall smile away my maiden blame „ 213
I am that Rosamond, whom men call /, „ 251
' Come again, and thrice as/; ' M. d' Arthur, Ep. 26
maid or spouse, As / as my Olivia, Talking Oak 35
/ young beech That here beside me stands, „ 141
oak on lea Shall grow so / as this.' „ 244
What moral is in being /. Day-Dm., Moral 4
' What wonder, if he thinks me / ? ' „ Ep. 4
Sees whatever / and splendid L. of Burleigh 27
She was more / than words can say : Beggar Maid 2
Tomohrit, Athos, all things /, To E. L. 5
frequent interchange of foul and /, Enoch Arden 533
' Too happy, fresh, and /, Too fresh and / The Brook 217
a couple, / As ever painter painted, Aylmer's Field 105
Sear'd by the close ecliptic, was not/; „ 193
Should as by miracle, grow straight and / — „ 676
F as the Angel that said ' Hail ! ' „ 681
a fearful night ! ' ' Not fearful ; /,' Said the good wife,
' if every star in heaven Can make it /: Sea Dreams 82
one that arm'd Her own / head. Princess, Pro. 33
then the maiden Aunt Took this / day for text, „ 108
A prince I was, blue-eyed, and / in face, ,, i 1
'My sister.' ' Comely, too, by all that's/, „ ii 114
and pass With all / theories made to gild „ 233
all her thoughts as / within her eyes, „ 326
So stood that same / creature at the door. „ 329
beauties every shade of brown and / „ 437
And why we came ? I fabled nothing /, „ iii 136
The head and heart of all our / she-world, „ 163
' or with / philosophies That lift the fancy ; „ 340
elaborately wrought With / Corinna's triumph ; „ 349
' F daughter, when we sent the Prince your way „ iv 398
From all high places, lived in all / lights, „ 430
All her / length upon the ground she lay : „ t) 59
Upon the skirt and fringe of our / land, „ 219
' O / and strong and terrible ! „ vi 163
So their / college tum'd to hospital ; „ vii 17
till she not / began To gather light _ „ 23
And found / peace once more among the sick. „ 44
those / charities Join'd at her side ; „ 65
Stays all the / young planet in her hands — „ 264
The sea-kings' daughter as happy as/, W. to Alexandra 26
Not once or twice in our / island-story, Ode on Well. 209
That one / planet can produce. Ode Inter. Exhib. 24
let the / white-wing'd peacemaker fly To happy
havens „ 34
F empires branching, both, in lusty life! — W. to Marie Alex. 21
Lariano crept To that / port below the castle The Daisy 79
The fields are / beside them. Voice and the P. 17
F is her cottage in its place, liequiescat 1
Thy creature, whom I found so/. hi Mem., Pro. 38
And glad to find thjs^self so /, „ vi 27
F ship, that from the Italian shore „ ix 1
Who broke our / companionship, „ xxii 13
And all we met was / and good, „ xxiii 17
If all was good and / we met, „ xxiv 5
Man, her last work, who seem'd so /, „ Ivi 9
Looks thy /face and makes it still. „ Ixx 16
With promise of a mom as /; ,, Ixxxiv 29
great Intelligences / That range above „ Ixxxv 21
When one would ami an arrow /, „ Ixxxvii 25
My Arthur found your shadows /, „ Ixxxix 6
Imaginations calm and /, „ xcivlO
And those / hills I sail'd below, „ xcviii 2
Let her great Danube rolling / Enwind her isles, „ 9
Unloved, the sun-flower, shining /, „ ci 5
trust In that which made the world so /. „ cxvi 8
And in the setting thou art /. „ cxxx 4
she grows For ever, and as / as good. „ Con. 36
she promised then to be /. Maud I i68
Man in his pride, and Beauty / in her flower ; „ iv 25
I had fancied it would be /. „ vi 6
And / without, faithful within, „ arm 37
1415
Marr. of Geraint 40
224
239
298
366
403
499
553
600
Fair (adj., s., adv.) (continued) garden of roses And lilies / on
a lawn ; Maud I xiy 2
Upon a pastoral slope as /, „ xviii 19
And you / stars that crown a happy day „ 30
Spice his / banquet with the dust of death ? „ 56
When the face of night is / on the dewy downs, „ /// vi 5
To have look'd, tho' but in a dream, upon eyes so /, „ 16
Had one / daughter, and none other child ; Com. of Arthur 2
One falling upon each of three / queens, „ 276
but this King is / Beyond the race of Britons „ 330
And hated this / world and all therein, „ 344
The / beginners of a nobler time, „ 457
And we that fight for our / father Christ, „ 510
One was /, strong, arm'd — Gareth and L. 104
the whole / city had disappear'd „ 196
Broad brows and /, a fluent hair and fine, High nose,
a nostril large and fine, and hands Large, / and tine ! — „ 464
/ and fine, forsooth ! „ 474
I leave not till I finish this / quest, „ 774
find My fortunes all as / as hers who lay „ 903
Bare-footed and bare-headed three / girls „ 926
F words were best for him who fights for thee ; „ 946
.' jP damsel, you should worship me the more, „ 1022
And seeing now thy words are /, methinks „ 1181
' My / child, What madness made thee challenge the
chief knight Of Arthur's hall ? ' 'F Sir, they bad
me do it.
He craved a / permission to depart,
'Farewell, / Prince,' answer'd the stately Queen.
And climb'd upon a / and even ridge,
' Whither, / son ? ' to whom Geraint replied,
Moved the / Enid, all in faded silk,
' F Host and Earl, I pray your courtesy ;
Nor can see elsewhere, anything so /.
' Advance and take, as fairest of the /,
With her / head in the dim-yellow light.
For tho' ye won the prize of fairest /, And tho' I heard
him call you fairest /,
however /, She is not fairer in new clothes
She never yet had seen her half so /;
I vow'd that could I gain her, our / Queen,
When your / child shall wear your costly gift
not to goodly hill or yellow sea Look'd the / Queen,
But hire us some / chamber for the night, Geraint
Femininely / and dissolutely pale.
' F and dear cousin, you that most had cause
Did her mock-honour as the fairest /,
Before the Queen's / name was breathed upon,
her ladies loved to call Enid the F,
till he crown'd A happy life with a / death,
Early, one / dawn, The light-wing'd spirit Bcdin a
' F Sirs,' said Arthur, ' wherefore sit ye here ? '
And brought report of azure lands and /,
ye stand, / lord, as in a dream.'
we have ridd'n before among the flowers In those
/ days — „ 273
This / wife-worship cloaks a secret shame ? „ 360
this / lord The flower of all their vestal knighthood, „ 507
' And is the / example follow'd, Sir, Merlin and V. 19
He hath given us a / falcon which he train'd ; „ 96
Had met her, Vivien, being greeted /, „ 155
tender was her voice, so / her face, „ 401
Is like the / pearl-necklace of the Queen, „ 451
And found a / young squire who sat alone, „ 472
Was this / charm invented by yourself ? „ 540
I mean, as noble, as their Queen was/? „ 608
kinsman left him watcher o'er his wife And two / babes, „ 707
What say ye then to / Sir Percivale „ 747 .
Sees what his / bride is and does, „ 782
Elaine the /, Elaine the loveable, Lancelot and E. 1
you cannot move To these / jousts ? ' „ 80
Why go ye not to these / jousts ? „ 98
as I hear It is a / large diamond, — „ 228
' A / large diamond,' added plain Sir Torre, „ 230
' If what is / be but for what is /, „ 237
719
721
741
787
819
831
and E. 238
275
824
833
, 951
963
968
lid Balan 20
31
168
258
Pair
Fair (adj^ s., adv.) (continued) who deem this maid
Might wear as /a jewel "j« umiu
* Save your great self, / lord ; ' JMncelot and E. 240
' F lord, whose name I know not— " o^
j; lady smce I never yet have worn " ^^
Who parted with his own to / Elaine • " o^
cells and chambers : all were / and dry • " a^I
Jn^cf ' !^^«d The Courteous, / and strong, " S?
AnH SI' '^^. "^^^ ^ ^y^ °" /Elaine : ' " ^
And hf ted her / face and moved away : " ^
Nay for near you, / lord, I am at r^t.' » f??
a faith once / Was richer than these diamonds- " i^
^ lord as would have help'd her from her dSth.' " }!??
Dehcately pure and marvellously f " ^^^^
'-F she was, my King, Pure » ^^^^
FareweU too— now at last-^Farewell, / lily " Ul^
A / ^^ f ^"^' ' Tli°" ^ /' my child, " jf^
and / the house whereby she sat, rj 7"r, r^
disarm'd By maidens each as / alk any flower : ^"^^ ^""^ ^l
Fnr7f/ '"''!?• ^T^^'"^ to and fro Wide a stream " S?
I" or /thou art and pure as Guinevere '"'"'«*'" „ 591
have the Heavens but given thee a / face '^'^' "'^ ^\ ^
Ay, thought Gawain, ' and you be / enoW : " 121
A rose, one rose, and this was wondrous/, " ^^?
Let be thy /Queen's fantasy, ''' r^., m " ^^
Be happy in thy / Queen as"^! in mine.' ^'' Tournament 197
InitTfn'J^'^K^ ^^ ^^° worships each " ^
In that / Order of my Table Round '/^ • "^
And be the / beginniiig of a tim^ ' Gmnevere 463
And drawing foul ensample from /names, " j^
And so thou lean on our /father Christ, " 1^
What might I not have made of thy / world, " «f f
Or else as if the world were wholly r p r '] ^ ^^
/ with orchard-lawns And bowery hollows *' "f ^''^^^^l»
bounds, as if some / city were one voice " T^X
1 e cannot shape Fancy so /" as is thi<! mi>mnmr r ',' ,„ ^""
^speech was L and JelTcate of pte "^^ ^^ * ^«^« *' ^f 8
Above some / metropolis, earth-shock'd'- " -H^
Oftentimes The vision has /prelude ' " " °^
80 those /eyes Shone on my darkness " ]^i
me or/Was brought before the guest: » • },^l
F speech was his, and delicate of phrase. " ^^ 1°^
Makmg fresh and / All the bowers and the » ^^^
flowers, „.
the great things of Nature and the / *"'^* ^^- ""'^ ^^l^
what IS / without Is often as foul Within ' n. j"o r ^f B
aU that is filthy with all that is f?"^ Dead Prophet 67
one was /, And one was dark ,r£ "^'?*^** ^^
Who would be A mermaid / ^/ fie Ring 160
I would be a mermaid /; "^ Mermaid 2
From Ind to Ind, but in'/ daylight woke r> " ^
Not these alone, but eveiy landfcapl/, ' " P fuonapartej
In some / space of sloping greens Lay ^"^ "*/ ^ '"', ^^
but eve^ legend / Which the supreme Caucasian mind " ]^
Above, the/ hall-ceUing stately-set ^'an mind „ i26
O all tilings / to sate my various eye.s ! " iH
xT'Jk !? / "f H*"® ^"^« in all the land they say MJ.'n,. ^
Pontius and Isoapiot by'mj side Show'd lilts e<"d«>er s D. 150
/seraphs. c^ o r, ,.
Beyond the/green field and eastern .»a. Uh^S^d^iI \m
the / nej, fonns. That float about the threshold «.(*, jS, ?^
S'tsrisK^irs^y, ^»»-i'£»|
??ii7hoi5*rhrdr^ f^^"^ 'w- '>-' «'<f ss
Nor for my lands so broad and /; t A A'"^' ^
Lord of Burleigh, / and free, r /r^ ^7^1 12
Three / chiklren first she bore him, * "^ '^"''^"i'* 58
For one / Vision ever fled Down the waste wafers Th. 7/ ^l
Like Virtue firm, like Knowledge / ^'^^ ^^^'^^^ ^J
WiU bring/ weather yet to aU of us. Enoch Arden ifl
193
Fairness
^'^^*d^y'bV'dIy^'°"'^""'^ Thro' many a/sea-circle,
'Then I fixt My wistful eyes on two f imaees ^noch Arden 542
The marvel of that / new nature- ^ ^ ' ^ea Breams 240
d'^Sh^ of 'fc / as life, it was all of it quiet as Columbus 79
F FloreAee honouring thy nativity, ^- "-^ M^'^^^e 20
And earth as / in hue ' a Dante 3
'Earth is /' When all 'is dark as night ' AncterU Sage 24
And show us that the worid is wholly/. " ]^^
0 Thou so/ m summers gone, 'i, , ^°^
bo / in southern sunshine bathed "'' '■^«*'»» 1
Our own /isle, the lord of every sea— m, 'i,, ^
R ^T"iT y°^ / ^^'"^ Of Statesman, To Mara of nt%5 1 1
Hail the / Ceremonial Of this year ' OnjJ O T^f^^ of
f things are slow to fade away, ** *^**%^-/'S^"« 23
1 loved you first when young and /, ^ " '^''^- -^^^^l
i^ Sprmg slides hither o'er the Southern sea p x « ^.^ ^^
'^ Seat^"" '°™«-^'i^^'^ beyond th^doo'rs ^''°'- '^ ^^''""^ ^
/mothers they Dying in childbirth of dead sons I^aJfl^'"''^ Vi
From ea^h/ plant the blossom choicest-grown "' ' ^''""* ^1
pahn Call to the cypress 'I alone am/'? " H
^ garments, plain or rich, and fitting close " , o?
loosen stone from stone, All my / work ; " Jf ^
^f ^itcoWot *KSr" ^' '^« ^-"^ ^«^«;iOa. JS
Ernilia, /than all else but thou, For thou art / '^'^ ^^^
than all else that is. •' ^ j, ^
^ his talk, a tongue that ruled the hour a Audiey Court QQ
i^ than Rachel bTthe palmy weU,%2n Ruth ^V^^'^ ^^eldlQl
among the fields of com.
And / she, but ah how soon to die ! t>" . ^'^?
Stiller, not / than mine nequtescat 5
F than aught in the worid beside, ^"^ ^^ * '^^
She IS not / in new clothes than old. Mn^,. r,t n "■ .r^^
O as much /—as a faith once fair Marr of Geramt 122
To greet their / sisters of the East ^""n^^l '''^. ^^.^228
Where / fruit of Love may rest Some happy G<^rdeners D. 188
future day. ^^^ _ „ .
there's the / chance : ^ '*^**'*^ <^«* 251
i; thy fate than mine, if life's best end Prxn^ess v 460
She that finds a winter sunset / than a mom J^^resms ISO
of Spring _ J
Fairest That aU which thou hast drawn of f J-ocksley H. Sixty 22
(Tho' all her/forms are types of ^ee^ ^^' ^^ ^'ITV^ f
claiming each This meed of/ isabdZQ
So Shalt thou find me/, (Enone 87
I promise thee The / and most loving wife in Greece ' " ?^
i^— why /wife? am I not fair? '" ureece, ^^ 287
She was the /in the face: „, >» 196
rose the tallest of them all And f ,^ ^, Ststers 2
beardless apple-arbiter Decided f ' "-/^t^ur 208
her that is the /under heaven ^ Liuretius 92
The prize of beauty for the f t.'hprp :., *"• ^f-^^fhur 86
' Advance and tak J, as /of the f afr' ^'"''- "^ ^""«*"«' 485
For tho' ye won the prize of / fair. And tho' I " ^^^
heard him call you / fair
/ and the best Of ladies living gave me r„7- "j ^ , ^19
I, and all. As /, best and purest "'*" ''''^ ^«^«« 339
' F I grant her : I have seen • ' " 350
rose the tallest of them all And f t, ". 356
/ of their evening stars ' r i^' "/ ^'■'^*w 376
/flesh at last is filth on which the worm will fex.t • "^ "'^ rz"^^/ 188
Fairest-spoken That art the f-s tree ^^'^^ ' ^ „ . ^^^Wy 30
Fair-fronted ^-/ Truth shall droop not now .o, \'dkmgOak2&
Fair-hair'd a loftier Annie Lee™^?;i "nd Ta" Clear-headed friend 12
-F-A and redder than a windy morn • ' ^noch Arden 749
came a f-h youth, that in his hand Bare Princess, Con. 91
_ when the f-h youth came by him said Geramt and E. 201
Pair-hands Sir Fine-face, Sir /-A? ' ^ >. 205
Fain ly Made so / well With delicate spire ^"""'t ""^ h ^J^
Fairily-dehcate -P-i palaces shine Maud II ii 5
Fair-maid many welcomes FehmaTO/-™ /. i» , The Islet 18
Fairness To do4t her / w^re toTa^t^^^'el'^"^*^ /'^^ f^^t"^ 2, 10
J waiii an eye, Lancelot and E. 1376
N
Fairplay
Fairplay ask'd but space and / for her scheme ;
Fair-spoken stranger that hath been To thee f-s ? '
Fairy (adj.) Aiey, / Lihan, rutting, / LiUan,
Like a rose-leaf I will crush thee, F LiUan.
A / shield your Genius made
With whitest honey in / gardens cuU'd —
And woke her with a lay from / land.
♦ Tis the / Lady of Shalott.'
heavens between their / fleeces pale
With the / tales of science.
And bring the fated / Prince. Day-Dm., Sleep P. 56
A / Prince, with joyful eyes, „ ^^'^'^-1
As wild as aught of / lore ; „ ^^ LEnvo^ 12
From havens hid in / bowers. The Voyage 54
many a / foreland set With willow-weed The Brook 45
Show'd her the / footings on the grass, The little
dells of cowsUp, / palms. The petty marestaU -^.,,„r>
forest, / pines, ^ ylmer's Field 90
What look'd a flight of / arrows aim'd . ,, »*
And dropt a / parachute and past : Princess, Fro. 7b
golden foot or a / horn Thro' his dim water-world ? Mavd II ti 19
Here is a city of Enchanters, built By / Kings.' Gareth and L. 200
whether this be built By magic, and by / Kings
and Queens ; . » ^^°
a F King And F Queens have built the city, ,, ^o»
Shrunk Uke a / changeling lay the mage ; Com. of Arthur dM
Until they vanish'd by the / well That laughs , „ ,.00
at iron Merlin and V. Alo
sharp breaths of anger pufE'd Her / nostril out ; , " j t- lot^
Look how she sleeps — the F Queen, so fair ! Lancelot and E. l^o&
we chanted the songs of the Bards and the
glories of / kings ; V. of Maeldune 90
The / fancies range. Early Spring ^9
but now Your / Prince has found you, 2 he King b9
And you were then a lover's / dream, To Mary Boyle 43
Fairy (S) The oriental / brought, N^"''^^^,Jk
' For as to fairies, that will flit Talking Oak 89
dancing of Fairies In desolate hollows, Merlin and the &. 41
Fairy-circle flickering /-c wheel'd and broke Guinevere 25a
Fairy-fine Fabric rough, or /-/, Ode Inter. Exhib. 18
Fairyland (See also Fairy) But only changeling ^ ,, , r ohq
out of F Gareth and L. M6
if the King' be King at all, or come From F ; » , -n TotiJ
Or come to take the King toF? Lancelot and E. 1J57
Fairy-tale (See also Fairy) told herf-fs, Show'd her the , „. , , „„
fjjiry Aylmer's FieldSd
Faith (iS'ee aZso Catholic Faith) left to me, but Thou, ^ , .
And / in Thee ? Supp. Confessions 19
How sweet to have a common /! » ^^
that knew The beauty and repose of /, ,, 75
Great in /, and strong Against the grief „ Jl
And simple / than Norman blood. L. C. V. de Vere &h
F from tracts no feet have trod, On a Mourner 29
settled down Upon the general decay of / The Epic 18
run My / beyond my practice into liis : Edwin Morris 64
we closed, we kiss'd, swore /, , ^ 77 '' ^ i\r
with a larger / appeal'd Than Papist unto Saint. Talking Oak lo
Wait : my / is large in Time, Love and Duty 25
So keep I fair thro' / and prayer Sir Galahad 26
I will know If there be any / in man.' ' Nay now, - , „, . ,
what /? ' said Alice the nurse. Lady Clare 44
His r&solve Upbore him, and firm /, Enoch Arden 800
lier sweet face and / Held him from that : Aylmer's Field 392
Have /, have / ! We Uve by /,' said he ; Sea Dreams 157
why kept ye not your / ? Princess v 77
their sinless /, A maiden moon that sparkles „ ,, 185
/ in womankind Beats with his blood, „ ^^ 328
Some sense of duty, sonietliiiig of a /, » Con. 54
The sport half-science, fill me with a/, « . "6
honouring your sweet / in him, A Dedication 5
By /, and / alone, embrace. In Mem., Pro. A
We have but/: we cannot know ; >» ..fl
Whose f ha.s centre everywhere, n xarxtjt 3
Her / thro' fonn is pure as thine, » .9
Tliis / has many a purer priest, ,» xxxmi 6
194
Princess v 282 Faith (continued) Is fas vague as all unsweet :
Gareth and L. 284: Be near me when my / is dry
Lilian 1 Shall love be blamed for want of /i*
30 I stretch lame hands of /, and grope,
Margaret 41 May breed with him, can fright my /.
Eleanore 26 The /, the vigour, bold to dwell
Caress' d or chidden 8 Perplext in /, but pure m deeds,
L. of Shalott i 35 There lives more / m honest doubt,
Gardener's D. 261 To find a stronger / his own ;
Locksley Hall 12 to him she sings Of early / and plighted vows ;
- -- Her / is fixt and cannot move,
What profit lies in barren /,
What is she, cut from love and /,
Our dearest/; our ghastUest doubt ;
If e'er when / had f all'n asleep,
all is well, tho' / and form Be sunder d
Is comrade of the lesser /
With / that comes of self-control,
have / in a tradesman's ware or his word .-'
and / in their great King,
good/, I fain had added— Knight,
Faithful
In. Mem. xlvii 5
^9
li 10
„ Ixxxit 4
„ xcv 29
„ xcvi 9
11
17
xcvii 30
„ 33
„ cviii 5
„ cxiv 11
„ cxxiv 2
„ cxxiv 9
„ cxxvii 1
„ cxxviii 3
„ cxxxi 9
Maud I i 26
Gareth and L. 330
1162
•'NiTy' by my /,"thou shalt not? cried Marr. of Geraint 198
a rock in ebbs and flows, Fixt on her /. ,, o^^
Brought the great / to Britam over seas ; Balm and Balan 103
F and unfaith can ne'er be equal powers : Unfaith
in aught is want of / in all. ^ Merlin and V 388
break /with one I may not name ? Larwelot and E. 685
And /unfaithful kept him falsely true. „ oh
/once fair Was richer than these diamonds— ,, |^^o
•heal'datonce,By/,ofallhisills. Holy Grail hC,
a maid. Who kept our holy /among her km ,, ^Ji
those who love them, trials of our /. FeUeas and E. 210
all these pains are trials of my /, » ^*"
' ii' of my body,' he said, ' and art thou not— ^ , ^ " , V«a
/have these 'm whom they sware to love ? Last Tournament 188
here the / That made us rulers ? To the Queen ti 18
fierce or careless looseners of the /, " -^
Confined on points of /, ^The SenTe IW
' I have fought for Queen and i*' J ^^ ^ff^^e lui
In matters of the /, alas the while ! Sir J. Oldcastle 76
Lest the false / make merry oyer them ! Columhus 147
'OsoulofUttle/, slowtobeheve! „ , „ rofj, /^ /in
the sacred peak 'of hoar high-templed F, Pref. Poem 19th Cen 10
to the F that saves, ^ -^ ^ f qq
Where you bawl'd the dark side of your / Despair 39
away from your / and your face ! ^ • /«. „. no
cUnI to J' beyond the forms of F! ^ 7^'^'t- ^^fiS
Bri^ the old dark ages back without the /, LocJcsley H. Sixty 137
wars and filial /, and Dido's pyre ; F«,/iT 11
F at her zenith, or all but lost ^ ,^ Fastness 11
bespiteofever^J'andCreed, m^" ^"ZVldl
Whose F and Works were bells of full accord, In Mem. G. W. Ward 2
With a / a.s clear as the heights '^''TvhJXmJmi.
And mood of / may hold its own, Ahbar s Dream 56
A people from their ancient fold of i', » "
I cull from every / and race the best » ^"
shook Those pillars of a moulder d /, » °^
and to spread the Divine F 'h■,.n^J^^
darken'ct with doubts of a 2^ that saves. The Dreamer 11
Faithful (See also TBmSxA) Lean'd on him, /, gentle, ^^^ ^^.^^^ ^^g
And shaping / record of the glance Gardener's 2). 177
< A • i. ^ 1 r 1 „;„i,f f^f nnrl I Sir Galahad iy
' O ]ust and / knight of Goa ! ^
I.faUingonhis/heart, ^ ^xTll
Thrice blest whose lives are / prayers, » f^»" |^
A / answer from the breast, » '^f;^ ^5
She dwells on him with /eyes, » fJlT^g
sleep Encompass'd by his / guard, ,, ^cx^^
And fair without, J witnin, „ • <ii7
Sjte/tS'S o/c wES l«v«i His ma,to Lo.e,'' Tale i. 2-^
in her you see That / servant whom we spoke about, „ ^^^
Thanks to the kindly dark faces who fought with ^^
us, / and few, •' •'
Faithful
195
Fall
Faithful (continued) Burnt too, my / preacher,
Beverley ! Sir J. OldcasUe 80
My noble friend, my / counsellor, Akbar's Dream 18
True we have got — sitch a / ally Riflemen form ! 24
Faithfulness loving, utter / in love, Gareth and L. 554
Faithless Lest I be found as / in the quest Lancelot and E. 761
VVhate'er the / people say. In Mem. xcvii 16
The / coldness of the times ; „ cvi 18
Falcon (adj.) bold and free As you, my / RosaUnd. Rosalind 18
Falcon (s) My frohc /, with bright eyes, „ 2
My bright-eyed, wild-eyed /, „ 6
If all the worid were /'s, what of that ? Golden Year 38
Forgetful of the / and the hunt, Marr. of Geraint 51
given us a fair / which he train'd ; Merlin and V. 96
unliooded casting off The goodly / free ; „ 131
No surer than our / yesterday, Lancelot and E. 656
beauty lured that / from his eyry on the fell, Happy 59
Falcon (name of ship) every soul from the decks of The
F but one ; The Wreck 109
Falcon-eyed quick brunette, well-moulded, f-e, Princess ii 106
Fall (s) (See also Foot-fall, Toumey-fall) many a / Of
diamond rillets musical, Arabian Nights 47
comes the check, the change, the /, Two Voices 163
Came in a sun-Ut / of rain. Sir L. and Q. G. 4
Illyhian woodlands, echoing /'s Of water, To E. L. 1
like the flakes In a / of snow, Lturetius 167
and the river made a / Out yonder : Princess Hi 172
blossom'd branch Rapt to the horrible /: „ iv 180
They mark'd it with the red cross to the /, „ vi 41
That huddhng slant in furrow-cloven f's „ vii 207
as the rapid of life Shoots to the / — A dedication 4
These leaves that redden to the/; In Mem. xi 14
And back we come at / of dew. „ Con. 100
Here at the head of a tinkUng /, Maud I xxi 6
My pride Ls broken : men have seen my /.' Marr. of Geraint 578
my pride Is broken down, for Enid sees my/! ' „ 590
The drumming thunder of the huger / Geraint and E. 173
Enid heard the clashing of his /, „ 509
never woman yet, since man's first /, Lancelot and E. 859
hear the manner of thy fight and /; PeUeas and E. 347
bide, unf rowardly, A / from him ? ' „ 598
laugh'd Lightly, to think of Modred's dusty /, Guinevere 55
a / fro' a kiss to a kick like Saatan as fell North. Cobbler 57
we may happen a / o' snaw — Village Wife 21
kindly curves, with gentlest /, De. Prof., Two G. 23
Following a torrent till its myriad /'s Tiresias 37
and mine was the deeper/; The Wreck 11
An' the / of yer foot in the dance Tomorrow 36
A / of water lull'd the noon asleep. Romney's R. 83
is the Demon-god Wroth at his/? ' St. Telemachus 20
he, That other, prophet of their/, Akbar's Dream 82
Fall (autumn) an' I mean'd to 'a stubb'd it at /, N. Farmer, O. S. 41
we talkt o' my darter es died o' the fever at /: Village Wife 10
'ud coom at the / o' the year, Owd Rod 23
An' pigs didn't sell at /, Church-warden, etc. 5
Fan (verb) (See also Fall oat) Letting the rose-leaves/: Claribel 3
Down by the poplar tall rivulets babble and /. Leonine Eleg. 4
Winds creep ; dews / chilly ; „ 7
I faint, I /, Men say that Thou Didst die Supp. Confessions 2
on his light there / s A shadow ; „ 163
Place it, where sweetest sunlight f's Ode to Memory 85
It would / to the ground if you came in. Poet's Mind 23
And shall / again to ground. Deserted House 16
The shadow passeth when the tree shall /, Love and Death 14
my ringlets would / Low adown. The Mermaid 14
Then did my response clearer f : Two Voices 34
when a billow, blown against, F's back, „ 317
Which only to one engine bound F's off, „ 348
Until they / in trance again. „ 354
And all day long to / and rise Miller's D. 182
You seem'd to hear them climb and / Palace of Art 70
to hear the dully sound Of himian footsteps /. „ 276
Along the cliff to / and pause and / did seem. Lotos-Eaters 9
There is sweet music here that softer f's „ C. S. 1
turning yellow F's, and floats adown the air. „ 31
Ripens and fades, and f's, and hath no toil, „ 37
Fall (verb) (continue) In silence : ripen, / and cease : Lotos-Eaters 52
thunder-drops / on a sleeping sea : D. of F. Women 122
/ down and glance From tone to tone, „ 166
F into shadow, soonest lost: To J. S. 11
that on which it throve F 's off, „ 16
That from Discussion's Up may / With Life, Love thou thy land 33
The goose let / a golden egg The Goose 11
Where f's not hail, or rain, or any snow, M. d' Arthur 260
' F down, O Simeon : thou hast suffer'd long St. S. Stylites 99
and oft I /, Maybe for months, „ 102
Once more the gate behind me/'s; Talking Oak 1
And when my marriage morn may /, „ 285
not leap forth and / about thy neck. Love and Duty 41
The woods decay, the woods decay and /, Tithonus 1
and the shadows rise and /. Locksley Hall 80
now for me the roof-tree /. „ 190
Let it / on Locksley Hall, „ 193
I'll take the showers as they/, Amphion 101
Perfume and flowers / in showers. Sir Galaliad 11
On whom their favours/! „ 14
Swells up, and shakes and f's. „ 76
F from iiis Ocean-lane of fire, The Voyage 19
And like a thunderbolt he f's. The Eagle 6
A footstep seem'd to / beside her path, Enoch Arden 514
F back upon a name ! rest, rot in that ! Aylmer's Field 385
heads of chiefs and princes / so fast, „ 763
as f's A creeper when the prop is broken, „ 809
and seem'd Always about to /, „ 822
his own head Began to droop, to /; „ 835
'Set them up! they shall not/! ' Sea Dreams 227
ever/'s the least white star of snow, Lucretius 107
She heard him raging, heard him /; ,, 276
come to fight with shadows and to /. Princess i 10
but prepare : I speak ; it f's. ' „ H 224
the gracious dews Began to glisten and to /: „ 317
The splendour /'« on castle walls „ ivl
Fly to her, and / upon her gilded eaves, „ 94
Bred will in me to overcome it or /. ,^ ^ 351
one should fight with shadows and should/; „ 476
Yea, let her see me /! „ 517
tho' he trip and / He shall not blind his soul „ vii 330
Mourning when their leaders /, Ode on Well. 5
float or/, in endless ebb and flow ; W. to Marie Alex. 27
I roar and rave for I /. Voice and the P. 12
F, and follow their doom. ,^ 20
Bloodily, bloodily / the battle-axe, Boddicea 56
she felt the heart within her / „ 81
I / unawares before the people, Hendecasyllabics 7
Her place is empty, / like these ; In Mem xiii 4
When fiU'd with tears that cannot /, „ xix 11
My deeper anguish also f's, „ 15
If such a dreamy touch should /, „ xliv 13
should / Remeiging in the general Soul, „ xlvii 3
Be near us when we climb or/: „ Zi 13
I can but trust that good shall / „ iw 14
As drop by drop the water /'s ,, lviii3
When on my bed the moonlight f's, „ Ixvii 1
Till on mine ear this message f's, „ Ixxxv 18
And lightly does the whisper/; „ 89
And strangely f's our Christmas-eve. „ cv 4.
A shade /'s on us like the dark From little cloudlets „ Con. 93
And breaking let the splendour / „ 119
Shall I weep if a Poland /? Maud I iv 46
and / before Her feet on the meadow grass, „ v 25
For I heard your rivulet / „ xxii 36
the heavens / in a gentle rain, „ // i 41
a dewy splendour /'s On the little flower „ iv 32
Then I rise, the eavedrops /, „ 62
and watch'd the great sea /, Wave after wave. Com. of Arthur 378
/ battleaxe upon helm, F battleaxe, „ 486
See that he / not on thee suddenly, Gareth and L. 921
♦ Lo,' said Gareth, ' the foe f's I ' „ 1317
And if 1/ her name will yet remain Marr. of Geraint 500
While slowly falling as a scale that/ 's, „ 525
Made her cheek burn and either eyelid /, „ 775
Before he turn to / seaward again, Geraint and E. 117
FaU
196
Falling
Fall (verb) (continued) Wait here, and when he passes /
upon him.' Geraint and E, 129
And they will / upon him imawares. „ 134
they will / upon you while ye pass.' „ 145
And if I /, cleave to the better man.' „ 152
Made her cheek bum and either eyelid /. „ 434
a dreadful loss F's in a far land and he knows it not, „ 497
and made as if to / upon him. „ 776
fear not, Enid, I should / upon him, „ 787
see He do not / behind me : Bcdin and Balan 135
Deep-tranced on hers, and could not /: „ 278
A doom that ever poised itself to /, Merlin and V. 191
Had I for three days seen, ready to /. „ 296
Set up the charge ye know, to stand or /! ' „ 703
the victim's flowers before he /.' Lancelot and E. 910
women watch Who wins, who f's ; Holy Grail 35
all the light that/'s upon the board „ 249
King himself had fears that it would /, „ 341
F on him aU at once. And if ye slay mm Pdleas and E. 268
' Would rather you had let them /,' Last Tournament 39
cold F's on the mountain in midsummer snows, „ 228
F, as the crest of some slow-arching wave, „ 462
Where /'s not hail, or rain, or any snow. Pass, of Arthur 428
as anger /'s aside And withers on the breast Lover's Tale i 9
Or as men know not when they / asleep „ 161
It / on its own thorns — if this be true — „ 273
my raised eyeUds would not /, „ i 571
First /'« asleep in swoon, wherefrom awaked, „ 791
faint and /, To / and die away. „ ii 96
nay — what was there left to /? Rizpah 9
F's ? what /'s ? who knows ? As the tree f's so
must it lie. „ 12
the thunderbolt will / Long and loud. The Revenge 44
F into the hands of God, not into the hands of Spain ! ' „ 90
Better to / by the hands that they love, than to / Def. of Lv^know 53
" " " ■ „ 65
Mark him — he f's ! then another,
I knew we should / on each other,
Have heard this footstep /,
Thy Thebes shall / and perish,
I felt one warm tear / upon it.
My Shelley would / from my hands
She tastes the fruit before the blossom f's,
The blackthorn-blossom fades and f's
thro' the tonguesters we may /.
Kingdoms and Republics /,
Jacob's ladder f's On greening grass.
Should this old England /
and at dawn F's on the threshold
thy hands let / the gather'd flower,
flowers that brighten as thy footstep f's,
felt a gentle hand F on my forehead,
my strongest wish F's flat before your least
unwillingness.
Thou, thou — I saw thee / before me,
the chuch weant happen a /.
your shadow f's on the grave.
My prison, not my fortress, / away !
The bridal garland f's upon the bier,
Fallen {See also Chap-fallen, Half-fallen, New-fallen,
Newly-fallen) legend of a / race Alone might liint Two Voices 359
mournful light That broods above the /sun, To J. S. 51
To trample round my / head, Come not, when 3
PhiUp glancing up Beheld the dead flame of the / day Enoch Arden 441
The two remaining found a / stem ; .» . . . ^^^
To lift the woman's /divinity Princess Hi 223
So those two foes above my / life, „ vi 130
O / nobility, that, overawed, Third, of Feb. 35
In those / leaves which kept their green, In Mem. xcv 23
saw the chargers of the two that fell Start from
their / lords, Geraint and E. 482
Arising wearily at a / oak, Balin and Balan 425
Then leapt her palfrey o'er the / oak, „ 587
And in the darkness o'er lier / head, Guinevere 583
Or ev'n a / feather, vanLsh'd again. Last Tournament 372
My / forehead in their to and fro, Lover's Tale i 701
V. of Maddwne 104
Tiresias 27
„ 116
„ 167
The Wreck 25
Ancient Sage 75
The Flight 15
Locksley H., Sixty 130
159
Early Spring 9
The Fleet 4
Demeter and P. 3
9
36
The Ring 419
Romney's R. 72
Akbar's Dream 185
Church-warden, etc. 10
Charity 20
Doubt and Prayer 12
D. of the Duke of C. 1
Fallen (continued) Were she . . . a / state ? The Fleet 10
I saw the tiger in the ruin'd fane Spring from his
/ God, Demeter and P. 80
stem, which else had / quite With cluster'd flower-bells Isabel 35
F silver-chiming, seem'd to shake Arabian Nights 51
dews, that would have / in tears. Miller's D. 151
She ceased in tears, / from hope and trust : D. of F. Women 257
Had / in Lyonnesse about their Lord, M. d' Arthur 4
half has / and made a bridge ; Walk, to the Mail 32
/ into the dusty crypt Of darken'd forms Will. Water 183
The rain had /, the Poet arose. Poet's Song 1
but her face had / upon her hands ; Enoch Arden 391
on her the thunders of the house Had / first Aylm^r's Field 279
How low his brother's mood had /, „ 404
' Let them Ue, for they have /.' Sea Dreams 228
And here upon a yellow eyeUd / Lucretius 141
When / in darker ways.' Princess v 68
' Our enemies have /, have /: (repeat) Princess vi 33, 38, 43, 48
would have strown it, and are / themselves. Princess vi 42
Our enemies have /, but this shall grow „ 53
0 / at length that tower of strength Ode on Well. 38
when she tum'd, the curse Had /, In Mem. vi 38
What words are these have / from me ? „ xvi 1
And towers / as soon as built — „ xxvi 8
Had / into her father's grave, ,, Ixxxix 48
There has / a splendid tear From the passion-flower Maud I xxii 59
Then cried the /, ' Take not my life : Gareth and L. 973
1 have not / so low as some would wish. Marr. of Geraint 129
So that I be not /in fight. Farewell.' „ 223
And here had / a great part of a tower, „ 317
now they saw their bulwark /, stood ; Geraint and E. 168
creatures gently born But into bad hands /, „ 192
catch a loathly plmne / from the wing Merlin and V. 727
Lay like a rainbow / upon the grass, Lancelot and E. 431
Where these had /, slowly past the barge „ 1241
apples by the brook F, and on the lawns. Holy Grail 385
Lancelot, with his heel upon the /, Pdleas and E. 580
A manner somewhat / from reverence — Last Tournament 119
And shouted and leapt down upon the /; „ 469
Ye twain had / out about the bride Of one — „ 545
wonders, what has / upon the realm ? Guinevere 275
tum'd, and reel'd, and would have /, „ 304
Tumbling the hollow helmets of the /, Pass, of Arthur 132
for on my heart hath / Confusion, „ 143
Had / in Lyonnesse about their lord, „ 173
if she knows And dreads it we are /. — To the Qu£en ii 33
And / away from judgment. _ Lover's Tale i 103
piUars which from earth uphold Our childhood, one
had / away, „ 221
that shock of gloom had / Unf elt, „ 505
and the rain Had / upon me, and the gilded snake „ 623
I had / Prone by the dashing runnel on the grass. „ ii 100
Anything / again ? nay — Rizpah 9
and his friends that had F in conflict, Batt. of Brunanburh 71
When I had / from off the crag The Flight 22
but now to silent ashes / away. Locksley H., Sixty 41
/ every purple Caesar's aome — To Virgil 30
Fifty times the golden harvest /, On Jub. Q. Victoria 2
torn the ring In fright, and / dead. I'he Ring 471
All his leaves F at length, The Oak 12
Falling (See also Fast-falling, Half-falling, Quick-
falling, Slow-falling) The jaw is /, The red
cheek paling. All Things will Die 30
Long alleys / down to twilight grots, Ode to Memory 107
F into a still delight, And luxury Eleanor e 106
The leaves upon her / light — L. of Shalott iv 21
Lo, / from my constant mind, Fatima 5
The long brook / thro' the clov'n ravine CEnone 8
watch the emerald-colour'd water / Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 96
Sound all night long, in / thro' the dell, D. of F. Women 183
content to perish, / on the foeman's ground, Locksley Hall 103
himself was deadly wounded F on the dead. The Captain 64
Rising, /, like a wave. Vision of Sin 125
Like moonlight on a / shower ? Margaret 4
Just ere the / axe did part The buming brain „ 3^
II
Falling
197
Fame
Falling (continued) sometimes in the / day An image
seem'd to pass the door, Mariana in the S. 73
/ prone he dug His fingers into the wet earth, Enoch Arden 779
We tum'd our foreheads from the / sun, The Brook 165
F had let appear the brand of John— Aylmer's Field 509
And, / on them like a thunderbolt, Princess, Pro. 43
Uke silver hammers / On silver anvils, i 216
slanted forward, / in a land Of promise ; ,'' H 139
And / on my face was caught and known. „ iv 270
Or, /, protomartyr of our cause, Die : ', 505
I watch the twilight / brown All round To F. d! Maurice 14
Or kill'd in / from his horse. /n Mem. vi 40
I, / on his faithful heart, ,, xviii 14
I wander, often / lame, xxiii 6
/ with my weight of cares Upon the great world's
altar-stairs ^p 14
And, /, idly broke the peace Of hearts " hiii 5
When twilight was /, Maud, Maud, Maud I xii 2
One / upon each of three fair queens. Com. of Arthur 276
Till / mto Lot's forgetfuhiess I know not thee, GaretJi and L. 96
While slowly / as a scale that falls, Marr. ofGeraint 525
And felt the warm tears / on his face ; Geraint and E. 586
in the / afternoon retum'd The huge Earl
Doorm 59I
As children learn, be thou Wiser for/! Bcdin and Bcdan 76
Past eastward from the / sun. 320
and reel'd Almost to / from his horse ; Pdleas and E. 24
darkness /, sought A prioiy not far off, „ 213
those who / down Look'd up for heaven Pass, of Arthur 111
Grew drearier toward twilignt /, 123
To stay his feet from /, and his spirit Lover's Tale i 142
upon the dewy pane F, unseal'd our eyelids, , 265
streak'd or starr'd at intervals With / brook „ 405
F in whispers on the sense, ^^ 720
taken Some years before, and / hid the frame. ," iv 217
He / sick, and seeming close on death, „ 258
F about their shrines before their Gods, Tiresias 105
roll Eising and /—for, Mother, The Wreck 54
moon was / greenish thro' a rosy glow, Locksley H., Sixty 178
and from each The light leaf / fast, Pro. to Gen. Handey 2
Ihon/, Rome arising. To Virgil 3
A noise of / weights that never fell. The Bing 410
slant His bolt from / on your head — Eavfy 81
Or cataract music Of / torrents. Merlin and the G. 47
poplars made a noise of / showers. Lancelot and E. 411
A dying echo from a / waU ; Ancient Sage 263
/ drop will make his name As mortal as my own. Epilogue 60
Falling out And blessings on the / 0 Princess ii 6
Fall out When wefo with those we love 8
Fallow (adj.) the tufted plover pipe along the "
. ^}^^' , , . . ^<^y Queen, N. Y's. E. 18
And m the / leisure of my life Audiey Court 77
A thousand hearts lie / in these halls, Princess ii 400
Saving Ms life on the / flood. Batt. of Brunanburh 61
FaUow (s) By many a field and /, The Brook 44
On earth a fruitless /, Demeter and P. 118
On icy /And faded forest. Merlin and the G. 84
False (ad].) The /, / arrow went aside, Oriana 39
there seem'd A touch of something /, Edwin Morris 74
Were no / passport to that easy reabn, Aylmer's Field 183
Coohng her / cheek with a featherian, „ 289
So /, he partly took himself for true ; Sea Dreams 185
o'er her wounded hunter wept Her Deity /in hmnan-
amorous tears ; Lucretius 90
The raillery, or grotesque, or / sublime — Princess iv 588
vainlier than a hen To her / daughters in the pool ; „ v 329
As true to thee as /, /, / to me ! „ vi 204
Ah / but dear, Dear traitor, too much loved, „ 292
Ring out / pride in place and blood, In Mem. cvi 21
silent thing that had made / haste to the grave— Maud 7 i 58
love has closed her sight And given / death ,, xviii 68
' as a / knight Or evil kii^ before my lance Gareth and L. 5
Or whether some / sense in her own self Marr. of Geraint 800
whom his own ear had heard Call herself /: Geraint and E. 114
like that / pair who turn'd Flying, „ 176
False (adj.) (continued) Led from the territory of /Limours Geraint and E. 431
as / and foul As the poach'd filth that floods Merlin and V. 797
(For in a wink the / love turns to hate) „ 852
Then her / voice made way, broken with sobs : „ 857
' Alas that ever a knight should be so /.' Pdleas and E. 450
crjdng ' F ! and I held thee pure as Guinevere.' „ 522
' Am I but / as Guinevere is pure ? , 524
' Is the Queen/? ' and Percivale was mute. ,'' 532
shouting, ' F, And / with Gawain ! „ 545
' Thou art / as Hell : slay me : ,, 576
when the land Was freed, and the Queen /, Last Tournament 339
' Ah then, / hunter and / harper, „ 567
If this / traitor have displaced his lord, Guinevere 216
raill'd at those Who calPd him the / son of Gorlois : „ 288
lets the wife Whom he knows /, abide and rule the house : „ 515
To whom my / voluptuous pride, „ 641
Lest the / faith make merry over them ! Sir J. OldcasUe 82
compass, Uke an old friend / at last In our most need, Columbus 70
when creed and race Shall bear / witness, Akhar's Dream 98
False (s) Hears httle of the / or just.' Two Voices 117
what, I would not aught of /— Princess v 402
And flashes into / and true. In Mem. xvi 19
Ring out the /, ring in the true. ,, cvi 8
By taking true for /, or / for true ; Geraint and E. 4
And sunder /from true, Mechanophilus 2
False-eyed F-e Hesper, unkind. Leonine Eleg. 16
Falsehood F shall bare her plaited brow ; Clear-headed friend 11
A gentler death shall F die, „ 16
To war with / to the knife. Two Voices 131
The / of extremes ! Of old sat Freedom 24
Your / and yourself are hateful to us : Princess iv 545
selfsame aspect of the stars, (Oh / of all starcraft !) Lover's Tale i 200
Falsely ' F, f have ye done, O mother,' Lady Clare 29
you might play me /, having power. Merlin and V. 515
looking at her. Full courtly, yet not/, Lancelot and E. 236
Falser F than all fancy fathoms, / than Locksley Hall 41
all Her / self slipt from her like a robe, Princess vii 161
Falter Whose spirits / in the mist, You ask me, why 3
He to lips, that fondly /, £. of Burleigh 9
wirer of their innocent hare F before he took it. Aylmer's Field 491
make Our progress / to the woman's goal.' Princess vi 127
I / where I firmly trod, /« Mem. Iv 13
When the happy Yes F's from her lips, Maud I xvii 10
Nor let her true hand /, nor blue eye Moisten, Geraint and E. 512
the fire within him would not /; Parnassus 19
Falter'd I / from my quest and vow ? Holy Grail 568
even in the middle of his song He /, Guinevere 303
Faltereth My tremulous tongue /, Eleanore 136
Faltering Made me most happy, / * I am thine.' Gardener's D. 235
low voice, F, would break its syllables. Love and Duty 39
her voice F and fluttering in her throat, Princess ii 187
Went / sideways downward to her belt, Merlin and V. 850
/ hopes of relief, Def. of Lucknow 90
Falteringly Phihp standing up said / ' Annie, Enoch Arden 284
Fame threaded The secretest walks of /: The Poet 10
with a worm I balk'd his /. D. of F. Women 155
I remember'd Everard's college / The Epic 46
now much honour and much / were lost.' M. d' Arthur 109
among us lived Her / from lip to Up. Gardener's D. 51
Whereof my / is loud amongst mankind, St. S. Stylites 81
' Name and / ! to fly sublime Thro' the courts, Vision of Sin 103
May beat a pathway out to wealth and/. Aylmer's Field 439
my grief to find her less than /, Princess i 73
With only F for spouse and your great deeds „ Hi 242
nor would we work for/; ^ 261
chattels, mincers of each other's /, " iv 515
Preserve a broad approach of/. Ode" on Well. 78
The proof and echo of aU human /, ,, 145
Their ever-loyal iron leader's /, 229
The / is quench'd that I foresaw. In Mem. Ixxiii 5
What / is left for human deeds n
O hoUow wraith of dying /, " 13
So here shall silence guard thy /; " i^xv 17
To breathe my loss is more than /, ," Ixxvii 15
his honest / should at least by me be maintained : Maud / 1 18
Fame
198
Fancy
Fame (continued) And one — they call'd her F ; and
one, —
And lost to life and use and name and /.
(repeat)
such fire for /, Such trumpet-blowings in it,
My use and name and /.
Upon my Ufe and use and name and /,
And into such a song, such fire for /,
felt them slowly ebbing, name and /.'
touching /, howe'er ye scorn my song.
For /, could / be mine, that / were thine,
' Man dreams of F while woman wakes to love.'
F, The F that follows death is nothing
what is i?" in life but half-disfame,
the scroll ' I follow /.'
this for motto, ' Rather use than /.'
F with men, Being but ampler means to serve
Use gave me F at first, and F again
Right well know I that F is half-disfame.
That other /, To one at least, who hath not children,
concluded in that star To make / nothing.
I rather dread the loss of use than /;
Gareth and L. 113
Merlin and V. 214, 970
417
304
374
417
437
444
447
460
463
465
„ 476
480
493
504
505
513
519
Bom to the glory of thy name and /,
May not your crescent fear for name and /
' I am wrath and shame and hate and evil /,
courtliness, and the desire of /,
I must not dwell on that defeat of /.
now much honour and much / were lost.'
aU the clearness of his / hath gone
As heir of endless / —
patriot — soldier take His meed of / in verse ;
And so does Earth ; for Homer's /,
Her ancient / of Free —
honouring your fair / Of Statesman,
F blowing out from her golden trumpet
' Take comfort you have won the Painter's /,'
What /? I am not Raphael,
Wrong there ! The painter's /?
Her sad eyes plead for my own / with me
thy / Is blown thro' all the Troad,
Famed See Far-famed, First-famed
Fame-lit Bard whose f-l laurels glance
Familiar And pace the sacred old / fields,
like bright eyes of / friends,
till the things / to her youth Had made a silent
answer :
Surely his King and most / friend
whence the Royal mind, / with her,
bones were blest Among / names to rest
grow F to the stranger's child ;
Lancelot and E. 1372
1400
Pelleas and E. 568
Guinevere 482
628
Pass, of Arthur 211
Lover's Tale i 789
Ancient Sage 147
Epilogue 33
58
The Fleet 9
To Marq. of Dufferin 14
Vastness 21
Romney's R. 43
:; '&
Death of (Enone 36
To Victor Hugo 4
Enoch Arden 625
Holy Grail 688
Lover's Tale iv 95
Lancelot and E. 592
Princess iv 235
In Mem. xviii 7
"20
F up from cradle-time, so wan, Balin and Balan 591
Familiarity Such dear familiarities of dawn ? Aylmer's Field 131
Family the / tree Sprang from the midriff of a prostrate
king— „ 15
A fieiy / passion for the name Of Lancelot, Lancelot and E. 411
Famine Blight and /, plague and earthquake, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 115
A/ after laid them low. The Victim 2
* Help us from / And plague and strife ! „ 9
And Wight and / on all the lea : „ 46
shipwrecks, f's, fevers, fighis. Mutinies, Columbus 225
when I spake of /, plague, Slmne-shattering earthquake, Tiresias 60
to stay. Not spread the plague, the /; Demster and P. 134
earthquake, or the /, or the pest ! Faith 4
Famishing / populace, wharves forlorn ; Vastness 14
Famous Plenty corrupts the melody That made thee / once, Blackbird 16
fellowship of / knights Whereof this world holds
record. M. d' Arthur 15
Thy / brother-oak. Talking Oak 296
That many a / man and woman, Princess iv 445
Thine island loves thee well, thou / man. Ode on Well. 85
rather proven in his Paynim wars Than / jousts ; Balin and Balan 39
the most / man of all those times, Merlin and V. 166
lance had beaten down the knights, So many and
/ names ; Holy Grail 364
I will make thee with my spear and sword As /— Pelleas and E. 46
Famous (continued) fellowship of / knights Whereof
this world holds record. Pass, of Arthur 183
And mingled with the / kings of old, Tiresias 171
Fan (s) To spread into the perfect /, Sir L. and Q. G. 17
toys in lava, f's Of sandal, amber. Princess, Pro. 18
Fan (verb) A soft air /' s the cloud apart ; Tithonus 32
/ my brows and blow The fever from my cheek. In Mem. Ixxxvi 8
Fancied (See also Ever-fancied) I had / it would be fair. Maud I vi6
she / ' Is it for me ? ' Lancelot and E. 822
I / that my friend For this brief idyll Tiresias 187
In impotence of / power. A Character 24
Beneath all / hopes and fears Ay me. In Mem. xlix 13
And then was painting on it / arms. Merlin and V. 474
Fancy (s) And a / as summer-new As the green June Bracken, etc. 8
Would that my gloomed / were As thine, Supp. Confessions 68
With youthful / re-inspired. Ode to Memory 114
F came and at her pillow sat, Caress'd or chidden 5
F watches in the wilderness. Poor F sadder than
a single star, „ 12
My / made me for a moment blest The form, the form 6
my lite with / play'd Before I dream 'd Miller's D. 45
I thought that it was /, and I listen'd May Queen, Con. 33
those sharp fancies, by down-lapsing thought D. of F. Wom^n 49
And if I said that F, led by Love, Gardener's D. 59
In the Spring a young man's / lightly turns Locksley Hall 20
Falser than all / fathoms, „ 41
Soothe him with thy finer /awcies, ,, 54
I have but an angry /: „ 102
Fool, again the dream, the /! „ 173
foimts of inspiration well thro' all my / yet. „ 188
Across my /, brooding warm, Day-Dm., Pro. 10
So much your eyes my / take — „ L'Envoi 26
My /, ranging thro' and thro', „ 34
But whither would my / go ? Wi.ll Water. 145
she gleam'd Like F made of golden air, The Voyage 66
Set thy hoary fancies free ; Vision of Sin 156
evil fancies clung Like serpent eggs together, Enoch Arden 479
His / fled before the lazy wind Returning, „ 657
Prattling the primrose fancies of the boy. The Brook 19
But Edith's eager / hurried with him Aylmer's Field 208
many a summer still Clung to their fancies) Sea Dreams 36
drifting up the stream In /, till I slept again, „ 109
maiden fancies ; loved to live alone Princess i 49
crush her pretty maiden fancies dead „ 88
What were those /amctes ? „ 95
fair philosophies That lift the /; „ Hi 341
sweet as those by hopeless / feign'd „ iv 55
thine are /amcies hatch'd In silken-folded „ 66
Which melted Florian's / as she hung, „ 370
Thy face across his / comes, „ 579
understanding all the foolish work Of F, „ vi 111
fancies like the vermin in a nut Have fretted „ 263
Lay your earthly fancies down. Ode on Well. 279
My / fled to the South again. The Daisy 108
flatters thus Our home-bred fancies : In Mem. all
My fancies time to rise on wing, „ xiii 17
And but for fancies, which aver „ xy9
dehrious man Whose / fuses old and new, „ oti 18
And F light from F caught, „ xxiii 14
I vex my heart with fancies dim : „ xlii 1
The /' s tenderest eddy wreathe, „ xlix 6
And dare we to this / give, „ UH 5
1 lull a / trouble-tost „ Ixv 2
You wonder when my fancies play „ Ixvi 2
Take wings of /, and ascend, „ Ixxvi 1
Then / shapes, as / can, The grief my loss „ Ixxx 5
backward /, wherefore wake The old bitterness again, „ Ixxxiv 46
111 brethren, let the / fly. „ Ixxxvi 12
Or villain / fleeting by, „ cxi 18
And all the breeze of F blows, „ cxxii 17
It circles round, and / plays, „ Con. 81
The / flatter'd my mind, Maud I xiy 23
dreamful wastes where footless fancies dwell „ scviii 69
these be for the snare (So runs thy /) Gareth and L. 1082
Then let her / flit across the past, Marr. of Geraint i
Fancy
199
Farewell
Fancy (S) {continued) Her / dwelling in this dusky
hall;
And sweet self-pity, or the / of it,
fabler, these be fancies of the churl,
mood as that, which lately gloom'd Your /
So fixt her / on him : let them be.
what was once to me Mere matter of the /,
To snare her royal / with a boon
Kapt in this / of his Table Round,
Full often lost in /, lost his way ;
that ghostly grace Beam'd on his /,
Her fancies witli the sallow-rifted glooms
' ye never yet Denied my fancies —
Not for me ! For her ! for your new /.
men Shtpe to their f's eye from broken rocks
Give me three days to melt her /,
her ever-veering / turn'd To Pelleas,
Appearing, sent his / back to where
push me even In / from thy side,
Made lU our tastes and fancies like,
graceful thought of hers Grav'n on my /!
Ye cannot shape F so fair as in this memory.
thronging fancies come To boys and girls
Hinging within the / had updrawn A fashion
Fktter'd the / of my fading brain ;
TIb / stirr'd him so He rose and went,
the sudden wail his lady made Dwelt in his /:
And idle fancies flutter me,
88t the maiden fancies wallowing
All the chosen coin of / flashing out
The f adry fancies range,
I till I believing that the girl's Lean /,
r For one monotonous / madden'd her,
But chaining / now at home
Fancy (verb) I / her sweetness only due To the sweeter
blood
What tiling soever ye may hear, or see, Or /
Hope ! O yes, I hope, or / that,
Fancy-borne Or f-b perhaps upon the rise
Fancy-fed And pining life be /-/.
Fancy-^es we that love the mud, Rising to no /-/.
Fancying / that her glory would be great
Fane translucent / Of her still spirit ;
hopes and hates, his homes and/'s,
wise humility As befits a solemn/:
Who built him f's of fruitless prayer,
And heard once more in college f s
I saw the tiger in the ruin'd /
an old / No longer sacred to the Sun,
anchorite Would haunt the desolated /,
stone by stone, I rear'd a sacred /,
Fang the f's Shall move the stony bases
Fann'd sudden flame, By veering passion /,
Thy bounteous forehead was not /
A summer / with spice.
Low breezes / the belfry bars,
I
Marr. of Geraint 802
Geraint and E. 349
Balin and Balan 307
Merlin and V. 326
777
924
Lancelot and E. 71
129
164
„ 886
1002
1112
1216
1252
Pelleas'and E. 356
493
Last Tournament 380
639
Lover's Tale i 242
358
548
554
645
„ a 107
„ iv 51
150
The Flight 74
Locksleij H., Sixty 145
To Virgil 7
Early Spring 39
The Ring 336
404
To Ulysses 31
Maud I xiii 33
Geraint and E. 416
Romney's R. 158
Lucretius 10
In Mem. Ixxxv 96
Vision of Sin 102
Merlin and V. 217
Isabel 4
Lucretius 255
Ode on Well. 250
In Mem. Ivi 12
„ Ixxxvii 5
Demeter and P. 79
St. Telemachus 6
„ 12
Akbar's Dream 177
Princess vi 57
Madeline 29
Elednore 9
Palace of Art 116
The Letters 43
river-breeze. Which / the gardens of that rival rose Alymer's Field 455
The woods with Uving airs How softly /, Early Spring 20
Fantastic overhead F gables, crowding, stared : Godiva 61
That lute and flute / tenderness. Princess iv 129
long / night With all its doings „ 565
round of green, this orb of flame, F beauty ; In Me^n. xxxiv 6
spreading made F plume or sable pine ; The Voyage 44
Fantastical So / is the dainty metre. Ilendecasyllabics 14
Albeit I know my knights /, Lancelot and E. 594
Fantasy Her gay-furr'd cats a painted /, Princess Hi 186
Proud in their / call themselves the Day, Gareth and L. 633
Or whether it be the maiden's /, „ 874
A border / of branch and flower, Lancelot and E. 11
And saved him : so she Uved in /. „ 27
There kept it, and so lived in /. „ 398
death Was rather in the / than the blood. „ 1132
Let be thy fair Queen's /. Last Tournament 197
Or prophets of them in his /, Lover's Tale iv 12
Far Thoro' the black-stemm'd pines only the / river shines. Leonine Eleg. 2
Far (continued) Sadly the / kine loweth :
overtakes F thought with music that it makes :
Going before to some / shrine,
I cannot sink So / — f down,
And fixt upon the / sea-line ;
Down at the / end of an avenue,
phrases of the hearth, And / allusion,
O sweet and / from cliff and scar
and died Of fright in / apartments.
Tliro' the long gorge to the / light
' F and / away,' said the dainty little maiden,
(repeat)
He seems so near and yet so /,
Falls in a / land and he knows it not,
my blood Hath earnest in it of / springs
His own / blood, which dwelt at Camelot ;
flame At sunrise till the people in / fields,
Leonine Eleg. 9
Two Voices 438
On a Mourner 17
My life is full 9
The Voyage 62
Enoch Arden 358
Princess ii 316
„ iv 9
„ vi 371
Ode on Well. 213
CUy Chad 3, 8
In Mem. xcvii 23
Geraint and E. 497
Merlin and V. 557
Lancelot and E. 803
Holy Grail 243
loyal to their crown Are loyal to their own / sons, To the Queen ii 28
Fierce in the strength of / descent, Lover's Tale i 382
Then at the / end of the vault he saw His lady „ iv 56
On one / height in one far-shining fire, Tiresias 185
Some / blue fell. Early Spring 34
Watch'd my / meadow zoned with airy morn ; Prog, of Spring 69
D&solate sweetness — f and / away — A ncient Sage 226
Far-blazing F-b from the rear of Philip's house, Enoch Arden 727
Far-brought love f-b From out the storied Past, Love thou thy land 1
Farce ' Ah fool, and made myself a Queen of / ! Princess vii 243
For by and by she sicken d of the /, Tlie Ring 383
Fare (S) Friday /was Enoch's ministering. Enoch Arden 100
With store of rich apparel, sumptuous /, Marr. of Geraint 709
My lord, eat also, tho' the / is coarse, Geraint and E. 208
And serve thee costlier than with mowers' /.'
Then said Geraint, ' I wish no better/: ,, 231
That Lenten / makes Lenten thought, To E. Fitzgerald 31
Fare (verb) So f's it since the years began, Will Water. 169
F's richly, in fine linen, not a hair Aylmer's Field 659
Thy duty? What is duty? i^Hheewell!' Lucretius 281
0 heart, how f's it with thee now. In Mem. iv 5
How f's it with the happy dead ? „ xliv 1
bring us where he is, and how he f's, Lancelot and E. 547
F you well A thousand times ! — „ 695
How f's my lord Sir Lancelot ? ' „ 795
Fared so / she gazing there ; Princess vii 41
Whereon with equal feet we /; In Mem. xxv 2
So / it with Geraint, who thought and said, Marr. of Geraint 343
So / it with Geraint, (repeat) Geraint and E. 8, 500
Then / it with Sir Pelleas as with one Pelleas and E. 528
Far-end When Molly cooms in fro' the f-e close Spinster's S's. 2
Farewell Ye merry souls, /. All Things will Die 36
But now /. I am going a long way With these
thou seest — M. d' Arthur 256
might I tell of meetings, of f's — Gardener's D. 251
F, like endless welcome, lived and died. Love and Duty 68
a long / to Locksley Hall ! Locksley Hall 189
Enoch faced this morning of / Brightly Enoch Arden 182
she said : '/, Sir — and to you. Princess ii 235
he reach'd White hands of / to my sire, „ v 233
The wrath I nursed against the world : /.' „ 437
Pledge of a love not to be mine, /; „ vi 197
few words and pithy, such as closed Welcome, /, „ Con. 95
landing-place, to clasp and say ' Fl In Mem. xlvii 16
In those sad words I book /: „ Iviii 1
1 cannot think the thing/. „ cxxiii 12
F, we kiss, and they are gone. „ Con. 92
own heart's heart, my ownest own, /; Maud I xvHi 74
Thy shield is mine—/; Gareth and L. 988
So that I be not fall'n in fight. F.' ' F, fair
Prince,' answer'd the stately Queen. Marr. of Geraint 223
narrow court and lubber King, /! Merlin and V. 119
F ; think gently of me, for I fear My fate or folly, „ 926
She needs must bid / to sweet Lavaine. Lancelot and E. 341
A thousand times ! — a thousand times /! „ 696
Nor bad /, but sadly rode away. „ 987
Gawain, who bad a thousand f's to me, „ 1056
' Sister, / for ever,' and again ' F, „ 1151
Farewell
200
Fast
Fvewell (continued) Come, for you left me taking no /,
Hither, to take my last / of you.
I left her and I bad her no /;
F too — now at last — F, fair lily.
Than to be loved again of you — f;
It was their last hour, A madness of f's.
Nay, friend, for we have taken our f's.
see thee no more — F ! '
F? I should have answer'd his /.
F ! there is an isle of rest for thee.
But now /. I am going a long way With these
thou seest —
And bad them to a banquet of f's.
We bad them no /, but mounting these He past
She remembers you. F.
thinks She sees you when she hears. Again /.'
' Pray come and see my mother, and /.'
for ever and ever, for ever and ever /,'
a whisper — some divine / —
Strike on the Mount of Vision ! So, /.
F, Macready, since to-night we part ;
F, Macready, since this night we part ;
F, Macready ; moral, grave, sublime ;
Not there to bid my boy /,
if so, Bid him / for me,
F, whose living like I shall not find,
F ! — You will not speak, my friends,
deem me grateful, and/!
And may there be no sadness of /,
Far-famed F-f for well-won enterprise.
Far-fleeted F-f by the purple island-sides.
Far-folded F-f mists, and gleaming halls of mom.
Far-heurd F-h beneath the moon.
Fana {See also Crown-farm) red cock crows from
the / upon the hill,
With farmer Allan at the / abode
and set out, and reach'd the /.
discuss'd the /, The four-field system,
Till last by Philip's / 1 flow
Philip's / where brook and river meet.
and call'd old PhiUp out To show the /:
how he sent the bailifE to the / To learn
He found the bailiff riding by the /,
ask'd her ' Are you from the /? '
We bought the / we tenanted before.
closed her access to the wealthier /'s,
princely halls, and f's, and flowing lawns,
the broad woodland parcell'd into f's ;
Willy had not been down to the /
there past by the gate of the /, WUly, —
sitting at home in my father's / at eve :
Feyther run oop to the /,
And crowded f s and lessening towers.
To leave the pleasant fields and f's ;
had need Of a good stout lad at his /;
Harry was bound to the Dorsetshire /
that workt with him up at the /,
the-y does it at Willis's /,
An* 'cos o' thy / by the beck,
Ev'n the homely / can teach us
Fur the gell o' the / 'at slep wi' tha
Moother 'ed bean a-naggin about the gell o' the /,
mine the hall, the /, the field ;
on waste and wood, On / and field
Lancelot and E. 1274
1304
1396
Pelleas and E. 302
Guinevere 103
„ 117
„ 580
615
Pass, of Arthur 35
424
Lover's Tale iv 186
„ 386
Sisters (E. and E.) 190
193
„ 196
Despair 58
Ancient Sage 225
286
To W. C. Macready 1
" 12
To Marq. of Dufferin 42
Romney's R. 147
In Mem. W. G. Ward 1
The Wanderer 3
16
Crossing the Bar 11
Kate 22
Princess vii 166
Tiihonus 10
D.ofF. Women 184:
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 23
Bora 1
,,129
Audley Court 33
The Brook 31
38
121
141
153
209
222
Aylmer's Field 503
„ 654
„ 847
Grandmother 33
41
90
N. Farmer, N. S. 54
In Mem. xill
„ cii 22
First Quarrel 18
19
24
Village Wife 119
Spinster's S's. 73
Locksley H., Sixty 26
Owd Rod 51
69
The Ring 169
Prog, of Spring 23
How be the / gittin on ? noaways. Church-warden, etc. 3
war dashing down upon cities and blazing fa, The Dawn 8
Farmer With / Allan at the farm abode Dora 1
Far off the / came into the field And spied her not ; „ 74
when the / pass'd into the field He spied her, „ 85
Francis Hale, The f's son, who lived across the bay, Audley Court 75
The / vext packs up his beds and chairs, Walk, to the Mail 39
robb'd the / of his Dowl of cream : Princess v 223
There was a / in Dorset of Harry's kin, First Quarrel 17
• The / dared me to do it,' he said ; Rizpah 26
Howiver was British f's to stan' agean Owd Rod 46
Farmin' An' thy /' es clean es thysen,'
Farmstead he, by /, thorpe and spire.
Far-off And the f-o stream is dumb,
F-o the torrent call'd me from the cleft :
I dimly see My f-o doubtful purpose.
In those f-o seven happy years were born ;
her f-o cousin and betrothed,
sorcerer, whom a f-o grandsire burnt
to catch The f-o interest of tears ?
The brook alone f-o was heard.
And one f-o divine event,
the f-o sail is blown by the breeze
some f-o touch Of greatness to know
The storm, you hear F-o, is Muriel —
Only to hear and see the f-o sparkling bruie.
In days f-o, on that dark earth, be true ?
deep Down upon f-o cities while they dance —
from him flits to warn A f-o friendship
For have the f-o hymns of May,
Farran'd (fashioned) See Owd-farran'd
Far-renowned f-r brides of ancient song
Far-rolling Seem'd those f-r, westward-smiling
seas,
Far-seen Amid thy melancholy mates f-s,
Far-shadowing half in light, and half F-s
Far-shining On one far height in one f-s fire.
' One height and one f-s fire '
Far-sighted F-s summoner of War and Waste
Far-sounded Geraint, a name f-s among men
Farther With / lockings on.
Farthest But from my / lapse, my latest ebb.
Spinster's S's. 77
Wm Water. 137
The Owl i 3
(Enone 54
„ 251
Enoch Arden 686
The Brook 75
Princess i 6
In Mem. i 8
„ xcv 7
„ Con. 143
Maud I ivi
Lancdet and E. 450
rhe Ring 139
Lotos-Eders, C. S. 98
Tiihonus 48
Merlin and V. 114
Demetir and P. 90
To Matter of B. 10
D. of F. Women n
Last Tournanent 587
Lover's Tde i 489
Princess,Con. 42
Tireiias 185
„ 186
Ded. of Idylls 31
Marr. of Geraint 427
Miller's D. 231
Lover's Tale i 90
Far-welter'd (overthrown) Woorse nor a f-w yowe : N. Farmer, N. S. 32
Fashion (S) After the / of the time, Arabian Nights 119i
Looks freshest in the / of the day : The Epic 32!
I know your sex. From the / of your bones. Vision of Sin 182
In sailor / roughly sermonizing Enoch Arden 204
Fire-hollowing tins in Indian /, „ 569
No more in soldier / will he greet Ode on Well. 21
veil His want in forms for f's sake, In Mem. cxi 6
What the / of the men ? ' ' They be of foolish /,
O Sir King, The / of that old knight-errantry Gareth and L. 627
and sumptuously According to his /, Geraint and E. 285
In any knightly / for her sake. Lancelot and E. 871
Knowest thou not the / of our speech ? Pelleas and E. 100
had updrawn A / and a phantasm of the form Lover's Tale i 645
In some such / as a man may be Sisters (E. and E.) 133
Fashion (verb) skill To strive, to /, to fulfil — In Mem. cxiii 7
Fashion'd {See also Altar-fashion'd, Cleaner-fashion'd,
Noblier-fashion'd, Owd-farran'd) holy hand hath
/ on the rock Gareth and L. 1197
/ for it A case of silk, and braided Lancelot and E. 7
F by Merlin ere he past away. Holy Grail 168
brooks Are / by the channel which they keep). Lover's Tale i 567
a people have / and worship a Spirit Kapiolani 1
F after certain laws ; Poets and Critics 5
Fast (adj.) my friend was he. Once my / friend : Sir J. Oldcastte 62
By changes all too fierce and / Freedom 22
Fast (s) all the passion of a twelve hours' /.' Marr. of Geraint 306
heard mass, broke /, and rode away : Lancelot and E. 415
life of prayer. Praise, / and alms ; Holy Grail 5
She gave herself, to /, and alms. „ 77
about him everywhere, despite All / and penance. „ 631
Fast with your f's, not feasting Guinevere 678
Penance ? 'F, Hairshirt and scourge — Sir J. Oldcastle 141
Fast (adv.) Two lives bound / in one Circumstance 5
And I believe, if you were / my wife, Enoch Arden 414
We must bind And keep you /, my Rosalind, F, f,
my wild-eyed Rosalind, Rosalind 43
We'll bind you / in silken cords, „ 49
' Lead, and I follow,' and / away she fled,
(repeat) Gareth and L. 760, 990
Fast (verb) If it may be, / Whole Lents, St. S. Stylites 181
bear his armour? shall we /, or dine ? Geraint and E. 490
brother, / thou too and pray, And tell thy brother
knights to / and pray, Holy Grail 125
Fast
201
Father
Fast (verb) (coniinued) F with your fasts, not feasting
witb your feasts ;
Fasted she pray'd and / all the more.
she pray d and /, tiU the sun Shone,
and myself / and pray'd Always,
F and pray'd even to the uttermost,
F and pray'd, Telemachus the Saint.
Fasten'd if she be / to this fool lord,
They had / the door of his cell.
they / me down on my bed.
Fastening loosed the/ 's of his arms.
Fast-falling follow the deer By these tall firs and
our /-/ burns ;
Fasting come To me by prayer and /? '
Fast-rooted F-r in the fruitful soil.
Fat (adj.) ' Old Summers, when the monk was /,
All over with the / affectionate smile
A lord of / prize-oxen and of sheep,
grew / On Lusitanian summers.
Fat (s) Padded romid with flesh and /,
Fat (verb) The poor man's money gone to / the friar.
Fatal ' He owns the / gift of eyes.
The / byword of all years to come.
So sweet a voice and vague, / to men,
Thy spirit ere our / loss Did ever rise
That m Vienna's / walls God's finger touch'd him.
When now we rode upon this / quest
which lived True life, Uve on — and if the /
kiss,
eyes of the lighthouse there on the / neck
And in the / sequence of this world
but hold the Present / daughter of the Past,
But ere he left your / shore,
' Ever since You sent the / ring ' —
The / ring lay near her ;
Fatalist we were nursed in the drear night-fold of your
/ creed.
Fate hers by right of f ull-accomplish'd F ;
heroic hearts. Made weak by time and /,
For love in sequel works with /,
The sphere thy / allots :
we three Sat muffled Uke the F's ;
Ask me no more : thy / and mine are seal'd :
Once the weight and / of Europe hung.
The limit of his narrower /,
As link'd with thine in love and /,
Of her whose gentle will has changed my /,
She is coming, my life, my /;
For man is man and master of his /.
Ay — so that / and craft and folly close,
grant me some sUght power upon your /,
My / or folly, passing gayer youth
omens may foreshadow / to man And woman,
no power on F, Theirs, or mine own !
Fairer thy / than mine.
But if sin be sin, not inherited /,
I bide no more, I meet my /,
And in her fleet her F.
For he — your India was his F,
Guinevere 678
Holy GraU 82
98
„ 130
„ 132
St. Teleinachus 11
Maud I xvi 24
Bizpah 42
„ 46
Geraint and E. 511
Gareth and L. 91
Holy GraU 96
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 38
Talking Oak 41
Sea Dreams 155
Princess, Con. 86
WiU Water. 7
Vision of Sin 177
Sir J. Oldcastle 150
Two Voices 286
Godiva 67
Princess iv 64
In Mem. xli 1
„ Ixxxv 19
Geraint and E. 703
Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 2
Despair 9
Ancient Sage 274
Locksley H., Sixty 105
To Marq. ofDufferin 33
The Ring 362
450
There is a 2^ beyond us.' Nothing knew.
What meant they by their ' F beyond the F's '
a jubilant challenge to Time and to F;
Man is but the slave of F.
and a curse, when I leam'd my /.
Fated (See also Ill-fated) And bring the / fairy
Prince.
may The / channel where thy motion lives
Fat-Iaced said the /-/ curate Edward Bull, (repeat)
I
Father (s) (See aZso'iFeyther, God-father)
That stand beside my f's door,
' Where wert thou when thy / play'd
ito vex me with his f's eyes I
And there the Ionian / of the rest ;
My / held his hand upon his face ;
her that died To save hex f's vow ;
poplars four
Despair 21
Palace of Art 207
Ulysses 69
Day-Dm., Arrival 3
WiU Water. 218
Princess ii 467
Ode on Well. 240
In Mem. Ixiv 21
„ Ixxxiv 38
Mavd I xviii 23
„ xxii 62
Marr. of Geraint 355
Merlin and V. 57
333
»27
Tiresias 7
„ 63
„ 130
The Wreck 85
The Flight 95
The Fleet 15
To Marq. of Dufferin 21
Demeter and P. 87
130
Vastness 21
Death of (Enone 44
Charity 14
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 56
De. Prof., Two G. 19
Edwin Morris 42, 90
Ode to Memory 57
Two Voices 319
CEnone 255
Palace of Art 137
D.ofF. Women Wl
196
Father (s) (continued) * My God, my land, my / — these did
move D. of F. Wom^n 209
I subdued me to my f's will ; „ 234
clasp'd in her last trance Her murder'd f's head, „ 267
in my time a f's word was law, " Dora 27
he left his f's house. And hired himself „ 37
pass'd his f's gate, Heart-broken, and his / help'd „ 50
' O F ! — ^if you let me call you so — „ 140
he was wrong to cross his / thus : „ 148
he will learn to shght His f's memory ; „ 154
A flask of cider from his f s vats, Audley Court 27
Her / left his good arm-chair. Talking Oak 103
Puppet to a f's threat, Locksley Hall 42
O, the child too clothes the / „ 91
a boy when first he leaves his f's field, „ 112
fell my / evil-starr'd ; — • „ 155
' O seek my f's court with me, Day-Dm., Depart. 27
My / left a park to me, Amphion 1
Against her f's and mother's will : Edward Gray 10
And they leave her f's roof. L. of Burleigh 12
As looks a/ on the things Of his dead son. The Letters 23
Philip stay'd (His / lying sick and Enoch Arden 65
caird him F PhiUp, PliiUp gain'd As Enoch lost ; „ 354
they begg'd For F Philip (as they call'd him)
' Come with us F Philip^ he denied ;
I fain would prove A / to your children : I do think
They love me as a /:
o'er her second f stoopt a girl.
Hers, yet not his, upon the f's knee.
Uphold me, F, in my loneliness A little longer !
Never : no f's kiss for me —
let them come, I am their/;
But evermore her / came across
' O would I take her / for one hour,
He lean'd not on his f's but himself.
The man was his, had been his f's, friend :
from out a despot dream The / pantuig woke,
the / suddenly cried, ' A wreck,
my good / thought a king a king ;
My / sent ambassadors with furs And jewels,
gentleman of broken means (His f's fault)
I saw my f's face Grow long and troubled
At last I spoke, ' My /, let me go.
To hear my f's clamour at our backs
which I have Hard by your f's frontier :
In masque or pageant at my f's court.
Yet hangs his portrait in my f's hall
F will come to thee soon ; (repeat)
F will come to his babe in the nest,
I never knew my /, but she says (God help her)
fell Into his f's hands, who has this night.
The second was my f's running thus :
Behold your f's letter.'
since our / — Wasps in our good hive,
' then we fell Into your f's hand,
roughly spake My /, ' Tut, you know them
Your captive, yet my / wills not war :
'sdeath ! against my f's will.'
Back rode we to my f's camp, and found
My / heard and ran In on the lists.
The haggard f's face and reverend beard
My / stoop'd, re-f ather'd o'er my wounds.
Not one word ; No ! tho' your /sues :
Help, /, brother, help ; speak to the king :
the king her / charm'd Her wounded soS
Nor did her / cease to press my claim.
And sidelong glances at my f's grief,
0 silent / of our Kings to be
her / was not the man to save,
1 remember a quarrel I had with yoiu* /,
Harry went at sixty, your / at sixty-five :
sitting at home in my f's farm at eve :
My / raves of death and wreck,
O /, wheresoe'er thou be,
half's chimney glows In expectation
365
368
411
747
760
784
790
890
The Brook 108
„ 114
Aylmer's Field 56
344
528
Sea Dreams 58
Princess i 25
42
54
58
68
„ 105
„ 148
198
„ ii 239
„ Hi 10, 12
13
82
„ iv 402
„ 406
468
„ 535
„ v51
151
277
„ 298
331
„ vi 26
103
129
240
305
„ 345
„ vii 87
107
Ode Inter. Exhih. 7
Grand/mother 5
21
86
Sailor Boy 19
In Mem. vi 9
29
Father
202
Fault
Father (s) (continued) O F, touch the east, and light
And doubtful joys the / move,
How many a / have I seen,
star Had fall'n into her f's grave,
f's bend Above more graves,
Out f's dust is left alone And silent
But crying, knows his / near ;
0 /! O God ! was it well ?—
raging alone as my / raged in his mood ?
sweet purse-mouth when my / dangled the grapes.
When have I bow'd to her /,
Your / has wealth well-gotten,
Your / is ever in London,
Why sits he here in his /'s chair ?
Not touch on her f's sin :
That Maud's dark / and mine Had bound
Mine, mine — our / 's have sworn.
Thou noble F of her Kings to be,
' Her / said That there between the man
we that fight for our fair / Christ,
thy / Lot beside the hearth Lies like a log.
Thy /, Uther, reft From my dead lord
who from the wrongs his / did Would shape
Aflfinning that his / left him gold,
1 thought, but that your / came between,
And loved me serving in my f's hall :
I should have slain your /, seized yourself.
My / hath begotten me in his wrath.
My / died in battle against the King,
My /died in battle for thy King,
Leaving her household and good /,
Here laugh'd the / saying ' Fie,'
Nay, /, nay good /, shame me not
But, /, give me leave, an if he will.
Crept to her /, while he mused alone,
' jF, you call me wilful, and the fault Is yours
Sweet /, will you let me lose my wits ? '
Sweet /, I behold him in my dreams
My /, to be sweet and serviceable
Then her / nodding said, ' Ay, ay,
Her/'s latest word humm'd in her ear,
brother's love. And your good f's kindness.'
her /: ' Ay, a flash, I fear me.
Then came her /, saying in low tones,
call'd The /, and all three in hurry
So dwelt the / on her face, and thought
' Peace,' said her /, ' 0 my child,
' Highest ? ' the / answer'd, echoing ' highest ? '
' Sweet /, all too faint and sick am I
so let me pass. My /, howsoe'er I seem to you,
wherefore cease. Sweet /, and bid call
sweet /, tender and true, Deny me not,'
She ceased : her / promised ;
Her / laid the letter in her hand,
in testimony. Her brethren, and her /,
' O jP 1 ' ask d the maiden,
A slender page about her/'s hall.
Fought in ner/'5 battles? wounded
So said my /, and himself was knight
So said my / — yea, and furthermore,
Not even thy wise / with his signs
one, a bard ; of whom my / said.
So said my / — and that night the bard
and the tales Which my good / told me, check me too
Nor let me shame my f's memory, „ 317
And so thou lean on our fair / Christ, „ 562
Before he saw my day my / died. Lover's Tale i 191
She was motherless And I without a /. „ 219
what use To know her / left us just before „ 293
that same nearness Were / to this distance, „ ii 29
His other / you ! KLss him, „ ii; 174
he sent, an' the / agreed ; First QvMrrd 18
You count the / of your fortune, Sisters (E. and E.) 28
My / with a child on either knee, . „ 54
he had stricken my / dead — V, of Maeldune 1
In Mem. xxx 31
xl9
liii 1
„ Ixxxix 48
xcviii 15
cv 5
cxxiv 20
Mavd I i 6
53
71
ivl3
18
59
xiii 23
xix 17
37
43
Bed. of Idj/Us 34
Com. of Arthur 78
510
Gareth and L. 74
334
347
Marr. of Geraint 451
Geraint and E. 314
„ 699
838
Balin and Balan 283
Merlin and V. 42
72
Lancelot and E. 14
200
207
219
748
750
752
763
767
770
780
945
970
994
1024
„ 1030
1062
1078
„ 1086
1092
1099
1110
„ 1130
1134
1300
Holy Grail 95
„ 581
Last Tournament 592
Guinevere 234
250
274
277
285
V. of Maeldune 8
70
121
128
Tiresias 16
The Wreck 1
„ 98
„ 99
Despair 69
Father (s) (continued) slain my / the day before I was
born.
I bad them remember mj f's death,
His f's have slain thy f's in war or in single strife,
Thy f's have slain his f's, each taken a life for
a life. Thy / had slain his /,
The man that had slain my /.
trembling /'s call'd The God's own son
my F's belong'd to the church of old,
the heart of the / will care for his own.'
' The heart of the / will spurn her,'
one son had forged on his / and fled,
Some say, the Light was / of the Night, And some,
the Night was /of the Light, Ancient Sage 247
This / pays his debt with me. The Flight 20
What /, this or mine, was he, „ 21
I loved him then ; he was my / then. No / now,
the tyrant vassal of a tyrant vice ! „ 24
My f's madness makes me mad — ■ „ 59
And tho' these f's will not hear, „ 67
who ? who ? my / sleeps ! „ 69
she knew this / well ; „ 87
/, mother, — be content, Locksley H., Sixty 25
Gone our sailor son thy /, „ 55
constancy Which has made your f's great Open I. and C. Exhib. 15
Shall we sin our f's sin, „ 24
why The sons before the f's die. To Marq. of Dufferin 47
No ! /, Spain, but Hubert brings me home The Ring 59
F's fault Visited on the children ! „ 175
you, poor desolate F, and poor me, „ 303
' F and Mother will watch you grow ' — (repeat) Romney's E. 104, 106
and the murderous / at rest, . . . Bandit's Death 33
As we surpass our f's skill, Mechanophilus 21
My F, and my Brother, and my God ! Doubt and Prayer 8
Father (verb) in the round of time Still / Truth ? Love and Duty 5
Father'd -See Re-father'd
Father-fool Thwarted by one of these old f-f's, Aylmer's Field 390
Father-grape f-g grew fat On Lusitanian summers. WiU Water. 7
Fatherhood twelve sweet moons confused his/.' Merlin and V. 713
Fatherland sweet it was to dream of F, Lotos-Eaters 39
Fatherless this earth is a / Hell — Despair 57
Fatherlike Appraised his weight and fondled /, Enoch Arden 154
Fathom For thou canst not / it. Poet's Mind 4
Falser than all fancy f's, Locksley HaU 41
Philip did not / Annie's mind : Enoch Arden 344
'Tis hard for thee to / this ; In Mem. Ixxxv 90
dangled a hundred / of grapes, V. of Maddime 56
Fathom-deep Should gulf him f-d in brine ; In Mem. x 18
Fathom'd Which none have /. Lover's Tale i 518
Fathomless half-attain'd futurity, Tho' deep not /, Ode to Memory 34
Fatling reach its / innocent arms And lazy lingering fingers. Princess vi 138
Fatten many streams to / lower lands. Golden Year 34
Fatter he was / than his cure. Edwin Morris 15
No, there is / game on the moor ; Maud I Hi
Fault tJw' the f's were thick as dust To the Queen 18
' Proclaim the f's he would not show : You might have won 17
Nor mine the /, if losing both of these Aylmer's Field 719
gentleman of broken means (His father's /) Princess i 54
' My /' she wept ' my /! and yet not mine ; „ Hi 30
The child is hers — for every little /, „ v 87
her one / The tenderness, not yours, „ vi 185
as dearer thou for f's Lived over : „ vii 317
Not ours the / if we have feeble hosts — Third of Feb. 38
Or seeming-genial venial /, Will 13
let it be granted her : where is the /? Maud I m' 4
blind To the f's of his heart and mind, „ xix 68
' The / was mine, the / was mine ' — „ II i I
' The / was mine,' he whisper'd, ' fly ! ' „ 30
a little / Whereof I was not guilty ; Com. of Arthur 341
wayside ambushings — No / of thine : Gareth and L. 433
'If Enid errs, let Enid learn her/.' Marr. of Geraint 132
creatures voiceless thro' the / of birth, Geraint and E. 266
and for her / she wept Of petulancy ; Merlin and V. 952
He is all / who hath no / at all : Lancelot and E. 132
you call me wilful, and the / Is yours „ 750
Fault
Fault (continued) Seeing it is no more Sir
Lancelot's /
/ and doubt — no word of that fond tale —
change your name : no / of mine !
/ care not for a name — ^no / of mine,
beauties of the work appear The darkest /'s :
by the / o' that ere maiile —
wroth at things of old — No / of mine.
Blasphemy? whose is the/?
Father's / Visited on the children !
be the fs your Poet makes Or many or few,
the / is less In me than Art.
203
Fear
Lancelot and E. 1075
Last Tournament 578
Sisters IE. and, E.) 69
77
106
ViUage Wife 17
Sir J. OldcasUe 22
Despair 107
The King 175
To Mary Boyle 61
Eoinney's R, 8
Fear (S) {continued) Remaining utterly confused with
You make our f's too gross, To one wJw ran down Eng. 1
an' not the f's o' the Squire. Church-warden, etc. 46
Some too high — no /of thine — Foets and Critics 12
Fanltful her great heart thro' all the / Past Princess vii 248
Faultless Henceforth be truer to your / lord ? Lancelot and E. 119
'Arthur, my lord, Arthur, the/ King, „ 121
Faultily /, icily regular, Maud I ii Q
she the /, the divine ; Lochsley H., Sixty 5
Faun mountain quickens into Nymph and F ; Liuretius 187
Arise and fly The reeling F, In Mem. cxviii 26
Faunns in the garden snared Picus and F, Lucretius 182
Favour (<See oZ^o C!ourt-favour) On whom their /'s fall ! Sir Galahad M
1 came to ask a / of you.' Enoch Arden 285
' F from one so sad and so forlorn „ 287
This is the / that I came to ask.' „ 313
Else I withdraw / and countenance From you Aylmer's Field 307
Arranged the /, and assumed the Prince. Princess iv 602
Who have won her/! Maud I xii 18
I bound to thee for an^ / ask'd ! ' Gareth and L. 977
To seek a second / at his hands. Marr. of Geraint 626
love or fear, or seeking / of us, „ 700
That he should wear her / at the tilt. Lancelot and E. 358
will you wear My / at this tourney ? ' „ 362
worn F of any lady in the lists, (repeat) „ 364, 474
find thy / changed and love thee not ' — Last Tournament 500
Black with bridal f's mixt ! Forlorn 69
Might I crave One /? Romney's R. 70
Favourable a / speed Ruffle thy mirror'd mast. In Mem. ix 6
Favour'd (See also White-favour'd) These / lips of mine ; Will Water. 20
Favourite 1 know the song, Their/ — Sisters (E. and E.) 3
Favouritism ' So puddled as it is with /.' Princess Hi 146
Fawn (s) your arrow-wounded / Came flying „ ii 270
That was f's blood, not brother's, „ 275
Ah Maud, you milkwhite /, Maud I iv 57
shadow of a bird Flying, and then a /; PeUeas and E. 39
Fawn (verb) And / at a victor's feet. Maud I vi 30
Fawn'd dog that had loved him and / at his knee — In the Child. Hasp. 9
Fawning Crouch'd / in the weed. (Enone 201
Feal (feel) I'd / mysen clean disgraaced. North. Cobbler 102
Feald (field) Huzzin' an' maazin' the blessed /'s N. Farmer, 0. S. 62
nor a mortal beast o' the /. North. Cobbler 38
Fe&Id (felt) till I / mysen ready to drop. Owd Rod 84
FSalty rendering true answer, as beseem'd Thy /, M. d' Arthur 15
In token of true heart and /. Gareth and L. 399
doubt her more, But rested in her /, Geraint and E. 967
Friends, thro' your manhood and your /, — Last Tournament 97
Forgetful of their troth and /, Guinevere 442
j and saps The / of our friends, „ 521
1 rendering true answer, as beseem'd Thy /, Pass, of Arthur 2^
and give His / to the halcyon hotu" ! The Wanderer 12
Fear (S) Earth goes to earth, with grief, not /, Supp. Confessions 38
Moved from beneath with doubt and /. „ 138
j Whispering to each other half in /, Sea-Fairies 5
I What hope or / or jov is thine ? Adeline 23
Roof'd the world with doubt and /, Eleanore 99
And they cross'd themselves for /, L. of Shallott iv 49
' Think you this mould of hopes and f's Two Voices 28
heaping on the / of iU The / of men, „ 107
sittmg, bumish'd without / The brand, „ 128
love dispell'd the / That 1 should die Miller's D. 89
I loved you better for your/ 's, „ 149
Acting the law we live by without/; CEnone 148
I shut my sight for /: „ 188
Palace of Art 269
I would not brook my / Of the other : D. of F. Women 154
/ of change at home, that drove him hence. Walk, to the Mail 68
the low wind hardly breathed for /. Godiva 55
Boring a little auger-hole in /, „ 68
to me is given Such hope, I know not/; Sir Galahad 62
Nor yet the / of little books Will Water. 195
Hush'd all the groves from / of wrong : Sir L. and Q. G. 13
All his Annie's /'s. Save, as his Annie's, Enoch Arden 184
Spy out my face, and laugh at all your/'s.' „ 216
Such doubts and/ 's were common to her state, „ 521
Has she no / that her first husband lives ? ' „ 806
'Ay, ay, poor soul ' said Miriam, '/enow ! ,, 807
hollow as the hopes and / 's of men ? Lticretius 180
for / This wliole foundation ruin. Princess ii 340
nor shrink For / our soUd aim be dissipated „ Hi 266
F Stared in her eyes, and chalk'd her face, „ iv 376
yet I blame you not so much for/; „ 506
Six thousand years of / have made you that „ 507
Fatherly/'* — you used us courteously — ;„ « 216
Bow-back'd with/: „ vi359
Shall /'s and jealous hatreds flame again ? W. to Marie Alex. 41
The King was shaken with holy /; The Victim 57
it darkens and brightens and darkens like
my /, Window, On the Kill 19
but for / it is not so. The wild unrest In Mem. xv 14
All subtle thought, all curious /'s, „ xxxii 9
yields To tliat vague / implied in death ; „ xli 14
Beneath all fancied hopes and/ 's „ xlix 13
I wrong tlie grave with f's untrue : „ \li 9
For /divine Philosophy Should push beyond her mark, „ liii 14
and is Eternal, separate from f's: „ Ixxxv 66
The feeble soul, a haunt oif's, „ ex 3
She cannot fight the / of death. „ cxiv 10
And heated hot with burning / '5, „ cxviii 22
No, like a child in doubt and/: „ cxxiv 17
Be sunder'd in the night of /; „ cxxvii 2
Wild Hours that fly with Hope and F, „ cxxviii 9
I fled from the place and the pit and the /? Maud I i Gi
The bitter springs of anger and /; „ x 49
she lay Sick once, with a / of worse, „ xix 73
a coast Of ancient fable and / — „ // H 32
Sick of a nameless /, Back to the dark sea-line „ 44
cells of madness, haunts of horror and /, „ /// vi 2
mother's eye Full of the wistful / Gareth and L. 173
Yet pressing on, tho' all in/ „ 325
Thou shakest in thy/: there yet is time : „ 940
the new knight Had / he might be shamed ; „ 1044
after all their foolish / 's And horrors „ 1424
all her foolish /'s about the dress, (repeat) Marr. of Geraint 142, 844
Rapt in the / and in the wonder of it ; „ 529
For love or /, or seeking favour of us, „ 700
The long way smoke beneath him in his / ; Geraint and E. 532
Enid in their going had two f's, „ 817
Truly save ioif's. My f's for thee, Balin and Balan 146
As Love, if Love be perfect, casts out /, So Hate,
if Hate be perfect, casts out /. Merlin and V. 40
She shook from /, and for her fault she wept „ 952
First as in /, step after step, she stole Lancelot and E. 342
Then came on him a sort of sacred /, „ 354
For/ our people call you lily maid „ 386
So fine a / in our large Lancelot „ 595
all three in hurry and / Ran to her, j, 1024
May not your crescent / for name and fame Speak, „ 1400
The King himself had f's that it would fall, Holy Grail 341
Our / of some disastrous chance for thee „ 727
whence the / lest this my realm, uprear'd, Last Tournament 122
but how ye greet me—/ And fault and doubt — „ 577
or a vague spiritual /— Guinevere 71
all his heart was cold With formless /; Pass, of Arthur 98
their f's Are morning shadows huger than the
shapes To the Queen ii 62
over the deep graves of Hope and F, Lover's Tale ii 58
Had I not known where Love, at first a/, Sisters (E. and E.) 170
Fear
204
Feast
Fear (s) {continued) And f's for our delicate
Eniinie
Cloud-weaver of phantasmal hopes and f's,
fail Thro' craven /'s of being great.
Had never swerved for craft or /,
as Gods against the / Of Death and Hell ;
that worship which is F, Henceforth,
and paced his land In / of worse,
May your/'s be vain !
Still — at times A doubt, a /, —
In tile Child. Hasp. 66
To Victor Hugo 2
Hands all Round 32
To Marq. of Dufferin 27
Demeter and P. 141
143
To Mary Boyle 30
To one who ran down Eng. 2
Alcbar's Dream 169
'Twere joy, not /, claspt hand-in-hand with thee, // / were loved 9
Fear (verb) I / All may not doubt, Supp. Confessions 177
I / to sUde from bad to worse. Two Voices 231
What is it that I may not /? ' „ 240
That I should /, — if I were loved If I were loved 4
I / My wound hath taken cold, M. d' Arthur 165
I / it is too late, and I shall die.' „ 180
I / That we shall miss the mail : Walk, to the Mail 111
' F not thou to loose thy tongue ;
/ no more for me ; or if you / Cast all your cares
I /, If there were many Lilias in the brood.
Let them not/: some said their heads were less :
I / My conscience will not count me fleckless ;
But, dearest Lady, pray you / me not,
* Ah, / me not ' Replied Melissa ; '
' What / ye, brawlers ? am not I your Head ?
what is it ye /? Peace !
' We /, indeed, you spent a stormy time
/ we not To break them more in their behoof.
Sighing she spoke ' I / They will not.'
Approach and / not ; breathe upon my brows ;
Shall we / him ? our own we never f ear'd.
I / you'll listen to tales, be jealous
' F not, isle of blowing woodland.
We mock thee when we do not /:
She f's not, or with thee beside
And me behind her, will not /.
I /, the new strong wine of love,
some one else may have much to /;
I should grow Ught-headed, I /,
Should I / to greet my friend
I almost / they are not roses, but blood ;
F not to give this King thine only child,
I / that I am no true wife.'
Like him who tries the bridge he f's may fail,
Yet / me not : I call mine own self wild,
he f's To lose his bone, and lays his foot
/ not, Enid, I should fall upon him,
men may / Fresh fire and ruin.
you that most had cause To / me, / no longer,
/ not, cousin ; I am changed indeed.'
0 Vivien, save ye / The monkish manhood,
Vivien answer'd, smiling scornfully, ' Why /?
1 savour of thy — virtues ? / them ? no.
loathe, / — but honour me the more.'
make me / still more j^ou are not mine,
Wherefore, if I /, Giving you power upon me
for I / My fate or folly,
a flash, I / me, that will strike my blossom dead,
as a coward slinks from what he f's To cope with.
• F God : honour the King
Because he hates thee even more than f's ;
F not : thou shalt be guarded till my dfeath.
I / My wound hath taken cold,
I / it is too late, and I shall die.'
tho' sometimes I / You may be flickering,
she'll never live thro' it, I /.'
Priests Who / the king's hard common-sense
And a man men / is a man to be loved
Days that will glimmer, I /,
' Do you /? ' and there came thro' the roar of the
breaker a whisper, a breath, ' F ? am I not with
you?
morning brings the da^ I hate and /;
lurks, listens, ft his victim may have fled —
Vision of Sin 155
Enoch Arden 221
Princess, Pro. 145
m147
293
333
342
11)498
500
1)121
vi 60
vii 297
353
Third of Feb. 25
Grandmother 54
Boadicea 38
In Mem., Pro. 30
„ Con. 43
» 44
Maud I vi 82
„ XV 4:
100
„ IIiv85
1)78
Com. of Arthur 413
Marr. of Geraint 108
Geraint and E. 303
311
561
787
822
825
873
Merlin and V. 34
38
39
122
32T
513
926
Lancelot and E. 971
PeUeas and E. 438
Last Tournament 302
533
Guinevere 448
Pass, of Arthur 333
348
Sisters (E. and E.) 32
In the Child. Hasp. 42
Sir J. Oldcastle 66
The Wreck 18
79
Despair 13
The Flight 2
.. 71
Fear (verb) {contimied) and what is it that you /? Happy 1
an' thou'U git along, niver /, Church-warden, etc. 7
F not thou the hidden purpose of that Power God and the Univ. 5
Fear'd / To send abroad a shrill and terrible cry, Enoch Arden 767
I / Lest the gay navy there should splinter Sea Dreams 130
I / To meet a cold ' We thank you. Princess iv 327
but / To incense the Head once more ; „ vii 76
she / that I should lose my mind, „ 99
Shall we fear him ? our own we never /. Third of Feb. 25
I say, we never f I „ __ 29
There sat the Shadow / of man ; In Mem. xxii 12
And that she / she was not a true wife. Marr. of Geraint 114
she / In every wavering brake an ambuscade. Geraint and E. 50
Enid / his eyes. Moist as they were, „ 350
I ever / ye were not wholly mine ; Merlin and V. 315
ridd'n away to die ? ' So /the King, Lancelot and E. 508
cope and crown Of all I hoped and /? — Lover's Tale ii 27
he was / to look at me now. First Quarrel 38
they / that we still could sting. The Revenge 72
I / The very fountains of her Ufe were chill'd ; Sisters (E. and E.) 265
I be / fur to tell tha 'ow much — Village Wife 47
/ myself turning crazed. Despair 78
Found, / me dead, and groan 'd. The Flight 23
They was all on 'em / o' the Ghoiist Owd Rod 37
She / 1 had forgotten her. The Ring 102
Fearful {See also Too-fearfuI) Too / that you should
not please. Miller's D. 148
Half / that, with self at strife, Will Water. 161
If you be /, then must we be bold. Third of Feb. 19,
Dismal error ! / slaughter ! The Captain 65
the sea roars Ruin : a / night ! ' ' Not / ; Sea Dreams 81
' The simple, / child Meant nothing, Guinevere 369
Fearing {See also God-fearing) hid my feelings, / they
should do me wrong ; Locksley HaU 29
F the lazy gossip of the port, Enoch Arden 335
Then / night and chill for Annie, „ 443
dwelt hngeringly on the latch, F to enter : „ 520
And / waved my arm to warn them off ; Sea Dreams 132
fling whate'er we felt, not /, into words. Third of Feb. 6
F to lose, and all for a dead man, Geraint and E. 564
Then, / for his hurt and loss of blood, „ 777
F the mild face of the blameless King, „ 812
But Vivien, / heaven had heard her oath. Merlin and V. 940
/ rust or soilure fashion'd for it , Lancelot and E. 7
Still hoping, / ' is it yet too late ? ' Guinevere 691
/ not to plunge Thy torch of life Tiresias 158
Fear-tremulous her slow sweet eyes F-t, Merlin and V. 86
Feast (s) Rise from the / of sorrow, lady, Margaret 62
scare church-harpies from the master's/; To J. M. K. 3
I made a /; I bad him come ; The Sisters 13
while Audley / Humm'd Uke a hive Audley Court 4
No larger / than under plane or pine Lu/n-etius 21S
near his tomb a / Shone, silver-set ; Princess, Pro. 105
Nymph, or Goddess, at high tide of /, „ i 197
Blanch'd in our annals, and perpetual /, „ vi 63
a/ Of wonder, out of West and East, Ode Inter. Exhib. 20
And we shall sit at endless /, In Mem. xlvii 9
Be neither song, nor game, nor/; „ cv 21
The reeling Faun, the sensual/; „ cxviii 26
Who stay to share the morning /, „ Con. 75
Again the /, the speech, the glee, „ 101
the King Made /for, saying, as they sat at meat. Com. of Arthur 247
that day a / had been Held in high hall, Gareth and L. 847
suit of f ray'd magnificence. Once fit for f's of
ceremony) Marr. of Geraint 297
eyes. Moist as they were, wine-heated from the /; Geraint and E. 351
Till when at / Sir Garlon Ukewise ask'd Balin and Balan 347
our knights at / Have pledged us in this union, Lancelot and E. 114
So dame and damsel glitter'd at the / Last Tournament 225
such a / As never man had dream'd ; Guinevere 263
Fast with your fasts, not feasting with your f's ; „ 678
And Julian made a solemn /: Lover's Tale iv 187
such a /, ill-suited as it seem'd To such a time, „ 207
such a / So rich, so strange, „ 210
our solemn / — we ate and drank, „
1
Feast
^^^ (8) (continued) A«^ u 205
heUr"^ ^"^ '^^^n the/v^as near an end
S5Vor4tjJJ -ore beauty at a/P«
a man Will honour th^^vT"/ ''^ *^«r ^ari ; r^ . ^^« ^aw'n 12
fairest flesh at iLt is filfh I^'' ^u"^'*^^ ^, ^^''^^ ""^ ^- 287
Feasted three days he /us And „^^i?^ ^^e worm will f. ^""^ ^^' »« 232
he the wisest man F the t^l°" **"? ^""^t^ p • ^"I'Py ^
F««.Jifr"§.*^^^ «« oft with aTK^u^t ">e°. ^""^^* *■ il8
*eastfu] Singinff anrl X,7 • ""^ ^mghts J" ,, « 357
^ l^ing FT;^irh"^Ji"™unnginh"?/'„,fe^ „/c,//^,«^l g]
i jMt often heard me prLsf vA \f ^'^^ yow feasts • ^'^'^'^pfArt 177
Feather fs) (^.e a/*" few^''"//* of an^s, ^';i, Guinevere m
li^lfs^^- ^^^""^^ Allgrkssof ^""••''/G'«-ai«M35
We'll b^ViSS of {' r^ "^^ and truth ^^^^ing Oak 269
O^e^'nlS-/^^^^^^^^^ H and/. ^^-^^TS/IJ
FeatT^ ^Sf£f ; B-Than^e of/.- ,^^ ^|rj^^3?l
Featherfan Coo^,^a'^^?'»d ' ^ «P«at) ^«ocA ^r,^^ 68 gfi
Feathering the £S^^« F^^^ «^'th a /• ,
Feature . chiseird K efe^^a^lld^^ ^^'^^^ ^^W.^«^289
Conjectures of the ^k ''^^; ^T^ ^^'^^ 544
Reading her peS/'fin^^^L'^' '^ ^ ^;^'-«-'«- 30
I cannot see the /'7ri4?'*^^S'°°'n. Tw ®«<'««252
_, that small charm nf/-' hardener's D. 175
Featured (-S.« S^»oZl"l^^' P"«"ed- , In Mem kx I
p, /inthes^n-^'^*^*"^*') The mother Berlin and F.Vs
*eoruary Cadi ^ at >o
Febru "^^'■^"'P^tr ""'"^ '''''^°™«« ^ fair- ^^^'^ ^- ««^ <?• E:rhil,. 12
Fed™S^l/^^;^^n^e a,,d ^ j„^^ Tke Snowdrop 2, 10
^ ,FulI.fed) / afe?* Fpnntkin-fS' ^^' ^^^^ird H
/the time w/th odou^ ^'^^^^-P^'^ted flan^of chastity
f thee, a child, lyinffalnn.. J X- Isabel 1
Bv'1;*^°'/-'th'Sfeft dirt ^^-^^-n Nights 64
^y dancing rimlef « / vaL a \ Eleanore 25
I / you with the milkof ^, ^^^ P^ace „ ^o £•. Z. 22
breast that/or aSthitS Muse; '^"'^^** ^" ^29
You haSur}rnSSe^3"--^ „•,„ ^» ^-. Wl'g
^land-myriads / f ro'm ahen L^^^^ ^^' » « 24
She watch'd me she nnl i '*"'^— » *« 264
, T^\^?andthePowrre- Z«.z. / ^^"^i' ^3
/itiS^mXrifli^ '•"/• ^4?^'it/f6
^«eed) ttrwamW^7f'''^^''' a burial/. ^'^ ^^ " ^^-'^ 4
an nowtheer'slotso'r^"'"'''^"^'- iV^ Jf„, '^'^''^ ^ ^' 45
al (feel) 'p thou n^iiJlx. farmer, O. S 37
f ;^t^r?/S^-- 0' their/. ""oSSlo^
ra>I at firet AncJ V all nn ^"'"" P™"« ^''^ ^'•'^^« 152
^■^en^age myself , but fan'^n"?"' °^ ''^e'f. P • » 779
"' ;i hearts and / whu,, Tl '.^emg so /.- Princess vii H7
hme. ^ """g'' That every sophister can ^'^ ' ^«^« *' 693
""" ''^ '^"'* ^ '^e have/hos.*^ ^«^/-. % /a„^ H
J-hirdofFeh. 38
Feeble {continued) The ^son) n k
/vassals of wine and fr. ' "* ''aunt of fears
thro' the / tSht of ,^'''' ^"? '"«*.
^and PellaJ^'s Tf^* ?sL^« ^^Id GrcJping,
Wer Is f than\l^L.®*ay, stay him ! ' ^'
Feel
^ ,and"psi7?^' 'kf "r^ «™p^. r ^«S/r4l
Feebler b / than-^hSneS^' '^'^ ^^'' Balt^'^'f'^^ E%
Then comes the / heires.; .f . ^ '"?^ ^'^«'» 420
It drown'd The /nVof fnf "^^our plan, ^nfient Sage 135
Feed (^.. «^,, Feead) Po"r A'"-"'-'"' ^""^- ^^'■'"'-' "^'^^
Thy kingly intellect shall / ^ ^ " ^" "^° ^erb. Suvt^'' % ^'^^ ^"^ ^3
Upon himself himself riti V ^fV- Confessions 151
Some honey-converle ?? /k' • ^^'^'-f^fied friend 20
httle ductsbegS^ To /f hi K^ '"'"^' ^ CAara^^, 27
Nor/with ci^deiia^Sfirr T 4/^^^^ 4Q
The fat earth f thv h£^T ^'^^ ^^rd, j- i^o Voices 326
TJat hoard, aid sfcn/,™<>t. ^''^^^-th.Jand fo
That early woke to /heSfi n I^'^^^^^ng Oak 213
The full new life that f's thtl''"^?; p • ^^^^^^^ 5
That / the mothers of f hi a ^ l^^^ath Princess vii 252
a rose-carnation / Kh ^,^*"^ ' "" ^''^- ^''^^i W
Nor / with sighs a n w ^"™'?er spice .. <, 16
goodly cheer To f,l^"^, ^^"^ : "^ „ ^^2
Feeding like horees when ^ ^^ ^P^ars. ^«-«««< and E. 284
;?i/;^,their downwIrdX" '^'^^ *'^«™/' » ««'
«w fi?5sig«"'-is 'j^ ?r «; / fer??
^ felt ? *"*■'' *^al) and 1/ 35 t{,oJ j^^^^ Geramt and E. 606
/ t4|'iirtltt,nn^h • . ''"^^- ^"^^-^-^ 82
For Kate no common ? '''^''' hearts ^ Om„a 77
To/, althoCTS 'an n^o'^' ^f^^ MermZ'i
Begin to/th {i^tra^ftr,''." '^^ "^^ ""--/o-^ne^ll
make a man / stroi^^n sf 1,°^ "^^y- ^- '^ ^'•'^«'- 177
1/ about my feet The h^^^^'?^*"^fch; ^ „ £•«. 19
my heart so^slow T^. iV "''^ ''"''"^ ^'^z.'^'*'^ ^^ 70
unto him who works and /■' k I^<^^^ngOakUl
guinea helps the hurt ZVw ''^ ^°'''^«- ^«;;« «»^ i?„^y 3^
Make me/the wild pulsafio^^"^'^/'^, ifff'^r^'^^ 73
Their yS°,;{k'e"ii:V30^Srv , ^^^ ^aterX
Ver;iivi;j';^^//J^eness inl. ,
And / myself fhll/ ''^^ ''ent ;
/. at leS that silenneT °^ ^ ^^«am.
which has pSwer to ?' f^'" r^''' «'".
But they-thev /• Vh{ / am I ' ?
As one who /'/the^mi'"'"^ °^ ^^^ ^^^P~~
im^s'iil^f^^^^rt''-'''''''^
IshoVd^otfer'"^*^'
reaches foTth^ertmst^^f-
i / 1 sliall owe vou a rfph.
^\9h. Pantheism 8
^o«<^e aw<f the p, 19
^ dedication 7
In Mem. v 2
'» «m 3
» arzi; 20
» a:ari 19
» S'xvii 14
» fo 19
j> tow 17
» ^iP^a:a 42
» 87
»» ar«tV 16
») a:«)jV34
» eararw 5
» cxxix 3
»^ ,", ''^^^ 7
-^'ajwf / xviii 72
" xix 87
Feel
206
FeU
Peel (continued) loved with that full love I / for thee, Gareth and L. 84
the plant that/' s itself Root-bitten „ 453
in your frosty cells ye / the fire ! BaJin and Balan 446
Caress her : let her / herself forgiven Who f's no
heart to ask another boon. Merlin and V. 381
Might / some sudden turn of anger born „ 531
low desire Not to / lowest makes them level all ; „ 828
In moments when he / 's he cannot die, Holy Grail 916
find a nest and f's a, snake, he drew : Petleas and E. 437
For / this arm of mine — Last Tournament 690
' lo mine helpmate, one to / My purpose Guinevere 485
find or / a way Thro' this blind haze. Pass, of Arthur 75
Like one that/ 's a nightmare on his bed „ 345
I / thy breath ; I come, great Mistress Lover's Tale i 21
flaw In his throne's title make him / so frail, Sir J. Oldcastle 73
We / we are nothing — • De Prof., Human C. 6
We / we are something — „ 7
What did I / that night ? Despair 3
She f's the Sun is hid but for a night, Ancient Sage 73
we / Within oiu^elves is highest, * „ 87
Scarce /'s the senses break away To mix „ 152
F's that the deep is boundless, „ 192
to / his breath Upon my cheek — The Flight 45
these would / and follow Truth Locksley H., Sixty 119
I / the deathless heart of motherhood Demeter and P. 41
Who / no touch of my temptation, Romney's R. 121
Polytheism and Isl&n/ after thee. Akbar's D., Inscrip. 2
Feel'd (felt) till agean I / mysen free. North. Cobbler 80
I / thy arm es I stood wur a-creeapin Spinster's S's. 26
Feeling / all along the garden-wall, Enoch Arden 773
She laid A / finger on my brows. Princess vi 121
And often / of the helpless hands, „ viiWl
When flower is / after flower ; In Mem. xxxix 7
The blind wave / roimd his long sea-hall Merlin and V. 232
I, / that you felt me worthy trust, „ 334
sideways downward to her belt. And /; „ 851
Feeling (s) {See also Fellow-feeling) embassies of love.
To tamper with the f's, Gardener's D. 19
Saying ' I have hid my f's, Locksley Hall 29
to decline On a range of lower /'s „ 44
' They were dangerous guides the f's — „ 95
Divorce the F from her mate the Deed. The Brook 95
Who speak their / as it is, In Mem. xx 5
We ceased : a gentler / crept Upon us : „ xxx 17
Feign things that being caught / death. Princess v 108
Feign'd sweet as those by hopeless fancy / „ iv 55
A face of tenderness might be /, Maud I vi 52
yet lay still, and / himself as dead, Geraint and E. 588
and / a sleep until he slept. Lancelot and E. 842
Feigning /pique at what she call'd The raillery. Princess iv 5^1
Fell (adj.) Outram and Havelock breaking their way
through the / mutineers ? Def. of Luckrum 96
the bees is as / as owt. N. Farmer, N. S. 40
Fell (hair) Half-.suffocated in the hoary / Merlin and V. 840
Fell (mountain) ye meanwhile far over moor and / Maud I xviii 76
gleam from yonder vale, Some far blue /, Early Spring 34
lured that falcon from his eyry on the /, Happy 59
he was coming down the / — „ 82
Fell (verb) (See also Fell out) msted nails / from the knots Mariana 3
Her tears / with the dews at even ; „ 13
Her tears / ere the dews were dried ; „ 14
The shadow of the poplar / Upon her bed, „ 55
springing forth anew Where'er they /, The Poet 22
the babble of the stream F, Mariana in the S. 52
I kLss'd away before they /. Miller's D. 152
They were together, and she /; The Sisters 4
folds, that floating as they /Lit up a torrent-bow. Palace of Art 35
on the fourth she /, Like Herod, „ 218
and loathing of her soUtude F on her, „ 230
because the kiss he gave me, ere I /, D. of F. Women 235
F in a doze ; and half-awake I heanl The Epic 13
So flash'd and / the brand Excalibur : M. d'A rthur 142
and threaten'd darkness, flared and /: „ Ep. 2
the sun /, and all the land was dark, (repeat) Dora 79, 109
The wreath of flowers / At Dora's feet. „ 102
Fell (verb) (continued) in wild Mahratta-battle/my father Locksley Hall 155
Bullets / Uke rain ; The Captain 46
The silver lily heaved and /; To E. L. 19
by mischance he slipt and /: Enoch Arden 106
on him /, Altho' a grave and staid God-fearing man, „ 111
Aylmer
487
569
914
s Field 409
810
Sea Dreams 53
224
Lucretius 279
Princess ii 242
iii 364
it) 29
60
378
401
497
t)50
542
vi80
vii 29
50
159
254
Light Brigade 44
W. to Marie Alex. 22
The Daisy 10
The Victim 1
Boddicea 30
these things / on her Sharp as reproach.
/ Sim-stricken, and that other Uved alone.
and so / back and spoke no more.
Tho' LeoUn flamed and / again,
/ The woman shrieking at his feet,
and / In vast sea-cataracts —
The statues, king or saint, or founder /;
/ on liim, Clasp'd, kiss'd him, wail'd :
he bestrode my Grandsire, when he /,
Grew broader toward his death and /,
Stirring a sudden transport rose and /.
the tear, She sang of, shook and /,
wing'd Her transit to the throne, whereby she /
but / Into his father's hands,
call'd Across the tumult and the tiunult /.
' then we / Into your father's hand,
darkness closed me ; and I /.
From the high tree the blossom wavering /,
But sadness on the soul of Ida /,
Star after star, arose and /;
back I /, and from mine arms she rose
She moved, and at her feet the volume /.
While horse and hero /,
Yet Harold's England / to Norman swords ;
The torrent vineyard streaming /
A PLAGUE upon the people /,
down their statue of Victory /.
F the colony, city, and citadel,
Thro' four sweet years arose and /, In Mem. xxii 3
And sadly / our Christmas-eve. „ xxx 4
In vaults and catacombs, they /; „ Iviii 4
And calmly / our Christmas-eve : „ Ixxviii 4
And / in silence on his neck : „ ciii 44
rock that / with him when he /. Maud I i8
a silence / with the waking bird, „ xxii 17
The white lake-blossom / into the lake „ 47
mood is changed, for it / at a time of year „ Illvi 4
sword rose, the hind/, the herd was driven. Com. of Arthur 432
A slender-shafted Pine Lost footing, /, Gareth and L. 4
And drops of water / from either hand ; „ 220
the King's calm eye F on, and check'd, „ 548
they shock'd, and Kay F shoulder-slipt, „ 759
F, as if dead ; but quickly rose and drew, „ 967
Went sliding down so easily, and /, „ 1224
there / A horror on him, lest his gentle wife, Marr. of Geraint 28
He spoke and / to work again. „ 292
/ at last In the great battle fighting „ 595
it / Like flaws in summer laying lasty corn : „ 763
jangling, the casque F, and he started Geraint and E. 389
saw the chargers of the two that / „ 481
Prince, without a word, from his horse /. „ 508
a fair death, and / Against the heathen „ 968
His arm half rose to strike again, but /: Balin and Balan 223
Garlon, reeling slowly backward, /, „ 397
and either /, and swoon'd away. ,, 563
Then / on Merlin a great melancholy ; Merlin and V. 189
they / and made the glen abhorr'd : Lancelot and E. 42
slipt and / into some pool or stream, „ 214
Treroit, Where many a heathen /; „ 302
when he / From talk of war to traits of pleasantry — „ 320
' Of all this will I nothing ; ' and so /, „ 967
back the maiden /, Then gave a languid hand „ 1031
raised his head, their eyes met and hers /, „ 1312
showers of flowers i^ as we past ; Holy Grail 349
F into dust, and I was left alone, (repeat) Holy Grail 389, 400, 419
slie too, F into dust and nothing, Holy Grail 397
Tlie plowman left his plowing, and / down Before it ; „ 404
milkmaid left her milking, and / down Before it, „ 406
as he spoke F into dust, and disappear'd, .. 436
Then / the floods of heaven drowning the deep.
, 5^
FeU
207
Felt
Fell (verb) (continued) Heavy as it was, a great stone
slipt and /, Holy Grail 680
stones Raw, that they / from, brought us to the hall. „ 720
wind /, and on the seventh night I heard „ 810
sword was dash'd from out my hand, and /. „ 826
star Reel'd in the smoke, brake into flame, and /. Pelleas and E. 519
Then / thick rain, plume droopt Last Tournament 213
thus he / Head-heavy ; then the kniglits, „ 467
Her light feet / on our rough Lyonnesse, „ 554
hurl'd him headlong, and he / Stunn'd, Guinevere 108
He f alter'd, and his hand / from the harp, „ 303
prone from off her seat she /, „ 414
and ev'n on Arthur / Confusion, Pass, of Arthur 98
some whisper of the seething seas, A dead hush /; „ 122
and all but slain himself, he /. „ 169
So flash'd and /the brand Excalibur: „ 310
silver-smiling Venus ere she / Would often loiter Lover's Tale i 61
heart of Hope F into dust, and crumbled „ 95
My coronal slowly disentwined itself And / between
us both ; „ 362
/ about My footsteps on the moimtains. „ 371
and the earth They / on became hallow'd „ 440
water, drop by drop, upon my ear JP ; „ 577
Even the feet of her I loved, I/, ,,600
wealth Flash'd from me a moment and I / Beggar'd
for ever —
few drops of that distressful rain F on my face,
and / into the abysm Of forms outworn,
till they / Half -digging their own graves)
and / Slanting upon that picture,
the surge / From thunder into whispers ;
Lionel, who fain had risen, but / again,
Saatan as / Down out o' heaven
And he / upon their decks, and he died,
sea plunged and / on the shot-shatter'd navy
Had caught her hand, her eyelids / —
The mother / about the daughter's neck,
But Billy / bakkuds o' Charlie,
there /, Striking the hospital wall,
on all the defences om- myriad enemy /.
I lost myself and / from evenness.
The crowd's roar / as at the ' Peace, be still ! '
trees grew downwards, rain / upward.
The hurricane of the latitude on him /,
They almost / on each other ;
steer / down at the plow and the harvest died
and lus white beard / to his feet,
F the shipcrews Doom'd to the death.
i Then / from that half -spiritual height Cliill'd,
I His formal kiss / chill as a flake of snow
j then / fluttering down at my feet ;
I And I / — and the storm and the days went
', a scrap, dipt out of the ' deaths ' in a paper, /.
the tundher, an' rain that /,
F like a cannonshot.
When That within the coffin /, F—
669
699
796
„ ii 46
...174
„ Hi 30
„ iv 361
North. Cobbler 57
The Revenge 104
117
Sisters {E. and E.) 148
154
Vaiage Wife 85
Def. of Lu^know 17
35
Sir J. Oldcasde 164
Columbus 13
„ 50
138
V. of Maddune 26
30
118
Batt. of Brunanburh 22
To E. Fitzgerald 19
The Wreck 32
82
„ 111
146
Tomorrow 23
Heavy Brigade 26
To Marq. of Dufferin 43
leaf /, and the sun. Pale at my grief, Demeter and P. 113
causer of that scandal, fought and /; The Ring 215
And then the tear /, the voice broke. „ 367
hands F from each other, and were join'd again. „ 381
A noise of falling weights that never /, „ 410
fell'd the foes before you as the woodman /'s the wood.
Happy 42
I F on the shadow. No longer a shadow, Merlin and the G. 92
mountain rolls into the plain, F headlong dead ; Death of (Enone 52
'ell'd slew the beast, and / The forest. Com. of Arthur 59
And / him, and set foot upon his breast, Marr. of Geraint 574
hand Which / the foes before you Happy 42
'eller (fellow) I knaw'd a QuaJiker/as often 'as N. Farmer, N. S. 19
I liked a bigger / to fight wi' North. Cobbler 100
I calls 'em arter the f's Spinster's S's 4
The f's as maiikes them picturs, Owd Rod 23
An' all along o' the / (Sir Robert Peel) as tum'd „ 48
ell out We / o, my wife and I, O we / o I know not
why, Princess ii 3
ellow (adj.) Or brag to his / rakes of his conquest Clmrity 18
Fellow (adj.) (continued) Let be thy wail and help
thy / men.
Fellow (s) (See also Feller, Tavern-fellow) if his /
spake. His voice was thin.
And lowing to liLs f's.
he. Poor /, could he help it ?
That great pock-pitten / had been caught ?
wise To let that handsome / Averill walk
' This / would make weakness weak.
This / hath broken from some Abbey,
Think ye this / will poison the King's dish ?
a hart Taller than all his f's, milky-white,
And heard one crying to his /, ' Look,
' Your sweet faces make good / 's fools
From all his/'s, lived alone.
This / hath wrought some foulness with his Queen
would ye look On this proud / again,
all was done He flung it among his/ '5 —
But I gather'd my f's together,
drew His sword on his / to slay him.
Fellow-citizen Welcome f-c's, Hollow hearts
Fellow-feeling a very miracle Of /-/ and communion.
Fellow-monk one, a f-m among the rest.
Fellowship goodliest / of famous knights
0 Sorrow, cruel/,
Mere / of sluggish moods.
To give him the grasp of /;
' God bless the King, and all his /! '
'What doest thou, scullion, in my/?
so rich a / Would make me wholly blest :
your / O'er these waste downs whereon I lost
myself.
My brethren have been all my/;
The goodliest / of famous knights
They grew aweary of her/:
Fellow-victini ' Curse him ! ' curse your f-v ?
Fellow-worker In which I might your /-w be.
Felo-de-se coroner doubtless will find it a f-d-s,
Felon (adj.) F talk ! Let be ! no more ! '
* Stay, / knight, I avenge me for my friend.'
Felon (s) that tall / there Whom thou by sorcery
Else yon black / had not let me pass.
Felt (See also Feald, Fee&Id, Feel'd) and I feel as
thou hast/?
She / he was and was not there.
' To search thro' all I / or saw,
something /, like something here ;
1 pray'd for both, and so I / resign'd,
She / her heart grow prouder :
F earth as air beneath me, till I reach'd
Dora / her uncle's will in all,
I / a pang within As when I see the woodman lift
/ my blood Glow with the glow
pulsation that I / before the strife,
And round her waist she / it fold,
I never / the kiss of love,
touch upon the master-chord Of all I / and feel.
We / the good ship shake and reel,
I read and / that I was there :
life's ascending sun Was / by either,
well had deem'd he / the tale Less
when he / the silence of his house About him,
escaped His keepers, and the silence which he /,
I / My heart beat thick with passion
/ the blind wildbeast of force,
you have known the pangs we /,
tender orphan hands F at my heart,
I / my veins Stretch with fierce heat ;
I / Thy helpless warmth about my barren breast
/ it sound and whole from head to foot,
and perhaps they / their power,
fling whate'er we /, not fearing, into words,
she / the heart witliin her fall and flutter
I / it, when I sorrow'd most,
I / and feel, tho' left alone.
Ancient Sage 258
Lotos-Eaters 33
Gardener's D. 88
The Brook 158
Aylmer's Field 256
„ 269
In Mem. xxi 7
Gareih and L. 456
471
Marr. of Geraint 150
Geraint and E. 59
399
Balin and Balan 126
: „ 565
Lancelot and E. 1065
Rizpah 32
V. of Maeldune 2
„ 68
Vision of Sin 173
Lover's Tale i 251
Holy Grail 8
M. d' Arthur 15
In Mem. Hi 1
„ XXXV 21
Maud, I xiii 16
Gareth and L. 698
765
Balin and Balan 147
Lancelot and E. 224
672
Pass, of Arthur 183
Lover's Tale i 109
Locksley H., Sixty 9
Princess iv 308
Despair 115
Balin and Balan 380
Gareth and L. 1220
Gareth and L. 996
„ 1293
Supp. Confessions 82
Mariana in the S. 50
Two Voices 139
382
May Queen, Con. 31
The Goose 22
Gardener's D. 212
Dora 5
Talking Oak 234
TitJumus 55
Locksley Hall 109
Day-Dm., Depart. 2
Sir Galahad 19
Will Water. 28
The Voyage 15
To E. L. 8
Enoch Arden 39
711
Aylmer's Field 830
„ 839
Princess Hi 189
„ V 266
374
436
537
vi 201
211
„ Con. 13
Third of Feb. 6
Boadicea 81
In Mem. Ixxxv 2
42
Felt
208
Feud
Pdt (continued) transfer The whole I / for him to you. In Mem. Ixxxv 104
and / The same, but not the same ; „ Ixxxvii 13
I / the thews of Anakim, „ ciii 31
A love of freedom rarely /, „ cix 13
And / thy triumph was as mine ; „ ex 14
Stood up and answer'd, ' I have /.' „ cxxiv 16
Because he / so fix'd in truth : „ cxxv 8
Nor have I / so much of bliss „ Con. 5
f himself in his force to be Nature's crowning race. Mavd I iv 33
F a horror over me creep, „ xiv 35
I / she was slowly dying Vext with lawyers „ xix 21
Strange, that I / so gay, „ xx 1
I cleaved to a cause that I / to be pure „ III vi 31
I have / with my native land, „ 58
His love, imseen but /, o'ershadow Thee, Bed. of Idylls 51
F the light of her eyes into his life Com,, of Arthur 56
but / him more. Of closest kin to me : Gareth and L. 126
/ his young heart hammering in his ears, „ 322
he /, despite his mail. Strangled, _ „ 1151
I / Thy manhood thro' that wearied lance „ 1265
Lancelot thro' his warm blood / Ice strike, „ 1398
F ye were somewhat, yea, and by, your state Mart. ofGeraint 430
He /, were she the prize of bodily force, „ 541
I / That I could rest, a rock in ebbs and flows, ,, 811
/ that tempest brooding round his heart, Geraint and E.ll
f Her low firm voice and tender government. „ 193
/ the warm tears falling on his face ; „ 586
She / so blunt and stupid at the heart : „ 747
And / him hers again : she did not weep, „ 768
/ His work was neither great nor wonderful, „ 920
and he / his being move In music with his order, Balin and Balan 211
He / the hollow-beaten mosses thud „ 321
when their foreheads / the cooling air, „ 589
he lifted faint eyes ; he / One near him ; „ 594
old man, Tho' doubtful, / the flattery, Merlin and V. 184
I, feeling that you / me worthy trust, „ 334
I / as tho' you knew this cursed charm, „ 435
that I lay And / them slowing ebbing, „ 437
darkling / the sculptured ornament „ 734
Thro' her own side she / the sharp lance go ; Lancelot and E. 624
/ the knot Climb in her throat, „ 740
And / the boat shock earth. Holy Grail 812
/ the svm Beat like a strong knight on his helm, Pelleas and E. 22
she, that / the cold touch on her throat, „ 488
but / his eyes Harder and drier than a fountain bed „ 506
and / the goodly hounds Yelp at his heart. Last Tournament 503
My soul, I / my hatred for my Mark Quicken „ 519
/ the King's breath wander o'er her neck, Guinevere 582
/ the blast Beat on my heated eyelids : Lover's Tale Hi 27
Thrice in a second, / him tremble too, „ iv22i
I / that my heart was hard. First Quarrel 76
An' I / 1 had been to blame ; „ 90
I / 1 could do it no more. In the Child. Hosp. 60
I / one warm tear faU upon it. Tiresias 167
The chfld that I / 1 could die for— The Wreck 36
till I / myself ready to weep „ 61
With the first great love I had / „ 76
Does it matter so much what I /? Despair 4
but/ thro' what we feel Ancient Sage 87
F within us as ourselves, the Powers of Good, LocTcsley H., Sixty 273
I / On a sudden I know not what. The Bing 31
and / An icy breath play on me, „ 130
and / a gentle hand Fall on my forehead, „ 418
I / for what I could not find, the key, „ 440
And sanguine Lazarus / a vacant hand To Mary Boyle 31
I / 1 could end myself too with the dagger — Bandit's Death 37
Female The stately flower of / fortitude, Isabel 1\
A random string Your finer / sense offends. Day-Dm., L' Envoi 2
Princess i 199
„ a 34
372
„ vi 73
We sent mine host to purchase / gear ;
All beauty compass'd in a / form,
The circle rounded under / hands
tender ministries Of / hands and hospitality.*
and served With / hands and hospitality.'
and the swarm Of / whisperers :
swarms of men Darkening her / field :
a56
w 34
Female {continued) manhood fused with / grace
In such a sort, In Mem. cix 17
Which types all Nature's male and / plan, On one who affec. E. M. 3
' then a loftier form Than /, Princess i» 216
Fen From the dark / the oxen's low Came Mariana 28
Fly o'er waste f's and windy fields. Sir Galahad 60
raised the school, and drain'd the /. Locksley H., Sixty 268
somewheers i' the Wowd or the F, Church-warden, etc. 47
Fence three horses that have broken /, Princess ii 386
Robins — a niver mended a/: N. Farmer, 0. S. 50
Break me a bit o' the esh for his 'ead, lad, out
o'the/! „ N.S.41
An' the fs all on 'em bolster'd oop Owd Boa 32
Fenced (fought) voice with which I / A little ceased, Two Voices 317
Fenced (hedged) I / it roimd with gallant institutes. Princess v 392
Ferdinand F Hath signed it and our Holy Catholic queen Columbus 29
I pray you tell King F who plays with me, „ 223
Fere And raceth freely with his /, Supp. Confessions 158
Fern (See also Ice-fems, Lady-fern, Tree-fern) learned
names of agaric, moss and /, Edwin Morris 17
Hail, hidden to the knees in /, Talking Oak 29
Oh, hide thy knotted knees in /, „ 93
O muffle round thy knees with /, ,,149
0 flourish, hidden deep in /, ,,201
Step deeper yet in herb and /, „ 245
Among the palms and f's and precipices ; Enoch Arden 593
And sparkle out among the /, The Brook 25
In copse and / Twinkled the innumerable „ 133
From slope to slope thro' distant f's, Princess, Con. 99
stood a shatter'd archway plumed with/; Marr. ofGeraint 316
all round was open space. And / and heath : Pelleas and E. 29
/ without Burnt as a living fire of emeralds, „ 34
The deer, the dews, the /, the founts. Last Tournament 727
sparkle of a cloth On / and foxglove. Sisters (E. and E.) 118
Ferreted I have / out their burrowings. Merlin and V. 55
Ferule As boys that slink From / Princess v 38
Fervent With such a / flame of human love, Boly Grail 74
Fescue Sweeping the fro thfly from the / Aylmer's Field 5S0
Festal With music and sweet showers Of / flowers. Ode to Memory 78
On the hall-hearths the / fires, Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 14
With / cheer, With books and music. In Mem. cvii 21
on a / day When Guinevere was crossing Merlin and V. 04
' If I be loved, these are my / robes, Lancelot and E. 909
make her / hour Dark with the blood of man St. Telemachus 79
Fester Eye, to which all order /'s, Locksley Hall 133
Festival Two strangers meeting at a /; Circumstance 3
illuminate All your towns for a /, On Jub. Q. Victoria 19
Festoon in many a wild / Ran riot, Qinone 100
Festooning Their humid arms / tree to tree, D. of F. Women 70
Fetch Go / your Alice here,' she said : Miller's D. 143
And down I went to / my bride : ,, 145
Go / a pint of port : Will Water. 4
Eh, let me / 'em, Arden,' Enoch Arden 871
the colt would / its price ; The Brook 149
with furs And jewels, gifts, to / her : Princess i 43
/ the wine, Arrange the board and brim the glass ; In Mem. cvii 15
/ Fresh victual for these mowers of our Earl ; Geraint and E. 224
1 will / you forage from all fields, „ 628
Lancelot went ambassador, at first. To / her. Merlin and V. 775
Well, I will wear it : /it out to me : Lancelot and E. 371
Fur 'e'd / an' carry like owt, Owd Bod 6
Fetch'd-Fetcht fetch'd His richest beeswing from
a binn Aylmer's Field 404
boooks fetch'd nigh to nowt at the saiile. Village Wife 73
I fetcht 'im a kick an' 'e went. Owd Boa 62
Fettle I could / and clump owd booiits North. Cobbler 13
Feud Rose /, with question unto whom 'twere due : (Enone 82
New and Old, disastrous /, Love thou thy land 77
how they mar this little by their f's. 8ea_ Dreams 49
' How grew this / betwixt the right and left.' Princess Hi 77
Then rose a little / betwixt the two, „ Cow. 23
I wage not any / with Death In Mem. Ixxxii 1
Ring out the / of rich and poor, „ cvi 11
And ever mourning over the /, Ma/itd I xix 31
splinter it into f's Serving his traitorous end; Guinevere .
1
Feud
209
Field
Feud (continued) counter-yells of / And faction, To Duke of Argyll 8
Before the f of Gods had niarr'd our peace, Death of CEnone 32
feudal above their heads I saw The /warrior lady-clad ; Princess, Pro. 119
A / knight in silken masquerade, „ 234
And tuft with grass a / tower ; In Mem. cxxviii 20
Ilever till at last a / seized On William, Dora 54
In hungers and in thirsts, f's and cold, St. S. Stylites 12
some low / ranging roimd to spy The weakness Aylmer's Field 569
mix the foaming draught Of /, Princess ii 252
fan my brows and blow The / from my cheek, In Mem. Ixxxvi 9
There / seized upon him : Lover's Tale iv 132
there from / and my care of him Sprang up „ 143
we talkt o' my darter es died o' the / at fall : Village Wife 10
/ 'ed baiiked Jinny's 'ead as bald as one o' them heggs, „ 102
Cholera, scurvy, and /, Def. of Lucknow 84
f's, fights. Mutinies, treacheries — Columbtis 225
summer days ' of /, and want of care ! The Wreck 147
fire of / creeps across the rotted floor, Locksley H., Sixty 223
bom of /, or the fumes Of that dark opiate dose Romney's R. 30
I She died of a / caught when a nurse Charity 41
j Fever'd so hot. So /! never colt would more delight Romney's R. 13
Upon my / brows that shook and throbb'd Lover's Tale Hi 7
! Feverous {See also Brain-feverous) A tongue-tied Poet
in the / days, Golden Year 10
i who slept After a night of / wakefulness, Enoch Arden 231
I or laid his / pillow smooth ! Aylm^'s Field 701
Fever-worn When, pale as yet, and f-w. To the Qrieen ii 4
Few (adj.) Sharp and /, but seeming-bitter Rosalind Z\
' I found him when my years were /; Two Voices 271
Who spoke / words and pithy. Princess, Con. 94
For those are / we hold as dear ; To F. D. Maurice 46
\ While another is cheating the sick of a / last gasps, Maud I i ^
/, F, but all brave, all of one mind with him ; Com. of Arthur 254
i so / words, and seem'd So justified Geraint and E. 395
I That has but one plain passage of / notes, Lancelot and E. 895
j Thanks to the kindly dark faces who fought with
i us, faithful and /, Def. of Lucknow 70
• these / lanes of elm And whispering oak. To Mary Boyle 67
some / drops of that distressful rain Fell on my face, Lover's Tale i
} Few (s) Clash'd with his fiery / and won ;
j that honest /, Who give the Fiend
F at first will place thee well ;
( Fewer we were every day / and /.
1 albeit their glorious names Were /,
Fewmet But at the slot or f's of a deer,
Feyther (father) Them or thir /'«, tha sees,
F 'ad ammost nowt ;
F run oop to the farm,
Coom ! coom ! /,' 'e says,
Sa / an' son was buried togither,
F 'ud saay I wur ugly es sin.
Fur if iver thy / 'ed riled me
Fiat This / somewhat soothed himself
Fibre Thy / 's net the dreamless head,
Fibred See Hairy-fibred
Fibrous pale and / as a wither'd leaf.
Fickle ' You're too sUght and /,' I said,
bright and fierce and / is the South,
Whatever / tongues may say.
' Rapt from the / and the frail
! so / are men — the best !
|Pictive Who dabbling in the fount of / tears,
I Piddle And ta'en my / to the gate, (repeat)
I Twang out, my / ! shake the twigs !
wa 'greed as well as a / i' tune :
Piddled And / in the timber !
Fie she lifted either arm, ' F on thee. King !
Field (adj.) {See also Field-flower) like the arrow-seeds
of the jf flower.
Field (s) {See also Autumn-fields, Battle-field, Fea,ld,
Field-of-battle, Four-field, Harvest-field, War-
field, Winter-field) the high/on the bushless Pike,
Whither away from the high green /,
/ and wood Grow green beneath the showery gray,
her sacred blood doth drown The f's,
Ode on Well. 100
To F. D. Maurice 5
Poets and Critics 10
Def. of I/ucknow 49
Princess ii 156
Last Tournament 371
N. Farmer, N. S. 49
51
54
VUlage Wife 69
90
Spinster's S's. 15
Church-Warden, etc. 41
Aylmer's Field 26
In Mem. ii 3
Lover's Tale i 422
Edward Gray 19
Princess iv 97
In Mem. xxvi 4
„ XXX 25
The Ring 392
The Brook 93
Amphion 11, 15
61
North. Cobbler 12
Amphion 16
Gareth and L. 658
The Poet 19
Ode to Memory 96
Sea-Fairies 8
My life is full 16
Poland 5
Field (s) {continued) hong f's of barley and of rye, L. of Shalott i 2
And thro' the / the road runs by „ 4
That sparkled on the yellow /, „ Hi 8
The willowy hills and / 's among, „ iv 25
thy father play'd In his free /, Two Voices 320
And forth into the f's I went, „ 448
see me more in the long gray /'s at night ; May Queen, N. Y's. E. 26
in the /'s all round I hear the bleating of
the lamb. „ Con. 2
He shines upon a hundred f's, „ 50
Weary the wandering /'s of barren foam. Lotos-Eaters 42
in fair / Myself for such a face had boldly died,' D. of F. Women 97
Then stept she down thro' town and / Of old sat Freedom 9
And bore him to a chapel nigh the/, M. d' Arthur 8
The f's between Are dewy -fresh. Gardener's D. 45
Leaning his horns into the neighbour /, „ 87
hired himself to work within the f's ; Dora 38
Far off the farmer came into the / „ 74
when the farmer pass'd into the / » 85
the boy's cry came to her from the /, „ 104
And scarce can recognise the f'sl know ; St. S. Stylites 40
To yonder oak within the / 1 spoke Talking Oak 13
Beyond the fair green / and eastern sea. Love and Duty 101
Man comes and tills the / and lies beneath, Tithonus 3
the steam Floats up from those dim f's „ 69
a boy when first he leaves his father's/, Locksley Hall 112
white-flower'd elder-thicket from the / Godiva 63
Fly o'er waste fens and windy /'s. Sir Galahad 60
The houseless ocean's heaving /, The Voyoge 30
And pace the sacred old familiar /'s, Enoch Arden 625
I fret By many a / and fallow. The Brook 44
all about the/ 's you caught His weary daylong chirping, „ 52
Sunning himself in a waste / alone — Aylmer's Field 9
became in other f's K mockery to the yeomen „ 496
Fairer than Ruth among the f's of com, „ 680
That all neglected places of the / „ 693
Follows the mouse, and all is open /. „ 853
woman heard his foot Return from pacings in the /, Lucretitis 6
makes Thy glory fly along the ItaUan /, „ 71
answer'd in her sleep From hollow f's : Princess, Pro. 67
when a / of com Bows all its ears „ i 236
First in the /: some ages had been lost ; „ ii 153
for indeed these f's Are lovely, „ Hi 341
They faint on hill or / or river : „ iv 14
waive your claim : If not, the f oughten /, „ v 297
ran the / Flat to the garden-wall : „ 361
Man for the / and woman for the hearth : „ 447
Thro' open / into the lists they wound Timorously ; „ vi 84
swarms of men Darkening her female /: „ vii 34
after that dark night among the f's „ 73
' The f's are fair beside them. Voice and the P. 17
The /, the chamber and the street. In Mem. viii 11
beast that takes His license in the / of time, „ xxvii 6
And loiter'd in the master's /, „ xxxvii 23
My paths are in the f's I know, „ xlZl
The bowlings from forgotten f's ; „ xli 16
And those five years its richest /. „ xlvi 12
A bounded /, nor stretching far ; „ 14
And hill and wood and / did print „ Ixxix 7
trees Laid their dark arms about the /. (repeat) „ xcv 16, 52
set To leave the pleasant f's and farms ; „ cii 22
Its lips in the / above are dabbled Maud 7 t 2
Go not, happy day, From the shining f's, „ xvii 2
Came night and day, and rooted in the f's. Com, of Arthur 24
Sware on the / of death a deathless love. „ 132
from the f oughten / he sent Ulfius, „ 135
F after /, up to a height, the peak Haze-hidden, „ 429
Far shone the f's of May thro' open door, „ 460
mount That rose between the forest and the /. Gareth and L. 191
gate shone Only, that open'd on the / below : „ 195
abide Without, among the cattle of the /. „ 274
Uther, reft From my dead lord a / with violence : „ 335
Yet, for the / was pleasant in our eyes, „ 337
reft iLS of it Perforce, and left us neither gold nor /.' „ 339
' Whether would ye ? gold or /? ' ,,340
Field
210
Fiery
Field (s) {continiied) The / was pleasant in my husband's
eye.' And Arthiir, ' Have thy pleasant / again, Gareth and L. 342
shone far-off as shines A / of charlock „ 388
paiised without, beside The / of tourney, „ 664
But by the / of tourney lingering yet „ 736
Silent the silent / They traversed. „ 1313
pitch'd Beside the Castle Perilous on flat /, „ 1363
what knight soever be in / Lays claim Marr. of Geraint 486
Geraint Beheld her first in /, awaiting him, „ 540
For these are his, and all the / is his, Geraint and E. 226
I will fetch you forage from all f's, „ 628
Are scatter'd,' and he pointed to the /, „ 802
One from the bandit scatter'd in the /, „ 818
My mother on his corpse in open /; (repeat) Merlin and V. 43, 73
in the / were Lancelot's kith and kin, Lancelot and E. 466
spoke, and vanish'd suddenly from the / „ 508
So that he went sore wounded from the /: „ 600
crown'd with gold, Eamp in the /, „ 664
For pleasure all about a / of flowers : „ 793
Then rose Elaine and glided thro' the f's, „ 843
past Down thro' the dim rich city to the f's, „ 847
And drave her ere her time across the f's „ 890
Death, hke a friend's voice from a distant / „ 999
Past hke a shadow thro' the /, „ 1140
flame At sunrise till the people in far f's, Holy Grail 243
in one full / Of gracious pastime, „ 323
where it smote the plowshare in the /, „ 403
But found a silk pavilion in a /, „ 745
And whipt me into the waste f's far away ; „ 788
I stinted stroke in foughten/? „ 860
Who may not wander from the allotted / „ 908
and the sweet smell of the f's Past, Pelleas and E. 5
the flat / by the shore of Usk Holden : „ 164
all day long Sir Pelleas kept the / With honour : „ 168
And he was left alone in open /. „ 208
flimg His rider, who call'd out from the dark /, „ 575
Caught his unbroken limbs from the dark /, „ 585
in among the faded f's To furthest towers ; Last Tournament 53
Enchair'd tomorrow, arbitrate the/; „ 104
With all the kmdlier colours of the/.' „ 224
' Free love — ^free /—we love (repeat) „ 275, 281
Showing a shower of blood in a / noir, „ 433
she thought ' He spies a / of death ; Guinevere 134
I mark'd Him in the flowering of His/'s, Pass, of Arthur 10
and the harmless glamour of the/; „ 52
the pale King glanced across the / Of battle : „ 126
Had held the / of battle was the King : „ 138
And bore him to a chapel nigh the /. „ 176
For I heard it abroad in the f's First Quarrd 32
Hard was the frost in the /, „ 39
what joy can be got from a cowslip out of the /; In the Child. Hasp. 36
breezes of May blowing over an English /, Def. of Lucknow 83
ears for Christ in this wild / of Wales — Sir J. Oldcastle 13
a crowd Throng'd the waste / about the city gates : „ 40
and the harvest died from the /, V. of Maeldune 30
Silent palaces, quiet f's of eternal sleep ! „ 80
By qmet/'«, a slowly-dying power, De Prof., Two G. 24
the / with blood of the fighters Flow'd, Batt. of Brunanburh 24
hear the voices from the /. Locksley H., Sixty 116
cow shall butt the ' Lion passant ' from his /. „ 248
out of the /, And over the brow and away. Heavy Brigade 63
a careless people flock'd from the f's Bead Prophet 7
Produce of your / and flood. Open. I. and C. Exhib. 5
in this pleasant vale we stand again. The / of Eima, Demeter and P. 35
Blessing his /, or seated in the dusk Of even, „ 125
glide Along the silent / of Asphodel. „ 153
mine the hall, the farm, the /; The Ring 169
She comes on waste and wood. On farm and/: Prog, of Spring 23
and I gaze at a / in the Past, By an Evolution. 17
What sight so lured him thro' the f's Far-far-away 1
waste and / and town of alien tongue, St. Telemachus 30
I reap No revenue from the / of unbelief. Akbar's Dream 67
And laughs upon thy / as well as mine, „ 106
Nor in the / without were seen or heard „ 195
And plow the Present like a /, Mechanophilus 31
Field-flower (See also Field (adj.)) would they grew Like
f-f's everywhere ! Princess Hi 252
Field-of-battle Arthur reach'd a /-o-& Com. of Arthur 9&
Fiend Who give the F himself his due. To F. D. Maurice 6
the / best knows whether woman or man Maud I il5
when he died, his soul Became a F, Balin and Balan 129
hold them outer /'s. Who leap at thee to tear thee ; „ 141
but in him His mood was often like a /, Lancelot and E. 251
drawn his claws athwart thy face ? or / ? Last Tournament 63
In fuming sulphur blue and green, a / — „ 617
like so many /'s in their hell — Def. of Luchnow 33
we have sent them very f's from Hell ; Columbus 184
'The F would yell, the grave would yawn. The Flight 51
the night. While the F is prowling. Forlorn 66
Fierce Kate loves well the bold and /; Kate 29
My heart, pierced thro' with / delight, Fatima 34
Twisted hard in / embraces. Vision of Sin 40
/ old man FoUow'd, and under his own lintel Aylmer's Field 330
Methought I never saw so / a fork — Lucretius 28
I urged the / inscription on the gate. Princess Hi 141
That bright and / and fickle is the South, „ iv 97
a tide of / Invective seem'd to wait „ 471
He yielded, wroth and red, with / demur : „ i; 358
I felt my veins Stretch with / heat ; „ 538
half the wolf's-milk curdled in their veins. The /
triumvirs ; „ vii 131
He heard a / mermaiden cry. Sailor Boy 6
Mad and maddening all that heard her in her / volubility, Boadicea 4
Yell'd and shriek'd between her daughters in her / volubility. „ 72
/ extremes employ Thy spirits in the darkening
leaf. In Mem. Ixxxviii 5
Till I with as / an anger spoke, Maud II i 17
In that / light which beats upon a throne. Bed. of Idylls 27
Her own brood lost or dead, lent her / teat Com. of Arthur 28
the lords Of that / day were as the lords of this, „ 216
When I was kitchen-knave among the rest F was the
hearth, Gareth and L. 1010
flash'd the / shield, All sun ; „ 1030
When I that knew him / and turbulent Eefused
her Marr. of Geraint 447
Thy too / manhood would not let thee he. Balin and Balan 74
In those / wars, struck hard — „ 177
Nor ever touch'd / wine, nor tasted flesh. Merlin and V. 627
' He learnt and wam'd me of their / design Lancelot and E. 274
So / a gale made havoc here of late Holy Grail 729
Let the / east scream thro' your eyelet-holes, Pelleas and E. 469
But Pelleas lifted up an eye so / She quail'd ; „ 601
wrath which forced my thoughts on that / law, Guinevere 537
And / or careless looseners of the faith. To the Queen ii 52
Hued with the scarlet of a / sunrise. Lover's Tale i 353
F in the strength of far descent, „ 382
Plunged in the last / charge at Waterloo, Sisters (E. and E.) 64
he, the / Soldan of Egypt, Columbus 97
Had the / ashes of some fiery peak Been hurl'd St. Telemachus 1
Blown by the / beleaguerers of a town, Achilles over the T. 20
because the / beast found A wiser than herself, Tiresias 151
By changes all too / and fast Freedom 22
Fierceness With such a / that I swoon'd Holy Grail 845
Fierier F and stormier from restraining, Balin and Balan 229
Fieriest But spurr'd at heart with / energy To J. M. K. 7
Fiery for / thoughts Do shape themselves within me, (Enone 246
roaring deeps and / sands, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 115
To make my blood run quicker. Used all her / will, Will Water. HI
cloud Cuts off the / highway of the sun, Enoch Arden 130
chance-met eyes Flash into / life from nothing, Aylmer's Field 130
Or down the / gulf as talk of it, Princess Hi 287
And as the / Sirius alters hue, „ v 262
shower the / grain Of freedom broadcast „ ^^
And into / splinters leapt the lance, „ 494
Leapt / Passion from the brinks of death ; „ vii 156
Clash'd with his / few and won ; Ode on Well. 100
Not sting the / Frenchman into war. Third of Feb. 4
Deep tulips dash'd with / dew. In Mem. Ixxxiii 11
here and there A / finger on the leaves ; „ xcix 12
which outran The hearer in its / course ; „ cix 8
Jl
Fiery
211
Fight
Fiery (continued) all at / speed the two Shock'd on the
central bridge,
Sir Balinwitha/'Ha!
But follow Vivien thro' the / flood !
A / family passion for the name Of Lancelot,
All in a / dawning wild with wind
I saw the / face as of a child
For every / prophet in old times,
Shading his eyes till all the / cloud,
Like to a low-hung and a / sky
Brother-in-law — the / nearness of it —
A / scroll written over with lamentation and woe.
To vex the noon with / gems,
Gardh and L. 962
BdLin and Balan 393
454
Lancelot and. E. 477
1020
Holy Grail 466
876
Lover's Tale i 306
„ ii 61
Sisters (E. and E.) 173
Despair 20
Ancient Sage 265
and Suns along their / way, LocJcsley H., Sixty 203
While squirrels from our / beech Were bearing off
the mast. Pro. to Gen. Hamley 3
Three that were next in their / course. Heavy Brigade 21
lighted from below By the red race of / Phlegethon ; Demeter and P. 28
' A / phoenix rising from the smoke. The Ring 339
And you spurr'd your / horse, Happy 76
would wallow in / riot and revel On Kilaueu, Kapiolani 8
Quail not at the / mountain. Faith 3
and your / clash of meteorites ? God and the Univ. 3
Fiery-hot f-h to burst All barriers In Mem. cxiv 13
Fiery-new yet unkept, Had relish f-n, Will Water. 98
Fiery-short f-s was Cyril's counter-scoff, Princess v 307
Fife The murmurs of the drum and / Talking Oak 215
merrily-blowing shrill'd the martial /; Princess v 251
March with banner and bugle and / Maud I v\0
Fifteen I ha' work'd for him / years. First Quarrel 7
and for / days or for twenty at most. Def. of Lucknow 9
' Hold it for / days ! ' ,,105
and his winters were / score, V. of Maeldune 116
beiin chuch-warden mysen i' the parish fur / year. Church-warden, etc. 8
mountain-like San Philip that, of / hundred tons. The Revenge 40
Fifth To slant the / autumnal slope. In Mem. xxii 10
Your / September birthday. The Ring 423
Our Playwright may show In some / Act The Play 4
Fifty Better / years of Europe than a cycle
of Cathay. Locksley Hall 184
Seam'd with the shallow cares of / years : Aylmer's Field 814
Her that talk'd down the / wisest men ; Princess v 294
finding that of / seeds She often brings In Mem. Iv 11
these have clothed their branchy bowers With / Mays, „ Ixxvi 14
And / knights rode with them, Marr. of Geraint 44
Was wont to glance and sparkle like a gem Of
/ facets ; Geraint and E. 295
/ knights rode with them to the shores Of Severn, „ 954
I have not broken bread for / hours. Sir J. OldcasUe 199
F times the rose has flower'd and faded, F times
the golden harvest fallen. On Jub. Q. Victoria 1
Henry's / years are all in shadow, Gray with
distance Edward's / summers,
F years of ever-broadening Commerce ! F years
of ever-brightening Science ! F years of ever-
widening Empire !
Rose, on this terrace / years ago.
That blush of / years ago, my dear,
on our terrace here Glows in the blue of / miles away,
39
52
Roses on the T. 1
5
Ah, what shall I be at /
Fifty-fold ' My lord, you overpay me /-/.'
Fifty-three We are six ships of the line ; can we
fight with /-<?'
Fig F's out of thistles, silk from bristles,
the / ran up from the beach and rioted over the
land.
Are f's of thistles ? or grapes of thorns ?
Fight (s) Ere I rode into the /,
Laid by the tumult of the /.
pierce The blackest files of clanging /,
Clanging f's, and flaming towns.
He got it ; for their captain after /,
Sun-shaded in the heat of dusty f's)
some grand / to kill and make and end :
And what she did to Cyrus after /,
Maud I vi 31
Geraint and E. 220
The Revenge 7
Last Tournament 356
F. of Maeldune 58
Riflemen form / 10
Oriana 21
Margaret 26
Kate 26
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 116
Aylmer's Field 226
Princess ii 241
„ iv 591
V 366
Fight (s) (continued)
princess —
He that gain'd a hundred f's,
For each had warded either in the /,
So that I be not f all'n in /.
My lord is weary with the / before,
f leased To find him yet un wounded after /,
, myself, when flush'd with /,
free to stretch his limbs in lawful /,
having been With Arthur in the /
hear the manner of thy / and fall ;
Nor ever yet had Arthur fought a / Like this
chance and craft and strength in single f's,
But never a moment ceased the /
fought such a / for a day and a night
fevers, f's. Mutinies, treacheries —
Each was as brave in the /
red with blood the Crescent reels from /
some in / against the foe,
the charge, and the might of the / !
Who were held for a while from the /,
for he fought Thy / for Thee,
Struck by a poison'd arrow in the /,
The gladiators moving toward their /,
Ralph went down Uke a fire to the /
Fight (verb) She saw me /, she heard me call,
who would / and march and countermarch,
brother, where two / The strongest wins,
one Should come to / with shadows and to fall.
Nor would I / with iron laws,
I prove Your knight, and / your battle,
' F ' she said, ' And make us all we woiild be,
make yourself a man to / with men.
I was pledged To / in tourney for my bride,
what mother's blood You draw from, /;
F and / well strike and strike home.
one should / with shadows and should fall ;
she sees me /, Yea, let her see me fall !
I would sooner / thrice o'er than see it.'
king is scared, the soldier will not /,
a he which is part a truth is a harder matter to /.
Glory of Virtue, to /, to struggle,
She cannot / the fear of death.
teach true life to / with mortal wrongs.
It is better to / for the good than to rail
we that / for our fair father Christ,
Hereafter I will /.'
the cur Pluckt from the cur he f's with,
F, an thou canst : I have missed the only way,'
To / the brotherhood of Day and Night —
Far liefer had I / a score of times
Fair words were best for him who f's for thee ;
Such / not I, but answer scorn with scorn.
nor meet To / for gentle damsel,
thou goest, he will / thee first ;
yield him this again : 'tis he must /:
Said Gareth laughing, ' An he / for this,
will I / him, and will break his pride,
arms, arms to / my enemy ?
And / and break his pride, and have it of him.
this nephew, / In next day's tourney
thou, that hast no lady, canst not /.'
I will not / my way with gilded arms,
he will / for me. And win the circlet :
look at mine ! but wilt thou / for me,
' F therefore,' yell'd the youth.
The king who f's his people f's himself.
I liked a bigger feller to / wi'
can we / with fifty-three ?
fly them for a moment to / with them again.
only a hundred seamen to work the ship and to /,
' Shall we / or shall we fly ?
For to / is but to die !
manj^ were shatter'd, and so could / us no more —
he said ' i^ on ! / on ! (repeat)
something real, A gallant /, a noble
Princess, Con. 19
Ode on WeU. 96
Com. of Arthur 131
Marr. of Geraint 223
Geraint and E. 133
371
„ 660
754
Lancelot and E. 287
Pelleas and E. 347
Pass, of Arthur 93
106
The Revenge 57
,, 8o
Columbus 225
V. of Maeldune 5
Montenegro 6
Locksley H., Sixty 45
Heavy Brigade 13
36
Happy 15
Death of CEnone 26
St. Telemachus 54
The Tourney 3
Oriana 32
AuMey Court 40
Aylmer's Field 364
Princess i 10
w75
595
598
i;35
353
405
409
476
516
m226
„ Con. 60
Grandmother 32
Wages 3
In Mem. cxiv 10
Maud I xviii 54
„ /// vi 57
Com. of Arthur 510
Gareth and L. 447
702
792
857
944
946
953
1177
1295
1321
1345
Marr. of Geraint 221
282
416
475
493
Geraint and E. 21
Pelleas and E. 118
127
572
Pass, of Arthur 72
North. Cobbler 100
The Revenge 1
9
22
25
27
61
63,69
Fight
212
Find
Fight (verb) (continued) We shall live to / again and to
strike another blow.' The Revenge 95
We can /! But to be soldier aU day Def. of Lucknow 73
shall we / her ? shall we yield ? Locksley H., Sixty 115
he needs must / To make true peace his own, Epilogue 26
'e'd / wi' a will when 'e f owt ; Owd Boa 7
Balph would / in Edith's sight, The Tourney 1
Fighter rustiest iron of old f's' hearts ; Merlin and V. 574
With her hundred /'s on deck. The Revenge 34
the field with blood of the f's Flow'd, Batt. of Brunanburh 24
a flight of shadowy f's crost The disk, St. Tdemachus 23
Fighting ' No / shadows here ! Princess Hi 125
Yet it seem'd a dream, I dream'd Of /. „ v 493
ere his cause Be cool'd by /, Gareth and L. 703
In the great battle / for the King. Marr. of Geraint 596
In battle, / for the blameless King. Geraint and E. 970
All / for a woman on the sea. Merlin and V. 562
send her delegate to thrall These / hands of mine — Pdleas and E. 337
Figtree wild / split Their monstrous idols, Princess iv 79
Figure Faint as a / seen in early dawn Enoch Arden 357
Some / like a wizard pentagram The Brook 103
Tall as a / lengthen'd on the sand Princess vi 161
for so long a space Stared at the f's, Gareth and L. 232
comb wherein Were slabs of rock with f's, „ 1194
beneath five f's, armed men, „ 1205
carven with strange f's ; and in out The f's. Holy Grail 169
So the sweet / folded round with night Lover's Tale iv 219
Figured bears a skeleton / on his arms, Gareth and L. 640
In many a /leaf enroUs The total world In Mem. xliii 11
Fignre-head full-busted /-A Stared o'er the ripple Enoch Arden 54:3
Filament Seems but a cobweb / to link Lover's Tale i 376
Had seem'd a gossamer /up in air, „ 413
File The blackest /'s of clanging fight, Kate 26
in the foremost /'s of time — Locksley Hall 178
Filed grated down and / away with thought. Merlin and V. 623
jraial wars, and / faith, and Dido's pyre ; To Virgil 4
/ eyes Have seen the loneliness of earthly thrones, Prin. Beatrice 13
Fill (verb) or/'s The homed valleys all about, Supp. Confessions 151
f the sea-halls with a voice of power ; The Merman 10
Yet / my glass : give me one kiss : MiUer's D. 17
bursts that / The spacious times of great Elizabeth D. of F. Women 6
And tho' mine own eyes / with dew, To J. 8. 37
F's out the homely quickset-screens. On a Mourner 6
Should / and choke with golden sand — You ask me, why 24
A thought would / my eyes with happy dew ; Gardener's D. 197
those tremulous eyes that / with tears To hear me ? Tithonus 26
Saw the heavens / with commerce, Locksley Hall 121
Heard the heavens / with shouting, „ 123
' F the cup, and / the can : (repeat) Vision of Sin 95, 119, 203
' F the can, and/ the cup : (repeat) „ 131, 167
Musing on him that used to / it for her, Enoch Arden 208
from all the provinces, And / the hive.' Princess ii 98
gwrt half-science, / me with a faith, „ Con. 76
There twice a day the Severn f's ; In Mem. xix 5
prosperous labour f's The lips of men „ Ixxxiv 25
so / up the gap where force might fail Gareth and L. 1352
BaJa fake F's all the sacred Dee. Geraint and E. 930
in this heathen war the fire of God F's him : Lancelot and E. 316
Kmo Akthtje made new knights to / the gap PeUeas and E. 1
and f's The flower with dew ; Early Spring 45
felt a vacant hand F with his purse. To Mary Boyle 32
F out the spaces by the barren tiles. Prog, of Spring 43
The kingcup f's her footprint, „ 59
/ the hollows between wave and wave ; Akbar's Dream 161
FOl (s) weep my / once more, and cry myself to rest ! The Flight 6
nO'd the ground Shall be / with life anew. Nothing will Die 29
The right ear, that is / with dust. Two Voices 116
The woods were / so full with song, „ 455
And / the breast with purer breath. Miller's D. 92
and / with light The interval of sound. D. of F. Women 171
And / the house with clamour. The Goose 36
F I was with folly and spite, Edward Gray 15
They are / with idle spleen ; Vision of Sin 124
and / the shores With clamour. Enoch Arden 635
when their casks were / they took aboard : „ 646
Fill'd (continued) drank The magic cup that / itself
anew. Aylmer's Field 143
entering/ the house with sudden light. „ 682
F thro' and thro' with Love, a happy sleep. Princess vii 172
When / with tears that cannot fall, In Mem. xix 11
The streets were / with joyful sound, „ xxxi 10
/ a horn with wine and held it to her,) Geraint and E. 659
F all the genial courses of his blood „ 927
Sprang to her face and / her with delight ; Lancelot and E. 377
great tower / with eyes Up to the summit, Pelleas and E. 166
Till the sweet heavens have / it „ 510
Ascending, / his double-dragon'd chair. Last Tournament 144
and the ways Were / with rapine, Guinevere 458
larks F all the March of life !— Lover's Tale i 284
openings in the mountains / With the blue valley „ 330
F all with pure clear fire, „ ii 146
Fillest thou, that / all the room Of all my love. In Mem. cxii 5
Filling F with light And vagrant melodies The Poet 16
Fillip'd / at the diamond in her ear ; Godiva 25
Film with a grosser / made thick These heavy, homy
eyes. St. S. Stylites 200
Filmed Floats from his sick and / eyes, Supp. Confessions 166
Filmy wheel'd or lit the / shapes That haunt the dusk. In Mem. xcv 10
Filter'd The / tribute of the rough woodland. Ode to Memory 63
Filth shown the trath betimes. That old true /, Merlin and V. 47
poach'd / that floods the middle street, „ 798
insult, /, and monstrous blasphemies. Pass, of Arthur 114
fairest flesh at last is / on which the worm will feast ; Happy 30
women shrieking ' Atheist ' flur^ F from the roof, Ahbar's Dream 92
Filthy In / sloughs they roll a prurient skin, Palace of A rt 201
He believed This / marriage-hindering Mammon Aylmer's Field 374
monster lays His vast and / hands upon my will, Lucretius 220
Till the / by-lane rings to the yell of the trampled wife, Maud I i38
to outlearn the / friar. Sir J. Oldcastle 118
all that is / with all that is fair ? Vastness 32
Fin winks the gold / in the porphyry font : Princess vii 178
There is not left the twinkle of a / Geraint and E. 474
Finance poring over his Tables of Trade and F ; The Wreck 26
Final we trust that somehow good Will be the / goal of ill. In Mem. liv 2
trusted God was love indeed And love Creation's / law — „ Ivi Ii
---■-■ Kate 31
The form, the form 7
Two Voices 29
96
97
176
191
233
243
279
293
308
352
MiUer's D. 238
(Enone 155
L. C. V. de Vere 18
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 45
„ Con. 11
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 117
Ulysses 70
Day-Dm., Arrival 27
„ Moral 2
10
„ L' Envoi 37
Ep.Ji,
Sir Galahad £
Find She cannot / a fitting mate
for a moment blest To / my heart so near
Could / no statelier than his peers
And seem to /, but still to seek.
but to seem to / Asks what thou lackest.
Named man, may hope some truth to /,
I shall not fail to / her now.
seeking to undo One riddle, and to / the trae,
Wilt thou / passion, pain or pride ?
' We / no motion in the dead.'
In Nature can he nowhere /.
Could his dark wisdom / it out,
' As here we / in trances, men Forget the dream
With blessings which no words can /.
So shalt thou / me fairest.
Some meeker pupil you must /,
/ my garden-tools upon the granary floor :
it can't be long before I / release ;
But they smile, they / a music centred
To strive, to seek, to /, and not to yield.
till he / The quiet chamber far apart.
And if you / no moral there,
In bud, or blade, or bloom, may /,
f's a closer truth than this All-graceful head.
And, if you / a meaning there,
on lonely mountain-meres I / a magic bark ;
Until I /the holy Grail.
/ the precious morning hours were lost.
Suddenly set it wide to / a sign,
you / That you meant nothing —
should I / you by my doors again.
And being used to / her pastor texts,
To / a deeper in the narrow gloom
and / A sort of absolution in the sound
I should / he meant me well ;
Enoch Arden •
Aylmer's Field 31S
324
Sea Dreams i
Find
213
Fine
Fmd (continued) to / Their wildest wailings never out of
tune
beastlike as I / myself, Not manlike end myself ? —
Who fail to / thee, being as thou art
Whate'er my grief to / her less than fame,
But chafing me on fire to / my bride)
As yet we / in barbarous isles,
' But you will / it otherwise ' she said.
Less welcome / among us, if you came
I / you here but in the second place,
we should / the land Worth seeing ;
I go to mine own land For ever : / some other :
come thou down And / him ;
/ him dropt upon the firths of ice,
dance thee down To / him in the valley ;
He shall / the stubborn thistle bursting
Shall / the toppling crags of Duty scaled
I / myself often laughing at things
For it's easy to / a rhyme, (repeat)
and there I / him worthier to be loved.
And / in loss a gain to match ?
And glad to / thyself so fair,
So / 1 every pleasant spot In which we two
may / A flower beat with rain and wind,
Treasuring the look it cannot /,
' to / Another service such as this.'
Then might I /, ere yet the mom Breaks
And /'s ' I am not what I see,
She/'s the baseness of her lot,
fancies play To / me gay among the gay,
I / a trouble in thine eye,
A man upon a stall may /,
I / An image comforting the mind,
They would but / in child and wife
I / not yet one lonely thought
To / a stronger faith his own ;
He/'s on misty mountain-ground
I / no place that does not breathe
What / 1 in the highest place.
And / his comfort in thy face ;
God grant I may / it at last !
A glory I shall not /.
If I / the world so bitter When I am but twenty-five ?
blush'd To / they were met by my own ;
And so that he / what he went to seek,
I / whenever she touch'd on me
But come to her waking, / her asleep,
To / the arms of my true love Round me
we look at him. And / nor face nor bearing,
all in fear to / Sir Gawain or Sir Modred,
thou wilt / My fortunes all as fair
' Follow the faces, and we / it.
and all as glad to / thee whole,
Seek, till we /.'
' Full merry am I to / my goodly knave
To /, at some place I shall come at,
I rode, and thought to / Arms in your town,
how can Enid / A nobler friend ?
pleased To / hrni yet unwounded after fight.
With eyes to / you out however far,
And / that it had been the wolf's indeed :
sit, Until they / a lustier than themselves.'
And f's himself descended from the Saint
glad. Knightlike, to / his charger yet unlamed,
And none could / that man for evermore,
for still I / Your face is practised
hide it, hide it ; I shall / it out ;
To / a wizard who might teach the King
but did they / A wizard ? Tell me, was he like to
thee?
To dig, pick, open, / and read the charm :
And in the comment did I / the charm,
that if they / Some stain or blemish
vile term of yours, I / with grief !
listen to me, If / must / your wit :
Sea Dreams 230
Lucretius 231
268
Princess i 73
„ 166
„ a 122
200
„ 354
„ Hi 157
» 171
„ OT217
„ m200
206
210
Ode on WM. 206
215
Grandmother 92
Window, Ay Q, 12
In Mem., Pro. 40
t6
w27
via 9
14
xviii 19
XX 7
xxvi 13
xlvl
Ix 6
Ixvi 3
Ixviii 10
Ixxvii 9
Ixxxv 50
xc 7
23
xcvi 17
xcvii 2
, c 3
, cviii 9
, cix20
Mavd I ii 1
tj22
vi33
viii 7
xvi 3
xix 59
, 7/ ii 81
iv3
Com. of Arthur 71
Gareth and L. 325
902
1210
1239
1279
1291
Marr. of Geraint 219
417
792
Geraint and E. 371
428
864
Balin and Bcdan 19
101
428
Merlin and V. 211
366
528
583
612
„ 660
„ 683
831
„ 922
Lancelot and E. 148
Find (continued) thro' all hindrance /'s the man
Behind it,
0 Gawain, and ride forth and / the knight,
cease not from your quest until ye /.'
he bore the prize and could not / The victor,
f ail'd to / him, tho' I rode all round
' and / out our dear Lavaine.'
1 needs must hence And / that other,
Until I / the palace of the King.
Where Arthur fs the brand Excalibur.
if I / the Holy Grail itself And touch it.
Only I / not there this Holy Grail,
the pity To / thine own first love once more —
to / Caerleon and the King,
a merry one To / his mettle, good :
/ a nest and feels a snake, he drew :
I have flung thee pearls and/ thee swine.'
He / thy favour changed and love thee not ' —
0 let us in, that we may/ the light !
And weighing / them less ;
and could he / A woman in her womanhood
sigh'd to / Her journey done.
But in His ways with men I / Him not.
and / or feel a way Thro' this blind haze.
You cannot / their depth ; for they go back,
1 almost dread to / her, dumb ! '
' You promised to / me work near you,
and I shall not / him in Hell.
You will not / me here.
Fur I f's es I be that i' debt,
Ya wouldn't / Charlie's likes —
I / that it always can please Our children,
should / What rotten piles uphold their mason-
work,
denied to him. Who f's the Saviour
and / Nearer and ever nearer Him,
these eyes will / The men I knew.
With easy laughter / the gate Is bolted,
Ah God, should we / Him, perhaps,
coroner doubtless will / it a felo-de-se,
She f's the fountain where they wail'd ' Mirage ' !
he comes, and f's me dead.
She that f's a winter sunset fairer than
I found, and more than once, and stUl could /,
shall we / a changeless May ?
Would she / her human offspring this ideal man
at rest ?
Till you / the deathless Angel seated in the vacant
tomb. „ 278
May we /, as ages run. Open. I. and C. Exhib. 11
in amaze To / her sick one whole ; Demeter and P. 58
Howiver was I fur to / my rent Owd Rod 47
to / My Mother's diamonds hidden from her there, The Ring 141
Lancelot and E. 333
537
548
629
709
754
759
1051
Holy Grail 253
438
542
620
Pelleas and E. 21
199
437
Last Tournament 310
500
Guinevere 175
„ 192
„ 298
404
Pass, of Arthur 11
75
Lover's Tale i 80
iv 339
First Quarrel 52
Rizpah 74
Sisters (E. and E.) 187
Village Wife 65
75
In the Child. Hosp. 51
Sir J. Oldcastle 66
115
De Prof., Two G. 52
Tiresias 175
„ 200
Despair 56
„ 115
Ancient Sage 77
The Flight 72
Locksley H., Sixty 22
121
156
234
who should say — ' that those who lose can /.'
groping for it, could not / One likeness.
In your sweet babe she f's but you —
I felt for what I could not /, the key,
Might / a flickering glimmer of relief
groans to see it, f's no comfort there.
/ the white heather wherever you go,
to / Me or my coffin ?
Fabewell, whose living like I shall not /,
F her warrior Stark and dark
But / their limits by that larger light,
I will / the Priest and confess.
I / her with the eye.
O well for him that f's a friend,
Findable Not / here — content, and not content.
Finding / neither light nor murmur there
And / that of fifty seeds
/ there unconsciously Some image of himself —
Fine (See also Fairy-fine) What is / within thee
growing coarse
F of the /, and shy of the shy ? F little hands,
/little feet—
282
336
365
„ 440
To Mary Boyle 47
Romney's R. 45
108
143
In Mem. W. G. Ward 1
To Master of B. 19
Akbar's Dream 99
Bandit's Death 18
Mechanophilus 12
The Wanderer 5
Sisters (E. and E.) 132
Enoch Arden 687
In Mem. Iv 11
Ded. of Idylls 2
Locksley Hall 46
Window, Letter 2
Fine
214
Fire
Fine (continued) Cuck-oo ! ' was ever a May so /? Window, Ay 10
hair Is golden like thy Mother's, not so /.' The Ring 104
From head to ancle /, Talking Oak 224
in / linen, not a hair Ruffled upon the scarfskin, Aylmer's Field 659
In that / air I tremble, all the past Princess vii 354
This / old world of ours is but a child „ Con. 77
Broad brows and fair, a fluent hair and /, High
nose, a nostril large and /, and hands Large,
fair and/! — Gareth and L. 464
fair and /, forsooth ! Sir Fine-face, Sir Fair-hands ?
but see thou to it That thine own fineness,
Lancelot, some / day „ 474
Such / reserve and noble reticence, Geraint and E. 860
and your / epithet Is accurate too. Merlin and V. 532
lady never made unwilling war With those / eyes : „ 604
for / plots may fail, „ 820
Told him that her / care had saved his life. Lancelot and E. 863
But there the / Gawain will wonder at me, „ 1054
Then came the / Gawain and wonder'd at her, „ 1267
And win me this / circlet, Pelleas, PeUeas and E. 128
a wire as musically as thou Some such / song — Last Tournament 324
I thought I could not breathe in that / air Guinevere 645
Flying by each / ear, an Eastern gauze Iiover's Tale iv 291
F an' meller 'e mun be by this. North. Cobbler 101
I warrant ye soom / daay — Spinster's S's. 63
An' my oan / Jackman i' purple „ 106
' This model husband, this / Artist ' ! Romney's R. 124
When / Philosophies would faU, Akbar's Dream 140
Fine-face Sir F-f, Sir Fair-hands ? Gareth and L. 475
Fineness some pretext of / in the meal Enoch Arden Z^l
For often / compensated size ; Princess ii 149
That thine own /, Lancelot, Garelh and L. 476
force might fail With skiU and /. „ 1352
Finn Soothe him with thy / fancies, Locksley Hall 54
A random string Your/ female sense offends. I) ay- Dm., L' Envoi 2
may soul to som Strike thro' a / element of
her own ? Aylmer's Field 579
And like a / light in Ught. In Mem. xci 16
Who wants the / politic sense To mask, Mavd I vi 47
this egg of mine Was / gold than any goose can
lay ; Gareth and L. 43
I, the / brute rejoicing in my hounds. By an Evolution. 7
tho' somewhat / than their own, ,, 13
Finest because he was The / on the tree. Talking Oak 238
Are touch'd, are tum'd to / air. Sir Galahad 72
Of / Gothic lighter than a fire. Princess, Pro. 92
Finger (adj.) seem'd All-perfect, nnish'd to the / nail. Edwin Morris 22
Finger (s) lets his rosy f's play About his mother's
neck, Supp. Confessions 42
weary with a f's touch Those writhed limbs Clear-headed friend 22
dare to kiss Thy taper f's amorously, Madeline 44
Kate snaps her f's at my vows ; Kate 19
Thro' rosy taper f's drew Her streaming curls Mariana in the S. 15
Three f's round the old silver cup — Miller's D. 10
With rosy slender f's backward drew CEnone 176
And on thy heart a / lays. On a Mourner 11
One rose, but one, by those fair f's cull'd, Gardener's D. 150
And with a flving / swept my lips, „ 246
To save her httle / from a scratch Edwin Morris 63
Baby f's, waxen touches, Locksley HaU 90
' You would not let your little / ache Godiva 22
f's steal And touch upon the master-chord Will Water. 26
Enoch's golden ring had girt Her /, Enoch Arden 158
Suddenly put her / on the text, „ 497
he dug His f's into the wet earth, „ 780
My lady with her f's interlock'd, Aylmer's Field 199
(I kept the book and had my / in it) Princess, Pro. 63
And takes a lady's / with all care, „ 173
now a pointed /, told them all ; ,,1; 270
she laid A feeling / on my brows, „ vi 121
innocent arms And lazy lingering f's. „ 139
With trembling f's dia we weave The holly In Mem, xxx 1
God's / touch'd him, and he slept. „ Ixxxv 20
A fiery / on the leaves ; ,, xcix 12
With petulant thumb and /, shrilling, Garelh and L. 750
Finger (s) {continued) Myself would work eye dim, and
/ lame, Marr. of Geraint 628
He sits imarm'd ; I hold a / up ; Geraint and E. 337
moving back she held Her / up, „ 453
clench'd her f's till they bit the palm, Lancelot and E. 611
In colour like the f'sota, hand Before a burning taper. Holy Gra/il 693
one with shatter'd f's dangling lame. Last Tournament 60
had let one / lightly touch The warm white apple „ 716
Touch'd by the adulterous / of a time To the Queen ii 43
placed My ring upon the / of my bride. Sisters (E. and E.) 214
Death at the glimpse of a / Def. of Lucknow 23
nor voice Nor / raised against him — Sir J. Oldcastle 45
drew the ring From his dead /, The Ring 218
His / '5 were so stiff en'd by the frost „ 239
mark ran All round one / pointed straight, „ 453
worn the ring — Then torn it from her /, „ 456
Finger-ache Who never knewest f-a, Gareth and L. 87
Fingering / at the hair about his Up, Princess v 303
F at his sword-handle imtil he stood Pelleas and E. 442
Finger-nail {See also Finger (adj.)
crush'd with a tap Of my f-n on the sand, Maud II ii 22
Fingers an' to^s (a disease in turnips) tonups was haafe
on 'em fat. Church-warden, etc. 4
Finger-tips she sway'd The rein with dainty f-t, Sir L. and Q. G. 41
FinisJs grasping the pews And oaken / Aylmer's Field 823
Finish I leave not till I / this fair quest, Gareth and L. 774
' Ay, wilt thou / it ? Sweet lord, „ 776
Finished when four years were wholly /, Palace of Art 289
Of such a / chasten'd purity. Isabel 41
seem'd All-perfect, / to the finger-nail. Edwin Morris 22
' It is /. Man is made.' Making of Man 8
Finite-infinite wrought Not Matter, nor the /-i, De Prof ., Two G. 54:
Sun, sun, and sun, thro' f-i space In f-i Time — „ 45
Finn and chanted the triumph of F, V. of Maddune 48
And we sang of the triumphs of F, „ 88
Go back to the Isle of F „ 124
I landed again, with a tithe of my men, on the Isle
of F. „ 130
Fir tall / '5 and oiu- fast-falling burns ; Gareth and L. 91
glories of the moon Below black /'s. Lover's Tale ii 111
Fire (s) {See also Afire, Altar-fire, Hell-fire, Idol-fires,
Rick-fire) a bolt of / Would rive the slumbrous
summer noon Supp. Confessions 10
the storm Of running/ '5 and fluid range „ 147
Until the latter / shall heat the deep ; The Kraken 13
Thou who stealest /, From the fountains Ode to Memory 1
Tho' one did fling the /. The Poet 30
Losing his / and active might Eleanore 104
a languid / creeps Thro' my veins „ 130
with sudden /'s Flamed over : Bu/)naparte 11
Like Stephen, an unquenched /. Two Voices 219
O Love, O /! once he drew With one long kiss Faiima 19
from beyond the noon a / Is pour'd upon the hills, „ 30
at their feet the crocus brake like /, CEnone 96
for she says A / dances before her, „ 264
All earth and air seem only burning /.' „ 268
Burnt like a fringe of /. Palace of Art ^
slow-flaming crimson /'s From shadow'd grots „ 50
And highest, snow and /. „ 84
She howl'd aloud, ' I am on / within. „ 285
wild marsh-marigold shines like / May Queen 31
blasts That rvm before the fluttering tongues of /; D. of F. Women 30
their /'s Love tipt his keenest darts; „ 173
The glass blew in, the / blew out. The Goose 49
hung From Allan's watch, and sparkled by the /. Dora 136
Or biutt'd in /, or boil'd in oil, St. 8. Stylites 52
Sit with their wives by/ 's, „ 108
Have scrambled past those pits of /, „ 184
beat the twilight into flakes of /. Tithonus 42
and winks behind a slowly-dying /. Locksley HaU 136
with rain or hail, or / or snow ; „ 193
On the hall-hearths the festal /'s, Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 14
The / shot up, the martin flew, „ Revival 11
But in my words were seeds of /. The Letters 28
Fall from his Ocean-lane of /, The Voyage 19
Jl
Fire
215
Fire
Fire (s) {contimied) With wakes of / we tore the dark ; The Voyage 52
' No, I cannot praise the / In your eye — Vision of Sin 183
All-kindled by a still and sacred /, Enoch Arden 71
Keep a clean hearth and a clear / for me, „ 192
And flung her down upon a couch of /, Aylmer's Field 574
flood, /, earthquake, thunder, wrought „ 639
as not passing thro' the / Bodies, but souls — „ 671
No desolation but by sword and/? „ 748
a /, The / that left a roofless Ihon, Liicretiv^ 64
altho' his / is on my face Blinding, „ 144
her arm lifted, eyes on / — Princess, Pro. 41
Of finest Gothic lighter than a /, „ 92
made to kill Time by the / in winter.' „ 205
But chafing me on / to find my bride) „ i 166
Burnt like the mystic / on a mast-head, „ iv 274
bloom As of some / against a stormy cloud, „ 384
The next, Uke/ he meets the foe, ' „ 583
red-faced war has rods of steel and/; „ v 118
living hearts that crack within the / „ 379
the /'s of Hell Mix with his hearth : „ 454
out of stricken helmets sprang the /. „ 495
Break from a darken'd future, crown'd with/, „ vi 175
Flash, ye cities, in rivers of /! W. to Alexander 19
the tongue is a / as you know, my dear, the tongue
is a /. Grandmother 28
moon like a rick on / was rising over the dale, „ 39
The giant windows' blazon'd f's. The Daisy 58
Then thorpe and byre arose in /, The Victim 3
At his highest with sunrise /; Voice and the P. 30
Thunder, a flying / in heaven, Boddicea 24
many a / before them blazed : Spec, of Iliad 10
many a / between the ships and stream „ 17
Sat fifty in the blaze of burning /; „ 20
And f's bum clear, And frost is here Window, Winter 4
The /'s are all the clearer, „ 16
king of the wrens with a crovm of /. „ Ay 16
A loonung bastion fringed with /. In Mem. xv 20
Is shrivell'd in a fruitless /, „ liv 11
Labumiuns, dropping- wells of /. „ Ixxxiii 12
shine Beside the never-lighted /. „ Ixxxiv 20
But on her forehead sits a /: „ cxiv 5
And compass'd by the f's of Hell ; „ cxxvii 17
And on the downs a rising/: „ Con. 108
/ of a foolish pride flash'd over Mavd I iv 16
Cold f's, yet with power to bum and brand „ xviii 39
f's of Hell brake out of thy rising sun, The f's of
HeU and of Hate; „ 7/ { 9
blood-red blossom of war with a heart of /. „ III vi 53
/of God Descends upon thee in the battle-field: Com. of Arthur 128
And all at once all round him rose in /, „ 389
the child and he were clothed in /. „ 390
echo'd by old folk beside their /'s For comfort „ 417
the herd was driven, F glimpsed ; „ 433
a city all on / With sun and cloth of gold, „ 479
I will walk thro' /, Mother, to gain it — Gareth and L. 133
' Will ve walk thro' /? Who walks thro' / will
hardly heed the smoke. „ 142
/, That lookt half-dead, brake bright, „ 684
For an your / be low ye kindle mine ! ,,711
But up hke / he started : „ 1123
forage for the horse, and flint for /. „ 1277
Glow'd like the heart of a great / at Yule, Marr. of Geraint 559
night of /, when Edym sack'd their house, „ 634
loosed in words of sudden / the wrath Geraint and E. 106
In a hollow land. From which old /'s have broken,
men may fear Fresh / and ruin. „ 822
/ of Heaven has kiU'd the barren cold, Balin and Balan 440
/ of heaven is not the flame of Hell, (repeat)
Yet in your frosty cells ye feel the/!
' The / of Heaven is on the dusty ways.
' The / of Heaven is lord of all things good, And
starve not thou this / within thy blood,
[ This / of heaven, This old sun-worship,
into such a song, such / for fame.
„ 443, 447,
451,455
„ 446
448
452
456
Merlin and V. 417
Fire (s) (continued) Rage like a / among the noblest
names. Merlin and V. 802
Her godlike head crown'd with spiritual /, „ 837
in this heathen war the / of God Fills him : Lancelot and E. 315
shot red /and shadows thro' the cave, „ 414
So ran the tale like / about the court, „ 734
F in dry stubble a nine-days' wonder flared : „ 735
wrapt In unremorsef ul folds of rolling /. Holy Grail 261
while ye follow wandering f's Lost in the quagmire ! „ 319
most of us would follow wandering f's, (repeat) „ 369, 599
years of death, Sprang into /: „ 497
Sprang into / and vanish'd, „ 506
Must be content to sit by httle f's. „ 614
A mocking/: ' what other / than he, „ 670
methought I spied A dying / of madness „ 768
most of them would foUow wandering /'s, „ 891
Burnt as a Uving / of emeralds, Pdleas and E. 35
A vision hovering on a sea of /, „ 52
a sacrifice Kindled by / from heaven ; „ 146
thro' his heart The / of honour and all noble deeds Flash'd, „ 278
maiden snow mingled with sparks of /. Last Tournament 149
Who sits and gazes on a faded /, „ 157
Arthur's vows on the great lake of /. „ 345
one was water and one star was /, „ 736
Pray for him that he scape the doom of /, Guinevere 347
The children bom of thee are sword and /, „ 425
making all the night a steam of /. „ 599
land of old unheaven from the abyss By/, Pass, of Arthur 83
and blew Fresh / into the sun. Lover's Tale i 319
Thy f's from heaven had touch'd it, „ 439
dragonfly Shot by me like a flash of purple /. „ ii 17
Fill'd all with pure clear /, „ 146
Had suck'd the / of some forgotten sun, „ iv 194
and all / again Thrice in a second, „ 323
if my boy be gone to the / ? Rizpah 78
an' I seead 'im a-gittin' o' /; North. Cobbler 26
an' 'e shined like a sparkle o' /. „ 48
leaves i' the middle to kindle the /; Village Wife 72
F from ten thousand at once of the rebels Def. of Lucknow 22
Sharp is the / of assault, „ 57
thou bringest Not peace, a sword, a /. Sir J. OldcasUe 36
and life Pass in the / of Babylon ! „ 124
Who rose and doom'd me to the /. „ 172
How now, my soul, we do not heed the/? „ 191
For I must live to testify by /.' „ 206
Thro' the / of the tulip and poppy, V. of Maddune 43
And we came to the Isle of ^ : „ 71
For the peak sent up one league of / „ 72
There were some leap'd into the/; „ 76
Dashing the f's and the shadows of dawn „ 99
with set of sun Their f's flame thickly, Achilles over the T. 11
To see the dread, unweariable / „ 27
Shrine-shattering earthquake, /, flood, thimderbolt, Tiresias 61
On one far height in one far-shining/. „ 185
' One height and one far-shining /.' „ 186
Flashing with f's as of God, Despair 16
and a smoke who was once a pillar of /, „ 29
Love is /, and bums the feet The Flight 68
cut his bit o' turf for the /? Tomorrow 65
Gone the /'s of youth, the follies, LocTcsley H., Sixty 39
Gone like f's and floods and earthquakes „ 40
F's that shook me once, but now to silent ashes „ 41
/ of fever creeps across the rotted floor, „ 223
The f's that arch this dusky dot — Epilogue 52
Ihon's lofty temples robed in /, To Virgil 2
One shriek'd ' The f's of Hell ! ' Dead Prophet 80
To and thro' the Doomsday /, Hden's Tower 10
all the hateful /'s Of torment, Demeter and P. 151
'e coom'd thruf the f wi' my bairn i' 'is mouth Owd Bod 92
the / was a-raagin' an' raavin' „ 110
Fur we moiint 'ev naw moor/'s — „ 118
vows that are snapt in a moment of /; Vastness 26
/ from Heaven had dash'd him dead, Happy 83
blasted to the deathless / of Hell. „ 84
lured me from the household / on earth. Romney's R. 40
Fire
216
Fit
Fite (s) (cantinued) The coals of /you heap upon my head Romney's R. 14cl
If the lips were touch'd with / Parnassus 17
the / within him would not falter ; . „ 19
Stark and dark in his funeral /. To Master of B. 20
mixt herself with him and past in /. Death of CEnone 106
' Is earth On / to the West ? St. Telemachus 19
were seen or heard F^s of Silttee, Akbar's Dream 196
passing souls thro' / to the /, The Dawn 4
Ralph went down like a / to the fight The Tourney 3
in the glare of deathless / ! FaiA 8
/ — thro' one that will not shame Gareth and L. 1310
Fire (verb) The furzy prickle / the dells, Two Voices 71
And /'s your narrow casement glass, Miller's D. 243
I, by Lionel sitting, saw his face F, Lover's Tale iv 323
Now let it speak, and you /, Def. of Lucknow 29
It is charged and we /, and they run. „ 68
Fire-balloon a f-h Rose gem-like up Princess, Pro. 74
Firebrand this / — gentleness To such as her ! „ i) 167
Fire-crown'd The f-c king of the wrens. Window, Ay. 8
Fired Not a gun was /. The Captain 40
man with knobs and wires and vials / A cannon ; Princess, Pro. 65
Now / an angry Pallas on the helm, ,, vi 367
He rose at dawn and, / with hope. Sailor Boy 1
he saw F from the west, far on a hill, Lancelot and E. 168
the heat Of pride and glory / her face ; Pelleas and E. 172
that Gawain / The hall of MerUn, „ 517
echoing yell with yell, they / the tower. Last Tournament 478
F all the pale face of the Queen, Guinevere 357
Fire-fly Glitter like a swarm of fire-jlies Locksley Hall 10
The /-/ wakens : waken thou with me. Princess vii 179
Firefly-like glitter f-l in copse And linden alley : „ i 208
Fire-hollowing F-h this in Indian fashion, fell Enoch Arden 569
Fireside her old / Be cheer'd with tidings of the bride, In Mem. xl 22
at your own /, With the evil tongue Maud / j; 50
Firewood heap'd Their /, and the winds Spec, of Iliad 7
Finn (adj. and adv.) Not swift nor slow to change,
but /: Love thou thy land 31
With measured footfall / and mild. Two Voices 413
Thereon I built it /. Palace of Art 9
Like Virtue /, like Knowledge fair. Voyage 68
His resolve Upbore him, and /faith, Enoch Arden 800
/ upon his feet. And like an oaken stock Golden Year 61
Not one stroke /. Romney's R. 115
he stood /; and so the matter hung ; (repeat) The Brook 144, 148
Her / will, her fix'd purpose. The Ring 293
/ Tho' compass'd by two armies Princess v 344
Some civic manhood / against the crowd — • „ Con. 57
keep the soldier /, the statesman pure : Ode on Well. 222
Met his full frown timidly /, and said ; Geraint and E. 71
felt Her low / voice and tender government. „ 194
Firm (s) Head of all the golden-shafted /, Princess ii 405
Firmament Shoot your stars to the /, On Jul. Q. Victoria 17
Firm-based stand F-b with all her Gods. Tiresias 142
Firmer Stept forward on a / leg, Will Water. 123
And slowly forms the /mind, In Mem. xviii 18
mine is the / seat, Lancelot and E. 446
Firmly Will / hold the rein. Politics 6
Firmness and said to him With timid /, Geraint and E. 140
Firry heard the tender dove In / woodlands making moan ; Miller's D. 42
First (adj.) {SeealsoTvak) in her /sleep earth breathes stilly : Leonine Eleg. 7
When the / matin-song hath waken'd loud Ode to Memory 68
In setting round thy / experiment „ 81
Needs must thou dearly love thy / essay, „ 83
The / house by the water-side, L. of Shalott iv 34
From that / nothing ere his birth Two Voices 332
For is not our / year forgot ? „ 368
foundation-stones were laid Since my / memory ? ' Palace of Art 236
Dan Chaucer, the / warbler, whose sweet breath D. of Fr- Women 5
Love at / sight, first-bom, and heir to all, Gardener's D. 189
beheld her ere she knew my heart, My /, last love ; „ 277
once I ask'd him of his early life. And his / passion ; Edwin Morris 24
when the / low matin-chirp hath grown Full quire, Love and Duty 98
Or this / snowdrop of the year St. Agnes' Eve 11
' Tell me tales of thy / love — Vision of Sin 163
In him woke, With his / babe's / cry, Enoch Arden 85
First (adj.) {continued) Has she no fear that her/ husband
lives ? ' Enoch Arden 806-
Leolin's / nurse was, five years after, hers : Aylmer's Field 79
and the / embrace has died Between them, Lucretius 3
Was it the / beam of my latest day ? ,,59
Huge Ammonites, and the / bones of Time ; Princess, Pro. 15
took advantage of his strength to be F in the field : „ ii 153
' Fresh as the / beam glittering on a sail, „ iv 44
Deep as / love, and wild with all regret ; „ 57
lines of green that streak the white Of the / snowdrop's
inner leaves; „ v 197
From our / Charles by force we wrung our claims. Third of Feb. 26
That was the / time, too. Grandmother 61
Since our / Sun arose and set. In Mem. xxiv 8
Where thy / form was made a man ; „ Ixi 10
F love, / friendship, equal powers, „ Ixxxv 107
Seal'd her mine from her / sweet breath. Maud I xix 41
But those / days had golden hours for me. Com. of Arthur 357
let my name Be hidd'n, and give me the / quest, Gareth and L. 545
' I have given him the / quest : ,,582
In the / shallow shade of a deep wood, Geraint and E. 119
O'er the four rivers the / roses blew, „ 764
who held and lost with Lot In that / war, Balin and Balan 2
which ruin'd man Thro' woman the / hour : Merlin and V. 363
Hurt in his / tilt was my son. Sir Torre. Lancelot and E. 196
never woman yet, since man's / fall, „ 859
Tliis is not love : but love's / flash in youth, „ 949
Embraced me, and so kiss'd me the / time. Holy Grail 596
0 the pity To find thine own / love once more — „ 620
But I and the / daisy on his grave Lover's Tale i 193
should this / master claim HLs service, „ iv 265
As I of mine, and my / passion. Sisters {E. and E.) 67
Love at / sight May seem — „ 91
at / glimpse and for a face Gone in a moment — „ 93
1 sail'd On my / voyage, harass'd by the frights Of
my / crew, Columbus 67
scouted by court and king — The / discoverer starves — „ 166
Who fain had pledged her jewels on my / voyage, ,, 229
With the / great love I had felt for the / and greatest of
men ; The Wreck 76
The / gray streak of earliest summer-dawn, Ancient Sage 220
Leave the Master in the / dark hour of his last
sleep alone. Locksley H., Sixty 238
Boimd by the golden cord of their / love — The Ring 429
First (s) And these had been together from the /; Aylmer's Field 713
First-bom love thou bearest The f-b of thy genius. Ode to Memory 92
Love at first sight, f-b, and heir to all. Gardener's D. 189
meal she makes On the f-b of her sons. Vision of Sin 146
First-famed of the two /-/ for courtesy — Guinevere 323
First-fruits The /-/ of the stranger : Princess ii 'i4
Firstling And bring the / to the flock ; In Mem. ii 6
Ever as of old time, Sohtary /, The Snowdrop 4
Firth find him dropt upon the f's of ice, Princess vii i306
By / and loch tny silver sister grow. Sir J. Oldcastle 58
Fish F are we that love the mud. Vision of Sin 101
beast or bird or /, or opulent flower : Lucretius 249
the bird, the /, the shell, the flower. Princess ii 383
bird in air, and /'«5 tum'd And whiten'd The Victim 19
o'er her breast floated the sacred /; Gareth and L. 223
' If we have / at all Let them be gold ; Marr. of Geraint 669
vanish'd panic-stricken, like a shoal Of darting /, Geraint and E. 469
an' ya thraw'd the / i' 'is faiice. Church-warden, etc. 30
Fish'd An' 'e niver not / 'is awn ponds. Village Wife 43
Fisherman O well for the f's boy. Break, break, etc. 5
A luckier or a bolder/, Enoch Arden 49
Fishing-nets coils of cordage, swarthy /-«, „ 17
and wrought To make the boatmen f-n, „ 815
Fist tiny / Had gra-spt a daisy from your Mother's grave — The Ring 322
Fit (adj.) I scarce am / for your great plans : Princess vi 21%
Becoming as is meet and / A link In Mem. xl 14
asking, one Not/ to cope your quest. Gareth and L. 1174
ye that scarce are / to touch, Pelleas and E. 292
O happy he, and / to live. The Wanderer 9
Fit (s) Gleam'd to the flying moon by/ 's. Miller's D. 11&
in a / of frolic mirth She strove to span my waist : Talking Oak 137
Fit
217
Flame
Fit (s) {continued) Or breaking into song by/ '5, In Mem. xxiii 2
only breathe Short f's of prayer, Geraint and E. 155
Began to break her sports with graver /'s, Merlin and V. 180
the riotous f's Of wine and harlotry — Sir J. OldcasUe 100
Fit (verb) / us like a nature second-hand ; Walk, to the Mail 65
/their little streetward sitting-room Enoch Arden 170
sad and slow, As / 's an universal woe. Ode on Well. 14
harden'd skins That / him like his own ; Gareth and L. 1094
better /'s Our mended fortunes and a Prince's
bride : Marr. of Geraint 717
Fitful like / blasts of balm To one that travels quickly, Gardener's D.
Fitly yield your flower of life To one more / yours.
Fitted Power / to the season ; wisdom-bred
Gown'd in pure white, that / to the shape —
So now 'tis / on and grows to me,
old and formal, / to thy petty part,
As his unlikeness / mine.
No stone is / in yon marble girth
Who / stone to stone again.
Fitter a villain / to stick swine Than ride abroad
I am / for my bed, or for my grave,
Fitting expert In / aptest words to things,
and / close Or flying looselier.
Whence shall she take a / mate ?
She cannot find a / mate.
Fitz Old F, who from your suburb grange,
which you will take My F, and welcome.
Five Alone and warming his / wits, (repeat)
Young Nature thro' / cycles ran.
Lord of the senses / ;
You know there has not been for these / years
and here it comes With / at top :
Leolin's first nurse was, / years after, hers :
son A Walter too, — with others of our set, F
others :
And those / years its richest field.
beneath / figures, armed men,
' Take F horses and their armours ; '
and hath overborne F knights at once,
/ summers back. And left me ;
So Lord Howard past away with / ships of war
swarm Of Turkish Islam for / hundred years.
Lancelot and E. 953
(Enone 123
Gardener's D. 126
St. S. Stylites 209
Locksley Hail 93
In Mem. Ixxix 20
Tiresias 135
Akbar's Dream 193
Gareth and L. 865
The Ring 433
In Mem. Ixxv 6
Akbar's Dream 131
Kate 13
„ 31
To E. Fitzgerald 1
51
The Owl i 6, 13
Tico Voices 17
Palace of Art 180
Dora 65
Walk, to the Mail 113
Aylmer's Field 79
Princess, Pro. 9
In Mem. xlvi 12
Gareth and L. 1205
Geraint and E. 409
Holy Grail 303
Guinevere .321
The Revenge 13
Montenegro 11
F young kings put asleep by the sword-stroke, Batt. of Brunanhurh 52
Five-acre While Harry is in the f-a
Five-beaded The tender pink f-h baby-soles.
Five-fold /-/ thy term Of years, I lay ;
Five-words-long quoted odas, and jewels f-w-l
Fix Holding the bush, to / it back, she stood,
'Twere all as one to / our hopes on Heaven
She could not / the glass to suit her eye ;
and her lynx eye To / and make me hotter.
Sun sets, moon sets. Love, / a day.
wait a little. You shall / a day.'
Nor cares to / itself to form.
And / my thoughts on all the glow
Who shall / Her pillars ?
Fized-Fixt there like a sun remain Fix'd —
' Not that the grounds of hope were fix'd,
Be fix'd and f roz'n to permanence :
And, last, you fix'd a vacant stare,
Counting the dewy pebbles, fix'd in thought ;
The blash is fix'd upon her cheek.
One fix'd for ever at the door,
And fix't upon the far sea-line ;
Were fixed shadows of thy fixed mood,
orb of moving Circumstance RoU'd round by
one fix'd law.
True love tum'd roimd on fixed poles,
my fresh but fixt resolve To pass away
either fixt his heart On that one girl ;
where he fixt his heart he set his hand
and fixt her swimming eyas upon him,
fixt the Sabbath. Darkly that day rose :
And those fixt eyes of painted ancestors
I fixt My wistful eyes on two fair images,
Grandmother 80
Aylmer's Field 186
Tiresias 33
Princess ii 377
Gardener's D. 127
Golden Tear 57
Enoch Arden 241
Princess Hi 47
Window, When 4
.12
In Mem. xxxiii 4
„ Ixxxiv 3
„ cxiv 3
Eleanore 93
Two Voices 227
237
L. C. V. de Vere 47
M. d' Arthur 84
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 32
WUl Water. 143
The Voyage 62
Isabel 9
Palace of Art 256
Love thou thy land 5
Holy Grail 737
Enoch A rden 39
„ 294
325
Aylmer's Field 609
832
Sea Dreams 239
Fixed-Fizt (continiied) eyes Of shining expectation fixt on
mine. Princess iv 153
Fixt like a beacon-tower above the waves „ 493
this is fixt As are the roots of earth
Fix'd in yourself, never in your own arms
drags me down From my fixt height to mob me
I on her Fixt my faint eyes, and utter'd whisperingly :
she fixt A showery glance upon her aunt,
Fixt by their cars, waited the golden dawn.
But Sorrow — fixt upon the dead,
Her faith is fixt and cannot move.
Because he felt so fix'd in truth :
And a morbid eating lichen fixt On a heart
Gareth likewise on them fixt his eyes
with fixt eye following the three.
Two forks are fixt into the meadow ground,
there they fixt the forks into the ground,
a rock in ebbs and flows, Fixt on her faith,
humbly hopeful, rose Fixt on her hearer's,
or all-silent gaze upon him With such a fixt devotion,
but that other clung to him, Fixt in her will.
So fixt her fancy on him : let them be.
ye fixt Your limit, oft returning with the tide,
Counting the dewy pebbles, fix'd in thought ;
and virgin eyes Remainuig fixt on mine,
With sad eyes fixt on the lost sea-home,
* That should be fix'd,' she said ;
But after ten slow weeks hei fix'd intent.
Her firm will, her fix'd purpose.
Fixing warm blood mixing ; The eyeballs /.
F full eyes of question on her face,
F my eyes on those three cypress-cones
Fixt See Fixed
Fla&me (flame) ' at summun seed i' the /,
Flaccid a scheme that had left us / and drain'd.
Flag never floats an European /,
F's, flutter out upon turrets and towers !
their sails and their masts and their /'s,
thou would'st have her / Borne on thy
coffin —
But one — he was waving a / —
wherever her / fly, Glorying between sea
and sky.
One life, one /, one fleet, one Throne ! '
Flag-fiower tall /-/'s when they sprung
Flagrante Caught in f — what's the Latin word ?—
Flagship stately Spanish men to their / bore him
Flail From Arac's arm, as from a giant's /,
A thresher with his / had scatter'd them.
Flake (See also Blossom-flake, Foam-flakes)
sang Shrill, chill, with f's of foam.
beat the twilight into f's of fire.
here and there a foamy / Upon me,
thicker, like the f's In a fall of snow.
Before me shower'd the rose in f's;
This / of rainbow flying on the highest
rocket molten into f's Of crimson
sea- wind sang Shrill, chill, with/'s of foam,
gladly see I thro' the wavering/ '5
Flaky Diffused and molten into / cloud.
Flame (s) (See also Altar-flame, Flaame, Martyr-flames,
Sun-flame, Under-flame) With the clear-pointed
/ of chastity, Isabel 2
A subtle, sudden /, By veering passion fann'd, Madeline 28
alight As with the quintessence of /, Arabian Nights 123
arrows of his thoughts were headed And wing'd with /, The Poet 12
in her raiment's hem was traced in / Wisdom, „ 45
Bum'd hke one burning / together, L. of Shalott Hi 22
A thousand little shafts of / Fatima 17
She died: she went to burning/: The Sisters 7
thro' the topmost Oriels' coloured / Palace of Art 161
hollow shEides enclosing hearts of /, „ 241
Dark faces pale against that rosy /, Lotos-Eaters 26
' Saw God divide the night with flying /, D. of F. Women 225
Beheld the dead / of the fallen day Enoch Arden 441
V 445
vim
308
vii 144
Con. 32
Spec, of Iliad 22
In Mem. xxxix 8
„ xcvii 33
,, cxxv 8
Mavd I vi 77
Gareth and L. 236
Marr. of Geraint 237
482
548
813
Merlin and V. 87
183
188
777
Lancelot and E. 1040
Pass, of Arthur 252
Tiresias 47
The Wreck 126
The Ring 316
„ 345
293
All Things will Die 34
Com. of Arthur 312
Lover's Tale ii 38
Owd Roa 94
Maud I i 20
Locksley Hall 161
W. to Alexander 15
The Revenge 116
Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 16
The Wreck 119
Open I. and C. Exhib. 17
39
Miller's D. 53
Walk, to the Mail 34
The Revenge 97
Princess v 50O
Gareth and L. 842
sea-wind
M. d' Arthur 49
Tithonus 42
The Brook 59
Lucretius 166
Princess iv 264
V 319
In Mem,, xcviii 31
Pass, of Arthur 217
Prog, of Spring 29
Lover's Tale i 641
Flame
218
Flash'd
Flame (s) (continued) His hair as it were crackling
into f's,
and girt With song and / and fragrance,
on a tripod in the midst A fragrant / rose,
her eye with slow dilation roll'd Dry /,
Now set a wrathful Dian's moon on /,
F's, on the windy headland flare !
Or down in a furrow scathed with /:
Pierces the keen seraphic /
This round of green, this orb of /,
And Life, a Fury slinging /.
As slowly steals a silver /
Who might'st have heaved a windless /
Ray round with f's her disk of seed.
Ready to burst m a colour'd/;
and all the wave was in a/: And down the wave
and in the / was borne A naked babe,
kings of old had doom'd thee to the f's,
I spring Like / from ashes.'
sparkle in the blood Break into fiuious /;
seems a / That rages in the woodland far below,
fire of Heaven is not the / of Hell, (repeat)
Aylmer's Field 586
Lwcrelius 134
Princess io 34
„ vi 190
368
W. to Alexandra 16
The Victim 22
In Mem. xxx 27
xxxiv 5
IQ
Ixvii 6
Ixxii 13
ci 6
Maud I vi 19
Hap {continued) dimpled flounce of the sea-furbelow /, Sea Dreams 266
a boat Tacks, and the slacken'd sail f's. Princess ii 186
Flapp'd-FIapt They flapp'd my light out as I read : St. S. Stylites 175
Touch flax with / — a glance will serve —
darken down To rise hereafter in a stiller /
such a fervent / of human love,
Against the / about a sacrifice Kindled
star Reel'd in the smoke, brake into /, and feU
all their dewy hair blown back Uke /:
in the dark of mine Is traced with /.
his high hills, with / Milder and purer,
his own Sent such a / into his face,
with her battle-thunder and /;
Dooms our unUcensed preacher to the /,
and the dwelhng broke into /;
from it lighted an all-shining/.
The flight of birds, the f of sacrifice,
flung the conquer'd Christian into f's.
eloquence caught like a / From zone to zone
The / of life went wavering down ;
saw The ring of faces redden'd by the f's
in the f that measures Time !
Dance in a fountain of / with her devils,
Than a rotten fleet and a city in f's !
Hame (verb) barking cur Made her cheek /:
wild peasant rights himseK, the rick F's,
when the long-illumined cities /,
ShaU fears and jealous hatreds / again ?
For him did his high sun /,
f's The blood-red blossom of war
Let it / or fade, and the war roll down
/ At sunrise till the people in far fields.
He saw them — headland after headland /
with set of Sim Their fires / thickly,
sun has risen To / along another dreary day.
Hame-banner great f-b borne by Teneriffe,
Flame-billow Into the f-b dash'd the berries,
Flame-colour smote F-c, vert and azure,
Flamed with sudden fires F over :
And / upon the brazen greaves
By peaks that /, or, all in shade,
J" in his cheek ; and eager eyes,
Tho' Leolin / and fell again,
scarlet of berries that / upon bine and vine,
or / at a public wrong,
and / On one huge slope beyond,
Flamest Once again thou / heavenward.
Flaming (See also Slow-flaming) / downward over
all From heat to heat
Clanging fights, and / towns,
doom of treason and the / death,
that red night When thirty ricks. All /,
Flank (adj.) better aimed are your / fusillades —
Flank (s) arisen since With cities on their f's —
Flap and the great echo / And buffet
Com. of Arthur 382
Gareth and L. 374
546
Geraint and E. 828
Balin and Balan 233
„ 443, 447,
451, 455
Merlin and V. Ill
Lancelot and E. 1319
Holy Grail 74
Pelleas and E. 145
519
Guinevere 284
Lover's Tale i 298
322
iv 177
The Revenge 59
Sir J. Oldcastle 105
V. of Maeldune 32
Achilles over the T. 6
Tiresias 6
Lochsley H., Sixty 84
Dead Prophet 34
To Marq. of Dufferin 32
Death of (Enone 92
Akbar's D., Hymn 8
Kapiolani 10
Riflemen form ! 18
Godiva 58
Princess iv 386
Ode on WeU. 228
W. to Marie Alex. 41
Maud I iv 32
„ III vi 52
54
Holy Grail 242
Guinevere 243
Achilles over the T. 11
Romney's R. 58
Columbus 69
Kapiolani 33
Com. of AHhur 274:
Buonaparte 12
L. ofShalott Hi 4
The Voyage 41
Aylmer's Field 66
409
V. of Maeldune 61
The Wreck 68
St. Tdemachus 7
AJAar's D., Hymn 1
conquering battle or flapt to the battle-cry !
Flare Flames, on the windy headland /!
F from Tel-el-Kebir Thro' darkness,
Flar'd threaten'd darkness, / and fell :
a great mist-blotted light F on him.
Fire in dry stubble a nine-days' wonder /:
blood-red light of dawn F on her face,
Flaring (See also Sudden-flaring) A million tapers
/ bright From twisted silvers
Sees in heaven the Ught of London /
I saw the / atom-streams And torrents
Thro' blasted valley and / forest
Flash (s) The Ughtning / atween the rains,
A Uving / of Ught he flew.'
ran by him without speaking, like a / of light.
a shape, a shade, A / of light.
The f'es come and go ;
The lightning / of insect and of bird,
A / of semi-jealousy clear'd it to her.
and once the / of a thimderbolt —
I learnt more from her in a /,
These f'es on the surface are not he.
And Uke a / the weird affection came :
Down in the South is a / and a groan :
You send a / to the sim.
A Uttle /, a mystic hint ;
As in the former / of joy,
at the / and motion of the man They vanish'd
I saw the / of him but yestereven.
And chased the f'es of his golden horns
send One /, that, missing aU things else,
free f'es from a height Above her,
but love's first / in youth. Most common :
' Ay, a /, I fear me, that will strike
I told her that her love Was but the / of youth,
F upon / they lighten thro' me —
Shot by me like a / of purple fire.
The light was but a /, and went again.
Flash (verb) And f'es off a thousand ways,
of tentimes they / and gUtter Like sunshine
F in the pools of whirling Simois.
/ the lightnings, weigh the Sun.
This proverb f'es thro' his head,
F into fiery Ufe from nothing,
naked marriages F from the bridge,
F, ye cities, in rivers of fire !
The facets of the glorious mountain /
in the vale You/ and lighten afar,
F, I am coming, I come,
F for a miUion miles.
And f'es into false and true.
And / at once, my friend, to thee.
Will / along the chords and go.
/ A momentary Ukeness of the King :
F brand and lance, fall battleaxe upon helm.
Fall battleaxe, and / brand ! (repeat)
A light of armour bv him /, and pass
Re-makes itself, ana f'es down the vale —
if what we call The spirit /
I saw The glory of the Lord / up.
Mariana in the S. 77
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 116
Guinevere 538
To Mary Boyle 37
Def. of Lucknow 57
Merlin and V. 676
Golden Year 76
about their ocean-islets / The faces of the Gods —
/ a milUon miles a day.
shine the level lands. And / the floods ;
ShaU / thro' one another in a moment
Flash'd He / into the crystal mirror.
The distant battle / and rung.
F thro' her as she sat alone,
So / and fell the brand ExcaUbur :
He / his random speeches.
That autumn into autumn / again,
jests, that / about the pleader's room,
They / a saucy message to and fro
Def. of Lucknow 2
W. to Alexandra 16
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 28
M. d' Arthur, Ep. 2
Enoch Arden 681
Lancelot and E. 735
1026
Arabian Nights 124
Locksley Hall 114
Lucretius 38
Kapiolani 12
Rosalind 12
Two Voices 15
May Queen 18
St. S. Stylites 203
St. Agnes' Eve 26
Enoch Arden 575
Aylmer's Field 189
Lucretius 27
Princess ii 397
„ iv 253
„ ^;477
Window, Gone 8
Window, Marr. Morn. 2
In Mem. xliv 8
,, cxxii 15
Geraint and E. 467
Balin and Balan 303
Merlin and V. 427
932
Lancelot and E. 647
949
970
1318
Lover's Tale i 51
„ ii 17
,, iv 55
Rosalind 23
„ 28
(Enone 206
Locksley Hall 186
Day-Dm., Arrival 15
Aylmer's Field 130
766
W. to Alexandra 19
The Islet 22
Window, Marr. Morn. 10
31
.24
In Mem. xvi 19
„ xli 12
,, Ixxxviii 12
Com. of Arthur 270
486
,,487,490,502
Balin and Balan 326
Guinevere 610
Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 5
Columbus 82
Tiresias 172
Locksley H., Sixty 2C
Early Spring 16
Happy ''
L. of Shalott Hi i
Two Voices 12fl
Palace of Art 21i
M. d' Arthur W
Will Water. 198
Enoch Arden ■
Aylmer's Field 44
Princess, Pro, 78'
Flashed
219
Fled
A thought / thro' me which I clothed
Princess 1 195
,, v20
Ode on WeU. 129
Light Brigade 27
In Mem. xcv 36
Mavd I iv 16
„ ix 10
Com. of Arthur 66
Gareth and L. 192
685
„ 689
784
1030
Marr. of Geraint 273
Merlin and V. 416
847
Lancelot and E. 357
613
1235
1236
Holy GraU 402
593
PeUeas and E. 279
503
Last Tournament 616
Pass, of Arthur 310
Lover's Tale i 370
Flasb'd (continued)
in act,
young captains / their glittering teeth,
Heaven / a sudden jubUant ray,
F all their sabres bare, F as they tum'd
The living soul was / on mine,
Eride / over her beautiful face,
omething / in the sun,
Barons of his realm F forth and into war :
At times the summit of the high city/;
and / as those Dull-coated things.
So Gareth ere he parted / in arms.
madden'd her, and away she / again
/ the fierce shield. All sun ;
Whereat Geraint / into sudden spleen :
out he /, And into such a song,
F the bare-grinning skeleton of death !
Suddenly / on her a wild desire.
Then / into wild teau^, and rose again,
and down they /, and smote the stream.
/, as it were. Diamonds to meet them.
Then / a yellow gleam across the world,
a stream That / across her orchard underneath
The fire of honoiu- and all noble deeds F,
For so the words were / into his heart
Then / a levin-brand ; and near me stood,
So / and fell the brand Excalibur :
A mystic light / ev'n from her white robe
all my wealth F from me in a moment „ 669
face and form of Lionel F thro' my eyes „ ii 95
jewels Of many generations of his house Sparkled and /, „ iv 300
one lightning-fork F out the lake ; Sisters (E. and E.) 97
bright face was / thro' sense and soul „ 109
And all the heavens / in frost ; To E. Fitzgerald 22
upon me / The power of prophesying — Tiresias 56
and / into the Red Sea, To Marq. of Dufferin 44
and / into a frolic of song And welcome ; Demeter and P. 12
F on the Tournament, Flicker'd and bicker'd Merlin and the G. 69
Flashest All along the valley, stream that / white, _ V.^f Cavieretz 1
Flashing She, / forth a haughty smile, began
/ round and round, and whirl'd in an arch.
The cataract / from the bridge.
Came quickly / thro' the shallow ford
Was all the marble threshold /,
on the splendour came, / me blind ;
/ round and round, and whirrd in an arch,
the whole isle-side / down from the peak
F with fires as of God,
Rode / blow upon blow,
coin of fancy / out from many a golden phrase ;
Flask (See also Wine-flask) A / of cider from his
father's vats,
Here sits the Butler with a /
I leave an empty / :
Flat (adj. and adv.) and so this earth was /:
dying ebb that faintly lipp'd The / red granite ;
sin, that crush'd My spirit / before thee.
child Push'd her / hand against his face
on this side the palace ran the field F
Of this / lawn with dusk and bright ;
pitch'd Beside the Castle Perilous on / field,
up the vale of Usk, By the / meadow.
Take my salute,' imknightly with / hand,
Arthur had the jousts Down in the / field
From / confusion and brute violences,
in dead night along that table-shore. Drops /,
A / malarian world of reed and rush !
Strow yonder mountain /,
leaves Laid their green faces /
To lay the sudden heads of violence /,
teeth of Hell flay bare and gnash thee /! —
and my strongest wish Falls /
Flat (a level) And glanced athwart the glooming f's.
By sands and steaming f's, and floods
here upon the / All that long mom
D.ofF. Women 129
M. d' Arthur 138
In Mem. Ixxi 15
Marr. of Geraint 167
Geraint and E. 25
Holy GraU 413
Pass, of Arthur 306
V. of Maddune 45
Despair 16
Heavy Brigade 32
To Virgil 8
Audley Court 27
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 25
WUl Water. 164
Columbus 48
Audley Court 13
St. S. Stylites 26
Princess ii 366
„ v362
In Mem. Ixxxix 2
Gareth and L. 1363
Marr. of Geraint 832
Geraint and E. 717
Pelleas and E. 164
Last Tournament 124
464
Lover's Tale iv 142
Mechanophilus 6
Balin and Balan 344
Holy Grail 310
Last Tournament 444
Romney's R. 72
Mariana 20
The Voyage 45
Princess v 367
Flat (a level) (continued) all about The same gray f's
again. In Mem. Ixxxvii 13
Wide f's, where nothing but coarse grasses grew ; Holy Grail 794
if yonder hill be level with the /. Lochsley H., Sixty 111
Flat (note in music) run thro' every change of
sharp and /; Caress'd or chidden 4
Flatten'd Mangled, and /, and crush'd, Maud I il
Flatter (See also Face-flatter) They would sue me,
and woo me, and / me. The Mermaid 43
To / me that I may die ? Two Voices 204
F myself that always everywhere I know Princess ii 412
This look of quiet f's thus Our home-bred fancies : In Mem. x 10
at times Womd / his own wish in age for love. Merlin and V. 185
Softly laugh'd Isolt ; ' 2?" me not. Last Tournament 557
F me rather, seeing me so weak, „ 642
0 you that can / your victims, Charity 29
Flatter'd Teach your / kings that only those Locksley H., Sixty 132
thought of power F his spirit ; (Enone 137
Be / to the height. Palace of Art 192
snares them by the score F and fluster'd, Princess v 164
The fancy / my mind, Maud I xiv 23
therefore / him. Being so gracious, Pelleas and E. 119
F the fancy of my fading brain ; Lover's Tale ii 107
Flattering But / the golden prime Arabian Nights 76
/ thy childish thought The oriental fairy brought, Elednore 13
A splendid presence / the poor roofs Aylmer's Field 175
I, that / my true passion, saw The knights, Merlin and V. 874
Half -envious of the / hand, Lancelot and E. 349
F myself that all my doubts were fools Sisters (E. and E.) 140
Flattery the wit. The / and the strife, D. of F. Women 148
Nor speak I now from foolish /; Marr. of Geraint 433
the old man, Tho' doubtful, felt the /, Merlin and V. 184
F gilding the rift in a throne ; Vastness 20
0 the / and the craft Which were my imdoing . . . Forlorn 3
Flaunt Was this a time for these to / their pride ? Aylmer's Field 770
and / With prudes for proctors. Princess, Pro. 140
to /, to dress, to dance, to thrum, „ iv 519
Pleasure who f's on her wide downway Vastness 16
Flaunted took the ring, and / it Before that other The Ring 243
Flaunting Thou comest not with shows of / vines Ode to Memory 48
Flaw Like f's in summer laying lusty corn : Marr. of Geraint 764
heirless / In his throne's title make him feel so frail, Sir. J. Oldcastle 72
Flawless circle rounded imder female hands With /
demonstration : Princess ii 373
Flax Touch / with flame — a glance will serve Merlin and V. Ill
Flaxen With thy floating /hair; Adeline 6
From the / curl to the gray lock Princess iv 426
Ere childhood's / ringlet turn'd To black and brown In Mem. Ixxix 15
on one arm The / ringlets of our infancies Lover's Tale i 234
Flay teeth of Hell / bare and gnash thee Last Tournament 444
/ Captives whom they caught in battle — Locksley H., Sixty 79
Flayflint There hved a / near ; we stole Walk, to the MaU 84
Flajring F the roofs and sucking up the drains, Princess v 525
Flea text no larger than the limbs of f's ; Merlin and V. 672
Fleck slid, a sunny /, From head to ancle Talking Oak 223
That life is dash'd with f's of sin. In Mem. Hi 14
Fleckless My conscience will not count me /; Princess ii 294
Fled / Beyond the Memmian naphtha-pits, Alexander 3
Her household / the danger. The Goose 54
Her voice / always thro' the summer land ; Edwin Morris 67
1 read, and / by night, and flying turn'd : „ 134
Then / she to her inmost bower, Godiva 42
' O happy sleep, that lightly/! ' Day-Dm., Depart. 18
Thought her proud, and / over the sea ; Edward Gray 14
For one fair Vision ever / Down the waste waters The Voyage 57
As fast she / thro' sun and shade. Sir L. and Q. G. 37
F forward, and no news of Enoch came. Enoch Arden 361
His fancy / before the lazy wind Returning, „ 657
For maidens, on the spur she /; Princess i 151
when he fell, And all else / ? „ ii 243
They /, who might have shamed us : „ 299
As flies the shadow of a bird, she /. „ Hi 96
the day / on thro' all Its range of duties „ 176
and /, as flies A troop of snowy doves „ iv 167
Amazed he / away Thro' the dark land, „ v 48
Fled
220
Flesh
Fled (continued) And shuddering / from room to room, Princess vi 370
My fancy / to the South again. The Daisy 108
Less yearning for the friendship /, In Mem. cxvi 15
Were it not wise I / from the place Maud 7 i 64
Whether I need have/? „ 7/ m 72
And I wake, my dream is /; „ iv 51
Left her and /, and Uther enter'd in, Com. of Arthur 201
F down the lane of access to the King, Gareth and L. 661
by this entry / The damsel in her wrath, „ 674
' Lead, and I follow,' and fast away she /. (repeat) „ 760, 990
but three F thro' the pines ; „ 814
a Shape that / With broken wings, „ 1207
they / With Httle save the jewels they had on, Marr. of Geraint 639
F all the boon companions of the Earl, Geraint and E. 477
and / Yelling as from a spectre,_ „ 732
women staring and aghast. While some yet /; „ 805
Dishorsed himself, and rose again, and / Far, Balin and Balan 330
/ from Arthur's court To break the mood. Merlin and V. 297
F like a glittering rivulet to the tarn : Laiicelot and E. 52
But I, my sons, and little daiighter / „ 276
F ever thro' the woodwork, till they found The
new design „ 440
But on that day when Lancelot / the lists, „ 525
Galahad / along them bridge by bridge. Holy Grail 504
Burnt me within, so that I rose and /, „ 608
Ran thro' the doors and vaulted on his horse
And /: Pdleas and E. 540
left him bruised And batter'd, and /on, „ 547
Before him / the face of Queen Isolt Last Tournament 363
Tristram waking, the red dream F with a shout, „ 488
Queen Guineveee had / the court, Guinevere 1
hither had she /, her cause of flight Sir Modred ; „ 9
F all night long by glimmering waste „ 128
Moan as she /, or thought she heard „ 130
Queen had added ' Get thee hence,' F frighted. ,, 367
he that / no further fly the King ; Pass, of Arthur 89
like wild Bacchanals F onward to the steeple Lover's Tale Hi 26
/ Wind-footed to the steeple in the woods, „ 55
in the thick of question and reply I / the house, Sisters {E. and E.) 158
she rose and / Beneath a pitiless rush „ 236
Few were his following, F to his warship : Batt. of Brunanburh 59
and tum'd in her haste and /. The Wreck 62
one son had forged on his father and /, Despair 69
and its last brother-worm will have / „ 85
listens, fears his victim may have / — The Flight 71
crying after voices that have /! Locksley H., Sixty 251
F wavering o'er thy face, and chased away Demeter and P. 15
and turn'd. And / by many, a waste, „ 74
Muriel /. Poor Muriel ! Ay, poor Muriel The Ring 271
up the tower — an icy air F by me — ,, 446
' He is / — I wish him dead — Forlorn 1
He is /, or he is dead, ,, 9
have you lost him, is he /? Happy 2
If. I was all but crazed With the grief Bandit's Death 38
Fledged curved branches, / with clearest green, D. of F. Wom^n 59
F as it were with Mercury's ankle-wing, Lucretius 201
lightlier move The minutes / with music : ' Princess iv 37
pines that / The hills that watch'd thee. Lover's Tale i 11
Flee faintest sunlights / About his shadowy sides : The Kraken 4
with increasing might doth forward / By town, Mine he the strength 5
if I / to these Can I go from Him ? Enoch Arden 224
Melissa clamour'd ' F the death ; ' Princess iv 166
What time mine own might also /, In Mem. Ixxxiv 37
I / from the cruel madness of love, Maud I iv 55
F down the valley before he get to horse. Gareth and L. 941
a dog am I, To worry, and not to / — „ 1015
' I will / hence and give myself to God ' — Last Tournament 624
I would / from the storm within, The Wreck 9
Fleece heavens between their fairy / 's pale Gardener's D. 261
many- wintered / of throat and chin. Merlin and V. 841
Burst from a swimming / of winter gray, Demeter and P. 20
Fleece (an inn) ' The Bull, the F are cramm'd, Audley Court 1
Fleeced See Thick-fleeced
Fleecy Moving thro' a / night. Margaret 21
Fleet (adj.) / 1 was of foot : Before me shower'd Princess iv 263
Fleet (s) all the / Had rest by stony hills On a Mourner 34
a / of glass. That seem'd a / of jewels Sea Dreams 122
An idle signal, for the brittle / „ 133
my poor venture but a / of glass „ 138
Breaking their mailed / 's and armed towers, Ode Inter. Exhib. 39
Welconie her, thunders of fort and of /! W. to Alexandra 6
I trust if an enemy's / came yonder Maud 7 i 49
Ev'n in the presence of an enemy's /, Guinevere 279
For half of their / to the right The Revenge 35
the Spanish / with broken sides lay round „ 71
The / of England is her all-in-all ; Her / is in your
hands, And in her / her Fate. The Fleet 13
you, that have the ordering of her /, „ 16
One life, one flag, one /, one Throne ! ' Open I, and C. Exhib. 39
valour in battle, glorious annals of army and /, Fastness 7
Than a rotten / and a city in flames ! Riflemen form .' 18
Fleet (verb) The cloud f's, The heart beats. Nothing will Die 11
The clouds will cease to /; All Things will Die 11
And the light and shadow /; Maud II iv 36
And the shadow flits and f's „ 90
Before them f's the shower. Early Spring 13
Fleeted (See also Far-fleeted) As fast we / to the South : The Voyage 4
. Those that of late had / far and fast Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 1
F his vessel to sea with the king in it, Batt. of Brunanburh 60
Fleeter know Whether smile or frown be /? Madeline 12
Fleeting (See also Ever-fleeting) When will the clouds
be aweary of /? Nothing will Die 5
Sow'd all their mystic gulfs with / stars ; Gardener's D. 262
One after another the white clouds are/; All Things will Die 5
' Or that this anguish / hence. Two Voices 235
And / thro' the boundless universe, Lucretius 161
Or villain fancy / by, Drew in the expression In Mem. cxi 18
in the night. When the ghosts are /. Forlorn 18
F betwixt her column'd palace-waJls, St. Telemachus 37
Flesh (See also Swine-flesh) my /, which I despise
and hate, St. S. Stylites 58
Mortify Your /, like me, with scourges „ 180
But far too spare of /.' Talking Oak 92
Padded round with / and fat. Vision of Sin 177
But they that cast her spirit into /, Aylmer's Field 481
Thou wUt not gash thy / for him ; „ 658
and swept away The men of / and blood. Sea Dreams 237
never yet on earth Could dead / creep, Lucretitts 131
Oh, sacred be the / and blood In Mem. xxxiii 11
All knowledge that the sons of / „ Ixxxv 27
0 heart of stone, are you /, Maud I vi 79
And she was fairest of all / on earth. Com. of Arthur 3
Some hold that he hath swallow'd infant /, Gareth and L. 1342
Go to the town and buy us / Marr. of Geraint 372
means of goodly welcome, / and wine. „ 387
boil'd the /, and spread the board, „ 391
call'd for / and wine to feed his spears. Geraint and E. 601
all the hall was dim with steam of /: „ 603
If ann of / could lay him.' Balin and Balan 299
shield of Balan prick'd The hauberk to the /; „ 560
World-war of dying / against the life. Merlin and V. 193
Nor ever touch'd fierce wine, nor tasted /, „ 627
how pale ! what are they ? / and blood ? Lancelot and E. 1256
The beauty of her / abash'd the boy, Pdleas and E. 78 i
the world Is / and shadow — I have had my day. Last Tournament 316 ,
They fail'd to trace him thro' the / and blood „ 686
Which / and blood perforce would violate : „ 689 ;
1 cannot take thy hand ; that too Ls /, Guinevere 553
in the / thou hast sinn'd ; and mine own /, „ 554
My love thro' /hath wrought into my life „ 558
F of my / was gone, but bone of my bone was left — Rizpah 51
a cross of / and blood And holier. Sir J. OldcasUe 137
' He veil'il Himself in /, and now He veils His / in bread, „ 156
Chill'd, till I tasted / again To. E. Fitzgerald 20
keep their haithen kings in the / for the Jidgemint day. Tomorrow 70
died in the doing it, / without mind ; Vastness 27
He that has nail'd all / to the Cross, „ 28
Hast spared the / of thousands, Happy 17
fairest / at last is filth on which the worm „ 30
This wall of solid / that comes between „ 35
Flesh
221
Float
riesh (continued) If man and wife be but one /, Sappy 94
Flesh'd iSVc Foul-flesh'd
Fleshless crown'd with / laughter — Gareth and L. 1383
like a barren ghost From out the /world of spirits, _ _ Thejiing 228
Fleshly this / sign That thou art thou —
Fleurs-de-lys sink Thy f-d-l in slime again,
Flew Out / the web and floated wide ;
That loosely / to left and right —
A living flash of light he /.'
The goose / this way and / that,
The fire shot up, the martin /,
F over roof and casement :
' Chase,' he said : the ship / forward,
the rim Changed every moment as we /.
till they /, Hair, and eyes, and limbs,
a coimtry dance, and / thro' light And shadow,
/ kite, and raced the purple fly.
Till o'er the hills her eagles /
The gust that round the garden /,
then / in a dove And brought a summons
and the blade / Splintering in six,
all that walk'd, or crept, or perch'd, or /.
its shadow / Before it, till it touch'd her,
And the daws / out of the Towers
Flexile So youthful and so / then.
Flicker The shadows / to and fro :
Where the dying night-lamp f's,
wisp that f's where no foot can tiead.'
To / with his double tongue.
seem to / past thro' sim and shade,
Nor / down to brainless pantomime,
Flicker'd high masts / as they lay afloat ;
F like doubtful smiles about her lips,
in the heaven above it there / a songless lark,
Lightnings / along the heath ;
F and bicker'd From helmet to helmet,
FUckering (See also Livid-flickering) night-light /
in my eyes Awoke me.'
and / in a grimly light Dance on the mere.
lark Shot up and shrill'd in / gyres,
/ fairy-circle wheel'd and broke
Draw downward into Hades with his drift Of /
spectres, Demeter and P. 27
Prince Who scarce had pluck'd his / life To the Queen ii 5
Might find a /glimmer of relief In change of place. To Mary Boyle 47
sometimes I fear You may be /, Sisters (E. and E.) 33
Sht (flying) (See also Swallow-flight) And of so
fierce a /, From Calpe unto Caucasus
Love wept and spread his sheeny vans for /;
free dehght, from any height of rapid /,
And that delight of f rohc /,
Rapt after heaven's starry /,
summits slope Beyond the furthest f's of hope,
she led, In hope to gain upon her /.
What look'd a / of fairy arrows aim'd
F's, terrors, sudden rescues.
Your / from out your bookless wilds
Edym's men had caught them in their /,
De Prof.. Two G. 40
Sir J. OldcasUe 99
L. of Shalott Hi 42
„ iv 20
Two Voices 15
The Goose 35
Day-Dm., Revival 11
WiU Water. 134
The Captain 33
The Voyage 28
Vision of Sin 38
Princess, Pro. 84
„ m248
Ode on WeU. 112
In Mem. Ixxxix 19
„ ciii 15
Balin and Balan 395
Last Tournament 367
Guinevere 79
V. of Maeldune 109
Amphion 59
D. of the 0. Fear 39
Locksley HaU 80
Princess iv 358
In Mem. ex 8
Ancient Sage 100
To W. C. Macready 10
D.ofF. Women Hi
Lover's Tale i 68
V . of Maeldune 17
Lead Prophet 79
Merlin and the G. 70
Sea Lreams 103
Gareth and L. 826
Princess vii 46
Guinevere 257
The Poet 14
Love and Death 8
Rosalind 3
„ 47
Two Voices 68
185
The Voyage 60
Aylmer's Field 94
„ 99
Princess ii 56
Marr. of Geraint 642
she fled, her cause of / Sir Modred ; ' Guinevere 9
prone / By thousands down the crags Montenegro 7
/ of birds, the flame of sacrifice, Tiresias 6
cheeping to each other of their / To summer lands ! The Ring 86
And over the / of the Ages ! Parnasstts 3
once a / of shadowy fighters crost The disk, St. Telemachus 23
ht (ol stoirs) Broad-based f's of marble stsurs Arabian Nights 117
And up a / of stairs into the hall. Princess ii 31
K (s) Give me my/, and let me say my say.' Aylmer's Field 399
linng (verb) to / The winged shafts of truth, The Poet 25
Tho' one did / the fire. „ 30
/ on each side my low-flowing locks. The Mermaid 32
take ExcaUbur, And / him far into the middle mere : M. d' Arthur 37
But, if thou spare to / ExcaUbur, „ 131
good luck Shall / her old shoe after. Will Water. 216
And / the diamond necklace by.' Lady Clare 40
' Can I not / this horror off me again, Lucretius 173
Fling (verb) (continued) will she / herself, Shameless
upon me ? Lucretius 202
/ The tricks, which make us toys of men, Princess ii 62
all prophetic pity, / Their pretty maids „ v 381
' F our doors wide ! all, all, not one, „ vi 334
And / it Uke a viper off, and shriek „ vii 94
/ whate'er we felt, not fearing, into words. Third of Feb. 6
Never a man could / him : Grandmother 10
/ This bitter seed among mankind ; In Mem. xc 3
sadness / 's Her shadow on the blaze of kings : „ xcviii 18
Did he / himself down ? who knows ? Maud I i9
I swear thou canst not / the fourth.' Gareth and L. 1327
And / me deep in that forgotten mere, Lancelot and E. 1426
an ye / those rubies round my neck In lieu of
hers. Last Tournament 312
take Excahbur, And / him far into the middle
mere : Pass, of Arthur 205
But, if thou spare to / Excalibur, „ 299
That f's a. mist behind it in the sun — Lover's Tale iv 294
and / Thy royalty back into the riotous fits Sir J. Oldcastle 99
I would / myself over and die ! The Wreck 118
earth's dark forehead /'s athwart the heavens Ancient Sage 200
And / free alms into the beggar's bowl, ,, 260
What ? / them to you ?— well— Happy 103
Mussulman Who /'s his bowstning Harem Romney's R. 135
horse, anger, plunged To / me, and fail'd. Akbar's Dream 119
Flinging F the gloom of yesternight On the white day ; Ode to Memory 9
/ round her neck, Claspt it, and cried Last Tournament 749
like the wave / forward again, Def. of Lucknow 43
Was f fruit to lions ; Tiresias 67
Flint shake The sparkling / 's beneath the prow. Arabian Nights 52
clattering/ '5 batter'd with clanging hoofs; D. of F. Women 21
Is there no stoning save with / and rock ? Aylmer's Field 746
own one port of sense not / to prayer, Princess vi 182
out upon you, /! You love nor her, „ 259
heart as a millstone, set my face as a /, Maud 7 i 31
But then what a / is he ! ,, xix 57
forage for the horse, and / for fire. Gareth and L. 1277
Flippant The / put himself to school In Mem. ex 10
Flirt Not one to / a venom at her eyes, Merlin and V. 609
Flit will / To make the greensward fresh. Talking Oak 89
Let our girls /, Till the storm die ! Princess vi 337
Look, look, how he f's, Window, Ay 1
f like the king of the wrens with a crown of fire. „ 16
Or like to noiseless phantoms /: In Mem. xx 16
What slender shade of doubt may /, „ xlviii 7
F's by the sea-blue bird of March ; „ xci 4
A shadow /'s before me, Maud II iv 11
shadow / 's and fleets And will not let me be ; „ 90
Then let her fancy / across the past, Marr. of Geraint 645
And while your doves about you /, To E. Fitzgerald 7
from him /'s to warn A far-off friendship Demeter and P. 89
round her brows a woodland culver/ '5, Prog, of Spring 18
Flitted F across into the night. Miller's D. 127
The little innocent soul / away. Enoch Arden 270
unawares they / off. Busying themselves about Aylmer's Field 202
left me in shadow here ! Gone^ away ! Window, Gone 4
/ 1 know not where ! ^ 7
Foiilks' coostom / awaiiy like a kite North. Cobbler 28
music Of falling torrents, F The Gleam. Merlin and the G. 48
Flittermouse-shriek fainter than any /-s ; V. of Maeldune 22
Flitteth The shallop / silken-sail'd L of Shalott i 22
Flitting (part. ) ' What ! You're / ! ' ' Yes, we're /,' Walk, to the MaU 43
says he, ' you / with us too — 45
F, fairy Lilian, " LUi^n 2
And airy forms of / change. Madelhie 7
till all my / chance Were caught within the record Princess v 142
Flitting (s) After the / of the bats, Mariana 17
Plagued with a / to and fro, Maud II ii 33
Float F's from his sick and fihned eyes, Supp. Confessions 166
F by you on the verge of night. Margaret 31
languors of thy love-deep eyes Ji' on to me. Elednore 77
as the warm gulf-stream of Florida F's Mine be the strength 13
Floated her hair or seem'd to / in rest. (Enone 19
Falls, and f's adown the air. Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 31
Float
222
Florence
Float {continued) forms, That / about the threshold of an
age, Golden Year 16
steam F's up from those dim fields about the homes Tithonus 69
never f's an European flag, Lochsley Hall 161
/ thro' Heaven, and cannot light ? Day-Dm., Ep. 8
I / till all is dark. Sir Galahad 40
I seem'd To / about a glimmering night, Princess i 247
bottom agates seem to wave and / „ ii 327
the streams that / us each and all „ iv 70
And / or fall, in endless ebb and flow ; W. to Marie Alex. 27
airy-light To / above the ways of men, To E. Fitzgerald 18
She f's across the hamlet. Prog, of Spring 40
May / awhile beneath the sun, Eomney's R. 50
vapour in daylight Over the mountain F's, Kapolani 18
boats of Dahomey that / upon human blood ! The Dawn 5
Floated Adown it / a dying swan, Dying Swan 6
Out flew the web and / wide ; L. of Shalott Hi 42
She / down to Camelot : „ iv 23
A gleaming shape she / by, „ 39
if first I / free. As naked essence, Two Voices 373
F her hair or seem'd to float in rest. (Enone 19
F the glowing sunlights, as she moved. „ 182
she / to us and said : ' You have done well Princess iv 526
lordly creature / on To where her wounded brethren lay ; „ i)i 89
And o'er her breast / the sacred fish ; Gareth and L. 223
She might have risen and / when I saw her. Holy Grail 100
White as white clouds, / from sky to sky. Lover's Tcde i 5
Waver'd and / — which was less than Hope, „ 452
And / on and parted round her neck, „ 704
about my brow Her warm breast / in the utterance „ ii 141
/in — While all the guests in mute amazement „ iv 304
F in conquering battle or flapt to the battle-cry ! Def. of Lucknow 2
Had / in with sad reproachful eyes, The Ring 469
Moving to melody, F The Gleam. Merlin and the G. 23
and thro' her dream A ghostly murmur /, Death of QLnone 79
Floating {See also Ever-floating) And / about the under-
sky, Dying Swan 25
F thro' an evening atmosphere, Elednore 100
misty folds, that / as they fell Lit up Palace of Art 35
With thy / flaxen hair ; Adeline 6
Down-droop'd, in many a /fold, Arabian Nights 147
Stays on her / locks the lovely freight Ode to Memory 16
thro' the wreaths of / dark upcurl'd. The Poet 35
land Of lavish lights, and / shades : Elednore 12
luxuriant symmetry Of thy / gracefulness, „ 50
Made misty with the / meal. Miller's D. 104
Buoy'd upon / tackle and broken spars, Enoch Arden 551
Came / on for many a month and year, Vision of Sin 54
o'er it crost the dimness of a cloud F, Pelleas and E. 38
and mine Were dim with / tears. Lover's Tale i 442
All day I watch'd the / isles of shade, „ H 5
in their / folds They past and were no more : ,, 99
Flock And in the /'5 The lamb rejoiceth Supp. Confessions 156
By dancing rivulets fed his f's To E. L. 22
when he came again, his / believed — Aylmer's Field 600
half amazed half frighted all his /: „ 631
my eldest-bom, the flower of the /; Grandmother 9
And bring the firstling to the /; In Mem. ii 6
meadowy curves. That feed the mothers of the/; „ c 16
The /'s are whiter down the vale, „ cxvlO
Flock'd thither / at noon His tenants, Princess, Pro. 3
a careless people / from the fields Dead Prophet 7
Flood (s) {See also Fountain-flood) From the westward-
winding/, Margarets
island queen who sways the f's and lands Biumaparte 3
They past into the level /, Miller's D. 75
dragons spouted forth A / of fountain-foam. Palace of Art 24
and takes the / With swarthy webs. M. d' Arthur 268
By sands and steaming flats, and f's The Voyage 45
his passions all in / And masters of his motion, Aylmer's Field 339
Bore down in /, and dash'd his angry heart „ 633
/, fire, earthquake, thimder, wrought Such waste „ 639
the / drew ; yet I caught her ; Princess iv 182
Better have died and spilt our bones in the / — „ 532
fling Their pretty maids in the running/, „ v 382
Flood (s) {continued) And whiten'd all the rolling/;
lead Thro' prosperous f's his holy urn.
Summer on the steaming f's,
shadowing down the homed / In ripples,
lay At anchor in the / below ;
And roU'd the f's in grander space.
And molten up, and roar in /;
No doubt vast eddies in the / Of onward time
have isled together, knave. In time of /.
follow Vivien thro' the fierjr /!
when ye used to take me with the /
far up the shining / Until we found the palace
I was all alone upon the /,
Beyond the poplar and far up the /,
Oar'd by the dumb, went upward with the / —
Then fell the f's of heaven drowning the deep,
and takes the / With swarthy webs,
booming indistinct Of the confused f's,
Saving liis life on the fallow /.
The Victim 20
In Mem. ix 8
„ Ixxxv 69
„ Ixxxvi 7
„ ciii 20
26
„ cxxvii 13
„ cxxviii 5
Gareth and L. 894
Balin and Balan 454
Lancelot and E. 1037
1043
„ 1046
1050
1154
Holy Grail 533
Pass, of Arthur AM
Lover's Tale i 638
Batt. of Brunanburh 61
Shrine-shattering earthquake, fire, /, thunderbolt, Tiresias 61
Gone like fires and f's and earthquakes Lochsley H., Sixty 40
shine the level lands. And flash the f's ; Early Spring 16
Produce of your field and /, Open. I. and C. Exhih. 5
From xmder rose a muffled moan of f's ;
The / may bear me far,
Flood (verb) F with full daylight glebe and town ?
F's all the deep-blue gloom with beams
Ready to burst and / the world with foam :
And / a fresher throat with song.
/ the haunts of hem and crake ;
poach'd filth that f's the middle street,
f's with redundant life Her narrow portals.
Flooded Were / over with eddying song.
risen before his time And / at our nod.
eyes All / with the helpless wrath of tears,
Over all the woodland's / bowers,
the lake beyond his Umit, And all was /;
Flooding /, leaves Low banks of yellow sand ;
On hill, or plain, at sea, or / ford.
Floor Old footsteps trod the upper f's.
Flung inward over spangled f's,
The meal-sacks on the whiten'd /,
find my garden-tools upon the granary /
rolling waves Of sound on roof and / Within,
There's a new foot on the /, my friend.
As head and heels upon the / They flounder'd
All heaven bursts her starry /'s,
thou shalt cease To pace the gritted /,
shape it plank and beam for roof and /,
Throbb'd thunder thro' the palace f's,
crash'd the glass and beat the/;
Witch-elms that counterchange the /
But let no footstep beat the /,
russet-bearded head roU'd on the /.
others from the /, Tusklike, arising,
Crush'd the wild passion out against the /
once she slipt like water to the /.
grovell'd with her face against the /:
Parted a little ere they met the /,
like the dead by the dead on the cabin /,
as we was a-cleanin' the /,
fire of fever creeps across the rotted /,
wi' my hairm hingin' down to the /,
Found in a chink of that old moulder'd/! '
The sacred relics tost about the / —
Flop hoickt my feet wi' a / fro' the claay.
Flora (Christian name) work in hues to dim The Titianic F.
O, Lady F, let me speak :
So, Lady F, take my lay.
So, Lady F, take my lay,
Florence (town) ' Poor lad, he died at F,
At F too what golden hours,
Abroad, at F, at Rome,
Fair F honouring thy nativity, Thy F now the
crown of Italy,
Prog, of Spring 70
Crossing the Bar 14
Two Voices 87
D. of F. Women 186
Princess iv 474
In Mem. Ixxxiii 16
Merlin and V. 798
Lover's Tale i 84
Dying Swan 42
D. of F. Women 144
Enoch Arden 32
Sisters {E. and E.) 20
The Daisy 72
Lover's Tale i 534
Holy Grail 728
Mariana 67
Arabian Nights 116
Miller's D. 101
May Queen, N. F's. E. 45
D. of F. Women 192
D. of the 0. Year 52
The Goose 37
St. Agnes' Eve 21
WiU Water. 242
Princess vi 46
„ vii 104
In Mem. Ixxxvii 20
„ Ixxxix 1
evil
Geraint and E. 729
Balin and Balan 315
Lancelot and E. 742
830
Guinevere 415
Lover's Tale iv 215
The Wreck 112
Spinster's S's. 49
Lochsley H., Sixty 223
Owd Rod 65
The Ring 280
„ 447
Spinster's S's. 30 J
Gardener's D. YILM
Day-Dm., Pro. L,|
Moral If
Ev.l]
The Brook 35 I
The Daisy 41
Maud I xix 58 1
To Dante 3 1
Flores
223
Flower
Flores At F in the Azores Sir Richaid Grenville lay, The Revenge 1
And he sailed away from F „ 23
Florian I stood With Cyril and with F, Princess i 52
F said : I have a sister at the foreign court, „ 74
I stole from court With Cyril and with F, „ 103
F, but no livelier than the dame „ ii 112
' The fifth in line from that old F, „ 238
The loyal warmth of F is not cold, „ 244
' Are you that Psyche,' F added ; „ 246
'Are you that Psyche,' F ask'd, „ 269
so pacing till she paused By F; „ 303
I am sad and glad To see you, F. „ 307
' Ungracious ! ' answer'd F ; ' have you learnt „ 392
What think you of it, F? ,,408
' Tell us,' F ask'd, ' How grew this feud „ m 76
Then murmur'd F gazing after her, „ 97
Cyril kept With Psyche, with Melissa F, „ 355
F nodded at him, I frowning ; „ iv 159
Alone I stood With F, cursing Cyril, „ 171
the doubt ' if this were she,' But it was F. „ 218
prayer. Which melted F's fancy as she hung, „ 370
Then F knelt, and ' Come ' he whisper'd to her, „ d 63
F, he That loved me closer than his own right eye, „ 530
' Your brother, Lady, — F, — ask for him „ vi 313
But Psyche tended F : „ vii 55
Sea Dreams 219
Princess in 350
Mine be the strength 12
Sea Dreams 266
Amphion 24
Hendecasyllabics 9
The Goose 38
PeUeas and E. 574
Princess v 498
Enoch Arden 342
Lancelot and E. 554
Talking Oak 197
201
Enoch Arden 8
The Brook 12
Boddicea 83
Lover's Tale i 348
Enoch Arden 734
The Brook 11
Princess vii 113
I
Florid /, stem, as far as eye could see.
Engirt with many a / maiden-cheek,
Florida as the warm gulf-stream of F Floats
Flounce dimpled / of the sea-furbelow flap,
Floonder began to move. And / into hornpipes.
Should I / awhile without a tumble
Floundered They / all together.
Floundering The weary steed of Pelleas /
Part stumbled mixt with / horses.
Flour / From his tall mill that whistled
Flourish (s) In the mid might and / of his May,
Flourish (verb) 0 / high, with leafy towers,
O /, hidden deep in fern,
f'es Green in a cuplike hollow of the down,
life in him Could scarce be said to /,
Out of evil evil /'«*,
She said, ' The evil / in the world.'
Elonrish'd F a little garden square and wall'd :
They / then or then ; but life in him
From all a closer interest / up,
poplar and cypress unshaken by storm / up
beyond sight, V. of Alaeldune 15
You shouJd be jubilant that you / here Poets and their B. 12
Flourishing cave Of touchwood, with a single / spray. Aylmer's Field 512
thence they wasted all the / territory, Boddicea 54
Flout put your beauty to this / and scorn Geraint and E. 675
And all to / me, when they bring me in, Pelleas and E. 330
Flouted When he / a statesman's error. The Wreck 68
Flow (s) Low-tinkled with a bell-like / The winds, etc. 7
silver / Of subtle-paced counsel in distress, Isabel 20
Down from the central fountain's / Arabian Nights 50
sonorous / Of spouted fountain-floods. Palace of Art 27
that / Of music left the lips of her that died D. of F. Women 194
Have ebb and / conditioning their march, Golden Year 30
float or fall, in endless ebb and /; W.to Marie Alex. 27
a rock in ebbs and f's, Fixt on her faith. Mart, of Geraint 812
clearer in my life than all Its present /. Lover's Tale i 150
With its true-touch'd pulses in the / „ 205
source Of these sad tears, and feeds their downward /. „ 784
Sway'd by vaster ebbs and /'« Locksley H., Sixty 194
Plow (verb) The stream f's. The wind blows, Nothing will Die 9
The stream will cease to /; All Things will Die 9
till his own blood f's About his hoof. Sv/pp. Confessions 155
All night the silence seems to / Oriana 86
Motions / To one another, Elednore 61
May into uncongenial spirits /; Mine be the strength 11
But now thy beauty f's away. Mariana in the S. 67
There's somewhat f's to us in life. Miller's D. 21
They saw the gleaming river seaward / Lotos-Eaters 14
According to my humour ebb and /. D. of F. Women 134
Flow (verb) {continued) I had not dared to / In these words
toward you. To J. S. 6
thro' such tears As / but once a life. Love and Duty 64
F down, cold rivulet, to the sea, A Farewell 1
F, softly /, by lawn and lea, „ 5
Till last by Philip's fann I / The Brook 31
and / To join the brimming river, (repeat) „ 63, 182
your great name / on with broadening time Princess Hi 164
let the turbid streams of rumour / Ode on Well. 181
All along the valley, where thy waters /, V. of Cauteretz 3
The tide / '5 down, the wave again Is vocal In Mem. xix 13
The double tides of chariots / „ xcviii 23
The liills are shadows, and they / „ cxxiii 5
F thro' our deeds and make them pure, „ cxxxi 4
And all we / from, soul in soul. „ 12
they do not / From evil done ; Guinevere 188
F back again unto my slender spring Lover's Tale i 147
Flow'd tide of time / back with me, Arabian Nights 3
Heaven / upon the soul in many dreams The Poet 31
Rare sunrise /. „ 36
F forth on a carol free and bold ; Dying Swan 30
From underneath his helmet / L. of Shalott, Hi 30
o'er him / a golden cloud, and lean'd Upon him, (Enone 105
Thus far he /, and ended ; Golden Year 52
Fast / the current of her easy tears, Enoch Arden 865
(possibly He / and ebb'd uncertain, Aylmer's Field 218
The mother /in shallower acrimonies: „ 563
but when the preacher's cadence / „ 729
and dream and truth F from me ; Princess v 542
Bloodily / the Tamesa rolUng phantom bodies Boddicea 27
ladies came, and by and by the town F in, Marr. of Geraint 547
light upon her silver face F from the spiritual lily Balin and Balan 264
in that hour A hope / round me, Lover's Tale i 449
that life I heeded not F from me, „ 597
Loosed from their simple thrall they had / abroad, „ 703
past and / away To those unreal billows : „ ii 195
the grape from whence it / Was blackening Sisters (E. and E.) 61
the field with blood of the fighters F, Batt. of Brunanburh 25
Flower (s) (See also Cuckoo-flower, Field-flower, Flag-
flower, Hearth-flower, Heather-flower, Honey-
suckle-flower, Marish-flowers, Passion-flower,
Poison - flowers. Orange - flower. Sea - flower.
Spring-flowers, Wild-flower, Wildweed-flower)
the heart to scathe F's thou hadst rear'd — Supp. Confessions 84
The stately / of female fortitude, Isabel 11
In order, eastern f's large, Arabian NigfUs 61
Engarlanded and diaper'd With inwrought /'s, „ 149
(Those peerless f's which in the rudest wind
and sweet showers Of festal f's,
the heavy stalks Of the mouldering f's :
like the arrow-seeds of the field /,
mother plant in semblance, grew A / all gold,
water will I pour Into every spicy /
The f's would faint at your cruel cheer.
With many a deep-hued bell-like /
Overlook a space of f's,
About the opening of the /,
You scarce could see the grass for f's.
and you were gay With bridal f's —
I roll'd among the tender f's :
meadow-ledges midway down Hang rich in f's,
purple / droops : the golden bee Is lily-cradled :
With bunch and berry and / thro' and thro'.
A simple maiden in her / Is worth
But I must gather knots of f's.
Last May we made a crown of f's :
There's not a / on all the hills :
I long to see a / so before the day I die.
When the f's come again, mother,
the land about, and all the f's that blow,
Wild f's in the valley for other hands
enchanted stem. Laden with / and fruit,
in the stream the long-leaved f's weep.
The / ripens in its place,
I knew the f's, I knew the leaves,
Ode to Memory 24
78
A spirit haunts 8
The Poet 19
„ 24
Poet's Mind 13
15
Elednore 37
L. of Shalott i 16
Two Voices 161
453
Miller's D. 165
Fatima 11
(Enone 7
„ 29
„ 102
L. C. V. de Vere 15
May Queen 11
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 9
13
16
25
Con. 7
52
Lotos-Eaters 29
„ C. S. 10
36
D.ofF. Women 13
Flower
224
Flower
Flower (s) (continued) Feeding the/; but ere my/
to fruit Changed,
shadow of the/'s Stole all the golden gloss,
Each garlanded with her peculiar /
And made a little wreath of all the f's
The wreath of f's fell At Dora's feet,
honeycomb of eloquence Stored from all f's ?
The / of each, those moments when we met,
Like Proserpine in Enna, gathering f's :
bring me offerings of fruit and f's :
The /, she touch'd on, dipt and rose,
The drooping / of knowledge changed to fruit
Live happy ; tend thy f's ;
we reap The / and quintessence of change,
bird of Eden burst In carol, every bud to /,
Perfume and/'s fall in showers.
That are the / of the earth ? '
With naked limbs and f's and fruit,
But we nor paused for fruit nor f's.
What ! the / of life is past :
robed your cottage- walls with f's
Makes his heart voice amid the blaze of f's :
Crown'd with a / or two, and there an end —
Or beast or bird or fish, or opulent / :
F's of all heavens, and lovelier than their names,
Laid it on f's, and watch'd it lying bathed
and with great urns of f's.
the bird, the fish, the shell, the /,
long hall glitter'd like a bed of f's.
Fluctuated, as f's in storm, some red,
Remembering her mother : O my / !
the household / Torn from the lintel —
squadrons of the Prince, trampling the f's
I take her for the / of womankind.
Their feet in f's, her loveliest :
With books, with f's, with Angel offices,
And Uke a / that cannot all unfold,
and crown'd with all her f's.
Break, happy land, into earlier f's !
Has given our Prince his own imperial F,
welcome Russian /, a people's pride. To Britain
when her f's begin to blow !
my eldest-bom, the / of the flock ;
Shadow and shine is life, Uttle Annie, / and thorn,
my beauty, my eldest-born, my/;
— wot's a beauty ? — the / as blaws.
Up there came a /, The people said,
muttering discontent Cursed me and my /.
the people cried, ' Splendid is the /.'
Most can raise the f's now,
F in the crannied wall,
Little / — but if I could understand
fruit Which in our winter woodland looks a /.
All of f's, and drop me a /, Drop me a /.
Cannot a /, a /, be mine ?
Drop me a /, a /, to kiss,
her Dower All of f's, a /, a /, Dropt, a /.
The seasons bring the / again,
may find A / beat with rain and wind.
And this poor / of poesy
From / to /, from snow to snow :
When / is feeling after /;
traces of the past Be all the colour of the /:
The path we came by, thorn and /,
The perfect / of human time ;
Made cypress of her orange /,
And brushing ankle-deep in f's,
Day, when I lost the / of men ;
The time admits not f's or leaves
the / And native growth of noble mind ;
But tho' I seem in star and / To feel thee
But where is she, the bridal /,
weight Of learning lightly like a /.
That pelt us in the porch with f's.
is but seed Of what in them is / and fruit ;
D. ofF. Women 207
Gardener's D. 129
201
Dora 82
„ 102
Edwin Morris 27
„ 69
112
St. S. Stylites 128
Talking Oak 131
Love and Duty 24
87
Day-Dm., L Envoi 24
44
Sir Galahad 11
Lady Clare 68
The Voyage 55
56
Vision of Sin 69
Aylmer's Field 698
Lucretius 101
229
249
Princess, Pro. 12
„ i93
„ a 26
„ 383
439
„ iv 482
„ «89
128
247
HI
„ m 78
„ vii 26
141
Ode Inter. Exhib. 42
W. to Alexandra 10
W. to Marie Alex. 4
Grandmother 9
60
101
N. Farmer, N. S. 15
The Flower 3
8
„ 16
„ 19
Flow, in cran. wall 1
4
A Dedication 13
Window, At the W. 6
9
11
13
In Mem. ii 5
„ viii 15
.19
„ arartt 4
„ xliii 8
„ xlvi 2
„ Ixi 4
„ Ixxxiv 15
„ Ixxxix 49
„ xcix 4
„ cvii 5
„ cxi 15
„ cxxx 6
„ Con. 25
40
68
136
Flower (S) (continued)
her/;
To the f's, and be their sun.
For a shell, or a /, little things
splendour falls On the Uttle / that clings
It is only f's, they had no fruits,
Wearing the white / of a blameless life,
Lancelot past away among the / 's.
Man in his pride, and Beauty fair in
Maud I iv 25
„ xxii 58
„ //m64
,, iv 33
«77
Ded. of Idylls 25
Com. of Arthur 450
and return'd Among the/'s, in May, „ 452
the live green had kindled into f's, Gareth and i. 185
nose Tip-tilted like the petal of a/; „ 591
As if the /, That blows a globe of after arrowlets,
' 0 dewy f's that open to the sun, O dewy /'s that
close when day is done,
' What knowest thou otf's, except, belike.
Who lent me thee, the / of kitchendom, A foolish love
for/'s?
F's ? nay, the boar hath rosemaries and bay.
Miss the full / of this accomplishment.'
will hide with mantling /'s As if for pity ? '
Fresh as a / new-bom, and crying,
like a crag was gay with wilding/ '5 :
Whom Gwydion made by glamour out oi f's,
Betwixt the cressy islets white in/;
wealth Of leaf, and gayest garlandage oif's,
Lancelot with his hand among the/'s
Prince, we have ridd'n before among the/'s
The / of all their vestal knighthood, knelt
They might have cropt the myriad / of May,
As once — of old — among the/'s — they rode.
And noble deeds, the / of all the world.
' to pluck the / in season,' So says the song,
A border fantasy of branch and /,
Lancelot, the / of bravery, Guinevere, The pearl
The / of all the west and aU the world,
So saying, from the carven / above,
it I bide, lo ! this wild / for me ! '
For pleasure all about a field of f's:
the victim's f's before he fall.'
Hereafter, when you yield your / of life
showers ol f's Fell as we past ;
disarm'd By maidens each as fair as any/:
the wholesome / And poisonous grew together,
see thou, that it may bear its /.
your / Waits to be solid fruit of golden deeds,
purple slopes of mountain /'s Pass under white, till
the warm hour returns With veer of wind, and all
are f's again;
Is all as cool and white as any /.'
Come dashing down on a tall wayside /,
A glorious company, the / of men.
To which my spirit leaneth all her f's,
broad and open / tell What sort of bud it was.
Can ye take off the sweetness from the /,
And then point out the / or the star ?
mine made garlands of the selfsame /,
let grow The/'s that run poison in their veins,
poppy-stem, ' whose /, Hued with the scarlet of a
fierce simrise,
no leaf, no /, no fruit for me.
Laden with thistledown and seeds oif's,
her I loved, adom'd with fading /'s.
the / of a year and a half is thine,
' Our Nelly's the / of 'em all.'
clean as a / fro' 'ead to feeat :
All the bowers and the/'s. Fainting /'s, faded
bowers.
Over all the meadows drowning /'s,
you used to send her the f's ;
F's to these ' spirits in prison '
And she lay with a / in one hand
1028
1066
1069
1071
1074
1297
1392
„ 1409
Marr, of Geraint 319
„ 743
Geraint and E. 475
Balin and Balan 83
259
272
„ 508
577
Merlin and V. 136
„ 413
722
Lancdot and £.11
113
249
549
644
793
910
952
Holy Grail 348
576
775
887
Last Tournament 99
And we came to the Isle of F's :
we tore up the/'s by the million
one carved all over with/'s,
there were more for the carven f's,
229
416
Guinevere 253
464
Lover's Tale i 104
„ 151
171
175
,, 343
347
352
„ m 40
To A. Tennyson 3
First Quarrel 28
North. Cobbler 44
Sisters (E. and E.) 10
21
In the Child. Hosp. 33
37
„ 39
V. of Maddune 37
53
106
112
Flower
225
Flung
Slower (s) {continued) Cast at thy feet one / that fades
away. To Dante 7
one snowy knee was prest Against the margin /'s ; Tiresias 43
And him the last ; and laying /'s, „ 212
speaking aloud To women, the / of the time, The Wreck 49
Who had home my / on her hireling heart ; „ 143
Trusting no longer that earthly / Despair 35
on an earth that bore not a/; „ 44
And wind the front of youth with /'s, Ancient Sage 97
songs in praise of death, and crown'd with f'sl „ 209
a / Had murmurs ' Lost and gone and lost and gone ! ' „ 223
' His two wild woodland /'«.' Wild /'s blowing side
by side
Wild/'s of the secret woods,
May all the/ '5 0' Jeroosilim blossom
An' the lark fly out 0' the/'s
carpet es fresh es a midder 0' f's i' Maiiy —
used to call the very f's Sisters,
perhaps a world of never tadingf's.
face of Edith Uke a / among the/'s.
Or Love with wreaths of f's.
the laughing shepherd bound with /'» ;
and fills The / with dew ;
where the purple/'* grow,
here thy hands let fall the gather'd /,
now once more ablsize With f's that brighten
All f's — but for one black blur of earth
My quick tears kill'd the /,
Caught by the / that closes on the fly,
lonely maiden-Princess, crown'd with f's,
Her tribes of men, and trees, and / '5,
the bloodless heart of lowly / 's
No louder than a bee among the f's,
the rose Cry to the lotus ' No / thou '?
Warble bird, and open /, and, men,
I am dressing the grave of a woman with / 's.
I am dressing her grave with / '5.
Vary like the leaves and/ 's,
Draw from my death Thy Uving / and grass,
Flower (verb) white as privet when it/ '«.
but as poets' seasons when they /,
his followers, all F into fortune —
So blighted here, would / into full health
while the races / and fade,
Flowerage Busying themselves about the /
Flower-bells cluster'd f-b and ambrosial orbs
Jlower'd (See also Fr^ihly-flowered, White-flower'd)
a dress All branch'd and / with gold,
answers to his mother's calls From the /
furrow. Supp. Confessions 160
Fifty times the rose has / and faded. On Jub. Q. Victoria 1
A rhyme that / betwixt the whitening sloe To Mary Boyle 25
Jnowering (part, and adj.) A spacious garden full
of / weeds, To With Pal. ofAri4.
there grew an Eastern rose, That, / high. Gardener's D. 124
burgeons every maze of quick About the / squares. In Mem. cxv 3
The snowdrop only, / thro' the year. Last Tournament 220
/ grove Of grasses Lancelot pluck'd him Guinevere 33
And we hated the F Isle, V. of Maeldune 52
charm of all the Muses often i^ in a lonely word ; To Virgil 12
Flowering (s) I mark'd Him in the / of his fields. Pass, of Arthur 10
Flowerless In silence wept upon the / earth. Death of CEnone 9
Flower-plot With blackest moss the f-p's Mariana 1
Flower-sheath Ughtly breaks a faded f-s, Marr of Geraint 365
Flowery rivulet in the / dale '11 merrily glance and
play. May Queen 39
I turning saw, throned on a / rise, D. of F. Women 125
AU the land in / squares, Gardener's D. 76
lead my Memmius in a train Of / clauses Lucretitis 120
came On / levels xmdemeath the crag, Princess Hi 336
Thy partner in the / walk Of letters. In Mem. Ixxxiv 22
Witness theu- / welcome. Balin and Balan 145
course of life that seem'd so / to me Merlin and V. 880
Floweth From thy rose-red lips my name F ; Eleanore 134
from whose left hand / The Shadow of Death, Lmer's Tale i 498
The Flight 80
82
Tomorrow 89
91
Spinster's S's. 45
Locksley H., Sixty 101
184
260
Epilogue 17
To Virgil 16
Early Spring 46
Fraier Ave, etc. 4
Demeter arid P. 9
36
37
108
The Ring 344
„ 485
To Ulysses 3
Prog, of Spring 84
Romney's R. 82
Akbar's Dream 37
„ Hymn 7
Charity 2
„ 44
Poets and Critics 4
Doubt and Prayer 6
Walk, to the Mail 56
Golden Year 28
Columius 167
The Ring 317
Making of Man 5
Aylmer's Field 203
Isabd 36
Marr. of Geraint 631
Flowing {See also Forward-flowing, Full-flowing,
Low-flowing) stream be aweary of / Under
my eye ?
the blue river chimes in its /
A clear stream / with a muddy one,
/ rapidly between Their interspaces,
F beneath her rose-hued zone ;
lordly music / from The illimitable years.
F like a crystal river ;
Winds were blowing, waters /,
My tears, no tears of love, are /
island in the river F down to Camelot
her canvas /, Rose a ship of France,
hung to hear The rapt oration / free
the blood Of their strong bodies, /,
F with easy greatness and touching
A land of promise / with the milk And honey
Were stoled from head to foot in / black ;
And holding them back by their / locks
But pledge me in the / grape.
And o'er them many a / range
The truth, that flies the / can,
princely halls, and farms, and / lawns.
Nothing will Die 1
AU Things will Die 1
Isabel 30
Arabian Nights 83
140
Ode to Memory 41
Poet's Mind 6
Oriana 14
Wan Sculptor 7
L. ofShalott i 14
The Captain 27
In Mem. Ixxxvii 32
Marr. of Geraint 569
The Wreck 50
Lover's Tale i 334
„ m85
The Merman 14
My life is full 15
Day-Dm., Depart. 21
Will Water. 171
Aylmer's Field 654
Dragon's cave Half hid, they tell me, now in / vines — Tiresias 144
Flown as tho' it were The hour just /, Gardener's D. 83
He rode a horse with wings, that would have /, Vision of Sin 3
Had tost his ball and / his kite, Aylmer's Field 84
tell her. Swallow, that thy brood is /: Princess iv 108
F to the east or the west, Window, Gone 7
love is more Than in the summers that are/. In Mem., Con. 18
For the black bat, night, has /, Maud I xxii 2
as the cageling newly / returns. Merlin and V. 901
life had /, we sware but by the shell — Last Tournament 270
she that clasp'd my neck had /; Locksley H., Sixty 15
Floy (fly) a knaws naw moor nor a/; N. Farmer, O. S. 67
Fluctuate And / all the still perfume, In Mem. xcv 56
Fluctuated F, as flowers in storm, some red, Princess iv 482
Fluctuation tall columns drown'd In silken / „ vi 355
world-wide / sway'd In vassal tides In Mem. cxii 15
Flue sent a blast of sparkles up the/: M. d' Arthur, Ep. 15
Fluent In tracts of / heat began. In Mem. cxviii 9
Broad brows and fair, a / hair and fine, Gareth and L. 464
Fluid and / range Of lawless airs, Supp. Confessions 147
' This world was once a / haze of light, Princess ii 116
Fluke Anchors of rusty /, and boats updrawn ; Enoch Arden 18
Flung (^See aZso Broad-flung) The costly doors /open wide, Arabian Nights 17
F inward over spangled floors, „ 116
F leagues of roaring foam into the gorge // / were loved 13
Backward the lattice-blind she /, Mariana in the S. 87
Then with both hands I / him, M. d' Arthur 157
And/ him in the dew. Talking Oak 232
F the torrent rainbow round : Vision of Sin 32
And / her down upon a couch of fire, Aylmer's Field 574
His body half / forward in pursuit, „ 587
F ball, flew kite, and raced the purple fly. Princess ii 248
She took it and she / it. ' Fight ' she said, „ iv 598
and / defiance down Gagelike to man, „ v 177
She / it from her, thinking : ,, Con. 32
Wo / the burthen of the second James. Third of Feb. 28
and / A ballad to the brightening moon : In Mem. Ixxxix 27
and / The lilies to and fro, and said „ xcv 59
I ran And / myself down on a bank of heath. Com. of Arthur 343
here is glory enow In having / the three : Gareth and L. 1326
To which he / a wrathful answer back : Geraint and E. 146
/ herself Down on the great King's couch, Lancelot and E. 609
Unclasping / the casement back, „ 981
F them, and down they flash'd, „ 1235
A stone is / into some sleeping tarn, Pelleas and E. 93
nipt the hand, and / it from her ; „ 133
And / them o'er the walls ; „ 316
steed of Pelleas floundering / His rider, „ 574
I have / thee pearls and find thee swine.' Last Tournament 310
Then with both hands I /him. Pass, of Arthur 325
would have / himself From cloud to cloud, Lover's Tale i 301
I / myself upon him In tears and cries : „ ii 89
Flung
226
Fly
Flung {continued) I, groaning, from me / Her empty
phantom : Lover's Tale ii 205
This question, so / down before the guests, „ iv 268
I / him the letter that drove me wild, First Quarrel 57
when all was done He / it among his fellows — Rizpah 32
the Priest's pearl, / down to swine — Sir J. Oldcastle 116
and / them in bight and bay, V. of Maeldune 53
Pallas / Her fringed segis, Achilles over the T. 3
I am / from the rushing tide of the world The Wreck 6
I caught the wreath that was /. „ 40
Till you / us back on ourselves. Despair 40
Christian conquerors took and / Locksley H., Sixty 84
from their hands F thro' the woods. Early Spring 18
/ herself Against my heart. The Ring 397
and / the mould upon your feet, Happy 50
/ himself between The gladiatorial swords, St. Telemachus 61
women shrieking ' Atheist ' / Filth from the roof, Akbar's Dream 91
I / myseU down at her feet. Charity 38
Clomb the mountain, and / the berries, Kapiolani 6
Wait till Death has / them open, Faith 7
Flur F, for whose love the Roman Caesar Marr. of Geraint 745
Flurried the little fowl were / at it, Gareth and L. 69
Flush (s) / of anger'd shame O'erflows thy calmer glances, Madeline 32
for when the morning / Of passion Lucretius 2
As light a / As hardly tints the blossom Bcdin and Balan 266
For here a sudden / of wrathful heat Guinevere 356
opposite The / and dawn of youth. Lover's Tale i 189
Her husband in the / of youth and dawn. Death of (Enone 17
Flush (verb) strikes along the brain, And f'es
all the cheek. D. of F. Women 44
colour f'es Her sweet face from brow to chin : L. of Burleigh 61
After his books, to / his blood with air, Aylmer's Field 459
Or by denial / her babbling wells Princess v 334
madness f'es up in the ruffian's head, Maud I iSl
and made him /, and bow Lowly, Gareth and L. 548
Flush'd (See also Faintly-flushed, New-flush'd, Sun-
flush'd) F all the leaves with rich gold-green, Arabian Nights 82
F Uke the coming of the day ; Miller's D. 132
/ Ganymede, his rosy thigh Half-biuied Palace of Art 121
F in her temples and her eyes, „ 170
' Then / her cheek with rosy light, Talking Oak 165
Psyche / and wann'd and shook ; Princess iv 160
When first she came, all / you said to me „ vi 250
her face A little /, and she past on ; „ vii 81
Where oleanders / the bed Of silent torrents. The Daisy 33
The Peak is high and / At his highest Voice and the P. 29
Some /, and others dazed. Com. of Arthur 265
when / with fight, or hot, God's curse, Geraint and E. 660
that other /, And hung his head, „ 810
Upright and / before him : Merlin and V. 912
F slightly at the slight disparagement Lancelot and E. 234
beyond them / The long low dune. Last Tournament 483
F, started, met him at the doors, „ 512
The small sweet face was /, The Wreck 60
and / as red As poppies when she crown'd it. The Tourney 16
Fhishing rosy red / in the northern night. Locksley Hall 26
let my query pass Unclaim'd, in / silence, The Brook 105
/ the guiltless air, Spout from the maiden fountain LAicretius 239
Plusier'd him that / his poor parish wits Aylmer's Field 521
snares them by the score Flatter'd and /, Princess v 164
But once in life was / with new wine, Merlin and V. 756
so / with anger were they. They almost fell V. of Maeldune 25
Flute (s) Blow, /, and stir the stiff-set sprigs, Amphion 63
thicket rang To many a / of Arcady. In Mem. xxiii 24
Nor harp be touch'd, nor / be blown ; „ ct 22
the roses heard The /, violin, bassoon; Maud I xxii 14
To the sound of dancing music and /'* : „ 7/ d 76
Fhite (verb) lute and / fantastic tenderness, Princess iv 129
Fluted The mellow ouzel / in the elm ; Gardener's D. 94
From / vase, and brazen urn In order, Arabian Nights 60
And / to the morning sea. To E. L. 24
Flute-notes thy f-n are changed to coarse, The Blackbird 18
Fluting swan That, / a wild carol ere her death, M. d' Arthur 267
swan That, f a wild carol ere her death, Pass, of Arthur 435
Flutter His spirit /'« like a lark, Day-Dm., Arrival 29
Flutter {continued) Wings /, voices hover clear : Sir Galahad 78
Flags, / out upon turrets and towers ! W. to Alexandra 15
heart within her fall and / tremulously, Boadicea 81
There /'s up a happy thought, In Mem. Ixv 7
The tender blossom / down, „ ci 2
idle fancies / me, 1 know not where to turn ; The Flight 74
Flutter'd F about my senses and my soul ; Gardener's D. 67
A second / round her lip Like a golden butterfly ; Talking Oak 219
melody F headlong from the sky. Vision of Si^i 45
A little /, with her eyelids down, Tlie Brook 89
there / in, Half -bold, half -frighted, Geraint and E. 596
And / adoration, and at last With dark sweet hints Merlin and V. 158
The footstep / me at first : Last Tournament 515
And a pinnace, like a / bird. The Revenge 2
Fluttering (part.) voice Faltering and / in her throat. Princess ii 187
Alive with / scarfs and ladies' eyes, „ i; 509
above. Crimson, a slender banneret /. Gareth and L. 913
/in a doubt Between the two — Sisters (E. and E.) 33
F the hawks of this crown-lusting line — Sir J. Oldcastle 57
and then fell / down at my feet ; The Wreck 82
elmtree's ruddy-hearted blossom-flake Is / down. To Mary Boyle 4
blasts That nm before the / tongues of fire ; D. of F. Women 30
And on the board the / urn : In Mem. xcv 8
With half a night's appUances, recall'd Her / life : Lover's Tale iv 94
Fluttering (s) I watch'd the little/'*, Miller's D. 15^
Fly (s) {See also Dragon-fly, Fancy-flies, Fire-fly, Floy,
Gad-fly) The blue / sung in the pane ; Mariana 63
Kate saith ' the men are gilded flies.' KatelS
The swallow stopt as he himted the /, Poet's Song 9
Like flies that haunt a woimd, Aylmer's Field 571
flew kite, and raced the purple /, Princess ii 248
In lieu of many mortal flies, „ Hi 268
endure for the life of the worm and the/? Wages 7
bees are still'd, and the flies are kill'd. Window, Winter 10
And men the flies of latter spring, In Mem. 1 10
eyes Are tender over drowning flies, „ xcvi 3
his head in a cloud of poisonous flies. Maud I iv 54
And call'd herself a gilded summer / Merlin and V. 258
since you name yourself the summer /, „ 369
gape for flies — we know not whence they come ; Holy Grail 147
and infinite torment of flies, Def. of Lucknow 82
men Walk'd like the / on ceilings ? Columbus 51
for you know The flies at home, „ 119
Nor drown thyself yfiih flies in honied wine ; Ancient Sage 268
Miriam sketch'd and Muriel threw the /; The Ring 159
She threw the / for me ; „ 355
black/ upon the pane May seem the black ox To one who ran down Eng. 3
Fly (verb) Then away she flies. Lilian 18
whither away, whither away ? / no more. Sea-Fairies 7
rainbow forms and flies on the land „ 25
mariner, mariner, / no more. „ 42
Whither / ye, what game spy ye, Rosalind 8
' Here sits he shaping wings to /: Two Voices 289
let her herald. Reverence, / Before her Love thou thy land 18
To ingroove itself with that which flies, „ 46
Simmies forward to his brother Sun; Golden Year 23
^F, happy happy sails, and bear the Press ; F
happy with the mission of the Cross ; „ 42
And order'd words asunder /. Day-Dm., Pro. 20
The colour ^ies into his cheeks : „ Arrival 19
splinter'd spear-shafts crack and /, Sir Galahad 7
F o'er waste fens and windy fields. „ 60
And /, like a bird, from tree to tree ; Edward Gray 30
The truth, that^tes the flowing can. Will Water. 171
We follow that which flies before : The Voyage 94
to / sublime Thro' the courts, the camps, Vision of Sin 103
A crippled lad, and coming tum'd to /, Aylmer's Field 519
Let me /, says little birdie, Sea Dreams 295
rests a httle longer, Then she flies away. „ 30O
Let me rise and / away. „ 304
Baby too shall / away. „ 308
F on to clash together again, Lucretius 41
Thy glory / along the ItaUan field, „ 71
do they / Now thinner, and now thicker^ „ 165
the soul flies out and dies in the air.' „ 274
I
Fly
227
Foam
Fly (verb) (continued)
at the hearts,
baby loves F twanging headless arrows
Princess ii 402
/,' she cried, ' O /, while yet you may !
But you may yet be saved, and therefore /:
As flies the shadow of a bird, she fled.
/' to her, and fall upon her gilded eaves,
F to her, and pipe and woo her,
and fled, as flies A troop of snowy doves
I grant in her some sense of shame, she flies;
She flies too high, she flies too high !
I say she flies too high, 'sdeath !
Mi 28
64
96
iv 94
115
167
349
®281
286
peacemaker / To happy havens under all the sky, Ode Inter. Exhib. 34
The lights and shadows/!
F; F to the light in the valley below —
As flies the lighter thro' the gross,
111 brethren, let the fancy /
Fiercely flies The blast of North and East,
and / The happy birds, that change their sky
Arise and / Tne reeling Faun,
Wild Hours that / with Hope and Fear,
' The fault was mine,' he wnisper'd, '/! '
I saw the dreary phantom arise and /
Until she let me / discaged to sweep
A jewell'd harness, ere they pass and /.
But after sod and shingle ceased to /
' I / no more : I allow thee for an hour.
Larded thy last, except thou turn eind /.
all about it flies a honeysuckle.
and wildly /, Mixt with the flyers.
' F, they will return And slay you ; /, your charger
is without,
Behold, I / from shame, A lustful King,
I / to thee. Save, save me thou —
When did not rumours/?
if he / us. Small matter ! let him.'
And / to my strong castle overseas :
yet rise now, and let us /,
Stands in a wind, ready to break and /,
And he that fled no further / the King ;
stream Flies with a shatter'd foam
He flies the event : he leaves the event
I must /, but follow quick.
You / them for a moment to fight with them again
' Shall we fight or shall we /?
and aloft the glare Flies streaming,
shell must break before the bird can /.
and now I / from Hell, And you with me ;
An' the lark / out o' the flowers
stormy moment / and mingle with the Past.
And wherever her flag /,
bird that flies All night across the darkness,
F — care not. Birds and brides must leave the nest.
And saw the world / by me like a dream.
And flies above the leper's hut,
Now past her feet the swallow circling flies,
Flies back in fragrant breezes to display
^ar arms stretch'd as to grasp a /:
and all f's from the hand Of Justice,
smd wildly fly, Mixt with the f's.
brands That hack'd among the f's,
Fiercely we hack'd at the f's before us,
_ _ n' Molly Magee kem / acrass me,
l^ing (See also A-Fljrm', Elyin') fled by night, and
/ tum'd :
Dreary gleams about the moorland /
in the / of a wheel Cry down the past,
Or / shone, the silver boss Of her own halo's
dusky shield ;
following up And / the white breaker.
And caught the blossom of the / terms,
we dropt, And / reach'd the frontier :
your arrow-wounded fawn Came /
and loose A / charm of blushes o'er this cheek,
he could not see The bird of passage / south
Blow, bugle, blow, set the wild echoes /, (repeat)
Window, On the Hill 1
„ Letter 12
In Mem. xli 4
„ Ixxxvi 12
„ coii 6
„ cxv 14
„ cxviii 25
„ cxxviii 9
Mavd II i 30
„ /// vi 36
Gareth and L. 20
761
892
1084
1278
Geraint and E. 482
748
Balin and Balan 473
Merlin and V. 77
Lancelot and E. 1194
Pelleas and E. 199
Guinevere 113
120
365
Pass, of Arthur 89
Lover's Tale i 383
„ iv 1
The Bevenge 6
9
25
Achilles over the T. 12
Ancient Sage 154
The Flight 88
Tomorrow 91
Locksley H., Sixty 279
Ofen I. and C. Exhib. 17
Demeter and P. 1
The Ring 89
„ 180
Haffy 4
Prog, of Spring 44
„ 64
Aylmer's Field 588
Marr. of Geraint 36
Geraint and E. 483
Com. of Arthur 121
Batt. of Brunanburh 42
Tomorrow 21
Edwin Morris 134
Locksley Hall 4
Godiva 6
The Voyage 31
Enoch Arden 21
Princess, Pro. 164
il09
ii 271
430
m 210
iv 5, 17
Flying (contimied) ' 0 Swallow, Swallow, /, / South,
' O Swallow, / from the golden woods,
A woman-post in / raiment,
/ on the highest Foam of men's deeds —
shot A / splendour out of brass and steel,
/ struck With showers of random sweet
or call'd On / Time from all their silver tongues —
Paid with a voice / by to be lost
are you / over her sweet little face ?
and birds' song F here and there.
Princess iv 93
114
376
, v319
, vi365
, vii 85
105
Wages 2
Window, On the Hill 13
Spring 2
/ gold of the ruin'd woodlands drove thro' the air. Maud I i 12
F along the land and the main — „ II ii 38
they swerved and brake F, Com. of Arthur 120
follow'd by his / hair Ran like a colt, „ 321
servingman F from out of the black wood, Gareth and L. 802
Gareth's eyes had / blots Before them „ 1031
Comes / over many a windy wave To Britain, Marr. of Geraint 337
And white sails / on the yellow sea ; „ 829
F, but, overtaken, died the death Themselves Geraint and E, 177
Another, / from the wrath of Doorm „ 530
/ back and crying out, ' O Merlin, Merlin and V. 943
I hear of rumoius / thro' your court. Lancelot and E. 1190
and once the shadow of a bird F, Pelleas and E. 39
A blot in heaven, the Raven, / high, Guinevere 133
wheel'd and broke F, and link'd again, and wheel'd
and broke F, „ 258
Quiver'd a / glory on her hair. Lover's Tale i 69
F by each fine ear, an Eastern gauze „ iv 291
pirmace, like a flutter'd bird, came / from far away : The Bevenge 2
F at top of the roofs in the ghastly siege Def. of Lucknow 4
F and foil'd at the last by the handful „ 44
Wiclif -preacher whom I crost In / hither ? Sir J. Oldcastle 39
Trade / over a thousand seas with her spice Fastness 13
with her / robe and her poison'd rose ; „ 16
and brighter The Gleam / onward. Merlin and the G. 96
and fitting close Or / looselier, Akbar's Dream 132
Gleam'd to the / moon by fits. Miller's D. 116
Sole as a / star shot thro' the sky Palace of Art 123
' Saw God divide the night with / flame, D. of F. Women 225
To follow / steps of Truth Across the brazen
bridge of war — Love thou thy land 75
Would play with / forms and images, Gardener's D. 60
And with a / finger swept my lips, „ 246
Thunder, a / fire in heaven, Boddicea 24
Loosely robed in / raiment, „ 37
Is matter for a / smile. In Mem. Ixii 12
And sow the sky with / boughs, „ Ixxii 24
The / cloud, the frosty light : „ cm 2
like a / star Led on the gray-hair'd wisdom Holy Grail 452
Foalk (folk) F's coostom flitted awaay ' North. Cobbler 28
an' / stood a-gawmin' in, „ 81
call'd me afoor my awn/'s to my faace Village Wife 105
that the / be sa scared at. Spinster's S's. 24
Fur to goa that night to 'er / by cause Owd Bod 52
Foam (s) (See also Fountain-foam, Ocean-foam, Sea-
foam) the green brink and the running /, Sea-Fairies 2
Flung leagues of roaring / into the gorge // / were loved 13
brightens When the wind blows the /, (Enone 62
Aphrodite beautiful, Fresh as the /, „ 175
Rolling a slumbrous sheet of / below. Lotos-Eaters 13
Weary the wandering fields of barren /. „ 42
I would the white cold heavy -plunging /, D. of F. Women 118
sea-wind sang Shrill, chill, with flakes of /, M. d' Arthur 49
in the chasm are / and yellow sands ; Enoch Arden 2
And scaled in sheets of wasteful /, Sea Breams 53
burst and flood the world with /: Princess iv 474
flying on the highest F of men's deeds — • „ v 320
sang from the three-decker out of the /, Maud I i 50
Hurl'd back again so often in empty /, Last Tournament 93
As tremulously as / upon the beach Guinevere 364
sea-wind sang ShrUl, chill, with flakes of /. Pass, of Arthur 217
Flies with a shatter'd / along the chasm. Lover's Tale i 383
the points of the / in the dusk came playing Despair 50
ships from out the West go dipping thro' the /, The Flight 91
On broader zones beyond the /, To Ulysses 30
Foam
Foam (s) (contmued) And these low bushes dip their t^^^^ ^^ ^^^.^^ 51
Too full for sound and /,
Foam (verb) Should all our churchmen / m spite
forward-creeping tides Began to /,
Foam-bow his cheek brighten'd as the f-b brightens
228
Folded
Crossing the Bar 6
To F. D. Maurice 9
In Mem. ciii 38
CEnone 61
Foam-DOW nis cneeK uriaui-c" >J <» i'"^ J " "''s""-"" . t ^, t „.,7^ q
FSS-chuming These wet black passes and/-cchaams- ^tr J OZ^as«. 9
Foam'd / away his heart at Averill's ear
Their surging charges / themselves away ;
raved And thus / over at a rival name :
Foam-flakes Crisp /-/ scud along the level sand,
Foam-fountains monster spouted his /-/ in the sea,
Foaming horse across the/ '5 of the ford,
To smoothe my pillow, mis the / draught Of fever,
The / grape of eastern France.
Foamy here and there a / flake Upon me,
Foe tho' his /'s speak ill of him, He was a fnend
to me.
The land, where girt with fnends or/ s
Must ever shock, like armed /'^,
went she Norward, Till she near'd the/,
divine to warn them of their f's :
Had beat her / 's with slaughter
drove her f's with slaughter from her walls,
The next, like fire he meets the /,
The general/. More soluble is this knot,
Truest friend and noblest/;
those two f's above my fallen life,
friend or /, Shall enter, if he will.
His f's were thine ; he kept us free ;
And England pouring on her/'s.
Who never spoke against a/;
For on them brake the sudden/;
Friend, to be struck by the public /,
bright With pi tch'd paviUons of his /,
thou hast driVen the / without, See to the / withm !
thou hast wreak'd his justice on his f's,
' Lo,' said Gareth, ' the / falls ! '
second was your /, the sparrow-hawk,
what they long for, good in friend or /,
Pellam, once A Christless / of thine
He makes no friend who never made a /.
I hold that man the worst of pubUc /'s
friend and / were shadows in the mist,
Kevenge ran on sheer into the heart of the /,
and they yielded to the /.
the / sprung his mine many times,
and the / may outUve us at last —
Friend ?— / perhaps— a tussle for it then !
Far oS from out an island girt by f's,
and a boundless panic shook the /.
where'er they ran. Have ended mortal f's ;
some in fight against the /,
the / was driven. And Wolseley overthrew
Ara,bi,
Drove thro' the midst of the /,
drew The / from the saddle and threw
Wareior of God, man's friend, and t3n'ant's /,
hand Which fell'd the f's before you
Foeman forth there stept a / tall,
What time the f's line is broke,
to perish, falling on the f's ground.
But they heard the f's thunder
still the / spoil'd and bum'd,
body enow to hold his foemen down ?
and by this will beat his foemen down.'
foemen scared, like that false pair who turn'd
/surged, and waver'd, and reel'd Up the hill,
Fog the white / vanish'd like a ghost
Foil'd Flying and / at the last by the handful
Aylmer's Field 342
Ode on Well. 126
Balin and Balan 567
Z>. ofF. Women 39
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 107
Gareth and L. 1040
Princess ii 251
In Mem., Con. 80
The Brook 59
J>. of the 0. Year 22
You ask me, why 7
Love thou thy land 78
The Captain 36
Sea Dreams 69
Princess, Pro. 34
123
iv 583
«135
vil
130
', 336
Ode on WeU. 91
117
185
The Victim 4
Maud II V 89
Com. of Arthur 97
Gareth and L. 593
1268
1317
Marr. of Geraint 444
Geraint and E. 876
Balin and Balan 97
Lancelot and E. 1089
Guinevere 512
Pass, of Arthur 100
The Revenge 33
96
Def. of Lucknow 31
,, 52
Sir J. OldcasUe 196
AchiUes over the T. 8
18
Ancient Sage 158
Locksley E., Sixty 45
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 29
Heavy Brigade 30
„ 54
Efit. on Gordon 1
Happy 42
Oriana 33
Two Voices 155
Locksley HaU 103
The Captain 41
The Victim 1 7
Com. of Arthur 253
309
Geraint and E. 176
Heavy Brigade 62
Death of CEnone 67
Def. of Lucknow 44
Fold (thing folded) (continued) detaching, / by /, From
those stiU heights,
f's as dense as those Which hid the Holiest
The drowsy f's of our great ensign shake
With / to /, of mountain or of cape ;
Dark in its funeral /.
And wrapt thee formless in the /,
In / upon / of hueless cloud,
Thro' twenty /'s of twisted dragon,
sprigs of summer laid between the f's.
Thro' knots and loops and f's innumerable
wrapt In unremorseful/'s of rolling fire.
a streetway hung with/'s of pure White samite,
Enwoimd him / by /, and made him gray And grayer,
I wish that somewhere in the ruin'd f's,
Thro' all its f's the multitudinous beast,
close-lapt in silken f's.
There is no shade or / of mystery
I thought it was an adder's /,
Himg round with ragged rims and burning/ s, —
in their floating /'s They past and were no more :
Fold (as for sheep) {See also Night-fold) * Bring this
lamb back into Thy /,
the thick-fleeced sheep from wattled/ s,
very whitest lamb in all my / Loves you :
who are these ? a wolf within the / !
Far off from men I built a / for them :
No gray old grange, or lonely /,
some black wether of St. Satan's /.
brand us, after, of whose / we be :
if the tigers leap into the / unawares —
driven by storm and sin and death to the ancient /,
ranged from the narrow warmth of your /,
iroil a r lying anu r ail tuc jaoo ujr uuo liouv^^^ _ , ^ •'I--' 71V • i,, -tAn
Fold (thing folded) Down-droop'd, in many a floatmg /, Arabian Nights 147
' Tr3?- o^ff //. „r,«„ TriAlHina rinwn. EUiMwre 28
Vision of Sin 51
Aylmer's Field 771
Princess v 8
„ vii 3
Ode on WeU. 57
In Mem. xxii 15
Maud I vi 3
Gareth and L. 510
Marr. of Geraint 138
Lancelot and E. 439
Holy Grail 261
Last Tournament 140
Guinevere 603
(Enone 221
Tiresias 15
Lover's Tale i 153
182
691
ii 63
99
Supp. Confessions 105
Ode to Memory 66
Aylnier's Fidd 361
Princess ii 190
v390
In Mem. c 5
Merlim, and V. 750
764
Def. of Lucknow 51
The Wreck 2
Despair 38
Akbar's Dream 61
A people from their ancient / of Faith,
Fold (verb) J' thy palms across thy breast, 2^ thme
arms, turn to thy rest. « lo on o-r qa li^*4S
the green that f's thy grave, (repeat) A Dirge 6, 13, 20^27,J4, 41,^48
' High up the vapours / and swim
/ our wings. And cease from wanderings,
sure this orbit of the memory f's
about my feet The berried briony /.'
round her waist she felt it /,
Now f's the Uly all her sweetness up.
So / thyself, my dearest, thou,
or / Thy presence in the silk of sumptuous
ah, / me to your breast !
I'd sooner / an icy corpse dead of some foul disease :
Fold See also Five-fold, Hundred-fold, Fifty-fold, Ten-
hundred-fold, Thousand-fold
Folded {See also Far-folded, Heavy-folded, Many-folded,
Silken-folded) Thought / over thought, smihng
Two Voices 262
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 19
Gardener's D. 74
Talking Oak 148
Day'Dm., Depart. 2
Princess vii 186
188
Ancient Sage 265
The Flight 5
.. 54
In silk-soft f's, upon yielding down,
Look up, the / is on her brow.
Winds all the vale in rosy f's,
In misty /'», that floating as they fell
Eleimore 28
Two Voices 192
MiUer's D. 242
Palace of Art 35
' His palms are / on his breast :
Sleep, Ellen, / in thy sister's arm,
' Sleep, Ellen, / in Emilia's arm ;
To spirits / in the womb.
Bow% on her pahns and / up from wrong.
She heard, she moved. She moan'd, a / voice ;
And every spirit's / bloom
Is pealing, / in the mist.
And yearn'd to burst the / gloom.
Not to be / more in these dear arms.
Wherein she kept them / reverently With sprigs
of summer • » j x
letter she devised ; which bemg wnt And /,
Hath / in the passes of the world.'
on the horizon of the mind Lies /,
the sweet figure / round with night
F her Uon paws, and look'd to Thebes.
Russian crowd F its wings from the left
and I was / in thine arms,
here, my child, tho' / in thine arms.
The / leaf is woo'd from out the bud
dissolved the mystery Of / sleep.
O'er the mute city stole with / wmgs,
Elednore 84
Two Voices 247
Audley Court 63
65
Day -Dm., Sleep P. 8
Princess iv 288
viz
In Mem. xliii 2
„ civ 4
,, cxxii 3
Marr. of Geraint 99
137
Lancelot and E. 1110
Pass, of Arthur 78
Lover's Tale i 50
„ iv 219
Tiresias 149
Heavy Brigade 39
Demeter and P. 22
40
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 26
D. of F. Women 263
Gardener's D. 186
Folded
iy>Ided (continued) Holding the / annals of my vouth •
With/feet, in stoles of white, J' J' " .
Mute with / anns they waited —
stood with / hands and downward eyes
Folding black f's, that which housed therein.
F each other, breathing on each other,
i^ his hands, deals comfortable words '
Foliage rustling thro' The low and bloomed /,
gale That blown about the / underneath,
all thy breadth and height Of /,
sank Down on a drift of / random-blown ;
^ moisture and all smells of bud And/
Foliaged (See also Fua-toliaged) Who murmurest
m the /eaves. , „^ - „
Folk (J.. f 0 Foalk) /that knew not their own minds, EZchTrk^jl
And echo'd by old / beside their fires Com ofArihTr 41 7
sTa^teTX^^riSdT^-^^^--'^- ^I'^^fi
He^that was reft of his J- and his friends Bati. of B^ZnbZrhlO
229
Gardener's D. 244
Sir Galahad 43
The Captain 39
Merlin and V. 69
Gareth and L. 1380
Lover's Tale i 261
. X." 717
Arabian Nighis 13
Princess Hi 121
In Mem. Ixxxix 4
Last Tournament 389
Lover's Tale Hi 6
In Mem. xcix 9
Follow'd
Thn FamA f df f>^ aLIZ ... inyseu ! Merlin and V. 82
FoUer (follow) tha'U / 'im slick into Heu!
FoUer'd (followed) fur the 'tumey's letters they / sa
Follow (-See also FoUer) lightning to the thunder
Which /'s it,
because right is right, to / right
'lo f flying steps of Truth
What good should / this, if this were done ?
dark Earth /'s wheel'd in her ellipse;
/ knowledge like a sinking star.
The vine stream'd out to /,
May my soul / soon !
I / till I make thee mine.'
We / that which flies before :
/ Such dear familiarities of dawn ?
One who cried, ' Leave all and / me.'
the thin weasel there F's the mouse,
which all our greatest fain Would /,
not be dissoluble. Not / the great law ?
A satyr, a satyr, see, F's ;
The rest would /, each in turn ;
' Then / me, the Prince,' I answer'd.
Voice Went with it, ' F, f, thou shalt win.'
falling m a land Of promise ; fruit would/
If more and acted on, what f's ?
Whence /'s many a vacant pang ;
bird of passage flying south but long'd To f-
O Swallow, SwaUow, if I could /,
And tell her, tell her, that I / thee.'
I cannot cease to /you,
To /up the worthiest till he die •
F us : who knows ? we four may bufld some plan
And on the ' F, f, thou shalt win :
But/; let the torrent dance thee down
farewell, and welcome for the year To f-
Fall, and /their doom.
North. Cobbler 66
VUlage Wife 62
The Poet 51
(Enone 149
Love thou thy land 75
M. d' Arthur 92
Golden Year 24
Ulysses 31
Amphion 46
St. Agnes' Eve 4
The Voyage 64
94
Aylmer's Field 130
664
853
Lucretius 79
,, 116
Princess, Pro. 201
227
ilOO
a 140
229
403
Hi 211
iv99
116
455
466
1)230
472
vii 209
„ Con. 96
Voice and the P. 20
F, f the chase.!
F them down the slope ! And I / them down
to the wmdow-pane
Nor/, tho' I walk in haste,
'The King will/ Cairist, and we the King
/ the deer By these tall firs and our fast-faUing
bums ; *
F the deer ? / the Christ, the King, Live pure,
speak true, right wrong, / the King—
Thou get to horse and / him far away.
/ s, being named. His owner.
Lead, and I /.' (repeat) Gareth and L. 746, 76o','807, sbT
< P T i«o^ ,y A . . 990. 1053,'ll55'
'f^ill paMon,"butl7uTth'?q^'^r" °' ''"^''' ^"^^' """ ^' Z
'F the faces, and we find it. " ip?^
the Prince, as Enid past him, fain To /, Marr. of Gerainttm
the knight besought him, ' ii' me, GiraiitaldF 807
• Enough,' he said, ' I /,' and they went. ""^ ^- f ?I
and crying ' Sirs, Rise, /! Balin aiU Balan^
Window, On the Hill 11
16
In Mem. xxii 18
Com. of Arthur 599
Gareth and L. 90
117
584
703
The Fame that/'s death is nothing to us;
the scroll ' I / fame.' '
1 charge you, /me not.'
serve you, and to /you thro' the world.'
I fam would / love, if that could be ; I needs
must /death, who calls for me; CaU and I
J, Ifi let me die.'
Then might she /me thro' the world
I sware a vow to / it till I saw ' '
Galahad, and O Galahad, / me.'
But ye, that /but the leader's bell'
while ye / wandering fires Lost in the quagmire '
most of us would / wandering fires, (repeal "
and vanish'd, tho' I yeam'dTo /•
most of them would / wandering fires
the gloom. That /'s on the turning of the worid
after wail Of suffering, silence f'sT '
What good should / this, if this were done ?
I could not nse Albeit I strove to f
I must fly, but / quick. '
Now f's Edith echoing Evelyn
crying out: ' ii' me, / me ! '—
Do-well will /thought,
/Edwin to those isles, those islands of the Blest '
these would feel and/ Truth if only you and '
leave the dog too lame to / with the cry
know them, / him who led the way
F you the Star that lights a desert pathway,
F Light, and do the Right— ^
'F,' and up the hill, up the hill
bound to/, wherever she go Stark-naked,
0 /, leaping blood, '
poor Muriel when you hear What f's '
/ am Merlin Who / The Gleam.
The Master whisper'd 'i^ the Gleam '
But eager to /, I saw.
After it, / it, F the Gleam.
1 whirl, and I /the Sun.'
Whirl, and /the Sun! (repeat)
But what may / who can tell ?
Follow'd (See also Foller'd)
hand,
^I^^'J/ counsel, comfort, and the words
Merlin and V. 82
464
476
Lancelot and E. 607
939
1016
,, 1316
Holy Grail 282
„ 292
298
319
„ 369, 599
507
„ 891
Pelleas and E. 549
Pass, of Arthur IW
^ „ 260
Lover's Tale ii 98
The Revenge 6
Sisters (E. and E.) 15
Def. of Lucknow 64
Ancient Sage 273
The Flight 42
The bappy princess / him
Locksley H., Sixty 119
226
„ 266
275
„ " 277
Heavy Brigade 11
Dead Prophet 45
Early Spring 25
The Ring 274
Merlin and the G. 10
34
101
130
/T-r T, ■'■"'^ Dreamer 14
Ine Dreamer 20, 24, 28, 32
xi- . , , The Wanderer 14
For surer sign had /, either
M. d' Arthur 76
Love and Dviy 69
Day-Dm., Depart. 8
Thro' all the world she /him.
And / with acclaims.
And / her all the way.
still we /where she led, (repeat)
Then/cahns, and then winds variable
when they / us from Philip's door,
Where Aylmer / Aylmer at the Hall
the fierce old man F, and under his own lintel stood
Seconded, for my lady / suit
T f^lf T^ ® ou *' *""* "^ *^® "^^^^^^ aisle Reel'd,
1 /: and at top She pointed seaward •
I began. And the rest /:
We /up the river as we rode,
■^ ,? A classic lecture, rich in sentiment,
resolder d peace, whereon F his tale
but Blanche At distance/: so they came:
And / up by a hundred airy does.
Passionate tears i?" : the king repUed not :
i K^ J? ""^^^y ^'^^ ^^^^ With blaro of bugle,
^ by the brave of other lands
the day that / the day she was wed.
And silence /, and we wept.
In vassal tides that / thought.
/by h^ flying hair Ran Uke a colt,
thereafter / cahn. Free sky and stars :
Thl fJ^fiT'^^^ ^h^^f' ^^^ good Queen,
Ihe two that out of north had / him :
till the dusk that /evensong Rode on the two
32
WUl Water. 138
Lady Clare 64
The Voyage 59, 90
Enoch Arden 545
The Brook 167
Aylmer's Field 36
331
558
o A' 817
Sea Dreams 121
Princess, Pro. 244
t206
it 373
v48
m83
87
312
Ode on Well. 114
194
The Islet 4
In Mem. xxx 20
). cxii 16
Com. of Arthur Z2l
391
Gareth and L. 526
679
793
Followed
230
Fool
FoUow'd (cotainued) He / nearer : ruth began to work Geraint and E. 101
He / nearer still ; the pain she had „ 186
And overthrew the next that / him, „ 465
His lusty spearmen / him with noise : „ 593
ye be sent for by the King,' They /; Balin arid Balan 49
F the Queen ; Sir Balin heard her „ 250
and / this. But all so blind in rage „ 327
' And is the fair example /, Sir, Merlin and V. 19
Vivien /, but he mark'd her not. „ 199
And then she / Merlin all the way, „ 203
Dear feet, that I have / thro' the world, „ 227
You / me unask'd ; „ 298
the stammering cracks and claps That /, „ 943
F, and in among bright faces, ours. Holy GraU 266
and she F Him down, and like a flying star „ 452
Told him he / — almost Arthur's words— „ 669
knights all set their faces home, Sir Pelleas /. PeUeas and E. 188
And / to the city. „ 586
Arthur rose and Lancelot / him, Last Tournament 112
F a rush of eagle's wings, „ 417
For surer sign had /, either hand, Pass, of Arthur 24i
in weeping and in praise Of her, we /: Lover's Tale ii 88
it seem'd By that which /— „ iv 22
F us too that night, and dogg'd us, Lespair 2
From wasteful living, / — Ancient Sage 5
Good, for Good is Good, he /, Locksley H, Sixty 60
up the hill, F the Heavy Brigade. Heavy Brigade 12
All in a moment / with force „ 20
/ up by her vassal legion of fools ; Fastness 12
hid in cloud not be / by the Moon ? Happy 97
Thro' which I / line by line Your leading hand, To Ulysses 45
A silence / as of death, St. Telemachus 65
those that/, loosen, stone from stone, Akbar's Dream 188
Follower tho' thou numberest with the/ 's Aylmer's Field 66B
And at her head a / of the camp. Princess v 60
my f's ring him round : He sits unarm'd ; Geraint and E. 336
With all his rout of random /'s, „ 382
Went Enid with her sullen / on. „ 440
prick'd In combat with the / of Limours, „ 501
one true knight — Sole / of the vows ' — Last Tournament 303
And every / eyed him as a God ; „ 678
his f's, aU Flower into fortune — Columbus 166
O / of the Vision, still In motion to the distant gleam. Freedom 13
Following / her dark eyes Felt earth as air Gardener's D. 211
or / up And flying the white breaker, Enoch Arden 20
/ our own shadows thrice as long The Brook 166
/ thro' the porch that sang All round with laurel, Princess ii 22
Went forth in long retinue / up The river „ Hi 195
ever / those two crowned twins, „ v 420
He, that ever /her commands. Ode on Well. 211
As we descended / Hope, In Mem. xxii 11
Tho' / with an upward mind The wonders „ xli 21
And Gareth / was again beknaved, Gareth and L. 786
with fixt eye / the three. Marr. of Geraint 237
A youth, that / with a costrel bore „ 386
Let his eye rove in /, or rest On Enid „ 399
(His gentle charger / him unled) Geraint and E. 571
and Vivien / him, Tum'd to her : Merlin and V. 32
And when I look'd, and saw you / still, „ 299
gloom'd Your fancy when ye saw me / you, „ 326
/you to this wild wood, Because I saw you sad, „ 440
and this honour after death, F thy will ! Last Tournament 35
/ these my mightiest knights, Guinevere 489
Few were his /, Fled to his warship : Batt. of Brunanburh 58
F a torrent till its myriad falls Tiresias 37
and, / out A league of labyrinthine darkness, Demeter and P. 81
So, / her old pastime of the brook. The Ring 354
How loyal in the / of thy Lord ! In Mem. W. G. Ward 6
/ lighted on him there. And shouted, Death of (Enone 55
/, as in trance, the silent cry. „ 86
F a hundred sunsets, and the sphere St. Tdemachus 31
And / thy true counsel, by thine aid, Akbar's Dream 154
FoDy ' Ah, /! ' in mimic cadence answer'd James —
' Ah, /! for it lies so far away. Golden Tear 53
Fill'd I was with / and spite, Edward Gray 15
Folly {continue And others' foUies teach us not, WiU Water. 173
/ taking wings SUpt o'er those lazy limits Aylmer's Field 494
brace Of twins may weed her of her /. Princess v 464
How I hate the spites and the follies ! Spiteful Letter 24
Deep / ! yet that this could be— In Mem. xli 9
slumber in which all spleenful / was drown'd, Maud I Hi 2
heart of the poet is whirl'd into / and vice. „ iv 39
perplext her With his worldly talk and/: „ xxl
thy much / hath sent thee here His kitchen-knave : Gareth and L. 919
for I fear My fate or /, Merlin and V. 927
I came All in my / to the naked shore. Holy GraU 793
dead babe and the foUies of the King ; Last Tournament 163
But then what / had sent him overseas „ 394
Gone the fires of youth, the follies, Locksley H., Sixty 39
Fond But O too /, when have I answer'd Princess vii 4
no word of that / tale — Last Tournament 578
Fonder man of science himself is / of glory, Maud I iv 37
Fondle rabbit /'s his own harmless face, Aylmer's Field 851
Fondled Appraised his weight and / f atherUke, Enoch Arden 154
Too ragged to be / on her lap, Aylmer's Field 686
And all this morning when I / you : Merlin and V. 286
we / it, Stephen and I, But it died. The Wreck 83
Fondling / all her hand in his he said, Marr. of Geraint 509
Tristram, / her light hands, replied. Last Tournament 601
Fonseca F my main enemy at their court, Columbus 126
Font One rear'd a / of stone And drew. Princess, Pro. 59
Nor winks the gold fin in the porphyry/: „ wi 178
Entwine the cold baptismal /, In Mem. xxix 10
Food eat wholesome /, And wear warm clothes, St. S. Stylites 108
wine and / were brought, and Earl Limours Geraint and E.289
a beggar began to cry '■F,f or I die ' ! Voice spake, etc. 6
Fool (adj.) What, if she be fasten'd to this / lord, Maud I xvi2A.
' Beat little heart ' on this / brain of mine. Romney's R. 155
Fool (s) (See also Father-fool) an absent /, I cast
me down, Miller's D. 62
we should mimic this raw / the world, Walk, to the Mail 106
while we stood hke f's Embracing, Edwin Morris 118
push'd the happy season back, — The more/'s they, — Golden Year 67
gilds the straiten'd forehead of the/! Locksley Hall 62
F, again the dream, the fancy ! „ 173
' A ship of / 's,' he shriek'd in spite, ' A ship of
f's,' he sneer'd and wept. The Voyage 77
Bandied by the hands of f's. Vision of Sin 106
Drink we, last, the public /, „ 149
April hopes, the f's of chance; „ 164
f's, With such a vantage-ground for nobleness ! Aylmer's Field 386
Went further, /! and trusted him with all. Sea Dreams 76
Christ the bait to trap his dupe and /; „ 191
(God help her) she was wedded to a/; Princess iii 83
slaves at home and / 's abroad.' „ iv 521
' Ah /, and made myself a Queen of farce ! „ vii 243
Ah, there's no / like the old one — Grandmother 44
but I beant a/: N. Farmer, 0. S. 3
' F,' he answer'd, ' death is sure To those that stay Sailor Boy 13
Ah God ! the petty f's of rhyme Lii. Squabbles 1
no God at all, says the /; High. Pantheism 15
We are f's and slight; In Mem., Pro. 29
•Thou shalt not be the/ of loss.' „ iv 16
O to us. The f's of habit, „ x 12
The / that wears a crown of thorns : „ Ixvx 12
They caU'd me /, they call'd me child : „ 13
and the brazen / Was sof ten'd, „ ex 11
who but a / would have faith in a tradesman's ware Maud I i 26
angry pride Is cap and bells for a /. „ **P2
F that I am to be vext with his pride ! „ xiii 5
thought hke a / of the sleep of death. „ xiv 38
Struck me before the languid /, „ // * 19
betraying His party-secret, /, to the press ; „ t; 35
and Evening-Star, Being strong/'*; Gareth and L. 635
all these four he f's, but mighty men, „ 643
Back wilt thou, /? For hard by here is one „ 895
The second brother in their /'« parable — „ 1004
this strong / whom thou. Sir Knave, „ 1058
There stands the third / of their allegory.' . „ 1085
yon four /'« have suck'd their allegory „ H!
1
Fool
231
Foot
Pool (s) (coniinued) Knight, knave, prince and /, Gareth and L. 1255
' jP, for thou hast, men say, the strength of ten, „ 1387
sweet faces make good fellows f's Geraint and E, 399
which a wanton /, Or hasty judger „ 432
And be he dead, I count you for a /; „ 548
F's prate, and perish traitors. Balin and Balan 530
to her Squire mutter'd the damsel ' F's I „ 564
were he not crown'd King, coward, and /.' Merlin and V. 789
shrieking out ' 0 /! ' the harlot leapt Adown the
forest, and the thicket closed Benind her, and
the forest echo'd '/.' „ 972
She mutter'd, ' I have lighted on a /, PeUeas and E. 113
' Thou /,' she said, ' I never heard his voice „ 255
F to the midmost marrow of his bones, „ 258
I deem'd him /? yea, so ? „ 309
Pelleas whom she call'd her/? „ 474
F, beast — ^he, she, or I? myself most /; „ 475
the King Hath made us f's and Uars. „ 479
Dagonet, the /, whom Gawain in his mood Last Tournament 1
Tristram, saying, ' Why skip ye so. Sir J!*" ? ' (repeat) „ 9, 243
being/, and seeing too much wit Makes the world rotten, „ 246
* Ay, /,' said Tristram, ' but 'tis eating dry „ 249
ask'd, ' Why skipt ye not, Sir i^ ? ' „ 256
what music have I broken, / ? ' „ 261
Sir /,' said Tristram, ' I would break thy head. Ff
I came late, the heathen wars were o'er, „ 268
I am but a / to reason with a / — „ 271
' Drink, drink, Sir 2^,' and thereupon I drank, „ 297
marking how the knighthood mock thee, / — „ 301
but when the King Had made thee /, „ 306
frighted all free / from out thy heart : Which left
thee less than /, „ 307
thank the Lord I am King Arthur's /. „ 320
Some such fine song — but never a king's /.' „ 324
goats, asses, geese The wiser f's, „ 326
Tristram, ' Ay, Sir F, for when our King Was victor „ 334
* Nay, /,' said Tristram, ' not in open day.' „ 347
* Lo, /,' he said, ' ye talk F's treason : is the King
thy brother/?' „ 351
Ay, ay, my brother /, the king of f's ! „ 354
Long Uve the king of f's ! „ 358
Sent up an answer, sobbing, ' I am thy /, „ 761
all my doubts were/'s Bom of the / Sisters {E. and E.) 140
stake and the cross-road, /, if you will, Despair 116
But man to-day is fancy's / Ancient Sage 27
I beant sich a / as ye thinks ; Spinster's S's. 18
ye mun be /'« to be h alius a-shawin' your claws, „ 61
tell them ' old experience is a /,' Locksley H., Sixty 131
Nor is he the wisest man who never proved himself a /. „ 244
for War's own sake Is /, or crazed, or worse ; Epilogue 31
f oUow'd up by her vassal legion of jf's ; Vastness 12
' This moael husband, this fine Artist ' ! F, Romney's R. 124
Pool (verb) my own weakness /'s My judgment Supp. Confessions 136
To / the crowd with glorious lies, In Mem. cxxviii 14
being f ool'd Of others, is to / one's self. Gareth and L. 1275
Jool'd Ah ! let me not be /, sweet saints : St. S. Stylites 212
And were half / to let you tend our son, Princess vi 274
dies, and leaves me / and trick'd, Gareth and L. 1251
for worse than being / Of others, is to fool one's self. „ 1274
What shock has / her since. To the Queen it 22
Fooleries ' Are these your pretty tricks and /, Merlin and V. 265
Pool-fury The red /-/ of the Seine In Mem. cxxvii 7
PoolJsb but sing the / song I gave you, MiUer's D. 161
And let the / yeoman go. L. C. V. de Vere 72
Aid all this / people ; St. S. Stylites 223
They to whom my / passion were a target for their
scorn : Locksley Hall 146
To drop thy / tears upon my grave, Come not, when 2
I seem so / and so broken down. Enoch Arden 316
Till understanding all the / work Of Fancy, Princess vi 116
But help thy / ones to bear ; In Mem. Pro. 31
Whose youth was full of / noise, „ Uii 3
The / neighbours come and go, „ Ix 13
That / sleep transfers to thee. „ Ixviii 16
Eut the fire of a / pride flash'd over Mavd I iv 16
Foolish {continue ' They be of / fashion, 0 Sir King, Gareth and L. 628
' ye are overfine To mar stout knaves with / courtesies : ' „ 733
A / love for flowers ? „ 1072
who lets His heart be stirr'd with any / heat „ 1178
As being after all their / fears „ 1424
And all her / fears about the dress, Marr. of Geraint 142
Nor speak I now from / flattery ; „ 433
whether very wise Or very/; „ 470
with her heart All overshadow'd by the / dream, „ 675
Could scarce divide it from her / dream : „ 686
And all her / fears about the dress, „ 844
Brother, I need not tell thee / words, — Holy Grail 855
' Will the child kill me with her / prate ? ' Guinevere 225
I myself have often babbled doubtless of a / past ; Locksley H., Sixty 7
O / dreams, that you, that I, Happy 89
Foolishness cipher face of rounded /, Gareth and L. 1039
Fool-like Nay, for he spake too /-Z : mystery ! „ 472
Foorty (forty) An' I've 'ed my quart ivry market-noight
for / year. N. Farmer, O. S. 8
Foot (See also Crow-foot, Feeat, Light-foot) 0 ! hither
lead thy feet I Ode to Memory 64
with echoing feet he threaded The secretest walks The Poet 9
curl round my silver feet silently. The Mermaid 50
if you kiss'd her feet a thousand years, The form, the form 13
With one black shadow at its feet, Mariana in the S. 1
Thy feet, millenniums hence, be set Two Voices 89
Touch'd by his feet the daisy slept. „ 276
at their feet the crocus brake like fire, (Enone 96
from the violets her hght / Shone rosy-white, „ 179
And laid him at his mother's feet. The Sisters 35
when you pass. With your feet above my
head
There's a new / on the floor, my friend,
Sleep full of rest from head to feet ;
Comes Faith from tracts no feet have trod,
The thunders breaking at her feet :
he based His feet on juts of slippery crag
Bound by gold chains about the feet of God.
So light of /, so light of spirit —
a /, that might have danced The greensward
The wreath of flowers fell At Dora's feet.
a hand, a / Lessening in perfect cadence.
But put yoiu" best /forward.
Or when I feel about my feet
And at my feet she lay.
drop Balm-dews to bathe thy feet !
full Of force and choler, and firm upon his feet,
and cold my wrinkled feet
His beard a / before him, and his hair A yard behind,
till noon no / should pace the street,
Yeab after year unto her /,
feet that ran, and doors that clapt.
And sixty feet the fountain leapt.
Each pluck'd his one / from the grave,
With folded feet, in stoles of white,
A clog of lead was round my feet,
break. At the / of thy crags, O Sea !
And the lark drop down at his feet.
And stared, with his / on the prey,
sketching with her slender pointed /
Tumbled the tawny rascal at his feet,
therefore with His light about thy feet,
fell The woman shrieking at his feet,
she with her strong feet up the steep hill
woman heard his / Return from pacings
f olden feet on those empurpled stairs
he tapt her tiny silken-sandal'd /:
oxu" cloisters echo'd frosty feet,
make her some great Princess, six feet high,
he started on his feet. Tore the king's letter,
tips of her long hands. And to her feet.
Woman, if I might sit beside your feet,
her / on one Of those tame leopards.
Many a light / shone hke a jewel set
But when we planted level feet,
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 32
D.ofiheO. Year 52
To J. S. 75
On a Mourner 29
Of old sat Freedom 2
M. d' Arthur 189
255
Gardener's D. 14
133
Dora 103
Walk, to the Mail 54
111
Talking Oak 147
208
268
Golden Year 61
Tithonus 67
Godiva 18
Day-Dm., Sleep B. 1
„ Revival 3
8
Amphion 43
Sir Galahad 43
The Letters 5
Break, break, etc. 14
Poet's Song 8
12
The Brook 102
Aylmer's Field 230
„ 665
811
Sea Dreams 120
Lucretius 5
„ 135
Prtncess, Pro. 150
183
224
„ i60
„ ii 41
258
„ Hi 180
„ 358
„ iv 30
Foot
232
Footcloth
Princess iv 196
263
269
326
358
391
471
1)57
100
376
415
vil8
88
166
211
vii 79
254
on Well. 11
Exhib. 6
Ode
Ode Inte,
Foot (continued) push'd alone on / (For since her horse
was lost
fleet I was of /: Before we shower'd the rose
a vine, That claspt the feet of a Mnemosyne,
their mask was patent, and my / Was to you :
wisp that flickers where no / can tread.'
lost lamb at her feet Sent out a bitter bleating
and dash'd Unopen'd at her feet :
some sweet sculpture draped from head to /,
lay my Uttle blossom at my feet,
those that iron-cramp'd their women's feet ;
We plsmt a solid / into the Time,
they came. Their feet in flowers, her loveliest :
Steps with a tender /, light as on air.
See, your / is on our necks, We vanquish'd,
felt it sound and whole from head to /,
on her / she hung A moment, and she heard,
She moved, and at her feet the volume fell.
And the feet of those he fought for,
m3mad horns of plenty at our feet.
Scatter the blossom under her feet. W. to Alexandra 9
Thro' cypress avenues, at our feet. The Daisy 48
and nearer than hands and feet. High. Pantheism 12
Fine httle hands, fine little feet — Window, Letter 3
/ Is on the skull which thou hast made. In Mem., Pro. 7
The Shadow cloak'd from head to /, „ xxiii 4
Whereon with equal feet we fared ; „ xxv 2
She bows, she bathes the Saviour's feet „ xxxii 11
On thy Parnassus set thy feet, „ xxxvii 6
That nothing walks with aimless feet ; „ liv 5
Whose feet are guided thro' the land, „ Ixvi 9
Thy feet have stray'd in after hours „ cii 14
my feet are set To leave the pleasant fields „ 21
Her feet, my darling, on the dead ; „ Con. 50
feet hke simny gems on an English green, Mavd 7 1) 14
fall before Her feet on the meadow grass, „ 26
And fawn at a victor's feet. „ vi 30
solid ground Not fail beneath my feet „ xi 2
For her feet have touch'd the meadows „ xii 23
Gorgonised me from head to / „ xiii 21
the delicate Arab arch of her feet „ xvi 15
her light / along the garden walk, „ xviii 9
He sets the jewel-print of jova feet In violets „ xxii 41
Would start and tremble under her feet, „ 73
A shadow there at my feet, „ II i 39
Lying close to my /, Frail, but a work divine, „ ii 3
A golden / or a fairy horn „ 19
the rivulet at her /eei Eipples on „ iv 41
never an end to the stream of passing feet, „ v 11
mock their foster-mother on four feet. Com. of Arthur 31
in the flame was borne A naked babe, and rode to
Merlin's feet, „ 384
their feet were planted on the plain Gareth and L. 187
I leap from Satan's / to Peter's knee — „ 538
loosed his bonds and on free feet Set him, „ 817
their feet In dewy grasses glisten'd ; „ 927
The gay pavilion and the naked feet, „ 937
do hun further wrong Than set him on his feet, „ 955
often they break covert at om feet.' Marr. of Geraint 183
Worn by the feet that now were silent, „ 321
fell'd him, and set / upon his breast, „ 574
rose Limours, and looking at his feet, Geraint and E. 302
lays his / upon it, Gnawing and growling : „ . 562
on his / She set her own and climb'd ; „ 769
set his / upon me, and give me life. „ 850
Hath hardly scaled with help a hundred feet Balin and Balan 170
made his /eet Wings thro' a glimmering gallery, „ 403
At Merlin's feet the wily Vivien lay. Merlin and V. 6
all the heathen lay at Arthur's feet, „ 144
kiss'd his feet, As if in deepest reverence „ 219
Dear feet, that I have follow'd thro' the world, „ 227
Behind his ankle twined her hollow feet Together, „ 240
Vivien bathed youv feet before her own? „ 284
Scared by the noise upstarted at our feet, „ 422
The feet unmortised from their ankle-bones 552
Foot (continued) judge all nature from her feet of clay, Merlin and V. 835
the green path that show'd the rarer /, Lancelot and E. 162
her shape From forehead down to /, perfect —
again From / to forehead exquisitely turn'd : „ 642
with her feet unseen Crush'd the wild passion „ 741
he wellnigh kiss'd her /e«< For loyal awe, „ 1172
let the shield of Lancelot at her feet Be carven, „ 1341
made a silken mat- work for her feet; Holy Grail 151
how my feet recrost the deathful ridge „ 534
— yea, his very hand and / — „ 915
one whose / is bitten by an ant, Pdleas and E. 184
there three squires across their feet : „ 431
The / that loiters, bidden go, — Last Tournament 117
Dagonet with one /poised in his hand, „ 285
little Dagonet mincing with his feet, „ 311
Dagonet, turning on the ball of his /, „ 329
when she heard the feet of Tristram grind „ 510
Her Ught feet fell on our rough Lyonnesse, „ 554
his / was on a stool Shaped as a dragon; „ 671
about his feet A voice clung sobbing till he question'd it, „ 758
voice about his feet Sent up an answer, „ 760
broadening from her feet, And blackening, Guinevere 81
let us in, tho' late, to kiss his feet ! „ 178
with a wild sea-light about his feet. He saw them — „ 242
when armed feet Thro' the long gallery „ 412
in the darkness heard his armed /eei Pause by her; „ 418
and laid her hands about his feet. „ 528
My pride in happier summers, at my feet. „ 536
And while she grovell'd at his feet, „ 581
based His feet on juts of slippery crag Pass, of Arthur 357
Bound by gold chains about the feet of God. „ 423
To stay his feet from falling. Lover's Tale i 142
she saw Beneath her feet the region far away, „ 395
at her feet, Ev'n the feet of her I loved, „ 599
Were stoled from head to / in flowing black ; „ ii 85
at his feet I seem'd to faint and fall, „ 96
Hard-heaving, and her eyes upon hei feet, „ iv 308
I lay At thy pale feet this ballad Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 20
and bullets would rain at oiu* feet — Def. of Lucknow 21
was poUen'd from head to feet V. of Maeldune 49
and his white beard fell to his feet, „ 118
Cast at thy feet one flower that fades away. To Dante 7
Or on your head their rosy feet. To E. Fitzgerald 9
one ghttering / disturb'd The lucid well ; Tiresias 41
I will sit at your feet, I will hide my face. The Wreck 12
then fell fluttering down at my feet ; „ 82
blanch into spray At the feet of the cliff ; „ 138
foam in the dusk came playing about our feet. Despair 50
And Love is fire, and burns the feet The Flight 68
A stealthy / upon the stair ! „ 70
fall of yer / in the dance was as light as snow Tomorrow 36
an' laid himself imdher yer feet, „ 38
I plimapt / fust i' the pond ; Spinster's S's. 28
tha' hoickt my /ee< wi' a flop f ro' the claay. „ 30
forefather, with his feet upon the hound. Locksley H., Sixty 28
and woman to her tender feet, „ 50
Set the feet above the brain and swear the brain is
in the feet. „ 136
Progress halts on palsied feet, „ 219
We needs must scan him from head to feet Dead Prophet 55
wild mob's million feet WiU kick you The Fleet 18
robed thee in his day from head to feet — Demeter and P. 21
For, see, thy / has touch'd it ; „ 48
see beneath our feet The mist of autumn The Ring 328
and flung the mould upon your feet, Happy 50
past her feet the swallow circling flies, Prog, of Spring 44
/ to / With your own shadow in the placid lake, Romney's R. 75
mine from your pretty blue eyes to your feet, „ 96
Six / deep of burial mould Will dull their
comments ! »> 1^5
vines Which on the touch of heavenly feet Death of (Enone 5
The mango spurn the melon at his /? Akbar's Dream 39
I flimg myself down at her feet, Charity 38
Football drunkard's /, laughing-stocks of Time, Princess iv 517
Footcloth and tumblM. on the purple /, „ 286
Footed
233
Forehead
Footed See Bare-footed, Cat-footed, Four-footed, Lighter-
footed, Little-footed, Wind-footed
Foot-fall With measured / firm and mild, Two Voices 413
list a/-/, ere he saw The wood-nymph. Palace of Art 110
her palfrey's / shot Light horrors Godiva 58
Or ghostly / echoing on the stair. Guinevere 507
Foot-gilt lay F-g with all the blossom-dust Merlin and V. 282
Footiiig Show'd her the isiiry f's on the grass, Aylmer's Field 90
A slender-shafted Pine Lost /, fell, Gareth and L. 4
hath o'erstept The slippery / of his narrow wit. Lover's Tale i 102
Footless where / fancies dwell Among the fragments Maud I xviii 69
Foot-lights By the low f-l of the world— The Wreck 40
Footprint left The little / daily wash'd away. Enoch Arden 22
May only make that / upon sand Princess Hi 239
watch The sandy / harden into stone.' „ 271
The kingcup fills her /, Prog, of Spring 59
Foot-sore Ileel'd as a / ox in crowded ways Aylmer's Field 819
F-s, way-worn, at length he touch'd his goal, St. Tdemachus 34
Footstep Old f's trod the upper floors, Mariana 67
night come from the inmost hills, Like f's upon wool,
(Enone 250
hear the dully sound Of human / 's fall.
his f's smite the threshold stairs Of life —
More close and close his /'s wind :
While he treads with / firmer,
A / seem'd to fall beside her path,
I prest my f's into his,
He seems as one whose / '5 halt,
The f's of his life in mine ;
But at his / leaps no more,
But let no / beat the floor,
guide Her/ '5, moving side by side
The / flutter'd me at first :
clomb The last hard / of that iron crag ;
and fell about My / 's on the mountains.
scales Their headlong passes, but his / fails,
Have heard this / fall,
flowers that brighten as thy / falls,
A /, a low throbbing in the walls,
Footstool drove The / from before him, and arose ;
Forage / for the horse, and flint for fire.
I will fetch you / from all fields,
To / for herself alone ;
Forager they found — his / 's for charms —
Foray Bound on a /, rolling eyes of prey,
Such as they brought upon their /'s out
Forbad F her first the house of Averill,
Forbear ' F,' the Princess cried ; ' J', Sir ' I ;
caught His purple scarf, and held, and said, ' F !
^F: there is a worthier,'
That I / you thus : cross me no more.
' Nay,' said PeUeas, ' but /.
call'd ' F In the great name of Him who died
for men,
Fcwbearance Arguing boimdless /:
Forbid ' did I not F you, Dora ? '
Chid her, and / her to speak To me,
And batten on her poisons ? Love / !
Forbore Bore and /, and did not tire.
But awed and promise-bounden she /,
Geraint, from utter courtesy, /.
hurl his cup Straight at the speaker, but/:
the meek maid Sweetly / him ever,
looking at the villainy done, F,
F his own advantage, (repeat)
Force (s) Had / to make me rhyme in youth,
All / in bonds that might endure,
I broke a close with / and arms :
you know him, — old, but full Of / and choler,
his passion shall have spent its novel /,
Titanic /'s taking birth In divers seasons,
I spoke with heart, and heat and /,
toward the hollow, all her / Fail'd her ;
she promised that no /, Persuasion, no,
Is duer unto freedom, / and growth Of spirit
felt the blind wildbeast of /,
Palace of Art 21Q
St. S. Stylites 191
Day-Dm., Arrival 25
L. of Burleigh 51
Enoch Arden 514
Lucretius 118
WiU 15
In Mem. Ixxxv 44
„ 112
„ CO 17
„ cxiv 19
Last Tournament 515
Pass, of Arthur 447
Lover's Tale i 372
Montenegro 5
Tiresias 27
Demeter and P. 36
The Ring 409
Aylmer's Field 327
Gareth and L. 1277
Geraint and E. 628
Open I. and C. Exhib. 29
Merlin and V. 619
Geraint and E'. 538
567
Aylmer's Field 502
Princess iv 162
Marr. of Geraint 377
556
Geraint and E. 678
Pelleas and E. 280
St. Telemachus 62
Aylmer's Field 317
Dora 92
Maud i xix 63
Lover's Tale i 111
Two Voices 218
Enoch Arden 869
Marr. of Geraint 381
Merlin and V. 31
Lancelot and E. 856
Pelleas and E. 283
Guinevere 331, 333
Miller's D. 193
Palace of Art 154
Edwin Morris 131
Golden Year 61
Locksley Hall 49
Day-Dm., L'Envoi 17
The Letters 37
Enoch Arden 374
Aylmer's Field 417
Princess iv 141
V 266
Force (s) (continued) Ida stood nor spoke, drain'd of
her /
Some patient / to change them when we will,
can bereave him Of the / he made his own
From our first Charles by / we wrimg our claims.
Who makes bf f his merit known
Of / that would have forged a name.
I know thee of what / thou art
Seraphic intellect and / To seize and throw
with / and skill To strive, to fashion,
Should licensed boldness gather /,
this electric /, that keeps A thousand pulses dancing,
in his / to be Nature's crowning race.
but of / to withstand, Year upon year,
That save he won the first by /,
his great self, Hath / to quell me.'
so fill up the gap where / might fail
Reproach you, saying all yom: / is gone ?
all nis / Is melted into mere effeminacy ?
He felt, were she the prize of bodily /,
blood Of their strong bodies, flowing, drain'd their /,
But cither's / was match'd till Yniol's cry,
could I someway prove such / in her
elemental secrets, powers And / '5 ;
so by / they dragg d him to the King.
I do not mean the / alone,
for what / is yours to go So far,
Drain'd of her /, again she sat,
But had not / to shape it as he would,
F is from the heights.
/ to guide u» thro' the days I shall not see ?
Howe'er bUnd / and brainless will May jar
my brothers, work, and wield The f's of to-day,
Force (verb) cruel glee F's on the freer hour.
this wild king to / her to his wish,
Forced I / a way Thro' soHd opposition
/ Sweet love on pranks of saucy boyhood :
brute world howUng / them into bonds,
wrath which / my thoughts on that fierce law,
the jailer / me away, (repeat)
fur theere we was / to 'ide.
Forcing / far apart Those blind beginnings
Ford By bridge and /, by park and pale,
her future Lord Was drown'd in passing thro' the /,
bridge, /, beset By bandits,
hard by here is one that guards a / —
Push'd horse across the foamings of the /,
Gareth laid his lance athwart the/;
There lies a ridge of slate across the /;
And victor of the bridges and the /,
quickly flashing thro' the shallow /
hill, or plain, at sea, or flooding/.
Forded Took horse, and / Usk, and gain'd the
wood ;
Fore when Dan didn't come to the /,
Forebode His heart f's a, mystery :
Foreboding / ' what would Enoch say ? '
Forecast But who shall so / the years
Foredoom'd Made us, foreknew us, / us.
Foredooming F all his trouble was in vain.
Forefather His own f's' arms and armour hung.
thy great F's of the thomless garden,
Lies the warrior, my /, with his feet upon the
hoimd.
that same path our true f's trod ;
Forefinger on the stretch'd / of all Time Sparkle
Forefoot With inward yelp and restless / plies
Forego which / The darkness of that battle
Foregoing F all her sweetness, like a weed.
Foregone ' But could I, as in times /,
have quite/ All matters of this world:
Foreground a / black with stones and slags,
Forehead (adj.) and his / veins Bloated, and
branch'd ;
Forehead (s) draws His / earthward, and he dies.
Princess vi 266
„ Con. 56
Ode on Well. 273
Third of Feb. 26
In Mem. Ixiv 9
,, Ixxiii 16
J) LXXtSC o
„ cix 5
„ cxiii 6
13
„ ex XV 15
Maud I iv 33
„ /Zm24
Gareth and L. 107
1183
1352
Marr. of Geraint 88
106
541
569
805
Merlin and V. 633
640
Lancelot and E. 471
1063
Last Tournament 540
Pass, of Arthur 15
Ancient Sage 14
Locksley H., Sixty 158
Freedom 15
Mechanophilus 30
Vision of Sin 130
Princess, Pro. 37
,, Hi 125
vii 343
Merlin and V. 744
Guinevere 537
Rizpah 41, 44
Spinster's S's. 39
Lucretius 245
Sir Galahad 82
In Mem. vi 39
Gareth and L. 594
1003
1040
1048
1056
1232
Marr. of Geraint 167
Holy Grail 728
Marr. of Geraint 161
Tomorrow 43
Two Voices 290
Enoch Arden 253
In Mem. i 5
Despair 97
Gareth and L. 1127
Princess, Pro. 24
Maud I xviii 27
Locksley H., Sixty 28
Doubt and Prayer 4
Princess ii 378
Lu<;retius 45
To the Qu^en ii 64
Holy Grail 623
Talking Oak 189
Balin and Balan 116
Palace of Art SI
Balin and Balan 391
Supp. Confessions 168
Forehead
234
Forget
Porehead (s) {continued) Thy bounteous / was not f ann'd With
breezes Elednore 9
about His dusty / drily curl'd, Miller's D. 6
And, with dim fretted fs all, Palace of Art 242
curls — That made his / like a rising sun M. d' Arthur 217
Where shall I hide my / and my eyes ? „ 228
and opposed Free hearts, free fs — Ulysses 49
/, eyeUds, growing dewy-warm With kisses Tithanus 58
On her pallid cheek and / came a colour Locksley Rail 25
gilds the straiten'd / of the fool ! „ 62
I, to herd with narrow f's, „ 175
Annie from her baby's / clipt A tiny curl, Enoch Arden 235
at last he said, Lifting his honest /, „ 388
We tum'd our f's from the falling sun, The Brook 165
With that she kiss'd His /, Princess ii 312
and o'er her / past A shadow, „ vi 106
With all their f's drawn in Roman scowls, „ vii 129
and her / sank upon her hands, „ 247
But on her / sits a fire : In Mem. cxiv 5
But on the damsel's / shame, Gareth and L. 656
Had bared her / to the blistering sun, Geraint and E. 515
when their f's felt the cooling air, Balin and Balan 589
her shape From / down to foot, perfect — again
From foot to / exquisitely tum'd : Lancelot and E. 642
Clean from her / all that wealth of hair Holy Grail 150
their f's grimed with smoke, and sear'd, „ 265
Met f's all along the street of those Who watch'd
us pass ; „ 344
This air that smites his / is not air „ 914
Glanced from the rosy / of the dawn, PeUeas and E. 502
Pure on the virgin / of the dawn ! ' ,, 505
curls — That made his / like a rising sun Pass, of Arthur 385
Where shall I hide my / and my eyes ? „ 396
with my work thus Crown'd her clear /. Lover's Tale i 345
holdeth his undimmed / far Into a clearer zenith, „ 513
brush'd My fallen /in their to and fro, „ 701
Brow-high, did strike my / as I past ; „ n 19
Bullets would sing by our f's, Def. of Lucknow 21
earth's dark / flings athwart the heavens Ancient Sage 200
/ vapoiu"-swathed In meadows ever green ; Freedom 7
felt a gentle hand Fall on my /, The Ring 419
round her / wheels the woodland dove. Prog, of Spring 57
And last on the / Of Arthur the blameless Merlin and the G. 72
you spill The drops upon my /. Romney's R. 24
Foreign and he died In / lands ; Dora 19
And I will tell him tales of / parts, Enoch Arden 198
' I have a sister at the / court, Princess i 75
And travell'd men from / lands ; In Mem. x 6
often abroad in the fragrant gloom Of / churches — Maud I xix 54
Display'd a splendid silk of / loom, Geraint and E. 687
some other question'd if she came From / lands, Lover's Tale iv 331
they praised him to his face with their courtly / grace ; Revenge 99
Urge him to / war. Sir J. OldcasUe 68
Toreigner {See also Furriner) A /, and I your country-
woman, Princess iv 317
.Foreknew Made us, / us, foredoom'd us. Despair 97
Foreland many a fairy / set With willow-weed The Brook 45
Forelock Are taken by the /. Let it be. Golden Year 19
Foremost {See also J^aA-loiemost) / in thy various
gallery Place it. Ode to Memory 84
And being ever / in the chase, Geraint and E. 959
I the heir of all the ages, in the / files of time — Locksley Hall 178
which, on the / rocks Touching, Sea Dreams 51
F captain of his time. Ode on Well. 31
He aash'd the pvimmel at the / face, Balan and Balan 402
Foreran So much the boy/; Aylmer's Field &)
Foreran 2^ thy peers, thy time, and let Thy feet, Two Voices dA
in the colci wind that f's the mom Guinevere 132
Foresaw (<Se« oZso Half-foresaw) The f ame is quench'd
that I /, In Mem. Ixxiii 5
what doubt that he / This evil work Guinevere 306
And each / the dolorous day to be : Pelleas and E. 606
Foresee Oh, if indeed that eye / In Mem. xxvi 9
could none of them /, Not even thy wise father Guinevere 273
Fweseeing Uo wbeit ouiself , / casualty, Princess Hi 317
Foreshadow Who dares / for an only son A loveher life, Ded. of Idylls 29
What omens may / fate to man And woman, Tiresias 7
Foreshadowing His heart / all calamity, Enoch Arden 683
Immersed in rich f's of the world. Princess vii 312
Foreshorten'd he F in the tract of time ? In Mem. Ixxvii 4
Foresight Whose / preaches peace. Love and Duty 34
Take wings of /; lighten thro' The secular abyss In Mem. Ixxvi 5
Forest (adj.) And armour'd all in /green. Last Tournament 170
his good warhorse left to graze Among the /greens, ,, 491
He burst his lance against a / bough, Balin and Balan 329
hurl'd it from him Among the / weeds, „ 542
Forest (s) {See also Mid-foreS, New Forest) so deadly
still As that wide /. D. of F. Women 69
Between dark stems the / glows, Sir Galahad 27
The petty marestail /, fairy pines, Aylmer's Field 92
Better to clear prime f's, heave and thump Princess Hi 127
While I roved about the /, Boadicea 35
The / crack'd, the waters curl'd. In Mem. xv 5
and pitch'd His tents beside the/. Com. of Arthur 58
slew the beast, and fell'd The /, „ 60
mount That rose between the / and the field. Gareth and L. 191
A mile beneath the /, challenging And over-
throwing Balin and Balan 12
the harlot leapt Adown the /, and the thicket
closed Behind her, and the / echo'd ' fool.' Merlin and V. 973
the gloomy skirts Of CeUdon the/; Lancelot and E. 292
Across the / call'd of Dean, to find Caerleon PeUeas and E. 21
Alone, and in the heart of the great /. Lover's Tale ii 3
moanings in the /, the loud brook, „ 114
On icy fallow And faded /, Merlin and the G. 85
Thro' blasted valley and flaring / Kapiolani 12
Forest-deeps And far, in f-d unseen, Sir L. and Q. G. 7
Forester How once the wandering / at dawn, Gareth and L. 498
Down on a rout of craven /'s. ,, 841
Before him came a / of Dean, Marr. of Geraint 148
Forest-path thine eyes not brook in f-p's. Prog, of Spring 31
Forest-shadow and through the f-s borne Lover's Tale ii 72
Forethought So dark a / roll'd about his brain, Merlin and V. 230
Foretold /, Djdng, that none of all our blood Princess i 7
He too / the perfect rose. In Mem., Con. 34
Has come to pass as /; Maud II v 4i
Forfeits game of / done — the girls all kiss'd The Epic 2
magic music, /, all the rest. Princess, Pro. 195
Forgave there the Queen / him easily. Marr. of Geraint 592
And he / me, and I could not speak. Guinevere 614
Forge yes ! — but a company /'* the wine. Maud 7 i 36
/ a life-long trouble for ourselves, Geraint and E. 3
Forged ' Who / that other influence. Two Voices 283
/ a thousand theories of the rocks, Edwin Morris 18
he /, But that was later, boyish histories Aylmer's Field 96
Nor deeds of gift, but gifts of grace he /, Sea Dreams 192
and so We / a sevenfold story. Princess, Pro. 202
thou hast / at last A night-long Present In Mem. Ixxi 2
results Of force that would have / a name. „ Ixxiii 16
Whereof they / the brand Excalibur, Gareth and L. 67
one son had / on his father and fled. Despair 69
Forget rose In love with thee /'s to close His curtains, Adeline^
men F the dream that happens then, Two Voices 353
' I might / my weaker lot ; ,, 367
who that knew him could / The busy wrinkles Miller's D. 3
Can he pass, and we/? „ 204
What is love ? for we /: „ 213
I shall not / you, mother. May Queen, N. Y's. E. 31
And God / the stranger ! ' The Goose 56
Authority f's a dying king, M. d' Arthur 121
I earth in earth / these empty courts, Tithonus 75
Perplext her, made her half / herself, Aylmer's Field 303
Swear by St something — I / her name — Princess v 293
all men else their nobler dreams /, Ode on Well. 152
What England was, shall her tme sons /? Third of Feb. 44
ten years back, or more, if I don't /: Grandmother 75
Could we / the widow'd hour In Mem. xl 1
But he /'* the days before „ xliv 3
Nor can it suit me to / The mighty hopes „ Ixxxy 59
The days she never can / „ xcvii 14
Forget
235
Forlorn
Forget {continued) I should / That I owe this debt to you Mattd I xix 89
shall I say ? — li ever I should f, „ 93
the lone hem f's his melancholy, Gareth and L. 1185
/ My heats and violences ? hve afresh ? Balin and Balan 189
ye / Obedience is the courtesy due to kings.' Lancelot and E. Ill
Authority /'s a dying king, Pass, of Arthur 289
Men will / what we sufEer and not what we do. Def. of Lucknow 73
and / The darkness of the pall.' Ancient Sage 197
As we / our wail at being bom. The Ring 465
A name that earth will not / To Ulysses 27
but thou forgive, F it. Death of (Enone 44
Wgetfal F how my rich proemion makes Thy glory fly Lucretius 70
F of Maud and me, Maud I xxi 4
F of his promise to the King, Marr. of Geraint 50
F of the falcon and the hunt, „ 51
F of the tilt and tournament, F of his glory and
his name, F of his princedom and its cares. „ 52
• The sound of that / shore In Mem. xxxv 14
dreaming of her love For Lancelot, and / of
the hunt ; Marr. of Geraint 159
F of their troth and fealty, Guinevere 442
/ of the man, Whose crime had half unpeopled
lUon, Death of (Enone 60
Vorgetfulness falling into Lot's / 1 know not thee, Gareth and L. 96
And this / was hateful to her. Marr. of Geraint 55
Forget-me-not I found the blue F-m-n. Miller's D. 202
f-m-n's That grow for happy lovers. The Brook 172
Fo^etteth The place he knew/ him.' Two Voices 264
Forgetting F how to render beautiful Her countenance Lover's Tale i 96
0 the night, Where there's no /. Forlorn 78
Forgive Us, 0 Just and Good, F, Poland 12
1 have been wild and wayward, but you'U / me
now ; You'll kiss me, my own mother, and /
me ere I go ; May Queen N, Y's. E. 33
May God / me ! — I have been to blame.
And easily f's it as his own,
' Love, / him : ' but he did not speak ;
' F ! How many will say, '/,'
neither God nor man can well /,
Before you prove him, rogue, and proved, /.
We must f the dead.'
/ him, dear, And I shall sleep the sounder ! '
I do / him ! ' ' Thanks, my love,'
F me, I waste my heart in sighs :
F what seem'd my sin in me ;
F my grief for one removed,
F these wild and wandering cries,
F them where they fail in truth,
hearts that know not how to/:
Or to say ' F the wrong,'
F me ; mine was jealousy in love.'
I / thee, as Etemal God F's :
Kiss him, and then F him.
Are slower to / than human kings.
All his virtues — I / them —
For you / me, you are sure of that —
but thou /, Forget it.
Airgiven not easily / Are those, who setting
Say one soft word and let me part /.'
Caress her ! let her feel herself /
She with a face, bright as for sin /,
Eass on, my Queen, /.'
lessed be the King, who hath / My wickedness
' Yea, little maid, for am / not /? '
And has he not / me yet,
trust myself / by the God to whom I kneel.
Reflected, sends a light on the /.
Forgiveness / seem no more : / want / too :
we embrace you yet once more With all /,
thro' this ring Had sent his cry for her /,
Could kneel for your /.
Human / touches heaven, and thence —
Forgiving I had set my heart on your / him
Forgot For is not our first year /?
having seen, /? The common mouth,
Dora 161
Aylmer's Field 401
Sea Dreams 45
60
63
„ 171
» 270
311
316
Princess vii 358
In Mem., Pro. 33
37
41
43
Maud II i 44
„ iv 86
Lancelot and E. 1351
Guinevere 544
Lover's Tale iv 175
Tiresias 10
Locksley H., Sixty 44
Romney's R. 160
Death of (Enone 43
Gardener's D. 247
Princess vi 219
Merlin and V. 381
Lancelot and E. 1102
1353
Guinevere 634
665
Hapfy 6
„ 86
Romney's R. 161
Princess vi 290
295
The Ring 233
Romney's R. 26
„ 159
Sea Dreams 269
Two Voices 368
Gardener's D. 55
Forgot (continued) The steer / to graze. Gardener's D. 85
Philip sitting at her side / Her presence, Enoch Arden 384
might be May or April, he /, The Brook 151
Sir Aylmer half / his lazy smile Aylm^'s Fidd 197
And I / the clouded Forth, The Daisy 101
F his weakness in thy sight. In Mem. ex 4
Nor yet / her practice in her fright, Merlin and V. 947
F to drink to Lancelot and the Queen, Lancelot and E. 737
And the sick man / her simple blush, ,, 864
so / herself A moment, and her cares ; Last Tournament 25
when their faces are / in the land — Lover's Tale i 759
that I might ha' / him somehow — First Quarrel 37
The warrior hath / his arms. Ancient Sage 138
But I clean / tha, my lad, Owd Rod 53
An' I'd clear/, little Dicky, „ 64
Forgotten (See also Half-forgotten, Long-forgotten)
To live /, and love forlorn.' (repeat) Mariana in the S. 24, 84, 96
I sleep /, I wake forlorn.' „ 36
Walks /, and is forlorn.' „ 48
Live / and die forlorn.' (repeat) „ 60, 72
not to be / — not at once — Not all /. Love and Duty 91
I meant ? I have / what I meant : Lucretius 122
F, rusting on his iron hills, Princess v 146
And doing battle with / ghosts, „ 480
' I had / all in my strong joy To see thee — Last Tournament 582
My God, thou hast / me in my death : Pass, of Arthur 27
Where fragments of / peoples dwelt, „ 84
Ahe you sleeping ? have you /? The Flight 1
Ev'n her grandsire's fifty half /. On Jub. Q. Victoria 41
She fear'd I had / her, and I ask'd About my Mother, The Ring 102
I had / it was your birthday, child — „ 378
/ mine own rhyme By mine own self. As I shall
be / by old Time, To Mary Boyle 21
Like glimpses of / dreams — Two Voices 381
wasting his / heart, Aylmer's Field 689
The bowlings from / fields ; In Mem. xli 16
And fling me deep in that / mere, Lancelot and E. 1426
Had suck'd the fire of some / sun. Lover's Tale iv 194
who dipt In some / book of mine To E. Fitzgerald 47
Fork (See also Lightning-fork) Who, God-Uke,
grasps the triple f's, Of old sat Freedom 15
Ruin'd trunks on wither'd / 's, Vision of Sin 93
I never saw so fierce a / — Lucretius 28
A double hill ran up his furrowy f's Princess Hi 174
Two f's are fixt into the meadow groimd, Marr. of Geraint 482
there they flxt the/ 's into the groxmd, „ 548
To me thiis narrow grizzled / of thine Merlin and V. 59
And dazzled by the Uvid-flickering /, „ 941
Forked things that are /, and horned, and soft. The Mermaid 53
/ Of the near storm, and aiming at his head, Aylmer's Field 726
Forlorn In sleep she seem'd to walk /, Mariana 30
To Uve forgotten, and love /.' (repeat) Mariana in the S. 24, 84, 96
I sleep forgotten, I wake /.' „ 36
Walks forgotten, and is /. „ 48
Live forgotten and die /.' (repeat) „ 60, 72
I am too /, Too shaken : Supp. Confessions 135
Over the dark dewy earth /, Ode to Memory 69
in a lonely grove He set up his / pipes, Amphion 22
I ceased, and sat as one /. Two Voices 400
Mournful (Enone, wandering / Of Paris, (Enone 16
Yet we will not die /.' Vision of Sin 206
' Favour from one so sad and so / Enoch Arden 287
A tonsured head in middle age /, The Brook 200
The little village looks/; In Mem. Ix 9
I walk as ere I walk'd /, „ Ixviii 5
purple-frosty bank Of vapour, leaving night/. „ cvii 4
Who am no more so all /, Maud I xviii 32
speak of the mother she loved As one scarce less /, „ xix 28
The tiny cell is /, „ // U 13
thus in grief to wander forth /; The Flight 85
may pass when earth is manless and/, Locksley H., Sixty 206
tho', in this lean age /, Epilogue 71
And fled by msnj a waste, / of man, Demeter and P. 74
Where noble Ulnc dwells /, Happy 10
To wait on one so broken, so /? Romney's R. 17
Form
236
Fortune
Fonn (s) This excellence and solid / Of constant
beauty.
(Tho' all her fairest /'« are types of thee,
And airy/'s of flitting change,
converse with all/'s Of the many-sided mind,
And other than his / of creed,
rites and/'s before his burning eyes Melted
Fretteth thine enshrouded /.
The /, the / alone is eloquent !
' Is this the /,' she made her moan,
The reflex of a beauteous /,
o'er her rounded / Between the shadows
I sit as God holding no / of creed,
f's that pass'd at windows and on roofs
That her fair / may stand and shine,
Matiu«s the individual /.
Phantoms of other /'s of rule,
all the decks were dense with stately/ '5
play with flying/ '5 and images,
fair new f's. That float about the threshold
Cursed be the sickly /'s that err
And loosely settled into /.
On either side her tranced / Forth streaming
ever dwells A perfect / in perfect rest.
But blessed / 's in whistUi^ storms
dusty crypt Of darken'd f's and faces.
And slowly quickening into lower/ '5;
All beauty compass'd in a female /,
since to look on noble f's Makes noble
There sat along the f's, like morning doves
Of faded / and haughtiest lineaments,
then a loftier / Than female,
I saw the f's: I knew not where I was :
Will clear away the parasitic /'s
And other f's of life than ours,
A hollow / with empty hands.'
A late-lost / that sleep reveals,
But knows no more of transient /
Nor cares to fix itself to /,
Her faith thro' / is pure as thine.
Eternal / shall still divide The eternal soul
Where thy first / was made a man ;
print The same sweet f's in either mind.
For changes wrought on / and face ;
O sacred essence, other /,
And seem to lift the /, and glow
' And merge,' he said, ' in / and gloss
wear the / by which I know Thy spirit
Come, beauteous in thine after /,
frame In matter-moulded /'s of speech.
For who would keep an ancient /
And ancient /'s of party strife ;
be veil His want in f's for fashion's sake,
And grew to seeming-random /'s,
flow From / to /, and nothing stands ;
tho' faith and / Be sunder'd in the night
these damp walls, and taken but the /.
Conjecture of the plumage and the /;
And dreamt herseU was such a faded /
all her / shone forth with sudden light
0 imperial-moulded /,
all the decks were dense with stately /'s,
a phantasm of the / It should attach to ?
Mantling her / halfway.
fell into the abysm 01 f's outworn,
very face and / of Lionel Flash'd thro' my eyes
f's which ever stood Within the magic cirque
pencil's naked f's Colour and life:
Grew after marriage to full height and /?
face and / are hers and mine in one,
1 clung to the sinking /,
and itself For ever changing /,
And blurr'd in colour and f,
The / of Muriel faded, and the face Of Miriam
concentrate into / And colour all you are,
Supp. Confessions 149
Isabel 39
Madeline 7
Ode to Memory 115
A Character 29
The Poet 39
A Dirge 10
The form, ike form 1
Mariana in the S. 33
Miller's D. 77
(Enone 180
Palace of Art 211
D. ofF. Women 23
Of old sat Freedom 21
Love thou thy land 40
59
M. d' Arthur 196
Gardener's D. 60
Golden Year 15
Locksley Hall 61
Day-Dm., Pro. 12
„ Sleep B. 5
24
Sir Galahad 59
WiU Water. 184
Vision of Sin 210
Princess ii 34
86
102
448
„ iv 215
„ vii 133
„ 269
Ode on Well. 264
In Mem. Hi 12
„ xiii 2
„ xvi 7
„ XX xiii 4
9
„ xlvii 6
„ Ixi 10
„ Ixxix 8
„ Ixxxii 2
„ Ixxxv 35
„ Ixxxvii 37
„ Ixxxix 41
„ xci 5
„ 15
„ xcv 46
„ cv 19
,, cvi 14
„ cxi 6
„ cxviii 10
,, ex xiii 6
,, cxxvii 1
Gareth and L. 1200
Marr. of Geraint 333
654
Holy Grail 450
Guinevere 548
Pass, of Arthur 364
Lover's Tale i 646
705
797
m94
158
180
Sisters (E. and E.) 171
De Prof., Two G. 13
The Wreck 105
Ancient Sage 193
Dead Prophet 22
The Ring 184
Romney's R. 7
Form (s) (continued) crown'd f's high over the sacred
fountain ?
all else F, Ritual, varying with the tribes of men,
thou knowest I hold that/'s Are needful:
And what are /'s ? Fair garments,
F's ! The Spiritual in Nature's market-place —
Who shaped the f's, obey them.
And is a living/?
Form (verb) the rainbow /'s and flies on the land
slowly /'s the firmer mind.
Storm, Storm, Riflemen /! (repeat)
Riflemen, Riflemen, Riflemen, /! (repeat)
F, F, Riflemen F ! (repeat)
F, be ready to do or die ! J" in Freedom's name
and the Queen's !
Formal O the / mocking bow,
His / kiss fell chill as a flake of snow
0, I see thee old and /,
Formalism they blurt Their furious f's.
Former And ebb into a / life,
remembering His / talks with Edith,
became Her / beauty treble ;
Makes / gladness loom so great ?
As in the / flash of joy,
In / days you saw me favourably.
' Earl, if you love me as in / years,
that I began To glance behind me at my / life.
Because his / madness.
For Evelyn knew not of my / suit.
Forming The lucid outline / round thee ;
Be yet but yolk, and / in the shell ?
Formless I am void, Dark, /, utterly destroyed.
A vapour heavy, hueless, /, cold.
And wrapt thee / in the fold,
till all his heart was cold With / fear ;
Forrards (forwards) if tha' wants to git / a bit,
Forsake Ah yet, tho' all the world /,
what a heart was mine to / her
leech / the dying bed for terror
Forsaken 0 my / heart, with thee And this poor flower
We saw far off an old / house,
Forsakii^ See ! our friends are all /
Forsworn I cannot bear to dream you so /:
I swore to the great King, and am /.
I swear and swear / To love him most,
Fort (See also Hill-fort) Welcome her, thunders of
/ and of fleet !
Built that new / to overawe my friends.
Forth And I forgot the clouded F,
Forthgazing F on the waste and open sea.
Fortitude stately flower of female /,
Fortress The /, and the mountain ridge,
The / crashes from on high,
deathful-grinning mouths of the /,
White from the mason's hand, a / rose ;
And onward to the / rode the three.
Ride into that new / by your town,
be thy heart a / to maintain The day
My prison, not my /, fall away !
Fortmiate You, the Mighty, the F,
Fortnne I rode sublime On F's neck :
Tho' / clip my wings, I will not cramp my heart,
I am but as my f's are :
' Drink to F, drink to Chance,
mark me! for your/'s are to make.
Name, / too : the world should ring of him
Thro' which a few, by wit or / led,
besides Their slender household / 's
ally Your/'s, justlier balanced,
affluent F emptied all her horn.
Becomes on F's crowning slope.
My f's all as fair as hers who lay
loved her in a state Of broken f's,
song that Enid sang was one Of F and her wheel,
' Turn, F, turn thy wheel and lower the proud ;
Parnassus I
Akbar's Dream 124
126
130
„ 134
143
Mechanophilus 16
Sea-Fairies 25
In Mem. xviii 18
Riflemen form ! 5, 19
„ 7, 14, 21, 28
12, 26
22
"The Flight 29
The Wreck 32
Locksley Hall 93
Akbar's Dream 57
Sonnet, To 2
Aylmer's Field 457
Princess vii 25
In Mem. xxiv 10
„ cxxii 15
Geraint and E. 315
„ 355
863
Holy Grail 649
Sisters {E. and E.) 205
Tithonus 53
Ancient Sage 130
Supp. Confessions 122
Vision of Sin 53
In Mem. xxii 15
Pass, of Arthur 98
Church-warden, etc. 49
Will Water. 49
The Wreck 95
Happy 98
In Mem. viii 18
The Ring 155
All Things will Die 18
Pelleas and E. 300
Last Tournament 661
The Flight 49
W. to Alexandra 6
Marr. of Geraint 460
The Daisy 101
Lover's Tale ii 177
Isabel 11
In Mem. Ixxi 14
„ cxxvii 14
Maud III vi 52
Marr. of Geraint 244
251
407
To Duke of Argyll 5
Doubt and Prayer 12
On Jub. Q. Victoria 55
D. ofF. Women 142
Will Water. 50
Lady Clare 70
Vision of Sin 191
Aylmer's Field 300
395
438
Sea Dreams 9
Princess ii 66
Ode on Well. 197
In Mem. Ixiv 14
Gareth and L. 903
Marr. of Geraint 13
346
34
ll
Fortune
237
Found
"^l
Fortune (continued) ' Turn, F, turn thy wheel with
smile or frown ; Marr. of Geraint 350
since our / slipt from sun to shade, „ 714
that better fits Our mended f's „ 718
Give me good /, I will strike him dead, Lancdot and E. 1071
You count the father of your /, Sisters (E. and E.) 28
his followers, all Flower into / — Columbus 167
Forty {See also Foorty) That numbers / cubits
from the soil. St. S. Stylites 91
And / blest one bless him, Aylmer's Field 372
for / years A hermit, who had pray'd, Lancelot and E. 402
Divil a Danny was there, yer Honour, for / year, Tomorrow 30
Gone with whom for / years my life in golden
sequence ran, Locksley H., Sixty 47
Ftooin Titanic shapes, they cramm'd The /. Princess vii 125
Now thy F roars no longer, To Virgil 29
The Baths, the F gabbled of his death, St. Telemachus 74
Focward {See also Forrards) with increasing might
doth / flee Mine be the strength 5
F, / let us range, Locksley Rail 181
' F, the Light Brigade ! (repeat) Light Brigade 5, 9
She sets her / countenance In Mem. cxiv 6
To right ? to left ? straight /? PeUeas and E. 67
Then bounded / to the castle walls, „ 363
Gone the cry of ' F, F,' Locksley H., Sixty 73
' F ' rang the voices then, „ 77
Let us hush the cry ot'F' „ 78
/ — naked — let them stare. „ 142
F, f, ay and backward, „ 146
F, backward, backward, /, „ 193
Nay, your pardon, cry your '/,* „ 225
F then, but still remember how the course of Time
will swerve, „ 235
F far and far from here is all the hope of eighty years. „ 254
F, till you see the highest Human Nature is divine. „ 276
F, let the stormy moment fly and mingle with the Past. „ 279
moving quickly / till the heat Smote on her brow. Death of (Enone 97
F to the starry track Glimmering up Silent Voices 8
Forward-creeping f-c tides Began to foam. In Mem. ciii 37
Forward-flowing The /-/ tide of time ; Arabian Nights 4
Fossil lark and leveret lay, Like f's of the rock, Audley Court 25
Foster guard and / her for evermore. Guinevere 592
Foster'd F the callow eaglet — (Enone 212
Which once she / up with care ; In Mem. viii 16
because that / at thy court I savour of thy — virtues ? Merlin and V. 38
that was Arthur ; and they / him Guinevere 295
Old poets / under friendlier skies. Poets and their B. 1
Poster-mother mock their f-m on four feet, Com. of Arthur 31
Foster-sister She was my f-s : Lover's Tale i 233
Vooght {See also Fowt) And in thy spirit with
thee / — England and Amer. 9
Annie / against his will : Enoch Arden 1 58
His comrades having / their last below, Aylmer's Field 227
F with what seem'd my own uncharity; Sea Dreams 73
with the PalmjT^ne That / Aurelian, Princess ii 84
And nursed by those for whom you /, i. ''i 95
I and mine have / Your battle : „ 224
And the feet of those he / for. Ode on Well. 11
those great men who /, and kept it ours. „ 158
Than when he / at Waterloo, „ 257
have we / for Freedom from our prime. Third of Feb. 23
Were those your sires who / at Lewes ? „ 33
They that had / so well Came thro' the jaws Light Brigade 45
may be met and / with outright. Grandmother 31
for the babe had / for his life. „ 64
He / his doubts and gather'd strength, In Mem. xcvi 13
Like Paul with beasts, I / with Death ; „ cxx 4
Aurelius lived and / and died. And after him King
Uther/and died. Com. of Arthur 13
F, and in twelve great battles overcame „ 518
He / against him in the Barons' war, Gareth and L. 77
Lot and many another rose and / Against thee, „ 354
but he that / no more, As being all bone-batter'd „ 1049
thy foul sayings / for me : „ 1180
twice they /, and twice they breathed, Marr. of Geraint 567
Fought {continued) f Hard with himself, and seem'd
at length in peace,
/ in her name, Sware by her —
two brothers, one a king, had met And /
if I went and if If and won it
' you have /. O tell us — ^for we live apart —
it seem'd half -miracle To those he / with, —
name Of greatest knight ? I / for it,
' Have ye / ? ' She Eisk'd of Lancelot,
whatever knight of thine I / And tumbled.
F in her father's battles ? wounded there ?
Isolt ?— I / his battles, for Isolt !
brake the petty kings, and / with Rome,
Nor ever yet had Arthur / a fight Like this
fell Confusion, since he saw not whom he /.
shiver'd brands that once had / with Rome,
He / the boys that were rude,
and they / us hand to hand.
And we had not / them in vain,
' We have / such a fight for a day and a night As
may never be / again !
' I have / for Queen and Faith
Each of us / as if hope for the garrison
Thanks to the kindly dark faces who / with us,
faithful and few, F with the bravest among us,
and / till I sunder'd the fray,
F for their lives in the narrow gap
Balin and Balan 238
Merlin and V. 13
Lancelot and E. 40
„ 216
283
498
1414
Pdleas and E. 592
Last Tournament 453
592
604
Pass."of Arihur &&
93
99
133
First Quarrd 14
The Revenge 52
74
83
101
Def. of Lucknow 48
70
V. of Maddwne 69
Heavy Brigade 23
Open I. and C. Exhib. 21
Britain / her sons of yore —
He wildly / a rival suitor, him The causer of
that scandal, / and fell ; The Ring 214
for he / Thy fight for Thee, Happy 15
Foughten the lords Have / like wild beasts Com. of Arthur 226
had I / — well — In those fierce wars, Balin and Balan 176
the / field, what else, at once Decides it. Princess v 297
Then quickly from the / field he sent Com. of Arthur 135
When have I stinted stroke in / field ? _ Holy Grail 860
Foul (adj.) keep where you are : you are / with sin ; Poet's Mind 36
Kill the / thief, and wreak me for my son.' Gareth and L. 363
But if their talk were /, „ 504
But truly / are better, „ 947
thy / sayings fought for me : „ 1180
F are their lives ; / are their lips ; Balin and Balan 616
Of that / bird of rapine whose whole prey Merlin and V. 728
as false and / As the poach'd filth „ 797
what is fair without Is often as / within.' Dead Prophet 68
You say your body is so / — _ Happy 25
Your body is not/ to me, and body is/ at best. „ 28
F\ fl the word was yours not mine, „ 41
' I So / a traitor to myself and her, Aylmer's Field 319
nature crost Was mother of the / adulteries „ 376
Ring out old shapes of / disease ; In Mem. cvi 25
housed In her / den, there at their meat would
growl, Com. of Arthur 30
As one that let / wrong stagnate and be, Geraint and E. 891
And drawing / ensample from fair names, Guinevere 490
sucking The / steam of the grave to thicken by it. Lover's Tale i 649
I'd sooner fold an icy corpse dead of some / disease : The Flight 54
Fright and / dissembling, Forlorn 32
strip your own / passions bare ; Locksley H., Sixty 141
Foul (s) frequent interchange of / and fair, Enoch Arden 533
Foul'd Experience, in her kind Hath / me — Last Tournament 318
Foulest Or the / sewer of the town — Dead Prophet 48
Foul-flesh'd as one That smells a /-/ agaric in the holt, Gareth and L. 747
Foully phantom husks of something / done,
Foulness canst endure To mouth so huge a / —
This fellow hath wrought some /
And of the horrid / that he wrought.
To all the / that they work.
Foun' for Danny was not to be /,
they / Dhrownded in black bog-wather
they laid this body they / an the grass
Found (find) {See also Foun', Fun) compare All
creeds till we have / the one,
Down she came and / a boat
' I / him when my years were few ;
Lu/^etius 160
Balin and Balan 379
565
Merlin and V. 748
785
Tomorrow 28
61
73
Swpp. Confessions 176
L. ofShalottivG
Two Voices 271
Found
238
Found
Found (find) {continued) * It may be that no life is /, Two Voices 346
Have I not / a happy earth ? Miller's D. 25
I / the blue Forget-me-not. „ 202
The comfort, I have / in thee : „ 234
' I have / A new land, but I die.' Palace of Art 283
The Roman soldier / Me lying dead, D. of F. Women 161
I woke, and / him settled down The Epic 17
would have spoken, but he / not words, M. d' Arthur 172
reach'd The wicket-gate, and / her standing there. Gardener's D. 213
I / it in a volume, all of songs, Audley Court 57
They /you out ? James. Not they. Walk, to the Mail 101
Bear witness, if I could have / a way St. 8. Stylites 55
I / him garrulously given, Talking Oak 23
And /, and kiss'd the name she /, „ 159
' She had not / me so remiss ; „ 193
Of love that never / his earthly close, Love and Duty 1
Sin itself be / The cloudy porch oft opening „ 8
And / him in Llanberis : Golden Year 5
and / him, where he strode About the hall, Godiva 16
there she / her palfrey trapt In piu^le „ 51
I / My spirits in the golden age. To E. L. 11
Blanch'd with his mill, they /; Enoch Arden 367
The two remaining / a fallen stem ; „ 567
Lest he should swoon and tumble and be /, „ 774
He / the bailiff riding by the farm, The Brook 153
/ the sun of sweet content Re-risen „ 168
F lying with his urns and ornaments, Aylmer's Field 4
Slipt into ashes, and was / no more. „ 6
written as she / Or made occasion, „ 477
F for himself a bitter treasure-trove ; „ 515
/ the girl And flung her down upon a couch „ 573
F a dead man, a letter edged with death „ 595
in moving on I / Only the landward exit Sea Dreams 95
I / a hard friend in his loose accoimts, „ 162
/ (for it was close beside) „ 288
LuciLiA, wedded to Lucretius, / Her master cold ; Lucretius 1
and / a witch Who brew'd the philtre „ 15
F a still place, and pluck'd her likeness Princess i 92
in the imperial palace / the king. „ 113
/ her there At point to move, „ Hi 130
I have not/ among them all One anatomic' „ 306
I fight with iron laws, in the end F golden : „ iv 76
Nor / my friends ; but push'd alone on foot „ 196
/ at length The garden portals. „ 199
/ that you had gone, Ridd'n to the hills, „ 342
but in you / / My boyish dream involved „ 449
F the gray kings at parle : „ v 114
/ He thrice had sent a herald to the gates, „ 331
/ fair peace once more among the sick. „ vii 44
she / a small Sweet Idyl, and once more, „ 190
I /, tho' crush'd to hard and dry, The Daisy 97
They / the mother sitting still ; The Victim 31
peak, the star Pass, and are / no more. Voice and the P. 28
Thy creature, whom I / so fair. In Mem., Pro. 38
And / thee lying in the port ; „ xiv 4
But / him all in all the same, „ 19
I / a wood with thomv boughs : „ Ixix 6
I / an angel of the night ; „ 14
My Arthur / your shadows fair, „ Ixxxix 6
I / Him not in world or sim, „ cxxiv 5
in the ghastly pit long since a body was /, Maud lib
as If when her carriage past, „ ii 3
and / The shining daffodil dead, „ Hi 13
What, has he / my jewel out ? „ a; 23
my life has / What some have / so sweet ; „ ari 3
in this stormy gulf have / a pearl „ xviii 42
This garden-rose that I /, „ xxi 3
and striking / his doom. Com. of Arthur 325
He / me first when yet a little maid : „ 339
F her son's will unwaveringly one, Gareth and L. 141
kings we /, ye know we stay'd their hands „ 421
On Caer-Eryri's highest / the King, A naked babe, „ 500
he sought The King alone, and /, and told him „ 540
he / the grass within his hands „ 1225
when they sought and /, Sir Gareth drank and ate, „ 1279
Found (find) (continued) had / and loved her in a state
Of broken fortunes,
being /, Then will I fight him,
F every hostel full,
He / an ancient dame in dim brocade ;
/ Half disarray'd as to her rest, the girl ;
She / no rest, and ever f aU'd to draw
The Prince had / her in her ancient home ;
He / the sack and plunder of our house
/ And took it, and array'd herself therein.
And when he / all empty, was amazed ;
jP Enid with the corner of his eye,
issuing arm'd he / the host and cried,
/ his own dear bride propping his head,
/ A damsel drooping in a comer of it.
' In this poor gown my dear lord / me first,
moving out they / the stately horse,
I /, Instead of scornful pity or pure scorn.
He look'd and / them wanting ;
The Lost one F was greeted as in Heaven
they brought report ' we hardly /,
in those deep woods we / A knight
/ the greetings both of knight and King
/ His charger, mounted on him and away,
they / the world. Staring wild-wide ;
/ a little boat, and stept into it ;
my Master, have ye / your voice ?
/ a fair young squire who sat alone,
being / take heed of Vivien,
they / — his foragers for charms —
and on returning / Not two but three ?
He brought, not / it therefore :
/ a door. And darkling felt the sculptured ornament
had she / a dagger there (For in a wink the false love
turns to hate) She would have stabb'd him; but
she / it not :
should have / in him a greater heart.
/ a glen, gray boulder and black tarn.
And issuing / the Lord of Astolat
/ it true, and answer'd, ' True, my child.
Until they / the clear-faced King,
till they / The new design wherein they lost
Where could be / face daintier ?
Lest I be / as faithless in the quest
And / no ease in turning or in rest ;
He / her in among the garden yews.
Until we / the palace of the King.
Stood, till I / a voice and sware a vow.
Until I / and saw it, as the nun My sister saw it ;
lifting up mine eyes, I / myself Alone,
I rode on and / a mighty hill,
but / at top No man, nor any voice,
I / Only one man of an exceeding age.
where the vale Was lowest, / a chapel,
at the base we / On either hand,
/ a people there among their crags,
/ ye all your knights return'd.
But / a silk pavilion in a field.
Other than when I / her in the woods ;
went on, and /, Here too, all hush'd below
Not lift a hand — not, tho' he / me thus !
Would track her guilt until he /,
They / a naked child upon the sands
and in her anguish / The casement :
warmth and colour which I / In Lancelot,
' I / Him in the shining of the stars,
would have spoken, but he / not words ;
we / The dead man cast upon the shore ?
I /, they two did love each other,
/ — All softly as his mother broke it
F, as it seem'd, a skeleton alone,
F that the sudden wail his lady made
/ the dying servant, took him home,
over the Solent to see if work could be /;
they / 1 had grown so stupid and still
Marr. of Geraint 12
220
255
„ 363
„ 515
531
644
694
„ 848
Geraint and E.2\Q
281
407
584
„ 610
698
752
„ 858
935
Balin and Balan 81
94
120
342
„ 417
„ 595
Merlin and V. 198
269
472
529
619
708
719
733
851
;; 873
Lancelot and E. 36
173
370
432
440
641
761
901
923
1044
Holy GraU 194
198
375
421
427
430
442
497
662
708
745
Pelleas and E. 328
423
Last Tournament 528
Guinevere 60
„ 293
„ 586
„ 647
Pass, of Arthur 9
340
Lover's Tale i 294
728
tt> 30
139
149
', 263
First Quarrel 44
Eizpah 49
I
Found
239
Powt
Found (find) (continued) to be / Long after, as
it seem'd,
seen And lost and / again,
They / her beating the hard Protestant doors.
gratefullest heart I have / in a child
(Hath he been here — not / me — gone
He would be / a heretic to Himself,
the harmless people whom we /
You / some merit in my rhymes,
who / Beside the springs of Dircd, smote,
the fierce beast / A wiser than herself,
little one / me at sea on a day,
I / myself moaning again ' O child.
We never had / Him on earth,
F, fear'd me dead, and groan'd,
when Edwin / us there,
burnt at midnight / at mom.
Shepherds, have I /, and more than once,
poet, surely to be / When Truth is / again.
be / of angel eyes In earth's recurring Paradise.
now Your fairy Prince has / you,
I / these cousins often by the brook.
And / a corpse and silence,
F in a chink of that old moulder'd floor ! '
laugh'd a little and / her two —
I / her not in house Or garden —
F yesterday — forgotten mine own rhyme
Wizard Who / me at sunrise Sleeping,
and the same who first had / Paris,
He had left his dagger behind him. I / it.
She / my letter upon him,
I / The tenderest Christ-like creature
Found (establish) All wild to / an University
ere he / Empire for life ?
Foundation-stone Whereof the strong f-s's were laid
Founded She had /; they must build.
I Have / my Round Table in the North,
some Order, which our King Hath newly /,
Table Round Which good King Arthur/,
We / many a mighty state ;
Founder statues, king or saint, or / fell ;
on that / of our blood.
Founding About the/ of a Table Round,
knight Of the great Table— at the / of it ;
Foundress The / of the Babylonian wall.
Some say the third — the authentic / you.
Fount he was thrown From his loud /
Ancient f's of inspiration well
burst away In search of stream or /,
Who dabbling in the / of Active tears,
Not past the living / of pity in Heaven.
There while we stood beside the /,
The very source and / of Day
deer, the dews, the fern, the f's, the lawns ;
Fountain (adj.) Harder and drier than a / bed In
summer :
Fountain (s) {See also Foam-fountains) Life of the
/ there, beneath Its salient springs,
from the central f's flow Fall'n silver-chiming,
stealest fire. From the f's of the past.
In the middle leaps a /
Day and night to the billow the / calls :
I should look like a / of gold
let thy voice Rise like a / for me
The / to his place returns
And sixty feet the / leapt.
runs to seed Beside its native /.
Against its / upward runs The current
Expecting when a / should arise :
I Till the / spouted, showering wide
Like f's of sweet water in the sea.
Spout from the maiden / in her heart.
Tne / of the moment, playing, now
the splash and stir Of f's spouted up
Enring'd a billowing / in the midst ;
Sisters (E. and E.) 110
147
240
In the Child. Hosp. 32
Sir J. Oldcasde 152
182
Columbus 181
To E. Fitzgerald 55
Tiresias 13
„ 151
The Wreck 86
134
Despair 57
The Flight 23
,, 82
LocTisley H., Sixty 97
121
Pref. Poem Broth. S. 15
Helen's Tower 11
The Ring 69
158
217
280
337
444
To Mary Boyle 21
Merlin and the G 12
Death of (Enone 53
Bandit's Death 12
Charity 23
„ 31
Princess i 150
Gardener's D. 19
Palace of Art 22,b
Princess ii 145
Last Tournament 78
742
Guinevere 221
Hands all Round 30
Sea Dreams 224
Locksley H., Sixty 32
Merlin and V. 411
Guinevere 235
Princess ii 80
„ Hi 158
Mine be the strength 4
Locksley Hall 188
Enoch Arden 635
The Brook 93
Aylmer's Field 752
Princess Hi 23
In Mem, xxiv 3
Last Tournament 727
Pelleas and E. 507
Supp. Confessions 55
Arabian Nights 50
Ode to Memory 2
Poet's Mind 24
Sea-Fairies 9
The Mermaid 18
M. d' Arthur 249
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 11
„ Revival 8
Amphion 96
Will Water. 35
Vision of Sin 8
„ 21
Enoch Arden 803
Lucretius 240
Princess, Pro. 61
i 218
„ ii 28
Fountain (s) {continued) Knowledge is now no more a/seal'd : Princess ii 90
and race By all the f's: fleet I was of foot : „ iv 263
And tears that at their / freeze ; In Mem. xx 12
And show'd him in the / fresh „ Ixxxv 26
From household f's never dry ; „ cia; 2
saw The / where they sat together, Balin and Balan 291
and by f's running wine, Last Tournament 141
' Friend, did ye mark that / yesterday „ 286
let thy voice Rise like a /for me Pass, of Arthur 417
springing from her f's in the brain. Lover's Tale i 83
from the diamond / by the palms, „ 137
A draught of that sweet / that he loves, „ 141
whate'er is / to the one Is / to the other ; „ 179
My current to the / whence it sprang, — „ 503
Why fed we from one /? drew one sun ? „ m 24
I fear'd The very f's of her life were chiU'd ; Sisters {E. and E.) 266
Here is the copse, the / and — a Cross ! Sir J. Oldcastle 127
/pour'd From darkness into daylight. Ancient Sage 7
She finds the / where they wail'd ' Mirage ' ! ,,77
Send the drain into the /, Locksley H., Sixty 144
shedding poison in the f's of the Will. „ 274
The / pulses high in sunnier Jets, Prog, of Spring 54
What be those crown'd forms high over the sacred/? Parnassus 1
What be those two shapes high over the sacred /, „ 9
Dance in a / of flame with her devils, Kapiolani 10
Fountain'd See Many-fountain'd
Fountain-fed /-/ Ammonian Oasis in the waste. Alexander 7
Fountain-flood sonorous flow Of spouted /-/'s. Palace of Art 2^
Fountain-foam dragons spouted forth A flood of /-/. „ 24
Fountidn-head The murmur of the f-h — Two Voices 216
FuU-welhng /-A's of change. Palace of Art 166
Fountain-jets others tost a ball Above the /-/, Princess ii 461
Fountain-side sit near Camelot at a f-s, Balin and Balan 11
So coming to the f-s beheld Balin and Balan „ 23
FoTmtain-ums Gods at random thrown By f-u ; To E. L. 16
Four The seven elms, the poplars / Ode to Memory 56
F gray walls, and / gray towers, L. of Sfudott i 15
From those / jets / currents in one swell Palace of Art 33
From / wing'd horses dark against the stars ; Princess i 211
Thro' / sweet years arose and fell. In Mem. xxii 3
F voices of / hamlets round, „ xxviii 5
Each voice / changes on the wind, „ 9
' Where wert thou, brother, these / days ? ' „ xxxi 5
And mock their foster-mother on / feet. Com. of Arthur 31
And all these / be fools, but mighty men, Gareth and L. 643
/ strokes they struck With sword „ 1042
yon / fools have suck'd their allegory „ 1199
O'er the / rivers the first roses blew, Geraint and E. 764
Closed in the / walls of a hollow tower, (repeat) Merlin and V. 209, 543
in the / loud battles by the shore Of Duglas ; Lancelot and E. 289
and strange knights From the / winds came in : Pelleas and E. 148
I thought F bells instead of one began to ring, F
merry bells, / merry marriage-bells, Lover's Tale Hi 20
F galleons drew away From the Spanish fleet The Revenge 46
a single piece Weigh'd nigh / thousand Castillanos Columbus 136
An' noan o' my / sweet-arts 'ud 'a let me 'a
bed my oiin waiiy. Spinster's S's. 101
upo' / short legs ten times fur one upo' two. Owd Rod 16
bird that still is veering there Above his / gold letters) The Ring 333
Four-field The /-/system, and the price of grain; Audley Court 34:
Four-footed no slaves of a /-/ will ? The Dawn 18
Four-handed The f-h mole shall scrape. My life is full 12
Four-bimdredth In that f-h summer after Christ, St. Telemachus 4
Four-in-hand as quaint a /-t-A As you shall see — Walk, to the Mail 113
Foursquare build some plan F to opposition.' Princess v 231
stood / to all the winds that blew ! Ode on Well. 39
Four-year-old ' That was the f-y-o I sold the Squire.' The Brook 137
Fowl {See also Night-fowl, Ocean-fowl, Water-fowl) To
scare the / from fruit : Princess ii 228
I have seen the cuckoo chased by lesser/, Com. of Arthur 167
all the little / were flurried at it, Gareth and L. 69
and horrible f's of the air, Rizpah 39
Fowt (fought) An' once I / wi' the Taailor — North. Cobbler 21
feller to fight wi' an' / it out. „ 100
'e'd fight wi' a will when 'e /; Owd Rod 1
Fox
Fox whole hill-side was redder than a /.
And lighter-footed than the /.
Then of the latest /—where started —
Let the / bark, let the wolf yell.
An' 'e niver runn'd arter the /,
Foxglove The/ cluster dappled bells.
Bring orchis, bring the / spire,
snowlike sparkle of a cloth On fern and/.
Foxlike Or / in the vine ;
Foxy Modred's narrow / face,
Fraction Some niggard / of an hour.
For every splinter'd / of a sect Will clamour
_!i- .,«« i-ViT-iV/i oQ sMTcat. As wroodbine s T
240
Wallc. to the Mail 3
J)ay-Dm., Arrival 8
Aylmer's Field 253
PeUeas and E. 472
ViUage Wife 41
Two Voices 72
In Mem. Ixxxiii 9
Sisters {E. and E.) 118
Princess vii 203
Guinevere 63
Aylmer's Field 450
Akbar's Dream 33
Frame (s) (continued) Deep-seated in our mystic /.
As thro' the/ that binds him in His isolation
Be near me when the sensuous / Is rack'd
No— mixt with all this mystic /,
new life that feeds thy breath Throughout my /,
That in this blindness of the /
Remade the blood and changed the /,
I steal, a wasted /, It crosses here,
The / bindweed-bells and briony rings ; The ^ookJOd
Fragment leaning on / twined with vine, 222
Among the f's tumbled from the glens, "j^Z, 7
But /s of her mighty voice Came ^^rl, w/i 234
The silver f's of a broken voice, Gardeners D. ^34
cr^ him U the/'5 of the grave. SaZT^iflO
Among the f's of the golden day. Maudi xmn i u
^h^rd hit f's of her later words Marr ofGerawiUS
Among the tumbled f's of the hills.' I^r^elot and E 1421
me^/'. of forgotten peoples dwelt, ^ZJsiTu A
And aU the f's of the living rock ^rJem^h^ 16
Spuming a shatter'd/ of the God, MhcTlU
Fragriice girt With song and flame and /, Lo^elTxTi 723
f and the green Of the dead sprmg : ^^«'- s laie i i^o
Fragrant {See aZso M-fragrant, Blossom-fragrant)
drove The /, gUstening deeps, ^ '•«"»«« ^^ *^"" ^^
All round about the / marge "
blinded With many a deep-hued bell-like flower Eleiinore 38
Of /trailers, (Enone lOQ
slowly dropping /dew Gardener's D. Ud
mmgled with her / ton, „ „ o,,.?,-,-, iqa
And bum a / lamp before my bones, &i- *• %f''^%^^^
iSe/tresses^arenotstirr'dThatUe . ^"2/-^"*- ^"^ W'ifi
Yet / in a heart remembering His former talks '^V^'^f'.ff.fol
on a tripod in the midst A /flame rose, Prmc-. ^vM
And bate went round in / skies, , ^^ ^.^f- ^^^.^
often abroad in the / gloom Of foreign churches- Ma^id Ixix 53
11^tain°arose Uke'a'jeweU'd throne thro' the / air, V of Maeldune 59
FUes back in / breezes to display A tunic ^rog. of ^ring 04
With many a pendent bell and / star, . Death of^nonelZ
FraU (adj.) Thy mortal eyes are / to judge of fair CEnone 158
nor shrink For fear our solid aim be dissipated By ^^ .^^^^^ ... ^^^
/ successors. . , .. , . ,„,• 1 1 r
/ at first And feeble, all unconscious of itself, 'jf em Zm" 25
O Ufe as futile, then, as / ! xfaJdlliil
F, but a work divine, ^^"'^'^ ^^ ^\l
F, but of force to withstand, . j'nirae^l
The / bluebell peereth over Rare broidry Marmral
Your melancholy sweet and /As perfume , v-flnA
I riendTthis / bLk of ou^ when sorely tried, ^| ^/X^/jf^ g^
F Life was startled from the tender love Lovers lale i oio
Ind sympathies, how /, In sound and smell ! Early Spring^
f werlThe work's that defended the hold ?'^V"^rSZ 73
in his throne's title make him feel so /, Sir J-OUc'^fi g
PraU (s) ' Rapt from the fickle and the / In Mem. xxx 25
T^S the /caravel. With what was mine, Columbus 140
ISS W not vet Anchor thy/there, ^"^P" ^^^^T^Z f I
Nor human / do me wrong. ^J^ ■ "l' i oo
L^ed by thi crimes and fraiUies of the court. ^^Z^ZlA
Thy /counts most real. Ancient Ciage oi.
Frame (8) (S« a2.<, Broidery-frame) creeps Thro my ^^^..^^, jgi
vems to all my /, j, y^i^es 99
A healthy /, a quiet nund.' ^ ""^ 366
Ck)nsolidate in mind and /— 7?^/,m/i 1 ft
shafts of flame Were shiver'd m my narrow /. ^"'^^ 18
Pour'd back into my empty soul and / U.oj^.W omen i o
D^T are our/'.; ^d |ied dust, ^^^'^S 42
Another and another / of things T^Tif'^9
The morals, something of the/, the rock, PnncmtzSg
woman wed is not as we. But suffers change of /. ,, J/°^
A man of well-attemper'd /. 0^^°^ ^^- ]l
No Wnt of death in all his /, -?" ^«'»- '^^^ ^^
Free
7n ilf em. a;xan» 2
„ a;Zi> 11
„ Ixxvut 18
„ Ixxxvi 11
„ arctM 15
„ Cow. 11
Maui // iv 69
mylmiiost / Was' riven in twain : ' Lover's Tale i 595
shook me, that my / would shudder, . » .**^°
taken Some years before, and falling hid the /. „ t» ^i <
Frame (verb) Vague words ! but ah, how hard to / /« ife»i. a;«) 45
Framed Neither modeU'd, glazed, nor/: Ji'T^i^ «f
Framework With royal f-w of wrought gold; Ode to Mermry 8J
yet with such a / scarce could be. PrvMess Con. 22
And aU the /of the land; _ ^ ^ ^" ^«?^- ^^^^» ?^
speak His music by the / and the chord ; HoZt/ Grati 879
Framing {See also Sea-framing) F the mighty land- , ^ , • .nA
scape to the west, ^ „ -^?TV ' * J2?
France Joan of Arc, A light of ancient 2? ; -^^ ''^/z ^""T ^^f
Rose a ship of i^. . . , ,^''^^"^^^91
That cursed F with her egahties ! ^yl'rner s Field 2b5
Had golden hopes for F and all mankmd, „ *»*
ever-murder'd F, By shores that darken . ,, 'oo
Imacdned more than seen, the skirts of F. Princess, Con. 48
Back to F her banded swarms, Back to F with w/ „ n n
countless blows, Ode on Wei. 110
In which we went thro' summer F. In Mem lxxt4
The foaming grape of eastern F. „ ^o™-. fi
Art with prisonous honey stol'n from F, To the Queen tt 56
Fresh from the surgery-schools ol F In the Child. Bosp.3
appeal Once more to J' or England ; Columbus 58
^TUd- "' ^ ' '^''" ^°'' "'' '''' °" ^0 Victor Hugo 8
Engknd%, all man to be WiU wake one people rr "cw„ rq
i? had show^ a Ught to aU men Xoc^Z^l/ ^A^,fpyJl
Franchise Her f uUer /—what would that be worth— IheJ^ leet 8
Francis (-S^e aZso Francis Men) ^, laughing, clapt The Evic 21
his hand On Everard's shoulder, -^ «« -«ip»« ^|
' But I,' said F, ' pick'd the eleventh » ^^
2?, muttering like a man ill-used, . M. i'^r<A«r, Ep. 12
To P, with a basket on his arm, To J' ]ust ahghted ^ ^«
from the boat, ^"^'^^ ^""'^ °
'With all my heart,' Said J". . j v,„ „^ " 9n
y laid A damask napkin wrought with horse and hound, „ ^u
Francis Allen (See oZso Francis) At ii'^'s on the TheEvicl
Christmas-eve, — . ,, '>, Sf r,A
Francis Hale F H, The farmer's son, ^ . -rr/y c,-" \k^
SS ^^sii Sweet St F 0 ^, would that he LocUsley H Sixty 1<^
i^Snk ' You know,' said F, ' he burnt His Epic, ^tJ^ou
Sankincense sweet ! spikenard, and balm, and /. ^': f ;/„f ^t ?50
ByS^ JT love and /hate. a. ^ . Viswn of Sm 150
For wMe the / rabble in half-amaze Stared at ^^ T^emachus 71
FraterAv^atqueVale ' i-' J a T '-as we wander'd ^^Sj'^.fgS
Fraud whispers of this monstrous /! J- fi^<^J>J fff ^l
SJught when /With a passion so mtense VofAdunlm
Fray and fought tUl I sunder'd the /, 1/ of Maeiau.ne<^
^and threw^Underfoot there in the /- ^'""IrZAfe
Fray'd (His dress a suit of / magnificence, ilfarr. o/ <?erai»< 296
Atween the blossoms, ' We are /.' 'h.c^Ji^A 1 7
so clear and bold and / As you, A±f 80
to have been Joyful and / from blame. B. of F. Women »U
So let the change which comes be / ^^VlfJ^^
I am always bound to you, but you are /.' Enoch Arden 450
!l?S\airha^d-^"''^"^^^'°''^^ , Ayl^'sFiM..!
'King, you are/! We did but keep you surety princess vU
for our son, , i. ^ 419
Knowledge in our own land make her/, >.
yourself and yours shall have i? adit; » ^^^
dwarf 'd or godUke, bond or /: «„' Ve« 91
His foes were thine ; he kept us /; t^« "» >^*"- ^^
Free
Free (adj.) (continued) all too / For such a wise humility Ode on Well. 248
peace, so it be / from pain, Grandmother 97
Survive m spints render'd /, /„ Mem. xxxviii 10
Whose ]est among his friends is /, ,, i^^i 10
Ring in the vahant man and /, '' ^^ 29
I feel so / and so clear By the loss 'Uavd I xix 98
unhooded casting off The goodly falcon /; Merlin and V. 131
Flow d forth a carol / and bold ; Dying Swan 30
Whose / deUght, from any height of rapid flight, Rosalind 3
Like two streams of incense / Eleanore 58
Mine be the strength of spirit, full and /, _ Mine be the strength 1
' Where wert thou when thy father play'd In his /
^^'^' ,^^ , ,, ^ , Two Voices i2lQ
and opposed F hearts, / foreheads— Ulysses 49
Lord of Burleigh, fair and /, i. <,/ Burleigh 58
Set thy hoary fancies /; Vision of Sin 156
Ihat our / press should cease to brawl. Third of Feb. 3
Have left the last / race with naked coasts ! , 40
presently thereafter f ollow'd cahn, i^ sky and stars ; Com. of Arthur 392
crush'd The Idolaters, and made the people /?
should be King save him who makes us /? '
' The thrall in person may be / in soul.
Till ev'n the lonest hold were all as /
Gareth loosed his bonds and on / feet Set him,
' I take it as / gift, then,' said the boy
Who
Gareth and L. 137
165
598
817
Geraint and E. 222
told F tales, and took the word and play'd upon it, „ 291
When wine and / companions kindled him, „ 293
' My / leave,' he said ; ' Get her to speak : ," SOQ
But / to stretch his limbs in lawful ^ht, „ 754
/ flashes from a height Above her, Lancelot'and E. 647
but / love will not be bound.' ' F love, so bound,
were freest,' said the King. ' Let love be/; /
love is for the best : 2379
■• F love—/ field — we love but while we may :
(repeat) Last Tournament 275, 281
It frighted all / fool from out thy heart ;
King Who fain had cUpt / manhood from the
world —
tide within Red with / chase and heather-
scented air.
Was not the land as / thro' all her ways
Bore her free-faced to the / airs of heaven,
' Take my / gift, my cousin, for your wife ;
An' coax'd an' coodled me oop till agean I feel'd
mysen/.
•Cold, but as welcome as / airs of heaven
' What, will she never set her sister /? '
And Grod's / air, and hope of better things,
gave All but / leave for all to work the mines,
when thou sendest thy /soul thro' heaven.
And fling / alms into the beggar's bowl,
Wild flowers blowing side by side in God's / light
and air.
But Moother was / of 'er tongue,
they know too that whene'er In our/ Hall,
Till every Soul be/;
Her ancient fame of F —
With earth is broken, and has left her/,
calls to them ' Set yourselves / ! '
walking and haunting us yet, and be /?
Tree (s) The starry clearness of the /?
How can a despot feel with the F ?
Freea (free) Parson a cooms an' a goiis, an' a says it
easy an' /
an' the F Traade runn'd i' my 'ead,
iPreed Well hast thou done ; for all the stream is /,
! the land Was /, and the Queen false,
he / himself From wife and child,
and / the people Of Hawa-i-ee !
Freedom and make The bounds of i wider yet
And F rear'd in that august sunrise
pure law, Commeasure perfect/.'
That sober-suited F chose,
F slowly broadens down From precedent to
precedent :
307
446
691
Lover^s Tale i 662
„ iv 38
363
North. Cobbler 80
Sisters (E. and E.) 197
218
Sir J. OldcasUe 10
Columbus 133
Ancient Sage 47
260
The Flight 81
Owd Rod IZ
Akbar's Bream 55
Freedom 20
The Fleet 9
The Ring 476
Kapiolani 3
The Dawn 23
In Mem. Ixxxv 86
Riflemen form ! 11
iV. Fanrnr, 0. S. 25
Owd Rod 54
Gareth and L. 1267
Last Tournament 339
Lover's Tale iv 379
Kapiolani 6
To the Queen 32
The Poet 37
(Enone 167
You ask WW, why, etc. 6
11
241 _ _
Freedom (continued) And individual / mute ;
Of old sat F on the heights,
shout For some blind glimpse of /
F, gaily doth she tread ;
Embrace our aims : work out your /.
for song Is duer unto /,
shower the fiery grain Of / broadcast
bear the yoke, I wish it Gentle as /' —
And save the one true seed of / sown
That sober / out of which there springs
we fought for F from our prime,
A love of / rarely felt.
Of / in her regal seat Of England ;
white bonds and warm. Dearer than /.
For /, or the sake of those they loved,
They kept their faith, their/,
rough rock-throne Of F !
F, free to slay herself,
we gain'd a / known to Europe,
To this great cause of F drink, my friends,
(repeat)
Thraldom who walks with the banner of F,
Form in F's name and the Queen's !
Free-faced Bore her /-/to the free airs
Freeing any knight Toward thy sister's /.'
Freeman It is the land that freemen till.
For English natures, freemen, friends,
Gallant sons of English freemen,
and the Rome of freemen holds her place,
To mark in many a f's home The slave,
Freer leave thee /, till thou wake refresh'd
But smit with / light shall slowly melt
tyrant's cruel glee Forces on the / hour,
noble thought be / under the sun,
Free-spoken or being one Of our f-s Table
Freest ' Free love, so bound, were /,'
Freewill joy I had in my / All cold.
Freeze eighty winters / with one rebuke
tears that at their fountain /;
tho' every pulse would /,
Death will / the supplest limbs —
Freezing here he stays upon a / orb
The / reason's colder part,
I took And chafed the / hand.
Freight lovely / Of overflowing blooms.
And, thy dark /, a vanish'd life.
French We love not this F God, the child of Hell,
F of the F, and Lord of human tears ;
Frenchman Not sting the fiery F into war.
Frenzied See Hall-frenzied
Frequence Not in this / can I lend full tongue,
Staled by /, shrunk by usage
Frequent (adj.) So / on its hinge before.
I was / with him in my youth,
Where from the / bridge.
And / interchange of foul and fair,
A / haunt of Edith, on low knolls
she With / smile and nod departing found.
Frequent (verb) Sometimes I /the Christian cloister.
Fresh (See also Dewy-fresh, Frish, Sparkling-fresh)
Keeps his blue waters / for many a mile.
Aphrodite beautiful, F as the foam,
All the valley, mother, 'ill be /
How / the meadows look Above the river,
I have seen some score of those F faces,
flit To make the greensward /,
Oh, nature first was / to men,
moon Smote by the / beam of the springing east ;
My sweet, wild, / three quarters of a year,
She seems a part of those / days to me ;
her / and innocent eyes Had such a star
What drives about the / Cascine,
her brother comes, like a blight On my / hope,
take my charger, /, Not to be spurr'd,
and fetch F victual for these mowers of our Earl ;
Fresh
Tou ask me, why, etc. 20
Of old sat Freedom 1
Love and Bwty 6
Vision of Sin 136
Princess ii 89
„ iv 141
„ v422
„ vi 206
Ode on Wdl. 162
164
Third of Feb. 2Z
In Mem. cix 13
14
Pelleas and E. 354
Sir J. OldcasUe 186
Montenegro 2
10
Locksley H., Sixty 128
» 129
Hands all Round 11, 35
Vastness 10
Riflemen form ! 23
Lover's Tale iv 38
Gareth and L. 1018
You ask me, why, etc. 5
Love thou thy land 7
The Captain 7
To Virgil 34
Freedom 11
Love and Duty 97
Golden Year 33
Vision of Sin 130
3Iaud III vi 48
Pelleas and E. 526
Lancelot and E. 1380
Supp. Confessions 16
Ode on Well. 186
In Mem. xx 12
The Flight 53
Hafpy 46
Lucretius 139
In Mem. cxxiv 14
The Ring 452
Ode to Memory 16
In Mem. x 8
Third of Feb. 7
To Victor Hugo 3
Third of Feb. A
Princess iv 442
Locksley H., Sixty 76
Deserted House 8
Gareth and L. 124
Ode to Memory 102
Enoch Arden 533
Aylmer's Field 148
Marr. of Geraint 515
Akbar's D., Inscrip. 5
Mine be the strength 8
(Enone 175
May Queen 37
Walk, to the Mail 1
Talking Oak 50
„ 90
A mphion 57
M. d' Arthur 214
Edwin Morris 2
142
Aylmer's Field 691
The Daisy 43
Maud I xix 103
Gareth and L. 1300
Geraint and E. 225
Fresh
242
Friend
Fnsb (contimied) men may fear F fire and ruin. Geraint and E. 823
my / but fixt resolve To pass away Holy Grail 737
moon Smote by the / beam of the springing east ; Pass, of Arthur 382
evermore F springing from her fountams in the
brain, Lover's Tale i 83
and blew F fire into the sun, „ 319
an' es cleiin Es a shilUn' / fro' the mint Spinster's S's. 76
While yet thy / and virgin soul Freedom 2
There no one came, the turf was /, Prog, of Spring 72
flowers To work old laws of Love to / results, „ 85
That his / life may close as it began, „ 89
How / was every sight and sound The Voyage 5
So / they rose in shadow'd swells The Letters 46
F from the burial of her little one, Enoch Arden 281
' Too happy, / and fair, Too / The Brook 217
Lady Psyche will harangue The / arrivals of the week Princess ii 96
F as the first beam glittering on a sail, „ iv 44
So sad, so /, the days that are no more. „ 48
/young captains flash'd their glittering teeth, „ v 20
When all our path was / with dew, In Mem. Ixviii 6
And show'd hmi in the fountain / „ Ixxxv 26
If not so /, with love as true, „ 101
pleased him, / from brawling courts „ Ixxxix 11
from the garden and the wild A / association blow, ,, ci 18
daily fronted him In some / splendour ; Marr. of Geraint 14
my child, how / the colours look, „ 680
this cut is /; That ten years back ; Lancelot and E. 21
Tommy's faiice be as / as a codlin North. Cobbler 110
Making / and fair All the bowers and the flowers, Sisters (E. and E.) 9
Freshen They / the silvery -crimson shells, Sea-Fairies 13
They / and sweeten the wards In the Child. Hosp. 38
Fresher And flood a / throat with song. In Mem. Ixxxiii 16
Bright Phosphor, / for the night, „ cxxi 9
She from her bier, as into / life, lever's Tale Hi 42
Freshest a truth Looks / in the fashion of the day : The Epic 32
Freshlier And gathering / overhead, In Mem. xcv 57
Freshly-flower'd and lay Upon the /-/slope. Miller's D. 112
Freshmen Everard's college fame When we were F : The Epic 47
Freshness The vmsunn'd / of my strength, Supp. Confessions 140
increased With / in the dawning east. Two Voices 405
Delighted with the / and the sovmd. Edwin Morris 99
Yet so did I let my / die. Maud I xix 11
immortality Of thought, and / ever self-renew'd. Lover's Tale i 106
Fresh-wash'd f-w in coolest dew The maiden splendours D. of F. Women 54
Eresh-water F-w springs come up through bitter brine. // / were loved 8
Fret (s) busy / Of that sharp-headed worm Supp. Confessions 185
Love is hurt with jar and/. Miller's D. 209
(all f's But chafing me on fire to find Princess i 165
Fret (verb) rib and / The broad-imbased beach, Supp. Confessions 127
You should not / for me, mother, May Queen, N. ¥'s. E. 36
say to Robin a kind word, and tell him not to/; „ Con. 45
Tne changing market f's or charms Ancient Sage 140
To / the summer jenneting. The Blackbird 12
We /, we fume, would shift our skins, Will Water. 225
With many a curve my banks I / The Brook 43
' So / not, like an idle girl, In Mem. Hi 13
Is that a matter to make me /? Maud I xiii 2
' F not yourself, dear brother, Lancelot and E. 1074
Fretfal / as the wind Pent in a crevice : Princess Hi 80
common sense of most shall hold a / realm in awe, Locksley Hall 129
Fretted (adj.) By Bagdat's shrines of / gold, Arabian Nights 7
And, with dim / foreheads all. Palace of Art 242
Fretted (verb) Have / all to dust and bitterness.' Princess vi 264
Fretteth F thine enshrouded form. A Dirge 10
Fretwork holds a stately / to the Sun, Princess vi 86
Friar For I am emptier than a f's brains ; Sir J. Oldcastle 7
at Pardoners, Summoners, F's, absolution-sellers, „ 93
God willing, to outlearn the filthy /. „ 118
foor man's money gone to fat the /. „ 150
"s, belhingers. Parish-clerks — „ 160
Two f's crying that if Spain should oust Columbus 96
Friday Whose F fare was Enoch's ministering. Enoch Arden 100
we sail'd on a, F mom — V. of Maeldune 7
Friend {See also Bosom-friend, Frind, Sea-friend)
our f's are all forsaking The wine AU Things will Die 18
Friend {continued) Ci-eae-headed /, whose joyful
scorn.
My /, with you to live alone.
So, /, when first I look'd upon your face,
painting some dead / from memory ?
' He seems to hear a Heavenly F,
f's to man. Living together under the same
roof. To —
Prythee, /, Where is Mark Antony ?
He gave me a /, and a true true-love.
He was a / to me.
The night is starry and cold, my /, And the New-
Year blithe and bold, my /,
Alack ! our / is gone.
There's a new foot on the floor, my /, And a new
face at the door, my /,
he too was a / to me : Both are my f's,
The land, where girt with f's or foes
English natures, freemen, f's,
Both for themselves and those who call them / ?
who lived across the bay, My /;
' F Edwin, do not think yourself alone
Sets out, and meets a / who hails
my /, the days were brief Whereof the poets talk.
Come, my f's, 'Tis not too late to seek
^ In Art like Nature, dearest/;
To fall asleep with all one's f's ;
She told me all her f's had said ;
Thro' troops of unrecording /'s,
naming those, his f's, for whom they were :
' Good,' said his /, ' but watch ! '
The man was his, had been his father's, /:
his nearer / would say ' Screw not the chord
F's, I was bid to speak of such a one
F's, this frail bark of ours,
their guest, their host, their ancient /,
' My dearest /, Have faith, have faith !
I found a hard / in his loose accovmts,
he that wrongs his / Wrongs himself
closed by those who mourn a / in vain,
and lady f's From neighbour seats :
They rode ; they betted ; made a hundred f's,
Cyril and with Florian, my two f's :
AVent forth again with both mj f's.
always f's, none closer, elm and vine :
' O /, we trust that you esteem'd us not
brings our f's up from the underworld,
Nor found my f's ; but push'd alone on foot
Then came your new /: you began to change —
I your okl / and tried, she new in all ?
' Her,' she said, 'my/ — Parted from her —
— and ours shall see us f's.
Truest / and noblest foe ;
a world Of traitorous / and broken system
' We two were f's : I go to mine own land
had you got a / of your own age,
glitteririg drops on her sad /.
be f's, like children, being chid !
Whatever man lies wounded,/ or foe,
0 my /, I will not have thee die !
hears his burial talk'd of by his f's,
' Look there, a garden ! ' said my college /,
O f's, our chief state-oracle is mute :
amoighty's a taiikin o' you to 'iss^n, my
/,' (repeat)
Thunder ' Anathema,' /, at you ;
One writes, that ' Other f's remain,'
And unto me no second /.
My /, the brother of my love ;
saying ; ' Comes he thus, my / ?
And flash at once, my /, to thee.
Methinks my / is richly shrined ;
' Does my old / remember me ? '
Since we deserved the name of /'s,
Whose jest among his f's is free,
Clear-headed friend 1
Ode to Memory 119
Sonnet To 9
Wan Sculptor 4
Two Voices 295
- With Pal. of Art 11
D.ofF. Women 139
D.oftheO. Year IS
23
34
47
52
To J. S. 61
You ask me, why, etc. 7
Love thou thy land 7
M. d' Arthur 253
Avdley Court 76
Edwin Morris 77
Walk, to the Mail 42
Talking Oak 185
Ulysses 56
Day-Dm., Moral 14
„ L'Envoi 4
The Letters 25
You might have won 7
The Brook 131
Aylmer's Field 275
344
468
677
715
790
Sea Dreams 156
162
172
Lucretius 142
Princess, Pro. 97
163
i 52
167
ii 337
„ Hi 198
„ iv 45
196
298
318
1)75
228
„ vi 7
195
216
251
283
289
336
,, vii 8
152
„ Con. 49
Ode on WeU. 23
N. Farmer, 0. S. 10, 26
To F. D. Maurice 8
In Mem. vi 1
44
ix 16
xii 13
xli 12
Ivii 7
Ixiv 28
lxv9
lxvil(y
Friend
243
Frieze
Friend (continued) Thy blood, my /, and partly mine ;
For other /'5 that once I met ;
I crave your pardon, O my /;
held debate, a band Of youthful /'«,
/ from / Is oftener parted,
Some gracious memory of my/;
With thy lost / among the bowers,
0, /, who earnest to thy goal
To hear the tidings of my /,
Dear /, far off, my lost desire.
Dear heavenly / that canst not die.
Strange /, past, present, and to be ;
That / of mine who lives in God,
I have led her home, my love, my only /.
To hef's for her sake, to be reconciled;
To be f's, to be reconcUed !
To me, her / of the years before ;
Should I fear to greet my /
To catch a / of mine one stormy day ;
F, to be struck by the public foe,
' O /, had I been holpen half as well
an old knight And ancient / of Uther ;
the f's Of Arthur, gazing on him,
three Queens, the f's Of Arthur,
a stalwart Baron, Arthur's /.
' F, whether thou be kitchen-knave, or not,
and now thy pardon, /,
felon, knight, I avenge me for my /.'
They hate the King, and Lancelot, the King's /,
'Ff he that labours for the sparrow-hawk
' O /, I seek a harbourage for the night.'
' Thanks, venerable /,' replied Geraint ;
he suspends his converse with a /,
Built that new fort to overawe my f's,
how can Enid find A nobler/?
Embraced her with all welcome as a /.
' F, let her eat ; the deimsel is so faint.'
Call in what men soever were his f's,
'All of one mind and all right-honest /'s!
what they long for, good in / or foe,
the great Queen once more embraced her /,
' Old /, too old to be so young, depart.
Poor wretch — no / ! —
Sir Lancelot, / Traitor or true ?
I know the Table Round, my f's of old ;
were I glad of you as guide and /:
' This shield, my /, where is it ? '
Surely his king and most familiar /
Marr'd her f's aim with pale tranquillity,
call her / and sister, sweet Elaine,
Death, hke a f's voice from a distant field
He makes no / who never made a foe.
To this I call my f's in testimony,
to warm My cold heart with a /:
And these, like bright eyes of familiar f's,
'Thou, too, my Lancelot,' ask'd the King, 'my/.
King, my /, if / of thine I be.
But as for thine, my good / Percivale,
But hold me for your /: Come, ye know nothing :
F's, thro' your manhood and your fealty, —
' jP, did ye mark that fountain yesterday
(what marvel — she could see) — Thine, /;
Nay, /, for we have taken our farewells.
The most disloyal / in all the world.'
and saps The fealty of our f's,
the warhorse neigh'd As at a f's voice,
all whereon I lean'd in wife and /
For / and foe were shadows in the mist. And / slew
/ not knowing whom he slew ;
Both for themselves and those who call them /?
f's Of Arthur, who should help him at his need ? '
f's — jouT love Is but a burthen :
Permit me, /, I prythee. To pass my hand
And, like all other f's i' the world,
Ye ask me, f's When I began to love.
In Mem. Ixxxiv 9
„ Ixxxv 58
100
„ Ixxxvii 22
„ xcviii 14
„ m IS
„ cxiv 23
„ cxxvi 3
„ cxxix 1
:: I
Con. 140
Mavd I xviii 1
„ xix 50
56
64
„ II iv 85
"85
89
Com. of Arthur 161
223
277
Gareth and L. 229
818
873
1166
1220
1418
Marr. of Geraint 211
299
303
340
460
793
834
Geraint and E. 206
286
484
876
947
Balin and Balan 17
Merlin and V. 75
769
816
Lancelot and E. 226
345
592
733
865
999
1089
1299
Holy Grail 619
688
764
769
861
PeUeas and E. 340
Last Tournament 97
286
548
Guinevere 117
„ 340
„ 521
531
Pass, of Arthur 24
100
421
455
To the Queen ii 16
Lover's Tale i 30
108
144
Nay, but my /.
Friend {continued) Life (like a wanton too-ofiicious /,
/, the neighbour, Lionel, the beloved.
Oh /, thoughts deep and heavy as these
looking round upon his tearful f's,
And then to f's — they were not many —
' There is a custom in the Orient, f's —
his / Replied, in half a whisper,
sight of this So frighted our good /,
an' you are my only /.
my best And oldest /, your uncle, wishes it,
the portrait of his / Drawn by an artist,
an' 'e smiled, fur 'e hedn't naw/.
My / should meet me somewhere hereabout
hang'd, poor f's, as rebels And bum'd alive
my / was he. Once my fast /:
led my / Back to the pure and universal church,
Burnt — good Sir Roger Acton, my dear/!
My / should meet me here — Here is the copse,
(My good / By this time should be with me.)
I would not spurn Good counsel of good f's,
(My / is long m coming.)
F 'i — foe perhaps — a tussle for it then !
My / '5 await me yonder ?
The compass, Uke an old / false at last
Than any / of ours at Court ?
reft of his Folk and his f's
Old f's outvaluing all the rest.
But we old/'s are still alive,
I fancied that my / P'or this brief idyll
away from the Christ, our human brother and /,
' Yet wine and laughter / 's !
would I were there, the /, the bride, the wife,
With breaking hearts, without a /,
and take their wisdom for your /.
You wrong me, passionate little /.
I count them all My / 's and brother souls,
His/'s had stript him bare,
Waeeioh of God, man's /, and tyrant's foe.
To this great cause of Freedom drink, my/ '5,
(repeat)
To this great name of England drink, mj f's,
came, my /, To prize your various book.
You came not,/;
golden youth bewail the /, the wife,
I once had / 's — and many — none Uke you.
But, /, man-woman is not woman-man.
hardly a daisy as yet, little /,
My /, the most unworldly of mankind,
My noble /, my faithful counsellor,
bravest soul for counsellor and /.
Lover's Tale i 627
653
688
792
iv 184
230
335
383
First Quarrel 8
Sisters (E. and E.) 47
„ 134
ViUage Wife 89
Sir J. Oldcaslle 1
47
61
70
79
126
138
146
148
196
„ 202
Columbus 70
„ 198
Batt. of Brunanburh 70
To E. Fitzgerald 40
„ 42
Tiresias 187
Despair 25
Ancient Sage 195
The Flight 43
100
Locksley H., Sixty 104
Epilogue 10
„ 19
Dead Prophet 14
Epit. on Gordon 1
my /, thou knowest I hold that forms Are needful :
Rands all Boumd 11, 35
23
To Ulysses 46
To Mary Boyle 17
53
Romney's R. 156
On one who effec. E. M. 4
The Throstte 11
In Mem. W. G. Ward 3
Akbar's Dream 18
69
Fur Quoloty's hall my f's.
You were his / — you- — you —
You will not speak, my / 's,
O well for him that finds a /,
Or makes a / where'er he come.
Friendlier Old poets foster'd imder / skies,
Friendly (See also Frindly) The / mist of mom
Clung to the lake.
Friendly-warm Only such cups as left usf-w.
Friendship a / so complete Portion'd in halves
My college /'s glimmer.
' F ! — to be two in one —
O /, equal-poised control,
such A / as had master'd Time ;
seek A / for the years to come.
First love, first /, equal powers,
Less yearning for the / fled.
And bright the / of thine eye ;
So vanish / 's only made in wine.
it was a bond and seal Of /,
Sprang up a / that may help us yet.
Gone into darkness, that full light Of /!
flits to warn A far-off / that he comes
Frieze boss'd with lengths Of classic /,
126
Church-warden, etc. 39
Charity 11
The Wanderer 3
5
6
Poets and their B. 1
Edwin Morris 107
Lucretius 215
Gardener's D. 4
Will Water. 40
Vision of Sin 107
In Mem. Ixxxv 33
64
80
107
„ cxvi 15
„ cxix 10
Geraint and E. 479
Lover's Tale ii 182
„ iv 144
Tiresias 203
Demeter and P. 90
Princess ii 25
Fright
244
Froze
Fright (s) and died Of / in far apartments. Princess vi 371
dead weight trail 'd, by a whisper'd /, Maud / 1 14
F's to my heart ; but stay : Gareth and L, 90
call'd him dear protector in her /, Nor yet forgot
her practice in her /, Merlin and V. 946
and the bitter frost and the /? Rizpah 18
till 'e'd gotten a / at last, Village Wife 61
harass'd by the / 's Of my first crew, Columbus 67
she had torn the ring In /, The Ring 471
F and foul dissembUng, Forlorn 32
Frighted (verb) breed with him, can / my faith. In Me^n. Ixxxii A
Frighted (See also Half-fr^hted) Queen had added
Get thee hence,' Fled /. Guinevere 367
My / Wiclif-preacher whom I crost In flying hither ? Sir J. OldcasUe 38
half amazed half / all his flock : Aylmer's Field 631
/ all free fool from out thy heart ; Last Tournament 307
the sight of this So / out good friend. Lover's Tale iv 383
I am / at life not death.' Despair 14
Frighten'd See Half-frighten'd
Frightful the bells Lapsed into / stillness ; Lover's Tale Hi 30
Frill door Of his house in a rainbow/? Maud II ii 11
Frind (friend) But shure we wor betther /'s Tomorrow 41
An' her nabours an' f's 'ud consowl „ 47
dhry eye thin but was wet for the f's „ 83
Frindly an' she gev him a / nod, „ 58
Fringe (See also Under-fringe) Burnt like a / of fire. Palace of Art 48
Tom from the / of spray. D. of F. Women 40
beard Was tagg'd with icy /'s in the moon, St. S. Stylites 32
From /'s of the faded eve. Move eastward 3
Upon the skirt and / of our fair land. Princess v 219
daisy close Her crimson /'s to the shower ; In Mem. Ixxii 12
/ Of that great breaker, sweeping up the strand. Com. of Arthur 386
from the / of coppice round them burst Balin and Balan 46
and the narrow / Of curving beach — Lover's Tale i 38
we kiss'd the / of his beard V. of Maddune 125
Fringed (adj. and part.) (See also Gold-fringed, Ray-
fringed, Sun-fringed) hollows of the / hills In
summer heats, Supp. Confessions 153
A looming bastion / with fire. In Mem. xv 20
Pallas flung Her / aegis, Achilles over the T. 4
Fringed (verb) the knightly growth that/ his lips. M. d' Arthur 220
the knightly growth that / his lips. Pass, of Arthur 388
Frish (fresh) But a / gineration had riz, Tomorrow 75
Frith o'er the/ 's that branch and spread In Mem., Con. lib
Frock Or the / and gipsy bonnet Maud I xx 19
Frog When did a / coarser croak Trans, of Earner 4
FroUc (adj.) My / falcon, with bright eyes, Rosalind 2
in a fit of / mirth She strove to span my waist : Talking Oak 137
with a / welcome took The thunder and the sunshine, Ulysses 47
Frolic (s) Cyril, howe'er He deal in /, Princess iv 250
fury of peoples, and Christless / of kings, The Dawn 7
Frolic (verb) come hither and / and play ; Sea-Fairies 18
Front (adj.) all at once The /rank made a sudden halt; Lover's Tale Hi 29
Front (s) (See also Minster-front, Palace-front) More
black than ashbuds in the / of March.' Gardener's D. 28
but in / The gorges, opening wide apart, (Enone 11
In / they bound the sheaves. Palace of Art 78
discern The / of Sumner-place. Talking Oak 248
Past thro' the solitary room in /, Enoch Arden 277
A / of timber-crost antiquity, „ 692
But huge cathedral /'s of every age, Sea Dreams 218
some inscription ran along the /, Princess i 212
terrace ranged along the Northern /, „ m 118
riders / to /, until they closed In conflict „ v 490
Cannon in / of them VoUey'd and thunder'd ; Light Brigade 20
Betwixt the black f's long-withdrawn In Mem. cxix 6
For Jf to / in an hour we stood, Maud II i 23
whereof along the/. Some blazon'd, Gareth and L. 405
thicker down the / With jewels Geraint and E. 689
Kiss'd the white star upon his noble/, „ 757
in / of which Six stately virgins, all in white, Lover's Tale ii 76
in / of that ravine Which drowsed in gloom, Death of (Enone 75
Front (verb) And the crag that f's the Even, Eleiinore 40
And eastward f's the statue, Eoly Grail 241
Henceforward rarely could she / in hall, Guinevere 62
Front (verb) (continued) Shape your heart to / the
hour, Locksley H., Sixty 106
I will / him face to face. Happy 19
Me they / With sullen brows. Akbar's Dream 51
Fronted (See also Fair-fronted) Philip's dwelling /
on the street, Enoch Arden 731
when first I / him. Said, ' Trust him not ; ' Sea Dreams 70
daily / him In some fresh splendour ; Marr. of Geraint 13
We / there the learning of all Spain, Columbus 41
Frontier And flying reach'd the / : Princess i 109
Hard by your father's /: „ 148
Fronting like a star F the dawn he moved ; (Enone 58
Frontless Suddenly bawls this / kitchen-knave, Gareth and L. 860
Frost There is / in your breath Poet's Mind 17
the / is on the pane : May Queen, N. Y's. E. 13
sparkled keen with / against the hilt : M. d' Arthur 55
Rain, wind, /, heat, hail, St. S. Stylites 16
With drenching dews, or stiff with crackling/. „ 115
one wide chasm of time and/ they gave Princess, Pro. 93
Draw toward the long /and longest night, A Dedication 11
The / is here. And fuel is dear. Window, Winter 1
And / is here And has bitten the heel „ 5
, Bite, /, bite ! (repeat) „ 7, 13
That grief hath shaken into /! In Mem. iv 12
The streets were black with smoke and /, „ Ixix 3
The yule-log sparkled keen with /, „ Ixxviii 5
' My sudden / was sudden gain, „ Ixxxi 10
New leaf, new life — the days of / are o'er : Last Tournament 278
sparkled keen with / against the hilt : Pass, of Arthur 223
Hard was the / in the field. First Quarrel 39
and the bitter / and the fright ? Rizpah 18
all the heavens flash'd in /; To E. Fitzgerald 22
leaf rejoice in the / that sears it at night ; The Wreck 20
' No / there,' so he said, ,, 80
Sun-flame or simless /, Epilogue 66
His fingers were so stiJEEen'd by the / The Ring 239
When / is keen and days are brief — To Ulysses 19
Frost-bead f-b melts upon her golden hair ; Prog, of Spring 10
Frost-like And tipt with f-l spires. Palace of Art 52
Frosty (See also Purple-frosty) Make thou my spirit
pure and clear As are the / skies, St. Agnes' Eve 10
For while our cloisters echo'd / feet. Princess, Pro. 183
That glitter burnish'd by the / dark ; „ v 261
Made the noise of / woodlands, Boddicea 75
The flying cloud, the / light : _ In Mem. cvi 2
Yet in your / cells ye feel the fire ! Balin and Balan 446
Thaw once of a / night I slither'd North. Cobbler 19
Froth Upon the topmost / of thought. In Mem. Hi 4
Froth'd He / his bumpers to the brim ; D. of the 0. Year 19
is your spleen / out, or have ye more ? Merlin andV. 767
Frothfly Sweeping the / from the fescue Aylmer's Field 530
Frown (s) who may know Whether smile or/ be
fleeter ? Whether smile or / be sweeter, Madeline 12
F's perfect-sweet along the brow „ 15
Thy smile and / are not aloof From one another, „ 19
black brows drops down A sudden-curved/, (repeat) „ 35, 47
other /'s than those That knit themselves Aylmer's Field 723
He had darken'd into a /, Maud I xix 62
Fortune, turn thy wheel with smile or/; Marr. of Geraint 350
Met his full / timidly firm, and said ; Geraint and E. 71
Frown (verb) F and we smile, the lords of our own
hands ; Marr. of Geraint 3?4
sweet eyes / : the lips Seem but a gash. Sisters (E. and E.) 106
Frown'd The seldom-frowning King /, Lancelot and E. 715
and you took them tho' you /; You / and yet
you kiss'd them. Happy 74
Frownmg (See also Seldom-frowning) Smiling, /,
evermore, (repeat) Madeline 8, 25
Florian nodded at him, I jf ; Princess iv 160
Vivien, / in true anger, said : Merlin and V. 691
Vivien answer'd / wrathfully : » 704
Vivien answer'd / yet in wrath : „ 768
With smiling face and / heart, Lancdot and E. 553
Froze with surprise F my swift speech : D. of F. Women 90
To me you / : this was my meed for all. Princess iv 302
II
Hapfy 71
L. ofShalottivZO
Poet's Mind 10
Two Voices 237
422
The Blackbird 24
M. d'Arthur 183
In Mem. Ixxxiii 15
Pass, of Arthur 351
Last Tournament 413
Merlin and V. 845
PMeas and E. 433
Death of (Enone 73
Montenegro 3
Ode to Memory 18
(Enone 66
„ 72
„ 135
„ 226
Lotos-Eaters 29
Froze
f ^^^^"^Mf f '^^u, ^T ^* ^ y°" ^'«™ your bride,
f Sttaea Till her blood was /slowly
i HoUow smile and / sneer Come' not here.
iie txx a and / to permanence :
My /heart began to beat.
Caught in the/pahns of Spring.
Larger than human on the / hills.
That longs to burst a/ bud
Larger than human on the/ hills.
These be no rubies, this is / blood
and stood StiflE as a viper /; '
the placid lip F by sweet sleep,
hke a creature/ to the heart
Wn^ /, savage, arm'd by day and night
Wmt (6e« a^so First-fruits) shoots Of orient green
givmg safe pledge of /'s, ^
?T^?j^^ ?/ of pure Hesperian gold,
^ehold this/, whose gleaming rind ingrav'n
Paris held the costly / Out at arm's-length,
cast the golden / upon the board
enchanted stem, Laden with flower and /, /^,„, ^v,,.„ 9a
ei^ my flower to / Changed, I was ripe f^'r death. D. ofTwo^'Z^fl
f sand cream Served in the weepins ehn • riZ^'J: > t^ Tni
we stole his /, His hens, his eggs^^ ' wSkt!7'u-iti
bring me offerings of / ^d ^wek • h, e cf ^''^{ «^
This / of thineTy Lo4Tb?esr ' rlf ^O t Ifo
Where fairer / of Love may rest ^"^^'""^ ^"* !f ?
flower of knowledge changed to f Of wisdom T^,. "j n . o7
and fs, and spicef, clear of toll,"^ ' ^Tn?Jlf v"'^ H
cherish that which bears but bitter f? t iT J% f.
With naked limbs and flowers and /VBut we nor ^"^^"^ ^"^^ ^
paused for /nor flowers. »- e nor
Gifts by the children, gaiden-herbs and/, eIcHaS^^
babies roU'd about Like tSnbled/ i7£.'J'f ^«^
falhng in a land Of promise ; / would foUow """'''' ^'-^H
To scare the fowl from/: ^ ^ouow. ^^ „ 140
J', blossom, viand, amber wine " .^of
breadth Of Autumn, dropping /'s " *^ ^
And gathering aU the /'5 of earth Orf^ /n/^ w.hl^l^
Weanng his wisdom %htly, hke the f Inter. Exhib. 41
A life that bears immortal / "^ ^ i>«^.ca<,o„ 12
I'll rather take what / may be ^"^ ^*"'- ?^ ^^
Of what in them is flower and/; " n'^^\l^
It IS only flowers, thev had no f's >/' ^V^r n^
little pitted speck in gamer'd/ ' ;tf j^'"'^. U l^^
sure I think this / is hu^ too high rf'^t" ""^ ?^- ^^f
your flower Waite to be soUd /^ 7^,?^? ^ "'^ ^; IZ^
the red / Grown on a magic oak-tree ^"'^ Tournament 100
manners are not idle, but the / Of loval nature "n ■ lit
said the maid, ' be m'annei^ such fai^P ' Gmnevere 335
no leaf, no flower, no / for me. r^,^, ^' , . HI
promise of blossom, but never a / ' iF f .S f/ * " !^
And we came to the Isle of ii"s • •' ^««'«w«« 51
irinn'^'F ^T^ ^"u L^^^ *^« poisonous pleasure " H
g^ddy besides with the/'5 we had gorgei " ??
Was flinging /to lions; ^ ^ ' "^. . l^
earthly flower would be heavenlv f— Tiresias 67
She tastes the / before the blossom falls, AnciZllZ ??
The kernel of the shriveU'd / Ancient i,age 75
climbing toward her with the golden f rt^nth J'n? T^
•Mine is the one/ Alia made for mam' AUar's^r^Z ^m
VruitrT ?"',?f '^^ V'^'^ "« ^^^ ^°d/, "'**"' ' Dreamy
Frmtful like the arrow-seeds of the field flower. The
/ wit Cleavmg, /ttt t, ^
P of further thought and deed, tJv ^°'\ f ?
FS-^oU^-^?;Lr^-^^'""^^^-^^/^^^^^^ , 7;&js
I keep smooth platk of / ground, ^"5?!?;' ^^a'^-^I
When the centres behind me like a/land reposed; £cL^"S?i|
245
Fruitful {continued) With / cloud and living smoke.
The / hours of still increase ; '
To / strifes and rivalries of peace —
Fruitless Which else were / of their due
Is shriveU'd in a / fire, *
Who built him fanes of / prayer
'Wherefore grieve Thy brethren with a/ tear ?
Full
In Mem. xxxix 3
,, xlvi 10
Bed. of Idylls Z%
In Mem. xlv 14
„ liv 11
„ hi 12
glajcing from his teighro.reaittT/ Mlow" ' DtMaef' ajfm
The / is all the dearer. Window, Winter 2
Fuel-smother'd And from it like a f-s fire n .j. " j r ^o^
Fulfil i^'5 him with beatitude. ^ ' ^J^"f'''^-^-^li
God f's himself in many ways, ^^if 7^'T%a^
discerning to / This labour, ^- ^ ^^f^^'' ^41
I would but ask you to / yourself • p • ^'y*!?* 35
each /'5 Defect in each, ^ ^""'^^^^ ^" 146
To strive, to fashion, to f-— r ,," .vP^
F the boundless purpose of their Kine " r. / r;/^*?^I
God / 's himself in many ways ^ * S^"*' < f^^""' jj^
Fulfill'd By its own eneiW^f itseU Pass, of Arthur 409
For daJy hope/, toTeS ' ^J'^^^C' ^'^^l
My father ' that our com^ct be /: ^^T- ^"""^ ?f
Fulfilment to rise again Revolving toward f i^j • i^ • o«
FuU so / and deep I„ thy large e/es, ^' Edwin Morris 39
and slowly grow To a / face, ^^eanore 85
So /, so deep, so slow, » ^|
Since in his absence / of light and iov t^,^> m\ . .„f
that strove to rise From my / heart?^' ^"^ ' ^"^^ ' ^25
It was / of old odds an' ends, p,v J'n ; To
and the / moon stares at the snow. ^^'^^^ ^p"-""^ a^
'F of compassion and mercy— (repeat) 7?.v^i?^«o «q
My brain is / of the cra^h of wrecks, r^t 'Pa
I fun thy pockets as / o' my pipnins ri, %. / '^^^^ ^
Too / for sound and f oam^ Church-warden etc. 34
And yet, tho' its voice be so clear and / p'"^ ^t Pf^^,
The warble was low, and / and clear n°'^ ' ¥^''^ ^4
Thy rose-lips and /blue eyes ' DyingSwan24
My life is /of weary days, ;[. ,v • J'^^fJ
Mine be the strength of spirit, f and free M ■ ^KI^^^ '' H^ i
But my / heart, that work'd below ' ^''"' * V f'^^'\]
Flood with / daylight glebe and to^n ? ^'"^ ^"^'* ^
Ihey met with two so / and bright— m •„" , 7. qA
While those / chestnut^ whisper by. ^'^^''' ^\ f ^
My eyes are / of tears, my heart of love, /h^„ /^
her / and earnest eye Over her snow-cold breast " , l]
nf^T/^°^'^^ '^^^ *^'°' *^^ «"^'i<=« drear, D. of F Women 121
He was / of joke and jest, n %,j;^ ^yomen Ul
Vnn i''^ •'^ "ll^ ^^T^'* °" ^«' ^'°^«' ^"d sunn'd^ GaVd'enJ^sDl^
that when his heart is glad Of the / harvest ^''''"' «q
lo some / music rose and sank the sun. And some "
/ music seem'd to move and change c'^.,,,- »^ ■ o.
Sneeze out a / God-bless-you right and left ? ^'^^^^ ^"'•'•^ ^
Un the coals I lay. A vessel f of sin • o. r, ,^' , . ""
The/south-breez^e around t4e Wow V^'^'tt^^?
and made himself F sailor ■ i- "' *f ™5' '^
Out ol/heart and boimdlis graUtude ^"'** "'"''",%
,1 a 45
» m 231
emu watcn A / sea glazed with mufiied mo(
that/ voice which circles round the grave
Alas your Highness breathes / East '
Full
246
Funeral
Full (continued) Not in this frequence can I lend / tongue, Princess iv 442
and meek Seem'd the / lips, „ vii 226
The two-cell'd heart beating, with one / stroke, „ 307
Not perfect, nay, but / of tender wants, „ 319
Uplift a thousand voices / and sweet. Ode Inter. Exhih. 1
Spread thy / wings, and waft him o'er. In Mem. ix 4
sigh The / new life that feeds thy breath „ Ixxxvi 10
But when the heart is / of din, „ xciv 13
And if the song were / of care, „ cxro 9
underUp, you may call it a little too ripe, too /, Maud I it 9
love of a peace that was / of wrongs and shames, „ III vi 40
Fixing / eyes of question on her face. Com. of Arthur 312
gathering half the deep And / of voices, „ 381
Albeit neither loved with that / love Gareth and L. 83
your / leave to go. „ 134
When waken'd by the wind which with / voice „ 176
This railer, that hath mock'd thee in / hall — „ 369
The wood is nigh as / of thieves as leaves : „ 789
' F pardon, but I follow up the quest, „ 886
the stream, F, narrow ; „ 908
knave that doth thee service as / knight „ 1016
so will my knight-knave Miss the / flower „ 1297
Met his / frown timidly firm, and said ; Geraint and E. 71
The whole wood-world is one / peal of praise. Balin and Balan 450
for this / love of mine Without the / heart Merlin and V. 533
that/ heart of yours Whereof ye prattle, „ 548
He is so / of lustihood, he will ride, Lancelot and E. 203
then tum'd the tongueless man From the half -face
to the / eye, „ 1262
with / affection said, ' Lancelot, my Lancelot, „ 1355
let us meet The morrow mom once more in one / field Holy Grail 323
That kept the entry, and the moon was /. „ 818
My tower is / of harlots, like his court. Last Tournament 81
free chase and heather-scented air. Pulsing / man ; „ 692
So then, when both were brought to / accord, „ 722
crying with / voice ' Traitor, come out, Guinevere 105
land was / of signs And wonders „ 232
for all the land was / of life. „ 259
on one Lay a great water, and the moon was/ . Pass, of Arthur 180
when the / city peal'd Thee and thy Prince ! To the Queen ii 26
and tho' I loiter'd there The / day after, Sisters {E. and E.) 98
Grew after marriage to / height and form ? „ 171
Love and Honour join'd to raise the / High-tide „ 177
Back to that passionate answer of / heart „ 259
golden guess Is moming-star to the / round of truth. Columbus 44
then full-current thro' / man : De Prof., Two G. 22
Yield thee / thanks for thy / courtesy To Victor Rugo 13
I can hear Too plainly what / tides of onset Tiresias 91
that / light Of friendship ! „ 202
One / voice of allegiance. On Jub. Q. Victoria 22
would flower into / health Among our heath The Ring 317
Not less would yield / thanks to you To Ulysses 33
Whose Faith and Work were bells of / accord, In Mem., W. G. Ward 2
And borne along by that / stream of men, St. Tdemachus 43
Fall-accomplished hers by right of f-a Fate ; Palace of Art 207
Full-ann'd F-a upon his charger all day Pdleas and E. 216
Full-blown sail'd, F-b, before us into rooms Princess i 229
Full-brain All the /-J, half-brain races, Locksley H., Sixty 161
Full-breasted f-b swan That, fluting a wild carol M. d' Arthur 266
f-b swan That, fluting a wild carol Pass, of Arthur 434
Full-busted f-b figure-head Stared o'er the ripple Enoch Arden 543
Full-cell'd A f-c honeycomb of eloquence Edwin Morris 26
Full-current then f-c thro' full man : De Prof., Two G. 22
Fuller More life, and /, that I want.' Two Voices 399
In the Spring a / crimson comes upon the robin's
breast ; Locksley Hall 17
A / light illumined all, Day-Dm., Revival 5
with / sound In curves the yellowing river ran, Sir L. arid Q. G. 14
With / profits lead an easier life, Enoch Arden 145
and mould The woman to the / day.' Princess Hi 332
So now thy / life is in the west, W. to Marie Alex. 36
But ring the / minstrel in. In Mem. cvi 20
For / gain of after bliss ; „ cxvii 4
Till ail my blood, a / wave, „ cxxii 12
they met In twos and threes, or / companies, Marr. of Geraint 57
Fuller (continued) Her / franchise — what would that be
worth— The Fleet 8
Larger and /, Uke the human mind ! Prog, of Spring 112
When I gits the plaate / o' Soondays Church-warden, etc. 40
Fullest his children, ever at its best And /; Lancelot and E. 337
' Taliessin is our / throat of song. Holy Grail 300
Full-faced all the /-/ presence of the Gods CEnone 80
F-f above the valley stood the moon ; Lotos-Eaters 7
glowing /-/ welcome, she Began to address us. Princess ii 183
Full-fair All in a /-/ manor and a rich, Gareth and L. 846
Full-fed a /-/ river winding slow By herds Palace of Art 73
one warm gust, /-/ with perfume. Gardener's D. 113
What dare the /-/ liars say of me ? Merlin and V. 692
Full-flowing /-/ harmony Of thy swan-like stateliness, Elednore 46
/-/ river of speech Came down upon my heart. CEnone 68
Full-foliaged Rock'd the /-/ elms, and swung In Mem. xcv 58
Full-grown f-g will, Circled thro' all experiences, (Enone 165
suit The f-g energies of heaven. In Mem. xl 20
Full-handed your Omar drew F-h plaudits from our best To E. Fitzgerald 38
F-h thunders often have confessed Thy power. To W. C. Macready 2
Full-juiced The /-/ apple, waxing over-mellow, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 33
Full-limb'd those whom God had made f-l and tall, Guinevere 42
FuU-maned the f-m horses whirl'd The chariots
backward, Achilles over the T. 24
Fullness (See also Fulness) But by degrees to
/ wrought. You ask me, why, etc. 14
part by part to men reveal 'd The / of her face — Of old sat Freedom 12
Full-orb'd to this present My f-o love has waned not. Lover's Tale i 734
Full-sail'd How may f-s verse express, Elecinore 4A
and seest me drive Thro' utter dark a f-s skiff, Supp. Confessions 95
Full-summ'd side by side, f-s in all their powers. Princess vii 288
Full-summer thro' the field, that shone F-s, Lancelot and E. 1141
Full-tided at Caerleon the f-t Usk, Geraint and E. 116
Full-toned swells High over the f-t sea : Sea-Fairies 15
The nightingale, f-t in middle May, Balin and Balan 213
Full-tuned break its syllables, to keep My own f-t, — Love and Duty 40
Full-welling 2^-w fountain-heads of change. Palace of Art 166
Fulminated / Against the scarlet woman Sea Dreams 22
Fulmined She / out her scorn of laws Salique Princess ii 133
Fulness (See also After-fulness) Have added / to
the phrase To Marq. of Dufferin 11
throng'd my pulses with the / of the Spring. Locksley Hall 36
The/ of the pensive mind; Day-Dm., L' Envoi 48
Lest of the / of my life I leave Will Water. 163
the note Had reach'd a thunderous /, Sea Dreams 214
And weep the / from the mind : In Mem. xx 6
Fulsome And / Pleasure clog him, and drown His heart Maud I xvi 4
Affronted with his / innocence ? Pelleas and E. 266
Fulvia You should have clung to F's waist, D. of F. Women 259
Fume (s) (See also Incense-fume) For mockery is
the / of little hearts. Guinevere 633
or the f's Of that dark opiate dose you gave me, Romney's R. 30
Fume (verb) We fret, we /, would shift our skins. Will Water. 225
Fuming and near me stood. In / sulphur blue and
green. Last Tournament 617
Fun (found) / 'um theer a-laaid on 'is faiice N. Farmer, 0. S. 33
Fur If', when 'er back wur turn'd. North. Cobbler 31
UU be /' upo' four short legs Owd Rod 16
Then I waaked an' I / it was Roaver „ 60
Till 1/ that it warn't not the gaainist waay Church-warden, etc. 12
I / thy pockets as full o' my pippins „ 34
Function pUes His / of the woodland : Lucretius 46
Funeral (adj.) Dark as a/ scarf from stem to stern, M. d' Arthur 194
In sound of / or of marriage bells ; Gardener's D. 36
Dark in its / fold. Ode on Well. 57
Dark as a / scarf from stem to stem. Pass, of Arthur 362
tolling of his / bell Broke on my Pagan Paradise, Tiresias 192
F hearses rolling ! Forlorn 68
They bore the Cross before you to the chant of / hymns. Happy 48
Death of (Enone 63
105
To Master of B. 20
Funeral (s) A /, with plumes and lights And music, L. of Shalott ii 31
the little port Had seldom seen a costlier/. Enoch Arden 917
Mother weeps At that white / of the single life, Prin. Beatrice 9_
II
Funeral
247
Gain
Tnneral (s) (contimied) toll of / in an Angel ear Sounds
happier D. of the Duke of C. 10
Fanweal at one end of the hall Two great / curtains, Lover's Tale iv 214
And lay on that / boat, To Marq. of Dufferin 34
Fur My father sent ambassadors with f's Princess i 42
Furbelow See Sea-furbelow
Furious nature's prideful sparkle in the blood Break
into / flame ;
As after / battle turfs the slain On some wild
down
they blurt Their / formalisms,
Furiousiy / Down thro' the bright lawns
Furl come hither and / your sails,
Mariner, mariner, / your sails,
Furl'd battle-flags were / In the Parliament
And never sail of ours was /,
Furlough To yield us farther /: '
Furnace all the / of the light Struck up
a heat, As from a seventimes-heated /,
Furnished bravely / all abroad to fling
Fumitur 0' / 'ere i' the 'ouse,
Furr'd (See also Gay-furr'd) Tho' smock'd, or / and
purpled,
Forriner (foreigner) gawin' to let in /'«' wheat.
Furrow to his mother's calls From the flower'd /.
sitting well in order smite The soimding f's ;
in the / broke the ploughman's head,
reddening in the f's of his chin,
meteor on, and leaves A shining /,
down in a / scathed with flame :
Or in the / musing stands ;
leaving share in / come to see The glories
Furrow-cloven huddling slant in f-c falls
Furrowing / into light the moimded rack,
Came / all the orient into gold.
F a giant oak, and javelining With darted spikes
Fnrrowy A double hill ran up his / forks
Further We brook no / insult but are gone.'
at the / end Was Ida by the throne.
Not ever to be question'd any more Save on the
\ /side;
and on the / side Arose a silk pavilion.
For this were shame to do him / wrong
Itethest summits slope Beyond the / flights of hope,
From Camelot in among the faded fields To /
towers ;
Fury (rage) (See also Fool-fory) struck such warbling
/ thro' the words ; Princess iv 586
Had often wrought some / on myself, Balin and Balan 62
' How then ? who then ? a / seized them Lancelot and E. 476
furies, curses, passionate tears, Lochsley H., Sixty 39
narrower The cage, the more their/. ATcbar's Dream 51
rememberest what a / shook Those pillars „ 80
Godless / of peoples, and Christless frolic of kings. The Dawn 7
Vnry (a deity) Like to Furies, like to Graces,
numbs the F's ringlet-snake, and plucks
And Life, a F slinging flame.
The household JF" sprinkled with blood
one angel face, And all the Furies. Sisters {E. and E.) 159
' Furze (See also Fuzz) on these dews that drench the /, In Mem. xi 6
Geraint and E. 828
Merlin and V. 657
Akbar's Dream 57
Aylmer's Field 340
Sea-Fairies 16
21
Lochsley Hall 127
The Voyage 81
Princess Hi 74
Mariana in the S. 55
Holy Grail 843
The Poet 25
NoHh. Cobbler 36
Princess iv 247
Owd Rod, 45
Supp. Confessions 160
Ulysses 59
Princess v 221
„ vi 228
„ vii 185
The Victim 22
In Mem. Ixiv 27
Gareth and L. 243
Princess vii 207
Love and Duty 100
Princess Hi 18
Merlin and V. 936
Princess Hi 174
vi 342
356
Com. of Arthur 397
Gareth and L. 909
954
Two Voices 185
Last Tournament 54
Vision of Sin 41
Lucretius 262
In Mem. I 8
Maud I xix 32
Fnrze-cramm'd F-c, and bracken-rooft,
Furzy The / prickle fire the dells,
Fuse Whose fancy f's old and new,
They / themselves to little spicy baths,
power to / My myriads into union under one ;
Fnsed manhood / with female grace
/ together in the tyrannous light —
Fosileer faces of Havelocks good f's,
FnsiUade better aimed are your flank f's —
Hark cannonade, / !
Posing / all The skirts of self again.
Of Knowledge / class with class,
Pnst (first) then I minded the / kiss I gied 'er by
Thursby thum ;
Fatile O life as /, then, as frail !
Last Tournament 377
Two Voices 71
In Mem. xvi 18
Prog, of Spring 33
Ahbar's Dream 156
In Mem. cix Yl
Lover's Tale ii 67
Def. of Lucknow 101
57
95
In Mem. xlvii 2
Freedom 17
North. Cobbler 45
In Mem. Ivi 25
Future (adj.) transfused Thro' / time by power of
thought. Love thou thy land 4
I think that we Shall never more, at any / time, M. d' Arthur 18
fruit of Love may rest Some happy / day. Talking Oak 252
Some / time, if so indeed you will, Princess ii 64
Perchance upon the / man : „ Con. 109
her / Lord Was drown'd in passing thro' the ford, In Mem. vi 38
And leaps into the / chance, „ cxiv 7
I think that we Shall never more, at any / time, Pass, of Arthur 189
Future (s) When I dipt into the /, Locksley Hall 15
For I dipt into the /. „ 119
this he kept Thro' all his /; Enoch Arden 237
a wind of prophecy Dilating on the/; Princess ii 172
Nemesis Break from a darken'd /, „ vi 175
prescient of whate'er The F had in store : Lover's Tale ii 133
And past and / mix'd in Heaven The Ring 186
and thence maintain Our darker /. To one ran down Eng, 2
Far as the F vaults her skies, Mechanophilus 17
Futurity the cope Of the half-attain'd /, Ode to Memory 33
Fuzz (furze) Nowt at all but bracken an' /, N. Farmer, 0. S. 38
Gaainist (nearest) I fun' that it wam't not the g
waiiy to the narra Gaiite,
GaainsaEly (gainsay) I weilnt g it, my lad,
Gaapin' (gaping) tha be new to the plaiice — thou'rt g —
Gaate (gate) why didn't tha hesp the g ?
an looiik thruf Maddison's g !
I fun that it wam't not the gaainist waay to the
narra G.
Gabble Nothing but idiot g !
Gabbled She g, as she groped in the dead,
The Baths, the Forum gr of his death.
Gable and half A score of g's.
overhead Fantastic g's, crowding.
Gable-ends bum'd On the blossom'd g-e
Gable-wall held the pear to the g-w.
Gabriel Whose Titan angels, G, Abdiel,
Gad-fly sung to, when, this g-f brush'd aside.
Gadding Said the good nuns would check her g tongue
Gaffer Ran G, stumbled Gammer.
Gag the wholesome boon of gyve and g.'
Gagelike flung defiance down G to man.
Gaiety G without eclipse Wearieth me,
Gain (s) I can but count thee perfect g,
But gentle words are always g :
foreheads, vacant of our glorious g's,
his g's were dock'd, however small : Small were
his g's, and hard his work ;
His g is loss ; for he that wrongs his friend
Who, never naming God except for g,
Ours the pain, be his the g !
And find in loss a ^ to match ?
Or but subserves another's g.
But turns his burthen into g.
' My sudden frost was sudden g.
For fuller g of after bUss :
And lust of g, in the spirit of Cain,
all for g Of glory, and hath added wound
allow my pretext, as for g Of purer glory.'
that make our griefs oiur g's.
The g of such large life as match 'd
Gain (verb) And g her for my bride.
In hope to g upon her flight.
man may g Letting his own life go.
help my prince to g His rightful bride,
And play the slave to g the tyranny.
He g in sweetness and in moral height.
How g in life, as life advances,
g The praise that comes to constancy.'
I will walk thro' fire, Mother, to g it —
And glory gain'd, and evermore to g.
Church-warden, etc. 12
North. Cobbler 17
Spinster's S's. 3
Village Wife 124
Spinster's S's. 6
Church-warden, etc. 12
Maud II V 41
Dead Prophet 73
St. Telemachus 74
Walk, to the Mail 14
Godiva 61
Maud I vi9
Mariana 4
Milton 5
Princess v 414
Guinevere 313
The Goose 34
Gareth and L. 370
Princess i; 178
Lilian 20
Palace of Art 198
Love thou thy land 23
Locksley Hall 175
Sea Dreams 7
,, 172
188
Ode on Well. 241
In Mem. i 6
„ liv 12
„ Ixxx 12
„ Ixxxi 10
„ cxvii 4
Maud I i 23
Lancelot and E. 566
586
Sisters (E. and E.) 231
■ Ancient Sage 237
Talking Oak 284
The Voyage 60
Lucretius 112
Princess Hi 160
„ iv 132
„ vii 281
To F. D. Maurice 39
In Mem. xxi 11
Gareth and L. 134
332
Gain
248
Game
Gain (verb) (.continued)
fair Queen,
she set herself to g Him, the most famous man
Woo her and g her then : no wavering, boy !
or if she g her earthly-best.
Ere she g her Heavenly-best,
in the North to g Her capital city,
corpse of every man that g's a name ;
As Wisdom hopes to g,'
Gain'd ' Thou hast not g a real height,
but even then she g Her bower ;
And g a laurel for your brow
G for her own a scanty sustenance,
Philip g As Enoch lost ;
seaward-bound for health they g a coast,
We g the mother-city thick with towers,
further on we gr A little street half garden
and g The terrace ranged along the Northern front,
thus much, nor more I g.'
grasping down the boughs I g the shore.
We cross'd the street and g a petty moimd
And on they moved and g the hall.
In such discourse we g the garden rails,
He that g a hundred fights,
A wretched vote may be g.
And glory g, and evermore to gain.
Took horse, and forded Usk, and g the wood ;
fatal quest Of honour, where no honour can be g
leaving Arthur's cornet he g the beach ;
when they g the cell wherein he slept,
Storm at the top, and when we g it,
she g her castle, upsprang the bridge,
but turning, past and g Tintagil,
G in the service of His Highness,
Step by step we g' a freedom
But when she g the broader vale,
G their huge Colosseum.
Gfainil^ Yet oceans daily g on the land,
worship woman as true wife beyond All hopes of g. Merlin and V. 24
G a lifelong Glory in battle. Bait, of Brunanburh 7
a glory slowly g on the shade. Making of Man 6
Gainsay See Graainsaay
Galabad (a Knight of the Bound Table) Not even
Lancelot brave, nor G clean. Merlin and V. 805
Sir Percivale And pure Sir G to uplift the maid ; Lancelot and E. 1265
ever moved Among us in white armour, G. Holy Grail 135
made a knight Till G ; and this G, when he heard „ 139
G, when he heard of Merlin's doom, „ 177
G would sit down in MerUn's chair. „ 181
and G sware the vow. And good Sir Bore, „ 199
G on the sudden, and in a voice Shrilling „ 288
G, and O G, follow me.' ' Ah, G, G,' „ 292
What are ye ? G's ? — no, nor Percivales' (For thus it
pleased the King to range me close After Sir G); „ 306
And I myself and G, for a strength Was in us „ 333
Shouting, ' Sir G and Sir Percivale ! ' „ 337
not lost thyself to save thyself As G.' „ 457
In silver armour suddenly G shone Before us, „ 458
I, G, saw the Grail, The Holy Grail, „ 464
G fled along them bridge by bridge, „ 504
O brother, saving this Sir G, ,, 561
after I was join'd with G Cared not for her, „ 611
Oalazy Hung in the golden G. L. of Shalott iiil2
Gale And merrily, merrily carol the g's, Sea-Fairies 23
Sweet g's, as from deep gardens, blow Fatima 24
strong g's Hold swollen clouds from raining, D. of F. Women 10
last night's g had caught. And blown across Gardener's D. 124
Caught the shrill salt, and sheer'd the g. The Voyage 12
And to and thro' the counter g? „ 88
Storm'd in orbs of song, a growing g ; Vision of Sin 25
Kough-redden'd with a thousand winter g^s, Enoch Arden 95
drank the g That blown about the foliage Princess Hi 120
Who changest not in any g. In Mem. ii 10
Caught and cuff 'd by the g : Maud I vi5
So fierce a g made hiavoc here of late Holy Grail 729
I vow'd that could I g her, our
Marr. of Geraint 787
Merlin and V. 165
Sisters (E. and E.) 39
Locksley H., Sixty 233
271
The Ring 481
Romney's R. 123
Politics 4
Two Voices 91
Godiva 76
You might have won 3
Enoch Arden 259
354
Sea Dreams 16
Princess i 112
213
Hi 117
167
it! 189
557
m352
Con. 80
Ode on Well. 96
Maud 7 m 56
Gareth and L. 332
Marr. of Geraint 161
: Geraint and E. 704
Merlin and V. 197
Lancelot and E. 811
Holy Grail 491
Pdleas and E. 206
Last Tournament 504
Columbus 236
Loclcsley H., Sixty 129
Death of CEnone 91
St. TelcTnachus 45
Golden Year 29
Gale {continued) this g Tore my pavilion from the
tenting-pin, Holy Grail 746
ever that evening ended a great g blew. The Revenge 114
Galilsee often mutter low ' Vicisti G ' ; louder again
Spuming a shatter'd fragment of the God,
' Vicisti G\' St. Tdemachus 15
Galilee still'd the rolUng wave of G ! Aylmer's Field 709
Galingale meadow, set with slender g ; Lotos-Eaters 23
Gall (bitterness) changed a wholesome heart to g. L. C. V. de Vere 44
That was the last drop in the cup of g. Walk, to the Mail 69
Unto me my maudhn g And my mockeries Vision of Sin 201
Gall (oak-gall) insects prick Each leaf into a g) Talking Oak 70
Gall (verb) Began to g the knighthood, asking Las t Tournament 683
Gallant My woman-soldier, g Kate, Kate 15
the seamen Made a g crew, G sons of English freemen. The Captain 6
Many a g gay domestic Bows before him L. of Burleigh 47
So sang the g glorious chronicle ; Princess, Pro. 49
To give three g gentlemen to death.' „ ii 335
He seems a gracious and a g Prince, „ v 213
I fenced it round with g institutes, „ 392
A g fight, a noble princess — „ Con. 19
Who pledgest now thy g son ; In Mem. vi 10
. A passionate ballad g and gay, Maud I vi
The charge of the g three hundred. Heavy Brigade 1
he waved his blade To the g three hundred „ 10
up the hill, Gallopt the g three hundred, „ 25
' Lost are the g three hundred of Scarlett's Brigade ! ' „ 45
0 great and g Scott, Bandit's Death 1
' G Sir Ralph,' said the king. The Tourney 6
Galleon Four g's drew away From the Spanish fleet The Revenge 46
their high-built g's came, „ 68
Galleried a minster there, A g palace. The Ring 246
Gallery foremost in thy various g Place it, Ode to Memory 84
By garden- wall and g, L. of Shalott iv S8
And round the roofs a gilded g Palace of Art 29
The Ught aisrial g, golden-rail'd, „ 47
long-laid galleries past a hundred doors Princess vi 375
golden hours, In those long galleries, The Daisy 42
made his feet Wings thro' a glimmering g, Balin and Balan 404
let his eyes Run thro' the peopled g Lancelot and E. 430
Rich galleries, lady-laden, weigh'd the necks Holy Grail 346
He glanced and saw the stately galleries. Last Tournament 145
Tristram round the g made his horse Caracole ; „ 205
armed feet Thro' the long g from the outer doors Guinevere 413
Gallop The trumpet, the g, the charge, Heavy Brigade 13
Gallopaded willows two and two By rivers g. Amphion 40
Gallop'd-Gallopt and so gallop'd up the knoll. Marr. of Geraint 168
as he gallop'd up To join them, „ 171
Gallopt the gallant three himdred, Heavy Brigade 25
our men gallopt up with a cheer and a shout, „ 61
Galloping {See also Eteavily-galloping) g hoofs bare on
the ridge of spears Princess v 489
Gallopt See Gallop'd
Gama His name was G ; crack'd and small his voice, „ i 114
Then G tum'd to me : ' We fear, indeed, „ v 120
you spake but sense Said G. „ 207
This G swamp'd in lazy tolerance. „ 443
can this be he From G's dwarfish loins ? „ 506
And moved beyond his custom, G said : „ vi 229
Gambol mother he had never known, In ^'s ; Aylmer's Field 6Q1
For these your dainty g's : wherefore ask ; Merlin and V. 309
Nor ever let you g in her sight. The Ring 387
Gamboll'd-Gambol'd when she gamboU'd on the greens Talking Oak 77
We gambol'd, making vain pretence Of gladness. In Mem. xxx 6
Glanced at the doors or gambol'd down the walks ; Marr. of Geraint 665
And a hundred gamboU'd and pranced on the
wrecks V. of Maddune 102
Gambolling Down shower the g waterfalls Sea-Fairies 10
Game (thing hunted) Stoops at all g that wing the skies, Rosalind 4
Whither fly ye, what g spy ye, „ 8
touch'd upon the g, how scarce it was Audley Court 32
Man is the hunter ; woman is his y : Princess v 154
He bore but little g in hand ; The Victim 42
No, there is fatter g on the moor; Maud I il^
Royaller g is mine. Merlin and V. IC
1
Game
249
Garden-wall
Game (pastime) The g of forfeits done — The Epic 2
dwindled down to some odd g's In some odd nooks „ 8
She remember'd that : A pleasant g, Princess, Pro. 194
Quoit, tennis, ball — no y's ? „ in 215
At civil revel and pomp and g, (repeat) Ode on Well. 147, 227
In dance and song and g and jest ? In Mem. xxix 8
Again our ancient y'» had place, „ Ixxviii 10
Poor rivals in a losing g, „ cii 19
Be neither song, nor g, nor feast ; „ cv21
moved by an unseen hand Sitag That pushes Maud I iv 26
And play the g of the despot kings, „ x 39
once again the sickening g ; Locksley H., Sixty 127
God must mingle with the g : „ 271
Romans brawlmg of their monstrous g's ; St. Telemachus 40
Gamesome ' Then ran she, g as the colt. Talking Oak 121
Gammer Ran Gaffer, stumbled G. The Goose 34
Gamut their shrieks Ran highest up the g, Sea Dreams 233
Ganymede flush'd G, his rosy thigh Half -buried Palace of Art 121
I think he came hke G, Will Water. 119
' They mounted, G's, To tumble, Vulcans, Princess Hi 71
Gap from the g's and chasms of ruin left Sea Dreams 225
fill up the g where force might fail Gareth and L. 1352
thro' the g Glimmer'd the streaming scud : Holy Grail 681
thro' the g The seven clear stars of Arthur's Table
Round— „ 683
new knights to fill the g Left by the Holy Quest ; Pdleas and E. 1
In this g between the sandhills, Locksley H., Sixty 176
Fought for their lives in the narrow g they had
made — Heavy Brigade 23
Gape A gulf that ever shuts and g's. In Mem. Ixx 6
too high For any mouth to g for save a queen's — Lancelot and E. 775
g for flies — we know not whence they come ; Holy Grail 147
Gaped Lavaine g upon him As on a thing miraculous, Lancelot and E. 452
tier over tier. Were added mouths that g, „ 1249
Gaping (See also Gaapin') The passive oxen g. Amphion 72
fool. Who was g and grinning by : Maud II i 20
Crap-mouth'd All in a g-m circle his good mates Gareth and L. 511
Gapp'd their masses are g with our grape — Def. of Lucknow 42
Gap-tooth'd A gray and g-t man as lean as death. Vision of Sin 60
Garbaging and Gave to the g war-hawk to goige it, Batt. of Brunanburh 109
Gaib'd richly g, but worn From wasteful living. Ancient Sage 4
Garda Lake Gazing at the Lydian laughter of the
G L below Prater Ave, etc. 3
Garden (adj.) By g porches on the brim, Arabian Nights 16
whose root Creeps to the g water-pipes beneath, D. of F. Women 206
black-hearts ripen dark. All thine, against the
g wall. Blackbird 8
There sat we down upon a g moimd, Gardener's D. 214
fountain to his place returns Deep in the g lake
withdrawn. Day-Dm., Sleep P. 12
Some figure like a wizard pentagram On g gravel, The Brook 104
all withim The sward was trim as any g lawn : Princess, Pro. 95
foimd at length The g portals. „ iv 200
To take their leave, about the g rails, „ Con. 38
In such discourse we gain'd the g rails. „ 80
all by myself in my own dark g ground, Maud I Hi 10
Seem'd her light foot along the g walk, „ xmii 9
And long by the g lake I stood, „ xxii 35
' this g rose Deep-hued and many-folded ! Balin and Balan 269
And oft they met among the g yews, Lancelot and E. 645
one mom it chanced He found her in among the
g yews, „ 923
Garden (s) (See also Hall-garden, Olive-gardens, Rose-
garden) High- wall'd ^'5 green and old ; Arabian Nights 8
Thence thro' the g I was drawn— „ 100
When rooted in the g of the mind, Ode to Memory 26
a g bower'd close With plaited alleys „ 105
the world Like one great g show'd, The Poet 34
In the heart of the g the merry bird chants. Poet's Mind 22
whitest honey in fairy g's cuU'd — Eleanore 26
Sweet gales, as from deep g's, blow Fatima 24
A spacious g full of flowering weeds, To With Pal. of Art ^
Walking about the g's and the halls Of Camelot, M. d' Arthur 20
blooms the g that I love. Gardener's D. 34
between it and the g lies A League of grass, „ 39
Garden (s) (continued) The g stretches southward.
One after one, thro' that still g pass'd ;
And cross 'd the g to the gardener's lodge,
A breeze thro' aU the g swept,
A g too with scarce a tree,
at the end of all A little g blossom.
Parks and order'd g's great,
Flourished a little g square and wall'd :
arranged Her g, sow'd her name and kept it
green
Which fann'd the g's of that rival rose
Kept to the g now, and grove of pines,
that in the g snared Picus and Faunus,
A little street half g and half house ;
grace Concluded, and we sought the g's :
Above the g's glowing blossom-belts,
' Look there, ay!' said my college friend.
All round a careless-order d g
' All among the g's, auriculas, anemones,
So that still g of the souls
The gust that round the g flew,
Till from the g and the wild
like the sultan of old in a 3 of spice.
Maud has a, g oi roses And lilies
great Forefathers of the thomless g.
Come into the g, Maud, (repeat)
Queen rose of the rosebud g of girls,
g by the turrets Of the old manorial hall.
But I know where a g grows.
And wallow'd in the g's of the King.
But this was in the y of a king ;
Sir Balin sat Close-bower'd in that g
a slope of g, all Of roses white and red.
Gardener's D. 115
201
Audley Court 17
Day-Dm., Revival 6
Amphion 3
„ 104
L. of Burleigh 30
Enoch Arden 734
Ayhner's Field 88
455
550
Lucretius 181
Princess i 214
„ a 453
„ v363
„ Con. 49
To F. D. Maurice 15
City Child 4
In Mem. xliii 10
„ Ixxxix 19
„ ci 17
Maud I iv 42
„ xiv 1
„ xviii 27
„ xxii 1, 3
53
„ IIiv19
vl2
Com. of Arthur 25
Marr. of Geraint 656
Balin and Balan 241
Pelleas and E. 421
Walking about the g's and the halls Of Camelot, Pass, of Arthur 188
as tho' A man in some still g should infuse Lover's Tale i 269
the daily want Of Edith in the house, the g. Sisters (E. and E.) 246
Down we look'd : what a.g\ V. of Maeldune 78
Wi' my oiin little g outside. Spinster's S's. 104
Every grim ravine a g, Locksley H., Sixty 168
I found her not in house Or g — The Ring 445
from every vale and plain And g pass. To Mary Boyle 10
Across my g ! and the thicket stirs, Prog, of Spring 53
under the Crosses The dead man's g. Merlin and the G. 106
like a lonely man In the king's g, Akbar's Dream 21
I cotch'd tha wonst i' my g, Church-warden, etc. 33
Garden (verb) I shall never g more : May Queen, N. Y's. E. 46
Garden-bower Black the g-b's and grots Arabian Nights 78
To and fro they went Thro' my g-b, The Flower 6
Gardener The g Adam and his wife L. C. V. de Vere 51
I and Eustace from the city went To see the G's
Daughter ; Gardener's D. 3
' Go and see The G's daughter: „ 30
not heard Of Rose, the G's daughter ? „ 52
And cross'd the garden to the g's lodge, Audley Court 17
charge the g's now To pick the faded creature Marr. of Geraint 670
And made a G putting in a graff. Merlin and V. 479
g's hand Picks from the colewort a green caterpillar, Guinevere 31
Garden-gate And push'd at Philip's g-g. The Brook 83
And stood by her g-g ; Maud I xiv 6
looks Upon Maud's own g-g : „ 16
Garden-glass The g-g'es glanced, and momently Gardener's D. 117
Garden-herbs Gifts by the children, g-h and fruit, Enoch Arden 338
Gardening Botanic Treatises, And Works on G Amphion 78
Garden-isles meadowy holms And alders, g-i ; Edwin Morris 96
Garden-lawn By grove and g-l, and rushing brook. Holy Grail 230
Garden-rose outredden All voluptuous g-r's. Ode on Well. 208
Tliis g-r that I found, Maud I xxi 3
Garden-square And in the sultry g-s's, The Blackbird 17
Garden-squirt Half -conscious of the g-s, Amphion 91
Garden-tools find my g-t upon the granary floor : May Queen, N. Y's. E. 45
Garden-tree Beneath your sheltering g-t, To E. Fitzgerald 6
Garden-walks As down the g-w I move, In Mem. cii 6
Garden-waU By g-w and gallery, L. of Shalott iv 38
And feeling all along the g-w, Enoch Arden 773
this side the palace ran the field Flat to the g-w : Princess v 362
Garden-wall
250
Garrulous
Garden-wall {continued) Climb'd to the high top of
the g-w
Gareth (a knight of the Round Table) G, in a showerful
spring Stared at the spate.
' How he went down,' said G', ' as a false knight
And G went, and hovering round her chair
G answer'd her with kindling eyes, (repeat)
(t, * An ye hold me yet for child,
G answer'd quickly, ' Not an hour,
G cried, ' A hard one, or a hundred,
G was too princely-proud To pass thereby ;
Silent awhile was G, then replied,
G awhile linger'd.
Then those who went with G were amazed,
G answer'd them With laughter,
those with G for so long a space Stared at the figures,
they call'd To G, ' Lord, the gateway is alive.' And
G likewise on them fixt his eyes So long.
Then G, ' We be tillers of the soil,
G spake Anger'd, ' Old Master,
Whom G looking after said, ' My men,
and the sound was good to (?'s ear.
Then into hall G ascending heard A voice,
G saw The shield of Gawain blazon'd rich and bright,
G leaning both hands heavily Down on the shoulders
So G all for glory underwent The sooty yoke
G bow'd himself With all obedience to the King,
G was glad, (repeat)
G telling some prodigious tale Of knights,
This, G hearing from a squire of Lot
Shame never made girl redder than G joy.
G, lightly springing from his knees,
G ask'd, ' Have I not earn'd my cake in baking of it ?
with a kindly hand on G's arm Smiled the great King,
Arthur mindful of Sir G ask'd,
Sir G call'd from where he rose,
on to this Sir G strode, and saw without the door
Sir G loosed A cloak that dropt from collar-bone
So G ere he parted flash'd in arms.
thro' lanes of shouting G rode Down the slope street,
So G past with joy ; but as the cur Pluckt
Mutter'd in scorn of G whom he used To harry
To whom Sir G drew (And there were none
G to him, ' Master no more ! too well I know thee,
G cried again, ' Lead, and I follow,'
' Damsel,' Sir G answer'd gently,
I shall assay,' said G with a smile That madden'd her,
And G following was again beknaved.
G, ' Bound am I to right the wrong'd,
' Lead, and I follow,' G cried again,
G loosed the stone From off his neck,
G loosed his bonds and on free feet Set him,
G sharply spake, ' None !
and the Baron set G beside her,
seating G at another board. Sat down beside him,
6 said, ' Full pardon, but I follow up the quest,
Sir G spake, ' Lead, and I follow.'
To whom Sir G answer'd courteously,
G silent gazed upon the knight,
Said G, ' Damsel, whether knave or knight,
0 lash'd so fiercely with his brand
Till G's shield was cloven :
<?, ' So this damsel ask it of me Good —
G there unlaced His helmet as to slay him,
Sir G answer'd, laughmgly, ' Parables ?
G's eyes had flying blots Before them
Whom G met midstream :
Then G laid his lance athwart the ford ;
and G sent him to the King.
G, ' Wherefore waits the madman there
Said G, ' Old, and over-bold in brag !
And G overthrew him, lighted, drew,
G brought liim grovelling on his knees.
Till G panted hard, and his great heart,
80 G seem'd to strike Vainly,
Guinevere 25
Gareth and L. 2
5
33
41,62
99
132
149
161
164
172
197
208
231
235
242
279
296
312
317
415
439
478
487
" 497, 504
508
531
536
556
574
578
624
645
676
681
689
699
701
706
743
755
759
772
783
786
804
807
814
817
831
852
871
885
890
900
933
943
968
971
974
978
1007
1031
1041
1048
1051
1091
1107
1121
1124
1126
1133
Gareth and L. 1141
1147
1201
„ 1219
1221
1237
1241
1258
1273
1280
1299
1304
1316
1317
1345
1354
1367
1386
1397
1404
Gareth {continued) And G hearing ever stronglier
smote,
Sir G's brand Clash'd his, and brake it utterly
G lookt and read — In letters like to those
star Gleam, on Sir G's turning to him,
G crying prick'd sigainst the cry ;
Lancelot answer'd, ' Prince, O G —
Then G, ' Thou— Lancelot !— thine the hand That
threw me ?
' Blessed be thou. Sir Q ! knight art thou
turning to Lynette he told The tale of G,
Sir G drank and ate, and all his life Past into sleep ;
Let G, an he will. Change his for mine,
G, wakening, fiercely clutch'd the shield ;
allured The glance of G dreaming on his liege.
' Lo,' said G, ' the foe falls ! '
Said G laughing, ' An he fight for this.
Then G, ' Here he rules. I know but one —
which Sir G graspt. And so, before the two could
hinder him,
But G spake and all indignantly.
Sir G's head prickled beneath his helm ;
with one stroke Sir G split the skull.
Answer'd Sir G graciously to one Not many a moon
his younger, „ 1414
So large mirth lived and G won the quest. „ 1426
tale in older times Says that Sir G wedded Lyonors, „ 1428
Tristram, and Geraint And G, a good knight, Lancelot and E. 557
Gargarus topmost G Stands up and takes the morning : (Enone 10
Garland The g of new-wreathed emprise : Kate 24
Do make a g for the heart : Miller's D. 198
knots of flowers, and buds and g's gay. May Queen 11
spears That soon should wear the g; Aylmer's Field 112
made g's of the selfsame flower. Lover's Tale i 343
a light Burst from the g I had wov'n, „ 366
Wreathed round the bier with g's: „ ii 79
Great g's swung and blossom'd ; „ iv 191
I, wearing but the gr of a day, To Dante 6
The bridal g falls upon the bier, D. of the Duke of C. 1
Garlandage leai, and gayest g of flowers, Balin and Balan 83
Garlanded Each g with her peculiar flower Gardener's D. 202
Garlanding g the gnarled boughs With bunch (Enone 101
Garlon (a Knight of the Round Table) G, mine heir.
Of him demand it,' which this G gave With
much ado, Balin and Balan 117
more than one of us Cried out on G, „ 123
Sir G too Hath learn'd black magic, „ 304
Till when at feast Sir G likewise ask'd „ 347
Made G, hissing ; then he sourly smiled. ,, 355
Then fiercely to Sir G, ' Eyes have I That saw to-day „ 372
The scorn of G, poisoning all his rest, „ 383
Sir G utter'd mocking-wise ; „ 389
Then G, reeling slowly backward, fell, „ 397
This G mock'd me, but I heeded not. " „ 606
And sought for G at the castle-gates, „ 610
Garment eddying of her g's caught from thee Ode to Memory 31
The woman's g hid the woman's heart.' Princess v 305
Fair g's, plain or rich, Akhar's Dream 131
Gamer The wrath that g's in my heart ; In Mem. Ixxxii 14
And g all you may ! Mechanophilus 32
Garner'd (adj.) time is scarce more brief Than of the g
Autumn-sheaf.
Or little pitted speck in g fruit,
and bless Their g Autumn also,
Garner'd (verb) long ago they had glean'd and g
Garnet Each like a gr or a turkis in it ;
Garnet-headed hear the g-h yafiingale Mock them :
Garnish flowers, except, behke. To g meats with ?
Garrick G and statelier Kemble,
Garrison as if hope for the g hung but on him ;
on a sudden the g utter a jubilant shout,
Garruhty Shame on her own g garrulously.
Garrulous Miriam Lane was good and g,
G under a roof of pine :
With g ease and oily courtesies
Two Voices 114
Merlin and V. 394
Demeter and P. 147
Lover's Tale i 128
Marr. of Geraint 661
Last Tournament 700
Gareth and L. 1070
To W. C. Macready 7
Def. of Lucknow 48
V ^^
Guinevere 312
Enoch Arden 700
To F. D. Maurice 20
Princess i
1
Garrulous
251
Gathered
Garrulous (contintied) Mother's g wail For ever woke
the unhappy Past again,
G old crone.
Innocent maidens, G children,
Garrulously To whom the little novice g.
To whom the novice g again,
Shame on her own garruUty g,
Garth past into the little g beyond.
Than in a clapper clapping in a g,
I climb'd to the top of the g,
jCtash 'G thyself, priest, and honour thy brute Baiil,
Thou wilt not g thy flesh for him. ;
eyes frown : the lips Seem but a g.
Gas-light The g-l wavers dimmer ;
Gasp cheating the sick of a few last g's,
Sisters {E. and E.) 262
The Ring 120
Merlin and the G. 56
Guinevere 231
276
„ 312
Enoch Arden 329
Princess ii 227
Grandmother 38
Aylmer's Field 644
658
Sisters (E. and E.) 107
Will Water. 38
Maud I i 43
Balan told him brokenly, and in g's, Balin and Baian 603
Gasp'd-Gaspt yet gasp'd, ' Whence and what art thou ? ' Holy Grail 434
I sat beside her dying, and she gaspt : The Ring 287
Gasping G to Sir Lavaine, ' Draw the lancehead : ' Lancelot and E. 511
he G, ' Of Arthur's hall am I, Pdleas and E. 514
Gaspt See Gasp'd
Gat Hunger of glory g Hold of the land. Batt. of Brunanburh 124
Gate {See also Bailey-gate, Castle-gate, City-gate, Entry-
gates, Gaate, Garden-gate, Palace-gate, Postern-
gate, Temple-gates, Watergate, Wicket-gate) Thro'
the open g's of the city afar,
look in at the g With his large calm eyes
her Satrap bled At Issus by the Syrian g's.
Saw distant g's of Eden gleam,
The Uon on your old stone g's
Are there no beggars at your g,
went along From Mizpeh's tower'd g
he pass'd his father's g, Heart-broken,
we reach'd The grifSn-guarded g's.
Battering the g's of heaven with storms
Once more the g's behind me falls ;
Her mother trundled to the g
Every g is throng'd with suitors,
And "ta'en my fiddle to the g, (repeat)
the g's Roll back, and far within
And beneath the g she turns ;
the music touch'd the g's and died ;
cold vapour touch'd the palace g,
A light wind blew from the g's of the sun,
one small g that open'd on the waste,
Crept to the g, and open'd it.
The g, Half-parted from a weak and scolding tuuge.
Stands at thy g for thee to grovel to — /
But nevermore did either pass the g i
sallying thro' the g. Had beat her foes ,■
Brake with a blast of trumpets from the g/
saw you not the inscription on the g, I
bury me beside the g, I
I urged the fierce inscription on the g, /
Eaint the g's of Hell with Paradise, /
pread out at top, and grimly spiked tlie g's.
Here, push them out at g's.' j
with grim laughter thrust us out at g'd
He thrice had sent a herald to the g's,)
Came sallying thro' the g's, and caugly. his hair,
so thro' those dark g's across the wild
the g's were closed At sunset,
and stood by the road at the g.
there past by the g of the farm, Willj^ —
Burst the g's, and burn the palaces.
In circle round the blessed g.
They can but listen at the ^'5,
my pulses closed their g's with a shocK
g's of Heaven are closed, and she is gkne.
I am here at the g alone ; I
From the passion-flower at the g. \
When her brother ran in his rage to tfe g,
and watch'd him from the g's:
at times the great g shone Only,
So push'd them all unwilling toward t le g.
'
Dying Swan 34
The Mermaid 26
Alexander 3
Two Voices 212
L. C. V. de Vere 23
67
B. ofF. Women 199
Dora 50
Audley Court 15
St. S. Stylites 7
Talking Oak 1 .
„ lU'
Locksley HaU 101
Am,phion>ll, 15
St. Agnes' Eve 29
L. of Surleigh 44
Vifsion of Sin 23
58
Poet's Song 3
Enoch Arden 733
775
The Brook 83
Aylmer's Field 652
826
Princess, Pro. 33
42
„ ii 194
206
„ Hi 141
„ iv 131
206
548
556
„ V 332
340
,, vii 362
,, Con. 36
Grandmother 38
41
Boddicea 64
In Mem. Ixxxv 23
„ xciv 15
Maud I il5
„ xviii 12
„ xxii 4
60
„ II i 12
Com. of Arthur 449
Gareth and L. 194
212
Gate {continued) And there was nD y like it under heaven. Gareth and L. 213
Back from the g started the three, „ 239
past The weird white g, and paused without, „ 663
Down the slope street, and past without the g. „ 700
Down the slope city, and out beyond the g. ,, 735
then descending met them at the g's, Marr. of Geraint 833
lets Or dame or damsel enter at his g*s Balin and Balan 107
Their heads should moulder on the city g's. Merlin and V. 594
Then made a sudden step to the g, Lancelot and E. 391
and under the strange-statued g, „ 800
past beneath the weirdly-sculptured g's ,, 844
to the G of the three Queens we came. Holy Grail 358
whence I came, the g of Arthur's wars.' „ 539
and thrust him from the g. Pdleas and E. 260
Open g's. And I will make you merry.' „ 373
and bound hLs horse Hard by the g's. „ 414
open were the g's. And no watch kept ; „ 414
from the city g's Issued Sir Lancelot ,, 556
and sharply turn'd North by the g. Last Tournament 128
The golden g's would open at a word. Sisters {E. and E.) 145
Throng'd the waste field about the city g's : Sir J. Oldcastle 40
— and those twelve ^'5, Pearl — Columbus 86
tides of onset sap Our seven high ^'5, Tiresias 92
the song-built towers and g's Reel, „ 98
find the y Is bolted, and the master gone. ,, 200
doors of Night may be the g's of Light; Ancient Sage 174
Till Holy St Pether gets up wid his kays an' opens the g ! Tomorrow 93
here the lion-guarded g. Locksley H., Sixty 213
The sun hung over the g's of Night, Dead Prophet 23
dear Mary, you and I To that dim g. To Mary Boyle 60
from o'er the a't of Birth, Far — far — away 13
Thro' the g's i^nat bar the distance Faith 6
nor the si' nt Opener of the G.' God and the Univ. 6
Gateway (adj.) Who 'lights and rings the g bell. In Mem. viii 3
carrion crows Hung like a cloud above the g towers. Merlin and V. 599
Thither he made, and blew the g horn. Lancelot and E. 169
Just above the g tower, Locksley H., Sixty 179
Gateway (S) Or in the g's of the morn. Two Voices 183
unto island at the g's of the day. Locksley Hall 158
until she reach'd The g ; Godiva 51
Till a g she discerns With armorial bearings L. of Burleigh 42
from the castle g by the chasm Descending Com. of Arthur 369
they call'd To Gareth, ' Lord, the g is alive.' Gareth and L. 235
Pass not beneath this g, but abide Without, „ 273
Right in the g of the bandit hold, Geraint and E. 774
Paused by the g, standing near the shield Lancelot and E. 394
And by the g stirr'd a crowd ; Holy Grail 424
the spiritual city and all her spires And g's „ 527
Gather Her words did g thunder as they ran. The Poet 49
I must g knots of flowers. May Queen 11
To g and tell o'er Each Uttle sound D. of F. Women 276
Where faction seldom g's head, Tou ask me, why, etc. 13
Rise in the heart, and g to the eyes, Princess iv 41
till she not fair began To g light, „ vii 24
But as he grows he g's much. In Mem. xlv 5
And g dust and chaff, and call „ Iv 18
Shall g in the cycled times. „ Ixxxv 28
rooks. That g in the waning woods, ,, 72
Unloved, that beech will g brown, „ « 3
Should licensed boldness g force, „ cxiii 13
' I sit and g honey ; yet, methinks, Merlin and V. 601
' One rose, a rose to g by and by, One rose, a rose,
to g and to wear, Pelleas and E. 405
Sigh'd, and began to g heart again, Guinevere 368
The mist of autumn g from your lake, The Ring 329
g the roses wherever they blow, Romney's R. 107
handle or g the berries of Peele ! Kapiolani 20
Gather'd {See also Self-gather'd) From beneath her
g wimple Lilian 14
' Rapt from the fickle and the frail With g power, In Mem. xxx 26
When here thy hands let fall the g flower, Demeter and P. 9
Whose wrinkles g on his face, Two Voices 329
A cloud that g shape : CEnone 42
When I am g to the glorious saints. St. S. Stylites 197
Have suck'd and g into one The life Talking Oak 191
Gather'd
252
Gave
Gather'd (continued) Grave faces j in a ring.^
Till they be ^ up ;
topmost elm-tree g green From draughts
there again When burr and bine were g ;
G the blossom that rebloom'd,
Easily g either guilt,
rose A hubbub in the court of half the maids
G together :
the heavy dews G by night and peace,
But such as g colour day by day.
Abide : thy wealth is g in,
He fought his doubts and g strength,
The maidens g strength and grace
He has g the bones for his o'ergrown whelp
this she g from the people's eyes :
g trickling dropwise from the cleft,
I stoop'd, I g the wild herbs,
I have g my baby together —
But I g my fellows together,
I would that I were g to my rest,
Thousands of horsemen had g there
The vast sun-clusters' g blaze,
Day-Dm., Sleep P. 38
Will Water. 170
Sir L. and Q. G. 8
Aylmer's Field 113
142
Princess iv 236
477
„ V 244
„ vii 118
In Mem. Hi 15
„ xcvi 13
„ ciii 27
Maud II V 55
Marr. of Geraint 61
Merlin and V. 274
Lover's Tale i 342
Bizfah 20
V. of Maeldune 2
Tiresias 170
Heavy Brigade 14
Ef Hague 54
Gathering (adj. and part.) the mighty moon was g light Love and Death 1
Proserpine in Enna, g flowers: Edwin Morris 112
G up from all the lower groimd ; Vision of Sin 15
And g all the fruits of earth Ode Inter. Exhih. 41
And g freshlier overhead. In Mem. xcv 57
G woodland lilies. Myriads blow together. Maud I xii 7
By shores that darken with the g wolf, Aylmer's Field 767
So much the g darkness charm'd : Princess, Con. 107
tho' the g enemy narrow thee, Boadicea 39
g half the deep And full of voices. Com. of Arthur 380
Vivien, g somewhat of his mood. Merlin and V. 842
but g at the base Re-makes itself, and flashes Guinevere 609
And g ruthless gold — Columbus 135
g here and there From each fair plant Akbar's Dream 21
Gathering (s) A gr of the Tory, Maud I xx 33
Gaud those gilt g's men-children swarm to see. To W. C. Macready 11
Gaudy Showing a 9 summer-mom. Palace of Art %2
Gandy-day Amends hereafter by some g-d, Marr. of Geraint 818
Gaunt Lancelot? goodly — ay, but g: Merlin and V. 103
G as it were the skeleton of himself, (repeat) Lancelot and E. 764, 816
(The g old Baron with his beetle brow Princess ii 240
Gauntlet maiden fancies dead In iron ^'s: „ i 89
added fullness to the phrase Of ' G in the velvet
glove.' To Marq. of Dufferin 12
Gauntleted my hand Was g, half slew him ; Balin and Balan 57
His passion half had g to death, „ 220
Gauntness Courteous — amends for g — Merlin and V. 104
Gauze ' He dried his wings : like g they grew ; Two Voices 13
Purple g's, golden hazes, liquid mazes. Vision of Sin 31
Half-lapt in glowing g and golden brede, Princess vi 134
an Eastern g With seeds of gold — Lover's Tale iv 291
Gave {See also Gied, Giv) God g her peace ; her land reposed ; To the Queen 26
And g you on your natal day. Margaret 42
Our thought g answer each to each. Sonnet To 10
' She g him mind, the lordliest Proportion, Two Voices 19
sing the foolish song I g you, Alice, Miller's D. 162
thought of that sharp look, mother, I g him yesterday. May Queen 15
flower and fruit, whereof they g To each, Lotos-Eaters 29
my bliss of life, that Nature g, D. of F. Women 210
because the kiss he g me, ere I fell, „ 235
He 9 me a friend, and a true true-love, D. of the 0. Year 13
' Hast thou perform'd my mission which I ^ ? M. d' Arthur 67
This, yielding, g into a grassy walk Gardener's D. Ill
Kissing the rose she g me o'er and o'er, „ 176
G utterance by the yearning of an eye, Love and Duty 62
The trance g way To those caresses, „ 65
And g my letters back to me. And g the trinkets
and the rings. The Letters 20
He ^ the people of his best : His worst he kept,
his best he g. You might have won 25
from her baby's forehead dipt A tiny curl, and g it: Enoch Arden 236
less Than what she $r in buying what she sold : „ 256
At Annie's door he paused and g his hand, „ 447
Gave (continued) clothes they g him and free passage Enoch Arden 650
Pitying the lonely man, and g him it : „ 664
the woman g A half-incredulous, half-hysterical cry. „ 852
This hair is his : she cut it off and g it, „ 894
He g them line : (repeat) The Brook 145, 150
scared with threats of jail and halter g Aylmer's Field 520
the dagger which himself G Edith, „ 597
g the verse ' Behold, Your house is left imto you
desolate ! ' „ 628
G his broad lawns until the set of sun Princess, Pro, 2
they g The park, the crowd, the house ; „ 93
I said no. Yet being an easy man, ^ it : „ i 149
yre g a, costly bribe To guerdon silence, „ 203
rooms which g Upon a pillar'd porch, „ 229
I g' the letter to be sent with dawn; „ 245
a glance I g, No more ; „ iv 180
On one knee Kneeling, I g' it, „ 470
Who g me back my child? ' „ v 105
Let so much out as g us leave to go. ,, 235
for everything G way before him : ,, 530
Was it for this we g our palace up, „ vi 244
Eefuse her proffer, lastly g his hand. „ 347
to them the doors g way Groaning, „ 349
pray'd the men, the women : I g assent : „ Con. 7
English Harold g its throne a wife, W. to Marie Alex. 24
and he g the ringers a crown. Grandmother 58
I pluck'd a daisy, I j it you. The Daisy 88
Hexameters no worse than daring Germany g us. Trans, of Homer 5
The Danube to the Severn g In Mem. xix 1
And g all ripeness to the grain, „ Ixxxi 11
Received and $r him welcome there ; „ lxxxv2i
With him to whom her hand I g. „ Con. 70
He fiercely g me the lie, Maud II i 16
By the home that g me birth, „ iv 7
Merlin took the child. And g him to Sir Anton, Com. of Arthur 222
She g the King his huge cross-hilted sword, „ 286
Arthur g him back his territory, Gareth and L. 78
Of whom ye g me to, the Seneschal, „ 559
that g upon a range Of level pavement „ 666
blue arms, and g a shield Blue also, „ 931
and thee the King G me to guard, „ 1014
g a shield whereon the Star of Even „ 1117
good king g order to let blow His horns Marr. of Geraint 152
g command that all which once was ours „ 696
he but g a wrathful groan. Saying, Geraint and E. 398
cousin, slay not him who g you life.' „ 783
I rode all-shamed, hating the life He g me, „ 853
which this Garlon g With much ado, Balin and. Balan 118
best Of ladies living g me this to bear.' „ 340
one that hath defamed The cognizance she g me : „ 485
knew no more, nor g me one poor word ; Merlin and V. 277
Use g me Fame at first, and Fame again Increasing
g me use.
His brother's ; which he g to Lancelot,
Sir Lancelot g A marvellous great shriek
he took, And g, the diamond :
he g, And slightly kiss'd the hand to which he g,
I g the diamond : she will render it ;
Stript off the case, and g the naked shield ;
Then g a languid hand to each, and lay,
I ^ No cause, not willingly, for such a love :
G him an isle of marsh whereon to build ;
to prayer and praise She g herself,
And g herself and all her wealth to me.
in my madness I essay'd the door ; It g;
Then g it to his Queen to rear :
Tristram won, and Lancelot (7, the gems,
and Innocence the King G ioc a, prize —
this I g thee, look, Is all as cc ol and white
he g them charge about the Ciueen,
' Hast thou perform'd my mi ssion which Ig?
So Death g back, and would ao further come.
He that g Her life, to me delightedly fuMll'd
Then playfully she g herself jhe lie —
• Kiss nim,' she said. ' You g me life again.
493
Lancelot and E. 380
515
551
701
713
979
1032
1297
Holy Grail 62
77
597
" 842
Last Tournament 22
190
295
415
Guinevere 591
Pass, of Arthur 235
Lover's Tale i 115
223
349
>171L:
M
Gave
263
Gazed
In the Child. Hosp. 51
Columbus 20
,, 22
„ 132
Batt. of Brunanburh 109
Tiresias 122
The Wreck 13
Lochsley H., Sixty 256
Demeter and P. 55
The Ring 270
Happy 68
Romney's R. 31
Charity 19
Gave (continued) (Meaning the print that you g us,
chains For him who g a new heaven,
G glory and more empire to the kings
g All but free leave for all to work
G to the garbaging war-hawk to gorge it,
sweet mother land which g them birth
He that they 3 me to, mother,
I refused the hand he g.
and g Thy breast to ailing infants
g it me, who pass'd it down her own,
pardon, O my love, if I ever g you pain,
fumes Of that dark opiate dose you g me,
I sent him back what he g, —
Gaw (go) ' I mun g up agean fur Roa.' ' G up agean
fur the varmint ? ' Owd Rod 97
Gawain (a knight of the Round Table) G and young
Modred, her two sons. Com. of Arthur 244
G went, and breaking into song Sprang out, „ 320
G, when he came With Modred hither Gareth and L. 25
aU in fear to find Sir G, or Sir Modred, „ 326
The shield of G blazon'd rich and bright, „ 416
' I have stagger'd thy strong G in a tilt „ 542
rise, O G, and ride forth and find the knight. Lancelot and E. 537
G, surnamed The Courteous, fair and strong, „ 555
G the while thro' all the region round „ 615
G saw Sir Lancelot's azure lions, „ 662
if I dream'd,' said G, 'that you love This greatest
knight, „ 638
But there the fine G will wonder at me, „ 1054
G, who bad a thousand farewells to me, ,, 1056
Then came the fine G sind wonder'd at her, „ 1267
G sware, and louder then the rest.' Holy Grail 202
sharply turning, ask'd Of G, ' G, was this Quest for
thee ? ' ' Nay, Lord,' said G, ' not for such as I. „ 740
left The hall long silent, till Sir G— „ 854
' Hath G fail'd in any quest of thine ? „ 859
' G, and blinder unto holy things „ 870
Three against one : and G passing by, Pdleas and E. 274
G, looking at the villainy done, Forebore, „ 282
Forth sprang G, and loosed him from his bonds, „ 315
G answer'd kindly tho' in scorn, „ 333
and took G's, and said, ' Betray me not, „ 360
' Ay,' said G, ' for women be so light.' „ 362
But G lifting up his vizor said, ' G am I, (? of Arthur's court, ,, 370
G, G of the Court, Sir G— „ 379
straight on thro' open door Rode G, , ,, 383
* Ay,' thought G, ' and you be fair enow : „ 388
but a sound Of G ever coming, and this lay — „ 396
I ' Why lingers G with his golden news ?' „ 411
I Bound on her brow, were G and Ettarre. „ 435
I turn'd herself To G: ' Liar, for thou hast not slain „ 490
I that G fired The hall of Merlin, „ 517
I shouting, ' False, And false with (? ! ' „ 546
1 Dagonet, the fool, whom C in his mood Last Tournament 1
\ G kill'd In Lancelot's war, the ghost of G blown
i Along a wandering wind. Pass, of Arthur ^
i Thine, G, was the voice — „ 47
i Light was G in hfe, and light in death Is (?, „ 56
>}8win' (going) g to let in furriners' wheat, Owd Rod. 45
I I wur g that waiiy to the bad, „ 71
lay you were g With bridal flowers — Miller's D. 164
Or g, or grave, or sweet, or stem, Palace of Art 91
many songs. But never a one so g. Poet's Song 14
statue propt against the waU, As 9 as any. Princess, Pro. 100
My g young hawk, my Rosalind : Rosalind 34
and buds and garlands g. May Queen 11
Or g quinquenniads would we reap Day-Dm., L'Envoi 23
' And, leg and arm with love-knots g, Talking Oak 65
With many kinsmen g, Will Water. 90
Many a gallant g domestic Bows before him L. of Burleigh 47
I f ear'd Lest the g navy there should splinter on it. Sea Dreams 131
silk pavilion, g with gold In streaks and rays, Gareth and L. 910
The g paviUon and the naked feet, „ 937
Prophet of the g time. The Snowdrop 6
remembering the g playmate rear'd Among them, Death of (Enone 59
Gay {continued) one is glad ; her note is g, In Mem. xxi 25
fancies play To find me g among the g, „ Ixvi 3
all is g with lamps, and loud With sport „ xcviii 27
Like things of the season g, Maud I iv 3
if I cannot be g let a passionless peace „ 50
A passionate ballad gallant and g, „ i; 4
Strange, that I felt so g, „ xx 1
one With whom she has heart to be g. „ xxii 20
I see her Weeping for some g knight in Arthur's
hall.' Marr. of Geraint 118
And seeing one so g^ in purple silks, „ 284
like a crag was 9 with wildmg flowers: „ 319
these to her own faded self And the g court, „ 653
Clothed with my gift, and g among the g.' „ 753
that good mother, making Enid g In such apparel „ 757
And all that week was old Caerleon g, „ 837
The three g suits of armour which they wore, Geraint and E. 95
drew from those dead wolves Their three g suits of
armour, „ 181
How g, how suited to the house of one „ 683
and damsel glitter'd at the feast Variously g : Last Tournament 225
Thy g lent-Ulies wave and put them by. Prog, of Spring 37
Bountiful, beautiful, apparell'd g, „ 62
Gayer But once were g than a dawning sky Death of (Enone 12
In colours g than the morning mist, Princess ii 438
My fate or folly, passing g youth For one so old, Merlin and V. 927
pale blood of the wizard at her touch Took g
colours, „ 950
Evelyn is g, wittier, prettier. Sisters {E. and E.) 36
Gayest wealth Of leaf, and g garlandage of flowers, Balin and Balan 83
Gay-torr'd Her g-f cats a painted fantasy. Princess Hi 186
Gaze (S) Than that earth should stand at g Locksley Hall 180
her ardent g Roves from the living brother's face, In Mem. xxxii 6
her hue Changed at his g^ : Balin and Balan 279
And were only standing at g, Heavy Brigade 37
The linnet's bosom blushes at her g. Prog, of Spring 17
Gaze (verb) Ever retiring thou dost g Ode to Memory 93
Ev'n while we g on it, Elednore 90
g upon My palace with unblinded eyes, Palace of Art 41
He g's on the silent dead: Day-Dm., Arrival 13
Evermore she seems to y L. of Burleigh 34
orb That fain would g upon him to the last ; Lucretius 140
climbs a peak to g O'er land and main. Princess vii 35
I, who g with temperate eyes In Mem. cxii 2
bear some token of his Queen Whereon to g, Balin and Balan 189
I cannot brook to g upon the dead.' „ 586
Sigh fully, or all-silent g upon him Merlin and V. 182
But who can g upon the Sun in heaven ? Lancelot and E. 123
even while I g The crack of earthquake Pdleas and E. 464
as one Who sits and g's on a faded fire, Last Tournament 157
and we woke To g upon each other. Lover's Tale i 266
To g upon thee till their eyes are dim ,, 491
and I gr at a field in the Fast, By an Evolution. 17
she used to g Down at the Troad; Death of (Enone 2
and there G at the ruin, often mutter low St. Telemachus 14
And g on this great miracle, the World, Akbar's Dream 122
and is. And is not, what I g on — „ 124
Gazed G on the Persian girl alone, Arabian Nights 134
Two godlike faces g below ; Palace of Art 162
He g so long That both his eyes were dazzled, M. d' Arthur 58
Averill went and g upon his death. Aylmer's Fidd 599
long we g, but satiated at length Came to the ruins. Princess, Pro. 90
I drew near ; I g. „ m 183
She g awhile and said, ' As these rude bones „ 295
while We g upon her came a little stur ,, iv 373
Clomb to the roofs, and g alone for hours „ vii 32
place Where first we g upon the sky ; In Mem. cii 2
They g on all earth's beauty in their Queen, Com. of Arthur 463
Gareth silent g upon the knight, Gareth and L. 933
on whom the maiden g. „ 1281
And kept her oS and g upon her face, Marr. of Geraint 519
King Had g upon her blankly and gone by : Merlin and V. 161
I never g upon it but 1 dreamt Of some vast charm „ 511
G at the heaving shoulder, and the face Hand-hidden, „ 896
while he g wonderingly at her, came Lancelot and E. 626
A I
Gazed
254
Gentle
Gazed (continiud) wlule he g The beauty of her flesh ^ r 77
^^^ abash'd Pelleas and E. 77
she g upon the man Of princely bearing, » 305
FuU wonderingly she g on Lancelot , , , „ ;' ^, ^°^
He g so long That both bis eyes were dazzled Pass, oj Arthur jM
three whereat we g On that high day, • " ,7, 7 • on^
for as that other g, Shading his eyes Lovers Tale % 6^
While I g My coronal slowly disentwined itself „ ^bU
while I g My spirit leap'd as with those thrills „ oW
The other, like the sun I y upon, „ 5U7
the stars Did tremble in their stations as I </ ; „ . . 00^
We a on it together In mute and glad remembrance, „ « leo
and the hght Grew as I ff, ,^-,°}''T}"'V1
And we 3 at the wandering wave V. oi MaeUune^2
Eer heart ! I ? into the mu-ror. The Ring A<oJ
Gazer greet With lifted hand the g in the street. Ode on Well, z^
Gazest When thou g at the skies ? ^ '^^^^^^ 50
Gazing (See also Seaward-gazing) G on thee for evermore, Eleanore W
Sometimes with most intensity G, I seem to see „ e^
and sense Of Passion g upon thee. ,- r c-x," 7 y/- 7
G where the lilies blow Round an island L. of 6halottii
In g up an Alpine height, Two Voices 36^
If 0 on divinity disrobed Thy mortal eyes ^'^°^i ^^l
eves grown dim with g on the pilot-stars, Lotos-Eaters, C. ^. » (
From her isle-altar g down, 0/ oZd «««/';«f ""l^^
There he sat down g on all below ; Enoch Arden TZ6
His 9 in on Aimie, his resolve, » . . °t>^
They stood, so rapt, we g, came a voice, Princess t}oio
Then murmur'd Florian g' after her, ,, .*" ^ '
AU open-mouth'd, all g to the Ught, ,. *^. |^^
Ida spoke not, g on the ground, » ''I. ^i
so fared she g there ; y ^.^. *^
And 9 on thee, sullen tree, "^''.^^T- "97R
the friends Of Arthur, g on him, tall. Com. of Arthur ZW
In scornful stillness g as they past ; ^ i," j r 00a
that men Were giddy g there ; Gareth and L. ZZb
pace At sunrise, g over plain and wood ; ^ ■ " ■, r ?o4
And sadly g on her bridle-reins, Geramtand h. 4y4
gone. And left me g- at a barren board, Holy hrail v,yc>
Pelleas g thought, ' Is Guinevere herself so j i, rq
beautiful?' Pelleas and E.&^
Peace at his heart, and g at a star ," ^ 7 ■ «»
To die in g on that perfectness Lover s Tale i b»
o hke The Indian on a still-eyed snake, » c--'. qo
G for one pensive moment on that founder Locksley H., Sixty 6^
And gr from this height alone. Pro. to Gen. Hamley i)
^ Klow ^^^''"'^ ^^"^^*^' °^ '^^ ^^'"^^ ^^^' ^^«'«-. ^^*' ^'''- ^
Gear We sent mine host to purchase female g ; -£^^"^^** * "^^=
for my ships are out of g, TA. 2?e™ 5
GeU (girl) an' soa is scoors o' ?'s, . ^- -^"Tn' .Wi'f.t
an- 'is 9'5 as thaw they was g's o' mine, ViUage Wife 6
The ?'s they counts for nowt, >i ^°
An' the g's, they hedn't naw taiiils, » ^
or the g's 'ull goa, to the 'Ouse, » 9^
An' I cried along wi' the g's, " "^
an' 'is g's es belong'd to the land ; o • *. '' c>» »9
a bouncin' boy an' a g. ., .. -S^^^'^r's 5 5 82
a's bobs to ma hoffens es I be abroad 1' the laanes, „ iu (
g o' the farm 'at slep wi' tha then Owd Boa 51
a-naggin' about the g 0' the farm, » °^
the g was as howry a troUope /^ ,j, j'V ioAq
Gelt left crag-carven o'er the streammg G— Gareth and L 1203
S(s) InhoUow'dmoonsofg's, ^M^^AiitlfA
lest the g's Should blind my purpose, M.d Arthur 152
Airing a snowy hand and signet g, Pnn^essi 121
rainbow robes, and g's and gemlike eyes, » i''. ^0^
How like a g, beneath, the city Of little Monaco, The Daisy -
feet like sunny g's on an English green, Maud 1 1; 14
All over glanced with dewdrop or with g Gareth and L. yjy
In crimsons and in purples and in g;s. "^''"■- f ^'JT^JJ
wont to glance and sparkle Uke a g Of fifty facets ; Geramt and E. 294
80 thickly shone the g's. ^ »' j r- i^r
he had the g's Pluck'd from the crown, Lancelot and E.bb
Keceived at once and laid aside the g < »»
Gem mcontinued) Tristram won, and Lancelot gave ^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^
the g s, , r\ 2Q3
Who left the g's which Innocence the Queen ,, ?^
lest the g's Should blmd my purpose, ^ZJsT^ei S?
Which are as g's set in my memory. Lover s 1 alei gl
g's Moveable and resettable at will, >' 2iQ
after he hath shown him g's or gold, Mneldime 46
Swept Uke a torrent of g's from the sky V.of Maeldwae^
To vex the noon with fiery g's, p^''"'fstLS
Gem (verb) new hfe that g's the hawthorn hne ; ^'%tTuA?i
Gemini starry (? hang Uke glorious crowns 7W<x«d Vii t« (
Gem-like a fire-balloon Rose g-l up before the dusky p^-^^^^^ p^^. 75
groves ' i«'480
And rainbow robes, and gems and g eyes, » '"
Luminous, g, ghostlike, deathlike, . f ««« i, "* °
iTeadow'g chased In'the brown wild, ^TffCWaintm
Gemm'd Breaks from a coppice g with green and red, ^f; ;4^™^???
Gemmv The g bridle glitter'd free, , , . ■^* •^ t^I LI* is
GeS Upon the g decay of faith Right thro' the world, ^^.^'J^^^,^
every face she fook'd on justify it) The g foe. j^Z^'^i^^^
should fall Remerging in the g Soul, rir^Taief 245
whatsoe'er Our g mother meant for me alone, Lover slalei /40
Generating .Seg All-generating ^ , ^ ,,
Generation (6'ee aZso Gineration) And mould a g Princessv4l&
strong to move . , , /„ Mem xl 16
to knit The g's each with each ; J,« ^T'-f 099
jewels Of mLy g's of his house Sparkled Lc.er s ^« jjg
National hatreds of whole g s, ,, t j j/ ci7
Generoi All brave, and many ?. and some chaste. M^Un andV.Jll
Most g of all Ultramontanes Ward, /« Mem.W '^•J^^J^^^
But, having sown some g seed, -^ T^ireoias 128
everywhere they meet And kindle g purpose ^ ^resias i.^o
Genial (5ee aZso Seeming-genial) With peals of g
clamour sent From many a tavern-door, i*i^Sm 743
so g was the hearth : , , ^. tvt ^ TyiirrHius 97
all-generating powers and g heat Of Nature, pS " 274
The g giant, Arac, roll'd himself rnncessv ^
broke A g warmth and Ught once more, .' "' „
For we, the g day, the happy crowd, » ^05
A preat broad-shoulder'd q Englishman, " . „„
paftner Sithe flowery wall Of letters, g table-talk. In Mem. lxxxiv2Z
And g warmth ; and o'er the sky The silvery haze „ J^^^
To myriads on the g earth, " cd 10
The g hour with mask and mime ; » „^ ,j,j
Let all my g spirits advance To meet /^ J' -^z „^^ jt 'q26
Fill'd all the g courses of his blood Geramt ««^ J; »^»
The light and g warmth of double day. Prm. BeaPnce 22
Genius thou bearest The first-bom of thy g. Ode to Memory 9^
A fairy shield your (? made And gave you ,trnilfm
G of that hour which dost uphold Thy coronal ^"'VjoaLfo
Genovese The grave, severe G of old. ^ ^ _ "^ '^^ ^''"^ ^"
Being but a (?, I am handled worse than had 1 Columbus 106
been a Moor, 243
I am but an alien and a G. "
Gentle (See aZso Stately-gentte) Lean don him. Two Voices A16
faithful, q, good, . . , , rr„ 7 o j.
gently comes the world to those That are cast m g n^uld ToJJ.^i
By g words are always gain: ^e J ^^^ ^^
A g sound, an awful hght ! " Kiirleiah 49
And they speak in g murmur, y. ^^ ^ Burleigli
And a g consort made he. And her g mmd was such ^^
That she grew a noble lady, , 'V , g^j
The g shower, the smell of dying leaves, Enoch Arden oii
a languor came Upon him, g sickness, a j^'h v^^i^ f>R5
So thit the g creatme shut from all Her chantable use, Aylmer s Fidd 5b&
Softening thro' all the g attributes ." .. .^q
Sme Melissa hitting all we saw with shaits Of g satire. Princess « 4b9
on my spirits Settled a g cloud of melancholy ; " li 206
the yoke, I wish it G as freedom '— " ^^ g,^
nor stranger seem'd that hearts So g, "
Sleep, g heavens, before the prow ; Sleep, g wmds, ^^^ .^ ^^
as he sleeps now, Jfaiwi 7^67
My mother, who was so g and good ? xviii 23
Of her whose g will has changed my fa,te, » ^^
I trust that I did not talk To g Maud m our walk „ ^'^
Gentle
265
Get
Gentle (continued) Was it g to reprove her For stealing Maud I xx 8
nor meet To fight for g damsel, he, who lets His
heart be stirr'd with any foolish heat At any
g damsel's waywardness. Gareih and L. 1177
there fell A horror on him, lest his g wife, Marr. of Geraint 29
Am much too gr, have not used my power : „ 467
Sank her sweet head upon her g breast ; „ 527
That tho' her g presence at the lists „ 795
nor told his g wife What ail'd him, Geraint and E, 503
(His g charger following him unled) „ 571
Pray you be g, pray you let me be : „ 708
Dame, to be ^ tnan ungentle with you ; „ 716
' I will he g' he thought * And passing g ' caught
his hand Balin and Balan 370
Then the g Squire ' I hold them happy, ,, 580
I thought that he was g, being great: Merlin and V. 871
The g wizard cast a shielding arm. „ 908
Some g maiden's gift. Lancelot and E. 605
Death-pale, for lack of g maiden's aid. „ 765
And all the g court will welcome me, „ 1060
To whom the g sister made reply, „ 1073
Know that for this most g maiden's death „ 1291
Unbound as yet, and g, asl know.' „ 1386
That doest right by g and by churl. Last Tournament 74
Ah great and g lord, Who wast, Guinevere 638
to which her gracious lips Did lend such g
utterance, Lover's Tale i 457
Then he patted my hand in his y way, First Quarrel 67
the crew were g, the captain kind ; The Wreck 129
Our g mother, had she lived — The Flight 77
All is gracious, g, great and Queenly. On Jub. Q. Victoria 14
and felt a g hand Fall on my forehead, The Ring 418
You that would not tread on a worm For your
g nature . . . Forlorn 46
Gentle-hearted The g-h wife Sat shuddering Sea Breams 29
Gentleman bore King Arthur, like a modem g M. d'Arthur, Ep. 22
And watch'd by silent gentlemen. Will Water. 231
first, a 3' of broken means (His father's fault) Princess i 53
To give three gallant gentlemen to death.' „ it 335
' You have done well and like a, g, „ iv 527
Well have you done and like a g. „ 530
Cooms oi ag bum : N. Farmer, N. S. 38
G bum ! what's g bum ? „ 42
The grand old name of g, In Mem. cxi 22
O selfless man and stainless g. Merlin and V. 792
Tme g, heart, blood and bone. Bandit's Death 2
Gentieness Winning its way with extreme g Isabel 23
More soluble is this knot. By g than war. Princess v 136
but this firebrand — g To such as her ! „ 167
The g he seem'd to be, In Mem. cxi 12
sworn to vows Of utter hardihood, utter g, Gareih and L. 553
world were one Of utter peace, and love, and g ! „ 1289
Yea, God, I pray you of your g, Geraint and E. 710
Subdued me somewhat to that g, „ 867
what the King So prizes — overprizes— y. Balin and Balan 184
airs of Heaven Should kiss with an unwonted g. Lover's Tale i 739
With politic care, with utter g, Akbar's Dream 128
Gentler A g death shall Falsehood die. Clear-headed friend 16
In g days, your an-ow-wounded fawn Princess ii 270
We ceased : a g feeling crept Upon us : In Mem. xxx 17
But golden earnest of a y life ! ' Balin and Balan 208
Gentler-born The g-b the maiden, the more bound, Lancelot and E. 766
, Gentlest whom the g airs of Heaven Should kiss Lover's Tale i 738
And last in kindly curves, with g fall, De Prof., Two G. 23
Gentlewoman hammer at this reverend g. Princess Hi 129
Or sit beside a noble g.' Gareth and L. 867
There is not one among my gentlewomen Geraint and E, 622
see ye not my gentlewomen here, „ 682
one among his gentlewomen Display'd „ 686
and stood, A virtuous g deeply wrong'd, Merlin and V. 911
Gentlier Music that g on the spirit lies, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 5
Geoffrey (of Monmouth) Of G's book, or him of
Malleor's, To the Queen ii 42
Geology Now hawking at G and schism ; The Epic 16
Astronomy and G, terrible Muses ! Parnassus 16
Geraint (a Knight of the Bound Table) brave G, a knight
of Arthur's court, Marr. of Geraint 1
so loved G To make her beauty vary day by day, „ 8
Grateful to Prince G for service done, ,, 15
Long in their common love rejoiced G. ,,23
Not less G believed it ; ^, 28
day by day she thought to tell G, j, 65
Pnnce 6^, Late also, wearing neither hunting-dress „ 164
G Exclaiming, ' Surely I will learn the name,' „ 202
Prince G, now thinking that he heard „ 232
came G, and undemeath Beheld the long street „ 241
thought G, ' I have track'd him to his earth.' ,, 253
Whereat G flash 'd into sudden spleen : ,, 273
Then rode G, a little spleenful yet, „ 293
Then rode G into the castle court, ,, 312
So the sweet voice of Enid moved G ; '' 334
So fared it with G, who thought and said, ,, 343
thought G, ' Here by God's rood is the one maid ,, 367
G, from utter courtesy, forbore. „ 381
G had longing in him evermore To stoop and kiss ,', 394
But after all had eaten, then G, ,, 397
— I am G Of Devon — ,' 409
G, a name far-sounded among men For noble deeds ? ,\ 427
' Well said, true heart,' replied G, „ 474
old And rusty, old and rusty. Prince G, Are mine, ',', 478
To whom G with eyes all bright replied, „ 494
And waited there for Yniol and G. „ 538
when G Beheld her first in field awaiting him, ,', 539
Increased G's, who heaved his blade aloft, ,, 572
No later than last eve to Prince G — ,, 603
She look'd on ere the coming of G. „ 614
G Woke where he slept in the high hall, „ 754
rejoiced More than G to greet her thus attired ; „ 772
So fared it with G, (repeat) Geraint and E. 8, 500
Prince G Drave the long spear a cubit thro' his
breast „ 85
his lance err'd ; but (r'5, A little in the late encounter „ 157
G, dismounting, pick'd the lance That pleased him
best, „ 179
G had ruth again on Enid looking pale : „ 202
G Ate all the mowers' victual unawares, „ 214
Then said G, ' I wish no better fare : „ 232
Her suitor in old years before G, Enter'd, ,, 276
Greeted G full face, but stealthily, „ 279
Then cried G for wine and goodly cheer „ 283
But Enid left alone with Prince G, „ 365
And G look'd and was not satisfied. „ 435
G Waving an angry hand as who should say „ 443
uttering a dry shriek, Dash'd on G, „ 462
Then like a stormy sunlight smiled G, „ 480
This heard G, and grasping at his sword, „ 725
then G upon the horse Mounted, and reach'd a hand, „ 758
' My lord G, I greet you with all love ; „ 785
But while G lay healing of his hurt, „ 931
when G was whole again, they past With Arthur ,', 945
tho' 6^ could never take again That comfort „ 949
Enids and G's Of times to be ; „ 955
after Lancelot, Tristram, and G And Gareth, Lancelot and E. 556
Germ (See also Baby-germ) in it is the g of all That
grows within the woodland. Amphion 7
German No little G state are we, Third of Feb. 15
Germander that her clear g eye Droopt Sea Dreams 4
Germany worse than daring G gave us. Trans, of Homer 5
Get (See also Git) g thee hence — Lest that rough
bumour Gareth and L. 376
Thou g to horse and follow him far away. „ 584
Flee down the valley before he g to horse. ', 941
with Sir Pelleas as with one Who g's a wound
in battle, Pelleas and E. 529
I couldn't g back tho' I tried, Rizpah 43
In yon dark city : g thee back : Ancient Sage 253
Till Holy St. Pether g's up wid his kays Tomorrow 93
Up, g up, and tell him all, Forlorn 55
Up, g up, the time is short, „ 73
I have told you my tale. G you gone. Charity 44
Getting
256
Gift
Getting See Gittin'
Got (give) yer Honour ye g her the top of the momin', Tomorrow 3
an' she g him a frindly nod, „ 58
Gewgaw Seeing his g castle shine, Maud 7 a; 18
Ghastlier And a g face than ever has haunted a grave The Wreck 8
stared upon By g than the Gorgon head, Death of (Enone 71
Ghastliest Our dearest faith ; our g doubt ; In Mem. cxxiv 2
Ghastly there rain'd a g dew From the nations' airy
navies Locksley Hall 123
They cUng together in the g sack — Aylmer's Field J Si
And g thro' the drizzling rain In Mem. vii 11
For there in the g pit long since a body was found, Maud I i 5
Walk'd in a wintry wind by a gf glimmer, „ Hi 13
The g Wraith of one that I know ; „ II i 32
Trick thyself out in g imageries Gareih and L. 1390
Lancelot gave A marvellous great shriek and g
groan, Lancelot and E. 516
from the sim there swiftly made at her A g something, Guinevere 79
He had brought his g tools : In the Child. Hosp. 69
Flying at top of the roofs in the g siege of Lucknow — Def. of Lucknow 4
Timur built his g tower of eighty thousand human
skulls, Locksley H., Sixty 82
Ghollst (ghost) I thowt it wur Charlie's g Village Wife 82
They was all on 'em fear'd o' the G Owd Bod 37
the G moastlins was nobbut a rat or a mouse. „ 38
Ghost (adj.) So sacred those G Lovers hold the gift.' The Ring 205
As if — those two G lovers — „ 459
Ghost (s) {See also Boggle, Ghoast) g of passion that
no smiles restore — The form, the form 11
He thought I was a g, mother, May Queen 17
we should come Uke g's to trouble joy. Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 74
Was haunted with a jolly g, that shook Walk, to the Mail 36
' Yes, we're flitting,' says the g ,, 43
Old wishes, g's of broken plans, WiU Water. 29
g of one who bore your name About these meadows, The Brook 219
I seem'd to move among a world of g's. Princess i 17
I seem'd to move among a world of g's ; „ iv 561
And doing battle with forgotten g's, „ y 480
droops the milkwhite peacock like a g, „ vii 180
And like a g she glimmers on to me. „ 181
And in the dark church like a, g In Mem. Ixvii 15
O solemn g, O crowned soul ! „ Ixxxv 36
Spirit to Spirit, G to G. „ xciii 8
My G may feel that thine is near. „ 16
a sudden desire, Uke a glorious g, to glide, Maud I xiy 20
A disease, a hard mechanic g „ II " 34
some Were pale as at the passing of a g, Com. of Arthur 263
thou be shadow, here I make thee g,' Balin and Balan 394
wall That sunders g's and shadow-casting men Merlin and V. 629
Then like a g she lifted up her face. But like a g
without the power to speak. Lancelot and E. 918
Monotonous and hollow like a G's Guinevere 420
g of Gawain blown Along a wandering wind. Pass, of Arthur 31
fight in death Is Gawain, for the 3 is as the man ; „ 57
Ajid some beheld the faces of old g's „ 103
Rather than that gray king, whose name, a g, To the Queen ii 39
still Haunted us like her g; Sisters (E. and E.) 247
the g of our great Catholic Queen Smiles Columbus 187
would scatter the g's of the Past, Despair 23
my mother's g would rise — The Flight 51
smiling at the slighter g. Locksley E., Sixty 54
All the world is gf to me, „ 253
G of Pindar in you Roll'd an Olympian ; To Prof. Jebb. 3
Led upward by the God of g's and dreams, Demeter and P. 5
G in Man, the G that once was Man, The Ring 35
that half skeleton, like a barren g „ 227
VUe, so near the g Himself, „ 230
dearer g had — ^wrench'd it away. „ 467
in the night, When the g's are fleeting. Forlorn 18
rib-grated dimgeon of the holy human g, Happy 31
white fog vanish'd like a g Before the day. Death of (Enone 67
G of the Brute that is walking and haunting The Dawn 23
Ghostlike Luminous, gemlike, g, deathlike, Maud I Hi 8
In either twilight g-l to and fro Lancelot and E. 849
mist Before her, moving 9 to his doom. Guinevere 605
Ghostly morning-breath Of England, blown across
her g wall :
An echo Uke a g woodpecker.
No g hauntings like his Highness.
for spite of doubts And sudden g shadowings
Cloud-towers by g masons wrought,
while that g grace Beam'd on his fancy,
and bid call the g man Hither,
So when the g man had come and gone,
Or g footfall echoing on the stair.
thro' her dream A g murmur floated,
Ghoul Some deathsong for the G's
Giant (adj.) enormous polypi Winnow with g arms the
slumbering green.
three stanzas that you made About my ' g bole ; '
And near the light a g woman sat.
For tho' the G Ages heave the hill And break
the shore,
g aisles, Rich in model and design ;
The g windows' blazon'd fires,
I stood on a 9 deck and mix'd my breath
Yet God's just wrath shall be wreak'd on a ^ liar ;
thrice that morning Guinevere had climb'd The
g tower,
struck, Furrowing a g oak,
and there My g ilex keeping leaf
Giant (s) a race Of g's living, each, a thousand years,
those three stars of the airy G's zone,
genial g, Arac, roll'd himself Thrice in the saddle,
From Arac's arm, as from a g's flail.
The g labouring in his youth ;
The g answer'd merrily, ' Yea, but one ?
the King, Who seem'd the phantom of a G in it,
weigh'd him down as jEtna does The G of
Mythology :
Gnome of the cavern. Griffin and G,
Giant-factoried Droopt in the g-f city-gloom.
Gibber point and jeer. And g at the worm.
Gibbet from the church and not from the g —
Gibe With solemn g did Eustace banter me.
there with g's and flickering mockeries
' Was it muddier than thy g's ?
Gibed — him Who g and japed — in many a merry tale
Giddiest Ran into its g whirl of sound.
Giddy or like a girl Valuing the g pleasure of the eyes.
that man Were g gazing there ;
or like a girl Valuing the g pleasure of the eyes.
We were g besides with the fruits we had gorged,
Gideon those whom G school'd with briers.
Gie (give) An' I says ' I mun g tha a kiss,'
ears es 'e'd g fur a howry owd book
set oop thy taUil, tha may g ma a kiss,
I shall hev to g one or tother awatiy.
Now I'll g tha a bit o' my mind
Gied (gave) toithe were due, an' I 9 it in bond ;
an' I g our Sally a kick,
I seeiid that our Sally went laamed Cos' o' the
kick as I gp 'er,
I minded the fust kiss I g 'er
I g 'ei a, kiss, an' then anoother,
upo' coomin' awaiiy Sally g me a. kiss ov 'ersen.
an' g to the tramps goin' by —
'e g — I be fear'd fur to tell tha 'ow much —
it g me a scare tother night,
an' our Nelly she g me 'er 'and.
Till I g 'em Hinjian cum,
Robby I g tha a raiitin that sattled thy coortin o' me.
Gift (See also Bridal-gift, Chance-gift) God's great g of
speech abused
' He owns the fatal g of eyes,
Love the g is Love the debt.
' I woo thee not with g's.
A sinful soul possess'd of many g's. To
angels rising and descending met With interchange
of ^.
Enoch Arden 661
Princess, Pro. 217
ii 411
iv 572
In Mem. Ixx 5
Lancelot and E. 885
1099
1101
Guinevere ^fl
Death of (Enone 79
Ancient Sage 17
The Kraken 10
Talking Oak 136
Sea Dreams 98
Ode on Well. 259
Ode Inter. Exhib. 12
The Daisy 58
Maud III vi 34
45
Marr. of Geraint 827
Merlin and V. 936
To Ulysses 18
Princess Hi 269
i;260
274
500
In Mem. cxviii 2
Geraint and E. 128
Guinevere 602
Lover's Tale iv 18
Merlin and the G. 40
Sea Dream,s 5
Romney's R. 137
Rizpah 84
Gardener's D. 168
Last Tournament 186
299
Sir J. Oldcastle 91
Vision of Sin 29
M. d' Arthur 128
Gareth and L. 228
Pass, of Arthur 22^
V. of Maddune 75
Buonaparte 14
North. Cobbler 51
Village Wife 45
Spinster's S's. 31
64
Church-warden, etc. 21
N. Farmer, 0. S. 11
North. Cobbler 36
40
45
52
56
ViUage Wife 33
47
81
111
118
Spinster's S's. 48
A Dirge 44
Two Voices 286
Miller's D. 207
(Enone 152
With Pal. of Ari 3
Palace of Art lU
Oift
257
Girl
Gist {continued) we knew your ^ that way At college: The Epic 24
The holy Elders with the g of myrrh. M. d' Arthur 233
Kequiring at her hand the greatest g, Gardener's D. 229
' And yet it was a graceful g — Talking Oak 233
Let me go : take back thy g : Tithonus 27
Gods themselves cannot recall their g's.' „ 49
eagles of her belt, The grim Earl's g ; Godiva 44
g's, when g's of mine could please ; The Letters 22
G's by the children, garden-herbs Enoch Arden 338
shower'd His oriental g's on everyone And most
on Edith : Aylmer's Field 214
Among the g's he left her „ 217
' A gracious g to give a lady, this ! ' „ 240
' Were I to give this g of his to one „ 242
' Take it,' she added sweetly, ' tho' his g- „ 246
Nor deeds of g, but g's of grace he forged, Sea Dreams 192
And jewels, g's, to fetch her : Princess i 43
they saw the king : he took the g's ; „ 46
g's of grace, that might express In Mem. Ixxxv 46
Ah, take the imperfect g I bring, „ 117
She keeps the g of years before, „ xcvii 25
and saw without the door King Arthur's g, Gareth and L. 677
branch'd and flower'd with gold, a costly g Marr. of Geraint 631
* Yea, I know it ; your good g, „ 688
Your own good g\' ' Yea, surely,' said the dame, „ 690
I see her now, Clothed with my g, and gay among
the gay.' „ 753
Laid from her limbs the costly-broider'd g, „ 769
your fair child shall wear your costly g „ 819
Who knows ? another g of the high God, „ 821
' I take it as free g, then,' said the boy, Geraint and E. 222
' These be g's, Bom with the blood, Balin and Balan 174
A seven months' babe had been a truer g. Merlin and V. 711
broider'd wth great pearls. Some gentle maiden's g.' Lancelot and E. 605
Gilded (adj. and part.) {continued) from the carven-work
she should ask some goodly g of him
price of half a realm, his costly g,
they had been thrice their worth Being your g,
value of all g's Must vary ss the giver's.
this life of mine I guard as God's high g
holy Elders with the g of myrrh.
my rich g is wholly mine to give.
' Take my free g, my cousin, for your wife ;
One golden curl, his golden g, before
G's from every British zone ;
And golden grain, my g to helpless man
sacred those Ghost Lovers hold the g.'
full thanks to you For your rich g,
send A 9 of slenderer value, mine.
Gifted (See also God-glfted) As some divinely g man,
Gigantesque The sort of mock-heroic g,
Gigglesby we was shaamed to cross G Greeiin,
out o' sight o' the winders o' G Hinn —
foiilk be sa scared at, i' G wood.
Gild g's the straiten'd forehead of the fool !
grain as sweet As that which g's the glebe of
England,
912
1164
1213
1214
Guinevere 494
Pass, of Arthur 401
Lover's Tale iv 350
363
The Flight 36
Open. I. and C. Exhib. 9
Demeter and P. Ill
The Bing 205
To Ulysses 34
48
In Mem. Ixiv 2
Princess, Con. 11
Spinster's S's. 33
35
24
Locksley Hall 62
To Prof. Jehh 7
Gilded (adj. and part.) {See also Lichen-gilded) Kate saith
' the men are g flies.' Kate 18
And round the roofs a g gallery Palace of Art 29
Near g organ-pipes, her hair Wound with white roses, „ 98
The parrot in his g wires. Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 16
A g dragon, also, for the babes. Enoch Arden 540
Dust are our frames ; and, g dust, our pride Aylmer's Field 1
Staring for ever from their g walls „ 833
steep-up spout whereon the g ball Danced like a
wisp : Princess, Pro. 63
Fly to her, and fall upon her g eaves, „ i-y 94
And slain with laughter roll'd the g Squire. „ « 22
let his coltish nature break At seasons thro' the g pale : In Mem. cxi 8
Sweet nature g by the gracious gleam Of letters, Ded. of Idylls 39
on such a palm As glitters g in thy Book of Hours. Gareth and L. 46
were birds Of sunny plume in g trellis- work; Marr. of Geraint 659
I will not fight my way with g arms, Geraint and E. 21
And call'd herself a g summer fly Merlin and V. 258
Set every g parapet shuddering ; Lancelot and E. 299
behind him crept Two dragons g,
the g parapets were crown'd With faces,
inflamed the knights At that dishonour done the
g spur,
G with broom or shatter'd into spires,
and the g snake Had nestled in this bosom-throne of
Love,
A veil, that seemed no more than g air,
I have broke their cage, no g one, I trow —
and once we only saw Your g vane.
Gilded (verb) Would that have g me?
Gilden-peakt pavilions rear'd Above the bushes, g-p :
Gildest star that g yet this phantom shore ;
Gilding Flattery g the rift in a throne ;
Gileadite The daughter of the warrior G,
Gillyflowers a rosy sea of g About it ;
Gilt {See also Foot-gilt) as a parrot turns Up thro' g
wires a crafty loving eye,
dark old place will be g by the touch of a millionaire
his strong hands gript And dinted the g dragons right
Lancelot and E. 437
Pelleas and E. 165
Last Tournament 435
Lover's Tale i 400
„ i 623
iv 290
Sir J. Oldcastle 3
The Ring 331
Columbus 114
Pelleas and E. 429
To Virgil 26
Vastness 20
D. of F. Women 197
Aylmer's Field 159
Princess, Pro. 172
Maud I i 66
and left
And those g gauds men-children swarm to see
Gilt-head court-Galen poised his g-h cane,
Gin I'll tell tha. G.
Thou gits naw g fro' the bottle theer,
seeits stannin' theer, yon big black bottle o' g.
summat bewitch'd istead of a quart o' g ;
Fur I couldn't 'owd 'ands off g.
An' 'e points to the bottle o' g,
Gineration (generation) But a frish g had riz,
Gipsy Or the frock and g bonnet
Gird minds did g their orbs with beams,
Uncared for, g the windy grove.
Far liefer had I gi his harness on him,
many a mystic symbol, g the hall :
Girded See Man-girded
Girdle {See also Vapour-girdle) And I would be the g
twist his g tight, and pat The girls
She moving, at her g clash The golden keys
Girdled g with the gleaming world :
and g her with music.
the rebels that g us round —
Girl (See also Baby-girl, Gell, Market-girl, Orphan-girl)
Gazed on the Persian g alone.
And the red cloaks of market g's,
the g's all kiss'd Beneath the sacred bush
like a g Valuing the giddy pleasure of the eyes.
' My g, I love you well ;
' Go \—G, get you in ! ' She went —
and pat The g's upon the cheek.
This g, for whom your heart is sick,
either fixt his heart On that one g;
the g Seem'd kinder unto Philip than to him ;
I'll be back, my g, before you know it.'
as the village g. Who sets her pitcher
' Annie, my g, cheer up, be comforted,
let me put the boy and g to school :
Philip put the boy and g to school.
And o'er her second father stoopt a g,
the g So like her mother, and the boy, my son.'
Where once with Leolin at her side the g,
would it be more gracious ' asked the g
The g might be entangled ere she knew.
g and boy, Sir, know their differences ! '
twenty boys and o's should marry on it,
foimd the g And flung her down upon a couch of fire,
Bom of a village g, carpenter's son.
But g's, Hetairai, curious in their art,
a group of g's In circle waited,
like as many g's — Sick for the hollies
lengths of yellow ringlet, like a g,
G's, Knowledge is now no more a fountain
G's ? — more like men ! '
Men ! g's, like men ! why, if they had been men
Last Tournament 182
To W. C. Macready 11
Princess i 19
North. Cobbler 7
10
70
82
84
90
Tomorrow 75
Mavd I XX 19
The Poet 29
In Mem. ci 13
Marr. of Geraint 93
Holy Grail 233
Miner's D. 175
Talking Oak 43
To Marq. of Dufferin 3
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 113
Princess vii 327
Def. of Lucknow 22
Arabian Nights 134
L.ofShaloUan
The Epic 2
M. d' Arthur 127
Dora 42
Edwin Morris 125
Talking Oak 44
71
Enoch Arden 40
41
193
„ 206
218
312
331
747
790
Aylmer's Field 184
241
272
274
371
573
668
Lucretius 52
Princess, Pro. 68
186
i3
a 89
Hi 43
49
R
Girl
258
Give
Girl (continued) To nurse a blind ideal like a g, Methinks
he seems no better than a ^ ; As g's were once,
as we ourself have been : Princess Hi 217
But children die ; and let me tell you, g, „ 253
G after g was call'd to trial : „ iv 228
like enough, O g's, To unfurl the maiden banner „ 502
and they will beat mj g Remembering her mother : „ ti 88
you spent a stormy tmie With our strange g : „ 122
' Tut, you know them not, the g's. „ 151
Let our g's flit. Till the storm die ! „ vi 337
ill coimsel had mislead the g To vex true hearts : yet
was she but a g — „ vii 241
' So fret not, like an idle g, In Mem. Hi 13
Like some poor g whose heart is set „ Ix 3
I play'd with the g when a child ; Mavd / i 68
' Well if it prove a g, the boy (repeat) „ vii 7, 15
And soften as if to a ^, „ xlQ
save from some slight shame one simple g. „ xviii 45
Queen rose of the rosebud garden of y'5, „ xxii 53
Shame never made g redder than Gareth joy. Gareih and L. 536
three fair g's In gilt and rosy raiment came : „ 926
massacring Man, woman, lad and g — „ 1341
Half disarray'd as to her rest, the g ; Mart, of Geraint 516
And all in charge of whom ? a, g: Geraint and E. 125
ye shall share my earldom with me, g, „ 626
' G, for I see ye scorn my courtesies, „ 671
Sir Lancelot worshipt no unmarried g Merlin and V. 12
beyond All hopes of gaining, than as maiden g. „ 24
came the village g's And linger'd talking, Pdleas and E. 508
like a g Valuing the giddy pleasure of the eyes. Pass, of Arthur 295
thronging fancies come To boys and g's Lover's Tale i 555
but Lionel and the g Were wedded, „ iv 13
Passionate g tho' I was, First Quarrd 15
There was a ^, a hussy, that workt „ 24
the g was the most to blame. „ 26
It's the little g with her arms lying out In the Child. Hosp. 58
And so, when I bore him a g, The Wreck 33
he the knight for an amorous g's romance ! „ 44
The g's of equal age, but one was fair, The Ring 160
you my g Rode on my shoulder home — „ 321
I believing that the g's Lean fancy, ,, 335
lover's fairy dream. His g of g's ; To Mary Boyle 44
Girl-graduates sweet g-g in their golden hair. Princess, Pro. 142
Girli^ Is g talk at best ; Epilogs 43
Girt Among the thorns that g Thy brow, Supp. Confessions 6
g round With blackness as a solid wall. Palace of Art 273
The land, where g with friends or foes You ask me, why, etc. 7
Tho' sitting g with doubtful light. Love thou thy land 16
g the region with high cliff and lawn : Vision of Sin 47
Enoch's golden ring had g Her finger, Enoch Arden 157
g With song and flame and fragrance, Lucretius 133
G by half the tribes of Britain, Boadicea 5
the King Came g with knights : Lancelot and E. 1261
Far off from out an island g by foes, Achilles over the T. 8
Girth Alas, I was so broad of g, Talking Oak 139
and grown a bulk Of spanless g, Princess vi 36
strait g of Time Inswathe the fulness of Eternity, Lover's Tale i 482
No stone is fitted in yon marble g Tiresias 135
Would my granite g were strong Helen's Tower 7
Git (get) G ma my aale, (repeat) iV. Farmer, 0. S. 4, 68
nobbut a curate, an' weant niver g hissen clear, „ N. S. 27
Squire were at Charlie agean to g 'im to cut off
'is taail. Village Wife 74
or she weant g a maiite onyhow ! „ 104
Robby, g down wi'tha, wilt tha ? Spinster's S's. 67
Steevie g down. „ 92
An' I says ' G awaay, ya beast,' Owd Rod 62
G oop, if ya're onywaays good for owt.' „ 77
when I g's to the top, „ 83
Too laate, tha mun g tha to bed, „ 117
an' thou'll g along, niver fear. Church-warden, etc. 7
I ^s the plaate fuller o' Soondays „ 40
jf iver tha means to g 'igher, „ 45
if tha wants to g forrards a bit, „ 49
OitUn' (getting) Fur work mun *a gone to the g N. Farmer, N. S. 50
Gittin' (getting) (continued) alius afear'd of a man's g'
ower fond. Spinster's S's. 27
How be the farm ^ on ? noaways. G on i' deeiid ! Church-warden, etc. 3
Giv (gave) I niver g^ it a thowtn— N. Farmer, N. S. 23
Give (See also Gev, Gie) Could g the warrior kings
of old. To the Queen 4
'Mother, g me grace To help me of my weary
load.' Mariana in the S. 29
fill my glass : g me one kiss : Miller's D. 17
0 would she g me vow for vow, „ 119
' O Paris, G it to Pallas ! ' (Enone 170
G us long rest or death, dark death, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 53
Failing to g the bitter of the sweet, D. of F. Women 286
God g's us love. Something to love He lends us ; To J. S. 13
What should one g to light on such a dream ? ' Edwin Morris 58
'G? G all thou art,' he answer'd, „ 59
like the daughters of the horseleech, ' G, Golden Year 12
1 ask'd thee, ' G me immortality.' Tithonus 15
wealthy men who care not how they g. „ 17
in the rights that name may g, Day-Dm., L'Envoi 54
a lily-white doe To 3 his cousin. Lady Clare. Lady Clare 4
' Yet g one kiss to your mother dear ! „ 49
Little can I g my wife. L. of Burleigh 14
And g his child a better bringing-up Enoch Arden 87
To g his babes a better bringing-up „ 299
— a month — G her a month — „ 462
aid me, g me strength Not to tell her, „ 785
Take, g her this, for it may comfort her : ,, 899
' A gracious gift to ^ a lady, this ! ' Aylmer's Field 240
' Were I to gf this gift of his to one „ 242
G me my fling, and let me say my say.' „ 399
G me your prayers, for he is past „ 751
or a song To gf us breathing-space.' Princess, Pro. 242
And here I g the story and the songs. „ 247
I can g you letters to her ; „ . i 159
' We g you welcome : not without redound „ ii 42
I g thee to death My brother ! „ 307
g three gallant gentlemen to death.' „ 335
we g you, being strange, A license : „ Hi 204
If we could g them surer, quicker proof — „ 282
g's the manners of your countrywomen ? ' „ iv 151
g him your hand : Cleave to your contract : „ 408
And g's the battle to his hands : „ 580
G us, then, your mind at large : „ v 123
G's her harsh groom for bridal-gift a scourge ; „ 378
It is not yours, but mine : g me the child.' „ vi 141
g her the child ! (repeat) ,, 168, 179, 183
Gmeit: / will ^ it her.' „ 187
what answer should Ig? „ vii 6
let her make herself her own To g or keep, ,, 273
of which I g you all The random scheme „ Con. 1
men required that I should g throughout „ 10
And yet to g the story as it rose, „ 26
G it time To learn its limbs : „ 78
these great Sirs G up their parks some dozen times
a year „ 103
he kept us free ; 0 g him welcome. Ode on Well. 92
a weant niver g it to Joanes, N. Farmer, 0. S. 59
Who g the Fiend himself his due. To F. D. Maurice 6
one lay-hearth would g you welcome „ 11
' We g you his life.' The Victim 16
Take you his dearest, G us a life.' „ 28
We g them the boy ' „ 40
' O, Father Odin, We g you a life. „ 75
Gods have answer'd ; We g them the wife ! ' „ 79
G her the glory of going on. Wages 5
G her the wages of going on, „ 10
To Sleep I g my powers away ; In Mem. iv 1
No joy the blowing season g's, „ xxxviii 5
the hoarding sense G"« out at times „ xlivl
And dare we to this fancy g, „ UH 5
Hath power to g thee as thou wert ? „ Ixxv 8
meets the year, and g's and takes „ cxvi 3
Some bitter notes my harp would g, „ cxxv 2
And I must g away the bride ; „ Con. 42
r
Give
259
Glad
Give {continued) To g him the grasp of fellowship ; Maud I xiii 16
sullen-seeming Death may g More life to Love „ xviii 46
squire will g A grand political dinner „ xx 24
A learned man Could gr it a clumsy name. „ // ii 10
G me thy daughter Guinevere to wife.' Com. of Arthur 139
G my one daughter saving to a king, „ 143
Fear not to g this King thine only child, „ 413
G me to right her wrong, and slay the man.' Gareih and L. 366
let my name Be hidd'n, and g me the first quest, „ 545
and so g's the quest to him — „ 864
ff him back the shield.' „ 1344
Take him to stall, and g him corn, Marr. of Geraint 371
Thou shalt g back their earldom to thy kin. „ 585
Albeit I g' no reason but my wish, „ 761
Then not to g you warning, that seems hard ; Geraint and E. 422
to g him warning, for he rode As if he heard not, „ 451
set his foot upon me, and g me life. „ 850
G's him the lie ! There is no being pure. Merlin and V. 51
But since I will not yield to g you power „ 373
But, father, g me leave, an if he wul, Lancelot and E. 219
if you love, it will be sweet to g' it ;
with mine own hand g his diamond to him,
yea, and you must g it —
G me good fortune, I will strike him dead,
g at last The price of half a realm,
Vl ye fail, G ye the slave mine order
G me three days to melt her fancy,
' I will flee hence and g myself to God ' —
G's birth to a brawling brook,
but you know that you must g me back :
you shall g me back when he returns.'
pronounced That my rich gift is wholly mine to g.
would venture to g him the nay ?
he ped me back wid the best he could g
Yer Honour 'ill y me a thrifle to dhrink
Coom g hoaver then, weant ye ?
G your gold to the Hospital,
' And if you g the ring to any maid,
and g place to the beauty that endures,
' Beat, little heart — I g you this and this '
For I g you this, and I g you this !
a charm no words could g ?
I whisper'd ' y it to me,' but he would not
and g His fealty to the halcyon hour !
G me a hand — and you — and you —
Or mine to g him meat,
Given Achieving calm, to whom was g
difference, reconcilement, pledges g,
I found him garrulously g,
then before thine answer g Departest,
to me is g Such hope, I know not fear ;
A man had g all other bliss.
Came, with a month's leave g them,
but g to starts and bursts Of revel ;
the king,' he said, ' Had g us letters,
with mutual pardon ask'd and g For stroke and song,
G back to life, to life indeed.
Is 9 in outline and no more.
the shock, so harshly g. Confused me
imto thee is ^ A life that bears immortal fruit
His who had g me life —
if she Had g her word to a thing so low ?
And g false death her hand.
For the prophecy g of old And then not understood,
' I have g him the first quest :
thou hast g me but a kitchen-knave.'
Canst thou not trust the limbs thy God hath g,
A creature wholly g to brawls and wine.
Woke and bethought her of her promise g
He would not leave her, till her promise g —
g her on the night Before her birthday,
' And gladly g again this happy morn.
(No reason g her) she could cast aside
Debating his command of silence g,
breaking his command of silence g,
760
773
1071
1163
Pdleas and E. 270
356
Last Tournament 624
Lover's Tale i 526
„ iv 100
112
350
The Wreck 17
Tomorrow 42
„ 98
Spinster's S's. 63
On Jub. Q. Victoria 33
The Ring 200
Happy 36
Romney's R. 1
100
Far — far — away 16
Bandit's Deatii 27
The Wanderer 11
15
Voice spake, etc. 8
Two Voices 209
Gardener's D. 257
Talking Oak 23
TiUionus 44
Sir Galahad 61
Sir G. and Q. G. 42
Sea Dreams 6
Princess i 54
„ 181
„ V 46
„ vii 345
In Mem. v 12
„ xvi 11
„ xl 17
Maud I iQ
„ xvi 27
„ xviii 68
„ IIv42
Gareih and L. 582
659
1388
Marr. of Geraint 441
602
605
„ 632
691
807
Geraint and E. 366
390
Given {continued) sunshine that hath g the man A
growth, Balin and Balan 181
but neither marry, nor are g In marriage. Merlin and V. 15
He hath j us a fair falcon which he train'd ; „ 96
no more thanks than might a goat have g „ 278
I fain had g them greater wits : „ 496
He promised more than ever king has g, „ 586
deem this prize of ours is rashly g : Lancelot and E. 541
' Sweet is true love tho' g in vain, ,, 1007
a space of land is ^ to the plow. Holy Grail 907
have the Heavens but g thee a fair face, Pdleas and E. 101
And thou hast g thy promise, and I know „ 245
And so, leave g, straight on thro' open door „ 382
I to your dead man have g my troth, „ 389
Not knowing they were lost as soon as g — Last Tournament 42
And if I do not there is penance g — Guinevere 187
For you have g me life and love again, Lover's Tale iv 110
I would have g my life To help his own Sir J. OldcasUe 62
G thee the keys of the great Ocean-sea ? Columbus 149
one thing g me, to love and to live for. The Wreck 35
Was to be gr you — such her dying wish — G on
the morning when you came of age The Ring 76
Miriam ! have you g your ring to her ? „ 260
for him who had g her the name. Charity 39
Giver Kender thanks to the G, (repeat) Ode on Well. 44, 47
value of all gifts Must vary as the g's. Lancelot and E. 1215
And were it only for the g's sake. Lover's Tale iv 364
Giving g light To read those laws ; Isabd 18
g safe pledge of fruits. Ode to Memory 18
record of the glance That graced the g — Gardener's D. 178
And part it, g half to him. In Mem. xxv 12
G you power upon me thro' this charm. Merlin and V. 514
In g so much beauty to the world. Lover's Tale i 212
And g light to others. „ 426
g him That which of all things is the dearest „ iv 347
of a hand g bread and wine, The Wreck 114
Glacier with tears By some cold morning g ; Princess vii 116
And the lilies like g's winded down, V. of Maddune 42
set me climbing icy capes And g's, To E. Fitzgerald 26
Glad {See also Maain-Glad) So full of summer
warmth, so g. Miller's D. 14
when his heart is ^ Of the full harvest, JDora 68
and we were g at heart. Audley Court 89
I'm g I walk'd. How fresh the meadows look Walk, to the Mail 1
I was g at first To think that in our often-
ransack'd world Sea Dreams 128
light is large, and lambs are g Lucretius 99
I am sad and g To see you, Florian. Princess ii 306
Be g, because his bones are laid by thine ! Ode on Well. 141
And g to find thyself so fair. In Mem. vi 27
And one is g ; her note Ls gay, „ . xxi 25
And g at heart from Maj^ to May : „ xxii 8
I read Of that g year which once had been, „ xcv 22
' Yea, my kind lord,' said the g youth, and went, Geraint and E. 241
Eat and be g, for I account you mine.' „ 647
' How should I be gr Henceforth in all the world „ 648
Kiss'd the white star upon his noble front, G also ; „ 758
Then were I ^ of you as guide and friend : Lancelot and E. 226
And g was I and clomb, but foimd at top Holy Grail 427
G that no phantom vext me more, „ 538
so g were spirits and men Before the coming Guinevere 269
' Were they so gr ? ill prophets were they all, „ 272
Sometimes a troop of damsels g, L. of Shalott ii 19
To-morrow 'ill be the happiest time of all the
g New-year ; (repeat) May Queen 2, 42
Of all the g New-year, mother, „ 3
For I would see the sun rise upon the g New-year. „ N. Y's. E. 2
Gareth was g. (repeat) Gareth and L. 497, 504
Lancelot, and all as ? to find thee whole, „ 1239
all g. Knightlike, to find his charger yet vmlamed, Balin and Balan 427
so g was he. Pdleas and E. 146
April promise, g new-year Of Being, Lover's Tale i 281
We gazed on it together In mute and g remembrance, „ ii 186
Let the maim'd in his heart rejoice At this g
Ceremonial, On Jub. Q. Victoria 37
Glad
260
Glare
Glad {continued) pierce the g and songful air,
g to seea tha sa 'arty an' well.
So g? no tear for hini, who left you wealth,
She comes, and Earth is 9 To roll her North
Gladden the Shepherd g's in his heart :
Come — let us g their sad eyes,
Gladden'd a rose that g earth and sky.
Gladder Put forth and feel a g clime.'
Demeter and P. 45
North. Cobbler 2
The Ring 188
Prog, of Spring 48
Spec, of Iliad 16
Last Tournament 222
Pelleas and E. 402
On a Mourner 15
Glade (See also Olive-glade) With breezes from our
oaken g's, Eleanore 10
winding g's high up like ways to Heaven, Enoch Arden 573
His wonted glebe, or lops the g's ; In Mem. ci 22
thro' many a grassy g And valley, Marr. of Geraint 236
with droopt brow down the long g's he rode; Balin and Balan 311
Then they reach'd a g, „ 460
drew me thro' the glimmering g's Sisters (E. and E.) 116
Gladed See Gloomy-gladed
Gladiator g's moving toward their fight, St. Telemachv^ 54
Gladiatorial and flung himself between The g swords, „ 62
Gladlier For sure no g does the stranded wreck Enoch Arden 828
Gladly How g, were I one of those, The Flight 63
Gladness a cloudy g lighten'd In the eyes of each. The Captain 31
I grew in g till I foimd My spirits in the golden age. To E. L. 11
Makes former g loom so great ? In Mem. xxiv 10
making vain pretence Of g, „ xxx 7
solemn g even crown'd The purple brows of Olivet. „ xxxi 11
Borne down by g so complete, „ xxxii 10
Neigh'd with all g as they came, Geraint and E. 755
Glaive See War-glaive
GlamOTlt he had g enow In his own blood, Gareth and L. 209
Gwydion made by g out of flowers, Marr. of Geraint 743
and the harmless g of the field ; Pass, of Arthur 52
Glance (s) (See also Half-glance) women smile with
saint-like g's Supp. Confessions 22
Roof not a, g so keen as thine : Clear-headed friend 7
Sudden g^s, sweet and strange, Madeline 5
O'erflows thy calmer g's, „ 33
Every turn and g of thine, Eleanore 52
shaping faitliful record of the g That graced Gardener's D. 177
cast back upon him A piteous g, and vanish'd. Aylmer's Field 284
a 9 I gave, No more ; Princess iv 180
one g he caught Thro' open doors of Ida „ v 342
striking with her g The mother, me, the child ; „ vi 152
And sidelong g's at my father's grief, „ vii 107
she fixt A showery g upon her aunt, ,, Con. 33
and rolling g's lioness-like, Boddicea 71
In g and smile, and clasp and kiss, In Mem. Ixxxiv 7
allured The g of Gareth dreaming on his liege. Gareth and L. 1316
Drew the vague g of Vivien, and her Squire ; Balin and Balan 464
That g of theirs, but for the street, Merlin and V. 105
a g will serve — the liars ! ,, 111
made him at one g More bondsman in his heart Pelleas and E. 238
the g That only seems half-loyal to command, — Last Tournament 117
a single g of them Will govern a whole life Lover's Tale i 75
But cast a parting g at me, you saw, „ iv 4
at a 9 And as it were, perforce, Tiresias 55
when he cast a contemptuous g The Wreck 25
aft€r one quick g upon the stars, Akbar's Dream 3
Glance (verb) Life shoots and g's thro' your veins, Rosalind 22
In crystal eddies g and poise. Miller's D. 52
rivulet in the flowery dale 'ill merrily g and play. May Queen 39
fall down and g From tone to tone, D. of F. Women 166
I slip, I slide, I gloom, I g. The Brook 174
And here he g's on an eye new-born, Lucretius 137
how the sun delights To g and shift about „ 189
made them g Like those three stars Princess v 259
And g about the approaching sails. In Mem. xiii 18
Let random influences g, „ xlix 2
And every eye but mine will g At Maud Maud I xx 36
Dared not to 9 at her good mother's face, Marr. of Geraint 766
sideways he let them g At Enid, Oeraint and E. 246
stare at open space, nor g The one at other, „ 268
wont to g and sparkle like a gem Of fifty facets ; „ 294
To g behind me at my former life, „ 863
speak Of the pure heart, nor seem to g at thee ? Guinevere 502
Glance (verb) (continued) Not daring yet to g' at Lionel. Lover's Tale iv 309
G at the wheeling Orb of change, To E. Fitzgerald 3
That g's from the bottom of the pool. The Ring 371
g the tits, and shriek the jays, Prog, of Spring 15
g's from the sun of our Islam. Akbar's Dream 79
Glanced And g athwart the glooming flats. Mariana 20
The damned arrow g aside, Oriana 41
garden-glasses g, and momently The twinkling laurel Gardener's D. 117
She g across the plain ; Talking Oak 166
We sat : the Lady g : Princess ii 111
G at the legendary Amazon As emblematic „ 126
G like a touch of sunshine on the rocks, „ Hi 357
I g aside, and saw the palace-front „ v 508
I struck out and shouted ; the blade g, „ 540
A light of healing, g about the couch, „ vii 59
mute she glided forth. Nor g behind her, „ 171
Whereat we g from theme to theme. In Mem. Ixxxix 33
shyly g Eyes of pure women, Gareth and i. 313
the hair All over g with dewdrop or with gem „ 929
G at the doors or gambol'd down the walks ; Marr. of Geraint 665
had g away From being knighted till he smote the
thrall, Balin and Balan 154
g aside, and paced The long white walk of lilies ,, 248
the King G first at him, then her, Lancelot and E. 95
But Lancelot, when they g at Guinevere, „ 270
maid G at, and cried, ' What news from Camelot, „ 620
yet he g not up, nor waved his hand, „ 986
g. and shot Only to holy things ; Holy Grail 75
And in he rode, and up I g, and saw „ 262
every moment g His sUver arms and gloom'd : „ 492
Then g askew at those three knights of hers, Pelleas and E. 134
G down upon her, tum'd and went her way. „ 185
G from the rosy forehead of the dawn. ,, 502
He g and saw the stately galleries. Last Tournament 145
bluebell, kingcup, poppy g About the revels, „ 234
g at him, thought him cold, High, Guinevere 405
pale King g across the field Of battle : Pass, of Arthur 126
the event G back upon them in his after life. Lover's Tale iv 24
G at the point of law, to pass it by, „ 276
to love and to live for, g at in scorn ! The Wreck 35
She g at me, at Muriel, and was mute. The Ring 264
In passing it g upon Hamlet or city, Merlin and the G. 103
no such light G from our Presence Akbar's Dream 113
a ray red as blood G on the strangled face — Bandit's Death 32
Glancing (See also Dawn-glancing) G with black-beaded eyes, Lilian 15
a thence, discuss'd the farm, AvMey Court 33
Philip g up Beheld the dead flame Enoch Arden 440
he saw The mother g often toward her babe, „ 754
The white-faced halls, the g rills. In Mem., Con. 113
Arthur g at him. Brought down a momentary brow. Gareth and L. 652
g like a dragon-fly In summer suit Marr. of Geraint 172
And g all at once as keenly at her ,, 773
and g round the waste she fear'd Geraint and E. 50
g for a minute, till he saw her Pass into it, „ 886
And g on the window, when the gloom Of twilight Balin and Balan 232
stood with folded hands and downward eyes Of g
comer, Merlin and V. 70
slander, o here and grazing there ; „ 173
g thro' the hoary boles, he saw, Pelleas and E. 50
And many a g plash and sallowy isle, Last Tournament 422
g up beheld the holy nuns All round her, Guinevere 666
I from the altar g back upon her, Sisters (E. and E.) 210
The days and hours are ever g by. Ancient Sage 99
g heavenward on a star so silver-fair, Locksley H., Sixty 191
g downward on the kindly sphere Poets and their B. 9
g from his height On earth a fruitless fallow, Demeter and P. 117
g from the one To the other. The Ring 164
Whose mantle, every shade of g green. Prog, of Spring 63
and g at Elf of the woodland, Merlin and the G. 37
Glare (s) steady g Shrank one sick willow Mariana in the S. 52
No sun, but a wannish g In fold upon fold Maud I vi2
in change of g and gloom Her eyes and neck Merlin and V. 959
and thro' a stormy g, a heat Holy Grail 842
Thro' the heat, the drowth, the dust, the g, Sisters (E. and E.) 6
Lured by the g and the blare, V. of Maeldune 73
Glare
261
Gleaned
I"
Glare (s) (continued) and aloft the g Ffies streaming, Achilles over the T. 11
to the y of a drearier day; Despair 28
in the g of deathless fire ! Faith 8
Glare (verb) G's at one that nods and winks Locksley Hall 136
when the crimson-roUing eye G's ruin, Princess iv 495
But the broad light g's and beats, Maud II iv 89
Would turn, and g at me, and point and jeer, Romney's R. 136
He g's askance at thee as one of those Who mix Akbar's Bream 173
lava-light G's from the lava-lake Kapiolani 14
Glared amazed They g upon the women, Princess vi 361
Under the half -dead sunset g ; Gareth and L. 800
G on a huge machicolated tower Last Tournament 424
That was their main test-question — g at me ! Sir J. Oldcastle 155
G on our way toward death, Despair 11
And gata. coming storm. Dead Prophet 24
the glazed eye G at me as in horror. The Ring 451
wrathful sunset g against a cross St. Telemachus 5
G on at the murder'd son, Bandit's Death 33
Glaring In g sand and inlets bright. Mariana in the S. 8
old lion, g with his whelpless eye. Princess vi 99
g, by his own stale devil spurr'd, Aylmer's Field 290
tlieir eyes G, and passionate looks. Sea Dreams 236
Glass (substEuice) (See also Garden-glass) fires your
narrow casement g, Miller's D. 243
The g blew in, the fire blew out. The Goose 49
echoing falk Of water, sheets of summer g. To E. L. 2
a fleet of g, That seem'd a fleet of jewels Sea Dreams 122
my poor venture but a fleet of g „ 138
Athwart a plane of molten g, In Mem. xv 11
— Others of jr as costly — Lover's Tale iv 198
and a clatter of hail on the g, In the Child. Hosp. 62
From skies of ^ A Jacob's ladder falls Early Spring 8
Glass (looking) looking as 'twere in a g, A Character 10
Gro, look in any g and say, Day-Dm., Moral 3
0 whisper to your g, and say, „ Ep. 3
having left the g, she turns Once more In Mem. vi 35
Dark in the ^ of some presageful mood, Merlin and V. 295
As from a ^ m the sun. Lover's Tale i 371
But whiniver I looked i' the g Spinster's S's. 20
Glass (drinking) fill my g : give me one kiss : Miller's D. 17
Make prisms in every carven g, Day-Dm., Sleep P. 35
1 sit, my empty g reversed. Will Water. 159
It is but yonder empty g That makes me maudlin-moral. „ 207
g with little Mai^aret's medicine in it ; Sea Dreams 142
Yours came but from the breaking of a g, „ 248
Cyril, with whom the bell-mouth'd g had wrought. Princess iv 155
crash'd the g and beat the floor ; In Mem. Ixxxvii 20
Arrange the board and brim the g ; „ cvii 16
hev ago' cowslip wine ! Village Wife 5
sa cowd ! — hev another gl „ 20
tha mun nobbut hev' one g of aale. Owd Rod 20
flass (spy) get you a seaman's g, Spy out Enoch Arden 215
Borrow'd a g, but all in vain : perhaps She could
not fix the g to suit her eye ; „ 240
Glass (verb) To g herself in dewy eyes Move eastward 7
Glass'd coming wave G in the sUppery sand Merlin and V. 293
Glasses (spectacles) Get me my g, Annie : Grandmother 106
wi' 'is g athurt 'is noase. Village Wife 38
Glassy With a g coimtenance Did she look to Camelot. L. of Shalott iv 13
In g bays among her tallest towers.' (Enone 119
On g water drove his cheek in lines ; Princess i 116
With a g smile his brutal scorn — Maud I vi 49
GIassy-head©a A little g-h hairless man. Merlin and V. 620
Glastonbury that low church he built at G. Balin and Balan 367
Joseph, journeying brought To G, Holy Grail 52
1 know That Joseph came of old to G, „ 60
Holy Cup, That Joseph brought of old to <? ? ' „ 735
Glazed the g eye Glared at me as in horror. The Ring 450
staring eye g o'er with sapless days, Love and Duty 16
think not they are g with wine. Locksley Hall 51
Neither modell'd, g, nor framed : Vision of Sin 188
A full sea g with muffled moonlight. Princess i 248
Gleam (s) g's of mellow light Float by you Margaret 30
Beyond the polar g forlorn. Two Voices 182
That touches me with mystic g's, „ 380
Gleam (s) (continued) Would love the g's of good
that broke
Dreary g's about the moorland flying over
Thou battenest by the greasy g
makes a hoary eyebrow for the g Beyond it,
In the green g of the dewy-tassell'd trees :
Making Him broken g's,
A doubtful g of solace lives,
or dives In yonder greening g,
nature gilded by the gracious g Of letters.
Or sallows in the windy g's of March:
strike it, and awake her with the g ;
Then flash'd a yellow g across the world,
and yellowing leaf And gloom and g,
G's of the water-circles as they broke.
Love thou thy land 89
Locksley Hall 4
Will Water. 221
The Brook 80
Princess i 94
High. Pantheism 10
In Mem. xxxviii 8
cxv 14
Ded. of Idylls ^Q
Merlin and V. 225
Lancelot and E. 6
Holy Grail 402
Last Tournament 155
Lover's Tale i 67
what g on those black ways Where Love could walk „ 812
that some broken g from our poor earth Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 18
The placid g of sunset after storm ! Ancient Sage 133
'Tho' some have g's or so they say „ 214
' And idle g's will come and go, „ 240
And idle g's to thee are light to me. „ 246
in the sidelong eyes a g ot all things ill — The Flight 31
sleeps the g of dying day. Locksley H., Sixty 42
Light the fading g of Even ? „ 229
the growing glimmer for the g withdrawn. „ 230
A g from yonder vale, Early Spring 33
still In motion to the distant g, Freedom 14
and a jr as of the moon. When first she peers Demeter and P. 13
in the ^ of a million of suns ? Vastness 4
in the g of those mid-summer dawns. The Ring 183
Look'd in upon me like a g and pass'd, „ 420
never caught one g of the beauty which endures — Happy 60
/ am Merlin Who follow The G. Merlin and the G. 10
The Master whisper'd ' Follow the G.' „ 34
music Of falling torrents, Flitted the G. „ 48
Of lowly labour, Slided The G— „ 61
Arthur the blameless Rested The G. „ 74
The G, that had waned to a wintry glimmer „ 83
But clothed with The G. „ 94
The G flying onward. Wed to the melody, „ 96
After it, follow it, Follow The G. „ 131
The cloud was rifted by a purer g Akbar's Dream 78
The g of household sunshine ends, The Wanderer 1
comes a gr of what is higher. Faith 6
Gleam (verb) Saw distant gates of Eden g, Two Voices 212
wherethro' G's that untravell'd world, Ulysses 20
G thro' the Gothic archway in the wall. Godiva 64
Fair g's the snowy altar-cloth. Sir Galahad 33
wisp that g's On Lethe in the eyes of Death. In Mem. xcviii 7
and when he saw the star G, on Sir Gareth's Gareth and L. 1219
this bare dome had not begun to g To Mary Boyle 41
Gleam'd G to the flying moon by fits. Miller's D. 116
now she g Like Fancy made of golden air, The Voyage 65
We parted : sweetly g the stars. The Letters 41
(A bill of sale g thro' the drizzle) Enoch Arden 688
that dawning g a kindlier hope On Enoch „ 833
dying, g on rocks Roof -pendent, sharp ; Balin and Balan 314
Sweetly g her eyes behind her tears Merlin and V. 402
There g a vague suspicion in his eyes : Lancelot and E. 127
G for a moment in her own on earth. The Ring 297
Gleaming A g shape she floated by, L. of Shalott iv 39
A g crag with belts of pines. Two Voices 189
A glowing arm, a g neck, _ Miller's D. 78
fruit, whose g rind ingrav'n ' For the most fair,' (Enone 72
They saw the g river seaward flow Lotos-Eaters 14
walls Of shadowy granite, in a g- pass ; „ C. S. 4
girdled with the g world : „ 113
Far-folded mists, and g halls of morn. Tithonus 10
Set in a g' river's crescent-curve. Princess i 171
Here half -hid in the g wood, Maud I vi 69
the stars went down across the g pane. The Flight 13
came On three gray heads beneath a g rift. Demeter and P. 83
Glean And g your scatter'd sapience.' Princess ii 259
not now to g, Not now — I hope to do it — Sir J. Oldcastle 11
Gleaned (adj.) Showering thy jr wealth into my open breast Ode to Memory 23
Gleaned
Glean'd (verb) long ago they had g and gamer'd
Gleaner Homestead and harvest, Reaper and g
Glebe Flood with full daylight g and towTi ? '
Sons of the g, with other frowns
those horn-handed breakers of the g,
the labourer tills His wonted g,
That grind the g to powder !
sweet As that which gilds the g of England
l^t the naked g Should yawn once more
262
Lover's Tale i 128
Merlin and the G. 58
Two Voices 87
Aylmer's Field 723
Princess it 159
In Mem. ci 22
Tiresias 95
To Prof. Jebb. 7
Bemeter and P. 42
Glee (joy) Love lighted down between them full of g, Bridesmaid 6
tyrant's cruel g Forces on the freer hour. Vision of Sin 129
Glee (part-music) The merry g's are still ; All Things will Die 23
Again the feast, the speech, the g, in Mem., Con. 101
Glem Rang by the white mouth of the violent G ; Lancelot and E. 288
Glen (/Seeo/soGlin) And runlets babbling down the gt. Mariana in the S.U
The swimming vapom slopes athwart the g, (Enone 3
between the piney sides Of this long g. 94
Among the fragments tumbled from the g's, '' 222
from the darken g, ' Saw God divide the night D. ofF. Women 224
That watch me from the g below. Move eastward 8
And snared the squirrel of the g ? Princess ii 249
let us hear the purple gr's replying : „ {.^ n
all the g's are diown'd in azure gloom ," 525
FoUow'd up in valley and g Ode on Well. 114
Had found a g, gray boulder and black tarn. Lancelot and E. 36
they fell and made the g abhorr'd : „ 42
Downward thunder in hollow and g, To Master of B. 16
Glide would she g between your wraths, Aylmer's Field 706
g a sunbeam by the blasted Pine, Princess vii 196
broad water sweetly slowly g's. Eequiescat 2
g. Like a beam of the seventh Heaven, Maud I xiv 20
Thy shadow still would g from room to room, Guinevere 504
The sisters g about me hand in hand, Sisters {E. and E.) 275
and the shadowy warrior g Along Bemeter atid P. 152
Glided g thro' all change Of liveliest utterance. B. of F. Women 167
but mute she g forth. Nor glanced behind Princess vii 170
Above thee g the star. Voice and the P. 8
We g winding under ranks Of iris. In Mem. ciii 23
Then g out of the joyous wood Maud II i 31
she g out Among the heavy breathings Geraint and E. 401
Then rose Elaine and g thro' the fields, Lancelot and E. 843
the Sweet Grail G and past, and close upon it Holy Grail 695
sad eyes fixt on the lost sea-home, as we jr away, The Wreck 126
Then g a vulturous Beldam forth. Bead Prophet 25
he sprang. And g lightly down the stairs, St. Telem^chus 59
Glidest How siu-ely g thou from March to May, Prog, of Spring 109
Gliding G with equal crowns two serpents led Alexander 6
past In either twilight ghost-like to and fro G, Lancelot and E. 850
Over a wilderness G, Merlin and the G. 37
g thro the branches over-bower'd Beath of (Enone 6
The woman, g toward the pyre, To Master of B. 18
Glinimer (s) I knew The tearful g of the languid dawn B. of F. Women 74
Across a hazy g of the west. Gardener's B. 219
the old mysterious g steals From thy pure brows, Tithonus 34
Walk'd in a wintry wind by a ghastly g, Maud I Hi 13
In gloss of satm and g of pearls, „ xxH 55
in the light's last g Tristram show'd And swung Last Tournament 739
I have had some g, at times, Bespair 103
Awake ! the creeping g steals, The Flight 4
light the g of the dawn ? Locksley H., Sixty 229
eyes may take the growing g „ 230
Might find a flickering g of relief To Mary Boyle 47
Gleam, that had waned to a wintry g On icy fallow Merlin and the G. 83
_ And slowly brightening Out of the g, „ 89
Glimmer (verb) ' A third would g on her neck Talking Oak 221
My college friendships g. will Water. 40
G in thy rheumy eyes. Vision of Sin 154
And Uke a ghost she g's on to me. Princess vii 181
G away to the lonely deep. To F. B. Maurice 28
eMly light Shall g on the dewy decks. In Mem. ix 12
Thy tablet g's to the dawn, ixvii 16
on the landward side, by a red rock, g's the HaU ; Maud I iv 10
Days that will g, I fear. The Wreck 79
She se^ the Best that g's thro' the Worst, Ancient Sage 72
light That g's on the marsh and on the grave.' The Bing 341
Glimmer'd Old faces g thro' the doors.
And April's crescent g cold.
Her taper g in the lake below :
white kine g, and the trees Laid their dark
arms (repeat)
And g on his armour in the room.
In Arthur's casement g chastely down,
and thro' the gap O the streaming scud:
And God Hath more than g on me.
Glimmer-gowk (owl) sit hke a great g-g
Glitter'd
Mariana 66
Miller's D. 107
Edwin Morris 135
In Mem. xcv 15, 51
Geraint and E. 386
Merlin and V. 740
Holy Grail 682
Columbus 144
Village Wife 38
Glimmering (adj. and part.) (See also Green^limmering)
the g water outfloweth : Leonine Eleg. 9
Vast images in ^ dawn. Two Voices 305
Who paced for ever in a ^ land, Palace of Art 67
Ranges of g vaults with iron grates, B. of F. Women 35
cold my wrinkled feet Upon thy g thresholds, Tithonus 68
When all the g moorland rings Sir L. and Q. G. 35
And on the g limit far withdrawn Vision of Sin 223
Naiads oar'd A g shoulder imder gloom To E. L. 17
Who feels a g strangeness in his dream. The Brook 216
half in doze I seem'd To float about a g night. Princess i 247
The casement slowly grows a g square „ iv 52
By g lanes and walls of canvas led „ ■« 6
Disrobed the g statue of Sir Ralph From those rich silks, "„ Con. 117
Came g thro' the laurels At the quiet evenfall, Maud II iv 77
and made his feet Wings thro' a g gallery, Balin and Balan 404
to Almesbury Fled all night long by g waste and weald, Guinevere 128
peal Of laughter drew me thro' the g glades Sisters (E. and E.) 116
G up the heights beyond me, Silent Voices 9
Glimmering (s) greenish g's thro' the lancets,— Aylmer's Field 622
There was a ^ of God's hand. Columbus 142
Glimpse (s) Like g's of forgotten dreams — Two Voices 381
shout For some blind g of freedom I^ve and Buty 6
A c? of that dark world where I was bom. Tithonus 33
Yet g's of the true. Will Water. 60
The shimmering g's of a stream ; Princess Con. 46
And never a gr of her window pane ! Window, No Answer 3
Last year, I caught a 5; of his face, Maud I xHi 27
He never had a 9 of mine untruth, Lancelot and E. 125
Possible — at first g, and for a face Gone in a
moment— Sisters [E. and E.) 93
Death at the g oi a, finger Bef. of Lucknow 23
For larger g's of that more than man Tiresias 21
Green Sussex fading into blue With one gray g
of sea ; Pro. to Gen. Hamley 8
agolB. height that is higher. By an Evolution. 20
Glimpse (verb) lift the hidden ore That g's, B. of F. Women 275
Past, Future g and fade Thro' some slight spell, Early Spring 31
Glimpsed the herd was driven. Fire g ; Com. of Arthur 433
Glimpsing And g over these, just seen, Bay-Bm., Sleep. P. 47
Glin (glen) sthrames runnin' down at the back 0' the g Tomorrow 24
Glisten (s) oft we saw the g Of ice. The Daisy 35
Glisten (verb) 0 listen, listen, your eyes shall g (repeat) Sea- Fairies 35, 37
gracious dews Began to g and to fall : Princess ii 317
Glisten'd the torrent ever pour'd And g — To E. L. 14
their feet In dewy grasses g ; Gareth and L. 928
His eyes g : she fancied ' Is it for me ? ' Lancelot and E. 822
Glistenmg drove The fragrant, g deeps, Arabian Nights 14
fall d With the blue valley and the g brooks, Lover's Tale i 331
buds Were g to the breezy blue ; Miller's B. 61
Glitter flash and g Like sunshine on a dancing rill, Rosalind 28
G like a swarm of fire-flies Locksley Hall 10
His mantle g's on the rocks— Bay-Bm., Arrival 6
Began to g firefly-like in copse Princess i 208
That g burnish'd by the frosty dark ; „ ^ 261
on such a pahn As g's gilded in thy Book of Hours. Gareth' and L. 46
I saw the moonUght g on their tears — Lover's Tale i 697
Glittw'd The genimy bridle 9 free, L. of Shalott Hi 10
Large Hesper g on her tears, Mariana in the S. 90
The long hall g like a bed of flowers. Princess ii 439
the citv g, Thro' cypress avenues. The Baisy 47
But when it g o'er the saddle-bow, Gareth and L. 1119
where it g on her pail. The milkmaid left Holy Grail 405
So dame and damsel a at the feast Last Tournament 225
brooks g on m the light without sound, v. of Maeldune 13
Glitter'd
263
Glorious
Glitter'd (continued) g o'er us a sunbright hand,
Glittering (adj. and part.) Gold g thro' lamplight
dini,
V. of Maldune 84
Arabian Nights 18
Come, blessed brother, come. I know thy g face. St. S. Stylites 205
Draw me, thy bride, a g star, St. Agnes'' Eve 23
' Fresh as the first beam g on a. sail, Princess iv 44
goes, like g bergs of ice, „ 71
fresh young captains flash'd their g teeth, „ v 20
The g axe was broken in their arms, „ vi 51
shone Thro' g drops on her sad friend. „ 283
as the white and g star of mom Parts from a
bank of snow, Marr. of Geraint 734
Queen who stood All g like May sunshine Merlin and V. 88
Her eyes and neck g went and came ; „ 960
Fled like a g rivulet to the tarn : Lancelot and E. 52
Whom g in enamell'd arms the maid „ 619
yet one g foot disturb'd The lucid well ; Tiresias 41
The g Capitol ; Freedom 4
Glittering (s) Blown into g by the popular breath, Romney's R. 49
Globe circles of the g's Of her keen eyes The Poet 43
Thro' the shadow of the g we sweep Locksley Hall 183
As thro' the slimiber of the g The Voyage 23
Thy spirit should fail from off the g ; In Mem. Ixxxiv 36
flower, That blows a ^ of after arrowlets, Gareth and L. 1029
We should see the G we groan in, Locksley H., Sixty 188
I would the g from end to end Epilogue 12
Since our Queen assimied the g, the sceptre. On Jub. Q. Victoria 3
Many a hearth upon our dark g Vastness 1
G again, and make Honey Moon. The Ring 15
eyes have known this g of ours. To Ulysses 2
hurl'd so high they ranged about the g ? St. Telemachus 2
Globed stars that g themselves in Heaven, Enoch Arden 597
Globing G Honey Moons Bright as this. The Ring 7
Glode G over earth till the glorious creature Batt. of Brunanburh 29
Gloom (s) {See also tSty-gloom, Thunder-gloom) Fling-
ing the g of yesternight On the white day ; Ode to Memory 9
That over-vaulted grateful g, Palace of Art 54
Floods all the deep-blue g with beams D. of F. Women 186
A motion toiling in the g — Love thou thy land 54
Reading her perfect features in the g. Gardener's D. 175
Thy cheek begins to redden thro' the g, Tithonus 37
The g of ten Decembers. Will Water. 104
glimmering shoulder imder g Of cavern pillars ; To E. L. 17
lying thus inactive, doubt and g. Enoch Arden 113
Thicker the drizzle grew, deeper the g ; „ 679
find a deeper in the narrow g By wife and child ; Aylmer's Field 840
from utter g stood out the breasts, Lucretius 60
Dropt thro' the ambrosial g Princess iv 24
Out I sprang from glow to g' : „ 178
moving thro' the imcertain g, „ 216
all the glens are drown'd in azure g „ 525
The height, the space, the g, The Daisy 59
The g that saddens Heaven and Earth, „ 102
and a stifled splendour and g. High. Pantheism 10
To touch thy thousand ^ears ot g: In Mem. ii 12
Thy g h kindled at the tips, „ xxxix 11
And passes into g again. „ 12
Thro' all its intervital g In some long trance „ xliii 3
When on the g I strive to paint The face „ Ixx 2
Recalls, in change of light or g, „ Ixxxv 74
roUest from the gorgeous g Of evening „ Ixxxvi 2
And suck'd from out the distant g „ xcv 53
But touch'd with no ascetic g ; „ cix 10
But iron dug from central g, „ cxviii 21
And yeam'd to burst the folded g, „ cxxii 3
With tender g the roof, the wall ; „ Con. 118
cold face, star-sweet on a g profound ; Maud I Hi 4
And laying his trams in a poison'd g „ x 8
Set in the heart of the carven g, „ xiv 11
in the fragrant g Of foreign churches — „ xix 53
Commingled with the g of imminent war. Bed. of Idylls 13
Before a ^ of stubborn-shafted oaks, Geraint and E. 120
thro' the green g of the wood they past, „ 195
So bush'd about it is with g, Balin and Balan 95
the g Of twilight deepens round it, „ 232
Balin and Balan 286
434
Merlin and V. 320
939
959
Lancelot and E. 1002
Holy Grail 370
Pelleas and E. 104
548
Last Tournam,ent 155
756
Lover
De Prof
s Tale i 2
505
744
iv 16
Gloom (s) {continued) and in him g ong Deepen'd :
there in g cast himself all along. Moaning
she will call That three-days-long presageful g
The tree that shone white-listed thro' the g.
in change of glare and g Her eyes and neck
the sallow-rifted g's Of evening.
Came like a driving g across my mind,
coming out of g Was dazzled by the sudden light,
the g, That follows on the turning of the world,
and yellowing leaf And g and gleam,
AU in a death-dumb autumn-dripping g,
Filling with purple g the vacancies
that shock of g had fall'n Unfelt,
In battle with the g's of my dark will,
But these, their g, the mountains and the Bay,
Drown'd in the g and horror of the vault,
kept it thro' a hundred years of g,
nine long months of antenatal g,
1 closed my heart to the g ;
the Godless g Of a life without sun,
last long stripe of waning crimson g,
lost within a growing g ;
lifts her buried life from g to bloom,
g of the evening. Life at a close ;
but a murmur of gnats in the g,
in the night, While the g is growing.'
Or does the g of Age And suffering
the bracken amid the g of the heather,
front of that ravine Which drowsed in g,
the momentary g, Made by the noonday blaze
Gloom (verb) There g the dark broad seas.
I slip, I slide, I g, I glance,
That g's his valley, sighs to see the peak
Gloom'd Would that my g fancy were As thine,
G the low coast and quivering brine
A black yew g the stagnant air,
twilight g ; and broader-grown the bowers
mood as that, which lately g Your fancy
every moment glanced His silver arms and g :
never g by the curse Of a sin,
this Earth, a stage so g with woe
Gloomier those g which forego The darkness
Gloomiest I have had some glimmer, at times, in my g woe.
Glooming {See also Dewy-glooming, Green-glooming, Light-
glooming) And glanced athwart the g flats. Mariana 20
Or while the balmy g, crescent-lit. Gardener's D. 263
we sank From rock to rock upon the g quay, Audley Court 84
Or cool'd within the g wave ; In Mem. Ixxxix 45
Sunder the g crimson on the maige, Gareth and L. 1365
among the g alleys Progress halts on palsied feet, Locksley H., Sixty 219
Gloomy To anchor by one g thought ; Two Voices 459
wind made work In which the g brewer's soul Talking Oak 55
Sailing along before a g cloud Sea Dreams 124
in and out the g skirts Of Celidon the forest ; Lancelot and E. 291
rolling far along the g shores The voice of days Pass, of Arthur 134
Gloomy-gladed tops of many thousand pines A g-g
hollow slowly sink Gareth and L. 797
Gloried I g' in my knave. Who being still rebuked, „ 1248
Glorify fountains of the past. To g the present ; Ode to Memory 3
Glori^ring sparkles on a sty, G clown and satyr ; Princess v 187
Glorious But in a city g — Deserted House 19
A g child, dreaming alone, Elednore 27
' Whose eyes are dim with g tears, Two Voices 151
A g Devil, large in heart and brain, To With Pal. of Art 5
When I am gather'd to the g saints. St. S. Styhtes 197
So g in his beauty and thy choice, Tithonus 12
vacant of our g gains, Locksley Hall 175
So sang the gallant g chronicle ; Princess, Pro. 49
and albeit their g names Were fewer, „ ii 155
who rapt in g dreams, „ 442
facets of the g mountain flash Above the valleys The Islet 22
the leader in these g wars Now to g burial slowly
borne, Ode on Well. 192
who gaze with temperate eyes On g insufficiences, In Mem. cxii 3
To fool the crowd with g lies, „ cxxviii 14
195
Two G. 8
The Wreck 38
Despair 6
Ancient Sage 221
Locksley H., Sixty 73
Demeter and P. 98
Vastness 15
35
Forlorn 12
Romney's R. 64
June Backen, etc. 9
Death of CEnone 76
St. Telemachus 49
Ulysses 45
The Brook 174
Balin and Balan 165
Supp. Confessions 68
The Voyage 42
The Letters 2
Princess vii 48
Merlin and V. 325
Holy GraU 493
The Wreck 139
The Play 1
To the Qy4en ii 64
Despair 103
Glorious
264
Gloss
Glorious (continued) like a g ghost, to glide, Like a beam Maud I xiv 20
starry Gemini hang like g crowns „ /// m 7
That g roundel echoing in our ears, Merlin and V. 426
— you know Of Arthur's g wars.' Lancelot and E. 285
where the g King Had on his cuirass worn our
Lady's Head, „ 293
that night the bard Sang Arthur's g wars, Guinevere 286
A g company, the flower of men, „ 464
There came a g morning, such a one As dawns Lover's Tale i 299
G poet who never hast written a line. To A. Tennyson 5
Havelock's g Highlanders answer with conquering
cheers, I>e/. o/ Lueknow 99
till the g creature Sank to his setting. Batt. of Brunanhurh 29
around his head The g goddess wreath'd a golden
cloud, Achilles over the T. 5
Whose echo shall not tongue thy g doom, Tiresias 136
Thy g eyes were dimm'd with pain , Freedom 10
And all her g empire, round and round. Hands all Round 24
Sharers of our g past, Open. I. and C. Exhib. 31
' Hail to the g Golden year of her Jubilee ! ' On Juh. Q. Victoria 64
g annals of army and fleet, Vastness 7
Glory (s) In marvel whence that g came Arabian Nights 94
God's g smote him on the face.' Two Voices 225
' G to God,' she sang, and past afar, B. of F. Women 242
And the long glories of the winter moon. M. d' Arthur 192
As down dark tides the g slides. Sir Galahad 47
But o'er the dark a g spreads, „ 55
things as they are. But thro' a kind of g. Will Water. 72
Yet he hoped to purchase g, The Captain 17
We lov'd the glories of the world. The Voyage 83
And drops at G's temple-gates. You might have won 34
glows And glories of the broad belt of the world, Enoch Arden 579
between the less And greater g varying Aylmer's Field 73
Thy g fly along the Italian field, Lnwretius 71
redound Of use and g to yourselves Princess ii 43
And the wild cataract leaps in g. „ iv 4
Like a Saint's g up in heaven : „ v 514
The path of duty was the way to g : (repeat) Ode on Well. 202, 210
The path of duty be the way to g: „ 224
When can their g fade ? Light Brigade 50
The height, the space, the gloom, the g ! The Daisy 59
G of warrior, g of orator, g of song. Wages 1
G of virtue, to fight, to struggle, to right the wrong — Nay,
but she aim'd not at g, no lover of g she ; Give her the
g of going on, and still to be. „ 3
G about thee, without thee ; High. Pantheism 9
Thine the liberty, thine the g, Boddicea 41
win A g from its being far ; In Mem. xxiv 14
There comes a ^ on the walls : „ Ixvii 4
The mystic g swims away ; „ 9
He reach'd the ^ of a hand, „ Ixix 17
g of the sum of things Will flash along „ Ixxxviii 11
crown'd with attributes of woe Like glories, „ cxviii 19
dim And dimmer, and a g done : „ cxxi 4
The man of science himself is fonder of g, Maud I iv 37
A g\ shall not find. „ v 22
every eye but mine will glance At Maud in all her g, „ xx 37
your true lover may see Your g also, „ 48
g of manhood stand on his ancient height, „ /// vi 21
Whose g was, redressing himian wrong; Ded. of Idylls 9
eagle-circles up To the great Sun of G, Gareth and L. 22
her son Beheld his only way to g „ 159
And g gain'd, and evermore to gain. „ 332
Gareth all for g underwent The sooty yoke „ 478
trusts to overthrow. Then wed, with g : „ 620
tUt for lady's love and g here, „ 740
here is g enow In having flung the three : „ 1325
Forgetful of his g and his name, Marr. of Geraint 53
court And all its perilous glories : „ 804
Balan answer'd ' For the sake Of g ; Balin and Balan 33
As fancying that her g would be great Merlin and V. 217
crying ' I have made his g mine,' „ 971
your pretext, O my knight. As all for g ; Lancelot and E. 154
No keener hunter after g breathes. „ 156
need to speak Of Lancelot in his ^ ! „ 464
Glory (s) {continued) the name Of Lancelot, and a g
one with theirs. Lancelot and E. 478
wound he spake of, all for gain Of g, „ 567
allow my pretext, as for gain Of purer g.' „ 587
it is my g to have loved One peerless, „ 1090
sons Born to the g of thy name and fame, „ 1372
beheld his fellow's face As in a g, Holy Grail 192
Naked of g for His mortal change, „ 448
spires And gateways in a gr like one pearl — „ 527
' G and joy and honour to our Lord „ 839
the heat Of pride and g fired her face ; Pelleas and E. 172
unsunny face To him who won thee g ! „ 181
knights Arm'd for a day of g before the King. Last Tournament 55
The g of our Round Table is no more.' (repeat) „ 189, 212
the knights, Glorying in each new g, „ 336
in their stead thy name and g cling Pass, of Arthur 53
And the long glories of the winter moon. „ 360
Quiver'd a flying g on her hair, Lover's Tale i 69
A solid g on her bright black hair ; „ 367
And g of broad waters interfused, „ 401
uphold Thy coronal of g like a God, „ 488
in this g I had merged The other, „ 506
sunset, glows and glories of the moon „ ii 110
for the g of the Lord. The Revenge 21
We have won great g, my men ! „ 85
had holden the power and g of Spain so cheap „ 106
Better have sent Our Edith thro' the glories of the
earth, Sisters (E. and E.) 225
Never with mightier g than when we had rear'd Def. of Lueknow 3
Gave g and more empire to the kings Columbus 22
All g to the all-blessed Trinity, „ 61
All g to the mother of our Lord, „ 62
I saw The g of the Lord flash up, „ 82
To walk within the g of the Lord „ 89
and the glories of fairy kings ; V. of Maeldune 90
Gaining a Ufelong G in battle, Batt. of Brunanhurh 8
King and Atheling, Each in his g, „ 102
lured by the Hunger oi g „ 124
strive Again for g, while the golden lyre Tiresias 180
of her eldest-born, her g, her boast. Despair 73
g and shame dying out for ever in endless time, „ 75
an' Hiven in its g smiled. As the Holy Mother o' G
that smiles Tomorrow 25
afther her paarints had inter'd g, „ 53
Dead the warrior, dead his g, Locksley H., Sixty 30
how her living g lights the hall, „ 181
stars in heaven Paled, and the g grew. Pro. to Gen. Hamley 32
three hundred whose g will never die — Heavy Brigade 10
G to each and to all, and the charge that they made !
G to all the three hundred, and all the Brigade ! „ 65
Thou sawest a g growing on the night, Epit. on Caxton 2
Glorying in the glories of her people. On Jub. Q. Victoria 26
once more in varnish'd g shine Thy stars Prog, of Spring 38
plunging down Thro' that disastrous g, St. Telemachus 29
' Thy g baffles wisdom. Akbar's Dream 28
for no Mirage of g, but for power to fuse „ 156
g of Kapiolani be mingled with either on Hawa-i-ee. Kapiolani 18
Prophet-eyes may catch a g Making of Man 6
Thou wilt strike Thy g thro' the day. Doubt and Prayer 14
Glory (verb) how would'st thou g in all The splendours Ancient Sage 176
Glory-circled A center'd, g-c memory. Lover's Tale i 446
Glory-crown'd His own vast shadow g-c ; In Mem. xcvii 3
Glorying upon the bridge of war Sat g ; Spec, of Iliad 10
g in their vows and him, his knights Stood roimd him, Com. of Arthur 458
stood a moment, ere his horse was brought, G ; Gareth and L. 935
the knights, G in each new glory, Last Tournament 336
A low sea-sunset g round her hair „ 508
g in the blissful years again to be. To Virgil 17
G between sea and sky. Open I. and C. Exhib. 18
G in the glories of her people, On Jub. Q. Victoria 26
Gloss shadow of the flowers Stole all the golden g, Gardener's D. 130
hair In g and hue the chestnut, (repeat) The Brook 72, 207
Let darkness keep her raven g : In Mem. i 10
merge ' he said ' in form and g „ Ixxxix 41
In g of satin and glimmer of pearls, Maud I xxii 55
Glossy
265
Go
Glossy find the stubborn thistle bursting Into g purples, Ode on Well. 207
then with a riding whip Leisurely tapping a g boot, Mavd I xiii 19
and smooth'd The g shoulder, Lancelot and E. 348
Glossy-throated g-t grace, Isolt the Queen. Last Tournament 509
Glove With blots of it about them, ribbon, g Aylmer's Field 620
It chanced, her empty g upon the tomb Princess iv 596
Come sliding out of her sacred g, Maud I vi 85
fit to wear your slipper for a g. Geraint and E. 623
added fullness to the phrase Of ' Gauntlet in the
velvet gr.' To Marq. of Dufferin 12
CHow (S) steady sunset g That stays upon thee ? Eleanore 55
sun begins to rise, the heavens are in a ^ ; May Queen, Con. 49
felt my blood Glow with the g that slowly crimson'd Tithonus 56
and looks Had yet their native g : Will Water. 194
^'5 And glories of the broad belt of the world, Enoch Arden 578
this kindlier g Faded with morning, Aylmer's Field 411
Out I sprang from g to gloom : Princess iv 178
With a satin sail of a ruby g, The Islet 13
lone g and long roar Green-rushing (repeat) Voice and the P. 3, 39
not for thee the g, the bloom. In Mem. ii 9
And reach the g of southern skies, „ xii 10
And fix my thoughts on all the g „ Ixxxiv 3
earth gone nearer to the g Of your soft splendours Maud I xviii 78
sunset, g's and glories of the moon Lover's Tale ii 110
wid all the light an' the g, Tomorrow 67
moon was falling greenish thro' a rosy g, Locksley H., Sixty 178
groves of olive in the summer g, Frater Ave, etc. 3
said with a sudden g On her patient face Charity 35
Glow (verb) vines that g Beneath the battled tower. D. of F. Women 219
felt my blood G with the glow that slowly crimson'd Tithonus 56
G's forth each softly-shadow'd arm Day-Dm., Sleep B. 13
Between dark stems the forest g's, Sir Galahad 27
over thy dark shoulder g Thy silver sister-world, Move Eastward 5
from his ivied nook G like a sunbeam : Princess, Pro. 105
now her father's chimney g's In expectation In Mem. vi 29
g In azure orbits heavenly- wise ; „ Ixxxvii 37
The wizard lightnings deeply g, „ cxxii 19
G's in the blue of fiity miles away. Roses on the T. 8
Glow'd His broad clear brow in sunlight g\ L. of Shalott Hi 28
And on the liquid mirror g Mariana in the S. 31
her face G, as I look'd at her. D. of F. Women 240
G for a moment as we past. The Voyage 48
before us g Fruit, blossom, viand. Princess iv 34
the city Of little Monaco, basking, g. The Daisy 8
As he g like a ruddy shield Maud III vi 14
his face G like the heart of a great fire Marr. of Geraint 559
A holy maid ; tho' never maiden g. Holy Grail 72
G intermingling close beneath the sun. Lover's Tale i 436
Glowing g full-faced welcome, she Began Princess ii 183
g round her dewy eyes The circled Iris „ Hi 26
Above the garden's g blossom-belts, „ v 363
Half-lapt in g gauze and golden brede, ,, vi 134
she rose G all over noble shame ; „ mi 160
She enters, g like the moon Of Eden In Mem., Con. 27
and g in the broad Deep-dimpled current Gareth and L. 1088
g on him, like a bride's On her new lord, Merlin and V. 616
g in all colours, the live grass. Last Tournament 233
Yet gf in a heart of ruby — Lover's Tale iv 196
All over g with the sim of life, „ 381
A g arm, a gleaming neck, Miller's D. 78
Between the shadows of the vine-bunches Floated
the g sunlights, (Enone 182
In g health, with boundless wealth, L. C. V. de Vere 61
Love took up the glass of Time, and turn'd it in
his g hancfs ; Locksley Hall 31
delicate spark Of g and growing light Maud I vi 16
Pass and blush the news Over g ships ; ,, xvii 12
above Broaden the g isles of vernal blue. Prog, of Spring 60
G with all-colour'd plums V. of Maeldune 60
Glowworm (adj.) lapt in wreaths of g light The mellow
breaker Princess iv 435
Glow-worm (s) And the g-w of the grave Glimmer Vision of Sin 153
No bigger than a g-w shone the tent . Princess iv 25
Now poring on the g, now the star, „ 211
Glutted 9 all night long breast-deep in com, „ ii 387
Gnarl'd Thro' solid opposition crabb'd and g. Princess Hi 126
All silver silver-green with g bark : Mariana 42
garlanding the g boughs With bunch and berry (Enone 101
Gnarr a thousand wants G at the heels In Mem. xcviii 17
Gnash teeth of Hell flay bare and g thee Last Tournament 444
Gnat (See also Water-gnat) chased away the still-
recurring g, Caress'd or Chidden 7
Not even of a 9 that sings. Day-Dm., Sleep P. 21
I well could wish a cobweb for the g. Merlin and V. 370
tiny-trumpeting g can break our dream Lancelot and E. 137
but a murmur of g's in the gloom, Vastness 35
Gnaw'd g his under, now his upper lip, Geraint and E. 669
crazed With the grief that g at my heart. Bandit's Death 39
Gnawing lays his foot upon it, G and growling : Geraint and E. 563
Gnome G of the cavern. Griffin and Giant, Merlin and the G. 39
Go [See also Gaw, Goa) We are call'd — we must g. All Things will Die 20
Nine times goes the passing bell : „ 35
whene'er Earth goes to earth, with grief, Supp. Confessions 38
the whirring sail goes round, (repeat) The Owl i 4
A weary, weary way I g, ^ Oriana 89
Thought seems to come and g Eleanore 96
Of that deep grave to wliich I g : My life is full 7
And up and down the people g, L. of Shalott i 6
page in crimson clad. Goes by to tower'd Camelot ; „ ii 23
' G, vexed Spirit, sleep in trust ; Two Voices 115
' I will g forward, sayest thou, „ 190
I g, weak from suffering here : „ 238
Naked I g, and void of cheer : „ 239
grass Is dry and dewless. Let us g. Miller's D. 246
I will rise and g Down into Troy, (Enone 261
And let the foolish yeoman g. L. C. V. de Vere 72
Little Effie shall g with me to-morrow to the green, May Qu£en 25
The night-winds come and g, mother, „ 33
and forgive me ere I g' ; 'May Queen, N. Y's. E. 34
sweeter far is death than life to me that long to g. May Qu£en, Con. 8
seem'd to g right up to Heaven and die „ 40
music went that way my soul will have to g. „ 42
I care not if I gf to-day. „ 43
Slow-dropping veils of thinnest lawn, did g ; Lotos-Eaters 11
Old Year, you must not g; D. of the 0. Year 15
Old Year, you shall not g. „ 18
' G, take the goose, and wring her throat. The Goose 31
Yet now, I charge thee, quickly g again M. d' Arthur 79
' Ah ! my lord Arthur, whither shall 1 g? „ 227
I, the last, g forth companionless, „ 236
these thou seest — if indeed I g — „ 257
But g you hence, and never see me more.' Dora 100
I will g. And I will have my boy, „ 121
I g to-night : I come to-morrow mom. ' I g, but
I return : I would I were The pilot Audley Court 70
let him g ; his devil goes with him. Walk, to the Mail 27
G ' (shrill'd the cotton-spinning chorus ) ; Edwin Morris 122
' G !— Girt, get you in ! ' „ 124
Power goes forth from me. Si. S. Stylites 145
Let me g : take back thy gift : Tithonus 27
G to him : it is thy duty : Locksley Hall 52
wind arises, roaring seaward, and I g. „ 194
G, look in any glass and say, Day-Dm., Moral 3
My breath to heaven like vapour goes : St. Agnes' Eve 3
The flashes come and g; „ 26
When down the stormy crescent goes. Sir Galahad 25
Thro' dreaming towns I g, „ 50
' Love may come, and love may g, Edward Gray 29
How goes the time ? 'Tis five o'clock. Will Water. 3
And all the world g by them. „ 48
But whither would my fancy g? „ 145
'Tis gone, and let it g. „ 180
G, therefore, thou ! thy betters went „ 185
Thy latter days increased with pence G down among
the pots : „ 220
To come and g, and come again, „ 229
And bless me, mother, ere I g.' Lady Clare 56
So she goes by him attended, L. of Burleigh 25
O, happy planet, eastward g ; Move eastward 4
But thou, g by. Come not, when, etc. 6
Go
266
Go
Go {continued) G by, g by. Come not, when, etc. 12
' Let her g ! her thirst she slakes Vision of Sin 143
And the stately ships g on To their haven Break, break, etc. 9
used Enoch at times to g by land or sea ; Enoch Arden 104
wanting yet a boatswain. Would he ^ ? „ 123
g This voyage more than once ? „ 141
cared For her or his dear children, not to g. „ 164
Annie, come, cheer up before I g.' „ 200
Keep everything shipshape, for I must g. „ 220
Can I g from Him ? „ 225
wherefore did he g this weary way, „ 296
Annie's children long'd To g with others, nutting
to the wood. And Annie would g with them ; „ 363
the children pluck'd at him to g, „ 369
' See your bairns before you g ! „ 870
such a time as goes before the leaf. The Brook 13
men may come and men may g, But I j on for
ever. The Brook 33, 49, 65, 184
Yes, men may come and g ; and these are gone, The Brook 186
would g. Labour for his own Edith, Aylmer's Field 419
' Let not the sun g down upon your wrath,' Sea Dreams 44
it I g my work is left Unfinish'd — if I g. Lucretius 103
man may gain Letting his own life g. „ 113
I spoke. ' My father, let me g. Princess i 68
against all rules For any man to g: „ 179
Leave us : you may g : „ ii 94
I shudder at the sequel, but 1 g.' „ 236
' Thanks,' she answer'd 'G: we have been too long „ 357
We tum'd to g, but Cyril took the child, „ 362
hark the bell For dinner, let us gl' „ 433
Over the rolling waters g, „ Hi 5
she goes to inform The Princess : ' „ 62
heal me with your pardon ere you g.' „ 65
I must g : I dare not tarry,' „ 95
Would we g with her? we should find the land „ 171
goes, like glittering bergs of ice, „ iv 71
Your oath is broken ; we dismiss you : g. „ 360
' Stand, who goes ? ' ' Two from the palace ' „ v 3
G: Cyril told us aU.' „ 36
I will take her up and g my way, „ 102
A smoke g up thro' which I loom to her „ 130
Let so much out as gave us leave to g. „ 235
' All good g with thee ! take it Sir,' „ vi 207
I y to mine own land For ever : „ 216
Let the long long procession g. Ode on Wdl. 15
From love to love, from home to home you g, W. to Marie Alex. 8
Patter she goes, my own little Annie, Grandmother 78
over the boards, she comes and goes at her will, „ 79
I, too, shall 9 in a minute. „ 104
O love, we two shall g no longer The Daisy 91
O whither, love, shall we g, (repeat) The Islet 1, 5
0 thither, love, let us g.' „ 24
' Mock me not ! mock me not ! love, let us g.' „ 30
' A thousand voices g To North, Voice and the P. 13
Shall I write to her ? shall I g- ? Window, Letter 5
G, little letter, apace, apace. Fly ; „ 11
wet west wind and the world will g on.
(repeat)
wet west wind and the world may g on.
1 9 to plant it on his tomb,
Like her I gr ; I cannot stay ;
Week after week : the days ^ by :
The path by which we twain did g.
Yet g, and while the holly boughs Entwine
' G down beside thy native rill,
And look thy look, and g thy way,
I care for nothing, all shall g.
let us g. Come ; let us y :
The foolish neighbours come and g.
Will flash along the chords and a.
g By summer belts of wheat and vine
We g, but ere we g from home,
I turn to g : my feet are set To leave the pleasant fields
when thev learnt that I must g They wept
• Enter likewise ye And g with us : '
Window, No Answer 6, 12
18
In Mem. viii 22
xii 5
xvii 7
xxii 1
xxix 9
xxxvii 5
xlix 9
Ivi 4
Ivii 4
fa; 13
Ixxxviii 12
xcviii 3
cii 5
21
ciii 17
52
Go (continued) The year is going, let him g ; In Mem. cvi 7
With thousand shocks that come and g, „ cxiii 17
Like clouds they shape themselves and g. „ cxxiii 8
But they must g, the time draws on, „ Con. 89
nine months g to the shaping an infant Maud I iv 34
G not, happy day, (repeat) „ xvii 1, 3
G in and out as if at merry play, „ xviii 31
It is but for a little space I g: „ 75
brief night goes In babble and revel „ xxii 27
Let me and my passionate love g by, „ // ii 77
Me and my harmful love ^ by ; „ 80
And the wheels g over my head, „ v A
Ever about me the dead men g; „ 18
Let it g or stay, so I wake to the higher aims „ /// vi 38
From the great deep to the great deep he goes.' Com. of Arthur 411
sent him from his senses : let me g.' Gareth and L. 71
Mother, to gain it — your full leave to g. „ 134
' A hard one, or a hundred, so I g. „ 149
Full of the wistful fear that he would g, „ 173
crying, ' Let us g no further, lord. „ 198
Thou that art her kin, G likewise ; „ 379
Sir Kay nodded him leave to g, „ 520
G therefore,' and all hearers were amazed. - „ 655
wherefore wilt thou g against the King, „ 727
' G therefore,' and so gives the quest to him — „ 864
0 birds, that warble as the day goes by, „ 1076
Hence : let us g.' „ 1312
in, g in ; for save yourself desire it, Marr. of Geraint 310
With that wild wheel we g not up or down ; „ 351
G to the town and buy us flesh and wine ; „ 372
G thou to rest, but ere thou g to rest Tell her, „ 512
But Yniol goes, and I full oft shall dream „ 751
' I will g back a Uttle to my lord, Geraint and E. 65
And into no Earl's palace will I g. „ 235
1 love that beauty should g beautifully : „ 681
Who loves that beauty should g beautifully ? „ 684
'Yea,' said Enid, 'let us g.' „ 751
' If ye will not g To Arthur, then will Arthur come „ 814
I will weed this land before 1 g. ,, 907
' G thou with him and him and bring it Balin and Balan 6
His Baron said ' W^e g but barken : ,. 10
Arthur, ' Let who goes before me, „ 134
but thou shalt g with me. And we will speak „ 531
We g to prove it. Bide ye here the while.' She past ;
and Vivien murmur'd after ' G ! I bide the while.' Merlin and V. 97
Let g at last ! — they ride away — ,. 107
' It is not worth the keeping : let it g :
let his wisdom g For ease of heart,
Would reckon worth the taking ? I will g.
Why g ye not to these fair jousts ?
therefore hear my words : g to the jousts :
men g down before your spear at a touch,
hide it therefore ; g unknown :
since Ig to joust as one unknown At Camelot
He seem'd so sullen, vext he coiUd not g :
Thro' her own side she felt the sharp lance g ;
ye shall g no more On quest of mine.
Being so very wilful you must g,' (repeat)
speak your wish. Seeing I g to-day : '
what force is yours to g, So far,
I gf in state to court, to meet the Queen,
let our dumb old man alone G with me,
phantom of a cup that comes and goes ? '
G, since your vows are sacred,
noble deeds will come and g Unchallenged,
my time is hard at hand. And hence I g ;
thou shalt see the vision when I g.'
g forth and pass Down to the little thorpe
entering, loosed and let him g.'
heard a voice, ' Doubt not, g forward ;
but will ye to Caerleon PIG likewise :
Nay, let him g — and quickly,'
and thought, ' I will g back, and slay them
The foot that loiters, bidden g, —
From the great deep to the great deep he goes.
396
892
917
Lancelot and E. 98
136
149
151
190
210
624
716
„ 777,781
925
1063
1124
1128
Holy Grail 44
314
318
482
484
546
698
824
Pelleas and E. 106
313
444
Last Tournament 117
133
Go
267
God
Go (continued) Now — ere he goes to the great Battle ? Guinevere 652
Arise, g forth and conquer as of old.' Pass, of Arthur 64
I charge thee, quickly g again, „ 247
my Lord Arthur, whither shall Ig? „ 395
I, the last, g forth companionless, „ 404
With these thou seest — if indeed Ig „ 425
' From the great deep to the great deep he goes.' „ 445
and g From less to less and veinish into light. „ 467
your love Is but a burthen : loose the bond, and g.' To the Queen ii 17
for they g back, And farther back.
If you g far in (The country people rumour)
he would g, WouJd leave the land for ever,
but for a whisper, ' G not yet,'
Now, now, will I g down into the grave,
and I y down To kiss the dead.'
' He casts me out,' she wept, ' and goes '
But he was all the more resolved to g,
When Julian goes, the lord of all he aayr.
sa3mig, ' It is over : let us y ' —
an' kiss you before I g.'
you'll kiss me before I ^ ? '
an' g to-night by the boat.'
when he knows that I cannot g ?
and now you may g your way.
But I g to-night to my boy,
g, g, you may leave me alone —
make the Spaniard promise, if we yield, to let us g;
love will g by contrast, as by likes.
then another, and him too, and down goes he.
G back to the Isle of Finn and suffer the Past
when a smoke from a city goes to heaven
g To spend my one last year among the hills.
' And idle gleams will come and g,
this Hall at last will g — ^perhaps have gone,
ships from out the West g dripping thro'
gone as all on earth will g.
bound to follow, wherever she g
G, take thine honours home ;
I cannot g, g you.'
Kiss me child and g.
you wave me off — poor roses — ^must I g —
find the white heather wherever you g,
G back to thine adulteress and die ! '
They sing it. Let us g.'
' Mjr dear, I will tell you before I g.'
bodies and souls g down in a conunon wreck,
Deep under deep for ever goes,
Let your reforms for a moment g !
Goa (go) But Parson a cooms an' a g's,
Seeii'd her to-daiiy g by —
but g wheere munny is ! '
Maakin' 'em g togither as they've good right to do
Strange fur to g fur to think
tha mun g fur it down to the inn.
Thou'll g sniffin' about the tap
I wefint g sniffin' about the tap.'
tha mun g fur it down to the Hinn,
I'll g wi' tha back : all right ;
'e bowt owd money, es wouldn't g,
or the gells 'ull g to the 'Ouse,
G to the laiine at the back,
an' they g's fur a walk,
When I g's fur to coomfut the poor
'e can naither stan' nor g.
Fur to g that night to 'er foiilk
' Then hout to-night tha shall g.'
teU'd 'er, ' Yeiis I mun g.'
Goad prick'd with g's and stings ;
His Own thought drove him, like a g.
His own thought drove him hke a g.
Goal Making for one sure g.
pass beyond the g of ordinance
make Our progress falter to the woman's g.'
his days, moves with him to one g,
Is the g so far away ?
Lover's Tale i 80
518
iv 18
20
46
49
103
179
315
384
First Quarrel 46
80
88
Rizpah 3
„ 20
,, 74
„ 79
The Revenge 94
Sisters (E. and E.) 42
Def. of Lucknow 65
V. of Maeldune 124
Achilles over the T. 7
Ancient Sage 15
240
The Flight 27
91
Locksley H., Sixty 46
Dead Prophet 45
To W. C. Macready 6
The Ring 434
489
Happy 101
Romney's R. 108
Death of CEnone 48
Akbar's Dream 204
Charity 36
The Dawn 13
Mechanophilus 35
Riflemen form, ! 15
A^. Farmer, 0. S. 25
N. S. 13
20
34
North. Cobbler 4
64
67
113
Village Wife 2
„ 49
64
Spinster's S's. 6
85
108
Owd Rod 2
„ 52
„ 58
„ 98
Palace of Art 150
M. d' Arthur 185
Pass, of Arthur ZbZ
Palace of Art 248
Tithonus 30
Princess vi 127
„ vii 263
Ode Inter. Exhib. 29
Goal (continued) good Will be the final g of ill.
Touch thy dull g of joyless gray.
Arrive at last the blessed g,
friend, who earnest to thy g So early,
larger, tho' the g of all the saints —
g of this great world Lies beyond sight :
No guess-work ! I was certain of my g ;
watch the chariot whirl About the g again.
And if we move to such a g
he touch'd his g, The Christian city.
Goan (gone) G into mangles an' tonups.
An' *ed g their waiiys ;
thowt o' the good owd times 'at was g,
an' I thowt as 'e'd g cleiin-wud,
Goan Padre And when the G P quoting Him,
Goat Leading a jet-black g white-horn'd,
are men better than sheep or g's
Catch the wild g by the hair,
the beard-blown g Hang on the shaft,
no more thanks than might a g have given
Swine, say ye ? swine, g's, asses,
In Mem. liv 2
„ Ixxii 27
„ Ixxxiv 41
„ cxiv 23
Holy Grail 528
To the Queen ii 59
Columbus 45
Tiresias 177
Politics 3
St. Teleonachus 34
Owd Roa 28
36
43
61
Akbar's Dream 74
CEnone 51
M. d' Arthur 250
Locksley Hall 170
Princess iv 78
Merlin and V. 278
Last Tournament 321
' Then were swine, g's, asses, geese The wiser fools, „ 325
are men better than sheep or g's Pass, of Arthur 418
Goatfoot Catch her, g : nay. Hide, hide Lucretiv^s 203
Goatskin wear an undress'd g on my back ; St. S. Stylites 116
Go-between To play their g-b as heretofore Aylmer's Field 523
Goblet A ^ on the board by Balin, Balin and Balan 362
priceless g with a priceless wine Arising, Lover's Tale iv 227
Goblm You did but come as g's in the night. Princess v 220
Go-cart is but a child Yet in the g-c. „ Con. 78
God G gave her peace ; her land reposed ; To the Queen 26
0 G ! my G ! have mercy now. Supp. Confessions 1
sure it is a special care Of G, „ 64
strive To reconcile me with thy G. „ 102
stood Betwixt me and the light of G ! That hitherto
I had defied And had rejected G — „ 110
1 would pray — that G would move And strike „ 115
Yet, my G, Whom call I Idol ? „ 179
And thou of G in thy great charity) Isabel 40
Oh G, that I were dead ! ' Mariana 84
not the g's More purely, when they wish to charm A Character 13
G's great gift of speech abused A Dirge 44
Half G's good sabbath. To J. M. K. 11
Waeeioh of G, whose strong right arm Alexander 1
How long, 0 G, shall men be ridden down, Poland 1
G in his mercy lend her grace, L. of Shalott iv 53
G's glory smote him on the face.' Two Voices 225
On to G's house the people prest : „ 409
Would G renew me from my birth Miller's D. 27
But that G bless thee, dear — „ 235
Cluster'd about his temples like a G's ; CEnone 60
all the full-faced presence of the G's „ 80
see thy Paris judge of G's.' „ 90
the G's Rise up for reverence. „ 109
likest g's, who have attain'd Best in a happy place „ 130
strike within thy pulses, like a G's, „ 162
Her presence, hated both of G's and men. „ 229
Moulded by G, and temper'd with the
tears To With Pal. of Art IS
My G's, with whom I dwell ! Palace of Art 196
I sit as G holding no form of creed, „ 211
G, before whom ever lie bare The abysmal deeps „ 222
Lay there exiled from eternal G, „ 263
To lie within the hght of G, May Queen, Con. 59
The G's are hard to reconcile: Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 81
On the hills like G's together, „ 110
A daughter of the g's, divinely tall, D. of F. Women 87
we sat as G by G : „ 142
' My G, my land, my father — „ 209
' Saw G divide the night with flying flame, „ 225
beautiful a thing it was to die For G and for my sire ! „ 232
' Glory to G,' she sang, and past afar, „ 242
G gives us love. Something to love He lends us ; To J. S. 13
I will not say ' G's ordinance Of Death „ 45
Imitates G, and turns her face To every land On a Mourner 2
God
268
God
God (continiied) And Virtue, like a household g Promising
empire ; On a Mourner 30
And G f oiget the stranger ! ' TJie Goose 56
G knows : he has a mint of reasons : The Epic 33
G fulfils himself in many ways, M. d' Arthur 241
knowing G, they lift not hands of prayer „ 252
Bound by gold chains about the feet of G. „ 255
Breathed, like the covenant of a G, Gardener's D. 209
She broke out in praise To G, Dora 113
' G bless him ! ' he said, ' and may he never know „ 149
May G forgive me ! — I have been to blame. „ 161
G made the woman for the man, (repeat) Edwin Morris 43, 50
' G made the woman for the use of man, „ 91
him That was a G, and is a lawyer's clerk, „ 102
Let this avail, just, dreadful, mighty G, St. S. Stylites 9
I had not stinted practice, O my G. „ 59
I bore, whereof, O G, thou knowest all. „ 70
Thou, O G, Knowest alone whether this was or no. „ 82
in your looking you may kneel to G. „ 141
G reaps a harvest in me. „ 148
G reaps a harvest in thee. „ 149
G hath now Sponged and made blank of crimeful record „ 157
G only thro' his bounty hath thought fit, „ 186
a priest, a man of G, Among you there, „ 214
for a man is not as G, Love and Duty 30
G love us, as if the seedsman, Golden Year 70
Meet adoration to my household g's, Ulysses 42
imbecoming men that strove with G's. „ 53
To his great heart none other than a G ! Tithonus 14
' The G's themselves cannot recall their gifts.' „ 49
Would to G — for I had loved thee more Locksley Hall 64
Ah, blessed vision ! blood of G ! Sir Galahad 45
' O just and faithful knight of <5 ! „ 79
Sipt wine from silver, praising G, WiU Water. 127
G's blessing on the day ! iMdy Clare 8
G be thank'd ! ' said Alice the nurse, „ 17
' As G's above,' said Alice the nurse, „ 23
G made himself an awful rose of dawn, (repeat) Vision of Sin 50, 224
' Lo ! G's likeness — the ground-plan — „ 187
broad-limb'd G's at random thrown By fountain-urns ; To E. L. 15
' Annie, this voyage by the grace of G Enoch Arden 190
G bless him, he shall sit upon my knees „ 197
Cast all your cares onG\ „ 222
We might be still as happy as G grants „ 416
' You have been as G's good angel in our house. G
bless you for it, G reward you for it, „ 423
for G's sake,' he answer'd, * both our sakes, „ 509
In those two deaths be read G's warning ' wait.' „ 571
O G Almighty, blessed Saviour, „ 782
' My G has bow'd me down to what I am ; „ 856
that almighty man, The county G— Aylmer's Field 14
sons of men Daughters of (? ; „ 45
' Bless, G bless 'em : marriages are made in Heaven.' „ 188
all but those who knew the living G— „ 637
with thy worst self hast thou clothed thy G. „ 646
No coarse and blockish G of acreage „ 651
Thy G is far diffused in noble groves „ 653
In such a shape dost thou behold thy G. „ 657
Prince of Peace, the Mighty G, „ 669
' O pray G that he hold up ' „ 733
A rushing tempest of the wrath of G „ 757
and made Their own traditions G, „ 795
sin That neither G nor man can well forgive, Hypocrisy, Sea Breams 63
Who, never naming G except for gain, „ 188
what dreams, ye holy G's, what dreams ! Liu:retius 33
worse Than aught they fable of the quiet G's. „ 55
Rather, O ye G's, Poet-Uke, „ 92
Which things appear the work of mighty G's. The
G's ! and it 1 go my work is left Unfinish'd — if I
go. The G's, who haunt The lucid interspace of
world „ 102
The G's, the G's ! If all be atoms, how then should
the G's Being atomic „ 113
My master held That G's there are, „ 117
G's there are, and deathless. „ 121
God (contimi£d) ' Look where another of our G's, the Sun, iMcretius 124
men like soldiers may not quit the post Allotted by
the G's : but he that holds The G's are careless, „ 149
Picus and Faunus, rustic G's? „ 182
0 ye G's, I know you careless, „ 207
(6^ help her) she was wedded to a fool ; Princess Hi 83
tho' your Prince's love were like a G's, „ 248
the old G of war himself were dead, „ v 145
Interpreter between the G's and men, „ vii 322
G bless the narrow sea which keeps her off, „ Con. 51
G bless the narrow seas ! „ 70
keep it ours, O G, from brute control ; Ode on Well. 159
palter'd with Eternal G for power ; „ 180
To which our G himself is moon and sun. „ 217
On G and Godlike men we build our trust. „ 266
G accept him, Christ receive him. „ 281
We love not this French G, the child of Hell, Third of Feb. 7
1 wish'd it had been G's will that I, Grandmother 73
G, not man, is the Judge of us all „ 95
thank G that I keep my eyes. „ 106
Dear to the man that is dear to G ; To F. D. Maurice 36
' G help me ! save I take my part Sailor Boy 21
Ah G ! the petty fools of rhyme Lit. Squabbles 1
G's are moved against the land.' The Victim 6
' The G's have answer'd : We give them the boy.' „ 39
The holy G's, they must be appeased, „ 47
G's, he said, ' would have chosen well ; „ 58
G's have answer'd ; We give them the wife ! ' „ 78
G is law, say the wise ; High. Pantheism 13
Law is G, say some : no G at all, says the fool ; „ 15
I should know what G and man is. Flow, in cran. wall. 6
' Hear it, G's ! the G's have heard it, Boadicea 21
Doubt not ye the G's have answer'd, „ 22
thine the battle-thunder of 6^,' ,. 44
Strong Son of G, immortal Love, In Mem., Pro. 1
O mother, praying G will save Thy sailor, — „ vi 13
drains The chalice of the grapes of G; „ x 16
What then were G to such as I ? „ xxxiv 9
G shut the doorways of his head. „ xliv 4
Ye watch, like G, the rolling hours „ li 14
When G hath made the pile complete ; ^ liv%
The Ukest G within the soul ? „ io 4
Are G and Nature then at strife, „ 5
That slope thro' darkness up to (?, „ 16
Who trusted G was love indeed „ Im 13
In endless age ? It rests with G. „ Ixxiii 12
But stay'd in peace with G and man. „ Ixxx 8
G's finger touch'd him, and he slept. „ Ixxxv 20
saw The G within him light his face, „ Ixxxvii 36
With g's in unconjectured bliss, „ xciii 10
Israel made their g's of gold, „ xcvi 23
Where G and Nature met in light ; „ cxi 20
mix'd with G and Nature thou, „ cxxx 11
That friend of mine who lives in G, „ Con. 140
That G, which ever lives and loves, „ 141
One G, one law, one element, „ 142
0 father ! 0 G\ was it well ?— Maud I i 6
ah G, as he used to rave. „ 60
G grant I may find it at last ! „ ii 1
how G will bring them about „ iv 44
Ah G, for a man with heart, head, hand, „ ar 60
May G make me more wretched Than ever „ xix 94
Arise, my G, and strike, „ JI i 45
as long, O G, as she Have a grain of love for me, „ ii 52
Britain's one sole G be the milUonaire : „ III vi 22
G's just wrath shall be wreak'd on a giant liar ; „ 45
1 embrace the purpose of G, „ 59
G's love set Thee at his side again ! • Bed. of Idylls 55
* the fire of G Descends upon thee in the battle-field : Com. of Arthur 129
Arthur said, ' Man's word is G in man : „ 133
G hath told the King a secret word. „ 489
In whom high G hath breathed a secret thing. „ 501
G wot, he had not beef and brewis enow, OareA and L. 457
as for love, G wot, I love not yet, But love F shall,
G willing.' „ 561
God
269
God
God (continiied) and cried, * G bless the King, and all his
feUowship ! ' Gareth and L. 698
my lance Hold, by G's grace, he shall into the mire — „ 723
G wot, so thou wert nobly bom, „ 1064
' G wot, I never look'd upon the face, „ 1333
Canst thou not trust the limbs thy G hath given, „ 1388
' Here, by G's grace, is the one voice for me.' Marr. of Geraint 344
' Here by G's rood is the one maid for me.' „ 368
Who knows ? another gift of the high G, „ 821
I know, G knows, too much of palaces ! Geraint and E. 236
G's curse, it makes me mad to see you „ 616
flush'd with fight, or hot, G's curse, with anger— „ 661
Yea, G, I pray you of your gentleness, „ 710
Man's word is (r in man.' Balin and Balan 8
and yet — G guide them — young.' Merlin and V. 29
by G's rood, I trusted you too much.' „ 376
for love of G and men And noble deeds, „ 412
Her G, her Merlin, the one passionate love „ 955
0 G, that I had loved a smaller man ! „ 872
G's mercy, what a stroke was there ! Lancelot and E. 24
but G Broke the strong lance, „ 25
rule the land Hereafter, which G hinder.' „ 66
honours his own word, As if it were his G's ? ' „ 144
G wot, his shield is blank enough. „ 197
in this heathen war the fire of G Fills him : „ 315
Rapt on his face as if it were a G's. „ 356
No diamonds ! for G's love, a little air ! „ 505
' Yea, by G's death,' said he, ' ye love him well, „ 679
Not all unhappy, having loved G's best And greatest, „ 1093
1 would to G, Seeing the homeless trouble „ 1364
shaped, it seems. By G for thee alone, „ 1367
may G, I pray him, send a sudden Angel „ 1423
' G make thee good as thou are beautiful,' Holy Grail 136
named us each by name, Calling ' G speed ! ' „ 352
seem'd Shoutings of all the sons of G : „ 509
If G would send the vision, well : „ 658
When G made music thro' them, „ 878
Nor the high G a vision, nor that One Who rose again : „ 918
I might have answer'd them Even before high G. Pelleas and E. 463
' Fear G : honour the King — Last Tournament 302
Conceits himself as G that he can make „ 355
woman-worshipper ? Yea, G's curse, and I ! „ 447
My G, the measure of my hate for Mark „ 537
Pale-blooded, she will yield herself to G.' „ 608
' 1 will flee hence and give myself to G ' — „ 624
May G be with thee, sweet, (repeat) „ 627, 629
My G, the power Was once in vows „ 648
And every follower eyed him as a G ; „ 678
those whom G had made full-limb'd and tall, Guinevere 42
Would G that thou could'st hide me „ 118
To honour his own word as if his G's, ' „ 473
I guard as G's high gift from scathe and wrong, „ 494
I foi^ve thee, as Eternal G Forgives : „ 544
We two may meet before high G, „ 564
hereafter in the heavens Before high G. „ 638
my G, What might I not have made of thy fair world, „ 654
As if some lesser g had made the world. Pass, of Arthur 14
Till the High G behold it from beyond, „ 16
My G, thou hast foi^otten me in my death : Nay —
G my Christ — I pass but shall not die.' ,. 27
G fulfils himself in many ways, „ 409
knowing G, they lift not hands of prayer „ 420
Bound by gold chains about the feet of G. „ 423
G unknits the riddle of the one, Lover's Tale i 181
so much wealth as G had charged her with — „ 213
I said to her, ' A day for G's to stoop,' „ 304
uphold Thy coronal of glory like a G, „ 488
tell him of the bliss he had with G — „ _ 674
nymph and ^ ran ever round in gold — „ iv 197
Some cousin of his and hers — O G, so like ! ' „ 327
G bless you, my own little Nell.' First Quarrel 22
I told them my tale, G's own truth — Rizpah 34
G 'ill pardon the heU-black raven „ 39
I have been with G in the dark — .. 79
an' the loov o' G fur men, North. Cobbler 55
God (continued) ' Fore G I am no coward ;
G of battles, was ever a battle like this
Fall into the hands of G,
and lodged with Plato's G,
G help the wrinkled children that are Christ's
My G, I would not live Save that I think
G help them, our children and wives !
But G is with me in this wilderness,
G's free air, and hope of better things.
So much G's cause was fluent in it —
Had he G's word in Welsh He might be kindlier :
come, G willing, to outlearn the filthy friar,
to thee, green boscage, work of G,
I spread mine arms, G's work, I said,
' Bury them as G's truer images Are daily buried.'
Do penance in his heart, G hears him.'
What profits an ill Priest Between me and my G ?
' No bread, no bread. G's body ! '
Then I, G help me, I So mock'd,
G pardon all — Me, them, and all the world —
the fourth Was like the Son of G !
G willing, I will bum for Him.
In praise to G who led me thro' the waste.
that was clean Against G's word :
There was a glimmering of G's hand.
And G Hath more than glimmer'd on me.
Ah G, the harmless people whom we found
Who took us for the very G's from Heaven,
in that flight of ages which are G's
thunder of G peal'd over us all the day.
Whereon the Spirit of G moves as he will —
dream of a shadow, go — G bless you
The Revenge 4
62
90
Sisters (E. and E.) 131
183
228
Bef. of Lucknow 8
Sir J. OldcasUe 8
10
17
: „ 22
118
129
137
140
143
145
159
162
168
176
193
Columbus 17
55
142
143
181
183
202
V. of Maeldune 113
De Prof., Two G. 28
To W. H. BrookfLdd 14
and the secret of the G's. My son the G's, despite
of human prayer, Tiresias 8
great G, Arfis, burns in anger still „ 11
trembling fathers call'd The G's own son. „ 17
some strange hope to see the nearer G. „ 29
angers of the G's for evil done „ 62;
FaUing about their shrines before their G's, „ 105
yesternight, To me, the great G Ar6s, „ 111
stand Firm-based with all her G's. „ 142
and quench The red G's anger, „ 158
flash The faces of the G's— „ 173
those who mix all odour to the G's „ 184
ah G, what a heart was mine to forsake her The Wreck 95
' would G, we had never met ! ' „ 102
but ah G, that night, that night JDespair 8
Flashing with fires as of G, „ 16
your faith and a G of eternal rage, „ 39
taking the place of the pitying G that should be ! „ 42
' Ah G ' tho' I felt as I spoke I was taking the name
in vain — ' Ah G ' and we turn'd to each other, „ 52
Ah G, should we find Him, perhaps, „ 56-
And if I believed in a G, „ 70
but were there a (? as you say, „ 101
Of a G behind all — after all — the great G for aught that I
know ; But the G of Love and of Hell together — „ 104
If there be such a G, may the great G „ 106
Or power as of the G's gone blind Ancient Sage 80
none but G's could build this house „ 83
To lie, to lie — in G's own house — The Flight 52
side by side in G's free light and air, „ 81
meet your paarints agin an' yer Danny O'Roon afore G Tomorrow 57
if soa please G, to the hend. Spinster's S's. 112
' thank G that I hevn't naw cauf o' my oan.' „ 116
Sons of G, and kings of men Locksleij H., Sixty 122
' Would to G that we were there ' ? „ 192
a G must mingle with the game : „ 271
Waehior of G, man's friend, and tyrant's foe, Epit. on Gordon 1
G the traitor's hope confound ! (repeat) Hands all Round 10, 22, 34
Pray G our greatness may not fail „ 31
Led upward by the G of ghosts and dreams, Demeter and P. 5
when before have G's or men beheld The Life „ 29
Spring from his fallen G, „ 80
we spin the lives of men, And not of G's, „ 86
God
God {continued) he, the G of dreams, who heard my
I, Elrth-Goddess, cursed the G's of Heaven. ^'"'*^"" ''^^ "^"iS
But younger kmdlier G's to bear us down, As we bore
down the G's before us ? G's, To quench, not hurl
the thunderbolt, joi
G's indeed, To send the noon into the night " 134
made themselves as G's against the fear Of Death " 141
O (?, I could blaspheme, '77/,-««„ T ^
That G would ever slant His bolt from falling ^^^ 81
trust myself forgiven by the G to whom I kneel " 86
Now G has made you leper in His loving care " 91
In the name Of the everlasting G, I will live and die " 108
G stay me there, if only for your sake, Romney's R. 34
happy to be chosen Judge of G's, Death of Snone 16
Pans, himself as beauteous asaG. tg
Paris, no longer beauteous as a G, " 95
Before the feud of G's had marr'd our peace, " S2
Thou knowest. Taught by some G, "35
G's Avenge on stony hearts a fruitless prayer " 40
Spummg a shatter'd fragment of the (?^ St Tel^uwh«<,ia
in his heart he cried ' The call of <? ! ' eienutcfius lb
muttering to himself ' The call of 6^ ' " 42
O G in every temple I see people that see
4. *u ®^' -i.j o XT .. , Akbar's D., Inscriv. 1
to be reconcil'd ?-No, by the Mother of G, Bandit's Death 17
as G's own scnptures tell, Charitu k
a woman, G bless her, kept me from Hell 4
Vanish'd shadow-like G's and Goddesses, Kapiokini 27
«rvi»™L^hi^T«i^"l r"^ Sl^^^^"' ^"f ™y ^ ■, -^"^^^ a J Prayer 8
eodamoighty (God Almighty) g an' parson 'ud nobbut
le nia aloan ^. p^ g ^_ ^
Do g knaw what a's domg a-taiikm' o' mea ? 45
But g a moost taiike mea an' taake ma now " 51
God-bless-you Sneeze out a full G-b-y right and
ri^l*' 1, lu J J .., ^, Edwin Morris m
Gnpt my hand hard, and with G-h-y went. ^ea Dreams 160
A curse in his G-b-y : t,qa
Goddess (See also Earth-goddess) if thou canst 0 G
J^^?''^^''^n >T u o ' Lucretius m
presented Maid Or Nymph, or G, princess i 197
Even now the G of the Past, Lover's Tale i 16
The glonous 5- wreath'd a golden cloud, Achilles over the T. 5
for the bnght-eyed g made it burn. 29
0(?'«, help me up thither! Parnassus^
flung the berries, and dared the G, Kaviolani fi
believing that Peele the G would wallow J^apwiam o
climb to the dwelling of Peelfe the Gl "22
Vanish'd shadow-like Gods and G'es, " 27
Godfather G, rame and see your boy : To F. D. Maurice 2
God-feanng Altho' a grave and staid (?-/ man, Enoch Arden 112
hnoch as a brave G-f man Bow'd himself down 185
God-gifted (?-9 organ- voice of England, " Milton Z
God-m-man G-i-rnis one with man-in-God, Enoch Arden 187
Godiva G, wife to that grim Earl, Godiva 12
Godl^ That tumbled in the G deep; In Mem. cxxiv 12
The craft of kindred and the G hosts Guinevere 427
three more dark days of the/? gloom Despair 6
The G Jeptha vows his child ... The Flight 26
n^ r J"^^, o^ peoples, and Christless frolic of kings. The Dawn 7
God-hke (See also Human-Godlike) G-l, grasps the
tnple forks 0/ o?d sat Freedom 15
But then mostj? being most a man. Zoi;e and Duty 31
Together, dwarf 'd or g, bond or free : Princess vii 260
Her 9 head crown'd with spiritual fire, Merlin and V. 837
Thee the G, thee the changeless Akbar's D., Hymm, 4
Two !, faces gazed below ; PaUce of Art 162
U (j-l isolation which art mme, 297
On God and G men we build our trust. Ode on Well. 266
touch of Chanty Could hft them nearer G-l state Lit. Squabbles 14
Beyond all dreams of G womanhood, Tiretin'i 54
Goest whither ? thou, tell me where ? ' Day-Dm., Depart. 26
i'Ji «° h« ^-n I ".?♦ ^ mock the King, Qaretll uJl. 292
thou g, be will fight thee first ; ^ 1295
270
Gold
Goin' (going) an' gied to the tramps g by—
' Ochone are ye g' away ? ' ' G ' to cut the Sassenach
whate
'An' whin are ye g' to lave me ? '
Going (See also A-Gawin', Gawin', Goin') We heard the
steeds to battle g,
G before to some far shrine,
I am ? a long way With these thou seest—
On a day when they were g O'er the lone expanse,
They by parks and lodges g
far end of an avenue, G we know not where :
Narrow'd her g's out and comings in ;
And thinner, clearer, farther g !
Give her the glory of g on.
Give her the wages of g on,
And has bitten the heel of the g year.
The year is g, let him go ;
g to the king. He made this pretext,
bent he seem'd on g the third day,
Bent as he seem'd on g this third day,
Enid in their g had two fears.
Coming and g, and he lay as dead
Coming and g, and she lay as dead,
' G ? and we shall never see you more,
but in g mingled with dim cries Far in the moonlit
I am J? a long way With these thou seest^—
Between the g light and growing night ?
I am ^ to leave you a bit —
• G ! you're g to her — kiss her —
Good-night. I am g. He calls.
G? I am old and sHghted :
I was not g to stab you.
Gold (adj.) With that y-dagger of thy bill
Bound by g chains about the feet of God.
His face was ruddy, his hair was g,
' If we have fish at all Let them be g ;
true hearts be blazon'd on her tomb In letters g
and azure ! '
the cup was g, the draught was mud.'
Bound by g chains about the feet of God. jras
knew not that which pleased it most, The raven ringlet
or the g ; jtt n • -i /./>
r. 1 J ^!^^^^^, ^^^^ ^^^^ ^*'" '^ veering there Above his four g letters ) ^^^ 33a
Gold (s) (See also (Jloth of Gold, Gowd) laws of marriage
Village Wife 33
Tomorrow 13
,, 17
Oriana 15
On a Mourner 17
M. d' Arthur 256
The Captain 25
L. of Burleigh 17
Enoch Arden 359
Aylmer's Field 501
Princess iv 8
Wages 5
,, 10
Window, Winter 6
In Mem. cvi 7
Marr. of Geraint 32
604
625
Geraint and E. 817
Merlin and V. 213
644
Lancelot and E. 926
Pass, of Arthur 41
424
Lover's Tale i 664
First Quarrel 80
81
Rizpah 86
Columbus 241
Bandit's Death 6
Blackbird 11
M. d' Arthur 255
The Victim 35
Marr. of Geraint 670
Lancelot and E. 1345
Last Tournament 298
Pass, of Arthur 423
character'd in g
By Bagdat's shrines of fretted g,
G glittering thro' lamplight dim.
With royal frame- work of wrought g;
Elant in semblance, grow A flower all g
osomsprest To little harps of 5?; '
with cymbals, and harps of g.
With a crown of 9 On a throne ?
I should look like a fountain of g
Slowly, as from a cloud of g.
Disclosed a fruit of pure Hesperian g.
Brow-bound with burning g.
Either from lust of g, or Hke a girl
Three Queens with crowns of g —
Cursed be the g that gUds the straiten'd forehead
Every door is barr'd with g,
trapt In purple blazon'd with armorial g.
Pull off, pull off, the brooch of g.
Beneath a manelike mass of rolling g,
g that branch'd itself Fine as ice-ferns
made pleasant by the baits Of g and beauty
heaps of living g that daily grow, '
swore Not by the temple but the g,
but a gulf of ruin, swallowing g,
a long reef of g, Or what seem'd g :
Still so much g was left ;
Wreck'd on a reef of visionary g.'
silken hood to each, And zoned with g ;
Canie furrowing all the orient into g.
P'ruit, blossom, viand, amber wine, and g,
gemUke eyes, And g and golden heads ;
Isabel 16
Arabian Nights 7
18
Ode to Memory 8?
The Poet 24
Sea-Fairies 4
Dying Swan 32
The Merman 6
The Mermaid 18
Elednore 73
(Enone 66
D.ofF. Women 128
M. d' Arthur 127
198
Locksley Hall 62
100-
Godiva §2
Lady Clare 39
Aylmer's Field 68
221
487
655
794
Sea Dreams 79
127
130
139
Princess ii 18
„ Hi 18
iv 35
481
Gold
271
Golden
all the g That veins the world were
Princess iv 542'
„ V 513
Gold (s) (continued)
pack'd
A single band of g about her hair,
Under the cross of g That shines over city and
river,
Steel and g, and corn and wine.
Whose crying is a cry for g :
And you with g for hair !
And you my wren with a crown' of g,
gossanners That twinkle into green and g :
Israel made their gods of g,
Ring out the narrowing lust of g;
the flying g of the ruin'd woodlands
And left his coal all turn'd into g
lost for a Uttle her lust of g,
egg of mine Was finer g than any goose can lay ;
' G ? said I g ? — ay then, why he, or she,
had the thing I spake of been Mere g —
howsoe'er at first he proSer'd g,
and left us neither g nor field.'
' Whether would ye ? y or field ? '
—thrice the g for Uther's use thereof,
a cloth of palest g, Which down he laid
gay with g In streaks and rays.
There swung an apple of the purest g,
Affirming that his father left him g,
a dress All branch'd and flower'd with g,
strown With g and scatter'd coinage,
In green and g, and plumed with green
A twist of g was round her hair;
The snake of g slid from her hair,
down his robe the dragon writhed in g,
Sir Lancelot's azure lions, crown'd with g,
both the wings were made of g,
a crown of g About a casque all jewels ;
third night hence will bring thee news of g.'
children sat in white with cups of g,
heard it ring as true as tested g.'
Either from lust of g, or like a girl
Three queens with crowns of g :
Or Cowardice, the child of lust for g,
rose as it were breath and steam of g,
nymph and god ran ever round in g —
G, jewels, arms, whatever it may be.
after he had shown him gems or g,
an Eastern gauze With seeds of g,
We brought this iron from our isles of g.
G? I had brought your Princes g
all The g that Solomon's navies carried
And gathering ruthless g —
seas of our discovering over-roll Him and his g ;
When he coin'd into English g
and the miser would yearn for his g,
make thy g thy vassal not thy king,
From war with kindly links of g,
I hold Mother's love in letter'd g,
Give your g to the Hospital,
Mere want of g — and still for twenty years
g from each laburnum chain Drop to the grass.
Bright in spring. Living g ;
Soberer-hued G s^ain.
alchemise old hates into the- g Of Love,
When I make for an Age of, g,
Ctolden (See also All-golden) Her subtil, warm, and
g breath,
The summer calm of g charity.
Thou art not steep'd in g languors,
the g prime Of good Haroun
Alraschid. (repeat) Arabian Nights 10, 21, 32, 43, 54, 65,
76, 87, 98, 109, 120, 131, 142, 153
marble stairs Ran up with g balustrade, Arabian Alights 118
The poet in a 9 clime was bom, With g stars above ; The Poet 1
sharp clear twang of the g chords Runs up the
ridged sea. Sea-Fairies 38
Two lives bound fast in one with g ease ; Circumstance 5
Ode on WeU. 49
Ode Inter. Exhib. 17
The Daisy 94:
Window, Spring 4
11
In Mem. xi 8
„ xcvi 23
„ cvi 26
Maud I i 12
X 11
,',' /// vi 39
Gareth and L. 43
63
66
336
339
340
344
389
910
Marr. of Geraint 170'
451
631
Geraint and E. 26
Merlin and V. 89
221
888
Lancelot and E. 435
663
Holy Grail 24a
410
Pelleas and E. 357
Last Tournament 142
284
Pass, of Arthur 295
366
To the Queen ii 54
Lover's Tale i 402
iv 197
235
246
292
Columbus 3
„ 105
„ 113
„ 135
„ 140
The Wreck 67
Despair 100
Ancient Sage 259
Epilogue 16
Helen's Tower 4
On Jub. Q. Victoria 33
The Ring 428
To Mary Boyle 11
The Oak 5
,, 10
Akbar's Dream 163
The Dreamer 7
Supp. Confessions 60
Isabel 8
Madeline 1
Golden (continued) In a g curl With a comb of pearl, The Mermaid 6
with fruitage golden-rinded On g salvers, Eleanore 34
Grow g all about the sky ; „ 101
Nor g \axgeas of thy praise. My life is full 5
branch of stars we see Hung in the g Galaxy, L. of Shalott Hi 12
the g bee Is lily-cradled : (Enone 29
And o'er him now'd a g cloud, „ 105
hair Ambrosial, g round her lucid throat And shoulder : „ 178
As she withdrew into the g cloud, „ 191
And cast the g fruit upon the board, „ 226
wherefrom The g gorge of dragons spouted forth Palace of Art 23
cloud of incense of all odour steam'd From out a g cup. „ 40
one hand grasp'd The mild bull's g horn. „ 120
the clouds are lightly curl'd Round their g
houses. Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 113
A g bill ! the silver tongue. The Blackbird 13
Should fill and choke with g sand — You ask me, why, etc. 24
The goose let fall a g egg The Goose 11
shadow of the flowers Stole all the g gloss, Gardener's D. 130
such a noise of life Swarm'd in the g present, „ 179
lad stretch'd out And babbled for the g seal, Dora 135
with g yolks Imbedded and injellied ; Audley Court 25
A second flutter'd round her lip Like a g butterfly ; Talking Oak 220
Dropt dews upon her g head, „ 227
themselves Move onward, leading up the g year. Golden Year 26
And slow and sure comes up the g year. „ 31
Thro' all the season of the g year. „ 36
Roll onward, leading up the g year. „ 41
Enrich the markets of the g year. „ 46
Thro' all the circle of the g year ? ' „ 51
Every moment, lightly shaken, ran itself in g sands. Locksley Hall 32
Every door is barr'd with gold, and opens but to g keys. „ 100
mantles from the g pegs Droop sleepily : Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 19
But dallied with his g chain, „ Revival 31
And, stream'd thro' many a g bar, „ Depart. 15
He lifts me to the g doors ; St. Agnes' Eve 25
And raked in g barley. Will Water. 128
now she gleam'd Like Fancy made of g air, The Voyage 66
Buckled with g clasps before ; A light-green tuft
of plumes she bore Closed in a ^ ring. Sir L. and Q. G. 25
Purple gauzes, g hazes, liquid mazes, Vision of Sin 31
I grew in gladness till I found My spirits in the g age. To E. L, 12
Then, on a gr autumn eventide, Enoch Arden 61
first since Enoch's g ring had girt Her finger, „ 157
And sent her sweetly by the g isles, „ 536
the g lizard on him paused, „ 601
many a silvery waterbreak Above the g gravel. The Brook 62
Ringing Uke proven g coinage true, Aylmer's Field 182
Had g hopes for France and all mankind, „ 464
dark retinue reverencing death At g thresholds ; „ 843
great Sicilian called Calliope to grace his g verse — Lucretius 94
slowly lifts His g feet on those empurpled stairs „ 135
that hour. My g work in which I told a truth „ 260
And sweet girl-graduates in their g hair. Princess, Pro. 142
ere the silver sickle of that month Became her g shield, „ i 102
read and earn our prize, A g brooch : „ Hi 301
fight with iron laws, in the end Found g: „ iv 76
' O Swallow, flying from the g woods, „ 114
But led by g wishes, and a hope „ 420
gems and gemlike eyes. And gold and g heads ; „ 481
sheathing splendours and the g scale Of harness, „ v 41
Creation minted in the g moods Of sovereign artists ; „ 194
When dames and heroines of the g year „ vi 64
Half-lapt in glowing gauze and g brede, „ 134
Reels, as the g Autumn woodland reels „ vii 357
anthem roU'd Thro' the dome of the g cross ; Ode on Well. 61
we hear The tides of Music's g sea Setting „ 252
Mourn'd in this g hour of jubilee, Ode Inter. Exhib. 8
And mix the seasons and the g hours ; „ 36
The g news along the steppes is blown, W. to Marie Alex, 11
At Florence too what g hours. The Daisy 41
And snowy dells in a ^ air. „ 68
Once in a 3 hour I cast to earth a seed. The Flower 1
To rest in a 9 grove, or to bask in a summer sky : Wages 9
Fixt by their cars, waited the g dawn. Spec, of Iliad 22
Golden
272
Gone
Golden (contimted) Here is the g close of love,
For this is the g morning of love,
That sittest ranging g hair ;
To thee too comes the g hour When flower
And lives to clutch the g keys,
Window, Marr. Morn. 3
11
In Mem. vi 26
„ xxxix 6
, Ixiv 10
sun by sun the happy days Descend below the g hills „ Ixxxiv 28
The promise of the g hours ? „ Ixxxv 106
call The spirits from their g day, „ xciv 6
We glided winding under ranks Of iris, and the g reed ; „ ciii 24
To him who grasps a g ball, „ cxi 3
I too may passively take the print Of the g age — Maud / i 30
Pale with the g beam of an eyelash dead on the cheek, „ in 3
Among the fragments of the g day. „ xviii 70
A g foot or a fairy horn Thro' his dim water-world ? „ // ii 19
The g symbol of his kingUhood, Com. of Arthur 50
But those first days had g hours for me, „ 357
An 'twere but of the goose and g eggs.' Gareth and L. 40
And handed down the g treasure to liim.' „ 61
And over that a g sparrow-hawk. Marr. of Geraint 484
And over that the g sparrow-hawk, „ 550
Near that old home, a pool of g carp ; „ 648
and by and by Shps into g cloud, „ 736
But g earnest of a gentler life ! ' Balin and Balan 208
Beheld before a g altar he The longest lance „ 410
Had wander'd from her own King's g head, „ 513
Perchance, one curl of Arthur's g beard. Merlin and V. 58
Arriving at a time of g rest, „ 142
In these wild woods, the hart with g horns. „ 409
And chased the flashes of his g horns „ 427
To make her smile, her g ankle-bells. „ 579
A league of mountain full of g mines, „ 587
Made proffer of the league of g mines, „ 646
And set it in this damsel's g hair, Lancelot and E. 205
Since to his crown the g dragon clung, „ 434
and g eloquence And amorous adulation, „ 649
' Stay a little ! One g minute's grace! „ 684
and saw The g dragon sparkling over all: Holy Grail 263
In g armour with a crown of gold „ 410
his horse In g armour jewell'd everywhere : „ 412
Merlin moulded for us Half-wrench'd a g wing ; „ 733
the prize A g circlet and a knightly sword. Full fain
had Pelleas for his lady won The g circlet, PeUeas and E. 12
The sword and g circlet were achieved. „ 170
' Why Ungers Gawain with his g news ? ' ,,411
your flower Waits to be solid fruit of g deeds. Last Tournament 100
them that round it sat with g cups To hand the wine „ 289
dark in the g grove Appearing, „ 379
The g beard that clothed his lips with light — „ 668
Went slipping back upon the g days Guinevere 380
Ab in the g days before thy sin. „ 500
makes me die To see thee, laying there thy g head, „ 535
O g hair, with which I used to play Not knowing ! „ 547
To which for crest the g dragon clung Of Britain „ 594
glory cling To all high places like a g cloud For
ever : Pass, of Arthur 54
And some had visions out of g youth, „ 102
like a g mist Charm'd amid eddies of melodious airs, Lover's Tale i 449
And sitting down upon the g moss, „ 540
With all her g thresholds clashing, „ 605
One g dream of love, from which may death „ 760
Did I make bare of all the g moss, „ ii 48
Well he had One g hour — of triumph shall I say ? „ iv 6
evermore Holding his g burthen in his arms, „ 89
(I told you that he had his g hour), „ 206
Smoothing their locks, as jr as his own Were silver, Sisters (E. and E.) 56
The g gates would open at a word. „ 145
but the g guess Is morning-star to the full round of truth. Columbus 43
each like a g image was pollen'd from head to feet V. of Maeldune 49
Glowing with all-colour'd plums and with g masses
of pear, „ 60
sworn to seek If any g harbour be for men Pref. Son 19th Cent. 13
The glorious goddess wreath'd a g cloud, Achilles over the T. 5
Who reads your o Eastern lay, To E. Fitzgerald 32
a dreadful light Uame from her g hair, her g helm
And all her g armour on the grass, Tiresias 44
Golden (continued) while the g lyre Is ever sounding in
heroic ears Tiresias 180.
Remembering all the g hours Now silent, „ 210
and call For g music. Ancient Sage 197
One g curl, his g gift, before he past away. The Flight 36
She that holds the diamond necklace dearer than
the g ring, Locksley H., Sixty 21
Gone with whom for forty years my life in g
sequence ran, „ 47
From the g alms of Blessing man had coin'd
himself a curse : „ 87
flashing out from many a g phrase ; To Virgil 8
G branch amid the shadows, „ 27
blind force and brainless will May jar the g dream Freedom 16
lavish all the g day To make them wealthier Poets and their B. 3
at her girdle clash The g keys of East and West. To Marq. of Dufferin 4
have I made the name A g portal to my rhyme : „ 16
Fifty times the g harvest fallen. On Juh. Q. Victoria 2
' Hail to the glorious G year of her Jubilee ! ' „ 65
To send my life thro' olive-yard and vine And
g grain, Demeter and P. Ill
Fame blowing out from her g trumpet a jubilant
challenge Vastness 21
debtless competence, g mean ; „ 24
' Thy hair Is g like thy Mother's, not so fine.' The Ring 104
for twenty years Bound by the g cord of their
first love— „ 429
Let g youth bewail the friend, the wife. To Mary Boyle 53
The frost-bead melts upon her g hair ; Prog, of Spring 10
Touch'd at the g Cross of the churches, Merlin and the G. 67
Let the g Iliad vanish. Homer here is Homer there. Parnassus 20
she saw Him, climbing toward her with the g fruit, Beath of (Enone 15
Golden Fleece (Inn sign) met the bailiff at the G F, The Brook 146
Golden-hair'd G-h Ally whose name is one with mine. To A . Tennyson 1
Golden-hilted Nor weapon, save a g-h brand, Marr. of Geraint 166
Golden-netted heart entanglest In a g-n smile ; Madeline 41
Golden-rail'd The light aerial gallery, g-r, Palace of Art 47
Golden-rinded with fruitage g-r On golden salvers, Elednore 33
Golden-shafted The Head of all the g-s firm, Princess ii 405
Gold-eyed The g-e kingcups fine ; A Dirge 36
Gold-fringed upswells The g-f pillow hghtly prest : Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 22
Gold-green Flush'd all the leaves with rich g-g, Arabian Nights 82
Gold-lily While the g-l blows, Edwin Morris 146
Gold-mine from the deep G-m's of thought D. of F. Women 274
Gone (See also Agoan, GoS.n) Autumn and Summer
Are g long ago ; Nothing will Die 19
Life and Thought have g away Deserted House 1
I said, ' When I am ^ away, Two Voices 100
The dull and bitter voice was g. „ 426
And now those vivid hours are g, Miller's D. 195
tell her, when I'm g, to train the rose-bush May Queen, N. Y's. E. 47
Alack ! our friend is g. D. of the 0. Year 47
all the old honour had from Christmas g. Or g. The Epic 7
' My end draws nigh ; 'tis time that I were g. M. d' Arthur 163
for the sake of him that's o, (repeat) Dora 62, 70, 94
Dora would have risen and g to him, „ 77
The troubles I have g thro' ! ' „ 150
prate Of penances I cannot have g thro', St. S. Stylites 101
Christ ! 'Tis g : 'tis here again ; „ 208
adoration to my household gods. When I am g. Ulysses 43
his spirit leaps witliin him to be ^ Locksley Hall 115
But for my pleasant hour, 'tis g ; 'Tis g, and let it
go. 'Tis g : a thousand such have slipt Away WiU Water. 179
Well I know, when I am g. Vision of Sin 109
the wife — When he was g — the children — Enoch Arden 132
So might she keep the house while he was g. „ 140
Pray'd for a sign ' my Enoch is he §» ? ' „ 491
' He is g,' she thought ' he is happy, „ 502
After he was g. The two remaining found „ 566
He thought it must have g ; but he was g „ 694
' after I am g, Then may she learn I lov'd „ 834
when I am g. Take, give her this, „ 898
and these are g, All g. The Brook 186
breathes in April autumns. All are g.' „ 196
Leolin, coming after he was g, Aylmer's Field 234
Gone
273
Good
Gone (continued) you had g to her, She told, perforce ; Princess iv 329
found that you had g, Ridd'n to the hills, „ 342
many a pleasant hour with her that's g, „ vi 247
We brook no further insult but are g.' „ 342
Blanche had g, but left Her child among us, „ vii 56
He is gi who seem'd so great. — G; Ode on Well. 271
And Willy, my eldest-bom, is g, Grandmother 1
and Willy, you say, is g. „ 8
I ought to have g before him : „ 14
But all my children have g before me, „ 18
laughing at things that have long g by. „ 92
So Willy has g, my beauty, „ 101
he has but g for an hour,— -<? for a minute, my son, „ 102
work mun 'a ^ to the gittin' whiniver N. Farmer, N. S. 50
there before you are come, and g, Window, On the HiU 14
G ! G, till the end of the year, G, and the light
g with her, „ Gone 1
(r— flitted away, „ 4
G, and a cloud in my heart, „ 6
the grass will grow when I am g, „ No Answer 5
when I am there and dead, and g, „ 11
Blow then, blow, and when I am g, „ 17
And learns her g and far from home ; In Mem. viii 4
' How good ! how kind ! and he is g.' „ xx 20
Old sisters of a day g by, „ xxix 13
My prospect and horizon g. „ xxxviii 4
She cries, ' A thousand types are g : „ Ivi 3
Quite in the love of what is g, „ Ixxxv 114
The violet comes, but we are g. „ cv 8
Farewell, we kiss, and they are g. „ Con. 92
and slurring the days g by, Maud / i 33
So many a million of ages have g „ iv 35
In a moment they were g: „ ix 12
lately died, G to a blacker pit, „ x 6
Like some of the simple great ones g „ 61
He may stay for a year who has gr for a week: „ xviG
gates of Heaven are closed, and she is g. „ xviii 12
our whole earth g nearer to the glow „ 78
Now half to the setting moon are g, „ xxii 23
Is it ^ ? my pulses beat — „ // i 36
It is ^ ; and the heavens fall in a gentle rain, „ 41
paid our tithes in the days that are g, „ v 23
We have lost him : he is gr : Ded. of Idylls 15
So that the realm has g to wrack: Com. of Arthur 227
And g as soon as seen. „ 377
Arthur all at once g mad replies, Gareth and L. 863
younger brethren have g down Before this youth ; „ 1102
a prince whose manhood was all g, Marr. of Geraint 59
Reproach you, saying all your force is gr ? „ 88
with the morning all the court were g. „ 156
when the fourth part of the day was g, Geraint and E. 55
For the man's love once g never returns. „ 333
when I am g Who used to lay them ! Balin and Balan 140
King Had gazed upon her blankly and g by : Merlin and V. 161
lists of such a beara as youth g out „ 245
Writ in a language that has long g by. „ 674
Was one year g, and on returning found „ 708
No sooner g than suddenly she began : Lancelot and E. 96
take Their pastime now the trustful King is gl' „ 101
g sore wounded, and hath left his prize „ 530
I mean nothing : so then, get you g, „ 776
on his helm, from which her sleeve had g. „ 982
His very shield was g ; only the case, „ 990
when the ghostly man had come and g, „ 1101
the heat is g from out my heart, „ 1116
those that had g out upon the Quest, Holy Grail 722
Lost in the quagmire ? — lost to me and g, ,, 892
y he is To wage grim war against Sir Lancelot Guinevere 192
By couriers g before ; and on again, ,. 396
listening till those armed steps were g, „ 585
' G — my lord ! G thro' my sin to slay and to be slain ! „ 612
O, my lord the King, My own true lord ! „ 616
' My end draws nigh ; 'tis time that I were g. Pass, of Arthur 331
and he groan'd, ' The King is g.' » 443
had g Surely, but for a wlusper, Lover's Tale iv 19
Gone (continued) he told me that so many years had
9 by, First Quarrel 36
Flesh of my flesh was g, Rizpah 51
if my boy be g to the fire ? „ 78
half of the short summer night was g. The Revenge 65
for a face G in a moment — strange. Sisters (E. and E.) 94
Sa 'is taail wur lost an' 'is boobks wur g Village Wife 87
sa o' coorse she be g to the bad ! „ 98
(Hath he been here— not found me—g again ? Sir. J. OldcasUe 152
She is g — but you will tell the King, Columbus 234
G ! He will achieve his greatness. Tiresias 167
the master g. G into darkness, „ 201
And g — that day of the storm — The Wreck 148
Hence ! she is g' ! can I stay ? Despair 113
' Lost and g and lost and g ! ' Ancient Sage 224
this Hall at last will go— perhaps have g. The Flight 27
He's g to the States, aroon, Tomorrow 49
dhry eye thin but was wet for the frinds that
was gl „ 83
G the fires of youth, the follies, Locksley H., Sixty 39
G like fires and floods and earthquakes „ 40
G the tyrant of my youth, „ 43
O the comrades of my bivouac, „ 45
g as all on earth will go. „ 46
G with whom for forty years my life „ 47
G our sailor son thy father, „ 55
G thy tender-natured mother, „ 57
(? for ever! Ever? no — „ 65
G the cry of ' Forward, Forward,' „ 73
till ten thousand years have g. „ 78
G at eighty, mine own age, „ 281
Midnight — and joyless June g by, Pref. Poem Broth. S. 9
O THOU so fair in summers g, Freedom 1
Child, when thou wert g, I envied human wives, Demeter and P. 52
an' screeiid like a Howl g wud — Owd Rod 76
So far g down, or so far up in life. The Ring 193
Laid on her table overnight, was g ; „ 277
g ! and g in that embrace ! „ 443
but dead so long, g up so far, „ 462
Is memory with your Marian g to rest. To Mary Boyle 13
bewail the friend, the wife, For ever g. „ 54
Good (adj.) the golden prime Of ^ Haroun
Abaschid. Arabian Nights 11, 22, 33, 44, 55, 66,
77, 88, 99, 110, 121, 132, 143, 154
But g things have not kept aloof. My life is fvU 2
humming of the drowsy pulpit-drone Half God's g
sabbath. To J. M. K. 11
' In some g cause, not in mine own, Two Voices 148
' Yea ! ' said the voice, ' thy dream was g, „ 157
Lean'd on him, faithful, gentle, g, „ 416
he set and left behind The g old year, the dear
old time. May Queen, N. Y's. E. 6
And that g man, the cleigyman, has told me
words of peace. „ Con. 12
' The Legend of G Women,' long ago Sung D. of F. Women 2
Lest one g custom should corrupt the world. M. d' Arthur 242
' Come With all g things, and war shall be no
more.' „ Ep. 28
Who read me rhymes elaborately g, Edwin Morris 20
G people, you do ill to kneel to me. St. S. Stylites 133
The g old Summers, year by year Talking Oak 39
slow sweet hours that bring us all things g, Love and Duty 57
And all g things from evil, „ _ 59
It is not bad but g land, Amphion 6
My g blade carves the casques of men, Sir Galahad 1
Like all g things on earth ! WUl Water. 202
I hold it g, g things should pass : „ 205
I hold thee dear For this g pint of port. „ 212
We felt the g ship shake and reel. The Voyage 15
Wine is g for shnvell'd lips. Vision of Sin 79
Virtue ! — to be g and just— „ 111
Then her g Philip was her all-in-all, Enoch Arden 525
But Miriam Lane was g and garrulous, „ 700
Heard the g mother softly whisper ' Bless, Aylmer's Field 187
Till after our g parents past away „ 358
Good
274
Good
Good (adj.) (continued) plagued themselves To sell her,
those g j)arents, for her good. Aylmer's Field 483
And bad him with g heart sustain himself — „ 544
' Not fearful ; fair,' Said the g wife. Sea Dreams 83
' Was he so boimd, poor soul ? ' said the g wife ; „ 169
old Sir Ralph's at Ascalon : A g knight he ! Princess, Pro. 27
For which the g Sir Ralph had burnt them all — „ 236
But my g father thought a king a king ; „ t 25
mounted our g steeds, And boldly ventured „ 204
As I m^ht slay this child, if g need were, „ ii 287
Wasps in our g hive, „ iv 535
thus I won Your mother, a g mother, a g wife, „ v 166
Were we ourselves but half as g', as kind, „ 201
When the g Queen, her mother, shore the tress „ vi 113
and all the g knights maim'd, „ 241
She needs must wed him for her own g name ; „ vii 74
O g gray head which all men knew, Ode on Well. 35
let ail g things await Him who cares not to be great, „ 198
You cannot love me at all, if you love not my g
name.' Grandmother 48
' Sweetheart, I love you so well that your g name is mine. „ 50
But he cheer'd me, my g man, „ 69
Maakin' 'em goa togither as they've g right to do. N. Farmer, N. S. 34
an 'e died a g un, 'e did. „ 52
if thou marries a ^ un I'll leave the land to thee. „ 56
' How g ! how kind ! and he is gone.' In Mem. xx 20
And all we met was fair and g. And all was g „ xxiii 17
If all was g and fair we met, „ xxiv 5
If thou wilt have me wise and g. „ lix 8
They sang of what is wise and g And graceful. „ ciii 10
for thee she grows For ever, and as fair as g. „ Con. 36
My mother, who was so gentle and g ? Mawd I vi 67
Comfort her, comfort her, all things g, „ II ii 75
lily and rose That blow by night, when the season is g, „ v 75
Have strength and wit, in my g mother's hall GaretJi and L. 12
Since the g mother holds me still a child ! G mother
is bad mother unto me ! „ 15
' Nay, nay, g mother, but this egg of mine „ 42
one, g lack, no man desired. „ 106
' Son, I have seen the g ship sail Keel upward, „ 253
With all g cheer He spake and laugh'd, „ 301
and the sound was g to Gareth's ear. „ 312
Then strode a g knight forward, „ 364
When some g knight had done one noble deed, „ 411
Truth-speaking, brave, g livers, them we enroU'd „ 424
All in a gap-mouth'd circle his g mates Lying „ 511
And the spear spring, and g horse reel, „ 523
g Queen, Repentant of the word she made him swear, „ 526
' Son, the g mother let me know thee here, „ 550
heart of her g horse Was nigh to burst with violence „ 762
Three with g blows he quieted, but three Fled „ 813
g cause is theirs To hate me, „ 820
G — I accord it easily as a grace.' „ 975
Is all as g, meseems, as any knight „ 1017
' Hath not the g wind, damsel, changed again ? ' „ 1054
hath not our g King Who lent me thee, „ 1070
O g knight-knave — 0 knave, „ 1135
' Sir, — and, g faith, I fain had added — Knight, „ 1162
Saving that you mistrusted our g King „ 1172
Where bread and baken meats and g red wine Of Southland, „ 1190
son Of old King Lot and g Queen Bellicent, „ 1231
and thy g horse And thou are weary ; „ 1264
G lord, how sweetly smells the honeysuckle „ 1287
Care not, g beasts, so well I care for you. „ 1308
Then the g King gave order to let blow His horns Marr. of Geraint 152
There is g chance that we shall hear the hounds : „ 182
Harbourage ? truth, g truth, I know not, save,
' Enid, the g knight's horse stands in the court ;
Rest ! the g house, tho' ruin'd, O my son,
His name ? but no, g faith, I will not have it :
And tilts with my g nephew thereupon,
a costly gift Of her g mother, given her
' Yea, I know it ; your g gift,
So sadly lost on that unhappy night ; Your own
ggiitl'
290
370
378
405
488
632
688
Good (adj.) (continued) Yniol made report Of that g mother
making Enid gay Marr. of Geraint 757
Dared not to glance at her g mother's face, „ 766
I charge thee ride before. Ever a g way on before ; Geraint and E. 15
While your g damsel rests, return, ancl fetch „ 224
speak To your g damsel there who sits apart, „ 299
' Your sweet faces make g fellows fools And traitors. „ 399
like a dog, when his g bone Seems to be pluck'd „ 559
G luck had your g man, „ 617
Embracing Balin, ' G my brother, hear ! Balin and Balan 139
As pass without g morrow to thy Queen ? ' „ 252
' The fire of Heaven is lord of all things g, „ 452
Meet is it the g King be not deceived. „ 533
this g knight Told me, that twice a wanton damsel came, „ 608
And made her g man jealous with g cause. Merlin and V. 605
G : take my counsel : let me know it at once : „ 653
foul bird of rapine whose whole prey Is man's g name : „ 729
By which the g Kmg means to blind himself, „ 783
Leaving her household and g father, Lancelot and E. 14
How came the lily maid by that g shield Of Lancelot, „ 28
That passionate perfection, my g lord — „ 122
' Nay, father, nay g father, shame me not „ 207
till our g Arthur broke The Pagan yet once more „ 279
Gareth, a g knight, but therewithal Sir Modred's
brother, „ 557
he went sore wounded from the field : Yet g news too : „ 601
Then far away with g Sir Torre for guide „ 788
And your g father's kindness.' „ 945
Alas for me then, my g days are done.' „ 947
More specially should your g knight be poor, „ 956
Give me g fortune, I will strike him dead, „ 1071
for g she was and true, „ 1292
For g ye are and bad, and like to coins. Holy Grail 25
g saint Arimathaean Joseph, journeying brought „ 50
' God make thee g as thou art beautiful,' „ 136
And g Sir Bors, our Lancelot's cousin, sware, „ 200
Said g Sir Bors, ' beyond all hopes of mine, „ 690
But as for thine, my g friend Percivale, „ 861
then binding his g horse To a tree, PeUeas and E. 30
Yet with g cheer he spake, ' Behold me, Lady, „ 240
' Pity on him,' she answer'd, ' a g knight, „ 386
' G now, what music have I broken, fool ? ' Last Tournament 261
He whistled his g warhorse left to graze „ 490
' 6^ : an I tum'd away my love for thee „ 705
(When the g King should not be there) Guinevere 97
they talk at Almesbury About the g King and his wicked
Queen, „ 209
wrought confusion in the Table Roimd Which g King
Arthur founded, „ 221
Said the g nuns would check her gadding tongue „ 313
tales Which my g father told me, „ 317
Then she, for her g deeds and her pure life, „ 693
Lest one g custom should corrupt the world. Pass, of Arthur 410
breathless body of her g deeds past. Lover's Tale i 217
There the g mother's kindly ministering, „ iv 92
So frighted our g friend, that turning to me „ 383
had need Of a <? stout lad at his farm ; First Quarrel 18
To make a g wife for Harry, „ 30
and they never would let him be g ; Eizpah 29
we had always borne a g name — „ 35
read me a Bible verse of the Lord's g will toward men — „ 61
We could sing a g song at the Plow, (repeat) North. Cobbler 18
G Sir Richard, tell us now, The Revenge 26
' We be all g English men. „ 29
Your g Uncle, whom You count the father of your
fortune, Sisters (E. and E.) 27
' G ! very like ! not altogether he.' „ 136
And not without g reason, my g son — „ 287
bowt owd money, es wouldn't goa, wi' g gowd o' the
Queen, Village Wife 49
' Ay, g woman, can prayer set a broken bone ? ' In the Child. Hosp. 20
but the g Lord Jesus had had His day.' „ 22
Clean from our lines of defence ten or twelve g paces Def. ofLucknow 62
Blessing the wholesome white faces of Havelock's
g f usileers, „ 101
Good
275
Goodmorrow
Good (adj.) (continued) As g need was — thou hast come
to talk our isle. Sir J. OldcasUe 32
Some cried on Cobham, on the y Lord Cobham ; „ 43
Burnt — g Sir Roger Acton, my dear friend ! „ 79
drawn By this g Wiclif mountain down from heaven, „ 132
(My g friend By this time should be with me.) „ 138
I would not spurn G counsel of g friends, „ 146
Chains, my g lord : in your raised brows I read Columbus 1
Drove me and my g brothers home in chains, „ 134
O never was time so ^ ! V. of Maddune 87
You needs must have g lynx-eyes if I do not escape
you Despair 114
Steevie be right g manners bang thruf Spinster's S's. 66
Hesper, whom the poet call'd the Bringer home of
all g things. All g things „ 185
G, this forward, you that preach it, „ 216
When our own g redcoats sank from sight, Heavy Brigade 42
'e was alius as ^ as gowd. Qwd Rod 6
Fur 'e's moor g sense na the Parliament man 'at stans
for us 'ere, ^^ 13
an' I thowt o' the g owd times 'at was goan, „ 43
An' I says ' I'd be g to tha, Bess, if tha'd onywaays let
ma be g," ,, 75
Git oop, if ya're onywaiiys g for owt.' And I says ' If I
beiint noiiwaays — not nowadaiiys — g fur nowt — „ 77
An' Roa was as 9 as the Hangel i' saavin' a son fur me. „ 96
the g and brave ! He sees me, waves me from him. Happy 18
G, I am never weaiy painting you. Romney's R. 3
Eh ? ^ daay ! g daay ! thaw it bean't not mooch
of a daily. Church-warden, etc. 1
Us, 0 Just and G, Forgive, Poland 11
such strange war with something g, Two Voices 302
'Tis only noble to be g. L. C. V. de Vere 54
waked with silence, grunted ' G ! ' M. d' Arthur, Ep. 4
' G ! my lady's kinsman \ g\' Aylmer's Field 198
'G: Your oath is broken: we dismiss you : Princess iv 359
make us all we would be, great and g.' „ 599
Were we ourselves but hall as j, as kind, „ v 201
Good (s) ' She wrought her people lasting g ; To the Queen 24
saw thro' life and death, thro' g and ill. The Poet 5
' And not to lose the g of life — Two Voices 132
' I see the end, and know the g.' „ 432
or if G, G only for its beauty, seeing not
That Beauty, G, and Knowledge, are three
sisters To With Pal. of Art 8
Would love the gleams of g that broke Love thou thy land 89
What g should follow this, if this were done ? M. d' Arthur 92
The drowsy hours, dispensers of all g. Gardener's D. 185
the g and mcrease of the world, (repeat) Edwin Morris 44, 51, 92
some one say. Then why not ill for g ? Lcme and Duty 27
when shall all men's g Be each man's rule, Golden Year 47
Subdue them to the useful and the g. Ulysses 38
But for some true result of g Will Water. 55
He never meant us anything but g. Enoch Arden 887
To sell her, those good parents, for her g. Aylmer's Field 483
contriving their dear daughter's g — „ 781
the two contrived their daughter's g — „ 848
all things work together for the g Of those ' — Sea Dreams 158
All for the common g of womankind.' Princess ii 209
' All g go with thee T take it Sir,' „ vi 207
Whole in himself, a conmion g. Ode on Well. 26
Till each man find his own in all men's g. Ode Inter. Exhib. 37
Embrace her as my natural g ; In Mem. Hi 14
And what to me remains oi g? „ vi 42
Her hands are quicker unto g : „ xxxiii 10
Enjoying each the other's g : „ xlvii 10
Hold thou the g : define it well : „ liii 13
g Will be the final goal of ill, „ liv 1
I can but trust that g shall fall „ 14
I see thee sitting crown'd with g, „ Ixxxiv 5
lead The closing cycle rich in g. „ cv 28
Ring in the common love of g. „ cvi 24
High nature amorous of the g, „ cix 9
Yet O ye mysteries of g, „ cxxviii 8
Behold, I dream a dream of g, „ cxxix 11
Good (s) (continued) Full to the banks, close on the promised g. Maud I xviii 6
Nor let any man think for the public g, „ II v^
It is better to fight for the g ,' /// m 57
I needs must disobey him for his g ; Geraint and E. 135
what they long for, g in friend or foe, „ 876
This g is in it, whatsoe'er of ill, Lancelot and E. 1207
as the base man, judging of the g, Pdleas and E. 80
None knows it, and my tears have brought me g : Guinevere 202
What g should follow this, if this were done ? Pass, of Arthur 260
fur they weant niver coom to naw g. Village Wife 96
power hath work'd no g to aught that lives, Tiresias 77
running edter a shadow of g ; Despair 92
No ill no g ! such counter-terms, my son, Ancient Sage 250
G, for G is G, he follow'd, Locksley H., Sixty 60
Truth for truth, and giorgl The G, the True,
the Pure, the Just — „ 71
preach'd a Gospel, all men's g; „ 89
Evolution ever chmbing after some ideal g, „ 199
Powers of G, the Powers of 111, „ 273
whatsoe'er He wrought of g or brave Epilogue 76
That wanders from the public^. Freedom 26
Shall we not thro' g and ill Open I. and C. Exhib. 33
Goodbye when he came to bid me g. First Quarrel 78
I had bid him my last g ; Rizpah 41
Good Fortune prosperously sail'd The ship ' G F,' Enoch Ardm 528
blown by baffling winds. Like the G F, „ 629
Goodlier ' A goodly youth and worth a g boon ! But
so thou wilt no g, then must Kay, Gareth and L. 450
(And there were none but few g than he) „ 744
When all the g guests are past away, Last Toumammtl58
Goodliest The g fellowship of famous knights M. d' Arthur 15
he seem'd the g man That ever among ladies Lancdot and E. 254
Reputed the best knight and g man, Guinevere 382
The g fellowship of famous knights Pass, of Arthur 183
Goodly In sooth it was a g time, Arabian Nights 20
A g place, a g time, (repeat) „ 31, 53
A g time, For it was in the golden prime „ 42
When on my g charger borne Sir Galahad 49
Nor dealing g counsel from a height Aylmer's Fidd 172
and g sheep In haste they drove. Spec, of Iliad 4
her great and g arms Stretch'd under all the cornice Gareth and L. 218
Had made his g cousin, Tristram, knight, „ 394
The g knight ! What ! „ 402
' A g youth and worth a goodlier boon ! „ 449
For strong thou art and g therewithal, „ 878
dreams Of g supper in the distant pool, „ 1187
' Full merry am I to find my g knave „ 1291
following with a costrel bore The means of g
welcome, Marr. of Geraint 387
And roam the g places that she knew ; „ 646
Ah, dear, he took me from a g house, „ 708
Yea, and he brought me to a 9 house ; „ 713
Men saw the g hills of Somerset, „ 828
But not to g hUl or yellow sea „ 830
Three horses and three g suits of arms, Geraint and E. 124
Then cried Geraint for wine and g cheer „ 283
Some g cognizance of Guinevere, Balin and Balan 195
till his g horse. Arising wearily at a fallen oak, „ 424
tramples on the g shield to show His loathing „ 550
and unhooded casting off The g falcon free ; Merlin and V. 131
for g hopes are mine That Lancelot is no more Lancelot and E. 601
she should ask some g gift of him For her own self „ 912
while I drank the brook, and ate The g apples, Holy Grail 388
' Where is that g company,' said I, „ 432
And then I chanced upon a g town „ • 573
Saving the g sword, his prize, Pdleas and E. 359
A g brother of the Table Round Swung by
the neck : Last Tournament 431
and felt the g hounds Yelp at his heart, „ 503
with g rhyme and reason for it — Sisters (E. and E.) 92
but the g view Was now one blank. Death of (Enone 3
Goodman her small g Shrinks in his arm-chair Princess v 453
Goodmorrow G — Dark my doom was here, Balin and Balan 623
' Goodnight, true brother here ! g there ! „ 628
Speaking a still g-m with her eyes. Lancdot and E. 1033
Goodness
276
Goodn^ eye which watches guilt And g, /„ Mem. xxvi 6
BOOdnight (j, g, when I have said g for evermore, May Queen N. T's E 41
Grace
(j, sweet mother : call me before the day is bom
G ! for we shall never bid again Good morrow—
nune agam should darken thine, G, true brother,'
' (?, true brother here ! goodmorrow there !
the stout Prince bad him a loud g-n.
G-n. I am going. He calls,
and soa little Dick, g-n.
Goods with what she brought Buy g and stores
Bought Annie g and stores,
shelf and comer for the g and stores.
Goodwill G' to me as well as all —
Peace and g, g and peace, Peace and g,
Bible verse of the Lord's g w toward men
Goose (.See also Wild-goose) He held a g upon his arm
take the g, and keep you warm, '
She caught the white g by the leg, A g —
The g let fall a golden egg
She dropt the g, and caught the pelf,
more the white g laid It clack'd and cackled louder.
Go, take the g, and wring her throat,
The g flew this way and flew that.
He took the g upon his arm,
Quoth she, ' The Devil take the g,
He praised his hens, his geese, his guinea-hens •
From the long-neck'd geese of the world '
' Being a g and rather tame than wild,
'twere but of the g and golden eggs.'
egg of mine Was finer gold than any g can lay;
rams and ^eese Troop'd round a Paynim harper
swine, goats, asses, geese The wiser fools,
Gorge (s) {See also Mountain-goi^e) roaring foam
into the g Below us,
The g's, opening wide apart, reveal
craggy le(%e High over the blue g,
golden g of dragons spouted forth A flood
Sat often in the seaward-gazing g,
Downward from his mountain g
Thro' the long g to the far light
Gorge (verb) Gave to the garbaging war-hawk to
9 it,
Gorged snake-hke slimed his victim ere he g •
We issued g with knowledge, '
Dropt off g from a scheme that had left us flaccid
we stay'd three days, and we g and we madden'd
giddy besides with the fruits we had g,
Gorgeous And title-scrolls and g heraldries,
this is he Worthy of our g ntes,
Starr'd from Jehovah's g armouries,
That rollest from the g gloom Of evening
Without a mirror, in the g gown ;
Nor meanly, but with g obsequies,
Mixt with the g west the Ughthouse shone,
Raise a stately memorial. Make it regally g,
Gorgon stared upon By ghastlier than the G head,
G<»gonised G me from head to foot
Gorlois ThisisthesonofG, not the King;
Some calling Arthur bom of G, Others of Anton ?
The prince and warrior G, he that held
But she, a stainless wife to G,
That G and King Uther went to war : And over-
thrown was G and slain,
many hated Uther for the sake Of G.
a son of G he, Or else the child of Anton,
bom the son of G, after death,
' Daughter of G and Ygerne am I ; '
and dark Was G, yea and dark was Uther too,
those Who call'd him the false son of G •
Qorae blaze of g, and the blush Of millions
Gospel The G, the Priest's pearl,
Ah rather. Lord than that thy G,
preach'd a G, all men's good ;
Gossamer (adj.) Had seem'd a g filament up in air
Gossamer («) To trip a tigress with a y,
49
Balin and Balan 622
626
628
Geraint and E. 361
Bizpah 86
Owd Bod 118
Enoch Arden 138
169
171
Supp. Confessions 27
In Mem. xxviii 11
Bizpah 61
The Goose 5
7
9
11
13
23
31
35
41
55
The Brook 126
Maud I iv 52
Gareth and L. 38
40
43
Last Tournament 321
325
// / were loved 13
(Enone 12
,, 210
Palace of Art 2'i
Enoch Arden 589
636
Ode on Well. 213
Batt. of Brunanhurh 109
Sea Dreams 193
Princess ii 388
Maud I i 20
V. of Maddune 67
75
Aylmer's Field 656
Ode on Well. 93
Milton 6
In Mem. Ixxxvi 2
Marr. of Geraint 739
Lancelot and E. 1335
Lover's Tale i 60
On Jvh. Q. Victoria 45
Deaih. of (Enone 71
Maud I xiii 21
Com. of Arthur 73
170
186
194
196
221
232
240
316
329
Guinevere 288
V. of Maddune 43
Sir J. OldcasUe 116
119
Locksley H., Sixty 89
Lover's Tale i 413
Princess v 170
Gossamer (s) (continued) all the silvery g's That twinkle
rn««n'^»H4PT»f'J'*^.°^'^= , . InMem.xil
Gossip (adj.) A hate of g parlance, and of sway, isahd 26
Gossip (s) Fearing the lazy g of the port, Enoch Arden 335
iiy this the lazy g's of the port, 472
The sins of emptiness, g and spite Prikcess ii 92
like a city, with g, scandal, and spite ; Maud I iv 8
Delight myself with g and old wives, Holy GraU 553
Gossip (verb) neighbours come and laugh and g, Grandmother 91
hear the magpie g Garrulous under a roof of pine : To F. D. Maurice 19
Gossoon Thin a shp of a ^ call'd, Tomorrow 18
W)t Cr up betwixt you and the woman there. Dora 96
storming a hill-fort of thieves He ^ it ; Aylmer's Field 226
Sir Ralph has g your colours : Princess iv 594
JNow had you g a fnend of your own age, , ^i 251
Stook to his taail they did, an' 'e 'ant g shut on
v'f^Ju^- ,u J ^- Farmer, N. S. 30
For all have J, the seed. The Flower 20
At last he j; his breath and answer'd, Lancelot and E. 422
up the side, sweating with agony, g, 494
So Lancelot g her horse, Set her thereon, Guinevere 122
we 9 to the barn, fur the bam wouldn't bum Owd Bod 103
Up she g, and wrote him all. Forlorn 79
r. iJ^^J'f ^^T® 9— such a faithful aUy Biflemen form ! 24
GOtnic (adj.) Gleam thro' the G archway in the wall. Godiva 64
«„*i.- / V^f-^^ * ^^T^" l^o"se, Princess, Pro. 232
Gothic (s) Of finest G lighter than a fire, 92
Gotten {See also Well-gotten) you have g the wings of
,, ^0^,^' , , Window, Ay 15
1!" 1^ ^ .T^ ^^""7^' u . Owd Bod 51
when Moother 'ed g to bed, 53
Gourd By heaps of g's, and skins of wine. Vision of Sin 13
In us true growth, in her a Jonah's g, Princess iv 311
Gout 5f and stone, that break Body toward death, Lucretius 153
Pw, ft U' ^"^ \^ ^ ^"^ "^'^ ^' Columbus 235
Gouty The ^ oak began to move, Amvhion 23
uovem 1 have no men to g m this wood : D. of F Wom^n 135
g a whole life from birth to death. Lover's Tale i 76
Governance And own the holy g of Rome.' Columbus 190
Governed I g men by change, and so I sway'd D. of F. Women 130
Governess See Guvness
Government A land of settled ^, You ask me, why, etc. 9
And manners, chmates, councils, g's, Ulysses 14
in arts of g Elizabeth and others ; Princess ii 161
ft« J^/'' mT ^°^ fimj/oice and tender g. Geraint and E. 194
eowd (gold) es wouldn't goa, wi' good g o' the Queen, Village Wife 49
boooks mebbe worth their weight i' g.' 70
Onn^^'^^.^""^M^°°i'f^- V,, Owd Bod Q
Gown Her cap blew off, her g blew up, The Goose 51
She clad herself m a msset g, Zady Clare 57
A g of grass-green silk she wore, - Sir L. and Q. G. 24
they should not wear our rusty g's, Princess, Pro. 143
A rosy blonde, and m a college g, a 323
\^^:X^lrfA'. .u ChandTnother bl
W,-fT,^?f ''■'^ ^ ^pv^the g ; /„ Mem. IxxxvU 2
Without a mimr, m the gorgeous g ; Marr. of Geraint 739
At least put off to please me this poor g, Geraint and E. 679
In this poor g my dear lord found me first, 698
In this poor g I rode with him to court, " 700
In this poor g he bad me clothe myself, " 702
And this poor g I will not cast aside " 705
'tw^'^ 'V,'' ?'^'^ *""? ^' . North! Cobbler 41
all the while I wur chaangm' my g, Spinster's S's. 43
to my f aace or a teann' my g — gi
r^JZ^'^n^ ^" the younger g There at Balliol, To Master of B. 2
&tr J^L^^™ f^^^^~^ "' P"^^ '^^^^' Gardener's D. 126
Graace (grace) an' the power ov 'is G, North. Cobbler 73
r-osl"/ ^^T ^^ ^^A ^ ??'\^. h'^^t' , Church-warden, etc. 42
Graate (grate) red as the Yule-block theer i' the q. Owd Bad 56
Graater (greater) They maakes ma a ^ Laady nor 'er
fir»hhM' * An^/'^ir *^^'' », -.. S^insUr'sS's.WO
ftro«J ^i^ } ^^^■■^T'^Jr^}'' •™^'^®' ^o^^h. Cobbler 32
Grace (*ee also Graace) Victoria— since your Boyal g To the Queen 5
that g Would drop from his^'er-brimming love, Supp. Confessions 112
i'rom all things outward you have won A tearful g, Margaret 12
Grace
277
Grail
Grace (continued) I watch thy g ; and in its place My heart Elednore 127
God in his mercy lend her g,
Complaining, ' Mother, give me g
' But looking upward, full of g, He pray'd,
and, with a silent g Approaching,
loveliest in all ^ Of movement,
all g Summ'd up and closed in little ; —
shelter'd here Whatever maiden g The good old
Summers,
So sweet a face, such angel g,
But the tender y of a day that is dead
' Annie, this voyage by the g of God
(Claspt hands and that petitionary g
Nor deeds of gift, but gifts of g he forged.
And so much g and power, breathing down
arts of g Sappho and others vied with any man :
At last a solemn g Concluded,
easy g, No doubt, for slight delay,
Come, a y to me ! I am your warrior :
who love best have best the g to know
and there is C to be had ;
The mimic picture's breathing g.
With gifts of g, that might express
with power and g And music in the bounds
The maidens gather'd strength and g
manhood fused with female g In such a sort,
Maud in the light of her youth and her g,
Rich in the g all women desire.
Some peculiar mystic g Made her only the child
g that, bright and light as the crest Of a peacock,
May nothing there her maiden g affright !
heaid that Arthur of his g- Had made
Treat him with all g, Lest he should come to shame
so my lance Hold, by God's g, he shall into the mire —
I accord it easily as a 9.'
and with all g Of womanhood and queenhood,
' Here, by God's g, is the one voice for me.'
It were but little g in any of us,
I might amend it by the g of Heaven,
such a 9 Of tenderest courtesy.
Both g and will to pick the vicious quitch
with how sweet g She greeted my return !
To learn the g's of their Table,
Name, manhood, and a g, but scantly thine,
into that rude hall Stent with all g, and not
with haJf disdain Hid under g,
' Do me this g, my child, to have my shield
' A ^ to me,' She answer'd, ' twice to-day.
The g and versatility of the man !
g's of the comt, and songs. Sighs,
' Stay a little ! One golden minute's g !
while that ghostly g Beam'd on his fancy,
' Ye might at least have done her so much g,
the seven clear stars — O g to me —
mighty reverent at our g was he :
glossy-throated g, Isolt the Queen.
' G, Queen, for being loved : she loved me well.
to yield thee g beyond thy peers.'
beauty, g and power, Wrought as a charm
Who see your tender g and stateliness.
Had yet that g of courtesy in him left
and — not one moment's g —
— so, with that g of hers. Slow-moving
praised him to his face with their courtly foreign g ;
being damn'd beyond hope of g' ?
Art and G are less and less :
the branching g Of leafless elm,
they do me too much g — for me ?
Grace (goddess) Like to Furies, like to G's,
Muses and the G's, group'd in threes,
meet her G's, where they deck'd her
Grace (verb) moss or musk, To g my city rooms ;
CalUope to g his golden verse —
' So ye will g me,' answer'd Lancelot,
Graced the glance That g the giving —
L. ofShaloU iv53
Mariana in the S. 29
Two Voices 223
Miner's D. 159
(Enone 75
Gardener's D. 12
Talking Oak 38
Beggar Maid 13
Break, Break, etc. 15
Enoch Arden 190
The Brook 112
Sea Dreams 192
Princess ii 38
163
452
„ to 330
„ OT223
W. to Marie Alex. 28
Grandmother 94
In Mem. Ixxviii 11
„ Ixxxv 46
„ Ixxxvii 33
„ ciii 27
„ cix 17
Maud 7 o 15
„ X 13
„ xiii 39
„ xvi 16
„ xviii 71
Gareth and L. 393
468
723
975
Marr. of Geraint 175
344
624
Geraint and E. 53
861
903
Balin and Balan 193
238
377
ease That g the lowliest act in
' And yet it was
Lancelot and E. 263
382
383
472
648
684
885
1310
Holy Grail 692
702
Last Tournament 509
602
743
Guinevere 143
190
436
Lover's Tale i 659
iv 292
The Revenge 99
Despair 109
Locksley H., Sixty 245
To Ulysses 15
Romney's R. 27
Vision of Sin 41
Princess ii 27
„ vii 168
Gardener's D. 194
Lucretius 94
Lancelot and E. 223
Gardener's D. 178
Graced (continued)
doing it.
Graceful (See also All-graceful)
a !7 gift-
Divided in a ^ quiet — paused.
What looks so little g : ' men '
Or deep dispute, and g jest ;
They sang of what is wise and good And g.
The g tact, the Christian art ;
you keep So much of what is g :
A g thought of her Grav'n on my fancy !
Gracefulness symmetry Of thy floating g.
Graceless Loud laugh'd the g Mark.
Gracious Maud could be g too, no doubt To a lord,
G lessons thine And maxims of the mud !
For Lancelot will be g to the rat,
thine is more to me — soft, g, kind —
thy Mark is kindled on thy lips Most g ;
Was g to all ladies, and the same In open battle
All is g, gentle, great and Queenly.
— well — that were hardly g. No !
A life that moves to g ends
A distant kinship to the g blood
' A g gift to give a lady, this ! ' ' But would it
be more g ' ask'd the girl ' Were I to give
this gift of his to one That is no lady ? '
'G? No 'said he.
So g was her tact and tenderness :
the Lord be g to me ! A plot, a plot,
till the g dews Began to glisten and to fall :
those were g times.
He seems a g and a gallant Prince,
Like creatures native unto g act,
Not learned, save in g household ways.
Whose hand at home was g to the poor:
Some g memory of my friend ;
Or Love but play'd with g lies,
Sweet nature gilded by the g gleam Of letters,
As in the presence ot a,g king,
or what had been those g things,
meet The morrow mom once more in one full field
Of g pastime,
woman's eyes and innocent, And all her bearing g ;
therefore fiatter'd him. Being so g.
And all her damsels too were g to him.
So for the last time she was g to him.
Warm with a g parting from the Queen,
this name to which her g lips Did lend such gentle
utterance,
for the sake Of one recalling g times.
Household happiness, g children.
She dropt the g mask of motherhood.
Watching her large light eyes and g looks,
Gradation Regard g, lest the soul Of Discord
Grade Tho' scaUng slow from g to g;
g's Beyond all g's develop'd ?
To leap the g's of life and Ught,
Gradual Her g fingers steal And touch
while I walk'd with these In Marvel at that g
change,
saner lesson might he learn Who reads thy g
process.
Gradually And g the powers of the night,
Graduate See Girl-graduates
Graff made a Gardener putting in a g.
Grafted Disrooted, what I am is g here.
my days have been a life-long lie, G on half a truth ;
Grail (See also Holy Grail) and the G Past, and the
beam decay'd,
A crimson g within a silver beam ;
Because I had not seen the G,
' Art thou so bold and hast not seen the G ? '
I, Galahad, saw the G, The Holy Grail,
Before a burning taper, the sweet O Glided and past,
Could see it, thou hast seen the G ; '
Gareth and L. 490
Talking Oak 233
Gardener's D. 156
Princess Hi 53
In Mem. Ixxxiv 24
„ ciii 11
„ ex 16
Lancelot and E. 1219
Lover's Tale i 357
Elednore 50
Merlin and V. 62
Maud 7 a; 28
Merlin and V. 48
120
Last Tournament 560
562
Guinevere 329
On Jub. Q. Victoria 14
Eajypy 103
You might have won 6
Aylm^r's Field 62
240
Princess i 24
ii 191
316
iv297
o213
vii 27
318
W. to Marie Alex. 37
In Mem. c 4
CXXV I
Ded. of Idylls 39
Gareth and L. 316
Geraint and E. 636
Holy GraU 324
394
Pelleas and E. 120
122
175
558
Lover's Tale i 456
, To E. Fitzgerald 53
Vastness 24
The Ring 384
Prog, of Spring 19
Love thou thy land 67
Two Voices 174
Gardener's D. 240
In Mem. xli 11
Will Water. 26
Lover's Tale Hi 19
Prog, of Spring 106
Princess, Con. Ill
Merlin and V. 479
Princess ii 220
Romney's R. 42
Holy GraU 121
155
196
279
464
694
757
Grail
278
Graspest
Grail (continued) And to the Holy Vessel of the G.' Holy Grail 840
Grain (com) four-field system, and the price of </; Audley Court di
shower the fiery g Of freedom broadcast Princess v 421
A j)amphleteer on guano and on g, „ Con. 89
eating hoary g and pulse the steeds, Spec, of Iliad 21
And vacant chaff well meant for g. In Mem. vi 4
grown The g by which a man may live ? „ Uii 8
And gave all ripeness to the jr, „ Ixxxi 11
g Storm-strengthen'd on a wmdy site, Gareth and L. 691
Smuttier than blasted g : Last Tournament 305
and of the g and husk, the grape And ivyberry, De Prof., Two G. 50
torpid mummy wheat Of Egypt bore a ^ as sweet
As that To Prof. Jebh. 6
thro' olive-yard and vine And golden g, Bemeter and P. Ill
From buried g thro' springing blade, „ 146
heats our earth to yield us g and fruit, Akbar's Bream 105
Grain (fibre, etc.) Cut Prejudice against they: Love thou thy land 22
tho' I circle in the g Five hundred rings Talking Oak 83
Nor ever lightning char thy g, „ 277
the stem Less g than touchwood, Princess iv 333
And twists the g with such a roar „ v 528
There dwelt an iron nature in the g: „ w 50
Too prurient for a proof against the g Merlin and V. 487
Grain (particle) A little g of conscience made him sour.' Vision of Sin 218
The city sparkles hke a ^ of salt. WiU 20
A little g shall not be spilt.' In Mem. Ixv 4
For every g of sand that nms, „ cxvii 9
Have a 9 of love for me, Maud II ii 53
When weight is added only g by g, Marr. of Geraint 526
Not a 9 of gratitude mine I Bespair 62
in the million-millionth of a y Ancient Sage 42
chains of mountain, g's of sand Locksley H., Sixty 208
Grain (fast dye) one the Master, as a rogue in g Princess, Pro. 116
Grained See Hard-grained
Granary find my garden-tools upon the g
floor : May Queen, N. Y's. E. 45
gamer'd up Into the granaries of memory — Lover's Tale i 129
Grand He look'd so g when he was dead. The Sisters 32
This same g year is ever at the doors.' Golden Year 74
Princess, six feet high, G, epic, homicidal ; Princess, Pro. 225
She look'd as gt as doomsday and as grave : „ i 187
true she errs. But in her own g way : „ Hi 108
strange Poet-princess with her g Imaginations „ 273
Or some g fight to kill and make an end : „ iv 591
wherein were wrought Two g designs ; „ vii 122
he bore without abuse The g old name of gentleman, In Mem. exi 22
A g political dinner To half the squirelings near ; Maud I xx 25
A g poUtical dinner To the men of many acres, „ 31
Grandchild I wish to see My g on my knees Bora 13
Grander And roU'd the floods in ^ space, In Mem. ciii 26
Grand<her I mean your g, Annie : Grandmother 23
Whose old g has lately died, Maud 1x5
Grandsire The boy set up betwixt his g's knees, Bora 131
sorcerer, whom a far-off g burnt Princess i 6
he bestrode my G, when he fell, „ it 242
a greatness Got from their G's — Batt, of Brunanburh 16
Ev'n her G's fifty half forgotten. On Jub. Q. Victoria 41
Grandson To a g, first of his noble line, Maud I xl2
Late, my g ! half the morning have I paced Locksley H., Sixty 1
Here is Locksley Hall, my g, „ 213
Not the Hall to-night, my g\ „ 237
Grange Upon the lonely moated g. Mariana 8
About the lonely moated g. „ 32
So pass I hostel, hall, and g ; Sir Galahad 81
so by tilth and g. And vines. Princess i 110
nail me like a weasel on a y For warning : „ ii 205
burnt the g, nor buss'd the milking-maid, „ v 222
That ripple round the lonely g ; In Mem. xei 12
No gray old g, or lonely fold, „ c 5
Old Fitz, who from your suburb g. To E. Fitzgerald 1
A height, a broken g, a grove. Ancient Sage 223
Rejoicing in the harvest and the g. Bemeter and P. 127
Granite shadowy g, in a gleaming pass ; Lotos-Eaters, C. 8. 4
ebb that faintly lipp'd The flat red y ; Audley Court 13
Grant ' Good soul I suppose I ^ it thee, Two Voices 38
Grant {continued) ' But if I g', thou mightst defend The
thesis Two Voices 337
didst thou g mine asking with a smile, Tithonus 16
We might be still as happy as God g's Enoch Arden 416
(Altho' I g but Uttle music there) Sea Breams 253
You g me license ; might I use it ? Princess Hi 235
1 g in her some sense of shame, „ iv 349
G me your son, to nurse, „ vi 298
g my prayer. Help, father, brother, „ 304
God g I may find it at last ! Maud I HI
His face, as I y, in spite of spite, „ xiii 8
G me some knight to do the battle for me, Gareth arid L. 362
ev'n that thou g her none, „ 368
g me to serve For meat and drink among thy
kitchen-knaves „ 444
And pray'd the King would g me Lancelot „ 856
G me pardon for my thoughts : Marr, of Geraint 816
if the Queen disdain'd to gi it ! Balin and Balan 191
' Fairest I g her : I have seen ; „ 356
g me some slight power upon your fate, Merlin and V. 333
And g my re-reiterated wish, „ 353
0 g my worship of it Words, as we 9 grief tears. Lancelot and E. 1187
Only this G me, I pray you : „ 1217
Queen, if I g the jealousy as of love, „ 1399
Granted Nor yet refused the rose, but g it. Gardener's B. 160
Perfectly beautiful : let it be g her : Maud I ii 4
As fairest, best and purest, g me To bear it ! ' Balin and Balan 350
What should be g which your own gross heart Merlin and V. 916
But takes it all for g : Lover's Tale i 157
Sanctuary g To bandit, thief, assassin — Sir J. Oldcastle 112
Grape (fruit) {See also Father-grape) But pledge me
in the flowing g. My life is full 15
And g's with bimches red as blood ; Bay-Bm., Sleep P. 44
Let there be thistles, there are g's ; Will Water. 57
skins of wine, and piles of g's. Vision of Sin 13
drains The chalice of the g's of God ; In Mem. x 16
bruised the herb and crush'd the g, „ xxxv 23
shun The foaming g of eastern France. „ Con. 80
when my father dangled the g's, Maud I ill
this wine — the g from whence it flow'd Sisters {E. and E.) 61
dangled a hundred fathom of g's, V. of Maddune 56
grain and husk, the g And ivyberry, choose ; Be Prof., Two 6. 50
vines with g's Of Eshcol hugeness ; To E. Fitzgerald 27
Are figs of thistles ? or ^'5 of thorns ? Riflemen form / 10
Grape (shot) their masses are gapp'd with our g — Bef. of Lucknow 42
Now double-charge it with gl „ 68
Grape-loaded valleys of g-l vines that glow B. of F. Women 219
Grape-thicken'd in a bower G-t from the light, Elednore 36
Grapple And g's with his evil star ; In Mem. Ixiv 8
Grappling airy navies g in the central blue ; Locksley Hall 124
Grasp (s) A g Having the warmth and muscle Aylmer's Field 179
To give him the g of fellowship ; Maud I xiii 16
g of hopeless grief about my heart. Lover's Tale i 126
1 clasped her without fear : her weight Shrank in my g, „ ii 203
Pity for all that aches in the g of an idiot power, Bespair 43
Grasp (verb) God-like, g's the triple forks. Of old sat Freedom 15
I will not cease to g the hope I hold Of saintdom, St. S. Stylites 5
his long arms stretch'd as to y a flyer : Aylmer's Field 588
And g's the skirts of happy chance. In Mem. Ixiv 6
To him who g's a golden Dall, „ cxi3
Than language g the infinite of Love. Lover's Tale i 484
Grasp'd-Graspt one hand grasp'd The mild bull's golden
horn. Palace of Art 119
there the world-worn Dante grasp'd his song, „ 135
And mounted horse and graspt a spear, Gareth and L. 691
long black horn Beside it hanging ; wluch Sir Gareth
graspt, „ 1367
Thus Balin graspt, but while in act to hurl, Balin and Balan 368
Queen Graspt it so hard, that all her hand Last Tournament 411
her hand Grasp'd, made her vail her eyes : Guinevere 663
I loved her, graspt the hand she lov'd. Lover's Tale i 750
' Woman ' — he graspt at my arm — The Wreck 120
tiny fist Had graspt a daisy from your Mother's grave — The Ring 323
Graspest Old Yew, which g at the stones In Mem. ii 1
Dark yew, that g at the stones „ xxxix 4 .
Grasping
279
Grave
Grasping g the pews And oaken finials Aylmer's Fidd 822
g down the boughs I gain'd the shore. Princess iv 189
jfo ! it was her mother g her Marr. of Geraint 676
This heard Geraint, and g at his sword, Geraint and E. 725
deathly-pale Stood g what was nearest, Lancelot and E. 966
Oraspt See Grasp'd
Grass (See also Meadow-grass, Oat-grass, Sparrow-grass,
Sword-grass) the dull Saw no divinity in g, A Character 8
And seem'd knee-deep in mountain g, Mariana in the S. 42
Make thy g hoar with early rime. Two Voices 66
You scarce could see the g for flowers. „ 453
the bearded g Is dry and dewless. Miller's D. 245
The grasshopper is silent in the g : (Enone 26
From level meadow-bases of deep g Palace of Aril
above my head in the long and pleasant g. May Qrieen, N. Y's. E. 32
petals from blown roses on the g, Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 2
Heap'd over with a mound of g, „ 67
thro lush green g'es bum'd The red anemone. D. of F. Women 71
A league of g, wash'd by a slow broad stream, Gardener's D. 40
So light upon the g : Talking Oak 88
He lies beside thee on the g. „ 239
All g of silky feather grow — „ 269
Or scatter'd blanching on the g. Day-Dm., Arrival 12
' There I put my face in the g — Edward Gray 21
High-elbow'd grigs that leap in summer g. The Brook 54
the Squire had seen the colt at g, „ 139
Show'd her the fairy footings on the g, Aylmer's Field 90
With neighbours laid along the g, Lucretius 214
babies roll'd about Like tumbled fruit in g ; Princess, Pro. 83
Grate her harsh kindred in the g : „ iv 125
Lay like a new-fall'n meteor on the g, „ vi 135
she sat, she pluck'd the g, She flung it „ Con. 31
I may die but the g will grow. And the g will
grow when I am gone, Window, No Answer 4
Spring is here with leaf and g: „ 23
And, since the g'es round me wave, In Mem. xxi 2
I take the g'es of the grave, „ 3
And tuft with g a feudal tower ; „ cxxviii 20
From little cloudlets on the g, „ Con. 94
fall before Her feet on the meadow g, Maud 7 d 26
A livelier emerald twinkles in the g, „ xviii 51
their feet In dewy g'es glisten'd ; Gareth and L. 928
when he found the g witliin his hands He laugh'd ; „ 1225
"' ' ' Geraint and E. 256
507
Balin and Balan 333
Merlin and V. 33
621
649
Lancelot and E. 107
431
Boly Grail 571
794
Last Tournament 233
„ . 735
Guinevere 34
Lover's Tale ii 101
Village Wife 32
To E. Fitzgerald 13
Tiresias 45
Tomorrow 73
pluck'd the g There growing longest
Tho' happily down on a bank of g,
grayly draped With streaming g, appear'd,
' Here are snakes within the g ;
lived alone in a great wild on g ;
Went back to his old wild, and lived on g,
its own voice clings to each blade of g,
Lay like a rainbow fall'n upon the g,
eft and snake. In g and burdock,
flats, where nothing but coarse g'es grew;
live g, Rose-campion, bluebell, kingcup,
O ay — the winds that bow the g !
the flowering grove Of g'es Lancelot pluck'd
Prone by the dashing nmnel on the g.
an' they sucks the muck fro' the g.
Who live on milk and meal and g ;
And all her golden armour on the g,
they laid this body they foun' an the g
blossom an' spring from the g,
glory lights the hall, the dune, the g !
Jacob's ladder faUs On greening g,
gold from each laburnum chain Drop to the g.
delight To roll himself in meadow g
Thy living flower and g,
Cirass-green graves g-g beside a gray church-tower,
A gown of g-g silk she wore,
Grasshopp^ the g carolleth clearly ;
The g is silent in the grass :
Grassy The plain was g, wild and bare,
gave into a g walk Thro' crowded lilac-ambush
And g barrows of the happier dead.
By g capes with fuUer sound In curves
LocJcsley H., Sixty 181
Early Spring 10
To Mary Boyle 11
Rorrmey's R. 14
Doubt and Prayer 6
Circumstance 6
Sir L. and Q. G. 24
Leonine Eleg. 5
(Enone 26
Dying Swan 1
Gardener's Z>. Ill
TUhonus 71
Sir L. and Q. G. 14
Grassy (continued) I steal by lawns and g plots. The Brook 170
thro' many a g glade And valley, Marr. of Geraint 236
When we had reach'd The g platform on some hill, lever's Tale i 341
Grate (s) (See also Graate) glimmering vaults with
iron g's, D. of F. Women 35
rang the g of iron thro' the groove, Pelleas and E. 207
Grate (verb) the harsh shingle should g underfoot, Enoch Arden 772
I ^ on rusty hinges here : ' Princess i 86
G her harsh kindred in the grass : „ iv 125
Grated (See also Rib-grated) faces flat against the
panes. Sprays g, Balin and Balan 345
Bhnkt the white morn, sprays g, „ 385
grew So g down and filed away with thought, Merlin and V. 623
Grateful g at last for a httle thing: Maud III vi 3
G to Prince Geraint for service done, Marr. of Geraint 15
So g is the noise of noble deeds „ 437
be g for the sounding watchword Locksley H., Sixty 198
And deem me g, and farewell ! The Wanderer 16
That over- vaulted g gloom, Palace of Art 54
a g people named Enid the Good ; Geraint and E. 963
clouded with the g incense-fume Tiresias 183
Gratefollest Hers was the g heart I have found In the Child. Hosp. 32
Gratefulness King was all f ulfill'd with g, Last Tournament 593
By all the laws of love and g. Lover's Tale iv 278
Gratify We would do much to g your Prince — Princess v 217
Grating Across the iron g of her cell Beat, Holy Grail 81
Struck from an open g overhead High in the wall, Lover's Tale iv 60
As from the j of a sepulchre. The Ring 400
Gratitude Out of full heart and boundless g Enoch Arden 346
This nightmare weight of g, I know it ; Princess vi 300
Not a grain of g mine ! Despair 62
G — loneliness — desire to keep So skilled The Ring 373
Gratulation and was moving on In g. Princess ii 185
Grave (adj.) Or gay, or g, or sweet, or stern, Palace of Art 91
G, florid, stern, as far as eye could see. Sea Dreams 219
a hero lies beneath, G, solemn ! ' Princess Pro. 213
She look'd as grand as doomsday and as g: „ i 187
In each we sat, we heard The g Professor. „ ii 371
Farewell, Macready ; moral, g, sublime, To W. C. Macready 12
And that has made you g ? The Ring 88
G mother of majestic works. Of old sat Freedom 13
Until the g churchwarden doff'd, The Goose 19
G faces gather'd in a ring. Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 38
Altho' a g and staid God-fearing man, Enoch Arden 112
The g, severe Genovese of old. The Daisy 40
G doubts and answers here proposed. In Mem. xlviii 3
Grave (s) See also Ocean-grave) when thy g Was
deep, Supp. Confessions 85
Over its g i' the earth so chilly ; (repeat) A spirit haunts 10, 22
the green that folds thy g. (repeat) A Dirge 6, 13, 20, 27, 34, 41, 48
Two g's grass-green beside a gray church-tower, Circumstance 6
the brink Of that deep g to which I go : My life is full 7
From winter rains that beat his g. Two Voices 261
A shadow on the g's 1 knew, „ 272
' From g to g the shadow crept : „ 274
I shall he alone, mother, within the moulder-
ing g. May Queen, N. Y's. E. 20
and upon that g of mine, „ 21
see me till my g be growing green : „ 43
His voice was thin, as voices from the g ; Lotos-Eaters 34
and ripen toward the g In silence ; „ C. S. 51
cord of love Down to a silent g. D. of F. Women 212
Thou seest all things, thou wilt see my g : Tithonv^ 73
Each pluck'd his one foot from the g, Amphion 43
By Ellen's g, on the windy hill. Edward Gray 12
The very g's appear'd to smile, The Letters 45
drop thy foolish tears upon my g. Come not, when, etc. 2
glow-worm of the g Glimmer in thy rheumy eyes. Vision of Sin 153
Till the g's begin to move, „ 165
tho' she mourn'd his absence as his y, Enoch Arden 247
it would vex him even in his 9, „ 303
thought to bear it with me to my g ; „ 896
shame these mouldy Aylmers in their g's: Aylmer's Field 396
Above them, with his hopes in either g. „ 624
bring Their own gray hairs with sorrow to the g — „ 777
Grave
280
very sides of the ^ itself shall pkss, Lucretius 256
There above the little g, (repeat) Princess'ii 12 ll
that full voice which circles round the g Princess u IZ, 16
cram him with the fragments of the o, ' " ,vv qii
and drank himself into his g. rL^^Jk r
Drops in his va^t and wandering^. ?«£ ffifi
I take the grasses of the g, ''" ^^'"- "* ^\
yeam'd To hear her weeping by his o ? " ^^* a
Or builds the house, or digs the g, " ^^^» *
And darkening the dark ^'s of men,- " ^^T^^l
I wrong the g with fears untrue : " , • q
No Ufa may fail beyond the g, " , %
Unused example from the g " 7 \i
And my prime passion in the o: " jf^'^ia
Had f all'n into^er father's ,, ' " £^^ ^
fathers bend Above more g's, " *^^^??: ^°
with me, and the g Divide us not, " '"^IDj'q
the g That has to-day its sunny side. " rff 7,
To-day the g is bright for me, " ^'"*- ^
thing that had made false haste to the g— Maud T i 4.
and Onon lo w in his ^. "^ ""^ . .*. ^^
Your mother is mute in her q " "* i^
Perhaps from a selfish y. " ^^.g"
into a shallow y they are thrust, " f? «
To have no peace in the g, is that not sad ? ' 1 fi
Is It kmd to have made me a y so rough, " 07
Orion's g low down in the west, " yi-r • i
The cackle of the unborn about the g, Merlin an/v Vm
Among the knightly brasses of the g's, '^^ ^- ??5
I shudder, some one steps across mv o • ' 'At, • c^
that his .should be a mastery From^^I men, Gu^nevere^
From halfway down the shadow of the ., To the OueeniU
to whom I made it o'er his g Sacred ^ %^
I and the first daisy on his g Zov^/; j,. ■ , ^X
received m a sweet g Of eglantines, sialet 196
That men plant over .'5. " „°
the darkness of the g, (repeat) " ^q.
The foul steam of the g to thicken by it, " «4q
till they fell Half-digging their own g's) " .f^
over the deep g's of Hope and Fear, " to
now, will I go down into the g, " • ^%
pR&X'te'Z^^^, ?Le ,- ^^-^ (^- «^ ^-J i
I wiU have them buried in my.. ^'•^- IST'^^o?
sonie one standing by my . ^1 say, Columhus 201
a ghasther face than ever has haunted a g TheWrerkt
vex you with wretched words, who is best in his . ? DesZi^lot
the world is dark with griefs and .'5, ^ Ancient Sale l?i
and weds me to my .. "^ nlvf^Jln
Fiend would yell, the g would yawn, ^''' ^^"^^ f ?
I seem to see a new-dug g up yonder by the yew ! " qt
hau: was as white as the snow an a 0. ^ r««;:,rr«,« fin
m wan g be the dead boor-tree, I'omorrotc 60
yet he look'd beyond the o, T^^^v^i^. tj "o- ^ cA
I repent it o'er his g— ' LocMey H., Sixty m
cycle-year That dawns behind the g. EvUonJlP,
raise a wind To sing thee to thy g, XlT Ik
sovnng the nettle on all the laurel'd g's of the Great : VastZ 22
graspt a daisy from your Mother's g- ' Th^mlnvA
glimmers on the mareh and on the 1' ^^' ^''^ S?
I am fitter for my bed, or for my a, " f^Q
0 the night, While the g is yawnii^ p" , «n
1 would leap into your g. ^ ^' -^'•^'"•'» ^0
throbs Thro' earth, and all her a's p ^"^/^, o2
Hush'd as the heart of the f ^ ' iZTnk^oa
I am dressing the , of a woLn with flowers. ^"'^^^ 'cW« I
your shadow falls on the g. i^tiarUyZ
I am dressing her g with flowers. " ji
crimson with battles, and hoUow with a's Th^ n " To
Orave waterbreak Above the goldenT^ ^ ' tE.r'^Z ll
like a wizard pentagram On garden., The Brook^62
Gray
The Daisy 34
Arabian Nights 108
W'iW ^a<er. 248
Com. of Arthur 302
Lover's Tale i 358
Tiresias 124
EreocA ^rdew 129
203
Princess, Con. 66
Sisters (E. and E.) 26
38
40
To F. D. Maurice 1
Marr. of Geraint 308
Merlin and V. 180
Princess, Con. 59
A'. Farmer, N. S. 16
A^ortA. Cobbler 86
Owd ifoa 26
Gravel-spread bed Of silent torrents, g-s ■
Graven G with emblems of the time, '
tmderneath, A pint-pot neatly ..'
on one side, G in the oldest tongue
A graceful thought of hers G on my fancy !
Their names, G on memorial colmnns
Graver No . than as when some httle cloud
he turn'd The current of his talk to . things
No . than a schoolboys' barring out •
one is somewhat . than the other— '
No ! but the paler and the ., Edith.
The . is the one perhaps for you
Come, when no . cares employ,
' G cause than yours is mine To curse this
hedgerow thief.
Began to break her sports with . fits.
Gravest The . citizen seems to lose his head,
Graw (grow) an' proputty, proputty g's.
thou can't . this upo' watter ! '
Graw'd (grew) as . hall ower the brick :
Gray (Edward) See Edward Gray
Gray (adj.) my hope is ., and cold At heart, Supv. Confessions 103
Come from the woods that belt the . hill-side, IdeToM^rUt
IZT^SxF^'^r'"' \^^' ^ ' church-tower, ct^^Zel
rour . walls, and four g towers, r -,/ vh^j^t* ; 1 1;
I Ut ^^ ^ ^y^ ^^^'^l^ yet At his own jest-, eyes ^
g twihght pour'd On dewy pastures, pS'ofAr't 85
wild marsh-marigold shines like fire in swamps and ^
hollows ., 71^ <-i 01
You'll never see me more in the long . fields ^^ ^"'''' ^^
Th^rfirk^d""^ S%? ^^^^^^'^^ *«--«' """" ^"&wl"/218
And twf i^^r^f apathetic end. L^ve and Duty 18
And this . spirit yearning m desire m,,,^, m
for this . shadow, once a man- Tithonus 11
chad""^* ^ barbarian lower than the Christian
my hai Is . before I know it. ^mPwatfr lit
A .and gap-tooth'd man as lean as death, Vilionofsi7im
On thy cold . stones, O Sea ! ' Brelbrmkl 2
higbjn heaven behind it a . down With Danish ' '
His^arge'.' eyes and weather-beaten face ^"^'^ "^'^^l
He, shakmg his . head patheticaUy, " 714
See thro' the . skirts of a lifting squall - " k^
wf ^^"°°'' ''''"*"^ ^^ 3 eyes upon her, " lA
!fwn tT ■°'^" ^ *T®-''' ''' plain-faced tabernacle, Aylmer' s Field 618
bnng Their own . hairs with sorrow to the grav^ ^ * ^ t«a 010
a work To assail this . preeminence of man ! PriZess Hi 234
From the flaxen curi to the . lock a hfe •' 426
and without Found the . kings at parie : " I ffS
Look you ! the . mare Is ill to live with, " i^l
G halls alone among their massive groves : " Cor, 4.^
0 good . head which all men knew, o^"^„ ^2' f.
From Como, when the light was ., TheDaisu 73
i"w*^ uT^'^li"^ 9 metropolis of the North. '^1 J4
We shall both be ..' „/■, " „,, ^^^
^nurses, loving no'thing new ; S^' S"l4
The same . flats again, and felt The same, Ixxxvii 13
No . old grange, or lonely fold, " '^'^^^^ ^^
A . old wolf and a lean. „'> , . • ..'k^
Not that . old wolf, for he came not back "^""^ ^X S
Sleuth-hound thou knowest, and a r„.,.fh /r ^^o
ivy-^ems Claspt the . walls' w?th haiiy-fibred ^'"'''^ """^ ^^ ^^^
G s^ps and pools, waste places of the hern, ^TeratfaJVi
As the . dawn stole o'er the dewy world ^erai,u and Ji.61
This . King Show'd us a shrine wherein ' Balin n^ARnJn^ fnft
As that .cricket chirpt of at our hearth- Medi^^Jv \m
seem'd a lovely baleful star Veil'd in . vapour • 5fi?
Had found a glen, . boulder and black tam. La.icelot and E^l
Sat on his knee, stroked his . face and said, -745
aSefS feTn^t'disTaS, "'^" ''' ^"^ ^' ^^' ^--~' £
„ 040
Gray
281
Heart-hiding smile, and g persistent
Guinevere o4
255
603
To the Queen ii 39
Gray (adj.) (continued)
eye I
When three g linnets wrangle for the seed :
and made him g And grayer,
Rather than that g king, whose name, a ghost.
Than the g cuckoo loves his name. Lover s Tale 1 257
. G relics of the nurseries of the world, .. f^
the summit and the pinnacles Of a ^ steeple- » ^.„;, iin
and That 9 beast, the wolf of the weald. Bait, of Brunanburh 110
The first /streak of earUest summer-dawn, A ncient Sage ^^0
for doubtless I am old, and think , thoughts, for^^^^^^ ^^ ^.^^^ ^^^
WitHne ? glimpse of sea; Pro. to Gen Haml^S
dash'd up alone Thro' the great g slope of men, Heavy Brmdejl
Yet tho' this cheek be 9, n r a n v^tri^^
G with distance Edward's fifty summers, On Jm6. Q. Fwtorta 40
came On three g heads beneath a gleammg rift,
Those g heads. What meant they
far As the g deep, a landscape which your eyes
You that are watching The g Magician
And now that I am white, and you are g.
Gray (s) The level waste, the rounding g.
An imder-roof of doleful g.
Grow green beneath the showery g,
Roll'd a sea-haze and whelm'd the world in g :
I sleep till dusk is dipt in g :
Touch thv dull goal of joyless g,
like night and evening mixt Their dark and g,
Nor settles into hueless g.
Burst from a swimming fleece of wmter g,
Grayer Enwound him fold by fold, and made him gray And g
Gray-eyed cold winds woke the g-e mom
Gray-hair'd the g-h wisdom of the east ;
old, G-h, and past desire, and in despair.
Grayliiig And here and there a g,
Grays Behind the dappled g.
Graze They g and wallow, breed and sleep ;
The steer forgot tog, , , . , ^, ^. ,
highest-crested helm could ride Therethro nor g .
They let the horses g, and ate themselves,
warhorse left to g Among the forest greens.
Year will g the heel of year.
Grazing points Of slander, glancing here and g there ;
Demeter and P. 83
129
The Ring 150
Merlin and the G. 5
Roses on the T. 4
Mariana 44
Dying Swan 4
My life is full 17
Enoch Arden612
In Mem. Ixvii 12
„ Ixxii 27
Princess vi 132
To Marq. of Dufferin 50
Demeter and P. 20
Guinevere 604
Mariana 31
Holy Grail 453
Last Tournament 653
The Brook 58
Talking Oak 112
Palace of Art 202
Gardener's D. 85
Gareth and L. 674
Geraint and E. 211
Last Tournament 490
Poets and Critics 14
Merlin and V. 173
Great
Gteat (continued) With jf contrivances of Power. Love tfwu thy land 6i
on one Lay a g water, and the moon was full. M. d Arthur i^
g brand Made lightnings in the splendour of the moon, „ 13b
Soga. miracle as yonder hilt. >. l&b
Lay g with pig, waUowing in sun and mud. Walk, to the Mail 88
.' » . ^^'. , . rr . J iu_ u:ii„ Golden Yearlo
Ulysses 64
Tithonus 14
Locksley Hall 8
182
Godiva 31
.» "^^
Amphion 9, 13
51
TAe Captain 19
i. of Burleigh 30
60
EwocA Arden 597
680
A 9 iron collar grinds my neck ;
Grease See Kitchen-grease
Greasy Thou battenest by the g gleam
Great (See also Great) G in faith, and strong
Against the grief of circumstance
And thou of God in thy g charity)
Emerged, I came upon the g Pavilion
caught from thee The light of thy g presence ;
Well hast thou done, g artist Memory,
the worid Like one g garden show'd.
But in a city glorious— A g and distant city-
God's g gift of speech abused
TiU that g sea-snake under the sea
What is there in the g sphere of the earth.
And I beheld g Here's angry eyes,
in bliss I shall abide In this g mansion.
While this g bow will waver in the sun.
Full of g rooms and small the palace stood,
Then in the towers I placed g bells that swung,
and those g bells Began to chime.
In this g house so royal-rich, and wide,
In doubt and g perplexity,
or one deep cry Of g wild beasts ;
A g enchantress you may be ; ,,,,.,,
For g delight and shuddering took hold of all my
mind.
And our g deeds, as half-forgotten things.
spacious times of g EUzabeth With sounds
As when a g thought strikes along the bram,
' I had g beauty : ask thou not my name :
G Natiire is more wise than I :
And the g ages onward roll.
St. S. Stylites 117
Will Water. 221
Supp. Confessions 91
Isabel 40
Arabian Nights 113
Ode to Memory 32
80
The Poet 34
Deserted H. 20
A Dirge 44
The Mermaid 23
// 1 were loved 2
CEnone 190
Palace of Art 19
43
57
129
157
191
278
283
L. C. V. de Vere 30
May Queen,Con. 35
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 78
D. of F. Women 7
43
93
To J. S. 35
„ 72
the g echo flap And bufiet round the hills,
And see the g Achilles, whom we knew.
he seem'd To his 9 heart none other than a God !
Did I look on g Orion sloping slowly to the West.
Let the g world spin for ever
He parted, with g strides among his dogs.
With twelve g shocks of sound,
had I hved when song was g (repeat)
Like some g landslip, tree by tree,
Hoped to make the name Of his vessel g m story,
Parks and order'd gardens g.
Not a lord in all the county Is so 3 a lord as he.
Then the g stars that globed themselves
a ^ mist-blotted light Flared on him,
That g pock-pitten fellow had been caught .-'
Now chafing at his own g self defied,
scowl'd At their g lord.
shroud this g sin from all !
Then the g Hall was wholly broken down,
and himself Were that g Angel;
The motion of the g deep bore me on.
When the g Books (see Daniel seven and ten)
and then the g ridge drew,
that g wave Returning, while none mark d it.
Live the 0 life which all our greatest
as the g Sicilian called Calliope
Not follow the g law ?
Seeing with how g ease Nature can smile,
spoils My bliss in being; and it was not g;
G Nature, take, and forcing far apart
And all things g ;
I wish That I were some g princess,
' And make her some g Princess, six feet high.
Our g court-Galen poised his gilt-head cane,
A present, a g labour of the loom ;
and with g urns of flowers.
when we set our hand To this g work,
Lucius Junius Brutus of my kind? Him you call g
While the g organ almost burst his pipes.
And your g name flow on with broadening tin^
With only Fame for spouse and your g deeds I'or
Howe'e'r you babble, g deeds cannot die ;
Toward that g year of equal mights and rights,
Stared with g eyes, and laugh'd with alien lips,
But g is song Used to g ends :
Two a statues, Art And Science, Caryatids,
Bear had wheel'd Thro' a g arc his seven slow suns.
Beaten with some g passion at her heart,
to-morrow mom We hold a g convention :
The drowsy folds of our g ensign shake
Bursts of g heart and slips in sensual mu^e,
And g bronze valves, emboss'd with Tomyris
there went up a ? cry, The Prince is slam.
Like that g dame of Lapidoth she sang.
burst the g bronze valves.
To lighten this g clog of thanks,
some g Nemesis Break from a darken d future,
as for me I scarce am fit for your g plans :
ask for him Of your g head—
but g the crush was, and each base,
the two g cats Close by her,
g lords out and in. From those two hosts
Let the g river take me to the main :
sees a g black cloud Drag inward from the deeps,
bowers Drew the g night into themselves,
her g heart thro' all the faultful Past
Then reign the world's g bridals,
A g broad-shoulder'd genial Englishman,
Why should not these g Sirs Give up theu- parks
Aylmer
's Field 256
537
725
773
846
Sea Dreams 27
111
152
220
233
Lucretius 78
93
„ 116
„ 174
„ 222
„ 245
Princess, Pro. 110
134
224
il9
44
ii 26
60
285
474
„ Hi 164
242
254
„ iv 74
119
137
200
213
388
511
v8
199
365
vi 25
32
75
126
174
218
314
353
357
382
„ vii 13
36
49
248
294
Con. 85
102
Great
282
Great
(heat (continued) Buey the G Duke With an
empire's lamentation, Let us bury the G Duke
To the noise Ode on Well. 1
The last g Englishman is low. „ 18
G in council and g in war, „ 30
S World-victor's victor will be seen no more. „ 42
In that dread sound to the g name, „ 71
Was g by land as thou by sea. (repeat) „ 84, 90
And ever g and greater grew, „ 108
So jr a soldier taught us there, , „ 131
Attest their g commander's claim With honour, „ 148
reverence and regret To those g men who fought, „ 158
All g self-seekers trampling on the right ; „ 187
Let his g example stand Colossal, „ 220
watching here At this, our g solemnity. „ 244
He is gone who seem'd so g. — ' „ 271
Sounds of the g sea Wander'd about. Minnie and Winnie 7
Like those who cried Diana g : Lit. Sqvabhles 16
Heart, are you g enough For a love that never
tires ? O heart, are you g enough for love ? Window, Marr. Mom. 17
Calm and still light on yon g plain
In those g offices that suit The full-grown energies
There must be wisdom with g Death :
Upon the g world's altar-stairs
Leaving g legacies of thought,
The g Intelligences fair That range above
She darkly feels him g and wise,
Let her g Danube rolfing fair Enwind her isles,
one would chant the history Of that g race,
where we saw A g ship lift her shining sides.
Brings in g logs and let them lie,
I would the g world grew like thee.
By thee the world's g work is heard Beginning,
And the g J3on sinks in blood.
As gentle ; liberal-minded, g, Consistent ;
She would not do herself this g wrong.
Like some of the simple g ones gone For ever
yellow vapours choke The g city sounding wide ;
praying To his own g self, as I guess ;
And so there grew g tracts of wilderness. Com. of
Of those g Lords and Barons of his realm
Made lightnings and g thunders over him,
whatsoever Merlin did In one g annal-book,
after, the g lords Banded, and so brake out in open war.'
And simple words of g authority,
So this g brand the king Took,
watch'd the g sea fall. Wave after wave,
And the fringe Of that g breaker.
From the g deep to the g deep he goes.'
so g bards of him will sing Hereafter ;
There at the banquet those g Lords from Rome,
80 those g lords Drew back in wrath,
in twelve g battles overcame The heathen hordes,
eagle-circles up To the g Sun of Glory,
at times the g gate shone Only,
like the cross her g and goodlv arms Stretch'd
and faith in their g King, with pure Affection,
But Mark hath tarnish'd the g name of king,
Lyonors, A ladjr of high lineage, of g lands,
Now two g entries open'd from the hall,
take counsel ; for this lad is g And lusty.
Till Gareth panted hard, and his g heart,
hew'd g pieces of his armour off him.
There rides no knight, not Lancelot, his g self,
one Of that g Order of the Table Round, Marr.
Thro' that g tenderness for Guinevere,
watch his mightful hand striking g blows
by g mischance He heard but fragments
And here had fall'n a g part of a tower.
Our hoard is little, but our hearts are g. (repeat)
For the g wave that echoes round the worla ;
Avenging this a insult done the Queen.'
his face Glow'd like the heart of a j fire at Yule,
and still The dew of their g labour,
' Remember that great insult done the Queen,'
In Mem. xi 9
xll9
zni
Ivlb
Ixxxiv 35
Ixxxv 21
xcvii 34
xcviii 9
ciii 35
40
cvii 17
cxiv 25
cxxi 10
cxxvii 16
Con. 38
Maud I x 51
61
// iv 64
v33
Arthur 10
65
108
158
236
261
308
378
387
411
414
504
513
518
and L. 22
194
218
330
426
609
665
730
1126
1142
1182
Geraint 3
30
95
112
317
, 352, 374
420
425
559
568
571
Gareth
of
Great (continued) fell at last In the g battle
fighting for the King. Marr. of Geraint 596
And should some g court-lady say, „ 723
As this g Prince invaded us, and we, „ 747
our g Queen, In words whose echo lasts, „ 781
Till the g plover's human whistle amazed Her heart, Geraint and E. 49
Saw once a g piece of a promontory, „ 162
I will tell him How g a man thou art : „ 228
While the g charger stood, grieved like a man. „ 535
This work of his is g and wonderful. „ 898
A thousand-fold more g and wonderful „ 914
His work was neither g nor wonderful, „ 921
There the g Queen once more embraced her friend, ,, 947
They call'd him the g Prince and man of men. „ 961
him who first Brought the g faith to Britain Balin and BcAan 103
down that range of roses the g Queen Came „ 244
And by the g Queen's name, arise and hence.' „ 482
By the g tower — Caerleon upon Usk — „ 506
I thought the g tower would crash down on both — „ 515
But the g Queen herself, fought in her name. Merlin and V. 13
G Nature thro' the flesh herself hath made „ 50
When Guinevere was crossing the g hall „ 65
Then fell on Merlin a g melancholy ; „ 189
work the charm Upon the g Enchanter of the Time, „ 216
'G Master, do ye love me?' he was mute. „ 237
Caught in a 9 old tyrant spider's web, „ 259
And therefore be as ^ as ye are named, „ 336
The ^ proof of your love; „ 354
I heard the g Sir Lancelot sing it once, „ 385
Then the g Master merrily answer'd her: „ 545
Who Uved alone in a ^ wild on grass ; „ 621
I thought that he was gentle, being g : „ 871
he rode to tilt For the g diamond in the diamond
jousts, Lancelot and E. 31
' Then will ye miss,' he answer'd, 'the g deeds Of
Lancelot, „ 81
your g name This conquers : „ 150
With laughter dying down as the g knight „ 179
The g and guilty love he bare the Queen, „ 245
the g knight, the darling of the court, „ 261
By the g river in a boatman's hut. „ 278
'0 there, g lord, doubtless,' Lavaine said, „ 281
And seeing me, with a g voice he cried, „ 309
' Save your g self, fair lord ; ' „ 320
And after muttering ' The g Lancelot,' „ 421
' Me you call g : mine is the firmer seat, „ 446
Of greatness to know well I am not g : „ 451
Lancelot gave A marvellous g shriek and ghastly groan, „ 516
Came round their g Pendragon, saying to him, „ 528
So gf a knight as we have seen to-day — „ 533
knowing he was Lancelot ; his g name Conquer'd ; „ 579
A sleeve of scarlet, broider'd with g pearls, „ 604
flung herself Do\vn on the g King's couch, „ 610
I deem you know full well Where your g knight
is hidden, „ 690
Yet the g knight in his mid-sickness made „ 878
Up the g river in the boatman's boat. „ 1038
And there the g Sir Lancelot muse at me ; „ 1055
My knight, the g Sir Lancelot of the Lake.' „ 1373
Or sin seem less, the sinning seeming g? „ 1418
In our g hall there stood a vacant chair. Holy Grail 167
While the g banquet lay along the hall, „ 180
roofs Of our g hall are roll'd in thunder-smoke ! „ 220
four g zones of sculpture, set betwixt „ 232
Where twelve g windows blazon Arthur's wars, „ 248
Streams thro' the twelve g battles of our King. „ 250
Knights that in twelve g battles splash'd and dyed „ 311
All the g table of our Arthur closed „ 329
A g black swamp and of an evil smell, „ 499
A thousand piers ran into the g Sea. „ 503
first At once I saw him far on the g Sea, „ 510
With one g dwelling in the middle of it ; „ 574
bound and plunged him into a cell Of g piled stones ; „ 676
a g stone slipt and fell. Such as no wind could move : „ 680
words Of so ^ men as Lancelot and our King „ 713
Great
Oreat (continued) And in the g sea wash away
my sin.'
Those two g beats rose upright like a man,
G angels, awful shapes, and wings and eyes.
And here and there g hollies under them ;
And she was a g lady in her land.
For she was a g lady.
g tower fiU'd with eyes Up to the summit.
But when she mock'd his vows and the g King,
A g and sane and simple race of brutes
Hath the g heart of knighthood in thee f ail'd
cry of a 3 jousts With trumpet-blowings ran
From the g deep to the g deep he goes.'
Sat their g umpire, looking o er the lists.
G brother, thou nor I have made the world ;
With Arthur's vows on the g lake of fire.
Then at the dry harsh roar of the g horn,
the g waters break Whitening for half a league,
' Flatter me not, for hath not our g Queen
To make one doubt if ever the g Queen
I swore to the g King, and am forsworn,
look'd and saw The g Queen's bower was dark,-
I thank the saints, I am not g.
As J as those of g ones,
and himself was Knight Of the g Table —
woman in her womanhood as j As he was in his manhood.
The Dragon of the g Pendragonship, (repeat)
In twelve g battles ruining overthrown.
Far down to that g battle in the west.
Ah g and gentle lord. Who wast.
Now — ere he goes to the g Battle ?
that day when the g light of heaven Bum'd
' Hearest thou this g voice that shakes the world,
on one Lay a g water, and the moon was full.
g brand Made lightnings in the splendour of the moon,
So ^ a miracle as yonder hilt.
' From the g deep to the g deep he goes.'
Like the last echo bom of a gi cry,
goal of this ^ world Lies beyond sight :
I come, g Mistress of the ear and eye :
g pine shook with lonely sounds of joy
And over all the g wood rioting And climbing,
With that g crown of beams about his brows —
From his g hoard of happiness distill'd
Alone, and in the heart of the g forest.
G hills of ruins, and collapsed masses
g day Peal'd on us with that music which rights all,
By that g love they both had borne the dead,
G garlands swung and blossom'd ;
at one end of the hall Two g funereal curtains,
while now the g San Philip hung above us like a
cloud
But anon the g San Philip,
We have won g glory, my men !
or ever that evening ended a g gale blew,
could I wed her Loving the other ? do her that
g wrong ?
the g things of Nature and the fair,
g Tragedian, that had quench'd herself
Tho' scarce as ^ as Edith's power of love,
then the g ' Laudamus ' rose to heaven.
g Augustine wrote that none could breathe
The g flame-banner borne by Teneriffe,
given the G Khan's palaces to the Moor,
Given thee the keys of the g Ocean-sea ?
Only the ghost of our g Catholic Queen
From that g deep, before our world begins,
G Tsemogora ! never since thine own Black ridges
when first the g Sun-star of morningtide,
always o'er the g Peleion's head Bum'd,
The g God, ArSs, bums in anger still
statue, rear'd To some g citizen,
g God Arte, whose one bliss Is war,
stars Send no such light upon the ways of men As
one g deed.
283
Greatest
Holy Grail 806
821
848
PeOeas and E. 27
98
123
166
252
480
596
Last Tournament 51
133
159
203
345
438
464
557
564
661
758
Guinevere 199
204
235
299
398, 598
432
571
638
652
Pass, of Arthur 90
139
180
304
324
;; 445
459
To the Queen it 59
Lover's Tale i 22
325
403
672
714
„ it 3
65
„ iv 64
181
191
214
The Revenge 43
50
85
114
Sisters (E. and E.) 168
222
233
261
Columbus 18
52
69
109
149
187
De Prof., Two G. 27
Montenegro 12
Batt. of Brunanburh 25
Achilles over the T. 28
Tiresias 11
83
„ 111
162
Great {continued) Flowing with easy greatness and
touching on all things g, Tlie Wreck 60
first g love I had felt for the first and greatest of men ; „ 76
g storm grew with a howl and a hoot of the blast <> . ^^\
after all— the g God for aught that I know ; Despair 104
may the g God curse him and bring him to nought ! ,, 106
Thro' the g gray slope of men. Heavy Brigade 17
With all the peoples, g and small. Epilogue 20
' So jr so noble was he ! ' -Dearf Prophet 30
'G \ for he spoke and the people heard, ,, 33
G and noble — O yes— but yetn- ,. 43
Noble and g—0 ay— but then, ^ r j i
Thou third g Canning, stand among our best Eptt. on Stratford 1
To this g cause of Freedom, drink, my friends, And
the g name of England, round and round. •, ,, o=
(repeat) Hands all Round 11, 35
To this g name of England drink, my friends. „ 23
Should this old England fall Which Nelson left so g. The Fleets,
All is gracious, gentle, g and Queenly. On Jub. Q. Vtctorm 14
Of this g Ceremonial And this year of her Jubilee. „ ^ „ ^
g Earth-Mother, thee, the Power That lifts Demeter and P. 97
coming year's g good and varied ills. Prog, of t>prmg 93
G the Master, And sweet the Magic, Merlin and the G. 15
I stood Before the g Madonna-masterpieces Rotrmey s R. 8b
mixt with the g Sphere-music of stars n,i'^t^'^^,Ji
As some g shock may wake a palsied limb, St. Telemachus 57
' Forbear In the g name of Him who died for men, , , ,•• ,^
And gaze on this g miracle, the World, Akbar s Dream 122
Ogand gaUant Scott, ^a^'**' « ^^%l
By the g dead pine— you know it— _ y . -^^
hidden purpose of that Power which alone is g, God and the iJnrv.o
tho' faintly heard Until the g Hereafter. D. of the Duke of C 17
0 silent faces of the G and Wise, Paiace of Art 195
The name of Britain trebly g— You ask rm, ■why, etc jZ
Which are indeed the manners of the g. Walk, to the MaU 6b
g and small. Went nutting to the hazels. ^och Arden^
she perhaps might reap the applause of G, Princess in 262
make us all we would be, g and good.' .. «> o»y
Him who cares not to be g. Ode mi Well. 199
Makes former gladness loom so ^ ? In Mem. xxiv 10
Thy kindred with the 3 of old. .- . I^^'^l^,
1 care not howsoever g he be, ^ Lawelotand E. 1069
vet this grief Is added to the griefs the g must bear, Gmnevere J06
bless your haters, said the Greatest of the g ; Locksley H Sixty 85
fail Thro' craven fears of being g. Hands all round 32
sowing the nettle on all the laurel'd graves of the G; Vastness22
Great Sa like a g num-cumpus I blubber'd A oHh Cobbler 61
While 'e sit like a g glimmer-gowk V Mage Wife 38
I heard 9 heaps o' the snaw slushin' down OwdKoaU
Then 'e married a g Yerl's darter, Church-warden, etc. 20
Greater (See also Graater) Art more thro' Love, and j n , oi
% than thy years, „ Love and Duty 21
For there are g wonders there. Day-Dm., Depart. 28
And , glory varying to and fro, "^StlwTl^
And ever great and g grew, ^de on well, luo
What know we g than the soul? " ^?2
G than I-is that your cry ? Sp^^^M ^*«f 17
My shame is y who remain, ^ InMem.cix23
from childhood shape His action like the g ape, ,, exx xx
Behind thee comes the g light : r^ i' ^ fif^%ii
and evermore As I grew g grew with me ; Com. of Arthur 352
And, for himself was of the g state, Gareth and L 395
Because I fain had given them g wits : Merlin and V. 496
I should have found in him a 3 heart. , ;' j ^ Vi%
there lives No g leader.' Lancelot and E. 317
' And on I rode, and ^ was my thirst. Holy Grail mi
The g man, the g courtesy. Last Tournament &Z^
and draws The g to the lesser, ^'"■'^"^',^oo2
why, the g their disgrace ! ^2/^^«r « ^'^^. g°t
A /than all knowledge, beat her down. Princess vii2ZQ
Believed himself a g than himself. Last Tournament 677
Greatest Requiring at her hand the g gift, Gardener sD 2'^
The g sailor since our world began. Ode on Well. 86
To thee the g soldier comes ; " o^
For this is England's g son, " ^^
Greatest
284
Greener
Greatest {continued) ' that you love This g knight, your
pardon ! Lancelot and E. 669
what profits me my name Of g knight ? „ 1414
Alas for Arthur's g knight, „ 1419
' We have heard of thee : thou art our g knight, Holy Grail 603
Chancellor, or what is g would he be — Aylmer's Field 397
life which all our g fain Would follow, Lucretius 78
Our g yet with least pretence, Ode on Well. 29
as the g only are. In his simplicity „ 33
grieving that their g are so small, Merlin and V. 833
to learn this knight were whole. Being our g : Lancelot and E. 773
Not all unhappy, having loved God's best And g, „ 1094
And calling me the g of all knights. Holy Grail 595
My g hardly will believe he saw ; „ 896
bless your haters, said the G of the great ; Locksley H., Sixty 85
Greatness And should your g, and the care To the Queen 9
Remembering all his y in the Past. Ode on Well. 20
if to-night our g were struck dead. Third of Feb. 17
I leave thy g to be guess'd ; In Mem. Ixxv 4
She knows not what his g is, „ xcvii 27
According to his g whom she quench'd. Merlin and V. 218
passion of youth Toward ^ in its elder, Lancelot and E. 283
No g, save it be some far-off touch Of g „ 450
one isle. That knows not her own g: To the Queen ii 32
a g Got from their Grandsires — Batt. of Brunanhurh 15
Gone ! He will achieve his g. Tiresias 168
Flowing with easy g and touching on all things great, The Wreck 50
Step by step we rose to g, — Locksley H., Sixty 130
Pray God our g may not fail Hands all round 31
increased Her g and her self -content. To Marq. of Dufferin 8
Greaves flamed upon the brazen g Of bold Sir
Lancelot. L. of Shalott Hi 4
g and cuisses dash'd with drops Of onset ; M. d' Arthur 215
g and cuisses dash'd with drops Of onset ; Pass, of Arthur 383
Grecian A Gothic ruin and a G house. Princess, Pro. 232
Ran down the Persian, G, Roman lines „ ii 130
And read a G tale re-told, Which, cast in later
G mould, To Master of B. 5
Gree^n (green) (adj.) an' jessmine a-dressin' it g, Spinster's S's. 105
Greean (s) we was shaamed to cross Gigglesby G, „ 33
Greece fairest and most loving wife in G,' QLnone 187
Greed Blockish irreverence, brainless g — Columbus 129
Greedy Come like a careless and a g heir Lover's Tale i 675
Greek (adj.) my ancient love With the G woman. (Enone2Ql
show'd the house, G, set with busts : Princess, Pro. 11
Greek (s) whilome spakest to the South in G Sir J. Oldcastle 29
sphere-music as the G Had hardly dream'd of. Akbar's Dream 44
Green (adj.) See also Dark-green, Grass-green, Greean,
Light-green, Live-green, Pale-green, Silver-green)
tears of penitence Which would keep g Supp. Confessions 119
Under the hollow-hung ocean g ! The Merman 38
Are neither g nor sappy ; Amphion 90
flourishes G in a cuplike hollow of the down. Enoch Arden 9
sow'd her name and kept it g Aylmer's Field 88
I trust We are g in Heaven's eyes ; Holy Grail 38
heaven appear'd so blue, nor earth so g, „ 365
forehead vapour-swathed In meadows ever Freedom 8
And see my cedar g, To Ulysses 17
High-wall'd gardens g and old ; Arabian Nights 8
From the g rivage many a fall Of diamond rillets „ 47
Betwixt the g brink and the running foam, Sea-Fairies 2
Whither away from the high g field, „ 8
Grow g beneath the showery g, My life is full 17
And in the middle of the g salt sea Mine be the strength 7
in the pits Which some g Christmas crams with
weary bones. Wan Sculptor 14
on the casement-edge A long g box of mignonette. Miller's D. 83
In this g vallev, under this g hill, CEnone 232
round the cool g courts there ran a row Of cloisters, Palace of Art 25
All the valley, mother, 'ill be fresh and g and still. May Queen 37
Don't let Effie come to see me till my grave
be growing g : May Qmen, N. Y's. E. 43
and there Grows g and broad, and takes no care, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 28
at the root thro' lush g grasses bum'd D. of F. Women 71
'Single I grew, like some g plant, „ 205
Green (adj.) (continued) To one g wicket in a privet
hedge ; Gardener's D. 110
With one g sparkle ever and anon Dipt Audley Court 88
Beyond the fair g field and eastern sea. Love and Duty 101
And dewy Northern meadows g. The Voyage 36
bathed In the g gleam of dewy-tassell'd trees : Princess i 94
' Ye are g wood, see ye warp not. „ ii 75
The g malignant light of coming storm. „ Hi 132
when all the woods are g? „ iv 107
Started a g linnet Out of the croft ; Minnie and Winnie 17
Within the g the moulder'd tree. In Mem. xxvi 1
Who wears his manhood hale and g : „ liii 4
So thro' the g gloom of the wood they past, Geraint and E. 195
mist Like that which kept the heart of Eden g „ 770
leaves Laid their g faces flat against the panes, Balin and Balan 344
Chose the g path that show'd the rarer foot, Lancelot and E. 162
g light from the meadows underneath Struck up „ 408
Till all the place whereon she stood was g ; „ 1200
And g wood- ways, and eyes among the leaves ; Pelleas and E. 139
In fuming sulphur blue and g, a fiend — Last Tournament 617
gardener's hand Picks from the colewort a g
caterpillar, Guinevere 32
prest together In its g sheath. Lover's Tale i 153
G prelude, April promise, glad new-year Of Being, „ 281
Rather to thee, g boscage, work of God, Sir J. Oldcastle 129
but the whole g Isle was our own, V. of Maeldune 93
Or the young g leaf rejoice in the frost The Wreck 20
G Sussex fading into blue Pro. to Gen. Hamley 7
' sitting on g sofas contemplate The torment of
the damn'd ' Akbar's Dream 48
Green (s) (See also Chapel-green, Greean, Gold-green)
Winnow with giant arms the slumbering g. The Kraken 10
and earliest shoots Of orient g. Ode to Memory 18
Shot over with purple, and g. Dying Swan 20
the g that folds thy grave, (repeat) A Dirge 6, 13, 20, 27, 34, 41, 48
In some fair space of sloping g's Palace of Art 106
Effie shall go with me to-morrow to the g, May Queen 25
Beneath the hawthorn on the g May Q%een, N. Y's. E. 10
branches, fledges with clearest g, D. of F. Women 59
The smell of violets, hidden in the g, „ 77
like a purple beech among the g's Edwin Morris 84
when she gamboll'd on the g's Talking Oak 77
All creeping plants, a wall of g Day-Dm., Sleep P. 45
The topmost elm-tree gather'd g Sir L. and Q. G. 8
all the wood stands in a mist of g, The Brook 14
pure as lines of g that streak the white Princess v 196
That twinkle into g and gold : In Mem. xi 8
This round of g, this orb of flame, | „ xxxiv 5
And on a simple village g ; „ Ixiv 4
Thy leaf has perish'd in the g, „ Ixxv 13
those fall'n leaves which kept their g, „ xcv 23
feet like sunny gems on an English g, Maud 7 d 14
damp hill-slopes were quicken'd into g, ' Gareth and L. 184
the live g had kindled into flowers, „ 185
Breaks from a coppice gemm'd with g and
red, Marr. of Geraint 339
like a shoaling sea the lovely blue Play'd into g, Geraint and E. 689
In g and gold, and plumed with g Merlin and V. 89
And armour'd all in forest g. Last Tournament 170
good warhorse left to graze Among the forest g's, „ 491
Modred still in g, all ear and eye, Guinevere 24
— its wreaths of dripping g — Lover's Tale i 39
recalling fragrance and the g Of the dead spring : „ 723
Ues Behind the g and blue ? Ancient Sage 26
blue of sky and sea, the g of earth, „ 41
for a blessin' 'ud come wid the g ! ' Tomorrow 64
ShaUow skin of g and azure — Locksley H., Sixty 208
mantle, every shade of glancing g. Prog, of Spring 63
earth's g stole into heaven's own hue. Far — far — away 2
as summer-new As the g of the bracken June Bracken, etc. 9
Green (verb) g's The swamp, where humm'd the
dropping snipe. On a Mourner 8
Greener This laurel g from the brows Of him To the Queen 7
might have danced The greensward into g circles, Gardener's D. 134
Yet the yellow leaf hates the g leaf. Spiteful Letter 15
Green-glimmering
285
Grew
Green-glimmering G-g toward the summit,
Crreen-glooming g-g twilight of the grove,
Careening Her dust is ^ in your leaf,
Her mantle, slowly g in the Sun,
or dives In yonder g gleam,
A Jacob's ladder falls On g grass,
Lancelot and E. 483
Pelleas and E. 33
Ancient Sage 165
Prog, of Spring 11
In Mem. cxv 14
Early Spring 10
Greenish except For g glimmerings thro' the lancets, Aylmer's Field 622
the moon was falling g thro' a rosy glow, Locksley H., Sixty 178
Green-rushing G-r from the rosy thrones (repeat) Voice and the P. 4, 40
Green-suited G-s, but with plumes that mock'd Guinevere 22
Greensward danced The g into greener circles. Gardener's B. 134
flit To make the g fresh, Talking Oak 90
Greenwood Thou liest beneath the g tree, Oriana 95
Greet to g Troy's wandering prince. On a Mourner 32
g their fairer sisters of the East. Gardener's D. 188
To g the sheriff, needless courtesy ! Edwin Morris 133
To meet and g her on her way ; Beggar Maid 6
' G her with applausive breath. Vision of Sin 135
To 9 his hearty welcome heartily ; ^ Enoch Arden 350
g her, wasting his forgotten heart, Aylmer's Field 689
ran To g him with a kiss, Lucretius 7
rose a cry As if to ^ the king ; Princess v 249
No more in soldier fashion wiU he g Ode on Well. 21
thrice as large as man he bent To g us. In Mem ciii 43
To meet and g a whiter sun ; „ Con. 78
Should I fear to g my friend Maud II iv 85
rejoiced More than Geraint to g her thus attiied ; Marr. of Geraint 772
' My lord Geraint, I g you with all love ; Geraint and E. 785
the King himself Advanced to g them, „ 879
but how ye g me — fear And faiilt and doubt — Last Tournament 517
So sweetly and so modestly she came To g us, Lover's Tale iv 171
rose from off his throne to g Before Columbus 5
And g it with a kindly smile ; To E. Fitzgerald 4
Every morning here we g it, Akbar's D., Hymn 3
Greeted Maiden, not to be g unbenignly. Hendecasyllahics 21
G Geraint full face, but stealthily, Geraint and E. 279
The Lost one Found was ^ as in Heaven Balin and JBalan 81
and with how sweet grace She g my return ! „ 194
Vivien, being g fair. Would fain have wrought Merlin and V. 155
For silent, tho' he g her, she stood Lancelot and E. 355
' Have comfort,' whom she g quietly. „ 995
thro' open door Rode Gawain, whom she g
courteously. Pelleas and E. 383
and then on Pelleas, him Who had not g her, „ 591
Passion-pale they met And g. Guinevere 100
If g by your classic smile, To Prof. Jebb 10
Greeting Full cold my g was and dry ; The Letters 13
And gets for g but a wail of pain; Lucretius 138
Eternal g's to the dead ; In Mem. Ivii 14
foimd the g's both of knight and King Balin and Balan 342
I send a birthday line Of gr ; To E. Fitzgerald 46
Grenade See Hand-grenade
Grenville (Sir Richard) See Richard, Richard Grenville
Grew {See also Graw'd) G darker from that
under- flame : Arabian Nights 91
mother plant in semblance, g A flower all gold, Tlie Poet 23
She, as her carol sadder g, Mariana in the S. 13
' He dried his wings : Hke gauze they g ; Two Voices 13
' Single I g, hke some green plant, D. of F. Women 205
G pliunp and able-bodied ; The Goose 18
we g The fable of the city where we dwelt. Gardener's D. 5
hoarded in herself, 6*, seldom seen ; „ 50
in praise of her G oratory. „ 57
For up the porch there g an Eastern rose, „ 123
Her beauty g ; till Autumn brought an hour For Eustace, „ 207
moimd That was imsown, where many poppies g. Dora 73
wreath of all the flowers That g about, „ 83
Of different ages, hke twin-sisters g, Edwin Morris 32
I g Twice ten long weary weary years St. S. Stylites 89
And in the chase g wild. Talking Oak 126
To look as if they g there. Am/phion 80
But such whose father-grape g fat Will Water. 7
That she g a noble lady, L. of Burleigh 75
Faint she g, and ever fainter, „ 81
wam'd that madman ere it g too late : Vision of Sin 56
Grew (continued)
change :
1 g in gladness till I found My spirits
third child was sickly-born and g Yet sicklier,
Philip's rosy face contracting g Careworn and wan ;
Thicker the drizzle g, deeper the gloom ;
Heaven in lavish bounty moulded, g.
The voice g faint : there came a further
Vision of Sin 207
To E. L. 11
Enoch Arden 261
486
679
Aylmer's Field 107
and still G with the growing note, Sea Dreams 213
g Tired of so much within our httle life, Lucretius 225
lovelier than their names, G side by side ; Princess, Pro. 13
the brain was like the hand, and g With using ; „ ii 150
' How g this feud betwixt the right and left.' „ Hi 77
they were still together, g (For so they said themselves) „ 88
I g discouraged. Sir ; but since I knew No rock „ 153
they g Like field-flowers everywhere ! „ 251
Sun G broader toward his death and fell, „ 364
Till all men g to rate us at our worth, „ iv 145
thus a noble scheme G up from seed „ 310
there g Another kind of beauty in detail „ 447
a clamour ^ As of a new-world Babel, „ 486
That all things g more tragic and more strange ; „ vi 23
o'er him g Tall as a figure lengthen'd „ 160
And ever great and greater g, Ode on Well. 108
What slender campaniU g The Daisy 13
it g so tall It wore a crown of light. The Flower 9
And still as vaster g the shore In Mem. ciii 25
I would the great world g like thee, „ cxiv 25
And g to seeming-random forms, „ cxviii 10
There rolls the deep where g the tree. „ cxxiii 1
For thee she g, for thee she grows „ Con. 35
Discussing how their courtship g, „ 97
When it slowly g so thin, Maud I xix 20
months ran on and rumour of battle g, „ /// vi 29
so there g great tracts of wilderness. Com. of Arthur 10
they g up to wolf-like men, Worse than the wolves. „ 32
and evermore As I g- greater g with me ;
a slope of land that ever g, Field after field.
To break him from the intent to which he g,
under cloud that g To thunder-gloom
g Forgetful of his promise to the King,
still she look'd, and still the terror g
Ue still, and yet the sapUng g :
he g Tolerant of what he hafi disdain'd,
g So grated down and filed away with thought,
the dark wood g darker toward the storm
g between her and the pictiu'ed wall.
g so cheerful that they deem'd her death
then the times G to such evil that the holy cup
sound As from a distance beyond distance g
till I g One with him, to beUeve as he believed,
wholesome flower And poisonous g together,
flats, where nothing but coarse grasses g ;
With such a closeness, but apart there g,
Whereon a hundred stately beeches g,
g So witty that ye play'd at ducks and drakes
all this trouble did not pass but g ;
And g half -guilty in her thoughts again,
dolorous day G drearier toward twilight falling.
They g aweary of her fellowship :
that my love G with myself —
sustenance, which, still as thought, g large,
and g again To utterance of passion.
Why g we then together in one plot ?
g at length Prophetical and prescient
and each heart G closer to the other,
a wave hke the wave that is raised by an earth-
quake g,
G after marriage to full height and form ?
could it be That trees g downward,
and the light G as I gazed,
they prest, as they g, on each other,
fixt on mine, till mine g dark For ever,
the great storm g with a howl and a hoot
stars in heaven Paled, and the glory g.
souls of men, who g beyond their race,
351
428
Gareth and L. 140
1358
Marr. of Geraint 49
615
Geraint and E. 165
Merlin and V. 177
622
890
Lancelot and E. 993
1131
Holy Grail 57
112
486
776
794
884
Pdleas and E. 26
Last Tournament 343
Guinevere 84
„ 408
Pass, of Arthur 123
Lover's Tale i 109
165
240
546
m23
131
187
The Revenge 115
Sisters (E. and E.) 171
Columbus 50
77
V. of Maddune 64
Tiresias 47
The Wreck 91
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 32
Demeter and I\ 140
Grew
286
Grinning
Grew (continiied) face Of Miriam g upon me, till I knew ; The Ring 185
that g Blown into glittering by the popular breath, Romney's R. 48
Grewest Who g not alone in power And knowledge. In Mem. cxiv 26
Greys Brave Inniskillens and G Heavy Brigade 33
Gride g's and clangs Its leafless ribs In Mem. cvii 11
Grief with g, not fear, With hopeful g, Supp. Confessions 38
strong Against the g of circumstance „ 92
not weep, nor let your g be wild. May Queen, N. T's. E. 35
and g became A solemn scorn of ills. D. of F. Women 227
In g I am not all unlearn'd ; To J. S. 18
Let G be her own mistress still. „ 41
Words weaker than your j would make G more. „ 65
such a distance from his youth in g, Gardener's D. 54
Annie, seated with her g, Enoch Arden 280
if g's Like his have worse or better, „ 740
My g and solitude have broken me ; „ 857
I am grieved to learn your g — Aylmer's Field 398
from his height and loneliness of g „ 632
my g to find her less than fame. Princess i 73
tinged with wan from lack of sleep, Or g, „ Hi 26
Red g and mother's hunger in her eye, ' „ vi 146
Rang ruin, answer'd full of g and scorn. „ 333
sidelong glances at my father's g, „ vii 107
Forgive my g for one removed, In Mem., Pro. 37
Let Love clasp G lest both be drown'd, „ id
That g hath shaken into frost !
To put in words the g I feel ;
But that large g which these enfold
Calm as to suit a calmer g,
And hush'd my deepest g of all,
The lesser g's that may be said.
But there are other g's within,
And is it that the haze of g
The voice was not the voice of g,
And by the measure of my g I leave
A g, then changed to something else,
0 g, can g be changed to less ?
The g my loss in him had wrought,
A ^ as deep as life or thought,
To this which is our common g.
And in my g a strength reserved.
Or so shall g with symbols play
And in the midmost heart of g
No more shall wayward g abuse
Ring out the g that saps the mind,
'twere possible After long g and pain
By reason of the bitterness and g
overtoil'd By that day's g and travel,
1 have g's enough : Pray you be gentle,
Thy chair, a j to all the brethren,
face Hand-hidden, as for utmost g or shame;
I find with g ! I might believe you then.
Words, as we grant g tears.
King himself could hardly speak For g,
left alone once more, and cried in g.
Being so clouded with his g and love.
And gulf 'd his g's in inmost sleep ;
he answer'd not, Or hast thou other g's ?
nor sought. Wrapt in her g, for housel
sweet lady, the King's g For his own self,
For if there ever come a g to me I cry my cry
But even were the g's of little ones
yet this g Is added to the g's the great must bear,
Grieve with the common g of all the realm ? '
* this is all woman's g. That she is woman.
Grieve with your g's, not grieving at your joys,
Time and G abode too long with Life,
Time and G did beckon unto Death,
The grasp of hopeless g about my heart,
Because my g as yet was newly born
I was shut up with G ;
whence without some guilt should such ghe?
Behind the world, that make our g's our gains. Sisters (E. and E.) 231
G for our perishing children, and never a moment
for g, Def. of Luchnow 89
Ckief (continued) chariots backward, knowing g's
at hand ;
The g for ever born from g's to be,
With present g, and made the rhymes,
With a g that could only be cured,
die for ever, if all his g's are in vain.
Achilles over ike T. 25
Tiresias 80
„ 196
Despair 80
„ 82
iv 12
v2
11
„ xi 2
„ xix 10
;; '"'ii
„ xxiv 9
„ Ixix 19
„ Ixxv 3
„ Ixxvii 11
„ Ixxviii 16
„ Ixxx 6
^
„ Ixxxv 7
52
95
„ Ixxxviii 7
«;9
„ cvi 9
Maud II iv 2
Com. of Arthur 209
Geraint and E. 377
707
Balin and Balan 78
Merlin and V. 897
922
Lancelot and E. 1188
Holy Grail 355
437
656
Pelleas and E. 516
599
Guinevere 149
196
200
203
204
217
218
679
Lover's Tale i 107
110
126
613
680
795
g's by which he once was wrung Were never worth Ancient Sage 127
O rosetree planted in my g, „ 163
the world is dark with g's and graves, „ 171
You will not leave me thus in g The Flight 85
When all my g's were shared with thee, Pref. Poem. Broth. S. 25
with all its pains, and g's, and deaths. To Prin. Beatrice 2
grieved for man thro' all my g for thee, — Demeter and P. 75
lost in utter g I fail'd To send my life „ 109
the sun, Pale at my g, drew down before his time „ 114
0 the g when yesterday They bore the Cross Happy 47
and with G Sit face to face, To Mary Boyle 45
crazed With the g that gnaw'd at my heart. Bandit's Death 39
soften me with g ! Doubt and Prayer 9
Grieve heart faints and my whole soul g's A spirit haunts 16
1 jr to see you poor and wanting help : Enoch Arden 406
With such compelling cause to g In Mem. xxix 1
g Thy brethren with a fruitless tear ? „ Iviii 9
it is not often I g ; Grandmother 89
G with the common grief of all the realm ? ' Guinevere 217
G with your griefs, not grieving at your joys, „ 679
Grieved I am g to learn your grief — Aylmer's Field 398
and she g In her strange dream. Sea Dreams 229
you began to change — I saw it and g — Princess iv 299
be not wroth or g At thy new son, Marr. of Geraint 779
the great charger stood, a like a man. Geraint and E. 535
since I was nurse, had I been so g and so vext ! In the Child. Hosp. 45
g for man thro' all my grief for thee, — Demeter and P. 75
Grieving g held his will, and bore it thro'. Enoch Arden 167
g that their greatest are so small. Merlin and V. 833
Grieve with your griefs, not g at your joys, Guinevere 679
Grievous He that only rules by terror Doeth g wrong. The Captain 2
Where I will heal me of my g wound.' M. d' Arthur 264
Where I will heal me of my g wound.' Pass, of Arthur 432
after healing of his g wound He comes again ; „ 450
All day the men contend in g war Achilles over the T. 9
Griflftn On wyvem, lion, dragon, g, swan, Holy Grail 350
Gnome of the cavern, G and Giant, Merlin and the G. 40
Griffin-guarded we reached The g-g gates, AvMey Court 15
Grig like the dry High-elbow'd g's The Brook 54
Grim Godiva, wife to that g Earl, who ruled In Coventry : Godiva 12
Unclasp'd the wedded eagles of her belt. The g Earl's gift ; „ 44
Were their faces g. The Captain 54
' Wrinkled ostler, g and thin ! Vision of Sin 63
And with g laughter thrust us out at gates. Princess iv 556
Lifting his g head from my wounds. „ vi 272
High on a y dead tree before the tower, Last Tournament 430
g faces came and went Before her, Guinevere 70
gone is he To wage g war against Sir Lancelot „ 193
Every g ravine a garden, every blazing desert
till'd, Locksley H., Sixty 168
What hast thou done for me, g Old Age, By an Evolution. 9
Grimace Caught each other with wild g's, Vision of Sin 35
Grimed their foreheads g with smoke, and sear'd. Holy Grail 265
Grimly flickering in&g light Dance on the mere. Gareth and L. 826
G with swords that were sharp from the
grindstone, Batt. of Brunanburh 41
Grimy G nakedness dragging his trucks Maud 1x7
And couch'd at night with g kitchen-knaves. Gareth and L. 481
Grin g's on a pile of children's bones, Maud I i 46
chuckle, and g a.t a, brother's shame ; „ iv 29
Grind A grazing iron collar ^'s my neck ; St. 8. Stylites 117
centre-bits G on the wakeful ear Maud I i ^
feet of Tristram g The spiring stone that scaled Last Tournament 510
in these spasms that g Bone against bone. Columbus 220
Tliat g the glebe to powder ! Tiresias 95
Grinding I heard the shingle g in the surge, Holy Grail 811
Grindstone swords that were sharp from the g, Batt. of Brunanburh 41
Grinning (See also Bare-grinning, Deatbful-grinning)
fool, Who was gaping and g by : Maud II i 20
Grinning
287
Ground
Grinning (continued) and tooth'd with g savagery.' Balin and Bcdan 197
Grip in the hard g of his hand, Sea Dreams 163
An' 'e ligs on 'is back i' the g, N. Farmer, N. S. 31
Gripe hand in wUd delirium, g it hard. Princess vii 93
Gript G my hand hard, and with God-bless-you went. Sea Dreams 160
Each g a shoulder, and I stood between ; Holy Grail 822
his strong hands g And dinted the gilt dragons Last Tournament 181
He y it so hard by the throat Bandit's Death 28
Grisly haggard father's face and reverend beard Of
g twine.
With a g wound to be drest he had left the deck,
Gritted and thou shalt cease To pace the g floor,
Griszled a story which in rougher shape Came from a
g cripple,
forth a g damsel came.
To me this narrow g fork of thine Is cleaner-
fashion'd —
Grizzlier Albeit g than a bear, to ride And jest with :
Groan (s) exprest By signs or g's or tears ;
Down in the south is a flash and a g :
he but gave a wrathful g, Saying,
gave A marvellous great shriek and ghastly g,
' Our mightiest ! ' answer'd Lancelot, with a g ;
Or Labour, with a g and not a voice,
their curses and their g's.
trumpets of victory, g's of defeat ;
Groan (verb) mother who never has heard us g\
We should see the Globe we g in,
g's to see it, finds no comfort there.
Groan'd deep brook g beneath the mill ;
as their faces drew together, g,
' No trifle,' g the husband ;
King Leodogran G for the Roman legions
G, and at times would mutter,
g Sir Lancelot in remorseful pain,
* Black nest of rats,' he g.
Until he g for wrath — so many of those,
and he g, ' The King is gone.'
Found, fear'd me dead, and g,
He g, he tum'd, and in the mist
while I g, From out the sunset pour'd
Gro&nin' Moother was naggin' an' g
Groaning (See also Groanin') tum'd, and g said,
' Forgive !
organ almost burst his pipes, G for power,
to them the doors gave way G,
With hand and rope we haled the g sow,
Kay near him g like a wounded bull —
the fallen man Made answer, g, ' Edyrn,
g laid The naked sword athwart their naked
throats,
I, g, from me flung Her empty phantom :
^^ I heard a g overhead, and climb'd
Grog But if thou wants thy g,
But if tha wants ony g tha mun goa fur it
Cirog-shop See Shebeen
Groom (a servant) hung with g's and porters on the bridge,
An' they rampaged about wi' their g's.
Groom (bridegroom) (See also Bridegroom) Gives her
harsh g for bridal-gift
As drinking health to bride and g
Groom'd strongly g and straitly curb'd
and now so long By bandits g.
Groove down the ringing g's of change.
Down rang the grate of iron thro' the g.
Grope g. And gather dust and chaff.
And grovel and g for my son
Groped g as blind, and seem'd Always about to fall,
She gabbled, as she g in the dead.
Groping feeble twilight of this world G,
the girl's Lean fancy, g for it,
Gross (adj.) In the g blackness imderneath.
Princess vi 104
The Revenge 66
Will Water. 242
Aylmer's Field 8
Gareth and L. 1114
Merlin and V. 59
Pelleas and E. 193
D.ofF. Women 284:
Window, Gone 8
Geraint and E. 398
Lancelot and E. 516
Holy GraU 766
To the Queen ii 55
Columbus 68
Vastness 8
Despair 98
Locksley H., Sixty 188
Romney's R. 45
Miller's D. 113
Enoch Arden 74
Sea Dreams 145
Com. of Arthur 34
Balin and Balan 173
Lancelot and E. 1428
Pelleas and E. 555
Last Tournament 183
Pass, of Arthur 443
The Flight 23
Death of (Enone 49
Akbar's Dream 191
Owd Rod 108
Sea Dreams 59
Princess ii Alb
„ vi 350
Walk, to the Mail 91
Gareth and L. 648
Marr. of Geraint 576
Pelleas and E. 451
Lover's Tale, ii 205
iv 136
North. Cobbler 8
113
Godiva 2
Village Wife 36
Princess v 378
In Mem., Con. 83
Princess v 456
Geraint and E. 193
Locksley Hall 182
Pelleas and E. 207
In Mem. Iv 17
Rizpah 8
Aylmer's Field 821
Dead Prophet 73
Geraint and E. 6
The Ring 336
Supp. Confessions 187
G darkness of the inner sepulchre D. of F. Women 67
So j; to express delight, in praLse of her Gardener's D. 56
It cannot be but some g error lies In this report, Princess i 69
Gross (adj.) (continued) yet On tiptoe seem'd to touch
upon a sphere Too g to tread. Princess vii 325
drown His heart in the g mud-honey of town, Maud I xvi 5
What should be granted which your own g heart Merlin and V. 916
For when had Lancelot utter'd aught so g Last Tournament 631
Save that I think this g hard-seeming world Sisters {E. and E.) 229
You make our faults too g, and thence
maintain To One who ran down Eng. 1
Gross (s) As flies the lighter thro' the g. In Mem. xli 4
Grosser with a g film made thick These heavy,
homy eyes. St. S. Stylites 200
song Might have been worse and sinn'd in g lips Princess iv 251
Barbarians, g than your native bears — „ 537
draw water, or hew wood. Or g tasks ; Gareth and L. 487
but g grown Than heathen. Pass, of Arthur 61
Grossest Love, tho' Love were of the g. Merlin and V. 461
Crossness the 9 of his nature will have weight Locksley Hall 48
Grot The hollow g replieth Claribel 20
From many a wondrous g and secret cell The Kraken 8
Black the garden-bowers and g's Arabian Nights 78
alleys falling down to twilight g's, Ode to Memory 107
shadow'd g's of arches interlaced. Palace of Art 51
Grotesque raillery, or g, or false sublime — Princess iv 588
Groun' a corp lyin' undher g. Tomorrow 62
Ground (s) • (See also Groun', Mountain-ground) Till
the air And the g Nothing will Die 28
And dew is cold upon the g, The Owl i 2
All the place is holy g ; Poet's Mind 9
It would fall to the g if you came in. „ 23
And shall fall again to g. Deserted House 16
Not that the g's of hope were fix'd, Two Voices 227
from the g She raised her piercing orbs, D. ofF. Women 170
I keep smooth plats of fruitful g, The Blackbird 3
as he near'd His happy home, the g. Gardener's D. 92
And mix'd with shadows of the common g ! „ 135
Dora cast her eyes upon the g, Dora 89
perish, falling on the foeman's g, Locksley Hall 103
O Lord ! — 'tis in my neighbour's g, Amphion 75
To yonder shining g; St. Agnes' Eve 14
vapours weep their burthen to the g, Tithonus 2
Release me, and restore me to the g; ,.72
perfect fan, Above the teeming g. Sir L. and Q. G. 18
Gathering up from all the lower g ; Vision of Sin 15
And track'd you still on classic g, To E. L. 10
All her fair length upon the g she lay : Princess v 59
Ida spoke not, gazing on the g, „ vi 227
To dance with death, to beat the g, In Mem. i 12
The chestnut pattering to the g : „ xi 4
here upon the g, No more partaker „ xli 7
And hide thy shame beneath the g. „ Ixxii 28
But all is new unhallow'd g. „ civ 12
flatten'd, and crush'd, and dinted into the g : Maud I il
all by myself in my own dark garden g, „ Hi 10
0 let the solid g Not fail beneath my feet „ xi 1
Rivulet crossing my g, „ xxi 1
Laid him that clove it grovelling on the g. Gareth and L. 972
Death was cast to g, and slowly rose. „ 1403
Two forks are fixt into the meadow g, Marr. of Geraint 482
Coursed one another more on open g „ 522
And there they fixt the forks into the g, „ 548
Then, moving downward to the meadow g, Geraint and E. 204
And hurl'd to g what knight soever spurr'd Balin and Balan 66
Shot from behind him, run along the g. „ 323
Shot from behind me, ran along the ^; „ 374
Stumbled headlong, and cast him face to g. „ 426
1 set thee high on vantage g, „ 534
Then she, who held her eyes upon the g, Lancelot and E. 232
He answer'd with his eyes upon the g, „ 1352
made the g Reel under us, and all at once, Lover's Tale ii 193
never to say that I laid him in holy g. Rizpah 58
and the palace, and death in the g ! Def. of Lveknow 24
coffinless corpse to be laid in the g, „ 80
slowly sinking now into the g, Locksley H., Sixty 27
ampler hunting g's beyond the night ; „ 69
and you hurl'd them to the g. Happy 76
Ground
288
Growing
Ground (s) (continued) Christ-like creature that ever stept on
the g. Charity 32
vaults her skies, From this my vantage g MechanophiLxts 18
Ground (verb) teeth that ? As in a dreadful dream, Aylmer's Field 328
For ' g in yonder social mill In Mem. Ixxxix 39
He 9 his teeth together, sprang with a yell, Bcdin and Balan 538
Groundflame g of the crocus breaks the mould Prog, of Spring 1
Ground-plan ' Lo ! God's likeness —the g-p- Vision of Sin 187
Ground-swell a full tide Rose with g-s, Sea Breams 51
Roll as a g-s dash'd on the strand, W. to Alexandra 23
Group A ^ of Houris bow'd to see Palace of Art 102
I have shadow'd many a y Of beauties, Talking Oak 61
a 9 of girls In circle waited. Princess, Pro. 68
and in g's they stream'd away. „ Con. 105
Group'd Muses and the Graces, g in threes, „ ii 27
stood her maidens glimmeringly g „ iv 190
Crrove {See also Sea-Groves) lemon g In closest coverture
upsprung, Arabian Nights 67
From the g's within The wild-bird's Poet's Mind 20
' I, rooted here among the g's Talking Oak 181
Wherever in a lonely g He set up Amphion 21
Hush'd all the g's from fear of wrong : Sir L. and Q. G. 13
Kept to the garden now, and g of pines, Aylmer's Field 550
Thy God is far diffused in noble g's „ 653
Rose gem-like up before the dusky g's Princess, Pro. 75
in a poplar g when a light wind wakes „ v 13
Gray halls alone among their massive g's ; „ Con. 43
Yet present in his natal g. The Daisy 18
For g's of pine on either hand, To F. D. Maurice 21
To rest in a golden g, or to bask in a summer sky : Wages 9
Burnt and broke the g and altar Boadicea 2
Uncared for, gird the windy g. In Mem. ci 13
In the little g where I sit — Maud I iv 2
A knot, beneath, of snakes, aloft, a g. Marr. of Geraint 325
It seems another voice in other g's ; Balin and Balan 215
With young Lavaine into the poplar g. Lancelot and E. 509
Hid from the wide world's rumour by the g „ 522
Touch'd at all points, except the poplar g, „ 617
Lavaine across the poplar g Led to the caves : „ 804
By g, and garden-lawn, and rushing brook. Holy Grail 230
green-glooming twilight of the g, Pelleas and E. 33
And all talk died, as in a gr all song „ 607
dark in the golden g Appearing, Last Tournament 379
from the high wall and the flowering g Of grasses Guinevere 33
Rode under g's that look'd a paradise „ 389
all the low dark g's, a land of love ! Lover's Tale i 332
A height, a broken grange, a g. Ancient Sage 223
thro' all the g's of olive in the summer glow, Frater Ave, etc. 3
palm And orange g of Paraguay, To Ulysses 12
Grovel Stands at thy gate for thee to g to — Aylmer's Field 652
g and grope for my son till I find myself Rizpah 8
Grovelike Once g, each huge arm a tree, Aylmer's Field 510
GroveD'd vmlaced my casque And g on my body, Princess vi 28
And g with her face against the floor : Guinevere 415
And while she g at his feet, „ 581
Grovelling Laid him that clove it g on the ground. Gareth and L. 972
Gareth brought him g on his knees, „ 1124
Grow {See also Grow) Think my belief would
stronger g ! Supp. Confessions 13
g awry From roots which strike so deep ? „ 77
in the rudest wind Never g sere, Ode to Memory 25
g 80 full and deep In thy large eyes, Elednore 85
and slowly ^ To a full face, „ 91
G golden all about the sky ; „ 101
G green beneath the showery gray, My life is full 17
And on my clay her darnel g; „ 22
How g's the day of human power ? ' Two Voices 78
' His sons g up that bear his name, „ 256
Some g to honour, some to shame, — „ 257
I will g round him in his place, G, live, Fatima 40
a light that g's Larger ana clearer, (Enone 108
untU endurance g Sinew'd with action, „ 164
G's green and broad, and takes no care, Lotos-Eaters, C.S. 28
It g's to guerdon after-days : Love thou thy land 27
She felt her heart g prouder : The Goose 22
Grow (continued) imtil he g's Of age to help us.'
cruel as a schoolboy ere he g's To Pity —
that my soul might g to thee.
Their faces g between me and my book ;
So now 'tis fitted on and g's to me.
Shall g so fair as this.'
All grass of silky feather g —
' But we g old. Ah ! when shall all men's good
The vast Republics that may g.
That g's within the woodland.
g's From England to Van Diemen.
patch of soil To g my own plantation.
I g in worth, and wit, and sense,
Till, where the street g's straiter,
forget-me-nots That g for happy lovers.
Watching your growth, I seem'd again to g.
And heaps of living gold that daily g,
as by miracle, g straight and fair —
I saw my father's face G long and troubled
might g To use and power on this Oasis,
And g for ever and for ever,
slowly g's a glimmering square,
the child shall g To prize the authentic mother
this shall g A night of Summer from the heat,
slight-natured, miserable, How shall men g ?
in the long years liker must they g ;
Purpose in purpose, will in will, they g,
let the sorrowing crowd about it g,
ever weaker g's thro' acted crime,
I may die but the grass will g, And the grass
will g when I am gone,
A beam in darkness : let it g.
Let knowledge g from more to more.
And g incorporate into thee.
But as he g's he gathers much.
His isolation g's defined.
How blanch'd with darkness must I g !
The days that g to something strange.
And year by year the landscape g
For thee she grew, for thee she g's
I should g light-headed, I fear,
and ever afresh they seem'd to g.
But I know where a garden g's,
change, and g Faint and far-off.
oiu'selves shall g In use of arms and manhood,
days will g to weeks, the weeks to months,
It g's upon me now — the semicircle
let g The flowers that run poison in their veins.
By firth and lock thy silver sister g,
But look, the morning g's apace.
Science g's and Beauty dwindles —
where the purple flowers g,
Dora 126
Walk, to the Mail 109
St. S. Stylites 71
176
209
Talking Oak 244
269
Golden Year 47
Day-Dm., L'Envoi 15
Amphion 8
„ 83
„ 100
WUl Water. 41
142
The Brook 173
Aylmer's Field 359
655
676
Princess i 59
ii 166
iv 16
52
v432
vi53
vii 266
279
305
Ode on Well. 16
Will 12
Window, No Answer 4
In Mem., Pro. 24
25
ii 16
„ xlv 5
12
Ixi 8
„ Ixxi 11
ci 19
Con. 35
Maud I xix 100
// i 28
t'72
Balin and Balan 217
Lancelot and E. 63
Guinevere 624
Lover's Tale i 37
346
Sir J. Oldcastle 58
The Flight 93
Locksley H., Sixty 246
Frater Ave, etc. 4
since your name will g with Time, To Marq. of Dufferin 13
Young again you g Out of sight. The Ring 11
the long day of knowledge g's and warms. Prog, of Spring 101
' Father and mother will watch you g ' — (repeat) Romney's R. 104, 106
You watch'd not I, she did not g, she died
there is time for the race to g.
You, what the cultured surface g's,
Growest ever thus thou g beautiful In silence,
grown In power, and ever g,
Chrowing (adj. and part.) (See also A-grawin', Ever
growing) Ere the light on dark was g.
Don't let Effie come to see me till my grave be
g green :
His face is g sharp and thin.
g dewy-warm With kisses balmier
g coarse to sympathise with clay.
gaze On that cottage g nearer,
May-music g with the g light,
a promontory. That had a sapling g on it,
grass There g longest by the meadow's edge,
And on the fourth are men with g wings.
And g, on her tomb.
Thou sawest a glory g on the night.
105
The Dawn 20
Mechanophilus 33
Tithonus 43
To Dante 2
Oriana 10
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 43
D.oftheO. Year 46
Tithonus 58
Locksley Hall 46
L. of Burleigh 35
Gareth and L. 1080
Geraint and E. 163
257
Holy Grail 237
Ancient Sage 164
Epit. on Caxton 2
Growing
289
Guess'd
I
Growing (adj. or part.) {cotUinited) in the night, While the
gloom is g.' Forlorn 12
And ever worse with g time, Palace of Art 270
The warders of the g hour, Love thou thy land 61
harmonies of law The g world assume, England and Amer. 17
Storm'd in orbs of song, a g gale ; Vision of Sin 25
His baby's death, her g poverty, Enoch Arden 705
the dull November day Was g duller twilight, „ 722
and still Grew with the g note, Sea Dreams 213
who desire you more Than g boys their manhood ; Princess iv 457
roll'd With music in the g breeze of Time, „ vi 56
From g commerce loose her latest chain, Ode Inter. Exhib. 33
Till g winters lay me low ; In Mem. xl 30
Is shadow'd by the g hour, „ xlvi 3
Ck)nduct by paths of g powers, „ Ixxxiv 31
G and fading and g (repeat) Maud I Hi 7, 9
delicate spark Of glowing and g light „ vi 16
Still g holier as you near'd the bay, Lover's Tale i 338
Between the gomg light and g night ? „ 664
orphan wail came borne in the shriek ot a,g wind, The Wreck 87
And we tum'd to the g dawn, Despair 22
cry of ' Forward, Forward,' lost within the g gloom ; Locksley H., Sixty 73
Aged eyes may take the g glimmer „ 230
Careless of our g kin. Open I. and C. Exhib. 23
Growing (s) body slight and round, and like a pear
In g, Walk, to the Mail 54
Growl there at their meat would g, Com. of Arthur 30
remembers all, and g's Remembering, Gareth and L. 704
Growl'd farewell to my sire, who g An answer Princess v 233
so the ruffians g, Fearing to lose, Geraint and E. 563
Growling g like a dog, when his good bone „ 559
lays his foot upon it. Gnawing and g'. . „ 563
g as before, And cursing their lost time, „ 575
Grown {See also Broader-grown, Choicest-grown,
Full - grown. Half - grown, Oer - grown.
Slowly-grown, Woman-grown) cold, and
dead, and corpse-like g ? Sjipp. Confessions 17
That her voice imtuneful g, The Owl ii 6
And she is ^ so dear, so dear. Miller's D. 170
eyes g dim with gazing on the pilot-stars. Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 87
when love is ^ To ripeness, To J. S. 14
Now am I feeble g ; my end draws nigh ; St. S. Stylites 36
low matin-chirp hath g Full quire. Love and Duty 98
The maiden's jet-black hair has g, Day-Dm., Sleep B. 4
My beard has g into my lap.' „ Revival 22
And wake on science g to more, „ L'Envoi 10
mean Vileness, we are g so proud — Aylmer's Field 756
tho' you have g You scarce have alter'd : Princess ii 305
and g a bulk Of spanless girth, „ vi 35
soil, left barren, scarce had g The grain In Mem. liii 7
To which thy crescent would have g ; „ Ixxxiv 4
I myself with these have g „ Con. 19
a morbid hate and horror have g Maud I vi 75
g too weak and old To drive the heathen Com. of Arthur 511
Man am I g, & man's work must I do. Gareth and L. 116
Ten thousand-fold had g, flash'd the fierce shield, „ 1030
now hath g The vast necessity of heart and life. Merlin and V. 924
g a part of me : but what use in it ? Lancelot and E. 1416
Becomes thee well — art g wild beast thyself. Last Tournament 637
the red fruit G on a, magic oak-tree „ 745
but grosser g Than heathen. Pass, of Arthur 61
To what height The day had g I know not. Lover's Tale Hi 9
I that was little had g so tall, First Quarrel 27
I had g so handsome and tall — ., 37
they foimd I had g so stupid and still Rizpah 49
and g In power, and ever growest. To Dante 1
Have we g at last beyond the passions Locksley H., Sixty 93
For moans will have g sphere-music The Dreamer 29
Growth Huge sponges of millennial g The Kraken 6
The lavish g's of southern Mexico. Mine be the strength 14
G's of jasmine turn'd Their humid arms D. of F. Women 69
Bear seed of men and g of minds. Love thou thy land 20
Mix'd with the knightly g that fringed his lips. M. d' Arthur 220
Or that Thessalian g, Talking Oak 292
Watching your g, I seem'd again to grow. Aylmer's Field 359
Growth {continued) bear a double g of those rare souls, Princess ii 180
Is duer unto freedom, force and g Of spirit „ iv 141
Know you no song, the true g of your soil, „' 150
In us true g, in her a Jonah's gourd, „ 311
train To riper g the mind and will : In Mem. xlii 8
How dwarf 'd a ^ of cold and night, „ Ixi 7
For change of place, like g of time, „ evil
And native g of noble mind ; " cxi 16
the sunshine that hath given the man A g, Balin and "Palan 182
Mix'd with the knightly g that fringed his lips. Pass, of Arthur 388
Thou didst receive the g of pines Lover's Tale i 11
the g's Of vigorous early days, „ 132
say rather, was my g, My inward sap, ,' 165
Grudge he that always bare in bitter g Merlin and V 6
Grunt meditative g's of much content, Walk, to the Mail 87
Grunted waked with silence, g ' Good ! ' M. d' Arthur, Ep. 4
Grunter tends her bristled g's in the sludge : ' Princess v 27
Guanahani last the light, the light On G ! Columbus 75
Guano A pamphleteer on g and on grain, Princess, Con. 89
Guard (s) {See also Woman-guard) Encompass'd by
his faithful g. In Mem. cxxvi 8
Guard (verb) g about With triple-mailfed trust, Supp. Confessions 65
clear-stemm'd plantans g The outlet, Arabian Nights 23
Upon the cliffs that g my native land, Audley Court 49
enough, Sir ! I can ^ my own.' Aylmer's Field 276
Brothers, the woman's Angel g's you. Princess v 410
g us, g the eye, the soul Of Europe, Ode on Well. 160
He bad you g the sacred coasts. „ 172
They knew the precious things they had to g : Third of Feb. 41
And like a beacon g's thee home. In Mem. xvii 12
That g the portals of the house ; „ xxix 12
So here shall silence g thy fame ; „ Ixxv 17
Yea, too, myself from myself I g, Maud IvidO
To g thee on the rough ways of the world.' Com. of Arthur 336
For hard by here is one that g's a ford — Gareth and L. 1003
' G it,' and there was none to meddle „ 1012
the King Gave me to g, and such a dog am I, „ 1014
one with arms to g his head and yours, Geraint and E. 427
Long since, to g the justice of the King : „ 934
Or devil or man G thou thine head.' Balin and Balan 553
I shall g it even in death. Lancelot and E. 1115
seeing that the King must g That which he rules, Holy Grail 905
To g thee in the wild hour coming on, Guinevere 446
I gr as God's high gift from scathe and wrong, „ 494
To g and foster her for evermore. „ 592
value of that jewel, he had to ^ ? Lover's Tale iv 153
Out yonder. G the Redan ! Def. of Lucknow 36
two repentsint Lovers g the ring ; ' The Ring 198
Guarded {See also Griffin-guarded) G the sacred shield
of Lancelot ; Lancelot and E. 4
Fear not : thou shalt be g till my death. Guinevere 448
You have the ring she g ; The Ring 475
Guardian (adj.) My g angel will speak out In Mem. xliv 15
Guardian (s) I to her became Her g and her angel. Lover's Tale i 393
you the lifelong g of the child. The Ring 54
The g of her relics, of her ring. „ 441
Guarding G realms and kings from shame ; Ode on Well. 68
Guerdon (s) Sequel of g could not alter me QSnone 153
What g will ye ? ' Gareth sharply spake, Gareth and L. 830
but take A horse and arms for g ; Geraint and E. 218
' I take it as free gift, then,' said the boy, ' Not g ; „ 223
hear The legend as in g for your rhyme ? Merlin and V. 554
Our g not alone for what we did, Columbus 33
Nor list for g in the voice of men. Ancient Sage 262
Guerdon (verb) It grows to g aiter-days : Love thou thy land 27
we gave a costly bribe To g silence, Princess i 204
Guess (s) the golden g Is morning-star Columbus 43
the wildest modem g of you and me. Locksley H., Sixty 232
Guess (verb) cannot g How much their welfare Princess Hi 280
The Power in darkness whom y/& g; In Mem. cxxiv 4
What art thou then ? I cannot g ; „ cxxx 5
praying To his own great self, as I ^ ; Maud II v 33
I might g thee chief of those, After the King, Lancelot and E. 183
g at the love of a soul for a soul ? Charity 30
Guess'd I leave thy greatness to be y ; In Mem. Ixxv 4
Guess'd
290
Gurgle
Gaess'd (continued) presence might have g you one of
those Marr. of Geraint 431
Now g a hidden meaning in his arms, Lancelot and E. n
Guess-work they g it, Columbus 43
Gness-work G-w they guess'd it, „ 43
No g-w ! I W£is certain of my goal ; „ 45
Gaest Each enter'd Hke a welcome g. Two Voices 411
Head-waiter, honour'd by the g Half-mused, Will Water. 73
mellow Death, like some late g, „ 239
g, their host, their ancient friend, Aylmer's Field 790
Shone, silver-set ; about it lay the g's, Princess, Pro. 106
You, likewise, oiu" late g's, „ v 229
Who is he that cometh, like an honour'd g. Ode on Well. 80
father's chimney glows In expectation of a ^ ; In Mem. vi 30
Which brings no more a welcome g „ xxix 5
I see myself an honour'd g, „ Ixxxiv 21
A g, or happy sister, simg, „ Ixxxix 26
if I Conjecture of a stiller g, „ Con. 86
Endures not that her g should serve himself.' Marr. of Geraint 379
wine and goodly cheer To feed the sudden g, Geraint and E. 284
to thy g, Me, me of Arthur's Table. Balin and Bdlan 379
' Whence comest thou, my g, Lancelot and E. 181
one of your own knights, a ^ of ours, Holy Grail 40
all the goodlier g's are past away, Last Tournament 158
Was brought before the g : and they the g's. Lover's Tale iv 204
all The g's broke in upon him with meeting hands „ 238
custom steps yet further when the g Is loved and honour'd
This question, so flung down before the g's.
While all the g's in mute amazement rose—
' My g's,' said Julian : ' you are honour'd now
a ^ So bound to me by common love and loss —
rose up, and with him all his g's
How oft the Cantab supper, host and g.
Like would-be g's an hour too late,
therewithin a g may make True cheer
Then drink to England, every g ;
Unfriendly of your parted g.
Guide (s) the silver star, thy g. Shines
' They were dangerous g's the feelings —
When each by turns was g to each,
With you for g and master, only you.
Then were I glad of you as g and friend :
far away with good Sir Torre for g
Alia be my g ! But come. My noble friend
Guide (verb) there is a hand that g's.'
g Her footsteps, moving side by side
244
268
305
316
344
359
To W. H. Brookfield 4
Tiresias 198
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 15
Hands all Round 2
The Wanderer 4
Tithonus 25
Locksley Hall 95
In Mem. xxiii 13
Merlin and V. 881
Lancelot and E. 226
788
Akbar's Dream 16
Princess, Con. 79
/w Mem. cxiv 18
I have not made the world, and He that made it will g. Maud I iv 48
thou. Sir Prince, Wilt surely g me
and clean ! and yet — God g them — young.'
and he Will g me to that palace, to the doors
force to 9 us thro' the days I shall not see?
Gnided Whose feet are g thro' the land,
Which not alone had g me,
Gnile pure as he from taint of craven g,
A widow with less g than many a child.
Guileless Till ev'n the clear face of the g King,
Guilt When I have purged my g.'
The g of blood is at your door :
To hold his hope thro' shame and gr,
May wreck itself without the pilot's g,
Easily gather'd either g.
eye which watches g And goodness,
hasty judger would have call'd her g,
subtle beast. Would track her g imtil he found,
too-fearful g, Simpler than any child,
without some g should such grief be ?
Guiltless Guilty or g, to stave off a chance
flushing the g air,
far away the maid in Astolat, Her g rival,
Against the g heirs of him from Tyre,
Being g, as an innocent prisoner.
Guilty (See also Half-guilty) a little fault Whereof I
was not g ;
be he g, by that deathless King Who lived
Touching her g love for Lancelot,
Balin and Balan 478
Merlin and V. 29
Lancelot and E. 1129
Locksley H., Sixty 158
In Mem. Ixvi 9
„ cxiii 3
Ode on Well. 135
Sisters (E. and E.) 182
Guinevere 85
Palace of Art 296
L. C. V. de Vere 43
Love thou thy land 82
Aylmer's Field 716
Princess iv 236
In Mem. xxvi 5
Geraint and E. 433
Guinevere 60
370
Lover's Tale i 795
Geraint and E. 353
Lucretius 239
Lancelot and E. 746
Tiresias 12
Lover's Tale i 787
Com. of Arthur Z^
Gareth and L. 382
Marr. of Geraint 25
Guilty (continued) To dream she could be g of foul
act,
G or guiltless, to stave off a chance
rooted out the slothful officer Or g,
And full of cowardice and g shame,
like a g thing I creep At earliest morning
It is this g hand ! —
Am I g oi blood ?
The great and g love he bare the Queen,
Guinea jingling of the g helps the hurt
Guinearbens praised his hens, his geese, his g-h ;
Guinevere Sir Laimcelot and Queen G Kode
G, and in her his one delight.
G Stood by the castle walls to watch him
Desiring to be join'd with G ;
Give me thy daughter G to wife.'
Fear not to give this King thine only child, G :
return'd Among the flowers. In May, with G.
Thro' that great tenderness for G,
G lay late into the morn. Lost in sweet dreams,
G, not mindful of his face In the King's hall,
A stately queen whose name was G,
thrice that morning G had cUmb'd The giant tower
Some goodly cognizance of G,
O me, that such a name as G's,
day When G was crossing the great hall
Spake (for she had been sick) to G,
G, The pearl of beauty :
Lancelot, when they glanced at G,
Sir Lancelot at the palace craved Audience of G,
And therefore to our Lady G,
For fair thou art and pure as G,
0 my Queen, my G, For I wUl be thine Arthur
' Is G herself so beautiful ? '
Said G, ' We marvel at thee much,
' False ! and I held thee pure as G.'
' Am I but false as G is pure ?
There with her knights and dames was G.
G had sinn'd against the highest,
QtJEEN G had fled the court.
When that storm of anger brake From G,
1 did not come to curse thee, G,
yet not less, 0 G, For I was ever virgin save for thee,
Marr of Geraint 120
Geraint and E. 353
939
Princess iv 348
In Mem. vii 7
Maud II i 4:
a 73
Lancelot and E. 245
Locksley Hall 105
The Brook 126
Sir L. and Q. G. 20
Com. of Arthur 4
47
77
139
414
452
Marr. of Geraint 30
157
191
667
826
Balin and Balan 195
489
Merlin and V. 65
Lancelot and E. 78
113
270
1163
1278
Pelleas and E. 44
46
70
179
522
524
588
Last Tournament 570
Guinevere 1
362
533
Guise and sets before him in rich g
Gules Langued g, and tooth'd with grinning
savagery.'
Gulf (s) and brought Into the g's of sleep.
Sow'd all their mystic g's with fleeting stars ;
It may be that the g's will wash us down :
a gr of ruin, swallowing gold.
Or down the fiery g as talk of it.
Nor shudders at the g's beneath,
A g that ever shuts and gapes,
in this stormy g have found a pearl
seas of Death and sunless g's of Doubt.
naked glebe Should yawn once more into the g,
woods Plunged ^ on ^ thro' all their vales
Gulf (verb) Should g him fathom-deep in brine ;
Gulf 'd And g his griefs in inmost sleep ;
Gulf-stream warm g-s of Florida Floats far away
Gulistan any rose of G ShaU burst her veil ■
Gull laugh'd and scream'd against the g's,
Gull'd break our bound, and g Our servants,
Be not y by a despot's plea !
Gun they waited — Not a g was fired.
Each beside his g.
Nor ever lost an English g ;
' Charge for the g's ! ' he said :
high above us with her yawning tiers of g's,
not arter the birds wi' 'is g,
make way for the g ! Now double-charge it
Gunner Sabring the g's there.
Sink me the ship. Master G —
g said ' Ay, ay,' but the seamen made reply :
Gurgle (s) as we sat by the g of springs,
„ 556
Lover's Tale iv 247
Balin and Balan 197
D. of F. Women 52
Gardener's D. 262
Ulysses 62
Sea Dreams 79
Princess Hi 287
In Mem. xli 15
„ Ixx 6
Maud I xviii 42
Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 14
Demeter and P. 43
Prog, of Spring 73
In Mem. x 18
Pelleas and E. 516
Mine be the strength 12
Princess iv 122
Pelleas and E. 89
Princess iv 539
Riflemen form ! 9
The Captain 40
52
Oie on Well. 97
Light Brigade 6
The Revenge 41
Village Wife 41
Def. of Lucknow 67
Light Brigade 29
The Revenge 89
91
V. of Maeldune 89
Gurgle
291
Hair
Gnrgle (verb) All throats that g sweet !
Gurgling To drench his dark locks in the g wave
Gumion By castle G, where the glorious King
Gnsh g'es from beneath a low-hung cloud.
Gush'd between Whose interspaces g in
Gushing g of the wave Far far away did seem
Gust one warm g, full-fed with perfimie,
will be chaflf For every g of chance,
The g that round the garden flew,
An angry g of wind Pufif'd out his torch
Anon the face, as, when a g hath blown,
Waved with a sudden g that sweeping down
a rougher g might tumble a stornuer wave.
Talking Oak 266
Princess iv 187
Lancelot and E. 293
Ode to Memory 71
Lover's Tale i 408
Lotos-Eaters 31
Gardener's D. 113
Princess iv 856
In Mem. Ixxxix 19
Merlin and V. 730
Last Tournament 368
Lover's Tale Hi 34
The Wreck 131
Gustful a g April mom That puff'd the swaying branches Holy Grail 14
Gusty She saw the g shadow sway. Mariana 52
Gutted till he crept from a g mine Maud 1x9
Guvness (governess) Mim be a g, lad, or summut, N. Farmer, N. S. 26
Gozzlin' G an' soakin' an' smoakin' North. Cobbler 24
Gwydion G made by glamour out of flowers, Marr. of Geraint 743
Gynseceum Dwarfs of the g, fail so far In high desire. Princess Hi 279
Gyre Shot up and shrill'd in flickering g's, „ vii 46
mighty g's Rapid and vast, of hissing spray Lover's Tale ii 197
Gyve the wholesome boon of g and gag.' Gareth and L. 370
sight run over Upon his steely g's ; Lover's Tale ii 157
H too rough H in Hell and Heaven, Sea Dreams 196
Haache (ache) es be down wi' their h's an' their paains : Spinster's S's. 108
Haacre (acre) Wamt worth nowt a h, N. Farmer, O. S. 39
wi halite hoonderd h o' Squoire's, „ 44
wi' a hoonderd h o' sense — Church-warden , etc. 22
Ha&fe (half) an' mea h down wi' my haay ! „ 2
Sa I warrants 'e niver said h wot 'e thowt, „ 18
Wi' h o' the chimleys a-twizzen'd an' twined Owd Sod 22
Ha9i-pot (half -pot) An' a h-p o' jam, Spinster's S's. 109
Haate (eight) Mea, wi' h hoonderd haacre o' Squoire's, N. Farmer, O. S. 44
Ha3,te (hate) an' we h's boooklarnin' ere. Village Wife 24
to be sewer I h's 'em, my lass, „ 31
a-preiichin' mea down, they heve, an' I h's 'em now, Church-warden, etc. 53
HaS.t«d (hated) a-flyin' an' seeiidin' tha A to see ; Spinster's S's. 79
Haay (hay) an' twined like a band o' h. Owd Rod 22
an' mea haafe down wi' my h ! Church-warden, etc. 2
Habit (custom) Idle h links us yet. Miller's D. 212
Or to burst all links of h — Locksley Hall 157
Drink deep, vmtil the h's of the slave, Princess ii 91
to us, The fools of h, sweeter seems In Mem. x 12
Her memory from old h of the mind Went slipping Guinevere 379
Habit (riding dress) whether The h, hat, and feather, Maud I xx 18
Hack yea to him Who h's his mother's throat — Sir J. Oldcastle 114
Hack'd stay the brands That h among the flyers. Com. of Arthur 121
their arms H, and their foreheads grimed with smoke. Holy Grail 265
H the battleshield, Batt. of Brunanhurh 13
Fiercely we h at the flyers before us. „ 42
Casques were crack'd and hauberks h The Tourney 7
Hades or the enthroned Persephonfe in H, Princess iv ^9
seen the serpent-wanded power Draw downward
into H Demeter and P. 26
A cry that rang thro' H, Earth, and Heaven ! „ 33
break The sunless halls of H into Heaven ? „ 136
shrillings of the Dead When driven to H, Death of CEnone 22
Haft all the h twinkled with diamond sparks, M. d' Arthur 56
Struck with a knife's h hard against the board, Geraint and E. 600
all the h twinkled with diamond sparks, Pass, of Arthur 224
Haggard And shot from crooked lips a h smile. Princess iv 364
when she saw The h father's face and reverend beard „ vi 103
An armlet for an arm to which the Queen's Is h, Lancelot and E. 1227
' What is it ? ' but that oarsman's h face, „ 1250
As a vision Unto a h prisoner, Lover's Tale ii 148
Master scrimps his h sempstress of her daily
bread, Locksley H., Sixty 221
Eve after eve that h anchorite Would haunt St. Telemachus 12
Hail (s) Where falls not h, or rain, or any snow,
Rain, wind, frost, heat, h, damp,
with rain or h, or fire or snow ;
And gilds the driving h.
Sleet of diamond-drift and pearly h ;
Where falls not h, or rain, or any snow,
and a clatter of h on the glass ,
h of Ares crash Along the sounding walls.
Hail (verb) Sets out, and meets a friend who h's
him,
city-roar that h's Premier or king !
And voices h it from the brink ;
and all men h him for their king.'
ere he came, like one that h's a ship.
M. d' Arthur 260
St. S. Stylites 16
Locksley Hall 193
Sir Galahad 56
Vision of Sin 22
Pass, of Arthur 428
In the Child. Hosp. 62
Tiresias 96
Walk, to the Mail 42
Princess, Con. 101
In Mem. cxxi 14
Com. of Arthur 424
Geraint and E. 540
H the fair Ceremonial Of this year olE her Jubilee. On Jub. Q. Victoria 23
Hear thy myriad laureates h thee monarch Akbar's D., Hymn 6
Hail (interj.) H, hidden to the knees in fern. Talking Oak 29
Fair as the Angel that said 'HI' Aylmer's Fidd 681
h once more to the banner of battle unroU'd ! Maud III vi 42
Prince, Knight, H, Knight and Prince, Gareth and L. 1271
I will speak. H, royal knight, Balin and Balan 470
King, Who, when he saw me, rose, and bade me h, Holy Grail 725
King espied him, saying to him, ' H, Bors ! „ 756
H, King ! to-morrow thou shalt pass away. Pass, of Arthur 34
' H to the glorious Golden year of her Jubilee ! ' On Jub. Q. Victoria 64
H ample presence of a Queen, Prog, of Spring 61
Hail'd Walter h a score of names upon her, Princess, Pro. 156
And toward him spurr'd, and h him. Holy Grail 637
Who never h another — was there one ? Lover's Tale i 798
and there h on our houses and halls Def. of Lucknow 13
Hair {See also 'Aair, 'Air) smooth'd his chin and
sleek'd his h, A Character 11
Dressing their h with the white sea-flower; The Merman 13
Combing her h Under the sea. The Mermaid 4
With a comb of pearl I would comb my h; „ 11
I would comb my h till my ringlets would fall „ 14
With thj floating flaxen h ; Adeline 6
Your h is darker, and your eyes Touch'd Margaret 49
bright black eyes, her bright black h, Kate 2
round her neck Floated her h (Enone 19
his sunny h Cluster'd about his temples „ 59
From her warm brows and bosom her deep h Ambrosial, „ 177
her h Wound with white roses, slept St. Cecily ; Palace of Art 98
blessings on his kindly voice and on his silver h ! May Queen, Con. 13
that h More black than ashbuds in the front
of March.' Gardener's D. 27
A single stream of all her soft brown h „ 128
wound Her looser h in braid, „ 158
leaf and acorn-ball In wreath about her h. Talking Oak 288
Catch the wild goat by the h, Locksley Hall 170
His beard a foot before him, and his h A yard behind. Godiva 18
The maiden's jet-black h has grown, Day-Dvi., Sleep B. 4
my h Is gray before I know it. WUl Water. 167
With a single rose in her h. Lady Clare 60
One her dark h and lovesome mien. Beggar Maid 12
H, and eyes, and limbs, and faces. Vision of Sin 39
This /i is his : she cut it off and gave it, Enoch Arden 894
h In gloss and hue the chestnut, (repeat) The Brook 71, 206
made The hoar h of the Baronet bristle up Aylmer's Field 42
His h as it were crackling into flames, „ 586
not a h Ruffled upon the scarfskin, „ 659
bring Their own gray h's with sorrow to the grave — „ 777
Beat breast, tore h, cried out upon herself Lucretius 277
sweet girl-graduates in their golden h. Princess, Pro. 142
combing out her long black h Damp from the river ; „ iv 276
' You have our son : touch not a /t of his head : „ 407
Robed in the long night of her deep h, „ 491
And fingering at the h about his lip, „ v 303
and caught his h. And so belabour'd him „ 340
A single band of gold about her h, „ 513
His face was ruddy, his h was gold, The Victim 35
And you with gold for h ! Window, Spring 4
That sittest ranging golden h ; In Mem. vi 26
From youth and babe and hoary h's : „ Ixix 10
To reverence and the silver h „ Ixxxiv 32
Hair
292
Half-attained
Hair (continued) the roots of my h were stirred By a shuffled
step, 3iaud I i 13
What if with her sunny h, „ vi 23
and thought It is his mother's h. „ // U 70
and foUow'd by his flying h Ran hke a colt, Com. of Arthur 321
dark my mother was in eyes and h, And dark in
h and eyes am I ; „ 327
Broad brows and fair, a fluent h and fine, Gareth and L. 464
the h All over glanced with dewdrop or with gem „ 928
broken wings, torn raiment, and loose h, „ 1208
and drew down from out his night-black h Balin and Balan 511
A twist of gold was round her h ; Merlin and V. 221
The snake of gold slid from her h, „ 888
And set it in this damsel's golden h, Lancelot and E. 205
Her bright h blown about the serious face „ 392
Then shook his h, strode off, and buzz'd abroad „ 722
— all her bright h streaming down — „ 1156
To seize me by the h and bear me far, „ 1425
Clean from her forehead all that wealth of h Holy Grail 150
all her shining h Was smear'd with earth, „ 209
black-blue Irish h and Irish eyes Had drawn Last Tournament 404
A low sea-sunset glorying roimd her h „ 508
His h, a sun that ray'd from off a brow „ 666
all their dewy h blown back Hke flame : Guinevere 284
with her milkwhite arms and shadowy h „ 416
Lest but a A of this low head be harm'd. „ 447
O golden h, with which I used to play „ 547
Quiver'd a flying glory on her h, Lover's Tale i 69
A solid glory on her bright black h ; „ 367
her h Studded with one rich Provence rose — „ Hi 44
thaw niver a h wur awry ; Village Wife 84
Harsh red h, big voice, big chest. In the Child. Hasp. 4
And his white h sank to Ms heels V. of Maddune 118
a dreadful light Came from her golden h, Tiresias 44
crystal into which I braided Edwin's h ! The Flight 34
An' yer h as black as the night. Tomorrow 32
h was as white as the snow an a grave. „ 60
And that bright h the modern sun. Epilogue 8
' Thy h Is golden like thy Mother's, The Ring 103
The frost-bead melts upon her golden h ; Prog, of Spring 10
one sleek'd the squalid h. One kiss'd Death of (Enone 57
Hair'd See Dark-hair'd, Fair-hair'd, Golden-hair'd,
)^ Gray-hair'd, Long-hair'd, White-hair'd
Hairless A little glassy-headed h man. Merlin and V. 620
Hainu (arm) An' 'e cotch'd howd hard o' my h, Owd Rod 58
wi' my h hingin' down to the floor, „ 65
Hair's-breadth Not even by one h-b of heresy, Columbus 64
Hairshirt ' Fast, H and scourge — Sir J. Oldcastle 142
Hairy-fibred Claspt the gray walls with h-f arms, Marr. of Geraint 323
Haithen (heathen) h kings in the flesh for the
Jidgemint day, Tomorrow 70
Halcyon (adj.) and give His fealty to the h hour! The Wanderer 12
Halcyon (s) in her open palm a A sits Patient — Prog, of Spring 2Q
Haldeny (Aldemey) pigs didn't sell at fall, an' wa
lost wer H cow, Church-warden, etc. 5
Hale (Francis) See Francis Hale
Hale I was strong and h of body then; St. S. Stylites 29
Who wears his manhood h and green : In Mem. liii 4
What did he then? not die: he is here and h — -Lover's Tale iv 40
Haled With hand and rope we h the groaning sow, Walk, to the Mail 91
The rope that h the buckets from the well, St. S. Stylites 64
And fam had h him out into the world, Aylmer's Field 467
They A us to the Princess where she sat Princess iv 271
h the yellow-ringleted Britoness — Boddicea 55
Haler and h too than I ; Guinevere 685
Half (See also Haafe) H shown, are broken and
withdrawn. Two Voices 306
a friendship so complete Portioned in halves between us, Gardener's D. 5
My words were h in earnest, h in jest,) „ 23
H Ught, h shade. She stood, „ 140
And h in love, h spite, he woo'd and wed Dora 39
h stands up And bristles ; h has fall'n and made
a bridge ; Walk, to the Mail 31
I hope my end draws nigh : h dead I am, St. S. Stylites 37
love-languid thro' h tears would dwell One earnest, Love and Duty 36
Half (continued) H is thine and A is his : it will be worthy
of the two. Locksley Rail 92
shall we pass the bill I mention'd h an hour ago ? ' Day-Dm., Revival 28
That my youth was h divine. Vision of Sin 78
With h a score of swarthy faces came. Aylmer's Field 191
his mind H buried in some weightier argument, Lucretius 9
H child h woman as she was. Princess, Pro. 101
we gain'd A little street h garden and h house ; „ i 214
then to bed, where h in doze I seem'd To float „ 246
we stroU'd For h the day thro' stately theatres „ ii 369
Hers more than h the students, all the love. „ Hi 39
bearing in my left The weight of all the hopes of
h the world,
but h Without you ; with you, whole ; and of those
halves You worthiest ;
H turning to the broken statue, said,
Lily of the vale ! h open'd bell of the woods !
H a league, h a league, H a league onward,
a he wWch is A a truth is ever the blackest of lies,
Girt by h the tribes of Britain,
or h coquette-like Maiden,
I sometimes hold it A a sin To put in words
like Nature, h reveal And h conceal the Soul within.
A shot, ere h thy draught be done.
And part it, giving h to him.
My bosom-friend and h of life ;
H jealous of she knows not what,
h exprest And loyal unto kindly laws.
I, the divided h of such A friendship as had master'd
Time;
And tumbled h the mellowing pears !
To count their memories h divine ;
Believe me, than in h the creeds.
These two have striven h the day.
Now h to the setting moon are gone. And h to the
rising day ;
H the night I waste in sighs, H in dreams I sorrow
' Thou hast h prevail'd against me,'
Or whosoe'er it was, or h the world Had ventured —
everyone that owns a tower The Lord for h a league.
King Arthur's gift, the worth oih a, town,
R fell to right and h to left and lay.
Spring after spring, for h a hundred years :
That have no meaning h a league away :
With h a night's appliances, recall'd
But his friend Replied, in A a whisper,
And the h my men are sick.
For h of their fleet to the right and h to the left
And h of the rest of us maim'd for life
the great waters break Whitening for h a
league,
Not quite so quickly, no, nor h as well.
For the one h slew the other,
and her tears Are h of pleasure, h of pain —
iv 184
460
593
yi 193
Light Brigade 1
Grandmother 30
Boddicea 5
Hendecasyllabics 20
In Mem. v 1
3
vi 11
XXV 12
lix 3
Ixl
Ixxxv 15
63
Ixxxix 20
xc 12
xcvi 12
cii 17
Maud I xxii 23
// iv 23
Gareth and L. 30
64
596
677
1405
Roly Grail 19
556
Lover's Tale iv 93
336
The Revenge 6
„ 35
77
Last Tournament 465
Sisters (E. and E.) 102
V. of Maeldune 114
Prin. Beatrice 11
He married an heiress, an orphan with h a shire of estate, — Charity 13
Half-accomplish'd A spike of h-a bells — To Ulysses 24
Half afraid I myself Am A a to wear it. The Ring 472
Half-aghast Leolin still Retreated h-a, Aylmer's Field 330
Half-akin No longer h-a to brute, In Mem., Con. 133
Half-a-league Yon summit h-a-l in air — Ancient Sage 11
Half-allowing h-a smiles for all the world, Aylmer's Field 120
Half-amaze rabble in h-a Stared at him dead, St. Telemachus 71
Half-amazed Whereat he stared, replying, h-a, Godiva 21
seal'd dispatches which the Head Took h-a, Princess iv 380
mirth so loud Beyond all use, that, h-a, the
Queen, Last Tournament 236
that h-a I parted from her, The Ring 436
Half-anger'd R-a with my happy lot, Miller's D. 2(X)
Come, I am hunger'd and h-a — meat. Last Tournament 719
Half-arisen came upon him h-a from sleep, Aylmer's Field 584
Half-ashamed Then h-a and part-amazed, Gareth and L. 868
Half-asleep As h-a his breath he drew. The Sisters 28
And on me, h-a, came back That wholesome heat To E. Fitzgerald 23
Half-assured their Highnesses Were h-a Columbus 60
Half-attain'd cope Of the h-a futurity, Ode to Memory 33
Half-awake
293
HaU
Half-awake h-a I heard The parson taking wide and
wider sweeps, The Epic 13
h-a he whisper'd, ' Where ? O where ? Pelleas and E. 41
Half-awaked sounded as in a dream To ears but h-a, Last Tournament 152
Half-awaken'd earliest pipe of h-a birds
Half-blind sudden light Dazed me h-b :
Half-blinded H-b at the coming of a Ught.
Half-bold H-b, half-frighted, with dilated eyes,
Half-brain All the full-brain, h-b races,
Half-bright Star of Even Half-tamish'd and /*-*,
Half-buried H-b in the Eagle's down.
Half-canonized H-c by all that look'd on her,
Half-cheated rathe she rose, h-c in the thought
Half-clench'd hand h-c Went faltering sideways
Half-closed dropping low their crimson bells H-c,
Half-conscious H-c of the garden-squirt,
H-c of their dying clay.
Half-consent Assumed from thence a h-c
Half-control for man can h-c his doom
Half-crazed I, once h-c for lai^er light
Half-crown Is it the weight of that h-c.
Half -crush 'd h-c among the rest A dwarf- like Cato
Half-cut-down h-c-d, a pasty costly-made,
Half-dead And all things look'd h-d,
H-d to know that I shall die.'
Maybe still I am but h-d •
fire, That lookt h-d, brake bright,
Under the h-d sunset glared ;
A stump of oak h-d. From roots like some black
coil
dash'd h d on barren sands, was I.
Half-deed shall descend On this h-d, and shape it
Half-defended Lo their colony h-d !
Half-despised not look up, or h-d the height
Half-digging they fell H-d their own graves)
Half-dipt a summer moon H-d in cloud :
Half-disdain h-d Perch'd on the pouted blossom
Half-diseased ' And the liver is h-d ! '
Half-disfame what is Fame in life but h-d.
Right well know I that Fame is h-d,
HaU-disrooted A tree Was h-d from his place
Half -divine The man I held as h-d ;
Half-drain'd a flask Between his knees, h-d ;
Half-dream Falling asleep in a h-d !
Half-drooping half on her mother propt, H-d
Half-dropt With h-d eyelid still.
Half-embraced And h-e the basket cradle-head
Half-English sweet h-E Neilgherry air I panted.
Half-entering H-e the portals.
Half-envious H-e of the flattering hand,
Half-face From the h-f to the full eye,
Half-faU'n H-f across the threshold of the sun,
Half-falling h-f from his knees. Half-nestled at his
heart.
Half-foresaw She h-f that he, the subtle beast,
Half-forgotten our great deeds, as h-f things.
random rhymes. Ere they be h-f;
Vivien h-f of the Queen
Low in the dust of h-f kings,
Half-frenzied when, h-f by the ring.
Half-frighted on the book, h-f, Miriam swore.
Half-bold, h-f, with dilated eyes,
Half-frighten'd Look'd down, half-pleased, h-f,
Half-glance With a h-g upon the sky
Half-grown H-g as yet, a child, and vain —
Half-guilty grew h-g in her thoughts again.
Half-heard laid his ear beside the doors. And there h-h ;
Half-hid Here h-h in the gleaming wood.
Half-hidden and there, h-h by him, stood.
Half-historic dealt with knights, HaK-legend, h-h,
Half-hour For one h-h, and let him talk to me ! '
Half-hysterical A half-incredulous, h-h cry.
Half-incredtUous A h-i, half-hysterical cry.
Half-invisible H-i to the view. Wheeling
HaU-lapt H-l in glowing gauze and golden brede,
Princess iv 50
„ 1)12
Com. of Arthur 266
Geraint and E. 597
Locksley H., Sixty 161
Gareth and L. 1118
Palace of Art 122
Princess i 23
Lancelot and E. 340
Merlin and V. 849
Arabian Nights 63
Amphion 91
In Mem. Iviii 7
Princess vii 82
Locksley H., Sixty 277
To Ulysses 29
Will Water. 155
Princess vii 125
Audley Court 23
Grandmother 34
In Mem,, xxxv 16
Maud II. V 99
Gareth and L. 685
800
Last Tournament 12
The Ring 309
Ancient Sage 89
Boddicea 17
Guinevere 643
Lover's Tale ii 47
Godiva 46
Princess, Pro. 198
Dead Prophet 76
Merlin and V. 465
504
Princess iv 186
In Mem. xiv 10
Day-Dm., Sleep P. 26
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 56
Princess iv 368
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 90
Sea Dreams 289
The Brook 17
Lover's Tale ii 123
Lancelot and E. 349
1262
D.ofF. Women ^
Merlin and V. 904
Guinevere 59
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 78
Will Water. 14
Merlin and V. 137
Lancelot and E. 1338
The Ring 213
Enoch Arden 843
Geraint and E. 597
Amphion 54
A Character 1
In Mem. cxiv 9
Guinevere 408
Com. of Arthur 324
Maud I vi 69
Holy Grail 754
Princess, Pro. 30
The Brook 115
Enoch Arden 853
853
Vision of Sin 36
Princess vi 134
Half-legend dealt with knights, H-l, half-historic,
Half-light In the h-l — thro' the dim dawn —
Half-lost H-l in belts of hop and breadths
HI in the liquid azure bloom
Owe you me nothing for a life h-l ?
Some third-rate isle h-l among her seas ?
O dear Spirit h-l In thine own shadow
Half-loyal the glance That only seems h-l
Half-man He scarce is knight, yea but h-m,
Half -melted moon, H-m into thin blue air.
Princess, Pro. 30
Gareth and L. 1384
Princess, Con. 45
Maud I iv 5
Geraint and E. 318
To the Queen ii 25
De Prof., Two G. 39
Last Tournament 118
Gareth and i. 1176
Lover's Tale i 421
Half-miracle seem'd h-m To those he fought with, Lancelot and E. 497
Half-moulder'd Sweeps suddenly all its h-m chords Lover's Tale i 19
Half-muflSed answer which, h-m in his beard. Princess v 234
Half-mused the guest H-m, or reeling ripe, WiU Water. 74
Half-naked H-n as if caught at once from bed Princess iv 285
Half-nestled half-falling from his knees, H-n at his
heart. Merlin and V. 905
Half-oblivious (For I was h-o of my mask) Princess Hi 338
Half-open Thro' h-o lattices Coming in the scented
breeze, Eleanore 23
Half-opening balmier than h-o buds Of April, Tithonus 59
Half-parted H-p from a weak and scolding hinge. The Brook 84
Half-pennyworth See A3,poth.
Half-pleased Look'd down, h-p, half-frighten'd, Amphion 54
Half-possess'd Lilia sang : We thought her h-p. Princess iv 585
Half-pot See Haaf-pot.
Half-right I thought her h-r talking of her wrongs ; Princess v 285
Half-sardonically I ask'd him h-s. Edwin Morris 59
Half-science The sport h-s, fill me with a faith. Princess, Con. 76
Half-self my other heart. And almost my h-s. Princess i 56
Half-shadow And thought, ' For this h-s of a lie Gareth and L. 323
Half-shrouded h-s over death In deathless marble. Princess v 74
Half-shut With h-s eyes ever to seem Falling Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 55
All unawares before his h-s eyes. Lover's Tale ii 153
Half-shy And so it was — half-sly, h-s. Miller's D. 133
Half -sick h-s at heart, return'd. Princess iv 223
Half-sickening H-s of his pension'd afternoon, Aylmer's Field 461
Half-sister Raw Haste, h-s to Delay. Love thou thy land 96
Half-sly And so it was — h-s, half-shy. Miller's D. 133
Half-spiritual Then fell from that h-s height To E. Fitzgerald 19
Hsdf-suffocated till I yell'd again H-s, Lucretius 58
H-s in the hoary fell And many winter'd fleece Merlin and V. 840
Half-swallow'd sea-foam sway'd a boat, H-s in it, Holy Grail 803
Half-tamish'd H-t and half-bright, Gareth and L. 1118
Half-thinking h-t that her lips. Who had devised Lancelot and E. 1287
Half-tum'd fixt On a heart h-t to stone. Maud I vi 78
Half-unconscious I saw with h-u eye The Letters 15
Half-uncut ' She left the novel h-u Talking Oak 117
Half-unwillingly h-u Loving his lusty youthhood Gareth and L. 579
Half-views nor take H-v of men and things. Will Water. 52
Halfway h down the shadow of the grave. To the Queen ii 6
h-w down rare saUs, white as white clouds. Lover's Tale i 4
Half-whisper'd drawing nigh H-w in his ear, (Enone 186
Half-within Seem'd h-w and half-without. Miller's D. 7
Half-without Seem'd half-within and h-w, „ 7
Half-world yonder morning on the blind h-w ; Princess vii 352
Half-wrench'd H-w a golden wing ; but now — Holy Grail 733
Half-wroth H-w he had not ended, but all glad, Balin and Balan 427
Half -yolk hast broken shell. Art yet h-y, „ 569
Haling six tall men h a seventh along, Gareth and L. 811
TTaii (surname) (See also Everard, Everard Hall) ' Nay,
nay,' said H, ' Why take the style The Epic 34
Here ended H, and our last light, M. d' Arthur, Ep. 1
Hall (See also 'All, Banquet - hall. Council - hall.
Sea-hall) the throne In the midst of the h ; The Mermaid 22
Round the h where I sate, „ 26
Gods Ranged in the h's of Peleus ; (Enone 81
' No voice,' she shriek'd in that lone h, Palace of Art 258
There stands a spectre in your h: L.C. V. de Vere 42
You pine among your h's and towers : „ 58
Walking about the gardens and the h's M. d' Arthur 20
how The races went, and who would rent the h : Audley Court 31
Far-folded mists, and gleaming h's of mom. Tithonus 10
Dreary gleams about the moorland flying over
Locksley H ; Locksley Hall 4
Locksley Hall 5
189
193
Godiva 17
Day- Dm., Revival 7
Sir Galahad 81
L. of Burleigh 52
Enoch Arden 99
Aylmer
's Field 14
36
Han
HsD {continued) Locksley H, that in the distance over
looks the sandy tracts,
a long farewell to Locksley H !
Let it fall on Locksley U, with rain or hail,
he strode About the h, among his dogs
A sudden hubbub shook the h,
So pass I hostel, h, and grange ;
Leading on from h to h.
And peacock-yewtree of the lonely H,
The peacock-yewtree and the lonely H,
The county God — in whose capacious h,
Where Aylmer followed Ayhner at the H
so that Rectory and H, Bound in an immemorial intimacy
At Christmas ; ever welcome at the H, '
darken'd all the northward of her H.
groves And princely h's, and farms,
Will there be children's laughter in their h
the great H was wholly broken down,
stairs That climb into the windy h's of heaven :
from vases in the h Flowers of all heavens,
If our old h's could change their sex,
And up a flight of stairs into the h.
' We scarcely thought in our own h to hear
Look, our h ! Our statues ! —
Yet hangs his portrait in my father's h
in h's Of Lebanonian cedar :
A thousand hearts he fallow in these h's, And round
these h's a thousand baby loves
The long h gUttei'd hke a bed of flowers.
With hooded brows I crept into the h,
haled us to the Princess where she sat High in the h :
from the illumined h Long lanes of splendour
A cap of Tyrol borrow'd from the h,
And on they moved and gain'd the h,
Descending, struck athwart the h.
Love in the sacred h's Held carnival
Gray h's alone among their massive groves ;
And sorrow darkens hamlet and h.
In this wide h with earth's invention stored,
We loved that h, tho' white and cold,
Dies off at once from bower and h,
At our old pastimes in the h We gambol'd,
Like echoes in sepulchral h's.
And saw the tumult of the h's ;
Imperial h's, or open plain ;
Methought I dwelt within a h,
The h with harp and carol rang.
The white-faced h's, the glancing rills,
that old man, now lord of the broad estate and the H,
I am sick of the H and the hill,
Workmen up at the H ! —
Maud the dehght of the village, the ringing joy of the H
by a red rock, glimmers the ^ ;
tree In the me^ow under the H !
Bound for the H, I am sure was he ; Bound for the H,
On my fresh hope, to the H to-night.
And bringing me down from the H
O Rivulet, bom at the H,
As the music clash'd in the h ;
by the turrets Of the old manorial h.
and set him in the h. Proclaiming, Com. of Arthur 229
sang the knighthood, moving to their h. 503
strength and wit, in my good mother's h Gardh and L. 12
both thy brethren are m Arthur's h, 82
294
Hall
38
114
415
654
787
846
Lucretius 136
Princess, Pro. 11
140
,, ii 31
53
75
239
351
400
439
iv 225
272
477
601
vi 352
364
„ vii 84
Con. 43
Ode on Well. 7
Ode Inter. Exhib. 2
The Daisy 37
In Mem. viii 6
,, XXX o
„ Iviii 2
„ Ixxxvii 4
„ xcviii 29
„ ciii 5
9
„ Con. 113
Maud I i 19
61
65
70
iv 10
v2
x25
„ xix 103
„ xxi 2
8
„ xxii 34
// iv 80
thou Shalt go disguised to Arthur's h,
a knight would pass Outward, or inward to the h :
Then into h Gareth ascending heard A voice,
Far over heads in that long-vaulted h
This railer, that hath mock'd thee in full h
Then came in h the messenger of Mark,
down the side of that long h A stately pile, —
this was Arthur's custom in his A ;
and they sit within our h.
or from sheepcot or king's h.
Look therefore when he calls for this in A,
152
311
317
319
369
384
404
410
425
467
583
Hall (continued) past into the h A damsel of hi"h
lineage, ^
She into h past with her page and cried
Safe, damsel, as the centre of this h. '
Then ere a man in h could stay her,
two great entries open'd from the h.
The most ungentle knight in Arthur's h.'
that day a feast had been Held in high h.
Hear me— this morn I stood in Arthur's h
The champion thou hast brought from Arthur's h ?
Arise And quickly pass to Arthur's h,
' Here is a kitchen-knave from Arthur's h
Where should be truth if not in Arthur's h. In Arthur's
presence ?
What madness made thee chaUenge the chief knieht Of
Arthurs A ? ' *
Weeping for some gay knight in Arthur's h.'
on a day, he sitting high in h,
not mindful of his face In the King's h.
Clear thro' the open casement of the h'
The dusky-rafter'd many-cobweb'd h, '
because their h must also serve For kitchen
Now here, now there, about the dusky h ■ '
those That eat in Arthur's h at Camelot. '
And told her all their converse in the h,
Geraint Woke where he slept in the high h
Thereafter, when I reach'd this ruin'd h, '
overbore Her fancy dwelhng in this dusky h
she, remembering her old ruin'd h,
take him up, and bear him to our h :
And bore him to the naked h of Doorm,
he lay Down on an oaken settle in the h,
There m the naked h, propping his head
return'd The huge Eari Doorm with plunder to the h.
And all the h was dim with steam of flesh :
And ate with tumult in the naked h.
He roll'd his eyes about the h,
At this he turn'd all red and paced his h,
And loved me serving in my father's h ■
strode the brute Eari up and down his h,
all the men and women in the h Rose
the huge Eari lay slain within his h.
and in their h's arose The cry of children
' I too,' said Arthur, ' am of Arthur's h, '
A thrall of mine in open h,
Thereafter, when Sir Bahn enter'd h,
the h Of him to whom ye sent us, Pellam,
warmth of Arthur's h Shadow'd an angry distance •
Uose-bower'd in that garden nigh the h.
the castle of a King, the h Of Pellam,
Faint in the low dark h of banquet :
Arthur's knights Were hated strangers in the h)
thou from Arthur's h, and yet So simple !
Who, sitting in thine own h, canst endure To mouth
Was dumb'd by one from out the h of Mark
Borne by some high lord-prince of Arthur's h,
bounden art thou, if from Arthur's h, To help the weak
Brother, I dwelt a day in Pellam's h •
«^J°^®r?'° ^^^^^ ^^^ '*' ^"^' Vivien following him,
When Gumevere was crossing the great h
but all was joust and play, Leaven'd his h.
built the King his havens, ships, and h's
In Arthur's arras h at Camelot : '
After the King, who eat in Arthur's h's
' Known am I, and of Arthur's h,
goodliest man That ever among ladies ate in h
mto that rude h Stept with all grace, '
a chapel and a A On massive columns
And reverently they bore her into h. '
I knew For one of those who eat in Arthur's h •
In our great h there stood a vacant chair, '
the great banquet lay along the h,
in the blast there smote along the h A beam of light
said Percivale, ' the King, Was not inh:
Ah outraged maiden sprang into the h
Gareth and L. 587
592
604
660
665
757
848
855
916
984
1036
1254
1417
Marr. of Geraint 118
147
192
328
362
390
401
432
520
755
785
802
Geraint and E. 254
552
570
573
581
592
603
605
610
668
699
712
731
806
964
Balin and Balan 37
56
80
95
236
241
331
343
352
357
378
437
466
472
605
Merlin and V. 32
65
146
168
250
Lancelot and E. 184
188
255
262
405
1266
Holy Grail 24
167
180
186
206
208
HaU
295
Hand
HaU (continued) roofs Of our great h are roU'd in thunder-
.smoke ! ^°^y ^^'^'^^ ^f ^
For dear to Arthur was that h of ours, .. 222
' O brother, had you known our mighty h, ,. -^^
Climbs to the mighty h that Merlin built. » ^^^
With many a mystic symbol, gird the h : « -^^
brother, had you known our h within, » ^^o
So to this h full quickly rode the King, .. ^o»
(Because the h was all in tumultr— >. ^o^
Shrilling along the A to Arthur, call'd, ,. ^o»
cries of all my realm Pass thro' this h— .. ^^^
But when they led me into h, behold, .. ^7 j
A slender page about her father's h, « og-l- '
that they fell from, brought us to the h. „ 7^|J
Yea, shook this newer, stronger h of ours, .. 7oi
And up into the sounding h I past ; But nothing in the
sounding h I saw, " ^i!'
Lancelot left The h long silent, '. «^4
and as he sat In h at old Caerleon, Felleas and A. rf
And spied not any light in k or bower, ,, 419
he Gasping, ' Of Arthur's A am I, but here, ,. 514
that Gawain fired The h of Merlin, .. o^o
High up in heaven the h that Merlin built, „ oM
It chanced that both Brake into h together, „ 587
Then a long silence came upon the h, .. WW
Danced like a wither'd leaf before the h.
(repeat) -^^^ Tournament 4, J4J
And toward him from the h, with harp in hand, „ 5
Into the h stagger'd, his visage ribb'd „ o7
warrior-wise thou stridest thro' his h's Who hates thee, „ ou
beheld That victor of the Pagan throned in h— „ 66o
stairway to the h, and look'd and saw >• . '&7
rarely could she front in h, Or elsewhere, Guinevere bJ
Swung round the lighted lantern of the A ; And
in the h itself was such a feast » ^^^
live To sit once more within his lonely h, ,. 49^
Walking about the gardens and the h's Pass, of Arthiir l»a
From his mid-dome in Heaven's airy h's ; Lover s Tale ibb
Is scoop'd a cavern and a mountain h, .. 51^
streams Running far on within its inmost h's, „ . 5^^
round his h From colmnn on to column, ,. *" 1°°
at one end of the h Two great funereal curtains, ,, 21^
rose— And slowly pacing to the middle h, „ ^o
this last strange hour in his own h; ,, ^ " /, il, , ^
hup to Harmsby and Hutterby H. . ^^''J^- ^°zH\\l
people throng'd about them from the h, Sisters (E. andE.) i&b
sa I hallus deal'd wi' the H, Village Wife 115
there hail'd on our houses and h's Def. ofLucknow i.6
princelier looking man never stept thro' a Prince's h. The yvreck lb
this H at last will go— perhaps have gone. The Flight 27
I myself so close on death, and death itself in „ c>- *
Lockslev H. Locksley H., Sixty 4
In the A there hangs a painting— >. ^^
how her Uving glory lights the h, » ^^^
Here is Locksley H, my grandson, here the lion-
guarded gate. Not to-night in Locksley H—
to-morrow — » ^07
Not the H to-night, my grandson ! .. ^^'
Here to-night, the H to-morrow, » -'"^
Then I leave thee Lord and Master, latest Lord of
Locksley H. ^ ^ " j t> -iQa
and break The sunless h's of Hades BemeterandP. Idb
And yet not mine the h, the farm, the field ; The Ring 169
they know too that whene'er In our free H, Akbar s Dream 55
HaU-ceiling the fair ;i-c stately-set .^^""""^nlW
Halleluiah Hallowed be Thy nam^-fl ! (repeat) De Prof^Eurruin C. 1, 6, 9
HaUelujah blend in choric U to the Maker Making of Man «
HaU-garden up in the high ff-9 I see her pass Maud I iv 11
Birds in the high H-g (repeat) ^ „ " *" t> f^
HaU-hearths On the ft-fe the festal fires. Day Dm., Sleep F. 1^
HaUoo Shrilly the owlet A'3; -^Xnf^i?
With a le^igthen'd loud h. The Owl « 13
in the h Wm topple to the trumpet down, .^^''u/ '* T«i
HaUow'd torrent brooks of A Israel ■^- ^-^^-.^^T**- ^
earth They fell on became h evermore. Lover s XaLei'i^
'BsSio'^A^ (continued) my name has been A A memory „, , ■ ^^r
like the names of old, Lover s Tale i 445
Your very armour h, Frmcess v 41d
E be Thy name— Halleluiah ! (repeat) De Prof., Human C. 1, 5, 9
Halo hence this h lives about The waiter's hands. Will Water, llo
boss Of her own h's dusky sliield ; The Voyage 32
Halt (adj.) And cured some A and maim'd ; St. S. Stylites IWJ
is there any of you h or maim'd ? ». . 142
But, if a man were h or hunch'd, Guinevere 41
no man h, or deaf or blind ; Locksley H., Sixty IW
Halt (S) they made aft; The horses yell'd ; Princess v_ 249
The front rank made a sudden h ; Lover s Tale in 29
Halt (verb) He seems as one whose footsteps h, r i qrh
rode In converse till she made her palfrey h, Gareth andL.liWi
cry ' H,' and to her own bright face Accuse her Geramt and E. 110
Progress h's on palsied feet, Locksley H., Sixty 219
Halted hung his head, and h in reply, Geramt and E. 811
And when we h at that other well, ■ Merlm and V. 2SU
he look'd at the host that had h Heavy Brigade 1
Halter scared with threats of jail and h Aylmer s h leld &JU
Halting lookt So sweet, that h, in he past, Last Tournament d»»
Halyard Shot thro' the staff or the /i, Def.ofLucknowb
Hamilton Who are you ? What ! the Lady H ? Romney s R. 2
Hamlet Two children in one h born and bred ; Circumstance S
many too had known Edith among the h's round, Aybner s J^ield blD
among their massive groves ; Trim h's ; Princess, <-o«- 44
And sorrow darkens h and hall. Ode on Well.!
But distant colour, happy h, TheUaisy M
Or where the kneeling h drains The chalice In Mem. x 1&
Four voices of four h's round, " ^^xyiiib
She floats across the h. , , Prog, of Spring 40
passing it glanced upon H or city, Merlm and the G. 104
Hammer (s) Came to the h here in March— Audley Court bO
Shaking their pretty cabin, /i and axe. Auger
andlaw, Enoch Arden 113
sUver h's falUng On silver anvils, Princess i 21b
iron-clanging anvil bang'd With A's ; « '"9^
Thou hear'st the viUage h clink. In Mem. cxxi 15
and everywhere Was h laid to hoof, Marr.of Geramt 25b
Hammer (verb) A at this reverend gentlewoman. Princess in U\i
Hammer'd Sons of Edward with h brands. Bait, of Brwnanburh 14
noon Was clash'd and h from a hundred
towers, p . ^«^»*« Jl
All that long morn the lists were A up, t/ -^""^t^V ?ni
Hammergrate (emigrate) An' saw she mun h, lass, Vdlage Wife 104
Hammering H and clinking, chattering stony names -^"7^**^ 'r' ^99
felt his young heart ^i in his ears, Gareth and L. 6li
Hammock-Shroud His heavy-shotted /i-5 InMeni.vil^
Hampden deep chord which E smote Will vibrate England and Amer. 19
Han' (hand) Queen wid her sceptre in sich an Tomorrow 35
llllgSint fly pre
Father Molowny he tuk her in /j,' » ^^
Hand (part of body) (-See oZso 'And, Han', Hond) *:«««' „ . ^ o.
T/ie seasons w/ie,i to take Occasion by the h, To t/ie Qween 31
Propt on thy knees, my h's upheld In thine, Supp. Confessions 70
Claps her tiny h's above me, ^f}°'\^
When I would kiss thy /i, ,^m "^^
Thou leddest by the A thine infant Hope. Ode to Meinory 30
O cursed /i! 0 cursed blow! _ ,?''"'"^ oq
Laughing and clapping their h's between, TheMermun 29
Leading his cheek upon his /^, -^^.f ^"7 }/8
And now shake h's across the brink -^1^2/ hfe is full 6
Shake h's once more : I cannot sink So f ai^- » °
her wooden walls,— lit by sure h's,— ,F'^Z''I 1
Caeess'd or chidden by the slender h. Caress d or chidden 1
And prest thy h, and knew the press retum'd, The Bridesmaid 12
But who hath seen her wave her h ? L.of Shalott iZ^
Or answer should one press his h's ? Two Vowes 245
On either h The lawns and meadow-ledges (Enoneb
till thy h Fail from the sceptre-staff. » ^^5
Ev'n on this h, and sitting on this stone ? ^ /'. fxf
/I's and eyes That said, We wait for thee. Palace of Art 106
Or hollowing one h against his ear, .. jO^
From one h droop'd a crocus : one h grasp'd ,. A19
clapt her h's and cried, ' I marvel if my still delight ., -lo9
Hand
296
Hand
Hand (part of body) {continued) The airy h confusion
wrought, Palace of Art 226
If time be heavy on your h's, L. C. V. de Vere 66
sit beside my bed, mother, and put your h in
mine, May Queen, Con. 23
flowers in the valley for other h's than mine. „ 52
and sinking ships, and praying h's. Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 116
Beauty and anguish walking ^ in A D. of F. Women 15
My father held his h upon his face ; „ 107
Shake h's, before you die. D. of the O. Year 42
But with his h against the hilt, Love thou thy land 83
laughing, clapt his h On Everard's shoulder, The Epic 21
either h, Or voice, or else a motion of the mere. M. d' Arthur 76
I will arise and slay thee with my h's.' „ 132
Then with both h's I flung him, „ 157
O'er both his shoulders drew the languid h's, „ 174
those three Queens Put forth their h's, „ 206
chafed his h's. And call'd him by his name, „ 209
knowing God, they lift not h's of prayer, „ 252
Requiring at her h the greatest gift. Gardener's D. 229
old man Was wroth, and doubled up his h's, Bora 25
She bow'd upon her h's, „ 103
clapt him on the h's and on the cheeks, „ 133
clapt his h in mine and sang — Audley Court 39
modest eyes, a,h, a. foot Lessening in perfect
cadence, Walk, to the Mail 54
With h and rope we haled the groaning sow, „ 91
Again with h's of wild rejection ' Go ! — Edwin Morris 124
She might have lock'd her h's. Talking Oak 144
kingdoms overset. Or lapse from h to h, „ 258
should not plunge His h into the bag: Golden Year 72
tum'd it in his glowing h's ; Locksley Hall 31
kiss him : take his h in thine. „ 52
tho' I slew thee with my h\ „ 56
Then a h shall pass before thee, „ 81
a heart as rough as Esau's h, Godiva 28
The page has caught her A in his: Day-Dm., Sleep P. 29
on either h upswells The gold-fringed pillow „ Sleep B. 21
That lightly rain from ladies' h's. Sir Galahad 12
Nor maiden's h in mine. ,, 20
And, stricken by an angel's h, „ 69
Who hold their h's to all, and cry Will Water. 45
this halo lives about The waiter's h's, „ 114
And lay your h upon my head, Lady Clare 55
Dropt her head in the maiden's h, „ 63
He clasps the crag with crooked h's ; The Eagle 1
Panted hinh with faces pale. Vision of Sin 19
Bandied by the h's of fools. „ 106
And the warmth of h in h. „ 162
But 0 for the touch of a vanish'd h. Break, break, etc. 11
Another h crept too across his trade Enoch Arden 110
set his h To fit their little streetward sitting-room „ 169
and his careful h, — The space was narrow, — „ 176
caught His bundle, waved his h, and went his way. „ 238
Perhaps her eye was dim, h tremulous ; „ 242
For wnere he fixt his heart he set his h „ 294
Caught at his h, and wrung it passionately, „ 328
but her face had fall'n upon her h's ; „ 391
At Annie's door he paused and gave his h, „ 447
Shaking a little like a drunkard's h, „ 465
Her h dwelt lingeringly on the latch, „ 519
on the right h of the hearth he saw Philip, „ 744
from her lifted h Dangled a length of ribbon „ 749
on the left h of the hearth he saw The mother „ 753
Almost to all things could he turn his h. „ 813
(Claspt h's and that petitionary grace The Brook 112
Until they closed a bargain, h in h. „ 156
Her art, her h, her counsel all had wrought Aylmer's Field 151
Queenly responsive when the loyal h Rose „ 169
voice Of comfort and an open h of help, „ 174
Then plajong with the blade he prick 'd his h, „ 239
Then made his pleasure echo, h to h, „ 257
under his own hntel stood Storming with lifted h'a, „ 332
Is whiter even than her pretty h : „ 363
and the h's of power Were bloodier, „ 452
Hand (part of body) {continued) His face magnetic to
the h from which Livid Aylmer's Field 626
free of alms her h — The h that robed your cottage-walls „ 697
laid, Wifelike, her h in one of his, „ 808
her own people bore along the nave Her pendent h's, „ 813
A pickaxe in her h : Sea Dreams 100
Gript my h hard, and with God-bless-you went. „ 160
A loose one in the hard grip of his h, „ 163
Left him one h, and reaching thro' the night „ 287
h's they mixt, and yell'd and round me drove Lucretius 56
unseen monster lays His vast and filthy h's upon my will,' „ 220
that sport Went h inh with Science ; Princess, Pro. 80
The h that play'd the patron with her curls. ,, 138
with long arms and h's Reach'd out, „ i 28
Airing a snowy h and signet gem, „ 121
I sat down and wrote. In such a A as when „ 236
Lived thro' her to the tips of her long h's, „ ii 40
when we set our h To this great work, „ 59
Besides the brain was like the h, „ 150
Took both his h's, and smiling faintly said : „ 304
Melissa, with her h upon the lock, „ 322
Push'd her flat h agamst his face and laugh'd ; „ 366
The circle rounded under female h's „ 372
one In this h held a volume as to read, „ 455
But Lady Psyche was the right h now, „ m 37
Up went the hush'd amaze of h and eye. „ 138
Dabbing a shameless h with shameful jest, „ 314
Many a little h Glanced like a touch of sunshine „ 356
once or twice she lent her h, „ iv 27
her heart Palpitated, her h shook, „ 389
but fell Into his father's h's, ,, 402
Render him up unscathed : give him your h : „ 408
Whose brains are in their h's and in their heels, „ 518
She, ending, waved her h's: „ 522
But on my shoulder hung their heavy h's, „ 553
And gives the battle to his h's : „ 580
clapt her h's and cried for war, „ 590
Lay by her like a model of her h. „ 597
' then we fell Into your father's h, „ v 51
push'd by rude h's from its pedestal, „ 58
reach'd White h's of farewell to my sire, „ 233
now a wandering h And now a pointed finger, „ 269
the tender orphan h's Felt at my heart, „ 435
sit Upon a king's right h in thunder-storms, „ 439
a moment h to h, And sword to sword, „ 538
tender ministries Of female h's and hospitality.' „ vi 73
and served With female h's and hospitaUty.' „ 96
prest Their h's, and call'd them dear deliverers, „ 92
in h's so lately claspt with yours, „ 184
Laid the soft babe in his hard-mailed h's. „ 208
kiss her ; take her h, she weeps : „ 225
the rougher h Is safer : „ 278
Refuse her proffer, lastly gave his h. „ 347
Low voices with the ministering h Hung round the sick : „ vii 21
Nor knew what eye was on me, nor the h That nursed me, „ 53
sometimes I would catch Her h in wild delirium, „ 93
And often feeling of the helpless h's, ,, 111
touch Came round my wrist and tears upon my h „ 138
Or h in h with Plenty in the maize, „ vii 201
And the voice trembled and the h. „ 227
and her forehead sank upon her h's, „ 247
Stays all the fair young planet in her h's — „ 264
Lay thy sweet h's in mine and trust to me.' „ 366
there is a A that guides.' „ Con. 79
Now shaking h's with him, now him, „ 92
will he greet With lifted h the gazer in the street. Ode on Well. 22
from both her open h's Lavish Honour shower'd „ 195
with toil of heart and knees and h's, „ 212
upon whose h and heart and brain „ 239
thou with thy young lover hinh W. to Marie Alex. 34
Whose h at home was gracious to the poor : „ 37
Strong of his h's, and strong on his legs, Grandmother 13
But marry me out oih: „ 52
For groves of pine on either h. To F. D. Maurice 21
To sit with empty h's at home. Sailor Boy 16
Hand
297
Hand
The Victim 8
42
53
High. Pantheism 12
Flow, in cran. wall. 3
Boadicea 71
79
Window, Letter 3
Window, The Answer 1, 4
6
Hand (part of body) (continued) To Thor and Odin lifted a h
He bore but little game in h ;
The King bent low, with h on brow,
and nearer than h's and feet.
I hold you here, root and all, in my h,
Brandishing in her h a dart
teat with rapid unanimous h.
Pine little h's, fine little feet —
Two little h's that meet, (repeat)
And loving A'5 must part —
Or Teach a h thro' time to catch In Mem. i 7
A hollow form with empty h's.' „ Hi 12
waiung for &h, Kh that can be clasp'd „ vii 4
And letters unto trembling h's ; „ xl
And A's so often clasp'd in mine, „ 19
wher; warm h's have prest and closed, „ xiii 7
Should strike a sudden h in mine, „ xiv 11
Come then, pure h's, and bear the head „ xviii 9
Her Hs are quicker unto good : „ xxxiii 10
wrou^t With human h's the creeds of creeds „ xxxvi 10
But thou and I have shaken h's, „ xl 29
I stretdi lame h's of faith, and grope, „ Iv 17
And reips the labour of his h's, „ Ixiv 26
And wilds their curls about his h : „ Ixvi 12
He reaci'd the glory of a h, „ Ixix 17
A h that points, and palled shapes „ Ixx 7
When the dark h struck down thro' time, „ Ixxii 19
Whate'ei thy h's are set to do „ Ixxv 19
Reach out dead h's to comfort me. „ Ixxx 16
Would retch us out the shining h. In Mem. Ixxxiv 43
How muck of act at human h's „ Ixxxv 38
all within ^■as noise Of songs, and clapping h's, „ Ixxxvii 19
Behold their brides in other h's ; „ xc 14
The larger ieart, the kindlier h; „ cvi 30
the child wculd twine A trustful h, „ cix 19
A higher h must make her mild, „ cxiv 17
I take the piessure of thine h. „ cxix 12
And out of dirkness came the h's „ cxxiv 23
Sweet human h and lips and eye ; „ cxxix 6
With him to vhom her h I gave. „ Con. 70
in their h Is Mature like an open book ; „ 131
Pickpockets, each h lusting for all that is not its own ; Maud 7 i 22
or are moved by an unseen A at a game „ iv 26
Ready in heart and ready in ^, „ v 9
she touch'd my h with a smile so sweet, „ vi 12
I saw the treasured splendour, her h, „ 84
She waved to me with her h. „ ix 8
Ah God, for a man with heart, head, h, „ x 60
I kiss'd her slender h, „ xii 13
Sunn'd itself on his breast and his h's. „ xiii 13
if a A, as white As ocean-foam in the moon, „ xiv 17
To labour and the mattock-harden'd h, „ xviii 34
And given false death her h, „ 68
It is this guilty 7i! — „ 7/ t 4
I sorrow For the A, the lips, the eyes, „ iv 27
And mightier of his h's with every blow, Com. of Arthur 110
But sought to rule for his own self and h, „ 219
h's Of loyal vassals toiling for their liege. „ 281
holy Dubric spread his h's and spake, „ 471
I could climb and lay my h upon it, Gareth and L. 50
But ever when he reach'd a /» to climb, „ 52
And drops of water fell from either h ; „ 220
Toward the sunrise, each with harp in h, „ 261
Merlin's h, the Mage at Arthur's court, „ 306
With thine own h thou slewest my dear lord, „ 352
In either h he bore What dazzled all, „ 386
ye know we stay'd their h's From war „ 421
Accursed, who strikes nor lets the h be seen ! ' „ 435
Gareth leaning both h's heavily Down „ 439
a nostril large and fine, and h's Large, fair and fine ! — „ 465
Lying or sitting round him, idle h's, Charm 'd ; „ 512
and bow Lowly, to kiss his h, „ 549
So with a kindly h on Gareth's arm „ 578
And told him of a cavern hard at h, „ 1189
h hath fashion'd on the rock The war of Time „ 1197
Hand (part of body) (continued) when he found the
grass within his h's He laugh'd ; Gareth and L. 1225
Lancelot ! — thine the h That threw me ? „ 1241
0 Lancelot, Lancelot ' — and she clapt her h's — „ 1290
waving to him White h's, and courtesy ; „ 1377
Lady Lyonors wrung her h's and wept, „ 1395
with her own white h's Array'd and deck'd her, Marr. of Geraint 16
and all flyers from the h Of Justice, „ 36
watch his mightful h striking great blows „ 95
instinctive h Caught at the hilt, „ 209
White from the mason's h, (repeat) „ 244, 408
Came forward with the helmet yet in h „ 285
Or it may be the labour of his h's, . „ 341
Frown and we smile, the lords of our own h's ; „ 354
And fondling all her h in his he said, „ 509
On either shining shoulder laid a h, „ 518
and h in h they moved Down to the meadow „ 536
There came a clapping as of phantom h's. „ 566
To seek a second favour at his h's. „ 626
and in her h A suit of bright apparel, „ 677
Came one with this and laid it in my h, „ 699
Help'd by the mother's careful h and eye, „ 738
Her by both h's he caught, and sweetly said, „ 778
our fair Queen, No h but hers, should make „ 788
For by the h's of Dubric, the high saint, „ 838
Far liefer by his dear h had I die, Geraint and E. 68
creatures gently born But into bad h's fall'n. „ 192
in his h Bare victual for the mowers : „ 201
In the mid-warmth of welcome and graspt h, „ 280
Geraint Waving an angry h as who should say „ 444
But lift a shining h against the sun, „ 473
Nor let her true h falter, nor blue eye Moisten, „ 512
after all was done that h could do, She rested, „ 517
chafing his pale h's, and calling to him. „ 582
chafing his faint h's, and calling to him ; „ 585
Take my salute,' unknightly with flat h, „ 717
reach'd a h, and on his foot She set her own and climb'd ; „ 759
Put h to h beneath her husband's heart, „ 767
wrought too long with delegated h's, „ 893
set up a stronger race With hearts and h's, „ 941
my h Was gauntleted, half slew him ; Balin and Balan 56
Lancelot with his h among the flowers „ 259
Saint who stands with lily in h In yonder shrine. „ 261
' And passing gentle ' caught his h away „ 371
Then h at ear, and hearkening from what side „ 415
white h whose ring'd caress Had wander'd „ 512
The hearts of all this Order in mine h — Merlin and V. 56
damsel bidden rise arose And stood with folded h's „ 69
Courteous — amends for gauntness — takes her h — „ 104
how h lingers in h ! Let go at last ! — „ 106
her left h Droop from his mighty shoulder, „ 242
And make a pretty cup of both my h's ^ „ 275
And Merlin lock'd his h in hers (repeat) ' „ 290, 470
charm Of woven paces and of waving h's, (repeat) „ 330, 968
Merlin loosed his h from hers and said, „ 356
It lives dispersedly in many h's, „ 457
The wrist is parted from the h that waved, „ 551
ringing with their serpent h's, „ 578
her h half-clench'd Went faltering sideways „ 849
clapt her h's Together with a wailing shriek, „ 866
some one put this diamond in her h, Lancelot and E. 212
Half-envious of the flattering h, „ 349
So kiss'd her, and Sir Lancelot his own h, „ 389
she smote her h : weUnigh she swoon'd : „ 625
it will be sweet to have it From your own h ; „ 694
slightly kiss'd the h to which he gave, „ 702
with mine own h give his diamond to him, „ 760
His battle-writhen arms and mighty h's „ 812
And laid the diamond in his open h. „ 827
yet he glanced not up, nor waved his h, „ 986
Then gave a languid h to each, and lay, „ 1032
lay the letter in my h A little ere I die, and close
the 7j Upon it; „ 1113
Her father laid the letter in her h. And closed the
h upon it, and she died. „ 1134
Hand
298
Hand (part of body) (continued) Set in her h a lily
in Her right h the lily, m her left The letter— 1 1 «:^
ui one cold passive h Received at once and laid aside " 1201
Arthur spied the letter in her A, " iink
shield of Lancelot at her feet Be carven, and her "
hlyinherA.
we blow with breath, or touch with h, v"?,, r.^sjiil
and at the base we found On either h, ^'^^ ^""'^ IJJ
The Quest and he were in the h's of Heaven. " r^q
In colour hke the fingers of a A Before a burning taper, " 693
caught his A, Held it, and there, half-hidden ^ " 75Q
The sword was dash'd from out my h, and fell " mr
—yea, his very h and foot— " gf ?
straitly nipt the A, and flung it from her • " Tao
by that strong ^i of his The sword and golden circlet " 169
And mmdful of her small and cruel A, " 201
strong A, which had overthrown Her minion-knights, " 234
Shakmg his h's, as from a lazar's rag " 017
delegate to thrall These fighting h's of mine— " %vt
tame thy jailing princess to thine h. " oil
as a ^ that pushes thro' the leaf To find a nest " 4Sfi
clench d His h's, and madden'd with himself " Iah
bent h's upon him, as to tear him, " rpf
A cripple, one that held a h for alms— " t%
blid from my h's, when I was leaning out 43
Bndge-broken, one eye out, and one h off, " ^
his strong h's gript And dinted the gilt dragons " 1 81
See, the A Wherewith thou takest this, " iqo
My A— behke the lance hath dript upon it— " 200
Dagonet with one foot poised in his h, " 00^
Dagonet clapt his h's and shrill'd, " qro
' Isolt Of the white h's ' they call'd her • " qqr
served him well with those white h's " 400
Graspt it so hard, that all her ;i was red. Then cried "
the Breton, ' Look, her h is red ! 41 1
melts within her A— her h is hot With ill desires, " 414
JNot hft a A— not, tho' he found me thus ' " <s28
And she, my namesake of the h's, " 594
Tnstram, fondlin? her light h's, replied, " fioi
Tnstram, ever dallying with her h, " AOfi
f '?in"^'l' in '''' ?°"' *^' ""'^^^'^ Guinevere 31
Ji smh s, and eye to eye Low on the border 100
and bow'd down upon her h's Silent, " 158
full passionately. Her head upon her h's, " isi
meat he long'd for served By h's unseen ; " 266
He falter'd, and his h fell from the harp, " 303
Whereat the novice crying, with clasp'd h's, " 311
He spared to lift his h against the King " 437
I made them lay their h's in mine and swear " 467
and laid her h's about his feet. " 508
I cannot take thy h ; that too is flesh, " 553
Perceived the waving of his h's that blest. " 534
Here her h Grasp'd, made her vail her eyes • " 662
%h^rh'"kf''^^"^" ^^1 helpless /i'5, Pass, of Arthur 131
either h. Or voice, or else a motion of the mere. 244
1 will anse and slay thee with my h's.' " qm
Then with both h's 1 flung him, " 305
O'er both his shoulders drew the languid h's, " 349
those three Queens Put forth their h's, " 374
chafed his h's, and call'd him by his name, " s77
knowing God, they lift not h's of prayer " 420
fetraimng his eyes beneath an arch of h, " 454
With A s for eaves, uplookmg and almost 311
had the Power from whose right h the light " 497
from whose left h floweth The Shadow of Death. " 498
Folding his h's, deals comfortable words " 7T7
I loved her, grasnt the h she lov'd, " «n
he Would hold the h of blessing over them, " 7^4
with mad A Tearing the bright leaves of the ivy-screen, " ii 39
drew back His A to push me from him; ' 93
Hand
Hand (part of body) (continued) Shrank in me like a
snowflake in the h, '
One A she reach'd to those that came behind.
And claspt her h in his :
And raised us A in A.'
But, placing his true h upon her heart,
drown'd The feebler motion underneath his h
with meeting A's And cries about the banquet—
1 hen taking his dear lady by one A,
better ha' put my naked A in a hornets' nest
he patted my h in his gentle way.
When I cannot see my own h,
Sir Richard bore in h all his sick men
and they fought us A to A,
Fall into the h's of God, not into the h's of Spain '
A h upon the head of either child.
Had caught her h, her eyelids fell-
But counterpressures of the yielded h
Put forth cold h's between us.
The sisters glide about me h in h,
big chest, big merciless h's !
she lay with a flower in one h and her thin h's
crost on her breast —
Keep the revolver in h !
Better to fall by the h's that they love
but be sure that your A be as true ! '
h of the Highlander wet with their tears !
Climb first and reach me down thy h.
lifted h and heart and voice In praise to God
There was a glimmering of God's h.
I lead thee by the h. Fear not.'
Some over-labour' d, some by their own h's —
glitter'd o'er us a sunbright h, '
and the sunbright h of the dawn,
chariots backward, knowing griefs at h •
And plant on shoulder, h and knee, '
The noonday crag made the h bum ;
these blind h's were useless in their wars
if one of these By his own h —
examples reach a h Far thro' all years
let thine own h strike Thy youthful pulses
This useless A ! I felt one warm tear fall upon it.
My Shelley would fall from my h's
My h's, when I heard him coming would drop
the A that would help me, would heal me—
Ten long sweet summer days upon deck, sitting A ir. A
of a A giving bread and wine,
I knew that A too well —
And she laid her A in my own
books are scatter'd from A to A
in his A A scroll of verse —
But in the A of what is more than man. Or in man's
h when man is more than man,
— rather than that h in mine.
Our dying mother join'd our h's ■
but wander A in A With breaking hearts
?Xe1 SeTheTa™."'' ' ^^^^^^^ ^•' ^^^^y l^
Her fleet is in you? A'. ^"""^ '^^ ^"^^f %f\ f^
w thl'^'oni^r ^?f h u , ^^- '■ '^-^c'ilt'i
?h7^^tt?aU thfgXat^^^^^^^ ^'^ ^"-*- «• ^-'-- 6«
Craft with a bunch of all-heal in her A
stretch'd my h's As if I saw her ; '
Some younger A must have engraven the ring—
Lover's Tale ni 38
48
52
„ iv 66
75
83
238
369
First Qtarrel 50
67
Rizpah 7
The Sevenge 15
52
90
Sisters (E. md E.) 55
148
163
265
275
In the Child. Hosp. 4
39
Bef. of Lucknow 26
53
56
102
Sir J. Oldcasile 204
Columbus 16
„ 142
„ 158
„ 178
V. of Maeldune 84
92
A chiles over the T. 25
To E. Fitzgerald 8
Tiresias 35
78
118
126
156
166
The Wreck 25
27
56
64
„ 114
„ 145
Despair 49
„ 93
Ancient Sage 5
„ 256
The Flight 53
87
What sparkled there ? whose A was that ?
Muriel clench'd The A that wore it.
Unclosed the A, and from it drew the ring
and the h's Fell from each other,
bells that rang without a A,
and felt a gentle A Fall on my forehead
And the face. The A,— my Mother. '
I took And chafed the freezing A.
Demeter and P. 9
Fastness 12
The Ring 116
238
257
262
269
380
411
418
425
452
Hand
299
Happiest
Hand (part of body) (continued) from her own h she had torn
the rin^ The Ring 470
place a A in his Like an honest woman's, Forlorn 19
How your h is shaking ! „ 38
I worship that right h Which feli'd the foes Happy 41
he was coming down the fell — I clapt my A's. „ 83
has join'd our h's of old ; „ 93
follow'd line by line Your leading h, To Ulysses 46
when we met, you prest My h, and said To Mary Boyle 16
Lazarus felt a vacant h Fill with his purse. „ 31
These h's of mine Have helpt to pass „ 38
A clamorous cuckoo stoops to meet her h ; Prog, of Spring 45
while my h exults Within the bloodless heart „ 83
Your h shakes. I am ashamed. Romney's E. 24
Your h. How bright you keep your marriage-ring ! „ 59
My life and death are in thy h. Death of QLnone 40
One kiss'd his h, another closed his eyes, „ 58
The man, whose pious h had built the cross, St. Tdemachus 9
only let the h that rules, With politic care, Akbar's Dream 127
by whatever h's My mission be accomplish'd ! ' „ 198
and the weight that dragg'd at my h ; Bandit's Death 39
I wept, and I kiss'd her h's, Charity 38
And handle boldly with the h, Mechanophilus 3
Dispense with careful h's : „ 84
Give me a h — and you — and you — The Wanderer 15
Hand (of clock) lights the clock ! the h points five — The Flight 94
Hand (at hand) my time is hard at h. And hence I go ; Holy Grail 481
Modred thought, ' The time is hard at h ' PeUeas and E. 610
Hand (hand-writing) such a A as when a field of corn Princess i 236
Last, Ida's answer, in a royal h, „ v 371
Hand (verb) Hebes are they to h ambrosia, „ Hi 113
those that h the dish across the bar. Gareth and L. 155
cups To H the wine to whosoever came — Last Tournament 290
Hand See also After-hands, Bridle-hand, Brother-
hands, Fair-hands, Second-hand Sword-hand
Handed {See also Delicate-handed, Four-handed, Full-
handed, Hom-huided, Lily-handed) And h down
the golden treasure to him.' Gareth and L. 61
A legend h down thro' five or six, Holy Grail 87
one of those white sUps H her cup and piped, Last Tournament 296
Was h over by consent of all To one who had
not spoken, Lover's Tale iv 271
Handful Two h's of white dust, shut in an urn
of brass ! Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 68
And my heart is a A of dust, Maud II v2>
by the h they could not subdue ; Def. of Lucknow 44
H of men as we were, „ 46
Hand-grenade we drive them with h-g's ; „ 59
Hand-hidden face H-h, as for utmost grief or shame ; Merlin and V. 897
Hand-in-hand claspt h-i-h with thee, If I were loved 9
Panted h-i-h with faces pale, Vision of Sin 19
Enoch and Annie, sitting h-i-h, Enoch Arden 69
And in a circle h-i-h Sat silent, In Mem. xxx 11
A wreath of airy dancers h-i-h Guinevere 261
Handkerchief See Kerchief
Handle (See also Door-handle, Sword-handle) He
lost the sense that h's daily life — Walk, to the Mail 22
That loved to h spiritual strife, In Mem. Ixxxv 54
our good King Would h scorn, or yield you, Gareth and L. 1173
h or gather the berries of Peelb ! Kapiolani 20
And h boldly with the hand, Mechanophilus 3
Handled Enoch took, and ^ all his limbs, Enoch Arden 153
And he h him gentle enough ; In the Child. Hasp. 15
I am h worse than had I been a Moor, Columbus 107
Handless I will slice him h by the wrist, Pelleas and E. 338
Handmaid a A on each side Bow'd toward her, Princess iv 275
Handmaid-work rest On Enid at her lowly h-w, Marr. of Geraint 400
Hauid-play Hard was his h-p, Batt. of Brunanburh 44
Hand-promise Molly says ' I'd his h-p. Tomorrow 52
Handsome (See also Hansome) I had grown so h and tall — First Quarrel 37
' Let us see these h houses L. of Burleigh 23
To let that h fellow Averill walk Aylmer's Field 269
Hand-to-mouth Low miserable Uves of h-t-m, Enoch Arden 116
Hang Heavily h's the broad sunflower (repeat) A spirit haunts 9, 21
Heavily h's the hollyhock, (repeat) „ 11, 23
Hang (continued) Heavily h's the tiger-lily, (repeat) A spirit haunts 12, 24
the rainbow h's on the poising wave, Sea-Fairies 29
That h's before her all the year, L. of Shalott ii 11
meadow-ledges midway down H rich in flowers, (Enone 7
a statue seem'd To h on tiptoe, Palace of Art 38
from the craggy ledge the poppy h's in sleep. Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 11
h's the heavy-fruited tree— Locksley Hall 163
As the wind-hover h's in balance, Aylmer's Field 321
the thunderbolt H's silent; but prepare : Princess ii 224
Yet h's his portrait in my father's hall „ 239
Knowledge is knowledge, and this matter h's : „ Hi 316
and the beard-blown goat H on the shaft, „ iv 79
For it h's one moment later. Spiteful Letter 16
Can h no weight upon my heart In Mem. Ixiii 3
To yon hard crescent, as she h's „ cvii 10
My a,nguish h's hke shame. Maud II iv 74
Charioteer And starry Gemini h like glorious crowns „ /// vi 7
' A craven ; how he h's his head.' Geraint and E. 127
To h whatever knight of thine I fought Last Tournament 453
they would h him again on the cursed tree. Rizpah 59
In the hall there h's a painting — Locksley H., Sixty 13
ladder-of-heaven that h's on a star. By an Evolution. 12
Hang'd (See also 'Ang'd) They h him in chains for a show — Rizpah 35
To be h for a thief — and then put away — „ 36
the la^T^er who kill'd him and h him there. „ 40
took and h, Took, h and burnt— how many — Sir J. Oldcastle 45
h, poor friends, as rebels And burn'd alive as heretics ! „ 47
whether crown'd for a virtue, or h for a crime ? Despair 76
Hangel (angel) He coom'd like &H o' marcy Oud Rod 93
Or like tother H i' Scriptur „ 94
Roa was as good as the H i' saiivin' „ 96
Hanging (See also Hingin') Or, clotted into points and
h loose, M. d' Arthur 219
h there A thousand shadowy-pencill'd valleys The Daisy 66
and a long black horn Beside it h ; Gareth and L. 1367
Here comes a laggard h down his head, Geraint and E. 60
And raised a bugle h from his neck, Pelleas and E. 364
In h robe or vacant ornament, Guinevere 506
Or, clotted into points and h loose, • Pass, of Arthur 387
Hannie (Annie) Hes fur Miss H the heldest Village Wife 107
Hanover I know not whether he came in the H ship, Maud II v 59
Hansome (handsome) Shamus O'Shea that has now
ten childer, h an' tall, Tomorrow 85
Hapless since The parents' harshness and the h loves Aylmer's Field 616
Happen Forget the dream that h's then, Two Voices 353
holy and high, Whatever ^i to me ! Maud II ii 79
I know, That whatsoever evil h to me, Marr. of Geraint 471
Whatever h's, not to speak to me, Geraint and E. 17
the chuch weant h a fall. Church-warden, etc. 10
Happier Philip, with something h than myself. Enoch Arden 425
Make me a Uttle h : let me know it : Geraint and E. 317
From being smiled at h in themselves — Balin and Balan 163
H are those that welter in their sin, Holy Grail 770
He was h using the knife than in trying In the Child. Hosp. 6
the dead, as h than ourselves And higher, Ancient Sage 205
Child, I am h in your happiness The Ring 90
I came, I went, was h day by day ; „ 348
toll of funeral in an Angel ear Sounds h D. of the Duke of C. 11
And grassy barrows of the h dead. Tithonus 71
sorrow's crown of sorrow is remembering h things. Locksley Hall 76
Till h times each to her proper hearth : Princess vi 303
many a maiden passing home Till h times ; „ 381
how shall Britain light upon auguries h ? Boddicea 45
0 happy hour, and h hours Await them. In Mem., Con. 65
Then sprang the h day from underground;. Gareth and L. 1421
My pride in h summers, at my feet. Guinevere 536
More living to some h happiness. Lover's Tale i 762
Once more — a h marriage than my own ! Sisters (E. and E.) 78
Towers of a A time, low down in a rainbow deep V. of Maeldune 79
Art passing on thine h voyage now Sir J. Franklin 3
So drew perchance a h lot Than ours, Epilogue 50
Happiest To-morrow 'ill be the h time of all the glad
New-year ; (repeat) May Queen 2, 42
H she of us all, for she past from the night Despair 72
1 the h of them all.' Pelleas and E. 137
Happiness
300
Happy
Happiness Spirit of h And perfect rest
all the warmth, the peace, the h.
Would shatter all the h of the hearth,
woman counts her due, Love, children, h ? '
What h to reign a lonely king.
From his great hoard of h distill'd
a life More living to some happier h,
One bloom of youth, health, beauty, h,
tho' the h of each in each Were not enough.
Household h, gracious children,
I am happier in your /( Than in mine own.
Happt (wrapped) an' h wersens oop as we mowt.
Happy (See also 'Appy, Thrice-happy) Christians
with h countenances —
that h morn When angels spake to men aloud,
Thrice h state again to be The trustful infant
and the h blossoming shore ?
Who can light on as fc a shore All the world o'er,
O h thou that liest low,
Oh ! what a h life were mine
O BEiDESMAiD, ere the h knot was tied,
A h bridesmaid makes a h bride.'
' O h bridesmaid, make a h bride.' (repeat)
' Waiting to strive a h strife,
from a h place God's glory smote him on the face.'
Have I not found a h earth ?
She wish'd me h, but she thought
Rest in a fc place and quiet seats
0 h tears, and how unlike to these ! O h Heaven, how
canst thou see my face ? Oh earth, how canst thou
bear my weight ?
Pass by the h souls, that love to live :
Lest their shrill h laughter come to me
h stars above them seem to brighten as they pass ;
many a worthier than I, would make him h yet.
h fair with orchard-lawns And bowery hollows
sweeter than the dream Dream'd by a /i man,
shook his song together as he near'd His h home,
Ah, h shade — and still went wavering down,
A thought would fill my eyes with h dew ;
Made me most h, faltering.
Might have been h : but what lot is pure ?
do not think yourself alone Of all men h.
may rest Some h future day.
Live h ; tend thy flowers ; be tended by My
blessing !
H days Roll onward, leading up the golden year.
' Fly, h h sails, and bear the Press ; Fly h
with the mission of the Cross ;
Old writers push'd the h season back, —
It may be we shall touch the H Isles,
Of h men that have the power to die,
Is it well to wish thee h ? —
Overlive it — lower yet — be h !
mellow moons and h skies.
Clothes and reclothes the h plains,
The h princess follow'd him.
' O eyes long laid in h sleep ! ' 'Oh sleep, that
lightly fled ! ' 'Oh kiss, that woke thy sleep ! '
when Adam first Embraced his Eve in h hour,
Such h intonation.
With twisted quirks and h hits,
0 hundred shores of h climes,
The h Minds upon her play'd,
Move eastward, h earth, and leave Yon orange
sunset
O, h planet, eastward go ;
And round again to h night,
seven h years, Seven h years of health and com-
petence.
Forward she started with a h cry,
We might be still as A as God grants
' he is A, he is singing Hosanna in the highest:
Whereof the Apeople strowing cried
In those (ar-ofi seven h years were born ;
Supp. Confessions 50
Enoch Arden 761
770
Princess Hi 245
Com. of Arthur 82
Lover's Tale i 714
762
Sisters (E. and E.) 120
220
Vastness 24
The Ring 90
Owd Rod 112
Supp. Confessions 20
24
40
Sea-Fairies 8
40
Oriana 84
The Merman 37
Bridesmaid 1
4
„ 8, 14
Two Voices 130
224
MiUer's D. 25
„ 139
(Enone 131
„ 235
„ 240
„ 258
May Queen 34
„ Cow. 46
M. d' Arthur 262
Gardener's D. 72
92
132
197
235
Walk, to the Mail 97
Edwin Morris 78
Talking Oak 252
Love and Duly 87
Golden Year 40
66
Ulysses 63
Tithonus 70
Locksley Hall 43
97
159
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 2
„ Depart. 8
17
L'Envoi 42
Amphion 18
Will Water. 189
The Voyage 49
Sir L. and Q. G. 38
Move eastward 1
4
12
Enoch Arden 81
151
416
502
505
Happy [continued) And know that she is h.' Enoch Arden 719
sweet forget-me-nots That grow for h lovers. The Brook 173
' Too h, fresh and fair. Too fresh and fair „ 217
And you are h : let her parents be.' Aylmer's Field 366
sown With h faces and with holiday. Princess, Pro. 56
and read My sickness down to h dreams ? „ ii 253
In looking on the h Autumn-fields, „ iv 42
And h warriors, and immortal names, „ vi 93
but at the h word ' he lives ' My father stoop'd, „ 128
And at the h lovers heart in heart — „ vii 108
Fill'd thro' and thro' with Love, a h sleep. „ 172
And find him ; by the h threshold, he, „ 200
H he With such a mother ! „ 327
turning saw The h valleys, half in light, „ Con. 41
the h crowd, The sport half-science, „ 75
peacemaker fly To h havens under all the sky. Ode Inter. Exhib. 35
Break, h land, into earlier flowers ! W. to Alexandra 10
The sea-kings' daughter aah as fair, „ 26
But marry me out of hand : we two shall be h still.' Grandmother 52
Never jealous — not he : we had many a h year ; „ 71
And h has been my life ; but I would not live it again. „ 98
But distant colour, h hamlet, The Daisy 27
Many and many a h year. To F. D. Maurice 48
' The King is h In child and wife ; The Victim 25
But the Priest was h. His victim won : „ 61
And the Priest was h, „ 73
A h lover who has come To look on her that loves In Mem. viii 1
The murmur oi &h Pan : „ xxiii 12
Rise, h mom, rise, holy mom, „ xxx 29
Her early Heaven, her h views ; „ xxxiii 6
How fares it with the h dead? „ xliv 1
And grasps the skirts of h chance, „ Ixiv 6
There flutters up a 7i thought, „ Ixv 7
sun by sun the h days Descend below the golden hills „ Ixxxiv 27
A guest, or h sister, sung, „ Ixxxix 26
Ring, h bells, across the snow : „ cvi&
h birds, that change their sky To build and brood ; „ cxv 15
For days of h commune dead ; „ cxvi 14
While thou, dear spirit, h star, „ cxxvii 18
0 h hour, and happier hours Await them. „ Con. 65
O h hour, behold the bride With him to whom „ 69
We wish them store of h days. „ 84
To spangle all the h shores By which they rest, „ 120
In the h morning of life and of May, Maud I vl
Go not, h day, (repeat) „ xvii 1, 3
Pass the h news. Blush it thro' the West ; „ 15
And you fair stars that crown a h day „ xviii 30
It seems that I am h, that to me A livelier emerald „ 50
Beat, h stars, timing with things below, „ 81
The delight of h laughter, „ // iv 29
Would the h spirit descend, „ 81
' And gladly given again this h morn. Marr. of Geraint 691
But o'er her meek eyes came a h mist Geraint and E. 769
Tho' pale, yet h, ask'd her not a word, „ 880
till be crown'd A h life with a fair death, „ 968
' I hold them h, so they died for love : Balin and Balan 581
What said the h sire ? Merlin and V. 710
And as it chanced they are h, being pure.' „ 745
But she was h enough and shook it off, Lancelot and E. 784
Came on her brother with a /* face „ 791
So that would make you h : furthermore, „ 959
As h as when we dwelt among the woods, „ 1036
make me h, making them An armlet for the roundest arm „ 1182
' In li time behold our pilot-star ! Pelleas and E. 63
' 0 h world,' thought Pelleas, ' all, meseems, Are h ; „ 136
Be h in thy fair Queen as I in mine.' Last Tournament 204
Crown'd warrant had we for the crowning sin
That made wsh: „ 577
the child of one I honour'd, h, dead before thy shame ? Guinevere 423
h, fair with orchard -lawns And bowery hollows Pass, of Arthur 430
And he was h that he saw it not; Lover's Tale i 192
O day which did enwomb that h hour, „ 485
It was so h an hour, so sweet a place, „ 558
The loved, the lover, the h Lionel, „ 654
Why was I To cross between their h star and them ? „ 730
Happy
301
Hardest
Happy (continued) Him who loving made The h and
the imhappy love,
I was h when I was with him,
Often I seem'd unhappy, and often as h too,
He means me I'm sure to be h with Willy,
Here's to your h xmion with my child !
We left her, h each in each, and then,
Pour'd in on all those h naked isles —
Live, and be A in thyself, and serve This mortal
race
So — your h suit was blasted —
H children in a sunbeam sitting on the ribs of wreck
Poet of the h Tityrus piping underneath
the child Is h — ev'n in leaving her !
We planted both together, h in our marriage mom ?
I am h, h. Kiss me.
Sing like a bird and be h,
' Here again, here, here, here, h year !
Him, h to be chosen Judge of Gods,
while we dwelt Together in this valley-
h had I died within thine arms.
The morning light of h marriage broke
O h he, and fit to live. On whom a h home has power The Wanderer 9
Hapt H in this isle, since Up the East Batt. of Brunanburh 116
Harangue Lady Psyche wQl h The fresh arrivals Princess ii 95
Harass'd the thought Haunted and h him, Enoch Arden 720
Vext with lawyers and h with debt : Mavd I xix 22
h by the frights Of my first crew, Columbus 67
Harbour and clambering on a mast In h, Enoch Arden 106
Ev'n in that h whence he sail'd before. „ 666
to seek If any golden h be for men Fref. Son. 19th Cent. 13
Lover's Tale i 753
First Quarrel 11
31
RizTpdh 76
Sister's (E. and E.) 68
219
Columbus 174
De Prof., Two G. 15
Locksley H., Sixty 5
14
To Virgil 13
Prin. Beatrice 12
Happy 14
„ 107
Parnassus 14
The Throstle 13
Death of (Enone 16
h then — Too
30
102
Vastness 14
Gareth and L. 834
844
Marr. of Geraint 281
290
299
Sailor Boy 2
Audley Court 86
You ask me, why, etc. 25
The Captain 22
The Voyage 2
Desolate offing, sailorless h's.
Harbourage But wilt thou yield this damsel h ? '
But an this lord will yield us h, Well.*
Where can I get me h for the night ?
H ? truth, good truth, I know not,
' 0 friend, I seek a h for the night.'
Harbour-bar Shot o'er the seething h-b,
Harbour-buoy h-b. Sole star of phosphorescence
Harbour-mouth Yet waft me from the h-m,
capes and islands, Many a h-m,
painted buoy That tosses at the h-m ;
Hard It seem'd so h at first, mother, to leave the
blessed sun. And now it seems as A to stay. May Queen, Con. 9
The Gods are h to reconcile : Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 81
'Tis h to settle order once again. „ 82
How h he breathes ! over the snow I heard D. of the 0. Year 37
A saying, h to shape in act ; Love thou thy land 49
But vague in vapour, h to mark ; „ 62
The blast was h and harder. The Goose 50
For how h it seem'd to me, When eyes. Love and Duty 35
If the sense is h To alien ears, „ 51
H is my doom and thine : „ 54
' Your riddle is /s to read.' Lady Clare 76
J? coils of cordage, swarthy fishing-nets, Enoch Arden 17
was it h to take The helpless life „ 556
* Too h to bear ! why did they take me „ 781
0 h, when love and duty clash ! Princess ii 293
all those h things That Sheba came to ask of Solomon.' „ 345
' O h task,' he cried ; ' No fighting shadows here ! „ Hi 124
No rock so h but that a little wave „ 154
they will take her, they will make her h, „ v 90
Thus the h old King : I took my leave, „ 467
no tenderness — Too h, too cruel : „ 516
These men are h upon us as of old, „ vi 198
the woman is so h Upon the woman. „ 222
And call her h and cold which seem'd a truth : „ vii 98
you think I am /i and cold ; Grandmother 17
be jealous and h and unkind.' „ 54
1 found, tho' crush'd to h and dry. The Daisy 97
O little bard, is your lot so h, Spiteful Letter 5
H, h, h is it, only not to tumble, Hendecasyllabics 13
* It will be h,' they say, ' to find In Mem. xx 7
The words were h to imderstand. „ Ixix 20
'Tis h for thee to fathom this ; „ Ixxxv 90
Hard {continued) The h heir strides about their lands, In Mem. xc 15
how h to frame In matter-moulded forms „ xeo 45
' A h one, or a hundred, so I go. Gareth and L. 149
h by here is one will overthrow And slay thee : „ 896
' Old damsel, old and h, Old, ]j 1105
blew A h and deadly note upon the horn. " 1111
Then not to give you warning, that seems h ; Geraint "and E. 422
How h you look and how denyingly ! Merlin and V. 338
May this h earth cleave to the Nadir hell „ 349
(Brother, the King was h upon his knights) Holy Grail 299
house of ours Where all the brethren are so h, „ 618
H was the frost in the field. First Quarrel 39
I felt that my heart was h, „ 76
So I knew my heart was h, 78
But say nothing h of my boy, Rizpah 22
you are just as /i as a stone. „ 80
they tell me that the worid is h, and harsh of mind.
But can it be so h, so harsh, The Flight 101
come a witness soon H to be confuted. Forlorn 26
He gript it so /* by the throat that the boy Bandit's Death 28
That God would move And strike the h, h rock, Supp. Confessions 116
' H task, to pluck resolve,' I cried, Two Voices 118
he and I Had once h words, and parted, Dora 18
and thought H things of Dora. „ 58
for you Will make him h, ,' 153
H wood I am, and wrinkled rind, Talking Oak 171
bade him cry, with sound of trumpet, all The h condition ; Godiva 37
The h brands shiver on the steel. Sir Galahad 6
Small were his gains, and h his work ; Sea Dreams 8
last Gript my hand h, and with God-bless-you went. „ 160
I found a h friend in his loose accounts, A loose one
in the h grip of his hand, „ 162
For us, we will not spare the tyrant one h word. Third of Feb. 42
That a calamity fe to be borne ? Maud I xiii 3
a ^mechanic ghost That never came from on high „ II H 34
Yniol with that h message went ; Marr. of Geraint 763
The h earth shake, and a low thunder of arms. Lancelot and E. 460
As h and still as is the face that men „ 1251
over h and soft, striking the sod From out the soft,
the spark from off the h, Pelleas and E. 498
h liis eyes ; harder his heart Seem'd ; „ 512
Modred thought, ' The time is h at band.' „ 610
H on that helm which many a heathen sword Pass, of Arthur 166
clomb The last h footstep of that iron crag ; „ 447
They found her beating the h Protestant doors. Sisters (E. and E.) 240
I find h rocks, h life, h cheer, or none. Sir J. Oldcastle 6
Vailing a sudden eyelid with his h ' Dim Saesneg ' „ 20
Priests Who fear the king's h common-sense „ 66
harlot draws his clerks Into the suburb — their h ceUbacy, „ 107
These h memorials of our truth to Spain Columbus 196
H was his hand-play, Batt. of Brunanburh 44
Beneath a h Arabian moon And alien stars. To Marq. of Dufferin 45
Seem'd nobler than their h Eternities. Demeter and P. 107
An' 'e cotch'd howd h 0' my hairm, Owd Rod 58
she loves her own h self. Her firm will, The Ring 292
She clung to me with such a h embrace, „ 435
// Romans brawling of their monstrous games ; St. Telemachus 40
And the h blue eyes have it still. Charity 10
Hard (heard) I A his Riverence say. To-morrow 69
tould yer Honour whativer I h an' seen, „ 97
Hard-breathing cast himself Down on a bench, h-b. PeUeas and E. 592
Harden watch The sandy footprint h into stone.' Princess Hi 271
Harden'd (See also Mattock-h^en'd, War-harden'd)
only wrapt in h skins That fit him like his own ; Gareth and L. 1093
His arms are old, he trusts the h skin — „ 1139
But lash'd in vain against the h skin, „ 1143
Harder The blast was hard and h- The Goose 50
H the times were, and the hands of power Aylmer's Field 452
the according hearts of men Seem'd h too ; „ 454
Enid answer'd, h to be moved Than hardest tyrants Geraint and E. 694
but felt his eyes H and drier than a fountain bed Pelleas and E. 507
hard his eyes ; h his heart Seem'd ; „ 512
But a lie which is part a truth is a A matter to fight. Grandmother 32
Tho' carved in h stone — Epilogue 59
Hardest Than h tyrants in their day of power, Geraint and E. 695
Hard-grain'd
302
Harry
Hard-grain'd h-g Muses of the cube and square
Hard-heaving her breast R-h, and her eyes
Hardihood Sick for thy stubborn h,
sworn to vows Of utter h, utter gentleness,
' My King, for h I can promise thee.
Hard-mailed Laid the soft babe in his h-m hands.
Hardness For he will teach him h.
Hard-ridden like a beast h-r, breathing hard.
Hard-seeming I think this gross h-s world
Hard-set smile a h-s smile, like a stoic,
Hard-won E-iv and hardly won with bruise
Hardy ' Be not so h, scullion, as to slay
Princess, Pro. 180
Lover's Tale iv 308
In Mem. ii 14
Gareth and L. 553
557
Princess vi 208
Dora 120
Aylmer's Field 291
Sisters (E. and E.) 229
Maud I iv 20
Lancelot and E. 1165
Gareth and L. 980
You the h, laborious. Patient children of Albion. On Jub. Q. Victoria 58
EEare {See also 'Are) nightly wirer of their innocent h Aylmer's Field 490
Harebell like an Alpine h hung with tears Princess vii 115
Harem flings his bowstrung H in the sea, Somney's E. 135
Hark H ! death is calling While I speak All Things will Die 28
hating to h The humming of the drowsy pulpit-drone To J. M. K. 9
but h the bell For dinner, let us go ! ' Princess ii 432
0 h,0 hear ! how thin and clear, „ iv 7
h the clock within, the silver knell Maud I xviii 64
' H tlie victor pealing there ! ' Gareth and L. 1318
' H, by the bird's song ye may learn the nest,' Marr. of Geraint 359
' H the Phantom of the house That ever shrieks Lancelot and E. 1022
h ! Nay — you can hear it yourself — Rizpah 84
Harken mother Ida, h ere I die. (repeat) (Enone 24, 35, 46, 53, 64, 77, 91,
103, 120, 134, 151, 173, 183, 195
1 shaU h what you say, May Queen, N. Y's. E. 39
Nor h what the inner spirit sings, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 22
His Baron said ' We go but h : Balin and Balan 10
And h if my music be not true. Last Tournament 274
But h ! have ye met him ? „ 529
Harken'd if our Princes h to my prayer, Columbus 100
Harkening h from what side The blindfold rummage Balin and Balan 415
Harlot (adj.) Hell burst up your h roofs- Bellowing, Pelleas and E. 466
Harlot (s) Mammon made The h of the cities : Aylmer's Field 375
h's paint their talk as well as face Merlin and V. 821
and in this Are h's like the crowd, „ 831
And hearing ' h ' mutter'd twice or thrice, „ 843
shrieking out ' O fool ! ' the h leapt Adown the forest, „ 972
whirl the dust of h's round and round Pelleas and E. 470
My tower is full of h's, hke his court, ImsI Tournament 81
The mitre-sanction'd h draws his clerks , Sir J. Oldcastle 106
Wealth with his wines and his wedded h's ; Fastness 19
Harlot-bride Among their h-b's, an evil song. Last Tournament 428
Harlot-like that h-l Seduced me from you, leaves me h-l, Romney's R. 115
Harlotry riotous fits Of wine and h — Sir J. Oldcastle 101
Harm (s) What h, undone? deep h to disobey, M. d' Arthur 93
And bites it for true heart and not for h, Princess, Pro. 174
arm. That shielded all her life from h In Mem., Con. 47
a.h no preacher can heal ; Maud I iv 22
How should I dare obey him to his h ? Geraint and E. 136
mere chUd Might use it to the /* of anyone. Merlin and V. 685
What h, undone? Deep h to disobey. Pass, of Arthur 261
ruling that which knows To its own h : To the Queen ii 59
she wrought us h. Poor soul, not knowing. Sisters (E. and E.) 184
' No h,Tioh'l tum'd again, „ 213
can tha tell ony h on 'im lass ? — Village Wife 19
Not es I cares fur to hear ony h, „ 22
weak i' the hattics, wi'out ony h i' the legs, „ 101
tweiint do tha naw h. „ 120
Nor harm an adder thro' the lust for h, Ancient Sage 271
there wam't not a mossel o' h ; Owd Rod 70
Harm (verb) A little thing may h a wounded man. M. d' Arthur 42
extremes, I told her, well might h The woman's cause. Princess Hi 144
To h the thing that trusts him, „ iv 248
All that not h's distinctive womanhood. „ vii 274
one who came to help thee, not to h, Gareth and L. 1238
A little thing may h a wounded man ; Pass, of Arthur 210
he was a child, an' he came to h ; First Quarrel 23
Nor h an adder thro' the lust for harm, Ancient Sage 271
Harm'd satire, kin to charity. That h not : Princess ii 470
soothe, and h where she would heal ; Guinevere 355
Lest but a hair of this low head be h. „ 447
Harmful Me and my l» love go by; Maud II ii^
Harmless The rabbit fondles his own h face,
Plucking the h wild-fiower on the hill ?—
Elves, and the h glamour of the field ;
the h people whom we found In Hispaniola's island'
Paradise !
Harmonious And in the long h years
Harmonising-Harmonizing A music harmonizing our
wild cries,
Make but one music, harmonising ' Pray.'
Harmony (See also Organ-harmony) words adore The
full-flowing h
harmonies of law The growing world assume,
O mighty-mouth'd inventor of harmonies.
Most loveliest, earthly-heavenliest h ?
Scarce living in the JEolian h,
All your hearts be in h,
AU her harmonies echo'd away ? —
the roll And march of that Eternal H
Haxmsby hup to H and Hutterby Hall.
Harness Dry clash'd his h in the icy caves
sheathing splendours and the golden scale Of h,
all beneath there burns A jewell'd h,
Far liefer had I gird his h on him.
Dry clash'd his h in the icy caves
Harold (the Second, 1066) H's England fell to
Norman swords;
Since English H gave its throne a vyife,
Haroun Alraschid prime Of good H A. (repeat)
Aylmer's Field 851
Maud II i 3
Pass, of Arthur 52
Columbus 181
In Mem. xliv 9
Sea Dreams 255
Akbar's Dream 151
Elednore 46
England and Amer. 16
Milton 1
Lover's Tale i 279
477
On Jub. Q. Victoria 62
On Master of B. 12
D. of the Duke of C. 15
North. Cobbler 14
M. d' Arthur 186
Princess v 42
Gareth and L. 688
Marr. of Geraint 93
Pass, of Arthur 354
W. to Marie Alex. 22
24
Arabian Nights 11, 22, 33,
44, 55, 66, 77, 88, 99,
110, 121, 132, 143, 154
Sea-Fairies 4
Dying Swan 32
Kate 8
Two Voices 436
Locksley Hall 33
Princess iv 38
In Mem. i 2
„ Ixxxviii 9
„ Ixxxix 27
„ ciii 9
cv22
„ cxxv 2
Harp (s) bosoms prest To Httle h's of gold ;
With shawms, and with cymbals, and h's of gold,
Clear as the twanging of a h.
Like an jEolian h that wakes No certain air.
Love took up the h of Life,
smote her h, and sang. ' Tears, idle tears.
To one clear h in divers tones.
And I — my h would prelude woe —
she brought the h and flung A ballad
The hall with h and carol rang.
Nor h be touch'd, nor flute be blown ;
Some bitter notes my h would give,
each with h in hand. And built it to the music of
their h's. Gareth and L. 261
Arthur's h tho' summer-wan, „ 1314
0 never h nor horn, Nor aught we blow with breath, Holy Grail 113
toward him from the hall, with h in hand. Last Tournament 5
and on shield A spear, a A, a bugle — „ 174
Then he twangled on his h. And while he twangled „ 251
We call the h of Arthur up in heaven ? ' „ 333
Save that to touch a h, tilt with a lance „ 636
Then Tristram laughing caught the h, „ 730
his hand fell from the h. And pale he turn'd, Guinevere 303
Harp (verb) to h on such a moulder'd string ? Locksley Hall 147
he could h his wife up out of hell.' Last Tournament 328
Harped equal to the man. They h on this ; Princess i 132
Harper Troop'd round a Paynim h once. Last Tournament 322
a helpful h thou. That harpest downward ! „ 331
' 0 hunter, and 0 blower of the horn, H, „ 543
' Ah then, false hunter and false h, „ 567
Harp'st ' And whither h thou thine ? down ! „ 330
a helpful harper thou, That h downward ! „ 332
Harping Now h on the church-commissioners, The Epic 15
and so went h down The black king's highway, Last Tournament 342
Harpy (See also Church-Harpy) harpies miring every dish, Lucretius 159
Harried Swarm'd overseas, and /t what was left. Com. of Arthur 9
war-workers who H the Welshman, Batt. of Brunanburh 122
Harrow'd Sent to the h brother, praying him Aylmer's Field 607
Harry (Henry VIII.) Bluff H broke into the spence Talking Oak 47
Harry (Christian name) While H is in the five-acre Grandmother 80
And H and Charlie, I hear them too — „ 81
For H went at sixty, your father at sixty-five: „ 86
1 wait, wait, wait for //. — First Quarrel 4
H and I were married : „ 5
When fl an' I were children, „ 10
Harry
303
Hate
Church-warden, etc. 42
Gareth and L. 484
707
Guinevere 360
Last Tournament 635
-Sir J. Oldcastle 96
Dora 35
Walk, to the Mail 49
The Captain 13
Lucretius 225
Harry (Christian name) {continued) I never could quarrel
with H — First Quarrel 16
There was a farmer in Dorset of H's kin, „ 17
So H was bound to the Dorsetshire farm „ 19
And so she was wicked with H; „ 26
To make a good wife for H, when H came home „ 30
And E came home at last, „ 35
H went over the Solent to see if work could be found ; „ 44
Before I quarrell'd with H — my quarrel — „ 56
For H. came in, an' I flung him the letter „ 57
H, my man, you had better ha' beaten me „ 72
Mr. U, I ham wot I ham.
Harry (to harass) Would hustle and h him,
Gareth whom he used To h and hustle.
and h me, petty spy And traitress.'
Harrying But thou, thro' ever h thy wild beasts-
Harry of Monmouth (Henry the Fifth) H o M,Ox
Amurath of the Ejist ?
Harsh his ways were h ; But Dora bore them
A woman like a butt, and h as crabs.
Day by day more h and cruel
To make a truth less h,
they tell me that the world is hard, and h of mind, But
can it be so hard, so h. The Flight 101
Overblown with murmurs h, Ode to Memory 99
Lest the h shingle should grate under foot, Enoch Arden 772
not Too h to your companion yestermorn ; Princess Hi 199
or the meadow-crake Grate her h kindred in the grass : „ iv 125
bride Gives her h groom for bridal-gift a scourge ; „ v 378
Not rather dead love's h heir, jealous pride ? Lancelot and E. 1398
Then at the dry h roar of the great horn,
H red hair, big voice, big chest,
and yet Pardon — too h, unjust.
Harsher When was a h sound ever heard, ye Muses,
She takes, when h moods remit,
And put thy h moods aside.
Harshness parents' h and the hapless loves
My needful seeming h, pardon it.
Hart a h Taller than all his fellows, milky-white,
thinking that he heard The noble h at bay.
In these wild woods, the h with golden horns.
Harvest (adj.) and in h time he died.
in the h hymns of Earth The worship which is
Love,
Harvest (s)— reap the h with enduring toil,
not been for these five years So full a h :
his heart is glad Of the full h,
God reaps a A in me.
God reaps a /i in thee.
if the seedsman, rapt Upon the teeming h,
reaps not h of his youthful joys,
Dispensing h, sowing the To-be,
watch her h ripen, her herd increase,
and the h died from the field,
Robed in universal h up to either pole she
smiles,
AU her h all too narrow —
Fifty times the golden h fallen.
Rejoicing in the h and the grange.
Homestead and h. Reaper and gleaner.
Harvest-field My brother .James is in the h-f:
Harvest-tool H-t and husbandry.
Hasp {See also Hesp) were laid On the h of the window.
Haste (s) (See also 'Aa,ste) Raw H, half-sister to
Delay.
heat Were all miscounted as malignant h
thing that had made false h to the grave-
no, not dead ! ' she answer'd in all h.
the years of h and random youth Unshatter'd ;
and tum'd in her h and fled.
Haste (verb) oh, h. Visit my low desire !
leave the cliffs, and h away O'er ocean-mirrors roimded
large.
Haste See also Post-haste
Hasty But pamper not a h time, Love thou thy land 9
Last Tournament 438
In the Child. Hasp. 4
Columbus 199
Trans, of Homer 3
In Mem. xlviii 6
lix 7
Aylmer^s Field 616
Princess ii 309
Mart, of Geraint 149
233
Merlin and V. 409
Dora 55
Demeter and P. 148
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 121
Dora 66
„ 69
St. S. Stylites 148
149
Golden Year 71
Locksley Hall 139
Princess, vii 289
Maud III vi 25
V. of Maeldune 30
Locksley H., Sixty 169
172
On Jub. Q. Victoria 2
Demeter and P. 127
Merlin and the G. 57
The Brook 227
Ode Inter. Exhib. 14
Maud I xiv 19
Love thou thy land 96
Princess iv 334
Maud I i58
Geraint and E. 542
De Prof., Two G. 21
The Wreck 62
Ode to Memory 3
In Mem. xii 8
Hasty {continued) Or h judger would have call'd her
guilt, Geraint and E. 433
And thro' the /* notice of the ear Lover's Tale i 615
Hat {See also 'At) grew about, and tied it round his h Dora 83
slavish h from the villager's head ? Maud 7x4
whether The habit, h, and feather, „ xx 18
Hatch I built the nest ' she said ' To h the cuckoo. Princess iv 366
Hatch'd fancies /* In silken-folded idleness ; „ 66
Hate (s) A h of gossip parlance, and of sway, Isabel 26
the h of h, the scorn of scorn. The Poet 3
And mete the bounds of h and love — Two Voices 135
1 hated him with the h of hell, The Sisters 22
Frantic love and frantic h. Vision of Sin 150
Hated him with a momentary h. Aylmer's Field 211
One shriek of h would jar all the hymns Sea Dreams 259
far aloof From envy, h and pity, Lucretius 77
his hopes and h's, his homes and fanes, „ 255
The common h with the revolving wheel Princess vi 173
Till a morbid h and horror have grown Maud I vi 75
I have sworn to bury All this dead body of h, „ xix 97
The fires of Hell and otH; „ II i la
I scarce can ask it thee for h, Gareth and L. 361
Peace to thee, woman, with thy loves and h's ! „ 373
and to hate his kind With such a h, Balin and Balan 127
and fain. For h and loathing, would have past „ 38S
H, ii H he perfect, casts out fear. Merlin and V. 41
(For in a wink the false love turns to /*) „ 852.
Thereon her wrath became a h ; Pelleas and E. 224
strike him ! put my h into your strokes, „ 228
I am wrath and shame and h and evil fame, „ 568
My God, the measure of my h for Mark Last Tournament 537
pluck'd one way by h and one by love, „ 539
Broken with Mark and h and sohtude, „ 643
his aims Were sharpen'd by strong h for Lancelot. Guinevere 20
' With what a h the people and the King Must hate me,' „ 157
my love should ne'er indue the front And mask of H, Lover's Tale i 775
Love passeth not the threshold of cold H, And H „ 778
Yet loves and hates with mortal h's and loves, Tiresias 23
It is not Love but H that weds a bride against her will ;
H, that would pluck from this true breast The Flight 32
An' there's h enough, shure. Tomorrow 68
look'd the twin of heathen h. Locksley H., Sixty 86
class. Of civic H no more to be, Freedom 18
alchemise old h's into the gold Of Love, Akbar's Dream 163
Hate (verb) {See also Haate) how much I h Her presence, (Enone 229
my flesh, which I despise and h, St. S. Stylites 58
Sluiek out, ' I h you, Enoch,' Enoch Arden 33
a height That makes the lowest h it, Aylmer's Field 173
because I love their child They /» me : „ 424
in the sound To /> a little longer ! Sea Dreams 62
I h, abhor, spit, sicken at him ; Lucretius 199
You men have done it : how I h you all ! Princess, Pro. 130^
Yet this day (tho' you should h me for it) ' „ iv 341
Until they h to hear me like a wind „ v 98
him that mars her plan, but then would h „ 132
Yet h me not, but abide your lot, Spiteful Letter 11
Yet the yellow leaf h's the greener leaf, „ 15
How I h the spites and the follies ! „ 24
Who h each other for a song. Lit. Squabbles 5
Discuss'd the books to love or h. In Mem. Ixxxix 34
I h the dreadful hollow behind the little wood, Maud III
Well, he may Uve to h me yet. „ xHi 4
there be those who h him in their hearts. Com. of Arthur 179
So many those that h him, and so strong, „ 251
good cause is theirs To h me, Gareth and L. 821
Being but knave, I /* thee all the more.' „ 1021
prince and fool, I h thee and for ever.' „ 1256
They h the King, and Lancelot, the King's friend, „ 1418
I h that he should linger here ; Marr. of Geraint 91
Thy wheel and thee we neither love nor h. (repeat) „ 349, 358
and to h his kind With such a hate, Balin and Balan 127
a liar is he. And h's thee for the tribute ! ' „ 608
Queen, if knowing that I know, Will h. Merlin and V. 122
do ye not h him, ye ? Ye know yourselves : Pelleas and E. 264
I have slain this Pelleas whom ye h : „ 372
Hate
304
Haw
Hate (verb) (continued) he thought — ' What, if she h
me now ? Last Tournament 496
thou stridest thro' his halls Who h's thee, „ 518
Because he h's thee even more than fears ; „ 533
I should h thee more than love.' „ 600
With what a hate the people and the King Must h me,' Guinevere 158
but who h's thee, he that brought The heathen Pass, of Arthur 151
I h her — an' I h you ! ' First Quarrel 71
Yet loves and h's with mortal hates and loves, Tiresias 23
I h the black negation of the bier. Ancient Sage 204
morning brings the day I h and fear ; The Flight 2
' Kill your enemy, for you h him,' Locksley H., Sixty 94
I h the rancour of their castes and creeds, Akbar's Bream 65
Hated (adj. and part.) this world's curse, — beloved
but h — Love and Duty 47
(for Arthur's Knights Were h strangers in the hall) Balin and Balan 352
with h warmth of apprehensiveness. Lover's Tale i 632
Her presence, h both of Gods and men. (Enone 229
Thro madness, h by the wise, Love and DrUy 7
Hated (verb) (See also Haated) I h him with the hate of
hell. The Sisters 22
And death and life she h equally, Palace of Art 265
But they h his oppression. The Captain 9
Then thejr look'd at him they h, „ 37
H him with a momentary hate. Aylmer's Field 211
Men h learned women : Princess ii 466
They h banter, wish'd for something real, „ Con. 18
many h Uther for the sake Of Gorlois. Com. of Arthur 220
And h this fair world and all therein, „ 344
They h her, who took no thought of them, Geraint and E. 639
She h all the knights, and heard in thought Merlin and V. 150
and she h aU who pledged. Lancelot and E. 744
wail'd and wept, and h mine own self. Holy Grail 609
* You said that you h me, Ellen, First Quarrel 79
And we h the beautiful Isle, V. of Maddune 21
And we h the Flowering Isle, as we A the isle that
was mute, „ 52
Till we h the Bounteous Isle „ 92
Troubled the track of the host that we h, Batt. of Brunanburh 40
he learnt that I h the ring I wore. The Wreck 57
tho' I think I h him less. Bandit's Death 17
Hateftd H is the dark-blue sky, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 39
Your falsehood and yoiurself are h to us : Princess iv 545
Horrible, h, monstrous, not to be told ; Maud III vi 41
And this forgetfulness was h to her. Marr. of Geraint 55
Last night I wasted h hours Fatima 8
Long, ere the h crow shall tread The comers Will Water. 235
and when the beauteous h isle Return'd upon him, Enoch Arden 617
all the h fires Of torment, Demeter and P. 151
This house with all its h needs no cleaner than the beast, Happy 32
in the heart of this most ancient realm A h voice be
utter'd, Prog, of Spring 103
Hater What room is left for a fe ? Spiteful Letter 14
Love your enemy, bless your h's, Locksley H., Sixty 85
Hating H to wander out on earth, Supp. Confessions 57
h to hark The humming of the drowsy pulpit-drone To J. M. K. 9
went H his own lean heart and miserable. Aylmer's Field 526
all-shamed, h the life He gave me, Geraint and E. 852
Hatred h of her weakness, blent with shame. Princess vii 30
Shall fears and jealous h's flame again ? W. to Marie Alex. 41
No more of h than in Heaven itself, Balin and Balan 151
My soul, I felt my h for my Mark Quicken Last Tournament 519
Love pledge H in her bitter draughts. Lover's Tale i 776
National h's of whole generations, Vastness 25
Dark no more with human h's Faith 8
Hattics (attics) An' Hetty wur weak i' the h. Village Wife 101
Hauberk shield of Balan prick'd The h to the flesh ; Balin and Balan 560
Casques were crack'd and h's hack'd The Tourney 7
Hanghtier She paused, and added with a h smile Princess Hi 225
Haughtiest Lady Blanche alone Of faded form and h
lineaments, „ ii 448
Imperious, and of h lineaments. Marr. of Geraint 190
Haughty She, flashing forth a h smile, began : D. of F. Women 129
My A jousts, and took a paramour ; Geraint and E. 832
but she, h, ev'n to him, Lancelot ; Last Tournament 562
Haughty (continued) H war-workers who Harried the
Welshman, Bait, of Brunanburh 121
Haunch On his h'es rose the steed. Princess v 493
Haunt (s) The h's of memory echo not. Two Voices 369
A A of ancient Peace. Palace of Art 88
battenest by the greasy gleam In h's of hungry sinners. Will Water. 222
A A of brawling seamen once, Enoch Arden 697
I come from h's of coot and hern. The Brook 23
A frequent h of Edith, Aylmer's Field 148
And flood the h's of hern and crake ; In Mem. ci 14
The feeble soul, a A of fears, „ ex 3
cells of madness, h's of horror and fear, Maud III vi 2
in lonely h's Would scratch a ragged oval Gareth and L. 533
but for those large eyes, the h's of scorn, Pdleas and E. 75
there In h's of jungle-poison'd air To Marq. of Dufferin 31
Haunt (verb) A spirit h's the year's last hours A Spirit haunts 1
than whatever Oread h The knolls of Ida, (Enone 74
Whose odours h my dreams ; Sir Galahad 68
Will h the vacant cup : Will Water. 172
Like flies that h a wound, or deer, Aylmer's Field 571
Gods, who h The lucid interspace of world Lucretius 104
h About the moulder'd lodges of the Past Princess iv 62
They h the silence of the breast. In Mem. xciv 9
the fihny shapes That h the dusk, „ xcv 11
Evil h's The birth, the bridal ; „ xcviii 13
' Look, He h's me — I cannot breathe — _ Pelleas and E. 227
all that h's the waste and wild Mourn, * Pass, of Arthur 48
those three words would h him when a boy. Far — far — away 8
anchorite Would h the desolated fane, St. Telemachus 13
Haunted (adj. and part.) (See also Bandit-haunted, Martin-haunted,
Satan-haunted) From old well-heads of h rills, Eleanor e 16
Heard by the watcher in a A house, Guinevere 73
Was h with a jolly ghost, that shook The curtains, Walk, to the Mail 36
and a hazel wood. By autumn nutters h, Enoch Arden 8
And h by the wrangling daw ; In Mem. c 12
h by the starry head Of her whose gentle will Mavd I xviii 22
Haunted (verb) It h me, the morning long. Miller's D. 69
the thought H and harass'd him, Enoch Arden 720
still H us like her ghost ; Sisters (E. and E.) 247
ghastUer face than ever has h a grave by night. The Wreck 8
she that had h his pathway still. Dead Prophet 61
Haunting (adj. and part.) (See also Boof-haunting)
phantoms moved Before him h him, or he himself
Moved /i people, Enoch Arden ^^
a tender Christian hope, H a holy text. Sea Dreams 42
My h sense of hollow shows : Princess vii 349
ever h round the palm A lusty youth, Gareth and L. 47
but shatter'd nerve. Yet h Julian, Lover's Tale iv 106
This h whisper makes me faint. In Mem. Ixxxi 7
Brute that is walking and h us yet. The Dawn 23
Haunting (s) No ghostly h's like his Highness. Princess ii 411
And out of h's of my spoken love, „ vii 109
Havelock (Gen. Sir Henry) H baffled, or beaten, or
butcher'd Def. of Lucknow 91
Outram and H breaking their way through „ 96
H's glorious Highlanders answer with conquering clieers, „ 99
Blessing the wholesome white faces of H's good fusileers, „ 101
Saved by the valour of H, „ 104
Haven From many an inland town and h large, CEnone 117
From h's hid in fairy bowers, The Voyage 54
ships go on To their h under the hill ; Break, break, etc. 10
northward of the narrow port Open'd a larger h : Enoch Arden 103
Till silent in her oriental h. „ 537
Where either h open'd on the deeps, „ 671
To rush abroad all round the little h, „ 867
That all the houses in the h rang. „ 911
while I breathed in sight of h, he, Poor fellow. The Brook 157
peacemaker fly To happy h's imder all the sky, Ode Inter. Exhib. 35
Had built the King his h's, Merlin and V. 168
You from the h Under the sea-cliff. Merlin and the G. 2
O young Mariner, Down to the h, „ 124
Havock-Havoc wrought Such waste and havock Aylmer's Field 640
Made havock among those tender cells, Lucretius 22
So fierce a gale made havoc here of late Holy Grail 729
Haw Nor hoary knoll of ash and h In Mem. c 9
Hawa-i-ee
305
Head
Hawa-i-ee (one of the Sandwich Islands) and freed the ^^ . , . _
people Of fl! Kaptolantl
be mingled with either on H. " ^°
and drove the demon from H. " ^^
Hawk(s) (5ee aZso Sparrow-hawk, War-hawk) My gay ,.,o^
young h, my Rosalind : ^ Roscdmd 34
The wild h stood with the down on his beak, roet sJ>ong ll
Lies the h's cast, the mole has made his run, Aylmer s Field 849
\nd pastime both of h and hound, Marr. of Geraintlll
Fluttering the h's of this crown-lusting Une— Sir J. OldcasUe 57
Hawk (verb) As when a hawker Ks his wares. The Blackbird jOi
they ride away— to h For waterfowl. Merlin and V. 107
Hawkard (awkward) An' a haxin' ma h questions, *^P*«*'f ^ * *; ^.
Hawker As when a /j hawks his wares. The Blackbird M
This broad-brimm'd h of holy things, ■'■^w* / ^ *i
Hawk-eye Your h-e's are keen and bright, . 'TtJ^
and a cheek of apple-blossom, i?-e's ; Garrt/i and L. bW
Hawking (See also A-havlang) Now /j at Geology and t- . ic
schism; ,, ,^''* .^'non
Hawk-mad Speak, if ye be not hke the rest, h-m, Marr. of Geraint 280
Hawl (awl) poonch'd my 'and wi' the h, North. Cobbler 78
Hawmin' (loungiifi) an' h about i' the laiines, „ 24
Hawthorn (adj.) bury me, my mother, just beneath
the /i shade, May Queen, N.Y s. E. 29
that new life that gems the h line ; Prog.ofSvmig 36
Hawthorn (s) Beneath the h on the green May Queen, N. Y s.L.lQ
Hax'd (asked) An' they haUus paad what I h. Village ^tfe}^
\Vhen summun 'ed h fur a son, . Owd Koa 95
Haxin' (asking) An' a /i ma hawkard questions. Spinster sS s. 90
Hay (See also Haay) And rarelv smells the new-mown h, The Owl t 9
Stuff his ribs with mouldy h. Vtswn of Sm 66
Haze (See also Sea-haze) Spread the light h along the , r. ^oa
river-shores. Gardener sD. 264
Purple gauzes, golden h's. Vision of Sin6l
thro' the dripping h The dead weight Enoch Arden 677
' This world was once a fluid h of light. Princess ii lib
And is it that the h of grief In Mem. xxiv 9
The silvery h of summer drawn ; ;' . i "^fof
mingled with the h And made it thicker ; Com. of Arthur 4dS
his dream was changed, the h Descended, ", ^ , ^i
Far in the moonlit h among the hills. Pass, of Arthur 4J
find or feel a way Thro' this blind h, ,t. " j 77 moo
heated h to magnify The charm of Edith— Sisters (E. and h.) i.^
Haze-hidden to a height, the peak U-h, Com. of Arthur 4d0
Hazel (adj.) about the may-pole and in the A a^ Vc jt n
copse, May Queen, A . x s. ii. 11
deeply dawning in the dark of h eyes— LocksleyHall 28
but as lissome as & h wand ; The Brook W
I slide by h covers ; » " j:
Hazel (s) The thick-set ^ dies ; ^''^'' V f^'^ aA
great and small, Went nutting to the h's. Enoch Arden^
Down thro' the whitening h's made a plunge „ .379
In native h's tassel-hung.' ^''r!^' ''^ 1^
Hazel-tree on the bridge beneath the h-t ? May Queen 14
Hazelwood a /^, By autumn nutters haunted, Enoch Arden I
Hazy Across a /i glimmer of the west, 9,''''^7^'' ir Ha
Far over the blue tarns and h seas, Oare^/i and L. 499
Head (Edward) See Edward Head ^,, -^ ,
Head (s) (See also Boat-head, Cradle-head, Death's-head,
Ead, Fountain-head, Hattics, Head, Lady's-head,
Lance-head, Mast-head, Shock-head, WeU-heads) 7 a 7 «
Madonna-wise on either side her h ; Isabel^
Revered Isabel, the crown and h, j n • " 1 q
Thou wilt never raise thine h ^ A mrge ly
from h to tail Came out clear plates Two Voices 11
Dominion in the h and breast.' "
' The simple senses crown'd his h : " „ ii.
Beat time to nothing in my A ^f%.\^- fn
Upon my lap he laid his h : The Sisters 17
I curl'd and comb'd his comely h, -o 1 "t a .A^
The h's and crowns of kings ; -P«^«f / ^/< ^f
You put strange memories in mj h. J- ^- ^ • <^/ ^^ '^
With your feet above my h May Qv^een, N. Y s. E. 6Z
i on his kindly heart and on his silver /j ! „ o/i«
I one that from a casement leans his h, D. of F. Women 246
Bfead (s) (continued) Her murder'd father's h.
Sleep full of rest from h to feet ;
Where faction seldom gathers h,
And heap their ashes on the h ;
As h and heels upon the floor They floimder'd
laid his h upon her lap,
And May with me from h to heel.
She bow'd down her h. Remembering the day
Jack, turn the horses' h's and home again.'
my stiff spine can hold my weary h.
She sank her h upon her arm
a sunny fleck. From h to ancle fine,
Dropt dews upon her golden h, .. — •
shook her h. And shower'd the rippled ringlets to her knee ; Godwa 46
wide-mouth'd h's upon the spout Had cunning eyes „ 56
D. ofF. Women 2Q7
To J. S. 75
You ask me, why, etc. , 13
Love thou thy land 70
The Goose 37
M. d' Arthur 208
Gardener's D. 81
Dora 105
Walk, to the Mail 46
St. S. Stylites 43
Talking Oak 207
224
227
Were shrivell'd into darkness in his /;,
This proverb flashes thro' his h.
You shake your h. A random string
All-graceful h, so richly curl'd,
power to turn This wheel within my h.
Live long, ere from thy topmost h
Live long, nor feel in /* or chest
And lay your hand upon my h,
Dropt her h in the maiden's hand.
To trample round my fallen h.
Then raised her h with lips comprest,
I saw within my ft A gray and gap-tooth'd man
In her left a human h.
Hollow hearts and empty h's !
Then calling down a blessing on his h
over Enoch's early-silvering h
He, shaking his gray h pathetically,
Held his h high, and cared for no man,
' His h is low, and no man cares for him.
As when she laid her h beside my own.
those that held their h's above the crowd,
and holds her h to other stars,
A tonsured h in middle age forlorn,
Whose eyes from under a pyramidal h
For heart, I think, help'd h :
made Still paler the pale h of him,
fork'd Of the near storm, and aiming at his h,
The h's of chiefs and princes fall so fast,
his own h Began to droop, to fall ;
ask'd ; but not a word ; she shook her h.
Like her, he shook his /^.
one that arm'd Her own fair h,
moved the multitude, a thousand h's:
above their h's I saw The feudal warrior lady-clad;
' Where,' Ask'd Walter, patting Lilia's h
o'er his h Uranian Venus hung,
such eyes were in her h, And so much grace and power,
some said thek h's were less : Some men's were small ;
' everywhere Two h's in council,
axehke edge untumable, our H, The Princess.
0 by the bright h of my little niece.
The H of all the golden-shafted firm,
the Muses' h's were touch'd Above the darkness
says the Princess should have been the H,
The h and heart of all our fair she-world,
He ceasing, came a message from the H.
Among her maidens, higher by the h,
spoke and turn'd her sumptuous h with eyes,
' The H, the H, the Princess, O the H ! '
underneath The h of Holofernes peep'd and saw.
And partly that you were my civil h,
seal'd dispatches which the H Took half -amazed.
You have our son : touch not a hair of his h :
after-beauty makes Such h from act to act,
gems and gemlike eyes, And gold and golden h's ;
Not peace she look'd, the H :
' What fear ye, brawlers ? am not I your H ?
all one rag, disprinced from h to heel.
Like some sweet sculpture draped from h to foot.
And at her h a follower of the camp,
70
Day-Bm., Arrival 15
„ L'Envoi 1
38
" Will Water. 84
233
237
Lady Clare 55
» 63
Come not, vihen, etc. 3
The Letters 19
Vision of Sin 59
138
174
Enoch Arden 327
622
714
848
850
881
The Brook 10
195
200
A ylmer
s Field 20
475
623
727
763
834
Sea Dreams 116
148
Princess, Pro. 33
57
118
125
i243
m37
147
173
203
276
405
Hi 21
34
163
168
179
iv 152
176
227
306
379
407
452
481
490
498
1)30
57
60
Head
306
Head
Head (s) {continued) ' Lift up your h, sweet sister : Princess v 64
in the furrow broke the ploughman's h, „ 221
with each light air On our mail'd h's : „ 245
Man with the h and woman with the heart : „ 449
felt it sound and whole from h to foot, „ vi 211
Her A a little bent; „ 269
Lifting his grim h from my wounds. „ 272
ask for him Of your great h — „ 314
That o'er the statues leapt from h to h, „ 366
here and there the small bright h, A light of healing, „ vii 58
f ear'd To incense the H once more ; „ *n
The gravest citizen seems to lose his h, „ Con. 59
Among six boys, h under h, „ 83
0 good gray h which all men knew, Ode on Well. 35
Hadn't a A to manage, and drank himself Grandmother 6
we saw the glisten Of ice, far up on a mountain h. The Daisy 36
And in my h, for half the day, „ 74
the singer shaking his curly h Turn'd as he sat. The Islet 6
Take the hoary Roman h and shatter it, Boadicea 65
Thy fibres net the dreamless h, In Mem. ii 3
save Thy sailor — while thy h is bow'd, „ vi 14
Come then, pure hands, and bear the h „ xviii 9
The Shadow cloak'd from h to foot, .. xxiii 4
And dippest toward the dreamless h, ,, xxxix 5
God shut the doorways of his ft. „ xliv 4
When in the down I sink my h, „ Ixviii 1
The h hath miss'd an earthly wreath : ,, Ixxiii 6
How pure at heart and sound in h, „ xciv 1
Their pensive tablets roimd her h, „ Con. 51
And catch at every mountain h, „ 114
vitriol madness flushes up in the ruffian's h, Maud I iSl
1 bow'd to her father, the wrinkled h of the race ? „ iv 13
walks with his ft in a cloud of poisonous fiies. „ 54
At the ft of the village street, „ vi 10
plucks The slavish hat from the villager's ft ? „ a; 4
Ah God, for a man with heart, ft, hand, „ 60
Gorgonised me from ft to foot With a stony British stare. „ xiii 21
crest Of a peacock, sits on her shining ft, „ xyi 17
haunted by the starry ft Of her whose gentle will „ xviii 22
Shaking her ft at her son and sighing „ xix 24
Here at the ft of a tinkling fall, „ xxi 6
little ft, sunning over with curls, „ xxii 57
My bird with the shining ft, „ // iv 45
And the wheels go over my ft, „ i) 4
tickle the maggot bom in an empty ft, „ 38
she is standing here at my ft ; „ 65
I will cry to the steps above my ft „ 101
king and ft, and made a realm, and reign'd. Com. of Arthur 19
there be many rumours on this ft : „ 178
beheld Far over h's in that long-vaulted haU Gareth and L. 319
A ft with kindling eyes above the throng, „ 646
wherewithal deck the boar's ft ? „ 1073
Sir Gareth's ft prickled beneath his helm ; „ 1397
the women who attired her ft. To please her, Marr. of Geraint 62
Sank her sweet ft upon her gentle breast ; „ 527
her fair ft in the dim-yellow light, „ 600
break perforce Upon a ft so dear in thunder, Geraint and E. 13
Here comes a laggard hanging down his ft, „ 60
' A craven ; how he hangs his ft.' „ 127
Held his ft high, and thought himself a knight, „ 242
But one with arms to guard his ft and yours, „ 427
There in the naked hall, propping his ft, „ 581
found his own dear bride propping his ft, „ 584
answer'd in low voice, her meek ft yet Drooping, „ 640
The russet-bearded ft roU'd on the floor. „ 729
And hung his ft, and halted in reply, „ 811
wander'd from her own King's golden ft, Balin and Balan 513
Or devil or man Guard thou thme ft.' „ 553
Their h's should moulder on the city gates. Merlin and V. 594
Her godlike ft crown'd with spiritual fire, „ 837
she turn'd away, she hung her ft, „ 887
Lancelot and E. 54
Head (s) {continued) ' Nay, by mine ft,' said he, ' I
lose it,
by mine ft she knows his hiding-place.'
He raised his ft, their eyes met and hers fell.
And mine, as ft of all our Table Round,
when the knights had laid her comely ft Low
power To lay the sudden h's of violence flat.
And o'er his ft the Holy Vessel hung (repeat)
on my breviary with ease. Till my ft swims ;
The h's of all her people drew to me,
Make their last ft like Satan in the North.
Working a tapestry, lifted up her ft,
Lancelot, Round whose sick ft all night,
fool, said Tristram, ' I would break thy ft.
sank his ft in mire, and slimed themselves :
full passionately. Her ft upon her hands.
Each with a beacon-star upon his ft,
and bow'd her ft nor spake.
Lest but a hair of this low ft be harm'd.
The realms together under me, their H,
die To see thee, laying there thy golden ft.
And in the darkness o'er her fallen ft,
laid his ft upon her lap.
And dipping his ft low beneath the verge.
Who with his ft below the surface dropt
and dimly knows His ft shall rise no more :
When the effect weigh'd seas upon my ft
stoled from ft to foot in flowing black ;
in Julian's land They never nail a dumb ft up in elm)
on her ft A diamond circlet,
for the name at the ft of my verse is thine,
the boy can hold up his ft,
I must ha' been light i' my ft —
was wounded again in the side and the ft,
A hand upon the ft of either child,
as far as the ft of the stair.
To thee, dead wood, I bow not ft nor knees
A thousand marks are set upon my ft.
that ever swarm about And cloud the highest h's,
I swore I would strike off his ft.
like a golden image was pollen'd from ft to feet
Plunged ft down in the sea,
around his ft The glorious goddess wreath'd
from his ft the splendour went to heaven,
o'er the great Peleion's ft Bum'd,
Or on your ft their rosy feet.
This wreath, above his honour'd ft,
and there Lost, ft and heart, in the chances
Lancelot and E. 658
714
1312
1328
1337
Holy Grail 310
„ 512, 520
546
601
Last Tournament 98
129
138
268
471
Guinevere 181
241
310
447
462
535
583
Pass, of Arthur 376
Lover's Tale i 509
636
639
660
ii 85
ii>37
288
To A. Tennyson 6
First Quarrel 5
82
The Revenge 68
Sisters {E. and E.) 55
In the Child. Hosp. 43
Sir J. Oldcastle 128
195
Columbus 120
V. of Maddune 2
49
82
Achilles over the T. 4
14
28
To E. Fitzgerald 9
Tiresias 213
The Wreck 30
She shook her ft. And the Motherless Mother kiss'd it.
61
Ancient Sage 124
Tomorrow 79
LocJcsley H., Sixty 135
Epilogue 47
Bead Prophet 55
Demeter and P. 21
83
129
The Ring 313
Happy 26
„ 81
plunged, and caught, And set it on his ft,
King Had on his cuirass worn our Lady's H,
Charge at the ft of all his Table Round,
and tiie h Pierced thro' his side,
294
304
489
The palsy wags his ft ;
she lifted her ft — ' He said he would meet me
Tumble Nature heel o'er ft,
' The stars with ft sublime,'
We needs must scan him from ft to feet
And robed thee in his day from ft to feet —
came On three gray h's beneath a gleaming rift.
Those gray h's. What meant they
came And saw you, shook her ft, and patted yours.
Who yearn to lay my loving ft
slant his bolt from falling on your ft —
leper like yourself, my love, from ft to heel. „ 88
The coals of fire you heap upon my ft Romney's R. 141
let me lean my ft upon your breast. „ 154
And stand with my ft in the zenith, Parnassus 6
stared upon By ghastlier than the Gorgon ft, Death of CEnone 71
Then her ft sank, she slept, „ 78
And muffling up her comely ft, „ 104
The Christians own a Spiritual H ; Akhar's Dream 153
You have set a price on his ft : Bandit's Death 7
do you doubt me ? Here is his ft ! „ 42
was a Scripture that rang thro' his ft, The Dreamer 2
Edith bow'd her stately ft, The Tourney 13
Edith Montfort bow'd her ft, „ 15
He&d (s) An' 'e kep his ft hoop like a king, Owd Rod 9
An' the Heagle 'as bed two h's „ 25
Head
307
Hear
Head (verb) Heaven Ks the count of crimes D. of F. Women 201
to h These rhymings with your name, Pro. to Gen. Hamley 19
Head-blow Some old h-h not heeded in his youth Gareth and L. 714
Headed (See also Bare-headed, Brazen-headed, Clear-
headed, Glassy-headed, Hoar-headed, Hoary-
headed, Lean-headed, Light-headed, Many-
headed, Seven-headed, Sharp-headed, White-
headed) arrows of his thoughts were h And
wing'd with flame, The Poet 11
In shining draperies, h like a star, Princess ii 109
Head-foremost To drop h-f in the jaws In Mem. xxxiv 15
Not plunge h from the mountain there, Lover's Tale iv 41
all ablaze too plimging in the lake H-f — The Ring 252
Head-heavy thxis he fell H-h ; Last Tournament 468
Head-hunter H-h's and boats of Dahomey The Dawn 5
Headland Flames, on the windy h flare ! W. to Alexandra 16
He saw them — h after h flame Guinevere 243
Headless Fly twanging h arrows at the hearts, Princess ii 402
Headlong and so hurl'd him h o'er the bridge Gareth and L. 1153
The damsel's h error thro' the wood — „ 1215
whose inroad nowhere scales Their h passes, Montenegro 5
Headstone About the moss'd h : Claribel 12
And at my h whisper low, My life is full 24
Head-waiter 0 plump h-w at The Cock, Will Water. 1
H-w, honour'd by the guest Half-mused, „ 73
And one became h-w. „ 144
H-w of the chop-house here, „ 209
Heagle (eagle) An' the H 'as hed two heiids Owd Rod 25
Heal (See also All-heal) I will h me of my grievous
wound.' M. d' Arthur 264
1 can h him. Power goes forth from me. St. S. Stylites 145
h me with your pardon ere you go.' Princess Hi 65
To spUl his blood and h the land : The Victim 44
a harm no preacher can h ; Maud I iv 22
h the world of all their wickedness ! Holy Grail 94
and harm'd where she would h ; Guinevere 355
treat their loathsome hurts and h mine own ; „ 686
I mil h me of my grievous wound.' Pass, of Arthur 432
the hand that would help me, would h me — The Wreck 56
love which once was mine, Help, h me. Death of (Enone 46
' He, whom thou wouldst not h\' „ 101
Heal'd To touch my body and be h, St. S. Stylites 79
They say that they are h. „ 146
He passes and is h and cannot die ' — Gareth and L. 503
he was h at once, By faith, of all his ills. Holy Grail 55
and all the world be h.' „ 128
that h Thy hurt and heart with unguent and
caress — Last Tournament 594
the woimd that would not be h, Def. of Lucknow 84
he h me with sorrow for evermore. The Wreck 58
blind or deaf, and then Suddenly h. Ancient Sage 176
Healing before we came. This craft of h. Princess Hi 320
A light of h, glanced about the couch, „ vii 59
while Geraint lay h of his hurt, Geraint and E. 931
Lancelot might have seen, The Holy Cup of h ; Holy Grail 655
And after h of his grievous wound Pass, of Arthur 450
Health In glowing h, with boundless wealth, L. C. V. de Vere 61
breathing h and peace upon her breast : Audley Court 68
Seven happy years of h and competence, Enoch Arden 82
Now seaward-bound for h they gain'd a coast, Sea Dreams 16
Huge women blowzed with h. Princess iv 279
I that have wasted here h, wealth, and time, „ 352
poor men wealth, Than sick men h — „ 460
As drinking h to bride and groom In Mem., Con. 83
double h, The crowning cup, the three-times-three, „ 103
One bloom of youth, h, beauty. Sisters (E. and E.) 120
Had set the blossom of her h again, „ 151
redder than rosiest h or than utterest shame, V. of Maeldune 65
life without sun, without h, without hope, Despair 7
an' I been Dhrinkin' yer h Tomorrow 12
give me a thrifle to dhrink yer h in potheen. „ 98
I Had been abroad for my poor h The Ring 101
would flower into full h Among our heath „ 317
' Muriel's h Had weaken'd, „ 356
Youth and H, and birth and wealth, By an Evolution. 8
Healthful And all about a h people stept
Her countenance with quick and h blood —
Healthfuller Make their neighbourhood h,
Healthly A h frame, a quiet mind.'
So h, sound, and clear and whole,
Heap (s) (See also Heap) wealth no more shall rest in
mounded h's,
By h's of gourds, and skins of wine.
And h's of living gold that daily grow,
Each hurling down a A of things that rang
crown'd With my slain self the h's of whom I
slew —
I saw him, after, stand High on a,h ot slain,
horses stumbling as they trode On h's of ruin.
Heap (s) H's an' h's o' booiiks, I ha' see'd 'em.
An I heiird great h's o' the snaw
Heap (verb) And h their ashes on the head ;
coals of fire you h upon my head
Heaped Of h hills that mound the sea,
Heap'd-Heapt Heap'd over with a mound of
grass.
Pain heap'd ten-hundred-fold to this,
heap'd Their firewood, and the winds from off
the plain
Gareth and L. 315
Lover's Tale i 97
On Jub. Q. Victoria 32
Two Voices 99
Miller's D. 15
Golden Year 32
Vision of Sin 13
Aylmer's Field 655
Geraint and E. 594
Balin and Balan 178
Lancelot and E. 307
Holy Grail 717
Village Wife 71
Owd Rod 41
Love thou thy land 70
Romney's R. 141
Ode to Memory 98
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 67
St. S. Stylites 23
Spec, of Iliad 6
heap'd the whole inherited sin On that huge scapegoat Maud I xiii 41
Heap'd on her terms of disgrace,
heap'd The pieces of his armour in one place,
Tho' heapt in mounds and ridges all the sea
Heaping Still h on the fear of ill
Heapt See Heap'd
Hear (See also 'Ear) at a burial to h The creaking
cords which wound
you may h him sob and sigh
you cannot h From the groves within
never would h it : your ears are so dull ;
I cry aloud : none h my cries,
I h the roaring of the sea.
To h the murmur of the strife,
Come down, come down, and h me speak :
I h what I would h from thee ;
Kate will not h of lovers' sighs.
H a song that echoes cheerly
H's little of the false or just.'
he h's His country's war-song thrill his ears :
' He will not h the north-wind rave,
' He seems to ^ a Heavenly Friend,
Or from the bridge I lean'd to h
H me, O Earth, h me, 0 Hills,
H me, for I vnll speak,
unheard H all, and see thy Paris judge of Gods.'
heard me not. Or hearing would not h me,
mother, h me yet before I die. (repeat)
as I A Dead sounds at night come from
H me, O Earth. I will not die alone.
You seem'd to h them climb and faU
king to h Of wisdom and of law.
my soul to h her echo'd song Throb thro'
that h's all night The plunging seas
h the dully sound Of human footsteps
h's the low Moan of an unknown sea ;
word That scarce is fit for you to h ;
I shall h you when you pass,
I h the bleating of the lamb.
I did not h the dog howl, mother.
To h each other's whisper'd speech ;
To h the dewy echoes calling From cave to cave
to h and see the far-off sparkling brine.
Only to h were sweet,
I h thee not at all, or hoarse
Ev'n now we h with inward strife
like a horse That h's the corn-bin open,
h The windy clanging of the minster clock ;
' H how the bushes echo !
Yet for the pleasure that I took to h,
blackbird on the pippin hung To h him,
II i 14
Geraint and E. 373
Holy Grail 798
Two Voices 107
Supp. Confessions 35
A spirit haunts 5
Poet's Mind 19
35
Oriana 73
„ 98
Margaret 23
56
Eleanore 141
Kate 20
L. of Shalotti 30
Two Voices 117
152
259
295
Miller's D. 49
(Enone 36
., 39
„ 90
„ 171
(Enone 207, 220, 230, 245, 256
(Enone 248
„ 257
Palace of AHlO
111
175
250
275
279
L. C. V. de Vere 38
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 31
Con. 2
21
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 59
94
98
99
The "Blackbird 19
Love thou thy land 53
The Epic 45
Gardener's D. 37
228
Audley Court 39
Hear
Hear {continued) I do not h the bells upon my cap,
my ears could h Her lightest breath ;
About the windings of the marge to h
nor heard of her, nor cared to h. (repeat)
I scarce can h the people hum
(And h me with thine ears,)
And h me swear a solemn oath,
that paused Among her stars to A us ;
h These measured words, my work of yestermom.
tremulous eyes that fill with tears To A me ?
and could h the lips that kiss'd Whispering
on the moorland did we h the copses ring.
Thou shalt h the ' Never, never,'
' 0 wake for ever, love,' she h's,
That lets thee neither h nor see :
But what is that Ih? a sound
I A a noise of hymns :
I A a voice but none are there ;
Let him h my song.
H's him lovingly converse.
Before you h my marriage vow.'
Annie seem'd to h Her own death-scaffold
H's and not h's, and lets it overflow.
Nor ever h a kindly voice,
' Dead,' clamour'd the good woman, ' h him
left Their own gray tower, or plain-faced tabernacle
To A him ;
you do but A the tide.
But wiU you A my dream.
He, dying lately, left her, as I A,
To A my father's clamour at our backs
my very ears were hot To A them :
A each other speak for noise Of clocks
' We scarcely thought in our own hall to A
there was one to A And help them ?
H my conditions : promise (otherwise You perish)
then the Doctors ! 0 to A The Doctors !
O A me, pardon me.
0 hark, 0 A ! how thin and clear.
Blow, let us A the purple glens replying :
A A tnmipet in the distance pealing news
tell her what they were, and she to A :
we shall A of it From Lady Psyche : '
For thus I A ; and known at last (my work)
we A You hold the woman is the better man;
A me, for I bear, Tho' man, yet human,
1 stood and seem'd to A As in a poplar grove
they hate to A me like a wind Wailing
when I A you prate I almost think
' Amazed am I to A Your Highness :
h's his burial talk'd of by his friends,
A The tides of Music's golden sea
Eh ! — but he wouldn't A me —
Harry and Charhe, I A them too —
And only A the magpie gossip
That it makes one weary to A.'
I A the roll of the ages,
cannot A The sullen Lethe rolUng doom
Speak to Him thou for He h's,
And the ear of man cannot A,
But if we could see and A, this Vision-
Did they A me, would they listen,
fl Icenian, Catieuchlanian, A (repeat)
308
Hear
Edwin Morris 56
64
94
138
St. S. Stylites 38
Talking Oak 82
281
I^ve and Duty 74
Golden Year 20
Tithonus 27
60
Locksley Hall 35
83
Day-Dm., Depart. 11
„ L'Envoi 52
Amphion 73
Sir Galahad 28
30
The Captain 4
L. of Burleigh 26
The Letters 8
Enoch Arden 174
209
582
840
Aylmer's Field 619
Sea Dreams 84
203
Princess i 78
105
135
215
m53
267
295
421
Hi 31
iv 7
11
80
323
328
347
409
424
t)12
A it. Spirit of C&sivelaitn l ^H% Gods ! the Gods
have heard it.
Till the victim A within and yearn to hurry
I A the noise about thy keel ;
I A the beU struck in the night :
And A the ritual of the dead.
The traveller h's me now and then,
To A her weeping by his grave ?
turn mine ears and A The moanings of the homeless sea,
And A thy laurel whisper sweet
I A it now, and o'er and o'er,
I A a wizard music roll,
152
w324
„ vii 152
Ode on Well. 251
Grand-mother 8
81
To F. D. Maurice 19
The Islet 29
Spiteful Letter 8
Lit. Squabbles 10
High. Pantheism 11
17
18
Boddicea 8
Boadicea 10, 34, 47
20
58
In Mem. x 1
2
xviii 12
xxi 5
xxxi 4
XXXV 8
xxxvii 7
Ivii 13
Ixx 14
Hear (continued) I A the sentence that he speaks;
We cannot A each other speak,
hung to A The rapt oration flowing free
heart and ear were fed To A him,
I A a wind Of memory murmuring the past.
A The wish too strong for words to name;
And A the household jar within.
That h's the latest linnet trill,
And sing the songs he loved to A.
I A a chirp of birds ;
To A the tidings of my friend.
And A at times a sentinel Who moves about
A A deeper voice across the storm,
I A thee where the waters run ;
A voice as unto him that h's,
Still ! I will A you no more,
I A the dead at midday moan.
Did I A it half in a doze Long since,
Strange, that I A two men,
I wish I could A again The chivalrous battle-song
The larkspur listens, ' I A, I A ; '
My heart would A her and beat.
My dust would A her and beat.
Do I A her sing as of old,
to A a dead man chatter Is enough to drive one mad.
I A A cry from out the dawning of my life,
A mother weeping, and I A her say,
said the King, ' and A ye such a cry ?
To h him speak before he left his life.
H the child's story.'
nor sees, nor h's, nor speaks, nor knows.
H yet once more the story of the child.
H me— this mom I stood in Arthur's hall,
Than A thee so missay me and revile.
H a parable of the knave,
stay'd Waiting to A the hounds ;
There is good chance that we shall A the hounds
They would not A me speak :
Hath ask'd again, and ever loved to A ;
thro' the crash of the near cataract h's
soldiers wont to A His voice in battle.
And A him breathing low and equally.
What thing soever ye may A, or see,
I A the violent threats you do not A,
And ears to A you even in his dreams.'
Feeding like horses when you A them feed ;
Submit, and A the judgment of the King.'
the judgment of the King of kings,'
Damsel and lover ? A not what I A. ^„n„
swan-mother, sitting, when she h's A strange knee rustle 353
1 e scarce can overpraise, will A and know. Merlin and V. 92
By Heaven that h's I tell you the clean truth, „ 343
will ye A The legend as in guerdon for your rhyme » " 553
And therefore A my words : go to the jousts : Lancdotand E. 136
we h It said Ihat men go down before your spear „ 148
as I A It is a fair lai^e diamond, — " 227
' H, but hold my name Hidden, " 415
we shall A anon. Needs must we A.' " 635
' we needs must A anon Of him, " 75g
till the ear Wearies to A it, " ggg
'Speak: that I live to A,' he said, 'is yours.' " 928
I A of rumours flying thro' your court. ' " 1190
' My lord liege Arthur, and all ye that A, " 1290
To A the manner of thy %ht and fall ; Pelleas and E. 347
T .n^i 7\^^^ '■ \ ?vf '* ^''l ^ ^^'i Tournament 348
1, and Arthur and the angels A, 350
lock up my tongue From uttering freely what I freely A '■> " 694
A the garnet-headed yaffingale Mock them : 700
And miss to A high talk of noble deeds Guinevere 499
Thro' the thick night I h the trumpet 559
I A the steps of Modred in the west, Pass of Arthur 59
you may A The moaning of the woman and the child, Lover's Tale i 519
I heard and trembled, yet I could but A ; 570
and then I seem'd to A Its murmur, as the drowning
seaman h's, 00 a
In Mem. Ixxx 10
Ixxxii 16
Ixxxvii 31
Ixxxix 23
xcii 7
xciii 13
xciv 16
clO
cvii 24
cxix 5
cxxvi 3
9
cxxvii 3
cxxx 2
cxxxi 6
Maud Iv23
vi 70
vii 1
13
a; 53
xxii 65
69
71
II iv 44
1)19
Com. of Arthur 332
334
337
362
Gareth and L. 39
81
100
• 855
945
1008
Marr. of Geraint 163
182
421
436
Geraint and E. 172
174
372
415
420
429
606
He A's
799
Balin and Balan 282
Hear
309
Heard
Lover's Tale ii 14
iv 160
243
Rizpah 45
48
62
82
85
Sisters {E. and E.) 193
ViUaffe Wife 22
70
Def. of Lucknow 26
Sir J. Oldcastie 42
143
Columbus 159
238
Tiresias 72
90
„ 155
Despair 47
Ancient Sage 31
76
The Flight 67
90
Locksley H., Sixty 116
262
Hear (continued) Paused in their course to h me,
I say the bird That will not h my call,
Laud me not Before my time, but h me to the close.
h that cry of my boy that was dead,
you know that I couldn't but h ;
and mercy, the Lord ' — let me h it again ;
But I cannot h what you say
Nay — you can h it yourself —
yet she thinks She sees you when she h's.
Not es I cares fur to h ony harm,
I h's es soom o' thy booiJks
you can h him — the murderous mole !
they came to h their preacher.
Do penance in his heart, God h's him.'
I shall h his voice again —
readier, if the King would h, to lead One last crusade
tum'd upon his heel to h My warning
I can h Too plainly what fidl tides of oiiset sap
h, and tho' I speak the truth Believe I speak it,
the waters — you h them call !
If thou would'st h the Nameless,
She h's the lark within the songless egg.
And tho' these fathers will not h,
and h the waters roar,
h the voices from the field.
Shall I h in one dark room a wailing,
H's he now the Voice that wrong'd him ?
Moon of married hearts, H me, you !
I h your Mother's voice in yours.
I h her yet — A sound of anger like a distant storm.
The storm, you h Far-off, is Muriel —
poor Muriel when you h What follows !
All the world will h a voice
1 7t a charm of song thro' all the land,
and h their words On pathway'd plains ;
Ih a. death-bed Angel whisper ' Hope.'
But 1 A no yelp of the beast,
H my cataract's Downward thunder
h The clash of tides that meet in narrow seas. —
but we h Music : our palace is awake,
H thy myriad laureates hail thee
Heard (See also 'Eard, Far-heard, Half-heard, Hard,
Heard) voice of the bird Shall no more be h,
Waking she h the night-fowl crow :
We h the steeds to battle going.
She saw me fight, she h me caU,
Hast thou h the butterflies What they say
Elsinore H the war moan along the distant sea,
I have h that, somewhere in the main.
She has h a whisper say.
They h her singing her last song,
H a carol, mournful, holy,
And h her native breezes pass,
' But h, by secret transport led,
And oft I h the tender dove In firry woodlands
Sometimes I h you sing within ;
Then first I h the voice of her.
Give it to Pallas ! ' but he h me not,
Indeed I h one bitter word That scarce is fit
wild March-morning I h the angels call ;
wild March-morning I h them call my soul,
who made His music h below ;
I h sounds of insult, shame, and wrong,
Sudden Ih a voice that cried,
I h my name Sigh'd forth with life
h A noise of some one coming thro' the lawn,
We h the lion roaring from his den ;
I h Him, for He spake, and grief became
I h just now the crowing cock.
Once h at dead of night to greet Troy's wandering
prince, On a Mourner 32
She h the torrents meet. Of old sat Freedom 4
half-awake I h The parson taking wide and wider sweeps. The Epic 13
What is it thou hast seen ? or what hast h ?
(repeat) M. d' Arthur 68, 114
The Ring 4
28
,, 118
„ 138
„ 273
Forlorn 27
Prog, of Spring 47
82
Romney's R. 148
By an Evolution. 19
To Master of B. 15
Akbar's Dream 57
199
„ Hymn 6
All Things wiM Die 25
Mariana 26
Oriana 15
„ 32
Adeline 28
Buonaparte 10
// / were loved 7
L. of Shaiott ii 3
iv 26
28
Mariana in the S. 43
Two Voices 214
Miller's D. 41
123
dnone 107
„ 170
L. C. V. de Vere 37
May Queen, Con. 25
28
D. of F. Women 4
19
123
153
177
222
227
D. of the O. Year 38
Heard {continued) I h the ripple washing in the reeds,
' I h the water lapping on the crag.
Speak out : what is it thou hast h, or seen ? '
He h the deep behind him, and a cry Before,
and h indeed The clear church-bells ring
Who had not h Of Rose, the Gardener's daughter ?
when I h her name My heart was like a prophet
Born out of everything I h and saw.
Nor h us come, nor from her tendance turn'd
all that night I h the watchman peal The sliding season
all that night I h The heavy clocks knolling
when I A his deep ' I will,' Breathed,
left his wife behind ; for so I h.
I had h it was this bill that past,
h with beating heart The Sweet-Gale rustle
nor h of her, nor cared to hear,
since I h him make reply Is many a weary hour ;
That oft hast h my vows,
I h them blast The steep slate-quarry.
Like that stremge song I h Apollo sing.
When I h my days before me,
H the heavens fill with shouting,
She sleeps : her breathings are not h
But they h the foeman's thunder Roaring
Then methought I ^ a mellow sound,
they that h it sigh'd. Panted hand-in-hand
At last I A a voice upon the slope Cry
Him running on thus hopefully she h,
she h, H and not h him ;
h The myriad shriek of wheeling ocean-fowl.
He h the pealing of his parish beUs ;
h them talking, his long-bounden tongue Was loosen'd.
Because things seen are mightier than things h,
M. d' Arthur 70
116
150
184
Ep. 30
Gardener's D. 51
62
66
144
182
208
Walk, to the Mail 47
67
Edwin Morris 109
138
Talking Oak 25
98
Golden Year 75
Tithonus 62
Locksley Hall 110
123
Day-Dm., Sleep B. 17
The Captain 41
Vision of Sin 14
18
219
Enoch Arden 201
205
582
615
644
766
As the woman h. Fast flow'd the current of her easy tears, „ 864
' Have you not h ? ' said Katie, The Brook 221
worse than had he h his priest Preach Aylmer's Field 43
H the good mother softly whisper ' Bless, „ 187
And neither loved nor Uked the thing he h. „ 250
had Sir Aylmer h — Nay, but he must — „ 261
till he h the ponderous door Close, _ „ 337
thunder from within the cliiis H thro' the living roar. Sea Dreams 56
1 woke, I h the clash so clearly. „ 136
often when the woman h his foot Return Lucretius 5
for thrice I h the rain Rushing ; „ 26
She h him raging, h him fall ; „ 276
he h her speak ; She scared him ; life ! Princess i 185
' having seen And h the Lady Psyche.' „ ii 211
' Ah — ^Melissa — you ! You hus?' „ 331
' 0 pardon me I ^, I could not help it, „ 332
In each we sat, we h The grave Professor. „ 370
like parting hopes I h them passing from me : „ iv 173
behind I h the pufi'd pursuer ; „ 265
we h In the dead hush the papers that she held Rustle : „ 389
I h of, after seen The dwarfs of presage : „ 446
saw the lights and h The voices murmuring. „ 558
Thy voice is h thro' rolling drums, „ 577
we h The drowsy folds of our great ensign „ v7
She h, she moved. She moan'd, „ 71
prated peace, when first I h War-music, „ 265
h Of those that iron-cramp'd their women's feet ; „ 375
Seeing I saw not, hearing not Ih: „ vil9
My father h and ran In on the lists, „ 26
they h A noise of songs they would not understand : „ 39
clamouring on, till Ida h, Look'd up, „ 150
' I've h that there is iron in the blood, „ 230
you had a heart — I A her say it — „ 234
on her foot she hung A moment, and she h, „ vii 80
I h her turn the page ; „ 190
I have h Of your strange doubts : „ 335
His captain's-ear has h them boom Bellowing victory, Ode on Well. 65
My Lords, we h you speak : Third of Feb. 1
Elburz and all the Caucasus have h; W.to Marie Alex. 13
He /j a fierce mermaiden cry, _ Sailor Boy 6
AU night have I h the voice Rave Voice and the P. 5
Mad and maddening all that h her Boddicea 4
Heard
310
Heard
Heard {continued) ' Hear it, Gods ! the Gods have /* it
a murmur h aerially,
There I h them in the darkness,
When was a harsher sound ever h,
I have h of thorns and briers.
The words that are not h again.
Before I h those bells again :
We h them sweep the winter land ;
And h once more in college fanes
We h behind the woodbine veil
The brook alone far-ofi was h,
And yet myself have h him say,
The roofs, that h our earUest cry,
h The low love-language of the bird
The flippant put himself to school And h thee,
the world's great work is h Beginning,
1 h a, voice ' beheve no more ' And h an ever-breaking
shore
I h The shrill-edged shriek of a mother
I have h, I know not whence,
I hno longer The snowy-banded,
I A no sound where I stood But the rivulet
even then I h her close the door.
All night have the roses h The flute.
For I h your rivulet faU From the lake
That h me softly call,
I ^ it shouted at once from the top
for he h of Arthur newly crown'd.
But h the call, and came : and Guinevere
he h, Leodogi'an in heart Debating —
there was h among the holy hymns A voice
his knights have h That God hath told the King
h him Kingly speak, and doubted him No more
Before the wakeful mother h him, went,
we have h from our wise men at home To Northward,
ascending h A voice, the voice of Arthur,
having h that Arthur of his grace Had made
For an ye A a music,
I h thee call thyself a knave, —
nor have I h the voice.
And muffled voices h, and shadows past ;
nor yet was h The world's loud whisper
He h but fragments of her later words,
but k instead A sudden sound of hoofs,
thinking that he h The noble hart at bay,
H by the lander in a lonely isle,
this dear child hath often h me praise
And tho' I h him call you fairest fair.
And h one crying to his fellow, ' Look,
h them boast That they would slay you,
his own ear had h Call herself false :
thought she h the wild Earl at the door,
for he rode As if he A not,
Enid h the clashing of his fall,
She spake so low he hardly h her speak,
This h Geraint, and grasping at his sword,
tho' mine own ears h you yestermom —
I h you say, that you were no tine wife :
for I h He had spoken evil of me ;
Follow'd the Queen ; Sir Balin h her ' Prince,
in a moment h them pass like wolves Howling ;
h and thought ' The scream of that Wood-devil
Mark The Cornish King, had h a wandering voice,
sat, h, watch'd And whisper'd :
They h and let her be.
and h in thought Their lavish comment
I h the great Sir Lancelot sing it once,
other was the song that once I A By this huge oak,
And h their voices talk behind the wall,
spoke in words part h, in whispers part,
Vivien, fearing heaven had h her oath,
in liLs heart // murmure ' Lo, thou likewise
Elaine, and h her name so tost about,
H from the Baron that, ten years before,
she h Sir Lancelot cry in the court,
Boadicea 21
24
36
Trans, of Homer 3
JVindow, Marr. Morn. 20
In Mem. xviii 20
xxviii 16
XXX 10
Ixxxvii 5
Ixxxix 50
xcv 7
xcviii 20
cii 3
10
ex 11
cxxi 10
cxxiv 10
Maud I ilb
67
„ via 9
„ xiv 28
„ xviii 11
„ xxii 13
36
„ IlivlQ
Com. of Arthur 41
47
140
290
488
Gareth and L. 125
180
201
317
393
275
1163
1336
1373
Marr. of Geraint 26
113
163
232
330
434
720
Geraint and E. 59
73
113
381
452
509
643
725
740
742
Balin and Balan 57
250
407
547
Merlin and V. 8
138
146
150
385
405
631
839
940
Lancelot and E. 55
233
272
344
Heard {continued) They rose, h mass, broke fast, and
rode away : Lancelot and E. 415
She, that had h the noise of it before, „ 731
when she h his horse upon the stones, „ 980
still she h him, still his picture form'd „ 992
the brothers h, and thought With shuddering, „ 1021
chanted snatches of mysterious hymns H on the
winding waters, „ 1408
We h not half of what he said. Holy Grail 43
I ^ a sound As of a silver horn „ 108
this Galahad, when he h My sister's vision, „ 139
Galahad, when he h of Merlin's doom. Cried, „ 177
we /j A cracking and a riving of the roofs, „ 182
I h the sound, I saw the light, „ 280
I saw the Holy Grail and h a cry — „ 291
' We have h of thee : thou art our greatest knight, „ 603
He h the hollow-ringing heavens sweep Over him „ 678
I told him all thyself hast h, „ 736
I h the shingle grinding in the surge, „ 811
h a voice, ' Doubt not, go forward ; „ 823
But always in the quiet house I h, „ 832
I h, ' Glory and joy and honour to our Lord „ 838
h the King Had let proclaim a tournament — Pelleas and E. 10
This her damsels h, „ 200
He h her voice ; Then let the strong hand, „ 233
' Thou fool,' she said, ' I never h his voice „ 255
PeUeas had h sung before the Queen, „ 397
And h but his own steps, and his own heart Beating, „ 416
hast not h That Lancelot '■ — there he check'd himself „ 526
beneath a winding wall of rock H a child wail. Last Tournament 12
he h The voice that billow'd round the barriers „ 166
And /i it ring as true as tested gold.' „ 284
tonguesters of the court she had not h. „ 393
the Bed Knight h, and all, „ 441
and I that h her whine And snivel, „ 449
H in dead night along that table-shore, „ 463
Nor h the King for their own cries, „ 472
h The hounds of Mark, and felt the goodly hounds „ 502
h the feet of Tristram grind The spiring stone „ 510
Murmuring a light song I had h thee sing, „ 614
H by the watcher in a haunted house, Guinevere 73
Vivien, lurking, h. She told Sir Modred. „ 98
h the Spirits of the waste and weald Moan as she fled, or
thought she h them moan : „ 129
when she h, the Queen look'd up, and said, „ 164
' Have we not h the bridegroom is so sweet ? „ 177
down the coast, he h Strange music, „ 238
in the darkness h his armed feet Pause by her ; „ 418
H in his tent the moanings of the King : Pass, of Arthur 8
This h the bold Sir Bedivere and spake : „ 50
Nor any cry of Christian h thereon, „ 128
What is it thou hast seen ? or what hast h ? ' (repeat)
I h the ripple washing in the reeds,
I h the water lapping on the crag.
Speak out : what is it thou hast h, or seen ? '
He h the deep behind him, and a cry Before,
we lately h A strain to shame us
and show us That we are surely h.
I too have h a sound — ^perchance of streams
I h and trembled, yet I could but hear ;
now first h with any sense of pain.
The hollow caverns h me — the black brooks Of the
midforest h me —
H yet once more the tolling bell,
I A a groaning overhead, and climb'd The moulder'd stairs
And h him muttering, ' So hke, so like ;
we h them a-ringing the bell,
For I h it abroad in the fields
you — and what have you h ?
' 0 mother ! ' I h him cry.
the first may be last — I have h it in church —
H, have you ? what ? they have told you
H ! have you ever h ! when the storm on the doivns
I h Wheels, and a noise of welcome at the
doors— Sisters {E. and E.) 148
236, 282
238
284
318
352
To the Queen it 14
Lover's Tale i 365
522
570
709
a 11
iv29
136
325
First Quarrel 21
32
Rizpah 13
„ 42
„ 66
„ 69
„ 71
Heard
311
Heart
Heard {continued) I h 'iin a roomlin' by, VMage Wife 122
but I know that I h hini say ' All very well- In the Child. Hosp. 21
Emmie had /i him. Softly she caU'd from her cot „ 4b
was a phantom cry that I A as I tost about, ,. og
The Lord of the chUdren had /i her, .- '^
I h his voice between The thunders Columbus 145
I A his voice, ' Be not cast down. „ lo^
a hundred who h it would rush on a thousand ^r r i^ 7j oa
lances ^- "/ Maeldune 24
past to the Isle of Witches and h their musical cry— ,, 97
and we pray'd as we h him pray,
oft we two have h St. Mai-y's chimes !
cry of iEakidSs Was h among the Trojans,
Two voices h on earth no more ;
Have h this footstep fall,
I A a voice that said ' Henceforth be blmd,
who h And h not, when I spake of famine,
are a song H in the future ;
H from the roofs by night,
My hands, when I h him coming would drop
I knew not what, when I h that voice, —
brute mother who never has h us groan !
That nightingale is h !
Powers, that rule Were never h or seen.'
and h his passionate vow,
while I h the curlews call,
only h in silence from the silence of a tomb.
Because you h the lines I read
for he spoke and the people h,
breathing in his sleep, E by the land.
thy voice, a music h Thro' all the yells and
counter-yells
And one drear sound I have not h,
and h The murmius of their temples chant-
ing me,
I h one voice from all the three ' We know not,
So he, the God of dreams, who h my cry,
Voices of the day Are h across the Voices
I h the sober rook And carrion crow cry ' Mortgage
I that h, and changed the prayer
There ! I h Our cuckoo call.
My birds would sing. You h not.
long ravine below. She h a wailing cry,
shouted, and the shepherds h and came.
she h The shriek of some lost life
h an answer ' Wake Thou deedless dreamer.
And at his ear he A a whisper ' Rome '
on to reach Honorius, till he h them,
Iha. mocking laugh ' the new KorAn ! '
field without were seen or h Fires of Svittee,
To have seen thee, and h thee, and known.
They h, they bided their time.
and /i as we crouch'd below, The clatter of arms,
when he h what an end was mine ?
tho' faintly h Until the great Hereafter.
Heiifd An' I ft great heaps o' the snaw
Hearer While thus he spoke, his h's wept ;
outran The h in its fiery course ;
and all h's were amazed.
himibly hopeful, rose Fixt on her h's,
Hear'st Thou h the village hammer clink,
' H thou this great voice that shakes the world.
Hearing (part,) Or h would not hear me.
How sweet it were, h the downward stream,
H the holy organ rolling waves Of sound
fe his mischance, Came, for he knew the man
That shook the heart of Edith h him.
Seeing I saw not, h not I heard :
h her tumultuous adversaries
This, Gareth h from a squire of Lot
And Gareth h ever stronglier smote,
Not h any more his noble voice,
(Who h her own name had stol'n away)
red and pale Across the face of Enid h her ;
crowd, E he had a difference with their pnests,
125
To W. E. Brookfield 3
Achilles over the T. 23
To E. Fitzgerald 41
Tiresias 27
„ 48
„ 59
„ 125
„ 140
The Wreck 27
52
Despair 98
Ancient Sage 20
30
The Flight 83
Lock-sley E., Sixty 3
74
Pro. to Gen. Eamley 17
Dead Prophet 33
Early Spring 24
To Duke of Argyll 7
To Marq. of Dufferin 40
Demeter and P. 71
84
91
The Ring 40
„ 173
Eappy 55
To Mary Boyle 5
19
Death of CEnone 20
56
89
St Telemachus 20
26
77
Akbar's Dream 183
195
Bandit's Death 4
14
23
Charity 17
Death of the Duke of C. 16
Owd Boa 41
Aylmer's Field 722
In Mem. cix 8
Gareth and L. 655
Merlin and V. 87
In Mem. cxxi 15
Pass, of Arthur 139
(Enone 171
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 54
D. of F. Women 191
Enoch Arden 120
Aylmer's Field 63
Princess vi 19
Boadicea 78
Gareth and L. 531
1141
Marr. of Geraint 98
507
524
Eoly Grail 674
Hearing (part.) {continued) And h ' harlot ' mutter'd
twice or thrice.
Hearing (s) Our h is not /*,
And in the h of the wave.
Yet in these ears, till h dies.
Within the h of cat or mouse.
But since her mind was bent On h,
Merlin and V. 843
Voice and the P. 35
In Mem. xix^ 4
„ Ivii 9
Maud II v48
ijuu aiiivc iivix ii.ui^ ..i.« ..^ V." :, Pelleas and E. 115
even into my inmost heart As to my outward h : Lover's Tale i 429
nor hope for a deathless h ! ■^"''Tfr^ljT
Hearsay blamed herself for telling h tales : Merhn and V. 951
Hearse Funeral h's rolUng ! Forlorn 68
Heart (See aZso 'Art, Black-heart, Lion-heart, Woman's- •„ r,. «
heart) When will the h be aweary of beating ? Nothing will Du o
The cloud fleets. The h beats, .,. . 12
Every h this May morning in joyance is beating All Ihings will -t^** »
The ft will cease to beat ; , „ '"r. <• • 3?
cords which woimd and eat Into my hxunan ft, Supp. Lonjesswns Ai
And loveth so his innocent h, >. 52
What Devil had the /i to scathe Flowers ,. 8^
Albeit, my hope is gray, and cold At h, ,. jO*
run short pains Thro' his warm h ; » jo^
0 spirit and h made desolate ! " r -t- oo
Thro' my very h it thrilleth iw^« f^
Upon the blanched tablets of her h ; Isabel 17
Right to the fe and brain, .. ,, , ^, x j j in"- J^
cords that bind and strain The h until it bleeds. Clear-headed i* r^endb
my bounding h entanglest In a golden-netted smile ; Madeline 40
My very h faints and my whole soul grieves A spirit haunts lb
In the h of the garden the merry bird chants. Poet sMind iZ
Out of the Uve-green h of the deUs Sea- Fairies 12
My A is wasted with my woe, Ormna I
And pierced thy h, my love, my bride, .. 4J
Thy ft, my life, my love, my bride, .. **
O breaking h that will not break, " b*
Up from my h unto my eyes, " j^
Within thy h my arrow lies, " °V
Die in their h's for the love of me. The Mermaid 30
Take the h from out my breast. Aaetmeo
Do beating h's of salient springs Keep measure ,. ^o
violet woos To his h the silver dews ? ,, " . ?«
Encircles aU the h, and feedeth The senses Margaret 16
The burning brain from the true ;*, .... ^^
And the h'sot purple hills, Eleanore 17
My fe a charmed slumber keeps, '- ^^^
Her /t is like a throbbing star. „ ,, ^atey
And either Uved in either's h and speech. bormetto -—/*
My hope and h is with thee— lo J.M. K.l
But spurr'd at h with fieriest energy t, " , [
He thought to queU the stubborn h's of oak, Buonaparte 1
The A of Poland hath not ceased To quiver, Poland 6
To find my h so near the beauteous breast The form, the form 7
' O cmel h,' she changed her tone, Marmna m the S. 69
But my full h, that work'd below, Two Voices U
Nor sold his h to idle moans, " ^^^
A deeper tale my h divines. " ^
His h forebodes a mystery : " ^
My frozen h began to beat, " rrS
From out my sullen /i a power Broke, .. n fin
And fuU at h of trembling hope. Miller s D. 110
Approaching, press'd you h to h. " ^-^
And her h would beat agamst me, • .. | ' '
Do make a garland for the h : " ^^°
Round my true /i thine arms entwine , , ,^. , " oo^
still affection of the h Became an outward breathing type, ,, J^a
My ;», pierced thro' with fierce delight, J'atimaO^:
Mv eyes are fuU of tears, my h of love, My ft is breaking,
and my eyes are dim, <^^one 31
My h may wander from its deeper woe. .. **
all my h Went forth to embrace him coming ,. o^
full-flowing river of speech Came down upon my ft. „ ow
Thou weighest heavy on the A within, „r:i. t> i 'r A7k
Devil, lai|e in h and brain. To , With Pal. of Art 5
hollow shades enclosing h's of flame, . P^ace of Art 241
You thought to break a country h For pastime, L. C. V. de ^erei
A h that doats on truer charms. .. -•■*
Heart
312
Heart
Heart (continued) You changed a wholesome h to gall. L. C. V. de Vere 4A
Kind h's are more than coronets, „ 55
Pray Heaven for a hixman h, „ 71
They say his /i is breaking, mother — May Queen 22
0 blessings on his kindly h „ Con. 15
music in his ears his beating h did make. Lotos- Eaters 36
To lend our h's and spirits wholly „ C. S. 63
Sore task to h's worn out by many wai-s „ 86
tho' my h, Brimful of those wild tales, D. of F. Women 11
melting the mighty h's Of captains and of kings. „ 175
the h Faints, faded by its heat. „ 287
His memoiy long will hve alone In all our h's, To J. S. 50
Sleep sweetlj% tender h, in peace : „ 69
And on thy h a finger lays. On a Mourner 11
Teach that sick h the stronger choice, „ 18
wild h's the feeble wings That every sophister Love thou thy land 11
Not yet the wise of h would cease To hold his hope „ 81
She felt her h grow prouder : The Goose 22
The summer pilot of an empty h Gardener's D. 16
So blimt in memory, so old at h, ,, 53
My h was Uke a prophet to my h, ,, 63
we coursed about The subject most at h, „ 223
A woman's h, the h of her I loved ; „ 230
doors that bar The secret bridal chambers of the h, „ 249
h on one wild leap Hung tranced from all pulsation, „ 259
Make thine h ready with thine eyes : „ 273
1 beheld her ere she knew my h, ,,276
I have set my h upon a match. Bora 14
when his Zi is glad Of the full harvest, „ 68
gone to him. But her h fail'd her ; „ 78
' With all my h,' Said Francis. Audley Court 8
And all my h tiun'd from her, „ 54
Dipt by itself, and we were glad at h. „ 89
I would have hid her needle in my h, Edwin Morris 62
heard with beating h The Sweet-Gale rustle „ 109
Until he plagiarised a h, Talking Oak 19
This girl, for whom your h is sick, „ 71
with throbbing h I came To rest beneath thy boughs ? „ 155
Streaming eyes and breaking h's ? Love and Duty 2
Better the narrow brain, the stony h, „ 15
Whose foresight preaches peace, my h so slow To feel it ! „ 34
And to the want, that hollow'd all the h, „ 61
seem to lift a burthen from thy h And leave thee freer, „ 96
For always roaming with a himgry h Ulysses 12
and opposed Free h's, free foreheads — „ 49
One equal temper of heroic h's, „ 68
To his great h none other than a God ! Tithonus 14
And bosom beating with a h renew'd. „ 86
with what another h In days far-off, „ 50
lower feelings and a narrower h than mine ! Locksley HaU 44
hidden from the h's disgrace, „ 57
tho' my h be at the root. „ 66
lest thy h be put to proof, „ 77
hoard of maxims preaching down a daughter's h. „ 94
Left me with the palsied h, „ 132
deep h of existence beat for ever like a boy's ? „ 140
And from a ^ as rough as Esau's hand, Godiva 28
That he upon her charmed h. Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 20
Magic Music in his A Beats quick and quicker, „ Arrival 26
strength of ten. Because my h is pure. Sir Galahad 4
But all my h is drawn above, „ 17
A virgin h in work and will. „ 24
This weight and size, this h and eyes, „ 71
' And have you lost your h ? ' she said ; Edward Gray 3
Can touch the h of Edward Gray. „ 8
' To trouble the h of Edward Gray.' „ 20
And here the h of Edward Gray ! ' „ 28
And there the h of Edward Gray ! ' „ 36
that child's h within the man's Begins to move WiU Water. 31
I wiU not cramp my h, „ 51
But, all his vast h sherris-warm'd, „ 197
Her h within her did not fail : Lady Clare 78
Shame and wrath his h confounded, The Captain 61
' If mv h by signs can tell, X. of Burleigh 2
Thus her h rejoices greatly, „ 41
Heart (continued) Shaped her h with woman's meekness L. of Burleigh 71
Which did win my h from me ! '
And madly danced our h's with joy.
Across the whirlwind's h of peace.
To waste his whole h in one kiss
Pass on, weak h, and leave me where I lie :
That mock'd the wholesome human h,
I spoke with h, and heat and force,
Every h, when sifted well.
Hollow h's and empty heads !
vulture waits To tear his h before the crowd !
either fixt his h On that one girl ;
Bearing a lifelong hmiger in his h.
Enoch in his h determined all :
But had no h to break his purposes To Annie,
Philip's true h, which hunger'd for her peace
For where he fixt his h he set his hand
He oft denied his h his dearest wish.
Out of full h and boundless gratitude
Brook'd not the expectant terror of her h,
But never merrily beat Annie's h.
Then the new mother came about her h,
had not his poor h Spoken with That,
His h foreshadowing all calamity.
While in her h she yeam'd incessantly
James Willows, of one name and h with her.
there he mellow'd all his h with ale.
That shook the h of Edith hearing him.
So these young h's not knowing that they loved,
Having the warmth and muscle of the h,
And foam'd away his h at Averill's ear :
the according h's of men Seem'd harder too ;
fragrant in a.h remembering His former talks
where his worldless h had kept it warm,
For h, I think, help'd head :
Hating his own lean h and miserable.
And bad him with good h sustain himself- —
down in flood, and dash'd his angry h
To greet her, wasting his forgotten h.
Long since her h had beat remorselessly,
from tender h's. And those who sorrow'd
Whose pious talk, when most his h was dry,
' I loathe it : he had never kindly h,
I had set my h on your forgiving him
what h had he To die of ? dead ! '
His angel broke his h.
bird Makes his h voice amid the blaze of flowers :
What beast has h to do it ?
Spout from the maiden fountain in her h.
' 0 noble h who, being strait-besieged
And bites it for true h and not for harm.
And stiU I wore her picture by my h,
my other h. And almost my half-self,
with all my h. With my full h :
think I bear that h within my breast,
A thousand h's lie fallow in these halls.
Fly twanging headless arrows at the h's.
And dear is sister Psyche to my h,
when your sister came she won the h Of Ida ;
I tried the mother's h.
head and h of all our fair she-world,
My h beat thick with passion and with awe ;
that men may pluck them from our h's,
Or in the dark dissolving himian h.
Rise in the h, and gather to the eyes,
her h Would rock the snowy cradle till I died.
cursing Cyril, vext at h,
To whom none spake, half-sick at h, retimi'd.
Beaten with some great passion at her h,
block and bar Your h with system out from mine,
Bursts of great h and sUps in sensual mire,
The woman's garment hid the woman's h.'
Suck'd from the dark h of the long hills
living h's that crack within the fire
at the h Made for all noble motion :
84
The Voyage 3
87
Sir L. and Q. G. 44
Come not, when, etc. 11
The Letters 10
37
Vision of Sin 112
174
You m,ight have won 36
Enoch Arden 39
79
148
155
272
294
336
346
493
513
524
618
683
866
The Brook 76
„ 155
Aylmer's Field 63
133
180
342
453
456
471
475
526
544
633
689
799
843
Sea Dreams 186
200
269
275
280
Lucretius 101
„ 233
„ 240
Princess, Pro. 36
174
i38
55
126
m334
400
402
418
Hi 87
147
163
190
257
312
iv 41
103
171
223
388
463
t)199
305
349
379
S83
Heart
313
Heart
i Heart (continued) the tender orphan hands Felt at my h,
! Man with the head and woman with the h :
i Her noble h was molten in her breast ;
i Win you the h's of women ;
She said You had a h — ^I heard her say it — " Our Ida
has a h "■ — just ere she died —
You will not ? well — no h have you,
Come to the hollow h they slander so !
I cannot keep My h an eddy from the brawling hour :
nor stranger seem'd that h's So gentle,
And at the happy lovers h in h —
And aU thy h Hes open unto me.
ill counsel had misled the girl To vex true h's :
her great h thro' aU the faultful Past
two-cell'd h beating, with one full stroke,
I waste my h in signs : let be.
And a deeper knell in the h be knoU'd ;
What long-enduring h's could do In that world-
earthquake.
On with toil of h and knees and hands,
upon whose hand and h and brain
Uplifted high in h and hope are we,
and change the h's of men.
But h's that change not,
And in thy h the scrawl shall play.'
A devil rises in my h,
Princess v 436
449
vi 119
171
234
262
288
322
„ vii 66
108
183
242
248
307
359
Ode on Well. 59
132
212
239
254
W. to Marie Alex. 44
46
Sailor Boy 12
23
h to endure for the life of the worm and the fly ? Wages 7
Tear the noble h of Britain, Boddicea 12
Till she felt the h within her fall and flutter „ 81
and the Shepherd gladdens in his h : Spec, of Iliad 16
my h is there before you are come. Window, On the Hill 14
Gone, and a cloud in my h, „ Gone 6
you bite far into the h of the house, „ Winter 11
You have bitten into the h of the earth, „ 18
Break — you may break my h. Faint h never won — The Answer 8
O merry my h, you have gotten the wings of love. Ay 15
lighten into my eyes and my h, Into my h and my
blood ! Marr. Morn. 15
H, are you great enough (repeat) „ 17, 19
And with my h I muse and say : In Mem. iv 4
0 h, how fares it with thee now, „ 5
But, for the unquiet h and brain, „ i) 5
but some h did break. „ vi 8
Doors, where my h was used to beat So quickly „ vii 3
0 my forsaken h, with thee And this poor flower „ viii 18
And in my h, if calm at all, „ xi 15
A void where h on h reposed ; „ xiii 6
I, falhng on his faithful h, „ xviii 14
The darken'd h that beat no more ; „ xix 2
And melt the waxen h's of men.' „ xxi 8
And glad at h from May to May : „ xxii 8
Nor could I weary, h or limb, „ xxv 9
The h that never plighted troth „ xxvii^ 10
To lull mth song an aching A, „ xxxvii 15
1 vex my h with fancies dim : „ xlii 1
the h is sick. And all the wheels of Being slow. „ . I 3
broke the peace Of h's that beat from day to day, „ Iviii 6
Like some poor girl whose h is set On one „ Za; 3
On some unworthy h with joy, ,< l^}i 7
Can hang no weight upon my h „ Ixiii 3
You thought my h too far diseased ; „ ^^i 1
Let this not vex thee, noble h ! » Ixxix 2
The wrath that gamers in my h ; » Ixxxii 14
O h, with kindliest motion warm, -> Ixxxv 34
That marry with the virgin h. ^ 108
My h, tho' widow'd, may not rest Quite in the love „ 113
in the midmost h of grief Thy passion clasps ,> Ixxxviii 7
h and ear were fed To hear him, ,. Ixxxix 22
How pure at h and sound in head, ,> a;cw 1
But when the h is full of din, >. 13
A hunger seized my h ; I read Of that glad year „ xcy 21
Their h's of old have beat in tune, ,. ««^« 10
He seems to sUght her simple h. >. 20
The pulses of a Titan's h ; ,. cwi 32
The larger h, the kindlier hand ; „ cm, 30
Heart {continued) I will not eat my h alone,
By blood a king, at h a clown ;
Doors, where my h was used to beat So quickly,
the h Stood up and ansvver'd ' I have felt.'
And h's are warm'd and faces bloom,
closed their gates with a shock on my h
Than the h of the citizen hissing in war
May make my /i as a millstone,
passionate h of the poet is whirl'd into folly
Keady in h and ready in hand,
Kept itself warm in the h of my dreams.
On a ^ half-turn'd to stone.
0 h of stone, are you flesh,
suddenly, sweetly, my h beat stronger
Sick, sick to the h of Ufe, am I.
Ah God, for a man with h, head, hand.
Set in the h of the carven gloom,
drown His h in the gross mud-honey of town,
Catch not my breath, O clamorous h,
shook my h to think she comes once more ;
Dear h, I feel with thee the drowsy spell.
My own h's h, my ownest own, farewell ;
Beat with my h more blest than /* can tell.
And that dead man at her h and mine :
From him who had ceased to share her h,
A desire that awoke in the h of the child,
To the faults of his h and mind.
There is but one With whom she has h to be gay.
My h would hear her and beat.
It will ring in my h and my ears,
little h's that know not how to forgive :
Shall I nurse in my dark /»,
Courage, poor h of stone !
Courage, poor stupid h of stone. —
H's with no love for me :
And my ^ is a handful of dust,
surely, some kind h will come To bury me,
it is time, O passionate h' said I
' It is time, 0 passionate h and morbid eye,
the ^ of a people beat with one desire ;
flames The blood-red blossom of war with a h of fire,
We have proved we have h's in a cause,
inheritance Of such a life, a h,
the spike that split the mother's h
A doubt that ever smoulder'd in the h's
And in the h of Arthur joy was lord,
when he heard, Leodogran in h Debating —
bold in h and act and word was he,
there be those who hate him in their h's.
Bewildering h and eye —
comforted my h. And dried my tears.
But brake his very h in pining for it,
and tourney-falls. Frights to my h ;
Albeit in mine own h I knew him King,
felt his young h hammering in his ears,
In token of true h and fealty.
h of her good horse Was nigh to burst with violence
Gareth panted hard, and his great h,
lets His h be stirr'd with any foolish heat
Sent all his h and breath thro' all the horn,
with true h Adored her, as the stateliest
Low to her own h piteously she said :
Our hoard is little, but our h's are great, (repeat)
grateful is the noise of noble deeds To noble h's
1 seem to suffer nothing h or limb,
' Well said, true h' replied Geraint,
Yniol's h Danced in his bosom,
Tell her, and prove her h toward the Prince.'
their converse in the hall, Proving her h :
Glow'd like the hoi a, great fire at Yule,
softly to her own sweet h she said :
her h All overshadow'd by the foolish dream,
felt that tempest brooding round his h,
there he broke the sentence in his h Abruptly,
great plover's human whistle amazed Her h,
In Mem. cviii 3
„ cxi 4
„ cxix 1
cxxiv 15
Con. 82
Maud I i 15
24
31
ii)39
»9
vi 18
78
79
via 8
X 36
60
xiv 11
xvi 5
31
xviii 10
72
74
82
xix 9
30
48
68
xxii 20
69
//i35
44
ii 55
// Hi 1
5
iv 94
v3
102
III vim
32
49
53
55
Bed. of Idylls 33
Com. of A rihur 38
64
124
140
176
179
300
349
Gareth and L. 51
90
123
322
399
762
1126
1178
1369
Marr. of Geraint 19
85
„ 352,374
438
472
474
504
513
521
559
618
674
Geraint and E. 11
41
50
Heart
314
Heart
Merlin
Heart (continued) Enid ponder'd in her h, and said :
(repeat) Geraint and E. 64, 130
disedge The sharpness of that pain about her h : „ 190
Here in the h of waste and wilderness,
fell asleep, and Enid had no h To wake him,
sadden'd all her h again.
has your palfrey h enough To bear his armour ?
to his own h, ' She weeps for me : ' (repeat)
As all but empty h and weariness
She felt so blunt and stupid at the h :
hand to hand beneath her husband's h,
mist Like that which kept the h of Eden green
(With one main purpose ever at my h)
His very face with change of h is changed.
Edyni has done it, weeding all his h
set up a stronger race With h's and hands,
vigorously yet mildly, that all h's Applauded,
spirit of his youth retum'd On Arthur's h ;
maidens often laugh When sick at h,
Brave h's and clean ! and yet —
Mark was half in h to hurl his cup
The h's of all this Order in mine hand —
Who feels no A to ask another boon.
Lo now, what h's have men !
brought Her own claw back, and wounded her own h.
Without the full h back may merit well
that full h of yours Whereof ye prattle,
The rustiest iron of old fighters' h's ;
Merlin to his own h, loathing, said :
colours of the h that are not theirs.
' Stabb'd through the h's affections to the h !
I should have found in him a greater h.
he let his wisdom go For ease of h,
from his knees, Half-nestled at his h,
own gross h Would reckon worth the taking ?
The vast necessity of h and life.
in his A Heard murmurs ' Lo, thou likewise Lancelot i
a h Love-loyal to the least wish of the Queen
Low to her own h said the lily maid.
She braved a riotous h in asking for it.
reverence, Dearer to true young h's
To which it made a restless h.
With smiling face and frowning h,
That Lancelot is no more a lonely h.
kept The one-day-seen Sir Lancelot in her h,
And changed itself and echo'd in her h,
And in her h she answer'd it and said,
and in her h she laugh'd, Because he had not loosed it
her h's sad secret blazed itself In the h's colours
Making a treacherous quiet in his h,
speak the wish most near to your true h ;
a stupid h To interpret ear and eye,
the heat is gone from out my h,
And parted, laughing in his courtly h.
in my h of h's I did acknowledge nobler.
To loyal h's the value of all gifts Must vary
For all true h's be blazon'd on her tomb
To doubt her pureness were to want a h —
' Ah simple h and sweet. Ye loved me, damsel,
Arthur's greatest knight, a man Not after Arthur's h !
and wrought into his 7j A way by love
men's h's became Clean for a season,
' I know not, for thy h is pure as snow.'
I was lifted up in h, and thought
And every homely secret in their h's,
that one only, who had ever Made my h leap ;
maiden, all my h Went after her with longing:
And the Quest faded in my h.
to warm My cold h with a friend:
Small h was his after the Holy Quest :
strove To tear the twain asunder in my h,
and in her h She mutter'd, ' I have lighted on a fool, Pdleas and E. 112
his helpless h Leapt, and he cried, „ 130
More bondsman in his h than in his bonds. „ 239
thro' his h The fire of honour and all noble deeds „ 277
313
369
445
489
587, 590
652
747
767
770
831
899
906
941
957
Balin and Balan 22
498
and V. 29
30
56
382
442
500
534
548
574
790
822
868
873
893
905
916
925
and E. 54
88
319
359
419
550
553
602
747
782
786
808
836
883
914
941
1116
1176
1210
1214
1344
1377
1393
1420
Holy Grail 10
90
97
361
552
580
582
600
619
657
786
Heart (continued) vext his h, And marr'd his rest — Pelleas and E. 398
heard but his own steps, and his own h Beating, ,, 416
Black as the harlot's h — hollow as a skull ! „ 468
the words were flash'd into his h „ 503
hard hLs eyes; harder his /i Seem 'd; „ 512
Peace at his h, and gazing at a star „ 559
Hath the great h of knighthood in thee fail'd „ 596
yeam'd to shake The burthen off his h Last Tournament 180
Strength of h And might of limb, „ 197
It frighted all free fool from out thy h ; „ 307
But in the h of Arthur pain was lord. „ 486
and felt the goodly hounds Yelp at his h, „ 504
heal'd Thy hurt and h with unguent and caress — „ 595
meats and wines, and satiated their h's — „ 725
Rankled in him and ruffled all his h, Guinevere 49
Sing, and unbind my h that I may weep.' „ 166
Then to her own sad h mutter'd the Queen, „ 213
Far on into the rich h of the west :
Sigh'd, and began to gather h again,
loathsome opposite Of all my h had destined did obtain
could speak Of the pure h, nor seem to glance
Better the King's waste hearth and aching h
while I weigh'd thy h with one Too wholly true
For mockery is the fume of Uttle h's.
left me hope That in mine own h I can live down sin
and her h was loosed Within her, and she wept
Eight well in h they know thee for the King,
till all his h was cold With formless fear ;
0 Bedivere, for on my h hath fall'n Confusion,
that takes The h, and sometimes touches
As tho' there beat a h in either eye ;
deep vault where the h of Hope Fell into dust.
The grasp of hopeless grief about my h,
Or from the after-fulness of my h,
neither Love, Warm in the h, his cradle,
Camilla close beneath her beating h,
Who had a twofold claim upon my h,
H beating time to h, lip pressing lip,
More warmly on the h than on the brow,
the naked poisons of his h In his old age.'
my inmost A As to my outward hearing :
(A visible link into the home of my h),
love, soul, spirit, and h and strength.
Love wraps his wings on either side the h,
words stole with most prevailing sweetness Into my h,
And soul and h and body are all at ease :
My h paused — my raised eyeHds would not fall,
For all the secret of her inmost h.
For in the sudden anguish of her h Loosed
syllables, that strove to rise From my full h.
deals comfortable words To h's wounded for ever ;
let my h Break rather —
There be some h's so airily built.
Alone, and in the h of the great forest,
motions of my h seem'd far within me.
Makes the h tremble, and the sight run over
and each h Grew closer to the other.
My h was cloven with pain ;
1 turn'd : my h Shrank in me,
the bells, Those marriage-bells, echoing in ear and h —
as he said, that once was loving h's, H's that had beat
with such a love
placing his true hand upon her h, ' O, you warm h,'
he moaned.
It beat — the h — it beat : Faint — but it beat :
Raving of dead men's dust and beating h's.
Talk of lost hopes and broken h 1
Yet glowing in a A of ruby —
The beauty that is dearest to his h —
' 0 my h's lord, would I could show you,' he says,
' Ev'n my h too.'
To show you what is dearest to my h, And my h too.
while I show you all my h.'
I felt that my h was hard.
So I knew my h was hard,
244
368
492
502
524
540
633
636
667
Pass, of Arthur 63
97
143
Lover's Tale i 17
34
94
126
146
158
203
210
260
328
356
428
431
460
467
554
556
571
588
702
712
718
737
803
ii 3
54
156
186
200
Hi 37
iv3
68
75
80
140
176
196
249
250
252
353
First Quarrel 76
78
Heart
315
Hearth
Heart (continued) But the night has crept into my h, Rtzpah 16
But not the black h of the lawyer who kill'd him „ 40
Revenge ran on sheer into the h of the foe, The Revenge 33
I could stamp my image on her h ! Sisters (E. and E) 195
cold h or none — No bride for me. „ 201
answer of full h I had from her at first. „ 259
But he sent a chill to my /t when I saw him In the Child. Hosp. 2
gratefuUest h I have found in a child of her
years — » ^^
Wan, but as pretty as h can desire, „ 40
we were English in h and in limb, Bef. of Lucknow 46
Rifleman, true is your h, • " j 7 ioq
Burst vein, snap sinew, and crack h, Sir J. Oldcastle 123
Do penance in his h, God hears him.' „ 143
lifted hand and h and voice In praise to God Columbus 16
ran into the h's of my crew, V. of Maeldwne 33
rang into the h and the brain, „ 110
all their h's Were troubled, Achilles over the T. 23
The boundless yearning of the Prophet's h — Tiresias 81
I never have wrong'd his h, The Wreck 14
and there Lost, head and h, in the chances of dividend, ,. 30
I closed my h to the gloom ; ,. 38
the ft of a listening crowd — ^ 47
the h that was wise ! " 56
what a h was mine to forsake her even for you.' ' Never
the h among women,' he said, » 95
' The h ! not a mother's h, .. 9 •
for the h of the father will care for his own.' * The h of
the father will spurn her,' ,- 98
• The h, the h\' I kiss'd him, ,. 105
Who had borne my flower on her hireling h; ,, 143
and the human h, and the Age. Despair 40
Struck hard at the tender h of the mother, „ 74
And Hope will have broken her h, .. 92
And leave him, blind of h and eyes. Ancient Sage 113
that world-prophet in the h of man. „ 213
send the day into the darken'd h; " x,,- ,. oq
daughter yield her life, h, soul to one — The Flight 2V>
love that keeps this h alive beats on it .. 35
And yet mj[ ft is ill at ease, •■ 97
With breaking h's, without a friend, •• 100
every h that loves with truth is equal to endure. „ 104
set me h batin' to music wid ivery word ! Tomorrow 34
wid a fe and a half, me darlin', ... 39
She that in her /t is brooding Locksley H., Sixty 23
Woman to her inmost h, and woman to her tender
feet, " 50
Pining for the stronger h that once had beat .. "^
Shape your h to front the hour, .. 106
men Were soldiers to her h's desire. Pro. to Gen. Hamley 25
In the h of the Russian hordes. Heavy Brigade 50
' The song that nerves a nation's h, Epilogue 81
The red ' Blood-eagle ' of liver and h ; Dead Prophet 71
' See, what a little h,' she said, .. . ^5
0 h, look down and up Serene, Early Spring 27
Thou livest in all h's, Epii. on Gordon 6
be thy h a fortress to maintain The day To Duke of Argyll b
To all the loyal h's who long To keep Hands all Round Id
One with Britain, h and soul ! Open I. andC. Exhib. 38
thank thee with our voice, and from the h. To W. C. Macreadyi
a multitude Loval, each, to the h of it. On Jub. Q. Victoria 21
Let the maim'd in his h rejoice » ^
All your h's be in harmony, » , „ ^f
1 feel the deathless h of motherhood Demeter and r. 41
I thridded the black h of all the woods, .. 69
Stirs up again in the h of the sleeper, K.V^^^.^ o
Moon of married h's, Hear me, you ! l "■^ ■"*'*?.^
Hubert weds in you The fe of Love. .. °^
No voice for either spoke within my h .. ^^q
Shrined him within the temple of her h, -., ^^
call thro' this ' lo t'amo ' to the h Of Miriam ; " Q«t
she makes Her h a mirror that reflects but you.' „ dbb
Her h ! 1 gazed into the mirror, .. ^"O
flung herself Against my h, » ^^^
And eased her h of madness . . . l<orlorn »J
Heart (continued) leper plague may scale my skin but
never taint my h ; Happy 27
Within the bloodless h of lowly flowers Prog, of Spring 84
in the /* of this most ancient realm „ 102
' Beat, little h — I give you tliis and this ' Romney's R. 1
claspt our infant daughter, h to h. „ 77
' Beat upon mine, little h ! „ 94
' Beat little h ' on this fool brain of mine. „ 155
The Gods Avenge on stony h's Death of (Enone 41
I am poison'd to the h.' „ 46
There, like a creature frozen to the h „ 73
in his h he cried ' The call of God ! ' St. Telemachus 27
thro' all the nobler h's In that vast Oval ,, 72
belongs to the h of the perfume seller. Akbar's D., Incrip. 9
Still I raised my h to heaven, Akbar's Dream 6
wann'd but by the h Within them, „ 132
how deep a well of love My h is for my son, „ 171
gladdening human h's and eyes. ,, Hymn 2
True gentleman, h, blood and bone, Bandit's Death 2
Hush'd as the h of the grave, „ 26
crazed With the grief that gnaw'd at my h, „ 39
Men, with a h and a soul. The Dawn 18
creeds be lower than the h's desire ! Faith 5
Heart-aflBuence H-a in discursive talk In Mem. cix 1
Heart-beat An earthquake, my loud h-b's, Lover's Tale ii 193
Heart-broken he pass'd his father's gate, H-b, Dora 51
Heart-disease He suddenly dropt dead of h-d.' Sea Dreams 274
' Dead ? he ? of h-d ? what heart had he To die of ? „ 275
Hearted See Cruel-hearted, Eager-hearted, Eunuch-hearted,
Evil-hearted, Faint-hearted, Gentle-hearted, Honey-
hearted, Human-hearted, Icy-hearted, Iron-hearted,
Kindly - hearted, Loyal - hearted. Noblest -hearted.
Open - hearted. Ruddy - hearted, Simple - hearted,
Shallow - hearted. Sweet-hearted, Tenderest-hearted,
Traitor-hearted, Truer-hearted
Hearten Cry thro' the sense to h trust In Mem. cxyi 7
Heart-free From which I escaped h-f, Maud I ii 11
Hearth (^See aZso Hall-hearth, Lay-hearth) For surely
now our household h's are cold : Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 72
' pick'd the eleventh from this h The Epic 41
an idle king, By this still h, Ulysses 2
Keep a clean h and a clear fire for me, Enoch Arden 192
ten years. Since Enoch left his h and native land, „ 360
so genial was the h : And on the right hand of the
Jl tlG Saw )' |4»>
on the left hand of the h he saw The mother „ 753
Would shatter aU the happiness of the h. „ 770
warm-blue breathings of a hidden h Aylmer's Field 155
On either side the h, indignant ; „ 288
face Meet for the reverence of the h, ,. 333
who beside your h's Can take her place — „ 735
strangers at my h Not welcome, Lucretius 15S
Two heads in council, two beside the h. Princess ii 173
household talk, and phrases of the h, „ 315
Man for the field and woman for the h; „ v 447
the fires of Hell Mix with hish: ,,455
we will make it faggots for the h, „ »t 45
Till happier times each to her proper h: „ 303.
azure pillars of the h Arise to thee ; „ vii 216
land whose h's he saved from shame Ode on Well. 225
For by the h the children sit In Mem. xx 13
weave The holly round the Christmas h ; „ xxx 2
weave The holly round the Christmas h ; „ Ixxviii 2
and prey By each cold h, ., xcviii 18
father Lot beside the h Lies Uke a log, Gareth and L. 74
rend In pieces, and so cast it on the h. ,. 401
Rose, and high-arching over-brow'd the h. „ 408
rend the cloth and cast it on the h. „ 418
labour him Beyond his comrade of the h, „ 485
But one was counter to the /*, „ 672
We lack thee by the h.' „ 754
My champion from the ashes of his h.' „ 899
kitchen-knave among the rest Fierce was the h, „ 1010
wear your costly gift Beside your own warm h, Mart, of Geraint 820
Thus, as a /i lit in a mountain home, Balin and Balan 231
Merlin and V. 110
Guinevere 524
V. of Maeldune 32
Batt. of Brunanburh 19
Demeter and P. 76
Vastness 1
Prog, of Spring 52
Princess, Pro. 166
Guinevere 64
Maud / i 24
Hearth 316
Hearth (continued) that gray cricket chirpt of at
our h —
Better the King's waste h and aching heart
And the roof sank in on the h,
their hoards and their h's and their homes.
The jungle rooted in his shatter'd h,
Many a h upon our dark globe sighs
Make all true h's thy home.
Hearth-flower The little h-f Lilia.
Heart-hiding H-h smile, and gray persistent eye :
Hearthstone hissing in war on his own h ?
Heartily they ran To greet his hearty welcome h ; Enoch Arden 350
Heartless Insolent, brainless, h ! Aylmer's Field 368
Heart-weary H-w and overdone ! The Dreamer 18
Hearty {See also 'Arty) they ran To greet his h
welcome heartily ; Enoch Arden 350
Heart-yearning deep h-y's, thy sweet memories Last Tournament 579
Heat (s) (See also After-heat, 'Eat, Heat, Hell-heat)
hollows of the fringed hills In summer h's, Sufp. Confessions 154
Clear, without h, undying, Isabel 3
Close-latticed to the brooding h, Mariana in the S. 3
But day increased from h to h, „ 39
P>om htoh the day decreased, „ 78
That h of inward evidence, Two Voices 284
Remembering its ancient h. „ 423
Throbbing thro' all thy h and light, Fatima 4
and the heart Faints, faded by its h. D. of F. Women 288
if in noble h Those men thine arms withstood, England and A mer. 6
Rain, wind, frost, h, hail, damp, St. S. Stylites 16
Then added, all in A : ' What stuff is this ! Golden Year 64
I spoke with heart, and h and force. The Letters 37
Or when some h of difference sparkled out, Aylmer's Field 705
all-generating powers and genial h Of Nature, Lucretius 97
With animal h and dire insanity ? „ 163
Sun-shaded in the h of dusty fights) Princess ii 241
under arches of the marble bridge Hung, shadow'd
from the h : „ 459
while my honest h Were all miscounted „ iv 333
many a bold knight started up in h, „ v 359
What h's of indignation when we heard „ 375
I felt my veins Stretch with fierce h ; „ 538
A night of Summer from the h, „ vi 54
Where we withdrew from summer h's and state, „ 245
But yonder, whiff ! there comes a sudden h, „ Con. 58
For life outliving h's of youth, In Mem. liii 10
mark The landscape winking thro' the h : „ Ixxxix 16
To make a soUd core oth; „ evii 18
not the schoolboy h, The blind hysterics „ cix 15
tread In tracts of fluent h began, „ cxviii 9
true blood spilt had in it a ^ To dissolve Maud I xix 44
Then Uther in his wrath and h besieged Com. of Arthur 198
His heart be stirr'd with any foolish h Gareth and L. 1178
And after nodded sleepily in the h. Geraint and E. 253
Who, with mfld h of holy oratory, „ 866
Took, as in rival h, to holy things ; Baiin and Balan 100
forget My h's and violences ? „ 190
Whom Pellam drove away with holy h. „ 611
Brain-feverous in his h and agony, Lancelot and E. 854
And when the h is gone from out my heart, „ 1116
thro' the casement standing wide for h, „ 1234
And earthly h's that spring and sparkle out Holy Grail 33
And almost burst the barriers in their h, „ 336
and thro' a stormy glare, ah „ 842
the h Of pride and glory fired her face ; Pelleas and E. 171
in his h and eagerness Trembled and quiver'd, „ 283
a sudden flush of wrathful h Fired all the pale face Guinevere 356
the white h's of the blinding noons Beat Lover's Tale i 139
Thro' the h, the drowth, the dust, the glare, Sisters (E. and E.) 6
U like the mouth of a hell, Def. of Lucknow 81
none could breathe Within the zone of h ; Columbus 53
with thirst in the middle-day h. V. of Maeldune 50
That wholesome h the blood had lost, To E. Fitzgerald 24
the winds were dead for h ; Tiresias 34
Of the hellish h of a. wretched life Despair 68
Surm'd with a summer of milder h. To Prof. Jebb. 8
Heather-scented
!
Heat (s) (continued) till the h Smote on her brow,
Heat (s) But the h druv hout i' my heyes
Heat (verb) the latter fire shall h the deep ;
Let the Sun, Who h's our earth to yield
Heated (See also Seventimes-heated, Wine-heated)
shrine-doors burst thro' with h blasts
came again together on the king With h faces ;
Where sat a company with h eyes,
To chapel ; where a h pulpiteer,
and from within Burst thro' the h buds,
and felt the blast Beat on my h eyelids :
Had made a h haze to magnify The charm of
Edith—
h thro' and thro' with wrath and love,
And h hot with burning fears.
And h the strong warrior in his dreams ;
H am I ? you — you wonder —
Heath (barren country) blackening over h and holt,
Who slowly rode across a wither'd h.
At the Dragon on the h !
The Priest went out by h and hill ;
Arise in open prospect — h and hill.
Dumb on the winter h he lay.
Lightnings flicker'd along the h ;
high
Death of (Enone 97
Owd Rod 84
The Kraken 13
Akbar's Dream 105
J
D. ofF. Women 29
Audley Court 37
Vision of Sin 7
Sea Dreams 20
Lover's Tale i 320
Hi 28
Sisters (E. and E.) 129
Princess iv 163
In Mem. cxviii 22
Marr. of Geraint 72
Locksley U., Sixty 151
Locksley Hall 191
Vision of Sin 61
72
The Victim 29
Lover's Tale i 397
Dead Prophet 13
79
Heath (heather) (See also Heather) lips in the field above
are dabbled with blood-red h, Maud / t 2
And flung myself down on a bank of h, Com. of Arthur 342
all round was open space. And fern and h : Pelleas and E. 29
Among our h and bracken. The Ring 318
Heathen (adj.) from time to time the h host Swarm'd
overseas, Com. of Arthur 8
last a h horde. Reddening the sun with smoke „ 36
in twelve great battles overcame The h hordes, „ 519
Red as the rising sun with h blood, Lancelot and E. 308
Yet in this h war the fire of God Fills him : „ 315
Wasted so often by the h hordes. Holy Grail 244
splash'd and dyed The strong White Horse in his
own h blood — „ 312
Fool, I came late, the h wars were o'er, Last Tournament 269
Hard on that helm which many a h sword Pass, of Arthur 166
Burn ? h men have borne as much as this, Sir J. Oldcastle 185
Christian love among the Churches look'd the twin
of h hate. Locksley H., Sixty 86
Heathen (s) (See also Haithen) Then he drave The h ;
after, slew the beast. Com. of Arthur 59
cross-hilted sword. Whereby to drive the h out : „ 287
then or now Utterly smite the h underfoot, „ 423
' Shall Rome or H rule in Arthur's realm ? „ 485
To drive the h from your Roman wall, „ 512
Who drave the h hence by sorcery Gareth and L. 204
and fell Against the h of the Northern Sea Geraint and E. 969
While all the h lay at Arthur's feet. Merlin and V. 144
till we drive The h, who, some say, Lancelot and E. 65
The h caught and reft him of his tongue. ,, 273
sand-shores of Trath Treroit, Where many a h fell ; „ 302
The h are upon him, his long lance Broken, Last Tournament 87
The h — but that ever-climbing wave, „ 92
H, the brood by Hengist left ; Guinevere 16
For now the H of the Northern Sea, „ . 135
And leagued with him the h, „ 155
Godless hosts Of h swarming o'er the Northern Sea ; „ 428
To break the h and uphold the Christ, „ 470
Lords of the White Horse, h, and knights, „ 574
but grosser grown Than h. Pass, of Arthur 62
Or thrust the h from the Roman wall, „ 69
shouts of h and the traitor knights, „ 113
Nor any cry of Christian heard thereon, Nor yet of ^ ; „ 129
he that brought The h back among us, „ 152
a shame to speak of them — Among the h — Sir J. Oldcastle 111
Heather find the white h wherever you go, Romney's R. 108
my white h only blooms in heaven „ 110
wild h round me and over me June's high blue, June Bracken, etc. 2
the bracken so bright and the h so brown, „ 3
green of the bracken amid the gloom of the h. „ 9
Heather-scented and h-s air. Pulsing full man ; Last Tournament 691
Heather-scented
317
Heaven
Heather-scented (continued) on that clear and h-s height
The rounder cheek
Heath-flower Some red h-f in the dew,
Heathy Playing mad pranks along the h leas,
Heave h and thump A league of street
For tho' the Giant Ages h the hill
Which h's but with the heaving deep.
Then the rough Torre began to h and move,
Began to k upon that painted sea ;
water began to h and the weather to moan,
ocean on every side Plunges and h's at a bank
Heaved (adj.) With a h shoulder and a saucy smile,
vessel in mid-ocean, her h prow Clambering,
Heaved (verb) The silver lily h and fell ;
I was h upon it In darkness :
huge bush-bearded Barons h and blew,
That only h with a summer swell.
Who might'st have h a windless flame
the Sun /^ up a ponderous arm to strike
h his blade aJoft, And crack'd the helmet
Heaven (See also 'Eaven, High-heaveo, Hiven, Mid-
heaven) And then one H receive us all.
that blue h which hues and paves The other ?
She could not look on the sweet h,
h's mazed signs stood still In the dim tract
Sure she was nigher to h's spheres,
H flow'd upon the soul in many dreaims
the moimtain draws it from H above,
the air Sleepeth over all the h,
As tho' a star, in inmost h set,
Thou from a throne Momited in h wilt shoot
H over H rose the night.
Rapt after h's starry flight,
The joy that mixes man with H :
' H opens inward, chasms yawn,
Coming thro' H, like a light that grows
From me, H's Queen, Paris, to thee king-bom,
0 happy H, how canst thou see my face ?
hollow'd moons of gems. To mimic h ;
From yon blue h's above us bent
Pray H for a human heart,
seem'd to go right up to H and die among the
stars,
sun begins to rise, the h's are in a glow ;
Beneath a h dark and holy,
' H heads the count of crimes With that wild
oath.'
Rose with you thro' a little arc Of h,
And dwells in h half the night,
all else of h was pure Up to the Sun,
praLse the h's for what they have ? '
For which to praise the h's but only love,
h's between their fairy fleeces pale
— H knows — as much within ;
Unfit for earth, unfit for h,
Battering the gates of h with storms
H, and Earth, and Time are choked,
the saints Enjoy themselves in h,
1 think you know I have some power with H
I. am whole, and clean, and meek for H.
whisper'd under H None eLse could understand ;
'Twere all as one to fix our hopes on H
which in old days Moved earth and h ;
Sees in h the light of London
Saw the h's fill with commerce.
Heard the h's fill with shouting,
birds of Paradise That float thro' H, and cannot
light?
My breath to h like vapour goes :
Break up the h's, O Lord !
All h bursts her starry floors,
I yearn to breathe the airs of h
And set in H's third story.
Shall show thee past to H :
With tears and smiles from h again
The Ring 350
Rosalind 41
Circumstance 2
Princess Hi 127
Ode on Well. 259
In Mem. xi 20
Lancelot and E. 1066
Lover's Tale ii 192
The Revenge 113
Def. of Lucknow 39
Aylmer's Field 466
Lover's Tale ii 169
To E. L. 19
Sea Dreams 92
Princess v 21
The Daisy 12
In Mem. Ixxii 13
Gareth and L. 1045
Marr. of Geraint 572
Supp. Confessions 32
134
Mariana 15
Clear-headed friend 28
Ode to Memory 40
The Poet 31
Poet's Mind 32
Elednore 39
89
To J. M. K. 13
Mariana in the S. 92
Two Voices 68
210
304
CEnone 108
„ 127
„ 236
Palace of Ari 189
L. C. V. de Vere 50
71
May Queen, Con. 40
49
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 91
D. of F. Women 201
To J. S. 27
„ 52
Gardener's D. 79
102
104
261
Edwin Morris 82
St. S. Stylites 3
7
104
106
143
213
Talking Oak 21
Golden Year 57
Ulysses 67
Locksley Hall 114
!, 121
123
Day -Dm., Ep. 8
St. Agnes' Eve 3
21
27
Sir Galahad 63
Will Water. 70
246
Sir L. and Q. G. 2
Heaven (continued) Blue isles of h laugh'd between. Sir L. and Q. G. 6
' Cold altar, H and earth shall meet The Letters 7
high in h behind it a gray down With Danish
barrows ; Enoch Arden 6
sermonizing On providence and trust in H, „ 205
The breath of h came continually „ 535
such as drove her imder moonless h's ^,' 547
lawns And winding glades high up like ways to H, " 573
great stars that globed themselves in H, „ 597
Which at a touch of light, an air of h, Aylmer's Field 5
Or // in lavish bounty moulded, „ 107
Like visions in the Northern dreamer's h's, '„ 161
God bless 'em : marriages are made in H.' „ 188
The rain of h, and their own bitter tears. Tears, and
the careless rain of h, „ 428
breathless burthen of low-folded h's ', 612
Shot up their shadows to the H of H's, ., 642
thy brother man, the Lord from H, „ 667
roof so lowly but that beam of H Dawn'd ,. 684
past the living fount of pity in H. „ 752
if every star in h Can make it fair : Sea Dreams 83
trees As high as h, and every bird that sings : „ 102
Dropping the too rough H iti Hell and H, „ 196
One shriek of hate would jar all the hymns oih: „ 259
Slide from that quiet h of hers, Lucretius 87
stairs That climb into the windy halls oih: „ 136
vases in the hall Flowers of all h's. Princess, Pro. 12
Myself too had weird seizures, H knows what : „ i 14
two sphere lamps blazon'd like H and Earth ,, 223
to call down from H A blessing on her labours „ ii 478
let us breathe for one hour more in H' „ Hi 69
Appealing to the bolts oi H; „ iv 372
and his anger reddens in the h's ; „ 386
sweet influences Of earth and h? „ v 192
Like a Saint's glory up in A : „ 514
And right ascension, H knows what ; „ vi 257
cloud may stoop from h and take the shape „ vii 2
//, Star after star, arose and fell ; „ 49
But cease to move so near the H's, „ 195
Beyond all thought into the // of H's. „ Con 115
H flash'd a sudden jubilant ray. Ode on Well. 129
The blue h break, and some diviner air W. to Marie Alex. 43
The gloom that saddens H and Earth, The Daisy 102
But thou wert sUent in h. Voice and the P. 7
voice and the Peak Far into h withdrawn. „ 38
Thunder, a flying fire in h, Boddicea 24
Roll'd the rich vapour far into the h. Spec, of Iliad 8
when in h the stars about the moon Look beautiful, „ 11
immeasurable h's Break open to their highest, „ 14
Be merry in h, O larks, and far away. Window, Ay 3
Sleep, gentle h's, before the prow ; In Mem. ix 14
To bear thro' H a tale of woe, „ xii 2
Hung in the shadow of. a.h? „ xvi 10
Her early H, her happy views ; „ xxxiii 6
suit The full-grown energies of h. „ xl 20
In its assumptions up to /i ; „ Ixiii 4
starry h's of space Are sharpen'd to a needle's end; ,, xxvi 3
drank the inviolate spring Where nighest h, „ xc 3
To scale the h's highest height, „ cviii 7
To bare the eternal H's again, „ cxxii 4
And high in h the streaming cloud, „ Con. 107
Let the sweet h's endure, Maud I xi8
O Maud were svie of H If lowliness could save her. ., xii 19
to glide. Like a beam of the seventh H, .. xiv 21
gates of H are closed, and she is gone. „ xviii 12
thunder'd up into // the Christless code, ,, // i 26
and the h's fall in a gentle rain, ,, 41
To her that is the fairest under h, Com. of Arthur 86
And dream he dropt from h : „ 183
In which the boimds of h and earth were lost — „ 372
It seem'd in h, a ship, the shape thereof „ 374
but the King stood out in h, Crown'd. „ 443
H yield her for it, but in me put force Gareth and L. 18
And there was no gate like it under h. „ 213
Keel upward, and mast downward, in the h's, „ 254
Heaven
318
Heaven
Heaven (continued) peak And pinnacle, and had made it
spire to h. Gareth and L. 309
Kather than — 0 sweet h\ 0 fie upon him — „ 741
Immingled with H's azure waverinjjly, „ 936
* No star of thine, but shot from Arthur's h „ 1100
* H help thee,' sigh'd Lynette. ., 1357
And loved her, as he loved the light of H. And
as the light of H varies, Marr. of Geraint 5
So aid me H when at mine uttermost, „ 502
on open ground Beneath a troubled h, „ 523
Sweet h, how much I shall discredit him ! „ 621
Herself would clothe her like the sun in H. ., 784
she was ever praying the sweet h's Oeraint and E. 44
I might amend it by the grace of H, „ 53
issuing under open h's beheld A little town ,. 196
she cried, ' by H, I will not drink „ 664
we love the // that chastens us. „ 789
The truest eyes that ever answer'd H, ., 842
Lost one Found was greeted as in H With joy Balin and Balan 81
No more of hatred than in II .. 151
fire of // has kill'd the barren cold, „ 440
fire of H is not the flame of Hell, (repeat) „ 443, 447,
451, 455
' The fire of H is on the dusty ways. „ 448
* The fire of // is lord of all things good, „ 452
* This fire of h, This old sun-worship, „ 456
The deathless mother-maidenhood of H, „ 521
vows like theirs, that higli in h Love most, Merlin and V. 14
0 H's own white Earth-angel, „ 80
Was also Bard, and knew the starry h's; „ 169
By H that hears I tell you the clean truth, „ 343
For men at most differ as II and earth. But women,
worst and best, as // and Hell. „ 814
May yon just h, that darkens o'er me, „ 931
Scarce had she ceased, when out of A a bolt „ 934
Vivien, fearing h had heard her oath, „ 940
But who can gaze upon the Sun in h? Lancelot and E, 123
*H hinder,' said the King, ' that such an one, „ 532
' I lose it, as we lose the lark in h, ., 659
And, after h, on our dull side of death, .. 1382
strength Within us, better offer'd up to H.' Holy Grail 36
1 trust We are green in H's eyes ; „ 38
the holy cup Was caught away to H, „ 58
' My knight, my love, my knight of h, „ 157
Pray H, they be not smitten by the bolt.' „ 221
Feasted, and as the stateliest under h. „ 224
and never yet Had h appear'd so blue, „ 365
Prick'd with incredible pinnacles into h. „ 423
the h's Open'd and blazed with thunder „ 507
the h's open'd and blazed again Roaring, „ 516
Then fell the floods of h drowning the deep. „ 533
and blest be // That brought thee here „ 616
Quest and he were in the hands of H. „ 659
and the stones They pitch up straight toh: „ 665
heard the hollow-ringing h's sweep Over him „ 678
they roll Thro' such a round in h, „ 686
But h had meant it for a sunny one : „ 706
clouded h's Were shaken with the motion and the sound. „ 800
But if indeed there came a sign from h, „ 873
A rosy dawn kindled in stainless h's, Pelleas and E. 72
Or have the H's but given thee a fair face, „ 101
a sacrifice Kindled by fire from h : „ 146
Till the sweet h's have fill'd it „ 510
but when he saw High up in h the hall „ 553
that young life Being smitten in mid h Last Tournament 27
Man was it who marr'd h's image in thee thus ? ' ., 64
We call the harp of Arthur up in A ? ' „ 333
High on all hills, and in the signs of /«.' „ 337
It makes a silent music up in h, „ 349
sun that ray'd from off a brow Like hillsnow high in h, ., 667
Dropt down from h ? wash'd up from out the deep ? „ 686
A star in h, a star within the mere ! „ 732
A blot in h, the Raven, flying high, Guinevere 133
There came a day as still as h, „ 292
But help me, A, for surely I repent. „ 872
Heaven [continued) seem'd the h's upbreaking thro' the
earth, Guinevere 391
I knew Of no more subtle master under h „ 478
be his mate hereafter in the h's Before high God. „ 637
the great light of H Burn'd at his lowest Pass, of Arthur 90
those who falling down Look'd up for h, „ 112
mightiest of all peoples under h? To the Queen ii 21
trust that H Will blow the tempest „ 46
P'rom his mid-dome in H's airy halls; Lover's Tale i 66
till earth And li pass too, dwelt on my h, „ 72
Waiting to see some blessed shape in h, „ 312
and joy In breathing nearer h ; „ 389
To breathe with her as if in h itself ; „ 391
Thy fires from h had touch'd it, „ 439
Sooner Earth Might go round H, „ 482
bliss stood round me like the light of H, — „ 495
Steppetli from // to //, from light to light, ., 512
had // from all her doors. With all her golden thresholils „ 604
whom the gentlest airs of // Should kiss „ 738
may death Awake them with h's music „ 761
Bore her free-faced to the free airs of //, „ iv 38
winas that, H knows when, Had suck'd the fire „ 193
Ah h's ! Why need I tell you all ?— „ 200
Down out o' h i' Hell-fire— North. Cobbler 58
melted like a cloud in the silent summer h ; The Revenge 14
a man's ideal Is high in H, Sisters {E. and E.) 131
Cold, but as welcome as free airs of h „ 197
saved by the blessing of // ! Def. of Lu^know 104
this good Wiclif mountain down from h, Sir J. Oldcastle 132
the great ' Laudamus ' rose to h. Columbus 18
chains For him who gave a new h, „ 20
King David call'd the h's a hide, „ 47
Who took us for the very Gods from H, „ 183
Queen of // who seest the souls in Hell „ 216
high in tlie h above it there flicker'd V. of Maeldune 17
wliere the h's lean low on the land, „ 83
For a wild witch naked as A „ 100
when a smoke from a city goes to h Achilles over the T. 7
from his head the splendour went to h. „ 14
all the h's flash'd in frost ; To E. Fitzgerald 22
more than man Which rolls the h's, Tiresias 22
voice rang out in the thunders of Ocean and H The Wreck 88
No soul in the h above. Despair 19
higher still, the h's Whereby the cloud Ancient Sage 12
thou sendest thy free soul thro' h, „ 47
So dark that men cry out against the H's. „ 172
earth's dark forehead flings athwart the h's „ 200
past into the Nameless, as a cloud Melts into H. „ 234
The lark has past from earth to H The Flight 62
the blessed H s are just, „ 67
She ba.l us love, like souls in H, „ 88
While the silent H's roll, Locksley H., Sixty 203
sphere of all the boundless H's „ 210
the stars in h PaJed, and the glory grew. Pro. to Gen. Hamley 31
Whole h's within themselves, amaze Epilogue 56
And ' The Curse of the Prophet ' in H. Dead Prophet 28
Opens a door in H ; Early Spring 7
Like some conjectured planet in mid h To Prin. Beatrice 20
cry that rang thro' Hades, Earth, and H ! Demeter and P. 33
I, Earth-Goddess, cursed the Gods of H. „ 102
break The sunless halls of Hades into // ? „ 136
Mellow moon of h, Bright in blue. The Ring 1
No sudden /(, nor sudden hell, for man, „ 41
past and future mix'd in H and made The rosy twilight „ 186
suilden fire from H had dash'd him dead, Happy 83
to trace On paler h's the branching grace To Ulysses 15
For his clear h, and these few lanes To Mary Boyle 67
// lours. But in the tearful splendour Prog, of Spring 40
all but in H Hovers The Gleam. Merlin and the G. 118
This seem'd my lodestar in the II of Art, Romney's R. 39
roll The rainbow hues of h about it — „ 51
my white heather only blooms in /* ' „ 110
the shout Of His descending peals from H, „ 127
Human forgiveness touches h, „ 159
earth's green stole in h's own hue. Far — far — aivay 2
Heaven
319
Height
Heaven (continued) as the heights of the June-
blue h, June Bracken, etc. 7
topmost pine Spired into bluest A, Death of CEnone 69
A sudden strength from h, St. Telemachus 56
Still 1 raised my heart to h, Akbar's Dream 6
Well spake thy brother in his hymn to h „ 27
star Should shriek its claim ' I only am inh' „ 43
mists of earth Fade in the noon of /», - „ 97
' hast <AoM brought us down a new Kortln From A ? „ 117
always open-door'd To every breath from h, „ 180
fur owt but the Kingdom o H; Church-warden, etc. 44
She is hi^h in the H of H's, Charity 42
He is racmg from h to h And less will be lost The Dreamer 21
// over h expands. Mechanofhilus 36
(.) ye H's, of your boundless nights, God and the Univ. 2
Heaven-descended Corrupts the strength of h-d Will, Will 11
Heavenliest See Earthly-beavenliest
Heavenly ' He seems to hear a // Friend, Two Voices 295
For me the H Bridegroom waits, St. Agnes' Eve 31
Like // Hope she crown'd the sea, The Voyage 70
But Wisdom h of the soul. In Mem. cxiv 22
Dear h friend that canst not die, „ cxj^ix 7
he defileth h things With earthly uses ' — Balin and Balan 421
Trusting no longer that earthly flower would be h fruit — Despair 35
Once more the H Power Makes all things new. Early Spring 1
For now the U Power Makes all tilings new, „ 43
\Vhich on the touch of h feet had risen, Death of CEnone 5
Heavenly-best Ere she gain her H-b, Locksley //., Sixty 271
Heavenly-toned So h-t, that in that hour Two Voices 442
Heavenly-unmeasured H-u or unlimited Love, Lover's Tale i 474
Heavenly-wise glow In azure orbits h-w ; In Mem. Ixxxvii 38
Heaven-sweet H-s Evangel, ever-living word. Sir J. Oldcastle 28
Heavenward glancing /j on a star so silver-fair, Locksley II., Sixty 191
As mounts the h altar-fire. In Mem. xli 3
Once again thou flamest h, Akbar's D., Hymn 1
Heavier tougher, h, stronger, he that smote Princess v 536
Heaviest roll'd Her h thunder — Lover's Tale i 606
Heavily-galloping sound of many a h-g hoof Geraint and E. 447
Heaviness VVhy are we weigh'd upon with h, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 12
Heaving (See also Hard-heaving) Which heaves but
with the h deep. In Mem. xi 20
Gazed at the h shoulder, and the face Hand-hidden, Merlin and V. 896
With his huge sea-castles h upon the weather bow. The Revenge 24
Heavy (See also Dead-heavy, Head-heavy) If time
be h on your hands, X. C. V. de Vere 66
What is this ? his eyes are h : Locksley Ilall 51
for this most gentle maiden's death Right h
am I ; Lancelot and E. 1292
W as it was, a great stone slipt and fell, Holy Grail 680
teach me yet Somewhat before the h clod Weighs
on me, Supp. Confessions 184
Earthward he boweth the h stalks A spirit haunts 7
Slide the h barges trail'd By slow horses ; L. ofShalott i 20
The h clocks knolling the drowsy hours. Gardener's D. 184
with a grosser film made thick These h, horny eyes. St. S. Stylites 201
Rain out the h mist of tears, Love and Duty 43
But that his h rider kept him down. Vision of Sin 4
A vapour h, hueless, formless, cold, „ 53
Drink to h Ignorance ! „ 193
But on my shoulder hung their h hands. Princess iv 553
And blossom-fragrant slipt the h dews „ v 243
on my h eyelids My anguish hangs Uke shame. Maud II iv 73
Among the h breathings of the house, Geraint and E. 402
tliouglits deep and h as these well-nigh Lover's Tale i 688
Heavy-blosssom'd Droops the h-b bower, Locksley Hall 163
Heavy Brigade charge of the gallant three hundred,
the // B] Heavy Brigade 1
up the hill, up the hill, FoUow'd the // B. „ 12
Gallopt the gallant three hundred, the JI B. „ 25
Heavy-folded and swung The h-f rose. In Mem. xcv 59
Heavy-fruited hangs the h-f tree — Locksley Hall 163
Heavy-plunging ' I would the white cold h-p foam, D. of F. Women 118
Heavy-shotted His h-s hammock-shroud In Mem. vi 15
Hebe (adj.) violet eyes, and all her // bloom. Gardener's D. 137
Hebe (s) H's are they to hand ambrosia, Princess Hi 113
Hebe (s) (continued) Cassandra, //, Joan, Komney's R. 4
Hebrew ' No fair H boy Shall smile away my maiden
blame among The H mothere ' — D. of F. Women 213
Hector So // spake ; the Trojans roar'd Spec, of Iliad 1
Hedge (S) To one green wicket in a privet h ; Gardener's D. 110
All round a h upshoots, Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 41
He breaks the h : he enters there : „ Arrival 18
The h broke in, the banner blew, „ Revival 9
The very sparrows in the h Scarce answer Amphion 67
Lawrence Aylmor, seatotl on a stile In the long h, The Brook 198
breath Of tender air made trenible in the h „ 202
tho' she were a beggar from the h, Marr. of Geraint 230
pick'd a ragged-robin from the h, „ 724
sp\ittering thro' the h of spliiiter'd teeth, Last Tournament 65
Hedge (verb) laurel-shrubs that h it around. Poet's Mind 14
Hedge-bottoms But creeiip along the li-b, Church-warden, etc. 50
Hedgehog h underneath the plantain bores, Aylmer's Field 860
Hedgerow Not sowing /* texts and passing by, „ 171
' Graver cause than yours is mine To curse tliis h
thief, Marr. of Geraint 309
Hedge-row (S) whore the h-r cuts the pathway, Gardener's D. 86
Heed (s) Yet take thou h of him, for, so thou pass Gareth and L. 267
And being found take h of Vivien. Merlin and V. 529
I didn't take h o' them. First Quarrel 29
Heed (verb) Why pray To one who h's not, Supp. Confessions 90
Sliall I h them in their anguisli ? Bocidieea 9
wliether he h it or not, Maud I iv 53
ilow now, my soul, we do not h the fire ? Sir J. Oldcastle 191
What are men that He sliould h us ? Locksley H., Sixty 201
Heeded ' He h not reviling tones, 2'wo Voices 220
AH would be well — the lover h not, Aylmer's Field 545
Bubbled the nightingale and h not, Princess iv 266
Some old head-blow not h in his youth Gareth and L. 714
Garlon mock'd me, but I h not. Balin and Balan 606
that life I /* not Flow'd from me, Lover's Tale i 596
Heedless a h and innocent bride — The Wreck 13
Heedlessness pleased her with a babbling h Guinevere 151
Heehaw A jackass h's from the rick, Amphion 71
Heel As head and h's upon the floor 2'he Goose 37
Sharp-smitten with the dint of armed h's — M. d' Arthur 190
And drove his h into the smoulder'd log, „ Ep. 14
May with me from head to h. Gardener's D, 81
snarling at each other's h's. Locksley Hall 106
a precipitate h. Fledged as it were Lucretius 200
She trampled some beneath her horses' h's, Princess, Pro. 44
brains are in their hands and in their h's, „ iv 518
one rag, disprinced from head to h. „ v 30
The virgin marble under iron /i's : „ m 351
And has bitten the h of the going year. Window, Winter 6
a thousantl wants Gnarr at the h's of men, In Mem. xcviii 17
A cloak that dropt from collar-bone to h, Gareth and L. 682
And h against the pavement echoing, Geraint and E. 271
At which her palfrey whinnying lifted h, „ 533
Drove his mail'd h athwart the rojfal crown, Balin and Balan 540
And lissome Vivien, holding by his h. Merlin and V. 238
The men who met him rounded on their h's Pelleas and E. 142
Lancelot, with his h upon the fall'n, „ 580
^Vhee^d round on either h, Dagonet replied. Last Tournament 244
Lancelot pluck'd him by the /*, Guinevere 34
Sharp-smitten with the dint of armed h's — Pass, of Arthur 358
And his white hair sank to his h's, V. of Maeldune 118
turn'd upon his ft to hear My warning Tiresias 72
Tumble Nature h o'er head, Locksley H., Sixty 135
I be leper hke yourself, my love, from head to h. Hap'py 88
Year will graze the h of year, Poets and Critics 14
Hegg (egg) Butter an' h's — yis — yis. Village Wife 2
an' 1 warrants the h's be as well, „ 3
fever 'ed baiiked Jinny's 'eiid as bald as one o' them h's, „ 102
But I sarved 'em wi' butter an' h's „ 114
an' they knaw'd what a h wur an' all ; „ 116
an' they laiiid big h's es tha seeas ; „ 118
Heifer brainless bulls, Dead for one h ! ' Balin and Balan 579
Height sponges of millennial growth and h ; Tlie Kraken 6
free clelight, from any h of rapitl flight, Rosalind 3
' Thou hast not gain'd a real ft. Two Voices 91
Height
320
Held
He^ht (continued) In gazing up an Alpine h,
0 sun, that from thy noonday h Shudderest
Beyond, a line of h's, and higher
Be flatter'd to the h.
Which will not leave the myrrh-bush on the h ;
To her full h her stately stature draws ;
Op old sat Freedom on the h's,
1 leave the plain, I climb the h ;
fold by fold, From those still h's,
When lo ! her Enoch sitting on a h,
bending from his h With half -allowing smiles
Nor dealing goodly counsel from a h
from his h and loneliness of grief
She rose her h, and said :
The rosy h's came out above the la^vns.
When storm is on the h's,
song, arose Once more thro' all her h,
drags me down From my fixt h to mob me
0 maid, from yonder mountain h :
What pleasure lives in h (the shepherd sang) In h
and cold, the splendour of the hills ?
He gain in sweetness and in moral h,
The h, the space, the gloom, the glory !
They leave the h's and are troubled,
' The deep has power on the h, And the h has
power on the deep ;
And a h beyond the h !
Whisper in odorous h's of even,
every h comes out, and jutting peak And valley.
On Argive's h's divinely sang,
Upon the last and sharpest h,
A higher h, a deeper deep,
all thy breadth and h Of foliage,
About empyreal h's of thought.
To scale the heaven's highest h,
Powers of the h, Powers of the deep,
glory of manhood stand on his ancient h,
up to a /», the peak Haze-hidden,
Sigh'd, as a boy lame-bom beneath a h,
Another sinning on such h's with one,
free flashes from a h Above her,
heavens have fill'd it from the h's
For once- — ev'n to the h — I honour'd him.
not look up, or half-despised the h
To what h The day had gown I know not.
Grew after marriage to fuU h and form ?
Death from the h's of the mosque and the
palace,
from the crag to an imbelievable h,
kept their faith, their freedom, on the h,
fell from that half -spiritual h Chill'd,
to scale the highest of the h's
In h and prowess more than human,
On one far h in one far-shining fire.
far-shining fire '
Force is from the h's.
Ah, a, broken grange, a grove.
And, gazing from this h alone,
horsemen had gather'd there on the h,
glancing from his h On earth a fruitless fallow,
an ever opening h. An ever lessening earth —
on that clear and heather-scented h
beauty that endures on the Spiritual h,
madden'd to the h By tonguester tricks.
And suffering cloud the h I stand upon
Muses have raised to the h's of the mountain,
As he stands on the h's of his life with a glimpse
of a A that is higher,
as the h's of the June-blue heaven.
Glimmering up the h's beyond me,
vanish in your deeps and h's ?
Height (eight) an' theere — it be strikin' h —
Heighten'd Then the Captain's colour h,
Heightening {See also Ever-heightening) peaks they
stand ever spreading and h ;
Two Voices 362
Fatima 2
Palace of Art 82
192
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 58
D.ofF. Women 102
Of old sat Freedom 1
Sir Galahad 57
Vision of Sin 52
Enoch Arden 500
Aylmer's Field 119
172
632
Princess ii 41
„ Hi 365
V 348
„ vi 160
308
„ vii 192
193
281
The Daisy 59
Voice and the P. 15
21
34
Milton 16
S'pec. of Iliad 13
In Mem. xxiii 22
„ xlvii 13
„ Ixiii 12
)j LCCXXtX O
„ xcv 38
„ cviii 7
Maud II ii 82
„ III vi 21
Com. of Arthur 429
Balin and Balan 164
Lancelot and E. 248
647
Pelleas and E. 510
Last Tournament 662
Guinevere 643
Lover's Tale Hi 8
Sisters (E. and E.) 171
Def. of Lucknow 24
V. of Maeldune 16
Montenegro 2
To E. Fitzgerald 19
Tiresias 28
„ 179
' One h and one
„ 185
Ancient Sage 14
223
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 9
Heavy Brigade 14
Demeter and P. 117
The Ring 45
„ 350
Happy 37
To Mary Boyle 33
Bomney's R. 65
Parnassus 2
By an Evolution. 20
June Bracken, etc. 7
Silent Voices 9
God and the Univ. 1
Spinster's S's. 114
The Captain 29
Parnassus 11
Height-year-howd (eight-year-old) thou was a h-y-h,
Heir His son and h doth ride post-haste,
first sight, first-born, and h to all,
I the h of all the ages.
Lord Ronald is ^ of all your lands.
And I,' said he, ' the lawful h,
loved As heiress and not h regretfully ?
Blissful bride of a blissful h. Bride of the h of
the kings of the sea—
The hard h strides about their lands,
Spum'd by this h of the liar —
Moaning and wailing for an h to rule After him,
' Here is Uther's h, your king.'
Moaning and wailing for an h,
cried ' The King ! Here is an h for Uther ! '
prince his h, when tall and marriageable,
Garlon, mine h, Of him demand it,'
dead love's harsh h, jealous pride ?
and tend him cmriously Like a king's h,
greedy h That scarce can wait the reading
H of his face and land, to Lionel.
Against the guiltless h's of him from Tyre,
quote Ash oi endless fame —
I am h, and this my kingdom.
My heart is for my son, Saleem, my h, —
Heiress ' If you are not the h born, (repeat)
loved As h and not heir regretfully ?
Their child.' ' Our child ! ' 'Omhl'
■ h, wealth. Their wealth, their h !
Then comes the feebler h of your plan.
He married an h, an orphan with half a shire
Heirless now a lonely man Wifeless and h,
whether that h flaw In his throne's title
Heirloom H's, and ancient miracles of Art,
Held That h the pear to the gable-wall.
Paris h the costly fruit Out at arm's-length,
not the less h she her solemn mirth.
You h your course without remorse,
H me above the subject, as strong gales
My father h his hand upon his face ;
Her rags scarce h together ;
He A a goose upon his arm,
there we ^ a talk. How all the old honour
I mean of verse (for so we h it then),
dropt the branch she h, and turning,
h it better men should perish one by one,
grieving h his will, and bore it thro'.
And yet she h him on delayingly „ 468
Some that she but h off to draw him on ; „ 476
With daily-dwindling profits h the house ; „ 696
H his head high, and cared for no man, „ 848
those that h their heads above the crowd, Tlie Brook 10
sweet face and faith H him from that : Aylmer's Field 393
Faded with morning, but his purpose h. „ 412
as if he h The Apocalyptic millstone, Sea Breams 25
My master h That Gods there are, Lucretius 116
She h it out ; and as a parrot turns Princess, Pro. 171
He h his sceptre like a pedant's wand „ i 27
knowledge, so my daughter h, Was all in all : „ 135
And h her round the knees against his waist, „ ii 363
In this hand h a volume as to read, „ 455
heard In the dead hush the papers that she h Rustle : „ iv 390
some pretext h Of baby troth, invalid, „ v 397
I pored upon her letter which I h, „ 469
painting and the tress. And h them up : „ vi 111
Love in the sacred halls H carnival at will, „ vii 85
h A volume of the Poets of her land : „ 173
I H it truth, with him who sings In Mem. i 1
The man Ih as half-divine ; „ xiv 10
if we /* the doctrine sound For life outliving „ liii 9
Where once we h debate, a band Of youthful friends, „ Ixxxvii 21
'Tis h that sorrow makes us wise, „ cviii 15
'Tis h that sorrow makes us wise ; „ cxiii 1
Thkse to His Memory — since he h them dear, Bed. of Idylls 1
h Tintagil castle by the Cornish sea, Com. of Arthur 187
Church-warden, etc. 33
D. of the Old Year 31
Gardener's B. 189
Locksley Hall 178
Lady Clare 19
86
Aylmer's Field 24
W. to Alexandra 27
In Mem. xc 15
Maud I xix 78
Com. of Arthur 207
230
368
386
Gareth and L. 102
Balin and Balan 117
Lancelot and E. 1398
Last Tournament 91
Lover's Tale i 675
iv 129
Tiresias 12
Ancient Sage 147
By an Evolution. 14
Akbar's Dream 171
Lady Clare 83, 85
Aylmer's Field 24
297
368
Princess Hi 237
Charity 13
Lancelot and E. 1371
Sir J. Oldcastle 72
Lover's Tale iv 192
Mariana 4
Qinone 135 '
Palace of Art 215
L. C. V. de Vere 45
D. of F. Women 10
107
The Goose 2
5
The Epic 6
„ 26
Gardener's D. 157
Locksley Hall 179
Enoch Arden 167
Held
321
Helm
I h with these, and loathe to ask thee
Held {continued)
aught.
A All in a gap-mouth'd circle his good mates
a casque ; that h The horse, the spear ;
that day a feast had been H in high hall,
H court at old Caerleon upon Usk.
caught His purple scarf, and h, and said,
Down to the meadow where the jousts were h,
H his head high, and thought himself a knight,
H commune with herself, and while she h
moving back she h Her finger up,
(And flll'd a horn with wine and A it to her,)
Edyrn, whom he h In converse for a little,
who h and lost with Lot In that first war,
Flow'd from the spiritual Uly that she h.
one had watch' d, and had not h his peace :
And that it was too slippery to be h,
she, who h her eyes upon the ground,
noble things, and h her from her sleep.
They that assail'd, and they that h the lists.
Ranged with the Table Round that h the lists.
And all the Table Roimd that h the lists,
h her tenderly. And loved her with all love
Her all but utter whiteness h for sin,
caught his hand, H it, and there,
h, that if the King Had seen the sight
she said, ' Had ye not h your Lancelot
' Fake ! and I h thee pure as Guinevere.'
* Have any of our Round Table h their vows ? '
met A cripple, one that h a hand for alms —
had h sometime with pain His own against him,
Gareih and L. 356
510
680
848
Marr. of Geraint 146
377
537
Geraint and E. 242
368
452
659
881
Balin and Balan 1
264
Merlin and V. 162
Lancelot and E. 213
232
339
455
467
499
867
Holy Grail 84
754
903
Pelleas and E. 182
522
„ • 533
542
Last Tournament 178
H her awake : or if she slept, she dream'd
Had h the field of battle was the King :
H for a space 'twixt cloud and wave,
H converse sweet and low — low converse sweet,
Long time entrancement h me.
And those that h the bier before my face,
our house has h Three hundred years —
defended the hold that we h with our lives —
we have h it for eighty-seven !
when I ft it aloft in my joy.
But pity — the Pagan A it a vice —
and h his own Like an Englishman
were h for a while from the fight.
She h them up to the view ;
I h you at that moment even dearer than before ;
caught and h His people by the bridle-rein of Truth,
'Helen the breasts. The breasts of H,
Ws Tower, here I stand.
Helicon frog coarser croak upon our H ?
Heliconian H honey in living words,
lands that lie Subjected to the H ridge
Hell I hated him with the hate of h,
Struck thro' with pangs of h.
some, 'tis whisper'd — ^down in h Suffer endless
anguish, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 123
all h beneath Made me boil over. St. S. Stylites 170
Deep asRl count his error. The Captain 3
' Thro' slander, meanest spawn of H — The Letters 33
Mix'd with cunning sparks of h. Vision of Sin 114
Lightens from her own central H — Aylmer's Field 761
Dropping the too rough H in i7 and Heaven, Sea Dreams 196
The mortal soul from out immortal h, Lucretius 263
paints the gates of H with Paradise, Princess iv 131
the fires of H Mix with his hearth : „ v 454
this French God, the child of H, Third of Feb. 7
Into the mouth of H Rode the six hundred. Light Brigade 25
Back from the mouth of H, » 47
Procuress to the Lords of H. In Mem. liii 16
And compass'd by the fires of fl^ ; „ cxxvii 17
the passions that make earth H ! Mavd I x 46
/ have climb'd nearer out of lonely H. „ (cviii 80
fires of H brake out of thy rising sun, „ II i 9
The fires of H and of Hate ; „ 10
Despite of Day and Night and Death and B.' Gareth and L. 887
Guinevere 75
Pass, of Arthur 138
Lover's Tale i 417
541
626
Sisters (E."and E.) 52
Def. of Lu^know 7
105
The Wreck 33
Despair 41
Heavy Brigade 18
36
Dead Prophet 72
Happy 90
Akbar's Dream 84
Lucretius 61
Helen's Tower 1
Trans, of Homer 4
Lucretius 224
Tiresias 26
The Sisters 22
Palace of Art 220
HeU (continued) I was halfway down the slope to H, Geraint and E. 791
Whereout the Demon issued up from H. Balin and Balan 317
fire of Heaven is not the flame of H. (repeat) „ 443, 447,
451, 455
And dallies with him in the Mouth of H.' „ 615
May this hard earth cleave to the Nadir h Merlin and V. 349
women, worst and best, as Heaven and H. „ 815
H burst up your harlot roofs Bellowing, Pelleas and E. 466
' Thou art false as H : slay me : „ 576
he could harp his wife up out of h.' Last Tournament 328
' The teeth of H flay bare and gnash thee „ 444
the scorpion-worm that twists in h, „ 451
leave me all alone with Mark and h. „ 536
and I shall not find him in H. Rizpah 74
thaw theer's naw drinkin' i' H ; North. Cobbler 58
tha'll foller 'im slick into H.' „ 66
raiike out H wi' a small-tooth coiimb — Village Wife 76
sulphur like so many fiends in their h — Def. of Lucknow 33
Heat like the mouth of a h, „ 81
we have sent them very fiends from H ; Columbus 184
seest the souls in H And purgatory, „ 216
In the rigging, voices of h — The Wreck 92
spoke, oi aH without help, without end. Despair 26
this earth is a fatherless H — „ 57
Infinite cruelty rather that made everlasting H, „ 96
H ! if the souls of men were immortal, „ 99
And so there were H for ever ! „ 101
His Love would have power over H „ 102
But the God of Love and of H together — „ 105
and now I fly from H, And you with me ; The Flight 88
sthrames runnin' down at the back o' the glin 'ud 'a
dhrownded H. Tomorrow 24
One shriek'd ' The fires oiHl' Dead Prophet 80
thence The shrilly whinnyings of the team of H, Demeter and P. 44
Gods against the fear Of Death and H ; „ 142
No sudden heaven, nor sudden h, for man. The Ring 41
There is laughter down in H Forlorn 15
Earth and H will brand your name, „ 51
blasted to the deathless fire of H. Happy 84
made an English homestead H — To Mary Boyle 37
the dead, who wait the doom of H Romney's R. 132
all the H's a-glare in either eye, Akbar's Dream 115
an' the tongue's sit afire o' H, Church-warden, etc. 24
a woman, God bless her, kept me from H. Charity 4 .
Hell-black God 'ill pardon the h-b raven Rizpah 39
Hell-fire An' Muggins 'e preiich'd o' H-f North. Cobbler 55
Down out o' heaven i' H-f — „ 58
Hell-heat would dare H-h or Arctic cold. Ancient Sage 116
Hellish Drench'd with the h oorali — In the Child. Hosp. 10
Of the h heat of a wretched life Despair 68
Helm (helmet) I am so deeply smitten thro' the h M. d' Arthur 25
Aidless, alone, and smitten thro' the h. „ 41
A scarf of orange round the stony h, Princess, Pro. 102
fired an angry Pallas on the h, „ vi 367
he neither wore on h or shield The golden symbol Com. of Arthur 49
fall battleaxe upon h. Fall battleaxe, „ 486
h could ride Theretfaro' nor graze : Gareth and L. 673
Then as he donn'd the h, and took the shield „ 690
brought a h With but a drying evergreen „ 1115
Sir Gareth's head prickled beneath his ft ; „ 1397
he clove the ft As throughly as the skuU ; „ 1406
Aim'd at the ft, his lance err'd ; Geraint and E. 157
cast his lance aside. And doS'd his ft : „ 596
Hard upon ft smote him, and the blade flew Balin and Balan 395
BaUn by the banneret of his ft Dragg'd him, „ 398
upon his ft A sleeve of scarlet, Lancelot and E. 603
he had not loosed it from his ft, „ 809
look'd Down on his ft, from which her sleeve had gone. „ 982
Beat like a strong knight on his ft, Pelleas and E. 23
Even to tipmost lance and topmost ft. Last Tournament 442
he spake to these his ft was lower'd, Guinevere 593
the crash Of battleaxes on shatter'd h's, Pass, of Arthur 110
Hard on that ft which many a heathen sword „ 166
I am so deeply smitten thro' the ft „ 193
Aidless, alone, and smitten through the ft. — „ 209
Helm
322
Herald
Helm (helmet) (continued) her golden h And all her golden armour
on the grass, Tiresias 44
Helm (as of a boat) She took the h and he the sail ; Merlin and V. 200
but the man that was lash'd to the h had gone ; The Wreck 110
Whatever statesman hold the h. Hands all Round 20
Or should those fail, that hold the h, Prog, of Spring 100
Helm (verb) overbears the bark. And him that h's it, Lancelot and E. 486
Helmet The h and the helmet-feather Burn'd L. of Shalott Hi 21
From imdemeath his h flow'd His coal-black curls „ 30
She saw the h and the plume, „ 40
out of stricken h's sprang the fire. Princess v 495
With Psyche's colour round his h, „ 534
And wears a h mounted with a skull, Gareth and L. 639
Gareth there unlaced His h as to slay him, „ 979
Sat riveting a A on his knee, Marr. of Geraint 268
Came forward with the h yet in hand „ 285
crack 'd the h thro', and bit the bone, „ 573
Till his eye darken'd and his h wagg'd ; Geraint and E. 505
then he bound Her token on his h, Lancelot and E. 374
leaving for the cowl The h in an abbey far away Holy Grail 6
And once the laces of a A crack'd. Last Tournament 164
Tumbling the hollow h's of the fallen. Pass, of Arthur 132
spear and h tipt With stormy light Tiresias 113
Flicker'd and bicker'd From hto h, Merlin and the G. 71
Helmet-feather The helmet and the h-f Bum'd L. of Shalott Hi 21
Helmet-hidden the face Wellnigh was h-h, Last Tournament 456
Helmless I sit within a h bark, In Mem. iv 3
Helmsman I leap on board : no h steers : Sir Galahad 39
Help (s) without h I cannot last till mom. M. d' Arthur 26
I grieve to see you poor and wanting h : Enoch Arden 406
a voice Of comfort and an open hand of h, Aylmer's Field 174
who promised h, and oozed All o'er with honey'd
answer Princess v 241
Because it needed h of Love : In Mem. xxv 8
For h and shelter to the hermit's cave. Gareth and L. 1209
scaled with h a hundred feet Up from the base : Balin and Balan 170
maiden sprang into the hall Crying on h : Holy Grail 209
shall I kill myself ? What h in that ? Guinevere 621
without h I cannot last till mom. Pass, of Arthur Idi
of a Hell without h, without end. Despair 26
they maiikes ma a A to the poor, Church-warden, etc. 39
Help (verb) {See also 'Elp) grace To h me of my
weary load.' Mariana in the S. 30
until he grows Of age to A us.' Dora 127
h's the hurt that Honour feels, Lochsley Hall 105
h me as when life begun : ,,185
I cannot h you as I wish to do Unless — Enoch Arden 407
H me not to break in upon her peace. „ 787
How could I A her ? ' Would I— The Brook 111
Poor fellow, could he ;* it ? „ 158
there was one to hear And h them ? Princess ii 268
I heard, I could not h it, „ 332
oh. Sirs, could I h it, but my cheek „ Hi 45
(God h her) she was wedded to a fool ; „ 83
h my prince to gain His rightful bride, „ 160
H, father, brother, h ; speak to the king : „ vi 305
one That whoUy scom'd to h their equal rights „ vii 233
For, saving that, ye h to save mankind Ode on Well. 166
How best to h the slender store, To F. D. Maurice 37
' God h me ! save I take my part Of danger Sailor Boy 21
' H us from famine And plague and strife ! The Victim 9
But h thy foolish ones to bear; In Mem., Pro. 31
H thy vain worlds to bear thy light. „ 32
Sent to him, saying ' Arise, and h us thou ! Com. of Arthur 4A
Sweet f eices, who will h him at his need. „ 279
friends Of Arthur, who should h him at his need, Gareth and L. 230
' We sit King, to h the wrong'd Thro' all our realm. „ 371
unhappiness Of one who came to h thee, „ 1238
'Hea\en/t thee,' sigh'd Lynette. „ 1357
name Slip from my lips if I can h it — Marr. of Geraint 446
So this will h him of his violences ! ' Balin and Balan 205
bounden art thou, if from Arthur's hall, To /* the
weak. ,, 473
fl, for he follows ! take me to thyself ! Merlin and V. 82
The sick weak beast seeking to h herself „ 498
Help (verb) (continued) ' What matter, so I A him
back to life ? ' Lancelot and E. 787
and said, ' Betray me not, but h — Pelleas and E. 360
If I, the Queen, May h them, loose thy tongue, „ 600
To h it from the death that cannot die, Guinevere 66
But h me, heaven, for surely I repent. „ 372
friends Of Arthur, who should h him at his need ? ' Pass, of Arthur 456
Lover's Tale iv 144
Sisters (E. and E.) 224
In the Child. Hosp. 49
Sir J. Oldcastle 63
162
De Prof., Human C. 8
Achilles over the T. 13
The Wreck 56
Ancient Sage 258
Locksley H., Sixty 267
Parnassus 3
5
Death of CEnone 46
Dora 51
„ lis
Enoch Arden 815
Aylmer's Field 475
Princess i 227
Marr. of Geraint 738
Geraint and E. 638
Lancelot and E. 297
1307
1311
The Wreck 58
To Mary Boyle 39
Princess vii 258
Last Tournament 331
Gareth aiid L. 1213
Marr. of Geraint 768
Sprang up a friendship that may h us yet,
And A us to our joy.
I should cry to the dear Lord Jesus to h me,
given my hfe To h his own from scathe,
I'hen I, God h me, I So mock'd,
but Thou wilt A us to be.
and sail to h him in the war ;
hand that would h me, would heal me —
Let be thy wail and h thy fellow men,
to A his homelier brother men,
0 Goddesses, h me up thither!
you wiU h me to overcome it,
by thy love which once was mine, H, heal me.
Help'd-Helpt and his father help'd him not.
God, that help'd her in her widowhood.
or help'd At lading and unlading the tall barks.
For heart, I think, help'd head :
Came rimning at the call, and help'd us down.
Help'd by the mother's careful hand and eye.
Yea, would have help'd him to it :
And at Caerleon had he help'd his lord,
some rough use. And help'd her from herself.'
as would have help'd her from her death.'
He helpt me with death, and he heal'd
hands of mine Have helpt to pass a bucket
Helper Henceforth thou hast a h, me.
Helpful a h harper thou. That harpest downward !
Helping h back the dislocated Kay To Camelot,
Her mother silent too, nor h her.
Helpless his blue eyes All flooded with the h wrath of
tears.
The h life so wild that it was tame.
1 felt Thy h warmth about my barren breast
And often feeling of the h hands,
Than as a Uttle h innocent bird.
Then his h heart Leapt, and he cried,
to and fro Swaying the h hands,
tiU h death And silence made him bold —
H, taking the place of the pitying God
Would echo h laughter to your jest !
peasants maim the h horse, and drive Innocent
cattle
She tumbled his h corpse about.
And golden grain, my gift to h man.
Helplessness Enid, in her utter h.
Helpmate ' lo mine h, one to feel My purpose
Helpt /See Help'd
Helter-skelter H-s nms the age ;
Hem (s) in her raiment's h was traced in flame
Hem (verb) one but speaks or h's or stirs his chair.
Hemlock Diotima, teaching him that died Of h ;
the h, Brow-high, did strike my forehead
Their nectar smack'd of h on the lips.
Hen (See also Guinea-hens) we stole his fruit. His
h's, his eggs ;
praised his h's, his geese, his guinea-hens ;
a A To her false daughters in the pool ;
even in their h's and in their eggs —
Pluksh ! ! ! the h's i' the peas !
Hend (end) theer wur a A o' the taail,
buried togither, an' this wur the A.
if soil please God, to the A.
Hengist Heathen, the brood by H left ;
Hennemy (enemy) Theer's thy A, man, an' I knaws,
I'll looiJk my A strait i' the faiice,
Henry (the Third) H's fifty years are all in shadow, On Jub. Q. Victoria 39
Hepitaph (epitaph) Nor her wi' the A yonder ! Spinster's S's. 12
Herald (adj.) The A melodies of spring, In Mem. xxxviii 6-
Enoch Arden 32
557
Princess vi 202
„ vii 111
Lancelot and E. 894
Pelleas and E. 130
Pass, of Arthur 131
Lover's Tale iv 72
Despair 42
To W. H. Brookfkld 5
Locksley H., Sixty 95
Dead Prophet 65
Demeter and P. Ill
Geraint and E. 719
Guinevere 485
Poets and Critics 2
Tlie Poet 45
Sonnet To 5
Princess Hi 303
Lover's Tale ii 18
Demeter and P. 104
Walk, to the Mail 85
The Brook 126
Princess v 328
Holy Grail 560
Village Wife 124
86
90
Spinster's S's. 112
Guinevere 16
North. Cobbler 65
74
Herald
323
Hid
Herald (s) The h of her triumph, drawing nigh
let her h. Reverence, fly Before her
She sent a h forth. And bade him cry,
He thrice had sent a A to the gates,
And all that mom the h's to and fro,
The fe of a higher race,
Heralded And h the distance of this time !
Heraldry title-scrolls and gorgeous heraldries.
Poor old H, poor old History,
Herb (See also Garden-herbs) For the Ox Feeds in
(Enone 185
Love thou thy land 18
Godiva 35
Princess v 332
369
In Mem. cxviii 14
Lover's Tale i 562
Aylmer's Field 656
Locksley H., Sixty 249
I Heresy
the h,
Step deeper yet in h and fern,
The vilest h that runs to seed
bruised the h and crush'd the grape.
For underfoot the h was dry ;
I stoop'd, I gather'd the wild h's,
whatever h or bahn May clear the blood from
poison,
Hercules My H, my Roman Antony,
My Eustace might have sat for H;
Herd (s) By h's upon an endless plain.
The h, wild hearts and feeble wings
but count not me the h !
a A of boys with clamour bowl'd And stump'd
and as the leader of the h That holds
So thick with lowings of the h's,
watch her harvest ripen, her h increase,
the hind fell, the h was driven,
vineyard, hive and horse and h ;
Herd (verb) I, to A with narrow foreheads.
Herded thick as h ewes, And rainbow robes,
Herdsman Earth Reels, and the herdsmen cry ;
Here H comes to-day, Pallas and Aphroditfe,
I beheld great H's angry eyes.
The Samian H rises and she speaks
woman is the better man ; A rampant h,
the king along with him — All h, treason :
a cross of flesh and blood And holier. That was h.
' H. — Penance ? ' ' Fast, Hairshirt and scourge —
' H — Not shriven, not saved ? '
' H.' (My friend is long in coming.)
' H ' — (Hath he been here — not found me —
Some thought it h, but that would not hold.
Not even by one hair's-breadth of h.
Thy elect have no dealings with either h or
orthodoxy ;
H to the heretic, and religion to the orthodox,
one of those Who mix the wines of h
Bicetic And burn'd ahve as h's !
He would be found a A to Himself,
Heresy to the h, and religion to the orthodox.
Heretical They said with such h arrogance
Heritage Will not another take their h ?
Push'd from his chair of regal h.
This h of the past ;
Hermit Knave, my knight, a h once was here.
For help and shelter to the h's cave.
now for forty years A h, who had pray'd.
Then came the h out and bare him in,
h, skill'd in all The simples and the science
and thereby A holy h ia a, hermitage,
When the h made an end,
there the h slaked my burning thirst,
Hermitage thereby A holy hermit in a fe,
Hermon we shall stand transfigured, like Christ on H hill,
Hem I come from haimts of coot and h,
And floods the haunts of h and crake ;
When the lone h forgets his melancholy,
swamps and pools, waste places of the /*,
Who lost the h we slipt her at,
» h'es tall Dislodging pinnacle and parapet
Supp. Confessions 151
Talking Oak 245
Amphion 95
In Mem. xxxv 23
„ xcv2
Lover's Tale i 342
Death of (Enone 35
Z». ofF. Women 150
Gardener's D. 7
Palace of Art 74
Love thou thy land 11
Golden Year 13
Princess, Pro. 81
vi 85
In Mem. xcix 3
Maud III vi 25
Com. of Arthur 432
To Virgil 10
Locksley Hall 175
Princess iv 479
V 529
(Enone 85
,,190
Princess Hi 115
„ iv 411
Sir J. Oldcastle 50
138
141
143
147
151
Columbus 46
64
Akbar's D., Inscrip. 7
Hero
Heroic, for a h Ues beneath.
Or be yourself your h if you will.'
I answer'd, ' each be h in his turn !
While horse and h fell,
Akbar's Bream 174
Sir J. Oldcastle 48
182
Akbar's B., Inscrip. 8
Sir J. Oldcastle 15
Aylmer's Field 786
Lover's Tale i 118
Freedom 24
Gareth and L 1196
1209
Lancelot and E. 403
519
861
Holy Grail 443
457
461
443
Happy 38
The Brook 23
In Mem. ci 14
Gareth and L. 1185
Geraint and E. 31
Lancelot and E. 657
B.ofF. Women 25
Princess, Pro. 212
222
228
Light Brigade 44
Hero {continued) To greet us, her young /( in her
arms ! Lover's Tale iv 171
as the bravest A of song, V . of Maddune 5
Crept to his North again, Hoar-headed h ! Bait, of Brunanburh 64
Never had huger Slaughter of h'es „ 111
Herod H, when the shout was in his ears. Palace of Art 219
Heroic (adj.) {See also Mock-heroic, True-heroic) H,
for a hero lies beneath. Grave, solemn ! ' Princess, Pro. 212
H if you will, or what you will, „ 221
H seems our Princess as required — „ 230
' Why take the style of those h times ? The Epic 35
One equal temper of h hearts, Ulysses 68
So past the strong h soul away. Enoch Arden 915
The massive square of his h breast, Marr. of Geraint 75
and thou, H sailor-soul. Sir J. Franklin 2
golden lyre Is ever sounding in h ears H hymns, Tiresias 181
Heroic (s) In mock h's stranger than our own ; Princess, Con. 64
Heroine ' Take Lilia, then, for h,' „ Pro. 223
When dames and h's of the golden year „ vi 64
greatest of women, island h, Kapiolani Kapiolani 5
Heroism earn from both the praise of h. Sisters {E. and E.) 251
Heron the h rises from his watch beside the mere, Happy 3
Herse (horse) Fur 'e smell'd like a h a-singein', Owd Boa 101
Hesitating Down the long tower-stairs, h : Lancelot and E. 343
Hesp (hasp) why didn't tha h the gaate ? Village Wife 124
Hesper H is stayed between the two peaks ; Leonine Lleg. 11
False-eyed H, unkind, „ 16
Large H glitter'd on her tears, Mariana in the S. 90
Sad H o'er the buried sun In Mem. cxxi 1
H, whom the poet call'd the Bringer home of all
good things. Locksley H., Sixty 185
All good things may move in H, perfect peoples, „ 186
H — Venus — were we native to that splendour „ 187
Hesperian Disclosed a fruit of pure H gold, (Enone 66
Hesperus that H all things bringeth. Leonine Eleg. 13
' Meeidies ' — ' H ' — ' Nox ' — ' Mors,' Gareth and L. 1204
Hesper-Phosphor Sweet H-P, double name In Mem. cxxi 17
Hest Yet I thy h will all perform at full, M. d' Arthur 43
Yet I thy h will all perform at full. Pass, of Arthur 211
Hetairai girls, H, curious in their art, Lucretius 52
Hetty An' H wur weak i' the hattics. Village Wife 101
Hew my arm was lifted to h down A cavalier B. of F. Women 45
draw water, or h wood. Or grosser tasks ; Gareth and L. 486
Hew'd my race H Ammon, hip and thigh, B. of F. Women 238
And h great pieces of his armour off him, Gareth and L. 1142
Sympathy h out The bosom-sepulchre of Sympathy ? Lover's Tale ii 31
H the linden wood, Hack'd the battleshield, Batt. of Brunanburh 12
and h Like broad oaks with thunder. The Tourney 10
Hewing woodman at a bough Wearily h. Balin and Balan 295
All that day long labour'd, h the pines, Death of (Enone 62
Hewn With rugged maxims h from l&e ; Ode on Well. 184
the splintering spear, the hard mail h. Pass, of Arthur 108
Hexameter rise And long roll of the H — Lucretius 11
These lame h's the strong-wing'd music Trans, of Homer 1
H's no worse than daring Germany gave us.
Barbarous experiment, barbarous h's. „ 5
Heye (eye) But the heat druv hout i' my h's Owd Boa 84
Hiccup man coomin' in wi' a A Spinster's S's. 98
Hie Jacet by the cold H J's of the dead ! ' Merlin and V. 753
Hid {See also Half-hid, 'Id) For h in ringlets day and
night. Miller's D. 173
And h Excalibur the second time, M. d' Arthur 111
and Dora h her face By Mary. Dora 15Q
h his face From all men, Walk, to the Mail 20
' I would have h her needle in my heart, Edwin Morris 62
Saying, ' I have h my feelings, Locksley Hall 29
From havens h in fairy bowers. The Voyage 54
Which h the Holiest from the people's eyes Aylmer's Field 772
echo like a ghostly woodpecker, H in the ruins ; Princess, Pro. 218
some h and sought In the orange thickets : „ ii 459
The woman's garment h the woman's heart.' „ v 305
mimibled it, And h her bosom with it ; „ vi 214
Woods where we h from the wet. Window, Marr. Morn. 6
The moon is h ; the night is still ; In Mem. xaviii 2
The moon is h, the night is still; „ civ 2
Hid
324
High
Hid (continued) an Isis h by the vefl. Mavd I iv 43
more exprest Than h her, clung about her lissome
limbs, Merlin and V. 223
and not with half disdain E under grace, Lancelot and E. 264
H from the wide world's rumour by the grove „ 522
And h Excalibur the second time. Pass, of Arthur 279
and falling h the frame. Lover's Tale iv 217
She feels the Sun is h but for a night, Ancient Sage 73
Would Earth tho' h in cloud Happy 97
left his dagger behind him. I found it. I A it away. Bandit's Death 12
Hidalgo and his H's — shipwrecks, famines, Columbus 225
Hidden (See also Half-hidden, Haze-hidden, Helmet-
hidden) place with joy Z? in sorrow: Dying Swan 23
The smell of violets, h m the green, D. of F. Women 77
Gold-mines of thought to lift the h ore „ 274
Hail, h to the knees in fern. Talking Oak 29
h from the heart's disgrace, Locksley Hall 57
Lay h as the music of the moon Aylmer's Field 102
warm-blue breathings of a A hearth „ 155
'betwixt these two Division smoulders h; Princess Hi 79
her face Wellnigh was h in the minster gloom ; Com. of Arthur 289
let my name Be h, and give me the first quest, Gareth and L. 545
Nay, truly we were h : this fair lord, Balin and Balan 507
and bottom of the well. Where Truth is h. Merlin and V. 48
Now guess'd a h meaning in his arms, Lancelot and E. 17
Lancelot saying, ' Hear, but hold my name H, „ 417
know full well Where your great knight is h, „ 690
echoes h in the wall Rang out like hoUow woods Pelleas and E. 366
(When first I learnt thee h here) Guinevere 539
number'd the bones, I have h them all. Rizpah 10
h there from the light of the sun — Def. of Lucknow 63
Mother's diamonds h from her there. The Ring 142
And all the winters are h. The Throstle 16
A thousand things are h still Mechanophilus 23
' Some h principle to move. Two Voices 133
' A h hope,' the voice replied : „ 441
sitting in the deeps Upon the h bases of the hills.' M. d' Arthur 106
And draws the veil from h worth. Day-Dm., Arrival 4
How dark those h eyes must be ! ' „ 32
See with clear eye some h shame In Mem. li 7
distant hills From h summits fed with rills „ ciii 7
sitting in the deeps Upon the h bases of the hills.' Pass, of Arthur 274
that sends the h sun Down yon dark sea, De Prof., Two G. 33
Son, in the h world of sight, that Uves Tiresias 51
Fear not thou the h purpose of that Power God and the Univ. 5
Hide (See also 'Ide) run to and fro, and h and seek. The Mermaid 35
for the tear thou couldst not h, The Bridesmaid 11
' I cannot h that some have striven. Two Voices 208
neither h the ray From those, not blind, Love thou thy land 14
Where shall I h my forehead and my eyes ? M. d' Arthur 228
Oh, h thy knotted knees in fern. Talking Oak 93
H me from my deep emotion, Locksley Hall 108
H, h them, mUUon-myrtled wilderness, Lucretius 204
And cavern-shadowing laurels, h ! „ 205
See they sit, they h their faces, Boddicea 51
Is there no baseness we would h? In Mem. li 3
And h thy shame beneath the ground. „ Ixxii 28
That evermore she long'd to h herself, Gareth and L. Ill
will h with mantling flowers As if for pity ? ' „ 1392
if he die, why earth has earth enough To h him. GerairU and E. 555
Well, A it, A It ; I shall find it out ; Merlin and V. 528
h it therefore ; go unknown : Win ! Lancelot and E. 151
therefore would he h his name From all men, „ 580
And sharply tum'd about to h her face, „ 608
There will I h thee, till my life shall end, Guinevere 114
Would God that thou could'st h me from myself ! ,,118
Where shall I A my forehead and my eyes ? Pass, of Arthur 396
Dust to dust— low down— let us h ! Rizpah 37
H me. Mother ! my Fathers belong'd to the church of old. The Wreck 1
I would h from the storm without, „ 9
I will h my face, I wiU tell you all. „ 12
and higher. The cloud that h's it — Ancient Sage 12
Marriage will not h it. Forlorn 50
Hideoiu Day, mark'd as with some h crime, In Mem. Ixxii 18
Hideonsness roofs of slated h ! Locksley H., Sixty 246
Hiding (See also Heart-hiding) To take me to that
h in the hills. Sir J. Oldcastle 2
Hiding-place by mine head she knows his h-p.' Lancelot and E. 714
High (See also Breast-high, Brow-high) either babbUng
world of h and low; Ode on Well. 182
Peak, That standest h above all ? Voice and the P. 10
The Peak is h and flush'd „ 29
The Peak is h, and the stars are h, „ 31
they set him on h That all the ships Rizpah 37
She is A in the Heaven of Heavens, Charity 42
Some too h — no fault of thine — Poets and Critics 12
Whether the h field on the bushless Pike, Ode to Memory 96
Heaven flow'd upon the soul in many dreams Of h desire. The Poet 32
Whither away from the h green field, Sea-Fairies 8
To the pale-green sea-groves straight and h, The Merman 19
H things were spoken there, unhanded down ; Alexander 12
Hve alone unto herself In her h palace there. Palace of Art 12
h shrine-doors burst thro' with heated blasts D. of F. Women 29
' The h masts flicker'd as they lay afloat ; „ 113
his forehead like a rising sun H from the dais-
throne- M. d' Arthur 218
Three years I lived upon a pillar, h Six cubits, St. S, Stylites 86
this h dial, which my sorrow crowns — „ 95
From my h nest of penance here proclaim „ 167
H towns on hills were dimly seen. The Voyage 34
That girt the region with h cliS and lawn : Vision of Sin 47
trees As A as heaven, and every bird that sings : Sea Dreams 102
Both crown'd with stars and h among the stars, — „ 241
' And make her some great Princess, six feet h, Princess, Pro. 224
Or Nymph, or Goddess, at h tide of feast, „ i 197
At those h words, we conscious of ourselves, „ ii 67
fail so far In h desire, they know not, „ Hi 280
They haled us to the Princess where she sat H in the
hall : „ iv 272
when a boy, you stoop'd to me From all h places, „ 430
From the h tree the blossom wavering fell, „ vi 80
trust in all things h Comes easy to him, „ vii 329
Or tower, or h hill-convent, seen The Daisy 29
With many a rivulet h against the Sun The Islet 21
Calm and deep peace on this h wold, In Mem. xi 5
Did ever rise from h to higher ; „ xli 2
My guardian angel will speak out In that h place, „ xliv 16
The h Muse answer'd : ' Wherefore grieve „ Iviii 9
And moving up from h to higher, „ Ixiv 13
H nature amorous of the good, „ cix 9
up in the h Hall-garden I see her pass Uke a light ; Mavd I iv 11
For him did his h sun flame, „ 32
Not making his h place the lawless perch Ded. of Idylls 22
And even in h day the morning star. Com. of Arthur 100
Beheld, so h upon the dreary deeps „ 373
To whom arrived, by Dubric the h saint, „ 453
In whom h God hath breathed a secret thing. „ 501
At times the summit of the h city flash'd ; Gareth and L. 192
over all H on the top were those three Queens, „ 229
H nose, a nostril large and fine, „ 465
there past into the hall A damsel of h lineage, „ 588
Lyonors, A lady of h lineage, of great lands, „ 609
rose H that the highest-crested helm could ride ., 673
that day a feast had been Held in h hall, „ 848
Till h above him, circled with her maids, „ 1374
darken'd from the h light in his eyes, Marr. of Geraint 100
lords and ladies of the h court went In silver tissue „ 662
Geraint Woke where he slept in the h hall, „ 755
another gift of the h God, Which, maybe, „ 821
giant tower, from whose h crest, they say, „ 827
For bv the hands of Dubric, the h saint, „ 838
Held his head h, and thought himself a knight, Geraint and E. 242
For once, when I was up so h in pride „ 790
And oft I talk'd with Dubric, the h saint, „ 865
but when he mark'd his h sweet smile In passing, Balin and Balan 160
' Too h this mount of Camelot for me : „ 226
Borne by some h Lord-prince of Arthiur's hall, „ 466
See now, I set thee h on vantage ground, „ 534
And the h purpose broken by the worm. Merlin and V. 196
passing one, at the h peep of dawn, „ 560
High
325
Highway
il Higb (continued) Till the h dawn piercing the royal
i rose Merlin and V. 739
Because of that h pleasure which I had „ 877
If this be h, what is it to be low ? ' Lancelot and E. 1084
from the h door streaming, brake Disorderly, „ 1347
and watch'd The h reed wave, „ 1390
Low as the hill was h, and where the vale Holy Grail 441
And this h Quest as at a simple thing : „ 668
Clear as a lark, h o'er me as a lark, „ 833
Nor the h Grod a vision, nor that One Who rose again : „ 918
h doors Were softly sunder'd, and thro' these Pelleas and E. 3
I might have answer'd them Even before h God. „ 463
he saw E up in heaven the hall that Merlin built, „ 553
At Camelot, h above the yellowing woods. Last Tournament 3
In her h bower the Queen, Working a tapestry, „ 128
set his name H on all hills, „ 337
Like hiUsnow h in heaven, the steel-blue eyes, „ 667
Climb'd to the h top of the garden-wall Ouineeere 25
So from the h wall and the flowering grove „ 33
H, self-contain'd, and passionless, „ 406
But teach h thought, and amiable words „ 481
I guard as God's h gift from scathe and wrong, „ 494
And miss to hear h talk of noble deeds „ 499
We two may meet before h God, and thou „ 564
And likewise for the h rank she had borne, „ 695
Till the H God behold it from beyond. Pass, of Arthur 16
To all h places like a golden cloud For ever : „ 54
three whereat we gazed On that h day, „ 454
his h hills, with flame Milder and purer. Lover's Tale i 322
Who scarce can tune his h majestic sense „ 475
I was the H Priest in her holiest place, „ 686
from an open grating overhead H in the wall, „ iv 61
that a man's ideal Is A in Heaven, Sisters (E. and E.) 131
thaw the banks o' the beck be sa h, Village Wife 83
Rifleman, h on the roof, hidden there Def. of Liicknow 63
what full tides of onset sap Our seven h gates, Tiresias 92
Thro' her h hill-passes of stainless snow. Bead Prophet 47
wild heather round me and over me Jime's h blue, June Bracken, etc. 2
Been hurl'd so h they ranged about the globe ? St. Telemachus 2
High-arch'd H-a and ivy-claspt. Of finest Gothic Princess, Pro. 91
High-built storm their h-b organs make, In Mem. Ixxxvii 6
their h-b galleons came. Ship after ship, The Revenge 58
High-elbow'd H-e grigs that leap in summer grass. The Brook 54
Higher {See also 'Igher) Up h with the yew-tree
by it. Walk, to the Mail 13
As never sow was h in this world — „ 96
the sensuous organism That which is h. Princess ii 88
stood Among her maidens, h by the head, „ Hi 179
And the thought of a man is h. Voice and the P. 32
shine ye here so low ? Thy ward is A up : Gareih and L. 1098
Which set the horror h : „ 1394
Broader and h than any in all the lands ! Holy Grail 247
But angled in the h pool. Miller's D. 64
I might have look'd a little h ; „ 140
sure he was a foot H than you be.' Enoch Arden 855
yet, my Lords, not well : there is a A law. Third of Feb. 12
Of their dead selves to h things. In Mem. i 4
That rises upward always h, „ xv 17
Our voices took a h range ; „ xxx 21
Whose loves in h love endure ; „ xxxii 14
Did ever rise from high to h; „ xli 2
A h height, a deeper deep. „ Ixiii 12
And moving up from high to h, „ Ixiv 13
A h hand must make her mild, „ cxiv 17
The herald of a ft race, And of himself in h place, „ cxviii 14
There is a lower and aft; ,. cxxix 4
I wake to the ft aims Of a land that has lost Maud III vi 38
If I lose it and myself in the h beauty, Happy 58
raising her Still ft, past all peril, Lover's Tale i 394
which was more and ft than all Hope, „ 454
but, son, the source is ft. Yon summit half-a-
league in air — and ft, The cloud that hides
it — ft still, the heavens Whereby the cloud
was moulded. Ancient Sage 10
dead, as happier than ourselves And ft, „ 206
Higher (continued) if thou Lockk ft, then — ^perchance — thou
mayest— Ancient Sage 281
So the H wields the Lower, while the Lower is
thefi.
Something kindlier, ft, holier —
a glimpse of a height that is ft.
comes a gleam of what is ft.
Highering See Evei-highering
Highest And ft, snow and fire.
And clouds are ft up in air,
he is singing Hosanna in the ft :
people strowing cried ' Hosanna in the ft ! '
worshipt their own darkness in the H ?
The ft IS the measure of the man.
This flake of rainbow flying on the ft
the midmost and the ft Was Arac :
flush'd At his ft with sunrise fire ;
immeasurable heavens Break open to their ft,
The King is King, and ever wills the ft.
On Caer-Eryri's ft found the King,
Arthur in the ft Leaven'd the world.
The meanest having power upon the ft.
Him of all men who seems to me the A.' ' H?
the father answer'd, echoing ' ft ? '
Daughter, I know not what you call the ft ;
Guinevere had sinn'd against the ft,
Thou art the ft and most human too.
It was my duty to have loved the ft :
We needs must love the ft when we see it,
thro' what we feel Within ourselves is ft,
According to the H in the H.
' The Bright one in the ft Is brother of the Dark
He Who still is ft, glancing from his height
ill-content With them, who still are ft.
the H is the wisest and the best,
ere we reach'd the ft summit I pluck'd a daisy.
The ft, holiest manhood, thou :
To scale the heaven's ft height,
What find I in the ft place,
A soul on ft mission sent.
The ft virtue, mother of them all ;
Crown'd with her ft act the placid face
that ever swarm about And cloud the ft heads,
Forward, till you see the ft Human Nature is
divine. Locksley H., Sixty 276
Highest-crested rose High that the ft-c helm could ride Gareth and L. 673
Highest-mounted ' The h-m mind,' he said. Two Voices 79
High-heaven see The ft-ft dawn of more than mortal day Ancient Sage 284
TTigMnnder Havelock's glorious Z?'s answer Def . of Lricknow 99
war-harden'd hand of the H wet with their tears ! „ 102
Highlands Sailing under palmy ft Th£ Captain 23
Highness Your H would enroU them with your own. Princess i 239
One rose in all the world, your H „ ii 51
No ghostly hauntings like his H. „ 411
Your H might have seem'd the thing you say.' „ Hi 202
surely, if your H keep Your purport, „ 211
' Alas your H breathes full East,' „ 231
' pass on ; His H wakes : ' „ v5
' Amazed am I to hear Your H : but your H breaks
with ease The law your H did not make : „ vi 325
these men came to woo Your H — „ 329
High-set h-s courtesies are not for me. Balin and Balan 227
High-tempted Of hoar h-t Faith, have leagued
again
High-tide raise the full H-t of doubt
High-walled H-w gardens green and old ;
Highway (adj.) dead, become Mere ft dust ?
Highway (s) There she sees the ft near
at night along the dusky ft near
Cuts off the fiery ft of the sun.
Cut off the length of ft on before,
went harping down The black king's ft,
The ft running by it leaves a breadth
down the ft moving on With easy laugh te
I scaled the buoyant ft of the birds.
Locksley H., Sixty 124
160
By an Evolution. 20
FaOhQ
Palace of Art 84
Lady Clare 2
Enoch Arden 503
606
Aylmer's Field 643
Princess ii 157
„ V 319
256
Voice and the P. 30
Spec, of Iliad 15
Com. of Arthur 495
Gareth and L. 500
Merlin and V. 140
195
Lancelot and E. Wll
1080
Last Tournament 570
Guinevere 649
657
660
Ancient Sage 88
90
Demeter and P. 94
117
129
Faith 1
The Daisy 87
In Mem., Pro. 14
„ cviii 7
9
„ cxiii 10
Holy Grail 446
Lover's Tale i 216
Co umbus 120
Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 10
Sisters (E. and E.) 178
Arabian Nights 8
Love and Duty 11
L. of ShaloU ii 13
Locksley Hall 113
Enoch Arden 130
673
Last Tournament 343
Sisters (E. and E.) 80
Tiresias 199
Prog, of Spring 80
Hignorant
326
Hill
Hignorant (ignorant) ' A h village wife as 'ud hev to
be larn'd her awn plaace,'
Hill (snmame) (See also Letty, Letty Hill) millionaires,
Village Wife 106
Here lived the H's — Edwin Morris 11
Hill (See also Chalk-hill, Clover-hill, 'HI) Nor the
wind on the h.
And hollows of the fringed h's
ridge Of heaped h's that mound the sea,
Spring Letters cowslips on the h ?
And the hearts of purple h's,
From the bosom of a h.
flee By town, and tower, and h, and cape, and
isle,
new deluge from a thousand h's
The willowy h's and fields among.
The white chalk-quarry from the h
Before he mounts the h, I know He cometh quickly
a fire Is poured upon the h's, ,
lovelier Than all the valleys of Ionian h's.
Paris, once her playmate on the h's.
the noonday quiet holds the h :
Hear me, O Earth, hear me, O E's,
I waited underneath the dawning h's,
In this green valley, under this green h,
sounds at night come from the inmost h's,
Or over h's with peaky tops engrail'd,
and the crowfoot are over all the h.
There's not a flower on all the h's :
cock crows from the farm upon the h.
His waters from the purple h —
reclined On the h's like Gods together.
And thunder on the everlasting h's.
Steps from her airy h, and greens The swamp,
Had rest by stony h's of Crete.
Upon the hidden bases of the h's.'
Larger than human on the frozen h's.
those that stood upon the h's behind
The cuckoo told his name to all the h's ;
till we reach'd The limit of the h's ;
buffet round the h's, from blufl to bluff.
Rift the h's, and roll the waters,
far across the h's they went In that new world
Across the h's, and far away
And o'er the h's, and far away Beyond
By Ellen's grave, on the windy h.
High towns on h's were dimly seen.
And h's and scarlet-mingled woods Glow'd
go on To their haven under the h ;
but as he climb'd the h. Just where the prone edge
silent water slipping from the h's,
to the h. There he sat down gazing on all below ;
By thirty h's I hurry down,
with her strong feet up the steep h Trod out a path :
From h's, that look'd across a land of hope,
With whom I sang about the morning h's,
still be dear beyond the southern h's ;
A double h ran up his furrowy forks
The river as it narrow'd to the h's.
They faint on h or field or river :
found that you had gone, Ridd'n to the h's,
came As night to him that sitting on a A
And hit the Northern h's.
Forgotten, rusting on his iron h's,
Suck'd from the dark heart of the long h's
In height and cold, the splendour of the h's ?
Till o'er the h's her eagles flew
tho' the Giant Ages heave the h And break the shore,
and Charlie ploughing the h.
Sown in a wrinkle of the monstrous h,
The Priest went out by heath and h ;
the stars, the seas, the h's and the plains —
1 stand on the slope of the h.
And makes a silence in the h's.
But all the lavish h's would hum
The Christmas bells from htoh Answer each other
All Things wUl Die 26
Supp. Confessions 153
Ode to Memory 98
Adeline 62
Eleanor e 17
Kate 5
Mine be the strength 6
// / were loved 12
L. of Shalott iv 25
MiUer's D. 115
Fatima 22
31
CEwone2
17
25
36
47
232
249
Palace of Art 113
May Queen 38
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 13
23
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 93
110
D.ofF. Women 226
On a Mourner 8
35
M. d' Arthur 106
183
Ep. 25
Gardener's D. 93
Audley Court 83
Golden Year 77
Locksley Hall 186
Day -Dm., Depart. 3
29
Edward Gray 12
The Voyage 34
47
Break, break, etc. 10
Enoch Arden 66
633
722
The Brook 27
Sea Dreams 120
Princess i 169
m247
265
Hi 174
196
iv 14
343
574
v44
146
349
vii 194
Ode on WeU. 112
259
Grandmother 80
WUl 19
The Victim 29
Eigh. Pantheism 1
Window, On the Hill 9
In Mem. xix 8
xxiii 11
xxviii 3
Hill (continu£d) sound of streams that swift or slow
Draw down jEonian h's. In Mem. xxxv 11
whisper sweet About the ledges of the h.' „ xxxvii 8
Or seal'd within the iron h's? „ Ivi 20
A distant dearness in the h, „ Ixiv 19
chequer-work of beam and shade Along the h's, ' ,. Ixxii 16
And h and wood and field did print „ Ixxix 7
Descend below the golden h's With promise „ Ixxxiv 28
Beyond the bounding h to stray, „ Ixxxix 30
And those fair h's I sail'd below, „ xcviii 2
I climb the h : from end to end „ c\
Nor quarry trench'd along the h „ 11
memory fades From all the circle of the h's. „ d 24
distant h's From hidden summits fed with rills „ ciii 6
A single church below the h Is pealing, „ civ 3
The h's are shadows, jind they flow From form to form, cxxiii 5
spread Their sleeping silver thro' the h's; „ Con. 116
fleet came yonder round by the h, Maud I i 49
1 am sick of the Hall and the h, ,, 61
Down by the h I saw them ride, „ ix 11
Plucking the harmless wild-flower on the h ? — „ // t 3
saw The smallest rock far on the faintest h. Com. of Arthur 99
Men saw the goodly h's of Somerset, Marr. of Geraint 828
But not to goodly h or yellow sea „ 830
all night long a cloud clings to the h, Geraint and E. 691
Men weed the white horse on the Berkshire h's „ 936
he saw Fired from the west, far on a h, Lancelot and E. 168
broke The Pagan yet once more on Badon h.' ,, 280
Among the tumbled fragments of the h's.' „ 1427
a silver horn from o'er the h's Blown, Holy Grail 109
I rode on and found a mighty h, „ 421
a lowly vale, Low as the h was high, „ 441
' There rose a h that none but man could climb, „ 489
h, or plain, at sea, or flooding ford. „ 728
h and wood Went ever streaming by him Pelleas and E. 547
set his name High on all h's. Last Tournament 337
When round him bent the spirits of the h's Guinevere 283
on from h to h, and every day Beheld at noon „ 392
Far in the moonlit haze among the h's. Pass, of Arthur 42
Upon the hidden bases of the h's.' „ 274
Larger than human on the frozen h's. „ 351
the vacancies Between the tufted h's, Lover's Tale i 3
pines that fledged The h's that watch'd thee, ,. 12
muse On those dear h's, that never more will meet ,, 32
Apart, alone together on those h's. ,, 190
His mountain-altars, his high h's, ,, 322
reach'd The grassy platform on some A, „ 341
how native Unto the h's she trod on ! „ 360
we came To what our people call, ' The H of Woe.' ., 374
Arise in open prospect — heath and h, „ 397
' let this be call'd henceforth The H of Hope ; ' and I
replied, ' O sister. My will is one with thine ; the H
of Hope.'
We trod the shadow of the downward h ;
Sometimes upon the h's beside the sea
Chiefly I sought the cavern and the h
Great h's of ruins, and collapsed masses
From out the yellow woods upon the h
wander round the bases of the h's,
the woods upon the h Waved with a sudden gust
cheeks as bright as when she climb'd the h.
fain have torrents, lakes, H's,
To take me to that hiding in the h's.
spend my one last year among the h's.
the h's are white with rime,
if yonder h be level with the flat.
Down the h, down the h, thousands of Russians,
462
515
ii 4
33
65
80
121
Hi 34
47
SisUrs (E. and E.) 221
Sir J. Oldcastle 2
Ancient Sage 16
The Flight 4
Locksley H., Sixty 111
Heavy Brigade 2
up the h, up the h, up the h, FoUow'd the Heavy
Brigade. ^^ u
and up the h, up the h, gallopt the gallant three
himdred, ., 24
Up the h, up the h, up the h, out of the field, „ 63
domes the red-plow'd h's With loving blue ; Early Spring 3
cuckoo cries From out a phantom h ; Pref. Poem Broth. S. 20
I climb'd the h with Hubert yesterday, The Ping 152
HiU
327
Hoary
TTill (continiied) we shall stand transfigured, like Christ on
Hemion h, Happy 38
Where am I ? snow on all the h^s ! Romney's R. 12
To wallow in that winter of the h's. „ 15
I had been among the h's, and brought you down „ 78
But, while the h's remain. Up h ' Too-slow ' will need the
whip, Down h ' Too-quick,' the chain. Politics 10
Hill-convent Or tower, or high h-c, seen The Daisy 29
Hill-fort stonning a h-f of thieves He got it ; Aylmer's Field 225
Hillock Peace Pipe on her pastoral h Maud III vi 24
The mortal h, Would break into blossom ; Merlin and the G. 107
Hill-pass high h-p'es of stainless snow. Dead Prophet 47
Hill-side {See also 'Dl-Side) woods that belt the
gray h-s, Ode to Memory 55
The whole h-s was redder than a fox. Walk, to the Mail 3
Hill-slope damp h-s's were quickened into green, Gareth and L. 184
Hillsnow a brow Like h high in heaven. Last Tournament 667
Hilt But with his hand against the A, Love thou thy land 83
sparkled keen with frost against the h: M.d' Arthur 55
But when he saw the wonder of the A, „ 85
Thou would'st betray me for the precious h ; „ 126
caught him by the h, and branish d him (repeat) „ 145, 160
8o great a miracle as yonder h. „ 156
rich With jewels, elfin Urim, on the h, Com. of Arthur 299
Clash'd his, and brake it utterly to the h. Gareth and L. 1148
Caught at the h, as to abolish him : Marr. of Geraint 210
sparkled keen with frost against the h : Pass, of Arthur 223
But when he saw the wonder of the h, „ 253
Thou would'st betray me for the precious h ; „ 294
caught him by the h, and branish'd him (repeat) „ 313, 328
So great a miracle as yonder h. w 324
Hilted 'S'ee Oolden-Hilted
Hind the h fell, the herd was driven. Fire glimpsed ; Com. of Arthur 432
the h To whom a space of land is given to plow. Holy Grail 906
Calling me thy white h, and saying to me Last Tournament 569
Hinder Came all in haste to h wrong. Princess iv 401
What h's me To take such bloody vengeance „ 533
And so, before the two could h him, Gareth and L. 1368
rule the land Hereafter, which God h.' Lancelot and E. 66
' Heaven h,' said the King, „ 532
Hindering {See also Marriage-hindering) Had made the
pretext of a A wound, „ 582
Hindrance Divinely thro' all h finds the man „ 333
Hindustan Thro' all the warring world of R Akbar's Dream 26
Hinge The doors upon their h's creak'd ; Mariana 62
So frequent on its h before. [Deserted House 8
Half-parted from a weak and scolding h, The Brook 84
I grate on rusty h's here : ' Princess i 86
Hingin' (hanging) wi' my hairm h down to the floor, Owd Rod 65
TTinjian (Indian) Till I gied 'em H curn. Village Wife 118
Hinn (Inn) I started awaay like a shot, an' down to
the H, North. Cobbler 69
tha mun giJa fur it down to the H, „ 113
out o' sight o' the winders o' Gigglesby H — Spinsters S's. 35
Hint (s) A Uttle h to solace woe, A h, Two Voices 433
Like h's and echoes of the world Day- Dm., Sleep. P. 7
No h of death in all his frame, In Mem. xiv 18
with shadow'd h confuse A life that leads „ xxxiii 7
A little flash, a mystic h ; „ xliv 8
And sowing one ill h from ear to ear, Merlin and V. 143
dark sweet h's of some who prized him „ 159
Hint (verb) Ah pity — h it not in human tones, Wan Sculptor 11
Alone might h of my disgrace ; Two Voices 360
laughingly Would h at worse in either. Enoch Arden 481
We whisper, and h, and chuckle, Maud I iv 29
Hinted matron saw That h love was only wasted bait, The Ring 360
Hip See Huck
Hip and Thigh my race Hew'd Ammon, hat, D. of F. Women 238
Hire (s) Money — my h — his money — Charity 19
Hire (verb) And h thyself to serve for meats Gareth and L. 153
h myself To serve with scuUions and with kitchen knaves ; „ 169
But h us some fair chamber for the night, Geraint and E. 238
Hired h himself to work within the fields ; Dora 38
Nurse, were you h ? Romney's R. 16
O yes ! I h you for a season there, » 20
Hireling Who had borne my flower on her h heart. The Wreck 143
Hispaniola Howl'd me f rom H ; Columbus 118'
harmless people whom we found In H's island-Paradise : „ 182
Hiss the hot h \nd busthng whistle of the youth
h, snake — I saw him there^Let the fox bark,
A A as from a wilderness of snakes,
Hiss'd h each at other's ear What shall not be
wedded her,' he said. Not said, but h it :
He h, ' Let us revenge ourselves,
Hissing Each h in his neighbour's ear ;
And dipt in baths of h tears,
h in war on his own hearthstone ?
geese of the world that are ever h dispraise
h spray wind-driven Far thro' the dizzy dark.
Garlon, h ; then he sourly smiled.
he, A ' I have no sword,' Sprang from the door
roused a snake that h writhed away ;
Hist H 0 H,' he said, ' They seek us :
Historic See Half-Historic
History boyish histories Of battle,
would chant the h Of that great race.
Now made a pretty h to herself
old writers Have writ of in histories —
Poor old Heraldry, poor old H,
kindliness Rare in Fable or H,
as this poor earth's pale h runs,^
Hit (s) With twisted quirks and happy h's.
Hit (verb) He scarcely h my humour.
And h the Northern hills.
dream can h the mood Of Love on earth ?
Some sudden vivid pleasure h him there.
An' I A on an old deal-box
Has h on this, which you will take My Fitz,
Hither And on the h side, or so she look'd,
But on the h side of that loud morn
Hitting aim'd All at one mark, all h :
h all we saw with shafts Of gentle satire.
Hive Audley feast Humm'd like a A all round
from all the provinces, And fill the h.'
— Wasps in our good h,
There the h of Roman Hars worehip
h of those wild bees That made such honey
vineyard, h and horse and herd ;
moment's anger of bees in their h ?
EQven (heaven) an' H in its glory smiled.
An' sorra the bog that's in H
An' tell thim in H about Molly Magee
Hoalm (Holm) an' Thurnaby h's to plow !
Hoam (home) I walk'd wi' tha all the way h
Hoar Make thy grass h with early rime.
brows in silent hours become Unnaturally h with
rime,
the lawn as yet Is h with rime.
And the willow-branches h and dank,
made The h hair of the Baronet bristle up
descending from the sacred peak Of h
high-templed Faith,
Hoard (s) With a little h of maxims preaching
a, h oi tales that dealt with knights,
Our h is little, but our hearts are great,
(repeat)
From his great h of happiness distill'd
Struck for their h's and their hearths
Hoard (verb) I A it as a sugar-plum for Holmes.'
That h, and sleep, and feed,
some three suns to store and h myself,
To h all savings to the uttermost,
I A in thought The faded rhymes and scraps
Hoarded h in herself. Grew, seldom seen :
Hoarding perhaps the h sense Gives out at times
Hoarhead Came on the h woodman at a bough
Hoar-headed Crept to his North again, H-h
hero !
Hoarse I hear thee not at all, or h
Hoary And h to the wind.
Marr. of Geraint 256
Pelleas and E. 471
St. Telemachus 66
Geraint and E. 634
Last Tournament 620
Happy 63
Princess v 15
In Mem. cxviii 23
Maud I i 24
iv 62
Lover's Tale ii 198
Balin and Balin 355
Pelleas and E. 602
Death of OSnone 88
Princess iv 218
Aylmer's Field 97
In Mem. ciii 34
Lancelot and E. 18
Batt. of Brunanburh 115
Locksley H., Sixty 249
On Jul?. Q. Victoria 5
Vastness 3
Will Water. 189
Edwin Morris 76
Princess v 44
In Mem. xlvii 11
Lover's Tale iv 178
First Quarrel 48
To E. Fitzgerald 50
Princess ii 107
Last Tournament 56
Aylmer's Field 95
Princess ii 468
Audley Court 5
Princess ii 98
„ iv 535
Boddicea 19
Holy Grail 214
To VirgU 10
Vastness 35
Tomorrow 25
67
92
N. Farmer, O. S. 52
Spinster's S's. 32
Two Voices 66
St. S. Stylites 166
To F. D. Maurice^
Dying Swan 37
Aylmer's Field 42
Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 10
Locksley Hall 94
Princess, Pro. 29
Marr. of Geraint 352, 374
Lover's Tale i 714
Batt. of Brunanburh 19
The Epic 43
Ulysses 5
,, 29
Enoch Arden 46
Lover's Tale i 288
Gardener's Z) I 9
In Mem. xliv 6
Balin and Balan 294
Batt. of Brunanburh 65
The Blackbird 19
Palace of Art 80
Hoary
328
Hold
Hoary (continued) O'erflourish'd with the h clematis : Golden Year 63
Set thy h fancies free ; Vision of Sin 156
Still makes a h eyebrow for the gleam The Brook 80
a h face Meet for the reverence of the hearth, Aylmer's Field 332
h Channel Tumbles a billow on chalk and sand ; To F. D. Maurice 23
Take the h Roman head and shatter it, Boddicea 65
And eating li grain and pulse the steeds, Sfcc. of Iliad 21
From youth and babe and h hairs : In Mem. Ixix 10
Nor h knoll of ash and haw „ c 9
lifted his voice, and call'd A h man, Com. of Arthur 145
Then spake the h chamberlain and said, „ 148
But none spake word except the h Earl : Marr. of Geraint 369
Then suddenly addrest the h Earl : „ 402
Half-suffocated in the h fell Merlin and V. 840
And glancing thro' the h boles, Pelleas and E. 50
From h deeps that belt the changeful West, Frog, of Spring 98
h Sheik, On whom the women shrieking ' Atheist ' ATchar's Dream 90
Hoary-headed There musing sat the h-h Earl, Marr. of Geraint 295
Then sigh'd and smiled the h-h Earl, „ 307
Hob wi' my oan kettle theere o' the h, Spinster's S's. 9
Hob-and-nob Let us /i-a-w with Death. Vision of Sin 74
H-a-n with brother Death ! „ 194
Hobble See Hopple
Hoed See Stubb'd
Hofficer (officer) she walkt awaiiy wi' a h lad, Village Wife 97
Hog his ploughs, his cows, his h's, his dogs ; The Brook 125
And sleeker shall he shine than any h.' Gareth and L. 460
men brought in whole h's and quarter beeves, Geraint and E. 602
H(^gish With colt-Uke whinny and with h whine St. S. Stylites 177
Hold (grasp) shuddering took h of aU my mind. May Queen, Con. 35
thrice as sweet As woodbine's fragile h, Talking Oak 146
Nor greatly cared to lose, her h on life. Aylmer's Field 568
And that my h on life would break In Mem. xxviii 15
from my h on these Streams virtue — fire — Gareth and L. 1309
of that token on the shield Eelax'd his h : Balin and Balan 370
And sweep me from my h upon the world. Merlin and V. 303
and their law Relax'd its h upon us, Guinevere 457
My inward sap, the h I have on earth, lever's Tale i 166
Himger of glory gat H of the land. Batt. of Brunanburh 125
Would loose him from his h ; Ancient Sage 118
Hold (stronghold) new-comers in an ancient h, Edwin Morris 9
calmer hours to Memory's darkest h. Love and Duty 90
ev'n the lonest h were all as free Gareth and L. 598
I would track this caitiff to his h, Marr. of Geraint 415
by bandit-haunted h's. Gray swamps and pools, Geraint and E. 30
Eight in the gateway of the bandit h, „ 774
broke the bandit h's and cleansed the land. „ 944
Scaped thro' a cavern from a bandit h, Holy Grail 207
And many of those who burnt the h, „ 264
defended the h that we held with our lives — Def. of Lucknow 7
Hold (of a ship) And the sick men down in the h The Revenge 79
Hold (verb) (See also Howd, 'Owd) you that h A nobler
office upon earth To the Queen 1
in mild unrest h's him beneath in her breast. Leonine Eleg. 12
To h a common scorn of death ! Supp. Confessions 34
We may h converse with all forms Ode to Memory 115
' Yet how should I for certain h. Two Voices 340
For now the noonday quiet h's the hiU : CEnone 25
H swollen clouds from raining, D. of F. Women 11
To A his hope thro' shame and guilt, Love thou thy land 82
there was no anchor, none. To h by.' The Epic 21
hand On Everard's shoulder, with ' I /j by him.' „ 22
Whereof thLs world's h's record. M. d' Arthur 16
He, by some law that h's in love. Gardener's D. 9
h From thence thro' all the worlds : „ 209
what it h's May not be dwelt on by the common day, „ 270
I will not cease to grasp the hope I h St. S. Stylites 5
my stiff spine can h my weary head, „ 43
Is that the angel there That h's a crown ? „ 204
I h them exquisitely knit, Talking Oak 91
h passion in a leash. And not leap forth Love and Duty 40
my purpose h's To sail beyond the simset, Ulysses 59
Yet h me met not for ever in thine East : Tithonus 64
h thee, when his passion shall have spent Locksley Hall 49
common sense of most shall h a fretful realm in awe, „ 129
Hold (verb) (continued) Who h their hands to all, and cry Will Water. 45
1 A it good, good things shall pass : „ 205
I h thee dear For this good pint of port. „ 211
Shall h their orgies at your tomb. You might have won 12
Enoch would h possession for a week : Enoch Arden 27
Cast all your cares on God ; that anchor h's. „ 222
But let me h my purpose till I die. „ 875
and h's her head to other stars, The Brook 195
' 0 pray God that he hup' Aylmer's Field 733
but he that h's The Gods are careless, Lucretius 149
h Yoiu- promise : all, I trust, may yet be well.' Princess ii 360
substance or the shadow ? will it A ? „ 409
such, my friend, We h them slight : „ iv 127
I h These flashes on the surface are not „ 252
You h the woman is the better man ; „ 410
I h That it becomes no man to nurse despair, „ 463
to-morrow mom We h a great convention : „ 511
yet I h her, king, True woman : Princess, v 179
That h's a stately fretwork to the Sim, „ vi 86
never in your own arms To h your own, „ 178
h against the world this honour of the land. Third of Feb. 48
For those are few sveh as dear ; To F. D. Maurice 46
I h you here, root and all, in my hand. Flow, in cran. wall 3
Take the hoary Eoman head and shatter it, h it
abominable, Boddicea 65
I sometimes h it half a sin In Mem. v 1
lake That h's the shadow of a lark „ xvi 9
I A it true, whate'er befall ; „ xsmii 13
And h's it sin and shame to draw ,, xlviii 11
H thou the good : define it well : ,. UH 13
To h the costliest love in fee. „ Ixxix 4
So A I commerce with the dead ; „ Ixxxv 93
they that h apart The promise of the golden hours ? „ 105
h An hour's communion with the dead. „ xciv 3
And h it solemn to the past. ,, cv 16
High wisdom h's my wisdom less, „ cxii 1
To h me from my proper place, „ cxvii 2
And dream my dream, and h it true ; „ cxxiii 10
Eather than h by the law that I made, Maud / i 55
h Awe-stricken breaths at a work divine, „ x 16
Think I may h dominion sweet, „ xvi 12
Arise, my God, and strike, for we h Thee just, „ II i 45
Whatever the Quaker h's, from sin ; „ ■« 92
theirs are bestial, h him less than man : Com. of Arthur 181
Hath body enow to h his foemen down ? ' „ 253
the good mother h's me stiU a child ! Gareth and L. 15
' An jeh me yet for child, „ 99
h The King a shadow, and the city real : „ 265
Eeturn, and meet, and h him from our eyes, „ 429
the mightiest, h's her stay'd In her own castle, „ 615
and so my lance H, by God's grace, ,. 723
I ^i He scarce is knight, yea but half-man, „ 1175
Some h that he hath swallow'd infant flesh, „ 1342
We h a tourney here to-morrow mom, Marr. of Geraint 287
How fast they h like colours of a shell „ 681
I ha finger up ; They understand : Geraint and E. 337
h them outer fiends. Who leap at thee to tear thee ; Balin and Balan 141
That honour too wherein she h's him — „ 180
' I h them happy, so they died for love : „ 581
some few— ay, truly— youths that h Merlin and V. 21
Lancelot saying, ' Hear, but h my name Hidden, Lancelot and E. 416
Yet, if he love, and his love h, „ 697
some do h our Arthur cannot die, „ 1258
Not at my years, however it h in youth. „ 1296
Unproven, h's himself as Lancelot, Holy Grail 304
to h, H her a wealthy bride within thine arms, „ 620
Or all but h, and then — cast her aside, „ 622
But h me for your friend : Pdleas and E. 340
Some h he was a table-knight of thine — Last Tournament 69
A naked aught — yet swine I h thee still, „ 309
I'll h thou hast some touch Of music, „ 313
There h thee with my life against the world.' She
answer'd, ' Lancelot, wilt thou hmeso? Guinevere 115
that strong castle where he h's the Queen ; „ 194
I h that man the worst of public foes „ 512
I
Hold
Hold (verb) (continued) Whereof this world h's
record. . • , t i
' This is a charmed dwelling which I h ;
He Would h the hand of blessing over them,
Nay, more, h out the lights of cheerfulness ;
some were doubtful how the law would h,
the boy can h up his head,
h them both Dearest of all things —
H it we might — and for fifteen days
' H it for fifteen days ! '
thought it heresy, but that would not h.
some in yonder city h, my son,
casket, which for thee But h's a skull,
She that h's the diamond necklace
h the Present fatal daughter of the Past,
Shall we h them ? shall we loose them ?
single sordid attic h's the living and the dead.
Death and Silence h their own.
and the Eome of freemen h's her place,
I h Mother's love in letter'd gold.
Whatever statesman h the helm.
329
Pass, of Arthur 184
Lover's Tale i 114
754
807
iv 270
First Quarrel 5
Sisters (E. and £.) 288
Bef. of Lucknow 9
„ 105
Columbus 46
Ancient Sage 82
255
Locksley H., Sixty 21
105
118
222
237
To Virgil 34:
Helen's Tower 3
Hands all Round 20
Britons, h your own ! (repeat) Open. I. and C. Exhih. 10, 20, 30, 40
sacred those Ghost Lovers h the gift.' The Ring 205
should those fail, that h the helm, Prog, of Spring 100
H the sceptre, Human Soul, and rule thy Province By an Evolution, lb
Will firmly fe the rein, ,^ , ^°^^^^^.a
and mood of faith may h its own, Akbar s Dream 5ib
thou knowest I h that forms Are needful : ,. If o
I count you kind, I h you true ; The Wanderer 13
H thine own, and work thy will ! Poets and Critics Id
Holden the fair Was h at the town ; Talking Oak lOA
h far apart Until his hour should come ; Com. of Arthur J14
had h the power and gloiy of Spain so cheap The Revenge 106
Holdest quick or dead thou h me for King. Pass, of Arthur 161
Holdeth And h his undimmed forehead far Lover s Tale i 513
Holding (See also Bawdin') And /j them back by theii- ^, ,^
flowing locks The Merman li
I sit as God h no form of creed. Palace of Art ^11
mystic, wonderful, H the sword— M. d ^rthurdZ
H the bush, to fix it back, Gardener s D. IZTl
H the folded annals of my youth ; ^ , ]' , ^^
Stagger'd and shook, h the branch, Enoch Arden (67
h out her hly arms Took both his hands. Princess n A06
reason ripe In h by the law within, In Mem. ^a^wtt 14
And Ussome Vivien, h by his heel. Merlin and / • ^38
Arthur, h then his court Hard on the river Lancelot and ii. 74
mystic, wonderful, H the sword— Pass, of Arthur 200
evermore H his golden burthen in his arms, Lover si ale^vb^
For h there was bread where bread was none — Sir J. Oldcastle 201
h, each its own By endless war : Ancient Sage 251
Hole (-See also Augur-hole, Eyelet-holes) bUnd walls Were
full of chinks and /t's ; ,^ TtT ^
Would he have that /i in his side ? Maud 11 v «^
rat that borest in the dyke Thy h by night Merlin and V. 113
And show'd him, like a vermin in its h. Last Tournament 165
down, down ! and creep thro' the h ! Bef. of ^^f'^^w lb
Holiday The yoimger people making h, Enoch Arden 6 J
sown With happy faces and with h. ^ Princess, Pro-&o
In summer suits and silks of h. Marr.of Geramt 173
HoUer fl is none, my Percivale, than she— Holy Grail Zd^
Still growing h as you near'd the bay, f^f Xii 4^ i q«
a crols of flesh and blood And h. ^ S^r J. Oldcastle 138
Something kindUer, higher, h— Locksley H. Sixty 160
Holiest (adj.) For me outpour'd in h prayer— Supp. Confesswns U
The highest, h manhood, thou : In Mem Pro.U
I was the High Priest in her h place, Lover s lalei 686
HoUest (S) hid the H from the people's eyes Aylmer s Meld TU
Holiness Beautiful in the light of h. Holy Grail 105
HoUow (adj.) h as the hopes and fears of men ? Lurretius 180
The ;i grot repUeth „ ^ Claribel M
Or breithe into the h air, SupP. Confessions 58
were stay'd beneath the dome Of h boughs.— Arabian Nights 42
H smUe and frozen sneer Come not here. Poet sMind 10
Aloud the ;i bugle blowing, ^, ^r ""^11
Would lean out from the h sphere of the sea. The Mermaid 54
Hollow-husk'd
Hollow (adj.) (continued) And h shades enclosing hearts
of flame, Palace of Art 241
saw The h orb of moving Circumstance „ 255
brides of anf-ient song Peopled the h dark, B. of F. Women 18
Thro' every h cave and alley lone Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 103
In the h Lotos-land to live and lie reclined „ 109
Bead, mouthing out his h oes and aes. The Epic 50
h ocean-riiiges roaring into cataracts. Locksley Hall 6
H hearts and empty heads ! Vision of Sin 174
Echo answer'd in her sleep From h fields : Princess, Pro. 67
The Princess Ida seem'd a h show, » *" 185
her maidens glimmeiingly group'd In the h bank. „ iv 191
King, camp and college tum'd to h shows ; „ ^ 478
wan was her cheek With h watch, ., ■««■ 145
Come to the h heart they slander so ! „ •f 88
I love not h cheek or faded eye : >, «" 7
They did but look like h shows ; >. ..134
A h echo of my own,— A h forni M'ith empty hands.' In Mem. in 11
And mix with h masks of night ; >. 'f.^^
O h wraith of dying fame, .> '•!;«" 1^
The ruin'd shells of h towers ? „ ^ "r ^"^"^ To
comitercharm of space and h sky, Maud I ^w* 4^
Whereon were h trampUngs up and down Gareth and L. 161^
clamour of the daws About her h turret, Geramt and E. J56
(It lay beside him in the h shield), >. 726
In a /i land. From which old fires have broken, „ , ^"'^^
Before an oak, so h, huge and old Merlin and V.d
Closed in the four walls oiah tower, (repeat) „ 209, 544
Behind his ankle twined her h feet .. ^
A snowy penthouse for his h eyes, .. o^&
Call'd her to shelter in the h oak, " oy4
And in the h oak he lay as dead, " ^ vt^
Rang out like h woods at hunting-tide. Pelleas and E. 367
Black as the harlot's heart— ;» as a skull ! .". .i ^
Went shrilling, ' H,ha]i delight ! Pass, of Arthur 33
And h, h, h all deUght.' " ^'
TumbUng the h helmets of the fallen, .. ,j^^^
The h caverns heard me— the black brooks Lover s Tale n 11
Then came on me The i^ tolling of the bell, „ „P/1^
Watch'd again the h ridges roaring into cataracts, Locksley H., Sixty Z
fleshless world of spirits, laugh'd : A h laughter ! The Ring jM
Monotonous and h Uke a Ghost's Denouncmg judgment, Gumevere 420
crimson with battles, and h with graves, The Breamer 12
HoUow (S) And h's of the fringed hills Supp. Confessions 153
shines Uke fire in swamps and A', gray, May Queen 31
From craggy h's pouring, -»• '^f/'J/T'' 9«1
And bowery h's crown'd with summer sea, M.d Arthur 263
along the river-shores. And in the h's ; Gardener s B. 265
Who thrust him in the h's of his aim, Dora la^
plump'd the pine From many a cloudy h. Amphion 48
Nourishes Green in a cuphke h of the down. Enoch jrden»
began To feather towards the h, (repeat) >. o». ^'*
Crept down into the h's of the wood ; , "tt- 7j ooa
Like echoes from beyond a h, Aylmer s Field 298
Blanching and billowing inahol it, Lucretius 31
strip a hundred h's bare of Spring, ^'"IT^i 7 ^
I HATE the dreadful h behind the little wood, Maud 1 1 1
creep to the h and dash myself down and die ,. .. o*
To the woody h's in which we meet " ^j^" |^
From the red-ribb'd /i behind the wood, "j i lo^
A eloomy-gladed /i slowly sink To westward— Gareth and L. .97
laid him on it AU in the h of his shield, Gerai«< and £. 56^
Last in a roky h, beUing, heard The hounds Last Tournament 502
And bowery h's crown'd with sununer sea, Pass, of Arthur 431
Found sUence in the /i's underneath. T^*'^* ^o
And dancing of Fairies In desolate h's, ^^^'■'^/''^ ^H » ff
Downward thunder in h and glen, To Master of B 16
And fill the h's between wave and wave ; Akbar s Bream 161
HoUow-banked (As echoes of the h-b brooks Lovers Tale i 566
HoUow-beaten He felt the h-b mosses thud Balin and Balan 321
HoUow'd (adj.) In ;* moons of gems 1^"^"''" ^/ nl, m
HoUow'd (verb) the want, that ^i aU the heart, , i^i;e and D«<2/ 61
tho' years Have h out a deep and stormy strait Lover s 1 ale t 24
HoUower-beUowing h-b ocean, and again The scarlet Enoch Arden 598
HoUow-husk'd barley-spears Were h-h, Demeter and P. 113
Hollow-hung
330
Homage
Hollow-hung Under the h-h ocean green ! The Merman 38
Hollowing (See also Fire-hollowing) Or h one hand *
against his ear, Palace of Art 109
Hollow-ringing He heard the h-r heavens sweep Over him Holy Grail 678
Hollow- vaulted look'd to shame The h-v dark, Arabian Nights 12Q
Holly (adj.) while the h boughs Entwine the cold baptismal
font. In Mem. xxix 9
Holly (s) Sick for the hollies and the yews Princess, Pro. 187
But this is the time of hollies. Spiteful Letter 22
0 hollies and ivies and evergreens, „ 23
weave The h round the Christmas hearth ; In Mem. xxx 2
weave The h round the Christmas hearth ; „ Ixxviii 2
let us leave This laurel, let this h stand : „ cv 2
here and there great hollies under them ; Pelleas and E. 27
Black h, and wliite-flower'd wayfaring-tree ! Sir J. Oldcastle 130
Holly-hoak Before a tower of crimson h-h's, Princess, Con. 82
Hollyhock Heavily hangs the h, (repeat) A spirit haunts 11, 23
A summer burial deep in h's ; Aylmer's Field 164
Holly-spray And wearing but a h-s for crest, Last Tournament 172
Holm (See also Hoalm) soft wind blowing over
meadowy h's Edwin Morris 95
Holmes The parson H, the poet Everard Hall, The Epic 4
1 hoard it as a sugar-plum for H.' „ 43
Holofemes underneath The head of H peep'd Princess iv 227
Holp h To lace us up, tiU, each, in maiden plumes „ i 201
However much he h me at my need. Com. of Arthur 142
Sir Lancelot h To raise the Prince, Guinevere 45
Holpen had I been h half as well By this King Arthur Com. of Arthur 161
And being lustily h by the rest, Lancelot and E. 496
Holt thro' damp h's new-flush'd with may, My life is full 19
She sent her voice thro' all the h Talking Oak 123
blackening over heath and h, Locksley Hall 191
Of wither'd h or tilth or pasturage. Enoch Arden 675
smeUs a foul-flesh'd agaric in the h, Gareth and L. 747
Holy (See also Holy Ghost, Holy Grail) All the place is h
ground ; Poet's Mind 9
H water will I pour Into every spicy flower „ 12
Heard a carol, mournful, h, L. of Shalott iv 28
Nor steep our brows in slumber's h balm ; Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 21
Beneath a heaven dark and h, „ 91
h organ rolling waves Of sound on roof D. of F. Women 191
invade Even with a verse your h woe. To J. S. 8
Sleep, h spirit, blessed soul, „ 70
light that led The h Elders with the gift of myrrh. M. d' Arthur 233
more Than many just and h men, St. S. Stylites 131
'By h rood, a royal beard ! Day-Dm., Revival 20
Then desperately seized the h Book, Enoch Arden 495
Haunting a h text, and still to that Returning, Sea Dreams 42
o'er the rest Arising, did his h oily best, „ 195
' Storm, and what dreams, ye h Gods, what dreams ! Lucretius 33
' Is this thy vengeance, h Venus, thine, „ 67
And h secrets of this microcosm. Princess Hi 313
The h Gods, they must be appeased. The Victim 47
The King was shaken with h fear ; „ 57
lead Thro' prosperous floods his h urn. In Mem. ix 8
Rise, happy mom, rise, h mom, ,, xxx 29
That h Death ere Arthur died „ Ixxx 2
And He that died in H Land „ Ixxxiv 42
And woodlands h to the dead ; „ xcix 8
This broad-brimm'd hawker of h things, Maud / a; 41
But speak to her all things h and high, „ // ii 78
But there was heard among the h hymns Com. of Arthur 290
And h Dubric spread his hands and spake, „ 471
Save whom she loveth, ov &h hfe. Gareth and L. 622
Whose h hand hath fashion'd on the rock „ 1197
Who, with mild heat of h oratory, Geraint and E. 866
King Took, as in rival heat, to h things ; Balin and Balan 100
brought By h Joseph hither, „ 113
boss'd With h Joseph's legend, „ 363
King Pellam's h spear. Reputed to be red with sinless
blood, , 556
Whom Pellam drove away with h heat. „ 611
saith not H Writ the same ? ' — M rlin and V. 52
They bound to h vows of chastity ! „ 695
Or else were he, the h king, whose hymns „ 765
Holy (continued) FuU many a h vow and pure resolve. Lancelot and E. 879
Not knowing he should die a h man. „ 1429
times Grew to such evil that the h cup Was caught
away to Heaven, Holy Grail 57
But who first saw the h thing to-day ? ' .,67
if ever h maid With knees of adoration wore the stone,
A h maid ; „ 70
glanced and shot Only to h things ; „ 76
Thy h nun and thou have seen a sign — ,, 295
thereby A h hermit in a hermitage, „ 443
at the sacring of the mass I saw The h elements alone ; ,, 463
This H Thing, fail'd from my side, „ 470
And o'er his head the H Vessel hung (repeat) „ 512, 520
thence Taking my war-hoi-se from the h man, „ 537
And ev'n the H Quest, and all but her ; „ 610
' Ridest thou then so hotly on a quest So /*,' „ 643
so Lancelot might have seen. The H Cup of healing ; „ 655
Small heart was his after the H Quest : „ 657
a maid. Who kept our h faith among her kin „ 697
This vision — hast thou seen the H Cup, „ 734
Perhaps, Uke him of Cana in H Writ, „ 762
Then I spake To one most h saint, „ 781
And to the H Vessel of the Grail.' „ 840
Thy h nun and thou have driven men mad, „ 862
To h virgins in their ecstasies, „ 867
' Gawain, and blinder unto h things „ 870
To those who went upon the H Quest, „ 890
BJNG Arthue made new knights to fill the gap Left
by the H Quest ; Pelleas and E. 2
' Ye, that so dishallow the h sleep, „ 446
sat There in the h house at Almesbury Weeping, Guinevere 2
Then glancing up beheld the h nuns All round her, „ 666
Do each low office of your h house ; „ 682
light that led The h Elders with the gift of myrrh. Pass, of Arthur 401
Each way from verge to verge a H Land, Lover's Tale i 337
I charge you never to say that I laid him in h grbund. Rizpah 58
Now reddest with the blood of h men. Sir J. Oldcastle 54
or such crimes As h Paul — „ 110
how I anger'd Arundel asking me To worship H Cross ! „ 136
As h John had prophesied of me, Columbus 21
Ferdinand Hath sign'd it and our H Catholic queen — „ 30
All glory to the mother of our Lord, And H Church, „ 63
And free the H Sepulchre from thrall. „ 104
And own the h governance of Rome.' „ 190
And ready — tho' our H CathoUc Queen, „ 228
And save the H Sepulchre from thrall. „ 240
the H man he assoil'd us, and sadly we sail'd away. V. ofMaddune 126
As the H Mother 0' Glory that smiles at her sleepin^
child — Tomorrow 26
Till H St. Pether gets up wid his kays „ 93
Near us Edith's h shadow, smiling Locksley H., Sixty 54
My warrior of the H Cross and of the conquering sword, Happy 21
This poor rib-grated dungeon of the h human ghost, „ 31
sway'd the sword that lighten'd back the sun of H land, „ 43
You parted for the H War without a word to me, „ 77
Who reads thy gradual process, H Spring. Prog, of Spring 106
If it be a mosque people murmur the h prayer, Akbar's D., Inscrip. 4
Holy Ghost the warning of the H G,l prophesy St. S. Stylites 219
Holy Grail (See also Grail) Three angels bear the A G : Sir Galahad 42
Until I find the h G. „ 84
sweet vision of the H G Drove me from all vainglories. Holy Grail 31
^ . ., , . ™ „ „ . . . . g^
86
92
107
, 117, 188
290
367
438
465
531
542
779
846
(Enone 116
To whom the monk : ' The H G ! — I trust
Spake often with her of the H G,
thought That now the H G would come again ;
' Sweet brother, I have seen the H G :
And down the long beam stole the H G, (repeat)
I, Sir Arthur, saw the H G, 1 saw the H G
I knew That I should light upon the // G.
if I find the H G itself And touch it,
saw the Grail, The H G, descend upon the shrine ;
and there Dwelt, and I knew it was the H G,
I find not there this H O,
the hope That could I touch or see the H G
I saw the H G, All paU'd in ciimson samite,
Homage Honour,' she said, ' and h, tax and toll.
Homage
Homage (continued) and render AU A to his own darling, Maud I .r j. 49
Lancelot draws From h to the best and purest, Balm and Balan dTb
knelt In anxious A— knelt^what eke ? >. ^^
bow'd black knees Of h, ringing with their serpent , rr kth
hands ilieWtn ana K . 670
bow'd his h, bluntly saying, ' Fair damsels, Last Tournament 206
Home («««aZsoHoam,"'Oajii, Sea-home) When cats run ft ^ i t a
and light is come, ^^ ,-/oZ
Come down, come ft. My Rosalind : .. ^««,?'*'^ ^3
The ft of woe mthout a tear. Manarmtnthe 6. ^U
I won his love, I brought him ft. ^ f /»« SM 14
one, an EngUsh ft— gray twiUght pour'd Po^e of 4r« 86
For ever and for ever, all in a blessed ft— May Queen, Con. 57
' Our island ft Is far beyond the wave ; M^'^^.r "^'^
Then when I left my ft.' D. of F.Worr^n 120
' at ft was little left And none abroad : Jhe hpic iM
The lime a summer ft of murmurous wings. Uardener ^ ^-^
as he near'd His happy ft, the ground. » ^^
So ft we went, and all the Uvelong way .. |o<
So ft I went, but could not sleep for joy, .. ^ '*
My ft is none of yours. "m
I will have my boy, and bring him ft ; " ^^^
Brought out a dusky loaf that smelt of ft, Audiey Court ^^
And saunter'd ft beneath a moon, " . °^
sick of ft went overseas for change. Walk, to the MaU Zi
slowly-painful to subdue this ft Of sin, my flesh, St. 6. i>tylitesbl
And climbing up into my airy ft, ." ^| '
• But as for her, she stay'd at ft, . Talking Oak 116
dim fields about the ft's Of happy men Idhonus btf
Lay betwixt his ft and hers ; L. of Burleigh 28
Ancient h's of lord and lady, " ^_
He shall have a cheerful ft ; r. i," ^ j I7
purchase his own boat, and make a ft For Anme : Enoch Aroen 4/
He purchased his own boat, and made a ft For Annie, „ o»
So aU day long till Enoch's last at ft, " |^
And make him merry, when I come ft " ^
nor loved she to be left Alone at ft, " ^^'
clothes they gave him and free passage ft ; „ wu
homeward— ft— what ft ? had he a ft ? His ft, -, ob8
he reach'd the ft Where Annie lived .. ^°|
Back toward his soUtary ft again, , "77- 7j 1^7
arose the labourers' ft's, ^!/Z»i«r s i^'teW 147
A breaker of the bitter news from ft, " ^^*
his hopes and hates, his ft's and fanes, ^ . iwcre^ttw ^6&
Sick for the holUes and the yews of ft— Princess, ^^o-.^^^
Not for three years to correspond with ft ; " ** '^
Whose ft is in the sinews of a man, " '" ^t'
Almost our maids were better at their h's, >. '*f °
H they brought her warrior dead : « . ..''"q
From love to love, from ft to ft you go, W. to Mane Alex.S
Whose hand at ft was gracious to the poor : ^ " j .1, on
sitting at ft in my father's farm at eve : Grandmother yu
endure To sit with empty hands at ft. Sailor BoylQ
this pretty ft, the ft where mother dwells ? CUy ChM. ^
running on one way to the ft of my love. Window, On the EM 8
And leirns her gone and far from ft ; In Mem. vtu 4
So draw him ft to those that mourn " .*^.|
And ask a thousand things of ft ; " ^^^ , „
And like a beacon guards thee ft. * " awiix^
Her eyes are ft's of silent prayer, " ^^^** ^
rise To take her latest leave of ft, " |: g
We go, but ere we go from ft, « ", j 7 ^:: 99
she went H with her maiden posy, ^''^ ^ ^.f,
I have led her ft, my love, " ^"gi
And at last, when each came ft, » jj i„n
By the ft that gave me birth,
we have heard from our wise man at ft To /> ,1. j r 901
Northward, Gareth and L.iOl
So drew him ft; but he that fought no more, t'r^^ijRXA
Prince had found her in her ancient ft ; Marr. of Geraint 644
Near that old ft, a pool of golden carp ; ^ • 'i „„j 7? 94
So the last sight that Enid had of ft Geraint andE.J^
as a hearth lit in a mountain ft, ■B'^*^ "'"^ ^-^^ |^ J
A ft of bats, in every tower an owl. " „, ,
the King, However mild he seems at ft, Lancelot and E. dll
331 Honest
Home (continued) those three knights all set their faces ft, Pdleas and E. 187
closing round him thro' the journey ft,
eyes Had drawn him ft — what marvel ?
That night came Arthur ft, and while he climb' d,
boundless ft's For ever-broadening England,
(A visible Unk unto the ft of my heart),
within its inmost halls. The ft of darkness ;
Solace at least — before he left his ft.
found the dying servant, took him ft. And fed,
an' often at ft in disgrace.
To make a good wife for Harry, when Harry came
ft for good.
And Harry came ft at last, but he look'd at me
I have taken them ft, I have number'd the bones,
gold that Solomon's navies carried ft,
for you know The flies at ft,
Drove me and my good brothers ft in chains
and their hearths and their ft's.
at ft if I sought for a kindly caress,
202
Last Tournament 405
755
To the Queen ii 29
Lover's Tale i 431
524
ivl
263
First Quarrel 15
30
35
Rizpah 10
Columbus 113
119
134
Batt. of Brunanburh 19
The Wreck 31
Having lands at ft and abroad in a rich West- Indian isle ; „ 46
When he spoke of his tropical ft in the canes ,, _ 71
sail at last which brings our Edwin ft. The Fl^ht 9^
To mark in many a freeman's ft . Freedom 11
But moving thro' the Mother's ft, To Prm. Beatrice 17
Go, take thine honours ft ; To W. 0. Macready_6
Hubert brings me ft With April and the swallow
far oS an old forsaken house, Then ft,
then I pass'd H, and thro' Venice,
but — coming ft— And on your Mother's birthday—
And send her ft to you rejoicin?.
hurryin'4 ft, I found her not in house Or garden —
But chaining fancy now at ft
Make all true hearths thy ft.
And wanders on from ft to ft !
On whom a happy ft has power To make
that which drew from out the boundless deep
Turns again ft.
Home-bred flatters thus Our h-b fancies :
Home-circle from her own ft-c of the poor They
barr'd her :
Homeless The moanings of the ft sea.
Seeing the ft trouble in thine eyes,
ft planet at length will be wheel'd
Homelier Strove for sixty widow'd years to help his
ft brother men.
Homely Fills out the ft quickset-screens.
And every ft secret in their hearts,
Ev'n the ft farm can teach us there is something
in descent,
beat Thro' all the ft town from jasper.
Homer But H, Plato, Verulam ;
These lame hexameters the strong-wing d music
of H!
And so does Earth ; for H's fame,
golden Iliad vanish, H here is H there.
Home-return on our ft-r the daily want Of Edith
Homeric faint H echoes, no thing- worth.
Homestead the trampled year, The smouldering ft,
made an English ft Hell —
H and harvest. Reaper and gleaner,
Home-voyage Less lucky her h-v:
Homicidal six feet high. Grand, epic, ft ;
Homily DistiU'd from some worm-canker d ft ;
Hond (hand) toithe were due, an' I giei it in ft ;
Honest Suddenly ft, answer'd in amaze,
and I methinks tiU now Was ft —
then do thou, being right ft, pray That we may meet
I too would still be ft.'
And knowing every ft face of theirs
A square-set man and ft ; and his eyes,
at last he said. Lifting his ft forehead,
Cui-sed be the sickly forms that err from ft Nature s
rule!
ft AveriU seeing How low his brother s mood
the woman A Work ;
The Ring 59
156
192
247
320
444
To Ulysses 31
Prog, of Spring 52
The Wanderer 8
10
Crossing the Bar 8
In Mem. a; 11
Aylmer's Field 504
In Mem. xxxv 9
Lancelot and E. 1365
Despair 83
Locksley H., Sixty 267
On, a Mourner 6
Holy Grail 552
Locksley H., Sixty 26
Columbus 83
Princess ii 160
Trans, of Homer 1
Epilogue 58
Parnassus 20
Sisters (E. and E.) 245
The Epic 39
Princess v 128
To Mary Boyle 37
Merlin and the G. 57
Enoch Arden 541
Princess, Pro. 225
To J. M. K. 6
N. Farmer, 0. S. 11
Geraint and E. 410
486
491
493
Holy Grail 550
703
Enoch Arden 388
Locksley HaU 61
Aylmer's Field 403
Sea Dreams 137
Honest
T^iTI' -,,^^"^igl^t '^ meanmgli her; ^~^* ^^ f^
That England's A censure Ment too far; r*,.:/ r i^ f o
For, being of that A few, ' 7, J''^\°J^^^-^
But A talk and wholesome wine, J-oji.n. Maurice 5
The lips of men with h praise, ' t n^" 1 ■ \^
There hves more faith in h doubt '^^*''- ^^^^^'i ^6
his A fame should at least by me be maintninoH . " ,^ a^wt H
A Poverty, bare to the bone • '""• ^^ ^^^-Hamley 16
Like an /j woman's ' yastness 19
°°"'''£?hL!'^''"^'''^°°'^°°°^ Globing^ Moons Bright ^'"'""^ ^^
Globe again, and make H Moon. -^^^ ■^*'*^ '^
They made a thousand h moons of one "> " l^
^^^^^^^^,^^^"^^0 Mud-honey) whitest ;»" in fairy gardens "
Or Heliconian h in living words r ^^^''^ore 26
madness of love. The h of poison-flowers 7?^*i*!" ^^*
' I sit and gather h ■ yet, m^etSs m i^""^. U'' ^^
wild bees fhat madeLch riS^t'realm. ^I^^r ^; 9?^
A from hornet-combs. And men from bea<it« t . -^ ^ ^''"''^ ^^^
Art with poisonous Astol'nTrom F™ " TotZZlT'-^tl
^nd of promise flowing with the mUk AM h M%1 "4^
Sleep, little blossom, my h, my bliss ' T , ?.^^^
Honeycomb A fuU-ceU'd A of eloquence ' vf'^'^K' ^- f
Honey-converse Some A-c feeds thy m^d '^'^^'^ fl'?.'' ^^
Honey'd oozed AU o'er with A answer as we rode ^^rfe/i«e40
Honeymoon But thirty moois, one SI? that PT'"\F"'-^^^
Globine a JK'» Bright as liS! ' Eio^nU^,^ 29
Olobe again, and make H M -"'"^ '
They made a thousand A m'* of one ? " ^^
-"0 second cloudless A was mine. " Ji
Honeysuckle The A round the porch has wov'n m „ n" ^oo
Broke from a bower of vine and A- ^ -J^ay Qw^m 29
But aU about it flies a A " Aylmer's Field 156
how sweetly smells the A In the hush'd night ^""''^ "^'^ i^. 1278
Honeysuckle-flower kingcups and h-f's ' ' ^'•' ^, ^^^^
Hong-Kong fl-Z, KaSic, fnd all thV^est. ^^'f/P^^ ]?
Homed And buzzings of the A hours. /„ m. 1^^'"'' it
Nor drown thyself with flies in h win^ • .V^' ^*^**^ ^^
Honorius to react H, S he hear^^thTm ' vf "t ?' *'T ^^8
"pSie ^'^''' "^'' Mock-honoi) In A of the golden '' ^^^^'"-^"^ 77
SomT^row to A, some to shame,- ^""^^^ ^^^'^^^ If,
H,' she said, ' and homage tax and toll ' J. wo Voices 257
all the old A had from fetmas^one ' ^^T "^
But now much A and much fame wppp ln«t ' »^ Jp-^^^P^e 7
Old age hath yet his A and his toil ' ' ^- '^ if ^'^ ^f
helps the hurt that B feels ' r t , *^'y«*^« 50
an l Unt^ which she was not bom. ^'^fH ^".^^
a snowy hand and signet gem, ' All A °I Burleigh 79
Hose My A, these thiir lives ' Prtw^m ^ 122
for A: every captain waits Hungry for A. " "iff
thisA,ifyewilf: It needs must be for A " '' g^
since you think me touch'd In A— " ^^^
Lti5;'z.^"sirotr?dti?t?st^^ "^^- ^^^^^^^^ ^'^^ - ^^«' 149. So
But some love England and her A yet. rur^ ,r p , ^^^
hold against the world this A of the land ^'"'^ ''•^ ^'*- ^f
Singir^ of Death, and of H that cannot die lu"^ r H
Clear A shining hke the dewv stnr ^ :^aM<Z / « 16
yield him thlflarge A aU tKo're ; ^«'-^'* "^'^ ^- 1^
And did her A as the Prince's bride j^ .'U ^^^
And feast with these inTof the" Earl • ^r'"' ^^ ^*"?^f' ^^
ThaTte^V'^^ '^l^^ quest 0rA,'^:here no A ^"^^'^ ""'^ ^'- ?»1
inat /I too wherem she holds him fV.;o n ,. ," '^4
We will do him No cSstSmSy A ' ^f " '^,'f ^f 1? ^80
His A rooted in dishonour stood ' Lancelot and E. 543
' » 876
332
Hoop
To win his A and to make
Honour (s) (continued)
his name,
'Glory and joy and A to our Lord Lancelot andE. 1362
Sir Pelleas kept the field With A • d ii^ ^^"■'^^ ^39
and thro' his heart The fire of A ' i^elleas and E. 169
by the A of the Table Round, I will be leal to th*.P " ^^^
this A after death Fnii^,„;.,„'.i;_ _ -.rP ^®*^ ^ ^hee „ 342
iiT- 7 ; j-ouie ivouna, 1 wili b(
wf . after death, FoUowing thy will!
White-robed m A of the stahile^ child
In A of poor Innocence the babe.
But now much A and much fame were lost
I^i.M ^f/ ""''^ ^ '^"^^ i"to the deep,
1 could not free myself in A—
r.''! ^^^£ ^^?,''* ^^«' ^ove and H join'd
Go, take thme h's home • ''
Honour (verb) his mute dust I A and his hying worth
And more than England h's that, ^ *'^
and A thy bmte Baal
And A all the day.
j& the charge they made ! H the Light Brigade
loathe, fear-but A me the more.' ""S^ae,
Before a kmg who A'* his own word,
'Pear God : A the King— '
To A his own word as if his God's
Hnnnl^Z """f* \ ^''^*^«' *« ^ ^hom I scorn P
Honoi^^H^^ '^"'^ •"?"*"^1 ^°^« and A toil ;
Daid has A beech or hme
Myself not least, but A of them all:
lauPh'rTt^n'' l^^ ^^^•^"^•^ Half-mused,
iaugli d upon his warrior whom he loved AnH 7.
wamor whom he loved And A most Sk LaSceL
beyond the rest, And A him, and wi^uSit '
fhi K"?r?^ '^ *« *^« heighV-I A hinT
ind t'ho'°h T ^}' ^^PP^' dead before
And, tho he loved and A Lionel,
'tou ^e7S F^f.f '^ '^ ^° *^« ""e^ost
nnp ti. f , T ^^^ *« *he uttermost:
one that loved, and A him,
VVho IS he that cometh, hke an A guest
I see myself an A guest, ^ '
IhiSM-reath, above his A head
Honouring A your sweet faith in him
A fus Wise mother's word '
Florence A thy nativity,
Vr.J ^''"'' ^^'"^ ^^e Of Statesman,
Hood we must A your random ey^,
h^'h'^.i T^^^fVP-*™^ °f ^ and hoop,
m hue The lilac, with a silken A to each
keep your A's about the face: '
HoodPd°'?*?? f ever setting up their A'*-
A h^tf-f" ^^f.'t-Jiooded: Violet-hooded)
w«n^«, ui^^.l "^^ept mto the haU, '^
Hoodman-blmd dance and song a^d h-b
Hoof his own blood flows About his A.
On bui-nish'd hooves his war-horse trode-
A h^Wi'^^ batter'd with cSiig^ A'5 •
h by A And every A a knell to my deSr^ '
gf °Pi"g ^'^ bare on the ridge of speaT'
th^el'f ^ThTL' ^°r -«- of A indl^hariot.
Till Of the horses beat, (repeat) '
E-H -^ ^'' ^/"" ^"P'' ^ the stream,
heard instead A sudden sound of h's
and everywhere Was hammer laid to A,
Not T?.if ""^^ ^ heavily-gaUopu^' A
^ ,S^ h^y^L^^e^Ti^Ttfet^li^^^
iSk'"1 SlTouM r -^f ''^ «^ a WX more.'
HOOK u 1 bhould A It to some useful end
TT««J?J^''y/'?" Red-rent with A'* of brSle
Hook'd At last I A my ankle in a vh^f^ '
'°°'squ?ir^s''''^ '''■^' ^' hautlThaacre 0'
"'™- ^^ ''^°'^''^ "°"' "^' ^ h l^aacre 0'
Hoop bom In teacup-times of hood and A,
Xasi Tournament 34
147
292
-ra55. of Arthur 277
The Bevenge 109
jSwiers (E. and E.) 161
To W. C. Macready 6
ti : To J. S. 30
Talking Oak 295
Aylmer's Field 644
Window, When 16
Xj^Ai Brigade 53
■Mertm ond F. 122
Lancelot and E. 143
•iasi Tournament 302
Guinevere 473
TA« i^%Ai 50
-EnocA Jrrfen 83
Two Foices 149
Ta^Aiw^ Oa/fc 291
Ulysses 15
»'i7/ W^aier. 73
Com. of Arthur 125
„ 448
Holy Grail 10
Xa^i Tournament 662
Guinevere 423
Lover's Tale iv 148
245
316
Ancient Sage 3
0<i« o» ^eZ;. 80
/» J/em. ;a;a7a:ii; 21
Tiresias 213
^ Dedication 5
Achilles over the T. 16
_ ,, To Z)amfe 3
i 0 J/arg'. 0/ Dufferin 14
Rosalind 37
Talking Oak 63
Princess ii 17
^7. , " 358
Akbar's Dream 166
With
Princess iv 225
/« J/em. Ixxviii 12
CMpy. Confessions 156
■£. of Shalott Hi 29
D. of F. Women 21
Princess iv 173
■^489
., w 379
l/aw<i 7/ i; 8
Gareth and L. 1046
i/arr. 0/ (Peraimf 164
. .. 256
Geramt and E. 447
485
Tiresias 138
^aZin a«ci i^aZaw 133
Day-Dm., Moral 16
i^oZy Grail 211
Princess iv 268
iV. Farmer, O. S. 44
Church-warden, etc. 22
TaZfeny OaA: 63
Hoop
333
Hope
Hoop (continued) and roll'd His h to pleasure Edith, Aylmer's Field 85
Hoot storm grew with a howl and a /i of the blast The Wreck 91
Hooved See WMte-hooved
Hop A land of h's and poppy-mingled corn, Aylmer's Field 31
tower Half-lost in belts of h and breadths of wheat ; Princess, Con. 45
Hope (s) {See also 'O&p) ^ly h is gray,and cold At heart, Supp. Confessions 103
Shall man live thus, in joy and h „ 169
without h of change. In sleep she seem'd to walk Mariana 29
Thou leddest by the hand thine infant H. Ode to Memory 30
the breathing spring Of H and Youth. The Poet 28
What h or fear or joy is thine ? Adeline 23
My h and heart is with thee — To J. M. K. 1
Light H at Beauty's caU would perch and stand, Caress'd or chidden 3
R is other H and wanders far, „ 10
' Think you this mould of h's and fears Two Voices 28
raise One h that warm'd me in the days „ 122
summits slope Beyond the furthest flights of h,
' Not that the grounds of h were fix'd,
' A hidden h,' the voice replied :
Nature's living motion lent The pulse of A to discontent
And full at heart of trembling h.
With blessings beyond h or thought,
' I was cut oS from h in that sad place.
She ceased in tears, fallen from h and trust :
Come H and Memory, spouse and bride,
To hold his h thro' shame and guilt,
A crowd of h's, That sought to sow themselves
say That my desire, like all strongest h's.
For daily h fulfill'd, to rise again
I will not cease to grasp the h I hold
and h ere death Spreads more and more
'Twere all as one to fix our h's on Heaven
Care and Pleasiu«, E and Pain,
What eyes, like thine, have waken'd h's,
to me is given Such h, I know not fear ;
And phantom h's assemble ;
For I had h, by something rare To prove myself
In A to gain upon her flight.
Like Heavenly H she crown'd tlie sea,
' Drink to lofty h's that cool —
April h's, the fools of chance ;
' Youthful h's, by scores, to all.
Cry to the summit, ' Is there any h ? '
It is beyond all h, against all chaince.
His h's to see his own, And pace the sacred old
famiUar fields,
but labour for himself, Work without h,
boat that bears the h of life approach
thro' that dawning gleam'd a kindlier h On Enoch
strong in h's, And prodigal of all brain-labour
Had golden h's for France and all mankind,
saw An end, a A, a light breaking upon him.
Seem'd h's returning rose :
tower'd Above them, with his h's in either grave.
Where she, who kept a tender Christian h,
within As hollow as the h's and fears of men ?
his h's and hates, his homes and fanes,
hiUs, that look'd across a land of h,
H, a poising eagle, bums Above the unrisen morrow
like parting h's I heard them passing from me :
weight of all the h's of half the world,
I bore up in A she would be known :
and a h The child of regal compact,
my h's and thine are one :
Uplifted high in heart and h are we.
He rose at dawn and, fired with h,
and darkens and brightens like my h,
As we descended following H,
The light that shone when H was bom.
Man dies : nor is there h in dust : '
And h's and light regrets that come
Beneath all fancied h's and fears
And faintly trust the larger h.
What h of answer, or redress ?
With so much h for years to come.
185
227
441
450
MilUr's D. 110
237
D. of F. Women 105
257
On a Mourner 23
Love thou thy land 82
Gardener's D. 64
237
Edwin Morris 38
St. S. Stylites 5
„ 156
Golden Year 57
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 55
„ U Envoi 45
Sir Galahad 62
Wia Water. 30
165
The Voyage 60
70
Vision of Sin 147
164
199
220
Enoch Arden 403
624
820
830
833
Aylmer's Field 446
464
480
559
624
Sea Dreams 41
Lucretius 180
255
Princess i 169
., iv 82
172
184
320
420
„ vii 364
Ode on Well. 254
Sailor Boy 1
Window, On the Hill 18
In Mem. xxii 11
„ XXX 32
„ XXXV 4
xll
„ xlix 13
Iv 20
Ivi 27
lix 14
Hope (s) continued) The pillar of a people's h, In Mem. Ixiv 15
What h is here for modem rhjone „ Ixxvii 1
Love, then, had h of richer store : „ Ixxxi 5
Despair of E, and earth of thee. „ Ixxxiv 16
I remain'd, whose h's were dim, „ Ixxxv 29
The mighty h's that make us men. „ 60
The h of unaccomplish'd years „ xci 7
And h could never hope too much, „ cxii 11
Yet E had never lost her youth ; „ cxxv 5
Wild Hours that fly with E and Fear, „ cxxviii 9
why not. I have neither h nor tmst ; Maud I i 30
returns the dark With no more h of light. „ ix 16
brother comes, like a blight On my fresh h, „ xix 103
a h for the world in the coming wars — „ /// vi 11
in that h, dear soul, let trouble have rest, „ 12
his own blood, his princedom, youth and h's, Gareth and L. 210
I lived in h that sometime you would come Geraint and E. 839
woi-ship woman as true wife beyond All h's of
gaining. Merlin and V. 24
goodly h's are mine That Lancelot is no more Lancelot and E. 601
' Yea, lord,' she said, ' Thy h's are mine,' „ 607
Said good Sir Bors, ' beyond all h's of mine, Eoly Grail 690
in the h That could I touch or see the Holy Grail „ 778
tho' ye kill my h, not yet my love, Pelleas and E. 303
Leave me that, I charge thee, my last h. Guinevere 568
what h? I think there was a h, Except he mock'd me
when he spoke of h ; His h he call'd it ;
left me h That in mine own heart I can live
O Love, O E ! They come, they crowd upon me
deep vault where the heart of E Fell into dust,
swathe thyself all round E's quiet urn For ever ?
in that hour A h flow'd round me,
which was less than E, Because it lack'd the power
of perfect E ; But which was more and higher
than all E, Because all other E had lower aim ;
' let this be call'd henceforth The Hill of E;' and
I repUed, ' O sister. My will is one with thine ;
the Hill of H.'
Her maiden dignities of E and Love —
No wish — no h. E was not whoUy dead,
Love could walk with banish 'd E no more ?
Love's arms were wreath'd about the neck of H, And E
Love would die when E was gone. And Love mourn'd
long, and sorrow'd after E ;
trod The same old paths where Love had walk'd with E,
But over the deep graves of E and Fear,
Talk of lost h's and broken heart !
if the h of the world were a he ?
as if A for the garrison hung but on him ;
faltering h's of relief, Havelock baffled,
God's free air, and h of better things,
drowning h Sank all but out of sight,
h was mine to spread the Catholic Faith,
Cloud-weaver of phantasmal h's and fears,
some strange h to see the nearer God.
' We are sinking, and yet there's h:
life without sun, without health, without h,
Bright as with deathless h —
And E will have broken her heart,
being damn'd beyond h of grace ?
market frets or charms The merchant's h no more
Without their h of wings ! '
h I catch at vanishes and youth is turn'd
E was ever on her mountain,
without the faith, without the h,
yours are h and youth, but I Eighty winters leave
the dog
far from here is all the h of eighty years.
As all my h's were thine —
God the traitor's h confoimd ! (repeat)
Star of the morning, E in the sunrise ;
Yes, for some wild h was mine That,
men have h's, which race the restless blood.
630
635
Lover's Tale i 46
94
100
449
452
462
580
584
813
815
818
821
«58
„ iv 176
In the Child. Eosp. 24
Def. of Lucknow 48
90
Sir J. Oldcastle 10
Columbus 156
230
To Victor Eugo 2
Tiresias 29
The Wreck 121
Despair 7
„ 17
,. 92
„ 109
; Ancient Sage 141
211
The Flight 16
Locksley H., Sixty 91
137
' The miserable have no medicine But only E ! '
Beyond aU A of warmth, Oilnone sat Not moving,
225
254
Pref. Poem Broth. S. 26
Eands all Round 10, 22, 34
Vastness 15
The Ring 135
Prog, of Spring 115
Romney's R. 150
Death of (Enone 74
Hope
334
Horse
Hope (s) (caniinued) blight thy h or break thy rest, Faith 2
Until the great Hereafter. Mourn in h ! Death of the Duke of C. 17
Hope (verb) ti-ust and h till things should cease,
Named man, may h some truth to find,
I h my end draws nigh :
Could h itself retum'd ;
I am. To that I /i to be.
h with me. Whose shame is that.
And hope could never h too much,
a debt. That I never can h to pay ;
And the titmouse h to win her
H more for these than some inheritance
H not to make thyself by idle vows,
and h The third night hence will bring thee
news
Australian dying h's he shall return,
H the best, but hold the Present
Bid him farewell for me, and tell him — H !
I hear a death-bed Angel whisper ' H.'
E ! O yes, I h, or fancy that,
nor h for a deathless hearing !
As Wisdom h's to gain,
I A to see my Pilot face to face
Hoped I had h that ere this period closed
Yet he A to purchase glory, H to make the name
Of his vessel great in story,
she heard. And almost h herself ;
partly that I A to win you back,
loved and did. And h, and suffer'd.
They h to slay him somewhere on the stream,
where I h myself to reign as king,
cope and crown Of all I h and f ear'd ?
Cold words from one I had h to warm so far
we had h for a dawn indeed,
H for a dawn and it came.
Hopeful Fear-tremulous, but humbly h,
With h grief, were passing sweet !
Hopefuller He, passionately h, would go.
Hopeless hush'd itself at last H of answer :
And sweet as those by h fancy f eign'd
The grasp of h grief about my heart,
it was all but a h case :
And it was but a h case.
Came that ' Ave atque Vale ' of the Poet's h woe.
In aiming at an all but h mark
Hoping h, fearing ' is it yet too late ? '
Hopple (hobble) Tha'd niver not h thy tongue,
Horace half in jest. Old H ?
you, old popular H, you the wise Adviser
Horde thine OAvn land has bow'd to Tartar h's
There the h of Roman robbers mock
last a heathen h. Reddening the sun
overcame The heathen h's, and made a realm
Wasted so often by the heathen h's,
clash'd with Pagan h's, and bore them down.
In the heart of the Russian h's,
Horder'd (ordered) To be h about, an' waaked,
Horizon By making all the h dark.
A length of bright h rimm'd the dark.
With fair h's boimd :
Ev'n to its last h, and of all Who peer'd at him
My prospect and h gone.
sometimes on the h of the mind Lies folded,
To change with her h, if true Love Were not
The faint h's, all the bounds of earth.
Supp. Confessions 31
Two Voices 176
St. S. Stylites 37
Talking Oak 12
St. Agnes' Eve 20
Aylmer's Field 717
In Mem. cxii 11
Maud I xix 88
XX 29
Ded. of Idylls 32
Holy Grail 871
Pelleas and E. 356
Locksley H., Sixty 70
105
Romney's R. 147
148
158
Parnassus 14
Politics 4
Crossing the Bar 15
St. S. Stylites 17
The Captain 17
Enoch Arden 202
Princess iv 304
In Mem., Con. 135
Gareth and L. 1419
Lover's Tale i 591
a 28
Sisters (E. and E.) 194
Despair 22
27
Merlin and V. 86
Supp. Confessions 39
Aylmer's Field 419
543
Princess iv 55
Lover's Tale i 126
In the Child. Hosp. 14
16
F rater ave, etc. 5
The Ring 346
Guinevere 691
Church-warden, etc. 24
Epilogue 46
Poets and their B, 5
W. to Marie Alex. 23
BoSdicea 18
Com. of Arthur 36
519
Holy Grail 244
479
Heavy Brigade 50
Spinster's S's. 97
Two Voices 390
Gardener's D. 181
WUl Water. 66
Aylmer's Field 816
In Mem. xxxvlii 4
Lover's Tale i 49
Sisters (E. and E.) 226
Far — far — away 14
Horn (See also Bugle-horn) wave-worn h's of the echoing
bank. Dying Swan 39
one hand i^rasp'd The mild bull's golden h. Palace of Art 120
Leaning his h's into the neighbour field. Gardener's D. 87
To where the bay runs up its latest h. Audley Court 11
Betwixt the monstrous Ks of elk and deer, Princess, Pro. 23
The h's of Elfland faintly blowing ! „ iv 10
A little space was left between the h's, „ 207
blast and bray of the long h And serpent-throated
bugle, „ V 252
Horn {continued) like a wild A in a land Of echoes, Princess v 486
Death and Morning on the silver h's, „ vii 204
affluent Fortune emj)tied all her h. Ode on Well. 197
outpour'd Their myriad h's of plenty Ode Inter. Exhih. 6
clangs Its leafless ribs and iron h's Together, In Mem. cvii 12
A golden foot or a fairy h Maud II ii 19
blew A hard and deadly note upon the h. Gareth and L. 1111
and a long black h Beside it hanging ; ., 1366
Sent all his heart and breath thro' all the h. ,, 1369
let blow His h's for hunting on the morrow
morn. Marr. of Geraint 153
The noble hart at bay, now the far h, „ 233
fill'd a h with wine and held it to her,) Geraint and E. 659
In these wild woods, the hart with golden h's. Merlin and V. 409
chased the flashes of his golden h's „ 427
sent His h's of proclamation out „ 581
They sit with knife in meat and wine in ^ ! „ 694
Thither he made, and blew the gateway h. Lancelot and E. 169
I heard a sound As of a silver h from o'er the hills Holy Grail 109
0 never harp nor A, Nor ought we blow with breath, „ 113
a h, inflamed the knights At that dishonour Last Tournament 434
Till each would clash the shield, and blow the h. „ 436
Then at the dry harsh roar of the great h, „ 438
' O hunter, and 0 blower of the h. Harper, „ 542
Made answer, sounding Uke a distant h. Guinevere 249
Hornblende chat tering stony names Of shale and h, Princess Hi 362
Homed (See also White-homed) things that are forked,
, and h. The Mermaid 53
or fills The h valleys all about, Supp. Confessions 152
shadowing down the h flood In ripples. In Mem. Ixxxvi 7
Homet better ha' put my naked hand in a h's nest. First Quarrel 50
Homet-comb honey from h-c's. And men from
beasts — Last Tournament 357
Homfooted tramp of the h horse That grind the glebe Tiresias 94
Horn-handed those h-h breakers of the glebe. Princess ii 159
Hornless h unicorns, Crack'd basilisks. Holy Grail 717
Hompipes move. And flounder into h. 4'''>phion 24
Homy with a grosser film made thick These heavy, h
eyes. St. S. Stylites 201
Homy-nibb'd Left for the 7i-n raven to rend it. Bait, of Brunanburh 108
' ■ ■ Palace of Art 240
Princess iv 180
Maud II i 24
„ III vi 41
Geraint and E. 379
Rizpah 39
Despair 87
Bandit's Death 35
Merlin and V. 748
Godiva 59
Aylmer's Field 43
603
Lucretius 173
Princess v 95
The Victim 7
Maud / i 3
56
vil5
,, xiv 35
„IIIvi2
Gareth and L. 1394
1411
1425
Marr. of Geraint 29
Lancelot and E. 2>1
Holy Grail 259
Lover's Tale iv 62
Def. of I/ucknow 88
Despair 48
The Ring 451
Aylmer's Field 318
Bahn and Balan 525
Horrible And h nightmares.
like a blossom'd branch Rapt to the h fall :
a mUhon h bellowing echoes broke
H, hateful, monstrous, not to be told ;
then Went slipping down h precipices,
God 'ill pardon the hell-black raven and h fowls of
the air.
Have I crazed myself over their h infidel writings ?
it was chain'd, but its h yell
Horrid And of the h foulness that he wrought,
Horror shot Light h's thro' her pulses :
hail" of the Baronet bristle up With h,
days Were dipt by h from his term of life.
' Can I not fling this h off me again.
The h of the shame among them all :
Priest in h about his altar To Thor and Odin
ledges drip with a silent /* of blood,
nevennore to brood On a /* of shatter'd limbs
a morbid hate and h have grown Of a world
Felt a h over me creep,
cells of madness, haunts of h and fear,
spake no word ; Which set the h higher :
To make a /i all about the house,
all their foolish fears And h's only proven
fell Ah on him, lest his gentle wife,
A h lived about the tam.
In h lest the work by Merlin wrought,
Drown'd in the gloom and h of the vault.
H of women in travail among the dying
Life with its anguish, and h's, and eiTors —
the glazed eye Glared at me as in A.
Horror-stricken And Leolin's h-s answer, ' I
She lied with ease ; but h-s he,
Horse (See also 'Erse, Herse, War-horse)
trail'd By slow h's ;
heavy barges
L. of Shalotti 21
Horse
335
Hospital
Horse (continued) like a h That hears the corn-bin open,
Francis laid A damask napkin wrought with h and
hound,
turn the h's' heads and home again.'
a little dearer than his h.
The h and rider reel :
He rode a h with wings, that would have flown.
Below were men and h's pierced with worms,
Enoch's white h, and Enoch's ocean-spoil
He knew her, as a horseman knows his h —
The h he drove, the boat he sold,
praised his land, his h's, his machines ;
She trampled some beneath her h's' heels,
twinn'd as h's ear and eye.
four wing'd h's dark against the stars ;
Till like three h's that have broken fence,
shook My pulses, till to A we got,
'To A' Said Ida; 'home! to/*!'
(For since her h was lost I left her mine)
The h's yell'd ; they clash'd their arms ;
Part stumbled mixt with floundering h's.
With stroke on stroke the h and horseman,
And sword to sword, and htohwe hung,
While h and hero fell,
rolling phantom bodies of h's and men ;
loosed their sweating h's from the yoke,
Or kiU'd in falling from his h.
Yet pity for a h o'er-driven,
And those white-f avour'd h's wait ;
Look, a A at the door,
That he left his wine eind h's and play,
the hoofs of the h's beat, (repeat)
long-lanced battle let their h's run.
A h thou knowest, a man thou dost not know :
he had ask'd For h and armour :
And the spear spring, the good h reel,
Thou get to h and foUow him far away.
Took h, descended the slope street,
that held The h, the spear ;
took the shield And mounted h and graspt a spear,
' Bound upon a quest With h and arms —
heart of her good h Was nigh to burst
Who stood a moment, ere his h was brought,
Flee down the valley before he get to h.
take his h And arms, and so return him to the King.
Beyond his h's crupper and the bridge,
Huge on a huge red h, and all in mail
Push'd h across the foamings of the ford,
hoof of his h slipt in the stream,
His h thereon stumbled — ay, for I saw it.
knights on h Sculptured, and deckt in slowly-waning hues
and thy good h And thou are weary ;
And forage for the h, and flint for fire.
Lancelot now To lend thee h and shield :
How best to manage h, lance, sword and shield.
High on a nightblack h, in nightblack arms.
Took h, and forded Usk, and gain'd the wood ; Marr. of Geraint 161
when she put her h toward the knight, „ 200
Prince Had put his ft in motion toward the knight, ., 206
the good knight's h stands in the court ;
That morning, when they both had got to h,
Come, we will slay him and will have his h
they would slay you, and possess your h
bound the suits Of armour on their h's,
Three h's and three goodly suit of arms,
bound them on their h's, each on each,
They let the h's graze, and ate themselves.
but take A h and arms for guerdon ;
stalling for the h's, and return With victual
up the rocky pathway disappear'd. Leading the h,
' Take Five h's and their armours ; '
wild Limours, Borne on a black h,
' H and man,' he said, ' All of one mind and all right-
honest friends !
Was honest — paid with h's and with arms ;
TJie Epic 44 Horse (continued) Prince, without a word, from his h
fell.
Feeding like h's when you hear them feed ;
moving out they found the stately h,
then Geraint upon the h Mounted,
And, gravely smiling, lifted her from h,
Men weed the white h on the Berkshire hills
on the right of Balin Balin's h Was fast
Christless foe of thine as ever dash'd H against h ;
We saw the hoof-print of a h, no more.'
stall'd his h, and strode across the court,
till his goodly h, Arising wearily at a fallen oak.
And there a h ! the rider ? where is he ?
vaulted on his h, and so they crash'd In onset,
Balin's h Was wearied to the death,
Beheld the Queen and Lancelot get to h.
Then got Sir Lancelot suddenly to h,
strong neighings of the wild white H
There to his proud h Lancelot turn'd,
And brought his h to Lancelot where he lay.
I charge you that you get at once to h.
So all in wrath he got to h and went;
all wearied of the quest Leapt on his h.
Making a roan h caper and curvet For pleasure
when she heard his h upon the stones,
splash'd and dyed The strong White H
his h In golden armour jewell'd everywhere :
our h's stumbling as they trode On heaps of ruin,
reel'd Almost to falling from his h ;
binding his good ft To a tree, cast himself down ;
all of them On h's, and the h's richly trapt
Pelleas rose, And loosed his ft.
Lend me thine h and arms, and I wiU say
Wherefore now thy ft And armour:
Behold his h and armour,
he told us — he that hath His ft and armour:
and bound his ft Hard by the gates.
And forth he past, and mounting on his h
He dash'd the rowel into his ft,
Kan thro' the doors and vaulted on his ft And fled :
small pity upon his ft had he, Or on himself,
Tristram round the gallery made his ft Caracole ;
as he stretch'd from ft To strike him,
And tamper'd with the Lords of the White H,
So Lancelot got her ft, Set her thereon.
And still at evenings on before his ft
who leagues With Lords of the White H,
There were our h's ready at the doors —
h's whirl'd The chariots backward,
tramp of the hornf ooted ft That grind the glebe
peasants maim the helpless ft.
Wedged themselves in between ft and ft,
vineyard, hive and ft and herd ;
And you spurr'd your fiery ft,
wild ft, anger, plunged To fling me,
Bring me my ft— my ft ? my wings That I may soar
the sky.
Horseback Enid was aware of three tall knights On ft,
lo, he sat on ft at the door!
„ 370 Horseleech like the daughters of the ft, ' Give,
Geraint and E. 9 Horseman He knew her, as a ft knows his horse —
„ 62 With stroke on stroke the horse and ft.
„ 74 Three other horsemen waiting,
„ 97 we may meet the horsemen of Earl Doorm,
„ 124 Thousands of horsemen, drew to the valley —
„ 182 Thousands of horsemen had gather'd
„ 211 Hortensla On the other side H spoke against the tax ;
„ 218 and before them paused H pleading :
„ 239 Horticultural a piece of inmost H art,
„ 244 Hosanna he is singing H in the highest :
„ 409 people strowing cried ' H in the highest ! '
„ 458 Hospitable Whom all men rate as kind and ft :
Hospital their fair college turn'd to ft ;
„ 483 She died of a fever caught when a nurse in a ft ward,
„ 486 Striking the ft wall, crashing thro' it,
Audley Court 21
Walk, to the Mail 46
Locksley Hali 50
Sir Galahad 8
Vision of Sin 3
209
Enoch Arden 93
136
609
The Brook 124
Princess, Pro. 44
i57
211
a 386
m 194
ivim
197
t)250
498
523
539
Light Brigade 44
Boadicea 27
Spec, of Iliad 2
In Mem. vi 40
„ Ixiii 1
„ Con. 90
Maud I xii 29
„ xix 74
// V 8
Com. of Arthur 104
Gareth and L. 463
474
523
584
662
681
691
709
762
934
941
955
966
1026
1040
1046
1057
1194
1264
1277
1324
1351
1381
Geraint and E. 508
606
752
758
883
936
Balin and Balan 28
98
133
341
424
467
555
560
Merlin and V. 102
Lancelot and E. 159
298-
347
493
539
563
704
792
980
Holy Grail 312
411
716
Pelleas and E. 24
30
55
61
345
354
373
37&
413
45ft
486
539
540
Last Tournament 205
459
Guinevere 15
„ 122
„ 256
„ 574
Lover's Tale iv 385
Achilles over the T. 24
Tiresias 94
Locksley H., Sixty 95
Heavy Brigade 22
To Virgil 10
Happy 76
Akbar's Dream 118
Mechanaphilus 9
Geraint and E. 57
Guinevere 589
Golden Year 12
Enoch Arden 136
Princess v 523
Geraint and E. 121
492
Heavy Brigade 3
14
Princess vii 127
132
HendecasyHabics 20
Enoch Arden 503
506
Princess i 71
„ vii 17
Charity 41
Def. ofLucknow 1&
Hospital
336
Hour
Hospital (continued) delicate women who tended the
h bed, Def. of Lucknow 87
Sick from the h echo them, „ 100
Give your gold to the H, On Jub. Q. Victoria 33
Hospitality tender ministries Of female hands
and h.' Princess vi 73
and served With female hands and h.' „ 96
broken into Thro' open doors and h ; Marr. of Geraint 456
innocent hospitalities quench'd in blood, Columbus 176
Host (entertainer of guests) The h and I sat round
the wassail-bowl, The Epic 5
Enoch was h one day, Philip the next, Enoch Arden 25
I, their guest, their h, their ancient friend, Aylmer's Field 790
enter'd an old hostel, call'd mine h To council, Princess i 173
We sent mine h to purchase female gear ; „ 199
' Fair H and Earl, I pray you courtesy ; Marr. of Geraint 403
Let me lay lance in rest, O noble h, „ 496
bad the h Call in what men soever Geraint and E. 285
Call the h and bid him bring Charger and palfrey.' „ 400
Till issuing arm'd he found the h and cried, „ 407
the h, Suddenly honest, answer'd in amaze, „ 409
How oft the Cantab supper, h and guest, To W. H. BrookfiMd 4
Host (array of men) two h's that lay beside the walls. Princess vi 383
Remember him who led your h's ; Ode on Well. 171
Not ours the fault if we have feeble h's — Third of Feb. 38
from time to time the heathen h Swarm'd overseas, Com. of Arthur 8
Arthur's h Proclaim'd him Victor, Balin and Balan 89
craft of kindred and the Godless h's Guinevere 427
They summon me their King to lead mine h's „ 570
Who slowly paced among the slumbering h, Pass, of Arthur 7
Then rose the King and moved his h by night, „ 79
ever and anon with h to h Shocks, „ 107
king was on them suddenly with a h. Sir J. Oldcastle 41
Troubled the track of the h that we hated, Batt. of Brunanburh 40
he look'd at the h that had halted Heavy Brigade 7
Hostage And here he keeps me h for his son.' Princess iv 405
Hostel So pass I h, hall, and grange ; _ Sir Galahad 81
enter'd an old h, call'd mine host To council, Princess i 173
riding wearily, Found every h full, Marr. of Geraint 255
And pausing at a A in a marsh, Lover's Tale iv 131
A dismal A in a dismal land, „ 141
There is one old E left us Locksley H., Sixty 247
In this H — I remember — I repent it „ 255
Hostess Then stept a buxom h forth. Princess i 228
Hot (See also Fiery-hot, 'Ot, Red-hot) my very ears were
h To hear them : „ 134
And heated h with burning fears, In Mem. cxviii 22
h in haste to join Their luckier mates, Geraint and E. 574
flush'd with fight, or h, God's curse, with anger — „ 660
H was the night and silent ; Pelleas and E. 395
snow on all the hills ! so h, So fever'd ! Romney's R. 12
Returning with h cheek and kindled eyes. Alexander 14
and my h lips prest Close, (Enone 203
Or rosy blossom in h ravine. The Daisy 32
h hiss And bustling whistle of the youth Marr. of Geraint 256
her hand is h With ill desires. Last Tournament 414
And leave the h swamp of voluptuousness Ancient Sage 277
Hot-and-hot To serve the h-a-h ; WiU Water. 228
Hottentot And not the Kaffir, H, Malay, Princess ii 158
Hotter her lynx eye To fix and make me h, „ Hi 47
Hoagonmont roar of H Left mightiest of dl peoples To the Queen ii. 20
Hound (See also Sleath-hound) Francis laid A damask
napkin wrought with horse and h, Audley Court 21
monstrous males that carve the living h, Princess Hi 310
And love in which my h has part. In Mem. Ixiii 2
thou knowest, and gray, and all the h's ; Gareth and L. 462
stay'd Waiting to hear the h's ; Marr. of Geraint 163
There is good chance that we shall hear the h's : „ 182
Cavall, King Arthur's h of deepest mouth, „ 186
And pastime both of hawk and h, „ 711
Who seems no bolder than a beaten h ; Geraint and E. 61
weakling, and thrice-beaten h : Pelleas and E. 291
or a traitor proven, or h Beaten, „ 439
Like a dry bone cast to some himgry h ? Last Tournament 196
heard The h's of Mark, and felt the goodly h's « 503
Hound (continued) my forefather, with his feet upon
the h. Locksley H., Sixty 28
I, the finer brute rejoicing in my h's, By an Evolution. 7
Hour (See also Half-hour, Tavern-hour) The winds, as
at their h of birth. The winds, etc. 1
The cock sung out an h ere light : Mariana 27
but most she loathed the h „ 77
A SPiEiT haunts the year's last h's A spirit haunts 1
sick man's room when he taketh repose An h before death ; „ 15
Most delicately A by A He canvass'd A Character 19
ere he parted said, ' This h is thine : Love and Death 9
So runs the round of life from h to h. Circumstance 9
a phantom two h's old Of a maiden past away, Adeline 18
' Were this not well, to bide mine h, Two Voices 76
Who is it that could live an A ? „ 162
' His face, that two h's since hath died ; „ 242
So heavenly-toned, that in that h „ 442
I wonder'd at the bounteous h's, „ 451
But, Alice, what an h was that. Miller's D. 57
And now those vivid h's are gone, „ 195
Last night I wasted hateful h's Fatima 8
Is wearied of the roUing h's. L. C. V. de Vere 60
The warders of the growing h, Love thou thy land 61
The lusty bird takes every h for dawn : M. d' Arthur, Ep. 11
as tho' it were The h just flown. Gardener's D. 83
ere an h had pass'd, We reach'd a meadow „ 107
heavy clocks knoDing the drowsy h's. „ 184
till Autumn brought an h For Eustace, ,, 207
this whole h your eyes have been intent „ 269
for three h's he sobb'd o'er WiUiam's child Dora 167
we met ; one h I had, no more : Edwin Morris 104
I, whose bald brows in silent h's become St. S. Stylites 165
make reply Is many a weary h ; Talking Oak 26
' An h had past — and, sitting straight „ 109
slow sweet h's that bring us all things good. The slow
sad h's that bring us all things ill, Love and Duty bl
calmer h's to Memory's darkest hold, „ 90
every h Must sweat her sixty minutes Golden Year 68
every h is saved From that eternal silence, Ulysses 26
thy strong H's indignant work'd their wills, Tithonus 18
Made war upon each other for an h, Godiva 34
A pleasant h has passed away Day-Dm., Pro. 2
shall we pass the bill I mention'd half an h ago ? ' „ Revival 28
The Poet-forms of stronger h's, „ L' Envoi 14
Embraced his Eve in happy h, „ 42
Still creeping with the creeping h's St. Agnes' Eve 7
To-day I sat for an h and wept, Edward Gray 11
Thro' many an h of summer suns. Will Water. 33
But for my pleasant h, 'tis gone ; „ 179
H's, when the Poet's words and looks „ 193
Let us have a quiet h. Vision of Sin 73
tyrant's cruel glee Forces on the freer h. „ 130
An h behind ; but as he climb'd the hUl, Enoch Arden 66
Had his dark h unseen, and rose and past „ 78
To find the precious morning h's were lost. „ 302
remember'd one dark h Here in this wood, „ 385
That was your h of weakness. I was wrong, „ 449
' 0 would I take her father for one h , The Brook 114
He wasted h's with Averill ; Aylmer's Field 109
but so they wander'd, hhjh Gathered the blossom ,, 141
Fairer his talk, a tongue that ruled the h, „ 194
Lightning of the h, the pun, ,, 441
Some niggard fraction of an h, „ 450
Thro' weary and yet ever wearier h's, „ 828
but later by an h Here than ourselves. Sea Dreams 263
crowds that in an h Of civic tumult jam the doors, iMcretivs 168
that h perhaps Is not so far when momentary man „ 252
till that h, My golden work in which I told a truth „ 259
And with that woman closeted for h's ! ' Princess Hi 56
Yet let us breathe for one h more in Heaven ' „ 69
Its range of duties to the appointed h. „ 177
Such head from act to act, from h to h, „ iv 452
0 would I had his sceptre for one h ! „ 538
1 took it for an A to mine own bed This morning : „ v 434
Sole comfort of my dark h, „ vi 194
Hour
337
House
Soar {continued) many a pleasant h with her that's gone, Princess vi 247
With one that cannot keep her mind a.ah: „ 287
My heart an eddy from the brawUng h : „ 322
Clomb to the roofs, and gazed alone for h's „ vii 32
To wile the length from languorous h's, „ 63
Melts mist-like into this bright h, „ 355
Who never sold the truth to serve the h, Ode on Well. 179
Moum'd in this golden h of jubilee. Ode Inter. Exhib. 8
mix the seasons and the golden h's ; „ 36
he has but gone for an h, — Grandmother 102
O LOVE, what h's were thine and mine, The Daisy 1
At Florence too what golden h's, „ 41
Once in a golden h 1 cast to earth The Flower 1
Her quiet dream of life this h may cease. Requiescat 6
that the victor H's should scorn The long result of love. In Mem. i 13
" - - ^^ ^^. jg
„ xii 20
„ xxi 13
„ XXXV 6
„ xxxix 6
xl\
„ xliii 5
„ xlvi 3
10
liU
„ Ixxii 9
„ Ixxxivl'i
30
„ Ixxxv 106
„ Ixxxix 52
„ xciv 4
„ cii 14
„ civ 6
c»10
„ cxi 14
„ cxii 12
„ cxvii 1
„ cxxvi 4
„ cxxviii 9
„ Con. 65
69
Maud Iiv28
vin
vii 3
xviii 65
II i 23
iv 14
Com. of Arthur 215
228
357
Gareth and L. 46
132
175
892
902
1184
wrought At that last h to please him well ;
learn That I have been an h away.
an h For private sorrow's barren song.
But for one h, O Love, I strive
To thee too comes the golden h When
Could we forget the widow'd h
Unconscious of the slidinjg h,
Is shadow'd by the growing h.
The fruitful h's of still increase ;
Ye watch, like God, the rolling h's
Who usherest in the dolorous h
But that remorseless iron h
And all the train of bounteous h's
The promise of the golden h's ?
And buzzings of the honied h's.
An h's communion with the dead.
Thy feet have stray'd in after h's
That wakens at this h of rest
No more shall wayward grief abuse The genial h
and join'd Each office of the social h
In watching thee from hUih,
■O days and h's, your work is this
Which every h his couriers bring.
Wild H's that fly with Hope and Fear,
O happy h, and happier h's Await them.
0 happy h, behold the bride With him
cannot be kind to each other here for an h ;
Thro' the livelong h's of the dark
Did I dream it an h ago,
twelve sweet h's that past in bridal white,
For front to front in an /i we stood,
For one short h to see The souls we loved,
holden far apart Until his h should come ;
when Merlin (for his h had come) Brought Arthur
those first days had golden h's for me.
As glitters gilded in thy Book of H's.
'* Not an h. So that ye jdeld me —
till an h. When waken'd by the wind
' I fly no more : I allow thee for an h.
Allow me for mine h, and thou wilt find My fortunes
that h When the lone hem forgets his melancholy,
1 will eat With all the passion of a twelve h's' fast.' Marr. of Geraint 306
How many among us at this very h Do forge Geraint and E. 2
O pardon me ! the madness of that h, „ 346
So for long h's sat Enid by her lord, „ 580
And now their h has come ; and Enid said : „ 697
in that perilous h Put hand to hand „ 766
Was half a bandit in my lawless h, „ 795
but this h We ride a-hawking with Sir Lancelot. Merlin and V. 94
you which ruin'd man Thro' woman the first h ; „ 363
lay the redding, one But one h old ! „ 710
To crop his own sweet rose before the h? ' „ 725
And not the one dark h which brings remorse, „ 763
Joust for it, and win, and bring it in an h, Lancelot and E. 204
In darkness thro' innumerable h's Holy Grail 677
But never let me bide one h at peace. _ Pdleas and E. 387
and say his h is come. The heathen are ujjon him, Last Tournament 86
as when an h of cold Falls on the mountain „ 227
the warm h returns With veer of wind, „ 230
«pake not any word, But bode his h, „ 386
Hour {continued) And so returns belike within an h. Last Tournament 531
To see thee — yearnings ?— ay ! for, h by h, „ 583
O ay— the wholesome madness of an h — „ 675
ptarmigan that whitens ere this h Woos his own end ; „ 697
Many a time for h's, Beside the placid breathings Guinevere 68
It was their last h, A madness of farewells. „ 102
' Late ! so late ! What h, I wonder, now ? ' „ 161
an h or maybe twain After the sunset, „ 237
To guard thee in the wild h coming on, „ 446
And well for thee, sajring in my dark h, Pass, of Arthur 159
wealthier— wealthier— ft by hi To the Queen ii 23
And wordy truckUngs to the transient h, „ 51
On the same morning, almost the same h. Lover's Tale i 198
that little h was bound Shut in from Time, „ 437
and in that h A hope flow'd round me, „ 448
Else had the life of that deUghted h „ 471
0 day which did enwomb that happy h, „ 485
Genius of that h which dost uphold „ 487
Thy name is ever worshipp'd among h's ! „ 493
It was so happy an h, so sweet a place, „ 558
So died that h, and fell into the abysm „ 796
So that h died Like odour rapt into the winged wind „ 800
All thro' the livelong h's of utter dark, „ 810
Well he had One golden h — „ iv Q
Would you had seen him in that A of his ! „ 8
1 may not stay, No, not an fe ; „ 116
after this, An h or two, Camilla's travail came Upon her, „ 127
Travelling that land, and meant to rest a,nh; „ 133
To come and revel for one h with him „ 182
(I told you that he had his golden h), „ 206
Down to this last strange h in his own hall ; „ 358
I'll come for an h to-morrow. First Quarrel 46
I have only an h of life. Rizpah 22
I spent What seem'd my crowning h, Sisters {E. and E.) 124
talk to 'em h's after h's ! In the Child. Hasp. 34
And the doctor came at his h, „ 68
when the wild h and the wine Had set the wits
aflame. Sir J. Oldcastle 94
I have not broken bread for fifty h's. „ 199
Once in an h they cried, V. of Maeldune 29
nor, in h's Of civil outbreak, Tiresias 67
Like would-be guests an h too late, „ 198
Remembering all the golden h's Now silent, „ 210
Why should we bear with an h of torture. Despair 81
What rulers but the Days and H's Ancient Sage 95
The days and h's are ever glancing by, „ 99
But with the Nameless is nor Day nor H ; „ 102
hands point five — O me— it strikes the h — The Flight 94
a hiccup at ony h o' the night ! Spinster's S's. 98
Shape your heart to front the h, but dream not
that the h will last. Loeksley H., Sixty 106
On this day and at this h, „ 175
Insects of an h, that hourly work their brother insect
wrong, „ 202
the first dark h of his last sleep alone. „ 238
Expecting all things in an h — Freedom 39
breaks into the crocus-purple h That saw thee vanish. Demeter and P. 50
The man, that only lives and loves an h, „ 106
waait till tha 'ears it be strikin' the h. Otod Roa 18
after h's of search and doubt and threats. The Ring 278
stUl drawn downward for an h, „ 477
And hhj h unfolding woodbine leaves Prog, of Spring 7
Beyond the darker h to see the bright, „ 88
and make her festal h Dark with the blood St. Tdemachus 79
' wasting the sweet summer h's ' ? Charity 1
I was close on that h of dishonour, „ 28
give His fealty to the halcyon h ! The Wanderer 12
When the dumb H, clothed in black. Silent Voices 1
Houri A group of H's bow'd to see The djdng Islamite, Palace of Art 102
Hourly Daily and h, more and more. Eleanore 71
And h visitation of the blood, Lover's Tale i 206
Hourly-mellowing summer's h-m change May breathe, In Mem. xci 9
House (s) {See also Ale-house, Chop-house, City-house,
'Ouse, Pleasure-house) All day within the dreamy h, Mariana 61
and vacancy Of the dark deserted h. Deserted Hov^e 12
House
338
Household
House (s) (continued) The h was bmlded of the earth, Deserted House 15
The first h by the water-side, L. of Shalott iv 34
Dead-pale between the /i's high, „ , „'^
The h thro' all the level shines, Mariana m the 6. ^
On to God's h the people prest : Two Voices 409
To move about the h with joy, Miller's D. 95
Li this great h so royal-rich, Palace of Art 191
I saw you sitting in the h. May Queen, Con. 30
lightly curl'd Round their golden h's, Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 113
And fill'd the h with clamour. The Goose 36
nightmare on his bed When all the h is mute. M. d' Arthur 178
' this wonder keeps the h.' He nodded. Gardener's D. 119
So rapt, we near'd the h; .. 142
He had been always with her in the h, ^°orr
he left his father's h. And hired himself to work „ 37
Then Dora went to Mary's h, » 110
Then thou and I will live within one h, ,, 125
So those four abode Within one h together ; „ 170
Whose h is that I see ? Walk, to the Mail 11
but his h, for so they say, Was haunted „ 35
So in mine earthly h I am, St. Agnes Eve 19
For I am of a numerous h, Will Water. 89
' Let us see these handsome h's L. of Burleigh 23
She is of an ancient h : Vision of Sin 140
Three children of three h's, Enoch Arden 11
the children play'd at keeping h. „ 24
' This is my h and this my Uttle wife.' „ 28
So might she keep the h whUe he was gone. „ 140
Lords of his h and of his mill were they ; „ 351
' You have been as God's good angel in our h. „ ^o
The babes, their babble, Annie, the small h, „ 606
With daily-dwindUng profits held the h ; „ 696
So broken— all the story of his h. „ 704
Far-blazing from the rear of Philip's h, ,, 727
The latest h to landward ; » 732
But kept the h, his chair, and last his bed. „ 82b
That all the fe'5 in the haven rang. ,"T,-,:,oJi
like a storm he came. And shook the h, Aylmer s Field Zlb
the thunders of the h Had fallen first, „ 278
beheld the Powers of the H On either side the hearth, „ 287
The last remaining pillar of their h, .. 295
Forbad her first the h of Averill, „ 502
to spy The weakness of a people or a h, „ 570
Your h is left unto you desolate ! ' (repeat) „ 629, 797
' My A is left imto me desolate.' » 721
' Our h is left unto us desolate ' ? » 737
The deathless ruler of thy dying h » 661
Who entering fill'd the h with sudden light. „ 682
when he felt the silence of his h About him, „ 830
Walter show'd the h, Greek, set with busts : Princess, Pro. 10
they gave The park, the crowd, the h ; „ 94
A Gothic ruin and a Grecian h, » 232
There lived an ancient legend in our h. » » |
An old and strange aSection of the h. » 1*
He cared not for the aSection of the h ; » 26
A little street half garden and half h; „ . . 214
wish'd to marry ; they could rule a A ; „ ." 465
came Upon me, the weird vision of our h : „ *^* 184
Still in the A in his coffin the Prince G. of Swamston 10
this pretty h, this city-house of ours ? City Child 7
And bread from out the h's brought. Spec, of Iliad &
you bite far into the heart of the h. Window, Winter}}.
Dark h, by which once more I stand In Mem. vn 1
Are but as servants in a A .. 5^,^
That guard the portals of the h ; „ icxix 12
And home to Mary's h return'd, .. ^^a;t 2
From every h the neighbours met, .. 9
Should murmur from the naiTOw A, ,. xxxyj
Or builds the h, or digs the grave, » xxxm 14
In that dark h where she was bom. .. *f 12
link thy life with one Of mine own h, „ Ixxxtv 12
And in the h light after light Went out, „ xcy 19
She knows but matters of the h, „ mcvi^ 31
he told me that he loved A daughter of our h ; ,, Con. 7
Living alone in an empty h, Maud I. vi 68
House (S) (continued) all round the h I beheld The death-
white curtain Maud I xiv 33
sprinkled with blood By which our h's are torn : „ xix_ 33
Wrought for his h an irredeemable woe ; „ Hi 22
stand at the diamond door Of his A in a rainbow frill ? „ ii 17
shouted at once from the top of the h ; „ "50
To make a horror all about the h, Gareth and L. 1411
Lady Lyonors and her h, with dance And revel „ 1422
slender entertaiiunent of a A Once rich, Marr. of Geramt 301
Rest ! the good h, tho' ruin'd, ,. 378
reverencing the custom of the h Geraint, „ 380
Before my Enid's birthday, sack'd myh; „ 458
when Edym sack'd their h. And scatter'd all they had „ 634
He foimd the sack and plunder of our h All scatter'd
thro' the h's of the town ; « 694
Ah, dear, he took me from a goodly h, „ 708
Yea, and he brought me to a goodly h; " , t. oio
Call for the woman of the h,' Geraint and E. jbS
Among the heavy breathings of the h, „ 402
how suited to the h of one Who loves that beauty ,, 683
mother of the h There was not : Lancelot and E. iTi
wam'd me of their fierce design Against my h, „ 275
shuddering, ' Hark the Phantom of the h
this discomfort he hath done the h.'
There sat the lifelong creature of the h,
saw One of her h, and sent him to the Queen
and fair the h whereby she sat,
h Became no better than a broken shed,
. brought thee here to this poor h of ours
and out again, But sit within the h.
But always in the quiet h I heard,
sat There in the holy h at Ahnesbury
Heard by the watcher in a haunted h,
Whom he knows false, abide and rule the h :
Do each low office of your holy h ;
Modred, imharm'd, the traitor of thine h.'
spake the King : 'My h hath been my doom.
But call not thou this traitor of my h
My h are rather they who sware my vows,
nightmare on his bed When all the /i is mute.
But thou didst sit alone in the inner h.
Still larger moulding all the h of thought,
O blossom'd portal of the lonely h,
Back to his mother's h among the pines.
to the mother's h where she was born.
But all their h was old and loved them both. And
all the h had known the loves of both ;
such a A as his. And his was old,
jewels Of many generations of his h Sparkled and flash'd^ „
1022
1072
1143
1168
Holy Grail 392
397
617
715
832
Guinevere 2
73
„ 515
„ 682
Pass, of Arthur 153
154
155
157
346
Lover's Tale i 112
241
280
„ iv 15
91
122
202
my h an' my man were my pride.
So I set to righting the h,
our h has held Three hundred years —
thick of question and reply I fled the h,
want Of Edith in the h, the garden,
there hail'd on our h's and halls
none but Gods could build this h of ours,
To lie, to lie — in God's own h —
A door was open'd in the h —
To both our H's, may they see Beypnd
Deck your h's, illuminate All your towns
Theere, when the 'ouse wur a h,
the h is afire,' she said.
We saw far off an old forsaken h,
being waked By noises in the h —
I found her not in h Or garden —
O the night. While the h is sleeping.
This h with all its hateful needs
This worn-out Reason dying in her h
Lord let the A of a brute
House (verb) That h the cold crown'd snake !
H in the shade of comfortable roofs.
Housed the children, h In her foul den,
those black foldings, that which h therein.
Scarce h within the circle of this Earth,
Household (adj.) h shelter crave From winter rains
First Quarrel 41
47
Sisters (E. and E.) 52
158
246
Def. of Lucknow 13
Ancient Sage 83
The Flight 52
69
Hands all Bound 27
On Jub. Q. Victoria 18
Owd Rod 29
68
The Ming 155
417
444
Forlorn 42
Happy 32
Romney's R. 145
By an Evolution. 1
(EnoneSl
St. S. Stylites 107
Com. of Arthur 29
GarOh and L. 1380
Lover's Tale i 479
Two Voices 260
Household
339
Huge
Honsebold (adj.) (continued) For surely now our h
hearths are cold : Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 72
Virtue, like a h god Promising empire ; On a Mourner 30
Meet adoration to my h gods, Ulysses 42
farmer vext packs up his bedis and chairs, And all
his h stuff ; Walk, to the Mail 40
While yet she went about her h ways, Enoch Arden 453
Their slender h fortunes (for the man Sea Dreams 9
common vein of memory Sweet h talk. Princess ii 315
and the h flower Tom from the lintel — „ v 128
As daily vexes h peace. In Mem. xxix 2
Moving about the h ways, „ Ix 11
And hear the A jar within. „ xciv 16
From h fountains never dry ; „ cix 2
The h Fury sprinkled with blood Maud I xix 32
Beyond all titles, and a h name, Ded. of Idylls 42
And like a h Spirit at the walls Beat, Geraint and E. 403
And trustful courtesies of h life, Guinevere 86
Red in thy birth, redder with h war. Sir J. OldcasUe 53
Which from her h orbit draws the child Prin. Beatrice 7
H happiness, gracious children, Vastnsss 24
And lured me from the h fire on earth. Eomney's R. 40
The gleam of h sunshine ends. The Wanderer 1
Household (s) Her h fled the danger. The Goose 54
And lift the h out of poverty ; Enoch Arden 485
example follow'd. Sir, In Arthur's h?' — Merlin and K. 20
Leaving her h and good father, Lancelot and E. 14
Housel nor sought. Wrapt in her grief, for h Guinevere 149
Houseless The h ocean's heaving field. The Voyage 30
Housemaid His daughter and his h were the boys : Princess i 190
Hove Then saw they how there h a dusky barge, M. d Arthur 193
Then saw they how there h a dusky barge, Pass, of Arthur 361
Hovell'd the poor are h and hustled together, Maud / i 34
Hover (See also Wind-hover) all his life the charm
did talk About his path, and h near
Wings flutter, voices h clear :
They come and sit by my chair, they h about my
bed —
Day -Dm., Arrival 22
Sir Galahad 78
Grandmother 83
Maud I XX 28
And the bird of prey will h,
Hbver'd wherefore n roimd Lancelot, but when he
mark'd Balin and Bcdan 159
That h between war and wantonness, To the Queen ii 44
Hovering h o'er the dolorous strait To the other shore, In Mem. Ixxxiv 39
and h round her chair Ask'd, ' Mother, Gareth and L. 33
breath Of her sweet tendance h over him, Geraint and E. 926
Whenever in her h to and fro The lily maid Lancdot and E. 326
A vision A on a sea of fire, Pelleas and E. 52
Her spirit h by the church. The Ring 478
Hbveringly h a sword Now over and now under, Lu^etius 61
How setting the how much before the h, Golden Year 11
Howard (See also Thomas Howard) I should count
myself the cowMd if I left them, my Lord H, The Revenge 11
Lord H past away with five ships of war „ 13
Howd (hold) whoii's to h the lond ater mea N. Farmer, 0. S. 58
'e could h 'is oan, Owd Rod 7
An' 'e cotch'd h hard o' my hairm, „ 58
till 'e feeald 'e could h 'is oan. Church-warden, etc. 19
Howd (old) hes now be a-grawin' sa h, Village Wife 107
Howdin' (holding) Thy Moother was h the lether, Owd Rod 85
Howl (verb) I did not hear the dog h, mother, May Queen, Con. 21
h in tune With nothing but the Devil ! ' Sea Dreams 260
Crack them now for yourself, and h, Maud II v 56
fl as he may. But hold me for your friend : Pelleas and E. 34D
Howl (s) rose the fc of all the cassock'd wolves. Sir J. OldcasUe 158
the great storm grew with a h and a hoot The Wreck 91
Howl (owl) an' screead like a R gone wud — Owd Rod 76
Howlaby Beck But I minds when i' H B won daiiy Church-warden, etc. 27
Howlaby Daale when we was i' H D. Owd Rod 10
I wants to tell tha o' Roa when we Uved i' H D. „ 19
Hbwl'd She h aloud, ' I am on fire within. Palace of Art 285
In blood-red armour sallying, h to the King, Last Tournament 443
whereat He shrank and h, and from his brow Lover's Tale ii 92
!H me from Hispaniola; Columbus 118
Howlest And h, issuing out of night. In Mem. Ixxii 2
Howlins The wind is A in turret and
Howling The wind is A in turret and tree.
The Sisters 9
Howling (continued) on her threshold lie H in
outer darkness. To , With Pal. of Art 16
The h's from forgotten fields ; In Mem. xli 16
heard them pass like wolves H ; Bodin and Balan 408
The brute world h forced them into bonds. Merlin and V. 744
When the wolves are h. Forlorn 72
How much setting the h m before the how, Golden Year 11
Howry (dirty) the geU was as ha. troUope Owd Rod 72
I ears es 'e'd gie fur a h owd book Village Wife 45
Hubbub A sudden h shook the hall, Day-Dm., Revival 7
A ^ in the court of half the maids Princess iv 476
for those That stir this h — you and you — „ 509
clamour of liars belied in the h of lies ; Maud I iv 51
Thro' the h of the market I steal, „ II iv 68
Ask'd yet once more what meant the h here ? Marr. of Geraint 264
search and doubt and threats. And h, The Ring 279
Hubert The prophet of his own, my H — „ 23
' Air and Words,' Said H, „ 25
H brings me home With April and of swallow. „ 69
What need to wish when H weds in you The heart of
Love, and you the soul of Truth In H? „ 61
I climb'd the hill with H yesterday, „ 152
Huck (hip) I slither'd and hurted my h. North. Cobbler 19
Huckster This h put down war ! Maud I x 4A
Huddled The cattle h on the lea ; In Mem. xv 6
h here and there on moimd and knoll, Geraint and E. 803
An' we cuddled and h togither, Owd Rod 112
Huddling h slant in furrow-cloven falls Princess vii 207
Hue (verb) blue heaven which h's and paves The other ? Supp. Confessions 134
Hue (s) H's of the silken sheeny woof Madeline 22
Touch'd with a somewhat darker h, Margaret 50
And your cheek, whose brilliant h Rosalind 39
shapes and h's that please me well ! Palace of Art 194
cannot fail but work in h's to dim The Titianic
Flora. Gardener's D. 170
By Cupid-boys of blooming h — Day-Dm., E'p. 10
Moved with violence, changed in h, Vision of Stn 34
we know the h Of that cap upon her brows. „ 141
hair In gloss and h the chestnut, (repeat) The Brook 72, 207
a but less vivid h Than of that islet Aylmer's Fidd 64
Academic silks, in h The lilac. Princess ii 16
the other distance and the h's Of promise ; „ iv 86
thoughts that changed from h to h, „ 210
And as the fiery Sirius alters h, „ v 262
o'er her forehead past A shadow, and her h changed, „ vi 107
And shapes and h's of Art divine ! Ode Inter. Exhib. 22
bays, the peacock's neck in h ; The Daisy 14
h's are faint And mix with hollow masks In Mem. Ixx 3
The distance takes a lovelier h, „ cxv 6
and all Lent-lily in h. Save that the dome was
purple, Gareth and L. 911
Sculptured, and deckt in slowly-waning h's. „ 1195
A tribe of women, dress'd in many h's, Geraint and E. 598
her h Changed at his gaze : Balin and Balan 278
Embathing all with wild and woful h's, Lover's Tale ii 64
And earth as fair in h ! Ancient Sage 24
with the living h's of Art. Locksley H., Sixty 140
may roll The rainbow h's of heaven about it — Romney's R. 51
heaven's own h. Far — far — away? Far — far — away 2
Hued (See also Crimson-hued, Deep-hued, Bose-hued,
Soberer-hued) ' whose flower, H with the scarlet
of a fierce sunrise. Lover's Tale i 353
Hueless In the h mosses under the sea The Mermaid 49
In fold upon fold of h cloud, Maud I vi3
Nor settles into h gray. To Marq. of Dufferin 50
Huge above him swell H sponges of millennial growth The Kraken 6
lie Battening upon h seaworms in his sleep, „ 12
A h crag-platform, smooth as burnish'd brass Palace of Art 5
whisper of h trees that branch'd And blossom'd Enoch Arden 585
Once grovelike, each h arm a tree, Aylmer's Field 510
Now striking on h stumbling-blocks of scorn „ 538
But h cathedral fronts of every age. Sea Dreams 218
H Ammonites, and the first bones of Time ; Princess, Pro. 15
H women blowzed with health, and wind, „ iv 279
The h bush-bearded Barons heaved and blew, „ v 21
Huge
340
Human
Huge (continiied) rode we with the old king across
the lawns Beneath h trees, Princess v 237
A raiser of h melons and of pine, „ Con. 87
On that h scapegoat of the race, Maud I xiii 42
She gave the King his h cross-hilted sword , Com. of Arthur 286
A h man-beast of boundless savagery. Gareth and L. 637
H on&h red horse, and all in mail „ 1026
A h pavilion like a mountain peak „ 1364
The h pavilion slowly yielded up, „ 1379
At this he hurl'd his h limbs out of bed, Marr. of Geraint 124
h Earl Doorm, Broad-faced with under-fringe of
russet beard, Geraint and E. 536
retum'd The h Earl Doorm with plunder to the hall. „ 592
Here the h Earl cried out upon her talk, „ 651
told How the A Earl lay slain within his hall. „ 806
canst endure To mouth so A a foulness — Balin and Balan 379
Before an oak, so hollow, h and old Merlin and V. 3
other was the song that once I heard By this h oak, „ 406
seem'd to me the Lord of all the world. Being so h. Holy Grail 415
O towers so strong, H, solid, Pelleas and E. 464
Glared on a A machicolated tower Last Tournament 424
{H blocks, which some old trembling of the world Lover's Tale ii 45
With his h sea-castles heaving upon the weather
bow. The Revenge 24
For a h sea smote every soul from the decks The Wreck 109
Earth so h, and yet so bounded — LocTcsley H., Sixty 207
and flamed On one h slope beyond, St Telemachus 8
Gain'd their h Colosseum. „ 45
Huger drumming thimder of the h fall At distance, Geraint and E. 173
Well — can I wish her any h wrong Last Tournament 5^6
their fears Are morning shadows h than the shapes To the Queen ii 63
Taller than all the Muses, and h than all the mountain ? Parnassus 10
Hugest Nor all Calamity's h waves confoimd, Will 5
place which now Is this world's h, Lancelot and E. 76
apples, the h that ever were seen, V. of Maeldune 63
Hu^'d And h and never h it close enough. Princess vi 212
clung to him and h him close; Merlin and V. 945
vsTOught upon his mood and h him close. „ 948
Hugger-mugger (untidy) H-m they lived, but they
wasn't that easy to please. Village Wife 117
Hugh ' this,' he said, ' was Ws at Agincourt ; Princess, Pro. 25
Hugly (ugly) But I niver wur downright h, Spinster's S's. 16
An' a-callin' ma ' h ' mayhap to my f aace „ 91
Hull h Look'd one black dot against the verge of dawn, M. d'Arthur 270
Than if my brainpan were an empty h. Princess ii 398
h Look'd one blaA dot against the verge of dawn, Pass, of Arthur 438
mark'd the black h moving yet, and cried, „ 448
Till it smote on then- h's and their sails Th£ Beverage 116
the low dark h dipt under the smiling main, The Wreck 127
Hum (s) With the h of swarming bees Elednore 29
Hum (verb) scarce can hear the people h About the
column's base, St. S. Stylites 38
And here by thee will h the bee, A Farewell 11
all the lavish hills would h The murmur of a happy
Pan : In Mem. xxiii 11
by and by began to h An air the nims Guinevere 162
Human Is not my h pride brought low ? Sufp. Confessions 14
cords that wound and eat Into my h heatrt, >■ 37
brook the rod And chastisement of h pride ; „ 108
cuts atwain The knots that tangle h creeds. Clear-headed friend 3
hour by hour He canvass'd A mysteries, A Character 20
But more h in your moods, Margaret 47
Far off from h neighbourhood, Elednore 6
Ah pity — hint it not in h tones. Wan Sculptor 11
How grows the day of h power ? ' Two Voices 78
While still I yeam'd for h praise. ,, 123
Free space for every h doubt, » 137
That I first was in h mould ? ,. 342
No life that breathes with h breath ,. 395
With cycles of the h tale Of this wide world. Palace of Art 146
hear the dully sound Of h footsteps fall. ., 276
Pray Heaven for a h heart, L. C. V. de Vere 71
To mingle with the h race, Of old sat Freedom 10
h things returning on themselves Move onward. Golden Year 25
Beyond the utmost bound of h thought. Ulysses 32
Human (continued) I dipt into the future far as A
eye could see; (repeat)
song That mock'd the wholesome h heart,
In her left a h head.
Cared not to look on any h face.
No want was there of h sustenance,
He could not see, the kindly h face.
Brown, looking hardly h, strangely clad,
Nor sound of h sorrow mounts to mar
Or in the dark dissolving h heart,
Tho' man, yet h, whatsoe'er your wrongs.
Then springs the crowning race of h kind.
The proof and echo of all h fame.
Till in all lands and thro' all h story
What would you have of us ? H life ?
Thou seemest h and divine.
It never look'd to h eyes Since our first Sun
wrought With h hands the creed of creeds
And render h love his dues ;
To point the term of h strife,
Nor h frailty do me wrong,
sweetest soul That ever look'd with h eyes.
The perfect flower of h time ;
What fame is left for h deeds In endless age ?
But somewhere, out of h view,
I know transplanted h worth Will bloom
How much of act at h hands The sense of h will
But ia dear words of h speech
there swims The reflex of a A face,
take what fruit may be Of sorrow imder A skies :
Nor dream of A love and truth.
That sees the course of A things.
Locksley Hall 15, 119
The Letters 10
Vision of Sin 138
Enoch Arden 282
554
581
638
Lucretius 109
Princess Hi 312
„ iv 425
vii 295
Ode on Well. 145
223
The Victim 12
In Mem., Pro. 13
„ xxiv 7
„ xxxvi 10
„ xxxvii 16
lU
„ Hi 8
„ Ivii 12
„ Ixi 4
„ Ixxiii 11
„ Ixxv 18
„ Ixxxii 11
„ Ixxxv 38
83
„ cviii 12
14
„ cxviii 3
„ cxxviii 4
Known and vmknown ; A, divine ; Sweet A hand and
lips and eye ; „ cxxix 5
Whose glory was, redressing A wrong ; Led. of Idylls 9
lent her fierce teat To A sucklings ; Com. of Arthur 29
Till the great plover's A whistle amazed Geraint and E. 49
They ride abroad redressing A wrongs ! Merlin and V. 693
With such a fervent flame of A love, Holy Grail 74
And leaving A wrongs to right themselves, „ 898
Beast too, as lacking A wit — disgraced, Pelleas and E. 476
To ride abroad redressing A wrongs, Guinevere 471
Thou art the highest and most A too, „ 649
Dark with the smoke of A sacrifice, Sir J. Oldcastle 84
Cried from the topmost summit with A voices and
words ; V. of Maeldune 28
French of the French, and Lord of A tears ; To Victor Hugo 3
My son, the Gods, despite of A prayer. Are slower to
forgive than A kings. Tiresias 9
whose one bliss Is war, and A sacrifice — „ 112
In height and prowess more than A, „ 179
we broke away from the Christ, our A brother Despair 25
and the A heart, and the Age. „ 40
Set the sphere of all the boundless Heavens within
the A eye. Sent the shadow of Himself, the
boundless, thro' the A soul; Locksley H., Sixty 2\Q
Would she fuid her A offspring this ideal man at rest ? „ 234
Forward, till you see the highest H Nature is
divine. „ 276
As a lord of the H soul. Dead Prophet 54
at the doubtful doom of A kind ; To Virgil 24
sunder'd once from all the A race, „ 36
too fierce and fast This order of Her H Star, Freedom 23
Two Suns of Love make day of A life, Prin. Beatrice 1
You see your Art still shrined in A shelves. Poets and their B.W
I envied A wives, and nested birds, Demeier and P. 53
This poor rib-grated dungeon of the holy A ghost, Happy 31
As dead from all the A race as if beneath the mould ; „ 95
Larger and fuller, like the A mind ! Prog, of Spring 112
On A faces. And all around me. Merlin and the G. 20
H forgiveness touches heaven, and thence — Romney's R. 159
Hold the sceptre, H Soul, By an Evolution. 16
The dust send up a steam of A blood, St. Telemachus 53
Every morning is thy birthday gladdening A hearts
and eyes. Akbar's D., Hymn 2
Human
341
Hung
Human (continued) Head-hunters and boats of Dahomey
that float upon h blood !
Neither mourn if h creeds be lower
Dark no more with h hatreds in the glare
' Spirit, nearing yon dark portal at the limit of
thy h state,
Larger than h on the frozen hills.
Larger than h on the frozen hills.
Human-amorous Her Deity false in h-a tears;
Human-godlike Thine eyes Again were h-g,
Human-hearted The h-h man I loved.
Humanity amaze Our brief humanities ;
for the rights of an equal h,
Human-kind springs the crowning race of h-k.
Humbling now desired the h of their best,
Humid Their h arms festooning tree to tree,
Humiliated The woman should have borne, h,
me they lash'd and h, (repeat)
Humility late he learned h Perforce,
she had f ail'd In sweet h ; had f ail'd in all ;
memories all too free For such a wise h
' 0 son, thou hast not true h,
Humm'd swamp, where h the dropping snipe,
Audley feast H like a hive
Koundhead rode. And h a surly hymn.
I tum'd and h a bitter song
Her father's latest word h in her ear,
Hnmmeth At noon the wild bee h
Hamming {See also Hnzzin')
drowsy pulpit-drone
But while I past he was h an air,
smooth'd The glossy shoulder, h to himself.
News from the h city comes to it
With summer spice the h air ;
Hnmoni And h of the golden prime
According to my h ebb and now.
He scarcely hit my h, and I said :
According as his h's lead.
Lest that rough h of the kings of old Return
Hnmorous he sigh'd Then with another h ruth
Homorous-melancholy You man of h-m mark,
Hompback'd There by the h wiUow ;
Hunchback And all but a h too ;
Hunch'd fl^ as he was, and Uke an old dwarf-elm
But, if a man were halt or h,
Hundred (adj.) {See also Hoonderd, Nineteen-hundied)
yonder h million spheres ? '
I knit a h others new :
A h winters snow'd upon his breast.
The daughter of a ft Earls,
Is worth a h coats-of-arms.
He shines upon a h fields, and all of them I know,
The Dawn 5
Faith 5
» 8
God and the Univ. 4
M. d' Arthur 183
Pass, of Arthur 351
Lucretius 90
Bemeter and P. 19
In Mem. xiii 11
Efilogue 57
Beautiful City 2
Princess vii 295
Geraint and E. 637
D. ofF. Women 10
Aylmer's Field 356
Boddicea 49, 67
Buona'parte 13
Princess vii 229
Ode on Well. 249
Holy Grail 445
On a Mourner 9
Audley Court 5
Talking Oak 300
The Letters 9
Lancelot and E. 780
Claribd 11
hating to hark The h of the
To J. M. K. 10
Maud I xiii 17
Lancelot and E. 348
Gardener's D. 35
In Mem. ci 8
Arabian Nights 120
D. of F. Women 134
Edwin Morris 76
Day-Dm., Aloral 11
Gareth and L. 377
Geraint and E. 250
To W. H. Brookjield 9
Walk, to the Mail 31
The Wreck 43
Pdleas and E. 543
Guinevere 41
In
Two Voices 30
234
Palace of Art 139
L. C. V. de Vere 7
16
May Queen, Con. 50
Hundred (adj.) {continued) He that gain'd a h fights, Ode on Well. 96
in a ft years it '11 all be the same. Grandmother 47
A mount of marble, a ft spires ! The Daisy 60
Ay is Ufe for a ft years. Window, No Answer 9
A ft spmts whisper ' Peace.' In Mem. Ixxxvi 16
War with a thousand battles, and shaking a ft thrones. Maud I i48
At this a ft bells began to peal,
Were worth a ft kisses press'd on lips
Bow down one thousand and two ft times,
I circle in the grain Five ft rings of years —
when a ft times In that last kiss,
Was clash'd and hammer'd from a ft towers,
Till all the ft summers pass,
When will the ft summers die,
' I'd sleep another ft years,
' A ft summers ! can it be ?
And every ft years to rise And learn the world,
O ft shores of happy climes.
Here on this beach a ft years ago,
And half a ft bridges.
Hvmg with a ft shields, the family tree
To turn and ponder those three ft scrolls
they betted ; made a ft friends,
That he would send a ft thousand men,
we mist with those Six ft maidens clad in purest white,
Shall strip a ft hollows bare of Spring,
and led A ft maids in train across the Park.
And follow'd up by a ft airy does,
thro' The long-laid galleries past a ft doors
M. d' Arthur, Ep. 29
Gardener's D. 151
St. S. Stylites 111
Talking Oak 84
Love and Duty 66
Godiva 75
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 33
49
„ Depart. 9
25
L' Envoi 7
The Voyage 49
Enoch Arden 10
The Brook 30
Aylmer's Field 15
Lucretius 12
Princess, Pro. 163
i64
a 472
m65
76
87
375
A ft voices cried, ' Away with him !
And ft winters are but as the hands
And I can topple over a ft such.
Came riding with a ft lances up ;
Hath hardly scaled with help a ft feet
The ft under-kingdoms that he sway'd
province with a ft miles of coast, (repeat)
Spring after spring, for half a ft years :
A man wellnigh a ft winters old,
And each of these a ft winters old,
Scarr'd with a ft wintry water-courses —
Yea, rotten with a ft years of death.
Whereon a ft stately beeches grew,
A ft goodly ones — the Red Knight, he —
whereon There tript a ft tiny silver deer,
but Arthur with a ft spears Rode far,
and a ft meres About it,
(As I have seen them many a ft times)
And kept it thro' a ft years of gloom,
He had only a ft seamen to work the ship
With her ft fighters on deck,
mountain-Uke San Philip that, of fifteen ft tons
which our house has held Three ft years —
dangled a ft fathom of grapes.
King, that hast reign'd six ft years,
Thou seest the Nameless of the ft names.
beyond A ft ever-rising mountain lines,
swarm Of Turkish Islam for five ft years.
Those three ft millions under one Imperial
sceptre now,
through twice a ft years, on thee.
Who meant to sleep her ft summers out
And more than half a ft years ago.
Following a ft sunsets, and the sphere
men of a ft thousand, a milUon summers away ?
Hundred (s) {See also 'Oonderd, Six hundred. Three
hundred) Seeing forty of our poor ft were slain,
from fight Before their dauntless h's.
Hundred-fold his love came back aft-/;
Hundredth See Four-hundredth
Hundred-throated As 'twere a h-t nightingale,
Hung {See also HoUow-hung, Low-hung, Tassel-hung)
thunder-clouds that, ft on high,
H in the golden Galaxy.
A mighty silver bugle ft,
chestnuts near, that ft In masses thick with milky cones. Miller's D. 55
some were ft with arras green and blue. Palace of Art 61
choice paintings of wise men I ft The royal dais round. „ 131
H tranced from all pulsation. Gardener's D. 260
golden seal, that ft From Allan's watch, Dora 135
blackbird on the pippin ft To hear him, Audley Court 38
stars that ft Love-charm'd to listen : Love and Duty 74
with a mute observance ft. Locksley Hall 22
I h with grooms and porters on the bridge, Godiva 2
ft upon him, play'd with him And call'd him Enoch Arden 353
for Enoch ft A moment on her words, „ 872
he stood firm ; and so the matter ft ; (repeat) The Brook 144, 148
capacious hall, H with a himdred shields, Aylmer's Field 15
ft With wings of brooding shelter o'er her peace, „ 138
His own forefathers' arms and armour ft. Princess, Pro. 24
Thro' the wild woods that ft about the town ; „ i 91
And o'er his head Uranian Venus ft, „ 243
Or under arches of the marble bridge H, „ ii 459
Which melted Florian's fancy as she ft, „ iv 370
But on my shoulder ft their heavy hands, „ 553
sword to sword, and horse to horse we ft, „ v 539
H round the sick : the maidens came, „ vii 22
on her foot she ft A moment, and she heard, „ 79
Love, Uke an Alpine harebell A with tears „ 115
Com. of Arthur 231
281
Gareth and L. 651
Geraint and E. 539
Balin and Balan 170
Merlin and V. 582
„ 588, 647
Holy Grail 19
85
88
490
496
Pelleas and E. 26
Last Tournament 70
171
420
481
Lover's Tale ii 145
iv 195
The Revenge 22
34
40
Sisters (E. and E.) 53
V. of Maeldune 56
To Dante 1
Ancient Sage 49
282
Montenegro 11
Locksley H., Sixty 117
To W. C. Macready 14
The Ring 66
To Mary Boyle 27
St. Telemachv^ 31
The Dawn 25
The Revenge 76
Montenegro 7
Dora 166
Vision of Sin 27
As
Elednore 98
L. of Shalott Hi 12
16
Hang
342
'Bxaae {continued) Once the weight and fate of Europe h. Ode on Well. 240
and Jenny h on his arm. Grandmother 42
H in the shadow of a heaven ? In Mem. xvi 10
h to hear The rapt oration flowing free „ Ixxxvii 31
On thee the loyal-hearted h, „ ex 5
H over her dying bed — Mavd I xix 36
And down from one a sword was h, Gareth and L. 221
he loosed a mighty purse, H at his belt, Geraint and E. 23
Enid had no heart To wake him, but h o'er him, „ 370
And h his head, and halted in reply, ,,811
high on a branch R it, and tum'd aside Balin and Balan 433
drawing down the dim disastrous brow That o'er him h, „ 598
a troop of carrion crows H Uke a cloud Merlin and V. 599
She paused, she tum'd away, she h her head, „ 887
siu-e I think this fruit is h too high Lancelot and E. 774
o'er her h The silken case with braided blazonings, „ 1148
o'er his head the Holy Vessel h (repeat) Holy Grail 512, 520
down a streetway h with folds of pure White samite, ImsI Tournament 140
the sloping seas H in mid-heaven, Lover's Tale i 4
day h From his mid-dome in Heaven's airy haUs ; „ 65
H round with ragged rims and burning folds, — „ ii 63
H round with paintings of the sea, „ 168
Took the edges of the pall, and blew it far Until it h, „ Hi 36
the great San PhiUp h above us Uke a cloud The Bevenge 43
as if hope for the garrison h but on him ; Def. of Lucknow 48
I have h them by my bed, Columbus 200
the long convolvulus h; V. of Maeldune 40
The sun k over the gates of Night, Dead Prophet 23
The shadow of a crown, that o'er him h, D. of the Duke of C.2
Hungary shall I shriek it a. H fail ?
Hunger (s) In h's and in thirsts, fevers and cold,
Bearing a lifelong A in his heart.
Philip with eyes Full of that lifelong h,
Red grief and mother's h in her eye.
And in her h mouth'd and mumbled it,
A h seized my heart ; I read
Some dead of h, some beneath the scom^e,
for H hath the EvU eye —
Crime and h cast our maidens
Hanger (verb) Long for my life, or h for my death,
Maud I iv 46
St. S. Stylites 12
Enoch Arden 79
464
Princess m 146
213
In Mem. xcv 21
Columbus 177
Ancient Sage 264
Lochsley H., Sixty 220
Geraint and E. 81
Honger'd tme heart, which h for her peace Enoch Arden 272
Ck)me, I &m h and half-anger'd — Last Tournament 719
Hungering staring wide And h for the gilt Lover's Tale iv 313
Hnngerwom how weak and h I seem — leaning on these ? Gareth and L. 443
Hnngry For always roaming with a h heart Ulysses 12
Slowly comes a h people, as a Uon creeping nigher, Locksley Hall 135
greasy gleam In haunts of h sinners. Will Water. 222
every captain waits H for honour, Princess v 314
Like a dry bone cast to some h hoimd ? Last Tournament 196
Hunt (s) Forgetful of the falcon and the h, Marr. of Geraint 51
petition'd for his leave To see the h, „ 155
her love For Lancelot, and forgetful of the h ; „ 159
I but come hke you to see the h, „ 179
And while they listen'd for the distant h, „ 184
A Uttle vext at losing of the h, „ 234
Hunt (verb) Do h me, day and night.' D. of F. Women 256
Like a dog, he h's in dreams, Locksley Hall 79
* They h old trails,' said Cyril Princess ii 390
We h them for the beauty of their skins ; „ v 156
who will h for me This demon of the woods ? Balin and Balan 136
not Arthur's use To Ji by moonlight ; ' Holy Grail 111
To h the tiger of oppression out From office ; Akbar's Dream 158
Hunted (adj.) As himters round a h creature draw Aylmer's Field 499
Hunted (verb) The swallow stopt as he A the fly. Poet's Song 9
Hunter (huntsman) {See also Head-Hunter) with pufi'd
cheek the belted h blew Palace of Art 63
As h's round a hunted creature draw Aylmer's Field 499
Nor her that o'er her woujided h wept Lucretius 89
the h rued His rash intrusion, manlike, Princess iv 203
Man is the h ; woman is his game : „ v 154
made Broad pathways for the h and the knight Com. of Arthur 61
No keener h after glory breathes. Lancelot and E. 156
' 0 h, and O blower of the horn. Harper, Last Tournament 542
' Ah then, fake h and false harper, „ 567
and h's race The shadowy lion, Tiresias 177
Husband
Hunter (horse) And rode his h down. Talking Oak 104
Hunting (See also 'Untin', Wile-hunting) The King was h
in the wild ; The Victim 30
gave order to let blow His homs for h Marr. of Geraint 153
he went To-day for three days' h — Last Tournament 530
Hunting-dress wearing neither h-d Nor weapon, Marr. of Geraint 165
Hunting-mom the third day from the h-m „ 597
Hunting-tide Rang out like hollow woods at h-t. Pelleas and E. 367
Hup-on-end (up-on-end) An' I slep i' my chair h-o-e, Owd Rod 54
Hupside (upside) an' the 'ole 'ouse h down. North Cobbler 43
Hurl h their lances in the sun ; Locksley Hall 170
Balin graspt, but while in act to h, Balin and Balan 368
Mark was half in heart to h his cup Merlin and V. 30
when he stopt we long'd to h together, ^ „ 420
Twice do we h them to earth Def. of Lucknow 58
Gods, To quench, not h the thunderbolt, Demeter and P. 133
Hurl'd the bolts are h Far below them Lotos- Eaters, C. S. Ill
And h the pan and kettle. The Goose 28
H as a stone from out of a catapult Gareth and L. 965
They madly h together on the bridge ; „ 1120
h him headlong o'er the bridge Down to the river, „ 1153
At this he h his huge Umbs out of bed, Marr. of Geraint 124
Hung at his belt, and h it toward the squire. Geraint and E. 23
h to ground what knight soever spurr'd Against us, Balin and Balan 66
h it from him Among the forest weeds, „ 541
he h into it Against the stronger : Lancelot and E. 462
H back again so often in empty foam, Last Tournament 93
h The tables over and the wines, „ 474
Leapt on him, and h him headlong, Guinevere 108
you h them to the groimd. Happy 76
Been h so high they ranged about the globe ? St. Telemmihus 2
when she h a plaate at the cat Church-warden, etc. 25
Noble the Saxon who h at his Idol Kapiolani 4
Hurling Each h down a heap of things that rang Geraint and E. 594
Hurrah we roar'd a h, and so The Uttle Revenge The Revenge 32
Hurricane like the smoke in a A whirl'd. Boddicea 59
The h of the latitude on him feU, Columbus 138
Crash'd like a h. Broke thro' the mass Heavy Brigade 28
Hurried Edith's eager fancy h with him Aylmer's Field 208
Hurry (s) {See also 'Urry) aU three in h and fear Ran
to her, Lancelot and E. 1024
Hurry (verb) By thirty hills I h down. The Brook 27
and yearn to h precipitously Boddicea 58
Hurrying Myriads of rivulets h thro' the lawn, Princess vii 220
Driving, h, marrying, burjdng, Maud II v 12
Another h past, a man-at-arms, Geraint and E. 526
Then, h home, I found her not in house The Ring 444
Hurt (s) helps the h that Honour feels, Locksley Hall 105
swathed the h that drain'd her dear lord's life. Geraint and E. 516
Then, fearing for his h and loss of blood, „ 777
came The King's own leech to look into his h ; „ 923
But while Geraint lay heaUng of his h, „ 931
tho' he caU'd his wound a Uttle h Lancelot and E. 852
when Sir Lancelot's deadly h was whole, „ 904
Like a king's heir, till aU his h's be whole. Last Tournament 91
heal'd Thy h and heart with unguent and caress — „ 595
treat their loathsome h's and heal mine own ; Guinevere 686
Hurt (verb and part.) Love is h with jar and fret. Miller's D. 209
H in that night of sudden ruin and wreck, Enoch Arden 564
There by a keeper shot at, slightly h, Aylmer's Field 548
almost all that is, hurting the h — ,, 572
With their own blows they h themselves, Princess vi 49
I trust that there is no one h to death, „ 242
H in his first tilt was my son. Sir Torre. Lancelot and E. 196
' But parted from the jousts H in the side,' „ 623
h Whom she would soothe, and harm'd Guinevere 354
Hurted I sUther'd and h my buck. North. Cobbler 19
Hurting almost all that is, h the hurt — Aylmer's Field 572
Husban' at yer wake Uke h an' wife. Tomorrow 82
Husband {See also Husban') As the h is, the wife is : Locksley Hall 47
of what he wish'd, Enoch, your h : Enoch Arden 292
Has she no fear that her first h Uves ? „ 806
only near'd Her h inch by inch, Aylmer's Field 807
' No trifle,' groan'd the h ; Sea Dreams 145
The field was pleasant in my h's eye.' Gareth and L. 342
Husband
343
Ida
Hosband (continued) my h's brother had my son Thrall'd
in his castle, Gareth and L. 357
Enid, but to please her h's eye, Marr. of Geraint 11
Put hand to hand beneath her h's heart,
I am thine h — not a smaller soul,
the widower h and dead wife Rush'd each at each
and dead her aged h now —
' This model h, tliis fine Artist ' !
Her h in the flush of youth and dawn,
crying ' H \' she leapt upon the fimeral pile,
blade that had slain my k thrice thro'
Husbandry with equal h The woman were an equal to
the man.
Harvest-tool and h, Loom and wheel
Hush (s) we heard In the dead h the papere
in the h of the moonless nights.
And a h with the setting moon.
had blown — after long h — at last —
A dead h fell ; but when the dolorous day
Hnsb (verb) If prayers will not h thee,
' O h,h]' and she began.
H, the Dead March wails in the people's ears
And h'es half the babbling Wye,
Let us h this cry of ' Forward '
Hosh'd air is damp, and h, and close.
The town was h beneath us :
Ranges of glimmering vaults with iron grates, And
h seragUos -D- of F. Women 36
Up went the h amaze of hand and eye. Princess Hi 138
how sweetly smells the honeysuckle In the h night, Gareth and L. 1288
H all the groves from fear of wrong : Sir L. and Q. G. 13
h itself at last Hopeless of answer : Aylmer's Field 542
The Wye is h nor moved along. And h my deepest
Geraint and E. 767
Guinevere 566
Lover's Tale iv 372
Locksley H., Sixty 37
Romney's R. 124
Death of (Enone 17
105
Bandit's Death 34
Princess i 130
Ode Inter. Exhib. 14
Princess iv 390
Maud I i'^
„ xxii 18
Gareth and L. 1378
Pass, of Arthur 122
Lilian 27
Princess ii 115
Ode on Well. 267
In Mem. xix 7
Locksley H., Sixty 78
A spirit haunts 13
Avdley Court 85
grief of all,
all was h within, TiU when at feast Sir Garlon
Here too, all h below the mellow moon,
woods are h, their music is no more :
' Bygones ! you kept yours h,' I said,
my ravings h The bird.
Stood round it, h, or calling on his name.
H as the heart of the grave.
Husk rent the veil Of his old h :
phantom h's of something foully done,
and of the grain and h, the grape
Hnsk'd See Hollow-Hnsk'd
Hussy There was a girl, a h, that workt with him
HasUe Would h and harry him, and labour him
Gareth whom he used To harry and h.
HnstijDgs That so, when the rotten h shake
Hustings-liar looking upward to the practised h-l ;
Hustled h together, each sex, Uke swine.
Hut a h, Half h, half native cavern.
h's At random scatter'd, each a nest in bloom,
By the great river in a boatman's h.
And flies above the leper's h,
Is that the leper's h on the solitary moor,
Hutterby HaU hup to Harmsby and H H.
Huzzin' (humming) H an' maazin' the blessed fealds
Hyacinth sweeter still The wild-wood h
over sheets of h That seem'd the heavens
Hyades Thro' scudding drifts the rainy fl
Hyaline pine slope to the dark h.
Hymen See Mock-Hymen
Hymn (See also Death-Hymn, 'Ymn) sound Of pious
h's and psalms,
Roundhead rode, And humm'd a surly h.
I hear a noise of h's :
.shriek of hate would jar aU the h's of heaven :
The bearded Victor of ten-thousand h's,
ourself have often tried Valkjrrian h's,
mine own phantom chanting h's ?
But there was heard among the holy h's
there past along the h's A voice as of the waters,
king, whose h's Are chanted in the minster,
She chanted snatches of mysterious h's
In Mem. xix 9
Balin and Balan 346
PeUeas and E. 424
Last TournaTTient 276
First Quarrel 68
Demeter and P. 108
Death of (Enone 66
Bandit's Death 26
Two Voices 11
Lucretius 160
De Prof., Two G. 50
First Quarrel 24
Gareth and L. 484
707
Maud I vi 54
Locksley H., Sixty 123
Maud I i 34:
Enoch Arden 559
Aylmer's Field 149
Lancelot and E. 278
Happy 4
9
North. Cobbler 14
N. Farmer, 0. S. 62
Balin and Balan 271
Guinevere 390
Ulysses 10
Leonine Eleg. 10
St. S. StylUes 34
Talking Oak 300
Sir Galahad 28
Sea Dreams 259
Princess Hi 352
iv 139
In Mem. cviii 10
Com. of Arthur 290
464
Merlin and V. 765
Lancelot and E. 1407
Hymn (continued) the nightingale's h in the dark. First Quarrel 34
sounding in heroic ears Heroic h's, Tiresias 182
in the harvest h's of Earth The worehip which
is Love, Demeter and P. 148
bore the Cross before you to the chant of funeral h's. Happy 48
For have the far-off h's of May, To Master of B. 10
spake thy brother in his h to heaven Akbar's Dream 27
Our h to the sun. They sing it. „ 203
Hjrmn'd h from hence With songs in praise Ancient Sage 208
Hyperion or of older use All-seeing H — Lucretius 126
Hypocrisy H, I saw it in him at once. Sea Dreams 64
B[]rpothesis If that h of theirs be sound ' Princess iv 20
Hsrsterical (See also Half-hysterical) That old h mock-
disease should die.' Maud III vi 33
Hysterics The blind h of the Celt : In Mem. cix 16
I learns the use of ' / ' and ' me,'
Ice / with the warm blood mixing ;
To the earth — until the i would melt
I bump'd the i into three several stars,
goes, like glittering bergs of i,
an old-world mammoth bulk'd in i,
find him dropt upon the firths of i,
oft we saw the glisten Of i,
skater on i that hardly bears him,
i Makes daggers at the sharpen'd eaves.
The spires of i are toppled down,
' A doubtful throne is i on summer seas.
Sworn to be veriest i of pureness.
The spear of i has wept itself away,
Iceberg sound as when an i splits From cope to base —
Ice-ferns Fine as i-f on January panes
Icenian Hear /, Catieuchlanian, (repeat)
the Gods have heard it, 0 /,
Shout /, Catieuchlanian,
Icicle lance that spUnter'd like an i.
Icy Day clash'd his harness in the i caves
Was tagg'd with i fringes in the moon,
Day clash'd his harness in the i caves
And set me climbing i capes And glaciers,
I'd sooner fold an i corpse dead of some foul disease :
and felt An i breath play on me,
an i breath. As from the grating of a sepulchre,
up the tower — an i air Fled by me.
That i winter silence — how it froze you
On i fallow And faded forest, Merlin and the G. 84
you will not deny my sultry throat One draught of i
^ater. Romney's R. 23
Icy-hearted How long this i-h Muscovite Oppress the region ? ' Poland 10
'Id (hid) wheer Sally's owd stockin' wur 'i, North. Cobbler 31
Ida (mountain of Phrygia) There lies a vale in /, (Enone 1
' O mother /, many-fountain'd /, (repeat) (Enone 23, 34, 45, 172
mother I, hearken ere I die. (repeat) (Enone 24, 35, 46, 53, 64, 77, 91,
103, 120, 134, 151, 173, 183,
195
whatever Oread haunt The knolls of /, CEnone 75
Whom all the pines of / shook to see Lucretius 86
found Paris, a naked babe, among the woods Of /, Death of (Enone 55
Ida (heroine of 'The Princess ') let us know The Princess
In Mem. xlv 6
All Things will Die 33
Supp. Confessions 81
The Epic 12
Princess iv 71
„ V 148
„ vii 206
The Daisy 36
Hendecasyllabics 6
In Mem cvii 7
„ cxxvii 12
Com. of Arthur 248
Sir J. Oldcastle 108
Prog, of Spring 6
Lover's Tale i 603
Aylmer's Field 222
Boddicea 10, 34, 47
21
57
Geraint and E. 89
M. d' Arthur 186
St. S. Stylites 32
Pass, of Arthur 354
To E. Fitzgerald 25
The Flight 54
The Ring 131
399
445
Happy 71
/ waited :
affianced years ago To the Lady I :
and silver litanies, The work of /,
She had the care of Lady I's youth,
your sister came she won the heart Of I :
Princess / seem'd a hollow show.
Said I: 'let us down and rest; '
' To horse ' Said / ; ' home ! to horse ! '
tum'd her face, and cast A liquid look on 7,
at eve and dawn With /, /, /, rang the words;
The mellow breaker murmur'd I.
I lend full tongue, O noble /,
Princess ii 21
216
478
Hi 85
88
185
iv21
167
369
433
436
443
Ida
344
lU
Ida (heroine of " The Princess ") {continued) For now will
cruel / keep her back ;
What dares not / do that she should prize The soldier ?
is not / right ? They worth it ?
much that / claims as right Had ne'er been mooted,
You talk almost like / : she can talk ;
Arac's word is thrice As ours with / :
To learn if / yet would cede our claim,
one glance he caught Thro' open doors of I
I's answer, in a royal hand,
With Psyche's babe, was / watching us,
high upon the palace / stood With Psyche's babe in arm:
clamouring on, till / heard, Look'd up.
But / spoke not, rapt upon the child.
' / — 'sdeath ! you blame the man ; You wrong yourselves —
But / spoke not, gazing on the ground,
I heard her say it — ' Our / has a heart ' —
But / stood nor spoke, drain'd of her force
' Ay so,' said / with a bitter smile,
/ with a voice, that like a bell Toll'd by an earthquake
at the further end Was I by the throne.
Then the voice Of / sounded,
But sadness on the soul of / fell.
When Cyril pleaded, / came behind Seen but of Psyche ;
and shriek ' You are not / ; ' clasp it once again. And call
her /, tho' I knew her not,
look like hollow shows; nor more Sweet /:
But if you be that / whom I knew.
My spirit closed with I's at the lips ;
' But I,' Said /, tremulously,
TflftliftTi / Aphrodite beautiful,
'He (hide) fur theere we was forced to 'i.
Ideal (adj.) A more i Artist be than all (repeat)
Scjirce other than my king's i knight,
/ manhood closed in real man.
Evolution ever climbing after some i good,
Would she find her human offspring this i man
at rest ?
Ideal (s) He worships your i : ' she replied :
To nurse a bUnd i like a girl,
spirit wholly true To that i which he bears ?
a man's i Is high in Heaven,
of the chasm between Work and I?
IdeaUty Infinite / ! Immeasurable Reality !
Idiot (adj.) Nothing but i gabble !
Ye mar a comely face with i tears.
Pity for all that aches in the grasp of an i power.
Idiot (s) (See also Emperor-idiot) No pliable i I to break
Princess v 84
174
188
202
210
227
333
343
371
512
vidO
150
220
221
227
235
266
316
331
357
373
vii 29
78
95
135
147
158
333
(Enone 174
Spinster's S's. 39
Gardener's D. 25, 173
Ded. of Idylls 7
To the Queen ii 38
Locksley H., Sixty 199
234
Princess ii 52
„ m217
In Mem. Hi 10
Sisters {E. and E.) 130
RoTimey's B. 64
De Prof., Human C. 2
Maud II V 41
Geraint and E. 550
Despair 43
my vow ; The Ring 402
Idioted being much befool'd and i Aylmer's Field 590
Idiotlike mumbling, i it seem'd, Enoch Arden 639
Idle Nor sold his heart to i moans. Two Voices 221
Eyes with i tears are wet. / habit links us yet. Miller's D. 211
It little profits that an i king, Ulysses 1
They are fill'd with i spleen ; Vision of Sin 124
An i signal, for the brittle feet Sea Dreams 133
' Tears, i tears, I know not what they mean, Princess iv 39
Where i boys are cowards to their shame, „ v 309
So bring liim : we have i dreams : In Mem. x 9
Behold, ye speak an i thing : „ xxi 21
O me, what profits it to put An i case ? „ xxocv 18
' So fret not, like an i girl, „ Hi 13
Then be my love, an i tale, „ Ixii 3
and show That life is not as i ore, „ cxviii 20
As half but i brawling rhymes, „ Con. 23
I^ing or sitting round him, i hands, Gareth and L. 512
Has Uttle time for i questioners.' Marr. of Geraint 272
Hope not to make thyself by i vows, Holy Grail 871
For manners are not i, but the fruit Guinevere 335
And i — and couldn't be i — my Willy — Rizpah 27
' And i gleams will come and go, Ancient Sage 240
And i gleams to thee are light to me. „ 246
And i fancies flutter me, I know not where to turn ; The Flight 74
Down, you i tools, Stampt into dust — Romney's R. 112
•hadow of a dream— an » one It may be. Akbar's Dream 5
Idleness hatch'd In silken-folded i ; Princess iv 67
Idly In lieu of i dallying with the truth, Lancelot and E. 590
Idol but everywhere Some must clasp I's. Supp. Confessions 179
Yet, my God, Whom call II? ,,180
the i of my youth. The darling of my manhood, Gardener's D. 277
The rosy i of her solitudes, Enoch Arden 90
clasp These i's to herself ? Lucretius 165
the wild figtree split Their monstrous i's, Princess iv 80
nations rear on high Their i smear'd with blood, Freedom 28
And when they roU their i down — „ 29
Noble the Saxon who hurl'd at his / Kapiolani 4
Idolater Count the more base i of the two ; Aylmer's Field 670
and crush'd The I's, and made the people free ? Gareth and L. 137
Idolatry waste and havock as the idolatries, Aylmer's Field 640
The red fruit of an old i— „ 762
Idol-fires A wind to puff your i-f. Love thou thy land 69
Idris pushing could move The chair of I. Marr. of Geraint 543
Idyll she foimd a small Sweet Idyl, Princess vii 191
I consecrate with tears — These I's. Ded. of Idylls 5
For this brief i would require Tiresias 188
'Igher (higher) we 'eiird 'im a-mountin' oop 'i an' 'i. North. Cobbler 47
if iver tha means to git 'i, Church-warden, etc. 45
Ignoble And soil'd with all i use. In Mem. cxi 24
Was noble man but made i talk. Lancelot and E. 1088
Ignominy hide their faces, miserable in i ! Boddicea 51
Ignorance In this extremest misery Of i, Supp. Confessions 8
he grows To Pity — more from i than will. Walk, to the Mail 110
Drink to heavy / ! Vision of Sin 193
where blind and naked I Delivers brawling
judgments. Merlin and V. 664
You lose yourself in utter i ; Lover's Tale i 79
l^orant {See also Hignorant) /, devising their own
daughter's death ! Aylmer's Field 783
As i and impolitic as a beast — Columbus 128
Ilex and there My giant i keeping leaf To Ulysses 18
Biad Let the golden / vanish, Parnassus 20
lUon Troeis and I's column'd citadel, (Enone 13
While / like a mist rose into towers. Tithonus 63
The fire that left a roofless /, Lucretius 65
I's lofty temples robed in flre, / falling, Rome arising. To Virgil 2
Whose crime had half unpeopled /, Death of (Enone 61
What star could burn so low ? not / yet. „ 83
III (adj. and adv.) But, Alice, you were i at ease ; Miller's D. 146
You know so i to deal with time, L. C. V. de Vere 63
You ask me, why, tho' i at ease. You ask me, why, etc. 1
Good people, you do i to kneel to me. St. S. Stylites 133
The slow sad hours that bring us all things i. Love and Duty 58
Had you i dreams ? ' Sea Dreams 85
' You jest : i jesting with edge-tools ! Princess ii 201
I mother that I was to leave her there, „ v 93
the gray mare Is i to live with, „ 452
Let them not lie in the tents with coarse mankind,
/ nurses ; „ w 70
In part It was i counsel had misled the girl „ vii 241
When i and weary, alone and cold. The Daisy 96
But i for him who, bettering not with time. Will 10
/ brethren, let the fancy fly From belt to belt In Mem. Ixxxvi 12
But i for him that wears a crown, „ cxxvii 9
sadder age begins To war against i uses of a life, Gareth and L. 1130
And sowing one i hint from ear to ear. Merlin and V. 143
I news, my Queen, for all who love him, Lancelot and E. 598
her hand is hot With i desires, Last Tournament 415
i prophets were they all. Spirits and men: Guinevere 272
/ doom is mine To war against my people Pass, of Arthur 70
that within her womb that had left her i content ; The Revenge 51
• are you i ? ' (so ran The letter) Sisters {E. and E.) 185
• What profits an i Priest Between me and my
God ? Sir J. OldcasUe 144
But often in the sidelong eyes a gleam of all things i— The Flight 31
And yet my heart is i at ease, „ 97
ni (s) Patient of i, and death, and scorn, Supp. Confessions 4
saw thro' life and death, thro' good and i, The Poet 5
heaping on the fear of i The fear of men, Two Voices 107
death — mute — careless of all i's. If I were loved 10
and grief became A solemn scorn of i's. D. ofF. Women 228
m
345
Inactive
fe ID (s) (continued) Then why not i for good ?
) good Will be the final goal of i,
Who loved, who suffer'd countless i's,
honey of poison-flowers and aU the measureless ?,
For years, a measureless i. For years,
Better to fight for the good than to rail at the i ;
There most in those who most have done them i.
This good is in it, whatsoe'er of i,
he was heal'd at once, By faith, of all his i's.
And i's and aches, and teethings,
so worship him That i to him is i to them ;
No i no good ! such counter-terms,
I meet my fate, whatever i's betide !
Powers of Good, the Powers of /,
Shall we not thro' good and i
year's great good and varied i's,
in (hill) Wrigglesby beck cooms out by the 'i !
El-content Dwelt with eternal summer, i-c.
I, Earth-Goddess, am but i-c
Dl-done It was i-d to part you. Sisters fair ;
ni-fated /-/ that I am, what lot is mine
i-f as they were, A bitterness to me !
migant (elegant) An' sorra the Queen wid her sceptre
in sich an i han', Tomorrow 35
niimitable lordly music flowing from The i years. Ode to Memory 42
Ruining along the i inane, Lucretius 40
l%ht and shadow i, Boddicea 42
tUl o'er the i reed, And many a glancing plash Last Tournament 421
Illiterate not i ; nor of those Who dabbling The Brook 92
Dl-omen'd Remembering his i-o song. Princess vi 159
'Hl-side (hill-side) What's the 'eiit of this little 'i-s North. Cobbler 6
Dl-suited such a feast, i-s as it seem'd To such a time, Lover's Tcde iv 207
Dluminate i AU your towns for a festival. On Jub. Q. Victoria 18
Qlumined {See also Long-illumined) from the i hall
Love and Duty 27
In Mem. liv 2
Ivi 17
Maud I iv 56
„ // a 49
„ /// vi 57
Geraint and E. 877
Lancelot and E. 1207
Holy Grail 56
554
652
Ancient Sage 250
The Flight 95
Locksley H., Sixty 273
Open I. and C. Exhib. 33
Prog, of Spring 93
A'. Farmer, N. S. 53
Enoch Arden 562
Demeter and P. 128
Lover's Tale i 814
Love and Duty 33
Last Tournament 40
Long lanes of splendour
Dliunined (verb) A fuller light i all,
Qlumineth I saw, wherever light i,
Ql-usage Or sicken with i-u,
Ql-used Chanted from an i-u race of men
Francis, muttering, Uke a man i-u,
Qlusion ' Confusion, and i, and relation,
The phantom walls of this i fade,
Qlyrian / woodlands, echoing falls Of water,
[mage An i with profulgent brows.
An i seem'd to pass the door, (repeat)
Vast i's in glimmering dawn.
Which was an i of the mighty world ;
Would play with flying forms and i's,
I fixt My wistful eyes on two fair i's.
An i comforting the mind.
To one pure i of regret.
Your mother is mute in her grave as her i in marble
above ;
finding there unconsciously Some i of himself —
Full often the bright i of one face,
' Let her tomb Be costly, and her i thereupon,
Stamp'd with the i of the King ;
I Man was it who marr'd heaven's i in thee thus ? '
I Which was an i of the mighty world,
j Thine i, like a charm of light and strength
for tho' mine i. The subject of thy power,
1 I could stamp my i on her heart !
! ' I's?' ' Bury them as God's truer i's
I each Uke a golden i was poUen'd from
■ magery Trick thyself out in ghastly imageries
magination Poet-princess with her grand I's
; I's calm and fair,
j The strong i roU A sphere of stars
tmaginative Likewise the i woe,
"^magined / more than seen, the skirts of France
magining Nor feed with crude i's
mbedle the man became / ; his one word was
j ' desolate ; '
imbedded with golden yolks / and injelUed ;
'-mbibing 0 to watch the thirsty plants / !
Princess iv 477
Day-Dm., Revival 5
D. of F. Women 14
Princess ■« 86
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 120
M. d' Arthur, Ep. 12
Gareth and L. 287
Ancient Sage 181
To E. L. 1
Supp. Confessions 145
Mariana in the jS. 65, 74
Two Voices 305
M. d' Arthur 235
Gardener's D. 60
Sea Dreams 240
In Mem. Ixxxv 51
,, cii 24
Maud I iv 58
Ded. of Idylls 3
Lancelot and E. 882
1340
Holy Grail 27
Last Tournament 64
Pass, of Arthur 403
Lover's Tale i 91
781
Sisters (E. and E.) 195
Sir J. OldcasUe 139
V. of Maddune 49
Gareth and L. 1390
Princess Hi 274
In Mem. xciv 10
„ cxxii 6
„ Ixxxv 53
Princess, Con. 48
Love thou thy land 10
Aylmer's Field 836
Audley Court 26
Princess ii 423
Imbower {See also Embower) sUent isle i's The Lady
of Shalott. L. of Shalott i 17
Imbower'd / vaults of piUar'd palm, Arabian Nights 39
Imbrashin' (embracing) / an' kissin' aich other — Tomorrow 90
Imitate I's God, and turns her face To every land On a Mourner 2
Imitative vague desire That spurs an i will. In Mem. ex 20
Immantled / in ambrosial dark, „ Ixxxix 14
Immeasurable ToUing in i sand, Will 16
As one who feels the i world. Dedication 7
the i heavens Break open to their highest, Spec, of Iliad 14
/ ReaUty ! Infinite PersonaUty ! De Prof., Human C. 3
backward, forward, in the i sea, Locksley H., Sixty 193
Immemorial Bound in an i intimacy, Aylmer's Field 39
but an i intimacy, Wander'd at will, „ 136
The moan of doves in i elms. Princess vii 221
Immerging i, each, his urn In his own weU, Tiresias 88
Immersed / in rich foreshadowings of the world, Princess vii 312
But when the Queen i in such a trance, Guinevere 401
Imminent Commingled with the gloom of i war, Ded. of Idylls 13
Immodesty Accuse her of the least i : Geraint and E. Ill
Immolation than by single act Of i. Princess Hi 285
Immort^ on my face The star-like sorrows of i eyes, D. of F. Women 91
Thy brothers and i souls. Love thou thy land 8
To dweU in presence of i youth, / age beside i youth, Tithonus 21
and plucks The mortal soul from out i heU, Lucretius 263
And happy warriors, and i names, Princess vi 93
Strong Son of God, i Love, In Mem., Pro. 1
A life that bears i fruit In those great offices „ xl 18
Or am I made i, or my love Mortal once more ? ' Lover's Tale iv 79
HeU ? if the souls of men were i. Despair 99
Thou canst not prove thou art i. Ancient Sage 62
Immortality feel their i Die in their hearts The Mermaid 29
Me only cruel i Consumes : Tithonus 5
I ask'd thee, ' Give me i.' „ 15
length of days, and i Of thought, ' Lover's Tale i 105
Impaled The King i him for his piracy ; Merlin and V. 569
Impart i The Ufe that almost dies in me ; In Mem. xviii 15
Impassion'd / logic, which outran The hearer „ cix 7
Impearled See Dew-impearled
Imperfect Ah, take the i gift I bring, „ Ixxxv 117
accept this old i tale. New-old, To the Queen ii 36
Imperial Serene, i Eleanore ! (repeat) Elednore 81, 121
come and go In thy large eyes, i Eleanore. „ 97
And in the i palace found the king. Princess i 113
blazon'd Uons o'er the i tent Whispers of war, „ v 9
Has given our Prince his own i Flower, W. to Marie Alex. 4
I halls, or open plain ; In Mem. xcviii 29
and thine / mother smile again, Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 13
Those three hundred miUions imder one I sceptre
now, Locksley H., Sixty 117
rhythm sound for ever of I Rome — To Virgil 32
' Sons, be welded each and all, Into one i
whole. Open. I. and C. Exhib. 37
Some / Institute, Rich in symbol. On Jub. Q. Victoria 46
Child, those i, disimpassion'd eyes Demeter and P. 23
and in her soft i way And saying gently : The Ring 267
Imperial-moulded O i-m form. And beauty Guinevere 548
Imperious /, and of haughtiest lineaments. Marr. of Geraint 190
Implied that vague fear i in death ; In Mem. xli 14
Imply That to begin implies to end ; Two Voices 339
Impolitic As ignorant and t as a beast — Columbus 128
Impossible Things in an Aylmer deem'd i, Aylmer's Field 305
Such a match as this ! /, prodigious ! ' „ 315
And swearing men to vows i, Lancelot and E. 130
Follows ; but him I proved i ; Lucretius 193
Impotence In i of fancied power. A Character 24
Impotent i To win her back before I die — Romney's R. 117
Impressions took FuU easily all i from below, Guinevere 642
Imprison'd Which to the i spirit of the child. Lover's Tale i 204
Imprisoning pillar'd palm, I sweets, Arabian Nights 40
Impulse With the selfsame i wherewith he was thrown Mine be the strength 3
' An inner i rent the veil Of his old husk : Two Voices 10
Impute i a crime Are pronest to it, and i Merlin and V. 825
Imputing Polluting, and i her whole self, „ 803
Inactive lying thus i, doubt and gloom. Enoch Arden 113
Inane
346
Influence
Inane Ruining along the illimitable i,
Inarticulate idiotlike it seem'd, With i rage,
Inaudible Alway the i invisible thought,
Incense (s) Like two streams of i free
A cloud of i of all odour steam'd
Lucretius 40
Enoch Arden 640
Lover's Tale ii 102
Elednore 58
Palace of Art 39
And that sweet i rise ? ' For that sweet i rose and
never f ail'd, „ 44
a mist Of i curl'd about her, and her face Com. of Arthur 288
Roll'd i, and there past along the hymns „ 464
Absorbing all the i of sweet thoughts Lover's Tale i 469
Incense (verb) fear'd To i the Head once more ; Princess vii 17
Incense-fume clouded with the grateful i-f Tiresias 183
Incest crowded couch of i in the warrens of the
poor. Locksley H., Sixty 224
Inch Why t by i to darkness crawl ? Two Voices 200
only near'd Her husband i by i, Aylmer's Field 807
strain to make an i of room For their sweet selves Lit. Squabbles 9
in the pause she crept an i Nearer, Guinevere 527
Incited each i each to noble deeds. Merlin and V. 414
Incline over rainy mist i's A gleaming crag Two Voices 188
Till all thy life one way i With one wide Will On a Mourner 19
Incompetent must I be / of memory : Two Voices 375
Incomplete While man and woman are still i, On one who effec. E. M. 1
Inconsiderate And like an i boy. In Mem. cxxii 14
Incorporate And grow i into thee. „ ii 16
The i blaze of sun and sea. Lover's Tale i 409
Incorruptible have bought A mansion i. Deserted H. 21
Increase (s) for the good and i of the world.
(repeat) Edwin Morris 44, 51, 92
The fruitful hours of still i ; In Mem. xlvi 10
Increase (verb) While the stars bm-n, the moons i. To J. S. 71
watch her harvest ripen, her herd i, Maud III vi 25
Increased lest brute Power be i, Poland 6
But day i from heat to heat, Mariana in the S. 39
light i With freshness in the dawning east. Two Voices 404
and with each The year i. Gardener's D. 199
Thy latter days i with pence Will Water. 219
His beauty still with his years i. The Victim 34
For them the light of life i, In Mem., Con. 74
i. Upon a pastoral slope as fair, Maud I xviii 18
7 Geraint's, who heaved his blade aloft, Marr. of Geraint 572
that ruling has i Her greatness and her self-
content. To Marq. of Dufferin 7
Increasing Which with i might doth forward flee Mine be the strength 5
I doubt not thro' the ages one i purpose runs, Locksley Hall 137
and Fame again 7 gave me use. Merlin and V. 494
Incredible spires Prick'd with i pinnacles into heaven. Holy Grail 423
Incredulous See Half-incredulous
In-crescent Between the i-c and de-crescent moon, Gareth and L. 529
Ind sways the floods and lands From 7 to 7, Buonaparte 4
Indecent See Ondecent
Indeed soldier of the Cross ? it is he and he i! Happy 12
Life, which is Life i. Prog, of Spring 117
India all the sultry palms of 7 known, W. to Marie Alex. 14
Where some refulgent sunset of 7 Milton 13
upon the topmost roof our banner in 7 blew. Def. of Lucknow 72
For he — your 7 was his Fate, To Marq. of Dufferin 21
Queen, and Empress of 7, On Juh. Q. Victoria 6
Indian (See also Hinjian, West-Indian) 7 reeds blown
from his silver tongue. The Poet 13
The throne of 7 Cama slowly sail'd Palace of Art 115
Fire- hollo wing this in 7 fashion, Enoch Arden 569
My lady's 7 kinsman unannounced Aylmer's Field 190
My lady's 7 kinsman rushing in, „ 593
less from 7 craft Than beelike instinct hiveward, Princess iv 198
yet the mom Breaks hither over 7 seas, In Mem. xxvi 14
gazing like The 7 on a still-eyed snake. Lover's Tale ii 189
Praise to our 7 brothers, Def. of Lucknow 69
not That I isle, but our most ancient East Columbus 80
7 warriors dream of ampler hunting grounds Locksley H., Sixty 69
To England under 7 skies. Hands all Round 17
7, Australasian, African, On Juh. Q. Victoria 60
Will my 7 brother come ? Romneu's R. 143
wail of baby- wife. Or I widow ; Akbar's Dream 197
Indiei Of the Ocean — of the I — Admirals we — Columbus 31
Indies (continued) Rome's Vicar in our 7 ? Columbus 195
Indifference Attain the wise i of the wise ; A Dedication 8
And Love the i to be. In Mem. xxvi 12
Indignant But thy strong Hours i work'd their wills, Tithonus 18
On either side the hearth, i ; Aylmer's Field 288
and she returned 7 to the Queen ; (repeat) Marr. of Geraint 202, 414
Indignantly Gareth spake and all i, Gareth and L. 1386
And yet he answer'd half i : Merlin and V. 404
Indignation What heats of i when we heard Princess t> 375
her white neck Was rosed with i: „ vi 344
Indistinct muffled booming i Of the confused floods, Lover's Tale i 637
masses Of thundershaken columns i, „ ii 66
Individual (adj.) And i freedom mute; You ask me why, etc. 20
Matures the i form. Love thou thy land 40
There — closing like an i life — Love and Duty 79
Individual (s) And the i withers, Locksley Hall 142
Individuality Distinct in individualities, Princess vii 291
Indolent O you chorus of i reviewers. Irresponsible, i
reviewers, Hendecasyllabics 1
Waking laughter in i reviewers. „ 8
All that chorus of i reviewers. ,, 12
believe me Too presimiptuous, i reviewers. „ 16
Indoor an' a trouble an' plague wi' i. Spinster's S's. 50
Indrawing Like some old wreck on some i sea, St. Telemachus 44
Induce persecute Opinion, and i a time You ask me why, etc. 18
Indue His eyes To i his lustre ; Lover's Tale i 424
my love should ne'er i the front And mask of Hate, „ 774
Ineffable Toil and i weariness, Def. of Lucknow 90
Beyond all dreams of Godlike womanhood, 7 beauty, Tiresias 55
Inexorable No saint — i — ^no tenderness — Princess v 515
fall the battle-axe, unexhausted, i. Boddicea 56
Infancy In the silken sail of i, Arabian Nights 2
O'er the deep mind of dauntless i. Ode to Memory 36
With those old faces of our i Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 66
To ailing wife or wailing i Aylmer's Field 177
flaxen ringlets of our infancies Wander'd, Lover's Tale i 234
As was our childhood, so our i, „ 249
Infant (adj.) Or an i civilisation be ruled with rod or
with knout ? Maud I iv 47
Some hold that he hath swallow'd i flesh, Gareth and L. 1342
You claspt our i daughter, heart to heart. Romney's R. 77
Infant (s) The trustful i on the knee ! Supp. Confessions 41
Which mixing with the i's blood. „ 61
clear Delight, the i's dawning year. „ 67
Thou leddest by the hand thine i Hope. Ode to Memory 30
And laid the feeble i in his arras ; Enoch Arden 152
more than i's in their sleep. Princess vii 54
Shall we deal with it as an i ? Boddicea 33
An i crying in the night : An i crying for the light : In Mem. liv 18
shaping an i ripe for his birth, Maud I iv 34
gave Thy breast to ailing i's in the night, Demeter and P. 56
Infidel (adj.) Have I crazed myself over their horrible i
writings ? Despair 87
Infidel (s) that large i Your Omar; To E. Fitzgerald 36
1 loathe the very name of i. Akbar's Dream 70
Infinite (See also Finite-infinite) Because the scale is i. Two Voices 93
and serve that 7 Within us, as without, Akbar's Dream 145
'Mid onward-sloping motions i Palace of Art 247
and i torment of flies, Def. of Lucknow 82
And shatter'd phantom of that i One, De Prof, Two G. 47
7 Ideality ! Immeasurable Reality ! 7 Personality ! „ Human C. 2
I should call on that 7 Love that has served us so well ?
I cmelty rather that made everlasting Hell, Despair 95
Infinity Like emblems of i. The trenched Ode to Memory 103
In flagrante Caught i /—what's the Latin word ? — Walk, to the Mail 34
Inflame twelve-divided concubine To i the tribes : Aylmer's Field 760
Infiamed Uke a rising moon, 7 with wrath : Princess i 60
a horn, i the knights At that dishonour Last Tournament 434
Inflate 7 themselves with some insane delight. Merlin and V. 834
Influence self-same i ControUeth all the soul Elednore 114
' Who forged that other i, Two Voices 283
To the i of mild-minded melancholy ; Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 64
and use Her i on the mind, Will Water. 12
sacred from the blight Of ancient i and scorn. Princess ii 169
Twice as magnetic to sweet i's Of earth „ v 191
Influence
347
Influence {coiUmmd) By many a varying i and so long. Princess vi 267
A kuidlier i reign'd ; ^_ ^-^^ 20
Or in tlieir silent i as they sat, " (j„^ 15
Mourn for the man of amplest i. Ode <^ Well. 27
Let random 1 5 glance /„ ji/^, ^^^ 3
Inauence-ncn t-r to soothe and save, /rn- 14
Infold -See Self-infold " **'*'^ ^*
Inform beauty doth i Stillness with love, Day-Dm Sleep B 15
early risen she goes to i The Princess : PHncew Hi ti2
Inform'd / the pillar'd Parthenon, Freedom 3
Infuse Desire in me to i my tale of love Princess v 240
Should i Kich atar in the bosom of the rose. Lover's Tale i 269
Ingrav'n (See also Engraven) rind i ' For the most fair,' CEnone 72
Ingress for your t here Upon the skirt Princess v 218
Ingroove be free To i itself with that which flies. Love thou thy land 46
Inhabitant hker to the t Of some clear planet Princess ii 35
Inherit Our sons i us : our looks are strange : Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 73
The meek shall t the earth ' The Dreamer 2
Inheritance some i Of such a life, a heart. Bed. of Idylls 32
And standeth seized of that i Gareth and L. 359
Tnh Jf"ii f ^-^^ ""T^ 'S'i^ '' u , ■ . ^«^^«« "'^d E. 18
inherited (adj.) heap'd the whole t sm On that huge
scapegoat ^^^ j ^ • ■ • ^
But if sm be sm, not t fate, xhe Wreck 85
tojem^ golden yolks Imbedded and i ■ judley Court 26
Injured iSee Seeming-injured
jtajnrira life-long i burning unavenged, Geratn< an<i £. 696
Mqt Draw the vast eyehd of an i cloud, Merlin and V. 634
Maid Distmct with vmd stars 1, Arabian Nights 90
Inland And ripples on an t mere ? Supp. Confessions 131
Crunsons over an t mere, '^^ £/eanore 42
From many an i town and haven large, (Enone 117
Tn}J A '""HSta^ ^Jf^^ <i'^« ^^1« Was seen far t, Lotos-Eaters 21
Inky deep t Of braided blooms unmown, Arabian Nights 28
SniL^ r "^.f S'^ ^""^ f' ^"^^^^ Mariana in the S. 8
innungled / with Heaven's azure wavermgly, Gareth and L 936
Inmost Upon the mooned domes aloof In i Bagdat, Arabian Nights 128
flLn 1^ '^'^' ."" •' uf ^^^° "f *" . ^ielwore 89
JJead sounds at night come from the i hiUs, (Enone 249
tT^ r^° i!"*f '^^ *-^ ^ pleasure raZ;tiMi, Oafc 173
Ihen fled she to her t bower, Godiva 42
clamour thicken'd, mixt with t terms Princess ii 446
Lame m long breezes rapt from i south And blown
tot north; ^^ ^gj
As some rare little rose, a piece of i Horticultural "
„ ^' . , , r, . Hendecasyllabics 19
wordy snar^ to track Suggestion to her i cell. /„ Mem. xcv 32
And gulf d h>s gnefs in i sleep ; pauas and E. 516
hke a little star Were drunk into the i blue. Lover's Tale i 309
bpoke loudly even mto my i heart 428
streams Running far on within its i halls, " 523
For all the secret of her i heart, " 533
tight chain within my i frame Was riven in twain : " 595
Woman to her % heart, and woman to her tender "
T„„ ,i^*' 7 „. , . , ,. , , Locksley H., Sixty 50
Inn {See also Hinn) And hghted at a ruin'd i, and said : Vision of Sin 62
tha mun goa fur it down to the i. North. Cobbler 8
like old-world I s that take Some warrior Pro. to Gen. Handey 13
^xr-.T • °^^ of flauntmg vines Unto mine i eye. Ode to Memory 49
With an I voice the nver ran. Dying Swan 5
Springing done With a shrill i sound, Mermaid 20
All the %, all the outer world of pain If 7 were loved 5
An 1 impulse rent the veil Of his old husk : Two Voices 10
nver seaward flow From the i land : Lotos-Eaters 14
JNor darken what the i spirit sings, C S 22
Gross darkness of the i sepulchre Is not so deadly
^^^'^^v, . . u u ,. D. of F. Women <dl
green that streak the white Of the first snowdrop's i
leaves ; Princess v 197
when sundown skirts the moor An i trouble I behold. In Mem. xli 18
That stir the spuit's i deeps, j-lii 10
No I vileness that we dread ? " Zi 4
His » day can never die, " ij^n^
Instinct
Last Tournament 366
Lover's Tale i 112
ii 191
95
Def. of Liwknow 15
Heavy Brigade 33
Pelleas and E. 266
Last Tournametit 31
218
291
293
Inner (continued) Made dull his i, keen his outer
eye
But thou didst sit alone in the i house,
vessel, as with i life, Began to heave
Innermost Flash'd thro' my eyes into my i brain.
Death in our i chamber,
Tnniskillens Brave / and Greys
Innocence Affronted with his fulsome i ?
' Take thou the jewels of this dead i,
Our one white day of / hath past,
small damosels white as 7, In honour of poor I
left the gems with 7 the Queen Lent to the King and 7
Which lives with blindness, or plain i Of
nature, SisUrs (E. and E.) 249
/ seethed m her mother's mflk, VastJet^
^fi rf?i'-^- ^^^^.r^^ '° ^"^ ' ^®^'*' ^^PP- Confessions 52
The httle » sou flitted away ''^^och Arden 270
nightly wirer of their t hare Falter Aylmer's Field 490
for her fresh and t eyes Had such a star 691
and reach its fatling i arms And lazy lingering
ThJ!^^^' i*.i u . . -..• J Princess vi 138
Then as a little helpless t bird, Xa^^.z^^ ^^ ^. 394
•WUl the child kill me with her i talk ? ' Guinevere 214
Why shou d she weep ? O t of spirit- Z<,i;er's Tale i 737
Being guiltless, as an e prisoner, 707
Theii- i hospitalities quench'd in blood, Columbus 176
a heedless and i bnde— ^he Wreck 13
and drive 7 cattle under thatch, Locksley H., Sixty 96
/ maidens Garruous chddren. Merlin and the G. 55
Innocent (s) Themselves had wrought on many an i. Geraint and E. 178
Iimocent-arch So t-a, so cunning-simple, Lilian 13
Innumerable (See also Numerable-innumerable) In
copse and fern Twinkled the i ear and tail. The Brook 134
And sated with the i rose p^iru^ess Hi 122
And murmuring of i bees.' ^j^- 222
bark and blacken i, Boddicea 13
/, pitiless, passionless eyes, Mavd I xviii 38
Thro' knots and loops and folds i Lancelot and E. 439
lymg bounden there In darkness thro' i hours Holy Grail 677
are these but symbols of i man, Locksley H., Sixty 195
Innumerous A hspmg of the i leaf and dies. Princess v 14
Inosculated (For so they said themselves) i ; m 39
Inquire Who scarcely darest to i 7^ M^m. iv 7
Inquisition To these I dogs and the devildoms of Spain.' The Revenge 12
Inrunning (See also Deep-inrunning) And at the i
of a Uttle brook Sat by the river Lancelot and E. 1388
5°^*°?^ TxA^f themselves with some i delight, Merlin and V. 834
Insamty With animal heat and dire i ? Lucretius 163
Roll'd again back on itself in the tides of a civic i ! Beautiful City 4
Inscription And some i ran along the front. Princess i 212
How saw you not the i on the gate, ,^ n 194
' for that i there, I think no more of deadly lurks " 225
I urged the fierce i on the gate, " ,-,v 147
^^1 'r ^r^ ^^^M ?"^/ ^^^^) Talking Oak 69
The liglitning flash of ^ and of bird, Enoch Arden 575
Or eagle s wmg or ^'5 eye ; In Me,n. cxxiv 6
7 s of an hour, that hourly work their brother i
T • •j^'z""^'.!, r. Locksley H., Sixty 2(^
Insipid / as the Queen upon a card ; Aylmer's Fidd 28
Insolence blustering I know not what Of i "^ Princess v 397
Smelling of musk and of i, j^^ud I vi 45
Insolent /, brainless, heartless ! Aylmer's Field 368
/scullion : / of thee ? Sareth and L. 976
Inspiration Ancient founts of i well Locksleu Hnll 18S
Instance That wilderness of single i'5. i^S'sFild m
But Vivien, deeming Merlm overborne By i, Merlin and V . mi
^K {,7,'« ti"? ^oi-ds. . Gareth and L.\2&Z
Tncten hr i^lM^'l' ^^"^ ' reverence, Lancelot and E. 418
SJflf '^■^^"'i'sh'd plume Brushing his i, Geraint and E. 360
Instinct of the moral i would she prate Palace of Art 205
And that mystenous ^ wholly died. Enoch Irdpr, 'i?R
less from Indian craft Than beelike i PrintessZ 199
a dearer being, all dipt In Angel i's, „ vU 321
Instinctive
Instinctive his quick i hand Causht at thn hiu i^
Institute their / Of which he Sthe patrol*' ^'"''■■o'f ^''"^''^ ^09
The patient leaders of theiTf TaLffi^^^ ^^^'^'^^'^^ Pro.^
I fenced It round with gallant t'5, " ^^n
Some Impenal 7, Rich in symbol n t ^ r,"r.- '"■^^^
Insufficiencies temperate eyes On glorious i Jnh.QVictormA&
Insult I heard sounds oft, shame, a~o4 n ^%^,T- ''''M
We brook no further i but are gone ' ^' ^- "i^- ^'''"%]^
'I wiU avenge this i, noble Queen ' m -P^^^^^s."* 342
Avenging this great i done the Queen ' '"■ "^ ^^"""'"^ ?i^
Remember that great i done the Qu^n,' " f ^
Crave pardon for that i done the Queen " ^U
your wretched dress, A wretched i on vA„ ^ •" , ^^^
Oaths, i, filth, and monstrous blaspheS' P^""'''^ 7^^.^- f^S
Inswathe I the fulness of Etemitv ^ ' ^V'' "•( ^'■^^«'" ^^^
Inswathed / sometimes in wanderme mi«f a^'J ^'^^ ^ ^^^
mteUect thorough-edged i To Jart EEr'om crime- ''' ''• Vt^ 1'
Thy kingly z shall feed, "om cnme, Isabel U
All-subtilising i • Uear-headed friend 20
Or ev'n for i to reach Thro' memory ^'^ ^^"^- ^^""^ ^^
Seraphic i and force To seize and throw " '"'''■ ^l
T ^ I^l ""f" \ '^*',"^*' ^^^ ^new thee keen In i " "^ f
Intellectual And i throne -^^^^^ wt, cxitiQ
bow'd myself down as a slave to his i throne rl "^r/'^^la
InteUigence The great I's fair That rana^ ,• ,^** '^^''^^'^ 66
Intelligible From over-finenis not i ^ iff ^■''^- ^^^^" 21
Intend (-See also Intind) The th&sis wh,Vh th^ a ■ ^^^J,^^ "■'^d V. 796
Intense ' Or will one beam be iS ^^ *^^ "^""^^^ '" ^'"^ ^''^^^ 338
when fraught With a passion so'z m " ^ r r • ■ ^
Intensity Sonietimes, with most i Gazing, ^'^if/^/^ " 59
Intent (adj.) have been i On that veU'd picture- r a ^^^'^^^1
I kept mine own 7 on her picture— Garrfewer's D. 269
Intent (s) almost ere I knew mine own i ^ Pnncm « 442
eye seem'd full Of a kind i to me Garrfmer'j 7>. 146
But after ten slow weeks her fix'd L r^t • ^l!!
fur I noilwaiiys knaw'd 'is i • "* -^^^ 345
Intercl^e^ angels rising and descending met With i ^""^ ^"^ ^^
And frequent i of foul and fair, ^^"^f "^ f '"' 1|4
Interest To close the Vs of all r ■'''"^^^ ^rdew 533
From all a closer i flourish'd ud '^" ''^^ ^'^'^^ ^6
catch The far-off i of tears ? Princess vii 113
Interfused And glory of broad waters ,• r {^J^em. i 8
Interlaced shadol'dVots of arSs^ '' ^^/'^ ^f 7 401
Interlock'd My lady with her finaer^ i > Palace of Art 51
Intermitted te^old dearer bv thfnow.r Of • Jylmer's Field m
Interpret True love t^'-r^hLlonr ^^ ' "'"^^ ' ^'^^^offerai^t Sll
^ ^vith such a stupid heart To "ear and eve ' r ^'^^^'^.188
Interpretation a to^e To blare fte'own %!!■ ' Lancelot and E. 0^2
Interpreter 7 between the Gods and men p ■" .HI
How, in the mouths of base i's, ' i/w"''''*j ?f ^E
Interpreting she broke out i my thoughts- "^'p*'? ""'^ ^t Z^f
streak'd or starr'd at i's With fafunn hi^r.1. ^noch Arden 909
sick with love. Fainted atV'f ^ """^ ■^''^^'- * ^«^« *' 404
thence at i's A low bell tolling. " .?46
Intervital spirit's folded bloom Thro' aU its i rfoom t a} 7*??o
Intunacy Bound in an immemorial! ^ " . ^f ^^f ""i. ?^ ^^
Bound, but an immemorial i ^ylmer's Field 39
Intind (intend) an' she didn't i to desavp ^" ^^^
Intolerable became Anguish i ' r tomorrow 59
Intolerant The menacing poison of i priests J/T'" * ^"^* " ^^
Intonation a tuneful to^Ge, Such happw' ^kbar's Bream 165
Intone L)elicate-handed priest i- ^^^ ^' A mphion 18
Intricate wanderings Of this most i Universe j''^/ ''*'" ^J
In^ion hunter rued His rash i, manhke J- ^^«'-«^«'- 3
Intuitive i decision of a hrioht An^i tK^^ u j , . Princess iv 204
Inutterable KiU'd wl i uSdlkiei^"""^^"'^^ "^^'t^K- '"'^^ ^^
^""^t, ' /;y«" ^'b a ^««e yom- holy woe ^*'"^*'* T^ ^^ «86
Invaded • Our land i, 'sdeath' ^ „ ^^ •^- S. 7
Princess v 276
348
Iron
Invaded (co«<»W) for whose love the Roman C^sar
farst 7 Bntam, But we beat him back. As this
great Prince i us, '
Was mine a mood To be i rudely
Invalid t, since my will Seal'd not the bond—
Invective a tide of fierce 7 seem'd to wait
Invent the years i; Each month is various
iiut when did woman ever yet i ? '
Invented Was this fair charm i by yourself ?
S3i' ^ MiGHTY-MotJTH'D i of harmonies.
Inverted he heard his pnest Preach an i scripture
Invested Shpt round, and in the dark /you '
Inveterately Time Were nothing, so i '
Invidious Who breaks his birth's i bar
Inviolable a doubtful lord To bind them by i vows
Inviolate And compass'd by the i sea ' ^ '
Nor ever drank the i spring
Invisible And praise the i universal Lord
Alway the inaudible i thought '
T ./but deathless, waiting still The edict
£2S Tu\ T T^ '"'i^"*' ^'^^ *^e Sultan's pardon
Invoke That which we dare i to bless - !'<''"""
rTT.^'^,l'°"'u^^'^''^. * i^alf-consent i In stiUness,
lo the other shore, i in thee """irao,
My mind i yourself the nearest thing
Involving worlds before the man I our^
inwaxd from the outward to the i brought
More I than at night or morn '
L^^f'f ^ f would pass Outward', or i to the hall
the wIlP"^ PeUam's chapel wide And i to
the rest Were crumpled i's. Dead !—
With an ancient melody Of an i agony.
Ihat heat of i evidence,
'Weep, weeping dulls the i pain.'
tv n now we hear with i strife
Again m deeper i whispers ' lost ! '
VVith I yelp and restless forefoot plies
My « sap, the hold I have on earth
address'd More to the i than the outward ear,
uead of some i agony— is it so ?
Inwoven dusky strand of Death i here
Inwrrapt 7 tenfold in slothful shame
r^®^*^!.®. *J^°^ lovelier, nobler then ')
Inwrought diaper'd VVith i floweis
Ionian Than all the valleys of 7 hills
And there the 7 father of the rest ;
10 t amp 'It '—and these diamonds-^
Ihis very ring 7 t ?
IT^ ^^!? ^^ ' ^J ' ^"^ ^^ best beloved,
and cned ' I see him, 1 1 It'
?f ! *?n°^*^^,;// ' *° the heart Of Miriam ;
/ ^ aU is well then.' Muriel fled,
lou love me still '7 t.'
e^ven Ihat ^/.' ' f^ ^^^^ ^*^^* "^^ ^eart,
TrS« !u n./r' '^'^^e *bree sweet Italian word^
Iran Alia caU'd In old 7 the Sun of Love ? '
Ire The'nTJnr ""^^ ^ ■•' ^^I' b"* I know it-
i.l^J^ plaintive cry jarr'd on her i ■
Ireland oaihng from 7,' y
Iris (prismatic colours) ^ pVianrroc tt, u • , , , , Last Tournament 555
TlTdrcWTa night oKS °^^ '^ ^'^'' ^"^^^^^^ ^'^ ^^
Iris (flag-flower) gUded winding under ranks Of i Princess in 27
^^Tst^f^'v?*^'^^ Bu'tligh™t7biVtit '^^^--24
lrish%\f bTai^atlVai?^?^^^^^^^^ . . i'^^^^- o^efZ'^'T'!
Irish Bog aisierrrkavtherhvidXSli Last Tournament m
Iron adj.) One show'd an ionZto^^ ' Tomorrow 72
Rangis of ghmrert^VaStfth'S""" i> f/^^^^^' ^?
Which men caU'd AiSis in those i yeS • "^ ^^oTnm 35
Marr. of Geraint 746
iowr's Ta/e i 678
Princess v 398
i« 472
Two Fotces 73
Princess ii 391
MerZm awd V. 540
if i7<o» 1
Aylmer's Field 44
Princess iv 404
<?are<A an<Z Z. 227
7re Mem. Ixiv 5
Last Tournament 688
To the Queen 36
In Mem. xc 2
Oci« Inter. Exhib. 3
Lover's Tale ii 102
160
lfaM<i 7 XX 38
7w Mem. cxxiv 1
Princess Hi 191
7w il/em. carara: 9
Princess iv 450
i;n 82
7« i/em. Ixxxiv 40
ilferZm and F. 300
Epilogue 26
Elednore 4
Mariana in the S. 58
Gareth and L. 311
^oZto a?Mi Balan 406
TAe -Bin^ 454
Claribel 7
Two Foices 284
To y. -S. 40
Love thou thy land 53
Enoch Arden 716
Lucretius 45
Lover's Tale i 166
721
To JF. a-. Brookfield 10
Ifawtf 7 aww' 60;
Palace of Art 2Q2,
Lover's Tale i 458
Arabian Nights 149
OEnone 2
Palace of Art 137
Tfe .Rinj? 70
134
210
223
234
271
291
397
„ 406
Ahbar's Dream 87
89
Princess iv 393
Last Tournament 555
Iron
349
Isle
Iron (adj.) (continued) A grazing i collar grinds my
neck ; St. S. Stylites 117
7 jointed, supple-sinew'd, they shall dive, Locksley Hall 169
Paled at a sudden twitch of Ms i mouth ; Aylmer's Field 732
crush her pretty maiden fancies dead In i gauntlets: Princess i 89
Binds me to speak, and O that i will, „ n 202
Nor would I %ht with t laws, „ iv 75
Forgotten, rusting on his t hills, „ v 146
he clash'd His i palms together with a cry ; „ 354
There dwelt an i nature in the grain : „ in 50
Her i will was broken in her mind ; „ 118
in the Vestal entry shriek'd The virgin marble under
i heels ; „ 351
and saw Thee woman thro' the crust of i moods „ vii 342
O i nerve to true occasion true. Ode on Well. 37
Till one that sought but Duty's i crown „ 122
Their ever-loyal i leader's fame, „ 229
Or seal'd within the i hills ? In Mem. Ivi 20
But that remorseless i hour Made cypress „ Ixxxiv 14
An i welcome when they rise : „ xc 8
and clangs Its leafless ribs and i horns „ cvii 12
That makes you tyrants in your t skies, Maud I xviii 37
That an i tjTanny now shoiild bend or cease, „ III vi 20
Across the i grating of her cell Beat, Holy Grail 81
The last hard footstep of that i crag ; Pass, of Arthur 447
butted with the shuddering War-thunder of i rams ; Tiresias 100
Brass mouths and i lungs
And I clash with an i Truth,
Iron (s) clad in i burst the ranks of war.
This red-hot i to be shaped with blows.
' I've heard that there is i in the blood.
But i dug from central gloom,
fight my way with gilded arms, All shall be i ; '
That laughs at i — as our warriors did —
drew The rustiest i of old fighters' hearts ;
We brought this i from our isles of gold.
Iron-clanging an i-c anvil bang'd With hammers ;
Iron-clashing such a stem and i-c close.
Iron-cramp 'd those that i-c their women's feet;
Iron-hearted i-h victors they.
Iron-stay'd i-s In damp and dismal dungeons
Iron-worded wall about thy cause With i-w proof.
Irony call her sweet, as if in i.
Irredeemable Wrought for his house an i woe ;
Irrepressible cloud of thought Keen, i.
Irresponsible /, indolent reviewers.
Irreverence Blockish i, brainless greed —
Irreverent you have miss'd the i doom
A reckless and i knight was he.
Irritable being vicious, old and i.
Is For was, and i, and will be, are but i ;
Isabel Revered 7, the crown and head,
Crown'd 7, thro' all her placid life,
Iscariot Pontius and 7 by my side
Isis an 7 hid by the veil.
Islam beating back the swarms Of Turkish I
Islam Polytheism and I feel after thee.
gleam Than glances from the sim of our 7.
Myself am such in our 7,
Islamite Houris bow'd to see The dying 7,
Island (adj.) ' Our i home Is far beyond the wave ;
Or else the i princes over-bold
bind with bands That i queen who sways
Not once or twice in our rough i story,
Revenge herself went down by the i crags
made your fathers great In our ancient i
State,
greatest of women, i heroine, Kapiolani
Island (s) on the land Over the i's free ;
Round an i there below. The i of Shalott.
By the i in the river Flowing down to Camelot,
Boat, i, ruins of a castle,
On from i unto i at the gateways of the day.
So they past by capes and i's.
The blaze upon his i overhead ;
Freedom 40
The Dreamer 6
Princess iv 504
»209
vi 230
In Mem. cxviii 21
Geraint and E. 22
Merlin and V. 429
574
Columbus 3
Princess v 504
Merlin and V. 419
Princess v 376
Locksley H., Sixty 80
Lover's Tale ii 148
To J. M. K. 9
Princess vii 97
Maud II i 22
Lover's Tale ii 165
Hendecasyllabics 2
Columbus 129
Tou might have won 9
Holy Grail 856
Marr. of Geraint 194
Princess Hi 324
Isabel 10
,, 27
St. S. Stylites 168
Maud I iv 43
Montenegro 11
Akbar's D., Inscrip. 2
Akbar's Dream 79
155
Palace of Art 103
Lotos-Eaters 44
„ C. 8. 75
Buonaparte 3
Ode on Well. 201
The Revenge 118
Open. I. and C. Exhih. 16
Kapiolani 5
Sea-Fairies 26
L. of Shalott i 8
.13
Edwin Morris 6
Locksley Hall 158
The Captain 21
Enoch Arden 595
Island (s) (continued) Thine i loves thee well, Ode on Well. 85
For out of the wa.ste i's had he come, PeUeas and E. 86
Drew to this i: Doom'd to the death. Bait, of Brunanburh 50
Far off from out an i girt by foes, Achilles over the T. 8
follow Edwin to those isles, those i's of the Blest ! Ths Flight 42
I, from out the Northern 7 simder'd once To Virgil 35
shake with her thunders and shatter her i, Kapiolani 10
' Woe to this i if ever a woman (repeat) „ 20, 22
Island-crag Set in a cataract on an i-c, Princess v 347
Island-myriads Her i-m fed from alien lands — The Fleet 12
Island-Paradise In Hispaniola's i-P ! Columbus 182
Island-sides Far-fleeted by the purple i-s, Princess vii 166
Island-story once or twice in our rough i-s, Ode on Well. 201
Not once or twice in our fair i-s, „ 209
Island-valley To the i-v of Avilion ; M. d' Arthur 259
To the i-v of Avilion ; Pass, of Arthur 427
Isle (s) (See also Bounteous Isle, Eden-isle, Garden-isles,
South -sea -isle. World-isle) flee By town, and
tower, and hill, and cape, and i
the silent i imbowers The Lady of Shalott.
Is there confusion in the little i ?
where the moving i's of winter shock By night,
mellow brickwork on an i of bowers.
The rentroU Cupid of our rainy i's.
To whom I leave the sceptre and the i —
It may be we shall touch the Happy I's,
Summer i's of Eden lying in dark -purple
breaker sweep The nutmeg rocks and i's of clove.
Blue i's of heaven laugh'd between,
over lake and lawn, and i's and capes —
And sent her sweetly by the golden i's,
stranding on an i at mom Rich,
Far in a darker i beyond the line ;
beauteous hateful i Retturn'd upon him,
Stay'd by this i, not knowing where she lay :
Across a break on the mist-wreathen i
Thou That didst uphold me on my lonely i,
and battle-clubs From the i's of palm :
As yet we find in barbarous i's,
over them the tremulous i's of light SUded,
O saviour of the silver-coasted i,
Maoris and that 7 of Continent,
(Take it and come) to the 7 of Wight;
For in all that exquisite i, my dear.
She desires no i's of the blest,
' Fear not, i of blowing woodland, i of silvery parapets !
Streams o'er a rich ambrosial ocean i,
Is dash'd with wandering i's of night.
Danube rolling fair Enwind her i's,
over all whose realms to their last i,
a petty king ere Arthur came Ruled in this i,
' He passes to the 7 Avilion,
Heard by the lander in a lonely i.
Whose bark had plunder'd twenty nameless i's ;
Lords of waste marches, kings of desolate i's.
Gave him an i of marsh whereon to build ;
And this new knight. Sir PeUeas of the i's —
And lord of many a barren i was he —
Scarce any but the women of his i's,
many a glancing plash and sallowy i.
Farewell ! there is an i of rest for thee,
where the moving i's of winter shock By night,
third-rate i half -lost among her seas ?
throne In our vast Orient, and one i, one i,
All day I watch'd the floating i's of shade,
But work was scant in the 7,
thou hast come to talk our i.
not That Indian i, but our most ancient East
Pour'd in on all those happy naked i's —
He lived on an i in the ocean —
And we came to the i in the ocean,
And we came to the Silent 7
And we hated the beautiful 7,
And we came to the 7 of Shouting,
And we came to the 7 of Flowers :
Mine be the strength 6
L. of Shalott i 17
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 79
M. d'Arthur 140
Edwin Morris 12
103
Ulysses 34
„ 63
Locksley Hall 164
The Voyage 40
Sir L. and Q. G. 6
Vision of Sin 11
Enoch Arden 536
552
605
617
630
632
783
Princess, Pro. 22
m122
m81
Ode on Well. 136
W. to Marie Alex. 18
To F. D. Maurice 12
The Islet 26
Wages 8
Boadicea 38
Milton 14
In Mem. xxiv 4
„ xcviii 10
Ded. of Idylls 12
Com. of Arthur 6
Gareth and L. 502
Marr. of Geraint 330
Merlin and V. 559
Lancelot and E. 527
Holy Grail 62
PeUeas and E. 17
19
88
Last Tournament 422
Pass, of Arthur 35
308
To the Queen ii 25
31
Lover's Tale ii 5
First Quarrel 43
Sir J. OldcasUe 32
Columbus 80
„ 173
V. of Maeldune 7
11
21
27
3T
Isle
350
Jacobinism
Isle (s) (continued) And we hated the Flowering /, as
we hated the i that was mute, V. of Maddune 52
And we came to the / of Fruits : „ 55
And we came to the / of Fire : „ 71
For the whole i shudder'd and shook like a man „ 74
and we past Over that undersea i, „ 77
but the whole green / was our own, „ 93
And we past to the / of Witches „ 97
And we came in an evil time to the I of the Double Towers, „ 105
And we came to the / of a Saint „ 115
He had lived ever since on the / „ 116
Go back to the I of Finn „ 124
we came to the / we were blown from, „ 127
I landed again, with a tithe of my men, on the / of Finn. „ 130
Hapt in this i, since Up from the East Batt. of Brunanhurh 116
and abroad in a rich West-Indian i ; The Wreck 46
The broad white brow of the / — „ 135
follow Edwin to those i's, those islands of the Blest! The Flight 42
ocean softly washing all her warless Ps. Locksley H., Sixty 170
His i, the mightiest Ocean-power on earth, Our own
The Fleet 6
Open I. and C. Exhib. 4
To Prof. Jebb 12
Prog, of Spring 60
Enoch Arden 131
Of old sat Freedom 14
Fatima 33
Ode on Well. 154
Gareth and L. 893
Merlin and V. 570
V. of Maeldune 45
The Voyage 33
Aylmer's Fidd 65
The Islet 15
Geraint and E. 475
Lover's Tale ii 173
Palace of Art 197
fair i, the lord of every sea —
From i and cape and continent.
Blossom again on a colder i.
Broaden the glowing i's of vernal blue,
Isle (verb) And i's a light in the offing :
Isle-altar From her i-a gazing down,
Isled And, i in sudden seas of light.
Thank Him who i us here.
Lion and stoat have i together.
Isle-nurtured i-n eyes Waged such unwilling
Isle-side whole i-s flashing down from the peak
Islet (See also Ocean-islet) The peaky i shifted shapes,
that i in the chestnut-bloom Flamed in his cheek ;
A mountain i pointed and peak'd ;
Betwixt the cressy i's white in flower ;
Isolated came a broad And solid beam of i light,
Isolation ' O God-like i which art mine,
he work'd among the rest and shook His i from
him.
remain Orb'd in your i: he is dead.
His i grows defined.
Isolt / the White— Sir Tristram of the Woods—
thou playest that air with Queen /,
Before him fled the face of Queen /
BuUt for a summer day with Queen /
/, the daiighter of the King ? ' / Of the white hands '
I of Britain and his bride.
And glossy-throated grace, / the Queen.
Softly laugh'd I ; ' Flatter me not.
To whom /, ' Ah then, false hunter and false harper,
And, saddening on the sudden, spake /,
/ of Britain dash'd Before / of Brittany
/ ? — I fought his battles, for / !
/ ! The name was ruler of the dark — I ?
I answer'd ' Yea, and why not I ?
Then came the sin of Tristram and / ;
Israel Wrestled with wandering /,
' The toiTent brooks of hallow'd /
' The balmy moon of blessed /
1 made their gods of gold,
Issa Ben Mi^riftir^ I B M,his own prophet.
Issue (s) Whereof I cateh the i, as I hear
Fame for spouse and your great deeds For i,
streams that float us each and all To the i,
reasons why she should Bide by this i :
Her words had i other than she will'd.
noble i, sons Bom to the gloiy of thy name
bsae (verb) To those that seek them i forth ;
Victor from vanquish'd i's at the last.
Issued ridge Of breaker i from the belt,
t in a court Compact of lucid marbles.
We i gorged with knowledge,
i in the sun, that now Leapt from the dewy shoulders „ v 42
Whence he i forth anew, Ode on Well. 107
out from this / the bright face of a blooming boy Gareth and L. 1408
Enoch Arden 652
Princess vi 169
In Mem. xlv 12
Last Tournament 177
263
363
378
397
408
509
556
566
581
588
604
605
609
Guinevere 488
Clear-headed friend 26
B. of F. Women 181
185
In Mem. xcvi 23
Akbar's Dream 75
CEnone 248
Princess Hi 243
„ iv 71
V 326
Merlin and V. 806
Lancelot and E. 1371
Day- Dm., Arrival 2
Gareth and L. 1262
Sea Dreams 212
Princess ii 23
388
Issued (continued) As last they i from the world of
, wood, Marr. of Geraint 23&
Whereout the Demon i up from Hell. Balin and Balan 317
Vext at a rumour i from herself Merlin and V. 153
from the city gates / Sir Lancelot riding Pelleas and E. 557
Issuii^ And, i shorn and sleek. Talking Oak 42
lightly i thro', I would have paid her „ 194
the voice Of Ida sounded, i ordinance : Princess vi 373
And howlest, i out of night. In Mem. Ixxii 2
Geraint, who i forth That morning, Geraint and E. 8
i under open heavens beheld A little town „ 196
i arm'd he found the host and cried, „ 407
And i found the Lord of Astolat Lancelot and E. 173
loud stream, Forth i from his portals Lover's Tale i 430
Issns Satrap bled At / by the Syrian gates, Alexander 3
Italian Thy glory fly along the / field, Lucretius 71
Fair ship, that from the / shore In Mem. ix 1
On a sudden after two / years SisUrs (E. and E.) 150
All in white / marble, Locksley H., Sixty 35
those thi-ee sweet / words, became a weariness. The Ring 407
Italy I to the East And he for / — The Brook 2
And now it teUs of /. The Daisy 90
Florence now the crown of /, To Dante 4
Iteration came Her sickUer i. Last he said, Aylmer's Field 299
Ithacensian Like the / suitors in old time, Princess iv 118
Ivery (every) ye set me heart batin' to music wid i word ! Tomorrow 34
Ivied Many a night from yonder i casement, Locksley Hall 7
warrior from his i nook Glow like a sunbeam : Princess, Pro. 104
It look'd a tower of i masonwork, Merlin and V. 4
Ivin' (ivy) An' they niver 'ed seed sich i Owd Rod 26
Sa I sticks like the i as long as I lives Church-warden, etc. 15
Ivory (adj.) She took the little i chest. The Letters 17
Ivory (s) Laborious orient i sphere in sphere. Princess, Pro. 20
Ivory-beak'd In a shallop of crystal i-b, The Islet 12
Ivry (every) I've 'ed my point o' aale i noight sin' I
bean 'ere. N. Farmer, O. S. 7
An' I've 'ed my quart i market-noight for foorty year. „ 8
an' swear'd as I'd break i stick NoHh. Cobbler 35
An' i darter o' Squire's bed her awn ridin-erse Village Wife 35
Ivy (See also Ivin') overhead the wandering i and vine, (Enone 99
And thro' the moss the ivies creep, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 9
Thorns, ivies, woodbine, mistletoes, Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 43
There is Damley bridge. It has more i ; The Brook 37
0 hollies and ivies and evergreens, Spiteful Letter 23
and wings Moved in her i, Marr. of Geraint 599
Betwixt the close-set ivies came Lover's Tale ii 172
Ivyberry husk, the grape And i, choose ; De Prof., Two G. 51
Ivy-clad In Autumn, parcel i-c ; Aylmer's Fidd 154
Ivy-claspt High-arch'd and i-c. Of finest Gothic Princess, Pro. 91
Ivy-matted Whose i-m mouth she used to gaze Death of (Enone 2
Ivy-net Now on some twisted i-n. Sir L. and Q. G. 28
Ivy-screen Tearing the bright leaves of the i-s. Lover's Tale ii 40
Ivy-stems monstrous i-s Claspt the gray walls Marr. of Geraint 322
Ivytods The battlement overtopt with i, Balin and Balan 335
Ivy-tress Until the plaited i-t had wound Round Lover's Tale i 618
Ivy-wreath briony-vine and i-w Ran forward Amphion 29 «
I will I heard his deep ' / w,' Breathed, Gardener's D. 208 ^
Her sweet ' / w ' has made you one. In Mem., Con. 56
Before the first ' / 10 ' was utter'd, /Sisters (E. and E.) 211
Ldonian stays the rolling / wheel, Lucretius 261
Ldon-like Embracing cloud, I-l ; Two Voices 195 i
Jacet by the cold Hie J's of the dead ! ' Merlin and V. 753
Jacinth-work and j-w Of subtlest jewellery. M. d' Arthur 57
and j-w Of subtlest jewellery. Pass, of Arthur 225
Jack ./, turn the horses' heads and home Walk, to the Mail 46
J on his ale-house bench has as many lies as a Czar ; Maud I ivQ
Jackass A j heehaws from the rick, Amphion 71
Jackman An' my oan fine J i' purple Spinster's S's. 106
Jacobinism after massacre, J and Jacquerie, Locksley H., Sixty 157
Jacqnerie
351
Jet-black
Jacquerie after massacre, Jacobinism and J,
Jacyoth chrysoprase, J, and aniethyst —
Tael a cymbal'd Miriam and a J,
Jail scared with threats of j and halter
JaOer And the j forced me away, (repeat)
Jafling And tame thy / princess to thme hand.
Jam (s) An' a haaf-pot o' /, or a mossel o' meat
Jam (verb) ;' the doors, and bear The keepers
James (See also James Willows, Willows) Old J was with
me : we that day had been Up Snowdon ;
in mimic cadence answer'd J — ' Ah, folly !
J, — you know him, — old, but full Of force
She and J had quarrell'd. Why ?
she said, no cause ; J had no cause : but when I prest
the cause, I leamt that J had fUckering jealomies
which anger'd her. Who anger'd J 1 I said.
tiU I ask'd If J were coming. ' Coming every day,'
J departed vext with him and her.'
I saw where J Made toward us,
My brother J is in the harvest-field :
James (11.) We flung the burthen of the second J.
James Willows (See also James, Willows) J W, of one
name and heart with her.
Jane And what do I care for J,
Jangled again the bells J and clang'd :
daws flew out of the Towers and / and wrangled in
vain, V. of Maeldune 109
Jangling j, the casque Fell, and he started up Geraint and E. 388
In clanging cadence / peal on peal — Lover's Tale in 22
January (adj.) Fine as ice-ferns on J panes Aylmer's Field 222
January (s) woodlands, when they shiver in J, Boadicea 75
Japan From Corrientes to J, To Ulysses 4
Japed — him Who gibed and / — in many a merry tale Sir J. Oldcastle 91
Jaques Our kindher, trustier J, past away ! To W. H. Brookfield 11
Locksley H., Sixty 157
Columbus 86
Princess » 511
Ayliner's Field 520
Rizpah 41, 44
Pelleas and E. 344
Spinster's S's. 109
Lucretius 169
Golden Year 3
53
60
The Brook 96
„ 98
„ 106
„ 110
„ 116
227
Third of Feb. 28
The Brook 76
Grandmother 51
Lover's Tale Hi 53
Jar (s) Love is hurt with j and fret
And hear the household j within.
Jar (verb) no mortal motion fs The blackness
shriek of hate would / all the hymns of heaven :
May j thy golden dream Of Knowledge
Jarr'd something j ; Whether he spoke too largely ;
The plaintive cry j on her ire ;
He laugh'd ; the laughter / upon Lynette :
Love and Honoiu" j Tho' Love and Honour
Jairing Who touch'd a / lyre at first,
Miller's D. 209
In Mem. xciv 16
On a Mourner 26
Sea Dreams 259
Freedom, 16
Edwin Morris 72
Princess iv 393
Gareth and L. 1226
Sisters (E. and £.) 176
In Mem. xcvi 7
For those that are cnjsh'd in the cla.sh of j claims, Maud III vi 44
relic of Javehns over The / breaker,
Jasmine (See also Jessamine, Jessmine)
tum'd Their humid anns
close-set robe of j sown with stars :
In meshes of the / and the rose :
Jasmine-leaves dawn Upon me thro' the j-l.
Jasper In the branching fs under the sea ;
j, sapphire. Chalcedony, emerald,
Jaimdice That veil'd the world with /,
Jamidiced and left me with the / eye ;
Javelin lay many a man Marr'd by the j,
rush of the j's. The crash of the charges,
Blood-redden'd rehc of J's over The jarring breaker,
Batt. of Brunanburh 97
Growths of j
D. of F. Women 69
Aylmer's Field 158
Princess i 219
Margaret 68
The Mermaid 47
Columbus 83
Walk, to the Mail 20
Locksley Hall 132
Batt. of Brunanburh 32
96
Javelining j With darted spikes and spUntei-s
Jaw The j is f aUing, The red cheek paling,
Into the j's of Death,
Came thro' the fs of Death,
in the fs Of vacant darkness
down-hung The fs of Death :
Jay Ring sudden scritches of the /,
glance the tits, and shriek the fs,
Jeakras ("See oZso Over-jealous) be /and hard and unkind
Never j — not he : we had many a happy year ;
Half j of she knows not what.
Merlin and V. 936
All Things will Die 30
Light Brigade 24
46
In Mem. xxxiv 15
Lover's Tale ii 205
My life is full 20
Prog, of Spring 15
Grandmother 54
71
In Mem. Ix 7
0 to what end, except a j one, And one to make me
7 if I love. Merlin and V. 538
What wonder, being j, that he sent His horns „ 580
And made her good man j with good cause. „ 605
1 was /, anger'd, vain, Happy 66
I meant to make you j. Are you / of me now ? „ 67
Jealous (continu^ed) But yet your mother's / temperament — Princess ii 338
'tis my mother. Too /, „ m go
Shall fears and j hatreds flame again ? W. to Marie Alex. 41
Sick, am I sick of a / dread ? Maud I x 1
Not rather dead love's harsh heir, j pride ? Lancelot and E. 1398
Jealousy (See also Semi-jealousy) James had flickering
jealousies The Brook 99
Down with ambition, avarice, pride, J, down ! Maud I x iS
all naiTOw jealousies Are silent ; Ded. of Idylls 16
No more of / than in Paradise.' Balin and Balan 152
A sudden spurt of woman's j, —
And as to woman's j, 0 why not ?
Foi^ve me ; mine was j in love.'
' J in love ? ' Not rather dead love's haish heir.
Queen, if I gi'ant the j as of love,
youthful y is a liar.
Jeer Began to scoff and j and babble of him
point and /, And gibber at the worm,
Jehovah Starr'd from J's gorgeous armouries,
Jenneting To fret the summer ;'.
Jenny •/, my cousin, had come to the place, and I knew
right well That J had tript in her time :
J, to slander me, who knew what J had been !
and J hmig on his arm.
J, the viper, made me a mocking curtsey
Jephthia Pale as the J's daughter,
The Godless ./ vows his child . . .
Jeroosilim (Jerusalem) May all the flowers o' J
Jersey I ha' six weeks' work m J
Jerusalem (See also Jeroosilim) but our most ancient East
Moriah with J ; Columbus 81
Jess Diet and seedUng, fes, leash and lure. Merlin and V. 125
Jessamine (See also Jasmine, Jessmine) All night has
the casement j stirr'd Maud I xxii 15
Jessmine (See also Jasmine, Jessamine) door-porch wi'
the woodbine an' j Spinster's S's. 105
Jest (s) eyes twinkle yet At his own j — Miller's D. 12
He was full of joke and j, D. of the O. Year 28
My words were half in earnest, half in j,) Gardener's D. 23
I am not all as wrong As a bitter / is dear. Vision of Sin 198
The j's, that flash'd about the pleader's room, Aylmer's Field 440
Dabbhng a shameless hand with shameful /, Princess Hi 314
The j and earnest working side by side, „ iv 563
beneath his vaulted palm A whisper'd j „ v 32
and ere the windy ; Had labour'd down „ 272
In dance and song and game and / ? In Mem. xxix 8
Whose ; among his friends is free, „ Ixvi 10
Or deep dispute, and graceful j ; „ Ixxxiv 24
Merlin in our time Hath spoken silso, not in /, Com. of Arthur 420
We will not touch upon him ev'n in /.' Marr. of Geraint 311
some light / among them rose With laughter dying Lancelot and E. 178
vext he could not go : A /, no more ! „ 211
(But all was j and joke among omselves) Then must
Merlin anrf V. 524
537
Lancelot and E. 1351
1397
1399
Locksley H., Sixty 240
Marr. of Geraint 58
Romney's R. 136
Milton 6
The Blackbird 12
Grandmother 25
35
42
46
Aylmer's Field 280
The Flight 26
Tomorrow 89
First Quarrel 88
she keep it safelier. All was /
moved to merriment at a passing j.
he was one of those who would break their j's
on the dead.
Would echo helpless laughter to your j \
As he did half in /, Old Horace ?
shameless laughter. Pagan oath, and /,
Jest (verb) ' You / : ill jesting with edge-tools !
grizzlier than a bear, to ride And j with :
Who j and laugh so easily and so well.
Jested while he j thus, A thought flash'd
Drank till he ; with all ease.
Have j also, but for Julian's eyes.
Jesting ' You jest : ill ; with edge-tools !
Jesus (See also Christ, Christ Jesus, Lord Jesus)
thou wilt not save my soul.
Jet (s) (See also Fountain-jets)
currents in one swell
The fountain pulses high in sunnier j's.
Jet (verb) J upward thro' the mid-day blossom.
Jet-black Leading a j-b goat white-hom'd.
The maiden's j-b hair has grown,
217
Sisters (E. and E.) 121
In the Child. Hosp. 8
To W. H. Brookfield 5
Epilogue 45
St. Telemachus 39
Princess ii 201
Pelleas and E. 194
Sisters (E. and E.) 41
Princess i 194
Geraint and E. 290
Lover's Tale iv 223
Princess ii 201
O J, if
St. S. StylUes 46
From those four fs four
Palace of Art 33
Prog, of Spring 54
Demeter and P. 47
(Enone 51
Day- Dm., Sleep. B. 4
Jetted
J«ttBd A dozen angry models ;■ steam ■
• «• *pani in his blood and the J~
J e«« J or sheD, or starry ore,
the y That trembles in her ear :
A da^er, in rich sheath with ys
That seem'd a fleet of ;'5 mider me
furs And fs, gifts, to fetch her • '
quoted odes, and yt five-words-long
shone hke a / set In the dark crag^
made the single j on her brow Bira
A ;, a ; dear to a lover's eye !
What, has he found my / out ?
And Maud will wear her f$,
™^ J^'t^ /"*' elfin Urim, on the hilt,
fled With Uttle save the fs they had on
and thicker down the front With fs
" ^^^r?i' ^bereupon I chanced Divinely
maid Might wear as fair a ; as is on earth,'
1 had not won except for you. These fs
f crown of gold About a casque all fi • '
Take Uiou the fs of this dead innocoice.
hick win go With these rich fs, "^^^"^
And some with scatterd fs,
what he brought to adorn her with. The Pt.
The value of that / he had to guard '
352
■'Vweew, Phj. 73
The Wreck 15
EUaiioTe2!Q
MiOer's D. 171
Aiflmer^s Fieid 220
Sea I}reawul23
iVneeMt43
» w377
» tttSSS
„. » »»273
WmdoWjOnthe HiaS
Maud / X 23
„ xz 27
Com. of Arthur 299
Marr. of GeraiiU 640
GeraiiU and E. 690
Lanedot and E. 58
240
1182
Holy Graa 411
iort Toumameni 31
46
148
Jovst
Wh^f'^^ f^^?"^'? °^ ^ ^o"* Sparkled " .^
"^VSth^e^^SSS?;: tm^* '■ — o' -^ne^. ^^|^^'
his horse In golden armoui /ev^^here • ^"'^ "'^ ^ f?^
But, while he boVd to kiss W J^^, ' Last Tc^^^ ^
himgermg for the gilt and ; world About him, I^rT^ ^\
themountam ar(«e like a ; throne thro' thefaagrant ^^
JUgTVenice, where a /, So far gone down, ^' "^T^l^J^.^y
^— *V. ^djacmth-work Of subtlest;. ^ a/^vw^ «
^^andjacmth-workOfsubUesty. ' P«.«„f^l^oS
Jated their pretty sayinl^T' Ls^ ^ J T „,~ . . ^' '^'■'^* ^61
^jfora^sr^^tet *^^ '""'•■ /JSr^^i^"^??
Jingle /of bits. Shouts, arro^ LocksUy H Si^ u
JJB^tA When armour clash'd or j n- T*resuts 93
Jingfag (adj.) moorland rings With / bridle-reins. V^ rTf? *7.^
Two sets of three ladenwith i armT^^^ -^ ■ '"^ 9' J?' ^
Tmas fever ed baaked J'* 'ead as bald ^^^ Sr^ ^**
°" Sot:'"" ** ^> ^ of'Sr The peasant J "^"^ "^'^^ '^
Cassandra, Hebe, J, Or spinning at your wheel v^t^ **»^
JMDofArc ^o J,Alight^lSSentSe; Z) «/ f^^l^
JoaoM ^, as ant not a 'aapoth o' sense, ' V p/^ ^^^
thot a weant niver give it to J ^^ Farmer, O. S. 49
Jo^ Dawes as with his tenant, J D w^n- * .i »# -, ^
John Falling had let appear the\''«S of J- ^jS'J^f'F^''^
T v_^^°^y "^ ^^ prophesied of me, '^^^ ^ ^
John(P«ster) ^wPwrterJohn Co/«»*«5 21
Join this byway fs The turnpike ? jT^j. ,„ ,. „ ^ ,
flow To ; the brimming river, (repeat) The £^^32^^^^"?^^
Tho' truths m manhood darkly , , »; ^' ^ ^??
as he eallopd up To / them, u rV^' '.""V.l
come hke you to see the hunt, Not / if ""• "^ ^'""^ ]i^
hot in haste to ; Their luckier mates, /?<™.-i „"-.» j? l^
Joinl^^\^H"l^'^^«^«--fficetnie: "^^ '^^ ^^ ^^SflJI
fa2;thepu«ta, And there weytlLn: ^I^i^ ^im
tboae fau chanties J at her side • ^Tvteess, Fro. 107
' n vn 66
Joni'd(««if.«««0 and / Each office of the social boar
l>esiring to be ; with Guinevere • ^^
for saving I be / To her that is Uie fairest
were I ; with her. Then might we live together
Then after I was ; with Galahad
Love and Honour ;" to raise the full High-tide
she ;, In and beyond the grave ^^
he stept, he stood, nor / The Achaeans—
Our dymg mother / our hands ;
Fell from each other, and were / again
7 you to the dead, has / our hands of old •
Jwmng And suck'd the / of the stones,
J<Hnt And work, a j of state,
and all hk f* Are full of 'chalk ?
all things hsK are out of ; :
My ;"* are somewhat stiff or so.
I admire Ts of cunning workmanship
i*^"°rT ^° ^'' supple-anew^'d, they shall dive
Joke He was full of ; and jest, '
(But^all was jest and ; among ourselves)
J<^r ^ ; .Tear we shafl not see.
JoDy his house, for so they say. Was haunted with
a ; ghost,
Jon^ ^ "? true growth, in her a y, gourd, Frim^<ir-iV^
I am the J, the crew should cast me into the deen n^ u^.
Joomp (jump) ' Billy,' says e ' hev a »" "-_ ^' iri^ ^^''^ ^
Joompt (jmnped) Theerabouts Charhe /— fiUageWtfe^
Fur tha / in thvsen,
Joseph d«cended from the Saint Arimathaean J
P^^^'By holy J hither, that same spear '
boss'd With holy J^s legend,
^^^i^, •^' JO'^neyins brought To Glastonbury
I know Thaty came of old to Glastonbury, ^'
Ihat J brou^t of old to Glastonbury ^ '
Josbm at gaze like Ts moon in Ajalon ' '
f''^'' ^^^° * ^"' •^» ^™e wtD cry
JOITO dim red mom had died, her ; done, /> of FWn,^ l\
before his ; clas«. He shaU find the stubborn thistle olV-^^aS
And aU his; to her, as himself Had told her ^^ ^<^ o* ** ett. 2fio
(repeat)
IBe prosperous in this /, as in aO •
Thev closing round him thro' the / home
- „J^j^ to^t^d Her; done, glanced at him,'
j2^S^ "^^l ^ ^'^<*' ^d saw the worid fly
Joazneymg Or of ten ; landward ; ^
-*:^body ;" onward, sick with toO.
°°*V ?^ (s) one might show it at a ; of arms.
And thee, rmne mnocent, the fs, the wars.
And I shaU see the ;"5. Thy son am L
If tliere chanced a /, So that Sir Kay nodded
1 et have I watch d thee victor in the i " iXTT
f -^-^"gbty ;-*, and took a paramour •
And, but for my main purpose in these fs
proven m his Paynim wars Than famous fs ■
no quest came, but aU was i and play '
diamond fs. Which Arthur had oidj^'d.
Once every year, a ; for one of these :
And eight years past, eight fs had been,
let proclaim a ; At Camelot
you cannot move To these fair ;■'* v '
Why go ye not to these fair fs '
therefore hear my words : eo to the T* •
nor cares For triumph in oilr mimic wa^ the T
parted from the;"-. Hurt in the^ 7^^*^)
and sparkle out Among us in the ;"'*;
bhish d and brake the morning of the ;"',,
Arthur had the ; * Down in the flat fidd
the circlet of the fs Bound on her brow,
^e prize Of Tnstram in the fs of yesteiday
She ended, and the cry of a great fs
one low roll Of Autumn thunder, 4nd the fs began -
wroth at Tnstram and the lawlei fs ^^ "
In Mem. eri 13
Com. of ArOtur 77
85
r, 90
Hoiy "Graa 6U
Sisters (E. and E.) 177
^ r-„ " ^71
AehMes over the T. 15
The Flight 87
The Bing 381
Happy 93
Marr. of Geraint 3^1
Lore thou thy land 47
Audley Court 46
Loeksley HaU 133
Day-Dtn., Sevival 26
Vision of Sin 186
Lodcdey HaU 169
D.oftheO. Year 28
Lancelot and E. 217
D.oftheO. Tear 20
Walk, to the MaQ 36
Princess it 311
81
Spinster's S's. 30
Balin and Balan l(r2
113
363
Holy Graa 51
» 60
, . " 73-5
LodkOof Hall 160
Bomney's R. 47
Marr. of Geraint 143, 845
^ „ 225
PeOeas and E. 302
Guinevere 406
The Bing 179
£»«* Arden 92
Lover's Tale i 124
M. d' Arthur 108
Gareth and L. 86
166]
51
13
Geratnt and E. 833 j
837]
Baltn and Balan 39<
Merlin a»d F. 145 j
LmmeHalmmi E.Zl[
61
67
76 <
80j
.-- --~~.«u auu uic lawless
one might show it at a ; of aims,
138
313
622
Holy Graa 3i
PeOeas and E. 157
163
434
ioa* Tournament 8
51
153
237
Pass, of Arthur 270
I
Jonst
353
Judgment
Joat iTCCb) For pastime ; y^a, he said it : / can L GartUt and L. 543
For hcae be va^aij men to ; with, „ 860
since I go to / as one onknown At Camelot Lancelot and E. 190
be wiD lide, J for it, and win, „ 2M
That he migfat ; unfaiown of aO, „ 583
Joml He most have been a ; king. Dajf-Dnt., Sleep. P. 40
Jowl Cheek by /, and knee by knee : Vision of Sin 84
Jaj The j I had in my freewill AH cold, ^^PP- Confessions 16
Scarce outward signs of / arise, „ 49
SbaB man fire thos, in / „ 1Q9
wild swan's death-hymn took the soul Of that waste
place with; Diftm^ Swrnm 32
What hope or fear or / is thine ? AdtUmg 23
aU day loog you sit betweoi J and woe, Margartt 64
Because yon are the soul of /, Rosalind 20
' Twere /, not fear, daspt hand-in-hand If I tcere loved 9
The / that mixes man with Hearen : Tico Voices 210
To more about the house with /, Millers D. 95
' There is no / but cafan ! ' Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 23
W9 should come like ^osts to trouble /. „ 74
emptied of all ;, Leaving the dance and song, D. of F. Wowun 215
Sodi j as you have seen with us, D. of ike O. Year 17
But Thou rejoice with liberal /, EngUnd and Awter. 11
lark could scarce get out his notes for /, Gardener's D. 90
So home I went, but could not sleep for /, „ 174
perfect J, perpfex'd for utterance, „ 255
I kMk'd at him with / : TaHdng Oak 106
re^K not hairest of his youthful fs, Loekdey Hall 139
I muse on j that wiD not cease. Sir Galakad 65
A prirate life was all his j, Wm Water. 129
And madly danced our hearts with ;', Ike Voyage 3
Lux 9ouls that balance ; and pain. Sir L. and Q. G. 1
O / to the pet^ile and y to the throne, W. to Alexandra 29
Makine the little <me leap for ;. To F. D. Maurice 4
The Priest befaeki him. And cried with /, Tke Victim 38
They bring me aornnr tooch'd with ;, /» Mem. xxvm 19
And doubtful fs the father moTe, „ jj 9
On some imwortfay heart with /, „ IxH 7
Thy passion da^ a secret j : „ Ixs^nH 8
0 y to him in th» letieat, ^ „ Ixxxix 13
As in the f onna flash oi j, „ exxH 15
teOs The ; To ereiy wandning breeze ; „ Con. 62
And, tho'' in siknce, wishing /. „ 88
the ringing ; of the Hall, Maud I i 70
With a ; in wfaidh I cannot rejoice, ^ v 21
Tliat die warbled akme in her;! ^ z55
in the heart of Arthur; was lord. Com.ofArtkurl2i
Stood round him, and rejoicing in his ;'. „ 459
Shame never made gM redder than Gareth ;'. Garetk and L. 536
So Gareth past with ; ; but as the cur Phickt „ 701
Not beat him back, but welcomed him with ;'. Marr. of Geraint 748
Lost one Found was greeted as in Heaven With ; Balin and Balan 82
Lady, my liege, in whom I have my ;, Lancdot and E. 1180
1 pray you : have your ;''* apart. ' „ 1217
thou in whom I have Most ; and most yffiamy, „ 1357
Bedder than any rose, a ; to me. Holy GraU 521
And each made'; of either ; then he ask'd, „ 638
' Glory and ; and honour to our Lord „ 839
* I had forgotten all in my strong ; To see thee— Last ToumamentoS2
Himself beheld three spints mad with ; Guinetere 252
feel My purpose and rejoicing in my ;.' „ 486
not grkving at your fs. But not rejoicing ; „ 679
L(Ridon rolPd one tide of ; thro' aH Her trebled
miDkRis, To the Queen ii 8
great pine shook with lonely sounds <A j Later' s Tale i 325
to boui there came The ;' of life in steeimess overcrane, „ 386
and ; In breathing nearer heaven ; and; to me, „ 388
more than ;' that I to her became Her guudian „ 392
Since in his abeence full of li^t and ;', „ 435
AO ;', to whom my agony was a ;. » 656
fromcommomihoe, Andh^oB toonr;. Sisters (E. and E.) 224
Little gueas what ; can be got from a cowslip In tke CkUd, Hosp. 36
within The city comes a munnur void of ;', Tiresias 101
when I hdd it aloft in my ;', The Wredc 33
k it wen to widi you / ? Lodcdey R., Sixty 216
Jogr {continued) Wish me ; !
this life of mingled pains And fs to me,
workl-wfai^>ex, mystk pain or ;,
Jaytnoe this May morning in ; is beating Full
menily ;
To keep them in all / : more than this I
could not;
Jayfnl led J to that pahn-planted fountain-fed
to have been J and free from blame.
J came his speech :
Took ; note of all things ;,
a shout More / than the city-roar that hails
Whex the breeze of a ;' dawn blew free
Cleab-hsaded friend, whose / scorn,
' I sung the / Paean clear,
by my life. These birds hare / thoughts.
A fairy Prince, with / eyes.
The streets were fill'd with / sound,
31ute symbols of a / mom.
With a ; spirit I Sir Richard GrenviUe die ! '
Joyinlly You then /, all of you,
Joying J to feel herself alive.
Joyless Touch thy dull goal of / gray,
cuckoo of a ; Jime Is calling out of doors :
Midnight — and ; June gone by.
The Sing 60
To Mary Boyle 50
Far — far — away 7
II
AU Things will Die 6
Lancelot and E. 1324
Alexander 7
D. of F. Women 80
The Captain 30
Aylmer's Fidd 67
Princess, Con. 101
Arabian Nights 1
Clear-headed friend 1
Two Voices 1^
Gardener's D. 99
Day-Dm., Arrival 7
In Mem. xxxi 10
„ Cm. 58
The Revenge 103
On Jub. Q. Victoria 15
Palace of Art 178
In Mem. IxxH 27
Pref. Poem Broth. S. 3
« 9
Tin the y birthday came of a boy bom happily dead. Charity 34
Joyous She seem'd a part of j Spring : <^^ L. and Q. G. 23
A y to dilaie, as toward the Ught. Aylmer's Field 77
Then glided out of the ; wood Maud II i 31
JnUuit But anon her awful ; voice. Dying Swan 28
While all the younger ones with ; cries Enoch Arden 377
Heavoi flash'd a sudden ; ray. Ode on Wdl. 129
Roll and rejoice, ; voice, W. to Alexandra 22
All on a sudden the garrison utter a ; shout, Def. of Lueknow 98
a ; challenge to Time and to Fate ; Vastness 21
Before her skims the y woodpecker. Prog, of Spring 16
Tou should be j that you flourish'd here Poets and their B. 12
Jnldee With pleasure and love and j : Sea- Fairies 36
Moum'd in this golden hour of ;', Ode Inter. Exhib. 8
Utter your j, steepk and spire ! W. to Alexandra 17
Crowning year of her J. On Jub. Q. Victoria 11
Ceremonial Of this year of her J. „ 24
And this year of her J. (repeat) „ 38, 51
' Hail to the glorious Goklen year of her J I' „ 65
darkness Dawns into the J of the Ages. „ 71
Judah Not least art thou, thou little Bethkhem
In J, Sir J. Oldcastle 25
Judge (s) Himself the j aiKi jury. Sea Dreams 175
God, not man, is the J of us aU. Grandmother 95
Modred for want of worthier was the ;. Gareth and L. 28
I came into court to the J and the lawyers. Rizpah 33
Him, happy to be chosen J of Gods, Death of (Enone 16
Judge (Tob) and see thy Paris ; of Gods.' CEnone 90
J thou me by what I am, „ 154
Thy mortal eyes are frail to ; of fair, „ 158
' Let the Princess / Of that ' Primeess ii 234
pray'd me not to j their cause from her „ rtt 235
bring Him here, that I may ; the ri^t, Gareth and L. 380
And y all nature from her feet of clay. Merlin and V. 835
If one may j the Uving by the dead, Lancelot and E. 1368
To y between my slander'd self and me — Columbus 125
Judged now the Priest has j for me.' The Victim 56
Jndger hasty j would have call'd her guilt, Geraint and E. 433
Judging he should come to shame thy j of him.' Gareth and L. 469
as the base man, j of the good, Pdleas and E. 80
Judgment my own weakness fools My ;', Supp. Confessions 137
pick'd offenders from the mass For ;'. Prineess i 30
You shame your mothers j too. „ vi 261
He would not make his j blind. In Mem. xevi 14
And shalt abide her j on it ; Marr. of Geraint 584
Submit, and hear the j of the King.' ' He hears
the y of the King of kings,' Geraint and E. 799
naked Ignorance Dehvers brawling fs. Merlin and V. 665
Rash were my j then, who dean Uik maid Lancelot and E. 239
and hollow like a Ghost's Doiouncing ;, Guinevere 421
Judgment
Judgment (continued) And fall'n away from /.
Love, arraign'd to / and to death,
when the trumpet of j 'ill sound,
And would defend his / well,
Judgment dafty an roarin' hke / d.
Judgment-day (See also Jidgemint day, Judgment daay)
the loud world's bastard 7-cZ,
Judith couch'd behind a J, underneath The head of
Holofemes
But your J — but your worldling —
Juggle Is a ;■ bom of the brain ?
and j, and lie and cajole.
Juice Till all his 7 is dried.
Juiced See Full-juiced
Julian Poor J — how he rush'd away ;
J came again Back to his mother's house
(for in J's land They never nail a dumb head
but shatter'd nerve, Yet haunting J,
' Stay then a little,' answer'd J,
For such a craziness as J's look'd
Forgive him, if his name be J too.'
And J made a solemn feast :
Wonder'd at some strange light in J's eyes
Have jested also, but for J's eyes.
Then J made a secret sign to me
younger J, who himself was crown'd With roses
When J goes, the lord of all he saw. '
'My guests,' said J : ' you are honour'd now
But J, sitting by her, answer'd all :
I with him, my J, back to mine.
Juliet J, she So %ht of foot,
J answer'd laughing, ' Go and see The Gardener's
daughter :
Will you match My J ? you, not you,—
July The cuckoo of a worse J Is calling
Jumbled Ev'n in the j rubbish of a dream,
every clime and age J together ;
Jump See Joomp
Jumped See Joompt
Jumping See A-Joompin'
June Their meetings made December J
married, when wur it ? back-end o' J,
The cuckoo of a joyless J Is calling
Midnight — and joyless J gone by.
When I was in my J, you in your May,
round me and over me J's high blue,
June-blue clear as the heights of the J-b heaven,
354
Lover's Tale i 103
785
Bizpah 57
Tirestas 190
Owd Roa 110
'5 R. 119
Princess iv 226
Locksley H., Sixty 20
Maud II a 42
Charity 29
Audley Court 46
Lover's Tale iv 2
14
36
106
113
168
175
187
205
223
284
296
315
316
340
388
Gardener's D. 13
29
172
Pref. Poem Broth. S. 11
Merlin and V. 347
Princess, Pro. 17
In Mem. xcvii 11
North. Cobbler 11
Pref. Poem Broth. 8. 3
9
Roses on the T. 2
June Bracken, etc. 2
7
To Marq. of Dufferin 31
Princess iv 142
A Character 15
Sea Dreams 175
Poland 11
Two Voices 117
To J. S. 31
Lady Clare 18
Vision of Sin 111
Tou might have won 19
Princess ii 132
Ode on Well. 169
Jungle-poison'd In haunts of j-p air
Junketing growth Of spirit than to j and love.
Juno to charm Pallas and J sitting by :
Jury Himself the judge and /,
Just Us, O J and Good, Forgive,
Hears little of the false or ;.'
A man more pure and bold and j Was never bom
' That all comes round so / and fair :
' Virtue ! — to be good and j —
'tis but / The many-headed beast should
know.'
woman's state in each, How far from j ;
crowds at length be sane and crowns be' j.
desires no isles of the blest, no quiet seats of the j.
And thou hast made him : thou art j
Who battled for the Tme, the J,
Arise, my God, and strike, for we hold Thee j
the blessed Heavens are i, ^ „g ^ ^ ^^
For ever and for ever with those j souls and tme— May Queen, Con. 55
A man more pure and bold and 7 To J S 31
i^^H ,^n,„ T. ' ^' '^'■^^'M"^. ™ghty God, St. S. StyliUs 9
and more Than many ; and holy men, 131
yJ?"^' ^^^""i'^'' Wu''^ ^^^ ' Si^ Galahad 79
7hv ?^il Z''^^ '''^".u ^ ^^""^^ °° ^ gi^t "" ; Maud III vi 45
The C^ood, the Tme, the Pure, the J- Loc^' 'i:'^iZn
In Mem., Pro. 12
Ivi 18
Maud II i 45
The Flight 67
Juster A j epoch has begun.
Justice A silent court of j in his breast
social tmth shall spread, And /, '
No boon is here. But j,
According to the j of the King :
thou hast \;Teak'd Ms j on his foes,
and all flyers from the hand Of J, '
to guard the j of the King :
And there he kept the j of the King
Him, who should bear the sword Of J
led by J, Love, and Tmth ;
Love and J came and dwelt therein ; (repeat)
Justified seem'd So / by that necessity
Justify ever face she look'd on / it) '
Justly How /, after that vile term of yours
Jut (s) By zig-zag paths, and j's of pointed rock,
based His feet on j's of slippery crag
By zigzag paths, and j's of pointed rock,
based His feet on j's of sUppery crag
Jut (verb) diamond-ledges that j from the dells •
Juttmg Is 7 thro' the rind ;
every height comes out, and j peak And valley,
Kay
Epilogue 6
Sea Dreams 174
In Mem. cxxvii 6
Gareth and L. 346
381
1268
Marr. of Geraint 37
Geraint and E. 934
956
Sir J. Oldcastle 88
Locksley H., Sixty 161
Akbar's Dream 181, 194
Geraint and E. 396
Princess v 134
Merlin and V. 921
M. d' Arthur 50
189
Pass, of Arthur 218
357
The Mermaid 40
Ancient Sage 122
Spec, of Iliad 13
Kate 6
„ 10
„ 14
17
Kaffir And not the K, Hottentot, Malay, Prinreii ii ^ «;«
Kalifa One Alia ! one Z ! '' Ji^hS!^ lan
Kapiolani(Chieftainess. Sandwich Islands) greatest of ^^"'^ * ^''^"'^ 1^7
women, island heroine, K v ■ i ■ ct
will the glory of K be mingled with either on Hawa-i-ee. ^'^^^'^^'^^^
Peelfe remainmg as K ascended her mountain " 9r
^araac .Hong-Kong, K, and all the rest. To Ulvsses 44
^*® ^? ^rZ^^^ ^^y^t*^ ^l^^t she will : For Z hath an ^
unbridled tongue,
K hath a spirit ever strung Like a new bow
For K no common love will feel ; My woman-soldier,
gallant K, '
^„^-u*^ fl*^^ ri^ "^ """'^ ""^^ ™"^*-' ^ s^th ' the men are
Karlft^ers'figr^' ^" ^"^^^ ^' '"^ ^'^' ' ^ -^ -^
Z bv^ well the bold and fierce ; But none are bold enough
Margaret and Mary, there's K and Caroline : Mav O^er^
Katie (See also Katie WiUows. WiUows) ' Sweet K, once I ^ ^
The Brook 74
„ 86
„ 92
„ 101
„ 119
„ 169
„ 193
„ 211
„ 214
„ 221
„ 67
Tomorrow 12
63
did her a good tum,
' Run ' To K somewhere in the walks below, ' Run K ' '
K never ran : she moved To meet me ' "
less of sentiment than sense Had K ;
But K snatch'd her eyes at once from mine,
O K, what I suffer'd for your sake !
sun of sweet content Re-risen in K's eyes
^ru^}^^ ^I *^® ^°"S ^^'^ of Australasian seas
What do they call you ? ' ' K.'
That K laugh'd, and laughing blush'd
Have you not heard ? ' said K, '
Katie Willows 0 darhng K W, his one child !
Katty wid Shamus O'Shea at K's shebeen •
says to me wanst, at K's shebeen '
Kay (a Knight of the Round Table) Then came Sir K, the
seneschal, and cried, ' V.„.,,i, j r oan
let ^ the seneschal Look to thy wants, ^"'''^ ""'^ ^^ T.
K, The master of the meats and drinks, "
^^^ wiL ^T^'^ °^ ""^'^ Wan-sallow as the plant
K, What murmurest thou of mystery v
But K the seneschal, who loved him not
c ^u '. a? ^"^schal, would come Blustering
feo that Sir K nodded him leave to go
so'sir Timf^.u^'^J him groaning like a wounded bull-
so bu- K beside the door Mutter'd in scom
. ri?-'»Tn °^® ^,* ^^^^ SO against the King,
Tut, tell me not,' said K, ' ye are overfine
look who comes behind,' for there was K
450
452
470
483
513
520
648
705
727
732
762
Kay
355
Keep
Kay (a Knight of the Bound Table) (continued) Knowest
thou not me ? thy master ? I am K. Gareth and L. 753
' Have at thee then,' said K : they shock'd, and K
Fell shoulder-slipt, „ 758
helping back the dislocated K To Camelot, „ 1213
Arthur tum'd to K the seneschal, Last Tournament 89
Kays (keys) Till Holy St Pether gets up wid his k an'
opens the gate ! Tomorrow 93
Keaper (keeper) K's it wur ; f o' they fim 'um
theer N. Farmer, 0. S. 33
Keeap (keep) an' I k^s 'im clean an' bright, North. Cobbler 97
I says to tha ' k 'em, an' welcome ' Church-warden, etc. 36
an' k's thysen to thysen. „ 48
Keeaper (keeper) An' k 'e seed ya an roon'd, „ 28
Keel round about the k with faces pale. Lotos- Eaters 25
Sweet-Gale rustle round the shelving k ; Edwin Morris 110
The broad seas swell'd to meet the k, The Voyage 13
no ruder air perplex Thy sliding k, In Mem. ix 10
I hear the noise about thy k; „ xl
ship sail K upward, and mast downward, Gareth and L. 254
Light-green with its own shadow, ktok. Lover's Tale i 43
Keen hawk-eyes are k and bright, K with triumph, Rosalind 25
Made dull his inner, k his outer eye Last Tournament 366
cloud of thought K, irrepressible. Lover's Tale ii 165
then so fc to seek The meanings ambush 'd Tiresias 4
I am not k of sight, The Ring 258
Roof not a glance so & as thine : Clear-headed friend 7
Those spirit-thrilling eyes so k and beautiful : Ode to Memory 39
about the circles of the globes Of her k eyes. The Poet 44
And sparkled k with frost against the hilt : M. d' Arthur 55
Thro' all yon starlight k, St. Agnes' Eve 22
His o\vn, tho' k and bold and soldierly Aylmer's Field 192
Did the k shriek ' Yes love, yes, Edith, „ 582
Pierces the k seraphic flame From orb to orb, In Mem. xxx 27
The yule-clog sparkled k with frost, ' „ Ixxviii 5
And k thro' wordy snares to track „ xcv 31
can I doubt, who knew thee k In intellect, „ cxiii 5
And sparkled k with frost against the hilt : Pass, of Arthur 223
When frost is k and days are brief — To Ulysses 19
Keener No k hunter after glory breathes. Lancelot and E. 156
The memory's vision hath a k edge. Lover's Tale i 36
Keenest Still with their fires Love tipt his k darts ; D. of F. Women 173
Keenin' (crjring) Him an' his childer wor k Tomorrow 86
Keenlier That k in sweet April wakes, In Mem. cxvi 2
Keenly glancing all at once as fc at her Marr. of Geraint 773
Keep (s) there is the k ; He shall not cross us Geraint and E. 341
Keep (verb) {See also KeeS,p) tears of penitence Which
would k green Supp. Confessions 119
So k where you are : you are foul with sin ; Poet's Mind 36
hearts of salient springs K measure with thine owti ? Adeline 27
K's real sorrow far away. Margaret 44
Too long you k the upper skies ; Rosalind 35
We must bind And k you fast, „ 43
heart a charmed slumber k's, Elednore 128
K's his blue waters fresh for many a mile. Mine be the strength 8
Nor any train of reason k : Two Voices 50
Let us swear an oath, and k it Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 108
I k smooth plats of fruitful groimd. The Blackbird 3
K dry their light from tears ; Of old sat Freedom 20
' Here, take the goose, and k you warm, The Goose 7
' So k you cold, or k you warm, „ 43
k a thmg, its use will come. The Epic 42
' Eustace,' I said, ' this wonder k's the house.' Gardener's D. 119
Could k me from that Eden where she dwelt. ,, 191
k's us all in order more or less — Walk, to the Mail 23
that trims us up, And k's us tight ; Edwin Morris 47
and try If yet he k's the power. Talking Oak 28
to k My own fuU-tuned, — Love and Duty 39
but that all Should k within, door shut, Godiva 41
His state the king reposing k's. Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 39
So A; I fair thro' faith and prayer Sir Galahad 23
To k the best man under the sun Lady Clare 31
' But k the secret for your life, „ 34
' But fc the secret all ye can.' „ 42
While we fc a little breath ! Vision of Sin 192
Keep (verb) (continued) betray the ti-ust : K nothing
sacred : You might have won 19
So might she fc the house while he was gone. Enoch Arden 140
K a clean hearth and a clear fire for me, „ 192
till I come again K everything shipshape, „ 220
Not fc it noble, make it nobler ? Aylmer's Field 386
fc him from the lust of blood That makes Lucretius 83
we fc a chronicle With all about him ' — Princess, Pro. 27
That love to fc xis children ! „ 133
fc your hoods about the face ; „ ii 358
surely, if your Highness fc Your purport, „ Hi 211
I broke the letter of it to fc the sense. „ iv 338
And here he k's me hostage for his son.' „ 405
We did but fc yoiu* siu^ty for our son, „ ii 25
For now will cruel Ida fc her back ; „ 84
she would not fc Her compact.' „ 323
0 if , I say, you fc One pulse that beats true woman, „ vi 179
With one that cannot fc her mind an hour : „ 287
What use to fc them here — now ? „ 304
1 cannot fc My heart an eddy from the brawling hour : „ 321
willing she should fc Court-favour : „ vii 57
seem to fc her up but drag her down — „ 270
make herself her own To give or fc, „ 273
fc's his wing'd aflections dipt with crime : „ 316
God bless the narrow sea which fc's her off, „ Con. 51
And k's our Britain, whole within herself, „ 52
fc it ours, O God, from brute control ; Ode on Well. 159
fc our noble England whole, „ 161
fc the soldier firm, the statesman pure : " „ 222
thank God that I fc my eyes. Grandmother 106
Let darkness fc her raven gloss : In Mem. i 10
Who fc's the keys of all the creeds, „ xxiii 5
How dare we fc our Christmas-eve ; „ xxix 4
I strive To fc so sweet a thing aHve : ' „ xxxv 7
' What fc's a spirit wholly true „ Hi 9
She fc's the gift of years before, „ xcvii 25
For who would fc an ancient form „ cv 19
We fc the day. With festal cheer, „ cvii 21
force, that fc's A thousand pulses dancing, „ cxxv 15
tho' as yet I fc Within his court on earth, „ cxxvi 6
I fc but a man and a maid, _ Maud I iv 19
I would not marvel at either, but fc a temperate brain ; „ 40
Should Nature fc me alive, „ vi 32.
Her brother, from whom I fc aloof, „ 46
K watch and ward, (repeat) „ 58
How can ye fc me tether'd to you — Gareth and L. 115
yet the which No man can fc ; „ 272
my knighthood fc the vows they swore, „ 602
And fc's me in this ruinous castle here, Marr. of Geraint 462
fc's the wear and polish of the wave. „ 682
dress her beautifully and fc her true ' — Geraint and E. 40
not to speak to me, And thus ye fc it ! „ 79
To fc them in the wild ways of the wood, „ 187
fc a touch of sweet civility Here in the heart „ 312
And if it were so do not fc it back : „ 316
To fc hini bright and clean as heretofore, „ 937
Eats scarce enow to fc his pulse abeat ; Balin and Balan 105
We could not fc him silent, out he flash'd, Merlin and V. 416
To fc me all to your own self, — „ 523
I needed then no charm to fc them mine But youth „ 547
the Queen Might fc her all his own : „ 585
meaning by it To fc the list low and pretenders back, „ 592
For fc it like a puzzle chest in chest, „ 654
But fc that oath ye sware, ye might, perchance, „ 688
Then must she fc it safelier. All was jest. Lancelot and E. 218
you fc So much of what is graceful : „ 1218
To fc them in all joyance : „ 1324
K him back Among yourselves. PeUeas and E. 190
take him to you, fc him off, „ 194
And if thou fc me in thy donjon here, „ 242
Vows ! did you fc the vow you made to Mark Last Tournament 655
house. That fc's the rust of murder on the waUs — Guinevere 74
Not only to fc down the base in man, „ 480
A strain to shame us ' fc you to yourselves ; To the Queen ii 15
K thou thy name of ' Lover's Bay.' Lover's Tale i 15
Keep
356
EiU
Keep (verb) (continued) yet in him k's A draught of that
sweet fountain Lover's Tale i 140
It seem'd to k its sweetness to itself, „ 154
Are fashion'd by the channel which they k), „ 567
And k yourself, none knowing, to yourself ; „ iv 114
Sally she wesh'd foalks' cloaths to k the wolf fro'
the door, North. Cobbler 29
K the revolver in hand ! Def. of Lticknow 26
The love that k's this heart aUve The Flight 35
Could k their haithen kings in the flesh Tomorrow 70
To k our English Empire whole ! Hands all Round 14
I bad her k, Like a seal'd book. The Ring 122
desire to k So skilled a nurse about you always — „ 373
How bright you k your marriage-ring ! Romney's R. 59
Keeper (See also Eeaper, Eeeaper) There hj ak shot at,
slightly hurt, Aylmer's Field 548
escaped His k's, and the silence which he felt, „ 839
jam the doors, and bear The k's down, Lucretius 170
the k was one, so full of pride, Maud II v 79
not with such a craziness as needs A cell and k), Lover's Tale iv 164
Keeping the children play'd at k house. Enoch Arden 24
did Enid, k watch, behold In the first shallow Geraint and E. 118
' It is not worth the k : let it go : Merlin and V. 396
to have my shield In k till I come.' Lancelot and E. 383
I said ' You were k with her, First Quarrel 64
My giant ilex k leaf When frost is keen To Ulysses 18
Kelt (See also Celt) Slav, Teuton, K, I count them all Epilogue 18
Kem (came) An' the sun k out of a cloud Tomorrow 37
Kemble Ganick and stateUer K, and the rest To W. C. Macready 7
Ken to sea, as far as eye could k, Lover's Tale i 336
Kendal I am all but sure I have — in K church — Romney's R. 19
Kent lands in K and messuages in York, Edwin Morris 127
On capes of Afric as on cliffs of K, W. to Marie Alex. 17
Kep (kept) ' Siver, I k 'um, I k 'lun, my lass, N. Farmer, O. S. 23
fur to kick our Sally as k the wolf fro' the door, North. Cobbler 59
I 'a k' thruf thick an' thin Spinster's S's. 12
boath on us jfc out o' sight o' the winders „ 35
fur, Steevie, tha k' it sa neat „ 77
An' 'e k his head hoop Uke a king, Owd Rod 9
Sa I fc i' my chair, fur I thowt she was nobbut a-rilin' „ 74
k a-callin' o' Roa till 'e waggled 'is taaU fur a bit, But
the cocks k a-crawin' an' crawin' „ 105
I it' mysen meeak as a lamb. Churchwarden, etc. 41
Kept (See also Kep) Which k her throne unshaken still, To the Queen 34
But good things have not k aloof. My life is full 2
K watch, waiting decision, CEnone 143
this k, Stored in some treasure-house M. d' Arthur 100
on the leads we k her till she pigg'd. Walk, to the Mail 92
But that his heavy rider k him down. Vision of Sin 4
His worst he k, his best he gave. You might have won 26
this he k Thro' all his future ; Enoch Arden 236
Smote him, as having k aloof so long. „ 274
but he was gone Who kit; „ 695
put her Uttle ones to school, And k them in it, „ 707
K him a living soul. „ 804
But k the house, his chair, and last his bed. „ 826
His gazing in on Annie, his resolve, And how he k it. ,, 864
sow'd her name and k it green In living letters, Aylmer's Field 88
where his worldless heart had k it warm, „ 471
yet her cheek K colour : wondrous ! „ 506
K to the garden now, and grove of pines, „ 550
she, who k a tender Christian hope. Sea Dreams 41
(I k the book and had my finger in it) Princess, Pro. 53
I k mine own Intent on her, „ ii 441
She k her state, and left the drunken king „ Hi 229
then, climbing, Cyril k With Psyche, „ 354
Saw that they k apart, no mischief done ; „ iv 340
why k ye not your faith ? O base and bad ! „ vll
Part sat Uke rocks : part reel'd but k their seats : „ 496
His foes were thine ; he A; us free ; Ode on Well. 91
great men who fought, and k it ours. „ 158
Like ballad-burthen music, k. The Daisy 77
My blood an even tenor k. In Mem. Ixxxv 17
In those f all'n leaves which k their green, „ xcv 23
K itself warm in the heart of my dreams, Maud I vi 18
Kept (continued) and k and coax'd and whistled to —
Wherein she k them folded reverently
And k her off and gazed upon her face,
But k it for a sweet surprise at morn.
But Enid ever k the faded silk.
Because she k the letter of his word.
Like that which k the heart of Eden green
But k myself aloof till I was changed ;
And there he k the justice of the King
Some lost, some stolen, some as reUcs k.
since he k his mind on one sole aim,
Some cause had k him simder'd from his wife :
and took the shield. There k it,
friend Might have well k his secret.
k The one-day-seen Sir Lancelot in her heart.
And faith imf aithful k him falsely true.
There two stood arm'd, and k the door ;
a maid, Who k our holy faith among her kin
Arthur k his best until the last ;
a Uon on each side That k the entry.
Sir Pelleas k the field With honour :
still he A; his watch beneath the wall.
Wide open were the gates. And no watch k ;
this k, Stored in some treasure-house
But still I k my eyes upon the sky.
And k it thro' a himdred years of gloom,
' Bygones ! you k yom-s hush'd,' I said.
They A: their faith, their freedom,
saw the death, but k the deck,
and iEtna k her winter snow,
you — you loved me, k your word.
k theii- watch upon the ring and you.
I A; it as a sacred amulet About me, —
a woman, God bless her, k me from Hell.
Kerchief about them, ribbon, glove Or A; ;
Kernel trash ' he said, ' but with a A; in it.
The A; of the shriveU'd fruit
Kestrel Kite and k, wolf and wolfkin.
Kettle (See also Kittle) And hurl'd the pan and A:.
wi' my oan A; theere o' the hob,
Kex tho' the rough A; break The starr'd mosaic,
Key (See also Kays) and opens but to golden k's.
With half a sigh she tum'd the A;,
Who keeps the k's of aU the creeds.
That Shadow waiting with the k's,
And Uves to clutch the golden k's.
Cries of the partridge, hke a rusty A; Tum'd in
a lock,
' Authority of the Church, Power of the k's ! ' —
Given thee the k's of the great Ocean-sea ?
and since The k to that weird casket,
The golden k's of East and West.
I felt for what I could not find, the k.
Keys (of a piano) Tum'd as he sat, and stmck the A;
and by their clash, And prelude on the k,
would drop from the chords or the k.
Keystone For barefoot on the A:,
Khan given the Great K's palaces to the Moor,
Kick all women A; against their Lords
an' I gied our Sally a A;,
I seead that our Sally went laamed Cos' o' the A; as
I gied 'er,
Heer wur a fall fro' a kiss to a A;
fur to A; our Sally as kep the wolf fro' the door,
mob's miUion feet Will A; you from your place,
I fetcht 'im a k an' 'e went.
Kick'd K, he returns : do ye not hate him.
An' I thowt 'at I A; 'im agean, but I A; thy Moother
istead.
Kid Seethed hke the A; in its own mother's milk !
ElilauSa, wallow in fiery riot and revel On K,
Kill eyes. That care not whom they A;,
why should you k youiself And make them orphans
monsters only made to A; Time by the fire in
printer.'
Gareih and L. 14
Marr. of Geraint 137
519
703
841
Geraint and E. 455
770
872
956
Merlin and V. 453
626
715
Lancelot and E. 398
593
746
877
1247
Holy Grail 697
763
818
Pelleas and E. 168
223
415
Pass, of Arthur 268
Lover's Tale i 572
iv 195
First Quarrel 68
Montenegro 2
Locksley H., Sixty 63
Demeter and P. 115
The Ring 290
300
442
Charity 4
Aylmer's Field 621
Princess ii 395
Ancient Sage 121
Boadicea 15
The Goose 28
Spinster's S's. 9
Princess iv 77
Locksley Hall 100
The Letters 1&
In Mem. xxiii 5
„ xxvi 15
,, Ixiv 10
Lover's Tale ii 115
Sir J. Oldcastle 162
Columbus 149
Ancient Sage 254
To Marq. of Dufferin 4
The Ring 440
Tht Islet 7
Sisters (E. and E.) 2
The Wreck 27
Gareth and L. 214
Columbus 109
Princess iv 412
North. Cobbler 36
40
57
59
The Fleet 19
Owd Rod 62
Pelleas and E. 264
Owd Rod 67
Merlin and V. 869
Kapiolani 9
Rosalind 37
Enoch Arden 394
Princess, Pro. 204
KiU
357
Kindle
Kill (continued) ' K him now, The tyrant ! k him Princess, Pro. 206
K us with pity, break us with ourselves — ., Hi 258
some grand fight to k and make an end : ,, iv 591
tenderness, not yours, that could not k, „ vi 186
that Which k's me with myself, and drags „ 307
Mammonite mother k's her babe for a burial fee, Maud I i'^
the churchmen fain would k their church, „ II v 28
K the foul thief, and wreak me for my son.' Gareth and L. 363
I speak, and tho' he k me for it, Geraint and E. 137
shivers, ere he springs and k's. Pelleas and E. 286
tho' ye k my hope, not yet my love, ., 303
Christ k me then But I will slice him „ 337
' Will the child k me with her innocent talk ? ' Guinevere 214
' Will the child k me with her foolish prate ? ' „ 225
shall I k myself ? What help in that ? I cannot k my
sin, If soul be soul ; nor can I k my shame ; ., 620
K or be kill'd, live or die, Def. of Lucknoto 41
k Their babies at the breast for hate of Spain — Columbus 179
' K you enemy, for you hate him,' Locksley H., Sixty 94
Mother, dare you k your child ? Forlorn 37
Kill'd I have k my son. I have k him — Dora 159
Till, k with some luxurious agony. Vision of Sin 43
latest fox — where started — k In such a bottom : Aylmer's Field 253
This truthful change in thee has k it. Princess vii 350
bees are still'd, and the flies are k, Window, Winter 10
Or k in falling from his horse. In Mem. vi 40
As the churches have k their Christ. Maud II v 29
I should not less have k him. Geraint and E. 845
fire of Heaven has k the barren cold, Balin and Balan 440
K with a word worse than a Ufe of blows ! Merlin and V. 870
K with vmutterable unkindliness.' „ 886
And here a thrust that might have k, Lancelot and E. 25
AT in a tilt, come nest, five summers back, Guinevere 321
Gawain k In Lancelot's war. Pass, of Arthur 30
they k him, they k him for robbing the mail. Rizpah 34
lawyer who k him and hang'd him there. „ 40
Kill or be k, Uve or die, Def. of Lucknow 41
Those that in barbarian burials k the slave, Locksley H., Sixty 67
tiger madness muzzled, every serpent passion k, „ 167
My quick tears k the flower, Demeter and P. 108
' She has k him, has k him, has k him ' Bandit's Death 36
Eillest 0 thou that k, hads't thou known, Aylmer's Field 738
Killing and, half k him With kisses, Lover's Tale iv 377
Kin lift His axe to slay my k. Talking Oak 236
I am well-to-do — no k, no care, Enoch Arden 418
shafts Of gentle satire, k to charity, Princess ii 469
If easy patrons of their k Third of Feb. 39
but felt him mine, Of closest fc to me : Gareth and L. 127
Thou that art her k. Go hkewise ; „ 378
Thou shalt give back their earldom to thy k. Marr. of Geraint 585
in the field were Lancelot's kith and k, Lancelot and E. 466
drave his kith and k. And all the Table Round „ 498
little cause for laughter : his own k — „ 597
His kith and k, not knowing, set upon him ; „ 599
Past up the still rich city to his k, „ 802
Far up the dim rich city to her k ; „ 845
Lancelot's kith and k so worship him Holy Grail 651
kept our holy faith among her k In secret, „ 697
and all his kith and k Clave to him, Guinevere 439
call My sister's son — no k of mine, „ 573
laid her in the vault of her own k. Lover's Tale iv 39
There was a farmer in Dorset of Harry's k, First Quarrel 17
are they his mother ? are you of his fc ? Eizpah 70
noa, not fur Sally's oan k. North. Cobbler 114
and vaulted our kith and our k, V. of Maeldune 47
serve This mortal race thy k so well, De Prof., Two G. 16
Amy's k and mine are left to me. Locksley H., Sixty 56
Kind (adj.) a nature never k ! Walk, to the Mail 62
K nature is the best : „ 64
' Her kisses were so close and k. Talking Oak 169
love her, as I knew her, k ? Locksley Hall 70
But may she still be it, Will Water. IQ
Whom all men rate as k and hospitable : Princess ill
we ourselves but half as good, as A:, « » 201
Is it A; ? Speak to her I say : ,, vi 248
Kind (adj.) {continued) K, like a man, was he ; like a
man. Grandmother 70
Stiles where we stay'd to be k, Window, Marr. Morn. 7
So fc an office hath been done. In Mem. xvii 17
' How good ! how fc ! and he is gone.' „ xx 20
He looks so cold : she thinks him fc. „ xcvii 24
we cannot be fc to each other here for an hour ; Maud I iv 28
Nor her, who is neither courtly nor fc, „ v 27
her eye seem'd full Of a fc intent to me, „ vi 41
Now I thought she was fc „ xiv 26
And says he is rough but fc, ., xix 70
K ? but the deathbed desire Spurn'd by this heir „ 77
Rough but fc ? yet I know He had plotted against me „ 79
K to Maud ? that were not amiss. „ 82
Well, rough but fc ; why let it be so : „ 83
Not beautiful now, not even fc ; „ II v 06
Is it fc to have made me a grave so rough, „ 97
surely, some fc heart will come To bury me, „ 102
such a silence is more wise than fc.' Merlin and V. 289
And fc the woman's eyes and innocent, Holy Grail 393
thine is more to me — soft, gracious, fc — Last Tournament 560
May those h eyes for ever dwell ! Miller's D. 220
K hearts are more than coronets, L. C. V. de Vere 55
And say to Robin a fc word, May Queen, Con. 45
But though we love fc Peace so well, Third of Feb. 9
' Yea, my fc lord,' said the glad youth, Geraint and E. 241
' Would some of your fc people take him up, „ 543
Manners so fc, yet stately, such a grace „ 861
but his voice and his face were not fc, In the Child. Hosp. 15
the crew were gentle, the captain fc ; The Wreck 129
yer Honour's the thrue ould blood that always manes
to be fc, Tomorrow 5
Than ha' spoken as fc as you did. First Quarrel 73
he was always fc to me. „ 90
for it's fc of you, Madam, to sit by an old dying
wife. Rizpah 21
I think that you mean to be fc, „ 81
so harsh, as those that should be fc ? The Flight 102
you look so fc That you will not deny Somney's R. 21
I coimt you fc, I hold you true ; The Wanderer 13
Kind (s) {See also Human-kind) Yet is there plenty
of the fc.' Two Voices 33
She had the passions of her fc, L. C. V. de Vere 35
Would serve his fc in deed and word. Love thou thy land 86
all k's of thought, That verged upon them, Gardener's D. 70
ever cared to better his own fc, Sea Dreams 201
Beastlier than any phantom of his fc Lucretius 196
Lucius Junius Brutus of my fc ? Princess ii 284
According to the coarseness of their fc, „ iv 346
there grew Another fc of beauty in detail „ 448
in a pleasant fc of a dream. Grandmother 82
Has made me kindly with my fc. In Mem. Ixvi 7
But thou and I are one in fc, „ Ixxix 5
What fc of Ufe is that I lead ; „ Ixxxv 8
I will not shut me from my fc, „ cviii 1
and that of a fc The viler, as underhand, Maud 1 121
I am one with my fc, „ III vi 58
think what fc of bird it is That sings Marr. of Geraint 331
Came purer pleasure unto mortal fc Geraint and E. 765
and to hate his fc With such a hate, Balin and Balan 127
But kindly man moving among his fc : Lancelot and E. 265
Being mirthful he, but in a stately fc — „ 322
in me lived a sin. So strange, of such a fc, Holy Grail 773
Seem'd niy reproach ? He is not of my fc. Pelleas and E. 311
Experience, in her fc Hath foul'd me — Last Tournament 317
chain that bound me to my fc. Locksley H., Sixty 52
sadness at the doubtful doom of human fc ; To Virgil 24
till Self died out in the love of his fc ; Vastness 28
Some half remorseful fc of pity too — The Ring 375
Kinder girl Seem'd fc imto Philip than to him ; Enach Arden 42
The night to me was fc than the day ; Lover's Tale i 611
Kindle The dim curls fc into sunny rings ; Tithonus 54
For an your fire be low ye fc mine ! Gareth and L. 711
leaves i' the middle to fc the fire ; Village Wife 72
they meet And fc generous purpose, Tiresias 128
Kindled
Kindled (adj. and part) {See also AU-kindled, Rosy-
kindled) Eetuming with liot cheek and k eyes,
She spake With k eyes :
Thy gloom is ifc at the tips,
And the Uve green had k into flowers,
hear His voice in battle, and be k by it,
her bloom A rosy dawn k in stainless heavens,
a sacrifice K by fire from heaven :
but k from within As 'twere with dawn.
Mark is fc on thy Ups Most gracious ;
And, who, when his anger was k.
358
King
Alexander 14
Princess Hi 334
In Mem. xxxix 11
Gareth and L. 185
Geraint and E. 175
Pelleas and E. 72
146
Lover's Tale i 73
Last Tournament 561
The Wreck 17
Kindled (verb) When wine and free companions k him, Geraint and E. 293
And k all the plain and all the wold.
k the pyre, and all Stood roimd it,
Kindlier since man's first fall. Did k unto man,
He might be k : happily come the day !
For thro' that dawning gleam'd a k hope
but k than themselves To ailing wife
After an angry dream this it glow
A k influence reign'd ;
And out of memories of her k days,
And each reflects a k day ;
The larger heart, the k hand ;
And yielding to his fc moods.
With all the k colours of the field.'
Our k, trustier Jaques, past away !
and bum the k brutes aUve.
Something k, higher, hoUer —
But yoimger k Gods to bear us down,
Kindliest 0 heart, with k motion warm,
The truest, k, noblest-hearted wife
Kindliness She beloved for a k Kare in Fable
Kindling And Gareth answer'd her with k eyes,
(repeat)
A head with k eyes above the throng.
Balin and Balan 441
Death of CEnone 65
Lancelot and E. 860
Sir J. Oldcastle 23
Enoch Arden 833
Aylmer's Field 176
411
Princess vii 20
106
In Mem. c 18
„ cvi 30
Merlin and V. 174
Last Tournament 224
To W. H. Brookfield 11
Locksley H., Sixty 96
160
Demeter and P. 131
In Mem. Ixxxv 34
Romney's R. 35
On Jub. Q. Victoria 4
Gareth and Z. 41, 62
646
Kindly 0 blessings on his k voice and on his silver hair ! May Queen, Con. 13
6 blessings on his A; heart and on his silver head !
But you can talk ! yours is a A; vein :
break In full and k blossom.
To vaiy from the k race of men.
And the k earth shall slumber.
Proudly tvuns he round and k,
And dwelt a moment on his A: face,
He could not see, the k human face, Nor ever hear
a k voice,
officers and men Levied a k tax upon themselves,
Never one k smile, one k word :
' Nay,' said the k wife to comfort him,
' I loathe it : he had never k heart,
A word, but one, one little k word,
Has made me k with my kind,
half exprest And loyal unto k laws.
To pledge them with a k tear,
How modest, k, all-accomplish'd, wise,
So with a k hand on Gareth's arm
Here ceased the k mother out of breath ;
And all the k warmth of Arthur's hall
But k man moving among his kind :
There the good mother's k ministering,
bear the sword Of Justice — what ! the kingly ifc boy ;
Their k native princes slain or slaved,
I sonow for that k child of Spain
Thanks to the fc dark faces wno fought with us,
And last in k curves, with gentlest fall,
And greet it with a k smile ;
And at home if I sought for a A: caress,
K landlord, boon companion —
From war with A; links of gold,
If, glancing downward on the k sphere
smiled, and making with a k pinch
Nor ever cheer'd you with a k smile,
Kindly-hearted So spake the k-h Earl,
Kindness / could trust Your k.
looking ancient k on thy pain.
I think your ifc breaks me down;
15
Edwin Morris 81
Will Water. 24
Tithonus 29
Locksley Hall 130
L. of Burleigh 55
Eiwch Arden 326
581
663
Aylmer's Field 564
Sea Dreams 140
200
Princess vi 258
In Mem. Ixvi 7
„ Ixxxv 16
xc 10
Bed. of Idylls 18
Gareth and L. 578
Marr. of Geraint 732
Balin and Balan 236
Lancelot and E. 265
Lover's Tale iv 92
Sir J. Oldcastle 8&
Columbus 174
212
Def. of Lucknow 70
De Prof., Two G. 23
To E. Fitzgerald 4
The Wreck 31
Locksley H., Sixty 240
Epilogue 16
Poets and their B. 9
The Ring 314
388
Marr. of Geraint 514
To the Queen 20
Locksley Hall 85
Enoch Arden 318
Kindness (continued) money can be repaid ; Not k
such as yours.'
Soul-stricken at their k to him,
summer of his faded love. Or ordeal by k ;
more in k than in love,
your brother's love. And your good father's k.'
he wrote ' Their k,' and he wrote no more ;
Kindred (adj.) But branches current yet in k veins.
To black and brown on k brows.
To-day they count as k souls ;
But each has pleased a k eye.
Kindred (s) Grate her harsh k in the grass :
Thy k with the great of old.
craft of k and the Godless hosts Of heathen
Kine Sadly the far A; loweth :
fields between Are dewy-fresh, browsed by deep-
udder'd A;,
white k ghmmer'd, and the trees (repeat)
King (See also Sea-king, Warrior-king) Could give
the warrior k's of old,
K's have no such couch as thine,
But the A; of them all would carry me,
' Reign thou apart, a quiet k,
stay'd the Ausonian A; to hear Of wisdom and of law
The heads and crowns of k's ;
black-bearded A;'* with wolfish eyes,
the mighty hearts Of captains and of k's.
kneeling, with one arm about her A;,
took it, and have worn it, like a k :
' It is not meet. Sir K, to leave thee thus.
So strode he back slow to the wounded K. (repeat)
if a A; demand An act unprofitable,
K is sick, and knows not what he does.
Stored in some treasure-house of mighty A;'5,
Authority forgets a dying A:,
And lightly went the other to the K.
So sigh'd the K, Muttering and miumuring
three Queens Put forth their hands, and took the 7\.',
So like' a shatter'd column lay the K ;
charged Before the eyes of ladies and of k's.
And came again together on the k
Enoch Arden 321
Aylmer's Field 525
561
Merlin and V. 907
Lancelot and E. 945
To Marq. of Dufferin 36
1
There came a mystic token from the A;
It little profits that an idle A;,
Than those old portraits of old A;'5,
His state the A; reposing keeps. He must have
been a jovial k.
And last with these the k awoke,
' Pardy,' retum'd the A;, ' but still My joints
In robe and crown the A; stept down,
' Death is k, and Vivat Rex !
No blazon'd statesman he, nor A;.
Like that long-buried body of the A;,
Sprang from the midriff of a prostrate A; —
the voice that calls Doom upon k's,
broke The statues, A; or saint, or founder fell ;
A' of the East altho' he seem,
Whose death-blow struck the dateless doom of k's,
counts and k's Who laid about them at their wills
being strait-besieged By this wild k
my good father thought a ^• a A: ;
they saw the A; ; he took the gifts ;
Tore the k's letter, snow'd it down,
In this report, this answer of a A;,
' No ! ' Roar'd the rough A;, ' you shall not ;
And in the imperial palace found the k.
without a star. Not like a k :
Thus the A; ; And I, tho' nettled
show'd the late-writ lettei-s of the A:.
' If the A;,' he said, ' Had given us lettere,
The k would bear him out : '
when the A; Kiss'd her pale cheek,
' Our A; expects — was there no precontract ?
kept her state, and left the drunken k
the tumult and the k's Were shadows ;
old k's Began to wag their baldness
Princess ii 245
In Mem. Ixxix 16
„ xcix 19
en
Princess iv 125
In Mem. Ixxiv 8
Guinevere 427
Leonine Eleg. 9
Gardener's D. 46
In Mem. xcv 15, 51
To the Queen 4
A Dirge 40
The Mermaid 45
Palace of Art 14
111
152
D. of F. Women 111
176
270
M. d' Arthur 33
40
65,112
95
97
101
121
147
178
206
221
225
Audley Court 36
Edwin Morris 132
Ulysses 1
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 23
39
„ Revival 17
25
Beggar Maid 5
Vision of Sin 179
You might have won 24
Aylmer's Field 3
16
742
Sea Dreams 224
Lucretius 133
„ 236
Princess, Pro. 30
37
i25
46
61
70
87
113
118
162
175
180
182
ii 263
Hi 207
229
iv 564
vl8
' A', you are free ! We did but keep you
King
King (continued)
surety
(thus the K Roar'd) make yourself a man to fight
and without Found the gray K's at parte :
' Not war, if possible, O k,' I said,
I hold her, k, True woman :
Then rode we with the old k across the lawns
mfuse my tale of love In the old k's ears,
then rose a cry As if to greet the k ;
then took the k His three broad sons ;
Hungry for honour, angry for his k.
' Boys ! ' shriek'd the old k,
I told the k that I was pledged To fight in tourney
sit Upon a k's right hand in thunder-storms,
the spindUng A:, This Gama swamp'd in lazy tolerance
Thus the hard old A; : I took my leave
I thought on all the wrathful k had said,
A , camp and college turned to hollow shows •
km bitter scorn Drew from my neck the painting
the small k moved beyond his wont.
Before these k's we embrace you yet once more
Help, father, brother, help ; speak to the k •
Passionate tears Follow'd : the k replied not •
the k her father charm'd Her wouncfed soul
The A; is scared, the soldier will not fight
More joyful than the city-roar that hails'Premier
or k !
Guarding reahns and k's from shame ;
And barking for the thrones of k's ;
Our loyal passion for our temperate k's :
O silent father of our K's to be
Bride of the heir of the k's of the sea-
Love by right divine is deathless k,
'The K is happy In child and wife ;
The K was hunting in the wild ;
The K retum'd from out the wild,
The A' bent low, with hand on brow,
The A' was shaken with holy fear ;
1 11 be K of the Queen of the wrens
The fire-crown'd k of the wrens,
flit like the k of the wrens with a crown of fire
He play'd at counsellors and k's,
flings Her shadow on the blaze of k's :
By blood a k, at heart a clown ;
Love is and was my Lord and A',
Love is and was my K and Lord'
And play the game of the despot k's,
Who reverenced his conscience as his A; •
Thou noble Father of her K's to be '
Leodogean, the K of Cameliard, '
many a petty k ere Arthur came Ruled in this isle,
iheir A; and head, and made a realm, and reign'd
And wallow'd in the gardens of the K
then his brother k, Urien, assail'd him':
the A Sent to him, saying, ' Arise, and help us
tnese, CoUeaguing with a score of petty k's,
Ihis is the son of Gorlois, not the A ; This is the
son of Anton, not the A.'
What happiness to reign a lonely k,
when the A had set his banner broad,
now the Barons and the k's prevail'd, And now the A',
leading all his knighthood threw the k's
Thou dost not doubt me A,
I know thee for my A ! '
Debating—' How should I that am a k,
Give my one daughter saving to a k, And a k's son ? '—
&ir K, there be but two old men that know :
when they came before him, the K said,
Whenever slander breathed against the A—
bo^ compass'd by the power of the A,
Here IS Uther's heir, your k,' A hundred voices
cned Away with him ! No A; of ours ! a son
of Gorlois he, Or else the child of Anton, and
no A:,
And while the people clamour'd for a k.
359
King
Princess v 24
34
114
126
179
236
241
249
268
314
328
352
439
442
467
473
478
vil09
265
294
305
312
345
Con. 60
102
Ode on Well. 68
121
165
Ode Inter. Exhib. 7
W. to Alexandra 28
W. to Marie Alex. 29
The Victim 25
30
41
53
57
Window, Spring 15
Ay 8
16
In Mem, Ixiv 23
>, xcviii 19
.. cxi 4
„ cxxvi 1
5
Mavd I x39
Bed. of Idylls 8
34
Com. of Arthur 1
5
19
25
35
43
67
73
82
101
105
111
126
130
141
143
149
166
177
203
230
235
Vp5t!^!*^^^^■°•'■^^^y"^' ^ *^«y ^at at meat,
Yea, but ye— thmk ye this A:—
. 2 ^f/ s^® cried, ' and I wiU tell thee :
Be thou the A;, and we wiU work thy wiU
Ihen the K in low deep tones
flash A momentary likeness of 'the A ■
fehe gave the A his huge cross-hilted sword,
bo this great brand the A; Took
therefore Arthur's sister ? ' asked the A
this A IS fau- Beyond the race of Britons
Ay said the K, ' and hear ye such a cry ?
A ! she cried, ' and I wiU tell thee true • '
1 surely thought he would be A;.
two^pf7fhf/f nf r-''*'"^ tb« -^. Uther, before he died ;
PripH ' Th W" ^ ' ^"^ P^''^ f «^th to breathe,
cnea I he AT ! Here is an heir for Uther ' '
^ ear not to give this A thine only child
Speak of the a: ; and Merhn in our time Hath spoken
Till these and all men hail him for their A: '
a phantom k. Now looming, and now lost •
while the phantom A; Sent out at times a voice •
crying No A: of ours, No son of Uther, and no A; of
but the A stood out in heaven, Crown'd.
the K That mom was married,
The Sun of May descended on their A'
A and my lord, I love thee to the death ! '
fulfil the boimdless purpose of their K ' '
Arthur's knighthood sang before the A •—
Let the A reign.' (repeat) Com. of Arthur 484, 487, 490
' Strike for the K and live ! his knights have ^^^' ^^^' ^^^' ^^
' ^t^ f^^^t ^""r? ^ath told the A a secret word. Com. of Arthur 488
^i"^« £?f the A and die ! and if thou diest, ^
Ihe AT IS AT,
'The K wiU foUow Christ, and we the A"
To wage my wars, and worship me their A ;
the A Drew m the petty princedoms under him
as a false knight Or evil A; before my lance
Then were I wealthier than a leash of k's '
ever smce when traitor to the A He fought
mother, there was once a A, like oure.
the a: Set two before him. One was fair
And these were the conditions of the A • '
follow the Christ, the K, Live pure, speak true
right wrong, follow the A—
Or will not deem him, wholly proven A— Albeit in
mine own heart I knew him K,
Life, limbs, for one that is not proven A' ^
Who should be A save him who makes us free ? '
Before you ask the K to make thee knight
Nor tell my name to any— no, not the K''
city of Enchanter's, built By fairy K's.'
this K IS not the K, But only changeling out of
rairyland,
come to see The glories of our A •
Doubt if the AT be A at all, or come From Fairy-
land ; and whether this be built By magic, and
by fairy K's and Queens ; •' "& '
a Fairy A And Fairy Queens have builfc the city
1' or there is nothing in it as it seems Saving the
A ; tho some there be that hold The A a
shadow, and the city real :
for the K WiU bind thee by such vows,
And now thou goest up to mock the K,
ancient k's who did their days in stone ;
As in the presence of a gracious A;.
A Throned, and delivering doom—
The truthful K will doom me when I speak.'
and faith m their great A, with pure Affection
a widow crying to the A, ' A boon, Sir A '
^ A boon. Sir K ! Thine enemy A, am I
A boon, Sir a: ! I am her kinsman, I.
Com. of Arthur 238
246
250
254
259
260
271
286
308
317
330
337
339
358
365
369
385
413
419
424
430
436
439
443
455
462
470
475
481
500
508
516
Gareth and L. 6
51
76
101
103
107
117
122
129
138
145
171
200
202
244
246
258
265
269
292
305
316
320
324
330
333
351
365
King
360
King
King (continued) came Sir Kay, the seneschal, and
cried, ' A boon. Sir K ! Gareth and L. 368
Arthur, ' We sit K, to help the wrong'd Thro' all
our realm. „ 371
k's of old had doom'd thee to the flames, „ 374
that rough himiour of the fc's of old Return „ 377
According to the justice of the K : Then, be he
guilty, by that deathless K Who lived and died „ 381
name of evil savour in the land, The Cornish k. „ 386
Delivering, that his lord, the vassal k, „ 391
Being a k, he trusted his liege-lord „ 396
made him knight because men call him k. „ 420
The k's we found, ye know we stay'd their hands
From war among themselves, but left them k's ; „ 422
Mark hath tamish'd the great name of k, „ 426
Approach'd between them toward the K, „ 441
' A boon. Sir K (his voice was all ashamed), „ 442
To him the K, ' A goodly youth and worth a
goodUer boon ! „ 448
Think ye this fellow will poison the K's dish ? „ 471
Gareth bow'd himself With all obedience to the K, „ 488
one would praise the love that linkt the K And
Lancelot — ^how the K had saved his life In battle
twice, and Lancelot once the K's — „ 492
On Caer-Eryri's highest f oimd the K, A naked babe, „ 500
nay, the K's — Descend into the city : ' „ 539
whereon he sought The K alone, and foimd, „ 541
the K's calm eye Fell on, and check'd, „ 547
And uttermost obedience to the K.' „ 555
' My K, for hardihood I can promise thee. „ 557
K — ' Make thee my knight in secret ? „ 563
Let Lancelot know, my K, let Lancelot know, „ 567
K — ' But wherefore would ye men should wonder
at you ? „ 569
rather for the sake of me, their K, „ 571
on Gareth's arm Smiled the great K, „ 579
' O K, for thou hast driven the foe without, „ 593
Rest would I not, Sir K, wal were k, „ 597
' They be of foolish fashion, O Sir K, „ 628
such As have nor law nor k ; „ 632
' A boon, Sir JST— this quest ! ' ,,647
K, thou knowest thy kitchen-knave am I, „ 649
Thy promise, K,' and Arthur glancing at him, „ 652
she Wted either arm, ' Fie on thee, K ! „ 658
Fled down the lane of access to the K, „ 661
pavement where the K would pace At simrise, „ 667
And out by this main doorway past the K. „ 671
and cried, ' God bless the K, and all his fellowship ! ' „ 698
the K hath past his time — My scullion knave ! „ 709
Thence, if the K awaken from his craze, „ 724
' Kay, wherefore wilt thou go against the K, „ 727
But ever meekly served the K in thee ? „ 729
' Wherefore did the K Scorn me ? „ 737
In uttermost obedience to the K. „ 833
And pray'd the K would grant me Lancelot .< 856
whether she be mad, or else the K, „ 875
To crave again Sir Lancelot of the K. „ 882
shame the K for only yielding me My champion „ 898
lay Among the ashes and wedded the K's son.' „ 904
The K in utt«r scorn Of thee and thy much folly „ 918
take his horse And arms, and so return him to the K. „ 956
and thee the K Gave me to guard, / „ 1013
and Gareth sent him to the K. „ 1051
hath not oiu good K Who lent me thee, „ 1070
thought the K Scom'd me and mine ; „ 1165
Saving that you mistrusted our good K „ 1172
knight art thou To the K's best wish. „ 1259
They bate the K, and Lancelot, the K's friend, „ 1418
going to the k, He made this pretext, Marr. of Oeraint 32
K himself should please To cleanse this common sewer „ 38
and the k Mused for a little on bis plea, „ 41
Forgetful of his promise to the K, „ 50
these things he told the K. Then the good K gave
order to let blow His boms „ 151
not mindful of hia face In the K's hall, „ 192
King {continued) were she the daughter of a k, Marr. of Geraint 229
In the great battle fighting for the K. „ 596
But this was in the garden of a fc ; „ 656
children of the K in cloth of gold Glanced ,, 664
I come the mouthpiece of our K to Doorm (The
K is close behind me) Geraint and E. 796
Submit, and bear the judgment of the K.' „ 799
' He hears the judgment of the K of k's,' ,, 800
in the K's own ear Speak what has chanced ; „ 808
Fearing the mild face of the blameless K, „ 812
the K himself Advanced to greet them, „ 878
So spake the K ; low bow'd the Prince, „ 920
came The K's own leech to look into his hurt ; „ 923
blameless K went forth and cast his eyes „ 932
to guard the justice of the K : „ 934
there he kept the justice of the K „ 956
In battle, fighting for the blameless K. „ 970
Pellam the K, who held and lost with Lot Balin and Balan 1
ye be sent for by the K,' They follow'd ;
K, Methought that if we sat beside the well,
move To music with thine Order and the K.
'' Sir K' they brought report ' we hardly found,
the K Took, as in rival heat, to holy things ;
This gray K Show'd us a shrine wherein were wonders —
the K So prizes — overprizes — gentleness.
I pray the K To let me bear some token of his Queen
she smiled and turn'd her to the K,
The crown is but the shadow of the K,
But light to me ! no shadow, O my K,
move In music with his Order, and the K.
court and K And all the kindly warmth of Arthur's hall
Whom all men rate the k of courtesy.
Our noble K will send thee his own leech —
stay'd to crave permission of the K,
the castle of a K, the hall Of Pellam,
found the greetings both of knight and K
and break the K And all his Table.'
Behold, I fly from shame, A lustful K,
Wilt surely guide me to the warrior K,
wander'd from her own K's golden head,
' Rise, my sweet K, and kiss me on the lips.
Meet is it the good K be not deceived.
Mark The Cornish K, had heard a wandering voice. Merlin
My father died in battle against the K,
Thy blessing, stainless K !
My father died in battle for thy K,
Poor wretch — no friend ! — and now by Mark the K
stainless bride of stainless K —
narrow court and lubber K, farewell !
the K Had gazed upon her blankly and gone by :
Vivien should attempt the blameless K.
Had built the K his havens, ships, and halls,
(As sons of k's loving in pupilage
' There lived a A; in the most Eastern East,
The K impaled him for his piracy ;
brutes of mountain back That carry k's in castles,
a wizard who might teach the K Some charm.
He promised more than ever k has given,
the K Pronounced a dismal sentence.
Or like a k, not to be trifled with —
And so by force they dragg'd him to the K. And
then he taught the K to charm the Queen In
such-wise, that no man could see her more. Nor
saw she save the K, who wrought the charm, „ 640
K Made proffer of the league of golden mines, „ 645
holy k, whose hymns Are chanted in the minster, „ 765
A rumour runs, she took him for the K, „ 776
Arthur, blameless K and stainless man ? ' „ 779
the good k means to blind himself, „ 783
were he not crown'd K, coward, and fool.' „ 789
' O true and tender ! O my liege and K I „ 791
the court, the K, dark in your light, „ 875
Arthur, long before they crown'd him K, Lancelot and E. 34
two brothers, one a k, had met And fought „ 39
he, that once was k, had on a crown Of diamonds, „ 45
and
King
361
King
ITing {continued) Heard murmurs, ' Lo, thou likewise
shalt be K.' Thereafter, when a K, he had the
gems Pluck'd from the crown.
Lancelot and E. 55
I chanced Divinely, are the kingdom's, not the K's —
Ljincelot, where he stood beside the K.
' Sir K, mine ancient wound is hardly whole,
the K Glanced first at him, then her,
take Their pastime now the trustful K is gone ! '
while the k Would listen smiling.
' Arthur, my lord, Arthur, the faultless K,
I Before a k who honours his own word,
our true k Will then allow your pretext,
I might guess thee chief of those, After the K,
By castle Gumion, where the glorious K
I myself beheld the K Charge at the head
the K, However mUd he seems at home.
The dread Pendragon, Britain's K of k's,
Until they f oimd the clear-faced K,
Blazed the last diamond of the nameless k.
K, duke, earl. Count, baron —
waste marches, k's of desolate isles,
knights and it's, there breathes not one of you
Wroth that the K's command to sally forth
made him leave The banquet, and concourse of
knights and k's.
ridd'n away to die ? ' So fear'd the A',
And when the K demanded how she knew,
hide his name From all men, ev'n the K,
Then replied the K : ' Far lovelier in oiu: Lancelot
Sxirely his K and most familiar friend
flimg herself Down on the great K's couch,
O loyal nephew of our noble K,
Why slight your K ! And lose the quest
' Right was the K ! our Lancelot !
there told the K What the K knew,
The seldom-frowning K f rown'd.
Obedience is the courtesy due to k's.'
Some read the K's face, some the Queen's,
prize the diamond sent you by the K : '
told him all the tale Of K and Prince,
Until we found the palace of the K.
■ Until I find the palace of the K.
there the K will know me and my love.
Or come to take the K to Fairyland ?
While thus they babbled of the K, the K Came
Low in the dust of half -forgotten k's,
Then answer'd Lancelot, ' Fair she was, my K,
* Free love, so bound, were freest,' said the K.
Why did the K dwell on my name to me ?
' Thou art fair, my child. As a k's son,'
Stamp'd with the image of the K ;
crown thee k Far in the spiritual city : '
' What said the K ? Did Arthur take the vow ? '
' Nay, for my lord,' said Percivale, ' the K, Was
not in hall :
K arose and went To smoke the scandalous hive
whence the K Look'd up, calUng aloud.
Behold it, crying, ' We have still a K.'
Streams thro' the twelve great battles of our K.
to this hall full quickly rode the K,
then the K Spake to me, being nearest.
My K, thou wouldst have sworn.'
' Ah, Galahad, Galahad,' said the K,
(Brother, the K was hard upon his knights)
it pleased the K to range me close After Sir Galahad) ;
A, Before ye leave him for this Quest,
Built by old k's, age after age,
K himself had fears that it would fall,
the K himself could hardly speak For grief,
' Thereafter, the dark warning of our K,
and one will crown me k Far in the spiritual city ;
«ave that some ancient k Had built a way.
Rejoicing in ourselves and in our K —
Tell me, and what said eadi, and what the K ? '
Tvords Of so great men as%uancelot and our K
59
85
93
94
101
115
121
143
152
184
293
303
310
424
432
444
464
527
540
560
562
568
575
581
588
592
610
652
654
665
706
715
718
727
821
824
1044
1051
1058
1257
1260
1338
1374
1380
1402
1410
Holy Grail 27
„ 161
204
213
218
245
250
258
267
278
293
299
307
324
340
341
354
368
482
501
687
710
713
King (continued) those that had not, stood before the K, Holy Grail 724
Among the strange devices of our k's ; „ 730
stood, Until the K espied him, saying „ 755
Lancelot,' ask'd the K, ' my friend, „ 764
' O ^ ! ' — ^and when he paused, methought I spied „ 767
' O K, my friend, if friend of thine I be, „ 769
But such a blast, my K, began to blow, „ 795
Now bolden'd by the silence of his K, — „ 857
' O K, my liege^' he said, ' Hath Gawain fail'd „ 858
' Deafer,' said the blameless K, „ 869
if the K Had seen the sight he would have sworn
the vow : „ 903
the K must guard That which he rules, „ 905
spake the K : I knew not all he meant.' „ 920
Sir K, All that belongs to knighthood, Pelleas and E. 8
there were those who knew him near the K, „ 15
to find Caerleon and the K, „ 22
I Go likewise : shall I lead you to the K ? ' „ 107
he knew himself Loved of the K : „ 154
she mock'd his vows and the great K, „ 252
the K hath boimd And sworn me to this brotherhood ; ' „ 448
the K Hath made us fools and liars. „ 478
' Is the K true ? ' ' The K ! ' said Percivale. „ 535
To whom the K, ' Peace to thine eagle-borne Last Tournament 33
Arm'd for a day of glory before the K. „ 55
A churl, to whom indignantly the K. „ 61
' Tell thou the K and all his liars, „ 77
and tend him curiously Like a k's heir, „ 91
Yet better if the K abide, „ 109
for the K has wUl'd it, it is well.' „ 111
the K Tiuu'd to him saying, ' Is it then so well ? „ 113
cursed The dead babe and the follies of the K ; „ 163
Are winners in this pastime of our K. „ 199
Dagonet, skipping, Arthur, the K's ; „ 262
Innocence the Queen Lent to the K, and Innocence
the K Gave for a prize — „ 294
' Fear God : honour the K — „ 302
but when the K Had made thee fool, „ 305
— but never a k's fool.' „ 324
our K Was victor wellnigh day by day, „ 334
whether he were K by courtesy. Or K by right — „ 341
so went harping down The black k's highway, „ 343
is the K thy brother fool ? ' „ 352
' Ay, ay, my brother fool, the k of fools ! „ 354
Mark her lord had past, the Cornish K, „ 382
Isolt, the daughter of the K? „ 397
In blood-red armour sallying, howl'd to the K, „ 443
Lo ! art thou not that eunuch-hearted K „ 445
Art thou K ?— Look to thy life ! ' ,,454
Nor heard the K for their own cries, „ 472
ere I mated with my shambling k, „ 544
K was all f ulfiU'd with gratefulness, „ 593
The man of men, our K—My God, the power Was
once in vows when men believed the K ! „ 648
thro' their vows The K prevailing made his realm : — „ 651
I swore to the great K, and am forewom. „ 661
thro' the flesh and blood Of our old K's : „ 687
Order, which our K Hath newly founded, „ 741
He chill'd the popular praises of the K Guinevere 13
He, reverencing k's blood in a bad man, „ 37
he was answer'd softly by the K And all his Table. „ 44
Beside the placid breathings of the K, „ 69
Till ev'n the clear face of the guileless K, „ 85
Before the people, and our lord the K. „ 92
(When the good K should not be there) „ 97
while the K Was waging war on Lancelot : „ 155
what a hate the people and the K Must hate me,' „ 157
weigh your sorrows with our lord the K's, „ 191
the K's grief For his own self, and his own Queen, „ 196
talk at Almesbury About the good K and his wicked
Queen, And were I such a K with such a Queen, „ 209
But were I such a K, it could not be.' „ 212
What canst thou know of K's and Tables Roimd, „ 228
sang the K As weUnigh more than man, „ 286
Till he by miracle was approven K : „ 296
King
362
Kinsman
King {continued) Lancelot or our lord the A' ? '
the K In open battle or the tilting-field
Sir Lancelot's, were as noble as the K's,
That crown'd the state pavilion of the E,
point where first she saw the K Ride toward her
Then on a sudden a cry, ' The K.'
She made her face a darkness from the A' :
but tho' changed, the K's :
He spared to lift his hand against the A'
That I the K should greatly care to live ;
I was first of all the k's who drew The knighthood-errant
and swear To reverence the K, as if he were Their
conscience, and their conscience as their A',
Better the K's waste hearth and aching heart
nay, they never were the K's.
They simimon me their K to lead mine hosts
She felt the K's breath wander o'er her neck,
The moony vapour rolling round the A,
Gone, my lord the A, My own true lord !
he, the K, Call'd me polluted :
blessed be the A, who hath forgiven My wickedness
Is there none Will tell the K I love him
broke The vast design and purpose of the A',
wrought the ruin of my lord the A.'
Heard in his tent the moanings of the A' :
Hail, K ! to-morrow thou shalt pass away.
' O me, my A, let pass whatever wiU,
Eight well in heart they know thee for the A".
brake the petty k's, and fought with Rome,
k who fights his people fights himself,
rose the A and moved his host by night,
he that fled no further fly the K ;
pale A glanced across the field Of battle :
Had held the field of battle was the A :
Nor whence I am, nor whether I be K. Behold,
I seem but A among the dead.'
' My A, A everywhere ! and so the dead have k's,
There also will I worship thee as A.
Then spake the A : ' My house hath been my doom,
even while they brake them, own'd me K.
That quick or dead thou boldest me for AT. K am
I, whatsoever be their cry ;
And uttering this the A Made at the man :
And took it, and have worn it, like a k ;
' It is not meet. Sir A, to leave thee thus.
So strode he back slow to the wounded K. (repeat)
if a A; demand An act unprofitable.
The A is sick, and knows not what he does.
Stored in some treasure-house of mighty k's,
Authority forgets a dying k,
And lightly went the other to the A.
sigh'd the K, Muttering and murmuring at his ear,
three Queens Put forth their hands, and took the A,
So like a shatter'd column lay the K ;
charged Before the eyes of ladies and of k's.
and he groan'd, ' The A is gone.'
' He passes to be A among the dead,
Around a k returning from his wars,
thought he saw, the speck that bare the K,
Rather than that gray k, whose name, a ghost,
where I hoped myself to reign as k, There, where
that day I crown'd myself as k.
But rich as for the nuptials of a k.
The K should have made him a soldier,
an' hallus as droonk as a A:,
The k was on them suddenly with a host.
but the k — nor voice Nor finger raised
to take the k along with him —
So to this k I cleaved :
Priests Who fear the k's hard common-sense
That was a miracle to convert the k.
Does the k know you deign to vLsit him
Before his people, like his brother k ?
the k, the queen Bad me be seated, speak,
the k, the queen, Sank from their thrones.
Guinevere 326
331
351
399
403
411
417
421
437
452
460
468
524
552
570
582
601
616
619
634
651
670
Pass, of Arthur 8
34
51
63
68
72
79
89
126
138
145
147
154
158
161
164
201
208
„ 233,280
263
265
269
289
315
346
374
389
393
448
449
461
465
To the Queen ii 39
Lover's Tale i 591
iv 212
Rizpah 28
North. Cobbler 27
Sir J. Oldcastle 41
44
49
61
66
178
Columbus 4
6
10
14
King {continued) showing courts and k's a truth the babe Columbus 37
outbuzz'd me so That even our proudest k, „ 122
put by, scouted by court and k — „ 165
tell the K, that I, Rack'd as I am with gout, „ 234
And readier, if the A would hear, „ 238
Each of them look'd like a k, V. of Maeldune 3
and the glories of fairy k's ; „ 90
Five young k's put asleep by the sword-stroke, Batt. of Brunanburh 52
Fleeted his vessel to sea with the k in it, „ 60
Also the brethren. A' and Atheling, „ 101
0 YOU that were eyes and light to the A' To Prin. F. of H. 1
the blind A sees you to-day, „ 3
A, that hast reigri'd six hundred years, To Dante 1
Are slower to forgive than human k's. Tiresias 10
The madness of our cities and their k's. „ 71
And mingled with the famous k's of old, „ 171
make thy gold thy vassal not thy k. Ancient Sage 259
Could keep their haithen k's in the flesh Tomorrow 70
a cat may looiik at a A; thou knaws Spinster's S's. 34
Assyrian k's would flay Captives Locksley H., Sixty 79
Sons of God, and k's of men in utter nobleness „ 122
Teach your flatter'd k's that only those who cannot read „ 132
perfect peoples, perfect k's. „ 186
cried the k of sacred song ; „ 201
k's and realms that pass to rise no more ; To Virgil 28
Was one of the people's k's, Dead Prophet 10
The k's and the rich and the poor ; „ 40
. shadow of a likeness to the k Of shadows, Demeter and P. 16
Three dark ones in the shadow with thy K. „ 122
An' 'e kep his head hoop like a k, Owd Pod 9
Old Empires, dwellings of the k's of men ; Prog, of Spring 99
city and palace Of Arthur the k ; Merlin and the G. 66
The k who loved me. And cannot die ; „ 79
like a lonely man In the k's garden, Akbar's Dream 21
To wreathe a crown not only for the k „ 23
may not k's Express Him also by their warmth „ 108
fuiy of peoples, and Christless frolic of k's, The Dawn 7
' Gallant Sir Ralph,' said the k. The Tourney 6
' O what an arm,' said the k. „ 12
' Take her Sir Ralph,' said the k. „ 18
Eing-bom k-b, A shepherd all thy life but yet k-b, Qinone 127
Kingcup (adj.) betwixt the whitening sloe And k blaze, To Mary Boyle 26
Kingcup (s) The gold-eyed k's fine ; A Dirge 36
Daisies and k's and honeysuckle-flowers.' City Child 10
Rose-campion, bluebell, k, poppy, Last Tournament 234
The k fills her footprint. Prog, of Spring 59
Kingdom {See also Under-ldngdom) divided quite
The k of her thought. Palace of Art 228
But thou, while k's overset. Talking Oak 257
A k topples over with a shriek Like an old
woman, Princess, Con. 62
But either fail'd to make the k one. Com. of Arthur 15
are the k's, not the King's— Lancelot and E. 59
Until it came a k's curse with thee — Guinevere 550
More worth than all the k's of this world. Sir J. Oldcastle 77
K's and Republics fall, Locksley H., Sixty 159
1 am heir, and this my k. By an Evolution. 14
fur owt but the K o' Heaven ; Church-warden, etc. 44
Kinghood one last act of k shalt thou see Pass, of Arthur 163
Kingless those three k years Have past — Balin and Balan 63
Kingliest Thou art the k of all kitchen-knaves. Gareth and L. 1158
Kinglihood The golden symbol of his k. Com. of Arthur 50
King-like K-l, wears the crown : Of old sat Freedom 16
Kingly Thy k intellect shall feed. Clear-headed friend 20
With merriment of k pride, Arabian Nights 151
bear the sword Of Justice — what ! the k, kindly boy ; Sir J. Oldcastle 88
Kinship A distant k to the gracious blood Aylmer's Field 62
Kinsman With many kinsmen gay. Will Water. 90
My lady's Indian k unannounced Aylmer's Field 190
' Good ! my lady's k ! good ! ' „ 198
she, Once with this k, ah so long ago, „ 206
My lady's Indian k rushing in, „ 593
Sleep, k thou to death and trance In Mem. Ixxi 1
' A boon, Sir King ! I am her k, I. Gareth and L. 365
him Whose k left him watcher o'er his wife Merlin and V. 706
Kinsman
363
Kiss'd
Kinsman {continued) Hia k travelling on his own affair Merlin and V. 717
but then A k, dying, summon'd me to Rome — The Ring 178
him, who left you wealth, Your k? „ 189
Kirtle blood Was sprinkled on your k, Princess ii 274
Kiss (s) {See also Bride-kiss) kiss sweet k'es, and
speak sweet words : Sea- Fairies 34
Yet fill my glass : give me one k : Miller's D. 17
The k, The woven arms, seem but to be Weak symbols „ 231
once he drew With one long k my whole soul Fatima 20
that quick-falling dew Of fruitful k'es, CEnone 205
Seal'd it with k'es ? water'd it with tears ? „ 234
the wild k, when fresh from war's alarms, D. of F. Women 149
Because the k he gave me, ere I fell, „ 235
worth a hundred k'es press'd on lips Gardener's D. 151
k'es, where the heart on one wild leap „ 259
' Her k'es were so close and kind, Talking Oak 169
I would have paid her k for k, „ 195
that last k, which never was the last, Love and Duty 67
k'es balmier than half-opening buds Of April, Tithonus 59
His own are pouted to a A; : Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 31
A TOUCH, a k ! the charm was snapt. „ Revival 1
0 love, for such another fc ; ' „ Depart. 10
' O happy k, that woke thy sleep ! ' '0 love,
thy k would wake the dead ! ' „ 19
evermore a costly k The prelude to some
brighter world. „ L' Envoi ZQ
A sleep by k'es imdissolved, „ 51
1 never felt the k of love, Sir Galahad 19
' Yet give one k to your mother dear ! Lady Clare 49
' Yet here's a k for my mother dear, „ 53
To waste his whole heart in one k Sir L. and Q. G. 44
Many a sad k by day by night renew'd Enoch Arden 161
Never : no father's k for me — „ 790
that one k Was Leolin's one strong rival Aylmer's Field 556
and ran To greet him with a k, Lucretius 7
httle maid, That ever crow'd for fc'w.' Princess ii 280
' Dear as remember'd k'es after death, „ iv 54
her mother, shore the tress With k'es, „ vi 114
In glance and smile, and clasp and k. In Mem. Ixxxiv 7
And every k of toothed wheels, „ cxvii 11
She took the k sedately ; Maud I xii 14
made my Maud by that long loving k, „ xviii 58
embraces Mixt with k'es sweeter sweeter „ // iv 9
had been A clinging k — Merlin and V. 106
I am silent then, And ask nok:' „ 254
Win ! by this k you will : Lancelot and E. 152
Yet rosy-kindled with her brother's k — „ 393
we twain Had never kiss'd a k, or vow'd a vow. Holy Grail 584
Constraining it with k'es close and warm, Lover's Tale i 468
answering lisp'd To k'es of the wind, „ 545
Love drew in her breath In that close k, „ 817
and, half killing him With k'es, „ iv 378
then I minded the fust k 1 gied 'er North. Cobbler 45
An' I says ' I mun gie tha a k,' „ 51
I gied 'er a k, an' then anoother, „ 52
Sally gied me a A; ov 'ersen. „ 56
Heer wur a fall fro' a A: to a kick „ 57
fatal k. Bom of true life and love, Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 2
k fell chill as a flake of snow on the cheek : The Wreck 32
Never a fc so sad, no, not since the coming of man ! Despair 60
sowl dead for a A: of ye, Molly Magee. Tomorrow 40
tha may gie ma a k, Spinster's S's. 31
Before a fc should wake her. The Ring 67
then with my latest fc Upon them, „ 298
That trembles not to k'es of the bee : Prog, of Spring 4
1 I blind your pretty blue eyes with a fc ! Roviney's R. 101
Too early blinded by the fc of death — „ 103
his k'es were red with his crime, Bandit's Death 13
Kiss (verb) When I would fc thy hand, Madeline 31
If my lips should dare to fc Thy taper fingers „ 43
fc sweet kisses, and speak sweet words : Sea- Fairies 34
1 would k them often under the sea. And fc them again
till they kiss'd me (repeat) The Merman 15, 34
And fc away the bitter words From off your rosy
mouth. Rosalind 50
Kiss (verb) (continued) You'll fc me, my own mother. May Queen, N. Y.'s E.[34i
I have been to blame. K me, my children.' Dora 162
0 fc him once for me. Talking Oak 240
' O fc him twice and thrice for me, That have no lips
to fc, „ 241
1 fc it twice, I fc it thrice, |f| „ 253
Go to him : it is thy duty : fc him : Locksley Hall 52
He stoops — to A; her — on his knee. Day-Dm., Arrival ZO
That I might fc those eyes awake ! „ L' Envoi 28
I fc the lips I once have kiss'd ; Will Water. 37
I cry to thee To fc thy Mavors, Lucretius 82
And fc again with tears ! Princess ii 9
He reddens what he k'es : ,. v 165
fc her ; take her hand, she weeps : „ vi 225
K and be friends, like children being chid ! „ 289
Stoop down and seem to fc me ere I die.' ,. vii 150
as good to cuddle an' fc as a lass as 'ant nowt ? N. Farmer, N. S. 24
Trail and twine and clasp and fc, K, fc ; Window, At the Wind. 4
Drop me a flower, a flower, to fc, K, fc — „ 11
Farewell, we fc, and they are gone. In Mem., Con. 92
flush, and bow Lowly, to fc his hand, Gareth and L. 549
To stoop and fc the tender little thumb, Marr. of Geraint 395
' Rise, my sweet King, and k me on the lips, Balin and Balan 516
tread me down And I will fc you for it ; ' Merlin and V. 229
pearls Ran down the silken thread to fc each other „ 455
we fc the child That does the task assign'd, Lancelot and E. 828
he bow'd to fc the jewell'd throat, Last Tournament 751
let us in, tho' late, to fc his feet ! Guinevere 178
ail's of Heaven Should fc with an unwonted
gentleness. Lover's Tale i 739
And fc her on the lips. She is his no more : „ iv 48
and I go down To fc the dead.' „ 50
* K him,' she said. ' You gave me life again. „ 172
K him, and then Forgive him, „ 174
an' fc you before I go.' First Quarrd 46
Didn't you fc me an' promise ? „ 53
— you'll k me before I go ? ' „ 80
fc her — if you will,' I said — „ 81
You wouldn't fc me, my lass, „ 86
and he call'd to me ' AT me ! ' The Wreck 104
I stoopt To take and fc the ring. The Ring 132
nurse is waiting. K me child and go. „ 489
when I let him fc my brow ; Happy 65
I am happy, happy. K me. „ 107
Kiss'd dew-impearl'd winds of dawn have fc. Ode to Memory 14
And kiss them again till they fc me (repeat) The Merman 16, 35
I would not be fc by all who would list, The Mermaid 41
And if you fc her feet a thousand years. The form, the form 13
' His little daughter, whose sweet face He fc, Two Voices 254
I fc away before they fell. Miller's D. 152
I fc his eyelids into rest : The Sisters 19
girls all fc Beneath the sacred bush The Epic 2
So the women fc Each other, Dora 128
clung about The old man's neck, and fc him many times. „ 164
She turn'd, we closed, we fc, swore faith, Edwin Morris 114
And found, and fc the name she found, Talking Oak 159
She fc me once again. „ 168
could hear the hps that fc Whispering Tithonus 60
I kiss the lips I once have fc ; Will Water. 37
He turn'd and fc her where she stood : Lady Clare 82
And k his wonder-stricken little ones ; Enoch Arden 229
and fc him in his cot. „ 234
as they fc each other In darkness, Aylmer's Field 430
She look'd so sweet, he fc her tenderly „ 555
Clasp'd, fc him, wail'd : he answer'd, Lucretius 280
And fc again with tears. Princess ii 5
We fc again with tears. „ 14
when the king K her pale cheek, „ 264
With that she fc His forehead, ,, 311
I fc it and I read. ' O brother, „ v 373
here she fc it : then — ' All good go with thee ! „ vi 206
I fc her slender hand, Maud I xii 13
Whom first she fc on either cheek, Marr. of Geraint 517
claspt and fc her, and they rode away. „ 825
K the white star upon his noble front, Geraint and E. 757
Eiss'd
Kiss'd {continiuid) he tum'd his face And k her
climbing,
And k her with all pureness, brother-like
brow That o'er him hung, he k it, moan'd, and
Sp3&6 J
lay she all her length and A; his feet,
she k them crying, ' Trample me, Dear feet,
k her, and Sir Lancelot his own hand
A the hand to which he gave, The diamond,
do^ the task assign'd, he k her face.
And k her quiet brows, and saying to her
he welhiigh k her feet For loyal awe,
bhe k me saying, ' Thou art fair, my child,
we twain Had never k a kiss, or vow'd a vow
i-mbraced me, and so k me the first time
ihere k, and parted weeping :
And Hope k Love, and Love drew in her breath
And k her more than once,
' I had sooner be cursed than k ! '
I k my boy in the prison,
I k 'em, I buried 'em all-
Cold were his brows when we k him—
And we k the fringe of his beard
And the Motherless Mother k it,
' The heart, the heart ! ' I A; him
we k, we embraced, she and I, '
took and k me, and again Hekme;
I remember how you k the miniature
dreamer stoopt and k her marble brow
A nng too which you k, and I, she said,
You frown'd and yet you k them.
One k his hand, another closed his eyes
I wept, and I k her hands, '
Kissin' Imbrashin' an' k aich othe-
Kissing {See also Kissin')
and o'er,
K his vows upon it like a knight
And satisfy my soul with khen'
our baby lips, K one bosom,
»"♦ 5 *^e war-harden'd hand of the Highlander
Ki^en adj.) The k brewis that was ever supt
Kitchen (s) out of k came The thralls in throng.
Thou smellest all of A; as before '
Nay— for thou smeUest of the k still.
The savotur of thy k came upon me
because their haU must also serve For k
m the Divil's k below. '
Kit<^dom lent me thee, the flower of k
Kitchen-grease thou smellest aU of k-g
Kitchen-knave Among the scullions and the k-k's,
10 serve with scullions and with k-k's ■
among thy k-k's A twelvemonth and a day
And couch'd at night with grimy k-k's.
Yea, King, thou knowest thy k-k am I,
And thou hast given me but a k-k.'
beside The field of tourney, murmuring ' A;-A:.'
Nor shamed to bawl himself a k-k
O fie upon him — His k-k.*
'Sir K-k, I have miss'd the only way
And m a sort, being Arthur's k-kl—
k-i aSr/^°''*^^ *■*' ' ^^^ ^"^*^ ^ ""^^ ' **^y
'Friend, whether thou be k-k, or not,
thy much foUy hath sent thee here His k-k-
A k-k, and sent in scorn of me :
The damsel crying, ' Well-stricken, k-k ! '
and say His k-k hath sent thee.
' Hprp iZ^ ii among the rest Fierce was the hearth.
Here is a k-k from Arthur's hall '
Thou art the kingliest of aU k-k's.
And tumbled back into the k-k.
Kitchen-vassal^ Ix)w down thro' villain k-v,
Kit« Vhil^\ ^i- A°^ underwent The sooty yoke of k-v
S£ ^S ^.rL^^'^hr'' and wolfkin,^
364
Knaw'd
Geraint and E. 761
884
Balin and Balan 598
Merlin and V. 219
226
Lancelot and E. 389
702
829
1150
1172
1409
Holy GraU 584
596
Guinevere 125
Lover's Tale i 816
iv 72
First Quarrel 83
Bizpah 23
„ 55
Def. of Lucknow 12
V. of Maeldune 125
The Wreck 62
„ 105
Despair 53
The Flight 23
Locksley H., Sixty 12
38
The Ring 114
Happy 75
Death of CEnone 58
Charity 38
r. ., , , Tomorrow 90
A tne rose she gave me o er
Gardener's D. 176
Aylmer's Field 472
Princess v 103
Lover's Tale i 238
Def. of Lucknow 102
Gareth and L. 781
694
771
843
993
Marr. of Geraint 391
Tomorrow 68
Gareth and L. 1071
751
154
170
445
481
649
659
664
717
742
787
838
Kite (toy) (continued)
purple fly,
coostom flitted awaay Uke a A; wi' a brokken string.
Flung ball, flew A;, and raced the
Princess ii 248
North. Cobbler 28
iri*« /i^\ -a j^ "r?;'*'^'> w"" ana wouiun.
Kite (toy) Had tost his ball and flown his k,
860
873
920
952
970
985
1009
1036
1158
1228
160
479
Boddicea 15
--- — -—.- — ».,u,uj iitto a n/ wi it uro
Kith m the field were Lancelot's k and kin
drave his A; and kin. And aU the Table Round
His k and kin, not knowing, set upon him •
Lancelot s k and kin so worship hun '
and aU his A; and kin Clave to him
and vaunted our A; and our kin, '
Kitten laugh As those that watch a A; •
i^Jlf°^®.« f ^\^^'^ And paw'd aboit her sandal.
Kittle (kettle) ater mea mayhap wi' 'is k o' steam
Knave (5ee aZso Kitchen-knave) neither A; nor
clown Shall hold their oreies v^. ■ -l^ i.
My Shakespeare's cui^e on &n and A: ^"^ '"^^ ^'' ^''" "
Tf,l T- ™t°' J^^* ^u*.^ ^""^ ^"*« fantastic tenderness. Princess iv 128
Lancelot arid E. 466
498
599
Holy Grail 651
Guinevere 439
V. of Maeldune 47
Merlin and V. ITJ
Princess Hi 181
iV. Farmer, 0. S. 61
Begone ! my k !— beUke and like enow
Well— I will after my loud k,
oveiBne To mar stout A;'* with foolish courtesies • '
But, k, anon thou shalt be met with A;
Setting this A;, Lord Baron, at my side
Lion and stoat have isled together. A;, In time of flood
slay thee unarm'd ; he is not knight but A: '
Thou art not knight but A;.' Said Gareth, ' Damsel,
whether k or knight, '
Come, therefore, leave thy lady hghtly. A;. Avoid •
for It beseemeth not a A; To ride with such a lady '
K, when I watch'd thee striking on the bridge
thou art not knight but k.'
' Parables ? Hear a parable of the A;.
knight or A:— The A; that doth thee service
n' • u 1 7 ^A^' "because thou strikest as a knight.
Being but A;, I hate thee aU the more.' '
being but A;, I throw thine enemies '
this strong fool whom thou, Sir K
Ok, as noble as any of aU the knights—
I heard thee call thyself a A;,—
but, being k, Hast mazed my wit :
T , ^',"}y l^night. a hermit once was here
I gloried in my k. Who being still rebuked,
Knight, A;, pnnce and fool, I hate thee and for ever '
find my goodly k Is knight and noble.
teeming with hars, and madmen, and k's.
Aylmer's Field 84
SoIf:^^* ^^^^" ^°°«' ^XweU striken,'
Knaw (know) Doctora, they A;'* nowt,
ihaw a A; 5 I haUus voated wi' Squoire
Bessy Mams's barne ! thaw A:'* she laaid it to mea.
Do godamoighty k what a's doing
I'ur they k's what I bean to Squoire
a A; s naw moor nor a floy ;
Dosn't thou A; that a man'mun be eather
iks what maakes tha sa mad
It s them as niver A:'* wheer a meals to be 'ad.
1 A; s, as k's tha sa well.
Doesn't tha k 'er— sa pratty,
tha dosn A; what that be ? But I A;'* the law, I does
thoul'J fhTh*^ ^?f>f ""V ^^™' b"t I likes oT'
thou A: s thebbe naither 'ere nor theer.
an boooks, as thou A;'*, beant nowt
i ks that mooch o' sheii,
a cat may loook at a king thou k's
an I k's It be aU fur the best
an ^ one o' ye dead ye k's I
I k'sl 'ed led tha a quieter Uf e
but 1 A; s they runs upo' four,—
. ^i?,^'!^ ma to A; wot she died on.
ya tell d 'un to A; his awn plaace
Knaw d (Imew) An' I niver A; whot a mean'd
I A a Quaaker feller as often 'as towd ma this :
I" ur I A: naw moor what I did
sa I A: es 'e'd coom to be poor •
An'^ 'e niver k nowt but boooks,
he^g^urln' aS;"'' ^^''' '"' '""'^ * ^^^* ^
713
720
733
779
854
893
922
942
957
992
1006
1008
1015
1019
1023
1058
1136
1163
1169
1196
1248
1255
1291
The Dreamer 9
Gareth and L. 1135
N. Farmer, 0. S. 5
15
21
45
55
67
N.S.Q
17
47
North. Cobbler 65
108
Village Wife 15
22
28
52
108
Spinster's S's. 34
52
71
Owd Rod 17
Church-warden, etc. 6
29
N. Farmer, 0. S. 19
N. S. 19
North. Cobbler 38
Village Wife 46
52
116
Enaw'd
365
Knew
Knaw'd (knew) {continued) ye k it wur pleasant to 'ear, Spinster's S's. 21
Koii was the dog as k when an' vvheere Owd Bod 8
fur I noawaiiys k 'is intent ; >• 61
S^oee The trustful infant on the k ! Supp. Confessions 41
when with brows Propt on thy k's, „ 70
Low on her k's herself she cast, Mariana in the S. 27
He sat upon the k's of men In days that never
come again. Two Voices 323
took with care, and kneeling on one k, M. d' Arthur 173
I would wish to see My grandchild on my k's before I die : Dora 13
The boy set up betwixt his grandsire's k's, „ 131
with his boy Betwixt his k's, his wife upon
the tilt, Walk, to the Mail 41
Hail, hidden to the k's in fern, Talking Oak 29
Oh, hide thy knotted k's in fern, ,. 93
0 muffle round thy k's with fern, „ 149
she wander'd round and round These knotted k's of mine, „ 158
shower'd the rippled ringlets to her k ; Godiva 47
a flask Between his k's, half-drain'd ; JDay-Dm., Sleep P. 26
He stoops — to kiss her— on his A;. „ Arrival 30
My Ar's are bow'd in crypt and shrine : Sir Galahad 18
Cheek by jowl, and khy k: Vision of Sin 84
God bless him, he shall sit upon my k's Enoch Arden 197
Stout, rosy, with his babe across his k's ; >• 746
Hers, yet not his, upon the father's k, « 760
knelt, but that his k's Were feeble, „ 778
And rotatory thumbs on silken k's, Aylmer's Field 200
And scoimdrel in the supple-sliding k.' Sea Dreams 168
And rosy k's and supple roundedness, Lucretius 190
held her round the k's against his waist, Princess n 363
That lent my k desire to kneel, ,. iii 193
On one k KneeUng, I gave it, „ iv 469
He sees his brood about thy k ; „ 582
Set his child upon her k — .. vi 14
Knelt on one k, — the child on one, — .. 91
Trail'd himself up on one k : „ 155
On with toil of heart and k's and hands, Ode on Well. 212
one about whose patriarchal k Late the little children
clung : ,> 236
He stay'd his arms upon his k : The Victim 54
Who takes the children on his it. In Mem. Ixyi 11
At one dear k we profier'd vows, „ Ixxix 13
boys of thine Had babbled ' Uncle ' on my k ; „ Ixxxiv 13
For I that danced her on my k, „ Con. 45
1 leap from Satan's foot to Peter's k — Gareth and L. 538
Gareth, lightly springing from his k's, „ 556
Gareth brought him grovelling on his k's, „ 1124
Sat riveting a helmet on his k, Marr. of Geraint 268
on her k's. Who knows ? another gift of the high God, „ 820
A strange k rustle thro' her secret reeds, [Balin and Balan 354
Writhed toward him, slided up his fc and sat, Merlin and V. 239
Across her neck and bosom to her k, „ 257
bow'd black k's Of homage, .. 577
she sat, half-falling from his k's. Half-nestled „ 904
Sat on his k, stroked his gray face Lancelot and E. 149
holy maid With k's of adoration wore the stone. Holy Grail 71
With supplication both of k's and tongue : .> 602
Full sharply smote his k's, and smiled, Guinevere 47
took with care, and kneeliiig on one k. Pass, of Arthur 341
an' sattled 'ersen o' my k, North. Cobbler 79
My father with a child on either k. Sisters (E. and E.) 54
dog that had loved him and fawn'd at his k— In the Child. Hosp. 9
dear Lord Jesus with children about his k's.) >> , ,5^
To thee, dead wood, I bow not head nor k's. Sir J. Oldcastle 128
plant on shoulder, hand and k. To E. Fitzgerald 8
k was prest Against the margin flowers ; Tiresias 42
Is feebler than his it's ; Ancient Sage 135
wid her stick, she was lamed iv a fc, . Tomorrow 77
Rob, coom oop 'ere o' my k. Spinster s S s. 11
let St«evie coom oop o' my k. " 67
swept The dust of earth from her k. -Dead Prophet 32
Nor ever cared to set you on her k, . The Bmg 386
Knee-deep seem'd k-d in mountain grass, Mariana in the S. 42
Full k-d lies the winter snow, -D. of the 0. Yearl
Kneel Good people, you do ill to fc to me. St. S. Stylites 133
Kneel (continued) in your looking you may fc to God. St. S. Stylites 141
That lent my knee desire to fc, Princess iii 193
' Why fc ye there ? What evil have ye %^T0ught ? Merlin and V. 67
Will ye not lie ? not swear, as there ye fc, Last Tournament 646
Shall I take him ? I fc with him ? The Flight 49
Who saw you fc beside your bier, Happy 54
trust myself forgiven by the God to whom I fc. „ 86
I am a trouble to you, Could fc for your forgiveness. Romney's R. 26
below the dome of azure K adoring Him the
Timeless Akbar's D., Hymn 8
Kneel'd A red-cross knight for ever fc L. ofShalott iii 6
^Ahat dame or damsel have ye fc to last ? Last Tournament 550
Kneeler I loved you like this fc, Princess iv 296
Kneeling Who fc, with one arm about her king, D. of F. Women 270
took with care, and fc on one knee, M. d' Arthur 173
On one knee K, I gave it. Princess iv 470
Or where the fc hamlet drains The chalice In Mem. x 15
when they i-ose, knighted from fc, some Were pale Com. of Arthur 263
And offer'd you it fc : Merlin and V. 276
Lancelot fc utter'd, ' Queen, Lady, my liege, Lancelot and E. 1179
took with care, and fc on one knee, Pass, of Arthur 341
And fc there Down in the dreadful dust Lover's Tale iv 66
Knell every hoof a fc to my desires, Princess iv 174
a deeper fc in the heart be knoll'd ; Ode on Well. 59
the silver fc Of twelve sweet hours that past Maud I xviii 64
that low fc tolling his lady dead — Lover's Tale iv 33
Knelt Bow myself down, where thou hast fc, Supp. Confessions 80
I blest him, as he fc beside my bed. May Queen, Con. 16
he would have fc, but that his knees Were feeble, Enoch Arden 778
shaken with her sobs, Melissa fc ; Princess iv 290
Florian fc, and ' Come ' he whisper'd to her, „ d 63
K on one knee, — the child on one, — „ vi 91
he laid before the throne, and fc. Delivering, Gareth and L. 390
had you cried, or fc, or pray'd to me, Geraint and E. 844
fc In amorous homage — fc — what else ? Balin and Balan 508
K, and drew from out his night-black hair „ 511
Cast herself down, fc to the Queen, Merlin and V. 66
camels fc Unbidden, and the brutes of moimtain back „ 575
she fc Full lowly by the corners of his bed, Lancelot and E. 825
and enter'd, and we fc in prayer. Holy Grail 460
and spake To Tristram, as he fc before her, Last Tournament 541
And fc, and lifted hand and heart and voice Columbus 16
We have fc in yovu" know-aU chapel Despair 94
where of old we fc in prayer, Locksley H., Sixty 33
She fc — ' We worship him ' — all but wept — Dead Prophet 29
The topmost — a chest there, by which you fc — The Ring 112
Knew (See also Knaw'd) Who k the seasons when to
take Occasion To the Queen 30
that fc The beauty and repose of faith, Supp Confessions 74
tho' I fc not in what time or place. Sonnet To 12
prest thy hand, and fc the press retiu-n'd, The Bridesmaid 12
Dreaming, she fc it was a dream : Mariana in the S. 49
The place he fc forgetteth him.' Two Voices 264
A shadow on the graves I fc, „ 272
And who that fc him could forget Miller's D. 3
I fc your taper far away, „ 109
I fc you coidd not look but well ; „ 150
Dear eyes, since first I fc them well. „ 222
I fc the flowers, I fc the leaves, I fc D. of F. Women 73
Touch'd ; and I fc no more.' „ 116
When she made pause I fc not for delight ; „ 169
her who fc that Love can vanquish Death, „ 269
I fc your brother : his mute dust I honour To J. S. 29
I fc an old wife lean and poor, The Goose 1
' we fc yoiu" gift that way At college : The Epic 24
And almost ere I fc mine own intent, Gardener's D. 146
Requiring, tho' I fc it was mine own, „ 227
I beheld her ere she fc my heart, „ 276
You fc my word was law, and yet you dared Dora 98
from his father's vats, Prime, which I fc; Audley Court 28
I set the words, and added names I fc. „ 61
built When men fc how to build, Edwin Morris 7
he that fc the names. Long learned names „ 16
since I fc the right And did it ; Love and Duty 29
And see the great Achilles, whom we fc, Ulysses 64
Knew
366
Knew
Knew (continued) Whispering I k not what of wild and sweet, Tithonus 61
and love her, as Ik her, kind ? Locksley Hall 70
Mother- Age (for mine I k not) help me „ 185
And she, that k not, pass'd : Godiva 73
We k the merry world was round, TJie Voyage 7
she loved Enoch ; tho' she k it not, Enoch Arden 43
for he k the man and valued him, „ 121
He k her, as a horseman knows his horse — „ 136
he had loved her longer than she k, „ 455
she k that she was bound — „ 462
simple folk that k not their own minds, „ 478
fall beside her path. She k not whence ; a whisper on her
ear. She i not what; „ 515
Philip thought he k : Such doubts and fears „ 520
tho' he k not wherefore, started up Shuddering, „ 616
and mjiking signs They k not what : „ 641
Seeking a tavern whicn of old he k, „ 691
' Know him ? ' she said ' I k him far away. „ 846
see me dead. Who hardly k me living, „ 889
He k the man ; the colt would fetch its price ; The Brook 149
Sir, if you k her in her English days, „ 224
one they k — Raw from the nursery — Aylmer's Field 263
The girl might be entangled ere she k. „ 272
but he had powers, he A; it : „ 393
Nor k he wherefore he had made the cry ; „ 589
And all but those who k the living God — „ 637
Was always with her, whom you also k. „ 711
Poor souls, and k not what they did, „ 782
I lost it, k him less ; Sea Dreams 72
In her strange dream, she k not why, „ 230
I had set my heart on your forgiving him Before you h. „ 270
that was mine, my dream, I k it — Lucretius 43
' I k you at the first : tho' you have grown Princess ii 305
I never k my father, but she says „ Hi 82
Melissa, knowing, saying not she k : „ 148
since I A; No rock so hard but that a little wave „ 153
I stammer'd that I k him — could have wish'd „ 206
laugh'd with alien lips, And k not what they meant ; „ iv 120
She, question'd if she k us men, „ 231
And then, demanded if her mother k, „ 233
Then came these wolves ; they k her : „ iv 321
We k not your ungracious laws, „ 399
nor k There dwelt an iron nature in the grain : „ vi 49
she nor cared Nor k it, clamouring on, „ 150
I had been wedded wife, I k mankind, „ 327
Nor k what eye was on me, nor the hand That nursed me, „ vii 53
call her Ida, tho' I k her not, „ 96
I saw the forms : I k not where I was : „ 133
But if you be that Ida whom I k, „ 147
she A; it, she had fail'd In sweet humility; „ 228
0 good gray head which all men k, Ode on Well. 35
He k their voices of old. „ 63
They k the precious things they had to guard : Third of Feb. 41
the soldier k Some one had blunder'd : Light Brigade 11
1 k right well That Jenny had tript in her time : I k,
but I would not tell. Orandmother 25
who k what .Jenny has been ! „ 35
I started, and spoke I scarce k how ; „ 43
I k them all as babies, „ 88
Nor k we well what pleased us most. The Daisy 25
Ye never k the sacred dust : In Mem. xxi 22
That never k the summer woods : „ xxvii 4
I know not : one indeed Ik „ xcvi 5
fool Was soften'd, and he k not why ; „ ex 12
can I doubt, who k thee keen In intellect, „ cxiii 5
K that the death-white curtain meant Maud I xiv 37
O, if she k it. To know her beauty „ xvi 18
He k not whither he should turn for aid. Com. of Arthur 40
Are like to those of Uther whom we k. „ 72
A red-faced bride who k herself so vile, Gareth and L. 109
Albeit in mine own heart I k him King, „ 123
I that k him fierce and turbulent Refused her Marr. of Geraint 447
And roam the goodly places that she k; „ 646
she k That all was bright ; „ 667
Then suddenly she k it and rejoiced, „ 687
Enid, all abash'd she knew not
Knew (continued)
why.
And k her sitting sad and solitary.
Except he surely k my lord was dead.'
And since I k this Earl, when I myself Was half
Because I k my deeds were known, I found,
lightly so return'd, and no man k.
I k thee wrong'd. I brake upon thy rest,
Why had ye not the shield I A; ?
Merlin, who A; the range of all their arts.
Was also Bard, and k the starry heavens ;
then you drank And k no more,
I felt as tho' you A; this cursed charm,
And either slept, nor k of other there ;
she that A; not ev'n his name ?
Sir Lancelot A: there lived a knight Not far from Camelot,
sally forth In quest of whom he k not,
when the King demanded how she A;,
' He won.' ' I A; it,' she said,
they talk'd, Meseem'd, of what they A; not ;
A; ye what all others know, And whom he loves.'
there told the King What the King A:,
she k right well What the rough sickness meant, but what
this meant She A; not,
And Lancelot A; the little clinking sound ;
Lancelot A; that she was looking at him.
I A; For one of those who eat in Arthur's hall ;
I k That I should light upon the Holy Grail,
and fell down Before it, and I A; not why,
I k the veil had been withdrawn,
and I A; it was the Holy Grail,
As well as ever shepherd A; his sheep,
'So spake the King: I A: not all he meant.'
there were those who A; him near the King,
and he A; himself Loved of the King :
Some rough old knight who k the wordly way,
Awaking A: the sword, and tum'd herself To Gawain
He A; not whence or wherefore :
made his beast that better A; it, swerve
i
Watch'd her lord pass, and A; not that she sigh'd.
Lancelot k, had held sometime with pain
Who A; thee swine enow before I came.
He ended : Arthur k the voice ;
and k that thou wert nigh.'
he A; the Prince tho' marr'd with dust,
no man k from whence he came ;
indeed I A; Of no more subtle master
merry linnet A; me. The squirrel A; me.
And partly made them — tho' he A; it not.
He A; the meaning of the whisper now, Thought that
he A; it.
Stung by his loss had vanish'd, none A; where.
I A; Some sudden vivid pleasure hit him
I A; a man, not many years ago ;
I A; another, not so long ago.
She never had a sister. I A; none.
So I A; my heart was hard,
He was devil for aught they A;,
Evelyn k not of my former suit,
She died and she was buried ere we A;,
or butcher'd for all that we k —
I would I A; their speech ;
Thou art so well disguised, I A; thee not.
I k we should fall on each other.
As if they A: your diet spares
I k the twain Would each waste each,
these eyes will find The men I A;,
I A; not what, when I keard that voice, —
the days went by, but I A; no more —
0 Mother, was not the face that I k.
1 A: that hand too well —
we A; that their light was a lie —
Nature who A; not that which she bore !
Who A; no books and no philosophies,
she k this father well ;
Marr. of Geraint 765
Geraint and E. 282
721
794
858
Balin and Balan 42
499
601
Merlin and V. 167
169
277
435
738
Lancelot and E. 29
401
561
575
622
675
680
707
887
983
985
Holy GraiZ 23
366
407
522
531
551
920
Pdleas and E. 15
153
192
489
504
551
Last Tournament 130
178
304
455
520
Cfainevere 36
„ 289
„ 477
Lover's Tale ii 15
i;25
43
102
177
255
262
326
First Quarrel 78
The Revenge 108
Sisters (E. and E.) 205
241
Def. of Lucknow 91
Sir J. OldcasUe 11
198
V. of Maeldune 104
To E. Fitzgerald 10
Tiresias 68
,, 176
The Wreck 52
„ 111
„ 116
„ 145
Despair 16
„ 34
Ancient Sage 218
The Flight 87
Knew
Knew (continued) an' none of the parish k
at the host that had halted he k not whv
There is a Fate beyond us.' Nothing k
k not that which pleased it most,
the face Of Miriam grew upon me, tiU I A •
you A not one was there Who saw you kneel
367
Knight
Tomorrow 76
Heavy Brigade 7
Demeter and P. 87
The Ring 165
185
Happy 53
1 k that you were near me when I let him kiss my brow • " " " 65
I A; You were parting for the war, jorow, „ 65
^'^:^}± !^.^?:^ I.^ -t whither, _ _ Merlin and the G. ]l
;
What sight so lured him thro' the fields he k
^Tt'hat hetr^"' '° '^*^^^ "^-y^" ^-y-
■ ^^'^o "^ ^^°"3 ^'^o' t^o" canst not know •
■ (g«^«^5o War-knife) To war with falsehood to
he drove the k into his side :
The k uprising toward the blow
/am his dearest ! ' rush'd on the k
Struck with a k^s haft hard against the board,
They sit with k in meat and wine in horn '
Ue was happier using the k
broken besides with dreams of the dreadful k
by the pitiful-pitiless k,~
ii cured, by the surgeon's k,~
«• : i°J ,^^ ^ £^ay with the k,
Knight (^ee also feoy-knight, Brother-knight, Knave-knieht
^°S;S*d J^'^^-^^t. TablSUS* I'^S'
^^^'a^ndTme^ "'^' ^^° ^'^^ ^^"^ ^^^ ^""^^ ""^ '"^^
A red-cross k for ever kneel'd To a lady ^- "^ ^^"^ *^ ?f
^ and burgher, lord and dame. " ."*J
li%S;i *i^^i:- ^- f«-. All the ^. at Camelot : : " g
Far — Jar — away 1
Charity 12
^not«n< <Sa^e 36
Two Voices 131
Lucretius 275
TAc FicitTO 66
" 72
Geratnt and E. 600
Merlin and V. 694
/« <A« CMrf. i?os». 6
65
Def. of Lncknow 85
Despair 80
Charity 15
ATo/e 21
Sir Bediyere, the last of aU his k'^.
The goodhest fellowship of famous it's
the mighty bones of ancient men, Old k's
beseem'd Thy fealty, nor hke a noble *: '
thou, the latest-left of all mv k's
every chance brought out a noble k.
A maiden ^— to me is given Such hope,
O just and faithful A of God '
Kissmg his vows upon it like a A;
E '— ^^ ' ^^ ^^^P ^ chronicle With all about
r?eud?i??n'«iit ^^^''^ "^ '^^? *^^' d^^t with ^'5,
A leudal k in silken masquerade
If 1 prove Your A;, and fight your battle
m^y a bold k started uj in heat, '
and all the good k's maim'd,
bcarce other than my king's ideal k,
^ut rode a simple k among his it's.
Broad pathway^ for the hunter and the k
H^ new-made i's, to King Leodogran,
Sf^H f'/^" ^'^^ ''^ ^" ^^ ^'* Knighted
an old k And ancient friend of Uth?r •
ttt^^^ K'' l^owever brave they be-
h^ pf Stood round him, and rejoicing in his joy.
^ a fi^r^ n^^-?^^^' ^"'i ^^^ told the ffing^
A t .f A !k ^"^ ^^"^ """^S before my lance
A A of Arthur, working out his wiU,
^ol Ln t?"^ .^"/^ ^ ^ ^°"^d pass OutwMd,
A i- nf ? fh ''>^\* '^"Sed about the throne,
A A; of Uther in the Barons' war
<j^rant me some A; to do the battle for me,
Then strode a good k forward, crying
Had made his goodly cousin, Tristram, k.
The goodly A; ! What ! shaU the shield of Mark
And under every shield a k was named :
nSfPv ™? f ""^ ^ ^a^ done one noble deed,
make him k because men caU him king.
And evermore a k would ride away
s^w fi7»*^"'?? ^u"??. prodigious tale Of A;'^,
■•'aw tne k s Clash hke the coming and retiring wave
M. d'Arthur 7
15
48
75
„ 124
231
Sir Gj'ahad 61
79
Aylmer's Fidd 472
Princess, Pro. 27
29
234
iv 595
1)359
.. vi 241
Bed. of Idylls 7
Com. of Arthur 51
61
137
174
222
252
458
488
Gareth and L. 5
24
27
,, . 145
310
328
353
362
364
394
402
409
411
420
438
r>, 509
521
Knight {continued) Make me thy A;-in secret !
Made thee my k? my k's are sworn to vows
'Make thee my A: in secret'
my need, a k To combat for my sister, Lyonors
three A:'s Defend the passings, brethren, '
And pardonable, worthy to be A;—
I ask'd for thy chief k, And thou hast given me
The most ungentle k in Arthur's hall '
Sweet lord, how like a noble k he talks '
he IS not A: but knave.'
And Gareth silent gazed upon the k.
Thou art not k but knave.' Said Gareth, ' Damsel
whether knave or k, •^•"usei,
|?d either A; at once, Huri'd as a stone
A, Thy hfe is thine at her command
thou art not A; but knave.'
A: or knave— The knave that doth thee service as fuU k
freS ^ ' meseems, as any k Toward thy sister's
knave, because thou strikest as a A:
*u ?^mu^ ^^ ^®^ ^^ ™'glit be shkmed •
the A;, That named himself the Star of Evening
O knave, as noble as any of all the k's—
Mid, good faith, I fain had added— Z
He scarce is A:, yea but half-man '
methmks There rides no A;, not Lancelot, his great self,
A: s on horse Sculptured, and deckt in slo'wly-fvaning hues,
^ Sir Knave, my A;, a hermit once was here « -==
Stay, felon k, I avenge me for my friend '
Pn^w °^ ^^*'^'^' 7^'l"^ *^'"own by whom I know not.
Courteous as any A;— but now, if A;, '
K, knave, prince and fool, I hate thee and for ever '
k art thou To the King's best wish
Prmce, K, HaU, K and Prince,
meriy am I to find my goodly knave Is k and noble
wTu' .^ ^^ "0* • '"y ^^^^ brethren bad me do it.
What madness made thee challenge the chief A;
brave Geraint, a A; of Arthur's court
bandit earls, and caitiff k's, Assassin's,
Enid rode. And fifty k's rode with them
Weeping for some gay A; in Arthur's hall '
rode Full slowly by a A;, lady, and dwarf •
the k Had vizor up, and show'd a youthful face.
when she put her horse toward the A;,
Had put his horse in motion toward the k
Pardon me, O stranger A; ; '
the good k's horse stands in the court ;
if he be the A: whom late I saw Ride into that new
fortress
what k soever be in field Lays claim to
errant A;'s And ladies came, and by and by the
town Flow'd in,
the A; With some surprise and thrice as much disdain
iimd was aware of three taU A;'* On horseback,
said the second, ' yonder comes a k.'
Held his head high, and thought himself a A;
A A; of Arthur's court, who laid his lance In rest
The voice of Enid,' said the A: ; '
I took you for a bandit A; of Doorm •
Now, made a A; of Arthur's Table Round
when the A: besought him, ' FoUow me, '
Than if some A; of mine, risking his life,
And fifty A;'* rode with them to the shores Of Severn
two strange A;'* Who sit near Camelot Balin ariA Tini. "Tn
chaUengmg And overthrowing every k who comes. ^"^"'^ J?
i'or whatsoever A; against us came " tX-
huri'd to ground what k soever spurr'd Against us " fa
worthier to be thme Than twenty Bahns, Balan k " ta
Rise, my true A:. " "^
in those deep woods we found A A; " ili
Mid a transitory word Make A; or churi or child " i «o
Bahn bare the crown, and all the A;'* Approved him. " ^
not worthy to be A: ; A churl, a clown " ' " ^
found the greetings both of A; and King " o^o
(for Arthur's k's Were hated strangers in the hall) " agf
Gareth and L. 544
552
564
607
613
654
658
757
777
922
933
942
964
982
1006
1015
1020
1043
1089
1136
1162
1176
1182
1194
1196
1220
1233
1250
1255
1258
1270
1292
1409
1416
Marr. of Geraint 1
35
44
118
187
188
200
206
286
370
406
486
545
556
Geraint and E. 56
126
242
775
780
786
793
807
915
954
Knight
368
Knight
Knight (continued) Hail, royal k, we break on thy
sweet rest,
the k, with whom I rode, Hath sufEer'd mis-
adventure,
nor Prince Nor k am I, but one that hath defamed
this good k Told me, that twice a wanton damsel
came.
It more beseems the perfect virgin k
She hated all the k's, and heard in thought
some corruption crept among his k*s,
but afterwards He made a stalwart k.
saw The k's, the court, the King,
and show'd them to his k's, Saying,
the k's Are half of them our enemies,
As to k's. Them surely can I silence with all ease,
our k's at feast Have pledged us in this union.
Then answer'd Lancelot, the chief of k's : (repeat)
allow your pretext, O my k, As all for glory ;
He loves it in his k's more than himself :
dying down as the great k Approach'd them :
Is that an answer for a noble k ?
shame me not Before this noble k,'
for, k, the maiden dreamt That some one put this
diamond
To ride to Camelot with this noble k :
slight disparagement Before the stranger k,
the great k, the darling of the court.
For if his own k cast him down, he laughs Saying,
his k's are better men than he —
knew there lived a k Not far from Camelot,
wrathful that a stranger k Should do and almost
overdo
He bore a A; of old repute to the earth,
all the k's, His party, cried ' Advance
His party, k's of utmost North and West,
' Lo, Sire, our A;, thro' whom we won the day.
So great a A; as we have seen to-day —
O Gawain, and ride forth and find the k.
k's and kings, there breathes not one of you
since the k Came not to us, of us to claim the prize,
a good k, but therewithal Sir Modred's brother,
banquet, and concourse of k's and kings.
Albeit I know my k's fantastical.
What of the k with the red sleeve ?
Here was the k, and here he left a shield ;
Who dream'd my k the greatest k of all.'
' that you love This greatest A:, your pardon !
know full well Where your great k is nidden,
the King knew ' Sir Lancelot is the k.'
the k's at banquet twice or thrice Forgot to drink
sweet and serviceable To noble k's in sickness.
Right fain were I to learn this k were whole,
Woke the sick k, and while he roll'd his eyes
the great A; in his mid-sickness made
More specially should your good k be poor.
In all your quarrels will I be your k,
the King Came girt with k's :
Sir Lancelot, As thou art a k peerless.'
' O my k, It will be to thy worship, as my k,
when the k's had laid her comely head
Strike down the lusty and long practised k,
My k, the great Sir Lancelot of the Lake.'
Pure, as you ever wish your k's to be.
what profits me my name Of greatest k ?
Alas for Arthur's greatest k,
' Nay,' said the it ; 'for no such earthly passion mine,
one of your own k's, a guest of ours.
And tell thy brother k's to fast and pray,
Said Arthur, when he dubb'd him k ; and none. In so
young youth, was ever made a k Till Galahad ;
' My k, my love, my k of heaven,
every k beheld bis fellow's face As in a glory, and all
the k's arose,
Lancelot sware, and many among the k's,
there so oft with all his k's Feasted,
Balin and Balan 470
475
484
Merlin and V. 22
150
154
482
875
Lancelot and E. 57
98
108
114
,. 140, 187
153
157
179
201
208
211
220
235
261
313
401
468
492
502
526
529
533
537
540
543
557
562
594
621
634
667
707
736
768
772
819
878
956
961
1261
1282
1326
1337
1360
1373
1375
1414
1419
Holy Grail 30
40
126
137
157
191
201
223
Enight (continued) ' Woe is me, my k's,' he cried. Holy Grail 275
he ask'd us, k by k, if any Had seen it, „ 283
(Brother, the King was hard upon his k's) „ 299
hath overborne Five k's at once, and every younger k,
Unproven, „ 303
K's that in twelve great battles splash'd „ 311
how often, O my k's Your places being vacant „ 316
The yet-unbroken strength of all his k's, „ 326
overthrew So many k's that all the people cried, „ 335
k's and ladies wept, and rich and poor Wept, „ 353
my strong lance had beaten down the k's, „ 363
calling me the greatest of all k's, „ 595
thou art our greatest k. Our Lady says it, „ 603
Saw ye none beside. None of your k's ? ' „ 632
found ye all your k's return'd, „ 708
and when thy k's Sware, I sware with them „ 777
Mean k's, to whom the moving of my sword „ 790
painting on the wall Or shield of A; ; „ 830
A reckless and irreverent A; was he, „ 856
Could all of true and noble in A; and man „ 882
' And spake I not too truly, O my k's ? „ 888
King Aethue made new k's to fill the gap Pelleas and E. 1
' Make me thy A;, because I know, „ 7
and Arthur made him A:. And this new k. Sir
Pelleas of the isles — „ 16
Beat like a strong k on his helm, „ 23
Arm'd as ye see, to tilt against the k's There at Caerleon, „ 65
Three k's were thereamong ; and they too smiled, „ 96
her k's And all her damsefi too were gracious „ 121
Then glanced askew at those three k's „ 134
and strange k's From the four winds came in : „ 147
and him his new-made k Worshipt, „ 154
For Arthur, loving his young k, „ 159
her look Bright for all others, cloudier on her A: — „ 177
those three k's all set their faces home, „ 187
Some rough old A; who knew the worldly way, „ 192
Then calling her three k's, she charged them „ 219
walking on the walls With her three k's, „ 226
Yield me thy love and know me for thy A;.' „ 249
her anger, leaving Pelleas, bum'd Full on her A;'5 „ 290
her k's Laugh'd not, but thrust him bounden out of door. „ 313
whom late our Arthur made K of his table ; „ 320
I chant thy praise As prowest A; and truest lover, „ 350
' Pity on him,' she answer'd, ' a good A;, „ 386
droned her lurdane A;'s Slumbering, „ 430
and thought, ' What ! slay a sleeping A; ? „ 448
' Alas that ever a k should be so false.' „ 450
as the one true A; on earth. And only lover ; „ 494
either k Drew back a space, and when they closed, „ 572
there with her k's and dames was Guinevere. „ 588
she, turning to Pelleas, ' O young k, „ 595
the purest of thy k's May win them for the purest Last Tournament^
everywhere the k's Arm'd for a day of glory „ 54
A hundred goodly ones — the Red K, he — „ 70
Red K Brake in upon me and drave them „ 71
whatsoever his own A;'s have sworn My k's have
sworn the counter to it — „ 79
My k's are aU adulterers hke his own, „ 84
My younger k's, new-made, in whom your flower „ 99
leave The leading of his younger k's to me. „ 110
Or have I dream'd the bearing of our k's „ 120
He spoke, and taking all his younger k's, „ 126
a A; cast down Before his throne of arbitration „ 161
An ocean-sounding welcome to one k, „ 168
O chief A;, Right arm of Arthur in the battlefield, „ 201
know myself the wisest k of all.' „ 248
one true A; — Sole follower of the vows ' — „ 302
' K, an ye fling those rubies round my neck „ 312
the k's. Glorying in each new glory, „ 335
And therebeside a horn, inflamed the k's „ 434
the Red K heard, and all, „ 441
Slain was the brother of my paramour By a A; of thine, „ 449
To hang whatever A; of thine I fought And tumbled. „ 453
k's, who watch'd him, roar'd And shouted „ 468
0 Sir K, What dame or damsel have ye kneel'd to last ? ' „ 549
Knight
369
Enight (continued) Far other was the Tristram
Arthur's kl ' r , m
I loved This knighthest of all fc's ' " ^JV
No k of Arthur's noblest dealt in scorn • /' • ::i
said my father, and himself was T ' Gmnevere^
every k Had whatsoever meat he long'd for "'
bir Lancelot, as became a noble k
If ever Lancelot, that most noble k
Reputed the best k and goodliest man
my right arm The mightiest of my k's'
hand against the King Who made hiin k : but many
a k was slam ; nuuiy
Then othere, foUowing these my mightiest k's
And miss the wonted number of my k's
Lords of the White Horee, heathen, and k's
Know
Among his warrmg senses, to thy k's—
Fust niade and latest left of all the k's,
264
328
345
382
430
7 jrTr """f .«"'^'' 'eit oi an tne k's,
and A; 5 Once thine, whom thou hast loved
1 o war a^Tainst my people and my k's.
And they my k's, who loved me once
shouts of heathen and the traitor k's
The goodhest feUowship of famous k's
the mighty bones of ancient men. Old k's,
beseem'd fhy fealty, nor hke a noble k :
thou, the latest-left of all my k's
every chance brought out a noble k.
he the k for an amorous girl's romance !
-a s were thwack'd and riven
»«<oSf^'"'t^r K'' u^"*^ ^"^^''i ^ red As poppies
Knighted K by Arthur at his crowning ^ ^^ "^
when they rose, A; from kneeling, some Were nalp
As on the day when Arthur k M^n ' ^ n ^z. ", . —
438
489
498
574
„ 640
Pass, of Arthur 2
60
71
73
113
183
216
243
292
399
The Wreck 44
The Tourney 10
16
Com. of Arthur 174
263
till he smote the thrall,
^ Then being on the morrow k,
Knight^rrantry old k-e Who ride abroad.
Knighthood leadmg all his k threw the kings
And Arthur's k sang before the King^— ^
too sang the k, moving to their haU "
A^H f K ^^"^ !}f ^ ^°'' ^ ^P^*=« Were all one wiU,
And the deed's sake my k do the deed
80 my k keep the vows they swore '
....-ui.u uj v,uiui,esy
The flower of all their vestal k.
Boldness and royal k of the bird
I swear by truth and k that I gave No cause,
Arthur and his k call'd The Pme
borne root of k and pure nobleness ;
All that belongs to k, and I love '
Hath the great heart of k in thee fail'd
marking how the k mock thee, fool—
My k taught me this— ay, being snapt—
Kn,VhK, ^^V^^. ^' "^^^ ^'leice Had Arthur
&^hthood-errant drew The k-e of this reahn
Kmght-knave weU stricken, O good k-k—
. so jyill my k-k Miss the full flower
^^iV^® . ^S ^ ^"=^^ ^*P instead of casque,
say That out of naked k purity Sir Lancelot
worship t
Knightly aU of pure Noble, and k in me
and these Full k without scorn •
Del^ht our souls with talk of A:' deeds.
Mix d with the A; growth that fringed his lips.
Had carved himself a k shield of wood
Among the k brasses of the graves '
In any k fashion for her sake. '
the prize A golden circlet and a k sword
•Uehght our souls with talk of k deeds,
»«{* T 7 "^^^ *,^® * growth that fringed his hps,
Kmt Ik a. hundred others new :
y'u ',®jlP"®ed, Love with k brows went by,
1 hold them exquisitely k,
K land to land, and blowing havenward
Balin and Balan 155
Pelleas and E. 140
Gareth and L. 629
Com. of Arthur 111
481
503
515
Gareth and L. 572
602
~u y « \t ^ """ *""^'* ^^^y swore, 7^
tL' flo^tr^f Tthel7v37' ''^'^°°'' ^"'^ ^ ' ^'^^^ <^^ ^«^- S'
508
Merlin and V. 134
Lancelot and E. 1297
HoZy G'ratY 3
886
Pelleas and E. 9
596
Last Tournament 301
658
683
Guinevere 461
(?are<A awcf L. 1135
1296
Princess iv 600
5aKw ajwf 5a^aw 428
Merlin and V. 11
iToZy Grail 774
Guinevere 39
il/. d' Arthur 19
220
^erZm a»ii F. 473
752
Lancelot and E. 871
Pelleas and E. 12
Pass, o/ Jrt/iMr 187
388
Two Voices 234
Gardener's D. 245
Talking Oak 91
Golden Year 44
^* ^1h"^ ^^°'' ^^""^ * themselves for summer
Some dolorous message k below Aylmer's Field 724
A; The generations each with each • ^^^- ^" ^
^ to some dismal sandbank far at «pa t- , " ^^ ^^
Knitted with such a chain OftpSptr' Lover's Tale imd
Knob man with k's and wires and vials p^^^ ^"^^^ ^^S
Knock'd volume, all of sones KAcv^tr. ^ Princess, Pro. 65
I k and, bidden, enter°d^' ° '""' ^«^% ^ourt 58
Knockii^ Someone A: there without ? No' Prmcess iii IZO
KnoU Oread haunt The k's of Ida ' ' Romney's R. 142
A;'s That dimpling died into each other ^ / , fEnonelS
perch'd about the k's A dozen an^Jyi^odels &"" ' ^'f ^f^
From /; to k, where, couch'd at eL Pn,icm, Pro. 72
dusk reveal'd The k's once more where ** ^'"'- ^«' ^^
Nor hoary k of ash and haw That hears " ^
rhere, on a httle k beside it, stav'd x/ x 'A • '' ^
ford Behind them, and so gaUop^d up the k "'■ "^ ^'"''''' 19
'For on this little k, if anywhere, ^ ' " 168
nuddJed here and there on mound and t n ■ ." ■, -r. ^^'■
The ruinous donjon as a k of ^ ' Geraintar^E. 803
KnoUd adeeperkniuinthehearbe'A; ^^'""odf ^tl^lt
KnoUing heavy clocks yfc the drowsy hou^ Ode on Well. 59
le S' "^'^ ^^«-^ots) TSteSls fell from '^"'"'^'""^ ^^ '^
The A;'s that tangle human creeds m i. j^«r»«™« 3
Bridesmaid, ere the b^pp y S tied ^^'%-J'''^'.i /''^'^ 3
I must gather k's of flowerl ' The Bridesmaid 1
palms in cluster, k's of Paradise r 7 ?^ ^J^/** ^^
felt the fc Clunb in her throat Lancelot and E. 439
&i^*'''/c ^7*^L* ^ 1 ^'^"^'i ^'tl^e noose ; St s'st^Jf^
^otted^^SeealsoMany-lmotted) These A knees of ^i- ^- &¥ttes 65
^"Jbared the k column of his throat, Mlrf^?f^?r''^ /t!
KnonrbSeKirrrd^o?w\r.T^^™' ^^ll^"!
^Ts aSg b^s h^mitety^s"^ ^"«- ^1 ^^4-ii:: S
I i At matins and at evSng ^ '^"^^- ^''»^^««*«'"* 43
and then, from whence He A;'s not, " ,??
r'i hTb'y e;^™^^ °^ ^^-'^ ^^ ^-*- ? ^«^^- n
Air Srh' ^K V '^^i' 7^ ^^y ^"^'^e, and answer M„ Uf^ if mi I
All this hath been I k not when or where.' sZletTo ^ I
She k's not what the curse may be, LoiiZi:^- «
The night comes on that k's not mom Mn.t ^ -.tV^^.
I would have said, ' Thou canst ZTk'' ^"'"^ZT^^" ^^ ^1
I wept, ' Tho' I should die, Ik ' ^""^ ^°'^'' f^
I k that age to age succeeds, " „^f
Kl not Death ? the outward signs ? " ^
He ksa baseness in his blood " ^ 'V
Of something done, I k not where : " oqo
^ I see the end, and k the good.' " ^°,%
I may not speak of what I k: " ™^
The lanes, you k, were white with mav ^/^^n " r. TJ^
I should k if it beat right, ^' il/*/Zer's i>. 130
I A; He Cometh quickly • ' " . ^79
What this may be I A: not, but I k ^"^'"^oE
Verulam, The first of those who k. p^j^,, J^Z ?66
And k's not if it be thunder ^'''"''* °J ^''^ ^^4
I k you proud to bear your name, t r v "^. v ? ^
I h you, Clara Vere de Vere, ^' *^- *** ^^''^ ^^
You A: so ill to deal with time, " f J
I k not what was said : n^ ^ " ^ "3
I k The blessed music 'went that way ^'''^ ^"*''*' <^'"*- ff
a hundred fields, and all of them I k " f^
I k not how, AU those sharp fancies, n „/• p'V.^. ^2
I wrote I A; not what a'. o; i* .Women 48
'You A;,' said Frank, ' he burnt His epic Jh i' ^■- IH
God A;'s ; he has a mint of reasons^ ^ ' ^^ ^P'' U
King IS sick, and A:'s not what he does. m. d' Arthur ll
2a
Know
Know (continued) I k not : but we sitting, as I said M d' Arthur V^ Q
You k there has not been for these five years ^'"'" «f
may he never A: The troubles I have gone thro' ! ' " iaq
shovel! d up into some bloody trench Where no "
one k's ? a ji ^
Nay, who Fs ? he's here and there Wnlhil ^7 1 tl
What k we of the secret of a mem ' '^''^^- '" ^^' ^""^^ ^6
Heaven k's— as much within : p^,„ • " ,^ • -^"s
scarce can recognise the fields I k ■ 1?T ^ r^"^ !n
I i not well, For that the evil one^ come here, ^'^ ^^ ^'^^'''' ^
I think you k I have some power with Heaven " iIq
I k thy ghttermg face. " ^1^
yesterday, you k, the fair Was holden at the town ; TalkiZ Oak 101
James,— you k him,— old, but fuU Of force rS v ^
but weU I k That unto him who works, ^"^'^'^ ^'"'' ?2
That hoard, and sleep, and feed, and k not me. " uivsseJi
I will k If there be any faith in man ' ' r a "m ^It
We k the meny world is round, Thf^r,^^"'' ^
Weill i, when I am gone, ' v^f- rT^".^
For they k not what they'mean. ^**^'* "^-^^^ l^^
we fc the hue Of that cap upon her brows. " ?ii
Madam— if I k your sex, " ||j
The many-headed beast should k ' y«,, ^i„i,t % o«
W her, as a horseman k's hi horse- "^"^ ^t ^rj^lle
I'll be back, my girl, before you k it.' ^'^''^'* Jo?
And yet for all your wisdom well kl " o, f
n he could A; his babes were running wild " oni
end of an avenue. Going we k not where : " o=q
1 A; not why— Their voices make me feel so solitary.' " qqr
I k not when it first came there, I k that it will out "
at Jast. .
Perhaps you k what I would have you k— " ^q
I have loved you longer than you k.' " 7^
If question'd, aught of what he cared to k. " ^1
look on her sweet face again And k that she is happy.' " nt
Not to teU her, never to let her k. (repeat) " yfift nka
must I not speak to these ? They k me riot. " ' Itt
^ After the Lord has call'd me she shall A;, " im
Did you k Enoch Arden of this town ? ' ' Z him « ' "
she said ' I knew him far away. ' oak
Nevertheless, k you that I am he Who married— " s^
glory varying to and fro. We k not wherefore ; Aulmer's Field U
other, save for Leolin's— Who k's? ^ i It
I k not, for he spoke not, only shower'd " " ofq
, -J o°* ^'^ence at first, Nor of what race, " ioo
r^u -^y^^l* That great pock-pitten fellow " 255
. The girl and boy. Sir, k their differences ! ' " o?^
T 7 u y"" ^ '^^^^ yo^ ™^ant nothing. " tit
Ik her : the worst thought she has Is whiter " Sfi2
A or let them k themselves betray'd • " t^f
-no° l?rif ^r """'"' ^ ^"'* ''' ^^ DreaJll
nor ft s He what he sees ; r^,^z.<.„,„ iqo
O ye-Gods, I k you careless, Lu^ehus 1^
Howbeit I k thou surely must be mine " i^
none of aU our blood should k The shadow from "
the substance, p . . „
Myself too had weird seizures, Heaven k's what : Princess t »
she, you k Who wedded with a nobleman " nl
they that J such things— I sought but peace ; " ili
and more We fc not,— only this : " T^
0 we feU out I k not why, " ...
let us k The Princess Ida waited : " "9^
She answer'd, ' then ye k the Prince ? ' " fo
1 A; the substance when I see it. " 4? o
^ll,^^'^lP^y<'^m^7^. My mother A;'s: " vv/^q
Why— these-<ire— men:' I shudder'd : ' and you i it ' " fiS
And she i', too. And she conceals it.' ^na you A it. „ 58
She calls her plagiarist; I A; not what: " qa
At no man's beck, but k ouraelf and thee, " ^7
370
Know {continued) I k the Prince, I prize his truth •
fail so far In high desire, they k not
yet we k Knowledge is knowle(%e, '
I Tears, idle tears, I k not what they mean
K you no song of your own land,' '
K you no song, the true growth of your soil
1— you k It — I will not boast : '
We did not k the real light,
I k Your faces there in the crowd
' Tut, you k them not, the girls,
something may be done— I k not what—
who A 5 ? we four may build some plan
—I myself, What A; I of these things ?
blustering I k not what Of insolence and love
and whereas I k Your prowess, Arac '
name is yoked with children's, k herself •
And right ascension. Heaven k's what • '
This nightmare weight of gratitude, I A; it ;
ttiat A; The woman's cause is man's :
Alone,' I said, ' from earlier than I k
dark gates across the wild That no man A;'*.
What A; we greater than the soul ?
who love best have best the grace to A;
I A; for a truth, there's none of them left
lo a sweet little Eden on earth that I A;
Well— if It be so, so it is, you A; • '
I should A; what God and man is ^
Sr^hnH *^^ ^^\°'.*^f, ^^^' ^^^^ I ^ not where !
faomebody k's that she'll say ay ! (repeat)
Thou madest man, he k's not why
Our wills are ours, we A; not how • '
We have but faith : we cannot A; ;
Ye A; no more than I who wrought
And beckoning unto those they k •
But k's no more of transient form'
I A; that this was Life, —
Half -dead to k that I shall die.'
My paths are in the fields I A;
When one that loves but A;'* Aot, reaps A truth from
one that loves and A;'s ?
(he A;'s not whence) A little flash,
I shall A; him when we meet :
Behold, we k not anything ; '
spirit does but mean the breath I A; no more '
howsoe er I k thee, some Could hardly tell
Half jealous of she k's not what,
I A; that in thy place of rest
And then I A; the mist is drawn
Death's twin-brother, k's not Death,
Which makes me sad I A; not why
I strive to paint The face I A; ;
How k I what had need of thee
and^ Thy hkeness to the wise below,
1 k thee of what force thou art
I ^transplanted human worth Will bloom to profit
Yet none could better k than I ^ '
wear the form by which I A; Thy spirit
teU me, doubt is Devil-born. I A; not •
bfae ks not what his greatness is,
tho4and Sg? '' '''' ^°"^^' ''^^ ^«' 1^^ ^'^ -
^u^^i™® "•'t' ^^^ "loiirn with me.
Ihat these are not the bells I A;
Let her A; her place ;
But, crying, k's his father near ;
Did he fling himself down ? who k's ?
who ks? we are ashes and dust.
1 have heard, I k not whence
l\'i?aid S£'J^^'H^'^^"'^?" °^ "^^'^ be the worse
«7v. '7^ , ^"""^ * hard-set smile,
Whojfc'5 the ways of the world.
Did I hear in half a doze Long since, I k not where ?
inH SA^'' ?^ went Home with her maiden posy!
And she k's it not : 0, if she knew it. ^'
10 A; her beauty might half undo it.
Enow
Princess Hi 232
280
315
iv39
84
150
353
357
509
«151
228
230
284
396
403
418
vi257
300
vii 258
311
363
Ode on Well. 265
W. to Marie Alex. 28
Grandmother 85
The Islet 14
Spiteful Letter 19
Flow, in cran. wall 6
Window, Gone 7
Letter 8, 15
In Mem.
Pro. 10
15
21
vin
xiv 8
xvi 7
XXV 1
XXXV 16
a;Z31
xlii 11
xliv 7
xlvii 8
liv 13
MS
lix 15
Ixl
lxvii2
13
Ixviii 3
II
Ixx 3
Ixxiii 3
Ixxiv 6
Ixxxii 11
Ixxxv 37
xci 5 ,
xcvi 5 i
xcvii2^
31
xcix 20
civ 8
cxiv 15
cxxiv 20
Mavd I i9
32
67
75
tt)20
44
vii 2
xii 21
aM^18
19
Enow
371
Enow
Know (continiied) I A; it the one bright thing to save
I A He has plotted against me
Now I k her but in two,
I k her own rose-garden,
The ghastly Wraith of one that I k ;
little hearts that k not how to forgive :
A; Is a juggle bom of the brain ?
Who k's if he be dead ?
I k not whether he came in the Hanover ship, But I k
that he lies and listens mute
But I k where a garden grows,
he is gone : We k him now :
I k thee for my King ! '
' Sir King, there be but two old men that k
for ye k that in King Uther's time
Who k's a subtler magic than his own —
then the Queen made answer, ' What A; I ?
I k not whether of himself he came,
rain, and sim ! and where is he who k's ?
and I that k, Have strength and wit,
sees, nor hears, nor speaks, nor k's.
I k not thee, myself, nor anything.
' K ye not then the Riddling of the Bards ?
but I k thee who thou art.
ye k we stay'd their hands From war
A horse thou knowest, a man thou dost not k :
' Son, the good mother let me k thee here.
And one with me in all, he needs must k.'
* Let Lancelot A:, my King, let Lancelot k,
ye k this Order lives to crush All wrongers
Whether he k me for his master yet.
' Master no more ! too well I k thee,
I k That I shall overthrow him.'
knight of Arthur, here lie thrown by whom I k not,
' Peradventure he, you name. May k my shield.
' And wherefore, damsel ? tell me all ye k.
I k but one — To dash against mine enemy
Made answer sharply that she should not k.
Arms ? truth ! I A; not : all are wanted here
Harbourage ? truth, good truth, I k not,
if ye A; Where I can light on arms,
be he dead I A: not, but he past to the wild land.
Nor A; I whether I be very base Or very manful,
this I A;, That whatsoever evil happen to me.
Look on it, child, and tell me if ye A; it.'
' Yea, I A; it ; your good gift,
I A;, When my dear child is set forth at her best,
Who k's ? another gift of the high God,
he loves to A; When men of mark are in his
territory :
I A;, God k's, too much of palaces !
return With victual for these men, and let us A;.'
Make me a little happier : let me A; it :
I k Tho' men may bicker with the things they love,
well I k it — pall'd — For I A; men :
' Yea, my lord, I A; Your wish.
Falls in a far land and he k's it not,
I suffer from the things before me. A;, Learn
nothing ;
I fain would k what manner of men they be.
Ye scarce can overpraise, will hear and k.
knowing that I A;, Will hate, loathe, fear —
' K ye the stranger woman ? '
did you A; That Vivien bathed your feet
However wise, ye hardly A; me yet.'
I think ye hardly A; the tender rhyme
K well that Envy calls you Devil's son.
Right well A; I that Fame is half-disfame,
lake my counsel ; let me A; it at once :
If ye A;, Set up the charge ye A;,
answer'd Merlin ' Nay, I k the tale.
he never wrong'd his bride. I A; the tale.
Or whisper'd in the comer ? do ye A; it ?
he answer'd sadly, ' Yea, I k it.
is he man at all, who k's and winks ?
To which
Maud xvi 20
„ xix 79
„ XX 15
41
„ IIi32
" ..^
„ ii 41
71
«59
72
Bed. of Idylls 16
Com. of Arthur 130
149
185
284
326
346
410
Gareth and L. 11
81
97
286
291
421
463
550
566
567
625
721
756
948
1234
1299
1328
1354
Marr, of Geraint 196
289
290
421
443
468
470
684
688
727
821
Geraint and E. 228
236
240
317
324
331
418
497
Balin and Balan 284
574
Merlin and V. 92
121
129
283
355
383
467
504
653
702
713
730
772
781
Enow {continued) I k the Table Round, my friends
of old ; Merlin and V. 816
I will not let her A; : ,, §23
believe you then. Who k's ? once more. ", 923
' Yea, loi-d,' she said, ' ye k it.' Lancelot and E. 80
I am yours. Not Arthur's, as ye A;, „ 135
Ye k right well, how meek soe'er he seem, „ 155
Hereafter ye shall A; me — and the shield — „ 192
you A; Of Arthur's glorious wars.' „ 284
■ Fair lord, whose name I A; not — „ 360
Such is my wont, as those, who k me, A;.' „ 365
That those who k should A; you.' „ 368
touch Of greatness to k weU I am not great : „ 451
such his wont, as we, that k him, k.' „ 475
Albeit I k my knights fantastical, „ 594
your pardon ! lo, ye A; it ! „ 669
Full simple was her answer, ' What A; I ? „ 671
I A; not if I A; what tme love is. But if I A;, then, if I
love not him, I k there is none other I can love.' „ 676
knew ye what all others k, „ 680
you A; full well Where yom- great knight „ 689
We two shall A; each other.' „ 700
by mine head she k's his hiding-place.' „ 714
ye A; When these have worn their tokens : „ 768
How k ye my lord's name is Lancelot ? ' „ 797
yea, I A; it of mine own self : „ 950
I A; not which is sweeter, no, not I. (repeat) „ 1009, 1015
As when we dwell upon a word we A;, Repeating, till
the word we k so well Becomes a wonder, and we
k not why, „ 1027
And there the King will A; me and my love, „ 1058
Daughter, I A; not what you call the highest ; But this
I A;, for all the people k it, „ 1080
K that for this most gentle maiden's death „ 1291
I k What thou hast been in battle by my side, „ 1357
Unbound as yet, and gentle, as I A;.' „ 1386
if she will'd it ? nay. Who k's ? „ 1423
' From our old books I A; That Joseph came of old Holy Grail 59
' I A; not, for thy heart is pure as snow.' „ 97
— we A; not whence they come ; „ 147
ye A; the cries of all my realm Pass thro' this hall — „ 315
I touch'd The chapel-doors at dawn I A; ; „ 536
And k's himself no vision to himself, „ 917
' Make me thy knight, because I A;, Pelleas and E. 7
I love thee, tho' I A; thee not. „ 43
I A; That all these pains are trials of my faith, „ 245
Yield me thy love and A: me for thy knight.' „ 249
Ye A; yourselves : how can ye bide at peace, „ 265
He could not love me, did he A; me well. „ 312
Come, ye k nothing : here I pledge my troth, „ 341
loose thy tongue, and let me A:.' „ 600
Perchance — who k's ? — the purest of thy knights Last Tournament 49
' Where is he who k's ? „ 132
behke I skip To k myself the wisest knight of all.' „ 248
Dost thou k the star We call the harp of Arthur „ 332
I A; not what I would ' — but said to her, „ 498
k The ptarmigan that whitens ere his hour „ 696
Who knowing nothing k's but to obey, Guinevere 186
None k's it, and my tears have brought me good : „ 202
What can'st thou k of Kings and Tables Round, „ 228
' Yea, but I A; : the land was full of signs „ 232
Howheit I A;, if ancient prophecies Have err'd not, „ 449
the wife Whom he k's false, abide and rule „ 515
claim me thine, and k I am thine husband — „ 565
I A; not what mysterious doom. „ 576
' Ye A; me then, that wicked one, „ 669
Right well in heart they A; thee for the King. Pass, of Arthur 63
Confusion, till I A; not what I am, „ 144
King is sick, and k's not what he does. „ 265
isle, one isle. That k's not her own greatness : if
she k's And dreads it we are fall'n. — To the Queen II 32
that which k's, but careful for itself. And that
which k's not, ruling that which k's „ 57
Ye A; not what ye ask. Lover's Tale i 150
young Life A;'s not when young Life was bom, „ 156
Enow
372
Knowing
Enow (continued) as men fc not when they fall asleep
Into delicious dreams,
So A; I not when I began to love.
k that whatsoe'er Our general mother meant
These have not seen thee, these can never k thee,
what use To k her father left us
and dimly k's His head shall rise no more :
she ask'd, I k not what, and ask'd.
Did I love her ? Ye k that I did love her ;
To what height The day had grown I k not.
but you k that you must give me back :
I will do your will, and none shall A;.' Not k ?
did her k her worth. Her beauty even ?
Beginning at the sequel k no more.
Clfalice and salver, wines that, Heaven k's when,
' six Aveeks' work, Uttle wife, so f ar as I fc ;
but that isn't true, you k ;
I didn't k well what I meant,
when he k's that I cannot go ?
Falls ? what falls ? who k's ?
what should you k of the night.
And now I never shall k it.
you k that I couldn't but hear ;
Sin ? O yes — we are sinner's, I k —
0 long-suffering — yes, as the Lord must k.
How do they A; it ? are they his mother ?
I'm sure to be happy with Willy, I k not where.
' I k you are no coward ;
1 k the song. Their favourite —
I k you worthy everyway To be my son,
only k they come, They smile upon me,
I k not which of these I love the best.
but I k that I heard him say
are all they can k of the spring.
How should he k that it's me ?
they shall k we are soldiers and men!
for you k The flies at home,
I k that he has led me all my life,
We k we are nothing —
which I A: no version done In English
as I A; Less for its own than for the sake
days of a larger light than I ever again shall A; —
for a moment, I scarce A; why.
I am not claiming your pity : I A: you of old —
the great God for aught that I k ;
if thou knewest, tho' thou canst not A; ;
That which k's, And is not known.
Who k's ? or whether this earth-narrow life
He k's not ev'n the book he wrote.
Who k's but that the darkness is in man ?
I k not and I speak of what has been.
To one who A;'s I scorn him.
I k not where to turn ;
You only k the love that makes the world
An' I didn't A; him meself,
' Div ye A: him, Molly Magee ? '
Move among your people, k them.
Lover's Tale i 161
163
244
285
293
638
706
733
„ Hi 9
iv 100
120
150
158
193
First Quarrel 45
79
83
Rizpah 3
„ 12
., 17
„ 44
„ 48
„ 60
■ „ 67
„ 70
„ 76
The Revenge 8
Sisters (E. and E.) 2
48
278
283
In the Child. Hasp. 21
37
54
Def. of Lucknow 41
Columbus 118
160
De Prof., Human C. 8
To E. Fitzgerald 33
51
The Wreck 78
84
Despair 37
„ 104
Ancient Sage 36
Who k you but as one of those I fain would meet
129
148
173
228
The Flight 2Q
74
76
Tomorrow 76
78
Locksley H., Sixty 266
again, Yet A: j^ou, as your England k's
we k what is fair without Is often as foul
within.'
for all men k This earth has never borne
wise to A; The limits of resistance,
you and yours may A; From me and mine,
•We k not, and we k not why we wail.'
' We k not, and we k not why we moan.'
* We k not, for we spin the lives of men, And not
of Gods, and A; not why we spin !
I felt On a sudden I A: not what,
thro' the Will of One who k's and rules —
well, you k I married Muriel Eme.
You that k you're dying . . .
Come back, nor let me fc it !
your tale of lands I k not,
Had I but known you as I A; you now —
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 21
Dead Prophet 67
Epit. on Gordon 3
To Duke of Argyll 1
To Marq. of Dufferin 17
Demeter and P. 62
67
85
The Ring 32
42
376
Forlorn 58
Happy 5
To Ulysses 35
Romnetfs S. 90
Eqow (continued) Should I k the man ? Romney's R. 144
you that drive, and A; your Craft, Politics 5
I A; it, I A; it, I A; it. The Throstle 2
He k's Himself, men nor themselves Akbar's Dream 32
they A; too that whene'er In our free Hall, „ 54
Nay, but I A; it — his, the hoary Sheik, „ 90
By the great dead pine — you A: it — Bandit's Death 23
Know-all We have knelt in your k-a chapel Despair 94
Enowest ' If straight thy track, or if obUque, Thou
A; not. Two Voices 194
' What is it thou A;, sweet voice ? ' „ 440
Thou A; I bore this better at the first, St. S. Stylites 28
whereof, O God, thou A: all. „ 70
Thou, 0 God, K alone whether this was or no. „ 83
O Lord, thou A; what a man I am ; „ 121
Hard is my doom and thine : thou A; it all. Love and Duty 54
tell her. Swallow, thou that A; each, Princess iv 96
' K thou aught of Arthur's birth ? ' Com,, of Arthur 147
and not k, and I that know, Gareth and L. 11
Sleuth-hound thou k, and gray, and all the hounds ;
A horse thou A;, a man thou dost not know : „ 462
' Yea, King, thou k thy kitchen-knave am I, „ 649
' K thou not me ? thy master ? I am Kay. „ 753
' What k thou of lovesong or of love ? „ 1063
' What A; thou of flowers, except, „ 1069
' What k thou of birds, lark, mavis, „ 1078
K thou not the fashion of our speech ? Pelleas and E. 100
What k thou of the world, and all its lights Guinevere 343
And A; thou now from whence I come — „ 433
thou A;, and that smooth rock Before it, Tiresias 146
Thou A;, Taught by some God, Death of CEnone 34
friend, thou k I hold that forms Are needful : Akbar's Dream 126
thou k how deep a well of love My heart is „ 170
Knowing But, A; not the universe. Two Voices 230
A; God, they lift not hands of prayer M. d' Arthur 252
So spoke I A; not the things that were. Edwin Morris 89
k all Life needs for life is possible Love and Duty 85
He comes, scarce A; what he seeks : Day-Dm., Arrival 17
She fail'd and sadden'd A; it ; Enoch Arden 257
Stay'd by this isle, not A; where she lay : „ 630
Told him, with annals of the port. Not k — „ 703
young hearts not k that they loved, Aylmer's Field 133
kiss'd her tenderly Not k what possess'd him : „ 556
Shame might befall Melissa, A;, Princess Hi 148
beauty in detail Made them worth A; ; „ iv 449
A; Death has made His darkness beautiful In Mem. Ixxiv 11
K the primrose yet is dear, „ Ixxxv 118
And smilest. A: all is well. „ cxxvii 20
K your promise to me ; Maud I xxii 50
K I tarry for thee,' „ /// vi 13
K all arts, had touch'd, Gareth and L. 307
great And lusty, and A; both of lance and sword.' „ 731
what ail'd him, hardly A; it himself, Geraint and E. 504
if A; that I know, Will hate, loathe, fear — Merlin and V. 121
Should rest and let you rest, A; you mine. „ 335
at a touch. But A; you are Lancelot ; Lancelot and E. 150
at a touch. But A: he was Lancelot ; „ 579
His kith and kin, not A:, set upon him ; „ 599
Not A; he should die a holy man. „ 1429
Beyond my A; of them, beautiful. Beyond all A; of
them,
And k every honest face of theirs
Not k they were lost as soon as given —
Who k nothing knows but to obey,
golden hair, with which I used to play Not A; !
Mourn, k it will go along with me ? '
friend slew friend not A; whom he slew ;
k God, they lift not hands of prayer
keep yourself, none A:, to yourself ;
one of those about her A; me Call'd me to join
she wrought us harm. Poor soul, not A;)
horses whirl'd The chariots backward. A; griefs
at hand ;
K the Love we were used to believe
For their A; and know-nothing books
Holy Grail 103
550
Last Tournament 42
Guinevere 186
548
Pass, of Arthur 49
101
420
Lover's Tale to 114
Sisters (E. and E.) 122
185
Achilles over the T. 25
Despair 54
.. 93
Knowledge
373
Laay
Two Voices 90
172
(Enone 133
- With Pal. of Art ?>
10
D. of F. Women 9
To J. S. 5
Love thou thy land 17
Knowledge {See also Self-knowledge) In midst of k,
clream'd not yet.
' That men with k merely play'd,
In k of their own supremacy/
And K for its beauty ; To —
Beauty, Good, and K, are three sisters
the k of his art Held me above the subject.
And me this k bolder made.
Make k circle with the winds ;
Certain, if k bring the sword, That k takes the
sword away — „ 87
flower of k changed to fruit Of wisdom. Love and Duty 24
yearning in desire To follow A: like a sinking star, Ulysses 31
K comes, but wisdom lingers, (repeat) Locksley Hall 141, 143
And newer k, drawing nigh, Day-Dm., Sleep P. 51
Like Virtue firm, like K fair, The Voyage 68
Without the captain's k : hope with me. Aylmer's Field 717
k, so my daughter held, Was all in all : Princess i 135
As arguing love of k and of power ; „ ii 57
K is now no more a fountain seal'd : „ 90
We issued gorged with k, and I spoke : „ 388
yet we know Kiak, and this matter hangs : „ Hi 316
each Disclaim'd all A; of us : „ iv 229
K in our own land make her free, „ v 419
sought far less for truth than power In fc: „ du 237
A greater than all k, beat her down. „ 238
For A: is of things we see; In Mem., Pro. 22
Let k grow from more to more, „ 25
power to think And all my k of myself ; „ xw 16
All k that the sons of flesh Shall gather „ Ixxxv 27
Who loves not K? Who shall rail Against her
beauty ? „ cxiv 1
grewest not alone in power And k, „ 27
eye to eye, shall look On k ; „ Con. 130
behold, Without k, without pity, Mand II iv 53
This is my sum of k — that my love Grew with
myself — Lover's Tale i 164
For K is the swallow on the lake Ancient Sage 37
Of K fusing class with class. Freedom 17
Without his k, from him flits to warn Demeter and P. 89
likeness of thyself Without thy k, „ 93
And utter k is but utter love — The Ring 43
While the long day of k grows and warms, Prog, of Spring 101
Known (See also Long-known, Well-known)
in all the land,
To perish, wept for, honour'd, k,
In aftertime, this also shall be k :
Like one that never can be wholly k,
Much have I seen and k ;
having k me — to decline On a range of lower feelings
* No more of love ; your sex is k :
Not only to the market-cross were k,
Have we not k each other all our lives ? (repeat)
k Far in a darker isle beyond the line ;
He must have k, himself had k :
He had k a man, a quintessence of man,
learn a language k but smatteringly
Or is she k
L. ofShaloiti 26
Two Voices 149
M. d' Arthur 35
Gardener's D. 206
Ulysses 13
Locksley Hall 43
The Letters 29
Enoch Arden 96
„ 306, 420
604
Aylmer's Field 346
388
433
many too had k Edith among the hamlets round, „ 614
As with the mother he had never k, „ 690
0 thou that kUlest, hadst thou k, „ 738
And whatsoever can be taught and k ; Princess ii 385
falling on my face was caught and k. „ iv 270
1 bore up in hope she would be A; : „ 320
public use required she should be A; ; „ 336
and k at last (my work) And full of cowardice. „ 347
when A;, there grew Another kind of beauty „ 447
' 0 brother, you have k the pangs we felt, „ 374
And all the sultry palms of India A;, W. to Marie Alex. 14
Two dead men have I A; In courtesy like to thee : G. of Swainston 11
Who makes by force his merit A; In Mem. Ixiy 9
And which, tho' veil'd, was k to me, „ ciii 13
And that dear voice, I once have k, „ cxvi 11
K and unknown ; human, divine ; „ cxxix 5
She is singing an air that is A; to me, Maud I v 3
Everything came to be A;. » // v 51
Known (continued) And there be made k to the stately
Queen,
Because I knew my deeds were k, I found.
Not wining to be A;, He left the barren-beaten
thoroughfare,
K as they are, to me they are unknown.'
' K am I, and of Arthur's hall, and A;,
Robed in red samite, easily to be k,
love In women, whomsoever I have k.
make men worse by making my sin k ?
never have I A; the world without,
' O brother, had you k our mighty hall,
' And, brother, had you A; our hall within,
0 brother, had you A; our Camelot,
But her thou hast not A; :
he had A; Scarce any but the women of his isles,
trampled out his face from being k,
wish ner any huger wrong Tlian having A; thee ?
It surely was my profit had I A; :
In aftertime, this also shall be k :
Never yet Before or after have I A; the spring
1 died then, I had not k the death ;
love Shall ripen to a proverb, unto all K,
Not know ? with such a secret to be A;.
all the house had A; the loves of both ;
Had I not A; where Love, at first a fear,
that hast never k the embrace of love.
But the face I had A;. 0 Mother,
That which knows. And is not k, but felt
gain'd a freedom k to Europe, A; to all ;
and flows that can be k to you or me.
A; By those who love thee best.
Makes the might of Britain k ;
one other whom you have not k.
Whose eyes have k this globe of ours,
Had I but A; you as I know you now —
On those two k peaks they stand
To have seen thee, and heard thee, and A;,
thousand things are hidden still. And not a
hundred A;.
Know-nothing We had read their k-n books
For their knowing and k-n books
Knuckled boy That A; at the taw :
Koran I stagger at the K and the sword.
' hast thou brought us down a new K From heaven ?
I heard a mocking laugh ' the new K ! '
Kraken uninvaded sleep The K sleepeth :
Marr. of Geraint 607
Geraint and E. 858
Lancelot and E. 160
186
188
433
1294
1417
Holy Grail 20
„ 225
„ 246
„ 339
„ 454
Pelleas and E. 87
Last Tournament 470
597
Guinevere 658
Pass, of Arthur 203
Lover's Tale i 314
496
759
iv 121
123
Sisters (E. and E.) 170
Tiresias 164
The Wreck 116
A ncient Sage 86
Locksley H., Sixty 129
194
Pref. Poem Broth. S. 7
Open. I. and C. Exhib. 19
The Ring 55
To Ulysses 2
Romney's R. 90
Parnassus 11
Bandit's Death 4
Mechanophilus 24
Despair 55
93
Will Water. 132
Akbar's Dream 71
116
183
The Kraken 4
Kypris Ay, and this K also — did I take That popular name Lucretius 95
La^y (lady) yon I a-steppin' along the streeat, North. Cobbler 107
But owd Squire's I es long es she lived Village Wife 53
They maakes ma a graater L Spinster's S's. 110
Laaid (laid) tha knaws she I it to mea. N. Farmer, O. S. 21
Wi' lots o' munny I by, „ N. S. 22
Could'n I luvv thy muther by cause o' 'er munny
Ihy? „ 35
an' they I big heggs es tha seeas. Village Wife 118
Laame (lame) An' Lucy wur I o' one leg, „ 99
Laamed (lamed) I seead that our Sally went I North. Cobbler 39
Laane (lane) an' hawmin' about i' the I's, „ 24
Goa to the I at the back, Spinster's S's. 6
by the brokken shed i' the I at the back, „ 37
es I be abroad i' the I's „ 107
Laate (late) fur he coom'd last night sa I — Village Wife 123
What maakes 'er sal? Spinster's S's. 5
what ha maade our Molly sa Z ? „ 113
I says to him ' Squire, ya're I,' Owd Rod 55
Too I — but it's all ower now — „ 116
Too I — tha mun git tha to bed, „ 117
Laay (lay) says Parson, and I's down 'is 'at, North. Cobbler 89
Laazy
374
Lady
Laazy (lazy) Them or thir feythers, tha sees, mun
'a bean a I lot, N. Farmer, N. S. 49
Laborious L orient ivory sphere in sphere. Princess, Pro. 20
And, lo ! the long I miles Of Palace ; Ode Inter. Exhib. 11
L for her people and her poor — Ded. of Idylls 35
You, the hardy, I, Patient children of Albion, 0?i Jub. Q. Victoria 58
Laboor (s) (See also Brain-labour) gaze On the prime
I of thine early days : Ode to Memory 94
So were thy I little-worth. Two Voices 171
A I working to an end. „ 297
why Should life all Z be ? Let us alone. Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 42
Long I unto aged breath, „ 85
the shore Than I in the deep mid-ocean, „ 127
And rested from her I's. The Goose 16
discerning to fulfil This I, Ulysses 36
Confused the chemic I of the blood, Lv/iretius 20
A present, a great I of the loom ; Princess i 44
A blessing on her Vs for the world. „ ii 479
health, and wind, and rain. And I. „ iv 280
That all her I was but as a block „ vii 230
Science, Art, and L have outpour'd Ode Inter. Exhib. 5
And reaps the I of his hands, In Mem. Ixiv 26
thy prosperous I fills The lips of men „ Ixxxiv 25
band Of youthful friends, on mind and art, And I, „ Ixxxvii 23
To I and the mattock-harden'd hand, Mavd I xviii 34
Or it may be the I of his hands, Marr. of Geraint 341
dew of their great I, and the blood Of their strong
bodies, „ 568
Her own poor work, her empty I, left. Lancelot and E. 991
Or L, with a groan and not a voice. To the Queen ii 55
the I of fifty that had to be done by five, Def. of Lucknow 77
And rough-ruddy faces Of lowly I, Merlin and the G. 60
Labour (verb) No memory I's longer from the deep
Gold-mines D. of F. Women 273
Yet since he did but I for himself, Enoch Arden 819
would go, L for his own Edith, Aylmer's Field 420
and I him Beyond his comrade of the hearth, Gareth and L. 484
' Friend, he that I's for the sparrow-hawk Marr. of Geraint 271
As one that I's with an evil dream. Merlin and V. 101
Labonr'd (adj. and part) Or I mine undrainable of ore. (Enone 115
Had I down within his ample lungs. Princess v 273
vast designs Of his I rampart-lines. Ode on Well. 105
A hermit, who had pray'd, I and pray'd, Lancelot and E. 403
Had I in lifting them out of slime. Dead Prophet 11
Labour'd (verb) I thro' His brief prayer-prelude, Aylmer's Field 627
The bosom with long sighs I ; Princess vii 225
L with him, for he seem'd as one That all in later, Gareth and L. 1128
AU that day long I, hewing the pines, Death of (Enone 62
Labourer woo'd and wed A I's daughter, Dora 40
By sallowy rims, arose the I's' homes, Aylmer's Field 147
year by year the I tills His wonted glebe. In Mem. ci 21
LabOTUiug And onward drags a I breast, „ a;r 18
The giant I in his youth ; „ cxviii 2
The lusty mowers I dinnerless, Geraint and E. 251
Arthur came, and I up the pass, Lancelot and E. 47
ever I had scoop'd himself In the white rock „ 404
Labourless till the I day dipt under the West ; V. of Maddune 86
Laburnum (adj.) aU the gold from each I chain Drop
to the grass. To Mary Boyle 11
Laburnum (s) L's, dropping-wells of fire. In Mem. Ixxxiii 12
Labyrinth Charm'd him thro' every I Aylmer's Field 479
He thrids the I of the mind. In Mem. xcvii 21
Labsrrinthine following out A league of I darkness, Demeter and P. 82
Lace (fabric) The shadow of some piece of pointed Z, Lancelot and E. Ill 4
books, the miniature, the I are hers, The Ring 288
Dresses and l's and jewels and never a ring Charity 6
Lace (a cord) burst The l's toward her babe ; Princess vi 149
And once the l's of a helmet crack'd, Last Tournament 164
Lace (verb) holp To I us up, till, each, Princess i 202
Laced See Strait-laced
Lack (s) tinged with wan from I of sleep, Princess Hi 25
Death-pale, for I of gentle maiden's aid. Lancelot and E. 765
' Belike for I of wiser company ; Last Tournament 245
Lack (verb) We I not rhymes and reasons, Will Water. 62
We I thee by the hearth.' Gareth and L. 754
Lack'd-Iackt I have not lack'd thy mild reproof, My life is full 4
for, were Sir Lancelot lackt, at least Gareth and L. 738
Because it lack'd the power of perfect Hope ; Lover's Tale i 453
angers of the Gods for evil done And expiation lack'd Tiresias 63
Lackest Asks what thou I, thought resign'd, Two Voices 98
Lacking given thee a fair face, L a tongue ? ' Pelleas and E. 102
Beast too, as I hvmian wit— -disgraced, „ 476
Lack-lustre And a l-l dead-blue eye, A Character 17
Lackt See Lack'd
Lactantius Some cited old L : Columbus 49
Lad {See also Shepherd-lad) There's many a bolder I 'ill
woo me May Queen 23
the shepherd l's on every side 'ill come „ 27
the I stretch'd out And babbled for the golden seal, Dora 134
0 well for the sailor I, That he sings in his boat Break, break, etc. 7
Enoch Arden, a rough sailor's I Enoch Arden 14
' Poor I, he died at Florence, The Brook 35
LeoUn's emissary, A crippled I, Aylmer's Field 519
long-limb'd I that had a Psyche too ; Princess ii 406
Himself would tilt it out among the l's : „ v 355
Wam't I craazed fur the lasses mysen when
win- a Z ? N. Farmer, N. S. 18
Mun be a guvness, I, or summut, and addle
her bread : „ 25
Break me a bit o' the esh for his 'ead, I, „ 41
fair and fine ! — Some young l's mystery — Gareth and L. 466
an the I were noble, he had ask'd For horse and armour : „ 473
Ate with young l's his portion by the door, „ 480
take counsel ; for this I is great And lusty, „ 730
massacring Man, woman, I and girl — „ 1341
This I, whose lightest word Is mere white truth Balin and Balan 517
had need Of a good stout I at his farm ; First Quarrel 18
poor I, an' we parted in tears. „ 20
For he thought — there were other l's — „ 38
you haven't done it, my I, „ 53
1 weant gaainsaiiy it, my I, North. Cobbler 17
not hafe ov a man, my I — „ 21
Proud on 'im, like, my I, an' I keeaps „ 97
But I moant, my I, and I weant, „ 102
' L, thou mun cut off thy taail. Village Wife 64
she walkt awaay wi' a hofficer I, „ 97
I ^n^l need little more of your care.' In the Child. Hosp. 17
Steevie, my I, thou 'ed very nigh been Spinster's S's. 68
But I clean forgot tha, my I, Owd Eod 53
wheere thou was a-liggin, my I, „ 87
But sich an obstropidous I — Churchwarden, etc. 23
an' 'e beal'd to ya ' i coom hout ' „ 28
fur thou was the Parson's I. „ 36
Ladder (See also Lether) lean a I on the shaft, St. S. Stylites 216
hurl them to earth from the l's Def. of Lucknow 58
shifting l's of shadow and light, Dead Prophet 21
A Jacob's I falls On greening grass. Early Spring 9
Ladder-of-heaven the l-o-h that hangs on a star. By an Evolution. 12
Laddie See Soldier-laddie
Laden (See also Barge-laden, Lady-laden) enchanted
stem, L with flower and fruit, Lotos- Eaters 29
Knowledge comes, but wisdom lingers, and he beai-s
a I breast, Locksley Hall 143
came the children I with their spoil ; Enoch Arden 445
Two sets of three I with jingling arms, Geraint and E. 188
Boughs on each side, I with wholesome shade. Lover's Tale i 230
soft winds, L with thistledown and seeds „ ii 13
Lading I and unlading the tall barks, Enoch Arden 816
The I of a single pain. In Mem. xxv 11
Lady (adj.) and I friends From neighbour seats : Princess, Pro. 97
In mine own I pahns I cull'd the spring Merlin and V. 273
Lady (s) (See also Court-lady, Laady, Liege-lady) The
sweetest I of the time, Arabian Nights 141
■Rise from the feast of sorrow, I, Margaret 62
In dreaming of my l's eyes. Kate 28
knight for ever kneel'd To a Z in his shield, L. of Shalott Hi 7
Before Our L mmmur'd she ; Mariana in the S. 28
bore a I from a leaguer'd town ; D. of F. Women 47
At length I saw a I within call, „ 85
' No marvel, sovereign I : in fair field „ 97
Lady
375
Laid
charged Before the eyes of ladies and
M. d' Arthur 225
Walk, to the Mail 48
Lady (s) (continued)
of kings.
I met my I once : A woman Uke a butt,
lightly rain from ladies' hands.
How sweet are looks that ladies bend
' And he shall have it,' the I rephed,
Ancient homes of lord and I,
That she grew a noble I,
a phosphorescence charming even My I ;
My I's Indian kinsman unannounced
' Good ! my I's kinsman ! good ! '
My I with her fingers interlock'd,
' A gracious gift to give a I, this ! '
give this gift of his to one That is no Z ? '
My I's cousin. Half-sickening of his pension'd afternoon,
Seized it, took home, and to my I, —
Seconded, for my I foUow'd suit.
My I's Indian kinsman rushing in,
with these, a I, one that arm'd Her own fair head, Pr
And takes a I's finger with all care,
A talk of college and of ladies' rights,
let the ladies sing us, if they will.
The I of three castles in that land :
' Three ladies of the Northern empire
are the ladies of your land so taU ? '
will do well. Ladies, in entering here,
We sat : the L glanced : Then Florian,
But, dearest L, pray you fear me not,
I ceased, and all the ladies, each at each,
strange experiences Unmeet for ladies.
Thereat the L stretch'd a vulture throat,
Take comfort : live, dear I, for your child ! '
Ahve with fluttering scarfs and ladies' eyes,
' Your brother, L, — Florian, — ask for him
Sleep, little ladies ! And they slept well.
Wake, httle ladies. The sxm is aloft !
And never a line from my I yet !
' And near him stood the L of the Lake,
A Z of high lineage, of great lands.
Who tilt for I's love and glory here.
Come, therefore, leave thy I lightly, knave,
it beseemeth not a knave To ride with such a I.
rode Full slowly by a knight, I, and dwarf ;
Except the I he loves best be there.
Lays claim to for the I at his side.
Has ever won it for the I with him,
thou, that hast no I, canst not fight.'
errant-knights And ladies came, and by and by
the town Flow'd in,
Spake to the I with him and proclaim'd,
lords and ladies of the high court went
Sweet I, never since I first drew breath
her ladies loved to caU Enid the Fair,
the fairest and the best Of ladies living
Take one verse more — the I speaks it —
The I never made unwilling war With those fine eyes : „ 603
man That ever among ladies ate in hall, Lancelot and E. 255
King Had on his cuirass worn our L's Head, „ 294
' Fair I, since I never yet have worn „ 363
Favour of any I in the lists, (repeat) „ 364, 474
L, my liege, in whom I have my joy, „ 1180
And to all other ladies, I make moan : „ 1279
Lancelot, whom the L of the Lake Caught „ 1404
The knights and ladies wept, Holy Grail 353
Our L says it, and we well beUeve : Wed thou our L,
and rule over us, ,> 604
Pelleas for his I won The golden circlet, Pdleas and E. 13
tvun'd the I roimd And look'd upon her people ; „ 91
for the I was Ettarre, And she was a great I in her land,
gracious to him. For she was a great I.
her ladies laugh'd along with her.
for he dream'd His I loved him,
Pelleas might obtain his l's love.
Then rang the shout his I loved :
' These be the ways of ladies,' Pelleas thought,
Sir Galahad 12
13
Lady Clare 47
L. of Burleigh 31
75
Aylmer's Field 117
190
198
199
240
243
460
532
558
593
, Pro. 32
173
233
240
t79
238
ii 47
62
111
333
iv 117
159
363
1)80
509
m313
Minnie and Winnie 3
19
Window, No Answer 15
Com. of Arthur 283
Gareth and L. 609
740
957
,' „ 959
Marr. of Geraint 187
481
487
490
493
546
552
662
Geraint and E. 619
962
Balin and Balan 340
Merlin and V. 445
97
123
135
153
161
171
209
Lady (s) (continued) ' Behold me, L, A prisoner, Pelleas and E. 240
' For pity of thine own self. Peace, L, peace : „ 254
He needs no aid who doth his l's will.' „ 281
' L, for indeed I loved you and I deem'd you beautiful, „ 296
' Why, let my I bind me if she will, And let my I beat
me if she will : „ 334
let my I sear the stump for him, • „ 339
they cried, ' our I loves thee not.' „ 369
crying to their Z, ' Lo ! Pelleas is dead — „ 376
ware their ladies' coloius on the casque, Last Tournament 184
' 0 pray you, noble I, weep no more ; Guinevere 184
Ah sweet I, the King's grief For his own self, „ 196
sweet I, if I seem To vex an ear too sad „ 314
a noble knight, Was gracious to all ladies, „ 329
I could think, sweet I, yours would be „ 352
charged Before the eyes of ladies and of kings. Pass, of Arthur 393
Whether they were his l's marriage-bells. Lover's Tale iv 11
For that low knell tolling his I dead — „ 33
saw His I with the moonlight on her face ; „ 57
He reverenced his dear I even in death ; „ 74
sudden wail his I made Dwelt in his fancy : „ 149
About a picture of his I, taken Some years „ 216
Led his dear Z to a chair of state. „ 321
Then taking his dear I by one hand, „ 369
yes — a I — none of their spies — Rizpah 15
Lady-clad I saw The feudal warrior l-c ; Princess, Pro. 119
Lady-fern underneath a plume of l-f. Sang, Balin and Balan 26
La^-laden long Eich galleries, l-l. Holy Grail 346
Lady of Sbalott See Shalott
Lady's-head The L-h upon the prow The Voyage 11
Lady-sister I bow'd to his l-s as she rode Maud I iv 15
Lag To I behind, scared by the cry they made. Princess v 94
Laggard Here comes a I hanging down his head, Geraint and E. 60
La^'d I Hn answer loth to render up Princess v 299
Whereof the dwarf I latest, and the knight Had
vizor up, Marr. of Geraint 188
Laid (See also La&id, Long-laid) L low, very low,
In the dark we must lie. All Things will Die 21
L by the tumult of the fight. Margaret 26
Upon my lap he I his head : The Sisters 17
And I him at his mother's feet. „ 35
the strong foundation-stones were I Palace of Art 235
and see me where I am lowly I. May Queen, N. Y's. E. 30
argent of her breast to sight L bare. D. of F. Women 159
more the white goose I It clack'd and cackled louder. The Goose 23
L widow'd of the power in his eye M. d' Arthur 122
I his head upon her lap. And loosed „ 208
Francis I A damask napkin wrought with horse Audley Court 20
and the winds are I with sound. Locksley Hall 104
for when he Z a tax Upon his town, Godiva 13
' O eyes long I in happy sleep ! ' Day- Dm., Depart. 17
Heb aims across her breast she I ; Beggar Maid 1
rises up. And is lightly I again, (repeat) Vision of Sin 134, 170
And I the feeble infant in his arms ; Enoch Arden 152
when she I her head beside my own. „ 881
the Baronet yet had I No bar between them : Aylmer's Field 117
or I his feverous piUow smooth ! „ 701
she I, WifeUke, her hand in one of his, „ 807
With neighbours I along the grass, Lucretius 214
his bones long I within the grave, „ 256
I about them at their wills and died ; Princess, Pro. 31
pluck'd her Ukeness out ; i it on flowers, „ i 93
The creature I his muzzle on your lap, „ ii 272
Mock-Hymen were I up like winter bats, „ iv 144
she I A feeUng finger on my brows, „ vi 120
L the soft babe in his hard-mailed hands. „ 208
And others otherwhere they I ; „ 378
And worthy to be I by thee ; Ode on Well. 94
Be glad, because his bones are I by thine ! „ 141
And where you tenderly Z it by : The Daisy 100
A famine after I them low. The Victim 2
beautiful, when all the winds are I, Spec, of Iliad 12
Where he in English earth is I, In Mem. xviii 2
They I him by the pleasant shore, „ xix 3
L their dark arms about the field, (repeat) „ xev 16, 52
Laid
376
Lame-born
Laid (continued) faced the spectres of the mind And
I them : In Mem. xcvi 16
I On the hasp of the window, Maud I xiv 18
He I a cruel snare in a pit „ // v 84
Bleys L magic by, and sat him down, Com. of Arthur 156
Modred I his ear beside the doors, „ 323
Eagle, I Almost beyond eye-reach, Gareth and L. 44
Which down he I before the throne, and knelt, „ 390
one stroke L him that clove it groveUing ,, 972
Gareth I his lance athwart the ford ; „ 1048
Far better were I Z in the dark earth, Marr. of Geraint 97
With sprigs of summer I between the folds, „ 138
and everywhere Was hammer I to hoof, „ 256
crost the trencher as she I it down : „ 396
On either shining shoulder I a hand, „ 518
bright apparel, which she I Flat on the couch, „ 678
Came one with this and I it in my hand, „ 699
L from her limbs the costly-broider'd gift, „ 769
one command 1 1 upon you, not to speak to me, Geraint and E. 78
raised and I him on a litter-bier, „ 566
I him on it All in the hollow of his shield, „ 568
I his lance In rest, and made as if to fall „ 775
And all the penance the Queen I upon me „ 854
leaves L their green faces flat against the panes, Balin and Balan 344
And I the diamond in his open hand. Lancelot and E. 827
Her father I the letter in her hand, „ 1134
on the black decks I her in her bed, „ 1147
Received at once and I aside the gems ,, 1202
when the knights had I her comely head „ 1337
made him hers, and I her mind On him. Holy Grail 164
against the chapel door L lance, and enter'd, „ 460
groaning I The naked sword athwart their naked
throats, Pelleas and E. 451
he I His brows upon the drifted leaf Last Tournament 405
and I her hands about his feet. Guinevere 528
L widow'd of the power in his eye Pass, of Arthur 290
I his head upon her lap. And loosed the shatter'd
casque, „ 376
Z it in a sepulchre of rock Never to rise again. Lover's Tale i 683
graspt the hand she lov'd. And I it in her own, „ 751
winds L the long night in silver streaks and bars, „ ii 112
And I her in the vault of her own kin. ,, iv 39
never to say that 1 1 him in holy ground. Rizpah 58
we I them on the ballast down below ; The Revenge 18
Where they I him by the mast, „ 98
this ward where the younger children are I : In the Child. Hosp. 27
we I him that night in his grave. Def. of Lucknow 12
corpse to be Z in the ground, „ 80
And she I her hand in my own — Despair 49
Or if lip were I to lip on the pillows The Flight 48
an' I himself imdher yer feet, Tomorrow 38
they I this body they foim' an the grass „ 73
Whin we I yez, aich by aich, „ 82
Who I thee at Eleusis, dazed and dumb Demeter and P. 6
L on her table overnight, was gone ; The Ring 277
forgotten by old Time, L on the shelf — To Mary Boyle 24
Lain There hath he I for ages and will lie The Kraken 11
fed on the roses and I in the lilies of life. Maud I iv60
Had I i! for a century dead ; „ xxii 72
For after I had I so many nights, Holy Grail 569
Hath I for years at rest — and renegades, Last Tournament 94
I had I as dead. Mute, blind and motionless Lover's Tale i 606
Would I had I Until the plaited ivy-tress „ 617
and had I three days without a pulse : „ iv 34
dark body which had I Of old in her embrace. Death of (Enone 93
Lake (See also Lava-lake) canal Is rounded to as
clear a I. Arabian Nights 46
counterchanged The level I with diamond-plots „ 85
an arm Rose up from out the bosom of the I, M. d' Arthur 30
Came on the shining levels of the I. „ 51
Wrought by the lonely maiden of the L. „ 104
on a sudden, lo ! the level I, „ 191
O MK, my pleasant rambles by the I, (repeat) Edwin Morris 1, 13
By ripply shallows of the lisping I, „ 98
The friendly mist of mom Clung to the I. „ 108
Lake (continued) Her taper glimmer'd in the I below
She moves among my visions of the I,
then we crost Between the I's,
Deep in the garden I withdrawn.
Dreams over I and lawn, and isles and capes — •
round the I A little clock-work steamer
The long light shakes across the I's,
quenching I by I and tarn by tarn
And slips into the bosom of the I :
Had blown the I beyond his limit.
One tall Agave above the I.
some dead I That holds the shadow of a lark
And long by the garden 1 1 stood.
From the I to the meadow and on to the wood.
The white lake-blossom fell into the I
sword That rose from out the bosom of the I,
Edwin Morris 135
144
Golden Year 6
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 12
Vision of Sin 11
Princess, Pro. 70
„ iv 3
„ vii 40
187
The Daisy 71
84
In Mem. xvi 8
Maud I xxii 35
37
47
Com. of Arthur 296
like an ever-fleeting wave. The Lady of the L stood : Gareth and L. 216
Bala I Fills all the sacred Dee
the I whiten'd and the pinewood roar'd,
you ride with Lancelot of the L,'
Than you believe me, Lancelot of the L.
' Most noble lord, Sir Lancelot of the L,
My knight, the great Sir Lancelot of the L.'
Lancelot, whom the Lady of the L Caught
Arthm''s vows on the great Z of fire.
an arm Rose up from out the bosom of the Z,
Came on the shining levels of the Z.
Wrought by the lonely maiden of the L.
And on a sudden, lo ! the level Z,
Lower down Spreads out a little Z,
ran over The rippling levels of the Z,
one lightning-fork Flash'd out the Z ;
thunder-sketch Of L and mountain conquers all the day.
must fain have torrents, I's, HiUs,
Knowledge is the swallow on the Z
Gazing at the Lydian laughter of the Garda L
below
And all ablaze too in the Z below !
all ablaze too plunging in the Z Head-foremost —
A light shot upward on them from the Z.
The mist of autumn gather from your Z,
Your wonder of the boiling Z ;
With your own shadow in the placid Z,
Lake-blossom The white l-b fell into the lake
Lakelet brook that feeds this Z murmur'd ' debt,'
Lamb ' Bring this Z back into Thy fold,
in the flocks The Z rejoiceth in the year,
live thus, in joy and hope As a young Z,
Nor bird would sing, nor Z would bleat,
in the fields all round I hear the bleating of the I
sweeter is the young I's voice to me
very whitest Z in all my fold Loves you :
and light is large, and I's are glad
this lost Z (she pointed to the child)
at once the lost Z at her feet Sent out
saintly youth, the spotless Z of Christ,
bleat of a Z in the storm and the darkness
The shepherd brings his adder-bitten Z,
I kep' mysen meeak as a Z,
Lamb (Christ) So shows my soul before the L,
I am written in the L's own Book of Life
Lame (See also LaS,me) abidest Z and poor,
Now mate is blind and captain Z,
But, blind or Z or sick or sound.
These Z hexameters the strong-wing'd music of
Homer !
I wander, often falling Z,
I stretch Z hands of faith, and grope,
Myself would work eye dim, and finger Z,
' why ? said he, ' for why should I go Z ? '
and half of the cattle went Z,
leave the dog too Z to follow with the cry,
L and old, and past his time,
L, crooked, reeling, livid, thro' the mist Rose,
Lame-bom as a boy l-b beneath a height.
Geraint and E. 929
Merlin and V. 637
Lancelot and E. 417
1205
1272
1373
1404
Last Tournament 345
Pass, of Arthur 198
219
272
359
Lover's Tale i 534
„ Hi 4
Sisters (E. and E.) 97
100
221
Ancient Sage 37
Prater Ave, etc. 8
The Ring 84
„ 251
., 256
„ 329
To Ulysses 40
Romney's R. 76
Maud I xxii 47
The Ring 171
Supp. Confessions 105
156
169
Mariana in the S. 37
May Queen, Con. 2
6
Aylmer's Field 361
Lucretius 99
Princess iv 361
391
Merlin and V. 749
In the Child. Hosp. 64
Death of (Enone 38
Church-warden, etc. 41
St. Agnes' Eve 17
Columbus 88
Two Voices 197
The Voyage 91
93
Trans, of Homer 1
In Mem. xxiii 6
Ivll
Marr. of Geraint 628
Sisters (E. and E.) 59
V. of Maeldune 31
Locksley H., Sixty 226
227
Death of (Enone 27
Balin and Balan 164
Lamech
Lamech But that of Z is mine.
Lamed (See also Laamed) my mind Stiunbles, and all
my faculties are I.
and a spear Down-glancing I the charter
she was I iv a knee, " '
Lameness Cured I, palsies, cancers.
Lament floated a dying swan. And loudly did I
a soul I's, which hath been blest,
Lamentation a I and an ancient tale of wron^
as it were one voice an agony Oil ^'
BuBY the Great Duke With an empire's I
as it were one voice, an agony Of I, '
scroll written over with I and woe. '
Laming And caught the I bullet
377
Lancelot
Mavd II a 48
Lamp (See also Night-lamp) Some yearning toward
the I s of night ;
' by that I,' I thought, ' she sits ! '
the' my I was lighted late,
and lit L's which out-bum'd Canopus.
bum a fragrant I before my bones
two sphere l's blazon'd like Heaven and Earth
above her droop 'd a I, And made the single jewel
. When all is gay with l's,
!« And just above the parting was a I :
L of the Lord God Lord everlasting
T-«.^•iKi'*'o^^'^^*' ^P'^ ^*" ^^^ golden music,
_ lamplight Gold ghttermg thro' I dim
Lamp-Ut shone the tent lA from the inner
Lan (land) was as light as snow an the V
The Divil take aU the black V
Lancaster (-See aZ«o Rose of Lancaster) York's white
rose as red as i's,
Lance L's in ambush set ;
Not like that Arthur who, with I in rest
and hurl their l's in the sun ; '
My tough I thrusteth sure,
some were push'd with l's from the rock
And into fiery splinters leapt the I, '
Like light in many a shiver'd I
Flash brand and Z, fall battleaxe upon helm
before my Hf Z Were mine to use—
my Z Hold, by God's grace, he shall into the mire-
and knowng both of I and sword '
no room was there For I or tourney-skill •
Gareth laid his I athwart the ford •
felt Thy manhood thro' that wearied I of thine
ilow best to manage horse, I, sword and shield"
Let me lay I in rest, 0 noble host, '
A I that splinter'd like an icicle
Aim'd at the helm, his I err'd • '
pick'd the I That pleased him best,
and the points of l's bicker in it
Down by the length of I and arm beyond The crupper
Came nding with a hundred l's up • ^rupper,
cast his I aside. And doff'd his helm •
Mn rest and made as if to fall upon him
he sharply caught his I and shield,
\V ith pointed Z as if to pierce, a shape
He burst his I against a forest bough
A score with pointed Z's, making at him—
Ihe longest I his eyes had ever seen
And every scratch a I had made upon it
Uod Broke the strong Z, and roU'd his enemy down
mme is the firmer seat. The truer I- '
toet Z in rest, strike spur, suddenly move,
Ihro her o^vn side she felt the sharp I go •
such a tonurey and so full, So many Z'Aroken-
my strong I had beaten down the knights
a^amst the chapel door Laid I, and enter'd,
she caught the circlet from his I
his long Z Broken, and his Excalibur a straw
My hand— behke the I hath dript upon it—
ii^ven to tipmost I and topmost hehn,
Mit with a I Becomes thee well-
Not hke that Arthur who, with I in rest
Lucretius 123
Lancelot and E. 488
Tomorrow 77
St. S. Stylites 82
Dying Swan 7
D. of F. Women 281
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 118
M. d' Arthur 201
Ode on Well. 2
Pass, of Arthur 369
Despair 20
Sisters (E. and E.) 65
Lance (continued)
die —
would rush on a thousand l's and
Two Voices Z^
Miller's D. 114
May Queen, Con. 18
D. of F. Women 146
St. S. Stylites 196
Princess i 223
„ iv 272
In Mem. xcviii 27
Lover's Tale iv 218
Batt. of Brunanburh 27
Ancient Sage 196
A rabian Nights 18
Princess iv 26
Tomorrow 36
64
Aylmer's Field 51
D. of F. Women 28
M. d' Arthur 222
Locksley Hall 170
Sir Galahad 2
Princess, Pro. 46
V 494
In Mem. xlix 3
Com. of Arthur 486
Gareth and L. 6
722
731
1042
1048
1266
1351
Marr. of Geraint 496
Geraint and E. 89
157
179
449
463
539
595
775
Balin and Balan 287
325
329
401
411
Lancelot and E. 20
26
447
456
624
Holy Grail 331
363
460
Pelleas and E. 173
Last Tournament 87
200
442
636
Pass, of Arthur 390
the points of the Russian l's arose in the sky •
Ihro the forest of Z's and swords
L's snapt in sunder.
Lanced See Long-lanced
Lance-head Gasping to Sir Lavaine, ' Draw the l-h ■
Lancelot (a knight of the Round Table) (See also '
Launcelot, Lancelot-like) brazen greaves
Uf bold Sir L.
' Tii-ra lirra,' by the river Sang Sir L.
But L mused a little space ;
whom he loved And honour'd most, Sir L
And L past away among the flowers, '
Then L standing near,' Sir Seneschal,
thme own fineness, L, some fine day Undo thee not-
i ever spake him pleasantly,
the love that linkt the King And L—
King had saved his life In battle twice, and L once
the King s— For Z was the first in Tournament,
Let L know, my King, let L know,
Then, after summoning L privily,
thy chief man Sir L whom he triits to overthrow
iNow therefore have I come for L.' '
And therefore am I come for L.'
Till peacock'd up with L's noticing.
L said, ' Kay, wherefore wilt thou go against the Kin
for, were Sir i lackt, at least He might have yielded '
pray d the Kmg would grant me L To fight
To crave again Sir L of the King,
methinks There rides no knight, not L,
bir L, having swum the river-loops —
L answer'd, ' Prince, 0 Gareth—
one who came to help thee, not to harm, L,
Then Gareth, ' Thou— Z .'—thine the hand That
threw me ?
Shamed had I been, and sad— 0 Z— thou ! '
Z, Why came ye not, when call'd ?
Zsaid, ' Blessed be thou. Sir Gareth!
Sir Z, IS hard by, with meats and drinks
^ Z, Z — and she clapt her hands-
Said Z, ' Peradventure he, your name,
'Courteous in this, Lord Z, as in all.' '
Z, from my hold on these Streams virtue—
not shame Even the shadow of Z under shield
Uung to the shield that Z lent him,
hath wrought on Z now To lend thee horse
O Prince, I went for Z first.
The quest is L's: give him back the shield.'
Z on him urged All the devisings of their chivalry
ev n Sir Z thro' his warm blood felt Ice strike
At once Sir L's charger fiercely neigh'd '
They hate the King, and Z, the King's'friend
Touching her guilty love for Z, '
and dreaming of her love For Z,
wherefore hover'd round Z, but when he mark'd
How far beyond him Z seem'd to move,
Sir Z as to meet her, then at once,
To whom Sir Z with his eyes on earth, "
Then Z with his hand among the flowers "
Then Z lifted his large eyes ; "
' The Queen we worship, Z,'l, and all "
Eyes too that long have watch'd how Z draws From homage "
Which our high Z hath so hfted up, ^
Stoop at thy will on Z and the Queen.'
Sir Z worshipt no unmarried girl
They place their pride in Z and the Queen
We ride a-hawking with Sir Z.
Beheld the Queen and Z get to horse.
Is that the Z ? goodly— ay, but gaunt :
Z will be gracious to the rat,
'Let her be,' Said Z and unhooded castin" off
1 heard the great Sir Z sing it once
what say ye to Sir Z, friend Traitor or true »
bir Z went ambassador, at first,
V. of Maeldune 24
Heavy Brigade 5
The Totirney 8
Lancelot and E. 511
Z. of Shalott Hi 5
36
), iv 51
Com. of Arthur 4i8
450
Gareth and L. 461
476
482
492
494
567
581
619
623
644
719
726
738
856
882
1182
1216
1236
1239
1241
1245
1246
1257
1276
1290
1298
1303
1309
1311
1320
1323
1343
1344
1348
1398
1400
1418
Marr. of Geraint 25
159
Balin and Balan 160
172
247
253
259
277
349
375
490
536
Merlin and V. 12
25
.. 95
102
103
120
130
385
769
774
Lancelot
378
Lancelot
Lancelot (a knight of the Bound Table) (continued) Not
even L brave, nor Galahad clean.
Guarded the sacred shield of L ;
came the lily maid by that good shield Of L,
L won the diamond of the year,
great deeds Of L, and his prowess in the lists,
and they dwelt languidly On L, where he stood
' To blame, my lord Sir L, much to blame !
L vext at having lied in vain :
L, the flower of bravery, Guinevere, The pearl of
beauty :
Then answer'd L, the chief of knights : (repeat)
before your spear at a touch. But knowing you are L ;
Then got Sir L suddenly to horse,
L marvell'd at the worldless man ;
'So ye will grace me,' answer'd L,
But L, when they glanced at Guinevere,
And L spoke And answer'd him at full,
she heard Sir L cry in the court.
There to his proud horse L turn'd,
yet-unblazon'd shield. His brother's ; which he
gave to L,
So kiss'd her, and Sir L his own hand,
Sir L knew there lived a knight Not far from Camelot,
L saying, ' Hear, but hold my name Hidden, you
ride with L of the Lake,'
And after muttering ' The great L,'
Then L answer'd yoimg Lavaine and said,
L bode a little, till he saw Which were the weaker ;
little need to speak Of L in his glory !
But in the field were Us kith and kin,
do and almost overdo the deeds Of L ;
Is it not i ! ' ' When has L worn Favour of any lady
A fiery family passion for the name Of L,
they overbore Sir L and his chai^er,
brought his horse to L where he lay.
my sweet lord Sir L' said Lavaine,
Sir L gave A marvellous great shriek
But on that day when L fled the lists.
He seem'd to me another L — Yea, twenty times
I thought him L —
after L, Tristram, and Geraint And Gareth,
L who hath come Despite the wound he spake of,
' Nay, lord,' she said. * And where is Z ? '
L told me of a common talk That men went down
before his spear at a touch, But knowing he
was L ;
* Far lovelier in our L had it been.
So fine a fear in our large L
That L is no more a lonely heart.
Gawain saw Sir Us azure lions, crown'd with gold,
' Right was the King ! our L ! that true man ! '
To cross our mighty L in his loves !
What the King knew, ' Sir i is the knight.'
' The maid of Astolat loves Sir Z, Sir L loves the
maid of Astolat.'
But sorrowing L should have stoop'd so low.
Forgot to drink to L and the Queen, And pledging
L and the lily maid
kept The one-day-seen Sir Z in her heart,
How fares my lord Sir Z ? '
Sir Z ! How know ye my lord's name is Z ? '
she saw the casque Of Z on the wall :
Z look'd and was perplext in mind,
Z Would, tho' he cali'd his wound a little hurt
But when Sir L's deadly hurt was whole,
She came before Sir Z, for she thought
And Z ever prest upon the maid
Z saw that she withheld her wish,
* Ah, sister,' answer'd Z, ' what is this ? '
Z answer'd, ' Had I chosen to wed,
Too courteous are ye, fair Lord Z.
Z said, ' That were against me :
And Z knew the little clinking sound ;
That Z knew that she was looking at him.
Merlin and V. 805
Lancelot and E. 4
29
68
82
85
97
102
113
140, 187
150
159
172
223
270
285
344
347
380
389
401
416
421
445
461
464
466
470
473
478
487
493
512
515
525
534
556
565
572
577
589
595
602
663
665
688
707
725
732
737
747
795
796
806
838
851
904
908
911
920
931
934
972
975
983
985
Lancelot (a knight of the Round Table) (continued)
the great Sir Z muse at me ;
Z, who coldly went, nor bad me one :
there
Lancelot and E. 1055
1057
Seeing it is no more Sir L's fault Not to love me,
' Is it for L, is it for my dear lord ?
' For Z and the Queen and all the world,
the Uttle bed on which I died For L's love,
Sir Z at the palace craved Audience of Guinevere,
Z kneeling utter'd, ' Queen, Lady, my liege,
quicker of belief Than you believe me, Z of the Lake,
while Sir Z leant, in half disdain At love.
And Z later came and mused at her,
' Most noble lord. Sir Z of the Lake,
Pray for my soul thou too. Sir Z,
Then freely spoke Sir Z to them all :
Z sad beyond his wont, to see The maiden buried,
the shield of Z at her feet Be carven.
Who mark'd Sir Z where he moved apart, Drew
near, and sigh'd in passing, ' Z, Forgive me;
Z, my Z, thou in whom I have Most joy
My knight, the great Sir Z of the Lake.'
answer'd Z, ' Fair she was, my King,
And Z answer'd nothing, but he went,
Z, whom the Lady of the Lake Caught
So groan'd Sir L in remorseful pain,
some Cali'd him a son of Z, and some said
For when was Z wanderingly lewd ?
Sir Bors, our L's cousin, sware. And Z sware,
Z is Z, and hath overborne Five knights at once, and
every younger knight, Unproven, holds himself as Z,
Queen, Who rose by Z, wail'd and shriek'd
hast thou seen him — Z ? — Once,'
Z shouted, ' Stay me not ! I have been the sluggard,
and sorrowing for our Z, Because his former madness.
For L's kith and kin so worship him
Z might have seen, The Holy Cup of healing ;
great men as Z and our King Pass not from door to door
entering, push'd Athwart the throng to Z,
' Then there remain'd but Z, for the rest
Z,' ask'd the King, ' my friend. Our mightiest,
' Our mightiest ! ' answer'd Z, with a groan ;
ceasing, Z left The hall long silent.
Blessed are Bors, Z and Percivale,
' Nay — but thou errest, Z :
she said, ' Had ye not held your Z in your bower,
hast not heard That Z ' — there he check'd himself
from the city gates Issued Sir L riding
Z, saying, ' What name hast thou That ridest here „ 562
blaze the crime of Z and the Queen.' ' First over
me,' said Z, ' shalt thou pass.' „ 570
Z, ' Yea, between my lips — and sharp ; „ 577
L, with his heel upon the fall'n, „ 580
' Rise, weakling ; I am Z ; say thy say.' And Z
slowly rode his warhorse back To Camelot, „ 582
wonderingly she gazed on Z So soon return'd, „ 589
' Have ye fought ? ' She ask'd of Z. „ 593
For Arthur and Sir Z riding once Last Tournament 10
Sir Z from the perilous nest, „ 18
Z won, methought, for thee to wear.' „ 38
Sir Z, sitting in my place Enchair'd „ 103
Speak, Z, thou art silent : is it well ? ' Thereto
Sir Z answer'd, ' It is well : „ 107
Arthur rose and Z foUow'd him, „ 112
Z, Round whose sick head all night, „ 137
Z knew, had held sometime with pain „ 178
Tristram won, and L gave, the gems, „ 190
Tristram, half plagued by L's languorous mood, „ 194
gladden their sad eyes, our Queen's And L's, „ 223
but she, haughty, ev'n to him, Z ; „ 563
For when had Z utter'd aught so gross „ 631
he that closes both Is perfect, he is Z — „ 709
his aims Were sharpen'd by strong hate for Z. Guinevere 20
Sir Z passing by Spied where he couch'd, „ 30
Z pluck'd him by the heel, „ 34
So Sir Z holp To raise the Prince, „ 45
1075
1105
1107
1118
1162
1179
1205
1238
1263
1272
1281
1289
1333
1341
1349
1356
1373
1374
1387
1404
1428
Holy Grail 144
148
200
302
356
639
643
648
651
654
713
753
760
764
766
853
874
881
Pelleas and E. 182
527
557
Lancelot
379
Land
Lancelot (a knight of the Round Table) (continued) Sir L told
This matter to the Queen, Guinevere 53
' 0 L, get thee hence to thine ovvn land, „ 88
And L ever promised, but remain'd, „ 93
' 0 X, if thou love me get thee hence.' „ 95
L, who rushing outward Uonlike Leapt on him, „ 107
She answer'd, ' L, wilt thou hold me so ? „ 116
So L got her horse, Set her thereon, „ 122
while the King Was waging war on L : „ 156
gone is he To wage grim war against Sir L „ 193
he foresaw This evil work of L and the Queen ? ' „ 307
himself would say Sir L had the noblest ; „ 320
you moved Among them, L or our lord the King ? ' „ 326
' Sir i, as became a noble knight, „ 328
L's needs must be a thousand-fold Less noble, „ 338
If ever L, that most noble knight, „ 345
Sir L's, were as noble as the King's, „ 351
L came. Reputed the best knight „ 381
not like him, ' Not like my L ' — „ 407
Sir L, my right arm The mightiest of my knights, „ 429
Then came thy shameful sin with L ; „ 487
touch thy lips, they are not mine. But L's : „ 552
not a smaller soul. Nor L, nor another. „ 567
yeam'd for warmth and colour which I found In L — „ 648
and most human too. Not L, nor another. „ 650
when we see it. Not L, nor another.' „ 661
Gawain kill'd In L's war. Pass, of Arthur 31
Lancelot-like ' L-l, she said ' Courteous is this, Gareth and L. 1302
Lance-splintering ' Ramp ye l-s lions, on whom all spears
Are rotten sticks ! „ 1305
Lancets greenish glimmerings thro' the I, Aylmer's Field 622
Land (See also Lan', Lond, Lotos-land, West-Saxon-land)
4
God gave her peace ; her 1 reposed;
the rainbow forms and flies on the I
thou wert nursed in some delicious I
Pressing up against the I,
who sways the floods and l's From Ind to Ind,
And woke her with a lay from fairy I.
That sets at twilight in a ? of reeds.
Or is she known in all the I,
Just breaking over I and main ?
gallery That lend broad verge to distant l's,
Who paced for ever in a glimmering I,
the times of every I So wrought,
plunging seas draw backward from the I
in strange l's a traveller walking slow,
I have found A new I, but I die.'
Nor any poor about your l's ?
fair as little Alice in all the I they say.
And sweet is all the I about,
' Courage ! ' he said, and pointed toward the I,
In the afternoon they came unto a I
A Z of streams ! some, like a downward smoke,
river seaward flow From the inner I :
A I where all things always seem'd the same !
smile in secret, looking over wasted l's.
In every 1 1 saw, wherever light illumineth,
when to I Bluster the winds and tides
' My God, my I, my father —
To every I beneath the skies.
It is the I that freemen till,
The I, where girt with friends or foes
A I of settled government, A Z of just and old
renown,
Tho' Power should make from I to I
Love thou thy I, with love far-brought
Would pace the troubled I, like Peace ;
that sendest out the man To rule by I and sea,
stood on a dark strait of barren I.
shrills All night in a waste I, where no one comes,
All the I in flowery squares,
and parted, and he died In foreign l's ;
the sun fell, and all the I was dark, (repeat)
the cliffs that guard my native I,
Her voice fled always thro' the summer I ;
To the Queen 26
Sea-Fairies 25
Eleanor e 11
„ 112
Buonajiarte 3
Caress'd or chtdden 8
14
L. of Shalotti 26
Two Voices 84
Palace of Art 30
67
147
251
277
284
L. C. V. de Vere 68
May Queen 7
„ Con. 7
Lotos-Eaters 1
3
10
15
24
C. S. 114
D. of F. Women 13
37
209
On a Mourner 3
You ask me, why, etc. 5
7
21
Love thou thy land 1
84
England and Am,er. 2
M. d' Arthur 10
202
Gardener's D. 76
Dora 19
Dora 79, 109
Audley Court 49
Edwin Morris 67
Land (continued) To Vs in Kent and messuages in
York,
I will leave my relics in your I,
A babbler in the I.
nor yet Thine acorn in the /.
Yet oceans daily gaining on the I,
In many streams to fatten lower l's.
Knit lial, and blowing havenward
Lie like a shaft of light across the I,
like a fruitful I reposed ;
It is not bad but good I,
Nor for my l's so broad and fair ;
Lord Ronald is heir of all your l's.
Made a murmur in the I.
In all that I had never been :
Close to the sun in lonely l's.
To which an answer peal'd from that high I,
Enoch at times to go by I or sea ;
Enoch left his hearth and native I,
and ran Ev'n to the limit of the I,
He praised his I, his horses, his machines ;
A i of hops and poppy-mingled corn,
A sleepy I, where under the same wheel
so sleepy was the I.
but he must — the I was ringing of it —
sole succeeder to their wealth, their l's,
crashing with long echoes thro' the I,
The I all shambles — naked marriages Flash
dream'd Of such a tide swelling toward the I,
I slipt Into a I all sun and blossom,
sit the best and stateliest of the I ?
The lady of three castles in that I :
seizures come Upon you in those Vs,
then we crost To a livelier I ;
From hills, that look'd across a Z of hope,
I, he imderstood, for miles about Was till'd
As thro' the I at eve we went,
are the ladies of your I so tall ? '
beam Had slanted forward, falling in a Z Of promise ;
I promise you Some palace in our I,
we should find the I Worth seeing ;
' Know you no song of your own I,'
swallow winging south From mine own I,
Strove to buffet to I in vain.
Or like a spire of I that stands apart
Some crying there was an army in the I,
Amazed he fled away Thro' the dark I,
Upon the skirt and fringe of our fair I,
' Our I invaded, 'sdeath ! and he himself Your captive.
Of l's in which at the altar the poor bride
Knowledge in our own I make her free,
like a wild horn in a Z Of echoes,
I go to mine own I For ever :
climbs a peak to gaze O'er I and main,
held A volume of the Poets of her I :
Far-shadowing from the west, a Z of peace ;
Was great by Z as thou by sea. (repeat)
FoUow'd by the brave of other l's
stand Colossal, seen of every I,
Till in all l's and thro' all human story
let the Z whose hearths he saved from shame
We broke them on the Z, we drove them on the seas,
hold against the world this honour of the Z.
Edwin Morris 127
St. S. Stylites 194
Talking Oak 24
260
Golden Year 29
34
44
49
Locksley Hall 13
Amphion 6
Lady Clare 10
„ 19
L. of Burleigh 20
Beggar Maid 14
The Eagle 2
Vision of Sin 221
Enoch Arden 104
360
578
The Brook 124
Aylmer's Field 31
33
45
262
294
338
765
Sea Dreams 87
„ 101
Lucretius 172
Princess i 79
83
110
169
191
ii 1
47
139
Hi 162
171
iv 84
90
185
281
484
v49
219
276
377
419
vi21&
vii 36
174
Cow. 42
Ode on Well. 84, 90
194
221
223
225
Third of Feb. ZO
48
Break, happy Z, into earlier flowers ! W. to Alexandra 10
Melt into stars for the l's desire ! „ 21
Roar as the sea when he welcomes the Z, And welcome her,
welcome the l's desire, „ 24
thine own I has bow'd to Tartar hordes W. to Marie Alex. 23
Love has led thee to the stranger Z, „ 31
an' a nicetish bit o' Z. iV. Farmer, N. S. 22
if thou marries a good un I'll leave the Z to thee. „ 56
if thou marries a bad un, I'll leave the I to Dick. — „ 58
In l's of palm and southern pine ; In l's of palm, of
orange-blossom. The Daisy 2
To l's of summer across the sea ; „ 92
Land
Land (continued) And o'er a weary sultry I,
' The Gods are moved against the I.'
To spill his blood and heal the I :
The I is sick, the people diseased,
Thine the I's of lasting summer.
Ran the I with Roman slaughter,
And travell'd men from foreign I's ;
That thou hadst touch'd the I to-day.
The violet of his native I.
Thro' I's where not a leaf was dumb ;
We heard them sweep the winter I ;
And thine in undiscover'd I's.
Whose feet are guided thro' the I,
And He that died in Holy L
And all the framework of the Z ;
The hard heir strides about their I's,
That stays him from the native /
In I's where not a memory strays,
We live within the stranger's I,
Ring out the darkness of the I,
that Uve their lives From I to I ;
They melt like mist, the solid I's,
better war ! loud war by I and by sea,
sapphire-spangled marriage ring of the I ?
To the death, for their native I.
riding at set of day Over the dark moor I,
One still strong man in a blatant I,
I past him, I was crossing his I's ;
From underneath in the darkening I —
High over the shadowy I.
Flying along the I and the main —
a I that has lost for a little her lust
I have felt with my native I,
Dear to thy I and ours, a Prince indeed,
waging war Each upon other, wasted all the I ;
And thus the I of Cameliard was waste,
Shall I not lift her from this I of beasts Up to my
power on this dark I to lighten it,
a slope of I that ever grew. Field after field,
and all the I from roof and rick,
name of evil savour in the I, The Cornish king,
lady of high lineage, of great I's,
and they past to their oWn I ;
and we smile, the lords of many I's ;
I know not, but he past to the wild I.
a dreadful loss Falls in a far I
In a hollow I, From which old fires have broken,
pray'd me for my leave To move to your own I,
I will weed this I before I go.
broke the bandit holds and cleansed the I.
and they past to their own I.
And brought report of azure I's and fair,
a silver shadow slipt away Thro' the dim I ; and
all day long we rode Thro' the dim I
two fair babes, and went to distant I's ;
Moaning and calling out of other I's,
The heathen, who, some say, shall rule the I
and Prince and Lord am I In mine own I,
Endow you with broad I and territory
Estate them with large I and territory
This, from the blessed I of Aromat —
and higher than anv in all the I's !
in a Z of sand and tnoms, (repeat)
wearying in a Z of sand and thorns,
his I and wealth and state were here,
thou shalt be as Arthur in our I.'
the hind To whom a space of I is given to plow.
And she was a great lady in her I.
served with choice from air, I, stream, and sea.
So those three days, aimless about the I,
I Was freed, and the Queen false,
Tintagil, half in sea, and high on I,
Clung to the dead earth, and the I was still,
^d blackening, swallow'd all the I,
' O Lancelot, get thee hence to thine own I,
380
Land
wai 17
The Victim 6
44
„. 45
Boddicea 43
84
In Mem. x 6
xiv 2
xviii 4
xxiii 10
XXX 10
xl32
Ixvi 9
Ixxxiv 42
,lxxxvii24:
xc 15
xciii 3
civ 10
cv 3
cvi 31
cxv 17
cxxiii 7
Maud I iAl
iv 6
t)ll
ix 6
a; 63
xiii 6
Hi 6
40
m38
HI vi 39
58
Ded. of Idylls 41
Com. of Arthur 7
20
throne, „ 80
93
428
433
Gareth and L. 385
609
Marr. of Geraint 45
353
443
Geraint and E. 497
821
889
907
944
955
Balin and Balan 168
Merlin and V. 424
707
962
Lancelot and E. 65
917
957
1322
Holy Grail 48
247
„ 376, 390
420
587
606
907
Pdleas and E. 98
149
391
Last Tournament 338
505
Guinevere 8
,. 82
» 88
Land (continued) Back to his I; but she to Almesbury Fled
Began to slay the folk, and spoil the I.'
the I was full of signs And wonders
sent a deep sea- voice thro' all the I,
for all the I was full of life.
Have everywhere about this I of Christ
Clave to him, and abode in his own I.
A Z of old upheaven from the abyss
That stood on a dark strait of barren I :
All night in a waste I, where no one comes,
And loyal to thy I, as tliis to thee —
The voice of Britain, or a sinking I,
Betwixt the native I of Love and me.
And all the low dark groves, a I of love ! A Z of
promise, a Z of memory, A I of promise flowing
with the milk And honey
Each way from verge to verge a Holy L,
Was not the Z as free thro' all her ways
when their faces are forgot in the Z —
Borne into ahen I's and far away,
whole I weigh'd him down as ^tna does The Giant
of Mythology : he would go. Would leave the I
for ever,
(for in Julian's I They never nail a dumb head
So bore her thro' the solitary Z
And all the Z was waste and soUtary :
Heir of his face and Z, to Lionel,
myself was then TraveUing that Z,
A dismal hostel in a dismal Z,
Before he left the Z for evermore ;
Scatteringly about that lonely Z of his,
self-exile from a Z He never would revisit,
question'd if she came From foreign I's,
I leave this Z for ever.'
He past for ever from bis native Z ;
wailing, waihng, the wind over Z and sea —
' Cast awaay on a disolut Z wi' a vartical soon ! '
sick men from the Z Very carefully and slow.
When he leaps from the" water to the Z.
When a wind from the I's they had ruin'd
all the broad Vs in youi' view
an niver lookt arter the I —
Fur we puts the muck o' the Z
For 'e warn't not burn to the I,
An' 'e digg'd up a loomp i' the Z
an' 'is gells es belong'd to the I ;
Fresh from the surgery-schools of France and of
other I's— In the Child. Hasp. 3
from the beach and rioted over the Z, V. of Maeldune 58
Isle, where the heavens lean low on the Z, 83
Hunger of glory gat Hold of the Z. Batt. of Brunanburh 124
m my wanderings all the I's that he Tiresias 25
For that sweet mother Z which gave them birth „ 122
Having I's at home and abroad The Wreck 46
warm winds had gently breathed us away from the Z— „ 63
Rich was the rose of sunset there, as we drew to the Z • ' 136
and dogg'd us, and drew me to Z ?
fatal neck Of Z running out into rock —
all that suffers on Z or in air or the deep,
I am left alone on the I,
down the rocks he went, how loth to quit the Z !
without a friend, and in a distant Z.
pools of salt, and plots of Z—
And shine the level I's,
Heard by the Z.
Dominant over sea and Z.
True leadei-s of the I's desire !
On you will come the curse of all the Z,
island-myriads fed from alien Vs —
And splendours of the morning Z,
Falls on the threshold of her native I,
of their flight To summer I's !
sword that lighten'd back the sun of Holy I.
Guinevere 127
„ 137
„ 232
„ 247
„ 259
„ 431
„ 440
Pass, of Arthur %2
178
370
To the Queen ii 2
24
Lover's Tale i 25
332
337
662
759
802
iv 17
36
90
125
129
133
141
183
185
209
331
368
387
Eizpah 1
North. Cobbler 3
The Revenge 15
55
112
Sisters (E. and E.) 51
VUlage Wife 25
32
44
48
112
your tale of I's I know not,
paced his I In fear of worse,
Despair 2
„ 10
,, 45
„ 63
The Flight 38
„ 100
Locksley H., Sixty 207
Early Spring 15
24
Helen's Tower 2
Hands all Round 26
The Fleet 3
„ 12
Open I. and C. Exhib. 8
Demeter and P. 3
The Ring 87
Happy 43
To Ulysses 34
To Mary Boyle 29
Land
Land (continued) I hear a chami of song thro' all
K*!^?^'- .u ,. ,• .. Prog, of Spring 47
basking in the sultry plains About a ^ of canes ; „ 78
so to the I's Last limit I came— ' Merlin and the G. 109
Landaulet An open / Whirl'd by, which, Sisters (E. and E ) 85
phantom of the whirhng I For ever past me by • 114
Landbird at length The /, and the branch " Columhus 73
Landed moving up the coast they i him, Enoch Arden 665
we came to the Isle of Shouting, we I, V. of Maeldune 27
When 1 1 agam, with a tithe of my men, „ 130
So they row'd, and there we I — Frater Ave etc 2
Lander Heard by the I in a lonely isle, Marr. of Geraint 330
Landing sent a crew that i burst away Enoch Ar den ^4.
Landing-place Some l-f, to clasp and say, ' Farewell ! ' In Mem. xlvii 15
Landlike cloud That I slept along the deep. ciii 56
Landlord Kindly /, boon companion— Locksley H., Sixtu 240
Landmark Nor I breathes of other days, /„ Mem. civ 11
Will see me by the I far away, Demeter and P. 124
Landscape ^ or these alone, but every i faii-, Palace of Art 89
And her the Lord of aU the I round Aylmer's Field 815
The eternal I of the past ; /„ Mem. xlvi 8
The I winking thro' the heat : Ixxxix 16
II from end to end Of all the I underneath, ," c 2
I grow Familiar to the stranger's child ; " ci 19
Framiiig the mighty I to the west, Lovers' Tale i 406
\ 3.1 which your eyes Have many a time ranged over The Ring 150
Landscape-lover L-l, lord of language To Virqil 5
Landscape-painter He is but a Z-p, L.ofBurlJghl
that he Were once more than l-p, ^ 53
Landskip man and woman, town And I, Princess iv 446
The light retreated. The I darken'd, Merlin and the G. 31
Blurr d ike a Z m a ruffled pool,— Romney's R. 114
Landslip Like some great I, tree by tree, Amphion 51
Landward Or often journeying I ; Enoch A rden 92
Ihe latest house to I : yoo
I found Only the I exit of the cave. Sea Dreams 96
And here on the I side, by a red rock, glimmers
T ,^^-^^^}^''c „. . Maud I iv 10
Lane (Muiam) See IWirigm, Miriam Lane
Lane (See also By-lane, Laane, Ocean-lane, Sea-lane)
The I's, you know, were white with may. Miller's D 130
like a I of beams athwart the sea. Golden Year 50
in the leafy I's behind the down, Enoch Arden 97
chmbing street, the mill, the leafy I's, „ 607
He led me thro' the short sweet-smelling Vs The Brook 122
Long/'* of splendour slanted Princess iv 478
iJy glimmering I's and walls of canvas „ ^6
A light-blue i of early dawn, /„ Mem. cxix 7
l-led down the I of access to the King, Gareth and L. 661
thro I's of shouting Gareth rode Down the slope street, „ 699
Where under one long I of cloudless ail- Balin attd Balan 461
up that I of light into the setting sun. The Flight 40
few I's of elm And whispering oak. To Mary Boyle 67
Language (See also Love-language) In the I wbere-
with Spring Letters cowslips Adeline 61
Such as no I may declare.' Two Voices 384
To learn a I known but smatteringly Aylmer's Field 433
Your I proves you still the child. Princess ii 58
whose I rife With rugged maxims hewn from life ; Ode on Well. 183
A use in measured I lies ; in Mem. v 6
And with no I but a cry. „ Uy 20
Writ in a I that has long gone by. Merlin and V. 674
Than I grasp the infinite of Love. Lover's Tale i 484
The music that robes it in I The Wreck 24
thro' that mirage of overheated I Locksley H., Sixty 113
lord of I more than he that sang the Works To Virgil 5
in every 1 1 hear spoken, people praise thee. Akbar's D., Inscrip. 1
Langued i gules, and tooth'd with grinning savagery.' Balin and Balan 197
Languid (See also Love-languid) His bow-string
slacken'd, I Love, Elednore 117
a I fire creeps Thro' my veins „ 130
The I light of your proud eyes L. C. V. de Vere 59
All round the coast the I air did swoon, Lotos-Eaters 5
tearful glimmer of the I dawn On those long, D. of F. Women 74
O'er both his shoulders drew the I hands, M. d' Arthur 174
381
Large
and di7P Tn ; ];,^k„ .j • . ' ''"''■P^s, Vision of Sm 12
ana due io I lunbs and sickness; FrineeU vi ^77
And myself so I and base. Xw Wfil
Struck me before the I fool, Maud I v 18
Pipe on her pastoral hillock a I note, " IlLl 94
Steh'hl^ ^^""f.*" ^T^' "-"l^ ^'^y' ^«««^^«^ <^^ E. Toi
u, . ^^ slioulders drew the I hands, Pass of Arthur 342
my blood Crept hke marsh drains thro' all my I ^
limbs: "^ r > /r 7 •• E-o
"""^i ^:i':ri' ' ^^'"™°^-^' %S "ilo
f hnnif .*''\P"'Pi« ««^- , , You ask me, why, etc. 4
r^n«2r^TH' .'^ my whole soul I'es And faints. Lover's Tale i 267
^^Z /' TJl^'f not steep'd m golden I's, Madeline 1
1 he ^ 5 of thy love-deep eyes Elednore 76
fh ^T^ V'P u" ^' S^"?"^ sickness, Enoch Arden 823
S ?.w '^ A^\^ drooping I wept : Princess vi 268
all for I and self-pity ran Mme down my face, vii 1 S<>
andoutofHeaptacry; " {55
Languorous To wile the length from I hours, " ^u 63
T 0^1 '^*f JJ?^"^^, ^y Lancelot's I mood. Last Tournament 194
Lank Shp-shod waiter, I and sour. Vision of Sin 71
Lantern Swung roimd the Ughted I of the hall ; Guinevere 262
Lap (toiees, etc. ) Upon my I he laid his head : The Sisters 17
1 hose m whose /!'s our hmbs are nursed. To J S 10
And fairest, laid his head upon her I, M. d' Arthur 208
My beard has grown into my V Day-Dm., Revival 22
loo ragged to be fondled on her I, Aylmer's Field 686
creature laid his muzzle on your I, Princess ii 272
Leapt from her session on his I, Merlin and V. 844
And fairest, laid his head upon her I, Pass, of Arthur 376
one soft I Pillow'd us both : Lover's Tale i 235
sat each on the I of the breeze ; V. of Maeldune 38
Lap (drink) Till Robby an' Steevie 'es 'ed their I Spinster's S's. 121
Lap (verb) Lest we should Z him up in cloth of lead, Gareth and L. A^
Lapidoth Like that great dame of L Princess vi 32
Lapping And the wild water I on the crag.' 1 M. d' Arthur 71
1 heard the water I on the crag, 116
And the wild water I on the crag.' Pass, of Arthur 239
I heard the water I on the crag, „ 284
Lapse (s) No I of moons can canker Love, In. Mem. xxvi 3
But from my farthest I, my latest ebb, Lover's Tale i 90
Lapse (verb) or seem To I far back in some confused
dream Sonnet To 3
kmgdoms overset. Or I from hand to hand. Talking Oak 258
Lapsed ' But, if 1 1 from nobler place, Two Voices 358
But I into so long a pause again Aylmer's Field 630
the bells L into frightful stillness ; Lover's Tale Hi 30
Lapsing See Down-lapsing
Lapt (See also Close-lapt Half-lapt) earth shall slumber,
I in universal law. Locksley Hall 130
I In the arms of leisure. Princess ii 167
I in wreaths of glowworm light The mellow breaker „ iv 435
Lapwing (See also Pewit) I gets himself another crest ; Locksley Hall 18
Lax lay at wine with L and Lucumo ; Princess ii 129
Larboard Roll'd to starboard, roll'd to I, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 106
two upon the I and two upon the starboard The Revenge 48
Larch When rosy plumelets tuft the I, In. Mem. xci 1
There amid perky I'es and pine, Maud I. x 20
Lard See Saame
Larded Old boxes, I with the steam Will Water. 223
See thou have not L thy last, Gareth and L. 1084
Larder And a whirlwind clear'd the I : The Goose 52
Larding these be for the spit, L and basting. Gareth and L. 1082
Large brazen um In order, eastern flowers T, Arabian Nights 61
L dowries doth the raptured eye Ode to Memory 72
With his I calm eyes for the love of me. The Mermaid 27
grow so full and deep In thy I eyes, • Elednore 86
Thought seems to come and go In thy I eyes, „ 97
L Hesper glitter'd on her tears, Mariana in the S. 90
From many an inland town and haven I, (Fnone 117
A glorious Devil, I in heart and brain. To , With Pal. of Art 5
Lit with a low I moon. Palace of Art 68
We saw the I white stars rise one by one, D. of F. Women 223
Large
382
Xarge {continued) And aU about the I lime feathers
X rSe of prospect had the mother sow, Wam'tflfM^i, m
Wait : my faith is I in Time, ' ltlj„^ nf tt
\ earning for the I excitement that the cominc. ^^ ^""^^ ^^
years would yield, "= r i? tt n -,-,■,
Bis ^ gray eyes and 'weather-beaten face S^ Irfenn
Drank the Z air, and saw, but scarce believed S^al)1lams 34
and light IS I, and lambs are glad oeajJr earns 6i
The blows rain'd as here Id everywhere He rode pfSsT^ol
But that I gnef which these enfold /» m! i i
O YntVu ^^P-'^"'^-' t'-^i" To riper growth '" ""'"^-Jil]
O Love, thy province were not Z, " ?^-M
Nor dare she trust a Hay, " T^* J^
self-infolds the Z results Of force that would have " ''^
forged a name. , ...._
Be Z and lucid round thy brow " '^^"^.^o
breeze began to tremble o'er The I leaves of the " ^"^
sycamore,
But thrice as Z as man he bent To greet'us. " f,^ fo
i elements in order brought, « " "^- » czm 42
With Z, divine, and comfortable words. Com ofArthTAt
Would yield hun this Z honour all the more ; Garl indL Ifl
High nose, a nostril Z and fine, and hands L, fair ^^^
and line ! —
&)Z mirth lived and Gareth won the quest. ' 14?^
A lair I diamond, added plam Sir Torre, oon
So fine a fear m our Z Lancelot Must needs have "
moved my laughter : ^q-
his Z black eyes Yet larger thro' his leanness, " 834
Estate them with Z land and territory " 1099
dawn "" ^ ^^^ '°°^''*' ^^^ ^^^ ^'°°™ ^ ^osy "
AndZt for those Z eyes, the haunts of scorn, ^"^"^^ ""^ ^' 11
A^T /*'' R"""^? °^ ^ ^'g^* °" ^oods and ways. " 394
|t ?3eTY?uSIr^^° ^ ^- ^^-' ^- Tizii
The gain of such Z life a^ match'd with ours LJSafim
that Z phrase of yours ' A Star among the stars.' %iZ,fTl
Watehn^ her Z light eyes and gracious looks, Prog ofTvrma 19
She spoke at Z of many things M.77 >^n^i«
f^f:'''*'^L ^'l"" ^^« ^^■««' Sz-J Verulam, FatceZflrl S
rSni4arbuS?nj,^- ^^^^' -*° «^^^- ,%f ^t^^^^^^^^
gnmTs?^nLSr^.r^^"P-^*^^^-P' ^^^Sf I
-len mues to northward of the narrow port Open'd
a Z haven: ^ ^ j? i. ^ j t^o
Become the master of a Z craft ^nocA Jrrfew 103
Sflrt^^:SS;5:L^or/> ^£st4^
SIX tS'tL1hop7" *'^*'^""' ^- ^--z^- j^
The Z heart, the kindlier hand • " • on
Whereof one seem'd far Z than her lord, Geraint and J" 122
But work as vassal to the Z love, M^fl "w #' 2qT
The text no Z than the limbs of fleas ; "'^''' "'^ ^- SJ
Yet Z thro' his leanness, dwelt upon her, LancdJt and F 8^
K Z glimpses Shi? rr,r ^K*^ "'^^^' ^'^ Tournament 610
a ui {glimpses ot tnat more than man rir-^„ino 9i
Ph.M^^' °^^^ ^ %ht than I ever again shaU know- The wZk 78
C^ 'J^l ?vf * P ': il^' ^,^^ L'°" I°°k no Z than the ^ ^^
Oat, lill the Cat thro' that mirage of overheated
language loom L than the Lion^- LocTcsleu H Sh^u 1 12
mmd ? ^''^ ™ °^ '^^^''^'■' ^"^''®^ ^'iy' ^
Has enter'd on the Z woman-world Of wives rh. Vi^r, ]^
I. once half-crazed for Z light "' '^"^ J'VfelQ
Larger (conimMei) L and fuller, like the human mind !
But find their limits by that Z li^ht
Larger-limb'd and one Is l-l than you kre
And every man were l-l than I '
Largess Nor golden Z of thy praise.
With shower'd Z of delight In dance and song
Largest Await the last and Z sense to make
Lariano The L crept To that fair jfort
Lari Maxume Virgilian rustic measure Of L M
rru , ^^^'^^ ^'* closest-caroU'd strains
Ihe Z could scarce get out his notes
quail and pigeon, Z and leveret lay
hvelier than a Z She sent her voice
His spirit flutters like a Z,
And the Z drop down at his feet
mom by morn the Z Shot up and shrill'd
merry in heaven, O I's, and far away.
That holds the shadow of a Z
But ere the Z hath left the lea
The Z becomes a sightless song
T^en would he whistle rapid as any Z
What knowest thou of birds, Z, mavi^ merie
lose It, as we lose the Z in heaven ' '
Clear as a Z, high o'er me as a Z, '
'"''hfi!*— ^^^'''*''''°'*^'^ ^'^ ^'^'"^ ^'^ ^^^ ^^^^ of
the morning song of the Z,
Theer wur a Z a-singin' 'is best
heaven above it there flicker'd a soneless Z
hears the Z within the songless egg '
The Z has past from earth to Heaven
MoUy Magee kem flyin' acrass me, as light as a Z
An' the Z fly out o' the flowers '
T 1 P ^®^£^ ^^^ ^' S°"® wild to welcome
Larkspur The Z listens, ' I hear, I hear • '
Lam (learn) I reckons I 'annot sa mooch to I.
Lam d (learned) L a ma' bea.
hignorant viUage wife as 'ud hev to be I her awn
Lash (eyelash) and Ves like to rays Of darkness
Lash (whip) Doom'd them to the Z. '*'''"*'^'
Lash (verb) My men shaU Z you from them like a
Lass
Prog, of Spring 112
Akbar's Dream 99
Geraint and E. 144
148
My life is full 5
In. Mem. xxix 7
Ancient Sage 180
The Daisy 78
76
Bosalind 10
Gardener's D. 90
Audley Court 24
Talking Oak 122
Day-Dm., Arrival 29
Poet's Song 8
Princess vii 45
Window, Ay 'A
In Mem. xvi 9
„ Ixviii 13
„ cxv 8
Gareth and L. 505
1078
Lancelot and E. 659
-ffoZy Grail 833
Lover's Tale i 283
■f iVs< QwarreZ 33
iVortA. Cobbler 4&
V. of Maeldune 17
Ancient Sage 76
T^ i?ZiyA< 62
Tomorrow 21
91
i^rog^. of Spring 14
ilf aM<i 7 xxii 65
k^. Farmer, 0. S. 13
13
FiZZaye IFi/e 106
Arabian Nights 136
2'Ae Captain 12.
like a pedant's wand To Z offence
war s avenging rod ShaU Z all Europe into blood •
L the maiden into swooning, '
Z with storm the streaming pane ?
Z the treasons of the Table Round.'
Ihe breakers Z the shores •
Lash d me they Z and humiliated, (repeat)
1, at the wizard as he spake the word,
gareth Z so fiercely with his brand
But I in vain against the harden'd skin
dishorsed and drawing, I at each So often
And Z It at the base with slanting storm •
Toaa 'J'- "^"l ^^^^ ^"^ ^ to the helm had gone-
Lass ; Siver, I kep 'urn, I kep 'urn, my Z, '
iJ ya momd the waaste, my Z 1^
Doctor's a 'toattler, Z,
thou's sweet upo' parson's Z
Warn't I craazed fur the I'es mys^n when I wur a lad ?
P«^?f "^ *?>'"^'"" ^^' '^^^ ^ a ^ as 'ant nowt ?
Parson's Z 'ant nowt, an she weant
thou can luvv thy Z an' 'er munny too,
thy muther says thou wants to marry the Z.
^ What can it matter, my Z Jf " ^h
Wait a little, my Z, (repeat)
You wouldn't kiss me, my Z
My Z, when I cooms to die'
OusE-KEEPEB Sent tha my Z
Fur ' staiite be i' taale, my Z •'
can tha tell ony harm on ''im'z?—
to be sewer I haiites 'em, my Z
I laugh'd when the I'es 'ud talk 0' their Missis's waavs
An' the Missisis talk'd o' the I'es — ^ '
Aylmer's Field 31
Princess i L.
To F. D. Maurice 3<
Boadicea 6'
In Mem. Ixxii '.
Pelleas and E. 56U
Pre/. Poem Broth. S. 2
Boadicea 49, 67
Com. of Arthur 388
Gareth and L. 968
1143
Marr. of Geraint 563
Merlin and V. 635
The Wreck IK
N. Farmer, 0. 8.
„ -V. s. 1:
u
24l
25
33'
37 1
First Quarrel 59 f
„ 74,91
86
North. Cobbler 103
Village Wife 1
15
» 19
., 31
.. 57
Lass
383
Last
Lass (continued) I'es 'ed teard out leaves i' the middle Village Wife 72
Mad wi' the I'es an' all — „ 78
An' saw she mun hammergrate, I, „ 104
call'd me es pretty es ony I i' the Shere ; Spinster's S's. 13
an' sarved by my oan little I, „ 103
Iiast A SPIRIT haimts the year's I hours A spirit haunts 1
And the year's I rose. „ 20
The I wild thought of Chatelet, Margaret 37
trampled under by the I and least Of men ? Poland 2
whose sweet face He kiss'd, taking his I embrace, Two Voices 254
To that I nothing under earth ! ' „ 333
L night, when some one spoke his name, Fatima 15
It is the I New-year that I shall ever see, May Queen, N. Y's. E. 3
dear the I embraces of our wives And their warm
tears : Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 70
Sir Bedivere, the I of all his knights, M. d' Arthur 7
And I, the I, go forth companionless, „ 236
Hebe ended Hall, and our I light, „ Ep. 1
I night's gale had caught, And blown across the walk. Gardener's D. 124
I beheld her ere she knew my heart, My first, I love ; „ 277
That was the I drop in the cup of gall. Walk, to the Mail 69
Declare when I Olivia came To sport Talking Oak 99
In that I kiss, which never was the I, Love and Duly 67
It was I summer on a tour in Wales : Golden Year 2
Roll'd in one another's arms, and silent in a Z
embrace. Locksley Hall 58
So all day long till Enoch's I at home, Enoch Arden 172
But when the I of those I moments came, „ 217
Ev'n to the I dip of the vanishing sail She watch'd it, „ 245
But kept the house, his chair, and I his bed. „ 826
The I remaining pillar of their house, Aylmer's Field 295
They might have been together till the I. „ 714
I made by these the I of all my race, „ 791
Ev'n to its Z horizon, „ 816
On him their I descendant, „ 834
And so I night she fell to canvass you : Princess Hi 40
L night, their mask was patent, and my foot „ iv 326
The I great Englishman is low. Ode on Well. 18
Mourn, for to us he seems the I, „ 19
Have left the I free race with naked coasts ! Third of Feb. 40
What more ? we took our I adieu. The Daisy 85
At that I hour to please him well ; In Mem. vi 18
The I red leaf is whirl'd away, „ xv3
A merry song we sang with him L year : „ xxx 16
Upon the I and sharpest height, „ xlvii 13
Man, her I work, who seem'd so fair, „ Ivi 9
O I regret, regret can die ! „ Ixxviii 17
On that I night before we went „ ciii 1
Now fades the I long streak of snow, „ cxv 1
While another is cheating the sick of a few I gasps, Maud / i 43
He now is first, but is he the I? „ iv 36
Whom but Maud should I meet L night, „ vi 8
L week came one to the county town, „ x 37
L year, I caught a glimpse of his face, „ xiii 27
loud on the stone The I wheel echoes away. „ xxii 26
Her — over all whose realms to their I isle, Ded. of Idylls 12
The I tall son of Lot and Bellicent, Gareth and L. 1
No later than I eve to Prince Geraint — Marr. of Geraint 603
And this was on the I jear's Whitsuntide. „ 840
So the I sight that Enid had of home Geraint and E. 24
L night methought I saw That maiden Saint Balin and Balan 260
Blazed the I diamond of the nameless king. Lancelot and E. 444
And came the I, tho' late, to Astolat : „ 618
High with the I line scaled her voice, „ 1019
Hither, to take my I farewell of you. „ 1275
our Lord Drank at the I sad supper with his own. Holy Grail 47
So for the I time she was gracious to him. Pelleas and E. 175
Would they have risen against me in their blood At
the I day ? ^ 462
Make their I head like Satan in the North. Last Tournament 96
Then m the light's I gUmmer Tristram show'd „ 739
hither brought by Tristram for his I Love-offering „ 747
It was their I hour, A madness of fareweUs. Guinevere 102
Bear with me for the I time while I show, „ 454
Leave me that, I charge thee, my I hope. „ 568
Last [continued) Then, ere that I weird battle in the
west,
one I act of knighthood shalt thou see Yet,
Striking the I stroke with Excahbur.
And I, the I, go forth companionless,
slowly clomb The I hard footstep of that iron crag ;
Like the I echo born of a great cry,
Down to this I strange hour in his own hall;
— my quarrel — the first an' the I.
I had bid him my I goodbye ;
Plunged in the I fierce charge at Waterloo,
fur he coom'd I night sa laate —
I night a dream — I sail'd On my first voyage,
You will not. One I word.
yet Am ready to sail forth on one I voyage.
With this I moon, this crescent — her dark orb
To that I deep where we and thou are still.
When the worm shall have writhed its I, and its I brother-
worm will have fled
go To spend my one I year among the hills.
Await the I and largest sense to make
The I long stripe of waning crimson gloom,
and so many dead. And him the I ;
I year — Standin' here be the bridge, when I
here I month they wor diggin' the bog,
Leave the Master in the first dark hour of his I
sleep alone.
Vows that will last to the I deathruckle,
I dream'd I night of that clear summer noon,
L year you sang it as gladly.
And at the I she said :
oft as needed — I, returning rich,
would work for Annie to the I,
I know that it will out at I. O Annie,
At I one night it chanced That Annie could not sleep,
may she learn I lov'd her to the I,'
' Woman, disturb me not now at the I,
and thou art I of the three.
at I — The huge paviUon slowly yielded up,
of overpraise and overblame We choose the I.
Let go at I ! — they ride away — to hawk
at I With dark sweet hints of some who prized him
Thanks at I ! But yesterday you never open'd lip,
At I they found — his foragers for charms —
At I she let herself be conquer'd by him,
Arthur kept his best until the I ;
at the 1 1 reach'd a door, A light was in the crannies,
at I They grew aweary of her fellowship :
But when at I his doubts were satisfied,
Lionel, when at I he freed himself
And Harry came home at I,
old Sir Richard caught at I,
At Z I go On that long-promised visit
at I their Highnesses Were half-assured
we are all of us wreck'd at I —
Pass, of Arthur 29
163
168
404
447
459
Lover's Tale iv 358
First Quarrel 56
Bizpah 41
Sister's (E. and E.) 64
Village Wife 123
Columbus 66
„ 221
237
De Prof., Two G. 9
25
Despair 85
Ancient Sage 16
180
221
Tiresias 212
Tomorrow 1
,. 61
Locksley H., Sixty 238
Vastness 26
Romney's R. 74
The Throstle 6
Palace of Art 208
Enoch Arden 143
180
402
489
835
874
G. of Swainston 15
Gareth and L. 1378
Merlin and V. 91
107
158
270
619
900
Holy Grail 763
837
Lover's Tale i 108
„ iv 84
379
First Quarrel 35
The Revenge 98
SisUrs (E. and E.) 187
Columbus 59
Despair 12
creeds that had madden'd the peoples would vanish at Z, ,', 24
shape it at the Z According to the Highest Ancient Sage 89
this Hall at Z will go— The Flight 27
Brothers, must we part at Z ? Open I. and C. Exhib. 32
yet at Z, Gratitude — loneliness — The Ring 372
Man is quiet at Z as he stands on the heights of
his life By an Evolution. 19
Last (verb) Weep on : beyond his object Love can Z : Wan Sculptor 5
What is it that will I ? Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 45
without help I cannot Z till morn. M. d' Arthur 26
should I prize thee, couldst thou I, Will Water. 203
a passion that Vs but a day ; G. of Swainston 9
I Z but a moment longer. Spiteful Letter 12
Dreams are true while they Z, High. Pantheism 4
Bare of the body, might it Z, In Mem. xliii 6
And love will Z as pure and whole „ 13
there no shade can Z In that deep dawn „ xlvi 5
To raise a cry that Vs not long, ,, Ixxv 10
matin songs, that woke The darkness of our planet, Z, „ Ixxvi 10
In words whose echo Vs, Marr. of Geraint 782
Last
384
""^SeK^^^^ Pass. ofAnnur 194
A crown the Singer hopes may I, ^'"'''■'' ^"If ^^ ^f^
a name may I for a thousand yeare -n.nFv T, ^o
As either love, to I as Ion- ' -?,^'','^ Pr^jAe^ 59
' Light-more Light-whSe Time shall 1 1 ' t? •! " * Tower 8
Vows that wiU zt the last deXucSe ^^^' F^^fr^J
world and all within it Will only I a miAute! ' Voice Zkeetct
but Z, AUowmg it, the Prince and Enid ^'oices'paU, etc. 4
rode, ,
X in a roky hollow, belUng, heard rff rA^ ^''''''?lm
A as by some one deathbfd often wail "^ J o^XX" m
X we came To what our people call 7^5. ti- V7%
and Z Framing the mighty landscape to the west ^ ^"^' ' S
Laste Sea^t)° I'er Sth'^'H^'*'"^ * ''^ ^^^-^^^^ ^^^^'•^^ --^ the ^'?i
of alf- 1 1 whishper was sweet as the lilt
Lasted Long as the daylight L, Bait nf J°'^T1 1
Lasting ' She wrought herj>eoj>le 1 good ■ ""• '^TnZZ''"^ f.
Thine the lands of I suinn^er, ^ ' ^^ ^^^ ^j*.^*'* f |
Latangor King Brandagoras of Z /o /7"i*^*",f?
Latch (^.. also Sneck) ^Unlifted 'was the clinking I ■ ''""• ''^Ij^il
When merry milkmaids click the Z, ^ ' rZn^Zt
The door was off the / : they peep'd n \\l
Her hand dwelt lingeringly on the/ v i j T\^
Late (See<asol.,.mi^ he felmed humility Perforce, ^"^t^a'S'S
I fear It IS too Z, and I shaU die.' ' Af^TKiH
' But I was borA too 1 : 5' f.^'''^^'' 180
not too Z to seek a newer world. Golden Year 15
And he for Italy-too Z-too I : tF^^''\^1
Too ripe, too I ! they come too I for use. Sea Dreamsi
Or soon or I, yet out of season, Lucretius 211
'They seek us : out so I is out of rules. PH^ellZ 219
You, hkewjse, our I guests, if so you will, "'^''' Z ojq
They rise, but linger; it is Z- 7 i^ " ^ ^,
the white rose wSps ' She hi-' M^'j^'"'-- ^
And now of Z I seeliim less and less, Co/.TJ/^W sg
for Pnnce Geraint, L also j/^ o] Arthur d&b
'Z, Z, Sir Prince,' she said, ^"'•'•- "•'^ ^«-«*'*' \f„
so Z That I but come like you to see the hunt. " i7s
And came at last, tho' Z, to Astolat : Lancelot and E 61 8
So fierce a gale made havoc here of I Holy Grail 729
m herself she moaned ' Too Z, too Z " rS \V^
•ilsoZ! What hour, I wonder, nowP' Gu^neverem.
air the mms had taught her; ' i, so Z ' ' " T cq
L, I, so 1 1 and dark the night and chill ! Z, Z so Z ' "
but we can enter still. ' jgo
?No \]ahf ^i/zl ''^"?°.* «"ter now. (repeat) Guinevere 170,"l73, 176
No light : so Z and dark and chill the night ! Guinevere 174
0 let us m, tho' Z, to kiss his feet ! No, no, too Z ' ve '''*'"^^' ^^^
cannot enter now.' ' > • j'
Will tell the King I love him tho' so Z ? " %k^
Still hoping, fearing ' is it yet too Z ? ' " fioi
1 fear It is too Z, and I shaU die.' Pa„ of Arthur ^R
'you have not been here of Z. SisZsiE aJdv\ ^l
Like would-be guests an hour too Z, "'""' ^^- itesial 198
As If the Z and early were but one-1 Ancienlsaae 222
some of I would raise a wind To sing thee to thy ^ ^^
BuUhen too Z, too Z. r^'/f/!! on
Whole weeks and months, and early and Z, TheSistefs 10
Now, tho; my lamp was lighted Z, there's One wiU
TilTmTuow Death, like some Z guest, ^"^teaSTbsg
The Z and ear y roses from his wall, Eru^ch Arden IS
all of an evening Z I climb'd t« the'top of the garth, GrandmoZrfl
X, my grandson ! half the morning have I pacid '^^'^ruimother 61
these sandy tracts. r ? j rr «• . ,
Warless? war will die out Z then. Will it ever ? Z "^ ' '""'^ ^
or soon?
Not to-night in Locksley HaU— to-morrow— vou "
you come so Z. "^ '
But while my life's Z eve endures r^ j^ i'n jy' • .^
she that cam^e to part the^Hfc z. ^^ ^^^^ %^%r:^Z
Late-left L-l an orphan of the squire.
Late-lost A l-l form that sleep reveals
Later A Z but a loftier Annie Lee,
But that was I, boyish histories Of battle
One of our town, but Z by an hour '
Warring on a I day,
For it hangs one moment Z.
The primrose of the Z year,
for he seem'd as one That all in Z,
by great mischance He heard but fragments of her
Laugh
Miller's D. 34
In Mem. xiii 2
Enoch Arden 748
Aylmer's Field 97
Sea Dreams 263
Ode on Well. 102
Spiteful Letter 16
In Mem. Ixxxv 119
Gareth and X. 1129
Z words,
' Late, late, Sir Prince,' she said,- Z than we !
This Z light of Love have risen in vain
Which, cast in Z Grecian mould, '
Later-rising and one The l-r Sun of spousal Love
Late-shown thought Of all my l-s prowess '
Latest As noble till the 1 day !
To where the bay runs up its Z horn,
my Z rival brings thee rest.
Not only we, the Z seed of Time,
Ev'n as she dwelt upon his Z words.
The I house to landward ; but behind,
my I breath Was spent in blessing her
Then of the I fox — where started —
Was it the first beam of my Z day ?
From growing commerce loose her Z chain,
charms Her secret from the Z moon ? '
To take her Z leave of home.
To where he breathed his Z breath.
That hears the Z linnet trill.
Her father's Z word humm'd in her ear.
But from my farthest lapse, my I ebb,
There, there, my I vision— then the event !
Days that will glimmer, 1 fear, thro' life to mv I
breath ;
Here we met, our Z meeting— Amy-^sixty years
ago-
Then I leave thee Lord and Master, Z Lord of
Locksley Hall. gs
And sacred is the I word; To Marq. of'hufferin 3
Mart, of Geraint IIZ
177
Prin. Beatrice 16
To Master of B. 6
Prin. Beatrice 6
Holy Grail 362
To the Queen 22
Audley Court 11
Locksley Hall 89
Godiva 5
Enoch Arden 454
732
883
Aylmer's Field 253
Lucretius 59
Ode Inter. Exhib. 33
In Mem. xxi 20
„ xl 6
„ xcviii 5
„ clO
Lancelot and E. 780
Lover's Tale i 90
Hi 59
The Wreck 78
Locksley H., Sixty n\
Miriam, breaks her Z earthly link With me to-dav
then with my I kiss Upon them.
Till earth has roll'd her Z year —
Latest-bom Nursing the sickly babe, her l-b
Latest-left For thou, the l-l of all my knights
For thou, the l-l of all my knights.
Late-writ show'd the l-w letters of the king.
Latin (adj.) in flagrante—what's the X word ?—
As in the X song I learnt at school,
But as a X Bible to the crowd ;
And then in Latin to the X crowd,
Latin (s) And then in X to the Latin crowd,
speakmg clearly in thy native tongue— No L—
Latitude hurricane of the Z on him fell.
Latter Until the I fire shall heat the deep ;
thou wilt be A Z Luther, and a soldier-priest
But in these Z springs I saw
Thy Z days increased with pence Go down amono
the pots :
And men the flies of Z spring,
(For then was Z April) and retum'd
Lattice (adj.) here and there on I edges Lav Or book
or lute ; •'
The Ring 41
„ 29|
To Ulysses 2S
Enoch Arden 15C
M. d' Arthur 124_
Pass, of Arthur 2^
Princess i 175
Wcdk. to the Mail 34
Edwin Morris 79
Sir J. Oldcastle 18
31
31
134
Columbus 138
The Kraken 13
To J. M. K. 2
Talking Oak 75»
Will Water. 21
In Mem. 1 1. _
Com. of Arthur 45l\
Princess ii 29^
^"'f« t^ tiy^'°' ^^^-TV' ^"^"^ ^ t^« ^'^^^ted breeze, iSr" 2?
As by the Z you reclmed,
if I could follow, and light Upon her Z,
thro' a Z on the soul Looks thy fair face
Lattice-blind Backward the l-b she flung.
Latticed (See also Close-latticed) From the lone
alley's Z shade Emerged,
Laud X me not Before my time,
I cannot Z this life, it looks so dark :
Laudamus then the great ' Z ' rose to heaven.
Laugh (s) Thereto she pointed with a Z,
He laugh'd a Z of merry scorn :
i)ay-Dm., Pro. 5
Princess iv 100
In Mem. Ixx 15
Mariana in the S. 87
Arabian Nights 112
Lover's Tale iv 242
To W. H. Brookfleld 12
Columbus 18
D. ofF. Women 159
Lady Clare 81
Laugh
385
Laurel
I i
Laugh (s) (continued) a I Ringing like proven golden
coinage true, Aulmer's Field 181
a light I Broke from Lynette, Garetk and L. 836
answer'd with a low and chuckling I: Merlin and V. 780
She broke into a little scornful I: Lancelot and E. 120
I heard a mocking I ' the new Koran ! ' Akbar's Dream 183
Laugh (verb) We did so I and cry with you, D. of the O. Year 25
Baby lips will I me down : Locksley Hall 89
Spy out my face, and ; at all your fears.' Enoch Arden 216
a tale To I at— more to Z at in myself — Lucretius 183
she I's at you and man : Princess v 116
the neighbours come and I and gossip, Grandmother 91
Why I ye ? that ye blew your boast Gareth and L. 1229
we maidens often I When sick at heart, Bcdin and Balan 497
I As those that watch a kitten ; Merlin and V. 176
vanish'd by the fairy well That I's at iron — „ 429
and cry, ' L, little well ! ' „ 431
I's Saying, his knights are better men Lancelot and E. 313
The wide world I's at it. Last Tournament 695
Ye would but Z, If I should tell you Lover's Tale i 287
L, for the name at the head of my verse To A. Tennyson 6
Who jest and I so easily and so well. Sisters {E. and E.) 41
For all that I, and all that weep Ancient Sage 187
to I at love in death ! The Ring 231
I's upon thy field as well as mine, Akbar's Dream 106
Laughable They would not make them Z in all eyes, Geraint and E. 326
Laugh'd over his left shoulder I at thee, The Bridesmaid 7
The still voice I. ' I talk,' said he. Two Voices 385
She spoke and I : I shut my sight for fear : (Enone 188
He I, and I, tho' sleepy. The Epic 44
Lightly he I, as one that read my thought. Gardener's D. 106
With heated faces ; till he / aloud ; A udley Court 37
And I and Edwin I ; Edwin Morris 93
About me leap'd and I The modish Cupid Talking Oak QQ
I, and swore by Peter and by Paul : Godiva 24
He I a laugh of merry scorn : Lady Clare 81
Blue isles of heaven I between. Sir L. and Q. G. 6
He I, and yielded readily to their wish, Enoch Arden 370
And others I at her and Philip too, ,, 477
Caught at and ever miss'd it, and they I ; „ 752
Katie I, and laughing blush'd, till he L also. The Brook 214
easily forgives it as his own. He I ; Aylmer's Field 402
Petulant she spoke, and at herself she I ; Princess, Pro. 153
something so mock-solemn, that 1 1 And Lilia woke „ 215
Push'd her flat hand against his face and I ; „ H 366
eye To fix and make me hotter, till she I: „ Hi 47
Stared with great eyes, and I with alien lips, „ iv 119
The little seed they I at in the dark, „ vi 34
This brother had I her down, Maud I xixlGO
He I upon his warrior whom he loved Com. of Arthur 125
He i as is his wont, and answer'd me „ 401
With all good cheer He spake and I, Gareth and L. 302
He I; he spmng. „ 537
when he found the grass within his hands He Z ; „ 1226
Arthur I upon him. Balin and Balan 16
Thereat she suddenly I and shrill, „ 493
Loud I the graceless Mark. Merlin and V. 62
I the father saying, ' Fie, Sir Chiu-l, Lancelot and E. 200
and in her heart she Z, „ 808
wives, that I and scream'd against the gulls, Pelleas and E. 89
' Ay, that will I,' she answer'd, and she I, „ 132
Till all her ladies I along with her. „ 135
L, and unbound, and thrust him from the gate. „ 260
And her knights L not, but thrust him bounden out of door. „ 314
under her black brows a swarthy one L shrilly. Last Tournament 217
Softly I Isolt ; ' Flatter me not, „ 556
When Sir Lancelot told This matter to the Queen, at
first she I Lightly, Guinevere 54
Then I again, but faintlier, ' „ 58
bones that had I and had cried — Rizpah 53
Sir Richard spoke and he I, The Revenge 32
soldiers look'd down from their decks and I, „ 37
'ow 1 1 when the lasses 'ud talk Village Wife 57
sold This ring to me, then I ' the ring is weird.' The Ring 195
fleshless world of spirits, Z: A hollow laughter! „ 228
Laugh'd (continued) I a little and found her two — The Ring 337
and it I like a dawn in May. Bandit's Death 20
Laughing L all she can ; Lilian 5
L and clapping their hands between. The Merman 29
Francis, I, clapt his hand On Everard's shoulder. The Epic 21
Juliet answer'd Z, ' Go and see The Gardener's daughter : Gardener's D. 29
Katie laugh'd, and I blush'd. The Brook 214
Then I ' what, if these weird seizures Princess i 82
I at things that have long gone by. Grandmother 92
Gareth I, ' An' he fight for this, Gareth and L. 1345
He answer'd I, ' Najr, not like to me. Merlin and V. 618
Whereat Lavaine said, I, ' Lily maid, Lancelot and E. 385
And parted, Z in his courtly heart. „ 1176
And I back the light, Ancient Sage 168
Then Tiistram I caught the harp, Last Tournament 730
I sober fact to scorn, Locksley H., Sixty 109
whom the I shepherd bound with flowers ; To Virgil 15
Laughingly till they kiss'd meL,l; (repeat) The Merman 17, 36
Laughing-stock drunkard's football, l-s's of Time, Princess iv 517
Laughter Till the lightning I's dimple Lilian 16
crimson-threaded lips Silver-treble I trilleth : „ 24
whose joyful scorn. Edged with sharp I, Clear-headed friend 2
Her rapid Fs wild and shrill. As I's of the woodpecker Kate 3
With her I or her sighs, Miller's D. 184
Lest their shrill happy I come to me (Enone 258
from out that mood L at her self -scorn. Palace of Art 232
light Of I dimpled in his swarthy cheek ; Edwin Morris 61
Marrow of mirth and I ; Will Water. 214
Save, as his Annie's, were a Z to him. Enoch Arden 184
And I to their lords : Aylmer's Field 498
Will there be children's I in their hall „ 787
Dislink'd with shrieks and I : Princess, Pro. 70
a sight to shake The midriff of despair with I, „ i 201
and back again With I: „ ii 462
And secret I tickled all my soul. „ iv 267
with grim I thrust us out at gates. „ 556
slain with I roU'd the gilded Squire. „ v22
spied its mother and began A bUnd and babbling I, „ vi 137
Waking I in indolent reviewers. Hendecasyllabics 8
The delight of happy I, Maud II iv 29
Gareth answer'd them With I, Gareth and L. 209
He laugh'd ; the I jarr'd upon Lynette : „ 1226
And crown'd with fleshless I — „ 1383
he moved the Prince To I and his comrades to
applause. Geraint and E. 296
It made the Z of an afternoon Merlin and V. 163
some light jest among them rose With I Lancelot and E. 179
Must needs have moved my I : now remains But
little cause for I : „ 596
And I at the limit of the wood, Pelleas and E. 49
Is all the I gone dead out of thee ? — Last Tournament 300
With shrieks and ringing I on the sand Lover's Tale Hi 32
Crazy with I and babble and earth's new wine. To A. Tennyson 2
one quick peal Of I drew me thro' the glimmering
glades Sisters (E. and E.) 116
Breaking with I from the dark ; De Prof., Two G. 18
echo helpless I to your jest ! To W. H. Brookfidd 5
moving on With easy I find the gate Tiresias 200
As I over wine, And vain the I as the tears. Ancient Sage 184
' Yet wine and I friends ! „ 195
Gazing at the Lydian I of the Garda Lake Frater Ave, etc. 8
fleshless world of spirits, laugh'd : A hollow I ! The Ring 229
There is I down in Hell Forlorn 15
there past a crowd With shameless I, St. Telemachus 39
Laughter-stirr'd his deep eye l-s With merriment Arabian Nights 150
Launcelot Sir L and Queen Guinevere Rode Sir L. and Q. G. 20
Launch L your vessel. And crowd your canvas. Merlin and the G. 126
Laureate Hear thy myriad I's hail thee monarch Akbar's D., Hymn 6
Laurel There in a sUent shade of I brown Alexander 9
The peacock in his Z bower, Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 15
This 1 greener from the brows To the Queen 7
The twinkling I scatter'd silver lights. Gardener's D. 118
she comes and dips Her Z in the wine. Will Water. 18
gain'd a Z for your brow Of soimder leaf You might have won 3
And cavern-shadowing I's, hide ! Lucretius 205
2b
Laurel
386
Lawless
Laurel {continv^d) Upon a pillar'd porch, the bases lost
In Z : Princess i 231
the porch that sang All round with I, „ ii 23
And hear thy I wh^per sweet In Mem. xxxvii 7
To-night iingather'd let us leave This I, , „ cv2
Just now the dry-tongued I's' pattering talk * Maud I xviii 8
Came glimmerir^ thro' the I's At the quiet erenfall, „ II iv 77
Bard whose f ame-Ut I's glance To Victor Hugo 4
Lightning may shrivel the I of Caesar, Parnassus 4
evergreen Z is blasted by more than lightning ! „ 12
Lanrerd sowing the nettle on all the I graves of the Great ; Fastness 22
Laurel-shrubs the l-s that hedge it around. Poet's Mind 14
Laurence Since I beheld young L dead. L. C. V. de Vere 28
Lava Claymore and snowshoe, toys in I, Princess, Pro. 18
Lavaine (a knight of the Bound Table) two strong sons,
Sir Torre and Sir L, Lancelot and E. 174
L, my younger here. He is so full of lustihood, „ 202
Before this noble knight,' said young L, „ 208
'O there, great lord, doubtless,' L said, „ 281
needs must bid farewell to sweet L. „ 341
L Past inward, as she came from out the tower. „ 345
L Eetuming brought the yet-imblazon'd shield, „ 378
Whereat L said, laughing, ' Lily maid, „ 385
Abash'd L, whose instant reverence, „ 418
So spake L, and when they reach'd the lists „ 428
Lancelot answer'd young L and said, „ 445
L gaped upon him As on a thing miraculous, „ 452
Sir L did well and worshipfully ; „ 491
With young L into the poplar grove. „ 509
Gasping to Sir L, ' Draw the lance-head : „ 511
' Ah my sweet lord Sir Lancelot,' said L, „ 512
L drew, and Sir Lancelot gave A marvellous great
shriek „ 515
' and find out our dear L.' ' Ye will not lose your
wits for dear L : „ 754
' L,' she cried ' L, How fares my lord Sir Lancelot ? ' „ 794
L across the poplar grove Led to the caves : „ 804
Besought L to write as she devised A letter, „ 1103
Lava-lake lava-light Glares from the l-l Kapiolani 14
Lava-light l-l Glares from the lava-lake „ 13
Lave (to bathe) sunshine I's The lawn by some
cathedral, D. of F. Women 189
Lave (leave) ' An' whin are ye goin' to Z me ? ' Tomorrow 17
Lavender standing near Purple-spiked I : Ode to Memory 110
Lavin' (leaving) But I must be I ye soon.' Tomorrow 13
Laving springs Of Dirce I yonder battle-plain, Tiresias 139
Lavish (adj.) But thou wert nursed in some deUcious
land Of I lights, Elednore 12
The I growths of southern Mexico. Mine be the strength 14
of all his Z waste of words Remains the lean P. W. The Brook 191
Or Heaven in I bounty moulded, grew. Aylmer's Field 107
L Honour shower'd all her stars. Ode on Well. 196
But all the Z hills would hum The murmur of a
happy Pan : In Mem. xxiii 11
Her I mission richly wrought, „ Ixxxiv 34
heard in thought Their Z comment when her name
was named. Merlin and V. 151
And Z carol of clear-throated larks Fill'd all the
March of Ufe !— Lover's Tale i 283
Lavish (verb) Z all the golden day To make them
wealthier Poets and their B. 3
Lavish'd O vainly Z love ! Merlin and V. 859
Law (See also Com-laws) Shall we not look into
the I's Supp. Confessions 172
I's of marriage character'd in gold Isabel 16
f'lving light To read those I's ; „ 19
ye by Z, Acting the Z we live by without fear; CEnoneMl
Circled thro' all experiences, pure Z, „ 166
And reach the Z within the I: Two Voices 141
stay'd the Ausonian king to hear Of wisdom and of Z. Palace of Art 112
Roll'd round by one fix'd Z. „ 256
And in its season bring the Z ; Love thou thy land 32
harmonies of Z The growing world assume, England and Amer. 16
He, by some Z that holds in love. Gardener's D. 9
in my time a father's word was I, Dora 27
Law (continued) My home is none of yours. My will is I.' Dora 4«
You knew my word was Z, and yet you dared „
But there was I for us ; Walk, to the Mail 8{
by Nature's Z, Have faded long ago ; Talking Oak 75
hated by the wise, to Z System and empire ? Love ami Duty 1
dole Unequal I's unto a savage race, Ulysses i
slumber, lapt in universal Z. Locksley Hall 13(
But I's of nature were our scorn. The Voyage 9i
Mastering the lawless science of our Z, Aylmer's Field 43i
Not follow the great Z ? Lucretius lli
f ulmined out her scorn of I's Sahque Princess ii 13!
Electric, chemic I's, and all the rest, '• „ 38-
Nor would I fight with iron I's, „ iv 71
We knew not your ungracious I's, „ 399"
truer to the Z within ? „ v 189
biting I's to scare the beasts of prey „ 393
our sanctuary Is violate, our I's broken : „ w 60
' Our Vs are broken : let him enter too.' ^ „ 317
We break our I's with ease, but let it be.' „ 323
your Highness breaks with ease The Z your Highness
did not make : „ 326
Sweet order lived again with other I's : „ vii 19
and storm'd At the Oppian Z. „ 124
sons of men, and barbarous Vs. (repeat) „ 234, 256
reverence for the I's ourselves have made, „ Con. 55
my Lords, not well : there is a higher Z. Third of Feb. 12
God is Z, say the wise ; High. Pantheism 13
For if He thunder by I the thunder is yet His voice. „ 14
L is God, say some : no God at all, says the fool ; „ 15
In holding by the Z within. In Mem. xxxiii 14
But bettex serves a wholesome Z, „ xlviii 10
And love Creation's final Z — ,, Ivi 14
For nothing is that errs from Z. „ Ixxiii 8
And loyal unto kindly Vs. „ Ixxxv 16
And music in the bounds of Z, „ Ixxxvii 34
And dusty purlieus of the Z. „ Ixxxix 12
With sweeter manners, purer Vs. „ cvi 16
In all her motion one with Z ; „ cxxii 8
One God, one Z, one element, „ Con. 142
Rather than hold by the Z that I made, Maud I i 55
such As have nor Z nor king ; Gareth and L. 632
crave His pardon for thy breaking of his Vs. „ 986
and whatever loathes a Z : Marr. of Geraint 37
Clear'd the dark places and let in the Z, Geraint and E. 943
Deeming our courtesy is the truest I, Lancelot and E. 712
own no lust because they have no Z ! Pelleas and E. 481
He saw the Vs that ruled the tournament Last Tournament 160
Red ruin, and the breaking up of Vs, Guinevere 426
and their I Relax'd its hold upon us, „ 456
wrath which forced my thoughts on that fierce I, „ 537
some were doubtful how the Z would hold, Lover's Tale iv 270
Glanced at the point of Z, to pass it by, „ 276
By all the Vs of love and gratefulness, „ 278
But I knaws the Z, I does, Village Wife 16
this changing world of changeless I, De Prof., Two G. 6
chime with never-changing L. To Duke of Argyll 11
To work old Vs of Love to fresh results. Prog, of Spring 85
For all they rule— by equal Z for all ? Akbar's Dream 110
Fashion'd after certain Vs ; Poets and Critics 5
Lawful And I,' said he, ' the Z heir. Lady Clare 86
Z and lawless war Are scarcely even akin. Maud II v 94
But free to stretch his limbs in I fight, Geraint and E. 754
Lawk L ! 'ow I laugh'd when the lasses Village Wife 57
Lawless (adj.) running fires and fluid range Of I airs, Supp. Confessions 148
Mastering the Z science of our law, Aylmer's Field 435
Confused by brainless mobs and Z Powers ; Ode on Well. 153
lawful and I war Are scarcely even akin. Maud II v 94
Not making his high place the Z perch Of wing'd
ambitions, Ded. of Idylls 22
therebefore the I warrior paced Unarm'd, Gareth and L. 914
For in that realm of Z turbulence, Geraint and E. 521
To shun the wild ways of the I tribe. „ 608
when I myself Was half a bandit in my Z hour, „ 795
And wroth at Tristram and the Z jousts, Last Tournament 237
for me that sicken at your Z din, Locksley H., Sixty 149
Lawless
387
Lay
Lawless (adj.) (continued) Thou leather of the I crown As of
the I crowd ; Freedom 31
Lawless (s) Nothing of the I, of the Despot, On Juh. Q. Victoria 12
Lawn (grassy level) (See also Garden-lawn, Orchard-
lawns, Terrace-lawn) And many a shadow-
chequer'd I
It springs on a level of bowery I,
Or only look across the I,
The Vs and meadow-ledges midway down
Aloft the mountain I was dewy-dark,
In each a squared I,
Leading from I to I.
A noise of some one coming thro' the I,
broad sunshine laves The I by some cathedral,
the range of I and park :
Flow, softly flow, by I and lea,
Dreams over lake and I,
girt the region with high cliff and I :
I's And winding glades high up like ways to Heaven,
I steal by Vs and grassy plots,
thro' the bright I's to his brother's ran,
princely halls, and farms, and flowing I's,
Gave his broad I's until the set of sun
The sward was trim as any garden I :
others lay about the I's, Of the older sort,
fields Are lovely, lovelier not the Elysian I's,
rosy heights came out above the Vs.
rode we with the old king across the I's
Myriads of rivulets hurrying thro' the I,
the I as yet Is hoar with rime, or spongy-wet ;
voice and the Peak Far over summit and I,
counterchange the floor Of this flat I
lay and read The Tuscan poets on the I:
By night we Unger'd on the I,
Now dance the lights on I and lea.
And Ulies fair on a. I;
But the rivulet on from the I
saw deep I's, and then a brook,
apples by the brook Fallen, and on the ^5.
So on for all that day from I to I
the dews, the fern, the founts, the I's ;
dimly-glimmering I's Of that Elysium,
Lawn (linen) Slow-dropping veils of thinnest I,
broad earth-sweeping paU of whitest I,
Lawrence (Sir Henry) our L the best of the brave :
Lawrence Aylmer (iSee also Aylmer)
stile In the long hedge,
Lawyer was a God, and is a I's clerk,
Vext with I's and harass'd with debt :
I came into court to the Judge and the I's.
But not the black heart of the I who kill'd him
I stole them all from the I's —
For the I is bom but to murder —
I knaws the law, I does, for the I ha towd it me.
the I he towd it me That 'is taail were soa tied up
Lay (s) woke her \vith a I from fairy land.
So, Lady Flora, take my I,
So, Lady Flora, take my I,
In I's that will outlast thy Deity ?
If these brief I's, of Sorrow bom,
Nor dare she trust a larger /,
And lo, thy deepest I's are dumb
Demand not thou a marriage I ;
Has Unk'd our names together in his I,
this I — Which Pelleas had heard sung before the
Queen,
many a mystic / of Ufe and death
Adviser of the nine-years-ponder'd I,
Lay (verb) (See also Laiy)
the chambers.
An open scroll. Before him I :
They should have stabb'd me where 1 1, (repeat)
She loosed the chain, and down she I ;
Arabian Nights 102
Poet's Mind 31
Margaret 65
(Enone 6
„ 48
Palace of Art 22
Z>. of F. Women 76
178
190
The Blackbird 6
A Farewell 5
Vision of Sin 11
47
Enoch A rden 572
The Brook 170
Aylmer's Field 341
654
Princess, Pro. 2
95
a 462
Hi 342
365
V 236
„ vii 220
To F. D. Maurice 41
Voice and the P. 2
In Mem. Ixxxix 2
24
„ xcv 1
„ cxv9
Maud I xiv 2
29
Holy Grail 380
385
Last Tournament 373
727
Demeter and P. 150
Lotos-Eaters 11
Lover's Tale ii 78
Def. of Lucknow 11
So L A, seated on a
The Brook 197
Edwin Morris 102
Maud I xix 22
Rizpah 33
„ 40
„ 52
„ 64
Village Wife 16
29
Caress'd or chidden 8
Day -Dm., Moral 1
Ep. 1
Lucretius 72
In Mem. xlviii 1
13
„ Ixxvi 7
Con. 2
Lancelot and E. 112
Pelleas and E. 396
Guinevere 281
Poets and their B. 6
and I Upon the freshly-flower'd slope.
To win his love llin wait :
thick-moted sunbeam I Athwart
Mariana 78
The Poet 9
Oriana 55, 60
L. of Shalott iv 16
Miller's D. Ill
The Sisters 11
Lay (verb) (continued) L, dozing in the vale of Avalon, Palace of Art 107
i there exiled from eternal God, ^^ 263
you may I me low i' the mould and think no
more of me. May Queen, N. Y's. E. 4
high masts flicker'd as they I afloat ; D. of F. Women 113
And on thy heart a finger I's, On a Mourner 11
On one side I the Ocean, and on one L a great water, M. d' Arthur 11
Where I the mighty bones of ancient men, „ 47
So Uke a shatter'd column Hhe King; I 221
Where quail and pigeon, lark and leveret I, Audley'Court 24
L great with pig, wallowing in sun and mud. Walk, to the Mail 88
1 1 Pent in a roofless close of ragged stones ; St. S. Stylites 73
this is none of mine ; L it not to me. „ 124
On the coals 11, A vessel full of sin : „ 169
And at my feet she I. Talking Oak 208
but a moment I Where fairer fruit of Love „ 250
1 1, Mouth, forehead, eyelids, Tithonus 57
The dewy sister-eyelids I. Day-Dm., Pro. 4
On the mossy stone, as 1 1, Edward Gray 26
And I's it thrice upon my hps. Will Water. 19
And I your hand upon my head. Lady Clare 55
Leapt up from where she I, „ 62
In their blood, as they I dying. The Captain 55
L betwixt his home and hers ; L. of Burleigh 28
And while he I recovering there, Enoch Arden 108
Enoch I long-pondering on his plans ; „ 133
L lingering out a five-years' death-in-life. „ 565
Stay'd hj this isle, not knowing where she I : „ 630
f ail'd a httle. And he I tranced ; „ 793
L hidden as the music of the moon Aylmer's Field 102
L deeper than to wear it as his ring — „ 122
silenced by that silence I the wife. Sea Dreams 46
1 1,' said he, ' And mused upon it, „ 107
right across its track there I, „ 126
belt, it seem'd, of luminous vapour, I, „ 209
I's His vast and filthy hands upon my will, Lucretius 219
on the pavement I Carved stones of the Abbey-ruin Princess, Pro. 13
about it I the guests. And there we join'd them : „ 106
patting Lilia's head (she I Beside him) „ 125
there on lattice edges / Or book or lute ; „ ii 29
spoke of those That I at wine with Lar and Lucumo ; „ 129
others I about the lawns, „ 462
court that I three parts In shadow, „ Hi 20
L out the viands.' „ 347
And I me on her bosom, and her heart „ iv 103
on the purple footcloth, I The Uly-shining child ; „ 286
glove upon the tomb L by her like a model „ 597
All her fair length upon the ground she I: „ ti 59
And I my little blossom at my feet, „ 100
As in some mystic middle state II; „ vil8
I's on every side A thousand arms and rushes „ 36
To where her wounded brethren I; „ 90
L like a new-fall'n meteor on the grass, „ 136
but he that I Beside us, Cyril, %, 163
or if you scorn to I it. Yourself, „ 183
those two hosts that I beside the walls, „ 383
L silent in the muffled cage of life : „ vii 47
I Quite simder'd from the moving Universe, „ 51
I I still, and with me oft she sat : „ 91
I could no more, but I like one in trance, „ 151
while with shut eyes 1 1 Listening ; „ 223
L thy sweet hands in mine and trust in me.' „ 366
Where shall we I the man whom we deplore ? Ode on Well. 8
L your earthly fancies down, „ 279
There I the sweet httle body Grandmother 62
Sun-smitten Alps before me /. The Daisy 62
in his coffin the Prince of courtesy I. G. ofSwainston 10
And dead men I all over the way. The Victim 21
there at tables of ebony I, Boadicea 61
Till growing winters I me low ; In Mem. xl 30
That I their eggs, and sting and sing „ 1 11
I and read The Tuscan poets on the lawn. „ Ixxxix 23
little shallop I At anchor in the flood below ; „ ciii 19
I Sick once, with a fear of worse, Maud I xix 72
Was it he I there with a fading eye ? „ // » 29
Lay
Lay (verb) (coniinTud) When he I dying there
Then to strike him and him I low, '
bhrunk hke a f ainr changeling I the mage •
I could chmb and I my hand upon it,
t^ "^r^^ !^^y ^^ '^ot- But brii^ him here
KfT^ f" ^^r ^ ^^'^ ^^° ^ Among the Ses
Half feU to nght and half to left and ^
tus pnncedom I Close on the borders '
Gmnevere I late into the morn
L s claim to for the lady at his side.
Let me I lance m rest, O noble host
/ W.k r^™?^"'? ^^"^ °^ unworthiness ;
A^'.u^^'u^^'" ^^^2 in the dim-yeUow hght
And tho' she I dark in the pool, ^ '
i-md hsten'd brightening as she Z-
down his enemy roll'd, And there'? still;
bo I the man transfixt.
feare To lose his bone, and I's his foot upon it
And cast him and the bier in which he? '
yet ? still and feign'd himself as dead,
(It j beside him m the hollow shield)
And here n this penance on myself
the huge Earl I slain within his hall.
But while Geraint ^heahng of his hurt,
when I am anno Wh^ .,„„j i.„ 7 ., . '
388
. — ."iu f ucaung oi ms nun
when I am gone Who used to I them '
To I that devil would I the Devil in me.'
A?M 1.«\o^Jy ^ith slow moans to where he I
At Merlin s feet the wily Vivien I. ''
While aU the heathen I at Arthur's feet,
and he ? as dead And lost to life
7 V f"u^^ -^J^'^ ^""^ ^^'d bis feet,
J Foot-gilt with aU the blossom-dust
that 1 1 And felt them slowly ebbing,
she I as dead, And lost aU uie of lifl.-
7^11 ^1 '1® ■'^"."o^ o^'' be ? as dead,
VHI *" *beir bones were bleach'd
kJ: \! r^bow faU'n upon the irass,
brought his horse to Lancelot whWhe L
And ever-tremulous aspen-trees, he I.
arms and mighty hands L naked on the wolfskin
Z, Speaking a still good-morrow with her eyes
F.iS uT ,°f "1^' *°d I me on it. '
PaU d all its length m blackest samite, I.
Uut fast asleep, and I as tho' she smil^
great banquet I along the hall '
power To ? the sudden heads of violence flat,
Frozen bv T^T^ ^°°^ "^ ^^^^ *^« ^rown earth
8b^ ; Th^ ^^'^fVleep four of her damsels I :
Si ffihSljVt'^™^^ ''^' ^^^ ^--'
Uke a subtle beast Z couchant with his eves
I made them ? their hands in mine aS swear
water ^ '^' ^'^' """^ 0° 0"« ^ ^ ^at
Where Uhe mighty bones of ancient men
So hke a shatter'd column I the Kii^ • '
a common hght of eyes Was on us a? 'we ? •
M,^? hr'"^''*^*'^ ^^' ™"d, L Uke a nTap before me
fT.'J!^±Ti!!'S'^-^,^ them 1 1;''
Mavd II a 67
r90
Cow. of Arthur 363
Gareth and L. 50
379
903
1405
il/arr. of Geraint 33
157
487
496
632
599
657
733
Geraint and E. 161
166
562
572
588
726
739
806
931
Lead
Lay (verb) (continued) five-fold thv term Of ™aro t ? ^■
I like the dead by the dead ^ ' ^ ' ^^imia* 33
and there in the boat 1 1 ^^* Wreck 112
i thine uphill shoulder to the wheel . ■ '^ ^^^
all night so cahn you I ' ^ ^"^"'^ ^^ge 279
Dumb on the winter heath he I r. T^ ^^^^^ ^
And ? on that funereal boat ' t i^ -Uead Prophet 13
The fatal ring I near her ' ^^ ^"'•?- "/ ^^fferin 34
Who yearn to I my lovir^ head imnn -^^i,, i u -^^^ ^^^ ^^0
iyour Plato for one St^ Hn J^^°° ^^^^ ^"P^°"« ^.^east., , Happy 26
5aZm OTwi ^oZan 141
298
301
592
Merlin and V. 5
144
213
219
281
436
644
709
969
Lancelot and E. 43
431
493
524
813
1032
1113
1120
1142
1161
1243
1286
Eoly Grail 180
310
PeUeas and E. 31
433
453
516
Guinevere 11
„ 467
Pass, of Arthur 179
215
389
Lover's Tale i 237
590
607
and two upon the starboard I, rp. ^ - •
ateS tt?eX^^^'^ ' ^°"°' us all in a ring; ^'' ^^^ fl
Ihaf lejsure watching overhead
she z with a flower in one hand
U At thy pale feet this ballad
10 I me m some shrine of this old Spain
mdon ? like a little sun on the taT^^sand,
S^&^%rd^er^^*^«'-^»^".
Sisters (E. and E.) 83
In the Child. Hasp. 39
Ded. Poem Prin. Alvee 19
Columbus 207
V. of Maeldune 57
Bait, of Srunanburk 31
Tiresias 22
-J -—" "^ " "V ^"viiig ueaa upc
i your Plato for one minute down.
T ..,.7 ^^" J^^ ^^^ ^'^ost of the Brute
r^Z ?/^^ ^ dark-green I's of shade.
Layest O moon, that I aU to sleep again
LavtoTflln °°' ^-^ ^?^^ S^^« yKelc'ome
Laying Z down an unctuous lease Of hfe
Autumn I here and there A fiery finder
i his trams m a poison'd gloom Wro^ht.
It fell Like flaws in summer I lusty cwn •
/ there thy golden head, ^ "
And him the last ; and I flowers
T !r^®° ^"'^' lay-women, who will come,
ftll^°T^A J.ay-T°' ^-«'' '"'bo will come,
Lazar And him, the I, in his rags •
Shaking his hands, as from a /'^ rags
Lazarus When L left his charnel-cave
^ *SlS°d,^' '"' ">»»" «S .he little''''"" '^- "•"' ^J '*
Waves all its I hhes, and creeps on
* earmg the I gossip of the port, '
By this the I gossips of the port
evermore His fancy fled before the I wind Returnina
Sir Aylmer half forant. hi« 7 c^,i„ ^'^ ^teturmng.
To Master of B. 4
The Dawn 22
Gardener's D. 116
<?are<A ajwi Z. 1061
To F. D. Maurice 11
Will Water. 243
/w Afem. xcix 11
il/atti / a; 8
i¥arr. of Geraint 764
Guinevere 535
Tiresias 212
'S'tV y. Oldcastle 117
117
/w il/em. ca;a;m 10
Pelleas and E. 317
/« Afem.. ara;^i 1
^To Mary Boyle 31
Miller's I). 73}
Gardener's D. 431
^wcA Jrtien 3351
472J
6571
bir Aylmer half forgot his ? smile "'a, ,"„■ ""••
Shpt o'er those I lirSits dovtnThe wind ^^^"^' ^^^'^ i^S
Ihis Gama swamp'd in I tolerance. p '•• !™'
reach Its fathng innocent arms And I lingering fingers ^'"^'^^^^J,^
And Hengths on boundless shores; gangers. , 1^^139
From a httle Z lover Who hnf nUir^^ Ko„ u- j n ■'** ^*^- ^^-^ 13
Lwing /outalifeofse'SiupptS^'^^^^^^-? ., S"' '/^ ^?
Lazy-plungu« low dune, an/4 sea. ' Z JS^Sl
Lea
l-rom wandering over the ? : ^ „ - ---r-r- —^ \
Playing mad pranks along the healthy I's • ^fa-Faines 11 1
The sunhght driving dovra the J' ' * ' Circumstance 2
From his loud fount upon the echoing;- jy i. ,-^'>^'^^nd 13 \
*low, softly flow, by lawn and l.
From him that on the mountain I
And blight and famine on all the /:
Tbe cattle huddled on the I;
Who ploi^hs with pain his native I
But ere the lark hath left the I
Now dance the lights on lawn and L
As the pimpernel dozed on the Z •
T^»-i??' ^<^,f"n,! a rainbow on the'?!
Lead (s) on the I's we kept her till she pigg'd
The tempest crackles on the I's ^^^
A clog of I was round my feet
Lest we should lap him ud in r]nih nf 1
Lead (verb) 0 ! hither I thy Fee^. ^ ^'
These three alone I life to sovereign power
'. fhf ^rP-"' P^*'f™= ^ them tWy^ht.
Is the clanging rookery home •'"«''•
According as his humours I
creeping hours That ? me td my Lord •
Z « her to the village altar
Take my brute, and I him 'in.
With fuller profits I an easier hfe,
The babe shall I the lion.
To I an errant passion home again
meant Surely to I my Memmius in'a train
we still may I The new light up
Z out the pageant : sad and slow,
A Farewell 5
To E. L. 21
The Victim 46
In Mem. ro 6
„ Ixiv 25
,, Ixviii 13
» cxv 9
Maud I xxii 48
Com. of Arthur 406
Walk, to the Mail 92
Sir Galahad 53
The Letters 5
Gareth and L. 430
Ode to Memory 64
CEnone 145
St. S. Stylites 224
Locksley Hall 68
Day-Dm., Moral 11
iS^. Agnes' Eve 8
Z. 0/ Burleigh 11
Vision of Sin 65
Z'mocA ^rrfm 145
Aylm£r's Field 648
Lucretius 17
„ 119
Princess ii 347
0<fe on ^e«. 13
Lead
389
Leafy
Lead (verb) (continued) I Thro' prosperous floods his holy-
urn.
Or on to where the pathway I's ;
A life that I's melodious days.
In Mem. ix 7
„ xxiii 8
„ xxxiii 8
„ Ixxxv 8
«)27
Maud II iv 17
Leaf (continiud) shall wear Alternate I and acorn-ball Talking Oak 287
L, and I follow.' (repeat)
What kind of life is that 1 1;
and I The closing cycle rich in good.
It I's me forth at evening,
way to glory I Low down thro' villain kitchen-
Gareth and L. 159
Gareth and L. 746, 760, 807
891, 990, 1053, 1156
' Follow, I Z ! ' so down among the pines He plunged ; Gareth and L. 808
' I Z no longer; ride thou at my side ; „ 1157
Thro' which he bad her I him on, Geraint and E. 29
Go likewise : shall 1 1 you to the King ? ' ' X then,'
she said ; and thro' the woods they went. Pelleas and E. 107
to I her to his lord Arthur, Guinevere 383
To I sweet lives in purest chastity, „ 474
They summon me their King to I mine hosts „ 570
that way my wish I's me evemaore Still to believe it — Lover's Tale i 274
Yes. L on them. Up the mountain ? Sir J. Oldcastie 203
be consecrate to Z A new crusade against the Saracen, Columbus 102
1 1 thee by the hand, Fear not.'
to I One last crusade against the Saracen,
short, or long, as Pleasure I's, or Pain ;
two that love thee, I a summer life.
Hand of Light will I her people,
Leaden-colour'd the low moan of l-c seas.
Leader patient I's of their Institute
The I wildswan in among the stars
as the I of the herd That holds a stately fretwork
Mourning when their I's fall,
Lo, the I in these glorious wars
Their ever-loyal iron I's fame.
For a man and I of men.
there lives No greater L'
But ye, that follow but the I's bell '
Ready ! take aim at their I's —
Then the Norse I, Dire was his need of it,
True I's of the land's desire !
Jfiftt^ing L a jet-black goat white-hom'd,
L from lawn to lawn,
onward, I up the golden year, (repeat)
L on from hall to hall,
children I evermore Low miserable lives
But sorrow seize me if ever that light be my I star !
And I all his knighthood threw the kings
Enid I down the tracks Thro' which he bad her lead
up the rocky pathway disappear'd, L the horse,
Arthur Z, slowly went The marshall'd Order
The I of his younger knights to me.
Ever, ever, and for ever was the I light of man.
Thro' which I f oUow'd line by line Your I hand.
Leading-strings be sweet, to sin in l-s,
aU the rest are as yet but in l-s.
Lead-like those l-l tons of sin,
LmI (See also Jasmfiie-Ieaves, Rose-leaf) Flush'd all
the leaves with rich gold-green, Arabian Nights 82
moist rich smell of the rotting leaves, A spirit haunts 17
The sun came dazzling thro' the leaves, L. of Shalott iii 3
The leaves upon her falling light — » w 21
' The memory of the wither'd I Two Voices 112
I whirl like leaves in roaring wind. Fatima 7
blossom on the blackthorn, the I upon the tree. May Queen, N. Y's. E. 8
folded I is woo'd from out the bucl Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 26
I knew the flowers, I knew the leaves, D. of F. Women 73
Shall sing for want, ere leaves are new. The Blackbird 23
And, sitting muffled in dark leaves, Gardener's D. 37
In whispers, like the whispers of the leaves „ 253
dimly rain'd about the I Twilights of airy silver, Audley Court 81
else may insects prick Each I into a gall) Talking Oak 70
' I swear, by I, and wind, and rain, .. 81
When that, which breathes within the I, „ 187
Thro' all the summer of my leaves >. 211
Thy I shall never fail, nor yet Thine acorn „ 259
158
238
Ancient Sage 101
To Prin. Beatrice 18
On Jub. Q. Victoria 68
Enoch Arden 612
Princess, Pro. 58
iv 434
m85
Ode on Well. 5
192
229
Maud I X 59
Lancelot and E. 317
Holy Grail 298
Def. of Lucknow 42
Batt. of Brunanburhl5Q
Hands all Round 26
(Enone 51
D.ofF. Women 76
Golden Fear 26, 41
L. of Burleigh 52
Enoch Arden 115
Maud I iv 12
Com. of Arthur 111
Geraint and E. 28
244
Lancelot and E. 1331
Last Tournament 110
Locksley H., Sixty 66
To Ulysses 46
Last Tournament 574
The Dawn 10
St. S. Stylites 25
Here rests the sap within the /,
As dash'd about the drunken leaves
And the I is stamp'd in clay.
Of sounder I than I can claim ;
and thatch'd with leaves of palm, a hut,
gentle shower, the smell of dying leaves,
dead weight of the dead I bore it down :
touch'd On such a time as goes before the I,
A lisping of the innimierous I and dies.
Of the first snowdrop's inner leaves ;
leaves were wet with women's tears :
This faded I, our names are as brief ;
Yet the yellow I hates the greener I,
Brief, brief is a summer I,
Like the Zin a roaring whirlwind.
Spring is here with I and grass :
And only thro' the faded I The chestnut
These leaves that redden to the fall ;
The last red Z is whii-l'd away.
Thro' lands where not a Z was dumb ;
In many a figured Z enrolls The total world
That seem'd to touch it into Z :
Thy Z has perish'd in the green.
Thy spirits in the darkening Z,
In those f all'n leaves which kept their green.
The large leaves of the sycamore,
park and suburb under brown Of lustier leaves;
A fieiy finger on the leaves ;
The tmie ^mits not flowei-s or leaves
The dead Z trembles to the bells.
When the shiver of dancing leaves is thrown
like a sudden wind Among dead leaves,
wood is nigh as full of thieves as leaves :
For as a Z in mid-November is To what
as the worm draws in the wither'd Z
wealth Of I, and gayest garlandage of flowers,
leaves Laid their green faces flat
dim thro' leaves Blinkt the white mom.
The new Z ever pushes off the old.
glittering like May sunshine on May leaves
left hand Droop from his mighty shoulder, as a Z,
Must our true man change like a Z at last ?
L after Z, and tore, and cast them off,
green wood-ways, and eyes among the leaves;
as a hand that pushes thro' the Z
Danced like a wither'd Z before the hall, (repeat) Last Tournament 4, 242
Day-Dm., Sleep P. 3
Amphion 55
Vision of Sin 82
You might have won 4
Enoch Arden 559
611
678
The Brook 13
Princess v 14
197
vi 39
Spiteful Letter 13
15
21
Boadicea 59
Window, No Answer 23
In Mem. xi 3
14
XV 3
xxiii 10
, xliii 11
, Ixix 18
, Ixxv 13
, Ixxxviii 6
xffi)23
55
, xcviii 25
, xcix 12
, cvii 5
, Con. 64
Maud I vi 73
Gareth and L. 515
789
Marr. of Geraint 611
Geraint and E. 633
Balin arid Balan 83
343
384
442
Merlin and V. 88
243
Lancelot and E. 686
1199
Pelleas and E. 139
436
and yellowing Z And gloom and gleam,
Z is dead, the yearning past away : New Z,
laid His brows upon the drifted Z and dream'd,
And rode beneath an ever-showering Z,
And pale and fibrous as a wither'd Z,
No bud, no Z, no flower, no fruit
Tearing the bright leaves of the ivy-screen,
AU crisped sounds of wave and Z and wind,
lasses 'ed teard out leaves i' the middle
without I or a thorn from the bush ;
Or the young green Z rejoice in the frost
Her dust is greening in your Z,
and from each The light Z falling fast,
Z fell, and the sun. Pale at my grief,
and there My giant ilex keeping Z
by hour unfolding woodbine leaves
leaves possess the season in their turn.
Light again, I again, life again, love again,'
All his leaves FaU'n at length.
Vary Uke the leaves and flowers.
Leafless (See also Seeming-leafless) What ?— that the
bush were Z ? Lucretius 206
wood which grides and clangs Its Z ribs and iron horns In Mem. cvii 12
the branching grace Of Z elm, or naked lime. To Ulysses 16
Leaflet with hardly a I between, V. of Maddune 64
Leafy its walls And chimneys muffled in the Z vine. Audley Court 19
O flourish high, with I towers. Talking Oak 197
But in the Z lanes behind the down, Enoch Arden 97
154
277
406
492
Lover's Tale i 422
725
ti 40
106
Village Wife 72
V. of Maeldune 44
The Wreck 20
Ancient Sage 165
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 2
Demeter and P. 113
To Ulysses 18
Prog, of Spring 7
107
The Throstle 3
The Oak 11
Poets and Critics 4
Leafy
390
Leap'd-Leapt
Leafy {continued) The climbing street, the mill, the I
lanes, Enoch Arden 607
Till they were swaUow'd in the I bowers, Lover's Tale Hi 57
League (s) (See also Half-a-league) For Vs no other
tree did mark The level waste, Mariana 43
Flung I's of roaring foam into the gorge // 1 were loved 13
A Z of grass, wash'd by a slow broad stream, Gardener's D. 40
Vs along that breaker-beaten coast Enoch Arden 51
Many a long I back to the North. Princess i 168
heave and thump A Z of street in summer solstice „ Hi 128
we rode a I beyond, And, o'er a bridge of pinewood „ 334
HiiLF a Z, half a I, Half a I onward, Light Brigade 1
On Vs of odour streaming far, In Mem. Ixxxvi 14
At the shouts, the Vs of lights, Maud II iv 21
everyone that owns a tower The Lord for half a I. Gareth and L. 596
A I beyond the wood. All in a fuU-fair manor „ 845
A Z of moimtain full of golden mines. Merlin and V. 587
King Made proffer of the I of golden mines, „ 646
That have no meaning half a I away : Holy Grail 556
great waters break Whitening for half a Z, Last Tournament 465
And ever push'd Sir Modred, I by Z, Pass, of Arthur 80
and loud Vs of man And welcome ! To the Queen ii 9
following out A Z of labyrinthine darkness, Demeter and P. 82
League (verb) who Vs With Lords of the White Hoi-se, Guinevere 573
Leagued And I him with the heathen, „ 155
I again Their lot with ours to rove the world Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 10
League-long l-l roller thimdering on the reef, Enoch Arden 584
Thro' many a l-l bower he rode. Last Tournament 374
You saw the l-l rampart-fire Flare from Tel-el-
Kebir Pro. to Gen. Hamley 27
Leaguer for hours On that disastrous Z, Princess vii 33
Lei^uer'd That bore a lady from a Z town ; D. of F. Women 47
Leaky or prove The Danaid of a Z vase. Princess ii 340
Leal fain Have all men true and I, Merlin and V. 794
I will be Z to thee and work thy work, Pdleas and E. 343
Lean (adj.) I knew an old wife Z and poor. The Goose 1
And in my weak, Z arms I Uft the cross, St. S. Stylites 118
A gray and gap-tooth'd man as Z as death. Vision of Sin 60
Remains the Z P. W. on his tomb : The Brook 193
All over with the fat affectionate smile That makes
the widow Z. Sea Dreams 156
went Hating his own Z heart and miserable. Aylmer's Field 526
Down from the Z and wrinkled precipices, Princess iv 22
But still her lists were swell'd and mine were Z ; „ 319
A gray old wolf and a Z. Maud I xiii 28
So Z has eyes were monstrous ; Merlin and V. 624
And a Z Order — scarce return'd a tithe — Holy Grail 894
Her dear, long, Z, little arms lying out In the Child. Hasp. 70
And tho', in this Z age forlorn. Epilogue 71
Opulent Avarice, Z as Poverty ; Vastness 20
till I believing that the girl's L fancy. The Ring 336
Lean (verb) Z out from the hollow sphere of the sea. The Mermaid 54
And a rose-bush Vs upon, Adeline 14
Enormous elm-tree-boles did stoop and I D. of F. Women 57
that from a casement Vs his head, „ 246
'Tis strange that those we Z on most. To J. S. 9
and I a ladder on the shaft, St. S. Stylites 216
' On that which Vs to you. Princess Hi 232
but Z me down, Sir Dagonet, Last Tournament 272
And 80 thou Z on our fair father Christ, Guinevere 562
He Vs on Antichrist ; Sir J. Oldcastle 74
let me Z my head upon your breast. Romney's R. 154
Lean'd-Leant And lean'd upon the balcony. Mariana in the S. 88
prudent partner of his blood Lean'd on him, Two Voices 416
Or from the bridge I lean'd to hear Miller's D. 49
o'er him flow'd a golden cloud, and lean'd Upon him, (Enone 105
And on her lover's arm she leant. Day -Dm., Depart. 1
He lean'd not on his fathers but himself. Aylmer's Field 56
Once she lean'd on me. Descending ; Princess iv 26
What reed was that on which I leant ? In Mem. Ixxxiv 45
Push'd thro' an open casement down, lean'd on it, Balin and Balan 413
Sir Lancelot leant, in half disdain At love, Lancelot and E. 1238
all whereon I lean'd in wife and friend Pass, of Arthur 24
As I lean'd away from his arms — The Wreck 102
and we lean'd to the darker side — Despair 55
Lean'd-Leant (contintied)
sphere,
Leaneth Thou art light. To which my spirit Z
Lean-headed L-h Eagles yelp alone.
Leaning (See also A-leanin') L upon the ridged sea,
A Z and upbearing parasite,
rich fruit-bunches Z on each other —
L his cheek upon his hand.
And you were Z from the ledge
She, Z on a fragrant twined with vine.
Upon her pearly shoulder Z cold,
Robin Z on the bridge beneath the hazel-tree ?
L his horns into the neighbour field,
And Z there on those balusters.
There Z deep in broider'd down we sank
Gareth Z both hands heavily
and hungerworn I seem — Z on these ?
eyes all bright rephed, L a little toward him.
And speaking not, but Z over him,
when I was Z out Above the river —
L its roses on my faded eyes.
The slant seas Z on the mangrove copse,
Leanness black eyes. Yet larger thro' his Z,
Leant See Lean'd
Leap (s) heart on one wild Z Himg tranced from all
pulsation,
this a bridge of single arc Took at a Z ;
and stirs the pulse With devil's Vs,
And leave the name of Lover's L:
Leap (verb) Where he was wont to Z and climb,
In the middle Vs a fountain
like a wave I would Z From the diamond-ledges
And not Z forth and fall about thy neck,
his spirit Vs within him to be gone
and I the rainbows of the brooks.
Be still the first to Z to light
I Z on board : no helmsman steers :
High-elbow'd grigs that Z in summer grass.
To Z the rotten pales of prejudice.
And the wild cataract Vs in glory.
Vs in Among the women, snares them by the score „ v 163
Whatever record Z to light He never shall be shamed. Ode on Well. 190
Making the little one Z for joy. To F. D. Maurice
She lean'd to from her Spiritual
The Ring 484
Lover's Tale i 104
Princess vii 211
The Winds, etc. 2
Isabel 34
„ 37
Elednore 118
MiUer's D. 84
(Enone 20
„ 140
May Queen 14
Gardener's D. 87
Princess Hi 119
iv32
Gareth and L. 439
,, . 444!
Marr. of Geraint 495-
Merlin and V. 477
Last Tournament 43
Lover's Tale i 621
Prog, of Spring 78
Lancelot and E. 835
Gardener's D. 259
Gareth and L. 909
Guinevere 523
Lover's Tale iv 43
Supp. Confessions 165
Poet's Mind 24
The Mermaid 39
Love and Duty 41
Locksley Hall 115
„ .171
Day-Dm., L'Envoi 21
Sir Galahad 39
The Brook 54
Princess ii 142
To Z the grades of life and light,
But at his footstep Vs no more,
And Vs into the future chance,
snubnosed rogue would Z from his counter and till
the red man's babe L, beyond the sea.
many a darkness into the light shall I,
1 1 from Satan's foot to Peter's knee —
Who Z at thee to tear thee ;
who had ever Made my heart Z ;
how her choice did Z forth from his eyes !
When he Vs from the water to the land,
if the tigers Z into the fold unawares —
I would Z into your grave.
Up Vs the lark, gone wild to welcome
Leap'd-Leapt Then leapt a trout. In lazy mood
My mailed Bacchus leapt into my arms.
My words leapt forth : ' Heaven heads the count
of crimes
About me leap'd and laugh'd The modish Cupid
And sixty feet the fountain leapt.
doe Lord Ronald had brought Leapt up from where
she lay,
no one cared for, leapt To greet her.
Two Proctors leapt upon us, crying, ' Names : '
Leapt from the dewy shoulders of the Earth,
And into fiery splinters leapt the lance,
o'er the statues leapt from head to head,
out of languor leapt a cry ; Leapt fiery Passion
Thought leapt out to wed with Thought
Ran like a colt, and leapt at all he saw :
Leapt in a semicircle, and lit on earth ;
his evil spirit upon him leapt,
In Mem. xli 11
„ Ixxxv 112
„ cxiv\
Maud I iSi
„ xviiSfi
„ III vi '
Gareth and L. 53
Balin and Balan 142
Holy Grail 58fl
Lover's Tale i 65T
The Revenge 55
Def. of Lucknow 51
Happy 2fl
Prog, of Spring 14
Miller's D. 73
D.ofF. Women 151
201
Talking Oak 68
Day-Dm., Revival T
Lady Clare i
Aylmer's Field 688
Princess iv 259
,, 1)43
„ 494
„ vi 366
„ vii 155
In Mem. xxiii l6i
Com. of Arthur 322
Balin and Balan 414
53T
Leap'd-Leapt
391
Least
Leap'd-Leapt (continued) Then leapt her palfrey o'er
the fallen oak,
Leapt from her session on his lap,
the harlot leapt Adown the forest.
Leapt on his horse, and carolling as he went
from the boat I leapt, and up the stairs.
his helpless heart Leapt, and he cried,
shouted and leapt down upon the f all'n ;
Leapt on him, and hurl'd him headlong.
Leapt like a passing thought across her eyes;
My spirit leap'd as with those thrills of bliss
Leapt lightly clad in bridal white —
One has leapt up on the breach,
There were some leaped into the fire ;
she leapt upon the funeral pile.
Leaping So, I lightly from the boat,
The I stream, the very wind,
0 foUow, I blood,
Then I out upon them unseen
And, I down the ridges lightly,
Pelleas, I up. Ran thro' the doors
Wills of my cell were dyed With rosy colours I on
the wall ;
Ard, I down the ridges lightly.
Leapt See Leap'd
Learn {See also Lam) Will I new things when I am not.'
Balin and Balan 587
Merlin and V. 844
972
Lancelot and E. 704
Holy Grail 819
Pelleas and E. 131
Last Tournament 469
Guinevere 108
Lover's Tale i 70
363
„ Hi 44
Def. of Lucknow 64
V. of Maddune 76
Death of Qinone 105
Arabian Nights 92
Rosalind 14
Early Spring 25
The Merman 33
M. d' Arthur 134
Pelleas and E. 538
Holy Grail 120
Pass, of Arthur 302
Two Voices 63
Gardener's D. 239
Dora 153
Talking Oak 203
Locksley Hall 77
Day-Dm., L' Envoi 8
WUl Water. 81
Enoch Arden 835
The Brook 142
Aylmer's Field 398
433
Sea Dreams 181
Princess ii 146
298
„ Hi 263
„ iv 512
V 333
„ vii 273
„ Con. 79
Ode on Well. 204
In Mem. viii 4
„ xii 19
,, xlv 6
15
Maud I iv 41
I at full How passion rose thro' circumstantial
he will I to sUght His father's memory ;
A thousand thanks for what 1 1
Drag thy memories, lest thou I it.
And I the world, and sleep again ;
Foi since I came to live and I,
Then may she 1 1 lov'd her to the last.'
sent the bailliff to the farm To I the price,
I am grieved to I your grief —
and as we task ourselves To Z a language
I A man is Ukewise counsel for himself,
Here might they I whatever men were taught:
wonen were too barbarous, would not I ;
Who I's the one pou sto whence after-hands
I With whom they deal.
To I if Ida yet would cede our claim.
To give or keep, to live and I and be All that
Oive it time To I its limbs :
and Vs to deaden Love of self.
And Z's her gone and far from home ;
and I That I have been an hour away.
And Vs the use of ' I ' and ' me,'
Had man to I himself anew
desire or admire, if a man could I it,
after-years Will I the secret of our Arthur's birth.* Com. of Arthur 159
and I Whether he know me for his master Gareth and L. 720
' If Enid errs, let Enid I her fault.' Marr. of Geraint 132
' Surely I will I the name,' ,, 203
by the bird's song ye may I the nest,' „ 359
I will break his pride and I his name, ,, 424
But coming back he I's it, Geraint and E. 498
As children I, be thou Wiser for f alUng ! Balin and Balan 75
and came To I black magic, „ 127
To I what Arthur meant by courtesy, „ 158
To I the graces of their Table, „ 238
suffer from the things before me, know, L nothing ; ,, 285
make me wish still more to I this charm Merlin and V. 329
Who have to I themselves and all the world, „ 365
we needs must I Which is our mightiest, Lancelot and E. 62
i If his old prowess were in aught decay'd ; And
added, ' Our true Arthur, when he I's,
Whence you might I his name ?
So ye will I the courtesies of the court,
fain were I to Z this knight were whole,
bode among them yet a little space Till he should I it ;
Till overborne by one, he I's —
thou remaining here wilt I the event ;
Must I to use the tongues of all the world.
He might have come to I Our Wiclif 's learning :
583
654
699
772
922
Holy Grail 305
Guinevere 577
Sir J. Oldcastle 34
64
Learn (continued) haply I the Nameless hath a voice, Ancient Sage 34
simpler, saner lesson might he I Prog, of Spring 105
Before 1 1 that Love, which is, DouU and Prayer 7
Learnable not I, divine. Beyond my reach. Balin and Balan 175
Learned (adj.) Long I names of agaric, moss and fern, Edwin Morris 17
Men hated I women : Princess ii 466
Not I, save in gracious household ways, „ vii 318
a I man Could give it a clumsy name. Maud II ii 9
Learned (s) The L all his lore ; Ancient Sage 139
Learned-Learnt (verb) (See also Larn'd) late he learned
humiUty Perforce, Buonaparte 13
all at once a pleasant truth I learn' d. The Bridesmaid, 9
As in the Latin song I learnt at school, Edwin Morris 79
a saying learnt. In days far-off, Tithonus 47
I learrU that James had flickering jealousies The Brook 99
' have you learnt No more from Psyche's lecture, Princess ii 392
And learnt ? I learnt more from her in a flash, „ 397
since we learnt our meaning here, „ Hi 222
learnt. For many weary moons before we came, „ 318
We knew not your ungracious laws, which learnt, „ iv 399
but when she learnt his face. Remembering „ vi 158
Much had she learrd in little time. vii 240
One lesson from one book we learn'd. In Mem. Ixxix 14
when they learnt that I must go They wept „ ciii 17
shall have learn'd to lisp you thanks.' Marr. of Geraint 822
ere he learnt it, ' Take Five horses and their
armours ; ' Geraint and E. 408
Sir Garlon too Hath learn'd black magic, Balin and Balan 305
And learnt their elemental secrets. Merlin and V. 632
'He learnt and warn'd me of their flerce design Lancelot and E. 274
' Sire, my Uege, so much I learnt ; „ 708
Lied, say ye ? Nay, but learnt, Last Tournament 656
(When first I learnt thee hidden here) Guinevere 539
and learn'd To Usp in tune together ; Lover's Tale i 257
Because she learnt them with me ; „ 292
Had I not learnt my loss before he came ? Lover's Tale i 665
I learnt the drearier story of his life ; „ iv 147
I learnt it first. I had to speak. Sisters (E. and E.) 242
he learnt that I hated the ring I wore. The Wreck 57
I scarce have learnt the title of your book, The Ring 126
and woke me And learn'd me Magic ! Merlin and the G. 14
when I learn'd my fate. Charity 14
when I learnt it at last, I shriek'd, „ 37
Leammg (part.) I this, the bridegroom will relent. Guinevere 172
I it (They told her somewhat rashly as I think) Lover's Tale iv 97
Learning (s) what was I unto them ? Princess ii 464
wearing all that weight Of I lightly In Mem., Con. 40
He might have come to learn Our Wiclif 's I : Sir J. Oldcastle 65
We fronted there the I of all Spain, Columbus 41
Learnt See Learn'd
Lease laying down an unctuous I Of life, WUl Water. 243
brooding on his briefer I of life, Locksley H., Sixty 23
Leash hold passion in a I, Love and Duty 40
Diet and seeling, jesses, I and lure. Merlin and V. 125
Least (See also Laste) And trampled under by the last
and I Of men ? Poland 2
her I remark was worth The experience of the wise. Edwin Morris 65
Nor ever falls the I white star of snow, Lucretius 107
In whose I act abides the nameless charm Princess v 70
Our greatest yet with I pretence. Ode on Well. 29
I seem to meet their I desire, In Mem. Ixxxiv 17
Or the I little delicate aquiline curve in a sensitive
nose, From which I escaped heart-free, with the
I little touch of spleen. Maud I ii 10
to her own bright face Accuse her of the I
immodesty : Geraint and E. Ill
Love-loyal to the I wish of the Queen Lancelot and E. 89
Love-loyal to the I wish of the Queen, Guinevere 126
my strongest wish Falls flat before your I unwillingness. Romney's R. 72
Myself not I, but honour'd of them Ulysses 15
Some men's were small ; not they the I of men ; Princess ii 148
feel, at I, that silence here were sin. Third of Feb. 37
' Thou pratest here where thou art I ; In Mem. xxxvii 2
I saw the I of little stars Down on the waste. Holy Grail 524
made our mightiest madder than our I. „ 863
Leather
392
Leaving
Leather See Saddle-leather
Leave-Leave (holiday) with a month's leaoe given them,
then 'ed gotten wer leave,
Leave (permission) so much out as gave us Ho go.
I'll have I at times to play
to gain it — ^your full I to go.
Sir Kay nodded him I to go,
Queen petition'd for his I To see the hunt,
' Thy I ! Let nie lay lance in rest,
' Have llio speak ? '
' Your I, my lord, to cross the room,
free I,' he said ; ' Get her to speak :
my I To move to your own land.
But, father, give me Z, an if he will,
But left him I to stammer,' Is it indeed ?
And so, I given, straight on thro' open door
dare without your I to head These rhymings
saying gently : ' Muriel, by your Z,'
Leave (farewell) — took my I, for it was nearly noon :
crowd were swarming now. To take their I,
To take her latest I of home.
And thou shalt take a nobler Z.'
But how to take last Z of all I loved ?
you still delay to take Your I of Town,
Leave (verb) (See also Lave, Leave) And 1 us rulers
of your blood
hard at first, mother, to I the blessed sun,
Which will not I the myn-h-bush on the height ; Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 58
' It is not meet. Sir King, to I thee thus, M. d' Arthur 40
it seem'd Better to I Excalibur conceal'd „ 62
' L,' she cried ' O Z me ! ' ' Never, Edwin Morris 116
I will I my relics in your land, St. S. Stylites 194
But I thou mine to me. Talking Oak 200
And I thee freer, till thou wake refresh'd Love and Duty 97
To whom 1 1 the sceptre and the isle — Ulysses 34
CoMBADES, I me here a little, Locksley Hall 1
L me here, and when you want me, „ 2
Eager-hearted as boy when first he I's his father's field, „ 112
Sea Dreams 6
Owd Rod 51
Princess v 235
In Mem. lix 11
Gareth and L. 134
520
Mart, of Geraint 154
495
Geraint and E. 140
298
300
888
Lancelot and E. 219
420
Pelleas and E. 382
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 19
The Sing 268
Princess v 468
„ Con. 38
In Mem. xl 6
„ Iviii 12
Guinevere 546
To Mary Boyle 2
To the Queen 21
May Queen, Con. 9
I I the plain, I climb the height ;
I Z an empty flask :
And they Z her father's roof.
and Z Yon orange sunset waning slow :
Pass on, weak heart, and Z me where I lie :
Nor Z his music as of old,
go this weary way. And Z you lonely ?
five years' death-in-life. They could not I him.
One who cried, ' L all and follow me.'
L us : you may go :
'Z me to deal with that.'
III mother that I was to Z her there,
meteor on, and I's A shining furrow,
Z The moastrous ledges there to slope,
Will Z her space to burgeon out of all
And in the vast cathedral Z him
They Z the heights and are troubled,
Z it gorily quivering ?
Thou wilt not Z us in the dust :
I Z this mortal ark behind,
And Z the cliffs, and haste away
L thou thy sister when she prays,
But half my life I Z behind :
And what I see I Z unsaid,
I I thy praises unexpress'd
I Z thy greatness to be guess'd ;
You Z us : you will see the Rhine,
We Z the well-beloved place
To Z the pleasant fields and farms ;
And wilt thou Z us now behind ? '
To-night ungather'd let us Z This laurel,
They Z the porch, they pass the grave
your sweetness hardly rs me a choice
When will the dancers Z her alone ?
past and I's The Crown a lonely splendour,
wilt thou Z Thine ea.seful biding here,
and Z my man to me.'
Sir Galahad 57
Will Water. 164
L. of Burleigh 12
Move eastward 1
Come not, when, etc. 11
You might have won 14
Enoch Arden 297
566
Aylmer's Field 664
Princess ii 94
„ Hi 149
vQ'i
„ vii 184
211
271
Ode on Well. 280
Voice and the P. 15
Boadicea 12
In Mem., Pro. 9
xii 6
8
xxxiii 5
Ivii 6
Ixxiv 10
Ixxv 1
4
xeoiii 1
cii 1
22
ciii 48
cv 1
Con. 71
Mavd / V 24
xx%i 21
Ded. of Idylls 48
Gareth and L. 127
477
Leave (verb) {continued) 1 1 not till I finish this fair
quest.
Come, therefore, Z thy lady lightly, knave,
and I's me fool'd and trick'd,
not Z her, till her promise given —
L me to-night : I am weary to the death.'
bounding forward 'Z them to the wolves.'
he rose To I the hall, and, Vivien following
To Z an equal baseness ;
ere I Z thee let me swear once more
made him Z The banquet,
let me Z My quest with you ;
Before ye Z him for this Quest,
Z The leading of his younger knights to me.
an aiTow from the bush Should I me all alone
And of this remnant will I Z a part.
Yet must I Z thee, woman, to thy shame.
L me that, I charge thee, my last hope.
' It is not meet. Sir King, to Z thee thus,
it seem'd Better to Z Excalibur conceal'd
lake, that, flooding, I's Low banks of yellow
sand ;
He flies the event : he I's the event to me :
Would Z the land for ever.
And Z the name of Lover's Leap :
And Z him in the public way to die.
I Z this land for ever.'
. I am going to Z you a bit —
go, go, you may Z me alone —
highway running by it I's a breadth Of sward
you Z 'em outside on the bed —
Or in that vaster Spain I Z to Spain.
And Z him, blind of heart and eyes.
And Z the hot swamp of voluptuousness
blackthorn-blossom fades and falls and I's the
bitter sloe.
You wiU not Z me thus in grief
if dynamite and revolver Z you courage
Eighty winters Z the dog too lame
L the Master in the first dark hour
Then I Z thee Lord and Master,
Birds and brides must Z the nest.
Queen, who I's Some colder province in the North
shadow Z the Substance in the brooding light of noon ?
now arching I's her bare To breaths of balmier
Gareth and L. 774
95|
1251
Marr. of Geraint i
Geraint and E. 35|
Balin and Balan 5fi
Merlin and V.
8301
9291
Lancelot and E. 5611
Holy Grait ^
Last Tournamett IC
5361
Guinevere ■
„ 5111
„ 5671
Pass, of Arthur '.
2301
Lover's Tde i 534|
iv\\
19j
2M1
3681
First Qtarrel 801
Mzfah 791
Sisters (E. aid E.) ''
In the Child. Hosp.
Colunhus r
Ancient Sage 113
277
The Flight IS
Locksley H., Sixty IC
" 238
282
Tht Ring 89
Happy'.
Prog, of Spring 13
I's me harlot-like. Who love her still, Romney's R. 116
May Z the windows blinded, „ 14 '
Le&ve (verb) if thou mariies a good un I'll I the
land to thee. N. Farmer, N. S. i
if thou marries a bad 'un, I'll Z the land to Dick. — „
Let's them inter 'eaven easy es I's Village Wife !
Leaved (left) but 'e Z it to Charhe 'is son, „
they Z their nasty sins i' my pond. Churchwarden, etc.
Leaved See Long-leaved, Thick-leaved
Leaven (s) the old I leaven'd all : Princess v ',
Leaven (verb) But now to Z play with profit, „ iv 14
Of Love to Z all the mass, Freedom lij
Leaven'd the old leaven Z all : Princess v 38
then as Arthur in the highest L the world. Merlin and V. 14
but all was joust and play, L his hall. „ 14
Leave-taking Low at l-t, with his brandish'd plume Geraint and E.
Leaving {See also Lavin') L door and windows wide : Deserted House i
I my ancient love With the Greek woman. CEnone 26
L the dance and song, ' L the olive-gardens far
below, L the promise of my bridal bower, D. of F. Women 21fl
L great legacies of thought, In Mem. Ixxxiv T'
And, Z these, to pass away, „ c 18
Z night forlorn. „ cvii '
who earnest to thy goal So early, Z me behind, „ cxiv 24
Who I share in furrow come to see The glories Gareth and L. 2431
ramp and roar at Z of your lord ! — „ 130TJ
never Z her, and grew Forgetful of his promise Marr. of Geraint 49 J
so Z him, Now with slack rein and careless Balin and Balan 3081
So I Arthur's court he gain'd the beach ; Merlin and V. 1971
Leaving
393
Left
Leaving (continued) L her household and good father, Lancelot and E. 14
I for the cowl The helmet in an abbey Holy Grail 5
' the pale nun, I spake of this To all men ; „ 129
And I human wrongs to right themselves, „ 898
her anger, I Pelleas, bum'd Full on her knights Pelleas and E. 289
Thieves, bandits, Vs of confusion. Last Tournament 95
now I to the skill Of others their old craft Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 2
L his son too Lost in the carnage, Batt. of Brunanburh 72
the child Is happy — ev'n ml her \ To Prin. Beatrice 12
Leavy Moving in the I beech. Margaret 61
Lebanon O, art thou sighing for L Maud I xviii 15
Sighing for L, Dark cedar, „ 17
Lebanonian in halls Of L cedar : Princess ii 352
Lecher The I would cleave to his lusts, Despair 100
Lecture (adj.) On the I slate The circle rounded Princess ii 371
Lecture (s) A classic I, rich in sentiment, „ 374
' have you learnt No more from Psyche's I, „ 393
Led (See also Moon-led) And like a bride of old In
triumph I, Ode to Memory 76
Gliding with equal crowns two serpents I Alexander 6
' But heard, by secret transport I, Two Voices 214
light that I The holy Elders with the gift of myrrh. M. d' Arthur 232
Fancy, I by Love, Would play with flying forms Gardener's D. 59
still we foUow'd where she I, (repeat) The Voyage 59, 90
took him by the curls, and I him in. Vision of Sin 6
I the way To where the rivulets of sweet water ran ; Enoch Arden 641
I me thro' the short sweet-smelling lanes The Brook 122
Thro' which a few, by wit or fortune I, Aylmer's Field 438
I I you then to all the Castalies ; Princess iv 294
But I by golden wishes, „ 420
I Threading the soldier-city, „ v 6
I A hundred maids in train across the Park. „ vi 75
Remember him who I your hosts ; Ode on Well. 171
Love has I thee to the stranger land, W. to Marie Alex. 31
Which I by tracts that pleased us well, In Mem. xxii 2
And I him thro' the blissful climes, „ Ixxxv 25
They wept and wail'd, but I the way „ ciii 18
I have I her home, my love, Maud I xviii 1
' Lead and I follow.' Quietly she I. Gareth and L. 1053
L from the tenitory of false Limours Geraint and E. 437
answering not one word, she I the way. „ 495
across the poplar grove L to the caves : Lancelot and E. 805
like a flying star L on the gray-hair'd wisdom Holy Grail 453
But when they I me into hall, behold, „ 577
loosed his horse, and I him to the light. Pelleas and E. 61
I her forth, and far ahead Of his and her retinue Guinevere 384
light that I The holy Elders with the gift of myrrh. Pass, of Arthur 400
I on with light In trances and in visions : Lover's Tale i 77
I was I mute Into her temple like a sacrifice ; „ 684
Then those who I the van, and those in rear, „ Hi 24
whirling rout L by those two rush'd into dance, „ 55
L his dear lady to a chair of state. „ iv 321
am I by the creak of the chain, Rizpah 7
far liever I my friend Back to the pure Sir J. Oldcastle 70
In praise of God who I me thro' the waste. Columbus 17
I know that he has I me all my life, „ 160
sometimes wish I had never I the way. „ 186
L backward to the tyranny of one ? Tiresias 76
I knaws I 'ed I tha a quieter life Spinster's S's. 71
Ages after, while in Asia, he that I the wild
Moguls, Locksley H., Sixty 81
half-brain races, I by Justice, Love, and Truth ; „ 161
know them, follow him who I the way, „ 266
L upward by the God of ghosts and dreams, Demeter and P. 5
L nre at length To the city and palace Merlin and the G. 64
Till, I by dream and vague desire. To Master of B. 17
And the Vision that I me of old. The Dreamer 5
Leddest I by the hand thine infant Hope. Ode to Memory 30
Ledge (See also Diamond-ledge, Meadow-ledges) And
you were leaning from the I Miller's D. 84
tall dark pines, that plumed the craggy I CEnone 209
Of I or shelf The rock rose clear. Palace of Art 9
from the craggy I the poppy hangs in sleep. Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 11
leave The monstrous I's there to slope, Princess vii 212
About the I's of the hill.' In Mem. xxxvii 8
Ledge (continue red-ribb'd I's drip with a silent horror
of blood, Maud I iZ
Athwart the I's of rock, „ // H 28
on the window I, Close underneath his eyes, Lancelot and E. 1239
And a hundred splash'd from the I's, V. of Maeldune 103
Ledger When only the I lives, Maud / i 35
Lee (Annie) See Annie, Annie Lee
Leech (blood-sucker) swann'd His literary I'es. Will Water. 200
Leech (physician) King's own I to look into his hurt ; Geraint and E. 923
King will send thee his own I — Balin and Balan 275
I foi-sake the dying bed for terror of his life ? Happy 98
Leering Z at his neighbour's wife. Vision of Sin IIS
Lees I will drink Life to the I : Ulysses 7
Dregs of life, and I of man : Vision of Sin 205
Left (adj.) And over his I shoulder laugh'd at thee, Bridesmaid 7
And on the I hand of the hearth he saw Enoch Arden 753
letting her I hand Droop from his mighty shoulder. Merlin and V. 242
from whose I hand floweth The Shadow of Death
And he call'd ' L wheel into line ! '
Left (s) In her I a hiunan head.
left but narrow breadth to I and right
And she the I, or not, or seldom u^ ;
' How grew this feud betwixt the right and I.'
Oaring one arm, and bearing in my I
here and there to I and right Struck,
To right ? to Z ? straight forward ?
Left (verb) (See also Leaved) And what is J to me,
but Thou,
With silver anchor I afloat.
She I the web, she I the loom.
Beneath a willow I afloat.
Is this the end to be I alone.
And day and night I am I alone
And I a want unknown before ;
And I was I alone within the bower ;
lock'd in with bars of sand, L on the shore ;
he set and I behind The good old year.
Then when 1 1 my home.'
What else was I ? look here ! '
flow Of music I the lips of her that died
She lock'd her lips : she I me where I stood :
Falls off, and love is I alone.
' at home was little I, And none abroad :
moved away, and I me, statue-like,
I his father's house. And hired himself to work
He spied her, and he I his men at work.
We I the dying ebb that faintly lipp'd
He I his wife behind ; for so I heard.
He I her, yes. I met my lady once :
till she was I alone Upon her tower,
and now we I The clerk behind us,
So I the place, I Edwin, nor have seen Him since,
Yet this way was I, And by this way
Her father I his good arm-chair,
' She / the novel half-uncut Upon the rosewood shelf ;
She I the new piano shut :
tho' they could not end me, I me maim'd
my passion sweeping thro' me I me dry, L me
with the palsied heart, and I me with the
jaundiced eye ;
I was I a trampled orphan.
So I alone, the passions of her mind.
My father I a park to me.
He I a small plantation ;
We I behind the painted buoy
Long lines of cliff breaking have I a chasm ;
daily I The little footprint daily wash'd away.
(Since Enoch I he had not look'd upon her),
ten years Since Enoch I his hearth
he who I you ten long yeai's ago Should still be living ;
nor loved she to be I Alone at home,
I but narrow breadth to left and right
Among the gifts he I her (possibly He flow'd
And I the living scandal that shall die —
Then I alone he pluck'd her dagger forth
Lover's Tale i 498
Heavy Brigade 6
Vision of Sin 138
Enoch Arden 674
Princess Hi 38
77
iv 183
Holy Grail 494
Pelleas and E. 67
Supp. Confessions 18
Arabian Nights 93
L. of Skalott Hi 37
„ ii> 7
Mariana in the S. 71
83
MUler's D. 228
(Enone 192
Palace of Art 250
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 5
D. of F. Women 120
156
195
241
To J. S. 16
The Epic 19
Gardener's D. 161
Dora 37
„ 86
Audley Court 12
Walk, to the Mail 47
48
98
Edwin Morris 96
137
St. S. Stylites 178
Talking Oak 103
117
Tithonus 20
Locksley Hall 131
156
Godiva 32
Amphion 1
„ 20
The Voyage 1
Enoch Arden 1
21
273
360
404
516
674
Aylmer's Field 217
444
470
Left
Your house is I unto you desolate ! ' (repeat)
iMght that were I to make a purer world—
^ My house is ^ unto me desolate.'
Our house is I unto us desolate ' ?
Have not our love and reverence I them bare "
or one stone L on another,
And I their memories a world's curse
Still so much gold was I ;
from the gaps and chasms of ruin I
n r"f ^^"'^' ^"'^ reaching thro' the night
^T^ ^u^^l"^ Teacher, whom he held diline.
Ihe fare that I a roofless Ilion,
if I go my work is I Unfinish'd— t/ 1 go
to take Only such cups as I us friendly- warm.
He, dymg lately, I her, as I hear,
last not least, she who had I her place
(what other way was I) I came ' '
chapel bells CaU'd us : we Z the walks •
Uhe drunken king To brawl at Shushan
(i-or smce her horse was lost 1 1 her mine)
With many thousand matters Uo do
what was I of faded woman-slough '
We I her by the woman,
which she I : She shall not have it back •
Pharos from his base Had I us rock.
I me m it ; And others otherwise they laid •
but some were I of those Held sagest '
Blanche had gone, but I Her child among us.
And I her woman, lovelier in her mood
her labour was but as a block L in the quarry •
might be Z some record of the things we said.
Have I the last free race with naked coasts '
All that was I of them, L of six hundred
my Annie who I me at two,
there's none of them I alive ;
There is but a trifle I you,
Nobbut a bit on it's I,
What room is I for a hater ?
if I to pass His autumn into seeming-leafless davs-
light gone with her, and I me in shadow here !
And, having I the glass, she turns
When Lazarus I his chamel-cave,
«)U, I barren, scarce had grown The grain
But ere the lark hath I the lea I wake
What fame is I for human deeds In endless a^e ?
As m the winters I behind,
I felt and feel, tho' I alone,
Which I my after-mom content.
Our father's dust is I alone
a scheme that had I us flaccid and drain'd
A ^ w?^ ^F ^^^'^ i"^o gold To a grandson,
And { the daisies rosy.
This lump of earth has I his estate
l-or who was Z to watch her but I ?
That, if I uncancell'd, had been so sweet :
Ihat he I his wine and horses and play.
From the meadow your walks have I so sweet
ihat thou art I for ever alone •
L her and fled, and Other enter'd in.
And ere it I their faces,
To hear him speak before he I his life
394
Left
Aylmer's Field 617
„ 629,797
638
721
737
785
789
796
Sea Dreams 130
225
287
iMcretius 13
65
„ 103
„ 215
Princess i 78
m165
217
the two X the still King, and passing forth to breathe
but when they I the shrine Great Lords from Rome '
and I m neither gold nor field.'
thou that slewest the sire hast I the son
war among themselves, but I them kings •
many a viancU, And many a costly cate,'
Z The dam.sel by the peacock in his pride
And I them with God-speed
Z crag-carven o'er the streaming Gel^-
Affirming that his father I him gold
wIrJ iT fn'^^'i ''''"^''' *"f' robed herself,
When lat« I Caerieon, our gr«at Queen,
471
Hi 229
it) 197
458
»40
113
431
w340
377
381
vii 56
162
231
Third of Feb. 18
40
Light Brigade 48
Grandmother 77
85
107
N. Farmer, 0. iS. 41
Spiteful Letter 14
— A Dedication 9
Window, Gone 3
In Mem. vi 35
„ xxxi 1
>f liii 7
,> Ixviii 13
„ Ixxiii 11
„ Ixxviii 9
,> Ixxxv 42
» ciii 4
„ cv 5
Maud I i 20
a; 11
,, xii 24
,, xvi 1
„ xix 10
46
74
» xxii 39
„ II Hi 4
Com. of Arthur 201
272
362
369
476
Gareth and L. 339
360
422
890
1203
Marr. of Geraint 451
737
781
Than when 1 1 your mowers
Left (verb) (continued)
dinnerless.
Leading the horse, and they were I alone.
Enid I alone with Prince Geraint
Nor I untold the craft herself had used •
and so I him stunn'd or dead, '
There is not I the twinkle of a fin
And I him lying in the public way :
Not a hoof I: and I methinks till now
But Z two brawny spearmen, who advanced
and the two Were I alone together, '
That trouble which has I me thrice your own •
whom Other I in charge Long since
when we I, in those deep woods we found
an enemy that has I Death in the living waters a
w^ni t"*"^ * ^Jl^ ^ y°"*^ g*"i« out Had I iA ashes
Whose kinsman I him watcher o'er his wife
Z Not even Lancelot brave, nor Galahad clean
And ending m a ruin — nothing I
Geraint and E. 234
244
365
393
464
474
478
485
558
734
737
„ . ' 933
Balm and Balan 120
Merlin and V. 147
246
706
804
883
WW ? *^^,^a^*ge'i woodland yet once more To peace ; gas
He I It with her, when he rode to tilt ^ Lancehi and F^
He I the barren-beaten thoroughfare J^ncelot and E.^
But i! her all the paler, " \^^
But I him leave to stammer ' Is it indeed ? ' " 3,
If any man that day were I afield " rfi
and hath I his prize Ontaken, " ^
Here was the knight, and here he I a shield ; " ^.o?
Why ask you not to see the shield he Z, " X^t
As yon proud Prince who I the quest to me. " ^9
and being in his moods L them, " '^^
Her own poor work, her empty labour, I. " qqV
But when they Z her to herself again, " qqo
Come, for you I me taking no farewell, " . IZ
I Z her and I bad her no farewell ; " fpA!
Fell mto dust, and I was I alone, (repeat) Holy Grail 389 400 41 Q
plowman Z his plowing, and fell dow^ Before it • ' ' ^
milkmaid I her milking, and f eU down Before it.
Was I alone once more, and cried in grief
a remnant that werej Paynim amid theii^ circles,
shattered talbots, which had I the stones Raw
Lancelot I The haU long silent.
And I me gazing at a barren board,
new knights to fill the gap L by the Holy Quest ;
And he was I alone in open field. J' ■* «•" .
There I it, and them sleeping •
wu ^i"i bruised And batter'd' and fled on.
wu? I ,1^^"^ ^bi°b Innocence the Queen
Which I thee less than fool,
After she I him lonely here ?
ButJ her all as easily, and retum'd.
Pdleas and E.
2
45;
5»
Last Tournament 29,
warhorse Z to graze A^iong the forest greens
my man Hath Z me or is dead • '
her too hast thou I To pine and waste
Heathen, the brood by Hengist Z •
Modred whom he I in charge of all
come next, five summers back. And I me ;
Ihen that other Z alone Sigh'd,
Had yet that grace of courtesy in him Z
For when the Roman Z us, and their law
For which of us, who might be Z, could speak
rn":.''fT..Ti" i":T"^«-" ,!?«-* I canLe down sin
TLl^^^'f?'"'^^^^- ^ -"iglitiest of all peoples
L her own life with it ; if f "
To know her father Z us just before
Before he I the land for evermore •
Lest there be none Z here to bring'her back
One had deceived her an' Z her alone
nay— what was there Z to fall ?
but bone of my bone was Z
an' if Sally be Z aloiin,
should count myself the coward if I Z them
hSni'^f"' *'J1!' P.?^'"' ^^^^ *hey were not Z to Spain
be little of us Z by the time this sun be set.' ^ '
within her womb that had Z her ill content •
wound to be drest he had Z the deck '
395
403
490
495
597
Guinevere 16
195
322
367
436
456
501
635
I
To the Queen ii 21
Lover's Tale i 215
293
iv 183
367
First Quarrel 25
Rizpah 9
„ 51
North. Cobbler 105
The Revenge 11
20
28
51 V
Left
I*ft (vexb) (continued) They have I the dooi-s ajar ; Sisters {E. and E.) 1
I me this, Which yet retains a memory of its youth fi.^
We I her, happy each in each, ■' j > „ ou
'Bread— Bread I after the blessing ? ' Sir j dldcastle 154
brought your Princes gold enough If I alone ! C« 32 106
And we I the dead to the birds v nfMnTA^.Ta
And we I but a naked rock, ^- "^ ^"^'^""^ 36
Alany a carcase they I to be carrion, Batt. of BruZnhurh 105
L for the white-tail'd eagle to tear it, and L for ^'^«««6«*'-/« lOo
the homy-ribb'd raven to rend it, 107
when 1 1 my darling alone.' "j^j^ Wreck Ql
the one man I on the wreck— '^ 1 1 1
fossil skull that is I in the rocks n'^,^^,-, s«
He ; us weeping in the woods ; ThemJht %l
That other I us to oureelves ; Ihe blr^U 37
but 'a I me the work to do, 'ini„„fp ' " e> ic
I was ^within the shadow sitting on the wreck LocT^Ch Sixty 16
Amy's km and mine are Z to meT "«/«(tey a ., oixty lo
Gone thy tender-natured mother, wearyinc to be
I alone, °
But ere he I your fatal shore. To Marq. of Dufferin 33
The Ring 58
„ 113
„ 179
„ 188
„ 347
„ 355
-, 476
Happy 100
To Mary Boyle 15
Romney's R. 129
St. Telemachus 50
Bandit's Death 12
Charity 40
395
Leodogran
For Naples which we only I in May ?
i to me, A ring too which you kiss'd.
He I me wealth— and while I journey'd hence
no tear for him, who I you wealth '
I took, 1 1 you there ; '
of tener I That angling to the mother.
With earth is broken, and has I her free
^ / had been the leper would you have'i the wife ?
i<or ere she I us, when we met,
' Why I you wife and children ?
had I His aged eyes, he raised them,
one day He had I his dagger behind him.
bhe has I me enough to live on.
Wt See also Late-left, Latest-left.
Leg She caught the white goose by the I
My right / chain'd into the crag, '
' And, I and ann with love-knots gay
And I's of trees were limber, '
Stept forward on a firmer I,
Callest thou that thing a I ?
and white, and strong on his I's,
' Here's a Z for a babe of a week ! '
Strong of his hands, and strong on his I's
Dosn't thou 'ear my 'erse's I's, '
moor sense i' one o' 'is I's nor in all thy braains
Lets down his other I, and stretching
c/awn shifts, and long crane I's of Mark—
An Lucy wur laame o' one I,
•wi'out ony harm i' the I's,
Ull be fun' opo' four short I's
Legacy Leaving great legacies of thought.
Some I of a fallen race Alone might hint
Legend (-See aZso Half-legend) Nor these alone
every I fair
'The L of Good Women,' long ago Sung
1 shaped The city's ancient Unto this :—
The reflex of a ^ past.
The violet of a I blow
There hved an ancient I in our house
I ahnost think That idiot I credible
And fading I of the past ;
boss'd With holy Joseph's I,
The Z as in guerdon for your rhyme ?
A I handed down thro' five or six,
Moreover, that weird I of his birth
So may this I for awhile, '
And then he told their I :
Lot true ? so tender should be true !
Legendary Glanced at the I Amazon
aon King Leodogran Groan'd for the Roman I's
And all his I's crying Christ and him,
follow d up by her vassal I of fools ;
l^SOTiary those Neronian legionaries Burnt and broke
f ensh d many a maid and matron, many a valorous I,
but
The Goose 9
St. S. Stylites 73
Talking Oak 65
Amphion 14
WUl Water. 123
Vision of Sin 89
Grandmother 2
11
13
N. Farmer, N. S. 1
4
Gareth and L. 1186
Last Tournament 729
Village Wife 99
101
Owd Rod 16
In Mem. Ixxxiv 35
Two Voices 359
Palace of Art 125
D. of F. Women 2
Godiva 4
Day-Dm,., Pro. 11
WUl Water. 147
Princess i 5
„ V 153
In Mem. Ixii 4
Balin and Balan 363
Merlin and V. 554
Holy Grail 87
Last Tournament 669
To Prof. Jebb 9
The Ring 206
224
Princess ii 126
Com. of Arthur 33
Lancelot and E. 305
Vastness 12
Boddicea 1
85
Leisure And in the fallow I of my life
lapt In the arms of I,
Mine eyes have I for their tears ;
Leman wert lying in thy new I's arms.'
Lemon I grove In closest coverture upspi-ung
Lend God in his mercy I her grace.
To I our hearts and spirits wholly
Something to love He I's us ;
Or I an ear to Plato where he says,
m this frequence can 1 1 full tongue
wi' noan to Z 'im a shuvv, '
That Nature I's such evil dreams ?
To I thee horae and shield :
I pray you I me one, if such you have. Blank,
Audley Court 77
Princess ii 168
In Mem. xiii 16
Last Tournament 625
Arabian Nights 67
L. ofShalottiv53
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 63
To J. S. 14
Lucretius 147
Princess iv 442
N. Farmer, IV. S. 31
In Mem. Iv 6
Gareth and L. 1324
Lancelot and E. 193
so did W\Uaa 7 in 7u2 ^u V ' ,,.*■' Lancelot and E. 193
L me thine horse and arms,
her gracious lips Did I such gentle utterance,
Nor I an ear to random cries.
Length (.See oZso Arm's-length) All its allotted
I of days,
I of bright horizon rimm'd the dark,
to such I of years should come
Cut off the I of highway on before.
Dangled a I of ribbon and a ring To tempt
With I's of yellow ringlet, like a girl
boss'd with I's Of classic frieze, '
All her fair I upon the ground she lay :
To wile the I from languorous hours.
And lazy I's on boundless shores ;
till at I Sir Gareth's brand Clash'd his.
Down by the I of lance and arm beyond
and seem'd at I in peace.
At I, and dim thro' leaves Bhnkt the white morn
lay she all her I and kiss'd his feet,
Pall'd all its I in blackest samite,
wilt at I Yield me thy love and know me
At I A lodge of intertwisted beechen-boughs
At I Descending from the point and standing
grew at I Prophetical and prescient
at I When some were doubtful how the law
But at I we began to be weary,
AU the miUions one at I
Led me at I To the city and palace Of Arthur
brought you down A I of staghorn-moss.
All his leaves Fall'n at I,
at I he touch'd his goal. The Christian city.
Lengthen'd Tall as a figure I on the sand
With a I loud halloo.
Lent (fast) If it may be, fast Whole L's,
Lent (verb) Who I you, love, your mortal dower
motion I The pulse of hope to discontent.
That I broad verge to distant lands,
That I my knee desire to kneel,
once or twice she I her hand,
I, that have I my life to build up yours,
Still in the little book you I me.
And, crown'd with all the season I,
A willing ear We I him.
I her fierce teat To human sucklings ;
hath not our good King Who I me thee,
Clung to the shield that Lancelot I him,
Pelleas I his horse and all his arms,
which Innocence the Queen L to the King.
I The sceptres of her West, her East,
Lenten That L fare makes L thought,
Lent-Iily and all L-l in hue,
Thy gay lent-lilies wave and put them by,
Leodogran L, the King of Cameliard,
King L Groan'd for the Roman legions
His new-made knights, to King L,
L in heart Debating—' How should I that am a kin''
lo whom the King L replied,
Thereat L rejoiced, but thought
She spake and King L rejoiced,
.. L awoke, and sent Ulfius, and Brastias and Bedivere,
345
Lover's Tale i 457
Politics 7
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 35
Gardener's D. 181
Locksley Hall 67
Enoch Arden 673
750
Princess i 3
,, ii 24
„ vbQ
„ m63
In Mem. Ixx 12
Gareth and L. 1147
Geraint and E. 463
Balin and Balan 239
384
Merlin and V. 219
Lancelot and E. 1142
Pelleas and E 248
Last Tournament dl5
Lover's Tale i 410
ii 131
iv 269
V. of Maeldune 91
Locksley H., Sixty 162
Merlin and the G. 64
Romney's R. 79
The Oak 12
St. Telemachus 34
Princess vi 161
The Owl ii 13
St. S. Stylites 182
Margaret 5
Two Voices 449
Palace of Art 30
Princess Hi 193
iv 27
351
The Daisy 99
In Mem. xxii 6
„ Ixxxvii 31
Com. of Arthur 28
Gareth and L. 1071
1320
Pelleas and E. 358
Last Tournament 294
To Marq. of Dufferin 5
To E. Fitzgerald 31
Gareth and L. 911
Prog, of Spring 37
Com. of Arthur 1
33 ■
137
140
160
310
425
444
Leolin
396
Letty
Aylmer
Field 57
79
124
140
184
210
234
283
318
329
339
350
360
367
409
432
493
518
557
576
Golden Year 1
4
Locksley H., Sixty 55
265
QHnone 58
Princess ii 33
„ ml81
t)400
Leolin L, his brother, living oft With Averill,
Vs first nui-se was, five years after,
Would care no more for L's walking with her
Might have been other, save for L's —
Where once with L at her side the girl.
Till L ever watchful of her eye,
And L, coming after he was gone,
by the counter door to that Which L open'd,
And L's horror-stricken answer,
while L still Retreated half-aghast.
Went L ; then, his passion all in flood
Some one, he thought, had slander'd L to him.
L, I almost sin in envying you :
But L cried out the more upon them —
Tho' L flamed and fell again.
So L went : and as we task ourselves
retmu'd L's rejected rivals from their suit
Came at the moment L's emissary.
Was L's one strong rival upon earth ;
And ci-ying upon the name of L,
Leonard you shall have that song which L wrote :
been tjp Snowdon ; and I wish'd for L there,
L early lost at sea ;
my L, use and not abuse your day,
Leopaiid (adj.) a I skin Droop'd from his shoulder,
Leopard (s) two tame l's couch'd beside her throne,
her foot on one Of those tame Vs.
I tamed my l's : shall I not tame these ?
Leper I plague may scale my skin but never taint my
heart ;
' Last of the train, a moral I, I,
And flies above the l's hut,
Is that the l's hut on the solitary moor, Where noble Ulric
dwells forlorn, and wears the l's weed ?
made him I to compass him with scorn —
be content Till I be Z like yourself,
Now God has made you I in His loving care
Or if / had been the I would you have left the wife ?
Leprous Who yearn to lay my loving head upon your I breast.
let mine be I too,
Less (adj. and adv.) To one of 1 desert allows
But now they live with Beauty I and I,
some said their heads were I :
L welcome find among us.
Not being I but more than all
And yet is love not I, but more ;
And theirs are bestial, hold him I than man :
And now of late I see him I and I,
Tells of a manhood ever I and lower ?
Art and Grace are I and I :
L weight now for the ladder-of -heaven
Less (s) O grief, can grief be changed to / ?
From I and I to nothing ;
From I to I and vanish into light.
And I will be lost than won.
Lessen Nor will it I from to-day ;
Lessened And I be Z in his love ?
great as Edith's power of love. Had I,
Lessening a foot L in perfect cadence,
L to the I music, back.
And crowded farms and I towers.
At Arthui''s ordinance, tipt with I peak And
pinnacle,
an ever opening height. An ever I earth —
(adj.) Woman is the I man, and all thy
pa-ssions, Locksley Hall 151
The I griefs that may be said, In Mem. xx 1
At noon or when the I wain Is twisting „ ci 11
to cast a careless eye On souls, the I lords of doom. „ cxii 8
Is comrade of the I faith That sees the course of human
things. „ cxxviii 3
' I have seen the cuckoo chased by I fowl, Com. of Arthur 167
Had sent thee down before a I spear, Gareth and L. 1244
* then in wearing mine Needs must be I likelihood, Lancelot and E. 367
Aa if some I god had made the world, Pass, of Arthur 14
Happy 27
Princess iv 222
Happy 4
16
88
91
100
26
94
To the Queen 6
Caress'd or chidden 9
Princess ii 147
354
In Mem. cxi 11
Con. 12
Com. of Arthur 181
356
Last Tournament 121
Locksley H., Sixty 245
By an Evolution. 12
In Mem. Ixxviii 16
Last Tournament 467
Pass, of Arthur 468
The Dreamer 22
In Mem. lix 10
;t8
Sisters {E. and E.) 262
Walk, to the Mail 55
Sea Dreams 221
In Mem. xi 11
Gareth and L. 308
The Ring 46
Lesser (s) draws The greater to the I,
Lesson Ketaught the I thou hadst taught,
Shall we teach it a Roman I ?
One I from one book we leam'd.
Gracious l's thine And maxims of the mud !
A simpler, saner I might he learn
Let And l's me from the saddle ; '
L's them inter 'eaven easy es leaves
Lethargy for months, in such blind lethargies
Lethe Some draught of X might await
For she that out of L scales with man
cannot hear The sullen L rolling doom
gleams On L in the eyes of Death.
the abyss Of Darkness, utter L.
Lethean (If Death so taste L springs),
Lether (ladder) ' Ya mun run fur the I.
Sa I i-uns to the yard fur a I,
Thy Moother was howdin' the Z,
Letter (epistle) from her bosom drew Old l's,
And gave my l's back to me.
her l's too, Tho' far between,
and read Writhing a I from his child,
The I which he brought, and swore
Found a dead man, a I edged with death Beside him,
Tore the king's I, snow'd it down,
I can give you l's to her ;
show'd the late-writ l's of the king.
the king,' he said, ' Had given us l's,
I gave the I to be sent with dawn ;
I read— two l's — one her sire's.
Behold your father's I.'
I pored upon her I which I held,
And with it a spiteful I
Go, little I, apace, apace. Fly ;
And l's unto trembling hands ;
The noble l's of the dead :
to write as she devised A I, word for word ;
Then he wrote The I she devised ;
lay the I in my hand A little ere I die.
Her father laid the I in her hand.
In her right the lily, in her left The I —
Arthur spied the I in her hand,
her lips. Who had devised the I, moved again
an' a I along wi' the rest,
— this was the I — this was the 1 1 read —
I flimg him the I that drove me wild,
And then he sent me a I,
' are you ill ? ' (so ran The I)
fur the 'tumey's l's they foller'd sa fast ;
I shook as I open'd the I —
She found my I upon him,
Letter (character) a tear Dropt on the l's as I wrote
sow'd her name and kept it green In living l's.
Along the l's of thy name.
In l's like to those the vexillary
on her tomb In l's gold and azure ! '
scroll Of l's in a tongue no man could read.
Not by the sounded I of the word,
until The meaning of the l's shot into My brain ;
is veering there Above his four gold l's)
Letter (literal meaning) His light upon the I dwells,
I broke the I of it to keep the sense.
Because she kept the I of his word.
Letter (verb) Spring L's cowslips on the-hill ?
Letter'd I hold Mother's love in I gold.
Letters (literature) From misty men of l's ;
Thy partner in the flowery walk Of l's,
gilded by the gracious gleam Of l's,
plaudits from our best In modern l's.
Before the Love of L's, overdone.
Letting fell'd The forest, I in the sun,
I her left hand Droop from his mighty shoulder,
Letty (See also HUi, Letty Hill) Tlie close, ' Your L,
only yours ; '
I have pai-don'd little L ;
Gardener's D. li
England and Am,er. 8
Boddicea 32
In Mem. Ixxix 14
Merlin and V. 48
Prog, of Spring 105
Lancelot and E. 94
VUlage Wife 94
St. S. Stylites 103
Two Voices 350
Princess vii 261
Lit. Squabbles 11
Im Mem. xcviii 8
Romney's R. 53
In Mem. xliv 10
Owd Rod 77
82
85
Mariana in the S. 62
The Letters 20
Aylmer' s Field 475
517
522
595
Princess i 61
159
175
181
245
w397
468
i;469
Spiteful Letter 2
Window, Letter 11
In Mem. x 7
„ xcv 24
Lancelot and E. 1104
1109
1113
1134
1156
1270
1288
First Quarrel 49
51
57
85
Sisters [E. and E.) 186
Village Wife 62
The Wreck 145
Charity 23
To J. S. 56
Aylmer's Field 81)
In Mem. Ixvii 7
Gareth and L. 1202
Lancelot and E. 1345
Holy Grail 171
Sisters (E. and E.)1G2
Lover's Tale ii b
The Ring 333
Miller's D. 189
Princess iv 338
Geraint and E. 455
Adeline 62
Helen's Tower 4
Will Water. 190
In Mem. Ixxxiv 23
Ded. of Idylls 40
To E. Fitzgerald 39
Poets and their B. 13
Com. of Arthur (K)
Merlin and V. 242
Edwin Morris 106
140
Letty HiU
LettyHUl (See also Bm, letty) Tho' if , in dancing
after L H, ' -S
Level (adj.) counterchanged The I lake with diamond
plots
For leagues no other tree did mark The Z waste
Or opening upon I plots Of crowned lilies, '
They past into the I flood,
From I meadow-bases of deep grass
Crisp foam-flakes scud along the I sand.
And on a sudden, lo ! the I lake,
But when we planted I feet, and dipt
As waits a river I with the dam Ready to burst
And on by many a I mead,
range Of I pavement where the King would pace
And on a sudden, lo ! the I lake.
And shine the I lands,
.level (s) Ridged the smooth I,
It springs on a Z of bowery lawn,
The house thro' all the I shines.
Came on the shining I's of the lake,
thou shalt lower to his Z day by day,
came On flowery I's underneath the crag,
waterlily starts and slides Upon the I
Came on the shining I's of the lake.
The rippling I's of the lake',
O yes, if yonder hill be I with the flat.
Down from the mountain And over the I,
climb'd from the dens in the I below.
Level (verb) Not to feel lowest makes them I all •
Lever A I to uplift the earth '
Leveret quail and pigeon, lark and I lay.
Levied L a kindly tax upon themselves.
Levin-brand Then flash'd 3.1-b;
Lewd when was Lancelot wanderingly I ?
Lewdness I, narrowing envy, monkey-spite,
Lewes Were those your sires who fought at Z ?
Liana And cliffs all robed in I's
Liar {See also Hustings-liar, Loiar) I raged against
the public I ;
Let the canting I pack !
and slandering me, the base little I !
There the hive of Roman I's
And rave at the lie and the I,
clamour of I's belied in the hubbub of lies •
Spum'd by this heir of the I — '
wrath shall be wreak'd on a giant I ;
one said ' Eat in peace ! a Z is he,
a glance will serve — the I's !
' What dare the full-fed I's say of me ?
the King Hath made us fools and I's.
'i, for thou hast not slain This Pelleas !
' Tell thou the King and aU his I's,
youthful jealousy is a Z.
teeming with I's, and madmen, and knaves
libation No vain I to the Muse, '
Uberal But Thou rejoice with I joy.
And I applications lie In Art like Nature
Two in the I offices of life, '
but come, We will be I, smce our rights are won.
shook to all the I air The dust and din
* Liberal-minded l-m, great. Consistent ;
Libera me, Domine ' L m, D ! ' you sang the Psalm,
Libera nos, Domine ' Ln,D '—you knew not one was there ;," ' 53
Liberty He that roars for Z Faster binds Vision of Sin 121
bhe bore the blade of L. The Voyage 72
Close at the boundary of the liberties ; Princess i 172
And boldly ventured on the liberties. „ 205
Not for three years to cross the liberties ; ," H 71
To compass our dead sisters' Zj6er<ie5.' " m 288
Thine the I, thine the glory, Boadicea 41
Me the wife of rich Prasiitagus, me the lover of I, 48
Libyan ' We drank the L Sun to sleep, B. of F. Women 145
^iceMe give you, being strange, A I : Priwess Hi 205
You grant me I ; might I use it ? 235
takes His I in the field of time, /« Mem. xxvii 6
397
Edwin Morris 55
Arabian Nights 85
Mariana 44
Ode to Memory 108
Miller's D. 75
Palace of Art!
D. of F. Women 39
M. d' Arthur 191
Princess iv 30
473
In Mem. ciii 21
Gareth and L. 667
Pass, of Arthur 359
Early Spring 15
Arabian Nights 35
Poet's Mind 31
Mariana in the S. 2
M. d' Arthur 51
Locksley Hall 45
Princess Hi 336
„ iv 256
Pass, of Arthur 219
Lover's Tale Hi 4
Locksley H., Sixty 111
Merlin and the G. 50
The Dawn 17
Merlin and V. 828
In Mem. cxiii 15
Audley Court 24
Enoch Arden 663
Last Tournament 616
Holy GraU 148
Lucretius 211
Third of Feb. 33
The Wreck 73
The Letters 26
Vision of Sin 108
Grandmother 27
Boadicea 19
Maud I im
„ iv 51
xix 78
„ IIIvi45
Balin and Balan 607
Merlin and F. Ill
692
Pelleas and E. 479
490
Last Tournament 77
Locksley H., Sixty 240
The Dreamer 9
Wm Water. 9
England and Amer. 11
Day-Dm., Moral 13
Princess ii 175
vi 68
In Mem. Ixxxix 7
Con. 38
Happy 49
Licensed Should I boldness gather force.
Lichen I scraped the I from it :
And a morbid eating I fixt On a heart
Root-bitten by white I,
Lichen-bearded the hall Of Pellam, l-b,
Lichen'd I into colour with the crags :
Lichen-gilded With turrets l-g like a rock •
Lidded See Argent-lidded
Lidless A I watcher of the public weal,
Lie (s) Can do away that ancient I ;
' Wilt thou make everything a I,
Perplexing me with I's ;
Cursed be the social I's
neither capable of I's, Nor asking overmuch
dare not ev'n by silence sanction I's.
a I which IS half a truth is ever the blackest of I's
That a I which is all a I may be met and fought
with outright. But a I which is part a truth is a
harder
Or Love but play'd with gracious I's,
To fool the crowd with glorious I's,
and a wretched swindler's I ?
And rave at the I and the liar.
Lie
In Mem. cxiii 13
The Brook 193
Maud I vi 77
Gareth and L. 454
Balin and Balan 332
Lancelot and E. 44
Edwin Morris 8
Princess iv 325
Clear-headed friend 15
Two Voices 203
St. S. Stylites 102
Locksley Hall 60
Enoch A rden 251
Third of Feb. 10
Grandmother 30
In Mem. cxxv 7
„ cxxviii 14
Maud I i56
60
Jack on his ale-house bench has as many I's as a Czar • i« Q
clamour of liars behed in the hubbub of I's • ' " 51
In another month to his brazen I's, ' " ^ =c
He fiercely gave me the I, " jj • ?g
Who cannot brook the shadow of any U Gareth and L. 293
Our one white I sits like a little ghost 297
' For this half-shadow of a I The trustful Kine " ^9^
HiTl"'*^'^^ 1 -u Merli:a.^dvA
cloaks the scar of some repulse with I's ; gig
I should suck L's like sweet wines : Last Tournament 645
Then playfuUy she gave herself the l~ Lover's Tale i 349
and he never has told me a I. Rizvah 24
If the hope of the world were a Z ? /„ the Child. Hosp. 24
we knew that their light was a l~ Despair 16
To he, to he— m God's own house— the blackest of aU lies ! The Flight 52
madness ? written, spoken l's ? Locksley H., Sixty 108
L s upon this side, l's upon that side, Vaslness 5
voices drowning his own in a popular torrent of l's upon l's • 6
Do not die with a I in your mouth, ' Forlorn 57
A I by which he thought he could subdue Havvy 64
To you my days have been a life-long I, Romney'sR. 41
more Than all the myriad l's, jog
I may claim it without a I. Bandit's Death 7
Lie (verb) (See also Lig) In the dark we must I. All Things wUl Die 22
w-!k® ^^ K^ ^^l"^ ^'"' ^^^^ ^P"^ ^'" ^ The Kraken 11
Within thy heart my arrow l's, Oriana 80
dead Imeamente that near thee I ? Wan Sculptor 2
On either side the river Z L. of SkJott i 1
Come from the wells where he did Z. Two Voices 9
to I Beside the mill-wheel in the stream, Miller's D. 166
I would I so light, so light, jo^
There l's a vale in Ida, " (En„ne\
on her threshold I Howling in outer
darkness. To , With Pal. of Art 15
God, before whom ever I bare The abysmal
Tj "^^f^l 11 7 , ., Palace of Art 222
?n ■ l.*T I *'°",^' '"°*^^'"' ^«2/ Q'^^e^, ^'- Y's. E. 20
All night 1 1 awake, ^ -^ t tn
To I within the Light of God, as I Z " r^ gq
Music that gentlier on the spirit l's, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 5
For they I beside their nectar, jjV
Full knee-deep l's the winter snow, D. of the 0. Year 1
For the old year l's a-dymg. t
L still, dry dust, secure of change. 'Vo T <i ir
Nature, so far as in her l's, Qn aModrn'erl
but It l's Deep-meadow'd, happy fair M d' Arthur 2fil
nlrTfl* T'i the garden l's A league of grass. Gardener's D. 39
Beyond the lodge the city l's. Talkie n nni^%
He l's beside thee on the grai. ^ "^'''''^ ^f oq
Peace L hke a shaft of light Gnld^r," V^^.aq
' Ah folly ! for it l's so far away, ^"^^''' ^*"'^ f ?
There l's the port : the vessel puffs Ulysses 44
Lie
398
Lie (verb) (con<mtt«rf) Man comes and tills the field and Z's beneath, TithonusS
That I upon her charmed heart,
liberal apphcations I In Art like Nature,
That in my bosom Vs.
' Here I's the body of Ellen Adair ;
There I's the body of Ellen Adair !
Crew and Captain I ;
Pass on, weak heart, and leave me where 1 1 :
rank or wealth Might I within their compass,
L's the hawk's cast, the mole has made his run,
' Let them I, for they have fall'n.'
Heroic, for a hero l's beneath,
some gross error l's In this report,
when we came where l's the child We lost
Here l's a brother by a sister slain,
thousand hearts I fallow in these halls,
there she l's, But will not speak, nor stir.'
' Lift up your head, sweet sister : I not thus.
Let them not I in the tents with coarse mankind,
that there L bruised and maim'd,
' You shall not I in the tents but here.
Whatever man l's wounded, friend or foe,
But l's and dreads his doom.
Now l's the Earth all Danae to the stars, And all
thy heart l's open unto me.
as far as in us l's We two will serve
in true marriage l's Nor equal, nor unequal ;
I see the place wJiere thou wilt I.
A use in measured language l's ;
Where l's the master newly dead ;
This use may I in blood and breath,
I Foreshorten'd in the tract of time ?
Bring in great logs and let them I,
What profit l's in barren faith,
There yet l's the rock that fell
And Sleep must I down arm'd.
Here will 1 1, while these long branches sway,
wilderness, full of wolves, where he used to i ;
I know that he l's and listens mute
Lot beside the hearth L's like a log,
and now l's there A yet-warm corpse,
under this wan water many of them L
There l's a ridge of slate across the ford ;
let the bodies I, but bound the suits
there I still, and yet the sapling grew :
Beheld before a golden altar I
yonder l's one dead within the wood,
to ? Closed in the four walls of a hollow tower,
0 did ye never I upon the shore,
Down to the Uttle thorpe that l's so close,
go back, and slay them where they L'
Never I by thy side ; see thee no more —
1 before your shrines ;
but it l's Deep-meadow'd, happy,
goal of this great world L's beyond sight :
on the horizon of the mind L's folded.
As the tree falls so must it I.
But if there I a preference eitherway,
in my wanderings all the lands that I
in thy virtue l's The saving of our Thebes ;
l's all in the way that you walk.
l's Behind the green and blue ?
L's the warrior, my forefather,
L's my Amy dead in child-birth.
Yonder l's our young sea-village —
You that I with wasted lungs Waiting
' Who l's on yonder pyre ? '
Saw them I confounded,
Lie (speak falsely) This is a shameful thing for men
' I will speak out, for I dare not I.
and when only not all men I ;
Who can rule and dare not I. „ x 66
My scheming brain a cinder, if 1 1.' Merlin and V. 933
i to me : I believe. Will ye not I ? Last Tournament 645
This is a shameful thing for men to I. Pass, of Arthur 246
Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 20
Moral 13
iSt. Agnes' Eve 12
Edward Gray 27
35
The Captain 68
Come not, when, etc. 11
Aylmer's Field 485
849
Sea Breams 228
Princess, Pro. 212
i69
mIO
208
400
v51
64
vi 69
72
94
336
vii 154
182
267
302
Sailor Boy 8
In Mem. v. 6
„ XX 4
„ xlv 13
„ Ixxvii 3
„ cvii 17
„ cviii 5
Maud lis
41
„ xviii 29
„ II V 54:
60
Gareth and L. 75
79
825
1056
Geraint and E. 96
165
Balin and Balan 410
468
Merlin and F. 208
291
Holy Grail 547
Pdleas and E. 444
Guinevere 579
„ 681
Pass, of Arthur 429
To the Queen II 60
Lover's Tale i 50
Rizpah 12
Sisters (E. and E.) 290
Tiresias 25
„ 109
Despair 112
Ancient Sage 25
Locksley H., Sixty 28
36
245
Forlorn 21
Death of (Enone 95
The Tourney 14
to I. M. d' Arthur 78
Lady Clare 38
Maud I i 35
Lie (speak falsely) {continued)
not let thee I.
To I, to I — in God's own housi
and juggle, and I and cajole,
Lied wrong'd and I and thwarted us —
I with ease ; but horror-stricken he,
foul are their lips ; they I.
Lancelot vext at having I in vain :
They I not then, who sware,
L, say ye ? Nay, but learnt,
you knew — you knew that he I.
Lief go again As thou art I and dear,
go again, As thou art I and dear,
Liefer-Liever Far liefer had I fight a score of times
Far liefer had I gird his harness
Far liefer than so much discredit him.'
Far liefer by his dear hand had I die,
I had liefer ye were worthy of my love.
Made answer, ' I had liefer twenty years
far liever led my friend Back to the pure
And each of them liefer had died
Liege ' Sir and my I,' he cried,
loyal vassals toihng for their I.
Gareth dreaming on his I.
' O true and tender ! O my I and King !
she call'd him lord and I, Her seer,
' Sire, my I, so much I learnt ;
' Lady, my I, in whom I have my joy,
' 0 King, my I,' he said,
Modred smote his I Hard on that helm
Liege-lady he, he reverenced his l-l there ;
Liege-lord trusted his l-l Would yield him
Liest O happy thou that I low.
Thou I beneath the greenwood tree,
' L thou here so low, the child of one I honour'd,
Liest (speakest falsely) 'Dog, thou I. I spring from
loftier lineage
Lieth (See also Low-lieth) He I still : he doth not
move :
Love I deep : Love dwells not in lip-depths.
Lieu In I of many mortal flies,
In I of idly dallying with the truth,
Liever See Liefer
Life (See also After-life, Loife) * Her court was pure ;
her 1 serene ;
the groimd Shall be fill'd with I anew.
They light his little I alway ;
He hath no care of I or death ;
L of the fountain there,
Which would keep green hope's I.
Shall we not look into the laws Of I and death,
0 weary I ! 0 weary death !
Crown'd Isabel, thro all her placid I,
She only said ' My I is dreary, (repeat)
L, anguish, death, immortal love.
Small thought was there of l's distress ;
in after I retired From brawling storms,
L in dead stones, or spirit in air ;
He saw thro' I and death,
L and Thought have gone away
L and Thought Here no longer dwell ;
Thou art the shadow of I,
L eminent creates the shade of death ;
Thy heart, my I, my love, my bride.
Two lives bound fast in one
So runs the round of I from hour to hour.
Oh ! what a happy I were mine
But enter not the toil of i!.
L shoots and glances thro' your veins,
Brimm'd with delirious draughts of warmest I.
My I is full of weary days,
ebb into a former I, or seem To lapse
' My I is sick of single sleep :
1 shut my I from happier chance.
And not to lose the good of I —
Life
fierce manhood would
Balin and Balan 74
the blackest of all lies ! The Flight 52
Charity 29
Princess iv 540
Balin and Balan 525
616
Lancelot and E. 102
Last Tournament 650
656
Charity 12
M. d' Arthur 80
Pass, of Arthur 248
Gareth and L. 944
Marr of Geraint 93
629
Geraint and E. 68
Pelleas and E. 301
Last Tournament 257
Sir J. Oldcastle 70
V. of Maeldune 6
Com. of Arthur 128
282
Gareth and L. 1316
Merlin and V. 791
953
Lancelot and E. 708
1180
Holy Grail 858
Pass, of Arthur 165
Princess i 188
Gareth and L. 396
Oriana 84
„ 95
Guinevere 422
Gareth and L. 960
D. of the 0. Year 10
Lover's Tale i 466
Princess Hi 268
Lancelot and E. 590
To the Queen 25
Nothing will Die 29
Supp. Confessions 46
48
55
119
173
188
Isabel 27
Mariana 9, 45, 69
Arabian Nights 73
Ode to Memory 37
111
A Character 9
The Poet 5
Deserted House 1
17
Love and Death 10
13
Oriana 44
Circumstance 5
9
The Merman 37
Margaret 24
Rosalind 22
Elednore 139
My life is full 1
Sonnet to 2
The Bridesmaid 13
Two Voices 54
132
Life
399
Ufe
JMb (continued) The springs of I, the depths of awe,' \ Two Voices 140
' To pass, when L her light withdraws, „ 145
' A / of nothings, nothing-worth, „ 331
' It may be that no Z is found, „ 346
' Or if thro' lower lives I came — „ 364
No I that breathes with human breath „ 395
' Tis I, whereof our nerves are scant, Oh I, not death,
for which we pant ; More I, and fuller, that I want.' „ 397
There's somewhat flows to us in Z, Miller's D. 21
I'd almost live my I again. „ 28
For scarce my I with fancy play'd „ 45
Like mine own I to me thou art, „ 196
My other dearer lial, „ 217
I am all aweary of my I. (Enone 33
A shepherd all thy I but yet king-born, „ 128
These three alone lead I to sovereign power. „ 145
push thee forward thro' a Z of shocks, „ 163
I pray thee, pass before my light of I, „ 241
Not less than I, design'd. Palace of Art 128
And death and I she hated equally, „ 265
And sweeter far is death than I to me May Queen, Con. 8
And blessings on his whole I long, „ 14
things have ceased to be, with my desire of I. „ 48
"" ~ „ 56
LotoS' Eaters, C. S. 41
69
D. of F. Women 146
154
210
D. of the 0. Year 12
To J. S. 24
On a Mourner 19
Love thou thy land 34
56
M. d' Arthur 155
244
251
Gardener's D. 20
70
84
98
178
198
Dora 23
Audley Court 43, 47, 51, 55
77
Walk, to the Mail 22
Edwin Morris 4
23
143
St. S. Stylites 54
192
Talking Oak 192
213
255
Love and Duty 12
18
64
79
And what is I, that we should moan ?
Death is the end of I ; ah, why Should I all
labour be ?
Dear is the memory of our wedded lives,
0 my I In Egypt !
1 heard my name Sigh'd forth with I
these did move Me from my bliss of /,
He hath no other I above.
Without whose 1 1 had not been.
Tin all thy I one way incline
With L, that, workmg strongly, binds —
Yearning to mix himself with L.
I live three lives of mortal men,
I have lived my I, and that which I have done
That nourish a blind I within the brain,
ere he found Empire for I ?
made the air Of L delicious,
(For those old Mays had thrice the I of these,)
by my I, These birds have joyful thoughts,
such a noise of I Swarm'd in the golden present,
Love trebled I within me,
by my I, I will not marry Dora.'
but let me live my I. (repeat)
And in the fallow leisure of my I
He lost the sense that handles daily I —
in the dust and drouth Of city I !
once I ask'd him of his early I,
in the dust and drouth of London I
and whole years long, a Z of death,
footsteps smite the threshold stairs Of I —
The I that spreads in them,
' I took the swarming sound of I —
To riper I may magnetise The baby-oak within
Sit brooding in the ruins of a I,
The set gray I, and apathetic end.
such tears As flow but once a I.
— closing like an individual I —
knowing all L needs for I is possible to will —
I will drink L to the lees :
As tho' to breathe were I. L piled on I
Love took up the harp of L,
'Tis a purer I than thine ;
and the tumult of my I ;
Orient, where my I began to beat ;
help me as when I begun :
In these, in those the I is stay'd.
all his I the charm did talk About his path,
all the long-pent stream of I Dash'd downward
Are clasp'd the moral of thy I,
and smote Her I into the liquor.
A private I was all his joy,
Lest of the fulness of my I
86
Ulysses 7
« 24
Locksley Hall 33
88
110
154
185
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 18
„ Arrival 21
„ Bevival 15
L' Envoi 55
Will Water. 112
129
163
Will Water. 244
Lady Clare 34
L. of Burleigh 16
The Letters 36
Vision of Sin 69
116
205
You might have won 6
8
23
30
Enoch Arden 38
54
75
116
145
260
306, 420
386
435
557
730
758
820
Life {continued) laying down an imctuous lease Of I,
' But keep the secret for your I,
And I love thee more than I.'
Thro' you, my I will be acciu-st.'
What ! the flower of Z is past :
Whited thought and cleanly I As the priest.
Dregs of I, and lees of man :
A I that moves^to gracious ends
A deedful I, a silent voice :
No public I was his on earth,
The little I of bank and brier,
new warmth of I's ascending sun
he thrice had pluck'd a I From the dread sweep
like a wounded I Crept down into the hollows
Low miserable lives of hand-to-mouth.
With fuller profits lead an easier I,
And lived a Z of silent melancholy,
known each other all our lives ? (repeat)
like a woimded I He crept into the shadow :
' Annie, as I have waited all my I
The helpless I so wild that it was tame,
and beats out his weary I.
when the dead man come to I beheld His wife
not Z in it Whereby the man could live ;
The boat that bears the hope of I approach To save
the Z despair'd of, „ 830
His wreck, his lonely Z, his coming back, „ 862
I in him Could scarce be said to flourish, The Brook 11
Flash into fiery Z from nothing, Aylmer's Field 130
thro' the perilous passes of his Z : „ 209
I lived for years a stunted sunless Z ; „ 357
quintessence of man. The Z of all — „ 389
Had rioted his Z out, and made an end. „ 391
Nor greatly cared to lose, her hold on Z. „ 568
days Were clipt by horror from his term of Z. „ 603
sunshine of the faded woods Was all the Z of it ; „ 611
sense Of meanness in her unresisting Z. „ 801
And musing on the little lives of men. Sea Dreams 48
Now I see My dream was L ; „ 137
Bound on a matter he of Z and death : „ 151
And that drags down his Z : „ 177
Live the great Z which all our greatest fain Lucretius 78
man may gain Letting his own Z go. „ 113
sober majesties Of settled, sweet, Epicurean Z. „ 218
Tired of so much within our little Z, Or of so little in
our little Z — Poor little Z that toddles half an hour „ 226
While Z was yet in bud and blade. Princess i 32
I ! he never saw the like ; „ 186
woman ripen'd earlier, and her Z Was longer ; „ ii 154
Two in the liberal ofiices of Z, „ 175
' Well then. Psyche, take my Z, „ 204
I lose My honour, these their lives.' „ 342
debtors for our lives to you, „ 355
better blush our lives away. „ iii 68
our three lives. True — we had limed ourselves „ 142
Ere half be done perchance your Z may fail ; „ 236
our device ; wrought to the Z ; „ 303
O Death in L, the days that are no more.* „ iv 58
tell her, brief is Z but love is long, „ 111
that have lent my Z to build up yours, „ 351
a Z Less mine than yours : „ 426
thousand matters left to do, The breath of Z ; „ 459
You saved our Z : we owe you bitter thanks ; „ 531
Severer in the logic of a Z ? „ v 190
Z and soul ! I thought her half -right „ 284
babbling wells With her own people's Z : „ 335
Still Take not his Z : ,. 407
And on the little clause ' take not his Z : ' „ 470
' He saved my Z : my brother slew him for it.' :, vi 108
So those two foes above my fallen Z, „ 130
Lay silent in the muffled cage of Z : „ vii 47
with what Z I had, And like a flower „ 140
but let us type them now In our own lives, „ 300
heart beating, with one full stroke, L.' „ 308
A drowning Z, besotted in sweet self, „ 314
Life 400
Life (continrted) Giv'n back to 7, to Z indeed, thro' thee, Princess vii 345
My bride. My wife, my I. „ 360
The long self-sacrifice of Z is o'er. Ode on Well. 41
Whose I was work, whose language rife With rugged
maxims hewn from I ; „ 183
And other forms of I than ours, „ 264
And mixt, as Z is mixt with pain, Ode Inter. Exhib. 27
empires branching, both, in lusty I ! — W. to Marie Alex. 21
now thy fuUer I is in the west, „ 36
Shadow and shine is I, Grandmother 60
for the babe had fought for his I. „ 64
Judge of us all when I shall cease ; „ 95
And happy has been my I; „ 98
So dear a I your arms enfold The Daisy 93
How gain in Z, as Z advances. To F. D. Maurice 39
Her quiet dream of I this hour may cease. Requiescat 6
What would you have of us ? Human I ? The Victim 12
' We give you his I.' ,, 16
Take you his dearest, Give us a Z.' „ 28
They have taken our son, They will have his I. „ 50
' O, Father Odin, We give you a I. ,, 75
for the I of the worm and the fly ? Wages 7
the rapid of I Shoots to the fall — Dedication 3
Ay is I for a hundred years. Window, No Answer 9
Love wiU come but once a I, „ 21
Love can love but once a I. „ 28
Thou madest L in man and brute ; In Mem., Pro. 6
Beats out the little lives of men. „ ii 8
Hath still'd the I that beat from thee. „ vi 12
The noise of I begins again, „ vii 10
And, thy dark freight, a vanish'd I. „ a; 8
An awful thought, a I removed, „ xiii 10
And how my I had droop'd of late, „ xiv 14
The I that almost dies in me ; „ xviii 16
I know that this was L, — „ xxv 1
In more of I true I no more „ xxvi 11
that my hold on I would break Before I heard „ xxviii 15
And rests upon the L indeed. „ xxxii 8
blest whose Ziws are faithful prayers, „ 13
A I that leads melodious days. „ xxxiii 8
My own dim I should teach me this, „ xxxiv 1
That I shall live for evermore, „ 2
A I that bears immortal fruit „ xl 18
To leap the grades of I and light, ^ „ xli 11
But evermore a Z behind. „ ...24
The total world since I began ; .. xliii 12
Lest I should fail in looking back. „ xlvi 4
drown The bases of my I in tears. -, xlix 16
And L, a Fury slinging flame. „ Z 8
And on the low dark verge oil „ 15
That I is dash'd with flecks of sin. „ lii 14
For I outliving heats of youth, „ Hit 10
That not one I shall be destroy'd, ,> Uv 6
No I may fail beyond the grave, ,. Iv 2
So careless of the single Z ; „ 8
I bring to Z, I bring to death : „ IviQ
O Z as futile, then, as frail ! „ 25
But half my 1 1 leave behind : „ Ivii 6
My bosom-friend and halt of Z ; ' „ Hx 3
Whose I in low estate began „ Ixiv 3
The shade by which my I was crost, ,, Ixvi 5
On songs, and deeds, and lives, „ Ixxvii 3
A grief as deep as Z or thought, „ Ixxx 7
No lower Z that earth's embrace « Ixxxii 3
He put our lives so far apart ,i 15
The Z that had been thine below, „ Ixxxiv 2
should'st link thy Z with one Of mine own bouse, „ 11
What kind of Z is that I lead ; ,, Ixxxv 8
Whose Z, whose thoughts were little worth, „ 30
The footsteps of his Z in mine ; „ 44
A Z that all the Muses deck'd „ 45
Diffused the shock thro' all my Z, „ 55
And pining I be fancy-fed. „ 96
The full new Z that feeds thy breath „ Ixxxvi 10
Were closed with wail, resume their Z, „ xc 6
Life
Life {continued) Mix their dim lights, like Z and death.
Two partnere of a married Z —
Her I is lone, he sits apart,
By which our lives are chiefly proved.
Ring in the nobler modes of Z,
A Z in civic action warm,
live their lives From land to land ;
The Z re-orient out of dust,
and show That Z is not as idle ore,
And Z is darken'd in the brain.
I sUp the thoughts of Z and death ;
0 when her I was yet in bud.
That shielded all her I from harm
living words of Z Breathed in her ear.
For them the light of Z increased,
And, moved thro' Z of lower phase,
His who had given me Z — 0 father ! 0 God !
spirit of murder works in the very means of Z,
Be mine a philosopher's Z
fed on the roses and lain in the lilies of Z.
Singing alone in the morning of Z,
In the happy morning of I and of May,
Sick, sick to the heart of I, am I.
Before my I has found What some have found
To a Z that has been so sad,
My yet young Z in the wilds of Time,
And made my Z a perfumed altar-flame ;
More Z to Love than is or ever was
but live a Z of truest breath. And teach true Z to fight
with mortal wrongs.
L of my Z, wilt thou not answer this ?
As long as my Z endures I feel I shall owe
She is coming, my Z, my fate ;
That must have Z for a blow.
Might drown all Z in the ej^e, —
But the red Z spilt for a private blow —
My Z has crept so long on a broken wing
Wearing the white flower of a blameless Z.
A lovelier Z, a more unstain'd, than his !
inheritance Of such a Z, a heart,
light of her eyes into his Z Smite on the sudden,
Travail, and throes and agonies of the Z,
Then might we live together as one Z,
A cry from out the dawning of my Z,
hear him speak before he left his Z.
to grace Thy climbing I, and cherish my prone year,
and risk thine all, L, limbs,
how the King had saved his Z In battle twice.
Save whom she loveth, or a holy Z.
Good now, ye have saved a Z Worth somewhat
And saver of my Z ;
The saver of my Z.'
lord whose Z he saved Had, some brief space,
' Take not my Z : I yield.'
Thy Z is thine at her command.
To war against ill uses of a Z, But these from all
his Z arise, and cry,
and all his Z Past unto sleep ;
imageries Of that which L hath done with,
drew himself Bright from his old dark Z,
Long for my Z, or hunger for my death,
1 save a Z dearer to me than mine.'
' Enid, the pilot star of my lone Z,
Owe you me nothing for a Z half -lost ?
swathed the hurt that drain'd her dear lord's Z.
' O cousin, slay not him who gave you I.'
set his foot upon me, and give me Z.
hating the Z He gave me, meaning to be rid of it.
To glance behind me at my former Z,
wroxight upon himself After a Z of violence,
some knight of mine, risking his Z,
crown'd A happy Z with a fair death.
1
In Mem. xcv 63
xcvii 5
17
ev 14
cvi 15
cxiii 9
cxv 16
cxvi 6
cxviii 20
cxxi 8
cxxii 16
Con. 33
47
52
74
125
Maud I i6
40
„ iv 49
60
v6
7
a; 36
„ xi 3
13
„ xvi 21
., xviii 24
47
53
59
„ xix 86
„ xxii 62
„ IIi21
„ ii 61
«93
„ III vi 1
Ded. of Idylls 25
30
33
Com. of Arthur 56
76
91
333
362
Gareth and L. 95
129
493
622
827
879
884
888
973
983
1130
1280
1391
Marr. of Geraint 595
Geraint and E. 81
138
306
318
516
783
850
852
863
913
915
I have not lived my Z delightsomely :
lived A wealthier Z than heretofore
He boasts his Z as purer than thine own ;
Balin and Balan 60
92
II
1
Life
Life (continued)
tongues
401
Life
as the man in I Was wounded by blind
Balin and Balan 129
But golden earnest of a gentler Z !' „ 208
I that fain had died To save thy I, „ 600
Foul are their lives ; foul are their lips ; „ 616
My madness all thy I has been thy doom, „ 619
World-war of dying flesh against the I, Merlin and V. 193
Death in all I and lying in all love, „ 194
lost to I and use and name and fame, (repeat) „ 214, 970
Upon my I and use and name and fame, „ 374
what is Fame in I but half-disfame, „ 465
lay as dead, And lost all use of ^ : „ 645
long sleepless nights Of my long I „ 680
once in I was fluster'd with new wine, „ 756
How from the rosy lips of I and love, „ 846
Kill'd with a word worse than a Z of blows ! „ 870
course of I that seem'd so flowery to me „ 880
If the wolf spare me, weep my I away, „ 885
The vast necessity of heart and I. „ 925
the one passionate love Of her whole I ; „ 956
The shape and colour of a mind and I, Lancelot and E. 335
' What matt«r, so I help him back to ^ ? ' „ 787
Told him that her fine care had saved his I. „ 863
when you yield your flower of I To one more
fitly yours, „ 952
half disdain At love, I, all things, „ 1239
Had pass'd into the silent I of prayer, Holy Grail 4
we that want the warmth of double Z, „ 624
Beyond all sweetness in a Z so rich, — „ 626
To pass away into the quiet I, „ 738
Cares but to pass into silent I. „ 899
To have thee back in lusty I again, Pelleas and E. 352
thro' her love her I Wasted and pined, „ 495
that young I Being smitten in mid heaven Last Tournament 26
I had flown, we sware but by the shell — „ 270
New leaf, new I — the days of frost are o'er : New I, „ 278
All out like a long Z to a sour end — „ 288
Art thou King ?— Look to thy Z ! ' „ 454
half a Z away, Her to be loved no moi-e ? „ 640
And ti-ustful courtesies of household Z, Guinevere 86
There will I hide thee, till my I shall end, There hold
thee with my Z against the world.'
whose disloyal Z Hath wrought confusion
for all the land was full of Z.
And many a mystic lay of Z and death
Thou hast not made my Z so sweet to me.
For thou hast spoilt the purpose of my Z.
To lead sweet lives in pm-est chastity,
this Z of mine I guard as God's high gift
love thro' flesh hath wrought into my Z
Myself must tell him in that purer Z,
for her good deeds and her pure Z,
Light was Gawain in Z, and light in death
Yet still my Z is whole, and still I live
tho' I live three lives of mortal men,
I have lived my Z, and that which I have done
nourish a blind I within the brain,
§luck'd his flickering I again From halfway
oftness breeding scorn of simple Z,
chambers of the morning star. And East of L.
govern a whole Z from birth to death,
floods with redundant Z Her narrow portals.
On these deserted sands of barren Z.
Time and Grief abode too long with L,
Death drew nigh and beat the doors of L ;
Yet is my Z nor in the present time.
Between is clearer in my I than all
young L knows not when young L was bom.
Into delicious dreams, our other Z,
Which yet upholds my Z, and evermore Is to me daily
Z and daily death :
Or build a wall betwixt my Z and love,
(For they seem many and my most of Z,
for ever, Left her own Z with it ;
He that gave Her Z, to me delightedly fulfill'd
114
219
259
281
451
453
474
493
558
653
693
Pass, of Arthur 56
150
323
412
419
To the Queen it 5
53
Lover's Tale i 29
76
84
93
107
111
116
149
156
162
168
176
185
215
224
Life (continued) And sang aloud the matin-song of I. Lover's Tale i 232
The stream of Z, one stream, one Z, „ 239
So what was earliest mine in earliest Z> „ 247
larks Fill'd all the March of Z !— „ 284
The joy of Z in steepness overcome, „ 386
her Z, her love. With my Z, love, soul, spirit, „ 459
Else had the Z of that delighted hour „ 471
whose right hand the light Of L issueth, „ 498
that Z I heeded not Flow'd from me, „ 596
henceforth there was no Z for me ! „ 608
L was startled from the tender love „ 616
L (like a wanton too-officious friend, „ 627
As it had taken Z away before, „ 710
with heaven's music in a Z More living „ 761
worth the Z That made it sensible. „ 799
Ruins, the ruin of all my Z and me ! „ ii 68
Now the light Which was their Z, „ 164
shadowing pencil's naked forms Colour and Z : „ 181
That painted vessel, as with inner Z, „ 191
all at once, soul, Z And breath and motion, „ 194
She from her bier, as into fresher Z, „ Hi 42
Glanced back upon them in his after Z, „ iv 24
Would you could toll me out of Z, „ 30
recall'd Her fluttering Z :
For you have given me Z and love again,
I learnt the drearier story of his Z ;
' Kiss him,' she said. ' You gave me Z again,
fed, and cherish'd him, and saved his Z.
Who thrust him out, or him who saved his Z ? '
' body and soul And Z and limbs,
some new death than for a Z renew'd ;
All over glowing with the sun of Z,
I'll tell you the tale o' my Z.
what I did wi' my single Z ?
I have only an hour of Z.
he took no Z, but he took one purse,
wur it nobbut to saave my Z ;
half of the rest of us maim'd for Z
And the Lord hath spared our lives.
very fountains of her Z were chiU'd ;
Now in this quiet of declining Z,
who scarce would escape with her I ;
which lived True Z, live on — and if the fatal kiss,
Bom of true Z and love, divorce thee not From
earthly love and Z — Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 2
Frail were the works that defended the hold that
we held with our lives —
for it never could save us a Z.
I find hard rocks, hard Z, hard cheer,
I would have given my Z To help his OM'n from
scathe, a thousand lives To save his soul,
and Z Pass in the fire of Babylon !
Lord of Z Be by me in my death.
The vast occasion of our stronger Z —
I am wiitten in the Lamb's own Book of L
I know that he has led me all my Z,
one. Whose Z has been no play with him
It was all of it fair as Z,
each taken a Z for a Z,
every phase of ever-heightening Z,
yovmg Z Breaking with laughter from the dark ;
From death to death thro' Z and Z,
I cannot laud this Z, it looks so dark :
Saving his Z on the fallow flood.
From the darkness of I —
if I's best end Be to end well !
not to plunge Thy torch of I in darkness,
Ofier thy maiden Z.
What Z, so maim'd by night, „ 208
My Z itself is a wreck. The Wreck 5
I would make my Z one prayer „ 10
I had lived a wild-flower Z, „ 37
thro' Z to my latest breath ; „ 79
mother's shame will enfold her and darken her I.' „ 100
* May her Z be as blissfully calm, „ 139
2 o
110
147
172
264
267
283
374
381
First Quarrel 9
59
Bizpah 22
„ 31
North. Cobbler 84
The Bevenge 77
93
Sisters (E. and'E.)2QQ
273
In the Child. Hosp. 66
Def. of Lucknow 7
86
Sir J. Oldcastle 6
62
123
173
Columbus 35
88
„ 160
„ 224
V. of Maeldune 20
122
De Prof", Two G. 7
17
52
To W. H. Brookfield 12
Batt. of Brunanhurh 61
To Prin. F. of H. 2
Tiresias 130
159
165
Life
402
Despair 7
„ 14
Life {continued) Godless gloom Of a I without sun
I am frighted at I not death.'
L with its anguish, and horrors, 4„
and you saved me, a valueless I. " o-i
Of the heUish heat of a wretched I " go
ahf^f. *^if f ^'•t^-°*"«^, ^ Be yet but yolk, Ancient Sage 129
gam of such large I as match'd with oiu:s 2S7
lose thy I by usage of thy sting ; " 070
daughter yield her Z, heart, soul to one- The Flight 28
And all my I was darken'd, ^ oq
where summer never dies, with Love, the Sun of Z ' " 44
an the face of the thraithur agin in 1 1 TotZirmw '^
ye would start back agin into ?, onwrrow 50
I knaws i 'ed led tha a quieter I Spinster's S's. 71
In my I there was a picture, Locksley H., Sixty 15
broodmg on his briefer lease of Z, ,"i^tyiu
my I in golden sequence ran, " aj
the sacred passion of the second I. " go
^hShf^^f^H^'"" ^'"u '""/^u ^ ""^^"^ S^P ^^'^^y Brigade 23
The hght of days when I begun, Pref. Poem Broth. S. 23
With stronger I from day to day ; Hands all Round 6
Two Suns of Love make day of human I, To Prin Beatrice 1
Mother weeps At that white funeral of the single I ' 9
two that love thee, lead a summer I, ' " i o
One I, one flag one fleet, one Throne ! ' Open. I. and C. Exhib. 39
flame of I went wavermg down ; To Marq. of Dufferin 32
while my Z's Jate eve endures, 1 J jj "' ^^
The L that had d^cended re-arise, Demeter and P. 30
we spm the lives of men. And not of Gods, 85
Power That lifts her buried I from gloom to bloom, " os
I fail'd To send my I thro' olive-yard " 2IO
Shalt ever send thy I along with mine " 145
gloom of the evening, Z at a close ; Vastness 15
mthemiseiyofmymamedZ, ^ S/ 136
So far gone down, or so far up in I, ^ i oo
Made every moment of her after I " oon
And there the light of other I, " 095
Saved when your I was wreck'd ! " qqk
That now their ever-rising I has dwarf 'd " am
silent brow when I had ceased to beat. Hattmi 59
snap the bond that link'd us i to Z, ^^^ 61
leech forsake the dying bed for terror of his I? "98
this I of mingled pains And joys to me. To Mary Boyle 49
long walk thro' desert I Without the one. " 55
new I that gems the hawthorn line ; Proa of Svrina '^fi
his fresh Z may close as it began, ^rog. oj Spring db
L, which is L indeed. " 217
As he stands on the heights of his I By an Evolution. 20
A whisper from his dawn of Z ? Far-far-away 10
L^ht again, leaf agam i again, love again,' The Throstle 3
Live thy L, Young and old, xhe Oak 1
My I and death are in thy hand. Death of (Enone 40
Let me owe my I to thee. 40
she heard The shriek of some lost I " on
lazying out a Z Of self-suppression, St. Telemachus 21
Reason m the dusky cave of L, Akbar's Dream 121
on this bank m some way live the I Beyond the bridge 144
To make him trust his I, ^ 'y^g Wanderer U
T «.Ji!!i^^M °^ 7^®**^ is toward the Sun of L, D. of the Duke of C. 12
rlifi'oc^''^ who shced a red Z-6 way Gareth and L. 509
LUelong rose and past Bearing a Z hunger in his heart. Enoch Arden 79
Then Philip with his eyes Full of that I hunger. 464
tliZtlnTT^'^^l^'^ , InMem.xlvit
\viihif- ^.^■^•^™"''J« .of ourselves, Geraint and E. 3
v\ ita i-l injuries burning unavenged, gag
Sfnfnf * 7 r/ '"'^f'^'T^, «/ the house, Lancelot a^ E. 1143
?nH ^ i ^1°"^ "i >*"'f ' . ■»««• of Brunanburh 7
And you the I guardian of the child. The Eino%4.
Lll«tS/°Fnfe^r. *''"^" ? '■' "«• RoIney'sT It
Llletime Ere half the / of an oak. /„ Mem Ixxvi 12
Lift Many an arch high up did Z, PalacTof ATtWi
£ip'.^v'ro'cWr^'^''«"^P^«»' 2>.;/r/J;n27!
L up thy rocky face, Engla^ and Amer. 12
Lift (continued) knowing God, they I not hands of prayer
m my weak, lean arms 1 1 the cross,
when I see the woodman I His axe to slay my kin
seem to I a burthen from thy heart
He I's me to the golden doors ;
And I the household out of povertv ;
slowly I's His golden feet on those'empurpled stairs
I your natures up : Embrace our aims :
To I the woman's fall'n divinity
fair philosophies That I the fancy ;
'Z up your head, sweet sister :
I thine eyes ; my doubts are dead,
Could I them nearer God-Uke state
L as thou may'st thy burthen'd brows
And seem to I the form, and glow
A great ship I her shining sides.
That we may I from out of dust
Shall I not I her from this land of beasts
' Blow trumpet ! he will I us from the dust.
Nor did she I an eye nor speak a word,
But I a shining hand against the sun, '
Without the will to I their eyes.
Not I a hand — not, tho' he found me thus !
He spared to I his hand against the King
knowing God, they I not hands of prayer
To Z us as it were from commonplace,
but 'e niver not I oop 'is 'ead :
and I's, and lays the deep,
Power That I's her buried life
To thoughts that I the soul of men,
I can but I the torch Of Reason
Lifted (adj. and part.) And once my arm was I to hew
down
So I up in spirit he moved away,
from her I hand Dangled a length of ribbon
under his own lintel stood Storming with / hands
her arm I, eyes on fire — '
With I hand the gazer in the street.
till the cloud that settles round his birth Hath
I but a little.
Which our high Lancelot hath so I up,
But when my name was I up, the storm Brake
And I was I up m heart, and thought
Till he, being I up beyond himself,
and morn Has I the dark eyelash of the Night
Lilted (verb) A limb was broken when they I him •
I up A weight of emblem, '
At which she I up her voice and cried.
Then us they I up, dead weights,
To Thor and Odin I a hand :
And once, but once, she I her eyes,
I his voice, and call'd A hoary man,
she I either arm, ' Fie on thee. King !
How the villain I up his voice,
L an arm, and softly whisper'd,
Crost and came near, I adoring eyes.
At which her palfrey whinnying I heel
gravely smiling, I her from horse.
Then Lancelot I his large eyes ;
and he I faint eyes ; he felt One near him ;
and they I up Their eager faces,
when she I up A face of sad appeal,
And the Queen L her eyes,
L her eyes, and read his lineaments.
And noblest, when she I up her eyes
sliej up her eyes And loved him.
And I her fair face and moved away •
Then like a ghost she I up her face,
and I up his eyes And saw the barge
Pelleas I up an eye so fierce She quail'd :
Working a tapestry, I up her head,
"P a face All over glowing with the sun
and Z hand and heart and voice In praise to God
she I her head —
Then I Z up my eyes,
Lifted
M.d' Arthur 252
St. S. Stylites 118
Talking Oak 235
Love and Duty 96
St. Agnes' Eve 25
Enoch Arden 485
Lucretius 134
Princess ii 88
„ m223
341
«64
„ rM348
Lit. Squabbles 14
In Mem. Ixxii 21
„ Ixxxvii 37
11 ciii 40
» cxxxi 5
Com. of Arthur 80
491
Marr. of Geraint 528
Geraint and E. 473
Merlin and V. 836
Last Tournament 528
Guinevere 437
Fass. of Arthur 420
Sisters (E. and E.) 223
Village Wife 88
Tiresias 22
Demeter and P. 98
To Master of B. 14
Akbar's Dream 120
D. of F. Women 45
Enoch Arden 330
749
Aylmer's Field 332
Princess, Pro. 41
Ode on Well. 22
Gareth and L. ISt
Balin and Balan 49
Merlin and V. 5C
Holy Grail 3€_
Last Tournament 67|
Akbar's Dream 20|
Enoch Arden 1(
Princess iv I
„ vi 3'
The Victim?,
Maud I via 5
Com. of Arthur 144
Gareth and L. 657
716
1361
Geraint and E. 304
533
883
Balin and Balan 277
5<
Merlin and V. 11
2L.
Lancelot and E. 8<
2^
256
259
682
91ft
139^
Pelleas and E. 601 '
Last Tournament 129
Lover's Tale iv 380
Columbus 16
Tomorrow 79
Happy 82
f
Lifted
403
she Z up a voice Of shrill
i Lifted (verb) {continued)
■ command,
; Lifting (adj. and part.) at last he said, L his honest
forehead,
See thro' the gray skirts of a Z squall
L his grim head from my wounds.
But Gawain I up his vizor said,
j I up mine eyes, I found myself Alone,
i Lifting (s) I of whose eyelash is my lord,
labour'd in I them out of sUme,
■'Lig (lie) An' 'e maade the bed as 'e I's on N
An' 'e I's on 'is back i' the grip,
I Theere, I down — ^I shall hev to gie one or tother
j awaay. Spinster's S's. 64
Tom, I theere o' the cushion, „ 94
I Liggin' (l3ing) and mea I 'ere aloan ? N. Farmer, O. S. 1
Light (adj. and adv.) L Hope at Beauty's call would
perch and stand,
from the violets her I foot Shone rosy-white.
The I aerial gallery, golden-rail'd,
' The I white cloud swam over us.
Make bright our days and I our dreams,
and the I and lustrous curls —
Juliet, she So I of foot, so I of spirit —
L pretexts drew me ;
Spread the I haze along the river shores,
overhead The I cloud smoulders on the summer crag.
So I upon the grass :
* A I wind chased her on the wing,
' But I as any wind that blows
her palfrey's footfall shot L horrors thro' her pulses :
So for every I transgression Doom'd them to the lash
A I wind blew from the gates of the sim,
Wearing the I yoke of that Lord of love,
or is it a Z thing That I, their guest, their host,
' That's your I way ; but I would make it death
L coin, the tinsel clink of compliment.
Many a I foot shone Uke a jewel set In the dark crag :
As in a poplar grove when a I wind wakes
with each I air On our raail'd heads :
Steps with a tender foot, Z as on air,
made me move As Z as carrier-birds in air ;
And hopes and I regrets that come Make April
Thro' I reproaches, half exprest And loyal
and I as the crest Of a peacock,
Seem'd her I foot along the garden walk,
a I laugh Broke from L3mette,
By bandits groom'd, prick'd their I ears,
some I jest among them rose With laughter
and like to coins. Some true, some I,
' Ay,' said Gawain, ' for women be so I.'
Her I feet fell on our rough Lyonnesse,
And Tristram, fondling her I hands,
Murmuring a I song I had heard thee sing,
L was Gawain in life, and I in death Is Gawain,
and the I and lustrous curls —
all the while The I soul twines and mingles
The leaves upon her falling I —
I must ha' been I i' my head —
And idle gleams to thee are I to me.
Molly Magee kem flyin' acrass me, as Z as a lark,
fall of yer foot in the dance was as Z as snow an the Ian',
and from each The Z leaf falling fast, ~
X airs from where the deep,
Watching her large Z eyes and gracious looks,
i^t (s) (See also Candle-light, Foot-lights, Gas-
light, Half-light, Lava-light, Night-light,
Sea-light, Topaz-lights) They light his
little Z alway ;
stood Betwixt me and the Z of God !
on his Z there falls A shadow ;
And far away in the sickly Z,
giving Z To read those laws ;
With swifter movement and in purer Z
I The cock sung out an hour ere Z :
i
Death of CEnone 98
Enoch Arden 388
829
Princess vi 272
Pelleas and E. 370
Holy Grail 375
Princess v 140
Bead Prophet 11
, Farmer, N. S. 28
31
Caress'd or chidden 3
CEnone 179
Palace of Art 47
D. of F. Women 221
Of old sat Freedom 22
M. d' Arthur 216
Gardener's D. 14
192
264
Edwin Morris 147
Talking Oak 88
125
129
Godiva 59
The Captain 11
Poet's Song 3
Aylm£r's Field 708
789
Princess, Pro. 151
ii 55
Hi 358
«13
244
m88
In Mem. xxv 6
xll
„ Ixxxv 15
Maud I xvi 16
„ xviii 9
Gareth and L. 836
Geraint and E. 193
Lancelot and E. 178
Holy Grail 26
Pelleas and E. 362
Last Tournament 554
601
614
Pass, of Arthur 56
384
Lovers Tale i 132
L. of Shalott iv 21
First QiMrrel 82
Ancient Sage 246
Tomorrow 21
36
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 2
Early Spring 21
Prog, of Spring 19
Supp. Confessions 46
110
163
The Kraken 7
Isabel 18
,. 32
Mariana 27
Light (s) (continued) Until the breaking of the Z,
Thro' I and shadow thou dost range,
Whex cats run home and Z is come,
I enter'd, from the clearer Z,
robed in sof ten'd Z Of orient state.
The Z of thy great presence ;
A pillar of white Z upon the wall
FiUing with Z And vagrant melodies
Bright as Z, and clear as wind.
In the windows is no Z ;
L and shadow ever wander
What time the mighty moon was gathering Z
So in the I of great eternity
Ere the Z on dark was growing,
Low thunder and Z in the magic night —
Breathing L against thy face,
gleams of mellow Z Float by you on the verge of
night.
And faint, rainy I's are seen.
To pierce me thro' with pointed Z ;
Of lavish I's, and floating shades :
in a bower Grape-thicken'd from the I,
But am as nothing in its I :
A funeral, with plumes and I's And music.
Some bearded meteor, trailing Z,
And all the furnace of the Z
A living flash of Z he flew.'
' Not less swift souls that yearn for Z,
Those lonely I's that still remain,
Nor art thou nearer to the Z,
' To pass, when Life her Z withdraws,
Z increased With freshness in the dawning east.
That these have never lost their Z.
I saw the village I's below ;
At last you rose and moved the Z,
His Z upon the letter dwells,
Throbbing thro' all thy heat and Z,
And, isled in sudden seas of Z,
like a I that grows Larger and clearer,
I pray thee, pass before my Z of life.
Suddenly scaled the Z.
the I's, rose, amber, emerald, blue,
Lit Z in wreaths and anadems,
spot of dull stagnation, without Z Or power
The languid Z of your proud eyes
I ran by him without speaking, like a flash of Z.
beneath the waning Z You'll never see me
more May
and there his Z may shine —
To lie within the Z of God,
thro' wavering I's and shadows broke,
Lo ! sweeten'd with the summer Z,
To dream and dream, like yonder amber Z,
In every land I saw, wherever Z illumineth,
fill'd with Z The interval of sound,
with welcome Z, With timbrel and with song.
O me, that I should ever see the Z !
Joan of Arc, A Z of ancient France ;
The cricket chirps : the Z bums low :
mournful Z That broods above the fallen sun,
Above her shook the starry I's :
Keep dry their I from tears ;
Tho' sitting girt with doubtful Z.
Set in all I's by many minds,
Z that led The holy Elders with the gift of myrrh,
and our last I, that long Had wink'd
twinkling laurel scatter'd silver I's,
Half Z, half shade. She stood.
Danced into I, and died into the shade ;
a Z Of laiighter dimpled in his swarthy cheek ;
If I may measure time by yon slow Z,
'tween the spring and downfall of the Z,
They flapp'd my Z out as I read :
What's here ? a shape, a shade, A flash of I.
take Example, pattern : lead them to thy I.
Light
Clear-headed friend 25
Madeline 4
The Owlil
Arabian Nights 38
Ode to Memory 10
32
53
The Poet 16
Poet's Mind 7
Deserted House 6
A Dirge 12
Love and Death 1
12
Oriana 10
The Merman 23
Adeline 56
Margaret 30
„ 60
Rosalind 27
Elednore 12
36
88
L. of Shalott ii 31
Hi 26
Mariana in the S. 55
Two Voices 15
67
83
92
145
404
Miller's D. 88
108
125
189
Fatima 4
„ 33
CEnone 108
„ 241
Palace of Art 8
169
186
245
L. C. V. de Vere 59
May Queen 18
Queen, N. Y's. E. 25
Con. 51
59
Lotos- Eaters 12
„ C. S. 32
57
D. of F. Women 14
171
199
254
268
D. of the O. Year 40
To J. 8. 50
Of old sat Freedom 3
20
Love thou thy land 16
35
M. d' Arthur 232
Ep. 1
Gardener's D. 118
140
203
Edwin Morris 60
St. S. Stylites 94
110
175
203
224
Light
Light (s) (continued) ' Then flush'd her cheek with rosy I,
I's of sunset and of sunrise mix'd
And point thee forward to a distant I,
furrowing into I the mounded rack,
smit with freer I shall slowly melt
And I shall spread, and man be liker man
Lie like a shaft of I across the land,
I's begin to twinkle from the rocks :
cold Are all thy I's, and cold my wrinkled feet
came a colour and a I,
Sees in heaven the I of London
Underneath the I he looks at.
The slumbrous I is rich and warm.
Stillness with love, and day with I.
A fuller I illumined all.
Be still the first to leap to I
And strows her I's below,
A I upon the shining sea —
A I before me swims,
A gentle sound, an awful 1 !
Ten thousand broken I's and shapes,
This whole wide earth of I and shade
And sleep beneath his pillar'd I !
Dip forward under starry I,
A sleepy I upon their brows and lips —
And isles a Z in the offing :
Started from bed, and struck herself a I,
a great mist-blotted I Flared on him.
But finding neither I nor murmur there
The ruddy square of comfortable I,
Which at a touch of I, an air of heaven,
A joyous to dilate, as toward the I.
An end, a hope, a I breaking upon him.
Star to star vibrates I :
Which from the low I of mortality
Thee therefore with His I about thy feet,
entering fiU'd the house with sudden I.
And near the I a giant woman sat,
— But round the North, a I,
on those cliSs Broke, mixt with awful I
on the crowd Broke, mixt with awful I,
and I is large, and lambs are glad
dance, and flew thro' I And shadow,
when the college I's Began to glitter
' This world was once a fluid haze of I,
' that we still may lead The new I up.
Before two streams of I from wall to wall,
green malignant I of coming storm,
as she smote me with the I of eyes
with the sun and moon renew their I For ever,
Let there be I and there was I :
all creation is one act at once. The birth of I :
The long I shakes across the lakes,
stood in your own I and darken'd mine.
We did not know the real I,
lived in all fair I's,
lapt in wreaths of glowworm I The mellow breaker
All open-mouth'd, all gazing to the I,
wild birds on the I Dash themselves dead.
You would-be quenchers of the I to be,
we saw the I's, and heard The voices murmuring,
the sudden I Dazed me half-blind :
A common I of smiles at our disguise
over them the tremulous isles of I Slided,
A genial warmth and I once more,
till she not fair began To gather I,
small bright head, A Z of healing,
silent I Slept on the painted walls,
Naked, a double I in air and wave.
Sent from a dewy breast a cry for I :
new day comes, the I Dearer for night,
The happy valleys, half in I,
Whatever record leap to I
Thro' the long gorge to the far I
A I amid its olives green ;
404
Light
Talking Oak 165
Love and Duty 72
95
100
Golden Year 33
35
I
Ulysses 54
Tithonus 67
Locksley Hall 25
114
116
Day-Dm., /Sleep. B. 7
16
„ Revival 5
L' Envoi 27
8t. Agnes' Eve 28
35
Sir Galahad 26
41
Will Water. 59
67
The Voyage 20
Move eastward, etc. 10
Vision of Sin 9
Enoch Arden 131
494
680
687
. 726
Aylmer's Field 5
77
480
578
641
665
682
Sea Dreams 98
208
215
235
Lucretius 99
Princess, Pro. 84
i207
a 116
348
473
Hi 132
192
255
323
326
iv 3
314
357
430
435
483
495
536
558
vU
271
viSl
282
«ii24
59
120
167
253
346
Con. 41
Ode on Well. 190
213
The Daisy 30
Marr.
Light (s) (continued) From Como, when the I was gray,
And on thro' zones of I and shadow To F.
it grew so tall It wore a crown of I,
I and shadow illimitable,
The I's and shadows fly ! Window
I's and shadows that cannot be still,
O ^5, are you flying over her sweet little face ?
Gone, and the I gone with her.
You roll up away from the I The blue wood-louse,
Fly ; Fly to the I in the valley below —
L, so low upon earth,
L, so low in the vale You flash and lighten
Thine are these orbs of I and shade ;
They are but broken I's of thee.
Help thy vain words to bear thy I.
magic I Dies off at once from bower and hall,
thro' early I Shall glimmer on the dewy decks.
Sphere all your I's around, above ;
Calm and still I on yon great plain
My blessing, like a line of I,
And Fancy I from Fancy caught,
light The I that shone when Hope was bom.
To leap the grades of life and I,
' Farewell ! We lose ourselves in I.'
Like I in many a shiver'd lance
Be near me when my I is low,
An infant crying for the I :
Or in the I of deeper eyes
Recalls, in change of I or gloom.
And like a finer I in I.
in the house I after I Went out,
Mixt their dim I's, like life and death,
Which makes the darkness and the I,
And dwells not in the I alone,
The flying cloud, the frosty I :
Where God and Nature met in I ;
Now dance the I's on lawn and lea,
Behind thee comes the greater I :
For them the I of life increased.
To pestle a poison'd poison behind his crimson I's.
in the high Hall-garden I see her pass like a I ;
sorrow seize me if ever that I be my leading-star !
Maud in the I of her youth and her grace,
delicate spark Of glowing and growing I
returns the dark With no more hope of I.
Beginning to faint in the I that she loves
To faint in the I of the sun she loves, To faint in
his I, and to die.
At the shouts, the leagues of I's,
And the I and shadow fleet ;
rivulet at her feet Ripples on in Z and shadow
From the realms of I and song,
But the broad I glares and beats,
Tho' many a I shall darken,
many a darkness into the I shall leap,
In that fierce I which beats upon a throne,
shone so close beside Thee that ye made One I together, „ 48
Half-bUnded at the coming of a I. Com, of Arthur 266
Affection, and the I of victory, Gareth and L. 331
flickering in a grimly I Dance on the mere. „ 826
May-music growing with the growing I, „ 1080
Echo'd the walls ; a I twinkled ; anon Came I's and I's, „ 1370
Beautiful among I's, and waving to him „ 1376
loved her, as he loved the I of Heaven. And as the
I of Heaven varies, Marr. of Geraint 5
And darken'd from the high I in his eyes, „ 100
never I and shade Coursed one another more „ 521
her fair head in the dim-yellow I, „ 600
the red cock shouting to the I, Geraint and E. 384
But Z to me ! no shadow, O my King, Balin and Balan 207
all the I upon her silver face Flow'd „ 263
A Z of armour by him flash, „ 326
They said a I came from her when she moved : Merlin and V. 567
the court, the King, dark in your I, „ 875
from the skull the crown Roll'd into I, Lancelot and E. 51
Tlie Daisy
D. Maurice 27
The Flower 10
Boddicea 42
, On the Hill 1
7
13
Gone 3,
Winter 8
LetUr 12
Mom. 1
9
In Mem., Pro. 5
19
32
„ via 5
„ ix 11
13
„ xi 9
„ x:vii 10
„ xxiii 14
,, XXX oa
Xli 11
„ xlvii 16
„ xlix 3
n
liv 19
„ Ixii 11
„ Ixxxv 74
„ xci 16
„ xev 19
.63
„ xcvi 19
20
„ m2
cxi 20
„ cxv 9
„ cxxi 12
Con. 74
Maud / i 44
„ iv 11
12
■yl5
„ vi 16
„ ix 16
„ xxii 9
//
,//7ot43
46
Ded. of Idylls 27
Light
405
Light
Light (s) (continued) The maiden standing in the
dewy I.
The green I from the meadows underneath
0 damsel, in the I of your blue eyes ;
the blood-red I of dawn Flared on her face,
1 heard the sound, I saw the I,
aU her form shone forth with sudden I
A I was in the crannies,
This I that strikes his eyeball is not I,
loosed his horse, and led him to the I.
Was dazzled by the sudden I,
a moon With promise of large I on woods
And spied not any I in hall or bower,
golden beard that clothed his lips with I —
Then in the I's last glimmer Tristram show'd
one low I betwixt them bum'd
* No I had we : for that we do repent ;
' No Z : so late ! and dark and chill the night ! O let
us in, that we may find the M
in the I the white mermaiden swam,
What knowest thou of the world, and all its I's And
shadows,
thou reseated in thy place of I,
near him the sad nuns with each a I Stood,
Wet with the mists and smitten by the Vs,
That pure severity of perfect I —
Lancelot and E. 352
408
660
1025
Holy Grail 280
450
838
913
PeUeas and E. 61
105
394
419
Last Tournament 668
739
Guinevere 4
.. 171
„ 174
,, 245
„ 343
., 525
„ 590
„ 597
— -, . -, „ 646
0 I upon the wind, Pass, of Arthur 46
great I of heaven Bum'd at his lowest „ 90
cryings for the I, Moans of the dying, „ 116
the I that led The holy Elders with the gift of myrrh. „ 400
when, clothed with living I, They stood before his throne „ 454
From less to less and vanish into I. „ 468
For when the outer I's are darken'd thus. Lover's Tale i 35
led on with I In trances and in visions : „ 77
image, like a chann of I and strength „ 91
Thou art I, To which my spirit leaneth „ 103
Looking on her that brought him to the I : „ 160
From the same clay came into I at once. „ 194
a common I of eyes Was on us £is we lay : „ 236
till the morning I Sloped thro' the pines, „ 263
Pour with such sudden deluges of I „ 315
Methought a I Burst from the garland I had wov'n, „ 365
A I methought broke from her dark, „ 368
mystic I flash'd ev'n from her white robe „ 370
a tissue of I Unparallel'd. „ 419
Since in his absence full of I and joy, And giving I to
others. „ 425
dwelling on the I and depth of thine, „ 492
bliss stood round me like the I of Heaven, — „ 495
whose right hand the I Of Life issueth, ,, 497
Steppeth from Heaven to Heaven, from I to I, „ 512
We past from I to dark. „ 516
eyes too weak to look upon the ' ; „ 614
The white I of the weary moon above, „ 640
Between the going I and growing night ? „ 664
Robed in those robes of Z I must not wear, „ 671
hold out the I's of cheerfulness ; „ 807
Showers slanting I upon the dolorous wave. „ 811
what I, what gleam on those black ways „ 812
fused together in the tyrannous I — „ ii 67
bliss, which broke in I Like morning „ 143
Now the I Which was their life, „ 163
And solid beam of isolated I, „ ..173
1 Of smiling welcome round her lips — „ iii 45
And, making there a sudden I, „ iv 53
The I was but a flash, and went again. „ 55
Wonder'd at some strange I in Julian's eyes „ 205
him nor I's nor feast Dazed or amazed, „ 310
an' puts 'im back i' the I. NoHh. Cobbler 98
O diviner I, Sisters [E. and E.) 16
Break, diviner l\ „ 23
dress thy deeds in I, Ascends to thee ; Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 9
hidden there from the I of the sun — Def. of Lucknow 63
Before thy I, and cry continually — Sir J. OldcasUe 85
Her love of I quenching her fear of pain — „ 190
Light (s) {continued) last the I, the I On Guanahani ! Columbus 74
and the I Grew as I gazed, „ 76
Sunless and moonless, utter I — „ 90
Set thee in I till time shall be no more ? „ 150
brooks glitter'd on in the I without sound, V. of Maeldune 13
we were lured by the I from afar, „ 71
Waste dawn of multitudinous-eddying I — De Prof., Two G. 4
— her dark orb Touch'd with earth's I — „ 10
that one I no man can look upon, „ 37
the lost I of those dawn-golden times, To W. H. Brookfield 7
0 YOU that were eyes and I to the King To Prin. F. of H. 1
dreadful I Came from her golden hair, Tiresias 43
spear and helmet tipt With stormy I „ 114
Send no such I upon the ways of men „ 161
Gone into darkness, that full I Of friendship ! „ 202
and awake to a livid I, The Wreck 7
in the Z of a dowerless smile, „ 45
days of a larger I than I ever again shall know — „ 78
we knew that their I was a lie — Despair 16
When the Z of a Sun that was coming „ 23
baby-girl, that had never look'd on the I: „ 71
And, darkening in the I, Ancient Sage 151
And laughing back the I, „ 168
doors of Night may be the gates ot L; „ 174
Some say, the L was father of the Night, And some,
the Night was father of the L, „ 247
up that lane of I into the setting sun. The Flight 40
side by side in God's free I and air, „ 81
wid all the I an' the glow. Tomorrow 67
when Molly 'd put out the I, Spinster's S's. 97
for ever was the leading I of man. Locksley H., Sixty 66
France had shown a Z to all men, „ 89
shriek'd and slaked the I with blood. „ 90
in that point of peaceful I? „ 190
were half as eager for the I. „ 228
L the fading gleam of Even ? I the glimmer of the
dawn ? „ 229
Follow L, and do the Right— „ 277
Whirling their sabres in circles of I ! Heavy Brigade 34
L among the vanish'd ages ; To Virgil 25
shifting ladders of shadow and I, Dead Prophet 21
The I of days when life begim, Pref. Poem Broth. S. 23
Thy prayer was ' L — more L— Epit. on Caxton 1
shadows which that I would cast, Till shadows vanish
in the L of L. „ 3
This later I of Love have risen in rain, To Prin. Beatrice 16
1 and genial warmth of double day. ,. 22
Trnst the Hand of L will lead her people. On Jub. Q. Victoria 68
And the L is Victor, „ 70
And all the Shadow die into the L, Demeter and P. 138
I'll coom an' I'll squench the I, Owd Rod 117
stings him back to the curse of the I ; Vastness 18
A I shot upward on them from the lake. The Ring 256
And there the I of other life, „ 295
saw Your gilded vane, a I above the mist ' — „ 331
' and the I,' She said, ' was like that I ' — „ 333
I That glimmers on the marsh and on the grave.' „ 340
one betwixt the dark and I had seen Her, „ 414
soul in soul and I in I, Happy 39
in the brooding I of noon ? „ 99
I, once half -crazed for larger I To Ulysses 29
Her I makes rainbows in my closing eyes. Prog, of Spring 46
still-fulfilling promise of a Z „ 90
I retreated, The landskip darken'd, Merlin and the G. 30
Could make pure I live on the canvas ? Romney's R. 10
Reflected, sends a Z on the forgiven. „ 161
L again, leaf again, life again, love again,' The Throstle 3
star of eve was drawing I From the dead sun, Death of CEnone 64
What I was there ? „ 84
The morning I of happy marriage broke „ 102
'i of the nations ' ask'd his Chronicler Of Akbar Akbar's Dream 1
There is I in all, And I, „ 45
But find their limits by that larger I, „ 99
By deeds a I to men ? „ 111
But no such I Glanced from our Presence ,, 112
Light
406
Like
1
light (s) (continued) arrowing Z from clime to clime, Akbar's Dream, Hymn 5
' I am losing the I of my Youth The Dreamer 4
Light (come upon, etc.) Who can I on as happy a shore Sea- Fairies 40
You could not I upon a sweeter thing : Walk, to the Mail 52
What should you give to I on such a dream ? ' Edwin Morris 58
He trusts to I on something fair ; Day- Dm., Arrival 20
i on a broken word to thank him with. Enoch Arden 347
if I could follow, and I Upon her lattice, Princess iv 99
Britain I upon auguries happier ? Boddicea 45
• may you I on all things that you love. Mart, of Geraint 226
but if ye know Where I can I on arms, „ 422
I should I upon the Holy Grail. Holy Grail 367
tha'll Z of a livin' somewheers i' the Wowd Church-warden, etc. 47
we shall I upon some lonely shore, The Flight 89
Light (kindle) I The light that shone when Hope was bom. In Mem. xxx 31
Light (to illuminate) They I his little life alway ; Swpp. Confessions 46
I let a sunbeam slip. To I her shaded eye ; Talking Oak 218
God within him I his face. In Mem. Ixxxvii 36
L's with herself, when alone She sits Maud I xiv 12
and l's the old chiurch-tower. And Vs the clock ! The Flight 93
'Light (to alight) Who 'l's and rings the gateway bell, In Mem. viii 3
That float thro' Heaven, and cannot Z ? Day-Dm., Ef. 8
Light-blue Sweet-hearted, you, whose l-h eyes In Mem. xcvi 2
A l-b lane of early dawn, „ cxix 7
Light Brigade Forward, the L B ! (repeat) Light Brigade 5, 9
Honour the L B, „ 54
Lighted (adj.) (See also Evening-lighted, Never-
lighted, Silent-lighted, Still-l^hted) And
in the I palace near L. of Shalott iv 47
Swung round the I lantern of the hall ; Guinevere 262
Lighted (kindled) tho' my lamp was I late, May Queen, Con. 18
Lighted (shone) from it I an all-shining flame. Achilles over the T. 6
Lighted (illuminated) I from below By the red race of
fiery Phlegethon ; Demeter and P. 27
And I from above him by the Sun ? ,, 31
Lighted (alighted) Love I down between them The Bridesmaid 6
And Z at a i-uin'd inn, Vision of Sim 62
Gareth overthrew him, I, drew, Gareth and L. 1121
Molly belike may 'a I to-night upo' one. Spinster's S's. 7
following I on him there. And shouted. Death of QLnone 55
Lighted on those of old That I o Queen Esther, Marr. of Geraint 731
tiU she had I o his wound, Geraint and E. 513
II o the maid. Whose sleeve he wore ; Lancelot and E. 710
mutter'd, ' I have I o a fool, Pelleas and E. 113
and the great King, L o words : „ 253
Lighten (illuminate) Have power on this dark land
to / it. Com. of Arthur 93
Lighten (to flash) L's from her own central Hell — Aylmer's Field 761
now she l's scorn At him that mars her plan. Princess v 131
You flash and I afar, Window, Marr. Mom. 10
0, 1 into my eyes and my heart, „ 15
I thro' The secular abyss to come, In Mem. Ixxvi 5
What l's in the lucid east „ cv 24
The brute earth l's to the sky, „ cxxvii 15
Flash upon flash they I thro' me — Lover's Tale i 51
Listen (to make lighter) One burthen and she would
not I it ? Aylmer's Field 703
To I this great clog of thanks. Princess vi 126
Lighten'd (flashed) The random sunshine I ! Amphion 56
a cloudy gladness I In the eyes of each. The Captain 31
stars all night above the brim Of waters I into view ; The Voyage 26
silver rays, that I as he breathed ; Lancelot and E. 296
sword that I back the sun of Holy land, Happy 43
Lighten'd (made lighter) but a dream, yet it I my despair Maud III vi 18
Lightening Came I downward, and so spilt itself Pelleas and E. 426
Lighter (adj.) touch him with thy I thought. Locksley Hall 54
Of finest Gothic I than a fire. Princess, Pro. 92
My I moods are like to these, In Mem. xx 9
The I by the loss of his weight ; Maud I xvi 2
Lighter (s) As flies the I thro' the gross. In Mem. xli 4
Lighter-footed And l-f than the fox. Day-Dm., Arrival 8
Lightest my ears could hear Her I breath ; Edwin Morris 65
Of I echo, then a loftier form Than female. Princess iv 215
The I wave of thought shall lisp, In Mem. xlix 5
This lad, whose I word Is mere white truth Bali/n and Balan 517
Lightest (continued) whose I whisper moved him more Pelleas and E. 155
Light-foot l-f Iris brought it yester-eve, (Enone 83
So saying, l-f Iris pass'd away. Achilles over the T. 1
Light-glooming L-g over eyes divine, Madeline 16
Light-green A l-g tuft of plumes she bore Sir L. and Q. G. 2ft
L-g with its own shadow, keel to keel. Lover's Tale i 43
Light-headed I should grow l-h, I fear, Maud I xix 1(X>
' 0 my child, ye seem L-h, Lancelot and E. 1063
Lighthouse with the gorgeous west the I shone. Lover's Tale i 60
that night When the rolling eyes of the I Despair 9
Lighting I upon days like these ? Locksley Hall 99
Lightning (adj.) Till the I laughters dimple Lilian 16
Those writhed hmbs of I speed ; Clear-headed friend 23
The I flash atween the rains, Rosalind 12
The I flash of insect and of bird, Enoch Arden 574
Lightning (s) (See also Cross-lightnings, Sheet-lightnings) m
as the I to the thunder Which follows it. The Poet 50
In the middle leaps a fountain Like sheet I, Poet's Mind 25
wilt shoot into the dark Arrows of Vs. To J. M. K. 14
With thunders, and with l's, Buonaparte 6
With summer l's of a soul Miller's D. 13
great brand Made l's in the splendour of the moon, M. d' Arthur 137
Nor ever I char thy grain, Talking Oak 277
flash the l's, weigh the Sun. Locksley Hall 186
L of the hour, the pim, Aylmer's Field 441
The wizard Vs deeply glow. In Mem. cxxii 19
That like a silent I under the stars Maud III vi 9
Made l's and great thunders over him. Com. of Arthur 108
And l's play'd about it in the storm, Gareth and L. 68
so quick and thick The Vs here and there Holy Grail 494
Makes wicked l's of her eyes, Guinevere 520
great brand Made l's in the splendour of the
moon, Pass, of Arthur 305
Thunderless Vs striking under sea To the Queen ii 12
tears, that shot the sunset In l's round me ; Lover's Tale i 443
L's flicker'd along the heath ; Dead Prophet 79
L may shrivel the laurel of Caesar, Parnassus 4
evergreen laurel is blasted by more than l\ „ 12
L^htning-fork one l-f Flash'd out the lake ; Sisters (E. and E.) 96
Light-of-love he whom men call l-o-l ? ' Pelleas and E. 361
Lightsome Self-balanced on a Z wing : In Mem. Ixv 8
Light-wing'd l-w spirit of his youth return'd Balin and Balan 21
Like (adj., adv., s.) Her heart is Z a thi-obbing star. Kate 9
L men, I manners : I breeds I, they say : Walk, to the Mail 63
L to Furies, I to Graces, Vision of Sin 41
Am I so Z her ? so they said on board. The Brook 223
and I a gentleman. And I a prince : Princess iv 527
Not I to I, but I in difference. „ vii 278
L the leaf in a roaring whirlwind, I Boddicea 59
For words, I Nature, half reveal And half conceal In Mem. v 3
I a stoic, or Z A wise epicurean, Maud I iv 20
There is none I her, none, (repeat) Maud I. xviii 2, 13
Not thou, but I to thee : „ // iv 12
Tell me, was he I to thee ? ' Merlin and V. 613
But up I fire he started : Gareth and L. 1123
but one I him.' ' Why that I was he.' Lancelot and E. 574
Not I him, ' Not I my Lancelot ' — Guinevere 406
And I the all-enduring camel, Lover's Tale i 136
Made all our tastes and fancies I, „ 242
X to a low-hung and a fiery sky „ ii 61
And heard him muttering, ' So Z, so Z ; „ iv 325
cousin of his and hers — O God, so Z ! ' „ 327
says, ' Good ! very Z ! not altogether he.' Sisters (E. and E.) 136
What be the nextun Z ? can tha tell Village Wife 19
Those three ! the fourth Was Z the Son of God ! Sir J. Oldcastle 176
those two Vs might meet and touch. Two Voices 357
life ! he never saw the Z ; Princess i 186
To prick us on to combat ' i to Z ! .. ■" 304
Pass, and mingle with your Vs. „ vi 341
There was not his I that year in twenty parishes Grandmother 12
Not violating the bond of Z to I.' Lancelot and E. 241
I never saw his Z ; there lives No greater leader.' „ 316
Camelot seen the Z, since Arthur came ; Holy Grail 332
love will go by contrast, as by Vs. Sisters (E. and E.) 42
Like (verb) How Z you this old satire ? ' Sea Dreams 198
Like
407
Limb
Like (verb) {continued) we I them well : But children die ; Princess Hi 252
/ I her none the less for rating at her ! „ v 461
Not es I cares 'fur to hear ony harm, but I I's to knaw. Village Wife 22
Like See also Artist-Like, Beastlike, Bell-like, Brother-like,
Catlike, Chasm-like, Childlike, Christ-like, Cleopatra-
like, Colt-like, Coquette-like, Deathlike, Dreamlike,
Dryad -like. Dwarf -like. Eagle -hke. Echo -like.
Fatherlike, Firefly-like, Fool-like, Frost-like, Gem-
like, Ghostlike, God-like, Grovelike, Harlot-like,
Idiotlike, Ixion-like, King-like, Enightlike, Lancelot-
like, Landlike, Lead-like, LilyUke, Lioness-like,
Lionlike, Loike, Magnet-like, Maidenlike, Manlike,
Mist - like. Moonlike, Mountain - like. Nestlike,
Oration - like. Poet -hke. Princelike, Saint -like.
Shadow - like. Snowlike, Soldierlike, Star - like.
Statue-like, Sun-like, Swanlike, Tusklike, Unking-
like, Unknightlike, Wizard-like, Womanlike
Liked more he look'd at her The less he I her ; Bora 35
neither loved nor I the thing he heard. Aylmer's Field 250
she I it more Thjm magic music, Princess, Pro. 194
Nor tho' she I him, yielded she, „ vii 76
But I ^ a bigger feller to fight North. Cobbler 100
1 1 the owd Squire an' 'is gells Village Wife 6
1 1 'er the fust on 'em all, „ 9
Likelihood Needs must be lesser I, Lancelot and E. 367
Likely ' 0 ay,' said Vivien, ' that were I too. Merlin and V. 746
Likm'd he that teUs the tale L them. Last Tournament 227
IftwnfiSS ' Lo ! God's Z— the ground-plan — Vision of Sin 187
darkening thine own To thine own J ; Aylmer's Field 674
Found a still place, and pluck'd her I out ; Princess i 92
A I, hardly seen before. Comes out — In Mem. Ixxiv 3
Thy I to the wise below, „ 7
If any vision should reveal Thy I, „ xcii 2
A momentary I of the King : Com. of Arthur 271
That shadow of a Z to the king Demeter and P. 16
Last as the Z of a dying man, „ 88
the I of thyself Without thy knowledge, „ 92
groping for it, could not find One I, The Ring 337
liker light shall spread, and man be i! man Golden Year 35
The Princess ; Z to the inhabitant Of some clear
planet Princess ii 35
Yet in the long years I must they grow ; „ vii 279
Ukest seeing men, in power Only, are I gods, (Enone 130
The I God within the soul ? In Mem. Iv 4
Idlac (adj.) So Willy and I were wedded : I wore a I
gown ; Grandmother 57
Lilac (s) And makes the piu^le I ripe, On a Mourner 7
Academic silks, in hue The I, Princess ii 17
Idbo-ambnsh Thro' crowded l-a trimly pruned ; Gardener's D. 112
Idlia And sister L with the rest.' Princess. Pro. 52
And L with the rest, and lady friends „ 97
L, wild with sport. Half child half woman „ 100
' Where,' Ask'd Walter, patting L's head „ 125
Quick answer'd L ' There are thousands now „ 127
If there were many L's in the brood, „ 146
The Uttle hearth-flower L. „ 166
and not for harm. So he with L's. „ 175
As many little trifling L's — „ 188
Said L ; ' Why not now ? ' the maiden Aunt. „ 208
L woke with sudden-shriUing mirth „ 216
' Take L then, for heroine,' clamour'd he, „ 223
So L sang : we thought her half-possess'd, „ iv 585
With which we banter'd Uttle L first : „ Con. 12
L pleased me, for she took no part In our dispute : „ 29
L, rising quietly. Disrobed the glinunering statue „ 116
Lilian (See also May Lilian) Aibt, fairy L, Flitting, fairy L, Lilian 1
^ Cruel little L. „ 7
mied The streams through many a I row The winds, etc. 5
Lflt whishper was sweet as the Z of a bird ! Tomorrow 33
LQted scraps of thimdrous Epic I out Princess ii 375
^Lilting I was I a song to the babe. Bandit's Death 20
Lily (adj.) holding out her I arms Took both his hands, Princess ii 303
Lily (s) {See also Gold-li^r, Lent-lily, Tiger-lily,
Water-lily) to brush the dew From thine
own I, Supp. Confessions 85
Lily (s) (continued) Or opening upon level plots Of
crowned lilies, Ode to Memory 109
Like a I which the sun Looks thro' Adeline 12
breath Of the lilies at simrise ? „ 37
Gazing where the lilies blow L. of Shalott i 7
amaracus, and asphodel, Lotos and lilies : (Enone 98
Waves all its lazy lilies, Gardener's D. 42
Pure lilies of eternal peace. Sir Galahad 67
It was the time when lilies blow, Lady Clare 1
The silver I heaved and fell ; To E. L. 19
steamer paddling pUed And shook the lilies : Princess, Pro. 72
than wear Those lilies, better blush „ Hi 68
violet varies from the Z as far As oak from elm : „ v 182
, ' Pretty bud ! L of the vale ! „ vi 193
Now folds the I all her sweetness up, „ vii 186
Roses and lilies and Canterbury-bells.' City Child 5
and flung The lilies to and fro. In Mem. xev 60 ■
fed on the roses and lain in the Mies of life. Maud I iv 60
Gathering woodland lilies, „ zii 7
Maud is here, here, here In among the lilies. „ 12
And lilies fair on a lawn ; „ xiv 2
Bright English I, breathing a prayer To be friends, „ xix 55
I said to the I, ' There is but one „ xxii 19
The lilies and roses were all awake, „ 51
Queen I and rose in one ; „ 56
And the I whispers, ' I wait.' „ 66 "
All made up of the I and rose That blow „ IIv74
Have I beheld a I like yourself. Geraint and E. 620
A walk of lilies crost it to the bower : Balin and Balan 243
white walk of lilies toward the bower. „ 249
Saint who stands with I in hand In yonder shrine. „ 261
Flow'd from the spiritual I that she held. „ 264
Set in her hand a I, o'er her hung The silken
case Lancelot and E 1148
In her right hand the I, in her left The letter — „ 1155
Be carven, and her I in her hand. „ 1342
Farewell too — now at last — FareweU, fair I. „ 1397
spire of the momitain was lilies in lieu of snow,
And the lilies like glaciers winded down, V. of Maeldune 41
And we waUow'd in beds of lilies, „ 48
Had set the / and rose By all my ways Ancient Sage 156
My I of truth and trust — „ 160
They made her I and rose in one, „ 161
0 slender I waving there, „ 167
Lily-avenue A l-a climbing to the doors ; Aylmer's Field 162
Lily-cradled the golden bee Is l-c : (Enone 30
Lily-handed No little l-h Baronet he. Princess, Con. 84
Lilylike The I Melissa droop'd her brows ; „ iv 161
Lily maid Elaine, the Imoi Astolat, Lancelot and E. 2
How came the Z to by that good shield of Lancelot, „ 28
close behind them stept the I m Elaine, „ 176
1 m Elaine, Won by the mellow voice „ 242
Low to her own heart said the I m, „ 319
The I m had striven to make him cheer, „ 327
' L m. For fear our people call you I min earnest, „ 385
Lancelot and the I m Smiled at each other, „ 738
Then spake the Z m of Astolat : „ 1085
barge Whereon the il m of Astolat Lay smiling, „ 1242
Lily-shining lay The l-s child ; Princess iv 287
Lily-white Lord Ronald brought a l-w doe Lady Clare 3
The l-w doe Lord Ronald had brought „ 61
Limb The strong l's failing ; All Things will Die 32
profulgent brows, And perfect l's, Supp. Confessions 146
Those writhed l's of lightning speed ; Clear-headed friend 23
her clear and bared Vs O'erthwarted (Enone 138
Resting weary l's at last on beds of asphodel. Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 125
Those in whose lap our l's are nursed, To J. S. 10
Denying not these weather-beaten l's St. S. Stylites 19
Till all my l's drop piecemeal from the stone, „ 44
coverUd Unto her l's itself doth mould Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 10
With naked l's and flowers and fruit, The Voyage 55
Hair, and eyes, and Vs, and faces. Vision of Sin 39
A I was broken when they lifted him ; Enoch Arden 107
Enoch took, and handled aU his l's, „ 153
Till the little l's ai'e stronger. Sea Dreams 30$
Limb
408
Lineament
Limb (continiied) Down thro' her I's a drooping languor
wept : Princess vi 268
and due To languid I's and sickness ; „ 377
Give it time To learn its I's : „ Con. 79
this weight of body and I, High. Pantheism 5
Nor could I weary, heart or I, In Mem. xxv 9
And watch'd them, wax'd in every I ; „ ciii 30
brood On a horror of shatter'd I's Maud I i 56
Dark cedar, tho' thy I's have here increase 1, „ xviii 18
find nor face nor bearing, I's nor voice, Com. of Arthur 71
nor pang Of wrench'd or broken I — Gareth and L. 88
and risk thine all. Life, I's, „ 129
Brute bulk of I, or boundless savagery „ 1330
not trust the I's thy God hath given, „ 1388
At this he hurl'd his huge I's out of bed, Marr. of Geraint 124
I seem to suffer nothing heart or I, „ 472
Laid from her I's the costly-broider'd gift, „ 769
strongly striking out her I's awoke ; Geraint and E. 380
free to stretch his I's in lawful fight, „ 754
clxmg about her lissome I's, In colour Merlin and V. 223
The text no larger than the I's of fleas ; „ 672
Spake thro' the I's and in the voice — Holy Grail 23
roimd her I's, mature in womanhood ; Pelleas and E. 73
but so weary were his I's, „ 513
his imbroken I's from the dark field, „ 585
Strength of heart And might of I, Last Tournament 198
The weight as if of age upon my I's, Lover's Tale i 125
ivy-tress had woimd Round my worn I's, „ 619
blood Crept like marsh drains thro' all my
languid I's ; „ ii 53
' body and soul And life and I's, „ iv 283
happier using the knife than in trying to save
the I, In the Child. Hosp. 6
we were English in heart and in I, Def. of Lucknow 46
Lobbing away of the I by the pitiful-pitiless
knife, — „ 85
a babe in lineament and I Perfect, De Prof., Two G. 11
I touch'd my I's, the I's Were strange Ancient Sage 234
Death will freeze the supplest I's — Happy 46
great shock may wake a palsied I, St. Telemachus 57
moved but by the living I, Akbar's Bream 133
Limbed See Broad-limbed, FuU-limbed, large-limbed,
Long-limb'd, Snow-limbed
Limber And legs of trees were I, Amphion 14
Lime (tree) arching I's are tall and shady, Margaret 59
Not thrice your branching I's have blown L. C. V. de Vere 27
beech and I Put forth and feel a gladder clime.' On a Mourner 14
all about the large I feathers low. The I Gardener's D. 47
and over many a range Of waning I „ 218
bard has honour'd beech or I, Talking Oak 291
overhead The broad ambrosial aisles of lofty I Princess, Pro. 87
Up that long walk of I's I past In Mem. Ixxxvii 15
mUlion emeralds break from the ruby-budded I Maud I iv 1
Of leafless elm, or naked I, To Ulysses 16
Tjmft (earth) To feed thy bones with I, Two Voices 326
As dying Nature's earth and I ; In Mem. cxviii 4
I am mortal stone and I. Helen's Tower 6
Lime (verb) That every sopbister can I. Love thou thy land 12
Limed Tme — we had I ourselves With open eyes, Princess Hi 142
Limit till we reach'd The I of the hills ; Audley Court 83
Here at the quiet I of the world, Tithonus 7
on the glimmering I far withdrawn Vision of Sin 223
and ran Ev'n to the I of the land, Enoch Arden 578
Twofooted at the I of his chain, Aylmer's Field 127
Slipt o'er those lazy I's down the wind „ 495
love-whispers may not breathe Within this vestal I, Princess ii 222
storm and blast Had blown the lake beyond his I, The Daisy 71
The I of his narrower fate. In Mem. Ixiv 21
No i to his distress ; Maud II v 31
And in what I's, and how tenderly ; Ded. of Idylls 20
utter purity Beyond the I of their bond. Merlin and V. 27
there ye fixt Your I, oft returning with the tide. Lancelot and E. 1041
And laughter at the I of the wood, Pelleas and- E. 49
As from beyond the I of the world, Pass, of Arthur 458
O'erbore the I's of my brain : Lover's Tale i 689
Limit (continued)
her I,
mortal I of the Self was loosed,
to know The I's of resistance,
so to the land's Last 1 1 came —
Spain should oust The Moslem from
Columbus 97
A ncient Sage 232
To Duke of Argyll 2 \
Merlin and the G. 110
find their Vs by that larger light, Akbar's Dream 99
at the I of thy human state, God and the Univ. 4
Limitless suns of the I Universe sparkled and shone in the
sky,
Limn'd Sun himself has I the face for me.
Limours suitors as this maiden ; first L.
Enter'd, the wild lord of the place, L.
Earl L Drank till he jested with all ease,
when the Prince was merry, ask'd L,
Then rose L, and looking at his feet,
toli him all that Earl L had said.
Led from the territory of false L
moment after, wild L, Borne on a black horse,
In combat with the follower of L,
Limpet And on thy ribs the I sticks,
Limpin' Molly kem I up wid her stick,
Linden (adj.) firefly-like in copse And I alley :
on the sward, and up the I walks,
Linden (s) The I broke her ranks and rent
Lindenwood Hew'd the I, Hack'd the battleshield, Batt. of Brunanburh 12
Line (s) (See also Lion-line, Sea-line) What time
Despair 15
Sisters (E. and E.) 101
Marr. of Geraint 440
Geraint and E. 277
289
297
302
391
437
457
501
Sailor Boy 11
Tomorrow 77
Princess i 209
„ iv 209
Amphion 33
the foeman's I is broke,
Beyond, a Z of heights, and higher
tender curving Vs of creamy spray ;
We past long I's of Northern capes
Long I's of cliS breaking have left a chasm ;
known Far in a darker isle beyond the I ;
He gave them I : (repeat) •
Love, let me quote these Vs,
those I's of cliffs were clifis no more.
On glassy water drove his cheek in Vs ;
the Persian, Grecian, Roman Vs Of empire,
' The fifth in I from that old Florian,
Vs of green that streak the white
ride with us to our Vs, And speak with Arac :
long I of the approaching rookery swerve
Right thro' the I they broke ;
Sunny tokens of the L,
And never a I from my lady yet !
My blessing, like a Z of light,
So word by word, and I by I,
a grandson, first of his noble I,
face is practised when I spell the Vs,
Yet is there one true I, the pearl of pearls :
Which is the second in a Z of stars
High with the last I scaled her voice,
with wandering Vs of mount and mere.
Breast-high in that bright I of bracken stood :
Glorious poet who never hast written a I,
to the 'eat o' the I ?
We are six ships of the I ;
Clean from our Vs of defence
Fluttering the hawks of this crown-lusting I —
I send a birthday I Of greeting ;
A hundred ever-rising mountain Vs,
Because you heard the Vs I read
call'd ' Left wheel into I ! '
Virgil who would write ten Vs,
To you that bask below the L,
foUow'd Z by Z Your leading hand,
bucket from the well Along the I,
new hfe that gems the hawthorn I ;
Line (verb) May bind a book, may I a box.
Lineage past into the hall A damsel of high I,
A lady of high I, of great lands,
I spring from loftier I than thine own.'
Lineament Every I divine,
to take the cast Of those dead Vs
Of faded form and haughtiest Vs,
writhing barbarous Vs,
Two Voices 155
Palace of Art 82
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 62
The Voyage 35 1
Enoch Arden 1 ^
605
The Brook 145, 150
Sea Dreams 181
217
Princess t 116
„ ii 130
238
V 196
|„ 225
„ Con. 97
Light Brigade 33
Ode Inter. Exhib. 19
Window, No Answer 15
In Mem. xvii 10
„ xcv 33
Maud I xl2
Merlin and V. 367
459
509
Lancelot and E. 1019
Holy Grail 252
Pelleas and E. 56
To A . Tennyson 5
North. Cobbler 6
The Revenge 7
Def. of Lucknow 62
Sir J. Oldcastle 57
To E. Fitzgerald 45
Ancient Sage 282
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 17
Heavy Brigade 6
Poets and their B. 2
To Ulysses 5
45
To Mary Boyle 40
Prog, of Spring 36
In Mem. Ixxvii 6
Gereth and L. 588
609
961
Eleanore 53
Wan Sculptor 2
Princess ii 448
Boadicea 74
Lineament
Uneament (continued) Imperious, and of haughtiest
I's.
Lifted her eyes, and read his I's.
a babe in I and limb Perfect,
Lined I And rippled like an ever-fieeting wave,
And hollow I and wooded to the lips.
Linen Fares richly, in fine I,
linger Knowledge comes, but wisdom Vs, and 1 1 on
the shoi-e,
Knowledge comes, but wisdom Vs,
I Z by my shingly bars ;
To I here with one that loved us.'
And I weeping on the marge,
They rise, but Z ; it is late ;
brother I's late With a roystering company)
rose-garden. And mean to I in it
L with vacillating obedience,
I hate that he should I here ;
how hand I's in hand ! Let go at last !
' Why Vs Gawain with his golden news ? '
and I there To silver all the vtdleys
may I, till she sees Her maiden coming
I, till her own, the babe She lean'd
Unger'd charmed sunset I low adown
altho' 1 1 there Till eveiy daisy slept,
but ever at a breath She I,
Long o'er his bent brows I Averill,
11; all within was noise Of songs,
By night we I on the lawn.
For while he I there,
Gareth awhile I.
L that other, staring after him ;
L Ettarre : and seeing Pelleas droop, •
came the village girls And Z talking,
weU I could have I in that porch.
As if perpetual sunset I there,
preacher's I o'er his dying words,
Lingereth ' Why I she to clothe her heart
Lingering After a I, — ere she was aware, —
I out a five-years' death-in-life.
L about the thymy promontories,
and reach its fatling innocent arms And lazy I
fingers.
by the field of tourney I yet
Lingeringly So I long, that half-amazed
Link (s) Or to burst all Vs of habit —
maids, That have no I's with men.
A I among the days, to knit The generations
lost the I's that bound Thy changes ;
closer I Betwixt us and the crowning race
all in loops and Vs among the dales
(A visible I unto the home of my heart),
seem'd as tho' a Z Of some tight chain
From war with kindly I's of gold,
breaks her latest earthy Z With me to-day.
is making a new Z Breaking an old one ?
that poor I With earth is broken,
And that was a Z between us ;
We return'd to his cave — the Z was broken —
Link (verb) Idle habit Vs us yet.
To which she I's a truth divine !
thou should'st Z thy life with one
Seems but a cobweb filament to Z The yawning
Link'd-Linkt Link'd month to month with such a chain
vapour touch'd the palace gate. And link'd again.
Which else had link'd their race with times to
come —
As link'd with thine in love and fate.
He linkt a dead man there to a spectral bride ;
love that linkt the King And Lancelot —
force in her Link'd with such love for me.
Has link'd our names together in his lay,
built a way, where, link'd with many a bridge,
broke Fljdng, and link'd again.
She that link'd again the broken chain
409
Lionlike
Man: of Geraint 190
Lancelot and E. 244
Be Prof., Two G. 11
Gareth and L. 214
Lover's Tale i 398
Aylmer's Field 659
Locksley Hall 141
143
The Brook 180
Princess Hi 339
In Mem. xii 12
Con. 91
Marid I xiv 14
XX 42
Gareth and L. 13
Marr. of Geraint 91
Merlin and V. 106
Pelleas and E. 411
Tiresias 31
The Ring 479
„ 483
Lotos- Eaters 19
Gardener's D. 164
Godiva 45
Aylmer's Field 625
In Mem. Ixxxvii 18
„ xcv 1
Com. of Arthur 63
Gareth and L. 172
Lancelot and E. 721
Pelleas and E. 178
509
Lover's Tale i 186
The Ring 83
St. Telemachus 75
Princess iv 105
Enoch Arden 268
565
Sea Dreams 38
Princess vi 139
Gareth and L. 736
The Ring 436
Locksley Hall 157
Princess vi 292
In Mem. xl 15
„ xli 6
„ Con. 127
Lancelot and E. 166
Lover's Tale i 431
594
Epilogue 16
The Ring 47
50
„ 475
Bandit's Death 16
29
Miller's D.212
In Mem. xxxiii 12
„ Ixxxiv 11
Lover's Tale i 376
Tvw Voices 167
Vision of Sin 59
Aylmer's Field 779
In Mem. Ixxxiv 38
Maud II v 80
Gareth and L. 492
Marr. of Geraint 806
Lancelot and E. 112
Holy Grail 502
Guinevere 258
Locksley H., Sixty 52
Link'd-Linkt (continued) snap the bond that link'd us life to life, Happy 61
starved the wild beast that was linkt with thee
Linking and Z tree to tree,
Linkt See Link'd
Lin-lan-Ione mellow l-l-l of evening bells
Linnet (See also Lintwliite) Sometimes the Z piped
his song :
Like I's in the pauses of the wind :
Started a green Z Out of the croft ;
O merry the I and dove,
And pipe but as the I's sing :
The Z born within the cage.
That hears the latest Z trill,
' What knowest thou of birds, lark, mavis,
merle, L ?
three gray I's wrangle for the seed :
merry Z knew me. The squirrel knew me,
The I's bosom blushes at her gaze.
Lintel and under his own Z stood Storming
the household flower Torn from the Z —
Lintwhite (See also Linnet) Her song the Z svveUeth,
Lion (adj.) Folded her Z paws, and look'd to Thebes.
Lion (s) (See also Shield-lion) The Z on your old
stone gates
We heard the Z roaring from his den ;
comes a hungry people, as a Z
The babe shall lead the Z.
and in her I's mood Tore open,
blazon'd I's o'er the imperial tent
old Z, gLiring with his whelpless eye,
your long locks play the L's mane !
Porch-pillars on the I resting,
To have her I roll in a silken net
A Z ramps at the top,
glow'd like a ruddy shield on the L's breast.
Cover the l's on thy shield,
L and stoat have isled together,
' Ramp ye lance-splintering l's,
prize The living dog than the dead Z :
Gawain saw Sir Lancelot's azure l's.
On wyvem, Z, dragon, griffin, swan.
For now there is a Z in the way.'
none Stood near it but a Z on each side
And the Z there lay dying.
Was flinging fruit to l's ;
and hunters race The shadowy Z,
till the L look no larger than the Cat, Till the
Cat thro' that mirage of overheated language
loom Larger than the L, — Locksley H., Sixty 112
peasant cow shall butt the ' L passant ' „ 248
trailing a dead Z away, One, a dead man. St. Telemachus 47
Lionel The friend, the neighbour, i, the beloved, The
loved, the lover, the happy L, The low-voiced,
tender-spirited L, Lover's Tale i 653
L, the happy, and her, and her, his bride ! „ 755
very face and form of L Flash'd „ ii 94
but L and the girl Were wedded, „ iv 13
bid him come : ' but L was away — „ 101
Heir of his face and land, to L. „ 129
And, tho' he loved and honour'd L, „ 148
And sent at once to L, praying him „ 180
to L's loss and his And that resolved self-exile „ 208
To one who had not spoken, L. „ 272
Not daring yet to glance at L. „ 309
I, by L sitting, saw his face Fire, „ 322
all but he, L, who fain had risen, „ 361
He slowly brought them both to L. „ 371
L, when at last he freed himself From wife and child, „ 379
Lioness L That with your long locks play Princess vi 163
By an Evolution. 11
Death of Qinone 11
Far — far — away 5
Sir L. and Q. G. 10
Princess, Pro. 246
Minnie and Winnie 17
Window, Ay 13
In Mem. xxi 24
„ xxvii 3
clO
Gareth and L. 1079
Guinevere 255
Lover's Tale ii 15
Prog, of Spring 17
Aylmer's Field 331
Princess v 129
Claribel 15
Tiresias 149
L. C. V. de Vere 23
D. of F. Women 222
Locksley Hall 135
Aylmer's Field 648
Princess iv 380
v9
vi 99
164
The Daisy 55
Mavd I vi 29
„ xiv 7
„ IllviU
Gareth and L. 585
893
1305
Balin and Balan 585
Lancelot and. E. 663
Holy Grail 350
645
817
The Revenge 96
Tiresias 67
„ 178
Yea, the cubb'd Z ;
Lioness-like and rolling glances l-l,
Lion-goarded Here is Locksley Hall, my grandson,
here the l-g gate.
Lion-heart The l-h, Plantagenet,
Lionlike rushing outward Z Leapt on him,
Demeter and P. 54
Boadicea 71
Locksley H., Sixty 213
Margaret 34
Guinevere 107
Lion-line
Lion-line Strong mother of a L-l,
Lion-whelp Far as the portal-warding l-w,
410
List
England and Amer. 3
Enoch Arden 98
When the happy Yes Falters from
Lilian 23
Isabel 7
Madeline 43
A Character 25
Adeline 20
Rosalind 24
Elednore 133
Two Voices 250
Miller's D. 131
Fatima 21
CEnone 78
„ 203
Palace of Art 111
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 44
D. of F. Women 62
195
241
Of old sat Freedom 23
Love thou thy land 33
M. d' Arthur 220
Gardener's D. 51
138
151
158
246
Dora 33
Audley Court 69
Talking Oak 219
242
Tithonus 60
Locksley Hall 38
Lip (s) («5ee also Rose-lips) When from crimson-threaded Vs
Sweet Vs whereon perpetually did reign
If my I's should dare to kiss Thy taper fingers
With I's depress'd as he were meek, J.
Ere the placid I's be cold ?
Thro' I's and eyes in subtle rays.
From thy rose-red l-s my name Flowetli ;
' His Vs are very mild and meek :
Your ripe I's moved not,
With one long kiss my whole soul thro' My Vs,
prest the blossom of his Vs to mine,
and my hot Vs prest Close,
And from her Vs, as mom from Memnon,
And in a little while our Vs are dumb,
with dead Vs smiled at the twilight plain,
music left the Vs of her that died
She lock'd her Vs : she left me where I stood :
Turning to scorn with Vs divine
from Discussion's I may fall With Life,
knightly growth that fringed his Vs.
among us lived Her fame from I to I.
doubled his own warmth against her Vs,
kisses press'd on Vs Less exquisite than thine.'
stirr'd her Vs For some sweet answer.
And with a flying finger swept my Vs,
answer'd madly ; bit his Vs, And broke away,
breathing love and trust against her I :
A second flutter'd round her I
me, That have no Vs to kiss,
could hear the Vs that kiss'd Whispering
at the touching of the Vs.
a I to drain thy trouble dry.
Baby Vs will laugh me down : „ 89
Her Vs are sever'd as to speak : Day- Dm., Sleep. P. 30
What Vs, like thine, so sweetly join'd ? „ L' Envoi 46
lays it thrice upon my Vs, These favour'd Vs of mine ; Will Water. 19
I kiss the Vs I once have kiss'd ; „ 37
He to Vs, that fondly falter, L. of Burleigh 9
one kiss Upon her perfect Vs. Sir L. and Q. G. 45
Then raised her head with Vs comprest, The Letters 19
A sleepy light upon their brows and Vs — Vision of Sin 9
Wine is good for shrivell'd Vs, „ 79
I cannot praise the fire In your eye — ^nor yet your I : „ 184
Perch'd on the pouted blossom of her Vs : Princess, Pro. 199
Proud look'd the Vs : „ _ i 96
with her Vs apart, And all her thoughts „ ii 325
fancy feign'd On Vs that are for others ; „ iv 56
Stared with great eyes, and laugh'd with alien I's, „ 119
sinn'd in grosser Vs Beyond all pardon — „ 251
You prized my coimsel, lived upon my Vs : „ 293
shot from crooked Vs a haggard smile. „ 364
dying Vs, With many thousand matters left to do, „ 457
Invective seem'd to wait behind her Vs, „ 472
smiles at our disguise Broke from their Vs, „ v 272
fingering at the hair about his I, „ 303
then he drew Her robe to meet his Vs, „ vi 156
My spirit closed with Ida's at the Vs ; „ vii 158
and meek Seem'd the full Vs, „ 226
What whispers from thy lying I? In Mem.iii 4
Would breathing thro' his Vs impart „ xviii 15
And dull'd the murmur on thy I, „ xxii 16
seaJ'd The Vs of that Evangelist. „ xxxi 16
dear to me as sacred wine To dying Vs „ xxxvii 20
What whisper'd from her lying Z's? „ xxxixlO
loosens from the I Short swallow-flights of song, „ xlviii 14
fills The Vs of men with honest praise, „ Ixxxiv 26
could not win An answer from my Vs, „ ciii 50
And bless thee, for thy Vs are bland, „ cxix 9
For tho' my Vs may breathe adieu, „ cxxiii 11
Sweet human hand and Vs and eye ; „ cxxix 6
Its Va in the field above are dabbled Maud 7 t 2
And the sunlight broke from her I? „ vi 86
And curving a contumelious I, „ xiii 20
Lip (s) (continued)
her Vs,
For the hand, the Vs, the eyes.
Prophet, curse me the blabbing I,
IModred biting his thin Vs was mute,
have I sworn From his own Vs to have it —
Slip from my Vs if I can help it —
Now gnaw'd his under, now his upper I,
Kise, my sweet King, and kiss me on the Vs,
Foul are their lives ; foul are their Vs ;
But yesterday you never open'd I,
How from the rosy Vs of life and love,
by what name Livest between the Vs ?
the living smile Died from his Vs,
Queen, who sat With Vs severely placid,
her Vs, Who had devised the letter.
Smiled with his Vs — a smile beneath a cloud.
In one, their malice on the placid I
' Yea, between thy Vs — and sharp ;
Mark is kindled on thy Vs Most gracious ;
golden beard that clothed his Vs with light —
Out of the dark, just as the Vs had touch'd,
I cannot touch thy Vs, they are not mine,
Mix'd with the knightly growth that fringed
his Vs.
Flicker'd like doubtful smiles about her Vs,
our baby Vs, Kissing one bosom,
Heart beating time to heart, I pressing I,
And hollow lined and wooded to the Vs,
gracious Vs Did lend such gentle utterance,
clothe itself in smiles About his Vs !
her Vs were sunder'd With smiles of tranquil bliss,
And parted Vs which drank her breath,
light Of smiling welcome round her Vs —
And kiss her on the Vs.
eyes frown : the Vs Seem but a gash,
While men shall move the Vs :
Or if I were laid to I on the pillows
ever moulded by the Vs of man.
nectar smack'd of hemlock on the Vs,
while her Vs Were warm upon my cheek,
Did he touch me on the Vs ?
If the Vs were touch'd with fire
Lip (verb) circle widens tiU it I the marge.
Lip-depths Love dwells not in l-d.
Lipp'd faintly I The flat red granite ;
Liquid on the I miiTor glow'd The clear perfection
Purple gauzes, golden hazes, I mazes,
Make I treble of that bassoon, my throat ;
and cast A I look on Ida, full of prayer.
Half-lost in the I azure bloom of a crescent of sea.
Maud I xvii 10
„ II iv 27
v67
Gareth and L. 31
Marr. of Geraint 409
44ft
Geraint and E. 669
Balin and Balan 516
616
Merlin and V. 271
84ft
Lancelot and E. 182
Holy Grail 705
Pelleas and E. 432
577
Last Tournament 561
668
752
Guinevere 551
Pass, of Arthur 388
Lover's Tale i 68
237
260
398
456
659
ii 142
204
Hi 46
„ iv 48
Sisters (E. and E.) 106
Tiresias 133
The Flight 48
To Virgil 40
Demeter and P. 104
The Ring 398
Happy 66
Parnassus 17
Pelleas and E. 94
Lover's Tale i 466
Audley Court 12
Mariana in the S. 31
Vision of Sin 31
Princess ii 426
iv 369
Maud I iv 5
When first the I note beloved of men Marr. of Geraint 336
Liquor smote Her life into the I. Will Water. 112
But sin' I wur hallus i' I North. Cobbler 27
I wear'd it o' I, I did. „ 32
Lisbon Round affrighted L drew The treble works. Ode on Well. 103
Lisp Nor cares to I in love's deUcious creeds ; Caress'd or chidden 11
Would I in honey'd whispers of this monstrous fraud ! Third of Feb. 36
lightest wave of thought shall I, In Mem. xlix 5
shall have learn'd to I you thanks.' Marr. of Geraint 822
leam'd To I in tune together ; Lover's Tale i 258
Lisp'd-lispt Was lispt about the acacias. Princess vii 251
waters answering lisp'd To kisses of the wind, Lover's Tale i 544
Lispeth The callow throstle I, Claribel 17
Lisping ran By ripply shallows of the I lake, Edwin Morris 98
A Z of the innumerous leaf and dies. Princess v 14
Lispt See Lisp'd
Lissome Straight, but as Z as a hazel wand ; The Brook 70
clung about her I limbs, In colour Merlin and V. 223
And I Vivien, holding by his heel, „ 238
Queen who sat betwixt her best Enid, and I Vivien, Guinevere 28
List (desire) not be kiss'd by all who would I, The Mermaid 41
O maiden, if indeed ye I to sing, Guinevere 165
List (roU of names) But still her Vs were swell'd Princess iv 319
meaning by it To keep the I low Merlin and V. 592
List
411
Little
lost (strip, division) a comb of pearl to part The Vs of
such a beard Merlin and V. 245
List (to hear) To Z a foot-fall, ere he saw Palace of Art 110
Listed See White-listed
Listen (See also Listhen) O I, I, your eyes shall glisten
(repeat) Sea- Fairies 35, 37
Whither away ? I and stay : „ 42
stars that hung Love-charm'd to I : Love and Duty 75
But if you care indeed to I, hear Golden Year 20
Whisper'd ' L to my despair : Edward Gray 22
' L, Annie, How merry they are down yonder Enoch Arden 388
Sit, I.' Then he told her of his voyage, „ 861
Call'd aU her vital spirits into each ear To I : Aylmer's Field 202
I ! here is proof that you were miss'd : Princess, Pro. 177
I fear you'll I to tales, Grandmother 54
Did they hear me, would they I, Boddicea 8
They can but I at the gates. In Mem. xciv 15
The larkspur I's, ' I hear, I hear ; ' Maud I xxii 65
1 know that he lies and Vs mute „ II v 60
That I's near a torrent mountain-brook, Geraint and E. 171
But I to me, and by me be ruled, „ 624
And it shall answer for me. L to it. Merlin and V. 386
while the King Would I smiling. Lancelot and E. 116
but I to me, If I must find you wit : „ 147
Would I for her coming and regret „ 866
To vex an ear too sad to i! to me, Guinevere 315
To speak no slander, no, nor I to it, „ 472
L's the muffled booming indistinct Lover's Tale i 637
2 how the birds Begin to warble The Flight 60
'If he ? yes, he . . . lurks, Vs, „ 71
Your song — Sit, I ! Eomney's B. 92
L ! we three were alone in the dell Bandit's Death 19
Usten'd my hands upheld In thine, I Z to thy vows, Swpp. Confessions 71
I look'd And I, the full-flowing river of speech (Enone 68
thought that it was fancy, and I Z in my bed. May Queen, Con. 33
from them clash'd The bells ; we i ; Gardener's D. 221
The deep air I roimd her as she rode, Godiva 54
Amazed and melted all who Z to it : Enoch Arden 649
While 1 1, came On a sudden the weird seizure Princess iv 559
Who spake no slander, no, nor Z to it ; Ded. of Idylls 10
And whDe they I for the distant hunt, Marr. of Geraint 184
Enid I brightening as she lay ; „- 733
1 1, And her words stole with most prevailing
sweetness Lover's Tale i 552
that I niver not I to noan ! Spinster's S's. 8
Listener not to die a, I, I arose. The Brook 163
but every roof Sent out a I : Aylmer's Field 614
Listenest Thou I to the closing door. In Mem. cxxi 7
Listening (adj. and part.) L the lordly music flowing Ode to Memory 41
For at eventide, I earnestly, A spirit haunts 4
L, whispers ' 'Tis the fairy Lady of Shallot.' L. of Shalott i 35
slow dilation roU'd Dry flame, she I ; Princess vi 190
with shut eyes I lay L ; then look'd. „ vii 224
L now to the tide in its broad-flung Maud I Hi 11
And seen her sadden I — vext his heart, Pelleas and E. 398
She sat Stiff-stricken, I ; Guinevere 412
I tiU those armed steps were gone, „ 585
but in aU the I eyes Of those tall knights, Gareth and L. 327
The I rogue hath caught the manner of it. „ 778
I came on him once at a ball, the heart of a Z crowd— The Wreck 47
Soxmding for ever and ever thro' Earth and her I
nations, Parnassus 7
Listening (s) lonely Vs to my mutter'd dream, Princess vii 110
Listhen (listen) 'ud I to naither at aU, at all. Tomorrow 46
Listless To be the long and I boy Miller's D. 33
L in all despondence, — read ; Aylmer's Field 534
And into many a I annulet, Geraint and E. 258
Lists Shot thro' the I at Camelot, M. d' Arthur 224
They reel, they roll in clanging I, Sir Galahad 9
All that long mom the I were hammer'd up. Princess v 368
woke it was the point of noon, The I were ready. „ 483
He rode the mellay, lord of the ringing I, „ 502
father heard and ran In on the I, „ vi 27
Thro' open field into the I they wound Timorously ; „ 84
and settling circled all the I. Marr. of Geraint 547
Lists (continued) tho' her gentle presence at the I Marr. of Geraint 795
hope that sometime you would come To these
my Z with him Geraini and E. 840
Lancelot, and his prowess in the Z, Lancelot and E. 82
Favour of any lady in the Z. (repeat) „ 364, 474
when they reach'd the Z By Camelot in the meadow, „ 428
They that assail'd, and they that held the Z, „ 455
the Table Round that held the Z, (repeat) „ 467, 499
on that day when Lancelot fled the Z, „ 525
Of all my late-shown prowess in the Z, Holy Grail 362
' Queen of Beauty,' in the Z Cried— Pelleas and E. 116
withheld His older and his mightier from the I, „ 160
with cups of gold, Moved to the I, Last Tournament 143
Sat their great umpire, looking o'er the Z. „ 159
Shot thro' the Z at Camelot, Pass, of Arthur 392
Lit (came upon, etc.) bore Them earthward till they I ■ The Poet 18
On the tree-tops a crested peacock Z, ' (Enone 104
And here we Z on Aunt Ehzabeth, Princess, Pro. 96
And wheel'd or Z the filmy shapes In Mem. xcv 10
Leapt in a semicircle, and Z on earth ; Baliii and Balan 414
Lit (kindled, etc.) Z your eyes with tearful power, Margaret 3
from her wooden walls, — Z by sure hands,— Buonaparte 5
gray eyes Z up With summer lightnings Miller's D. 12
X up a torrent-bow. Palace of Art 36
L with a low large moon. „ 68
L light in wreaths and anadems, „ 186
and Z Lamps which out-burn'd Canopus. D. of F. Women 145
She I the spark within my throat. Will Water. 109
Thus, as a hearth Z in a mountain home, Balin and Balan 231
Her snule Z up the rainbow on my tears. Lover's Tale i 254
itself Z up There on the depth of an unfathom'd woe „ 745
After their marriage Z the lover's Bay, „ iv 28
an' just as candles was I, North. Cobbler 87
this shore Z by the sirns and moons De Prof., Two G. 38
Lit See also Crescent-Iit, Dew-lit, Dim-Ut, Fame-lit,
Lamp-lit, Moon-lit
Litany solemn psalms, and silver litanies, Princess ii 477
Literary swarm'd His Z leeches. Will Water. 200
Lithe bent or broke The Z reluctant boughs Enoch Arden 381
and made her Z arm round his neck Tighten, Merlin and V. 614
Litter-bier Yet raised and laid him on a l-b, Geraint and E. 566
Little They light his Z life alway ; Supp. Confessions 46
Had I So Z love for thee ? „ 88
Cruel Z Lilian. Lilian 1
Like Z clouds sun-fringed, are thine, Madeline 17
and bosoms prest To Z harps of gold ; Sea- Fairies 4
Or when Z airs arise, Adeline 33
L breezes dusk and shiver L. of Shalott ill
And Z other care hath she, „ H 8
' His Z daughter, whose sweet face He kiss'd. Two Voices 253
' Before the Z ducts began To feed thy bones with Ume, ,, 325
The Z maiden walk'd demm-e, „ 419
A Z whisper silver-clear, „ 428
A Z hint to solace woe, „ 433
You would, and would not, Z one ! Miller's D. 134
but she thought I might have look'd a Z higher ; „ 140
A thousand Z shafts of flame Were shiver'd Fatima 17
And in a Z while our lips are dumb. Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 44
Like a tale of Z meaning tho' the words are strong ; „ 119
Storing yearly I dues of wheat, and wine and oil ; „ 122
Each Z sound and sight. D. of F. Women 277
for this star Rose with you thro' a Z arc To J. S. 26
A Z thing may harm a wounded man. M. d' Arthur 42
And in the compass of three Z words. Gardener's D. 232
And made a Z wreath of all the flowers That grew about, Dora 82
To save her Z finger from a scratch Edwin Morris 63
yet long ago I have pardon'd Z Letty ; „ 140
Or in the night, after a Z sleep, I wake : St. S. Stylites 113
'Tis I more : the day was warm ; Talking Oak 205
and drew My Z oakling from the cup, „ 231
Life piled on life Were all too Z, Ulysses 25
Comrades, leave me here a Z, Locksley Hall 1
With a Z hoard of maxims preaching down a daughter's
heart. „ 94
' You would not let your I finger ache For such as these ? ' — Godiva 22
LitUe
412
Little
Little (continued) The I wide-mouth'd heads upon the spout Godiva 56
Boring a I auger-hole in fear, Peep'd — „ 68
and shows At distance like a I wood ; Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 42
from the valleys underneath Came I copses climbing. Amphion 32
Nor yet the fear of I books Had made him talk for
show ; Will Water. 195
She took the I ivory chest, The Letters 17
While we keep a I breath ! Vision of Sin 192
A I grain of conscience made him sour.' „ 218
The I life of bank and brier, You might have won 30
Annie Lee, The prettiest I damsel in the port, Enoch Arden 12
daily left The I footprint daily wash'd away. ., 22
' This is my house and this my I wife,' „ 28
at this The I wife would weep for company, „ 34
And say she would be I wife to both. „ 36
No graver than as when some I cloud „ 129
set his hand To fit their I streetward sitting-room „ 170
This pretty, puny, weakly I one, — „ 195
And kiss'd his wonder-stricken I ones ; „ 229
The I innocent soul flitted away. „ 270
' I may see her now. May be some I comfort ; ' „ 276
Fresh from the burial of her I one, „ 281
And past into the I garth beyond. „ 329
How Philip put her I ones to school, „ 706
Flourish'd a I garden square and wall'd : ,, 734
Uphold me, Father, in my loneliness A I longer ! ,, 785
To rush abroad all romid the I haven, ., 867
the I port Had seldom seen a costlier funeral. „ 916
By twenty thorps, a I town, The Brook 29
The I dells of cowslip, fairy palms, Aylmer's Field 91
Has often toil'd to clothe your I ones ; „ 699
(for the man Had risk'd his I) like the I thrift. Sea Dreams 10
And musing on the I lives of men, „ 48
A sort of absolution in the sound To hate a I longer ! „ 62
broke The glass with I Margaret's medicine in it ; „ 142
(Altho' I grant but I music there) „ 253
Sleep, I birdie, sleep ! will she not sleep Without
her " I birdie " ? „ 282
What does I birdie say In her nest at peep of day ? „ 293
Let me fly, says I birdie, „ 295
Birdie, rest a I longer. Till the I wings are stronger. „ 297
So she rests a I longer. Then she flies away. „ 299
What does I baby say. In her bed at peep of day ? „ 301
Baby says, like I birdie, Let me rise and fly away. „ 303
Baby, sleep a I longer. Till the I limbs are stronger, „ 305
If she sleeps a I longer. Baby too shall fly away. „ 307
Tired of so much within our I life, Or of so I in our
I life — Lucretiibs 226
Poor I life that toddles half an hour „ 228
round the lake A I clock-work steamer paddfing
plied Princess, Pro. 71
A rosebud set with I wilful thorns, „ 154
The I hearth-flower Lilia. „ 166
As many I trifling Lilias — play'd Charades „ 188
(A I sense of wrong had touch'd her face AVith colour) „ 219
A I dry old man, without a star, „ 1 117
A I street half garden and half house ; „ 214
There above the I grave, 0 there above the I grave, „ ii 12
O by the bright head of my I niece, „ 276
' The mother of the sweetest I maid, „ 279
While my I one, while my pretty one, sleeps. „ Hi 8
Sleep, my I one, sleep, my pretty one, sleep. „ 16
What looks so I graceful : ' men ' „ 53
Many a I hand Glanced like a touch of sunshine on
the rocks, „ 356
A I space was left between the horns, „ iv 207
Upon the level in I puffs of wind, „ 256
while We gazed upon her came a I stir About the doors, „ 373
A I shy at first, but by and by We twain, „ t> 45
The child Ls hers — for every I fault, „ 87
And lay my I blossom at my feet, „ 100
indeed I think Our chiefest comfort is the I child „ 430
And on the I clause ' take not his life : ' „ 470
The I seed they laugh'd at in the dark, „ vi 34
while Psyche ever stole A I nearer, „ 133
Little (continued) and now A word, but one, one I
kindly word. Princess vi 258
Her head a I bent ; and on her mouth A doubtful smile ,, 269
bird. That early woke to feed her I ones, „ vii 252
With which we banter'd I LiUa first : „ Con. 12
Then rose a I feud betwixt the two, „ 23
The I boys begin to shoot and stab, „ 61 ]
and look'd No I lily-handed Baronet he, „ 84 '
Last I Lilia, rising quietly, „ 116
For one about whose patriarchal knee Late the I
children clung : Ode on Well. 237
No I German state are we. Third of Feb. 15
And Willy, my eldest-born, is gone, you say, I Annie ? Grandmother 1
And she to be coming and slandering me, the base I liar ! .. 27
Shadow and shine is life, I Annie, flower and thorn. ., 60
There lay the sweet I body that never had drawn a
breath. „ 62
I had not wept, I Annie, not since I had been a wife ; „ 63
His dear I face was troubled, as if with anger or pain : „ 65
I look'd at the still I body — his trouble had all been in
vain. „ 66
Patter she goes, my own I Annie, an Annie like you : ,, 78
And in this Book, I Annie, the message is one of Peace. ,, 96
the city Of I Monaco, basking, glow'd. The Daisy 8
Still in the I book you lent me, „ 99
Making the I one leap for joy. To F. D. Maurice 4
Read my I fable : He that runs may read. The Flower 17
For a score of sweet I summers or so ? ' The Islet 2
The sweet I wife of the singer said, „ 3
To a sweet I Eden on earth that I know, „ 14
Dainty I maiden, whither would you wander ? (repeat) City Child 1, 6
' Far and far away,' said the dainty I maiden, (repeat) „ 3, 8
Minnie and Winnie 3
9
19
Spiteful Letter 5
Lit. Squabbles 6
Victim 42
Flow, in cran. wall 4
Boadicea 68
Sleep, I ladies ! And they slept well
Sleep, I ladies ! Wake not soon !
Wake, I ladies. The sun is aloft !
0 I bard, is your lot so hard,
And do their I best to bite
He bore but I game in hand ;
1 hold you here, root and all, in my hand,
L flower —
dash the brains of the I one out.
As some rare I rose, a piece of inmost Horticultural
art, Hendecasyllabics 19
0 lights, are you flying over her sweet I face ? Window, On the Hill 13
Go, I letter, apace, apace, The Letter 11
Two I hands that meet, (repeat) Answer 1, 4
Look how they tumble the blossom, the mad I tits ! Ay 9
Our I systems have their day ; In Mem., Pro. 17
the clock Beats out the I lives of men.
'Tis I ; but it looks in truth As if the quiet bones
For now her I ones have ranged ;
or to use A I patience ere I die ;
And owning but a I art To lull with song an aching
heart,
A I flfish, a mystic hint ;
Abide a I longer here.
The I village looks forlorn ;
When he was I more than boy,
A I grain shall not be spilt.'
breeze of song To stir a I dust of praise.
The I speedwell's darling blue.
Whose life, whose thoughts were I worth,
but led the way To where a I shallop lay
A I spare the night I loved,
A I while from his embrace.
From I cloudlets on the grass,
1 HATE the dreadful hoUow behind the I wood.
Or the least I delicate aquiline curve in a sensitive
nose. From which I escaped heart-free, with the
least I touch of spleen.
In the I grove where I sit — ah,
whole I wood where I sit is a world of plunder and prey.
However we brave it out, we men are a I breed.
Because their natm'es are I, and, whether he heed it
or not,
m8
„ xviii 5
„ xxi 26
„ xxxiv 12
,, xxxvii 14
„ xliv 8
„ Iviii 11
1x9
„ Ixii 6
„ Ixv 4
„ Ixxv 12
„ Irxxiii 10
„ Ixxxv 30
„ ciii 19
„ cv 15
., cxvii 3
,. Con. 94
Maiid I il
mIO
iv2
24
30
53
Little
Little (continued) To preach our poor I amiy down
He stood on the path a I aside ;
Maud's own I oak-room
It is but for a I space I go :
For stealing out of view From a I lazy lover
Shine out, I head, sunning over with curls
The I hearts that know not how to forgive' :
Void of the I living wiU That made it stir on the shore
I things Which else would have been past by !
And a dewy splendour falls On the I flower
That I come to be grateful at last for a I thing
413
Little
Mavd I x38
,. xiii 7
,. xiv 9
,, xviii 75
XX 10
„ xxii 57
Maud II i 44
a 14
64
iv 33
/// vi 3
He found me first when yet a I maid : ~ Com. of "Arthur 340
Beaten I had been for a I fault Whereof I was not
guilty ; 341
And all the I fowl were flurried at it, Gareth and L fiS
Our one white lie sits Uke a I ghost ^' g^
As slopes a wild brook o'er a I stone, Marr. of Geraint 77
There, on a I knoll beside it, stay'd 162
' For on this I knoll, if anywhere, " igi
Beheld the long street of a I town In a long valley " 242
Has nime for idle questioners.' " 072
Then rode Geraint, a I spleenful yet, " 293
Our hoard is I, but our hearts are great, (repeat) ' 3'52 S74
To stoop and kiss the tender I thumb, " > ^ '^
It were but I grace in any of us, " 504
beheld A I town with towere. upon a rock, Geraint "and E. 197
There found a I boat, and stept mto it ; 298
■ I saw the I elf-god eyeless once " 049
' It is the I rift within the lute, " 3^
• The I rift within the lover's lute Or / pitted "
speck in gamer'd fruit, 000
and cry, ' Laugh, I well ! ' " 431
A I glassy-headed hairless man, " a^n.
A square of text that looks a I blot, " gyV
She broke into a I scornful laugh : Larwelot "and E. 120
But I, my sons, and I daughter fled From bonds or
death, 27«
I need to speak Of Lancelot in his glory ! " 4gQ
' Diamond me No diamonds ! for God's love a, I "
now remains But I cause for laughter : " 507
Utter'd a I tender dolorous cry. " gii
Lancelot VVould, tho' he caU'd his wound a I hurt " 852
Then as a I helpless innocent bird, " 09!
And bode among them yet a I space Till he should
learn it ; „„,
And Lancelot knew the I clinking soimd ; " gas
And in those days she made a I song, ' " 1004
yesternight I seem'd a curious Z maid again " inS'S
Then take the I bed on which I died " 1117
And at the inrunning of a Z brook " 1300
A I lonely church in days of yore, jjolu Grail 64
I saw the least of I stars Down on the waste, 524
Down to the I thorpe that lies so close, " 547
Must be content to sit by I fires. " 614
so that ye care for me Ever sol; " 616
There was I beaten down by I men, " 739
And I Dagonet on the morrow mom. Last Tournament 240
And while he twangled I Dagonet stood Quiet 252
And I Dagonet, skippmg, ' Arthur, the King's ; , 262
And I Dagonet mincmg with his feet, 311
Then I Dagonet clapt his hands and shrill'd, " 353
Press this a I closer, sweet, until — " 71s
none with her save a I maid, A novice : ^Guinevere 3
A I bitter pool about a stone On the bare coast. 51
But conamuned only with the I maid, " 150
until the I maid, who brook'd No silence, " 159
Whereat full willingly sang the I maid. " I67
Then said the I novice prattUng to her, " 183
But even were the griefs of I ones As great ", 203
O I maid, shut in by nunnery walls, " 227
To whom the I novice garrulously, " 231
To which the I elves of chasm and cleft Made answer, ',' 248
Little (continued) ' Yea,' said the I novice, ' I pray for
For°mokery is the fume of I hearts. Guinevere 3^
' Yea, I maid, for am / not forgiven ? ' " gSe
A I thing may harm a wounded man ; Pass of Arthur 210
O I blossom, O mine, and mine of mine. To 2 rlnnZonA
Suck'd mto oneness like a I star Loter^sSilm
that I hour was bound Shut in from Time ' 4??
Lower down Spreads out a I lake, that, flooding " ^sl
Until It hung, a I silver cloud Over the sounding sea.s • " «." 36
W hen Harry an' I were children, he caU'd me his "
own I wife ; r • ^ /^ 7 1 n
God bless you, my own I Nell.' ^'''^ ^^""'^ ^§
years went over tiU I that was I had grown so tall " 27
I ha six weeks' work, I wife, so far as I know • "14
Come, come, I wife, let it rest ! 62
What's the 'eat o' this I 'ill-side to the 'eat o' the
mi , T^ , . North. Cobbler &
ihe I Revenge ran on sheer into the heart of the foe. The Revenae VK
i Revenge ran on thro' the long sea-lane between. 36
Thousands of their seamen made mock at the mad / craft " 38
Ihat he dared her with one I ship and his English few • " 107
An e bowt Z statutes all-naakt ' Villaae Wife^
Here is the cot of our oi-phan, our darling, our n j ^^
meek I maid ; 7^ tj^^ child. Hasp. 28
L guess what joy can be got from a cowslip out
of the field ; „-,
Quietly sleeping— so quiet, our doctor said ' Poor I dear " 41
If I, said the wise I Annie, ' was you, ' " 40
' L children should come to me.' " g/j
It's the I girl with her arms lying out on the
counterpane.' ~ j-q
Her dear, long, lean, I arms lying out on the
counterpane ; rrri
Not least art thou thou I Bethlehem In Judah, Sir j"oidcastle 24
Nor thou in Britain, I Lutterworth, 2&
' O soul of I faith, slow to believe ! Columbus 147
warm melon lay like a I sun on the tawny sand, V. of Maeldune 57
My sin to my desolate I one found me at sea on a day. The Wreck 86
Ihe dark I worlds running round them Despair 18
Come, speak a I comfort ! The Fliqht 17
yer laste i whishper was sweet as the lilt of a bird ! Tomori-ov) 33
An I sits 1 my oan I parlour, an' sarved by my
oan I lass, Spinster^ s S's. 103
Wi' my oan I garden outside, ^ 1Q4
An' the I gells bobs to ma hoffens es I be abroad
i' the laanes, 2Q7
You wrong me, passionate I friend. Epilogue 10'
'See, what a I heart,' she said. Bead Prophet 75
* "?^tL^^^. °i ^^^'^^^^ ^'■•'"' ^^'°''^ *« ^^O^"*!- Early Spring 41
An I'd clear forgot, I Dicky, Owl Rod 64
An she beald \ a mun saave I Dick, gi
and soa I Dick, good-night. " ug
The I senseless, worthless, wordless babe. The Ring 304
' Muriel's health Had weaken'd, nursing I Miriam. 357
This Satan-haunted ruin, this I citv of sewers, Bavvn 34
May I come a I nearer, I that heard, 55
A I nearer. Yes. " g7
A I nearer yet ! " 1Q4
They fuse themselves to I spicy baths, Prog. of Spring 33
Beat, I heart— I give you this and this ' Romney's R. 1
Beat upon mme, I heart ! beat, beat ! 94
' Sleep, I blossom, my honey, my bliss ! 99
Yes, my vvild ; Poet. ^,^. ^ Tlie Throstle 4:
And hardly a daisy as yet, I fnend, n
cried ' Love one another I ones ' and ' bless ' "
,^^0™? w , , ^Jcbar's Dream 16.
And he caught my Z one from me : Bandit's Death 22
Will you move a I that way ? Chariti/ 20
And owning but a I more Than beasts. Two Voice" 196
Right thro' the world, ' at home was I left. The Evic 19
aU grace Summ'd up and closed in I ;— Gardener's D. 13
but Dora stored what I she could save, Dq^^ 52
Life piled on life Were all too I, and of one to me
L^^m^v^: Ulysses 26.
Little
Little (contimLed) L can I give my wife.
And how they mar this I by their feuds.
Or of so I in our I life —
So I done, such things to be,
And Enid took a I delicately,
' Wait a I,' you say, ' you are sure it '11 all come
right,'
' Wait a I, my lass, I am sure it 'ill all come right '
Little-footed laws Salique And l-f China,
Littleness a thousand peering I'es,
Little-worth So were thy labour l-w.
Live (adj.) L chattels, mincers of each other's fame.
But his essences turn'd the I air sick.
And the I green had kindled into flowers,
And glowing in all colours, the I grass,
Which half that autumn night, like the I North,
Live (verb) Shall man I thus, in joy and hope
Living, but that he shall Z on ?
Thou wilt not ? in vain.
My friend, with you to I alone,
the rainbow I's in the curve of the sand ;
unheard melody. Which I's about thee,
We would I merrily, merrily.
now they I with Beauty less and less.
His object I's : more cause to weep have I :
414
Live
L. of Burleigh 14
Sea Dreams 49
Lucretius 227
In Mem. Ixxiii 2
Geraint and E. 212
First Quarrel 1
91
Princess ii 134
Bed. of Idylls 26
Two Voices 171
Princess iv 515
Maud I xiii 11
Gareth and L. 185
Last Tournament 233
479
Siipp. Confessions 169
171
Clear-headed friend 9
Ode to Memory 119
Sea- Fairies 27
Elednore 65
The Merman 40
Caress'd or chidden 9
Wan Sculptor 6
To I forgotten, and love forlorn.' (repeat) Mariana in the S. 12, 24, 84, 96
L forgotten and die forlorn.' (repeat) „ 60, 72
' To breathe and loathe, to I and sigh, Two Voices 104
Who is it that could I an hour ? „ 162
I'd almost I my life again. Miller's D. 28
Grow, I, die looking on his face, Fatima 41
I by law. Acting the law we I by without fear ; (Enone 147
Pass by the happy souls, that love to I: „ 240
My soul would I alone unto herself Palace of ArtW
I only wish to I till the snowdrops come
again : May Queen, N. Y's. E. 14
To muse and brood and I again in memory, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 65
In the hollow Lotos-land to I and lie „ 109
His memory long will I alone In all our hearts, To J. 8. 49
But I's and loves in every place ; On a Mourner 5
I I three lives of mortal men, M. d' Arthur 155
Mary, let me I and work with you : Dora 115
Then thou and I will I within one house, „ 125
but let me I my Ufe. (repeat) Audley Court 43, 47, 51, 55
St.S. Stylites 79
Love and Duty 84
87
Golden Year 56
70
Day-Dm., L' Envoi 56
Wai Water. 81
113
233
237
Lady Clare 26
L. of Burleigh 57
Enoch Arden 319
806
812
821
851
Sea Dreams 68
95
157
314
lAvcretius 78
Princess, Pro. 126
i49
ii 223
Hi 243
328
iv 192
513
1)80
408
touch my body and be heal'd, and I :
L — ^yet I — Shall sharpest pathos blight us,
L happy ; tend thy flowers ;
'Tis like the second world to us that I ;
L on, God love us, as if the seedsman,
And that for which I care to I.
For since I came to I and learn,
hence thLs halo I's about The waiter's hands,
L long, ere from thy topmost head
L long, nor feel in head or chest
I speak the truth, as I Z by bread !
Here he I's in state and bounty,
Enoch I's ; that is borne in on me.
Has she no fear that her fii-st hasband I's ? '
Scorning an alms, to work whereby to I.
life in it Whereby the man could I ;
I have not three days more to I ;
there surely I's in man and beast Something divine
' What a world,' I thought, ' To Zin ! '
' Have faith, have faith ! We Z by faith,'
' His deeds yet /, the worst is yet to come.
L the great life which all our greatest fain
* ^5 there such a woman now ? '
loved to / alone Among her women ;
Who am not mine, say, I :
yet may I in vain, and miss. Meanwhile,
And I, perforce, from thought to thought,
they cried ' She I's : *
dismiss'd in shame to 2 No wiser than their mothers,
J, dear lady, for your child ! '
risk'd it for my own ; His mother I's :
Live (verb) (continued) the gray mare Is ill to { with,
' Sweet my child, 1 1 for thee.'
' he I's : he is not dead :
at the happy word ' he I's ' My father stoop'd.
Ask me no more, lest I should bid thee I ;
What pleasure I's in height (the shepherd sang)
to I and learn and be All that not harms
he, that doth not, I's A drowning life,
but I would not I it again,
run oop to the brig, an' that thou'll I to see ;
And men will I to see it.
Dreams are true while they last, and do we not I in
dreams ?
For merit I's from man to man,
I trust he I's in thee.
The wild unrest that I's in woe
There I's no record of reply.
That life shall I for evermore,
A doubtful gleam of solace Vs.
The grain by which a man may I ?
0 Sorrow, wilt thou I with me
But I's to wed an equal rmnd ;
And I's to clutch the golden keys.
And thine effect so I's in me,
A part of mine may I in thee
Can trouble / with April days,
By which we dare to I or die.
There I's more faith in honest doubt,
He told me, I's in any crowd.
We I within the stranger's land,
that I their lives From land to land ;
Yet less of sorrow I's in me
seern'd to il A contradiction on the tongue,
That friend of mine who I's in God,
That God, which ever I's and loves.
When only the ledger I's,
Well, he may I to hate me yet.
In our low world, where yet 'tis sweet to I.
Not die ; but I a Ufe of truest breath.
And died to I, long as ray pulses play ;
But to-moiTow, if we I,
We are not worthy to I.
Then might we I together as one life,
power on this dead world to make it I.'
' Reign ye, and Z and love,
' Strike for the King and l !
1 the strength and die the lust !
L pure, speak true, right wrong.
She I's in Castle Perilous :
ye know this Order I's to crush All wrongers
I to wed with her whom first you love : Mart, of Geraint 227
if 1 1, So aid me Heaven when at mine uttermost, „ 501
if he I, we will have him of our band ; Geraint and E. 553
we will I like two birds in one nest^ „ 627
I A wealthier life than heretofore Balin and Balan 91
From all his fellows, I alone, „ 126
forget My heats and violences ? I afresh ? „ 190
I too could die, as now 1 1, for thee.' „ 583
' L on. Sir Boy,' she cried. „ 584
It I's dispersedly in many hands. Merlin and V. 457
may now assure you mine ; So I uncharm'd. „ 550
0 tell us — for we' I apart — • Lancelot and E. 284
1 never saw his like : there I's No greater leader.' „ 316
L's for his children, ever at its best And fullest ; „ 336
in daily doubt Whether to I or die, „ 521
as but born of sickness, could not I : „ 880
' Speak : that 1 1 to hear,' he said, ' is yours.' „ 928
Yet, seeing you desire your child to I, „ 1095
No memory in me l's ; Holy Grail 535
But I like an old badger in his earth, „ 629
Long I the king of fools ! ' Last Tournament 358
True men who love me still, for whom 1 1, Guinevere 445
I the King should greatly care to Z ; „ 452
How sad it were for Arthur, should he I, „ 496
No, nor by living can I Z it down. „ 623
Princess v 452
ml6
122
128
„ vttS
1^
273
313
Grandmother 98
N. Farmer, N. S. 55
Spiteful Letter 18
High. Pantheism 4
In Mem., Pro. 35
39
XV IS
xxxi 6
xxxiv 2
xxxviii 8
UUSf
lixi
Ixii 8
Ixiv 10
IxvlO
11
Ixxxiii 7
Ixxxv 40
xcvi 11
xcviii 26
cvS
cxv 16
cxvi 13
cxxv 3
Con. 140
141
Maud 7 t 35
„ xiii 4
„ xviii 48
53
66
XX 23
„ 7/ t 48
Com. of Arthur 91
94
472
488
492
Gareth and L. 118
611
625
Live
415
Livid
live (verb) (corUinued)
sin
and still 1 1 Who love thee ;
Not tho' 1 1 three lives of mortal men,
In that I Z I love ; because I love 1 1 :
blight L's in the dewy touch of pity
mask of Hate, who l's on others' moans,
the Saviour l's but to bless.
I to fight again and to strike another blow.'
My God, I would not I Save that I think
necessity for talk Which l's with blindness,
she'll never I thro' it, I fear.'
' He says I shall never I thro' it,
that, which lived True life, I on —
Kill or be kill'd, I or die,
For I must I to testify by fire.
X, and be happy in thyself,
channel where thy motion l's Be prosperously shaped,
L thou ! and of the grain and husk,
Who I on milk and meal and grass ;
that l's Behind this darkness,
• work'd no good to aught that l's,
one thing given me, to love and to I for,
Wh^ should 1 1 ?
Let it I then — ay, till when ?
May freedom's oak for ever I
man, that only l's and loves an hour,
which l's Beyond our burial and our buried eyes,
You will I till that is bom,
leper's hut, where l's the living-dead.
would he I and die alone ?
then I am dead, who only I for you.
I will I and die with you.
Could make pure light I on the canvas ?
can Music make you I Far — far — away ?
L thy Life, Young and old,
I the life Beyond the bridge,
I sticks like the ivin as long as I l's
She has left me enough to I on.
0 happy he, and fit to I,
Uved I in cither's heart and speech.
Have I and loved alone so long.
If I had I — I cannot tell —
You I with us so steadily,
1 have I my life, and that which I have done
nor less among us I Her fame from lip to lip.
Dora I unmarried till her death.
The farmer's son, who I across the bay.
There I a flayflint near ;
Here I the Hills-
while I Z In the white convent down the valley
I Z up there on yonder mountain side.
Three years 1 1 upon a pillar.
Farewell, like endless welcome, I and died.
They said he I shut up within himself,
O had 1 1 when song was great
And I a life of silent melancholy,
fell Sun-stricken, and that other I alone.
Where Annie I and loved him,
0 had he Z ! In our schoolbooks we say,
1 1 for years a stunted sunless life ;
In other scandals that have I and died,
1 thought I Z securely as yourselves —
There Z an ancient legend in our house.
L thro' her to the tips of her long hands,
bones of some vast bulk that I and roar'd
You prized my counsel, Z upon my lips :
I in all fair lights,
equal baseness I in sleeker times
and Z but for mine own.
My dream had never died or Z again.
Sweet order Z again with other laws :
as dearer thou for faults L over :
the sooner, for he Z far away.
Aurelias Z and fought and died,
in mine own heart I can I down
Guinevere 636
Pass, of Arthur 150
323
Lover's Tale i 178
695
775
Rizpah 64
The Revenge 95
Sisters {E. and E.) 228
249
In the Child. Hosp. 42
47
Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 2
Def. of Lucknow 41
Sir J. Oldcastle 206
De Prof., Two G. 15
19
50
To E. Fitzgerald 13
Tiresias 51
,, 77
The Wreck 35
Despair 69
Epilogue 63
Hands all Round 5
Demeter and P. 106
The Ring 295
Forlorn 63
Happy 4
", 96
„ 108
Romney's R. 10
Far — far — aivay 17
The Oak 1
Akbar's Dream 144
Church-warden, etc. 15
Charity 40
The Wanderer 9
Sonnet To 14
MUler's D. 38
May Queen, Con. 47
D. of the 0. Year 8
M. d' Arthur 244
Gardener's D. 50
Dora 172
Audley Court 75
FaZ7c. to the Mail 84
Edwin Morris 11
St. S. Stylites 61
72
86
Love and Duty 68
Golden Year 9
Amphion 9
Enoch Arden 260
570
685
The Brook 9
Aylmer's Field 357
443
iMcretius 210
Princess i 5
a 40
„ m294
„ w293
430
„ V 385
389
„ vi 17
„ vii 19
348
Grandmother 16
Com. of Arthur 13
Lived (continued) King Who I and died for men,
So large mirth Z and Gareth won the quest.
Tho' yet there Z no proof,
so there I some colour in your cheek,
Z thro' her, who in that perilous hour
I in hope that sometime you would come
I have not Z my life delightsomely :
There Z a king in the most Eastern East,
And Z there neither dame nor damsel
Who Z alone in a great wild on grass ;
back to his old wild, and Z on grass,
One child they had : it Z with her ; she died ;
And saved him : so she Z in fantasy.
A horror Z about the tarn,
all night long his face before her Z,
the face before her Z, Dark-splendid,
There kept it, and so Z in fantasy.
Sir Lancelot knew there Z a knight
Struck up and Z along the milky roofs ;
in me Z a sin So strange, of such a kind.
She I a moon in that low lodge with him :
an Abbess, Z For three brief years,
I have Z my life, and that which I have done
So that, in that I have I, do I live,
how should I have I and not have loved ?
we Z together. Apart, alone together on those hills.
But many weary moons I Z alone —
I Scatteringly about that lonely land
Affirming that as long as either Z,
Ah — you, that have Z so soft,
he Z with a lot of wild mates.
Squire's laady es long es she Z
long es she Z I niver hed none of 'er darters 'ere ;
Hugger-mugger they I, but they wasn't
which Z True life, live on —
He I on an isle in the ocean —
He had Z ever since on the Isle
I had Z a wild-flower life.
Our gentle mother, had she I —
aisier work av they Z be an Irish bog.
But I couldn't 'a Z wi' a man
that you have not Z in vain.
An' 'e sarved me sa well when 'e Z,
when we Z i' Howlaby Daale,
He that has I for the lust of the minute,
Z With Muriel's mother on the down.
Live-green Out of the l-g heart of the dells
Livelier And Z than a lark She sent her voice
Gareth and L. 383
1426
Marr. of Geraint 26
Geraint and E. 621
766
839
Balin and Balan 60
Merlin and V. 555
606
621
649
716
Lancelot and E. 27
37
331
337
398
401
409
Holy Grail 772
Last Tournament 381
Guinevere 696
Pass, of Arthur 412
Lover's Tale i 120
170
189
it 2
iv 184
277
Rizpah 17
29
Village Wife 53
54
117
Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 1
V. of Maeldune 7
116
The Wreck 37
The Flight 77
Tomorrow 72
Spinster's S's. 52
Locksley H., Sixty 242
Owd Rod 11
19
Vastness 27
The Ring 147
Sea- Fairies 12
Talking Oak 122
In the Spring a Z iris changes on the bumish'd dove ; Locksley Hall 19
then we crost To a Z land
Then Florian, but no I than the dame
Nor less it pleased in Z moods,
No Z than the wisp that gleams On Lethe
Be quicken'd with a Z breath,
that to me A Z emerald twinkles in the grass,
Liveliest glided thro' all change Of Z utterance.
Livelong Pour round mine ears the Z bleat
Past Yabbok brook the Z night.
Thro' which the I day my soul did pass.
There will not be a drop of rain the whole of the I day, May Queen 35
all the Z way With solemn gibe did Eustace Gardener's D. 167
break the Z summer day With banquet In Mem. Ixxxix 31
light Thro' the Z hours of the dark Maud I vi 17
All thro' the Z hours of utter dark. Lover's Tale i 810
Lively Rapt in sweet talk or Z, all on love Guinevere 386
Liver (one who lives) Tnith-speaking, brave, good l's, Gareth and L. 424
Liver (organ of the body) pierces the Z and blackens the blood ; The Islet 35
Princess i 110
a 112
In Mem. Ixxxix 29
„ xcviii 7
„ cxxii 13
Maud I xviii 51
D. of F. Women 168
Ode to Memory 65
Clear-headed friend 27
Palace of Art 55
red ' Blood-eagle ' of Z and heart ;
' And the Z is half-diseased ! '
Liveried dashing runnel in the spring Had Z
Livest by what name L between the lips ?
Thou Z in all hearts.
Livid L he pluck'd it forth,
Many a Z one, many a sallow-skin-
Dead Prophet 71
76
Lover's Tale ii 50
Lancelot and E. 1 82
Epit. on Gordon 3
Aylmer's Field 627
Batt. of Brunanburh 106
I am roused by the wail of a child, and awake to a Z light. The Wreck 7
Livid
416
Loathsome
Livid {eoniinued) crooked, reeling, I, thro' the mist
Kose,
Livid-flickering dazzled by the l-f fork,
Livin' (benefice) I reckons tha'U light of a Z
Living (See also Ever-living) L, but that he shall
live on ?
The I airs of middle night Died round the bulbul
A I flash of light he flew.'
Natuie's I motion lent The pulse of hope
L together under the same roof, To
each a perfect whole From I Nature,
his mute dust I honour and his I worth :
And feeding high, and I soft,
Cursed be the social lies that wai-p us from the
I truth !
Pure spaces clothed in I beams,
That he who left you ten long years ago Should f-till
he I:
evermore Prayer from a I source within the wiU,
Like fountains of sweet water in the sea, Kept him
a I soul.
Who hardly knew me I, let them come.
But Leolin, his brother, I oft With Averill,
sow'd her name and kept it green In I letters.
And left the I scandal that shall die —
As if the I passion symbol'd there Were I nerves
to feel the rent ;
And all but those who knew the I God —
And heaps of I gold that daily grow,
Not past the I fount of pity in Heaven.
Dead claps of thunder from within the cliffs Heard
thro' the I roar.
(the same as that L within the belt)
Or Heliconian honey in I words,
a race Of giants I, each, a thousand years.
Those monstrous males that carve the I hound,
but I wills, and sphered Whole in ourselves
Of I hearts that crack within the fire
I believed that in the I world JVIy spirit closed
Thy I voice to me was as the voice of the dead,
voice of the dead was a I voice to me.
Roves from the I brother's face.
With fruitful cloud and I smoke,
The wish, that of the I whole No life may fail
Which sicken'd every I bloom,
That warms another I breast.
The I soul was flash'd on mine.
And drown'd in yonder I blue The lark becomes
O I will that shalt endure
And the most I words of life Breathed in her ear.
L alone in an empty house,
Void of the little I will That made it stir
Blow thro' the I world — ' Let the King reign.'
thou art but swollen with cold snows And mine
is I blood :
gown I will not cast aside Until himself arise
a I man,
' For the fairest and the best Of ladies I gave me Balin and Balan 340
' I better prize The I dog than the dead lion : „ 585
Death in the I waters, and withdrawn. Merlin and V. 148
who was yet a I soul. Lancelot and E. 253
She still took note that when the I smile Died „ 323
' I never yet have done so much For any maiden I,' „ 376
Become a I creature clad with wings ? Hohj Grail 519
since the I words Of so great men as Lancelot and
our King „ 712
fern without Burnt as a Z fire of emeralds, Pelleas and E. 35
Makers of nets, and I from the sea. „ 90
more Than any have sung thee I, „ 351
Again with I waters in the change Of seasons : ,,511
No, nor by I can I live it down. Guinevere 623
On that high day, when, clothed with I light. Pass, of Arthur 454
thro' thy I love For one to whom I made it To the Queen ii 34
Scarce I in the jEolian harmony, Lover's Tale i 477
More I to some happier happiness, „ 762
Death of Qinone 27
Merlin and V. 941
Church-warden, etc. 47
Sup p. Confessions 171
Arabian Nights 69
Two Voices 15
449
-, With Pal. of Art 12
Palace of Art 59
To .J. S. 30
The Goose 17
Locksley Hall 60
Sir Galahad 66
Enoch Arden 405
801
804
889
Aylmer's Field 57
89
444
535
637
655
752
Sea Dreams 56
216
Lucretius 224
Princess Hi 269
310
iv 147
V 379
vii 157
V. of Cauteretz 8
10
In Mem. xxxii 7
CCXtCtX o
Ivl
Ixxii 7
Ixxxv 116
xcv 36
cocv 7
cxxxi 1
Con. 52
Maud I vi 68
„ // ii 14
Com. of Arthur 484
Gareth and L. 10
Geraint and E. 706
Living (continued) if Affection L slew Love, Lover's Tale ii 31
And all the fragments of the I rock „ H 44
told the I daughter with what love Edith Sisters (E. and E.) 253
And mangle the I dog that had loved him In the Child. Hosp. 9
Dead Princess, I Power, if that, which lived Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 1
Rather to thee, thou I water.
That miss'd his I welcome, seem
Wander'd back to I boyhood while I heard the
curlews call.
Paint the mortal shame of nature with the I hues
of Art.
Dead, but how her I glory lights the hall,
woods with I airs How softly f ann'd,
To share his I deatli with him,
A beauty came upon your face, not that of I men,
woiTn, who, I, made The wife of wives a widow-bride
Bright in spring, L gold ;
Farewell, whose I like I shall not find. In Mem. W
Look how the I pulse of Alia beats Thro' all His
world.
moved but by the I limb.
And is a I form ?
Draw from my death Thy I flower and grass,
earn'd a scanty I for himself :
war stood Silenced, the I quiet as the dead.
If one may judge the I by the dead,
molten Into adulterous I,
were worth Our I out ?
• but worn From wasteful Z, follow 'd —
attic holds the Z and the dead.
Living-dead where lives the l-d.
Living-place river i-uns in three loops about her Z-p ;
Lizard Z, with his shadow on the stone,
the golden Z on him paused,
Lizard-point fairest-spoken tree From here to L-f.
Llanberis And found him in L :
Llanberris I came on lake L in the dark.
Load grace To help me of my weaiy I.'
Loaded See Grape-loaded
Loaf a dusky I that smelt of home.
Loan aims On Z, or else for pledge ;
Loath {See also Loth) be loath To part them, or part
from them : Sisters J, E. and E.) 49
Loathe ' To breathe and loathe, to live and sigh, ~
I loathe it : he had never kindly heart,
and she Loathes him as well ;
And I loathe the squares and streets,
and loathe to ask thee aught.
flyers from the hand Of Justice, and whatever
loathes a law :
came to loathe His crime of traitor,
loathe, fear — but honour me the more.'
whom ye loathe, him will I make you love.'
I loathe her, as I loved her to my shame.
on thine polluted, cries ' I loathe thee : '
for I loathe The seed of Cadmus —
waken every morning to that face I loathe to see
To love him most, whom most I loathe,
I loathe the veiy name of infidel.
Loathed but most she Z the hour
And Z to see them overtax'd •
His power to shape : he Z himself ;
Z the bright dishonour of his love,
I that Z, have come to love him.
When Dives Z the times,
Loather Thou Z of the lawless crown
Loathing Deep dread and Z of her solitude
and fain, Foi- hate and Z,
to show His Z of our Order and the Queen.
Merlin to his own heart, Z, said ;
L to put it from herself for ever.
Loathly ' Overquiok art thou To catch a I plume
fall'n from the wing
Loathsome What is I to the young Savours well to
thee and me. ' Vision of Sin 157
Sir J. Oldcastle 131
Tiresias 197
Locksley H., Sixty 3
,, 140
181
Early Spring 19
Happy 8
51
Ro7nney's R. 137
The Oak 5
G. Ward 1
Akbar's Dream 41
133
Mechanophilus 16
Doubt and Prayer 6
Enoch Arden 818
Com. of Arthur 123
Lancelot and E. 1368
Sir J. Oldcastle 109
Tiresias 209
Ancient Sage 5
Locksley H., Sixty 222
Happy 4
Gareth and L. 612
CEnone 27
Enoch Arden 601
Talking Oak 264
Golden Year 5
Sisters (E. and E.) 95
Mariana in the S. 30
Audley Court 22
Marr. of Geraint 220
Two Voices 104
Sea Dreams 2(X)
Lucretius 200
Maud II iv 92
Gareth and L. 3')()
Marr. of Geraint 37
593
Merlin and V. 122
Pelleas and E. 390
4cS3
Guinevere 55 (i
Tiresias 11 1>
The Flight >S
50
Akbar's Dream 70
Mariana 77
Godiva 9
Lvrcretius 23
Com. of Arthur 194
Locksley H., Sixty 280
To Mary Boyle 29
Freedom 31
Palace of Art 229
Balin and Balan 388
551
Merlin and V. 790
Lover's Tale i 214
Merlin and V. 727
Guinevere 490
„ 686
Merlin and V. 845
In the Child. Hasp. 25
Walk, to the Mail 37
Sir J. Oldcastle 58
Yoxt, might have won 18
Princess ii 322
Lover's Tale ii 116
Isabel 5
Ode to Memory 16
The Merman 14
The Mermaid 32
Adeline 57
Vision of Sin 200
Princess iv 187
426
ft 164
/« Mem. Ixxvii 7
Sisters {E. and E.) 56
Xas< Tournament 693
Pa^« o/ ^r< 249
2>. 0/ JP. Women 241
Talking Oak 144
fiaZiw ajid Balan 632
Aferiw anti F. 290, 470
655
The Flight 33
Loathsome
t;ftHthaftma (continued) till the 2 opposite Of all my heart
had destined dad obtain,
And treat their I hurts and heal mine own ;
and stood Stiff as a viper frozen ; I sight,
How could I bear ■NWth the sights and the I
smells of disease
Lobby whined in lobbies, tapt at doors,
Loch By firth and I thy silver sister grow,
Lock (fastening) Break I and seal :
Melissa, with her hand upon the I,
Cries of the partridge like a rusty key Tum'd
in a I,
Lock (of tresses) I's not wide-dispread.
Stays on her floating I's the lovely freight
holding them back by their flowing I's
I would fling on each side my low-flowing I's,
While his I's a-drooping twined
When the I's are crisp and curl'd ;
To drench his dark Vs in the giu-gling wave
From the flaxen curl to the gray I
with your long I's play the Lion's mane !
May serve to curl a maiden's I's,
Smoothing their I's, as golden as his own
jOck (verb) I up my tongue From uttering freely
iOCk'd salt pool, I m with bars of sand,
She I her lips : she left me where I stood :
She might nave I her hands.
slept the sleep With Balin, either I in either's
arm.
And Merlin I his hand in hers (repeat)
a puzzle chest in chest, With each chest I
lOcket pluck from this true breast the I that I wear,
locksley Dreary gleams about the moorland flying over
L Hall ; Locksley Hall 4
L Hall, that in the distance overlooks the sandy tracts, „ 5
a long farewell to L Hall ! „ 189
Let it fall on L Hall, with rain or bail, „ 193
I myself so close on death, and death itself in L
Hall. Locksley H., Sixty 4
Close beneath the casement crimson with the
shield of L —
Li this gap between the sandhills, whence you see
the L tower.
Here is L Hall, my grandson, here the lion-guarded
gate. Not to-night in L Hall — to-morrow —
one old Hostel left us where they swing the L shield,
Then I leave thee Lord and Master, latest Lord
of L HaU.
Odestar secm'd my I in the Heaven of Art,
Odge (s) cross'd the garden to the gardener's I,
Beyond the I the city lies.
They by parks and I's going
beyond her I's, where the brook Vocal,
haunt About the moulder'd I's of the Past
A Z of intertwisted beechen-boughs
She lived a moon in that low I with him :
that desert I to Tristram lookt So sweet,
that low I retum'd. Mid-forest,
Some I within the waste sea-dunes,
odge (verb) L with me all the year !
Odged Vivien, into Camelot stealing, I Low in the city, M^lin and V. 63
Pdleas and E. 214
Sisters (E. and E.) 131
Lancelot and E. Ill
Pdleas and E. 125
The Daisy 52
Lover's Tale iv 138
Enoch Arden 748
Princess iv 215
Gareth and L. 961
417
Lonely
34
176
213
247
282
Romney's R. 39
AvMey Court 17
Talking Oak 5
L. of Burleigh 17
Aylm,er's Field 145
Princess iv 63
Lajt Tournament 376
381
387
488
The Flight 90
Prog, of Spring 26
A priory not far off, there I,
and I with Plato's God,
Odging let him into I and disarm'd.
ere they past to I, she, Taking his hand,
^odi At L, rain, Piacenza, rain,
oft in a I, with none to wait on him,
oftier A later but a I Annie Lee,
then a I form Than female,
I spring from I lineage than thine own.'
A temple, neither Pagod, Mosque, nor Church,
But I, simpler,
oftiest a wild witch naked as heaven stood on each
of the I capes,
otty * Drink to I hopes that cool —
Akbar's Dream 179
V. of Maeldune 100
Vision of Sin 147
Lofty (continued) broad ambrosial aisles of I lime Made
noise with bees Princess, Pro. 87
lUon's I temples robed in fire. To Virgil 2
Log (See also YuIe-Iog) drove his heel into the
smoulder'd I, M. d' Arthur, Ep. 14
Bring in great I's and let them lie. In Mem. cvii 17
Lies like a I, and all but smoulder'd out ! Gareth and L. 75
_ Dagonet stood Quiet as any water-sodden I Last Tournament 253
Logic Severer in the Z of a hfe ? Princess v 190
Impassion'd I, which outran In Mem. cix 7
Loiac (liar) I weant saay men be Vs, N. Farmer, 0. S. 27
Loife (lite) thaw I they says is sweet, „ 63
Loike (like) Moast I a butter-bump, „ 31
Loins For many weeks about my 1 1 wore St. S. Stylites 63
can this be he From Gama's dwarfish I ? Princess v 506
Loiter from pine to pine, And I's, slowly drawn. (Enone 5
1 1 round my cresses ; The Brook 181
With weary steps I Z on. In Mem. xxxviii 1
The foot that I's, bidden go,— Last Tournament 117
Would often I in her balmy blue. Lover's Tale i 62
Loiter'd And I in the master's field. In Mem, xxxvii 23
and tho' 1 1 there The full day after, Sisters (E. and E.) 97
Lombard But when we crost the L plain The Daisy 49
look'd the L piles ; „ 54
You see yon L poplar on the plain. Sisters (E. and E.) 79
Lond (land) as I 'a done boy the I. (repeat) N. Farmer, 0. S. 12, 24
an' I o' my oan. „ 44
whoa's to howd the I ater mea „ 58
London (adj.) For in the dust and drouth of L life Edwin Morris 143
When, in our younger L days. To E. Fitzgerald 54
London (s) (See also Lunnon) Sees in heaven the
light of L flaring Locksley HaU 114
Here, in streaming L's central roar. Ode on Well. 9
L, Verulam, C^muloddne. Boddicea 86
Your father is ever in L, Maud I iv 59
And L roll'd one tide of joy To the Queen ii 8
Koaring L, raving Paiis, Locksley H., Sixty 190
And L and Paiis and all the rest The Dawn 10
Lone At eve the beetle boometh Athwart the thicket I : Claribd 10
never more Shall I (Enone see the morning mist (Enone 216
' No voice,' she shriek'd in that I hall. Palace of Art 258
Thro' every hollow cave and alley I Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 103
On a day when they were going O'er the I expanse. The Captain 26
The bird that pipes his I desire Yov, might have won 31
The I glow and long roar (repeat) Voice and the P. 3, 39
Her life is I, he sits apart. In Mem. xcvii 17
When the I hem forgets his melancholy, Gareth and L. 1185
' Enid, the pilot star of my I life, Geraint and E. 306
' And even m this I wood. Sweet lord, Balin and Balan 528
Perchance in I Tintagil far from all Last Tournament 392
Till one I woman, weeping near a cross, „ 493
And those I rites I have not seen. To Mara, of Dufferin 39
Lonelier I, darker, earthJier for my loss. Aylmer's Field 750
Loneliest but the Z in a lonely sea. Enoch Arden 553
The I ways are safe from shore to shore. Last Tournament 102
Loneliness Uphold me, Father, in my I Enoch Arden 784
from his height and I of grief Bore down in flood, Aylmer's Fidd 632
Me rather all that bowery I, Milton 9
' Hast thou no pity upon my I ? Gareth and L. 73
Gratitude — I — desire to keep So skilled a nurse The Ring 373
Lonely ancient thatch Upon the I moated grange. Mariana 8
winds woke the gray-eyed mom About the I moated grange. „ 32
Those I lights that still remain, Two Voices 83
Wrought by the I maiden of the Lake. M. d' Arthur 104
Wherever in a Z grove He set up his forlorn pipes, Amphion 21
Sometimes on I moimtain-meres I find a magic bark ; Sir Galahad 37
I seabird crosses With one waft of the wing. The Captain 71
Close to the sim in I lands. The Eagle 2
And he sat him down in a Z place. Poet's Song 5
And peacock-yewtree of the i Hall, Enoch ArdM^d
And leave you I ? not to see the world — „ 297
but the loneliest in a Z sea. „ 553
The peacock-yewtree and the I Hall, „ 608
when his I doom Came suddenly to an end. „ 626
Pitying the I man, and gave him it : „ 664
2d
Lonely
418
Long
Thou That didst uphold me on my I
LoDdy {eontiniud)
isle,
His wreck, his I life, his coming back.
And I listenings to my mutter'd dream,
zones of light and shadow Glimmer away to the
I deep.
And a storm never wakes on the I sea,
To breathe thee over I seas.
That beats within a I place,
I find not yet one I thought That cries
That ripple round the I grange ;
No gray old grange, or I fold,
/ have climb'd nearer out of I Hell.
(For often in I wanderings I have cursed him
has past and leaves The Crown a I splendour.
What happiness to reign a I king,
in / haimts Would scratch a ragged oval on the
sand.
Whom he loves most, I and miserable.
Heard by the lander in a Z isle,
good damsel there who site apart, And seems so I?
That Lancelot is no more a Z heart.
Who might have brought thee, now a I man
To
Enoch Arden 783
Princess m 110
F. D. Maurice 28
The Islet 33
In Mem. xvii 4
„ Ixxxv 110
xc 23
„ xci 12
c5
Mavd I xviii 80
xtx 14
Bed. of Idylls 49
Com. of Arthur 82
Gareth and L. 533
Marr. of Geraint 123
330
' Geraint and E. 300
Lancelot and E. 602
1370
So ? as you have been
n
built with wattles from the marsh A little I church Holy Grail 64
Here one black, mute midsummer night I sat, L, Last Tournament 613
All down the I coast of Lyonnesse, Guinevere 240
To sit once more within his I hall, „ 497
As of some I city sack'd by night. Pass, of Arthur 43
Wrought by the I maiden of the Lake. „ 272
O blossom'd portal of the I house. Lover's Tale i 280
great pine shook with I sounds of joy „ 325
And thus our I lover rode away, „ iv 130
who lived Scatteringly about that I land of his, „ 185
But / was the I slave of an often-wandering mind ; The Wreck 130
0 we poor orphans of nothing — alone on that I shore — Despair 33
and we shall light upon some I shore. The Flight 89
World-isles in I skies, Epilogue 55
charm of adl the Muses often flowering in a Z woi-d ; To Virgil 12
seated in the dusk Of even, by the I threshing-floor, Demetet and P. 126
The I maiden-Princess of the wood. The Ring 65
Her I maiden-Princess, crown'd with flowers, „ 485
you, that now are I, and with Grief Sit face to face. To Mary Boyle 45
1 seem no longer like a I man In the king's garden, Akbar's Dream 20
Lonest Till ev'n the I hold were all as free Gareth and L. 598
Sir Bors Rode to the I tract of all the realm, Holy Grail 661
Long (adj. and adv.) (See also Life-long) From the I
alley's latticed shade Emerged,
L alleys falling down to twilight grots,
Now is done thy I day's work ;
And I purples of the dale.
When the I dun wolds are ribb'd with snow.
How I, 0 God, shall men be ridden down,
How I this icy-hearted Muscovite Oppress the region ? '
L fields of barley and of rye,
Still moving after truth I sought,
But I disquiet merged in rest.
To be the I and listless boy Late-left an orphan
Like those / mosses in the* stream.
on the casement-edge A I green box of mignonette,
{ shadow of the chair Flitted across into the night,
burning drouth Of that I desert to the south,
once he drew With one / kiss my whole soul thro' My lips,
roars The / brook falling thro' the clov'n ravine
between the piney sides Of this I glen.
higher All barr'd with I white cloud the scornful
crags. Palace of Art 83
Smile at the claims of I descent. L. C. V. de Vere 52
You'n never see me more in the I gray fields
at night ; May Queen, N. Y's. E. 26
With your feet above my head in the I and
pleasant grass. „ 32
Give us I rest or death, dark death, Lotos-Eaters, C. 8. 53
L labour unto aged breath, „ 85
To watch the I bright river drawing slowly „ 92
glimmer of tt>« languid dawn On those I, rank, D. oj F. Women 75
Arabian Nights 112
Ode to Memory 107
A Dirge 1
„. 31
Oriana 5
Poland 1
,, 10
L. of Shalott i 2
Two Voices 62
249
Miller's D. 33
48
83
126
Fatima 14
20
(Enone%
„ 94
Long (adj. and adv.) {continued)
with us, D. of the 0. Year 16
Brightening the skirte of a Z cloud, M. d' Arthur 54
And the I ripple washing in the reeds.' „ 117
And the I glories of the winter moon. „ 192
I am going a I way With these thou seest — „ 256
whispering rain Night slid down one I stream Gardener's D. 267
L learned names of agaric, moss and fern, Edwin Morris 17
Twice ten I weary weary years to this, St. S. Stylites 90
Or eke I dream — and for so Z a time, „ 93
thou hast suffer'd I For ages and for ages ! ' „ 99
I have some power with Heaven From my I penance : „ 144
The I mechanic pacings to and fro. Love and Duty 17
The I day wanes : Ulysses 55
With the fairy tales of science, and the I result
of Time ; Locksley Hall 12
' Dost thou love me, cousin ? ' weeping, ' I have loved
thee i: „ 30
a I farewell to Locksley Hall ! „ 189
The poplars, in I order due, Amphion 37
We past I lines of Northern capes The Voyage 35
Where those I swells of breaker sweep „ 39
' Thou art mazed, the night is I, Vision of Sin 195
The I divine Peneian pass. To E. L. 3
L lines of cliff breaking have left a chasm ; Enoch Arden 1
higher A I street climbs to one tall-tower'd mill ; „ 5
That he who left you ten I years ago „ 404
Then after a I tumble about the Cape „ 532
then winds variable. Then baffling, a I coui-se of them ; „ 546
lustre of the I convolvuluses That coil'd around „ 576
And dull the voyage was with I delays, „ 655
Then down the I street having slowly stolen, „ 682
his I wooing her. Her slow consent, and marriage, „ 707
All down the I and narrow street he went „ 795
And there he told a I long-winded tale The Brook 138
Katie walks By the I wash of Australasian seas „ 194
seated on a stUe In the I hedge, „ 198
L since, a bygone Rector of the place, Aylmer's Field 11
crashing with I echoes thro' the land, „ 338
And his I arms stretch'd as to grasp a flyer : „ 588
But lapsed into so Z a pause again „ 630
Ran in and out the I sea-framing caves. Sea Dreams 33
a I reef of gold, Or what seem'd gold : „ 127
He dodged me with a I and loose account. „ 149
rise And I roll of the Hexameter — Lucretius 11
And blasting the I quiet of my breast „ 162
And our I walks were stript as bare as brooms. Princess, Pro. 184
and with I arms and hands Reach'd out, „ i 28
Grow I and troubled like a rising moon,
there did a compact pass L summers back.
We rode Many a I league back to the North.
He with a I low sibilation, stared As blank as death
every turn Lived thro' her to the tips of her I hands,
And glutted all night I breast-deep m com.
The I hall glitter'd like a bed of flowers.
A I melodious thunder to the sound Of solemn
psedms,
' O I ago,' she said, ' betwixt these two
so Went forth ui I retinue following up
The I light shakes across the lakes,
" O tell her, brief is life but love Ls I,
combing out her I black hair Damp from the river ;
Came in I breezes rapt from inmost south
L lanes of splendour slanted o'er a press
rising up Robed in the I night of her deep hair,
I fantastic night With all ite doings
blast and bray of the I horn And serpent-throated bugle,
Suck'd from the dark heart of the I hills roll
All that I mom the liste were hammer'd up.
Lioness That with your I locks play the Lion's mane !
Till out of I frustration of her care.
The bosom with I sighs labour'd ;
Yet in the / years Hker must they grow ;
made The I fine of the approaching rookery swerve
Let the 1 1 procession go.
124
168
176
n40
387
439
476
m 78
195
iv 3
111
276
431
478
491
565
t>252
349
368
vi 164
mi 101
225
279
Con. 97
Ode on Well. 15
Long
419
Long-enduring
Long (adj. and adv.) {contwmed) The I self-sacrifice of life
is o'er. Ode on Well. 14
Thro' the I gorge to the far light has won „ 213
lo ! the I laborious miles Of Palace ; Ode Inter. Exhih. 11
Wheeh 'asta bean saw I and mea liggin' 'ere aloan ? N. Farmer, 0. S. 1
In those I galleries, were oiu« ; The Daisy 42
The lone glow and I roar (repeat) Voice and the P. 3, 39
Draw toward the I frost and longest night, A Dedication 11
' Ah, the I delay.' Window, When 10
Than that the victor Hours should scorn The I result
of love, In Mem. i 14
once more I stand Here in the Z unlovely street, „ vii 2
As parting with a I embrace She enters other realms
of love; .. a;Z 11
In some I trace should slumber on ; „ xliii 4
And in the I harmonious years „ xliv 9
But with I use her tears are dry. „ Ixxviii 20
and last Up that I walk of limes I past „ Ixxxvii 15
' We served thee herCj' they said, ' so Z, „ ciii 47
L sleeps the sunmier m the seed ; „ cv26
Now fades the last I streak of snow, „ cxv 1
Now rings the woodland loud and I, " ...^
There where the I street roars, „ cxxiii 3
0 true and tried, so well and I, „ Con. 1
Or the voice of the I sea-wave as it swell'd Maud I xiy 31
In the I breeze that streams to thy delicious East, „ xviii 16
Here will I he, while these I branches sway, „ 29
Maud made my Maud by that I loving kiss, „ 58
swell Of the I waves that roll in yonder bay ? „ 63
One I milk-bloom on the tree ; „ xxii 46
And as ^, O God, as she Have a grain of love for me, „ // ii 52
After I grief and pain To find the arms „ iv 2
We stood tranced in I embraces Mixt with kisses „ 8
Dead, I dead, L dead ! „ vl
My life has crept so Z on a broken wing „ /// vi 1
Blow trumpet, the I night hath roll'd away ! Com. of Arthur 483
Then those with Gareth for so Z a space Gareth and L. 231
seems Wellnigh as Z as thou art statured tall ! „ 282
For, midway down the side of that I hall A stately pile, — „ 404
Down the I avenues of a boundless wood, „ 785
Then after one I slope was mounted, saw, „ 795
Then to the shores of one of those I loops „ 905
and a I black horn Beside it hanging ; „ 1366
Prince Three times had blown — after I hush — „ 1378
Beheld the I street of a little town In a I valley, Marr. of Geraint 242
And down the I street riding wearily, „ 254
Geraint Drave the I spear a cubit thro' his breast Geraint and E. 86
sUde From the I shore-cliff's windy walls to the beach, „ 164
made The I way smoke beneath him in his fear ; „ 532
So for I hours sat Enid by her lord, „ 580
paced The I white walk of lilies toward the bower. Balin and Balan 249
Now with droopt brow down the I glades he rode ; „ 311
Where under one I lane of cloudless air „ 461
blind wave feeling round his I sea-hall In silence : Merlin and V. 232
1 sleepless nights Of my I life have made it easy to me. „ 679
A I, I weeping, not consolable, „ 856
she stole Down the I tower-stairs, hesitating : Lancelot and E. 343
Far o'er the I backs of the bushless downs, „ 400
Rode o'er the I backs of the bushless downs To
Camelot, .. 789
And after my I voyage I shall rest ! ' » 1061
And down the I beam stole the Holy Grail,
(repeat) Holy Grail 117, 188
out of this she plaited broad and I A strong
sword-belt, » 152
where the I Rich galleries, lady-laden, .. 345
Then a I silence came upon the hall, Pdleas and E. 609
his I lance Broken, and his Excahbur a straw.' Last Tournament 87
Sir Dagonet, one of thy I asses' ears, ,. 273
run itself All out Uke a I life to a sour end — „ 288
The I low dune, and lazy-plunging sea. .. 484
And craven shifts, and I crane le-gs of Mark — „ 729
I wave broke All down the thundering shores of Bude
and Bos Guinevere 290
Thro' the I gallery from the outer doors » 413
Long (adj. and adv.) {continued) down the I wind the
dream Shrill'd ; Pass, of Arthur 40
I mountains ended iii a coast Of ever-shifting sand, „ 85
Brightening the skirts of a Z cloud, „ 222
And the I ripple washing in the reeds.' „ 285
And the I glories of the winter moon. „ 360
I am going a I way With these thou seest — „ 424
Down that I water opening on the deep „ 466
L time entrancement held me. Lover's Tale i 626
her I ringlets moved. Drooping and beaten by the
breeze, i> . . ""^
winds Laid the I night in silver streaks and bars, „ tt 112
A I loud clash of rapid marriage-bells. „ iii 23
I knew another, not so I ago, „ i'o 262
Who let her in ? how I has she been ? Eizpah 13
Revenge ran on thro' the I sea-lane between. The Revenge 36
Fur Molly the I un she walkt awaay wi' a hofficer
lad. Village Wife 97
Her dear, I, lean, little arms lying out on the
counterpane ; In the Child. Hosp. 70
but how I, O Lord, how I ! Sir J. Oldcastle 124
Eighteen I years of waste, seven in your Spain, Columbus 36
I waterfalls Pour'd in a thunderless plimge V. of Maeldune 13
starr'd with a myriad blossom the I convolvulus hung ; „ 40
And nine I months of antenatal gloom, De Prof., Two G. 8
once for ten I weeks I tried Your table of
Pythagoras, To E. Fitzgerald 14
Ten I sweet summer days ui)on deck, The Wreck 64
Ten I days of summer and sin — >. 77
' Ten I sweet summer days ' of fever, „ 147
The last I stripe of waning crimson gloom, Ancient Sage 221
all the summer I we roam'd in these wild woods The Flight 79
now thy I day's work hath ceased, Epit. on Stratford 2
I seed the beck coomin' down Uke a I black snaake i'
the snaw, a,?"l^''^im
Had been abroad for my poor health so I The KingHn.
— and there she paused. And I ; » 335
L before the dawning. Forlorn 54
—the crash was I and loud— Happy 80
Not I to wait— To Map Boyle 58
While the I day of knowledge grows and warms. Prog, of k>prtng 101
Anon from out the I ravine below. Death of CEnone 19
By the I torrent's ever-deepen'd roar, ,, 85
Sa I sticks like the ivin as Z as I lives to the
owd chuch now, Churchwarden, etc. 15
Long (verb) I i to see a flower so before May Queen, N. ¥ s.E. 16
sweeter far is death than life to me that I to go. „ ?^'*V.«
that's aU, and I for rest ; Grardmothet 99
I I to prove No lapse of moons In Mem. xxvtZ
That Ps to burst a frozen bud » Ixxxtn 15
1 1 to creep Into some still cavern deep, Maud II iv 95
a sense might make her I for court Marr. of Geramt 803
L for my hfe, or hunger for my death, Geraint and E. 81
credulous Of what they I for, " , r^ fc?
I To have thee back in lusty life again, PeUeas and h. 6^1
Long-ann'd To meet the l-a vines with grapes To E. Fitzgerald 21
Long-bearded Stept the long-hair'd l-h solitary, Enoch Arden 637
From out thereimder came an ancient man, L-b, Gareth and L. 241
Long-betroth'd Lovers l-b were they : Lady Clare 6
Long-bounden his l-b tongue Was loosen'd, Enoch Arden M^
Long-buried Like that l-b body of the king, Aylmer s Fyddi
Long-closeted L-c with her the yestermom, J'^'^f^. ^'^ %^^
Long'd Has ever truly I for death. Two Voices 396
Annie's children I To go with others, Enoch Arden 6bZ
And swore he I at college, only I, Princess, Pro. 158
bird of passage flying south but I To follow : „ itt 210
I I so heartily then and there Maud I xni 15
That evermore she I to hide herself, Gareth and L. Ill
That when he stopt we I to hurl together, Merlin and V. 420
I never heard his voice But I to break away. Pdleas and E. 256
Had whatsoever meat he I for served Guinevere 265
away she sail'd with her loss and I for her own ; The Revenge 111
till we Z for eternal sleep. ■^^??,''5 o5
Long-enduring Mourn for the man of l-e blood, Ode on Well. 24
What l-e hearts could do In that world-earthquake, „ 132
Longer
Longer the I night is near :
That he had lored her I than she knew,
So she rests a Uttle I,
If she sleeps a little I,
ripen'd earlier, and her life Was I ;
I last but a moment I.
unto I heard no I The snowy-banded, dilettante,
420
Look
I
Vision of Sin 196
Enoch Arden 455
Sea Dreams 299
Princess ii 155
Spiteful Letter 12
Maud I viii 9
' I lead no I ; ride thou at my side ; Gareth and L. 1157
but in scarce I time Than at Caerleon the full-tided
Usk, Geraint and E. 115
Clung closer to us for a i term Than any friend Columbus 197
Then a little I . . . Forlorn 64
Fell on a shadow. No Z a shadow, Merlin and the G. 93
And can no I, But die rejoicing, „ 111
Paris, no I beauteous as a God, Death of CEnone 25
an old fane No I sacred to the Sun, St. Telemachus 7
Doubt no I that the Highest is the wisest Faith 1
Longest growing I by the meadow's edge, Geraint and E. 257
The I lance his eyes had ever seen, Balin and Balan 411
Draw toward the long frost and I night, A Dedication 11
Long-forgotten Sxmg by a l-f mind. In Mem. Ixxvii 12
Long-haird l-h page in crimson clad, L. of Shalott ii 22
Stept the l-h long-bearded solitary, Enoch Arden 637
Long-illumined when the l-i cities flame, Ode on Well. 228
Longing (part.) ever I to explain, The Brook 107
Longing (s) (See also Love-longing) Geraint had I
in him evermore Marr. of Geraint 394
And Enid fell in Z for a dress „ 630
my heart Went after her with I : Holy Grail 583
her I and her will Was toward me as of old ; „ 590
Love and L dress thy deeds in light, Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 9
Long-known the view L-k and loved by me. Pro. to Gen. Hamley 6
Long-laid l-l galleries past a hundred doors Princess vi 375
Long-lanced The l-l battle let their horses run. Com. of Arthur 104
Long-leaved in the stream the l-l flowers weep, Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 10
Long-limb'd l-l lad that had a Psyche too ; Princess ii 406
Long-neck'd From the l-n geese of the world Maud I iv 52
Long-pent all the l-j> stream of hfe Day- Dm., Revival 15
Long-pondering Enoch lay l-p on his plans ; Enoch Arden 133
Long-promised I go On that l-p visit to the North. Sisters (E. and E.) 188
Long-soonding FuU of l-s corridors it was. Palace of Art 53
Long-sufferance Trying his truth and his l-s, Enoch Arden 470
Long-suffering I that thought myself l-s, Aylmer's Field 753
' Full of compassion and mercy — Vs.' Rizpah 63
Suffering — 0 l-s — yes, „ 67
Long-sweeping those l-s beechen boughs Of our
New Forest. Sisters (E. and E.) 112
Long-tail'd Like l-t birds of Paradise, Day- Dm., Ep. 7
Long-tormented Thro' the l-t air Ode on Well. 128
Long-vaulted Far over heads in that l-v hall Gareth and L. 319
Long-windMl her father came across With some l-w tale, The Brook 109
And there he told a long l-w tale „ 138
Long-wisb'd-for Cahning itself to the l-w-f end, Mavd I xviii 5
Long-withdrawn Betwixt the black fronts Z-w In Mem. cxix 6
Look (i) Wherefore those dim I's of thine, Adeline 9
Hence that I and smile of thine, „ 63
He thought of that sharp I, mother. May Queen 15
sons inherit us : our I's are strange : Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 73
with sick and scornful I's averse, D. of F. Women 101
How sweet are I's that ladies bend Sir Galahad 13
Hours, when the Poet's words and I's Will Water. 193
their eyes Glaring, and passionate I's, Sea Dreams 236
A liquid { on Ida, full of prayer. Princess iv 369
This / of quiet flatters thus In Mem. x 10
Treasuring the I it cannot find, „ xniii 19
And look thy I, and go thy way, „ xlix 9
The voice was low, the I was briight ; „ Ixix 15
they meet thy I And brighten like the star „ Con. 30
her I Bright for aU others, Pdleas and E. 176
large light eyes and her gracious I's, Prog, of Spring 19
Look (verb) (See also Looiik) Shall we not I into
the laws Of life and death, Sv^. Confessions 172
She could not I on the sweet heaven, Mariana 15
How could 1 1 upon the day ? Oriana 59
I should I like a lounJain of gold The Mermaid 18
Look (verb) (continued) I in at the gate With his large
calm eyes The Mermaid 26
the sun L's thro' in his sad decline, Adeline 13
Or only I across the lawn, L out below your bower-
eaves, L down, and let your blue eyes dawn Margaret 65
curse is on her if she stay To I down to Gamelot. L. of Shalott ii 5
With a glassy countenance Did she I to Camelot. „ iv 14
To / at her with slight, and say Mariana in the S. 66
To I into her eyes and say, ,. 75
L up thro' night : the world is wide. Two Voices 24
L up, the fold is on her brow. „ 192
L's down upon the viUage spire : Miller's D. 36
I knew you could not I but well ; „ 150
L thro' mine eyes with thine. „ 215
L thro' my veiy soul with thine ! „ 218
I, the sunset, south and north, „ 241
I shall I upon your face ; May Queen, N. Y's. E. 38
O I ! the sun begins to lise, „ Con. 49
' Come here, That I may I on thee.' D. of F. Women 124
What else was left ? I here ! ' „ 156
' Turn and I on me : „ 250
He cried,.' L\ II' Before he ceased I turn'd, Gardener's D. 121
therefore / to Dora ; she is well To Z to ; Dora 15
i to it ; Consider, William : „ 28
for you may I on me. And in your looking St. S. Stylites 140
dipt and rose, And turn'd to Z at her. Talking Oak 132
L further thro' the chace, „ 246
0 might it come like one that l's content. Love and Duty 93
Did 1 Z on great Orion sloping slowly to the West. Locksley Hall 8
whom to I at was to love. „ 72
Underneath the light he l's at, „ 116
No eye Z down, she passing ; Godiva 40
Nor Z with that too-earnest eye — Day-Dm., Pro. 18
Go, Z in any glass anil say, „ Moral 3
I Z at all things as they are, IVill Water. 71
And he came to I upon her, L. of Burleigh 93
As l's a father on the things Of his dead son, The Letters 23
'■ O ! we two as well can I Whited thought Vision of Sin 115
know I That I shall Z upon your face no more.'
' Well then,' said Enoch, ' I shall Z on youre. Enoch Arden 212
L to the babes, and till I come again „ 219
Cared not to I on any human face, „ 282
' I cannot Z you in the face I seem so foolish „ 315
So much to Z to — such a change — „ 461
' If I might Z on her sweet face again „ 718
our pride L's only for a moment whole Aylmer's Field 2
1 upon her As on a kind of paragon ; Princess i 154
L, our hall ! Our statues ! — „ ii 75
since to Z on noble fonns Makes noble „ 86
Z ! for such are these and 1.' „ 268
blessing those that Z on them. „ Hi 256
you Z well too in your woman's dress : „ iv 529
Begone : we will not Z upon you more. „ 547
'i. He has been among his shadows.' „ » 32
Z up : be comforted : „ 66
L up, and let thy nature strike on mine, „ vii 351
' L there, a garden ! ' said my coUege friend, „ Con. 49
strong on his legs, he l's Uke a man. Grandmother 2
Why do you Z at me, Annie ? „ 17
To I on her that loves him well, In Mem. viii 2
And I on Spirits breathed away, „ xl 2
And Z thy look, and go thy way, „ xlix 9
The dead shall Z me thro' and thro'. „ Ii 12
Dost thou Z back on what hath been, „ Ixiv 1
L's thy fair face and makes it still. „ Ixx 16
She did but Z thro' dimmer eyes ; „ cxxv 6
eye to eye, shall Z On knowledge ; „ Con. 129
( L at it) pricking a cockney ear. Maud I x22
L, a horse at the door, „ xii 29
l's Upon Maud's own gai-den-gate : „ xiv 15
That I dare to Z her way ; „ xvill
we I at him, And find nor face nor bearing. Com. of Arthur 70
beard That l's as white as utter truth, Gareth and L. 281
Kay the seneschal L to thy wants, „ 434
L therefore when he calls for this in hall, „ 583
J
Look
421
Look'd-Lookt
Look (verb) (continued) I who comes behind,'
(repeat)
Shalt not once dare to I him in the face.'
and I thou to thyself :
L on it, child, and tell me if ye know it.'
And once again she rose to 2 at it,
Eat ! L yourself. Grood luck had your good man,
Until my lord arise and I upon me ? '
I will not I at wine until I die.'
came The King's own leech to I into his hurt ;
Gareth and L. 752, 1210
782
920
Marr. of Geraint 684
Geraint and E. 387
617
650
667
923
L to the cave
these be fancies of the churl, L to thy woodcraft,'
Squire had loosed them, ' Goodly ! — I !
How hard you I and how denyingly !
A square of text that I's a little blot,
For I upon his face ! — but if he sinn'd,
A sight ye love to I on.'
wherefore would ye I On this proud fellow again,
and she, L how she sleeps —
' See ! I at mine ! but wilt thou fight
' L, He haunts me — I cannot breathe —
ye I amazed, Not knowing they were lost
cried the Breton, ' L, her hand is red !
this I gave thee, Z, Is all as cool and white
Art thou King ?— i to thy life ! '
not I up, or half-despised the height
face of old ghosts L in upon the battle ;
I at them. You lose yourself in utter ignorance ;
Of eyes too weak to I upon the light ;
And could 1 1 upon her tearful eyes ?
would not I at her — No not for months :
an' I's so wan an' so white :
I had but to Z in his face.
he was fear'd to Z at me now.
L at the cloaths on 'er back.
For I you here — the shadows are too deep,
I's at it, and says, ' Good ! very like !
that one light no man can I upon,
I cannot laud this life, it Vs so dark :
I yonder,' he cried, ' a sail '
I shall I on the child again.
whence, if thou L higher.
But I, the morning grows apace,
till the Lion I no larger than the Cat,
O heart, I down and up Serene,
from thine own To that which I's like rest.
Why do you I so gravely at the tower ?
but you I so kind That you will
L, the sun has risen To flame along another dreary
day.
L, in their deep double shadow
morning that Is so bright from afar !
L, he stands. Trunk and bough,
L how the living pulse of Alia beats
L to your butts, and take good aims !
Balin and Balan 306
308
576
Merlin and V. 338
671
761
Lancelot and E. 83
1064
1255
Pelleas and E. 127
226
Last Tournament 41
412
415
454
Guinevere 643
Pass, of Arthur 104
Lover's Tale i 78
614
735
iv 26
First Qttarrel 2
16
38
NoHh. Cobbler 109
Sisters (E. and E.)1GS
135
De Prof., Two G. 37
To W. H. Brookfidd 12
The Wreck 121
124
Ancient Sage 281
The Flight 93
Locksley H., Sixty 112
Early Spring 27
Pref. Poem Broth. S. 6
The Sing 80
Eomney's R. 21
Look'd-Lobkt (See also Loook'd-Loookt)
look'd sad and strange :
look'd to shame The hollow-vaulted dark.
Hast thou look'd upon the breath Of the lilies
when first I look'd upon your face.
She look'd down to Camelot.
I might have look'd a little higher ;
And turning look'd upon your face,
I look'd athwart the bm-ning drouth
I look'd And listen'd, the full-flowing river
when I look'd, Paris had raised his arm.
He look'd so grand when he was dead,
slept St. Cecily ; An angel look'd at her.
her face Glow'd, as I look'd at her.
I have not look'd upon you nigh,
when I look'd again, behold an arm,
this is also true, that, long before I look'd upon her,
She look'd : but all Suffused with blushes —
57
Parnassus 13
By an Evolution. 10
The Oak 13
Akbar's Dream 41
Riflemen form ! 16
broken sheds
Mariana 5
Arabian Nights 125
Adeline 36
Sonnet To 9
L. of Shalott Hi 41
Miller's D. 140
157
Fatima 13
(Enone67
„ 189
The Sisters 32
Palace of Art 100
D. of F. Women 240
To J. S. 33
M. d' Arthur 158
Gardener's D. 62
153
He often look'd at them. And often thought,
more he look'd at her The less he liked her ;
Dora 3
., 34
Look'd-Lookt (continued) Mary sat And look'd with tears upon
her boy, " Dora 57
I look'd at him with joy : Talking Oak 106
She look'd with discontent. „ 116
Look'd down, half -pleased, half-frighten'd, Amphion 54
She look'd into Lord Ronald's eyes, Lady Clare 79
Then they look'd at him they hated. The Captain 37
And he look'd at her and said, L. of Burleigh 94
She look'd so lovely, as she sway'd Sir L. and Q. G. 40
things Of his dead son, I look'd on these. The Letters 24
then I look'd up toward a mountain-tract, Vision of Sin 46
And all men look'd upon him favourably : Enoch Arden 56
Philip look'd, And in their eyes and faces „ 72
(Since Enoch left he had not look'd upon her), „ 273
silent, tho' he often look'd his wish ; „ 482
he look'd up. There stood a maiden near. The Brook 204
and here he look'd so self-perplext, „ 213
What look'd a flight of fairy arrows Aylmer's Field 94
One look'd all rosetree, and another wore „ 157
And after look'd into yourself, „ 312
Half-canonized by all that look'd on her, Princess i 23
hiUs, that look'd across a land of hope, „ 169
And every face she look'd on justify it) „ v 134
then once more she look'd at my pale face : „ vi 115
Look'd up, and rising slowly from me, „ 151
do\vn she look'd At the sirm'd man sideways, „ 156
with shut eyes I lay Listening ; then look'd. „ vii 224
Who look'd all native to her place, „ 323
and look'd the thing that he meant ; Grandmother 45
I look'd at the still little body — „ 66
look'd the Lombard piles ; The Daisy 54
And look'd at by the silent stars : Lit. Squabbles 4
That ever look'd with human eyes. In Mem. Ivii 12
He look'd upon my crown and smiled : „ Ixix 16
I look'd on these and thought of thee „ xevii 6
and thee mine eyes Have look'd on : if they look'd
in vain, „ cix 22
And how she look'd, and what he said, „ Con. 99
The sun look'd out with a smile Maud I ix 3
I look'd, and round, all round the house „ xiv 33
To have look'd, tho' but in a dream, upon eyes „ /// vi 16
and look'd no more — But felt his young heart Gareth and L. 321
fire, That lookt half-dead, brake bright, „ 685
lord Now look'd at one and now at other, „ 869
and Gareth lookt and read — In letters „ 1201
' God wot, I never look'd upon the face, „ 1333
He look'd and saw that all was ruinous. Marr. of Geraint 315
dress that now she look'd on to the dress She
look'd on ere the coming of Geraint. „ 613
still she look'd, and still the terror grew „ 615
Enid look'd, but all confused at first, „ 685
not to goodly hill or yellow sea Look'd the fair
Queen, „ 831
They rode so slowly and they look'd so pale, Geraint and E. 35
he tum'd and look'd as keenly at her „ 430
And Geraint look'd and was not satisfied. „ 435
Once she look'd back, and when she saw him ride „ 441
By having look'd too much thro' alien eyes, „ 892
have ye look'd At Edym ? have ye seen how nobly
changed ? „ 896
He look'd and foimd them wanting ; „ 935
It look'd a tower of ivied masonwork, Merlin and V. 4
when I look'd, and saw you following still, „ 299
Merlin look'd and half believed her tme, „ 400
Won by the mellow voice before she look'd, Lancelot and E. 243
He look'd, and more amazed Than if seven men „ 350
Lancelot look'd and was perplext in mind, „ 838
wherein she deem'd she looVd her best, „ 907
and look'd Down on his helm, „ 981
whence the King Look'd up, calling aloud. Holy Grail 219
large her violet eyes look'd, and her bloom A rosy
dawn Pelleas and E. 71
tum'd the lady round And look'd upon her people ; „ 92
Pelleas look'd Noble among the noble, „ 151
The Queen Look'd hard upon her lover, „ 605
Look'd-Lookt
422
Loosed
Look'd-Lookt {continued) He look'd but once, and
vail'd his eyes Last Tournament 150
that desert lodge to Tristram lookt So sweet, „ 387
look'd and saw The great Queen's bower was dark, — „ 757
Hliich when she he^, the Queen look'd up, Guinevere 164
the pale Queen look'd up and answer'd her, „ 327
she look'd and saw The novice, weeping, „ 663
of those who falling do>vn Look'd up for heaven, Pass, of Arthur 112
But when I look'd again, behold an arm, „ 326
A stately moimtain nymph she look'd ! Lover's Tale i 359
bridge is there, that, look'd at from beneath Seems „ 375
looking down On all that had look'd down on us ; „ 388
Look'd forth the summit and the pinnacles „ ii 81
All that look'd on her had pronoimced her dead. „ iv 35
look'd No less than one divine apology. „ 168
look'd, as he is like to prove, „ 314
but he looked at me sidelong and shy. First Quarrel 35
the Lord has look'd into my care, Rizpah 75
soldiers looked down from their decks and laugh'd. The Revenge 37
an niver lookt arter the land — Village Wife 25
can well believe, for he look'd so coarse and
so red. In the Child. Hosp. 7
Each of them look'd like a king, V. of Maeldune 3
Down we look'd : what a garden ! „ 78
Folded her lion paws, and look'd to Thebes. Tiresias 149
He look'd at it coldly, and said The Wreck 34
and I look'd at him, first, askance. With pity — „ 43
baby-girl, that had never look'd on the light : Despair 71
yet he look'd beyond the grave, Locksley H., Sixty 60
look'd the twin of heathen hate. „ 86
You came, and looT^d and loved the view Pro. to Gen. Hamley 5
Then he look'd at the host that had halted Heavy Brigade 7
and a sudden face Look'd in upon me The Ring 420
When I look'd at the bracken so bright June Bracken, etc. 3
Looketh moon cometh. And I down alone. Claribel 14
Lookblg She, I thro' and thro' me Lilian 10
But, I fixedly the while, Madeline 39
Then I as 'twere in a glass, A Character 10
All I up for the love of me. The Mermaid 51
All I down for the love of me. „ 55
As a Naiad in a well, L at the set of day, Adeline 17
Sang I thro' his prison bars ? Margaret 35
' But I upward, full of grace. Two Voices 223
Grow, live, die I on his face, Fatima 41
I over wasted lands. Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 114
And I wistfully with wide blue eyes M. d' Arthur 169
And in your I you may kneel to God. St. S. Stylites 141
I ancient kindness on thy pain. Locksley Hall 85
Brown, I hardly human, Enoch Arden 638
Then I at her ; ' Too happy, fresh and fair. The Brook 217
In I on the happy Autumn-fields, Princess iv 42
stood The placid marble Muses, I peace. „ 489
And I back to whence I came. In Mem. xxiii 7
Sat silent, I each at each. „ xxx 12
Lest life should fail in I back. „ xlvi 4
Now I to some settled end, „ Ixxxv 97
And Z to the South, and fed With honey'd
rain Maud I xviii 20
L, tbinkii^ of all I have lost ; „ II ii 46
Arthur, I downward as he past. Com. of Arthur 55
slowly spake the mother I at him, Gareth and L. 151
Gareth I after said, ' My men, „ 296
Not turning round, nor I at him, Marr. of Geraint 270
And I round he saw not Enid there, „ 506
Then rose Limours, and I at his feet, Geraint and E. 302
then he spoke and said. Not I at her, Ma-lin and V. 247
• I once was I for a magic weed, „ 471
/ at her. Full courtly, yet not falsely, Lancelot and E. 235
Lancelot knew that she was I at him. „ 985
I often from his face who read „ 1285
/ up. Behold, the enchanted towers of Carbonek, Holy Grail 812
M he lay At random I over the brown earth Pelleas and E. 32
80 that his eyes were dazzled I at it. „ 36
Gawain, / at the villainy done, „ 282
S»t tbdr greftt umpire, I o'er the lists. Last Toun^ment 159
Looking (continued) Here I down on thine polluted.
And I wistfully with wide blue eyes
L on her that brought him to the light :
We often paused, and, I back,
I down On all that had look'd down on us ;
I roxmd upon his tearful friends.
And I as much lovelier as herself
in the chapel there I over the sand ?
your know-all chapel too I over the sand.
I still as if she smiled,
I upward to the practised hustings-liar ;
but wool's I oop ony how.
With farther I's on.
Lookt See Look'd
Loom (s) She left the web, she left the I,
A present, a great labour of the I ;
rent The wonder of the I thro' warp and woof
L and wheel and enginery,
Display'd a splendid silk of foreign I,
Thy presence in the silk of sumptuous I's ;
Loom (verb) smoke go up thro' which I Z to her
Makes former gladness I so great ?
overheated language I Larger than the Lion, —
Looming To sail with Arthur under I shores,
A I bastion fringed with fire.
a phantom king. Now I, and now lost ;
Loomp (lump) the poor in a Z is bad.
ilui' 'e digg'd up a i! i' the land
Loon Dish-washer and broach-turner, I ! —
Loo5k (look) Dubbut I at the waaste :
an' fuzz, an' I at it now —
L 'ow quoloty smoiles
L thou theer wheer Wrigglesby beck cooms out
I'll I my hennemy strait i' the faace,
an' let ma I at 'im then,
and I thruf Maddison's gaate '
Fur a cat may Z at a king
Loodk'd-Loookt (look'd-Iookt) I loook'd cock-eyed at
my noase
an' Sally looiJkt up an' she said.
But 'e niver loollkt ower a bill,
ghoast i' the derk, fur it loookt sa white.
But whiniver I loooked i' the glass
An' I loookt out wonst at the night.
Loop (See also Biver-Ioop) a river Runs in three
I's about her living-place ;
Then to the shore of one of those long I's
aU in I's and links among the dales
Thro' knots and I's and folds innumerable
Loophole death from the I's around.
Looping great fimereal curtains, I down.
Loose (adj.) He dodged me with a long and I account.
I found a hard friend in hLs I accounts, A I one
torn raiment and I hair,
one night I cooms 'oam like a bull gotten I at
a f aair.
Loose (verb) that she would I The people :
Let me I thy tongue with wine :
' Fear not thou to I thy tongue ;
when they ran To I him at the stables,
/ A flying charm of blushes o'er this cheek,
growing commerce I her latest chain,
— dismount and I their casques
I thy tongue, and let me know.'
I the bond, and go.'
Would I him from his hold ;
Shall we hold them ? shall we I them ?
Loosed She I the chain, and down she lay ;
And I the shatter'd casque,
I their sweating horses from the yoke,
and I him from his vow.
Sir Gareth I A cloak that dropt
Gareth I the stone From off his neck,
I his bonds and on free feet Set him,
he Z a mighty purse, Hung at his belt.
Guinevere 555]
Pass, of Arthur 337]
Lover's Tale i 1601
329
387|
792|
iv 287]
Despair 1
„ 94
Locksley H., Sixty 35
123
Church-warden, etc. 6
Miller's D. 231
L. of Shalott Hi 37
Princess i 44
62
Ode Inter. Exhib. 15
Geraint and E. 687
Ancient Sage 266
Princess v 130
In Mem. xxiv 10
Locksley H., Sixty 113
M. d' Arthur, Ep. 17
In Mem. xv 20
Com. of Arthur 431
N. Farmer, N. S. 48
Village Wife 48
Gareth and L. 770 1
N. Farmer, 0. S. 371
38]
" N.S.5Z
North. Cobbler 14
73
Spinster's S's.
34
NoHh. Cobbler 26
Village Wife 51
Spinster's S's.
Owd Rod 39
Gareth and L. 612
Lancelot and E.\t
Def. of Lucknow 79
Lover's Tale iv 214
Sea Dreams \A
16
Gareth and L. 12
North. Cobbler'.
Godiva 37
Vision of Sin i
Aylmer's Field 12fl
Princess ii 42"
Ode Inter. Exhib. 33i
Balin and Balan 573
Pelleas and E. 60
To the Queen iill"
Ancient Sage 118
Locksley H., Sixty 118
L. of Shalott iv 16j
M. d' Arthur 2091
Spec, of Iliad I
Gareth and L. 53'
Geraint and E.
Loosed
423
Lord
Loosed (continued) I in words of sudden fire the wrath Geraint and E. 106
I the fastenings of his arms, „ 511
And when the Squire had I them, Balin and Balan 575
our bond Had best be I for ever : Merlin and V. 342
Merlin I his hand from hers and said, „ 356
All ears were prick'd at once, all tongues were I : Lancelot and E. 724
Because he had not I it from his helm, „ 809
entering, I and let him go.' Holy Grail 698
Pelleas rose, And I his horse, Pdleas and E. 61
Forth spranig Gawain, and I him from his bonds, „ 315
and her heart was I Within her, Guinevere 667
And I the shatter'd casque, Pass, of Arthur 377
L from their simple thrall they had flow'd abroad, Lover's Tale i 703
/ My captives, feed the rebels of the crown, Columbus 130
mortal limit of the Self was I, Ancient Sage 232
Loosen I's from the lip Short swallow-flights In Mem. xlviii 14
/, stone from stone, All my fair work ; Akbar's Dream 188
Loosen'd Ids long-bounden to"ngue Was I, Enoch .irden 645
And shake the darkness from their I manes, Tithonus 41
The team is I from the wain, In Mem. cxxi 5
skirts are I bv the breaking storm, Geraint and E. 4&Q
Had I from the mountain. Lover's Tale ii 46
She comes ! The I rivulets run ; Prog, of Spring 9
Loosener fierce or careless I's of the faith, To the Queen ii 52
Looser and turning, wound Her I hair in braid. Gardener's D. 158
Loov (love) an' the I o' God fur men, North. Cobbler 55
I 'a gotten to I 'im agean „ 96
L's 'im, an' roobs 'im, an' doosts 'im, „ 98
I l's tha to maake thysen 'appy. Spinster's S's. 57
Loove (love) To I an' obaay the Tommies ! „ 96
Loov'd (loved) fur I Z 'er as well as afoor. North. Cobbler 60
Loovin' (loving) ' A faaithful an' I wife ! ' Spinster's S's. 72
Lop His wonted glebe, or l's the glades ; In Mem. ci 22
Who l's the moulder'd branch away. Hands all Round 8
Lopping L away of the limb by the pitiful-pitiless
knife,— Def. of Lucknow 85
Lord (8) (See also Liege-lord, Pheasant-lord) My
i, if 80 it be Thy will.' Supp. Confessions 106
O hither, come hither, and be our l's, Sea- Fairies 32
' L, how long shall these things be ? Poland 9
Knight and biu^her, I and dame, L. of Shalott iv 43
' Omega ! thou art L,' they said, Two Voices 278
L over Nature, L of the visible earth, L of the
senses five ; Palace of Art 179
fall'n in Lyonnesse about their L, M. d' Arthur 4
What record, or what relic of my I „ 98
Such a I is Love, Gardener's D. 57
by the L that made me, you shall pack, Dora 31
Have mercy, L, and take away my sin. St. S. Stylites 8
0 take the meaning, L: „ 21
O L, L, Thou knowest I bore this better „ 27
Bethink thee, L, while thou and all the saints „ 105
L, thou knowest what a man I am ; „ 121
O L, Aid all this foolish people ; „ 222
It may be my I is weary, Locksley Hall 53
She sought her I, and found him, Godiva 16
robed and crown'd, To meet her /, „ 78
How say you ? we have slept, my Vs. Day-Dm., Revival 21
My I, and shall we pass the bill „ 27
That lead me to my L : St. Agnes' Eve 8
Break up the heavens, O i ! „ 21
Ancient homes of I and lady, L. of Burleigh 31
Not a Hn all the country Is so great a i „ 59
' It is no wonder,' said the l's, Beggar Maid 7
L's of his house and of his mill Enoch Arden 351
reigning in his place, L of his rights „ 764
' After the L has call'd me she shall know, „ 810
Were he I of this. Why twenty boys and girls Aylmer's Field 370
And laughter to their l's : „ 498
There the manorial I too curiously Raking „ 513
came a i in no wise like to Baal. „ 647
thy brother man, the L from Heaven, „ 667
the light yoke of that L of love, „ 708
scowl'd At their great I. „ 725
made Their own traditions God, and slew the L, „ 795
Lord (s) (cotUimied) And her the Z of all the landscape
round Aylmer's Field 815
Remembering her dear L who died for all. Sea Dreams 47
But honeying at the whisper ot al; Princess, Pro. 115
with those self-styled our l's ally Your fortunes, „ H 65
the L be gracious to me ! A plot, „ 191
make all women kick against their L's „ iv 412
The lifting of whose eyelash is my I, „ v 140
But overborne by all his bearded l's „ 356
I of the ringing lists, „ 502
and the great l's out and in, „ vi 382
A Z of fat prize-oxen and of sheep, „ Con. 86
Mt L's, we heard you speak : Third of Feb. 1
It was our ancient privilege, my L's, „ 5
my L's, not well : there Ls a higher law. „ 12
my L's, you make the people muse „ 31
And praise the invisible universal L, Ode Inter. Exhih. 3
thou, O L, art more than they. In Mem., Pro. 20
And not from man, O L, to thee. „ 36
her future L Was drown'd in passing thro' tlie ford, „ vi 38
A Z of large experience, „ xlii 7
Procuress to the L's of Hell. „ UH 16
To what I feel is i of all, „ Iv 19
On souls, the lesser l's of doom. „ exii 8
Love is and was my L and King, „ cxxvi 1
Love is and was my King and L, „ 5
old man, now I of the broad estate and the Hall, Mavd 7 1 19
eft was of old the L and Master of Earth, „ iv 31
This new-made I, whose splendour plucks „ xZ
To a Z, a captain, a padded shape, . „ 29
Go back, my I, across the moor, „ xii 31
L of the pulse that is Z of her breast, „ xvi 13
What, if she be fasten'd to this fool I, „ 24
He came with the babe-faced I ; „ II i 13
And another, a Z of all things, praying „ v 32
L's and Barons of his realm Flash'd forth Com. of Arthur 65
make myself in mine own realm Victor and I. „ 90
your l's stir up the heat of war, „ 169
l's Of that fierce day were as the l's „ 215
the l's Have foughten like wild beasts „ 225
but after, the great l's Banded, „ 236
Hath power to walk the waters like our L. „ 294
' King and my I, I love thee to the death ! ' „ 470
L's from Rome before the portal stood, ■ „ 477
at the banquet those great L's from Rome, „ 504
so those great l's Drew back in wrath, „ 513
crying ' Let us go no further, I. Gareth and L. 198
' L, we have heard from our wise man „ 201
' L, there is no such city anywhere, „ 206
' L, the gateway is alive.' „ 235
reft From my dead I a field with violence : „ 335
my I, The field was pleasant in my husband's eye.' „ 341
thine own hand thou slewest my dear I, „ 352
The woman loves her I. „ 372
Dehvering, that his I, the vassal king, „ 391
The L for half a league. „ 596
Sweet I, how like a noble knight he talks ! „ 777
' They have bound my I to cast him in the mere.' „ 803
But an this I will jdeld us harbourage, „ 844
the I Now look'd at one and now at other, „ 868
the I whose life he saved Had, „ 888
' Thou hast made us l's, and canst not put us down ! ' „ 1132
Good I, how sweetly smells the honeysuckle „ 1287
ramp and roar at leaving of your I ! — „ 1307
ever yet was wife True to her I, Mart, of Geraint 47
I cannot love my I and not his name. „ 92
Than that my I thro' me should suffer shame. „ 101
see my dear I wounded in the strife, „ 103
' Smile and we smile, the l's of many lands ; Frown
and we smile, the l's of our own hands ; „ 353
l's and ladies of the high court went „ 662
save her dear I whole from any wound. Geraint and E. 45
' I will go back a little to my I, „ 65
That that my I should suffer loss or shame.' „ 69
' My I, I saw three bandits by the rock „ 72
Lord
424
Lordly
Lord (>) (continiud) Whereof one seem'd far larger
than her I,
' I will abide the coming of my I,
My I is weary with the fight before.
My I, eat also, tho' the fare is coarse,
To close with her Vs pleasure ;
* My I, you overpay me fifty-fold.'
* Yea, my kind <,' said the glad youth,
to which She answer'd, ' Thanks, my I ; '
the wild I of the place, Limours.
Nor cared a broken egg-shell for her I.
tending her rough I, tho' all unask'd,
* My I, I scarce have spent the worth of one ! '
* Yea, my I, I know Your wish,
Then not to disobey her I's behest,
Start from their fallen I's, and wildly fly,
swathed the hurt that drain'd her dear I's life.
So for long hours sat Enid by her I,
Until my I arise and look upon me ? '
I will not drink Till my dear I arise and bid me do it,
' In this poor gown my dear I found me first,
Except he surely knew my I was dead,'
Let be : ye stand, fair Z, as in a dream.' Balin and Balan 258
'£, thou couldst lay the Devil of these woods „ 298
'i, Why wear ye this crown-royal upon shield ? '
fire of Heaven is i of all things good,
Their brother beast, whose anger was his I.
Again she sigh'd ' Pardon, sweet I !
this fair I, The flower of all their vestal knighthood,
in this lone wood, Sweet I, ye do right well
angels of our L's report,
like a bride's On her new I, her own,
she call'd him I and liege,
' Yea, I,' she said, ' ye know it.'
Henceforth be truer to your faultless I ? '
That passionate perfection, my good I —
In battle with the love he bare his Z,
' O there, great I, doubtless,' Lavaine said,
at Caerleon had he help'd his I,
' Save your great self, fair I ; '
' Fair I, whose name I know not —
Needs must be lesser likelihood, noble I,
our liege I, The dread Pendragon,
L's of waste marches, kings of desolate isles,
' L, no sooner had ye parted from us,
' Yea, I,' she said, ' Thy hopes are mine,*
' What news from Camelot, I ?
Nay, for near you, fair I, I am at rest.'
Prince and L am I In mine own land,
' Is it for Lancelot, is it for mv dear I ?
Nay, by the mother of our L himself,
ever in the reading, l's and dames Wept,
Fair I, as would have help'd her from her death.'
when now the l's and dames And people,
cup itself from which our L Drank at the last sad supper Holy Grail 46
thorn Blossoms at Christmas, mindful of our L. „ 53
a hundred winters old, From our L's time.
* Nay, for my I' said Percivale,
I, I heard the sound, I saw the light,
I, and therefore have we sworn our vows.'
seem'd to me the L of all the world,
when the L of all things made Himself
blessed L, I speak too earthlywise,
' Nay, I' said Gawain, ' not for such as I,
' Glory and joy and honour to our L
And / of many a barren isle was he —
and remain L of the tourney.
L, I was tending swine
Geraint and E. 122
131
133
208
214
220
241
264
277
364
405
411
418
450
482
516
580
650
665
721
337
452
488
497
507
529
Merlin and F. 16
617
953
Lancdot and E. 80
119
122
246
281
297
320
360
367
423
527
576
606
620
833
916
1105
1230
1284
1311
1346
Watch'd her I pass, and knew not that she sigh'd.
and in her bosom pain was I.
thank the Z I am King Arthur's fool.
Mark her I had past, the Cornish King,
in the heart of Arthur pain was I.
' Why weep ye ? ' ' L^ she said,
a doubtful I To bind them by inviolable vows,
205
280
285
414
447
627
741
839
Pdleas and E. 19
163
Last Tournament 71
130
239
320
382
486
494
687
Lord (s) (continued) tamper'd with the L's of the White Horse,
false traitor have displaced his I,
to lead her to his I Arthur,
tho' thou wouldst not love thy I, Thy I has wholly
lost his love for thee,
leagues With L's of the White Horse,
' Gone — my I ! Gone thro' my sin to slay and to be slain !
Gone, my I the King, My own true I !
Ah great and gentle I, Who wast,
wife and child with wail Pass to new l's ;
fall'n in Lyonnesse about their I,
What record, or what reUc of my I
Artificer and subject, I and slave,
' O my heart's I, would I could show you,'
Julian goes, the I of all he saw.
Bible verse of the L's good will toward men —
' Full of compassion and mercy, the L '
yes, as the L must know,
the L has look'd into my care,
' Stan' 'im theer i' the naame o' the L
for the glory of the L.
And the L hath spared our lives.
An' I thowt 'twur the will o' the L,
thebbe aU wi' the L my childer.
But I beant that sewer es the L,
where the works of the L are reveal'd
' but then if I call to the L,
The L has so miich to see to !
L of the children had heard her,
Judah, for in thee the L was bom ;
L give thou power to thy two witnesses !
than to persecute the L, And play the Saul
Ah rather, L, than that thy Gospel,
but how long, 0 L, how long !
L of life Be by me in my death.
Chains, my good I : in your raised brows
All glory to the mother of our L,
I saw The glory of the L flash up,
walk within the glory of the L
The L had sent this bright, strange dream „ 91
O my I, I swear to vou I heard his voice „ 144
Still for aU that, my Z, „ 163
Remember the words of the L when he told us V. of Maddune 120
L of human tears ; Child-lover ; To Victor Hugo 3
Athelstan King, L among Earls, Batt. of Brunanburh 2
Lamp of the L God L everlasting, „ 27
thanks to the L that I niver not listen'd to noan ! Spinster's S's. 8
GrvAnevere 15
„ 216
„ 383
„ 508
n 574
„ 612
„ 616
„ 638
Pass, of Arthur 45
173
266
Lover's Tale ii 103
iv 250
315
Rizvah 61
62
67
75
North. Cobbler 73
The Revenge 21
93
Village Wife II
13
93
In the Child. Hasp. 35
53
57
72
Sir J. Oldcastle 25
81
102
119
125
173
Columbus 1
62
82
but, O L, upo' coomin' down—
my I is lower than his oxen or his swine.
Then 1 leave thee L and Master, latest L of
Locksley Hall,
they rode like Victoi-s and L's
As a Z of the human soul,
Our own fair isle, the I of every sea —
thy dark I accept and love the Sun,
do you scorn me when you tell me, 0 my I,
I replied ' Nay, L, for Art,'
L let the house of a brute to the soul of a man,
And the L — ' Not yet : but make it as clean
How loyal in the following of thy L !
when these behold their L,
An' saw by the Graace o' the L,
she is face to face with her L,
Priests in the name of the L
Lord (verb) every spoken tongue should I you.
Lord Jesos (See also Christ, Christ Jesus, Jesus)
seek the Z J in prayer ;
but the good L J has had his day.'
I should cry to the dear L J to help me,
dear L J with children about his knees.)
Lordlier assert None I than themselves
grace And presence, I than before ;
Lordliest ' She gave him mind, the I Proportion,
Lord-lover young l-l, what sighs are those,
Lordly Listening the I music flowing
44
Locksley H., Sixty 126
282
Heavy Brigade 48
Dead Prophet 54
The Fleet 7
Demeter and P. 137
Happy 23
Romney's R. 131
By an Evolution. 1
3
In Mem., W. H. Ward 6
Akbar's Dream 142
Church-warden, etc. 42
Charity 42
The Dawn 4
Princess iv 514
to
In the Child. Hosp. 18
22
49
52
Princess ii 144
In Mem. ciii 28
Two Voices 19
Maud I xxii 29
Ode to Memory 41
Lordly
Lotiitif(corUinued) I BmLT my soul a i pleasure-house
stL/ ^ "^^ ^"^ ®^ *^® ' "^^'^^
The lovely, Z creature floated on
down from this a I stairway sloped
They past on, The I Phantasms !
Lord-manufacturer You, the L-m
Lord of Astolat) (^ee 0^50 Astolat)' And issuing
found the Lo A "»uiug
then the i o ^ : ' Whence comest thou
said the X o J, ' Here is Torre's •
came The LoA out, to whom the Prince
10 whom the Z 0 ^ ' Bide with us.
Lord of Burleigh Z o 5, f air and free
Deeply moum'd the L 0 B,
Lord-prince high l-p of Arthur's hall
Lord-territorial You, the L-t,
Lore (««« o/so Love-lore) As wild as ausht of
fairy I; "» '
The Learned all his ^ ;
Lose 1 1 my colour, 1 1 my breath,
And not to I the good of life
Oft I whole years of darker mind.
Nor greatly cared to I, her hold on life
teu^'^.K^u^® '•'"^i ^"'"•' The woman :
???," V^^ ^^^^' »"<! ^ Convention,
1 1 My honour, these their lives.'
To our point : not war : Lest I^ all '
she fearM that I should I my mind *
£ 5 It S-l"'-*^r'/^*^ ^'^^"^ the world ;
Nor / the childhke m the larger mind •
Ihe gravest citizen seems to I his head
1 too, talk, and I the touch I talk of '
Nor I their mortal sympathy
We I ourselves in light.' '
I shall not I thee tho' I die
and he fears To I his bone, and lays his foot
upon it.
Fearing to /, and all for a dead man
And / the quest he sent you on,
1 1 It, as we I the lark in heaven
Sweet father, wiU you let me I my wits ? '
not I your wits for dear Lavaine •
Pleasure to have it, none ; to Ht, pain •
^ No man could sit but he should ^ Wself • '
U 11 myself, I save myself ' '
I will embark and I wUl I myself
Not greatly care to ^ ;
You / yourseH m utter ignorance :
And Uhy hfe by usage of thy sting •
say that those who I can find '
All IS well If I Z it and myself
Ihey I themselves and die
And yet The world would I
Losing L his fire and active might
L her carol I stood pensively
nZ"^^ 'Al^^'J^*'." ^ ^«*h of these
odes About this I of the child •
Poor rivals in a ^ game, '
A little vext at I of the hunt
T «»» a1!? ^ *^u 'j^ht of my Youth
Loss Although the I had brought us pain, That I
\ «"V^ ^/^^er ; for this sir Rose '
And but for daily I of one she loved
^ of all But Enoch and two others.
Am loneher, darker, earthUer for my I
An AT "^ n' ^°'' ^^ *hat wrongs his friend
^A l^^_,X°>fy^ng cannon thunder his I ;
And find m I a gain to match ?
Ah sweeter to be drunk with l,
^ Ihou Shalt not be the fool of I '
L IS common to the race '
That Z is common would not make
Which weep a I for ever new,
Thy spirit ere our fatal I
425
Palace of Art I
L. of Burleigh 18
Princess vi 89
Gareth and L. 669
Lover's Tale ii 99
On Juh. q. Victoria 57
Lancelot and E. 173
180
195
627
632
L. of Burleigh 58
91
tfaltn and Balan 466
On Jub. Q. Victoria 56
Day- Dm., L' Envoi 12
Ancient Sage 139
Elednore 137
Two Voices 132
» 372
Aylmer's Field 568
Princess i 137
» ii 85
341
1)205
vii 99
282
284
„ Con. 59
Lit. Squabbles 17
In Mem. xxx 23
» xlvii 16
1. ex XX 16
Geraint and E. 562
_ , „ 564
Lancelot and E. 655
659
752
755
1415
Holy Grail 174
178
805
Guinevere 495
Lover's Tale i 79
Ancient Sage 270
The Ring 282
Happy 58
Prog, of Spring 35
Romney's R. 68
Elednore 104
D. of F. Women 245
Aylmer's Field 719
Princess i 141
In Mem. cii 19
Marr. of Geraint 234
The Dreamer 4
Miller's D. 229
To J. S. 25
Walk, to the Mail 94
Enoch Arden 549
Aylmer's Field 750
Sea Dreams 172
Ode on Well. 62
In Mem. i 6
11
ivlQ
vi2
5
xiii 5
xlil
Lon (continued) His night of I is always there,
lo breathe my I is more than fame
The gnef my I in him had wrought'
The lighter by the I of his weight •
By the I of that dead weight, '
shadow of His I drew like eclipse
Than that my lord should suffer 'l or shame.'
bnid, the I of whom hath tum'd me wild—
as a man to whom a dreadful I Falls in a far land
ISO pajns hun that he sickens nigh to death •
Ihen, fearing for his hurt and I of blood
w- u 7®"* '^^^^^ 'he I of use than fame • '
With / of half his people arrow-slain •
dame nor damsel then Wroth at a lover's I ■>
Had I not learnt my I before he came i>
btung by his I had vanish'd, none knew where
h?« ^wv tT"^'^- ^"^ '"'^^^ * *™«' t« Lionel's I
—his I Weigh'd on him yet—
guest So bound to me by common love and l~
wf T ^f K ^f!^ T^^^ ^^'' ^ ^"^ l°ng'd for her own ;
lost to the I that was mine, '
and thro' I of Self The gain of such large life
Moanmg your I'es, O Earth,
Thrones are clouded by your I
Lost (««eaZ5o Half-lost. Late-lost)' That these have
never I their light.
Her cheek had I the rose,
one silvery cloud Had I his way
L to her place and name ;
Stream'd onward, I their edges,
Fall into shadow, soonest I :
thus be I for ever from the earth,
much honour and much fame were I.'
I the sense that handles daily life — '
have you I your heart ? ' she said ;
And now we I her, now she gleam'd
the precious morning hours were I.
Phihp gain'd As Enoch I ;
'The ship was I,' he said ' the ship was I !
Enoch, poor man, was cast away and I.'
Kepeated muttering ' cast away and i ; ' Again in
deeper inward whispers ' Z ! '
slowly I Nor greatly cared to lose.
Softening thro' aU the gentle attributes Of his
I child,
I came To know him more, 1 1 it,
But now when all was I or seem'd as I
They I their weeks ; they vext the souls of deans •
a pillar'd porch, the bases I In laurel : '
the child We I in other years,
some ages had been I ;
an erring pearl L in her bosom :
Wiser to weep a true occasion I,
(For since her horse was 1 1 left'her mine)
For this I lamb (she pointed to the child)
at once the I lamb at her feet Sent out a bitter
bleating
' Be comforted : have 1 not I her too,
our side was vanquish'd and my caus'e For ever I
slip Into my bosom and be I in me.' '
Nor ever I an English gun ;
flying by to be I on an endless sea —
' Behold the man that loved and I,
Something it is which thou hast I,
With my I Arthur's loved remains,
'Tis better to have loved and I
I the links that boimd Thy changes •
So then were nothing I to man ; '
' Love's too precious to be I,
And like to him whose sight is I ;
That Nature's ancient power was I :
The quiet sense of something I.
'Tis better to have loved and I,
No visual shade of some one I,
Day, when 1 1 the flower of men ;
Lost
In Mem. Ixvi 16
n Ixxvii 15
). Ixxx 6
Maud I xvi2
„ xix 99
Ded. of Idylls 14
Geraint and E. 69
308
496
498
,T ,- " '^^^
Merhn and V. 519
565
607
Lover's Tale i 665
iv 102
208
274
345
The Revenge 111
The Wreck 113
Ancient Sage 236
The Dreamer 17
D. of ihe Duke of C. 6
Miller's D. 88
(Enone 18
"93
Palace of Art 264
D. of F. Women 50
To J. S. 11
M. d' Arthur 90
109
Walk, to the Mail 22
Edward Gray 3
The Voyage 65
Enoch Arden 302
355
393
713
^ , , " "^15
Aylmer's Field 567
731
Sea Dreams 72
Princess, Pro. 39
162
i 230
ii 11
153
iv 61
68
197
361
391
t)69
vi 25
vii 189
Ode on Well. 97
Wages 2
In Mem. i 15
iv 9
ix 3
xxvii 15
xli 6
xliii 9
Ixv 3
Ixvi 8
Ixix 2
Ixxviii 8
Ixxxv 3
xciii 5
xcix 4
Lost
426
Loud
Lost (continued) With thy I friend among the bowers,
Hope had never I her youth ;
Dear friend, far off, my I desire,
I in trouble and moving round Here
Looking, thinking of all I have / ;
Of a land that has I for a little her lust of gold,
We have I him : he is gone :
a night In which the bounds of heaven and earth
werei —
a phantom king. Now looming, and now I ;
I in blowing trees and tops of towers ;
L in sweet dreams, and dreaming of her love
enter'd, and were I behind the walls.
So sadly I on that unhappy night ;
Youiseif shall see my vigour is not I.'
scour'd into the coppices and was I,
And ciusing their I time, and the dead man,
your charger is without. My palfrey L'
held and I with Lot In that first war,
The L one Found was greeted as in Heaven
I itself in darkness, till she cried —
I to life and use and name and fame, (repeat)
and there We I him :
Some I, some stolen, some as relics kept.
lay as dead, And I all use of life :
fought together ; but their names were I ;
Else had he not I me : but listen to me,
Full often I in fancy, I his way ;
waste downs whereon 1 1 myself,
new design wherein they I themselves.
Who I the hem we slipt her at,
had you not I your own.
Merlm sat In his own chair, and so was 2 ;
while ye follow wandering fires L in the quagmire
hast not I thyself to save thyself As Galahad.'
wandering fires L in the quagmire ? — I to me and gone,
In Mem. cii 15 Lost (continued) Swallow'd in Vastness, I in Silence, Vaatness 34
„ cxxv5 2 the moment of their past on earth, The Ring 4i64:
„ cxxix 1 have you I him, is he fled ? Happy 2
Maud I xxi 5 and I Salvation for a sketch. Romney's R. 138
„ // ii 46 she heard The shriek of some I life among the pines, Death of (Enone 90
„ /// vi 39 Who all but I himself in Alia, Akbar's Dream 93
Ded. of Idylls 15 an' wa I wer Haldeny cow. Church-warden, etc. 5
And less will be I than won, The Dreamer 22
Lot ' I might forget my weaker I ; Two Voices 367
Half-anger'd with my happy I, Miller's D. 200
been happy : but what I is pure ? Walk, to the Mail 97
and one that, Because the way was I.
at Caerleon, but have I our way :
i in a doubt, Pelleas wandering Waited,
Among the roses, and was I again.
she cried, ' Plunge and be I —
Not knowing they were I as soon as given —
Thy lord has wholly I his love for thee.
city sack'd by night, When all is I,
thus be I for ever from the earth,
much honour and much fame were /.'
my I love Symbol'd in storm.
Talk of I hopes and broken heart !
tho' she seem so Hke the one you I,
And if he be I — but to save my soul,
seen And I and found again,
or desire that her I child Should earn
fur 'e I 'is taail i' the beck.
Sa 'is taail wur Z an' 'is boociks wur gone
We have I her who loved her so much —
Uim, the I light of those dawn-golden times.
Leaving his son too L in the carnage,
wholesome heat the blood had I,
To be I evermore in the main.
and there Z, head and heart,
L myself — lay like the dead
I to the loss that was mine,
With sad eyes fixt on the I sea-home.
And now is 2 in cloud ;
* L and gone and / and gone ! '
What had he loved, what had he I,
wor keenin' as if he had I thim all.
Com. of Arthur 372
431
Gareth and L. 670
Marr. of Geraint 158
252
689
Geraint and E. 82
534
576
750
Balin and Balan 1
81
514
Merlin and V. 214, 970
433
453
645
Lancelot and E. 40
147
164
225
441
657
1213
Holy Grail 176
320
456
892
Pelleas and E. 59
66
392
427
Last Tournament 40
42
Guinevere 509
Pass, of Arthur 44
258
277
Lover's Tale ii 184
iv 176
365
Rizpah 77
Sisters (E. and E.) 147
250
Village Wife 86
87
In the Child. Hasp. 29
To W. H. Brookfield 7
Batt. of Brunanburh 73
To E. Fitzgerald 24
The Revenge 119
The Wreck 30
112
113
126
Ancient Sage 143
224
227
Tomorrow 86
Locksley //., Sixty 55
Leonard early / at sea ;
{ within a growing gloom ; L, or only beard in silence „ 73
'L are the gallant three hundred Heavy Brigade 45
' L one and all ' were the words Mutter'd „ 46
all fa / In what they prophesy, EpUogue 64
Mi(utt break thro clouded memories once again On
U»X I self. Demeter and P 11
f in th« gloom of doubta that darken the schools ; Vastness 11
Ill-fated that I am, what I is mine
Would quarrel with our I ;
I stubb'd 'um oop wi' the I,
Wamt worth nowt a haacre, an' now theer's I's o
feead,
Wi' I's o' munny laaid by,
coom'd to the parish wi' I's o' Varsity debt.
Them or thir feythers, tha sees, mun 'a bean a
laazy I,
0 little bard, is your I so hard,
hate me not, but abide your I,
She finds the baseness of her I,
To chances where our I's were cast
maidens with one mind BewaiI'd their I ;
let a passionless peace be my I,
he lived with a Z of wild mates.
Their I with ours to rove the world
drew perchance a happier I Than ours,
1 would it had been my I To have seen thee.
Love and Duty 33
WHl Water. 226
Farmer, 0. S. 32
39
N. S. 22
29
49
Spiteful Letter 5
11
In Mem. Ix 6
„ xcii 5
„ ciii 46
Maud I iv 50
Rizpah 29
Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 11
Epilogue 50
Bandits Death 3
fur a Z on 'em coom'd ta-year — Church-warden, etc. 13
Lot (King of Orkney) Morganore And L of Orkney. Com. of Arthur 116
L's wife, the Queen of Orkney, Bellicent, (repeat)
last tall son of L and Bellicent,
where thy father L beside the hearth
Till falling into L's f orgetfulness
L and many another rose and fought
Gareth hearing from a squire of L
son Of old King L and good Queen Bellicent,
held and lost with L In that first war,
Sir Modred's brother, and the child of L,
Lot (nephew of Abraham) see how you stand Stiff as
L's wife,
Loth (See also Loath) were much I to breed Dispute
betwixt myself and mine :
but she still were I, She still were I to yield herself
And now full I am I to break thy dream,
how I to quit the land !
Lotos-Lotus asphodel, Lotos and lilies :
Eating the Lotos day by day.
The Lotos blooms below the barren peak :
The Lotos blows by every winding creek :
Cry to the lotus ' No flower thou ' ?
Lotos-dust the yellow L-d is blown.
Lotos-eaters mild-eyed melancholy L-e came.
Lotos-land In the hollow L-l to live
Lotus See Lotos
Load With a lengthen'd I halloo,
L, I nmg out the bugle's brays.
From his I fount upon the echoing lea : —
Between the I stream and the trembling stars.
If you do not call me I when the day begins to
break :
Whereof my fame is I amongst mankind,
And chanted a melody I and sweet,
while the rest were I in meri-ymaking,
There came so Z a calling of the sea,
he spread his arms abroad Ciying witli a I voice ' A
sail ! a sail !
On that I sabbath shook the spoiler down ;
and we refrain From talk of battles I and vain.
For him nor moves the I world's random mock.
Winds are I and you are dumb.
Winds are I and winds will pass !
That makes the barren branches I ;
190, 245
Gareth and L. 1
74
96
354
531
1231
Balin and Balan 1
Lancelot and E. 558
Princess vi 241
i 156
„ vii 231
Balin and Balan 500
The Flight 38
(Enone 98
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 60
100
101
Akbar's Dream 37
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 104
Lotos- Eaters 27
„ C. S. 109
The Owl ii 13
Oriana 48
Mine be the strength 4
(Enone 219
May Queen 10
8t. S'. Stylites 81
Poet's Song 6
Enoch Arden 77
910
913
Ode on Well. 123
247
Will 4
Window, No Answer 19
22
In Mem. xv 13
I
Loud
427
^°liT;w".f^ Alfcho' the trumpet blew so/. In Mem xcvi 24,
Sn 1 Jf" ^^"^ f"!? ^?S, inWth and tent, xS 27
bo I with voices of the birds x«ntt ^<
Now rings the woodland I and long " ^'^^ ?
makes us / in the world of the dead • " %Tll
and so / That first they mock'd n ^x. " ^ / 1^,
WeU-I will after my Iknave, and learn "'"'''^ "^ ^- f^^
L"°^ l^u*" ^ Southwestems, roUing ridge on ridge " 1 1 1^
Love
Love (8)Jcontmued) spreads above And veileth 7, itself
then came a night Still as the day was I •
bo I a blast along the shore and sea
But on the hither side of that I mom
and with mirth so I Beyond all use
and I leagues of man And welcome''
lake to a quiet mind in the I world '
and thro' the arch Down those I waters
fnr tho ® TXJ^'i^^' ^^^"^ *" ^^^ ^nds were l,
for the sound Of the I stream was pleasant
Ihe moanmgs m the forest, the I brook
An earthquake, my I heart-beats,
A long / clash of rapid marriage- bells.
The / black nights for us.
Whence the thunderbolt will fall Long and I
Men Z against all forms of power— '
Holy Grail 683
796
Last Tournament 56
235
To the Queen ii 9
Lover's Tale i 7
59
378
n 35
114
193
in 23
Rizpah 6
The Revenge 45
Freedom 37
T?en^nTJ'^^>K^ storm-the crash was long and l-HtZm
lilytho"utJo"r?o?s^rer ^"^^"-t-'^^' ^^f-^f^.n^
Sing thou low or I or sweet
Louder a i one Was aU but silence-
It clack'd and cackled I.
Gawain sware, and I than the rest.'
breakers on the shore Sloped into I surf ■
ir 7 \ y rhyme the silent Word
JNo I than a bee among the flowei-s,
Loud-lung d And l-l Antibabylonianisms
Lounging See Hawmin'
Lour whatever tempests I For ever silent •
x^r,^^^r^Z'' ?V* "^ *^^ *«^rf"J splendour
Louse See Wood-louse
^"^ ^ mJ^i' "^^lAfter-love, Boy-love. Loov. Luw,
A I still burmng upward,
Life, anguish, death, immortal I,
J thou bearest The first-bom of thy genius.
the scom of scom. The lot I.
And It sings a song of undying I •
eyes shall glisten With pleasm-e and I and jubilee •
L paced the thymv plots of ParadLse, •■ '
■t' wept and spread bis sheeny vans
pierced thy heart, my I, my bride.
Thy heart, my life, my I, my bride.
With his laI^|e calm eyes for the I of me.
Die in their hearts for the I of me.
All looking up for the I of me.
All looking down for the I of me
wJ ''V^h ^^^''- ^°''"^*5 ''O close His curtains.
Who lent you, I, your mortal dower
langmd Z, Leaning his cheek upon his hand,
l-or Kate no common I will feel •
Nor cares to lisp in I's delicious creeds ;
Weep on : beyond his object L can last :
Liu'.^? ^^^ °^ ^' *r« flowing fast. No tears
of I, but tears that L can die.
Clear i would pierce and cleave,
Z lighted down between them full of glee
« a' a^ ^^^'^' ' '""^^ "''®*^ be tme,
And cruel I, whose end is scom.
And mete the bounds of hate and I—
And m their double I secure,
Poets and Critics 6
Aylmer's Field 696
The Goose 24
Holy Grail 202
Lover's Tale Hi 15
Ancient Sage 212
Romney's R. 82
Sea Dreams 252
Ode on Well. 175
Prog, of Spring 40
Leonine Eleg. 14
Supp. Confessions 88
113
182
Isabel 18
Arabian Nights 73
Ode to Memory 91
The Poet 4
Poet's Mind 33
Sea- Fairies 36
Love and Death 2
Oriana 42
„ 44
The Mermaid 27
30
51
55
Adeline 42
Margaret 5
Eleanor e 117
Kate 14
Caress'd or chidden 11
Wan Sculptor 5
// / were loved 6
TAe Bridesmaid 6
Mariana in the S. 63
^ " 70
Two Voices l^
418
But ere I saw your eyes, my I,
Such eyes ! I swear to you, my I
Iloved, and Mispell'd the fear '
For I possess'd the atmosphere
which tme I spells— Tme I interprets—
in tmth You must blame L.
L that hath us in the net,
L the gift is L the debt.
L is hurt with jar and fret.
L is made a vague regret.
What is I ? for we forget :
0 L, L, L\ O withering might '
0 Z, O fire ! once he drew With one long kiss
My eyes are full of tears, my heart of I
My [hath told me so a thousand times'.
Hath he not sworn his I a thousand times
teavmg my ancient I With the Greek wom'an
To wm his / I lay m wait :
1 won his I, I brought him home,
he that shuts L out, in turn shall be Shut
out from L, m . „7 „ , ..
They sav he's dying aU for I, ^ " ' ^'^^ ^^- "f ^^t- If
gi:^^r^t.^!l^.«Pl^_i«i-est darts; D.of^^^ZT^l
Two Voices 447
Miller's D. 43
87
89
91
187
192
203
207
209
210
213
Fatima 1
„ 19
CEnone 31
„ 197
» 231
„ 260
The Sisters 11
14
beams of X, melting the mighty hearts Of captains
softly with a threefold cord of I !""»"'»
her who knew that L can vanquish Death
God gives us I. Something to love He lends us • but
when ; IS grown To ripeness, '
Falls off, and I is left alone.
Love thou thy land, with I far-brought
Tme I tum'd round on fixed poles, L that
endures not sordid ends.
He, by some law that holds in I,
Such touches are but embassies of I
not your work, but L's. L, unperceived,
buch a lord is Z,
Fancy, led by L, Would play with flying forms
lor which to praise the heavens but only L That onlv
/ were cause enough for praise.' ^
L's white star Beam'd thro' the thicken'd cedar
the Master, L, A more ideal Artist he than all '
L at first sight, first-born,
sometimes a Dutch I For tulips :
L trebled life within me,
L, the third, Between us,
while I mused, L with knit brows went by
My first, last i; the idol of my youth,
half in I, half spite, he woo'd and wed'
all his I came back a hundredfold ;
and not a room For I or money,
breathing I and tmst against her lip :
' My I for Nature is as old as 1 ;
three rich sennights more, my I for her
My I for Nature and my I for her,
i to me As in the Latin song I leamt at school,
Ine I, that makes me thrice a man,
languidly adjust My vapid vegetable l's
Pursue thy l's among the bowers
This fmit of thine by L is blest,
Where fairer fruit of L may rest
Of I that never found his earthly close
But am I not the nobler thro' thy I ? '
likewise thou Art more thro' L,
Wait, and L himself will bring 'The drooping flower
For Z himself took part against himself To warn
us off and Duty loved of L~0 this world's cui-se.
Could L part thus ? v-"'ac.
Caught up the whole of I and utter'd it
Can thy I, Thy beauty, make amends '
fancy lightly tums to thoughts of I.
L took up the glass of Time,
L took up the harp of Life,
and love her for the I she bore ?
175
211
269
To J. S. 13
r , " 16
Love thou thy land 1
5
Gardener's D. 9
18
24
57
59
104
165
172
189
192
198
215
245
277
Dora 39
„ 166
Audley Court 2
69
Edwin Morris 28
30
31
^ " 78
Talking Oak 11
183
199
249
251
Love and Duty 1
19
21
23
45
55
82
Tithonus 23
Locksley Hall 20
31
33
73
Love
428
Loehley HdU 74
Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 16
Arrival 3
Depart. 10
11
12
20
Sir Galahad 19
Edward Gray 7
29
L. of Burleigh 15
Lore (■) (oorUtnwei) I is I tor evermoie.
beauty doth inform Stillness with I,
For I in sequel works with f at«,
0 I, for sucn another kiss ; '
* O wake for ever, I,' she hears.
•01, 'twas such as this and this.'
' O I, thy kiss would wake the dead !
1 never felt the kiss of I,
I no more Can touch the heart of Edward Gray,
' L may come, and Z may go,
L will make our cottage pleasant,
And he cheer'd her soul with I.
She talk'd as if her I were dead, The Letters 27
' No more of I ; your sex is known : „ 29
Frantic I and frantic hate. Vision of Sin 150
' Tell me tales of thy first I— „ 163
and Enoch spoke his Z, Enoch Arden 40
And mutual 7 and honourable toil; „ 83
I do beseech you by the I you bear Him „ 307
Lord of his rights and of his children's I, — „ 764
dream That L could bind them closer Aylmer
and true I Crown'd after trial ;
how should L, Whom the cross-lightnings
his, a brother's 2, that himg With wings
and truth and I are strength,
Of such a Z as like a chidden child,
A Martin's summer of his faded Z,
the hapless Vs And double death
Wearing the light yoke of that Lord of Z,
you loved, for he was worthy I.
our I and reverence left them bare ?
Ah Z, there surely lives in man and beast
We remember I ourselves In our sweet youth :
As arguing Z of knowledge and of power ;
0 hara, when Z and duty clash !
a thousand baby I's Fly twanging headless arrows
half the students, all the Z.
angled with them for her pupil's I :
every woman counts her due, L, children, happiness ? '
tho' your Prince's Z were like a God's,
0 Z, they die in yon rich sky,
deep as Z, Deep as first Z,
cheep and twitter twenty million I's.
Why lingereth she to clothe her heart with Z,
tell her, brief is life but I is long,
to junketing and Z. i is it ?
heated thro' and thro' with wrath and Z,
1 bore up in part from ancient Z,
I want her Z.
' We remember Z ourself In our sweet youth ;
infuse my tale of Z In the old king's ears,
I know not what Of insolence and Z,
Be dazzled by the wildfire L to sloughs
L and Nature, these are two more terrible
where you seek the common Z of th&se.
Pledge of a Z not to be mine.
Two women faster welded in one Z
so employ'd, should close in Z,
L in tne sacred halls Held carnival at will, ,
And out of hauntings of my spoken Z,
L, like an Alpine harebell hung with tears
From barren deeps to conquer all with Z ;
Fill'd thro' and thro' with L,
come, for L is of the valley, come, For L is of the
valley, come thou down „ 198
make her as the man, Sweet L were slain : „ 277
Sweet Z on pranks of saucy boyhood : „ 344
Z of country move thee there at all. Ode on Well. 140
debt Of boundless Z and reverence and regret „ 157
and learns to deaden L of self, „ 205
From Z to Z, from home to home you go, W. to Marie Alex. 8
L by right divine is deathless king, „ 29
L has led thee to the stranger land, „ 31
hearts that change not, I that cannot cease, „ 46
Witit a Z that ever will be : 6. of Sioainston 14
s Field 41
128
138
365
541
560
616
708
712
785
Sea Dreams 68
Princess i 122
„ ii 57
293
401
„ tn 39
93
245
248
iv 13
56
101
105
111
142
163
303
V 136
207
340
,, • 397
441
„ vi 165
172
197
253
„ vii 67
84
109
115
164
172
Love (s) (continued) running on one way to the
home of my Z,
Birds' Z and birds* song
Birds' song and birds' Z, (repeat)
Men's song and men's Z,
And women's Z and men's !
Take my Z, for I will come, L will come but once
a life.
Take my I and be my wife.
L can love but once a life,
you have gotten the wings of I,
Sun sets, moon sets, L, fix a day.
Here is the golden close of Z,
For this is the golden morning of Z,
For a Z that never tires ?
O heart, are you great enough for I ?
Steonq Son of God, immortal L,
Let L clasp Grief lest both be drown'd,
victor Hours should scorn The long result of Z,
Poor child, that waitest for thy Z !
Phosphor, bright As our pure Z,
My friend, the brother of my Z ;
Because it needed help of L :
L would cleave in twain The lading of a single pain
No lapse of moons can canker L,
And L the indifference to be,
Then one deep Z doth supersede
Whose Vs in higher Z endure ;
But for one hour, 0 Z, I strive
L would answer with a sigh.
At first as Death, L had not been,
And render human I his dues ;
She enters other realms of I ;
And I will last as pure and whole
0 L, thy province were not large,
Look also, L, a brooding star,
dream can hit the mood Of L on earth ?
And makes it vassal imto Z :
And I be lessen'd in his Z ?
Shall Z be blamed for want of faith ?
For Z reflects the thing beloved ;
The Spirit of true Z repUed ;
Who trusted God was Z indeed
And I Creation's final law —
play As with the creature of my I ;
Then be my I an idle tale.
And Z in which my hoimd has part,
• L's too precious to be lost.
To utter Z more sweet than praise.
To hold the costliest I in fee.
' My Z shall now no further range ;
For now is Z mature in ear.' (
L, then, had hope of richer store :
As Unk'd with thine in Z and fate,
Z for him have drain'd My capabilities of I ;
1 woo your I : I count it crime To mourn
A meeting somewhere, I with I,
If not so fresh, with Z as true.
First Z, first friendship, equal powers.
Quite in the Z of what is gone,
He tasted Z with half his mind,
Vs dumb cry defying change To test his worth ;
My I has talk'd with rocks and trees ;
Their Z has never past away ;
Two spirits of a diverse Z Contend
Ring in the Z of truth and right,
Ring in the common Z of good.
A Z of freedom rarely felt,
But mine the Z that will not tire, And, bom of Z,
the vague desire
fillest all the room Of all my Z,
What is she, cut from Z and faith.
Nor dream of human I and truth,
Or L but play'd with gracious lies>
L is and was my Lord and King^
Love
Window, On the Hill 8
„ Spring 1
3,5
7
10
No Answer 20
24
28
Ay\b
When 4
Marr. Mom. 3
11
18
19
In Mem., Pro. 1
14
vi28
ix 11
16
XXV 8
10
xxvi 3
12
xxxii 5
14
XXXV 6
13
19
xxxvii 16
xll2
xliii 13
xlvi 13
15
xlvii 12
xlviii 8
Zi8
10
Zm2
6
Ivi 13
14
lix 12
Ixii 3
Ixiii 2
IxvS
Ixxvii 16
Ixxix 4
Ixxxi 2
4
5
Ixxxiv 38
Ixxxv 11
61
99
101
107
114
xc 1
xeo21
xcvii 1
13
cii 7
m23
24
cix 13
ca;18
cxii 6
cxiv 11
cxviii 3
cxxv 7
cxxvi 1
Love
429
Love
Love (s) {cantinued) L is and was my King and Lord,
The I that rose on stronger wings,
My I involves the I before ;
My I is vaster passion now ;
And yet is I not less, but more ;
Regret is dead, but I is more
there was I in the passionate shriek, L for the
silent thing that had made false haste
I flee from the cruel madness of I,
I fear, the new strong wine of I,
I have led her home, my I,
Death may give More liie to L than is or ever was
L, like men in drinking-songs,
With dear L's tie, makes L himself more dear,'
now by this my I has closed her sight
And the planet of L is on high,
Have a grain of I for me,
Let me and my passionate I go by,
Me and my hannful i go by ;
To find the arms of my true I Roimd me
Hearts with no I for me :
Z of a peaice that was full of wrongs and shames,
May all I, His I, unseen but felt,
The I of all Thy sons encompass Thee, The I of all
Thy daughters cherish Thee, The I of all Thy
people comfort Thee, Till God's I set Thee at his
side again !
Sware on the field of death a deathless /.
Uther cast upon her eyes of I :
loathed the bright dishonour of his I,
Sware at the shrine of Christ a deathless I :
I charge thee by my I,'
' True I, sweet son, had risk'd himself
I I feel for thee, nor worthy such a I :
thy I to me. Thy Mother, — I demand.'
I be blamed for it, not she, nor I :
Eyes of pure women, wholesome stars of I ;
Peace to thee, woman, with thy l's and hates !
one would praise the I that linkt the King
And, loving, utter faithfulness in I,
And as for I, God wot, I love not yet.
Who tilt for lady's I and glory here,
Smile sweetly, thou ! my I hath smiled on me.'
twice my I hath smiled on me.' (repeat)
What knowest thou of lovesong or of / ?
A foolish I for flowers ?
thrice my I hath smiled on me.'
Of utter peace, and I, and gentleness !
Long in their common I rejoiced Geraint.
Touching her guilty I for Lancelot,
dwelling on his boundless I,
and dreaming of her I For Lancelot,
I or fear, or seeking favour of us,
In Mem. cxxvi 5
„ cxxviii 1
„ cxxx 9
10
Con. 12
17
Maud / t 57
„ iv 55
vi82
„ xviii 1
47
55
61
67
„ xxii 8
„ // a 53
77
80
„ iv 3
94
„ III vi 40
Bed. of Idylls 50
„ 52, 53, 54
Com. of Arthur 132
193
195
466
Gareth and L. 55
60
83
146
299
314
373
492
554
561
740
1001
„ 1062,1077
1063
1072
1161
1289
Marr. of Geraint 23
25
63
158
,,700
for whose I the Roman Caesar first Invaded Britain, „ 745
' Earl, entreat her by my I, „ 760
force in her Link'd with such I for me, „ 806
Enid, my early and my only I, Geraint and E. 307
For the man's I once gone never returns. „ 333
lord Greraint, I greet you with all i ; >• 785
love you. Prince, with something of the I „ 788
With deeper and with ever deeper I, „ 928
bearing in their common bond of I, Balin and Balan 150
sought to win my I Thro' evil ways : » 474
And yet hast often pleaded for my I — »
' I hold them happy, so they died for Z : „
L, if L be perfect, casts out fear, Merlin and
flatter his own wish in age for I,
Death in all life and lying in all I,
As if in deepest reverence and in I.
wise in I Love most, say least,'
ask'd again : for see you not, dear Z,
The great proof of your I :
' In 2, if i be X, if i be ours,
for I of Grod and men And noble deeds,
X, the' L were of the grossest, carves
571
581
r. 40
185
194
220
247
324
354
387
412
461
Love (s) (continued) rest : and L Should have some rest
and pleasure
But work as vassal to the larger I, That dwarfs the
petty I of one to one.
this full I of mine Without the full heart back
Full many a Z in loving youth was mine ;
charm to keep them mine But youth and I ;
How from the rosy lips of life and I,
(For in a wink the false I turns to hate)
0 vainly lavish'd I !
for what shame in Z, So Z be true,
more in kindness than in Z,
' There must be now no passages of I
Merlin, the one passionate Z Of her whole life ;
my Z is more Than many diamonds,'
great and guilty Z he bare the Queen,
In battle with the I he bare his lord,
loved him, with that I which W£is her doom.
' L, are you yet so sick ? '
And I, when often they have talk'd of Z,
1 know not if I know what tixie Z is,
cross our mighty Lancelot in his Vs !
Yet, if he love, and his Z hold,
About the maid of Astolat, and her Z.
woman's Z, Save one, he not regarded,
but her deep Z Upbore her ;
loved her with all Z except the I Of man and woman
shackles of an old Z straiten'd him,
' Your Z,' she said, ' your I — to be your wife.'
ill then should I quit your brother's Z,
This is not Z : but l's first flash in youth,
she by tact of Z was well aware That Lancelot
her song, ' The Song of L and Death,'
' Sweet is true Z tho' given in vain,
'Z, art thou sweet? then bitter death must be:
L, thou art bitter ; sweet is death to me. 0 L,
if death be sweeter, let me die.
' Sweet Z, that seems not made to fade away,
' I fain would f oUow Z, if that could be ;
there the King will know me and my Z,
she returns his Z in open shame ;
And greatest, tho' my Z had no return :
take the little bed on which I died For Lancelot's I,
in half disdain At Z, life, all things,
I loved you, and my Z had no return. And therefore
my true Z has been my death,
loved me with a Z beyond all Z In women.
No cause, not willingly, for such a Z :
I told her that her Z Was but the flash of youth.
Forgive me ; mine was jealousy in Z.'
' That is l's curse ; pass on, my Queen,
if what is worthy I Could bind him, but free Z will
not be botmd.'
' Free Z, so bound, were freiist,' said the King.
' Let I be free ; free I is for the best :
What should be best, if not so pure a Z
with a I Far tenderer than my Queen's.
' Jealousy in Z ? ' Not rather dead l's harsh heir,
Queen, if I grant the jealousy as of Z,
Speak, as it waxes, of a Z that wanes ?
A way by Z that waken'd Z within.
With such a fervent flame of human Z,
' My knight, my Z, my knight of heaven, 0 thou,
my Z, whose Z is one with mine.
To find thine own first Z once more —
Being so clouded with his grief and Z,
That Pelleas might obtain his lady's Z,
wilt at length Yield me thy Z and know me
I had liefer ye were worthy of my Z,
tho' ye kill my hope, not yet my Z,
this man loves, If Z there be :
Dishonour'd aU for trial of true Z— i ?— we be all alike :
thro' her Z her life Wasted and pined,
Sole Queen of Beauty and of Z,
' Free I — ^free field — we love (repeat)
Merlin and V. 484
491
533
546
548
846
852
859
861
907
913
955
Lancelot and E. 87
245
246
260
571
673
676
688
697
723
840
860
868
875
933
944
949
984
1005
1007
1010
1013
1016
1058
1083
1094
1118
1239
1276
1293
1298
1317
1351
1353
1378
1380
1381
1383
1394
1397
1399
1401
Holy GraU 11
74
157
620
656
Pelleas and E. 161
249
301
303
308
477
495
Last Tournament 208
275, 281
Love
430
Love
Love (s) (continued) New life, new I, to suit the newer
day : New I's Last Tournament 279
Is as the measure of my I for thee.' „ 538
pluck'd one way by hate and one by I, „ 539
my Queen Paramount of I And loveliness — „ 552
Queen Have yielded him her I.' „ 565
therefore is my I so large for thee, Seeing it is not
bounded save by L' „ 702
an I tum'd away my I for thee „ 705
Rapt in sweet talk or lively, all on Z And sport Guinevere 386
the desire of fame. And I of truth, „ 483
Thy lord has wholly lost his I for thee. „ 509
My I thro' flesh hath wrought into my life „ 558
Past with thee thro' thy people and their I, To the Queen ii 7
friends — your I Is but a burthen : „ 16
Not for itself, but thro' thy living I „ 34
withers on the breast of peaceful I ; Lover's Tale i 10
hills that watch'd thee, as L watcheth L, „ 12
Betwixt the native land of L and me, „ 25
0 L,0 Hope ! They come, they crowd upon me „ 46
Here, too, my I Waver'd at anchor with me, „ 64
Flow back again into my slender spring And first of I, „ 148
neither L, Warm in the heart, his cradle, can
remember L in the womb, „ 157
that my I Grew with myself — „ 164
Or build a wall betwixt my life and I, „ 176
As L and I do number equal years, So she, my I, is
of an age with me. „ 195
My mother's sister, mother of my I, „ 209
nor was his I the less Because it was divided, „ 228
for that day, L, rising, shook his wings, „ 317
all the low dark groves, a lemd of H „ 332
Spirit of L ! that little hour was bound „ 437
her life, her I, With my life, I, soul, spirit, „ 459
1 could not speak my I. L lieth deep : L dwells
not in lip-depths. L wraps his wings on either
side the heart, „ 465
Drunk in the largeness of the utterance Of Z ;
but how should Earthly measure mete The
Heavenly-unmeasured or imlimited L, „ 473
Than language grasp the infinite of L. „ 484
sick with I, Fainted at intervals, „ 545
Her maiden dignities of Hope and L — „ 580
the tender I Of him she brooded over. „ 616
nestled in this bosom-throne of L, „ 624
how her I did clothe itself in smiles „ 658
And why was I to darken their pure I, „ 727
to this present My full-orb'd I had waned not. „ 734
Her I did murder mine ? What then ? „ 740
She told me all her I : she shall not weep. „ 742
for I loved her, lost my lin L; „ 749
till their I Shall ripen to a proverb, „ 757
One golden dream of I, from which „ 760
sure my I should ne'er indue the front „ 774
Shall L pledge Hatred in her bitter draughts. And
batten on her poisons ? L forbid ! „ 776
L passeth not the threshold of cold Hate, And Hate
18 strange beneath the roof of L. „ 778
O L,it thou be'st L, dry up these tears Shed for
the lot L; ,,780
So L, arraign'd to judgment and to death, „ 785
when their I is wreck'd— if L can wreck — „ 804
Where L could walk with banish'd Hope „ 813
L's arms were wreath'd about the neck of Hope,
and Hope kiss'd L, and L „ 815
They said that L would die when Hope was gone,
And L moum'd long, „ 818
trod The same old paths where L had walk'd with Hope,
And Memory fed the soul of L with tears. „ 821
till they faded like my I. „ a jq
if Affection Living slew i, and Sympathy hew'd out „ 31
I told him all my I, How I had loved her „ 90
A monument of childhood and of I ; The poesy of
childhood ; my lost I Symbol'd in storm. „ 183
My stater, and my cousin, and my I, „ m 43
Love (s) (continued) 01,1 have not seen you for so long. Lover
Hearts that had beat with such a I as mine —
am I made immortal, or my I Mortal once more ? '
you have given me life and I again,
the house had known the I's of both ;
This I is of the brain, the mind, the soul :
that great I they both had borne the dead,
By all the laws of I and gratefulness.
As for a solemn sacrifice of I —
guest So bound to me by common I and loss —
And then began the story of his I
And I, and boundless thanks —
An' he smiled at me, ' Ain't you, my I ? First
For I will go by contrast, as by likes. Sisters (E.
L at first sight May seem —
Not I that day of Edith's I or mine —
Had I not known where X, at first a fear.
So L and Honour jarr'd Tho' L and Honour
L Were not his own imperial all-in-all.
with what I Edith had welcomed my brief wooing
Not that her I, Tho' scarce as great as Edith's
power of I,
remembering all The I they both have borne me, and
the 1 1 bore them both —
in the rich vocabulary of L ' Most dearest '
s Tale iv 45
69
79
110
123
156
181
278
301
345
354
382
Quarrel 62
and E.) 42
91
142
170
176
226
253
260
280
291
In the Child. Hasp. 12
Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 3
would die But for the voice of L,
fatal kiss. Born of true life and I, divorce thee
not From earthly I and life —
Where L and Longing dress thy deeds in light, „ 9
Indissolubly married like our I ; De Prof., Two G. 14
Yet loves and hates with mortal hates and Vs Tiresias 23
that hast never known the embrace of I, „ 164
With the first great 1 1 had felt The Wreck 76
' as in truest L no Death.' „ 80
Knowing the L we were used to believe Despair 54
' Dear L, for ever and ever, „ 58
Infinite L that has served us so well ? „ 95
His L would have power over Hell „ 102
God of L and of Hell together — „ 105
My rose of I for ever gone. Ancient Sage 159
not L but Hate that weds a bride against her will ;
The I that keeps this heart aUve
where summer never dies, with L, the Sun of life !
And L is fire, and bums the feet „ 68
Christian I among the Churches Locksley H., Sixty 86
Envy wears the mask of L, „ 109
half-brain races, led by Justice, L, and Truth ; „ 161
Or L with wreaths of flowers.
Son's I built me, and I hold Mother's I in letter'd
gold.
L IS in and out of time,
granite girth were strong As either I,
Of L to leaven all the mass.
Two Suns of L make day of human life,
The later-rising Sun of spousal L,
This later light of L have risen in vain,
Sway'd by each L, and swaying to each L,
Will mix with I for you and yours.
The Flight 32
35
44
Epilogue 17
Helen's Tower 3
5
Freedom 19
To Prin. Beatrice 1
6
16
19
To Marq. of Dufferin 52
harvest hymns of Earth The worship which is L, Demeter and P. 149
L for the maiden, crown'd with marriage, fastness 23
till Self died out in the I of his kind ; „ 28
Shall not my I last, Moon, with you, The Ring 17
And utter knowledge is but utter I — „ 43
Hubert weds in you The heart of L, „ 62
to laugh at I in death ! „ 231
matron saw That hint«d I was only wasted bait, „ 360
but now my I was hers again, „ 393
Bound by the golden cord of their first I — „ 429
pardon, 0 my I, if I ever gave you pain. Happy 68
be content TiU I be leper Tike yourself, my /, „ 88
work old laws of i to fresh results. Prog, of Spring 85
Light again, leaf again, life again, I again,' The Throstle 3
' L again, song agam, nest again, „ 9
This, and my I together, June Bracken, etc. 5
by thy I which once was mine, Death of (Enone 45
St. Tdemachus 22
73
101
109
164
170
181, 194
Charity 30
Lo7e
Love (s) (cofUinv^) self-suppression, not of selfless I
il It be a Christian Church, people ring the beU
from Z to Thee. r i- --s ^i.a _, r, r
The Alif of Thine alphabet of L ' jL >' ^^'^P-J^
' Alia ' savs their sabred book, 'is L ' ^**'"' ' ^''""^ ^^
oi tmth ?^ "^^ ^'^" ^^^ Sun of Z ? and L The net
in the I of Truth, The truth of L
Express bim also by their warmth of I
alchemise old hates into the gold Of L
a well of I My heart is for my son,
L and Justice came and dwelt therein ; (repeat)
guess at the / of a soul for a soul ?
Before I learn that X, which is n i. J v:"" "-
For if thb earth be ruled by Perfect L, D ?/£ ^Stf 7c 8
Sleep, Ellen Aubrey, I, and dream of me ' ^ / ^i n^ nn
Love (^^b)^ (See also ^oi LooJJX^V When I ask her ^Sf '''^'' ''
She'll not teU me if she I me -^^^^ 1
brook that /'« To purl o'er matted cress ha. t n^ " ro
thou dearly I thy ^rst essayT '" '^^"^'^ f f
Who is it Vs me ? who Z', not me ? ' y*^ il/«.«,.,w i q
You I, remaming peacefully ^er»M«i 13
And clip your win^, and mkke vou I ■ Margaret 22
Kate Vs well theTld and^^ef ' ^"'f^^ 45
For ah ! the shght coquette, she cannot /, The form the foZ S
' ?:t m^ Thlr fo^yotrke'^"""' ^° '"^"' ^r. ^-4 '^^
That loss but madel^iTrmor^, ^^^^'^ ^- 1^2
I shall I thee weU and cleave to thee, rp', Tah
K H^,*^l^"PPy ^'^' '^^* ^ to live : ®"""* IS
viiili ^*"^ °" ^' (^^^"ty seen In aU " ^
YouTugt to prove how I could I, ^' ~~t ^J^/t "f /%?
Those we / first are taken first. ' ^^ ^- ^-/^ ^Z' f^
Somethuig to I He lends us ; I o J. 6. 12
But lives and I's in every place • n i,/' ^
X thou thy land, with love far-brought r H" ¥2.'"'^'^^
Would I the gleams of good thaSke ^"^ '^" '^^ ^''^ ^
blooms the garden that I /.
And told me I should I.
' My girl, 1 1 you well ;
I come For Dora : take her back ; she I's you well.
0?d'oak^^^re'4^ ,^ ^"'''^ ^ ^«-- --'
God i us, as if the seedsman,
and the wild team Which I thee
Saying, ' Dost thou I me, cousin ? '
and I her, as I knew her, kind ?
whom to look at was to I.
and I her for the love she bore ?
I will I no more, no more,
'He does not I me for my birth,
HeJ s me for my own true worth,
rhere is none 1 1 like thee.'
And 1 1 thee more than life.'
Says to her that I's him weU
0 but she will I him truly !
Fish are we that I the mud,
No, 1 1 not what is new ;
U him aU the better for it—
1 do think They Z me as a father : I am sure that 1 1
tnem as if they were mine own •
Can one Uwice ? can you be ever loved
the days That most she I's to talk of
and he said ' Why then I Ht : '
whitest lamb in all my fold L's you •
because 1 1 their child They hate me :
you then, That I to keep us children !
Her brethren, tho' they I her.
When we fall out with those we I
Albeit so mask'd. Madam, 1 1 the truth ;
II 1 could I, why this were she :
she cned, ' you I The metaphysics !
431
Gardener's D. 34
64
Dora^
„ 143
Audley Court 52
Talking Oak 202
Golden Year 70
Tithonus 40
Locksley Hall 30
70
72
73
Edward Gray 31
Lady Clare 9
1]
L. of Burleigh 6
16
22
37
Vision of 8in 101
139
Enoch Arden 196
412
426
The Brook 226
Aylmer's Field 249
362
423
Princess, Pro. 133
n54
m8
213
Hi 99
299
^'' ^'he lergef ""^^ '^^^' ''°^' ""'^^ ^' ^" ^ ^^'"^
and to shame That which he says he l's :
mat I their voices more than duty
and yet they say that still You I her
shards with catapults. She would not I •—
Not ever would she I ■ but brooding
They Z us for it, and we ride them down,
one I s the soldier, one The silken priest
she can be sweet to those she l's
X ou I nor her, nor me, nor any •
And trust, not I, you less. '
II not hollow cheek or faded eye :
But hke each other ev'n as those who I
^ever, I'rmce ; You cannot I me.'
to life mdeed, thro' thee. Indeed 1 1 ■
1^ thee : come, Yield thyself up •
Thme island l's thee well
We ^ not this French God, the child of Hell,
But though we I kind Peace so well.
But some I England and her honou^ yet
Come to us, Z us and make us your own •
who I best have best the grace to know '
You cannot I me at all, if you I not
Sweetheart, I Z you so well that your good name
To I once and for ever. j & ^^ udiue
L me now, you'll I me then :
Love can L but once a life.
To look on her that l's him" well,
Come quick, thou bringest all 1 1
And come, whatever l's to weep
He l's to make parade of pain, '
But in the songs I Z to sing
When one that Z'. but knows not, reaps A truth
from one that l's and knows ?
I cannot I thee as I ought
My spirit loved and l's him yet.
How should he I a thing so low ? '
I loved thee, Spirit, and I, nor c'an The soul of
bhakespeai-e I thee more.
'More years had made me I thee more
Discuss'd the books to I or hate
Are earnest that he l's her yet, '
He l's her yet, she will not weep
For that, for all, she l's him more
I cannot understand : II.'
shape of him I loved, and l For ever •
Who l's not Knowledge ?
I do not therefore I thee less :
I seem to I thee more and more,
be bom and think. And act and'/.
That God, which ever lives and l's,
I am quite sure That there is one to I me :
bhould 1 1 her so well if she (repeat)
I see she cannot but I him.
Love
Princess iv 47
249
612
1)123
139
141
157
183
289
«ji260
296
vii 7
292
334
338
346
363
Ode on Well. 85
Third of Feb. 7
9
46
iV. to Alexandra 30
fV. to Marie Alex. 28
Grandmother 48
50
Window, Spring 8
,, No Answer 21
28
In Mem. viii 2
» X'oii 8
.. xviii 11
i> xxi 10
» xxxviii 7
.. xlii 11
'. lit 1
1x2
16
Begmnmg to famt m the Ught that she l's
To faint m the light of the sun she l's.
But she, she would I me still ;
wheedle a world that l's him not
we wiU work thy will Who I thee'.'
c^ce what will, I I thee to the death ! '
^ King and my lord, 1 1 thee to the death ' '
Keign ye, and live and I,
Sweet mother, do ye / the child ? '
Then, mother, an' ye I the child,'
Ihe woman l's her lord.
God wot, 1 1 not yet. But 1 1 shall,
and whom they could but I,
I accept thee aught the more Or I thee better
i cannot I my lord and not his name
in the sweet face of her Whom he l's most
may you light on all things that you l. And hve to
wed with her whom fiiJt you Z •
wheel and thee we neither I nor hate, (repeat)
Ixi 11
1) Ixxxi 8
» Ixxxix 34
.. xcvii 15
18
28
36
.. ciii 14
i> cxiv 1
» cxxx 8
12
,, Con. 127
141
Maud I xi 11
., xvi 26, 28
» xix 69
>i xxii 9
11
// a 51
V 39
Com. of Arthur 260
468
470
., " 472
Oareth and L. 35
37
372
561
696
767
Mart, of Geraint 92
123
226
., 349,358
Love
432
Love-charm'd
Love (verb) {conHn%ud) For truly there are those who
I me yet ; Marr. ofGeraint 461
Except the lady he I's best be there. „ 481
I would the two Should I each other : „ 792
he I'a to know When men of mark are in his
territory : Geraint and E. 228
doth he I you as of old ? „ 323
men may bicker with the things they I, „ 325
that this man Vs you no more. „ 329
But here is one who Vs you as of old ; „ 334
' Earl, if you I rae as in former years, „ 355
village boys Who I to vex him eating, „ 561
I I that beauty should go beautifully : „ 681
I never loved, can never I but him : „ 709
Who I you, Prince, with something of the love
Wherewith we I the Heaven that chastens us. „ 788
A year ago — nay, then 1 1 thee not — Balin and Balan 504
vows like theirs, that high in heaven L most,
' O Merlin, do ye i me ? ' (repeat)
' Great Master, do ye i me ?
' Who are wise in love L most, say least,'
Master, do ye I my tender rhyme ? '
methinks you think you I me well ; For me, 1 1 you
somewhat ; rest :
' Man dreams of Fame while woman wakes to L'
proof against the grain Of him ye say ye I :
However well ye think ye I me now
try this charm on whom ye say ye I.'
My daily wonder is, I i at all.
And one to make me jealous if 1 1,
must be to i thee stUl.
' O Merlin, tho' you do not I me, save. Yet save me !
A sight ye I to look on.'
who I's me must have a touch of earth ;
He I's it in his knights more than himself :
III news, my Queen, for all who I him,
' that you I This greatest knight.
But if I know, then, iill not him, I know there is
none other I can I.'
' Yea, by God's death,' said he, ' ye I him well,
knew ye what all others know, And whom he I's.'
For if you I, it will be sweet to give it ; And if he I,
it will be sweet to have it
whether he I or not, A diamond is a diamond.
Yet, if he I, and his love hold,
Whose sleeve he wore ; she I's him ;
' The maid of Astolat Vs Sir Lancelot, Sir Lancelot
Vs the maid of Astolat.'
But did not I the colour ;
love Of man and woman when they I their best,
He will not I me : how then ?
' I have gone mad. 1 1 you :
Sir Lancelot's fault Not to I me, than it is mine
to I Him
He I's the Queen, and in an open shame :
Yet to be loved makes not to I again ;
All that belongs to knighthood, and 1 1.'
I I thee, tho' I know thee not.
win me this fine circlet, Pelleas, That I may I thee ?
on the morrow knighted, sware To I one only.
' To those who I them, trials of our faith,
and if ye { me not, I cannot bear to dream
this man I's, If love there be :
He could not I me, did he know me well.
' Avaunt,' they cried, ' our lady I's thee not.'
That whom ye loathe, him will I make you Z.'
He dies who I's it, — if the worm be there.'
What faith have these in whom they sware to I ? Last Tournament 188
' Free love — free field — we I (repeat) „ 275, 281
What, if she I me still ? „ 497
He find thy favour changed and I thee not ' — „ 500
I should hate thee more than I.' „ 600
Did 1 1 her ? the name at least I loved. „ 603
I say, Sw«ar to me thou wilt I me ev'n when old, „ 652
my Mul, we I but while we may ; „ 701
Merlin and V. 15
235, 236
237
248
399
483
460
488
516
525
536
539
928
944
Lancelot and E. 83
133
157
598
668
677
679
681
692
694
697
711
725
840
930
,,
1076
1082
1295
Pelleas and E. 9
43
129
141
210
299
307
312
369
390
409
Lore (verb) {continued) ' We I but while we may.' Well
then, Last Tournament 712
and I will I thee to the death, „ 720
' O Lancelot, if thou I me get thee hence.' Guinevere 95
True men who I me still, for whom I live, „ 445
To I one maiden only, cleave to her, „ 475
tho' thou wouldst not I thy lord, „ 508
that my doom is, I Z thee still. „ 559
Let no man dream but that 1 1 thee „ 560
tell the King 1 1 him tho' so late ? „ 651
I must not scorn myself : he I's me still. „ 673
Let no one dream but that he I's me still. „ 674
thy life is whole, and still I live Who I thee ; Pass, of Arthur 151
sons, who I Our ocean-empire To the Queen ii 28
draught of that sweet fountain that he I's, Lover's Tale i 141
Ye ask me, friends. When I began to I. „ 145
So know I not when I began to I. „ 163
In that I live 1 1 ; because III live : • „ 178
Than the gray cuckoo I's his name, „ 257
I foimd, they two did I each other, .„ 728
Did I Z her ? Ye know that I did I her ; „ 732
Did 1 1 her. And could I look upon her „ 735
Let them so I that men and boys may say, ' Lo !
how they I each other ! ' „ 756
Deem that 1 1 thee but as brothers do. So shalt thou
I me still as sisters do ; ,,767
had there been none else To Z as lovers, „ 771
I will be alone with all 1 1, „ iv 47
solemn offering of you To him you I.' „ 119
I'll never I any but you, (repeat) First Quarrel 22, 32, 33, 34
I loved Edith, made Edith I me. Sisters (E. and E.) 139
I know not which of these 1 1 the best. „ 283
But you I Edith ; and her own true eyes „ 284
I think / Ukewise I your Edith most. „ 293
Better to fall by the hands that they I, Def. of Lucknow 53
Ay, for they I me ! Sir J. Oldcastle 44
Who dost not I our England — To Victor Hugo 9
Yet I's and hates with mortal hates and loves, Tiresias 23
thou art wise enough, Tho' young, to I thy wiser, „ 154
one thing given me, to I and to Uve for, The Wreck 35
Stephen, 1 1 you, 1 1 you, and yet ' — „ 101
The wife, the sons, who I him best Ancient Sage 125
I swear and swear forsworn To I him most. The Flight 50
They I their mates, to whom they sing ; „ 65
She bad us I, like souls in Heaven, „ 88
every heart that I's with truth is equal to endure. „ 104
L youi- enemy, bless your haters, Locksley H., Sixty 85
I that loathed, have come to I him. „ 280
who I's War for War's own sake Is fool, Epilogue 30
only to be known By those who I thee best. Pref. Poem Broth. S. 8
Who I's his native country best. Hands all Round 4
To Canada whom we I and prize, „ 19
between The two that I thee. To Prin. Beatrice 18
Your rule has made the people I Their ruler. To Marq. of Dufferin 9
man, that only Uves and I's an hoxrr, Dem^ter and P. 106
Till thy dark lord accept and I the Sun, „ 137
for I loved him, and I him for ever : Fastness 36
And bind the maid to I you by the ring ; The Ring 202
flaunted it Before that other whom I loved and I. „ 244
MiriEun, if you I me take the ring ! ' „ 263
if you cannot I me, let it be.' „ 265
You I me still ' lo t'amo.' — ^Muriel — no — She cannot I ;
she I's her own hard self, „ 291
Why had I made her I me thro' the ring, „ 391
' That weak and watery nature I you ? „ 396
but now 1 1 you most ; Happy 29
whisper'd me ' your Ulric I's ' „ 62
Who I the winter woods. To Ulysses 14
Who I her still, and wliimper, Romney's R. 117
I I you more than when we maiTied. „ 157
cried 'L one another little ones ' Akbar's Dream 76
L me ? 0 yes, no doubt — how long — Charity 5
And I's the world from end to end. The Wanderer 7
Loveable Elaine the fair, Elaine the I, Lancelot and E. 1
Love-obarm'd stars that hung L-c to listen : Love and DvXy 75
Loved
433
Loved
Loved {See also Loov'd, Luw'd, Well-loved, Yet-loved) Ev'n
in her sight he I so well ? Margaret 40
If I were I, as I desire to be, // / were loved 1
— if I were I by thee ? „ 4
1 1 thee for the tear thou couldst not hide, The Bridesmaid 11
Have lived and I done so long. Miller's D. 38
1 1, and love dispeU'd the fear „ 89
1 1 the brimming wave that swam Thro' quiet meadows „ 97
1 1 you better for your fears, „ 149
But I Z his beauty passing well. The Sisters 23
silver tongue. Cold February I, is dry : The Blackbird 14
a sleep They sleep — the men 1 1. M. d' Arthur 17
we I the man, and prized his work ; „ Ej). 8
woman's heart, the heart of her 1 1 ; Gardener's D. 230
on the cheeks, Like one that I him : Dora 134
I have kill'd him— but 1 1 him— „ 160
I At first hke dove and dove were cat and dog Walk, to the Mail 57
but for daily loss of one she I „ 94
and Duty I of Love — Love and Duty 46
both with those That I me, and alone ; Ulysses 9
weeping, ' I have I thee long.' Locksley Rail 30
I had I thee more than ever wife was I. „ 64
No — she never I me truly : „ 74
to have I so slight a thing. „ 148
I the people well, And loathed to see them overtax'd ; Godiva 8
therefore, as they I her well, „ 38
* Ellen Adair she I me well, Edward Gray 9
And the people I her much, L. of Burleigh 76
We I the glories of the world, The Voyage 83
And you, whom once I Z so well. The Letters 35
But Philip I in silenoe ; Enoch Arden 41
But she I Enoch ; tho' she knew it not, „ 43
And her, he I, a beggar : „ 117
To sell the boat — and yet he I her well — „ 134
I have I you longer than you know.' „ 421
can you be ever I As Enoch was ? „ 426
to be Z A httle after Enoch.' „ 428
he had I her longer than she knew, „ 455
nor I she to be left Alone at home, „ 516
home Where Annie lived and I him, „ 685
Then may she learn 1 1 her to the last.' „ 835
yet the brook he I, For which. The Brook 15
fancies of the boy. To me that I him ; „ 20
he Z As heiress and not heir regretfully ? Aylmer's Field 23
young hearts not knowing that they I, „ 133
He but less I than Edith, of her poor :
He, I for her and for himself,
neither I nor liked the thing he heard,
for I have I you more as son Than brother,
The life of all — who madly I — and he,
They I me, and because I love their child
Him too you I, for he was worthy love,
woman half tum'd roimd from him she I,
tho' he I her none the less,
the mind, except it I them, clasp These idols
I to live alone Among her women ;
eyes that ever I to meet Star-sisters
' To Unger here with one that I us.'
I I her. Peace be with her.
1 1 you Uke this kneeler,
he That I me closer than his own right eye,
Call'd him worthy to be I,
if you I The breast that fed or arm that dandled you.
Dear traitor, too much I, why ? — why ? —
1 1 the woman : he, that doth not,
there was one thro' whom 1 1 her,
Ere seen 1 1, and I thee seen.
We I the hall, tho' white and cold,
I walk'd with one 1 1 two and thirty years ago.
Two dead men have 1 1 With a love
Three dead men have 1 1 and thou art last of the three. „ 15
I find him worthier to be I. In Mem., Pro. 40
' Behold the man that I and lost, „ i 15
With my lost Arthur's I remains, » _ ix 3
The human-hearted man 1 1, m «w» H
167
179
250
351
389
423
712
Sea Dreams 286
Lucretius 4
„ 164
Princess i 49
m427
Hi 339
iv 136
296
r531
vi 6
180
293
vii 313
317
341
The Daisy 37
V. of Cauteretz 4
G. of Swainston 13
Loved (continued) 1 1 the weight I had to bear. In Mem. xxv 7
'Tis better to have I and lost Than never to have I
at aU. „ xxvii 15
As when he I me here in Time, „ xliii 14
Who I, who suffered countless ills, ,, Ivi 17
My spirit I and loves him yet, „ Ix 2
1 1 thee, Spirit, and love, „ Ixi 11
'Tis better to have I and lost. Than never to have
I at all— „ Ixxxv 3
That I to handle spiritual strife, „ 54
He I to rail against it still, „ Ixxxix 38
The shape of him I Z, and love For ever : „ ciii 14
The man we I was there on deck, „ 41
A httle spare the night 11, „ cv 15
And sing the songs he I to hear. „ cvH 24
And I them more, that they were thine, „ ex 15
0 1 the most, when most I feel . _ „ cxxix 3
L deeplier, darklier imderstood ; „ 10
Until we close with all we I, „ cxxxi 11
told me that he Z A daughter of our house ; „ Con. 6
For all we thought and Z and did, „ 134
To speak of the mother she Z Maud I xix 27
one short hour to see The souls we Z, „ // iv 15
I one only and who clave to her — ' Ded. of Idylls 11
He laugh'd upon his warrior whom he I And honour'd
Com. of Arthur 125
most.
Stern too at times, and then I Z him not. But sweet
again, and then I Z him well.
Arthur charged his warrior, whom he Z And honour'd
most.
One, that had I him from his childhood,
I with that full love I feel for thee,
Kay the seneschal, who I him not,
And I her, as he Z the light of Heaven.
30 Z Geraint To make her beauty vary
and Z her in a state Of broken fortunes,
L her, and often with her own white hands
And Enid Z the Queen, and with true heart
tho' he Z and reverenced her too much
that dress, and how he Z her in it, (repeat)
Hath ask'd again, and ever Z to hear ;
Might well have served for proof that I was Z,
Perhaps because he Z her passionately.
The being he I best in all the world.
Not while they Z them ;
Enid never Z a man but him,
Except the passage that he Z her not ;
And I me serving in my father's hall :
I never Z, can never love but him :
To these my lists with him whom best you Z ;
with your own true eyes Beheld the man you Z
her ladies Z to call Enid the Fair,
I Z thee first. That warps the wit.'
0 God, that I had Z a smaller man !
Who Z to make men darker than they are,
My Queen, that summer, when ye Z me first,
she lifted up her eyes And Z him,
darling of the court, L of the loveliest,
Z her with aU love except the love
' If I be Z, these are my festal robes,
' I never Z him : an I meet with him,
it is my glory to have Z One peerless,
having Z God's best And greatest,
I I you, and my love had no return,
1 me with a love beyond all love In women,
Yet to be Z makes not to love again ;
And Z thy courtesies and thee, a man Made to
be Z;
Thou couldst have Z this maiden,
to be Z, if what is worthy love Could bind him,
Ye I me, damsel, surely with a love
Z him much beyond the rest, And honour'd him,
And since he Z all maidens,
for he dream'd His lady Z him, and he knew himself
L of the King :
354
447
Gareth and L. 53
83
483
Marr. of Geraint 5
8
12
16
19
119
„ 141,843
436
796
Geraint and E. 10
103
327
363
392
699
709
840
847
962
Merlin and V. 60
872
876
Lancelot and E. 104
260
262
868
909
1068
1090
1093
1276
1293
1295
1363
1366
1378
1394
Holy Grail 9
Pelleas and E. 40
153
2 E
Loved
434
Lover
Loved (continued) Then rang the shout his lady I : Pelleas and E. 171
1 1 you and I deem'd you beautiful, „ 297
Than to be Z again of you — farewell ; „ 302
yet him 1 1 not. Why ? I deem'd him fool ? „ 308
For why should I have I her to my shame ? I
loathe her, as I Z her to my shame. „ 482
1 never I her, I but lusted for her — „ 484
I it tenderly, And named it Nestling ; Last Tournament 24
And I him well, until himself had thought He I
her also, „ 401
' Grace, Queen, for being I : she I me well. „ 602
Did I love her ? the name at least 1 1. „ 603
Her to be i no more ? „ 641
I I This knightUest of all knights, „ 710
how to take last leave of all I Z ? Guinevere 546
Had I but I thy highest creatures here ? It was
my duty to have I the highest : „ 656
We needs must I the highest when we see it, „ 660
knights Once thine, whom thou hast I, Pass, of Arthur 61
And they my knights, who I me once, „ 73
Such a sleep They sleep — the men 1 1. „ 185
how should 1 have lived and not have I ? Lover's Tale i 170
we I The sound of one-another's voices „ 255
Next to her presence whom I Z so well, „ 427
Parting my own I mountains was received, „ 433
Even the feet of her I Z, I feU, „ 600
The I, the lover, the happy Lionel, „ 654
for 1 1 her, lost my love in Love ; I, for 1 1 her,
graspt the hand she I, „ 749
dream but how I could have I thee, had there been
none else To love as lovers, I again by thee. „ 770
How I had I her from the first ; „ ii 91
my spirit Was of so wide a compass it took in All
I had I, „ . 136
the settled coimtenance Of her 1 1, „ iii 40
all their house was old and I them both, „ iv 122
And, tho' he I and honour'd Lionel, „ 148
when the guest Is I and honour'd to the uttermost. „ 245
one who I His master more than all on earth „ 256
1 1 him better than play ; First (Quarrel 12
an' 1 1 him better than all. „ 14
an' I never I any but you ; „ 86
mother and her sister I More passionately still. Sisters {E. and E.) 44
Only, believing 1 1 Edith, „ 138
Had I not dream'd 1 1 her yestermom ? „ 169
she That L me — our true Edith — „ 235
In and beyond the grave, that one she I. „ 272
dog that had I him and fawn'd at his knee — In the Child. Hasp. 9
We have lost her who I her so much — „ 29
Voice of the dead whom we I, Def. of Luckrum 11
freedom, or the sake of those they I, Sir J. Oldcastle 186
Old Brooks, who I so well to mouth my rhymes. To W. H. Brookfield 2
those dawn-golden times, Who I you well ! „ 8
a man men fear is a man to be Z by the women
they say. And I could have I him too, The Wreck 18
Seer Whom one that Z, and honour'd him. Ancient Sage 3
What had he Z, what had he lost, „ 227
I Z him then ; he was my father then. The Flight 24
My Edwin I to call us then „ 80
I Z ye meself wid a heart and a half. Tomorrow 39
Amy Z me. Amy fail'd me, Locksley H., Sixty 19
All I Z are vanish'd voices, „ 252
a wailing, ' I have Z thee well.' „ 262
You came, and look'd and Z the view Long-known
and I by me. Pro. to Gen. Hamley 5
I that Z thee since my day began, To Virgil 38
cried ' Where is my I one ? Demeter and P. 60
for I Z him, and love him for ever : Vastness 36
He I my name not me ; The Ring 191
flatmted it Before that other whom I Z and love. „ 244
Miriam Z me from the first, „ 274
you — you Z me, kept your word. „ 290
all her talk was of the babe she Z ; „ 353
I Z you first when young and fair, Happy 29
The king who I me, And cannot die ; Merlin and the G. 79
Loved (continued) I by all the yoimger gown There at
Balliol, To Master of B. 2
and he I to dandle the child, Bandit's Death 15
He was I at least by his dog : „ 35
Love-deep languors of thy l-d eyes Elednore 76
Love-drunken who was he with such l-d eyes The Ring 21
Love-knots leg and arm with l-k gay, Talking Oak 65
Love-language heard The low l-l of the bird In Mem. cii 11
Love-langoid eyes, l-l thro' half tears Love and Duty 36
Loveless Sweet death, that seems to make us I clay, Lancelot and E. 1014
Lovelier I Than all the valleys of Ionian hills
As I than whatever Oread haunt The knolls of Ida,
What I of his own had he than her,
Flowers of aU heavens, and I than their names,
these fields Are lovely, I not the Elysian lawns.
And left her woman, I in her mood
The distance takes a I hue,
A I Ufe, a more unstain'd, than his !
' Far I in our Lancelot had it been,
Z than when firet Her light feet fell
might in wreathe (How Z, nobler then !)
Far I than its cradle ;
Z as herself Is I than all others —
Loveliest true To what is I upon earth.'
I in all grace Of movement,
Their feet in flowers, her Z :
Array'd and deck'd her, as the Z,
And Z of all women upon earth.
darling of the court, Loved of the Z,
Most I, earthly-heavenliest harmony ?
Turning my way, the Z face on earth.
Loveliness Her I with shame and with surprise
A miniature of Z, all grace Summ'd up
In Z of perfect deeds,
so pure a love Clothed in so pure a Z ?
Queen Paramount of love And Z —
Love-longing I thought Laziness, vague l-Vs,
Love-lore Thou art perfect in l-l. (repeat)
Lovelorn With melodious airs Z,
Love-loyal L-l to the least wish of the Queen
L-l to the least wish of the Queen,
Lovely (See also Lowly-lovely) A Z time. For it was
in the golden prime Arabian Nights 86
Stays on her floating locks the Z freight Ode to Memory 16
He said, ' She has a I face ; L. of Shalott iv 52
And whisper I words, and use Her influence Will Water. 11
She look'd so Z, as she sway'd The rein Sir L. and Q. G. 40
' Look what a I piece of workmanship ! ' Aylmer's Field 237
then I saw one Z star Larger and larger. Sea Dreams 93
these fields Are Z, lovelier not the Elysian lawns, Princess iii 342
The Z, lordly creature floated on „ vi 89
Be sometimes I Hke a bride. In Mem. lix 6
See what a Z shell. Small and pure as a pearl, Maud II ii 1
Where like a shoaling sea the Z blue Geraint and E. 688
But rather seem'd a I baleful star Veil'd Merlin and V. 262
and that clear-featured face Was Z, Lancelot and E. 1160
Love-oSering last L-o and peace-ofiering Last Tournament 748
Love-poem and this A mere l-p ! Princess iv 126
CEnone 1
74
Aylmer's Field 22
Princess, Pro. 12
„ iii 342
„ vii 162
In Mem. cxv 6
Ded. of Idylls 30
Lancelot and E. 589
Last Tournament 553
Lover's Tale i 459
530
iv 287
Mariana in the S. 64
CEnone 75
Princess vi 78
Marr. of Geraint 17
21
Lancelot and E. 262
Lover's Tale i 279
Sisters (E. and E.) 87
D. of F. Women 89
Gardener's D. 12
In Mem. xxxvi 11
Lancelot and E. 1384
Last Tournament 553
SisUrs (E. and E.) 128
Madeline 9, 26
Adeline 55
Lancelot and E. 89
Guinevere 126
Lover (See also Landscape-lover, Truth-lover) Two I's
whispering by an orchard wall ;
Came two young I's lately wed ;
my Z, with whom I rode subhme On Fortxme's
neck :
And on her I's arm she leant,
L's long-betroth'd were they :
But he clasp'd her like a Z,
He like a Z down thro' all his blood
That grow for happy Vs.
Yet once by night again the l's met,
Z heeded not. But passionately restless
And at the happy l's heart in heart —
As thou with thy young I hand in hand
she aim'd not at glory, no Z of glory she :
me the Z of liberty,
A jewel, a jewel dear to a l's eye !
Circumstance 4
L. of Shalott ii 34
D. of F. Women 141
Day- Dm., Depart. 1
Lady Clare 6
L. of Burleigh 67
Enoch Arden 659
The Brook 173
Aylmer's Field 413
545
Princess vii 108
W. to Marie Alex. 34
Wages 4
Boddicea 48
Window, On the Hill 8
Lover
435
Low
Lover (continued) A happy I who has come To look on her In Mem. viii 1
From a Uttle lazy I Who but claims Maud I xx 10
Come out to your own ti"ue I, That your true I may
see Your glory also, „ 46
For, call it I's' quarrels, yet I know Geraint and E. 324
one true I whom you ever own'd, „ 344
shall we strip him there Your I? „ 489
' The little rift within the Vs lute Merlin and V. 393
neither dame nor damsel then Wroth at a Vs loss ? „ 607
chant thy praise As prowest knight and truest I, Pelleas and E. 350
as the one true knight on earth, And only I ; „ 495
The Queen Look'd hard upon her I, „ 605
How darest thou, if I, push me Last Toiirnament 638
The loved, the I, the happy Lionel, Lover's Tale i 654
The blissful I, too. From liis great hoaixi ,, 713
had there been none else To love as Vs, „ 771
And leave the name of L's Leap : „ w 42
And thus our lonely I rode away, „ 130
I with our I to his native Bay. „ 155
What was it ? for our I seldom spoke, „ 225
The I answer'd, ' There is more than one „ 241
For man is a / of Truth, Dead Prophet 44
souls Of two repentant L's guard the ring ; ' The Sing 198
sacred those Ghost L's hold the gift.' „ 205
Two Vs parted by a scurrilous tale „ 208
as the bygone I thro' this ring Had sent his ciy „ 232
on that day Two Vs parted „ 427
As if — those two Ghost Vs — „ 459
L's yet — Miriam. Yes, yes ! „ 460
you were than a Vs fairy dream. To Mary Boyle 43
For Ralph was Edith's I, The Tourney 2
Lover's Bay Keep thou thy name of 'Z B.' Lover's Tale i 15
Love-sighs passion seeks Pleasance in l-s, Lilian 9
Lovesome One her dark hair and I mien.. Beggar Maid 12
Love-song A l-s I had somewhere read, ' Miller's D. 65
What knowest thou of I or of love ? Gareth and L. 1063
Lovest L thou the doleful wind Adeline 49
I think thou I me well.' L. of Burleigh 4
Lovetale The wind Told a I beside us, Lover's Tale i 543
Loveth And Z so his innocent heart, Supp. Confessions 52
She I her own anguish deep To J. S. 42
she will not wed Save whom she I, Gareth and L. 622
Love-whispers Affianced, Sir ? l-w may not breathe Princess ii 221
Loving {See also A-loving, England-loviiig, Loovin') ' I
pi'omise thee The fairest and most I wife in Greece,' (Enone 187
Most I is she ? „ 201
AVhen thy nerves could imderstand What there is
in I tears, Vision of Sin 161
Blessing her, praying for her, I her ; Enoch Arden 879
I her As when she laid her head beside my own. „ 880
For she — so lowly-lovely and so I. Aylmer's Field 168
Up thro' gilt wires a crafty I eye, Princess, Pro. 172
And I hands must part — Window, Answer 6
Gray nurses, I nothing new ; In Mem. xxix 14
Two spirits of a diverse love Contend for I masterdom. „ cii 8
Maud I xviii 58
Gareth and L. 554
580
1301
Merlin and V. 517
Pelleas and E. 159
Lover's Tale iv 68
Sisters (E. and E.) 168
Happy 26
91
Maud made my Maud by that long I kiss.
And, I, utter faithfulness in love,
L his lusty youthhood yielded to him.
I the battle as well As he that rides him
(As sons of kings I in pupilage
For Arthur, I his young knight.
Dust, as he said, that once was I hearts,
nay, but could I wed her L the other ?
Who yearn to lay my I head upon your leprous breast.
Now God has made you leper in His I care for both,
domes the red-plow'd hiUs With I blue ; Early Spring 4
Lovingldndness delightedly fulfill'd All Ves, Lover's Tale i 225
Low (adj. and adv.) Is not my human pride brought I ? Supp. Confessions 14
stooping I Unto the death, not sunk ! „ 97
Breathed I around the rolling earth The winds, etc. 3
an accent very I In blandishment, Isabel 19
And ever when the moon was I, Mariana 49
But when the moon was very I, „ 53
The I and bloomed foliage, Arabian Nights 13
oh, haste, Visit my I desire ! Ode to Memory 4
Low (adj. and adv.) (continued) at first to the ear The
warble was I, Dying Swan 24
L thunder and light in the magic night — The Merman 23
my ringlets would fall L adown, I adown. From
under my starry sea-bud crown L adown The Mermaid 15
And at my headstone whisper I, My life is full 24
Heavily the I sky raining Over tower'd Camelot ; L. of Shalott iv 4
L on her knees herself she cast, Mariana in the S. 27
Oh your sweet eyes, your I replies : L. C. V. de Vere 29
Lit with a I large moon. Palace of Art 68
Her I preamble all alone, „ 174
hears the I Moan of an unknown sea ; „ 279
Then I and sweet I whistled thrice ; Edwin Morris 113
Then when the first I matin-chirp hath grown Love and Duty 98
L thunders bring the mellow rain. Talking Oak 279
And all the I wind hardly breathed for fear. Godiva 55
And one I churl, compact of thankless earth, „ 66
Gloom'd the I coast and quivering brine The Voyage 42
L breezes fann'd the belfry bars, The Letters 43
Ever brightening With a I melodious thunder ; Poet's Mind 27
L voluptuous music winding trembled. Vision of Sin 17
Swung themselves, and in I tones replied ; „ 20
children leading evermore L miserable lives of
hand-to-mouth, Enoch Arden 116
And the I moan of leaden-colour'd seas. „ 612
' His head is I, and no man cares for him. „ 850
On a sudden a I breath Of tender air The Brook 201
Somewhere beneath his own I range of roofs, Aylmer's Field 47
call'd away By one I voice to one dear neighbourhood, „ 60
on I knolls That dimpling died into each other, „ 148
Averill seeing How I his brother's mood had fallen, „ 405
Last, some I fever ranging round to spy „ 569
Which from the I light of mortaUty „ 641
thro' the smoke The blight of I desires — „ 673
L was her voice, but won mysterious way „ 695
ever in it a ^ musical note Swell'd up and died ; Sea Dreams 210
He with a long I sibilation, stared As blank Princess i 176
Some to a Z song oar'd a shallop by, „ ii 457
Sweet and I, sweet and I, „ m 1
L, I, breathe and blow, „ 3
everywhere L voices with the ministering hand „ vii 21
There to hei-self, all in I tones, she read. „ 175
The last great Englishman is I. Ode on Well. 18
Thro' either babbling world of high and I ; „ 182
Light, so I upon earth, Window, Marr. Morn 1
Light, so I in the vale You flash and lighten afar, „ 9
' What is it makes me beat sol?' In Mem. iv 8
Till growing winters lay me I; „ xl 30
Be near me when my light is I, „ 11
on the I dark verge of life The twilight of eternal day. „ 15
How should he love a thing so Z ? ' „ Ix 16
Whose life in I estate began „ Ixiv 3
The voice was I, the look was bright ; „ Ixix 15
and break The I beginnings of content. „ Ixxxiv 48
Or I morass and whispering reed, „ c 8
and heard The I love-language of the bird „ cii 11
shining daffodil dead, and Orion I in his grave. Maud I Hi 14
Had given her word to a thing so I? „ xvi 27
More Ufe to Love than is or ever was In our I world, „ xviii 48
L on the sand and loud on the stone „ xxii 25
The delight of I replies. „ // iv 30
Then to strike him and lay him I, „ v 90
Over Orion's grave I down in the west, „ /// vi 8
Then the King in I deep tones. Com. of Arthur 260
Go likewise ; lay him I and slay him not, Gareth and L. 379
As Mark would sully the I state of churl : „ 427
For an your fire be I ye kindle mine ! „ 711
I have not fall'n so I as some would wish. Marr. of Geraint 129
Made a I splendour in the world, „ 598
felt Her I firm voice and tender goverrmient. Geraint and E. 194
L at leave-taking, with his brandish'd plume „ 359
But answer'd in I voice, her meek head yet Drooping, „ 640
Faint in the I dark hall of banquet : Bcdin and Balan 343
walls Of that I church he built at Glastonbuiy. „ 367
Beneath a I door dipt, and made his feet „ 403
Low
436
Loyal
Low (adj. and adv.) (coniinued) Crawl'd slowly with /
moans to where he lay, Balin and Balan 592
She answer'd with a I and chuckling laugh : Merlin and V. 780
we scarce can sink as ^ : „ 813
or I desire Not to feel lowest makes them level all ; „ 827
But into some I cave to crawl, and there, „ 884
The I sun makes the colour : I am yours, Lancelot and E. 134
The hard earth shake, and a I thunder of arms. „ 460
Then came her father, saying in I tones, „ 994
If this be high, what is it to be Z ? ' „ 1084
But spake with such a sadness and so I Holy Grail 42
L as the hill was high, and where the vale Was lowest, „ 441
then one I roll Of Autumn thimder. Last Tournament 152
She lived a moon in that I lodge with him : „ 381
out beyond them flush'd The long I dune, „ 484
that I lodge retum'd. Mid-forest, „ 488
A I sea-sunset glorying round her hair „ 508
one I light betwixt them bum'd Guinevere 4
' Liest thou here so I, the child of one I honour'd, „ 422
Lest but a hair of this I head be harm'd. „ 447
Do each I office of your holy house ; „ 682
And all the I dark groves, a land of love ! Lover's Tale i 332
lake, that, flooding, leaves L banks of yellow sand ; „ 535
Held converee sweet and I — I converse sweet, „ 541
At first her voice was very sweet and I, „ 563
for the sound Of that dear voice so musically I, „ 708
Unfrequent, I, as tho' it told its pulses ; „ ii 55
thence at intervals A I bell tolling. „ 83
For that I knell toUing his lady dead — „ iv 33
I down in a rainbow deep Silent palaces, V. of Maeldune 79
And his voice was I as from other worlds, „ 117
By the I f oot-Ughts of the world — The Wreck 40
L warm winds had gently breathed us away from the
land — „ 63
I sigh'd, as the I dark hull dipt under the smiling main, „ 127
' Is it fee then brought sol? ' Dead Prophet 6
And behind him, I in the West, „ 20
You speak so I, what is it ? The Ring 49
A footstep, a I throbbing in the walls, „ 409
And these I bushes dipt their twigs in foam, Prog, of Spring 51
Where I sank with the body at times in the sloughs
of a i desire. By an Evolution. 18
Sing thou I or loud or swfeet. Poets and Critics 6
Some too I would have thee shine, „ 11
Low (s) In smnmer heats, with placid I's
Unf earing.
From the dark fen the oxen's I
Low (verb) and the bull couldn't I,
Low-brow'd or safely moor'd Beneath a l-b cavern,
Low-built appear'd, l-b but strong ;
Low-couch'd Indian on a still-eyed snake, l-c —
Low-cowering L-c shall the Sophist sit ;
Low-drooping L-d till he well-nigh kiss'd her feet
Low-dropt nmrmur at the l-d eaves of sleep,
Lower She breathed in sleep a I moan.
Calling thyself a little I ' Than angels.
' Or if thro' I lives I came —
And I voic&s saint me from above.
On a range of I feelings and a narrower heart
But I count the gray barbarian I than the Christian
child.
Like a beast with I pleasures, like a beast with /
pains ?
Gathering up from all the I ground ;
And slowly quickening into I forms ;
We ranging down this I track,
No I Ufe that earth's embrace May breed with him,
when most I feel There is a Z and a higher ;
And, moved thro' life of I phase.
Tells of a manhood ever less and I ?
Because aU other Hope had I aim ;
Lower (continued) So the Higher wields the L, while
■8upp. Confessions 154
Mariana 28
V. of Maeldune 18
Lover's Tale i 55
Balin and Balan 333
Lover's Tale ii 189
Clear-headed friend 10
Lancelot and E. 1172
Lover's Tale ii 122
Mariana in the S. 45
Two Voices 198
364
St. S. Stylites 154
Locksley Hall 44
174
176
Vision of Sin 15
210
In Mem. xlvi 1
„ Ixxxii 3
„ cxxix 4
„ Con. 125
Last Tournament 121
Lover's Tale i 455
my lord is I than his oxen or his swine. Locksley //., Sixty 126
youth and age are scholars yet but in the I school, „ 243
altogether can escape From the I world within him. Making of Man 2
Neither mourn if human creeds be I Faith 5
the L is the Higher
Lower (verb) shalt I to his level day by day,
Fortune, turn thy wheel and I the proud ;
Lower'd L softly with a threefold cord of love
he spake to these his helm was I,
They I me down the side,
(deferentially With nearing chair and I accent)
Lowest from a height That makes the I hate it,
Nor ever I roll of thunder moans,
barbarous isles, and here Among the I.'
so Vivien in the Z, Arriving at a time
low desire Not to feel I makes them level all ;
And in the I beasts are slaying men,
where the vale Was I, found a chapel,
I could hardly sin agaiixst the I.'
Sorrowing with the sorrows of the I !
Is brother of the Dark one in the I,
Low-flowing fling on each side my l-f locks,
L-f breezes are roaming the broad valley
Low-folded breathless burthen of l-f heavens
Low-hung gushes from beneath a l-h cloud.
Like to a l-h and a fiery sky
Lowing (part.) And I to his fellows.
Lowing (s) So thick with Vs of the herds.
Lowland Toward the I ways behind me.
Lowlier We taught him I moods, when Elsinore
Low-lieth Where Claribel l-l (repeat)
Lowlihead perfect wifehood and pure I.
Lowliness sure of Heaven If I could save her.
Lowly (adj.) Or even a I cottage whence we see
When truth embodied in a tale Slftill enter in
at I doors,
or rest On Enid at her I handmaid-work,
' And thence I dropt into a / vale.
For I minds were madden'd to the height
Within the bloodless heart of I flowers
• And rough-ruddy faces Of I labour.
Lowly (s) All the I, the destitute,
Lowly-lovely she — so l-l and so loving.
Lowly-sweet Edith, yet so l-s,
Lowness The I of the present state.
Low-spoken L-s, and of so few words,
Low-throned L-t Hesper is stayed between the two
peaks ;
Low-tinkled L-t with a bell-Uke flow
Low-toned So she l-t ; while with shut eyes I lay
Low-tongued Doth the l-t Orient Wander
Low-voiced The l-^, tender-spirited Lionel,
Low-wheel'd Within the Z-t« chaise.
Loyal (See also Ever-loyal, Half-loyal, Love-loyal,
Mock-loyal) She hath no I knight and true,
' The slight she-shps of I blood.
Queenly responsive when the I hand
The I warmth of Florian is not cold.
The I pines of Canada murmur thee.
Our I passion for our temperate kings ;
And I unto kindly laws.
With a I people shouting a battle cry.
Hath ever like a I sister cleaved To Arthur, —
Of I vassals toiling for their liege.
Art thou so little I to thy Queen,
' Fain would I still be I to the Queen.'
So I scarce is I to thyself.
But have ye no one word of I praise For Arthur,
But now my I worship is allow'd Of all men :
Nor often I to his word, and now Wroth
' Prince, O I nephew of our noble King,
L, the dumb old servitor, on deck,
Low-drooping till he wellnigh kiss'd her feet For
I awe.
To I hearts the value of all gifts Must vary
' Hail, Bors ! if every I man and tme Could see it,
For I to the uttermost am I.'
but the fi-uit Of I nature, and of noble mind.'
Locksley H., Sixty 124
Locksley Hall 45
Marr. of Geraint 347
D. of F. Women 211
Gruinm'ere 593
The Wreck 125
Aidmer's Field 267
173
Lucretius 108
Princess ii 123
Merlin and V. 141
828
Holy Grail 234
„ 442
Iiast Tournament 572
On Juh. Q. Victoria 27
Demeter and P. 95
The Mermaid 32
Leonine Eleg. 1
Aylmer's Field 612
Ode to Memory 71
Lover's Tale ii 61
Gardener's D. 88
In Mem. xcix 3
Silent Voices 5
Buonaparte 9
Claribel 1, 8, 21
Isabel 12
Maud I xii 20
Ode to Memory 100
In Mem. xxxvi 8
Marr. of Geraint 400
Holy Grail 440
To Mary Boyle 33
Prog, of Spring 84
Merlin and the G. 60
On Jub. Q. Victoria 31
Aylmer's Field 168
Locksley H., Sixty 49
In Mem. xxiv 11
Geraint and E. 395
Leonine Eleg. 11
The winds, etc. 7
Princess vii 223
Adeline 51
Lover's Tale i 655
Talking Oak 110
L. of Shalott ii 25
Talking Oak 57
Aylmer's Field 169
Princess ii 244
W. to Marie Alex. 19
Ode on Well. 165
In Mem. Ixxxv 16
Maud III vi 35
Com. of Arthur 191
282
Balin and Balan 251
254
256
Blerlin and V. 778
Lancelot and E. 110
559
652
1144
1173
1214
Holy Grail 756
Pellea.« and E. 212
Guinevere 336
I
Loyal
437
Luvv
Loyal (continued) O Z to the royal in thyself, And I to
thy land, To the Queen ii 1
So Z is too costly ! friends — „ 16
The I to their crown Are I to their own own far sons, „ 27
That I am I to him tUl the death,
she was always I and sweet —
To all the I hearts who long To keep
multitude L. each, to the heart of it,
where the I bells Clash welcome —
How I in the following of thy Lord !
Loyal-hearted On thee the l-h hung.
Lubber Then, narrow court and I King, farewell !
Lucid golden round her I throat And shoulder :
The I outline forming round thee ;
Gods, who haunt The I interspace of world and world,
issued in a court Compact of I marbles,
the mist is drawn A I veil from coast to coast,
Be large and I round thy brow.
What lightens in the I east Of rising worlds
The I chambers of the morning star,
yet one glittering foot disturb'd The I well ;
Lucilia L, wedded to Lucretius, found
Lucius Junius Brutus The L J B oimj kind ?
Luck good / Shall fling her old shoe after.
Good I had your good man,
but rosier I will go With these rich jewels,
Columbus 227
Despair 49
Hands all Round 13
On Jub. Q. Victoria 21
The Ring 482
In Mem. W. G. Ward 6
In Mem. ex 5
Merlin and V. 119
(Enone 178
Tithonus 53
Lucretius 105
Princess ii 24
In Mem. Ixvii 14
„ xci 8
cv 24
Lover's Tale i 28
Tiresias 42
Lucretius 1
Princess ii 284
Will Water. 215
Geraint and E. 617
Last Tournament 45
Luckier so prosper'd that at last A i or a bolder fisherman, Enoch Arden 49
hot in haste to join Their I mates,
Lucknow in the ghastly siege of L—
Lucky Less I her home-voyage :
For I rhymes to him were scrip and share,
Lucretius LtrciLiA, wedded to L, found
Lucumo lay at wine with Lar and L ;
Lucy An' L wur laame o' one leg,
Straange an' unheppen Miss L !
Lull (while warm airs I us, blowing lowly)
Perchance, to I the throbs of pain.
To I with song an aching heart,
11 & fancy trouble-tost
Lullabies These mortal I of pain May bind a book,
Lull'd Thy tuwhits are I, I wot,
hum of swarming bees Into dreamful slumber I
L echoes of laborious day Come to you,
And I them in my own.
A fall of water I the noon asleep.
Lulling L the brine against the Coptic sands.
I random squabbles when they rise.
Lumber the waste and I of the shore,
Luminous his stedfast shade Sleeps on his I ring.'
A belt, it seem'd, of I vapour, lay,
meek Seem'd the full lips, and mild the I eyes,
L, gemlike, ghostlike, deathUke,
Holy Grail All over cover'd with a I cloud,
Holy Vessel hung Clothed in white samite or a Z cloud.
Lump {See also Loomp) This I of earth has left his estate
Lungs labour'd down within his ample I,
writhings, anguish, labouring of the I
Brass mouths and iron I !
You that lie with wasted I
Lunnon (London) Squoire's i' L, an'
summun
Lurdane droned her I knights Slumbering,
Lure (s) Diet and seeling, jesses, leash, and I.
follow, leaping blood, The season's I !
Lure (verb) splendour fail'd To I those eyes
Lured When we have I you from above,
him they I Into their net made pleasant
one unctuous mouth which I him,
L by the crimes and frailties of the court,
Which often I her from herself ;
we were I by the light from afar,
L by the glare and the blare,
Earis that were I by the Hunger of glory
Eyes that I a doting boyhood
My beauty I that falcon from his eyry
Geraint and E. 575
Def. of Lucknow 4
Enoch Arden 541
The Brook 4
Luxyretius 1
Princess ii 129
Village Wife 99
100
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 89
The Daisy 105
In Mem. xxxvii 15
„ Ixv 2
„ Ixxvii 5
The Owl ii 1
Elednore 30
Margaret 29
Talking Oak 216
Romney's R. 83
Buonaparte 8
Eoly Grail 557
Enoch Arden 16
Palace of Art 16
Sea Dreams 209
Princess vii 226
■ Maud I Hi 8
Holy Grail 189
513
Maud I xvi 1
Princess « 273
Pass, of Arthur 115
Freedom 40
Forlorn 21
N. Farmer, O.S. 57
Pelleas and E. 430
Merlin and V. 125
Early Spring 26
St. Telemachus 36
Rosalind 46
Aylmer's Field 485
Sea Dreams 14
Guinevere 136
152
V. of Maeldune 71
73
Bait, of Brunanhurh 123
Locksley H., Sixty 10
Happy 59
Lured (continued) What sight so I him thro 'the fields Far— far — away 1
I me from the household fire on earth. Romney's R. 40
Lurid Wrapt in drifts of I smoke Maud II iv 66
when now Bathed in that I crimson — St. Telemachus 18
His face deform'd by I blotch and blain — Death of (Enone 72
Lurk I think no more of deadly I's therein, Princess ii 226
such as I's In some wild Poet, hi Mem. xxxiv 6
' There I three villains yonder in the wood, Geraint and E. 142
If he ? yes, he . . . I's, listens. The Flight 71
Lurking Balan I there (His quest was
unaccomphsh'd) Balin and Balan 546
Vivien, I, heard. She told Sir Modred. Guinevere 98
Luscious Nor roll thy viands on a I tongue, Ancient Sage 267
Lush at the root thro' I green grasses burn'd D. of F. Women 71
Lusitanian father-grape grew fat On L summers. Will Water. 8
Lust Either from I of gold", or like a girl M. d' Arthur 127
Crown thyself, worm, and worship thine ownl's !^ Aylmer's Field 650
and keep him from the I of blood Lucretius 83
And twisted shapes of I, unspeakable, „ 157
For I or lusty blood or provender : „ 198
in his I and voluptuousness, Boadicea 66
Ring out the narrowing I of gold ; In Mem. cvi 26
And I of gain, in the spirit of Cain, Maud I. i 23
feeble vassals of wine and anger and I, „ // i 43
land that has lost for a little her I of gold, „ /// vi 39
live the strength and die the I ! Com. of Arthur 492
own no I because they have no law ! Pelleas and E. 481
Either from I of gold, or like a girl Pass, of Arthur 295
thro' which the I, Villany, violence, Colmnhus 171
The lecher would cleave to his I's, Despair 100
craft and madness, I and spite, Locksley H., Sixty 189
He that has lived for the I of the minute, Vastness 27
wallow in this old I Of Paganism, St. Telemachus 78
Lusted I never loved her, I but I for her — Pelleas and E. 484
ghastliest That ever I for a body, Lover's Tale i 648
Lustful A I King, who sought to win my love Balin and Balan 474
Lustier By park and suburb under brown Of I leaves ; In Mem. xcviii 25
Until they find a I than themselves.' Balin and Balan 19
Stronger ever born of weaker, I body, larger
mind ? Locksley H., Sixty 164
Lustihood He is so full of I, he will ride, Lancelot and E. 203
Lusting I for all that is not its own ; Maud I i 22
Lustre (See also Lace-lustre) Soft I bathes the range
of urns Day- Dm., Sleep. P. 9
The I of the long convolvuluses Enoch Arden 576
His eyes To indue his I ; Lover's Tale i 424
Lustreless one was patch'd and blurr'd and I Marr. of Geraint 649
Lustrous and the light and I curls — AI. d' Arthur 216
And all about him roU'd his I eyes ; Love and Death 3
Slides the bird o'er I woodland, Locksley Hall 162
and the light and I curls — Pass, of Arthur 384
Lusty The I bird takes every hour for dawn : M. d' Arthur, Ep. 11
And here and there a I trout. The Brook 57
For lust or I blood or provender : Lucretius 198
A I brace Of twins may weed her of her folly. Princess v 463
Fair empires branching, both, in I life ! — W. to Marie Alex. 21
A I youth, but poor, who often saw Gareth and L. 48
Loving his I youthhood yielded to him. „ 580
for this lad is great And I, „ 731
it fell Like flaws in summer laying I com : Marr. of Geraint 764
The I mowers labouring dinnerless, Geraint and E. 251
His I spearmen follow'd him with noise : „ 593
Strike down the I and long practised knight, Lancelot and E. 1361
till she long To have thee back in I life again, Pelleas and E. 352
I might have stricken a I stroke for him, Sir J. Oldcastle 69
Lute (s) on lattice edges lay Or book or I ; Princess ii 30
' It is the Uttle rift within the I, Merlin and V. 390
' The httle rift within the lover's I „ 393
Lute (verb) That I and flute fantastic tenderness, Princess iv 129
Luther thou wilt be A latter L, To J. M. K. 2
Lutterworth Nor thou in Britain, little L, Sir J. Oldcastle 26.
Luw (love) (s) Noa — -thou'U marry for I — N. Farmer, N. S. 12*
fur, Sammy, 'e married fur I. „ 32
X ? what's I ? thou can luvv thy lass an' 'er munny
too, „ 33
Luvv
438
Mad
Law flove) (verb) Luw ? what's luvv ? thou can I
thy lass an' 'er munny too, N. Farmer, N. S. 33
Could'n 1 1 thy muther hy cause o' 'er munny
laaid by ? „ 35
Law'd (loved) fur I Z 'er a vast sight moor fur it : „ 36
Luxuriant The I symmetry Of thy floating gracefulness, Eleanore 49
Luxurious Till, kill'd with some I agony, Vision of Sin 43
Luxury And I of contemplation : Eleanore 107
Lychgate to the I, where his chariot stood, Aylmer's Field 824
By the l-g was Muriel. The Ring 324
Lycian Appraised the L custom. Princess ii 128
Lydian Gazing at the L laughter of the Garda Lake below Frater Ave, etc. 8
Lyiug (adj. and part.) See also A-laaid, A-liggin', Li^in',
Under-lying) Fed thee, a child, I alone, Eleanore 25
I still Shadow forth the banks at will : „ 109
L, robed in snowy white That loosely flew L. of Shalott iv 19
Win vex thee I underground ? Two Voices 111
For I broad awake I thought of you May Queen, Con. 29
The Roman soldier found Me I dead, JD. of F. Women 162
I robed and crown'd, Worthy a Roman spouse.' „ 163
/, hidden from the heart's disgrace, Locksley Hall 57
Summer isles of Eden I in dark-purple spheres „ 164
She I on her couch alone, Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 2
On the decks as they were I, The Captain 53
Suffused them, sitting, I, languid shapes, Vision of Sin 12
(His father I sick and needing him) Enoch Arden 65
I thus inactive, doubt and gloom. „ 113
Found I with his urns and ornaments, Aylmer's Field 4
I bathed In the green gleam of dewy-tassell'd trees : Princess i 93
You I close upon his temtory, „ iv 403
but when she saw me I stark, „ vi 100
What whispers from thy I lip ? In Mem. Hi 4
And found thee I in the port ; „ xiv 4
What whisper'd from her I lips ? „ xxxix 10
The wine-flask I couch'd in moss, „ Ixxxix 44
What was ii? &l trick of the brain ? Maud II i 37
L close to my foot. Frail, „ ii 3
his good mates L or sitting round him, Gareth and L. 512
And left him I in the public way ; Geraint and E. 478
she that saw him I unsleek, unshorn, Lancelot and E. 815
I bounden there In darkness thro' innumerable hours Holy Grail 676
thou wert I in thy new leman's arms.' Last Tournament 625
saw One I in the dust at Almesbury, Pass, of Arthur 77
Ever the mine and assault, our sallies, their I
alarms, Def. of Lucknow 75
I've ninety men and more that are I sick ashore. The Revenge 10
little girl with her arms I out on the
counterpane.' In the Child. Hosp. 58
little arms I out on the counterpane ; „ 70
I I here bedridden and alone, Columbus 164
Among them Muriel I on her face — The Ring 448
Tell him you were I ! Forlorn 56
Lying (s) Death in all life and I in all love. Merlin and V. 194
Lyings-in aches, and teethings, l-i. Holy Grail 554
I^ette ' My name ? ' she said — ' L my name ; Gareth and L. 607
a light laugh Broke from L, „ 837
He laugh'd ; the laughter jarr'd upon L : ,. 1226
turning to i he told The tale of Gareth, „ 1272
' Heaven help thee,' sigh'd L. „ 1357
But he, that told it later, says L. „ 1429
Lynx lier I eye To fix and make me hotter, Princess Hi 46
I^x-eyes You needs must have good l-e Despair 114
Lyonesse sea-sounding wastes of L— Merlin and V. 74
Lyonnesse Had fallen in L about their Lord, M. d' Arthur 4
Roving the tra^^kless realms of L, Lancelot and E. 35
Rode Tristram toward L and the west. Last Tournament 362
Then pressing day by day thro' X „ 501
light feet fell on our rough L, „ 554
when first I rode from our rough L, „ 664
And rode thereto from L, and he said Guinevere 236
All down the lonely coast of L, „ 240
Back to the sunset bounil of L— Pass, of Arthur 81
Ha<l fall'n in L about their lord, „ 173
Lyonors a knight To combat for my sLster, L, Gareth and L. 608
the Lady L Had sent her coming champion, „ 1191
Lyonors (continued) The Lady X at a window stood, Gareth and L. 1375
The Lady L wrung her hands and wept, ,, 1395
And stay the world from Lady L. „ 1412
And Lady L and her house, with dance „ 1422
Says that Sir Gareth wedded L, „ 1428
Lyre voice, a Z of widest range Struck by all passion, D. of F. Women 165
Who touch'd a jarring I at firet, In Mem. xcvi 7
golden I Is ever sounding in heroic ears Tiresias 180
Ljrrics dismal I, prophesying change Princess i 142
Maade (made) An' 'e m the bed as 'e ligs on N. Fanner, N. S. 28
scratted my faace like a cat, an' it m 'er sa mad North. Cobbler 22
I grabb'd the munny she m, „ 32
what ha m our MoUy sa laate ? Spinster's S's. 113
An' the munney they m by the war, Owd Rod 44
An' soa they've m tha a parson. Church-warden, etc. 7
pearky as owt, an' tha m me as mad as mad, „ 35
Maain-glad (main glad) but I be m 3 to seea tha so 'arty North. Cobbler 2
Naay — fur 1 be m-g, „ 9
Maake (make) I knaws what m's tha sa mad. N. Farmer, N. S. 17
What m's 'er sa laate ? Spinster's S's. 5
till I m's tha es smooth es silk, „ 53
I loovs tha to 7n thysen 'appy, „ 57
They 7n's ma a graater Laady „ 110
means fur to m 'is owd aage as 'appy Owd Rod 3
The fellers as m's them picturs, „ 23
Doant m thysen sick wi' the caake. „ 34
an' they m's ma a help to the poor, Church-warden, etc. 39
Blaakin' (making) M 'em goa togither as they've
good right to do. N. Farmer, N. S. 34
an' w ma deaf wi' their shouts, Spinster's S's. 88
I 'eiird 'er a m 'er moan, „ 115
Maale (male) by the fault 0' that ere m — Village Wife 17
Maate (mate) or she weant git a m onyhow ! „ 104
Maay (hawthorn-bloom) niver ha seed it sa white wi' the M „ 80
Maay (month) carpet es fresh es a midder o' flowers i' M Spinster's S's. 45
Maaziu' (bewildering) Huzzin' an' m the blessed fealds N. Farmer, 0. S. 62
Macaw add A crimson to the quaint AI, Day-Dm., Pro. 16
Mace brand, m, and shaft, shield — Princess v 503
Machicolated Glared on a huge m tower Last Tournament 424
Machine praised his land, his horses, his m's ; The Brook 124
Machcee ' Tomorra, tomorra, M ! ' Tomorrow 18
Macready Farewell, M, since to-night we part ; To W. C. Macready 1
Farewell, M, since this night we part, „ 5
Farewell, M ; moral, grave, sublime ; „ 12
Mad {See also Clean-wud, Hawk-mad, Wud) troops of
devils, m with blasphemy, St. S. Stylites 4
Am I m, that I should cherish that which beai-s
but bitter fruit ? Locksley Hall 65
the bailiff swore that he was m, The Brook 143
Squoire 'ull be sa m an' all — N. Farmer, 0. S. 47
I knaws what maakes tha sa m. „ N. S. 17
M and maddening all that heard her Boddicea 4
What matter if I go m, Maud I xi 6
to hear a dead man chatter Is enough to drive one m. „ // v 20
Then Artliur all at once gone m replies, Gareth and L. 863
whether she be m, or else the King, Or both or
neither, or thyself be m, 1 ask not : „ 875
your town, where all the men are m ; Marr. of Geraint 418
it makes me m to see you weep. Geraint and E. 616
for I was wellnigh m : „ 836
m for strange adventure, dash'd away. Balin and Balan 289
' I have gone m. I love you : Lancelot and E. 930
' he dash'd across me — m. Holy Grail 640
holy nun and thou have driven men m, „ 862
What ! art thou m ? ' Pelleas and E. 537
beheld three spirits m with joy Guinevere 252
Playing m pranks along the heathy leas ; Circumstance 2
Look how they tumble the blossom, the m little
tits ! Window, Ay 9
Mad
439
Made
Mad (continued) with m hand Tearing the bright leaves
of the ivy -screen, Lover's Tale ii 39
their seamen made mock at the m little craft The Revenge 38
an' it maade 'er sa m North. Cobbler 22
M wi' the lasses an' all — Village Wife 78
I Stumbled on deck, half m. The Wreck 118
n bride who stabb'd her bridegroom on her bridal
night— The Flight 57
L m, then I am m, but sane, „ 58
My father's madness makes me m — ,, 59
I *m not m, not yet, not quite — „ 60
m loT the charge and the battle were we. Heavy Brigads 41
a-yowhn' an' yaupin' like m ; Owd Rod 88
pearky as owt, an' tha maade me as m as m, Church-warden, etc. 35
I w»s m, I was raving-wild. Charity 27
HftHam Take, M, this poor book of song ; To the Queen 17
M — i I know your sex, Vision of Sin 181
so mask'd, M, I love the truth ; Receive it ; Princess ii 213
not to answer, M, all those hard things .. 345
' M, he the wisest man Feasted the women ,. 350
M, you should answer, we would ask) „ 353
Nay — for it's kind of you, M, Rizpah 21
M, I beg your pardon ! „ 81
Hadden -s tliis a time to »» madness Aylmer's Field 769
Hadden'd (adj. and part.) Now to the scream of a m
beach dragg'd down by the wave, Maud I Hi 12
cramping creeds that had to the peoples Despair 24
TiU I myself was m with her cry. The Ring 405
For bwly minds were m to the height To Mary Boyle 33
Madden'd (verb) And ever he mutter'd and m, Maud / i 10
' I shall assay,' said Gareth with a smile That m her, Gareth and L. 784
and tft with himself and moan'd : Pelleas and E. 460
and we gorged and we to, V. of Maeldune 67
For one monotonous fancy to her, The Ring 404
Kaddeniig Mad and to all that beard her Boddicea 4
And m what he rode : Eoly Grail 641
Madder made our mightiest m than our least. „ 863
Haddest Of all the glad New- Year, mother, the m
merriest day ; May Queen 3
To-morrow 'ill be of all the year the m merriest day, „ 43
Maddison's an' loook thruf M gaate ! Spinster's S's. 6
Hade (See also Costly-made, Ifoade, New-made,
Stronger-made) The world was never to ; Nothing will Die 30
0 spirit- and heart »w desolate ! Supp. Confessions 189
A faiiy sliield your Genius m Margaret 41
My fancy to me for a moment blest The form, the form 6
while the tender service to thee weep, The Bridesmaid 10
She m three paces thro' the room, L. of Shalott Hi 38
' Is this the form,' she m her moan, Mariana in the S. 33
' The day to night,' she to her moan, „ 81
And weeping then she m her moan, „ 93
What is so wonderfully to.' Two Voices 6
' This is more vile,' he to reply, „ 103
1 told thee — hardly nigher to, „ 173
play'd In his free field, and pastime m, „ 320
These three to unity so sweet, „ 421
wherefore rather I to choice To commune „ 460
So sing that other song I ?«, Miller's D. 199
Love is m a vague regret. „ 210
That loss but to us love the more, „ 230
She to Paris to Proffer of royal power, CEnone 110
Kept watch, waiting decision, m reply. „ 143
I TO a feast ; I bad him come ; The Sisters 13
I TO my dagger sharp and bright. „ 26
To which my soul to answer readily : Palace of Art 17
Four courts I to. East, West and South and North, „ 21
you'll be there, too, mother, to see me to the Queen ; May Queen 26
Last May we to a crown of flowers : „ N. Y's. E. 9
Beneath the hawthorn on the green they to me
Queen of May ; „ 10
morning star of song, who m His music heard
below ; D. of F. Women 3
I TO The ever-shifting currents of the blood „ 132
And me this knowledge bolder to. To J. S. 5
To shame the boast so often to, Love thou thy land 71
Made (continued) I perish by this people which I to, — M. d' Arthur 22
great brand M Ughtnings in the splendour of the moon, „ 137
M me most happy, faltering,
TO a little wreath of all the flowers
half has fali'n and to a bridge ;
m it sweet To walk, to sit, to sleep,
Man is to of solid stuff.
God TO the woman for the man,
' God TO the woman for the use of man,
all hell beneath M me boil over.
So slightly, musically m,
M weak by time and fate,
the barking cur M her cheek flame :
no sound is to. Not even of a gnat that sings.
Had m him talk for show ;
the seamen M a gallant crew,
M a murmur in the land.
And a gentle consort to he.
Like fancy m of golden air.
But you have to the wiser choice.
That m the wild-swan pause in her cloud,
sailor's lad M orphan by a winter shipwreck,
and TO himself Full sailor ;
and TO a home For Annie, neat and nestlike,
The sea is His : He to it.'
his duty by his own, M himself theirs ;
Down thro' the whitening hazels to a plunge
tongue Was loosen'd, till he to them understand ;
M such a voluble answer promising all,
I saw where James M toward us,
m The hoar hair of the Baronet bristle up
bounteously m And yet so finely,
M blossom-ball or daisy-chain,
' God bless 'em : marriages are to in Heaven.'
Fine as ice-ferns on January panes M by a breath.
Then to his pleasure echo, hand to hand,
Perplext her, to her half forget herself,
much allowance must be m for men.
knew he wherefore he had to the cry ;
m Still paler the pale head of him,
I m by these the last of all my race,
and m Their own traditions God,
M more and more allowance for his talk ;
breaking that, you to and broke your dream :
M Him his catspaw and the Cross his tool,
m The dimpled flounce of the sea-fm'below flap,
M havock among those tender cells,
it seem'd A void was m in Nature ;
bUnd beginnings that have m me man,
M noise with bees and breeze from end to end.
TO the old wanior from his ivied nook Glow
They rode ; they betted ; to a hundred friends.
My mother pitying to a thousand prayers ;
He always to a point to post with mares ;
but that which to Woman and man.
Have we not to ourseU the sacrifice ?
I remember'd one myself had to,
part TO long since, and part Now while I sang,
in the North long since my nest is to.
beauty in detail M them worth knowing ;
M at me thro' the press, and staggering back
reverence for the laws ourselves have ?«,
0 the wild charge they to !
Honour the charge they to !
Who TO the serf a man, and burst his chain —
the parson m it his text that week,
Is on the skull which thou hast m.
He thinks he was not to. to die ; And thou hast to
him : thou art just.
And TO me that delirious man
m me move As light as carrier-birds in air ;
Him that to them current coin ;
When God hath to the pile complete ;
Where thy first form was to a man ;
Has TO me kindly with my kind,
Gardener's D. 235
Dora 82
Walk, to the Mail 32
Edwin Morris 39
49
50
91
St. S. Stylites 171
Talking Oak 87
Ulysses 69
Godiva 58
Day Dm., Sleep. P. 20
Wai Water. 196
The Captain 6
L. of Burleigh 20
73
The Voyage 66
You might have won 5
Poet's Song 7
Enoch Arden 15
53
58
226
334
379
645
903
The "Brook 117
Aylmer's Field 41
74
87
188
223
257
303
410
589
622
791
794
Sea Dreams 75
143
190
265
Lu/;retius 22
37
246
Princess, Pro. 88
104
163
i21
189
ii 144
Hi 249
j»88
90
110
449
•«522
Con. 55
Light Brigade 51
53
W. to Marie Alex. 3
Grandmother 29
In Mem., Pro. 8
11
xvi 17
XXV 5
xxxvi 4
liv^
Ixi 10
Irci 7
Made
""""VrfSSe 'in^'ZlT.''^' - - ^°- ^'^^ "-• /« ^-. ^-- 8
440
Made
I m a, picture m the brain ;
And tracts of calm from tempest m
In that which m the world so fair
flood Of onward tune shall yet be w
Her sweet ' I will ' has to you one.
Rather than hold by the law that I m
/have not TO the world, and He that to it
&ne TO me divme amends For a courtesy
M her only the cWld of her mother.
There were but a step to be m.
And TO my hfe a perfumed altar-flame •
Maud TO my Maud by that long loving 'kiss,
.¥so fainly weU With delicate spire and whorl
Imng wiU That m it stir on the shore.
^ "l^?- u ^u^ ^'y ^'^^ ™s^ That blow by nisht
star Which shone so close beside Thee that ye
TO One light together, ^ n ^ ^ tj .. .-,
and TO a realm, and reign'd freoeat^ r^ ^ / 7 .^I^^ *^
m Broad pathways forV£ra!id the knighf"- "^ ^'''"'- ^'' ''I
il/ head against him, crying, *-"'sUt „ 60
M lightnings and great thunders over him °
the King M feast for, saying, '
the Queen to answer, ' What know I ?
mingled with the haze And to it thicker •
crush d The Holators, and to the people free ?
The birds to Melody on branch,
that old Seer to answer playing' on him
and had to it spire to heaven.
TO his goodly cousin, Tristram, knight
Kepentant of the word she to him swear
bhame never to girl redder than Gareth loy
and TO him flush, and bow Lowly
^^ thee my knight ? my knights 'are sworn
Ihou hast TO us lords, and canst not put us down ' '
Always he TO his mouthpiece of a page
\^^. converse tiU she to her palfrey halt.
What madness to thee challenge the chief knight
dance And revel and song, m merry over Dealh
wherefore going to the King, He to this pretest'
Was ever man so grandly w as he ?
the strong passion in her to her weep
M answer sharply that she should not know
A sliarplv to the dwarf, and ask'd it of him
And TO hira hke a man abroad at morn
M a low splendour in the world,
Af her cheek bum and either ey'elid fall
Which TO him look so cloudy and so cold ;
and suffenng thus he m Minutes an age •
And TO it of two colours ;
Him that to me The one 'true lover whom you
ever own'd, •'
M her cheek bum and either eyelid fall
It weUnigh to her cheerful ;
to The long way smoke beneath him in his fear :
M but a single bound, and with a sweep of it
and TO as if to fall upon him.
I, tlierefore, to him of our Table Round
*" t ♦u^®^*''"®'^ °^ *""^^^« battles overhead Stir
and the Queen, and all the world M music
TO that mouth of night Whereout the Demon
-WGrarlon, hissing ; then he sourly smiled.
TO his feet VVings thro' a ghmmering gallery,
TO him quickly dive Beneath the boughs
Nature through the flesh herself hath to
It TO the laughter of an afternoon
M with her right a comb of pearl to part The lists
And TO a pretty cup of both my hanc&
M answer either eyeUd wet with tears :
And TO a Gardener putting in a graS
but afterwards He to a stalwart knight.
rhen TO her Queen : but those isle-nurtured eyes
^d Thfr "^ ""T^'"^ ^''^ W'th those fine eTe.:
and rher 1?Z ™^" J«»>ou«. with good cause^
ana to her hthe arm round his neck Tignten,
Ixxx 9
„ cxii 14
„ cxvi 8
„ cxxviii 6
Con. 56
Maud I i 55
iv 48
vil3
„ xiii 40
„ xiv 22
1. xviii 24
58
// a 5
15
t)74
108
247
326
436
Garelh and L. 137
183
252
309
394
527
536
548
552
1132
1337
1360
1416
1423
Marr. of Geraint 33
81
110
196
204
335
598
775
Gerainl and E. 48
114
292
343
434
443
531
727
776
908
Bali7i and Balan 87
211
Merlin and
316
355
403
422
F. 50
163
244
275
379
479
482
570
603
605
614
Made (continued) King M proffer of the league of
golden mines,
sleepless nights Of my long life have m it easy
Ihat wreathen round it »i it seem his own •
And weaned out to for the couch and slept'
and TO A snowy penthouse for his hoUow evps
crying I have to his glory mine,' ' '
Now TO a pretty history to herself
every scratch a lance had to upon it
down they fell and to the glen abhoiT'd •
1 hither he to, and blew the gateway horn
to a sudden step to the gate, and there— '
backward by the wind they to In moving
Sweet love, that seems not to to fade aw^y
He makes no friend who never to a foe
and TO him hers, and laid her mind On him
Vi^^l ^^\* '" ^"'^b ^oney in his reahn. '
mould Of Arthur, m by Merlin, with a crown
crown And both the wings are to of gold '
A sign to maim this Order which I m '
since your vows are sacred, being to ■ '
Rejoicing in that Order which he to '
Lord of aU things m Himself Naked of glory
When the hermit to an end,
past thro' Pagan reahns, and to them mine,
imther I TO, and there was I disarm'd
iifn T^ °"^^' ^^'^ ^\^ ^^^^ ^ ™y heart leap ;
And each to joy of either ;
So fierce a gale to havoc here of late
Who m me sure the Quest was not for me •
TO our mightier madder than our least. '
When God to music thro' them
King Arthur to new knights t'o fill the gap
and Arthur to him knight.
Then Arthur to vast banquets,
• .'" ^^,™oan ; and, darkness fallin<-
sight Of her rich beauty to him at one glance
SwF f K °"'^^^^' "^ ^""'Sht of his'table ;
only the King Hath to us fools and liars.
AnH pj T '* P^""^^^ *h™' *he wound again.
And Percivale to answer not a word
he twitch'd the reins. And to his beast
Had TO mock-knight of Arthur's Table Round
Gr.IlT^h^l-J'''^ wherefore toss me this '
Great brother, thou nor I have to the world ■
S aSTer'^'Ti '^'^.^f^'y "^ ^is horse Caracole ;
M answer I had liefer twenty years
I to it m the woods, And heard it ring as true
M duU his inner, keen his outer eve
up thro' AUoth and Alcor, M aU above it
the crowning sm That to L happy • '
The King prevailing to his reahn •—
did you keep the vow you to to Mark
utul '■^^^ ^^ ^ ; but then their vows-
M such excuses as he might
And from the sun there swif'tly m at her
siL'^tS?^ mournful answer to the Queen :
s^ns that to the past so pleasant to us :
m her face a darkness from the King •
"^TOSn^S :'^ '''''' ^^"^-^ ^« K-8 Who
uttering this the King M at the man :
I perish by this people which I to -
^'moon ^ ^^^"^' •" *^« «P'«^dour of the
here the faith That to us rulers ? ^ ,. 'A .?^
-I o the Queen m 19
Merlin and V. 646
680
T35
r36
807
971
Lancelot and 3. 18
20
42
169
391
480
1013
1089
Holy Crail 164
215
239
,i 242
,\ 297
,| 314
i 327
* 447
.1 457
.1 478
,; 575
580
638
729
743
863
878
Pelleas end E. 1
16
147
213
238
319
479
530
534
55L
Last Tournament 2
195
203
205
25T
283
287
306
366
481 I
577 I
651
655
681
Guinevere 38
78
341
375
417
438
451
467
510
603
655
Pass, of Arthur 2
14
165
190
Made
441
Magic
Made (continued) to whom I m it o'er his grave Sacred, To the Qu^en it 35
attracted, won. Married, m one with, Looer's Tale i 134
M all our tastes and fancies like, „ 242
m garlands of the selfsame flower, „ 343
had m The red rose there a pale one — „ 695
m The happy and the unhappy love, „ 752
one other, worth the life That m it sensible — „ 800
M strange division of its sufEering „ ii 128
m the gromid Reel under us, „ 193
The front rank w a sudden halt ; „ tit 29
And partly m them — the' he knew it not. „ iv 25
till helpless death And silence m him bold — „ 78
Or am I m immortal, or my love Mortal once more ? ' „ 79
things familiar to her youth Had m a sUent answer : „ 96
sudden wail his lady to Dwelt in his fancy : „ 149
And Julian m a solemn feast : „ 187
Then Julian m a secret sign to me „ 284
answer'd not a word. Which m, the amazement more, „ 334
he TO me the cowslip ball, First Quarrel 13
you were only to for the day. Rizpah 19
The King should have m him a soldier, „ 28
seamen m mock at the mad little craft The Revenge 38
gunner said ' Ay, ay,' but the seamen m reply : „ 91
Had TO a heat«d haze to magnify The charm of
Edith— Sisters ( E. and E.) 129
he had seen it and to up his mind. In the Child. Hosp. 16
TO West East, and sail'd the Dragon's mouth, Columbus 25
vow I TO When Spain was waging war against the Moor — „ 92
m by me, may seek to unbury me, „ 206
Who TO thee unconceivably Thyself De Prof., Two G. 48
for the bright-eyed goddess to it bum. Achilles over the T. 29
but TO me yearn For larger glimpses Tiresias 20
The noonday crag to the hand bum ; „ 35
With present grief, and to the rhymes, „ 196
I took it, he TO it a cage, The Wreck 83
M us, foreknew us, foredoom'd us, Despair 97
' The years that m the stripling wise Ancient Sage 111
They to her lily and rose in one, „ 161
Only That which to us, meant us to be mightier Locksley H., Sixty 209
Fought for their hves in the narrow gap they
had TO — Heavy Brigade 23
Glory to eaich and to all, and the chaise that they m ! „ 65
Which has w your fathers great Open. I. and C. Exhih. 15
Who TO a nation purer through their art. To W. C. Macready 8
Your mle has m the people love Their ruler. To Marq. of Dufferin 9
have I TO the name A golden portal to my rhyme : „ 15
TO themselves as Gods against the fear Dem'Uer and P. 141
They m a thousand honey moons of one ? The Ring 22
And that has to you grave ? ., 88
and TO The rosy twilight of a perfect day. „ 186
M every moment of her after life A virgin victim ., 220
Why had 1 to her love me thro' the ring, ., 391
But still she to her outcry for the ring ; ., 403
TO him leper to compass him with scorn — Happy 16
I TO one barren effort to break it at the la-st. „ 72
Now God has m you leper in His loving care „ 91
m an English homestead Hell — To Mary Boyle 37
I might have to you once, Romney's R. 89
TO The wife of wives a widow-bride, „ 137
M by the noonday blaze without, St. Telemacims 50
' Mine is the one fruit AUa m for man.' Akbar's Bream 40
Adoring That who m, and makes, „ 123
Alphabet-of-heaven-in-man M vocal — „ 137
Man as yet is being to. Making of Man 3
' It is finish'd. Man is to.' „ 8
Madeline Ever varying M. (repeat) Madeline 3, 18, 27
Madest Who m him thy chosen, TUhonus 13
Thou TO Life in man and brute ; Thou m Death ; In Mem., Pro. 6
Thou m man, he knows not why, „ 10
Madhouse I would not be mock'd in a to ! Despair 79
Madly That you should carol so to ? The Throstle 8
Madman M ! — to chain with chains, Buonaparte 2
wam'd that to ere it grew too late : Vision of Sin 56
he struck me, to, over the face, Maud II i 18
' Wherefore waits the to there Naked Gareth and L. 1091
Madman {continued) And like a m brought her to the
court,
A TO to vex you with wretched words,
teeming with liars, and madmen, and knaves.
Madness Then in to and in bliss,
From cells of m unconfined.
Thro' TO, hated by the wise.
Mingle to, mingle scorn !
Vext with imworthy to, and deform'd.
Is this a time to madden to then ?
No TO of ambition, avarice, none :
The accomplice of your to unforgiven,
kinsman thou to death and trance And m,
the vitriol m flushes up in the i-uffian's head,
I flee from the cioiel m of love,
Perhaps from to, perhaps from crime.
And do accept my to, and would die
Thro' cells of to, haimts of horror and fear,
What TO made thee challenge the chief knight
O pardon me ! the m of that hour.
And after m acted question ask'd :
break Into some m ev'n before the Queen ? '
My TO all thy life has been thy doom,
' This TO has come on us for our sins.'
former to, once the talk And scandal of our table,
A dying fire of w in his eyes —
My TO came upon me as of old.
And in my to to myself I said.
Then in my to I essay'd the door ;
And but for all my to and my sin.
And all the sacred to of the bard,
— the wholesome m of an hour —
It was their last hour, A m of farewells.
curb The to of our cities and their kings.
My father's to makes me mad —
age so cramm'd with menace ? to ? written,
spoken lies ?
After TO, after massacre. Jacobinism and Jacquerie,
Every tiger m muzzled, every serpent passion kill'd,
dream of wars and carnage, craft and to, lust and spite,
Cast the poison from your bosom, oust the m from
your brain.
The theft weie death or to to the thief,
And eased her heart of m. . . .
Madonna ' M, sad is night and morn,'
Madonna-masterpieces M-m Of ancient Art in Paris,
Madonna-wise M-w on either side her head ;
Maeldune ' O M, let be this purpose of thine !
Magazine 0 blatant M's, regard me rather —
Mage ' And there I saw m Merlin,
like a fairy changeUng lay the to ;
Merlin's hand, the M at Arthur's court,
Magee (Molly) See Molly, Molly Magee
Maggot tickle the to born in an empty head,
' O worms and m's of to-day
Magic (adj.) Low thunder and light in the m night —
A m web with colours gay.
To weave the mirror's m sights,
Saw the heavens fill with commerce, argosies of
m sails.
The M Music in his heart Beats quick and
quicker,
on lonely mountain-meres I find a to bark ;
drank The to cup that fill'd itself anew.
she liked it more Than to music, forfeits,
all the TO hght Dies oS at once
wise man that ever served King Uther thro' his
TO art ;
' I once was looking for a m weed,
red fmit Grown on a to oak-tree in mid-heaven,
forms which ever stood Within the to cirque of
memory, Lover's Tale ii 159
Magic (s) Is there some w in the place ? Will Water. 79
Bleys, Who taught him to ; Com. of Arthur 154
Bleys Laid to by, and sat him down, „ 156
Marr. of Geraint 725
Despair 108
The Dreamer 9
Madeline 42
Two Voices ill
Love and Duty 7
Vision of Sin 204
Aylmer's Field 335
769
Lucretius 212
Princess vi 276
In Mem. Ixxi 2
Maud I i 37
„ iv 55
„ xvi22
„ xviii 44
„ IIIvi2
Gareth and L. 1416
Geraint and E. 346
813
Balin and Balan 230
619
Holy Grail 357
649
768
787
804
841
849
877
Last Tournament 675
Guinevere 103
Tiresias 71
The Flight 59
Locksley H., Sixty 108
157
167
189
241
The Ring 204
Forlorn 82
Mariana in the S. 22
Romney's R. 86
Isabel 6
V. of Maeldune 119
Hendecasyllahics 17
Com., of Arthur 280
363
Gareth and L. 306
Maud II V 38
Ancient Sage 210
The Merman 23
L. of Shalott ii 2
29
Locksley Hall 121
Day- Dm., Arrival 26
Sir Galahad 38
Aylmer's Field 143
Princess, Pro. 195
In Mem. viii 5
Com. of Arthur 152
Merlin and V. 471
Last Tournament 745
Magic
442
Maiden
Who knows a subtler m than his
Kagic (s) (continued)
own,
and whether this be built By m,
came To leam black m, and to hate his kind
Garlon too Hath leam'd black m,
their wise men Were strong in that old vi
and woke me And leam'd me M !
Great the Master, And sweet the M,
A barbarous people, Blind to the m,
For thro' the M Of Him the Mighty,
Magician You that are watching The gray M
Magaet Repell'd by the m of Art
Be needle to the m of your word,
Hagnetic His face m to the hand
Twice as m to sweet influences Of earth
M mockeries ; not in vain,
Magnetise may m The baby-oak within.
Magnet-like m-l she drew The rustiest iron
Magnificence (His dress a suit of fray'd m,
Magnify haze to m The charm of Edith —
Magpie And only hear the m gossip
Mahomet touch'd on M With much contempt,
Mahratta-battle in wild M-b fell my father
Maid {See also Be^ar maid. Fair-maid, Lily maid,
Milking-maid, Milkmaid) Even as a »<, whose
stately brow
So sitting, served by man and m,
IS ever m or spouse. As fair as my Olivia,
The m and page renew'd their strife.
This earth is rich in man and m ;
Why come you drest like a village m,
' If I come drest like a village m.
Bare-footed came the beggar m
' This beggar m shall be my queen ! '
men and m's Arranged a country dance,
how we three presented M Or Nymph, or Goddess,
' The mother of the sweetest little m,
m's should ape Those monstrous males
turning to her m's, ' Pitch our pavilion
a m. Of those beside her, smote her harp,
marsh-divers, rather, m, Shall croak
A hubbub in the court of half the m's
fling Their pretty m's in the running flood,
Mask'd like our m's, blustering I know not what
Almost our m's were better at their homes,
0 m's, behold our sanctuary Is violate,
led A hundred m's in train across the Park.
1 should have had to do with none but m's,
we will scatter all our m's Till happier times
With showers of random sweet on m and man.
' Come down, O vi, from yonder mountain height :
Perish'd many a w and matron.
After-loves of m's and men
I keep but a man and a m,
For the m's and marriage-makers,
found me first when yet a little m :
Till high above him, circled with her m's,
' Here by God's rood is the one m for me.'
And page, and to, and squire,
come with no attendance, page or m,
Arthur the blameless, pure as any m,
but sufler'd much, an orphan m !
Vivien, like the tenderest-hearted ?«
Master, be not wrathful, with your m ;
A TO so .smooth, so white, so wonderful,
A stainless man beside a stainless m ;
Elaine, the hly to of Astolat,
How came the lily m by that good shield
close behind them stept tlie lily to PMaine,
' Such he for queens, and not for simple m's.'
this m Might wear as fair a jewel as is on earth,
lily m Elaine, Won by the mellow voice
Ix)w U) her own heart said tlie lily w.
The lily m ha<l striven to make him cheer.
Lily m, For fear our people call you lily m In earnest,
Com. of Arthur 284
Gareth and L. 248
Balin and Balan 127
305
Holy Grail 666
Merlin and the G. 14
16
26
113
5
The Wreck 22
To Mary Boyle 7
Aylmer's Field 626
Princess v 191
In Mem. cxx 3
Talking Oak 255
Merlin and V. 573
Marr. of Geraint 296
Sisters {E. and E.) 129
To F. D. Maurice 19
Princess ii 134
Locksley Hall 155
Ode to Memory 13
The Goose 21
Talking Oak 34
Day-Dm., Revival 13
WUl Water. 65
Lady Clare 67
69
Beggar Maid 3
16
Princess, Pro. 83
i 196
ii 279
m 309
345
w37
123
476
i>382
396
428
vim
76
291
302
, vii 86
192
Boddieea 85
Window, No Answer 25
Maud I iv 19
„ XX 35
Com. of Arthur 340
Gareth and L. 1374
Marr. of Geraint 368
710
Geraint and E. 322
Balin and Balan 479
Merlin and F. 71
377
380
566
737
Lancelot and E. 2
28
176
231
239
242
319
327
Maid (continued) glittering in enamell'd arms the m
Glanced at,
till the to Rebell'd against it,
I lighted on the to Whose sleeve he wore ;
About the to of Astolat, and her love.
The TO of Astolat loves Sir Lancelot, Sir Lancelot
loves the to of Astolat.'
all Had marvel what the m might be.
And pledging Lancelot and the lily to
the TO in Astolat, Her guiltless rival,
when the m had told him all her tale,
when the to had told him all the tale
the meek m Sweetly forbore liim ever,
simple TO Went half the night repeating,
Lancelot ever prest upon the m
' Nay, noble to,' he answer'd,
full meekly rose the w, Stript off the case,
I seem'd a curious httle m again,
Then spake the hly m of Astolat :
past the barge Whereon the lily vi of Astolat Lay smiling,
pure Sir Galahad to upUft the to ;
I, sometime call'd the m of Astolat,
if ever holy to With knees of adoration wore the
stone, A holy to ; tho' never maiden glow'd,
a m. Who kept our holy faith among her kin
since he loved all maidens, but no to In special,
win them for the purest of my m's.'
and then the to herself. Who served him well
none with her save a little to, A novice :
But communed only with the little w,
until the Uttle m, who brook'd No silence,
Whereat fuU willingly sang the little to.
' Yea,' said the to, ' this is all woman's grief,
' O little TO, shut in by nunneiy walls,
said the m, ' be manners such fair fruit ?
Than is the maiden passion for a to,
' Yea, Uttle m, for am / not forgiven ? '
those six m's With shrieks and ringing laughter
The men would say of the m's,
our darling, our meek little m ;
' And if you give the ring to any to,
bind the m to love you by the ring ;
if the ring were stolen from the m.
Maiden (adj.) There was no blood upon her to robes
Lancelot and E. 619
650
710
723
725
728
738
745
798
823
855
898
911
948
978
1035
1085
1242
1265
1273
Holy Grail 70
696
Pelleas and E. 40
Ijast Tournament 50
399
Guinevere 3
150
159
167
218
227
337
479
665
Lover's Tale Hi 31
First Quarrel 28
In the Child. Hosp. 28
The Ring 200
202
203
The Poet 41
The m splendours of the morning star D. of F. Women 55
' No fair Hebrew boy Shall smile away my m blame „ 214
385
The m. blossoms of her teens Could number
A TO knight^to me is given Such hope.
The TO Spring upon the plain Came in
Spout from the m fountain in her heart.
then the to Aunt Took this fair day for text.
Said Lilia ; ' Why not now ? the to Aunt.
Hid in the ruins ; till the to Aunt
was he to blame ? And to fancies ;
we ourself Will crush her pretty to fancies dead
till, each, in to plumes We rustled :
Her TO babe, a double April old.
To unfurl the to banner of our rights,
A TO moon that sparkles on a sty.
Home with her m posy.
May nothing there her m grace affright !
nothing can be sweeter Than m Maud in either.
This bare a to shield, a casque ;
And left her to couch, and robed heraelf,
I saw That to Saint who stands with Uly in hand Balin and Balan 261
So basliful he ! but all the to Saints, „ 520
point Across the to shield of Balan prick'd „ 559
All hopes of gaining, than as to girl. Merlin and V. 24
all unscarr'd from beak or talon, brought A
TO babe ; Last Tournament 21
like a bank Of to snow mingled with sparks of fire. „ 149
can Arthur make me pure As any to child ? „ 693
Than is the to pa-ssion for a maid, Guinevere 479
Her TO dignities of Hope and Love — ■ Lover's Tale i 580
And all the to empire of her mind, „ 589
Talking Oak 79
Sir Galahad 61
Sir L. and Q. G. 3
Lucretius 240
Princess, Pro. 107
208
218
202
ii 110
iv 503
V 186
Maud I xii 22
„ xviii 71
XX 22
Gareth and L. 680
Marr. of Geraint 737
Maiden
443
Main
Maiden (adj.) {contimied) nor yet to the wife — to her m
name ! The WrecJc 144
Set the m fancies wallowing in the troughs of
ZolaLsm, — Locksley H., Sixty 145
Her m daughter's marriage ; Prin. Beatrice 10
But ere thy m bii'k be wholly clad, Prog, of Spring 50
Maiden (s) phantom two hours old Of a m past away, Adeline 19
Two Voices 419
L. C. V. de Vere 15
D. of F. Women 198
253
M. d' Arthur 104
Talking Oak 180
Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 4
Sir Galahad 20
Lady Clare 63
L. of Burleigh 3
The little m walk'd demure,
A simple m in her flower
of the waiTior Gileadite, A m pure ;
' Would I had been some m coai^se and poor !
Wrought by the lonely m of the Lake.
whose touch may press The m's tender palm.
The m^s jet-black hair has grown.
Nor 7n's hand in mine.
Dropt her head in the m's hand,
M, I have watch'd thee daily.
And a village m she.
A 7n of our century, yet most meek ;
There stood a m near, Waiting to pass.
more and more, the m woman-grown,
All wild to found an University For m's,
Six hundred m'5 clad in purest white,
' O marvellously modest m, you !
' An open-hearted m, true and pure.
Among her m's, higher by the head.
Her college and her m's, empty masks.
There stood her in's glimmeringly gi'oup'd
All her m's, watching, said.
Stole a m from her place,
many a m passing home Till happier times ;
m's came, they talk'd. They sang,
m, whither would you wander ? (repeat)
far away,' said the dainty little m, (repeat)
Lash the m into swooning,
or half coquette-Uke M,
As on a m in the day When first she wears
May serve to curl a m's locks,
I dwelt within a hall, And m's with me :
The m's gather'd strength and grace
m's with one mind Bewail'd their lot ;
m's of the place, That pelt us in the porch
Go not, happy day. Till the m yields.
Or whether it be the m's fantasy.
Whereat the m, petulant, ' Lancelot,
on whom the m gazed.
set the horror higher : a m swoon'd ;
But rose at last, a single m with her, Took horse, Marr. of Geraint 160
sent Her m to demand it of the dwarf ; „ 193
Done in your m's person to yourself : „ 216
Sent her own m to demand the name, „ 411
never yet had woman such a pair Of suitors as this ?/i ; „ 440
' Mother, a 771 is a tender thing, „ 510
Let never m think, however fair, „ 721
the m rose, And left her maiden couch, „ 736
call'd her like that m in the tale, „ 742
we 7ii's often laugh When sick at heart, Balin and Balan 497
shelter for mine innocency Among thy 7n's ! ' Merlin and V . 84
m dreamt That some one put this diamond Lancelot and E. 211
And yield it to this m, if ye wiU.' „ 229
saw The m standing in the dewy light. „ 352
never yet have done so much For any m Uving,' „ 376
broider'd with great pearls. Some gentle m's gift.' „ 605
for lack of gentle m's aid. The gentler-born the ?«, „ 765
m, while that ghostly grace Beam'd on his fancy, „ 885
So in her tower alone the m sat : ,. 989
' Is this Elaine ? ' till back the m fell, „ 1031
Know that for this most gentle m's death „ 1291
to see The 711 buried, not as one unknown, „ 1334
Thou could 'st have loved this m, ., 1366
A holy maid ; tho' never 711 glow'd. Holy Grail 72
' O Father ! ' ask'd the rn, „ 95
sweet w, shore away Clean from lier forehead „ 149
I, m, round thee, m, bind my belt. „ 159
An outraged w sprang into the hall i- 208
The Brook 68
204
Aylmer's Field 108
Princess i 151
., a 472
Hi 48
98
179
187
„ iv 190
„ vi 3
9
380
„ vii 22
City Child 1, 6
3,8
Boddicea 67
Hendecasyllabics 21
In Mem. xl 3
Ixxvii 7
ciii 6
27
45
Con. 67
Maud I xvii 4
Gareth and L. 874
1246
1281
1394
Maiden (s) {continued) By m's each a-s fair as any flower : Holy Grail 576
she a slender 711, all my heart Went after her „ 582
And merry m's in it ; „ 746
blew my merry 7n's all about With all discomfort ; „ 748
And since he loved all m's, Pelleas and E. 40
' O 7)1, if indeed ye list to sing, Guinevere 165
' Such as thou art be never ?« more „ 358
aghast the m rose. White as her veil, „ 362
love one 711 only, cleave to her, „ 475
Meek 7n's, from the voices crying " shame." „ 672
Wrought by the lonely «i of the Lake. Pass, of Arthur 272
»«'s, wives, And mothere with their babblers Tiresias 102
Crime and hunger cast our 7h's by the thousantl
on the street. Locksley H., Sixty 220
Love for the m, crown'd with marriage, Vastness 23
Her 7)1 coming like a Queen, The Ring 480
Innocent ?«'s. Garrulous children, Merlin and the G. 55
Maiden-cheek Engirt with many a florid ?»-e, Princess Hi 350
Maidenhood {See also Mother-maidenhood) To her,
perpetual ?«, hi Mem.vi 43
Would mar their charm of stainless w.' Bali7i a7id Balan 268
To get me shelter for my m. „ 480
But that was in her earlier w. Holy Grail 73
Maidenlike »» as far As I could ape their treble. Princess iv 91
Maiden-meek '»-w I pray'd Concealment : „ Hi 134
Maid-mother Or the ?«-m by a crucifix, Palace of Art 93
Maiden-Princess lonely w-P of the wood. The Ring 65
Her loiiply m-P, crown'd with flowers, „ 485
Maid of Astolat {See also Astolat) Elaine, the lily
m o A, Lancelot and E. 2
About the m oA, and her love. „ ,723
' The 7n oA loves Sir Lancelot, Sir Lancelot loves
the mo .4.' „ 725
Then spake the lily m o A : „ 1085
past the barge Whereon the lily m o A Lay smiling, „ 1242
I, sometime call'd the 7n o A, „ 1273
Maid-of-hononr The 7)i-o-h blooming fair ; Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 28
Poor soul ! I had a, 711 o h once ; Princess iv 133
Mail (armour) from head to tail Came out clear plates
of sapphire 7)1. Two Voices 12
And, ringing, springs from brand and 7)i ; Sir Galahad 54
and all in m Burnish'd to blinding, Gareth and L. 1026>
till he felt, despite his m. Strangled, „ 1151
splintering spear, the hard ?n. hewn. Pass, of Arthur 108
Mail (coach) The m ? At one o'clock. Walk, to the Mail 8
I fear That we shall miss the ?» : „ 112
They swore he dare not rob the ?«, Rizpah 30-
they kiU'd him for robbing the m. „ 34
Mailed {See also Hard-mailed, Tiiple-mailed) My m
Bacchas leapt into my arms, D. of F. Women 151
with each light air On our m heads : Princess v 245
Breaking then- 7)i fleets and armed towers. Ode Inter. Exhih. 39
Drove his ?» heel athwart the royal crown, Bali7i and Balan 540^
Maim A sign to m this Order, which I made. Holy Grail 297
Maim'd (adj. and part.) left me ?» To dwell in presence of
immortal youth, Tithonus 20
Speak ! is there any of you halt or m ? St. S. Stylites 142
that there Lie bixiised and m, Pri7icess vi 72
and all the good knights ?n, „ 241
I see thee m. Mangled : Gareth and L. 132&
with blunt stump Pitch-blacken'd sawing the air,
said the m churl, Last Tournament 67
And half of the rest of us m for life The Revenge 77
What fife, so m by night, were worth Our living out ? Tiresias 208
Maim'd (s) Antl cured some halt and m ; St. S. Stylites 137
Let the »« in liLs heart rejoice On Jub. Q. Victoria 36
Maim'd (verb) and him they caught and m ; Lancelot a7id E. 275
M me and maul'd, and would outright have slain, Last Tournament 75
Main (adj.) (iSee also Maain-glad) till Arthur by m might, Co)n. of Arthur 109
And out by this m doorway past the King. Gai-eth and L. 671
And bare her by m violence to the board, Geraint and E. 654
(With one m purpose ever at my heart) „ 831
but for my m purpose in these jousts, „ 837
Could call him the m cause of all their crime ; Merlin and V. 788
That was their m test-question — Sir J. Oldcastle 155
Main
444
Make
Main (adj.) (cotitinued) Fonseca my m enemy at their
court,
Main (s) heard that, somewhere in the m,
Just breaking over land and m ?
On open m or winding shore !
And mighty courteous in the m —
spire of land that stands apart Cleft from the m,
Let the great river take me to the m :
climbs a peak to gaze O'er land and m,
Blown from over every m,
To mingle with the bounding w :
I am sick of the moor and the m.
Flying along the land and the m—
out to open m Glow'd intermingling close beneath
the sun.
To be lost evermore in the m.
hull dipt under the smiling m,
sea-cm-rent would sweep us out to the m.
O will she, moonUke, sway the m,
Main-current Watch what m-c's draw the years
Main-miracle But this m-m, that thou art thou,
Maintain thy heart a fortress to m The day
and thence m Our darker future.
Maintained should at least by me be m :
Maintaining M that with equal husbandry
Maintenance all That appertains to noble m.
Maiise hand in hand with Plenty in the m,
Of olive, aloe, and m and vine.
Maj^ic Grave mother of m works.
Sees a mansion more m Than all those
Who scarce can tune his high m sense
Thou m in thy sadness at the doubtful doom of human
kind;
But scarce of such m mien
Majesty New Majesties of mighty states —
Nothing to mar the sober majesties
and so unmoved a m She might have seem'd her
statue,
Make (See also Maake, May, Be-make) yield you
time To m demand of Tnodern rhyme
and m The hounds of freedom, wider
Shall m the winds blow Round and roimd,
Whose chillness would m visible
Rain m's music in the tree
M's thy memory confused :
the wave would m music above us afar —
M a carcanet of rays,
cUp your wings, and m you love :
happy bridesmaid m's a happy bride.'
happy bridesmaid, m a happy bride.' (repeat)
' \Vhat drug can m A wither'd palsy cease to shake
M thy grass hoar with early rime.
' Or m that mom, from his cold crown
' Wilt thou m everything a lie.
Not m him sure that he should cease ?
' I cannot m this matter plain.
Far thought with music that it m's :
His memory scarce can m me sad.
And m's me talk too much in age.
Do m a garland for the heart :
' A/ me a cottage in the vale,' Palace of Art 291
To m him trust his modest worth, L. C. V. de Vere 46
many a worthier than I, would m him happy yet. May Queen, Con. 46
what is life, that we should moan ? why m we
such ado ? „ 56
music in his ears his beating heart did m. Lotos- Eaters 36
And m perpetual moan, „ C. S. 17
That mU my only woe. D. of F. Women 136
Words weaker than your grief would m Grief more. To J. S. 65
On a Mourner 7
¥ou ask me, why, etc. 21
Of old sat Freedom 22
Gardener's D. 141
273
Dora 4
Columbus 126
// / were loved 7
Two Voices 84
The Voyage 6
Aylmer's Field 121
Princess iv 282
„ vii 13
36
Ode Inter. Exhih. 26
In Mem. xi 12
Mavd I i 61
„ // a 38
Lover's Tale i 435
The Revenge 119
The Wreck 127
Despair 51
Mechanophilus 13
Love thou thy land 21
De Prof., Ttoo G. 55
To Duke of Argyll 5
To one who ran down Eng. 1
Maud I ilS
Princess i 130
Marr. of Geraint 712
Princess vii 201
The Daisy 4
Of old sat Freedom 13
L. of Burleigh 45
Lover's Tale i 475
To Virgil 23
Freedom 6
Love thou thy land 60
Lucretius 217
Lancelot and E. 1170
To the Queen 11
31
Nothing will Die 23
Swpp. Confessions 59
A Dirge 26
45
The Merman 22
Adeline 59
Rosalind 45
The Bridesmaid 4
8, 14
Tioo Voices 56
66
85
203
282
343
438
Miller's D. 16
194
198
Make (continued) To m him pleasing in her uncle's eye
let me have my boy, for you Will m him hard.
To m me an example of mankind.
The love, that m's me thrice a man,
But since I heard him m reply
To m the necklace shine ;
mellow rain, That m's thee broad and deep !
words That m a man feel strong in speaking
truth ;
How dull it is to pause, to m an end,
by .slow prudence to m mild A rugged people,
Can thy love. Thy beauty, m amends.
And m me tremble lest a saying learnt,
M me feel the wild pulsation
M prisms in every carven glass,
And m her dance attendance ;
M Thou thy spirit pure and clear
Heavenly Bridegroom waits, To m me pure of sin.
To »i me write my random rhymes,
Until the charm have power to m New lifeblood
To m my blood run qxiicker,
How out of place she m's The violet of a legend blow
empty glass That m's me maudhn-moral.
Hoped to m the name Of his vessel great in story,
' I can m no marriage present :
Love will m our cottage pleasant,
All he shows her m's him dearer
I follow till I m thee mine.'
sweetest meal she m's On the first-born
Dora 84
,, 153
St. S. Stylites 188
Talking Oak 11
25
222
280
Who m it seem more sweet to be
Love and Duty 70
Ulysses 22
36
Tvthonus 24
47
Locksley Hall 109
Day- Dm., Sleep. P. 35
A mphion 62
St. Agnes' Eve 9
32
Will Water. 13
21
110
146
208
The Cavtain 18
L. of Burleigh 13
15
33
The Voyage 64
Vision of Sin 145
You inight have won 29
And w'a the purple ulac ripe,
Power should m from land to land
M bright our days and light our dreams,
She sUjod, a sight to m an old man young.
M thine heart ready with thine eyes :
' I'll m tbem man and wife,'
purchase his own boat, and m a home For Aimie : Enoch Arden 47
m him merry, when I come home again. „ 199
kill yourself And m them orphans quite ? ' „ 395
Their voices m me feel so solitary.' „ 397
To m the boatmen fishing-nets, ,, 815
himself could m The thiiig that is not as the thing The Brook 7
1 m a sudden sally, „ 24
Still m's a hoary eyebrow for the gleam „ 80
I m the netted sunbeam dance „ 176
Roaring to m a third : Aylmer's Field 128
coimsel from a height That m's the lowest hate it, „ 173
for your fortunes are to m. I swear you shall not
m them out of mine. „ 300
every star in heaven Can m it fair : Sea Dreams 84
A trifle m's a dream, a trifle breaks.' „ 144
fat affectionate smUe That m's the widow lean. „ 156
— it m's me sick to quote him — „ 159
Went both to m your dream : ,, 254
m our passions far too hke The discords „ 257
m Another and another frame of things Lucretius 41
my rich procemion m's Thy glory fly „ 70
blood That m's a steaming slaughter-house of Rome. „ 84
bird M's his heart voice amid the blaze of flowers : „ 101
To m a truth less harsh, „ 225
I would m it death For any male thing Princess, Pro. 151
And sweet as English air could m her, „ 155
' And m her some great Princess, „ 224
doubt that we might m it worth his while. „ i 184
her lynx eye To fix and m me hotter, „ m 47
your pains May only m that footprint „ 239
and m One act a phantom of succession : „ 328
pipe and woo her, and m her mine, „ iv 115
Would m aU women kick against their Lords „ 412
' And m us aU we should be, great and good.' „ 599
wiU take her, they will m her hard, „ v 90
Knowledge in our own land m her free, „ 419
The mother m's us most — and in my dream „ 507
let me m my dream All that I would. „ 519
let her m hereelf her own To give or keep, „ vii 272
— why Not m her true-heroic — „ Con. 20
break the shore, and evermore M and break, Ode on Well. 261 ;
And you, my Lords, you m the people muse Third of Feb. 31 ,'
Come to us, love us and m us your own : W. to Alexandra 30 |
Armie, will never m oneself clean. Grandmother 36 !
it m's me angry now. „ 44 J
Make
Hake (continued) preacher says, our sins should m
us sad :
That it m's one weary to hear.'
And m's it a sorrow to be.'
strain to m an inch of room For their sweet selves,
445
Make
Grandmother 93
The Islet 29
36
Lit. Squabbles 9
m you evermore Dearer and nearer,
VI the carcase a skeleton,
and m her a bower All of flowers.
Our wills are ours, to m them thine.
May m one music as before.
And in thy wisdom m me wise.
' What is it m's me beat so low ? '
That m's the barren branches loud ;
And m's a silence in the hills.
And m them pipes whereon to blow.
M Apiil of her tender eyes ;
A spectral doubt that m's me cold,
And m's it vassal unto love :
winds that 7n The seeming-wanton ripple break.
To «i allowance for us all.
Could 711 thee somewhat blench or fail.
Who m's by force his merit known
Which m's a desert in the mind.
Which m's me sad I know not why
Looks thy fair face and m's it still.
sire would m Confusion worse than death.
But ever strove to m it true :
He would not m his judgment blind.
Which 7n's the darkness and the light.
To m a solid core of heat ;
'Tis held that sorrow m's us wise,
'Tis held that sorrow m's us wise ;
To m old bareness picturesque
Is that a matter to m me fret ?
And I m myself such evil cheer,
boundless plan That m's you tyrants
M answer, Maud my bliss,
m's Love himself more dear.'
May God m me more wretched Than ever
But either fail'd to m the kingdom one.
nor m myself in mine own realm Victor
Eower on this dead world to m it live.' 94
ve and love, and w the world Other, " 472
should be King save him who m's us free ? ' Garethand L 137
one proof. Before thou ask the King to m thee knight, 145
Well, we will m amends.' " 30Q
m him knight because men call him king. " 420
M me thy knights— in secret ! (repeat) " 544 564
m demand Of whom ye gave me to, the Seneschal, ," ' 558
Let be my name until I m my name ! „ 576
To break her will, and m her wed with him : " 617
mar the boast Thy brethren of thee m — " 1243
to m the terror of thee more, " 1359
To m a horror all about the house, " 14H
To m her beauty vary day by day. Marr. of Geraint 9
thro his manful breast darted the pang That m's a
man, joo
And we will m us merry as we may. ]] 373
I will m her truly my true wife.' ,',' 503
for my strange petition I will m Amends ," 817
Mmea Uttle happier : let me know it : Gerai7it "and E. 317
Ihey would not m them laughable in aU eyes, „ 326
' Your sweet faces m good fellows fools „ 399
God's curse, it m's me mad to see you weep. ," 616
when it weds with manhood, m's a man. „' 868
m aU clean, and plant himself afresh. ',' 905
Should m an onslaught single on a realm "„ 91 7
And m,, as ten-times worthier to be thine Bali7i aTi'd Balan 68
so nch a fellowship Would m me wholly blest : ,. 148
a transitory word M knight or churl „ 162
would she m My darkness blackness ? ", 192
as m's The white swan-mother, sitting, ,' 352
So thou be shadow, here I m thee ghost,' ',' 394
same mistrustful mood That m's you seem less
°obl® Merlin and F, 322
A Dedication 2
Boddicea 14
Window, At the W. 5
In Mem., Fro. 16
28
44
tvS
a:ol3
» mx 8
» ««t 4
xl8
xli 19
„ xl7)iii 8
,, xlix 10
li 16
M Ixii 2
„ Ixiv 9
I. Ixvi 6
„ Ixviii 11
„ Ixx 16
xc 18
.: xcvi 8
14
19
„ cvii 18
„ cTiiii 15
„ cxiii 1
„ cxxviii 19
Maud I xiii 2
„ XV 2
„ xviii 37
57
61
„ xix 94
Com. of Arthur 15
Hake (contiiiued) Must m me fear still more you are not
mme, Must m me yearn still more to prove you
mine, And m me wish stiU more to learn Merlin and V. 327
Ihat 7ns me passing wrathful ; 341
That by and by will w the music mute, " gqi
fam would m you Master of all vice.' " Tm
charm concluded in that star To m fame nothing " 51 %
And one to m me jealous if I love, " 53^
ringing with their serpent hands, To m her smile, " 570
Or »/i her paler with a poison'd rose ? " fji?
Not to feel lowest 7n's them level all ; " aoa
Who loved to m men darker than they are " 876
could 7n me stay— That proof of trust— ' " giq
may m My scheming brain a cinder, " oqS
To m them like himself : Lancelot "and E. 131
The low sun m'5 the colour : 134
To 7)1 her thi-ice as wilful as before.' " 206
hly maid had striven to m him cheer, " 327
sloping down to m Arms for his chair, " 437
that I m My will of yours, " Q\k
So that would to you happy : " gga
sweetly could she m and sing. " 2OO6
Sweet death, that seems to m us loveless clay, " 1014
He m's no friend who never made a foe. " loga
and 7n me happy, making them An armlet " 1132
Yet to be loved m's not to love again ; " 1295
'God w thee good as thou art beautiful,' Holv Grail ISfi
Hope not to m thyself by idle vows, ^ 871
'if me thy knight, because I know, PelUas and E. 7
1 will m thee with my spear and sword 45
Stammer'd and could not m her a reply. " 35
His neighbom''s m and might : " 151
Open gates. And I will m you merry.' " 374
whom ye loathe, him will I m you love.' " 390
And m them an thou wilt a tourney-prize.' Last Tournament 32
M theu last head hke Satan in the North. 93,
Would 7n the world as blank as Winter-tide. " 221
too much wit M's the world rotten, ',' 247
Than any broken music thou canst m.' " 259
It m's a silent music up in heaven, |' 34^
he can m Figs out of thistles, " ' 355
Arthur m me pure As any maiden child ? " . ' ' 692
I shall never w thee smile again.' " 752
chance Will m the smouldering scandal ^ Guinevere 91
love of truth, and all that m's a man. 433
M's wicked lightnings of her eyes, " 520
whose vast pity aknost m's me die To see thee, " 534
And m's me one pollution : " 619
And enter it and m it beautiful ? Pass of Arthur 17
To 7ft It wholly thme on sunny days. Lover's Tale i 14
it m s a constant bubbhng melody 532
I m bare of all the golden moss, '' ^-^ 43
M's the heart tremble, and the sight run over ,',' 155
I will m a solemn offering of you " {^ 113
It m's me angry yet to speak of it — " 135,
the soul : That m's the sequel pure ; " 157
To m a good wife for Harry, First" Quarrel 30
no need to m such a stir.' g3
You'll m her its second mother ! [[ ji
We will m the Spaniard promise, The Eevenge 94
birds m ready for their bridal-time Sisters (E. and E.) 71
m Ihe veriest beauties of the work appear 104
that m our griefs our gains. " 231
caU nien traitors May m men traitors. Sir J. Oldcastle 51
L.est tne false faith ?» merry over them ! 32
They said ' Let us m man ' Dg p^^f "Two G 36
That Lenten fare m's Lenten thought, To E. Fitzgerald 31
I would m my hf e one prayer The Wreck 10
Tom theu- banquet rehsh ? Ancient Sage IS
What power but the bird's could m This music in the bird ' 21
What Power but the Years that m And break the vase of clay " 91
m the passing shadow serve thy will. ' " hq
to m The phantom walls of this illusion fade, " I80
m thy gold thy vassal not thy king, " 259
Nor m a snail's hom shrink for wantonness ; " 272
Make
446
Man
Hake {continiud) My father's madness m's me mad — The Flight 59
You only know the love that m's the world a world
to me ! „ 76
therewithin a guest may to True cheer Pro. to Gen. Hamley 15
must tight To m true peace his own, Epilogue 27
The falling drop will m his name „ 60
Heavenly Power M's all things new, (repeat) Early Spring 2, 44
and thy will, a power to m To Duke of Argyll 9
Two Suns of Love m day of human life, To Prin. Beatrice 1
M's the might of Britain known ; Open. I. and C. Exhib. 19
M their neighbourhood healthfuller, On Jub. Q. Victoria 32
M it regally goi"geous, „ 45
do ye 711 your moaning for my child ? ' Bemeter and P. 65
Globe again, and m Honey Moon. The Ring 15
she m's Her heart a miiTor that reflects „ 365
And I meant to m you jealous. Happy 67
faults your Poet m's Or many or few. To Mary Boyle 61
Her light m's rainbows in my closing eyes, Prog, of Spring 46
M all true hearths thy home. „ 52
Could m pure light Uve on the canvas ? Romney's R. 10
Elead for my o%vn fame with me To m it deai'er. „ 56
ut m it as clean as you can. By an Evolution. 3
can Music m you Uve Far — ^far — away ? Far — far — aicay 17
You m our faults too gross. To one who ran down Eng. 1
m her festal hour Dark with the blood St. Telemachus 79
Adoring That who made, and m's, Akbar's Dream 123
M but one music, harmonising ' Pray.' „ 151
gold Of Love, and m it current ; „ 164
I could m Sleep Death, if I would — Bandit's Death 32
when he promised to m me his bride. Charity 11
When I m for an Age of gold. The Dreamer 7
Or m's a friend where'er he come. The Wanderer 6
To m him trust his life, „ 11
when the man will m the Maker Faith 7
Make-believes m-6 For Edith and himself : Aylmer's Field 95
Maker (the Creator) For the drift of the M is dark, Maud I iv 43
thou dost His will. The M's, Gareth and L. 11
voices blend in choric Hallelujah to the M Making of Man 8
when the man will make the M Faith 7
Maker {See also Marriage-maker, Shadow-maker) M's
of nets, and living from the sea. Pelleas and E. 90
Makest ' Thou m thine appeal to me : In Mem. Ivi 5
And TO meriy when overthrown. Gareth and L. 1270
Thou TO broken music with thy bride. Last Tournament 264
MftHTig {See also Maakin', Merrymaking) M earth wonder. The Poet 52
By TO all the horizon dark. Two Voices 390
In firry woodlands to moan ; Miller's D. 42
M sweet close of his delicious toils — Palace of Art 185
M for one sure goal. „ 248
Thro' many agents m strong. Love thou thy land 39
The younger people m holiday, Enoch Arden 62
and m signs They knew not what : „ 640
gulf of ruin, swallowing gold. Not to. Sea Dreams 80
M the httle one leap for joy. To F. D. Maurice A
M Him broken gleams, and a stifled splendour High. Pantheism 10
to vain pretence Of gladness. In Mem,, xxx 6
to his high place the lawless perch Ded. of Idylls 22
TO slide apart Their dusk wing-cases, Gareth and L. 686
good mother m Enid gay In such apparel Marr. of Geraint 757
comrades to slowlier at the Prince, Geraint and E. 167
score with pointed lances, to at him — Balin and Balan 401
M a roan horse caper and curvet Lancelot and E. 792
M a treacherous quiet in her heart, „ 883
TO them An armlet for the roundest ann „ 1182
make men worse by to my sin known ? „ 1417
m all the night a steam of fire. Guinevere 599
And, TO there a sudden light. Lover's Tale iv 53
M fresh and fair All the bowers Sisters {E. and E.) 9
i« m a now link Breaking an old one ? The Ring 50
m with a kindly pinch Each poor pale cheek „ 314
tracks Of science to toward Thy Perfectness Akbar's Dream 29
Or hath cfjme, since the rn of the world. M. d' Arthur 203
agPH have gonn to the m of man : Maud I iv 35
thp. sudden to of sjilerulitl names, „ /// ^ 47
Or hatlt come, since the to of the world. Pass, of Arthur 371
Malarian A flat m world of reed and rush ! Lover's Tale iv 142
Malay not the Kaffir, Hottentot, M, Princess ii 158
Malayan Ran a M amuck against the times, Aylmer's Field 463
The cui-sed M crease. Princess, Pro. 21
Male (adj.) make it death For any m thing but to peep
at us.' „ 152
I dare All these w thunderbolts : „ iv 500
Thaw this to nature to some touch of that „ vi 306
all m minds perforce Sway'd to her ,. vii 325
Which types all Nature's to and female plan, On One who affec. E. M. 3
Male (s) {See also Maale) maids should ape Those
monstrous m's
Malice crime of sense became The crime of m,
My TO is no deeper than a moat.
In one, their to on the placid lip
phrase that masks his m now —
Malignant The green m light of coming stomi.
my honest heat Were all miscounted as m haste
Malison I have no sorcerer's to on me,
Mallrin {See also Mawkln) the swineherd's m in the
mast ?
MaUeor Of Geoffrey's book, or him of M's,
Mallow set With wiUow-weed and to.
Mammon This filthy marriage-hindering M
Mammonite When a M mother kills her babe
Mammoth old-world m bulk'd in ice,
Man {See also Countryman, Half-man, Lay-men, Men-at-arms,
Men-children, Men-tommies, Methody-man, Serving-man,
Watchman, Welshman, Woman-man, Woodman, Workman)
Princess Hi 310
Vision of Sin 216
Geraint and E. 340
Pelleas and E. 432
The Flight 30
Princess Hi 132
„ iv 334
ii 410
Last Tournament 632
To the Queen II 42
The Brook 46
Aylmer's Field 374
Maud I i45
Princess v 148
As all men know, Long ago.
Men say that Thou Didst die for me.
Men pass me by ;
When Angels spake to men aloud,
where to Hath moor'd and rested ?
It is m's privilege to doubt.
Shall TO live thus, in joy and hope
Then once by to and angels to be seen.
As a sick m's room when he taketh repose
riving the spirit of to. Making earth wonder,
Kate saith ' the m£n are gilded flies.'
How long, O God, shall men be ridden down. And trampled
under by the last and least Of men ? Poland 1
And in the sixth she moulded to. Two Voices 18
And men, thro' novel spheres of thought „ 61
All Things will Die 39
Supp. Confessions 2
19
25
124
148-
16d
The Krdken 14
A spirit haunts 14
The Poet 51
Kate 18
101
108
109
172
176
210
280
323
327
352
370
Miller's D. 96
(Enone 129
„ 229
„ 265
To , With Pal. of Art 11
19
Palace of Arl 131
155
209
' He dared not tarry,' men will say,
heaping on the fear of ill The fear of men,
' Do men love thee ? Art thou so bound To men.
That men with knowledge merely play'd,
this dreamer, deaf and blind, Named to.
The joy that mixes m with Heaven :
' Why, if TO rot in dreamless ease.
He sat upon the knees of men
till thou wert also m :
in trances, men Forget the dream that happens then
' And men, whose reason long was bUnd,
And with the certain step of m.
men, in power Only, are likest gods,
hated both of Gods and men.
Rings ever in her eare of amied m£n.
friends to m. Living together under the
same roof,
tears Of angels to the perfect shape of m
choice paintings of wise 7nen I hung
once more like some sick to declined,
' I take possession of m's mind and deed,
that good TO, the clergyman, has told me words
of peace. May Queen, Con. 12
from an ill-used race of men that cleave the soil, Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 120
Squadrons and squares of men in brazen plates, D. of F. Women 33
men call'd Aulis in those iron yeara : „ 106
' I govern'd men by change, and so I sway'd All moods. „ 130
'TLs long since 1 have seen a to. „ 131
I have no men to govern in this wood : „ 135
' The TO, my lover, with whom I rode sublime „ 141
1 am that Rosamond, whom men call fair, „ 251
Man
447
Man
To J. S. 31
You ask me, why, etc. 8
Of old sat Freedom 11
Love thou thy land 20
74
England and Amer. 1
7
The Goose 21
The Epic 37
M. d' Arthur 3
17
42
Man (continued) A tn more pure and bold and just
A m may speak the thing he will ;
part by part to wen reveal'd The fullness
Bear seed of meii and growth of minds,
if Nature's evil star Drive men in manhood,
0 THOU, that sendest out the to
in noble heat Those men thine arms withstood,
So sitting, served by m and maid,
and why should any m Remodel models ?
Until King Arthur's table, m by m,
They sleep — the 7nen I loved.
A Uttle thing may harm a wounded m.
mighty bones of ancient men. Old knights,
is a shameful thing for men to lie.
Which might have pleased the eyes of many men.
some old m speak in the af tertime
for a TO may fail in duty twice,
1 live three Uves of mortal mew.
Among new me^i, strange faces,
are m.en better than sheep or goats
we loved the m, and prized his work ;
Francis, muttering, like a m ill-used,
sweeter than the dream Dream'd by a happy m,
She stood, a sight to make an old m young,
thought, ' I'll make them to and wife.'
Then the old m Was wroth,
none of all his men Dare tell him Dora waited
He spied her, and he left his men at work,
when William died, he died at peace With all men ;
at once the old to burst in sobs : —
they climg about The old m's neck.
And all the to was broken with remorse ;
hid his face From all men,
You saw the m — on Monday, was it ? —
Like men, like manners :
What know we of the secret of a w ?
built When men knew how to build,
God made the woman for the m, (repeat)
M is made of soUd stuff,
do not think youreelf alone Of all men happy.
' God made the woman for the use of ?»,
Show me the m hath suffer'd more than I.
and men on earth House in the shade
Lord, thou knowest what ami am ; A sinful m,
and more Than many just and holy men,
by surname Stylites, among men ;
Speak, if there be a priest, a to of God,
That love, that makes me thrice a m.
To that TO My work shall suiswer,
for a TO is not as God,
But then most Godlike being most a m.
words That make a »n. feel strong in speaking tioith ;
light shall spread, and to be liker m
when shall all men's good Be each m's rule,
cities of men And manners, climates,
xmbecoming men that strove with Gods.
M comes and tiUs the field and Ues beneath,
Alas ! for this gray shadow, once a m —
wealthy men who care not how they give.
Why should a to desire in any way To vary from the
kmdly race of men, „ 28
happy men that have the power to die, „ 70
In the Spring a young m's fancy Locksley Hall 20
in among the throngs of men : „ 116
Men, my brothers, men the workers, " „ 117
battle-flags were furl'd In the Parliament of m, „ 128
thoughts of men are widen'd with the process of
the suns. „ 138
Woman is the lesser to, „ 151
held it better men should perish one by one, „ 179
New men, that in the flying of a wheel Godiva 6
Bring truth that sways the soul of men ? Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 52
But any m that walks the mead, „ Moral 9
To silence from the paths of men ; „ L' Envoi 6
Oh, nature first was fresh to Tnen, Am/phion 57
47
78
91
107
129
155
238
250
Ep. 8
12
Gardener's D. 72
141
Dora 4
„ 24
„ 75
„ 86
„ 145
„ 158
„ 164
„ 165
Walk, to the MaU 21
30
63
104
Edwin Morris 7
„ 43,50
49
78
91
St. S. Stylites 49
106
121
131
162
214
Talking Oak 11
Love and Dviy 28
30
31
70
Golden Year 35
47
Ulysses 13
„ 53
Tithonus 3
11
17
Man (continued) My good blade carves the casques of men. Sir Galahad 1
child's heart within the m's Begins to move Will Water. 31
Which vexes public men, ., 44
nor take Half views of men and thmgs. „ 52
This earth is rich in m and maid ; „ 65
From misty 7nen of letters ; „ 190
To keep the best to under the sun Lady Clare 31
Lord Ronald's, When you are to and wife.' „ 36
If there be any faith in m.' „ 44
' The TO will cleave unto his right.' „ 46
Burnt in each m's blood. The Captain 16
Blood and brains of men. „ 48
each TO. murmur'd, ' O my Queen, I follow The Voyage 63
A m had given all other bliss, Sir L. and Q. G. 42
Henceforth I tiaist the to alone,
gray and gap-tooth'd w as lean as death,
Every moment dies a to, (repeat)
' We are 7nen of ruin'd blood ;
All the windy ways of men (repeat)
Buss me, thou rough sketch of m.
Dregs of life, and lees of m :
Below were men and horses pierced with woi'ms,
But in a tongue no to could understand ;
You shadow forth to distant men.
And all m,en look'd upon him favourably :
Altho' a grave and staid God-fearing m,
he knew the to and valued him,
Enoch as a brave God-fearing m
You chose the best among us — a strong m :
To wed the to so dear to all of them
Surely the m had died of solitude.
officere and men Levied a kindly tax upon themselves,
Pitying the lonely to, and gave him it :
with yet a bed for wandering men.
' Enoch, poor m, was cast away and lost.'
when the dead to come to life beheld His wife
As lightly as a sick m's chamber-door,
fife in it Whereby the m could live ;
gentle sickness, gradually Weakening the m,
' hear him talk ! I warrant, to,
Held his head high, and cared for no to, he.'
' His head is low, and no to cares for him.
I am the to.'
The Letters 31
Vision of Sin 60
' 97, 121
99
132, 168
189
205
209
222
To E. L. 7
Enoch Arden 56
112
121
185
293
484
621
662
698
713
758
776
821
825
841
848
850
852
For men may come and men may go, (repeat) The Brook 33, 49, 65, 184
He knew the m ; the colt would fetch its price ; „
Yes, men may come and go ; and these are gone, „
SiE Aylmer Aylmer, that almighty to, Aylmer
sons of men Daughters of God ;
My men shall lash you from them like a dog ;
the fierce old m Follow'd,
m was his, had been his father's, friend :
He had known a to, a quintessence of m,
agreed That much allowance must be made for men.
hearts of men Seem'd harder too ;
Like flies that haunt a wound, or deer, or men,
a dead m, a letter edged with death Beside him,
thy brother to, the Lord from Heaven,
often placed upon the sick to's brow
the m became Imbecile ; his one word was ' desolate ; '
(for the TO Had risk'd his little)
Not preaching simple Christ to simple men,
And musing on the little lives of men,
neither God nor to can well forgive,
there surely lives in to and beast
TO is likewise counsel for himself.
Came men and women in dark clusters round,
men of flesh and blood, and men of stone.
Good TO, to please the child.
who is dead ? ' ' The m your eye pursued.
if there be A devil in to, there is an angel too,
Then the to, ' His deeds yet live,
tickling the brute brain within the m's
TO may gain Letting his own Ufe go.
Gods there are, for all m,en so believe.
his wrath were wreak'd on wretched m.
149
186
FieU 13
44
325
330
344
388
410
453
571
595
667
700
835
Dreams 9
21
48
63
68
182
226
237
267
272
278
313
Lucretius 21
„ 112
„ 117
„ 128
Sea
Man
448
Man
Man (continued) men like soldiers may not quit the post
hollow as the hopes and fears of men ?
what m, What Roman would be dragg'd in triumph
Those blind beginnings that have made me w,
into m once more, Or beast, or bird or fish,
that hour perhaps Is not so far when momentary ?»
carest not How roughly men may woo thee so they wi
A m with knobs and wires and vials fired
men and maids Arranged a country dance,
Discuss'd his tutor, rough to common men,
men have done it : how I hate you all !
build Far off from men a college hke a m's, And I
would teach them all that men are taught ;
never m, I think, So moulder'd in a sinecure
what kind of tales did men tell itien.
Between the rougher voices of the men,
On a sudden in the midst of men and day,
he would send a hundred thousand vien.
Whom all men rate as kind and hospitable :
A little dry old m, without a star.
The woman were an equal to the m.
Yet being an easy m, gave it :
see no men. Not ev'n her brother Arac,
it was clear against all rules For any m. to go :
planet close upon the Sun, Than our m's earth ;
This barren verbiage, current among men,
tricks, which make us toys of men,
Not for three years to speak with any men ;
not of those that men desire,
then the monster, then the m ;
but that which made Woman and m.
Here might they learn whatever men were taught :
Some meal's were small : not they the least of men ;
thence the m's, if more was more ;
The highest is the measure of the m,
Sappho and others vied with any m :
Let no m enter in on pain of death ?
chanted on the blanching bones of men ? '
the wisest m Feasted the woman wisest then.
The total chronicles of m, the mind.
Abate the stride, which speaks of m,
might a m not wander from his wits
Men hated learned women :
Girls ? — more Uke men ! '
Men ! girls, hke men ! why, if they had been men
' men ' (for still My mother went revolving on the
word)
' And so they are — very like men indeed —
' Why — these — are — men : ' I shudder'd :
Three times more noble than three score of men,
every phrase well-oil'd. As m's could be ;
nor deals in that Which men deUght in,
Upon an even pedestal with to.'
we move, my friend. At no m's beck.
To assail this gray preeminence of m !
that men may pluck them from our hearts,
bones of some vast bulk that hved and roar'd
Before m was.
Nor willing Tnen should come among us.
And all the m«n moum'd at his side :
So sweet a voice and vague, fatal to men,
Knaves are men, That lute and flute
Till all men grew to rate us at our worth.
She, question 'd if she knew us men,
stronger than men. Huge women blowzed with health,
men will say We did not know the real light,
You hold the woman is the better m ;
I bear, Tho' m, yet human,
A m I came to see you : but, indeed,
That many a famous m and woman,
more than poor men wealth, Tlian sick men health —
That it l.ecomes no m to nurse despair,
Home that men were in the veiy walk,
Then men had said — but now —
inake yourself a m to fight with mm.
Lucretius 148
180
233
246
248
253
273
Princess, Pro. 65
83
114
130
135
181
196
245
il5
64
71
117
131
149
152
179
m37
54
63
72
76
119
145
146
148
151
157
164
195
199
350
381
429
440
466
iii 43
49
53
55
58
109
134
216
224
227
234
257
295
318
353
iv 64
128
145
231
278
356
410
425
441
445
459
464
485
533
t)35
Man (continued) what might that to not deserve of me
she laughs at you and to :
M is the hunter ; woman is his game :
fling defiance down Gagelike to m.
Not like the piebald miscellany, to,
nor ever had I seen Such thews of men :
home is in the sinews of a to.
Her that talk'd down the fifty wisest men ;
rainbow fiying on the highest Foam of men's deeds —
lived in sleeker times With smoother men :
I set my face Against all men,
Far oif from men I built a fold
sole men to be mingled with our cause, The sole
men we shall prize in the aftertime,
this Egypt-plague of men !
When the to wants weight, the woman takes it up,
M for the field and woman for the hearth : M for
the sword and for the needle she. M with the
head and woman with the heart : M to command
and woman to obey ;
large-moulded m. His \Tsage aU agrin as at a wake,
boats and bridges for the use of men.
down she look'd At the arm'd m sideways,
These men are hard upon us as of old,
Ida — 'sdeath ! you blame the m ;
men see Two women faster welded in one love
maids. That have no links with men.
these men came to woo Your Highness —
Whatever to hes wounded, friend or foe,
The common men with rolling eyes ;
swanns of men Darkening her female field ;
face Peep'd, shining in upon the wounded m
showers of random sweet on maid and to.
sons of men, and barbarous laws, (repeat)
that know The woman's cause is m's :
For she that out of Lethe scales with to
shares with to His nights, his days,
slight-natured, miserable, How shall men grow ?
For woman is not undevelopt w. But divei-se : could
we make her as the to, Sweet love were slain :
The TO be more of woman, she of to ;
Till at the last she set herself to to,
comes the stateUer Eden back to men :
Interpreter between the Gods and men,
mask'd thee from men's reverence up,
dark gates across the wild That no to knows.
So pray'd the men, the women :
men required that I should give throughout
Perchance upon the future m :
Where shall we lay the to whom we deplore ?
Mourn for the to of long-enduring blood.
Mourn for the m of «mplest influence,
0 good gray head which all men knew,
0 voice from which their omens all men drew,
A TO of well-attemper'd frame.
Thine island loves thee well, thou famous to.
With blare of bugle, clamour of inen,
all men else their nobler dreams forget,
great men who fought, and kept it ours,
spoke among you, and the M who spoke ;
More than is of m's degree Must be with us,
On God and Godhke men we build our trust,
any ^vreath that m can weave him.
Was there a to dismay'd ?
Till each m find his own in all men's good. Ode
And all men work in noble brotherhood,
made the serf a m, and burst his chain — W.
Where men are bold and strongly say their say ; —
and change the hearts of men,
strong on his legs, he looks like a m.
her father was not the to to save.
Never a m could fling him :
Willy stood up like a to,
But he cheer'd me, my good to,
Kind, like a to, was he ; like a to, too,
Princess v 104
116
154
178
198
256
267
294
320
386
389
390
411
427
444
447
520
ot47
157
198
221
252
292
328
336
360
vii 33
61
86
234, 256
259
261
262
266
275
280
285
293
322
343
363
Con. 7
10
109
on Well. 8
24
27
35
36
74
85
115
152
158
178
242
266
277
Light Brigade 10
Inter. Exhib. 37
38
to Marie Alex. 3
32
44
Grandmother 2
10
45
69
70
Ode<
Man
i Maa (continued) and now they're elderly mm.
trod, not m, is the Judge of us all
I weant saay men be loiars,
what a TO a bea sewer-loy ! '
a TO mun be eather a to or a mouse ?
Dear to the to that is dear to God •
bhadows of three dead men (repeat)
Two dead men have I known In courtesy
J. wo dead men have I loved With a love
the'ttS/""" ^^^ ^ ^''^^ ^^ *^°" ^ ^^ of
If TO«i neglect your pages ?
And men will live to see it.
And dead men lay all over the way
And the ear of to cannot hear, and the eye of to
cannot see; j^viiu
And the thought of a to is higher
I should know what God and to is
phantom bodies of horses and men •
Men s song and men's love, '
And women's love and men's '
^ter-loves of maids and men
Thou madest Life in to and brute •
Ihou madest m, he knows not why
tor merit hves from to to to
And not from to, O Lord, to thee.
' R^h '?!ftu'"*^ "^ °" stepping-stones
Behold the TO that loved and lost.
Beats out the little lives of men.
And traveU'd men from foreign lands ;
The human-hearted w I loved
The m I held as half-divine • '
-^d made me that delirious' to
And melt the waxen hearts of men.'
There sat the Shadow fear'd of m ■
Behold a TO raised up by Christ '
Yet If some voice that to could trust
^ dies : nor is there hope in dust • '
And darkening the dark graves of men,—
bo then were nothing lost to to ;
^or here the to is more and more •
Had TO to learn himself anew '
Then thase were such as m^n might scorn •
And TOm the flies of latter spring '
A sober to, among his boys
The grain by which a to may live ?
^, her last work, who seem'd so fair,
Where thy first form was made a to •
As some divinely gifted to
Of men and minds, the dust of change,
the path that each to trod Is dim
As sometimes in a dead m's face '
A TO upon a stall may find '
But stay'd in peace with God and to.
labour fiEs The Ups of men with honest praise
The mighty hopes that make us men. ^ '
Ihe picturesque of to and to.'
tMIh^ the to whose thought would hold
Ihe dead to touch'd me from the past
thousand wants Gnarr at the heels^of men,
Day, when I lost the flower of men ; '
Ihe TO we loved was there on deck. But thrice as
large as to he bent To greet us.
Kmg in the valiant to and free,
10 seize and throw the doubts of to ;
J. he men of rathe and riper years •
May she mix With men and prosper !
liU at the last arose the to ;
What matters Science unto men,
Tfl^^'^^u ^^^ '^ ^^0 springs Hereafter,
^or thro' the questions men rn^y try.
And hke a TO in wrath the heart
What is, and no to understands ;
That reach thro' nature, moulding men.
Kesult m TO, be bom and think
449
Orandmother 88
95
N. Farmer" 0. S. 27
54
N. S. 6
To F. D. Maurice 36
G. of Swainston 3, 5
11
13
c ." 15
Sftteful Letter 6
18
The Victim 21
High. Pantheism 17
Voice and the P. 32
Flow, in cran. wall 6
Boddicea 27
Window, Spring 7
10
» No Answer 25
In Mem., Pro. 6
10
35
36
t 3
15
a 8
x6
.. xiii 11
.. xiv 10
.. xvi 17
>. xxi 8
.. xxii 12
<> xxxi 13
>. XXXV 1
4
,. xxxix 9
i> xliii 9
.. xliv 2
» xlv 15
1. xlviii 4
no
» liii 2
8
lvi9
Ixi 10
» Ixiv 2
.. Ixxi 10
X Ixxiii 9
1) Ixxiv 1
,. Ixxvii 9
>. Ixxx 8
„ Ixxxiv 26
„ Ixxxv 60
„ Ixxxix 42
). xciv 3
.. xcv 34
„ xcviii 17
» xcix 4
). ciii 41
cvi 29
>i cix 6
.. ex 2
.. cxiv 3
» cxviii 12
,. cxx 7
9
>, ex xiv 7
15
22
24
» Con. 126
Man (continued) Whereof the m, that with me trod
old TO, now ord of the broad estate and ™he HaU
the works of the men of mind '
and when only not all men lie'-
?1fir!'f *'.^''°''' "l"^^^^' ^•''nan or TO be the worse
1 keep but a to and a maid, wuise.
We are puppets, il/ in his pride
we men are a httle breed. '
million of ages have gone to the making of to •
m of science himself is fonder of glory
desire or admire, if a to could learn it
Strange, that I hear two mm.
Strong in the power that all men adore
Jior a TO and leader of TOcw.
Ah God, for a TO with heart, head, hand.
still strong TO m a blatant land
^d ah for a TO to arise in me, '
That the TO I am may cease to be '
That old m never comes to his place :
liU the red to dance By his red^cedar-tree. And
the red TO s babe Leap, beyond the sea.
and brand His nothingness into to.
Love, like men in drinking-songs,
that dead m at her heart and mine •
pohtical dinner To the men of many acres
a learned TO Could give it a clumsy name
FS.thn'P.'^^''^K'^ ? °? ^ ''°^* Of ancient fable
iiiver about me the dead men go •
to hear a dead to chatter Is enough to drive one mad
They cannot even bury am;
Nor let any to think for the public good,
He hnkt a dead to there to a spectral bride :
what will the old to say ? (repeat)
But TO was less and less, till Arthur came
they grew up to wolf-Uke men,
For here between the to and beast we die '
Ihat there between the to and beast they die
Arthur said, M's word is God in to •
and caU'd A hoary to, his chamberlain,
there be but two old men that know •
and one Is Merhn, the wise to
beast and to had had their share of me •
theiis are bestial, hold him less than to •
there be those who deem him more than to
her TOm Seeing the mighty swarm about their walls
and rear'd him with her own ; And no to knew.
Victor his men Report him '
blade so bright That mm are blinded by it—
King IS fair Beyond the race of Britons and of men.
A young to wiU be wiser by and by ; An old m's
wit may wander ere he die.
Ranging and ringing thro' the minds of men
men may wound him that he will not die '
and all men hail him for their king ' '
ye are yet more boy than to.'
^"deS "'"'' ^^^^^'^ ^^"^ ' ''"^' ^°°^ ^^cJ^' no ^
Must wed that other, whom no m desired
SSOT fronted to or woman, eye to eye—
M ami grown, a m's work must I do
we have heard from our wise to at home To
JNorthward,
that men Were giddy gazing there ;
thereunder came an ancient to. Long-bearded
these, my men, (Your city moved so weirdly '
''Tf' fif '^ Vl^^ ^ ^ ^^°'^<1 "ot be bouiid by,
yet the which No to can keep ; ^'
Gareth looking after said, ' My men.
Give me to right her wrong, and slay the to.'
lived and died for men, the to shaU die '
make him knight because men call him king.
2f
Man
In Mem., Con. 137
Maud I i 19
25
35
75
ivl9
25
30
35
37
41
54
t)8
vi61
vii 5
13
arl4
59
60
63
67
68
xiii 24
xvii 17
xviii 40
55
xix 9
aja: 32
// a 9
31
t)18
19
22
45
80
„ 83, 87
Com. of Arthur 12
32
45
79
133
145
149
151
163
181
182
199
225
249
301
331
404
416
421
424
Gareth and L. 98
105
109
112
116
201
227
240
244
271
296
366
383
420
Man
450
Man
Man (continued) a m of plots, Craft, poisonous counsels, Gareth and L. 431
noise of ravage wrought by beast and m,
Down on the shoulders of the twain, his men,
then Kay, a m of mien Wan-sallow as the plant
A horse thou knowest, a m thou dost not know :
and leave my m to me.'
Our noblest brother, and oiu- truest m,
would ye men should wonder at you ?
do the battle with him, thy chief m Sir Lancelot
What the fashion of the men ? '
these four be fools, but mighty men,
ere a m in hall could stay her, tum'd,
Arthiu-'s Tnen are set along the wood ;
Saw six tall men haling a seventh along,
For here be mighty m to joust with.
The war of Time against the soul of m.
beneath five figures, armed men,
massacring M, woman, lad and girl —
Belike he wins it as the better m :
' Fool, for thou hast, men say, the strength of ten,
Was ever m so grandly made as he ?
I the poor cause that men Reproach you.
And how men slur him, saying aU his force
For aU my pains, poor w, for all my pains,
pang That makes a to, in the sweet face of her
the TO Not turning round, nor looking at him.
And made him Uke a m abroad at mom
the liquid note beloved of men Came flying
For TO is m and master of his fate.
yoiu- town, where all the men are mad ;
a name far-sounded among men For noble deeds ?
since the proud to often is the mean,
Bribed with large promises the men who served
About my person,
I have let m be, and have their way ;
But in this tournament can no to tilt,
the fallen to Made answer, groaning,
men have seen my fall.'
rose a cry That Edym's men were on them,
Edym's men had caught them in their flight,
Never to rejoiced More than Geraint
Men saw the goodly hills of Somerset,
0 PURBLIND race of miserable men,
M a TO upon his tongue May break it,
like a to That skins the wild beast after slaying him,
And every to were larger-Umb'd than I,
And if I fall, cleave to the better m.'
yet the sapling grew : So lay the to transfixt.
1 will tell him How great a to thou art : he loves
to know When men of mark are in his territoi-y :
and return With victual for these men.
Or two wild men supporters of a shield,
bad the host Call in what men soever were his friends,
men may bicker with the things they love,
that this TO loves you no more,
the m's love once gone never returns.
He moving homeward babbled to his men, How
Enid never loved a to but him.
Seeing that ye are wedded to a to,
But at the flash and motion of the to
But if a TO who stands upon the brink
scared but at the motion of the to,
' Horse and to,' he said, ' All of one mind
But as a TO to whom a dreadful loss Falls
freat charger stood, grieved Uke a to.
earing to lose, and all for a dead m,
cursing their lost time, and the dead to,
men brought in whole hogs and quarter beeves,
Good luck had your good to,
* I will not eat Till yonder to upon the bier arise,
Take warning : yonder to is surely dead ;
Until himself anse a living to,
all the men and women in the hall Rose when they saw
the dead m rise,
I have used you worse than that dead m ;
Marr. of
437
440
452
463
477
565
570
619
627
643
660
788
811
880
1198
1205
1341
1346
1387
Geraint 81
87
106
116
122
269
335
336
355
418
427
449
453
466
480
575
578
639
642
771
828
Geraint and E. 1
42
92
148
152
166
228
240
267
286
325
329
333
362
425
467
472
476
483
496
535
564
576
602
617
657
672
706
731
785
Man (continued) Shriek'd to the stranger ' Slay not
a dead to ! '
Were men and women staring and aghast,
men may fear Fresh fire and ruin,
with your own true eyes Beheld the m you loved
when it weds with manhood, makes a m.
The world will not beUeve a to repents :
Full seldom doth a to repent,
as now Men weed the white horse on the Berkshire
hills
sent a thousand men To till the wastes,
call'd him the great Prince and m of men.
Geraint and E. 7791
804|
8231
847
M's word is God in man.'
mightier men than aU In Arthur's court ;
And lightly so retum'd, and no to knew.
My brother and my better, this to here, Balan.
A TO of thine to-day Abash'd us both.
Reported of some demon in the woods Was once a to,
as the TO in life Was wounded by blind tongues
This was the simshine that hath given the to A growth.
Whom all men rate the king of courtesy.
Then spake the men of PeUam crying
Truly, ye men of Arthur be but babes.'
But thou art to, and canst abide a truth.
Or devil or to Guard thou thine head.'
crush'd the m Inward, and either fell,
I fain would know what manner of men
the most famous m of all those times,
old TO, Tho' doubtful, felt the flattery,
The m so wrought on ever seem'd to He
none could find that to for evermore,
ruin'd to Thro' woman the first hour ;
was to be, for love of God and men And noble deeds
Lo now, what hearts have men !
' M dreams of Fame while woman wakes to love.'
Fame with men, Being but ampler means
for men sought to prove me vile,
made her good to jealous with good cause.
new lord, her own, the first of men.
A little glassy-headed hairless m,
sunders ghosts and shadow-casting men
here wa.s the m. And so by force they dragg'd him
In such-\vise, that no to could see her more,
that old m Went back to his old wild.
But you are to, you well can understand
sweet Sir Sagramore, That ardent to ?
whose whole prey Is m's good name :
stainless to beside a stainless maid ;
' A sober to is Percivale and pure ;
Arthur, blameless King and stainless m ? '
' M \ is he TO at all, who knows and winks ?
0 selfless to and stainless gentleman,
fain Have all men true and leal, aU women pure ;
For men at most difier as Heaven and earth,
0 God, that I had loved a smaller to !
Who loved to make men darker than they are,
loyal worship is allow'd Of aU men :
And swearing men to vows impossible,
men go down before your spear at a touch.
Then came an old, dumb, myriad-wrinkled to,
Lancelot marvell'd at the worldless to ;
he seem'd the goodhest to That ever among ladies
But kindly to moving among his kind :
Suddenly speaking of the worldless to,
his knights are better men than he —
thro' all hindrance finds the m Behind it,
more amazed Than if seven men had set upon him,
1 am not great : There is the to.'
that a m far-off might well perceive.
If any to that day were left afield.
Strong men, and wrathful that a stranger knight
The grace and versatility of the to !
men went down before his spear at a touch,
would he hide his name From all men,
our Lancelot ! that true to ! '
941]
9611
Balin and Balan Sl
7G
125
12
181
251
331
3611
501
552
56
574
Merlin and V. 1€
18
72
72
731
75
77fl
78|
79
79
814
87l
87i
Lancelot and E. 11|
13
26
271
314
35]
459
45g
468
472
57»,
581
Man
451
Man
JMan (continued) our true m change like a leaf at
last?
since m's fiist fall, Did kindlier unto m,
the sick m forgot her simple blush,
love Of w and woman when they love their best,
Another world for the sick m ;
no m there will dare to mock at me ;
it is mine to love Him of all men
never yet Was noble m but made ignoble talk,
and bid call the ghostly w Hither,
when the ghostly w had come and gone,
therefore let our dumb old m alone Go with me,
Oui- bond, as not the bond of m and wife.
Our bond is not the bond of m and wife,
hard and stiU as is the face that men Shape to their
fancy's eye
then tum'd the tongueless m From the half-face
a m Made to be loved ;
now a lonely m Wifeless and heirless.
To make men worse by making my sin known ?
Arthm-'s greatest knight, a m Not after Arthur's heart !
Not knowing he should die a holy m.
m Could touch or see it, he was heal'd at once,
A m wellnigh a hundred winters old,
all men's hearts became Clean for a season,
pale mm, I spake of this To all inen ;
letters in a tongue no in could read.
' No m could sit but he should lose himself : '
staring each at other like dumb men Stood,
And in the lowest beasts are slajring ?««», And in
the second men are slaying beasts. And on the
third are warriors, perfect men, And on the
fom'th are men with growing wings,
' but men With strength and will to right the wrong'd,
m£n and boys astride On wyvern, lion.
Thou mightiest and thou purest among men ! '
but foimd at top No m, nor any voice.
I saw That m had once dwelt there ;
I found Only one m of an exceeding age.
rose a hill that none but m could climb.
Part black, part whiten'd with the bones of men,
Taking my war-horse from the holy m.
Rejoice, small m, in this small world of mine,
phantoms in your quest, No m, no woman ? '
' All men, to one so bound by such a vow.
Then said the monk, ' Poor men, when yule is cold,
and their wise men Were strong in that old magic
A square-.set m and honest ;
words Of so great men as Lancelot and our King
Therefore I communed with a saintly m,
if ever loyal m and true Could see it.
There was I beaten down by Uttle men,
great beasts rose upright like a m,
nun and thou have driven men mad,
all of true and noble in knight and m
For as the base m, judging of the good,
as he came away, The m,en who met hirn
No men to strike ? Fall on him all at once,
she gazed upon the m Of princely bearing,
•this m loves. If love there be :
Art thou not he whom men call light-of-love ? '
I to your dead m have given my troth,
' Why then let men couple at once with wolves.
M was it who marr'd heaven's image in thee
thus?'
honey from hornet-combs. And mew from beasts —
as from men secure Amid their marshes.
Men, women, on their sodden faces,
' my m Hath left me or is dead ; '
I — ^misyoked with such a want of m —
my Mark's, by whom all men Are noble.
The greater m, the greater courtesy.
The m of men, our King — My God, the power Was
once in vows when men believed the King !
' If , is he m at all ? ' methought,
Lancelot and E. 686
859
864
874
1053
1077
1088
1099
1101
1127
1191
1206
1251
1261
1363
1370
1417
1419
1429
Holy Grail 54
85
90
130
171
174
193
234
308
349
426
428
430
431
489
500
537
559
563
565
613
665
703
713
742
756
789
821
862
882
80
142
268
305
307
361
389
536
Pelleas and E.
Last Tournament 64
358
426
474
494
571
599
633
648
H 663
Man {continued) he seem'd to me no m. But Michael
trampUng Satan ; Last Tournament 672
heather-scented air. Pulsing full m ; „ 692
reverencing king's blood in a bad m, Guinevere 37
But, if a m were halt or himch'd, „ 41
such a feast As never m had dream'd ; „ 264
so glad were spirits and men Before the coming „ 269
prophets were they all. Spirits and men : „ 273
the King As wellnigh more than m, „ 287
For there was no m knew from whence he came ; „ 289
a mystery From all men, like his birth ; „ 298
Were the most noblj^-manner'd men of all ; „ 334
Reputed the best knight and goodliest ?re, „ 382
True 7)ien, who love me stiU, for whom I live, „ 445
glorious company, the flower of men, „ 464
Not only to keep down the base in m, „ 480
love of truth, and aU that makes a m. „ 483
I hold that m the worst of public foes „ 512
She like a new disease, unknown to men, „ 518
Worst of the worst were that m he that reigns ! „ 523
no m dream but that I love thee still. „ 560
strike against the m they call My sister's son — „ 572
when the m was no more than a voice Pass, of Arthur 3
in His ways with men I find Him not. „ 11
that these eyes of men are dense and dim, „ 19
for the ghost is as the m ; „ 57
but no m was moving there ; „ 127
uttering this the King Made at the m : „ 165
Until King Arthur's Table, m by m, „ 172
They sleep — the men I loved. „ 185
A little thing may harm a woimded m ; „ 210
Where lay the mighty bones of ancient men, Old
knights, „ 215
This is a shameful thing for men to lie. „ 246
might have pleased the eyes of many men. „ 259
some old m speak in the aftertime To all the
people, „ 275
for a m may fail in duty twice, „ 297
I live three lives of mortal men, „ 323
Among new men, strange faces, „ 406
are men better than sheep or goats „ 418
and loud leagues of m And welcome ! To the Queen ii 9
Ideal manhood closed in real m, „ 38
Or as men know not when they fall asleep Lover's Tale i 161
as tho' A m in some still garden „ 269
we found The dead m cast upon the shore ? „ 295
she answered, ' Ay, And men to soar : ' „ 305
A woful m (for so the story went) ,, 379
That men plant over graves. „ 538
like a vain rich m, That, having always prosper'd „ 715
Let them so love that men and boys may say, „ 756
Beneath the shadow of the curse of m, „ 790
the m who stood with me Stept gaily forward, „ Hi 50
the dreadful dust that once was m, „ iv 67
dead men's dust and beating hearts. „ 140
when a m WiU honour those who feast with him, „ 231
I knew a m, not many years ago ; „ 255
Dazed or amazed, nor eyes of men ; „ 311
but after my m was dead ; First Quarrel 6
The men would say of the maids, „ 28
my house an' my m were my pride, „ 41
been as true to you as ever a m to his wife ; „ 60
The m isn't like the woman, „ 63
Han-y, my m, you had better ha' beaten me „ 72
Bible verse of the Lord's good will toward men — Bizpah 61
and the sea that 'ill moan like am? „ 72
not hafe ov a m, my lad — North. Cobbler 21
an' the loov of God fur men, „ 55
thou'rt like the rest o' the men, „ 63
Theer's thy hennemy, m, „ 65
And the half my men are sick. The Revenge 6
I've ninety men and more that are lying „ 10
bore in hand all his sick men from the land „ 15
Men of Bideford in Devon, „ 17
' We be all good English mew. „ 29
Man
452
Man
Man {continued) sick men down in the hold were most
of them stark and cold, The Revenge 79
We have won great glory, my men ! „ 85
stat«ly Spanish men to their flsigship bore him then, ,, 97
fought for Queen and Faith like a valiant m and true ; „ 101
only done my duty as a m is bound to do : ,, 102
Was he devil or m ? He was devil for aught „ 108
a m's ideal Is high in Heaven, Sisters {E. and E.) 130
In some such fashion as a m may be „ 133
Selfish, strange ! What dwarfs are men ! „ 199
an' was 'untin' arter the men, Village Wife 36
every m die at his post ! ' (repeat) Def. of Lucknow 10, 13, 52
Handful of wen as we were, „ 46
Men wiU forget what we suffer and not what we do. „ 73
Sir J. Oldcaslle 50
54
142
150
185
Columbus 50
„ 152
V. of Maddune 23
31
74
85
126
128
130
Be Prof., Two G. 12
16
22
to call men traitors May make men traitors.
reddest with the blood of holy men,
nay, let a m repent. Do penance in his heart,
goor m's money gone to fat the friar,
eathen men have borne as much as this,
men Walk'd like the fly on ceilings ?
thou hast done so well for m,en, that men
the men that were mighty of tongue
the men dropt dead in the valleys
shook hke a «i in a mortal affright ;
it open'd and dropt at the side of each m.
And the Holy m he assoil'd us.
The m that had slain my father,
landed again, with a tithe of my men,
and prophet of the perfect m ;
that men May bless thee as we bless thee,
then full-current thro' full m :
' Let us make m ' and that which should be m. From
that one light no m can look upon, „ 36
seek If any golden harbour be for men Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 13
You m of himiorous-melancholy mark, To W. H. Brookfield 9
England, France, all m to be Will make one people
ere m's race be run : To Victor Hugo 10
lay many a m Marr'd by the javeUn, Batt. of Brunanhurh 31
Men of the Northland Shot over shield. „ 33
All day the men contend in grievous war Achilles over ike T. 9
airy-light To float above the ways of men. To E. Fitzgerald 18
What omens may foreshadow fat« to m And woman, Tiresias 7
more than m Which rolls the heavens, „ 21
moves unseen among the ways of men.
speak the truth that no m may believe.'
While men shall move the Ups :
light upon the ways of mew As one great deed,
wise m's word, Here trampled by the populace
these eyes will find The men I knew,
princeUer looking m never stept thro' a Prince's hall.
And a m men fear is a m to be loved
and men at the helm of state —
he, poor m, when he learnt that I hated the ring
felt for the first and greatest of men ;
all but the m that was lash'd to the helm had gone ;
the one m left on the wreck —
kiss so sad, no, not since the coming of m !
You have parted the m from the wife.
If every m die for ever,
if the souls of men were immortal, as men have been told, „ 99
till that old m before A cavern Ancient Sage 6
TO to-day is fancy's fool As m hath ever been. „ 27
never spake with m. And never named the Name ' — ,, 55
beyond All work of m, yet, like the work of m,
The last and least of men ;
For m has overlived his day
So dark that men cry out against the Heavens.
Who knows but that the darkness is in m ?
Word Of that world-prophet in the heart of m.
But in the hand of wnat is more than m. Or in m's
band when m is more than m, Let be thy wail
and help thy fellow men.
Nor list for guerdon in the voice of men,
iould her to come away from the m,
an' a dhrame of a married m, death alive,
24
50
133
161
173
176
The Wreck 16
18
49
57
76
110
119
Despair 60
62
82
85
114
150
172
173
213
256
262
Tomorrow 20
51
Man (continued) An' where 'ud the poor m, thin,
bogs whin they swalUes the m intire !
Thou sees that i' spite o' the men
alius afear'd of a m's gittin' ower fond,
That a m be a durty thing an' a trouble
But I couldn't 'a Uved wi' a m
By a m coomin' in wi' a hiccup
'es hallus to hax of a m how much to spare
she with all the breadth of m,
for ever was the leading light of m.
alms of Blessing m had coin'd himself a curse :
France had shown a light to all men, preach'd a
Gospel, all men's good ;
still, ' your enemy ' was a m.
Are we devils ? are we men ?
Sons of God, and kings of men
to lower the rising race of men ;
no m halt, or deaf or blind ;
who can fancy warless men ?
are these but symbols of innumerable m, M or
Mind that sees a shadow
What are men that He should heed us ?
before her highest, m, was bom,
offspring this ideal m at rest ?
Nor is he the wisest m, who never proved
to help his homeher brother men,
— ^for m can half -control his doom
you and all your men Were soldiers
Thro' the great gray slope of men,
our men gaUopt up with a cheer and a shout.
In worlds before the m Involving oiu"s —
now we see. The m in Space and Time,
what they prophesy, our wise men.
Tomorrow 65
66
Spinster's S's. 11
27
50
52
98
111
Locksley H., Sixty 48
66
87
94
99
122
147
163
172
195
201
„ 205
234
244
267
277
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 24
Heavy Brigade 17
61
Epilogue 25
49
65
all in vain As far as m can see, except The m himself
remain ;
That m can have no after-morn,
The m remains, and whatsoe'er He wrought
measure ever moulded by the lips of m.
touch'd on the whole sad planet of m,
For m is a lover of Truth,
Was he nobUer-f ashion'd than other men ?
Waeriob of God, m's friend,
for all men know This earth has never borne a
nobler m.
That m's the best Cosmopolite
That m's the true Conservative
Men loud against all forms of power —
When all men starve, the wild mob's million feet
Men that in a narrower day —
when before have Gods or men beheld
73
75
To Virgil 40
Dead Prophet 39
44
51
Epit. on Gordon 1
Hands all Round 3
7
Freedom 37
The Fleet 18
Open. I. and C. Exhib. 25
Demeter and P. 29
fled by many a waste, forlorn of m, And grieved for
m thro' all my grief for thee, —
we spin the hves of men, And not of Gods,
Last as the likeness of a dying m,
m, that only lives and loves an hour,
vine And golden grain, my gift to helpless m.
the praise And prayer of men,
souls of men, who grew beyond their race,
thou that hast from men. As Queen of Death,
nor I iver owad mottal m.
moor good sense na the Parliament m 'at stans fur
us 'ere,
men ater supper 'ed sung their songs
Howiver was I fur to find my rent an' to paay my men ?
Ghost in M, the Ghost that once was M, But cannot
wholly free itself from M,
No sudden heaven, nor sudden hell, for m,
I had seen the m but once ;
till the m repenting sent This ring
bad the m engrave ' From Walter ' on the ring,
as a m Who sees his face in water,
80 fickle are men — the best !
beauty came upon your face, not that of living men.
If m and wife be but one flesh,
Ulysses, much-experienced m.
74
85
88
106
111
120
140
142
Owd Rod 4
13
35
47
The Ring 35
41
190
209
235
369
392
Happy 51
„ 94
To Ulysses 1
J
Man
""^w^^""*^^ ^®'; *^?^ °* "^""^ ^"'i trees, and flowere, To Ulvsses 3
Where «i, nor only Nature smiles ; «, ^ o a fysses d
K LSL^? !t^*^ ^^' ^'^^ l^«^r their words Pro;,, of Spring si
87
99
115
Merlin and the G. 106
JRo7nney's E. 123
144
% an EvoltUion. 2
19
453
Manners
I too would teach the m
dwellings of the kings of men ;
men have hopes, which race the restless blood
under the Crosses The dead m's garden
blacken round The copse of every m
Should I know the m ?
And the m said ' Am I your debtor ? '
M IS quiet at last As he stands on the heights
While m and woman are still incomplete, I prize
that soul where m and woman meet. On one who a.tf,r V nr i
thoughts that lift the soul of men, Tnulf^' / ^\ I
M is but the slave of Fate. ' nJiTr^^ ^- ]!
and forgetful of the m, ^""^ "•' ^'"^'"'^ 44
But every m was mute for reverence. " ^
The w, whose pious hand had built the cross, A m "
who never changed a word with Ttien
borne along by that full stream of men
trailing a dead lion away. One, a dead m.
Christian faces watch M murder m.
bamer that divided beast from m Slipt
In the great name of Him who died iov men
Dark with the blood of m who murder'd m '
only conquers men to conquer peace
I seem no longer like a lonely m
knows Himself, men nor themselves nor Him
Mme is the one fruit AUa made for «i ' '
men may taste Swine-flesh, drink wine •
I let men worship as they will '
By deeds a light to men ? '
Ritual, varying with the tribes of men.
and men, below the dome of azure Kneel
and voices, and men passing to and fro.
And a m ruin'd mine.
Would the m have a touch of remorse
M^ffL 1°"k ""^u ^^ f > *^^ ^°^« of a soul for a soul ?
M with his brotherless dinner on m
Men, with a heart and a soul.
We are far from the noon of m,
The men of a hundred thousand,
M as yet is being made,
' It is finish'd. M is made.'
That no in would believe.
To a just m and a wise —
when the m will make the Maker
Manage Hadn't a head to m,
■ How best to m horse, lance, sword and shield
managed I a m for Squoire coom Michaehnas
Man-at-arms Another hunying past, a m-a-a,
Man-beast m-b of boundless savagery
Man-breasted strong m-b things stood from the sea,
Manchester throats of jI/ may bawl
Manchet And in her veil enfolded, m bread.
Bfender (manner) noa m o' use to be callin' 'im Roa,
Mane shake the darkness from their loosen'd m's
10 break my chain, to shake my m •
with your long locks play the Lion's m !
Man^ C^"i n""^^"'^ ^' ^^o^« t^« gJ-eat beasts
Maned -S-ee FuD-maned, Midnight-maned
Manehke Beneath a m mass of roUing gold
Manes (mean) An' yer Honour's the tl^e ould blood
that always m to be kind,
^^ uPl'^^f?.^*'"'' P^oP^es ti^th and m peace,
Kight thro' his m breast darted the pang
f^or know I whether I be very base Or very m
Manfuhiess he, from his exceeding m
Man-girdled Than thus m-g here :
Mangle And m the living dog that had loved him
Mangle (mangold) Goan into m's an' t«nups.
Mangled M, and flatten'd, and cnish'd,
I see thee maim'd, M :
M to morsels, A youngster in war !
Mango The m spurn the melon at his foot ?
St. Telemachitsd
43
48
56
60
63
80
Akbar's Dream 15
20
32
40
53
66
111
125
„ Hymn 7
Bandit's Death 24
Charity 4
„ 17
„ 30
The Dawn 3
18
20
25
Making of Man 3
8
Mechanofhilus 28
Voice spake, etc. 2
Faith 7
Grandmother 6
Gareth and L. 1351
N. Farmer, O. S. 48
Geraint and E. 526
Gareth and L. 637
Guinevere 246
Third of Feb. 43
Marr. of Geraint 389
Owd Rod 1
Tithonus 41
Princess ii 424
„ vi 164
Holy Grail 820
Aylmer's Field 68
Tomorrow 5
W. to Marie Alex. 49
Marr. of Geraint 121
469
211
Princess v 429
In the Child. Hasp. 9
Owd Roa 28
Mavd I i7
Gareth and L. 1327
Bait, of Brunanburh 74
Akbar's Dream 39
Mangold See Mangle
Mangrove The slant seas leaning on the m consp p /■ c. • »^
Manhood Nature's evil star DriVe men in «' r 'T "f ^Vnng 76
The darling of my m, and X ™ ' ^""'n ^^ '^^ ^"'^'^ ^^
who desireVu m';,re'Than growing boys their m ■ ^" S""^ ""■■ f^
AccompUsh thou my m and thysef ■ ' ^'''^''' '^. W.
Some civic m firm against the crowd— " ^" ^ff
The highest, holiest m, thou : r nr" n ' f T
Tho' truths in m darkly join ^^^ ^^^"'■' ^'"'- ^^
Who wears his m hale and green • " '^'^f.'?* ^
m fused with female grace In such a sort, " • ■■ f
glory of m stand on his ancient height, m' ,j 7-7/'^ iJ
So make thy m mightier day by day- • n ^ ^^/ T ^
I felt Thy m thi-o'lhat weaLd^lanJe'of thine ^"'"''^ ""^ \B
a prmce whose m was aU gone. 1/ ;'^ .^^°^
Xn it weds with m, maf es a man. S^STfiS
Thy too fierce m would not let thee lie S Tl 1 ^^
kii'ShSd';^'^" "''"' '^ '^°"' '"^' -'^^' ^"^ ^'
Name, w, and'a grace, but scantly thine, " l^t
\ men, save ye fear The monkish m, Merlin and V S
The pretty, popular name such m earns, "'"^ ^vff
oureelves shall grow In use of arms and m, Lancelot and FfiA
Friends, thro' your m and your fealtv — J-anceiot and E. 64
Tells of a m ever less and l™ ? ^' '^'''' ?'o«*r,«imm!! 97
Who fam had chpt free m from the world— " 7?1
as great As he was in his m, n "■ 5^
Ideal m closed in real man, r ^umevereZ^
Yet you in your mid m— ^ " '''^ ^'^^'^ " ^8
Maniac Time, a m scattering dust, 7 i,7^^ ,1
Manifold With a music stralge and m, nJ^'^^'^-^l
But m entreaties, many a tear, ' v1T^^T\ I^
Thro' m effect of 'simple powe^ pZ A^^^ ^f^
^ Sent notes of preparation m, KZ^' ?f '^P^^'^l^
Man-in.(Jod God-in-man is one'with m-i-G ^Jf/ Yl ' ?^I
Manlrind like Gods together, careless of m' Lotos Zt ci HO
Altho' I be the basest of m, if 1j V, ;^ ?
Whereof my fame is loud amongst m, ^^ ^^ ^*y^'i%]
To make me an example to m, " . qZ
m the thoughts that shake m. Lock,7.n "ffnU ir«
Had golden hopes for France and aU m, A^lmfr'i FM 4fi!
Let them not he in the tents with coarse m, Prilcefsvi^
I had been wedded wife, I knew m, Jrrmcess vim
For saving that, ye help to save m ode onlVoll ififi
But while the races of m endure, '"* *'^^^^- i?^
Peace and goodwill, to all m. 7« m " •••,^
This bitter seed among m ; '^'' -^''"- ^"^"^ ^f
Ring in redress to all m. " '^'if
For each is at war with m. " m , f"* Jf
Being but ampler means to serve m. Merlin a^ V "^irq
so might there be Two Adams, two m's Berlin and V. 489
My friend, the most unworldly of m,' /« .!/„„ w'r'''w'^i
Man^ess when earth is m and forlorn, ' xSji ^^ ^,il«
Manhke m end myself ?-K)ur privilege— ^ocksley H., Sixty 206
open-work in which the hunter medllis rash ^'''''''' ^^^
intrusion, m, d • • .,„,
Manly Is this the m strain of Runnymede ? t1-^TT^\ ^2!
Man-minded . When his m-m offs^S ' ?£{ Jl" ?f
S^'^iron^ifyTllllr^^^^ , ^attS
t.'r - *'%^«^^ -™ --*^- al- crew, ''"^^•^rfer Jlo
Manner (^ee a;.o Mander) listening rogue hath cailght ^
the m of it. /^ .7 , ^
HistnTrifeiTm^t'd^h^' r" '^^^ ^^ ' ^^S^^^'^^^^- 5?t
£t?Jn''7C^4irh armtfte'vfcT' ^^^^^^ «-^ ^- JJ^
To hear the m of thy fight and fall : " ^
A m somewhat fall'n from reverenpp t , n, " ?*'
Manner'd -See Nobly.maimer^d Last Tournament \\^
Manners Her m had not that repose T C V Ao v an
Like men, Uke m : hke breeds hke, they say : Kind ""' ^^
nature is the best : those m next ^ Walk to the M.iJ a^
What are indeed the m of the great * ^"^^ ^
cities of men And m, chmates, councils, "uivsses 14
That gives the m of your countiywomen ? PnnS 151
Manners
454
Margin
Hamiers {coniimied) With sweeter m, purer laws. In Mem. cvi 16
To noble m, as the flower And native growth „ cxi 15
By the coldiiess of her m, Maud I xx 13
M so kind, yet stately, Geraint and E. 861
sudden-beaming tenderness Of in and of nature : Lancelot and E. 329
father's memory, one Of noblest m, Guinevere 319
For m are not idle, but the fruit Of loyal nature, „ 335
' Yea,' said the maid, ' be m such fair fruit ? „ 337
good m bang thruf to the tip o' the taail. Spinster's S's. 66
Manor All in a full-fair m and a rich, Gareth and L. 846
Manorial There the m lord too curiously Aylmer's Field 513
Of the old m haU. Maud II iv 80
Man-shaped cloud, m-s, from mountain peak, To the Queen ii 40
Mansion have bought A m incorruptible. Deserted House 21
Where this old m moimted high Looks down Miller's B. 35
this great m, that is built for me. Palace of Art 19
* My spacious m built for me, „ 234
Sees a m more majestic L. of Burleigh 45
In an ancient m's crannies and holes : Maud II v 61
nor 'er i' the m theer. Spinster's S's. 110
Mantle (s) sweet Europa's m blew unclasp'd. Palace of Art 117
m's from the golden pegs Droop sleepily : Day- Din., Sleep. P. 19
His m ghtters on the rocks — „ Arrival 6
her blooming m torn. Princess vi 145
And spread his m dark and cold. In Mem. xxii 14
A faded m and a faded veil, Marr. of Geraint 135
Then brought a m down and wrapt her in it, „ 824
drew The vast and shaggy m of his beard Merlin and V. 256
Then fell thick rain, plume droopt and m clung, Last Tournament 213
Her m, slowly greening in the Sun, Prog, of Spring 11
Whose m, every shade of glancing green, „ 63
Mantle (verb) Nor bowl of wassail m warm ; In Mem. cv 18
m's all the mouldering bricks — Locksley H., Sixty 257
Mantling M her form halfway. Lover's Tale i 705
will hide with m flowers As if for pity ? ' Gareth and L. 1392
Mantovano I salute thee, M, To Virgil 37
Manufacturer See Lord-manufacturer
Manuscript With sallow scraps of w. To E. Fitzgerald 48
Man-woman m-w is not woman-man. On one who affec. E. M. 4
Many (adj.) Thou of the m tongues, the myriad eyes ! Ode to Memory 47
They have not shed a m tears, Miller's D. 221
A sinful soul possess'd of m gifts. To , With Pal. of ArtB
Long stood Sir Bedivere Revolving m memories, M. d' Arthur 270
Long stood Sir Bedivere Revolving m memories, Pass, of Arthur 438
Many (s) the never-changing One And ever-
changing M, Akbar's Dream 148
Many-blossoming m-b Paradises, Boddicea 43
Many-cobweb'd The dusky-rafter'd m-c hall, Marr. of Geraint 362
Many-corridor'd m-c complexities Of Arthur's palace : Merlin and V. 732
Many-folded rose Deep-hued and m-f ! Balin and Balan 270
Many-fountain'd ' 0 mother Ida, m-f Ida, (repeat) (Enone 23, 34, 45, 172
Many-headed The m-h beast should know.' ¥ou might have won 20
Many-knotted There in the m-k waterflags, AI. d' Arthur 63
There in the m-k waterflags. Pass, of Arthur 231
Many-shielded Have also set his m-s tree ? Aylmer's Field 48
Many-sided with all forms Of the m-s mind, Ode to Memory 116
Many-stain'd An old storm-beaten, russet, m-s
PaviUon, Gareth and L. 1113
Many-tower'd road nms by To ot-< Camelot ; L. of Shalott i 5
Many-winter'd m-w crow that leads the clanging
rookery home. Locksley Hall 68
And m-w fleece of throat and chin. Merlin and V. 841
Maoris The M and that Isle of Continent, W. to Marie Alex. 18
Map Lay Uke a m before me, and I saw There, Lover's Tale i 590
Maple This m bum itself away ; In Mem. ci 4
Mar How they m this little by their feuds. Sea Dreams 49
mount* to m Their sacred everlasting cahn ! Lucretius 109
Nothing to m the sober majesties „ 217
she lightens scorn At him that m's her plan, Princess v 132
whatever tempest m's Mid-ocean, In Mem. xvii 13
•ye are overfine To m stout knaves Gareth and L. 733
Ye ma comely face with idiot tears Geraint and E. 550
Would m their charm of stainless maidenhood.' Balin and Balan 268
uke Nature, wouldst not m By changes Freedom 21
You would not m the beauty of your bride Happy 24
Marble (adj.) Broad-based flights of m stairs Arabian Nights IIT
and on roofs Of m palaces ; D. of F. Women 24
Or under arches of the to bridge Hung, Princess ii 458
high above them stood The placid to Muses, „ iv 489
A column'd entry shone and m stairs, „ v 364
All up the TO stair, tier over tier, Lancelot and E. 1248
then No stone is fitted in yon m girth Tiresias 135
I this old white-headed dreamer stoopt and kiss'd
her TO brow. Locksley H., Sixty 38
Marble (s) Stiller than chisell'd m, standing there ; D. of F. Women 86'
As blank as death in m ;
issued in a court Compact of lucid m's,
But I wiU melt this w into wax
half-shrouded over death In deathless to.
The virgin to under iron heels :
A mount of to, a hundred spires !
Thy m bright in dark appears,
Your mother is mute in her grave as her image in m
above ;
All in white Italian to, looking still
Marbled sands to with moon and cloud,
March (s) ebb and flow conditioning their m,
enjoyment more than in this to of mind,
di-ill the raw world for the m of mind,
thou, brother, in my m'es here ? '
For on their m to westward, Bedivere,
in the roll And m of that Eternal Harmony
March (month) thro' wild M the throstle calls.
More black than ashbuds in the front of M.'
Came to the hammer here in M —
Clash, ye bells, in the meriy M air !
when the wreath of M has blossom'd.
Flits by the sea-blue bird of M ;
palm On sallows in the windy gleams of M :
clear-throated larks Fill'd all the M of life !—
Princess i 177
ii 24
„ Hi 73
v75
„ vi 351
The Daisy &>
In Mem. Ixvii 5
Maud I iv 5&
Locksley H., Sixty 35
Last Tournament 466
Golden Year 30'
Locksley Hall 165
Ode on Well. 16&
Gareth and L. 1034
Pass, of Arthur 6-
D. of the Duke of C. 15
To the Queen 14
Gardener's D. 28
Aiidley Court 60-
W. to Alexandra 18
To F. D. Maurice 43
In Mem. xci 4
Merlin and V. 225
Lover's Tale i 284
this M mom that sees Thy Soldier-brother's Ded. Poem Prin. Alice Id
How surely gUdest thou from M to May, Prog, of Spring 109
March (verb) fight and w and countermarch, Audley Court 40
M with banner and bugle and fife To the death, Maud I v 10
that I w. to meet thy doom. Guinevere 450
Marches And there defend his to ; Marr. of Geraint 41
past The to, and by bandit-haunted holds, Geraint and E. 30
move to your own land, and there defend Your to, „ 889
Lords of waste m, kings of desolate isles, Lancelot and E. 527
March-morning in the wild M-m I heard (repeat) May Queen, Con. 25, 28
March-wind That whenever a M-w sighs Maud I xxii 40
Marcy (mercy) He coom'd like a Hangel o' to Owd Rod 93
Mare He always made a point to post with m's ; Princess i 189
Look you ! the gray to Is iU to live with, „ v 451
and the to brokken-kneead, Church-warden, etc. 4
Marestail The petty to forest, fairy pines, Aylmer's Field 92
Margaret O sweet pale AI, O rare pale M, (repeat) Margaret 1, 54
What can it matter, AI, „ 32
Exquisite M, who can tell The last wild thought „ 36
There's M and Mary, there's Kate and Caroline : May Queen 6
One babe was theirs, a M, three years old : Sea Dreams 3
Their AI cradled near them, „ 57
The glass with little APs medicine in it ; „ 142
cry Which mixt with little M's, and I woke, „ 246
Marge round about the fragrant to From fluted vase, Arabian Nights 59
whistled stiff and diy about the m. M. d' Arthur 64
we paused About the windings of the to Edwin Alorris 94
And linger weeping on the to. In Mem. xii 12"
from TO to TO shall bloom The eternal landscape „ xlvi 7
A rosy warmth from to to to. „ 16-
Sunder the glooming crimson on the to, Gareth and L. 1365
But every page having an ample to. And every to
enclosing in the midst
The circle widens tUI it lip the m,
That whistled stiff and dry about the m.
Margin (adj.) one snowy knee was prest Against the m
flowers ;
Margin (s) By the m, willow-veil'd,
And bear me to the m ;
world, whose to fades For ever and for ever
Merlin and V. 669'
Pelleas and E. 94
Pass, of Arthur 232
Tiresias 43-
L. of Shalott i 19
AI. d' Arthur 165
Ulysses 20" ■,
I
Margin
Margin (s) (continued) Comes a vapour .from the m,
every m scribbled, crost, and cramm'd
And bear me to the m ;
ere it vanishes Over the m,
Mariam See Issa Ben Mariam
Marian Is memory with your M gone to rest,
Marie (See also Alexandrovna, Marie Alexandrovna)
Here also M, shaU thy name be blest,
Marie Alexandrovna (See also Alexandrovna, Marie)
From mother unto mother, stately bride, M A !
loyal pines of Canada murmur thee, M A
Love by right divine is deathless king, M A !
Here ako, Marie, shall thy name be blest, M A !
Marigold See Marsh-marigold
Mariner Slow sail'd the weary m's and saw,
M, m, furl your sails,
listen and stay : m, m, fly no more.
Oh rest ye, brother m's,
My m's, Souls that have toil'd,
O young M, Down to the haven,
Marish thro' the m green and still
Marish-flowers the silvery m-f that throng
Marish-mosses The cluster'd m-w crept.
Marish-pipe With moss and braided m-p ;
Mark (coin) A thousand m's are set upon my head.
Mark (s) (See also Merk) thou,' said I, ' hast missed
thy »n,
he thought himself A m for all,
arrows aim'd All at one m, all hitting :
push beyond her m, and be Procuress
No single tear, no m of pain :
master-bowman, he. Would cleave the m.
loves to know When men of m are in his temtory
meant to stamp him with her master's m ;
Yon man of humorous-melancholy m,
an' the m. O' 'is 'pJiH o' thp phaira I
455
Marriage
Locksley Hall 191
Merlin and V. 677
Pass, of Arthur 333
Merlin and the 6. 129
To Mary Boyle 13
W. to Marie Alex. 39
10
20
30
40
Sea Fairies 1
21
42
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 128
Ulysses 45
Merlin and the G. 123
Dying Swan 18
40
Mariana 40
On a Mourner 10
Sir J. OldcasUe 195
Two Foices 388
Walk, to the Mail 73
Aylmer's Field 95
In Mem. liii 15
„ Ixxviii 14
„ Ixxxvii 30
Geraint and E. 229
Merlin and V. 759
To W. H. Brookfield 9
Spinster's S's. 100
The Ring 346
452
Happy 18
an' the m o' 'is 'ead o' the chairs .
In aiming at an all but hopeless m
A red m ran All round one fiiiger
And set a crueller m than Cain's on him, nappy lo
Hark ( aristian Nane) came in haU the messenger of M, Gareth and i 384
shall the shield of M stand among these ? ' , 403
M hath tamish'd the great name of king, " 426
M would suUy the low state of churl : " 427
*j!^u'^J'^ °"f (?"" ""^ ^'^^ ^*" o'f ^^ ^«^w and'Salan 437
iSu Romish Kmg, had heard a wandering voice. Merlin and V 1
(She sat beside the banquet nearest M), 18
M was half in heart to hirrl his cup " 39
Loud laugh'd the graceless M. ^^' 53
Poor wretch— no friend ! — and now by M the King " 75
Nay — we believe aU evil of thy M — " 93
li}'^!^,!^^^^'^ ?^l' ^¥ ^opys."^ ?i°g' Last Tournament 382
heard The hounds of M, and felt the goodly hounds
Crying aloud, ' Not M— not M, my soul !
Catlike thro' his own castle steals my M,
my hatred for my M Quicken within me.
Let be thy M, seeing he is not thine.'
bitten, blinded, marr'd me somehow — M ?
M's way, my soul !— but eat not thou with M,
Should leave me all alone with M and hell. My God,
the measure of my hate for M
M is kindled on thy Ups Most gracious ;
my M's, by whom all men Are noble,
M's way to steal behind one in the dark— For there
was M :
Broken with M and hate and solitude,
' Vows ! did you keep the vow you made to M
craven shifts, and long crane legs of M —
' M's way,' said M, and clove him thro' the brain.
Mark (verb) no other tree did m The level waste,
I wUl stand and m.
But vague in vapour, hard to m ;
503
514
516
519
522
526
532
536
561
599
618
643
655
729
754
Mariana 43
To J. M. K. 14
Love thou thy land 62
m me and imderstand. While I have power to speak. Enoch Arden 876
m me ! for your fortunes are to make. Aylmer's Field 300
wid m The landscape winking thro' the heat : In Mem. Ixxxix 15
Hither, boy— and m me well. Balin and Balan 502
Mark (verb) (continued) Friend, did ye m that fountain
yesterday Last Tournament 2m
tor some are scared, who m, Or wisely or
M^h'ir^l^'f 11 , .u . To the Queen a AS
M him-he falls then another, Def. of Lucknow 65
io 7ft m many a freeman's home Freedom 11
Mo,J "^7 *" '^«^ ':'?"^ 7^^^^^ 8''®''* S°"d P>-og- of Spring 92
Blark Antony Prythee, fnend. Where is Jlf ^ ? D. of F. Women 140
Mark d wave Returning, whUe none m it. Sea Dreams 234
Ihey m it with the red cross to the fall. Princess vi 41
Day m as with some hideous crime, in Mem. Ixxii 18
t^7hJ^ "J?^' °'' '^ u°*' "^ ^^^ ?^^' ^'"«- "/ ^rff^ur 53
tor He m Kay near hun groaning hke a wounded
, ,7Tv . ,. , Gareth and L. 64:7
ana all that m him were aghast. 1399
saw me not, or m not if you saw ; Geraint "and E. 870
he m his high sweet smile In passing, Balin and Balan 160
bo m not on his right a cavern-chasm 312
He m not this, but blind and deaf " 31 a
he m The portal of King Pellam's chapel " 404
Vivien folio w'd, but he m her not. Merlin and V. 199
Had marr d his face, and m it ere his time. Lancelot and E. 247
Wiio m bir Lancelot where he moved apart, 1349
I m Him in tbe flowering of His fields, Pass, of Arthur 10
inence m the black hull moving yet, 443
Market (adj.) The m boat is on the stream. In Mem. cxxi 13
Market (s) (See also Woman-markets) Enrich the m's of
the golden year. q^i^^^ Year 46
Lvery gate is throng'd with suitors, all the m's
7^"^°^: ^ • Locksley Hall 101
and bought Quaint monsters for the m Enoch Arden 539
Stumbling across the m to his death, Aylmer's Field 820
Thro the hubbub of the m I steal, Maud II iv 68
Ihe changing m frets or charms Ancient Sage 140
Pillory Wisdom in your m's, Locksley H., Sixty 134
Market-cross Not only to the m-c were known, Enoch Arden 96
Lhaffermgs and chatterings at the m-c. Holy Grail 558
Market-gurl the red cloaks of m-g's, L. of Shalott ii 17
fflarket-noiglit (night) 'ed my quart ivry m-n N. Farmer OSS
Market-place Spiritual in Nature's m-p— Akhar's Dream 135
Markmg m how the knighthood mock thee. Last Tournament 301
Markanen then' m were told of our best, Def . of Lucknow IQ
Marr d beat me down and m and wasted me, Tithonus 19
what follows ! war ; Your own work m : Princess ii 230
Brake on us at our books, and m our peace, „ ^ 395
Had m his face, and mark'd it ere his time. Lancelot "and E 247
Mashe was, he seem'd the goodliest man „ 254
However m, of more than twice her yeai-s, ',' 257
M her friend's aim with pale tranquiUity. ,' 733
I cannot brook to see your beauty m Pelleas "and E. 298
M tho it be with spite and mockery now, „ 327
vext his heart. And m his rest — " 399
Man w^ it who m heaven's image in thee thus ? ' Last Tournament 64
Scratch d, bitten, blinded, m me somehow — 526
he knew the Prince tho' m with dust, Guinevere 36
lay many a man M by the javelin, Batt. of Brunanburh 32
My beauty m by you ? by you ! Happy 57
Before the feud of Gods had m our peace, Death of (Enone 32
Marriage (adj.) In sound of funeral or of m bells ; Gardener's D 36
And when my m mom may fall. Talking Oak 285
I can make no m present : L. of Burleigh 13
Heaven and earth shall meet Before you hear my
m vow.' ^ , , „ The Letters 8
Ihere comes a sound of m beUs. 43
Demand not thou a m lay : In that it is thy m day In Mem " Con 2
silent sapphire-spangled m ring of the land ? Alavd I iv 6
Now over, now beneath her m ring, Gareth and. E. 259
We planted both together, happy in our m morn, Happy 14
that you, that I, would slight our m oath : 39
Marriage (s) (See also Border-marriage) laws of m "
character'dingold Isabel 16
ine queen of m, a most perfect wife. 28
I have wish'd this m, night and day, 2)ora 21
Her slow consent and m, Enoch Arden 708
Ihere was an Ayhner-Avenll m once. Aylmer's Field 49
Marriage
456
Marvel
Marriage (s) (continued) m's are made in Heaven.' Aylmer's Field 188
naked m's Flash from the bridge, „ 765
in true m lies Nor equal, nor unequal : Princess vii 302
neither marry, nor are given In m, Merlin and V. 16
And m with a princess of that realm. Last Tournament 176
And sleek his m over to the Queen. „ 391
Thy m and mine own, that I should suck „ 644
eleventh moon After their m lit the lover's Bay, Lover's Tale iv 28
Once more — a happier m than my own ! Sisters (E. and E.) 78
Grew after m to full height and form ? Yet
after m, that mock -sister there — „ 171
that had sunn'd The morning of our m, „ 244
coimsel me ; this m must not be. The Flight 75
Her maiden daughter's m ; To Prin. Beatrice 10
Love for the maiden, crown'd with to. Fastness 23
Had ask'd us to their m, and to share The Ring 430
M will conceal it . . . Forlorn 10
Shame and to. Shame and m, „ 31
M will not hide it, „ 50
Death and to. Death and to ! „ 67
The morning light of happy to broke Death of CEnone 102
Marriageable prince his heir, when tall and to, Gareth and L. 102
Marriage-banquet and to share Their m-b. The Ring 431
Marriage-bell (See also Marriage (adj.)) Four merry bells,
four merry m-b's Lover's Tale Hi 21
A long loud crash of rapid m-J's. „ 23
the bells. Those m^b's, echoing in ear and heart — „ iv 3
Whether they were his lady's m-b's, „ 11
Soimds happier than the merriest m-b. D. of the Duke of C. 11
Marri^e-day on the dark night of our m-d The
great Tr^edian, Sisters (E. and E.) 232
Marriage-hindering filthy Tti-h Mammon made The
harlot Aylmer's Field 374
Marriage-maker For the maids and m-m's, Maud I xx 35
Marriage-mom And move me to my to-to, Move eastward 11
but on her to-to This birthday. The Ring 275
Marri^e-pillow To thy widow'd m-jt's, Locksley Hall 82
Marriage-ring (See also Marriage (adj.)) That ever wore a
Christian TO-r. Romney's R. 36
How bright you keep your m-r ! „ 59
Married I to late, but I would wish to see Dora 12
Who TO, who was like to be, Audley Court 30
' And are you to yet, Edward Gray ? ' Edward Gray 4
Nevertheless, know you that I am he Who m — Enoch Arden 859
I TO her who to Philip Ray. „ 860
fur, Sammy, 'e to fur luw. N. Farmer, N. S. 32
the King That mom was to, Com. of Arthur 456
Had TO Enid, Yniol's only child, Marr. of Geraint 4
attracted, won, M, made one with, Lover's Tale i 134
Harry and I were to : First Quarrel 5
we were m o' Christmas day, M among the red
berries, „ 39
kept yours hush'd,' I said, ' when you to me ! „ 68
Mea and thy sister was to. North. Cobbler 11
Indissolubly to like our love ; De Prof., Two G. 14
an' he's to another wife, Tomorow 49
But if I 'ed TO tha, Robby, Spinster's S's. 54
Hed I TO the Tommies — O Lord, „ 95
and the charm of to brows.' CEnone 76
Two partners of a to life- In Mem. xcvii 5
Moon of TO hearts, Hear me, you ! The Ring 3
came of age Or on the day you to. „ 78
That, in the misery of my to life, „ 136
Then I and she were m for a year, „ 283
well, you know I to Muriel Erne. „ 376
hovering by the church, where she Was to too, „ 479
sang the to ' nos ' for the solitary ' me.' Hajimy 56
I love you more than when we to. Rorrmey's R. 157
Then 'e to a great Yerl's darter, Church-warden, etc. 20
He TO an heiress, an orphan Charity 13
I had cursed the woman he to, „ 24
Marris (Bessy) See Bessy Marris.
Marrow M of mirth and laughter ; Will Water. 214
Fool to the midmost to of his bones, Pelleas and E. 258
He withers m and mind ; Ancient Sage 120
Marry Woo me, and win me, and to me. The Mermaid 46
' I cannot to Dora ; by my life, I will not to Dora.' Dora 23
where the waters m — crost, The Brook 81
' he that marries her marries her name ' Aylmer's Field 25
twenty boys and girls should to on it, „ 371
learning unto them ? They wish'd to to ; Princess ii 465
But TO me out of hand : Grandmother 52
' M you, WUly ! ' said I, „ 53
Thou'U not TO for munny — N. Farmer, N. S. 11
Noa — thou'll TO for luw — „ 12
' Doant thou to for munny, „ 20
thy muther says thou wants to to the lass, „ 37
if thou marries a good un I'll leave the land to thee. „ 56
But if thou marries a bad un, I'll leave the land to Dick. — „ 58
Ask her to to me by and by ? Window, Letter 6
That TO with the virgin heart. In Mem. Ixxxv 108
but neither to, nor are given In marriage, Merlin and F. 15
and yet one Should to, or all the broad lands Sister's (E. and E.) 51
Tha thowt tha would to ma, did tha ? Spinster's S's. 74
when she comes of age, or when She marries ; The Ring 290
Marrsdi^ could not ever rue his to me — Dora 146
Driving, hurrying, m, burying, Maud II v 12
Mars pointed to M As he glow'd like a ruddy shield „ /// vi 13
native to that splendour or in M, Locksley R., Sixty 187
Marsh (adj.) my blood Crept like m drains thro' all my
languid limbs ; Lover's Tale ii 53
Marsh (s) wide and wild the waste enormous to. Ode to Memory 101
Gave him an isle of w whereon to build ; And there
he built with wattles from the to Holy Grail 62
and sliding down the blacken'd TO Blood-red, „ 473
The wide-wing'd sunset of the misty m Last Tournament 423
as from men secure Amid their m,'es, „ 427
That sent the face of all the to aloft „ 439
And pausing at a hostel in a to. Lover's Tale iv 131
light That glimmers on the to and on the grave.' The Ring 341
steaming m'es of the scarlet cranes. Prog, of Spring 75
Marshall'd slowly went The to Order of their Table
Round, Lancelot and E. 1332
Marsh-diver m-d's, rather, maid. Shall croak Princess iv 123
Marsh-marigold the wild to-to shines like fire May Queen 31
Mart labour, and the changing to. In Mem. Ixxxvii 23
MarthK (Martyr) Wid his blessed M's an' Saints ; ' Tomorrow 58
an' Saints an' M's galore, „ 95
Martial Which men delight in, to exercise ? Princess Hi 216
merrily-blowing shrill'd the to fife ; „ « 251
And let the mournful to music blow ; Ode on Well. 17
A TO song like a trumpet's call ! Maud I v 5
Martin Roof-haunting m's warm their eggs : Day-Dm., Sleep P. 17
The fire shot up, the to flew, „ Revival 11
A M's summer of his faded love, Aylmer's Field 560
plaster'd like a m's nest To these old walls — Holy Grail 548
Martin-haunted almost to the m-h eaves Aylmer's Field 163
Martyr (See also Marthyr) did not all thy m's die one
death ? St. S. Stylites 50
Charity setting the to aflame ; Fastness 9
Martyrdom arks with priceless bones of to, Balin and Balan 110
Martyr-flames to-/, nor trenchant swords Can do Clear-headed friend 14
Marvel (s) In to whence that glory came Upon me, Arabian Nights 94
The m of the everlasting will. The Poet 7
' No TO, sovereign lady : D. of F. Women 97
The TO dies, and leaves me fool'd and trick'd, Gareth and L. 1251
and all Had to what the maid might be, Lancelot and E. 728
Some little of this to he too saw. Holy Grail 216
With miracles and m's like to these, „ 543
Had drawn him home — what to ? Last Tournament 405
(what TO — she could see) — „ 547
What TO my Camilla told me all ? (repeat) Lover's Tale i 557, 579
In TO at that gradual change, „ Hi 19
TO among us that one should be left alive, Def. of Lucknow 78
The m of that fair new nature — Columbus 79
Half the m's of my morning, Locksley H., Sixty 75
Marvel (verb) ' I to if my still delight Palace of Art 190
And TO what possess'd my brain ; In Mem. xiv 16
I would not TO at either, Maud I iv 40
mazed my wit : I m what thou art, Gareth and L. 1170
Marvel
457
Master
Said Guinevere, ' We m at
Marvel (verb) (continued)
thee much,
Or TO how in English air My yucca,
Marvell'd I m how the mind was brought
so that all My brethren to greatly.
. Lancelot m at the wordless man ;
Marvelling Balin m oft How far beyond
gazing at a star And to what it was :
Pelleas and E. 179
To Ulysses 20
Two Voices 458
St. S. Stylites 69
Lancelot and E. 172
Balin and Balan 171
Pelleas and E. 560
Arabian Nights 130
MarveUons that m time To celebrate the golden prime
Sir Lancelot gave A m great shriek and ghastly
groan, Lancelot and E. 516
Most TO in the wars your own Crimean eyes Pro. to Gen. Hamley 11
Hary (Virgin) But ' Ave M,' made she moan. And
' Ave M,' night and morn, Mariana in the S. 9
And ' Ave M,' was her moan, „ 21
Mary (See also Mary Morrison) There's Margaret and M,
there's Kate May Queen 6
Then Dora went to M. M sat And look'd Dora 56
M, for the sake of him that's gone, „ 62
Then Dora went to M's house, „ 110
M saw the boy Was not with Dora. „ 111
But, ilf, let me live and work with you : „ 115
Then answer'd M, ' This shall never be, „ 117
And Allan set him down, and M said : „ 139
So M said, and Dora hid her face By M. „ 156
as years Went forward, M took another mate ; „ 171
And home to M's house retum'd, In Mem. xxxi 2
So close are we, dear M, To Mary Boyle 59
O M, M\ Vexing you with words ! Romney's R. 28
M, my crayons ! if I can, I will. „ 88
Mary Morrison (See also Mary) A labourer's daughter, M M. Dora 40
Mash (smash) I claums an' I m'es the winder hin,
Mash'd (smashed) I to the taables an' chairs,
Mashin' (smashing) An' their m their toys to pieaces
Mask (s) college and her maidens, empty m's,
(For I was half -oblivious of my to)
Last night, their m was patent,
head That sleeps or wears the to of sleep,
And mix with hollow m's of night ;
The genial hour with m and mime ;
and the to of pure Worn by this court,
misfeaturing m that I saw so amazed me.
Envy wears the to of Love,
dropt the gracious to of motherhood,
Mask (verb) m, tho' but in his own behoof,
courtly phrase that to's his maUce now —
Mask'd ' Albeit so to. Madam, I love the truth ;
M Uke our maids, blustering I know not what
That TO thee from men's reverence up.
Mason Cloud-towers by ghostly m's wrought.
White from the to's hand, (repeat)
Masonwork It look'd a tower of ivied m,
What rotten piles uphold their to,
Masque to or pageant at my father's court.
Masquerade A feudal knight in silken to,
Mass (eucharist) heard to, broke fast, and rode away :
but with gorgeous obsequies, And to,
at the sacring of the to I saw The holy elements
many's the time that I watch'd her at to
people 'ud see it that wint in to m —
Mass (aggregation) In m'es thick with mUky cones.
Beneath a manelike to of rolling gold,
pick'd offendei-s from the to For judgment.
That jeweU'd to of millinery,
collapsed m'es Of thimdershaken columns
their m'es are gapp'd with our grape —
and with golden m'es of pear,
Broke thro' the to from below,
Stagger'd the to from without,
Of iKJve to leaven all the to,
Massacre or to whelm All of them in one to ?
all the pavement stream'd with to :
dying worm in a world, all to, murder, and wrong
Owd Rod 83
North. Cobbler 37
Spinster's S's. 88
Princess Hi 187
338
iv 326
In Mem. xviii 10
„ Ixx 4
otIO
Merlin and V. 35
The Wreck 117
Locksley H. , Sixty 109
The Ring 384
Maud I vi 48
The Flight 30
Princess ii 213
V 396
„ vii 343
In Mem. Ixx 5
Marr. of Geraint 244, 408
Merlin and V. 4
Sir J. Oldcastle 67
Princess i 198
„ Pro. 234
Lancelot and E. 415
1336
Holy Grail 462
Tomorrow 29
74
Miller's D. 56
Aylmer's Field 68
Princess i 29
Maud / vi 43
Lover's Tale ii 65
Def. of Lucknow 42
V. of Maeldune 60
Heavy Brigade 29
59
Freedom 19
Lucretius 207
Last Tournament 477
Despair 32
After madness, after to,
Massacred moan of an enemy m,
Locksley H., Sixty 157
Boddicea 25
Massacring m Man, woman, lad and girl —
Massiest on his right Stood, all of to bronze :
Massive underpropt a rich Throne of to ore.
Gray haUs alone among their m groves ;
The TO square of his heroic breast,
white rock a chapel and a hall On m columns,
Mast surf wind-scatter'd over sails and m's,
' The high to's flicker'd as they lay afloat ;
Over TO and deck were scatter'd Blood and brains
of men.
and clambering on a to In harbour.
Ruffle thy mirror'd to.
Keel upward, and to downward,
Ev'n to the swineherd's malkin in the m ?
TO bent and the ravin wind In her sail roaring.
to's and the rigging were lying over the side ;
Where they laid him by the m,
their sails and their m's and their flags,
co-mates regather round the to ;
With stormy light as on a to at sea,
then came the crash of the to.
fieiy beech Were bearing off the to,
Master (s) church-harpies from the to's feast ;
you, not you, — the M, Love,
if they quarell'd, Enoch stronger-made Was m :
the TO of that ship Enoch had served in,
Become the to of a larger craft,
Seldom, but when he does, M of all.
all in flood And m's of his motion,
LuciLiA, wedded to Lucretius, found Her ?ra cold ;
the TO took Small notice, or austerely.
My TO held That Gods there are.
And one the Af , as a rogue in grain
The M was far away :
Where lies the to newly dead ;
And loiter'd in the to's field,
eft was of old the Lord and M of Earth,
M of half a servile shire,
one Is Merlin's to (so they call him) Blcys,
but the scholar ran Before the to.
For Bleys, our MerUn's to, as they say,
' Old M, reverence thine own beard
Kay, The to of the meats and drinks,
No mellow to of the meats and drinks !
Whether he know me for his to yet.
Knowest thou not me ? thy m ? I am Kay.
' M no more ! too well I know thee,
Thou hast overthrown and slain thy w —
And doubling all his m's vice of pride,
whistle of the youth who scour'd His to's aimour ;
For man is man and to of his fate.
' Great M, do ye love me ? '
0 my M, have ye found your voice ?
M, be not wrathful with your maid ;
O M, do ye love my tender rhyme ? '
Since ye seem the M of all Art, They fain would
make you M of all vice.'
the great M merrily answer'd her :
smiling as a to smiles at one That is not of his school,
0 M, shall we call him overquick
meant to stamp him with her m's mark ;
With you for guide and to, only you,
There like a dog before his m's door !
1 knew Of no more subtle m under heaven
loved His to more than all on earth beside.
His TO would not wait until he died,
should this first to claim His service.
Obedient to her second to now ;
gate Is bolted, and the w gone.
As a psalm by a mighty to
M scrimps his haggard sempstress
Leave the M in the first dark hour
Then I leave thee Lord and M,
had yielded her will To the to.
Great the M, And sweet the Magic,
Gareth and L. 1340
Balin and Balan 364
Arabian Nights 146
Princess, Con. 43
Marr. of Geraint 75
Lancelot and E. 406
D.ofF. Women 31
113
The Captain 47
Enoch Arden 105
In Mem. ix 7
Gareth and L. 254
Last Tournament 632
Lover's Tale ii 170
The Revenge 81
98
116
Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 5
Tiresias 114
The Wreck 92
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 4
To J. M. K. 3
Gardener's D. 172
Enoch Arden 31
119
144
Aylmer's Field 132
340
Lucretius 2
7
„ 116
Princess, Pro. 116
G. of Swainston 7
In Mem. xx 4
„ xxxvii 23
Maud I iv 31
X 10
Com. of Arthur 153
155
360
Gareth and L. 280
451
560
721
753
756
769
Marr. of Geraint 195
258
355
Merlin and V. 237
269
380
399
468
545
662
724
759
881
Pelleas and E. 263
Guinevere 478
Lover's Tale iv 257
259
265
343
Tiresias 201
The Wreck 53
Locksley H., Sixty 221
238
282
Dead Prophet 64
Merlin and the G. 15
Master
458
Maud
Blaster (s) (continued) M whisper'd ' Follow the
Gleam.' Merlin and the G. 33
My cuise upon the M's apothegm, Bomney's R. 37
or am I conscious, more Than other M's, „ 63
Deak M in our classic town, To Master of B. 1
proclaimed His M as ' the Sun of Righteousness,' Akbar's Bream 83
Master (verb) m's Time indeed, and is Eternal, In Mem. Ixxxv 65
break it, when his passion w's him. Geraint and E. 43
Master-bowman the 7n-b, he, Would cleave the mark. In Mem. Ixxami 29
Master-chord the m-c Of aU I felt and feel. Will Water. 27
Masterdom Contend for loving m. In Mem. cii 8
Master'd Not m by some modem term ; Love thou thy land 30
call them masterpieces : They m me. Princess i 146
Or m by the sense of sport, „ iv 156
dream involved and dazzled down And m, „ 451
such A friendship as had m Time ; In Mem. Ixxxv 64
Theere ! I ha' m them ! Spinster's S's. 95
Mastering M the lawless science of our law, Aylmer's Field 435
Master-passion Brooded one m-j) evermore, Lover's Tale ii 60
Masterpiece (See also Madonna-masterpieces) You
scarce can fail to match his m.' Gardener's B. 31
No critic I — would call them m's : Princess i 145
Mastery So there were any trial of m, Gareth and L. 517
Paynim bard Had such a m of his mysteiy Last Tournament 327
Mast-head like the mystic fire on a m-h, Princess iv 274
Mastodon nature brings not back the M, The Epic 36
Mast-throi^'d M-t beneath her shadowing citadel (Enone 118
Mat an' tother Tom 'ere o' the m. Spinster's S's. 94
Match (an equal) ' but thou shalt meet thy ?n.' Gareth and L. 1024
lighted on Queen Esther, has her m.' Marr. of Geraint 731
Match (marriage contract) I have set my heart upon a m. Bora 14
Such a m as this ! Impossible, Aylmer's Field 314
wealth enough was theirs For twenty m'es. „ 370
Match (verb) scarce can fail to m his masterpiece.' Gardener's B. 31
Will you m My Juliet ? „ 171
May m his pains with mine ; St. S. Stylites 139
And find in loss a gain to to ? In Mem. i 6
Match'd M with an aged wife, Ulysses 3
all thy passions, m with mine, Locksley Rail 151
Were meUow music m with him. In Alem. Ivi 24
But cither's force was m till Yniol's cry, Alarr. of Geraint 570
m with the pains Of the hellish heat Bespair 67
life as m with ours Were Sun to spark — Ancient Sage 237
Mate (partner) (See also Co-mate, Maate) Whence shall she
take a fitting m ? Kate 13
She cannot find a fitting m. „ 31
Your pride is yet no m for mine, L. C. V. de Vere 11
as years Went forward, Mary took another m ; Bora 171
Feeling from her m the Deed. The Brook 95
Raw from the prime, and crushing down his m ; Princess ii 121
That 1 shall be thy m no more, In Mem. xli 20
With one that was his earliest m ; „ Ixiv 24
his good m's Lying or sitting round him, Gareth and L. 511
A woman weeping for her murder'd m Geraint and E. 522
hot in haste to join Their luckier m's, „ 575
' Yet weep not thou, lest, if thy m return, Last Tournament 499
be his m hereafter in the heavens Guinevere 637
Amid thy melancholy m's far-seen, Lover's Tale i 489
he lived with a lot of wild m's, Rizpah 29
They love their m's, to whom they sing ; The Flight 65
likeness to the king Of shadows, thy dark m. Bemeter and P. 17
Is he sick your m like mine ? Happy 2
Mate (of a ship) Now m is blind and captain lame. The Voyage 91
For since the m had seen at early dawn Enoch Arden 631
Mated thou art m with a clown, Locksley Hall 47
M with a squalid savage — „ 177
ere I m, with my shambling king. Last Tournament 544
Material could she climb Beyond her own m prime ? Two Voices 378
Matin By some wild skylark's m song. Miller's B. 40
And if the m songs, that woke The darkness In Mem. Ixxvi 9
' Here thy boyhood cung Long since its TO song, „ m 10
Matin-chirp low mrc hath grown Full quire, Love and Buty 98
Matins 1 know At m and at evensong, Supp. Confessions 99
IbtiD-fong (See also Matin) when the first m-s hath
waken'd loud Ode to Memory 68
Matin-song (continued) And sang aloud the m-s of
hfe.
Matron Perish'd many a maid and m,
the m saw That hinted love was only wasted bait.
Matted See also Close-matted, Ivy-matted To purl o'er
m cress and ribbed sand.
Matter (s) No m what tQe sketch might be ;
A OT to be wept with tears of blood !
' I cannot make this m, plain,
dealing but with time. And he with m,
A goose — 'twas no great to.
we sat and eat And talk'd old m's over ;
and so the m hung ; (repeat)
Bound on a TO he of life and death :
Thro' her this m might be sifted clean.'
Knowledge is knowledge, and this m hangs :
With many thousand m's left to do,
lie which is part a truth is a harder m to fight
Till you should turn to dearer m's,
Is TO for a flying smile.
Tho' rapt in m's dark and deep
She knows but m's of the house.
What m if I go mad,
Is that a m to make me fret ?
but my belief In all this m^—
' I have quite foregone All m's of this world :
Sick ? or for any to anger'd at me ? '
what was once to me Mere to of the fancy,
' What m, so I help him back to life ? '
and if he fly us. Small m ! let him.'
Sir Lancelot told This to to the Queen,
What to ? there are others in the wood.
Matter (verb) What can it to, Margaret,
then What m's Science unto men,
' What can it to, my lass.
We die ? does it m when ?
Does it TO so much what I felt ?
Does it TO how many they saved ?
Does it m so much whether crown'd
That m's not: let come what will;
this fine Artist ' ! Fool, What m's ?
would it TO so much if I came on the street ?
Matter-moulded In to-to forms of speech,
Matting conscious of ourselves. Perused the m ;
Mattock-harden'd labour and the m-h hand.
Mature (adj.) For now is love to in ear.'
And round her limbs, m in womanhood ;
Mature (verb) M's the individual form.
Mat-work made a silken to-w for her feet ;
Maud of the singular beauty of M ;
M with her venturous climbings and tumbles
M the delight of the village,
M with her sweet purse-mouth
M the beloved of my mother.
It will never be broken by M,
Ah M, you milkwhite fawn,
M with her exquisite face,
M in the light of her youth and her grace.
Whom but M should I meet ? (repeat)
If M were all that she seem'd, (repeat)
M could be gracious too, no doubt To a lord,
M, M, M, M, They were crying and calling.
Where was ilf ? in our wood ;
M is here, here, here In among the lilies.
M is not seventeen, But she is tall and stately.
0 M were sure of heaven If lowliness could save her.
Where is M, M, M?
M is as true as If is sweet :
M to him is nothing akin :
M has a garden of roses And lilies
M's own little oak-room (Which M, like a precious stone
looks Upon M's own garden-gate :
Make answer, M my bliss,
M made my M by that long loving kiss,
1 trust that I did not talk To gentle M in our walk
Lover's Tale i 232
Boddicea 85
The Ring 359
Ode to Memory 59
95
Poland 14
Two Voices 343
377
The Goose 10
Audley Court 29
r/je5roofc]44, 148
Sea Breams 151
Princess i 80
„ Hi 316
„ w458
Grandm.other 32
To F. B. Maurice 35
In Mem. Ixii 12
„ xcvii 19
31
Maud I xi 6
„ xiii 2
Com. of Arthur 184
Balin and Balan 117
276
Merlin and V. 924
Lancelot and E. 787
Pelleas and E. 200
Guinevere 54
Lover's Tale iv 162
Margaret 32
In Mem. cxx 7
First Quarrel 59
The Revenge 88
Bespair 4
„ 12
,. 76
The Flight 103
Romney's R. 125
Charity 8
In Mem. xcv 46
Princess ii 68
Maud I xviii 34
In Mem. Ixxxi 4
Pelleas and E. 73
Love thou thy land 40
Holy Grail 151
Maud I i&l
70
71
72
w2
iv57
1)12
15
vi7,ll
36,92
a: 28
xii 3
5
11
15
19
27
xiii 32
38
xiv 1
9
16
xviii 57
58
xix 13
Maud
459
Meadow-bases
Maud {continued) And M too, M was moved To speak
of the mother
Maud I xix 26
35
37
40
67
82
84
85
XX 22
27
37
50
xxi 4
xxii 1, 3
// a 39
When only M and the brother Hung over her dying bed-
That Af's dark father and mine Had bound us
On the day when M was bom ;
Yet M, altho' not blind To the faults
Kind to M ? that were not amiss.
For shall not M have her will ?
For, M, so tender and true,
nothing can be sweeter Than maiden M in either.
And M will wear her jewels,
every eye but mine will glance At M in all her glory.
Queen M in all her splendour.
Forgetful of M and me,
My M has sent it by thee (If I reatl her sweet will right)
Come into the garden, M, (repeat)
Why should it look like M ?
Maudlin-moral empty glass That makes me m-m. Will Water. 208
Haul'd Maim'd me and m, Last Tournament 75
Maurice Come, M, come : the lawn as yet To F. D. Maurice 41
Mavis (See also Throsh) The clear-voiced m dwelleth, Claribel 16
' What knowest thou of birds, lark, m, merle, Gareth arid L. 1078
Mavors cry to thee To kiss thy M, , Lucretius 82
Maw let the wolves' black m's ensepulchre Balin and Balan 487
Mawkin (See also Malkin) or a draggled m, thou, Princess, v 26
Maxim With a little hoard of m's
With rugged m's hewn from life ;
Gracious lessons thine And m's of the mud !
Mazume See Lari Maxume
May (hawthorn-bloom) (See also Maay) thro' damp
holts new-flush'd with m,
lanes, you know, were white with m,
but with plumes that mock'd the m,
wid the red o' the rose an' the white o' the M,
May (month) (See also M^y) Evei-y heart this M
morning in joyance is beating
I'm to be Queen o' the M, (repeat)
Locksley Hall 94
Ode on Well. 184
Merlin and V. 49
My life is full 19
MUler's D. 130
Guinevere 22
Tomorrow 31
All Things will Die 6
May Queen 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, 24,
28, 32, 36, 40, 44
Last M we made a crown of flowers : May Queen N. Y's. E. 9
Beneath the hawthorn on the green they
made me Queen of M ;
and M from verge to verge, And M with me from
head to heel.
(For those old M's had thrice the life of these,)
he touch'd his one-and-twentieth M
(It might be M or April, he forgot. The last of
April or the first of M)
temper amorous, as the first of M,
murmur'd that their M Was passing :
tho' it was the middle of M.
Cuck-oo ! ' was ever a M so fine ?
And glad at heart from M to M :
clothed their branchy bowers With fifty M's,
In the happy morning of life and of M,
Among the flowers, in M, with Guinevere.
Far shone the fields of M thro' open door,
The sacred altar blossom'd white with M,
for the world is white with M ;
' Blow, for our Sun is mighty in his M !
nightingale, full-toned in middle M.
wild-wood hyacinth and the bloom of M.
They might have cropt the myriad flower of M,
glittering like M sunshine on M leaves
the mid might and flourish of his M,
an' all as merry as M —
long ago. One bright M morning in a world of
song,
vague love-longings, the bright M,
Thoughts of the breezes of M
shall we find a changeless M ?
For Naples which we only left m. M?
glidest thou from March to M,
When I was in my June, you in yom* M,
Prophet of the M time,
display A tunic white as M !
10
Gardener's D. 80
84
Enoch Arden 57
The Brook 151
Princess i 2
„ m463
Grandmother 34
Window, Ay IQ
In Mem. xxii 8
„ Ixxvi 14
Maud I vl
Com. of Arthur 452
460
461
482
497
Balin and Balan 213
271
577
Merlin and V. 88
Lancelot and E. 554
First Quarrel 40
Sisters (E. and E.) 82
128
Def. of Lucknow 83
Locksley H., Sixty 156
The Ring 58
Prog, of Spring 109
Roses on the T. 2
The Snowdrop 7
Prog, of Spring 65
May (month) (continued) For have the far-off hymns of M, To Master of B. 10
and it laugh'd like a dawn in M. Bandit's Death 20
May (makes) — an ass as near as m's nowt — N. Farmer, N. S. 39
May-blossom a brow M-h, and cheek of apple-blossom, Gareth and L 589
and like M-h's in mid autumn — The Ring 255
Maydew In the M's of childhood, Lover's Tale i 188
Mayfly The M is torn by the swallow, Maud I iv 23
Maying See A-maying
May Lilian (See also Lilian) Prythee weep, M L ! (repeat) Lilian 19, 25
May-music when they utter forth M-m Gareth and L. 108O
May-pole And we danced about the m-p May Queen, N. Y's. E. 11
Lover's Tale i 318
Guinevere 388
Gareth and L. 657
Vision of Sin 31
Princess iv 261
In Alem. cxv 2
Vision of Sin 195
Clear-headed friend 28
Gareth and L. 1170
Pelleas and E. 525
In Mem. xlv 6
Day-Dm., Moral 9
In Mem. xxviii 6
. c7
„ ciii 21
Lancelot and E. 106
May-sweet charged the winds With spiced M-s's
Maytime (for the time Was m, and as yet no sin
May-white pride, wrath Slew the M-w :
Maze gauzes, golden hazes, liquid m's,
To thrid the musky-circled m's.
Now burgeons eveiy m of quick
Mazed ' Thou art m, the night is long,
heaven's m signs stood still In the dim tract of
Penuel.
but, being knave, Hast m my wit :
Or art thou m with dreams ?
Mazing See Maazin'
Me And learns the use of ' I,' and ' m,'
Mead But any man that walks the m.
From far and near, on m and moor.
Or simple stile from m to m.
And on by many a level m,
Than of the myriad cricket of the m.
Meadow (adj.) and fall before Her feet on the m grass, Maud / « 26
Two forks are fixt into the m ground, Marr. of Geraint 482
Then, moving downward to the m ground, Geraint and E. 204
delight To roll himself in m grass Romney's R. 14
Meadow (S) (See also Midder) Thro' quiet m's round the mill, Miller's D. 98
vale And m, set with slender galingale ; Lotos-Eaters 23
reach'd a m slanting to the North ; Gardener's D. 108
sweep Of m smooth from aftermath Audley Court 14
How fresh the m's look Above the river, Walk, to the Mail 1
A sign betwixt the m and the cloud, St. S. Stylites 14
Faint murmui's from the m's come, Day-Dm., Sleep P. 6
And dewy Northern m's green. The Voyage 36
daughter of our m's, yet not coarse ; The Brook 69
ghost of one who bore your name About these m's, „ 220
the dim m toward his treasure-trove, Aylmer's Field 531
where it dash'd the reddening m, Lucretius 49
' AU among the m's, the clover and the clematis, City Child 9
Oh, the woods and the m's. Window, Marr. Mom. 5
M's in which we met ! „ 8
I come. By m and stile and wood, „ 14
Over the m's and stiles, „ 22
over brake and bloom And m. In Mem. Ixxxvi 4
By m's breathing of the past, „ xcix 7
I smeU the m in the street ; „ cxix 4
voice by the cedar tree In the m under the HaU ! Maud I v 2
move to the m and fall before Her feet on the meadow grass, „ 25
For her feet have touch'd the m's „ xii 23
From the lake to the m and on to the wood, „ xxii 37
From the m your walks have left so sweet „ 39
She is walking in the m, „ II iv 37
She is singing in the m „ 40
Down to the m where the jousts were held, Marr. of Geraint 537
up the vale of Usk, By the flat m, „ 832
a m gemlike chased In the brown wild, Geraint and E. 198
grass There growing longest by the m's edge, „ 257
blossom-dust of those Deep m's we had traversed. Merlin and V. 283
The green light from the m's underneath Lancelot and E. 408
in the rn's tremulous aspen-trees And poplars „ 410
reach'd the lists By Camelot in the m, „ 429
Over all the m baked and bare. Sisters (E. and E.) 8
Over all the m's drowning flowers, „ 21
Simimers of the snakeless m. To Virgil 19
forehead vapour-swathed In m's ever green ; Freedom 8
A thousand squares of corn and m. The Ring 149
my far m zoned with airy mom ; Prog, of Spring 69
Meadow-bases From level m-b of deep grass Palace of Art 7
Meadow-crake
460
Measured
Meadow-crake the m-c Grate her harsh kindred Princess iv 124
Meadow d See Deep-meadow'd
Meadow-grass (See also Meadow (adj.)) come and go,
mother, upon the m-g, May Queen 33
Across the silent seeded m-g Pelleas and E. 561
Meadow-ledges m-l midway down Hang rich in flowei-s, CEnone 6
Meadow-sweet waist-deep in m-s. The Brook 118
Meadow-trenches by the m-t blow the faint sweet
cuckoo-flowers ; May Queen 30
Meadowy soft wind blowing over m holms And aldere, Edwin Morris 95
Drew in the dewy m morning-breath Of England, Enoch Arden 660
rividet that swerves To left and right thro' m curves. In Mem. c 15
Her pendent hands, and narrow m face Aylmer's Field 813
I was changed to wan And m, Holy Grail 572
Meal (ground com) Made misty with the floating m. Miller's D. 104
With some pretext of flneness in the m Enoch Arden 341
Who live on milk and m. and grass ; To E. Fitzgerald 13
Meal (repast) (See also Meal) sweetest m she makes
On the first-born Vision of Sin 145
scarce a coin to buy a m withal, Columbus 169
Meal (repast) an' taakes their regular m's. N. Farmer, N. S. 46
it's them as niver knaws wheer a m's to be 'ad. „ 47
Meal-sacks The m-s on the whiten'd floor. Miller's D. 101
Mealy-mouth'd nursed by m-m philanthropies. The Brook 94
Mean (adj.) weep for a time so sordid and m, Maud I v VJ
since the proud man often is the m, Marr. of Geraint 449
thought it never yet had look'd so m. „ 610
M knights, to whom the moving of my sword Holy Grail 790
that would sound so m That all the dead, Eomney's R. 131
Mean (s) debtless competence, golden m ; Fastness 24
Mean (verb) (See also Manes, Mean Means) another which
you had, I m of verse The Efic 26
For they know not what they m. Vision of Sin 126
and m Vileness, we are grown so proud — Aylmer's Field 755
Whether I m this day to end myself, Lucretius 146
' Tears, idle tears, I know not what they m. Princess iv 39
I m your grandfather, Annie : Grandmother 23
my noations, Sammy, wheerby I m's to stick ; iV. Farmer, N. S. 57
The spirit does but m the breath : In Mem. Ivi 7
her own rose-garden. And m to linger in it Maud 7 a;ar 42
' What m's the timiult in the town ? ' Marr. of Geraint 259
They understand : nay; I do not m blood : Geraint and E. 338
were all as tame, I w, as noble, Merlin and V. 608
the good king m's to blind himself, „ 783
I do not m the force alone — Lancelot and E. 471
Nay, I m nothing : so then, get you gone, „ 776
What might she m by that ? „ 834
He m's me I'm sure to be happy Rizpah 76
I think that you m to be kind, „ 81
show In some fifth Act what this wild Drama m's. The Play 4
only the Devil can tell what he m's. Riflemen form ! 25
Mein (verb) she didn't not solidly m I wur gawin' Owd Rod. 71
Mefin'd (meant) An' I niver knaw'd whot a m N. Farmer, 0. S. 19
an' I w to 'a stubb'd it at fall, Done it ta-year I m, „ 41
Meanest (adj.) Better to me the m weed That blows upon its
mountain, Amphion 93
' Thro' slander, m spawn of Hell — The Letters 33
put on thy worst and m dress And ride with me.' Marr. of Geraint 130
Put on your worst and m dress,' „ 848
Meanest (s) m having power upon the highest. Merlin and V. 195
Meaning (part.) life He gave me, m to be rid of it. Geraint and E. 853
711 by it To keep the list low and pretenders back. Merlin and V. 591
(.)/ the print that you gave us. In the Child. Hasp. 51
Mftaning (s) So was their m to her words. The Poet 53
Like a tale of little m tho' the words Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 119
0 take the m, Lord : St. S. Stylites 21
A m suited to his mind. Day-I)m., Moral 12
To search a m for the song, „ L' Envoi 35
And, if you find a m there, „ Ep. 2
Nor the m can divine, L. of Burleigh 54
That was nothing to her : No m there : Enoch Arden 499
Being other — since we learnt our m here, Princess Hi 222
there's a downright honest m in her ; „ v 280
Her secret m in her deeds, /n Mem. Iv 10
1 will not ask your m in it : Geraint and E. 743
Meaning (s) (continued) this, indeed, her voice And vi. To the Queen ii 20
Now guess'd a hidden m in his arms, Lancelot and E. 17
He thinking that he read her m there, „ 86
That have no m half a league away : Holy Grail 556
while they rode, the m in his eyes, Pelleas and E. 109
Her words did of their m borrow sound. Lovers Tale i 568
until The m of the letters shot into My brain ; „ m 8
He knew the m of the whisper now, „ iv 43
■ to seek The m's ambush'd Tiresias 5
Meaningless drown'd in the deeps of a m Past ? Vastness 34
Meanness sense Of m in her unresisting life. Aylmer's Field 801
Means Or m to pay the voice who best could tell Enoch Arden 266
The first, a gentleman of broken m Princess i 53
spirit of murder works in the very m of life, Maud I i 40
following with a costrel bore The m of goodly
welcome, Marr. of Geraint 387
Because my m were somewhat broken into „ 455
Being but ampler m to serve mankind. Merlin and V. 489
should strike upon a sudden m To dig, „ 659
Means m's fur to maake 'is owd aage Owd Rod 3
if iver tha m's to git 'igher, Church-warden, etc. 45
Meant (See also Mean'd) We met, but only m to part. The Letters 12
He never m us anything but good. Enoch Arden 887
you find That you m nothing — us indeed you
know That you m nothing. Aylmer's Field 313
1 should find he jn me well ; Sea Dreams 153
he m, he said he m. Perhaps he m, or partly m,
you well.' „ 178
' Ay, but 1 m not thee ; I m not her, Lucretius 85
and m Surely to lead my Memmius in a train „ 118
M? I m? 1 have fogotten what 1 m: „ 121
That she but m to win him back, „ 279
alien lips. And knew not what they m ; Princess iv 120
And vacant chaff well m for grain. In Mem. vi 4
She m to weave me a snare Of some coquettish deceit, Maud I vi 25
Knew that the death-white curtain ?» but sleep, „ xiv 37
Ask'd yet once more what m the hubbub here ? Marr. of Geraint 264
To learn what Arthur m by courtesy, Balin and Balan 158
m to eat her up in that wild wood Merlin and V. 260
m to stamp him with her master's mark ; „ 759
m once more perchance to tourney in it. Lancelot and E. 810
rough sickness w, but what this m „ 888
(He m to break the passion in her) „ 1079
But when I thought he m To crush me. Holy Grail 415
But heaven had m it for a sunny one : „ 706
spake the King : I knew not all he m.' „ 920
' The simple, fearful child M nothing, Guinevere 370
Our general mother m for me alone. Lover's Tale i 245
and m to rest an hour ; „ iv 133
I didn't know well what I m. First Quarrel 83
If a curse m ought, I would curse Despair 64
m us to be mightier by and by, Locksley H., Sixty 209
Those gray heads. What m they Demeter and P. 130
Muriel claim'd and opea'd what I m For Miriam, The Ring 242
And I m to make you jealous. Happy 67
you knew that he m to betray me — Charity 12
Measure (s) (See also Slow-measure) hearts of sahent
springs Keep ?/i Adeline 27
I crouch'd on one that rose Twenty by m ; St. S. Stylites 89
fresh to men. And wanton without m ; Amphion 58
Tread a m on the stones. Vision of Sin 180
As meted by his m of himself, Aylmer's Field 316
The highest is the m of the man. Princess ii 157
rich VirgiUan rustic m Of Lari Maxume, The Daisy 75
draw The deepest m from the chords : In Mem. xlviii 12
by the m of my grief I leave thy greatness „ Ixxv 3
God, the m of my hate for Mark Is as the m Last Tournament 537
how should Earthly m mete The Heavenly-
unmeasured Lover's Tale i 473
Wielder of the stateliest m ever moulded To Virgil 39
Measure (verb) m time by yon slow light, St. S. Stylites 94
in the flame that m's Time ! Akbar's D., Hymn 8
Measured How many m words adore The full-flowing
harmony Elednore 45
With m footfall firm and mild, Two Voices 413
I
Measured
461
Meet
Measured {contimied) An echo from a m strain, Miller's D. 66
hear These m words, my work of yestemiom. Golden Year 21
A use in m language lies ; In Mem. v 6
The m pulse of racing oars Among the willows ; „ Ixxxvii 10
Kun out your m arcs, and lead The closing cycle „ cv 27
three paces m from the mound, Princess v 1
Measureless honey of poison-flowers and all the m ill. Mavd I iv 56
For years, a m iU, „ // U 49
Measuring JEonian music m out The steps In Mem. xcv 41
Oft in mid-banquet m with his eyes Pelleas and E. 150
Meat ("See also Meat) Yea ev'n of wretched m and drink, Mavd I xv8
In her foul den, there at their m would growl.
King Made feast for, saying, as they sat at m,
hire thyself to serve for m's and drinks
grant me to serve For m and drink
Kay, The master of the m's and drinks.
No mellow master of the m's and drinks !
mighty thro' thy m's and drinks (repeat)
except, belike, To garnish m's with ?
Where bread and baken m's and good red wine
Sir Lancelot, is hard by, with m's and drinks
sit with knife in m and wine in horn !
with m's and vintage of their best
where the m's became As wormwood,
w. Wine, wine, — and I will love thee
had comforted the blood With m's and wines.
Had whatsoever m he long'd for served
our lover seldom spoke, Scarce touch'd the m's ;
Or mine to give him m,
Me&t or a mossel o' m when it beant too dear.
Mechanic (adj.) The long m pacings to and fro.
The sad m exercise.
Co7n. of Arthur 30
247
Gareth and L. 153
445
451
560
,. 650, 862
1070
1190
1276
Merlin and V. 694
Lancelot and E. 266
743
Last Tournament 719
725
Guinevere 265
Lover's Tale iv 226
Voice spake, etc. 8
Spinster's S's. 109
Love and Duty 17
In Mem. v 7
A disease, a hard m ghost That never came from on high, Maud II ii 34
Mechanic (s) see the raw m's bloody thumbs
Meddle and there was none to m with it.
Meddling Some m rogue has tamper'd with him —
Medicine glass with httle Margaret's m in it ;
blush and smile, a m in themselves
' The miserable have no m But only Hope ! '
Meditated while I m A wind arose and rush'd
Meditating long and bitterly m,
Meditation In a silent m,
Meditative With m gnmts of much content,
Mediterranean About the soft M shores,
Medley This were a m ! we should have him
Mee&k (meek) I kep' mysen m as a lamb,
Mee&tin' (meeting) An' when we coom'd into M,
Meed claiming each This m of fairest.
The m of saints, the white robe and the palm.
this was my m for all.
Meek (adj.) (See also Maiden-meek, Meeak, Mock-meek)
With lips depress'd as he were m,
' His hps are very mild and m :
And Dora promised, being m.
maiden of our century, yet most m ;
Him, to her m and modest bosom prest In agony,
thought myself long-suffering, m,
m Seem'd the full hps, and mild the limiinous eyes,
why come you so cruelly m,
Tut : he was tame and m enow with me,
and m withal As any of Arthur's best,
O pale, pale face so sweet and m,
0 somewhere, m, unconscious dove.
Walk, to the Mail 75
Gareth and L. 1012
Lancelot and E. 128
Sea Dreams 142
Princess vii 62
Romney's R. 149
Princess i 96
Boddicea 35
Elednore 105
Walk, to the Mail 87
Sir J. Oldcastle 30
Princess, Pro. 237
Church-warden, etc. 41
North. Cobbler bZ
(Enone 87
St. 8. Stylites 20
Princess iv 302
A Character 25
Two Voices 250
Dora 46
The Brook 68
Aylmer's Field 416
753
Princess vii 225
Maud I Hi 1
Gareth and L. 718
1168
Oriana 66
In Mem. vi 25
But answer'd in low voice, her m head yet Drooping, Geraint and E. 640
But o'er her m eyes came a happy mist
Yet not so misty were her m blue eyes
And there, poor cousin, with your m blue eyes.
Ye know right well, how m soe'er he seem,
but the m maid Sweetly forbore him ever,
So Arthur bad the m Sir Percivale
M maidens, from the voices crying " shame."
an' 'e says to 'im, m as a mouse,
our darling, our m little maid ;
Except his own m daughter yield her life,
but set no m ones in their place ;
769
772
841
Lancelot and E. 155
855
1264
Guinevere 672
VUlage Wife 63
In the Child. Hosp. 28
The Flight 28
Locksley H., Sixty 133
Meek (adj.) (continued) patient, and prayerful, to,
Pale-blooded,
who am not m, Pale-blooded, prayerful.
Meek (s) ' The m shall inherit the earth '
Tlie Reign of the M upon earth.
Meeker M than any child to a rough nurse,
Some m pupil you must rind.
Meekness Shaped her heart with woman's w
Meet (adj.) M is it changes should control Our being,
' It is not TO, Sir King, to leave thee thus,
scarce to For troops of devils,
I am whole, and clean, and to for Heaven.
pay M adoration to my household gods,
should pause, as is most to for all ?
M for the reverence of the hearth,
surely rest is to : ' They rest,' we said.
Becoming as is to and fit A link among the days,
nor m To fight for gentle damsel,
fare is coaree. And only m for mowers ; '
M is it the good King be not deceived.
' It is not TO, Sir King, to leave thee thus.
Meet (verb) That clothe the wold and to the sky ;
For those two Ukes might to and touch.
I could TO with her The Abominable,
blessings on his whole life long, until he to me
there !
token when the night and morning to :
Counts nothing that she m's with base.
She heard the torrents to.
In whom should w the offices of all.
Sets out, and m's a friend who hails him,
robed and crown'd. To w her lord,
airs of heaven That often to me here.
sometimes two would w in one,
broad seas swell'd to to the keel.
To to and greet her on her way ;
' Cold altar. Heaven and earth shall m
year Roll'd itself round again to to the day When
Enoch
Stands Philip's faim where brook and river m.
Katie never ran : she moved To m me,
Abase those eyes that ever loved to to Star-sisters
Not yet endured to to her opening eyes,
I fear'd To to a cold ' We thank you.
The next, like fire he m's the foe,
to TO us lightly pranced Three captains out ;
then he drew Her robe to to his hps,
tum'd half-round to Psyche as she sprang To to it.
To TO her Graces, where they deck'd her
Who lets once more in peace the nations m,
To TO the sun and sunny waters.
In middle ocean m's the surging shock,
and Spirit with Spirit can m —
Two little hands that to, (repeat)
In which we two were wont to to,
I shall know him when we to :
And envying all that m him there.
I seem to to theii" least desire,
O teU me where the passions to.
And m's the year, and gives and takes
And imto meeting when we to,
they TO thy look And brighten like the star
advance To m and greet a whiter sun ;
Whom but Maud should I to ? (repeat)
She remembers it now we to.
To the woody hollows in which we to
When I was wont to to her In the silent woody places
In a moment we shall to ;
And the faces that one m's,
Return, and to, and hold him from our eyes,
' but thou shalt to thy match.'
one might to a mightier than himself ;
pray That we may m the horsemen of Earl Doorm
shadow from the counter door Sir Lancelot as to
TO her, Balin and Balan 247
Last Tournament 607
610
The Dreamer 2
25
Lancelot and E. 857
L. C. V. de Vere 18-
L. of Burleigh 71
Love thou thy land 41
M. d' Arthur 40
St. S. Stylites 3
213
Ulysses 42
Tithonus 31
Aylmer's Field333
In Mem. xxx 18
xl 14
Gareth and L. 1176
Geraint and E. 209
Balin and Balan 533
Pass, of Arthur 207
L. of Shalott i 3
Two Voices 357
(Enone 223
May Queen, Con. 14
22
On a Mourner 4
Of old sat Freedom 4
M. d' Arthur 125
Walk, to the Mail 42
Godiva 78
Sir Galahad 64
Will Water. 95
The Voyage \3
Beggar Maid 6
The Letters 7
Enoch Arden 822
The Brook 38
88
Princess ii 427
ivldS
328
583
t)254
ml56
210
vii 168
Ode Inter. Exhib. 4
The Daisy 11
Will 8
High. Pantheism 11
Window, The Answer 1, 4
In Mem. viii 10
„ xlvii 8
1x8
„ Ixxxiv 17
„ Ixxxviii 4
„ cxvi 3
„ cxvii 7
Con. 30
78
Maud I vi 7, 11
88
„ xxii 43
IIiv5
39
93
Gareth and L. 429
1024
1350
Geraint and E. 492
Meet
462
Melody
Meet (verb) (continued) m's And dallies with him in
the Mouth of Hell.'
Moving to in him in the castle court ;
strike spur, suddenly move, M in the midst,
we two May m at court hereafter :
' I never loved him : an I m with him,
I go in state to court, to m the Queen.
flash'd, as it were, Diamonds to m them,
let us m The morrow morn once more
she rose Opening her arms to m me,
I -wiU be thine Arthur when we m.'
if thou tarry we shall m again, And if we m again,
some evil chance
to m And part for ever.
that I march to m my doom.
We two may m before high God,
and in myself Death, or I know not what mysterious
doom.
In whom should m the oflSces of all,
never more will m The sight that throbs
But I cannot m them here.
My friend should m me somewhere
My friend should m me here. Here is the copse.
The city deck'd herself To m me,
roll'd To m me long-arm'd vines with grapes
they m And kindle generous purpose,
their songs, that m The morning with such music,
I bide no more, I m my fate,
' An' whin will ye m me agin ? '
I'll m you agin tomorra,' says he,
shure thin ye'll m me tomorra ? '
an' shure he'll m me agin.'
That ye'll m your paarints agin
' He said he would m me tomorra ! '
one of those I fain would m again,
and I may m him soon ;
She always came to m me carrying you.
She came no more to m me,
A clamorous cuckoo stoops to m her hand ;
that soul where man and woman m,
hear The clash of tides that m in narrow
seas. —
Ready, be ready to m the storm ! (repeat)
All at all points thou canst not m,
Veetiiig (part.) Two strangers m at a festival ;
A stranger m them had surely thought
guests broke in upon him with m hands
Meeting (s) (See also Mee&tin') might I tell of m's, of
farewells —
A perilous m imder the tall pines
And oft at Bible m's, o'er the rest Arising,
A m somewhere, love with love.
Their m's made December Jime
And unto m when we meet.
For the m of the morrow.
Have I misleamt our place of m ?)
Here we met, our latest m —
Meg tavern-catch Of Moll and M,
Melancholy (adj.) (See also Humorous-melancholy)
Her TO eyes divine.
The mild-eyed m Lotos-eaters came.
I used to walk This Terrace — morbid, m ;
Melancholy (s) Your m sweet and frail
To the influence of mild-minded m ;
And lived a life of silent m.
Settled a gentle cloud of m ;
To beguile her m ;
that hour When the lone hem forgets his m,
Then fell on MerUn a great m ;
For these have broken up my m.'
across him came a cloud Of m severe,
■dian M, with her hand upon the lock,
' Ah — M — you ! You heard us ? ' and M,
' Ah, fear me not ' Replied M ;
came M hitting all we saw with shafts
Balin and Balan 614
Lancelot and E. 175
457
698
1068
1124
1237
Holy Grail 322
395
Pelleas and E. 47
Guinevere 89
97
450
564
575
Pass, of Arthur 293
Lover's Tale i 32
The Revenge 5
Sir J. Oldcastle 1
126
Columbus 10
To E. Fitzgerald 27
Tiresias 127
The Flight 65
95
Tomorrow 15
16
18
52
57
80
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 22
To Marq. of Dufferin 48
The Ring 352
„ _ 385
Prog, of Spring 45
On one who effec. E. M. 2
Akhar's Dream 58
Riflemen form ! 13, 27
Poets and, Critics 7
Circumstance 3
Geraint and E. 34
Lover's Tale iv 238
Gardener's 2). 251
Aylmer's Field 414
Sea Dreams 194
In Mem. Ixxxv 99
„ xcvii 11
„ cxvii 7
Maud II iv 28
Sir J. Oldcastle 153
Locksley H., Sixty 177
Princess iv 158
Mariana in the S. 19
Lotos- Eaters 27
The Ring 168
Margaret 7
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 64
Enoch Arden 260
Princess iv 570
Maud I XX 3
Gareth and L. 1185
Merlin and V. 189
267
Lancelot and E. 325
Princess ii 322
330
343
468
Melissa (continued) approach'd M, tinged with wan from
lack of sleep. Princess Hi 25
' What pardon, sweet M, for a blush ? ' ,,66
M shook her doubtful curls, „ 75
Shame might befaU M, knowing, „ 148
Cyril kept With Psyche, with M Florian, „ 355
The Ulylike M droop'd her brows ; „ iv 161
M clamour'd ' Flee the death ; ' „ 166
last of aU, M : trust me. Sir, I pitied her. „ 230
white shoulder shaken with her sobs, M knelt ; „ 290
Rise ! ' and stoop'd to updrag M : „ 367
with her oft, M came ; for Blanche had gone, ,. vii 56
Mellay here and everywhere He rode the m, ., v 502
Meller (mellow) Fine an' m 'e mun be by this. North. Cobbler 101
Mellow (adj.) (See also Meller, Over-mellow) With m
preludes, ' We are free.' The winds, etc. 4
gleams of m light Float by you on the verge of night. Margaret 30
The TO ouzel fluted in the elm ; Gardener's D. 94
a Tudor-chimnied bulk Of m brickwork on an isle of
bowers. Edwin Morris 12
Low thunders bring the m rain. Talking Oak 279
Many a night I saw the Pleiads, rising thro' the
TO shade, Locksley Hall 9
TO moons and happy skies, „ 159
Till TO Death, Uke some late quest. Will Water. 239
Then methought I heard a w sound. Vision of Sin 14
And TO metres more than cent for cent ; The Brook 5
lapt in wreaths of glo^vworm light The m breaker
murmur'd Ida. Princess iv 436
Were to music match'd with him. In Mem. Ivi 24
No to master of the meats and drinks ! Gareth and L. 560
Won by the to voice before she look'd, Lancelot and E. 244
Here too, all hush'd below the m moon, Pelleas and E. 424
I heard that voice, — as m and deep The Wreck 52
M moon of heaven. Bright in blue. The Ring 1
The TO hn-lan-lone of evening bells Far — far — away 5
Mellow (verb) but as his brain Began to m. Princess i 180
Mellow-deep Drawn from each other m-d ; Elednore 67
Mellow'd (adj.) The m reflex of a winter moon ; Isabel 29
then perhaps The to murmur of the people's
praise Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 7
Mellow'd (verb) And there he m all his heart with ale. The Brook 155
Mellower All day the wind breathes low with m
tone : Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 102
There cannot come a to change. In Mem. Ixxxi 3
Mellowing (See also Hourly-mellowing, Slowly-mellowing)
into mournful twiUght m, dwelt Full on the child ; Princess vi 191
And tumbled half the to pears ! Im Mem. Ixxxix 20
Mellowness Touch'd by thy spirit's to, Eleanore 103
Melodious Ever brightening With a low to thunder ; Poet's Mind 27
lowly bent With m airs lovelorn, Adeline 55
whose sweet breath Preluded those to bursts D. of F. Women 6
rolling thro' the court A long to thunder Princess ii 476
shadow'd hint confuse A life that leads m days. In Mem. xxxiii 8
like a golden mist Charm'd amid eddies of to airs, Lover's Tale i 450
Melodist mystic to Who all but lost himself Akbar's Dream 92
Melody ancient m Of an inward agony, Claribel 6
Filling with light And vagrant melodies The Poet 17
They were modulated so To an unheard m, Eleanore 64
from Memnon, drew Rivers of melodies. Palace of Art 172
Plenty corrupts the to That made thee famous The Blackbird 15
Wheeling with precipitate paces To the m, Vision of Sin 38
nerve-dissolving to Flutter'd headlong „ 44
And chanted a to loud and sweet. Poet's Song 6
The herald melodies of spring, In Mem. xxxviii 6
M on branch, and m in mid air. Gareth and L. 183
And talk and minstrel m entertain'd. Lancelot and E. 267
half-moulder'd chords To some old to. Lover's Tale i 20
It makes a constant bubbling m That drowns „ 532
Moving to TO, Floated The Gleam. Merlin and the G. 22
Blind to the magic. And deaf to the m, „ 27
landskip darken'd. The m deaden'd, „ 32
Then to the to, Over a wilderness Gliding, „ 36
Then, with a m Stronger and statelier, „ 62
slowly moving again to a m Yearningly tender, „ 90
Melody
Melody {contimied) Gleam ^Ting onward, Wed to
the m,
All her melodies. All her harmonies
Melon A raiser of huge m's and of pine,
m lay hke a little sun on the tawny sand.
The mango spum the m at his foot ?
Melpomene And my M replies,
Melt To the earth — until the ice would m
463
Mercury
I wish the snow would m
And from it m the dews of Paradise
light shall slowly m In many streams
I will m this marble into wax
' embrace me, come. Quick while I m ;
M's mist-like into this bright hour,
M into stars for the land's desire !
And m the waxen hearts of men.'
They m like mist, the solid lands,
A warmth within the breast would m
A purer sapphire m's into the sea.
Give me three days to m her fancy,
And m's within her hand — her hand is hot
as a cloud M's into Heaven.
frost-bead m's upon her golden hair ;
Merlin and the G. 97
To Master of B. 11
Princess, Con. 87
V. of Maeldune 57
Akhar's Dream 39
In Mem. xxxmi 9
Su-pp. Confessions 81
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 15
St. S. StylUes 210
Golden Year 22
Princess Hi 73
„ vi 286
„ vii 355
W. to Alexandra 21
In Mem. xxi 8
„ cxxiii 7
„ cxxiv 13
Maud I xviii 52
Pelleas and E. 356
Last Tournament 414
Ancient Sage 234
Prog, of Spring 10
Melted {See also Half-melted) rites and foi-ms before
Th^ hS"^ ^^^ ^^ "^^ '"°'^- ^f'' Poet 40
Ihe t\vihghtwmtomom. Dav-Dm Deryart ^(^
^nazed and m all who listen'd to it : """^^^ Snul
Which OT Flonan's fancy as she hung, Princess iv 370
Till hi Ti.^ '",^*? ?"T effeminacy ? Marr. of Geraint 107
TiU he m hke a cloud m the silent summer heaven ; The Revenge 14
fcank from their thrones, and to into teare, Columbui 15
Melteth m m the source Of these sad teai^. Lover's STi83
Meltmg m the mighty hearts Of captains D. ^F Warned 175
Member (MJ.) {See also Ciomity Member) The Tory
m's elder son, •' p„We5s Cor, 'lO
Memmian Beyond the M naphtha-pits, AlexaZer4
Memmius Surely to lead my il/ in a tr^n Lu^eS 119
Memnon from il/, drew Rivers of melodies. Palc^T^f Art 171
.¥ smitten with the morning Sun.' PwLLiS 116
Memorial (adj.) I seem'd to move in old m tilts, " Jjt
Their names. Graven on m columns, rJV/.«V„ ^9±
MemonaKs) I stored it full of rich m : PW^^'Hsgi
My sole to Of Edith-no, the other,- Sisters {K^E) 107
nSe a stat^v '* '"" ^'^^^ ''^ ®P^^" ^""^^ 196
Memory Thou de^ dawn of ^. (repeat) O?;.^''^;.^?:'^'^
Unto nune inner eye, Divinest M\ " ' ' ^
Well hast thou done, great artist M " on
Makes thy m confused : " j ^ • ^
The m of the wither'd leaf Two Voices 112
Because my TO is so cold, i^oicesii^
The haunts of to echo not. " 309
must I be Incompetent of to : ' For m dealing but with
time, ^ gyg
His TO scarce can make me sad. Miller's D 16
foundation-stones were laid Since my first m ? ' Palace of Art 236
10 muse and brood and hve agam m m. Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 65
JJear is the to of our wedded hves, 69
No m labours longer from the deep J), of f" Women 273
His m long will hve alone In all our hearts. To J S 49
M standing near Cast down her eyes, ' ' 53
Come Hope and M spouse and bride, On a Mourner 23
o .^edivere Revolving many memories, M. d' Arthur 270
So blunt in TO, so old at heart, Gardener's D. 53
And sure this orbit of the to folds 74
while I mused came M with sad eyes, " 243
Now the most blessed to of mine age. " 279
he will learn to slight His father's to ; " Dora 154
For calmer hours to M's darkest hold, Z<we and Duty 90
Drug thy rnemones, lest thou learn it, Locksley hJi 77
a thousand memories roU upon him, Enoch Arden 724
Uld and a mme of rnemones— Aylmer's Field 10
leit tneir memories a world's curse — nga
Memory (continued) From out a common vein of to
Sweet household talk.
Rose from the distance on her m,
And out of rnem^ries of her kindlier days
brawhng memories all too free
From whence clear m may begin,
To count their memories half divine ;
I hear a wind Of m mui-muring the past.
The m like a cloudless air,
Or ev'n for intellect to reach Thro' to
Memories of bridal, or of birth.
Some gracious m of my friend ;
year by year our to fades From aU the circle of the hills
In lands where not a m strays,
To whom a thousand memories call,
My drooping w will not shun The foaming grape
Mix not TO with doubt, ^ ^ f
These to His Jl/— since he held them dear,
TO of that cognizance on shield Weighted
TO of that token on the shield Relax'd his hold •
No TO in me lives ;
Vext her with plaintive memories of the child :
Then ran across her m the strange rhyme
sweet memories Of Tristram in that year he was
away.'
O sweeter than aU memories of thee,
pine and waste in those sweet memories.
Nor let me shame my father's m.
Her TO from old habit of the mind Went slipping back
Princess ii 314
vi 112
vii 106
Ode on Well. 248
In Mem. xlv 10
xc 12
„ xcii 8
„ xciv 11
„ xcv 48
■, xcix 15
c4
«23
„ civ 10
,. cxi 10
Con. 79
Maud II iv 57
Ded. of Idylls 1
Balin and Balan 224
369
Holy Grail 535
Last Tournament 29
131
579
585
598
Guinevere 318
379
Lover's Tale i 36
129
277
291
333
335
Sir Bedivere Revolving many memories, " ' Pass, of Arthur 438
The m's vision hath a keener edge. - • ~ - ^ -
gamer'd up Into the granaries of to—
Doth question'd to answer not.
Which are as gems set in my m,
A land of promise, a land of to,
milk And honey of deUcious memories !
my name has been A hallow'd m like the names of old
A center'd, glory-circled to, '
Ye cannot shape Fancy so fair as is this vi.
At last she sought out M, and they trod
And M fed the soul of Love with tears.
Within the magic cirque of to.
Which yet retains a m of its youth,
Unvenerable will thy to be While men
My memories of his briefer day
break thro' clouded memories once again
A virgin victim to his to.
Or is it some half to of a dream ?
Is TO with your Marian gone to rest,
Menace When was age so cramm'd with m ?
Menacing beat back The to poison of intolerant
priests,
Men-at-arms m-a-a, A score with pointed lances
Men-children gauds m-c swarm to see
Mend {See also CJlump) How m the dwellings, of the
poor ;
Mended (adj.) Our m fortunes and a Prince's
bride :
Mended (verb) Robins — a niver to a fence :
Mene Wrote ' M, to,' and divided quite
Menial bad his m's bear him from the door,
Menceceus M, thou hast eyes, and I can hear
Mental Wanting the m range ;
Mention seal'd book, all w of the ring
Mention'd bill I to half an hour ago ? '
when the day, that Enoch to, came,
Men-tommies Ye be wiiss nor the m-t.
Merchant As tho' they brought but m's' bales,
market frets or charms The m's hope no more •
Merchantman served a year On board a m '
Mercian Mighty the M, Hard was his hand-play
Merciful were any bounteous, to, '
Merciless big voice, big chest, big to hands !
Mercury as it were with M's ankle-wing,
M On such a morning would have flung himself
445
548
820
822
ii 159
Sisters {E. and E.) 66
Tiresias 132
To Marq. of Dufferin 51
Demeter and P. 10
The Ring 221
422
To Mary Boyle 13
Locksley H., Sixty 108
Akhar's Dream 165
Balin and Balan 400
To W. C. Macready 11
To F. D. Maurice 38
Marr. of Geraint 718
N. Farmer, 0. S. 50
Palace of Art 227
Lover's Tale iv 260
Tiresias 90
Merlin and V. 827
The Ring 123
Day-Dm., Revival 28
Enoch Arden 239
Spinster's S's. 93
In Mem. xiii 19
Ancient Sage 141
En/)ch Arden 53
Batt. of Brunanburh 43
Gareth and L. 423
In the Child. Hosp. 4
Lucretitis 201
Lover's Tale i 300
Mercy
464
Merriment
Mercy (See also Marcy) 0 God ! my God ! have
m now.
God in his m lend her grace.
He taught me all the m,
Have m, Lord, and take away my sin.
Have m, m : take away my sin.
Have m, m ! cover all my sin.
0 m, m ! wash away my sin.
And ah God's «i, what a stroke was there !
His m choked me.
' Full of compassion and m, (repeat)
Mere (adj.) M chaff and draff, much better burnt.'
and this A m love-poem !
M fellowship of sluggish moods,
had the thing I spake of been M gold —
Full cowardly, or by m unhappiness.
Hast overthrown thro' m unhappiness),
1 know not, all thro' m unhappiness—
O Gareth — thro' the m imhappiness
And molten down in m uxoriousness.
Is melted into m effeminacy ?
whose lightest word Is m white truth
a m child Might use it to the harm of anyone,
what was once to me M matter of the fancy,
What I by w mischance have brought, my
shield.
M want of gold —
Mere (s) (See also Mountain-mere) curls And
ripples of an inland m ?
Crimsons over an inland m.
When m's begin to uncongeal.
And fling him far into the middle m :
Or voice, or else a motion of the m.
and paced beside the m,
and drew him under in the m. (repeat)
And on the m the wailing died away.
in the deeps whereof a m, Round as the red eye
' They have bound my lord to cast him in the m.
and there, blackshadow'd nigh the m,
then in the m beside Tumbled it ; oilily bubbled
the m.
flickering in a grimly light Dance on the m.
in her arms She bare me, pacing on the
dusky m.
And fling me deep in that forgotten m.
Wealthy with wandering lines of mount and m,
and in the sleepy m below Blood-red.
hundred m's About it, as the water Moab saw
star in heaven, a star within the m !
O ay — the winds that move the m.'
And fling him far into the middle m :
Or voice, or else a motion of the m.
and paced beside the m,
and drew him under in the m. (repeat)
And on the m the wailing died away.
heron rises from his watch beside the m.
Merely Nor in a m selfish cause —
Merge m ' he said ' in form and gloss
Merged But long disquiet m in rest.
fulfill'd itself, M in completion ?
in this glory I had m The other,
Merides ' Phosfhohus,' then ' M ' — ' Hespebus ' —
Merit (S) For m lives from man to man.
Who makes by force his m known
That were a public m, far,
You found some m in my rhymes,
Merit (verb) is it I can have done to m this ?
may m well Your term of overstrain'd.
Merk (mark) fur the m's o' thy shou'der yit ;
Merle (See also Blackbird) lark, mavis, m, Linnet ?
Merlin M sware that I should come again
and one Is M, the wise man
one Is M's master (so they call him) Bleys,
wrote All things and whatsoever M did
Deliver'd at a secret postern-gate To M,
Suvf. Confess ns 1
L. of Shalott iv 53
May Queen, Con. 17
St. S. Stylites 8
45
84
120
Lancelot and E. 24
Guinevere 616
Rizpah 62, 63
The Epic 40
Princess iv 126
In Mem. xxxv 21
Gareth and L. 66
768
1059
1234
„ .1237
Marr. of Geraint 60
107
Balin and Balan 518
Merlin and V. 684
924
Lancelot and E. 189
The Ring 428
Swpf. Confessions 131
Eleanore 42
Two Voices 407
M. d' Arthur 37
77
83
„ 146,161
272
Gareth and L. 798
803
up
815
827
Lancelot and E. 1411
1426
Holy Grail 252
475
Last Tournament 481
732
738
Pass, of Arthur 205
245
251
„ 814,329
440
Happy 3
Two Voices 147
In Mem. Ixxxix 41
Two Voices 2-^^
Gardener's D. 239
Lover's Tale i 506
Gareth and L. 1204
In Mem., Pro. 35
„ Ixiv 9
Maud II V 91
To E. Fitzgerald b6
St. S. StyliUs 134
Merlin arid V. 534
Owd Boa 90
Gareth and L. 1078
M. d' Arthur 23
Com. of Arthur 151
153
157
214
Merlin (continued) Wherefore M took the child,
And gave him to Sir Anton,
when M (for his hour had come) Brought Arthur
Yet M thro' his craft,
' And there I saw mage M,
old M counsell'd him, ' Take thou and strike !
Or brought by M, who, they say,
For Bleys, our M's master, as they say.
And M ever served about the King,
and rode to M's feet, Who stoop t and caught
I met M, and ask'd him if these things were tiiith —
' So M riddling anger'd me ;
and M in our time Hath spoken also,
drave the heathen hence by sorcery And M's
glamour.'
To plunge old M in the Arabian sea ;
Which AI's hand, the Mage at Arthur's court.
At M's feet the wily Vivien lay.
M, who knew the range of all their arts.
Then fell on M a great melancholy ;
And then she follow'd M all the way.
For M once had told her of a charm,
' O M, do ye love me ? ' (repeat)
M lock'd his hand in hers and said, (repeat)
O, M, teach it me.
0 M, may this earth, if ever I,
M loosed his hand from hers and said,
M look'd and half beheved her tme.
Then answer'd M careless of her words :
Then answer'd M, ' Nay, I know the tale.
M answer'd, ' Overquick art thou To catch
M answer'd careless of her charge,
M to his own heart, loathing, said :
Vivien, deeming M overborne By instance,
' 0 M, tho' you do not love me, save,
her M, the one passionate love Of her whole life ;
M, overtalk'd and overworn. Had yielded,
Fashion'd by M ere he past away,
M call'd it ' The Siege perilous,'
M sat In his own chair, and so was lost ;
Galahad, when he heard of M's doom, Cried,
Galahad would sit down in M's chair.
Which M built for Arthur long ago !
Climbs to the mighty hall that M built,
mould Of Arthur, made by M, with a crown,
In horror lest the work by M wrought.
And from the statue M moulded for us
that Gawain flred The hall of M,
saw High up in heaven the hall that M built,
ran across her memory the strange rhyme Of
bygone M,
M's mystic babble about his end Amazed me ;
M sware that I should come again
/ am M, And / am dying, 7 am M Who follow
The Gleam.
Mermaid With the m's in and out of the rocks.
Who would be A m fair,
1 would be a m fair ;
Mermaiden He heard a fierce m cry.
And in the light the white m swam,
Merman Who would be A m bold,
I would be a m bold,
And all the mermen under the sea
and play With the mermen in and out of the rocks ;
bold merry mermen under the sea ;
Com. of Arthur 221
228
234
280
306
347
360
365
384
398
412
419
Gareth and L. 205
211
306
Merlin and V. 5
167
189
203
205
„ 235, 236
„ 290, 470
331
345
356
400
700
713
726
754
790
800
944
955
965
Holy GraU 168
172
175
177
181
226
231
239
259
732
Pelleas and E. 518
553
Last Tournament 132
670
Pass, of Arthur 191
Merlin and the G. 7
The Merman 12
The Mermaid 2
9
Sailor Boy 6
Guinevere 245
The Merman 2
8
The Mermaid 28
34
42
Merrier The m, prettier, wittier, as they talk. Sisters (E. and E.) 286
Merriest Of all the glad New-year, mother, the
maddest m day ; May Queen 3
To-morrow 'ill be of all the year the maddest m day, „ 43
Sounds happier than the m marriage-bell. D. of the Duke of C. 11
Merrily Chasing each other m. The Merman 20
All night, m, m ; (repeat) „ 27, 30
We would Uve m, m. „ 40
Merrily-blowing m-h shrill'd the martial fife ; Princess v 251
Merriment With m of kingly pride, Arabian Nights 151
Merriment
465
Meteorite
And moved to w at a passing
Merriment (continued)
jest.
Merry The m glees are still ;
Ye m souls, farewell.
When m milkmaids click the latch,
In the heart of the garden the m bird chants.
For m brides are we :
Of the bold m mermen under the sea ;
How the m bluebell rings
A m boy in sun and shade ? 'Aw boy they call'd
him then,
I said, ' O Soul, make m and carouse.
Last May we made a crown of flowers : we
had a m day ; May Queen, N.
Sisters E. and E. 121
All Things will Die 23
36
The Owl i 8
Poet's Mind 22
Sea- Fairies 33
The Mermaid 42
Adeline 34
Two Voices 321
Palace of Art 3
Y's. E. 9
But all his m quips are o'er.
Hark, my m comrades call me.
And many a m wind was borne,
He laugh'd a laugh of m scorn :
We knew the m world was roimd,
W'e know the m world is round.
And make him m, when I come home again.
How m they are down yonder in the wood.
Clash, ye hells, in the m March air !
Be m, all birds, to-day. Be m on earth as you never
were m before. Be m in heaven, O larks, and far
away. And m for ever and ever, and one day
more.
O m the linnet and dove,
0 m my heart, you have gotten the wings of love,
The m m bells of Yule.
A m song we sang with him Last year :
Many a m face Salutes them —
Go in and out as if at w play,
1 -ear. Fantastically m ;
' Full m am I to find my goodly knave
And we wiU make us m as we may.
Then, when the Prince was m, ask'd Limours
And m maidens in it ;
And blew my m maidens all about
should ye try him with a m one To find his mettle.
Open gates, And I will make you m.'
Down in the cellars m bloated things
m linnet knew me. The squirrel knew me.
Four m bells, four m marriage-beUs,
Married among the red berries, an' all as m as May
Lest the false faith make m over them !
in many a m tale That shook our sides —
Merrymaking our friends are all forsaking The wine
n. of the 0. Year 29
Locksley Hall 145
Day- Dm., Depart. 14
Lady Clare 81
The Voyage 7
95
Enoch Arden 199
389
W. to Alexandra 18
Window, Ay 1
13
15
In Mem. xxviii 20
„ XXX 15
„ Con. 66
Maud I xviii 31
„ xix 101
Gareth and L. 1291
Marr. of Geraint 373
Geraint and E. 297
Holy Grail 746
748
Pelleas and E. 198
374
Guinevere 267
Lover's Tale ii 15
Hi 21
- First Quarrel 40
Sir J. Oldcastle 82
91
and the m.
no more of mirth Is here or m-m sound,
while the rest were loud in m-m,
Mersey New-comers from the M,
Meseems ' M, that here is much discovu-tesy.
Is all as good, m, as any knight
My quest, m, is here.
Mesh In m's of the jasmine and the rose :
Message with His m ringing in thine ears.
They flash'd a saucy m to and fro
I brought a m here from Lady Blanche.'
He ceasing, came a m from the Head.
With m and defiance, went and came ;
in this Book, little Annie, the m is one of Peace.
Some dolorous m knit below
TiU on mine ear this m falls,
Yniol with that hard m went ;
Save that he sware me to a m, saying,
And waited for her m, piece by piece
Messenger Then came in hall the m of Mark,
Messuage lands in Kent and m's in York,
Met (See also Chance-met) ' And statesmen at her
council m
talking to himself, fii-st m his sight :
Methought that I had often m with you.
They m with two so full and bright—
And angels rising and descending m
All Things will Die 19
Deserted House 14
Enoch Arden 77
Edwin Morris 10
Gareth and L. 853
1017
Balin and Balan 552
Princess i 219
Aylmer's Field 666
Princess, Pro. 78
ii 319
,, lii 168
V 370
Grandmother 96
In Mem. xii 3
„ Ixxxv 18
Marr. of Geraint 763
Last Tournament 76
Lover's Tale iv 146
Gareth and L. 384
Edwin Morris 127
To the Queen 29
Love and Death 6
Sonnet To 13
Miller's D. 86
Palace of Art 143
Met ^continued) When thus he m his mother's view, L. C. V. de Vere 34
(j'or as once we m Unheedful, Gardener's D. 265
I TO my lady once : Walk, to the Mail 48
those moments when we m. The crown of all, we
m to part no more.' Edwin Morris 69
we TO ; one hour I had, no more : „ 104
I am a part of all that I have m ; Ulysses 18
M me walking on yonder way, Edward Gray 2
then we to in wrath and wrong. We m, but only
meant to part. The Letters 11
He TO the baUiff at the Golden Fleece, The Brook 146
Yet once by night again the lovers to, Aylmer's Field 413
I TO him suddenly in the street, Sea Dreams 146
Here Cyril to us. A little shy at first. Princess v 44
a lie which is all a lie may be to and fought with
outright. Grandmother 31
Meadows in which we to ! Window, Marr. Morn. 8
And ever m him on his way In Mem. vi 22
And all we to was fair and good, „ xxiii 17
If all was good and fair we to, „ xxiv 5
From every house the neighbours to, „ xxxi 9
I m with scoffs, I to with scorns „ Ixix 9
For other friends that once I to ; „ Ixxxv 58
Where God and Nature to in light ; „ cxi 20
Unpalsied when he to with Death, „ cxxviii 2
I TO her to-day with her brother, Maud I iv 14
To entangle me when we to, „ vi 28
blush'd To find they were to by my own ; „ viii 7
Alas for her that to me, „ // iv 75
I TO Merlin, and ask'd hira if these things Com. of A rthur 397
knave, anon thou shalt be to with, knave, Gareth and L. 779
Whom Gareth to midstream : no room was there „ 1041
Gareth overthrew him, lighted, drew, There to him
drawn, „ 1122
when they to In twos and threes, Marr. of Geraint 56
then descending to them at the gates, „ 833
M his f uU frown timidly firm, Geraint and E. 71
m The scomer in the castle court, Balin and Balan 386
Had TO her, Vivien, being greeted fair. Merlin and V. 155
would often when they to Sigh fuUy, „ 181
here we to, some ten or twelve of us, „ 407
two brothers, one a king, had to And fought Lancelot and E 39
And oft they to among the garden yews, „ 645
They to, and Lancelot kneeling utter'd, „ 1179
He raised his head, their eyes to and hers fell, „ 1312
M foreheads all along the street Holy Grail 344
' And then, with small adventure to, „ 660
And steps that to the breaker ! „ 816
The men who to him rounded on their heels Pelleas and E. 142
he TO A cripple, one that held a hand for alms — „ 541
Flush'd, started, to him at the doors. Last Tournament 512
But barken ! have ye met him ? „ 529
And still they to and to. Again she said, Guinevere 94
Passion-pale they to And greeted. „ 99
We turn'd ; our eyes m : hers were bright, Lover's Tale i 441
Parted a little ere they to the floor, „ iv 215
their breath to us out on the seas, V. of Maeldune 37
' would God, we had never to ! ' The Wreck 102
Here we to, our latest meeting — Locksley H., Sixty 177
Like a clown — by chance he to me — „ 256
century's three strong eights have to To Ulysses 7
For ere she left us, when we to. To Mary Boyle 15
Have I not to you somewhere long ago ? Romney's R. 18
when I TO you first — when he brought you ! — Charity 9
Metal Bright to all without alloy. Rosalind 21
Metaphysics she cried, ' you love The to ! Princess Hi 300
Mete And to the bounds of hate and love — Two Voices 135
I TO and dole Unequal laws unto a savage race, Ulysses 3
Meted As to by his measure of himself, Aylmer's Field 316
Meteor Some bearded m, trailing light, L. of Shalott Hi 26
The TO of a splendid season, she, Aylmer's Field 205
like a new-f all'n to on the grass, Princess vi 135
Now slides the silent to on, „ vii 184
While thou, a to of the sepulchre. Lover's Tale i 99
Meteorite and your fiery clash of m's ? God and the Univ. 3
2 G
Methinks
466
Mightiest
Methinks m Some ruth is mine for thee.
VI There rides no knight, not Lancelot,
Method M's of transplanting trees
Methody-man ' Thou'rt but a M-m,' says Parson,
Methought yet to I saw the Holy GraU,
m The cloud was rifted by a purer gleam
Metre meUow m's more than cent for cent ;
All composed in a m of Catullus,
So fantastical is the dainty m.
Metrification Thro' this to of Catullus,
Metropolis And gray m of the North.
Above some fair m, earth-shock'd, —
Mettle It stirr'd the old wife's to :
try him with a merry one To find his to, good :
Mew (sea-gull) Here it is only the to that wails;
and wail'd about \vith m's.
Mew (cry of a cat) M ! m ! — Bess wi' the milk !
Mewin (mewing) what art'a to at, Steevie ?
Mexico lavish growths of southern M.
Michael But M trampling Satan ;
Michael Angelo The bar of M A.
Michaelmas for Squoire coom M thutty year.
Microcosm holy secrets of this m.
Gareth and L. 894
1181
Amfhion 79
North. Cobbler 89
Holy Grail 846
Alcbar's Dream 11
The Brook 5
Hendecasyllabics 4
"„ 10
The Daisy 104
Lover's Tale ii 62
The Goose 26
PelleasandE. 199
Sea-Fairies 19
Princess iv 282
Spinster's S's. 113
41
Mine be thy strength 14
Last Tournament 673
In Mem. Ixxxvii 40
N. Farmer, 0. 8. 48
Princess Hi 313
Mid birds made Melody on branch, and melody in
m air. Gareth and L. 183
In the m might and flourish of his May, Lancelot and E. 554
and started thro' m. air Bearing an eagle's nest : Last Tournament 14
life Being smitten in m heaven with mortal cold „ 27
as a stream that spouting from a cliff Fails in to air, Guinevere 609
Like some conjectured planet in to heaven Pnw. Beatrice 20
and like May-blossoms in to autumn — The Ring 255
Yet you in your m manhood — B.ajypy 47
Mid-banqnet in m-b measuring with his eyes Pelleas and E. 150
Mid-channel in the gurgling wave M-c. Princess iv 188
Mid-day Jet upward thro' the m-d blossom. Demeter and P. 47
Midder (meadow) an' the m's as white, Owd Rod 31
Middle (adj.) The living airs of to night Died round Arabian Nights 69
ShriU music reach'd them on the to sea. Sea-Fairies 6
And fling him far into the m mere : M. d' Arthur 37
But Enoch shunn'd the to walk and stole Up by
the wall, Enoch Arden 738
but in the to aisle Reel'd, Aylmer's Field 818
As in some mystic to state I lay ; Princess vi 18
In TO ocean meets the surging shock, Will 8
The nightingale, full-toned in m May, Balin and Balan 213
As the poach'd filth that floods the to street, Merlin and V. 798
all in to street the Queen Who rode by Lancelot, Holy Grail 355
And fling him far into the to mere : Pass, of Arthur 205
Who toils across the to moonlit nights. Loner's Tale i 138
with such sudden deluges of light Into the to summer ; „ 316
All the west And ev'n unto the to south was ribb'd „ 415
And slowly pacing to the m hall, „ iv 306
For the Spring and the m Siunmer sat V. of Maeldune 38
Middle (s) It was the to of the day. Dying Swan 8
And in the m, of the green salt sea Mine be the strength 7
one great dwelling in the to of it ; Holy Grail 574
All in the m of the rising moon : „ 636
Middle-day each was as dry as a cricket, with thirst in
the m^d heat. V. of Maeldune 50
Mid-dome day hung From his m-d in Heaven's Lover's Tale i 66
Mid-forest that low lodge retum'd, M-f, Last Tournament 489
black brooks Of the m heard me — Lover's Tale ii 12
Mid-beaven Grown on a magic oak-tree in mrh, Last Tournament 745
the sloping seas Hung in m-h. Lover's Tale i 4
Midmost (adj.) in the m heart of grief Thy passion
clasps a secret joy : In Mem. Ixxxviii 1
for save he be Fool to the m marrow of his bones, Pelleas and E. 258
Hidmost (s) the to and the highest Was Arac : Princess v 256
And at the m charging. Prince Geraint Geraint and E. 85
Midnight At m the moon cometh, Claribel 13
Ask the sea At TO, Supp. Confessions 126
At TO the cock was crowing, Oriana 12
When TO bells cease ringing suddenly, D. of F. Women 247
rode till to when the college Hghts Princess i 207
sitting on a hill Sees the midsummer, to, „ iv 575
Midnight (continued) but rode Ere to to her walls.
As rain of the midsiunmer m soft,
burnt at to, found at mom,
M — in no midsummer tune The breakers
M — and joyless June gone by,
And thro' this to breaks the sun
forth again Among the wail of to winds.
On a to in midwinter when all but the winds
Midnight-maned their arch'd necks, to-to,
Midnoon It was the deep to :
Mid-November For as a leaf in m-N is
Mid-ocean Than labour in the deep m-o,
whatever tempest mars M-o, spare thee,
one A vessel in m-o, her heaved prow Clambering,
Mid-October To what it was in m-0,
Midriff Sprang from the to of a prostrate king —
shake The m of despair with laughter.
Mid-sickness great knight in this m-s made
Midst Over the throne In the m of the hall ;
And every maige enclosing in the m
Midstream Whom Gareth met to :
Midsimmier sitting on a hill Sees the to, midnight,
As rain of the to midnight soft,
in the gleam of those m-s dawns,
as when an hour of cold Falls on the mountain
in TO snows,
Here one, black, mute to night I sat. Lonely,
Midnight — in no to tune The breakers lash
the shores :
Mid-thigh-deep m-t-d in bulrushes and reed,
Mid-warmth In the m-w of welcome and grasp t
Midway m down the side of that long hall
Midwinter (adj.) And on this white to day —
Midwinter (s) On a midnight in to when all but the
winds
Mien One her dark hair and lovesome to.
then Kay, a man of to Wan-saUow
But scarce of such majestic m
Might (See also Mowt) Losing his fire and active m
with increasing to doth forward flee
O Love, Love, Love ! O withering to !
Dehver not the tasks of to To weakness,
smote on aU the chords with to ;
Toward that great year of equal m's and rights.
That I could wing my will with w
with TO To scale the heaven's highest height.
Her hkewise would I worship an I to
Pelleas and E. 413
Lover's Tale i 722
Locksley H., Sixty 97
Pref. Poem Broth. S. 1
9
21
Demeter and P. 59
The Dreamer 1
Deineter and P. 46
(EnoneQ2
Marr. of Geraint 611
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 127
In Mem. xvii 14
Lover's Tale ii 169
Marr. of Geraint 612 ^
Aylmer's Field 16
Princess i 201
Lancelot and E. 878
The Mermaid 22
Merlin and V. 670
Gareth and L. 1041
Princess iv 575
Lover's Tale i 722
The Ring 183
Last Tournament 228
612 i
Pref. Poem. Broth. S. 1
Gareth and L. 810
Geraint and E. 280
Gareth and L. 404 j
To Master of B. 9 |
The Dreainer 1
Beggar Maid 12 ]
Gareth and L. 452
Freedom 6 !
Elednore 104 j
Mine be the strength 5 ]
Fatima 1 i
Love thou thy land 13
Locksley Hall 33 1
Princess iv 74 1
In Mem. xli 10 1
„ cviii 6 I
Balin and Balan 185
376
Lancelot and E. 554
Pelleas and E. 151
Last Tournament 198
Marr. of Geraint 95
TO, Name, manhood, and a grace, but scantly thine.
In the mid to and flourish of his May,
His neighbour's make and to :
Strength of heart And m of limb,
Mightful And watch his to hand striking great blows
M^htier Because things seen are to than things
heard, Enoch Arden 766
And TO of his hands with every blow. Com. of Arthur 110
Wave after wave, each to than the last, ,, 379
Blow, for our Sun is to day by day ! „
So make thy manhood to day by day ; Gareth and L. 92
we be TO men than all In Arthur's court ; Balin and Balan 33
Did TO deeds than ekewise he had done. Last Tournament 680
One twofold to than the other was, Lover's Tale i 211
Never with to glory than when we had rear'd thee
on high Def. of Lucknow 3
Has breathed a race of m mountaineers. Montenegro 14
Only That which made us, meant us to be to
by and by.
When one might meet a to than himself ;
withheld His older and his to from the lists,
Mightiest But Arthur to on the battle-field —
and a fourth And of that four the to,
Then others, following these my m knights,
Spain then the to, wealthiest realm on earth.
His isle, the to Ocean-power on earth,
we needs must learn Which is our to,
Thou TO and thou purest among men ! '
Locksley H., Sixty 209
Gareth and L. 1350
Pelleas and E. 160
Gareth and L. 496
615
Guinevere 489
Columbus 205
The Fleet 6
Lancelot and E. 65
Holy GraU 426
Mightiest
467
MiU
Itiest (cmitinued) ' my friend, Our hi, hath this
Quest avaii'd for thee ? ' ' Our m ! ' answer'd
Lancelot, with a groan ; Holy Grail 765
Yea, made our m madder than our least. „ 863
my right arm The m of my knights, Guinevere 430
llty As when a m people rejoice With shawms, Joying Swan 31
What time the m moon was gathering light Love and Death 1
A m silver bugle hmig, L. of Shalott Hi 16
row Of cloist«rs, branch'd like m woods. Palace of Art 26
melting the m hearts Of captains and of kings. D. of F. Women 175
fragments of her tn voice Came i*olling on the
wind. Of old sat Freedom 7
New Majesties of m States — Love thou thy land 60
Where lay the w bones of ancient men, M. d' Arthur 47
Stored in some treasure-house of m kings, „ 101
^Vhich was an image of the m world ; „ 235
Let this avail, just, dreadful, m Grod, St. S. Stylites 9
For the m wind arises, roaring seaward, and I go. Lockdey HaU 194
To sleep thro' terms of m wars. Day- Dm., L' Envoi 9
The tavern-hours of m wits — Will Water. 191
and Hoods Of m mouth, we scudded fast, The Voyage 46
Soft fruitage, m nuts, and nourishing roots ; Enoch Arden 555
And m courteous in the main — Aylmer's Field 121
^\Tiich things appear the work of m Gods. Lucretius 102
I wish I were Some m poetess. Princess, Pro. 132
Then those eight m daughters of the plough „ iv 550
To the noise of the mourning of a m nation. Ode on Well. 4
-1/ Seaman, this is he Was great by land „ 83
M Seaman, tender and true, „ 134
thou shalt be the m one yet ! Boddicea 40
When TO Love would cleave in twain In Mem. xxv 10
To mould a m state's decrees, „ Ixiv 11
The m hopes that make us men. „ Ixxxv 60
I seem as nothing in the m world, Com. of Arthur 87
Seeing the m swarm about their walls, „ 200
' Blow, for our Sun is m in his May ! „ 497
And all these four be fools, but m men, Gareih and L. 643
And m thro' thy meats and drinks am I, (repeat) „ 650, 862
For here be m men to joust with, „ 880
four strokes they struck With sword, and these were m ; „ 1043
he loosed a m puise, Hung at his belt.
But like a m patron, satisfied
letting her left hand Droop from his m shoulder.
To cross om* in Lancelot in his loves !
His battle-writhen arms and to hands
' O brother, had you known our m hall.
Climbs to the m hall that Merlin built.
• And I rode on and found a m hill.
Where lay the m bones of ancient men.
Stored in some treasure-house of m kings.
Framing the m landscape to the west,
shower'd down Rays of a m circle,
in gyres Rapid and vast, of hissing spray wind-driven
And bearing high in arms the m babe,
And the men that were m of tongue
M the Mercian, Hard was his hand-play,
Thrice from the dyke he sent his m shout,
as mellow and deep As a psalm by a m master
We founded many a m state ;
M the Wizard Who found me at sunrise
Bards, that the m Muses have raised
You, the TO, the Fortunate,
For thio' the Magic Of Him the M,
'•: Jlighty-moath'd O m-m inventor of harmonies.
Mignonette A long green box of m,
parlour-window and the box of m,
But miss'd the m of Vivian-place,
I Jlilan 0 M, 0 the chanting quires,
I Jlild Throbbing in m imrest holds him beneath
beheld Thy m deep eyes upraised,
I have not lack'd thy m reproof,
' His Ups are very m and meek :
With measured footfall firm and to.
She with a subtle smile in her m eyes,
one band grasp'd The m bull's golden horn.
Geraint and E. 22
644
.yerlin and V. 243
Lancelot and E. 688
812
Holy Grail 225
231
421
Pass, of Arthur 215
269
Lover's Tale i 406
418
m197
w295
V. of Maeldune 23
Bait, of Brunanburh 43
Achilles over the T. 30
The Wreck 53
Hands all Round 30
Merlin and the G.W.
Parnassus 2
On Jub. Q. Victoria 55
Merlin and the G. 114
Milton 1
MUler's D. 83
May Queen, .Y. Y's. E.48
Princess, Pro. 165
The Daisy 57
Leonine Eleg. 12
Supp. Confessions 74
My life is full 4
Two Voices 250
413
CEnone 184
Palace of Art 120
Mild (continued) Beside him Shakespeare bland and m ; Palace of Art 134
by slow prudence to make in A rugged people, Ulysses 36
My mother was as to as any saint. Princess i 22
meek Seem'd the full Ups, and to the luminous eyes, „ vii 226
The stem were m when thou wert by, In Mem. ex 9
A higher hand must make her to, „ cxiv 17
With difiBculty in in obedience Driving them on : Geraint and E. 104
Fearing the to face of the blameless King, ,, 812
■Who, with TO heat of holy oratory, „ 866
However m he seems at home, nor cares Lancelot and E. 311
Mflder M than any mother to a sick child, „ 858
with flame M and purer. Lover's Tale i 323
Simn'd with a summer of to heat. To Prof. Jebh 8
Mildew'd Who had to in their thousands, Aylmer's Field 383
Mild-eyed The m-e melancholy Lotos-eaters Lotos- Eaters 27
Mild-minded the influence of m-m melancholy ; Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 64
Mile A TO beneath the cedar-wood. Elednore 8
Keeps his blue wat«rs fresh for many a to. Mine be the strength 8
Ten to's to northward of the narrow port Enoch Arden 102
the long laborious m's Of Palace ; Ode Inter. Exhib. 11
Flash for a million to's. Window, Marr. Mom. 24
I was walking a to. More than a to Maud I ix 1
A m beneath the forest, Balin and Balan 12
race thro' many a to Of dense and open, „ 423
province with a hundred to's of coast, (repeat) Merlin and V. 588, 647
But for a TO all round was open space, Pdleas and E. 28
flash a million m's a day. Locksley H., Sixty 204
Glows in the blue of fifty to's away. Roses on the T. 8
Milk (See also Wolf's-milk) I fed you with the m of
every Muse ; Princess iv 295
The TO that bubbled in the paU, In Mem. Ixxxix 51
clean as blood of babes, as white as to : Merlin and V. 344
Seethed hke the kid in its own mother's to ! „ 869
TO From burning spurge, honey from homet^combs. Last Tournament 356
land of promise flowing with the to And honey Lover's Tale i 334
Hafe a pint o' to runs out Village Wife 4
the babe Will suck in with his to hereafter — Columbus 38
Who Uve on to and meal and grass ; To E. Fitzgerald 13
M for my sweet-arts, Bess ! Spinster's S's. 1
thou'd not 'a been worth thy to, „ 54
Mew ! mew ! — Bess wi' the in ! „ 113
Innocence seethed in her mother's in, Vastness 9
nui-se my children on the to of Truth, Akbar's Dream 162
Milk-bloom One long m-h on the tree ; Maud I xxii 46
Milkier And to every milky sail In Mem. cxv 11
Millring The milkmaid left her to, and fell Holy Grail 406
Milking-maid burnt the grange, nor buss'd the m-m, Princess v 222
Milkmaid When merry to's click the latch. The Owl i 8
The TO left her milking, and fell down Holy Grail 406
Milk-white opening out his m-w palm Disclosed a fruit QLnone 65
Now droops the to peacock like a ghost. Princess vii 180
Ah Maud, you m fawn, you are all immeet for a wife. Maud I iv 57
There with her to arms and shadowy hah- Guinevere 416
Milky hke morning doves That sun their to bosoms Princess ii 103
The soft and to rabble of womankind, „ vi 309
if below the to steep Some ship of battle To F. D. Maurice 25
And milkier every to sail On ^vinding stream In Mem. cxv 11
Struck up and hved along the to roofs ; Lancelot and E. 409
either in arm Red-rent with hooks of bramble, Holy Grail 210
Old in fables of the wolf and sheep, Pelleas and E. 196
Milky-bell'd A m-b amaryllis blew. The Daisy 16
Milky-way this, a m-w on earth, Aylmer's Field 160
Milky-white Taller than all his fellows, m-w, Marr. of Geraint 150
Mill Thro' quiet meadows round the to, Miller's D. 98
The deep brook groan'd beneath the m ; ,, 113
To yon old m across the wolds ; „ 240
long street climbs to one taU-tower'd to ; Enoch Arden 5
narrow street that clamber'd towsird the to. „ 60
flour From his tall to that whistled on the waste. „ 343
Lords of his house and of his to were they ; „ 351
Blanch'd with his to, they foimd ; ,, 367
climbing street, the to, the leafy lanes, „ 607
an' I runs oop to the to ; N. Farmer, N. S. 54
' ground in yonder social to We rub each other's
angles down, In Mem. Ixxxix 39
MiU
468
Mind
In the Child. Hosp. 14
The Ring 156
Miller's D. 50
The Kraken 6
Aylmer's Field 514
Two Voices 89
Miller's D. 1
„ 169
Enoch Arden 13
804
Maud / m 43
Arabian Nights 124
Ode to Memory 35
Two Voices 30
Palace of Art 138
Princess iv 101
Mill (cow<inM?<i) Caught in a ot and crush'd —
Then home, and past the ruin'd m.
Blilldam The m rushing down with noise,
Millenial Huge sponges of m growth and height ;
Raking in that m touchwood-dust
Millennimn let Thy feet, m's hence, be set
Miller I see the wealthy m yet,
It is the m's daughter,
Philip Ray the m's only son,
' This m's wife ' He said to Miriam
Millinery That jewell'd mass of m,
Million A m tapers flaring bright
Was cloven with the m stars which tremble
In yonder hundred m spheres ? '
A TO wiinkles carved his skin ;
And cheep and tmtter twenty m loves.
Over the world to the end of it Flash for a m
miles. Window, Marr. Morn. 24
A TO emeralds break from the ruby-budded lime Maud I iv 1
And a to horrible bellowing echoes broke „ // i 24
Whirl'd for a to aeons thro' the vast Waste dawn De Prof., Two G. 3
wild mob's m feet Will kick you from your place, The Fleet 18
but a trouble of ants in the gleam of a to million of
suns ? Vastness 4
men of a hundred thousand, a to summers away ? The Dawn 25
joy thro' all Her trebled m's, To the Queen ii 9
m's under one Imperial sceptre now, Locksley H., Sixty 117
AU the m's one at length with all the visions „ 162
and her thousands to's, then — „ 171
To those dark m's of her realm ! Hands all Round 18
The shriek and curse of trampled m's, Akbar's Dream 190
a trouble of ants in the gleam of a million m of suns ? Vastness 4
Millionaire New-comers from the Mersey, m's, Edwin Morris 10
be gilt by the touch of a to : Maud I i 66
Britain's one sole God be the to : „ III vi 22
Million-millionth to-to of a grain Which cleft Ancient Sage 42
Million-myrtled hide them, to-to wilderness, Lucretius 204
MiUstone as it he held The Apocalyptic to. Sea Dreams 26
May make my heart as a to, Maud 7 i 31
Mill-wheel Beside the m-w in the stream. Miller's D. 167
Milton there was M Uke a seraph strong. Palace of Art 133
M, a name to resound for ages ; Milton 4
white heather only blooms in heaven With M's
amaranth. Romney's R. Ill
Mime genial hour with mask and to ; In Mem. cv 10
Mimic (adj.) ' Ah, folly ! ' in to cadence answer'd James — Golden Year 53
They flash'd a saucy message to and fro Between the
TO stations ;
The TO picture's breathing grace,
nor cares For triumph in our m wars,
Mimic-Mimick (verb) But I cannot mimick it ;
moons of gems. To mimic heaven ;
That we should mimic this raw fool the world.
Mimicry Soul of mincing m !
Mincer m's of each other's fame,
Mincing Dagonet to with his feet,
Modulate me, Soul of m mimicry
Mind (s) (See also Prophet-mind) Smoothing the
wearied m :
When rooted in the garden of the m,
the deep m of dauntless infancy.
all forms Of the many-sided to,
And stood aloof from other m's
So many m's did gird their orbs
Vex not thou the poet's to (repeat)
Some honey-converse feeds thy m,
'She gave him to, the lordiest Proportion,
' This truth within thy to rehearse,
It spake, moreover, in my to :
* The highest-mounted to,' he said,
A healthy frame, a quiet to.'
That the whole m might orb about —
That bears relation to the to.
' That type of Perfect in his to
became Consolidate in to and frame —
Princess, Pro. 79
In Mem. Ixxviii 11
Lancelot and E. 312
The Owl ii 9
Palace of Art 189
Walk, to the Mail 106
Princess ii 425
„ iv 515
Last Tournament 311
Princess ii 425
Leonine Eleg. 14
Ode to Memory 26
36
116
A Character 23
The Poet 29
Poet's Mind 1, 3
Adeline 40
Two Voices 19
25
31
79
99
138
177
292
366
Mind (s) (continued) Oft lose whole years of darker m.
I marvell'd how the to was brought To anchor
Two spirits to one equal to —
Lo, falling from my constant to,
with one to the Gods Rise up for reverence,
that I might speak my to, And teU her to her face
(Beauty seen In all varieties of mould
and to) To
As fit for every mood of to,
supreme Caucasian m Carved out of Natm'e
' I take possession of man's to and deed.
I could not stoop to such a to.
dear old time, and all my peace of m ;
Two Voices 372
458
Miller's D. 236
Fatvina 5
(Enone 109
„ 227
-, With Pal. of Art 7
Palace of Art 90
126
209
L. C. V. de Vere 20
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 6
Con. 35
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 108
D. of the O. Year 26
To J. S. 48
Love thou thy land 20
35
M. d' Arthur 60
238
258
Dora 47
Edwin Morris 87
Locksley Hall 69
165
Godiva 32
Day-Dm., Moral 12
„ L' Envoi 48
Will Water. 12
Lady Clare 21
L. of Burleigh 74
Enoch Arden 344
delight and shuddering took hold of all my to,
and keep it with an equal to,
I've half a m to die with you,
common chance That takes away a noble m.
Bear seed of men and growth of m's.
Set in all lights by many m's,
dividing the swift to, In act to throw :
Among new men, strange faces, other m's.'
(For all my to is clouded with a doubt) —
' It cannot be : my imcle's to will change ! '
something of a wayward modem to
in division of the records of the m ?
more than in this march of to,
so left alone, the passions of her to.
A meaning suited to his m.
The fulness of the pensive to ;
and use Her influence on the to,
' Are ye out of your to, my nurse,
her gentle to was such That she grew a noble lady,
Philip did not fathom Annie's to :
Annie, there is a thing upon my to. And it has been
upon my to so long, „ 399
simple folk that knew not their own m's, „ 478
my TO is changed, for I shall see him, „ 897
rolling in his to Old waifs of rhyme. The Brook 198
TO Half buried in some weightier argument, Lucretius 8
my TO Stumbles, and all my faculties are lamed. „ 122
' How should the m, except it loved them, „ 164
which brought My book to m : Princess, Pro. 120
abyss Of science, and the secrets of the to : „ ii 177
the TO, The morals, something of the frame, „ 381
One TO in all things : „ Hi 91
From whence the Royal m, famiUar with her, „ iv 235
Our TO is changed : we take it to ourself.' „ 362
Give us, then, your to at large : „ u 123
prize the authentic mother of her to. „ 433
Her iron will was broken in her m ; „ vi 118
one that cannot keep her to an hour : „ 287
still she fear'd that I should lose my m, „ mi 99
lose the childlike in the larger to ; „ 284
all male m's perforce Sway'd to her „ 325
drill the raw world for the march of to. Ode on Well. 168
' but I needs must speak my to. Grandmother 53
That TO and soul, according well, In Mem., Pro. 27
Upon the threshold of the to ? „ Hi 16
A weight of nerves without a m, „ xii 7
And slowly forms the firmer to, „ xviii 18
And weep the fulness from the to : „ xxQ
Nor other thought her to admits „ xxxii 2
Tho' following with an upward to „ xli 21
train To riper growth the to and will : „ xlii 8
So rounds he to a separate to „ xlv 9
But hves to wed an equal m ; „ Ixii 8
Which makes a desert in the to, „ Ixvi 6
we talk'd Of men and m's, the dust of change, „ Ixxi 10
Sung by a long-forgotten to. „ Ixxvii 12
The same sweet forms in either m. „ Ixxix 8
An image comforting the to, „ Ixxxv 51
on TO and art. And labour, and the changing mart, „ Ixxxvii 22
He tasted love with half his to.
He faced the spectres of the to „ xm iS
He thrids the labyrinth of the to, „ xcvii 2|
Mind
Mind (s) (continued) those maidens with one m Bewail'd
their lot ; . , ^^ ^ ^ In Mem. ciii 45
King out the gnef that saps the m, ^j 9
And native growth of noble m ; ]' ^xi 16
For she is earthly of the m, ]' ^^^ 2I
these are the days of advance, the works of the
men of m, , , ,, , Maud I i 25
be still, for you only trouble the m „ » 20
cut o£E from the m The bitter springs of anger
and fear ; ., a; 48
The fancy flatter'd my m, " ^^^ 23
So dark a m within me dwells, " ^^^ 2
To the faults of his heart and m, " xix 68
Strange, that the m, when fraught With a passion ,', // a 58
for she never speaks her m, "^ ^ Qrj
awaked, as it seems, to the better m ; " I IJtn 56
inheritance Of such a life, a heart, a m as thine, Ded. of Idylls 33
469
Minster
but aU brave, aU of one m with him ; Coin, of Arthur'255
m my m 1 hear A cry from out the dawning „ 332
Ranging and ringing thro' the m's of men, " 416
Across her w, and bowing over him, Marr. ofGrraint 84
And ever m her m she cast about Geraint and E '^
of one m and all right-honest friends ! „ 434
with her m all full of what had chanced, " 773
My m involved yourself the nearest thir^g Merlin and V ^Xi
smce he kept his to on one sole aim, ,, ' 526
densest condensation, hard To m and eye ; ,' 579
To sleek her ruffled peace of m, " 399
The shape and colour of a m and life, Lancelot "and E. 335
he turn d Her counsel up and down within his m, „ 369
Lancelot look'd and was perplext in w, [\ 333
So cannot speak my m. An end to this ! " i222
made him hers, and laid her m On him. Holy Grail 164
Came like a driving gloom across my m. 37O
since her m was bent On hearing, Pdleas akd E. 114
Went wandenng somewhere darkling in his m. Last Tournament 457
byal nature, and of noble m.' Guinevere 336
Her memory from old habit of the m 379
With whom he dwelt, new faces, other m's. Pass, of "drthur 5
dividing the swift m, In act to throw : ,' 228
Among new men, strange faces, other m's.' " 406
(For all my TO is clouded with a doubt) — " 426
Like to a quiet m in the loud world, Lover's Tale i 7
sometimes on the horizon of the m Lies folded, 49
daylight of your m's But cloud and smoke, " 296
And all the maiden empire of her m, " 539
She deem'd I wore a brother's m : " 741
whether the m, With some revenge — " a 126
bom Not from believing m, but shatter'd nerve, " iv 105
This love is of the brain, the m, the soul : " 155
But arter I chaanged my m, North. Cobbler 105
he had seen it and made up his m. In the Child. Hosp. 16
his m, So quick, so capable in soldiership. Sir J. Oldcastle 74
When he clothed a naked m with the wisdom The Wreck 65
/ was the lonely slave of an often-wandering m ; , 130
the blasphemy to my m lies aU in the way Despair 112
WTiat Power ? aught akin to M, The m Ancient Sage 78
thm m s, who creep from thought to thought, „ 103
He withers marrow and m ; " 120
the world is hard, and harsh of m, The Flight 101
for Molly was out of her m. Tonwrrow 6
nurse of aihng body and m, Locksley H., Sixty 51
kings of men m utter nobleness of m, „ 122
lustier body, larger m ? |' 164
Man or M that sees a shadow of the planner or the plan ? " 196
Universal Nature moved by Universal M ; To Virgil 22
How long thine ever-growing m Freedom 33
died m the doing it, flesh without m ; Fastness 27
When the m is failing ! Forlorn 36
For lowly m's were madden'd to the height To Mary Boyle 33
Larger and fuller, like the human m ! Prog, of Spring 112
of the m Mine ; worse, cold, calculated. Romney's R. 151
How subtle at tierce and quart of m with m. In Mem. W. G. Ward 5
Now I'U gie tha a bit o' my m Church-warden, etc. 21
M son this round earth of ours Poets and Critics 3
Mind (verb) [See also Moind) I m him coming down
tiLi6 str^^pt " ^^
m us of the time When we made bricks in Egypt. ^"pfinifst 127
fur T^tbf f ' "ir* ^°^ ' ™^« ZZbusll
R,^f it, wL -^u' , K ^ , Church-warden, etc. 23
But I ?« when 1' Howlabv beck won daay 07
^^iu,fj' Cheerful-minded, Liberal-minded, Man-minded, "
Mild-mmded, Myriad-minded
Mindful Guinevere, not m of his face Marr of Gerair,f IQl
Mindless One truth wiU damn me with the m mob, Romney's R 120
E""?^. liTiS^^'-'^r''^ '^^ ^"l '^^' ^-^ ■■ Merlin 11 V. loi
fflme (See also Gold-nune) Or labour'd m undrainable
Old, and a m of memories- ^ vlm^sTiddll
To buy strange shares in some Peruvian m. Sea Bream-i V=,
there is no such m. None ; but a gulf of ruin 78
she said, ' by working in the m's : ' ' " 114
Secrets of the suUen m ode Inter. Exhib. 16
tiU he crept from a gutted m j^aud 7 /q
A league of mouiitain f uU of golden m's. Merlin and V. 587
Made proffer of the league of golden m's, 646
Wf?f^*"*' ^^?^™^^'- . Def.ofLucknow25
but the foe sprung his w many times, 31
m a moment two m's by the enemy sprung " 54
Ever the m and assault, our salhes, " 75
AU but free leave for all to work the m's, Columbus 133
M,-«„i "'"^^r,*"!?' ^"^^ P"^^ "^""^ '■> Open. I. and C. Exhib. 6
Mingle Thoi^ht and motion TO, ilf ever. "^ Eleanore^
In^^r rt ^"^^a ?u^' . Of old sat Freedom 10
And star-hke m's with the stars. sir Galahad 48
?«« T'' ""-.1'°™ • r, f'^^*^ of Sin 204
Pass, and TO with your likes. PriJess vi 341
To TO with the bounding mam : /„ Mem. xi 12
And m's all without a plan ? ^^ 20
And TO all the world with thee. " cxxix 12
and TO with our folk ; ^p^" Qrail 549
wherefore shouldst thou care to to with it, Last Tournament 105
TO with your ntes ; Pray and be pray'd for ; Guinevere 680
sou^ twines and to'* with the growths Lover's Tale i 132
God must TO with the game : Locksley H., Sixty 271
let the stormy moment fly and to with the Past. 279
I would not TO with their feasts ; Demet^ and P. 103
Mmgled (See also Poppy-nungled, Scarlet-mingled)
Ceasing not, to, unrepress'd, Arabian Nights 74
D^mng what is to with past years, D. of F. Women 282
a Rose In roses, to with her fragrant toil, Gardener's D 143
And ever as he to with the crew, Enoch Arden 643
this at times, she to with his drink, Lucretius 18
Will rank you nobly, to up with me. Princess ii 46
ine sole men to be to with our cause, „ 411
TO with the haze And made it thicker ; Com. of Arthur 434
And TO with the spearmen : Geraint and E- 599
bank Of maiden snow to with sparks of fire. Last Tournament 149
TO with dim cries Far m the moonlit haze Pass, of Arthur 41
TO with the famous kings of old, xiresias 171
will the glory of Kapiolam be to Kapiolani 18
this life of TO pains And joys to me, To Mary Boyle 49
Mmiature A to of loveliness. Gardener' sD ^
I remember how you kiss'd the to Locksley H., Sixty 12
. The books, the TO, the lace are hers, The Ring 288
Mimon A do^vnward crescent of her to mouth, Aylmer's Field 533
inmion-knignt had overthrown Her m-k's, Pelleas and E 235
Minister Who may to to thee ? Summer herself should to Eleiinore 31
Ministermg Fnday fare was Enoch's to. Enoch Arden 100
There the good mother's kmdly to. Lover's Tale iv 92
everywhere Low voices with the to hand Princess vii 21
Mmistration for the power of to in her, Guinevere 694
Ministries tender to Of female hands and hospitality.' Princess vi 72
Mmneth from Aroer On Amon unto M.' D of F Women 239
Minnie M and Winnie Slept in a shell. Minnie and Winnie 1
Minnow And see the m's everywhere Miller's D 51
Minster (adj.) windy clanging of the to clock ; Gardener's D 38
south-breeze around thee blow The sound of
*" *^«"«- Talking Oak 272
Minster
470
Miserable
Minster (adj.) (contimted) face Wellnigh was hidden
in the in gloom ; Com. of Arthur 289
Minster (s) whose hymns Are chanted in the in, Merlin and V. 766
trees like the towers of a m, The Wreck 74
Here silent in our M of the West Epit. on Stratford, 3
mountain stay'd me here, a m there, The Ring 245
Minster-front on one of those dark m-f's — Sea Dreams 243
Minster-tower bridge Crown'd with the m-Vs. Gardener's D. 44
Minstrel (adj.) And talk and m melody ent«rtain'd. Lancelot and E. 267
Minstrel (s) the m sings Before them of the ten years'
war Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 76
But ring the fuller m in. In Mem. cvi 20
A m of Caerleon by strong storm Blown into shelter Merlin and V. 9
And every m sings it differently ; „ 458
Mint he has a m of reasons : ask. The Epic 33
As moulded like in Nature's m ; In Mem. Ixxix 6
clean Es a shillin' fresh fro' the m Spinster's S's. 76
Minted Creation m in the golden moods Princess v 194
Minuet thro' the stately m of those days : Aylmer's Field 207
Minnte (adj.) How exquisitely m, Maud II ii 7
Minute (s) sweat her sixty m's to the death, Golden Year 69
The m's fledged with music : ' Princess iv 37
came a m's pause, and Walter said, „ Con. 4
Gone for a m, my son, from this room into the next ;
I, too, shall go in a w. Grandmother 103
For a m, but for a m, Maud I xx 45
and suffering thus he made M's an age : Geraint and E. 115
glancing for a m, till he saw her Pass into it, „ 886
Balin the stillness of a m broke Balin and Balan 51
' Stay a little ! One golden m's grace ! Lancelot and E. 684
An' Dan stood there for a m, ToTrwrrow 22
He that has Uved for the lust of the m, Vastness 27
Lay your Plato for one m do^vn. To Master of B. 4
WiU only last am!' Voice spake, etc. 4
Were nothing the next m? „ 10
Miracle (See also Half-miracle, Main-miracle) So
great a m as yonder hilt. M. d' Arthur 156
A certain m of symmetry. Gardener's D.W
they say then that I work'd m's, St. S. Stylites 80
It may be I have wrought some m's, „ 136
Can I work m's and not be saved ? „ 150
Should, as by in, grow straight and fair — Aylmer's Field 676
' O TO of women,' said the book, Princess, Pro. 35
O TO of noble womanhood ! ' „ 48
A TO of design ! Maud II ii 8
wondei-s ye have done ; M's ye cannot : Gareth and L. 1325
Mute of this m, far as I have read. Holy Grail 66
' Then came a year of to : „ 166
With to'5 and marvels Uke to these, „ 543
hollow-ringing heavens sweep Over him till by to — „ 679
With signs and m's and wonders, Guinevere 222
And simple m's of thy nunnery ? ' „ 230
Till he by to was approven King : „ 296
So great a TO as yonder hilt. Pass, of Arthur 324
a very to Of fellow-feeling and communion. Lover's Tale i 250
Heirlooms, and ancient m's of Art, „ iv 192
That was a to to convert the king. Sir J. Oldcastle 178
this Caiaphas-Anmdel What m could turn ? „ 180
art thou the Prophet ? canst thmi work M's ? Akbar's Bream 118
M's ! no, not I Nor he, nor any. „ 119
And gaze on this great to, the World, „ 122
Miraculous gaped upon him As on a thing to, Lancelot and E. 453
These have told us all their anger in to utterances, Boddicea 23
Mirage And a moist to in desert eyes, Maud I vi 53
finds the fountain where they wail'd ' Jlf ' ! Ancient Sage 77
thro' that m of overheated language Locksley H., Sixty 113
for no M of glory, but for power to fuse Akbar's Dream 156
Mire great heart and slips in sensual to. Princess v 199
by God's grace, he shall into the to — Gareth and L. 723
sank his head in to, and slimed themselves : Last Tournament 471
But curb the beast would cast thee in the m, Ancient Sage 276
from wallowing in the to of earth, Akbar's Dream 141
Miriam (iS'e« also Miriam Erne, Miriam Lane) ' This
miller's wife ' lie said to M Enoch Arden 805
And on the book, half-frighted, M swore. „ 843
Miriam (continued) M watch'd and dozed at intervals, Enoch Arden 909
Between a cymbal'd M and a Jael, Princess v 511
My M, breaks her latest earthly Unk The Ring 47
Your ' Al breaks ' — -is making a new link „ 50
WeU, One way for M. Miriam. M am I not ?
M youi" Mother might appear to me.
M sketch'd and Miu-iel threw the fly ;
and the face Of M grew upon me,
this ' lo t'amo ' to the heart Of M ;
he scrawl'd A ' 3/ ' that might seem a ' Muriel ' ;
Muriel claim'd and open'd what I meant For M,
Muriel and M, each in white,
M ! have you given your ring to her ?
0 M ! ' M redden'd, Muriel clench'd The hand that
wore it,
' 0 M, if you love me take the ring ! '
M loved me from the first, Not thro' the ring ;
My M nodded with a pitying smile,
And you my M born within the year ; And she my
M dead within the year.
Promise me, M not Muriel — she shall have the ring.'
M, I am not surely one of those
' Muriel's health Had weaken'd, nursing little M.
1 told her ' sent To M,'
M, on that day Two lovei-s pai'ted by no scui'rilous
tale —
Miriam Erne (See also Miriam) M E And Muriel Erne —
MiriftTti Lane (See also Miriam) his widow M L, With
daily-dwindling profits
But M L was good and garrulous,
Then he, tho' M L had told him all.
He call'd aloud for M L and said
M L Made such a voluble answer promising all,
Miring harpies m every dish,
Mirror (See also Ocean-Mirror) Opposed m's each
reflecting each —
And moving thi'o' a m clear That hangs
sometimes thro' the to blue The knights came
To weave the m's magic sights.
He flash'd into the crystal w.
The TO crack'd from side to side ;
on the Uquid to glow'd The clear perfection
Without a TO, in the gorgeous gown ;
reaUties Of which they were the m's.
she makes Her heart a m. that reflects
I gazed into the to, as a man Who sees his face
Mirror'd a favourable speed Ruffle thy to mast.
Mirth Come away : no more of to Is here
Singing and murmuring in her feastful m,
not the less held she her solemn m,
in a fit of frolic to She strove to span
Marrow of to and laughter ;
I laugh'd And Liha woke with sudden-shrilling m
clamouring etiquette to death, Unmeasured m ;
So large to Hved and Gareth won the quest.
and with to so loud Beyond aU use,
Mirthful TO he, but in a stately kind —
And m sayings, children of the place.
Misadventure whom I rode. Hath suffer'd m,
Miscellany Not like the piebald to, man.
Mischance Seeing all his own m —
by m_ he slipt and fell : A limb was broken
hearing his m. Came, for he knew the man
So now that shadow of m appear'd No graver
touch of all TO but came As night to him
by gi-eat m He heard but fragments of her later
words.
What I by mere m have brought, my shield.
Mischief they kept apart, no w done ;
Miscounted Were aU to as malignant haste
Miser and the to would yearn for his gold.
Miserable ' Ah, to and unkind, untrue.
Hating his own lean heart and m.
More TO than she that has a son And sees him err
If she be small, slight-natured, m,
73
137
159
185
235
241
242
254
260
261
263
274
281
285
294
34a
357
363
426
146
Enoch Arden 695
700
765
836
902
Lucretius 159
Sonnet to 11
L. of Shalottii 10
24
29
,, Hi 34
43
Mariana in the S. 31
Marr. of Geraint 739
Lover's Tale ii 163
The Ring 366
369
In Mem. ix 7
Deserted House 13
Palace of Art Yll
215
Talking Oak 137
Will Water. 214
Princess, Pro. 216
■wis
Gareth and L. 1426
Last Tournament 235
Lancelot and E. 322
Holy Grail 555
Balin and Balan 476
Princess v 198
L. of Shalott iv 12
Enoch Arden 106
120
128
Princess iv 573
Marr. of Geraint 112
Lancelot and E. 189
Princess iv 340
334
Despair 100
M. d' Arthur 119
Aylmer's Field 526
Princess Hi 260
„ vii 265
Miserable
471
Mix
Miserable {co7itinued) hide their faces, m in ignominy ! Boddicea 51
her Whom he loves most, lonely and m. Marr. of Geraint 123
' Ah, m and unkind, untrue. Pass, of Arthur 287
' The m have no medicine But only Hope ! ' Eomney's R. 149
Not with bUnded eyesight poring over m books — Locksley Hall 172
Low TO Uves of hand-to-mouth, Enoch Arden 116
0 PURBLIND race of m men, Geraint and E. 1
Misery Oh ! m ! Hark ! death is calling While
I speak All Things will Die 27
In this extremest m Of ignorance, Supp. Confessions 8
' Thou are so full of to. Two Voices 2
' Thou art so steep'd in to, „ 47
step beyond Our village miseries, Ancient Sage 207
in the to of my married life. The Ring 136
Misfaith turn of anger bom Of your to ; Merlin and V. 532
Misfeaturing strange to mask that I saw so amazetl
me, . The Wreck 117
Misleamt Have I to our place of meeting ?) Sir J. Oldcastle 153
Blisled ill counsel had m the girl Princess vii 241
Mismated Not all to with a yawning clown, Geraint and E. 426
Miss (s) The wither'd M'es ! how they prose Amphion 81
Miss (verb) Who to the brother of your youth ? To J. S. 59
1 fear That we shall to the mail : Walk, to the Mail 112
yet may live in vain, and to, Meanwhile, Princess Hi 243
Why should they to their yearly due In Mem. xxix 15
ye in,' he answer'd, ' the great deeds Of
Lancelot, Lancelot and E. 81
And TO the wonted number of my knights. And m to
hear high talk of noble deeds Guinevere 498
Missaid rebuked, reviled, M thee ; Gareth and L. 1165
Missay hear thee so to me and revile. „ 945
Miss'd thou,' said I, ' hast to thy mark, Two Voices 388
And you have to the irreverent doom You might have won 9
Caught at and ever to it, Enoch Arden 752
But TO the mignonette of Vivian-place, Princess, Pro. 165
0 yes, you to us much. „ 169
' Come, listen ! here is proof that you were to : „ 177
For blind with rage she to the plank, „ iv 177
Till even those that to her most In Mem. xl 27
The head hath to an earthly wreath : „ Ixxiii 6
1 have TO the only way (repeat) Gareth and L. 787, 792
TO, and brought Her own claw back, Merlin and V. 499
That TO his living welcome, Tiresias 197
he TO The wonted steam of sacrifice, Demeter and P. 118
Misshaping Is our to vision of the Powers Sisters (E. and E.) 230
Missile whelm'd with to's of the wall, Princess, Pro. 45
Missing One flash, that, to all things else. Merlin and V. 932
Mission ' Hast thou perform'd my to which I gave ? M. d' Arthur 67
Fly happy with the to of the Cross ; Golden Year 43
Her lavish to richly wrought. In Mem. Ixxxiv 34
A soul on highest to sent, „ cxiii 10
If this were all your to here, „ cxxviii 12
On a blushing to to me, Maud I xxi 11
Rode on a m to the bandit Earl ; Geraint and E. 527
' Hast thou perform'd my to which I gave ? Pass, of Arthur 235
My TO be accomplish'd ! ' 'Akbar's Dream 199
Missis An' once I said to the M, North. Cobbler 103
the lasses 'ud talk o' their M's waays. An' the il/'t's
talk'd o' the lasses. — Village Wife 57
As I says to my to to-daay, Church-warden, etc. 25
Missive let our to thro'. And you shall have her answer Princess v 326
Mist (See also Mind-mist, Moming-mist) thou earnest
with the morning to, (repeat) Ode to Memory 12, 21
she deem'd no to of earth could duU , „ 38
As over rainy to inclines A gleaming crag Two Voices 188
(Enone see the morning to Sweep thro' them ; (Enone 216
Whose spirits falter in the to. You ask me, why, etc. 3
The friendly to of mom Clung to the lake. Edwin Morris 107
Inswathed sometimes in wandering to, St. S. Stylites 75
Rain out the heavy to of tears. Love and Duty 43
Far-folded m's, and gleaming haUs Tithonus 10
While lUon hke a to rose into towers. „ 63
And softly, thro' a vinous to, WUl Water. 39
When all the wood stands in a to of green. The Brook 14
In colours gayer than the morning to, Princess ii 438
Mist (continued) two and thirty years were a m that
rolls away ; V. of Cauteretz 6
The TO and the rain, the to and the rain ! Window, No Answer 1
Answer each other in the to. In Mem. xxviii 4
And then I know the to is drawn „ Ixvii 13
Is pealing, folded in the to. „ civ 4
They melt hke to, the sohd lands, „ cxxiii 7
turrets half-way down Prick'd thro' the m ; Gareth and L. 194
(Your city moved so weirdly in the to) „ 245
o'er her meek eyes came a happy to Geraint and E. 769
An ever-moaning battle in the to. Merlin and V. 192
Or in the noon of to and driving rain, „ 636
clave Like its own m's to all the mountain side : Lancelot and E. 38
light betwixt them bum'd Blurr'd by the creeping to, Guinevere 5-
white TO, hke a face-cloth to the face, ,, 7
she saw. Wet with the to's and smitten by the lights, „ 597
till himself became as to Before her, „ 604
A deathwhite m slept over sand and sea : Pass, of Arthur 95
friend and foe were shadows in the m, „ 100
and in the m Was many a noble deed, „ 104
Look'd up for heaven, and only saw the m ; „ 112
labourings of the lungs In that close to, „ 116
blew The to aside, and with that wind the tide Rose, „ 125
And whiter than the m that all day long „ 137
hke a golden to Charm'd amid eddies Lover's Tale i 449
As moonlight wandering thro' a to : „ ii 52
That flings a to behind it in the sun — „ iv 294
in the to and the wind and the shower Rizpah 68
Thro' the blotting to, the blinding showei-s, Sisters (E. and E.) 18
The TO of autimin gather from yom' lake, The Ring 329
saw Your gilded vane, a light above the vi ' — „ 331
dead cords that ran Dark thro' the to. Death of (Enone 11
crooked, reehng, Uvid, thro' the to Rose, „ 27
and in the to at once Became a shadow, „ 49
tiU the mortal morning m's of earth Fade Akbar's Dream 96
Mist-blotted a great m-h light Flared on him, Enoch Arden 680
Mistletoe Thoms, ivies, woodbine, m's, Day-Din., Sleep. P. 43
Mist-like Melts m-l into this bright hour. Princess vii 355
Mistress (See also Missis) Let Grief be her own m still. To J. S. 41
Beauty such a to of the world. Gardener's D. 58
While Annie stiU was to ; Enoch Arden 26
No casual to, but a wife. In Mem. lix 2
The slowly-fading to of the world, Com. of Arthur 505
I come, great M of the ear and eye : Lover's Tale i 22
Mistrust never shadow of to can cross Between us. Marr. of Geraint 815
shadow of to should never cross Betwixt them, Geraint and E. 248
Mistrusted Saving that you m our good King Gareth and L. 1172
Mistrustful same m mood That makes you seem less
noble Merlin and V. 321
Mist-wreathen Across a break on the m-w isle Enoch Arden 632
Misty (See also Silver-misty) veiy air about the door
Made m with the floating meal. Miller's D. 104
Across the mountain stream'd below In m folds. Palace of Art 35
From TO men of lettei"s ; Will Water. 190
the TO summer And gray metropolis of the North. The Daisy 103
He finds on to mountain-ground His own vast
shadow In Mem. xcvii 2
Wrapt in di-ifts of lurid smoke On the m river-tide. Maud II iv 67
Yet not so to were her meek blue eyes Geraint and E. 772
I cared not for it : a single to star. Merlin and V. 508
All in a to moonshine, unawares Lancelot and E. 48
The wide-wing'd sunset of the to marsh Last Tournament 423
Misused canceU'd a sense to : Godiva 72
Misyoked I — to. with such a want of man — Last Tournament 571
Mitred while this to Arundel Dooms our unUcensed
preacher Sir J. Oldcastle 104
Mitre-sanction' d m-s harlot draws his clerks „ 106
Mix joy that m'es man with Heaven : Two Voices 210
Yearning to to himself with Life. Love thou thy land 56
can my nature longer to with thine ? Tithonus 65
I myself must m with action, Locksley Hall 98
So m for ever with the past. Will Water. 201
TO the foaming draught Of fever. Princess ii 251
Speak little ; to not with the rest ; „ 360
Hebes are they to hand ambrosia, to The nectar ; „ Hi 113
Miz
472
Mob
Mix (eorUinued) while the fires of Hell M with his hearth : Princess v 455
think that you might m his draught with death, „ vi 277
And m the seasons and the golden hours ; Ode Inter. Exhib. 36
' The SEinds and yeasty surges m Sailor Boy 9
And m with hollow masks of night ; In Mem. Ixx 4
O tell me where the senses m, „ Ixxxviii 3
They m in one another's arms „ cii 23
May she m With men and prosper ! ., cxiv 2
M not memory with doubt, Maud II iv 57
Of those who m all odour to the Gods Tiresias 184
To m with what he plow'd ; Ancient Sage 145
senses break away To m with ancient Night.' „ 153
Will m with love for you and yours. To Marq. of Dufferin 52
That I might m with men, and hear their words Prog, of Spring 82
one of those Who m the wines of heresy Akbar's Dream 174
M me this Zone with that ! Mechanophilus 8
Miz'd-Mizt The elements were kindUer mix'd.' Two Voices 228
She mix'd her ancient blood with shame. The Sisters 8
Mix'd with the knightly growth that fringed his
Ups. M.d' Arthur 220
mix'd with shadows of the common grovmd ! Gardener's D. 135
A welcome mix'd with sighs. Talking Oak 212
lights of sunset and of simrise mix'd Love and Duty 72
In mosses mixt with violet Sir L. and Q. G. 30
Mix'd with cunning sparks of hell. Vision of Sin 114
rain of heaven, mixt Upon their faces, Aylmer's Field 429
on those cliffs Broke, mixt with awful light Sea Dreams 215
on the crowd Broke, mixt with awful light, „ 235
cry Which mixt with Uttle Margaret's, „ 246
And hands they mixt, and yeU'd Lucretius 56
And mixt with these, a lady, Princess, Pro. 32
mixt with inmost terms Of art and science : „ ii 446
we mixt with those Six hundred maidens „ 471
our dreams ; perhaps he mixt with them : „ Hi 220
Part stumbled mixt with floundering horses. „ v 498
like night and evening mixt Their dark and gray, „ vi 131
And mixt, as life is mixt with pain. Ode Inter. Exhib. 27
Mixt with myrtle and clad with vine, Ths Islet 19
No — mixt with all this mystic frame, In Mem. Ixxviii 18
He mixt in all our simple sports ; „ Ixxxix 10
Mixt their dim lights, like life and death, „ xcv 63
Tho' mix'd with God and Nature thou, „ exxx 11
a world in which I have hardly mixt, Maud I vi 76
Mixt with kisses sweeter sweeter „ // iv 9
mix'd my breath With a loyal people shouting „ III vi 34
wildly fly, Mixt with the flyers. Geraint and E. 483
she mixt Her fancies with the sallow-rifted glooms Lancelot and E. 1001
brambles mixt And overgrowing them, Pelleas and E. 422
Nor with them mix'd, nor told her name, Guinevere 148
Mix'd with the knightly growth that fringed his
lips. Pass, of Arthur 388
Mixt with the gorgeous west the lighthouse shone. Lover's Tale i 60
and these Mixt with her own, because the fierce beast Tiresias 151
And mixt the dream of classic times „ 194
past and future mix'd in Heaven The Ring 186
Black with bridal favours mixt ! Forlorn 69
mixt with the great Sphere-music of stars Parnassus 8
mixt herself with him and past in fire. Death of (Enone 106
Hizen cast it on the m that it die.' Marr. of Geraint 672
Mizmg Ice with the warm blood m; All Things will Die 33
Which m with the infant's blood, Supp. Confessions 61
He m with his proper sphere, In Mem. Ix 5
Mixt .9ee Mix'd
Mizpeh she went along From M's tower'd gate D. of F. Women 199
Mnemosyne That claspt the feet of a M, Princess iv 269
Moab water M saw Ck)me round by the East, Last Tournament 482
Moan (s) {See also Mo&n) Heard the war m along the
distant sea, Buonaparte 10
But ' Ave Mary,' made she m, Mariana in the S. 9
And ' Ave Mary,' was her m, „ 21
' Is this the form,' she made her m, „ 33
herm,
She breathed in sleep a lower m.
She whisper'd, with a stifled m
' The day to night,' she made her m.
And weeping then she made her m.
45
57
81
93
Moan (s) {continued) Nor sold his heart to idle m's.
In firry woodlands making m ;
hears the low M of an unkno^vn sea ;
And make perpetual m.
And the low m of leaden-colour'd seas.
The m of doves in immemorial elms,
m of an enemy massacred.
Is that enchanted m only the swell
Crawl'd slowly with low m's to where he lay,
And to all other ladies, I make m :
So made his m, and, darkness falling,
M's of the dying, and voices of the dead.
But when that m had past for evermore,
mask of Hate, who Uves on others' m's.
From under rose a muffled m of floods ;
and the m of my waves I whirl.
For m's wiU have grown sphere-music
Moan (s) I 'card 'er a maakin' 'er m.
Moan (verb) what is life, that we should m ?
the deep M's round with many voices.
Nor ever lowest roU of thxmder m's,
or bits of roasting ox M round the spit —
' Not such as m's about the retrospect,
And m and sink to their rest.
I hear the dead at midday m,
heard the Spirits of the waste and weald M as she
fled, or thought she heard them m :
and the sea that 'ill m Uke a man ?
water began to heave and the weather to m,
■ ask'd the waves that m about the world
' We know not, and we know not why we m.'
M to myself ' one plunge —
Moan'd the passion in her m reply
She heard, she moved. She m,
And ever and aye the Priesthood m.
Weighted it down, but in himself he m :
he kiss'd it, m and spake ;
All that had chanced, and Balan m again,
and madden'd with himself and m :
And in herself she m ' Too late, too late ! '
' O, you warm heart,' he m,
' 0 Stephen,' I ?», ' I am coming to thee
m, I am fitter for my bed, or for my grave,
and m ' ffinone, my (Enone,
Moaneth Wherefore he m thus,
Moanin' an' m an' naggin' agean ;
Moaning (adj. and part.) {See also Ever-moaning,
Moanin') Nor, m, household shelter crave
And circle m in the air :
Uther died himself, M and wailing for an heir
Uther in Tintagil past away M and wailing for an
heir,
M ' My violences, my violences ! '
M and calling out of other lands.
The phantom circle of a m sea.
stones Strewn in the entry of the m cave ;
But I could wish yon m sea would rise
I found myself m again
Are there thunders m in the distance ?
M your losses, 0 Earth,
Moaning (s) Yes, as your m's witness.
The m's of the homeless sea,
glooms Of evening, and the m's of the wind.
Heard in his tent the m's of the King :
The m of the woman and the child.
The m's in the forest, the loud brook,
do ye make your m for my child ? '
And may there be no m of the bar,
Moat My malice is no deeper than a m.
Moated Upon the lonely m grange.
About the lonely m grange.
Mob (s) Confused by brainless m's
m's million feet Will kick you from your place,
One ti-uth will damn me with the mindless m,
Mob (verb) From my fixt height to m me up
Two Voices 221
Miller's D. 42
Palace of Art 280
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 17
Enoch Arden 612
Princess vii 221
Boddicea 25
Maud I xviii 62
Balin and Balan 592
Lancelot and E. 1279
Pelleas and E. 213
Pass, of Arthur 117
441
Lover's Tale i 775
Prog, of Spring 70
The Dreamer 13
29
Spinster's S's. 115
May Queen, Con. 56
Ulysses 56
Lucretius 108
132
Princess iv 85
Voice and the P. 16
Maud I vi 70
Guinevere 130
Rizpah 72
The Revenge 113
Demeter and P. 64
67
Charity 16
Enoch Arden 286
Princess v 72
The Victim^
Balin and Balan 225
598
604
Pelleas and E. 460
Guinevere 131
Lover's Tale iv 76
The Wreck 132
The Ring 432
Death of (Enone 28
Supp. Confessions 132
Owd Rod 108
Two Voices 200 \
In Mem. xii 15]
Com. of Arthur 2011
368!
Balin and Balan 435
Merlin and V. 962
Pass, of Arthur 81
Lover's Tale Hi 2
The Flight 11
The Wreck 134
On Jub. Q. Victoria 66
The Dreamer 17 ;
Aylmer's Field 749 j
In Mem. xxxv 9J
Lancelot and E. 10031
Pass, of Arthur 81
Lover's Tale i 520l
ii 114
Demeter and P. 65j
Crossing the Bar 3l
Geraint and E. 340J
Mariana 8 1
32
Ode on Well. 153
The Fleet 18 ^i
Romney's R. 120 1
Princess vi 308a
Mock
473
Molly
I
Mock (adj.) Autumn's m sunshine of the faded woods Aylmer's Field 610
down rolls the world In in heroics stranger than our
own ; Princess, Con. 64
Mock (s) nor moves the loud world's random m, Will 4
seamen made m at the mad Uttle craft The Revenge 38
Mock (verb) I would m thy chaunt anew ; TJie Owl ii 8
' M me not ! m me not ! love, let us go.' The Islet 30
m at a barbarous adversary. Boddicea 18
We m thee when we do not fear : In Mem., Pro. 30
And m their foster-mother on four feet, Com. of Arthur 31
I m thee not but as thou mockest me, Gareth and L. 289
And now thou goest up to m the King, „ 292
' Is this thy courtesy — to m me, ha ? Balin and Balan 495
And no man there will dare to m at me ; Lancelot and E. 1053
marking how the knighthood m thee, fool — Last Tournament 301
hear the garnet-headed yaffingale M them : „ 701
he never m's. For mockery is the fume Guinevere 632
Mock-disease old hysterical m-d should die.' Maud III vi 33
Mock'd That m the wholesome human heart, The Letters 10
That m him with rettmiing calm, Lucretius 25
This railer, that hath m thee in full hall — Gareth and L. 369
first they m, but, after, reverenced him. „ 507
Garlon m me, but I heeded not. Balin and Balan 606
he smote his thigh, and m : ' Right was the
King ! Lancelot and E. 664
But when she m his vows and the great King, Pdleas and E. 252
but with plumes that m the may, Guinevere 22
Except he m me when he spake of hope ; „ 631
I So m, so spum'd, so baited two whole days — Sir J. Oldcastle 163
I would not be m in a madhouse ! Despair 79
Mocker Betwixt the m's and the realists : Princess, Con. 24
the m ending here Tum'd to the right, Gareth and L. 294
Mockery And my mockeries of the world. Vision of Sin 202
A w to the yeomen over ale, Aylmer's Field 497
I seem A m to my own self. Princess vii 337
not whoUy brain, Magnetic mockeries ; In Mem. cxx 3
Marr'd tho' it be with spite and m now, Pelleas and E. 327
But these in earnest those in m call'd Last Tournament 135
there with gibes and flickering mockeries „ 186
The m of my people, and their bane.' Guinevere 526
For m is the fume of Httle hearts. „ 633
Mockest Why m thou the stranger Gareth and L. 283
but as thou m me. And all that see thee, „ 289
Mock-heroic The sort of m-h gigantesque, Princess, Con. 11
Mock-honour Did her m-h as the fairest fair, Geraint and E. 833
Mock-Hymen M-if were laid up hke winter bats. Princess iv 144:
Mocking made me a m curtsey and went. Grandmother 46
almost Arthur's words — A m fire : Holy Grail 670
Now m at the much ungainUness, Last Tournament 728
0 the formal m bow, The Flight 29
1 heard a m laugh ' the new Kor&n ! ' Akhar's Bream 183
Mocldng-wise Sir Garlon utter'd m-w ; Balin and Balan 389
Mock-knight Had made m-k of Arthm-'s Table
Round, Last Tournament 2
Mock-love same m-l, and this Mock-Hymen Princess iv 143
Mock-Ioyal With reverent eyes m-l. Merlin and V. 157
Mock-meek That m-m mouth of utter Antichrist, Sir J. Oldcastle 170
Mock-sister after marriage, that m-s there — ■ Sisters (E. and E.) 172
Mock-solemn something so m-s, that I laugh'd Princess, Pro. 215
Mode (See also Man-mode) Odalisques, or oracles of m. Princess ii 77
Ring in the nobler m's of life, In Mem. cvi 15
Model (adj.) ' This m husband, this fine Artist ' ! Romney's R. 124
Model (s) why should any man Remodel m's ? The Epic 38
A dozen angry m's jetted steam : Princess, Pro. 73
glove upon the tomb Lay by her hke a m of her hand. „ iv 597
This mother is your m. „ vii 335
the giant aisles, Rich in m and design ; Ode Inter. Exhih. 13
To serve as m for the mighty world, Guinevere 465
Accomplish that bhnd m in the seed, Prog, of Spring 114
Modell'd Is but m on a skull. Vision of Sin 178
Neither m, glazed, nor framed : „ 188
Moderate statesman-warrior, m, resolute. Ode on Well. 25
Modem To make demand of m rhyme To the Queen 11
Not master'd by some m term ; Love thou thy land 30
Perhaps some m touches here and there M. d' Arthur, Ep. 6
Modem {continued) King Arthur, like a m gentleman
Of stateliest port ; M. d' Arthur, Ep. 22
Or something of a wayward m mind Dissecting
passion. Edtvin Morris 87
The m Muses reading. Amphion 76
Cock was of a larger egg Than m poultry drop. Will Water. 122
What hope is here for m rhyme To him, /« Mem. Ixxvii 1
Full-handed plaudits from our best In m letters. To E. Fitzgerald 39
your m amourist is of easier, earthher make. Locksley H., Sixty 18
Something other than the wildest m guess of you
and me. „ 232
And that bright hair the m sun. Epilogue 8
Modest To make him trust his m worth, L. C. V. de Vere 46
hke a pear In growing, m eyes, a hand. Walk, to the Mail 54
Him, to her meek and m bosom prest Aylmer's Field 416
' 0 marvellously m maiden, you ! Princess Hi 48
How m, kindly, aU-accomplish'd, wise. Bed. of Idylls 18
Modish The m Cupid of the day, Talking Oak 67
Modred (A knight of the Bomid Table) Gawain and
young M, her two sons, Com. of Arthur 244
M laid his ears beside the doors, „ 323
came With M hither in the summertime, Gareth and L. 26
M for want of worthier was the judge. ,, 28
M biting his thin lips was mute, ,, 31
all in fear to find Sir Gawain or Sir if , ., 326
And M's blank as death ; „ 417
Sir M's brother, and the child of Lot, Lancelot and E. 558
M thought, ' The time is hard at hand.' Pelleas and E. 610
show'd him, hke a vermin in its hole, M, a
narrow face : Last Tournament 166
her cause of flight Sir M ; Guinevere 10
M still in green, all ear and eye. „ 24
laugh'd Lightly, to think of M's dusty fall. Then
■ ■■ 55
63
103
154
195
441
443
Pass, of Arthur 59
80
153
165
Princess ii 425
Eleanore 63
Locksley H., Sixty 81
N. Farmer, 0. S. 29
Love thou thy land 38
A spirit haunts 17
Maud I vi 53
Geraint and E. 350
Pelleas and E. 215
Geraint and E. 513
Lover's Tale Hi 5
My life is full 12
Aylmer's Field 849
Def. of Lucknow 26
Dead Prophet 56
Princess iv 158
shudder'd,
M's narrow foxy face. Heart-hiding smile,
M brought His creatures to the basement
that Sir M had usurp'd the realm.
And M whom he left in charge of all.
And many more when M raised revolt,
clave To M, and a remnant stays with me.
I hear the steps of M in the west.
And ever push'd Sir M, league by league,
yonder stands, M, unharm'd, the traitor of
thine house.'
then M smote his hege Hard on that helm
Modulate M me, Soul of mincing mimicry !
Modulated They were m so To an unheard melody,
Mogul he that led the wild M's,
Moind (mind) D'ya m the waaste, my lass ?
Moist And m and dry, devising long.
At the m rich smell of the rotting leaves.
And a m mirage in desert eyes,
or the fancy of it. Made liis eye m ; but Enid
fear'd his eyes, M as they were,
and m or dry, Full-arm'd upon his charger
Moisten her true hand falter, nor blue eye M,
Moisture blew Coolness and m and all smells
Mole (animal) The four-handed m shall scrape,
the m has made his run,
you can hear him — the mm'derous m !
Mole (on the skin) Were it but for a wart or a w ? '
MoU tavern-catch Of M and Meg,
Molly [See also Molly Magee) M the long un she walkt
awaay wi' a hoflficer lad,
for M was out of her mind.
' M asthore, I'll meet you agin tomon-a,'
Thin M's ould mother, yer Honour,
But M, begorrah, 'ud Usthen to naither at all,
But M says ' I'd his hand-promise,
' M, you're manin',' he says, me dear,
But M kem hmpin' up wid her stick,
Och, M, we thought, machree.
When M cooms in fro' the far-end close
M beUke may 'a lighted to-night upo' one.
An' M and me was agreed.
Village Wife 97
Tomorrow 6
15
19
46
52
56
77
81
Spinster's S's. 2
7
49
MoUy
474
may {continued) when M 'd put out the light, Spinster's S's. 97
what ha niaade our M sa laate ' i io
Molly Ma«ee (5^6 0^50 Molly) They caU'd her M M. Tmnorrow 4
M M wid her batchelor, Danny O'Roon— «"-/•«■«;*
M M kern flyin' acrass me, as Ught as a laik " 21
MM wid the red o' the rose an' the white o' the Mav " 31
Ud a shot his own sowl dead for a kiss of ve M M '' " m
Div ye know him, MM?' J > - • "to
Danny O'Roon wid his ould woman, M M " ee
tell thini in Hiven about M M an' her Danny O'Roon, '" 92
Moloch red-hot palms of a JIf of Tyre, The Dawn 9
Mopwny an' Father 1/ he tuk her in han', iZor^Zd
Molt^ ^» on the waste Becomes a cloud : ' Pri^Zivli
Her noble heart wa5 m in her breast ; r-rincessiv U
Athwart a plane of m glass, /„ x{.^ ' , Ti
The rocket m into flakis Of crimson ^"^ ^'"^-J^i V,
And m up, and roar in flood ; " ^^2%
And m do^vn m. mere uxoriousness. Marr of Gerni'ni m
SiCed anT beautiful in Past of act or place, ' w{ frfisl
Uittused and m mto flaky cloud. g4i
m Into adulterous hving, ,&;„ 7 nh^„„47. mo
Moly propt on beds of amaranth and «,, Zoto^ia^Ss C ^ 2S
Moment brought, At the m of thy birth ElednoVe 15
m a m I would pierce The blackest files kZ 25
Am came the tenderness of tears. The form, the form 9
flower of each, those m's when we met, ^dwin MoLs 69
One earnest, earnest m upon mine, Zove and Duty 37
SZ^' ^^"^ shaken ran itself Lo.^ey nil 32
Changed every m as we flew. The Vm.nZ^t
Glow'd for a m as we past. ^ ^°'-''^^^ ff
Every m dies a man. Every m one is born. Vision of Sin 97, 121
when the last of those last m's came, Enoch Arden 217
stood on deck Waving, the m and the vessel past 244
Paused for a m at an inner door, " o|o
And dwelt a m on his kindly face, " qof
She spoke ; and in one m as it were, " 450
Which in one m, hke the blast of doom, " 7«q
Enoch hung A m on her words, '" 373
our pride Looks only for a m whole and sound ; Ayhner's Field 2
Between his palms a ot up and down— 259
That night, that m, when she named " goi
The fountain of the m, playing, Pri^e^s, Pro. 61
and a m, and once more The trumpet, ~ 407
on her foot she hung A m, and she heard, " ,„v on
wno stood a m, ere his horse was brought qc{4
But when they closed— in a m— " i222
in a m heard thenri pass like wolves Howhng ; Balin and Balan 407
men, in one to, she put forth the charm Merlin and V 967
every to glanced His silver arms and gloom'd : Holv Grail 492
m a TO when they blazed again Open^g, ^ tos
In m's when he feels he cannot die, " of g
Rolling his eyes, a m stood, co,
A if "!- ftf^" "^ T' l"^, ^?^^^J:^ 5 ^«*^ Tournament 26
A TO, ere the onward whirlwind shatter it. Lover's Tale i 451
Which seeming for the m due to death, s laiei 40i
wealth Flash'd from me in a to and I feU " aaq
This custom ' Pausing here a to, " ,v 2S7
Ihe passionate TO would not suffer that— " q^A
fly them for a to to fight with them again. The Rmel
But never a to ceased the fight of throne and the ^
luty-three. __
and for a face Gone in a to— strange. Sisters (E at,}' P \ qI
Roar^upon roar in a to two mines by the enemy ^ ^ ^^
an^J^^r a to for grief, ^'■^- "-^ ■^^'»««' 54
I suffer all as much Aa they do-for the to. Coywmfiw* 218
I thought of the child for a to, to?^ z. c5
bear with an hour of torture, k ,« of pain, nZZt It
Gazing for one peasive TO ' Zo.;;./., //f ^?5 g
Monstrous
Moment (continued) m fly and mingle with the
Past.
All in a TO foUow'd with force
to maintain The day against the m,
Made every m of her after life A virgin victim
Gleam'd for a m in her own on earth.
Or lost the m of their past on earth,
Shall flash thro' one another in a m
See, I sinn'd but for a w.
held you at that to even dearer than before ;
still'd it for the to with a song
For one m afterward A silence foUow'd
then and there he was crush'd in a to and died
Let your reforms for a to go ! '
Momentary Hated him with a m hate.
that hour perhaps Is not so far when m man
A w likeness of the King :
Brought down a to brow.
That less than m thunder-sketch
Each poor pale cheek a m rose —
when the to gloom, Made by the noonday blaze
Mona While about the shore of M
Monaco city Of little M, basking, glow'd.
Monarch m in their woodland rhyme.
Monday saw the man — on M, was it ? —
' 0' M momin' ' says he ;
Money (See also Mooney, Munney, Mmmy) and not
a room For love or to.
m can be repaid ; Not kindness such as youre '
Nor could he understand how to breeds,
An' 'e bowt owd to, es wouldn't goa,
The poor man's to gone to fat the friar.
M — my hire — his m —
Monk (See also FeUow-monk) ' Old Summers, when
the TO was fat,
TO and nun, ye scorn the world's desire.
The TO Ambrosius question'd Percivale •
To whom the TO : ' The Holy Grail !— I trust
Nay, TO ! what phantom ? ' answer'd Percivale
the m : From our old books I know That Joseph
inen spake the to Ambrosius, asking him,
Then said the w, ' Poor men, when yule is cold
the TO : And I remember now That pehcan on'
the casque :
Monkeries absolution-seUers, to And nunneries
Monkey-spite No lewdness, narrowing envy, m-s
Monkish save ye fear The TO manhood '
Monmouth (Harry of) See Harry of Monmouth
Monotonous M and hoUow like a Ghost's
For one to fancy madden'd her.
Monster wallowing to spouted his foam-fountains
Locksley H., Sixty 279
Heavy Brigade 20
To Duke of Argyll 6
The Ring 220
297
464
Happy 40
„ 85
„ 90
Romney's R. 84
St. Telemachus 64
Charity 21
Riflemen form ! 15
Ayhner's Field 211
Lucretius 253
Com. of Arthur 271
Gareth and L. 653
Sisters (E. and E.) 99
The Ring 315
St. TelcTnachus 49
Boddicea 1
The Daisy 8
Akhars D., Hymn 6
Walk, to the Mail 30
Tomorrow 17
AuMey Court 2
Enoch Arden 320
The Brook 6
Village Wife 49
Sir J. Oldcastle 150
Charity 19
Talking Oak 41
Balin and Balan 445
Holy Grail 17
37
45
5&
203
613
Sir J. Oldcastle 93
Lucretius 211
Merlin and V. 35
bought Quamt m's for the market of those times
TO lays His vast and filthy hands upon my will
Seven-headed m's only made to kiU Time
r^"^ ^ ®/^' ^^^^ *be man ; Tattoo'd or woaded.
No doubt we seem a kind of to to you •
These m's blazon'd what they were '
I loom to her Three times am: '
A TO then, a dream, A discord.
Ti"? !^^^- '"■ ""subduable Of any save of him
M ! O Prince, I went for Lancelot first
advanced The to, and then paused
Monstrous In bed hke to apes they crush'd my
Betwixt the to horns of elk and deer
Those m males that carve the living hound
and the wild figtree split Their m idols, '
Ihe Princess with her to woman-guard
and leave The m ledges there to slope, '
Would hsp in honey'd whispers of this m fraud '
Sown m a wnnkle of the m hill
A to eft was of old the Lord and Master of Earth,
Horrible, hateful, to, not to be told •
TO ivy-stems Claspt the gray m alls '
So lean his eyes were m ;
Guinevere 420
The Ring 404
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 107
Enoch Arden 539
Lucretius 219
Princess, Pro. 204
a 119
Hi 276
iv 345
V 131
In Mem. liri 21
Gareth and L. 858
1343
1385
St. S. Stylites 174
Princess, Pro. 23
„ Hi 310
iv 80
562
vii 212
Third of Feb. 36
WUl 19
Maud I iv 31
„ Illvi^l
Marr. of Geraint 322
Merlin and V. 624
Pass, of Arthur 114
St. Telemachus 40
The Daisy 66
Monstrous
Monstrous {continued) m blasphemies, Sweat,
writhings, anguish,
Hard Komans brawling of their m games ;
Monte Rosa how phantom-fair. Was M E
Montfort (Edith) See Edith, Edith Montfort
Month (See also Seven-months') Each m is various to
present The world 2'wo Voice - 74
Link'd m to m with such a chain Of knitted puroort *167
Pl'j^^lTf'^ Th'^-n'*' ^""^ ^*'^y ^"'^ ^**^' ' The Sisters IQ
Earn Nv ell the thrifty m's, Love thou thy land 95
Consider, William : take a m to tliink, Dorn M
before The m was out he left his father's house 37
?n^^^*^TJ;'''^''A^K*^"*^°' , ' Walk.totheMail2
m one m They wedded her to sixty thousand
^^"^^^ „ ,, . , , Edwin Morris 125
and oft I fall. Maybe for m's, Sf ,<? <ii„]AtZ i hq
I must work thr/m's of .toil', ''■ ''T^^^^f,
Each m, a birth-day coming on, i^m rf^ qi
Caniefloatmg on for niany a m and year, Vision of Sin 54
a ?»— Give her a to— she knew that she was bound—
So m by m the noise about their doors, Avl^lr's Fidd 488
face to face With twenty m's of silence, ^ ^'^ giS
In one m, Thro' weary and yet ever wearier horns " 827
Came, with a m's leave given them, ' g" T)ream<i fi
Am hence, a m hence. ^. -^^ ^y^ ^
The all-assuming m'5 and years /„ 3/m. V*-^^ 67
And tho' the m's, revolving near, Z. ■■ \\
As nine m's go to the shaping an infant Maud I iv M
In another m to his brazen Ues, !^ cf
as m's ran on and rumour of battle grew, " ///^ 29
So for a m he wrought among the thralls ; Garethand T «;9^
weeks to m's. The m's ^vill add themselves G^^^^e 624
would not look at her-No not for m's : LovStTIei^4l
nme long m's of antenatal gloom, bTpJo^ tL r I
last m they wor diggin' the bog,' ^^ "^foZZSel
Altho the m's have scarce begun, j'o Vlnsseo 22
Monument A m of childhood and of love ; z^ J . rj/p l" 1 H
Mood Were fixed shadows of thy fixed m LA./ o
But more human in your m's, MnJnZw'^
We taught him lowUer m's, ' JlZnZlul
In lazy m I watch'd the Httle circles die ; M^^^D 73
xJftl fT"^ "" ^^ ^^^^I ""^ ""y ^^^ ^"^- P<^<^^ of Art 59
As fat for every m of mmd, •' qq
from which m was bom Scorn of herself ; again
^ from out that m Laughter at her self-scorn ' oon
I govern'd men by change, and so I sway'd
^^,'^-^''^ . ""-IwsTS
1 went thro many wayward »«'s Dai/- Dm P^n a
She changes with that m or this, mil Wate^ 107
cruel Seem'd the Captain's m rl! n f ■ ? I
But subject to the sLon or the m, Aylner's'lldd 71
How low his brother's m had faUen, '' '^^'^JA
and in her Uon's m Tore open. Princess iv S8n
Creation minted in the golden 7n's Of sovereign ^"'»'^««^ ^^ ^^
artists; ^ ,„.
And left her woman, lovelier in her m " ,,jV i62
saw Thee woman thro' the crust of iron m's " S42
My lighter m's are Uke to these, InMem xx%
I envy not in any m's The captive void -.■„„•,• ^
Mere feUowship of sluggish m's, " ^^^21
What vaster dream can hit the m Of Love on earth ? " xlvii 11
she takes, when harsher m's remit, " ^7,„-,v «
And put thy harsher m's aside, " Ux7
Nor less it pleased in livelier m's, " ixxxix 29
am I raging alone as my father raged in his m ? Maud I i 53
My m IS changed, for it fell at a time of year /// ^ 4
coming up quite close, and in his m Geraint "and E. 714
Let not thy m s prevail, when I am gone Balin and Balan 140
&o when his m's were darken'd, 235
^f^A ^^^e ."^ougbt upon his cloudy m Jfer^iw Ind V. 156
And yielding to his kmdher m's, 1Y4
Dark in the glass of some presageful m, ]] 295
475
Moon
Mood (continued) fled from Arthur s com-t To break
Not^hlH so strange as that dark m of yours ^"'^''' "'^^ ^^ o?f
same inistrustfiU m That makes you seem leas noble " 321
such a ?n. as that, which lately gloom'd " 09=
As high as woman in her selfless m. " ilo
or a m Of overstrain'd affection, " ^
Vivien, gathering somewhat of his m, " 040
wrought upon his m and hugg'd him close. " oaZ
Arthnr^f!?\?A*'^ was often hke a fiend, Lancelot "and E. 251
Arthur to the banquet, dark m m, Past ^ci
tum'd Sir Torre, being in his m's Left them, '" 70^
?rirtrnrh^iff nl.^^^ iT'^? mock-knight Last Tournament 1
iiistram, half plagued by Lancelot's languorous m 104
Was mme a m To be invaded rudely, ^ Lover's' Tale i ^77
At times too shrHhng in her angrie/ m's, Theptl Vil
your opiate then Bred this black m ? Bomnev'TR 62
mtfttTtli''''' T '' '^^^^ AuTs'VreL 5I
m s 01 tiger, or 01 ape : m v r n/r n
Moon (^e« also Crescent-moon, Honeymoon) At midnighl ''^ '^
the m Cometh, m t, i tq
The meUow'd reflex of a winter m ; ^ /"^j iq
Bu? wh'/nThr '''' " '''^ ^^' ^-rZnZ 49
cut wnen the »« was very low, co
SJ ''^ti k^ ""'^.u*^ "* '^'^ gathering light Love and "Death 1
N^eith^rmtoi'lt^a^!^'^" "' '^"^ ^*^^' ' ^'^ ^-^ g
Which the m about her spreadeth, " Maraaret 20
Breathes low between the sunset and the m ; £^^7124
Or tSL ?!"* *^' '"^P"", ""T'^' ^- ^/ 'S/'"^^" ^' 33
Ur wnen the m was overhead, v qo
'For every worm beneath the m Two " Voices 178
G eam'd to the flying m by fits. i^^zi^'sT J16
T f/l-fh i'' f ^"^ "'°™"'^ "'• Fatima 28
In hoUow'd ms of gems, ■' jgg
It was when the m was setting, i^^^/ Queen, Con. 26
FuU-faced above the vaUey stood the m ; Lotos- Eaters 7
Between the sun and m upon the shore ; qq
and in the m Nightly dew-fed ; ' " C S 2^
Once, like the m, I made The ever-shiftin" " • • ^^
currents " -D. 0/ J-. fFomeT. 132
Far-heard beneath the m. jg^
bahny m of blessed Israel Floods all the deep-blue
gloom jg-
the next m was roll'd into the sky, " 229
While the stars bum, the m's increase. To J S 71
Lay a great water, and the m was full. M. d' Arthur 12
And in the m athwart the place of tombs, " ' 46
the winter m Brightening the skirts of a long cloud " 53
great brand Made lightnings in the splendour of the in " 137
And the long glories of the winter m. ' 192
colourless, and like the wither'd m , " 213
for some three careless m's. Gardener's D 15
rose And saunter'd home beneath a m, that, just
In crescent j^ ^ourt 80
But thirty m s, one honeymoon to that, Edwin Morris 29
my beard Was tagg'd with icy fringes in the m, St. S. Stylites 32
Sun will run his orbit, and the M Her circle. Love and Duty 22
long day wanes : the slow m climbs : Vlvsses 55
meUow m's and happy skies, Lockslev Hall 159
stand at gaze like Joshua's m in Ajalon ! lan
hke a summer m Half-dipt in cloud : " Qodiva 45
the snows Are sparkUng to the m : St. Agnes' Eve 2
^ ar ran the naked m across The houseless ocean's The Vovaae 29
A thousand m's wiU quiver : j Vn'^^nnln ^A
Ab shines the m in clouded skies, BeaoarMaidQ
beneath a clouded m He hke a lover EnocTlrde^tl
1 murmui- under m and stars In brambly wildernesses ; The Brook 178
music of the m Sleeps m the plain eggs Aylmer's Field 102
tJeneatn a pale and unimpassion'd m, 334
father's face Grow long and troubled hke a rising m, PHncess i 59
Come from the dying m, and blow, ' Jvifi
out of the west Under the silver m : " 15
with the sun and m renew their Ught For ever, " 255
Moon
476
Moother
Moon (continued) For many weary m's before we came, Princess Hi 319
And brief the m of beauty in the South. ., i^ 113
I babbled for you, as babies for the m, ^ 428
A maiden m that sparkles on a sty, " „ 186
like a clouded w In a stiU water : " ^^ 270
Now set a wrathful Dian's w on flame, " 368
Ask me no more : the m may draw the sea ; " vii 1
our God Himself is m and sun. Qde on Well. 217
The m like a nek on fire was rising Grandmother 39
Echo on echo Dies to the m. Minnie and Winnie 12
The sun the m, the stars, Eigh. Pantheism 1
when m heaven the stars about the m Spec, of Iliad 11
Sun comes, m comes, Time shps away. Sun sets
m sets Love, fix a day ' Window, When 1
charms Her secret from the latest m ? ' /« Mem. xxi 20
-\o lapse of vvs can canker Love, g-^vi 3
The m is hid ; the night is still ; " xxviii 2
Or when a thousand m's shall wane " Ixxvii 8
Or sadness in the summer m's ? " Ixxxiii 8
flung A ballad to the brightening m : ;,' lxxxix2Q
Ihe saihng m- in creek and cove ; ^i 16
The m is hid, the night is still ; " ^iv 2
glowing Uke the m Of Eden on its bridal bower : .',' Con 27
And rise, O m, from yonder down, ' 109
hand, as white As ocean-foam in the m, Maud I xiv 18
And a hush with the setting m. .^ ^xii 18
Now half to the setting m are gone, ' 23
Not many m's. King Uther died himself. Com. of "Arthur 206
Jietween the in-crescent and de-crescent w, Gareth and L. 529
O VI, that layest all to sleep again, 1061
Answer'd Sir Gareth graciously to one Not many
a TO his younger, \415
by night With m and trembling stars, Marr. of Geraint 8
but three bnef m s had glanced away Balin and Balan 154
Ihose twelve sweet m's confused his fatherhood.' Merlin and V 712
All in the middle of the rising m : Holy GraU 636
And with me drove the m and all the stars ; ., 809
That kept the entry, and the ?» was full. ][ 818
the rounded m Thro' the tall oriel on the rolling sea. " 830
mitU the third night brought a to Pelleas "and E. 393
Here too, all hush'd below the mellow to, „ 424
their own darkness, throng'd into the to. " 458
She Uved a to in that low lodge with him : Last Tournament 381
Far over sands marbled with m and cloud, „ 466
Beneath a to unseen albeit at full, "Guinevere 6
on one Lay a great water, and the to was full, Pass of Arthur 180
in the TO athwart the place of tombs, ' „ 214
winter to. Brightening the skirts of a long cloud, ," 221
great brand Made lightnings in the splendour of the to, ", 305
And the long glories of the winter to. „ 360
face was white And colourless, and hke the wither'd m " 381
the to. Half-melted into thin blue air. Lover's' Tale i 420
came in The white light of the weary to above, „ 640
But many weary m's I lived alone — ,^ a 2
glows and glories of the to Below black fii-s, " no
eleventh to After their marriage lit the lover's Bay, ,' iv 27
m Struck from an open grating overhead .',' 59
and the full to stares at the snow. " Rizpah 4
Willy — the m's in a cloud — ^ g6
With this last to, tliis crescent — De Prof., Two G 9
ninth to, that sends the hidden sun Down yon
dark sea, 33
Drew to this shore lit by the suns and m's " 38
ttiLs roaring m of daffodil And crocus, Pref Son., 19th Cent 7
Rejoicing that the sun, the to, the stars Tiresias 160
and crows to the sun and the to. Despair 90
Till the Sun and the M of our science 91
there was but a slip of a to, Toi^ow 9
wid his song to the Sun an' the M, 9I
dead as yon dead world the to ? Locksley H., Sixty 174
TO was falling greenwh thro' a rosy glow, 178
Beneath a hard Arabian m And alien stars. To Mara, of Duffenn 45
gleam as of the to. When first she peers along DenJter aUd P. 13
dwell hor nine white m's of each whole year 120
To send the m into the night and break "„ I35
Moon (continued) Mellow to of heaven. Bright in blue ¥ of
married hearts Hear me, you ! ' The Ring 1
Globing Honey M's Bright as this. 7
M, you fade at times From the night. " 9
Globe again, and make Honey M. " I6
Shall not my love last, M, with you, " 13
They made a thousand honey m's of one ? " 22
And while the to was setting. JforJom 84
not be foUow'd by the M ?^ Happl 97
Mooned Upon the m domes aloof In inmost Bastdat, Arabian Nights 127
Mooney (money) Parson as hesn't the call, nor the m. Village Wife 91
Moon-faced :Maud the beloved of my mother, the m-f
darling of all,— Maud I i 72
Moon-led Their m-l waters white. Palace of Art 252
Moonless Storm, such as drove her under m heavens Enoch Arden 547
Gnntl on the wakeful ear in the hush of the m nights, Maud I i 42
A TO night with storm— sisters ( E. and E.) 96
M«« 1^1,^^ ^""^ T' ""u •*''■ ligl^t-but no ! Columbus 90
Moonlight By st^ai-shine and bv m, Oriana24
Like TO on a falling shower ? Margaret 4
Are a^ to unto sunlight, Lockslex, Roll 152
A full sea glazed with muffled to. Princess i 248
A cypress in the to shake, Xh-e Daisy 82
TO touching o'er a terrace One tall Agavh 83
When on my bed the to falls, /^ Mem. Ixvii 1
l"rom off my bed the m dies ; 10
' It is not Arthur's use To hunt by to ; ' Holy 'Grail 111
There in the shuddering to brought its face Lovers Tale i 650
1 saw the m ghtter on their tears — 697
As TO wandering thro' a mist : " n 52
His lady with the to on her face ; " ^j, 57
Yet the TO is the sunlight, • Locksley H., Sixty 182
TWf«„ v^ ""^ *,^^ '"' ^^^ "^^'^^ starlight ! Merlin and the G. 121
Moonhke glooms of my dark wiU, M emerged. Lover's Tale i 745
Wnni^l^ T, ' f ' ?^^y ^If '"'^•n' Mechanophilus 13
^^L ^^°P"¥ ?^ ^^^ "^-^ ^^"""^ ^^^bian ^fights 27
With narrow to-Z slips of silver cloud, (Enone 218
Far m the to haze among the hills. Pass, of Arthur 42
lVln^^^° l^.f 1°'/ *^^ ''^"t'^^^ "^ "^Shts, Lover's Tale i 138
Moon-nse little before m-r hears the low Moan Palace of Art 279
Moonshme eyes all wet, in the sweet m : Grandmother 49
Tu,^ ""^""p?"" "P *^® P^^,', >" '"■ a niisty to, Lancelot and E. 48
m^wa^ • "^ n ^^^PO^'^J^^ng ,™"nd the King, Guineoere 601
Moor (adj.) Over the dark to land, Maud I ix 6
Moor (land) From far and near, on mead and m, In Mem. xxviii 6
Yet oft when sundown skirts the to ^li 17
I am sick of the to and the main. Maud I i 61
JNo, there is fatter game on the m ; 74
I bo w'd to his lady-sister as she rode by on the to: " t« 15
Betwixt the cloud and the to ^^4
And over the suUen-pm-ple to (Look at it) " x 21
Go back, my lord, across the to, ' xii 31
ye meanwhile far over to and fell " r7»,V 7fi
When I bow'd to her on the to. " xix 66
I will wander till I die about the barren m's. The Flight 56
Is that the leper's hut on the sohtary to, Havvv 9
Moor more) Says that I moiint 'a naw m aale : N. Farmer OS 3
Moor (race Of people) When Spain was waging war against
T u . 1 ?^™^® '^^^^^ ^i*^^ Spai" against the M. Columbus 93
1 am handled worse than had I been a M, 107
given the Great Khan's palaces to the M, Or clutch'd the
, sacred crown of Prester John, And cast it to the if : „ 109
Moor d where man Hath to and rested ? Supp. Confessions 124
MooriS ?r^ ;^^°^* *^^ ^?y. °^'^«'y "* LovJs Tale i 54
Moorland (See also moot (tA}.)) Dreary gleams about the to Locksley Hall 4
Many a morning on the to 35
O the dreary, dreary to ! " 40
ghnimering to rings With jingling bridle-reins. Sir L. and Q. G. 35
Mooted ne er been to, but as frankly theirs Princess v 203
°°whe^^*?'f^ 5 ''f "t'^:^ '"^ *° '^^g "^^ ^'^^' S La 50
wnen M ed gotten to bed, 53
li'i'^V'/ ''"^ ^^'^^^ but I kick'd thy M istead. " 67
M ed bean a-naggin' about the gell 0' the farm, " 69
But il/ was free of 'er tongue, "73
Moother
477
Morning
Moother (mother) (continued) Thy M was howdin' the
lether,
M was naggin' an' groanin' an' moanin'
M 'ed bean sa soak'd wi' the thaw
Moral (adj.) (See also Maudlin-moral) Then of the
m instinct would she prate
' Last of the train, a m leper, I,
He gain in sweetness and in m height,
' A m ehUd without the craft to rule,
Farewell, Macready ; m, grave, subUnie ;
Moral (s) And if you find no m there,
What m is in being fair.
is there any m shut Within the bosom
You'd have my m from the song.
Are clasp'd the m of thy life.
The m's, something of the frame,
Morass Or low m and whispering reed,
Morbid Vex'd with a m devil in his blood
TiU a m hate and horror have grown
And a m eating lichen fixt On a heart
' It is time, O passionate heart and m eye,
I used to walk This Terrace — m, melancholy ;
More See Moor
Moreland (Emma) See Emma Moreland
Mo^anore M, And Lot of Orkney.
Moriah the dead Went wandering o'er M —
our most ancient East M with Jerusalem ;
Morion shone Their m's, wash'd with morning,
Mom (See also After-mom, Chrislmas-mom, Hunting-
mom, Marriage-mom, Mum, Summer-mom,
Yestermom) For even and m Ever will be
Thro' eternity.
For even and w Ye will never see Thro'
eternity.
she bow'd Above Thee, on that happy m
' Yet,' said I, in my m of youth.
Either at m or eventide.
Till cold winds woke the gray-eyed m
Eay-fringed eyeUds of the m
amber m Forth gushes from beneath a low-hung
cloud.
Wander from the side of the m.
Thou wert bom, on a summer m,
And ' Ave Mary,' night and m,
' Madonna, sad is night and m,'
' That won his praises night and m ? '
And murmuring, as at night and m,
More inward than at night or m,
' The day to night, the night to m,
' The night comes on that knows not m,
' Or make that m, from his cold crown
Or in the gateways of the m.
' Behold, it is the Sabbath w.'
Each m my sleep was broken thro'
in the dark m The panther's roar came muffled,
from her Hps, as m from Memnon, drew Rivers
Owd Rod 85
„ 108
„ 113
Palace of Art 205
Princess iv 222
vii 281
Laticelot and E. 146
To W. C. Macready 12
Day-Dm., Moral 2
4
7
„ L' Envoi 31
55
Princess ii 382
In Mem. c 6
Walk, to the Mail 19
Maud I vi 75
77
„ III vi 32
The Ring 168
Com. of Arthur 115
Holy Grail 50
Columbus 81
Princess v 264
All night I he awake, but I fall asleep at m ;
The dim red m had died,
M broaden'd on the borders of the dark,
From out the borders of the m,
without help I cannot last till m.
Shot like a streamer of the northern m,
dark East, Unseen, is brightening to his bridal m
hour just flown, that m with all its sound,
I come to-morrow m. I go,
friendly mist of m Climg to the lake.
And when my marriage m may fall,
Far-folded mists, and gleaming halls of m.
Thou wilt renew thy beauty m by m ;
leave me here a little, while as yet 'tis early m :
The twilight melted into m.
The cock crows ere the Christmas m,
They two will wed the morrow m :
We two wiU wed to-morrow m,
And perplex'd her, night and m,
Nothing will Die 33
AU Things will Die 44
Sufp. Confessions 24
139
Mariana 16
31
Clear-headed friend 6
Ode to Memory 70
Adeline 52
Eleanore 7
Mariana in the S. 10
22
34
46
58
82
94
Two Voices 85
183
402
Miller's D. 39
(Enone 213
Palace of Art 171
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 50
D. of F. Women 61
265
On a Mourner 24
M. d' Arthur 26
139
Gardener'sD. 73
83
Audley Court 70
Edwin Morris 107
Talking Oak 285
Tithonus 10
74
Locksley Hall 1
Day-Dm., Depart. 16
Sir Galahad 51
Lady Clare 7
87
L. of Burleigh 78
The Voyage 82
Vision of Sin QQ, 120
Enoch Arden 181
552
Lucretius 24
Princess ii 262
Hi 17
72
iv 5AQ
V 368
369
423
„ vii 45
356
„ Con. 91
Grandmother 67
In Mem. xi 1
„ xicvi 13
„ XXX 29
„ Ixviii 8
„ Ixxxiv 29
„ Con. 58
Com. of Arthur 456
Gareth and L. 189
855
888
Marr. of Geraint 69
153
157
287
335
691
703
734
Mom (continued) Nor anchor dropt at eve or m ;
Have a rouse before the m : (repeat)
Ascending tired, heavily slept till m.
drifted, stranding on an isle at m Rich,
m That mock'd him with returning calm,
' That on her bridal m before she past
M in the white wake of the morning star
To tvimble, Vulcans, on the second m.'
to-moiTOw m We hold a great convention :
so here upon the flat All that long m
all that m the heralds to and fro,
Between the Northern and the Southern m.'
m by m the lark Shot up and shrill'd
this Is m to more, and all the rich to-come Reels,
Fair-hair'd and redder than a windy m ;
I shall see him another m :
Calm in the m without a sound,
ere yet the m Breaks hither over Indian seas.
Rise, happy 7n, rise, holy m,
Reveillee to the breaking m.
With promise of a m as fair ;
Mute symbols of a joyful m,
the King That m was married,
Far oS they saw the silver-misty m
Hear me — this m I stood in Arthur's hall,
next m, the lord whose Ufe he saved Had,
At last, it chanced that on a summer m
blow His horns for hunting on the morrow m.
But Guinevere lay late into the m.
We hold a tourney here to-morrow m,
made him hke a man abroad at m
' And gladly given again this happy m.
kept it for a sweet surprise at ?».
as the white and glittering star of m
like a shoal Of darting fish, that on a simimer m Geraint and E.
Blinkt the white m, sprays grated, Balin and Balan 385
There m by m, aiTaying her sweet self Lancelot and E. 906
eve and m She kiss'd me saying, „ 1408
gustful April m That puff'd the swaying branches Holy Grail 14
let us meet The morrow m once more in one full field „ 323
till one fair m, I walking to and fro „ 591
But on the hither side of that loud m Last Tournament 56
And little Dagonet on the morrow m, „ 240
it chanced one m when all the court, Guinevere 21
Till in the cold wind that forenms the m, „ 132
without help I cannot last till m. Pass, of Arthur 194
Shot like a streamer of the northern m, „ 307
this March m that sees Thy Soldier-
brother's Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 10
we sail'd on a Friday m — V. of Maeldune 7
The night was calm, the m is calm, The Flight 10
and now the m appears, „ 18
biunt at midnight, found at m, Locksley H., Sixty 97
planted both together, happy in our marriage m ? Happy 14
my fair meadow zoned with airy m ; Prog, of Spring 69
m Has lifted the dark eyelash of the Night Akbar's Dream 200
Momin' yer Honour ye gev her the top of the m. Tomorrow 3
whin are ye goin' to lave me ? ' '0' Monday m '
says he ; „ 17
But airth was at pace nixt m, „ 25
Morning (adj.) Whilome thou earnest with the m
mist, (repeat) Ode to Memory 12, 21
never more Shall lone (Enone see the m mist (Enone 216
long ago Sung by the m star of song, D. of F. Women 3
The maiden splendours of the m star „ 55
And fluted to the m sea. To E. L. 24
To find the precious m hours were lost. Enoch Arden 302
when the m flush Of passion and the first embrace Lucretius 2
like m doves That sim their milky bosoms Princess ii 102
With whom I sang about the m hills, „ 247
In crystal currents of clear m seas. „ 328
In colours gayer than the m mist, „ 438
Mom in the white wake of the m star „ Hi 17
A Memnon smitten with the m Sun.' „ 116
Alpine harebell himg with tears By some cold m glacier ; „ vii 116
Morning
478
Mortal
Homing (adj.) (continued) And whistled to the m star. Sailor Boy 4
And you are his m star. Windov.\ Marr. Morn. 12
Thro' clouds that drench the m star, In Mem. Ixxii 22
The sweep of scythe in m dew, „ Ixxxix 18
Who stay to share the m feast, „ Con. 75
And even in high day the m star. Com. of Arthur 100
thereon the m star. And Gareth silent gazed Gareth and L. 932
And then she sang, ' O m star ' „ 996
' O m star that smilest in the blue, O star, my m
dream hath proven true, „ 999
' O birds, that warble to the m, sky, „ 1075
But that same strength which threw the M Star „ 1108
and the m star Reel'd in the smoke, Pelleas and E. 518
their feare Are m shadows huger than the shapes To the Queen ii 63
The lucid chambers of the m star, Lover's Tale i 28
A m air, sweet after rain, ran over „ Hi 3
the m, song of the lark. First Quarrel 33
lark has past from earth to Heaven upon the w
breeze ! The Flight 62
And splendours of the m land. Of en. I. and C. Exhih. 8
tiU the mortal m mists of earth Fade Akbar's Dream 96
The m light of happy marriage broke Death of (Enone 102
Uomii^ (s) (See also March-morning, Momin' Mumin')
Every heart this May m in joyance is beating All Things will Die 6
Thou comest m or even ; she cometh not m or even. Leonine Eleg. 15
' Still sees the sacred m spread Two Voices 80
In her still place the m wept : „ 275
It haunted me, the m long, Miller's D. 69
you had set. That m, on the casement-edge „ 82
Gargarus Stands up and takes the m : (Enone 11
Far up the solitary m smote The streaks „ 55
In the early early m the summer sun May Queen, N. Y's. E. 22
How sadly, I remember, rose the m of the year ! „ Con. 3
came a sweeter token when the night and m meet : „ 22
It is a stormy ?«,.' The Goose 44
every m brought a noble chance, AI. d' Arthur 230
This m is the m of the day, Gardener's D. 1
The northern m o'er thee shoot, Talking Oak 275
m driv'n her plow of pearl Far fun'owing Love and Duty 99
Many a m on the moorland Locksley Hall 35
And in the m of the times. Day-Dm., L' Envoi 20
I saw that every m, far withdrawn Vision of Sin 48
Enoch faced this m of farewell Brightly Enoch Arden 182
in those uttermost Parts of the m ? „ 224
that same m officers and men Levied a kindly tax „ 662
this kindlier glow Faded with m, Aylmer's Field 412
eyes Had such a star of m in their blue, „ 692
And me that m Walter show'd the house, Princess, Pro. 10
That m in the presence room I stood „ i 51
shone Their morions, wash'd with m, ., v 264
I took it for an hour in mine own bed This m : „ 435
I mused on that wild m in the woods, „ 471
Death and M on the silver horns, „ vii 204
Like yonder m on the bUnd half-world ; „ 352
the winds are up in the m ? (repeat) Window, On the HUl 5, 10, 15, 20
For this is the golden m of love, „ Marr. Mom. 11
With m wakes the wUl, and cries. In Mem. iv 15
Never m wore To evening, but some heart „ m 7
I creep At earUest m to the door. ,, vii 8
Singing alone in the m of life, In the happy m of life and
of May, Maud I v 6
M arises stormy and pale, „ ml
Till at last when the m came In a cloud, „ 20
O when did a m shine So rich in atonement „ xix 5
For a breeze of m moves, „ xxii 7
'Tis a m pure and sweet, (repeat) Maud II iv 31, 35
So with the m all the court were gone. Marr. of Geraint 156
To ride with him this m to the court, • „ 606
And now this m when he said to her, „ 847
Geraint, who issuing forth That m, Geraint and E. 9
Their chance of booty from the m's raid, „ 565
Then chanced, one m, that Sir BaUn sat Balin and Balan 240
Came with slow steps, the m on her face ; „ 245
And all this m when I fondled you : Merlin and V. 286
she placed where m'a earliest ray Might strike it, Lancelot and E. 5
Morning (s) (continued) o'er and o'er For all an April m, Lancelot and E. 897
ten slow m's past, and on the eleventh „ 1133
blush'd and brake the m of the jousts, Pelleas and E. 157
but rose With m every day, and, moist or dry, „ 215
But when the m of a tournament. Last Tournament 134
every m brought a noble chance. Pass, of Arthur 398
On the same m, almost the same hour, Lover's Tale i 198
There came a glorious m, such a one „ 299
Mercury On such a m would have flung ,, 301
broke in light Like m from her eyes — „ ii 144
One m when the upblown billow ran Shoreward „ 178
One bright May m in a world of song. Sisters (E. and E.) 82
had sunn'd The m of our marriage, „ 244
Then in the gray of the m it seem'd In the Child. Hosp. 67
on another wild m another wild earthquake Def. of Lucknow 61
I saw your face that m in the crowd. Columbus 7
one m a bird with a warble The Wreck 81
the m brings the day I hate and fear ; The Flight 2
waken every m to that face I loathe to see : „ 8
their songs, that meet The m with such music, ,, 66
But look, the m grows apace, „ 93
half the m have I paced these sandy tracts, Locksley H., Sixty 1
Half the marvels of my m, „ 75
Star of the »n, Hope in the sunrise ; Vastness 15
Given on the m when you came of age The Ring 77
Why not bask amid the senses while the sun of
m shines. By an Evolution. 6
Would I had past in the m that looks so bright „ 10
m of my reign Was redden'd by that cloud Akbar's Dream 63
Every 7n is thy birthday „ Hymn 2
Every m here we greet it, „ 3
Morning-breath dewy meadowy m-b Of England, Enoch Arden 660
Morning-mist thro' the sunless winter m-m In silence Death of (Enone 8
Morning-star (See also Morning (adj.)) Sung by the m s
of song, D. of F. Women 3
maiden splendours of the m s Shook „ 55
Toward the m-s. „ 244
And whistled to the m s. Sailor Boy 4
M-S, and Noon-Sim, and Evening-Star, Gareth and L. 634
' Nay, nay,' she said, ' Sir M-S. „ 918
And servants of the M-S, approach, „ 924
golden guess Is m-s to the full round of truth. Columbus 44
Momingtide great Sun-star of m. Bait, of Bnmanburh 26
Morris (Edwin) See Edwin, Edwin Morris
Morrison (Mary) See Mary, Mary Morrison
Morrow (adj.) (See also To-morrow) They two will wed the
m morn : Lady Clare 7
blow His horns for himting on the m mom. Marr. of Geraint 153
let us meet The m mom once more in one full field Holy Grail 323
And httle Dagonet on the m mom. Last Tournament 240
Morrow (s) (See also Goodmorrow, Tomorra, To-morrow)
when the m came, she rose and took The child Dora 80
till the m, when he spoke. Enoch Arden 156
a poising eagle, burns Above the imrisen m : ' Princess iv 83
For the meeting of the m, Maud II iv 28
As pass without good m to thy Queen ? ' Balin and Balan 252
Then being on the m knighted, sware Pelleas and E. 140
and expectancy of worse Upon the m. Lover's Tale ii 152
Mors ' Meridies ' — ' Hesperus ' — ' Nox ' — ' M,' Gareth and L. 1205
Morsel (See also Mossel) Mangled to m's, A youngster
in war ! Batt. of Brunanburh 74
Mortal (adj.) (See also Mortial, Mottal) your m dower Of
pensive thought Margaret 5
' Then dying of a m stroke, Two Voices 154
Who sought'st to wreck my m ark, „ 389
Thy m eyes are frail to judge of fair, — (Enone 158
And when no m motion jars The blackness On a Mourner 26
Not tho' I live three lives of m men, M. d' Arthur 155
made blank of crimeful record all My m archives. St. S. Stylites 159
tho' my m summers to such length of years Locksley Hall 67
My spirit beats her m bars. Sir Galahad 46
This m armour that I wear, „ 70
plucks The m soul from out immortal hell, Lucretius 263
Her stature more than m in the burst Of sunrise. Princess, Pro. 40
The fading politics of m Rome, „ n 286
Mortal
479
Mortal (adj.) (continued) In lieu of many m flies, a race Of
giants living, ' r, . ...„„„
I leave this m krk behind, ^^T/'' "' ^^a
'They do not die Nor los^ their m sympathy, ^" "23
hardly worth my while to choose Of things iu ,«, " ^^^iJl
For W idsom dealt with m powers " "^^^^^ :^^
These m luUabies of pain May bind a book, " f^^: %
Intelhgencies fair That range above our m state, " ^^22
And teach true hfe to fight with m ^vrongs. Maud Ix^i 54
nae, ana dream The m dream that never yet was
mine — ^ it 7-
Naked of glory for His m change, HolTild mI
&o"oveThS?,'^^T ^' "^ ^^''^ ^-' S?nS^,m
J>ot tno 1 live three hves of m men, />„<,. „/• ^w/.«^ ^9^!
Three cypresses, symbols of m woe, ' LovekrhTi f^l
forest-shadow borne With more th^n m swiftness, ' ^"^^ if g
or my love M once more ? ' ' " • an
^ ^S"^ "^"^ '"°°'' '*'^^'' ^ '^''' "°'' * "" ^^^* '^' ^'^^ " *"
andThook like a man in a m affright • vTh, ^f}^^ ,5
serve This m race thy kin so weSf ' nlprlf Tw^G It
our m veil And shatter'd phantom of that infinite ^■' ^'^ ^^ ^^
One,
Yet loves and hates with m hates and loves, "xiresms 23
no Nor yet that thou art to— j ■ ! 1^ ^o
Have ended m foes ; ^nci««< Sage 63
^"tlTin^r'^ ^^^^^ *^'' ^° ^^^^ ^^'^ ^^ """'^ "^^" '" " "^^^
TheTOlimitof the Self was loosed, " 909
mgh-heayen dawn of more than m day " 9^2
Twisted hard in m agony with their offspring, Locksleu H "sirtn^
^J^t *" ^ °^ "^*'™ "^^^ ^'^^^ living hues ^ ' ^ ^
But since, our m shadow, p •, ^^
will make his name As to as my own Epilogue 22
I am TO stone and lime. rr^, , 'A, "i
The dead man's garden, The to hillock. Merlin M^Gm^
Tho' their music here be to need the singer greatly care PPamL^S
till the TO morning mists of earth Fade j zV ,^^^^ ^°
Mortal (s) black earth ^r»v^^. tu^ i- ^A;6ar'5 Dream 96
w)»tlrij*^ oiacK eartn yawns : the to disappears : Ode on Well 9fiq
Mortality from the low light of to Shot up their ^^
shadows ^ - , , -r, • , , ^ .
Morteage sober rook And carrion crow crv ' 1/ ' ^2/^'««: « Frdd 641
Mortial(mortal) ,to dhrame of a maS m^n, death alive, ^'^^ ^^^ ^^^
IS a 771 sin, /Ti
Mortify i/ Your flesh, hke me, o, /iTT^'^.^l
Mosaic Below was aU to choicely plann'd lltWrt iS
Mnc.c A*^^ rough kex break The stan-'d to, PrileiVK
Moses An', faix, be the piper 0' J/ J^twces.9 ii; 78
Moslem (adj.) clove theycrescent moon, and changed it into'^"'^"^" ''
Moslem (s) Spain should oust The M from her limit, CoFuZll ^
palace, n r r ?- 7
sometunes the to. '
Christian beU, the cry from off the vi, Akbar'sDream 149
M™» ?f ^'' Tt^' •^.^°^' ^' "°^ Church, ' ^''""^ If.
Moss (f «« «^«o Maxish-mosses, Staghorn-moss) With "
blackest TO the flower-pots l/ariat,« 1
creeping mes and clambering weeds, Z?vmSr36
S'ub:uS?T"ot;r'^'*'r^ .0 m7iS!9
Diueoeu rmgs lo the m'es underneath ? Adeline 35
Like those long m'es in the stream. Miller's I) 48
theiTof rot?' "^"^ *^'"; *^^ '^ t'^^ ^^^ Lotos-EaeZ C -S I
With TO and hVr^rn'"""'^' J"-^^"" '"y "*y ^^"'"^ ; Gardener's D. 193
Lona Lt^i ^"^ mansh-pipe ; On a Mourner 10
Long learned names of agaric, to and fern, Edwin Morris 17
^hlZ7^L^V't' ^'' cream-white'mule Sir L. ZdQG. lb
ft w?np fl^i T^ refuse patch'd with to. F«ior^ of Sin 212
He felt the hollow-beaten m'es thud Balin and Balan 321
Mother
And sitting down upon the golden
I make bare of all the golden to,
Moss-bed Soft are tho m-b's imder the sea •
Moss d wild bee hummeth About the to headstone :
Mossel (morsel) there wam't not a m o' hai-m •
Mossy and wi-ote On the to stone, as I lay
Mostly The words are to mine • '
Moted See Thick-moted '
Moth (See also Emperor-moth) we as rich as m's from
dusk cocoons,
That not a to with vain desire
The m will singe her wings,
Mother (adj.) That not in any m town With statelier
progress
Who finds the Saviour in his to tongue.
For that sweet to land which gave them birth
Mother (s) (See also Earth-mother, Foster-mother
Maid -mother, Moother, Muther, Stepmother,
T .Swaa-mother) In her as M, Wife, and Queen ;
i-iike Ihine own m's when she bow'd
rosy fingei-s play About his m's neck, and knows
Nothing beyond his m's eyes.
my gloomed fancy were As thine, my in
grave Was deep, my to, in the clay ? '
answers to his m's calls From the flower'd furrow
Af, give me grace To help me of my weary
' Sweet M, let me not here alone
My TO thought, What ails the boy ?
slowly was my to brought To yield consent
Ihe doubt my m would not see •
I^tT. ^f ^' ."^^ny-fo.un.tain'd Ida, (repeat) ^none Z6, 54, 45 172
TO Ida, barken ere I die. (repeat) CEnone 24, 35, 46, 53, 64, 77, 91 103,
' 0 TO, hear me yet before I die. (repeat) (Enone 201 ' 220 'lit m,' 256
Lover's Tale i 540
a 48
The Merman 39
Claribel 12
Owd Rod 70
Edward Gray 26
Princess, Con. 3
Princess ii 19
In Mem. liv 10
Sir J. Oldcastle 189
In Mem. xcviii 21
Sir J. Oldcastle 115
Tiresias 122
To the Queen 28
Supp. Confessions 23
43
159
Mariana in the S. 29
59
Miller's D. 93
137
^ " 154
CEnone 23, 34, 45, 172
as a TO Conjectures of the features of her child
And laid him at his m's feet.
When thus he met his m's view,
must wake and call me early, call me early
dear; (repeat)
Of all the glad New-year, to,
I'm to be the Queen o' the May, to, (repeat)
I sleep so sound all night, to,
He thought of that sharp look, to,
He thought I was a ghost, to,
They say his heart is breaking, mr—
And you'll be there, too, to.
The night-winds come and go, to,
All the valley, to, 'ill be fresh and green
If you're waking call me early, call me
early, m dear, (repeat)
And the New-year's coming up, to.
But I shall lie alone, to,
When you are warm-asleep, to.
When the flowers come again, to.
You'll bury me, my to, just beneath the
hawthorn shade,
I shall not forget you, to,
You'll kiss me, my own to,
You should not fret for me, to.
If I can I'U come again, to,
Tho' you'll not see me, to.
Goodnight, sweet m : call me before the day is bom
It seem'd so hard at first, to,
Nor would I now be well, to,
I did not hear the dog howl, to.
But sit beside my bed, to.
CEnone 251
The Sisters 35
L. C. V. de Vere 34
May Queen 1, 41
3
May Queen 4, 8, 12, 16,
20, 24, 28, 32,
36, 40, 44
May Queen 9
15
smile away my maiden blame among The
Hebrew m's ' —
Grave m of majestic works.
Strong TO of a Lion-line,
he win teach him hardness, and to slight His m •
17
22
26
33
37
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 1, 52
7
20
24
25
29
31
34
36
37
38
49
Con. 9
19
21
23
D. of F. Women 215
Of old sat Freedom 13
England and Amer. 3
Dora 121
Mother
480
Mother
Mother (s) (continued) but when the boy beheld His m,
Bora 138
St. S. Stylites 112
Christ, the Virgin M, and the saints ;
Her m tiomdled to the gate Behind the dappled
grays. Talking Oak 111
press me from the m's breast. Locksley Hall 90
m's brought Their children, clamoiuing, Godiva 14
Against her father's and m's will : Edward Gray 10
O w,' she said, ' if this be true. Lady Clare 30
' Yet give one kiss to your m dear ! „ 49
' O m, ?n., m,' she said, „ 51
' Yet here's a kiss for my m dear, My m dear, if this be so, „ 53
And bless me, m, ere I go.' „ 56
Every ?n's son — Down they dropt — The Captain 50
m cared for it With aU a m's care : Enoch Arden 262
Then the new m came about her heart, „ 524
saw The m glancing often toward her babe, „ 754
the girl So like her to, „ 791
Annie, whom I saw So like her m, „ 883
from the plaintive m's teat he took The Brook 129
My w, as it seems you did, „ 225
Heard the good m softly whisper ' Bless, Aylmer's Field 187
nature crost Was m of the foul adulteries „ 376
The TO flow'd in shallower acrimonies : „ 563
Yet the sad to, for the second death „ 604
As with the to he had never known, „ 690
The childless to went to seek her child ; „ 829
wail'd and woke The to, and the father suddenly
cried.
The Viigin M standing with her child
the child Clung to the to, and sent out a cry
M, let me fly away,
lambs are glad Nosing the m's udder.
For so, my to said, the story ran.
My TO pitying made a thousand prayers ;
My TO was as mild as any saint,
' The TO of the sweetest little maid,
why should I not play The Spartan M with emotion,
Our TO, is she weU ? '
clad her like an April daffodilly (Her m's colour)
But yet your in's jealous temperament —
Rest, rest, on m's breast,
' 0 fly, while yet you may ! My to knows : '
My TO, 'tis her wont from night to night
(for still My to went revolving on the word)
So my TO clutch'd The truth at once,
'tis my TO, Too jealous, often fretful as the wind
my m still Affirms your Psyche thieved her theories,
I tried the m's heart.
And then, demanded if her to knew,
and you me Your second to :
she, half on her m propt, Half-drooping from her,
dismiss'd in shame to live No wiser than their m's,
they will beat my girl Remembering her to :
111 TO that I was to leave her there,
I won Your to, a good to, a good wife,
and she of whom you speak. My to,
M's — that, all prophetic pity,
and what m's blood You draw from, fight ;
risk'd it for your own ; His m lives :
cbiefest comfort is the little child Of one unworthy m ;
prize the authentic to of her mind.
The TO makes us most —
good Queen, her to, shore the tress With kisses,
spied its m and began A blind and babbling laughter,
So stood the unhappy to open-mouth'd,
Red grief and m's hunger m her eye,
hadf The sacred m's bosom, panting,
striking with her glance. The w, me, the child ;
thy TO prove As true to thee as false,
Not from your to, now a saint with saints.
You shame your m's judgment too.
Not only he, but by my m's soul,
Happy he With such a to !
This TO is your model.
From 7ft unto to, stately bride,
Sea Dreams 58
242
245
296
Lucretius 100
Princess ill
21
22
a 279
283
310
325
338
iii 11
29
32
54
60
79
91
147
w233
297
367
514
v89
93
166
193
381
404
408
431
433
507
mll3
136
143
146
148
153
203
233
261
335
vii 328
335
W. to Marie Alex. 9
Mother (s) {continued) ' My to clings about my neck,
this pretty home, the home where m dwells ?
They f oimd the w sitting still ;
The TO said, ' They have taken the child
Chop the breasts from oS the m,
0 TO, praying God will save Thy sailor,—
Dear as the to to the son,
And tears are on the m's face.
That feed the m's of the flock ;
The shrill-edged shriek of a m
a Mammonite to kills her babe for a burial fee,
Maud the beloved of my m,
Your TO is mute in her grave as her image in marble
above ;
My TO, who was so gentle and good ?
Her TO has been a thing complete.
Made her only the child of her m,
Darken'd watching a to dechne
1 did not speak Of my m's faded cheek
Maud was moved To speak of the to she loved
and thought It is his m's hair.
spike that split the m's heart Spitting the child,
the bitterness and grief That vext his to.
For dark my to was in eyes and hair,
A m weeping, and I hear her say,
in my good m's hall Linger with vacillating
obedience.
Since the good to holds me stiU a child !
, Good TO is bad to imto me !
' M, tho' ye count me stiU the child. Sweet to, do ye
love the child ? '
' Then, to, an ye love the child,'
good TO, but this egg of mine Was finer gold
so the boy, Sweet to, neither clomb,
TO said, ' True love, sweet son, had risk'd himself
TO, there was once a King, Mke ours.
M, How can ye keep me tether'd to you —
To whom the to said, ' Sweet son,
I will walk thro' fire, M, to gain it —
obedience and thy love to me. Thy to, — I demand.'
slowly spake the to looking at him.
And since thou art my to, must obey.
The m's eye Fxall of the wistful fear
Before the wakeful to heard him, went.
' Son, the good to let me know thee here.
Seem I not as tender to him As any to ?
' M, a maiden is a tender thing,
arose, and raised Her to too,
a costly gift Of her good to.
For while the to show'd it, and the two
it was her to grasping her To get her well awake ;
Here ceased the kindly to out of breath ;
Help'd by the m's careful hand and eye,
Yniol made report Of that good to making Enid gay
Dared not to glance at her good m's face.
Her TO silent too, nor helping her.
Then seeing cloud upon the m's brow,
' 0 my new m, be not %vroth or grieved
He spoke : the w smiled, but half in tears,
Pure as our own tiTie M is our Queen.'
My m on his corpse in open field ; (repeat)
Seethed hke the kid in its own m's milk !
TO of the house There was not :
Wish'd it had been my to, for they talk'd,
Milder than any to to a sick child.
Nay, by the to of our Lord himself.
Lady of the Lake Caught from his m's arms —
The highest virtue, to of them all ;
Sucli as the wholesome m's tell their boys,
sister of my to — she that bore Camilla
My m's sister, to of my love,
whatsoe'er Our general to meant for me alone, Our
mutual TO dealt to both of us :
Why were our m's' branches of one stem ?
Back to his m's house among the pines.
Sailor Boy 17
City Child 2
The Victimil
43
Boddicea 68
In Mem. vi 13
ix 19
xl 10
cl6
Maud I i 16
45
72
ii;58
vi 67
xiii 35
40
xix 8
19
27
II a 70
Com. of Arthur 38
211
327
334
Gareth and L.
34
37
42
56
59
101
114
120
134
147
151
167
172
180
550
1284
Marr. of Geraint 510
536
632
636
676
732
738
757
766
768
777
779
823
Balin and Balan 617
Merlin and V. 43, 73
869
Lancelot and E. 177
674
858
1230
1405
Holy Grail 446
Pelleas and E. 197
Lover's Tale i 202
209 j
2451
a 25|
iv Ifi
Mother
481
Motion
Motber (s) (contimied) All softly as his m broke it to
him —
Back to the m's house where she was bom.
Then the good m's kindly ministering,
You'll make her its second m !
' 0 m, come out to me.'
' O m ! ' I heard him cry.
' M, O ml ' — he call'd in the dark
How do they know it ? are they his w ?
their m and her sister loved More passionately
still.
The m fell about the daughter's neck,
Edith wrote : ' My m bids me ask '
I told yom- wayside story to my m
' Pray come and see my m.
' Pray come and see my m, and farewell.'
the simple m work'd upon By Edith
The m broke her promise to the dead,
m's garrulous wail For ever woke the unhappy
Past „ 262
Miss Annie were saw stuck oop, like 'er m afoor — Village Wife 59
And thine Imperial m smile again, Bed. Poem Prin. Alice 13
yea to him Who hacks his m's throat — denied to him,
Who finds the Saviour in his mother tongue. Sir J. Oldcastle 114
All glory to the m of our Lord, Colunibibs 62
dear m's, crazing Nature, kill Their babies „ 179
-honouring his wise m's word — Achilles over the T. 16
- ----- - Tiresias 103
The Wreck 1
» 11
13
Lover's Tale iv 31
91
92
First Quarrel 71
Rizpah 2
„ 42
„ 47
„ 70
Sisters {E. and E.) 44
164
181
189
191
196
206
252
maidens, wives, And m's vnih. their babblers
Hide me, M ! my Fathers belong'd to the church
I was the tempter, M,
He that they gave me to, M,
M, I have not — however their tongues may have
babbled
for M, the voice was the voice of the soul ;
but it coo'd to the M and smiled.
And the Motherless M kiss'd it,
M, one morning a bird with a warble
* The heart ! not a m's heart,
cloud of the m's shame will enfold her
M, the ship stagger'd under a thunderous shock,
the face I had known, O M, was not the face
O M, she came to me there.
Struck hard at the tender heart of the m.
Better our dead brute m who never
grave would yawn, my m's ghost would rise —
Our gentle m, had she lived —
Our dying m join'd our hands ;
Thin Molly's ould m, yer Honour,
As the Holy M o' Glory that smiles
To be there wid the Blessed M,
— ^father, m, — be content,
dead the m, dead the child.
Gone thy tender-natured m.
Clinging to the silent m !
Sun of dawn That brightens thro' the M's tender
eyes,
M weeps At that white funeral of the single life.
But moving thro' the M's home,
The m featiu-ed in the son ; Open, J. and C. Exhib. 12
Drove from out the m's nest That yoimg eagle „ 27
' Jf ! ' and I was folded in thine arms. Demeter and P. 22
disimpassion'd eyes Awed even me at first, thy m — „ 24
So mighty was the m's childless cry, „ 32
And set the m waking in amaze
chanting me. Me, me, the desolate M !
Because I hear your M's voice in yours.
ring bequeath'd you by your m, child,
My M's nurse and mine.
I ask'd About my M, and she said, Thy hair Is golden
like thy M's, not so fine.'
Of my dear M on your bracket here —
and I, she said, I babbled, M, M —
Miriam your M might appear to me.
Vext, that you thought my M came to me ? Or at
my crying ' ilf ? ' or to find My M's diamonds hidden „ 140
41
54
60
62
81
97
100
107
., 116
148
Despair 74
98
The Flight 51
77
87
Tomorrow 19
26
95
Locksley H., Sixty 25
36
57
99
To Prin. Beatrice 4
8
17
57
73
The Ring 28
75
97
103
110
115
137
Mother (s) (continued) Your M and step-mother —
lived With Muriel's m on the dowii,
And on your M's birthday —
poor M ! And you, poor desolate Father,
Mmiel's m sent, And sure am I,
Had graspt a daisy from your M's grave —
You scorn my M's warning.
For Muriel nursed you with a m's care ;
but oftener left That angling to the m.
And the face. The hand, — my M.
larger woman-world Of wives and m's.
M, dare you kill your child ?
I see the picture yet, AI and child.
' Father and M will watch you grow ' — (repeat)
fair m's they Dying in chUdbirth of dead sons,
to be reconciled ? — No, by the M of God,
Mother-age O thou wondrous M-A !
M- A (for mine I knew not)
Mother-city gain'd the m-c thick with towers,
Motherhood heart of m Within me shudder.
She dropt the gracious mask of m,
Motherless She was m And I without a father.
M evermore of an ever-vanishing race.
The m bleat of a lamb in the storm
And the M Mother kiss'd it.
Mother-maidenhood deathless m-m of Heaven,
Motion A m from the river won Ridged the smooth
level, Arabian Nights 34
Thought and m mingle, Mingle ever. M's flow To one
The Ring 146
148
248
302
311
323
326
349
356
425
487
Forlorn 37
Romney's R. 81
„ 104, 106
Alcbar's Dream 11
Bandit's Death 17
Locksley Hall 108
185
Princess i 112
Demeter and P. 41
The Ring 384
Lover's Tale i 218
Despair 84
In the Child. Hasp. 64
The Wreck 62
Balin and Balan 521
another.
With m's of the outer sea :
' We find no w in the dead.'
With m's, checks, and counterchecks.
Nature's living m lent The pulse of hope
I had no m of my own.
all those names, that in their m were
'Mid onward-sloping m's infinite
We have had enough of action, and of m we,
There was no m in the dumb dead air,
Because with sudden m from the ground
when no mortal m jars The blackness
A m toiling in the gloom —
Or voice, or else a m of the mere.
Like those blind m's of the Spring,
And her eyes on all my m's
Nature made them blinder m's
No shadow past, nor m :
his passions all in flood And masters of his m,
I thought the m of the boimdless deep
The m of the great deep bore me on.
And then the m of the current ceased,
Read rascal in the m's of his back,
faces toward us and address'd Their m :
about his m clung The shadow of his sister,
the heart Made for all noble m :
All in quantity, careful of my m.
That all thy m's gently pass
Whose muffled m's blindly drown
As, imto vaster m's bound,
O heart, with kindliest m warm,
No dance, no m, save alone What lightens
In all her m one with law ;
having the nerves of m as well as the nerves of pain.
Elednore 60
113
Two Voices 279
300
449
Miller's D. 44
Palace of Art 165
247
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 105
D. of F. Women 65
170
On a Mourner 26
Love thou thy land 54
M. d' Arthur 77
Talking Oak 175
Locksley Rail 22
150
Enoch Arden 710
Aylmer's Field 340
Sea Dreams 91
111
117
167
Princess iv 552
V 257
.384
Hendecasylldbics 5
In Mem. xv 10
„ xlix 15
„ Ixiii 10
„ Ixxxv 34
cv23
„ cxxii 8
Maud I i 63
In coimter m to the clouds, Gareth and L. 1315
put his horse in m toward the knight, Marr. of Geraint 206
But at the flash and m of the man Geraint and E. 467
So, scai'ed but at the m of the man, „ 476
heavens Were shaken with the m and the sound. Holy Grail 801
Or voice, or else a m of the mere. Pass, of Arthur 245
or set apart Their m's and their brightness Lover's Tale i 174
And saw the m of all other things ; „ 574
m's of my heart seem'd far within me, „ H 54
soul, life And breath and m, past and flow'd away „ 195
The feebler m underneath has hand. „ iv 83
fated channel where thy m lives De Prof., Two G. 19
2 H
Motion
482
Mountain
notion (continued) the boundless m of the deep. Ancient Sage 194
still 111 m to the distant gleam, Freedom 14
Motionless Enoch slumber'd m and pale, Enoch Arden 908
Mute, blind and w as then I lay ; Lmer's Tale i 607
Hottal (mortal) I owas owd Koaver moor nor I iver owad
m man. Owd Boa 4
Motto Blazon your in'es of blessing W. to Alexandra 12
this for m, ' Rather use than fame.' Merlin and V. 480
Mould (earth) you may lay me low i' the m May Queen, N. Y's. E. 4
And render him to the m. Ode on Well. 48
and flung the m upon your feet, Happy 50
dead from all the human race as if beneath the m ; „ 95
groundflame of the crocus breaks the m, Prog, of Spring 1
Six foot deep of burial m Will dull their comments ! Romney's E. 125
Mould (form) ' Think you this m of hopes and fears Two Voices 28
That I was fust in human m ? „ 342
(Beauty seen In all varieties of m and
mind) To , With Pal. of Art 7
those That are cast in gentle m. To J. S. 4
lovelier in her mood Than in her m that other, Princess vii 163
Those niched shapes of noble m. The Daisy 38
over all one statue in the m Of Arthur, Holy Grail 238
Which, cast in later Grecian m, To Master of B. 6
Mould (verb) Unto her limbs itself doth m Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 10
and m The woman to the fuller day.' Princess Hi 331
And m a generation strong to move „ v 416
To m a mighty state's decrees, In Mem. Ixiv 11
wrought To m the dream ; To E. Fitzgerald 30
and the strength To m it into action Tiresias 129
Will m him thro' the cycle-year That dawns Epilogue 11
M them for all his people. Akbar's Bream 129
Moulded (See also Imperial-moulded, Large-moulded, Master-
moulded, Well-moulded) M thy baby thought. Elednore 5
And in the sixth she m man. Two Voices 18
M by God, and temper'd with the
tears To , With Pal. of Art 18
Heaven in lavish bounty ?», Aylmer's Field 107
As m Uke in Nature's mint ; In Mem. Ixxix 6
And m in colossal calm. „ Con. 16
Be m by your wishes for her weal ; Marr. of Geraint 799
from the statue MerUn m for us Holy Grail 732
M the audible and visible ; Lover's Tale ii 105
the heavens Whereby the cloud was m, Ancient Sage 13
stateliest measure ever m by the lips of man. To Virgil 40
Moulder cannons m on the seaward wall ; Ode on Well. 173
That rotting inward slowly m's all. Merlin and V. 395
Their heads should m on the city gates. „ 594
but here too much We m — Holy Grail 39
Moulder'd (See also Half-moulder'd) I see the m
Abbey-walLs, Talking Oak 3
ShaU it not be scorn to me to harp on such a m
string ? Locksley Hall 147
red roofs about a narrow wharf In cluster ; then a m
church ; Enoch Arden 4
never man, I think. So m in a sinecure as he : Princess, Pro. 182
About the m lodges of the Past „ iv 63
A m citadel on the coast. The Daisy 28
hath power to see Within the green the m tree, In Mem. xxvi 1
I heard a groaning overhead, and climb'd The m
stall's Lover's Tale iv 137
And a tree with a m nest On its barkless bones, Dead Prophet 18
\\ho lops the m branch away. Hands all Round 8
P'ound m a chink of that old in floor ! ' The Ring 280
what a fuiy shook Those pillare of a m faitli, Akbar's Dream 81
Mouldering mouse Behind the m wainscot shriek'd, Mariana 64
Earthward he boweth the heavy stalks Of the m
flowers : A spirit haunts 8
But I shall lie alone, mother, within the m
grave. May Queen, N. Y's. E. 20
Yet how often I and Amy in the m aisle have
stood, Locksley H., Sixty 31
Prom that casement where the trailer mantles all
the m bricks — „ 257
m with the dull earth's m sod. Palace of Art 261
hunlit ocean tosses O'er them m. The Captain 70
Mouldering (continued) Before the w of a yew ; In Mem. Ixxvi 8
Still larger m all the house of thought, Lover's Tale i 241
Moulding reach thro' nature, m men. In Mem. cxxiv 24
Mouldy To shame these m Aylmers in their graves : Aylmer's Field 396
Stuff his ribs with m hay. Vision of Sin 66
' Trooping from their m dens The chap-fallen circle
spreads : „ 171
Moult Some birds are sick and sullen when they m. Sisters (E. and E.) 73
Mound (s) A realm of pleasance, many a «i, Arabian Nights 101
Heap'd over with a m of grass, Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 67
There sat we down upon a garden ?«, Gardener's D. 214
and sat upon a m That was unsown, Dora 72
took The child once more, and sat upon the m ; „ 81
and gain'd a petty m Beyond it. Princess iv 557
scarce three paces measured from the m, „ vl
huddled here and there on m and knoU, Geraint and E. 803
whelm all this beneath as vast a m Merlin and V. 656
Tho' heapt in m's and ridges aU the sea Holy Grail 798
Near him a m of even-sloping side, Pelleas amd E. 25
Mound (verb) heaped hiUs that m the sea. Ode to Memory 98
Moimded Ear furrowing into light the m rack. Love and Duly 100
' When wealth no more shall rest in vi heaps, Golden Year 32
Mount (s) A m of marble, a hundred spires ! The Daisy 60
RoUing her smoke about the Royal m, Gareih and L. 190
Right o'er a m of newly-fallen stones, Marr. of Geraint 361
' Too lugh this m of Camelot for me : Balin and Balan 226
on the m Of Badon I myself beheld the King Lancelot and E. 302
For all the sacred m of Camelot, Holy Grail 227
Wealthy with wandering Unes of m and mere, „ 252
Strike on the M of Vision ! Ancient Sage285
M and mine, and primal wood ; Open. I. and C. Exhib. 6
Moimt (verb) Before he m's the hill, I know Fatima 22
Nor sound of human sorrow m's to mar Lucretius 109
As m's the heavenward altar-fire, In Mem. xli 3
never m As high as woman in her selfless mood. Merlin and V. 442
What did the wanton say ? ' Not m as high ; ' „ 813
Mountain (adj.) why he Slumbers not hke a m
tarn ? Supp. Confessions 129
And seem'd knee-deep in m grass, Mariana in the S. 42
0 m brooks, I am the daughter of a River-God, (Enone 37
Aloft the m lawn was dewy-dark. And dewy dark aloft
the m pine : „ 48
Ah me, my m shepherd, that my arms „ 202
thro' m clefts the dale Was seen far inland, Lotos- Eaters 20
1 Uved up there on yonder m side. St. S. Stylites 72
He watches from his m walls. The Eagle 5
Like torrents from a m source We rush'd The Letters 39
From him that on the m lea To E. L. 21
Downward from his 7n gorge Stept the long-hair'd
long-bearded sohtary, Enoch Arden 636
Turbia show'd In i-uin, by the m road ; The Daisy 6
Now watching high on m cornice, „ 19
oft we saw the glisten Of ice, far up on a m head. „ 36
A m islet pointed and peak'd ; The Islet 15
The fortress, and the m ridge, In Mem. Ixxi 14
And catch at every m head, „ Con. 114
A huge pavilion like a m peak Gareth and L. 1364
Thus, as a hearth lit in a m home, Balin and Balan 231
brutes of m back That cany kings in castles, Merlin and V. 576
Like its own mists to all the m side : Lancelot and E. 38
and on the naked m top Blood-red, Holy Grail ¥1^
all the purple slopes of m flowei-s Pass under
white. Last Tournament 229
Streams like a cloud, man-shaped, from m peak, To the Queen ii 40
A TO nest — the pleasure-boat that rock'd, Lover's Tale i 42
As TO streams Our bloods ran free : „ 326
A stately m nymph she look'd ! „ 359
On the other side Is scoop'd a cavern and a to hall, „ 51 7
waterfalls Pour'd in a thunderless plunge to the
base of the m walls, V. of Maeldune 11
beyond A hundred ever-rising m hues, Ancient Sage 282
And wo will feed her with our m air, The Ring 319
Mountain (s) From the brain of the purple m Poet's Mind 29
And the m draws it from Heaven above, „ 32
Apart ujjon a wi, tho' the surge If I were loved 11
Mountain
483
Mouse
Mountain (s) (continued) Across the m stream'd below In
misty folds Palace of Art 34
The wind, that beats the m, To J. S. 1
roll'd Among the w's by the winter sea ; M. d' Arthur 2
curves of m, bridge, Boat, island, Edwin Morris 5
The m stirr'd its bushy crown, Amphion 25
meanest weed That blows upon its m, „ 94
The 7n wooded to the peak, Enoch Arden 572
A m, Uke a wall of bui-s and thorns ; Sea Dreams 119
The m there has cast his cloudy slough, Now towering
o'er him in serenest air, A m o'er a m, — Lucretius 177
The m quickens into Nymph and Faun ; „ 187
With fold to fold, of m or of cape ; Princess vii 3
The facets of the glorious m flash The Islet 22
storm Brake on the in and I cared not Merlin and V. 503
A league of m full of golden mines, „ 587
And the caim'd m was a shadow, „ 638
So long, that m's have arisen since „ 675
they would pare the m to the plain, „ 829
Falls on the m in midsummer snows, Last Tournament 228
m's ended in a coast Of ever-shifting sand, Pass, of Arthur 85
roll'd Among the m's by the winter sea ; „ 171
with balanced wings To some tall m : Lover's Tale i 303
clefts and openings in the m's fiU'd „ 330
fell about My footsteps on the m's. „ 372
Beyond the nearest m's bosky brows, „ 396
sea Parting my own loved in's was received, „ 433
trembling of the world Had loosen'd from the m, „ ii 46
The m, the three cypresses, the cave, „ 109
But these, their gloom, the m's and the Bay, „ iv 16
Not plimge headforemost from the m there, „ 41
thunder-sketch Of lake and m conquers all the
day. Sisters ( E. and E. ) 99
drawn By this good Wiclif m down from heaven, Sir J. Oldcastle 132
Up the m ? Is it far ? Not far. „ 203
And came upon the M of the World, Columbus 26
And the topmost spire of the m V. of Maddune 41
the m arose like a jewell'd throne „ 59
And the peak of the m was apples, „ 63
Hope was ever on her m, Locksley H., Sixty 91
chains of m's, grains of sand „ 208
Set the TO aflame to-night. On Jub. Q. Victoria 16
A TO stay'd me here, a minster there, The Ming 245
For on a tropic m was I bom. Prog, of Spring 67
In early summers, Over the to. Merlin and the G. 19
And wraiths of the m, „ 43
Down from the m And over the level, „ 49
Muses have raised to the heights of the to, Parnassus 2
Steep is the to, but you, you will help „ 5
and nuger than all the m ? „ 10
ere the m- rolls into the plain. Death of CEnone 51
dragg'd me up there to his cave in the to, Bandit's Death 11
Clomb the m, and flmig the berries, Kapiolani 6
vapour in daylight Over the m Floats, „ 17
as Kapiolani ascended her to, „ 28
Strow yonder to flat, Mechanophilus 6
Quail not at the fiery m, Faith 3
Mountain-altars His m-a, hLs high bills. Lover's Tale i 322
Mountain-brook listens near a torrent m-b, Geraint and E. 171
Mountain-cleft came from out a sacred m-c Gareth and L. 260
Mountain-cones A purple range of m-c, Lover's Tale i 407
Mountain-eaves And shepherds from the m-e Amphion 53
Mountaineer breathed a race of mightier m's. Montenegro 14
Mountain-gorge in a seaward-gazing m-g Enoch Arden 558
Mountain-ground He finds on misty m-g In Mem. xcvii 2
Moimtain-like till delay'd By their m-l San Philip
that, The Revenge 40
Mountain-mere Sometimes on lonely m-m's Sir Galahad 37
Mountain-range uprose the mystic m-r : Vision of Sin 208
Mountain-shade the m-s Sloped downward (Enone 21
Moimtain-side I lived up there on yonder m s. St. S. Stylites 72
Struck out the streaming m-s, Lucretius 29
Like its own mists to all the to s : Lancelot and E. 38
star-crowns of his palms on the deep-wooded m-s, The Wreck 72
Mountain-top three m-t's, Three silent pinnacles Lotos- Eaters 15
Mountain-top {continued) Had chanted on the smoky
m-t's, Guinevere 282
Mountain-tract then I look'd up toward a m-t, Vision of Sin 46
Mountain-wall (See also Mountain (adj.)) thro' the m-w's
A rolling organ-harmony Sir Galahad 74
He watches Irani his m w's. The Eagle 5
o'er the m-w's Young angels pass. Early Spring 11
Mounted (adj. and part.) (See also Hfehest-mounted) Thou
from a throne M in heaven wilt shoot into the dark
Arrows of lightnings. To J. M. K. 13
Where this old mansion m high Looks down Miller's D. 35
what you will — Has m yonder ; Lucretius 127
And rarely pipes the m thrush ; In Mem. xci 2
And wears a helmet m with a skull, Gareth and L. 639
Then after one long slope was m., saw, „ 795
And he that bore the star, when m, cried „ 951
Mounted (verb) And, while day sank or m higher, Palace of Art 46
m our good steeds. And boldly ventured Princess i 204
' They m, Ganymedes, To tumble, Vulcans, „ Hi 71
And m horse and graspt a spear, Gareth and L. 691
M in arms, threw up their caps and cried, „ 697
Then to, on thro' silent faces rode „ 734
Geraint upon the horse M, and reach'd a hand, Geraint and E. 759
foimd His charger, m on him and away. Balin and Balan 418
Set her thereon, and to on his own, Guinevere 123
We TO slowly ; yet to both there came Lover's Tale i 385
Mounting (See also A-mountin') Their common
shout in choiTis, m, Balin and Balan 87
forth he past, and m on his horse Pelleas and E. 456
TO these He past for ever from his native land ; Lover's Tale iv 386
' This m wave will roll us shoreward soon.' Lotos- Eaters 2
Mount of Blessing And climb the M o B, Ancient Sage 280
Mourn Over the pools in the burn water-gnats murmur
and m. Leonine Eleg. 8
' Where I may to and pray. Palace of Art 292
did seem to m and rave On alien shores ; Lotos- Eaters 32
and to clamour, m and sob, St. S. Stylites 6
closed by those who to a friend in vain, Lucretius 142
m half -shrouded over death In deathless marble. Princess v 74
M, for to us he seems the last. Ode on Well. 19
M for the man of long-enduring blood. „ 24
M for the man of amplest influence, „ 27
So draw him home to those that m In vain ; In Mem. ix'5
crime To m for any overmuch ; „ Ixxxv 62
They know me not, but m with me. „ xcix 20
all that haunts the waste and wild M, Pass, of Arthur 49
silver year should cease to to and sigh — To Mary Boyle 57
Neither to if human creeds be lower Faith 5
M ! That a world-wide Empire m's D. of the Duke of C. 5
Until the great Hereafter. M in iiope ! „ 17
Moum'd Deeply m the. Lord of Burleigh, L. of Burleigh 91
she m his absence as his grave, Enoch Arden 247
And all the men m at his side : Princess Hi 353
M in this golden hour of jubilee. Ode Inter. Exhib. 8
Love m long, and sorrow'd after Hope ; Lover's Tale i 819
tmthless violence m by the Wise, Vastness 5
Mournful Heard a carol, to, holy, L. of Slialott iv 28
M (Enone, wandering forlorn Of Paris, (Enone 16
as TO light That broods above the fallen sun. To J. S. 50
And, into to twilight mellowing, Princess vi 191
Then Violet, she that sang the m song, „ 318
And let the m martial music blow ; Ode on Well. 17
Ring out, ring out my w rhymes. In Mem. cvi 19
To which a »» answer made the Queen : Guinevere 341
Mourning (part.) I went m, ' No fair Hebrew boy D. of F. Women 213
M when their leaders fall, Ode on Well. 5
And ever to over the feud, Maud I xix 31
Mourning (s) in m these, and those With blots of it Aylmer's Field 619
To the noise of the to of a mighty nation, Ode on Well. 4
Mouse m Behind the mouldering wainscot shriek'd, Mariana 63
the thin weasel there Follows the m, Aylmer's Field 853
knaw that a man mun be eather a man or a to ? N. Farmer, N. S. 6
the shrieking rush of the wainscot to, Maud I vi 71
Within the hearing of cat or m, „ // v 48
an' 'e says to 'im, meek as a to, Village Wife 63
Mouse
484
Move
Monse (continued) Thou'd niver 'a cotch'd ony mice Spinster's S's. 55
thou be es 'ansora a tabby es iver patted a m. „ 70
Ghoast moastliiis was nobbut a rat or a m. Owd Rod 38
Mouth (s) (See also Cavern-mouth, Harbour-mouth, Purse-
mouth) bitter words From off your rosy m. Rosalind 51
smit« him on the cheek, And on the w, Two Voices 252
I- crush'd them on my breast, my m ; Fatima 12
common m. So gross to express deUght, Gardener's D. 55
M, forehead, eyelids, growing dewy-warm Tiihonus 58
steaming flats, and floods Of mighty w. The Voyage 46
A downward crescent of her minion m, Aylmer's Field 533
Paled at a sudden twitch of his iron m ; „ 732
that one unctuous m which lured him, Sea Dreams 14
And often told a tale from m to m Princess, Pro. 191
Walter warp'd his m at this To something „ 214
a twitch of pain Tortured her m, „ vi 106
on her m A doubtful smile dwelt „ 269
Into the m of Hell Rode the six himdred. Light Brigade 25
Back from the m of Hell, „ 47
A rabbit m that is ever agape — Maud / a; 31
And a rose her m (repeat) „ xvii 8, 28
deathful-gi-inning m's of the fortress, „ /// vi 52
King Arthur's hound of deepest m, Marr. of Geraint 186
made that m of night Whereout the Demon Balin and Balan 316
meets And daUies with him in the M of Hell.' „ 615
How, in the m's of base interpreters, Merlin and V. 795
Rang by the white m of the violent Glem ; Lancelot and E. 288
too high For any m to gape for save a queen's — „ 775
Were added w's that gaped, and eyes that ask'd „ 1249
An' I wur down 1' tha w, North. Cobbler 77
as big i' the m as a cow, Village Wife 103
Heat like the m of a hell, Def. of Lucknow 81
That mock-meek m of utter Antichrist, Sir J. Oldcastle 170
and sail'd the Dragon's m, Columbus 25
Brass m's and iron lungs ! Freedom 40
wt' my bairn i' 'is m to the winder Owd Rod 92
Do not die with a lie in your to. Forlorn 57
Whose ivy-matted m she used to gaze Death of (Enone 2
Month (verb) How she m's behind my back. Vision of Sin 110
endure To m so huge a foulness — Balin and Balan 379
actor m his last upon the stage. Locksley H., Sixty 152
Mouth'd (See also Bell-mouthed, Gap-mouth'd, Mealy-
mouth'd. Mighty-mouthed, Open-mouth'd, Wide-
mouthed) in her hunger m and mumbled it, Princess vi 213
Mouthing m out his hollow oes and aes. The Epic 50
While scandal is to a bloodless name The Dawn 12
Mouthpiece he made his to of a page Who came and
went, Gareth and L. 1337
I' come the to of our King to Doorm Geraint and E. 796
Move pray — that God would to And strike Supp. Confessions 115
You m not in such solitudes, Margaret 45
Or sometimes they swell and to, Eleanore 111
phantom of a wish that once could to, The form, the form 10
trailing light, M's over still Shalott. L. of Shalott Hi 27
' Some hidden principle to to, Two Voices 133
To TO about the house with joy. Miller's D. 95
And there I to no longer now. May Queen, Con. 51
these did to Me from my bliss of life, D. of F. Women 209
He lieth still : he doth not to : D. of the 0. Year 10
some fuU music seem'd to to and change Edwin Morris 35
She m's among my visions of the lake, „ 144
wake and sleep, but all things m ; Golden Year 22
M onward, leading up the golden year. ,, 26
For ever and for ever when I m. Ulysses 21
sweetly did she speak and to : Locksley Hall 71
Science m's, but slowly slowly, „ 134
And m's not on the rounded curl. Day-Dm., Sleev. B. 8
The gouty oak began to to, Amphion 23
I could not TO a thistle ; „ 66
Me mightier transports to and thrill ; Sir Galahad 22
Then to the trees, the copses nod, „ 77
Begins to to and tremble. Will Water. 32
And wheresoe'er thou to, good luck „ 215
But thou wilt never to from hence, „ 217
M eastward, happy earth, Move eastward 1
Move (continued) And to me to my marriage-mom, Move Eastward 11
Till the graves begin to to, Vision of Sin 165
A life that m's to graciovis ends You might have won 6
I TO the sweet forget-me-nots That grow The Brook 172
bough That moving m's the nest and nestling, Sea Dreams 291
never creeps a cloud, or m's a wind, Lucretius 106
But TO as rich as Emperer-moths, Princess, Pro. 144
I seem'd to m among a world of ghosts, „ i 17
Who m's about the Princess ; „ 76
whene'er she m's The Samian Herb rises „ Hi 114
enter'd ; found her there At point to to, „ 131
we TO, my friend, At no man's beck, „ 226
whence after-hands May to the world, „ 264
lightlier m The minutes fledged with music : ' „ iv 36
I seem'd to m among a world of ghosts ; „ 561
And mould a generation strong to to „ v 416
1 seem'd to to in old memorial tilts, „ 479 '
fangs Shall to the stony bases of the world. „ vi 58
cannot speak, nor to, nor make one sign, „ vii 153
But cease to to so near the Heavens, „ 195
m's with him to one goal, „ 263
If love of country to thee there Ode on Well. 140
The dark crowd m's, and there are sobs „ 268
For him nor to's the loud world's random mock. Will 4
And m's his doubtful arms, and feels In Mem. xiii 3
For I in spirit saw thee to „ xvii 5
But this it was that made me to „ xxv 5
And doubtful joys the father to, „ xl 9
Should TO his rounds, and fusing all „ xlvii 2
' Thou canst not to me from thy side, „ Hi 7
, My centred passion cannot to. „ lix 9
And to thee on to noble ends. „ Ixv 12
Her faith is fixt and cannot to, „ xcvii 33
As down the garden-walks I to, „ cii 6
m his course, and show That life is not an idle ore, „ cxviii 19
M upward, working out the beast, „ 27
a sentinel Who m's about from place to place, „ cxxvi 10
To which the whole creation m's. „ Con. 144
Do we TO ourselves, or are moved Maud I iv 26
But to TO to the meadow and fall before „ v 25
For a breeze of morning m's, „ xxii 7
But only m's with the moving eye, „ II ii 37
Pass and cease to to about ! „ iv 59
Began to to, seethe, twine and curl : Gareth and L. 234
that ev'n to him they seem'd to m. „ 237
M's him to think what kind of bird it is Marr. of Geraint 331
pushing could to The chair of Idris. „ 542
When first I parted from thee, m's me yet.' Geraint and E. 347
my leave To m to your own land, „ 889
walk with me, and to To music with thine Order Balin and Balan 76
How far beyond him Lancelot seem'd to to, „ 172
he felt his being to In music with his Order, „ 211
you cannot m To these fair jousts ? ' Lancelot and E. 79
strike spur, suddenly to. Meet in the midst, „ 456
dream Of dragging down his enemy made them m. „ 814
the rough Torre began to heave and to, „ 1066
In which as Arthur's Queen I to and rule : „ 1221
Such as no wind could to : Holy Grail 681
M with me toward their quelling, Last Tournament 101
O ay — the winds that to the mere.' „ 738
in this battle in the west Whereto we m. Pass, of Arthur 67
wastes the narrow realm whereon we to, „ 140
M with me to the event. Lover's Tale i 298
The boat was begirming to to. First Quarrel 21
You TO about the Court, I pray you teQ Columbus 222
Whereon the Spirit of God m's as he will — De Prof., Two G. 28
And m's unseen among the ways of men. Tiresias 24
While men shall to the lips : „ 133
boundless deep That m's, and all is gone.' Ancient Sage 190
All good things may to in Hesper, Locksley H., Sixty 186
M among your people, know them, „ 266
draws the child To to in other spheres. To Prin. Beatrice 8
Thy power, well-used to to the public breast. To W. C. Macready 3
We to, the wheel must always to. Politics 1
And if we TO to such a goal As Wisdom „ 3
Move
485
Moving
Move (continued) Will you m a little that way ? Charity 20
Moveable some with gems M and resettable at will, Lover's Tale iv 199
Moved M from beneath with doubt and fear. Suj>j>. Confessions 138
At last you rose and m the light, Milleis D. 125
Your ripe lips m not, but your cheek Flush'd „ 131
Fronting the dawn he m ; CEnone 58
Floated the glowing sunlights, as she to. „ 182
bells that swimg, M of themselves, Palace of Art 130
Its office, m with sympathy. Love thou thy land 48
barge \rith oar and sail M from the brink, M. d' Arthur 266
And m away, and left me, statue-like, Gardener's D. 161
she TO, Like Proserpine in Enna, Edwin Morris 111
strength which in old days M earth and heaven ; Ulysses 67
You TO her at your pleasm-e. Amvhion 60
She faintly smiled, she hardly m ; The Letters 14
M with violence, changed in hue, Vision of Sin 34
So lifted up in spirit he m away. Enoch Arden 330
A phantom made of many phantoms m Before him
haimting him, or he himself M haunting people, „ 602
Katie never ran : she w To meet me. The Brook 87
There m the multitude a thousand heads : Princess, Pro. 57
for still we to Together, „ i 56
so To the open window to, „ iv 492
Set into sunrise ; then we m away. » 576
She heard, she to. She moan'd, „ v 72
Yet she neither spoke nor m. „ vi8
Yet she neither m nor wept. „ 12
whether m by this, or was it chance, „ 97
And to beyond his custom, Gama said : „ 229
So said the small king m beyond his wont. „ 265
on they to and gain'd the hall, and there Rested : „ 352
And in their own clear element, they m. „ vii 28
I TO : I sigh'd : a touch Came round my wrist, „ 137
She TO, and at her feet the volume fell. „ 254
Sway'd to her from their orbits as they m, „ 326
I TO as in a strange diagonal, „ Con. 27
' The Gods are to against the land.' The Victim 6
The Wye is hush'd nor to along. In Mem. xix 9
M in the chambera of the blood ; „ xxiii 20
We saw not, when we to therein ? „ xxiv 16
and TO Upon the topmost froth of thought. „ Hi 3
Had TO me kindly from his side, „ Ixxx 3
And, TO thro' life of lower phase, „ Con. 125
TO by an unseen hand at a game That pushes Maud I iv 26
Maud was to To speak of the mother she loved . „ xix 26
and we see him as he to. Bed. of Idylls 17
(Your city to so weirdly in the mist) Gareth and L. 245
So the sweet voice of Enid m Geraint ; Marr. of Geraint 334
M the fair Enid, all in faded silk, „ 366
they m Down to the meadow where the jousts „ 536
and wings M in her ivy, „ 599
thus he TO the Prince To laughter Geraint and E. 295
harder to be to Than hardest tyrants „ 694
Was m so much the more, and shriek'd again, „ 782
They said a light came from her when she to : Merlin and V. 567
Thus they to away : she stay'd a minute, Lancelot and E. 390
Must needs have to my laughter : „ 596
And TO about her palace, proud and pale. „ 614
And lifted her fair face and w away : „ 682
Who had devised the letter, m again. „ 1288
mark'd Sir Lancelot where he to apart, „ 1349
m Among us in white armour, Galahad. Holy Grail 134
on me to In golden armour with a crown of gold „ 409
when I m of old A slender page about her father's
haU, „ 580
whose lightest whisper m him more Pdleas and E. 155
for nothing to but his own self, „ 417
with cups of gold, M to the lists, Last Tournament 143
might have to slow-measure to my tune, „ 282
ending, he to toward her, and she said, „ 704
which had noblest, while you to Among them, Guinevere 325
rose the King and m his host by night, Pass, of Arthur 79
barge with oar and sail M from the brink, „ 434
Thereat once more he to about, „ 462
M from the cloud of unforgotten things. Lover's Tale i 48
Moved (continued) By that name I m upon her breath ; Lover's Taled 560
rain FeU on my face, and her long ringlets m, „ 699
M with one spirit round about the bay, „ Hi 17
He TO thro' all of it majestically — „ iv 9
they are mine — ^not theirs — they had to in my side. Rizpah 54
And TO to merriment at a passing jest. Sisters (E. and E.) 121
it often TO me to tears. In the Child. Hosp. 31
an earthquake always m in the hollows V. of Maeldune 107
Whatever to in that full sheet Let down to Peter To E. Fitzgerald 11
Universal Nature to by Universal Mind ; To Virgil 22
TO but by the living limb, Akhar's Dream 133
Movement in its onward current it absorbs With swifter m Isabel 32
loveliest in all grace Of to, CEnone 76
without light Or power of to, Palace of Art 246
Movest Nor canst thou prove the world thou to in. Ancient Sage 58
Moving (See also Slow-moving) M thro' a fleecy night. Margaret 21
M in the leavy beech. „ 61
TO thro' a mirror clear That hangs before her L. of Shalott ii 10
Still TO after tnith long sought. Two Voices 62
lift the hidden ore That glimpses, w up, D. of F. Women 275
Seen where the to isles of winter shock By night, M. d' Arthur 14Q
TO toward the stillness of his rest. Locksley Hall 144
Then m homeward came on Annie pale, Enoch Arden 149
The TO whisper of huge trees that branch'd „ 585
Then to up the coast they landed him, „ 665
in m on I found Only the landward exit of the cave. Sea Dreams 95
bough That to moves the nest and nestling, „ 291
and was m on In gratulation. Princess ii 184
TO thro' the uncertain gloom, „ iv 216
isles of light Slided, they to under shade : „ vi 82
lay Quite sunder'd from the to Universe, „ mi 52
M about the household ways, In Mem. Ix 11
And TO up from high to higher, „ Ixiv 13
Eternal process to on, „ Ixxxii 5
m side by side With wisdom, „ cxiv 19
And see'st the to of the team. „ cxxi 16
lost in trouble and to round Here at the head Maud I xxi 5
But only moves with the m eye, „ // ii 37
sang the knighthood, m to their hall. Com. of Arthur 503
Who, m, cast the coverlet aside, Marr. of Geraint 73
And m toward a cedarn cabinet, „ 136
I saw you to by me on the bridge, „ 429
So m without answer to her rest She found no rest, „ 530
Then, to downward to the meadow ground, Geraint and £.204
He to up with pliant courtUness, „ 278
He TO homeward babbled to his men, „ -362
TO back she held Her finger up, „ 452
And m. out they found the stately horse, „ 752
And Edym w frankly forward spake : „ 784
TO eveiy where Clear'd the dark places „ ;942
M to meet him in the castle court ; Lancelot and E. 175
But kindly man m among his kind : „ :.265
plumes driv'n backward by the wind they made In to, „ 481
saw the barge that brought her 711 down, „ 1391
thought he meant To crush me, m on me, Holy Grail 416
but TO with me night and day, „ 471
Mean knights, to whom the m. of my sword „ 790
and far ahead Of his and her retinue m, Guinevere 385
And TO thro' the past unconsciously, „ 402
TO ghostlike to his doom. „ 605
but no man was to there ; Pass, of Arthur 12J
Seen where the m isles of winter shock By night, „ 308
Thence mark'd the black hull m yet, „ 448
down the highway m on With easy laughter Tiresias 199
But m thro' the Mother's home. To Prin. Beatrice. 13
She TO, at her girdle clash The golden keys To Marq. of Dufferin 3
Are there spectres m in the darkness ? On Jub. Q. Victoria 67
And TO each to music, soul in soul Happy 39
M to melody. Floated The Gleam. Merlin and the G.22
slowly TO again to a melody Yearningly tender, „ 90
CEnone sat Not to, till in front of that ravine Death of CEnone 75
Then m quickly forward till the heat „ 97
The gladiators to toward their fight, St. Telemachus 54
TO easily Thro' after-ages in the love of Truth, Akhar's Dream 100
But such a tide as m seems asleep. Crossing the Bar 5
Mower
Hower and m's mowing in it :
in his hand Bare victual for the in's :
fare is coarse. And only meet for m's ;'
Ate all the m's' victual unawares,
P'resh \-ictual for these m's of our Earl ;
serve thee costlier than with m's' fare.''
Than when I left your m's dinnerless.
The lusty m's labouring dinnerless,
Howing and mowers «i in it :
Mown See New-mown
Mowt (might) M a bean, mayhap, for she wur a
bad un,
or I m 'a liked tha as well.
Mach After w waUing, hush'd itself at last
Still so m gold was left ;
touch'd on Mahomet With m contempt
m profit ! Not one word ; No ! '
For himself has done m better.
486
Murmur
Geraint and E. 199
202
209
215
225
231
234
251
199
N. Farmer, 0. S. 22
Spinster's S's. 43
Aylmer's Field 542
Sea Dreams 130
Princess ii 135
vi 239
Spiteful Letter 4
Much tlnvS"-^ ?1V'?,' '"^"^y^- ^^ kitchen-knave : cSV^ f 919
Mucn-beloved And he the m-h agam. j„ \f^„ i-a
Much-experienced Ulysses, m-7man, Torlh.tll ^
Muck slaape dowTi i' the squad an' the m : NoHh CobblJ%()
Fur we puts the m o' the land an' they sucks the m
fro the grass. 77 -i, jjr . , „„
Mucky an' their m bibs, an' the clats an' the clouts, SpSr'sS's 87
Mud {See also Squad) Lay great with pig, wallowiilg '"-P*"*'^'' * -=» ^- »7
m sun and »«. u/^„ji. 4 41. 1^ •, ^o
Fish are we that love the m, ViV f^^'^'^\n^
Gracious lessons thine And maxims of the m ! mZhu aid V 49
Swme m the m, that cannot see for slime. Ho u Grail 771
the cup was gold, the draught was m.' Last Tou^ament 298
an' the 77!. 0' 'is boots o' the staire, SpZX'sS's^^
lllnH-?'''''?w ' •?' ^'f^^^ Evolution in the m. LocMeTu Sixt^'m)
Muddier Was it m than thv eibes ? r^T* 7^ ' ^ t^
Muddle londatermeathot^^'frn" quoit; ^ ZTer'Ts^^^
Muddy clear stream flowing with a m one ' ' Uahd SO
Mud-honey His heart in the gross r/i-A of town, Maud IxJl
Muffle O wi round thv knees with fern Tnii-i^„n ^Ik
Muffled (See also Half-muffled) The panthei^s roar came ,« '''"^,2f. ^S
And, sitting m m dark leaves, Gardene7rD %
And chimneys m in the leafy vine I^euCnuri IQ
watch A full sea glazed M-ith m moonlight, fZcessl2^
but we three Sat 7« like the Fates ; -Trtncm t ^48
but I Lay silent in the 7» cage of Ufe : " ""?t
Now, to the roll of m drumsT Od. 'L win f-
And standing, m round with woe, /t 'Z. ■ %
Whose m motions blindly drown The bases of mv life '^'*'
m t«ars. •' 7 • i k
Whereon were hollow tramplings up and down And "
1ft VOICGS Ik^AIYi
Not m round ^vith selfish i^ticence. SunaLVWl
Listens the m booming indistinct Of the confused ^^
floods, r ) ^ 7 • /,
From under rose a m moan of floods • pZn %^f'- ' ^l
Muffling And r,^ up her comely head, ' D^aZfiZjZ
Muggms An' M 'e preach'd o' Hell-fir« tjl nl^f ^^
Mulberry-faced male The m-f DictaS's orgies worse ''"' zSS S
Mule Her cream-white m his pastern set : ^j> i alTor SI
Multipbed Thus truth was 7« on truth, ^- r*. pf ; 1^
The. moved tL ,«, a'tCaTdtd's : PrinZTro'fl
To cast wise words among the m princess, fro. 57
And in each let a m LovS n ^ 7 ^ Tirestas 66
Multitudinous Phantom wftf women and childre?"/"'-^- '^"^'"^ "«
agonies. ""i"c«, t»
Ran the land with Roman slaughter, m agonies Boadwea 26
st.llM Thro' all its folds the m beast ^ r • " • ?^
5?™^°'^'^°« ^^''*"'* ''««'" «^ ^-^ light- Z)« Pro/- rSTr 4
Mumble pnest, who to worship in vour aui^ fit? • h » 7 .".^
Mumbled in her hunger moutfi'd and wli^ ?."^ ^'^''. ^
m that white hand who*e rimA? ca^' r 7- "^T^"^ ''^ ^13
Mmnbbng Muttering and w idiotHke -n -'««,^»«9l25
Mummy That her. the torpld't ^'htt Of Egypt ^^o%''lSI
Mmmey (money) An' the m they maade by the war
Munny (money) Thou'll not marry for w—
soa IS scoors 0' gells, Them as 'as w an' aU—
Doant thou marry for 7/1, but goa wheer m is "
An I went wheer m war : an' thy muther coom
to and, W 1' lots o' m laaid by,
thou can luvv thy lass an' 'er 7/1 too.
Could'n I luvv thy muther by cause o' 'er m laaid by ?
lis n them as 'as 7n as breaks into 'ouses an' steals
work mun a gone to the gittin' whiniver m was got.
Peyther ad ammost nowt ; leastways 'is m was 'id
1 grabb d the m she maade,
spirit of m works in
Murder (See also Wife-murder)
the very means of life.
That keeps the rust of m on the walls
Her love did m mine ? What then ?
For the lawyer is bom but to m —
hoyv long shall the m last ?
dying worm in a world, all massacre, m, and wrone
M Mould not veil your sin,
Murder'd J^ee o/so Ever-murder'd) A woman weeping
Owd Rod 44
N. Farmer, N. S.ll
15
20
21
33
35
45
50
51
Cobbler 32
North
Maud I i4ii
Guinevere 74
Lover's Tale i 740
Rizpah 64
V. of Maeldune 123
Despair 32
Forlorn 49
for her m mate
Self-starved, they say— nay, m, doubtless dead.
Olared on at the m son, and the murderous father
at rest, . . .
Murderer prov'n themselves Poisoners, m's
Murderous Or pinch a 7/1 dust into her' drink
you can hear him — the m mole ! '
and the m father at rest, ..."
Muriel (See also Muriel Erne) Far-off, is M—yoxxn
stepmother's voice,
lived With M's mother on the down
Miriam sketch'd and M threw the fly •
The form of M faded, and the face Of'Miriam
A Miriam ' that might seem a.' M' •
M claim'd and open'd what I meant For Miriam,
M and Miriam, each in white.
But coming nearer— ^/ had the ring—
M clench'd The hand that wore it.
She glanced at me, at M, and was mute.
then- J/ standing ever statue-like —
And saying gently : ' M, by your leave,'
M fled. Poor M ! Ay, poor M
M enter'd with it, ' See !— Found in a chink
iVi— no— She cannot love ; she loves her own hard self
Promise me, Miriam not yV-«he shall have the ring ' '
M s mother sent. And sure am I, by Jlf
By the lych-gate was M. '
For .1/ nm-sed you with a mother's care •
. f« health Had weaken'd, nursing httle Miriam.
1 take thee M for my wedded wife '
3/, paler then Than ever you were in your cradle
Among them .1/ lying on her face— I raised her, c'all'd
her M, M wake ! ' . <» u
Muriel Erne (^ee a/so Muriel) Miriam Erne And Jf £—
well, you know I married M E.
Murmur (s) Overblown with m's harsh,
And no m at the door.
To hear the m of the strife,
The 7« of the fountain-head —
A 7ft ' Be of better cheer.'
There comes no 771 of reply.
And m's of a deeper voice,
This m broke the stillness of that air
Not whisper, any m of complaint.
The m's of the drum and fife
Faint m's from the meadows come.
Made a w in the land.
And they speak in gentle »7!,
But finding neither light nor m there
Came 77i'5 of her beauty from the South,
By this a 771 ran Thro' all the camp
a m heard aeriaUy,
And 77»'s from the dying sim :
And dull'd the 77* on thy lip,
Geraint and E. 522
Sir J. Oldcastle 60
Bandit's Death 33
Sir J. Oldcastle 168
Merlin and V. 610
Def. of Lucknow 26
Bandit's Death 33
The Ring 139
148
159
184
241
242
254
259
261
264
266
268
271
279
291
294
311
324
349
356
377
431
147
376
Ode to Memory 99
Deserted House 7
Margaret 23
Two Voices 216
429
Palace of Art 2'^
On a Mourner 16
Gardener's D. 147
St. S. Stylites 22
Talking Oak 215
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 6
L. of Burleigh 20
49
Enoch Arden 687
Princess i 36
„ V 110
Boadicea 24
/» Mem. iii 8
„ xxii 16
Mnrmur
487
Music
Munnnr (s) (continued)
a happy Psin :
A single m in the breast,
cackle of your bourg The m of the world !
They take the rustic m of their bourg
m's ' Lo, thou likewise shalt be King.'
and then I seem'd to hear Its m,
mellow'd m of the people's praise
but never a m, a breath —
from within The city comes a m void of joy,
a flower Had vi's ' Lost and gone
but a in of gnats in the gloom,
thro' her dream A ghostly m floated.
lavish hills would hum The m of
In Mem. xxiii 12
„ civ 7
Mart, of Geraint 277
419
Lancelot and E. 55
Lover's Tale i 635
Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 7
V. of Maddune 19
Tiresias 101
Ancient Sage 224
Vastness 35
Death of (Enone 79
Murmur (verb) in the bum water-gnats m and mourn. Leonine Eleg. 8
At heart, thou woxildest m still — Supp. Confessions 104
And the nations do but m, Locksley Hall 106
I m, under moon and stars In brambly wildernesses ; The Brook 178
The dove may m of the dove,
loyal pines of Canada m thee.
Should m from the narrow house,
the crowd Will m, ' Lo the shameless ones,
And m at the low-dropt eaves of sleep,
and TO down Truth in the distemce —
will m thee To thine own Thebes,
clasp the hands and to, ' Would to God
If it be a mosque people to the holy prayer,
Mnrmur'd Before Our Lady m she ;
low voice, full of care, M beside me :
to Arthur, ' Place me in the barge,'
And sweetly to thine.
m ' Oh, that he Were once more that landscape-
painter,
But each man to, ' O my Queen,
And double death were widely to,
For all the sloping pasture to,
and to that their May Was passing :
Then m Florian gazing after her.
The mellow breaker to Ida.
' I TO, as I came along.
She past ; and Vivien m after ' Go !
She TO, ' Vain, in vain : it cannot be.
m Arthur, ' Place me in the bai^e.'
when the bridegroom to, ' With this ring,'
Murmurest Who to in the foUaged eaves
Then Kay, ' What to thou of mystery ?
Murmuring And m, as at night and mom,
Singing and m in her feastful mirth.
Muttering and m at his ear ' Quick,
we saw the lights and heard The voices m.
And TO of innumerable bees.'
The brooks of Eden mazily to,
a wind Of memory m the past.
field of toumey, to ' kitchen-knave.'
one M, ' All courtesy is dead,'
M a light song I had heard thee sing,
A TO whisper thro' the nunnery ran,
Muttering and m at his ear, ' Quick,
Murmurous lime a summer home of m wings.
Mum (mom) lark a-singin' 'is best of a Sunday at to,
Mumin' (morning) An' when I waak'd i' the m
D'ya mind the m when we was a-walkin'
togither,
Muscle Having the warmth and m of the heart,
arms on which the standing m sloped,
Muscovite How long this icy-hearted M
Muscular So to he spread, so broad of breast.
Muse (s) The modem M's reading.
No vain libation to the M,
The M, the jolly M, it is !
hard-grain'd M's of the cube and square
M's and the Graces, group'd in threes.
And every M tumbled a science in.
the M's' heads were touch'd Above the darkness
So they blaspheme the m !
I fed you with the milk of every M
Princess Hi 105
W. to Marie Alex. 19
In Mem. xxxv. 2
Lancelot and E. 100
Lover's Tale ii 122
Columbus 120
Tiresias 140
Locksley H., Sixty 192
Akbar's D., Inscrip. 4
Mariana in the S. 28
D. of F. Women 250
M.d'AHhur 204:
Talking Oak 160
L. of Burleigh 82
The Voyage 63
Aylmer's Field 617
Princess, Pro. 55
„ ii 463
„ Hi 97
iv 436
In Mem. xxxvii 21
Merlin and V. 98
Lancelot and E. 892
Pass, of Arthur 372
The Ring 438
In Mem. xcix 9
Gareth and L. 470
Mariana in the S. 46
Palace of Art 177
M. d' Arthur 179
Princess iv 559
„ vii 222
Milton 10
In Mem. xcii 8
Gareth and L. 664
Last Tournament 211
614
Guinevere 410
Pass, of Arthur 347
Gardener's D. 48
North. Cobbler 46
39
Spinster's S's. 23
Aylmer's Field 180
Marr. of Geraint 76
Poland 10
Gardener's D. 8
Amphion 76
Will Water. 9
105
Princess, Pro. 180
ii 27
399
Hi 21
iv 137
295
Mose (s) {continued) above them stood The placid marble
M's, looking peace.
0 civic TO, to such a name,
sound ever heard, ye M's, in England ?
' For I am but an earthly M,
high M answer'd : ' Wherefore grieve Thy brethren
A life that all the M's deck'd With gifts of grace,
That saw thro' all the M's ' walk,
charm of all the M's often flowering
the M's cried \vith a stormy cry
M's have raised to the heights of the mountain,
Taller than all the AI's,
Astronomy and Geology, terrible M's !
Muse (verb) I to, as in a trance,
While I m upon thy face ;
with downcast eyes we to and brood.
To TO and brood and hve again in memory,
1 m on joy that will not cease,
my Lords, you make the people m
And with my heart I to and say :
face shine Upon me, while I to alone ;
And there the gi-eat Sir Lancelot to at me ;
0 my Queen, I m Why ye not wear on arm,
and TO On those dear hills.
Mused (See also Half-mused) while they m Whispering
to each other half in fear.
But Lancelot to a little space ;
But while I to came Memory with sad eyes,
while I TO, Love with knit brows went by,
M, and was mute.
And m upon it, drifting up the stream
1 m on that wild morning in the woods,
Who TO on all I had to tell,
is it pride, and to and sigh'd ' No surely,
the King M for a little on his plea,
She m a little, and then clapt her hands
Crept to her father, while he to alone,
Lancelot later came and w at her,
while I m nor yet endured to take So rich a prize
Museth TO where broad sunsliine laves The lawn
Music (See also Bridal-music, May-music, Sphere-music,
Thunder-music, War-music) Then — while a sweeter
Princess iv 489
Ode on Well. 75
Trans, of Homer 3
In Mem. xxxvii 13
„ Iviii 9
„ I xxxv 45
„ cix 4
To Virgil 11
Bead Prophet 2
Parnassus 2
10
16
Elednore 75
„ 129
Sonnet To 1
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 65
Sir Galahad 65
Third of Feb. 31
In Mem. iv 4
„ cxvi 10
Lancelot and E. 1055
Last Tournament 35
Lover's Tale i 31
Sea- Fairies 4
L. of Slialott iv 51
Gardener's D. 243
245
The Brook 201
Sea Dreams 108
Princess v 471
In Mem. vi 19
Maud I via 12
Marr. of Geraint 42
Merlin and V. 866
Lancelot and E. 748
1268
Lover's Tale Hi 49
D. of F. Women 189
m viakci
m flowing from The illimitable years,
led. With TO and sweet showers Of festal flowers.
Shrill TO reach'd them on the middle sea.
With a TO strange and manifold,
Rain makes m in the tree
the wave would make to above us afar —
A funeral, with plumes, and lights And to,
overtakes Far thought with to that it makes :
Rose slowly to a m slowly breathed,
up the valley came a swell of to on the wind,
up the valley came again the m on the wind.
The blessed to went that way my soul
TO in his ears his beating heart did make.
There is sweet ni here that softer falls
M that gentlier on the spirit lies,
M that brings sweet sleep down from the blissful skies,
they find a to centred in a doleful song
who made His m heard below ;
that flow Of TO left the lips of her that died
Deep-chested to, and to this result.
To some full to rose and sank the sun,
full TO seem'd to move and change
I scarce have other to : yet say on.
The m from the town —
pass'd in to out of sight.
The Magic M in his heart Beats quick
Low voluptuous TO winding trembled,
Then the m touch'd the gates and died ;
Nor leave his to as of old.
Lay hidden as the to of the moon Sleeps
and coming fitfully Like broken to,
Broke into nature's w when they saw her.
To the Queen 13
Ode to Memory 41
77
Sea- Fairies 6
Dying Swan 29
A Dirge 26
The Merman 22
L. of Shalott ii B2
Two Voices 438
(Enone 41
May Queen, Con. 32
36
42
Lotos- Eaters 36
C. S. 1
5
7
117
D. of F. Women 4
195
The Epic 51
Edwin Morris 34
35
57
Talking Oak 214
Locksley Hall 34
Day-Dm., Arrival 26
Vision of Sin 17
23
You might have won 14
Aylmer's Field 102
477
Music
488
Mute
Music (continued) I had one That altogether went to m ? Sea Dreams 204
Lessening to the lessening m, back, And past into
the belt and swell'd again Slowly to m : „ 221
(Altho' I grant but little m there) „ 253
A m harmonizing our wild cries, „ 255
she liked it more Than magic m, forfeits, all the
rest. Princess, Pro. 195
lightlier move The minutes fledged with m : ' Princess iv 37
as they say The seal does m ; „ 456
Like one that wishes at a dance to change The m — „ 590
With m in the growing breeze of Time, „ vi 56
Like perfect m imto noble words ; „ vii 286
And girdled her with m. „ 327
let the mournful martial m blow ; Ode on Well. 17
With banner and with w, „ 81
we hear The tides of M's golden sea „ 252
Make m, 0 bird, in the new-budded bowers ! W. to Alexandra 11
Like ballad-burthen m, kept. The Daisy 77
These lame hexameters the strong-wing'd m of
Homer ! Trans, of Homer 1
May make one m as before. In Mem., Pro. 28
With all the m in her tone, „ m 10
Were mellow m match'd %vith him. „ Ivi 24
I hear a wizard m roll, „ Ixx 14
Shall ring with m aU the same ; „ Ixxvii 14
And m in the bounds of law, „ Ixxxvii 34
jEonian m measuring out The steps of Time — „ xcv 41
At last he beat his m out. „ xcvi 10
sweep A m out of sheet and shroud, „ ciii 54
With festal cheer. With books and m, „ cvii 22
Is m more than any song. „ Con. 4
when alone She sits by her m and books Maud I xiv 13
Beat to the noiseless m of the night ! „ xviii 77
As the 7n clash'd in the hall ; „ xxii 34
To the sound of dancing m and flutes : „ II v 76
Out of the city a blast of m peal'd. Gareth and L. 238
and this m now Hath scared them both, „ 250
And built it to the m of their hai-ps. „ 262
For an ye heard a m, „ 275
seeing the city is built To m, „ 277
move To m with thine Order and the King. Balin and Balan 11
Queen, and all the world Made m, and he felt his
being move In m with his Order, and the King. „ 211
The w in him seem'd to change, „ 217
the wholesome m of the wood Was dumb'd „ 436
That by and by will make the m mute. Merlin and V. 391
And mass, and roUing w, like a queen. Lancelot and E. 1336
Was like that m as it came ; Holy Grail 115
then the m faded, and the GraU Past, „ 121
When God made m thro' them, could but speak His m
by the framework and the chord ; „ 878
Skip to the broken m of my brains Than any
broken m Last Tournament 258
' Good now, what m have I broken, fool ? ' „ 261
Thou makest broken m with thy bride, „ 264
so thou breakest Arthur's m too.' ' Save for that
broken m „ 266
And barken if my to be not true. „ 274
woods are hu-^h'd, their m is no more : „ 276
I'll hold thou hast some touch Of m, „ 314
It makes a silent m up in heaven, „ 349
he heard Strange m, and he paused, Guinevere 239
with heaven's m in a life More living Lover's Tale i 761
day Peal'd on us with that m which rights all, „ iv 65
The TO that robes it in language The Wreck 24
What power but the bird's could make This to in the
bird?
set The lamps alight, and call For golden to,
their songs, that meet The morning with such to,
heart batin' to to wid ivery word !
not the TO of a deep ?
thy voice, a to heard Thro' all the yells
And moving each to to, soul in soul
if his young to w akes A wish in you.
Or cataract m Of falling torrents,
Ancient Sage 22
197
The Flight 66
Tomorrow 34
LocTcsley H., Sixty 154
To Duke of Argyll 7
Happy 39
To Mary Boyle 63
Merlin and the G. 46
Music (continued) Tho' their to here be mortal
can AI make you Uve Far — ^far — away ?
Make but one w, harmonising ' Pray.'
but we hear M : our palace is awake.
Musical many a fall Of diamond rillets to,
More TO than ever came in one,
ever in it a low to note Swell'd up and died ;
There is but one bird with a m throat,
we past to the Isle of Witches and heard their
TO cry — -
Musically winded it, and that so to
Musician The discords dear to the to.
M, painter, sculptor, critic.
Musing M on him that used to fill it for her,
And to on the little lives of men.
Or in the furrow to stands ;
who turns a in eye On songs, and deeds,
But TO ' Shall I answer yea or nay ? '
There to sat the hoary-headed Earl,
could not rest for to how to smoothe And sleek
I sat. Lonely, but to on thee, wondering where.
Musk moss or to. To grace my city rooms ;
Smelling of to and of insolence.
And the to of the rose is blown.
Musket Death while we stood with the m,
Musket-bullet Millions of m-b's.
Musket-shot Cannon-shot, m-s,
Musky-circled began To thrid the m-c mazes,
Musqueteer came with their pikes and m's,
Mussulman True M was I and sworn,
M Who flings his bowstrung Harem in the sea,
But in due time for every M,
Musty In TO bins and chambers.
Mute wait for death — m — careless of all iUs,
When all the house is to.
M with folded arms they waited —
Here both were to, tiU Philip glancing up
Mused, and was to.
He laugh'd ; and then was to ;
his TO dust I honour and his hving worth :
And individual freedom to ;
O'er the to city stole with folded wings,
her eyes on all my motions with a to observance
hung. Locksley Hail 22
she would answer us to-day. Meantime be m : Princess, Hi 167
she saw me lying stark, Dishelm'd and to, „ vi 101
but TO she glided forth. Nor glanced behind her, „ vii 170
0 friends, our chief state-oracle is to : Ode on Well. 23
And statued pinnacles, to as they. The Daisy 64
Your mother is to in her grave Maud I iv 58
Modred biting his thin Ups was to, Gareth and L. 31
TO As creatures voiceless thro' the fault of birth, Geraint and E. 26&
1 will kiss you for it : ' he was m : Merlin and V. 22&
' Great Master, do ye love me ? ' he was to. „ 237
by and by will make the music to, „ 391
With aU her damsels, he was stricken to ; Pelleas and E. 251
' Is the Queen false ? ' and Percivale was m. „ 532
And most of these were to. Last Tournament 210
Here one black, to midsummer night I sat, „ 612
When all the house is to. Pass, of Arthur 346
with an awful sense Of one m Shadow watching all. In Mem. xxx 8
M symbols of a joyful mom, „ Con. 58
but seem M of this miracle, far as I have read. Holy Grail 66
M, blind and motionless as then I lay ; Lover's Tale i 607
M, for henceforth what use were words to me ! „ 609
I was led to Into her temple Uke a sacrifice ; „ 684
We gazed on it together In to and glad
remembrance.
While all the guests in to amazement rose-
I read no more the prisoner's to wail
as we hated the isle that was to,
TO below the chancel stones.
She glanced at me, at Muriel, and was to.
Shall the royal voice be to ?
But every man was m for reverence.
Parnassus 18
Far — far — away 17
Akbar's Dream 151
„ _ 200
Arabian Nights 48
Gardener's D. 233
Sea Dreams 210
The Islet 27
V. of Maeldune 97
Pdleas and E. 365
Sea Dreams 258
Princess ii 178
Enoch Arden 208
Sea Dreams 48
In Mem. Ixiv 27
„ Ixxvii 2
Com. of Arthur 426
Marr. of Geraint 295
Last Tour)iament 390
613
Gardener's D. 193
Maud I vi 45
„ xxii 6
Def. of Lucknow 16
93
34
Princess iv 261
The Revenge 53
Arabian Nights 9
Romney's R. 134
Akbar's Dream 24
Will Water. 102
If I were loved 10
M. d' Arthur 178
The Captain 39
Enoch Arden 440i
The Brook 201
Aylmer's Field 402
To J. S. 2»
You ask me, why, etc. 20
Gardener's D. 186
a 186
iv 305
Sir J. OldcasOe 4
V. of Maeldune 52
Locksley H., Sixty 43
The Ring 264
By an Evolution. 14
Death of (Enon$ 9ft
Muther
489
Mythology
Mutber (mother) Me an' thy m, Sammy, 'as bean
a-talkin' o' thee ; Thou's bean talkin' to m, N. Farmer, N. S. 9
an' thy in coom to 'and, „ 21
Could'n I luvv thy m by cause o' 'er munny
laai'd by ? „ 35
thy m says thou wants to many the lass, „ 37
Mutmeer breaking their way through the fell m's ? Def. of Lucknow 96
Matiny fights, Mutinies, treacheries — Columbus 226
Mutter Groan'd, and at times would m, Balin and Balan 173
often TO low ' Vicisti Galilsee ' ; St. Telemachus 14
Mattered And lonely listenings to my m dream. Princess vii 110
paw'd his beard, and m ' catalepsy.' „ i 20
And ever he to and madden'd, Maud 7 i 10
M in scorn of Gareth whom he used To harry Gareth and L. 706
M the damsel, ' Wherefore did the King Scorn
me ? „ 737
Then to her Squire m the damsel ' Fools ! Balin and Balan 564
And to in himself ' Tell her the charm ! Merlin arid V. 809
And hearing ' harlot ' to twice or thrice, „ 843
' Him or death,' she m, ' death or him,' Lancelot and E. 902
She TO, ' I have lighted on a fool, Pelleas and E. 113
while he to, ' Craven crests ! 0 shame ! ImsI Tournament 187
Then to her own sad heart to the Queen, Guinevere 213
Then he to half to himself. In the Child. Hasp. 21
were the words M in our dismay ; Heavy Brigade 47
Mattering M and murmuring at his ear, ' Quick, M. d' Arthur 179
Francis, to, like a man ill-used, „ Ef. 12
M and mumbling, idiotlike Enoch Arden 639
Repeated m ' cast away and lost ; ' „ 715
thereat the crowd M, dissolved : Princess iv 523
And TO discontent Cursed me and my flower. The Flower 7
Peering askance, and to broken-wise. Merlin and V. 100
And after to ' The great Lancelot,' Lancelot and E. 421
M and murmuring at his ear, ' Quick, Pass, of Arthur 347
heard him to, ' So hke, so hke ; Lover's Tale iv 325
TO to himself ' The call of God ' St. Telemachus 42
Mutual And TO love and honoui-able toil ; Enoch Arden 83
with TO pardon ask'd and given For stroke and
song. Princess v 46
Our TO mother dealt to both of us : Lover's Tale i 246
Muzzle creature laid his to on your lap, Princess ii 272
Muzzled Every tiger madness m, Locksley H., Sixty 167
Myriad (adj.) Thou of the many tongues, the to eyes ! Ode to Memory 47
but heard The to shriek of wheeUng ocean-fowl, Enoch Arden 583
I saw the flaring atom-streams And torrents of her
TO universe, Lucretius 39
These prodigies of m nakednesses, „ 156
Tho' world on world in to myriads roll Round us. Ode on Well. 262
have outpom-'d Their to horns of plenty at our
feet. Ode Inter. Exhih. 6
They might have cropt the to flower of May, Balin and Balan 577
Than of the to cricket of the mead, Lancelot and E. 106
Fiercely on aU the defences our m enemy fell. Def. of Lucknow 35
starr'd with a to blossom the long convolvulus
hung ; V. of Maeldune 40
I rose Following a torrent till its to ffdls Tiresias 37
Far away beyond her to coming changes
earth Locksley H., Sixty 231
Britain's m voices call. Open. I. and C. Exhih. 35
more Than all the to hes, that blacken round The
corpse of every man Romney's R. 122
Hear thy to laureates hail thee monarch Akbar's D., Hymn 6
Nor the to world, His shadow, nor the silent
Opener of the Gate.' God and the Univ. 6
Myriad (s) (See also Isiaiai-ISynaAs) M's of topaz-lights,
and jacinth- work M. d' Arthur 57
That codeless to of precedent, Aylmer's Field 436
M's of rivulets hurrying thro' the lawn. Princess vii 220
Against the m's of Assaye Clash'd Ode on Well. 99
Tho' world on world in myriad m's roll Round us, „ 262
To m's on the genial earth, In Mem. xcix 14
And unto m's more, of death. „ 16
woodland lilies, M's blow together. Maud I xii 8
M's of topaz-lights, and jacinth-work Pass, of Arthur 225
To serve her m's and the State, — To Marq. of Dufferin 24
power to fuse My m's into union
Akbar's Dream 157
Ode to Memory 118
Boddicea 42
Merlin and V. 731
Epilogue 53
Lancelot and E. 170
M. d' Arthur 233
Pass, of Arthur 401
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 58
Arabian Nights 104
The Islet 19
CEnone 213
Tithonus 34
Enoch Arden 526
Aylmer's Field 695
Lancelot and E. 1407
Guinevere 576
Madeline 24
A Character 20
Adeline 1
Alexander 11
Two Voices 290
D. of F. Women 262
Myriad (s) (continued)
under one ;
Myriad-minded Subtle-thoughted, to-to.
Myriad-rolling Thine the m-r ocean,
Myriad-room'd Pufi'd out his torch among the m-r
Myriad-worlded Yon m-w way^
MSrriad-wrinkled came an old, dumb, m-w man.
Myrrh holy Elders with the gift of m.
holy Elders with the gift of to.
Myrrh-bush leave the m-b on the height ;
Myrrh-Uiicket deep m-t's blowing rovmd
Msrrtle Mixt with to and clad with vine,
Myrtled See Million-myrtled
mysterious Whose thick m boughs in the dark mom
Once more the old m glimmer steals
And that to instinct wholly died.
Low was her voice, but won to way
She chanted snatches of to hymns
or I know not what m doom.
Mystery All the m is thine ;
hour by hour He canvass'd human mysteries,
M of mysteries. Faintly smiling AdeUne,
Shelter'd his unapproached mysteries :
His heart forebodes a to :
dissolved the to Of folded sleep.
in that to Where God-in-man is one with
man-in-God,
O m ! What amulet drew her down to that old
oak.
No purple in the distance, to,
speak Of thy prevailing mysteries ;
In vastness and in to,
O ye mysteries of good,
fair and fine ! — Some young lad's m —
Then Kay, ' Wliat murmurest thou of to ?
TO ! Tut, an the lad were noble,
Paynim bard Had such a mastery of his to
And that his grave should be a to
no shade or fold of to Swathing the other.
wailest being horn And banish'd into to,
every Faith and Creed, remains The M.
Mystic That touches me with to gleams,
Sow'd all their to gulfs with fleeting stars ;
Clothed in white samite, to, wonderful,
(Repeat)
And TO sentence spoke ;
Changed with thy to change, and felt my blood
Once more uprose the to mountain-range :
Shone hke a to star between the less
Bum like the to fire on a mast-head, "^
As in some to middle state I lay ;
Deep-seated in our m frame,
A little flash, a to hint ;
The TO glory swims away ;
No — mixt with all this to frame.
To seek thee on the to deeps.
Some pecuhar to grace Made her only the child
Clothed in white samite, m, wonderful.
With many a m symbol, gird the hall :
With Merlin's to babble about his end Amazed
Enoch Arden 186
Aylmer's Field 506
Princess vi 196
In Mem. xxxvii 12
„ xcvii 7
„ cxxviii 8
Gareth and L. 466
470
472
Last Tournament 327
Guinevere 297
Lover's Tale i 182
De Prof., Two G. 42
To Mary Boyle 52
Two Voices 380
Gardener's D. 262
M. d' Arthur 31, 144, 159
Talking Oak 294
Tithonus 55
Vision of Sin 2G&
Aylmer's Field 72
Princess iv 274
vi 18
In Mem. xxxvi 2
„ xliv 8
„ Ixvii 9
„ Ixxviii 18
„ cxxv 14
Maud I xiii 39
Com. of Arthur 285
Holy Grail 233
Last Tournament 670
Guinevere 281
And many a m lay of hfe and death Had chanted
Clothed in white samite, m, wonderful,
(repeat) Pass, of Arthur 199, 312, 327
A TO light flash'd ev'n from her white robe
Henceforth that w bond betwixt the twins —
To me, my son, more to than myself.
What vague world-whisper, w pain or joy,
TO melodist Who aU but lost himself in AUa,
Mystical some confused dream To states of to
similitude ;
There I heard them in the darkness, at the to ceremony, Boddicea 36
Mythic Or to Uther's deeply-wounded son Palace of Art 105
M3^oIogy ' As old mythologies relate. Two Voices 349
weigh'd him down as .^tna does The Giant of M : Lcmr's Tale iv 18
Lover's Tale i 370
Sisters (E. and E.) 25Q
Ancient Sage 45
Far — far — away 7
Akbar's Dream 92
Sonnet to 4
Naail
490
Name
N
Naail (nail) toaner 'ed shot 'um as dead as a n. N. Farmer, 0. S. 35
Naakt (naked) An' ya stood cop n i' the beck, Church-warden, etc. 29
Naame (name) ' Stan' 'im theer i' the n o' the Lord North. Cobbler 73
coom'd Uke a Hangel o' inarcy as soon as 'e 'eard 'is w, Owd Rod 93
Uaamed (named) we n her ' Dot an' gaw one ! ' Village Wife 100
Nabour (neighbour) An' her n's an frinds 'ud consowl
and condowl md her, Tomorrow 47
Nadir hard earth cleave to the N hell Merlin and V. 349
Nager (nigger) Thim ould blind n's in Agypt, Tomorrow 69
Na^in' Moother was n an' groanin' an' moanin' an' n
agean ; Owd Boa 108
Nagging See A-naggin', Naggin'
Naiad but the N Throbbing in mild unrest Leonine Eleg. 11
faintly smilest still. As a iV in a well, Adeline 16
and N's oar'd A glimmering shoulder To E. L. 16
Nail (s) {See also Finger-nail, Naail) The rusted n's fell
from the knots Mariana 3
seem'd All-perfect, finish'd to the finger n. Edwin Morris 22
children cast their pins and n's, Merlin and V. 430
Nail (verb) n me hke a weasel on a grange Princess ii 205
They never n a dumb head up in ehn). Lover's Tale iv 37
Nail'd (adj.) Then with their n prows Parted the
Norsemen, Batt. of Brunnnburh 9B
Nail'd (verb) He that has n all flesh to the Cross, Fastness 28
Naked (See also Half-naked, Naakt, Nigh-naked) N I go,
and void of cheer : Two Voices 239
As n essence, must I be Incompetent of memory : „ 374
All n in a sultx-y sky, Fatima 37
N they came to that smooth-swarded bower, CEnone 95
' Ride you n thro' the town, Godiva 29
Far too n to be shamed ! Vision of Sin 190
I rate your chance Almost at n nothing.' Princess i 161
N, a double light in air and wave, „ vii 167
mighty hands Lay n on the wolfskin, Lancelot and E. 813
Far ran the n moon across The houseless ocean's The Voyage 29
With n limbs and flowers and fruit, „ 55
n marriages Flash from the bridge, Aylmer's Field 765
Have left the last free race with n coasts ! Third of Feb. 40
down the wave and in the flame was borne A n
babe, Com. of Arthur 384
The shining dragon and the n child „ 399
And truth or clothed or n let it be. „ 408
A n babe, of whom the Prophet spake, Gareth and L. 501
The gay pavilion and the n feet, „ 937
rose-red from the west, and all N it seem'd, „ 1088
' Wherefore waits the madman there N in open
dayshine ? ' „ 1092
' Not n, only wrapt in haiden'd skins „ 1093
weep True tears upon his broad and n breast, Marr. of Geraint 111
Ancl bore him to the n hall of Doorm, Geraint and E. 570
There in the n hall, propping his head, . „ 581
And at« with tumult in the n hall, „ 605
I smote upon the n skull A thrall of thine Balin and Balan 55
say That out of n knightlike purity Merlin and F. 11
But that where blind and n Ignorance „ 664
Stript off the case, and read the n shield, Lancelot and E. 16
battle-writhen arms and mighty hands Lay n on
the wolfskin, „ 813
Stript off the case, and gave the n shield ; „ 979
Himself N of glory for His mortal change, Eoly Grail 448
and on the n mountain top Blood-red, „ 474
then I came All in my folly to the n shore, „ 793
laid The n sword athwart their n throats, Pelleas and E. 452
A n aught— yet swme I hold thee still. Last Tournament 309
then They found a n child upon the sands Guinevere 293
Above the n poisons of his heart In his old age.' Lover's Tale i 356
pour'd Into the shadowing pencil's n forms „ ii 180
1 had better ha' put my n hand in a hornets' nest. First Quarrel 50
Pour'd in on all those happy n isles— Columbus 173
Naked (conlinued) And we left but a n rock.
For a wild witch n as heaven stood
One n peak — the sister of the sun
When he clothed a n mind with the wisdom
lest the n glebe Should yawn once more
The scorpion crawling over n skulls ; —
Of leafless elm, or n lime.
Trunk and bough, N strength.
gliding thro' the branches over-bower'd The n
Tlu'ee,
same who first had found Paris, a n babe,
I stood there, n, amazed
forward — n — let them stare.
Nakedness we shall see The n and vacancy
These prodigies of myriad n'es,
Grimy n dragging his trucks And laying
Is mere white tl^lth in simple n,
roU'd his n everyway That all the crowd
Name (s) {See also Naame) Wisdom, a n to shake AU
evil dreams of power — a sacred n.
From thy rose-red hps my n Floweth ;
Yet tell my n again to me,
round the prow they read her n,
how thy n may sound Will vex thee lying
underground ?
' His sons grow up that bear his n.
He names the n Eternity.
Last night, when some one spoke his n,
all those n's, that in their motion were
Lost to her place and n ;
I know you proud to bear your n,
' ' I had great beauty : ask thou not my n :
when I heard my n Sigh'd forth with life
my crown about my brows, A n for ever ! —
The n of Britain trebly great —
' Thou hast betray'd thy nature and thy n,
call'd him by his n, complaining loud,
when I heard her n My heart was like a prophet
The cuckoo told his n to all the hills ;
if I carved my n Upon the cliffs that guard
set the words, and added n's I knew.
he that knew the n's. Long learned n's
I spoke her n alone.
n's Are register'd and calendar'd for saints.
thou, whereon I carved her n, (repeat)
tell me, did she read the n
found, and kiss'd the n she found,
I am become a n ;
And built herself an everlasting n.
n of wife. And in the rights that n may give.
Hoped to make the n Of his vessel great in story
in whom he had reliance For his noble n.
What care I for anv n ?
V. of Maeldune 54
100
Tiresias 30
The Wreck 65
Demeter and P. 42
78
To Ulysses 16
The Oak 15
Death of CEnone 7
54
Despair 77
Locksley H., Sixty 142
Deserted House 11
Lucretius 156
Maud I xl
Balin and Balan 518
Dead Prophet 15
The Poet 46
Elednore 133
142
L. of Shalott iv 44
' N and fame ! to fly sublime Thro' the courts.
You might have won the Poet's n,
but that n has twice been changed —
James Willows, of one n and heart with her.
' Willows.' 'No ! ' ' That is my n.'
Two Voices 110
256
291
Fatima 15
Palace of Art 165
264
L. C. V. de Vere 10
D. of F. Women 93
153
163
You ask me, why, etc. 22
M. d' Arthur 73
210
Gardener's D. 62
93
Audley Court 48
61
Edwin Morris 16
68
St. S. Stylites 131
Talking Oak 33, 97
153
159
Ulysses 11
Godiva 79
Day-Dm., L'Envoi 53
The Captain 18
. . " ^8
Vision of Sin 85
103
You might have won 1
Enoch Arden 859
The Brook 76
212
ghost of one who bore your n About these meadows, „ 219
'he that marries her marries her n ' Aylmer's Field 25
almost all the village had one n; „ 35
sow'd her »!. and kept it green In living letters, „ 88
The one transmitter of their ancient n, „ 296
N,too,n\ Their ancient w ! „ 377
Fall back upon a n ! rest, rot in that ! „ 385
make a n, N, fortune too : „ 394
And crying upon the n of Leohn, „ 576
that moment, when she named his n, „ 581
So never took that useful n in vain. Sea Dreams 189
did I take That popular n of thine to shadow forth Lucretius 96
bears one n with her Whose death-blow struck „ 235
and lovelier than their n's, Princess, Pro. 12
Walter hail'd a score of n's upon her, „ 156
His n was Gama ; crack'd and small his voice, „ i 114
albeit their glorious n's Were fewer, „ « 155
Name
491
Name
Name (s) (continued) great n flow on with broadening
time For ever.' Princess Hi 164
chattering stony n's Of shale and hornblende, „ 361
Proctor's leapt upon us, crying ' N's :' „ iv 259
Swear by St. something — I forget her n — „ v 293
Whose 11 is yoked with children's, „ 418
happy warrior's, and immortal n's, „ vi 93
She needs must wed him for her own good n ; „ vii 74
In that dread sound to the great ?i. Ode on Well. 71
0 civic muse, to such a n. To such a n for ages long,
To such a n, „ 75
Eternal honour to his n. (repeat) „ 150, 231
at thy n the Tartar tents are stirr'd; W to Marie Alex. 12
Thy n was blest within the narrow door ; „ 38
Here also, Marie, shall thy n be blest, „ 39
You cannot love me at all, if you love not my
good w.' Grandmother 48
1 love you so well that your good n is mine. „ 50
My n in song has done him much wrong. Spiteful Letter 3
This faded leaf, our n's are as brief ; „ 13
Milton, a n to resound for ages ; Milton 4
quiet bones were blest Among familiar n's to rest In Mem. xviii 7
We yield all blessing to the n „ xxxvi 3
Could hardly tell what n were thine. „ lix 16
.Since we deserved the n of friends, „ Ixv 9
Along the letters of thy n, „ Ixvii 7
force that would have forged an. „ Ixxiii 16
Another n was on the door : „ Ixxxvii 17
The grand old n of gentleman, „ cxi 22
Sweet Hesper-Phosphor, double n „ cxxi 17
sign your n's, which shall be read, „ Con. 57
The n's are signed, and overhead Begins the clash „ 60
And my own sad n in comers cried, Maud I vi 72
a learned man Could give it a clumsy n. „ U ii 10
the sudden making of splendid n's, „ Illviil
a household n, Hereafter, thro' all times, Bed. of Idylls 42
Nor shalt thou tell thy n to anyone. Gareth and L. 156
Not tell my n to any — no, not the King.' „ 171
A n of evil savour in the land, „ 385
without a sign Saving the n beneath ; „ 415
Mark hath tarnish'd the great n of king, „ 426
A twelvemonth and a day, nor seek my n. „ 446
let my n Be hidd'n, and give me the first quest, „ 544
Let be my n until I make my n ! „ 576
What is thy n ? thy need ? ' ' My n ? ' she said —
' Lynette my n ; „ 605
Forgetful of his glory and his n, Marr. of Geraint 53
I cannot love my lord and not his n. „ 92
desired his n, and sent Her maiden to demand it of the dwarf; „ 192
' Surely I will learn the n,' „ 203
His n 'i but no, good faith, I will not have it : „ 405
Sent her own maiden to demand the n, „ 411
I will break his pride and learn his n, „ 424
Geraint, a n far-sounded among men „ 427
I will not let his n Slip from my lips „ 445
earn'd himself the n of sparrow-hawk. „ 492
her n will yet remain Untamish'd as before ; „ 500
(Who hearing her o^vn n had stol'n away; „ 507
' Thy 71 ! ' To whom the fallen man jNIade Answer, „ 575
A stately queen whose n was Guinevere, „ 667
the Queen's fair n was breathed upon, Geraint and E. 951
Arthur seeing ask'd ' Tell me your n's ; Balin and Balan 50
Saying ' An unmelodious n to thee, „ 52
realm Hath prosper'd in the n of Christ, „ 99
a n that branches o'er the rest, „ 182
might, N, manhood, and a grace, „ 377
by the great Queen's n, arise and hence.' „ 482
O me, that such a w as Guinevere's, „ 489
And thus foam'd over at a rival n : „ 567
fought in her n, Sware by her — Merlin and V. 13
Their lavish comment when her n was named. „ 151
lost to Ufe and use and n and fame, (repeat) „ 214, 970
My use and n and fame. „ 304
Upon my life and use and n and fame, „ 374
felt them slowly ebbing, n and fame.' „ 437
Name (s) (continued) My n, once mine, now thine.
But when my n was lifted up,
M'liose whole prey Is man's good n :
The pretty, popular n such manhood earns,
Kage like a tire among the noblest n's.
Some stain or blemish in a w of note,
she that knew not ev'n his n ?
and by that n Had named them,
fought together ; but their n's were lost ;
Has link'd our n's together in his lay,
your great n, This conquei-s :
and by what ?i Livest between the lips ?
Elaine, and heard her n so tost about,
' Fair lord, whose 71 I know not —
' Hear, but hold my n Hidden,
fiery family passion for the n Of Lancelot,
his great n Conquer'd ; and therefore would he hide
his n
Whence you might learn his n ?
How know ye my lord's n is Lancelot ? '
To win his honour and to make his n,
sons Born to the glory of thy n and fame,
Why did the King dwell on my n to me ?
Mine own n shames me,
profits me my n Of greatest knight ?
named us each by n, Calhng ' God speed ! '
the knights. So many and famous n's ;
after trumpet blown, her n And title.
Full on her knights in many an evil n
' And oft in dying cried upon your n.'
Lancelot, saying, ' What n hast thou That ridest
' No n, no w,' he shouted, ' a scourge am I
but thy n? ' 'I have many n's,' he cried :
And when I call'd upon thy n
set his n High on all hills,
a n ? Was it the n of one in Brittany,
the sweet n Allured him first,
n Went wandering somewhere darkling in his mind.
Of one — his n is out of me — the prize.
Did I love her? the n at least I loved.
Tlie 7t was ruler of the dark — Isolt ?
And once or twice I spake thy n aloud.
hers Would be for evermore a w of scorn.
and yield me sanctuary, nor ask Her n
Nor with them mix'd, nor told her n.
And drawing foul ensample from fair n's.
And mine will ever be a m of scorn.
in their stead thy n and glory cling
' Thou hast betrayed thy nature and thy n,
call'd him by his ti, complaining loud,
Mather than that gray king, whose n, a ghost,
Keep thou tliy n of ' Lover's Bay.'
more Than the gray cuckoo loves his n,
and my n was borne Upon her breath.
Henceforth my n has been A hallow'd memory Uke
the 7i's of old,
this n to which her gracious lips Did lend such gentle
utterance, this one n. In sucli obscure hereafter.
Nevertheless, we did not change the n.
Thy n is ever worshipp'd among hours !
And by that n I moved upon her breath; Dear n,
which had too much of nearness in it
Him who should own that n ?
If so be that the echo of that n
upon the sands Insensibly I drew her n.
And leave the n of Lover's Leap :
Forgive him, if his n be Julian too.'
Merlin and V. 446
502
729
787
802
832
Lancelot and E. 29
32
40
112
150
181
233
360
416
477
579
654
797
1362
1372
1402
1403
1413
Holy Grail 351
364
Pelleas and E. 115
290
385
563
565
567
Last Tournament 73
336
395
398
456
546
603
606
615
Guinevere 61
„ 142
,, 148
„ 490
„ 627
Pass, of Arthur 53
241
378
To the Queen, ii 39
Lover's Tale i 15
257
443
444
456
464
493
560
643
644
ii 7
it) 42
175
Golden-haie'd Ally whose n is one with mine. To A. 2'ennyson, 1
the n at the head of my vei-se is thine. „ 6
May'st thou never be wrong'd by the n that is mine ! „ 7
we had always borne a good n — liiz-path 35
Yet must you change your n : Sisters (E. and E.) 69
An old and worthy nl „ 74
care not tor a n — no fault of mine. „ 77
city deck'd herself To meet me, roar'd my n ; Columbus 10
Name
492
Narrow
Tiresias 121
„ 123
„ 137
The Wreck 5
„ 144
Despair 52
Ancient Sage 49
56
149
Locksley H. Sixty 83
128
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 20
Epilogue 1
„ 60
Dead Prophet 36
59
Name (s) (continued) I changed the n ; San Salvador I
caU'd it ; Columbus 75
Hallowed be Thy n— Halleluiah ! (repeat) De Prof., Human C. 1, 5, 9
n's who dare For that sweet mother land ^- ■ -.^•.
Their n's, Graven on memorial columns,
ring thy n To every hoof that clangs it,
I have sullied a noble n,
— to her maiden n !
felt as I spoke I was taking the n in vain-
seest the Nameless of the hundred n's.
And never named the N' —
Not even his own n.
an age of noblest English n's,
and dying while they shout her n.
leave to head These rhymings with your n,
will you set your n A star among the stars,
f aUing drop will make his n As mortal
till his Word Had won him a noble n.
a n may last for a thousand years,
great n of England, round and round, (repeat) Hands all Round 12, 36
To this great n of England drink, my friends, „ 23
But since your n will grow with Time, To Marq. of Dufferin 13
have I made the n A golden portal to my
rhyme:
and recks not to ruin a realm in her n.
He loved my n not me ;
wrote N, Surname, all'as clear as noon.
Earth and Hell will brand your n.
In the n Of the everlasting God,
A n that earth will not forget
corpse of every man that gains a n ;
aU Stood round it, hush'd, or calling on his n.
In the great n of Him who died for men,
I loathe the very n of infidel,
her n ? what was it ? I asked her.
for him who had given her the n.
Priests in the n of the Lord
scandal is mouthing a bloodless n
Form in Freedom's n and the Queen's !
his truer n Is ' Onward,'
Name (verb) He n's the name Eternity.
That n the under-lying dead.
The wish too strong for words to n ;
The Sultan, as we n him, —
Let him n it who can.
He n's himself the Night and oftener Death,
' Perad venture he, you n. May know my shield,
since you n yourself the simimer fly,
break faith with one I may not n ?
she spake on, for I did n no wish, (repeat)
those about us whom we neither see nor n.
15
Vastness 10
The Bing 191
237
Forlorn 51
Happy 107
To Ulysses 27
Eomney's R. 123
Death of Qinone 66
St. Telemachus 63
Akhar's Dream 70
Charity 35
„ 39
The Dawn 4
„ 12
Riflemen form ! 23
D. of the Duke of C. 13
dreamer, deaf and blind, N
Named {See also Naamed)
man,
ship I sail in passes here (He n the day)
that moment, when she n his name,
would bawl for civil rights. No woman n :
Truth-teller was our England's Alfred n ;
under every shield a knight was n :
follows, being n. His owner, but remembers all,
That n himself the Star of Evening,
a grateful people n Enid the Good ;
lavish comment when her name was n.
therefore be as great as you are n,
n them, since a diamond was the prize.
n us each by name. Calling ' God speed ! '
Thro' such a round in heaven, we n the stars,
loved it tenderly, And n it Nestling ;
this I n from her own self, Evelyn ;
And never n the Name ' —
Drew to the valley N of the shadow,
Nameless (adj.) In whose least act abides the n charm
But spoke not, rapt in n reverie,
Such clouds of n trouble cross All night
Your father has wealth well-gotten, and I am m and
poor.
Two Voices 291
In Mem. ii 2
xciii 14
Maud I XX A
„ mill
Gareth and L. 638
1298
Merlin and V. 369
Lancelot and E. 685
Lover's Tale i 578, 583
Locksley H., Sixty 272
Two Voices 176
Enoch Arden 215
Aylmer's Field 581
Princess v 388
Ode on Well. 188
Gareth and L. 409
703
1090
Geraint and E. 963
Merlin and V. 151
336
Lancelot and E. 33
Holy Grail 351
686
Last Tournament 25
Sisters (E. and E.) 270
Ancient Sage 56
Merlin and ike G. 87
Princess v 70
„ Con. 108
In Mem. iv 13
Maud I iv 18
Nameless (adj.) {continued) Sick of a w fear, Maud II ii 44
Whose bark had plunder'd twenty n isles ; Merlin and V. 559
Blazed the last diamond of the n king. Lancelot and E. 444
The n Power, or Powers, that rule Ancient Sage 29
Nameless (s) If thou would'st hear the N, „ 31
thou May'st haply leam the N hath a voice, „ 34
Or even than the N is to me. „ 46
Thou seest the N of the hundred names. And if the
N should withdraw from all
The N never came Among us.
Thou canst not prove the N, 0 my son,
But with the N is nor Day nor Hour ;
past into the iV, as a cloud Melts into Heaven.
A cloud between the N and thyseK,
49
54
57
102
233
278
Namesake Her daintier n down in Brittany —
And she, my n of the hands.
Naming n each. And n those, his friends,
Who, never n God except for gain,
Nap 'Twas but an after-dinner's n.
Nape the very n of her white neck Was rosed
and the skull Brake from the n.
Naphtha-pits Beyond the Memmian n-p.
Napkin n wrought with horse and hound,
like the common breed That with the n dally ;
Naples quite worn out, Travelling to N.
For N which we only left in May ?
Narcotics Like dull n's, numbing pain.
Narded N and swathed and balm'd it
Last Tournament 265
594
The Brook 130
Sea Dreams 188
Day-Dm., Revival 24
Princess vi 343
Lancelot and E. 50
Alexander 4
Audley Court 21
Will Water. 118
The Brook 36
The Ring 58
In Mem. v 8
Lover's Tale i 682
Narra (narrow) I fun that it warn't not the gaainist
waay to the n Gaate. Church-warden, etc. 12
Narrow (adj.) {See also Earth-narrow, Narra) Oh ! n,n was
the space, Oriana 46
Drawing into his n earthen urn. Ode to Memory 61
And fires your n casement glass, Miller's D. 243
Were shiver'd in my n frame. Fatima 18
With n moon-lit slips of silver cloud, QSnone 218
Better the n brain, the stony heart, Love and Duty 15
Hunun'd like a hive all round the n quay, Audley Court 5
I, to herd with n foreheads, Locksley Hall 175
red roofs about a n wharf In cluster ; Enoch Arden 3
A n cave ran in beneath the cliff : „ 23
halfway up The n street that clamber'd „ 60
Ten miles to northward of the n port „ 102
and his careful hand, — The space was n, — „ 177
And left but n breadth to left and right „ 674
Down to the pool and n wharf he went, „ 690
All down the long and n street he went „ 795
Doubtless our n world muet canvass it : Aylmer's Field 774
n meagre face Seam'd with the shallow cares „ 813
To find a deeper in the n gloom „ 840
God bless the n sea which keeps her off, Princess, Con. 51
God bless the n seas ! „ 70
Thy name was blest within the n door ; W. to Marie Alex. 38
Till, in a n street and dim, The Daisy 22
Should murmur from the n house. In Mem. xxxv 2
She sighs amid her n days, „ Ix 10
And Spring that swells the n brooks, „ Ixxxv 70
all n jealousies Are silent ; Ded. of Idylls 16
the stream Full, n ; Gareth and L. 908
Anon they past a n comb wherein „ 1193
To me this n grizzled fork of thine Merlin and V. 59
Then, n court and lubber King, farewell ! „ 119
In mine own realm beyond the n seas, Lancelot and E. 1323
Uke a vermin in its hole, Modred, a n face : Last Tournament 166
Or elsewhere, Modred's n foxy face, Guinevere 63
And wastes the n realm whereon we move. Pass, of Arthur 140
and the n fringe Of curving beach— Lover's Tale i 38
floods with redundant life Her n portals. „ 85
o'erstept The slippery footing of his n wit, „ 102
Small pity for those that have ranged from the n
warmth of your fold, Despair 38
Fought for their lives in the n gap they had
made — Heavy Brigade 23
The clash of tides that meet in n seas. — Akhar's Dream 68
Narrow (verb) tho' the gathering enemy n thee, Boddicea 39
Narrow'd
493
Harrow'd N her goings out and comings in ; An7,»^', v.:ja r:m
The river as it n to the hills Ayliner s Field 501
^arroWCT^On arrange of lower feelings and a n heart """''' '" ^^^
The hniit oT his n fate -£ocfo% ^a^^ 44
Set light by n perf ectness. ■''* ^*"' • ^^*''. ^1
Men that in a re day— n r ^"^ ^ , '^^^ ^
the re The cage, the more their fury. ^''' AUa^lf^'^'l^
arrowest Or been in re working shut 7**",^* ^'■^''''* ^^
rarrowing .Y in to where they safSembled 'v^CofsTn m
round me drove In re circles till I yeU'd aeain T ^ . • 1^
No lewdnes-s, n envy, monkey-spite ^ XMoreitw^ 57
Rmg out the n lust of gold ; r at" -kl
' O closed about by « nunnery-walls, In Mem. cm 26
O shut me round with re nmineiy-walls, Gmnevere 342
1 .?re\°i.^^T"4i't'^'^^ *'^ """^'^ ^' ^ ^-p ^ ^-^^^y ^. S-^. S4
Harrowness Nor ever? or spite, Prog.ofSj>ring9l
Hasty iV an' snaggy an' shaakv ,/^ ,-^*"*- ^^* 1^
iV, casselty Sher ! ^' ^, ^f'^- 9**^«^ 78
i they leaved their n sins i' my pond Church-warden, etc 2
[ Watal And gave you on your re day ' ",y . •
1 Yet present in his n Irove^ ^f "^r^^ f2
I Nation And the re'5 do but milrmur r A rr'^MK^^
! From the re'5' airy navies S-^p^ling iocis^ey ZTaZZ 106
A re yet, the rulers and the ruled— Pw " n ^o
To the noise of the mourning of a mighty re Z'J'' ^^\^\
are weeping, and breaking on my resi ? ^ ' ^^' "^ ^'\i
wno lets once more in peace the re's meet n^. i . "r^ , •, ":
' The song that nerves a re'/heartr %• ^''^W
when the re's rear on high Their idol ^Uogue 81
Who made a re pm-er thro4h tl^eir art To WT 5"'"^"J ^l
thro' Earth and her listeni^ «'5 ^ 0 fF. C. ^acreorfy 8
Light of the n's ' ask'd hiTChr^nicler 4 vk V''^''**"* I
National iV hatreds of whole geneSm ^^Vj^'^'l^
Native on his light there falls A shadow^' and his ''''"' ^^
M slope, o /-, y. .
And heard her re breezes pass Supp. Confessions 164
Upon the cliffs that^^Trrm; re land ^^^rianajn the S. 43
herb that runs to seed BesiK « folmtain ^"^J^ ^r'' f
Poet's words and looks Had yet theirT glow- wJP'^"''',a^.
i^rHaSt Krv?i '-'^' -' ^ ^-^' ^-^ s- ^^^
Who look'd all re to her place, " ^?. ^gl
The violet of his re land r ,'; ^" ^^^
Go down beside thy re rill ■^^- ^^" *
Who ploughs with pain his re lea " ^f^.%5
That stays him from the re land " ^**?'.?^
love-language of the bird In re hazels tassel hung ' " !^v 1 9
And re growth of noble mind- '«»ei "ung. „ ^.^ 12
To the death, for their n land. 'W. f * J?
I have felt with my re land, il/at«i / z, 11
Betwkt the re land of Love and me, r^ver'^s tHI 9^
how re Unto the hills she trod on' J-over s Taie i 25
I with our lover to his re Bay. " • ^^^
He past for ever from his re land ; " *^ if ^
Natmty Fair Florence honouring thy re/ Far-far-away 4
Natura^ Embrace her as my re good ; 7« m. "•*,!
NatnfenL^trate^-Tld^^^^ And re dieP ^^^^
Tftt^r^rork'h^-r^X^^^^^
Young iV thro' five cyciL 7a^' ^V^'^I^' f,
InN^^r^ ^°^^ '^^J P°^«^ At°"t the opening ^""^ ^"^'^^1 J^
In iV can he nowhere find. i^ h " iXo
iv 5 living motion lent The pulse of hope " f ?^
each a perfect whole From living N, Falace'of Arftl
Nature (contmued) Carved out of TV for itself
Lord over iV Lord of the visible ear h '
my bhss of life, that N gave
Crreat N is more wise than l'-
N, so far as in her lies,
English re's, freemen, friends
For N also, cold and warm '
1^'* T-^ ^*^'" ^""l^^ "^«" in manhood,
*or n brings not back the Mastodon,
Thou hast betray'd thy re and thy Aame,
To what she is : a re never kind '
Kmd re IS the best: those manners next That fit
us hke a re second-hand • ^
My love for iV is as old as I •
My love for N and my love for her
For those and theirs, by N's law
How can my re longer mix with thine ?
M^b^S^tt"^^^^^^^^^
1 am shamed thro' all my re '
N made them bUnder motions
Here at least, wliei-e re sickens, nothing
liberal apphcatioiis he In Art like N
Uh, re hi-st was fresh to men,
But laws of re were our scorn
as neat and close as N packsHer blossom
speech and thought and re fail'd a little
« crost ^yas mother of the foul adulteri^
iiroke mto re'5 music when they saw her
for It seem'd A void was made in iV • '
all-generating powei's and genial heat Of N
^e^ii^S with how great ease N can smUe, '
1 wy-natured is no re : '
the womb and tomb of all. Great N
r4>L°"'; '*'* "P •■ Embrace our aims':
Wild re s need wise curbs,
but as frankly theirs As dues of N.
Ihere dwelt an iron re in the grain •
Love and N, these are two more terrible
inaw this male n to some touch of that Which kills
scales with man The shining steps of N
and let thy re strike on mine,
And ruling by obeying N's powers.
And aU the phantom, N, stands-
words hke N, half reveal And half conceal
^or tho my re rarely yields
From art, from re, from the schools,
I o pangs of re, sins of will.
Are God and N then at strife,
That N lends such evil dreams ?
Th f V> ""^ '^ **'°*^ ^'i^ <^^aw With ravine,
inat TV 5 ancient power was lost ■
And cancell'd n's best : but thou
I curse not re, no, nor death ; '
As moulded like in N's mint ;
Thou doest expectant re wrong •
Can clouds of w stain The starry clearness
ilign re amorous of the good
,^u" ^^^r^^^ '=°^*^^^ »» break At seasons
Where God and N met in light •
As dying N's earth and hme ;
hands That reach thro' re, moulding men.
Tho mix'd with God and N thou,
^ N hke an open book ;
For re is one with rapine,
in his force to be N's crowning race.
An eye well-practised in re,
Because their n's are Uttle,
Should N keep me aUve,
Sweet re gilded by the gracious gleam
Had suffer'd, or should suffer any taint In n •
Suspicious that her re had a taint.
Nature
Palace of Art 127
» 179
D. of F. Women 210
To J. S. 35
Ore a Mourner 1
Love thou thy land 7
37
73
The Epic 36
M.d' Arthur Id
fValk. to the Mail 62
Edwin Morris 28
31
Talkiiig Oak 73
Tithonus 65
Locksley Hall 48
61
87
148
150
n T, » 153
JJay-Dm., Moral 14
Amphion 57
The Voyage 84
Enoch Arden 178
» 792
Aylmer's Field 375
694
Lucretius 37
98
„ 174
„ 194
„ 245
Princess ii 88
., V 173
204
ri50
165
306
„ vii 262
r>j, r " 351
Ode Inter. Exhib. 40
In Mem. Hi 9
«3
xli 13
. xlix 1
livZ
lv5
6
Ivi 15
Ixix 2
Ixxii 20
Ixxiii 7
Ixxix 6
Ixxxiii 3
Ixxxv 85
eix 9
cxi 7
20
cxviii 4
cxxiv 24
exxx 11
., Con. 132
Maud I iv 22
33
38
53
^ , „ viZ2
Bed of Idylls 39
Marr. of Geraint 32
68
1 — ui J "' "'''" a laint.
doubted whether daughter's tenderness, Or easy re -,„„
«'s pndeful sparkle in the blood ed^y re, „ 798
Geraint and E. 827
Nature
Nature (continued) Like simple noble n's,
credulous
N thro' the flesh herself hath made
the charm Of w in her overbore their own :
judge all n from her feet of clay,
tenderness Of manners and of n : and she thought
494
Neck
Geraint and E 875
Merlin and V. 50
596
835
That all was n, all, perchance for her
some discourtesy Against my n :
baseness in him by default Of will and n,
not idle, but the fruit Of loyal n,
' Thou hast betray'd thy n and thy name,
' Nothing in n is unbeautiful ;
the great things of N and the fair,
lives with blindness, or plain innocence Of n.
The marrel of that fair new n —
dear mothers, crazing N, kill Their babies
magnet of Art to the which my n was drawn,
Born of the brainless A' who knew not
Tumble N heel o'er head.
Paint the mortal shame of n
see the highest Human TV is divine,
seest Univei-sal N moved by Universal Mind ;
Who yet, hke N, wouldst not mar By changes
' That weak and watery n love you ?
For your gentle n . . .
My n was too proud.
Where man, nor only N smiles ;
whether, since our n cannot rest.
Which types all N's male and female plan,
The Spiritual in N's market-place —
Lancelot and E. 329
1303
Pelleas and E. 82
Guinevere 336
Pass, of Arthur 241
Lover's Tale i 350
Sisters (E. and E.) 222
250
Columbus 79
„ 179
The Wreck 22
Despair 34
Locksley H., Sixty 135
140
276
To Virgil 22
Freedom 21
The Ring 396
Forlorn 46
Happy 78
To Ulysses 39
Prog, of Spring 96
On one who effec. E. M. 3
Akbar's Dream 135
from the terrors of N a people have fashion'd Kapiolani 1
Let not all that saddens N Faith 2
Natured See Best-nattired, Noble-natured, Tender-natured
Nave bore along the n Her pendent hands.
Navy From the nations' aiiy navies
gay n there should splinter on it,
sea plunged and fell on the shot-shatter'd n of
Spain,
gold that Solomon's navies carried home.
Near now I think my time is n.. I trust it is.
Ride on ! the prize is n.'
I could not weep — my own time seem'd so n.
Yet both are n, and both are dear,
Dear, n and true — no truer Time
He seems so n and yet so far.
But now set out : the moon is n,
red rose cries, ' She Ls n, she is w ; '
Wounded and wearied needs must he be n.
And one was far apart, and one was n :
I was n my time wi' the boy.
Vile, so n the ghost Himself,
noises in the house — and no one n —
The fatal ring lay n her ;
I knew that you were n me
but fork'd Of the n storm,
Near'd as he n His happy home, the ground.
So rapt, we n the hoase ;
went she Norward, Till she n the foe.
only n Her husband inch by inch,
n, Touch'd, clink'd, and clash'd, and vanish'd,
Still growing holier as you n the bay,
Nearer Nor art thou n to the light.
Could lift them n God-like state
and n than hands and feet.
tho' he make you evermore Dearer and n,
coming n and n again than before —
and find N and ever n Hun,
coming n — Muriel had the ring —
No « ? do you sconi me when you tell me,
May I come a little n, I that heard,
— a little n still — He hiss'd,
A little n ? Yes. I shall hardly be content
A little n yet !
his n friend would say, 'Screw not the chord
My spring is all the n,
Aylmer's Field 812
Locksley Hall 124
Sea Dreams 131
The Revenge 117
Columbus 113
May Queen, Con. 41
Sir Galahad 80
Grandmother 72
The Victim bQ
A Dedication 1
In Mem. xcvii 23
Con. 41
Maud I xxii 63
Lancelot and E. 538
Last Tourna^nent 734
First Quarrel 82
The Ring 230
417
450
Happy 65
Aylmer's Field 727
Gardener's D. 91
142
The Captain 36
Aylmer's Field 806
Sea Dreams 134
Lover's Tale i 338
Two Voices 92
Lit. Squabbles 14
High. Pantheism 12
A Dedication 3
Def. of Lucknow 28
Be Prof., Two G. 53
The Ring 259
Happy 23
„ 55
,. 62
„ 87
« 104
Aylmer's Field 468
Window, Winter 17
Nearer {continued) bubbling melody That drowns
the n echoes. Lover's Tale i 533
Nearest {See also Gaainist) Were it our n, Were it our
dearest. The Victim 13
Which was his n ? Who was his dearest ? „ 76
While I, thy n, sat apart. In Mem. ex 13
the King Spake to me, being n, ' Percivale,' Holy Grail 268
My mind involved yourself the n thing Merlin and V. 300
Beyond the n mountain's bosky brows, Lover's Tale i 396
Nearing And I am n seventy-four, To E. Fitzgerald 43
That he was n his own hundred. The Ring 194
' Spirit, n yon dark portal at the hmit God and the Univ. 4
With n chair and lower'd accent) Aylmer's Field 267
Nearness touch'd her thro' that n of the first, „ 605
Desire of n doubly sweet ; In Mem. cxvii 6
name, which had too much of n in it Lover's Tale i 561
same n Were father to this distance, „ H 28
Brother-in-law — the fiery n of it — • Sisters {E. and E.) 173
Neat {See also Neat) a home For Annie, n and nestlike, Enoch Arden 59
order'd aU Almost as n and close „ 178
Neat Sally sa pratty an' n an' sweeiit. North. Cobbler 43
sa pratty, an' feat, an' «, an' sweeiit ? „ 108
fur, Steevie, tha' kep' it sa n Spinster's S's. 77
Neater Be the n and completer ; Maud I xx 20
Neat-herds while his n-h were abroad ; Lucretius 88
Nebulous ' There sinks the n star we call the Sun, Princess iv 19
Necessity seem'd So justified by that n, Geraint and E. 396
The vast n of heart and life. Merlin and V. 925
Whom weakness or n have cramp'd Tiresias 87
Neck fingers play About his mother's n, Supp. Confessions 43
locks a-drooping twined Round thy n in subtle ring Adeline 58
A glowing arm, a gleaming n, Miller's D. 78
I'd touch her n so warm and white. „ 174
round her n Floated her hair or seem'd to float (Enone 18
I rode sublime On Fortune's n: D, of F. Women 142
Then they clung about The old man's n, Dora 164
A grazing iron collar grinds mj' n ; St. S. Stylites 117
' A third would glimmer on her n Talking Oak 221
And not leap forth and fall about thy n. Love and Duty 41
Disyoke their n's from custom, Princess ii 143
Drew from my n the painting and the tress, „ vi 110
See, your foot is on our n's, „ 166
nape of her white n Was rosed with indignation : „ 343
grew By bays, the peacock's n in hue ; The Daisy 14
' My mother clings about my «, Sailor Boy 17
And fell in silence on his n : In Mem. ciii 44
' Climb not lest thou break thy n, I charge thee by
my love,' and so the boy. Sweet mother, neither
clomb, nor break his n, Gareth and L. 54
A stone about his n to drown him in it. „ 812
Gareth loosed the stone From off his n, „ 815
Drown him, and with a stone about his w ; „ 823
with a sweep of it Shore thro' the swarthy n, Geraint and E. 728
Sir Balan drew the shield from off his n, Balin and Balan 429
curved an arm about his n, Clung like a snake ; Merlin and V. 241
mantle of his beard Across her n „ 257
to kiss each other On her white n — „ 456
made her Uthe arm round his n Tighten, „ 614
Her eyes and n ghttering went and came ; „ 960
a w to which the swan's Is tawnier Lancelot and E. 1184
a necklace for a m O as much fairer — „ 1227
n's Of dragons clinging to the crazy walls. Holy Grail 346
raised a bugle hanging from his n, Pelleas and E. 364
This ruby necklace thrice around her n, Last Tournament 19
I muse Why ye not wear on arm, or n, or zone „ 36
ye fling those rubies round my n „ 312
Queen Isolt With ruby-circled n, „ 364
brother of the Table Round Swvmg by the n : „ 432
flinging round her n, Claspt it, „ 749
felt the King's breath wander o'er her n, Guinevere 582
Bent o'er me, and my n his arm upstay'd. Lover's Tale i 690
floated on and parted round her n, „ 704
Trove's arms were wreath'd about the n of Hope, „ 815
He softly put his arm about her n „ iv 71
The mother fell about the daughter's n, Sisters {E. and E.) 154
!
Neck
495
Nest
Neck (continued) an' Charlie 'e brok 'is n, Village Wife 85
on the fatal n Of land running out into rock — Despair 9
Amy's arms about my n — Locksley H., Sixty 13
she that clasp'd my ?i had flown ; „ 15
their arch'd n's, midnight-maned, Demeter and P. 46
I feeald it drip o' my 71. Owd Rod 42
as if 'e'd 'a brokken 'is n, „ 63
Neck-an-crop I coom'd n-a-c soomtimes North. Cobbler 20
Neck'd See Long-neck'd
Necklace (See also Pearl-necklace) And I would be the n, Miller's D. 181
To make the n shine ; Talking Oak 222
And fling the diamond w by.' Lady Clare 40
Or n for a neck to which the swan's Lancelot and E. 1184
or a w for a neck 0 as much fau-er — „ 1227
This ruby n thrice around her neck, Last Tournament 19
diamond n dearer than the golden ring, Locksley H., Sixty 21
Nectar For they lie beside their 71, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. Ill
Hebes are they to hand ambrosia, mix The n ; Princess Hi 114
n smack'd of hemlock on the lips, Demeter and P. 104
Need (s) wasted Ti-uth in her utmost n. Clear-headed friend 19
Our dusted velvets have much n of thee : To J. M. K. 4
And if some dreadful n should rise Love thou thy land 91
vows, where there was never n of vows. Gardener's D. 258
As I might slay this child, if good n were, Princess ii 287
How know I what had n of thee. In Mem. Ixxiii 3
What is thy name ? thy n ? ' Gareth and L. 605
my w, a knight To combat for my sister, „ 607
cruel n Constrain'd us, Marr. of Geraint 715
All to be there against a sudden n ; Geraint and E. 375
Mine is the larger n, who am not meek, Last Tournament 610
friends Of Arthur, who should help him at his n ? ' Pass, of Arthur 456
bad w Of a good stout lad at his farm ; First Quarrel 17
no re to make such a stir.' „ 63
' All the more n,' I told him, In the Child. Hosp. 18
As good n was — thou hast come to talk Sir J. Oldcastle 32
false at last In our most n, appall'd them, Columbus 71
Bread enough for his n till the labourless day V. of Maeldune 86
Then the Norse leader. Dire was his n of it, Batt. of Brunanburh 56
What n to wish when Hubert weds in you The Ring 61
house with all its hateful n's Happy 32
Need (verb) all Life n's for life is possible Love and Duty 86
' Wild natures n wise curbs. Princess v 173
whence they n More breadth of culture : „ 187
Whether I n have fled ? Maud II ii 72
T n not tell thee foolish words, — Holy Grail 855
He n's no aid who doth his lady's will.' Pelleas and E. 281
I n Him now. Last Tournament 630
such a crazine&s as n's A cell and keeper), Lover's Tale iv 164
Ah heavens ! Why n I tell you all ?— „ 201
' The lad will n little more of your care.' In the Child. Hosp. 17
You n not wave me from you. Happy 20
music here be mortal n the singer greatly care ? Parnassus 18
Up hill ' Too-slow ' will n the whip, Politics 11
I n no wages of shame. * Charity 40
Needed With all that seamen n or their wives — Enoch Ardeii 139
yea twice or thrice — As oft as n — „ 143
Or thro' the want of what it n most, „ 265
voice who best could tell What most it n — „ 267
Because it n help of Love : In Mem. xxv 8
I n then no charm to keep them mine Merlin and V. 547
Heedful And bought them n books, and everyway, Enoch Arden 332
My n seeming harshness, pardon it. Princess ii 309
Are but the n preludes of the tioith : „ Con. 74
thou knowest I hold that fonns Are 71 : Akbar's Dream 127
Needing (His father lying sick and m him) Enoch Arden 65
Needle ' I would have hid her n in my heart, Edwin Morris 62
Man for the sword and for the « she : Pri7icess v 448
Are sharpen'd to a n's end ; 1 71 Mem. Ixxvi 4
Be n to the magnet of your word. To Mary Boyle 7
Needless To greet the sheriff, n courtesy ! Edwin Morris 133
Needs (adv.) he n Must wed that other, whom no man
desired, Gareth and L. 108
one with me in all, he n must know.' „ 566
I n must disobey him for his good ; Geraint and E. 135
You n must work my work. Merlin and V. 505
Needy Let the n be banqueted.
Negation I hate the black m of the bier,
Neglect If men « your pages ?
Neglected That all ?i places of the field
For thanks it seems till now n.
On Jub. Q. Victoria 35
ATicient Sage 204
Spiteful Letter 6
Aylmer's Field 693
Merlin and V. 308
Neighbour (adj.) from all n crowns Alliance and
allegiance, (E7wne 124
Leaning his horns into the « field, Gardener's D. 87
and lady friends From n seats : Princess, Pro. 98
But if my n whistle answers him — Lcyver's Tale iv 161
Neighbour (s) (See also Nabour) While all the n's shoot
thee roimd, The Blackbird 2
And ran to tell her n's ; The Goose 14
Yet say the »»'s when they call, Amphion 5
O Lord ! — 'tis in my n's ground, „ 75
Leering at his n's wife. Vision of Sin 118
The next day came a n. Aylmer's Field 251
With n's laid along the grass, Lucretius 214
Each hissing in his n's ear ; P7-i7icess v 15
the w's come and laugh and gossip, Grandmother 91
From every house the n's met, I71 Mem. xxxi 9
The foolish n's come and go, „ Ix 13
measuring with his eyes His n's make and might : Pelleas and E. 151
friend, the «, Lionel, the beloved. Lover's Tale i 653
i£ perchance the 71's round May see, Achilles over the T. 12
Neighbourhood Far off from human n, Elednore 6
As from some blissful m. Two Voices 430
By one low voice to one dear n, • Aylmer's Field 60
Make their n healthfuller, On Jub. Q. Victoria 32
Neighbouring half The 71 borough with their Institute Princess, Pro. 5
betroth'd To one, a n Princess : „ i 33
Neigh'd Lancelot's charger fiercely «, Gareth and L. 1400
N with all gladness as they came, Geraint and E. 755
the warhorse m As at a friend's voice, Guinevere 530
Neighing strong n's of the wild white Horse Lancelot and E. 298
Nei^herry the sweet half-English N air The Brook 17
Nell Uod bless you, my own little N.' First Quarrel 22
Nelly ' Our N's the flower of 'em all.' „ 28
But N, the last of the cletch, Village Wife 9
iV wur up fro' the craadle as big i' the mouth „ 103
an' our N she gied me 'er 'and, „ 111
Nelson old England fall Which N left so great. The Fleet 5
Nemesis great N Break from a darken'd future, PriTicess vi 174
Nephew sparrow-hawk, My curee, my w — Marr. of Geraint 445
if the sparrow-hawk, this n, fight „ 475
And tilts with my good n thereupon, „ 488
Then Yniol'a n, after trumpet blown, „ 551
O loyal n of our noble King, Lancelot and E. 652
Neronian those N legionaries Boddicea 1
Nerve (s) 'Tis life, whereof our n's are scant, . Two Voices 397
His n's were wrong. What ails us. Walk, to the Mail 105
like those, who clench their n's to rush Love and Duty 77
My n's have dealt with stiffer. Will Water. 78
When thy n's could understand Vision of Sin 160
Were living n's to feel the rent ; A^jlmer's Field 536
O iron n to true occasion true. Ode on Well. 37
A weight of n's without a mind. In Mem. xii 7
blood creeps, and the 71's prick And tingle ; „ 12
Where all the n of sense is numb ; „ xciii 7
0, having the n's of motion as well as the n's Maud I i 63
believing mind, but shatter'd n. Lover's Tale iv 105
Nerve (verb) ' The song that n's a nation's heart. Epilogue 81
Nerve-dissolving The 71-d melody Vision of Sin 44
Nest Fiom my high n of penance here proclaim St. S. Stylites 167
huts At random scatter'd, each a to in bloom. Aylmer's Field 150
bough That moving moves the ?i and nesthng. Sea Dreams 291
birdie say In her n at peep of day ? „ 294
However deep you might embower the n, Pri7icess, Pro. 147
Father will come to l;is babe in the n, „ Hi 13
in the North long since my n is made. „ iv 110
built the n ' she said, ' To hatch the cuckoo. „ 365
We seem a m of traitors — „ v 426
And all in a w together. Window, Spring 16
there were cries and clashings in the n, Gareth a7}d L. 70
by the bird's song ye may leam the n,' Marr. of Geraint 359
Nest
almost plaster'd like a maS'sV ^'^^l? ^J^ f -J^
find an and feels a snake, he drew: PelllfaS'^E S?
• Black n of rats,' he groan'd, ^ ""^ ^- f?J
rL^irt^'S^J.te^SK^^^^'-^ ^-^ T.«;^.J
A mountain «-the pleasure-boat that rock'd. Lover's Tale i 42
better ha' put my naked hand in a hornets' n. fZi Ouartel S
And a tree with a moulder'd n nlJj ^"^'T^ ^
Drove from out the mother's n Oven I andf^ %7uf 97
Birds and brides must leave the n. ^ ''• ^^ """^ ?a5£ fa
song agam, n again, young again,' rtThfj q
Nested (adj.) (See also' i^.^ested) ' I envied human ^' ^^'""'''^ ^
wives, and n birds, "uukui , „ ^^
NMted(verb) Wherein we r^ sleeping or awake £Sl7aUfS<
Nestied and the gilded snake Had « ' Lover s Tale i2Z\
Mestlike a home For Annie npat, nn^l « t-. ," . , *
Nestljig bough That rvfng^tSh^^^ SrtlS?
I^d^^^rnd^^rinli^S^^^^^ XaS.faTri1
; Peace to thine^eagle-bornTSead «', ^'' Tournament 25
Wet (s)(^«e aZso Ivy-net, Pishing-nets) Love that hath us "
in me w, m'?? ' n ono
To-c^t^h^S4?/i^^a%Sri^ ^zfe^i
To have her ho-n roU in a siufen'. mZTvIII
Makers of ^^, and living from the sea. PdleasZl F QO
and Love The n of truth ? ' f^ > n ^2
Net (verb) fibres n the dreamless head ^*^^, ' i^'''""^.?^
""^^^dS "''" ^'^'^-^'^) I -ake the « sunbeam '" ""'"• " '
Nettle r^und and round In dung and ^'5! PelUasanAE^mx
fir Ttu ^hSrL^rX"^:^^^^- x//?l y
New (6V. 0^.0 Kery-new. Spick-span-new) Kate hath ?s^r f '""' '^
ever strung like a « bow, i-u d spun
Transgress his ample bound to some n crown :- PolZdl
hUk «"'ge Of some n deluge from a thousand
WU.learn « thii^ when I am not.' ^^ tZv'Ss m
I knit a hundred others n: J-wo y owes bd
With this old soul in organs n? " oq?
I have found A n land, but I die.' Palace of Art 284
N from Its silken sheath. jfTv w ^
Sweet as n buds in Spring. ^- "^ ^- ^^^^^
IhSeSiTooToi'/h'Ti'"^''"'"/' . . . TheBla^Uirili
inere s a « loot on the floor, my fnend, And a n
Nothing comes to thee n or strange. ^^ ""'"''^V^- TT ?!
Se^tSTtt'SKn^i''^- •. Lcn>et}u>utl/{a!^'m
rie mougnt ttiat nothing n was said, rh^ v^i^ -in
She left the n pUno shut: Edm^Uonu 115
In that n world which k the ofd • ^ ' n„„ n ^/,2/^*«* 28
Thr?; sunny decades n and strSige, ^ liTltA
If old things, there are n ; Wiiiw * !!
i^ stars all night above the brim Of waters vTZe I
'No, I love not what is n ; vi.i /e?^ ion
And the » warmth of life'^ ascending sun v u^I'f ^11
Then her n child was as heSen^'dTThen the n ""'^ ^'■'^'" ^®
mother came about her heart, ' -„„
that we stiU may lead The n l^ht ud t> ■ ' ■■%i%
those were graciois times. Thfn S yourn friend : "^T'i.l^
496
New
New (cowtiwzteci) I your old friend and tried, she w in all ?
n day comes, the light Dearer for night.
Gray nurses, loving nothing n ;
Shall count n things as dear as old :
The baby n to earth and sky.
The full n life that feeds thy breath
But all is n unhallow'd ground.
With old results that look like n :
But, I fear, the n strong wine of love,
iV as his title, built last year.
And that same night, the night of the n year,
N things and old co-twisted, as if Time Were
nothing,
the n knight Had fear he might be shamed •
n sun Beat thro' the bhndless casement of the
room,
Ride into that n fortress by your town
Built that n fort to overawe my friends',
She is not fairer in n clothes than old.
' O my w mother, be not wroth or grieved At thv
n son, •'
A splendour dear to women, n to her, And therefore
dearer ; or if not so n,
The n leaf ever pushes off the old.
like a bride's On her n lord, her own.
But once in life was fluster'd with n wine,
Meanwhile the n companions past away
tm they found The n design wherein they lost
themselves.
Not for me ! For her ! for your n fancy
King Akthuh made n knights to fill the gap
And this n knight. Sir Pelleas of the isles—
iV leaf, n life— the days of frost are o'er: iV lif e m
love, to suit the newer day: N loves are sweet
thel.nl^h^^^^'rL'''''' '?'^°'^; , ^'i Tournament 278
A J ^ ' *^ioryuig m each n glory, ooc
And thou wert lying in thy n leman's arms.' " 625
bhe like a n disease, unknown to men, Guirwuerp -sis
to those With whom he dwelt, ,. faces other minds. Pass TirL. 5
wife and child with wail Pass to n lords ; ^ -o-rmur o
Among n men, strange faces, other minds.'
And the n sun rose bringing the n year
rather seem'd For some n death than for a life
renew'd ;
Crazy with laughter and babble and earth's n
wme,
those long-sweeping beechen boughs Of our N
Forest,
fur N Squire coom'd last night.
Saw Squire's coom'd wi' 'is taail in 'is 'and, (repeat)
an dizen'd out, an' a-buyin' n cloathes,
chams For him who gave a n heaven, a n earth.
The marvel of that fair n nature-
Whatever wealth I bought from that n yfoTlA
be consecrate to lead A n ci-usade against the Saracen,
l?or these are then dark ages, you see
Eh ! tha be m to the plaace — '
Princess iv 318
„ vii 346
In Mem. xxix 14
xl28
xlv 1
Ixxxvi 10
civ 12
cxxviii 11
Maud I vi 82
„ X 19
Com. of Arthur 209
Gareth and L. 226
1043
Marr. of Geraint 70
407
460
722
779
808
Balin and Balan 442
Merlin and V. 617
756
Lancelot and E. 399
441
1216
Pelleas and E. 1
17
45
406
469
Lover's Tale iv 374
To A. Tennyson 2
Sisters (E. and E.) 113
Village Wife 1
„ 14, 121
37
Columbus 20
79
„ 101
„ 103
Despair 88
Dead the n astronomy'^lk her Locksle?H'%lty'l7^^
And some ,. Spirit o'erbear the old, ''^ ^SL 14
?T.ZTy,!^^3'^''r'j ^^^^"^ Makes all things n, EaZspZgl
For now the Heavenly Power Makes aU things
iv England of the Southern Pole !
For ten thousand years Old and n ?
—is making a n link Breaking an old one ?
On that n life that gems the hawthorn line •
And n developments, whatever spark
Sing the n year in under the blue.
'■N,n,n,n] Is it then so w
hast <fe)M brought us down a n Kor^n From
heaven ?
I heard a mocking laugh ' the n Koran ! '
Ihe wonders were so wildly w.
If N and Old, disastrous feud',
«Tu ^ °^? °^"^®f changeth, yielding place to n.
Whose fancy fuses old and «,
44
Hands all Round 16
The Ring 20
50
Prog, of Spring Z6
94
The Throstle 5
7
Akbar's Dream 116
183
Mechanophilus 27
Love thou thy land 77
M. d' Arthur 240
In Mem. xvi 18
New
497
Night
Ifew {continued) Ring out the old, ring in the «,
' The old order changeth, yielding place to n.
New-born here he glances on an eye n-b,
face of a blooming boy Fi-esh as a flower n-b,
Kew-budded music, O bird, in the n-b bowers !
New-caged first as sullen as a beast n-c,
these Are like wild brutes n-c —
New-comer n-c's in an ancient hold,
N-c's from the Mersey, millionaires,
New-dug I seem to see a n-d grave up yonder
Newer 'Tis not too late to seek a n world.
Yea, shook this n, stronger hall of ours.
New life, new love, to suit the n day :
Dust in wholesome old-world dust before the n
world begin.
And cast aside, when old, for n, —
New-faU'n Lay like a n-f meteor on the grass,
New-flush'd thro' damp holts n-f vidth may,
New Forest beechen boughs Of our N F.
Newfoundland Than for his old N's,
Newly-caged Like some wild creature ji-c,
Newly-enter'd But n-e, taller than the rest.
Newly-fallen Right o'er a mount of n-f stones.
New-made one of the two at her side This n-m lord,
sent Ulfius, and Brastias, and Bedivere, His n-m
knights,
and him his n-m knight Worshipt,
My younger knights, n-m,
New-mown rarely smells the n-m hay.
Newness the discovery And n of thine art
New-old accept this old imperfect tale, N-o,
All n-o revolutions of Empire —
New-risen on the roof Of night n-r.
News N from the humming city comes to it
Expectant of that n which never came,
and no n of Enoch came,
breaker of the bitter n from home.
She brought strange n.
in the distance pealing n Of better,
golden n along the steppes is blown.
Pass and blush the n Over glowing ships;
Pass the happy n, Blush it thro' the West ;
These n be mine, none other's —
111 n, my Queen, for all who love him.
Yet good n too ; for goodly hopes are mine
' What n from Camelot, lord ?
Came suddenly on the Queen with the sharp n.
third night hence will bring thee n of gold.'
' Why lingers Gawain with his golden n ? '
New-wedded But the n-w wife wasmnharm'd.
New-world clamour grew As of a «-w Babel,
New-wreathed The garland of n-w emprise :
New-year To-morrow 'ill be the happiest time of all the
glad N-y ; (repeat)
Of all the glad N-y, mother, the maddest merriest
day; ., 3
_i_ I would see the sun rise upon the glad N-y.
(repeat) May Queen N. ¥'s. E. 2, 51
In Mem. cvi 5
Fass. of Arthur 408
Lucretius 137
Gareth and L. 1409
W. to Alexandra 11
Geraint and E. 856
Akbar's Dream 50
Edwin Morris 9
10
The Flight 97
Ulysses 57
Holy Grail 731
Last Tournament 279
Locksley H. Sixty 150
Akbar's Dream 134
Frincess vi 135
My life is full 19
Sisters (E. and E.) 113
Aylmer's Field 125
Frincess ii 301
Last Tournament 169
Marr. of Geraint 361
Maud 1x3
Com. of Arthur 137
Felleas and E. 154
Last Tournament 99
The Owl i 9
Ode to Memory 88
To the Queen ii 37
Vastness 30
Arabian Nights 130
Gardener' s D. 35
Enoch Arden 258
361
Aylmer's Field 594
Sea Dreams 267
Frincess iv 81
W. to Marie Alex. 11
Maud I xvii 11
15
Gareth and L. 539
Lancelot and E. 598
601
620
730
Felleas and E. 357
411
Charity 22
Frincess iv 487
Kate 24
May Qu^en 2, 42
9 It is the last N-y that I shall ever see,
^1 And the N-y's coming up, mother,
9 And the N-y will take 'em away.
* And the N-y blithe and bold, my friend,
O sweet n-y delaying long ;
O thou, n-y, delaying long,
that same night, the night of the n y,
And the new sun rose bringing the n y.
April promise, glad n-y Of Being,
Sing the ny in under the blue.
Next ' When the n moon was roU'd into the sky,
' So when, n mom, the lord whose Ufe he saved
fight In n day's tourney I may break his pride.'
But when the n sun brake from underground,
' But when the n day brake from under groimd-
What be the n im like ?
Were nothing the n minute ?
3
7
D.oftheO. YearU
35
In Mem. Ixxxiii 2
13
Com. of Arthur 209
Fass. of Arthur 469
Lover's Tale i 281
The Throstle 5
D.ofF. Women 229
Gareth and L. 888
Marr. of Geraint 476
Lancelot and E. 1137
Holy Grail 338
Village Wife 19
Voice spake, etc, 10
Nibb'd See Horny-nibb'd
Nice his H eyes Should see the raw mechanic's bloody
thumbs Walk to the Mail 74
If I should deem it over n — Tiresias 191
Nicetish Wi' lots o' munny laiiid by, an' a n bit o'
land. N. Farmer, N. 8. 22
Niched Those n shapes of noble mould, The Daisy 38
Niece Wilham was his son, And she his n. Dora 3
Allan call'd His n and said : „ 42
by the bright head of my little n, Frincess ii 276
Niggard Some » fraction of an hour, Aylmer's Field 450
Tho' n throats of Manchester may bawl. Third of Feb. 43
Ni^^er See Nager
Nigh Far off thou art, but ever n ; In Mem. cxxx 13
In the night, and n the dawn. Forlorn 83
' My end draws n ; 'tis time that I were gone. M. d' Arthur 163
' My end draws n; 'tis time that I were gone. Fu»s. of Arthur 332
Nigher Sure she was n to heaven's spheres, Ode to Memory 40
Nigh-naked On the n-n tree the robin piped Enoch Arden 676
Night {See also Goodnight, Market-noight, Noight,
Sleeping-night, Yesternight) They comfort
him by n and day ;
She only said, ' The n is dreary (repeat)
Upon the middle of the n.
Past Yabbok brook the livelong n.
Until another ninnl enter'd,
living airs of middle n Died round the bulbul
crescents on the roof Of n new-risen,
Nor was the n thy shroud.
With a half-glance upon the sky At n
All day and all n it is ever drawn
Day and n to the billow the fountain calls :
All within is dark as n :
In the yew-wood black as n.
All n the silence seems to flow
But at w I would roam abroad and play
Low thunder and light in the magic n —
whoop and cry All n, merrily, merrily ;
But at M I would wander away, away,
wasting odorous sighs All n long
Moving thro' a fleecy n.
Float by you on the verge of n.
delight of frolic flight, by day or n,
There she weaves by n and day A magic web
For often thro' the silent n's A funeral,
As often thro' the purple n,
Thro' the noises of the n
And ' Ave Mary,' n and morn,
' Madonna, sad is n and morn,'
' That won his praises n and morn ? '
And murmuring, as at n and mom.
More inward than at n or morn.
Sup p. Confessions 45
Mariana 21, 57
25
Clear-headed friend 27
Arabian Nights 37
69
130
Ode to Memory 28
A Character 2
Poet's Mind 28
Sea-Fairies 9
Deserted House 5
Oriana 19
„ 86
The Merman 11
23
27
The Mermaid 31
Adeline 44
Margaret 21
31
Rosalind 47
L. of Shalott ii 1
" ...30
„ Hi 24
iv 22
Mariana in the S. 10
22
34
46
58
' The day to n,' she made her moan, ' The day to n,
the n to morn. And day and n I am left alone „ 81
Heaven over Heaven rose the n. ,, 92
* The n comes on that knows not morn, „ 94
Look up thro' n : the world is wide. Two Voices 24
Would sweep the tracts of day and n. „ 69
Some yearning toward the lamps of w ; „ 363
When April n's began to blow, Miller's D. 106
Fhtted across into the n, „ 127
I may seem, As in the n's of old, „ 166
For hid in ringlets day and n, „ 173
I scarce should be unclasp'd at n. „ 186
Last n I wasted hateful hours Fatima 8
Last n, when some one spoke his name, „ 15
I hear Dead sounds at n come from the inmost hills, (Enone 249
wheresoe'er I am by n and day, „ 267
I rose up in the silent n : The Sisters 25
Echoing all n to that sonorous flow Falace of Art 27
young n divine Crown'd dying day with stars, „ 183
that hears all n The plunging seas „ 250
I sleep so sound all n, mother. May Queen 9
never see me more in the long gray fields
at n ; May Queen, N. Y's. E. 26
2 I
Night
498
Night
Night {ccmtinued) All n I lie awake, but I fall
asleep at mom ;
came a sweeter token when the n and morn-
ing meet:
Drops in a silent autumn n.
Sound all n long, in falling thro' the dell,
All n the splinter'd crags that wall the dell
' Saw God divide the n with flying flame,
Do hunt me, day and ».'
The n is starry and cold, my friend.
And dwells in heaven half the n.
May Queen, N. ¥'s. E. 50
Con. 22
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 34
D of F. Women 183
187
225
256
D. of the 0. YearM
To J. S. 52
M. d' Arthur 141
202
249
Gardener's D. 124
182
190
267
Audley Court 79
Walk, to the Mail 74
89
Ed/uiin Morris 134
St. S. Stylites 113
Love and Duty 59
73
Lochsley Hall 7
9
26
78
heard at dead of n to greet Troy's wandering prince. On a Mourner 32
the moving isles of winter shock By m,
like a wind, that shrills All n in a waste land,
voice Rise like a fountain for me n and day.
last n's gale had caught, And blown
all that n I heard the watchman peal The sliding
season: all that n I heard The heavy clocks
knolling
and heir to all, Made this n thus.
N slid down one long stream of sighing wind,
ere the n we rose And saunter'd home
a cry Should break his sleep by n.
By n we dragg'd her to the college tower
I read, and fled by n, and flying tum'd :
in the n, after a little sleep, I wake :
brought the n In which we sat together
and of sunrise mix'd In that brief n ; the summer n,
Many a n from yonder ivied casement,
Many awl saw the Pleiads,
rosy red flushing in the northern n.
In the dead unhappy n, and when the rain
at n along the dusky highway near and nearer di'awn, „ 113
Beyond the n, across the day. Day- Dm., Depart. 31
And perplex'd her, n and mom, L. of Burleigh 78
And bum the threshold of the n. The Voyage 18
New stars all n above the brim Of waters „ 25
Down the waste waters day and n, „ 58
overboard one stormy n He cast his body, „ 79
elfin prancer springs By n to eery warblings, Sir L. and Q. G. 34
And round again to happy n. Move eastward 12
I HAD a vision when the n was late : Vision of Sin 1
' Thou art mazed, the n is long, „ 195
And the longer n is near : „ 196
seem'd, as in a nightmare of the n, Enoch Arden 114
Many a sad kiss by day by n renew'd „ 161
After a n of feverous wakefulness, „ 231
Then fearing n and chill for Annie, „ 443
one n it chanced That Annie could not sleep, „ 489
compass'd round by the blind wall of n „ 492
Half the n, Buoy'd upon floating tackle „ 550
Hurt in that n of sudden ruin and wreck, „ 564
thii-d n after this. While Enoch slumber'd „ 907
was Edith that same n ; Aylmer's Field 279
Yet once by n again the lovers met, „ 413
rustling once at n about the place, „ 547
That n, that moment, when she named his name, „ 581
one n, except For greenish glimmerings „ 621
Returning, as the bird retm-ns, at n. Sea Dreams 43
the sea roars Ruin : a fearful n\' „ 81
Left him one hand, and reacliing thro' the « Her other, „ 287
your sleep for this one n be sound : „ 315
' Storm in the n ! for thrice I heard the rain iMcretius 26
from some bay-window shake the n ; Princess i 106
To float about a glimmering n, „ 247
The circled Iris of a n of tears ; „ Hi 27
My mother, 'tis her wont from n to w „ 32
And so last n she fell to canvass you : „ 40
Up in one n and due to sudden sun : „ iv 312
Robed in the long n of her deep hair, „ 491
the long fantastic n With all its doings „ 565
came As n to him that sitting on a hiU „ 574
later in the » Had come on Psyche weeping : „ v 49
You did but come as goblins in the n, „ 220
heavy dews Gathered by n and peace, „ 244
Night (continued) A w of Summer from the heat,
like n and evening mixt Their dark and gray,
whole n's long, up in the tower,
cloud Drag inward from the deeps, a wall of n,
Drew the great n into themselves,
Blanche had sworn That after that dark n among
Deep in the n I woke :
shares with man His n's, his days,
the new day comes, the light Dearer for n,
And gradually the powers of the n,
Deepening thy voice with the deepening of the n,
Stole the seed by n.
All n have I heard the voice Rave
Draw toward the long frost and longest n,
all n upon the bridge of war Sat glorying ;
Taken the stars from the n
All n below the darken'd eyes ;
AU M no loider air perplex
I hear the bell struck in the n ;
That strikes by « a craggy shelf,
Is on the waters day and n.
Is dash'd with wandering isles of n.
The moon is hid ; the n is still ;
To enrich the threshold of the n
Draw forth the cheerful day from n :
An infant ci-ying in the n:
At n she weeps, ' How vain am I !
How dwarf'd a growth of cold and n.
His n of loss is always there.
I found an angel of the n ;
And mix with hoUow masks of n ;
And howlest, issuing out of n.
Come : not in watches of the n.
By n we linger'd on the lawn.
Withdrew themselves from me and n,
Power was with him in the n.
On that last n before we went
The moon is hid, the n is still ;
A little spare the n I loved,
The year is dying in the n ;
bank Of vapour, leaving n forlorn.
Bright Phosphor, fresher for the n,
In the deep n, that all is well,
tho' faith and form Be sunder'd in the n of fear ;
All n the shining vapour sail
shriek of a mother divide the shuddering n.
in the hush of the moonless n's,
ghostlike, deathlike, half the n long
Last n, when the sunset bum'd
nodding together In some Arabian n ?
Like a sudden spark Struck vainly in the n.
Beat to the noiseless music of the n !
Sat with her, read to her, n and day,
For the black bat, n, has flown.
All n have the roses heard The flute.
All n has the casement jessamine stirr'd
brief n goes In babble and revel and wine,
the rose was awake all n for your sake.
Half the n I waste in sighs,
the lily and rose That blow by n,
face of m is fair on the dewy downs,
wolf and boar and bear Came n and day,
that same n, the n of the new year,
on the n When Uther in Tintagil past away
Descending thro' the dismal n — a n
' Blow trumpet, the long n hath roll'd away !
couch'd at n with grimy kitchen-knaves,
names himself the N and oftener Death,
Slain by himself, shall enter endless n.
but at n let go the stone. And rise.
To fight the brotherhood of Day and N —
Despite of Day and N and Death and Hell.'
smells the honeysuckle In the hush'd n,
like a phantom pass ChilUng the n :
doom'd to be the bride of N and Death ;
the fields
Princess vi 54
131
255
m37
49
73
173
263
347
„ Cow 111
V. of Cauteretz 2
The Flower 12
Voice and the P. 5
A Dedication 11
Spec, of Iliad 9
Window, Gone 5
In Mem. iv 14
„ ix 9
x2
„ xvi 13
„ xvii 11
„ xxiv 4
„ xxviii 2
„ xxix 6
„ XXX 30
liv 18
1x15
Ixi 7
„ Ixvi 16
„ Ixix 14
„ Ixx 4
„ Ixxii 2
„ xci 13
„ xcv 1
18
„ xcvi 18
„ dii 1
„ civ 2
„ cv 15
„ cvi 3
„ cvii 4
„ cxxi 9
„ cxxvi 12
„ exxvii 2
„ Con 111
Maud I il&
42
„ Hi 8
viS
„ vii 12
„ ix 14
„ xviii 77
„ xix 75
„ xxii 2
13
15
27
49
„ II iv 23
„ 1)75
„IIIvi5
Com. of Arthur 24
209
366
371
48S
Gareth and L. 481
638
642
825
857
887
1288
133&
1396.
Night
499
Night
ingfat (continued) now by n With moon and trembling
stars, Marr. of Geraint 7
At distance, ere they settle for the n. „ 250
Where can I get me harbourage for the « ? „ 281
I seek a harbourage for the n.' „ 299
the n Before my Enid's birthday, „ 457
draw The quiet n into her blood, „ 532
given her on the n Before her birthday, „ 632
n of fire, when Edym sack'd their house, ,, 634
So sadly lost on that unhappy n ; „ 689
But hire us some fair chamber for the n, Geraint and E. 238
or touch at n the northern star ; Balin and Balan 166
Last n methought I saw That maiden Saint „ 260
made that mouth of n Whereout the Demon „ 316
not the less by n The scorn of Garlon, „ 382
and now The n has come. „ 621
rat that borest in the dyke Thy hole by n Merlin and V. 113
sleepless re's Of my long life have made it easy „ 679
thither wending there that n they bode. Lancelot and E. 412
There bode the n : but woke with dawn, „ 846
she tended him. And likewise many an: „ 851
80 the simple maid Went half the n repeating, „ 899
this n I dream'd That I was all alone „ 1045
lily maid of Astolat Lay smiling, like a star in blackest n. „ 1243
Who passes thro' the vision of the » — „ 1406
Hdy Grail 108
123
179
471
569
607
634
682
685
810
910
Pelleas and E. 138
357
393
395
473
487
497
waked at dead of n, I heard a sound
The rosy quiverings died into the n.
' Then on a summer n it came to pass,
but moving with me n and day, Fainter by day, but
always in the n Blood-red,
For after I had lain so many n's,
but one n my vow Burnt me within,
* One n my pathway swerving east,
came a n Still as the day was loud ;
For, brother, so one », because they roll
on the seventh n I heard the shingle grinding
Let visions of the n or of the day Come,
Nor slept that n for pleasure in his blood,
The third n hence will bring thee news of gold.'
third n brought a moon With promise of large light
Hot was the n and silent ;
Here in the stUl sweet summer n,
bounded forth and vanish'd thro' the n.
by wild and way, for half the n.
Round whose sick head all n, like birds of prey, Last Tournament 138
And Lancelot's, at this n's solemnity
Heard in dead n along that table-shore,
that autumn n, like the hve North,
The n was dark ; the true star set.
one black, mute midsummer n 1 sat.
That n came Arthur home,
In the dead n, grim faces came and went
And then they were agreed upon a n
Fled all n long by glimmering waste and weald,
This n, a rumour wildly blown about Came,
and dark the n and chUl !
and dark and chill the n !
that n the bard Sang Arthur's glorious wars,
Thro' the thick re I hear the trumpet blow :
making all the n a steam of fire.
like wild birds that change Their season in the n
As of some lonely city sack'd by n,
rose the King and moved his host by n,
moving isles of winter shock By n,
like a wind that shrills All n in a waste land.
Rise like a fountain for me n and day.
toils across the middle moonlit n's,
thence one n, when all the winds were loud,
Then had he stemm'd my day with n,
darkness of the grave and utter n,
day was as the n to me ! The w to me was kinder
than the day ; The n
Between the going light and growing n ?
sent my cry Thro' the blank re to Him
winds Laid the long n in silver streaks
223
463
479
605
612
755
Guinevere 70
96
128
153
168
174
285
569
599
Pass, of Arthur 39
43
79
309
370
417
Lover's Tale i 138
378
502
598
610
664
752
a 112
Night (continued) Comes in upon him in the dead of re. Lover's Tale ii 154
With half a n's appliances, „ iv 93
So the sweet figure folded round with n „ 219
the boat went down that n — (repeat) First Quarrel 92
The loud black n's for us, Rizpak 6
But the re has crept into my heart, „ 16
what should you know of the re, „ 17
in the n by the churchyard wall. „ 56
once of a frosty n I sUther'd North. Cobbler 19
one n I cooms 'oam like a bull gotten loose at a faair, „ 33
Ship after ship, the whole n long, (repeat) The Revenge 58, 59, 60
half of the short summer re was gone, „ 65
the n went down, and the sun smiled „ 70
fought such a fight for a day and a re „ 83
cloud that roofs our noon with m, Sisters (E. and E.) 17
A moonless re with storm — „ 96
For on the dark re of our marriage-day „ 232
Thro' dreams by re and trances of the day, „ 274
fur New Squire coom'd last re. Village Wife 1
and it gied me a scare tother re, „ 81
fur he coom'd last re sa laate — „ 123
I had sat three re's by the child — In the Child. Hasp. 59
we laid him that re in his grave. Def. of Luclcnow 12
to be soldier all day and be sentinel all thro'
the n — „ 74
Ever the re with its coffinless corpse „ 80
Then day and re, day and n, „ 92
that one re a crowd Throng'd the waste field Sir J. Oldcastle 39
Not yet — not all — last re a dream — Columbus 66
thunders in the black Veragua n's, „ 146
I send my prayer by re and day — „ 233
arm'd by day and re Against the Turk ; Montenegro 3
One re when earth was winter-black. To E. Fitzgerald 21
And oldest age in shadow from the n, Tiresias 104
Heard from the roofs by n, „ 140
he roll'd himself At dead of n — „ 146
By re, into the deeper re ! The deeper re ? „ 204
If re, what barren toil to be ! „ 207
What hfe, so maim'd by re, „ 208
ghastlier face than ever has haunted a grave by re, The Wreck 8
leaf rejoice in the frost that sears it at re ; „ 20
Follow'd us too that re, and dogg'd us. Despair 2
What did I feel that re ? „ 3
but ah God, that re, that re „ 8
We had past from a cheerless w „ 28
for she past from the re to the re. „ 72
She feels the Sun is hid but for a re, Ancient Sage 73
senses break away To mix with ancient N." „ 153
When all is dark as re.' „ 170
doors of N may be the gates of Light ; „ 174
pass From sight and « to lose themselves „ 203
' And N and Shadow rule below „ 243
Day and N are children of the Sun, „ 245
Some say, the Light was father of the N, And some,
the N was father of the Light, No re no day ! — ■ „ 247
but re enough is there In yon dark city : „ 252
And past the range of N and Shadow — „ 283
all re so calm you lay. The re was calm, the mom
is calm, The Flight 9
all re I pray'd with tears, „ 17
love that keeps this heart aUve beats on it n and day — „ 35
bride who stabb'd her bridegroom on her bridal n — „ 57
an' meself remimbers wan re Tomorrow 7
But wirrah ! the storm that re — „ 23
An' yer hair as black as the re, „ 32
a hiccup at ony hour o' the re ! Spinster's S's. 98
hunting grounds beyond the re ; Locksfey H., Sixty 69
and passing now into the re ; „ 227
sun hung over the gates of N, Dead Prophet 23
Thou sawest a glory growing on the re, EpU. on Caxton 2
FntST pledge our Queen this solemn w, Hands all Rownd 1
Macready, since this n we part. To W. C. Macready 5
bird that flies All re across the darkness, Demeter and P. 2
gave Thy breast to ailing infants in the n, „ 56
out from aU the n an answer shrill'd, ,, 61
Night
500
Noble
Wigkt (continued) To send the moon into the n Demeter and P. 135
An' theere i' the 'ouse one n — Owd Rod 27
one n I wm- sittin' aloan, „ 29
oop wi' the windle that n; „ 32
I loookt out wonst at the n, „ 39
goa that n to 'er foalk by cause o' the Christmas Eave ; „ 52
cocks kep a-crawin' an' crawin' all n, „ 106
she cotch'd 'er death o' cowd that n, „ 114
at n Stirs up again in the heart of the sleeper, Fastness 17
Moon, you fade at times From the n. The Ring 10
In the n, in the n, (repeat) Forlorn 5, 11, 17
Catherine, Catherine, in the n, „ 13
Ninety (continued) But I've n men and more that are lying
sick The Revenge 10
With her hundred fighters on deck, and her n sick below ; „ 34
fingers were so stiEfen'd by the frost Of seven and n
In the n, O the n ! (repeat)
0 the n of weeping !
In the ft, and nigh the dawn,
remember that red n When thirty ricks,
Narrowing the bounds of «.'
1 dream'd last n of that clear summer noon,
morn Has lifted the dark eyelash of the iV
And — well, if I sinn'd last n.
Black was the n when we crept away —
she sat day and n by my bed.
Was it only the wind of the N
O ye Heavens, of your boundless n's,
Nightblack High on a w horse, in n arms,
drew down from out his n-b hair
Nightcap but alter my n wur on ;
Night-dew Or n-d's on still waters
Night-fold we were nursed in the drear n-f
Night-fowl Waking she heard the n-f crow :
Nightin^e No n delighteth to prolong
M Sang loud, as tho' he were the bird
whisper of tlie leaves That tremble round a n —
As 'twere a hundred-throated n,
n thought, ' I have sung many songs.
Sleeps in the plain eggs of the n.
And all about us peal'd the n,
at mine ear Bubbled the n and heeded not,
in the bush beside me chirrupt the n.
N's warbled without,
N's sang in his woods :
N's warbled and sang Of a passion
To think or say, ' There is the n ; '
The n, full-toned in middle May,
the n's hymn in the dark.
That n is heard !
n Saw thee, and flash'd into a froUc
Night-lamp Where the dying n-l flickers.
Night-light n-l flickering in my eyes Awoke me.'
Night-long A n-l Present of the Past
Nightly made The n wirer of their innocent hare
Nightmare (adj.) This n weight of gratitude,
Nightmare (s) And horrible n's. And hollow shades
Like one that feels a « on his bed
N of youth, the spectre of himself ?
He seem'd, as in a » of the night,
Like one that feels a w on his bed
the babblings in a dream Of n,
Kigfat-wind The n-w's come and go, mother,
Nile shaker of the Baltic and the N,
Nilns N would have rLsen before his time
Nine N times goes the passing bell :
N years she wrought it, sitting in the deeps
As n months go to the shaping an infant
n tithes of times Face-flatterer and backbiter
For so by n years' proof we needs must leam
N years she wrought it, sitting in the deeps
And n long mont& of antenatal gloom.
For n white moons of each whole year with
me,
Nine-days' Fire in dry stubble a n-d wonder flared :
Nineteen-hundred Tenderest of Roman poets n-h years
Ninety Hose a nurse of n years,
2^0^077123,29,35,41,47,
53, 59, 65, 71, 77
Forlorn 48
83
To Mary Boyle 35
Prog, of Spring 91
Romney's R. 74
Akbar's Dream 201
Bandit's Death 18
25
Charity 33
The Dreamer 15
God and the Univ. 2
Gareth atid L. 1381
Balin and Balan 511
Village Wife 122
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 3
Despair 21
Mariana 26
Palace of Art 173
Gardener's D. 95
- „ 254
Vision of Sin 27
Poet's Song 13
Aylmer's Field 103
Princess i 220
„ iv 266
Grandmother 40
G. of Swainston 1
6
Marr. of Geraint 342
Balin and Balan 213
First Quarrel 34
Ancient Sage 20
Demeter and P. 11
LocJcsley Hall 80
Sea Dreams 103
In Mem. Ixxi 3
Aylmer's Field 490
Princess vi 300
Palace of Art 2'iO
M. d' Arthur 177
Love and Duty 13
Enoch Arden 114
Pass, of Arthur 345
Ancient Sage 107
May Queen 33
Ode on Well. 137
D. ofF. Women 143
All Things wiU Die 35
M. d' Arthur 105
Maud I iv 34
Merlin and V. 823
Lancelot and E. 62
Pass, of Arthur 273
De Prof., Two G. 8
Demeter and P. 121
Lancelot and E. 735
Frater Ave, etc. 6
Princess vi 13
wmters,
Nine-years-fought-for The n-y-f-f diamonds :
Nine-years-ponder'd Adviser of the n-y-p lay,
Ninth Till last, a n one, gathering half the deep
With this n moon, that sends the hidden sun
Niobe Upon her tower, the N of swine,
Niobean A N daughter, one arm out,
Nip close again, and n me flat,
Nipt n to death by him That was a God,
n her slender nose With petulant thumb
n the hand, and flung it from her ;
No brightens at the clash of ' Yes ' and ' N,'
Noaks N or Thimbleby — toaner 'ed shot 'um
N wur 'ang'd for it oop at 'soize —
Noase (nose) 1 loook'd cock-eyed at my n
wi' 'is glasses athurt 'is n,
An' 'is n sa grufted wi' snuff
An' anoother agean my n.
Noation (notion) Thim's my n's, Sammy, wheerby I
means to stick ;
Nobility O fall'n n, that, overawed,
And pure n of temperament.
Noble (adj.) As n till the latest day !
When, soil'd with n dust, he hears
And slew him with your n birth.
' Tis only n to be good.
Resolved on n things, and strove to speak,
That takes away a n mind.
What wonder, if in w heat Those men
as beseem'd Thy fealty, nor like a n knight
When every morning brought a n chance. And every
chance brought out a n knight.
Some work of n note, may yet be done,
So the Powers, who wait On n deeds,
And beaker brimm'd with n wine.
in whom he had rehance For his n name.
That she grew a n lady,
n wish To save all earnings to the uttermost,
Not Tceef it n, make it nobler ? fools,
Thy God is far diffused in n groves
' O n heart who, being strait-besieged
O miracle of n womanhood ! '
since to look on n forms Makes n
Better not be at all Than not be n.
O Vashti, n Vashti ! Summon'd out She kept her
state,
She bow'd as if to veil a n tear ;
thus a n scheme Grew up from seed
O n Ida, to those thoughts that wait
No more, and in our n sister's cause ?
at the heart Made for all n motion :
Her n heart was molten in her breast ;
she rose Glowing all over n shame ;
Like perfect music unto n words ;
Yoked in all exercise of n end,
A gallant fight, a n princess —
keep our n England whole.
And all men work in n brotherhood.
Those niched shapes of n mould.
Close to the ridge of a n down.
Tear the n heart of Britain,
And dead calm in that n breast
The captive void of n rage.
And move thee on to n ends.
Let this not vex thee, n heart !
The n letters of the dead :
join'd Each office of the social hour To n manners, as
the flower And native growth of n mind ;
was a n type Appearing ere the times
To a grandson, first of his n line.
And n thought be freer imder the sun.
The Ring 240
Lancelot and E. 1167
Poets and their B. 6
Com. of Arthur 380
De Prof., Two G. 33
Walk, to the Mail 99
Princess iv 371
Merlin and V. 350
Edwin Morris 101
Gar'.th and L. 749
Pelleas and E. 133
Ancient Sage 71
N. Farmer, O. S. 35
36
North. Cobbler 26
Village Wife 38
39
Church-warden, etc. 26
N. Farmer, N. S. 57
Third of Feb. 35
Marr. of Geraint 212
To the Queen 22
Two Voices 152
L. C. V. de Vere 48
54
D.ofF. Women 42
To J. S. 48
England and Amer. 6
M. d' Arthur 75
230
Ulysses 52
Godiva 72
Day-Dm , Sleep P. 36
The Captain 58
L. of Burleigh 74
Enoch Arden 85
Aylmer's Field 386
653
Princess, Pro. 36
48
« 86
94
Hi 228
289
w309
443
V 312
384
vi 119
*«» 160
286
361
Con. 19
Ode on Well. 161
Ode Inter. Exhib. 38
The Daisy 38
To F. D. Maurice 16
Boddicea 12
In Mem. xi 19
„ xxvii 2
to) 12
„ Ixxix 2
xcv 24
„ cxi 15
„ Con. 138
Maud I xl2
„ /// vi
1
Noble
501
Nodded
Noble (adj.) (continued) We have proved we have hearts in
a cause, we are n still, Mavd III vi 55
Thou n Father of her Kings to be. Bed. of Idylls 34
But thou art closer to this n prince, Com. of Arthur 314
When some good knight had done one n deed, GareiJi and L. 411
Tut, an the lad were n, „ 473
All kind of service with a n ease „ 489
' Lynette my name ; n ; my need, a knight „ 607
Sweet lord, how like a n knight he talks ! „ 777
Or sit beside a n gentlewoman.' „ 867
O knave, as n as any of all the knights — „ 1136
Missaid thee : n I am ; and thought the King „ 1165
Then tum'd the n damsel smiHng at him, „ 1188
' Nay, n damsel, but that I, the son „ 1230
merry am I to find my goodly knave Is knight and n. „ 1292
0 « Lancelot, from my hold on these Streams virtue — „ 1309
' O n breast and all-puissant anns, Marr. of Geraint 86
Not hearing any more his n voice,
' Yea, n Queen,' he answer'd,
now thinking that he heard The n hart at bay,
Greraint, a name far-sounded among men For n deeds ?
So grateful is the noise of « deeds To « hearts
Let me lay lance in rest, O n host,
' This n prince who won our earldom back,
all That appertains to n maintenance.
See ye take the charger too, A n one.'
she Kiss'd the white star upon his n front,
Such fine reserve and n reticence.
Like simple w natures, credulous
Our n King will send thee his own leech — •
Not, doubtless, all uneam'd by n deeds.
Our n Arthur, him Ye scarce can overpraise,
' She is too n ' he said ' to check at pies.
That makes you seem less n than yoinself ,
for love of God and men And n deeds, the flower of all
the world. And each incited each to n deeds,
such a n song was that.
were aU as tame, I mean, as n, as their Queen
Is that an answer for a n knight ?
shame me not Before this n knight,'
To ride to Camelot with this n knight :
full Of n things, and held her from her sleep.
' Fair lord, whose name I know not — n it is,
Needs must be lesser likelihood, n lord.
And ride no more at random, n Prince !
O loyal nephew of our n King,
to be sweet and serviceable To n knights in sickness,
' Nay, n maid,' he answer'd, ' ten times nay !
Was n man but made ignoble talk.
' Most n lord. Sir Lancelot of the Lake,
Wifeless and heirless, n issue, sons Born
This chance of n deeds will come and go
Unchallenged,
So strange, of such ,a kind, that all of pure iV,
All of true and n in knight and man
and Pelleas look'd N among the n,
fire of honour and all n deeds Flash'd,
O n vows ! O great and sane and simple race
By n deeds at one with n vows,
by whom all men Are n,
' 0 pray you, n lady, weep no more ;
FuU many a n war-song had he sung,
' Sir Lancelot, as became a n knight,
fruit Of loyal nature, and of n mind.'
Less n, being, as aU rumour runs,
I
178
233
428
437
496
619
712
Geraint and E. 556
757
860
875
Balin and Balan 275
471
Merlin and V. 91
126
322
413
433
608
Lancelot and E. 201
208
220
339
360
367
633
652
768
948
1088
1272
1371
Holy Grail 318
774
882
Pelleas and E. 152
278
479
Last Tournament 123
600
Guinevere 184
278
328
336
339
If ever Lancelot, that most n knight. Were for one
hour less n than himself, „ 345
Sir Lancelot's, were as w as the King's, „ 351
And worship her by years of n deeds, „ 476
And miss to hear high talk of n deeds „ 499
and in the mist Was many a n deed. Pass, of Arthur 105
as beseem'd Thy fealty, nor Uke a n knight : „ 243
When every morning brought a n chance, And
every chance brought out a n knight. m 398
And bearing on one arm the n babe, Lover's Tale iv 370
Noble (adj.) [continued) and was n in birth as in
worth, V. of Maeldune 3
I have sullied a n name. The Wreck 5
to crown with song The warrior's n deed — Epilogue 37
' So great so n was he ! ' Dead Prophet 30
till his Word Had won him a n name. N ! he sung, „ 36
Great and n — O yes — but yet — „ 43
N and great — 0 ay — but then, „ 49
To all our n sons, the strong New England Hands all Round 15
Where n Ulric dwells forlorn, Happy 10
But come. My n friend, my faithful counsellor, Akbar's Dream 18
N the Saxon who hurl'd at his Idol Kapiolani 4
Noble (s) Where the wealthy n's dwell.' L. of Burleigh 24
The n and the convict of Castile, Columbus 117
Nobleman she, you know. Who wedded with a n from
thence : Princess i 77
Noble-natured the boy Is n-n. Gareth and L. 468
Nobleness With such a vantage-ground for n ! Aylmer's Field 387
And much I praised her m. Princess, Pro. 124
That you trust me in your own n. Lancelot and E. 1195
Some root of knighthood and pure n ; Holy Grail 886
the wines being of such n — Lover's Tale iv 222
kings of men in utter n of mind, LocTcsley H., Sixty 122
Nobler am I not the n thro' thy love ? Love and Duty 19
Not keep it noble, make it n. ? Aylmer's Field 386
Balmier and n from her bath of storm, Lucretius 175
And since the n pleasure seems to fade. „ 230
as to slay One n than thyself.' Gareth and L. 981
A something — was it n than myself ? — Pelleas and E. 310
might in wreathe (How lovelier, n then !) Lover's Tale i 459
Seem'd n than their hard Eternities. Demeter and P. 107
O you that hold A n office upon earth To the Queen 2
A n yearning never broke her rest The form, the form 2
' But, if I lapsed from n place, Two Voices 358
As emblematic of a m age ; Princess ii 127
Tbo' all men else their n dreams forget. Ode on Well. 152
There must be other n work to do „ 256
And thou shalt take a n leave.' In Mem. Iviii 12
He past; a soul of n tone : In Mem.lx 1
Ring in the n modes of life, „ cvi 15
Are breathere of an ampler day For ever n ends. „ cxviii 7
The fair beginners of a w time, Com. of Arthur 457
how can Enid find A n friend ? Marr. of Geraint 793
in my heart of hearts I did acknowledge n. Lancelot and E. 1211
This earth has never borne a n man. Epit. on Gordon 4
thro' all the n hearts In that vast Oval St. Telemachus 72
Noblest Truest friend and n foe ; Princess vi 7
The n answer unto such Is perfect stillness Lit. Squabbles 19
but he. Our n brother, and our truest man, Gareth and L. 565
let Lancelot know. Thy n and thy truest ! ' „ 568
let her tongue Rage hke a fire among the n names, Merlin and V. 802
goodliest man That ever among ladies ate in hall,
And n, Lancelot and E. 256
one Of n manners, tho' himself would say Sir
Lancelot had the noblest ; Guinevere 319
But pray you, which had n, while you moved „ 325
here in Edward's time, an age of n EngUsh names, Locksley H., Sixty 83
All that is w, aU that is basest. Fastness 32
One of our n, our most valorous, Geraint and E. 910
noble it is, I well beUeve, the n — Lancelot and E. 361
knight of Arthur's n dealt in scorn ; Guinevere 40
would say Sir Lancelot had the n ; „ 320
Noblest-hearted truest, kindliest, n-h wife Romney's R. 35
Noblier-fashion'd Was he n-f than other men ? Dead Prophet 51
Nobly have ye seen how n changed ? Geraint and E. 897
Nobly-manner'd Were the most n-m men of all ; Guinevere 334
Nod (s) And flooded at our n. D. of F. Women 144
With frequent smile and n departing Marr. of Geraint 515
an' she gev him a frindly n, Tomorrow 58
Nod (verb) Glares at one that w's and winks Locksley Hall 136
Then moves the trees, the copses n, Sir Galahad. 77
Nodded The parson smirk'd and n. The Goose 20
He n, but a moment afterwards He cried. Gardener's D. 120
And Walter n at me ; ' He began, Princess, Pro. 200
Florian n at him, I frowning ; „ iv 159
Nodded
502
Northern
Nodded (corUinued) Doubted, and drowsed, n and slept, Com. of Arthur 427
Sir Kay n him leave to go, « - - -
And after n sleepily in the heat.
Miriam « with a pitying smile,
Nodding n, as in scorn, He parted,
Viziers n together In some Arabian night ?
Then her father n said, ' Ay, ay,
Noight (nigbt) I've 'ed my point o' aale ivry n
Noit Showing a shower of blood in a field n,
Noise Thro' the n's of the night
Blowing a n of tongues and deeds.
The milldam rushing down with n,
n of some one coming thro' the lawn,
So all day long the n of battle roU'd
with n's of the northern sea.
such a n of Ufe Swarm'd in the golden present,
There rose a «. of striking clocks,
I bear a w of hymns :
month by month the n about their doors.
Made n with bees and breeze from end to end.
scarce could hear each other speak for n Of clocks
and chimes,
compass'd by two armies and the n Of arms ;
A w of songs they would not imderstand :
To the n of the mourning of a mighty nation,
far from n and smoke of town,
Made the n of frosty woodlands.
The n of life begins again,
I hear the n about thy keel ;
Whose youth was full of foolish n.
Autumn, with a w of rooks,
all within was n Of songs, and clapping hands,
u of ravage wrought by beast and man,
out of town and valley came a n
So grateful is the n of noble deeds
lusty spearmen f ollow'd him with n :
Scared by the n upstarted at our feet,
poplars made a w of falling showers.
poplars with their n of falling showers,
She, that had heard the n of it before,
some doubtful n of creaking doors.
So all day long the n of battle roU'd
with n's of the Northern Sea.
N's of a current narrowing,
n of faUing weights that never fell,
being waked By n's in the house —
Noised do the deed. Than to be n of.'
Noiseful Feom n arms, and acts of prowess
Noiseless a n riot underneath Strikes tlux)ugh the wood,
Or like to n phantoms flit :
Beat to the n music of the night !
Noisy I wander'd from the n town,
I cast them in the n brook beneath.
None There is n like her, n. (repeat)
N like her, n.
Nook odd games In some odd n's like this ;
^ made the old warrior from his ivied n
Noon At n the wild bee hummeth
fire Would rive the slumbrous summer n
Till now at n she slept again,
from beyond the n a fire Is pour'd upon the hills,
Hither came at n Mournful (Enone,
On corpses three-months-old at n she came,
Sun-steep'd at n, and in the moon
In those old days, one summer n,
till n no foot should pace the street,
the shameless n Was clash'd and hammer'd
I took my leave, for it was nearly n :
ere I woke it was the point of n,
pensive tendance in the all-weary n's.
Climb thy thick n, disastrous day;
What stays thee from the clouded n's.
At n or when the lesser wain
That must be made a wife ere n ?
But now.set out : the n is near,
Gareth and L. 520
Geraint and E. 253
Thu Bing 281
Godiva 30
Maud I vii 11
Lancelot and E. 110
N. Farmer, O. S. 7
Last Tournament 433
L. of Shalott iv 22
Two Voices 206
Miller's D. 50
D. of F. Women 178
M. d' Arthur 1
141
Gardener's D. 178
Day-Dm., Revival 2
Sir Galahad 28
Aylmer's Field 488
Princess, Pro. 88
i 215
1)345
„ vi 40
Ode on Well. 4
To F. D. Maurice 13
Boadicea 75
In Mem. vii 10
x\
„ liii 3
„ Ixxxv 71
„ Ixxxvii 18
Gareth and L. 437
Mart, of Geraint 247
437
Geraint and E. 593
Merlin and V. 422
Lancelot and E. 411
523
731
Guinevere 72
Pass, of Arthur 170
309
LocTcsley H., Sixty 154
The Ring 410
417
Gareth and L. 573
Holy Grail 1
Lucretius 185
In Mem. xx 16
Maud I xviii 11
In Mem. Ixix 5
Lover's Tale ii 41
Maud I xviii 2, 13
7
The Epic 9
Princess, Pro. 104
Clarihel 11
Supp. Confessions 11
Mariana in the S. 41
Fatima 30
(Enone 15
Palace of Art 243
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 29
M. d' Arthur 29
Godiva 39
74
Princess v 468
482
„ vii 102
In Mem. Ixxii 26
„ Ixxxiii 5
ctll
Con. 26
41
Noon [continued) at the point of n the huge Earl
Doorm,
Or in the n of mist and driving rain,
Riding at n, a day or twain before,
Beheld at n in some dehcious dale
In those old days, one summer n,
the white heats of the blinding n's
When first we came from out the pines at n,
cloud that roofs our n with night,
and the owls are whooping at n.
To vex the n with fiery gems.
Name, surname, all as clear as n,
in the brooding light of w ?
I dream'd last night of that clear summer n,
A fall of water lull'd the n asleep,
mists of earth Fade in the n of heaven,
We are far from the n of man,
Noonday now the n quiet holds the hill :
Made by the n blaze without,
O sun, that from thy n height
shone the N Sun Beyond a raging shallow.
And thrice as blind as any n owl,
The n crag made the hand burn ;
Geraint and E. 536
Merlin and V. 636
Pdleas and E. 20
Guinevere 393
Pass, of Arthur 197
Lover's Tale i 139
310
Sisters (E. and E.) 17
Despair 89
Ancient Sage 265
The Ring 237
Happy 99
Romney's R. 74
83
Akbar's Dream 97
The Dawn 20
(Enone 25
St. Telemachv^ 50
Fatima 2
Gareth and L. 1027
Holy Grail 866
Tiresias 35
Noon-Sun Morning-Star, and N-S, and Evening-Star, Gareth and L. 634
Noorse (nurse) N ? thourt nowt o' a w : N. Farmer, O. S. 2
Noose Twisted as tight as I could knot the n ; St. S. Stylites 65
Norland loud the N whirlwinds blow, Oriana 6
When N winds pipe down the sea, „ 91
Norman (adj.) And simple faith than iV blood. L. C. V. de Vere 56
Harold's England fell to N swords ; W. to Marie Alex. 22
Norman (s) Saxon and N and Dane are we, W. to Alexandra 3
For Saxon or Dane or N we, „ 31
Norse Then the N leader, Dire was his need of it, Batt. of Brunanburh 56
Norsemen nail'd prows Parted the N, „ 94
Nortb by day or night. From N to South, Rosalind 48
For look, the sunset, south and n. Miller's D. 241
Four courts I made. East, West and South and N, Palace of Art 21
In the n, her canvas flowuig. The Captain 27
But round the N, a light, A belt. Sea Dreams 208
Many a long league back to the N. Princess i 168
Princess rode to take The dip of certain strata to the N. „ Hi 170
And dark and true and tender is the N. „ iv 98
But in the N long since my nest is made. „ 110
And brief the sun of summer in the N, „ 112
And blown to inmost n ; „ 432
And gray metropolis of the N. The Daisy 104
To N, South, East, and West ; Voice and the P. 14
Thine the N and thine the South Boadicea 44
Fiercely flies The blast of N In Mem. cvii 1
and fly Far into the N, and battle, Maud III vi 37
two that out of n had f ollow'd him : Gareth and L. 679
knights of utmost N and West, Lancelot and E. 526
founded my Round Table in the N, Last Tournament 78
Make their last head like Satan in the N. „ 98
and sharply tum'd N by the gate. „ 128
half that autumn night, hke the live N, „ 479
And shook him thro' the n. Pass, of Arthur 70
came A bitter wind, clear from the N, „ 124
that true N, whereof we lately heard To the Queen ii 14
I go On that long-promised visit to the N. Sisters {E. and E.) 188
somewhere in the N, as Rumour sang Sir J. OldcasUe 56
Crept to his N again, Hoar-headed hero ! Batt. of Brunanburh 64
Not here ! the white N has thy bones ; Sir J. Franklin 1
leaves Some colder province in the N The Ring 481
roll her N below thy deepening dome, Prog, of Spring 49
drank the dews and drizzle of the N, „ 81
Northern Floats far away into the N seas Mine be the strength 13
Shot Uke a streamer of the n mom, M. d' Arthur 139
isles of winter shock By night, with noises of the »
sea. „ 141
The n morning o'er thee shoot. Talking Oak 275
Like visions in the N dreamer's heavens, Aylmer's Field 161
seen the rosy red flushing in the n night. Locksley Hall 26
We past long lines of N capes And dewy N meadows
green. The Voyage 35
I
Northern
503
Novelist
Horthem (corUinued) For on my cradle shone the N star. Princess i 4
Three ladies of the N empire pray Your Highness „ 238
The terrace ranged along the N front, „ in 118
* Peace, you young savage of the N wild ! „ 247
And hit the N hills. „ « 44
Between the A^ and the Southern morn.' „ 423
We might discuss the N sin To F. D. Maurice 29
Dip down upon the n shore. In Mem. Ixxxiii 1
fell Against the heathen of the N Sea Geraint and E. 969
or touch at night the n star ; Balin and Balan 166
And peak'd wings pointed to the N Star. Holy GraU 240
For now the Heathen of the N Sea, Guinevere 135
Godless hosts Of heathen swarming o'er the N Sea ; „ 428
Shot like a streamer of the n mom, Pass, of A rthur 307
isles of winter shock By night, with noises of the N
Sea.
309
To Virgil 35
V. of Maeldune 72
Batt. of Brunanburh 33
Lancelot and E. 482
Com. of Arthur 113
Enoch Arden 102
Aylmer's Field 415
Gareth and L. 202
Ancient Sage 202
Two Voices 259
The Captain 35
Princess iv 575
Maud I ii 10
Gareth and L. 465
590
749
Last Tournament 59>
Lucretius 100
Gareth and L. 465
Merlin and V. 849
Edwin Morris 105
M. d' Arthur 89
Aylmer's Field 67
Lancelot and E. 323
Pass, of Arthur 257
I, from out the N Island sunder'd once
peak sent up one league of fire to the N Star ;
Northland Men of the N Shot over shield.
North-sea as a wild wave in the wide N-s,
Northumberland Claudias, and Clariance of N,
Northward Ten miles to n of the narrow port
gines That darken'd all the n of her Hall,
eard from our wise man at home To N,
and yonder — out To n —
North-wind ' He will not hear the n-w rave,
Norward Stately, lightly, went she N,
Norway N sun Set into simrise ;
Nose {See also Noase) aquiline curve in a sensitive n,
High n, a nostril large and fine,
and lightly was her slender n Tip-tilted
nipt her slender n With petulant thumb
his n Bridge-broken, one eye out,
Nodng N the mother's udder,
Nostril High nose, a n large and fine,
breaths of anger puff 'd Her fairy n out ;
Note (billet) sent a n, the seal an EUe vous suit,
Note (notice) a precious tiling, one worthy n,
Took joyful n of all things joyful,
took n that when his living smUe Died
Surely a precious thing, one worthy n,
Note (as of music) (See also Flute-notes) The single
n From that deep chord
' A quinsy choke thy cursed n ! '
lark scarce get out his n's for joy,
a low musical n Swell'd up and died ;
still Grew with the growing n, and when the n Had
reach'd
never out of tune With that sweet n;
(Consonant chords that shiver to one n ;
And his compass is but of a single n.
And one is glad ; her n is gay,
And one is sad ; her n is changed.
Some bitter n's my harp would give.
Peace Pipe on her pastoral hillock a languid n,
blew A hard and deadly n upon the horn.
liquid n beloved of men Comes flying
a n so thin It seems another voice
but one plain passage of few n's.
Sent n's of preparation manifold,
Till at thy chuckled n.
Note (distinction) Some work of noble n, may yet be done, Ulysses 52
Some stain or blemish in a name of n, Merlin and V. 832
Nothing {See also Know-nothing, Nowt) Of him that
viter'd n base ; To the Queen 8
Never, oh ! never, n will die ; Nothing will Die 8
iV will die. iV will die; „ 13
N was bom ; N will die ; „ 36
and knows N beyond his mother's eyes. 8u/pp. Confessions 44
n here. Which, from the outward to the inward brought, Elednore 3
For in thee Is n sudden, n single ; „ 57
But am as « in its light : „ 88
From that fiirst n ere his birth To that last n imder
earth ! ' Two Voices 332
Beat time to « in my head Miller's D. 67
England and Amer. 18
The Goose 29
Gardener's D. 90
Sea Dreams 210
213
232
Princess Hi 90
Tlie Islet 28
In Mem. xxi 25
27
„ cxxv 2
Maud III vi 24
Gareth and L. 1111
Marr. of Geraint 336
Balin and Balan 214
Lancelot and E. 895
Lover's Tale i 207
Early Spring 37
Nothing {continued) N comes to thee new or strange.
Counts n that she meets with base,
He thought that n new was said, or else Something
so said 'twas n —
' There now — that's « ! '
pilot of an empty heart Unto the shores of n !
n else For which to praise the heavens
where nature sickens, n.
That was n to her :
wood stands in a mist of green. And n perfect :
Saw from his windows n save his own —
Flash into fiery life from n,
howl in tune With n but the Devil ! '
N to mar the sober majesties
N but this ; my very ears were hot To hear them :
I rate your chance Almost at naked n.'
there is n upon earth More miserable
n can bereave him Of the force he made his
own
So then were n lost to man ;
That n walks with aimless feet ;
I care for n, all shall go.
For n is that errs from law.
From form to form, and n stands ;
May n there her maiden grace afifright !
n can be sweeter Than maiden Maud in either.
N but idiot gabble !
I seem as n in the mighty world,
and the solid earth became As n.
For there is m in it as it seems Saving the
King;
and all wmg'd n's peck him dead !
Who pipe of n but of sparrow-hawks !
Owe you me n for a life half- lost?
empty heart and weariness And sickly n ;
Fame that follows death is w to us ;
charm concluded in that star To make fame n.
there was n wild or strange,
»i Poor Vivien had not done to win his trust
And ending in a ruin — n left,
And every voice is n.
' Of all this will In;' and so fell,
she, too, Fell into dust and n,
' A^ in nature is unbeautiful ;
That seeming something, yet was n,
But say n hard of my boy.
We feel we are n —
We know we are n —
Nothingness Teach me the n of things.
Redeem'd it from the charge of ii—
to burn and brand His n into man.
Nothing-worth ' A Ufe of nothings, n-w.
Were faint Homeric echoes, n-w,
Notice A n faintly understood,
master took Small n, or austerely.
Till w of a change in the dark world
«. of a hart Taller than all his fellows,
thro' the hasty n of the ear Frail life
but send me n of him When he returns,
Suddenly came her n and we past.
Noticed I n one of his many rings
Noticing peacock'd up with Lancelot's n.
Notion {See also Noation) The boy might get a n into
him ; _ Aylmer's Field 271
Nourish That n a bUnd life within the brain, M. d' Arthur 251
That n a bUnd life within the brain. Pass, of Arthur 419
Nourishing Here about the beach I wander'd, n a youth
To J. S. 74
On a Mourner 4
The Epic 30
M d' Arthur, Ep. 13
Gardener's D. 17
103
Locksley Hall 153
Enoch Arden 498
The Brook 15
Aylmer's Field 21
130
Sea Dreams 261
Lucretius 217
Princess i 134
161
Hi 259
Ode on WeU. 272
In Mem. xliii 9
„ liv 5
„ ' Ivi 4
„ Ixxiii 8
cxxiii 6
Maud I xviii 71
XX 21
// V 41
Com. of Arthur 87
443
Gareth and L. 264
Marr. of Geraint 275
279
Geraint and E. 318
653
Merlin and V. 464
513
860
862
883
Lancelot and E. 108
967
Holy Grail 397
Lover's Tale i 350
iv 104
Rizpah 22
De Prof., Human C. 6
8
A Character 4
M. d' Arthur, Ep. 7
Maud I xviii 40
Two Voices 331
The Epic 39
Two Voices 431
Lucretius 8
Princess vii 250
Marr. of Geraint 149
Lover's Tale i 615
iv 116
154
Maud II ii 68
Gareth and L. 719
sublime
Soft fruitage, mighty nuts, and n roots ;
Novel (adj.) ' And men, thro' n spheres of thought
when his passion shall have spent its n force.
And breathes a n world, the while
some n power Sprang up for ever at a touch.
Novel (s) ' She left the n half -uncut
Novelist n, reaUst, rhymester.
Locksley Hall 11
Enoch Arden 555
Two Voices 61
Locksley Hall 49
In Mem. Ixii 9
„ cxii 9
Talking Oak 117
Locksley H., Sixty 139
November
504
Oak
November (See also Mid-November) N dawns and dewy-
glooming downs, Enoch Arden 610
N day Was growing duller twilight, „ 721
Novice none with her save a little maid, Aw: Guinevere 4
sang the n, while full passionately, „ 180
said the little n prattluig to her, „ 183
To whom the little n garrulously,
To whom the n garrulously again
the n crying, with clasp'd hands,
said the'Uttle n, ' I pray for both ;
and saw The n, weeping, suppliant.
Now ' Thens ' and * Whens ' the Eternal N :
Now-recover'd brought From Solomon's n-r Ophir
Nowt (nothing) Noorse ? thourt « o' a noorse :
Doctors, they knaws n, fur a says what's nawways
true:
N at all but bracken an' fuzz,
Wam't worth n a haacre. .
Parson's lass 'ant n, an' she weant 'a n when 'e's dead,
an ass as near as mays n —
Feyther 'ad ammost n ;
I 'a M but Adam's wine :
The gells they counts fur n,
knaw'd n but boooks, an' boociks, as thou knaws,
beant n.
niver done n to be shaamed on,
not nowadaays — good fur n —
Yit I beant sich a iV of all N's
They says 'at he coom'd fra n —
Nox ' Mehidies ' — ' Hesperus ' — ' N ' — ' Moes,'
Nudd answer, groaning, ' Edym, son of N !
' Then, Edym, son of N,' replied
Beholding it was Edym son of N,
NnJl icily regular, splendidly n,
Nmnb (adj.) Where all the nerve of sense is n ;
Numb (verb) And n's the Fury's ringlet-snake,
Nmnber (s) And o'er the n of thy years.
And miss the wonted n of my knights,
numberless n's, Shipmen and Scotsmen.
Number (verb) Whose troubles n with his days :
That n's forty cubits from the soil.
Could n five from ten.
Love and I do « equal years,
Number'd n o'er Some thrice three years :
I have n the bones,
Numberest tho' thou n with the followers
Numberless n numbers, Shipmen and Scotsmen.
Numbing Like dull narcotics, n pain.
Num-cumpus So like a great n-c I blubber'd
Numerable-innumerable Among the n-i Sun,
Numerous For I am of a « house.
Nun monk and n, ye scorn the world's desire,
' A woman,' answer'd Percivale, ' a w,
N as she was, the scandal of the Court,
leaving the pale n, I spake of this To all men ;
saw it, as the n My sister saw it ;
Thy holy n and thou have seen a sign —
Thy holy n and thou have driven men mad,
she spake There to the n's, and said,
many a week, unknown, among the n's ;
hum An air the n's had taught her ;
Our simple-seeming Abbess and her n's,
the good n's would check her gadding tongue
near him the sad n's with each a light Stood,
Then glancing up beheld the holy n's
Wear black and white, and be a w like you.
Nunnery (adj.) ' O little maid, shut in by w walls.
Nunnery (s) monkeries And nunneries,
And simple miracles of thy n ? '
A murmuring whisper thro' the n ran.
Nunnery-walls {See also Nunnery (adj.))
by narrowing n-w,
0 shut me round with narrowing n-w.
Nuptial But rich as for the n's of a king.
231
276
311
349
664
Ancient Sage 104
Columbus 112
N. Farmer, O. S. 2
5
38
39
N. S. 25
39
51
North. Cobbler 5
Village Wife 18
52
Owd Boa 10
78
79
Church-warden, etc. 17
Gareth and L. 1205
Marr. of Geraint 576
579
Geraint and E. 781
Maud I ii 6
In Mem. xciii 7
Lucretius 262
In Mem. Ixvii 8
Guinevere 498
Batt. of Brunanburh 54
Two Voices 330
St. S. Stylites 91
Talking Oak 80
Lover's Tale i 195
In Mem. Con. 9
Rizfah 10
Aylmer's Field 663
Batt. of Brunanburh 54
In Mem. v 8
North. Cobbler 61
Be Prof., Two G. 4A
Will Water. 89
Balin and Balan 445
Holy Grail 68
„ 78
„ 129
„ 198
„ 295
,, 862
Guinevere 139
147
163
309
313
590
666
677
227
Sir J. Oldcastle 94
Guinevere 230
410
0 closed about
342
671
Lover's Tale iv 212
Nurse (s) (See also Noorse) In there came old Alice the n, Lady Clare 13
Nurse (s) (continued) said Alice the n, (repeat) Lady Clare 17, 23, 33, 41, 45
' Are ye out of your mind, my n, my n?' Lady Clare 21
And told him all her n's tale. „ 80
Leolin's first n was, five years after, hers : Aylmer's Field 79
my n would tell me of you ; Princess iv 427
Rose a w of ninety years, „ vi 13
Let them not lie in the tents with coarse mankind, 111 n's ; „ 70
Gray n's, loving nothing new ; In Mem, xxix 14
That watch'd her on her n's arm, „ Con. 46
And tended her like a n. Maud I xix 76
Meeker than any child to a rough n, Lancelot and E. 857
dirty n. Experience, in her kind Hath f oul'd me — Last Tournament 317
N, I must do it to-morrow ; In the Child. Hasp. 42
Never since I was n, had I been so grieved „ 45
That day my n had brought me the child. The Wreck 59
I wrote to the n Who had borne my flower on her
hireUng heart ; and an answer came Not from
the n— „ 142
n of ailing body and mind, Locksley H., Sixty 51
Your n is here ! Miriam. My Mother's n The Ring 96
woman came And caught me from my n. „ 118
Poor n ! I bad her keep, „ 121
third September birthday with your n, „ 130
desire to keep So skilled a n about you always — „ 374
I cried for n, and felt a gentle hand „ 418
Your n is waiting. Kiss me child and go. „ 489
N, were you hired ? Romney's R. 16
caught when a w in a hospital ward. Charity 41
Nurse (verb) To w a blind ideal like a girl, Princess Hi 217
it becomes no man to n despair, „ iv 464
Grant me your son, to n, „ vi 298
Shall I n in my dark heart, Maud II ii 55
You'll have her to n my child. First Quarrd 70
To n my children on the milk of Truth, Akbar's Bream 162
Nursed Thou wert not n by the waterfall Ode to Memory 51
wert n in some delicious land Of lavish lights, Elednore 11
Those in whose laps our limbs are n. To J. S. 10
And n by mealy-mouth'd philanthropies, The Brook 94
The wrath I n against the world : Princess v 437
And n by those for whom you fought, „ vi 95
nor the hand That n me, „ vii 54
she had n me there from week to week : „ 239
n at ease and brought to understand Maud I xviii 35
and his wife N the young prince, Com. of Arthur 224
we were n in the drear night-fold Besfair 21
Muriel n you with a mother's care ; The Ring 349
She watch'd me, she n me, she fed me, Charily 33
Nurseling This n of another sky The Baisy 9&
Nursery one they knew — Raw from the n — Aylmer's Field 264
In our young n still unknown. Princess iv 332
Gray relics of the nurseries of the world, Lover's Tale i 290
Nursing ' Muriel's health Had weaken'd, n little Miriam. The Ring 357
Annie pale, N the sickly babe, Enoch Arden 150
N a child, and turning to the warmth Aylmer's Field 185
Nurtured See Isle-nurtured
Nut if the n's ' he said ' be ripe again : Enoch Arden 45&
mighty n's, and nourishing roots ; „ 555
As fancies like the vermin in a m Princess vi 263
Nutmeg The « rocks and isles of clove. The Voyage 40
Nutter hazlewood. By autumn n's haunted, Enoch Arden 8
Nutting great and small. Went n to the hazels. „ 64
long'd To go with others, n to the wood, „ 363^
Nymph (See also Wood-nymph) mountain quickens into
N and Faun ; Lucretivs 18T
presented Maid Or N, or Goddess, Princess i 197
how hke a w, A stately mountain n she look'd ! Lover's Tale i 358
Where n and god ran ever round in gold — „ iv 19T
0 mouthing out his hollow oes and aes. The Epic 50>
Oak (See also Baby-oak, Brother-oak) He thought to quell
the stubborn hearts of o, Buona/iarte 1-
Oak
505
Ocean
Oak (continued) I turn to yonder o.
To yonder o within the field I spoke
Broad 0 of Snmner-chace,
Old 0, 1 love thee well ;
For never yet was o on lea
The gouty o began to move,
Parks with o and chestnut shady,
What amulet drew her down to that old o,
violet varies from the lily as far As o from elm ;
when the winds of winter tear an o
Ere half the lifetime of an o.
Before a gloom of stubborn-shafted o's,
Arising wearily at a fallen o,
Then leapt her palfrey o'er the fallen o,
Before an o, so hollow, huge and old
song that once I heard By this huge o,
Call'd her to shelter in the hollow o,
struck, Furrowing a giant o,
And in the hollow o he lay as dead,
A stump of o half-dead,
May freedom's o for ever live
tew lanes of elm And whispering o.
Young and old, Like yon o,
hew'd Like broad o's with thunder.
Oaken With breezes from our o glades,
And Uke an o stock in winter woods,
And 0 finials till he touch'd the door ;
The three decker's o spine
he lay Down on an o settle in the hall.
Oakling drew My little o from the cup,
Oak-^oom Maud's own little o-r
Oak-tree But the solemn o-t sigheth.
An o-t smoulder'd there.
Talking Oak 8
13
30
202
,, 243
Amphion 23
L. of Burleigh 29
Aylmer's Field 507
Princess v 183
Boadicea 77
In Mem. Ixxvi 12
Geraint and E. 120
Baiin and Balan 425
587
Merlin and V. 3
„ 406
„ 894
., 936
„ 969
Last Tournament 12
Mands all Round 5
To Mary Boyle 68
The Oak 3
The Tourney 11
Elednore 10
Golden Tear 62
Aylmer's Field 823
Maud II a 27
Geraint and E. 573
Talking Oak 231
Maud I xiv 9
Claribel 4
Gareth and L. 402
red fruit Grown on a msigic o-t in mid-heaven, Last Tournament 745
'0am (liome) one night I cooms 'o like a bull North. Cobbler 33
'e were that outdacioua at 'o. Village Wife 75
boath slink t 'o by the brokken shal i^inster's S's. 37
Oan (own) wi' the Divil's o team. N. Farmer, O. S. 62
an' 'e's the Divil's o sen.' North. Cobbler 76
An' Squire, his o very sen, » 91
noa, not fur Sally's o kin. „ 114
So I sits i' my o armchair wi' my o kettle Spinster's S's. 9
fro' my o two 'oonderd a-year. « 58
'ere i' my o blue chaumbcr to me. ,, 80
'ud 'a let me 'a hed my o waiiy, „ 101
An' I sits i' my o little parlour, an' sarved by my o
little lass, Wi' my o httle garden outside, an' my
o bed o' sparrow-grass, An' my o door-poorch wi'
the woodbine ,, 103
' thank God that I hevn't naw cauf o' my o.' „ 117
An' I'd voiit fur 'im, my o sen, Owd Rod 14
Oap (hope) An' I 'o's es 'e beiint boooklam'd : Village Wife 23
es I o'5 es thou'll 'elp me a bit, „ 65
sewer an' sartin 'o o the tother side ; „ 92
Oar weary seem'd the sea, weary the o, Lotos-Eaters 41
wind and wave and o ; „ C. S. 127
barge with o and sail Moved from the brink, M. d' Arthur 265
stirr'd with languid pulses of the o, Gardener's D. 41
The measured pulse of racing o's In Mem. Ixxxvii 10
barge with o and sail Moved from the brink, Pass, of Arthur 433
Oar'd Naiads o A glimmering shoulder To E. L. 16
Some to a low song o a shallop by. Princess ti 457
the dead, O by the dumb, went upward Lancelot and E. 1154
Oaring O one arm, and bearing in my left Princess iv \d&
Oarless unlaborious earth and o sea ; To Virgil 20
Oarsman o's haggard face, As hard and still Lancelot and E. 1250
Oasis foimtain-f^ Ammonian 0 in the waste. Alexander 8
My one O in the dust and drouth Of city life ! Edwin Morris 3
they might grow To use and power on this 0, Princess ii 167
Oat (See also WboaXa) had the wild o not been
sown. In Mem. liii 6
Oat-grass On the o-g and the sword-grass, May Queen, N. Y's. E. 28
Oath Let us swear an o, and keep it Lotos-Eaiers, C. S. 108
Heaven heads the count of crimes With that
wildo.' D. of F. Women 2QI2
Oath (continued) And hear me swear a solemn o. Talking Oak 281
Cophetua sware a royal o : Beggar Maid 15
since my o was ta'en for public use, Princess iv 337
Your 0 is broken : we dismiss you : „ 360
But keep that o ye sware, Merlin and V. 688
Vivien, fearing heaven had heard her o, „ 940
O's, insult, filth, and monstrous blasphemies. Pass, of Arthur 114
that you, that I, would slight our marriage o : Happy 89
laughter. Pagan o, and jest, St. Telemachus 39
Obaay (obey) To loove an' o the Tommies ! Spinster's S's. 96
Obedience Seeing o is the bond of rule. M. d' Arthur 94
Linger with vacillating o, Gareth and L. 13
Of thine o and thy love to me, „ 146
bow'd himself With all o to the King, „ 488
And uttermost o to the King.' „ 555
For uttermost o to make demand „ 558
In uttermost o to the King. „ 833
But silently, in all o, Marr. of Geraint 767
With difificulty in mild o Driving them on : Geraint and E. 104
O is the courtesy due to kings.' Lancelot and E. 718
Seeing o is the bond of rule. Pass of Arthur 262
bankrupt of all claim On your o, Romney's R. 71
Obedient most valorous, Sanest and most o : Geraint and E. 911
0 to her second master now ; Lover's Tale iv 343
Obeisance curtseying her o, let us know Princess ii 20
Obelisk o's Graven with emblems of the time, Arabian Nights 107
Obey (See also Oba&y) A courage to endure and to o ; Isabel 25
' Will be o when one commands ? Two Voices 244
well to o then, if a king demand An act un-
profitable, M. d' Arthur 95
Man to command and woman to o ; Princess v 450
And since thou art my mother, must o. Gareth and L. 167
' I charge thee, ask not, but o.' Mart, of Geraint. 133
How should I dare o him to his harm ? Geraint and E. 136
1 swear it would not ruflBe me so much As you
that not 0 me. „ 151
that ye speak not but o.' „ 417
I know Your wish, and would o ; „ 419
Almost beyond me : yet I would o.' „ 423
Rise therefore ; robe yourself in this : o.' „ 685
Who knowing nothing knows but to o, Guinevere 186
well to o then, if a king demand An act un-
profitable. Pass, of Arthur 263
race to command, to o, to endure, Def. of Lucknow 47
Who shaped the forms, o them, Akbar's Dream 143
Obey'd ' I have o my imcle until now, Dora 59
and they wheel'd and o. Heavy Brigade 6
Object beyond his o Love can last : His o lives : Wan Sculptor 5
bum'd upon its o thro' such tears Love and Duty 63
Oblique ' If straight thy track, or if o, Two Voices 193
Oblivion With all forgiveness, all o. Princess vi 295
Oblivious See Half-oblivious
Obscure In some o hereafter, might inwreathe
Obscurity I faint in this o, (repeat)
Obsequies Nor meanly, but with gorgeous o.
Observance with a mute o himg.
He compass'd her with sweet o's
To compass her with sweet o's,
Obstinacy At which the warrior in his o,
Obstinate See Stunt
Obstreperous See Obstropulous
Obstropulous (obstreperous) But sich an o lad —
Obtain Pelleas might o his lady's love,
all my heart had destined did o,
Obtain'd second suit o At first with Psyche.
Occasion seasons when to take O by the hand,
written as she found Or made o,
Wiser to weep a true o lost,
O iron nerve to true o true.
Elusion, and o, and evasion ' ?
A little at the vile o, rode.
The vast o of our stronger life —
Ocean (See also lllid-ocean) Under the hollovr-hung
0 green !
On one side lay the O,
Lover's Tale i 458
Ode to Memory 6, 44, 123
Lancelot and E. 1335
Locksley Hall 22
Marr. of Geraint 48
Geraint and E. 39
454
Church-icarden, etc. 23
Pdleas and E. 161
Guinevere 492
Princess vii 71
To the Queen 31
Aylmer's Field 478
Princess iv 68
Ode on Well. 37
Gareth and L. 288
Marr. of Geraint 235
Columbus 35
The Merman 38
M. d' Arthur 11
<Ocean
506
Ccean (continued) Yet o's daily gainine on thp lanH r^y^. v o«
There the sunlit o tosses ""S on tne Jand, Golden Year 29
The houseless o's heaving field, TheCaptam 69
The hollower-bellowing o, P ^\^ ^T^'i2
Now pacing mute hvo's rim ; Enoch Arden 598
Or ohve-hoaiy caoem o- ^^^ ^''^^^ ^1
In middle o meets' the surging shock, " rirnjl
Cataract brooks to the o run, 7,. T;*! ,^
Thine the myriad-rolling o, l^^l'^'^ll
Charm, as a wanderer out in 0, ^",f r" f I
Streams o'er a rich ambrosial 0 isle, '''"'"* J?
By which thev rest, and o sounds, 7^ ,!/,„ ^" nif
As on a dull day in an O oavp ^^ Mem., ton. 121
On one side lay the O ^''^'^ T^ ^- ^^^
as o on every side Pliiiges and heaves n f " "//''' ''^'' ^P
Chains for the Admiral^of the O - ^'^- "/^f ^^^^ 38
Chains ! we arc Admirals of the 0 Columbus 19
Of the 0-of the Indies-Admirals we— " o?
He hved on an isle in the o— ^ „ . ,. ", , "^^
And we came to the isle in the 0 ^ Maeldwne 7
silent o always broke on a silent shore " 1 %
voice rang out in the thunders of 0 and Heaven Th. u/ 7 H
Dash back that r) with a pier Merlin and the ^. in
tS ^vho love Ourie With her boundless ^^<^^hanophnus 5
Ocean-fo^^ as white As o-f in the moon ^^ M.?^'^ ^' ?«
Ocean-fowl myriad shriek of wheeling T-f v a^ i '''^ll
ocean-islet about their o-i's flash The faces «e fJ'reeA; Id^
Ocean-lane FaU from his O-l of fire 7,/V7'''' \^i
Ocean-mirror O'er o-m'5 rounded large, rtuT^'-l
Ocean-plain Sailest the placid o-p's ^" ^^""- "^-^ I
Ocean-power the mightiest O-j, on earth, n. vil^ I
Ocean-ndge hollow o-r'* roarhig into cataracts t /itH^
Ocean-roU Tho' thine o-r of rhfthm sound ^'r^% -^fJ
Ocean-sea Given thee the keys of the great 0-s ? rl' ^P^ !n
Ocean-smelling ocean-spoil In os osfer ,. Co W«s 149
Ocean-sounding o-s wekome to one kSght La,t rZf "^^It
Ocean-spoU o-s In ocean-smelling osie?^^ ' ^'^ pZT^'f ^q!
Ochone but we hard it cryin" O ' ' Eno^h Arden 94
O'clock 'Tis nearly twelve 0. ' TJ^f^Tr'^^f
The mail ? At one o ri/ ■(, ^ ^; -^ ^'"" "^^
How goes the time ? ' 'Tis five 0 '^^'wnufr^ o
October .See Mid-October »'i« Wafer. 3
1^'^ • ?,'T/°"'^ ^ ^°™«^ of tl^e brain. Muler's h S
or dmndled down to some 0 games In some 0 nooks like ^^
Odd (S) And strength against all o's n r /ty^H^'J,
^ It was full of ^d o^an^ends Bahnand Balan 183
Ode then. Sir, awful .'. she wrote First Quarrel 49
o'5 About this losing of the child ; ^'''^''' ' j^
t\AiJ^''^^it''' ^"^ J^^«^ five-words-long " ,-,• o^
0dm To Thor and 0 lifted a hand • Thl vl- I
' O, Father 0, We give you a hie. ^'^^ ^"''^^Vj
Odorous wasting 0 siglis AU night long AdpNr,At
the amorous, 0 wind Breathes low^ Ehd^oZ\f^
Wlusper in o heights of even. mT i«
Odour fed the time With 0 j ,. ^r-^^^l^
A cloud of incense of aU o steam'd pfcS g
wtS.tu-nTmrdrtiL^^" "fiffl
An'd flU"n7o of thrs^acfo'^'alr''"''"^ *^ "^ . ^^'/^i^^
that hour died Like 0 ?apt iKhe winged wind ^''"" ' ^"^' ^ S?
those who mix all o to tfie Gods 'fe^a ^^na „ 801
aJnone Mournful ffi, wandering forlorn ^^rmas 184
My own CE, Beautif ul-brow'd ffi ^"^"^ l^
fZ^^:^ ^caTetrut '--- ^^ ,,^ ,i 2'
OUy
(Enone (continued) CE, by thy love which once was mine
cc sat Not moving, '
ghostly murmur floated, ' Come to me CE '
I can wrong thee now no more, CE, my CE'
0 er-brunming Would drop from his o-b love '
0 er-driven Yet pity for a horse o-d
O erflourish'd 0 with the hoary clematis •
O erflow O's thy cakner glances
O'er-grown TiU that o-g Barbarian in the East
.i?ol?:f ?)^K.i^!,^?.-- I- _^- -^ -l^elp to crack; Maulfffd
Death ofCEnone 45
74
80
81
bufp. Confessions 113
In Mem. Ixiii 1
Golden Year 63
Madeline 33
Poland 7
29
O'erlook'st 0 the tumult fromXfar
0 ershadow His love, unseen but felt, o Thee,
O erstept hath 0 The slippery footing
O^I'J^warted 0 with the brazen-headed spear
Offal btench of old o decaying,
pelt your o at her face.
Offence To save the 0 of charitable
like a pedant's wand To lash 0, '
without 0, Has link'd our names together
an tha weant be taakin' o,
Offend Your finer female sense o's
RKff f'^^''^ K' ^™'" *^® ™^ Por judgment.
Offer s) I trample on your o's and on you:
Offer (verb) I o boldly: we wiU seat you highest •
1 would o this book to you,
Offer'd then and there had 0 something more
JNot ev n a rose, were 0 to thee ? '
cup of both my hands And o you it kneelin" •
better o up to Heaven.' ° '
Offering ('^^e aZso Love-offering. Peace-offering) brin.'
me o's of fruit and flowers : "
dress the victim to the o up.
I will make a solemn o of you
Office O you that hold A nobler o upon earth
a joint of state, that plies Its o.
In whom should meet the o's of all
decent not to fail In o's of tenderness.
Two in the Hberal o's of hfe.
With books, with flowers, with Angel o's.
So kind an 0 hath been done,
Her o there to rear, to teach,'
In those great o's that suit The full-grown energies
join d Each . of the social hour To noble mannfr?
If all your o had to do With old results
touch of their o might have sufficed
Do each low 0 of your holy house • '
In whom should meet the o's of all
all o s Of watchful care and trembUng tenderness
joins us once again, to his either o trSe •
n« """*^he tiger of oppression out From o ;
Officer (See also Hofflcer) o's and men Levied a
Kinuly tax
an 0 Rose up, and read the statutes.
_^ We rooted out the slothful o
Officious See Too-officious
Offing And isles a light in the o :
Desolate 0, sailorless harbours
Offset man-minded o rose To cha^e the deer
Offsprmg with their o, born-unborn
AV'ould slie find her human o '
Often-ransack'd To think that in our o-r world
TiSf'"*^ ^ "^^ *^^ ^°"^^^ ^^""^^ °f ^" "-«'•
Ogress ' petty 0,' and ' ungrateful Puss '
Oil realms of upland, prodigal in 0,
pure quintessences of precious o's
little dues of wheat, and wine and 0 •
Or burn'd in fire, or boil'd in 0
njiM^'i'S '^'^'f i'?g,''.on aU their stony creeds.
Bun ^^"-°"^) That 0 and curl'd Assyrian
Oilily o bubbled up the mere.
Oily lower down The bay was o calm •
o'er the rest Arising, did his holy o best.
and 0 courte.sies Our formal compact
In Mem. cxxvii 19
Ded. of Idylls bl
Lover's Tale i 101
CEnone 139
-De/, of Lucknow 82
Locksley H., Sixty 134
Enoch Arden 342
Princess i 28
Lancelot and E. Ill
Church-warden, etc. 21
Bay-Dm., L' Envoi 2
Princess i 29
„ iv 546
„ Hi 159
June Bracken, etc. 4
The Brook 147
Lucretius 69
Merlin and V. 276
Holy Grail 36
St. S.Stylites 128
Princess iv 130
Lovtr's Tale iv 118
To the Queen 2
Love thou thy land 48
M. d' Arthur 125
Ulysses 41
Princess ii 175
vii 26
In Mem. xvii 17
xl 13
19
). cxi 14
„ cxxviii 10
Maud II V 27
Guinevere 682
Pass, of Arthur 293
Lover's Tale i 225
Happy 106
Akbar's Dream 159
Enoch Arden 662
Princess ii 68
Geraint and E. 938
Enoch Arden 131
Vastness 14
Talking Oak 51
Locksley H., Sixty 98
234
Sea Dreams 129
I
The Wreck 130
Princess, Pro. 157
Palace of Art 79
187
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 122
*S^ S. Stylites 52
Akbar's Dream 160
Maud I vi44
Gareth and L. 816
Audley Court 86
iiSea Dreams 195
Princess i 164
Old
Old {See also Hovfd, New^M, Onid, Owd. World-
old) The 0 earth Had a birth, jj, rhi^n. v; n- orr
And the o earth must die ^*"^^ ^*^^ -^** 37
^ l^T g"™"er'd thro' the doors, 0 footsteps " ^^
trod the upper floors, O voices called her
from without.
High-waUed gardens green and o • j Mariana QQ
From o well-heads of haunted rilk Arabian lights 8
rismg, from her bosom drew O letters tij ■ ^ieanore 16
^An inner impulse rent the veil Of S o husk • ^"'"^IV^l^- ^- ??
Pam rises up, o pleasures pall ■' ^'^ ^''*''^* ^^
' As o mythologies relate, " " 164
With this o soul in organs new ' " ^^^
Three fingers round the o silver cud k^ ■„ " , ^^^
Where this o mansion mounted high ^^^^^ ^- P
1 o yon o mill across the wolds : " „?5
The hon on your o stone gates r r V /J v ^
The good o year, the dear o timA at Ti'^'^- "* ^*'"« 23
With%hose 0 fac'es of oJi^rcy ^«y ««««n, iV. Y's.E. 6
methought that.I had wande^d^ar In an o y^oo^^'ntTvp-J- ^^
And the o year is dead. wuou. u. oj Ji. Women 54
For the 0 year lies a-dying. n ^A' ^ t, ^^^
O year, you must not diej ^- "•' ^ ^- ^ <^«'' 5
O year, you shall not die. (repeat) » ^ „5
t> year, you must not go ; ..9, 24
O year, you shall not go. » 1^
O year, if you must die. •• 18
0 year, we'll dearly rae for you : " ^7
A land of just and o renown v . i " , ^3
If New and O, disastrous^ud You ash me, why ete. 10
1 KNEW an o wife lean and poor, ^' ^^^!^^ ^"'^ "
It stirr'd the o wife's mettle • "^ ^''''** 1
How aU the o honour had from Christmas gone ri"7r -^^
In those 0 days, one summer noon, ^ ' t^ I'^\^^%1
and mighty bones of ancient men, 0 knights ' ^ ^'^'''' f.
^o might some 0 man speak in the af tertime' " , ^
For now I see the true o times are dead, " ^
The o order changeth, yielding place to new, " ^
So blunt m memory, so o at h^rt /^ j ", r.^^
?5: ^'?H°''' ^ ^^^* ^ '"^^^^ ^ 0^^ young. ^'^'■*"^'- * ^-,5?
Then they clung about The 0 man's nickT " n 1^
New things and o, himself and her n^ 71 . .1. ■^fr".!^
still The same 0 sore breaks out ^'^*- '" '** ^^«^ ^^
'My love for Nature is as 0 as I ; jp^ '■' ,, . P
The good o Summers, year by year l'^^? •'^"i;'"'* 28
; O Smmners, M-hen the^monk S f at ^'^^^"^ ^"-^ 39
;^%ut%yOf%oi^e'anfcl^^^^^^^^^ ^"''"^"'^ '^^ <'olden Year %
^j/^^i^"^^'^ *J?^ ^^?Py ««^on back,- " ^
you and I are o ; O age Itiath yet his honour tji ?n
We are not now that strength'^which in c d^ys ^^^"*" f.
Once more the 0 mysterious glimmer steals t -.r. " ^^
O, I see thee 0 and formal r ,^*<^«««34
Than those o portraits of o kin^rs 7. Locksley Hall 93
In that new world wWch ts th?J- Day-Dm., Sleep P. 23
O wishes, ghosts of broken plans, ' " j^ •„ SrV^ot
If o things, there are new ; "^"^ Water. 29
Shall fling her o shoe after. " ^^
In there came 0 Ahce the nurse ' t :, 'X, ^^^
The o Earl's daughter died T my breast • ^' ^^'' 1%
I am 0, but let me drink; •>' ^'^. Vo-^f
?o? Wl! '^'.^^ Jt"«« P^t^^b'd with moss. ^"'"'^ ''^ %^i
^or Enoch parted with his 0 sea-friend t? i."a :, .?
And pace the sacred o familiar fiS' ^"^'^ ^'^"^ ^^
bo propt, worm-eaten, ruinously 0, ' " ^^5
OPhihp;aU about the fields you caught t^'1 n i^^l
Than for his o Newfoundland's, ' " Jf
T?^ f^beaaant-lords, These partridge-breeders " qI?
Thwarted by one of these 0 father-fools, " f^
What amulet drew her down to that o oak, So o " fm
O there The red fruit of an o idolatry- ' ' " ^^
507
One babe was theirs, a .Margaret, three
Old (continued)
years o:
How like you this 0 satire ?
And that was o Sir Ralph's at Ascalon :
Tf nnr h u ^fj^^ ^ P"^*^ ^"^ ^^^ t^at rang
if our o halls could change their sex
An 0 and strange affection of the ho^e
A httle dry o man, without a star
?fcffK*^'"'r^''i' ^°'^''^' '^a"''! n»ne host
The fifth m hne from that o Florian
(The gaunt o Baron with his beetle brow
she past From all her 0 companions,
Ihey hunt 0 trails ' said Cyril ' very well •
But when I dwelt upon your o affiance
trim our sails, and let 0 bygones be
It was not thus, O Princess, in 0 days-
I your o friend and tried, she new in all ?
wlnle now the two o kmgs Began to wag
I wi fhf ^r^ A ^"''"u^."^ tbeir shadows !
1 would the 0 God of war himself were dead.
Then rode we with the o king across the lawns
n^use my tale of love In the^« king's ears.
Boys! shriek'd the o king, but vlinlier '
the o leaven leaven'd all •
Thus the hard 0 king : I took my leave
1 seem d to move in o memorial tilts
Up started from my side The o hon '
O studies fail'd ; seldom she spoke •
kingdom topples oyer ,vith a shriek Like an 0 woman
This fine 0 world of ours is but a child "-"'"d".
And sombre, o, colonnaded aisles
aU my chUdren have gone before me, I am so o ■
Ah, there's no fool hke the 0 one— •*""""•
But stay with the 0 woman now •
(> Yew, which graspest at the stones
Whose fancy fuses o and new
o"i«fTr^f """ f Philosophy On Argive heights
C Sisters of a day gone by.
At our o p^times in the hall We gambol'd
O warder of these buried bones ' '
How often shall her 0 fireside '
ShaU count new things as dear as 0:
iJoes my o friend remember me ? '
wherefore wake The 0 bitterness again
My o affection of the tomb, (repeat) '
While now we sang 0 songs that peal'd
^o gray o grange, or lonely fold
King out o shapes of foul disease •
Ihe grand o name of gentleman,
With o results that look like new •
To make o bareness picturesque '
But that 0 man now lord of the broad estate
dark 0 place vvill be gilt by the touch of a miUionaire •
Whose 0 grandfather has lately died "'"^onaire .
Ihat o man never comes to his place •
A gray o wolf and a lean.
An o song vexes my ear •
^"nf'it^."'^®'' ^y *^° *""et« Of tbe o manorial haU
nul ^u\^'% ^O^''"' ^°^ ^^ ^^™« "°t back
But what will the 0 man say ?
For what wiU the 0 man say
That 0 hysterical mock-disease should die '
lll"^' l^^^" ^^ ^"* *'^« « ™en that know: And
each is twice as 0 as I •
^^ S,%^«,bim to Sir Anton, an o knight
but o Merhn counseU'd him, ' Take thou and strike
An 0 man'.s wit may wander ere he die
And echo'd by 0 folk beside their fires '
W "^ Tk'^^J '^bangeth, yielding place to new •
Seeing that ye be grown too weak and o '
10 plunge 0 Merlm in the Arabian sea :
New things and o co-twisted,
Then that o Seer made answer playing on him
0 Master, reverence thine ow/beard That looks
Old
Sea Breams 3
Princess, Pro. 26
104
121
140
il3
117
173
a 238
240
263
390
m 139
TO 69
292
318
»18
34
145
236
241
328
386
467
479
vi 99
vii 31
Con. 63
77
Tfie Daisy 56
Grandmother 18
44
108
In Mem. ii 1
., xvi 18
i> xxiii 21
„ xxix 13
1. XXX 5
>] xxxix 1
xl 22
28
„ Ixiv 28
„ Ixxxiv 47
In Mem. Ixxxv 75, 77
In Mem. xcv 13
c5
., cvi 25
" cxi 22
,, cxxviii 11
19
Maud I i 19
66
>i X 5
» xiii 24
28
„ //n47
iv 80
«;53
83
87
„IIIm33
Com. of Arthtir 149
222
306
405
417
509
511
and Z. 211
226
262
280
Gareth
Old
508
Old
Old (caniiniied) Or carol some o roundelay, and so loud Gareth and L. 506
The fashion of that o knight-errantry Who ride abroad, „ 629
Some o head-blow not heeded in his youth „ 714
Art thou not o ? ' ' O, damsel, o and hard, 0, with the
might and breath „ 1105
' O, and over-bold in brag ! „ 1107
An 0 storm-beaten, russet, many-stain'd Pavilion, ,. 1113
And arm'd him in o arms, and brought a helm „ 1115
His arms are o, he trusts the harden'd skin — „ 1139
son Of o King Lot and good Queen Bellicent, „ 1231
Held court at o Caerleon upon Usk. Marr. of Geraint 146
Who being vicious, o and irritable, „ 194
' Arms, indeed, but o And rusty, o and rusty, „ 477
But that o dame, to whom full tenderly „ 508
slowly drew himself Bright from his o dark life, „ 595
Near that o home, a pool of golden carp ; „ 648
She is not fairer in new clothes than o. „ 722
For o am I, and rough the ways and wild ; „ 750
And all that week was o Caerleon gay, „ 837
But she, remembering her o ruin'd hall, Geraint and E. 254.
Her suitor in o years before Geraint, „ 276
some, whose souls the o serpent long had drawn Down, „ 632
From which o fires have broken, men may fear „ 822
' 0 friend, too o to be so young, depart, Balin and Balan 17
' O fabler, these be fancies of the churl, „ 307
and o boughs AVhined in the wood. „ 385
' 0 priest, who miimble worship in your buire — 0 monk
and nun, ,, 444
This o sim-worship, boy, will rLse again, „ 457
Before an oak, so hoUow, huge and o Merlin and V. 3
That o true filth, and bottom of the well, „ 47
With such a fixt devotion, that the o man, „ 183
Caught in a great o tyrant spider's web.
Less 0 than I, yet older, for my blood
drew The rustiest iron of o fighters' hearts ;
that o man Went back to his o wild,
Came to her o perch back, and settled there,
passing gayer youth For one so o,
Then came an o, dumb, myriad-wrinkled man.
He bore a knight of o repute to the earth,
learn If his o prowess were in aught decay'd ;
The shackles of an o love straiten'd him.
Beyond mine o belief in womanhood,
therefore let our dumb o man alone Go with me.
Loyal, the dumb o servitor, on deck.
Then rose the dvimb o servitor, and the dead,
' From our o books I know That .Joseph came of old
had you known our Camelot, Built by o kings, age
after age, so o
till the dry o trunks about us, dead,
plaster'd like a martin's nest To these o walls —
Delight myself with gossip and o wives,
But Uve hke an o badger in his earth.
Were strong in that o magic which can trace
For every fiery prophet in o times,
as he sat In hall at o Caerleon, the high doors
Strange as to some o prophet might have seem'd
Some rough o knight who knew the worldly way,
O milky fables of the wolf and sheep,
That ail the o echoes hidden in the wall
like an o dwarf-elm That turns its back on the salt blast, „ 543
' May God be with thee, sweet, when o and gray. Last Tournament 627
' May God be with thee, sweet, when thou art o, „ 629
Swear to me thou wilt love me ev'n when o, „ 652
fail'd to trace him thro' the flash and blood Of our o kings : „ 687
Her memory from o habit of the mind Guinevere 379
some beheld the faces of o ghosts Look in Pass, of ArthurlOS
In those o days, one summer noon, „ 197
0 knights, and over them the sea-wind sang Shrill, „ 216
So might some o man speak in the aftertime „ 275
For now I see the true o times are dead, „ 397
' The o order changeth, yielding place to new, „ 407
accept this o imperfect tale. New-old, To the Queen, ii 36
half-moulder'd chords To some o melodv, Lover's Tale i 20
Above the naked poisons of his heart Iii his o age.' „ 357
259
556
574
648
903
928
Lancelot and E. 170
492
584
875
955
1127
1144
1153
Eoly Grail 59
340
495
549
553
629
666
876
Pelleas and E. 3
51
192
196
366
Old (continued) they trod The same o paths where
Love had walk'd
(Huge blocks, which some o trembUng of the world
But all their house was o and loved them both.
And his was o, has in it rare or fair
An' I hit on an o deal-box that was push'd
it's kind of you. Madam, to sit by an o dying wife.
I can't dig deep, I am o —
0 Sir Richard caught at last.
An 0 and worthy name !
1 walked with our kindly o doctor as far
Stench of o offal decaying,
on the palace roof the o banner of England blew
Some cited o Lactantius :
■ike an o friend false at last In our most need,
I am not yet too o to work his will —
To lay me in some shrine of this o Spain,
Going ? I am 0 and sUghted :
Of others their o craft seaworthy still.
Such as 0 writers Have writ of in histories —
O FiTZ, who from your suburb grange,
0 friends outvaluing all the rest.
But we o friends are still aUve,
till that 0 man before A cavern
and Ughts the o church-tower. And lights the clock ! The Flight 93
our o England may go down in babble at last. Locksley H., Sixty 8
Lover's Tale i 821
„ ii 45
„ iv 122
203
First Quarrel 48
Eizpah 21
„ 56
The Revenge 98
Sisters (E. and E,) 74
In the Child Hosp. 43
Bef. of Lucknow 82
106
Columbus 49
70
„ 161
,. 207
„ 241
Pref. Son 19th Cent. 3
Batt. of Brunanhurh 114
To E. Fitzgerald 1
40
42
Ancient Sage 6
I this 0 white-headed dreamer stoopt and kiss'd
0 Assyrian kings would flay Captives whom they
caught in battle —
teU them ' o experience is a fool,'
Bring the o dark ages back without the faith,
1 am 0, and think gray thoughts, for I am gray :
Lame and o, and past his time.
There is one o Hostel left us
Poor 0 Heraldry, poor o History, poor o Poetry,
In the common deluge drowning o poUtical
common-sense !
Poor o voice of eighty crying after voices
0 Horace ? ' I will strike ' said he
And he sung not alone of an o sun set.
Should this o England fall
That 0 strength and constancy
0 poets foster'd under friendlier skies, 0 Virgil
who would write ten lines,
And you, o popular Horace, you the wise
and all these o revolutions of earth ;
P'or ten thousand years O and new ?
is making a new Unk Breaking an o one ?
Garrulous o crone.
We saw far off an o forsaken house.
And in yon arching avenue of o elms,
Found in a chink of that o moulder'd floor ! '
(Our o bright bird that still \s veering there
So, following her o pastime of the brook,
forgotten mine own rhyme By mine o self. As I
shall be forgotten by o Time,
To work 0 laws of Love to fresh results,
0 Empires, dwellings of the kings of men ;
slower and fainter, 0 and weary,
What hast thou done for me, grim 0 Age,
Ever as of o time.
Live thy Life, Young and o,
Rear'd on the tumbled ruins of an o fane
Like some o wreck on some iiidrawing sea,
Rome no more should wallow in this o lust
was not Alia call'd In o Inln the Sun of Love ?
A voice from o Ivkn ! Nay, but I know it —
And cast aside, when o, for newer, —
alchemise o hates into the gold Of Love,
Could give the warrior kings of o.
Seeking a tavern which of o he knew,
Ring out the o, ring in the new,
sayings from of o Ranging and ringing
kings of 0 had doom'd thee to tlie flames,
humour of the kings of o Return upon me !
38
79
131
137
155
227
247
249
250
251
Epilogue 46
Dead Prophet 41
The Fleet 4
Open I. and C. Exhih. 14
Poets and their B. 1
5
Fastness 29
The Ring 20
51
120
155
172
280
332
354
To Mary Boyle 22
Prog, of Spring 85
99
Merlin and the G. 100
By an Evolution. 9
The Snowdrop 3
The Oak 2
St. Telemachus 6
44
78
Akbar's Dream 87
89
134
163
To the Queen 4
Enoch Arden 691
In Mem. cvi 5
Com. of Arthur 415
Gareth and L. 374
377
Old
509
One
I
Old (continued) Stir, as they stirr'd of o, Balin and Baian 89
The new leaf ever pushes off the o. „ 442
Many a time As once — of o — Merlin and V, 136
I know the Table Round, my friends of o ; „ 816
I know That Joseph came of o to Glastonbury, Holy Grail 60
every evil thought I had thought of o, „ 372
when I moved of o A slender page about her father's hall, „ 580
her longing and her will Was toward mo as of o ; „ 591
Joseph brought of o to Glastonbury ? ' „ 735
My madness came upon me as of o, „ 787
Shone Uke the countenance of a priest of o PeUeas and E. 144
Arise, go forth and conquer as of o.' Pass, of Arthur 6i
A land of o upheaven from the abyss „ 82
my name has been A hallow'd memory like the
names of o,
I WISH I were as in the years of o,
mingled with the famous kings of o,
my Fathers belong'd to the church of o,
not claiming your pity : I know you of o —
has join'd our hands of o ;
body which had lain Of o in her embrace.
And the Vision that led me of o.
Olden a valorous weapon in o England !
Older others lay about the lawns. Of the o sort.
And he that told the tale in o times
Less old than I, yet o, for my blood
withheld His o and his mightier from the Usts,
Oldest Behind yon whispering tuft of o pine,
Graven in the o tongue of all this world.
And o friend, your Uncle, wishes it,
each of them boasted he sprang from the o race
upon earth.
And o age in shadow from the night,
one Their o, and the same who first
Whereon their o and their boldest said,
Old-fashion'd See owd-farran'd
Old-recurring o-r waves of prejudice Resmooth
Old-world o-w trdns, upheld at court
like an o-w mammoth bulk'd in ice.
Dust in wholesome o-w dust
And now — like o-w inns that take
Old Year And the o v is dead.
For the o y lies a-dying.
O y, you must not die ;
O y, you shall not die. (repeat)
O y, you must not go ;
O y, you shall not go.
O y, if you must die.
0 y, we'll dearly rue for you :
'Ole (whole) an' the 'o 'ouse hupside down.
Oleander Where o's flush'd the bed
Olive (a girl's name) WiU I to O plight my troth,
Olive (tree) the year in which our o's fail'd.
Of o, aloe, and maize and vine.
A light amid its o's green ;
Peace sitting under her o,
to me thro' all the grovas of o
Olive-gardens ' Leaving the o-g far below,
Olive-glade There in a secret o-g I saw
Olive-hoary Or o-h cape in ocean ;
Olive-silvery Sweet Catullus's all-but-island, o-s
Sirmio !
Olivet crown'd The purple brows of 0.
Olive-yard o-y and vine And golden grain,
Olivia maid or spouse. As fair as my 0,
1 saw Your own 0 blow,
Declare when last 0 came To sport
Olympian Ghost of Pindar in you RolI'd an 0 ;
Omar that large infidel Your 0 ; and your 0 drew
Full-handed plaudits
Omega '0 ! thou art Lord,' they said.
Omen from which their o's all men drew,
What o's may foreshadow fate to man And woman,
Omen'd See ni-omen'd
Ondecent (indecent) an' saayin' o things, Spinster's S's. 90
Lover's Tale i 445
Tiresias 1
„ 171
The Wreck 1
Despair 37
Happy 93
Death of (Enone 94
The Dreamer 5
Kapiolani 4
Princess ii 463
Gareth and L. 1427
Merlin and V. 556
Pdleas and E. 160
(Enone 88
Com. of Arthur 302
Sisters (E. and E.) 47
V. of Maeldune 4
Tiresias 104
Death of (Enone 53
100
Princess Hi 240
Day-Dm., Ep. 9
Princess v 148
Locksley H., Sixty 150
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 13
D.ofF. Women 248
D.oftheO. Year 5
6
9, 24
15
18
27
43
North. Cobbler 42
The Daisy 33
Talking Oak 283
Princess i 125
The Daisy 4
,, 30
Maud I i 33
Prater Ave, etc. 3
D.ofF. Women 211
Tiresias 39
The Daisy 31
Prater Ave, etc. 9
In Mem xxxi 12
Demeter and P. 110
Talking Oak 35
76
99
To Prof. Jebb. 4
To E. Fitzgerald 37
Two Voices 278
Ode on Well. 36
Tiresias 7
One (See also Wan, Won, Wonn) We were two
daughters of o race : The Sisters 1
By 0 low voice to o dear neighbourhood, Aylmer's Field 60
The 0 transmitter of their ancient name, „ 296
that 0 kiss Was Leolin's o strong rival „ 556
Never o kindly smile, o kindly word : „ 564
Never since our bad earth became o sea, „ 635
or o stone Left on another, „ 768
his o word was ' desolate ; ' „ 836
then I saw o lovely star Larger and larger. Sea Dreams 93
' With all his conscience and o eye askew ' — „ 180
Without 0 pleasure and without o pain, Lucretius 269
And there we took o tutor as to read : Princess, Pro. 179
Yet let us breathe for o hour more in Heaven ' „ Hi 69
On 0 knee Kneehng, I gave it, which she caught, „ iv 469
My o sweet child, whom I shall see no more ! „ v92
My babe, my sweet Aglaia, my o child : „ 101
her o fault The tenderness, not yours, „ m 185
To o deep chamber shut from sound, „ 376
for on o side arose The women up in wild revolt, „ vii 122
His nights, his days, moves with him to 0 goal, „ 263
And save the o true seed of freedom sown Ode on Well. 162
But the 0 voice in Europe : we must speak ; Third of Feb. 16
For us, we will not spare the tyrant 0 hard word. „ 42
That 0 fair planet can produce, Ode Inter. Exhib. 24
0 tall Agave above the lake. The Daisy 84
Yet o lay-hearth would give you welcome To F. D. Maurice 11
Or later, pay o visit here, „ 45
There is but 0 bird with a musical throat. The Islet 27
May make 0 music as before. In Mem., Pro. 28
Make 0 wreath more for Use and Wont, „ xxix 11
Of 0 mute Shadow watching all. „ xxx 8
Then 0 deep love doth supersede „ xxxii 5
But for 0 hour, 0 Love, I strive „ . xxxv 6
That not o life shall be destroy 'd, „ Ud q
At o dear knee we proffer'd vows, 0 lesson from
o book we learn'd, „ Ixxix 13
They mix in o another's arms „ cH 23
Whereat those maidens with o mind „ dii 45
0 God, o law, o element. And o far-off divine event, „ Con. 142
1 know it the 0 bright thing to save Maud I xvi 20
To save from some sUght shame o simple girl. „ xviii 45
O long milk-bloom on the tree ; „ xxii 46
For o short hour to see The souls we loved, „ // iv 14
But is ever the 0 thing silent here. „ v 68
To catch a friend of mine 0 stormy day ; „ 85
And the heart of a people beat with o desire ; „ /// vi 49
O light together, but has past and leaves Ded. of Idylls 48
Then might we live together as o life, And reigning
with 0 will in everything Com. of Arthur 91
Give my o daughter saving to a king, „ 143
In o great annal-book, where after-years „ 158
' Few, but all brave, aU of o mind with him ; „ 255
That men are blinded by it — on 0 side, „ 301
Arthur and his knighthood for a space Were all 0 will, „ 516
only 0 proof. Before thou ask the King Gareth and L. 144
Our o white he sits like a little ghost „ 297
When some good knight had done 0 noble deed, „ 411
At o end o, that gave upon a range Of level pavement „ 666
Then after o long slope was mounted, saw,
in a moment — at o touch Of that skill'd spear.
But with 0 stroke Sir Gareth split the skull.
In a long valley, on o side whereof,
And on o side a castle in decay,
' Here, by God's grace, is the o voice for me.'
' Here by God's rood is the o maid for me.'
o command I laid upon you, not to speak to me,
The 0 true lover whom you ever own'd.
The pieces of his armour in o place,
answering not o word, she led the way.
(With o main purpose ever at my heart)
o side had sea And ship and sail and angels
The whole wood-world is 0 full peal of praise.
Where imder 0 long lane of cloudless air
And sowing 0 ill hint from ear to ear.
795
1222
1404
Marr. of Geraint 243
245
344
368
Geraint and E. 77
344
374
495
831
Balin and Balan 364
450
461
Merlin and V. 143
One
One {continued) And knew no more, nor eave mp
o poor word ; ^
Take o verse more— the lady speaks itr-this •
Yet IS there 0 true hne, the pearl of pearls:
Kead but o book, and ever reading grew
And smce he kept his mind on o sole aim
b^t" ^Zl.Tf^ ^"'^ ^'^ returning foundNot two
And not the o dark hour wliich brings remorse
But have ye no o word of loyal praise For Arthur
I will go. In truth, but o thing now— "°"'^'
send O flash, that, missing all things else
the 0 passionate love Of her whole life •
m o nioment, she put forth the charm '
Carved of o emerald center'd in a sun Of silver
rays,
'Stay a little ! 0 golden minute's grace !
l-ull often the bright unage of o face
and o morn it chanced He found her'in among
Aiid 1 must die for want of o bold word '
This was the o discourtesy that he used.'
^,.^/=old passive hand Received at once
With o sharp rapid, where the crisping white
there I found Only o man of an exceeding age
And gateways m a glory like o pearl—
With o great dwelling in the middle of it •
tiU o fair mom, I walking to and fro
O n^ht my pathway swerving east, I saw
J^ or brother, so o night, because they roll
knightly in me twined and clung Round that o sin
But never let me bide o hour at peace
A rose, o rose, and this was wontlrous fair 0 rose
a rose that gladden'd earth and sky, O rose mv
^ rose, that sweeten'd all mine air— ' ^
O rose a rose to gather by and by, O rose, a rose
to gather and to wear, , <i ios.e,
O rose my rose ; a rose that will not die,— " 2r^
Save that 0 rivulet from a tiny cave " T^t
h'^n. '^R ^-f^^u' f ^^^ ^ ^"^^ J^n^^ht on earth, " til
&nTLS"K/f.?.^:^.TK.-i-^ <> ^-d off, Ust TournameJU
162
168
218
285
302
493
539
612
„ . 716
Qumevere 4
„ 2]
„ 475
" 619
Pass, of Arthur 118
156
163
197
341
410
439
460
To the Queen ii 8
31
Lover's Tale i 17
510
One
Merlin and V. 277
445
459
622
626
708
763
778
918
932
955
967
Lancelot and E. 295
684
882
922
927
988
1201
Eoly Grail 381
431
527
574
591
634
685
775
Pelleas and E. 387
401
then o low roll Of Autumn thunder.
An ocean-sounding welcome to o knight
Our o white day of Innocence hath past'
But Dagonet with o foot poised in his hand,
* ear God: honour the King— his o true knight-
o ", '°?e woman, weeping near a cross.
So, pluck'd 0 way by hate and o by love
Here o bl^k, mute midsummer night I sat
« w r 'l^'^f -"^^"Z ^''"^^ The warm white apple
o low light betwixt them burn'd ^^
For thus it chanced o mom when all the court
10 love 0 maiden only, cleave to her
And makes me o pollution : he, the King
as by some 0 deathbed after wail Of suffering.
Who hath but dwelt beneath a roof with me
o last act of kinghood shalt thou see Yet,
in those old days, o summer noon
Then took with care, and kneeling on o knee
wi t" ^u"'? T,^'." ^^^"''^ (^OTvn^t the world.
Sn^ '^v" ^^^^^ dot against tLe verge of dawn,
Sounds, as if some fair city were o voice
And London roU'd o tide of joy thro'
^^m!^'°"^ *'" T ''^^ ^"«"t' and o isle, o isle,
sometmies touches but o string That quivers, '
The stream of hfe, o stream, o life, o blood. 6
sustenance, '
this o name. In some obscure hereafter,
C^olden dream of love, from which m4y death
WBy grew we then together in o plot ? Why fed
we from o fountain ? drew o sun ? Whv were
our mothers' branches of o stem ^
Brooded o master-passion evermore
Mo'^TL'W."'^^"*^^ upblown billow ran
Mo>ed witl, 0 spirit round about the bay,
239
457
760
n23
60
178
Hi 17
One (continued) her hair Studded with o rich
Provence rose —
2lr^^'^^^ she reach'd to those that came behind.
Well he had 0 golden hour— of triumph shall I sav?
at o end of the haU Two great funereal curtains
And bearmg on o arm the noble babe
he took no hfe, but he took o purse.
An' o night I cooms 'oam hke a bull
he dared her with o httle ship and his English few •
when o quick peal Of laughter drew me
all O bloom of youth, health, beauty, happiness
An Lucy wur laame o' o leg,
And she lay with a flower in o hand
that 0 night a crowd Throng'd the waste field
Wot even by o hair's-breadth of heresy
Am ready to sail forth on o last voyage,
to lead O last crusade against the Saracen
May send o ray to thee !
For the peak sent up o league of fire
For the o half slew the other.
From that o hght no man can look upon,
WiU make o people ere man's race be run •
Oast at thy feet o flower that fades away.
O night when earth was winter-black,
— not 0 bush was near —
o snowy knee was prest Against the margin flowers •
great God Ar6s, whose o bliss Is war, '
X , > """ovy w ijiioa io war,
bend no such hght upon the ways of men As o great deed
On o far height in o far-shiniHg fire.
O height and o far-shining fire '
I would make my life o prayer for a soul
go To spend my o last year among the hills.
Th!;^.. '"Y'^ "/^F ^^yo"'^ 0"r village miseries,
Those three hundred millions under o Imperial
sceptre now.
There is o old Hostel left us
With o gray glimpse of sea ;
Welcome, welcome with o voice '
0 hfe, 0 flag, o fleet, o Throne ! ' '
By 0 side-path, from simple truth ■
And o drear sound I have not heard,
O full voice of allegiance,
and I heard o voice from aU the three
K, "?."" "obbut hev' o glass of aale.
An theere i' the 'ouse o night-
Well, O way for Miriam.
0 silent voice Came on the wind,
O year without a storm, or even a cloud •
JMay, you were my o solace ; only— '
o day came And saw you, shook her head,
groping for it, could not find O likeness,
^or o monotonous fancy madden'd her
A red mark ran All round o finger pointed straight,
Who never caught o gleam of Se beauty * '
If man and wife be but o flesh
Might I crave 0 favour ?
Lay your Plato for o minute down
but the goodly view Was now o blank,
flamed On o huge slope beyond
l;or o moment afterward A silence follow'd
Ihen 0 deep roar as of a breaking sea.
Mine IS the o fruit Alia made for mail.'
Make but o music, haimonising " Prav "
0 Alia! o KaUfa! ^
1 had 0 brief summer of bUss
there o day He had left his dagger behind him
Moan to myseH ' o plunge-thTn quiet for e^ore
And o clear call for me ! 'cmiuri.
For that the evil o's come here, and sav
A rose, but 0, none other rose had I
No rose but o— what other rose had I?
^^^^^^^er- changing 0 And ever - changing
But o was counter to the hearth
But never a o so gay,
Lover's Tale Hi 45
48
). iv 6
213
370
Rizpah 31
North. Cobbler 33
The Revenge 107
Sisters (E. and E.) 115
120
Village Wife 99
In the Child. Hosp. 39
Sir J. Oldcastle 39
Columbus 64
„ 237
„ 239
Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 14
V. of Maeldune 72
114
De Prof., Two G. 37
To Victor Hugo 11
To Dante 7
To E. Fitzgerald 21
Tiresias 36
42
,, 111
„ 162
„ 185
„ 186
The Wreck 10
Ancient Sage 16
206
Locksley H., Sixty 117
247
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 8
Open. I. and C. Exhib. 1
39
To Marq. of Dufferin 28
^ r " 40
On Jub. Q. Victoria 22
Demeter and P. 84
Owd Rod 20
„ 27
The Ring 73
„ 153
„ 284
„ 310
,, 312
„ 337
„ 404
,, 453
Happy 60
,. 94
Romney's R. 70
To Master of B. 4
Death of CEnone 4
St. Telemachus 8
64
67
Akbar's Dream 40
151
167
Bandit's Death 9
11
' Charity 16
Crossing the Bar 2
St. S. Stylites 98
Pelleas and E. 400
407
Akbars Dream 147
Gareth and L. 672
Poet's Song 14
One
511
Open-mouth' d
One (conlimied) Why were we o in all things, save in
that Where to have been o had been the cope and
crown
0 with Britain, heart and soul !
One-day-seen The o-d-s Sir Lancelot in her heart,
One-sided ' O dull, o-s voice,' said I,
Only (adj.) His o child, his Edith, whom he loved
' We have his dearest. His o son ! '
Fear not to give this King thine o child,
when her son Beheld his o way to glory
1 have miss'd the o way (repeat)
Had niaiTied Enid, Yniol's o child.
Onset greaves and cuisses dash'd with drops Of o ;
A day of o's of despair !
Rings to the roar of an angel o —
and so they crash'd In o,
greaves and cuisses dash'd with drops Of o ;
Onslaught make an o single on a realm
Onward (adj. and adv.) Still o ; and the clear canal Is
rounded Arabian Nights 45
Till in its o current it absorbs Isabel 31
fiery -hot to burst All barriers in her o race For power. In Mem. exiv 14
Lover's Tale ii 26
Open. I. and C. Exhib. 38
Lancelot and E. Til
Two Voices 202
Aylmer's Field 23
The Victim 64
Com. of Arthur 413
Gareth and L. 159
„ 787,792
Marr. of Qeraint 4
M. d' Arthur 216
Ode on Well. 124
Milton 8
Balin and Balan 556
Pass, of Arthur 384
Geraint and E 917
vast eddies in the flood Of o time
A moment, ere the o whirlwind shatter it,
But in the o current of her speech.
Onward (s) his truer name Is ' O,'
Onward-sloping ' Mid o-s motions infinite
'Oonderd (hundred) an' thin my two 'o a-year
wellnigh purr'd ma awaay fro' my oan two 'o a-year. „ 58
Oorali Drench'd with the hellish o — In the Child. Hasp. 10
„ cxxviii 6
Lover's Tale i 451
565
D. of the Duke of C. 14
Palace of Art 2^1
Spinster's S's. 12
Ooze (s) For I was drench'd with o,
Ooze (verb) bloat himself, and o All over
Oozed 0 All o'er with honey'd answer
Opal gayer colours, like an o warm'd.
Open (adj ) The costly doors flung o wide,
Showering thy gleaned wealth into my o breast
An 0 scroll. Before him lay :
Wide, wild, and o to the air,
Thro' the o gates of the city afar,
Her 0 eyes desire the truth.
More softly round the o wold,
On o main or winding shore !
Were o to each other ;
voice Of comfort and an o hand of help,
Follows the mouse, and all is o field.
we had limed ourselves With o eyes,
and in her lion's mood Tore o,
so To the 0 window moved,
one glance he caught Thro' o doors of Ida
Thro' o field into the lists they wound
And all thy heart Ues o unto me.
He, on whom from both her o hands
immeasurable heavens Break o to their highest,
But o converse is there none,
Imperial halls, or o plain ;
in their hand Is Nature like an o book ;
lords Banded, and so brake out in o war.'
' Wherefore waits the madman there Naked in o
dayshine? '
rang Clear thro' the o casement of the hall,
Thro' o doors and hospitality ;
Coursed one another more on o ground
And i.ssuing under o heavens beheld
Painted, who stare at o space, nor glance
I smote upon the naked skull A thrall of thine in o
Princess v 28
Sea Dreams 154
Princess v 241
Merlin and V. 950
Arabian Nights 17
Ode to Memory 23
The Poet 8
Dying Swan 2
34
Of old sat Freedom 17
To J. S. 2
The Voyage 6
Aylmer's Field 40
174
„ 853
Princess Hi 143
iv 381
492
V 343
„ viM
„ vii 183
Ode on Well. 195
Spec, of Iliad 15
in Mem. xx 17
„ xcviii 29
„ Con. 132
Com. of Arthur 237
Gareth and L. 1092
Marr. of Geraint 328
456
522
Geraint and E. 196
268
hall, Balin and Balan 56
under o blue Came on the hoarhead woodman „ 293
Push'd thro' an o casement down, „ 413
My mother on his corpse in o field ; (repeat) Merlin and V. 43, 73
And laid the diamond in his o hand. Lancelot and E. 827
He loves the Queen, and in an o shame : And she
returns his love in o shame ; „ 1082
But for a mile all round was o space, Pelleas and E. 28
And he was left alone in o field. „ 208
straight on thro' o door Rode Gawain, „ 382
Open (adj.) (continued) Wide o were the gates, And no
watch kept ; Pelleas and E. 414
' Nay, fool, said Tristram, ' not in o day.' Last Tournament 347
huge machicolated tower That stood with o doors, „ 425
but sprang Thro' o doors, and swording right and left „ 473
In o battle or the tilting-field (repeat) Guinevere 330, 332
o flower tell What sort of bud it was. Lover's Tale i 151
Arise in o prospect — heath and hill, „ 397
Forthgazing on the waste and o sea, „ ii 177
moon Struck from an o grating overhead „ iv 60
An 0 landaulet Whirl'd by, which, after it had
past me, Sisters {E. and E.) 85
Rip your brothers' vices o, Locksley H., Sixty 141
We often walk In o sun, The Ring 328
There, the chest was o — all The sacred relics „ 446
The door is o. He ! is he standing at the door, Happy 11
And in her o palm a halcyon sits Patient — Prog, of Spring 20
Wait till Death has flung them o, Faith 7
Open (s) race thro' many a mile Of dense and o, Balin and Balan 424
Open (verb) Heaven o's inward, chasms yawn. Two Voices 304
Uke a horse That hears the corn-bin o, The Epic 45
and o's but to golden keys. Locksley Hall 1(X>
o to me. And lay my little blossom at my feet, Princess v 99
' O dewy flowers that o to the sun, Gareth and L. 1066
The wayside blossoms o to the blaze. Balin and Balan 449
To dig, pick, o, find and read the charm : Merlin and V. 660
0 gates. And I will make you merry.' Pelleas and E. 373
The golden gates would o at a word. Sisters (E. and E.) 145
He would o the books that I prized. The Wreck 21
Till Holy St. Pether gets up wid his kays an' o's the
gate ! Tomorrow 93
O's a door in Heaven ; Early Spring 7
Open-door'd Once rich, now poor, but ever o-d.' Marr. of Geraint 302
always o-d To every breath from heaven, Akbar's Dream 179
Open'd (adj.) Lily of the vale ! half o bell of the woods ! Princess vi 193
Open'd (verb) Thy dark eyes o not, Elednore 1
northward of the narrow port 0 a larger haven : Enoch Arden 103
Where either haven o on the deeps, „ 671
With one small gate that o on the waste, „ 733
Crept to the gate, and o it, „ 775
counter door to that Which Leohn o, Aylmer's Field 283
Books (see Daniel seven and ten) Were o, Sea Dreams 153
gate shone Only, that o on the field below : Gareth and L. 195
Now two great entries o from the hall, „ 665
But yesterday you never o lip. Merlin and V. 271
0 his arms to embrace me as he came, Holy Grail 417
all the heavens 0 and blazed with thunder „ 508
the heavens o and blazed again Roaring, „ 516
Sat by the walls, and no one o to him. Pelleas and E. 217
0 on the pines with doors of glass. Lover's Tale i 41
door for scoundrel scum I o to the West, Columbus 171
it 0 and dropt at the side of each man, V. of Maddune 85
1 shook as I o the letter — The Wreck 145
A door was o in the house — The Flight 69
Muriel claim'd and o what I meant For Miriam, The Ring 242.
And bolted doors that 0 of themselves: „ 413
Opener nor the silent 0 of the Gate.' God and the Univ. &
Open-hearted ' An o-h maiden, true and pure. Princess Hi 98
Opening (adj. and part.) {See also Half-opening) o upon
level plots Of crowned Ulies, Ode to Memory 108-
in front The goi^es, o wide apart, CEnone 12
and o out his milk-white palm „ 65
The cloudy porch oft o on the Sun ? Love and Duty 9
struck it thnce, and, no one o, Enter'd ; Enoch Arden 279
o this I read Of old Sir Ralph a page or two Princess, Pro. 120
Not yet endured to meet her o eyes, „ iv 195
and she rose O her arms to meet me, Holy Grail 395
in a moment when they blazed again 0, „ 524
long water o on the deep Somewhere Pass, of Arthur 46S
in the end, 0 on darkness, Lover's Tale ii 125
an ever o height. An ever lessening earth — The Ring 45
Opening (s) About the o of the flower, Two Voices 161
we saw The clefts and o's in the mountains Lover's Tale i 330
Open-mouth'd AU o-m, all gazing to the light, Princess iv 483
So stood the unhappy mother o-m, „ vi 143
openness
512
Orgies
Openness Till taken with her seeming o
Open-work o-w in which the hunter rued
Operation Thy scope of o, day by day,
Ophir brought From Solomon's now-recover'd O
Opiate Then bring an o trebly strong,
fumes Of that dark o dose you gave me.
Has your o then Bred this black mood ?
Opinion banded unions persecute 0,
Oppian and storm'd At the 0 law.
Opposed 0 mirrors each reflecting each —
and o Free hearts, free foreheads —
fifty there 0 to fifty,
Opposite loathsome o Of all my heart
Opposition Yet not with brawling o she.
Thro' solid o crabb'd and gnarl'd.
we four may build some plan Foursquare to o.'
Oppress icy-hearted Muscovite O the region ? '
Oppression But they hated his o,
himt the tiger of o out From office ;
Opulence barbarous o jewel-thick Sunn'd itself
In a world of arrogant o,
Opulent Or beast or bird or fish, or o flower:
A less diffuse and o end,
0 Avarice, lean as Poverty ;
Oracle (See also State-oracle) Sleek Odalisques, or o's of
mode.
Apart the Chamian 0 divine
Orange (adj.) leave Yon o sunset waning slow :
some hid and sought In the o thickets :
Made cypress of her o flower.
And 0 grove of Paraguay,
Orange (s) past Into deep o o'er the sea,
A scarf of o round the stony helm,
Orange-bloom Soldier-brother's bridal o-b
Orange-blossom In lands of palm, of o-b,
Orange-flower (See also Orange (adj.)) When first she
wears her o-fl
Oration hung to hear The rapt o
Oration-like and rolling words O-l.
Orator Stood up and spake, an aSluent o.
Gloet of warrior, glory of o,
Charm us, 0, till the Lion look
Oratory in praise of her Grew o.
Who, with mild heat of holy o,
Orb (s) ambrosial o's Of rich fruit-bunches
So many minds did gird their o's with beams.
Should slowly round his o,
saw The hollow o of moving Circumstance
She raised her piercing o's,
Storm'd in o's of song.
And here he stays upon a freezing o
Than if the crowded 0 should cry
Thine are these o's of light and shade ;
From 0 to o, from veil to veil.'
This round of green, this o of flame,
her dark o Touch'd with earth's light —
Glance at the wheeling 0 of change,
Orb (verb) That the whole mind might o about —
o's Between the Northern and the Southern
mom.'
And o into the perfect star We saw not,
Orb'd (See also Full-orb'd) remain 0 in you
isolation :
Orbit this o of the memory folds For ever
The Sun will run his o,
Sway'd to her from their o's as they moved,
circuits of thine o round A higher height.
In azure o's heavenly-wise ;
from her household o draws the child
Orchard (adj.) Two lovers whispering by an o wall;
birds Begin to warble yonder in the budding o trees !
Orchard (s) on a slope of o, Francis laid A damask
napkin
a stream That flash'd across her o
1 whipt him for robbing an o once
Princess iv 300
203
Prog, of Spring 111
Columbus 112
In Mem. Ixxi 6
Romney's B. 31
61
You ask me, why, etc. 18
Princess vii 124
Sonnet To 11
Ulysses 48
Princess v 484
Guinevere 491
Enoch Arden 159
Princess Hi 126
V 231
Poland 11
The Captain 9
Akbar's Dream, 158
Maud I xiii 12
Despair 78
Lv/:retius 249
Tiresias 189
Fastness 20
Princess ii 77
Alexander 10
Move eastward 2
Princess ii 460
In Mem. Ixxxiv 15
To Ulysses 12
Mariana in the S. 26
Princess, Pro. 102
Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 11
The Daisy 3
In Mem. xl 4
„ Ixxocvii 32
Princess v 373
„ iv 291
Wages 1
Locksley H., Sixty 112
Gardener's D. 57
Geraint and E. 866
Isabel 36
The Poet 29
Elednore 91
Palace oj Art 255
D. of F. Women 171
Vision of Sin 25
Lucretius 139
Lit. Squabbles 15
In Mem., Pro. 5
„ XXX 28
„ xxxiv 5
De Prof., Two G. 9
To E. Fitzgerald 3
Two Voices 138
Princess v 422
In Mem. xxiv 15
Princess vi 169
Gardener's D. 74
Love and Duty 22
Princess vii 326
In Mem. Ixiii 11
„ Ixxxvii 38
To Prin. Beatrice 7
Circumstance 4
The Flight 61
Audley Court 20
Holy Grail 593
Rizpah 25
Orchard-lawns happy fair with o-l And bowery
hollows
happy, fair with o-l And bowery hollows
Orchis Bring o, bring the foxglove spire,
Ordain'd diamond jousts, WMch Arthur had o.
Ordeal faded love. Or o by kindness ;
Order (arrai^ement, etc.) fluted vase, and brazen
urn In o,
all things in o stored,
-'Tis hard to settle o once again.
old 0 changeth, yielding place to new.
That keeps us all in o more or less-—
sitthig well in o smite The sounding furrows ;
Eye, to which all o festers.
The poplars, in long o due,
What for o or degree ?
But till this cosmic o everywhere
Sweet o lived again with other laws :
Large elements in o brought.
Order (fraternity) I beheld From eye to eye thro' all
their O
And all this 0 of thy Table Round
ye know this 0 lives to crush All wrongers
Of that great 0 of the Table Round,
move To music with thine 0 and the King.
Then Balan added to their O lived
move In music with his 0, and the King.
to show His loathing of our 0 and the Queen.
hearts of all this 0 in mine hand —
marshall'd 0 of their Table Round,
A sign to maim this 0 which I made.
Rejoicing in that 0 which he made.'
And a lean 0 — scarce retum'd a tithe —
collar of some 0, which our King Hath newly
founded,
Claspt it, and cried ' Thine 0, O my Queen ! '
In that fair 0 of my Table Roimd,
old 0 changeth, yielding place to new.
This o of Her Human Star,
Order (command) King gave o to let blow His
horns
Give ye the slave mine o to be bound,
Order (verb) She will o all things duly,
Order'd (See also Careless-order'd, Horider'd) And o
words asunder fly.
Parks and o gardens great.
As all were o, ages since.
having o all Almost as neat and close
Days o in a wealthy peace,
Ordering you, that have the o of her fleet.
Ordinance ' God's o Of Death is blown in every
wind ; '
Or pass beyond the goal of o
voice Of Ida sounded, issuing o :
and everywhere At Arthur's o,
Ore a rich Throne of the massive o,
Jewel or shell, or starry o.
Or labour'd mine undrainable of o.
to lift the hidden o That glimpses,
and show That life is not as idle o.
Oread whatever 0 haimt The knolls of Ida,
here an 0, how the stm delights To glance
And I see ray 0 coming down.
Organ With this old soul in o's new ?
Hearing the holy o rolling waves Of sound
While the great o almost bui-st his pipes.
The storm their high-built o's make,
psalm by a mighty master and peal'd from an o,-
roll
Organ-harmony A rolling o-h Swells up.
Organism Makes noble thro' the sensuous o
Organ-pipes Near gilded o-p, her hair
Organ-voice God-gifted o-v of England,
M. d' Arthur 262
Pass, of Arthur ^^
In Mem. Ixxxiii 9
Lancelot and E. 32
Aylmer's Field 561
Arabian Nights 61
Palace of Art 87
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 82
M. d' Arthur 240
Walk. U the Mail 23
Ulysses 58
Locksley Hall 133
Amphion 37
Vision of Sin 86
Lucretius 250
Princess vii 19
In Mem. cxii 13
Com. of Arthur 270
474
Gareth and L. 625
Marr. of Geraint 3
Balin arid Balan 77
91
212
551
Merlin and V. 56
Lancelot and E. 1332
Holy Grail 297
327
894
Last Tournament 741
750
Guinevere 463
Pass, of Arthur 408
Freedom 28
Marr. of Geraint 152
PeUeas and E. 270
L. of Burleigh 39
Day-Dm., Pro. 20
L. of Burleigh 30
Day Dm., Sleep. P. 54
Enoch Arden 177
In Mem. xlvi 11
The Fleet 16
Orgies Shall hold their o at your tomb.
The mulberry-faced Dictator's o
To J. S. 45
Tithonus 30
Princess vi 373
Gareth and L. 308
Arabian Nights 146
Elednore 20
CEnone 115
D. of F. Women 274
In Mem. exviii 20
CEnone 74
Lucretius 188
Maud I xvi 8
Two Voices 393
D. of F. Women 191
Princess ii 474
In Mem. Ixxxvii 6
The Wreck 53
Sir Galahad 75
Princess ii 81
Palace of Art 9&
Milton 3
You might have won 12
Lucretiiis 64
Oriana
513
Outbuzz'd
Oriana My heart is wasted with
my woe, 0. (repeat) Oriana 2, 4, 7, 9, 11, 13, 16, 18, 20, 22, 25,
27, 29, 31, 34, 36, 38, 40, 43, 45, 47,
49, 52, 54, 56, 58, 61, 63, 65, 67, 70,
72, 74, 76, 79, 81, 83, 85, 88, 90, 92,
94, 97, 99
Oriel She sat betwixt the shining O's, Palace of Art 159
thro' the topmost O's' coloured flame „ 161
The beams, that thro' the 0 shine, Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 34
All in an o on the summer side, Lancelot and E. 1177
moon Thro' the tall o on the rolling sea. Holy Grail 831
Oriel-embowering Brake from the vast o-e vine Lancelot and E. 1198
Orient (adj.) (See also Re-orient) Tall o shrubs, and
obelisks Arabian Nights 107
but robed in soften'd light Of o state. Ode to Memory 11
and earliest shoots Of o green, „ 18
Sunn'd by those o skies ; The Poet 42
Laborious o ivory sphere in sphere. Princess, Pro. 20
To where in yonder o star In Mem. Ixxxvi 15
Orient (s) Doth the low-tongued 0 Wander fi-om the side
of the mom, Adeline 51
Deep in yonder shining 0, Locksley Hall 154
Came furrowing all the o into gold. Princess Hi 18
and her throne In our vast O, To the Queen ii 31
There is a custom in the 0, friends — Lover's Tale iv 230
Oriental Till silent in her o haven. Enoch Arden 537
flattering thy childish thought The o faii-y brought, Elednare 14
shower'd His o gifts on everyone And most on
Edith : Aylmer's Field 214
Your O Eden-isles, To Ulysses 38
Orion great 0 sloping slowly to the West. Lodcsley Hall 8
shining daffodil dead, and 0 low in his grave. Maud I Hi 14
Over O's grave low down in t.he west, „ /// vi 8
Orkney Morganore, And Lot of O. Com. of Arthur 116
Lot's wife, the Queen of O, (repeat) „ 190, 245
Ornament Found lying with bis urns and o's, Aylmer's Field 4
And darkling felt the sculptured o Merlin and V. 734
In hanging robe or vacant o, Guinevere 506
read Some wonder at our chamber o's. Columbus 2
Institute, Rich in symbol, in o. On Jub. Q. Victoria 47
Orphan (adj.) His wife, an unknown artist's o
child— Sea Dreams 2
Made o by a winter shipwreck, Enoch Arden 15
there the tender o hands Felt at my heart. Princess v 435
' None wrought, but suffer'd much, an o maid ! Merlin and V. 71
When her o wail came borne in the shriek The Wreck 87
Orphan (s) Late-left an o of the squire, Miller's D. 34
And for this o, I am come to you : Dora 64
I was left a trampled o, Locksley Hall 156
kill yourself And make them o's quite ? ' Enoch Arden 395
Here is the cot of our o, In the Child. Hosp. 28
O we poor o's of nothing — Despair 33
an o with half a shire of estate, — Charity 13
Orphan-boy Oh ! teach the o-b to read, L. C. V. de Vere 69
Orphan'd So were we bom, so o. Lover's Tale i 218
Orphan-girl Or teach the o-g to sew, L. C. V. de Vere 70
O'Roon (Danny) See Danny, Danny O'Roon
Orthodox Our o coroner doubtless will find it a
felo-de-se. Despair 115
Heresy to the heretic, and religion to the o, Akbar's D., Inscrip. 8
Orthodoxy Thy elect have uo dealings with either
heresy or o ; „ 7
O'Shea (SIuuuus) See Shamus, Shamus O'Shea
Osier ocean-spoil In ocean-smelling o, Enoch Arden 94
Ostler ' Wrinkled o, grim and thin ! Vision of Sin 63
Ostleress A plump-arm'd 0 and a stable wench Princess i 226
'Ot (hot) ' Summat to drink — sa' 'o ? ' North. Cobbler 5
Other (See also Tothet) And little o care hath she, L. of Shalottii 8
There is no o thing express'd Two Voices 248
' Who forged that o influence, „ 283
He hath no o life above. D. of the 0. Fear 12
Among new men, strange faces, o minds.' M. d'Arthur 238
and with what o eyes I used to watch — Tithonus 51
' Some 0 race of AveriUs ' — prov'n or no, A ylmer's Field 54
became in o fields A mockery to the yeomen „ 496
Other (continued) o frowas than those That knit
themselves
last, my o heart. And ahnost my half-self,
And thus (what o way was left) I came.'
Sweet order lived again with o laws :
On the 0 side Hortensia spoke against the tax
Follow'd by the brave of o lands.
One writes, that ' O friends remain,'
But there are o griefs within,
Nor 0 thought her mind admits
She enters o realms of love ;
With larger o eyes than ours,
the while His o passion wholly dies.
To the o shore, involved in thee,
O sacred essence, o form.
For 0 friends that once I met ;
Behold their brides in o hands ;
Nor landmark breathes of o days.
And silent under o snows :
But I was bom to o things.
. Had one fair daughter, and none o child ;
Lets down his o leg, and stretching,
Three o horsemen waiting, wholly arm'd.
It seems another voice in o groves ;
And when we halted at that o well.
Why will ye never ask some o boon ?
That 0 fame. To one at least.
Moaning and calling out of o lands.
She might have made this and that o world
A mocking fire : ' what o fire than he,
' Or hast thoU o griefs ?
Among new men, strange faces, o minds.'
And, like all o friends i' the world,
fall asleep Into delicious dreams, our o life.
On the 0 side Is scoop'd a cavern
And saw the motion of all o things ;
had never seen it once. His o father you !
For he thought — there were a lads —
Fresh from the surgeiy-schools of France and
of 0 lands —
For every o cause is less than mine.
And his voice was low as from o worlds.
Was he nobUer-f ashion'd than o men ?
And there the light of o life, which lives
0 songs for o worlds !
Ottoman Emperor, 0, which shall win :
Ought Sweet is it to have done the thing one o,
1 cannot love thee as I o,
Ould (old) yer Honour's the thrue o blood
Thin Molly's o mother, yer Honour,
best he could give at o Donovan's wake-.—
Thim 0 blind nagers in Agjrpt, „ 69
Danny O'Roon wid his o woman, Molly Magee. „ 88
'Onse (house) theer's a craw to pluck wi' tha, Sam :
yon's parson's 'o — N. Farmer, N. S, 5
Tis'n them as 'as munny as breaks into 'o's an'
steals, „ 45
swear'd as I'd break ivry stick O' furnitur 'ere i'
the 'o, NoHh. Cobbler 36
an' the 'ole 'o hupside down. „ 42
' When theer's naw 'ead to a '0 Village Wife 17
or the gells 'all goa to the '0, „ 64
'e wur bum an' bred i' the 'o. Spinster's S's. 69
An' the stink o' 'is pipe i' the 'o, „ 100
a roabin' the 'o like a Queean, „ 106
Straange an' owd-farran'd the 'o, Owd Rod 21
An' theere i' the 'o one night — „ 27
Theere, when the 'o wur a house, „ 29
an' dussn't not sleeap i' the 'o, „ 37
'Ouse-keeper (housekeeper) '0-k sent tha my lass. Village Wife 1
Oust 0 the madness from your brain. Locksley H., Sixty 241
Ousted From mine own earldom foully o me ; Marr. of Geraint 459
Outbreak nor, in hours Of civil o, Tiresias 68
Outbum'd lit Lamps which o Canopus. D. of F. Women 146
Outbuzz'd o me so That even om- prudent king, Columbus 121
2k
Aylmer's Field 723
Princess i 55
„ ii 217
„ vii 19
126
Odi' on Well. 194
In Mem. vi 1
„ XX 11
„ xxxii 2
xl 12
Ii 15
„ Ixii 10
„ Ixxxiv 40
„ Ixxxv 35
58
„ xa 14
„ civ 11
cv&
„ cxx 12
Com. of Arthur 2
Gareth and L. 1186
Geraint and E. 121
Balin and Balan 215
Merlin and V. 280
375
505
962
Lancelot and E. 873
Holy Grail 670
Pelleas and E. 599
Pass, of A rthur 406
Lover's Tale i 108
162
516
574
iv 174
First Quarrel 38
In the Child. Hosp. 3
Sir J. Oldcastle 188
V. of Maeldwne 117
Dead Prophet 51
The Rmg 295
Parnassus 19
To F. D. Maurice 32
Princess v 67
In Mem. Hi 1
Tomorrow 5
19
42
Outcry
514
Overthrew
Outcry still she made her o for the ring ;
Oatdacious (audacious) 'e were that o at 'oiim,
Out-door eyes, An o-d sign of all
Outer With motions of the o sea :
All the inner, all the o world of pain
on her threshold lie Howling in o
darkness. To
Where, three times slipping from the o edge,
And I from out the boundless o deep
And one would pierce an o ring,
hold them o fiends, Who leap at thee to tear
thee;
Made duU his inner, keen his o eye
feet Thro' the long gallery from the o doors
chsifed breakers of the o sea Sank powerless.
For when the o lights are darken'd thus,
And mellow'd echoes of the o world —
From the o day. Betwixt the close-set ivies
Outfloweth the gUmmering water o :
Outland Sir Valence wedded with an o dame :
Outlast lays that will o thy Deity ?
Outleam to o the filthy friar.
Outlet clear-stemm'd platans guard The o.
Outline The lucid o forming round thee ;
Is given in o and no more.
Outlive and the foe may o us at last —
Outliving For life o heats of youth,
Outpour 'd o Their myriad horns of plenty
Outraged An o maiden sprang into the hall
Outrageous And pelted with o epithets,
Outram (Sir James) O and Havelock breaking their
way
Outran o The hearer in its fiery coiu"se ;
Outredden o All voluptuous garden-roses.
Outside j'ou leave 'em o on the bed —
Outstript He still o me in the race ;
Out-tore another wild earthquake o-t
Outward (adj.) Scarce o signs of joy arise.
Know I not Death ? the o signs ?
Became an o breathing type,
Perplext his o purpose, till an hour.
My o circling air wherewith I breathe,
even into my inmost heart As to my o hearing :
More to the inward than the o ear,
that only doats On o beauty.
Outward (adv.) a knight would pass 0, or inward to
the hall :
Outward (s) from the o to the inward brought,
Outwelleth The slumbrous wave o.
Outworks Thro' all the o of suspicious pride ;
Outworn Of forms o, but not to me o,
till this 0 earth be dead as yon dead world the
moon?
Ouzel The mellow o flut«d in the elm ;
Oval the nobler hearts In that vast 0
Ovation To rain an April of o
Over-acting her brain broke With o-a,
Overawe Built that new fort to o my friends.
Overawed 0 fall'n nobility, that, o,
Am I to be o By what I cannot but know
Overbalancing strike him, o his bulk.
Overbear o's the bark. And him that helms it,
Overblame of overpraise and o We choose the last.
Overblown 0 with murmurs harsh,
Overboard o one stormy night He cast his body,
Over-bold island princes o-h Have eat our substance,
And again seem'd o ;
' Old, and o-b in brag !
Overbore contrasting brightness, o Her fancy
charm Of nature in her o their own :
they 0 Sir Lancelot and his charger.
Overborne o by all his bearded lords
Vivien, deeming Merlin o By instance,
and hath o Five knights at once.
Tin 0 by one, he learns — and ye,
The Ring 403
Village Wife 75
Holy Grail 704
Eleanor e 113
If I were loved 5
-, With Pal. ofAHlQ
The Epic 11
Sea Dreams 88
In Mem. Ixxxvii 27
Balin and Balan 141
Last Tournament 366
Guinevere 413
Lover's Tale i 8
35
208
„ a 171
Leonine Eleg. 9
Merlin and V. 714
Lucretius 72
Sir J. Oldcastle 118
Arabian Nights 24
Tithonus 53
In Mem. v 12
Def. of Lucknow 52
In Mem. liii 10
Ode Inter. Exhih. 5
Holy Grail 208
Ayhner's Field 286
Def. of Lucknow 96
In Mem. cix 7
Ode on Well. 207
In the Child. Hosf. 56
In Mem. xlii 2
Def. of Lucknow 61
Supp. Confessions 49
Two Voices 270
Miller's D. 226
Gareth and L. 175
Lover s Tale i 167
429
721
The Ring 164
Gareth and L. 311
Elednore 4
Claribel 18
Isabel 24
Lover's Tale i 797
Locksley H., Sixty 174
Gardener's D. 94
St. Telemachus 73
Princess vi 66
Sisters (E. and E.) 236
Marr. of Geraint 460
Third of Feb. 35
Maud II ii 40
Last Tournament 460
Lancelot and E. 485
Merlin and V. 90
Ode to Memory 99
The Voyage 79
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 75
Maud I xiv 24
Gareth and L. 1107
Marr. of Geraint 801
Merlin and V. 596
Lancelot and E. 486
Princess v 356
.]/erlin and V. 800
Holy Grail 302
305
Overbower'd gliding thro' the branches o The naked Three, Death of (Enone 6
Over-bright Eyes not down-dropt nor o-h, Isabel 1
Overbrow'd high-arching o the hearth. Gareth and L. 408
Overcame Did more, and imderwent, and o, Godiva 10
in twelve great battles o The heathen hordes. Com. of Arthur 518
and then Me too the black- wing'd Azrael o, Akbar's Dream 186
Overcome Bred will in me to o it or fall. Princess v 351
who wUl come to all I am And o it ; Lancelot and E. 449
but you, you wiU help me to o it, Parnassus 5
Overdo almost o the deeds Of Lancelot ; Lancelot and E. 469
Overdone Heart-weary and o ! The Dreamer 18
Overdrest See A-Dallackt.
Overfine ' ye are o To mar stout knaves Gareth and L. 732
Overfineness From o-f not inteUigible Merlin and V. 796
Overflow (S) Rain'd thro' my sight its o. Two Voices 45
Overflow (verb) all the markets o. Locksley Hall 101
Hears and not hears, and lets it o. Enoch Arden 209
Somewhile the one must o the other ; Lover's Tale i 501
Overflow'd dissolving sand To watch them n, Enoch Arden 20
Overflowing the lovely freight Of o blooms, Ode to Memory 17
o revenue Wherewith to embellish state, CEnone 112
Over-full and o-f Of sweetness. Lover's Tale i 271
Overgrowing brambles mixt And o them, Pelleas and E. 423
Overhead Or when the moon was o, L. of Shallott ii 33
Those banners of twelve battles o Balin and Balan 88
arrow whizz'd to the right, one to the left. One o ; „ 420
moon Struck from an open grating o Lover's Tale iv 60
watching o The aerial poplar wave. Sisters (E. and E.) 83
beheld A blood-red awning waver o, St. Telemachus 52
Overheated Cat thro' that mirage of o language Locksley H., Sixty 113
Over-jealous has he not forgiven me yet, his o-j bride, Happy 6
Over-labour'd Some o-l, some by their o\\n hands.
Overlaid o With narrow moon-lit slips
Overlive 0 it — lower yet — be happy!
Overlived For man has o his day And,
Overlook 0 a space of flowers.
And 0 the chace ;
And 0 the lea,
in the distance o's the sandy tracts,
Over-mellow full-juiced apple, waxing o-m.
Overmuch Nor asking o and taking less,
I count it crime To mourn for any o ;
Overnight Laid on her table o, was gone ;
Overpay ' My Lord, you o me fifty-fold.'
Overpower'd o quite, I cannot veil, or droop
and had yielded her will To the master, as o,
Overpraise of o and overblame We choose the last
Our noble Arthur, him Ye scarce can o.
Overprize King So prizes — o's — gentleness.
Overquick o To crop his own sweet rose
' 0 art thou To catch a loathly plume fall'n
Overrode boy Paused not, but o him.
Over-roll o-r Him and his gold ;
Overseas sick of home went o for change.
late From o in Brittany return'd.
But then what foUy had sent him o
And fly to my strong castle o :
Overset But thou, while kingdoms o,
Overshadow'd All o by the foolish dream.
Over-smoothness some self-conceit. Or o-s :
Overstep by that larger Ught, And o them,
Overstrain'd or a mood Of o affection,
may merit well Your term of o.
Overstream'd And o and silvery-streak 'd
Overtake o's Far thought with music
Overtaken she stay'd, and o spoke.
Flying, but, o, died the death Themselves
Overtaik'd MerUn, o and overworn. Had yielded,
Overtax'd And loathed to see them o ;
Overthrew down we swept and charged and o.
Gareth o him, lighted, drew. There met him drawn
and 0 him again.
And 0 the next that follow'd him,
King, duke, earl, Count, baron — whom he smote,
heo.
Columbus 178
(Enone 217
Locksley Hall 97
Ancient Sage 150
L. of Shalott i 16
Talking Oak 94
198
Locksley Hall 5
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 33
Enoch Arden 252
In Mem. Ixxxv 62
The Ring 277
Geraint and E. 220
Elednore 86
Dead Prophet 64
Merlin and V. 90
92
Balin and Balan 184
Merlin and V. 724
726
Pelleas and E. 545
Columbus 139
Walk, to the Mail 24
Last Tournament Yl^
394
Guinevere 113
Talking Oak 257
Marr. of Geraint 675
Edwin Morris 75
Akbar's Dream 100
Alerlin and V. ."^22
535
The Islet 20
Two Voices 437
Gareth and L. 764
Geraint and E. 177
Merlin and V. 965
Godiva
Ode on Well.
Gareth and L. Ill
Geraint and E. 465
Lancelot and E. 4fi5
P
Overthrew
515
Own
Overthrew {continued) o So many knights that all the
people cried,
Pelleas o them as they dash'd Against him
down they went, And Pelleas o them
by those he o Be bounden straight,
Pelleas o them, one to three ;
Overthrow (s) quick ! by o Of these or those,
Overthrow (verb) Lancelot whom he trusts to o,
hard by here is one will o And slay thee :
I know That I shall o him.'
0 My proud self, and my purpose three years old,
\\'hether me likewise ye can o.'
Overthrower And o from being overthrown.
Overthrowing (part.) challenging And o every knight
Overthrowing (s) With o's, and with cries,
By o me you threw me higher.
Overtkurown And Uke a warrior o ;
And 0 was Gorloi's and slain.
Thou hast o and slain thy master —
Or some device, hast foully o).
Hath 0 thy brother, and hath his arms.'
Hast 0 thro' mere unhappiness),
' Shamed and o, And tumbled back
To call him shamed, who is but o ?
And overthrower from being o.
And makest merry when o.
1 have never yet been o, And thou hast o me.
Or I or he have easily o.'
strong hand, which had o Her minion-knights,
' And thou hast o him ? ' ' Ay, my Queen.'
In twelve great battles ruining o.
Overtoil'd o By that day's grief and travel,
Overtopt The battlement o with ivytods,
Over-tragic Deem this o-t drama's closing curtain is
the pall !
Overtrailed Half o with a wanton weed,
Overtrue ' O ay,' said Vivien, ' o a tale.
Overtrust wink no more in slothful o.
Overtam Behold me o and trample on him.
Overtum'd (See also Skelpt) schemed and wrought
Until I 0 him ;
Over-vaulted That o-v grateful gloom,
Overwhelm'd shook And almost o her,
Over-wise has written : she never was o-w, (repeat)
Overworn But all he was is o.'
Merlin, overtalk'd and o, Had yielded.
Overwrought that his brain is o :
being so o, Suddenly strike on a sharper sense
Owa (owe) Fur I o's owd Roaver moor
Owad (owed) nor I iver o mottal man.
Owd (old) A mowt 'a taaen o Joanes,
Doctor's a 'toattler, lass, an a's hallus i' the o
taale;
I could fettle and clump o booots
wheer Sally's o stockin' wur 'id,
an' draggle taail'd in an o turn gown,
I liked the o Squire an' 'is geUs
new Squire's coom'd wi' 'is taail in 'is 'and, an' o
Squire's gone, (repeat)
'e'd gie fur a howry o book thutty pound an' moor,
An' 'e'd wrote an o book, his awn sen,
fur an o scratted stoan.
An' 'e bowt o money, es wouldn't goii.
But 0 Squire's laady es long es she lived
moast on 'is o big booiiks feteh'd nigh to nowt at the saale
Siver the mou'ds rattled down upo' poor o Squire i'
the wood,
I didn't not taake it kindly ov o Miss Armie
I means fur to maake 'is o aage as 'appy as iver I can,
I owas 0 Roaver moor nor I iver owad mottal man.
afoor thou was gotten too o,
an' I thowt o' the good o times 'at was goan,
an' clemm'd o Roa by the 'ead,
Sa I sticks like the ivin as long as I Uves to the o
chuch now, Church-warden, etc. 15
Holi/ Grail 334
Pelleas and E. 221
230
235
287
Frincess v 316
Gareth and L. 620
896
949
Geraint and E. 848
Balin and Balan 40
Gareth and L. 1263
Balin and Balan 13
In Mem. cxiii 19
Geraint and E. 792
Two Voices 150
Com. of Arthur 197
Gareth and L. 769
998
1037
1059
1227
1260
1263
1270
Marr. of Geraint 588
Balin and Balan 36
Pelleas and E. 234
594
Guinevere 432
Geraint and E. 376
Balin and Balan 335
Locksley H., Sixty 62
Lover's Tale i 525
Merlin and- V. 720
Ode on Well. 170
Geraint and E. 843
830
Palace of Art 54
Enoch Arden 530
Grandmother 3, 105
In Mem. i 16
Merlin and V. 965
Locksley Hall 53
Maud II a 62
Owd Rod 4
4
N. Farmer, 0. S. 49
North. Cobbler 13
31
41
VUlage Wife 6
14, 121
45
46
47
49
53
73
95
109
Ou;d Rod 3
4
5
„ 43
„ 99
'Owd (hold) Fur 1 couldu"t 'o 'auds off gin. North. Cobbler 84
pockets as fuU o' my pippins as iver they'd 'o. Church-warden, etc. 34
Owd-farran'd (old-fashioned) Straange an' o-f the 'ouse, Owd Rod 21
Owe {See also Owa) we o you bitter thanks : Princess iv 531
I feel J shall o you a debt, Maud I xix 87
forget That I o this debt to you „ 90
0 you me nothing for a life half -lost ? Geraint and E. 318
ask your boon, for boon I o you thrice. Merlin and V. 306
To you and yours, and still would o. To Marq. of Dufferin 20
Let me o my life to thee. Death of (Enone 42
Owed {See also Owad) Whole in ourselves and o to none. Princess iv 148
how dear a debt We o you, and are owng
yet To Marq. of Dufferin 19
Owing and are o yet To you and yours, „ 19
Owl {See also Eagle-owl, Glinuner-gowk, Howl) The
white 0 in the belfry sits, (repeat) The Owl i 7, 14
1 drown'd the whoopings of the o St. S. Stylites 33
bats wheel'd, and o's whoop'd, Frincess, Con. 110
An 0 whoopt : ' Hark the victor pealing there ! ' Gareth and L. 1318
A home of bats, in every tower an o. Balin and Balan 336
the o's WaiUng had power upon her, Lancelot and E. ICKX)
thrice as blind as any noonday o. Holy Grail 866
and the o's are whooping at noon, Despair 89
0 the night, When the o's are waiUng ! Forlorn 30
Owlby He'll niver swap 0 an' Scratby Church-warden, etc. 44
Owlet shrilly the o halloos ; Leonine Eleg. 6
Owl-whoop o-w and dorhawk- whirr Awoke me not. Lover's Tale ii 116
Own (adj.) {See also Oan) to brush the dew From
thine o lily, Supp. Confessions 85
till his 0 blood flows About his hoof. „ 155
1 see his gray eyes twinkle yet At his o jest — Miller's D. 12
My o sweet Alice, we must die. „ 18
You'll kiss me, my o mother, and forgive me
ere I go ; May Queen, N. Y's. E. 34
Once thro' mine o doors Death did pass ; To J. S. 19
And tho' mine o eyes fill with dew, „ 37
She loveth her o anguish deep „ 42
So spake he, clouded with his o conceit, M. d' Arthur 110
His 0 thought drove him, like a goad. „ 185
It may be, for her o dear sake but this, Edwin Morris 141
But in these latter springs I saw Your o Olivia blow. Talking Oak 76
This is my son, mine o Telemachus, Ulysses 33
Upon my proper patch of soil To grow my o plantation. Amphion 1(X)
He loves me for my o true worth, Lady Clare 11
I buried her like my o sweet child, „ 27
He not for his o self caring but her, Enoch Arden 165
while Annie seem'd to hear Her o death-scaffold rising, „ 175
' Take your o time, Annie, take your o time.' ,, 466
Her o son Was silent, tho' he often look'd his wish ; ,, 481
And his o children tall and beautiful, „ 762
And following our o shadows thrice as long The Brook 166
bearing hardly more Than his o shadow in a sickly
sun. Aylmer's Field 30
Somewhere beneath his o low range of roofs, „ 47
Him, glaring, by his o stale devil sjjurr'd, „ 290
under his o Hntel stood Storming with lifted hands, „ 331
would go. Labour for his o Edith, and return „ 420
Burst his o wyvem on the seal, and read „ 516
went Hating his o lean heart and miserable „ 526
Now chafing at his o great self defied, „ 537
left Their o gray tower, or plain-faced tabernacle, „ 618
And worshipt their o darkness in the Highest ? „ 643
Crown thyself, worm, and worship thine o lusts ! — „ 650
darkening thine own To thine o likeness ; „ 674
Is not our o child on the narrow way, „ 743
earth Lightens from her o central Hell — „ 761
Who, thro' their o desire accompUsh'd, bring Their o
gray hairs with sorrow to the grave — „ 776
but sat Ignorant, devising their o daughter's death ! „ 783
and made Their o traditions God, and slew the Lord, „ 795
Then her o people bore along the nave Her pendent
hands, „ 812
Fought with what seem'd my o uncharity ; Sea Dreams 73
Nor ever cared to better his o kind, „ 201
His 0 forefathers' arms and annour hung. Princess, Pro. 24
{
Own
616
Own
Ovm(aAj.) {continued) a lady, one that arm'd Her o fair ^^^^^^^ p^^ 33 °^
' We scarcely thought in our 0 hall to hear .. ** ^^
what follows ? war ; Your 0 work marr'd : "... ^^
true she errs, But in her o grand way : " *" ^
That we might see our 0 work out, " '
' Know you no song of your 0 land,' she said, .. *^ °*
What time I watch'd the swallow winging south From ^
mine 0 land, " o(^c
And partly conscious of my o deserts, .- ^"a
You stood in your o Ught and darken'd mine. „ |^^
Om- o detention, why, the causes weigh'd, .. '" '^^'^
Or by denial flush her babbling wells With her 0 people s ^^^
And Knowledge m our 0 land make her free, ,. ^19
he That loved me closer than his 0 right eye, „ p^a
With their 0 blows they hurt themselves, .. ^^^
all dabbled with the blood Of his o son, » ^^
0 let me have him with my brethren here In our o ^^^
palace: " 177
never in your 0 arms To hold your own, .. ^' '
1 go to mine 0 land For ever : " „,.
Now had you got a friend of your o age, .- ^^^
to wait upon him, Like mine 0 brother. .. .f ^^
And in their 0 clear element, they moved. .. ^^ ^°
She needs must wed him for her 0 good name ; „ <*
' Dear, but let us type them now In our 0 lives, „ ^
I seem A mockery to my 0 self . ^f"^„ jj.-r d.
Has given our Pnnce his 0 imperial Flower, H . to Mane Alex.^
Yet thine 0 land has bow'd to Tartar hordes „ '^^
And he died, and I could not wee^^my 0 time g^„,^amother 72
seem d so near. . • ,•, 78
Patter she goes, my o little Annie, an Annie hke you : „ . '°
My 0 dim We should teach me this, ^ . In Mem. xxxiv I
When thou should'st hnk thy life with one Of mine ^^^^^ ^^
o house, , , , " rnrii 3
His 0 vast shadow glory-crown d ; " ^VT' ^
But mine o phantom chanting hymns ? , ^^ ^ „ 'W^,,!^ !■ 24
heart of the citizen hissing in war on his 0 hearthstone ? Maud Ii M
But arose, and all by myself in my 0 dark garden ground, „ tw i"
finer politic sense To mask, tho' but m his 0 behoof, „ vt |o
How prettily for his 0 sweet sake ^ u n * f „i " fi2
For often a man's 0 angry pride Is cap and bells for a fool. „ o|
And my 0 sad name in comers cried, " '
Down too, down at your 0 fireside, " . „
Maud's 0 Uttle oak-room " , g
looks Upon Maud's 0 garden-gate : " g^
Running down to my o dark wood ; " ••• 74
My 0 heart's heart, my ownest own, farewell ; .. a^»» ^^
For I know her 0 rose-garden, " ^g
Come out to your o true lover, "49
and render All homage to his 0 darhng, " .g
My 0 dove with the tender eye ? ' « 33
praying To his o great self, as I guess ; '^i^i.^.^ or
^erVbrood lost or dead, lent her fierce teat Co«i. 0/ Arthur 28
nor make myself in mine 0 realm Victor and lord. „ o^
for each But sought to rule for his 0 self and hand, „ ^i»
Bound them by so strait vows to his 0 self.
But thou art closer to this noble prince. Being his 0
J • 1. J »i Ol'J
AlbeH iTmk^e 0 heart I knew him King Oareth and L. 123
Her 0 true Gareth was too pnncely-proud "
swearing he had glamour enow In his 0 blood, ,.
' Old Master, reverence thine 0 beard That looks as white „ ^
With thine 0 hand thou slewest my dear lord, .. ^^
see thou to it That thine 0 fineness, Lancelot, .. *' "
holds her stay'd In her 0 castle, ■■ . , , 1
often with her 0 white hands Array'd and deck d /3^,-„/ 1 «
her, as the loveUest, Next after her 0 self, Marr. of Oeramt ^
and they past to their 0 land ; "85
Low of her 0 heart piteously she said : " „, .
Frown and we smile, the lords of our 0 hands ; » ^
then have I sworn From his 0 Ups to have it — .. ^
Queen Sent her 0 maiden to demand the name, .. ^^1
Kaised my o town against me in the night « '*°'
(adj.) (continued) From mine 0 earldom toully
ousted me ; , , , „ \
(Who hearing her 0 name had stoi n away)
but lay Contemplating her 0 unworthiness ;
And softly to her 0 sweet heart she said :
made comparison Of that and these to her 0 faded self
So sadly lost on that unhappy night ; Your 0 good gift !
Or whether some false sense in her 0 self
child shaU wear your costly gift Beside your 0 warm
hearth, . , . ^i 1 .
to her 0 bright face Accuse her of the least ^ p nn
immodesty: ^ ,. ^ ,^ . Geratnt and E. l^
That she could speak whom his 0 ear had heard .. ^^^
I call mine 0 self wild. But keep a touch of sweet civihtj
At this the tender sound of his 0 voice
And their 0 Earl, and their 0 souls, and her.
And found his 0 dear bride propping his head.
And said to bis 0 heart, ' She weeps for me : '
And say to his 0 heart, ' She weeps for me.'
Not tho' mine 0 ears heard you yestermorn—
in the King's 0 ear Speak what has chanced ;
with your 0 true eyes Beheld the man you loved
ve pray'd me for my leave To move to your 0 land,
came The King's 0 leech to look into his hurt ;
and they past to their o land.
ask'd To bear her 0 crown-royal upon shield,
Our noble King will send thee his 0 leech —
Who sitting in thine 0 hall, canst endure
Had wander'd from her 0 King's golden head.
Pure as our 0 true Mother is our Queen.'
, Be thine the bahn of pity, 0 Heaven's 0 white Earth ^^ ^ ^
angel, ..,.,, isv;
at times Would flatter his o wish m age for love, „ 100
In mine 0 lady palms I cuU'd the spring " ^no
brought Her 0 claw back, and wounded her 0 heart. .. ^^
Marr. of Geraint 459
507
533
618
652
690
800
820
311
348
577
584
587
590
740
808
846
923
955
Balin and Balan 200
274
378
513
617
His kinsman travelling on his 0 affair
To crop his o sweet rose before the hour ?
Then Merlin to his 0 heart, loathing, said :
Who wouldst against thine 0 eye-witness fain
Seethed Hke the kid in its o mother's milk !
What should be granted which your 0 gross heart
All the devices blazon'd on the shield In their 0
tinct, „ , X • -J
clave Like its o mists to all the mountain side :
When its 0 voice cUngs to each blade of grass,
I Before a King who honours his o word.
For if his o knight cast him down, he laughs
Low to her o heart said the lily maid.
So kiss'd her, and Sir Lancelot his 0 hand,
Dearer to true young hearts than their 0 praise,
and a spear Prick'd sharply his o cuirass,
his 0 kin— 111 news, my Queen,
it will be sweet to have it From your o hand ;
And with mine 0 hand give his diamond to hiin,
His 0 far blood, M'hich dwelt at Camelot ;
she should ask some goodly gift of him For her 0 self
or hers ; • , j
and Prince and Lord am I In mine 0 land,
and such a tongue To blare its o interpretation-
Most common : yea, I know it of mine 0 self : And you
yourself will smile at your 0 self Hereafter,
only the case. Her o poor work, her empty labour, left.
There surely I shall speak for mine 0 self,
these, as I trust That you trust me in your 0 nobleness,
In mine 0 reabn beyond the narrow seas.
Mine 0 name shames me, seeming a reproach.
Yet one of your 0 knights, a guest of ours.
And once by mfeadvertence MerUn sat In his 0 chair,
dyed The strong White Horse in his o heathen blood —
But wail'd and wept, and hated mine 0 self,
but 0 the pity To find thine 0 first love once more—
Where saving his 0 sisters he had known
* For pity of thine 0 self. Peace, Lady, peace :
And heard but his 0 steps, and his 0 heart Beating, for
nothing moved but his 0 self, And his 0 shadow.
717
;; 725
790
793
869
916
Lancelot and E. 10
38
107
1^
313
319
389
419
489
597
694
760
913
917
943
950
991
1125
1195
1323
1403
Holy Grail 40
176
312
609
620
Pelleas and E. 87
25o
416
J
Own
517
Paay
Own (adj.) (continued) towers that, larger than them-
selves In their o dai'kness, Pdlms and E. 458
And whatsoever his o knights have sworn Last TourtMment 79
Nor heard the King for their o cries, „ 472
Catlike thro' his o castle steals my Mark, „ 516
ptarmigan that whitens ere his hour Woos his o end ; .. 698
and cast thee back Thine o small saw, „ 712
' 0 Lancelot, get thee hence to thine o land, Guinevere 88
the King's grief For his o self, and his o Queen, „ 197
Then to her o sad heart mutter'd the Queen, „ 213
Shame on her o garrulity garrulously, „ 312
In open battle or the tilting-field Forbore his o advantage,
and the King In open battle or the tilting-field Forbore
his 0 advantage,
fearful child Meant nothing, but my o too-fearful guilt,
kith and kin Clave to him, and abode in his o land.
To honour his o word as if his God's,
do thou for thine o soul the rest.
and mine o flesh. Here looking down on thine polluted,
Gone, my lord the King, My o true lord !
That in mine o heart I can live down sin
So spake he, clouded \n\h his o conceit,
His o thought drove him like a goad.
The loyal to their crown Are loyal to their o far
sons,
That knows not her o greatness :
ruling that which knows To its o harm :
In thine o essence, and delight thyself
pleasure-boat that rock'd, Light-green with its o
shadow.
Loathing to put it from herself for ever. Left her
o life with it ;
Till, drunk with its o wine, and over-full Of sweetness,
and in smelling of itself, It fall on its o thorns —
Parting my o loved mountains was received.
Yet bearing round about him his o day.
As from a dismal dream of my o death,
till they fell Half-digging their o graves)
And laid her in the vault of her o kin.
as her o reproof At some precipitance in her burial.
Then, when her o true spirit had return'd,
And crossing her o picture as she came,
thence Down to this last strange hour in his o hall ;
^Vhen Hany an' I were children, he call'd me his o
little wife;
God bless you, my o little Nell.'
When I cannot see my o hand, but am led by the creak
of the chain, Rizpah 7
I told them my tale, God's o truth — „ 34
if true Love Were not his o imperial all-in-all. Sisters (E. and E.) 227
A second — this I named from her o self, Evelyn ; „ 270
mellow'd murmur of the people's praise From
thine o State, Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 8
Yet art thou thine o witness that thou bringest
Not peace, Sir J. Oldcastle 35
I am written in the Lamb's o Book of Life Columbus 88
Tho' quartering your o royal arms of Spain, „ 115
Some over-labour'd, some by their o hands, — „ 178
in that flight of ages which are God's 0 voice to justify
the dead— „ 203
O dear Spirit half-lost In thine o shadow De Prof., Two G. 40
With power on thine o act and on the world. „ 56
never since thine o Black ridges drew the cloud Montenegro 12
Went to his own in his o West-Saxon-land, Batt. of Brunanburh 103
All day the men contend in grievous war From
their o city, Achilles over the T. 10
Own (adj.) {continued) Except his o meek daughter yield lier
life. The Flight 28
To lie, to lie — in God's o house — the blackest of all lies ! „ 52
Arise, my o true sister, come forth ! the world is wide. „ 96
'Ud 'a shot his o sowl dead for a kiss of ye, ]Molly Magee. Tomorrow 40
331
370
440
473
545
555
617
636
Pass, of Arthur 218
353
To Ike Queen ii 28
32
59
Lover's Tale i 13
43
215
271
433
510
748
ii 47
iv 39
106
108
286
358
First Quarrd 10
22
which our trembling fathers call'd The God's o son. Tiresias 17
immerging, each, his urn In his o well, „ 89
yet if one of these By his o hand — „ 118
will murmur thee To thine o Thebes, „ 141
let thine o hand strike Thy youthful pulses into rest „ 156
And pity for our o selves on an earth that bore not a
flower ; Despair 44
And pity for our o selves till we long'd for eternal sleep. „ 46
wilt dive Into the Temple-cave of thine o self, Ancient Sage 32
Yer Honour's o agint, he says to me wanst.
Demos end in working its o doom.
strip your o foul passions bare ;
Gone at eighty, mine o age,
When our o good redcoats sank from sight.
And who loves War for War's o sake Is fool.
Our 0 fair isle, the lord of every sea-
63
Locksley H., Sixty 114
141
281
Heavy Brigade 42
Epilogue 30
The Fleet 7
What is it all, if we all of us end but in being our o corpse-
coffins at last. Fastness 33
That he was nearing his o hundred. The Ring 194
She cannot love ; she loves her o hard self, „ 292
Till from her o hand she had torn the ring „ 470
forgotten mine o rhyme By mine old self, I'o Mary Boyle 21
or came of your o will To wait on one so broken, Romney's R. 16
Her sad eyes plead for my o fame with me „ 55
With your o shadow in the placid lake, „ 76
As where earth's green stole into heaven's o hue. Far — far — away 2
For a woman ruin'd the world, as God's o scriptures tell, Charity 3
every dawn Struck from him his o shadow on to
Rome.
Issa Ben Mariam, his o prophet, cried
Own (s) darkening thine o To thine own likeness ;
never in your own arms To hold your o,
My own heart's heart, my ownest o, farewell ;
at which his o began To pulse with such a
vehemence
Went to his o in his own West-Saxon-land,
and will be his, his o and only o,
Own (verb) better than to o A crown, a sceptre,
' He o's the fatal gift of eyes,
o one port of sense not flint to prayer,
everyone that o's a tower The Lord for half a
league.
That 0 no lust because they have no law !
The Christians o a Spiritual Head ;
Own'd one of my co-mates 0 a rough dog.
The one true lover whom you ever o,
yourself have o ye did me wrong.
nor tasted flesh. Nor o a sensual wish,
while they brake them, o me King.
Owner follows, being named. His o,
Ownest My own heart's heart, my o own,
Owning o but a little more Than beasts,
earthly Muse, And o but a little art
Ox For the 0 Feeds in the herb.
From the dark fen the oxen's low Came
The passive oxen gaping.
Reel'd, as a footsore o in crowded ways
roasting o Moan round the spit —
oxen from the city, and goodly sheep
my lord is lower than his oxen or his swine.
May seem the black o of the distant plain.
Ozlip As cowslip unto o is,
St. Telemachus 33
Akbar's Dream 75
Aijlmer's Field 673
Princess villS
Maud I xviii 74
Lover's Tale iv 81
Batt. of Brunanburh 103
Happy 7
Ode to Memory 120
Two Voices 286
Princess vi 182
Gareth and L. 595
Pelleas and E. 481
Akbar's Dream 153
Gareth and L. 1011
Geraint and E. 344
Merlin and V. 316
628
Pass, of Arthur 158
Gareth and L. 704
Maud I xviii 74
Two Voices 196
In Mem. xxxvii 14
Supp. Confessions 150
Mariana 28
Amphion 72
Aylmer's Field 819
Lucretius 131
Spec, of Iliad 4
Locksley H., Sixty 126
To one ran down Eng. 4
Talking Oak 107
Paaid (paid) easy es leaves their debts to be p. Village Wife 94
An' they hallus p what I hax'd, „ 115
Paail (pail) wi' her p's fro' the cow. Spinster's S's. 2
ye shant hev a drop fro' the p. „ 65
Paain (pain) Sam, thou's an ass for thy p's : N. Farmer, iV. S. 3
an am'd naw thanks fur 'er p's. Village Wife 12
es be down wi' their haaches an' their p's : Spinster's S's. 108
Paarint (parent) afther her p's had inter'd glory, Tomorrow 53
That ye'll meet your p's agin „ 57
Paay (pay) find my rent an' to p my men ? Dud Rod 47
' can ya p me the rent to-night ? ' „ 57
Pace
518
Pain
Pace (s) She made three p's thro' the room,
Wheeling with precipitate p's To the melocl3-,
scarce three p's measured from the mound,
forth they rode, but scarce three p's on,
Roimd was their p at first, but slacken'd soon
she went back some p's of return.
With woven p's and with waving anias,
Of woven p's and of waving hands, (repeat)
ten or twelve good p's or more.
Pace (verb) Would p the troubled land,
till noon no foot should p the street,
thou shalt cease To p the gritted floor,
p the sacred old familiar fields,
cram our ears with wool And so p by :
pavement where the King would p At sunrise.
L. of Shalotl in 38
Vision of Sin 37
Princess v 1
Geraint and E. 19
33
70
Merlin and V. 207
„ 330,968
Def. of Lucknow 62
Love thou thy land 84
Godiva 39
Will Water. 242
Enoch Arden 625
Princess iv 66
Gareth and L. 667
He seem'd to p the strand of Brittany Last Tournament 407
Paced {See also Subtle-paced) Love p the thymy plots
of Paradise, " Love and Death 2
I wonder'd, while I p along : Two Voices 454
Who p for ever in a gUmmering land. Palace of Art 67
and p beside the mere, 31. d' Arthur 83
he rose and p Back toward his solitary home Enoch Arden 793
forth they came and p the shore. Sea Dreams 32
out we p, I fii-st, and following thro' the porch Princess ii 21
So saying from the court we p, „ Hi 117
Where p the Demigods of old, „ 343
I p the terrace, till the Bear had wheel'd „ iv 212
p the shores And many a bridge, In Mem. Ixxxvii 11
p a city all on fire With sun and cloth of gold, Co7n. of Arthur 479
the lawless warrior p Unai-m'd, Gareth and L. 914
he turn'd all red and p his hall, Geraint and E. 668
and p The long white walk of lilies Balin and Balan 248
feet unmortised from their ankle-bones Who p it,
ages back : Merlin aiid V. 553
Then p for coolness in the chapel-yard ; „ 757
Bedivere, Who slowly p among the slumbering host, Pass, of Arthur 7
and p beside the mere, „ 251
How oft with him we p that walk of limes, To W. H. BrooJcfield 6
half the morning have I p these sandy tracts, Locksley H., Sixty 1
and p his land In fear of worse, ' To Mary Boyle 29
By tbe long torrent's ever-deepen'd roar, P, Death of (Enone 86
Pacing (part.) P with downward eyelids pure. Two Voices 420
And some one p there alone. Palace of Art 66
Walking up and p down, L. of Burleigh 90
so p till she paused By Florian ; Princess ii 302
p staid and still By twos and threes, „ 435
Now p mute by ocean's rim ; The Daisy 21
in her arms She bare me, p on the dusky mere. Lancelot and E. 1411
Tristram, p moodily up and down, Last Tournament 654
And slowly p to the middle hall, Lover's Tale iv 306
Pacing (s) long mechanic p's to and fro. Love and Duty 17
his foot Return from p's in the field, Lucretius 6
Pack (s) wolf within the fold ! Ap ot wolves ! Princess ii 191
Pack (verb) by the Lord that made me, you shall p, Dora 31
farmer vext f's up his beds and chairs, Walk, to the Mail 39
Let the cantmg liar p ! Vision of Sin 108
neat and close as Nature p's Her blossom Enoch Arden 178
Pack'd (For they had p the thing among the beds,) Walk, to the Mail 44
were p to make your crown, Princess iv 543
Pad An abbot on an ambling p, L. of Shalott ii 20
Padded P round with flesh and fat, Vision of Sin 177
To a lord, a captain, a p shape, Maud 7 a; 29
Paddling round the lake A little clock-work steamer p
plied Princess, Pro. 71
Padlock'd each chest lock'd and p thirty-fold. Merlin and V. 655
Padre And when the Goan P quoting Him, • Akbar's Dream 74
Paean ' I sung the joyful P clear. Two Voices 127
Pagan (adj.) past tliro' P realms, and made them mine. And
clash'd with P hordes. Holy Grail 478
funeral bell Broke on my P Paradise, Tiresias 193
P oath, and jest, Hard Romans brawling St. Telemachus 39
Pagan (s) till our good Arthur broke The P Lancelot and E. 280
But pity — the P held it a vice — Despair 41
beheld That victor of the P throned in hall— Last Tournament 665
Paganism wallow in this old lust Of P, St. Telemachus 79
Page (boy) Or long-hair'd p in crimson clad, L. of Shalott ii 22
The J) has caught her hand in his : Day-Dm., Sleep P. 29
The maid and p renew'd their strife, „ Revival 13
She into hall past with her p and cried, Gareth and L. 592
he made his mouthpiece of a ^ Who came and went, „ 1337
And p, and maid, and squire, Marr. of Geraint 710
You come with no attendance, p or maid, Geraint-and E. 322
A slender p about her father's hall. Holy Grail 581
Page (of a book) I will turn that earlier p. Locksley Hall 107
And trust me while I turn'd the p, To E. L. 9
a p or two that rang With tilt and tourney ; Princess, Pro. 121
I heard her turn the p ; „ vii 190
If men neglect your p's ? Spiteful Letter 6
passing, turn the p tnat tells A grief, In Mem. Ixxvii 10
0 ay, it is but twenty p's long. But every p having
an ample marge.
But you will turn the p's.
Pageant meisque or p at my father's court.
Lead out the p : sad and slow.
Pageantry All the p, Save those six virgins
Pagod temple, neither P, Mosque, nor Church,
Paid (See also Paaid, Ped) there was la\v for us;
We p in person.
1 would have p her kiss for kiss,
respect, however slight, was p To woman,
P with a voice flying by to be lost
p our tithes in the days that are gone,
— p with horses and with arms ;
And the people p her well.
Pail (See also Paail) The milk that bubbleil in the p, In Mem. Ixxxix 51
where it ghtter'd on her p, Holy Grail 405
Pain (s) (See also Paain) run short p's Thro' his
Merlin and V. 668
The Ring 127
Princess i 198
Ode on Well. 13
Lover's Tale ii 83
Akbar's Dream 178
Walk, to the Mail 86
Talking Oak 195
Princess ii 136
Wages 2
Maud II V 23
Geraint and E. 486
Dead Prophet 78
warm heart ;
You care not for another's p's.
All the inner, all the outer world of p
Than once from dread of p to die.
P rises up, old pleasures pall.
' Yet hadst thou, thro' enduring p,
Wilt thou find passion, p or pride ?
Thy p is a reality.'
I least should breathe a thought of p.
Although the loss had brought us p.
Trouble on trouble, p on p,
I started once, or seem'd to start in p,
With what dull p Compass'd,
' Weep, weeping dulls the inward p.'
rose, Slowly, with p, reclining on his arm,
P heap'd ten-hundred-fold to this,
May match his p's with mine ;
With slow, faint steps, and much exceeding p,
sting of shrewdest p Ran shrivelling thro' me,
one blind cry of passion and of p,
looking ancient kindness on thy p.
woman's pleasure, woman's p —
like a beast with lower p's !
Care and Pleasure, Hope and P,
Like souls that balance joy and p,
A band of p across my brow ;
And gets for greeting but a wail of p ;
Without one pleasure and without one p.
Let no man enter in on /> of death ? '
your p's May only make that footprint upon sand
I clamber'd o'er at top with p,
a twitch of p Tortured her mouth,
and draw The sting from p ;
Peace, it is a day of p (repeat)
Ours the p, be his the gain !
And mixt, as life is mixt with p,
troubled, as if with anger or p :
peace, so it be free from p.
Perchance, to lull the throbs of p.
Like dull narcotics, numbing p.
And I should tell him all my p.
That dies not, but endures witli p.
He loves to make parade of p,
Supp. Confessions 161
Rosalind 19
If I were loved 5
Two Voices 105
164
166
243
387
Miller's D. 26
229
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 84
D. of F. Women 41
277
To J. S. 40
M. d' Arthur 168
St. S. Stylites 23
139
183
198
Love and Duty 80
Locksley Hall 85
149
176
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 55
Sir L. and Q. G. 1
The Letters 6
Lucretius 138
„ 269
Princess ii 195
,, Hi 238
iv 208
„ vi 105
vii 64
Ode on Well. 235, 238
241
Ode Inter. Exhib. 27
Grandmother 65
9Ti
The Daisy 1051
In Mem. v%\
„ xiv 13]
„ xviii 17|
„ xxi IC
Pain
519
Palace-doorway
Pain (s) {continued) The lading of a single p, In Mem. xxv 11
This year I slept and woke with p, „ xxviii 13
I would set their p's at ease. „ Ixiii 8
Who ploughs with p his native lea „ Ixiv 25
These mortal lullabies of p „ Ixxvii 5
No single tear, no mark of p : „ Ixxviii 1 4
Some painless sympathy with p ? ' „ Ixxxv 88
nerves of motion as well as the nerves of p, Maud I i 63
possible After long grief and p To find the arms „ // iv 2
Pass, thou deathlike type of p, „ 58
And my bones are shaken with p, „ v 5
Sun, that wakenest all to bliss or p, Gareth and L. 1060
all my p's, poor man, for all my p's, Marr. of Geraint 116
p she had To keep them in the wild ways Geraint and E. 186
sharpness of that p about her heart : „ 190
and down he sank For the pure p, Lancelot and E. 518
sweet is death who puts an end to p : „ 1008
Pleasure to have it, none ; to lose it, p ; „ 1415
So groan'd Sir Lancelot in remorseful p, „ 1428
I climb'd a thousand steps With p : Holy Grail 836
I know Tliat all these p's are trials of my faith, Pdleas and E. 246
had held sometime with p His own against him, Last Tournament 178
and in her bosom p was lord. „ 239
in the heart of Arthur p was lord. „ 486
rose. Slowly, with p, reclining on his ann. Pass, of Arthur ^ZQ
now first heard with any sense of p. Lovers Tale i 709
suffering view'd had been Extremest p; „ m 130
My heart was cloven with p ; „ 200
And they blest him in their p, The Revenge 20
Patient of p tho' as quick as a sensitive plant In the Child. Hosp. 30
Her love of light quenching her fear of p — Sir J. Oldcastle 190
I am rack'd with p's. Columbus 199
and wrench'd with p's Gain'd in the service „ 235
p Of this divisible-indivisible world De Prof., Two G. 42
I had now — with him — been out of my p.' The Wreck 128
match'd with the p's Of the hellish heat Despair 67
hour of torture, a moment of p, „ 81
short, or long, as Pleasure leads, or P ; Ancient Sage 101
The plowman passes, bent with p, „ 144
whose p's are hardly less than ours ! Loclcsley H., Sixty 102
or p in every peopled sphere ? „ 197
Thy glorious eyes were dimm'd with p Freedom 10
with all its p's, and griefs, and deaths. To Prin. Beatrice 2
her tears Are half of pleasure, half of p — „ 11
P, that has crawl'd from the corpse of Pleasure, Fastness 17
pardon, O my love, if I ever gave you p. Happy 68
life of mingled p's And joys to me. To Mary Boyle 49
world-whisper, mystic p or joy. Far — far — away 7
Pain (verb) (See also Paain) p's him that he sickens
nigh to death ; Geraint and E. 499
Pain'd P, and, as bearing in myself the shame Aylmer's Field 355
Her crampt-up sorrow p her, „ 800
Painful (See also Slowly-painful) Full oft the riddle of
the p earth Palace of Art 213
Completion in a p school ; Love thou thy land 58
Till out of p phases wrought In Mem. Ixv 6
Painless Some p .sympathy with pain ? ' „ Ixxxv 88
Paint ' When will you p like this ? ' Gardener's D. 22
And p the gates of Hell with Paradise, Princess iv 131
I strive to p The face I know ; In Mem. Ixx 2
And every dew-drop p's a bow, „ cxxii 18
harlots p their talk as well as face Merlin and V. 821
Behind it, and so p's him that his face, Lancelot and E. 334
P the mortal shame of nature Locksley H., Sixty 140
Painted (adj.) (See also Point-painted) We left behind
the p buoy The Voyage 1
those fixt eyes of p ancestors Staring for ever Aylmer's Field 832
Her gay-furr'd cats a p fantasy. Princess Hi 186
sUent light Slept on the p walls, „ vii 121
So like a p battle the war stood Silenced, Com. of Arthur 122
Or two wild men supporters of a shield, P, Geraint and E. 268
when all at once That p vessel, as with inner life.
Began to heave upon that p sea ; Lover's Tale ii 191
Painted (verb) Eustace p her. And said to me, Gardener's D. 20
a couple, fair As ever painter p, Aylmer's Field 106
Painter (See also Landscape-painter) sorrowest thou,
pale P, for the past. Wan Sculptor 3
a couple, fair As ever p painted, Aylmer's Field 106
Musician, p, sculptor, critic. Princess ii 178
As when a p, poring on a face, Lancelot and E. 332
' Take comfort you have won the P's fame,' liomney's R. 43
Wrong there ! The v's fame ? „ 48
Painting (part) p some dead friend from memory ? Wan Sculptor 4
And then was p on it fancied arms, Merlin and V. 474
Good, I am never weary p you. Romney's R. 3
Painting (s) with choice p's of wise men I hung Palace of Art 131
Drew from my neck tlie p and the tress. Princess vi 110
p on the wall Or shield of knight ; Holy Grail 829
Hung round with p's of the sea, Lover's Tale ii 168
In the hall there hangs a p — Locksley H., Sixty 13
Pair we went along, A pensive p, Miller's D. 164
saw the p, Enoch and Annie, sitting Enoch Arden 68
welded in one love Than p's of wedlock ; Princess vi 254
His craven p Of comrades making slowlier Geraint and E. 166
like that false p who tum'd Flying, „ 176
With a low whinny toward the p : „ 756
Palace (adj.) ' Yet pull not down my p towers, Palace of Art 293
High up, the topmost p spire. Day-Dm., Sleep P. 48
In p chambers far apart. „ Sleep B. 18
When that cold vapour touch'd the p gate. Vision of Sin 58
clocks Throbb'd thunder thro' the p floors. Princess vii 104
Nor waves the cypress in the p walk ; „ 177
sound ran Thro' p and cottage door. Bead Prophet 38
Palace (s) (See also Sunuuer-palace) And in the lighted
p near L. of Shalott iv 47
unto herself In her high p there. Palace of Art 12
gaze upon My p with unblinded eyes, „ 42
Full of great rooms and small the p stood, „ 57
in dark comers of her p stood Uncertain shapes ; „ 237
forms that pass'd at windows and on roofs Of
marble p's ; D. of F. Women 24
The p bang'd, and buzz'd and clackt, Day-Dm., Revival 14
And from the p came a child of sin. Vision of Sin 5
Which rolling o'er the p's of the proud, Aylmer's Field 636
.4nd in the imperial p found the king. Princess i 113
I promise you Some p in oiu- land, „ Hi 162
took this p ; but even from the first „ iv 313
we this night should pluck your p down ; „ 414
who goes ? ' ' Two from the p ' I. „ v 3
All on this side the p ran the field „ 361
high upon the p Ida stood With Psyche's babe „ vi 30
with my brethren here In our own p : „ 124
Was it for this we gave our p up, „ 244
the long laborious miles Of P ; Ode Inter. Exhib. 12
Or p, how the city gUtter'd, The Daisy 47
Fairily-delicate p's shine Mixt with myrtle The Islet 18
Lo the p's and the temple, Boddicea 53
Burst the gates, and bum the p's, „ 64
Camelot, a city of shadowy p's And stately, Gareth and L. 303
And he will have thee to his p here, Geraint and E. 230
And into no Earl's p will I go. „ 235
I know, God knows, too much of p's ! „ 236
hundred miles of coast, A p and a princess, Merlin and V. 589
hundred miles of coast, The p and the princess, „ 648
many corridor'd complexities Of Arthur's p : „ 733
moved about her p, proud and pale. Lancelot and E. 614
Until we found the p of the King. „ 1044
UntU I find the p of the King. „ 1051
he Will guide me to that p, to the doors.' „ 1129
Sir Lancelot at the p craved Audience of Guinevere, „ 1162
of Arthur's p toward the stream, „ 1178
And all the broken p's of the Past, Lover's Tale ii 59
Death from the heights of the mosque and the p, Def. of Lucknow 24
given the Great Khan's p's to the Moor, Columbus 109
down in a rainbow deep Silent p's, V. of Maeldune 80
Thro' many a p, many a cot, Demeter and P. 55
A galleried p, or a battlefield, • The Ring 246
To the city and p Of Arthur the king ; Merlin and the G. 65
our p is awake, and mom Has lifted Akbar's Dream 200
Palace-doorway On to the p-d sliding, paused. Lancelot and E. 1246
Palace-front
520
Palm
Falace-front p-/ Alive with flattering scarfs Princess v 508
Palace-gate (See also Palace (adj.)) youth came riding
toward a p-g, Vision of Sin 2
Palace-walls Where all about your p-w To the Queen 15
Fleeting betwixt her column'd p-w, St. Telemaehus 37
Palate Whither beneath the p, D. of F. Women 287
Pale (adj.) (See also Dead-pale, Deathly-pale, Death-pale,
Passion-pale) Then her cheek was p and thinner Lockdey Hall 21
P he turn'd and red, The Captain 62
P again as death did prove : L. of Burleigh 66
Then moving homeward came on Annie p, Enoch Arden 149
Enoch slumber'd motionless and p, „ 908
P, for on her the thunders of the house Aylmer's Field 278
P as the Jephtha's daughter, „ 280
Beneath a p and unimpassion'd moon, „ 334
how p she had look'd Darling, to-night ! „ 379
made Still paler the p head of him, „ 623
seem'd he saw no p sheet-lightnings from afar, „ 726
when the king Kiss'd her p cheek. Princess ii 264
' P one, blush again : ,, Hi 67
some red, some p, All open-mouth'd, ,, iv 482
raised the cloak from brows as p and smooth „ v 73
Dishelm'd and mute, and motionlessly p, „ vi 101
And then once more she look'd at my p face : „ 115
P was the perfect face ; ,, vii 224
Come ; let us go : your cheeks are p ; In Mem. Ivii 5
P with the golden beam of an eyelash dead on the
cheek, Passionless, p, Maud I Hi 3
ever as p as before Growing and fading „ 6
Morning arises stormy and p, „ vi 1
some Were p as at the passing of a ghost. Com. of Arthur 264
red and p Across the face of Enid hearing her ; Marr. of Geraint 523
when the p and bloodless east began To quicken „ 534
They rode so slowly and they look'd so p, Geraint and E. 35
Had ruth again on Enid looking p : „ 203
Femininely fair and dissolutely p. „ 275
and at his side all p Dismounting, „ 510
And chafing his p hands, and calling to him. „ 582
I never yet beheld a thing so p. „ 615
and beholding her Tho' p, yet happy, ., 880
break her sports with graver fits, Turn red or p. Merlin and V. 181
The p blood of the wizard at her touch Took gayer
colours, „ 949
moved about her palace, proud and p. Lancelot and E. 614
Marr'd her friend's aim with p tranquiUity. „ 733
how p ! what are they ? flesh and blood ? „ 1256
Brake into hall together, worn and p. Pelleas and E. 587
When, p as yet, and fever-worn. To the Queen ii 4
sun, P at my grief, drew down before his time Demeter and P. 114
are faint And p in Alla's eyes, .ikbar's Dream 11
Bramble roses, faint and p, A Dirge 30
O p, p face so sweet and meek, Oriana 66
O SWEET p Margaret, O rare p Margaret, (repeat) Margaret 1, 54
Of pensive thought and aspect p, „ 6
0 sorrowest thou, p Painter, for the past. Wan Sculptor 3
The p yellow wooc^ were waning, L. of Shalott iv 2
And round about the keel with faces p. Dark faces
p against that rosy flame, Lotos Eaters 25
To whom replied King Arthur, faint and p : M. d' Arthur 72
At this p taper's earthly spark, St. Agnes' Eve 15
Panted hand-in-hand with faces p, Vision of Sin 19
' Then leaving the p nun, I spake of this Holy Grail 129
And p he turn'd, and reel'd, and would have fall'n, Guinevere 304
Then the p Queen look'd up and answer'd her, „ 327
wrathful heat Fired all the p face of the Queen, „ 357
Rose the p Queen, and in her anguish found „ 586
the p King glanced across the field Of battle : Pass, of Arthur 126
To whom replied King Arthur, faint and p : „ 240
its wreaths of dripping green — Its p pink shells — Lover's Tale i 40
And p and fibrous as a wither'd leaf, „ 422
dewy touch of pity had made The red rose there a p one — „ 696
The bridesmaid p, statuteUke, passionless — Sisters (E. and E.) 212
1 lay At thy p feet this ballad of the deeds Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 20
Then his p face twitch'd ; ' O Stephen, The Wreck 101
J have scared you p with my scandalous talk, Despair 111
Pale (adj.) (continued) as this poor earth's p history runs, — Vastness 3
Each poor p cheek a momentary rose — The Ring 315
Pale (s) By bridge and ford, by park and p. Sir Galahad 82
To leap the rotten p's of prejudice. Princess ii 142
break At seasons thro' the gilded p : In Mem. cxi 8
Nor ever stray'd beyond the p : Holy Grail 21
Pale-blooded patient, and prayerful, meek, P-h, Last Tournament 608
who am not meek, P-h, prayerful. „ 611
Paled P at a sudden twitch of his iron mouth ; Aylmer's Field 732
stars in heaven P, and the glory grew. Pro. to Gen. Hamley 32
Pale-green p-g sea-groves straight and high, The Merman 19
Paleness a p, an hour's defect of the rose, Maaid I iiS
Paler made Still p the pale head of him, Aylmer's Field 623
Or made her p with a poison'd rose ? Merlin and V. 611 '
But left her all the p, when Lavaine Lancelot and E. 378 \
but the child Is p than before. The Ring 327 ^
Muriel, p then Than ever you were in your cradle, „ 431
No ! but the p and the graver, Edith. Sisters (E. and E.) 38
to trace On p heavens the branching grace To Ulysses 15
Palest Between two showers, a cloth of p gold, Gareth and L. 389
Palfrey there she found her p trapt Godiva 51
her p's footfall shot Light horrors „ 58
In converse till she made her p halt, Gareth and L. 1360
and cried, ' My charger and her p ; ' Marr. of Geraint 126
Call the host and bid him bring Charger and p.' Geraint and E. 401
has your p heart enough To bear his armour ? „ 489
At which her p whinnying hfted heel, „ 533
your charger is without, My p lost.' „ 750
Then leapt her p o'er the fallen oak, Balin and Balan 587
Palisade our walls and our poor p's. Def. of Lucknow 55
Pall (s) pass the gate Save vmder p with bearers. Aylmer's Field 827
Warriors carry the warrior's p, Ode on Well. 6
This truth came borne with bier and p, In Mem. Ixxxv 1
upbare A broad earth-sweeping p of whitest lawn. Lover's Tale ii 78
Took the edges of the p, and blew it far „ Hi 35
and forget The darkness of the p.' Ancient Sage 198
drama's closing curtain is the p ! Locksley H., Sixty 62
and I and you will bear the p ; „ 281
Pall (verb) Pain rises up, old pleasures p. Two Voices 164
Pallas (See also Pallas Athene) when they wish to charm
P and Juno sitting by : A Character 15
Herb comes to-day, P and Aphrodite, (Enone 86
P where she stood. Somewhat apart, „ 137
' O Paris, Give it to P ! ' „ 170
There stood a bust of P for a sign, Princess i 222
Now fired an angry P on the hehn, „ vi 367
some wild P from the brain Of Demons ? In Mem. cxiv 12
P flung Her fringed segis, Achilles over the T. 3
and P far away Call'd ; „ 17
blunt the curse Of P, hear, Tiresias 155
Pallas Athene saw P A chmbing from the bath „ 40
Palled (adj.) p shapes In shadowy thoroughfares of
thought ; In Mem. Ixx 7
Pall'd (draped) P all its length in blackest samite, Lancelot and E. 1142
AU p in crimson samite. Holy Grail 847
Pall'd (stale) well I know it — p — For I know men : Geraint and E. 331
Pallid On her p cheek and forehead came a colour Locksley Hall 25
Palling grew To thunder-gloom p all stars, Gareth and L. 1359
Palm (of the hand) Fold thy p's across thy breast, A Dirge 2
' His p's are folded on his breast : Two Voices 247
opening out his milk-white p Disclosed (Enone 65
Caught in the frozen p's of Spring. The Blackbird 24
he smote His p's together, and he cried M. d' Arthur 87
may press The maiden's tender p. Talking Oak 180
Between his p's a moment up and down — Aylmer's Field 259
Bow'd on her p's and folded up from wrong, Princess iv 288
some one sent beneath his vaulted p A whisper'd jest „ v 31
he clash'd His iron p's together with a cry ; „ 354
nor more Sweet Ida : p to p she sat : „ vii 135
What time his tender p is prest In Mem. xlv 2
In mine own lady p's I cuU'd the spring Merlin and V. 273
clench'd her fingers till they bit the j>, Lancelot and E. ^611
he smote His p's together, and he cned Pass, of Arthur 255
The rough brier tore my bleeding p's ; Lover's Tale H 18
Screams of a babe in the red-hot p's of a Moloch of Tyre, The Dawn 2
Palm
(of the hand) (continued) in her open p a
halcyon sits Patient —
I (sailow-bloom) In colour like the satin-shining p
1 (tree) (See also Coco-pahn) Imbower'd vaults of
pillar'd p,
the solemn p's were ranged Above,
And many a tract of p and rice,
and the yellow down Border'd with p,
The p's and temples of the South.
the white robe and the p.
Breadths of tropic shade and p's
these be p's Whereof the happy people
built, and thatch'd with leaves of p, a hut,
Among the p's and ferns and precipices ;
Uttle dells of cowsUp, fairy p's,
battle-clubs From the isles of p :
To brawl at Shushan underneath the p's.'
all the sultry p's of India known.
In lands of p and southern pine ; In lands of p of
orange-blossom, '
Not the dipt p of which they boast ;
Above the valleys of p and pine.'
Betwixt the p's of paradise.
a p As glitters gilded in thy Book of Hours.
was ever haunting round the p A lusty youth
from the diamond foimtain by the p's, '
not those aUen p's,
the high star-crowns of his p's
by the p And orange grove of Paraguay,
Your cane, your p, tree-fern, bamboo,
p Call to the cypress ' I alone am fair ' ?
Palm-planted p-p fountain-fed Ammonian Oasis
Pahn-tree ' Under the p-t.' That was nothing to her •
Under a p-t, over lum the Sun :
Palmwood crimson-hued the stately p's
Palmy Sailing under p highlands
Fairer than Rachel by the p well,
Pahnyrene with the P That fought Aurehan,
Palpitated tempestuous treble throbb'd and p ;
r, her hand shook, and we heard In the dead hush
Palpitation blissful p's in the blood.
Palsied Left me with the p heart.
521
Pardon
Prog, of Spring 20
Merlin and V. 224
Arabian Nights 39
79
Palace of Art 114:
Lotos-Eaters 22
i'oii ask me, why, etc. 28
St. S. Sti/lites 20
Locksley Hall 160
Enoch Arden 504
559
593
Aylmer's Field 91
Princess, Pro. 22
Hi 230
ir. to Marie Alex. 14
The Dauy 2
,. 26
The Islet 23
In Mem., Con. 32
Oareth and L. 45
47
Lover's Tale i 137
Columbus 78
The Wreck 72
To Ulysses 11
36
Akbar's Dream 37
Alexander 7
Enoch Arden 498
501
Milton 15
The Captain 23
Aylmer's Field 679
Princess ii 83
Vision of Sin 28
Princess iv 389
28
Locksley Hall 132
among the gloommg alleys Progress halts on p feet. Locksley H., Sixty 219
As some arpaf, shnr-V mcTr maVc .> », i:~u '^ r,. ^,„ , ) ""•^'J/ "^^
As some great shock may wake a p limb
Palsy A wither'd p cease to shake ? ' '
Cured lameness, palsies, cancers.
wife or wailing infancy Or old bedridden »,—
p, death-in-life, And wretched age —
The p wags his head ;
Palter to dodge and p with a public crime ?
Palter'd Nor p with Eternal God for power •
Pamper But p not a hasty time, '
And p him with papmeat, if ye will.
Pamphleteer A p on guano and on grain.
Pan (a god) The murmur of a happy P •
Pan (a vessel) And hurl'd the p and kettle.
Pane {See also Window-pane)
the frost is on the p :
St. Telemachus 57
Two Voices 57
St. S. Stylites 82
Aylmer's Field 178
Lu^etius 154
Ancient Sage 124
Third of Feb. 24
Ode on Well. 180
Love thou thy land 9
Pelleas and E. 195
Princess, Con. 89
In Mem. xxiii 12
The Goose 28
I peer 'd athwart the chancel p
Fine as ice-ferns on January p's
Oh is it the brook, or a pool, or her window p
And never a glimpse of her window p ! '
And lash with storm the streaming p ?
The prophet blazon'd on the p's ;
Laid their green faces flat against the p's,
thro' the pines, upon the dewy p Falling,
stars went down across the gleaming p ""
small black fly upon the p '
Pang Struck thro' with p's of hell.
Thrice multiplied by superhuman p's,
I felt a p within
Whence follows many a vacant p ;
brother, y^ou have known the p's we felt,
rack'd with p's that conquer trust ;
To p's of nature, sins of will,
The blue fly sung in the p ; Mariana 63
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 13
The Letters 3
Aylmer's Field 222
Window, On the Hill 4
No Answer 3
In Mem. Ixxii 4
„ Ixxxvii 8
Balin and Balan 344
Lover's Tale i 264
The Flight 13
To one who ran down Eng. 3
Palare of AH 220
St. S. Stylites 11
Talking Oak 234
Princess ii 403
„ V 374
In Mem,. I 6
liv 3
Vrngicontinued) nor p Of wrench'd or broken Hnib— Gareth and L 87
Right thro' his manful breast darted the p Marr. of Geraint 121
The p— which while I weigh'd thy heart Guinevere 540
Panic and a boundless p shook the foe. Achilles over the T 18
Pamc-Stricken p-s, Uke a shoal Of darting fish, Geraint and E. 468
Pansy eyes Darker than darkest pansies. Gardener's D. 27
Fant life, not death, for which we p ; Two Voices 398
Panted as he walk'd, King Arthur p hard, M. d' Arthur 176
P hand-in-hand with faces pale, Vision of Sin 19
sweet half-English Neilgherry air I p. The Brook 18
F from weary sides ' King, you are free ! Princess v 24
Gareth p hard and his great heart, Gareth and L. 1126
n i.f rJTr "^ ^ ^'"S Arthur p hard, Pass, of Arthur 344
Panther The p's roar came muffled, (Enone 214
A p sprang across her path. Death of (Enone m
fantrng p, burst The laces toward her babe ; Princess vi 148
Pantomime Nor flicker down to brainless p. To W C Macready 10
Pap their bottles o' p, an' theii mucky bibs, Spinster's S's. 87
Papal Prick d by the P spur, we rear'd. Third of Feb. 27
Faper ihere at a board by tome and p sat. Princess ii 32
heard In the dead hush the p's that she held Rustle • ' iv 390
sack'd My dwelling, seized upon my p's, Columbus 130
a scrap, dipt out of the ' deaths ' in a p, fell. The Wreck 146
S*pH"^,p "^^^■^^"^^^i'^.^ ^elJ^' (Enone 175
Papist 1 ban P unto Saint. Talking Oak 16
Papmeat And pamper him with p, if ye will, Pelleas and E. 195
Parable second brother in their fool's p— Gareth and L. 1004
P s:' Hear a p of the knave. jqOS
Parachute And dropt a faiiy p and past : Princess Pro 76
Parade He lov^ to make p of pain, in Mem. xxi 10
Paradise (See also Island-Paradise) Love paced the
thymy plots of P, x^^g „^ ^g^,;^ 3
Or thronging all one porch of P PaUce of Art 101
And from it melt the dews of P, St. S. Stylites 210
pahns in cluster, knots of P. Locksley Hall 160
Like long-tail'd birds of P Day-Dm. Ev 7
And paint the gates of Hell with P, Princess iv 131
dipt In Angel instmcts, breathing P ^i 321
many-blossoming P's ' Boddicea 43
Ihis earth had been the P in Mem. xxiv 6
shook Betwixt the palms of p. ^, Qq„ 32
And the valleys of P. Maud I xxii 44
since high in P O'er the four rivers Geraint and £.763
No more of jealousy than in P.' Palin and Balan 152
i\ ow talking of their woodland p. Last Tournament 726
groves that look'd a p Of blossom, Guinevere 389
I stood upon the stairs of P. Sisters (E. and E ) 144
And saw the rivers roU from P ! Cohmhus 27
^ fi!' o^^* ^ u. f^""^ ■ ^- "f Maeldune 78
and the P trembled away. g2
Broken on my Pagan P, "Tiresias 193
' P there ! ' so he said, but I seem'd in P then The Wreck 75
In earth's recm-ring P. n^en's Tower 12
A silken cord let down from P, Akbar's Dream 139
Paragon look upon her As on a kind of p ; Princess i 155
Paraguay palm And orange grove of P, To Vlvsses 12
Paramount Tristram, ' Last to my Queen P, Here
now to my Queen P Last Tournament 551
Paramour iMy haughty jousts, and took a p ; Geraint and E. 832
Por^w^'h''^ fn'?.*^f',°^-"'y? , . Last Tournament 44fi
Parapet heroes tall Dislodging pinnacle and p D of F Women 26
isle of silvery p's! Boddicea^S
bet every gilded p shuddermg ; Lancelot and E. 299
gilded ps were crown'd With faces, Pdhas and E. 165
Parasite A leaning and upbearing p, Isabel 34
l^^% ^y"^ clear away the p forms Prir^cess vii 269
Parcel Portions and fs of the dreadful Past. Lotos- Eaters, C. S 47
Parcel-bearded p-6 with the traveller's-joy In Autumn, Aylmer's Field 153
Parcell d the broad woodland p into farms ; R4.7
Parch'd p and wither'd, deaf and blind, " PatiinaQ
p with dust ; Or, clotted into points M. d' Arthur 218
V^J "^'^^i^" J ^''' f dotted into points Pass, of Arthur 386
Fard a wild and wanton p. Eyed like the evening star, (Enone 199
Pardon (s) heal me with your p ere you go.' ^ Princess Hi 05
\\ hat p, sweet Melissa, for a blush ? ' „ 66
Pardon
522
Faidon (s) (cotitinued) and sirm'd in grosser lipsBeyond all p
with mutual p ask'd and given For stroke
I crave your p, O my friend ;
^vith the Sultan's p, I am all as well delighted,
Thy p ; I but speak for thine avail,
' Full p, but I follow up the quest,
crave His p for thy breaking of his laws,
and now thy p, friend,
Crave p for that insult done the Queen,
Grant me p for my thoughts
Princess iv 252
In Mem. Ixxxv 100
Maud I XX 39
Gareih and L. 883
986
1166
Marr. of Geraint 583
816
Your p, child. Your pretty sports have brighten'd Merlin and V. 304
your p ! lo, ye know it ! Speak therefore
tlazzled by the sudden light, and crave P :
^ladam, I beg yoiu: p !
Nay, your p, cry your 'forward,'
Your p, O my love, if I ever gave you pain.
Pardon (verb) ' Pray stay a little : p me;
I cared not for it. 0 p me,
and I (P me saying it) were much loth to breed
My needful seeming harshness, p it.
' O p me I heard, I could not help it,
Yet mine in part. O hear me, p me.
P, I am shamed That I must needs repeat
We p it ; and for your ingress here
' P me, O stranger knight ;
O p me ! the madness of that hour.
Again she sigh'd ' P, sweet lord !
sin in words Perchance, we both can p :
God 'ill p the hell-black raven
God p all — Me, them, and all the world —
and yet P — too harsh, unjust.
Pardonable ' Rough, sudden. And p,
Pardon'd I have p little Letty ;
Pardoner at P's, Summoners, Friars,
Pare would p the mountain to the plain,
Parent (See also Paarint) and their p's underground)
Till after our good p's past away
.\nd you are happy : let her p's be.'
sell her, those good p's, for her good.
The p's' harshness and the hapless loves
do not doubt Being a watchfiil p,
Paris (city of) Roarbg London, raving P,
Lancelot and E. 669
Pelleas and E. 106
Rizpah 81
Locksley H., Sixty 225
Happy 68
The Brook 210
Aylmers Field 244
Princess i 156
„ a 309
331
„ Hi 31
51
V 218
Marr. of Geraint 286
Geraint and E. 346
Balin and Balan 497
Lancelot and E. 1189
Rizpah 39
Sir J. Oldcastle 168
Columbus 199
Gareth and L. 654
Edwin Morris 140
Sir J. Oldcastle 92
Merlin and V. 829
Aylmer's Field 83
358
366
483
616
Sisters (E. and E.) SI
Locksley H., Sixty 190
Madonna-masterpieces Of ancient Art in P, or in
Rome. Romney's R. 87
And London and P and all the rest The Dawn 10
Paris (son of Priam) (Enone, wandering forlorn Of P, Qinone 17
Beautiful P, evil-hearted P, „ 50
Hear all, and see thy P judge of Gods.' „ 90
She to P made Proffer of royal power, „ 110
From me. Heaven's Queen, P, to thee king-born, „ 127
P held the costly fruit Out at arm's-length, ,. 135
And P ponder'd, and I cried, ' O P, Give it to Pallas ! ' „ 169
when I look'd, P had raised his arm, „ 189
P, himself as beauteous as a God. Death of (Enone 18
on a sudden he, P, no longer beauteous as a God, „ 25
who first had foxmd P, a naked babe, „ 54
Parish (adj.) He heard the pealing of his p bells ; Enoch Arden 615
To him that fluster'd his poor p wits Aylmer's Field 521
Parish (s) like that year in twenty p'es round. Grandmother 12
"e coom'd to the p wi' lots o' Varsity debt, I\'. Farmer, N. S. 29
An' all o' the wust i' the p — Village Wife 34
an' none of the p knew. Tomorrow 76
Haafe of the p runn'd oop Owd Rod 115
I bean chuch-warden i' the p fur fifteen year. Church-warden, etc. 8
Parish-clerks Friars, bellringers, P-c — Sir J. Oldcastle 160
Park the range of lawn and p : The Blackbird 6
The wUd wind rang from p and plain. The Goose 45
voice thro' all the holt Before her, and the p. Talking Oak 124
My father left a p to me, Amphion 1
By bridge and ford, by p and pale, Sir Galahad 82
They by p's and lodges going L. of Burleigh 17
P's with oak and chestnut shady, „ 29
P'a and order'd gardens great, „ 30
lay Carved stones of the Abbey-ruin in the p, Princess, Pro. 14
Down thro' the p: strange was the sight „ 54
Park [continued) they gave The p, the crowd, the house ;
A himdred maids in train across the P.
Give up their p's some dozen times a year
tides of chariots flow By p and suburb
To range the woods, to roam the p.
Part
Princess, Pro. 94
vi 76
„ Con. 103
In Mem. xcviii 24
Con. 96
from the deluged p The cuckoo of a worse July Pref. Poem Broth. S. 10
Parlance A hate of gossip p, Isabel 26
Parle (s) Found the gray kings at p : Princess vWA
Parle (verb) wakeful portress, and didst p with Death, — Lover's Tale i 113
Parliament (adj.) moor good sense na the p man 'at
stans fur us 'ere, Owd Roa 13
Parliament (s) fiu-l'd In the P of man, Locksley Hall 128
A potent voice of P, In Mem. cxiii 11
Parlour I sits i' my oan httle p. Spinster's S's. 103
Parlour-window rosebush that I set About the p-w May Queen, A\ Y's. E. 48
Parma Of rain at Reggio, rain at P ; The Daisy 51
Parnassus On thy P set thy feet. In Mem. xxxvii 6
Parrot Whistle back the p's call, Locksley Hall 171
The p in his gilded wires. Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 16
The p scream'd, the peacock squall'd, „ Revival 12
p turns Up thro' gilt wires a crafty loving eye, Princess, Pro. 171
Parsee Buddhist, Christian, and P, Akbar's Dream 25
Parson The p smirk'd and nodded. The Goose 20
The p Holmes, the poet Everard Hall, The Epic 4
The p taking wide and wider sweeps, „ 14
At which the P, sent to sleep with sound, M. d' Arthur, Ep. 3
'P,' said I,' you pitch the pipe too low : Edwin Morris 52
the p made it his text that week, Grandmother 29
P's a bean loikewoise, N. Farmer, 0. S. 9
But P a cooms an' a goas, „ 25
p 'ud nobbut let ma aloan, „ 43
• yon's p's 'ouse — Dosn't thou knaAV „ N. S. 5
thou's sweet upo' p's lass — „ 11
P's lass 'ant nowt, „ 25
' Thou'rt but a Methody-man,' says P, North. Cobbler 89
An' P as hesn't the call, nor the mooney. Village Wife 91
An' soa they've maade tha a p. Church-warden, etc. 7
ther mun be p's an' all, „ 9
fur thou was the P's lad. „ 36
An' P 'e 'ears on it all, ,, 37
But P 'e ^vill speak out, ,. 43
Part (adv.) a lie which is p a truth Grandmother 32
spoke in words p heard, in whispers p. Merlin and V. 839
P black, p whiten'd with the bones of men. Holy Grail 500
Part (s) they had their p Of sorrow : Miller's D. 223
seems a p of those fresh days to me ; Edwin Morris 142
Love himself took p against himself Love and Duty 45
I am a p of all that I have met ; Ulysses 18
fitted to thy petty p, Locksley Hall 93
She seem'd a p of joyous Spring : Sir L. and Q. G. 23
I will tell him tales of foreign p's, Enoch Arden 198
in those uttermost P's of the morning ? „ 224
And been himself a p of what he told. Aylmer's Field 12
a p Falling had let appear the brand of John — „ 508
p were drown'd within the whirling brook : Princess, Pro. 47
As p's, can see but p's, now this, now that, „ Hi 327
p made long since, and p Now while I sang, ,. iv 90
P sat like rocks : p reel'd but kept their seats : „ v 496
P roU'd on the earth and rose again and drew : „ 497
P stumbled mixt with floundering horses. „ 498
for she took no p In our dispute : „ Con. 29
' God help me ! save I take my p Of danger Sailor Boy 21
And love in which my hound has p. In Mem. Ixiii 2
A p of mine may live in thee „ Ixv 11
Can take no p away from this : „ Ixxxv 68
A p of stillness, yearns to speak : „ 78
The freezing reason's colder p, „ cxxiv 14
when the fourth p of the day was gone, Geraint and E. 55
' Him, or the viler devil who plays his p, Balin and Balan 300
Now grown a p of me : Lancelot and E. 1416
of this remnant wUl I leave a p, Guinevere 444
is also past — p. And all is past, „ 542
low converse sweet. In which our voices bore least p. Lover's Tale i 542
I seem'd the only p of Time stood still ; „ 573
but were a p of sleep, „ ii 117
Part
523
Pass
Part (s) (continued) I would play my p with the young The Wreck 39
realist, rhymester, play your p, Locksley H., Sixty 139
She crouch'd, she tore him p from p, Dead Prophet 69
Part (to part company) The crown of all, we met to p
no more.'
I too must p : I hold thee dear
I trow they did not p in scorn :
We met, but only meant to p.
We too must p : and yet how fain
one soft word and let me p forgiven.'
' Let us p : in a hundred years
At last must p with her to thee ;
I must tell her before we p,
For years, for ever, to p-^
nor could I p in peace Till this were told.'
to meet And p for ever.
Brothers, must we p at last ?
for a season there, And then we p ;
Fahewell, Macready, since to-mght we p ;
Farewell, Macready, since this night we p,
Could Love p thus ?
And loving hands must p —
star of morn P's from a bank of snow,
No — AVe could not p.
Edwin Morris 70
WUl Water. 211
Lady Clare 5
The LetUrs 12
Princess vi 199
219
Grandmother 47
In Mem., Con. 48
Maud I xvi 33
„ // a 50
Co)n. of Arthur 393
Guinevere 98
Open I. atid C. Exhib. 32
Bomney's R. 21
To W.C. Macready 1
5
Love and Duty 55
Window, The Answer 6
Marr. of Geraint 735
The Ring 321
Part (to divide) thorough-edged intellect to p Error from crime ; Isabel 14
ere the falling axe did p The burning brain
To put together, p and prove.
Can I p her from herself.
And p it, giving half to him.
Her care is not to v and prove ;
a comb of pearl to p The lists of such a beard
It was ill-done to p you, Sisters fair ;
be loath To p them, or p from them :
I mun p them Tommies —
While she vows ' till death shall p us,'
she that came to p them all too late,
Partake Then Yniol, ' Enter therefore and p
Partaker No more p of thy change.
Part-amazed Then half-ashamed and p-a.
Parted (adj.) Or thro' the p silks the tender face
And p lips which drank her breath,
Unfriendly of your p guest.
Parted (parted company) ere he p said, ' This hour is thine
Had once hard words, and p,
p, with great strides among his dogs.
We p : sweetly gleam'd the stars,
Enoch p with his old sea-friend,
' Here, by this brook, we p ;
the week Before I p with poor Edmund ;
They p, and Sir Aylmer Ayhner watch'd.
A littfe after you had p with him,
and beckon'd us : the rest P ;
Gareth ere he p flash'd in arms.
madness of that hour, WTien first I p from thee,
rose without a word and p from her :
Who p with his own to fair Elaine :
' Lord, no sooner had yep from us,
' But p from the jousts Hurt in the side,'
He spake and p. Wroth, but all in awe,
' Farewell, sweet sister,' p all in teare.
And p, laughing in his courtly heart.
then slowly to her bower P,
rode to the divided way. There kiss'd, and p weeping
poor lad, an' we p in tears
when we p, Edith spoke no word,
I p from her, and I went alone.
You p for the Holy War without a word to me,
Parted (divided) ' my friend — P from her —
friend from friend Is oftener p,
one at other, p by the shield.
The wrist is p from the hand that waved,
We cried when we were p ;
And floated on and p round her neck,
P a little ere they met the floor,
with their nail'd prows P the Norsemen,
Margaret 38
Two Voices 134
Locksley Hall 70
In Mem. xxv 12
„ xlviii 5
Merlin and V. 244
Lover's Tale i 814
Sisters [E. and E.) 50
Spinster's S's. 92
Locksley H., Sixty 24
The Ring 216
Marr. of Geraint 300
In Mem. xli 8
Gareth and L. 868
Princess vii 60
Lover's Tale ii 204
The Wanderer 4
Love and Death 9
Dora 18
Godiva 31
The Letters 41
Enoch Arden 168
The Brook 1
78
Ayhner's Field 277
Sea Dreams 273
Princess ii 183
Gareth and L. 689
Geraint and E. 347
Merlin and V. 742
Lancelot and E. 381
576
622
719
1152
1176
Last Tournament 239
Guinevere 125
First Quarrel 20
Sisters (E. and E.) 215
The Ring 437
Happy 77
Princess v 76
In Mem. xcviii 15
Geraint and E. 269
Merlin and V. 551
Lover's Tale i 253
704
iv 215
Batt. of Brunanburh 94
Parted (divided) {continued) You have p the man from the m ife. Despair 62
rove no more, if we be p now ! Tlie Flight 84
Two lovers p by a scurrilous tale The Ring 208
storm Had p from his comrade in the boat, „ 308
on that day Two lovers p by no scurrilous tale — „ 427
Parthenon Inform'd the pillar'd P, Freedom 3
Parting (adj. and part.) As p with a long embrace In Mem. xl 11
nigh the sea P my own loved mountains lever's Tale i 433
But cast a p glance at me, you saw, „ iv 4
I knew You were p for the war, Happy 74
hke p hopes I heard them passing from me : Princess iv 172
and regret Her p step, and held her tenderly, Lancelot and E. 867
Parting (s) Their eveiy p was to die. " In Mern. xcvii 12
Warm with a gracious p from the Queen, Pelleas and E. 558
And just above the p was a lamp : Lover's Tale iv 218
Partner prudent p of his blood Lean'd on him, Two Voices 415
Thy p in the nowery walk Of letters, In Mem. Ixxxiv 22
Two p's of a married life — „ xemi 5
Partridge Cries of the p hke a rusty key Lover's Tale ii 115
Partridge-breeder These p-b's of a thousand years, Ayhner's Field 382
Party (adj.) And ancient forms of p strife ; In Mem. cvi 14
0 scorner of the p cry That wanders Freedom 25
Party (s) two parties still divide the world — Walk, to the Mail 77
All parties work together. Will Water. 56
' Drink, and let the parties rave : Vision of Sin 123
being lustily holpen by the rest. His p, — Lancelot and E. 497
knights. His p, cried ' Advance and take thy prize „ 503
His p, knights of utmost North and West, „ 526
Kivals of realm-ruining p, Locksley H., Sixty 120
Party-secret betraying HLs p-s, fool, to the press ; Maud II v 35
Pass (s) (See also Hill-pass) shadowy granite, in a
gleaming p; Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 4
The long divine Peneian p. To E. L. 3
Snatch'd thro' the perilous p'es of his life : Aylmer's Field 209
the strait and dreadful p of death. Com. of Arthur 395
never dream'd the p'es would be past ' Gareth and L. 1413
never dream'd the p'es could be past.' „ 1420
Arthur came, and labouring up the p, Lancelot and E. 47
And soUtary p'es of the wood Last Tournament 361
Hath folded m the p'es of the world.' Pass, of Arthur 78
wet black p'es and foam-churning chasms — Sir J. Oldcastle 9
inroad nowhere scales Their headlong p'es, Montenegro 5
from every vale and plain And garden p, To Mary Boyle 10
Pass (verb) Men p me by ; Supp. Confessions 19
red cloaks of market girls, P onward from Shalott. L. of Shalott ii 18
And heard her native breezes p, Mariana in the S. 43
An image seem'd to p the door, (repeat) „ 65, 74
To p, when Life her light withdraws, Two Voices 145
Can he p, and we forget ? Miller's D. 204
P by the happy souls, that love to live : (Enone 240
1 pray thee, p before my light of life, „ 241
the Uvelong day my soul did p. Palace of Art 55
stars above them seem to biighten as they p : May Queen 34
I shall hear you when you p. May Queen, N. Y's. E. 31
I THOUGHT to p away before, „ Con. 1
my desire is but to p to Him that died for me. „ 20
' P freely thro' : the wood is all thine own, D. of F. Wotnen 83
Once thro' mine own doors Death did p ; To J. S. 19
Did never creature p So slightly. Talking Oak 86
Or p beyond the goal of ordinance Tithonus 30
Then a hand shall p before thee, Locksley Hall 81
Till all the hundred summers p, Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 33
That strove in other days to p, „ Arrival 10
My lord, and shall we p the bill „ Revival 27
To p with all our social ties „ L' Envoi 5
So p I hostel, hall, and grange ; Sir Galahad 81
I hold it good, good things should p : Will Water. 205
P on, weak heart, and leave me where I lie : Come not, lohen, etc. 11
And p his days in peace among his own. Enoch Arden 147
Annie, the ship I sail in p'es here „ 214
P from the Danish barrow overhead ; . „ 442
let my query p Unclaim'd, The Brook 104
There stood a maiden, near Waiting to p. „ 205
But nevermore did either p the gate Aylmer's Field 826
sides of the grave itself shall p, Lucretius 257
Pass
there did a compact f Long summers
Princess i 123
,. a 232
V A
91
., vi 341
Bequiescat 7
Voice and the P. 28
s (verb) (continued)
back,
and p With all fair theories only made to gild
he said, ' p on ; His Highness wakes : '
she wiU p me by in after-life
P, and mingle with your likes.
Her peaceful being slowly p'es by
the voice, the peak, the star P,
if left to p His autumn into seeming-leafless days-
Winds are loud and winds will p ! "~
That all thy motions gently p
The salt sea-water p'es by,
And p'es into gloom a^ain.
I shall p ; my work will fail.
We p : the path that each man trod
That these things p, and I shall prove
And, leaving these, to p away,
A Dedication 9
Window, No Answer 22
In Mem. xv 10
,, xix 6
,. xxxix 12
„ Ivii 8
„ Ixxiii 9
„ Ixxxv 98
cl9
in the drifts that p To darken on the roUing brine „ cvii 13
They leave the porch, they p the grave „ Con. 71
But sweeps away as out we p ,, 95
And p the silent-Ughted town, „ 112
I see her p like a light ; Maud I iv 11
P and blush the news Over glowing ships ; ,, xvii 11
P the happy news. Blush it thro' the West ; „ 15
And trying to f to the sea ; „ xxi 7
P, thou deathlike type of pain, „ II iv 58
P and cease to move about ! „ 59
Guinevere Stood by the castle walls to watch him p ; Com. of Arthur 48
and sign'd To those two sons to p, ,, 319
he will not die, But p, again to come ; „ 422
Gareth was too princely-proud To p thereby ; Gareth and L. 162
so thou p Beneath this archway, „ 267
P not beneath this gateway, „ 273
a knight would p Outward, or inward to the hall : „ 310
' He p'es to the Isle AviUon, „ 502
He p'es and is heal'd and cannot die ' — „ 503
jeweU'd harness, ere they p and fly. „ 688
For whom we let thee p.' „ 917
And quickly p to Arthur's hall, „ 984
Else yon black felon had not let me p, „ 1293
like a phantom p Chilling the night : „ 1335
until we p and reach That other, Geraint and E. 6
Wait here, and when he p'es fall upon him.' „ 129
they wiU fall upon you while ye p.' „ 145
glancing for a minute, till he saw her P into it, „ 887
WUt thou undertake them as we p, Balin and Balan 14
As p without good morrow to thy Queen ? ' „ 252
' Yea so ' she said, ' but so to p me by — „ 255
and p And vanish in the woods ; „ 326
heard them p Uke wolves Howling ; „ 407
He must not p uncared for. Lancelot and E. 536
Only ye would not p beyond the cape „ 1039
I cried because ye would not p Beyond it, „ 1042
that I may p at last Beyond the poplar „ 1049
so let me p, My father, howsoe'er I seem to you, „ 1091
But that he p'es into Fairyland.' „ 1259
' That is love's curse ; p on, my Queen, forgiven.' „ 1353
Who p'es thro' the vision of the night — „ 1406
' Then on a summer night it came to p, Holy Grail 179
cries of all my realm P thro' this hall^ „ 316
the street of those Who watcb'd usp; „ 345
go forth and p Down to the little thorpe
P not from door to door and out again,
resolve To p away into the quiet life,
Cares but to p into the sUent life.
And p and care no more,
like a poisonous wind I p to blast
' First over me,' said Lancelot, ' shalt thou p.'
Watch'd her lord p, and knew not that she
sigh'd. Last Tournament 130
purple slopes of mountain flowers P under white, „ 230
one will ever shine and one will p. „ 737
all this trouble did not p but grew ; Guinevere 84
1 waged His wars, and now I p and die. Pass, of Arthwr 12
God my Christ — I p but shall not die.' „ 28
524 Passing
Pass (verb) [continued) King ! To-morrow tnou shalt p
away. Pass, of Arthur M
wife and child with wail P to new lords ; ,.45
' O me, my King, let p whatever will, „ 51
but as yet thou shalt not p. „ 55
one last act of knighthood shalt thou see Yet, ere I p.' „ 164
' He p'es to be King among the dead, „ 449
Somewhere far off, p on and on, ,, 467
To p my hand across my brows. Lover's Tale i 31
And mine with one that will not p, till earth And
71
286
470
481
., iv 63
276
Sisters (E. and E.) 53
In the Child. Hosp. 61
Sir J. Oldcastle 21
124
Ancient Sage 144
202
Locksley H., Sixty 182
206
Epilogue 64
To Virgil 28
Early Spring 12
On Jub. Q. Victoria 69
Happy 104
To Mary Boyle 39
Parnassus 15
Making of Man 4
. Poets and Critics 8
Doubt and Prayer 3
Enoch Arden 650
Geraint and E. 392
Merlin and V. 913
Lancelot and E. 895
II
546
714
738
Pelleas and E. 11
569
571
heaven p too,
P we then A term of eighteen years.
So that they p not to the shrine of sound
Which p with that which breathes them ?
' It was my wish,' he said, ' to p, to sleep.
Glanced at the point of law, to p it by.
Three hundred years — will p collaterally ;
but I thought that it never would p.
with his hard ' Dim Saesneg ' p'es,
and life P in the fire of Babylon !
The plowman p'es, bent with pain,
but p From sight and night to lose themselves
and the sun himself will p.
Many an jEon too may p •
Earth p'es, all is lost In what they prophesy,
kings and realms that p to rise no more ;
o'er the mountain-walls Young angels p.
Till the thunders p, the spectres vanish,
Your plague but p'es by the touch.
helpt to p a bucket from the well
p on ! the sight confuses —
aeon after aeon p and touch him into shape ?
Some will p and some will pause.
From sin thro' sorrow into Thee we p
clothes they gave him and free p home ;
Except the p that he loved her not ;
There must be now no p'es of love
That has but one plain p of few notes,
Will sing the simple p o'er and o'er
Passant cow shall butt the ' Lion p '
Pass'd See Past
Passenger Should see thy p's in rank
Passest thou p any wood Close vizor,
Passeth shadow p when the tree shall fall.
Love p not the threshold of cold Hate,
Passin' when they seeas ma a p boy,
Passing (See also Passin') P the place where each
must rest,
each in p touch'd with some new grace
In p, with a grosser film made thick
No eye look down, she p ;
She p thro' the summer world again,
Not sowing hedgerow texts and p by,
as not p thro' the fire Bodies, but souls —
and murmur'd that their May Was p :
like parting hopes I heard them p
many a maiden p home Till happier times ;
Nine times goes the p bell :
P with the weather.
Was drown'd in p thro' the ford,
p, turn the page that tells A grief.
Nor feed with sighs a p wind :
The shade of p thought, the wealth Of words
With never an end to the stream of p feet,
Arthur, p thence to battle, felt Travail,
and p forth to breathe,
' Ana p gentle ' caught his hand away
That makes me p wrathful ;
And p one, at the high peep of dawn, „
I fear My fate or folly, p gayer youth For one so old, „
sigh'd in p ' Lancelot, Forgive me; Lancelot and E.
Three against one : and Gawain p by.
He saw not, for Sir Lancelot p by
Leapt like a p thought across her eyes ;
that p lightly Adown a natural stair
Locksley H., Sixty 248
In Mem. xiv 6
Last Tournament 534
Love and Death 14
Lover's Tale i 778
N. Farmer, 0. S. 53
Two Voices 410
Gardener's D. 204
St. S. Stylites 200
Godiva 40
Enoch Arden 534
Aylmer's Field 171
671
Princess ii 464
„ iv 173
„ vi 380
All Things icill Die 35
Windov;, Spring 6
In Mem. vi 39
„ Ixxvii 10
„ cviii 4
„ Con. 102
Maud II V 11
Com. of Arthur 75
369
Balin and Balan 371
Merlin and V. 341
560
927
1350
Pelleas and E. 274
Guinevere 30
Lover's Tale i 70
526
Passing
525
Past
Passing (continued) ships of the world could stare at him,
p by. Bizfah 83
And moved to meiriment at a p jest. Sisters (E. and E.) 121
Art p on thine happier voyage now Sir J. Franklin 3
But make the p shadow serve thy will. Aiicient Sage 110
and p now into the night ; Locksley H., Sixty 227
poor old Poetry, p hence, „ 249
p thro' at once from state to state, Demeter and P. 7
clatter of arms, and voices, and men p to and fro. Bandit's Death 24
p souls thro' fire to the fire. The Dawn 4
The p of the sweetest soul In Mem. Ivii 11
some Were pale as at the p of a ghost, Com. of Arthur 264
And o'er it are three p's, and three knights Defend
the p's, Gareth and L. 613
he mark'd his high sweet smile In p, Balin and Balan 161
In p it glanced upon Hamlet or city, Merlin and the G. 103
Passion {See also Master-passion) When my p seeks
Pleasance Lilian 8
By veering p fann'd, Madeline 29
And those whom p hath not blinded, Ode to Memwry 117
In thee all p becomes passionless, Elednore 102
the soul and sense Of P gazing upon thee. „ 116
A ghost of p that no smiles restore — The form, the form 11
Wilt thou find p, pain or pride ? Two Voices 243
She had the p's of her kind, L. C. V. de Vere 35
lyre of widest range Struck by all p, D. of F. Women 166
How p rose thro' circumstantial grades Gardener's D. 240
I ask^d him of his early life, And his first p ; Edxoin Morris 24
something of a wayward modem mind Di.ssecting p. „ 88
For when my p first began, Talking Oak 9
hold p in a leash. And not leap forth Love and Duty 40
In one blind cry of p and of pain, „ 80
p shall have spent its novel force, Locksley Hall 49
I triiunph'd ere my p sweeping thro' me „ 131
my foolish p were a, target for their scorn : ^ „ 146
and all thy p's, match'd with mine, ,, 151
There the p s cramp'd no longer „ 167
p's of her mind. As winds from all the compass Godiva 32
He spoke; the p in her moan'd repljr Enoch Arden 286
where a p yet unborn perhaps Lay hidden Ayhner's Field 101
his p's all in flood And masters of his motion, „ 339
living p symbol'd there Were living nerves „ 535
make our p's far too like The discords Sea Dreams 257
flush Of p and the first embrace had died Lucretius 3
To lead an errant p home again. „ 17
My heart beat thick with p and with awe ; Princess Hi 190
How much their welfare is a « to us. ., 281
She ended with such p that the tear, ., iv 59
rhythm have dash'd The p of the prophetess ; ,. 140
Beaten with some great p at her heart, .. 388
Leapt fiery P from the brinks of death ; „ vii 156
loyal p for our temperate kings ; Ode on Well. 165
sang Of a p that lasts but a day ; G. of Swainston 9
My centred p cannot move, In Mem lix 9
His other p wholly dies, ,, Ixii 10
my p hath not swerved To works of weakness, „ Ixxxv 49
And my prime p in the grave : „ 76
O tell me where the p's meet, „ Ixxxviii 4
Thy p clasps a secret joy : „ 8
And p pure in snowy bloom Thro' all the years „ cix 11
My love is vaster p now ; „ cxxx 10
Put down the p's that make earth Hell ! Maud / a; 46
mind, when fraught With a p so intease „ II ii 59
the strong p in her made her weep Marr. of Geraint 110
all the p of a twelve hours' fast.' „ 306
So burnt he was with p, crying out, „ 560
break it, when his p masters him. Geraint and E. 43
With more exceeding p than of old : ,. 335
And all in p uttering a dry shriek, „ 461
His p half nad gauntleted to death, Balin and Balan 220
I, that flattering my true p, saw The knights. Merlin and V. 874
Till now the storm, its burst of p spent, „ 961
sweet and sudden p of youth Toward greatness Lancelot and E. 282
A fiery family p for the name Of Lancelot, 477
Crush'd the wild p out against the floor „ 742
Passion {continued) To blunt or break her p.'
(He meant to break the p in her)
To break her p, some discourtesy
My brother ? was it earthly p crost ? '
' Nay,' said the knight ; ' for no such p mine,
sent the deathless p in her eyes Thro' him.
Than is the maiden p for a maid,
and grew again To utterance of p.
As I of mine, and my first p.
I spoke it — told her of my p.
For the p of battle was in us.
Till the p of battle was on us,
my boy-phrase ' The P of the Past.'
the sacred p of the second life,
at last beyond the p's of the primal clan ?
strip your own foul p's bare ;
every serpent p kill'd.
Lancelot and E. 974
1079
1302
Holy Grail 29
30
" 163
Guinevere 479
Lover's Tale i 547
Sisters (E. and E.) 67
146
V. of Maeldune 96
111
Ancient Sage 219
Locksley H., Sixty 68
93
141
167
Passionate and show'd their eyes Glaring, and p looks. Sea Dreams 236
P tears FoUow'd : Princess vi 311
there was love in the p shriek, Maud- 1 i 57
p heart of the poet is whirl'd into folly and vice. ,, iv 39
A p ballad gallant and gay, „ v ^
there rises ever a p cry From underneath „ II i 5
And there rang on a sudden a p cry, „ 33
Let me and my p love go by, „ H 77
But there rings on a sudden a p cry, iv 47
' It is time, it is time, 0 p heart,' .. /// vi 30
' It is time, O p heart and morbid eye, „ 32
So p for an utter purity Beyond the limit of their bond. Merlin and V. 26
Her God, her Merlin, the one p love „ 955
That p perfection, my good lord — * Lancelot and E. 1 22
Went on in p utterance : Guinevere 611
The p moment would not suffer that — Lover's Tale iv 356
P girl tho' I was, an' often at home in disgrace, First Quarrel 15
Back to that p answer of full heart Sisters {E and E.) 259
tone so rough that I broke into p tears, The Wreck 122
and heard his p vow. The Flight 83
the follies, furies, curses, p tears, Locksley H., Sixty 39
You wrong me, p little friend. Epilogue 10
0 you with your p shriek for the rights Beautiful City 2
Passionately Then suddenly and p she spoke : Lancelot and E. 929
while full p, Her head upon her hands, Guinevere 180
Passion-flower He is claspt by a p-f. Maud I xiv 8
splendid tear From the p-f at the gate. „ xxii 60
And the red p-f to the cliffs, V. of Maeldune 39
Passionless In thee all passion becomes p, Eleanore 102
P bride, divine Tranquillity, Lucretius 266
P, pale, cold face, star-sweet Maud I Hi 4
Where if I cannot be gay let a p peace be my lot, „ iv 50
Innumerable, pitiless, p eyes, „ xviii 38
The bridesmaid pale, statuelike, p — Sisters {E. and E.) 212
High, self-contain'd, and p, Guinevere 406
Passion-pale P-p they met And greeted.. „ 99
Passive The p oxen gaping. Amphion 72
Worried hLs p ear with petty wrongs Enoch Arden 352
when he cea.sed, in one cold p hand Lancelot and E. 1201
p sailor wrecks at last In ever-silent seas ; Ancient Sage 136
Passport no false p to that easy realm, Aylmer's Field 183
Past (adj.) {See also Past (verb) Strange friend, p, present,
and to be ; In Mem. cxxix 9
all experience jp became Consolidate in mind Two Voices 365
Desirmg what is mingled with p years, D. of F. Women 282
She took the body of my p delight, Lover's Tale i 681
Past (adv.) seem to nicker p thro' sun and shade, Ancient Sage 100
Past (prep.) Lame and old, and p his time, Locksley H., Sixty 227
Give me your prayers, for he is past your prayers, Aylmer's Field 751
Not past the living fount of pity in Heaven. „ 752
For it was past the time of Easterday. Gareth and L. 186
when old and gray. And past desire ! ' Last Tournament 628
old, Gray-hair'd, and past desire, „ 653
wind, and past his ear Went shrilling. Pass of Arthur 32
raising her Still higher, past all perU, Lover's Tale i 394
to be sewer it be past 'er time. Spinster's S's. 5
Then home, and past the ruin'd mill. The Ring 156
Now past her feet the swallow circling flies, Prog, of Spring 44
Past
526
Past-Pass' d
Past ipnp.) (emUintud) Yoke of the Earth weut wailingly
past bhx\ The Drfamtr 3
Past (s) fiiv. From the fountains of the />, Ode to MetHorjf 2
sorrowest thou, pale Fainter, for the /•, IVan Si^nlptor 3
P and Preseoit-, ^vound in one, MiUtr's D. 197
far-biought Fiom out the storied P, Loit thou thy land 2
For ail we f> of Time rereals „ 50
in the flying of a wheel Cry down the p, Godiva 7
So mix for ever with the p, WiU H'o/«f. 201
bitvi's-eye-view of all the unsjracious p ; Princess ii 125
haunt About the moulderM lodges of the P „ »c 63
let the p be v ; „ 76
great hejirt thro' all tlie f aultful P Princess vii 848
all the i> Melts mist^like into this bright hour, „ 354
RemeiUDeriHij all his givatjiess in the P. Ode on Fr«H. 20
That sets the p in this rt>hef ? In Mem. xxiv 12
Or that the p will always win A glory „ 13
And silent traces of tiie p „ xiiU 7
The eternal landscape of the p ; „ jdvi 8
And fadim; legend of the p : ., Isii 4
A night-long l^resont of the P .. Uxi 3
>vind Of niojuory niunnuring the ». „ xcii 8
The deavi man tbuch'd me from the p, ., oftf 34
By meadows breathing of the />, ., jW* 7
And hold it solenm to the p. „ cv 16
Thou, like my present and my p, „ cxri 19
Then let her "fancy flit across the p, Marr. of Geraint 645
sins that maile tlie d so pleasant to us : Ouinetere 375
And moving thro' tne p unconsiMously, „ 403
Even now the Goddess of the P, Loter's Tale i 16
The I'resent is the vassal of the P: .,119
The beautiful in P of act or place, „ 135
And all the broken palaces of the P, „ •» 59
mother's garrxilous wail For ever woke the
unhappv P again, •^•.slars ( £. and £.) 263
and suffer the /* to be P.' V. of Jdaddune 124
mindful of the », Our true co- mates
regatlier Prtf. Son. 19th Cent. 4
would scatter tlie gliosts of the P, Despair 23
can I breathe divoroeil from the P? „ 113
statesman's brain that sway'd tlie p Ancient Safe 134
In mv bov-phrase ' The Passion of the P.' » 219
doubtless'of a fooUsh /> : Ltdcdey if., Sixtjf 7
hold tlie Present fatal daughter of the P, ., 105
moment fly and mingle with the P. ,. 279
This heritage of the p ; Freedom 24
Sharers of our glorious p. Open, L and C. EsAib. 31
drown'd in the deeps of a meaiiingless P '? Fatness 34
And D and future mis'd in Heaven The Sin^ 186
kst tne moment of their p on earth, „ 464
winter of the Present for the summer of the P ; ^«VP!f 70
I smn at a field in the P, By em Bwolmbo*. 17
Extras in the P, but close to me to-day JtoMS ontM* T.6
Her P became her Present-, Death of (Enone 14
Past-Pass'd (v«rb) Of a maiden post away, Adeline 19
and past Into deep orange o'er the sea, Mariana in the S. 25
They piiA' into the level flood, MOler's D. 75
That into stilhiess past again, „ 227
When I past by, a wild iuid wanton pard, (Enomt 199
you must comfort her when I am p<u( away. May Qmmm, Con. 44
forms that Mus'^ at windo^rs and on roofs D. of F. Woman S3
^ Glory to God,' she sang, and pa^ afar, „ 848
Beneath the sacred bush and ^ast away — Tht Efie S
an hour hai.1 pass'd. We reach d a meadow Gardetur^s D. 107
One after one, tliro' that still garvien pitss'd ; „ 201
be pass'd his father's gate, Ueart-brokot, Dora 50
when the fanneryass^ into the field .. 85
Then be tum'd ^ face and pass'd — .. 151
y«M'4 tiuo' aD The pillar'd dusk of sounding
STcamores, AndUy Court 15
I bad heaivl it was this bill that paM, Wedk. to IJU MaQ 67
' An hour had past— and, sitting stnug^t Tedkin§ Oak 109
tmnbting, pass'd in music out of si^t. LoeisUy Hedl 34
And she, that knew not, pass'd: OoHtm 73
A pleasant hour has pmsaed away Dmif-Dm^ /Va. 3
Past-Pass'd (vab) (coiUmiMd) The reflex of a legend past. Day- Dm., Pn>. II
ShiUl show thee past to Heaven : WiU Water. 246
So they past by capes and islaniis. The Captain 21
We past long lines of Xortliem capes The Voyagt- '^5
Glow'd for a moment as we past. „
What ! the flower of life is past : Vision of Sin
He pass'd by the town and out of the street^ Poet's Sony _
when the da\m of rosy childhoo^i past, Enoeh Jrden 37
past Bearing a lifeJong hunger in his heart. .. 78
the moment and the vessel past. .. 244
Past thro' the solitarj- room in front, .. 277
And ^i.</ into the little garth beyond. .. 329
o'er his covmtenance Xo shadow pa^, Enoeh Arden 710
So past the strong heroic soul away. „ 915
Rose from the clay it work'd in as she past, Aylmter's Fieid 170
Sir Ayhner p<%st. And neither lovet.1 nor like^l „ 249
Till after our good parents past away .. ;i"i!=;
Then drank and past it ; tiU at length .. !
and with her the race of Aylmer, ptist. ,. -3
fMst In simshine: right across its track Sea Dreams 1:
Aud past into the belt and swell'd ;igaiu „ 2:
he {Hist To turn and ponder those three hundred scrolls Lueretius
And dropt a fairy parachute and pust. Princess, Pro. Ti>
I rose and past Thro' the wild woods „ i P '
She once had oast that way ; ,. 1>
we past an aroi. Whereon a Avoman-statue rose ,. 2i
hastily we past, ^Vnd up a flight of stairs „ it .
she ptist From all her old companions, ,, 2(32
was it chance. She past my way. .. pi 98
o'er her foreliead past A shadow, .. 106
her face A little flush'd, and she past on ; ,, rii SI
there past by the gate of the fann, Willy, — Grandmoth^ 41
trifle left you, when I shall have tHwl away. „ l~
we iHtst Fiom Como, when the light was gray. The Daisy
And after Autunm past A Dedication
He past; a soul of nobler tone : In Mem. Ix I
I paH beside the reverend walls ,. Ixxxvii 1
Up that long walk of limes I pitst .. 1 '
But if they came who past away, ,. jx 1
Their love has never past a>vay ; .. jtrvii 1
as I found when her carriage past, Mawd I ii o
1 past him, I was crossing his lands ; „ xUi o
But while I past he was hiumning an air, ., 17
Of twelve sweet hours that past in bridal white, ., jtriii ivi
Which else would have been past by ! „ // ii tv>
has past and leaves The Crown a lonely splendour. Ded. of IdMs 4S
But Arthur, looking downward as he past. Com. of Arthur 55
And Lancelot past away among the flowers, ,. 40*^
there p<i.<< along tlie hyinns A voice as of the waters, „ 4(.
In scornful stiUness gazing as they past ; ..41
break his \-ery heart in puiing for it. And past away.' Gareth and L. •>>
Tum'd to the right, and past along the plain ; „ 2;^o
while she past, CJame yet another widow „ 34;^
He rose and post ; then Kay, a man of mien „ 45-
jMtst into the hall A damsel'of high lineage, „ 5S7
:>he into hall p>kct with her page and cried, ,. 5P-
past The weirvi white gj»te. and paused without, „ tx
And out by tliis main doorway past the King. „ oT
Gareth rode Down the slope street, anti past without
the gate. „ 100
So Gareth past with iov ; „ 701
tire King hath past his'time — „ 109
Anon Uiey past a narrow comb wherein » 119o
and all his life Past into sleep ; „ 1381
mufflevi voices hearvl, and shallows past ; „ 13To
They never drvam'd the passes woiud be pas*,' .. 1413
They never dreamM the passes could be past.' „ 142li
and they pa.<< to their own land ; Marr. ofGiraint 45
like a shadow, past the people's talk .. ?-
Prince, sis Enivl p<%si him. fain To follow, ., 37
1 know not, but he past to the wild land. „ 4^
they pti,<f The marvhes, and by bandit-haunted holds, Geratnt and E. ~
thro' the gre^i gloom of the wood they pa^, » 1^'
And many peut, but none regarded her, „ oiX>
and past away. But left two orawny spearmen, „ 557
Fast-Pass'd
527
Path
Past-Pass'd (verb) {continued) And past to Enid's tent ; Geraint and E. 922
So past the days. „ 930
they past With Arthur to Caerleon upon Usk. „ 945
and they past to their own land. „ 955
those three kingless years Have past — Balin and Balan 64
so turning side by side They past, „ 280
Past eastward from the falling sun. „ 320
For hate and loathing, would have past him by ; „ 388
She past ; and Vivien murmur'd after ' Go ! Merlin and V. 98
eight years past, eight jousts had been, Lancelot and E. 67
Past inward, as she came from out the tower. „ 346
Meanwhile the new companions past away „ 399
Arthur to the banquet, dark in mood. Past, „ 565
Past to her chamber, and there flung herself „ 609
Thence to the court he past ; „ 706
Past up the still rich city to his kin, „ 802
past beneath the weirdly-sculptured gates ., 844
and past Down thro' the dim rich city to the fields, „ 846
past In either twilight ghost-Uke to and fro ,. 848
ten slow mornings past, and on the eleventh „ 1133
Past like a shadow thro' the field, „ 1140
Diamonds to meet them, and they past away. ., 1237
slowly past the barge Whereon the lily maid 1241
Had pass'd into the silent life of prayer. Holy Grail 4
the Grail Past, and the beam decay'd, „ 122
Fashion'd by Merlin ere he past away, „ 168
none might see who bare it, and it past.
showers of flowers Fell as we past ;
thence I past Far thro' a ruinous city,
past thro Pagan realms, and made them mine,
the sweet Grail GUded and past.
And up into the sounding hall I past ;
and the sweet smell of the fields Past,
reach 'd Caerleon, ere they past to lodging, she,
he past. And heard but his own steps,
forth he past, and mounting on his horse
with mortal cold Past from her ;
that imhappy child Past in her barge :
When all the goodlier guests are past away,
Our one white day of fiinocence hath past.
The leaf is dead, the yearning past away :
Isolt With ruby-circled neck, but evermore Past,
Mark her lord had past, the Cornish King,
lookt So sweet, that halting, in he past,
but turning, paM and gain'd TintagU,
he past. Love-loyal to the least wish
while he past the dim-Ut woods,
(When first I learnt thee hidden here) is past.
is also past — in part. And all is past, the sin
past To where beyond these voices there is peace,
when that moan had past for evermore,
Past with thee thro' thy people and their love,
breathless body of her good deeds past.
We past from light to dark.
Past thro' into his citadel, the brain,
when the woful sentence hath been past,
did strike my forehead as I past ;
They past on. The lordly Phantasms ! in their floating
folds They past
past and flow'd away To those unreal billows :
Suddenly came her notice and we past.
Past thro' his visions to the bimal ;
mounting these He past for ever from his native land ;
in the pleasant times that had past.
190
349
428
478
827
Pdleas and E. 6
125
415
456
Last Tournament 28
45
158
218
277
365
382
388
504
Guinevere 125
251
539
542
697
441
To the Queen ii 7
Lover's Tale i 217
516
631
788
ii 19
98
195
„ iv 154
357
387
First Quarrel 55
Lord Howard past away with five ships of war The Revenge 13
Whirl'd by, which, after it had past me, Sisters (E. and E.) 86
whirUng landaulet For ever past me by : ,,115
The morning of our marriage, past away : „ 244
past to this ward where the younger children are
laid:
and Emmie had past away,
but only a whisper that past :
On them the smell of burning had not past.
and we past Over that undersea isle.
And we past to the Isle of Witches
In the Child. Hasp. 27
72
Def. of Lv^Tcnow 50
Sir J. Oldcastle Yll
V. of Maeldwne 76
„ 97
Past-Pass'd (verb) {continued) So saying, light-foot Iris
pass'd a.vf?LY. Achilles over the T. 1
light to the King tifl he past away To Prin. F. of H. 1
win all praise from all Who past it, Tiresias 84
past, in sleep, away By night, „ 203
and past Over the range and the change The Wreck 69
I remember I thought, as we past, Despair 11
We had past from a cheerless night „ 28
I had past into perfect quiet at length „ 66
for she past from the night to the night. „ 72
past into the Nameless, as a cloud Melts into Heaven. Ancient Sage 233
And past the range of Night and Shadow — „ 283
One golden curl, his golden gift, before he past away. The Flight 36
The lark has past from earth to Heaven „ 62
and thy shadow past Before me, crying Demeter and P. 93
breath that past With all the cold of winter. The Ring 32
then I pass'd Home, and thro' V^enice, ,, 191
And gave it me, who pass'd it down her own, „ 270
spoke no more, but tum'd and pass'd away. „ 342
A cold air pass'd between us, „ 380
the grating of a sepulchre. Past over both. „ 401
face Look'd in upon me like a gleam and pass'd, ,, 420
Would I had past in the morning By an Evolution. 10
She waked a bird of prey that scream'd and past ; Death of (Enone 87
mixt herself with him and past in fire. „ 106
there past a crowd With shameless laughter, St. Telemachus 38
Pastern cream-white mule his p set : Sir L. and Q. G. 31
Pastime play'd In his free field, and p made. Two Voices 320
You thought to break a country heart For p, L. C. V. de Vere 4
Why took ye not your p ? Love and Duty 28
At our old p's in the hall In Mem. xxx 5
he beats his chair For p, „ Ixvi 14
in a tilt For p ; yea, he said it : Gareth and L. 543
And p both of hawk and hound, Marr. of Geraint 711
who take Their p now the trustful King is gone ! ' Lancelot and E. 101
in one full field Of gracious p. Holy Grail 324
Are winners in this p of our King. Last Tournament 199
following her old p of the brook. The Ring 354
Pastor being used to find her p texts, Aylmer's Field Q06
Pastoral Nor p rivulet that swerves To left and right In Mem. c. 14
Upon a p slope as fair, Maud I xviii 19
and Peace Pipe on her p hillock a languid note, „ /// vi 24
Pasturage wither'd holt or tilth or p. Enoch Arden 675
Pasture Thro' crofts and p's wet with dew Two Voices 14
gray twilight pour'd On dewy p's, dewy trees, Palace of Art 86
In tracts of p sunny-warm, „ 94
For all the sloping p murmur'd. Princess, Pro. 55
Silvery willow, P and plowland. Merlin and the G. 54
Pasturing He pointed out a p colt, and said : The Brook 136
Pasty half -cut-down, a p costly-made, Audley Court 23
what stick ye round The p ? Gareth and L. 1073
Pat p The girls upon the cheek, Talking Oak 43
Patch (s) Or while the p was worn ; „ 64
Upon my proper p of soil Amphion 99
Patch (verb) three castles p my tatter'd coat ? Princess ii 416
Patch'd and refuse p with moss. Vision of Sin 212
one was p and blurr'd and lustreless Marr. of Geraint 649
Patent Last night, their mask was p. Princess iv 326
Paternoster See Pather
Path (See also Forest-path, Side-path) why dare P's
in the desert ? Supp. Confessions 79
He, stepping down By zig-zag p's, M. d' Arthur 50
Till all the p's were dim, Talking Oak 298
the charm did talk About his p, TJay-Dm., Arrival 22
To silence from the p's of men ; L'Envoi 6
footstep seem'd to fall beside her p, Enoch Arden 514
up the steep hill Trod out a p : Sea Dreams 121
you planed her p To Lady Psyche, Princess iv 315
The p of duty was the way to gloiy : (repeat) Ode on Well. 202, 210
has won His p upward, and prevail'd, „ 214
The p of duty be the way to glory : „ 224
The p by which we twain did go. In Mem, xxii 1
where the p we walk'd began To slant „ 9
My p's are in the fields I know, „ xl 31
The p we came by, thorn and flower, „ xlvi 2
Path
528
Pavilion
Path (continued) When all our p was fresh with dew,
the p that each man trod Is dim,
Conduct by f's of growing powers,
He stood on the p a little aside ;
And wildernesses, perilous p's.
As not to see before them on the p,
Sideways he started from the p, and saw,
ran the counter p, and found His charger,
Chose the green p that show'd the rarer foot,
Darken'd the common p :
He, stepping down By zigzag p's.
The p was perilous, loosely strown with crags :
they trod The same old p's where Love
Yet trod I not the wildnower in my p,
my p was clear To win the sister.
A panther sprang across her p,
same p our true forefathers trod ;
Father (Paternoster) singin' yer ' Aves ' an' ' P's '
Pathos Shall sharpest p blight us.
Pathway disgraced For ever — thee (by p sand-erased)
where the hedge-row cuts the p, stood,
a well-worn p courted us To one green wicket
May beat a p out to wealth and fame.
Or on to where the p leads ;
made Broad f^s for the hunter and the knight
And down a rocky p from the place
And up the rocky p disappear'd.
Becomes the sea-cuff p broken short,
' One night my p swerving east.
Follow you the Star that lights a desert p,
she that had haunted his p still,
Pathway'd and hear their words On p plains ;
Patience ' Have p,' I repUed, ' ourselves are full
P ! Give it time To learn its limbs :
use A Uttle p ere I die ;
P — let the dying actor mouth his last
Steel me \vith p !
Patient (adj.) P of ill, and death, and scorn,
I had been a p wife :
P on this tall pillar I have borne
p leaders of their Institute Taught them
A p range of pupils ;
howsoever p, Yniol's heart Danced in his bosom,
And howsoever p, Yniol his.
crying, ' Praise the p saints,
p, and prayerful, meek, PaJe-blooded,
P of pain tho' as quick as a sensitive plant
in her open palm a halcyon sits P —
P children of Albion,
She said with a sudden glow On her p face
And yet be p — Our Playwright may show
Patient (s) blabbing The case of his p —
Patriarchal For one about whose p knee
Patriot 0 P Statesman, be thou wise to know
Patriot-soldier let the p-s take His meed
Patron Sir Aylmer half forgot his lazy smile Of p
Institute Of which he was the p.
hand that play'd the p with her curls.
A p of some thirty charities,
If easy f's of their kin Have left the last free race
like a mighty p, satisfied With what himself
Patted he p my hand in his gentle way,
thou be es 'ansom a tabby es iver p a mouse.
shook her head, and p yours,
Patter P she goes, my own little Annie,
Pattering P over the boards, (repeat)
The chestnut p to the ground :
Jast now the dry-tongued laurels' p talk
Pattern let them take Example, p :
Can't ye taake p by Steevie ?
Patting Ask'd Walter, p Lilia's head
Panl (Saint) laugh'd, and swore by Peter and by P:
Like P with beasts, I fought with Death ;
play the Saul that never will be P.
or such crimes As holy P — a shame to speak
In Mem. Ixviii 6
„ Ixxiii 9
In Mem. Ixxxiv 31
Maud I xiii 7
Geraint and E. 32
773
Balin and Balan 324
417
Lancelot and E. 162
Pdleas and E. 550
Pass, of An]. >ir 218
Lover's Tale i 384
821
a 20
Sisters (E. and E.) 202
Death of (Enone 89
Doubt and Prayer 4k
Tomorrow 96
Love and Duty 85
Alexander 5
Gardener's D. 86
109
Aylmer' s Field 439
In Mem. xxiii 8
Com. of Arthur 61
Geraint and E. 200
243
Merlin and V. 882
Holy Grail 634
Locksley H., Sixty 275
Dead Prophet 61
Prog, of Spring 83
Princess, Con. 72
78
In Mem. xxxiv 12
Locksley II., Sixty 152
Doubt and Prayer 9
Supp. Confessions 4
Dora 147
St. S. Stylites 15
Princess, Pro. 58
a 104
Marr. of Geraint 504
707
Last Tournament 217
607
In the Child. Hosp. 30
Prog, of Spring 21
On Jub. Q. Victoria 59
Charity 36
The Play 3
Maud II V 37
Ode on Well. 236
To Duke of Argyll 1
Epilogue 32
Aylmer' s Field 198
Princess, Pro. 6
138
„ Con. 88
Third of Feb. 39
Geraint and E. 644
First Quarrel 67
Spinster's S's. 70
The Ring 313
Grandmother 78
„ 77, 79
In Mem. xi 4
Maud I xviii 8
St. S. StyliUs 224
Spinster's S's. 65
Princess, Pro. 125
Godiva 24
In Mem. cxx 4
Sir J. OldcasUe 103
110
Paul's (Cathedral) down by smoky P's they bore.
Pause (s) and a sweep Of richest p's.
And, in the p's of the wind.
When she made p I knew not for delight ;
But lapsed into so long a p again
Like linnets in the p's of the wind :
Went sorrowing in a p I dared not break ;
There came a minute s p, and Walter said.
He paused, and in the p she crept an inch Nearer,
Pause (verb) The breezes p and die,
stream Along the cliff to fall and p and fall did seem
How dull it is to p, to make an end,
goal of ordinance Where all should p.
That made the wild-swan p in her cloud,
' Yet p,' I said : ' for that inscription
' Decide not ere you p.
turn to fall seaward again, P's,
in the darkness heard his armed feet P by her ;
J
Will Water. 1
Elednore 66
Miller's D. 122
D. of F. Women 169
Aylmer's Field 630
Princess, Pro. 246
vii 249
Con. 4
Guinevere 527
Claribd 2
Lotos-Eaters 9
Ulysses 22
Tithonus 31
Poet's Song 7
Princess ii 225
„ Hi 156
Geraint and E. 116
Guinevere 419
P ! before you sound the trumpet
Some will pass and some will p.
Paused Among the tents I p and sung,
p, And dropt the branch she held,
we p About the windings of the marge
that p Among her stars to hear us ;
But we nor p for fruit nor flowers.
p ; and he. Who needs would work for Annie
P for a moment at an inner door.
At Annie's door he p and gave his hand,
So still, the golden lizard on him p,
p Sir Ayhner reddening from the itorm
so pacing till she p By Florian ;
She p, and added with a haughtier smile
before them p Hortensia pleading :
She turn'd ; she p ; She stoop'd ;
We p : the winds were in the beech :
past The weird white gate, and p without,
advanced The monster, and then p,
often when I p Hath ask'd again.
She p, she turn'd away, she hmig her head,
P by the gateway, standing near the shield
On to the palace-doorway sliding, p.
' O King ! ' — and when he p,
— there he check'd himself and p.
the boy P not, but overrode him,
he heard Strange music, and he p.
He p, and in the pause she crept an inch Nearer,
We often p, and, looking back.
We p amid the splendour.
My heart p — my raised eyeUds would not fall,
P in their course to hear me,
Before the board, there p and stood,
and there she p. And long ;
p — and then ask'd Falteringly,
Pausing He p, Arthur answer'd, ' 0 my knight.
And p at a hostel in a marsh,
This custom ' P here a moment,
Pave blue heaven which hues and p's
Pavement from the p he half rose. Slowly,
on the p lay Carved stones of the Abbey-ruin
p where the King would pace At sunrise.
And heel against the p echoing,
heap of things that rang Against the p,
all the p stream'd with massacre :
from the p he half rose. Slowly,
Nor in this p but shall ring thy name
Pavilion I came upon the great P of the Caliphat
' Pitch our p here upon the sward ;
I stood With Florian, cursing Cyril, vext at heart, In the p : „ iv 172
bright With pitch'd p's of his foe, Com. of Arthur 97
on the further side Arose a silk p, Gareth and L. 910
The gay p and the naked feet, „ 937
old storm-beaten, russet, many-stain'd P, „ 1114
A huge p like a mountain peak „ 1364
at last — The huge p slowly yielded up, „ 1379
But found a silk p in a field, Holy Grail 745
Locksley H., Sixty 116
Poets and Critics 8
Two Voices 125
Gardener's D. 156
Edwin Morris 93
Love and Duty 73
The Voyage 56
Enoch Arden 179
278
447
601
Aylmer's Field 321
Princess ii 302
„ Hi 225
„ vii 131
154
In Mem. xxx 9
Gareth and L. 663
1385
Marr. of Geraint 435
Merlin and V. 887
Lancelot and E. 394
1246
Holy Grail 767
Pelleas and E. 527
545
Guinevere 239
527
Lover's Tale i 329
414
571
„ ii 14
iv 307
The Ring 334
Death of (Enone 94
Lancelot and E. 1326
Lover's Tale iv 131
237
Supp. Confessions 134
M. d' Arthur 167
Princess, Pro. 13
Gareth and L. 667
Geraint and E. 271
595
Last Tournament 471
Pass, of Arthur 335
Tiresias 137
Arabian Nights 114
Princess Hi 346
Pavilion
529
Peace-offering
Pavilion {continued) then this gale Tore my p from the
tenting-pin,
Holy GraU Ul
three p's rear'd Above the bushes, gilden-peakt : Pelleas and E. 428
The silk p's of King Arthur raised Guinevere 394
That crown'd the state p of the King, „ 399
Pavilion'd See Clood-paTilion'd
Paw Folded her lion p's, and look'd to Thebes. Tiresias 149
Paw'd p his beard, and mutter'd ' catalepsy.' Princess i 20
Kittenlike he roll'd And p about her sandal. „ Hi 182
Pay {See also Paay) p Meet adoration to my household gods, Ulysses 41
clamouring, ' If we p, we starve ! ' Godiva 15
' If they p this tax, they starve.' „ 20
half-crown. Which I shall have to p ? WUl Water. 156
Or means to p the voice who best could tell Enoch Arden 266
a voice, with which to p the debt Of boundless love Ode on Well. 156
Or later, p one visit here. To F. D. Maurice 45
Nor p but one, but come for many, „ 47
a debt. That I never can hope to p ; Maud I xix 88
No tribute will we p : ' Com. of Arthur 513
Will p thee all thy wages, and to boot. Gareth and L. 1005
And I will p you worship ; Merlin and V. 228
This father p's his debt vdih me, The Flight 20
With a purse to p for the show. Dead Prophet 8
Paynim But rather proven in his P ware Balin and Batan 38
a renmant that were left P amid their circles. Holy Grail 664
Troop'd round a P harper once, Last Tournament 322
thy P bard Had such a mastery of his mystery „ 326
Pea 'ere a bean an' yonder a p ; N. Farmer, 0. S. 46
Pluksh ! ! ! the hens i' the p's^l Village Wife 124
Peace God gave her p ; her land reposed ; To the Queen 26
And Thou and p to earth were bom. Supp. Confessions 26
a world of p And confidence, day after day ; „ 29
A haunt of ancient P. Palace of Art 68
And let the world have p or wars, „ 182
the dear old time, and all my p of mind ; May Queen, N. Y's. E. 6
good man, the clergyman, has told me words of p. „ Con. 12
Is there any p In ever climbing up Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 49
The place of him that sleeps in p. To J. S. 68
Sleep sweetly, tender heart, in p : „ 69
Would pace" the troubled land, like P ; Love thou thy land 84
when William died, he died at p With all men; Dora 144
breathing health and p upon her breast : Audley Court 68
Whose foresight preaches p, Love and Duty 34
cross thy thoughts Too sadly for their p, „ 89
universal P Lie like a shaft of light Golden Year 48
Pure lilies of eternal p, Sir Galahad 67
Across the whirlwind's heart of p, The Voyage 87
And pass his days in p among his own. Enoch Arden 147
Philip "s true heart, which hunger'd for her p „ 272
all the warmth, the p, the happiness, „ 761
Help me not to break in upon her p. „ 787
sleeps in p : and he, poor Philip, The Brook 190
wounded p which each had prick'd to death. Aylmer's Field 52
hung With wings of brooding shelter o'er her p, „ 139
Jilted I was : I say it for your p. „ 354
Prince of p, the Mighty God, „ 669
The things belonging to thy p and ours ! „ 740
I sought but p ; No critic I — Princess i 144
' p ! and why should I not play The Spartan Mother „ ii 282
lead The new light up, and culminate in p, „ 348
' P, you young savage of the Northern wild ! „ Hi 247
P be with her. She is dead. „ iu 136
marble Muses, looking p. Not p she look'd, „ 489
P ! there are those to avenge us and they come : „ 501
resolder'd p, whereon Follow'd his tale. „ v 47
one The silken priest of p, one this, „ 184
heavy dews Gather'd by night and p, „ 244
but other thoughts than P Burnt in us, „ 245
I that prated p, when first I heard War-music, „ 265
boys Brake on us at our books, and marr'd our p, „ 395
found fair p once more among the sick. „ vii 44
plighted troth, and were at p. „ 83
Far-shadowing from the west, a land of p ; „ Con. 42
P, his triumph will be sung Ode on Well. 232
P, it is a day of pain (repeat) „ 235, 238
tetuoe {continued) But though we love kind P so well, Third of Feb. 9
Who lets once more in p the nations meet. Ode Inter. Exhib. 4
The works of p with works of war. „ 28
And p be yours, the p of soul in soul ! W. to Marie Alex. 47
Between your peoples truth and manful p, „ 49
mine in a time of p, (repeat) Grandmother 89, 94
in this Book, little Annie, the message is one of P. „ 96
And age is a time of p, so it be free from pain, „ 97
passes by To some more perfect p. Requiescat 8
Calm and deep p on this high wold. In Mem. xi 5
Calm and deep p in this wide air, „ 13
P and goodwill, goodwill and p, P and goodwill, „ xxiiii 11
As daily vexes household p, „ xxix 2
'Twere best at once to sink to p, „ xxxiv 13
Days order'd in a wealthy p, ,. xlvi 11
P ; come away : the song of woe „ Ivii 1
P ; come away : we do him wrong To sing so wildly : .. 3
idly broke the p Of hearts that beat from day to day, „ Iviii 5
But stay'd in p with God and man. „ Ixxx 8
A hundred spirits whisper 'P.' ., Ixxxvi 16
and shake The pillars of domestic p. ,. xc 20
My spirit is at p with all. „ xciv 8
Ring in the thousand years of p. „ cvi 28
Why do they prate of the blessings of P? Maud 7 i 21
Is it p or war ? Civil war, as I think, „ 27
P sitting imder her olive, „ 33
P in her vineyard — yes ! — „ 36
Is it p or war ? better, war ! „ 47
if I cannot be gay let a passionless p be my lot, „ iv 50
P, angry spirit, and let him be ! „ xiii 44
For I thought the dead had p, „ // v 15
To have no p in the grave, „ 16
and P Pipe on her pastoral hiUock „ /// vi 23
love of a p that was full of wrongs „ 40
For the p, that I deem'd no p, is over and done, „ 50
fruitful strifes and rivalries of p — Ded. of Idylls 38
nor could I part in p Till this were told.' Com. of Arthur 393
P to thee, woman, with thy loves and hates ! Gareth and L. 373
as if the world were one Of utter p, and love, „ 1289
fought Hard with himself, and seem'd at length in p. Balin and Balan 239
one said ' Eat in p ! a liar is he, „ 607
' P, child ! of overpraise and overblame Merlin and V. 90
one had watch'd, and had not held his p : „ 162
sunn'd The world to p again : „ 639
To sleek her ruffled p of mind, „ 899
if I schemed against thy p in this, „ 930
ravaged woodland yet once more To p ; „ 964
saying, ' P to thee, Sweet sister,' Lancelot and E. 996
' P,' said her father, ' 0 my child, „ 1062
For pity of thine own self, P, Lady, p : Pelleas and E. 254
Ye know yourselves : how can ye bide at p, „ 265
But never let me bide one hour at p.' „ 387
P at his heart, and gazing at a star „ 559
' P to thine eagle-borne Dead nestling. Last Tournament 33
past To where beyond these voices there is p. Guinevere 698
wife and friend Is traitor to my p. Pass, of Arthur 25
thou bringest Not p, a sword, a fire. Sir J. Oldcastle 36
crowd's roar feU as at the ' P, be still ! ' Columbus 13
Might sow and reap in p, Epilogue 13
must fight To make true p his own, „ 27
P, let it be ! for I loved him, Vastness 36
Where stood the sheaf of P : The Ring 247
Before the feud of Gods had marr'd our p. Death of (Enone 32
only conquers men to conquer p, Akbar's Dream 15
Truth and P And Love and Justice came „ 180
Truth, P, Love and Justice came and dwelt therein, „ 193
Peaceful Her p being slowly passes by Requiescat 7
thro' the p court she crept And whisper'd : Merlin and V. 139
' Mine enemies Pursue me, but, O p Sisterhood, Guinevere 140
And withers on the breast of p love ; Lover's Tale i 10
My close of earth's experience May prove as p as his own. Tiresias 217
in that point of p light ? Locksley H., Sixty 190
Peacefuller when a balmier breeze curl'd over a p sea. The Wreck 133
Peacemaker let the fair white-wing'd p fly Ode Inter. Exhib. 34
Peace-offering last Love-offering and p-o Last Tournament 748
2l
Peach
530
Peer
Peach Solved in the tender blushes of the p ;
Peacock On the tree-tops a crested p ht,
The p in his laurel bower,
The parrot scream'd, the p squall'd,
And smooth'd a petted p down with that :
Now droops the milkwhite p like a ghost,
campanili grew By bays, the p's neck in hue ;
bright and light as the crest Of a p,
placed a «> in his pride Before the damsel,
left The aamsel by the p in his pride,
Peacock'd p up with Lancelot's noticing.
Peacock -yewtree And f-y of the lonely Hall,
Th e f-y and the lonely Hall,
Peak (See also Bosom-peak, Eagle-peak) Twin p's
shadow'd with pine slope
Hesper is stayed between the two p's ;
Some blue p's in the distance rose,
between The snowy p and snow-white cataract
high on every p a statue seem'd To hang
Lotos blooms below the barren p :
By p's that flamed, or, all in shade,
The mountain wooded to the p,
climbs a p to gaze O'er land and main,
The voice and the P (repeat)
Hast thou no voice, O P,
' I am the voice of the P,
The valley, the voice, the p, the star Pass,
P is high and flush'd At his highest
P is high, and the stai-s are high,
every height comes out, and jutting p
As over Sinai's p's of old,
the budded p's of the wood are bow'd
up to a height, the p Haze-hidden,
Stream'd to the p, and mingled with the haze
tipt with lessening p And pinnacle,
A huge pavilion like a mountain p
sighs to see the p Sun-flush'd,
a cloud, man-shaped, from mountain p,
isle-side flashing down from the p
the p of the mountain was apples.
Prog, of Spring 34
(Enone 104
Day -Dm., Sleep. P. 15
„ Revival 12
Princess ii 456
„ vii 180
The Daisy 14
Maud I xvi 17
Gareih and L. 850
870
719
Enoch Arden 99
608
Leonine Eleg. 10
11
Dying Swan 11
(Enone 211
Palace of Art 31
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 100
The Voyage 41
Enoch Arden 572
Priticess vii 35
Voice and the P. 1,31
9
11
27
29
31
Spec, of Iliad. 13
In Mem. xcvi 22
Maud I vi 4
Com. of Arthur 429
435
Gareth and L. 308
1364
Balin and Balan 165
To the Queen ii 40
V. of Maeldune 45
63
p sent up one league of fire to the Northern Star ; „ 72
For some, descending from the sacred p Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 9
One naked p — the sister of the sun Tiresias 30
two known p's they stand ever spreading Parnassus 11
Had the fierce ashes of some fiery p St. Telemachus 1
Peak'd A mountain islet pointed and p ; The Islet 15
Feakt See Gilden-peakt
Peaky Or over hills with p tops engrail'd, Palace of Art 113
The p islet shifted shapes. The Voyage 33
Peal (s) P after p, the British battle broke, Buonaparte 7
With p's of genial clamour sent Will Water. 187
A single p of beUs below. In Mem. civ 5
whole wood-world is one full p of praise. Balin and Balan 450
In clanging cadence jangling p on p — Lover's Tale Hi 22
p Of laughter drew me thro' the glimmering glades Sisters (E. and E.) 115
Then a p that shakes the portal — Locksley H., Sixty 263
Peal (verb) sweet church bells began to p. Two Voices 408
At this a hundred bells began to p, M. d' Arthur, Ep. 29
the watchman p The sliding season : Gardener's D. 182
shout Of His descending p's from Heaven, Romney's R. 127
Peal'd an answer p from that high land. Vision of Sin 221
And all about us p the nightingale, Princess i 220
old songs that p From knoll to knoll, In Mem. xcv 13
Out of the city a blast of music p. Gareth and L. 238
close upon it p A sharp quick thunder.' Holy Grail 695
the full city p Thee and thy Prince ! To the Qu^en ii 26
till the great day P on us with that music Lover's Tale iv 65
and whenever their voices p V. of Maeldune 29
thunder of God p over us all the day, „ 113
and p from an organ, — The Wreck 53
Pealing He heard the p of his parish bells ; Enoch Arden 615
trumpet in the distance p news Of better, Princess iv 81
single church below the hill Is v. In Mem. civ 4
wild voice p up to the sunny sty, Maud I v 13
' Hark the victor p there ! ' Gareth and L. 1318
Pear That held the p to the gable- wall.
body slight and round, and like a p In growing,
tumbled half the mellowing p's !
and with golden masses of p,
Pearky (pert) An' thou was as p as owt.
Pearl a brow of p Tress'd with redolent ebony,
In a golden curl With a comb of p,
With a comb of p I would comb my hair ;
morning driv'n her plow of p Far furrowing
Forth streaming from a braid of p :
now a rain of p's, Or steep-up spout
shook and fell, an erring p I^ost in her bosom :
When Time hath sunder'd shell from p.'
in this stonny gulf have found a p
In gloss of satin and glimmer of p's.
Small and pure as a p,
Mariana 4
Walk, to the Mail 53
In Mem. Ixxxix 20
V. of Maeldune 60
Church-warden, etc. 35
Arabian Nights 137
The Mermaid 7
10
Love and Duty 99
Day-Dm., Sleep B. 6
Princess, Pro. 62
iv 60
In Mem. Hi 16
Maud I xviii 42
„ xxii 55
// ii 2
Made with her right a comb of p to part The lists
burst in dancing, and the p's were spilt ;
But nevermore the same two sister p's
Yet is there one true line, the p of p's :
Guinevere, The p of beauty :
' A red sleeve Broider'd with p's'
wore the sleeve Of scarlet, and the p's ;
sleeve of scarlet, broider'd with great p's,
carved and cut, and half the p's away,
So pray you, add my diamonds to her p's;
gateways in a glory like one p —
For I have flung thee p's and find thee swine.'
since I care not for thy p's. Swine ?
The Gospel, the Priest's p, flung down to swin
. and those twelve gates, P —
Pearl-necklace Is like the fair p-n of the Queen,
Pearly Upon her p shoulder leaning cold.
Sleet of diamond-drift and p hail ;
Peasant (adj.) Till the p cow shall butt the ' Lion
passant '
Peasant (s) arts of war The p Joan and others ;
When the wild p rights himself,
p's maim the helpless horse, and drive
Pebble Counting the dewy p's, fix'd in thought ;
I babble on the p's.
Counting the dewy p's, fix'd in thought ;
Peck all wing'd nothings p him dead !
Peculiar When thy p difference Is cancell'd
Each garlanded with her p flower
Some p mystic grace Made her
And a p treasure, brooking not Exchange
Ped (paid) he p me back wid the best
Pedant held his sceptre like a p's wand
Pedestal Upon an even p with man.'
push'd by rude hands from its p,
seat you sole upon my p Of worship^
Peele that P the Goddess would wallow
handle or gather the berries of P !
climb to the dwelling of P the Goddess !
None but the terrible P remaining
crying ' I dare her, let P avenge hei'self ' !
Peep (s) birdie say In her nest at p of day ?
baby say. In her bed at p of day ?
passing one, at the high p of dawn,
Peep (verb) For any male thing but to p at us.
Merlin and V. 244
452
454
459
Lancelot a)id E. 114
373
502
604
807
1224
Holy Grail, 527
Last Tournament 310
314
• Sir J. Oldcastle 116
Columbus 87
Merlin and V. 451
(Enone 140
Vision of Sin 22
Locksley H., Sixty 248
Princess ii 163
„ iv 385
Locksley H., Sixty 95
M. d' Arthur 84
The Brook 42
Pass, of Arthur 252
Marr. of Geraint 275
Two Voices 41
Gardener's D. 202
Maud I xiii 39
Lover's Tale i 447
Tomorrow 42
Princess i 27
„ Hi 224
i;58
Merlin andV. 878
Kapiolani 8
„ 20
22
28
32
Sea Dreams 294
302
Merlin and V. 560
. , __„ ,. j_ Princess, Pro. 152
Peep'd-peept peep'd, and saw The boy set up betwixt Dora 130
Peep'd, — but his eyes, before they had their will, (iodiva 69
underneath The head of Ilolofernes peep'd Princess iv 227
thro' the parted silks the tender face Peep'd, „ vii 61
Two bright stars Peep'd into the shell. Minnie and Winnie 14
Peept the winsome face of Edith Locksley H., Sixty 260
Peer (s) Could find no stateher than his p's Two Voices 29
' Forerun thy p's, thy time, „ 88
Regard the weakness of thy p's : Love thou thy land 24
drunk delight of battle with my p's, Ulysses 16
in sight of Collatine And all his p's, Lucretius 239
Surprise thee ranging with thy p's. In Mem. xliv 12
Thy spirit in time among thy p's ; „ xci 6
to yield thee grace beyond thy p's.' Last Tournament 7
II
Peer
Peer (s) {continued) their claim to be thy p's •
Feet (verb) not to pry and p on vour reserve'
she p's along the tremulous deep, '
Peerage the savage yells Of Uther's v died,
Pfter d Or from the crevice p about.
I p athwart the chancel pane And saw the altar
and of all Who p at him so keenly,
I p thro' tomb and cave,
Peereth The frail bluebell p over
Peering thro' the portal-arch P askance,
Before a thousand p littlenesses,
Peerless my glory to have loved One p,
As thou art a knight p.'
(Those p flowers which in the rudest wind
Peewit See Pewit
P^ The mantles from the golden p's
' Let me screw thee up a p :
Pelelan came Into the fair P banquet-hall
Peleion o'er the great P's head Bum'd, '
Peleus Gods Ranged in the balls of P; '
Pelf dropt the goose, and caught the p,
Pelican I saw The p on the casque
I remember now That p on the casque :
Pellam P the King, who held and lost with Lot
P, once A Christless foe of thine
till castle of a King, the hall Of P,
Then spake the men of P crying
mark'd The portal of King P's chapel
P's feeble cry ' Stay, stay him !
King P's holy spear. Reputed to be red with
smless blood,
' Brother, I dwelt a day in P's hall :
Whom P drove away with holy heat.
PeUeas (a Knight of the Eound Table) and thro' these
a youth, P,
had P for his lady won The golden circlet,
this new knight. Sir P of the isles—
and slowly P drew To that dim day.
It seem'd to P that the fern without Burnt
P rose. And loosed his horse,
P gazing thought, ' Is Guinevere herself so beautiful ?
so did P lend All the young beauty of his own soul
And win me this fine circlet, P,
' O happy world,' thought P,
P look'd Noble among the noble,
P might obtain his lady's love,
all day long Sir P kept the field With honour:
and seeing P droop. Said Guinevere,
knights aU set their faces home, Sir P follow'd
These be the ways of ladies,' P thought
P overthrew them as they dash'd Against him
they went. And P overthrew them one by one •
Nay,' said P, ' but forbear ;
And P overthrew them, one to three ;
first her anger, leaving P, bum'd Full
P answer'd, ' Lady, for indeed I loved you
P answer'd, ' 0, their wills are hers
P lent his horse and all his arms,
I have slam this P whom ye hate :
' Lo ! Pis dead— he told us—
Lost in a doubt, P wandering Waited
t^ lay— Which P had heard sung before the Queen,
did P man utter shame Creep with his shadow
the poor P whom she caU'd her fool ?
' Liar, for thou hast not slain This PI
her ever-veering fancy tum'd To P
fared it with Sir P as with one Who gets a wound
P, leapmg up. Ran thro' the doors and vaulted
weagr steed of P floundering flung His rider,
bu- P m bnef while Caught his unbroken Umbs
then on P, him Who had not greeted her
■nien she, turning to P, ' O young knight,
P hf ted up an eye so fierce She quail'd •
Pelt p me with starry spangles and shells,
That p us in the porch with flowers.
531
To Victor Hugo 6
Princess iv 419
Demeter and P. 14
Com. of Arthur 257
Mariana 65
The Letters 3
Aylmer's Field 817
Demeter and P. 70
A Dirge 37
Merlin and V. 100
Ded. of Idylls 26
Lancelot and E. 1091
1282
Ode to Memory 24
Day-Dm., Sleep P. 19
Vision of Sin 87
(Enone 225
Achilles over the T. 28
(Enone 81
The Goose 13
Holy Grail 635
700
Balin and Balan 1
96
332
337
405
420
556
605
611
Pdleas and E. 5
13
In Mem
17
29
34
60
69
82
128
136
151
161
168
178
188
209
221
230
280
287
289
296
324
358
372
377
392
397
440
474
491
494
528
538
574
584
590
595
601
The^Merman 28
Con. 68
People
Locksley H., Sixty 134
Aylmer's Field 286
To E. L. 6
St. S. Stylites 68
101
144
n ■ - ^67
Geraint and E. 739
854
Pelt (continued) p your offal at her face.
« "*°„r. ,"^ P with outrageous epithets.
Pen With such a pencil, such a p,
Penance Betray'd my secret p,
prate Of p's I cannot have gone thro'
power mth Heaven From my long p •'
From my high nest of p here proclaim
And here I lay this p on myself.
And all the p the Queen laid upon me or^
TiltofthiS T^J^ll '^^p^^ ^^ '^^' -^ V- ^y. ^--^ Si
aeiesy. — i^.'- l^ast, Hairshirt ,c/~ / n/z/r-^orf^ i/ii
Do p in his heart, God hears him.' '^^ ^^'^«*<^« jfl
^'"^^,jfl'^''',^^^F's-Venee) Or that eternal want of p, Will Water 4^
Thy latter daj's increased with p ^' o7n
IS it shilUns an' « ? ,v p " ,. ^-^ix
Even in dreams to the chink of his p, '^^ ^''^Man^ /' 11
Pencil Came, drew your p from Tou n ^^ ^^ B
wave of such a breast^As nTve^p drew Gardener's D.26
Into the shadowing p's naked forms t^.^^ t^"; -nn^
Pencill'd See Shadowicill'd. iS-pencill'd '" ' ^"'^ " '^^
Pendent (See also Roof-pendent) Her p hands, and
narrow meagre face //„7.„w„ /'• ;j oio
With many a p bell and fragrant star, AiofmtJf^
^n=roS Sg5a?J!t^nf ^ ^^ ^^^^ xfrLlST^
Kntr^ff^oJg'^di^Spl^r ^^"^ ^' '''''^'' ^-'-T T' f 1
Pension title, place, or touch Of p, Lov^ thou 7hu tr,^'A
Pens on'd Half-sickening of his p'^kternoon, AuI^I'IVmSx
Pensive Of p thought and aspect pale, '' M„t\
A p pair, and you were gay Miller's nffU
The fulness of the p mind : n„,, j-,T T' ^ ^- • ,|
Edith, whose p bea\ty, perfect else, ''A^Js^Teld 70
YetfL f ^f •'" "" '^' ""■^'■*'"^y "•'°"«' PrZess^riQ2
I et feels, as in a p dream, t^ T\r ? ■ VS
Their p tablets round her head, ^'^ Mem.lxtv 17
Gazing for one p moment on that founder Locksley H Si^v%9.
Pent (^.«a;.oLong.pent) I lay P in a roofless close s7J:styUUsll
fretful a.s the wind P in a crevice : Princess M 81
Pentagram Some figure hke a wizard p ThT Brook lol
Pentecost Hereafter thou, fulfilling P, si^ J OldZt/i^i
Penthouse A snowy p for his hollow eyes, MerLandV^m
Penuel In the dim tract of P. rietrhtZ.Jf ■ Ion
People ^She wrought her p lasting good; Totfe^l'^i S
Broad-based upon her p's will, ""^ ^"^^'* B
As when a mighty p rejoice With shawms, U.ina Swan 31
And up and down the p go, T,%^i II -i
On to God's house the;!,rest: Twivtif/m
rhe j> here, a bea^t of burden slow, Palace of Art 149
I perish by this p which I made,-' Md'Arthtr 22
speak m the aftertime To all the p, " ^'^^'^^'l j?^
aU the p cried, ' Arthur is come again : " p« oo
x'siir/tX t CTsahit' *'^ •^"'""^' '"^' '' '■ ^^i
Good p, you do ill to kneel to me, " \zl
O Lord, Aid all this foolish p ; " t)9,t
If •. wT P^dence to make mild A rugged p, " Ulussestl
With the standards of the p's ^^ ^' LocksleuHnn4l
Slowly comes a hungry p, ^''"' ''"■' "^°" \^
loved the « well. And loathed to see them overtax'd ; " Godi^al
but that she would loose The p : uoatia o
happy p strowing cried ' Hosanna ArdenbZ
or he himself Moved haunting p, " ^
p talk'd— that it was wholly wise Auh,„..--^'v;.i^ oaS
p talk'd-The boy might get a notion ^^^'"'' ' ^ ''^ Ifr,
Ibe weakness of a p or a house, " f^J;
To speak before the p of her child, " %^
hid the Holiest from the p's eyes " l^g
People
532
Pereivale
People {continued) her own p bore along the nave Her
pendent hands, Aylmer's Field 812
until the set of sun Up to the p : Princess, Pro. 3
were there any of our p there In want of peril, „ ii 266
babbling wells With her own p's life : ,, v 335
All p said she had authority — „ vi 238
To let the p breathe ? „ Con. 104
And a reverent p behold The towering car, Ode on Well. 54
thro' the centuries let a p's voice In full acclaim,
A p's voice. The proof and echo of all human
fame, A p's voice, when they rejoice „ 142
A p's voice ! we are a p yet. „ 151
Betwixt a p and their ancient throne, „ 163
the Dead March wails in the p's ears : ,, 267
you, my Lords, you make the p muse Third of Feb. 31
0 joy to the p and joy to the throne, W. to Alexandra 29
thrones and p's are as waifs that swing, W. to Marie Alex. 26
Between your p's truth and manful peace, „ 49
A princely p's awful princes. The Daisy 39
came a flower. The p said, a weed. The Flower 4
all the p cried, ' Splendid is the flower.' „ 16
again the p Call it but a weed. „ 23
A PLAGUE upon the p fell, The Victim 1
So thick they died the p cried, „ 5
The land is sick, the p diseased, „ 45
her p all around the royal chariot Boddicea 73
Lest I fall unawares before the p, Hendecasyllahics 7
more and more the p throng The chairs In Mem. xxi 15
The pillar of a p's hope, „ Ixiv 15
Whate'er the faithless p say. „ xcvii 16
a loyal p shouting a battle cry, Mavd III vi 35
heart of a p beat with one desire ; „ 49
Laborious for her p and her poor — Ded. of Idylls 35
The love of all Thy p comfort Thee, ^ „ 54
And while the p clamour 'd for a king, ' Com. of Arthur 22ib
Bright with a shining p on the decks, „ 376
crush'd The Idolaters, and made the p free ? Gareth and L. 137
p stept As in the presence of a gracious king. „ 315
around him slowly prest The p, „ 694
by and by the p, when they met In twos and threes, Marr. of Geraint 56
this she gather'd from the p's eyes : „ 61
Then, like a shadow, past the p's talk „ 82
' \\'ould some of your kind p take him up, Geraint and E. 543
a grateful p named Enid the Good ; „ 963
The p call'd him Wizard ; Merlin and V. 170
The p call you prophet: let it be: „ 317
With loss of half his p arrow-slain ; „ 565
For fear our p call you Uly maid Lancelot and E. 386
Of whom the p talk mysteriously, „ 425
this I know, for all the" p know it, „ 1081
when now the lords and dames And p, „ 1347
till the p in far fields. Wasted so often Holy Grail 243
overthrew So many knights that all the p cried. „ 335
The heads of all her p drew to me, „ 601
And found a p there among their crags, „ 662
tum'd the lady round And look'd upon her p ; Pelleas and E. 92
there before the p crown'd herself : „ 174
scandal break and blaze Before the p, Guinevere 92
* With what a hate the p and the Kmg „ 157
The mockery of my p, and their bane.' ,. 526
To poor sick p, richer in His eyes Who ransom'd us, „ 684
And with him many of thy p, Pass, of Arthur 60
To war against my p and my knights. „ 71
The king who fights his p fights himself. „ 72
Where fragments of forgotten p's dwelt, „ 84
1 perish by this p which I made, — „ 190
?jeak in the aftertime To all the p, „ 276
iast with thee thro' thy p and their love. To the Queen ii 7
Left mightiest of all p's under heaven ? „ 21
To what our p call ' The HiU of Woe.' Lover's Tale i 374
If you go far in (The country p rumour) „ 519
p throng'd about them from the hall. Sisters (E. and E.) 156
p't praise From thine own State, Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 7
rose from off his throne to greet Before his p, Colv/mhus 6
harmless p whom we found In Hispaniola's „ 181
People (continued) This creedless p wiU be brought to Christ Columbus 189
three of the gentlest and best of my p,
0 smallest among p's 1
make one p ere man's race be run :
creeds that had madden'd the p's
p 'ud see it that wint in to mass —
perfect p's, perfect kings.
Move among your p, know them.
With all the p's, great and small,
for evermore. Let the p die.'
a careless p flock'd from the fields
Was one of the p's kings,
for he spoke and the p heard.
And all the p were pleased ;
And the p paid her well.
Your rule has made the p love Their ruler
Glorying in the glories of her p,
Hand of Light wiU lead her p,
My p too were scared with eerie sounds,
A barbarous p, Blind to the magic,
O God in every temple I see p that see thee, and
in every language I hear spoken, p praise thee. Akhars D., Inscrip. 1
If it be a mosque p murmur the holy prayer, and if it be
a Christian Church, p ring the bell from love to Thee. „ 4
drive A p from their ancient fold Akbar's Dream 61
held His p by the bridle-rein of Truth. „ 85
Mould them for all his p. „ 129
a p have fashion'd and worship a Spirit of Evil, Kapiolani 1
and freed the p Of Hawa-i-ee ! „ 6
A p beheving that Peele the Goddess „ 8
One from the Sunrise Dawn'd on His p, „ 25
Godless fury of p's. The Dawn 7
Till the p's all are one. Making of Man 7
Peopled (adj.) eyes Run thro' the p gallery which half
round Lancelot and E. 430
Is there evil but on earth ? or pain in every p
sphere? Locksley H., Sixty 197
Peopled (verb) P the hollow dark, like biu'ning stars, D. of F. Women 18
V. of Maeldune 81
Montenegro 9
To Victor Hugo 11
Despair 24
Tomorrow 74
Locksley H., Sixty 186
266
Epilogvs 20
Dead Prophet 4
7
10
33
74
78
To Marq. of Dufferin 9
On Jub. Q. Victoria 26
68
The Ring 408
Merlin and the G. 25
Peptics Or do my p differ ?
Peradventure ' P he, you name. May know
Perceive a man far-off might well p,
Perceived And I p no touch of change,
P the waving of the hands that blest.
Perceiving He, p, said : ' Fair and dear cousin,
P that she was but half disdain'd.
Perch (s) lawless p Of wing'd ambitions,
Came to her old p back, and settled
Perch (verb) Light Hope at Beauty's call would p
Perch'd P like a crow upon a three-legg'd stool,
p about the knolls A dozen angrjr models
P on the pouted blossom of her lips :
all that walk'd, or crept, or p, or flew.
P on the shrouds, and then fell fluttering
WUl Water. 80
Gareth and L. 1298
Lancelot and E. 458
In Mem. xiv 17
Guinevere 584
Geraint and E. 823
Merlin and V. 179
Ded. of Idylls 22
Merlin and V. 903
Caress'd or chidden 3
Audley Court 45
Princess, Pro. 72
199
Last Tournament 367
The Wreck 82
Pereivale (a Knight of the Bound Table) What say ye
then to fair Sir P Merlin and V. lil
' A sober man is P and pure ; „ 755
So Arthur bad the meek Sir P Lancelot and E. 1264
acts of prowess done In tournament or tilt, Sir P, Holy Grail 2
45
68
106
205
268
296
306
337
425
564
633
711
861
„ 874
Pelleas and E. 501
a
The monk Ambrosius question'd P :
' Nay, monk ! what phantom ? ' answer'd P.
' A woman,' answer'd P, ' a nun,
' 0 my brother P,' she said, ' Sweet brother,
my lord,' said P, ' the King, Was not in hall:
the King Spake to me, being nearest, ' P,'
Hoher is none, my P, than she —
What are ye ? Galahads ? — no, nor P's '
Shouting, ' Sir Galahad and Sir P ! '
these Cried to me climbing, ' Welcome, P !
Sir P: AU men, to one so bound by such a vow,
' Yea so,' said P : ' One night my pathway swerving east,
answer'd P : ' And that can I, Brother,
But as for thine, my good friend P,
Blessed are Bors, Lancelot and P,
Beside that tower where P was cowl'd.
But P stood near him and repUed,
ll
Percivale
533
Persia
FttCivale (continued) ' Is the Queen false ? ' and P
was mute.
And F made answer not a word.
'Is the King true ? ' ' The King ! ' said F.
Perdition ' / am on the Perfect Way, AH else is to p.'
Perennial p effluences, Whereof to all that draw the
wholesome air,
P»fect (adj.) (See also AU-perfect) And p rest so
inward is ;
An image with profulgent brows, And p limbs.
Of p wifehood and pure lowUhead.
The queen of marriage, a most p wile.
Thou art p in love-lore, (repeat)
pure law, Commeasure p freedom.'
temper'd with the tears Of angels to the p
shape of man. To-
each a p whole From Uving Nature,
I can but count thee p gain,
Reading her p features in the gloom,
in sighs With p Joy, perplex'd for utterance,
a hand, a foot Lessemng in p cadence,
And that which shapes it to some p end.
but ever dwells A p form in p rest,
wide earth of light and shade Comes out a p round,
that reach To each his p pint of stout,
Felleas and E. 532
534
535
Akbar's Bream 35
Lover's Tale i 499
Supp. Confessions 51
146
Isabel 12
„ 28
Madeline 9, 26
(Enone 167
, With Fal. of Art 19
Falace of Art 58
198
Gardener's D. 175
255
Walk, to the Mail 55
Love and Duty 26
Day-Diii., Sleep. B. 24
Will Water. 68
115
drooping chestnut-buds began To spread into the p
fan, Sir L. and Q. G. 17
To waste his whole heart in one kiss Upon her p lips. „ 45
Visions of a p State : Vision of Sin 148
When all the wood stands in a mist of green. And
nothing p : The Brook 15
Edith, whose pensive beauty, p else, Aylmer's Field 70
only, if a dream. Sweet dream, be p. Frincess vii 149
Pale was the p face ; „ 224
Like p music unto noble words ; „ 286
they grow, The single pure and p animal, „ 306
Not p, nay, but full of tender wants, „ 319
Her peaceful being slowly passes by To some more p peace. Requiescat 8
Is p stillness when they brawl. Lit. Squabbles 20
As pure and p as I say ? In Mem. xxiv 2
And orb into the p star We saw not, „ 15
hiunan hands the creed of creeds In loveliness of p deeds, „ xxxvi 11
The p flower of human time ;
He too foretold the p rose.
It more beseems the p virgin knight
As Love, if Love be p, casts out fear. So Hate, if
Hate be p, casts out fear.
then her shape From forehead down to foot, p —
And on the third are warriors, p men,
but he that closes both Is p, he is Lancelot — ■
That pure severity of p h'ght —
Because it lack'd the power of p Hope ;
a babe in Uneament and limb P,
I had past into p quiet at length
All good things may move in Hesper, p peoples
p kings.
and made The rosy twilight of a p day.
' / am on the F Way, All else is to perdition.'
For if this earth be ruled by P Love,
Perfect (s) ' That type of P in his mind In Natm-e
Perfection The clear p of her face.
Dead p, no more ; nothing more.
That passionate p, my good lord —
Perfectly P beautiful : let it be granted her :
Perfectness Set light by narrower p.
To die in gazing on that p Which I do bear
science making toward Thy F Are blinding desert
sand;
Perfect-pure For see, how p-p !
Perfect-sweet Frowns p-s along the brow
Perform Yet I thy best will all p at full.
Yet I thy best wiU all p at fuU,
Perform'd ' Hast thou p my mission which I gave ?
' Hast thou p my mission which I gave ?
Ixi 4
., Con. 34
Merlin and V. 22
40
Lancelot and E. 642
Holy Grail 236
Last Tournament 709
Guinevere 646
Lover's Tale i 453
De Prof., Two G. 12
66
Locksley H., Sixty 186
The Ring 187
Akbar's Dream 34
D. of the Duke of C. 8
Two Voices 2m
Mariana in the S. 32
Maud I ii 7
Lancelot and E. 122
Maud I ii 4
In Mem. cxii 4
Lover's Tale i 88
Akbar's Dream 29
Balin and Balan 266
Madeline 15
M. d' Arthur 43
Pass, of Arthur 211
M. d' Arthur 67
Pass, of Arthur 235
Perfume (adj.) belongs to the heart of the p seller. Akbar's D., Inscrip. 9
Perfume (s) As p of the cuckoo-flower ?
one wann gust, fuU-fed with p,
P and flowers faU in showers.
And fluctuate all the stiU p,
Perfumed And made my life a p altar-flame ;
Peril A carefuUer in p, did not breathe
any of our people there In want or p,
the rest Spake but of sundry p's in the storm
raising her StiU higher, past aU p.
That they had the better In p's of battle
Perilous Snatch'd thro' the p passes of his life :
A p meeting under the taU pines
Trembled in p places o'er a deep :
make her long for court And all its p glories :
And wildernesses, p paths, they rode :
Nor dared to waste a p pity on him :
who in that p hour Put hand to hand
And Merlin call'd it ' The Siege p,' F for good and ill ; Holy Grail 172
The path was p, loosely strown with crags : Lover's Tale i 384
Above the p seas of Change and Chance ; „ 806
But in p phght were we, The Revenge 75
Clove into p chasms our walls Def. of Lucknow 55
we took to playing at battle, but that was a p play, V. of Maeldune 95
Period Devolved his rounded p's.
I had hoped that ere this p closed
Perish To p, wept for, honour'd, known,
Lest she should fail and p utterly,
TiU they p and they suffer —
I ^ by this people which I made,—
F in thy seli-contempt !
I had been content to p,
better men should p one by one,
then it fails at last And p'es as I must ;
promise (otherwise You p) as you came.
Fools prate, and p traitors.
1 p by this people which I made, —
could I p While thou, a meteor of the sepulchre.
Thy Thebes shall f aU and p,
Perish'd I remember one that p :
' They p in their daring deeds.'
Not yet had p, when his lonely doom
F many a maid and matron.
Thy leaf has p in the green,
Now the Rome of slaves hath p.
Perishing Grief for our p children.
Perky (See also Pearky) There amid p larches and pine,
Permanence Be flx'd and froz'n to p :
Permission He craved a fair p to depart,
Nor stay'd to crave p of the King,
Permit F me, friend, I prythee.
Perpetual And make p moan.
May p youth Keep dry their light from tears ;
Blanch'd in our annals, and p feast.
To her, p maidenhood.
As if p sunset linger'd there.
On their p pine, nor round the beech ;
Perplex many things p. With motions,
no ruder air p Thy sliding keel,
Perplex'd-Perplext (See also Self-perplext)
perplex'd for utterance.
And perplex'd her, night and mom,
Perplext her, made her half forget herself,
Ferplext in faith, but pure in deeds,
But he vext her and perplext her
Perplext his outward purpose, till an hour,
Lancelot look'd and was perplext in mind,
Perplexing P me with lies ;
Perplexity In doubt and great p,
Perplext See Perplex'd
Persecute Should banded union p Opinion,
than to p the Lord, And play the Saul
Persecutor ' bless ' Whom ? even ' your p's ' !
Persephone or the enthroned P in Hades,
P ! Queen of the dead no more —
Persia arm debased The throne of P,
perfect Joy,
Margaret 8
Gardener' s D. 113
Sir Galahad 11
In Mem. xcv 56
Maud I xviii 24
Enoch Arden 50
Princess ii 267
Holy Grail 761
Lover's Tale i 394
Bait, of Brunanburh 85
Aylmer's Field 209
414
Sea Dreams 11
Marr. of Geraint 804
Geraint and E. 32
525
766
A Character 18
St. S. Stylites 17
Two Voices 149
Falace of Art 221
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 123
M. d' Arthur 22
Locksley Hall 96
103
179
Lucretius 265
Frincess ii 296
Balin and Balan 530
Pass, of Arthur 190
Lover's Tale i 98
Tiresias 116
Locksley Hall 71
Day-Dm., Arrival 14
Enoch Arden 626
Boddicea 85
In Mem. Ixxv 13
To Virgil 33
Def. of Lucknow 89
Maud I x2Q
Two Voices 237
Marr. of Geraint 40
Balin and Balan 288
Lover's Tale i 30
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 17
Of old sat Freedom 19
Frincess vi 63
In Mem,, vi 43
The Ring 83
Prog, of Spring 32
Two Voices 299
In Mem. ix 9
Gardener's D. 255
L. of Burleigh 78
Aylmer's Field 303
In Mem. xcvi 9
Maud I XX Q
Gareth and L. 175
Lancelot and E. 838
St. S. Stylites 102
Palace of Art 219,
You ask me, why, etc. 17
Sir J. Oldcastle 102
Akbar's Dream 77
Princess iv 439
Demeter and P. 1 7
Alexander 2
Lover's Tale iv 231
Arabian Nights 134
Princess ii 130
Lover's Tale iv 347
Felleas and E. 218
Guinevere 64
Walk, to the Mail 86
Gareth and Z. 165
Mart, of Geraint 216
454
544
Maud I X 33
Enoch Arden 474
Palace of Art 223
De Prof., Human C. 4
Faith 4
Maud I X b&
Aylmer's Field 418
Princess ii 68
(Sea Breams 15
A/at«Z / i 44
Talking Oak 229
Persia 534
Persia (continued) a custom in the Orient, friends, — I
reatl of it in P —
Persian (adj.) Gazed on tlie P girl alone,
Kan down the P, Grecian, Koman lines
Persian (s) in his behalf Shall I exceed the P,
Persistence p tnm'd her scorn to wrath.
Persistent Heart-hiding smile, and gray f eye :
Person law for us ; Wo paid in p.
' The thrall in p may be free in souJ,
Done in your maiden's p to yourself :
promises the men who served About my p,
Yniol's rusted aims Were on his princely p,
Personal And therefore splenetic, p, base,
Began to chafe as at a p wrong.
PersonaJity The abysmal deeps of P,
Inuneasurable Reality ! Infinite P !
Pert See Pearky
Pest rending earthquake, or the famine, or the p !
Persuade I might p myself then
Persuasion P, no, nor death could alter her :
Perused conscious of ourselves, P the matting ;
Peruvian To buy strange shares in some P mine.
Pestle To p a poison'd poison
Pet (fit of peevi^ess) But in a p she started up.
Petal (See also Rose-petal) p'« from blown roses on
the gi-ass, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 2
two dewdi'ops on the p shake To the same sweet air, Princess vii 68
' Now sleeps the crimson p, „ 176
Tip-tilted like the p of a flower ; Gareth and L. 591
Peter (See also Pether) laugh'd, and swore by P and by Paul : Godiva 24
' P had the brush, My P, first : ' Aylmer's Field 254
I leap from Satan's foot to P's knee — Gareth and L. 538
sheet Let down to P at his prayers ; To E. Fitzgerald 12
Rome of Caesar, Rome of P, Locksley H., Sixty 88
Peter's-pence ' Ere yet, in scorn of P-p, Talking Oak 45
Pether (Peter) Till Holy St. P gets up wid his kays Tomorrow 93
Petition make a wild p night and day, Princess v 97
At thy new son, for my p to her. Marr. of Geraint 780
for my strange p I will make Amends „ 817
Petitionary (Claspt hands and that p grace The Brook 112
Petition'd P too for him. Princess vi 320
Queen p for his leave To see the hunt, Marr. of Geraint 154
Petted And smoothed a p peacock down with that : Princess ii 456
Pettish And p cries awoke, and the wan day Last Tournament 214
Petty O, I see thee old and formal, fitted to thy p part, Locksley Hall 93
Worried his passive ear with p wrongs Enoch Arden 352
The p marestail forest, fairy pines, Aylmer's Field 92
A p railway ran : a fire-balloon Princess, Pro. 74
And ' p Ogress,' and ' ungrateful Puss,' „ 157
We cross'd the street and gain'd a p mound „ iv 557
Ah God ! the p fools of rhyme Lit Squabbles 1
And weave their p cells and die. In Mem. I 12
Let cares that p shadows cast, „ cv 13
The p cobwebs we have spun : „ cxxiv 8
For many a p king ere Arthur came Com. of Arthur 5
Drew all their p princedoms under him, „ 18
Colleaguing with a score of p kings, „ 67
Drew in the p princedoms under hirn, „ 517
That dwarfs the p love of one to one. Merlin and V. 492
And brake the p kings, and fought with Rome, Pass, of Arthur 68
Petulance Seer Would watch her at her p. Merlin and V. 175
Petulancy for her fault she wept Of p ; „ 953
Petulant She brook'd it not ; but wrathful, p, Lucretius 14
nipt her slender nose With p thumb Gareth and L. 750
Whereat the maiden, p, ' Lancelot, „ 1246
Petulantly p she said, ' Ay well— „ 1273
Pew grasping the p'* And oaken finials Aylmer's Field 822
Pewit (See also Lapwing) Returning like the p, Will Water. 230
Phalanx Into that p of the summer spears Aylmer's Field 111
Phantasm white-eyed p's weeping tears of blood, Palace of Art 23Q
updrawTi A fashion and a p of the form Lover's Tale i 646
■niey paat on. The lordly P's ! „ ii 99
'^^tantasmal Cloud-weaver of p hopes and fears. To Victor Hugo 2
kantom (adj.) Thou shalt hear the ' Never, never,'
whisper'd by the p years, Locksley Hall 83
Philip
Phantom (adj.) (continued) And p hopes assemble ; Will Water. 30
The p husks of something foully done, Lucretius 160
P sound of blows descending, moan of an enemy massacred,
P wail of women and children, multitudinous agonies. Boddicea 25
Bloodily flow'd the Tamesa rolling p bodies of horses and
men ; Then a p colony smoulder'd on the refluent estuary ; „ 27
a p king. Now looming, and now lost
while the p king Sent out at times a voice ;
There came a clapping as of p hands,
far away The p circle of a moaning sea.
there was a p cry that I heard as I tost about,
yet No phantoms, watching from a p shore
The p walls of this illusion fade,
star that gUdest yet this p shore ;
Far oS a p cuckoo cries From out a p hill; Pref Poem, Broth. Son. 19
Phantom (s) a p two hours old Of a maiden past away, Adeline 18
Com. of Arthur 430
436
Marr. of Geraint 566
Pass, of Arthur 87
In the Child. Hosp. 63
Ancient Sage 179
181
To Virgil 26
The p of a wish that once could move.
The p of a silent song,
P's of other fonns of rule,
A p made of many p's moved Before him
Beastlier than any p of his kind
and make One act a p of succession :
' And all the p. Nature, stands —
Or like to noiseless p's flit :
But mine own p chanting hymns ?
That abiding p cold.
Till I saw the dreary p arise and fly
But watch'd him have I like a p pass
' Hark the P of the house That ever shrieks
The p of a cup that comes and goes ? '
' Nay, monk ! what p ? ' answer'd Percivale.
To whom I told my p's, and he said :
Glad that no p vext me more.
Came ye on none but p's in your quest.
And women were as p's.
Who seem'd the p of a Giant in it,
P ! — had the ghasthest That ever lusted for a body,
I, groaning, from me flung Her empty p :
The p of the whirling landaulet
shatter'd p of that infinite One,
And all the p's of the dream,
and yet No p's, watching from a phanton shore
and as the p disappears,
and that rich p of the tower ?
Phantom-fair How faintly-flush'd, how p-f.
Phantom-warning Should prove the p-w true.
Pharaoh May P's darkness, folds as dense
Pharisee These P's, this Caiaphas- Arundel
Pharos roar that breaks the P from his base
Phase act Of immolation, any p of death,
out of painful p's wrought There flutters
And, moved thro' life of lower p,
every p of ever-heightening life,
Pheasant-lord old p-l's, These partridge-breeders
Phenomenon Arbaces, and P, and the rest,
Philanthropies And nursed by mealy-mouth'd p,
Phihp (See also Philip Ray) Enoch was host one day
the next,
then would P, his blue eyes All flooded
But P loved in silence ; and the girl Seem'd kinder unto P
P stay'd (His father lying sick and needing him)
P look'd, And in their eyes and faces read his doom ;
P's true heart, which hunger'd for her peace
P standing up said f alteringly ' Annie,
P ask'd ' Then you will let me, Annie ? '
P put the boy and girl to school,
P did not fathom Annie's mind :
P was her children's all-in-all ;
call'd him Father P. P gain'd As Enoch lost ;
they begg'd For Father P (as they call'd him)
' Come with us Father P ' he denied ;
So P rested with her well-content ;
P sitting at her side forgot Her presence,
P coming somewhat closer spoke.
God reward you for it, P,
The form, the form 1(.»
Miller's n. 71
Love thou thy land 59
Enoch Arden 602
Lucretius 196
Princess iii 329
In Mem. iii 9
„ XX 16
„ cviii 10
Maud II iv 55
„ /// vi 36
Gareth and L. 1335
Lancelot and E. 1022
Holy Grail 44
45
„ 444
„ 538
„ 562
„ 566
Guinevere 602
Lover's Tale i 647
ii 206
Sisters (E. and E.) 114
De Prof., Two G. 47
tiresias 195
Ancient Sage 179
Locksley H., Sixty 253
The Ring 253
The Daisy 65
In Mem. xcii 12
Aylmer's Field 771
Sir J. Oldcastle 179
Princess vi 339
„ iii 285
In Mem. Ixv 6
„ Con. 125
De Prof., Two G. 7
Aylmer's Field 381
The Brook 162
94
P
Enoch Arden 25
31
41
64
72
272
284
322
331
344
348
354
365
368
376
384
398
425
PhUip
535
Pig
Philip {continued) ' dear P, wait a while : If Enoch comes-
P sadly said ' Annie, as I have waited all my life
till P glancing up Beheld the dead flame
P with his eyes Full of that lifelong hunger,
Some thought that P did but trifle with her :
And others laugh'd at her and P too,
P's rosy face contracting grew Careworn and wan ;
P thought he knew :
Then her good P was her all-in-all,
How P put her Uttle ones to school,
and marriage, and the birth Of P's child :
Far-blazing from the rear of P's house,
P's dwelhng fronted on the street,
P, the slighted suitor of old times,
And say to P that I blest him too ;
Till last by P's farm I flow
P's farm where brook and river meet.
P chatter'd more than brook or bird ; Old P ;
And push'd at P's garden-gate.
in I went, and call'd old P out To show the farm :
And with me P, talking still ;
when they follow'd us from P's door.
Poor P, of all his lavish wast« of words
Philip Ray (See also Philip) P R the miller's only son,
I married her who married P R.
Philosopher Be mine a p's life
Philosophy Aflirming each his own p —
fair philosophies That lift the fancy ;
And many an old p On Argive heights
For fear divine P Should push beyond her mark,
I have had my day and my philosophies —
Science, p, song —
knew no books and no philosophies,
What the philosophies, all the sciences,
each p And mooci of faith may hold
When fine Philosophies would fail.
Philtre brew'd the p which had power,
Phlegethon By the red race of fiery P ;
Phcenix A fiery p rising from the smoke,
Phosphor till P, bright As our pure love.
Bright P, fresher for the night.
Phosphorescence star of p in the calm.
Broke with a p charming even My lady ;
Phosphorus ' P,' then ' Mehidies ' — ' Hesperus ' —
Phra-bat P-b the step ; your Pontic coast ;
Phra-Chai P-C, the Shadow of the Best,
Phrase (See also Boy-phrase) In p's here and there at
Enoch Arden 430
434
440
463
475
477
486
520
525
706
709
727
731
745
886
The Brook 31
38
51
83
120
164
167
191
Enoch Arden 13
860
Maud I iv 49
Lucretius 216
Princess Hi 340
In Mem. xxiii 21
„ liii 14
Last Tournament 319
The Wreck 51
Ancient Sage 218
Vastness 31
Akbar's Dream 55
140
Lucretius 16
Demeter and P. 28
The Ring 339
In Mem. ix 10
„ cxxi 9
Audley Court 87
Aylmer's Field 116
Gareth and L. 1204
To Ulysses 42
41
random,
liousehold talk, and p's of the hearth,
every p well-oil'd. As man's could be ;
Fair speech was his and delicate of p.
Fair speech was his, and delicate of p.
courtly p that masks bis malice now —
that large p of yoxirs ' A Star among the stars,'
flashing out from many a golden p ;
Have added fulness to the p
Aylmer's Field 434
Princess ii 315
„ Hi 133
leaver's Tale i 719
iv 273
The Flight 30
Epilogue 41
To Virgil 8
To Marq. of Dufferin 11
Physician a vile p, blabbing The case of his patient — Maud II v 36
Piacenza At Lodi, rain, P, rain. The Daisy 52
Piano She left the new p shut: Talking Oak 119
Pibroch Dance to the p ! — saved ! Def. of Lucknow 103
Pick (s) Click with the p, coming nearer and nearer Def. of Lucknow 28
Pick (verb) p the faded creature from the pool, Marr. of Geraint 671
p the vicious quitch Of blood and custom Geraint and E. 903
To dig, p, open, find and read the charm : Merlin and V. 660
P's from the colewort a green caterpillar, Guinevere 32
Pickaxe A p in her hand : Sea Dreams 100
wait till the point of the p be thro' ! Def. of Lucknow 27
Pick'd ' p the eleventh from this hearth The Epic 41
p offenders from the mass For judgment. Princess i 29
Hath p a ragged-robin from the hedge, Marr. of Geraint 724
p the lance That pleased him best, Geraint and E. 179
Pickpocket P's, each hand lusting for all Maud / i 22
Picnic Let us p there At Audley Court.' Audley Court 2
Pictur (s) The fellers as maakes them p's, Owd Rod 23
Fictur (verb) to p the door-poorch theere, Owd Rod 24
Picture (See also Pictur) with wide blue eyes As in a p. M. d' Arthur 170
eyes have been intent On that veil'd p — Gardener's D. 270
More like a p seemeth all Than those old portraits Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 22
still I wore her p by my heart, Princess i 38
The mimic js's breathing grace. In Mem. Ixxviii 11
I make a p in the brain ; „ Ixxx 9
still his p form'd And grew between her Lancelot and E. 992
with wide blue eyes As in a p. Pass, of Arthur 338
and fell Slanting upon that p, Lover's Tale ii 175
About a p of his lady, taken Some years before, „ iv 216
And crossing her own p as she came, „ 286
for Emmie, you see. It's all in the p there : In the Child. Hosp. 50
In my life there was a p, Locksley H., Sixty 15
I used To prattle to her p — The Ring 116
I see the p yet, Mother and child. Romney's R. 80
Pictured From yearlong poring on thy p eyes. Princess vii 340
And grew between her and the p wall. Lancelot and E. 993
Picturesque The p of man and man.' In Mem. Ixxxix 42
To make old bareness p And tuft with grass „ cxxviii 19
Picus snared P and Faunus, rustic Gods ? Lucretius 182
Pie too noble ' he said ' to check at p's. Merlin and V. 126
Pieace (piece) An' their mashin' their toys to p's Spinster's S's. 88
Piebald Not like the p miscellany, man. Princess v 198
Piece (See also Pieace) Look what a lovely p of
workmanship ! ' Aylmer's Field 237
a rough p Of earljf rigid colour, „ 280
All over earthy, hke a p of earth, Sea Dreams 99
earthquake in one day Cracks all to p's, — Lucretius 252
charr'd and wrinkled p of womanhood, Princess v 61
Cut the Roman boy to p's Boddicea 66
a p of inmost Horticultural art, Hendecasyllabics 19
I see in part That all, as in some p of art, In Mem. cxxviii 23
to rend the cloth, to rend In p's, Gareth and L. 401
hew'd great p's of his armour off him, „ 1142
And high above a p of turret stair, Marr. of Geraint 320
Saw once a great p of a promontory, Geraint and E. 162
heap'd The p's of his ai-mour in one place, „ 374
his cheek Bulge with the unswallow'd p, „ 631
shadow of some p of pointed lace, Lancelot and E. 1174
p by p I learnt tne drearier story Lover's Tale iv 146
a single p Weigh'd nigh four thousand Castillanos Columbus 135
Pieced I slept again, and p The broken vision : Sea Dreams 109
Piecemeal Till all my limbs drop p St. S. Stylites 44
surely would have torn the child P among them, Com. of Arthur 218
if thou doubt, the beasts Will tear thee p.' Holy Grail 825
Pied Then all the dry p things that be The Mermaid 48
Pier A thousand p's ran into the great Sea. Holy Grail 503
Dash back that ocean with a p, Mechanophilus 5
Pierce Yet could not all creation p A Character 5
watching stiU To p me thro' with pointed light ; Rosalind 27
p The blackest files of clanging fight, Kate 25
Clear Love would p and cleave, // / were loved 6
Pointed itself to p, but sank down shamed Lucretius 63
p's the liver and blackens the blood ; The Islet 35
P's the keen seraphic flame From orb to orb. In Mem. xxx 27
And one would p an outer ring, „ Ixxxvii 27
With pointed lance as if to p, a shape, Balin and Balan 325
Ascending, p the glad and songful air, Demeter arid P. 45
Pierced p thy heart, my love, my bride, Oriana 42
heart, p thro' with fierce delight, Fatima 34
Below were men and horses p with worms. Vision of Sin 209
wander from his wits P thro with eyes, Princess ii 441
maybe p to death before mine eyes, Marr. of Geraint 104
same spear Wherewith the Roman p the side of
Christ. Balin and Balan 114
and the head P thro' his side, Lancelot and E. 490
thro' those black walls of yew Their talk had p, „ 970
thro' the wind P ever a child's cry : Last Tournament 17
dying now P by a poison'd dart. Death of (Enone 34
Piercing the high dawn p the royal rose Merlin and V. 739
from the ground She raised her p orbs, D. of F. Women 171
Pierian fire from off a pure P altar, Parnassus 17
Piaro and he stabb'd my P with this. Bandit's Death 10
For he reek'd with the blood of P; „ 13
Pig great with p, wallowing in sun and mud. Walk, to the Mail 88
Pig 536
Pinnacle
Pig {continued) An' p's didn't sell at fall,
Pigeon quail and p, lark and leveret lay,
p's, who in session on their roofs Approved him,
Like any p will I cram his crop,
Pigg'd on the leads we kept her till she p.
Pigmy That shriek and sweat in p wars
and p spites of the village spire ;
Pike (fish) but Charlie 'e cotch'd the p,
Pike (hill) high field on the bushless P,
Pike (weapon) when his baiUff brought A Chartist p.
;^ as prompt to spring against the p's,
M came with their p's and musqueteers,
^ the p's were all broken or bent.
Pile (s) skins of wine, and p's of grapes.
iook'd the Lombard p's ;
When God hath made the p complete ;
Timour-Mammon grins on a p of children's bones,
side of that long haU A stately p, —
find What rotten p's uphold their mason-work,
built their shepherd-prmce a funeral p ;
she leapt upon the funeral p,
PUe (verb) Should p her barricades with dead.
Piled Life p on life Were all too httle,
Among p arms and rough accoutrements,
plunged him into a cell Of great p stones ;
Pilgnmage ' P's ? ' ' Drink, bagpipes,
Piluig P sheaves in uplands airy.
Pillar (See also Porch-pillars) A p of white light upon
the wall
Patient on this tall p I have borne
Three years I lived upon a p,
I, Simeon of the p, by surname Stylites,
slid From p unto p, until she reach'd The gateway ;
glimmering shoulder under gloom Of cavern p's ;
The last remaining p of their house,
ample awnings gay Betwixt the p's,
Her back against a p, her foot on one
As comes a p of electric cloud,
azure p's of the hearth Arise to thee :
The p of a people's hope,
shake The p's of domestic peace.
A p stedfast in the storm.
Who shall fix Her p's ?
And sat by a p alone ;
two p's which from earth uphold Our childhood,
Tether'd to these dead p's of the Church —
a smoke who was once a p of fire,
shook Those p's of a moulder'd faith,
Pillar'd Imbower'd vaults of p palm,
star shot thro' the sky Above the p town.
pass'd thro' all The p dusk of sounding sycamores.
And sleep beneath his p light !
before us into rooms which gave Upon a p porch,
thy fresh and virgin soul Inform'd the p Parthenon,
Pillar-punishment For not alone this p-p,
Pillory P Wisdom in your markets, Locksley H., Sixty 134
Pillow (See also Marriage-pillow) Dripping with Sabsean
spice On thy p, Adeline 54:
Fancy came ana at her p sat, Caress' d or chidden 5
Turn thee, turn thee on thy p : Locksley Hall 86
The gold-fringed p lightly prest: Day-Dm., Sleep. B._22
Church-warden, etc. 5
Audley Court 24
The Brook 127
Gareth arid L. 459
Walk, to the Mail 92
Lit. Squabbles 2
Fastness 25
Village Wife 43
Ode to Memory 96
Walk, to the Mail 71
Princess Hi 286
The Revenge 53
. . " . ^
Vision of Sin 13
The Daisy 54
In Mem. liv 8
Maud I i 46
Gareth and L. 405
Sir J. Oldcastle 67
Death of CEnone 63
105
In Mem. cxxvii 8
Ulysses 24
Princess v 55
Holy Grail 676
Sir J. Oldcastle 148
L. ofShalottiM
Ode to Memory 53
St. S. Stylites 15
86
161
Godiva 50
To E. L. 18
Aylmer's Field 295
Princess ii 26
„ Hi 180
i;524
„ , vii 216
In Mem. Ixiv 15
xc 20
,, cxiii 12
,, cxiv 4
Maud I via 2
Lover's Tale i 220
Sir J. Oldcastle 121
Despair 29
Akbar's Dream 81
Arabian Nights 39
Palace of Art 124
Audley Court 16
The Voyage 20
Princess i 230
Freedom 3
St. S. Stylites 60
Ii
or laid his feverous p smooth !
smooth my p, mix the foaming draught
Or if lip were laid to lip on the p's of the wave.
Pillow'd one soft lap P us both :
Pilot (adj.) ' Enid, the p star of my lone life.
Pilot (s) The summer p of an empty heart
The p of the darkness and the dream.
P's of the purple twilight.
May wreck itself without the p's guilt,
But, your example p, told her all.
I hope to see my P face to face
Pilot-star (See also Pilot (adj.)) eyes grown dim
with gazing on the p-s's.
' In happy time behold our p-s !
Aylmer's Field 701
Princess ii 251
The Flight 48
Lover's Tale i 236
Geraint and E. 306
Gardener's D. 16
Audley Court 72
Locksley Hall 122
Aylmer's Field 716
Princess Hi 137
Crossing the Bar 15
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 87
Pelleas and E. 63
Pimpernel As the p dozed on the lea ; Maud I xxii 48
Pin Where children cast their p's and nails, Merlin and V. 43i
Pinch And p their brethren in the throng. Lit. Squabbles
Or p a murderous dust into her drink, Merlin and V. 610
making with a kindly p Each poor pale cheek The Ring 314
Pindar Ghost of P in you RoU'd an Olympian ; To Prof. J ebb 3
Pine (a tree) black-stemm'd p's only the far river shines. Leonine Eleg. 2
Twin peaks shadow'd with p slope to the dark hyaline. „ 10
A gleaming crag with belts of p's. Two Voices 189
creeps from p to p. And loiters, CEnone 4
And dewy dark aloft the mountain p : „ 49
within the cave Behind yon whispering tuft of oldest p, „ 88
away my tallest p's. My tall dark p's, ,, 208
Up-clomb the shadowy p above the woven copse. Lotos-Eaters 18
sweet, stretch'd out beneath the p. „ C. S. 99
sweating rosin, plump'd the p Amphion 47
Fantastic plume or sable p ; The Voyage 44
The petty marestail forest, fairy p's, Aylmer's Field 92
A perilous meeting under the tall p's „ 414
and above them roar'd the p. „ 431
Kept to the garden now, and grove of p's, „ 550
Whom all the p's of Ida shook to see Lucretius 86
No larger feast than under plane or p „ 213
standing like a stately P Set in a cataract Princess v 346
cease To glide a sunbeam by the blasted P, „ vii 196
her eagles flew Beyond the Pyrenean p's. Ode on Well. 113
And loyal p's of Canada murmur thee, W. to Marie Alex. 19
In lands of palm and southern p ; The Daisy 2
Garrulous under a roof of p : To F. D. Maurice 20
For groves of p on either hand, „ 21
Above the valleys of palm and p.' The Islet 23
• king of the wrens, from out of the p ! Window, Ay 8
There amid perky larches and p, Maud I x 20
slender-shafted P Lost footing, fell, Gareth and L_. 3
thro' tops of many thousand p's „ 796
so down among the p's He plunged ; „ 808
but three Fled thro' the p's ; „ 814
p's that fledged The hills that watch'd thee. Lover's Tale i 11
open'd on the p's vnth doors of glass, „ 41
till the morning light Sloped thro' the p's, „ 264
When first we came from out the p's at noon, „ 310
great p shook with lonely sounds of joy ,■ 325
Back to his mother's house among the p's. „ iv 15
the p shot aloft from the crag V. of Maeldune 16
Or watch the waving p which here To Ulysses 25
On their perpetual p, nor round the beech ; Prog, of Spring 32
day long labour'd, hewing the p's. Death of (Enone 62
topmost p Spired into bluest heaven, „ 68
shriek of some lost life among the p's, ,, 90
under the bridge By the great dead p — Bandit's Death 23
Pine (fruit) A raiser of huge melons and of p. Princess, Con. 87
Pine (verb) You p among your halls and towers: L. C. V. de Vere 58
p's in sad experience worse than death, Princess vii 315
To p in that reverse of doom. In Mem. Ixxii 6
her too hast thou left To p and waste Last Tournament 598
Pined thro' her love her Ufe Wasted and p, Pelleas and E. 496
Pinewood o'er a bridge of p crossing. Princess Hi 335
the lake whiten'd and the p roar'd. Merlin and V. 637
Thy breath is of the p ; Lover's Tale i 23
Piney lost his way between the p sides CEnone 93
Pining brake his very heart in p for it, Gareth and L. 57
And p Ufe be fancy-fed. In Mem. Ixxxv 96
P for the stronger heart Locksley H., Sixty 58
Pink P was the shell within, Minnie and Winnie 5
The tender p five-beaded baby-soles, Aylmer's Field 186
ye said I wur pretty i' p's. Spinster's S's. 17
its wreaths of dripping green — Its pale p shells — Lover's Tale i 40
Pinnace And a p, hke a flutter'd bird. The Revenge 2
Piimacle Three silent p's of aged snow, Lotos-Eaters 16
iieroes tall Dislodging p and parapet D. of F. Women 26
.Vnd statued p's, mute as they. The Daisy 64
tipt with lessening peak And p, Gareth and L. 309
spires Prick'd with incredible p's into heaven. Holy Grail 423
summit and the p's Of a gray steeple — Lover's Tale ii 81
ablaze With creepers crimsoning to the p's. The Ring 82
Pint
it (See also Point) Go fetch a p of port :
The p, you brought me, was the best
No p of white or red Had ever half the power
To each his perfect p of stout,
I hold thee dear For this good p of port.
Wouldn't a. pa' sarved as well as a quart ?
Pini-pot underneath, A p-p, neatly graven.
Pioneer and the dark p is no more ;
Pious with sound Of p hymns and psalms,
The Sabbath, p variers from the church.
Whose p talk, when most his heart was dry
The man, whose p hand had built the cross,'
«p A thousand p's eat up your sparrow-hawk !
«pe (cask) the best That ever came from p
Pipe (musical) (^ee o^so Organ-pipes) 'you pitch the
p too low :
He set up his forlorn p's,
great organ ahnost burst his p's,
earliest p of half-awaken'd birds To dying ears
make them p's whereon to blow. '
Pipe (tobacco) (See also Cross-pipes) An' the stink o'
^s pr the 'ouse,
Kpe (verb) Norland winds p down the sea
tufted plover p along the faUow lea, '
The bird that p's his lone desire
I would p and trill. And cheep and twitter
riy to her, and p and woo her,
children call, and I Thy shepherd p.
And p but as the linnets sing :
And rarely p's the mounted thrush ;
Where now the seamew p's,
and the Devil may p to his'own.
Peace P on her pastoral hillock
W ho p of nothing but of sparrow-hawks '
«pe See also Marish-pipe, Water-pipes
Piped Sometimes the linnet p his song •
Ou the nigh-naked tree the robin pDisconsoIate
song on every spray Of birds that p their '
Valentines,
those white shps Handed her cup and p
Pipmg That with his p he may gain
Like birds of passage p up and down,
lityrus p underneath his beechen bowers •
Pippm while the blackbird on the p hung '
pockets as full o' my p's as iver they'd 'owd
ftque feigmng p at what she caU'd '
ftracy King impaled him for his p •
Pu-ate A tawny p anchor'd in his port.
And since the p would not yield her up,
Rrouetted Young ashes p down
Ksh Spat— p— the cup was gold,
Pit (See also Naphtha-pits) p's Which some green
l^hnstmas crams
Have scrambled past those p's of fire
m the ghastly p long since a body wi found,
fled from the place and the p and the fear '
lately died. Gone to a blacker p,
He laid a cruel snare in a p
comes to the second corpse in the « ">
Pitch you p the pipe too low :
' P our paviUon here upon the sward •
i>!*.if *v,"®f '^^t^ f "P straight to heaven :'
fttch-blacken d stump P-b sawing the air.
Pitch d(ad] and part) Arthur reach'd a field-of-battle
bright With p pavihons of his foe,
!>.•* /., , ''^^ ^'^^ ^^*1« Perilous on flat field,
fttched (verb) and p His tents beside the forest.
Wtcher sets her p underneath the spring
Piteous p was the cry : i- s.
TK.u ""^^xT' ^^^ "PO" him A p glance,
nthy Who spoke few words and «,
Pitied trust me, Sir, I p her.
ni^J?^* ^^® ^"®®" herself, and p her:
Pitiful shall we care to be p ?
P sight, wrapp'd in a soldier's cloak,
537
Place
WUl Water. 4
75
82
115
212
NoHh. Cobbler 99
WUl Water. 248
Def. of Lticknow 29
St. S. Stylites 34
Sea Dreams 19
186
St. Telemachus 9
Marr. of Geraint 274
WUl Water. 76
Edwin Morris 52
Amphion 22
Princess ii 474
» iv 50
In Mem. xxi 4
Spinster's S's. 100
, , _ Oriana 91
Mau Queen, .Y. Y's. E. 18
You might have won 31
Princess iv 100
115
„ vii 218
In Mem. xxi 24
<> xci 2
I. cxv 13
Maud I ilQ
„ III vi 24:
Marr. of Geraint 279
Sir L. and Q. G. 10
Enoch Arden 676
Princess v 239
Last Tournament 296
In Mem. xxi 11
Holy GraU 146
To VirgU 14
Audley Court 38
Church-warden, etc. 34
Princess iv 587
Merlin and V. 569
558
568
Amphion 27
Last Tournament 298
Wan Sculptor 13
-S^ ;S. Stylites 184
i¥aMrf / z 5
64
xQ
„ II V 84
88
Edwin Morris 52
Princess Hi 346
^oZy G'ratZ 665
Last Tournament 67
Cow. of Arthur 97
<yare<;8 awii Z. 1362
Com. of Arthur 51
Enoch Arden 207
Princess vi 142
Aylmer's Field 284
Princess, Con. 94
» w 230
Lancelot and E. 1269
Boddicea 32
Princess v 56
^^'^'kJIiff^ Lopping away of the hmb by the p-p
Pitil^ V% aZ.o Pitiful-pitiless) all her p avarice ^*-^' ""'^ «!"$'"'"' «n
Innmnerable, p, passionless eyes, ^ ' Mn^T"^- -^2
Beneath a p rush of Autumn mik ^»5^.r;Sti ^?2S?
Scribbled or carved upon the p stone : stlOlA^'
Pitt J"' r ? ""' ?.'' ."^^ a^ywhere^in this 'p world of ours ! ' SS 43
Pitted Or from the tmy p target blew 4. 7 > p^,^ „^
Or httle p speck in gLner'd f ru7 ^2/;«»«r'. Arfrf 93
Pity(s) (^./a^i'.Self-pfty) ffisbooks-the more the ^^'•^--^^•3^4
P, so I said — y 7, ^
a schoolboy ere he grows To P~ m 11. ..^^ Pf^l^K ^^
each other for an hourrTill p won ^"^^- '" '^'^f ^^^
Annie could have wept for p of him • p„^,j, j"!, ,f'5
Nor save for p was it hard to take ' ^"""'^ ^'^''' ^^^
Not past the hvii^ fount of p in Heaven. Jy^mer's Field fi
P, the violet on the tyrant's grave. ^ytmer s n leld 7o J
Who first wrote satire, with no v in it t. n 0^0
far aloof From envy hate and p! Indite "/."X'??
Kill us with p, break us with ourselves- PrW Sv 2^.8
aU prophetic p, fling Their pretty maids '* " S^?
Yet p for a horse o'er-driven, r„ 5', ,^.V?|
\yithout knowledge, without p, M^iTr^^'-o
'Hast thou no p upon my loneliness ? G^^taldL ?S
hide with mantlmg flowers As if for p ? ' "'''' ioqo
Nor dared to waste a perilous p on him : Geraint and V %i
Instead of scornful p or pure scorn, "'^ ^- f 1
Be thine the bahn of p, m. r" j rr o^
the p To find thine o^A first love once more- mVSfaU 61
^ of thine own self, Peace, Lady, peace : PelleasandF tl
P on him,' she answer'd, ' a good knight, ""^ ^- 1%
small p upon his horse had he, " ^^^
I, whose vast p ahnost makes me die Guinevere 534
The night in p took away my day, T^vZ^^nfl- «i o
Lives n the cfewy touch of p had made ^^ ' ^''^' ' f^.
Terrible p, if one so beautiful Prove, " ,• 000
look'd at him, first, askance. With v— tL m i a,
Nay, but I am not'claiming'your p^ ^KZ"'"^ H
But p-the Pagan held it a vice- ^''^'**'" ^,
P for all that aches in the grasp of an idiot power, " ik
And p for our own selves (repeat) " j^ . Jf.
P for all that suffers on land or in air " ' f V
Some half remorseful kind of p too— rh^ v\-^„ tn-
on stony hearts a fruitless prayer For v. T)pnihni(vT^ \%
Pity (verb) ratlier pray for those and p them, ATne^^Tdlf.
Ah p -hint It not m hmnan tones, ' JvZ Sr^ntt \^
did they p me suppUcating ? ' ^^"''' ^^^?^?^ ^\
there the Queen herself will p me, Lancelot andi'm^t
Came out of her p womanhood, xr '\ P .^\
taking the place of the p God that should be ! DesLt 42
My Miriam nodded with a p smile, rif pfj!, 9«T
Plaace (place) afoor I coom'd to the p. jy Pa^t o^^qI
hev to be larn'd her awn p,' ^ ^^' v^Z'w-f\li
Eh ! tha be new to the p- ^^*^^?^', ^'-^^,106
ya tell'd 'im to knaw his awn v Ch. ,'^?'"*S »" ' ^^- ^
Plaaia (plain) thaw soom 'ud 'a tl?owt ma p, An' I ^^^'•^'*-«'«'-'^«^. ^^'^^ 29
wasn't sa p i' pink ribbons, <i^i^^t. ■> cj 1^
But niver not speak p out, Ch^.SfT I' ^f' ^^
Plaate (plate) when she hurl'd a p at the cat ^^^^'^h-warden, etc. 49
I gits the p fuller o' Soondays " Jn
Place (s) (-S-ee a(5o Dwelling-place, Hiding-place, Landing- "
place, Livmg-place, Market-place, Plaace, Resting-
place, Sumner-place, Vivian-place) Her temple and
her p of birth, e„ n t ■
I think that pride hath now no p Nor sojourn ^^" ^"^f'^'^^'^i ^3
A goodly p, a goodly time, (repeat) ArabianNinhu -Xi tl
Apart from p, withholding time, Arabian lights 31, 53
Entranced with that p and time, " ^^
Sole star of all that p and time, " ,^^
All the v is holy ground ; "p„^,, „ . ^^j^
swan's <5eath-hymn took the soul Of that waste p Dying Swln'22
Place
538
Placid
Place (s) {continued} The battle deepen'd in its p,
in its p My heart a channed slumber
tho' I knew not in what time or p,
He pray'd, and from a happy p
The p he knew forgetteth him.'
In her still p the morning wept :
' But, if I lapsed from nobler p,
Passing the p where each must rest,
I will grow round him in his p,
who have attain'd Rest in a happy p
' What ! is not this my p of strength,'
Lost to her p and name ;
The flower ripens in its p,
Spoke slowly in her p.
' I was cut off from hope in that sad p.
The p of him that sleeps in peace.
But lives and loves in every p ;
There in her p she did rejoice,
Nor toil for title, p, or touch Of pension,
in the moon athwart the p of tombs,
rising bore him thro' the p of tombs.
old order changeth, yielding p to new.
In that still p she, hoarded in herself,
Then, in that time and p, I spoke to her,
in that time and p she answer'd me,
he's abroad : the p is to be sold.
purple beech among the gi'eens Looks out of p :
So left the p, left Edwin,
'Tis the p, and all around it.
The rhymes are dazzled from their p
The fountain to his p returns
Here all things in their p remain.
And alleys, faded f's,
Is there some magic in the p ?
How out of p she makes The violet
Then they started from their p's,
And he sat him down in a lonely p,
Would Enoch have the p ?
Moved haunting people, things and p's,
Flared on him, and he came upon the p.
And him, that other, reigning in his p,
served. Long since, a bygone Rector of the p,
i-ustling once at night about the p,
all neglected p's of the field Broke
who beside your hearths Can take her p —
Trembled in perilous p's o'er a deep :
something it should be to suit the p,
something made to suit with Time and p.
Found a still p, and pluck'd her likeness out ;
They fed her theories, in and out of p
last not least, she who had left her p,
I find you here but in the second p,
A tree Was half-disrootod from his p
To push my rival out of p and power.
you stoop'd to me From all high p's,
Stole a maiden from her p,
work no more alone ! Our p is much :
Who look'd all native to her p,
Jenny, my cousin, had come to* the p,
Faib is her cottage in its p,
I see the p where thou wilt lie.
From out waste p's comes a cry,
And all the p is dark,
and feels Her p is empty, fall like these;
rest And in the p's of his youth.
It was but unity of p
And so may P retain us still,
will speak out In that high p,
I know that in thy p of rest
Again our ancient games had p,
Tliy 8weetne<>s from its proper p ?
That beats within a lonely p,
I find no p that does not breathe
We leave the well-beloved p
For change of p, like growth of time,
Oriana 51
Ele&nore 127
Sonnet To 12
Two Voices 224
264
275
358
410
Fatima 40
CEnone 131
Palace of Art 233
264
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 36
D. ofF. Women 92
105
To J. S. 68
On a Mourner 5
Of old sat Freedom 5
Love thou thy land 25
M. d'Arthur 46
175
240
Gardener's D. 49
226
231
Walk, to the Mail 16
Edwin Morris 85
137
Locksley Hall 3
Day-Dm., Pro. 19
,. Sleep P. 11
53
Amphion 86
Will Water. 79
146
Vision of Sin 33
Poet's Song 5
Enoch Arden 125
604
681
763
Aylmer's Field 11
547
693
736
Sea Breams 11
Princess, Pro. 211
231
i92
i 129
,, ii 165
„ Hi 157
iv 186
335
430
vi 9
vii 267
323
Grandmother 25
Requiescat 1
Sailor Boy 8
In Mem. Hi 7
., via 7
„ xiii 4
xviii 8
„ xlii 3
5
xliv 16
„ ItbH 2
In Mem Ixxviii 10
„ Ixxxiii 6
Ixxxv 110
c 3
„ cii 1
evil
Place (s) (continued) Ring out false pride in p and blood,
\Vhat find I in the highest p.
Let her know her p ;
To hold me from my proper p.
And of himself in higher p,
Thy p is changed ; thou art the same.
Who moves about from p to p,
maidens of the p. That pelt us in the porch
if I fled from the p and the pit and the fear ?
The dark old p will be gilt by the touch
That old man never comes to his p :
In the silent woody p's By the home
Not making his high p the lawless perch
old order changeth, yielding p to new ;
To find, at some p I shall come at, arms
roam the goodly p's that she knew ;
swamps and pools, waste p's of the hern,
And down a rocky pathway from the p
Enter'd, the wild lord of the p, Limoure.
heap'd The pieces of his armour in one p,
Clear'd the dark p's and let in the law,
the p which now Is this world's hugest,
The sound not wonted in a p so still
all the p whereon she stood was green ;
my knights, Your p's being vacant at my side.
And mirthful sayings, children of the p.
Sir Lancelot, sitting in my p Enchair'd
Than thou reseated in thy p of light,
glory cling To all high p's like a golden cloud
in the moon athwart the p of tombs,
rising bore him thro' the p of t<Jmbs.
old order changeth, yielding p to new,
nor in the present time. Nor in the present p.
Thl^lst forward on to-day and out of p ;
The beautiful in Past of act or p,
a p of burial Far lovelier than its cradle ;
But taken with the sweetness of the p,
To centre in this p and time.
It was so happy an hour, so sweet a p,
I was the High Priest in her holiest p,
every bone seem'd out of its p —
Have I misleamt om- p of meeting ?)
perils of battle On p's of slaughter —
taking the p of the pitying God
but set no meek ones in their p ;
and the Rome of freemen holds her p,
mob's milUon feet Will kick you from your p,
and give p to the beauty that endures,
glimmer of relief In change of p.
from out our bourne of Time and P
Place (verb) foremost in thy various gallery P it,
murmur'd Arthur, ' P me in the barge,'
p their pride in Lancelot and the Queen.
murmur'd Arthur, ' P me in the barge.'
And p them by themselves ;
p a hand in his Like an honest woman's.
Few at first will p thee well ;
Placed in the towers I p great bells
often p upon the sick man's brow Cool'd it,
they p a peacock in his pride Before the damsel.
And over these is p a silver wand,
And over these they p the silver wand,
And p them in this ruin ;
p where morning's eariiest ray Might strike it,
p My ring upon the finger of my bride.
Placid In summer heats, with p lows Unfearing,
Crown'd Isabel, thro' all her p life.
Ere the p lips be cold ?
high above them stood The p marble Muses,
Sailest the p ocean-plains With my lost Arthur's loved
remains.
To feel once more, in p awe,
while the Queen, who sat With lips severely p,
their malice on the p lip Froz'n by sweet sleep,
Beside the p breathings of the King,
In Mem. cvi 2 1
cviii 9
cxiv 15
cxvii 2
cxviii 15
cxxi 20
cxxvi 10
Con. 67
Alaud / i 64
66
„ xiii 24
„ // iv 6
Bed. of Idylls 22
Com. of Arthur 509
Marr. of Geraint 219
646
Geraint and E. 31
200
277
374
94:3
Lancelot and E. 75
818
1200
Holy Grail 317
555
Last Tournament 103
Guinevere 525
Pass, of Arthur 54
214
343
408
Lover's Tale i 117
123
135
529
531
552
558
686
In the Child. Hosp. 13
Sir J. Oldcastle 153
Batt. of Brunanburh 86
Despair 42
Locksley H., Sixty 133
To Virgil 34 1
The Fleet 19
Happy 36 j
To Mary Boyle 48 j
Crossing the Bar 13 1
Ode to Memory 85l
M. d'Arthur 2041
Merlin and V. 25 1
Pass, of Arthur 312]
Lover's Tale i 173
Forlorn 19 j
Poets and Critics 10
Palace of Art 129 1
Aylmer's Field 700]
Gareth and L. 850J
Marr. of Geraint 4831
5491
6431
Lancelot and E. 5|
Sisters (E. and E.) 21S
Supp. Confessions 1541
Isabel 27|
Adeline 201
Princess iv 489]
In Mem. ix 2j
„ cxxii 5J
Lancelot and E. 740j
Pelleas and E. 432|
Guinevere <
Placid
539
Lover's Tale i216
Ancient Sage 133
Romney's R. 76
Lover's Tale iv 75
Talking Oak 19
Princess Hi 94
Placid {continued) Crown'd with her highest act the
p face
The p gleam of sunset after storm !
With your own shadow in the p lake,
Placing p his tme hand upon her lieart,
Plagiarised Until he p a heart,
Plagiarist calls her p ; I know not what :
Plague (s) {See also Egypt-plague) Blight and
famme, p and earthquake. Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 115
Remember what a v of ram ; The Daisy 50
A F upon the people f eU The Victim 1
Help us from famine And p and strife ! 10
when I spake of famine, p, Tiresias 60
an' a trouble an' p wi' indoor. Spinster's S's 50
to stay. Not spread the p, the famine ; Bemeter and P. 134
leper p may scale my skin but never taint my heart : Havvu 27
\ourp but passes by the touch. 104
Plague (vCTb). began To vex and p her. Guin^ere 68
tnou their tool, set on to p And play upon, 359
Plagued P her with sore despair. Palace of Art 224
woildly-wise begetters, p themselves A ylmer's Field 482
P with a flittmg to a,nd fro, ' Maud II ii 33
\v e that are p with dreams of somethuig sweet Holy Grail 625
Pini. ?-^^?"'< «7?n'^'.*'''" P ^^ Lancelot's Last TouAament 194
Plam (ad] ) Will thirty seasons render p Two Voices 82
bhould that p fact, as taught by these, 281
' I cannot make this matter p, " 343
Sleeps in the p eggs of the mghtingale. Aylmer's Field 103
1 hat has but one p passage of few notes, Lancelot and E. 895
who hmiself Besought me to be p and blunt, „ 1301
Which lives with bhndness, or p innocence Sisters (E."and E.) 249
Plo,-« fo^ garments p or rich, and fitting close Akbar's Dream 131
Flam (s) {See also Battle-plam, Ocean-plain) The p was
Tn =^^' 7^^ ^nd bare, Dyi ^^„„ 1
To stoop the cowslip to the p's, Rosalind 16
By herds^ upon an endless p, Palace of Art 74
flroves of swme That range on yonder p. 200
with dead lips smiled at the twilight p, D. of F. Women 62
The wild wind rang from park and p, The Goose 45
.She glanced across the p ; Talking Oak 166
on the ringing p's of Avmdy Troy. fjlysses 17
Clothas and reclothes the happy fs, Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 2
I leave the p I chmb the height ; Sir Galahad 57
The maiden Spnng upon the p Sir L. and Q. G. 3
And fleeter now she skimm'd the p's 32
M f f^ ringing lists And all the p,- Pri;i:ess v 503
And had a cousin tumbled on the p, ^i 319
But when we crost the Lombard p The Daisy 49
the stai-s, the seas, the hi Is and the p's- High. Pantheism 1
winds from off the p RoU'd the nch vapom- Spec, of Iliad 7
A thousand on the p ; 10
brightens and darkens down on the p. Window, On the Hill 2
Calm and stiU light on yon great p In Mem. xi 9
Imperial halls, or open p ; j.^^ 29
The brook shall babble down the p, " ci 10
when their feet were planted on the p Gareth and L. 187
l-um d to the right, and past along the p ; 295
gazing oyer p and wood ; '' ggg
' O trefoil, sparkling on the rainy p, " 2159
kindled all tte p and all the wold. Balin and Balan 441
while they rode together down the p. Merlin and V. 123
sunlight on the p behind a shower : , 403
they would pare the mountain to the p, " 829
Returning o^er the p that then began Holy Grail 217
niU, or p, at sea, or flooding ford. 728
On some vast p before a setting sun, Gumevere 77
1 ou see yon Lombard poplar on the p. Sisters (E. and E.) 79
bloom from every vale and p To Mary Boyle 9
summer basking m the sultry p's Prog, of Spring 77
hear their words On pathway'd p's; 83
Nor always on the p, "Politics 2
the black ox of the distant p. On one who ran down Enq. 4
ere the mountain rolls into the p, Death of CEnone 51
Plain See also Plaam
Plain-faced gray tower, or p-f tabernacle.
Plainness Nay, the p of her dresses ?
Plaintive Then from the p mother's teat he took
The p cry jarr'd on her ire ;
' Yet blahie not thou thy p song,'
Vext her with p memories of the child •
Plaited (adj.) With p alleys of the trailing rose
Falsehood shall bare her p brow : ' '
Until the p ivy-tress had wound
Planted
Aylmer's Field 618
Mavd I XX 14
The Brook 129
Princess iv 393
In Mem. Hi 5
Last Tournament 29
Ode to Memory 106
Clear-headed friend 11
pSif^/T^^ 'she-p'broad"and"l^ A strong sword-belt, ^miy^Grlil 152
Plan (s) (See also Ground-plan) Old wishes, ghosts of
broken p's, ^--jj „^ „„
Enoch lay long-pondering 011 his p's ; Enoch ArdenV^'\
comes the feebler heiress of your p, Princtsiii 237
Dismiss me, and I prophesy your p, ^"'''''' ^ §1
Ihe p was mme. I built the nest.' " qck
she lightens scorn At him that mars her p " ■» m
build some p Foursquare to opposition.' " 230
I scarce am fit for your great p's : " ^,- oi e
The world-compelling p was tkne,- Qde Inter. Exhib. 10
And mmgles all without a p ? In Mem xvi 20
the boundless p That makes you tyrants MaudTxviU le
a shadow of the planner or the p ? Locksley H., Sixty 196
Pl«n^™rf ' "? • ' ?"^ ^^'r^^ V' . ^« °^ ^hl affec. E.^M I
Plan (verb) whde I p and p, my hair Is gray Will Water 1fi7
pS S'^^r^ Athwart|pofmolTe/glass, iImIxIu
Plane (tree) under p or pine With neighbours Lucretius 21-^
beneath an emerald p Sits Diotima, Pri^ssiii 301
had our wine and chess beneath the p's, princess m Ml
Planed you p her path To Lady Psyche, " i' o j^
Planet I breathed In some new p : Edwin Morris lit
?.'.,^h?.P^/^?^*''^''1 ^"^ ' , -''iove eastward 4
inhabitant Of some clear p close upon the Sun, Princess ii 36
eddied into suns, that wheeling cast The p's ■ iio
all the fair young p in her hands— " ^,jj 264
That one fair p can produce, Qde Inter "Prhih 9X
songs, that woke Th^e darkness of our p. In Mem I xt it
Whereof the man, that with me trod This p, Con 138
Our p is one the suns are many, "Maud I iv 45
And the p of Love is on high, ^.^ v g
A p equal to the sun Which cast it. To E FitzaeraJd S^i
homeless p at length will be wheel'd DeZah- 83
earthquakes of the p's dawning years. Locksley H., Sixty 40
All theu- p's whirling round them, 204
nta Ln °" *^^- ^^l^^^d p of man, Bead Prophet 39
Like some conjectured p in mid heaven To Prin. Beatrice 20
Many a p by many a sun may roU Vastnei', 2
Plank bhnd with rage she miss'd the p, Princess iv 111
shape It p and beam for roof and floor, w A
Pl«nn'r%'^fPP''^ ^^n"^ down the p /„ Mem. xiv 7
Plann d Below was all mosaic choicely p Palace of Art! d.k
?&,> a shadow of the p or the pU'f LoclcsteyH.%X ^
Plant (S) Like to the mother p in semblance. The Poet 23
frost m your breath Which -would blight the p's. Poet's Mind 18
' SWlP^? tlT '"^^^:■ *^' P ^''=^'"''- ^»« Voices 268
Single I grew like some green p, n, of F. Women 205
All creeping p's, a wall of green' Day-Jm. Sleep P%
to watch the thirsty p's Imbibing ! "^ Princess ii^
Wan-sal ow as the p that feels itself Root-bitten Gareth and L. 453
They will but sicken the sick p the more. Lover's Tale i 766
quick as a sensitive p to the touch ; In the Child. Hosp 30
Planf fvi!?!,^ P f^ ^ t^^^l^lossom choicest-grown Akbar's Dream 22
Plant (verb) i'. thou no dusky cypress- tree. My life is fu/f V^
We p a soUd foot into the Time, PriLessv 415
I go to p it on his tomb, InMemvUiA
make alT clean, and p himself afresh. GeraltaZ £.9!
Ihat men p over graves. Lover'i TnU v ^98
And p on shoulder, hand and knee, ToE FitfaerlldH
Plantagenet The lion-heart, P, A/J™/ ^!
Plantain hedgehog underneath the p bores, Aylmer's Field do
HeTf t %^ ''^''' '^' ^^''^^' ^"^"^^ WamtotheMaul
To grow^my own p. ^mp/^io^ 20
^^Sp./fh^if ff f al°^-»Janted) But when we p level feet. Princess iv 30
when their feet were p on the plain Gareth and L. 187
Planted
Planted {continued) I was p now in a tomb •
O rosetree p in my grief, '
off the tree We p both together,
Plash p of rains, and refuse patch'cl with moss
™any a glancing p and sallowy isle
Plash d the tide P, sapping its worn ribs :
Haster alum and p are sold to the poor
Plaster d almost p like a martin's nest
Plat I keep smooth p's of fruitful ground
Platan clear-stemm'd p's guard The outlet
the thick-leaved p's of the vale.
540
Pleasant
The Wreck 37
Ancient Sage 163
Happy 14
Vision of Sin 212
Last Tournament 422
Lover's Tale i 56
MavA / i 39
Holy Grail 548
The 'Blackbird 3
Arabian Nights 23
Princess Hi 175
Plate (^.. also Plaate) Came out clear p's of sannhire mail rZnV •" ^lo
Squadrons and squares of men in bLzen J^^^"' tofF^wZZ II
Lay your P for one minute down, TnUnZ ""t*^^^
Platform (^6. aZs. Crag-platform) reach'd The grassy ^'^ ^«^^^'- ^/ ^- 4
?) on some hill, & <^'">y , ^, .„.,
Plato P the wise, and large-brow'd Verulam, ^pZcI ofVt SS
Or lend an ear to P where he savs Jraiace oj Art lb3
But Homer, P, VeruUm ^ ' Lucretius 147
man's ideal Is high in Heaven, and lodged with "'''''' " ^^
Plaudit Omar drew Full-handed p'. r« i^>i^- i^J
^^'^'fh^ t (f-.-^n^tt'^y) ^* ^^t. t™d out with p TdllTolim
That he shouts with his sister at « ' ^' TiZ,„v u V /^
But now to leaven p with profit "^ ' PktZt'iful
Go in and out as if at merry p, mITIt ■■ • qV
That he left his mne and horfes and p, ^"""^ ^ ^^^ f,
bhe is weary of dance and p.' " ■■ '*
w "^If joust and p, Leaven'd his hall. Merlin an/vVA
Would watch her at her petulance, and p "^ ^- ]f.
Iloved him better than ?? ; ' ''' ,. i/o
He said it ... in the » 1 he Flight 22
Play (verb) fingers pAbourhis mother's neck, 6W ~&f«/S
Hither, come hither and frolic and ?> ; ^^' SpnvTZl T«
at night I would roam abroad and l ThTu. I?
Vt* n^eidsisn S^h'^^-r-' £ ^^^i=
'm me^rt Sa^nce^a^r " ''"" "^^ ^^ ^^ ^^^^ g
Would p with flying foLs and images, G^dJnSTn 60
' P me no tricks,' said Lord Ronald: (repeat) Sy Clare i' 75
ll^iZil^rS'^'rruf^'T'Z' I u ^yi^er'sFilhll
with your long locks p the Lion's m^ne ! " H {ii
And m thy heart the scrawl shaU p.' s,^lor BouaI
dart again, and p About the prowf i^Mem xii 17
The tender-pencil'd shadow p. '"^ xUx 12
I'll have leave at times to 29 " ^"» |f
You wonder when my fancies p " , • i
He p's with threads, he beats his chair " \ t
Or so shaU grief with symbols p " i^^^it
For him she p's, to him she si4s " SgQ
It circles round, and fancy p's " ^^" «?
And p the game of the despot kings, MaudTx 39
died to hve, long as my pulses p • •- ««
■ rthe''vJrH^.'rt'°?'t^**'"™"y°"««' Garetha:nrL%f2
there hi set^hTmil^?i^' ^^""""^ P''^^'' ^^'^^''^ ^'^'^ ^ 515
Abbess and he^nl Vn^^"'' ^^' , ^'^'^'>^ ''^ ^- 646
iiDoess ana ner nuns. To p upon me,' Guinevere 310
set on to plague And ^ upon, and harry me, ^^mevere 310
0 golden hair, with which I used to p " V^r,
begins to p That air which pleased her Uver's "Tale t" 20
tell Kin" FpTilinanrl ,„»,,. V -tiT' "''^ ''• iJldcastle 103
ten IV ng rerainand who p's with me, Columhi<t 19%
1 would ^ my part with the young Th^wUf^
reahst, rhymester, « vour cart r 77 ■{''■^ ^^/^ckjid
^d felt a; icy b^eLCorme. ^^'"^^"^^ f^'/S ^9
tor I used to p with the knife, rf'^^H
Play'd That men with knowledge merely p. ^.o fS Jl
Play'd (continued) when thy father p In his free field
^or scarce my hfe with fancy p '
Here p, a tiger, roUing to and fro
with the time we p, We spoke of other things •
here she came, and round me «,
The happy winds upon her p,
?u-'^Ti^^ *^^ ^^s*^ *"d lumber of the shore
the children p at keeping house. '
p with him And call'd him Father Philip
hand that p the patron with her curls
p Charades and riddles as at Christmas here
^ the beam Of the East, that p upon them,'
He p at counsellors and kings
P A chequer-work of beam and shade Along the hills
Love but p with gracious hes, '
I p with the girl when a child ;
I have p with her when a child ;
And hghtnings p about it in the storm
And only wondering wherefore p upon'-
and took the word and p upon it
the lovely blue P into green, ' „„_
&ytbui??n tfre-'"' ^^'^'^^^ '''^' r^'^'f^^ ^- ^
crisping white P ever back upon the sloping wave HoiTI^I -f^
ye p at ducks and drakes With Arthur's vows Tn^t r ^ f o??
when we p together, I loved him '^ Tournament 344
p with The children of Edward.
Playest thou p that air with Queen Isolt,
pHi 'p *^ ^^ *^" Crouch'd fawning in the weed.
naymg P mad pranks along the heathy leas •
p with the blade he prick'd his hand '
Th.n'Ih'^f^'^'^S'^ '"^''^.' ^""^ "°^ ^ ^'ain of pearls,
inen that old Seer made answer p on him
And we took to p at ball.
And we took to p at battle,
foam m the dusk came p about our feet
Waymate Pans, once her p on the hills
Doubled her own, for want of p's
P^s^v^lf^n'^^i^^ ^^y/ "^^'^'''^ ^™ong them,
Playwnght Our P may show In some fifth Act
Plea King Mused for a little on his »
Be not guU'd by a despot's « '
Pleached 6'ee Self-pleached
Plead let her p in vain ;
twice I sought to p my cause
when I return, will p for thee, (repeat)
iNot all in vain may p
Pino-Sl'' ^A uf ^^^ ? ^°^ ™y o^ fame with me
Pleaded Although I p tenderly
on a day When Cyril p, Ida came behind
And yet hast often p for my love
Pleader jests, that flash'd about the p's room,
Pleadest What if Thou p still, '
Pleading a sound Like sleepy'counsel p ■
before them paused Hortensia p-
Pleasance my passion seeks P in love-sighs
A realm of p, many a mound '
Pleasant And all at once a p truth I learn'd,
Before I dream'd that p dream—
With your feet above my head in the long
, and p grass. ^ ^,^^
Beat quicker, for the time Is p, and the woods
and ways Are p,
0 ME, my p rambles by the lake, (repeat)
Well— were it not a p thing
A p hour has passed away
By many p ways.
But for my p hour, 'tis gone ;
Love will make our cottage p
made p by the baits Of gold and beauty
A V game, she thought :
teU me p tales, and read My sickness
Ofi "ft"^ '^ ^ ^°"^ ^^^^^ h®' ♦'h*<''s gone.
Two Voices 319
Miller's D. 45
Pomace 0/ Jr< 151
Gardener's D. 221
Talking Oak 133
'S'jT- i. anc^ Q. G. 38
jEreoc/i Jrieji 15
24
353
Princess, Pro. 138
188
V 259
/m J/ew. Ixiv 23
„ ^a;a;M 14
„ cxxv 7
^¥aM«f / i 68
,. OT 87
Gareth and L. 68
. » 1252
Geraint and E. 291
-Firsf Quarrel 12
£a«. 0/ Brunanburh 91
ias< Tournament 263
CEwo»e200
Circumstance 2
Aylmer's Field 239
Princess, Pro. 61
Gareth and L. 252
F. 0/ Maeldune 94
95
Despair 50
(Enone 17
Aylmer's Field 81
Z>ga<A 0/ (Enone 59
T/ie P% 3
Jfa/T. ofGeraint 42
Riflemen form! 9
-Bnoc,^ Jrien, 166
Princess iv 552
G'are^A awcZ i. 987, 1052
Epilogue 80
Romney's R. 55
Miller's D. 135
Princess vii 78
-Bo/iw a/i<^ PaZajj 571
Aylmer's Field 440
(Swyp. Confessions 94
Amphion 74
Princess vii 132
Lilian 9
Arabian Nights 101
TAe Bridesmaid 9
Miller's D. 46
ilfa^ Qweew, iV. Z's. £. 32
0»i a Mourner 13
Edwin Morris 1, 13
Day-Dm., L'Envoi3
Pro. 2
Will Water. 34
179
X. of Burleigh 15
Aylmer's Field 486
Princess, Pro. 194
M 252
i)z 247
§!^M''r^s;';S»p„r.-s-r°'-— «^^riS
/«. Mem. via 9
ai
Pleasant
541
Plighted
Pleasant {continued) They laid him by the p shore, In Mem. xix 3
To leave the p fields and farms ; „ cii 22
Yet, for the field was p in our eyes, Gareth and L. 337
The field was p in my husband's eye.' „ 342
' Have thy p field again, „ 343
Thou hast a p presence. ,, 1065
My twelvemonth and a day were p to me.' Holy GraU 750
The sins that made the past so p to us : Guinevere 375
Oh ! p breast of waters, quiet bay. Lover's Tale i 6
A portion of the p yesterday, „ 122
for the soimd Of the loud stream was p, „ m 35
Those were the p times, First Quarrel 41
in the p times that had past, „ 55
I had past into perfect quiet at length out of p dreams. Despair 66
but ye knaw'd it wur p to 'ear, Spinster's S's. 21
So in this p vale we stand again, Demeter and P. 34
Pleasantry From talk of war to traits of p — Lancelot and E. 321
Please {See also Please) Too fearful that you should not p. Miller's D. 148
0 shapes and hues that p me well ! Palace oj Art 194
She could not p hei'self . Talking Oak 120
My gifts, when gifts of mine could p ; The Letters 22
Edith whom his pleasure was to p, Aylmer's Field 232
sea-furbelow flap. Good man, to p the child. Sea Dreams 267
betwixt them both, to p them both, Princess, Con. 25
At that last hour to p him well ; In Mem. ri 18
thinking ' this will p him best,' „ 31
here is truth, but an it p thee not, Gareth and L. 256
Enid, but to p her husband's eye, Marr. of Geraint 11
the King himself should p To cleanse „ 38
To p her, dwelling on his boundless love, „ 63
put off to p me this poor go^vn, Geraint and E. 679
1 find that it always can p Our children, In the Child. Hosp. 51
I fail'd to p him, however I strove to p — The Wreck 28
Does it p you ? The Ring 26
Still would you — if it p you — sit to me ? Romney's R. 73
Please but they wasn't that easy to p. Village Wife 117
Pleased {See also Half-pleased, Well-pleased) newness
of thine art so p thee, Ode to Memory 88
It p me well enough.' The Epic 34
might have p the eyes of many men. M. d' Arthur 91
him We p not — he was seldom p : The Voyage 74
A song that p us from its worth ; You might have won 22
saying that which p him, for he smiled. Enoch Arden 151
' but it p us not : in truth We shudder Princess Hi 308
And maybe neither p myself nor them. „ Con. 28
But Lilia p me, for she took no part In our dispute : „ 29
Nor knew we well what p us most. The Daisy 25
But since it p a vanish'ci eye. In Mem. viii 21
Which led by tracts that p us well, .. xxii 2
Like one with any trifle p. „ Ixvi 4
They p him, fresh from brawling courts ,. Ixxxix 11
Nor less it p in livelier moods, .. 29
But each has p a kindred eye, ,, c 17
pick'd the lance That p him best, Geraint and E. 180
whoUy p To find him yet unwounded after fight, ., 370
Was in a manner p, and turning, stood. „ 456
(For thus it p the King to range me close Holy Grail 307
Who p her with a babbhng heedlessness Guinevere 151
might have p the eyes of many men. Pass, of Arthur 259
begins to play That air which p her first. Lovers Tale i 21
And all the people were p ; Dead Prophet 74
Shakespeare's bland and universal eye Dwells p, To W. C. Macready 14
knew not that which p it most. The Ring 165
Pleasing To make him p in her uncle's eye. Dora 84
Pleasurable Ev'n such a wave, but not so p. Merlin and V. 294
Pleasure (s) With p and love and jubilee : Sea- Fairies 36
Pain rises up, old p's pall. Two Voices 164
What p can we have To war with evil? Lotos- Eaters, C. 8. 48
own anguish deep More than much p. To J. S. 43
Valuing the giddy p of the eyes. M. d' Arthur 128
Yet for the p that I took to hear, Gardener's D. 228
into my inmost ring A p I discem'd, Talking Oak 174
woman's p, woman's pain — Locksley Hall 149
Like a beast with lower p's, „ 176
C!ome, Care and P, Hope and Pain, Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 55
Pleasure (s) (coK<tnM«rf) I will take my p there : Day-Dm., L' Envoi ^2
You moved her at your p. Amphion 60
Built for p and for state. L. of Burleigh 32
not to see the world — For p ? — Enoch Arden 298
Worried his passive ear with petty wrongs Or p's „ 353
Edith whom his p was to please, " Aylmer's Field 232
Then made his p echo, hand to hand, „ 257
since the nobler p seems to fade, Lucretius 230
Without one p and without one pain, „ 269
What p lives in height (the shepherd sang) Princess vii 193
Some p from thine early years. In Mem. iv 10
That so my p may be whole ; „ Ixxi 8
And fulsome P clog him, and drown Maud I xvi 4
nor a vantage-ground For p ; Ded. of Idylls 24
Merlin, who, they say, can walk Unseen at p — Com. of Arthur 348
thy charge Is an abounding p to me. Gareth and L. 982
desire To close with her lord's p ; Geraint and E. 214
Came purer p unto mortal kind Than lived thro' her, „ 765
Should have some rest and p in himself. Merlin and V. 485
Should have small rest or p in herself, .. 490
she had her p in it, „ 604
Because of that high p which I had „ 877
For p all about a field of flowers : Lancelot and E. 793
P to have it, none ; to lose it, pain ; „ 1415
Nor slept that night for p in his blood, Pelleas and E. 138
on love And sport and tilts and p, Guinevere 387
It would have been my p had I seen. „ 659
Valuing the giddy p of the eyes. Pass, of Arthur 296
Some sudden vivid p hit him there. Lover's Tale iv 178
And I more p in your praise. To E. Fitzgerald 56
short, or long, as P leads, or Pain ; Ancient Sage 101
her tears Are half of p, half of pain — To Prin. Beatrice 11
P who flaunts on her wide downway Vastness 16
Pain, that has crawl'd from the corpse of P, „ 17
Pleasure (verb) roU'd His hoop to p Edith, Aylmer's Field 85
Pleasiue-boat A mountain nest — the p-b that rock'd, Lover's Tale i 42
Pleasure-house I built my soul a lordly p-h, Palace of Art 1
Pledge (s) giving safe p of fruits. Ode to Memory 18
tell Of difference, reconcilement, p's given, Gardener's D. 257
P of a love not to be mine. Princess vi 197
arms On loan, or else for p ; Marr. of Geraint 220
Pledge (verb) But p me in the flowing grape. My life is full 15
I p her not in any cheerful cup, Wan Sculptor 9
I p her, and she comes and dips Will Water. 17
I p her silent at her board ; „ 25
We did but talk you over^ p you all In wassail ; Princess, Pro. 185
To p them with a kindly tear. In Mem. xc 10
here I p my troth, Pelleas and E. 341
Love p Hatred in her bitter draughts, Lover's Tale i 116
FiKST p our Queen this solemn night. Hands all Round 1
Pledged p To fight in tourney for my bride. Princess v 352
our knights at feast Have p us in this union, Lancelot and E. 115
and she hated all who p. „ 744
Queen, Who fain had p her jewels Columbus 229
Pledgest Who p now thy gallant son ; In Mem. vi 10
Pledging p Lancelot and the lily maid Lancelot and E. 738
Pleiads Many a night I saw the P's, Locksley Hall 9
Plenteousness Set in this Eden of all p, Enoch Arden 561
Plenty Yet is there p of the kind.' Two Voices 33
P corrupts the melody That made thee famous once, The Blackbird 15
hand in hand with P in the maize, Princess vii 201
Their myriad horns of p at our feet. Ode Inter. Exhib. 6
boy Will have p : so let it be.' (repeat) Maud I vii 8, 16
Pliable No p idiot I to break my vow ; The Ring 402
Pliant like the p bough That moving moves the nest Sea Dreams 290
He moving up with p courtliness, Geraint and E. 278
Plied round the lake A little clock-work steamer
paddling p Princess, Pro. 71
p him with his richest wines, „ i 174
Plight (s) nor by p or broken ring Bound, Aylmer's Field 135
But in perilous p were we. The Revenge 75
Plight (verb) I to thee my troth did p, Oriana 26
Will I to Olive p my troth, Talking Oak 283
Plighted (adj.) Of early faith and p vows ; In Mem. xcvii 30
Pl^hted (verb) p troth, and were at peace. Princess vii 83
PUghted
542
Plunging
Plighted (verb) (cowimwed) The heart that never p troth In Mem. xxvii 10
Plot (conspiracy) A p, a p, a p, to ruin all ! ' ' No p, no p,' Princess ii 192
man of p's, Cvait, poisonous counsels, Gareth and L. 431
for fine p's may fail, ' Merlin and V. 820
Plot (of ground) (See also Diamond-plot) Or opening
upon level p's Of crowned lilies. Ode to Memory 108
Love paced the thymy p's of Paradise, Love and Death 2
I steal by la\vns and grassy p's, The Brook 170
That all the turf was rich in p's Marr. of Geraint 660
Why grew we then together in one p ? Lover's Tale ii 23
pools of salt, and p's of land — Locksley H., Sixty 207
Plot (verb) That he p's against me still. Maiid I xix 81
Plotted He has p against me in this, „ 80
Plough-Plow (s) and morning driv'n her plow of pearl Love and Duly 99
He praised his ploughs, his cows, his hogs. The Brook 125
stood Eight daughters of the plough. Princess iv 278
Then those eight mighty daughters of the plough „ 550
and those eight daughters of the plough „ v 339
an' runn'd plow thruff it an' all, N. Farmer, 0. S. 42
We could sing a good song at the Plow, (repeat) North. Cobbler 18
The steer fell dowTi at the plow V. of Maeldune 30
take the suffrage of the plow. Locksley H., Sixty 118
an raaved slick thruf by the plow — Owd Rod 28
Plough-Plow (verb) an' Thumaby hoalms to pZow ! i\'. Farmer, O. S. 52
Who ploughs with pain his native lea In Mem. Ixiv 25
To whom a space of land is given to plow. Holy Grail 907
And plow the Present like a field, Mechanophilu^ 31
Ploughing and Charlie p the hill. Grandmother 80
Ploughnmn in the furrow broke the p's head. Princess v 221
Plover tufted p pipe along the fallow lea. May Queen, X. ¥'s. E. 18
There let the wind sweep and the p cry ; Come not, when, etc. 5
great p's human whistle amazed Her heart, Geraint and E. 49
Why wail you, pretty p ? Happy 1
Plow See Plough
Plow'd (.See also Red-plow'd) To mix with what he p ; Ancient Sage 145
Plowing The plowman left his p, and fell down Holy Grail 404
Plowland Silvery wiUow, Pasture and p, Merlin aiid the G. 54
Plowman The p left his plowing, and fell down Holy Grail 404
The p passes, bent with pain, Ancient Sage 144
Plowmen. Shepherds, have I found, Locksley H., Sixty 121
Plowshare it smote the p in the field, Holy Grail 403
Pluck ' Hard task, to p resolve,' I cried. Two Voices 118
I \iill p it from my bosom, Locksley Hall 66
p's The mortal soul from out immortal hell, Lucretius 262
that men may p them from our hearts. Princess Hi 257
this night should p your palace down ; „ iv 414
theer's a craw to p wi' tha, Sam : N. Farmer, N. S. 5
I p you out of the crannies. Flower in cran. wall 2
whose splendour p's The slavish hat Maud 1x3
' to p the flower in season ; ' So says Merlin and V. 722
So, brother, p and spare not.' Lover's Tale i 351
p from this true breast the locket that I wear, The Flight 33
P the mighty from their seat, Locksley H., Sixty 133
Pluck'd-Pluckt Devils pluck'd my sleeve, St. S. Stylites 171
in a pet she started up, And pluck'd it out, Talking Oak 230
Each pluck'd his one foot from the grave Amphion 43
he thrice had pluck'd a life From the dread sweep Enoch Arden 54
when the children pluck'd at him to go, „ 369
left alone he pluck'd her dagger forth Aylmer's Field 470
hand from which Livid he pluck'd it forth, „ 627
Found a still place, and pluck'd her likeness out ; Princess i 92
And pluck'd the ripen'd ears, „ ii 2
she pluck'd the grass. She flung it from her, „ Con. 31
I pluck'd a daisv, I gave it you. The Daisy 88
afi the cur Pluckt from the cur he fights with, Gareth and L. 702
■nluck'd the grass There growing longest Geraint and E. 256
bone Seems to he pluck'd at by the village boys „ 560
he had the gems Pluck'd from the crown, Lancelot and E. 57
each as each. Not to be pluck'd asunder ; Holy Grail 777
touch or see the Holy Grail They might be pluck'd
asunder. " „ 780
Tliat save they could be pluck'd asunder, „ 782
pluck'd one wav by bate and one by love. Last Tournament 539
lAncelot pluyck^d him by the heel, Guinevere 34
Prince Who scarce had pluck'd his flickering life To the Queen ii 5
Plucking P the harmless wild-flower on the hill ?-
Pluckt See Pluck'd
Pluksh f ! ! ! the hens i' the peiis !
Plum (See also Sugar-plum) Glowing with all-
colour'd p's
Plumage Conjecture of the p and the form ;
Plume A funeral, with p's and lights
She saw the helmet and the p.
From spur to p a star of tournament,
Kuffles her pure cold p.
Fantastic p or sable pine ;
A light-green tuft of p's she bore
The slender coco's drooping crown of p's,
till, each, in maiden p's We rustled :
all about were birds Of sunny p in gilded
trellis-work ;
brandish'd p Brushing his instep,
underneath a p of lady-fern. Sang,
p fall'n from the wing Of that foul bird
from spur to p Red as the rising sun
Their p's driv'n backward by the wind
shower and shorn p Went down it.
fell thick rain, p droopt and mantle clung,
.storm and cloud Of shriek and p,
but with p's that mock'd the may,
From spur to p a star of tournament,
Kuflfles her pure cold p.
Plumed pines, that p the craggy ledge
Empanoplied and p We enter'd in,
a shatter'd archway p with fern ;
green and gold, and p with green
Plumelet When rosy p's tuft the larch.
Plummet Two p's dropt for one to sound
Plump Grew p and able-bodied ;
O P head-waiter at The Cock,
One shade more p than common ;
blue wood-louse, and the p dormouse.
As well as the p cheek —
Plump-arm'd A p-a Ostleress and a stable wench
Plump'd sweating rosin, p the pine
Plmnper And cramm'd a p crop ;
Plunder (s) is a world of p and prey.
He found the sack and p of our house
Earl iJooiTn with p to the hall.
Plunder (verb) I camiot steal or p, no nor beg :
Plvmder'd bark had p twenty nameless isles ;
Plunge (s) thro' the whitening hazels made a p
waterfalls Pour'd in a thunderless p
' one p — then quiet for evermore.'
Maud II i 3
Village Wife 124
V. of Maeldune 60
Marr. of Geraint 333
L. of Shalott m31
Hi 40
M. d' Arthur 223
268
The Voyage 44
Sir L. and Q. G. 26
Enoch Arden 574
Princess i 202
Mart, of Geraint 659
Geraint and E. 359
Balin and Balan 26
Merlin and V. 727
Lancelot and E. 307
480
Last Tournament 155
213
441
Gtdnevere 22
Pass, of Arthur 391
436
(Enone 209
Princess v 483
Marr. of Geraint 316
Merlin and V. 89
In Mem. xci 1
Princess ii 176
The Goose 18
Will Water. 1
150
Window, Winter 9
Sisters (E. and E.) 184
Princess i 226
Amphion 47
Will Water. 124
Maud I iv 24
Marr. of Geraint 694
Geraint and E. 592
487
Merlin and V. 559
Enoch Arden 379
V. of Maeldune 14
Charity 16
Plunge (verb) should not p His hand into the bag : Golden Year 71
nor rather p at once. Being troubled, Lucretius 151
river sloped To p in cataract. Princess Hi 291
To p old Merlin in the Arabian sea ; Gareth and L. 211
and the sword That made it p's thro' the wound Pelleas and E. 530
she cried, ' F and be lost — ill-fated as they were. Last Tournament 40
Not p headforemost from the mountain there. Lover's Tale iv 41
P's and lieaves at a bank that is daily devour'd Def. of Lucknow 39
fearing not to p Thy torch of life Tiresias 158
Plunged p Among the bulrush-beds, M. d' Arthur 134
but woman-vested as I was P ; Princess iv 182
P in the battery-smoke Right thro' the line Light Brigade 32
slowly ro.se and p Roaring, Com. of Arthur 381
so down among the pines He p ; Gareth and L. 809
And down the shingly scaur he p, iMncelot and E. 53
Seized him, and bound and p him into a cell Holy Grail 675
p Among the bulrush beds, I'ass. of Arthur 302
sea p and fell on the shot-shatter'd navy of Spain, The Revenge 117
P in the last fierce charge at Waterloo, Sisters (E. and E.) 64
P liead down in the sea, V. of Maeldune 82
crest of the tides P on the ves.sel The Wreck 90
P up and down, to and fro. Heavy Brigade 31
woods P gulf on gulf thro' all their vales Prog, of Spring 73
wild horse, anger, p To fling me, Akbar's Dream 118
Plunging (See also Heavy-plunging, Lazy-plunging)
peoples p thro' the thunder-storm ; Locksley Hall 126
Plunging
543
Poison'd
Plunging (continued) p seas draw backward from the land Palace of Art 251
all ablaze too p in the lake Head-foremost — The Jiing 251
p down Thro' that disastrous glory, St. Telemachus 28
Ply joint of state, that plies Its office, Love thou thy land 47
plies His function of the woodland : Lucretius 45
Foach'd As the p filth that floods the middle street, Merlin and V. 798
Pocket I fmi thy p's as full o' my pippins Church-warden, etc. 34
Pock-pitten That great p-p feUow Aylmer's Field 256
Poem {See also Love-poem) Look, I come to the
test, a tiny p Hendecasyllabics 3
Poesy And this poor flower of p In Mem. viii 19
The p of childhood ; Lovers Tale ii 184
all the sciences, p, vailing voices of prayer ? Fastness 31
Poet Thb p in a golden chme was born, The Poet 1
But one poor p's scroll, „ 55
Vex not thou the p's mind (repeat) Poet's Mind 1, 3
The parson Holmes, the p Everard Hall , The Epic 4
and the p Uttle urged, „ 48
sing Like p's, from the vanity of song ? Gardener's D. 100
days were brief Whereof the p's talk. Talking Oak 186
A tongue-tied P in the feverous days, Golden Year 10
Are but as p's' seasons when they flower, „ 28
this is truth the p sings, Locksley Hall 75
To prove myself a p : Will Water. 166
Hours, when the P's words and looks „ 193
You might have won the P's name. You might liave won 1
doom Of those that wear the P's crown : „ 10
For now the P cannot die, „ 13
The rain had fallen, the P arose. Poet's Song 1
fair As ever painter painted, p sang, Ayltners' Field 106
P's, whose thoughts enrich the blood Princess ii 181
held A volume of the P's of her land : „ vii 174
such as lurks In some wild P, In Mem. xxxiv 7
read The Tuscan p's on the lawn : „ Ixxxix 24
passionate heart of the p is whirl'd Maud I iv 39
take withal Thy p's blessing, To the Queen ii 46
Glorious p who never hast written a line. To A . Tennyson 5
word of the P by whom the deeps The Wreck 23
The p whom his Age would quote Ancient Sage 146
Hesper, whom the p call'd the Bringer Locksley H., Sixty 185
P of the happy Tityrus piping underneath To Virgil 13
P of the poet-satyr whom the laughing shepherd „ 15
blackbirds have their wills. The p's too. Early Spring 48
True p, surely to be found When Truth Pref. Poem, Broth. Son 15
' Ave atque Vale ' of the P's hopeless woe, Tenderest of
Roman p's Prater Ave, etc. 5
Old p's foster'd under friendlier skies. Poets and their B. 1
Had swampt the sacred p's with themselves. „ 14
faults your P makes Or many or few, To Mary Boyle 61
P, thai evergreen laurel is blasted Parnassus 12
Yes, my mid little P. The Throstle 4
But seldom comes the p here. Poets and Critics 15
Poetess The ancient p singeth, Leonine Eleg. 13
I wish I were Some mighty p. Princess, Pro. 132
Poet-forms The P-/ of stronger houi-s. Day -D ru., L' Envoi \<i
Poetic More strong than all p thought ; In Mem. xxxvi 12
Poetically ' What , if you drest it up p ! ' Princess, Con. 6
Poet-like P-l he spoke. Edwin Morris 27
Rather, O ye Gods, P-l, Lucretius 93
Poet-princess P-p with her grand Imaginations Princess Hi 273
Poetry poor old P, passing hence, Locksley H., Sixty 249
Poet-satyr Poet of the p-s To Virgil 15
Point (s) clotted into p's and hanging loose, M. d' Arthur 219
sail with Arthur under looming shores, P after p ; „ Ep. 18
slowly, creeping on from p to p : Locksley Rail 134
And now, the bloodless p reversed. The Voyage 71
talking from the p, he drew him in, The Brook 154
To our p : not war : Lest I lose all.' Princess v 204
touch'd upon the p Where idle boys are cowards „ 308
In conflict with the crash of shivering p's, „ 491
oration flowing free From p to p, In Mem. Ixxxvii 33
' Nay, not a p : nor art thou victor here. Gareth and L. 1055
and the p's of lances bicker in it. Geraint and E. 449
p Across the maiden shield of Balan Balin and Balan 558
and faintly-venom'd p's Of slander. Merlin and V. 172
Point (s) {continued) It buzzes fiercely round the p ; Merlin and V. 432
Touch'd at all p's, except the poplar grove, Lancelot and E. 617
that p where first she saw the King Guinevere 403
clotted into p's and hanging loose. Pass, of Arthur 387
Descending from the p and standing both, Lover's Tale i 411
Confined on p's of faith, „ a ISQ
Glanced at the p of law, to pass it by, „ iv 276
wait till the p of the pickaxe be thro' ! Bef. of Lucknow 27
Still — could we watch at all p's ? „ 49
the p's of the foam in the dusk came Despair 50
in that p of peaceful hght ? Locksley H., Sixty 190
p's of the Russian lances arose in the sky ; Heavy Brigade 5
All at all p's thou canst not meet, Poets and Critics 7
Point (verb) p thee forward to a distant hght, Love and Duty 95
p you out the shadow from the truth ! Princess i 84
p to it, and we say. The loyal warmth of Florian „ H 243
To p the term of human strife, In Mem. 1 14
A hand that p's, and palled shapes „ Ixx 7
And then p out the flower or the star ? Lover's Tale i 175
An' 'e p's to the bottle o' gin, North. Cobbler 90
lights the clock ! the hand p's five— The Flight 94
p and jeer, And gibber at the worm, Romney's R. 136
Point (pint) I've 'ed my p o' ajile ivry noight N. Farmer, 0. S. 7
Pointed (adj.) {See also Clear-pointed, Sharp-pointed) To
pierce me thro' with p light ; Rosalind 27
By zig-zag paths, and juts of p rock, M. d' Arthur 50
And sketching with her tender p foot The Brook 102
with now a wandering hand And now a p finger. Princess v 270
A mountain islet p and peak'd ; The Islet 15
With p lance as if to pierce, a shape, Balin and Balan 325
A score with p lances, making at him — „ 401
The shadow of some piece of p lace, Lancelot and E. 1174
By zigzag paths, and juts of p rock, Pass, of Arthur 218
Pointed (verb) ' Courage^ ' he said, and p toward the
land, Lotos-Eaters 1
Thereto she p with a laugh, D. of F. Women 159
He p out a pasturing colt. The Brook 136
I follow'd ; and at top She p seaward : Sea Dreayns 122
P itself to pierce, but sank down shamed Lucretius 63
p on to where A double hill ran up Princess Hi 173
For this lost lamb (she p to the child) „ iv 361
I tarry for thee,' and p to Mars Maud III vi 13
Stood one who p toward the voice. Com. of Arthur 438
held Her finger up, and p to the dust. Geraint and E. 453
Are scatter 'd,' and he p to the field, „ 802
rose And p to the damsel, and the dooi-s. Lancelot and E. 1263
peak'd wings p to the Northern Star. Holy Grail 240
she p downward, ' Look, He haunts me — Pelleas and E. 226
red mark ran All round one finger p straight. The Ring 453
and p to the West, St. Telemachus 25
Pointing p to his drunken sleep, Locksley Hall 81
one was p this way, and one that, Pelleas and E. 58
Point-painted eyes had ever seen, P-p red ; Balin and Balan 412
Poise In crystal eddies glance and p, Miller's D. 52
Poised {See also Equal-poised) court-Galen p his guilt-
head cane. Princess i 19
A doom that ever p itself to fall. Merlin and V. 191
Dagonet with one foot p in his hand. Last Tournament 285
Poising And the rainbow hangs on the p wave, Sea-Fairies 29
a p eagle, bums Above the unrisen morrow : ' Princess iv 82
Poison (s) Drew forth the p with her balmy breath, D. of F. Women 271
Full of weak p, turnspits for the clown. Princess iv 516
To pestle a poison'd p behind his crimson liglits. Maud / i 44
The flowers that nm p in their veins. Lover's Tale i 347
naked p's of his heart In his old age.' „ 356
And batten on her p's ? Love forbid ! „ 777
Cast the p from your bosom, Locksley H., Sixty 241
or shedding p in the fountains of the Will. „ 274
balm May clear the blood from p, Death of CEnone 36
menacing p of intolerant priests, Akbar's Dream 165
Poison (verb) now we p our babes, poor souls ! Maud II v 63
Think ye this fellow will p the King's dish ? Gareth and L. 471
devil's leaps, and p's half the young. Guinevere 522
Poison'd (adj. and part) {See also Jungle-poison'd) To
pestle a p poison behind his crimson lights. Maud I iH
Poison'd
544
Poor
Poison'd (adj. and part.) (continued) laying his trains in a p
gloom Wrought, Maud 1x8
Or make her paler with a p rose ? Merlin and V. 611
with her flying robe and her p rose; Fastness 16
Struck by a p arrow in the fight, Death of (Enone 26
I am dying now Pierced by a p dart. „ 34
I am p to the heart. „ 46
Poison'd (verb) an' I doubts they p the cow. Church-warden, etc. 16
an' it p the cow. „ 54
Poisoner prov'n themselves P's, murderers. Sir J. Oldcastle IfiP
Poison-flowers The honey of p-f Maud I iv 56
Poisoning scorn of Garlon, p all his rest, Balin and Balan 383
Poisonous each man walks with his head in a cloud of
p flies. Maud I iv 54
Craft, p counsels, wayside ambushings — Gareth and L. 432
untU the wholesome flower And p grew together, Roly Grail 776
And like a p wind I pass to blast And blaze Felleas and E. 569
On Art with p honey stol'n from P'rance, To the Queen ii 56
in every berry and fruit was the p pleasure of wine ; V. of Maeldune 62
Poland heart of P hath not ceased To quiver, Poland 3
Shall I weep if a P fall ? Maud I iv 46
Polar Is twisting roimd the p star ; In Mem. ci 12
P marvels, and a feast Of wonder, Ode Inter. Exhib. 20
Pole (See also May-pole) True love turn'd round on
fixed p's, Love thou thy land 5
Betwixt the slumber of the p's, In Mem. xcix 18
Straat as a p an' clean as a flower North. Cobbler 44
happier voyage now Toward no earthly p. Sir J. Franklin 4
up to either p she smiles, Locksley H., Sixty 169
That wheel between the p's. Epilogue 21
New England of the Southern P ! Hands all round 1 6
Polish keeps the wear and p of the wave. Marr. of Geraint 682
Polish'd The p argent of her breast to sight Laid
bare. ' D. of F. Women 158
Thy care is, under p tins. Will Water. 227
Politic Who wants the finer p sense Maud I vi 47
With p care, with utter gentleness, Akbar's Dream 128
Political A grand p dinner To half the squirelings Maud I xx 25
A grand p dinner To the men of many acres, „ 31
In the common deluge drowning old p common-
sense! Locksley E., Sixty 25Q
Politics At wine, in clubs, of art, of p ; Princess, Pro. 161
The fading p of mortal Rome, „ ii 286
Raving p, never at rest — ' Fastness 3
Pollen'd golden image was p head to feet F. of Maeldune 49
Pollio Chanter of the P, To Firgil 17
Polluted Lest he should be p. Balin and Balan 108
Here looking down on thine p, Guinevere 555
he, the King, Call'd me p : „ 620
Scream you are p . . . Forlorn 28
Polluting P, and imputing her whole self. Merlin and F. 803
Pollution And makes me one p : Guinevere 619
Polypi enormous p Winnow with giant arms The Kraken 9
Polytheism P and IsMm feel after thee. Akbar's D., Inscrip. 2
And vaguer voices of P Make but one music. Akbar's Dream 150
Pomp At civic revel and p and game, (repeat) Ode on Well. 147, 227
Pond cutting eights that day upon the p, The Epic 10
an' stood By the claay'd-oop p, Spinster's S's. 24
I plumpt foot fust i' the p ; „ 28
An' 'e niver not fish'd 'is awn p's, FUlage Wife 43
to my p to wesh thessens theere — Church-warden, etc. 14
Fur they wesh'd their sins i' my p, .. 16
they leaved their nasty sins i' my p, ,,54
Ponder p those three hundred scrolls Lucretius 12
Ponder'd (See also Nine-years-ponder'd) Paris p, and I
cried ' O Paris, (Enone 169
Enid p in her heart, and said : (repeat) Geraint and E. 64, 130
Pondering See Long-pondering
Ponderous till he heard the p door Close, Aylmer's Field 337
Our p squire will give A grand political diimer Maud I xx 24
Sun Heaved up a p arm to strike the fifth, Gareth and L. 1045
Pontic Phra-bat the step ; your P coast ; To Ulysses 42
Pontius P and Iscariot by my side St. S. Stylites 168
Poodle a score of pugs And p's yell'd Edwin Morris 120
Wheer the p runn'd at tha once, Spinster's S's. 38
Pool Over the p's in the burn water-gnats
Draw down into his vexed p's Supp
marish-flowers that throng The desolate creeks and
p's among.
But angled in the higher p.
sleepy p above the dam, The p beneath it
Touching the sullen p below :
Flash in the p's of whirling Simois.
salt p, lock'd in with bars of sand,
and the bulrush in the p.
Down to the p and narrow wharf he went,
a hen To her false daughters in tlie p ;
is a straight staff bent in a p ;
the brook, or a p, or her window pane,
That breaks about the dappled p's :
dreams Of goodly supper in the distant p.
Near that old home, a p of golden carp ;
Among his bumish'd brethren of the p ;
Among her bumish'd sisters of the p ;
And tho' she lay dark in the p,
pick the faded creature from the p.
Gray swamps and p's, waste places
sUpt and fell into some p or stream,
A little bitter p about a stone
p's of salt, and plots of land —
That glances from the bottom of the p,
Blurr'd like a landskip in a ruffled p, —
Poonch'd (punched) an' p my 'and wi' the hawl.
Poop (pup) an' seeam'd as blind as a p,
Poor (adj.) Take, Madam, this p book of song ;
But one p poet's scroll, and with his word
owning but a little more Than beasts, abidest lame
and p,
' Would I had been some maiden coarse and p !
I KNEW an old wife lean and p.
She in her p attire was seen :
I grieve to see you p and wanting help :
had not his p heart Spoken with That,
' Ay, ay, p soul ' said Miriam, ' fear enow !
' P lad, he died at Florence, quite worn out,
the week Before I parted with p Edmund ;
P fellow, could he help it ?
and he, P Phihp, of all his lavish waste of words
A splendid presence flattering the p roofs
So they talk'd, P children, for their comfort :
To him that fluster'd his p parish wits
p child of shame The common care whom no one cared for
long-sufEering, meek. Exceeding ' p in spirit ' —
P souls, and knew not what they did.
All my p scrapings from a dozen years
And my p venture but a fleet of glass
Nor like p Psyche whom she drags in tow.'
' P boy,' she said, ' can he not read — no books ?
P soul ! I had a maid of honour once ;
O more than p men wealth, Than sick men health
Of lands in which at the altar the p bride
P weakling ev'n as they are.'
Leonine Eleg. 8
Confessions 133
Dying Swan 41
Miller's D. 64
99
244
(Enone 206
Palace of Art 249
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 28
Enoch Arden 690
Princess v 329
High. Pantheism 16
Window, On the HUl 4
In Mem. xlix 4
Gareth and L. 1187
Marr. of Geraint 648
650
655
657
671
Geraint and E. 31
Lancelot and E. 214
Guinevere 51
Locksley H., Sixty 207
The Ring 371
Romney's R. 114
North. Cobbler 78
Owd Roil 101
To the Queen 17
The Poet 55
Two Foices 197
D. of F. Women 253
The Goose 1
Beggar Maid 10
Enoch Arden 406
618
=, . 807
The Brook 35
78
158
191
Aylmer's Field 175
427
521
687
754
782
Sea Dreams 77
Princess Hi 103
214
„ iv 133
459
„ V 377
„ w310
And some are pretty enough. And some are p indeed ; The Flower 22
And this p flower of poesy Which Uttle cared In Mem. viii 19
Like some p girl whose heart is set On one ., 1x3
But he was rich where I was p, „ Ixxix 18
P rivals in a losing game, „ cii 19
Your father has wealth well-gotten, and I am nameless
and p. Maud I iv 1^
An eye well-practised in nature, a spirit bounded and p ;
To preach our p little army down,
I noticed one of his many rings (For he had many, p worm)
Courage, p heart of stone !
Courage, p stupid heart of stone. —
Except that now we poison our babes, p souls !
there was ever hauntmg round the palm A lusty
youth, but p.
Am I the cause, I the p cause that men Reproach
you,
a house Once rich, now p, but ever open-door'd.'
38
a; 38
7/M69
Hi 1
5
V&3
Gareth and L. 48
Marr. of Geraint 87
302
Poor
545
Port
Poor (adj.) {continued) At least put off to please me this p
gown,
' In this p gown my dear lord found me first,
In this p gown I rode with him to court,
In this p gown he bad me clothe myself.
And this p gown I will not cast aside
And there, p cousin, with your meek blue eyes,
P wretch — no friend ! —
And knew no more, nor gav^e me one p word ;
More specially should your good knight be p,
Geraint and E. 679
698
700
702
705
841
Merlin and V. 75
277
^ _, _, ^ , Lancelot and E. 956
only the case^ Her own p work, her empty labour left. „ 991
More specially were he, she wedded, p, „ 1321
Then said the monk, ' P men, when yule is cold, Holy Grail 613
blest be Heaven That brought thee here to this p house
of ours „ 617
I, the p Pelleas whom she call'd her fool ? Pelleas and E. 474
In honour of p Innocence the babe. Last Tournament 292
To p sick people, richer in His eyes Guinevere 684
P Julian — how he rush'd away ; Lover's Tale iv 2
p lad, an' we parted in tears. First Quarrel 20
Seeing forty of our p hundred were slain, The Revenge 76
— she wrought us harm, P soul, not knowing) Sisters {E. and E.) 185
sa I knaw'd es 'e'd coom to be p ; Village Wife 46
Siver the mou'ds rattled down upo' p owd Squii-e
i' the wood, „ 95
Quietly sleeping — so quiet, our doctor said ' P
Uttle dear. In the Child. Hasp. 41
that some broken gleam from our p earth
May touch thee, Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 18
Clove into perilous chasms our walk and our p
palisades. Def. of Lucknow 55
hang'd, p friends, as rebels And burn'd alive as
heretics ! Sir J. Odlcastle 47
The p man's money gone to fat the friar. „ 150
my « thanks ! I am but an alien and a Genovese. Columbus 242
A clearer day Than our p twilight dawn on earth — Tiresias 206
0 we p orphans of nothing — Despair 33
And we, the p earth's dying race. Ancient Sage 178
An' where 'ud the p man, thin, cut his bit o' turf
for the fire ? Tomorrow 65
Wheer the p wench drowndid hersen, black Sal, Spinster's S's. 25
But fur thy bairns, p Steevie, a boimcin' boy an' a gell. „ 83
P old Heraldry, p old History, p old Poetry,
passing hence, Lochsley H., Sixty 249
P old voice of eighty crying after voices that have fled ! „ 251
she cotch'd 'er death o' cowd that night, p soul, Owd Roa 114
— as this p earth's pale history runs, — Vastness 3
you and I Had been abroad for my p health so long The Ring 101
P nurse ! Father. I bad her keep. Like a seal'd book,
all mention of the ring, ,, 121
P Muriel ! Father. Ay, p Muriel when you hear
What follows ! „ 272
0 p Mother ! And you, p desolate Father, and p me, „ 302
Each p pale cheek a momentary rose — „ 315
that p luik With earth is broken, and has left her free, „ 475
This p rib-grated dungeon of the holy human ghost, Happy 31
StDl you wave me off — p roses — must I go — „ 101
Poor (s) Nor any p about yoiu- lands ? L. C. V. de Vere 68
He but less loved than Edith, of her p : Aylmer's Field 167
Last from her own home-circle of the p ,, 504
Whose hand at home was gracious to the p : W. to Marie Alex. 37
Taake my word for it, Sammy, the p in a loomp
is bad. N. Farmer, N. S. 48
How mend the dwellings, of the p ; To F. D. Maurice 38
Ring out the feud of rich and p. In Mem. cvi 11
When the p are hovell'd and hustled together, Maud / i 34
chalk and alum and plaster are sold to the p for bread, „ 39
Laborious for her people and her p — Ded. of Idylls 35
knights and ladies wept, and rich and p Wept, Holy Grail 353
When I goas fur to coomfut the p Spinster's S's. 108
crowded couch of incest in the warrens of the p. Lochsley H., Sixty 224
Served the p, and built the cottage, „ 268
The kings and the rich and the p ; Dead Prophet 40
Call yoiu- p to regale with you. On Jul). Q. Victoria 30
an' they maakes ma a help to the p, Church-warden, etc. 39
Pope And rail'd at all the P's, Sir J. Oldcastle 165
Poplar (adj.) As in a ^ grove when a light wind wakes Princess v 13
Lancelot and E. 509
617
804
Leonine Eleg. 4
Mariana 41
55
76
Ode to Memory 56
Amphion 37
In Mem. Ixxii 3
Lancelot and E. 411
523
1040
1050
Sisters (E. and E.) 79
110
V. of Maeldune 15
Balin and Balan 30
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 11
Dora 73
Princess v 29
Last Tournament 234
V. of Maeldune 43
Spinster's S's. 78
The Tourney 17
Aylmer's Field 31
Lover's Tale i 352
Boddicea 7
Tiresias 174
Vastness 14
With young Lavame into the p grove.
Touch'd at all points, except the p grove,
Lavaine across the p grove Led to the caves :
Poplar (s) by the p tall rivulets babble and fall.
Hard by a p shook alway.
The shadow of the p fell Upon her bed,
sound Which to the wooing wind aloof The p made
The seven ebns, the p's four
The p's, in long order due.
With blasts which blow the p white,
And p's made a noise of falling showers,
wide world's rumour by the grove Of p's
not pass beyond the cape That has the p on it
Beyond the p and far up the flood,
You see yon Lombard p on the plain.
And by the p vanish'd —
the p and cypress unshaken by storm
Poplartree left Of Balan Balan's near a p.
Poppy from the craggy ledge the p hangs in sleep.
moimd That was imsown, where many poppies grew
More crumpled than a p from the sheath,
bluebell, kingcup, p, glanced About the revels.
Thro' the fire of the tulip and p,
sa much es a p along wi' the wheat,
and flush'd as red As poppies
Poppy-mingled A land of hops and p-m com,
Poppy-stem Ev'n the dull-blooded p-s.
Populace call us Britain's barbarous p's,
Here trampled by the p underfoot,
famishing p, wharves forlorn ;
Popular did I take That p name of thine to shadow forth Lucretius 96
The pretty, p name such manhood earns. Merlin and V. 787
for this He chill'd the p praises of the King Guinevere 13
these are the new dark ages, you see, of the p press. Despair 88
in a p torrent of lies upon lies ; Vastness 6
Blown into glittering by the p breath, Romney's R. 49
And you, old p Horace, you the wise Poets and their B. 5
Porch {See also Door-poorch) By garden p'es on
the brim, Arabian Nights 16
Or thronging all one p of Paradise Palace of Art 101
honeysuckle roimd the p has wov'n its wavy bowers. May Queen 29
For up the p there grew an Eastern rose. Gardener's D. 123
The cloudy p oft opening on the Sun ? Love and Duty 9
' Dark p,' 1 said, ' and silent aisle, The Letters 47
Strode from the p, tall and erect again. Aylmer's Field 825
into rooms which gave Upon a pillar'd p. Princess i 230
p that sang AU round with laurel, „ ii 22
Then summon'd to the p we went. „ Hi 178
That pelt us in the p with flowers. In Mem., Con. 68
They leave the p, they pass the grave „ 71
I could have linger'd in that p. Lover's Tale i 186
Porch-pillars P-p on the lion resting. The Daisy 55
Pore dote and p on yonder cloud In Mem. xv 16
Pored I p upon her letter which I held. Princess v 469
Poring' p over miserable books — Lochsley Hall 172
Now p on the glowworm, now the star. Princess iv 211
' From yearlong p on thy pictured eyes, „ vii 340
As when a painter, p on a face, Lancelot and E. 332
he was p over his Tables of Trade The Wreck 26
Porphyry Nor winks the gold fin in the p font : Princess vii 178
Port (demeanour) modem gentleman Of stateliest p ; M. d' Arthur, Ep. 23
Port (harbour) There lies the p ; the vessel puffs Ulysses 44
Annie Lee, The prettiest Uttle damsel in the p, Enoch Arden 12
Ten miles to northward of the narrow p „ 102
before she sail'd, Sail'd from this p. „ 125
Fearing the lazy gossip of the p, „ 335
Then all descended to the p, „ 446
By this the lazy gossips of the p, „ 472
Told him, with other annals of the p, „ 702
And when they buried him the little p „ 916
To that fair p below the castle Of Queen Theodolind, The Daisy 79
And found thee lying in the p ; In Mem. xiv 4
A tawny pirate anchor'd in his p, Merlin and V. 558
2 M
Port
Pwt (wine) Go fetch a pint of -p :
But tho' the p surpasses praise,
I hold thee dear For this good pint of p.
Portal crimson'd all Thy presence and thy p'5,
found at length The garden p's.
That guard the v's of the house ;
And doubt beside the p waits,
Lords from Rome before the p stood,
mark'd The p of King Pellam's chapel
With chasni-Uke -p's open to the sea,
saw the postern p also wide Yawning ;
floods with redundant life Her narrow p's.
O blossom'd p of the lonely house,
Forth issuing from his p's in the crag
Half -entering the p's.
Then a peal that shakes the p —
the name A golden p to my rhyme :
' Spirit, neanng yon dark p at the limit
Portal-arch thro' the f-a Peering askance.
Portal-warding Far as the p-w lion-whelp,
Porter / hung with grooms and p's on the bridge
Portion P's and parcels of the dreadful Past.
At« with yoimg lads his p by the door,
carves A p from the solid present,
A p of the pleasant yesterday,
Portion'd P in halves between us,
Portly His double chin, his p size,
Portrait Than those old f's of old kings.
Yet hangs his p in my father's hall
p of his friend Drawn by an artist.
Portress At break of day the College P came :
A wakeful p, and didst parle with Death, —
Portugal Was blackening on the slopes of P,
I will p him or will die.
What souls p themselves so pure,
slay you, and p your horse And armour,
s'd (See also Half-possess'd, Self-possess'd)
thing which p The darkness of the world.
For love p the atmosphere,
sinful soul p of many gifts, To
kiss'd her tenderly Not knowing what p him :
And marvel what p my brain ;
A rainy cloud p the earth,
The silent snow p the earth.
Possession ' I take p of man's mind and deed.
Enoch would hold p for a week :
reading of the will Before he takes p ?
Possible all Life needs for life is p to will —
O that 'twere p After long gnef and pain
Ah Christ, that it were p For one short hour
Post (s) {See also Sign-post, Woman-post)
by the Gods :
thro' twenty p's of telegraph They flash'd
546
Power
Will Water. 4
77
212
Tithonvs 57
Princess iv 200
In Mem. xxix 12
„ xdv 14
Com. of Arthur 477
Balin and Balan 405
Holy Grail 815
Pelleas and E. 420
Lover's Tale i 85
280
430
m123
Locksley H., Sixty 263
To Marq. of Dufferin 16
God and the Univ. 4
Merlin and V. 99
Enoch Arden 98
, Godiva 2
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 47
Gareth and L. 480
Merlin and V. 462
Lover's Tale i 122
Gardener's D. 5
Miller's D. 2
Day- Dm., Sleep. P. 23
Princess ii 239
Sisters (E. and E.) 134
Princess ii 15
Lover's Tale i 113
Sisters (E. and E.) 62
Fatima 39
In Mem. xxxii 15
Geraint and E. 74
some-
Arabian Nights 71
Miller's D. 91
With Pal. of Art. 3
Aylmer's Field 556
In Mem. xiv 16
,, XXX O
„ Ixxviii 3
Palace of Art 209
Enoch Arden 27
Lover's Tale i 677
Love and Duty 86
Maud II iv 1
13
quit the p Allotted
Lucretius 148
Princess, Pro. 77
Ponr'd {continued) P back into my empty soul and frame D. of F. Women 78
her soft brown hair P on one side : Gardener's D. 129
For me the torrent ever f And glisten'd — To E. L. 13
I had p Into the shadowmg pencil's Lover's Tale ii 179
avarice, of your Spain P in on aU those happy naked
Def. of Lucknow 10, 13, 52
Princess i 189
PeUeas and E. 420
Com. of Arthur 213
D. of the 0. Year 31
Princess v 424
Maud I xii 22
isles —
waterfalls P in a thimderless plimge
From out the sunset p an alien race,
Pouring brooks of hallow'd Israel From craggy
hoUows p,
And England p on her foes.
foimtains in the brain, Still p thro',
Poussetting P with a sloe-tree :
Pou sto one P s whence af terhands May move
Pouted His own are p to a kiss :
Perch'd on the p blossom of her lips :
Poverty And lift the household out of p ;
His baby's death, her growing p.
every man die at his p ! (repeat)
Post (verb) made a point to p with mares ;
Postern the p portal also wide Yawning ;
Postem-gate Deliver'd at a secret f-g To Merlin,
Posi-haste His son and heir doth nde p-h,
Postscript came a p dash'd across the rest.
Posy went Home with her maiden p,
Pot {See also Flower-pot, Pint-pot) Thy latt«r days
increased with pence Go down among the p's : Will Water. 220
an' 'e got a brown p an' a boan, Village Wife 48
Potato .S'«eTaate
Potent A p voice of Parliament, In Mem. cxiii 11
No sound is breathed so p to coerce, Tiresias 120
Potheen give me a thrifle to dhrink yer health in p. Tomorrow 98
Potherbs rights or wrongs like p's in the street. Princess v 459
Poultry a larger egg Than modem p drop, Will Water. 122
Pounced the bird Who p her quarry Merlin and V. 135
Pound wedded her to sixty thousand p's, Edwin Morris 126
Pour P round mine ears the livelong bleat Ode to Memory 65
Holy water will I p Into every spicy flower Poet's Mind 12
Pour'd beyond the noon a fire Is p upon the hills, Fatima 31
gray twilight p On dewy pastures, Palace of Art 85
Columbus 173
V. of Maeldune 14
Akbar's Dream 192
D. of F. Women 182
Ode on Well. 117
Lover's Tale i 84
Amphion 44
Princess Hi 263
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 31
Princess, Pro. 199
Enoch Arden 485
705
honest P, bare to the bone ; Opulent Avarice, lean as P ; Fastness 19
Powder and the p was all of it spent ; The Revenge 80
That grind the glebe to p ! Tiresias 95
Power {See also Ocean-power) arms, or p of brain, or
birth To the Queen 3
In impotence of fancied p. A Charci,cter 24
a name to shake All evil dreams of p — • The Poet 47
fill the sea-halls with a voice of p ; The Merman 10
What lit your eyes with tearful p, Margaret 3
Mine be the p which ever to its sway Mine be the strength 9
lest brute P be increased, Poland 6
That once had p to rob it of content. The form, the form 8
How grows the day of human p ? ' Two Voices 78
' If Nature put not forth her p ,. 160
From out my sullen heart a p Broke, .. 443
She to Paris made Proffer of royal p, (Enone 111
StiU she spake on and still she spake of p, .. 121
P fitted to the season ; ., 123
seeing men, in p Only, are likest gods, „ 129
so much the thought of p Flatter'd his spirit ; ,. 136
three alone lead life to sovereign p. .. 145
Yet not for p {p of herself Would come uncall'd for) .. 146
without light Or p of movement, Palace of Art 246.
P should make from land to land You ask me, why, etc. 21
Thro' future time by p of thought. Love thou thy land 4
sea and air are dark With great contrivances of P. „ 64
Laid widow'd of the p in his eye
you know I have some p with Heaven
P goes forth from me.
Among the p's and princes of this world,
and try If yet he keeps the p.
happy men that have the p to die.
So the P's, who wait On noble deeds.
The Federations and the P's ;
Until the charm have p to make New lifeblood
halt the p to turn This wheel wthin my head.
Faster binds a tyrant's p ;
' He had not wholly quench'd his p ;
understand. While I have p to speak.
Turning beheld the P's of the House
but he had p's, he knew it :
and the hands of p Were bloodier,
the philtre which had p, they said,
and check'd His p to shape :
all-generating p's and genial heat Of Nature,
And so much grace and p, breathing down
arguing love of knowledge and of p ;
might grow To use and p on this Oasis,
organ almost burst his pipes. Groaning for p.
To push my rival out of place and p.
Autmnn, dropping fruits of p ;
sought far less for truth than p In knowledge :
side by side, full-summ'd in all their p's,
— and perhaps they felt their p.
And gradually the p's of the night,
Confused by brainless mobs and lawless P's ;
Nor palter'd with Eternal God for p ;
M. d' Arthur 12
St. S. Stylites 14
14
181
Talking Oak '.
Tiihonus 7fl
Godiva 71
Day-Dm., L' Envoi I5
Will Water. ~
Vision of Sin 12
211
Enoch Arden 87l
Aylmer's Field 28
39
43
Lucretius '.
" ..^^
Princess ii 38
57
167
475
,, iv 335
,. vi 55
., vii 236
288
.. Con. 13
111
Ode on Well. 153
180
Power
547
Praise
Power (continued) Round us, each with different p's. Ode on Well. 263
And ruling by obeying Nature's p's, Ode Inter. Exhib. 40
Son of him with whom we strove for p — W. to Marie Alex. 1
is He not all but that which has p to feel High. Pantheism 8
all we have p to see is a straight staff „ 16
• The deep has p on the height, And the height has
p on the deep ; Voice and the P. 21
To Sleep I give my p's away ; In Mem. iy 1
And stunn'd me from my p to think „ xm 15
The chairs £ind thrones of civil p ? ,, xxi 16
p to see Within the green the moulder'd tree, / „ xxvi 6
With gatber'd p, yet the same, „ xxx 26
For Wisdom dealt with mortal f's, ,, xxxvi 5
When all his active p's are still, „ Ixiv 18
That Nature's ancient p was lost : „ Ixix 2
Hath p to give thee as thou wert ? ., Ixxv 8
Conduct by patlis of growing p^s, .. Ixxxiv 31
First love, first friendship, equal -p's, „ Ixxxvlffl
with p and grace And music in the bounds of law, ., Ixxxvii 33
P was with him in the night, „ xeoi 18
some novel p Sprang up for ever at a touch, ,, cxii 9
burst All barriers in her onward race For p. „ cxiv 15
Who grewest not alone in p „ 26
The P in darkness whom we guess ; „ cxxiv 4
To shift an arbitrary p, „ cxxviii 17
To feel thee some diffusive p, „ cxxx 7
And thou art worthy ; full of p ; „ Con. 37
Strong in the p that aJl men adore, Maud / a? 14
Cold fires, yet with p to bum and brand „ xviii 39
P's of the height, P's of the deep, „ // ii 82
Have p on this dark land to Ughten it. And p on
this dead world to make it live.' Com. of Arthur 93
P's who walk the world Made lightnings „ 107
So, compass'd by the p of the King, „ 203
Hath p to walk the waters like our Lord. „ 294
Am much too gentle, have not used my p : Marr. of Geraint 467
dearer by the p Of intermitted usage ; „ 810
Ye are in my p at last, are in my p. Geraint and E. 310
I will make use of all the p I have. „ 345
out of lier there came a p upon him ; ,, 613
Than hardest tyrants in their day of p, „ 695
Disband himseU, and scatter all his p's, ,. 798
' and lo, the p's of Doorm Are scatter'd,' „ 801
wealth of beauty, thine the crown of p, Merlin and V. 79
The meanest having p upon the highest, „ 195
grant me some slight p upon your fate, „ 333
I will not yield to give you p Upon my life „ 373
F'aith and unfaith can ne'er be equal p's : „ 388
Giving you p upon me thro' this charm, That you
might play me falsely, having p, „ 514
Have turn'd to tyrants when they came to p) ., 518
learnt their elemental secrets, p's And forces ; ., 632
like a ghost without the p to speak. Lancelot and E. 919
the owls WaiUng had p upon her, „ 1001
p To lay the sudden heads of violence flat. Holy Grail 309
Drew me, with p upon me, till I grew „ 486
My God, the p Was once in vows when men
beheved Last Tournament 648
the P's that tend the soul, Guinevere 65
her beauty, grace and p. Wrought as a charm upon them, „ 143
And for the p of ministration in her, „ 694
And have not p to see it as it is : Pass, of Arthur 20
Laid widow'd of the p in his eye . „ _ 290
Becaase it lack'd the p of perfect Hope ; Lover's Tale i 453
P from whose right hand the light Of Life issueth, „ 497
tho' mine image, The subject of thy p, „ 782
an' the p ov 'is Graace, North. Cobbler 73
But she wur a p o' coomfut, „ 79
had holden the p and glory of Spain so cheap The Revenge 106
misshaping vision of the P's Behind the world. Sisters (E. and E.) 230
scarce as great as Edith's p of love, „ 261
Dead Princess, living P, if that, Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 1
Lord give thou p to thy two witnesses ! Sir J. Oldcastle 81
^ Authority of the Church, P of the keys ! '— „ 162
By quiet fields, a slowly-dying p, De Prof., Two G. 24
Power (continued) With p on thine own act and on the
world. De Prof., Two G. 56
and grown In p, and ever growest, To Dante 2
upon me flash'd The p of prophesying — ^but to me No p — Tiresias 57
no p on Fate, Theirs, or mine own ! ,, 63
This p hath work'd no good to aught that lives, „ 77
Pity for all that aches in the grasp of an idiot p, Despair 43
His Love would have p over HeU „ 102
What p but the bird's could make This music Ancient Sage 21
The nameless P, or P's, that rule „ 29
' What P ? aught akin to Mind, „ 78
Or P as of the Gods gone bhnd „ 80
' What P but the Years that make ., 91
P's of Good, the P's of 111, Locksley H., Sixty 273
Heavenly P Makes all things new, (repeat) Early Spring 1, 43
thy will, a p to make This ever-changing world To Duke of Argyll 9
Men loud against all forms of p — Freedom 37
thunders often have confessed Thy p. To W. C. Macready 3
serpent-wanded p Draw downward into Hades Demeter and P. 25
P That lifts her buried life from gloom „ 97
Thro' manifold effect of simple p's — Prog, of Spring 86
banners blazoning a P That is not seen Akbar's Dream 137
but for p to fuse My myriads into union „ 156
Call'd on the P adored by the Christian, Kapiolani 32
On whom a happy home has p The Wanderer 10
purpose of that P which alone is great, God atid the Univ. 5
Praay'd (prayed) howsiver they p an' p. Village Wife 93
Practice run My faith beyond my p into his : Edwin Morris 54
I had not stinted p, O my God. St. S. Stylites 59
workman and his work, That p betters ? ' Princess Hi 299
What p howsoe'er expert In fitting aptest words In Mem. Ixxv 5
The sin that p burns into the blood, Merlin and V. 762
Nor yet forgot her p in her fright, „ 947
Practise And do not p on me, Geraint and E. 356
Practised (See also WeU-practised) inasmuch as you
have p on her, Aylmer's Field 302
I find Your face is p when I spell the Unes, Merlin and V. 367
Strike down the lusty and long p knight, Lancelot and E. 1360
Truthful, trustful, looking upward to the p hustings-
liar ; Locksley H., Sixty 123
Praise (S) Blew his own p's in his eyes, A Clmracter 22
Nor golden largess of thy p. My life is full 5
She still would take the p, and care no more. The form, the form 14
' That won his p's night and morn ? ' Mariana in the S. 34
While still I yeam'd for human p. Two Voices 123
But he is chill to p or blame. „ 258
neither count on p : Love thou thy land 26
express delight, in p of her Grew oratory. Gardener's D. 56
That only love were cause enough for p.' ,, 105
She broke out in p To God, Dora 112
But yield not me the p : St. 8. Stylites 185
And others, passing p. Talking Oak 58
But tho' the port surpasses p. Will Water 77
In p and in dispraise the same. Ode on Well. 73
after p and scorn. As one who feels the immeasurable
world, A Dedication 6
The p that comes to constancy.' In Mem. xxi 12
Had surely added p to p. „ xxxi 8
I leave thy p's unexpress'd „ Ixxv 1
To stir a little dust of p. „ 12
fills The lips of men with honest p, ,, Ixxxiv 26
whole wood-world is one full peal of p. Balin and lialan 450
have ye no one word of loyal p For Arthur, Merlin and V. 778
Dearer to true young hearts than their own p, Lancelot and E. 419
silent life of prayer, P, fast and alms ; Holy Grail 5
to prayer and p She gave herself, „ 76
From prime to vespers will I chant thy p Pelleas and E. 349
He chill'd the popular p's of the King Gtunevere 13
he was loud in weeping and in p Of her. Lover's Tale ii 87
Should earn from both the p of heroism. Sisters (E. and E.) 251
murmur of the people's p From thine own
State, Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 7
P to our Indian brothers, Def. of Lucknow 69
In p to God who led me thro' the waste. Columbus 17
And I more pleasure in your p. To E. Fitzgerald 56
Praise
648
Prayer
Praise (s) (continued) win all p from all Who past it,
to slight p but suffer scorn ;
the p And prayer of men,
in p of Whom The Christian bell,
' All p to Alia by whatever hands
Praise (verb) p the heavens for what they have ? '
nothing else For which to p the heavens
And p thee more in both
' No, I cannot p the fire In your eye —
And p the invisible ujiiversal Lord,
one would p the love that linkt the King
child hath often heard me p Your feats of arms,
crying, ' P the patient saints.
You p when you should blame
in every language I hear spoken, people p thee.
Praised One p her ancles, one her eyes,
He p his land, his horses, his machines ; He p his
ploughs, his cows, his hogs, his dogs ; He p his
hens, his geese, his guinea-hens ;
p the waning red, and told The vintage —
And much I p her nobleness.
Then they p him, soft and low,
But if I p the busy io-vm,
p him to his face with their courtly
Praiang Sipt wine from silver, p God,
Pranced lightly p Three captains out ;
a hundred gamboU'd and p on the wrecks
Prancer she whose elfin p sprmgs By night
Prank Plajong mad f'a along the heathy leas ;
must play such p's as these.
Sweet love on p s of saucy boyhood :
Prasutagus Me the wife of rich P,
Prate (s) child kill me with her foolish p ? '
Prate (verb) of the moral instinct would she p
p Of penances I cannot have gone thro',
we, that p Of rights and wrongs,
Boy, when I hear you p I ahnost think
Whj^ do they p of the blessings of Peace ?
Fools p, and perish traitors.
Prated I that p peace, when first I heard
Pratest ' Thou p here where thou art least ;
Prattle full heart of yours Whereof ye p.
Hers was the prettiest p,
I used To p to her picture —
Prattling P the primrose fancies of the boy,
Then said the Uttle novice p to her.
Unmannerly, with p and the tales
And once my p Edith ask'd him ' why ? '
Pratty (pretty) sa p an' neat an' sweeat,
smile o' the sun as danced in 'er p blue eye ;
sa p, an' feat, an' neat, an' sweeat ?
Pray While I do p to Thee alone,
Why p To one who heeds not,
I woiUd p — that God would move And strike
P, AUce, p, my darling wife,
I p thee, pass before my light of life,
' Where I may mourn and p.
P Heaven for a human heart,
P for my soul. More things are wrought
fast ^Vhole Lents, and p.
p them not to quarrel for her sake,
0 rather p for those and pity them,
p Your Highness would enroll them with your own.
Yet I p Take comfort : live, dear lady,
So I p you tell the truth to me.
take thus and p that he Who wrote it,
Leave thou thy sister when she p's,
p That we may meet the horsemen of Earl Doorm,
I p you of your courtesy. He being as be is,
P you be gentle, p you let me be :
Yea, God, I p you of your gentleness,
1 p the King To let me bear some token
I p you lend me one, if such you have,
let ine hence I p you.'
P for my soul, and yield me burial.
Tiresias 83
To Duke of Argyll 4
Demeter and P. 119
Akbar's Dream 148
198
Gardener's D. 102
104
Talking Oak 290
Vision of Sin 183
Ode Inter. Exhib. 3
Gareth and L. 492
Marr. of Geraint 434
Last Tournament 217
Epilogue 4
Akbar's D., Inscrip. 1
Beggar Maid 11
#
The Brook 124
Aylmer's Field 406
Princess, Pro. 124
„ vi 5
In Mem. Ixxxix 37
The Revenge 99
Will Water. 127
Princess v 254
V. of Maeldune 102
Sir L. and Q. G. 33
Circumstance 2
L. C. V. de Vere 64
Princess vii 344
Boddicea 48
Guinevere 225
Palace of Art 205
St. S. Stylites 100
Godiva 7
Princess v 152
Maud 7 t 21
Balin and Balan 530
Princess v 265
In Mem. xxxvii 2
Merlin and V. 549
In the Child. Hosp. 31
The Ring 116
The Brook 19
Guinevere 183
„ 316
Sisters {E. and E.) 58
North Cobbler 43
50
108
Supp. Confessions 12
115
Miller's D. 23
CEnone 241
Palace of AH 292
L. C. V. de Vere 71
M. d' Arthur 247
St. S. Stylites 182
Enoch Arden 35
Aylmer's Field 775
Princess i 238
vl9
The Victirn 48
A Dedication 4
In Mem. xxxiii 5
Geraint and E. 491
641
708
710
Balin and Balan 187
Lancelot and E. 193
770
1280
Pray (continued) P for my soul thou too. Sir Lancelot, Lancelot andE. 1281
P for thy soul ? Ay, that will I. „ 1395
I p him, send a sudden Angel down To seize me „ 1424
brother, fast thou too and p. And tell thy brother
knights to fast and p. Holy Grail 125
P for him that he scape the doom of fire, Guinevere 347
said the Uttle novice, ' I p for both ; „ 349
P and be pray'd for ; „ 681
P for my soul. More things are wrought Pass, of Arthur 415
O — to p with me — yes — Rizpah 15
P come and see my mother. Sisters (E. and E.) 191
' P come and see my mother, and farewell.' „ 196
to p Before that altar — rso I think ; ,, 238
and I p for them all as my own : ' In the Child. Hosp. 19
I p you tell King Ferdinand who plays with me, Columbus 222
and we pray'd as we heard him p, V. of Maeldune 125
I pray'd — ' my child ' — for I still coidd p — The Wreck 138
P God our greatness may not fail Hands all Round 31
To p, to do — To p, to do according to the prayer, Akbar's Dream 7
Make but one music, harmonising 'P.' „ 151
wines of heresy in the cup Of counsel — so — I p thee — „ 175
Let blow the trumpet strongly while I p. Doubt and Prayer 10
Pray'd (See also Praay'd) He p, and from a happy place
God's glory smote Two Voices 224
With all my strength I p for both, May Queen, Con. 31
p him, ' If they pay this tax, they starve.' Godiva 20
then he p ' Save them from this, whatever comes
to me.' Enoch Arden 117
And while he p, the master of that ship „ 119
P for a blessing on his wife and babes „ 188
P for a sign ' my Enoch is he gone ? ' „ 491
dug His fingers into the wet earth, and p. „ 780
yet maiden-meek I p Concealment : Princess Hi 134
She p me not to judge their cause „ vii 235
So p the men, the women : „ Con. 7
So p him well to accept this cloth of gold, Gareth and L. 398
p the King would grant me Lancelot To fight „ 856
had you cried, or knelt, or p to me, Geraint and E. 844
when of late ye p me for my leave „ 888
A hermit, who had p, labour'd and p, Lancelot and E. 403
and she p and fasted all the more. Holy Grail 82
she p and fasted, till the sun Shone, „ 98
and myself fasted and p Always, „ 130
Fasted and p even to the uttermost, „ 132
Who scarce had p or ask'd it for myself — „ 691
Pray and be p for ; Guinevere 681
He waked for both : he p for both Lover's Tale i 227
By Edith p me not to whisper of it. Sisters (E. and E.) 207
I p them being so calumniated Columbus 123
and we p as we heard him pray., V. of Maeldune 125
I p — ' my child ' — for I stiU could pray — The Wreck 138
all night I p with tears. The Flight 17
Fasted and p, Telemachus the Saint. St. Telemachus 11
I p against the dream. Akbar's Dream 7
And we p together for him. Charity 39
Prayer For me outpour'd in hohest p — Sv/pp. Confessions 72
Prevail'd not thy pure p's ? „ 89
In deep and daily p's would'st strive „ 101
If p's will not hush thee, Lilian 27
More things are wrought by p Than this world
dreams of. ' M. d' Arthur 247
knowing God, they hft not hands of p „ 252
Battering the gates of heaven with storms of p, St. S. Stylites 7
with hoggish whine They burst my p. „ 178
So keep I fair thro' faith and p A virgin heart Sir Galahad 23
Rejoicing at that answer to his p. Enoch Arden 127
evermore P from a living source within the will, „ 801
Give me your p's, for he is past your p's, Aylmer's Field 751
My mother pitying made a thousand p's ; Princess i 21
A liquid look on Ida, full of p, „ iv 369
one port of sense not fiint to p, „ vi 182
grant my p. Help, father, brother, help ; „ 304
Blazon your mottoes of blessing and p ! W. to Alexandra 12
my p Was as the whisper of an air In Mem. xvii 2
Her eyes are homes of silent p, „ xxxii 1
Prayer
549
Prayer (continued) Thrice blest whose lives are taithf ul p's. In M'm xxxii 13
Who built him fanes of fruitless p, i^i 12
breathing a p To be friends, to be reconciled ! Maud I xix 55
iNot a bell was rung, not a p was read ; II v 24:
weary her ears with one continuous p, Gareih and L. 19
only breathe Short fits of p, Oeraint and E. 155
silent life of j>, Praise, fast, and alms ; Holy Grail 4
to p and praise She gave herself, irg
' might it come To me by p and fasting ? ' 96
and enter'd, and we knelt in p. " 4gQ
And so wear out in abnsdeed and in p Gtdnevere 687
More things are wrought by p Than this world
dreams of. Pass, of Arihur il5
knowing God, they hft not hands of p 420
p of many a race and creed, and clime— To the Queen, ii 11
That stnke acro^ the soul m p, iter's Tale i 364
to seek the Lord Jesus m p ; /„ the Child. Hosp. 18
good woman, can p set a broken bone ? ' 20
if our Princes harken'd to my p, Columhus 100
I send my p by night and day— 233
sheet Let down to Peter at his p's ; To E. Fitzgerald 12
(jods, despite of human p. Are slower to forgive Tiresias 9
I would make my life one p The Wreck 10
where of old we knelt in p, Loclslei, H., Sixty 33
Thy p was ' Light-more Light- Epit. on Caxton 1
the praise And p of men, Demeter and P. 120
all the sciences, poesy, varying voices of p ? Vastness 31
I that heard, and changed the p Happy 55
on stony hearts a fruitless p For pity. Death of (Enone 41
If It be a mosque people murmur the holy p, Akbar's D., InscHp. 4
To pray, to do accorcfing to the p, Akbar's Dream 8
out the p s, i hat have no successor in deed 9
Prayerful patient, and p, meek. Pale-blooded, ' Last Tournament 607
who am not meek, PaJe-blooded, p. 611
Prayer-prelude labour'd thro' His brief p-p, Aylmer's Field 628
Praying P all I can. If prayers wiU not hush thee, LUian 26
and sinking ships, and p hands. Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 116
teU her that I died Blessing her, p for her, Enoch Arden 879
my latest breath Was spent in blessing her and p for her 884
P ^"5 To speak before the people of her child, Aylmer's Field 607
p God will save Thy sailor,- /„ nfg^ ^i 13
another, a lord of all things, p Maud 1 1 v 32
she was evej- p the sweet heavens To save Geraint and E. 44
T ^f^^y that great love they both had borne the
*if * ' V, T , , Lover's Tale iv 180
p that when I from hence Shall fade Tiresias 214
When I was p in a storm— Happy 80
Preach {See also Preach) I will not even p to you. To J.S 39
Whose foresight p'es peace, Love and Duty 34
h^lT'^A ^?P«".«nce p'e... Will Water, m
he heard his priest P an inverted scripture, Aylmer's Field 44
Yet who would p It as a truth % Mem. liii 11
io p our poor little army down, Maud I x 38
i^l'A 1^ ^^^ ^'^ P, ^"? '^°'^"' Church-Warden, etc. 52
Preach d p An universal culture for the crowd, Princess Pro 108
Is It you, that p in the chapel Despair 1
p, -^J;, J^f'J^^ "^^K^ S"""? ' Locksley H., Sixty 89
Preach'd An' Muggms 'e p o' Hell-fire N^h. Cobbler 55
«eacher {See also Wichf-preacher) when the p's
cadence flow'd Softening Aylmer's Field 729
p says, our sins should make us sad : Grandmother 93
WK^^?v. "° ? It'' ^^*^ ' ^^««*^ I ^« 22
Why there ? they came to hear their p. Sir J. Oldcastle 42
Burnt too, my faithful p, Beverley ! 80
Dooms our unlicensed p to the flame, " 105
p's linger'd o'er his dying words, St. Telekachus 75
rteaching {See also A-preachin') p down a daughter's
^r^^f^^'"*: ^ nu ■ .. ■ , Locksley Hall 94
Not p simple Christ to simple men. Sea Dreams 21
Preamble prolong Her low p all alone, Palace of Art 174
tricks and foolenes, O Vivien, the p ? Tlf erZm avitZ F. 266
rrecantion Creeps no p used, among the crowd, Guinevere 519
Prec^ent slowly broadens down From p to p : You ask me, why, etc 12
I hat codeless mynad of p, Aylmer's Field 436
Precedent (continued) Swallowing its p in victory
Precinct did I break Your p ;
What, in the p's of the chapel-yard.
Precious pure quintessences of p oils In hoUow'd
moons of gems.
Surely a p thing, one worthy note,
Thou wouldst betray me for the p hilt ;
All p things, discover'd late.
To find the p morning hours were lost.
They knew the p things they had to guard :
Lo their p Roman bantling.
Such p relics brought by thee ;
With ' Love's too p to be lost,
(Which Maud, like a p stone
To dissolve the p seal on a bond.
Surely a p thing, one worthy note,
Thou wouldst betray me for the p hilt ;
The clear brow, bulwark of the p brain.
The p crystal into which I braided Edwin's hair !
Presence
Lover's Tale i 763
Princess iv 422
Merlin and V. 751
Palace of AH 187
M. d' Arthur 89
126
Day-Dm., Arrival 1
Enoch Arden 302
Third of Feb. 41
Boadicea 31
In Mem. xvii 18
,. Ixv 3
Maud I xiv 10
„ xix 45
Pass, of Arthur 257
294
Lover's Tale i 130
The Flight 34
Precipice Among the palms and ferns and p's ; Enoch Arden 593
Bown from the lean and wrmkled p's, Princess iv 22
breakers boom and blanch on the p's, Boadicea 76
P^^^-l^r*' ^^^^'"^ down horrible p's, Geraint and E. 379
Precipitancy Bearing all down m thy p — Gareth and L 8
Precipitate Wheehng with p paces To the melody, Vision of Sin 37
such a p heel, Fledged as it were Lucretius "m
Precipitous sweep Of some p rivulet to the wave, Enoch Arden 587
Precontract Our kmg expects— was there no p ? Princess Hi 207
as to p 5, we move, my friend. At no man's beck 226
/ wed with thee ! / bound by p Your bride, '" iv 541
lagg'd in answer loth to render up My p, " ^ 300
Predoom'd most P her as unworthy. Lancelot and E. 729
Preeminence To assail this gray p of man ! Princess Hi 234
Preter each p's his separate claim, 7^ j|/g^ ^^ ig
Reference But if there lie a p eitherway, Sisters (E. and E.) 290
Prejudice Cut P against the gram : Love thou thy land 22
To leap the rotten pales of p. Princess ii 142
old-recumng waves of p Resmooth to nothing : m 240
Prelude (s) {See also Prayer-prelude) With mellow p's,
' We are free.' j'^e winds etc 4
But with some p of disparagement, Read, The Epic 49
1 his p has prepared thee. Gardener's D 272
The p to some brighter world. Day-Dm., L'Envoi 40
Are but the needful p's of the truth : Princess Con 74
Green p, April promise glad new-year Lover's Tale i 281
Oftentimes The vision had fair p, ^ 124
by their clash And p on the keys. Sisters {E. and E.) 2
Was p to the tyranny of aU ? Tiresias 74:
Prelude (verb) And I— my harp would p woe— In Mem. Ixxxviii 9
Preluded sweet breath P those melodious B of F Women 6
Premier city-roar that hails P or king! Princess, Con. 102
Prepare hutp: I speak ; it falls.' ^-j 224
^""^Sfu^ -7^^ prelude has p thee. Gardener's D. 272
The rites p the victim bared The Victim 65
day p The daily burden for the back. /„ Mem. xxv 3
let there be p a chanot-bier To take me Lancelot and E. 1121
Presage after seen The dwarfs of t, : Princess iv 447
No p but the same mistrustful mood Merlin and V. 321
Presageiul Dark m the glass of some p mood, „ 295
That three-days-long p gloom of yours " 320
Prescient at length Prophetical and p Lover's"Tale ii 132
Presence (adj.) That morning in the p room I stood Princess i 51
Presence (s) The light of thy great p ; ode to Memory 32
all the full-faced p of the Gods (Enone 80
I hate Her p, hated both of Gods and men. 229
To dwell in p of immortal youth, TithZi-iio 91
crimson'd all Thy p and thy portals, 57
PhiUp sitting at her side forgot Her p, Enoch Arden 385
A splendid p flattering the poor roofs Aylmer's Field 175
Your p will be sun m wmter. To F D Maurice 3
gather'd strength and grace And p, /,, Mem. ciii 28
m his p I attend To hear the tidings cxxvi 2
As m the p of a gracious king. Gareth and L. 316
splendour of the p of the King Throned, „ 320
Presence
550
Pretty
Presence (s) (continued) Thou hast a pleasant v. Gareth and L. 1065
trulh if not in Arthur's hall, In Arthur's p ? „ 1255
faded from the p into years Of exile — ' Balin and Balan 156
by your state And v might have guess'd Marr. ofGeraint 431
her gentle j> at the lists Might well have served „ 795
by thy state And p I might guess thee chief of those, Lancelot and E. 183
Ev'n in the p of an enemy's fleet, Guinevere 279
Nor yet endured in p of His eyes To indue his lustre ; Lover's Tale i 423
Next to her p whom I loved so well, „ 427
or fold Thy p in the silk of sumptuous looms ; Ancient Sage 266
Hail ample p of a Queen, Prog, of Spring 61
Glanced from our P on the face of one, Akbar's Dream 113
Present (adj.) Yet p in his natal grove. The Daisy 18
The lowness of the p state, In Mem. xociv 11
Strange friend, past, p, and to be ; „ cxxix 9
Yet is my life nor in the p time, Nor in the p place. Lovei-'s Tale i 116
depth Between is clearer in my life than all Its p flow. „ 150
With p giief , and made the rhymes, Tiresias ] 96
Present (gift) ' I can make no marriage p : L. of Burleigh \d
Tost over all her p's petulantly : Aylmers Field 235
A p, a great labour of the loom ; Princess i 44
Present (time) To glorify the p ; Ode to Memory 3
Where Past and P, wound in one. Miller's D. 197
used Within the P, but transfused Thro' future
time Love thou thy land 3
noise of lite Swarm'd in the golden p, Gardener's D. 179
When I clung to all the p Locksley Hall 14
A night-long P of the Past In Mem. Ixxi 3
But in the p broke the blow. „ Ixxxv 56
Thou, like my p and my past, „ cxxi 19
carves A portion from the solid p, Merlin and V. 462
The P is the vassal of the Past : Lmer's Tale i 119
to this p My fuU-orb'd love has waned not. ,, 733
clear-eyed Spirit, Being blunted in the P, „ ii 131
hold the P fatal daughter of the Past, Locksley H., Sixty 105
In the whiter of the P Happy 70
Her Past became her P, Death of CEnone 14
And plow the P like a field, Meclmnophilus 31
Present (verb) To the young spirit p Ode to Memory 73
Each month is various to p The world Two Voices 74
With purpose to p them to the Queen, Lancelot and E. 69
Presented p Maid Or Nymph, or Goddess, Princess i 196
Presentiment But spiritual p's. In Mem. xcii 14
Preserve P a broad approach of fame, Ode on Well. 78
Ftess (newspapers, etc.) ' Fly, happy sails, and bear the P ; Golden Year 42
That our free p should cease to brawl. Third of Feb. 3
His party-secret, fool, to the p ; Maud II v 35
dark ages, you see, of the popular p, Despair 88
the p of a thousand citias is prized The Dawn 14
Press (pressure) and knew the p retmn'd, Bridestnaid 12
Press (throng) slanted o'er a p Of snowy shoulders, Princess iv 478
Made at me thro' the p, „ v 522
Press (verb) answer should one p his hands ? Two Voices 245
whose touch may p The maiden's tender pabn. Talking Oak 179
p me from the mother's breast. Locksley Hall 90
P'es his without reproof : L. of Burleigh 10
and so p in, perforce Of multitude, Lucretius 167
For they p in from all the provinces, Princess ii 97
Nor did her father cease to p my claim, „ vii 87
' P this a little closer, sweet. Last Tournament 718
Press'd-Prest prest thy hand, and knew the press
retum'd, The Bridesmaid 12
bosoms prest To little haips of gold ; Sea-Fairies 3
On to God's house the people prest : Two Voices 409
Approaching, press'd you heart to heart. Miller's D. 160
He prest the blossom of his lips to mine, CEnone 78
my not lips prest Close, close to thine „ 203
kisses press'd on lips Less exquisite than thine.' Gardener's D. 151
The gold-fringed pillow lightly prest: Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 22
the daughter prest upon her To wed the man Enoch Arden 483
when I prest the cause, I learnt that James The Brook 98
to her meek and modest bosom prest In agony, Aylmer's Field 416
I prest my footsteps into his, Lucretius 1 18
closer prest, denied it not : Princess iv 232
She prest and prest it on me — „ v 283
Press'd-Prest {continued) prest Their hands, and call'd them
dear deliverers,
where warm hands have prest and closed.
What time his tender pahn is prest
around him slowly prest The people.
All round her prest the dark,
And Lancelot ever prest upon the maid
Full of the vision, prest :
prest together In its green sheath.
And they prest, as they grew, on each other.
Princess vi 91
In Mem. xiii '
xlv 2 M
Gareth and L. 693 I
Balin a7id Balan 262 '
Lancelot and E. 911
Holy Grail 267
Lover's Tale i 152 -,
F. of Maeldune 64 i
one snowy knee was prest Against the margin flowers ; Tiresias 42
when we met, you prest My hand, and said To Mary Boyle 15
Pressing P up against the land, Eleanore 112
Yet p on, tho' all in fear to find Sir Gawain Gareth and L. 325
Then p day by day thro' Lyonnesse Last Tournament 501
Heart beating time to heart. Up p hp, Lover's Tale i 260
Pressure ' Yet seem'd the p thrice as sweet Talking Oak 145
in days of difl&culty And p, Enoch Arden 255
I take the p of thine hand. In Mem. cxix 12
Prest See Press'd
PresterJohn Or clutch'd the sacred crown of P J, Columbus 110
Presumptuous dishonourable, base, P ! Aylmer's Field 293
nor believe me Too p, indolent reviewers. Hendecasyllabics 16
Presumptuously as he deem'd, p : Balin and Balan 222
Pretence Our greatest yet with least p. Ode on Well. 29
making vain p Of gladness, hi Mem. xxx 6
Pretender To keep the list low and p's back. Merlin and V. 592
Pretext Light p's drew me ; Gardener's D. 192
With some p of fineness in the meal Enoch Arden 341
some p held Of baby troth, invalid, Princess v 397
going to the King, He made this p, Marr. of Geraint 33
' And with what face, after my p made, Lancelot and E. 141
our true king Will then allow your p, „ 153
Had made the p of a hindering wound, „ 582
when he leams. Will well allow my p, „ 586
Prettier Eveljn is gayer, wittier, p. Sisters (E. and E.) 36
The merrier, p, wittier, as they talk, „ 286
Prettiest ' Which was p, Best-natured ? ' Princess i 233
The p little damsel in the port, Enoch Arden 12
Hers was the p prattle, In the Child. Hasp. 31
Prettily How p for his own sweet sake Maud I vi 51
Pretty {See also Pratty) Have all his p young ones
educated, ' Enoch Arden 146
Shaking their p cabin, hammer and axe, „ 173
This p, puny, weakly little one, — „ 195
- A p face is well, and this is well, Edwin Morris 45
What is their p saying ? Aylmer's Field 353
worst thought she has Is whiter even than her p hand : „ 363
' P were the sight If our old halls Princess, Pro. 139
Will crush her p maiden fancies dead „ i 88
While my little one, while my p one, sleeps. „ Hi 8
Sleep, my little one, sleep, my p one, sleep. „ 16
nor p babes To be dandled, no, „ iv 146
Their p maids in the running flood, v 382
' P bud ! Lily of the vale ! „ vi 192
Whither from this p home. City Child 2
Whither from this p house, „ 7
' O that ye had some brother, p one. Com. of Arthur 335
' Are these your p tricks and fooleries, Merlin and V. 265
And made a p cup of both my hands „ 275
Your p sports have brighten'd all again. ,. 305
' Thou read the book, my p Vivien ! ., 667
The p, popular name such manhood earns, ., 787
Now made a p history to herself Lancelot and E. 18
Handed her cup and piped, the p one. Last Tournament 296
' your p bud, So blighted here, The Ring 316
Why wail you, p plover ? Happy 1
All mine from your p blue eyes to your feet, Romney's R. 96
And I blind your p blue eyes with a kiss ! „ 101
P enough, very p ! but I was against it Grandmother 7
And some are p enough. The Flower 21
Wan, but as p as heart can desire, In the Child. Hasp. 40
call'd me es p es ony lass i' the Shere ; Spinster's S^s. 13
An' thou be es ^ a Tabby, ., 14
ye said I wur p V pinks, „ 17
Pretty
561
Priest
Pretty {continued) Niver wur p, not I,
Thaw it wam't not me es wui- p,
P anew when ya dresses 'em cop,
PrevaO Let her work p.
Let not thy moods p, when I am gone
Prevail'd But why P not thy pure prayers ?
has won His path upward, and p,
And now the Barons and the kings p,
' Thou hast half p against me,'
p So far that no caress could win
Prevailing P in weakness, the coronach stole
not worthy ev'n to speak Of thy p mysteries ;
And her words stole with most p sweetness
The King p made his realm : —
Prey (s) And stared, with his foot on the p,
biting laws to scare the beasts of p
The seeming p of cyclic storms,
little wood where I sit is a world of plunder and p.
Bound on a foray, roUing eyes of p,
bird of rapine whose whole p Is man's good name :
Beneath the shadow of some bird of p ;
Spinster's S's 21
22
.85
In Mem. cxiv 4
Balin and Balan 140
Supp. Confessions 89
Ode on Well. 214
Com. of Arthur 105
Gareth and L. 30
Sisters (E. and E.) 251
Dying Swan 26
In Mem. xxxvii 12
Lover's Tale i 553
Last Tournament 651
Poet's Song 12
Princess v 393
In Mem. cxviii 11
Maud I iv 24
Geraint and E. 538
Merlin and V. 728
Pelleas and E. 608
his p Lay deeper than to wear it as
Kound whose sick head all night, like birds of p, Last Tournament 138
Prey (verb) and p By each cold hearth, In Mem. xcviii 17
Price four-field system, and the p of gi'ain ; Audley Court 34
learn the p, and what the p he ask'd, The Brook 142
tlie colt would fetch its p ; „ 149
to give at last The p of naif a realm, Lancelot and E. 1164
a robe Of samite without p, Merlin and V. 222
Ev'n by the p that others sot upon it. Lover's Tale iv 152
You have set a p on his head : Bandit's Death 7
Priceless Rich arks with p bones of martyrdom, Balin and Balan 110
Stared at the p cognizance, and thought „ 430
A p goblet with a p wine Arising, Lover's Tale iv 227
Prick insects p Each leaf into a gall) Talking Oak 69
To p us on to combat ' Like to like ! Princess v 304
the blood creeps, and the nerves p In Mem. I 2
plimges thro' the wound again, ijid p's it deeper : Pelleas and E. 531
they p's clean thruf to the skin — Spinster's S's. 36
Prick'd p with goads and stings ; Palace of Art 150
like a horse That hears the corn-bin open, p my ears ; The Epic 45
peace which each had p to death. - ' ' '^ " "-
playing with the blade he p his hand,
while each ear was p to attend A tempest,
P by the Papal spur, we rear'd,
half-way down P thro' the mist ;
And Gareth crying p against the cry ;
p their light ears, and felt Her low firm voice
Geraint, who being p In combat with the follower
of Limours,
I was p with some reproof,
p The hauberk to the flesh ;
couch 'd their spears and p their steeds,
and a spear P sharply his own cuirass,
All ears were p at once,
P with incredible pinnacles into heaven.
Phcking (Look at it) p a cockney ear.
Pitickle (s) The f urzy p fire the dells,
Prickle (verb) P my skin and catch my breath.
Prickled Gareth 's head p beneath his helm ;
Prickly His charger trampling many a p star
Pride Is not my human p brought low ?
And chastisement of human p ; That p, the sin
of devils, „ 108
I think that p hath now no place Nor sojourn in me. „ 120
all the outworks of suspicious p ; Isabel 24
With merriment of kingly p, Arabian Nights 151
' Self-blinded are you by your p : Two Voices 23
waste wide Of that abyss, or scornful p ! „ 120
Wilt thou find passion, pain or p ? „ 243
on herself her serpent p had curl'd. Palace of Art 257
Your p is yet no mate for mine, L. C. V. de Vere 11
my brand Excalibur, Which was my p : M. d' Arthur 28
old Sir Robert's p. His books — Audley Court 58
shame and p. New things and old, Walk, to the Mail 60
our p Looks only for a moment whole Aylmer's Field 1
Aylmer's Field 52
239
Princess vi 280
Third of Feb. 27
Gareth and L. 194
1221
Geraint and E. 193
500
890
Balin and Balan 559
Lancelot and E. 479
489
724
Holy Grail 423
Maud I x22
Two Voices 71
Maud I xiv 36
Gareth and L. 1397
Marr. of Geraint 313
Supp. Confessions 14
Pride {continued)
his ring —
taking p in her. She look'd so sweet,
a time for these to flaunt their p ?
your Princess cramm'd with erring p,
welcome Russian flower, a people's p,
Ring out false p in place and blood.
The proud was half disarm'd of p,
The fire of a foolish p flash'd
We are puppets, Man in his p,
often a man's own angry p Is cap and bells
thought, is it p, and mused and sigh'd
' No surely, now it cannot be p.'
Down with ambition, avarice, p,
I to cry out on p Who have won her favour !
Fool that I am to be vext with his p !
For the keeper was one, so full of p,
shame, p, wrath Slew the May-white :
placed a peacock in his p Before the damsel,
The damsel by the peacock in his p.
And doubling all his master's vice of p,
Then wiU I fight him, and will break his p,
fight and break his p, and have it of him.
That I will break his p and learn his name,
Refused her to him, then his p awoke ;
But that his p too much despises me :
In next day's tourney I may break his p.'
My p is broken : men have seen my fall.'
my p Is broken down, for Enid sees my fall ! '
For once, when I was up so high in p
They place their p in Lancelot and the Queen,
dead love's harsh heir, jealous p ?
the heat Of p and glory fired her face ;
My p in happier summers, at my feet.
To whom my false voluptuous p,
my brand Excalibur, Which was my p :
my house an' my man were my p,
Sir Richard cried in his English p,
hesn't the call, nor the mooney, but hes the p,
I have only wounded his p —
he sail'd the sea to crush the Moslem in his p ;
Prideful My nature's p sparkle in the blood
Priest {See also Soldier-priest) Speak, if there be a p,
a man of God,
As the p, above his book Leering
his p Preach an inverted scripture,
' Gash thyself, p, and honour thy brute Baal,
one The silken p of peace, one this, one that,
with music, with soldier and with p,
The P in horror about his altar
The P went out by heath and hill ;
He seem'd a victim due to the p. The P beheld him.
For now the P has judged for me.'
the P was happy, (repeat)
This faith has many a purer p,
Dehcate-handed p intone ;
p, who mumble worship in your quire —
he had a difference with their p's,
Shone hke the countenance of a p of old
I was the High P in her hohest place,
for your P Labels — to take the king along with
him —
P's Who fear the king's hard common-sense
Runs in the rut, a coward to the P.
The Gospel, the P's pearl, flung down to swine—
What profits an ill P Between me and my God ?
that proud P, That mock-meek mouth of utter
Antichrist, „ 169
I am damn'd already by the P „ 200
Bantering bridesman, reddening p, Forlorn 33
when The P pronounced you dead, Happy 50
P, who join'd you to the dead, „ 93
he buried you, the P ; the P is not to blame, „ 105
The menacing poison of intolerant p's, Akbar's Dream 165
I will find the P and confess. Bandit's Death 18
Aylmer's Field 121
554
770
Princess Hi 102
W. to Marie Alex. 6
In Mem. cvi 21
„ ex 6
Maud I iv 16
25
Vi61
„ via 12
13
a; 47
„ xii 17
xiii 5
„ // V 79
Gareth and L. 656
850
870
Marr. of Geraint 195
221
416
424
448
464
476
578
589
Geraint and E. 790
Merlin and V. 25
Lancelot and E. 1398
Pelleas and E. 172
Guinevere 536
641
Pass, of Arthur 196
First Quarrel 41
The Revenge 82
Village Wife 91
The Wreck 14
Locksley H., Sixty 29
Geraint and E. 827
St. S. Stylites 214
Vision of Sin 117
Aylmer's Field 43
644
Princess v 184
Ode on Well. 81
The Victim 7
29
36
56
„ 61,73
In Mem. xxxvii 3
Maud I via 11
Balin and Balan 444
Holy GraU 674
Pelleas and E. 144
Lover^s Tale i 686
Sir J. Oldcastle 48
65
78
116
144
Priest
552
Princely
Priest (continued) P's in the name of the Lord passing souls The Dawn 4
Priest^ O P in the vaults of Death, In Mem. Hi 2
Priesthood ever and aye the P moan'd, The Victim 23
What said her P ? Kapiolani 19
BafHed her p, Broke the Taboo, „ 29
Primal grown at last beyond the passions of the p clan ? Locksley H., Sixty 93
Mount and mine, and p wood ; Open I. and C. Exhib. 6
Prime (adj.) On the p labour of thine early days : Ode to Memory 94
P, which I knew; and so we sat and eat Audley Court 28
While the p swallow dips his wing, Edwin Morris 145
Better to clear p forests, heave and thump Princess Hi 127
And my p passion in the grave : In Mem. Ixxxv 76
from p youth Well-known well-loved. Lover's Tale ii 175
Butter I warrants be p, Village Wife 3
Prime (s) golden p Of good Haroun
Alraschid. Arabian Nights 10, 21, 32, 43, 54, 65,
76, 87, 98, 109, 120, 131, 142, 153
gray p Make thy grass hoar with early rime. Two Voices 65
coiUd she climb Beyond her own material p? „ 378
Raw from the p, and crushing down his mate ; Princess ii 121
about my barren breast In the dead p: „ vi 203
we fought for Freedom from our p, Third of Feb. 23
And at the spiritual p Rewaken In Mem. xliii 15
Dragons of the p, That tare each other „ Ivi 22
The colours of the crescent p? „ cxvi 4
shook his wits they wander in his p — Gareth and L. 715
From p to vespers will I chant thy praise Pelleas and E. 349
Primrose (adj.) Prattling the p fancies of the boy, The Brook 19
Primrose (s) p yet is dear, The p of the later year. In Mem. Ixxxv 118
Prince (See also Lord-prince, Shepherd-prince) eke
the island p's over-bold Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 75
to greet Troy's wandering p, On a Mourner 33
Among the powers and p's of this world, St. S. Stylites 187
And bring the fated fairy P. Day-Dm., Sliep. P. 56
A fairy P, with joyful eyes, „ Arrival 7
P of peace, the Mighty God, Aylmer's Field 669
heads'of cliiefs and p's fall so fast, „ 763
and be you The P to win her ! Princess, Pro. 226
' Then follow me, the P,' I answer'd, „ 227
A p I was, blue-eyed, and fair in face, „ i 1
' You do us, P,' he said, „ 120
would you had her, P, with all my heart, „ 126
She answer'd, ' then ye know the P?' „ ii 49
in me behold the P Your countryman, „ 214
' O Sir, O P, I have no country none ; „ 218
be swerved from right to save A p, a brother ? „ 291
help my p to gain His rightful bride, „ Hi 160
I know the P, I prize his truth : „ 232
tho' your P's love were like a God's, „ 248
' Fair daiighter, when we sent the P your way „ iv 398
and like a gentleman, And like ap: „ 528
Arranged the favour, and assumed the P. „ 602
you could not slay Me, nor your p: ,. v 66
He seems a gracious and a gallant P, „ 213
We would do much to gratSy your P — „ 217
But let your P (our royal word upon it, „ 224
embattled squares. And squadrons of the P, „ 247
P, she can be sweet to those she loves, „ 289
and bore down a P, And Cyril, one. „ 518
Cyril seeing it, push'd against the P, „ 533
there went up a great cry, The P is slain. „ vi 26
on to the tents : take up the P.' „ 279
That you may t«nd upon him with the p.' „ 315
but the P Her brother came ; „ 344
Never, P ; You cannot love me.' „ vii 337
Has given our P his own imperial Flower, W. to Marie Alex. 4
A princely people's awful p's, The Daisy 39
in his coffin the P of courtesy lay. G. of Swainston 10
a P indeed, Beyond all titles, Ded. of Idylls 41
his wife Nursed, the young p, and rear'd him Com. of Arthur 224
thou art closer to tins noble p, „ 314
p his heir, when tall and marriageable, Gareth and L. 102
P, thou Shalt go disguised to Arthur's hall, „ 152
Lancelot answer'd, ' P, O Gareth— „ 1236
Knight, knave, p and fool, I hate thee and for ever.' „ 1255
Prince (continued) P, Knight, Hail, Knight and P, Gareth and L. 1270
' Nay, P,' she cried, ' God wot, „ 1332
0 P, I went for Lancelot first, „ 1343
the P Three times had blown — „ 1377
A tributary p of Devon, Marr. of Geraint 2
Allowing it, the P and Enid rode, „ 43
As of a p whose manhood was all gone, „ 59
Low bow'd the tributary P, and she, „ 174
' Late, late. Sir P,' she said, ,, 177
P Had put his horse in motion toward the knight, „ 205
The P's blood spirted upon the scarf, „ 208
' Farewell, fair P,' answer'd the stately Queen. „ 224
P, as Enid past him, fain To follow, „ 375
and while the P and Earl Yet spoke together, „ 384
and prove her heart toward the P.' „ 513
Loudly spake the P, ' Forbear : „ 555
' This noble p who won our earldom back, „ 619
But being so beholden to the P, „ 623
P had found her in her ancient home ; „ 644
While ye were talking sweetly with your P, „ 698
Our mended fortunes and a P's bride : „ 718
the P Hath pick'd a ragged-robin from the hedge, „ 723
might shame the P To whom we are beholden ; „ 726
we beat him back, As this great P invaded us, „ 747
And did her honour as the P's bride, „ 835
pair Of comrades making slowlier at the P, Geraint and E. 167
' Ye will be all the wealthier,' cried the P. „ 221
P had brought his errant eyes Home from the rock, „ 245
thus he moved the P To laughter and his comrades „ 295
when the P was merry, ask'd Limours, „ 297
the stout P bad him a loud good-night. „ 361
P, without a word, from his horse fell. „ 508
love you, P, with something of the love „ 788
' Follow me, P, to the camp, „ 808
till he saw her Pass into it, turn'd to the P, „ 887
' P, when of late ye pray'd me for „ 888
So spake the King : low bow'd the P, „ 920
call'd him the great P and man of men. „ 961
' P, Art thou so little loyal to thy Queen, Balin and Balan 250
P, we have ridd'n before among the flowers „ 272
thou. Sir P, Wilt surely guide me to the warrior King, „ 477
nor P Nor knight am I, „ 483
a P In the mid might and flourish of his May, Lancelot and E. 553
to whom the P Reported who he was, „ 627
ride no more at random, noble P ! „ 633
P Accorded with his wonted courtesy, „ 63.7
' P, O loyal nephew of our noble King, j, 651
yon proud P who left the quest to me. „ 762
told him all the tale Of King and P, „ 824
P and Lord am I In mine own land, „ 916
And there the heathen P, Arviragus, Holy Grail 61
he knew the P tho' marr'd with dust, Guinevere 36
Sir Lancelot holp To raise the P, „ 46
the P Who scarce had pluck'd his flickering life To the Queen ii 4
fuUcity peal'd Thee and thy P! „ 27
Like to the wild youth of an evil p. Lover's Tale i 354
if our P's harken'd to my prayer, Columbus 100
brought your P's gold enough If left alone ! „ 105
native p's slain or slaved, „ 174
A princelier looking man never stept thro' a P's hall. The Wreck 16
now Your fairy P has found you, The Ring 69
One raised the P, one sleek'd the squahd hair. Death of CEnone 57
Princedom Drew all their petty p's under him. Com. of Arthur 18
the King Drew in the petty p's under him, „ 517
In his own blood, his p, youth and hopes, Gareth and L. 210
his p lay Close on the borders of a territory, Marr. of Geraint 33
Forgetful of his p and its cares. „ 54
Princelier A p looking man never stept thro' a Prince's
hall. The Wreck 16
Princelike thro' these P his bearing shone ; Marr. of Geraint 545
Princely And p halls, and farms, and flowing lawns, Aylvier's Field 654
A p people's awful princes. The Daisy 39
Yniol's rusted arms Were on his p person, Marr. of Geraint 544
she gazed upon the man Of p bearing, Pelleas and E. 306
So p, tender, truthful, reverent, pure — D. of the Duke of C. 4
Princely-proud
553
Profit
Princely-proud too f-p To pass thereby ; Gareth and L. 162
Princess {See also Maiden-Rcincess, Poet-princess) The
happy p follow'd him.
I wish That I were some great p,
' And make her some great P, six feet high,
Heroic seems our P as required —
betroth'd To one, a neighbouring P :
Who moves about the P ;
beauty compass'd in a female form, The P ;
edge imtumable, our Head, The P.'
' Let the P judge Of that ' she said :
the P should have been the Head,
early risen she goes to inform The P :
Not like your P cramm'd with erring pride.
My p, 0 my p ! true she errs,
' That afternoon the P rode to take The dip
but with some disdain Answer'd the P,
' The Head, the Head, the P, O the Head ! '
They haled us to the P where she sat High in the hall :
It was not thus, 0 P, in old days :
She ceased : the P answer'd coldly, ' Good :
The P with her monstrous woman-guard,
She was a p too : and so I swore.
A gallant nght, a noble p —
Like our wild P with as wise a dream
Or at thy coming, P, everywhere,
I full oft shall dream I see my p
In such apparel as might well beseem His p,
hundred miles of coast, A palace and a p,
hundred miles of coast, The palace and the p.
The P of that castle was the one.
And tame thy jailing p to thine hand.
And marriage with a p of that realm.
Dear P, living Power, if that.
Principle ' Some hidden p to move,
P's are rain'd in blood ;
Print (s) (See also Hoof-print, Jewel-print)
p Of the golden age —
(Meaning the p that you gave us.
Print (verb) hiU and wood and field did p
Prior Archbishop, Bishop, P's, Canons,
Priory sought A p not far off, there lodged.
Prism Make p's in every carven glass.
Prison (adj.) Sang looking thro' his p bars ?
Prison (s) {See also Shadow-prison)
Flowers to these ' spirits in p '
Day-Dm., Depart. 8
Princess, Pro. 134
224
230
i33
76
a 35
204
234
„ in 34
63
102
107
169
iv 62
176
271
292
359
562
V 295
Con. 19
69
W. to Marie Alex. 42
Marr. of Geraint 752
759
Merlin and V. 589
648
Holy Grail 578
Pelleas and E. 344
Last Tournament 176
Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 1
Two Voices 133
Love thou thy land 80
take the
Maud I i 29
In the Child. Hasp. 51
In Mem. Ixxix 7
Sir J. Oldcastle 160
Pelleas and E. 214
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 35
Margaret 35
I kiss'd my boy in the p, Rizpah 23
In the Child. Hosp. 37
My p, not my fortress, fall away ! Doubt and Prayer 12
Prison'd P, and kept and coax'd and whistled to — Gareth and L. 14
Prisoner and himself The p at the bar. Sea Dreams 176
A p, and the vassal of thy will ; Pelleas and E. 241
Being guiltless, as an innocent p, Lover's Tale i 787
As a vision Unto a haggard p, „ ii 148
I read no more the p's mute wail Sir J. Oldcastle 4
Private A p life was all his joy. Will Water. 129
' Is this an hour For p sorrow's barren song, In Mem. xxi 14
For I never whisper'd a p affair Maud II v 47
But the red life spilt for a p blow — „ 93
Privet (adj.) To one green wicket in a p hedge ; Gardener's D. 110
Privet (s) white as p when it flowers. Walk, to the Mail 56
Privilege manlike end myself ? — our p — Lucretius 232
It was our ancient p, my Lords, Third of Feb. 5
Prize (s) {See also Toumey-prize) Ride on ! the p is near.' Sir Galahad 80
read and earn our p, A golden brooch : Princess Hi 300
The p of beauty for the fairest there. Marr. of Geraint 485
He felt, were she the p of bodily force, .. 541
two years past have won for thee, The p of beauty.' „ 555
tho' ye won the p of fairest fair, ,, 719
shook her pulses, crying ' Look, a p ! Geraint and E. 123
since a diamond was the p. Lancelot and E. 33
Proclaiming his the p, who wore the sleeve Of scarlet, „ 501
' Advance and take thy p The diamond ; ' „ 503
Prize me no p's, for my p is death ! „ 506
left his p Untaken, crying that his p is death.' „ 530
Will deem this p of ours is rashly given : „ 541
Came not to us, of us to claim the p, „ 544
Prize (s) (continued) with you ? won he not your p ? ' Lancelot and E. 573
bore the p and could not find The victor, • „ 629
' Your p the diamond sent you by the King : ' „ 821
the p A golden circlet and a knightly sword, Pelleas and E. 11
Saving the goodly sword, his p, „ 359
p Of Tristram in the jousts of yesterday. Last Tournament 7
Irmocence the King Gave for a p — „ 295
Of one — his name is out of me — the p. If p she \Aere — „ 546
I mused nor yet endured to take So rich a p, Lover's Tale Hi 50
Prize (verb) should I p thee, couldst thou last. Will Water. 203
I know the Prince, I p his truth : Princess Hi 233
What dares not Ida do that she should p The soldier? „ v 174
sole men we shall p in the af tertime, ,, 412
p the authentic mother of her mind. .. 433
what the King So p's — overprizes — gentleness. Balin and Balan 184
' I better p The living dog than the dead lion : „ 584
prized him more Than who should p him Merlin and V. 160
P me no prizes, for my prize is death ! Lancelot and E. 506
To Canada whom we love and p. Hands all Round 19
my friend. To p your various book, To Ulysses 47
I p that soul where man and woman On one who effec. E. M. 2
Prized Or else we loved the man, and p his work ; M. d' Arthur, Ep. 8
You p my counsel, lived upon my lips : Princess iv 293
p him more Than who should prize him Merlin and V. 159
No sisters ever p each other more. Sisters (E. and E.) 43
He would open the books that I p. The Wreck 21
is p for it smells of the beast. The Dawn 14
Prize-oxen A lord of fat p-o and of sheep. Princess, Con. 86
Process widen'd with the p of the suns. Lochsley Hall 138
Eternal p moving on. In Mem. Ixxxii 5
Who reads thy gradual p. Holy Spring. Prog, of Spring 106
Procession Let the long long p go. Ode on Well. 15
I came upon The rear of a p, Lover's Tale ii 75
Proclaim From my high nest of penance here p St. S. Stylites 167
' P the faults he would not show You might have won 1 7
For many and many an age p Ode on Well. 226
let p a joiLSt At Camelot, Lancelot and E. 76
the King Had let p a tournament— Pelleas and E. 11
Proclaim'd Spake to the lady with him and p, Marr. of Geraint 552
Arthur s host P him Victor, and the day was won. Balin and Balan 90
p His Master as ' the Sun of Righteousness,' Akbar's Dream 82
Proclaiming P Enoch Arden and his woes ; Enoch Arden 868
P social truth shall spread. In Mem. cxxvii 5
set him in the hall, P, ' Here is Uther's heir. Com. of Arthur 230
P his the prize, who wore the sleeve Of scarlet, Lancelot and E. 501
Proclamation sent His horns of p out Merlin and V. 581
Proctor he had breathed the P's dogs ; Princess, Pro. 113
prudes for p's, dowagers for deans, „ 141
Two P's leapt upon us, crying, ' Names : ' „ iv 259
Procm'ess P to the Lords of Hell. In Mem. liii 16
Prodigal Behind Were realms of upland, p in oil, Palace of Art 79
And p of all brain-labour he, Aylmer's Field 447
Prodigies These p of myriad nakednesses, Lucretius 156
Prodigious a match as this ! Impossible, p ! ' Aylmer's Field 315
Or Gareth telling some p tale Of knights, Gareth and L. 508
Produce (s) P of your field and flood. Open. I. and C. Exhib. 5
Produce (verb) That one fair planet can p, Ode Inter. Exhib. 24
Profess seeing they p To be none other (repeat) Last Tournament 82, 85
Professor we heard The grave P. Princess ii 371
Sat compass'd with p's : ,, 444
Proffer (s) She to Paris made P of royal power, . (Enone 111
nor did mine own Refuse her p, Princess vi 347
Made p of the league of golden mines, Merlin and V. 646
Proffer (verb) p these The brethren of our blood Princess vi 70
Proffer'd At one dear knee we p vows, In Mem. Ixxix 13
For howsoe'er at first he p gold, Gareth and L. 336
Profile Less p ! turn to me — three-quarter face. Romney's R. 98
Profit (s) (See also Sell-profit) With fuller p's lead an
easier life, Enoch Arden 145
With daily-dwindling p's held the house ; „ 696
But now to leaven play with p, Princess iv 149
The Lady Blanche : much p ! „ vi 239
Will bloom to p, otherwhere. In Mem. Ixxxii 12
What p lies in barren faith, „ cviii 5
It surely was my p had I known : Quineiere 658
Profit
554
Prophet
Profit (verb) It little p's that an idle king, Ulysses 1
what p's it to put An idle case? In Mem. xxxv 17
what p's me my name Of greatest knight ? Lancelot and E. 1413
What p's an ill Priest Between me and my God ? Sir J. Oldcastle 144
Profound Passionless, pale, cold face, star-sweet on a gloom p ; Maud I Hi 4
Profulgent An image with p brows, Supp. Confessions 145
Progress Our p falter to the woman's goal.' Princess vi 127
With statelier p to and fro In Mem. xcviii 22
P halts on palsied feet, Locksley H., Sixty 219
Project p after p rose, and all of them were vain ; The Flight 14
Prolong p Her low preamble all alone. Palace of Art 173
Promenaded With cypress p, Amphion 38
Promise (s) (See also Hand-promise) Leaving the p
of my bridal bower, D. of F. Women 218
for the p that it closed : Locksley Hall 14
the crescent p of my spirit „ 187
With words of p in his walk, Day-Dm., Arrival 23
' I am bound : you have my p — in a yeai' : Enoch Arden 437
stood once more before her face. Claiming her p. „ 458
falling in a land Of p ; Princess ii 140
hold Your p : all, I trust, may yet be well.' „ 361
other distance and the hues Oi p; „ iv 87
With p of a mom as fair ; In Mem. Ixxxiv 29
The p oE the golden hoiux ? „ Ixxxv 106
Knowing your p to me ; Maud I xxii 50
Thy p. King,' and Arthur glancing at him, Gareth and L. 652
Forgetful of his p to the King, Mart: of Geraint 50
Bribed with large p's the men who served ,. 453
Woke and bethought her of her p given „ 602
He would not leave her, till her p given — „ 605
Made p, that whatever bride I brought, „ 783
Pelleas might obtain his lady's love. According to
her p, Pelleas and E. 162
And thou hast given thy p, „ 245
With p of large light on woods and ways. „ 394
Green prelude, April p, glad new-year Lover's Tale i 281
A land of p, a land of memory, „ 333
A land of p flowing with the milk And honey „ 334
mother broke her p to the dead, Sisters (E. and E.) 252
p of blossom, but never a fruit ! V. of Maddune 51
but the p had faded away ; Despair 27
Be truer to your p. To Mary Boyle 5
The still-fulfilling p of a light Prog, of Spring 90
Promise (verb) p thee The fairest and most loving wife in Greece,' (Enone 186
p (otherwse You perish) as you came, Princess ii 295
who miaht have shamed us: p, all.' „ 299
I p you Some palace in our land, „ Hi 161
Kmg, for hardihood I can p thee. Gareth and L. Sol
' Now all be dumb, and p all of you Lover's Tale iv 351
Didn't you kiss me an' p ? First Quarrel 53
We will make the Spaniard p, The Revenge 94
P me, Miriam not Muriel — she shall have the ring.' The Ring 293
Promise-bounden awed and p-h she forbore, Enoch Arden 869
Promised (adj.) (See also Long-promised) Full to the
banks, close on the p good. Maud I xviii 6
Promised (verb) And Dora p, being meek. Dora 46
and once again She p. Enoch Arden 906
she p that no force, Persuasion, no, Aylmer's Field 417
What could we else, we p each ; Princess ii 300
who p help, and oozed All o'er with honey'd answer „ v 241
she p then to be fair. Maud I i 68
He p more than ever king has given, Merlin and V. 586
She ceased : her father p ; Lancelot and E. 1130
those who knew him near the King, And p for him : Pelleas and E. 16
Lancelot ever p, but remain'd, Guinevere 93
' You p to find me work near you. First Quarrel 52
an' 'e p a son to she, Owd Rod 95
fur I p ya'd niver not do it agean. Church-warden, etc. 32
when he p to make me his bride, Charity 11
Promising like a household god P empire ; On a Mourner 31
Miriam Lane Made such a voluble answer p all, Enoch Arden 903
Promontory Lingering about the thymy promontories, Sea Dreams 38
Who seems a p of rock. Will 6
winds of winter tear an oak on a p. Boddicea 77
Saw once a great piece of a p, Geraint and E. 162
Prompt as p to spring against the pikes, Princess Hi 286
Prone Just where the p edge of the wood began (repeat) Enoch Arden 67, 373
falUng p he dug His Angel's into the wet earth, „ 779
Against the rush of the aii" in the p swing, Aylmer's Field 86
She veil'd her brows, and p she sank. Princess v 107
Thy climbing life, and cherish my p year, Gareth and L. 95
p from off her seat she fell, Guinevere 414
in p flight By thousands down the crags Montenegro 7
Pronest that most impute a crime Are p to it. Merlin and V. 826
Pronounce Nor can p upon it If one should ask Maud I xx 16
Pronounced the King P a dismal sentence. Merlin and V. 591
All that look'd on her had p her dead. Lover's Tale iv 35
himself p That my rich gift is wholly mine „ 349
and when The Priest p you dead, Happy 50
Prooemion my rich p makes Thy glory fly Lucretius 70
Proof To arm in p, and guard about Supp. Confessions 65
wall about thy cause With iron-worded p, To J. M. K. 9
lest thy heart be put to p, Locksley Hall 77
train Of flowery clauses onward to the p Lucretius 120
' Come, hsten ! here is p that you were miss'd : Princess, Pro. 177 j
If we could give them surer, quicker p — „ m 282 '
The p and echo of all human fame. Ode on Well. 145
go then, an ye must: only one p, Gareth and L. 144
the p to prove me to the quick ! ' „ 150
Tho' yet there lived no p, Marr. of Geraint 26
Might well have served for p that I was loved, „ 796
As p of trust. O Merlin, teach it me. Merlin and V. 331
The great p of your love : „ 354
pi-urient for a p against the grain „ 487
p of trust — so often ask'd in vain ! „ 920
by nine years' p we needs must learn Lancelot and E. 62
a p That I — even I — at times Romney's R. 92
Proofless Spleen-bom, I think, and p. Merlin and V. 702
Prop falls A creeper when the p is broken, Aylmer's Field 810
Proper Upon my p patch of soil To grow my own plantation. Amphion 99
His p chop to each. Will Water. 116
this is p to the clown, Tho' smock'd, or furr'd Princess iv 246
Till happier times each to her p hearth : „ vi 303
To shroud me from my p scorn. In Mem. xxvi 16
He mixing with his p sphere, „ Ix 5
Thy sweetness from its p place ? „ Ixxxiii 6
your work is this To hold me from my p place, „ cxvii 2
Property See Proputty
Prophecy If aught of p be mine. Clear-headed friend 8
At last She rose upon a wind of p Princess ii 171
They might not seem thy prophecies. In Mem. xcii 13
For the p given of old And then not understood, Maud II v 42
A prophet certain of my p, Marr. of Geraint 814
Or was there sooth in Arthur's p. Holy Grail 709
if ancient prophecies Have err'd not, Guinevere 449
Prophesied Approvingly, and p his rise: Aylmer's Field 474
I have p — Strike, thou art worthy Gareth and L. 1137
As holy John had p of me, Columbus 21 i
Prophesy i p that I shall die to-night, .SV. S. Stylites 220
Dismiss me, and I p your j)lan. Princess iv 354 '
all is lost In what they p, Epilogue 65
Prophesying p change Beyond all reason : Princess i 142
upon me flash'd The power of p— Tiresias 57 '
Prophet (See also World-prophet) My heart was hke a
p to my heart. Gardener's D. 63
Is there no p but the voice that calls Aylmer's Field 741
Cries ' Come up hither,' as a p to us? „ 743
fire on a masthead, P of storm : Princess iv 275
The p's blazon'd on the panes ; In Mem. Ixxxvii 8
P, curse me the blabbing Up, Maud II v 57
A naked babe, of whom the P spake, Gareth and L. 501
A p certain of my prophecy, Marr. of Geraint 814
The people call you p : let it be : Merlin and V. 317
think I show myself Too dark a p : Holy Grail 322
For every fiery p in old times, „ 876
Was I too dark a p when I said „ 889
to some old p might have seem'd A vision Pelleas and E. 51
ill p's were they all. Spirits and men : Guinevere 272
The p and the chariot and the steeds, Lover's Tale i 307
Or p s of them in his fantasy, „ iv 12
11
Prophet
555
^Prophet (continued) and p of the perfect man •
rtie p s beacon bum'd in vain, '
Proved
_ _ De Prof., Two G. 12
And-' ThelW of-ihe P ' ST'ljeaven. IrJ^AS/S
Tho' a p should have his due, Prophet 28
since he would sit on a P's seat, " to
t^he tore the P after death, ■ ^^
The p of his own, my Hubert— W' „■ LI
2'Ae; Throstle 10
Akbars Dream 75
82
117
Meckanophiltis 25
Princess iv 140
Boddicea 37
Making of Man 6
Princess v 381
Lover's Tale ii 132
0/ o/d sa/ Freedom 6
Boddicea 16
Two Voices 20
Lover's Tale iv 251
/w J/«rt. arWii 3
Geraint and E. 581
584
Princess ii 415
Farmer, N/S. 2
3
Never a p so crazy !
Issa Ben Mariam, his own «,
he, That other, p of their fall,
art <AoM the P? canst thou work Miracles? '
had some p spoken true Of aU we shall achieve
>plietess have dash'd The passion of the » •
sang the terrible p'e3, '
j ftophet-eye P-e's may catch a glory
ftophetic Mothei-s,— that, all p pity
Prophetical at length P and prescient
Prophet-mind Self-gather'd in her p-m
Pi-opitiated Tai-anis hep.
Proportion gave .him mind, the loi-diest P
Propose I p to-night To show you '
Proposed Grave doubts and answere here v
Propping in the naked haU, p his head.
And found his own dear bride p his head
Proprietress Is she The sweet « a shadow ? Princess ii 41^^
she, half on her mother p, Half-droopine from her -^'^'*^**''' -ol^
I ^'*'»°*g^;^5«^> ^-P.Ahat'swST'elT'em' " *' ^^^
: ^> P, P— Sam, thou's an ass for thy paains •
J^, p — woa then woa —
But p, p sticks, an' p, p graws.
\Voa then, p, wiltha?—
P, p's ivrjthing 'ere,
Coom oop, p, p— that's what I 'ears 'im saav—
\. P, p— canter an' canter awaay.
Prose (s) I will work in p and rhyme.
Let raffs be rife in p and rhyme
£l^! "'■"^^ T M^^y^P. ^'^'" ^'oo^^s of travell'd seamen
Proserpme Like P in Enna, gathering flowera : '
Prospect Large range of p had the mother sow
My p and horizon gone. '
Ai-ise in open p— heath and hill
"OSPer While yon sun p's in the blue.
And the third time may p,
and thought He scarce would p
May she mix With men and p !
I p, circled with thy voice ;
And the third time may p,'
Prosper'd throve and p : sh three yeara She p •
sop that at last A luckier or a bolder fisterman,
H 1^ ' -^'^lu '■''"*^ °^ ^^"<=y boys Brake on us
iiath p in the name of Christ
nch man, That, having always p in the world
Prospenty return In such a sunliht of « '
^^^fr^,?^ ^^^'^ ^'^^■*'' P floods his holy urn
While now thy p labour fills
Be p in this journey, as in all ■
Now with p auguries Comes at last
Prostrate Sprang from the midriff of a p king-
Protector call'd him dear p in her fright,
Protestant found her beating the hard P doors. c',
So nS^ri/Tn-^''^"^,' "^^ «°'"« P)' '«l>at is this?
S ^T^^ falhng, p of our cause. Die
Proud (adj.) {See also Princely-pro^^
to bear your name.
Too p to care from whence I came,
langmd l^ht of your p eyes Is wearied
Ke p of those strong sons of thine
Ihought her p, and fled over the sea;
Iheir ancient name ! tliey might be p •
I know you p
16
39
43
59
60
Talking Oak 289
WiU Water. 61
■A mphion 81
Edwin Morris 112
Walk, to the Mail 93
In Mem. xxxviii 4
Lover's Tale i 397
The Blackbird 22
M. d' Arthur 130
Princess Hi 76
hi Mem. cxiv 3
„ cxxx 15
Pass, of Arthur 298
Palace of Art 211
Enoch Arden 48
Princess v 394
Balin and Balan 99
Lover's Tale i 716
Aylmer's Field 421
/w il/ew. ix 8
„ Ixxxiv 25
il/arr. o/ Geraint 225
Om Jm6. Q. Victoria 9
Aylmer's Field 16
Merlin and V. 946
•Sisters (£. a«rf £.) 240
"^ ' Z?o/y 6Vai^ 270
Princess iv 505
X. C. V. de Vere 10
12
59
England and Amer. 4
Edward Gray 14
Aylmer's Field 378
Alymer's Field 756
Princess i 96
„ wi300
Sailor Boy 7
ilf awrf 7 j'lj 17
A^ortA. CoiiZer 97
Freedom 30
Happy 78
Proud (adj.) {continued) and mean Vileness, we are
grown so p — '
P look'd the Ups :
and this p watchword rest Of equal •
' O boy, tho' thou art young and p '
you wrong your beauty, believe it, in being so p •
P on 'im, hke, my lad, ^ "" /' ,
Of saner worship sanely p ;
My nature was too p.
three of these P in their fantasy call themselves
tne Day, „
And since the p man often is the mean lu ^'''"^^'' "'^^ .^- 633
overthrow My ^ self, and m? purpose t'hree years ^''"'- "^ '''''''''' ^"^
There to his p horee Lancelot tum'd Geraint and E. 849
And moved aUt her pS°* p"Sd 'pale ^"'"'^''^ '"''' ^- ^fj
As yon p Prince who left the quest to me. " ^H
vvherefore would ve look On this p fellow again " ^13
Against the p archbishop Arundel— ^ ' si. 7"nir, }^a
that p Priest, That mock-meek mouth of utter .VnticSfst ^^^""'^^^i
Slender warrant Imdi/e to hep of The welcomV«„«^f ft " t, }^t
Prove To put together, part and p, rJ% ^P"'', 22
To feel, altho' no ti^ngue can p ^'^'^ ^'"''' ]^
You sought to p how I could love, T r v Lv ^
P me what it is I would not do.' ^- ^- ^- '^f. /"^ II
To p myself a poet : „. ■„ ^odiva 27
Pale again as death did p : r i i^'^/^^z.^f!
I fain would p A father to your children • If ''\Y^P^\ ^f
She must p tme : for, brother " . I'*"'^ ^:^^^,^ ^10
caU him, love. Before you plim rogue ^yl^er's Fteld 364
Your language p's you stilf the chUd^ ' ^'p^ZT'- ^11
or p The Danaid of a leaky vase, ^'^''"'''' "^^
I p Your knight, and fight your battle, " • t^.
may thy mother p As true to thee as false, " Z %}^
no tmer Time hunself Can p you, 4 n'J^- ,■ %
Beheving where we cannot pf /«m i^""?
I long to p No lapse of moons ^"^ ^"''^•' ^'•^•. *
Her care is not to part and p ; " f ^.'?? ^
and I shaU p A meeting somewhere " , ^*^" ^
Should p the phantom-warning true. " '^f- rt
Let Science p we are, and then " ^"* f
Or thou wilt p their tool. ,'> , /*.*,?
' WeU, if it p a girl, the bov ^^"'"^ ^ ^^ ??
' Well, if it p a gu-1, my boy " *'**, \
the proof to p me to the quick ! ' a„^^.t, " , ^ i It.
and p her heart toward tlie Prince.' Ma^lwrat Jf?
I someway p such force in her Link'd with such love ^ ''""'' gS
That he might p her to the uttermost, Gerair^t ar,d V t^
Shall I not rather ;, the woree for these ? Bdi^ aid fait IS
We go to p it. Bfde ye here the while.' Merit Hv fl
make me yearn still more to p you mine, ""'''' ""^ \^l
Ihat I should p it on you unawares, " o^?^
What other? for men sought top me vile, " Jon
For tho' you should not p it upon me, " ta^
All— aU— the wish to p him wholly hers.' " a«i
They p to him his work • r j . " , -r. °"^
P No surer than our falcon yesterday, ■^'*''^"' '^'^ ^- iff
Yea let her p me to the uttermost, PeUe" a«A TP 9??
bok'd as he IS like to p. When Julian goes, Ms meiv f fl
Temble pity, if one so beautiful P, ' ^over s 1 ale tv dU
May p as peaceful as his own. /f'- • %?%
Thou canst not p the Nameless, 0 my son. Nor canst ''""'"'* ^^
thou p the world thou movest in. Thou canst not p
that thou art body alone, Nor canst thou v that
thou art spirit alone, j • . o
Nor canst thou p that thou art both in one : ^"'''''' ^'^^ f,
Ihou canst not p thou art immortal " «i
*^ ' Lucretius 193
Proved
556
Puff'd
Proved (continued) By which our lives are chiefly p,
The truths that never can be p
nor p Since that dark day a day like this;
We have p we have hearts in a cause,
p him everyway One of our noblest,
that also have we p ;
Nor is he the wisest man who never p himself a
fool.
Proven See Prov'n
Provence hair Studded with one rich P rose —
Provender For lust or lusty blood or p :
Proverb This p flashes thro' his head,
till their love Shall ripen to a p,
Providence sermonizing On p and trust in Heaven,
Province they press in from all the p's,
O Love, thy p were not large,
tho' they sought Thro' all the p's
p ■with a hundred miles of coast, (repeat)
leaves Some colder p in the North
and rule thy P of the brute.
Proving converse in the hall, P her heart :
this cftrsed charm. Were p it on me,
nothing worthy p can be proven.
Prov'n ' Not p ' Averill said, or laughingly ' Some other
race of Averills ' — p or no, What cared he ?
and a laugh Ringing like p golden coinage true,
who hath p him King Uther's son ?
Ask'd me to tilt with him, the p knight.
Not p, who swept the dust of ruin'd Rome
But justice, so thy say be p true.
the first quest : he is not p.
O stai', my morning dream hath p true,
And horrors only p a blooming boy.
But rather p in his Paynim wars Than famous
jousts ; but see, or p or not,
or a traitor p, or hound Beaten,
only p themselves Prisoners, murderers.
nothing worthy proving can be p,
Re-volution has p but E-volution
Prow shake The sparkling flints beneath the p.
round about the p she wrote The Lady of Shalott.
round the p they read her name. The Lady of Shalott
Lady's-head upon the p Caught the shrill salt,
Now nearer to the p she seem'd
Sleep, gentle heavens, before the p ;
dart again, and play About the p,
vessel in mid-ocean, her heaved p Clambering,
chains for him Who push'd his p's
their nail'd p's Parted the Norsemen,
Prowess whereas I know Yom* p, Arac,
great deeds Of Lancelot, and his p in the lists.
His p was too wondrous.
learn If his old p were in aught decay'd ;
acts of p done In toiu-nament or tilt,
thought Of all my late-shown p in the lists,
Thou thoughtest of thy p and thy sins ?
here and there a deed Of p done
In height and p more than human,
In Mem. cv 14
„ cxxxi 10
Con. 7
Maud. Ill vi 55
Geraint and E. 909
Balin and Balan 34
Locksley H., Sixty 244
Lover's Tale Hi 45
Lucretius 198
Day- Dm., Arrival 15
Lover's Tale i 758
Enoch Arden 205
Princess ii 97
In Mem. xlvi 13
Marr. of Geraint 730
Merlin and V. 588, 647
The Ring 481
By an Evolution. 16
Mart, of Geraint 521
Merlin and V. 436
Ancient Sage 66
Aylmer's Field 53
182
Com. of Arthur 69
Gareth and L. 27
135
346
582
1000
1425
Balin and Balan 38
PeUeas and E. 439
Sir J. Oldcastle 167
Ancient Sage 66
Beautiful City 3
Arabian Nights 52
L. of Shalott iv 8
44
The Voyage 11
67
In Mem. ix 14
„ xii 18
Lover's Tale ii 169
Columbus 24
Batt. of Brunanburh 93
Princess v 404
Lancelot and E. 82
542
584
Roly Grail 1
„ 362
„ 455
Guinevere 459
Tiresias 179
Prowest I chant thy praise As p knight and truest lover, Pelleas and E. 350
Prowling While the Fiend is p. Forlorn 66
Proxy-wedded p-w with a bootless calf Princess i 34
Pmde p's for proctors, dowagers for deans, „ Pro. 141
Prudence a p to withhold ; Isabel 15
by slow p to make mild A rugged people, Ulysses 36
Let not your p, dearest, drowse, Princess ii 339
Prudent The p partner of his blood Two Voices 415
these outbuzz'd me so That even our v king, Columbus 122
Pruned Thro' crowded lilac-ambush trimly p ; Gardener's D. 112
Prurient v for a proof against the grain Merlin and V. 487
' In filthy sloughs they roll a p skin. Palace of Art 201
Prussian Last, the P trumpet blew ; Ode on Well. 127
Pry not to p and peer on your reserve, Princess iv 419
Psalm with sound Of pious hymns and jp'*, St. S. Stylites 34
sound Of solemn p s, and silver litanies. Princess ii 477
Who roll'd the p to wintry skies, In Mom. Ivi 11
Psalm (continued) As a p by a mighty master
' Libera me, Domine ! ' you sang the P,
Psyche Two widows, Ladjr P, Lady Blanche ;
' Lady Blanche ' she said, ' And Lady P.'
Which was prettiest, Best-natured ? ' Lady P.'
with your own. As Lady P's pupils. '
Lady P will harangue The fresh arrivals
back again we crost the court To Lady P's :
' Well then, P, take my life,
' having seen And heard the Lady P.'
' Are you that Lady P,' I rejoin'd,
' Are you that P,' Florian added ;
are you That P, wont to bind my throbbing brow,
are you That brother-sister P, both in one ?
You were that P, but what are you now ? ' (repeat)
' You are that P,' Cyril said,
' Are you that Lady P,' I began,
' Are you that P,' Florian ask'd.
Then Lady P, ' Ah — Melissa — you !
WWle P watch'd them, smiling,
you learnt No more from P's lecture,
The long-limb'd lad that had a P too ;
And dear is sister P to my heart.
To rail at Lady P and her side.
Herself and Lady P the two arms ;
Lady P was the right hand now.
Lady P will be crush'd ;
ASirms your P thieved her theories.
Nor like poor P whom she drags in tow.'
then, climbing, Cyril kept With P,
P flush 'd and wann'd and shook ;
demanded if her mother knew, Or P,
She sent For P, but she was not there ;
she call'd For P's child to cast it from the doors ;
And where are P, Cyril ? both are fled :
you planed her path To Lady P,
' We thank you, we shall hear of it From Lady P : '
later in the night Had come on P weeping :
With P's babe, was Ida watching us.
With P's colour round his helmet,
after him Came P, sorrowing for Aglaia.
high upon the palace Ida stood With P's babe in arm
while P ever stole A Uttle nearer.
Who turn'd half-round to P as she sprang
' Come hither. 0 P,' she cried out.
But P tended Florian : with her oft, Melissa came ;
second suit obtain'd At first with P.
Ida came behind Seen but of P :
Ptarmigan know The p that whitens ere his hour
Public I raged against the p Uar ;
No p life was his on earth.
Drink we, last, the p fool,
A hdless watcher of the p weal.
But p use required she should be known ; And
since my oath was ta'en for p use,
Till p wrong be crumbled into dust.
They call'd me in the p squares
Not let any man think for the p good.
Friend, to be struck by the p foe.
That were a p merit, far,
And left him lying in the p way ;
not the King's — For p use :
I hold that man the worst of p foes
And leave him in the p way to die.
or flamed at a p wrong.
Thy power, well-u sed to move the p breast.
That wanders from the p good,
Pucker'd And shoals of p faces drive ;
Puddin' beslings p an' Adam's wine ;
Puddled ' So p as it is with favouritism.'
Pufl (s) Upon the level in little p's of wind,
Pufl (verb) A wind to p your idol-fires,
the vessel p's her sail :
Puff'd (adj.) Where with p cheek the belted hunter
behind I heard the p pursuer ;
The Wreck 53
Happy 49
Princess i 128
233
234
240
ii 95
101
204
211
237
246
250
254
255, 277
256
261
269
330
365
393
406
418
Hi 33
35
37
63
92
103
355
ivlGO
234
237
238
241
316
329
v50
512
534
vi29
31
132
209
285
vii55
72
79
Last Tournment 697
The Letters 26
You might have won 23
Vision of Sin 149
Princess iv 325
336
Ode on Well. 167
In Mem. Ixix 11
Maud II V 45
89
91
Geraint and E. 478
Lancelot and E. 60
Guinevere 512
Lover's Tale iv 261
The Wreck 68
To W.C. Macready 3
Freedom 26
In Mem. Ixx 10
North. Cobbler 112
Princess Hi 146
„ iv 256
Love thou thy land 69
Ulysses 44
Palace of Art 63
Princess iv 265
Puff'd
557
Pure
Puff'd (verb) angry gust of wind P out his torch Merlin and V. 731
breaths of anger p Her fairy nostril out ; „ 848
morn That p the swaying branches into smoke Holy Grail 15
Pug a score of ji's And poodles yell'd Edwin Morris 119
Puissance of her brethren, youths of p ; Princess i 37
Puissant (See also All-puissant) rountl The warrior's f
shouldere Pallas flung Achilles over the T.3
Pull ' Yet p not down my palace towers, Palace of Art 293
P off, p off, the brooch of gold. Lady Clare 39
tears that make the rose P sideways. In Mem. Ixxii 11
Pulpit-drone humming of the drowsy p-d To J. M. K. 10
Pulpiteer To chapel ; where a heated p, Sea Dreams 20
Pulsation Hung tranced from all p, Gardener's D. 260
Make me feel the wild p Locksley Hall 109
The wild p of her wuigs ; In Mem. xii 4
The deep p's of the world, „ xcv 40
Pulse lent The p of hope to discontent. Two Voices 450
Shall strike within thy p's, like a God's, (Enone 162
stirr'd with languid p's of the oar. Gardeners D. 41
And her whisper throng'd my p's Locksley Hall 36
her palfrey's footfall shot Light horrors thro' her p's : Godiva 59
lent my desire to kneel, and shook My p's, Princess Hi 194
you keep One p that beats true woman, „ vi 180
p's at the clamouring of her enemy Boildicea 82
My p's therefore beat again For other friends In Mem. Ixxxv 57
And every p of wind and wave Recalls, „ 73
measured p of racing oars Among the willows ; ,, Ixxxvii 10
The p's of a Titan's heart ; „ ciii 32
force, that keeps A thousand p's dancing, „ cxxv 16
my p's closed their gat«s with a shock Maud / i 15
Lord of the p that is lord of her breast, „ xvi 13
died to live, long as my p's play ; „ xviii 66
Is it gone ? my p's beat — „ II i 36
shook her p's, crying, ' Look, a prize ! Geraint and E. 123
and stirs the p With devil's leaps, Guinevere 521
With its true-touched p's in the flow Lover's Tale i 205
And faints, and hath no p, no breath — „ 268
Unfrequent, low, as tho' it told its p's ; „ ii 55
had lam three days without a p : „ iv 34
strike Thy youthful p's into rest Tiresias 157
tho' every p would freeze, The Flight 53
Look how the living p of AUa beats Akbar's Dream 41
Poise (vegetable) eating hoary grain and p the steeds, Spec, of Iliad 21
Pnlse (verb) began To p with such a vehemence Lover's Tale iv 82
fountain p's high in sunnier jets, Prog, of Spring 54
Poising (See also Red-pulsing) heather-scent«d air,
P fuU man ; Last Tournament 692
Pommel dash'd the |> at the foremost face, Balin and Balan 402
Pnn the p, the scurrilous tale, — Aylmer's Field 441
Ponched See Poonch'd
Ponisbment See Pillar-punishment
Pony This pretty, p, weakly little one, — Enoch Arden 195
Pup See Poop
Popil Some meeker p you must find, L. C. V. de Vere 18
with your own, As Lady Psyche's p's.' Princess i 240
A patient range of p's ; „ ii 104
angled with them for her p's love : „ Hi 93
Popilage sons of kings loving in p Merlin and V. 517
Poppet P to a father's threat, Locksley Hall 42
We are p's, Man in his pride, Maud I iv 25
Poppy bUnd and shuddering puppies, The Brook 130
PorblJnd O P race of miserable men, Geraint and E. 1
Poichase Yet he hoped to p glory. The Captain 17
To p his own boat, and make a home For Annie : Enoch Arden 47
We sent mine host to p female gear ; Princess i 199
Purchased p his own boat, and made a home For Annie, Enoch Arden 58
Pure {See also Perfect-pure) ' Her court was p ; her
life serene ; To the Queen 25
But why Prevail'd not thy p prayers ? Supp. Confessions 89
P vestal thoughts in the translucent fane Isabel 4
Of perfect wifehood and p lowhhead. „ 12
P silver, underpropt a rich Throne Arabian Nights 145
As p and true as blades of steel. Kate 16
Pacing with downward eyelids p. Two Voices 420
Disclosed a fruit of p Hesperian gold, (Enone 66
Pore (continued) p law, Commeasure perfect freedom.'
(Enone 166
And p quintessences of precious oils Palace of Art 187
daughter of the warrior Gileadite, A maiden p ; D. of F. Women 198
A man more p and bold and just To J. S. 31
May He within Himself make p ! M. d' Arthur 245
Ruffles her p cold plume, and takes the flood „ 268
all else of heaven was p Up to the Sun, Gardener's D. 79
Gown'd in p white, that fitted to the shape — „ 126
but what lot is p ? Walk, to the Mail 97
mysterious glimmer steals From thy p brows, and
from thy shoulders p, Tithonus 35
Make Thou my spirit p and clear St. Agnes' Eve 9
To make me p of sin. „ 32
Because my heart is f. Sir Galalmd 4
P spaces clothed in hving beams, P hlies of eternal peace, „ 66
otherwhere P sport : ~
' An open-hearted maiden, true and p.
But p as lines of green that streak the white
Is not our cause p ?
The single p and perfect animal,
Which he has worn so p of blame.
And p as he from taint of craven guile,
And keep the soldier firm, the statesman p :
till Phosphor, bright As our p love.
Come then, p hands, and bear the head
As p and perfect as I say ?
What souls possess themselves so p.
Her faith thro' form is p as thine,
And love will last as p and whole
How p at heart and soimd in head,
Perplext in faith, but p in deeds,
To one p image of regret.
And passion p in snowy bloom
Flow thro' our deeds and make them p.
Small and p as a pearl,
'Tis a morning p and sweet, (repeat)
(For I cleaved to a cause that I felt to be p and true),
shyly glanced Eyes of p women,
with p Affection, and the light of victory,
And p nobility of temperament,
Arthur the blameless, p as any maid,
P as our own true Mother is our Queen.'
and the mask of p Worn by this court,
' This Arthiu: p !
There is no being p. My cherub ;
And as it chanced they are happy, being p.'
' A sober man is Percivale and p ;
Have all men true and leal, all women p ;
and down he sank For the p pain,
Full many a holy vow and p resolve.
And p Sir Galahad to uplift the maid ;
Delicately p and marvellously fair,
P, as you ever wish your knights to be.
if not so p a love Clothes in so p a loveUness ?
Whom Arthur and his knighthood caU'd The P,
' I know not, for thy heart is p as snow.'
of such a kind, that all of p Noble,
Some root of knighthood and p nobleness ;
For fair thou art and p as Guinevere,
P on the virgin forehead of the dawn !
' False ! and I held thee p as Guinevere.'
' Am I but false as Guinevere is p ?
can Arthur make me p As any maiden child ?
could speak Of the p heart.
Her station, taken everywhere for p.
Hereafter in that world where all are p
That p severity of perfect light —
Then she, for her good deeds and her p life,
May He within himself make p !
Ruffles her p cold plume, and takes the flood
Into a clearer zenith, p of cloud.
And why was I to darsen their p love,
Fill'd all with p clear fire.
That makes the sequel p ;
Back to the p and universal church,
Princess, Pro. 81
Hi 98
v 196
403
„ vii 306
Ode on Well. 72
135
222
In Mem. ix 11
„ xviii 9
xxiv 2
„ xxxii 15
,, xxxiii 9
xliii 13
„ xciv 1
xcvi 9
cii 24
,, cix 11
„ cxxxi 4
Maud II ii 2
„ iv 31, 35
„ /// vi 31
Gareth and L. 314
330
Marr. of Geraint 212
Balin and Balan 479
617
Merlin and V. 35
49
51
745
755
794
Lancelot and E. 518
879
1265
1369
1375
1383
Holy Grail 3
97
„ 773
„ 886
Pelleas and E. 44
505
522
524
Last Tournament 692
Guinevere 502
517
562
646
693
Pass, of Arthur 413
436
Lover's Tale i 514
727
„ ii 146
iv 157
Sir J. Oldcastle 71
Pure
The Good, the True the P, the Just- Locksley H., Sixty 71
lest the stream should issue p. ' ^j^J
Could make p light live on the canvas ? Romneu's R 10
hps were touch'd with fire from off a p Pierian altar, Parnassu^ 17
Pnroijl^'"'''^ ^' ^""^TvJ *ri*'^"^' .J-e^erent, p~ D. of the Duke of C. 4
Porelier on him breathed Far p in his rushings to
^^/S? ""'' ^'*\^^' brother-like, atZtlSi^.f^
To doubt her p were to want a heart- Lancelot and E. 1377
Purer With swifter movement and in p light Tinh^J <<9
And fill'd the breast with p breath.^ ^ W'/K I
^ahtfw^*''^"/.'i^^' , Locksley Hall 88
Eight that were left to make a p world- JyZmer'* keZci 638
This faith has many a p pnest, „ ^^^^ g
With sweeter manners, p laws. cw 16
A p sapphire melts into the sea. j^'^nd I xvni 52
Came p pleasure unto mortal kind Geraint and E. 765
He boasts his life as p than thine own ; Balin and Balan 104
with flame Milder and p. Lovers Tale i 323
Who made a nation p through their art. To W. C. Macready 8
Purest Six hundred maidens clad in p white, Frincess ii 472
There swung an apple of the p gold, Marr. of Geraint 170
1 have seen ; but best, Best, p? ogy
From homage to the best and p, " ^jq
Thou mightiest and thou p among men ! ' Hoh/ Grail 426
the p of thy knights May win them for the p of
W^Ju'^^'^u' u .. o Last Tournament 49
Art thou the p, brother ? 2 oo
Purgatory seest the souls in HeU And p, (i;^^ ,,bus 217
Pulled \\ hen I have p my gudt.' Palace of Art 296
whom The wholesome realm is p of otherwhere, Last Tournament 96
S^n). h r"u'; ^"^ -1? "^r/.^^-^ '°"'' Guinevere 561
Puritanic but all-too-ful in bud For p stays : Talking Oak 60
Punty such a fmLsh'd chasten'd p. Isabel 41
Who wove coarse webs to snare her p, ^yZmer's /'teirf 780
That out of naked kiughtlike p jl/er^,-,, „„^ p_ ^
r?o passionate for an utter p 26
5SS^/„^-''wc'*^f*^^*;^'''^^^- „ ., f^i Mem. Ixxxii 12
Purple (adj.) (.See a/so Dark-purple, Sullen-purple) A
pillar of white light upon the wall Of p cliffs. Ode to Memory 54
rrom the brain of the p mountain PoeVs iMind 29
Kare broidry of the p clover. ^ /)j^„^ 3g
In the p twilights under the sea ; The Mermaid 44
And the hearte of p hills, Elednore 17
Asoft«„thro'thepmght, L. of Shalott Hi 24
Ihe p flower droops : the golden bee Is hly-cradled : (Enone 29
river drawing slowly His waters from the p hill— Lotos-Eaters, C S 93
And makes the p lilac ripe, On a Mourner 7
-ru . r'.'""'''' for the p seas. You ask me, why, etc. 4
That like a p beech among the greens Edivin Morris 84
I'llots of the p twilight, dropping down ^v■ith costly
\}j^^:u , . Locksley Hall 122
Across the p coverlet, Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 3
far away Beyond their utmost p rim, (repeat) „ Depart 6 30
.P gauzes golden hazes, liquid mazes, I'isionof Sin 31
Hung ball, fiew kite, anc raced the p fly. Princess ii 248
Blow, let us hear the p glens replying : ;« 1 1
And tumbled on the p footcloth, " 286
and she Far-fleeted by the p island-sides, " ^i \qq
And steenng now, from a p cove, The Daisy 20
Kolling on their p couclies in their tender effeminacy. Boddicea 62
A solemn gladness even crown'd The p brows of
<a„„J^.u '.111 , ^w Mem. xxxi 12
have that the dome was p, and above. Crimson, Gareth and L. 912
A p scarf, at either enfl whereof Marr. of Geraint 169
And seeing one so gay in p silks. ojwratnt loy
558
Pursued
Purple (adj.) (continued) but Yniol caught His p scarf,
. '*"^,}^^{,'^' , ^ Marr. of Geraint 317
And all the p slopes of mountam flowers Last Tournament 229
Hlhng with p gloom the vacancies Lover's Tale i 2
A p range of moimtam-cones, 4^7
dragonfly Shot by me like a flash of p fire. " ii\q
Pot amber, dangled a hundred fathom of grapes, V. of Maddune 56
fallen every p Caesar's dome— •' To ViraU 30
When he spoke of his tropical home in the canes by
the p tide, •' ^^^ ^r^^^^ 71
There beneath the Roman ruin where the p flowers
grow, Prater Ave etc 4
"^ti^dUXuhTdai^: '"' ^"^°' ^' y^"°^^- ^^7 It- 1;
palfrey trapt In p blazon'd with amiorial gold. Godwa 52
n, H ^^K"' *^-? '^/stance mystery, P,i„,,s5 m 196
Or red wth spirited p of the vats, .^u 202
thistle bursting Into glossy fs, Qde on Well. 207
The p from the distance dies, /« Mem. xxxviU 3
And blossom in p and red Maud I xxii 74
In crimsons and in ps and m gems. Marr. of Geraint 10
Purple-frosty Behind a p-f bank /„ Me,„ „,,-,■ o
Purple-skirted the p-s robe Of twilight The Vovam 21
Purple-spiked standing near P-5 lavender : Ode to 3IeJ>y 110
surely, if your Highness keep Your p, Pnncess Hi 212
de ays his p till thou send To do the battle Gareth and L. 618
V\ hen all the p of my throne hath fail'd, l^ass of Arthur 160
Purpose I dimly see My far-off doubtful p, ' ^ SinZ 251
my p liolds To sail beyond the sunset, • Ulvsses 59
He will answer to the p, Locksle.f/al 55
one increasing p runs, •' ^gl;
Enoch set A p evermore before his eyes, Enoch Arden 45
iiut had no heart to break his p's To Annie • 155
But let me hold my p till I die ' " ant
Faded with morning but his p held. Aylmers Field 412
T Tnrf , .clench d his p Uke a blow ! Prmcess v 306
Unshaken, chnging to her p, 344
That like a broken p waste in air : " ..,v 214
/■ m p, will in will, they grow, " 305
Such splendid p in his eyes, y ,, .,/,„,. i^^ jq
i.SiTK^^n,^^^''^ , . Maud III vi 59
SiS *^f boundless p of their King ! ' Com. of Arthur 475
1 lep ext lus outward p, tiU an hour, Gareth and L. 175
An fVTt ""*"" ^ ^''■^'' ^^- ™y '^^^^^^ ^'^'•««'»^ ^'>d E. 831
Ana, but for my main p m these joasts, 8S7
and my p three years old, "' §49
And the high p broken by the worm. Merlin and V. 196
?n, ifn . P"f «"^ tf ^f •" to the Queen, Laiu^elot and E. 69
tor thou hast spoilt the p of my life. Guinevere 453
lo mine helpmate, one to feel My p and rejoicing 486
The vast design and p of the King. •- s "670
lest the gems Should blind my p, Pass, of Arthur 321
Maeldune, let be this p of thine ! V of Maddune 119
everywhere they meet And kindle generous p, ' "' " Twesias 128
Stately p's, valour in battle, Vasfnei<! 7
Her firm wiU, her fix'd p. ThS 293
tes. not thou the hidden p God atithedlSt
Purposed p with ourself Never to wed. Princei^, ii fin
S^ lic.^ '"f "'^'^ ^r'"^ ^'^^y SpiJter's S's. 58
he took no life, but he took one p, Rizvah -il
With a p to pay for the show. ^' DeadPrSJl
Pnri!™onir'M ^T'-^'\ ^^''^ *" P- ^^ Mary Bollf 32
Pursue / thy loves among the bowers Talkina Oak 199
;t n?r "'■' "^ "^'' ^'' ^ P^^-^^^"! Sisterhood, G^lZ^^ Z
P„rc„i^ P"'*y/f •'^°" '^ P "° '"«'•'' -P^w- «/ Arthur 88
wno IS deati .■' 1 he man your eye p. 272
Pursued
559
Pnrsned (continued) on a sudden rush'd Among us, out of
breath, as one j>. Princess iv 375
For that small charm of feature mine, p — Merlin and V. 76
he p her, calling, ' Stay a little ! Lancelot and E. 683
Pnrsner behind I heard the puft'd p ; Princess iv 265
There the p could pursue no more. Pass, of Arthur 88
Pursuit body half flung forward in p, Aylmer's Field 587
Pursuivant burst A spangled p, Balin and Balan 47
Posh (See also Shuw) p thee forward thro' a life of shocks, (Enone 163
P off, and sitting well in order smite
To p my rival out of place and power,
Here, p them out at gates.'
No will p me down to the worm,
Should p beyond her mark,
That p'es us off from the board.
Did he p, when he was uncurl'd.
The new leaf ever p^es oS the old.
as a hand that p'es thro' the leaf
p me even In fancy from thy side,
drew back His hand to p me from him ;
Posh'd behold thy bride, ' She p me from thee.
Old M'rit«rs p the happy season back, —
And p at Philip's garden-gate.
some were p with lances from the rock,
child P her flat hand against his face
but p alone on foot (For since her horse was lost
so from her face They p us, down the steps,
And p by rude hands from its pedestal,
r5Til seeing it, p against the Prince,
So p them all unwilling toward the gate.
P hoi-se across the foamings of the ford,
door, P from without, drave backward
Hath p aside his faithful wife,
P thro' an open casement down, lean'd on it,
Sir Bors, on entering, p Athwart the throng
thought, Why have I p him from me ?
ever p Sir Modred, league by league,
p me back again On these deserted sands
P from his chair of regal heritage,
deal-box that was p in a comer away,
chains for him Who p his prows into the setting sun,
a wing p out to the left and a ^ving to the right.
But she — she p them aside.
Has p toward our faintest sun
Pushing p could move The chair of Idiis.
p his black craft among them all,
Puss ' petty Ogress,' and ' ungrateful P,'
Put To p together, part and prove,
P's forth an arm, and creeps from pine to pine,
and p your hand in mine,
P fortli and feel a gladder cUme.'
' Bring the dress and p it on her.
Now let me p the boy and girl to school :
Philip p the boy and girl to school.
But she— she p him off —
Suddenly p her finger on the text,
How Philip p her Uttle ones to school,
after that P on more calm and added suppliantly :
He p our lives so far apart
This huckster p down war !
p force To weary her ears with one continuous prayer. Gareth and L. 18
Thou hast made us lords, and canst not p as down ! ' „ 1132
p on thy worst and meanest dress Marr. of Geraint 130
when she p her horse towai'd the knight, ., 200
Prince Had p his horse in motion toward the knight, .. 206
P on your worst and meanest dress,' „ 848
At least p off to please me this poor gown, Geraint and E. 679
' Thou shalt p the crown to use. Balin and Balan 202
in one moment, she p forth the charm Merlin and V. 967
P''s his own baseness in him by default Pdleas and E. 81
strike him ! p my hate into your strokes, „ 228
Loathing to p it from herself for ever. Lover's Tale i 214
He softly p his arm about her neck „ iv 71
l,)etter ha' p my naked hand in a hornets' nest. First Quarrel 50
To be hang'd for a thief — and then p away — Bizpah 36
Ulysses 58
Princess iv 335
548
Window, No Answer 10
In Mem. liii 15
Maud I iv 27
„ // a 18
Balin and Balan 442
Pelleas and E. 436
Last Tournament 638
Lover's Tale ii 93
Love and Duty 50
Golden Year 66
The Brook 83
Princess, Pro. 46
ii 366
iv 196
555
•b58
533
Gureth and L. 212
1040
Geraint and E. 273
Balin and Balan 106
413
Holy Grail 752
Pelleas and E. 307
Pass, of Arthur m
Lovers Tale i 92
118
First Quarrel 48
Columbus 24
Heavy Brigade 15
Dead Prophet 58
I'o Ulysses 23
Marr. of Geraint 542
Merlin and V. 563
Princess, Pro. 157
Two Voices 134
Qinone 4
May Queen, Con. 23
On a Mourner 15
L. of Burleigh 95
Enoch Arden 312
331
460
497
706
Princess vi 215
In Mem. Ixxxii 15
Maud I X 44
Put (continued) never p on the black cap except for
But I p's it inter er 'ands
an' p's 'im back i' the light.
Fur we p's the muck o' the lemd
' Emmie, you p out yom- arms,
but she p thim all to the door.
when Molly 'd p out the light.
Her that shrank, and p me from her,
Thy gay lent-lilies wave and p them by,
They p him aside for ever,
may tnere be no moaning of the bar, When I p
to sea.
Putting And made a Gardener p in a graff,
Puzzle keep it like a p chest in chest.
That was a p for Annie.
P. W. Remains the lean P. W. on his tomb :
Pyebald three p's and a roan.
Pyramid The Khodope, that built the p.
Pyramidal Whose eyes from under a p head
ftrre ware, and filial faith, and Dido's p ;
The p he burnt in.' —
The woman, gliding toward the p,
kindled the p, and all Stood roimd it,
ask'd Falteringly, ' W^ho lies on yonder p ? '
' Who burns upon the p ? '
Pyrenean Beyond the P pines,
IVthagoras weeks I tried Your table of P,
Quay
the worst Rizpah 65
North. Cobbler 72
98
Village Wife 32
In the Child. Hasp. 56
Tomorrow 44
Spinster's S's. 97
Locksley H., Sixty 264
Prog, of Spring 37
Charity 25
out
Crossing the Bar 4
Merlin and V. 479
654
In the Child. Hosp. 55
The Brook 192
Walk, to the Mail 114
Princess ii 82
Aylmer's Field 20
To Virgil 4
The Ring 340
To Master of B. 18
Death of CEnone 65
95
99
Ode on Well. 113
To E. Fitzgerald 15
Q
Quaaker (Quaker) I knaw'd a Q feller as often 'as
towd ma this : N. Farmer, N. S. 19
Quagmire foUow wandering fires Ix)st in the j ! (repeat) Holy Grail 320, 892
Quail (s) (J and pigeon, lark and leveret lay, Audley Court 24
Quail (verb) Q not at the fiery mountain, Faith 3
Quail'd an eye so fierce She q ; Pelleas and E. 602
Quaint bought Q monsters for the market of those times, Enoch Arden b3Q
as (? a four-in-hand As you shall see — Walk, to the Mail 113
A crimson to the q Macaw, Day-Dm., Pro. 16
Quaker (See also Quaaker) Whatever the Q holds, from sin ; Maud II v 92
Quality See Quoloty
Quantity All in q, careful of my motion,
Quarrel (s) Why ? What cause of <; ?
' father.
I remember 3,ql had with your
For, call it lovers' q's, yet I know
In all your q's will I be your knight.
my q — the first an' the last.
I am sorry for all the q
Quarrel (verb) With time I ^nll not q :
Would q with our lot ;
And pray them not to q for her sake,
I never could q with Harry —
Quarrell'd She and James had q.
if they q, Enoch stronger-made Was master :
Before I q with Harry —
Had q, till the man repenting sent This ring
Quarried From scarped cliff and q stone
Among the q downs of Wight,
Quarry (See also Chalk-quarry) but as a block Left m
the q ; Princess mi 231
Nor q trench'd along the hill In Mem. c 11
the bird Who pounced her q and slew it. Merlin and V. 135
Quart I've 'ed my q ivry market-noight N. Farmer, O. S. 8
Wouldn't a pint a' sarved as well as a g ? North. Cobbler 99
Quarter What is it now ? A g to. Walk, to the Mail 10
men brought in whole hogs and q beeves, Geraint and E. 602
Quartering q your own royal arms of Spain, Columbus 115
Quarter-sessions A q-s chairman, abler none ; Princess, Con. 90
Quay Humm'd like a hive all round the narrow q, Audley Court 5
From rock to rock upon the glooming q, „ 84
And I went down unto the q, In Mem. xiv 3
I walked with him down to the q. First Quarrel 20
Hendecasyllabics 5
The Brook 97
Grandmother 21
Geraint and E. 324
Lancelot and E. 961
First Quarrel 56
87
Will Water. 206
226
Enoch Arden 35
First Quarrel 16
The Brook 96
Enoch Arden 30
First Quarrel 56
The Ring 209
In Mem. Ivi 2
To Ulysses 32
Queean
560
Queen
Spinster's S's. 76
106
Maud I xxii 53
56
To the Queen 28
Isabel 28
Buonafarte 3
(Enone 127
Palace of Art 108
. C. V. de Vere 19
Queean (Queen) wi' a bran-new 'ead o' the Q,
a roabin' the 'ouse like a Q.
Queen (adj.) Q rose of the rosebud garden of girls,
Q lily and rose in one ;
Queen (S) (See also Queefin) In her as Mother, Wife
and Q ;
q of marriage, a most perfect wife.
bind with bands That island q who sways
From me, Heaven's Q, Paris, to thee king-born,
And watch'd by weeping q's.
For were you q of all that is,
I'm to be Q o' the May, mother, I'm to be Q o'
the May. May Queen 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, 24, 28, 32, 36, 40, 44
you'll be there, too, mother, to see me made the Q ; May Queen 26
on the green they made me Q of May ; May Queen, N. ¥'s. E. 10
A q, with swarthy cheeks and bold black eyes, B. of F. Women 127
' I died a Q. The Roman soldier found Me lying dead, „ 161
Three Q's with crowns of gold — M. d' Arthur 198
those three Q's Put forth their hands, „ 205
each man murmur'd, ' O my Q, The Voyage 63
' This beggar maid shall be my q ! ' Beggar Maid 16
Insipid as the Q upon a card ; Aylmer's Field 28
thoughts would swarm as bees about their q. Princess i 40
from the Q's decease she brought her up. „ lii 86
good Q, her mother, shore the tress With kisses, ,. vi 113
' Ah fool, and made myself a Q of farce ! .. vii 243
You my q of the wrens ! You the q of the wrens — Window, Spring 12
I'll be King of the Q of the wrens, „ 15
Lot's wife, the Q of Orkney, Bellicent, (repeat)
One falling upon each of those fair q's,
the Q made answer, ' What know I ?
Lancelot, to ride forth And bring the Q ; —
They gazed on all earth's beauty in their Q,
the Q replied with drooping eyes,
and may thy Q be one with thee,
Q, who long had sought in vain To break him
so the Q believed that when her son
High on the top were those three Q's,
built By magic, and by fairy Kings and Q's ;
King And Fairy Q's have built the city,
good Q, Repentant of the word she made him swear,
Q herself, Grateful to Prince Geraint
And Enid loved the Q, and with true heart
But when a nmiour rose about the Q,
Q petition'd for his leave To see the hunt,
' Yea, noble Q,' he answer'd,
and she return'd Indignant to the Q ; (repeat)
' I will avenge this insult, noble Q,
' Farewell, fair Prince,' answer'd the stately Q.
Q Sent her own maiden to demand the name.
Avenging this great insult done the Q.'
' Remember that great insult done the Q,'
Crave pardon for that insult done the Q,
And there the Q forgave him easily.
there be made known to the stately Q,
came A stately Q whose name was Guinevere,
His princess, or indeed the stately Q,
our great Q, In words whose echo lasts,
our fair Q, No hand but hers,
Look'd the fair Q, but up the vale of Usk,
there the Q array'd me like the sxm :
all the penance the Q laid upon me
And you were often there about the Q,
great Q once more embraced her friend,
Q's fair name Wcis breathed upon.
But this worship of the Q,
pray the King To let me bear some token of his Q
if the Q disdain'd to grant it !
' No shadow ' said Sir Balin ' 0 my Q,
the Q, and all the world Made music,
break Into some madness ev'n before the Q ? '
the great Q, Came with slow steps.
Follow'd the Q ; Sir Balin heard her ' Prince, Art thou
80 little loyal to thy O, As pass without good morrow
to thy Q?-
Com. of Arthur 190, 245
276
326
449
463
469
473
Gareih and L. 139
158
229
248
259
526
Marr. of Geraint 14
19
24
154
178
„ 202, 414
215
224
410
425
571
583
592
607
667
759
781
787
831
Geraint and E. 701
854
869
947
951
Balin and Balan 179
188
191
206
210
230
244
250
Queen (s) (continued) ' Fain would I still be loyal to
the Q . ' Balin and Balan 254
' Q ? subject ? but I see not what I see. „ 281
' The Q we worship, Lancelot, I, and all, „ 349
by the great Q's name, arise and hence.' „ 482
Stoop at thy will on Lancelot and the Q.' „ 536
His loathing of our Order and the Q. „ 551
This fellow hath wrought some foulness with his Q : „ 565
Pure as our own true Mother is our Q.' „ 617
no unmarried girl But the great Q herself. Merlin and V. 13
They place their pride in Lancelot and the Q. „ 25
Cast herself down, knelt to the Q, „ 66
Q who stood All glittering hke May sunshine
Beheld the Q and Lancelot get to horse,
our wise Q, if knowing that I know,
when the Q demanded as by chance
But Vivien half-forgotten of the Q
hke the fair pearl-necklace of the Q,
made her Q : but those isle-nutured eyes
Some charm, which being wrought upon the Q
I mean, as noble, as their Q was fair !
then he taught the King to charm the Q
that conrunerce with the Q, I ask you.
With purpose to present them to the Q,
' Are you so sick, my Q, you cannot move
And the Q Lifted her eyes,
Love-loyal to the least wish of the Q
ye were not once so wise, My Q,
Shall I appear, O Q, at Camelot,
said the Q, ' A moral child without the craft
. ' Such be for q's, and not for simple maids.'
And only q's are to be coimted so,
great and guilty love he bare the Q,
Then when he saw the Q, embracing ask'd,
the Q amazed, ' Was he not with you ?
Ill news, my Q, for all who love him,
Some read the King's face, some the Q's,
old dame Came suddenly on the Q with the sharp news.
Forgot to drink to Lancelot and the Q,
Q, who sat With lips severely placid.
For any mouth to gape for save a q's —
And there the Q herself will pity me,
He loves the Q, and in an open shame :
' For Lancelot and the Q and all the world,
deck it h'ke the Q's For richness, and me also like the Q
I go in state to court, to meet the Q.
sent him to the Q Bearing hLs wish, whereto the Q
agreed
£iece of pointed lace. In the Q's shadow,
lancelot kneeling utter'd, ' Q, Lady,
but, my Q, I hear of rumours flying thro' your court,
half tum'd away, the Q Brake from the vast oriel-
embowering vine
In which as Arthur's Q I move and rule :
An armlet for an arm to which the Q's Is haggard,
the wild Q, who saw not, burst away To weep
Look how she sleeps — the Fairy Q, so fair !
And last the Q herself, and pitied her:
said the Q, (Sea was her wrath, yet working after storm)
' Q, she would not be content Save that I wedded her,
And mass, and rolling music, like a q.
the Q, Who mark'd Sir Lancelot when he moved apart,
' This is love's curse ; pass on, my Q, forgiven.'
with a love Far tenderer than my Q's.
Q, if I grant the jealousy as of love,
in middle street the Q, Who rode by Lancelot,
So to the Gate of the three Q's we came,
O my Q, my Guinevere,
her name And title, ' Q of Beauty,'
My Q, he had not won.' Whereat the Q, As one
whose foot is bitten by an ant,
Pelleas had heard sung before the Q,
and wail'd, ' Is the Q false? '
Warm with a gracious parting from the Q,
blaze the crime of Lancelot and the Q.'
87
102
121
128
137
451
570
584
608
641
770
Lancelot and E. 69
79
83
89
104
142
145
231
238
245
570
572
598
727
730
737
739
775
1059
1082
1107
1118
1124
1168
1175
1179
1189
1197
1221
1226
1244
1255
1269
1308
1314
1336
1348
1353
1395
1399
Holy Grail 355
358
PeUeas and E. 46
116
183
397
532
558
570
Queen
661
Quest
(s) {continued) ' Ay, my Q,' he said. ' And thou
hast overthrown him ? ' ' Ay, my QJ
If I, the Q, May help them, loose thy tongue,
The Q Look'd hard upon her lover,
Then gave it to his Q to rear : the Q But coldly
acquiescing,
O my Q, I muse Why ye not wear on arm,
Only to yield my Q her own again ?
In her high bower the Q, Working a tapestry,
each thro' worship of their Q White-robod in honour
Let be thy fair Q's fantasy.
Be happy in thy fair Q as I in mine.'
Q of Beauty and of love, behold This day mj Q of
Beauty
sad eyes, our Q's And Lancelot's,
Beyond all use, that, half-amazed, the Q,
ijems which Innocence the Q Lent to the King,
the land Was freed, and the Q false,
smoothe And sleek his marriage over to the Q.
Q Graspt it so hard, that all her hand was red.
glossy-throated grace, Isolt the Q.
hath not our great Q iMy dole of beauty trebled? '
the great Q Have yielded him her love.'
' Grace, Q, for being loved :
First mainly thro' that sullying of our Q —
' Not so, my Q,' he said,
Claspt it and cried ' Thine Order, O my Q ! '
look'd and saw The great Q's bower was dark, —
Q who sat betwixt her best Enid,
Sir Lancelot told This matter to the Q,
Love-loyal to the least wish of the Q,
the stately Q abode For many a week,
when she heard, the Q look'd up,
when first she came, wept the sad Q.
Round that strong castle where he holds the Q;
For his own self, and his own Q,
About the good King and his wicked Q, And were I
such a King with such a Q,
Then to her own sad heart mutter'd the Q,
ere the coming of the Q.' (repeat)
Then thought the Q within herself again,
Before the coming of the sinful Q.'
Then spake the Q and somewhat bitterly.
This evil work of Lancelot and the Q ? '
thought the (? ' Lo ! they have set her on,
the pale Q look'd up and answer'd her.
To which a mournful answer made the Q :
Such as they are, were you the sinful Q.'
Fired all the pale face of the Q,
stood before the Q As tremuloasly as foam
when the Q had added ' Get thee hence,'
But when the Q immersed in such a trance.
Rose the pale Q, and in her anguish
and he gave them charge about the Q,
Three q's with crowns of gold :
those three Q's Put forth their hands,
be yon dark Q's in yon black boat.
But thou, my Q, Not for itself,
' I have fought for Q and Faith
es wouldn't goa, wi' good gowd o' the Q,
the king, the q Bad me be seated,
king, the q. Sank from their thrones,
Ferdinand Hath sign'd it and our Holy Catholic q —
but our Q Recall'd me,
our prudent king, our righteous q —
ghost of our great Catholic Q Smiles on me,
Q of Heaven who seest the souls in Hell
ready — tho' our Holy Catholic Q,
sorra the Q wid her sceptre in sich
stood up strait as the Q of the world —
FtBST pledge our Q this solemn night,
Since our Q assumed the globe, the sceptre.
Q, and Empress of India,
Q, as true to womanhood as Queenhood,
Persephone ! Q of the dead no more —
Pdleas and E. 593
599
604
Last Tournament 22
35
106
128
146
197
204
208
222
236
293
339
391
410
509
557
564
602
682
744
750
758
Guinevere 27
54
126
146
164
182
194
197
209
213
,. 223, 233
224
270
271
307
308
327
341
353
357
363
366
401
586
591
Pass, of Arthur 366
373
452
To the Queen ii 33
The Bevenge 101
Village Wife 49
Columbus 10
14
30
58
„ 122
„ 187
„ 216
„ 228
Tomorrow 35
79
Hands all round 1
On Jub. Q. Victoria 3
6
25
Demeter and P. 18
Queen (s) {continued)
Death,
Her maiden coming like a Q,
Hail ample presence of a Q,
Form in Freedom's name and the Q's !
Queen-city To change our dark Q-c,.
Queenhood with all grace Of womanhood and q.
thou that hast from men, As Q of
Demeter and P. 143
The Ring 480
Prog, of /Spring 61
Riflemen farm ! 23
To Mary Boyle 65
Marr. of Geraint 176
Queen, as true to womanhood as Q,
Queenly All is gracious, gentle, great and Q.
Quell He thought to q the stubborn hearts of oak,
his great self. Hath force to q me.'
scream of that Wood-devil I came to q\'
My yucca, which no winter q's,
Quelling Move with me toward their q,
Quench and q The red God's anger,
Gods, To q, not hurl the thunderbolt,
Quench'd had not wholly q his power ;
The fame is q that I foresaw.
According to his greatness whom she q.
that had q herself In that assumption
Their innocent hospitalities q in blood.
All diseases q by Science,
Quencher You would-be q's of the light to be,
Quenching q lake by lake and tarn by tarn
love of light q her fear of pain —
Query let my q pass Unclaim'd,
Answer'd all queries touching those at home
He put the self-same q,
To all their queries answer'd not a word.
Quest When I went forth in q of truth,
name Be hidd'n, and give me the first q,
' I have given him the first q :
' A boon. Sir King, this q ! '
' Bound upon a q With horse and arms —
' Damsel, the q is mine.
I leave not till I finish this fair q, Or die therefore,
' The q is mine ; thy kitchen-knave am I,
' Go therefore,' and so gives the q to him —
' Full pardon, but I follow up the q,
Not fit to cope your q.
boundless savagery Appal me from the q.'
The q is Lancelot's : give him back the shield.'
So large mirth lived and Gareth won the q.
we rode upon this fatal q Of honour,
So claim'd the q and rode away,
(His q was unaccomplish'd)
My q, meseems, is here.
And no q came, but all was joust and play,
cease not from your q until ye find.'
to sally forth In q of whom he knew not,
Rode with his diamond, wearied of the q,
Reported who he was, and on what q Sent,
And lose the q he sent you on,
let me leave My q with you ;
all wearied of the q Leapt on his horse,
ye shall go no more On q of mine,
Lest I be found as faithless in the q As yon proud
Prince who left the q to me.
the q Assign'd to her not worthy of it,
ride A twelvemonth and a day in q of it.
Before ye leave him for this Q,
and cried, ' This Q is not for thee.' (repeat)
' I am not worthy of the Q ; '
Came ye on none but phantoms in your q,
I f alter'd from my q and vow ?
And the Q faded in my heart.
And ev'n the Holy Q, and all but her ;
' Ridest thou then so hotly on a q So holy.
Small heart was his after the Holy Q :
Q and he were in the hands of Heaven.
and scoff'd at him And this high Q
And those that had gone out upon the Q,
but now — the Q, This vision —
' Gawain, was this Q for thee ? '
Who made me sure the Q was not for me ;
On Jub. Q. Victoria 25
14
Buonaparte 1
Gareth and L. 1183
Balin and Balan 548
To Ulysses 21
Last Tournament 101
Tiresias 157
Demeter and P. 133
Vision of Sin 217
In Mem. Ixxiii 5
Merlin and V. 218
Sisters (E. and E.) 233
Columbus 176
Locksley H., Sixty 163
Princess iv 536
„ vii 40
Sir J. Oldrastle 190
The Brook lOi
Aylmer's Field 465
Marr. of Geraint 269
Lover's Tale iv 333
Supp. Confessions 141
Gareth and L. 545
582
647
708
745
774
861
864
886
1174
1331
1344
1426
Geraint and E. 703
Balin and Balan 138
547
552
Merlin and V. 145
Lancelot and E. 548
561
616
628
655
691
703
717
761
824
Holy GraU 197
325
„ 374, 378
386
562
568
600
610
642
657
659
668
722
733
740
743
2n
Quest
562
Quivering
Qaest (continued) For I was much awearied of the Q : Holy Grail 744
nath this Q avail'd for thee ? ' ,,765
all My q were but in vain ; „ 783
and this Q was not for me.' „ 852
' Hath Gawain fail'd in any q of thine ? ' ,, 859
To those who went upon the Holy Q, „ 890
to fill the gap Left by the Holy Q ; Pelleas and E. 2
Qaestion (s) (See also Test-question) with q unto whom
'twere due : GEnone 82
And, smiling, put the q by. Day-Dm., Bevival 32
yovu" q now, Which touches on the workman Princess Hi 321
But then this q of your troth remains : „ v 279
overthrow Of these or those, the q settled die.' „ 317
In many a subtle q versed, In Mem. xcvi 6
Nor thro' the q's men may try, „ cxxiv 7
Fixing full eyes of q on her face. Com. of Arthur 312
And aJEter madness acted q ask'd : Geraint and E. 813
the q rose About the founding of a Table Round, Merlin and V. 410
This q, so flung down before the guests, Lover's Tale iv 268
in the thick of q and reply I fled the house. Sisters (E. and E.) 157
An' a haxin' ma hawkard q's, Spinster's S's. 90
Question (verb) 'Twere well to q him, and try Talking Oak 27
* Thou art but a mid-goose to q it.' Gareth and L. 36
To q, why The sons before the fathers die. To Marq. of Dufferin 46
Question')! Doth q memory answer not. Lover's Tale i 277
or could answer him, tl q, Enoch Arden 654
She, q if she knew us men. Princess iv 231
q any more Save on the further side ; Com. of Arthur 396
A voice clung sobbing till he q it. Last Tournament 759
then some other q if she came From foreign lands. Lover's Tale iv 330
Questioner Has little time for idle q's.' Marr. of Geraint 272
Quick (adj.) (See also Too-quick) — they say that
women are so q — Enoch Arden 408
The q lark's closest-caroU'd strains, Rosalind 10
And my thoughts are as q and as q, Window, On the Hill 12
With thy q tears that make the rose In Mem. Ixxii 10
his q, instinctive hand Caught at the hilt, Marr. of Geraint 209
Thus, after some q burst of sudden wrath, Balin and Balan 216
so q and thick The lightnings here and there Holy Grail 493
and close upon it peal'd A sharp q thunder.' „ 696
Her countenance with q and healthful blood — Lover's Tale i 97
Q blushes, the sweet dwelling of her eyes Sisters (E. and E.) 165
At once The bright q smile of Evelyn, „ 243
oiu" q Evelyn — The merrier, prettier, „ 285
Patient of pain tho' as g- as a sensitive plant In the Child. Hosp. 30
So q, so capable in soldiership. Sir J. Oldcastle 75
Then, after one q glance upon the stars, Akbar's Dream 3
We are twice asq\' Princess, Pro. 137
A q bnmette, well-moulded, falcon-eyed, „ ii 106
For some cry ' Q ' and some cry ' Slow,' Politics 9
Quick (living) That q or dead thou boldest me for King. Pass, of Arthur 161
Quick (quickset) Rings Eden thro' the budded q's, In Mem. Ixxxviii 2
Now bm-geons every maze of q „ cxv 2
Quick (to the quick) I myself, A Tory to the q, Walk, to the Mail 81
the proof to prove me to the q ! ' Gareth and L. 150
Quicken mountain q's into Nymph and Faun ; Lucretius 187
bloodless east began To q to the sun, Marr. of Geraint 535
Yovir wailing will not q him : Geraint and E. 549
felt my hatred for my Mark Q within me. Last Tournament 520
Qnicken'd Be q with a Uvelier breath. In Mem. cxxii 13
Quickening slowly q into lower forms ; Vision of Sin 210
Quicker Her hands are q unto good : In Mem. xxxiii 10
If we could give them surer, q proof — Princess Hi 282
It may be, I am q of belief Than you believe me, Lancelot and E. 1204
Quick-fallW 9-/ dew Of fruitful kisses, (Enone 204
Quickset-screens Fills out the homely q-s. On a Mourner 6
Quiet (adj.) Q, dispassionate, and cold, A Character 28
As waves that up a g cove Rolling slide, Eleanore 108
A healthy frame, a q mind.' Two Voices 99
Then said the voice, in q scorn, „ 401
wave that swam Thro' q meadows round the mill, Miller's D. 98
Rest in a happy place and q seats Above the thunder, (Enone 131
' Reign thou apart, a q king. Palace of Art 14
With q eyes unfaithful to the truth, Love and Duty 94
Here at the q limit of the world, Tithonus 7
Quiet (adj,) (continued) till he find The q chamber far
apart. Day-Dm., Arrived 28
Let us have a q hour. Vision of Sin 73
Than aught they fable of the q Gods. Lucretius 55
pines of Ida shook to see Slide from that q heaven of hers, „ 87
from some bay-window shake the night ; But all was q : Princess i 107
Her q dream of life this hour may cease. Eequiescat 6
She desires no isles of the blest, no q seats of the just, Wages 8
As if the q bones were blest Among familiar names In Mem. xviii 6
The q sense of something lost. „ Ixxviii 8
' I watch thee from the q shore ; „ Ixxxv 81
Below me, there, is the village, and looks how q and
small ! Maud I iv 1
Be mine a philosopher's life in the q woodland ways, .. 49
Came glimmering thro' the laurels At the q evenfall, .. // iv 78
Me, that was never a q sleeper ? „ ■« 98
painted battle the war stood Silenced, the living q as
the dead, Com. of Arthur 123
ever fail'd to draw The q night into her blood, Marr. of Geraint 532
And kiss'd her q brows, and saying to her Lancelot and E. 1150
my fresh but fixt resolve To pass away into the q life, Holy Grail 738
But always in the q house I heard, „ 832
Oh ! pleasant breast of waters, q bay. Like to a g'
mind in the loud world. Lover's Tale i 6
Didst swathe thyself all round Hope's q urn For ever ? „ 100
All this Seems to the q daylight of your minds But
cloud and smoke, „ 296
Why did you sit soq? Rizpah 14
Quietly sleeping — so q, our doctor said In the Child. Hosp. 41
It was all of it fair as life, it was all of it as </ as death, V. of Maeldune 20
Silent palaces, q fields of eternal sleep ! „ 80
By q fields, a slowly-dying power, De Prof., Two G. 24
All so q the ripple would hardly blanch into spray The Wreck 137
Naay, but the claws o' tha ! q ! Spinster's S's. 36
Man is q at last As he stands on the heights By an Evolution. 19
Quiet (s) For now the noonday q holds the hill : CEnone 25
Divided in a graceful q — paused. Gardener's D. 156
And blasting the long q of my breast Lucretius 162
This look of q flatters thus In Mem. a; 10
Making a treacherous q in his heart, Lancelot and E. 883
Moan to myself ' one plunge — then q for evermore.' Charity 16
Quieted Three with good blows he q, Gareth and L. 813
I was q, and slept again. The Ring 421
Quieter but I knaws I 'ed led tha a q life Spinster's S's. 71
Quince As hardly tints the blossom of the q Balin and Balan 267
Quinquenniad Or gay q's would we reap Day-Dm., L'Envoi 23
Quinsy ' A q choke thy cursed note ! ' The Goose 29
Quintessence As with the q of flame, Arabian Nights 123
pure q's of precious oils In hoUow'd moons Palace of Art 187
The flower and q of change. Day-Dm., L'Envoi 24
He had known a man, a </ of man, Aylmer's Field 388
Quintus Calaber Q C Somewhat lazily handled To Master of B. 7
Quip But all his merry q's are o'er. D. of the 0. Year 29
Tristram, waiting for the q to come. Last Tournament 260
Quire low-matin chii-p hath grown Full q. Love and Duty 99
O Milan, O the chanting q's. The Daisy 57
priest, who mumble worship in your q — Balin and Balan 444
Quirk With twisted q's and happy hits, Will Water. 189
Quit (leave) q the post Allotted by the Gods : Lucretius 148
how loth to q the land ! The Flight 38
Wilt neither q the widow'd Crown To Prin. Beatrice 15
Quit (repay) ill then should I q your brother's love, Lancelot and E. 944
Quitch the vicious q Of blood and custom Geraint and E. 903
Quiver heart of Poland hath not ceased To q, Poland 4
Willows whiten, aspens q, L. of Shalott i 10
A thousand moons will q ; A Farewell 14
sometimes touches but one string That q's. Lover's Tale i 18
Quiver'd Her eyelid q as she spake. Millers D. 144
bright death q at the victim's throat ; . D. of F. Women 115
Trembled and q, as the dog, Pelleas and E. 284
Q a flying glory on her hair. Lover's Tale i 69
Quivering sets all the tops q — Lucretius 186
Gloom'd the low coast and q brine The Voyage 42
Tear the noble heart of Britain, leave it gorily q? Boadicea 12
The rosy q's died into the night. Holy Grail 123
Quoit
563
Bagged
Princess in 215
N. Farmer, 0. S. 53
Church-warden, etc. 39
Sea Dreams 159
181
Princess ii 377
Akbar's Bream 74
Quoit Q, tennis, ball — no games ?
Qaoloty (quality) Loocik 'ow q smoiles
Fur Q's hall my friends,
Quote — it makes me sick to q him —
Love, let me q these lines, that you may learn
Quoted q odes, smd jewels five-words-long
Quoting And when the Goan Padie q Him,
R
Raake (rake) r out Hell wi' a small-tooth coamb — Village Wife 76
Raate (rate) I ^vtw niver agin the r. N. Farmer, 0. S. 16
;m' agean the toithe an' the r. Church-warden, etc. 11
Raated (scolded) Sally she tum'd a tongue-banger, an'
r ma,
Raatin (scolding) Hobby I gied tha a i-
Raaved (tore) an' r an' rembied 'mn out.
Raaved (torn) an' r slick thruf by the plow —
Raavin' (raving) fire was a-raagin' an' r
Rabbit (adj.) A r mouth that is ever agape —
Rabbit (s) The r fondles his own harmless face.
Rabble soft and milky r of womankind,
h^ frantic r in half -amaze Stared at him dead.
Race (of persons) (See also Border-race)
to her r —
Who took a wife, who rear'd his r.
Some legend of a fallen r Alone might hint
We were two daughters of one r :
Chanted from an ill-used r of men
my r Hew'd Ammon, hip and thigh.
To iningle with the human r,
Unequal laws unto a savage r.
To vary from the kindly r of men,
she shall resir my dusky r.
' Some other r of Averills ' —
Nor of what r, the work ;
and with her the r of Aylnter, past.
Which else had link'd their r with times to come — •
I made by these the last of all my r.
And those who sorrow'd o'er a vanish'd r,
a r Of giants living, each, a thousand years.
Then spiings the crowning r of humankind.
while the r's of mankind endure.
Have left the last free r with naked coasts !
That ' Loss is common to the r ' —
Comes out — to some one of his r :
Will shelter one of stranger r.
Of that great r, which is to be,
The herald of a higher r.
And throned r's may degrade ;
Betwixt us and the crowning r
her father, the wrinkled head of the r ?
in his force to be Nature's crowning r.
At war with myself and a wretched r.
On that huge scapegoat of the r,
Strike dead the whole weak r of venomous worms,
North. Cobbler 23
Spinster's S's. 48
N. Farmer, 0. S. 32
Owd Boa 28
„ 110
Maud I X 31
Aylmer's Field 851
Princess vi 309
St. Telemachus 71
Becomes dishonom'
Two Voices 255
328
359
The Sisters 1
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 120
n. of F. Women 237
Of old sat Freedom 10
Ulysses 4
Tithonus 29
Locksley Hall 168
Beyond the r of Britons and of men.
0 PUEBLiND r of miserable men,
in their chairs set up a stronger r '
strange sound of an adulterous r,
Our r and blood, a renmant that were left
great and sane and simple r of brutes
The prayer of many a r and creed, and chme —
Strong with the strength of the r
Spain once the most chivalric r on earth,
1 WAS the chief of the r —
boEksted he sprang from the oldest r upon earth,
serve This mortal r thy kin so well,
breathed a r of mightier mountaineers,
one of these, the r of Cadmus —
Motherless evermore of an ever-vanishing r,
we, the poor earth's dying r,
for since our dying r began.
Aylmer's Field 54
224
577
779
791
844
Princess Hi 268
vii 295
Ode on Well. 219
Third of Feb. 40
In Mem. vi 2
„ Ixxiv 4
„ cii 4.
„ ciii 35
„ cxviii 14
„ cxxviii 7
„ Con. 128
Maud I iv 13
33
a; 35
„ xiii 42
„ // i 46
Corn, of Arthur 331
Geraint and E. 1
940
Holy Grail 80
663
Pelleas and E. 480
To the Queen ii 11
Def. of Lucknow 47
Columbus 204
V. of Maeldune 1
>• 4
De Prof., Two G. 16
Montenegro 14
Tireslas 134
Despair 84
Ancient Sage 178
Locksley H., Sixty 65
Race (of persons) (continued) Far among the vanish'd r's, Locksley H., Sixty 79
to lower the rising r of men ; ,, 147
All the full-brain, half-brain r's, „ 161
a single r, a single tongue — „ 165
I would the rising r were half as eager „ 228
sxmder'd once from all the human r. To Virgil 36
souls of men, who grew beyond their r, Demeter and P. 140
may roll with the dust of a vanish'd r. Vastness 2
As dead from all the human r Happy 95
I cull from every faith and r Akbar's Dream 68
when creed and r Shall bear false witness, „ 97
From out the sunset pom''d an alien r, „ 192
there is time for the r to grow. The Dawn 20
but, while the r's flower and fade. Making of Man 5
Race (course of life, etc.) Till all my widow'd r be run ; In Mem. ix 18
Till all my widow'd r be run. „ xvii 20
He still outstript me in the r ; „ xlii 2
burst All barriers in her onward r For power. „ cxiv 14
make one people ere man's r be run : To Victor Hugo 11
And I would that my r were mn. The Dreamer 8
Or ever your r be run ! „ 30
Race (stream) By the red r of fiery Phlegethon ; Demeter and P. 28
Race (verb) and r By all the fountains : Princess iv 262
r thro' many a mile Of dense and open, Balin and Balan 423
and hmiters r The shadowy lion, Tiresias 177
hopes, which r the restless blood. Prog, of Spring 115
Raced flew kite, and r the purple fly. Princess ii 248
Thro' all the camp and inward r the scouts „ v 111
Races and how The r went, and who would rent the hall : AucUey Court 31
Raceth And r freely with his fere, Supp. Confessions 158
Rachel Fairer than R by the pahny well, Aylmer's Field 679
Racing Clouds that are r above. Window, On the Hill 6
measured pulse of r oars Among the willows ; In Mem. Ixxxvii 10
He is r from heaven to heaven The Dreamer 21
Rack furrowing into light the mounded r, Love and Duty 100
As if 'twere drawn asunder by the r. Lover's Tale ii 57
save breaking my bones on the r ? By an Evolution. 9
Rack'd frame Is r with pangs that conquer trust ; In Mem. I 6
I am r with pains. Columbus 199
that I, JK as I am with gout, „ 235
Radiate where the passions meet. Whence r : In Mem. Ixxxviii 5
Raff Let r's be rife in prose and rhyme. Will Water. 61
Rafter slew Till all the r's rang with woman-yells. Last Tournament 476
Boardings and r's and doors — Def. of Lucknow 67
Rafter'd See Dnsky-rafter'd
Rag (torn clothes) Her r's scarce held together ; The Goose 2
and throng, their r's and they The basest, Lucretius 170
all one r, disprinced from head to heel. Princess v 30
And him, the lazar, in his r's : In Mem. cxxvii 10
put your beauty to this flout and scorn By dressing
it in r's ? Geraint and E. 676
this poor gown. This silken r, „ 680
Shaking his hands, as from a lazar's r, Pelleas and E. 317
Rag (stone) hornblende, r and trap and tuff. Princess Hi 362
Rage (s) His early r Had force to make me rhyme Miller's D. 192
With inarticulate r, and making signs Enoch Arden 640
For blind with r she miss'd the plank. Princess iv 177
And I remain on whom to wreak your r, „ 350
The captive void of noble r, In Mem. xxvii 2
her bi-other ran in his r to the gate, Maud II i 12
that chain'd r, which ever yelpt within, Balin and Balan 319
so blind in r that unawares He burst his lance „ 328
and dash'd herself Dead in her r : Tiresias 153
your faith and a God of eternal r, Despair 39
call him dotard in your r? Locksley H., Sixty 9
This thing, that thing is the r. Poets and Critics 1
Rage (verb) a flame That r's in the woodland far
below, Balin and Balan 234
E like a fire among the noblest names. Merlin and V. 802
Raged I r against the pubUc Mar ; The Letters 26
am I raging alone as my father r in his mood ? Mav^ I i 53
Rageful Slowly and conscious of the r eye That
watch'd him, Aylmer's Field 336
Nor thou be r, like a handled bee, Ancient Sage 269
Ragged The r rims of thunder brooding low. Palace of Art 75
Bagged
564
Raised
Bagged (continued) Pent in a roofless close of r stones ; St. S. Stylites 74
babe Too r to be fondled on her lap, Aylmer's Field 686
haunts Would scratch a r oval on the sand, Gareth and L. 534
Hung round with r rims and burning folds, — Lover's Tale ii 63
Upon the morrow, tliro' the r walls, „ 152
Ragged-robin Hath pick'd a r-r from the hedge, Marr. of Geraint 724
Raging (See also A-raagin') The wind is r in tun-et and
tree. The Sisters 21
shot at, slightly hurt, R retum'd : Aylmer's Field 549
She heard him r, heard him fall ; Lucretius 276
am I r alone as my father raged in his mood ? Maud I i 53
shone the Noonday Sun Beyond a r shallow. Gareth and L. 1028
Raid chance of booty from the morning's r, Geraint and E. 565
Rail (s) take their leave, about the garden r's. Princess, Con. 38
In such discourse we gain'd the garden r's, „ 80
Rail (verb) To r at Lady Psyche and her side. „ Hi 33
He loved to r against it still, In Mem. Ixxxix 38
Who shall r Against her beauty ? „ cxiv 1
fight for the good than to r at the ill ; Maud III vi 57
For that did never he whereon ye r, Gareth and L. 728
if she had it, would she r on me To snare the next,
and if she have it not So will she r. Merlin and V. 810
Then she began to r so bitterly, Pelleas and E. 250
they r At me the Zoroastrian. Akbar's Dream 103
R at ' Blind Fate ' with many a vain ' Alas ! ' Doubt and Prayer 2
Rail'd (See also Golden-rail'd) stUl she r against the
state of things. Princess Hi 84
r at those Who call'd him the false son Guinevere 287
And r at all the Popes, Sir J. Oldcastle 165
Railer This r, that hath mock'd thee in full hall — Gareth and L. 369
Railing r at thine and thee. Balin and Balan 119
Raillery feigning pique at what she call'd The r. Princess iv 588
Railway In the steamship, in the r, Locksley Hall 166
A petty r ran : a fire-balloon Rose gem-like Princess, Pro. 74
A r there, a tunnel here, Mechanophilus 7
Raiment in her r's hem was traced in flame The Poet 45
In diverse r strange : Palace of Art 168
In r white and clean. St. Agnes' Eve 24
A woman-post in flying r. Princess iv 376
Loosely robed in flying r, Boddicea 37
three fair girls In gilt and rosy r came : Gareth and L. 927
His arms, the rosy r, and the star, „ 938
broken wings, torn r and loose hair, „ 1208
Rain (s) (See cdso River-rain) E makes music in the tree A Dirge 26
VVash'd with stiU r's and daisy blossomed ; Circumstance 7
The lightning flash atween the r's, Rosalind 12
From winter r's that beat his grave. Two Voices 261
Autumn r's Flash in the pools of whirling Simois. CEnone 205
With shadow-streaks of r. Palace of Art 76
There will not be a drop of r May Queen 35
Where falls not hail, or r. or any snow, M. d' Arthur 260
beneath a whispering r Night slid down Gardener's D. 266
R, wind, frost, heat, hail, damp, St. S. Stylites 16
' I swear, by leaf, and wind, and r. Talking Oak 81
Low thunders bring the meUow r, „ 279
when the r is on the roof, Locksley HaU 78
with r or haU, or fire or snow ; „ 193
Bullets fell bke r ; The Captain 46
With ashy r's, that spreading made The Voyage 43
Came in a sun-Ut fall of r. Sir L. and Q. G. 4
Old plash of r's, and refuse patch'd with moss. Vision of Sin 212
The r had fallen, the Poet arose. Poet's Song 1
The r of heaven, and their own bitter tears, Tears,
and the careless r of heaven, Aylmer's Field 428
for thrice I heard the r Rushing ; Lucretius 26
A twisted snake, and now a r of pearls. Princess, Pro. 62
blowzed with health, and wind, and r, ,, iy 279
Remember what a plague of r ; The Daisy 50
01 r at Reggio, r at Parma ; At Lodi, r, Piacenza, r. „ 51
The mist and the r, the mist and the r ! Window, No Answer 1
And ghastly thro' the drizzling r In Mem. vii 11
A flower beat with r and wind, „ viii 15
That takes the simshine and the r's, „ x 14
flakes Of crimson or in emerald r. „ xcviii 32
and fed With honey'd r and delicate air, Maud I xviii 21
Rain (s) (continued) and the heavens fall in a gentle r, Maud II i 41
' R, r, and sun ! a rainbow in the sky! Com. of ArtMir 403
R, r, and sun ! a rainbow on the lea ! „ 406
R, sun, and r ! and the free blossom blows ; „ 409
Sun, r, and sun ! and where is he who knows? ,. 410
0 rainbow with three colours after r, Gareth and L. 1160
Before the useful trouble of the r : Geraint and, E. 771
Or in the noon of dust and driving r, Merlin and V. 636
Then fell thick r, plume droopt and mantle climg, Last Tournament 213
faUs not hail, or r, or any snow. Pass, of Arthur 428
and the r Had fall'n upon me. Lover's Tale i 622
few drops of that distressful r Fell on my face, „ 698
As ?• of the midsummer midnight soft, „ 722
A morning air, sweet after r, „ Hi 3
An' be took three turns in the r. First Quarrel 75
1 find myself drenched with the r. Rizfah 8
Beneath a pitiless rush of Autumn r Sisters (E. and E.) 237
That trees grew downward, r fell upward, Columbus 50
the tundher, an' r that fell. Tomorrow 23
And o'er thee streams the r, Pref. Poem Broth. Son. 14
Rain (verb) R out the heavy mist of tears. Love and Duty 43
That lightly r from ladies' hands. Sir Galahad 12
To r an April of ovation round Their statues. Princess vi 66
bullets would r at our feet — Def. of Lucknow 21
Rainbow (adj.) And r robes, and gems and gemlike eyes, Princess iv 480
Of his house in a ?■ frill ? Maud II ii 17
may roll The r hues of heaven about it — Romney's R. 51
Rainbow (s) the r forms and flies on the land Sea-Fairies 25
And the r lives in the curve of the sand ; „ 27
And the r hangs on the poising wave, „ 29
. Between the r and the sun. Margaret 13
Broke, like the r from the shower. Two Voices 444
leap the r's of the brooks, Locksley Hall 171
Flung the torrent r round : Vision of Sin 32
This flake of r flying on the highest Princess v 319
' Rain, rain, and sun ! a r in the sky ! Com. of Arthur 403
Rain, rain, and sun ! a r on the lea ! „ 406
0 r with three colours after rain, Gareth and L. 1160
Lay like a r fall'n upon the grass, Lancelot and E. 431
Her smile lit up the r on my tears. Lover's Tale i 254
low down in a r deep Silent palaces, V. of Maeldune 79
Her light makes r's in my closing eyes, Prog, of Spring 46
Rain'd R thro' my sight its overflow. Two Voices 45
Principles are r in blood ; Love thou thy land 80
dimly r about the leaf Twilights of airy silver, Andley Court 81
and there r a ghastly dew Locksley Hall 123
a giant's flail. The large blows r, Princess v 501
mine down r Their spirit-searching splendours. Lover's Tale ii 146
Raining Heavily the low sky r L. of Shalott iv 4
Hold swollen clouds from r, D. of F. Women 11
Rain-rotten R-r died the wheat, Demeter and P. 112
Rainy And faint, r fights are seen, Margaret 60
As over r mist incfines A gleaming crag Two Voices 188
The rentroll Cupid of our r isles. Edwin Morris 103
Thro' scudding drifts the r Hyades Vext the dim sea : Ulysses 10
The sunny and r seasons came and went Enoch Arden 623
A r cloud possess'd the earth, In Mem. xxx 3
' 0 trefoil, sparkling on the r plain, Gareth and L. 1159
and thro' the tree Rush'd ever a r wind, Last Tournament 16
Raise Thou wilt never r thine head A Dirge 19
1 could r One hope that warm'd me Two Voices 121
R thy soul; Make thine heart ready with thine
eyes : the time Is come to r the veil. Gardener's D. 272
Most can r the flowers now, The Flower 19
To r a cry that lasts not long. In Mem. Ixxv 10
Sir Lancelot holp To r the Prince, Guinevere 46
and could r such a battle-cry V. of Maeldune 23
Tho' some of late would r a wind ' Freedom 35
R a stately memorial, On Juh. Q. Victoria 44
R me. I thank you. Romney's R. 60
Raised (adj.) in your r brows I read Some wonder Columbus 1
my r eyelids would not fall, Lover's Tale i 571
Raised (verb) when I r my eyes, above They met Miller's D. 85
I look'd, Paris had r his ann, CEnone 189
She r her piercing orbs, D. of F. Women 171
Raised
565
Ran
Raised (verb) (continued) Then r her head with lips comprest, The Letters 19
When Annie would have r him Enoch said Enoch Arden 232
' You r your arm, you tumbled down and broke Sea Dreams 141
r the bUnding bandage from his eyes : Princess i 244
At the word, they r A tent of satin, „ Hi 347
And r the cloak from brows as pale „ v 73
They are r for ever and ever, Voice and the P. 23
Not r for ever and ever, „ 25
Behold a man r up by Christ ! In Mem. xxxi 13
R my own towii against me in the night Marr. of Geraint 457
arose, and r Her mother too, „ 535
Yet r and laid him on a Utter-bier, Geraint and E. 566
He r his eyes and saw The tree that shone Merlin and V. 938
He r his head, their eyes met and hers fell, Lancelot and E. 1312
And r a bugle hanging from his neck, Pelleas and E. 364
The silk paviUons of King Arthur r Guinevere 394
And many more when Modred r revolt, „ 441
And r us hand in hand.' lever's Tale iv 66
He r her softly from the sepulchre, „ 85
she r an eye that ask'd ' Where ? ' • „ 94
a wave Uke the wave that is r by an earthquake
grew. The Revenge 115
but ever we r thee anew, Def. of Lucknow 5
nor voice Nor finger r against him — Sir J. Oldcastle 45
r the school, and drain'd the fen. Locksleij H., Sixty 268
I r her, call'd her ' Muriel,' The Ring 449
the mighty Muses have r to the heights Parnassus 2
One r the Prince, one sleek'd the squalid hair, Death of (Enone 57
had left His aged eyes, he r them, <S'^ Telemachu^ 51
Still I r my heart to heaven, AJcbar's Dream 6
Raiser A r of huge melons and of pine, Princess, Con. 87
Raising Annie seem'd to hear Her own death-scaffold r, Enoch Arden 175
r her Still higher, past all peril. Lover's Tale i 393
Rake (s) brag to his fellow r's of his conquest Charity 18
Rake (verb) (See also Raake) Nor will she r : there is
no baseness in her.' Merlin and V. 127
Raked And r in golden barley. Will Water. 128
Rake-ruin'd r-r bodies and souls go down in a common
wreck. The Dawn 13
Raking R in that millennial touchwood-dust Aylmer's Field 514
Ralph And that was old Sir R's at Ascalon : Princess, Pro. 26
there was R himself, A broken statue propt „ 98
I i-ead Of Old Sir R a page or two „ 121
or R Who shines so in the corner; „ 144
For which the good Sir R had burnt them all — „ 236
' Sir R has got your coloius : „ iv 594
Disrobed the glimmering statue of Sir R „ Con. 117
R would fight in Edith's sight. For R was Edith's lover, The Tourney 1
R went down like a fire to the fight „ 3
' Gallant Sir R,' said the king. ,. 6
' Take her Sir R,' said the king. „ 18
Ram (sheep) rs and geese Troop'd round a Paynim
harper Last Tournament 321
Ram (battering-ram) shuddering War-thunder of iron r's ; Tiresias 100
Ramble O me, my pleasant r's by the lake, (repeat) Edwin Morris 1, 13
Rambling And oft in r's on the wold. Miller's D. 105
Ramp A Uon r's at the top, Maud I xiv 7
' jR ye lance-splintering lions, Gareth and L. 1305
Yea', r and roar at leaving of your lord ! — „ 1307
Uoiis, crown'd with gold, R in the field, Lancelot and E. 664
Rampaged An' they r about wi' their grooms. Village Wife 36
Rampant A r heresy, such as if it spread Princess iv 411
Rampart ranged r's biight From level meadow-bases Palace of Art 6
few, but more than wall And r, Tiresias 126
Rampart-lines designs Of his labour'd r-l. Ode on Well. 105
Ran (See also Roon'd, Rmm'd) marble stairs R up with
golden balustrade, Arabian Nights 118
words did gather thunder as they r. The Poet 49
With an inner voice the river r. Dying Swan 5
Young Nature thro' five cycles r, Tioo Voices 17
r Their course, till thou wert also man : „ 326
in many a wild festoon R riot, QLnonc 101
round the cool green courts there r a row Of cloistci-s, Palace of Art 25
I r by him without speaking, May Queen 18
And r to tell her neighbours ; The Goose 14
Ran (continued) R Gaffer, stumbled Gammer. The Goose 34
Then quickly rose Sir Bedivere, and r, M. d' Arthur 133
I boated over, r My craft aground, Edwin Morris 108
sting of shrewdest pain R shrivelling thro' me, St. S. Stylites 199
' Then r she, gamesome as the colt, Talking Oak 121
r itself in golden sands. Locksley Hall 32
And feet that )•, and doors that clapt, Day-Dm., Revival 3
R forward to his rhyming, Amphion 30
Far r the naked moon across The Voyage 29
In curves the yellowing river r, Sir L. and Q. G. 15
R into its giddiest whirl of sound. Vision of Sin 29
A narrow cave r in beneath the cliff : Enoch Arden 23
And merrily ;• the years, seven happy years, „ 81
they r To greet his hearty welcome heartily ; „ 349
and r Ev'n to the limit of the land, „ 577
where the rivulets of sweet water r ; „ 642
and all round it r a walk Of shingle, „ 736
' Run, Katie! ' Katie never r : The Brook 87
And r thro' all the coltish chronicle, „ 159
when they r To loose him at the stables, Aylmer's Field 125
r By sallowy rims, arose the labourers' homes, „ 146
Wife-hunting, as the rumour r, „ 212
thro' the bright lawns to his brother's r, „ 341
he r Beside the river-bank : ,, 450
R a Malayan amuck against the times, „ 463
R in and out the long sea-framing caves. Sea Dreams 33
ever as their shrieks R highest up the gamut, „ 233
and r To greet him with a kiss, Imcretius 6
r in. Beat breast, tore hair, cried out „ 276
A petty railway ?• : a fire-balloon Rose gem-like Princess, Pro. 74
For so, my mother said, the story r. „ ill
And some inscription r along the front, „ 212
R down the Persian, Grecian, Roman lines „ ii 130
A double hill r up its furrowy forks „ Hi 174
a murmur r Thro' all the camp and inward raced „ v 110
on this side the palace r the field „ 361
My father heard and r In on the lists, „ vi 26
languor and self-pity r Mine down my face, „ vii 139
R the land with Roman slaughter, Boddicea 84
crying, ' How changed from where it r In Mem. xxiii 9
We talk'd : the stream beneath us r, „ Ixxxix 43
his high sun flame, and his river billowing r, Maud I iv 32
And never yet so warmly r my blood ,, xviii 3
her brother r in his rage to the gate, „ // i 12
months r on and rumour of battle grew, „ /// vi 29
but the scholar r Before the master. Com. of Arthur 154
R Uke a colt, and leapt at all he saw : „ 322
out I r And flung myself down on a bank of heath, „ 342
There r a treble range of stony shields, — Gareth and L. 407
children in their cloth of gold R to her, Marr. of Geraint 669
A walk of roses r from door to door ; Balin and Balan 242
Shot from behind him, r along the ground. „ 323
r the counter path, and found His charger, „ 417
sister pearls R down the silken thread Merlin and V. 455
R to the Castle of Astolat, Lancelot and E. 167
So r the tale like fire about the court, „ 734
For when the blood r lustier in him again, „ 881
all three in hurry and fear R to her, „ 1025
Uke a serpent, r a scroll Of letters Holy Grail 170
A thousand piers r into the gi-eat Sea. „ 503
And with exceeding swiftness r the boat, „ 514
Up r a score of damsels to the tower ; Pelleas and E. 368
And down they r. Her damsels, „ 375
Pelleas, leaping up, R thro' the doors „ 539
With trumpet-blowings r on all the ways From
Camelot ' Last Tournament 52
Then r across her memory the strange rhyme „ 131
straddUng on the butts While the wine r : Guinevere 269
A murmuring whisper thro' the nunnery r, ,, 410
Then quickly rose Sir Bedivere, and r, ' Pass, of Arthur 301
As mountain streams Our bloods r free: Lover's Tale i 327
R amber toward the west, and nigh the sea „ 432
I r down The steepy sea-bank, „ H 73
upblown billow r Shoreward beneath red clouds, „ 178
r over The rippling levels of the lake, „ m 3
Ran
566
Rank
Ran {cantinued) Where nymph and god r ever round in
gold — Lover's Tale iv 197
and so The little Revenge r on l^he Revenge 33
Kevenge r on thro' the long sea-lane between. „ 36
' are you ill ? ' (so r The letter) Sisters (E. and E.) 185
r Surging and swaying aU round us, Def. of Lucknow 37
r uito the hearts of my crew, V. of Maeldune 33
fig r up from the beach and rioted over the land, „ 58
By all my ways where'er they r, Ancient Sage 157
my life in golden sequence r, Lochsley H., Sixty 47
sound r Thxo' palace and cottage door, Dead Prophet 37
red mark r All round one finger pointed straight. The Ring 452
dead cords that r Dark thro' the mist. Death of (Enone 10
Slipt, and r on, and flung himself between St. Telemachus 61
In that vast Oval r a shudder of shame. „ 73
Rancorous A wounded thing with a r crj', Maud / a; 34
Rancour hate the r of their castes and creeds, Akbar's Dream 65
Random (adj.) (See also Seeming-random) But we must
hood your r eyes, Rosalind 37
A r arrow from the brain. Two Voices 345
A r string Your finer female sense offends. Day -Dm., L' Envoi 1
As dash'd about the drunken leaves The r sunshine
lighten'd! Amphion 56
To make me write my r rhymes, Will Water. 13
He flash'd his r speeches, „ 198
Whistling a r bar of Bonny Doon, The BrooJc 82
Balmier and nobler from her bath of storm, At r ravage ? Lucretius 176
As if to close with CyrU's r wish : Princess Hi 101
I give you all The r scheme as wildly as it rose : „ Con. 2
For him nor moves the loud world's r mock. Will 4
And answering now my r stroke In Mem. xxxix 2
Let r influences glance, „ xlix 2
With all his rout of r followers, Geraint and E. 382
but had ridd'n a r roimd To seek him, Lancelot and E. 630
Or lulling r squabbles when they rise. Holy Grail 557
deed Of prowess done redress'd a r wrong. Guinevere 459
Along the years of haste and r youth Unshatter'd : De Prof. Two G. 21
Nor lend an ear to r cries. Politics 7
Random (s) as he lay At r looking over the brown earth Pelleas and E. 32
Random-blown sank Down on a drift of foliage r-b ; Last Tournament 389
Rang The bridle bells r merrily L. of Shalott Hi 13
The wild wind r from park and plain. The Goose 45
based His feet on juts of slippery crag that r M. d' Arthur 189
So these were wed, and merrily r the bells,(repeat) Enoch Arden 80, 511
shrill'd and r, Till this was ended, ,. 175
Merrily r the bells and they were wed ,, 512
That aU the houses in the haven r. ., 911
a page or two that r With tilt and tourney ; Princess, Pro. 121
with this our banquets r ; „ i 132
for still my voice R false : „ iv 121
With Ida, Ida, Ida, r the woods ; „ 433
R ruin, answer'd full of grief and scorn. „ vi 333
and r Beyond the bourn of sunset ; ., Con. 99
And the ringers r with a will. Grandmother 58
And roimd us all the thicket r In Mem. xxiii 23
Then echo-like our voices r ; „ xxx 13
The hall with harp and carol r. „ ciii 9
there r on a sudden a passionate cry, Maud II i 33
r Clear thro' the open ca.sement of the hall, Marr. of Geraint 327
things that r Against the pavement, Geraint and E. 594
R by the white mouth of the violent Glem ; Lancelot and E. 288
Then r the shout his lady loved : Pelleas and E. 171
Down r the grate of iron thro' the groove, „ 207
old echoes hidden in the wall R out ,. 367
Till all the raft«rs r with woman-yells. Last Tournament 476
based His feet on juts of slippery crag that r Pass, of Arthur 357
There r her voice, when the full city To the Queen ii 26
r into the heart and the brain, V. of Maeldune 110
So r the clear voice of ^Eakides ; Achilles over the T. 21
a voice r out in the thunders of Ocean and Heaven The Wreck 88
' Forward ' r the voices then, Locksley H., Sixty 77
ciy that r thro' Hades, Earth, and Heaven ! Demeter and P. 33
Weird whispers, belLs that r without a hand, The Ring 411
r out all down thro' the dell, Bandit's Death 36
was a Scripture that r thro' his head, The Dreamer 2
Rang (continued) R the stroke, and sprang the blood. The Tourney 9
Range (s) (See also Mountain-range) storm Of
running fires and fluid r Supp. Confessions 147
And r of evil between death and birth, // / were loved 3
Below the r of stepping-stones, Miller's D. 54
R's of glimmering vaults with iron grates, D. of F. Women 35
a lyre of widest r Struck by all passion, „ 165
the r of lawn and park : The Blackbird 6
over many a r Of waning Ume the gray cathedral
towers. Gardener's D. 217
Large r of prospect had the mother sow. Walk, to the Mail 93
On a r of lower feehngs Locksley Hall 44
Soft lustre bathes the r of urns Day -Dm., Sleep. P. 9
o'er them many a flowing r Of vapour „ Depart. 21
Somewhere beneath his own low r of roofs, Aylmer's Field 47
A patient r of pupils ; Princess ii 104
the day fled on thro' all Its r of duties Hi 177
Rhymes and rhjrmes in the r of the times ! Spiteful Letter 9
Our voices took a higher r; In Mem. xxx 21
O, therefore from thy sightless r „ xciii !>
There ran a treble r of stony shields, — Gareth and L. 407
that gave upon a r Of level pavement „ 666
down that r of roses the great Queen Came Balin and Balan 244
Merlin, who knew the r of all their arts. Merlin and V. 167
impute themselves. Wanting the mental r ; „ 827
A purple r of mountain-cones. Lover's Tale i 407
past Over the r and the change of the world The Wreck 70
past the r of Night and Shadow — Ancient Sage 283
after his brief r of blameless days, D. of the Duke of C. 9
Range (verb) So let the wind r ; Nothing will Die 32
So let the warm winds r. All Things will Die 42
Thro' light and shadow thou dose r, Madeline 4
' Not less the bee would r her cells, Two Voices 70
droves of swine That r on yonder plain. Palace of Art 200
Forward, forward let us r, Locksley Hall 181
That r above the region of the wind, Princess, Con. 112
' My love shall now no further r ; In Mem. Ixxxi 2
That r above our mortal state, „ Ixxxv 22
To r the woods, to roam the park, „ Con. 96
it pleased the King to r me close After Sir Galahad) ; Holy Grail 307
To course and r thro' all the world. Sir J. Oldcastle 120
Is it well that while we r with Science, Locksley H., Sixty 217
The fairy fancies r. Early Spring 39
Ranged (adj.) r ramparts bright From level meadow-bases Palace of Art 6
Than all the r reasons of the world. Pelleas and E. 156
Ranged (verb) the solemn palms were r Above, Arabian Nights 70
presence of the Gods R in the halls of Peleus ; Qinone 81
I r too high : what draws me down Will Water. 153
As down the shore he r, Enoch Arden 588
gain'd The terrace r along the Northern front. Princess Hi 118
For now her Httle ones have r ; In Mem. xxi 26
tall knights, that r about the throne, Gareth and L. 328
R with the Table Round that held the lists, Lancelot and E. 467
And a hxmdred r on the rock V. of Maeldune 101
Small pity for those that have r Despair 38
R like a storm or stood like a rock Heavy Brigade 56
He fain had r her thro' and thro', To Marq. of Dufferin 23
your eyes Have many a time r over when a babe. The Ring 151
so high they r about the globe ? St. Telemachus 2
Ranging My fancy, r thro' and thro', Day-Dm., L'Envoi 34
some low fever r round to spy The weakness Aylmer's Field 5&.)
That sittest r golden hair ; In Mem. vi 2(i
Surprise thee r with thy peers. „ xliv 12
We r down this lower track, „ xlvi 1
R and ringing thro' the minds of men. Com. of Arthur 416
Rank (adj.) long, r, dark wood-walks drench'd in
dew, D. of F. Women 75
Rank (line) When the r's are roll'd in vapour, Locksley Hall 104
The linden broke her r's Amphion 33
And clad in iron burst the r's of war. Princess iv 50 1
Should see thy passengers in r In Mem. xiv 6
glided winding under r's Of iris, „ ciii 23
The front r made a sudden halt ; Lover's Tale Hi 29
Rank (social station) To all duties of her r: L. of Burleigh 72
Whatever eldest-born of r or wealth Might lie Aylmer's Field 484
Rank
567
Raw
Rank (social station) (continued) heart is set On one whose r
exceeds her own. In Mem. Ix 4
lip or down Along the scale of r'5, „ cxi 2
likewise for the h^h r she had borne, Guinevere 695
Rank (verb) r you nobly, mingled up with me. Princess ii 46
She might not r with those detestable „ v 457
)• with the best, Garrick and statelier Kemble, To W. C. Macready 6
Rank'd made me dream I r with him. In Mem. xlii 4
Rankled R in him and ruffled all his heart, Guinevere 49
Ransack'd See Often-ransack'd
Ransom 'd (adj.) Thy r reason change repUes In Mem. Ixi 2
Ransomd (verb) richer in His eyes Who r us, Guinevere 685
Raphael I am not R, Titan — no Romney's R. 46
Rapid (adj.) Whose free delight, from any height of r flight, Rosalind 3
Her r laughters wild and shrill, Kate 3
Cla-sh the darts and on the buckler beat with r unanimous
hand, Boadicea 79
gyres R and vast, of hissing spray wind-driven Lover's Tale ii 198
A long loud clash of r marriage- bells. „ Hi 23
Rapid (s) as the r of life Shoots to the fall — A Dedication 3
then a brook, With one sharp r, Holy Grail 381
Rapine For nature is one with r, Maud 7 w 22
the wing Of that foul bird of r Merlin and V. 728
and the ways Were fiU'd with r, Guinevere 458
Rapt So tranced, so r in ecstasies, Elednore 78
R after heaven's starry flight. Two Voices 68
gnuited ' Good ! ' but we Sat r : M. d' Arthur, Ep. 5
So r, we near'd the house ; Gardener's D. 142
seedsman, r Upon the teeming harvest, Golden Year 70
And, r thro' many a rosy change, Day-Dm., Depart. 23
I all r in this, ' Come out,' he said, Princess, Pro. 50
peal'd the nightingale, R in her song, ,. i 221
They stood, so r, we gazing, came a voice, „ ii 318
Intent on her, who r in glorious dreams, „ 442
She r upon her subject, ho on her : ,. Hi 304
R to the horrible fall : „ iv 180
Came in long breezes r from inmost south „ 431
Ida spoke not, r upon the child. .. vi 220
we sat But spoke not, r in nameless reverie, Con. 108
' R from the fickle and the frail In Mem. xxx 25
r below Thro' all the dewy-tassell'd wood, ,. Ixxxvi 5
Who, but hung to hear The r oration flowing free ,. Ixxxvii 32
Tho' r in matters dark and deep „ xcvii 19
So r I was, they could not win An answer ,, ciii 49
R in the fear and in the wonder of it ; Marr. of Geraint 529
R in this fancy of his Table Round, Lancelot and E. 129
r By all the sweet and sudden passion of youth .. 281
ii on his face as it if were a God's. .. 356
R in sweet talk or lively, Guinevere 386
Like odour r into the winged wind Lover's Tale i 801
car Of dark Aidoneus rising r thee hence. Demeter and P. 39
Raptured Large dowries doth the r eye Ode to Memory 72
Ewe wintertide shall star The black earth with
brilliance r. „ 20
wreaths of floating dark upcurl'd, R sunrise flow'd. The Poet 36
R broidry of the purple clover. A Dirge 38
0 r pale Margaret, (repeat) Margaret 2, 55
1 had hope, by something r To prove myself a poet : Will Water. 165
" - - - ... . Princess ii 180
The Daisy 53
Hendecasyllabics 19
Lover's Tale i 4
ii 162
iv 203
On Jub. Q. Victoria 5
To J. S. 25
Lancelot and E. 162
Poets and Critics 16
Aylmer's Field 230
Sea Dreams 167
The Captain 10
The Islet 10
Princess iv 204
Lancelot and E. 239
To Marq. of Diifferin 2
Should bear a double growth of those r souls,
stem and sad (so r the smiles Of sunlight)
As some r little rose, a piece of inmost
half-way down r sads. White as white clouds,
to reassume The semblance of those r realities
r or fair Was brought before the guest :
R in Fable or History,
Barer Your loss is r ; for this star
Chose the green path that show'd the r foot,
And the Critic's r still.
Rascal Tiunbled the tawny r at his feet,
Read r in the motions of his back.
Rash Stern he was and r ;
With a crew that is neither rude nor r,
the hxmter rued His r intrusion, manUke,
R were my judgment then.
At times her steps are swift and r ;
Rash (continued) Not swift or r, when late she lent
The sceptres To Marq. of Dufferin 5
Rashness if I should do This r, Two Voices 392
Rason (reason) there's r in aU things, yer Honour, Tomorrow 6
Rat tapt at doors. And rummaged like a r : Walk, to the Mail 38
And curse me the British vermin, the r ; Maud II v 58
Ah little r that borest in the dyke Merlin and V. 112
Lancelot will be gracious to the r, „ 120
' Black nest of r's' he groan'd, Pelleas and E. 555
Ghoast moastUns was nobbut a r or a mouse. Owd Rod 38
Rate (See also Raate, Third-rate) Whom all men r as
kind and hospitable : Princess i 71
I r your chance Almost at naked nothing.' „ 160
Till all men grew to r us at our worth, .. iv 145
we did not r him then This red-hot iron „ v 208
Whom all men r the king of courtesy. Balin and Balan 257
Rated (See also Raated) must have r her Beyond all
tolerance Aylmer's Field 380
such a one As all day long hath r at her child, Gareth and L. 1285
Rathe (early) The men of r and riper years : In Mem. ex 2
Till r she rose, half-cheated m the thought Lancelot and E. 340
Ratify every voice she talk'd with r it. Princess v 133
Rating (See also Raatin) like her none the less for r at her ! „ 461
Rattl^ Siver the mou'ds r down upo' poor owd Squire Village Wife 95
Ravage from her bath of storm. At random r ? Lucretius 176
noise of r wrought by beast and man, Gareth and L. 437
Ravaged left the r woodland yet once more To peace ; Merlin and V. 963
Rave Let t^iem r. (repeat) " A Dirge 4, 7, 11, 14, 18, 21,
25, 28, 32, 35, 39, 42, 49
But let them r. A Dirge 46
' He wiU not hear the north-wind r. Two Voices 259
did seem to mourn eind r On alien shores ; Lotos-Eaters 32
For blasts would rise and r and cease, The Voyage 85
' Drink, and let the parties r : Vision of Sin 123
My father r's of death and vireck. Sailor Boy 19
I heard the voice R over the rocky bar. Voice and the P. 6
I roar and r for I faU. „ 12
And r at the lie and the Uar, ah God, as he used to r. Maud I i60
about the shuddering wreck the death- white sea should r. The Flight 47
Raved (See also Raaved) nor r And thus foam'd over
at a rival name : Balin and Balan 566
Raven (adj.) Let darkness keep her r gloss : In Mem. i 10
knew not that which pleased it most. The r ringlet or the
gold ; The Ring 166
Raven (s) Bark an answer, Britain's r ! Boadicea 13
For a r ever croaks, at my side, Maud I vi 57
A blot in heaven, the R, "flying high, Croak'd, Guinevere 133
God 'ill pardon the hell-black r Rizpah 39
Left for the homy-nibb'd r to rend it, Batt. of Brunanburh 108
at the croak of a, R who crost it. Merlin and the G. 24
Ravening Again their r eagle rose In anger. Ode on Well. 119
Ravine (mountain-gorge) brook f alUng thro' the clov'n r In cataract Qinone 8
wilt thou snare ium in the white r. Princess vii 205
Or rosy blossom in hot r, The Daisy 32
Beyond a bridge that spann'd a dry r : Marr. of Geraint 246
Across the bridge that spann'd the dry r. „ 294
Every grim r a garden, Loeksley H., Sixty 168
from out the long r below She heard a wailing cry. Death of (Enone 19
in front of that r Which drowsed in gloom, „ 75
Ravine (rapine) red in tooth and claw With r, In Mem. Ivi 16
Raving (See also Raavin') The wind is r in turret and tree. The Sisters 27
Now with dug spur and r at himself, Balin and Balan 310
R of dead men's dust and beating hearts. Lover's Tale iv 140
tears kill'd the flower, my r's hush'd The bird, Demeter and P. 108
Roaring London, r Paris, Loeksley H., Sixty 190
R poUtics, never at rest— Vastness 3
Raving-wild I was mad, I was r-w. Charity 27
Raw nor wed R Haste, half-sister to Delay. Love thou thy land 96
Should see the r mechanic's bloody thumbs Walk, to the Mail 15
That we should mimic this r fool the world, „ 106
one they knew — R from the nursery — Aylmer's Field 264
R from the prime, and crushing down his mate ; Princess ii 121
And drill the r world for the march of mind, Ode on Well. 168
shatter'd talbots, which had left the stones R, Holy Grail 720
' I have lighted on a fool, R, yet, so stale ! ' Pelleas and E. 114
Ray
568
Bead
Ray (Philip) See Philip, Philip Ray
Ray (s) lashes like to r's Of darkness,
Make a carcanet of r's.
Thro' lips and eyes in subtle r's.
neither hide the r From those, not blind,
Heaven flash'd a sudden jubilant /,
Flame-colour, vert and azure, in three r's,
gay with gold In streaks and r's,
where morning's earliest r Might strike it,
emerald center'd in a sun Of silver r's,
shower'd down R's of a mighty circle.
May send one r to thee !
Arabian Nights 136
Adeline 59
Rosalind 24
Love thou thy land 14
Ode on Well. 129
Co7n. of Arthur 275
Gareth and L. 911
Lancelot and E. 5
296
Lover's Tale i 418
Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 14
a r red as blood Glanced on the strangled face — Bandit's Death 31
Ray (verb) R round with flames her disk of seed, In Mem. ci 6
Ray'd His hair, a sun that r from off a brow Last Tournament 666
Ray-fringed R-f eyelids of the morn Roof Clear-headed friend 6
Raze and r The blessed tomb of Christ ; Columbus 98
Reach (s) {See also Eye-reach) Beside the river's wooded r. In Mem. Ixxi 13
not leamable, divine. Beyond my r. Balin and Balan 176
Reach (verb) And r the law within the law : Two Voices 141
example to mankind. Which few can r to. St. S. Stylites 189
r To each his perfect pint of stout, Will Water. 114
r its fatling innocent arms And lazy lingering fingers. Princess vi 138
Deeper than those weird doubts could r me, „ vii 51
Or r a hand thro' time to catch In Mem. i 7
And r the glow of southern skies, „ xii 10
When Science r'es forth her arms ,, xxi 18
R out dead hands to comfort me. „ Ixxx 16
Would r us out the shining hand, ,, Ixxxiv 43
Thy spirit up to mine can r ; „ Ixxxv 82
Or ev'n for intellect to r „ xcv 47
came the hands That r thro' nature, „ cxxiv 24
until we pass and r That other, Geraint and E. 6
Climb first and r me down thy hand. Sir J. Oldcastle 204
examples r a hand Far thro' aU years, Tiresias 126
Earth may r her earthly- worst, Locksley H., Sixty 233
In summer if I r my day — To Ulysses 9
but echo'd on to r Honorius, St. Telemachus 76
Reach'd music r them on the middle sea. Sea- Fairies 6
For ere she r upon the tide L. of Shalott iv 33
We r a meadow slanting to the North ; Gardener's D. 108
till I r The wicket-gate, „ 212
and set out, and r the farm. Dora 129
we r The griffin-guarded gates, Audley Court 14
till we r The Umit of the hiUs ; „ 82
until she r The gateway : Godiva 50
he r the home Where Annie lived and loved him, Enoch Arden 684
we r A mountain, like a wall of burs and thorns ; Sea Dreams 118
when the note Had / a thunderous fulness, „ 214
and with long arms and hands R out. Princess i 29
we dropt. And flying r the frontier : „ 109
I would have r you, had you been Sphered „ iv 437
he r White hands of farewell to my sire, „ y 232
ere we r the highest summit I pluck'd a daisy, The Daisy 87
And r the ship and caught the rope. Sailor Boy 3
Mayst seem to have r a purer air. In Mem. xxxiii 2
He r the glory of a hand, „ Ixix 17
When Arthur r a field-of -battle Com. of Arthur 96
But ever when he r a hand to climb, Gareth and L. 52
went her way across the bridge. And r the town, Marr. of Geraint 384
Thereafter, when I r this ruin'd hall, „ 785
r a hand, and on his foot She set her own Geraint and E. 759
when they r the camp the King himself „ 878
Then they r a glade, Balin and Balan 460
when they r the lists By Camelot in the meadow, Lancelot and E. 428
But when ye r The city, Holy Grail 707
O, when we r The city, „ 715
at the last Ira door, A light was in the crannies, „ 837
And when they r Caerleon, ere they past to lodging, Pelleas and E. 124
r The grassy platform on some hill, Lover's Tale i 340
One hand she r to those that came behind, „ Hi 48
Bflai^hing r thro' the night Her other. Sea Dreams 287
One r forward drew My burthen from mine arms ; Princess iv 191
Read {See also ReSd) giving light To r those laws ; Isabel 19
And round the prow they r her name, L. of Shalott iv 44
Read {continued) That r his spirit blindly wise. Two Voices 287
A love-song I had somewhere r, Miller's D. 65
Oh ! teach the orphan-boy to r, L. C. V. de Vere 69
I R, before my eyehds dropt their shade, D. of F. Women 1
R, mouthing out his hollow oes and aes. The Epic 50
it was the tone with which he r — M. d' Arthur, Ep. 5
laugh'd, as one that r my thought. Gardener's D. 106
Who r me rhymes elaborately good, Edwin Morris 20
I r, and fled by night, and flying tum'd : „ 134
They flapp'd my light out as I r : St. S. Stylites 175
But tell me, did she r the name Talking Oak 153
They r Botanic Treatises, Amphion 11
They r in arbours dipt and cut, „ 85
' Your riddle is hard to r.' Lady Clare 76
I r and felt that I was there : To E. L. 8
And in their eyes and faces r his doom ; Enoch Arden 73
In those two deaths he r God's warning ' wait.' „ 571
and r Writhing a letter from his child, Aylmer's Field 516
r ; and tore. As if the hving passion „ 534
R rascal in the motions of his back. Sea Dreams 167
I r Of old Sir Ralph a page or two Princess, Pro. 120
We seven stay'd at Christmas up to r ; „ 178
And there we took one tutor as to »• : „ 179
an officer Rose up, and r the statutes, „ ii 69
r My sickness down to happy dreams ? „ 252
In this hand held a volume as to r, „ 455
' can he not r — no books ? „ Hi 214
r and earn our prize, A golden brooch : „ 300
Regarding, while she r, „ iv 382
on to me, as who should say ' R,' and I r — two letters — „ 397
So far I r ; And then stood up and spoke „ 417
I kiss'd it and Ir. „ v 373
the maidens came, they talk'd. They sang, they r : „ vii 23
to herself, all in low tones, she r. „ 175
once more, as low, she r : „ 191
R my little fable : He that runs may r. The Flower 17
Which he may r that binds the sheaf. In Mem. xxxvi 13
as he lay and r The Tuscan poets on the lawn : ., Ixxxix 23
I r Of that glad year which once had been, ,, xcv 21
He r's the secret of the star, „ xcvii 22
Now sign your names, which shall be r, „ Con. 57
echo of something R with a boy's delight, Maud I vii 10
Sat with her, r to her, night and day, „ xix 75
(If I r her sweet will right) ., xxilQ
Not a bell was rung, not a prayer was r ; ., II v2i
Gareth lookt and r — In letters Gareth and L. 1201
R but one book, and ever reading grew • Merlin and V. 622
To dig, pick, open, find and r the charm : „ 660
Thou r the book, (repeat) ,. 667, 676
And none can r the text, not even I ; And none can
r the comment but myself ; ,, 681
Stript off the case, and r the naked shield, Lancelot and E. 16
He thinking that he r her meaning there, „ 86
Lifted her eyes, and r his lineaments. ,. 244
Some r the King's face, some the Queen's, „ 727
Stoopt, took, brake seal, and r it ; „ 1271
Thus he r ; And ever in the reading, „ 1283
looking often from his face who r To hers „ 1285
Mute of this miracle, so far as I have r. Holy Grail 66
ran a scroll Of letters in a tongue no man could r. ,. 171
which oftentime I r, Who r but on my breviary with ease, „ 544
There is a custom in the Orient, friends — I r of it in
Persia-
tlais was the letter I r —
And r me a Bible verse of the Lord's good will
I r no more the prisoner's mute wail
Who r's of begging saints in Scripture ? '
in your raised brows I r Some wonder
Who r's your golden Eastern lay.
We had r their know-nothing books
banquet relish ? let me r.
R the wide world's annals, you,
that only those who cannot r can rule.
Because you heard the lines I r
A storm-worn signpost not to be r,
Lover's Tale iv 231
First Quarrel 51
Rizpah 61
Sir J. Oldcastle 4
151
Columbus 1
To E. Fitzgerald 32
Despair 55
Ancient Sage 18
Locksley H., Sixty 104
132
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 17
Dead Prophet 17
f
Bead
569
Bear'd
Bead (continued) Take, r ! and be the faults your Poet
makes To Mary Boyle 61
Who r's thy gradual process, Holy Spring. Prog, of Spring 106
And r a Grecian tale re- told, To Master of B. 5
Bead a r's wonn sannin a weeak, N. Farmer, 0. S. 28
'E r's of a sewer an' sartan 'oap Village Wife 92
like fur to hev soom soort of a sarvice r. Owd Rod 12
Beader make them wealthier in his r's' eyes ; Poet's and their B. 4
Beadier And r, if the King would hear, Columbus 238
Beadin' Fur atween 'is r an' writin' Village Wife 40
Beading (See also Beadin') R her perfect features in
the gloom. Gardener's D. 175
The modem Muses r. AmphionlQ
Yet bitterer from his r's : Aylmers Field 553
Read but one book, and ever r grew Merlin and V. 622
And ever in the r, lords and dames Lancelot and E. 1284
heir That scarce can wait the r of the will Lover's Tale i 676
Beady Make thine heart r with thine eyes : Gardener's D. 273
I waited long ; My brows are r. St. S. Stylites 206
The lists were r. Empanoplied Princess v 483
And r, thou, to die with him. In Mem. cxxi 2
ever r to slander and steal ; Matid I iv 19
R in heart and r in hand, „ v 9
R to burst in a colour'd flame ; „ vi 19
I for three days seen, r to fall. Merlin and V. 296
And while she made her r for her ride, Lancelot and E. 779
and a barge Be r on the river, „ 1123
R to spring, waiting a chance : Guinevere 12
Stands in a wind, r to break and fly, „ 365
There were our horses r at the doors — Lover's Tale iv 385
R ! take aim at their leaders — Def. of Lucknow 42
R, be r against the storm ! (repeat) Riflemen form / 6, 20
^, be r to meet the storm ! (repeat) „ 13, 27
Form, be / to do or die ! „ 22
Beal Keeps r sorrow far away. Margaret 44
' Thou hast not gain'd a r height. Two Voices 91
At half thy r worth ? Will Water. 204
men will say We did not know the r light. Princess iv 357
They hated banter, wish'd for somethi^ r, „ Con. 18
some there be that hold The King a shadow, and
the city r :
Ideal manhood closed in r man,
Thy frailty counts most r,
Bealist Betwixt the mockers and the r's :
novelist, r, rhymester, play your part,
Beality Thy pain is a r.'
The semblance of those rare realities
Immeasurable R ! Infinite Personality !
Bealm A r of pleasance, many a mound,
Behind Were r's of upland, prodigal in oil
shall hold a fretful r in awe,
Were no false passport to that easy r.
Guarding r's and kings from shame ;
She enters other r's of love ;
From the r's of light and song,
over aU whose r's to their last isle.
and made a r, and re^'d. (repeat)
Lords and Barons of his r Flash'd forth
Gareth and L. 266
To the Queen ii 38
Ancient Sage 51
Princess, Con. 24
Locksley H., Sixty 139
Two Voices 387
Lover's Tale ii 162
De Prof., Human C. 3
Arabian Nights 101
Palace of Art 79
Locksley Hall 129
Aylmer's Field 183
Ode on Well. 68
Iv Mem. xl 12
Maud II iv 82
Bed. of Idylls 12
Com. of Arthur 19, 519
65
make myself in my own r Victor and lord. „ 89
lest the r should go to wrack. „ 208
So that the r has gone to wrack : „ 227
Shall Rome or Heathen rule in Arthur's r ? „ 485
swept the dust of ruin'd Rome From off the
threshold of the r, Gareth and L. 136
' We sit King, to help the wrong'd Thro' all our r. „ 372
wastest moorland of our r shall be Safe, „ 603
this Order lives to crush All wrongers of the R. „ 626
cleanse this common sewer of all his r, Marr. of Geraint 39
For in that r of lawless turbulence, Geraint and E. 521
cleanse this common sewer of all my r, „ 895
Should make an onslaught single on a »• „ 917
his r restored But render'd tributary, Balin and Balan 2
seeing that thy r Hath prosper'd in the name of Christ, „ 98
Roving the trackless r's of Lyonnesse, Lancelot and E. 35
snare her royal fancy with a boon Worth half her r, „ 72
Bealm (continued) Even to the half my r beyond the seas, Lancelot and E. 958
to give at last The price of half a r, „ 1164
In mine own r beyond the narrow seas, „ 1323
shrine which then in all the r Was richest, „ 1330
wikL bees That made such honey in his r. Holy Grail 215
for ye know the cries of all my r „ 315
past thro' Pagan r's, and made them mine, ,, 478
Rode to the lonest tract of all the r, „ 661
wholesome r is purged of otherwhere. Last Tournament 96
Or whence the fear lest this my r, „ 122
And marriage with a princess of that r, „ 176
The King prevaihng made his r : — „ 651
so the r was made ; but then their vows — „ 681
Sir Modred had usurp'd the r, Guinevere 154
King's grief For his own self, and his own Queen, and r, „ 197
Grieve with the common grief of all the r? ' „ 217
what has fall'n upon the r? ' „ 275
kings who drew The knighthood-errant of this r and all
The r's together under me, „ 461
all my r Reels back into the beast. Pass of Arthur 25
And wastes the narrow r whereon we move, „ 140
From sunset and simrise of all thy r. To the Queen ii 13
There in my r and even on my throne. Lover's Tale i 593
Like sounds without the twilight r of dreams, „ ii 120
and all our breadth of r, Bed. Poem Prin. Alice 8
mightiest, wealthiest r on earth, Columbus 205
Nay — tho' that r were in the wrong Epilogue 34
kings and r's that pass to rise no more ; To Virgil 28
To those dark millions of her r ! Hands all Round 18
recks not to ruin a r in her name. Vastness 10
all her r Of sound and smoke. To Mary Boyle 65
in the heart of this most ancient r Prog, of Spring 102
Bealm-ruining Rivals of r-r party, Locksley H., Sixty 120
Beap Sow the seed, and r the harvest Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 121
To-morrow yet would r to-day. Love thou thy land 93
God r's a harvest in me. St. S. Stylites 148
God r's a harvest in thee. „ 149
r's not harvest of his youthful joys, Locksley Hall 139
r The flower and quintessence of change. Bay-Bm., L' Envoi 23
perhaps might r the applause of Great, Princess Hi 262
r's A truth from one that loves and knows ? In Mem. xlii 11
And r's the labour of his hands, „ Ixiv 26
Might sow and r in peace, Epilogue 13
r with me, Earth-mother, in the harvest Bemeter and P. 147
I r No revenue from the field of unbelief. Akbar's Bream 66
Reap'd the reapers r And the sun fell, (repeat) Bora 78, 108
Beaper Only r's, reaping early L. of Shalott i 28
And by the moon the r weary, „ 33
one, the r's at their sultry toil. Palace of Art 77
the r's reap'd And the sun fell, (repeat) Bora 78, 108
Once more the r in the gleam of dawn Bemeter and P. 123
Homestead and harvest, R and gleaner, Merlin and the G. 58
Beaping Only reapers, r early L. of Shalott i 28
men tlie workers, ever r something new : Locksley Hall 117
Bear (s) Far-blazing from the r of Philip's house, Enoch Arden 727
I came upon The r of a procession. Lover's Tale ii 75
those who led the van, and tliose in r, „ Hi 24
Bear (verb) she shall r my dusky race. Locksley Hall 168
Her office there to r, to teach. In Mem. xl 13
Then gave it to his Queen to r : Last Tournament 22
Thou — when the nations r on high Freedom 27
Bear'd heart to scathe Flowers thou hadst r — Supp. Confessions 84
Freedom r in that augiist sunrise The Poet 37
Who took a wife, who r his race. Two Voices 328
ring To tempt the babe, who r his creasy arms, Enoch Arden 751
One r a font of stone And drew. Princess, Pro. 59
and your statues R, sung to, when, „ v 414
Prick'd by the Papal spur, we r. Third of Feb. 27
r him with her own ; And no man knew. Com. of Arthur 224
three pavilions r Above the bushes, gilden-peakt : Pelleas and E. 428
than when we had r thee on high Bef. of Lucknoio 3
a statue, r To some great citizen, Tiresias 82
And dying rose, and r her arms. The Ring 222
remembering the gay playmate r Among them, Beath of CEnone 59
sunset glared against a cross R on the tumbled ruins St. Telemachxis 6
Bear'd
570
Red
Rear'd (continued) stone by stone Ira sacred fane, Akbar's Dream 177
Reason (s) (See also Bason) Nor any train of r keep : Two Voices 50
' The end and the beginning vex His r : „ 299
' And men, whose r long was blind, „ 370
He utter'd rhyme and r, The Goose 6
God knows : he has a mint of r's : The Epic 33
We lack not rhymes and r's. Will Water. 62
' There is no r why we should not wed.' Enoch Arden 508
For save when shutting r's up in rhythm, Liicretius 223
prophesying change Beyond all r : Princess i 143
■ worthy r's why she should Bide by this issue ; „ v 325
With r's dra^vn from age and state, „ 357
Dark is the world to thee : thyself art the r why ; High. Pantheism 7
See thou, that countest r ripe In Mem. xxxiii 13
Thy ransom'd r change replies „ Ixi 2
art r why I seem to cast a careless eye On souls, „ cxii 6
The freezing r's colder part, „ cxxiv 14
And r in the chase : Com. of Arthur 168
Albeit I give no r but my wish, Marr. of Geraint 761
(No r given her) she could cast aside „ 807
Than all the ranged r's of the world. Pelleas and E. 156
A crueller r than a crazy ear, Lover's Tale iv 32
with goodly rhyme and r for it — Sisters (E. and E.) 92
And not without good r, my good son — „ 287
Slender r had He to be glad of The clash Batt. of Brunanburh 76
This worn-out R dying in her house Romney's R. 145
I can but lift the torch Of R Akbar's Dream 121
And let not R fail me, Doubt and Prayer 5
Must my day be dark by r, God and the Univ. 2
Reason (verb Their's not to r why, Li^ht Brigade 14
I am but a fool to r with a fool — Last Tournament 271
Reave like are we to r him of his crown Gareth and L. 419
Rebel (adj.) if the r subject seek to drag me from the
throne, By an Evolution. 15
Rebel (S) Fire from ten thousand at once of the r's Def. of Lucknow 22
hang'd, poor friends, as r's And bum'd alive Sir J. Oldcastle 47
loosed My captives, feed the r's of the crown, Columbus 131
Rebell'd till the maid R against it, Lancelot and E. 651
Rebellion thirty-nine — Call'd it r — Sir J. Oldcastle 47
Rebloom'd Gather'd the blossom that r, Aylmer's Field 142
Reboant the echoing dance Of r whirlwinds, Supp. Confessions 97
Rebuke eighty winters freeze with one r Ode on Well. 186
Rebuked I so r, reviled, Missaid thee ; Gareth and L. 1164
Who being still r, would answer still „ 1249
Recall Gods themselves cannot r their gifts.' Tithonus 49
R's, in change of light or gloom, In Mem. Ixxxv 74
Recall'd half a night's appliances, r Her fluttering life : Lover's Tale iv 93
but our Queen R me, Columbus 59
Receive And then one Heaven r us all. Supp. Confessions 32
but whoso did r of them. And taste, Lotos- Eaters 30
Make broad thy shoulders to r my weight, AI. d' Arthur 164
I love the truth ; Rit; Princess ii 214
God accept him, Christ r him. Ode on Well. 281
R, and yield me sanctuary, Guinevere 141
Make broad thy shoulders to r my weight, Pass, of Arthur 332
Thou didst r the growth of pines Lover's Tale i 11
Received I stood like one that had r a blow : Sea Dreams 161
R and gave him welcome there ; In Mem. Ixxxv 24
And many a costly cate, r the three. Gareth and L. 849
R at once and laid aside the gems Lancelot and E. 1202
in her white arms R, and after loved it tenderly, Last Tournament 24
was r, Shorn of its strength, Lover's Tale i 433
Is presently r in a sweet grave Of eglantines, „ 528
R unto himself a part of blame, „ 786
Reciting One walk'd r by herself. Princess ii 454
Reck And if ye slay him I r not : Pelleas and E. 269
r's not to ruin a realm in her name. Fastness 10
Reckless A r and irreverent knight was he, Holy Grail 856
Reckling there lay the r, one But one hour old ! Merlin and V. 709
Reckon I r's I 'annot sa mooch to larn. N. Farmer, O. S. 13
summim I r's 'ull 'a to wroite, „ 57
gross heart Would r worth the taking ? Merlin and V. 917
I r's tha'll light of a livin' Church-warden, etc. 47
Reckoning ' Thy r, friend ? ' and ere he learnt it, Geraint and E. 408
Reclined On silken cushions half r ; Elednore 126
Reclined (continued) In the hollow Lotos-land to live
and he r On the hills Lotos- Eaters, C. 8. 109
As by the lattice you r, Day-Dm., Pro. 5
Reclining Slowly, with pain, r on his arm, M. d' Arthur 168
Slowly, with pain, r on his arm. Pass, of Arthur 336
Reclothes Clothes and r the happy plains, Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 2
Recognise scarce can r the fields I know ; St. S. Stylites 40
Recollect We do but r the dreams that come Lucretius 35
Unruffling waters r-c the shape Of one Last Tournament 369
Reconunenced A little ceased, but r. Two Voices 318
Poor fellow, could he help it ? r. The Brook 158
I r ; ' Decide not ere you pause. Princess Hi 156
r, and let her tongue Rage like a fire Merlin and V. 801
Reconcile The Gods are hard to r : Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 81
Reconciled Nor did mine own, now r ; Priticess vii 88
To be friends for her sake, to be r ; Maud I xix 50
breathing a prayer To be friends, to be r ! „ 56
but I — to be r ? — No, Bandit's Death 16
Reconcilement difference, r, pledges given. Gardener's D. 257
Quick while I melt ; make r sure Princess vi 286
Record Whereof this world holds r. M. d' Arthur 16
What r, or what relic of my lord „ 98
shaping faithful r of the glance That graced Gardener's D. 177
Sponged and made blank of crimeful r St. S. Stylites 158
in division of the r's of the mind ? Locksley Hall 69
Were caught within the r of her wrongs, Princess v 143
Whatever r leap to light He never shall be shamed. Ode on Well. 190
might be left some r of the things M'e said. Third of Feb. 18
There lives no r of reply. In Mem. xxxi 6
What r ? not the sinless years That breathed „ Hi 11
Whereof this world holds r. Pass, of Arthur 184
What r, or what relic of my lord „ 266
Recorded each at other's ear What shall not be r — Geraint and E. 635
Recover'd See Now-recover'd
Recovering And while he lay r there, Enoch Arden 108
Recrost my feet r the deathf ul ridge Holy Grail 534
Rector Long since, a bygone R of the place, Aylmer's Field 11
Rectory And Averill Averill at the R Thrice over ; so
that R and Hall, Bound in an immemorial intimacy, „ 37
Recurring (See also Old-recurring, Still-recurring) R and
suggesting still ! Will 14
And be found of angel eyes In earth's r Paradise. Helen's Tower 12
Red (adj.) (See also Blood-red, Rose-red) The r
cheek paling. The strong limbs failing ; All Things will Die 31
Some r heath-flower in the dew, Rosalind 41
And the r cloaks of market girls, L. of Shalott ii 17
One seem'd all dark and r — a tract of sand, Palace of Art 65
Before the r cock crows from the farm upon
the hiU, May Queen, N. Y's. E. 23
charmed sunset linger'd low adown In the r West : Lotos-Eaters 20
The dim r mom had died, her journey done, D. of F. Women 61
at the root thro' lush green grasses bum'd The r anemone. „ 72
We left the dying ebb that faintly lipp'd The flat r
granite ; Audley Court 13
And grapes with bunches r as blood ; Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 44
Pale he tum'd and^. The Captain 62
r roofs about a narrow wharf In cluster ; Enoch Arden 3
When the r rose was redder than itself. And York's
white rose as r as Lancaster's, Aylmer's Field 50
0 there The r fruit of an old idolatry — „ 762
Fluctuated, as flowers in storm, some r, some pale. Princess iv 482
perforce He yielded, wroth and r, with fierce demur : „ v 358
They mark'd it with the r cross to the fall, „ vi 41
R grief and mother's hunger in her eye, „ 146
Or r with spirted purple of the vats, .. vii 202
A r sail, or a white ; and far beyond, „ Con. 47
The last r leaf is whirl'd away. In Mem. xv 3
Tho' Nature, r in tooth and claw With ravine, ., Ivi 15
The r fool-fury of the Seine Should pile her barricades „ cxxvii 7
here on the landward side, by a r rock, glimmers the
Hall ; Maud I iv 10
Has a broad-blown comeliness, r and white, „ xiii 9
Till the r man dance By his r cedar-tree. And the r
man's babe Leap, „ xvii 17
The r rose cries, ' She is near, she is near ; ' „ xxii 63
Red
571
Reef
Red (adj.) (continued) The day comes, a dull r ball \^'rapt in
drifts 3Iaud II iv 65
But the r life spilt for a private blow — „ ' ■« 93
r berries charm the bird, And thee, mine innocent, Gareth and L. 85
who shced a r life-bubbling way Thro' twenty folds ,. 509
Round as the r eye of an Eagle-owl, „ 799
Huge on a huge r horse, and all in maU Bumish'd to
bUnding, „ 1026
Where bread and baken meats and good r wine Of
Southland, „ 1190
than r and pale Across the face of Enid hearing her ; Marr. of Geraint 523
Which was the r cock shouting to the light, Geraint and E. 384
At this he tum'd all r and paced his hall, „ 668
longest lance his eyes had ever seen, Point-
painted r ; Balin and Balan 412
Reputed to be r with sinless blood, „ 557
Turn r or pale, would often when they met Sigh
fully, ^ Merlin and V. 181
from spur to plume R as the rising sun with heathen
blood, Lancelot and E. 308
■ A r sleeve Broider'd with pearls,' „ 372
And shot r fire and shadows thro' the cave, .. 414
who sat Robed in r samite, easily to be known, ,. 433
What of the knight with the r sleeve ? „ 621
up a slope of garden, all Of roses white and r, Pelleas and E. 422
in one, R after revel, droned her lurdane knights „ 430
R Knight Brake in upon me and drave them to
his tower ; Last Tournament 71
See, the hand Wherewith thou takest this, is r ! ' „ 193
till his Queen Graspt it so hard, that all her hand M'as r. „ 411
Then cried the Breton, ' Look, her hand is r ! „ 412
the R Knight heard, and all, „ 441
r dream Fled with a shout, and that low lodge return'd, 487
tide within R with free chase and heather-scented air, „ 691
' but the r fruit Grown on a magic oak-tree in mid-heaven, ,. 744
R ruin, and the breaking up of laws, Guinevere 426
blight Lives in the de^vy touch of pity had made The
r rose there a pale one — Lover's Tale i 696
One morning when the upblown billow ran Shoreward
beneath r clouds, „ ii 179
Married among the r berries, an' all as merry as
May — First Quarrel 40
Harsh r hair, big voice, big chest, big merciless
hands ! In the Child. Hosp. 4
for he look'd so coarse and so r, „ 7
R in thy birth, redder with household war. Sir J. Oldcastle 53
Redder to be, r rose of Lancaster — „ 55
And the r passion-flower to the cliffs, V. of Maeldune 39
And r with blood the Crescent reels from fight Montenegro 6
strike Thy youthful pulses into rest and quench The r
God's anger, Tiresias 158
wi' a niced r faace, an' es clean Es a shillin' Spinster's S's. 75
The r ' Blood-eagle ' of Uver and heart ; Dead Prophet 71
Fell — and flash'd into the R Sea, To Marq. of Dufferin 44
lighted from below By the r race of fiery Phlegethon ; Demeter and P. 28
Then I seed at 'is faace wur as r as the Yule-block Oicd Rod 56
A r mark ran All round one finger pointed straight. The Ring 452
I well remember that r night When thirty ricks.
All flaming, " To Mary Boyle 35
but close to me to-day As this r rose, Roses on the T. 7
his kisses were r with his crime, Bandit's Death 13
and a ray r as blood Glanced on the strangled face — „ 31
An' 'e tom'd as r as a stag-tuckey's wattles. Church-warden, etc. 31
flush'd as r As poppies when she crown'd it. The Tourney 16
Bed (s) {See also Bose-red) As I have seen the rosy r
flushing in the northern night. Locksley Hall 26
No pint of white or r Had ever half the power to turn Will Water. 82
Blues and r's They talk'd of : Aylmer's Field 251
praised the waning r, and told The vintage — „ 406
And bickers into r and emerald. Princess v 263
Who tremblest thro' thy darkhng r In Mem. xcix 5
And blossom in purple and r. Maud I xxii 74
Breaks from a coppice gemm'd with green and r, Marr. of Geraint 339
' Come to us, O come, come ' in the stormy r of a sky V. of Maeldune 98
Molly Magee, wid the r o' the rose an' the white o' the May, Tomorrow 31
Red (s) (continued) R of the Dawn ! (repeat) The Dawn 1, 6, 21
Is it turning a fainter r ? The Dawn 22
Redan Out yonder. Guard the R ! Def. of Lucknow 36
Redcap The r whistled ; and the nightingale Gardener's D. 95
Redcoat our own good r's sank from sight. Heavy Brigade 42
Red-cross A r-c knight for ever kneel'd L. of Shalott Hi 6
Redden cheek begins to r thro' the gloom, Tithonus 37
Sad as the last which r's over one Princess iv 46
and his anger r's in the heavens ; „ 386
He r's what he kisses : „ v 165
These leaves that r to the fall ; In Mem. xi 14
he r's, cannot speak. So bashful, he ! Balin and Balan 519
Redden'd r with no bandit's blood : Aylmer's Field 597
And this was what had r her cheek Maud I xix 65
R at once with sinful, Balin and Balan 558
Miriam r, Muriel clench'd The hand that wore it. The Ring 261
The ring of faces r by the flames Death of CEnone 92
r by that cloud of shame when I . . . Akbar's Dream 64
Reddening Sir Aybner r from the storm within, Aylmer's Field 322
And r in the furrows of his chin, Princess vi 228
heathen horde, R the sun with smoke and earth Co7n. of Arthur 37
She r, ' Insolent scuUion : I of thee ? Gareth and L. 976
He, r in extremity of delight, Geraint and E. 219
And where it dash'd the r meadow, Lucretius 49
Bantering bridesman, r priest. Forlorn 33
Redder When the red rose was r than itself, Aylmer's Field 50
The whole hill-side was r than a fox. Walk, to the Mail 3
Fair-hair'd and r than a windy mom ; Princess, Con. 91
Shame never made girl r than Gareth joy. Gareth and L. 536
R than any rose, a joy to me. Holy Grail 521
r with household war. Now reddest with the blood
of holy men, R to be, red rose of Lancaster — Sir J. Oldcastle 53
r than rosiest health or than utterest shame, V. of Maeldune 65
Reddest Now r with the blood of holy men, Sir J. Oldcastle 54
Redeem that From which I would r you : Princess iv 508
Redeem'd R it from the charge of nothingness — M. d' Arthur, Ep. 7
Red-faced But r-f war has rods of steel and fire ; Princess v 118
A r-f bride who knew herself so vile, Gareth and L. 110
Red-hot This r-h iron to be shaped with blows. Princess v 209
Screams of a babe in the r-h palms of a Moloch of
Tyre, The Dawn 2
Redolent brow of pearl Tressed with r ebony, Arabian Nights 138
Redound not without r Of use and glory to yourselves Princess ii 42
Red-plow'd domes the r-p hills With loving blue ; Early Spring 3
Red-pulsing R-p up thro' Ahoth and Alcor, Last Tournament 480
Red-rent arm R-r with hooks of bramble, Holy Grail 211
Redress ^^'hat hope of answer, or r ? In Mem. Ivi 27
Ring in r to all mankind. „ cvi 12
Redress'd prowess done r a random wrong. Guinevere 459
Redressing Whose glory was, r human wrong ; Ded. of Idylls 9
Than ride abroad r women's ^vrong, Gareth and L. 866
They ride abroad r human wrongs ! Merlin and V. 693
To ride abroad r human wrongs, Guinevere 471
Red-ribb'd r-r ledges drip with a silent horror of blood, Maud I i3
From the r-r hollow behind the wood, „ // i 25
Red Sea and flash'd into the R S, To Marq. of Dufferin 44
Redundant floods with r life Her narrow portals. Lover's Tale i 84
Reed Like Indian r's blown from his silver tongue, The Poet 13
the wavy swell of the soughing r's. Dying Swan 38
That sets at twiUght in a land of r's. Caress'd or chidden 14
' I heard the ripple washing in the r's, M. d' Arthur 70
And the long ripple washing in the r's.' „ I17
What r was that on which I leant ? In Mem. Ixxxiv 45
Or low morass and whispering r, „ c 6
ranks Of iris, and the golden r ; „ ciii 24
And mid-thigh-deep in bulrushes and r, Gareth and L. 810
strange knee rustle thro' her secret r's, Balin and Balan 354
and watch'd The high r wave, Lancelot and E. 1390
Rode far, till o'er the illimitable r. Last Tournament 421
' I heard the ripple washing in the r's. Pass, of Arthur 238
And the long ripple washing in the r's.' „ 285
A flat malarian world of r and rush ! Lover's Tale iv 142
Reed-tops And took the r-t as it went. Dying Swan 10
Reedy Came up from r SimoLs all alone. Qinone 52
Reef league-long roller thundering on the r, Enoch Arden 584
Reef
572
Rejoice
Reef (continued) Down in the water, a long r of gold, Sea Dreams 127
Wreck'd on a »• of visionary gold.' „ 139
In roarings round the coral r. In Mem. xxxvi 16
Reek'd For he r with the blood of Piero ; Bandit's Death 13
Reel The horse and rider r : They r, they roll in clanging
lists,
We felt the good ship shake and r,
Earth R's, and the herdsmen cry ;
R's, as the golden Autumn woodland r's
When all my spirit r's At the shouts,
the spear spring, and good horse r,
R back into the beast, and be no more ? '
all my realm R's back into the beast,
made the ground R under us, and all at once,
My brain had begun to r —
Backward they r like the wave,
red with blood the Crescent r's from fight
song-built towers and gates R,
r's not in the storm of warring words,
ReeI'd but in the middle aisle R,
part r but kept their seats :
M from the sabre-stroke Shatter'd and sunder'd
and r Almost to falling from his horse ;
and the morning star R in the smoke.
And pale he turn'd, and r,
backward r the Trojans and allies ;
foeman surged, and waver'd, and r
Reeling Garlon, r slowly backward, fell.
Arise and fly The r Faun,
crooked, r, fivid, thro' the mist Rose,
Re-father'd stoop'd, r-f o'er my wounds.
Refectory Told us of this in our r,
Reflect For love r's the thing beloved ;
And each r's a kindlier day ;
makes Her heart a mirror that r's but you.'
Reflected R, sends a light on the forgiven.
Reflecting Opposed mirrors each r each —
Reflex The mellow'd r of a winter moon ;
The r of a beauteous form.
The r of a legend past,
swims The r of a human face.
depth of an unfathom'd woe R of action.
Refluent a phantom colony smoulder'd on the r estuary ;
Reform R, White Rose, Bellerophon,
Let your r's for a moment go !
Refraction And such r of events
Refrain we r From talk of battles loud and vain,
Refrain'd r From ev'n a word,
Refresh'd leave thee freer, till thou wake r
Reft r From my dead lord a field with violence :
Sir Galahad 8
The Voyage 15
Princess v 529
„ vii 357
Maud II iv 20
Gareih and L. 523
Last Tournament 125
Pass, of Arthur 26
Lover's Tale ii 194
In the Child. Hosp. 60
Def. of Lucknow 43
Tiresias 99
Ancient Sage 70
Aylmer's Field 819
Princess v 496
Light Brigade 35
Pelleas and E. 23
519
Guinevere 304
Achilles over the T. 31
Heavy Brigade 62
Balin and Balan 397
In Mem. cxviii 26
Death of (Enone 27
Princess vi 129
Holy Grail 41
In Mem. Hi 2
cl8
The Ring 366
Romneij's R. 161
Sonnet To 11
Isabel 29
Miller's D. 77
Day-Dm., Pro. 11
In Mem. cviii 12
Lover's Tale i 747
Boadicea 28
The Brook 161
Riflemen form ! 15
In Mem. xcii 15
Ode on Well. 246
Marr. of Geraint 213
Love and Duty 97
Gareih and L. 334
he r us of it Perforce, and left us neither gold nor field.
338
heathen caught and r him of his tongue.
that was r of his Folk and his friends
Refulgent Where some r sunset of India
Refuse (s) and r patch'd mth moss.
Refuse (verb) nor did mine own R her proffer,
Refused Nor yet r the rose, but granted it,
R her to him, then his pride awoke ;
I r the hand he gave.
Refusing and thou r this, Unvenerable
Regal and a hope The child of r compact,
Of freedom m her r seat Of England ;
Push'd from his chair of r heritage.
Regale Call your poor to r with you.
Regally Make it r gorgeous.
Regard R the weakness of thy peers :
R gradation, lest the soul Of Discord
O blatant Magazines, r me rather —
Regarded Bedivere Remorsefully r thro' his tears,
daughters in (he pool ; for none R ;
And many past, but none r her,
woman's love. Save one, he not r,
Bedivere Remorsefully r thro' his tears,
Regarding Droops both his wings, r thee,
any one, R, well had deem'd he felt the tale
Lancelot and E. 273
Batt. of Brunanburh 69
Milton 13
Vision of Sin 212
Princess vi 347
Gardener's D. 160
Marr. of Geraint 448
Locksley H., Sixty 256
Tiresias 131
Princess iv 421
In Mem. cix 14
Lover's Tale i 118
On Jub. Q. Victoria 30
45
Love thou thy land 24
67
Hendeca.iyllabics 17
M. d' Arthur 171
Princess v 330
Geraint and E. 520
Lancelot and E. 842
Pass, of Arthur 339
Eleanor e 119
Enoch Arden 711
Regarding (continued) silent we with blind surmise R, Princess iv 382
Regather co-mates r round the mast ; Pref. Sm. 19th Cerit. 5
Reggio Of rain at R, rain at Parma ; The Daisy 51
Region How long this icy-hearted Muscovite Oppress the r ? ' Poland 11
Within this r I subsist, You ask me, tvhy, etc. 2
girt the r with high cliff and lawn : Vision of Sin 47
That range above the r of the wind, Princess, Con. 112
No wing of wind the r swept. In Mem. Ixxviii 6
To the r's of thy rest ' ? Maud II iv 88
Gawain the while thro' all the r round Lancelot and E. 615
fail'd to find him, tho' I rode all round The r : „ 710
saw Beneath her feet the r far away. Lover's Tale i 395
Register'd Are r and calendar'd for saints. St. S. Stylites 132
Regret (s) Love is made a vague r. Miller's D. 210
Deep as first love, and wild with all r ; Princess iv 57
debt Of boundless love and reverence and r Ode on Well. 157
So seems it in my deep r. In Mem. viii 17
And chains r to his decease, ,, xxix 3
hopes and light r's that come Make April ., xl 7
0 last r, r can die ! ., Ixxviii 17
To one pure image of r. „ cii 24
and my r Becomes an April violet, „ cxv 18
Is it, then, r for buried tmie That keenlier ,, cxvi 1
Not all r : the face will shine Upon me, ., 9
embalm In dying songs a dead r, „ Con. 14
R is dead, but love is more „ 17
no r's for aught that has been, Vastness 23
Regret (verb) and r Her parting step, Lancelot and E. 866
Regular Faultily faultless, icily r, _ Maud I ii 6
Them as 'as coats to their backs an' taiikes their
} meaLs. N. Farmer, N. S. 46
Rehearse ' This truth within thy mind r, Two Voices 25
Reign (verb) lips whereon perpetually did r The summer calm Isabel 7
1 shall r for ever over all.' Love and Death 15
' R thou apart, a quiet king. Palace of Art 14
you shall r The head and heart of all our fair she-
world, Princess Hi 162
Then r the world's great bridals, „ vii 294
the wise who think, the wise who r. Ode Inter. Exhib. 32
0 Soul, the Vision of Him who r's ? High. Pantheism 2
What happiness to r a lonely king. Com., of Arthur 82
same child,' he said, ' Is he who r's ; „ 393
' R ye, and live and love, „ 472
' Let the King r.' (repeat) Com. of Arthur 484, 487, 490, 493,
496, 499, 502
the worst were that man he that r's ! Guinevere 523
where I hoped myself to r as king. Lover's Tale i 591
^V'llen only Day should r.' Ancient Sage 244
Reign (s) morning of my r Was redden'd by that cloud Akbars Dream 63
The R of the Meek upon earth. The Dreamer 25
Reign'd A kindlier influence r ; Princess vii 20
and made a realm, and r. (repeat) Com. of Arthttr 19, 519
King, that hast r six hundred years, To Dante 1
when Athens r and Rome, Freedom 9
Reigning hmi, that other, r in his place, Enoch Arden 763
And r with one will in everything Com. of Arthur 92
Rein (See also Bridle-rein) sway'd The r with dainty
finger-tips. Sir L. and Q. G. 41
with slack r and careless of himself, Balin and Balan 309
he twitch'd the r's, And made his beast Pelleas and E. 550
Will firmly hold the r, Politics 6
Rein'd Edyrn r his charger at her side, Geraint and E. 820
Re-inspired With youthful fancy r-i, Ode to Memory 114
Reissuing whence r, robed and crown'd, Godiva 77
Rejected He should not be r. Aylmer's Field 422
return'd Leolin's r rivals from their suit So often, „ 493
Rejection with hands of wild r ' Go ! ' — Edwin Morris 124
Rejoice As when a mighty people r Dying Sican 31
Than him that said ' i? ! r ! ' Two Voices 462
There in her place she did r, Of old sat Freedom 5
But Thou r with liberal joy, England and Amer. 11
Thus lier heart r's greatly, L. of Burleigh 41
A jjeople's voice, when they r At civic revel Ode on Well. 146
Roll and r, jubilant voice, W. to Alexandra 22
O Soul, and let us r, High. Pantheism 13
Rejoice
573
Remember
Rejoice (contiiiued) I have thee still, and I r ;
With a joy in which I cannot r,
R, small man, in this small world of mine,
young green leaf r in the frost
In your welfare we r,
Let the maim'd in his heart r
Rejoiced Thereat Leodogran r,
She spake and King Leodogran r.
Long in their common love r Geraint.
Then suddenly she knew it and r,
while the women thus r, Geraint Woke
In Mem. cxxx 14
Maud Iv2l
Holy Grail 559
The Wreck 20
Open. I. and C. Exhib. 2
On Juh. Q. Victoria 36
Com. of Arthur 310
425
Man: of Geraint 23
687
754
771
Enoch Arden 127
Com. of Arthur 459
Holy Grail 327
687
Guinevere 486
„ 680
Tiresias 160
Demeter and P. 127
The Ring 320
Merlin and the G. 112
By an Evolution. 7
Akbar's Dream, 182
Two Voices Z^Q
In Mem. Ixxviii 19
Gareth and L. 287
Never man r More than Geraint to greet her
Rejoicing R at that answer to his prayer.
Stood round him, and r in his joy.
R in that Order which he made.'
R in ourselves and in our King —
one to feel ^ly purpose and r in my joy.'
not grieving at your joys. But not r ;
thou R that the sun, the moon,
R in the harvest and the grange.
And send her home to you r.
And can no longer, But die r,
I, the finer brute r in my hounds.
But \\hile we stood r, I and thou.
Relate As old mythologies r.
Relation That bears r to the mind.
Her deep r's are the same,
' Confusion, and illusion, and r.
Relaxed memory of that token on the sliield R his
hold : Balin and Balan 370
and their law R its hold upon us, Guinevere 457
Release (S) can't be long before I find r ; May Queen, Con. 11
Release (verb) R me, and restore me to the ground ; Tithonus 72
A nd let who will r him from his bonds. Pelleas and E. 294
Released I arose, and I r The casement. Two Voices 403
Relent learning this, the bridegroom will r. Guinevere 172
Reliance Those, in whom he had r The Captain 57
Relic ^^'hat record, or what r of my lord M. d' Arthur 98
I \\\\\ leave my r's in your land, St. S. Stylites 194
Sucli precious r's brought by thee ; In Mem. xvii 18
Some lost, some stolen, some as r's kept. Merlin and V. 453
What record, or what r of my lord Pass, of Arthur 266
Gray r's of the nurseries of the world, Lover's Tale i 290
Blood-redden'd r of Javelins Batt. of Brunanburh 95
guardian of her r's, of her ring. The Ring 441
sacred r's tost about the floor — „ 447
Relief on thy bosom, (deep-desired r !) Love and Duty 42
That sets the past in this r ? In Mem. xxiv 12
In verse that brings myself r, „ Ixxv 2
Demanding, so to bring r „ Ixxxv 6
faltering hopes of r, Havelock baffled, Def. of LucJcnow 90
glimmer of r In change of place. To Mary Boyle 47
Rel^on Each r says, ' Thou art one, without
equal.' Akbar's D., Inscrip. 3
and *• to the orthodox, „ 8
Relish Had r fiery-new, Will Water. 98
Re-listen seems, as I r-l to it. Prattling The Brook 18
Relive Can I but r in sadness ? Locksley Hall 107
Reluctant bent or broke The lithe r boughs Enoch Arden 381
Remade R the blood and changed the frame. In Mem., Con. 11
Remain there Uke a sun r Fix'd — Elednore 92
Those lonely lights that still r. Two Voices 83
Let what is broken so r. Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 80
And what r's to tell. Talking Oak 204
and of one to me Little r's : Ulysses 26
R's the lean P. W. on his tomb : The Brook 192
we must r Sacred to one another.' Aylmer's Field 425
I r on whom to wreak your rage. Princess iv 350
But then this question of your troth r's : „ v 279
r Orb'd in your isolation : „ vi 168
As long as we r, we must speak free, Third of Feb. 13
One writes, that ' Other friends r,' In Mem. vi 1
And what to me r's of good ? „ 42
And what are they when these r „ Ixxvi 15
My shame is greater who r, „ cix 23
Remain (continued) her name will yet r Untarnish'd
as before ; Marr. of Geraint 500
now r's But Uttle cause for laughter : Lancelot and E. 596
and r Lord of the tourney. Pelleas and E. 162
others who r. And of the two first-famed for courtesy — • Guinevere 322
I shared with her in whom myself r's. Lover's Tale i 248
But still the clouds r ; ' Ancient Sage 241
except The man himseM r ; ' Epilogue 70
The man r's, and whatsoe'er He wrought „ 75
every Faith and Creed, r's The Mystery. To Mary Boyle 52
But, while the hills r, Politics 10
Remain'd r among us In our young nursery still
unknown, Princess iv 331
I r, whose hopes were dim. In Mem. Ixxxv 29
the two r Apart by all the chamber's width, Geraint and E. 264
Balan warn'd, and went ; Bahn r : Balin and Balan 153
Pierced thro' his side, and there snapt, and r. Lancelot and E. 490
there that day r, and toward even „ 977
there I woke, but still the wish r. „ 1048
' Then there r but Lancelot, Holy Grail 760
Lancelot ever promised, but r, Guinevere 93
Remaineth The rest r unreveal'd ; In Mem. xxxi 14
Remaining You love, r peacefully, Margaret 22
R betwixt dark and bright : „ 28
Than cry for strength, r weak, Two Voices 95
R utterly confused with fears. Palace of Art 269
The two r found a fallen stem ; Enoch Arden 567
The last r pillar of their hoase, Aylmer's Field 295
r there Fixt Uke a beacon-tower Priyicess iv 492
And thou r here wilt learn the event ; Guinevere 577
eyes R fixt on mine, Tiresias 47
None but the terrible Peele r Kapiolani 28
Remains With my lost Arthur's loved ■>-, In Mem. ix 3
Re-make gathering at the base R's itself, Guinevere 610
Remand r it thou For calmer hours Love and Duty 89
Remark her least r was worth The experience Edwin Morris 65
Remark'd r The lusty mowers labouring Geraint and E. 250
Remble (remove) a niver r's the stoans. N. Farmer, 0. S. 60
Rembled (removed) an' raaved an' r 'um out. „ 32
Remedy There is one r for all. (repeat) Two Voices 165, 201
Remember {See also Remimber) As one before, r much, „ 356
For you r, you had set. Miller's D. 81
How sadly, I r, rose the morning of the year ! May Queen, Con. 3
The times when I r to have been Joyiul B. of F. Women 79
Oh yet but I r, ten years back — Walk, to the Mail 50
I r one that perish'd : Locksley Hall 71
Such a one do I r, _ „ 72
I r, when I think. That my youth was half divine. Vision of Sin 77
how should the child R this ? ' Enoch Arden 234
We r love ourselves In our sweet youth : Princess i 122
' We r love ourseU In our sweet youth ; „ v 207
R him who led your hosts ; Ode on Well. 171
yet r all He spoke among you, „ 177
Ira quarrel I had with your father, Grandmother 21
R what a plague of rain ; The Daisy 50
R how we came at last To Como ; „ 69
' Does my old friend r me ? ' In Mem. Ixiv 28
That yet r's his embrace, „ Ixxxv 111
I r the time, for the roots of my hair Maud I i 13
She r's it now we meet. „ vi 88
I r, I, When he lay dying there, „ // ii 66
but r's all, and growls Remembering, Gareth and L. 704
' R that great insult done the Queen,' Marr. of Geraint 571
Dost thou r at Caerleon once — Balin and Balan 503
' And I r now That pelican on the casque : Holy Grail 699
neither Love, Warm in the heart, his cradle, can r
Love in the womb.
Once or twice she told me (For I r all things)
She r's you. Farewell.
Nay you r our Emmie ;
I bad them r my father's death,
I r I thought, as we past,
I r how you kiss'd the miniature
r how the course of Time will swerve,
In this Hostel — I r —
Lover's Tale i 158
346
Sisters (E. and E.) 190
In the Child. Hosp. 33
V. of Maeldune 70
Despair 11
Locksley H., Sixty 12
235
255
Remember
574
Replied
Remember (continued) They still r what it cost them here, The Ring 201
I r once that being waked By noises in the house — „ 416
I brought you, you r, these roses, Happy 73
I well r that red night When thirty ricks, To Mary Boyle 35
I r it, a proof That I — Romney's R. 92
Bememberable Bear witness, that r day. To the Queen ii 3
Remember'd (adj.) ' Dear as r kisses after death, Princess iv 54
Remember'd (verb) I r Everard's college fame The Epic 46
and r one dark hour Here in this wood, Enoch Arden 385
She r that : A pleasant game. Princess, Pro. 193
I r one myself had made, „ iv 88
Then I r that burnt sorcerer's curse „ v 475
Then he r her, and how she wept ; Geraint and, E. 612
I — even I — at times r you. Romney's R. 93
Then I r Arthur's warning word. Holy Grail 598
Rememberest for thou r how In those old days, M. d' Arthur 28
thou r well — one summer dawn — Balin and Balan 505
for thou r how In those old days, Pass, of Arthur 196
thou r what a fury shook Those pillars Akbar's Bream 80
Remembering R its ancient heat. Two Voices 423
R the day when first she came, Bora 106
crown of sorrow is r happier things. Locksley Hall 76
fragrant in a heart r His former talks with Edith, Aylmer's Field 456
R her dear Lord who died for all. Sea Breams 47
R how we three presented Maid Or Nymph, Princess i 196
they will beat my girl R her mother : „ v 89
R his ill-omen'd song, „ vi 159
i? all his greatness in the Past. Ode on Well. 20
R all the beauty of that star Which shone Bed. of Idylls 46
but remembers all, and growls R, Gareth and L. 705
R when first he came on her Drest in that dress, Marr. of Geraint 140
R how first he came on her, „ 842
But she, r her old ruin'd ball, Geraint and E. 254
some token of his Queen Whereon to gaze, r her — Balin and Balan 189
R that dark bower at Camelot, „ 526
r Her thought when first she came, Guinevere 181
r all The love they both have borne me, Sisters (E. and E.) 279
while r thee, I lay At thy pale feet Bed. Poem Prin. Alice 19
R all the golden hours Now silent, Tiresias 210
r the gay playmate rear'd Among them, Beath of (Enone 59
Remembrance In mute and glad r. Lover's Tale ii 186
Remerging R in the general Soul, In Mem. xlvii 4
Remimber (remember) an' meself r's wan night Tomorrow 7
Remiss " She had not found me so r ; Talking Oak 193
Remit She takes, when harsher moods r. In Mem. xlviii 6
Remnant a r that were left Paynim amid their circles, Holy Grail 663
and a r stays with me. And of this r wiU I leave a part, Guinevere 443
Remodel why should any man R models ? The Epic 38
Remorse You held your course without r, L. C. V. de Vere 45
all the man was broken with r ; Bora 165
At once without r to strike her dead, Geraint and E. 109
not the one dark hour which brings r. Merlin and V. 763
Dead ! — and maybe stung With some r. The Ring 454
For never had I seen her show r — „ 457
Would the man have a touch of r Charity 17
Bemorsefnl To whom r Cyril, ' Yet I pray Take comfort : Princess v 79
So groan'd Sir Lancelot in r pain, Lancelot and E. 1428
Some half r kind of pity too — The Ring 375
Remorseless But that r iron hour Made cypress In Mem. Ixxxiv 14
Remote Beside r Shalott. (repeat) L. of Shalott Hi 9, 18
Remove See Remble
Removed [See also Rembled) Forgive my grief for one r. In Mem., Pro. 37
An awful thought, a life r, „ xiii 10
Rend cried to r the cloth, to r In pieces, Gareth and L. 400
r the cloth and cast it on the hearth. „ 418
Left for the homy-nibb'd raven to r it, Batt. of Brunanhurh 108
Bender ' Will thirty seasons r plain Two Voices 82
left me, statue-Uke, In act to r thanks. Gardener's B. 162
R him up unscathed : Princess iv 408
I lagg'd in answer loth to r up My precontract, „ v 299
R thanks to the Giver, (repeat) Ode on Well. 44, 47
And r him to the mould. „ 48
And / human love his dues ; In Mem. xxxvii 16
and r All homage to his own darhng, Maud I xx 48
I gave the diamond : she will r it ; Lancelot and E. 713
Render (continued) Forgetting how to r beautiful Her
countenance Lover's Tale i 96
Render'd She r answer high : B. of F. Women 202
Survive in spirits r free. In Mem. xxxviii 10
in my charge, which was not r to him ; Marr. of Geraint 452
Arthur's wars were r mystically, Lancelot and E. 801
Arthur's wars are r mystically. Holy Grail 359
Rendering Not r true answer, as beseem'd Thy fealty, M. d' Arthur 74
Nor r true answer, as beseem'd Thy fealty. Pass, of Arthur 242
Rending And r, and a blast, and overhead Thunder, Holy Grail 184
the veil Is r, and the Voices of the day The Ring 39
or the r earthquake, or the famine, or the pest ! Faith 4
Renegade and r's, Thieves, bandits. Last Tournament 94
Renew Would God r me from my birth Miller's B. 27
wilt r thy beauty morn by morn ; Tithonus 74
with the sun and moon r their light Princess Hi 255
Renew'd (See also Self-renew'd) And bosom beating with
a heart r. Tithonus 36
The maid and page r their strife, Bay-Bm., Revival 13
a wish r. When two years after came a boy Enoch Arden 88
Many a sad kiss by day by night r „ 161
Then her new child was as herself r, „ 523
seem'd For some new death than for a Ufe r ; Lover's Tale iv 374
Renown Of me you shall not win r : L. C. V. de Vere 2
A land of just and old r. You ask me, why, etc. 10
Speak no more of his r. Ode on Well. 278
Who might have chased and claspt R To Marq. of Bufferin 29
Renowned See Far-renowned
Rent (tearing) Were Uving nerves to feel the r ; Aylmer's Field 536
Rent (money) Howiver was I fur to find my r Owd Rod 47
' can ya paay me the r to-night ? ' „ 57
Rent (tore) ' An inner impulse r the veil Two Voices 10
r The woodbine wreaths that bind her, Amphion 33
r The wonder of the loom thro' warp and woof Princess i 61
Rent (hire) how The races went, and who would r the hall : Audley Court 31
Rent (torn) See Red-rent
Rentroll The r Cupid of our rainy isles. Edwin Morris 103
Re-orient The life r-o out of dust. In Mem. cxvi 6
Repaid money can be r ; Not kindness Enoch Arden 320
Repast For brief r or afternoon repose Guinevere 395
And sitting down to such a base r. Lover's Tale iv 134
Repay Why then he shall r me — Enoch Arden 310
He will r you : money can be repaid ; „ 320
Repeal ' Ride you naked thro' the town. And I r it ; ' Godiva 30
Repeat I must needs r for my excuse Princess Hi 52
Repeated R muttering ' cast away and lost ; ' Enoch Arden 715
Repeating roll'd his eyes upon her R all he wish'd, „ 905
simple maid Went half the night r, ' Must I die ? ' Lancelot and E. 899
R, till the word we know so well Becomes a wonder, „ 1028
Repell'd R by the magnet of Art The Wreck 22
Repent I r me of all I did : Edward Gray 23
voice that calls Doom upon kings, or in the
waste ' R' ? Aylmer's Field 742
The world will not believe a man r's : Geraint and E. 900
FuU seldom doth a man r, „ 902
' No light had we : for that we do r ; Guinevere 171
But help me, heaven, for surely I r. „ 372
let a man r, Do penance in his heart, Sir J. Oldcastle 142
I r it o'er his grave — Locksley H., Sixty 255
I repented and r, Happy 85
Repentance what is true r but in thought — Guinevere 373
Repentant R of the word she made him swear, Gareth and L. 527
' The souls Of two r Lovers guard the ring ; ' The Ring 198
Repented they have told you he never r his sin. Rizpah 69
I r and repent, Happy 85
Repenting till the man r sent This ring ' The Ring 209
Replied Thereto the silent voice r ; Two Voices 22
He sang his song, and I r with mine : Audley Court 56
Swung themselves, and in low tones r ; Vision of Sin 20
And she r, her duty was to speak. Princess Hi 151
Passionate tears Follow'd : the king r not : „ vi 312
The Spirit of true love r ; In Mem. Hi 6
To whom the Queen r with drooping eyes. Com. of Arthur 469
Silent awhile was Gareth, then r, Gareth and L. 164
Then r the King : ' Far lovelier in our Lancelot Laiicelot and E. 588
Replied
575
Rest
Pelleas and E. 523
Lover's Tale iv 336
Claribel 20
Two Voices 7
CEnone 143
Palace of Art 286
L. C. V. de Vere 22
29
Talking Oak 25
Bay- Dm., Revival 30
Enoch Arden 286
Zi^Ai Brigade 13
/re Mem. xxxi 6
„ Za;i 2
MaM<i // iv 30
Geraint and E. 811
Merlin and V. 895
Pelleas and E. 85
TAe Revenge 91
.SMfers (i;. arwZ £.) 157
i. o/ Burleigh 5
TAe 5rooA: 22
/w Mem. xxxvii 9
Jf awrf // Hi 7
Garetfe aW i. 863
Princess iv\l
i 70
In Mem. xiv 1
J/arr. of Geraint 756
Balin and Balan 94
168
Merlin and V. 16
Cow. o/ Arthur 250
Garg<A aw(^ Z. 1338
Replied (continued) Percivale stood near him and r,
his friend R, in half a whisper,
Beplieth The hollow grot r
Beply (s) To which the voice did urge r ;
Kept watch, waiting decision, made r.
There comes no murmur of r.
And my disdain is my r.
Oh your sweet eyes, your low replies :
But since I heard him make r
In courteous words retum'd r :
He spoke ; the passion in her moan'd r
Their's not to make r.
There lives no record of r,
Thy ransom'd reason change replies
The delight of low replies.
And hung his head, and halted in r,
having no r. Gazed at the heaving shoulder,
Stammer'd, and could not make her a r.
gurmer said ' Ay, ay,' but the seamen made r :
in the thick of question and r
Reply (verb) She replies, in accents fainter,
and the brook, why not ? replies.
And my Melpomene replies.
Care not thou to r :
Arthur aU at once gone mad replies,
Repl3ring Blow, let us hear the purple glens r :
Report (s) In this r, this answer of a king.
If one should bring me this r,
when Yniol made r Of that good mother
' Sir King ' they brought r ' we hardly found,
And brought r of azure lands and fair,
angels of our Lord's r.
Report (verb) Victor his men R him !
Reported still r him As closing in himself
a woodman there R of some demon in the woods Balin and Balan 124
R who he was, and on what quest Sent, Lancelot and E. 628
Reporting R of his vessel China-bound, Enoch irden 122
Repose sick man's room when he taketh r A spirit haunts 14
Her manners had not that r L. C. V. de Vere 39
For brief repast or afternoon r Guinevere 395
God gave her peace ; her land r ; To the Queen 26
centuries behind me like a fruitful land r ; Locksley Hall 13
A void where heart on heart r ; In Mem. xiii 6
Reposing His state the king r keeps. Day- Dm., Sleep. P. 39
Repression what sublime r of himself, Ded. of Idylls 19
Reproach (s) you may worship me without r ; St. S. Stylites 193
all these things fell on her Sharp as r. Enoch Arden 488
Thro' light r'es, half exprest In Mem. Ixxxv 15
He never spake word of r to me, Lancelot and E. 124
Mine own name shames me, seeming a r, „ 1403
Seem'd my r ? He is not of my kind. Pelleas and E. 311
found my letter upon him, my wail of r and scorn ; Charity 23
Reproach (verb) the poor cause that men R you, Marr. of Geraint 88
Reproachful Had floated in with sad r eyes, The Ring 469
Reprobation Election, Election and R — ■ Rizpah 73
Reproof I have not lack'd thy mild r, My life is full 4
Presses his without r: L. of Burleigh 10
I was prick'd with some r, Geraint and E. 890
her own r At some precipitance in her burial. Lover's Tale iv 106
Reprove Was it gentle to r her For stealing Maud I xx 8
' A welfare in thine eye r's Our fear Holy Grail 726
Republic The vast R's that may grow, Day-Dm., L' Envoi 15
Aroused the black r on his elms, Aylmer's Field 529
Revolts, r's, revolutions, Princess, Con. 65
And crown'd R's crowning common-sense, To the Queen ii 61
Kingdoms and R's fall, Locksley H., Sixty 159
Repulse cloaks the scar of some r with lies ; Merlin and V. 818
Repulsed being r By Yniol and yourself, Geraint and E. 828
Repute bore a knight of old r to the earth, Lancelot and E. 492
Reputed R to be red with sinless blood, Balin and Balan bbl
R the best knight and goodUest man, Guinevere 382
ReQUest then at my r He brought it ; The Epic 47
' To what r for what strange boon,' Merlin and V. 264
Require I should r A sign ! 8v/pp. Confessions 9
For this brief idyll would r A less diffuse Tiresias 188
Required Heroic seems our Princess as r — Princess, Pro. 230
But pubUc use r she should be known ; „ iv 336
The men r that I should give throughout Princess Con. 10
whom He trusted all things, and of him r His
coimsel : Com. of Arthur 146
Requiring R, tho' I knew it was mine own, Gardener's D. 227
R at her hand the greatest gift, „ 229
Re-reiterated And grant my r-r wish. Merlin and V. 353
Re-risen content R-r in Katie's eyes. The Brook 169
Rescue Flights, terrors, sudden r's, Aylmer's Field 99
Rescued diamonds that I r from the tam, Last Tournament 37
You r me — yet — was it well That you came Despair 4
Reseated thou r in thy place of light, Guinevere 525
Resembles And so my wealth r thine. In Mem. Ixxix 17
Reserve not to pry and peer on yoiu- r. Princess iv 419
Such fine r and noble reticence, Geraint and E. 860
Reserved from a binn r For banquets, Aylmer's Field 405
And in my grief a strength r. In Mem. Ixxxv 52
Resettable gems Moveable and r at will. Lover's Tale iv 199
Resign'd Asks what thou lackest, thought r, Two Voices 98
I pray'd for both, and so I felt r. May Queen, Con. 31
Resistance to know The limits of r, To Duke of Argyll 2
Resmooth waves of prejudice R to nothing : Princess Hi 241
Resolder'd r peace, whereon FoUow'd his tale. „ v 47
Resolute The statesman-warrior, moderate, r. Ode on Well. 25
Resolution Dispersed his r like a cloud. Lancelot and E. 884
Resolve (s) ' Hard task, to pluck r,' 1 cried, Two Voices 118
Assurance only breeds r.' „ 315
His r Upbore him, and firm faith, Enoch Ardeti 799
His gazing in on Annie, his r, „ 863
Full many a holy vow and pure r. Lancelot and E. 879
my fresh but fixt r To pass away into the quiet life. Holy Grail 737
Resolve (verb) turn thee round, r the doubt ; In Mem. xliv 14
Nor can my dream r the doubt : „ Ixviii 12
Resolved (adj.) But he was all the more r to go, Lover's Tale iv 179
and that r self-exile from a land He never would revisit.
209
Resolved (verb) start in pain, R on noble things, D. of F. Women 42
Here she woke, R, sent for him and said Enoch Arden 507
Resort To which I most r, (repeat) Will Water. 2, 210
Resound And solemn chaunts r between. Sir Galahad 36
Milton, a name to r for ages ; Milton 4
Respeck (respect) but I r's tha fur that ; ' North. Cobbler 90
fur I r's tha,' says 'e ; „ 92
Respect (See also Respeck) some r, however slight, was
paid To woman, Prhicess ii 136
Response Then did my r clearer fall : Two Voices 34
Responsive Queenly r when the loyal hand Aylmer's Field 169
Rest (remainder) Proportion, and, above the r. Two Voices 20
' These words,' I said, ' are like the r ; „ 334
And there the Ionian father of the r ; Palace of Art 137
while the r were loud in merry-making, Enoch Arden 77
But oft he work'd among the r and shook „ 651
Arbaces, and Phenomenon, and the r. The Brook 162
o'er the r Arising, did his holy oily best, Sea Dreams 194
who this way runs Before the r — Lucretius 192
And sister Liha with the r.' Princess, Pro. 52
Liha with the r, and lady friends „ 97
' He began, The r would follow, each in turn ; ,, 201
So I began. And the r follow'd : „ 244
and beckon'd us : the r Parted ; „ H 182
Speak little ; mix not with the r ; „ 360
Electric, chemic laws, and all the r, „ 384
Arriving all confused among the r ,, iv 224
half-crush'd among the r A dwarf-like Cato cower'd „ vii 125
nor can I weep for the r ; Grandmother 19
Perchance, perchance, among the r, In Mem., Con. 87
the r Slew on_and biu-nt, crying, Com. of Arthur 438
among the r Fierce was the hearth,
Speak, if ye be not hke the r, hawk-mad,
a name that branches o'er the r,
eats And uses, careless of the r ;
And being lustily holpen by the r.
Gareth and L. 1009
Marr. of Geraint 280
Balin and Balan 182
Merlin and V. 463
Lancelot and E, 496
one, a fellow-monk among the r, Ambrosius, loved him
much beyond the r, Holy Grail 8
Gawain sware, and louder than the r.' „ 202
Rest
576
Rested
My sister's vision, and the r,
Rest (remainder) (continued)
to Bors Beyond the r :
the r Spake but of sundry perils in the storm ;
Thy brotherhood in me and all the r.
But newly-enter'd, taller than the r,
And trebling all the r in value —
an' a letter along wi' the r,
thou'rt like the r o' the men,
And the r they came aboard us,
half of the r of us maim'd for life
brain that could think for the r ;
Old friends outvaluing all the r.
An' Shamus along wid the r,
fur I stuck to tha moor na the r,
r Who made a nation purer through their art.
the r Were crumpled inwards.
London and Paris and all the r
Best (repose) happiness And perfect r so perfect is ;
In sweet dreams softer than unbroken r
Fold thine arms, turn to thy r.
There is no r for me below,
Nor unhappy, nor at r,
A nobler yearning never broke her r
But long disquiet merged in r.
heart would beat against me, In sorrow and in r
Floated her hair or seem'd to float in r.
who have attain'd if in a happy place
I kiss'd his eyelids into r :
and the weary are at r.
all things else have r from weariness ?
AU things have r : (repeat)
Give us long r or death.
Sleep full of r from head to feet ;
Had r by stoyy hills of Crete.
Thou wouldst have caught me up into thy r,
And shadow'd all her r —
yonder ivied casement, ere I went to r,
turn thee on thy pillow : get thee to thy r again.
my latest rival brings thee r.
moving toward the stillness of his r.
A perfect form in perfect r.
That her spirit might have r.
With a nation weeping, and breaking on my r ?
tired a little, that's all, and long for r ;
And moan and sink to their r.
And waves that sway themselves in r.
Nor any want-begotten r.
surely r is meet : ' They rest,' we said,
I know that in thy place of r
That wakens at this hour of r
To the regions of thy r ' ?
in that hope, dear soul, let trouble have r,
Half disarray'd as to her r,
moving mthout answer to her r She found no r,
scorn of Garlon, poisoning all his r,
royal knight, we break on thy sweet r,
I brake upon thy r. And now fuU loth am I
Arriving at a time of golden r,
charm so taught will charm us both to r.
and Love Should have some r and pleasure
Should have small r or pleasure in herself,
B. must you have.' ' No r for me,'
' Nay, for near you, fair lord, I am at r.'
And found no ease in turning or in r ;
vext his heart, And marr'd liis r —
Hath lain for years at r —
Farewell ! there Ls an isle of r for thee.
But I had been at r for evermore.
and we thought her at r,
as he rose from his r,
strike Thy youthful pulses into r
I would that I were gather'd to my r,
let me weep my fill once more, and cry myself to r ! To
r ? to rest and wake no more were better r for me, The Flight 6
human oSspring this ideal man at r ? Locksley H., Sixty 234
Holy Grail 272
653
760
Pelleas and E. 322
Last Tournament 169
Lover's Tale iv 200
First Quarrel 49
North. Cobbler 63
The Revenge 52
77
Def. of Lucknow 20
To E. Fitzgerald 40
Toinorrow 44
Spinster's S's, 51
To W. C. Macready 7
The Ring 453
The Dawn 10
Supp. Confessions 51
Ode to Menmory 29
A Dirge 3
Oriana 3
Adeline 4
The form, the form 2
Tico Voices 249
AlUler's D. 178
CEnone 19
„ 131
The Sisters 19
May Queen, Con. 60
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 14
15, 51
53
To J. S. 75
On a Mourner 35
St. S. Stylites 18
Talking Oak 226
Locksley Hall 7
86
89
144
Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 24
L. of Burleigh 100
Ode on Well. 82
Grandmother 99
Voice and the P. 16
In Mem. xi 18
„ xxvii 12
„ XXX 18
„ Ixvii 2
„ civ 6
Mavd II iv 88
„ III vi 12
Marr. of Geraint 516
530
Balin and Baian 383
470
499
Merlin and V. 142
332
485
490
Lancelot and E. 832
833
901
Pelleas and E. 399
Last Tournament 94
Pass, of Arthur 35
Lover's Tale i 625
In the Child. Hosp. 40
V. of Maeldune 85
Tiresias 157
170
Rest (repose) {continued) To that which looks
like r.
Raving pohtics, never at r —
Is memory with your Marian gone to r,
and the murderous father at r, . . .
blight thy hope or break thy r.
Rest (s) Go thou to r, but ere thou go to r
Now both are gone to r.
Rest (verb) ' The doubt would r, I dare not solve
Passing the place where each must r,
his shadow on the stone, R's like a shadow,
r thee sure That I shall love thee well
Oh r ye, brother mariners,
came To r beneath thy boughs, (repeat)
Where fairer fruit of Love may r
wealth no more shall r in mounded heaps,
I cannot r from travel :
Here r's the sap within the leaf,
And I desire to r.
Who will not let his ashes r !
and sighing ' Let me r ' she said :
Fall back upon a name ! r, rot in that !
Birdie, r a little longer.
So she r's a Mttle longer,
Sleep and r, sleep and r,
R, r, on mother's breast,
Said Ida ; ' let us down and r ; '
and this proud watchword r Of equal ;
There he shall r for ever
To r in a golden grove.
To r beneath the clover sod.
Among famihar names to r
I sing to him that r's below,
' They r,' we said, ' their sleep is sweet,'
And r's upon the Life indeed.
In endless age ? It r's with God.
My heart, tho' widow'd, may not r
Who r to-night beside the sea.
spangle all the happy shores By which they r,
so should he r with her. Closed in her castle
R would I not. Sir King, an I were king,
I nor mine R : so my knighthood keep the vows
Pref. Poem Broth. Son 6
Vastness 3
To Mary Boyle 13
Bandit's Death 33
Faith 2
Marr. of Geraint 512
To W. H. Brookfield 8
Two Voices 313
410
(Enone 28
„ 159
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 128
Talking Oak 36, 156
251
Golden Year 32
Ulysses 6
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 3
Come not, when, etc. 10
You might have won 28
Enoch Arden 375
Aylmer's Field 385
Sea Dreams 297
299
Princess Hi 9
11
iv 21
„ vii 300
Ode on Well. 51
Wages 9
In Mem. x 13
„ xviii 7
„ xxi 1
„ XXX 19
„ xxxii 8
,. Ixxiii 12
„ Ixxxv 113
„ Con. 76
121
Gareih and L. 162
597
602
R ! the good house, tho' ruin'd, Marr. of Geraint 378
eye rove in following, or r On Enid „ 399
I felt That I could r, a rock in ebbs and flowS; .. 812
therefore, I do r, A prophet certain of my prophecy, „ 813
but to r awhile within her court ; Geraint and E. 855
Should r and let you r, knowing you mine. Merlin and V. 335 j
r : and Love Should have some rest and pleasure „ 484
after my long voyage I shall r !
' I will r here,' I said,
as who should say, ' R here ; '
So shook him that he could not r,
but here, Here let me r and die,'
could not r for musing how to smoothe
' to pass, to sleep, To r, to be with her —
stricling fast, and now Sitting awhile to r.
Travelling that land, and meant to r an hour ;
Come, come, little wife, let it r !
couldn't be idle — my Willy — he never could r.
At times our Britain cannot r.
To rest ? to r and wake no more,
He r's content, if his young music
whether, since our nature cannot r,
And here no longer can I r ;
Rested where man Hath moor'd and r ?
And r from her labours.
So Philip r with her well-content ;
There Enoch r silent many days,
and gain'd the hall, and there R :
But r with her sweet face satisfied ;
She r, and her desolation came Upon her,
He r well content that all was well.
But r in her fealty, till he crown'd
Nor r thus content, but day by day.
Lancelot and E. 1061
Holy Grail 385
396
Pelleas and E. 412
515
Last Tournament 390
Lover's Tale iv 64
88
133
First Quarrel 62
Rizpah 27
To Marq. of Dufferin 1
The Flight 6
To Mary Boyle 63
Prog, of Spring 96
The Wanderer 2
Su/pp. Confessions 125
The Goose 16
Enoch Arden 376
699
Princess vi 353
Marr. of Geraint 776
Geraint and E. 518
952
967
Lancelot and E. 13 i
Rested
577
Returning
Rested (continued) Wander'd, the while we r : Lover's Tale i 235
Arthur the blameless jR The Gleam. Merlin and the G. 74
Resteth but r satisfied, Looking on her Lover's Tale i 159
Resting R weary limbs at last on beds of asphodel. Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 125
Porch-pillars on the lion r, The Daisy 55
Resting-place come again, mother, from out
my r-p ; May Queen, N. Y's. E. 37
Restless But passionat«ly r came and went, Aylmer's Field 546
and r forefoot plies His function of the woodland : Lucretius 45
swaying upon a r elm Drew the vague glance of
Vivien, Balin and Balan 463
To which it made a r heart, he took, Lancelot and E. 550
And men have hopes, which race the r blood. Prog, of Spring 115
Restore ghost of passion that no smiles r — The form, the form 11
Release me, and r me to the ground ; Tithonus 72
Restored tho' he built upon the babe r ; Princess vii 75
had his realm r But render'd tributary, Balin and Balan 2
Restrain'd Restrain'd him with all manner of device, Pelleas and E. 204
Restrain'd himself quite to the close — Lover's Tale iv 10
Restraining Fierier and stormier from r, Balin and Balan 229
Restraint I spoke without restraint. Talking Oak 14
Result (s) The slow r of winter showers : Two Voices 452
Deep-chested music, and to this r. The Epic 51
from age to age With much the same r. Walk, to the Mail 80
and the long r of Time ; Locksley Hall 12
But for some true r of good All parties Will Water. 55
victor Hours should scorn The long r of love, In Mem. i 14
self-infolds the large r's Of force „ Ixxiii 15
And that serene r of all.' „ Ixxxv 92
With old r's that look like new ; „ cxxviii 11
O, the r's are simple ; Merlin and V. 684
work old laws of Love to fresh r's, Prog, of Spring 85
Result (verb) R in man, be bom and think, In Mem., Con. 126
Resume r their life. They would but find „ xc 6
Retain And so may Place r us still, „ xlii 5
Which yet r's a memory of its youth, Sisters (E. and E.) 66
Betake stands Vacant, but thou r it, Balin and Balan 79
Betaught R the lesson thou hadst taught, England and Amer. 8
Reticence Such fine reserve and noble r, Geraint and E. 860
Not muffled round with selfish r. Merlin and V. 337
Down with R, down with Reverence — Locksley H., Sixty 142
Retinae The dark r reverencing death Aylmer's Field 842
and so Went forth in long r following up Princess Hi 195
and far ahead Of his and her r moving, Guinevere 385
Retire How oft we saw the Sun r. The Voyage 17
And last the dance; — till Ir: In Mem., Con. 105
Retired in after life r From brawling storms, Ode to Memory 111
I saw the snare, and I r : L. C.V. de Vere 6
Retiring Ever r thou dost gaze On the prime labour Ode to Memory 93
knights Clash like the coming and r wave, Gareth and L. 522
Be-told And read a Grecian tale r-t. To Master of B. 5
Retreat Ah, for some r Deep in yonder Locksley Hall 153
0 joy to him in this r. In Mem. Ixxxix 13
Retreated Leolin still R half-aghast, Aylmer's Field 330
The light r, The landskip darken'd. Merlin and the G. 30
Retreating up and down Advancing nor r. Sisters {E. and E.) 179
Retrospect ' Not such as moans about the r. Princess iv 85
yet in r That less than momentary thunder-
sketch Sisters (E. and E.) 98
Return (s) (See also Home-return) Then she went back
some paces of r, Geraint and E. 70
with how sweet grace She greeted my r ! Balin and Balan 194
tho' my love had no r : Lavicelot and E. 1094
1 loved you, and my love had no r, „ 1276
Return (verb) I may »■ with others there Palace of Art ^5
some one said, ' We will r no more ; ' Lotos-Eaters 43
' I go, but I ?• : I would I were The pilot Audley Court 71
The fountain to his place r's Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 11
to r When others had been tested) Aylmer's Field 218
and r In such a sunlight of prosperity „ 420
Returning, as the bird r's, at night. Sea Dreams 43
heard his foot R from pacings in the field, Lucretius 6
back r To where the body sits, In Mem. xii 18
How often she herself r, „ xl 24
But Death r's an answer sweet : „ Ixxxi 9
Return (verb) (continued) r's the dark With no more hope of light. Maud I ix 15
humour of the kings of old R upon me ! Gareth and L. 378
R, and meet, and hold him from our eyes, „ 429
take his horse And arms, and so r him to the King. „ 956
Myself, when I r, will plead for thee, (repeat) „ 987, 1052
r, and fetch Fresh victual for these mowers Geraint and E. 224
and r With victual for these men, „ 239
For the man's love once gone never r's. „ 333
' Fly, they will r And slay you ; ]] 743
And as the cageling newly flown r's, Merlin and V. 901
They prove to him his work : win and r.' Lancelot and E. 158
Rise and take This diamond, and deliver it, and r, „ 546
And she r's his love in open shame ; „ 1083
Many of you, yea most, R no more: Holy Grail 321
He will r no more.' Pelleas and E. 259
Kick'd, he r's : do ye not hate him, ye ? „ 264
the warm hour r's With veer of wind. Last Tournament 230
weep not thou, lest, if thy mate r, „ 499
And so r's belike within an hour. „ 531
She is his no more — The dead r's to me. Lover's Tale iv 49
And you shall give me back when he r's.' „ 112
When he r's, and then will I r, „ 117
If we should never more r. The Flight 99
Australian dying hopes he shall r, Locksley H., Sixty 70
Retum'd prest thy hand, and knew the press r, The Bridesmaid 12
One went, who never hath r. To J. S. 20
And so r unfarrow'd to her sty. Walk, to the Mail 100
Could hope itself r ; Talking Oak 12
' Pardy,' r the King, ' but still My joints Day-Dm., Revival 25
In courteous words r reply : „ 30
when the beauteous hateful isle R upon him, Enoch Arden 618
round again to meet the day When Enoch had r, „ 823
r Leolin's rejected rivals from their suit Aylmer's Field 492
by a keeper shot at, slightly hurt. Raging r: " „ 549
To whom none spake, half-sick at heart, r. Princess iv 223
The King r from out the wild. The Victim 41
And home to Mary's house r. In Mem. xxxi 2
divine amends For a courtesy not r. Maud I vi 14
pathways for the htmter and the knight And so r. Com. of Arthur 62
r Among the flowers, in May, with Guinevere. „ 451
she r Indignant to the Queen; (repeat) Marr. of Geraint 201, 413
the boy r And told them of a chamber, Geraint and E. 260
till she woke the sleepere, and r : „ 404
r The huge Earl Doomi with plunder to the hall. „ 591
In converse for a little, and r, „ 882
spirit of his youth r On Arthur's heart ; Balin and Balan 21
And lightly so r, and no man knew. „ 42
till their embassage r. „ 93
Full courtly, yet not falsely, thus r : Lancelot and E. 236
after two days' tarriance there, r. „ 569
r To whence I came, the gate of Arthur's wars.' Holy Grail 538
talk And scandal of our table, had r ; „ 650
reach'd The city, found ye all your knights r, „ 708
scarce r a tithe — „ 894
these r. But still he kept his watch Pelleas and E. 222
Then tum'd, and so r, and groaning „ 451
she gazed on Lancelot So soon r, „ 590
Tristram — late From overseas in Brittany r. Last Tournament 175
one that in them sees himself, r; „ 370
But left her all as easily, and r. „ 403
and that low lodge r. Mid-forest, „ 488
Had been, their wont, a-maying and r, Guinevere 23
' Perchance,' she said, ' r.' Lover's Tale i 581
Then, when her own true spirit had r, „ iv 108
Then I r to the ward ; In the Child. Hosp. 44
wept with me when I r in chains, Columbus 231
She in wrath R it on her birthday, The Ring 212
We r to his cave — the link was broken — ■ Bandit's Death 29
Returning from the secret shrine R with hot cheek Alexander 14
human things r on themselves Move onward. Golden Year 25
And thee r on thy silver wheels. Tithonus 76
R hke the pewit. Will Water. 230
As oft as needed — last, r rich, Enoch Arden 143
His fancy fled before the lazy wind R, „ 658
Seem'd hope's r rose : Aylmer's Field 559
2 o
Retnrning
678
Rhyme
Betnrning (contimied) That mock'd him with r calm,
still to that R, as the bird returns,
that great wave R, while none mark'd it.
And last, r from afar,
and on r found Not two but three ?
R brought the yet-vmblazon'd shield.
To Astolat r rode the three.
Your limit, oft r with the tide.
R o'er the jjlain that then began To darken
Aroimd a king r from his wars.
Reveal gorges, opening wide apart, r Troas
For all the past of Time r's
Nor to r it, till you see me dead.'
words, like Nature, half r And half conceal
A lat«-lost form that sleep r's,
If any vision should r Thy Ukeness,
Who shall now r it ?
Beveal'd first r themselves to English air,
part by part to men r The fullness of her face —
R their shining windows :
A whisper half r her to herself.
Of contort clasp'd in truth r ;
A lifelong tract of time r ;
doubtful dusk r The knolls once more where,
where the works of the Lord are r
Revealing R's deep and clear are thine
Reveillee blew R to the breaking morn.
Revel given to starts and bursts Of r ;
At civic r and pomp and game, (repeat)
night goes In babble and r and wine.
with dance And r and song, made merry over Death, Gareth and L. 1423
Red after r, droned her lurdane knights Slumbering, Pelleas and E. 430
kingcup, poppy, glanced About the r's, Last Tournament 235
To come and r for one hour with liim Lover's Tale iv 182
wallow in fiery riot and r On Kilauea, Kapiolani 8
Revelling bagpipes, r, devil's-dances, Sir J. Oldcastle 149
Revenge Therefore r became me well. The Sisters 5
Womanlike, taking r too deep for a transient WTong Maud I Hi 5
Lucretius 25
Sea Dreams 43
234
In Mem. Ixxxix 46
Merlin and V. 708
Lancelot and E. 379
905
1041
Holy Grail 217
Pass, of Arthur 461
(Enone 12
Love thou thy land 50
Enoch Arden 839
In Mem. v 3
„ xiii 2
„ xcii 1
Forlorn 8
Elednore 2
Of old sat Freedom 11
Gardener's D. 220
Aylmer's Field 144
In Mem. xxxvii 22
„ xlm 9
„ xcv 49
In the Child. Hosp. 35
Madeline 10
In Mem. Ixviii 8
Princess i 55
Ode on Well. 147, 227
Maud I xxii 28
whether the mind. With some
Revenge (ship) so The little R ran on sheer
R ran on thro' the long sea-lane between.
mann'd the R with a swarthier aUen crew,
R herself went down by the island crags
Revenge (verb) He hiss'd, ' Let us r ourselves.
Revenue overflowing r Wherewith to embellish
I reap No r from the field of unbeUef .
Revere Whom we see not we r ; We r.
We r, and while we hear The tides of Music's
Revered R, beloved, — 0 you that hold
R Isabel, the crown and head,
flattering the poor roofs R as theirs
Reverence (s) (See also Self-reverence)
to r closed
with one mind the Gods Rise up for r.
But let her herald, R, fly Before her
To all the people, winning r.
Meet for the r of the hearth,
Have not our love and r left them bare?
With some cold r worse than were she dead.
That mask'd thee from men's r up.
Some r for the laws ourselves have made,
to pay the debt Of boundless love and r
But more of r in us dwell ;
I had such r for his blame.
To r and the silver hair ;
In r and in charity.
As if in deepest r and in love.
With no more sign of r than a beard.
Abash'd Lavaine, whose instant r,
A manner somewhat f aU'n from r —
To all the people, winning r.
Down with Reticence, down with R —
But every man was mute for r.
Uevarence (verb) swear To r the King, as if he were Their
conscience,
Lover's Tale ii 127
The Revenge 33
36
110
118
Happy 63
(Enone 112
Akbar's Dream 67
Ode on Well. 245
251
To the Queen 1
Isabel 10
Aylmer's Field 176
A thousand claims
To the Queen 27
(Enone 110
Love thou thy land 18
M. d' Arthur 108
Aylmer's Field 333
785
Princess v 92
„ vii 343
„ Con. 55
Ode on Well. 157
In Mem., Pro. 26
lie
Ixxxiv 32
„ cxiv 28
Merlin and V. 220
279
Lancelot and E. 418
Last Tournament 119
Pass, of Arthur 276
Locksley U., Sixty 142
Death of (Enone 96
Guinevere 468
Reverenced he, he r his liege-lady there ; Princess i 188
' Who r his conscience as his king ; Ded. of Idylls 8
first they mock'd, but, after, r him. Gareth and L. 507
Then tho' he loved and r her too much Marr. of Geraint 119
He r his dear lady even in death ; Lover's Tale iv 74
Reverencing The dark retinue r death Aylmer's Field 842
SeU-reverent each and r each. Princess vii 290
And r the custom of the house Geraint, Marr. of Geraint 380
He, r king's blood in a bad man, Guinevere 37
Reverend Than hammer at this r gentlewoman. Princess Hi 129
when she saw The haggard father's face and r beard „ vi 103
1 past beside the r walls In which of old In Mem. Ixxxvii 1
Reverent [See also Self-reverent) mighty r at our grace
Holy Cfrail 702
Merlin and V. 157
D. of the Duke of C. A
Ode on Well. 54
Princess, Con. 108
In Mem. Ixxii 6
Will Water. 159
The Voyage 71
Locksley H., Sixty 200
Day-Dm., L'Envoi 36
Vision of Sin 159
was he:
With r eyes mock-loyal, shaken voice.
So princely, tender, truthful, r, pure —
a r people behold The towering car.
Reverie rapt in nameless r,
Reverse To pine in that r of doom,
Reversed I sit, my empty glass r,
And now, the bloodless point r,
Reversion R ever dragging Evolution in the mud.
Revert Perforce wiU still r to you ;
Reverting ' Change, r to the years.
Reviewer O you chorus of indolent r's, Irresponsible,
indolent r's, Hendecasyllabics 1
Waking laughter in indolent r's. „ 8
All that chorus of indolent r's. ., 12
Too presumptuous, indolent r's. „ 16
Revile hear thee so missay me and r. Gareth and L. 945
Reviled Rode on the two, reviler and r ; „ 794
Shamed am I that I so rebuked, r, Missaid thee ; ,. 1164
And when r, hast answer'd graciously, „ 1269
tongue that all thro' yesterday R thee, ., 1323
Reviler Rode on the two, r and reviled ; „ 794
Reviling ' He heeded not r tones. Two Voices 220
Revisit from a land He never would r. Lover's Tale iv 210
Revolt arose The women up in wild r. Princess vii 123
R's, repubUcs, revolutions, „ Con. 65
And many more when Modred raised r, Guinevere 441
Revolution Revolts, repubhcs, r's, Princess, Con. 65
and all these old r's of earth ; All new-old r's of Empire — Vastness 29
R-v has proven but E-volution Beautiful City 3
Revolve In the same circle we r. Two Voices 314
Revolver Keep the r in hand ! Def. of Lu^know 26
if dynamite and r leave you courage Locksley H., Sixty 107
Revolving stood Sir Bedivere i? many memories, M. d' Arthur 210
to rise again R toward fulfilment, Edwin Morris 39
(for still My mother went r on the word) Princess Hi 54
common hate with the r wheel Should drag you down, „ vi 173
And tho' the months, r near. In Mem. xcii 11
stood Sir Bedivere R many memories. Pass, of Arthur 438
r in myself The word that is the symbol Ancient Sage 230
Rewaken R with the dawning soul. In Mem. xliii 16
Reward God bless you for it, God r you Enoch Arden 424
fain would I r thee worshipfully. Gareth and L. 829
Rex ' Death is king, and Vivat R ! Vision of Sin 179
Rtaeumatis (rheumatism) I wur down wi' the r then — Church-warden, etc. 14
Rheumy Glimmer in thy r eyes. Vision of Sin 154
Rhine You leave us : you will see the R, In Mem. xcviii 1
Rhodope The R, that built the pyramid. Princess ii 82
Rhyme (s) 2'o make demand of modem t To the Queen 11
With weary sameness in the r's. Miller's D. 70
He utter'd r and reason, The Goose 6
Wlio read me r's elaborately good, Edwin Morris 20
I will work in prose and r. Talking Oak 289
The r's are dazzled from their place Day-Dm., Pro. 19
To make me write my random r's. Will Water. 13
Let raffs be rife in prose and r, „ 61
We lack not r's and reasons, „ 62
lucky r's to him were scrip and share. The Brook 4
' O babbling brook, says Edmund in his r, „ 21
rolling in his mind Old waifs of r, „ 199
and r's And dismal lyrics, Princess i 141 ]
R's and r's in the range of the times ! Spiteful Letter 9 '
Rhyme
579
Richer
Rhyme (S) (continued) Ah God ! the petty fools of r Lit. Squabbles 1
For it's easy to find a r. (repeat) Window, Ay 6, 12
What hope is here for modem r In Mem. Ixxvii 1
Ring out, ring out my mournful r's, „ cvi 19
As half but idle brawling r's, „ Con. 23
I think ye hardly know the tender r Merlin and V. 383
Master, do ye love my tender r ? ' ., 399
Vivien, when you sang me that sweet r, „ 434
this r Is like the fair pearl-necklace of the Queen, ,, 450
so is it with this r : „ 456
The legend as in guerdon for your r ? „ 554
This tender r, and evermore the doubt, Pelleas and E. 410
ran across her memory the strange r Of bygone
Merlin, Last Tournament 131
therewithal came on him the weird r. Pass, of Arthur 444
The faded r's and scraps of ancient crones. Lover's Tale i 289
with goodly r and reason for it — Sister's (E. and E.) 92
who loved so well to mouth my r's. To W. H. Brookfield 2
You found some merit in my r's. To E. Fitzgerald 55
With present grief, and made the r's, Tiresias 196
louder than thy r the silent Word Ancient Sage 212
the name A golden portal to my r : To Marq. of Dufferin 16
forgotten mine own r By mine old self. To Mary Boyle 21
A r that flower'd betwixt the whitening sloe „ 25
hail thee monarch in their woodland r. Akbar's D., Hymn 6
Bhyme (verb) force to make me r in youth, Miller's D. 193
a happier lot Than ours, who r to-day. Epilogue 51
Rhymester novelist, realist, r, play your part, Locksley H., Sixty 139
Rhjrming R forward to his r, Amphion 30
leave to head These r's with your name. Pro. to Gen. Hainley 20
Rhsrthm For save when shutting reasons up in r, Lucretius 22Z
into r have dash'd The passion of the prophetess ; Princess iv 139
Tho' thine ocean-roll of r sound for ever To Virgil 31
Rib (s) sawn In twain beneath the r's ; St. S. Stylites 53
Stuff his r's with mouldy hay. Vision of Sin 66
Rotting on some wild shore with r's of wreck, Princess v 147
And so belabour'd him on r and cheek „ 341
And on thy r's the limpet sticks. Sailor Boy 11
clangs Its leafless r's and iron horns In Mem. cvii 12
white breast-bone, and barren r's of Death, Gareth and L. 1382
Clung but to crate and basket, r's and spine. Merlin and V. 625
tide Plash'd, sapping its worn r's ; Lover's Tale i 56
sitting on the r's of wreck. Locksley H., Sixty 14
Rib (verb) r and fret The broad-imbased beach, Su/pp. Confessions 127
Ribald Me the sport of r Veterans, Boddicea 50
Then with a r twinkle in his bleak eyes — The Ring 199
Riband She takes a r or a rose ; In Mem. vi 32
Ribb'd long dun wolds are r with snow, Oriana 5
his visage r From ear to ear with dogwhip-weals. Last Tournament 57
was r Aiid barr'd with bloom on bloom. Lover's Tale i 415
R3)bed (See also Red-ribb'd) To purl o'er matted
cress and r sand, Ode to Memory 59
her echo'd song Throb thro' the r stone ; Palace of Art 176
Ribbon Dangled a length of r and a ring Enoch Arden 750
blots of it about them, r, glove Or kerchief ; Aylmer's Field 620
wasn't sa plaain i' pink r's, Spinster's S's. 17
Rib-grated r-g dungeon of the holy human ghost, Happy 31
Rice many a tract of palm and r. Palace of Art Hi
Rich (See also Influence-rich, Royal-rich, Smnmer-rich)
A spring r and strange, Nothing will Lie 22
flower-bells and ambrosial orbs Of r fruit-bunches Isabel 37
Flush'd all the leaves with r gold-green, Arabian Nights 82
underpropt a r Throne of the massive ore, ,, 145
At the moist r smell of the rotting leaves, A spirit haunts 17
and meadow-ledges midway down Hang r in flowers, (Enone 7
And three r sennights more, my love for her. Edwin Morris 30
The slumbrous light is r and warm, Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 7
This earth is r in man and maid ; Will Water. 65
And many a slope was r in bloom To E. L. 20
returning r. Become the master of a larger craft, Enoch Arden 143
Annie — for I am r and well-to-do. „ 311
stranding on an isle at mom R, „ 553
A dagger, in r sheath with jewels on it Aylmer's Field 220
Forgetful how my r prooemion makes Lucretius 70
But move as r as Emperor-moths, Princess, Pro. 144
Rich (continued) swell On some dark shore just seen
that it was r. Princess i 249
And we as r as moths from dusk cocoons, „ ii 19
A classic lecture, r in sentiment, „ 374
I stored it full of r memorial : „ v 391
Immersed in r foreshadowings of the world, ,, vii 312
Disrobed the glimmering statue of Sir Ralph From
those r silks, „ Con. 118
R in saving common-sense, Ode on Well. 32
R in model and design ; Ode Inter. Exhib. 13
r Virgilian rustic measure Of Lari Maxume, The Daisy lb
Me the wife of r Prasutagus, Boddicea 48
Streams o'er a r ambrosial ocean isle, Milton 14
RoU'd the r vapour far into the heaven. Spec, of Iliad 8
But he was r where I was poor. In Mem. Ixxix 18
and lead The closing cycle r in good. „ cv 28
Ring out the feud of r and poor, „ cvi 11
R in the grace all women desire, Mavd I x 13
a morning shine So ■> in atonement as this „ xix 6
Voice in the r dawn of an ampler day — Ded. of Idylls 36
r With jewels, elfin Urim, on the hilt, Com. of Arthur 298
r in emblem and the work Of ancient kings Gareth and L. 304
The shield of Gawain blazon'd r and bright, „ 416
All in a full-fair manor and a r, „ 846
house Once r, now poor, but ever open-door'd.' Marr. of Gmaint 302
That all the turf was r in plots that look'd „ 660
With store of r apparel, sumptuous fare, „ 709
R arks with priceless bones of martyrdom, Balin and Balan 110
so r a fellowship Would make me wholly blest : „ 147
Past up the still r city to his kin, Lancelot and E. 802
Far up the dim r city to her kin ; „ 845
across the fields Far into the r city, „ 891
and me also like the Queen In all I have of r, „ 1120
And all the dim r city, roof by roof. Holy Grail 228
So strange, and r, and dim ; „ 342
R galleries, lady-laden, weigh'd the necks „ 346
The knights and ladies wept, and r and poor Wept, ,, 353
Beyond all sweetness in a life so r, — „ 626
sight Of her r beauty made him at one glance Pelleas and E. 238
but rosier luck will go With these r jewels. Last Tournament 46
Far on into the r heart of the west : Guinevere 244
infuse R atar in the bosom of the rose, Lover's Tale i 270
like a vain r man, That, having always prosper'd „ 715
her hair Studded with one r Provence rose — „ Hi 45
while I mused nor yet endured to take So r a prize, „ 50
such a feast So r, so strange, and stranger ev'n than
r, But r as for the nuptials of a king. „ iv 211
He brings and sets before him in r guise „ 247
That my r gift is wholly mine to give. „ 350
And in the r vocabulary of Love Sisters (E. and E.) 291
Having lands at home and abroad in a r West-Indian
isle ; The Wreck 46
R was the rose of simset there, „ 136
Strong in will and r in wisdom, Edith, Locksley H., Sixty 49
The kings and the r and the poor ; Dead Prophet 40
R in symbol, in ornament, On Jub. Q. Victoria 47
Their r ambrosia tasted aconite. Demeter and P. 105
stood between The tower and that r phantom of the
tower ? The Ring 253
full thanks to you For your r gift, To Ulysses 34
Fair garments, plain or r, and fitting close Akbar's Dream 131
Richard (See also Richard Grenville) Sir R bore in hand
all his sick men The Revenge 15
Good Sir R, tell us now, „ 26
And Sir R said again : ' We be all good English men. „ 29
Sir R spoke and he laugh'd, „ 32
Sir R cried in his Engl^h pride, „ 82
old Sir R caught at last, „ 98
Richard Grenville (See also Richard) At Flohes in the
Azores Sir R G lay, The Revenge 1
Then spake Siv R G : „ 8
With a joyful spirit I Sir 22 G die ! ' „ 103
Richard (king) That traitor to King R and the tmth, Sir J. Oldcastle 171
Richer Love, then, had hope of r store : In Mem. Ixxxi 5
And many of these in r arms than he. Com. of Arthur 52
Richer
580
Riding-borse
Richer {continued) as a faith once fair Was r than
these diamonds — Lancelot and E. 1229
she set A banquet r than the day before By me ; Holy Grail 589
r in His eyes Who ransom'd us, Guinevere 684
Richest and a sweep Of r pauses, Elednore 66
fetch'd His r beeswing from a binn reserved Aylmer's Field 405
call'd mine host To council, plied him with his r wines, Princess i 174
And those five years its r field. In Mem. xlvi 12
that shrine which then in all the realm Was r, Lancelot and E. 1331
Richest-toned voice the r-t that sings, In Mem. Ixxv 7
Richness deck it like the Queen's For r, Lancelot and E. 1119
Rick A jackass heehaws from the r, Amphion 71
the r Flames, and his anger reddens Princess iv 385
The moon like a r on fire was rising Grandmother 39
and all the land from roof and r. Com. of Arthur 433
When thirty r^s. All flaming. To Mary Boyle 36
Rick-fire years ago, In r-f days, „ 28
Rid If both be slain, I am r of thee ; Gareth and L. 790
Ridden {See also Hard-ridden) How long, O God, shall men
be r down, Poland 1
found that you had gone, R to the hills. Princess iv 343
Half r off with by the thing he rode, Geraint and E. 460
we have r before among the flowers In those
fair days — ■ Balin and Balan 272
added wound to wound. And r away to die ? ' Lancelot and E. 568
had r a random roimd To seek him, „ 630
' Then Sir Bors had r on Softly, Holy Grail 647
Riddle Dissolved the r of the earth. Two Voices 170
in seeking to undo One r, and to find the true, „ 233
oft the r of the painful earth Flash'd Palace of Art 213
' Your r is hard to read.' Lady Clare 76
Charades and r's as at Christmas here. Princess, Pro. 189
God unknits the r of the one. Lover's Tale i 181
Riddhng So Merlin r anger'd me ; Com. of Arthur 412
' Know ye not then the R of the Bards ? Gareth and L. 286
Ride (s) while she made her ready for her r, Lancelot and E. 779
' Alas,' he said, ' your r hath wearied you. „ 831
Ride (verb) His son and heir doth r post-haste, D. of the O. Year 31
' R you naked thro' the town, Godiva 29
Then by some secret shrine I r ; Sir Galahad 29
R on ! the prize is near.' „ 80
All-arm'd I r, whate'er betide, „ 83
They love us for it, and we r them down. Princess v 157
r with us to our lines, And speak with Arac : „ 225
Down by the hill I saw them r, Maud I ix 11
Lancelot, to r forth And bring the Queen ; — Com. of Arthur 448
And evermore a knight would r away. Gareth and L. 438
helm could r Therethro' nor graze : ,, 673
Than r abroad redressing women's wrong, „ 866
beseemeth not a knave To r with such a lady.' „ 959
The buoy that r's at sea, „ 1146
' I lead no longer ; r thou at my side ; „ 1157
There r's no knight, not Lancelot, „ 1182
loving the battle as well As he that r's him.' „ 1302
Seeing he never r's abroad by day ; „ 1334
And r with him to battle and stand by, Marr. of Geraint 94
' I will r forth into the wilderness ; ,. 127
put on thy worst and meanest dress And r with me.' ,, 131
tho' I r unann'd, I do not doubt To find, „ 218
knight whom late I saw R into that new fortress ,, 407
Shalt r to Arthur's court, and coming there, „ 582
To r with him this morning to the court, ,. 606
I can scarcely r with you to court, „ 749
That she r with me in her faded silk.' „ 762
I charge thee r before, Geraint and E. 14
when she saw him r More near by many a rood „ 441
' Then, Enid, shall you r Behind me.' „ 750
Hath leam'd black magic, and to r unseen. Balin and Balan 305
Up then, r with me ! Talk not of shame ! „ 522
We r a-hawking with Sir Lancelot. Merlin and V. 95
they r away — to hawk For waterfowl. „ 107
r, and dream The mortal dream „ 116
R, r and dream until ye wake — „ 118
They r abroad redressing human wrongs ! „ 693
he will r, Joust for it, and win, Lancelot and E. 203
Ride (verb) {continued) To r to Camelot with this noble
knight : Lancelot and E. 220
you r with Lancelot of the Lake,' ,. 417
rise, O Gawain, and r forth and find the knight. ,. 537
And r no more at random, noble Prince I .. 633
r A twelvemonth and a day in quest of it, Holy Grail 196
I have been the sluggard, and I r apace, „ 644
we are damsels-errant, and we r, Arm'd as ye see, Pelleas and E. 64
grizzlier than a bear, to r And jest with : „ 193
saw the King R toward her from the city, Guinevere 404
To r abroad redressing human wrongs, „ 471
r highly Above the perilous seas of change Lover's Tale i 805
war R's on those ringing axles ! Tiresias 93
Rider The horse and r reel : Sir Galahad 8
But that his heavy r kept him down. Vision of Sin 4
r's front to front, until they closed . Princess v 490
there a horse ! the r ? where is he ? Balin and Balan 467
steed of Pelleas floundering flung His r, Pelleas and E. 575
Ridest ' R thou then so hotly on a quest Holy Grail 642
That r here so blindly and so hard ? ' Pelleas and E. 564
Rideth who always r arm'd in black, Gareth and L. 636
Ridge (See also Ocean-ridge) his r's are not curls And
ripples of an inland mere ? Supp. Confessions 130
sand-built r Of heaped hills that mound the sea, Ode to AlemoryQl
A faint-blue r upon the right.
Across the r, and paced beside the mere,
And, leaping down the r's lightly.
But the other swiftly strode from r to r.
Or shp between the r's,
a ?■ Of breaker issued from the belt,
and then the great r drew,
storm Of galloping hoofs bare on the r of spears
Close to the r of a noble down.
The fortress, and the mountain r,
There Ues a r of slate across the ford ;
Southwestems, rolling r on r.
And climb'd upon a fair and even r,
my feet recrost the deathful r No memory
heapt in mounds and r's all the sea Drove
Across the r, and paced beside the mere.
And, leaping down the r's lightly.
But the other swiftly strode from r to r,
On that sharp r of utmost doom ride highly
that brave soldier, down the terrible r
r's drew the cloud and brake the storm
he Subjected to the Heliconian r
Watch'd again the hollow r's
we saw your soldiers crossing the r,
Ridged (adj.) Leaning upon the r sea,
bleat Of the thick-fleeced sheep from wattled folds.
Upon the r wolds. Ode to Memory 67
sharp clear twang of the golden chords Runs up the
r sea. Sea-Fairies 39]
Ridged (verb) R the smooth level, Arabian Nights 35:
Ridging {See also Slowly-ridging) The Biscay, roughly
r eastward,
Ridin-erse (riding-horse) iviy darter o' Squire's hed her
awn r-e
Riding Stopt, and then with a r whip
The kmghts come r two and two :
A youth came r toward a palace-gate.
He found the bailiff r by the farm,
r in, we call'd ; A plump-arm'd Ostleress
r at set of day Over the dark moor land, Rapidly
r far away. She waved to me
And down the long street r wearily.
Then r close behind an ancient churl.
Then r further past an armourer's,
but r first, I hear the violent threats
Came r with a hundred lances up ;
R at noon, a day or twain before,
from the city gates Issued Sir Lancelot r airily,
For Arthur and Sir Lancelot r once
Scarlett and Scarlett's three hundred were r by
Riding-horse See Ridin-erse
Mariana in the S. 5
31. d' Arthur 83
134
181
The Brook 28
Sea Dreams 211
220
Priticess v 489
To F. D. Maurice 16
In Mem. Ixxi 14
Gareth and L. 1056
1145
Marr. of Geraint 239
Holy Grail 534
798
Pass, of Arthur 251
302
349
Lover's Tale i 805
Sisters {E. and E.) 63
Montenegro 13
Tiresias 26
Locksley H., Sixty 2
Bandit's Death 21
The Winds, etc. 2
Enoch Arden 5291
Village Wife 35]
Maud I xiii 18 1
L. of Shalott a 25 j
Vision of Sin T
The Brook 15
Princess i 2251
Maud I ix5i\
Marr. of Geraint 25
261
26
Geraint and E. 4191
5391
Pelleas and E.
557
Last Tournament IC
Heavy Brigade '.
Rife
581
Ring
Eife With dinning sound my ears are r, Elednore 135
Let raffs be r in prose and rhyme, WUl Water. 61
language r With rugged maxims hewn from life ; Ode on Wdl. 183
Bifle-buUet Death from their r-b's, Def. of Luchww 1-t
Rifleman R, true is your heart, „ 56
R, high on the roof, hidden there „ 63
Storm, Storm, Riflemen form! (repeat) Riflemen form! 5, 19
Riflemen, Riflemen, Riflemen form ! (repeat) „ 7, 14, 21, 28
Form, Form, Riflemen Form ! (repeat) „ 12, 26
Rift (s) ' It is the little r within the lute, Merlin and V. 390
' The little r within the lover's lute „ 393
gray heads beneath a gleaming r. Demeter and P. 83
Flattery gilding the r in a throne ; Fastness 20
Rift (verb) R the hills, and roll the waters, Locksley Hall 186
Rifted (See also Sallow-rifted) methought The cloud
was r by a purer gleam Akbar's Dream 78
Rigging masts and the r were lying over the side ; The Revenge 81
storm grew with a howl and a hoot of the blast In the r. The Wreck 92
Right (adj. and adv.) {See also Ebilf-right) whose strong
r arm debased The throne of Persia, Alexander 1
The r ear, that is fiU'd with dust. Two Voices 116
And I should know if it beat r, Miller's D. 179
Time will set me r.' Edwin Morris 88
My r leg chain'd into the crag, St. S. Stylites 73
For, am I r, or am I wrong, (repeat) Day-Dm., U Envoi 29, 33
And on the r hand of the hearth he saw Philip, Enoch Arden 744
But Lady Psyche was the r hand now, Princess Hi 37
is not Ida r ? They worth it ? „ 188
And so I often told her, r or wrong, ,, 288
And, r or wrong, I care not : „ 290
she may sit Upon a king's r hand in thunderstorms, „ 439
he That loved me closer than his own r eye, „ 531
And r ascension. Heaven knows what ; „ vi 257
she turns Once more to set a ringlet r ; In Mem. vi 36
I cannot see the featiu-es r, „ Ixx 1
And this wise world of ours is mainly r. Geraint and E. 901
' R was the King ! our Lancelot ! that true man ! '
' And r was I,' Lancelot and E. 665
In her r hand the lily, in her left The letter — „ 1155
Power from whose r hand the light Of Life issueth. Lover's Tale i 497
' you are sure it '11 all come r,' First Quarrel 1
' Wait a little, my lass, I am sure it '11 all come r.'
(repeat) „ 74, 91
Steevie be r good manners bang thruf Spinster's S's. 66
It still were r to crown with song Epilogue 36
Death for the r cause, death for the wrong cause. Fastness 8
I worship that r hand Which fell'd the foes Happy 41
Ri{^t (s) who stand now, when we should aid the r — Poland 13
because r is r, to follow r Were wisdom (Enone 149
hers by r of f ull-accomplish'd Fate ; Palace of Art 207
Who wi-ench'd their r's from thee ! England and Amer. 5
since I knew the r And did it ; Love and Duty 29
we, that prate Of r's and wrongs, Godiva 8
And in the r's that name may give, Day-Dm., L'Envoi 54
' The man will cleave unto his r.' Lady Clare 46
reigning in his place. Lord of his r's Enoch Arden 764
A talk of college and of ladies' r's. Princess, Pro. 233
be swerved from r to save A prince, „ ii 290
Toward that great year of equal mights and r's, „ iv 74
To unfurl the maiden banner of our r's, „ 503
What have you done but r ? „ d 65
As trutliful, much that Ida claims as r „ 202
throat's would bawl for civU r's. No woman named : „ 387
With claim on claim from r to r, „ 417
r's or wrongs like potherbs in the street. „ 459
We will be liberal, since our r's are won. „ vi 68
whoUy scom'd to help their equal r's „ vii 233
AH great self-seekers trampling on the r : Ode on Well. 187
only thirsting For the r, „ 204
Maakin' 'em goa togither as they've good r to do. N. Farmer, N. S. 34
At you, so careful of the r. To F. D. Maurice 10
Ring in the love of truth and r, In Mem. cvi 23
mine by a r, from birth till death. Maud I xix 42
a war would arise in defence of the r, „ /// vi 19
in the space to left of her, and r, Gareth and L. 224
Right (s) (continued) mocker ending here Turn'd to the r, Gareth and L. 295
Would shape himself a r ! '
bring him here, that I may judge the r,
mark'd not on his r a cavern-chasm
on his r Stood, all of massiest bronze :
Made with her r a comb of pearl to part The lists
lightnings here and there to left and r Struck,
To r ? to left ? straight forward ?
a-s one That doest r by gentle and by churl.
King by courtesy, Or King by r —
What r's are his that dare not strike
Had Arthur r to bind them to himself ?
For half of their feet to the r
but sane, if she were in the r.
Follow Light, and do the R —
The ring by r, she said, was hers again
for the r's of an equal humanity,
I still would do the r Thro' all the vast dominion
Right (verb) When the wild peasant r's himself,
to fight, to struggle, to r the wrong —
' Bound am I to r the wrong'd,
strength and will to r the wrong'd.
And leaving human Avrongs to r themselves.
Righteous Not void of r self-applause,
That even our prudent king, our r queen —
Righteousness yonder shines The Sun of R,
proclaimed His Master as ' the Sun of R,'
Rightful help my prince to gain His r bride.
Right-honest ' All of one mind and all r-k friends !
Righting So I set to r the house,
Rigid a rough piece Of early r colour,
Rigtree (beam) when the r was tummlin' in —
Riled Eh but the moor she r me.
Fur if iver thy feyther 'ed r me
Rill Like sunshine on a dancing r,
From old well-heads of haimted r's.
Not any song of bird or sound of r ;
' Go down beside thy native r.
From hidden summits fed with r's
The white-faced halls, the glancing r's,
round with ragged r's and burning folds, —
Rillet fall Of diamond r's musical,
Rim ragged r's of thunder brooding low,
Beyond their utmost purple r, (repeat)
the r Changed every moment as we flew.
ran By sallowy r's, arose the labourers' homes.
Now pacing mute by ocean's r ;
Roll'd into light, and turning on its r's
Rime Make thy grass hoar with early r.
348
380
Balin and Balan 312
363
Merlin and F. 244
Holy Grail 494
Pelleas and E. 67
Last Tournament 74
342
527
684
The Revenge 35
The Flight 58
Locksley H., Sixty 277
The Ring 394
Beautiful City 2
Akbar's Dream 13
Princess iv 385
Wages 3
Gareth and L. 804
Holy Grail 309
898
Two Foices 146
Columbus 122
Enoch Arden 504
Akbar's Dream 83
Princess Hi 161
Geraint and E. 484
First Quarrel 47
Aylmer's FieM 281
Owd Rod 115
North. Cobbler 30
Church-warden, etc. 41
Rosalind 29
Elednore 16
D. ofF. Women 66
In Mem. xxxvii 5
,, ciii 7
Con. 113
Lover's Tale ii 63
Arabian Nights 48
Palace of Art 75
Day-Dm., Depart. 6, 30
The Foyage 27
Aylmer's Field 147
The Daisy 21
Lancelot and E. 51
Two Foices 66
brows in silent hours become Unnaturally hoar with r, St. S. Stylites 166
To F. D. Maurice 42
The Flight 4
Gardener's D. 181
(Enone 72
Talking Oak 171
Ancient Sage 122
the lawn as yet Is hoar with r,
the hiUs are white with r.
Rimm'd length of bright horizon r the dark.
Rind gleaming r ingrav'n ' For the most fair,'
Hard wood I am, and wrinkled r,
Is jutting thro' the r ;
Rinded See Golden-rinded
Ring (encompass) my followers r him roimd : Geraint and E. 336
Ring (s) (See also Marriage-ring) locks a-drooping twined
Round thy neck in subtle r Adeline 58
his stedfast shade Sleeps on his luminous r.' Palace of Art 16
they drew into two burning r's All beams of Love, D. of F. Women 174
Five hundred r's of years — Talking Oak 84
And even into my inmost r A pleasure I discern'd, „ 173
The dim curls kindle into sunny r's ;
Grave faces gather'd in a r.
Closed in a golden r.
And gave the trinkets and the r's,
Enoch's golden r had girt Her finger,
Dangled a length of ribbon and a r
fragile bindweed-bells and briony r's ;
Lay deeper than to wear it as his r —
nor by plight or broken r Bound,
I'll stake my ruby r upon it you did.'
a thousand r's of Spring In every bole.
Tithonus 54
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 38
Sir L. and Q. G. 27
The Letters 21
Enoch Arden 157
750
The Brook 203
Aylmer's Field 122
135
Princess, Pro. 170
V 237
Ring
582
Now over, now beneath her marriafrp r /o • '' /!** ^
Spanish fleet with broken siHpf^I^ ' ^ „ • Geramt and E. 259
he learnt thatl hated thf rl wZ " '^'^'^^ ^^fri^'^z-^^^
diamond necklace dearer than the golden r LorUlJn J'f ol
Pnnce has found you, take this r -Locksleij H., Sixty 21
This r bequeath'd you by your mother,
Ihe ris doubly yours.
A r too which you kiss'd,
Like a seal'd book, aU mention of the r
while I stoopt To take and kiss the r '
Ihis very r lo t'amo?
S Jf^f'' *° ™^' *>" i^"g^'^ ' tlie r is weird.'
souls Of two repentant Lovers guard the r • '
And If you give the r to any maid,
And bind the maid to love you by the r; And if the
r were stolen from the maid "
sent This r 'lo t'amo ' to his best beloved,
half-frenzied by the r. He wildly fought
drew the r From his dead finger
^J^fhP^^""^ '°''^' *V"' *^i« '• Had sent his cry
bad the man engrave ' From Walter ' on the r
fa^M^'^^'^J'^'"^ ?'f^ '^^^^ engraven the ;_
took the r, and flaunted it Before that other
But commg nearer— Muriel had the r—' 0 Miriam ' have
^ you given your r to her ? ^^""am . nave
• p Miriam if you love me take the r "
Unclosed the hand, and from it drew the r
Mimm loved me from the first. Not thro' the r; but on
SroThaTr""™' ™« ^^^^^^^^^'' death-dky."i^S
Mjr too when she comes of age
Minam not Muriel-she shall have the r.'
But kept their watch upon the r and you.
i?.ver since You sent the fatal r'~
Aor ever ceased to clamour for the r; Why had I sent
Iw thf ;:* '° '^^ ^ ^'^y ^^^ I made Lr love^'r^e
The r by right, she said, was hers again.
But still she made her outcry for the r ■
when the bridegroom murmur'd, ' With this r '
The guardian of her relics, of her r
Ine fatal r lay near her •
had stolen, worn the r— Then torn it from her finser
vr^' °r ^^l^ ^^^ ^^d torn the r In frSt, '
You have the r she guarded •
saw The r of faces redden'd by the flames
and never a r for the bride
Ring (to resound, etc.) How the merry bluebell r's
R sudden scntches of the jay
V"ul^,? ^^.®'' "1 ^^^ ears of armed men.
church-bells r in the Christmas-morn
il wT"^ ^1"^- ^^^ ^*^^' f°^g«t to graze,
aid we hear the copses r » s ,
^e shrill beU r's, the censer swings.
When all the ghmmering moorlanl Vs
""' Aylme?s ' ""^ ^™ '^° '^^™^ *^""^ ™«^dy
J?> to the roar of an angel onsetr-
hghts and r's the gateway bell,
Shall r with music all the same •
R out, wild bells, to the wild sky,
R out, wild bells, and let him die.
^"ow^ ' ' '" ^^^ "^'^' ^' ^''PPy b^"^' across the
^ out the false, r in the true,
R out the grief that saps the mind,
manEnd °^ "'^ ^"^ P""'"' ^ ^'^ '^^'^"^ ^ all
■R out a slowly dying cause,
« m the nobler modes of life,
Rioted
The Ring 69
75
79
114
123
132
133
195
198
200
202
210
213
217
232
236
238
243
259
263
269
275
289
294
300
362
389
394
403
439
441
450
455
470
„ 475
Death of CEnone 92
Charity 6
Adeline 34
My life ii full 20
(Enone 265
M. d'Arthur, Ep. 31
Gardener's D. 85
LocMey Hall 35
Sir Galahad 35
Sir L. and Q. G. 35
Aylmer's Field 395
Milton 8
In Mem. viii 3
Ixxvii 14
cvi 1
4
11
13
15
Ring (to resound, ete.) {continued) R out the want the
care, the sm, ' j ,,
R out, r out my mournful rhymes '''* ^^''^- "'^ ]l
But r the fuller minstrel in. " '" ^^
R out false pride in place and blood, " 9?
of good °^ ^"^^^ ^^ "^^*' ^ ''^ *^^ common love "
^W°f'^'^5P%°^^.°"i'^''^^«; ^ out the narrowing " ^^
ust of gold,- i? out the thousand wars of old, R in
the thousand years of peace,
i? in the vahant man and free " i%
R ouMhe darkness of the land, R in the Christ that is "
Now r's the woodland loud and lorn? " ^\
r's to the yell of the trampled wife, Mn,,^ t'^-^I
Ts Even in dreams to the chink of his pence, ^ 1 40
It will r m my heart and my ears, ''it-H
And the woodland echo r's; " -^ qo
But there r's on a sudden a passionate cry " '* i?
FolSilJsLrdron^C'n't^f-' ' ^^^^o^na^r^nt^
m this pavement but shall ^^T/rme '"''" T^wS^flf?
R little bells of change From word to word PnJJT- .i
If It be a Christian Church, people r1he beli from ^""^' ^^''''' ^^
love to Thee, ji,i. > n t
Ringdove In which the swarthy r sat Akbars B., Inscrtp. 4
xuugmg |oee aiso A-nnging, Hollow-rmging) When
midnight bells cease r suddenly, Z> «f 7<' IF. 9 it
when the bells were r, Allan call'd "^ ^- ^"T** ^!I
m the r of thine ears ; r i. 7 t^^. !^
^'oVcha^'e'* """'^^ 'P'" ^'' '""' ^^°^'" *^ '^ g'-°°^<'«
And, r, springs from brand and mail • e; n 1 j. if?
With blissful treble r clear. ' «• r*"^ ^/"'^"^ ^4
Once likewise, in the r of his ears %^- T^ ^J ^\B
R like proven'golden coinage tme, AylZXpfZ til
but he must— the land was r of it— ^ ^'^^"^ Ex
with His message r in thine ears, " i^
-baaint s-daay— they was r the bells. iv Farmer V .<? T^
I' tSo^le'tty? ^'^ ^'"^^' *'^^ ^ ^""^ °^ *'- Hal,; ^"^T^i"/; g
Clamour and rumble, and r and clatter, " rT! ]2
Raiiging and r thro' the minds of men. Com of ArthLVA
r with their serpent hands, m'i ■ It/ r J«
f -f ;« the faLy had updrawn A fashion zS/^f^fi 12
Surely the pibroch of Europe is r jtTZ t I ^
Far on the r plains of windy Troy ^'^^ "^ ^^.f ""^ ?^
He rode the meUay, lord of the /lists p • ^''%}1
those six maids ;,^^h shrieis and .tughter on the '^'■""" ' '"^
sand Threw down the bier; r^,.^^', t 7 ••• o«
Rin.S'* " T^"^* ."' -^^^ ^^'i^^ °" those r axles ! '''''' ' Ss'Z II
Rmglet comb my hair till my r's would fall The Me^ZZ l!
Tie up the r's on your cheek : vwmnawi 14
For hid in r's day and night, mw/^^T\ -o
bab!- PP^ ^' ^^^' '"^y ^^'^^^ The r's waving ^'"'^ ' ^^ ^'^
shower'd the rippled r's to her knee • Talking Oak 178
Her full black r's downward roU'd n n „,'^''<^*^'« 47
Blowing the r from th^toaid ' -D«i/-i>m., Sleep. B. 12
With le^ngths of °ydliw r like'a giri ^'' ^^ ";''.«• ^- ^^.^
turns Once more to set a r right r ^-J.^^^''^ \i
Ere childhood's flaxen r turn'd ' ^'^ ^^ " ^* ?f
flaxen r's of our infancies Wander'd, Lover's TalTi^f A
Fell on my face, and her long r's moved, ' ' ^"^' ' f^t
The raven r or the gold ; ^^r j,. o99
Rmgleted 6Ve Yellow-rmgleted The Ring 16b
wallow in fiery r and revel On Kilaneii oMrwammi 426
Rioted
583
Risen
Rioted {continued) r in the city if C)inobeline !
There they dwelt and there they r ;
and r over the land,
Rioting over all the great wood r And climbing,
Riotous show'd A r confluence of watercourses
She braved a r heart in asking for it.
fling Thy royalty back into the r fits
Rip S your brothers' vices open.
Boddicea 60
63
V. of Maddune 58
Lover's Tale i 403
Lticretius 30
Lancelot and E. 359
Sir J. Oldcastle 100
Locksley H., Sixty 141
Ripe Your r hps moved not, but your cheek Flush'd Miller's D. 131
when time was r, The still affection „ 224
I was r for death. D. of F. Women 208
And makes the purple lilac r, On a Mourner 7
Made r in Sumner-chace : Talking Oak 40
Till all be r and rotten. Will Water. 16
Half-mused, or reeling r, „ 74
' Yes, if the nuts ' he said ' be r again : Enoch Arden 459
Too r, too late ! they come too late Sea Dreams 67
See thou, that countest reason r In Mem. xxxiii 13
Appearing ere the times were r, „ Con. 139
you may call it a little too r, Maud I ii9
shaping an infant r for his birth, „ iv 34
Ripen flower r's in its place, R's and fades, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 36
and r toward the grave In silence ; r, fall, and
cease : „ 51
The unnetted black-hearts r dark, The Blackbird 7
watch her harvest r, her herd increase, Maud III vi 25
till their love Shall r to a proverb, Lover's Tale i 758
Ripen'd And pluck'd the r ears, Princess ii 2
But woman r earlier, and her life „ 154
Ripeness but, when love is grown To r, To J. S. 15
And gave all r to the grain. In Mem. Ixxxi 11
Riper r fife may magnetise The baby-oak within. Talking Oak 255
Not first, and third, which are a r first ? Sea Dreams 66
train To i growth the mind and will : In Mem. xlii 8
The men of rathe and r years : „ cx2
Ripple (s) his ridges are not curls And r's Swpp. Confessions 131
watch the crisping r's on the beach, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 61
' I heard the r washing in the reeds, M. d' Arthur 70
And the long r washing in the reeds.' „ 117
Stared o'er the r feathering from her bows : Enoch Arden 544
The seeming-wanton r break, In Mem. xlix 11
shadowing down the homed flood In r's, „ Ixxxvi 8
' I heard the r washing in the reeds, Pass, of Arthur 238
And the long r washing in the reeds.' „ 285
so quiet the r would hardly blanch into spray The Wreck 137
Slight r on the boundless deep Ancient Sage 189
that one r on the boundless deep „ 191
Ripple (verb) That r round the lonely grange ; In Mem. xci 12
rivulet at her feet R's on in light and shadow Maud II iv 42
Rippled the r ringlets to her knee ; Godiva 47
which was lined And r like an ever-fleeting wave, Gareth and L. 215
Rippling ran over The r levels of the lake, Lover's Tale Hi 4
Ripply and ran By r shallows of the lisping lake, Edwin Morris 98
Rise (s) (See also Moon-rise) I turning saw, throned
on a flowery r, D. of F. Women 125
Approvingly, and prophesied his r : Aylmer'a Field 414
upon the r And long roll of the Hexameter — Lucretius 10
Rise (verb) In roaring he shall r and on the surface die. The Kraken 15
How could I r and come away, Oriana 57
R from the feast of sorrow, lady, Margaret 62
Pain r's up, old pleasures paU. Two Voices 164
all day long t« fall and r Upon her balmy bosom, Miller's D. 182
with one mind the Gods R up for reverence. CEnone 110
I will r and go Down into Troy, „ 261
And that sweet incense r ? ' Palace of Art 44
I would see the sun r (repeat) May Qv^en, N. Y's. E. 2, 51
sweeter is the yoimg lamb's voice to me
that cannot r, „ Con. 6
O look ! the sun begins to r, „ 49
threshold of the sun. Never to r again. D. of F. Women 64
We saw the large white stars r one by one, „ 223
And if some dreadful need should r Love thou thy land 91
let thy voice R Uke a fountain for me M. d' Arthur 249
to r again Revolving toward fulfilment, Edwin Morris 38
and the shadows r and fall. Locksley Hall 80
Rise (verb) (continued) And every hundred years to r Day-Dm., L'Envoi 7
For blasts would r and rave and cease. The Voyage 85
and r To glass herself in dewy eyes Move eastward 6
Are but dust that r's up, (repeat) Vision of Sin 133, 169
Till thy drooping courage r, „ 152
Let me r and fly away. Sea Dreams 304
The Samian Here r's and she speaks Princess Hi 115
R in the heart, and gather to the eyes, „ iv 41
R ! ' and stoop'd to updrag Melissa : „ 366
they r or sink Together, dwarf'd or godlike, „ vii 259
A devil r's in my heart, Sailor Boy 23
That men may r on stepping-stones In Mem. i 3
And see the sails at distance r, „ xii 11
To-night the winds begin to r „ xvl
cloud That r's upward always higher, „ 17
R, happy mom, r, holy mom, „ xxx 29
When crown'd with blessing she doth r .„ xl 5
Did ever r from high to higher ; „ xli 2
If any vague desire should r, „ Ixxx 1
An iron welcome when they r: „ xc8
of events As often r's ere they r. „ xcii 16
But served the seasons that may r ; „ cxiii 4
R in the spiritual rock, „ cxxxi 3
They r, but linger ; it is late ; „ Con. 91
And r, 0 moon, from yonder down, ,, 109
and thought he would r and speak And rave Maud I i 59
And there r's ever a passionate cry „ II i 5
Then I r, the eavedrops fall, „ iv 62
but at night let go the stone, And r, Gareth and L. 826
if he r no more, I will not look at wine Geraint and E. 666
R therefore ; robe yourself in this : „ 685
Rose when they saw the dead man r, „ 732
and crying, ' Sirs, R, follow ! Balin and Balan 48
R, my true knight. „ 75
This old sun-worship, boy, will r again, „ 457
' R, my sweet King, and kiss me on the hps, „ 516
R ! ' and the damsel bidden r arose Merlin and V. 68
r, O Gawain, and ride forth and find the knight. Lancelot and E. 536
R and take This diamond, and deliver it, „ 545
To r hereafter in a stiller flame „ 1319
lulling random squabbles when they r. Holy Grail 557
' R, weakling ; I am Lancelot ; Pelleas and E. 582
but r. And fly to my strong castle overseas : Guinevere 112
yet r now, and let us fly, „ 120
r — I hear the steps of Modred in the west, Pass, of Arthur 58
let thy voice R hke a fountain for me „ 417
from the woods That belt it r three dark, tall
cypresses,— Lover's Tale i 536
and dimly knows His head shall r no more : „ 639
laid it in a sepulchre of rock Never to r again. „ 684
that strove to r From my full heart. „ 711
then I seem'd To r, and through the forest-shadow „ ii 72
I could not r Albeit I strove to follow. „ 97
An' the wind began to r. First Quarrel 89
My Willy 'ill r up whole Rizpah 57
wish yon moaning sea would r and burst the shore, The Flight 11
my mother's ghost would r — „ 51
kings and realms that pass to r no more ; To Virgil 28
heron r's from his watch beside the mere, Happy 3
in their turn thy warblers r on wing. Prog, of Spring 108
once again we see thee r. Akbar's D., Hymn 1
Risen (See also New-risen, Re-risen) Nilus would
have r before his time D. of F. Women 143
Dora would have r and gone to him, Dora 77
thus early r she goes to inform The Princess : Princess Hi 62
Has r and cleft the soil, „ m 35
those twin brothers, r again and whole ; „ vii 89
She might have r and floated when I saw her. Holy Grail 100
sun is rising,' tho' the sun had r. „ 408
they have r against me in their blood Pelleas and E. 461
Lionel, who fain had r, but fell again. Lover's Tale iv 361
nay but thirty-nine have r and stand, Sir J. Oldcastle 83
Have we r from out the beast, Locksley H., Sixty 148
This later light of Love have r in vain, To Prin. Beatrice 16
Henceforth, as having r from out the dead, Demeter and P. 144
Risen
584
Rivulet
Risen (continued) Not r to, she was bolder. The Ring 361
Look, the sun has r To flame along Romney's R. 57
vines Which on the touch of heavenly feet had /, Death of CEnone 5
Risest R thou thus, dim dawn, again, In Mem. Ixxii 1
R thou thus, dim dawn, again, „ xcix 1
Rising {See also Ever-rising, Later-rising) r, from her
bosom drew Old letters, Mariana in the S. 61
angels r and descending met With interchange Palace of Art 143
And of the r from the dead, „ 206
lest the soul Of Discord race the r wind ; Love thou thy land 68
r bore him thro' the place of tombs. M. d' Arthur 175
made his forehead like the r sun High „ 217
r thro' the mellow shade, Locksley Hall 9
Rto no fancy-flies. Vision of Sin 102
R, falling, like a wave, „ 125
I saw my father's face Grow long and troubled like a r
moon, Princess i 59
r up Robed in the long night of her deep hair, „ iv 490
Look'd up, and r slowly from me, „ vi 151
Last Uttle Lilia, r quietly, „ Con. 116
The moon like a rick on fire was r Grandmother 39
And r up, he rode to Arthur's court, Marr. of Geraint 591
And r on the sudden he said, ' Eat ! Geraint and E. 614
Azure, an Eagle r or, the Sun In dexter chief ; Merlin and V. 475
raise the Prince, who r twice or thrice Guinevere 46
Will draw me to the r of the sun. Lover's Tale i 27
for that day Love, r, shook his wings, „ 317
roll R and f aUing— The Wreck 54
the car Of dark Aidoneus r rapt thee hence. Demeter and P. 39
fiery phoenix r from the smoke. The Ring 339
O r worlds by yonder wood. In Mem. cv 25
Thou standest in the r sun, „ cxxx 3
And on the downs a r fire : „ Con. 108
And half to the r day ; Maud I xxii 24
The fires of Hell brake out of thy r sim, „ II id
but thought ' The sun is r,' tho' the sun had risen. Holy Grail 408
All in the middle of the r moon : „ 636
And r bore him thro' the place of tombs. Pass, of Arthur 343
made his forehead like a r sun High „ 385
to lower the r race of men ; Locksley H., Sixty 147
Yet I would the r race were half as eager for the
light. „ 228
Risk and r thine all. Life, limbs, Gareth and L. 128
Risk'd (for the man Had r his little) Sea Dreams 10
Take not his life : he r it for my own ; Princess v 407
sweet son, had r himself and climb'd, Gareth and L. 60
Risking some knight of mine, r his Ufe, Geraint and E. 915
Rite r's and forms before his burning eyes The Poet 39
and with solemn r's by candle-light — Princess v 292
Worthy of our gorgeous r's, Ode on Well. 93
The r's prepared, the victim bared. The Victim 65
mingle with your r's ; Pray and be pray'd for ; Guinevere 680
And those lone r's I have not seen. To Marq. of Dufferin 39
Ritual And hear the r of the dead. In Mem. xviii 12
all else Form, R, varying with the tribes of men. Akbar's Dream 125
Rivage From the green r many a fall Arabian Nights 47
Rival (adj.) Which fann'd the gardens of that r rose Aylmer's Field 455
the King Took, as in r heat, to holy things ; Balin and Balan 100
nor raved And thus foam'd over at a r name : „ 567
He wildly fought a r suitor, The Ring 214
Rival (s) my latest r brings thee rest. Locksley Hall 89
Leolin's rejected r's from their suit Aylmer's Field 493
Leolin's one strong r upon earth ; „ 557
wrathful, petulant. Dreaming some r, Lucretius 15
To push my r out of place and power. Princess iv 335
Poor r's in a losing game. In Mem. cii 19
far away the maid in Astolat, Her guiltless r, Lancelot and E. 746
R's of realm- ruining party, Locksley H., Sixty 120
Rivalries fruitful strifes and r of peace — Bed. of Idylls 38
Drove me from all vainglories, r. Holy Grail 32
Riven within my inmost frame Was r in twain : Lover's Tale i 596
Knights were thwack'd and r. The Tourney 10
River CEeably the blue r chimes in its flowing All Things willj)ie 1
Thoro' the crack-stemm'd pines only the far r shines. Leonine Eleg. 2
down a broad canal P'rom the main r sluiced, Arabian Nights 26
River (continued) A motion from the r won Ridged the
smooth level, Arabian Nights 34
Flowing like a crystal r ; Poet's Mind 6
With an inner voice the r ran. Dying Swan 5
One willow over the r wept, „ 14
Like some broad r rushing down alone, Mine be the strength 2
On either side the r lie Long fields L. of Shalott i 1
By the island in the r Flowing down to Camelot. „ 13
From the r winding clearly, „ 31
There the r eddy whirls, „ it 15
From the bank and from the r He flash'd „ Hi 33
' Tirra Urra,' by the r Sang Sir Lancelot. „ 35
And down the r's dim expanse „ iv 10
full-flowing r of speech Came down upon my heart. CEnone 68
one, a full-fed r windmg slow By herds Palace of Art 73
drew R's of melodies. „ 172
They saw the gleaming r seaward flow Lotos-Eaters 14
long bright r drawing slowly His waters „ C. S. 92
How fresh the meadows look Above the r. Walk, to the Mail 2
willows two and two By r's gallopaded. Ampkion 40
Sir L. and Q. G. 15
A Farewell 6
The Brook 32, 48, 64, 183
37
Aylmer's Field 768
Princess i 171
206
Hi 172
196
290
iv 14
178
277
473
vii 13
Ode on Well. 50
W. to Alexandra 19
In Mem. Ixxi 13
„ ciii 8
Maud I iv 32
Gareth and L. 611
906
1154
Geraint and E. 764
Lancelot and E. 75
• 278
1038
1122
1389
Holy Grail 800
Last Tournament 44
Columbus 27
Merlin and the G. 52
Aylmer's Field 451
Mariana in the S. 6
54
Aylmer's Field 454
Qinone 38
Gareth and L. 1025
1216
Merlin and V. 958
Gardener's D. 264
Charity 15
CEnone 114
Mavd II iv 67
Lover's Tale ii 188
Marr. of Geraint 268
The Poet 51
Holy Grail 183
Leonine Eleg. 4
May Queen 39
Sir L. and Q. G. 29
A Farewell 1
In curves the yellowing r ran,
A rivulet then a r :
To join the brimming r, (repeat)
there the r : and there Stands PhiHp's farm
where brook and r meet.
Runs in a r of blood to the sick sea.
Set in a gleaming r's crescent-curve,
We foUow'd up the r as we rode,
and the r made a fall Out yonder ; '
The r as it narrow'd to the hills.
we came to where the r sloped To plunge
They faint on hill or field or r :
miss'd the plank, and roli'd In the r.
combing out her long black hair Damp from the r ;
As waits a r level with the dam Ready to burst
Let the great r take me to the main :
That shines over city and r.
Flash, ye cities, in r's of fire !
Beside the r's wooded reach,
A r sliding by the wall.
his high sun flame, and his r billowing ran,
a r Runs in three loops about her living-place ;
Wherethro' the serpent r coil'd, they came.
Down to the r, sink or swim.
O'er the four r's the first roses blew,
holding then his court Hard on the r
By the great r in a boatman's hut.
Up the great r in the boatman's boat.
prepared a chariot-bier To take me to the r, and a
barge Be ready on the r.
Sat by the r in a cove, and watch'd
and all the sand Swept hke a r,
when I was leaning out Above the r —
saw the r's roU from Paradise !
streaming and shining on Silent r.
River-bank he ran Beside the r-b :
River-bed An empty r-b before.
The r-b was dusty-white ;
River-breeze the soft r-b, Which fann'd the gardens
River-God I am the daughter of a R-G,
River-loop So when they touch'd the second r-l,
Lancelot, having swum the r-l's —
River-rain Snapt in the rushing of the r-r
River-shore Spread the light haze along the r-s's,
creep down to the r-s,
River-sunder'd r-s champaign clothed with com,
River-tide On the misty r-t.
Riveted the eye Was r and charm-bound,
Riveting Sat r a helmet on his knee.
Riving r the spirit of man,
A cracking and a r of the roofs.
Rivulet Down by the poplar tall r's babble and fall.
r in the flowery dale ill merrily glance and play.
Now by some tinkling r.
Flow down, cold r, to the sea,
Rivulet
585
Robby
Rivulet (continiud) A r then a river : A Farewell 6
By dancing r's fed his flocks To E. L. 22
sweep Of some precipitous r to the wave, Enoch Arden 587
where the r's of sweet water ran ; „ 642
Myriads of r's hurrying thro' the lawn, Priticess vii 220
With many a r high against the Sun The Islet 21
Nor pastoral r that swerves In Mem. c 14
But the r on from the lawn Running down Maud I xiv 29
R crossing my ground, „ xxi 1
O R, bom at the Hall, „ 8
For I heard your r fall From the lake „ xxii 36
the r at her feet Ripples on in light and shadow „ // iv 41
Fled like a glittering r to the tarn : Lancelot and E. 52
one r from a tiny cave Came lightening Pelleas and E. 425
She comes ! The loosen'd r's run ; Prog, of /Spring 9
RoS (dog's name) (See also Boaver) Naay, noa mander o' use
to be callin' 'im E, R, R, Owd Rod 1
An' R was the dog as knaw'd „ 8
Fur I wants to tell tha o' R „ 19
Then I caU'd out R, R, R, „ 91
R was as good as the Hangel i' saavin' a son „ 96
' I mun gaw up agean fur jf?.' „ 97
an' clemm'd owd R by the 'ead, „ 99
a-callin' o' R till 'e waggled 'is taail „ 105
An' I browt R round, „ 113
Roabin' (robing) a r the 'ouse Uke a Queean. Spinster's S's. 106
Road (See also Cross-road) thro' the field the r runs by
To many-tower'd Camelot ; L. of Shcdott i 4
Walking the cold £ind starless r of Death Uncomforted, (Enone 259
and stood by the r at the gate. Grandmother 38
Out into the r I started, and spoke „ . 43
In ruin, by the mountain r ; The Daisy 6
And at a sudden swerving of the r, Geraint and E. 506
Roam at night I would r abroad and play The Merman 11
Too long you r and wheel at will ; Rosalind 36
see thee r, with tresses unconfined, Elednore 122
we will no longer r.' Lotos-Eaters 45
To those that stay and those that r, Sailor Boy 14
Henceforth, wherever thou may'st r, In Mem. xvii 9
All winds that r the twilight came „ Ixxix 11
To range the woods, to r the park, „ Con. 96
And r the goodly places that she knew ; Marr. of Geraint 646
Boam'd the hill Where last we r together. Lover's Tale ii 34
For while we r along the dreary coast, „ iv 145
all the summer long we r in these wild woods The Flight 79
Roaming Low-flowino breezes are r Leonine Eleg. 1
For always r with a hungry heart Ulysses 12
A white-hair'd shadow r Uke a dream Tithonus 8
Roan three pyebalds and a r. Walk, to the Mail 114
Roar (s) (See also City-roar) The panther's r came mufHed, CEnone 214
Heard thro' the Uving r. Sea Breams 56
' but this tide's r, and his, „ 250
twists the grain with such a r that Earth Reels, Princess v 528
The r that breaks the Pharos from his base „ vi 339
Here, in streaming London's central r. Ode on Well. 9
The lone glow and long r (repeat) Voice and the P. 3, 39
Rings to the r of an angel onset— Milton 8
in its broad -flung shipwrecking r, Maud I Hill
whereout was roll'd A r of riot. Last Tournament 426
Then at the dry harsh r of the great horn, „ 438
So shook to such a r of all the sky, „ 621
whom the r of Hougoumont Left mightiest To the Queen ii 20
R upon r in a moment two mines by the enemy Def. of Lucknow 54
while I spoke The crowd's r fell Columbus 13
My brain is full of the crash of wrecks, and the r of waves, The Wreck 4
thro' the r of the breaker a whisper. Despair 13
By the long torrent's ever-deepen'd r, Death of CEnone 85
Then one deep r as of a breaking sea, St. Telemachus 67
Roar (verb) below them r's The long brook CEnone 7
r rock-thwarted under bellowing caves. Palace of Art 71
' He that r's for Uberty Faster binds Vision of Sin 127
the sea r's Ruin : a fearful night ! ' Sea Dreams 80
once or twice I thought to r, Princess ii 423
R's as the sea when he welcomes the land, W. to Alexandra 24
I r and rave for I fall. Voice and the P. 12
Boar (verb) (continued) And r from yonder dropping day : In Mem. xv 2
There where the long street r's, „ cxxiii 3
Well r's the storm to those that hear „ cxxvii 3
And molten up, and r in flood ; „ 13
ye seem agape to r ! Yea, ramp and r at leaving
of your lord ! — Gareth and L. 1306
?• An ocean-sounding welcome to one knight. Last Tournament 167
the crowd would r For blood, for war, Tiresias 64
and hear the waters r, And see the ships The Flight 90
Now thy Forum r's no longer, To Virgil 29
Roar'd and above them r the pine. Aylmer's Field 431
' No ! ' R the rough king, Princess i 87
bones of some vast bulk that lived and r „ Hi 294
(thus the King R) make j^ourself a man „ v 35
R as when the roaring breakers boom Boddicea 76
So Hector spake ; the Trojans r applause ; Spec, of Iliad 1
He from beyond the roaring shallow r, Gareth and L. 1033
the lake whiten'd and the pinewood r. Merlin and V. 637
r And shouted and leapt down upon the fall'n ; Last Tournament 468
Sir Richard spoke and he laugh'd, and we r a hurrah. The Revenge 32
To meet me, r my name ; Columbus 10
Roarin' an r like judgment daay. Owd Roa 110
Roaring (See also Roarin') In r he shall rise and on the
surface die. The Kraken 15
I hear the r of the sea, Oriana 98
The wind is r in turret and tree. The Sisters 15
We heard the hon r from his den ; D. of F. Women 222
ocean-ridges r into cataracts. Locksley Hall 6
mighty wind arises, r seaward, „ 194
heard the f oeman's thunder R out their doom ; The Captain 42
R to make a third : Aylmer's Field 128
And the r of the wheels. Maud II iv 22
slowly rose and plunged R, Com. of Arthur 382
He from beyond the r shallow roar'd, Gareth and L. 1033
the heavens open'd and blazed again R, Holy Grail 517
mast bent and the ravin wind In her sail r. Lover's Tale ii 111
And the storm went r above us. The Wreck 106
Flung leagues of r foam into the gorge // 7 were loved 13
I whirl like leaves in r wind. Fatima 7
plague and earthquake, r deeps and fiery sands, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 115
High over r Temple-bar, Will Water. 69
Bows all its ears before the r East ; Princess i 237
I take my part Of danger on the r sea. Sailor Boy 22
Like the leaf in a r whirlwind, Boddicea 59
Roar'd as when the r breakers boom and blanch „ 76
Than if with thee the r wells In Mem. x 17
In r's round the coral reef. „ xxxvi 16
up thy vault with r sound Climb thy thick noon, „ Ixxii 25
in this r moon of daffodil And crocus, Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 7
W^atch'd again the hollow ridges r into cataracts, Locksley H., Sixty 2
R London, raving Paris, „ 190
Roasting or bits of r ox Moan round the spit — Lucretius 131
Boaver (dog's name) (See also Boa) Fur I owas owd
R moor nor I iver owad mottal man. Oiod Rod 4
Wi' R athurt my feeat, „ 30
cat wur a-sleeaping alongside R, „ 33
I fun it was R a-tuggin' an' tearin' my slieave. ,. 60
I thowt it was R a-tuggin' an' tearin' me ,. 66
R was theere i' the chaumber a-yowlin' an' yaupin' ,, 88
Bob (name of man and cat) (See also Bobby) Tommy
the second, an' Steevie an' R. Spinster's S's. 10
R, coom oop 'ere o' my knee. „ 11
Rob (verb) once had power to r it of content. The form, the form- 8
They swore that he dare not r the mail, Rizpah 30
Bobb'd r the farmer of his bowl of cream : Princess v 223
Bobber There the horde of Roman r's Boddicea 18
an onslaught single on a realm Of r's, Geraint and E. 918
Bobbing I whipt him for r an orchard once Rizpah 25
they kill'd him for r the mail. ' „ 34
Bobby (name of man and cat) (See also Bob) but R I
seed thrut ya theere. Spinster's S's. 14
R, I niver 'a liked tha sa well, „ 29
R wur fust to be sewer, (repeat) „ 42, 69
ii!, I thowt o' tha all the while ., 43
R I gied tha a raiitin that sattled „ 48
Bobby
586
Rode
Robby (name of man and cat) {continued) But if I 'ed
married tha, R, Spinster's S's. 54
R, git down wi'tha, wilt tha ? „ 67
Theere! Set it down! Now 5! „ 119
Till R an' Steevie 'es 'ed their lap „ 121
Robe (s) no blood upon her maiden r's The Poet 41
She threw her royal r's away. Palace of Art 290
(With that she tore her r apart, D. of F. Women 157
the white r and the palm. St. S. Stylites 20
As these white r's are soil'd and dark, St. Agnes' Eve 13
How oft the purple-skirted r The Voyage 21
In r and crown the king stept down, Beggar Maid 5
wove A close-set r of jasmine sown with stars : Aylmer's Field 158
whirl'd her white r like a blossom'd branch Princess iv 179
rainbow r's, and gems and gemlike eyes, „ 480
he drew Her r to meefc his lips, „ vi 156
Her falser self slipt from her like a r, „ vii 161
Till slowly worn her earthly r, In Mem. Ixxxiv 33
In a cold white r before me, Mattd II iv 19
a r Of samite without price, Merlin and V. 221
down his r the dragon writhed in gold, Lancelot and E. 435
' If I be loved, these are my festal rs, „ 909
' Take thou my r,' she said, Holy Grail 449
In hanging r or vacant ornament, Guinevere 506
A mystic light flash'd ev'n from her white r Lover's Tale i 370
Robed in those r's of light I must not wear, „ 671
throwing down his r's, And claspt her hand in his : „ Hi 51
with her flying r and her poison'd rose ; Fastness 16
Robe (verb) Rise therefore ; r yourself in this : Geraint and E. 685
The music that r's it in language The Wreck 24
Robed (See also White-robed) but r in soften'd light Of
orient state. Ode to Memory 10
Lying, r in snowy white That loosely flew L. of Shalott iv 19
lying r and croMii'd, Worthy a Roman spouse.' D. of F. Women 163
reissuing, r and crown'd. To meet her lord, Godiva 77
hand that r your cottage-walls with flowers Aylmer's Field 698
And r the shoulders in a rosy silk, Princess, Pro. 103
R in the long night of her deep hair, „ iv 491
Loosely r in flying raiment, Boddicea 37
r herself, Help'd by the mother's careful hand Marr. of Geraint 737
And r them in her ancient suit again, „ 770
R in red samite, easily to be known, Lancelot and E. 433
R in those robes of light I must not wear, Lover's Tale i 671
cliffs all r in lianas that dropt The Wreck 73
R in universal harvest up to either pole Locksley H., Sixty 169
Ilion's lofty temples r in fire, To Virgil 2
r thee in his day from head to feet — Demeter and P. 21
Robert old Sir R's pride. His books — Audley Court 58
slight Sir R with his watery smile Edwin Morris 128
Robin (bird) In the spring a fuller crimson comes upon
the r's breast ; Locksley Hall 17
On the nigh-naked tree the r piped Enoch Arden 676
careful r's eye the delver's toil, Marr. of Geraint 774
careful r's eye the delver's toil ; Geraint and E. 431
Robin (Christian name) But R leaning on the bridge May Queen 14
And say to i2 a kind word, „ Con. 45
Robin See Ragged-robin
Robing See Roabin'
Robins (surname) Or a mowt 'a taaen young R — 7\^ Farmer, 0. S. 50
"Saw, nor a moant to if? — „ 60
Rock (S) And strike the hard, hard r, Supp. Confessions 116
the mermaids in and out of the r's. The Merman 12
the mermen in and out of the r's ; The Mermaid 34
Of ledge or shelf The r rose clear. Palace of Art 10
or a sound Of r's thrown down, „ 282
zig-z£^ paths, and juts of pointed r, M. d' Arthur 50
and leveret lay, Like fossils of the r, Audley Court 25
as we sank From r to r upon the glooming quay, „ 84
upon a r With turrets lichen-gilded Uke a r : Edwin Morris 7
forged a thousand theories of the r's, „ 18
he struck his staff against the r's Golden Year 59
lights begin to twinkle from the r's : Ulysses 54
His mantle glitters on the r's — Day- Dm., Arrival 6
The nutmeg r's and isles o! clove. " The Voyage 40
To him who sat upon the r's, To E. L. 23
Rock (s) {continued) Is there no stoning save with
flint and r ? Aylmer's Field 746
on the foremost r's Touching, Sea Dreams 51
some were push'd with lances from the r, Princess, Pro. 46
The morals, something of the frame, the r, „ ii 382
No r so hard but that a little wave ,. Hi 154
Glanced like a touch of svmshine on the r's, „ 357
Each was Uke a Druid r ; ., iv 280
Part sat like r's : part reel'd but kept their seats : „ v 496
Pharos from his base Had left us r. „ vi 340
for Willy stood Uke a r. Grandmother 10
Who seems a promontory of r, Will 6
along the valley, by r and cave and tree, V. of Cauteretz 9
My love has talk'd with r's and trees ; In Mem. xcvii 1
Nor runlet tinkling from the r ; ,. c 13
Rise in the spiritual r, „ cxxxi 3
There yet lies the r that fell with him Maud I i S
by a red r, glimmers the Hall ; .. iv 10
Athwart the ledges of r, „ // ii 28
smallest r far on the faintest liiU, Com. of Arthur 99
As being all bone-shatter'd on the r. Yielded ; Gareth and L. 1050
narrow comb wherein Were slabs of r with figures, „ 1194
Whose holy hand hath fashion'd on the r „ ll97
a r in ebbs and flows, Fixt on her faith. Marr. of Geraint 812
knights On horseback, wholly arm'd, behind a r In
shadow, Geraint and E. 51
I saw three bandits by the r „ 72
A little to^vn with towers, upon a r, ., 197
Prince had brought his errant eyes Home from the r, „ 246
gleam'd on r's Roof-pendent, sharp ; BcUin and Balan 314
In the white r a chapel and a haU Lancelot and E. 405
Shape to their fancy's eye from broken r's „ 1252
A castle like a r upon a r. Holy Grail 814
Far down beneath a winding waU of r Last Tournament 11
zigzag paths, and juts of pointed r, Pass, of Arthur 218
Thro' the r's we wound : Lover's Tale i 324
walls of battlemented r Gilded with broom, „ 399
Shut in the secret chambers of the r „ 521
laid it in a sepulchre of r Never to rise again. „ 683
And all the fragments of the Uving r „ ii 44
I find hard r's, hard Ufe, hard cheer, Sir J. Oldcastle 6
And we left but a naked r, V. of Maeldune 54
And a himdred ranged on the r „ 101
that smooth r Before it, altar-fashion'd,- Tiresias 146
as if she had struck and crash'd on a r ; The Wreck 108
neck Of land running out into r— Despair 10
skull that is left in the r's „ 86
How slowly down the r's he went, The Flight 38
Ranged Uke a storm or stood Uke a r Heavy Brigade 56
When seated on a r, and foot to foot Romney's R. 75
Rock (verb) 0 r upon thy towery-top Talking Oak 265
r the snowy cradle till I died. Princess iv 104
The blind wall r's, and on the trees In Mem., Con. 63
Rock'd R the fuU-foUaged elms, „ xcv 58
A mountain nest — the pleasure-boat that r. Lover's Tale i 42
Rocket Rush to the roof, sudden r, W. to Alexandra 20
The r molten into flakes In Mem. xcviii 31
Rocking (See also Scarce-rocking) R with shatter'd spars, Buanaparte 11
Then Ughtly r baby's cradle Enoch Arden 194
Rock-throne rough r-t Of Freedom ! Montenegro 9
Rock-thwarted r-t under bellowing caves. Palace of Art 71
Rocky Lift up thy r face, England and A mer. 12
Dash'd on every r square Their surging charges Ode on Well. 125
How richly down the r dell The Daisy 9
For all along the vaUey, down thy r bed, V. of Cauteretz 7
I heard the voice Rave over the r bar. Voice and the P. 6
And down a r pathway from the place Geraint and E. 200
And up the r pathway disappear'd, „ 243
Rod I must brook the r And chastisement Supp. Confessions 107
red-faced war has r's of steel and fire ; Princess y 118
war's avenging r Shall lash aU Europe To F. D. Maurice 33
be ruled with r or with knout ? Maud I iv 47
Tho' Sin too oft, when smitten by Thy r, Doubt and Prayer 1
Rode Ere I r into the fight, Oriana 21
He r between the barley-sheaves, L. of Shalott Hi ~
Rode
587
Roll
Rode {continued) As he r down to Camelot : (repeat) L. ofShalott 14, 23, 32
And as he r his armour nmg, „ 17
The man, my lover, with whom I r sublime D. of F. Women 141
And r his humt«r down. Talking Oak 104
And far below the Koundhead r, „ 299
Then she r forth, clothed on with chastity : Godiva 53
The deep air listen'd round her as she r, „ 54
she r back, clothed on with chastity : „ 65
R thro' the coverts of the deer, Sir L. and Q. G. 21
He r a horse with wings, that would have flown. Vision of Sin 3
Who slowly r across a wither'd heath, „ 61
They r ; they betted ; made a hundred friends. Princess, Pro. 163
We r Many a long league back to the North. .. i 167
foUow'd up the river as we r. And r till midnight .. 206
' That afternoon the Princess r to take .. Hi 169
I r beside her and to me she said : „ 197
we r a league beyond. And, o'er a bridge of pinewood 334
Then r we with the old king across the lawns ,. v 236
All o'er with honey'd answer as we r .. 242
Back r we to my father's camp, „ 331
as here and everywhere He r the mellay, „ 502
but Arac r him down : And Cyril seeing it, ,. 532
E the six hundred, (repeat) Light Brigade 4, 8, 17, 26
Boldly they r and well, .. 23
Then they r back, but not Not the six hundred. .. 37
I bow'd to his lady-sister as she r by on the moor ; Mavd I iv 15
one of the two that r at her side Boimd for the Hall, „ x 24
r a simple knight among his knights, Covi. of Arthur 51
Smit« on the sudden, yet r on, ,. 57
thinking as he r, ' Her father said ,. 78
A naked babe, and r to Merlin's feet, „ 384
Gareth r Down the slope street, Gareth and L. 699
thro' silent faces r Down the slope city, .. 734
R on the two, re viler and reviled ; ,. 794
Suddenly she that r upon his left ,. 1319
r In converse till she made her palfrey halt, „ 1359
Prince and Enid r. And fifty knights r with them, Marr. of Geraint 43
there r Full slowly by a knight, lady, ,. 186
r, By ups and downs, thro' many a grassy glade „ 235
And onward to the fortress r the three, „ 251
Then r Geraint, a little spleenful yet, „ 293
Then r Geraint into the castle court, „ 312
all unarm'd I r, and thought to find Arms „ 417
And rising up, he r to Arthur's court, „ 591
claspt and kiss'd her, and they r away. „ 825
forth they r, but scarce three paces on, Geraint and E. 19
And wildernesses, perilous paths, they r: .,32
They r so slowly and they look'd so pale, „ 35
for he r As if he heard not, „ 451
Half ridden off with by the thing he r, .. 460
And so r on, nor told his gentle wife ,. 503
S on a mission to the bandit Earl ; „ 527
In this poor gown I r with him to court, ., 700
now we r upon this fatal quest Of honour, ,. 703
east her arms About him, and at once they r away. .. 762
Tho' thence I r all-shamed, hating the life „ 852
for a space they r, And fifty knights r with them „ 953
So claim'd the quest and r away, Balin and Balan 138
and r The skyless woods, but under open blue ., 292
with droopt brow down the long glades he r ; „ 311
damsel-errant, warbling, as she r The woodland alleys, .. 438
the knight, with whom I r. Hath suffer'd misadventure, „ 475
Yet while they r together down the plain, Merlin and V. 123
of old — among the flowers — they r. ,. 136
and all day long we r Thro' the dim land ,, 424
He left it with her, when he r to tilt Lancelot and E. 30
They rose, heard mass, broke fast, and r away : „ 415
all the region round R with his diamond, „ 616
A true-love ballad, lightly r away. „ 705
fail'd to find him, tho' I r all round The region : „ 709
R o'er the long backs of the bushless downs „ 789
To Astolat returning r the three. „ 905
Nor bad farewell, but sadly r away. „ 987
to this hall full quickly r the King, Holy Grail 258
And in he r, and up I glanced, „ 262
Bode (continued) Queen, Who r by Lancelot, wail'd and
shriek'd Holy Grail 356
' And on I r, and when I thought my thirst „ 379
on I r, and greater was my thirst. „ 401
I r on and found a mighty hUl, „ 421
And in the strength of this I r, „ 476
And maddening what he r : ,, 641
Sir Bors R to the lonest tract of aU the realm, ,. 661
while they r, the meaning in his eyes, Pelleas and E. 109
straight on thro' open door R Gawain, ,, 383
but r Ere midnight to her walls, „ 412
R till the star above the wakening sun, „ 500
Lancelot slowly r his warhorse back To Camelot, „ 583
Down the slope city r, and sharply turn'd Last Tournament 127
R Tristram toward Lyonnesse and the west. ., 362
Thro' many a league-long bower he r. „ 374
Arthur with a hundred spears R far, „ 421
Arthur waved them back. Alone he r. ,, 437
And r beneath an ever-showering leaf, „ 492
when first I r from our rough Lyonnesse, „ 664
and then they r to the divided way, Guinevere 124
And r thereto from Lyonnesse, and he said That as he
r, an hour or maybe twain „ 236
R imder groves that look'd a paradise „ 389
There r an armed warrior to the doors. „ 409
And then he r away ; but after this, Lover's Tale iv 126
And thus our lonely lover r away, „ 130
and he r on ahead, as he waved his blade Heavy Brigade 9
R flashing blow upon blow, „ 32
they r like Victors and Lords „ 48
They r, or they stood at bay — „ 51
Thou's r of 'is back when a babby, Owd Rod 5
you my girl R on my shoulder home — The Ring 322
Roger Acton Burnt — good Sir i? A, my dear friend ! Sir J. Oldcastle 79
R(^e unctuous mouth which lured him, r, Sea Dreams 14
do not call him, love. Before you prove him, r, „ 171
And one the Master, as a r in grain Princess, Pro. 116
A r of canzonents and serenades. „ iv 135
snubnosed r would leap from his counter and till, Maud I i 51
listening r hath caught the manner of it. Gareth and L. 778
these caitiff r's Had wreak'd themselves on me ; „ 819
Some meddling r has tamper'd with him — Lancelot and E. 128
Roisterer midmost of a rout of r's, Geraint and E. 274
Roky Last in a r hollow, belling. Last Tournament 502
Roll (s) (See also Ocean-roll) upon the rise And long r of the
Hexameter — Lucretius 11
Nor ever lowest r of thunder moans, „ 108
Now, to the r of muffled drums, Ode on Well. 87
R of cannon and clash of arms, „ 116
I hear the r of the ages. Spiteful Letter 8
then one low r Of Autumn thunder. Last Tournament 152
Rush of Suns, and r of systems, God. and the Univ. 3
no discordance in the r And march D. of the Duke of C. 14
Roll (verb) (See also Over-roll) ' In filthy sloughs they
r a prurient skin, Palace of Art 201
trees began to whisper, and the wind began to r. May Queen, Con. 27
' This mounting wave will r us shoreward soon.' Lotos- Eaters 2
And the great ages onward r. To J. S. 72
R onward, leading up the golden year. Golden Fear 41
r the waters, flash the lightnings, Locksley Hall 186
the gates R back, and far within St. AgneS' Eve 30
They reel, they r in clanging lists, Sir Galahad 9
There did a thousand memories r upon him, Enoch Arden 724
r thy tender arms Round him, Lucretius 82
Our echoes r from soul to soul. Princess iv 15
r The torrents, dash'd to the vale : „ v 349
r the torrent out of dusky doors : „ vii 208
down r's the world In mock heroics „ Con. 63
world on world in myriad myriads r Ode on Well. 262
R and rejoice, jubilant voice, W. to Alexandra 22
R as a ground-swell dash'd on the strand, „ 23
And howsoever this wild world may r, W. to Marie Alex. 48
two and thirty years were a mist that r's away ; V. of Cauteretz 6
You r up away from the light Window, Winter 8
I hear a wizard music r, In Mem. ixx 14
RoU
588
Roman
Roll (verb) {continued) And r it in another course,
The strong imagination r A sphere
There r's the deep where grew the tree.
To have her lion r in a silken net
swell Of the long waves that r in yonder bay ?
and the war r down like a wind,
and when the surface r's,
sea r's, and all the world is warm'd ? '
because they r Thro' such a round in heaven.
The yeare will r into the centuries,
more than man Which r's the heavens,
r Rising and falling —
Nor r thy viands on a luscious tongue
and r their ruins down the slope.
While the silent Heavens r,
And when they r their idol down —
may r with the dust of a vanish'd race.
To r her North below thy deepening dome,
delight To r himself in meadow grass
may r The rainbow hues of heaven about it —
and r my voice from the summit,
ere the mountain r's into the plain.
Well if it do not r our way.
Boll'd the tumult of their acclaim is r
And all about him r his lustrous eyes ;
And all the war is r in smoke.'
I r among the tender flowers :
R round by one fix'd law.
R to starboard, r to larboard,
R on each other, rounded, smooth'd,
Whirl'd by the wind, had r me deep below,
' When the next moon was r into the sky,
So all day long the noise of battle r
R in one another's arms.
When the ranks are r in vapour.
Her full black ringlets downward r,
R a sea-haze and whelm'd the world
as the year R itself round again
once again he r his eyes upon her
and r His hoop to pleasure Edith,
babies r about Like tumbled fruit in grass ;
Kittenhke he r And paw'd about her sandal,
miss'd the plank, and r In the river,
slain with laughter r the gilded Squire,
giant, Arac, r himself Thrice in the saddle.
Part r on the earth and rose again and drew :
r With music in the growing breeze of Time,
her eye with slow dilation r Dry flame,
the sound of the sorrowing anthem r
Better the waste Atlantic r On her and us
R the rich vapour far into the heaven.
Who r the psalm to wintry skies,
And r the noods in grander space.
And a sullen thimder is r ;
R incense, and there past along the hymns
the long night hath r away !
down his enemy r, And there lay still ;
He r his eyes about the hall.
The russet-bearded head r on the floor,
a forethought r about his brain,
anJr his enemy down. And saved him :
from the skull the crown R into light,
he r his eyes Yet blank from sleep,
roofs Of our great hall are r in thunder-smoke !
whereout was r A roar of riot.
So all day long the noise of battle r
And London r one tide of joy
threshold clashing, r Her heaviest thunder —
And we r upon capes of crocus
r To meet me long-arm'd vines with grapes
whence he r himself At dead of night —
And r them around Uke a cloud, —
And r his nakedness everyway
once had r you round and round the Sun,
Ghost of Pindar in you R an Olympian ;
In Mem. cxiii 16
„ cxxii 6
„ cxxiii 1
Maud Ivi29
„ xviii 63
„ IIIvi54:
Com. of Arthur 293
Holy Grail 672
685
Guinevere 626
Tiresias 22
The Wreck 53
Ancient Sage 267
Locksley H., Sixty 138
203
F.reedom 29
Vastness 2
Prog, of Spring 49
Romney's R. 14
50
Parnassus 6
Death of (Enone 51
Riflemen form ! 4
Dying Swan 33
Love and Death 3
Two Voices 156
Fatima 11
Palace of Art 256
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 106
D. of F. Women 51
119
229
M. d' Arthur 1
Locksley Hall 58
104
Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 12
Enoch Arden 672
822
904
Aylmer's Field 84
Princess, Pro. 82
Hi 181
iv 177
«22
274
497
vi 55
189
Ode on Well. 60
Third of Feb. 21
Spec, of Iliad 8
In Mem. Ivi 11
„ ciii 26
Maud II iv 49
Com. of Arthur 464
483
Geraint and E. 160
610
729
Merlin and V. 230
Lancelot and E. 26
51
819
Holy Grail 220
Last Tournament 425
Pass, of Arthur 170
To the Queen ii 8
Lover's Tale i 605
V. of Maeldune 47
To E. Fitzgerald 26
Tiresias 145
Heavy Brigade 40
Dead Prophet 15
Poets and their B. 10
To Prof. J ebb 4
Boll'd {continued) Till earth has r her latest year — To Ulysses 28
R again back on itself in the tides Beautiful City 4
E them over and over. The Tourney 5
Roller league-long r thundering on the reef, Enoch Arden 584
slowly-ridging r's on the chfEs Clash'd, Lover's Tale i 57
RoUest r from the gorgeous gloom In Mem. Ixxxvi 2
Rolling {See also Crimson-rolling, Far-rolling, Myriad-rolling)
waves that up a quiet cove R slide, Elednore 109
r to and fro The heads and crowns Palace of Art 151
R a slumbrous sheet of foam below. Lotos- Eaters 13
holy organ r waves Of sound on roof and floor D. of F. Women 191
her mighty voice Came r on the wind. Of old sat Freedom 8
r as in sleep, Low thunders bring the mellow rain, Talking Oak 278
Enoch r his gray eyes upon her, Enoch Arden 844
and r in his mind Old waifs of rhyme, The Brook 198
Breathed low around the r earth The winds, etc. 3
Is wearied of the r hours. L. C. V. de Vere 60
A r stone of here and everywhere, Audley Court 78
A r organ-harmony Swells up. Sir Galahad 75
Beneath a manelike mass of r gold, Aylmer's Field 68
And r as it were the substance of it ,, 258
Which r o'er the palaces of the proud, „ 636
Who still'd the r wave of GaUlee ! „ 709
And there was r thunder ; Sea Dreams 118
That stays the r Ixionian wheel, Lucretius 261
r thro' the court A long melodious thimder Princess ii 475
Over the r waters go, „ Hi 5
Thy voice is heard thro' r drums, „ iv 577
and r words Oration-like. ,. v 372
in the centre stood The common men with r eyes ; ,, vi 360
fishes turn'd And whiten'd all the r flood ; I'he Victim 20
Ye watch, Uke God, the r hours In Mem. Ii 14
And thunder-music, r, shake The prophet ., Ixxxvii 7
Let her great Danube r fair Enwind her isles, „ xcviii 9
To darken on the r brine That breaks the coast. ,, cvii 14
Thy voice is on the r air ; „ cxxx 1
And, star and system r past, „ Con. 122
In drifts of smoke before a r wind. Com. of Arthur 434
And mass, and r music, like a queen. Lancelot and E. 1336
wrapt In unremorseful folds of r Are. Holy Grail 261
Thro' the tall oriel on the r sea. „ 831
Ught of heaven Burn'd at his lowest in the r year. Pass of Arthur 91
And r far along the gloomy shores „ 134
When the r eyes of the lighthouse there Despair 9
or the r Thunder, or the rending earthquake. Faith 3
sullen Lethe r doom On them and theirs Lit. Squabbles 11
R on their purple couches Boddicea 62
R her smoke about the Royal mount, Gareth and L. 190
Southwesterns, r ridge on ridge, „ 1145
Bound on a foray, r eyes of prey, Geraint and E. 538
when they clash'd, R back upon BaUn, Balin and Balan 562
R his eyes, a moment stood, Pelleas and E. 581
The moony vapour r round the King, Guinevere 601
Funeral hearses r ! Forlorn 68
r of dragons By warble of water. Merlin and the G. 44
R her anger Thro' blasted valley Kapiolani 11 '
Roman (adj.) My Hercules, my R Antony, D. of F. Women 150
The R soldier found Me lying dead, „ 161 ,
lying robed and crown'd. Worthy a R spouse.' „ 164
and the R brows Of Agrippina. Princess ii 84
the Persian, Grecian, R lines Of empire, „ 130
their foreheads drawn in R scowls, „ vii 129
What R strength Turbla show'd In ruin, The Daisy 5
Blacken round the R carrion, Boddicea 14
horde of R robbers mock at a barbarous adversary. „ 18
hive of R liars worship an emperor-idiot. „ 19
Lo their precious R bantling, „ 31
Shall we teach it a, R lesson ? „ 32
Tho' the R eagle shadow thee, „ 39
Take the lioary R head and shatter it, „ 65
Cut the R boy to pieces in his lust „ 66
Ran the land with R slaughter, „ 84
King Leodogran Groan'd for the R legions Com. of Arthur 34
To drive the heathen from your R wall, „ 512
for whose love the R Caesar first Invaded Britain, Mart, of Geraint 745
Roman
589
Root
Boman (adj.) (continued) Or thrust the heathen from
the K wall, Pass, of Arthur 69
M ViHGiL, thou that singest To Virgil 1
There beneath the R ruin where the purple flowers grow, Frater ave, etc. 4
Tenderest of R poetsmineteen-hundred years ago, „ 6
Roman (S) What R would be dragg'd in triumph thus ? Lucretiiis 234
Wherewith the R pierced the side of Christ. Balin and Balan 114
For when the R left us, and their law Guinevere 456
Hard R's brawUng of their monstrous games ; St. Telemachus 40
Romance Victob in Drama, Victor in R, To Victor Hugo 1
he the knight for an amorous girl's r ! The Wreck 44
Rome a steaming slaughter-house of R. Lucretius 84
The fading politics of mortal R, Princess ii 286
Such is R, and this her deity : Boddicea 20
Abroad, at Florence, at R, Maud I xix 58
Great Lords from R before the portal stood, Com. of Arthur 411
Shall R or Heathen rule in Arthur's realm ? „ 485
at the banquet those great Lords from R, ., 504
and Arthur strove with R. „ 514
who sv ept the dust of ruin'd R From off the threshold Gareth and L. 135
brake the petty kings, and fought with R, Pass, of Arthur 68
brands that once had fought with R, „ 133
And own the holy governance of R.' Columbus 190
R's Vicar in our Indies ? „ 195
R of Caesar, R of Peter, Locksley H., Sixty 88
Ihon falling, R arising, To Virgil 3
somid for ever of Imperial R — „ 32
Now the R of slaves hath perish'd, and the R of freemen
holds her place, „ 33
when Athens reign'd and R, Freedom 9
kinsman, dying, summon'd me to R — The Ring 178
Of ancient Art in Paris, or in R. Romney's R. 87
at his ear he heard a whisper ' R' St. Telemachus 26
struck from his own shadow on to R. „ 33
decreed That jR no more should wallow „ 78
and R was a babe in arms, The Dawn 9
Ronald Lord R brought a lily-white doe Lady Clare 3
Lord R is heir of all your lands, ,. 19
And all you have wiU be Lord R's, ,. 35
lily-white doe Lord R had brought Leapt up ,. 61
Down stept Lord R from his tower : ., 65
' Play me no tricks,' said Lord R, (repeat) ,. 73, 75
She look'd into Lord R's eyes, „ 79
Roob (rub) Loovs 'un, an' r's 'im, an' doosts 'im, North. Cobbler 98
Ay, r thy whiskers agean ma. Spinster's S's. 81
Rood ' By holy r, a royal beard ! Day-Dm., Revival 20
' Here by God's r is the one maid for me.' Marr. of Geraint 368
More near by many a r than yestermom, Geraint and E. 442
by God's r, I trusted you too much.' Merlin and V. 376
Roof (s) (See also Convent-roof, Under-roof) The sparrow's
chirrup on the r, Mariana 73
Hundreds of crescents on the r Arabian Nights 129
Living together under the same r. To , With Pal. of Art 12
And round the r's a gilded gallery Palace of Art 29
the r and crown of things ? Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 24
and on r's Of marble palaces ; D. of F. Women 23
organ rolhng waves Of sound on r and floor „ 192
House in the shade of comfortable r's, St. S. Stylites 107
The r's of Sumner-place ! (repeat) Talking Oak 32, 96, 152
And on the r she went, „ 114
and when the rain is on the r. Locksley Hall 78
Flew over r and casement : Will Water. 1.34
And they leave her father's r. L. of Burleigh 12
When beneath his r they come. „ 40
red r's about a narrow wharf In cluster ; Enoch Arden 3
in session on their r's Approved him, The Brook 127
Somewhere beneath his own low range of r's, Aylmer's Field 47
presence flattering the poor r's Revered as theirs, „ 175
but every r Sent out a listener : „ 613
The r so lowly but that beam of Heaven „ 684
Flaying the r's and sucking up the drains. Princess v 525
there on the r's Like that great dame „ vi 31
shape it plank and beam for r and floor, „ 46
Clomb to the r's, and gazed alone „ vii 32
Rush to the r, sudden rocket, W. to Alexandra 20
Roof (s) (continued) I climb'd the r's at break of day ; The Daisy 61
Garmlous under a r of pine : To F. D. Maurice 20
The r's, that heard our earliest cry, In Mem. cii 3
With tender gloom the r, the wall ; „ Con. 118
and all the land from r and rick, Com. of Arthur 433
Struck up and lived along the milky r's ; Lancelot and E. 409
A cracking and a riving of the r's. Holy Grail 183
r's Of our great hall are roU'd in thunder-smoke ! „ 219
And all the dim rich city, r by r, „ 228
r's Totter'd toward each other in the sky, „ 342
Hell burst up your harlot r's Bellowing, Pelleas and E. 466
hath but dwelt beneath one r with me. Pass, of Arthur 156
Hate is strange beneath the r of Love. Lover's Tale i 779
Flying at top of the r's Def. of Luchiow 4
topmost r our banner of England blew, (repeat) ., 6, 30, 45, 60, 94
Rifleman, high on the r, ,. 63
topmost r our banner in India blew. „ 72
And ever aloft on the palace r ,. 106
Without a r that I can call mine own, Columbus 168
And the r sank in on the hearth, V. of Maeldune 32
Ruddy thro' both the r's of sight, Tiresias 3
Heard from the r's by night, „ 140
r's of slated liideousness ! Locksley H., Sixty 246
rummle down when the r's gev waay, Owd Rod 109
Was all ablaze with crimson to the r, The Ring 250
women shrieking ' Atheist ' flung Filth from the r, Akbar's Dream 92
Roof (verb) R not a glance so keen as thine : Clear-headed friend 7
cloud that r's our noon with night. Sisters (E. and E.) 17
Boof'd (See also Booft) R the world with doubt and fear, Elednore 99
Roof-haunting R-h martins warm their eggs : Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 17
Roofless I lay Pent in a r close of ragged stones ; St. S. Stylites 74
The fire that left a r Ihon, Lucretius 65
Roof-pendent gleam'd on rocks R-p, sharp ; Balin and Balan 315
Rooft See Bracken-rooft
Roof-tree now for me the r-t fall. Locksley Hall 190
Rook building r 'ill caw from the windy tall elm-
tree, May Queen, N. ¥'s. E. 17
The r's are blown about the skies ; In Mem. xv 4
And Autumn, with a noise of r's, „ Ixxxv 71
a clamour of the r's At distance, Marr. of Geraint 249
I heard the sober r And carrion crow The Ring 173
Rookery leads the clanging r home. Locksley Hall 68
long line of the approaching r swerve Princess, Con. 97
Room (apartment) (See also Oak-room, Sitting-room)
close. As a sick man's r A spirit haunts 14
She made three paces thro' the r, L. of Shalott Hi 38
pass, Well-pleased, from r to r. Palace of Art 56
Full of great r's and small the palace stood, „ 57
moss or musk. To grace my city r's ; Gardener's D. 194
There was silence in the r ; Dora 157
and not a r For love or money. Audley Coiirt 1
Past thro' the solitary r in front, Enoch Arden 277
jests, that flash'd about the pleader's r, Aylmer's Field 440
That morning in the presence r I stood Princess i 51
r's which gave Upon a piUar'd porch, „ 229
And shuddering fled from r to r, „ vi 370
from this r into the next ; Grandmother 103
To see the r's in which he dwelt. In Mem. Ixxxvii 16
thro' the blindless casement of the r, Marr. of Geraint 71
' Your leave, my lord, to cross the r, Geraint and E. 298
And glimmer'd on his armour in the r. „ 386
shadow still would ghde from r to r, Guinevere 504
It was a r Within the summer-house Lover's Tale ii 166
I hear in one dark r a wailing, Locksley H., Sixty 262
Room (space) seem'd no r for sense of wrong ; Tvio Voices 456
What r is left for a hater ? Spiteful Letter 14
strain to make an inch of r For their sweet selves. Lit. Squabbles 9
fiUest all the r Of all my love. In Mem. cxii 5
no r was there For lance or toumey-skill : Gareth and L. 1041
Room'd See Myriad-room'd
Roomlin' (nunbUng) I heard 'im a r by. Village Wife 122
Roon'd (ran) An' keeaper 'e seed ya an r, Churchwarden, etc. 28
Root grow awry From r's which strike so deep ? Supp. Confessions 78
Cleaving, took r, and springing forth The Poet 21
at the r thro' lush green grasses burn'd D. of F. Woinen 71
Root
590
Rose
Boot (continued) whose r Creeps to the garden water-
pipes beneath, B. of F. Women 205
The fat earth feed thy branchy r, Talking Oak 273
tho' my heart be at the r. Locksley Hall 66
And scirrhous r's and tendons. Amphion 64
Soft fruitage, mighty nuts, and nourishing r's ; Enoch Arden 555
fixt As are the r's of earth and base of aU ; Princess v 446
hold you here, r and all, in my hand. Flow, in cran. wall. 3
What you are, r and all, „ 5
Thy r's are wrapt about the bones. In Mem. ii 4
By ashen r's the violets blow. „ cxv 4
for the r's of my hair were stirr'd Maud 7 z 13
Some r of knighthood and pure nobleness ; Holy Grail 886
r's Uke some black coil of carven snakes, iMst Tournament 13
Adown a natural stair of tangled r's, Lover's Tale i 527
His winter chills him to the r, Ancient Sage 119
Boot-bitten B-b by white lichen, Gareih and L. 454
Booted \See also Fast-rooted, Serpent-rooted) When r
in the garden of the mind,
' I, r here among the groves
night and day, and r in the fields.
He r out the slothful ofi&cer Or guilty.
His honour r in dishonour stood,
jungle r in his' shatter'd hearth,
Bootless evermore Seem'd catching at a r thorn,
Bope With hand and r we haled the groaning sow,
I wore The r that haled the buckets
.Vnd reach'd the ship and caught the r.
Torn as a sail that leaves the r is torn In tempest :
Bosa (Monte) how phantom-fair, Was Monte R,
Bosalind bring me my love, R.
where is my sweet R ?
My R, my R, (repeat)
bold and free As you, my falcon R.
Come down, come home, my R, My gay young ha-(vk,
my R:
bind And keep you fast, mv R, Fast, fast, my wild-
eyed i?, " ., 43
face again, My R in this Arden — Sisters (E. and E.) 119
Bosamond I am that R, whom men call fair, D. of F. Women 251
Bosary (rose-garden) Thick rosaries of scented thorn, Arabian Nights 106
Bosary (string of beads) amber, ancient rosaries,
Bose (adj.) the lights, r, amber, emerald, blue,
Eose (Christian name) Who had not heard Of R, the
19 Gardener's daughter ?
but she, a i? In roses,
R, on this terrace fifty years ago.
Two words ' My R ' set aU your face aglow,
Rose (flower, colour) (See also Baby-rose, Garden-
rose) With plaited alleys of the trailing r.
And the year's last r.
Bramble r's, faint and pale.
Some spirit of a crimson r In love with thee
Wearing the r of womanhood.
Her cheek had lost the r,
her hair Wound with white r's, slept St. Cecily ;
petals from blown r's on the grass,
up the porch there grew an Eastern r,
but she, a Rose In Ps,
' Ah, one r. One r, but one.
Nor yet refused the r, but granted it.
Kissing the r she gave me o'er and o'er,
Ode to Memory 26
Talking Oak 181
Com. of Arthur 24
Geraint and E. 938
Lancelot and E. 876
Demeter and P. 76
Geraint and E. 378
Walk, to the Mail 91
St. S. Stylites 64
Sailor Boy 3
Holy Grail 212
The Daisy 66
Leonine Eleg. 14
16
Rosalind 1, 5
18
33
Princess, Pro. 19
Palace of Art 169
Gardener's D. 52
142
Roses on the T. 1
3
Ode to Memory 106
A spirit haunts 20
A Dirge 30
Adeline 41
Two Voices 417
(Enone 18
Palace of Art 99
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 2
Gardener's D. 123
143
149
160
176
then for r's, moss or musk. To grace my city rooms ;
193
shut Within the bosom of the r ?
With a single r in her hair.
God made Himself an awful r of dawn, (repeat)
The late and early r's from his wall,
the red r was redder than itself,
York's white r as red as Lancaster's,
Which fann'd the gardens of that rival r
Seem'd hope's returning r :
The wilderness shall blossom as the r.
Not ev'n a r, were offer'd to thee ?
In meshes of the jasmine and the r :
as tho' there were One r in all the world,
Day- Dm., Moral 8
Lady Clare 60
Vision of Sin 50, 224k
Enoch Arden 339
Aylmer
s Field 50
51
455
559
649
Lucretius 69
Princess i 219
„ ii 51
Bose (flower, colour) (continued) And sated with the in-
numerable r. Princess Hi 122
any r of Gulistan Shall burst her veil : „ iv 122
Before me shower'd the r in flakes ; „ 264
there's no r that's half so dear to them „ v 159
R's and UUes and Canterbury-bells.' City Child 5
some rare little r, a piece of inmost Horticultural
art, Hendecasyllabics 19
R, r and clematis, (repeat) Window, At the Window 3, 10
She takes a riband or a r ; In Mem. vi 32
quick tears that make the r Pull sideways, ., Ixxii 10
May breathe, with many r's sweet, „ xci 10
and swung The heavy-folded r, and flung The lilies „ xcv 59
And every thought breaks out a r. ,, cxxii 20
He too foretold the perfect r. „ Con. 34
an hour's defect of the r, Maud I ii 8
You have but fed on the r's ,, iv 60
Maud has a garden of r's „ xiv 1
R's are her cheeks. And a r her mouth (repeat) „ xvii 7, 27
' Ah, be Among the r's to-night.' „ xxi 13
And the musk of the r is blown. „ xxii 6
All night have the r's heard The flute, „ 13
I said to the r, ' The brief night goes In babble „ 27
But mine, but mine,' so I sware to the r, „ 31
the soul of the r went into my blood, „ 33
the r was awake all night for your sake, „ 49
The lilies and r's were all awake, „ 51
Queen r of the rosebud garden of girls, „ 53
Queen Uly and r in one ; „ 56
The red r cries ' She is near, she is near ; ' „ 63
the white r weeps, ' She is late ; ' „ 64
All made up of the lily and r ., II v 74
I almost fear they are not r's, but blood ; ., 78
O'er the four rivers the first r's blew, Geraint and E. 764
A walk of r's ran from door to door ; Balin and Balan 242
down that range of r's the great Queen Came „ 244
' Sweeter to me ' she said ' this garden r „ 269
make her paler with a poison'd r ? Merlin and V. 611
To crop his own sweet r before the hour ? ' ,, 725
Till the high dawn piercing the royal r „ 739
Redder than any r, a joy to me. Holy Grail 521
' A worm within the r.' Pelleas and E. 399
' A r, but one, none other r had I, A r, one r, and
this was wondrous fair. One r, a r that
gladden'd earth and sky. One r, my r, that
sweeten'd all mine air — „ 400
' One r, a r to gather by and by. One r, a r, to gather
and to wear, No r but one — what other r had I ?
One r, my r ; a r that will not die, — „ 405
slope of garden, all Of r's white and red, „ 422
and so spilt itself Among the r's, ., 427
colour and the sweetness from the r. Lover's Tale i 172
infuse Rich atar in the bosom of the r, ,, 270
Leaning its r's on my faded eyes. „ 621
made The red r there a pale one — „ 696
hair Studded with one rich Provence r — „ Hi 45
who himself was crown'd With r's, „ iv 297
my r, there my allegiance due. Sir J. Oldcastle 59
the blush Of miUions of r's V. of Maeldune 44
Rich was the r of simset there. The Wreck 136
Youth began Had set the lily and r Ancient Sage 156
My r of love for ever gone, „ 159
They made her Uly and r in one, „ 161
Molly Magee, wid the red o' the r Tomorrow 31
Feed the budding r of boyhood Locksley H., Sixty 143
Fifty times the r has flower'd and faded, On Jub. Q. Victoria 1
with her flying robe and her poison'd r ; Vastness 16
Each poor pale cheek a momentary r — The Ring 315
My r's — win he take them now — Happy 13
The r's that you east aside — „ 22
I brought you, you remember, these r's, „ 73
you wave me off^ — poor r's — must I go — „ 101
gather the r's whenever they blow, Romney's R. 107
close to me to-day As this red r, Roses on the R. 7
Prophet of the r's. The Snowdrop 8
Rose
591
Rose
Shall the r Cry to the
Rose (flower, colour) {continued)
^ lotus ' No flower thou ' ?
Rose (verb) Some blue peaks in the distance r,
Heaven over Heaven r the night.
At last you r and moved the light,
And r, and, with a silent grace Approaching,
R slowly to a music slowly breathed,
R feud, with question unto whom 'twere due
I r up in the silent night :
Of ledge or shelf The rock r clear,
that sweet incense r and never fail'd.
Here r, an athlete, strong to break or bind
How sadly, I remember, r the morning of
the year !
this star R with you thro' a little arc
so that he r With sacrifice,
arm R up from out the bosom of the lake,
Then quickly r Sir Bedivere, and ran,
r an arm Clothed in white samite, mystic,
from the pavement he half r. Slowly,
from them r A cry that shiver'd to the tingling stars,
she, that r the tallest of them all And fairest.
And up we r, and on the spur we went.
but I r up Full of his bliss,
passion r thro' circumstantial grades
she r and took The child once more,
ere the night we r And saunter'd home
To some full music r and sank the sun,
I crouch'd on one that r Twenty by measure ;
When his man-minded offset r To chase the deer
flower, she touch'd on, dipt and r,
we two r. There — closing hke an individual life —
While Ilion like a mist r into towers.
There r a noise of striking clocks,
R a ship of France.
So fresh they r in shadow'd swells
R again from where it seem'd to faU,
r and past Bearing a lifelong hunger
Enoch r. Cast his strong arms
She r, and fixt her swimming eyes upon him,
r And sent his voice beneath him thro' the wood.
r And paced Back toward his soUtary home again
He woke, he r, he spread his arms abroad
full wiUingly he r :
R from the clay it work'd in as she past.
Darkly that day r :
a full tide R with ground-swell,
a fire-balloon R gem-hke up before
I r and past Thro' the wild woods
Whereon a woman-statue r with wings
She r her height, and said :
an officer R up, and read the statutes,
She r upon a wind of prophecy Dilating on the futme ;
We r, and each by other drest with care
Stirring a sudden transport r and fell.
on a tripod in the midst A fragrant flame r,
There r a shriek as of a city sack'd ;
there r A hubbub in the court of half the maids
I beheld her, when she r The yesternight,
among them r a cry As if to greet the king ;
On his haunches r the steed.
Part roll'd on the earth and r again and drew :
R a nurse of ninety years,
and a day R from the distance on her memory,
He r, and while each ear was prick'd
nor seem'd it strange that soon He r up whole,
from mine arms she r Glowing all over noble shame ;
I give you all The random scheme as wildly as it r :
Then r a Uttle feud betwixt the two.
And yet to give the story as it r,
But that there r a shout :
a shout r again, and made The long line
Again their ravening eagle r Ode on Well. 119
He r at dawn and, fired with hope. Sailor Boy 1
While I r up against my doom, In Mem. cxxii 2
Akbar's Bream 36
Dying Swan 11
Mariana in the S. 92
Miller's D. 125
159
(Enone 41
„ 82
The Sisters 25
Palace of Art 10
45
153
May Queen, Con. 3
To J. S. 26
On a Mourner 33
M. d' Arthur 30
133
143
167
198
207
Gardener's D. 32
210
240
Dora%Q
Audley Court 79
Edwin Morris 34
St. S. Stylites 88
Talking Oak 51
131
Love and Duty 78
Tithonu^ 63
Day-Dm., Revival 2
The Captain 28
The Letters 46
Vision of Sin 24t
Enoch Arden 78
227
325
443
793
912
The Brook 121
Aylmer's Field 170
609
Sea Dreams 51
Princess, Pro. 75
i90
210
ii 41
171
Hi 19
iv29
34
165
475
fl75
248
493
497
vi 13
112
m280
vii 65
159
Con. 2
23
26
36
Rose (verb) (continued) The love that r on stronger wings. In Mem. cxxviii 1
when they r, knighted from kneeling. Com. of Arthur 263
voices, slowly r and plimged Roaring, „ 381
And all at once all round him r in fire, „ 389
He r, and out of slumber calling two Gareth and L. 178
That r between the forest and the field. „ 191
Lot and many another r and fought Against thee, „ 354
R, and high-arching overbrow'd the hearth. „ 408
He r and past ; then Kay, a man of mien „ 452
Sir Gareth caU'd him from where he r, „ 645
r High that the highest-crested helm „ 672
Baron set Gareth beside her, but at once she r. „ 852
Fell, as if dead ; but quickly r and drew, „ 967
Death was cast to ground, and slowly r. „ 1403
But when a rumour r about the Queen, Marr. of Geraint 24
But r at last, a single maiden with her, „ 160
from the mason's hand, a fortress r ; „ 244
r a cry That Edyrn's men were on them, „ 638
the maiden r. And left her maiden couch, „ 736
Then r Limours, and looking at his feet, Geraint and E. 302
Anon she r, and stepping lightly, „ 373
And once again she r to look at it, „ 387
R when they saw the dead man rise, „ 732
Then Balin r, and Balan, Balin and Balan 43
His arm half r to strike again, but fell : „ 223
Dishorsed himself, and r again, and fled Far, ,,
He r, descended, met The scorner in the castle court.
And Balin r, ' Thither no more ! ,,
he r To leave the hall, and, Vivien following Merlin and
r Fixt on her hearer's, „
then I r and fled from Arthur's court „
It was the time when first the question r
He r without a word and parted from her : „
she dislink'd herself at once and r,
some light jest among them r With laughter
r And drove him into wastes and solitudes
rathe she r, half-cheated in the thought
They r, heard mass, broke fast, and rode away
Then flash'd into wild tears, and r again.
Then r Elaine and glided thro' the fields,
full meekly r the maid, Stript off the case,
Then r the dumb old servitor,
and r And pointed to the damsel,
and she r Opening her arms to meet me,
' There r a hill that none but man could chmb,
so that I r and fled. But wail'd and wept,
when he saw me, r, and bad me hail,
two great beasts r upright like a man,
nor that One Who r again :
Pelleas r. And loosed his horse, Pelleas and E. 60
but r With morning every day, „ 214
they r up, and bound, and brought him in. „ 288
Arthur r and Lancelot foUow'd him. Last Tournament 112
She r, and set before him all he will'd ; „ 723
Behind him r a shadow and a shriek — „ 753
aghast the maiden r. White as her veil, Guinevere 362
Then r the King and moved his host by night, Pass, of Arthur 79
and with that wind the tide R, „ 126
Lancelot and E.
330
483
F. 31
297
410
742
909
178
251
340
415
613
843
978
1153
1262
Holy Grail 394
489
608
725
821
919
an arm R up from out the bosom of the lake,
Then quickly r Sir Bedivere, and ran,
r an arm Clothed in white samite, mystic,
from the pavement he half r, Slowly,
from them r A cry that shiver'd to the tingling stars,
she, that r the tallest of them aU And fairest,
the new sun r bringing the new year.
Whence r as it were breath and steam of gold,
The fancy stirr'd him so He r and went,
While aU the guests in mute amazement r —
then r up, and with him all his guests
he r upon their decks, and he cried :
she r and fled Beneath a pitiless rush
Then r the howl of all the cassock'd wolves.
Who r and doom'd me to the fire.
Whom once he r from off his throne to greet
then the great ' Laudamus ' r to heaven.
198
301
311
335
366
375
Lover's Tale i 402
iv 52
305
359
The Revenge 100
Sisters (E. and E.) 236
Sir J. OldcasUi 158
172
Columbus 5
18
Rose
592
Rough
Rose (verb) (continued) each man, as he r from his rest, V. of Maeldune 85
They r to where their sovran eagle sails, Montenegro 1
Then r Achilles dear to Zeus ; Achilles over the T. 2
I r Following a torrent till its myriad falls Tiresias 36
he r as it were on the wings of an eagle The Wreck 69
project after project r, and all of them were vain ; The Flight 14
Celtic Demos r a Demon, Locksley H., Sixty 90
Step by step we r to greatness, — „ 130
truckled and cower'd When he r in his wrath. Bead Prophet 63
And dying r, and rear'd her arms. The Ring 222
then she r. She clung to me with such a hard embrace, „ 434
From under r a muffled moan of floods ; Frog, of Spring 70
crooked, reeling, livid, thro' the mist R, Death of (Enone 28
She r and slowly down, „ 84
Rose-blowing Creeping thro' blossomy rushes and bowers
of r-b bushes. Leonine Eleg. 3
Rosebud (adj.) Queen rose of the r garden of girls, Mavd I xxii 53
Rosebud (s) Where on the double r droops Day-Dm., L'Envoi 47
A r set with little wilful thorns, Frincess, Fro. 154
Rose-bush And a r-h leans upon, Adeline 14
to train the r that I set About the
parlom'-window May Queen, N. Y's. E. 47
Rose-campion R-c, bluebell, kingcup, JLast Tournament 234
Rose-carnation And many a r-c feed In Mem. ci 7
Rosed darken'd in the west. And r in the east : Sea Dreams 40
her white neck Was r with indignation : Princess vi 344
Rose-garden For I know her own r-g, Maud I xx 41
Rose-hued Flowing beneath her r-h zone ; Arabian Nights 140
Rose-leaf Letting the rose-leaves fall : Claribel 3
Like a r-l I will crush thee, Lilian 29
Rose-lips Thy r-l and full blue eyes Adeline 7
Rosemary the boar hath rosemaries and bay. Gareth and L. 1074
Rose of Lancaster (See also Lancaster, Roses) Ro L,
Ked in thy birth. Sir J. Oldcastle 52
Redder to be, red r o L — „ 55
Rose-petal dust of the r-p belongs to the heart Akbar's D., Inscrip. 9
Rose-red (adj.) soon From thy r-r Ups my name Floweth ; Eleanore 133
down the long beam stole the Holy Grail, R-r with
beatings in it. Holy Grail 118
from the star there shot A r-r sparkle to the city, „ 530
Rose-red (s) beyond a bridge of treble bow, All in a
r-r from the west, Gareth and L. 1087
Roses (Wars of the Roses) civil wars and earlier too
Among the R, Sisters (E. and E.) 76
Rosetree One look'd all r, and another wore Aylmer's Field 157
0 r planted in my grief. Ancient Sage 163
Rosewood ' She left the novel half -uncut Upon the
r shelf ; Talking Oak 118
Rosier but r luck will go With these rich jewels. Last Tournament 45
taller indeed, R and comelier, thou — „ 710
Rosiest And all of them redder than r health V. of Maeldune 65
Rosin And, sweating r, plump'd the pine Amphion 47
Rosy AVho lets his r fingers play About his mother's
neck, Supp. Confessions 42
kiss away the bitter words From off your r mouth. Rosalind 51
When Sleep had bound her in his r band, Caress'd or chidden 6
Thro' r taper fingers drew Her streaming curls Mariana in the S. 15
Winds all the vale in r folds. Miller's D. 242
With r slender fingers backward drew (Enone 176
Ganymede, his r thigh Half-buried in the Eagle's
down. Palace of Art 121
Dark faces pale against that r flame. Lotos- Eaters 26
' Then flush'd her cheek with r light. Talking Oak 165
Coldly thy r shadows bathe me, Tithonus 66
As I have seen the r red flushing in the northern
night. Locksley Hall 26
And, rapt thro' many a r change, Day-Dm., Depart. 23
But when the dawn of r childhood past, Enoch Arden 37
came a boy to be The r idol of her solitudes, „ 90
Philip's r face contracting grew Careworn and wan ; „ 486
.Stout, r, with his babe across his knees ; „ 746
This had a r sea of gillyflowers About it ; Aylmer's Field 159
And r knees and supple roundedness, Lucretius 190
And robed the shoulders in a r silk. Princess, Fro. 103
A r blonde, and in a college gown, „ ii 323
Rosy (continued) all The r heights came out above
the lawns.
Or r blossom in hot ravine.
Green-rushing from the r thrones of dawn !
(repeat)
A r warmth from marge to marge.
When r plumelets tuft the larch.
And left the daisies r.
R is the West, R is the South, (repeat)
three fair girls In gilt and r raiment came :
His arms, the r raiment, and the star.
How from the r hps of life and love.
With r colours leaping on the wall ;
The r quiverings died into the night.
Frincess Hi 365
The Daisy 32
Voice and the P. 4, 40
In Mem. xlvi 16
„ xci 1
Maud I xii 24
„ xvii 5, 25
Gareth and L. 927
938
Merlin and V. 846
Holy Grail 120
123
Felleas and E. 72
502
her bloom A r dawn kindled in stainless heavens,
Glanced from the r forehead of the dawn
himself was crown'd With roses, none so »• as
himself — Lover's Tale iv 297
Or on your head their r feet, To E. Fitzgerald 9
the moon was faUing greenish thro' a r glow, Locksley H., Sixty 178
made The r twilight of a perfect day. The Ring 187
From off the r cheek of waking Day. Akbar's Drea7n 202
Rosy-bright There all in spaces r-b Mariana in the S. 89
Rosy-kindled r-k with her brother's kiss — Lancelot and E. 393
Rosy-tinted In tufts of r-t snow ; Two Voices 60
Rosy-white her light foot Shone r-w, QLnone 180
Rot ' Why, if man r in dreamless ease, Two Voices 280
Fall back upon a name ! rest, r in that ! Aylmer's Field 385
Rotatory And r thumbs on silken knees, „ 2(X)
Rotted my thighs are r with the dew ; St. S. Stylites 41
There the smouldering fire of fever creeps across
the r floor, Locksley H., Sixty 223
Rotten (See also Rain-rotten) Till all be ripe and r. Will Water. 16
When the r woodland drips, Vision of Sin 81
To leap the r pales of prejudice. Princess ii 142
when the r hustings shake In another month Maud I vi 54
on whom all spears Are r sticks ! Gareth and L. 1306
r branch Snapt in the rushing of the river-rain Merlin and V. 957
Yea, r with a hundred years of death, Holy Grail 496
seeing too much wit Makes the world r. Last Tournament 247
What r piles uphold their mason-work, Sir J. Oldcastle 67
Better a r borough or so Than a r fleet Riflemen form ! 17
Rotting At the moist rich smell of the r leaves, A spirit haunts 17
' At least, not r hke a weed. Two Voices 142
R on some wild shore with ribs of wreck, Frincess v 147
That r inward slowly moulders all. Merlin and V. 395
Rough The fllter'd tribute of the r woodland. Ode to Memory 63
And from a heart as r as Esau's hand, Godiva 28
Buss me, thou r sketch of man. Vision of Sin 189
And Enoch Arden, a r sailor's lad Enoch Arden 14
How many a r sea had he weather'd in her ! „ 135
a r piece Of early rigid colour, Aylmer's Field 280
befool'd and idioted By the r amity of the other, „ 591
Dropping the too r H in Hell and Heaven, Sea Dreams 196
But your r voice (You spoke so loud) „ 280
That ever butted his r brother-brute Lucretius 197
Discuss'd his tutor, r to common men. Princess, Fro. 114
but ' No ! ' Roar'd the r king, ' you shall not ; ., t 87
tho' the r kex break The starr'd mosaic, ., iv 77
At length my Sire, his r cheek wet with tears, „ v 23
Among piled arms and r accoutrements, „ 55
These were the r ways of the world till now. „ vii 257
Not once or twice in our r island story. Ode on Well. 201
Fabric r, or fairy-fine. Ode Inter. Exhib. 18
And says he is r but kind, Maud I xix 70
R but kind ? yet I know He has plotted against me ., 79
Well, r but kind ; why let it be so : ,, 83
Is it kind to have made me a grave so r, ,, // v 97
To guard thee on the r ways of the world.' Com. of Arthur 336
Last that r humour of the kings of old Gareth and L. 377
' R, sudden. And pardonable, worthy to be knight — • „ 653
nor r face, or voice. Brute bulk of limb, „ 1329
For old am I, and r the ways and wild ; Marr. of Geraint 750
Then tending her r lord, tho' all unask'd, Geraint and E. 405
In lieu of this r beast upon my sliield, Balin and Balan 196
1
Rough
593
Royal
Bough (continued) And one was r with wattling, Balin and Balan 366
Meeker than any child to a r nurse, Lancelot and E. 857
she knew right well What the r sickness meant, „ 888
I pray you, use some r discourtesy „ 973
Then the r Torre began to heave and move, „ 1066
I might have put my wits to some r use, „ 1306
r crowd, Hearing he had a difference with their priests. Holy Grail 673
E wives, that laugh'd and scream'd against the
gulls, Pelleas and E. 89
Some r old knight who knew the worldly way, „ 192
Her light feet fell on our r Lyonnesse, Last Tournament 554
when first I rode from our r Lyonnesse, „ 664
The r brier tore my bleeding palms ; Lover's Tale ii 18
In a tone so r that I broke into passionate tears. The Wreck 122
r rock-throne Of Freedom ! Montenegro 9
Bongher Here is a story which in r shape Aylmer's Field 7
women sang Between the r voices of the men, Princess, Pro, 245
the r hand Is safer : „ w 278
whenever a r gust might tumble a stormier wave, The Wreck 131
Roughest A cloth of r web, and cast it down, Gareth and L. 683
Rough-redden'd R-r with a thousand winter galos, Enoch Arden 95
Rough-ruddy And r-r faces Of lowly labour. Merlin and the G. 59
Rough-thicketed E-t were the banks and steep ; Gareth and L. 907
Round (adj.) And o'er it many, r and small, Mariana 39
We knew the merry world was r. The Voyage 7
We know the merry world is r, „ 95
For so the whole r earth is every way M. d' Arthur 254
A body slight and r, and like a pear Walk, to the Mail 53
Her r white shoulder shaken with her sobs, Princess iv 289
For so the whole r earth is every way Pass, of Arthur 422
E was their pace at first, but slacken'd soon : Geraint and E. 33
Round (adv.) Shall make the winds blow E and r, Nothing will Die 24
flashing r and r, and whirl'd in an arch, M. d' Arthur 138
I'd clasp it r so close and tight. Miller's D. 180
And ' while the world runs r and r,' Palace of Art 13
r and r A whirlwind caught and bore us ; Lover's Tale ii 196
Hands all r ! (repeat) Hands all Pound 9, 21, 33
great name of England, r and r. (repeat) „ 12, 36
And all her glorious empire, r and r. „ 24
An' the dogs was a-yowlin' all r, Owd Eod 107
flashing r and r, and whirl'd in an arch, Pass, of Arthur 306
Round (prep.) once had roll'd you r and r the Sun, Poets and their B. 10
Round (s) runs the r of life from hour to hour. Circumstance 9
Like the tender amber r, Margaret 19
The dark r of the dripping wheel. Miller's D. 102
in the r of Time Still father Truth ? Ixrve and Duty 4
To yonder argent r ; St. Agnes' Eve 1&
Comes out a perfect r. Will Water. 68
This r of green, this orb of flame. In Mem. xxxiv 5
Shovdd move his r's, and fusing all „ xlvii 2
slowly breathing bare The r of space, „ Ixxxvi 5
they roll Thro' such a r in heaven, Holy Grail 686
BoODd (verb) Should slowly r his orb, Elednore 91
So r's he to a separate mind In Mem. xlv 9
r A higher height, a deeper deep. „ Ixiii 11
Bonnded (adj. and part.) clear canal Is r to as clear a
lake. Arabian Nights 46
Devolved his r periods. A Character 18
Roll'd on each other, r, smooth'd, D. of F. Women 51
Sweet faces, r arms, and bosoms prest To little harps
of gold ; Sea-Fairies 3
o'er her r form Between the shadows of the vine-bunches (Enone 180
r, smooth'd, and brought Into the gulfs of sleep. D. of F. Women 51
And moves not on the r curl. Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 8
O'er ocean-mirrors r la:^e, In Mem. xii 9
vizoring up a red And cipher face of r foolishness, Gareth and L. 1039
only the r moon Thro' the tall oriel on the rolling sea. Holy Grail 830
Bounded (verb) slowly r to the east The one black
shadow Mariana in the S. 79
• And r by the stillness of the beach Audley Court 10
The men who met him r on their heels Pelleas and E. 142
Roundedness rosy knees and supple r, Lu^etius 190
Ronndel glorious r echoing in our ears, Merlin and V. 426
Roundelay Twice or thrice his r, (repeat) The Owl i 11, 12
Or carol some old r, Gareth and L. 506
Roundelay (continued) To dance without a catch, a r
To dance to.' Last Tournament 250
Rounder softer all her shape And r seem'd : Princess vii 137
The r cheek had brighten'd into bloom. The Eing 351
Roundest making them An armlet for the r arm on
earth, Lancelot and E. 1183
Roundhead And far below the E rode, Talking Oak 299
Rounding The level waste, the r gray. Mariana 44
Round Table (See also Table, Table Round) But now
the whole E T is dissolved M. d' Arthur 234
' Have any of our i? T held their vows ? ' Pelleas and E. 533
Have founded my jB T in the North, Last Tournament 78
The glory of our iJ T is no more.' (repeat) „ 189, 212
But now the whole E T ia dissolved Pass, of Arthur 402
Rouse (s) Have a r before the mom : (repeat) Vision of Sin 96, 120
Rouse (verb) From deep thought himself he r's, L. of Burleigh 21
Roused has r the child again. Sea Dreams 281
I am r by the wail of a child. The Wreck 7
r a snake that hissing writhed away ; Death of (Enone 88
Rout (s) a r of saucy boys Brake on us at our books. Princess v 394
Down on a r of craven foresters. Gareth and L. 841
And midmost of a r of roisterers, Geraint and E. 274
With all his r of random followers, „ 382
And blindly rush'd on all the r behind. „ 466
whirling r Led by those two rush'd into dance. Lover's Tale Hi 54
Rout (verb) O sound to r the brood of cares. In Mem. Ixxxix 17
Rove How young Columbus seem'd to r. The Daisy 17
E's from the living brother's face, In Mem. xxxii 7
Let his eye r in following, Marr. of Geraint 399
Their lot with ours to r the world about ; Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 11
Wild woods in which we r no more. The Flight 84
Roved While I r about the forest, Boddicea 35
I r at random thro' the town. In Mem. Ixxxvii 3
Wild woods in which we r with him, The Flight 83
Rover and thou hast been a r too. Last Tournament 543
Roving When after r in the woods Miller's D. 58
E the trackless realms of Lyonnesse, Lancelot and E. 35
Row (s) The streams through many a lilied r The Winds, etc. 5
rotmd the cool green courts there ran a r Of cloisters. Palace of Art 25
like white sea-birds in a r, V. of Maeldune 101
Row (verb) taught me how to skate, to r, Edwin Morris 19
he can steer and r, and he WiU guide me Lancelot and E. 1128
E us out from Desenzano, to your Sirmione r ! Frater ave, etc. 1
Row'd and how I r across And took it, M. d' Arthur 32
Arthur r across and took it — Com. of Arthur 298
and how I r across And took it, Pass, of Arthur 200
So they r, and there we landed — Frater ave, etc. 2
Rowel He dash'd the r into his horse, Pelleas and E. 486
Rowing ' Who, r hard against the stream, Two Voices 211
Royal (adj.) (See also Crown-royal) Victoria, — since your
R grace To the Queen 5
With r frame-work of wrought gold ; Ode to Memory 82
Died the sound of r cheer; L. of Shalott iv 48
She to Paris made Profier of r power, CEnone 111
paintings of wise men I hung Tae r dais round. Palace of Art 132
She threw her r robes away. „ 290
' By holy rood, a r beard ! Day-Dm., Eevival 20
Cophetua sware a r oath : Beggar Maid 15
From whence the E mind, familiar with her, Princess iv 235
(om' r word upon it. He comes back safe) „ v 224
Last, Ida's answer, in a r hand, „ 371
Till her people all around the r chariot agitated, Boddicea 73
He set his r signet there ; In Mem. cxxv 12
Break not, for thou art E, but endure, Ded. of Idylls 45
For this an Eagle, a r Eagle, laid Gareth and L. 44
Rolling her smoke about the E mount, „ 190
r crown Sparkled, and swaying upon a restless elm Balin and Balan 462
Hail, r knight, we break on thy sweet rest, „ 470
Drove his mail'd heel athwart the r crown, „ 540
Boldness and r knighthood of the bird Merlin and V. 134
Till the high dawn piercing the r rose „ 739
but meaning all at once To snare her r fancy Lancelot and E. 71
Tho' quartering your own r arms of Spain, Columbus 115
Shall the r voice be mute ? By an Evolution. 14
Royal (s) 0 loyal to the r in thyself, To the Queen ii 1
2 p
Royal-born
Koyal-bom a cotter's babe is r-h by right divine ; Locksley H., Sixty 125
Royal-nch So r-r and wide.' Palace of Art 20
this great house so r-r, and wide, jgj
Royalty fling Thy r back into the riotous fits Sir J. Oldcastle 100
Eoysteruig her brother lingers late With a r company) Mand I xiv 15
Knb (See also -Rtxlb) We r each other's angles down, In Mem. Ixxxix 40
594
Rule
Bobbed And yawn'd, and r his face,
Bnbbish Or cast as r to the void,
Ev'n in the jumbled r of a dream,
Rubric set your thoughts in r thus
Ruby (adj.) I'll stake my r ring upon it you did.'
With a satin sail of a r glow.
This r necklace thrice around her neck,
in the light's last glimmer Tristram show'd And
swung the r carcanet.
Ruby (s) a carcanet Of r swaying to and fro,
an ye fling those rubies round my neck
These be no ruiies, this is frozen blood,
Yet glowing in a heart of r —
Ruby-budded break from the r-h lime
Ruby-chain show'd them both the r-c,
Ruby-circled Queen Isolt With r-c neck,
Day-Dm., Revival 19
In Mem. liv 7
Merlin and V. 347
Princess Hi 50
„ Pro. 170
The Islet 13
Last Tournament 19
740
7
312
413
Lover's Tale iv 196
Maud I iv 1
Last Tournament 409
364
Rud^ (See aZso Rough-ruddy) His r cheek upon my breast. The Sisters 20
By and by The r square of comfortable light,
i? and white, and strong on his legs.
His face was r, his hair was gold,
As he glow'd like a r shield on the Lion's breast.
R thro' both the roofs of sight.
Ruddy-hearted Our ehntree's r-h blossom-flake
Rude sketches r and faint.
' As these r bones to us, are we to her
And push'd by r hands from its pedestal,
With a crew that is neither r nor rash,
into that r hall Stept with all grace,
Who will not hear denial, vain and r
He fought the boys that were r,
Ruder All night no r air peiplex Thy sliding keel,
Rudest (Those peerless flowei's which in the r wind
Rue Old year, we'll dearly r for you :
He could not ever r his marrying me —
May r the bargain made.'
Rued the hunter r His rash intrusion,
But I r it arter a bit,
RufiSan (adj.) mine of r violators !
RnfBan (s) vitriol madness flushes up in the r's head,
so the r'« growl'd, Fearing to lose,
r's at their ease Among their harlot-brides,
RufSe R's her pure cold plume, and takes the flood
R thy mirror'd mast,
I swear it would not r me so much
As the sharp wind that r's all day long
R's her pure cold plume, and takes the flood
Ruffled (adj.) To sleek her r peace of mind,
Blurr'd like a landskip in a r pool, —
Ruffled (verb) not a hair R upon the scarfskin,
Kankled in him and r all his heart,
Rugged And r barks begin to bud,
by slow prudence to make mild A r people,
With r maxims hewn from life ;
Ruin (s) (See also Abbey-ruin) Boat, island, r's of a
castle,
Sit brooding in the r's of a life,
crash of r, and the loss of all But Enoch
Hurt in that night of sudden r and wreck,
By that old bridge which, half in r's then,
Sat shuddering at the r of a world ;
but a gulf of r, swallowing gold,
the sea roars R : a fearful night ! '
from the gaps and chasms of r left
but satiated at length Came to the r's,
echo like a ghostly woodpecker. Hid *i the r's ;
A Gothic r and a Grecian house,
when the crimson-rolling eye Glares r
Rang r, answer'd full of grief and scorn.
Enoch Arden 726
Grandmother 2
The Victim 35
Maud III vi 14
Tiresias 3
To Mary Boyle 3
Aylmer's Field 100
Princess Hi 296
v58
The Islet 10
Lancelot and E. 262
Lover's Tale i 628
First Quarrel 14
In Mem. ix 9
Ode to Memory 24
D.oftheO. Year 43
Dora 146
Princess i 74
„ iv 203
Spinster's S's. 51
Boadicea 50
Maud I i 37
Geraint and E. 563
Last Tournament 427
M. d' Arthur 268
In Mem. ix 7
Geraint and E. 150
Guinevere 50
Pass, of Arthur 436
Merlin and V. 899
Romney's R. 114
Aylmer's Field 660
Guinevere 49
My life is full 18
Ulysses 37
Ode on Well 184
Edwin Morris 6
Love and Duty 12
Enoch Arden 549
564
The Brook 79
Sea Dreams 30
79
81
225
Princess, Pro. 91
218
232
iv 495
vi 333
Ruin (s) (continued) Roman strength Turb'ia show'd In r, The Daisy 6
And placed them in this r ; Mart, of Geraint 643
rnen may fear Fresh fire and r. Geraint and E. 823
And ending m a r— nothmg left. Merlin and V. 883
our horses stumbling as they trode On heaps of r. Holy Grail 717
Red r, and the breakmg up of laws, Guinevere 426
Which wrought the r of my lord the King.' 689
Great hills of r's, and coUapsed masses Lover's Tale ii 65
K s, the r of all my life and me ! gg
and roll their r '5 down the slope. Locksley h" Sixty 138
beneath the Koman r where the purple flowers grow, Prater ave, etc 4
He that wrought my ,-- Forlorn2
Ihis featan-haunted r, this little city of sewers, Happy 34
Rear'd on the tumbled r's of an old fane St. Telemachus 6
and there Gaze at the r, 14
. from the r arose The shriek and curse Akbar's Dream 189
Rum (verb) A plot, a plot, a plot, to r aU ! ' Princess ii 192
for fear This whole foundation r, Sil
heiress of your plan, And takes and r's all ; " Hi 238
recks not to r a realm in her name. Fastness 10
Ruin'd (adj. and part.) (See also RBke-nan'A) Tho' watch-
ing from a r tower Xwo Voices 77
I wish that somewhere in tie r folds, (Enone 221
So saying, from the r shrine he stept M. d' Arthur 45
And hghted at a, r inn, and said : Vision of Sin 62
R trunks on wither'd forks, 93
' We are men of r blood ; " 99
^ ! r ! the sea roars Ruin : a fearful night ! ' Sea Dreams 80
The r shells of hollow towers ? /« Aiem. Ixxvi 16
Or r chrysalis of one. ^_ Ixxxii 8
flying gold of the r woodlands drove thro' the air. "Maud I i 12
Rest ! the good house, tho' r, O my son, Marr. of Geraint 378
who swept the dust of r Rome From off the threshold Gareth and L. 135
But she, remembering her old r hall, Geraint and E. 254
ho saying froni the r shrine he stept. Pass, of Arthur 213
And r \yh}m, by him jy j^ 77
Over ail this r world of ours. Sisters (E andE ) 22
I saw the tiger in the r fane Spring from his f aUen God, Demeier and P. 79
Ihen home, and past the r mill. The Rinq 156
Ruin'd (verb) And stirr'd tliis vice in you which r man
Thro' woman the first hour : Merlin and V. 362
i'or a woman r the world, as God's own scriptures tell
. . And a manr mine, ' charity 3
Ruuung (See also Reahn-ruuung) R along the illimitable inane, Lucretius 40
_ In twelve great battles r overthrown. Guinevere 432
Rumous He look'd and saw that all was r. Marr. of Geraint 315
And keeps me in this r castle here, 452
The r donjon as a knoll of moss, Balin and Balan 334
And thence I past Far thro' a r city, Holy Grail 429
Rule (s) royal power, ample r Unquestion'd, (Enone 111 •
Phantoms of other forms of r. Love thou thy land 59
beemg obedience is the bond of r. M d' Arthur 94
when sliall all men's good Be each man's r. Golden Year 48
err from honest Nature's r ! Locksley Hall 61
Averrmg it was clear agamst all r's Princess i 178
ihey seek us : out so late is out of r's. iv 219
I beant a-gawin' to break my r. N. Farrier, 0.S.4
I weant break r's fur Doctor, gy
Seeing obedience is the bond of r. Pass, of Arthur 262
Your r ha^ made the people love Their ruler. To Marq. of Dufferin 9
Rule (verb) May you v us long. To the Queen 20
sendest out the man To r by land and sea, England andAmer. 2
I should come again To r once more- M. d' Arthur 24
xlE tnat only r s by terror The r t ■ -i
she That taught the Sabine how to r, ptLTsTuiQ
wish d to marry : they could r a house ; 4^1
But they my troubled spirit r. In Mem."xxviii 17
O Sorrow, wilt thou r my blood, zL -5
Who can r and dare not lie. " A/«,,/7 T -y «'«
'Who is he That he should r us? Com.lffnL 69
Moaning and wailing for an heir to r After him, 207
sought to r for his own self and hand, " 219
'Shall Rome or Heathen r in Arthur's realm ? " 4s';
Then Gareth,' Here he r's. Gareth and L 1354
heathen, who, some say, shall r the land Lancelot and E. 65
Role
595
Running
Sole (verb) (continued) 'Amoral child without the craft to r, Lancelot a^idE. 146
as Arthur's Queen I move and r :
Wed thou our Lady, and r over us,
King must guard That which he r's,
he knows false, abide and r the house :
I should come again To r once more ;
The nameless Power, or Powers, that r
Night and Shadow r below
only those who camiot read can r.
Or Might would r alone ;
thro' the Will of One who knows and r's —
and r thy Providence of the brute.
For all they r — by equal law for all ?
only let the hand that r's. With politic care,
Power That is not seen and r's from far away —
Ruled captain of my dreams R in the eastern sky.
grim Earl, who r In Coventry :
Fairer his talk, a tongue that r the hour,
A nation yet, the rulers and the r —
There they r, and thence they wasted
infant civilisation be r with rod or with knout?
many a petty king ere Arthur came R in this isle,
listen to me, and by me be r.
He saw the laws that r the tournament
if this earth be r by Perfect Love,
Ruler A nd leave us r's of your blood
The deathless r of thy dying house
A nation yet, the r's and the ruled —
The name was r of the dark — Isolt ?
here the faith That made as r's ?
What r's but the Days and Hours
Unprophetic r's they —
Your rule has made the people love Their r.
1221
Holy Grail 605
906
Guinevere 515
Fass. of Arthur 192
Aiicient Sage 29
243
Locksley H., Sixty 132
Epilogue 29
The Ring 42
By an Evolution. 16
Akhar's Dream 110
127
138
D. ofF. Women 264
Godiva 12
Aylmer's Fidd 194
Princess, Con. 53
Boadicea 54
Maud I iv 47
Com. of Arthur 6
Geraint and E. 624
ImsI Tournament 160
D. of the Duke of C. 8
To the Queen 21
Aylmer's Field 661
Princess, Con. 53
Last Tournament 606
To the Queen ii 19
Ancient Sage 95
Open. I. and C. Exhib. 26
To Marq. of Dufferin 10
Ruling And r by obeying Nature's powers, Ode Inter. Exhib. 40
Dreams r when wit sleeps ! Balin and Balan 143
r that which knows To its own harm : To the Qu^en ii 58
To one, that r has increased Her greatness To Marq. of Dufferin 7
Rumble {See also Ruimnle) Clamour and r, and ringing and
clatter, Maud II v 13
Rambled And round the attics r, The Goose 46
Rumbling See Roomlin'
Rummage from what side The blindfold r Balin and Balan 416
Rummaged tapt at doors, And r like a rat : Walk, to the Mail 38
Rummle (rumble) I eard the bracks an' the baulks r down Owd Rod 109
Rumour empty breath And r's of a doubt ?
Wife-hunting, as the r ran, was he :
down the wind With r.
With r of Prince Arac hard at hand,
let the turbid streams of r flow
months ran on and r of battle grew.
Sir, there be many r's on this head :
But when a r rose about the Queen,
Vext at a r issued from herself
A r runs, she took him for the King,
Hid from the wide world's r by the grove
I hear of r's flying thro' your court,
let r's be : When did not r's fly ?
This night, a r wildly blo^vn about Came,
Less noble, being, as all r runs,
but empty breath And r's of a doubt ?
somewhere in the North, as R sang
Bun (s) so quick the r, We felt the good ship
Lies the hawk's cast, the mole has made his r.
Run (verb) r short pains Thro' his warm heart ;
When cats r home and light is come,
trenched waters r from sky to sky ;
R's up the ridged sea.
And then the tears r down my cheek.
So r's the round of life from hour to hour,
would r to and fro, and hide and seek,
r thro' every change of sharp and flat ;
And thro' the field the road r's by
Thro' the wave that r's for ever By the island
' while the world r's round and round,'
r before the fluttering tongues of fire ;
M. d' Arthur 100
Aylmer's Field 212
496
Princess v 112
Ode on Well. 181
Maud III vi 29
Com. of Arthur 11^
Marr. of Geraini 24
Merlin and V. 153
776
Lancelot and E. 522
1190
1193
Guinevere 153
339
Pass, of Arthur 268
Sir J. Oldcastle 56
The Voyage 14
Aylmer's Field 849
Supp. Confessions 161
The Owl i 1
Ode to Memory 104
Sea-Fairies 39
Oriana 69
Circum,stance 9
The Mermaid 35
Caress'd or chidden 4
L. of Shalott i 4
12
■ Palace of Art 13
D. of F. Women 3()
Run (verb) (continued) where the bay r's up its latest horn. Audley CouH 11
can r My faith beyond my practice into his : Edwin Mon-is 53
The Sun will r his orbit, Love and Duty 22
one increasing purpose r's, Locksley Hall 137
they shall dive, and they shall r, „ 169
The vilest herb that r's to seed Amphion 95
Against its fountam upward r's Will Water. 35
To make my blood r quicker, „ 110
Where the bloody conduit r's, Vision of Sin 144
he clamour'd from a casement, ' R ' The Brook 85
' R, Katie ! ' Katie never ran : „ 87
R's in a river of blood to the sick sea. Aylmer's Field 768
enter'd one Of those dark caves that r beneath the
chffs. Sea Dreams 90
who this way r's Before the rest — Lucretius 191
Feyther r oop to the farm, an' I r's oop to the mill ; N. Farmer, N. S. 54
An' I'll r oop to the brig, „ 55
He that r's may read. The Flower 18
Cataract brooks to the ocean r. The Islet 17
' The stars,' she whispers, ' blindly r ; In Mem. Hi 5
Till all my widow'd race be r ; „ ix 18
Till all my widow'd race be r. „ xvii 20
So r's my dream : but what am 1 ? ,, liv 17
R out your measured arcs, „ cv 27
For every grain of sand tliat r's, „ cxvii 9
I hear thee where the waters r ; „ cxxx 2
And letting a dangerous thought r wild Maud I xix 52
long-lanced battle let their horses r. Com. of Arthur 104
a river R's in three loops about her living-place ; Gareth and L. 612
these be for the snare (So r's thy fancy) „ 1082
Shot from behind me, r along the ground ; Balin and Balan 374
rumour r's, she took him for the King, Merlin and V. 776
let his eyes R thro' the peopled gallery Lancelot and E. 430
being snapt — We r more counter to the soul Last Tournament 659
being, as all nunour r's, The most disloyal friend Guinevere 339
flowers that r poison in their veins. Lover's Tale i 347
the sight r over Upon his steely gyves ; „ ii 156
r's out when ya breaks the shell. Village Wife 4
It is charged and we fire, and they r. Def. of Lucknow 68
R's in the rut, a coward to the Priest. Sir J. Oldcastle 78
make one people ere man's race be r: To Victor Hugo 11
as I saw the white sail r. And darken, The Flight 39
May we find, as ages r. Open I. and C. Exhib. 11
but 1 knaws they r's upo' four, — Owd Rod 17
' Ya mun r fur the lether. " „ 77
Sa I r's to the yard fur a lether, „ 82
as this poor earth's pale history r's, — Vastness 3
She comes ! The loosen'd rivulets r ; Prog, of Spring 9
And I would that my race were r. The Dreamer 8
Or ever your race be r! „ 30
Helter-skelter r's the age ; Poets and Critics 2
Rung Loud, loud r out the bugle's brays, Oriana 48
And as he rode his armour r, L. of Shalott Hi 17
The distant battle flash'd and r. Two Voices 126
Not a bell was r, not a prayer was read ; Maud II v 24
Runlet And r's babbling down the glen. Mariana in the S. 44
Nor r tinkling from the rock ; In Mem. c 13
Runn'd (ran) an' r plow thruff it an' all, N. Farmer, O. S. 42
An' 'e niver r arter the fox. Village Wife 41
An' sarvints r in an' out, „ 56
the poodle r at tha once, an' thou r ' Spinster's S's. 38
an' the Freea Traade r 'i my 'ead, Owd Rod 54
Haafe o' the parish r oop „ 115
Runnel The babbling r crispeth, Claribd 19
dashing r in the spring Had liveried Lover's Tale ii 49
fallen Prone by the dashing r on the grass. „ 101
Runnin' sthrames r down at the back o' the gUn Tomorrow 24
Running (See also Runnin') Him r on thus hopefully
she heard, Enoch Arden 201
know his babes were r wild Like colts „ 304
While you were r down the sands, Sea Dreams 265
Of r fires and fluid range Oi lawless airs, Supp. Confessions 147
Betwixt the green brink and the r foam, Sea-Fairies 2
a stable wench Came r at the call. Princess i 227
The second was my father's r thus : „ iv 406
Running
596
Sable
Bmuiing (continued) fling Their pretty maids in the r flood, Princess v 382
All r on one way to the home of my love,
You are all r on, and I stand on the slope
jR down to my own dark wood ;
for r sharply with thy spit Down on a rout
And r down the Soul, a Shape that fled
B too vehemently to break upon it.
and by fountains r wine.
Window, On the Hill 8
9
Maud I xiv 30
Gareth and L. 840
1207
Marr. of Geraint 78
Last Tournament 141
perchance of streams R far on within its imnost halls, Lover's Tale i 523
the mad little craft R on and on,
highway r by it leaves a breadth Of sward
r out below Thro' the fire
neck Of land r out into rock —
dark Uttle worlds r round them were worlds
r after a shadow of good ;
Bimiiyiuede Is this the manly strain of R?
Bush (s) thro' blossomy r'es and bowers
the r of the air in the prone swing,
the shrieking r of the wainscot mouse,
Follow'd a r of eagle's wings,
A flat malarian world of reed and r !
Beneath a pitiless r of Autumn rain
The r of the javelins,
R of Suns, and roll of systems.
Bush (verb) those, who clench their nerves to r
To r abroad all round the little haven,
A thousand arms and r'es to the Sun.
R to the roof, sudden rocket,
would r on a thousand lances and die —
Bush'd And out spirits r together
We r into each other's arms.
A wind arose and r upon the South,
on a sudden r Among us, out of breath,
/ am his dearest ! ' r on the knife.
And blindly r on all the rout behind,
thro' the tree R ever a rainy wind,
B into dance, and hke wild Bacchanals
whirling rout Led by those two r into dance,
Poor JuUan — how he r away ;
R each at each with a cry.
Boshing (See also GreeD-rushing, Upward-rushing)
shadow r up the sea.
Like some broad river r down alone,
The nulldam r down with noise,
whisper of the south-wind r warm,
Far purelier iii his r's to and fro,
My lady's Indian kinsman r in,
A r tempest of the wrath of God
for thrice I heard the rain R ;
r battle- bolt sang from the three-decker
we rode Thro' the dim land against a r wind,
rotten branch Snapt in the r of the river-rain
Lancelot, who r outward honlike Leapt on him,
Blaze by the r brook or silent well,
the storm r over the down,
I am flimg from the r tide of the world
The Revenge 39
Sisters (E. and E.) 80
V. of Maeldune 42
Despair 10
18
92
Third of Feb. 34
Leonine Eleg. 3
Aylmer's Field 86
Maud I vi 71
Last Tournament 417
Lover's Tale iv 142
Sisters (E. and E.) 237
Batt. of Brunanhurh 88
God and the Univ. 3
Love and Duty 77
Enoch Arden 867
Princess vi 37
W. to Alexandra 20
V. of Maeldune 24
Locksley Hall 38
The Letters 40
Princess i 97
„ iv 374
The Victim 72
Geraint and E. 466
Last Tournament 16
Lover's Tale iii 25
55
iv2
373
The
Rosalind 11
Mine he the strength 2
Miller's D. 50
Locksley Hall 125
Aylmer's Field 458
593
757
iMcretius 27
Maud I ibO
Merlin and V. 425
957
Guinevere 107
400
Rizpah 6
The Wreck 6
hellish heat of a wretched life r back thro' the veins ?
Bushy Or dimple in the dark of r coves,
Eusset She clad herself in a r gown.
An old storm-beaten, r, many-stain'd Pavilion,
Broad-faced with uncler-fringe of r beard.
And took his r beard between his teeth ;
Busset-bearded The r-b head roll'd on the floor.
Bussia R bursts our Indian barrier,
Despair 68
Ode to Memory 60
Lady Clare bl
Gareth and L. 1113
Geraint and E. 537
713
729
Locksley H., Sixty 115
Bnssian (adj.) And welcome ii flower, a people's pride, IV. to Marie Alex. 6
the points of the R lances arose in the sky ; Heavy Brigade 5
In the heart of the R hordes, „ 50
Bussian (s) Cossack and R Reel'd Light Brigade 34
thousands of R's, Thousands of horsemen. Heavy Brigade 2
Bust (s) fearing r or soilure fashion'd for it Lancelot and E. 7
That keeps the r of murder on the walls — Guinevere 74
Bust (verb) lest we r in ease. Love thou thy land 42
To r imbumish'd, not to shine in use ! Ulysses 23
the cannon-bullet r on a slothful shore, Maud III vi 26
Busted (adj.) The r nails fell from the knots Mariana 3
Busted (adj.) (continued) Yniol's r arms Were on his
princely person.
Busted (verb) when the bracken r on their crags,
Bustle Not by the weU-known stream and r spire,
that in the garden snared Picus and Faunus, r Gods ?
We dropt with evening on a r town
43M
0»1
Marr. of Geraint 5'
Edwin Morris lOO"
The Brook 188
Lucretius 182
Princess i 170
a r tower Half-lost in belts of hop and breadths of wheat; „ Con. 44
The rich Virgilian r measure Of Lari Maxume, The Daisy 75
Ye think the r cackle of your bourg
They take the r murmur of their bourg
sound and honest, r Squire,
Bustiest drew The r iron of old fighters' hearts ;
Busting Forgotten, r on his iron hills.
Bustle (verb) Sweet-Gale r round the shelving keel ;
Marr. of Geraint 276
419
Locksley H., Sixty 239
Merlin and V. 574
Princess v 146
Edwin Morris 110
heard In the dead hush the papers that she held R : Princess iv 391
A strange knee r thro' her secret reeds.
Bustle (s) Past, as a r or twitter in the wood
Bustled each, in maiden plumes We r :
Bustling r thro' The low and bloomed foUage,
And r once at night about the place.
Busty Anchors of r fluke, and boats updrawn ;
Ah, let the r theme alone !
I think they should not wear our r gowns,
I grate on r hinges here :
but old And r, old and r, Prince Geraint,
Cries of the partridge like a r key
But same old r would deepen year by year ;
Runs in the r, a coward to the Priest.
Buth (proper name) Fairer than R among the fields of
corn,
Buth methinks Some r is mine for thee.
r began to work Against his anger in him,
Geraint Had r again on Enid looking pale :
Then with another humorous r remark'd
Buthless As r as a baby with a worm,
And gathering r gold —
r Mussulman Who flings his bowstrung Harem in the
sea,
Bye Long fields of barley and of r.
8
Saailor (sailor) what s's a' seean an' a' doon ;
Saaint's-daay (Saints-day) S-d — they was ringing the
bells.
Saale (sale) fetch'd nigh to nowt at the s,
Saame (lard) An' I niver puts s i' my butter,
Saatan (Satan) Uke S as fell Down out o' heaven
Saave (save) wur it nohbut to s my life ;
I may s mysen yit.'
she heald ' Ya mun s little Dick,
Saavin' (saving) in s a son fur me.
Saay (say) use to s the things that a do.
I thowt a 'ad summut to s,
I weant s men be loiars,
— that's what I 'eai-s 'em s.
— that's what I 'ears 'im s —
Feyther 'ud s I wiu; \igly es sin,
when they 'evn't a word to s.
Saayin' (saying) an' wur niver sa nigh s Yis.
an' s ondecent things,
Sabsean Dripping with S spice
Sabbath (adj.) ' Behold, it is the S mom.'
Sabbath (s) Half God's good s.
The s's of Eternity, One s deep and wide—
fixt the S. Darkly that day rose :
woke, and went the next, The S,
On that loud s shook the spoiler
Sabbath-drawler art no s-d of old saws,
Sabine she That taught the S how to rule.
Sable Fantastic plume or s pine ;
The towering car, the s steeds :
Balin and Balan 354
Last Tournament 365
Princess i 203
Arabian Nights 12
Aylmer's Field 547
Enoch Arden 18
WUl Water. 177
Princess, Pro. 143
i 86
Marr. of Geraint 478
Lover's Tale ii 115
Aylmer's Field 34
Sir J. Oldcastle 78
Aylmer's Field 680
Gareth and L. 895
Geraint and E. 101
203
250
Walk, to the Mail 108
Columbus 135
Romney's E. 134
L. of Shalott i 2 ,
North. Cobbler 4r\
N. Farmer, N. S. 13
Village Wife 73
119
North. Cobbler 57
84
Village Wife 66
Owd Rod 81
96
N. Farmer, 0. S. 6
19
27
N. S. 2
59
Spinster's S's. 15
102
32
90
Adeline 53
Two Voices 402
To J. M. K. 11
Si Agnes' Eve ^Z
Aylmer's Field 609
Sea Dreams 19
Ode on Well. 123
To J. M. K. 5
Princess ii 79
The Voyage 44
Ode on Well. 55
Sabre
597
Saddening
Sabre Flash'd all their s's bare,
Sway'd his s, and held his own
'" ' *' Whirling their s's in circles of light !
Sabre-stroke Eeel'd from the s-s
Sabring S the gunners there,
Light Brigade 27
Heavy Brigade 18
34
Light Brigade 35
29
Sack (bag) {See also Meal-sacks) With bag and s and
basket, Enoch Arden 63
cling together in the ghastly s — Aylmer's Field 764
sweating underneath a s of com, Marr. of Geraint 263
Sack (pillage) found the s and plunder of our house „ 694
Sack'd rose a shriek as of a city s ; Princess iv 165
night Before my Enid's birthday, s my house ; Marr. of Geraint 458
night of fire, when Edym s their house, „ 634
As of some lonely city s by night, Pass, of Arthur 43
who s My dwelling, seized upon my papers, Columbiis 129
Sacrament DeUver me the blessed $;' St. S. Stylites 218
Sacred a s name And when she spake, The Poet 4.7
tho' her s blood doth drown The fields, Poland 4
' Still sees the s morning spread Two Voices 80
girls all kiss'd Beneath the s bush and past away — The Epic 3
And either s unto you. Day-Dm., Ep. 12
betray the trust : Keep nothing s : You might have won 19
face All-kindled by a still and s fire, Enoch Arden 71
And pace the s old familiar fields, „ 625
we must remain S to one another.' Aylmer's Field 426
to mar Their s everlasting calm ! iMcretius 110
s from the blight Of ancient influence and scorn. Princess ii 168
and half The s mother's bosom, „ vi 148
Love in the s halls Held carnival at will, „ vii 84
He bad you guard the s coasts. Ode on Well. 172
Mid-ocean, spare thee, s bark ; In Mem. xvii 14
Ye never knew the s dust : „ xxi 22
Oh, s be the flesh and blood „ xxxiii 11
(And dear to me as s wine To dying lips „ xxxvii 19
0 s essence, other form, „ Ixxxv 35
Come sliding out of her s glove, Maud I vi 85
The s altar blossom'd white with May, Com. of Arthur 461
And o'er her breast floated the s fish ; Gareth and L. 223
They came from out a s mountain-cleft „ 260
south-west that blowing Bala lake Fills all the s Dee. Geraint and E. 930
Guarded the s shield of Lancelot ; Lancelot and E. 4
Then came on him a sort of s fear, „ 354
For all the s mount of Camelot, Holy Grail 227
Go, since your vows are s, „ 314
And all the s madness of the bard, „ 877
whom I made it o'er his grave S, To the Qu^en ii 36
A s, secret, unapproached woe, Unspeakable ? Lover's Tale i 679
Or clutch'd the s crown of Prester John, Columbus 110
descending from the s peak Of hoar high-templed
Faith, Pref. Poem 19th Cent. 9
Felt within themselves the s passion of the second
life. Locksley H., Sixty 68
What are men that He should heed us ? cried the
king of s song ; „ 201
Had swampt the s poets with themselves. Poets and their B. 14
And s is the latest word ; To Marq. of Dufferin 37
So s those Ghost Lovers hold the gift.' The Ring 205
1 kept it as a s amulet About me, — „ 442
The s rehcs tost about the floor — „ 447
What be those crown'd forms high over the s fountain ? Parnassus 1
What be those two shapes high over the s foimtain, „ 9
an old fane No longer s to the Sim, St. Telemachus 7
Yet ' Alia,' says their s book, ' is Love,' Ahhar's Dream 73
That stone by stone I rear'd a s fane, „ 177
fiicrifice (s) (See also Self-sacrifice) so that he rose With s, On a Mourner 34
To blow these s's thro' the world— Aylmer's Field 758
Have we not made ourself the s ? Princess Hi 249
Against the flame about a s Pelleas and E. 145
let mute Into her temple Uke a s ; Lover's Tale i 685
As for a solemn s of love — „ iv 301
Dark with the smoke of human s, Sir J, Oldcastle 84
flight of birds, the flame of s, Tiresias 6
Is war, and human s — „ 112
miss'd The wonted steam of s, Demeter and P. 119
Sacrifice (verb) to thy worst self s thyself, Aylmer's Field 645
Sacring And at the s of the mass I saw Holy Grail 462
Sad Looks thro' in his s decline, Adeline 13
The broken sheds look'd s and strange : Mariana 5
' Madonna, s is night and morn,' Mariana in the S. 22
His memory scarce can make me s. Miller's D. 16
' I was cut off from hope in that s place, D. of F. Women 105
But while I mused came Memory with s eyes. Gardener's D. 243
The slow s hours that bring us all things ill, Love and Duty 58
Full of s experience, moving toward the stillness of
his rest. Locksley Hall 144
Many a s kiss by day by night renew'd Enoch Arden 161
Set her s will no less to chime with his, „ 248
' Favour from one so s and so forlorn As I am ! ' „ 287
That after all these s uncertain years, „ 415
Too fresh and fair in our s world's best bloom, The Brook 218
Yet the s mother, for the second death Aylmer's Field 604
' Not s, but sweet.' Sea Dreams 106
I am s and glad To see you, Florian. Princess ii 306
talk'd The trash that made me sick, and almost 5 ? ' „ 394
S as the last which reddens over one That sinks „ iv 46
So s, so fresh, the days that are no more. „ 48
s and strange as in dark summer dawns „ 49
So s, so strange, the days that are no more „ 53
shone Thro' glittering drops on her s friend. „ vi 283
Or pines in s experience worse than death, „ vii 315
Lead out the pageant : s and slow, Ode on Well. 13
says, our sins should make us s : Grandmother 93
stem and s (so rare the smiles Of sunlight) The Daisy 53
The s mechanic exercise. In Mem. v 7
And one is s ; her note is changed, „ xxi 27
In those s words I took farewell : „ Iviii 1
Which makes me s I know not why „ Ixviii 11
S Hesper o'er the buried sim And ready, „ cxxi 1
And niy own s name in comers cried, Maud I vi 72
To a life that has been so s, „ xi 13
Than nursed at ease and brought to understand A 5
astrology, „ xviii 36
To have no peace in the grave, is that not s ? „ II vlQ
And s was Arthur's face Taking it. Com. of Arthur 305
and s At times he seem'd, and s with him was I, „ 352
Shamed had I been, and s — 0 Lancelot — thou ! ' Gareth and L. 1245
Before her birthday, three s years ago, Marr. of Geraint 633
And knew her sitting s and solitary. Geraint and E. 282
Art thou s ? or sick ? Balin and Baian 274
The s sea-sounding wastes of Lyonnesse — Merlin and V. 74
when she lifted up A face of s appeal, „ 234
Because I saw you s, to comfort you. „ 441
Till all her heart's s secret blazed itself Lancelot and E. 836
s chariot-bier Past like a shadow thro' the field, „ 1139
And Lancelot s beyond his wont, „ 1333
which our Lord Drank at the last s supper with his own. Holy Grail 47
and there, with slow s steps Ascending, Last Tournament 143
Come — let us gladden their s eyes, „ 222
remembering Her thought when first she came, wept
the s Queen. Guinevere 182
Then to her own s heart mutter'd the Queen, „ 213
To vex an ear too s to listen to me, „ 315
rather think How s it were for Arthur, „ 496
And near him the s nuns with each a Ught Stood, „ 590
it melteth in the source Of these s tears. Lover's Tale i 784
S, sweet, and strange together — „ iv 304
With s eyes fixt on the lost sea-home. The Wreck 126
For he touch'd on the whole s planet of man, Dead Prophet 39
Had floated in with s reproachful eyes. The Ring 469
Her s eyes plead for my own fame with me Romney's R. 55
Sadden The gloom that s's Heaven and Earth, The Daisy 102
He s's, all the magic light In Mem. viii 5
While he that watch'd her s, Marr. of Geraint 67
And seen her s listening — Pelleas and E. 398
Let not all that s's Nature Faith 2
Sadden'd She fail'd and s knowing it ; Enoch Arden 257
Told Enid, and they s her the more : Marr. of Geraint 64
s all her heart again. Geraint and E. 445
Saddening And s in her childless castle, Gareth and L. 528
And, s on the sudden, spake Isolt, Last Tournament 581
Sadder
Sadder She, as her carol s grew,
Poor Fancy 5 than a single star,
s age begins To m ar against iU uses of a life,
Saddle Arac, roU'd himself Thrice in the s,
I so shook him in the s, he said.
And lets me from the s ; '
Then crush'd the s with his thiglis,
drew The foe from the s and threw
Saddle-bow A cavalier from off his s-b.
But M hen it glitter'd o'er the s-b,
Saddle-leather Thick-jewell'd shone the s-l
Sadness Can I but relive in s ? '
memories roll upon him. Unspeakable for s
But s on the soul of Ida fell.
Or s in the summer moons ?
s flings Her shadow on the blaze of kings :
spake with such a s and so low We heard not
Thou majestic in thy s at the doubtful doom
All her tale of s,
may there be no s of farewell.
598
Sail
Marian-a in the S. 13
Caress'd or chidden 13
Gareth and L. 1129
Princess v 275
Gareth and L. 29
Lancelot and E. 94
Pelleas and E. 459
Heavy Brigade 54
D. of F. Women 46
Gareth and L. 1119
L. of Shalott Hi 20
Locksley Hall 107
Enoch Arden 725
Princess vii 29
In Mem. Ixxxiii 8
„ xcviii 18
Holy Grail 42
To Virgil 23
Forlorn 80
Crossing the Bar 11
Saesn^ VaiUng a sudden eyelid with his hard ' Dim S '
Qo*o P-^*^^' , , , , ., Sir J. Oldcastle 21
Safe givmg s pledge of fruits, Qde to Memory 18
<S, damsel, as the centre of this hall. Gareth and L 604
The loneliest ways are s from shore to shore. Last Tournament 102
00 all the ways were s from shore to shore, 485
(our royal word upon it, He comes back s) Princess v 225
might be s our censures to withdraw ; Third of Feb. 11
Safer the rougher hand Is s : Princess vi 279
Sagest some were left of those Held 5, 382
Sagramore What say ye then to sweet Sir S, Merlinand V. 721
Sa^b At once the costly S yielded to her. Aylmer's Field 233
Said 1 s that all the years invent ; Two Voices 73
when I have s goodnight for evermore, May Queen, N. Y's E 41
1 know not what was s ; ^^ (^P,^ 34
He thought that nothing new was s, or else Something
so 5 'twas nothing- TheEficZO
Eustace painted her, And s to me. Gardener's D. 21
And if I s that Fancy, led by Love, , 59
he s That he was wrong to cross his father ' "Dora 147
Tis s he had a tuneful tongue, Amvhicm 17
Cruel cruel the words Is ! Edward Gray 17
She told me all her friends had s ; The Letters 25
?J^u-^'® ^.Yf f You chose the best among us— Enoch Arden 292
Ihis miller's wife ' He s to Miriam 805
life m hmi Could scarce be s to flourish. The Brook 12
so hke her ? so they s on board. 223
wid he meant, he 5 he meant. Sea Dreams 178
J^or so, my mother s, the story ran. Princess i 11
He s there was a compact ; that was true : „ 47
I s no. Yet being an easy man, " 143
some s their heads were less : " a 247
it .shall be s, These women were too barbarous, " 297
much I might have s, but that my zone " 420
(For so they s themselves) inosculated ; " m 89
I thought on all the wrathful king had s, " « 473
so it seem'd, or so they s to me, " ^ 22
She s you had a heart — " 234
All people s she had authority— " 238
all, they s, a.s earnest as the close ? " Con 21
left some record of the things we s. Third of Feb. 18
for he .seldom * me nay : Grandmother 69
I thowt a s whot a owt to 'a s N. Farmer, 0. S. 20
thaw summun s it m 'aaste : 27
The people 5 a weed The Flower 4
bomebody s that she'd say no ; (repeat) Window, Letter 7, 14
The le-sser griefs that may be s, /^ Mem. xx 1
And all hes of things divme, „ a:xxvii 18
To dying lips is all lie s), 20
Could I have s while he was here, " ixxxi 1
* The dawn, the dawn,' and died away ; " xcv60
Whatever I have s or sung, " ^j-^yg j
And how she look'd, and what he s, " Con 99
*low strange was m hat slie s, Maud I zix 34
whether there were truth in anything S by these three, Com . of Arthur 243
Saii (continued) For pastime ; yea, he s it : joust can I. Gareth and L. 543
You « your say ; Mine answer was my deed. „ 1174
She told him all that Earl Limours had s, Geraint and E 391
I haves. Not so— not all. Balin and Balan 69
s a light came from her when she moved : Merlin and V 567
What s the happy sire ? ' /tjq
we hear it s That men go down before your spear Lanceloiand E. 148
1 s Ihat if I went and if I fought and won it 215
one 5 to the other, ' Lo ! What is he ? ]] 47Q
being weak in body s no more ; " 330
We heard not half of what he s ]^oly Grail 43
asking him, ' What s the King ? 204
what s each, and what the King ? " 71Q
one most holy saint, who wept and s, " 731
Was I too dark a prophet when Is " qqq
There she that seem'd the chief among them s, Pelleas and E 62
I know not what I would '—but s to her. Last Tournament 498
went io-day for three days' hunting — as lie s — „ 53Q
But openly she spake and s to her, Guinevere 226
So s my father, and himself was knight 234
and he s That as he rode, " 236
So s my father — yea, and furthermore, " 250
S the good nuns would check her gadding tongue " 313
as he s, that once was loving hearts, Lover's Tale iv 68
An once I s to the Missis, js'^rth. Cobbler 103
Mlss Annie she s it ^vur draains, Village Wife 11
This tongue that wagg'd They s Sir J. Oldcastle 15
and I heard a voice that s Tiresias 48
' He s he would meet me tomorra ! ' Tomorrow 80
ye s I wur pretty i' pinks Spinster's S's. 17
She s, that you and I Had been abroad The Ring 100
He s it . . in the play Romney's R. 150
Sa I warrants e niver s haafe wot 'e thowt, Church-warden, etc. 18
She s with a sudden glow On lier patient face Charity 35
Q ,A ^Aif^' ^ c ' ^A^i'-'^o ?i' • Kapiolani 19
Said (Abu) See Abu Said
Sail (s) And the whirring s goes round, (repeat) The Owl i 4
In the silken s of infancy, Arabian Nights 2
come hither and furl your s's, Sea-Fairies 16
JNlariner, mariner, furl your s s, 2I
surf wind-scatter'd over s's and masts, D of F Women 31
barge with oar and s Moved from the brink, M d' Arthur 265
'Fly, happy happy s's, and bear the Press ; Golden Year 42
the vessel puffs her s : jji 44
argosies of magic ss, Locksleii Hall 121
Dry sang tlie tackle, sang the s : The Voyage 10
And never s of ours was furl'd, 81
whence were those that drove the s "86
to the last dip of the vanLshing s Enoch Arden 245
waiting for a 5 : ISo s from day to day, „ 590
scarlet shafts of sunrise — but no s. " 599
Crying with a loud voice ' A s ! a 5 ! " 913
all the s's were darken 'd in the west. Sea Dreams 39
boat Tacks and the slacken'd s flaps. Princess ii 186
Silver s s all out of the west jjj 14
' Fresh as the first beam glittering on a s, " {^ 44
trim our s's, and let old bygones be, " 69
the seas ; A red s, or a white ; " Con 47
With a satin s of a ruby glow, fhe Islet 13
And see the s s at distance rise, j^ Mem. xii 1 1
glance about the approaching s's, ^iii 18
And milkier every milky s " ^^ n
far-off s is blown by the breeze Maud I iv 4
And white s's flying on the yellow sea ; Marr. of Geraint 829
one side had sea And ship and s and angels Balin and Balan 365
She took the helm and he the s ; Merlin and V. 200
Torn as as that leaves the rope Holy Grail 212
had he set the s, or liad the boat Become 5I8
the barge with oar and s Moved from the brink, Pass, of Arthur 433
fu w',7^y '^°'''" '''"'^. ^'*' Lov^'^ Tale i 4
the s Will draw me to the rising of the smi, 26
the ravin wind In her s roaring. " n 171
Took the breath from our s's, and we stay'd. The Revenge 42
Till It smote on their hulls and their s's lift
look yonder,' he cried, 'as' The Wreck 121
1
SaU
599
Sallow-skin
SbQ (s) (continued) as I saw the white s run, And darken
And sunshine on that s at last
The Flight 39
92
M. d' Arthur, Ep. 17
Ulysses 60
iSir Galahad 44
The Voyage 8
16
96
Enoch Arden 214
In Mem. cxxv 13
„ Con. Ill
Gareth and L. 253
Columbus 237
Montenegro 1
Achilles overihe T. 13
Hands alt Round 29
fttil (verb) s with Arthur under looming shores,
piurpose holds To s beyond the sunset,
On sleeping wings they s.
And we might s for evermore.
We seem'd to s into the Sun !
And we may s for evermore.
Annie, the ship I s in passes here
Abiding with me till I s
All night the shining vapour s
I have seen the good ship s Keel upward,
ready to s forth on one last voyage.
They rose to where their sovran eagle s's,
and s to help them in the war ;
We sail'd wherever ship could s,
Sail'd (See also Full-sail'd, Silken-sail'd) Slow s the
weary mariners and saw, Sea-Fairies 1
throne of Indian Cama slowly s Palace of Art lib
weeks before she s, S from this port. Enoch Arden 124
prosperously s The ship ' Good Fortune,' „ 527
in that harbour whence he s before. „ 666
s, Full-blown, before us into rooms Princess i 228
And those fair hilLs I « below. In Mem. xcviii 2
And he s away from Flores The Revenge 23
away she s with her loss and long'd for her own ; „ 111
made West East, and s the Dragon's mouth, Columbus 25
I s On my first voyage, harass'd by the frights „ 66
— we s on a Friday mom — V. of Maeldune 7
we s away, (repeat) „ 26, 70, 114
and we s with our wounded away. „ 36
and in anger we s away. „ 54
and away we s, and we past Over that undersea isle, „ 76
we slew and we s away. ,, 96
and hastily s away. „ 10-1
Saint who had s with St. Brendan of yore, „ 115
and sadly we s away. ,. 126
he s the sea to crush the Moslem in his pride; Locksley U., Sixty 29
We s wherever ship could sail, Hands all Round 29
Sailest S the placid ocean-plains In Mem. ix 2
Sailing (See also A-sailing) S under pahny highlands
Far wthin the South.
With here a blossom *,
S along before a gloomy cloud
The s moon in creek and cove ;
iS' from Ireland.
Sailor (adj.) O well for the s lad.
The Captain 23
The Brook 56
Sea Dreams 124
In Mem. ci 16
Last Tournament 555
Break, break, etc. 7
Enoch Arden 204
In s fashion roughly sermonizing On providence
Gone our s son thy father, Leonard early lost at
sea ; Locksley H., Sixty 55
Sailor (s) (See also Sa&Qor) S's bold and true. The Captain 8
And Enoch Arden, a rough s's lad Enoch Arden 14
and made himself Full s; „ 54
A shipwreck'd s, waiting for a sail : „ 590
The greatest s since our world began. Ode on Well. 86
praying God will save Thy s, — In Mem. vi 14
I see the s at the wheel. „ a; 4
Thou bring'st the 5 to his wife, „ 5
passive s Avrecks at last In ever-silent seas ; Ancient Sage 136
Desolate as that s, whom the storm Had parted The Ring 307
Sailorless Desolate offing, s harbours, Fastness 14
Sailor-sonl and thou, Heroic s-s, Sir J. Franklin 2
Saint (s) (See also Francis of Assisi) meed of s's, the
white robe and the palm. St. S. Styliies 20
Who may be made a s, if I fail here ? „ 48
thou and all the s's Enjoy themselves „ 105
To Christ, the Virgin Mother, and the s's; „ 112
The silly people take me for a s, „ 127
Are register'd and calendar'd for s's. „ 132
It may be, no one, even among the s's, „ 138
This is not told of any. They were s's. „ 151
Yea, crown'd a s. They shout, ' Behold as!' „ 153
I am gather'd to the glorious s's. „ 197
Ah ! let me not be fool'd, sweet s's : ,, 212
Than Papist unto 6'. Talking Oak 16
Saint (s) (continued) statues, king or s, or foimder fell ; Sea Dreams 224
My mother was as mild as any s. Princess i 22
Swear by S something — „ v 293
Like a S's glory up in heaven : but she No s —
inexorable — no tenderness — „ 514
your mother, now a s with s's. „ vi 233
arrived, by Dubric the high s. Com. of Arthur 453
For by the hands of Dubric, the high s, Marr. of Geraint 838
oft I talk'd with Dubric, the high s, Geraint and E. 865
descended from the S Arimathsean Joseph ; Balin and Balan 101
I saw That maiden S who stands with lily „ 261
scarce could spy the Christ for S's, „ 409
but all the maiden S's, „ 520
the good s Arimathsean Joseph, joumejdng Holy Grail 50
larger, tho' the goal of all the s's — „ 528
I spake To one most holy s, „ 781
crying, ' Praise the patient s's. Last Tournament 217
I thank the s's, I am not great. Guinevere 199
Who wast, as is the conscience of a s „ 639
Who reads of begging s's in Scripture ? ' Sir J. Oldcastle 151
And we came to the Isle of a iS V, of Maeldune 115
Wid his blessed Marthyrs an' S's;' Tomorrow 58
an' S's an' Marthyrs galore, „ 95
I cried to the S's to avenge me. Bandit's Death 14
But thanks to the Blessed S's „ 40
Saint (verb) lower voices s me from above. St. S. Stylites 154
St. Brendan See Brendan
St. Cecily See CecUy
St. Francis of Assisi See Francis of Assisi
St. Paul See Paul
Saintdom grasp the hope I hold Of s, St. S. Stylites 6
Saint-like women smile with s-l glances Supp. Confessions 22
Saintly The s youth, the spotless lamb of Christ, Merlin and V. 749
Therefore I communed with a s man. Holy Grail 742
Saint's-day See Saaint's-daay
Saitll s not Holy Writ the same ? '— Merlin and V. 52
He, that $ it, hath o'erstept Lover's Tale i 101
Sake ' Yet must I love her for your s ; Miller's D. 142
Nor would I break for your sweet s L. C. V. de Vere 13
for his s I bred His daughter Dora : Dora 19
for the s of him that's gone, (repeat) Dora 62, 70, 94
for your s, the woman that he cliose, „ 63
may be, for her own dear s but this, Edwin Morris 141
pray them not to quarrel for her s, Enoch Arden 35
for Annie's s. Fearing the lazy gossip „ 334
for God's s,' he answer'd, ' both our s's, „ 509
Katie, what I suffer'd for your s ! The Brook 119
How prettily for his own sweet s Maud I vi 51
To be friends for her s, to be reconciled ; „ xix 50
And for your sweet s to yours ; „ 91
the rose was awake all night for your s, „ xxii 49
rather for the s of me, their King, Gareth and L. 571
the deed's s my knighthood do the deed, „ 572
for the deed's s have I done the deed, „ 832
Balan answer'd ' For the s Of glory ; Balin and Balan 32
And were it only for the giver's s. Lover's Tale iv 364
freedom, or the s of those they loved. Sir J. Oldcastle 186
I know Less for its own than for the s To E. Fitzgerald 52
sorrow that I bear is sorrow for his s. The Flight 64
will you sicken for her s? Locksley H., Sixty 17
God stay me there, if only for your s, Romney's R. 34
for my s. According to my word ? ' „ 129
Sal (See also Sally) black S, es 'ed been disgraaced ? Spinster's S's. 25
Salamanca Were you a.tS? No. Columbus 40
Sale See Stale
Saleem heart is for my son, S, my heir, — Akbar's Dream 171
on the sudden, and with a cry ' S' „ 184
Salient beneath Its s springs, and far apart, Supp. Confessions 56
Do beating hearts of s springs Keep measure Adeline 26
Salique fulmined out her scorn of laws S Princess ii 133
Sallow (adj.) (See also Wan-sallow) With s scraps of
manuscript. To E. Fitzgerald 48
Sallow (s) satin-shining pahn On s's Merlin and V. 225
Sallow-rifted the s-r glooms Of evening, Lancelot and E. 1002
Sallow-skin Many a livid one, many a s-s — Batt. of Brunanburh 106
Sallowy
600
Sand
Sallowy ran By s rims, arose the labourers' homes, Aylmer's Field 147
And many a glancing plash and s isle. Last Tournament 422
Sally (proper name) (See also Sal) to 's chooch af oor
moy S wiir dead, N. Farmer, 0. S. 17
Waait till our S cooms in, North. Cobbler 1
That S she tum'd a tongue-banger, „ 23
S she wesh'd f oalks' deaths to keep the wolf fro' the door, „ 29
wheer S's owd stockin' wur 'id, „ 31
an' I gied our S a kick, „ 36
I seead that our S went laamed Cos' o' the kick as I gied 'er, „ 39
An' S wur sloomy an' draggle „ 41
then I minded our S sa pratty an' neat an' sweeat, „ 43
' I mun gie tha a kiss,' an' S says ' Noa, thou moant,' „ 51
gied 'er a kiss, an' then anoother, an' S says ' doant ! ' „ 52
upo' coomin' awaay iS gied me a kiss ov 'ersen. „ 56
fur to kick oiu: S as kep the wolf fro' the door, „ 59
an' S loookt up an' she said, ' I'll upowd it tha weant „ 62
' That caps owt,' says S, an' saw she begins to cry, „ 71
' S,' says I, ' Stan' 'im theer i' the naame o' the Lord „ 72
An' S she tell'd it about, an' foalk „ 81
an' if aS be left aloan, „ 105
'Ere be our S an' Tommy, an' we be a-goin to dine, ., Ill
weant shed a drop on 'is blood, noa, not fur S's oan kin. „ 114
Sally (a rush) I make a sudden s, The Brook 24
our sallies, their lying alarms, Def. of Lucknow 75
Sally (verb) the cave From which he sallies, Balin and Balan 132
all at once should s out upon me, Geraint and E. 149
Wroth that the King's command to s forth Lancelot and E. 560
Sallying s thro' the gate, Had beat her foes Princess, Pro. 33
s thro' the gates, and caught his hair, „ v 340
In blood-red armour s, howl'd to the King, Last Tournament 443
Saloon Or, in a shadowy s, Elednore 125
Salt (adj.) And in the middle of the green s sea Mine be the strength 7
A still s pool, lock'd in with bars of sand, Palace oj Art 249
The s sea-water passes by. In Mem. xix 6
old dwarf-elm That turns its back on the s blast, Pelleas and E. 544
Salt (s) stony drought and steaming s ; Mariana in the S. 40
Caught the shrill s, and sheer'd the gale. The Voyage 12
By shards and scurf of s. Vision of Sin 211
The city sparkles Hke a grain of s. Will 20
she has neither savour nor s, Maud I ii2
pools of s, and plots of land — Locksley H., Sixty 207
Salute (s) Take my s,' unknightly with flat hand, Geraint and E. 717
Salute (verb) Many a merry face S's them — In Mem., Con. 67
I s thee, Mantovano, To Virgil 37
Salvation and lost S for a sketch. Romney's B. 139
Salve Our Britain cannot s a tyrant o'er. Third of Feb. 20
Salver fruitage golden-rinded On golden s's, Elednore 34
Chalice and s, wines that. Heaven knows when. Lover's Tale iv 193
Sam (See also Sammy) S, thou's an ass for thy
paa'ins : N. Farmer, N. S. 3
theer's a craw to pluck wi' tha, S: „ 5
Same (See also Self-same) In the s circle we revolve. Two Voices 314
Living together under the s roof, To , With Pal. of Art 12
and stiU The s old sore breaks out from age to age
With much the s result. Walk, to the Mail 79
and that s song of his He told me ; Golden Year 7
This s grand year is ever at the doors.' „ 74
A sleepy land, where under the s wheel The s old rut Aylmer's Field 33
thunders of the house Had fallen first, was Edith
that « night ; „ 279
Then she told it, having dream'd Of that s coast. Sea Dreams 207
So stood that s fair creature at the door. Princess ii 329
Would this s mock-love, and this Mock-Hymen „ iv 143
Than when two dewdrops on the petal shake To the 5
sweet air, „ vii 69
The s sweet forms in either mind. In Mem. Ixxix 8
For us the s cold streamlet curl'd „ 9
and all about The s gray flats again, „ Ixxxvii 13
and that s night, the night of the new year, Com. of Arthur 209
' And this s child,' he said, ' Is he who reigns ; „ 392
Then that s day there past into the hall Gareih and L. 587
But that s strength which threw the Morning Star „ 1108
that s spear Wherewith the Roman pierced the
side of Christ. Balin and Balan 113
Same (continued) ' What, wear ye still that s
crown-scandalous ? ' Balin and Balan 390
for early that s day, Scaped thro' a cavern from a
bandit hold, Holy Grail 206
stood beside thee even now, the s. Balin and Balan 613
and felt The s, but not the s ; In Mem. Ixxxvii 14
saith not Holy Writ the s?' — Merlin and V. 52
Sameness With weary s in the rhymes, Miller's D. 70
Samian whene'er she moves The S Herh rises Princess Hi 115
Samite Clothed in white s, mystic, wonderful, (repeat) M. d' Arthur 31,
144, 159
Clothed in white 5, mystic, wonderful. Com. of Arthur 285
a robe Of s without price, Merlin and V. 222
King, who sat Robed in red s, Lancelot and E. 433
Pall'd all its length in blackest s, „ 1142
Clothed in white s or a luminous cloud. Holy Grail 513
All pall'd in crimson s, „ 847
hung with folds of pure White s, Last Tournament 141
Clothed ia white s, mystic, wonderful, (repeat) Pass, of Arthur 199,
312, 327
Sammy (See also Sam) Me an' thy muther, iS, 'as
bean a-talkin y. Farmer, N. S. 9
fur, S, 'e married fur luvv. „ 32
an', S, I'm blest If it isn't the saame oop yonder, „ 43
Taake my word for it, S, „ 48
Thim's my noations, S, wheerby I means to stick ; „ 57
Sanctimonious as a rogue in grain Veneer'd with s theory. Princess, Pro. 117
Sanction dare not ev'n by silence s lies. Third of Feb. 10
Sanction'd See Mitre-sanction'd
Sanctities And darken'd s with song.' In Mem. xxxvii 24
Sanctuary crowds in colmnn'd sanctuaries ; D. of F. Women 22
behold our s Is violate, our laws broken : Princess vi 59
So was their s violated, „ vii 16
For I will draw me into s, Guinevere 121
yield me s, nor ask Her name to whom ye yield it, „ 141
S granted To bandit, thief, assassin — Sir J. Oldcastle 112
Sand purl o'er matted cress and ribbed s, Ode to Memory 59
rainbow Uves in the curve of the s ; Sea-Fairies 27
the brine against the Coptic s's. Buonaparte 8
In glaring s and inlets bright. Mariana in the S. 8
to where the sky Dipt down to sea and s's. Palace of Art 32
seem'd all dark and red — a tract of s, „ 65
salt pool, lock'd in with bars of s, „ 249
sat them down upon the yellow s, Lotos-Eaters 37
roaring deeps and fiery s's, „ C. S. 115
foam-flakes scud along the level s, D. of F. Women 39
Should fill and choke with golden s — You ask me, why, etc. 24
I might as well have traced it in the s's ; Audley Court 50
ran itself in golden s's. Locksley Hall 32
By s's and steaming flats, and floods The Voyage 45
in the chasm are foam and yeUow s's ; Enoch Arden 2
built their castles of dissolving s „ 19
All s and cUff and deep-inrunning cave. Sea Dreams 17
now on s they walk'd, and now on cUff, „ 37
While you were running down the s's, „ 265
May only make that footprint upon s Princess Hi 239
Tall as a figure lengthen'd on the s „ vi 161
suck the blinding splendour from the s, „ vii 39
Tumbles a billow on chalk and s ; To F. D. Maurice 24
Toihng in immeasureable s, WUl 16
' The s's and yeasty surges mix In caves Sailor Boy 9
For every grain of s that runs, In Mem. cxvii 9
Low on the s and loud on the stone Maud I xxii 25
a tap Of my finger-nail on the s, „ II H 22
scratch a ragged oval on the s, Garetk and L. 534
Come slipping o'er their shadows on the s, Geraint and E. 471
the s danced at the bottom of it. Balin and Balan 27
touching Breton s's, they disembark'd. Merlin and V 202
Glass'd in the sUppery s before it breaks ? „ 293
in a land of s and thorns, (repeat) Holy Grail 376, 390
wearying in a land of s and thorns. „ 420
and all the s Swept hke a river, „ 799
Far over s's marbled with moon and cloud, Last Tournament 466
They found a naked child upon the s's Guinevere 293
mountains ended in a coast Of ever-shifting s. Pass, of Arthur 86
I
Sand
601
Sap
Sand {continued) On the waste s by the waste sea they
closed. Pass of Arthur 92
A deathwhite mist slept over s and sea : „ 95
these deserted s's of barren life. Lover's Tale i 93
heats of the blinding noons Beat from the concave s ; „ 140
leaves Low banks of yellow s ; „ 535
upon the s's Insensibly I drew her name, „ ..ji^
shrieks and ringing laughter on the s „ in 32
melon lay like a little sim on the tawny s, V. of Maddune 57
and pranced on the wrecks in the s below, „ 102
that bay with the colour'd s — The Wreck 135
in the chapel there looking over the s ? Despair 1
' Lightly step over the s's ! ,, 47
his boat was on the s ; The Flight 37
chains of mountains, grains of s Locksleij H., Sixty 208
airs from where the deep, All down the s, Early Spring 22
dash'd half dead on barren s's, The Ring 309
I know not, your Arabian s's ; To Ulysses 35
Are bhnding desert s ; Akbar's Bream 30
Sandal (shoe) he roll'd And paw'd about her s. Princess Hi 182
Sandal (wood) toys in lava, fans Of s, „ Pro. 19
Sandal'd See Silken-sandal'd
Sandbank some dismal s far at sea. Lover's Tale i 809
Sand-built a s-b ridge Of heaped hills Ode to Memory 97
Sand-erased disgraced For ever — thee (thy pathway s-e) Alexander 5
Sandhill In this gap between the s's, Locksley H., Sixty 176
Sand-shore the waste s-s's of Trath Treroit, Lancelot and E. 301
Sandy Locksley Hall, that in the distance overlooks the
s tracts, Locksley Hall 5
I make the netted sunbeam dance Against my s shallows. The Brook 177
and watch The s footprint harden into stone.' Princess Hi 270
on 5 beaches A milky-beU'd amaryllis blew. The Daisy 15
Unloved, by many a s bar, In Mem. ci 9
half the morning have I paced these s tracts, Locksley H., Siscty 1
Sane I woke s, but well-nigh close to death Princess vii 119
0 great and s and simple race of brutes PeUeas and E. 480
Till crowds at length be s Ode on Well. 169
but s, if she were in the right. The Flight 58
Saner Of s worship sanely proud ; Freedom 30
A simpler, s lesson might he learn Prog, of Spring 105
Sanest valorous, S and most obedient : Geraint and E. 911
Sang (See also Sing'd) S looking thro' his prison bars ? Margaret 35
' Tirra Urra,' by the river S Sir Lancelot. L. of Shalott Hi 36
' Ah,' she s, ' to be all alone, (repeat) Mariana in the S. 11, 23
S to the stillness, till the mountain-shade (Enone 21
they s, ' Our island home Is far beyond the wave ; Lotos-Eaters 44
' Glory to God,' she s, and past afar, D. of F. Women 242
and over them the sea-wind s Shrill, M. d' Arthur 48
nightingale S loud, as tho' he were the bird of day. Gardener's D. 96
clapt his hand in mine and s — AuMey Court 39
He 5 his song, and I replied with mine : „ 56
So s we each to either, Francis Hale, » 74
An angel stand and watch me, as I 5. St. S. Stylites 35
s to me the whole Of those three stanzas Talking Oak 134
Dry s the tackle, s the sail : The Voyage 10
a couple, fair As ever painter painted, poet s, Aylmer's Field, 106
sway'd The cradle, while she s this baby song. Sea Dreams 292
So s the gallant glorious chronicle ; Princess, Pro. 49
the women s Between the rougher voices of the men, „ 244
Beyond all reason : these the women s ; „ i 143
thro' the porch that s All roimd with laurel, „ H 22
With whom I s about the morning hills, „ 247
maid, Of those beside her, smote her harp, and s. „ iv 38
the tear. She s of, shook and fell, „ 60
part made long since, and part Now while I s, „ 91
bo Lilia s : we thought her half-possess'd, „ 585
Like that great dame of Lapidoth she s. „ vi 32
Violet, she that s the mournful song, , 318
maidens came, they talk'd. They s, they read : „ vii 23
What pleasure Uves in height (the shepherd s) „ 193
something in the ballads which they s, „ Con. 14
Nightingales s in his woods : G. of Swainston 6
Nightingales warbled and s Of a passion „ 8
in flying raiment, s the terrible prophetesses, Boddicea 37
many an old philosophy On Argive heights divinely s, In Mem. xxiii 22
Sang (coniinued) A merry song we s with him Last year :
impetuously we s : In Mem. xxx 15
we s : ' They do not die Nor lose their mortal sympathy, „ 22
While now we s old songs that peal'd „ xcv 13
They s of what is wise and good And graceful. „ ciii 10
In the centre stood A statue veil'd, to which they s; „ 12
s from the three-decker out of the foam, Maud I i 50
Birds in our wood s Ringing thro' the valleys, „ xii 9
Arthur's knighthood s before the King: — Com. of Arthur 481
s the knighthood, moving to their hall. „ 503
And then she s, ' 0 morning star ' Gareth and L. 995
the song that Enid s was one Of Fortune Marr. of Geraint 345
From underneath a plume of lady-fern, S, Balin and Balan 27
they drank and some one s. Sweet-voiced, „ 85
But, Vivien, when you s me that sweet rhyme, I felt Merlin and V. 434
And s it : sweetly could she make and sing. Lancelot and E. 1006
Then Tristram laughing caught the harp, and s : Last Tournament 730
Whereat full willingly s the little maid. Guinevere 167
So s the novice, while full passionately, „ 180
8 Arthur's glorious wars, and s the King „ 286
then, he s, The twain together well might change „ 300
and over them the sea-wind s Shrill, Pass, of Arthur 216
And s aloud the matin-song of hfe. Lover's Tale i 232
If somewhere in the North, as Rumour s Sir J. Oldcastle 56
And we s of the triumphs of Finn, V. of Maeldune 88
more than he that s the Works and Days, To Virgil 6
I s the song, ' are bride And bridegroom.' The Ring 25
' Libera me, Domine ! ' you s the Psalm, Happy 49
And s the married ' nos ' for the solitary ' me.' „ 56
Wed to the melody, S thro' the world ; Merlin and the G. 98
Last year you s it as gladly. The Throstle 6
Sanguine S he was : a but less vivid hue Aylmer's Field 64
s Lazarus felt a vacant hand Fill with his purse. To Mary Boyle 31
Sank I s In cool soft turf upon the bank, Arabian Nights 95
And, while day s or mounted higher, Palace of Art 46
Her slow fuU words s thro' the silence drear, D. of F. Women 121
as we s From rock to rock upon the glooming quay, Audley Court 83
To some full music rose and s the sun, Edwin Morris 34
She s her head upon' her arm Talking Oak 207
Tho' at times her spirit s: L. of Burleigh 70
s As into sleep again. Aylmer's Field 591
but s down shamed At all that beauty ; Lucretius 63
leaning deep in broider'd down we s Our elbows : Princess iv 32
but again She veil'd her brows, and prone she s, „ v 107
And down dead-heavy s her curls, „ vi 147
after s and s And, into mournful twilight mellowing, „ 190
I s and slept, Fill'd thro' and thro' with Love, „ vii 171
voice Choked, and her forehead s upon her hands, „ 247
A bitter day that early s In Mem. cvii 2
show'd themselves against the sky, and s. Marr. of Geraint 240
8 her sweet head upon her gentle breast ; „ 527
half his blood burst forth, and down he s For the
pure pain, Lancelot and E. 517
s Down on a drift of foliage random-blown ; Last Tournament 388
s his head in mire, and slimed themselves : „ 471
breakers of the outer sea (S powerless, Lover's Tale i 9
s his body with honour down into the deep. The Revenge 109
king, the queen, S from their thrones, Columbus 15
when drowning hope S all but out of sight, „ 157
And the roof s in on the hearth, V. of Maeldune 32
And his white hair 5 to his heels „ 118
till the glorious creature aS to his setting. Bait, of Brunanburh 30
when our good redcoats s from sight, Heavy Brigade 42
Where I s with the body at times By an Evolution. 18
Became a shadow, s and disappear'd. Death of (Enone 50
Then her head s, she slept, „ 78
San Philip delay'd By their mountain-hke S P The Revenge 40
the great S P hung above us Uke a cloud „ 43
But anon the great S P, she bethought „ 50
San Salvador I changed the name -,8 81 call'd it ; Columbus 76
Sap (s) ' The s dries up : the plant declines. Two Voices 268
But yet my s was stirr'd : Talking Oak 172
Here rests the s within the leaf, Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 3
say rather, was my growth. My inward s. Lover's Tale i 166
Sap (verb) Ring out the grief that s's the mind, In Mem. cvi 9
Sap
602
Sat
Sap (verb) (continued) and s's The fealty of our friends, Guinevere 520 Sat
tides of onset s Our seven high gates, Tiresias 91
Sapience And glean your scatter 'd s.' Princess it 259
Sapless staring eye glazed o'er with s days. Love mid Duty 16
Sapling a promontory, That had a * growing on it, Geraint and E. 163
And there lie still, and yet the s grew : „ 165
Sapphire (adj.) Came out clear plates of s mail. Two Voices 12
Sapphire (s) A purer s melts into the sea. Maud I xviii 52
from jasper, s, Chalcedony, emerald, Columbus 83
Siapphire-spaiigled The silent s-s marriage ring Maud I iv 6
Sappho arts of grace S and othei"s Princess ii 164
Sapping tide Plash'd, s its worn ribs ; Lover's Tale i 56
Sappy Are neither green nor s ; A m/phion 90
And when the s field and wood My life %s full 16
Saracen to lead A new crusade against the 6', Columbus 103
to lead One last cnjsade against the S, „ 239
Sardius s, Chrysolite, beryl, topaz, „ 84
Sardonic^ See Half-sardonically
Sardonyx Beneath branch-work of costly s Palace of Art 95
Chalcedony, emerald, s, sardius. Chrysolite, Columbus 84
Sarmin (sermon) But 'e reads wonn s a weeak, N. Farmer, O. S. 28
Sartin-sewer (certain-sure) S-s I bea, „ 59
Sarve (serve) — an' it «'s ye right. Spinster's S's. 121
Sarved (served) Wouldn't a pint a' s as mcII as a
quart ? North. Cobbler 99
But I s 'em wi' butter an' heggs Village Wife 114
an' s by my oan little lass. Spinster's S's. 103
An' 'e s me sa well when 'e lived, Owd Bod 11
Sarvice (service) like fur to hev sooni soort of a s read. „ 12
Sarvint (servant) An' s's runn'd in an' out, Village Wife 56
Sassenach ' Goin' to cut the S whate ' Tomorrow 14
■ niver crasst over say to the S whate ; „ 48
that's betther nor cuttin' the iS whate „ 94
Slat (See also Siate) Fancy came and at her pillow 5, Caress'd or chidden 5
He s upon the knees of men In days Two Voices 323
I ceased, and s as one forlorn. „ 400
I came and s Below the chestnuts, Miller's D. 59
As near this door you s apart, „ 158
With down-dropt eyes I s alone : (Enone 57
panther's roar came muffled, while I s Low in the valley. „ 214
S smiling, babe in arm. Palace of Art 96
She s betwixt the shining Oriels, „ 159
Flash'd thro' her as she s alone, „ 214
They s them down upon the yellow sand, Lotos- Eaters 37
we s as God by God : ' D. of F. Women 142
Of old s Freedom on the heights, Of old sat Freedom 1
and I s round the wassail-bowl. The Epic 5
waked mth silence, grunted ' Good ! ' but we S
rapt : M. d' Arthur, Ep. 5
Eustace might have s for Hercules ; Gardener's D. 7
There s we down upon a garden mound, „ 214
Mary s And look'd with tears upon her boy, Dora 56
and s upon a mound That was unsown, „ 72
took The child once more, and s upon the mound ; „ 81
so we s and eat And talk'd old matters over ; Audley Court 28
In which the swarthy ringdove s. Talking Oak 293
the night In which we s together and alone, Love and Duty 60
Wherever he s down and sung Amphion 19
To-day I s for an hour and wept, Edward Gray 11
Where s a company with heated eyes. Vision of Sin 7
Narrowing in to where they s assembled „ 16
To him who s upon the rocks. To E. L. 23
And he s him down in a lonely place. Poet's Song 5
S often in the sea ward -gazing gorge, Enoch Arden 589
There he s down gazing on all below ; „ 723
S anger-charm'd from sorrow, soldier-like, Aylmer's Field 728
gentle hearted wife S shuddering at the ruin Sea Dreams 30
S at Ills table ; drank his costly wines ; ,. 74
And near the light a giant woman s, ,. 98
and I s down and wrote. In such a liand Princess i 235
There at a board by tome and paper 5, „ ii 32
There s along the forms, like morning doves „ 102
We s : the Lady glanced : „ 111
fawn Came Hying while you s beside the well ? ., 271
In each we s, we heard The grave Professor. „ 370
(continued) S compass'd with professors :
but we three S muffled like the Fates ;
haled us to the Princess where she s Higli in the hall :
up she s. And raised the cloak from brows
Part s like rocks : part reel'd but kept their seats :
I lay still, and with me oft she s :
by axe and eagle s, With all their foreheads
palm to palm she s : the dew Dwelt in tier eyes.
Or in their silent influence as they s,
she s, she pluck'd the grass. She flung it from her.
But we went back to the Abbey, and s on,
we s But spoke not, rapt in nameless reverie,
Turn'd as he s, and struck the keys
all night upon the bridge of war S glorying ;
S fifty in the blaze of burning fire ;
There s the Shadow fear'd of man ;
I myself, who s apart And watch'd them.
While I, thy nearest, s apart,
And s by a pillar alone ;
S with her, read to her, night and day,
Bleys Laid magic by, and s him down, and wrote
All things
King Made feast for, saying, as they s at meat,
and Arthur s Crown'd on the dais,
S down beside him, ate and then began.
Enid woke and s beside the couch,
iS riveting a helmet on his knee.
There musing s the hoary-headed Earl,
So for long hours s Enid by her lord,
none spake word, but all s down at once,
' Tell me your names ; why s ye by the weU ? '
Methought that if we s beside the well,
they s, And cup clash 'd cup ;
Balin s Close-bower'd in that garden nigh the hall
saw The fountain where they s together,
(She s beside the banquet nearest Mark),
Among her damsels broidering s, heard,
slided up his knee and s,
And found a fair young squire who s alone,
while she s, half-falling from his knees.
King, who s Robed in red samite.
There from his charger down he slid, and s,
then from where he s At Arthur's right.
Queen, who s With lips severely placid,
S on liis knee, stroked his gray face
So in her tower alone the maiden s :
There s the lifelong creature of the house,
S by the river in a cove,
and as they s Beneath a world-old yew-tree,
once by misadvertence Merlin s In his own chair,
as there we s, we heard A cracking and a riving
and fair the house whereby she s,
there s Arthur on the da"is-throne,
and as he s In hall at old Caerleon,
each one s, Tho' served with choice from air,
Full-arm'd upon his charger all day long S by the walls, „ 217
children s in white with cups of gold. Last Tournament 142
Princess ii 444
467
iv 271
•b72
.496
„ vii 91
128
135
„ Con. 15
31
106
107
The Islet 7
Spec, of Iliad 10
20
In Mem. xxii 12
,. ciii 29
„ ex 13
Maiid I via 2
„ xix 75
Com. of Arthur 156
247
257
Gareth and L. 872
Marr. of Geraint 79
268
295
Geraint and E. 580
604
Balin and Balan 50
65
84
240
291
Merlin and V. 18
138
239
472
904
Lancelot and E. 432
510
551
739
749
989
1143
1389
Holy Grail 12
175
182
392
721
Pelleas and E. 2
148
I
S their great umpire, looking o'er the lists.
them that round it s with golden cups
Down in a casement s, A low sea-sunset glorying
Drain'd of her force, again she s.
Here one black, mute midsummer night I s,
s There in the holy house at Almesbury Weeping
saw the Queen who s betwixt her best Enid,
Low on the border of her couch they s
She s. Stiff-stricken, listening ;
And lo, he s on horseback at the door !
All day I s within the cavern-mouth,
day waned : Alone I s with her :
I CAME one day and s among the stones
1 never 8 at a costlier ;
s as if in chains — to whom he said :
I had s three nights by the child —
s each on the lap of the breeze ;
as we s by the gurgle of springs,
159
289
507
540
612
Guinevere 1
27
„ 101
., 411
„ 589
Lover's Tale ii 37
140
Hi 1
twl88
362
In the Child. Hosp. 59
V. of Maeldune 38
Sat
603
Saver
Sat (continued) once when I S all alone, revolvint; Ancient Sage 230
I s beside her dying, and she gaspt : The Ring 287
I s beneath a soUtude of snow ; Prog, of Spring 71
CEnone s within the cave from out Death of (Enone 1
CEnone s Not moving, „ 74
He stumbled in, and s Blinded ; St. Telemachus 48
she s day and night by my bed. Charity 33
SataD (See also Saatan) ' "S take The old women and their
shadows ! Princess v 33
I leap from S's foot to Peter's knee — Gareth and L. 538
Or some black wether of St. S's fold. Merlin and V. 750
Where one of S's shepherdesses caught „ 758
Make their last head hke S in the North. Last Tournament 98
But Michael trampUng S ; „ 673
A stranger as welcome as »S — Charity 26
Satan-haunted This S-h ruin, this little city of sewers, Happy 34
Sate (sat) Round the hall where I s. The Mermaid 26
Sate (to gratify) things fair to s my various eyes ! Palace of Art 193
Sated And s with the innumerable rose, Princess Hi 122
Satiate Nor Arac, s with his victory. „ vii 90
Satiated but s at length Came to the ruins. „ Pro. 90
an anger, not by blood to be s. Boddicea 52
With meats and wines, and « their hearts — Last Tournament 725
Satin (adj.) dipt Beneath the s dome and enter'd in. Princess iv 31
With a 5 sail of a ruby glow. The Islet 13
Satin (s) A tent of s, elaborately wrought Princess Hi 348
In gloss of J! and gUmmer of pearls, Matid I xxii 55
Satin-shining In colour like the s-s palm Merlin and V. 224
Satin-wood Erect behind a desk of s-w, Princess n 105
Satire How like you this old s ? ' Sea Dreams 198
Who first wrote s, with no pitj' in it. „ 202
.shafts Of gentle s, kin to charity, Prin<-ess ii 469
Satisfied Look to thy wants, and send thee s — Gareth and L. 434
But rested with her sweet face s ; Marr. of Geraint 776
And Geraint look'd and was not s. Geraint and E. 435
s With what himself had done so graciously, „ 644
But when at la.st his doubts were s, Lover's Tale iv 84
Satisfy And »■ my soul with kissing her : Princess v 103
Satrap when her S bled At Issus by the Syrian gates, Alexander 2
Sattle (settle) An' s their ends upo stools Owd Boa 24
Sattled (settled) an' s 'ersen o' my knee, North. Cobbler 79
I gied tha a raatin that s thy coortin o' me. Spinster's S's. 48
Saturate Tho' soak'd and s, out and out, Will Water. 87
foul adulteries That s soul with body. Aylmer's Field 377
Saturn while S wliirLs, his stedfast shade Palace of Art 15
Satyr A s, a s, see — Follows ; Lucretius 192
Glorifj'ing clown and s • Princess v 187
Satyr-shape Or in his coarsest S-s In Mem,, xxxv 22
Saucy With a heaved shoulder and a s smile, Aylmer's Field 466
They flash'd a s message to and fro Princess, Pro. 78
till a rout of s boys Brake on as at our books, „ v 394
forced Sweet love on pranks of s boyhood : „ vii 344
Saul plaj' the S that never will be Paui. Sir .1. Oldcastle 103
Saunter to those that s in the broad Aylmer's Field 744
Saunter'd we rose And s home beneath a moon, Audley Court 80
(adj.) 1 mete and dole Unequal laws unto
a s race, Ulysses 4
I will take some s woman, she shall rear my dusky
race. LocJcsley Hall 168
For I was near him when the s yells Of Uther's
peerage died. Com. of Arthur 256
Balin, ' the S ' — that addition thine — Balin and Balan 53
here I dwell S among the s woods, here die — „ 486
Chaste, frugal, s, arm'd by day and night Montenegro 3
(s) Mated with a squalid s — Locksley Ha.ll 177
Peace, you young s of the Northern wild ! Princess Hi 247
A huge man-beast of boundless s. Gareth and L. 637
Brute bulk of limb, or boundless s „ 1330
and tooth'd with grinning s.' Balin and Balan 197
Save (See also Saave) who can s But wiU not ? Supp. Confessions 90
And s me lest I die ? ' Palace of Art 288
died To s her father's vow ; D. of F. Women 196
Dora stored wliat little she could s, Dora 52
To s her little finger from a scratch Edxcin Morris 63
Jesus, if thou wilt not s my soul, St. S. Stylites 46
Save (continued) To s from shame and thrall : Sir Galahad 16
And vex the unhappy dust thou wouldst not s. Come not, when, etc. 4
wish To s all earnings to the uttermost, Enoch Arden 86
be pray'd ' S them from this, whatever comes to me.' „ 118
To s the offence of charitable, „ 342
hope of life approach To s the life despair'd of, „ 831
(I thought 1 could have died to s it) Sea Dreams 134
be swerved from right to s A prince, a brother ? Princess ii 290
And s the one true seed of freedom Ode on Well. 162
For, saving that, ye help to 5 mankind „ 166
But as he s's or serves the state. „ 2(X>
her father was not the man to s, Grandmother 5
0 mother, praying God will s Tliy sailor, — In Mem. vi 13
And, influence-rich to sooth and s, „ Ixxx 14
If lowliness could s her. Maud I xii 20
1 know it the one bright thing to s My yet young life „ xvi 20
To s from some slight shame one simple girl. „ xviii 45
a monster unsubduable Of any s of him whom I
call'd — Gareth and L. 859
S that the dome was purple, and above, Crimson, „ 912
To s her dear lord whole from any wound. Geraint and E. 45
I s a life dearer to me than mine.' „ 138
Truly s for fears, My fears for thee, Balin and Balan 146
I that fain had died To s thy life, „ 600
I fly to thee. S, s me thou — Merlin and V. 78
Merlin, tho' you do not love me, s. Yet s me ! ' „ 944
' S your great self, fair lord ; ' Lancelot and E. 320
' If I lose myself, I s myself ! ' Holy Grail 178
Thou hast not lost thyself to s thyself As Galahad.' „ 456
And s it even in extremes, Guinevere 67
To s his blood from scandal, „ 514
S for some whisper of the seething seas. Pass, of Arthur 121
And all the senses weaken'd, s in that. Lover's Tale i 127
s in that Where to have been one had been „ ii 26
but to s my soul, that is all your desire : Rizpah 77
happier using the knife than in trying to s the
limb. In the Child. Hasp. 6
for it never could s us a life. Def. of Lucknoio 86
before their Gods, And wailing ' S us.' Tiresias 106
to the Faith that s's. The Wreck 3
would you s A madman to vex you with wretched
words. Despair 107
Pierced by a poison'd dart. S me. Death of (Enone 34
Take it, and s me from it ! Bandit's Death 38
darken'd with doubts of a Faith that s's, The Dreamer 11
Saved Who may be s ? who is it may be s ? St. S. Stylites 47
Can 1 work miracles and not be s ? „ 150
It cannot be but that I shall be s ; „ 152
every hour is s From that eternal silence, Ulysses 26
' Thou shalt not be s by works : Vision of Sin 91
' A sail ! a sail ! I am s ; ' Enoch Arden 914
you may yet be s, and therefore fly : Princess Hi 64
You s our life : we owe you bitter thanks : „ iv 531
' He s my life : my brother slew him for it.' „ vi 108
let the land whose hearths he s from shame Ode on Well. 225
how the King had s his life In battle twice, — Gareth and L. 493
Good now, ye have s a life Worth somewhat „ 827
the lord whose life he s Had, some brief space, „ 888-
There was I broken down ; there was I s : Geraint and E. 851
and roll'd his enemy down, And s him : Lancelot and E. 27
Told him that her fine care had s his life. „ 863
That s her many times, not fail — To the Queen ii 62
fed, and cherish'd him, and s his life. Lover's Tale iv 264
Who thrust him out, or him who s his hfe ? ' „ 267
service of the one so s was due All to the saver — „ 279
Dance to the pibroch ! — s ! we are s ! — Def. of Lucknow 103
S by the valour of Havelock, s „ 104
' Heresy — Not shriven, not s ? ' Sir J. Oldcastle 144
they had s many hundreds from wreck — Despair 10
Does it matter how many they s ? „ 12
and you s me, a valueless life „ 61
S when your life was wreck'd ! The Ring 305
Saver And s of my life ; Gareth and L. 879
The s of my life.' „ 884
service of the one so saved was due All to the s — Lover's Tale iv 280
Saving
604
Saw
Saving {See also Saavin') For, s that, ye help to save mankind Ode on Well. 166
for s I be join'd To her that is the fairest Com. of Arthur 85
S that you mistrusted our good King Gareth and L. 1172
wrought some fury on myself, S for Balan : Balin and Balan 63
O brother, s this Sir Galahad, Holy Grail 561
^Vhere s hjs own sisters he had known Pelleas and E. 87
S his life on the fallow flood. Batt. of Brunanburh 61
in thy virtue lies The s of our Thebes ; Tiresias 110
S women and their babes, Loclcsley H., Sixty 64
Savings To hoard all 5 to the uttermost, Enoch Arden 46
Saviour 0 God Almighty, blessed S, „ 782
0 s of the silver-coasted isle, Ode on Well. 136
She bows, she bathes the S's feet In Mem. xxxii 11
the S lives but to bless. Rizpah 64
Who finds the (S in his mother tongue. Sir J. Oldcastle 115
Savour (s) she has neither s nor salt, Maud I ii2
A name of evil s in the land, Gareth and L. 385
The s of thy kitchen came upon me „ 993
Savour (verb) S's well to thee and me. Vision of Sin 158
1 s of thy — virtues ? fear them ? no. Merlin and V. 39
Saw (maxim) Thou art no sabbath-drawler of old s's. To J. M. K. 5
Not clinging to some ancient s ; Love thou thy land 29
and cast thee back Thine own small s, Last Tournament 712
SawJ(sow) s's 'ere a bean an' yonder a pea ; N. Farmer, 0. S. 46
Saw (tool) May never s dismember thee. Talking Oak 261
Shaping their pretty cabin, hammer and axe. Auger
and s, Enoch Arden 174
Saw (verb) (See also Seead, Seea'd, Seed, See'd) She s the gusty
shadow sway. Mariana 52
I s him — in his golden prime, Arabian Nights 153
that the duU S no divinity in grass, A Character 8
He s thro' life and death, thro' good and ill. He s thro'
his own soul. The Poet 5
Slow sail'd the weary mariners and s, Sea-Fairies 1
She s me fight, she heard me call, Oriana 32
they s thee from the secret shrine Alexander 13
She s the water-lUy bloom, L. of Shalott Hi 39
She s the helmet and the plume, „ 40
' To-day I s the dragon-fly Come from the wells Two Voices 8
' To search thro' all I felt or s, „ 139
S distant gates of Eden gleam, „ 212
But ere I s your eyes, my love, Miller's D. 43
I 5 the village lights below ; „ 108
Sometimes I s you sit and spin ; „ 121
To list a foot-fall, ere he s The wood-nymph, Palace of Art 110
standing s The hollow orb of moving Circimistance „ 254
nothing s, for her despair, But dreadful time, „ 266
1 s the snare, and I retired : L. C. V. de Vere 6
To-night I s the sun set : May Queen, N. Y's. E. 5
I s you sitting in the house, „ Con. 30
They s the gleaming river seaward flow Lotos-Eaters 14
I 5, wherever light Ulumineth, D. of F. Women 14
I s crowds in column'd sanctuaries ; „ 22
At length I s a lady within call, „ 85
I turning s, throned on a flowery rise, „ 125
We s the large white stars rise one by one, „ 223
' S God divide the night with flying flame, „ 225
Ere I s her, who clasp'd in her last trance „ 266
But when he s the wonder of the hilt, M. d' Arthur 85
I never s. Nor shall see, here or elsewhere, „ 153
Bom out of everything I heard and s. Gardener's D. 66
I, that whole day, S her no more, „ 164
Mary s the boy Was not with Dora. Dora 111
You s the man — on Monday, Walk, to the Mail 30
in these latter springs I 5 Yoiu" own Olivia blow, Talking Oak 75
s The dim curls kindle into sunny rings ; Tithonus 53
Many a night I s the Pleiads, Locksley Hall 9
S the Vision of the world, (repeat) „ 16, 120
S the heavens fill with commerce, „ 121
she s The white-flower'd elder-thicket Godiva 62
And see the vision that I s, Day-Dm., Pro. 14
in a court he s A something-pottle-bodied boy WUl Water. 130
Than all those she s before : L. of Burleigh 46
How oft we s the Sun retire. The Voyage 17
He 8 not far : his eyes were dim : „ 75
Saw (verb) {continued) And s the altar cold and bare.
I s with half-imconscious eye She wore the colours
I s that every morning, far withdrawn
I s within my head A gray and gap-tooth'd man
s the pair, Enoch and Annie, sitting hand-in-hand.
She s him not : and while he stood on deck
All these he s : but what he fain had seen
if griefs Like his have worse or better, Enoch s.
he s Philip, the slighted suitor of old times,
s The mother glancing often toward her babe,
and s the babe Hers, yet not his,
he s Death dawning on him, and the close of all.
And tell my daughter Annie, whom I s
I s where James Made toward us,
grizzled cripple, whom I s Sunning himself
S from his windows nothing save his own —
thro' every labyrinth till he s An end.
Broke into nature's music when they s her.
5 No pale sheet-lightnings from afar,
that they s, the sea.
Hyprocrisy, I s it in him at once,
then 1 s one lovely star Larger and larger.
Methought I never s so fierce a fork —
I s the flaring atom-streams And torrents
Half-suffocated, and sprang up, and s —
I s The feudal warrior lady-clad ;
they s the king ; he took the gifts ;
I s my father's face Grow long and troubled
life ! he never s the like ;
How s you not the inscription on the gate,
turning roimd we s The Lady Blanche's daughter
Melissa hitting all we s with shafts Of gentle satire,
' Who ever s such wild barbarians ?
s The soft white vapour streak the crowned towers
began to change — I s it and grieved —
S that they kept apart, no mischief done ;
we s the lights and heard The voices murmuring,
when we s the embattled squares,
and I s That equal baseness lived in sleeker times
and s the palace-front Ahve with fluttering scarfs
Seeing I s not, hearing not I heard : Tho', if I s not,
yet they told me all
when she s me lying stark, Dishelm'd and mute,
when she s The haggard father's face
she s them, and a day Rose from the distance
I s the forms : I knew not where I was :
s Thee woman thro' the cnist of iron moods
turning s The happy valleys, half in light,
And there we s Sir Walter where he stood,
he turn'd, and I s his eyes all wet,
crossing, oft we s the glisten Of ice.
For I in spirit s thee move
We s not, when we moved therein ?
And s the tumult of the haUs ;
He brought an eye for aU he « ;
That s thro' all the Muses' walk ;
Wrapt in a cloak, as I s him,
1 s the treasured splendour, her hand,
Down by the hill I s them ride.
Yet I thought I s her stand.
Till I 5 the dreary phantom arise and fly
She s him not, or mark'd not, if she s,
he 5 The smallest rock far on the faintest hill,
' And there I s mage Merlin,
Ran like a colt, and leapt at all he s :
nodded and slept, and s, Dreaming, a slope of land
s The splendour sparkling from aloft,
they s the silver-misty morn Rolling her smoke
s nor one Nor other, but in all the listening eyes
Gareth s The shield of Gawain blazon'd rich
s the knights Clash like the coming and retiring wave,
s without the door King Arthur's gift,
s, Bowl-shaped, thro' tops of many thousand pines
horse thereon stumbled — ay, for I s it.
and when he s the star Gleam,
The
Aylmer
The Letters 4
. . " 15
Vision of Sin 48
59
Enoch Arden i
243
580
741
744
753
759
831
882
Brook 116
s Field 8
21
479
694
725
Sea Dreams 36
64
93
Lucretius 28
38
58
Princess, Pro. 118
t46
58
186
m194
320
468
Hi 42
343
11)299
340
558
w246
384
508-
viVd
100
102
111
vii 133
341
Cow. 40
81
Grandmother 49
The Daisy Z5
In Mem. ocvii 5
„ xxiv 16
„ Ixxxvii 4
„ Ixxxix 9
„ cix 4
Maud I i59
„ vi 84
ix 11
„ Hi 38
„IIIvi36
Com. of Arthur 53
98
280
322
427
Gareth and L. 48
189
326
415
521
676
795
1057
1218
Saw
605
Saw
Saw (verb) (continued) s That Death was cast to ground, Gareth and L. 1402
He look'd and s that all was ruinous. Marr. of Geraint 315
For if he be the knight whom late Is „ 406
I s you moving by me on the bridge, „ 429
For this dear child, because I never s, „ 497
And looking round he s not Enid there, „ 506
Men s the goodly hilis of Somerset, „ 828
By the flat meadow, till she s them come ; „ 832
I 5 three bandits by the rock Waiting to fall on you, Geraint and E. 72
S once a great piece of a promontory, „ *162
When now they s their bulwark fallen, „ 168
In former days you s me favourably. ,, 315
when she s him ride More near by many a rood „ 441
turning round she s Dust, and the points of lances ., 448
Who s the chargers of the two that fell ,. 481
Rose when they s the dead man rise, „ 732
But s me not, or mark'd not if you s ; ,. 870
for a minute, till he s her Pass into it, „ 886
he s not whence. Strikes from behind. Balin and Balan 130
We s the hoof-print of a horse, no more.' ., 133
once he s the thrall His passion half had gauntleted „ 219
As if he s not, glanced aside, „ 248
Last night methought I s That maiden Saint „ 260
s The foimtain where they sat together, „ 290
I s the flash of him but yestereven. „ 303
s. With pointed lance as if to pierce, a shape, „ 324
That 5 to-day the shadow of a spear, ,, 373
in simple nakedness, jS them embrace : „ 519
' I s the little elf-god eyeless once Merlin and V. 249
I look'd, and s you following still, „ 299
gloom'd Your fancy when ye s me following you, „ 326
Because 1 5 you sad, to comfort you. „ 441
He 5 two cities in a thousand boats „ 561
men Became a crystal, and he s them thro' it, „ 630
Nor s she save the King, who wrought the charm, „ 643
s The knights, the court, the King, „ 874
since he s The slow tear creep from her closed eyelid „ 905
raised his eyes and s The tree that shone white-listed „ 938
s Fired from the west, far on a hill, Lancelot and E. 167
„ 306
316
351
461
670
662
794
805
„ 815
920
1167
1173
1244
1391
Holy Grail 67
100
156
198
216
262
280
282
290
380
429
462
I s him, after, stand High on a heap of slain,
I never s his like : there lives No greater leader.'
s The maiden standing in the dewy light.
till he s Which were the weaker ;
when he s the Queen, embracing ask'd,
Gawain s Sir Lancelot's aziure lions,
Whom when she s, ' Lavaine,' she cried,
there first she s the casque Of Lancelot on the wall :
Then she that s him lying unsleek, unshorn,
Lancelot s that she withheld her wish,
s One of her house, and sent him to the Queen
s with a sidelong eye The shadow of some piece
wild Queen, who s not, burst away To weep
s the barge that brought her moving down,
But who first s the holy thing to-day ? '
She might have risen and floated when I s her.
s the bright boy-knight, and bound it on him,
found and s it, as the nvm My sister s it ;
Some little of this marvel he too s,
s The golden dragon sparkling over all :
I heard the sound, I s the light,
I sware a vow to follow it till I s.'
s the Holy Grail, I 5 the Holy Grail
8 deep lawns, and then a brook,
I s That man had once dwelt there ;
I s The holy elements alone ;
but he, ' «S ye no more ? I, Galahad, s the Grail,
The Holy Grail,
I s the fiery face as of a child That smote itself
At once I s him far on the great Sea,
If boat it were — I s not whence it came,
again Roaring, I 5 him like a silver star —
I s the least of little stars Down on the waste,
I s the spiritual city and all her spires
8 ye none beside. None of your knights ? '
I s The pelican on the casque of our Sir Bors
464
466
510
515
517
524
526
631
634
Saw (verb) {continued) Who, when he s me, rose, and bad
me hail,
tum'd to whom at first He s not,
I may not speak of it : I s it ; '
But nothing in the sounding hall I s,
yet methought I s the Holy Grail,
I had sworn 1 s That which I s ; but what I s was
veil'd And cover'd ;
And as ye s it ye have spoken truth.
My greatest hardly will beUeve he s ;
but s Near him a mound of even-sloping side,
glancing thro' the hoary boles, he s.
She that s him cried, ' Damsels —
But s the postern portal also wide Yawning ;
hiss, snake — I s him there —
he s High up in heaven the hall that Merlin built.
He glanced and s the stately galleries.
He s the laws that ruled the tournament
as the water Moab s Come rovmd by the East,
look'd and s The great Queen's bower was dark, —
s the Queen who sat betwixt her best Enid,
and more than this He s not.
He s them — headland after headland flame
the golden days In which she s him first.
Came to that point where first she s the King
she s, Wet with the mists and smitten by the lights,
she look'd and s The novice, weeping,
I 5 One lying in the dust at Almesbury,
since he s not whom he fought.
Look'd up for heaven, and only s the mist ;
But when he s the wonder of the hilt,
I never s, Nor shaU see, here or elsewhere,
s, Straining his eyes beneath an arch of hand,
thought he s, the speck that bare the King,
Before he s my day my father died. And he was
happy that he 5 it not ;
looking back, we s The clefts and openings
she s Beneath her feet the region far away,
And s the motion of all other things ;
I s There, where I hoped myself to reign
I s the moonlight glitter on their tears —
But cast a parting glance at me, you s,
he s His lady with the moonlight on her face ;
when I s her (and I thought him crazed,
Julian goes, the lord of all he s.
I, by Lionel sitting, s his face Fire,
s The bridesmaid pale, statuelike,
when I s him come in at the door,
we s the rivers roll from Paradise !
and I s The glory of the Lord flash up,
I s that we could not stay,
I s him and let him be.
He s not his daughter — he blest her :
meanings ambush'd under all they s,
There in a secret olive-glade I s Pallas Athene
mask that I s so amazed me,
I s that a boat was nearing us —
as I s the white sail run. And darken,
who 5 the death, but kept the deck.
You s the league-long rampart-fire
A sudden nightingale S thee,
crocus-purple hour That s thee vanish.
I s the tiger in the ruin'd fane
but trace of thee I s not ;
I never s it yet so all ablaze
stretch'd my hands As if I s her ;
We s far off an old forsaken house,
And s the world fly by me Hke a dream,
one day came And s you, shook her head,
and once we only s Your gilded vane,
the matron s That hinted love was only wasted bait
Who s you kneel beside your bier.
And him I s but once again.
Holy Grail 725
752
759
828
846
850
880
896
Pelleas and E. 24
50
188
420
471
552
Last Tournament 145
160
482
757
Guinevere 27
30
243
381
403
596
663
Pass, of Arthur 76
99
112
253
321
463
465
Lover's Tale i 191
329
394
574
590
697
„ iv 4
56
163
315
322
Sisters {E. and E.) 211
In the Child. Hosp. 2
Columbus 27
81
V. of Maeldune 35
128
To Prin. F. of H. 3
Tiresias 5
„ 39
The Wreck 117
123
The "Flight 39
Locksley H., Sixty 63
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 27
Demeter and P. 12
51
79
81
The Ring 81
„ 117
„ 155
„ 180
„ 313
„ 330
„ 359
Happy 54
79
I s bejjrond their silent tops The steaming marshes Prog, of Spring 74
I s, whenever In passing it glanced upon Merlin and the G. 102
Saw
606
Say
Saw (verb) (continued) she s Him, climbing toward her
with the golden fruit, Death of (Enone 14
and s The ring of faces redden'd by the flames „ 91
Thou, thou — I s thee fall before me, Akbar's Dream 185
on a sudden we s your soldiei-s crossing the ridge, Bandit's Death 21
An' s by the Gi"aace o' the Lord, Church-warden, etc. 42
S them lie confounded. The Tourney 14
Sawdust Or elbow-deep in s, slept. Will Water. 99
Sawest Who never « Caerleon upon Usk — Balin and Balan 570
Thou s a gloi-y growing on the night, Epit. on Caxton 2
Sawing stump Pitch-blacken'd s the air, Last Tournament 67
Sawn s In twain beneath the ribs ; St. S. Stylites 52
Saxon (See also West-Saxons, West-Saxon-land) S
and NoiTiian and Dane are we, W. to Alexandra 3
For S or Dane or Norman we, „ 31
S and Angle from Over the broad billow Batt. of Brunanburh 118
Noble the S who hurl'd at his Idol Kapiolani 4
Say (s) (See also Sa&y) Give me my fling, and let me
say my s.' Aylmer's Field 399
men are bold and strongly say their s : — W. to Marie Alex. 32
Say thou thy s, and I will do my deed. Gareth and L. 901
You said your s ; Mine answer was my deed. „ 1174
I am Lancelot ; say thy s.' Pelleas and E. 582
Say (verb) May children of our children s, To the Queen 23
Men s that Thou Didst die for me, Supp. Confessions 2
still as I comb'd I would sing and s, The Mermaid 12
What they s betwixt their wings ? Adeline 29
She has heard a whisper s, L. of Skalott ii 3
she s's A fire dances before her, (Enone 263
but I care not what they s. May Queen 19
They s he's dying all for love, „ 21
They s liis heart is breaking, mother — „ 22
I shall hearken what you s, May Queen, N. ¥'s. E. 39
And s to Robin a kind word, „ Con. 45
Yet something I did wish to s: To J. S. 60
Is this enough to s That my desire. Gardener's D. 236
He s's that he will never see me more.' Dora 116
I scarce have other music : yet s on Edwin Morris 57
They s that they are heal'd. St. S. Stylites 146
I do not s But that a time may come — „ 189
S thou, whereon I carved her name. Talking Oak 33
Will some one s, Then why not ill for good ? Love and Duty 27
How s you ? we have slept, my lords. Day-Dm., Revival 21
As who shall s me nay : Will Water. 92
S's to her that loves him well, L. of Burleigh 22
She was more fair than words can s : Beggar Maid 2
And s she would be little wife to both. Enoch Arden 36
still foreboding ' what would Enoch s ? ' „ 253
Him and his children not to s me nay — „ 308
they s that women are so quick — „ 408
And s to Philip that I blest him too ; „ 886
Far as we tiuck ourselves — I s that this — Aylmer's Field 306
And you shall s that having spoken with me, „ 311
JUted I was : I s it for your peace. „ 354
Give me my fling, and let me s my say.' „ 399
How many will s ' forgive,' Sea Dreams 60
What does little birdie s In her nest „ 293
What does little baby s. In her bed at peep of day ? „ 301
No matter ; we will s whatever comes. Princess, Pro. 239
1, Who am not mine, s, live : „ ii 223
She s's the Princess should have been the Head, „ Hi 34
in the second place. Some s the thii-d — „ 158
Your Highness might have seem'd the thing you s.' „ 202
S to her, 1 do but wanton in the South, „ iv 109
and to shame That which he s's he loves : „ 249
let me s but this. That many a famous man and woman, „ 444
as they s The seal does music ; „ 455
when they s The chUd is hers ; . „ vSQ
and yet they s that still You love ber. „ 122
How s you, war or not ? ' „ 124
neither seem'd there more to 5 : „ 330
8 one soft word and let me part forgiven.' „ vi 219
said you had a heart — I heard her s it — „ 234
Far, how far no tongue can s. Ode Inter. Exhib. 30
men are bold and strongly s their say : — W. to Marie Alex. 32
Say (verb) (continued) and Willy, you s, is gone. Grandmother 8 ,i
S's that I moant 'a naw moor aale : iV. Farmer, 0. /S. 3 |
Doctors, they knaws nowt, fur a s's what's naw-
ways true : ,. 5 '
an' a s's it easy an' freea ,, 25
S's to thessen naw doubt ' what a man a bea sewer-loy ! ' ,. 54
Sin' I mun doy I mun doy, thaw loife they s's is sweet, .. 63
thy muther s's thou wants to many the lass, ., N. S. 31
Somebody said that she'd s no ; (repeat) Window, Letter 7, 14
' As pure and perfect as I s ? In Mem. xxiv 2
Whatever fickle tongues may s. .. xxvi 4
Or so methinks the dead would s ; „ Ixxxv !
Except, like them, thou too canst s, ,, xciv 7
Whate'er the faithless people s. .. xcvii 16
And yet myself have heard him s, „ xcviii 20
They s, The solid earth whereon we tread „ cxviii 7
One s's, we are villains all. Maud I ilT .
And s's he is rough but kind, „ xix 70
0 then, what then shall Is?— „ 92
what will the old man s ? (repeat) Maud II v 83, 87
But s, these four. Who be they ? Gareth and L. 626
' S thou thy say, and 1 will do my deed. „ 901
tell him wliat I think and what they s. Marr. of Geraint 90
ye look so scared at what I s : Geraint and E. 339
what s ye, shall we strip him there Your lover ? „ 488
Enid could not s one tender word, „ 746
some do s that our Sir Garlon too Hath leam'd
black magic, Balin and Balan 304
' Who are wise in love Love most, s least,' Merlin and V. 248
Yet you are wise who s it ; „ 252
' S's she not well ? and there is more— „ 450
proof against the grain Of him ye s ye love : „ 488
Should try this chann on whom ye s ye love.' „ 525
What dare the full-fed bars s of me ? „ 692
' O ay, what s ye to Sir Valence, „ 705
What s ye then to sweet Sir Sagramore, „ 721
What s ye then to fair Sir Percivale „ 747
' 0 ay ; what s ye to Sir Lancelot, „ 769
What did the wantons? „ 812
heathen, who, some s, shall rule the land Lancelot and E. 65
1 might s that 1 had seen.' ,, 427
if 1 could believe tlie things you .9 ,, 1097
For so they s, these books of ours, Holy Grail 65
Our Lady s's it, and we well believe : „ 604
and yet I should be shamed to s it — Pelleas and E. 189
I will s That 1 have slain thee. „ 345
Blowing liis bugle as who should s him nay.' „ 381
I am Lancelot ; s thy say.' „ 582
and s My tower is full of harlots, Uke his court. Last Tournament 80
s My knights are all adulterers like his own, „ 83
and s his hour is come. The heathen are upon him, ,, 86
Swine, s ye ? swine, goats, asses, rams and geese ,, 321
Lied, s ye ? Nay, but learnt, „ 656
himself would s Sir Lancelot had the noblest ; Guinevere 319
Not to break in on what I s by word Or whisper, Love's Tale iv 352
The men would s of the maids. First Quarrel 28
But s nothing hard of my boy, Rizpah 22
he had something further to s, „ 43
I charge you never to s that I laid him „ 58
You s that you can do it as willingly Sisters (E. and E.) 70
but I know that I heard him s
' He s's I shall never live thro' it,
S that His day is done ! Ah why should we care
what they s ?
What did he s. My frighted Wiclif-preacher
Then some one standing by my grave will s,
is a man to be loved by the women they s.
' Tho' some have gleams or so they s
^vrite ten lines, they s. At dawn,
s That here the torpid mummy wheat
What did she s ?
and seem'd to s ' Again.'
You s your body is so foul —
Yet ' Alia,' s's their sacred book, ' is Love,'
What am I doing, you s to me,
In the Child. Hasp. 21
47
Sir
71
J. Oldcastle 37
Columbus 209
The Wreck 18
Ancient Sage 214
Poets and their B. 2
To Prof. Jebb 4
Tlie Ring 99
The Ring 154
Happy 25
Akbar's Dream 73
Charity 1
Sayest
607
Scatter
Sayest 'Tis Kate — She s what she will : Kate 6
as thou s, a Fairy King And Fairy Queens Gareth atid L. 258
as thou s, it is enchanted, son, „ 263
Sajnng (part.) (See also Saayin') s that which pleased him,
for he smiled. Enoch Arden 757
S this, The woman half tuni'd round Sea Dreams 285
and I (Pardon me s it) were much loth Princess i 156
So s from the com-t we paceti, „ Hi 117
Shame might befall Melissa, knowing, * not she knew : „ 148
S in odour and colour, ' Ah, be Among the roses Mavd I xxi 12
King Made feast for, s, as they sat at meat, Com. of Arthur 247
s this the seer Went thro' the strait „ 394
s thou wert basely born. Gareth and L. 355
Reproach you, s all your force is gone ? Marr. of Geraint 88
s all his force Is melted into mere effeminacy ? „ 106
So s, from the carven flower above, Lancelot atid E. 549
hopes are mine,' and s that, she choked, ,. 607
<S which she seized. And, thro' the casement „ 1233
s to me That Guinevere had sinn'd against the
liighest. Last Tournament 569
ev'n in s this. Her memory from old habit Guinevere 378
And well for thee, s in my dark hour, Pass, of Arthur 159
What am I 5 ? and what are you ? Eizvah 11
So s, light-foot Iris pass'd away. Achilles over the T. 1
What art thou s ? ' And was not Alia Akbar's Bream 8Q
Sasiag (s) A s, hard to shape in act ; Love thou thy land 49
a s learnt. In days far-off, Tithonus 47
What is their pretty s ? jilted, is it? Aylmer's Field 353
dark s's from of old Ranging and ringing Com. of Arthur 415
thy foul s's fought for me : Gareth and L. 1 180
And mirthful s's, children of the place, Holy Grail 555
a s that anger'd her. Last Tournament 628
Scabbard when she show'd the wealthy s, Aylmer's Field 236
Scaffold (See also Death-scaffold) S's, still sheets of
water, D. of F. Women 34
Scald That let the bantling s at home, Princess v 458
Scale (for weighing) fortunes, justlier balanced, s with s,' „ ii 66
takes it up. And topples down tlie s's ; „ v 445
While slowly falling as a s that falls, Marr. of Geraint 525
Scale (graduated series) Along the s of ranks, thro' all, In Mem. cxi 2
Scale (of armour) splendours and the golden s Of harness, Princess v 41
Scale (proportion) Because the s is infinite. Two Voices 93
Scale (verb) she that out of Lethe s's with man Princess vii 261
To s the heaven's highest height. In Mem. cviii 7
to s the highest of the heights With some strange hope Tiresias 28
The leper plague may s my skin Hafpy 27
Scaled Suddenly * the light. Palace of Art 8
And s in sheets of wasteful foam. Sea Dreams 53
Shall find the toppling crags of Duty s Ode on Well. 215
s with help a hundred feet Up from the base : Baiin and Balan 170
High with the last line s her voice, Lancelot and E. 1019
The spiring stone that s about her tower, Last Tournament 511
I s the buoyant liighway of the birds. Prog, of Spring 80
Scaling Tho' s slow from grade to grade ; Two Voices 174
But after s half the weary down, Enoch Arden 372
crag and tree S, Sir Lancelot from the perilous nest. Last Tournament 18
Scalp From s to sole one slough and crust St. S. Stylites 2
Beat into my s and my brain, Maud II v 10
Scan I s him now Beastlier than any phantom Lucretius 195
We needs must « him from head to feet Dead Prophet 55
Scandal Begins the s and the cry : You might have won 16
Old s's buried now seven decads deep In other s's
that have Uved and died. And left the living s
that shall die — Aylmer's Field 442
You'll have no s while you dine. To F. D. Maurice^ 17
like a city, with gossip, s, and spite ; Maud I iv 8
Nun as she was, the s of the Court, Holy Grail 78
once the talk And s of our table, had retum'd ; ,, 650
To spy some secret s if he might, Guinevere 26
make the smouldering s break and blaze Before the people, „ 91
To save his blood from s, „ 514
him The causer of that s, fought and fell ; The liing 215
While s is mouthing a bloodless name The Dawn 12
Scandalous (See also Crown-scandalous) To smoke the
s hive of those wild bees Holy Grail 214
Scandalous (continued) I have scared you pale with my 5 talk. Despair 111
Scant 'Tis hfe, whereof our nerves are 5, Two Voices 397
But work was s in the Isle, First Quarrel 43
Scanty Gain'd for her own a s sustenance, Enoch Arden 259
Thus earn'd a s living for himself : „ 818
Scape who may slay or s the three, Gareth and L. 641
Pray for him that he s the doom of fire, Guinevere 347
Scaped <S' thro' a cavern from a bandit hold, Holy Grail 207
'Scaped (escaped) by this way I 's them. St. S. Stylites 179
Scapegoat On that huge s of the race, Maud I xiii 42
Scar O sweet and far from cliff and s Princess iv 9
cloaks the s of some repulse with lies ; Merlin and V. 818
Scarce upon the game, how s it was This season ; AvMey Court 32
I s can ask it thee for hate, Gareth and L. 361
He s is knight, yea but half-man, „ 1176
But s could see, as now we see, Epilogue 48
But s of such majestic mien Freedom 6
I s have learnt the title of your book. The Ring 126
saw you kneel beside your bier, and weeping s could see ; Happy 54
Altho' the months have s begun. To Ulysses 22
we s can spell The Alif of Thine alphabet Akbar's Dream 30
Scarce-believable many a s-h excuse, Enoch Arden 469
Scarce-credited S-c at first but more and more, „ 648
Scarce-rocking S-r, her full-busted figure-head „ 543
Scare a- church-harpies from the master's feast ; To J. M. K. 3
Why wilt thou ever s me with thy tears, Tithonus 46
To *■ the fowl from fruit : Princess ii 228
biting laws to s the beasts of prey „ » 393
You cannot s me ; nor rough face, Gareth and L. 1329
shadow of my spear had been enow To s them from
me once ; Holy Grail 792
Scarecrow Empty s's, 1 and you ! Vision of Sin 94
Scared (See also Skeard) ' 0 ' she cried, its' as it were, Enoch Arden 430
But s with threats of jail and halter Aylmer's Field 520
he heard her speak ; She s him ; Princess i 186
To lag behmd, s by the ciy they made, „ v 94
The king is s, the soldier will not fight, „ Con. 60
and this music now Hath s them both, Gareth and L. 251
foemen 5, like that false pair who tum'd Geraint and E. 176
Nor need ye look so s at what 1 say : „ 339
So, s but at the motion of the man, „ 476
beauteous beast «S' by the noise upstarted Merlin and V. 422
some are s, who mark, Or wisely or unwisely, To the Queen ii 48
Do you think 1 was s by the bones ? Rizpah 55
I have s you pale with my scandalous talk. Despair 111
that the foalk be sa s at. Spinster's S's. 24
My people too were s with eerie sounds. The Ring 408
Scarf One sitting on a crimson s unroU'd ; D. of F. Wometi 126
Dark as a funeral s from stem to stern, M. d' Arthur 194
A A- of orange romid the stony helm, Princess, Pro. 102
palace-front Alive with fluttering s's and ladies' eyes, „ v 509
A purple s, at either end whereof Marr. of Geraint 169
Prince's blood spirted upon the s, „ 208
Yniol caught His purple s, and held, „ 377
Dark as a funeral s from stem to stern. Pass, of Arthur 362
Scarfskin not a hair Ruffled upon the s, Aylmer's Field 660
Scarlet (adj.) The sunrise broken into s shafts Enoch Arden 592
and again The s shaftjS of sunrise — but no sail. „ 599
and fulminated vVgainst the s woman and her creed ; Sea Dreams 23
her s sleeve, Tho' carved and cut, Lancelot and E. 806
The steaming marshes of the .9 cranes, Prog, of Spring 75
Scarlet (s) who wore the sleeve Of s, and the pearls ; Lancelot and E. 502
upon his helm A sleeve of s, broider'd „ 604
Hued with the s of a fierce sunrise. Lover's Tale i 353
crimson and s of berries that flamed V. of Maeldune 61
Scarlet-mingled And hills and s-m woods The Voyage 47
Scarlett S and S's three hundred were riding by Heavy Brigade 4
Scarlett's Brigade three hundred ot S B\' „ 45
Scarped From s cliff and quarried stone In Mem. Ivi 2
Scarr'd S with a hundred wintry watercourses — Holy Grail 490
Scathe What Devil had the heart to s Supp. Confessions 83
as God's high gift from s and wrong, Guinevere 494
given my life To help his own from s, Sir J. Oldcastle 63
Scathed down in a furrow s with flame : The Victim 22
Scatter we will s all our maids Till happier times Primcss vi 302
Scatter
608
Scorn
Scatter {continued) S the blossom under her feet ! W. to Alexandra 9
Disband himself, and s all his powers, Geraini and E. 798
would s the ghosts of the Past, Despair 23
s's on her throat the sparks of dew, Prog, of Spring 58
Scattered {See also Wind-scatter'd) ' Tho' thou wert s to
the wind. Two Voices 32
The twinkhng laurel s silver lights. Gardener's D. 118
Or s blanching on the grass. Day-Dm., Arrival 12
were s Blood and brains of men. The Captain 47
huts At random s, each a nest in bloom. Aylmer's Field 150
dear diminutives S all over the vocabulary „ 540
And glean your s sapience ' Princess ii 259
Yet how to bind the 5 scheme of seven Together in one
sheaf ? „ Con. 8
A thresher \vith his flaD had s them. Gareth and L. 842
And s all they had to all the winds : Marr. of Geraint 635
AU s thro' the houses of the town ; „ 695
strown With gold and s coinage, Geraint and E. 26
' and lo, the powers of Doorm Are s,' „ 802
One from the bandit s in the field, „ 818
He lightly s theirs and brought her off Merlin and V. 564
And some with s jewels, Last Tournament 148
books are s from hand to hand — Despair 93
Her dauntless army 5, and so small. The Fleet 11
band will be s now their gallant captain is dead. Bandit's Death 41
Scattering {See also Ever-scattering) Time, a maniac s dust, In Mem. I 7
Scaur down the shingly s he plunged, Lancelot and E. 53
Scene all but sicken at the shifting s's. The Play 2
Scent I s it twenty-fold.' Gareth and L. 995
Scented {See also Heather-scented) Thick rosaries of s
thorn, Arabian Nights 106
Thro' half-open lattices Coming in the s breeze, Elednore 24
Sceptre A crown, a s, and a throne ! Ode to Memory 121
To whom I leave the s and the isle — Ulysses 34
He held his s hke a pedant's wand Princess i 27
0 would I had his s for one hour ! „ iv 538
sorra the Queen wid her s in sich an iUigant ban', Tomorrow 35
millions under one Imperial s now, Locksley H., Sixty 117
lent The s's of her West, her East, To Marq. of Dufferin 6
Since our Queen assumed the globe, the s. On Jut. Q. Victoria 3
Hold the s. Human Soul, By an Evolution. 16
Sceptre-staff till thy hand Fail from the s-s. (Enone 126
Scheme noble s Grew up from seed we two long since
had sown ; Princess iv 309
She ask'd but space and f airplay for her s ; „ v 282
1 give you aU The random s as wildly as it rose : „ Con. 2
how to bind the scatter'd s of seven Together „ 8
s that had left us flaccid and drain'd. Maud / i 20
When the s's and all the systems, Locksley H., Sixty 159
Schemed s and wrought Until I overtum'd him ; Geraint and E. 829
That if I s against thy peace in this, Merlin and V. 930
Scheming At your simple s . . . Forlorn 16
Schism Now hawking at Geology and s ; The Epic 16
Scholar {See also Scholard) but the s ran Before the
master, Com. of Arthur 154
Youthful! youth and age are s's yet Locksley H., Sixty 243
Scholard (scholsur) Fur Squire wur a Varsity 5, Village Wife 25
Fur thou be a big s now Church-warden, etc. 22
School {See also Sorgery-school) Completion in a
painful s ; Love thou thy land 58
I was at s — a college in the South : Walk, to the Mail 83
As in the Latin song I learnt at s, Edwin Morris 79
Thro' the courts, the camps, the s's, Vision of Sin 104
Now let me put the boy and girl to 5 : Enoch Arden 312
Then Philip put the boy and girl to s, „ 331
How Philip put her little ones to s, „ 706
For there are s's for all.' Princess Hi 305
From art, from nature, from the s's, In Mem. xlix 1
The flippant put himself to s „ ex 10
smiles at one That is not of his s, nor any s Merlin and V. 663
scholars yet but in the lower s, Locksley H., Sixty 243
raised the s, and drain'd the fen. „ 268
lost in the gloom of doubts that darken the s's ; Vastness 11
Schoolbooks In our s we say, The Brook 9
Schoolboy (adj.) not the s heat, The blind hysterics of the Celt : In Mem. cix 15
Schoolboy (s) As cruel as a s ere he grows To Pity — Walk, to the Mail 109
No graver than a s's' barring out ; Princess, Con. 66
School'd whom Gideon s with briers. Buonaparte 14
Science (See also Half-science) truths of S waiting to be
caught — Golden Year 17
With the fairy tales of s, Locksley Hail 12
S moves, but slowly slowly, „ 134
And wake on s grown to more, Day-Dm., L' Envoi 10
Mastering the lawless s of our law, Aylmer's Field 435
so that sport Went hand in hand with S ; Princess, Pro. 80
Two plummets dropt for one to sound the abyss Of s, „ ii 177
And every Muse tumbled a s in. „ 399
mixt with inmost terms Of art and s : „ 447
Two great statues. Art And S, „ iv 201
Where S, Art, and Labour have outpour'd Ode Inter. Exhib. 5
When S reaches forth her arms In Mem. xxi 18
Let S prove we are, and then What matters S imto men, „ cxx 6
man of s himself is fonder of glory, Maud I iv 37
gleam Of letters, dear to S, dear to Art, Ded. of Idylls 40
The simples and the s of that time, Lancelot and E. 862
touching on all things great, S, philosophy, song — The Wreck 51
Till the Sun and the Moon of our s Despair 91
All diseases quench 'd by S, Locksley H., Sixty 163
Is it well that while we range with S, „ 217
S grows and Beauty dwindles — „ 246
Fifty years of ever-brightening S ! On Jub. Q. Victoria 53
What the philosophies, all the s's, Vastness 31
tracks Of s making toward Thy Perfectness Akbar's Dream 29
Scion Nor cared for seed or s ! A mphion 12
Scirrhous And s roots and tendons. „ 64
Scoff (s) I met with s's, I met with scorns In Mem. Ixix 9
Scoff (verb) Began to s and jeer and babble of him Marr. of Geraint 58
Scoff'd and s at him And this high Quest Holy Grail 667
Scolded See Raated
Scolding {See also Baatin') Half-parted from a weak and
s hinge, The Brook 84
Scoop'd had s himself In the white rock a chapel Lancelot and E. 404
On the other side Is s a cavern Lover's Tale i 517
Scoor (score) an' soa is s's o' gells, N. Farmer, N. S. 14
Scope shall have s and breathing space Locksley Hall 167
Scorch'd Shot out of them, and s me that I woke. Lucretius 66
Score {See also Scoor) Colleaguing with a s of petty
kings. Com. of Arthur 67
and his winters were fifteen s, V. of Maeldune 116
Scorn (s) {See also Self-scorn) Patient of ill, and
death, and s, Sv/pp. Confessions 4
To hold a common s of death ! „ 34
Cleae-headed friend, whose joyful s. Clear-headed friend 1
Dower'd with the hate of hate, the s of s. The Poet 3
' And cruel love, whose end is s, Mariana in the S. 70
Then said the voice, in quiet s. Two Voices 401
Were wisdom in the s of consequence.' CEnone 150
from which mood was born S of herself ; Palace of Art 231
grief became A solemn s of ills. D. of F. Women 228
Turning to s with Mps divine The falsehood Of old sat Freedom 23
' Ere yet, in s of Peter's-pence, Talking Oak 45
passion were a target for their s : Locksley Hall 146
Shall it not be s to me „ 147
nodding, as in s, He parted, with great strides Godiva 30
I trow they did not part in s : Lady Clare 5
He laugh'd a laugh of merry s : „ 81
But laws of nature were our s. The Voyage 84
Mingle madness, mingle s ! Vision of Sin 204
bent as he was To make disproof of s, Aylmer's Field 446
striking on huge stumbling-blocks of s „ 538
From envy, hate and pity, and spite and s, Lucretius 77
She fulmined out her s of laws Salique Princess ii 133
sacred from the blight Of ancient ii^uence and s. „ 169
' lest some classic Angel speak In s of us, „ Hi 71
she lightens s At him that mars her plan, „ v 131
but brooding turn The book of s, Princess v 142
the king in bitter s Drew from my neck „ vi 109
answer'd full of grief and s. „ 333
and after praise and s. As one who feels A Dedication 6
To shroud me from my proper s. In Mem. xxvi 16
I
Scorn
609
Scrubbed
Scorn (s) (co7itmued I met with scoffs, I met with s's In Mem. Ixix 9
You say, but with no touch of s, „ xcvi 1
Why then my s might well descend „ cxxviii 21
With a glassy smile his brutal s — Maud I vi 49
Sir Kay beside the door Mutter'd in a- of Gareth Gareth and L. 706
The King in utter s Of thee and thy much folly „ 918
' A kitchen-knave, and sent in s of me : Such fight
not I, but answer s with s. „ 952
Would handle s, or yield you, „ 1173
put your beauty to this flout and s Geraint and E. 675
Instead or scornful pity or pure s, „ 859
The s of Garlon, poisoning all his rest, Balin and Balan 383
those large eyes, the haunts of s, Pelleas and E. 75
persistence tum'd her s to wrath. „ 218
Gawain answer'd kindly tho' in s, „ 333
and these Full knightly without s ; Guinevere 39
No knight of Arthur's noblest dealt in s ; „ 40
S was allow'd as part of his defect, . „ 43
hers Would be for evermore a name of s. „ 61
And mine will ever be a name of s. „ 627
Softness breeding s of simple life, To the Queen ii 53
to love and to live for, glanced at in s ! The Wreck 35
shaft of s that once had stung Ancient Sage 131
laughing sober fact to s, Locksley H., Sixty 109
Not only to slight praise but suffer « ; To Duke of Argyll 4
made him leper to compass him with s — Happy 16
my wail of reproach and s ; Charity 23
Scorn (verb) or if you s to lay it, Yourself, Princess vi 183
' They that s the tribes and call us Boadicea 7
victor Hours should s The long result of love, In Mem. i 13
Then these were such as men might s : „ xlviii 4
Scom'd, to be scom'd by one that I s, Maud I xiii 1
' Wherefore did the King S me? Gareth and L. 738
' Girl, for I see ye s my courtesies, Geraint and E. 671
monk and nun, ye s the world's desire, Balin and Balan 445
touching fame, howe'er ye s my song. Merlin and V. 444
— we s them, but they sting.' Lancelot and E. 139
look On this proud fellow again, who s's us all ? ' „ 1065
I must not s myself : he loves me still. Guinevere 673
To one who knows I s him. The Flight 29
whom most I loathe, to honovu" whom Is? ,,50
You s my Mother's warning. The Ring 326
do you s me when you tell me, O my lord, Happy 23
Scom'd cursed and s, and bruised with stones : Two Voices 222
Comfort ? comfort s of devils ? Locksley Hall 75
s to help their equal rights Against the sons Princess vii 233
S, to be s by one that I scorn, Maud I xiii 1
and thought the King S me and mine ; Gareth and L. 1166
And doubtful whether I and mine be s. „ 1253
Scomer not a s of your sex But venerator, Princess iv 422
He rose, descended, met The s in the castle court, Balin and Balan 387
0 A- of the party ciy That wanders Freedom 25
Scornful waiste wide Of that abyss, or s pride ! Two Voices 120
All barr'd with long white cloud the s crags. Palace of Art 83
But she, with sick and s looks averse, B. of F. Women 101
In i stillness gazing as they past ; Com. of Arthur 478
Instead of s pity or pure scorn, Geraint and E. 859
She broke into a httle « laugh : Lancelot and E. 120
Scorning He utter'd words of s ; The Goose 42
Enoch set himself, S an alms, to work Enoch Arden 812
and they too smOed, S him ; Pelleas and E. 97
Scorpion s crawling over naked skulls ; — Demeter and P. 78
Scorpion-worm Sware by the s-w that twists Last Tournament 451
Scotsman Bow'd the spoiler. Bent the S, Batt. of Brunanburh 21
There was the S Weary of war. „ 35
numberless numbers, Shipmen and Scotsmen. „ 55
Scott (Sir Walter) 0 great and gallant S, Bandit's Death 1
Scoundrel (adj.) seeing what a door for s scmn I open'd to
the West, Columbus 170
Scoundrel (s) stammering ' s ' out of teeth that Aylmer's Field 328
And s in the supple-sliding knee.' Sea Dreams 168
Scour to scream, to burnish, and to s. Princess iv 520
Scour'd whistle of the youth who s His master's
armour ; Marr. of Geraint 257
And s into the coppices and was lost, Geraint and E. 534
Scourge Mortify Your flesh, like me, with s's St. S. Stylites 180
bride Gives her harsh groom for bridal-gift a s ; Princess v 378
' a s am I To lash the treasons of the Table Round.' Pelleas and E. 565
' Heresy. — Penance ? ' Fast, Hairshirt and s — Sir J. Oldcastle 142
some beneath the s. Some over-labour'd, Columbus 177
The slave, the s, the chain ; Freedom 12
Scoui^ed AureUus Emrys would have s thee dead, Gareth and L. 375
Scouring told him, s still, ' The sparrow-hawk ! ' Marr. of Geraint 260
Scout inward raced the s's With nmiour Priticess v 111
is it true what was told by the s, Def. of Lucknow 95
Scouted put by, s by court and king — Columbus 165
Scowl foreheads drawn in Roman s's. Princess vii 129
Scowl'd s At their great lord. Aylmer's Field 724
Scrambled Have s past those pits of fire, St. S. Stylites 184
Scrap s's of thundrous Epic lilted out Princess ii 375
faded rhymes and s's of ancient crones. Lover's Tale i 289
With sallow s's of manuscript. To E. Fitzgerald 48
a s, clipt out of the ' deaths ' in a paper, fell. The Wreck 146
Scrape The four-handed mole shall s. My life is full 12
Scraped (See also Scrawm'd) I s the lichen from it : The Brook 193
Scraping With strumming and with s, Amphion 70
All my poor s's from a dozen years Of dust Sea Dreams 77
Scratby niver swap Owlby an' S Church-warden, etc. 44
Scratch (s) save her little finger from a s Edwin Morris 63
And eveiy s a lance had made upon it, Lancelot and E. 20
Scratch (verb) And s the very dead for spite : Lit. Squabbles 8
Would s a ragged oval on the sand, Gareth and L. 534
They would s him up — Rizpah 59
Scratch'd {See also Scratted) S, bitten, blinded,
marr'd me Last Tournament 526
Scratted (scratched) he scrawm'd an' s my f aace like a cat North. Cobbler 22
'e gied — I be fear'd fur to tell tha 'ow much — fur an
owd s stoan. Village Wife 47
Scrawl in thy heart the s shall play.' Sailor Boy 12
Scrawl'd The butler drank, the steward s, Day-Dm., Revival 10
s A ' Miriam ' that might seem a ' Muriel ' ; The Ring 240
Scrawm'd (scraped) he s an's cratted my faace like a cat, North. Cobbler 22
Scream (s) Now to the s of a madden'd beach Maud 1 Hi 12
s of that Wood-devil I came to quell ! ' Balin and Balan 548
S's of a babe in the red-hot palms The Dawn 2
Scream (verb) To tramp, to s, to burnish. Princess iv 520
Let the fierce east s thro' your eyelet-holes, Pelleas and E. 469
S you are polluted ... ■ Forlorn 28
Scream'd The parrot s, the peacock squall'd, Day-Dm., Revival 12
wives, that laugh'd and s against the gulls, Pelleas and E. 89
waked a bird of prey that s and past ; Death of (Enone 87
Screead (shriek'd) an' s like a Howl gone wud — Owd Rod 76
Screen (See also Ivy-screen, Quickset-screens) neither
of them stands behind the s of thy truth. Akbar's D., Inscrip. 7
Screw ' Let me s thee up a peg : Vision of Sin 87
'*S not the chord too sharply lest it snap.' Aylmer's Field 469
Scribbled every margin s, crost, and cramm'd Merlin and V. 677
S or carved upon the pitiless stone ; Sir J. Oldcastle 5
Scrimp Master s's his haggard semptress of her daily
bread, ~ Locksley H., Sixty 221
Scrip lucky rhymes to him were s and share. The Brook 4
Scriptur (scripture) them words be i' S — Owd Rod 15
Or hke tother Hangel i' S „ 94
Scripture (See also Scriptur) he heard his priest Preach
an inverted s, Aylmer's Field 44
Who reads of begging saints in S?' Sir J. Oldcastle 151
woman ruin'd the world, as God's own s's tell. Charity 3
was a S that rang thro' his head. The Dreamer 2
Scritch Ring sudden s'es of the jay. My life is full 20
Scroll (See also Title-scroll) An open s. Before him lay : The Poet 8
But one poor poet's s, „ 55
ponder those three hundred s's Left by the Teacher, Lucretiiis 12
The seal was Cupid bent above a s. Princess i 242
she crush'd The s's together, made a sudden turn „ iv 394
Sun In dexter chief ; the s ' I follow fame.' Merlin and V. 476
like a serpent, ran a s Of letters Holy Grail 170
fiery s written over with lamentation and woe. Despair 20
in his hand A s of verse — Ancient Sage 6
Scroob'd (scrubbed) es it couldn't be s awaay. Village Wife 39
Scrubbed See Scroob'd
2q
Scruple
610
Scruple bi-akest thro' the s of inv bond t ,c^ v . roo
Scud foam-flakes . along the levXand, ^f oTT^Jf^
««. ^f^ *nf g?P Glimmer'd the streaming . : ^ Hol^GTnT^9
Scudded Of mighty mouth, we 5 fast, %V^i7^^1
Scudding Thro' s drifts the rainv Hvades Vpvf fj,» a- "^ f;o2/a?e 46
Scullery whinny shrills From Se to . '^* *^' ^"'^ '^^^ > • ^^^^^^^ 10
Scullion (adj.) the King hath past his time-Mv 5 Princess v^%
knave ! * /-. ,
Scumon(s) Among the s'. and the kitchen-knaves ^^'''^h and L. 710
To serve with 5'^ and with kitchen-knaves ; ' " J?^
What doest thou, «, m my fellowship ? " ii"
Sir /S, canst thou use that spit of thine ' " iS?
1 accept thee aught the more, S ' " i^i
She reddening, ' Insolent 5 : I of thee ? " ^
amlnfl^ "w ''^ e^'^y- *' ^ ^ «^^y One nobler " ^n
Sculptor Wan S, weepest thou to take the cast w " i- 7 . ?
Musician, painter, s, critic, more T ^"^ &'c^ptorl
Sculpture some sweet . dipped from head to foot, PHncls'^v 57
And four great zones of s, set betwixt TJnlTr lo^o
Sculptured (^a. <^so Weirdly^sculptured) knights on ^"^^ ^''"^ 232
horse xS, and deckt in slowly-wanine hues «^«.<fc j r nnr
And darkhng felt the s ornament .f 7^ "'*'^/- ^^^^
Scum scurf of fait, and /of droTs ^«-^?'* «f ^^- 734
a door for scoundrel s I open'd to the West Vision of Sm 211
Scurf . of salt, and scum of dross, *' p.,. polnmbus 170
Scurrilous Lightning of the hour, the pun the s tale /J ' %^T^ ^}}.
Two lovei. par Jd by a . tale Ha7quarreU'd,'''''~ ^^'T/. Sf 1^8
Two lovers parted by no s tale— J-ne nmg jm
Scurvy Cholera, s, and fever, r,^-. ^ . ^ "7 ol
S^etar bright and sharp As edges of the .. ^'^^ '^ ^^Zl ?|
Scythe The sweep of s in morning dew r„ m. 7 ■ }a
'Sd Ji?'' ^'rt''=^'<' '^^ «"".b'^^« on^he turning ., S.£raS"r25|
Sdeath 'Our land mvaded, '5! and he hin^elf Your
captive, yet my father wills not war : And 's '
myself, what care I, war or no ? ' ' d • nn.,
I say she flies too high,'.! whatofthat? I'rincess v 276
A— and with solemn rites by candle-light— " 5^9
at once Decides it, 's ! against my father's will.' " §i
* ! but we will send to her,' " ^°
,Wa— 's ! you blame the man ; " • ^£*
Saa .9'!;i7^"'l^°°"«'' fight thrice o'er than see it.' " "si
sea ("See a^5o North-sea, Ocean-sea, Red Sea) And
compass'd by the inviolate s.' r^ ,i„ n oa
Ask the s At midnight, o„_ ^'' '*/ «^««« 36
Far, far beneath inlhe abysmal ., '^'^^^ ^^^L^^^
Leaning upon the ridged s, n ■ I^"" I
Down-caroUing to thi crisped s ^^ '""*^*' ^^- f
ridge Of heaped hills that mound the s nj. 4 aV' J^
Shrill music reach'd them on the middle . ^^' % ^T^ ^l
clover-hiU swells High over the full-toned s • Sea-FairiesQ
When Norland winds pipe down the 5, ^ Oria„^ Q?
I hear the roaring of the 5 Cnarea 91
Singing alone Under the s\ r,, ,. » ^^
I would kiss them of ten ukder the ., (repeat) ^^' Merman 5
Soft are the moss-beds under the s ; " ^^' So
Combing her hair Under the s, tj,^ ,}' .f%
TiU that great sea-snake under the s ^^^ ^^'^^ 5
WhnI ?f ™^'' "?'^^' *^® * '^""^'i feel their immortality " 28
)yA°u®f^,'?'7^P'^^^'"enighestthe*. ^ " SS
Of the bold merry mermen under the s ; " ao
In the purple twilights under the s ; " tf
In the branching jaspers under the s ; " J?
In the hueless mosses under the s " ^L
Would lean out from the hollow sphere of the s,\ " ^4
Your spirit IS the calmed 5, '' j^" , gf
The shadow rushing up the s Margaret 25
With motions of thi outer , : ' ^f ^^^^^ "
And in the middle of the ereen salt , 1 f • 7. ft^'^^^^ 113
Floats far awav into the ffihemV. '"'^'^^ ^' '^ ''''''^M
ii/Jsinore Heard the war moan alone the distant « r„" , ,«
and past Into deep orange o'er th^., ^'''''^ '' Marian^iHTs 26
There came a sound as of the « • ^y^ariana tn tfie iS. Jfa
wled in sudden «'« of light, My heart, "p„„«> It
In cataract after cataract to the 5. SXe 9
(cow<mwe<f) to where the sky Dipt down to 5 and s^nric P7 .- . „„
Or m a clear-waU'd city on the s * -^"^'^^ ''•^ ^'"^ ^2
plunging s's draw backward from the land " oil
hears the low Moan of an unknown s • " ^51
but evermore Most weary seem'd the 's r . "^ ^80
Vaulted o'er the dark-blue s ' Lotos- Eaters 41_
wallowing monster spouted his foam-fountains in th^ . " ^* ^\ S
As thunder-drops fail on a sleeping . r^*'.^'"' "^ *5> of F W ]% '
And languish for the purple s's v •( ^- ^T^** 122
And round them 5 and air are dark t "''i"'^' f ^'?' ^- ^
thou sendest out the man To rule by land and . ^J ^^^ '^^ i^"^ ^
The s's that shock thy base ' ' -Ew^^awi and Amer. 2
battle roll'd Among the mountains by the winter 5 •
north^nf ^^ "^^*' ^*^ "°^^ ^<^e '
And bowery hollows crown'd with summer s
ahghted from the boat And breathing of the s.
The s wastes all : but let me live my life
my heart turn'd from her, as a thorn Turns from the s
Beyond the fair green fieW pnri ^^.^^r^ . "™ ^'^^J
J It. V ■ ^'""' ""^i) aj5 a morn iu:
Beyond the fair green field and eastern s
like a lane of beams athwart the s
the ramy Hyades Vext the dim s ■'
There gloom the dark broad s's
lying m dark-purple spheres of s.
A light upon the shining s—
Thought her proud, and fled over the s •
Ihe broad s's swell'd to meet the keel
At times the whole s bum'd, '
Like Heavenly Hope she crown'd the s
JbLow down, cold rivulet, to the s
A J yinJ^ed s beneath him crawls ■
And fluted to the morning s. '
On thy cold gray stones, 0 S I
At the foot of thy crags O S •
Fnnl*^^ ^'T'^ 'r^P °f *he down-Streaming s's :
i.noeh was abroad on wrathful s's
bnoch at times to go by land or s'-
many a rough s had he weather'd in her '
the s IS His, The s is His : He made it.' "
but the lonehest in a lonely s.
And the low moan of leaden-colour'd s's
Like fountains of sweet water in the s
Ihere came so loud a calling of the s '
By the long wa^h of Australasian s's '
Ihis had a rosy s of gillyflowers
Never since our bad earth became one s
Huns in a river of blood to the sick s '
mth a month's leave given them, to the s :
feliaU Babylon be cast into the s •
that they saw, the s. '
the s roars Ruin : a fearful night ' '
A full s glazed with muffled moonlight
crystal currents of clear morning s's '
Wind of the western s, (repeat)
Blot out the slope of s from verge to shore,
the « s ; A red sail, or a white ;
(rod bless the narrow s which keeps her off
(jod bless the narrow s's ' '
Was great by land as thou by s. (repeat)
roughly set His Briton in blo"W s's '
whfle we hear The tides of Music's golden s
broke them on the land, we drove them on the s's
Sea-king's daughter from over the s
R^nl^f .K^ l"^^^*} \^ welcomes the land,
Bnde of the heir of the kings of the s—
voices of our universal s On capes
10 lands of summer across the s ■
I take my part Of danger on the 'roaring s
Singmg, And shall it be over the s's
a storni never wakes on the lonely s.
Sounds of the great s Wander'd about
flying by to be lost on an endless s—
oalm on the s's, and silver sleep,
10 breathe thee over lonely s's
15
-¥. d' Arthur 2
141
263
AvMey Court 8
51
55
Love and Duty 101
Golden Year 50
Ulysses 11
,. 45
Locksley Hall 164
'S'^. Agnes' Eve 35
Edward Gray 14
The Voyage IZ
51
70
A Farewell 1
The Eagle 4
To E. L. 24
Break, break, etc. 2
14
Enoch Arden 55
91
104
135
225
553
612
803
910
The Brook 194
Aylmer's Field 159
635
768
Sea Dreams 6
28
36
80
Princess i 248
„ a 328
„ Hi 2, 4
„ vii 1
38
„ Con. 46
51
70
Ode on Well. 84, 90
155
252
Third of Feb. 30
W. to Alexandra 1
24
28
W. to Marie Alex. 16
The Daisy 92 ']
Sailor Boy 22
The Islet 9
..33
Minnie and Winnie 7
Wages 2
In Mem. xi 17
„ xvii 4
Sea
611
Seal
Sea (continued) Breaks hither over Indian s's, In Mem. xxvi 14
The meanings of the homeless s, „ xxxv 9
From belt to belt of crimson s's „ Ixxxvi 13
The conscience as a 5 at rest : „ xdv 12
flew in a dove And brought a suimnons from the s : „ ciii 16
On winding stream or distant s ; ,, cxv 12
The stillness of the central s. „ cxxiii 4
Who rest to-night beside the s. „ Con. 76
better, war ! loud war by land and by s, Mavd I iil
liquid azure bloom of a crescent of s, „ iv 5
Over blowing s's, Over s's at rest, ., xvii 13
the red man's babe Leap, beyond the s. „ 20
A purer sapphire melts into the s. „ xviii 52
And trying to pass to the s ; „ xxi 7
shock Of cataract s's that snap „ // ii 26
While I am over the s \ „ 76
Far into the North, and battle, and s's of death. „ [II vi 37
held Tintagil castle by the Cornish s, Com. of Arthur 187
' A doubtful throne is ice on summer s's. „ 248
two Dropt to the cove, and watch'd the great s fall, „ 378
Descending in the glory of the s's — „ 400
To plunge old Merlin in the Arabian s ; Gareth and L. 211
Far over the blue tarns and hazy s's, „ 499
The buoy that rides at 5, and dips and springs „ 1146
And white sails flying on the yellow s ; Marr. of Geraint 829
But not to goodly hill or yeUow s „ 830
like a shoaling s the lovely blue Play'd into green, Geraint and E. 688
fell Against the heathen of the Northern 8
Brought the great faith to Britain over s's ;
one side had s And ship and sail and angels
All fighting for a woman on the s.
Even to the half my realm beyond the s's,
(S was her wrath, yet working after storm)
In mine own realm beyond the narrow s's,
A thousand piers rsin into the great S.
At once I saw him far on the great S,
Strike from the s ; and from the star there shot
And the s rolls, and all the world is warm'd ? '
On hiU, or plain, at s, or flooding ford.
So loud a blast along the shore and 5,
heapt in mounds and ridges all the s Drove like a cataract,
And in the great s wash away my sin.'
With chasm-like portals open to the s,
moon Thro' the tall oriel on the rolling s.
A vision hovering on a s of fire, PeUeas and E. 52
Makers of nets, and living from the s. „ 90
served with choice from air, land, stream, and s, „ 149
flush'd The long low dune, and lazy-plunging s. Last Tournament 484
gain'd TintagU, half in s, and high on land, „ 505
westward-smiling s's Watch'd from this tower. „ 587
For now the Heathen of the Northern S, Guinevere 135
strong man-breasted things stood from the s, „ 246
Of dark Tintagil by the Cornish s ; „ 294
Godless hosts Of heathen swarming o'er the Northern S ; „ 428
The phantom circle of a moaning s. Pass, of Arthur 87
On the waste sand by the waste s they closed. „ 92
deathwhite mist slept over sand and s : „ 95
Save for some whisper of the seething s's, „ 121
battle roll'd Among the mountains by the winter s ; „ 171
isles of winter shock By night, with noises of the
Northern S.
And bowery hoUows crown'd with summer s,
Thimderless lightnings striking under s
Some third-rate isle half -lost among her s's ?
the sloping s's Himg in mid-heaven,
breakers of the outer s Sank powerless,
down to s, and far as eye could ken,
The incorporate blaze of sun and s.
nigh the s Parting my own loved moimtains
the effect weigh'd s's upon my head To come my way !
Above the perilous s's of Change and Chance ;
Knit to some dismal sandbank far at s,
Sometimes upon the hills beside the s
Hung round with paintings of the s,
Forthgazing on the waste and open s.
Balin and Balan 103
364
Merlin and V. 562
Lancelot and E. 958
1309
1323
Holy Grail 503
510
529
672
728
796
798
806
815
831
„
309
,,
431
^0 the Queen ii 12
„
25
Lover's
TdeiZ
„
8
„
336
»
409
432
I '1
660
,,
806
„
809
„
m4
„
168
„
177
Sea (continued) Began to heave upon that painted s ; Lovers Tale i 192
a httle silver cloud Over the sounding s's : „ Hi 37
an' I thought of him out at s. First Quarrel 89
wailing, wailing, the wind over land and s — Rizpah 1
the s that 'ill moan like a man ? „ 72
' Spanish ships of war at s ! The Revenge 8
stars came out far over the summer s, ., 56
sun smiled out far over the summer s, ,, 70
And a day less or more At s or ashore, „ 87
s plunged and fell on the shot-shatter'd navy of Spain, „ 117
the wind Still westward, and the weedy s's — Columbus 72
The s's of our discovering over-roll Him „ 139
same chains Bound these same bones back thro' the Atlantic s, „ 214
blast blew us out and away thro' a boimdless s. V. of Maeldune 10
their breath met us out on the s's, „ 37
from the sky to the blue of the s ; „ 46
Plunged head down in the s, „ 82
sends the hidden sim Down yon dark s, De Prof., Two G. 34
In s's of Death and sunless gulfs of Doubt. Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 14
Fleeted his vessel to s with the king in it, Batt. of Brunanburh 60
With stormy light as on a mast at s, Tiresias 114
a huge s smote every soul from the decks of The Falcon The Wreck 109
a balmier breeze curl'd over a peacefuller s, „ 133
she is all alone in the s ; Despair 63
blue of sky and s, the green of earth. Ancient Sage 41
sailor wrecks at last In ever-silent s's ; „ 137
wish yon moaning s would rise and burst the shore, The Flight 11
about the shuddering wreck the death-white s should rave, „ 47
he sail'd the s to crush the Moslem in his pride ; Locksley H., Sixty 29
Leonard early lost at s ; „ 55
backward, forward, in the immeasureable s, „ 193
With one gray glimpse of s ; Pro. to Gen. Hamley 8
Like drops of blood in a dark-gray s. Heavy Brigade 43
unlaborious earth and oarless s ; To Virgil 20
Dominant over s and land. Helen's Tower 2
Our own fair isle, the lord of every s — The Fleet 7
Glorying between s and sky. Open. I. and C. Exhib. 18
And drew him over s to you — To Marq. of Dufferin 22
I climb'd on all the cliffs of all the s's, Demeter and P. 63
Trade flying over a thousand s's Fastness 13
Spring slides hither o'er the Southern s. Prog, of Spring 2
slant s's leaning on the mangrove copse, „ 76
Mussulman Who flings his bowstrung Harem in the s, Romney's R. 135
Like some old wreck on some indrawing s, St. Telemachus 44
Then one deep roar as of a breaking s, „ 67
clash of tides that meet in narrow s's. — Akbar's Dream 58
in blood-red cataracts down to the s ! Kapiolani 12
When I put out to s. Crossing the Bar 4
Sea-bank I ran down The steepy s-b, Lover's Tale ii 74
Seabird And the lonely s crosses The Captain 71
ranged on the rock hke white s-b's in a row, V. of Maeldune 101
Sea-blue FUts by the s-b bird of March ; In Mem. xci 4
Sea-bud under my starry s-b crown The Mermaid 16
Sea-castle huge s-c's heaving upon the weather bow. The Revenge 24
Sea-cataract and fell In vast s-c's — Sea Dreams 54
Sea-circle first indeed Thro' many a fair s-c, Enoch Arden 542
Sea-cliff the s-c pathway broken short. Merlin and V. 882
You from the haven Under the s-s. Merlin and the G. 3
Sea-current s-c would sweep us out to the main. Despair 51
Sea-dune Some lodge within the waste s-d's. The Flight 90
Sea-flower Dressing their hair with the white s-f ; The Merman 13
Sea-foam in the s-f sway'd a boat, Half-swallow'd in it, Holy Grail 802
Sea-framing Ran in and out the long s-f caves, Sea Dreams 33
Sea-friend Enoch parted with his old s-f, Enoch Arden 168
Sea-furbelow dimpled flounce of the s-f flap. Sea Dreams 266
Sea-grove the pale-green s-g's straight and high. The Merman 19
Sea-hall fill the s-h's with a voice of power ; „ 10
bUnd wave feeling round his long s-h In silence : Merlin and V. 232
Sea-haze Roll'd a s-h and whelm'd the world Enoch Arden 672
Sea-home eyes flxt on the lost s-h. The Wreck 126
Seeking S-k-s daughter from over the sea, W. to Alexandra 1
The S-k's' daughter as happy as fair, „ 26
Seal s, that hung From Allan's watch, Dora 135
She sent a note, the s an Elle vous suit, Edwin Morris 105
Break lock and s : betray the trust : You might have won 18
Seal
612
Second
Seal {continued) Burst his own wyvem on the s,
The s was Cupid bent above a scroll,
Claspt on her s, my sweet !
To dissolve the precious 5 on a bond,
Stoopt, took, brake s, and read it ;
it was a bond and s Of friendship,
Aylmer's Field 516
Princess i 242
Window, The Answer 2
Maud I xix 45
Lancelot and E. 1271
Lover's Tale ii 181
Seal (an animal) follow you, as they say The s does music ; Princess iv 456
Sea-lane Revenge ran on thro' a long s-l between. The Revenge 36
Seal'd Thro' the s ear to which a louder one Was all
but silence — Aylmer's Field 696
iS it with kisses ? water'd it with tears ? CEnone 234
This I s : The seal was Cupid bent above a scroll, Princess i 241
Knowledge is now no more a fountain s : „ ii 90
Delivering 5 dispatches which the Head Took half-amazed, „ iv 379
since my will S not the bond — „ v 399
Ask me no more : thy fate and mine are s : „ vii 11
or something s The hps of that Evangelist. In Mem. xxxi 15
Or s within the iron hills ? „ Ivi 20
S her mine from her first sweet breath. Maud I xix 41
I bad her keep. Like a s book, all mention of the grin, The Ring 123
Sea-light with a wild s-l about his feet, Guinevere 242
Sea-line And fixt upon the far s-l ; The Voyage 62
Back to the dark s-l Looking, Maud 11 ii 45
Seaman prose O'er books of travell'd seamen, Amphion 82
the seamen Made a gallant crew. The Captain 5
set Annie forth in trade With all that seamen needed Enoch Arden 139
get you a s's glass, Spy out my face, „ 215
A haunt of brawUng seamen once, „ 697
Mighty S, this is he Was great by land Ode on Well. 83
Mighty S, tender and true, „ 134
seem'd to hear Its muiinur, as the drowning s hears, Lover's Tale i 635
only a hundred seamen to work the ship The Revenge 22
seamen made mock at the mad Uttle craft „ 38
the gimner said " Ay, ay,' but the seamen made reply : „ 91
Seam'd S with the shallow cares of fifty years : Aylvier's Field 814
S with an ancient swordcut on the cheek, Lancelot and E. 258
Chink'd as you see, and s — Lover's Tale i 131
Sleamew Where now the s pipes. In Mem. cxv 1^<
Sear (adj.) {See also Sere) And woods are 5, And fires
burn clear, Window, Winter 3
Sear (verb) And let my lady s the stump for him, Pelleas and E. 339
leaf rejoice in the frost that s's it at night ; The Wreck 20
Search (S) burst away In s of stream or fount, Enoch Arden 635
To seek him, and had wearied of the s. Lancelot and E. 631
went in s of thee Thro' many a palace, Demeter and P. 54
after hours of s and doubt and threats. The Ring 278
Search (verb) ' To s thro' all I felt or saw, Two Voices 139
To s a meaning for the song. Day Dm., L' Envoi 35
But it is thou whom I s from temple to temple. Akbar's D., Inscrip. 6
Searching See Spirit-searching
Sear'd S by the close ecHptic, Aylmer's Field 193
foreheads grimed with smoke, and s. Holy Grail 265
Searer The woods are all the s, Window, Winter 14
Sea-smoke upjetted in spirts of wild s-s. Sea Dreams 52
Sea-snake Till that great s-s imder the sea The Mermaid 23
Season knew the s's when to take Occasion To the Queen 30
' Win thirty s's render plain Two Voices 82
Power fitted to the s ; CEnone 123
And in its s bring the law ; Love thou thy land 32
It is a stormy s.' The Goose 8
I heard the watchman peal The sliding s : Gardener's D. 183
Then touch'd upon the game, how scarce it was This s ; Audley Court 33
Are but as poets' s's when they flower. Golden Year 28
Thro' all the s of the golden year. „ 36
Old writers push'd the happy s back, — „ 66
In divers s's, divers climes ; Day-Dm., L' Envoi 18
We circle with the s's. Will Water. 64
The sunny and the rainy s's came and went Enoch Arden 623
But subject to the s or the mood, Aylmer's Field 71
The meteor of a splendid s, „ 205
yet out of s, thus I woo thee roughly, Lucretius 271
the cube and square Were out of s : Princess, Pro. 181
And mix the s's and the golden hours ; Ode Inter. Exhib. 36
The s's bring the flower again. In Mem. ii 5
And, crown'd with all the s lent. „ xxii 6
Season {continued) No joy the blowing s gives,
break At s's thro' the gilded pale :
But served the s's that may rise ;
Like things of the s gay, like the bountiful s bland,
That blow by night, when the s is good,
Fixt in her will, and so the s's went.
' to pluck the flower in s,'
aU men's hearts became Clean for a s,
with living waters in the change Of s's :
birds that change Their s in the night
such a one As dawns but once a s.
Banner of England, not for a s,
leaves possess the s in their turn,
0 yes ! 1 hired you for a s there,
Season'd Which bears a s brain about,
Season-earlier cool as these, Tho' s-e.
Sea-sounding sad s-s wastes of Lyonesse —
Sea-sunset s-s gloryuig romid her hair
Seat (s) downward to her s from the upper cliff-
Rest in a happy place and quiet s's
had cast the curtains of their s aside —
and lady friends From neighbour s's :
part reel'd but kept their s's :
no quiet s's of the just,
freedom in her regal s Of England ;
mine is the firmer s, The truer lance :
prone from off her s she fell,
Pluck the mighty from their s,
since he would sit on a Prophet's s,
1 sprang from my s, I wept.
Seat (verb) we will s you highest :
To s you sole upon my pedestal Of worship-
Then waving as a sign to s ourselves,
Seated {See also Deep-seated) but Annie, s with her grief, Enoch Arden2S0
Then, s on a serpent-rooted beech. The Brook 135
Laurence Aylmer, s on a stile In the long hedge, „ 197
In Mem. xxxviii 5]
„ cxi 8 1
„ cxiii 4J
Maud I iv 3]
„ 7/i;7SJ
Merlin and V. 188
7231
Holy Grail 915
Pelleas and E. 5123
Pass, of Arthur 393
Lover's Tale i 3001
Def. of Lucknow 11
Prog, of Spring 1071
Romney's R. 201
Will Water. 851
Balin and Balan 274l
Merlin and V. 74l
Last Tournament 508]
CEnone 22
„ 131
Aylmer's Field 803
Princess, Pro. 98
V 496
Wages 8
In Mem. cix 14
Lancelot and E. 446
Guinevere 414
Locksley H., Sixty 133 i
Dead Prophet 53 j
Charity 37 '
Princess Hi 159
Merlin and V. 878
Lover's Tale iv 320 '
the king, the queen Bad me be s,
he was s — speaking aloud To women,
Angel s in the vacant tomb.
Blessing his field, or s in the dusk Of even.
When s on a rock, and foot to foot
Seating And, s Gareth at another board,
Sea-viUage Yonder lies our young s-v —
Sea-voice sent a deep s-v thro' all the land,
Seaward Your cannons moulder on the s wall ;
Seaward-bound s-b for health they gain'd a coast.
Seaward-gazing in a s-g mountain-gorge They built,
all day long Sat often in the s-g gorge.
Sea-water The salt s-w passes by.
Sea-wave voice of the long s-w as it swell'd
Sea-wind and over them the s-w sang Shrill,
and over them the s-w -sang Shrill,
sounds of joy That came on the s-w.
Sea-wold On the broad .f-w's in the crimson shells,
Scaworm lie Battening upon huge s's
Sea-worthy The vessel scarce s-w ;
Of others their old craft s stUl,
Second (adj.) A s voice was at mine ear,
Is bodied forth the s whole.
And hid Excalibur the s time,
'Tis like the s world to us that live ;
And o'er her s father stoopt a girl,
Yet the sad mother, for the s death
Columbus 11 1
The Wreck 48 1
Locksley H., Sixty 278 j
Demeter and P. 125 j
Romney's R. 75]
Gareth and L. 871 1
Locksley H., Sixty 245 j
Guinevere 247ij
Ode on Well. 173
Sea Dreams Ifl
Enoch Arden 558
5891
In Mem. xix 6j
Maud I xiv 31
M. d' Arthur ■
Pass, of Arthur 21fl
Lover's Tale i 326
The Mermaid i
The Kraken IS
Enoch Arden *
Pref. Son. 19th Cent,^
Two Voices •"
Love thou thy land i
M. d' Arthur 111
Golden Year i
Enoch Arden 10,
Aylmer's Field i
But when the s Christmas came, escaped His keepers.
Is it so tine that s thoughts are best ? Sea Drearns
I find you here but in the s place. Princess Hi 151
and you me Your s mother :
' The s two : they wait,' he said, ' pass on ;
Less prosperously the s suit obtain'd At first with Psyche. „ vii 71
We flung the burthen of the s James. Third of Feb. 28*
And unto me no s friend. In Mem. vi 44
Beyond the s birth of Death. „ xlv 16
If, in thy s state sublime, „ Ixi 1
She is the s, not the first ,, cxiv 16
When he comes to the s corpse in the pit ? Maud II v 88
Second
613
See
Garelh and L. 1004
1025
Marr. of Geraint 626
Fass. of Arthur 250
279
Lover's "Tale iv 343
First Quarrel 71
Sisters (E. and E.) 269
Locksley H., Sixty 68
The Ring 382
Lover's Tale iv 324
Walk to the Mail 65
Frincess ii 443
Second (adj.) {co^Uinued) The* brother in their fool's
parable —
So when they touch'd the s river-loop,
To seek a s favour at his hands.
Then went Sir Bedivere the s time
And hid Excalibur the s time,
Obedient to her s master now ;
You'll make her its 5 mother !
and in the s year was bom A s —
Felt within themselves the sacred passion of the
*■ life.
No s cloudless honeymoon was mine.
Second (s) ashes and all fire again Thrice in a s,
Second-hand fit us like a natme s-h ;
Second-sight The s-s of some Astraean age,
Secret (adj.) From many a wondrous grot and s cell The Kraken 8
Only they saw thee from the s shrine Alexander 13
and close it up With s death for ever, Wan Sculptor 13
and made appear StiU-lighted in a s shrine, Mariana in the S. 18
' Yet,' said the s voice, ' some time, Sooner or later, Two Voices 64
' But heard, by s transport led, „ 214
doors that bar The s bridal chambers of the heart, Gardener's D. 249
Then by some s shrine I ride ; Sir Galahad 29
S wrath like smother'd fuel Burnt in each man's blood. The Captain 15
And s laughter tickled all my soul. Princess iv 267
considering everywhere Her s meaning in her deeds. In Mem. Iv 10
A A- sweetness in the stream, „ Ixiv 20
Thy passion clasps a s joy : „ Ixxxviii 8
all as soon as bom Deliver'd at a s postern-gate Com. of Arthur 213
She answer'd, ' These be s things,' „ 318
That God hath told the King a s word. „ 489
In whom high God hath breathed a s thing. „ 501
A strange knee rustle thro' her s reeds, Balin and Balan 354
This fair wife-worship cloaks a s shame ? „ 360
To spy some s scandal it he might, Guinevere 26
Shut in the s chambers of the rock. Lover's Tale i 521
and not rather A sacred, s, imapproached woe, ,, 679
Then Juhan made a s sign to me ,, iv 284
strange dream to me To mind me of the s vow I made Columbus 92
There in a s olive-glade I saw PaUas Athene Tiresias 39
Wild flowers of the s woods. The Flight 82
Patient — the s splendour of the brooks. Frog, of Spring 21
Secret (s) {See also Party-secret) What know we of
the s of a man ? Walk, to the Mail 104
On s's of the brain, the stars, Day-Dm., L' Envoi 11
' But keep the s for your life, Lady Clare 34
' But keep the 5 all ye can.' „ 42
' Woman, I have a s — only swear, Enoch Arden 837
abyss Of science, and the s's of the mind : Princess ii 177
the snake, My s, seem'd to stir within my breast ; „ Hi 44
And holy s's of this microcosm. „ 313
S's of the sullen mine, Ode Inter. Exhib. 16
charnis Her s from the latest moon ? ' • In Mem. xxi 20
And all the s of the Spring „ xxiii 19
He reads the s of the star, „ xcvii 22
after-years Will learn the s of our Arthur's birth.' Com. of Arthur 159
learnt their elemental s's, powers And forces ; Merlin and V. 632
familiar friend Might well have kept his s. Lancelot and E. 593
her heart's sad s blazed itself In the heart's colours „ 836
And every homely « in their hearts, Holy Grail 552
kept our holy faith among her kin In s, „ 698
For all the s of her inmost heart, Lover's Tale i 588
Not know ? with such a s to be known. „ iv 121
and the s of the Gods. Tiresias 8
Secretest with echoing feet he threaded The s walks
of fame ; The Poet 10
Sect I care not what the s's may brawl. Palace of Art 210
To cleave a creed in s's and cries, In Mem. cxxviii 15
every splinter'd fraction of a « Will clamour Akbar's Dream 33
Seonlar on whom The s emancipation turns Of half this
world, Frincess ii 289
lighten thro' The s abyss to come, In Mem. Ixxvi 6
Seoure And in their double love s, Two Voices 418
Lie still, dry dust, s of change. To J. S. 76
as from men s Amid their marshes. Last Tournament 426
Secure {continued) look down and up. Serene, s, Early Spring 28.
Sedate The chancellor, s and vain, l)ay-pm.\Remval 29
Sedge whisper'd ' Asses' ears,' aVnong the 5, ' Princess ii 113
Seduced harlot-Uke S me from you, Romney's R. 116
See {See also Seea) S ! our friends are all forsaking All Things will Die 18
For even and morn Ye will never s Thro' etemity. „ 45
Hither, come hither and s ; Sea- Fairies 28
thro' the windows we shall s The nakedness Deserted House 10
I s thy beauty gradually unfold, Elednore 70
I seem to s Thought folded over thought, „ 83
I s thee roam, with tresses imconfined, ., 122
as far onas eye could s. // I were loved 14
Thine-eyes so wept that they could hardly s ; The Bridesmaid 2
There she s's the highway near L. of SJwlott ii 13
Like to some branch of stars we s „ Hi 11
' Still s's the sacred morning spread Two Voices 80
' I « the end, and know the good.' „ 432
You scarce could s the grass for flowei's. ,. 453
I s the wealthy miller yet, Miller's D. \
In yonder chair I s him sit, „ 9
I s his gray eyes twinkle yet At liis own jest — „ '. 11
And s the minnows everywhere In crystal eddies „ 51
The doubt my mother would not s ; „ 154
and s thy Paris judge of Gods.' CEnone 90
never more Shall lone (Enone s the morning mist Sweep
thro' them ; never s them overlaid With narrow moon-
lit slips „ 216
0 happy heaven, how canst thou s my face ? „ 236
1 dimly s My far-off doubtful purpose, „ 250
0 the Earl was fair to s ! (repeat) The Sisters 6, 12, 18, 24, 30, 36
Houris bow'd to s The dying Islamite, Palace of Art 102
Which you had hardly cared to s. L. C. V. de Vere 32
whom think ye should I s. May Queen 13
you'll be there too, mother, to s me made the Queen ; „ 26
1 would s the sun rise upon the glad New-
year, (repeat) May Queen, N. Y's. E. 2, 51
It is the last New- Year that I shall ever s, ,, 3
never s The blossom on the blackthorn, „ 7
I long to s a flower so before the day I die. „ 16
never s me more in the long gray fields „ 26
And you'll come sometimes and s me „ 30
Tho' you'll not s me, mother, „ 38
s me carried out from the threshold of the door ; ,, 42
Don't let Effie come to s me ,, 43
hear and s the far-off sparkling brine, Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 98
Waiting to s me die. D. of F. Women 112
0 me, that I should ever s the light ! „ 254
He will not s the dawn of day. D. of the 0. Year 11
A jolUer year we shall not s. „ 20
To s him die, across the waste „ 30
1 will s before I die The palms and temples You ask me, why, etc. 27
Watch what I s, and Ughtly bring thee word.' M. d' Arthur 44
I s thee what thou art, „ 123
' Now s I by thine eyes that this is done. ,. 149
Nor shall s, here or elsewhere, till I die, ,, 154
now I s the true old times are dead, „ 229 '
If thou should'st never s my face again, ,. 246
in itself the day we went To s her. Gardener's D. 76
I would wish to s My grandchild on my knees before I die : Dora 12
he may s the boy. And bless him „ 69
Allan said, ' I s it is a trick Got up betwixt you „ 95
But go you hence, and never s me more.' ., 100
He says that he will never s me more.' „ 116
Whose house is that Is? Walk, to the Mail 11
eyes Should s the raw mechanic's bloody thumbs „ 75
I s the moulder'd Abbey-walls, Talking Oak 3
when I s the woodman lift HLs axe to slay my kin, „ 235
Then not to dare to « ! Love and Duty 38
And s the great Achilles, whom we knew. Ulysses 64
Thou seest all things, thou wilt s my grave : Tithonus 73
far as himian eye could s ; (repeat) Locksley Hall 15, 119
O, I s thee old and formal, „ 93
S's in heaven the light of London „ 114
O, I s the crescent promise „ 187
And loathed to s them overtax'd ; Godiva 9
See
614
See
See (continued) heads upon the spout Had cunning eyes to s : Godiva 57 See
To s you dreaming — and, bemnd, Day- Dm., Pro. 7
And s the vision that I saw, „ 14
That lets thee neither hear nor s : „ L' Envoi 52
And wasn't it a sight to s, Amphion 49
' Let us s these handsome houses L. of Burleigh 23
S's whatever fair and splendid „ 27
S's a mansion Ynore majestic „ 45
S that sheets are on my bed ; Vision of Sin 68
To s his children leading evermore Enoch Arden 115
' Surely,' said Philip, ' I may s her now, „ 275
not to s the world — For pleasure ? —
I grieve to s you poor and wanting help :
' Yes, if the nuts ' he said ' be ripe again : Come out and s.'
what he fain had seen He could not s,
His hopes to s his owti,
Enoch yeam'd to s her face again ;
S thro' the gray skirts of a lifting squall
Not to reveal it, tiU you s me dead.'
' S your bairns before you go !
I charge you now. When you shall 5 her.
But if my children care to s me dead,
for I shall s him, My babe in bliss :
when you s her — but you shall not s her —
Uke one that s's his own excess,
Now I s My dream was Life ;
Grave, florid, stem, as far as eye could s,
Whom all the pines of Ida shook to s
nor knows he what he s's ;
he s's not, nor at all can tell
they s no men. Not ev'n her brother Arac,
I am sad and glad To s you, Florian.
I know the substance when I s it.
She s's herself in every woman else,
he could not s The bird of passage flying
More miserable than she that has a son And s's him err
That we might s our own work out,
As parts, can s but parts, now this,
A man I came to s you :
He s's his brood about thy knee ;
My one sweet child, whom I shall s no more !
I know not what — and ours shall s us friends.
' 8 that there be no traitors in your camp :
S now, tho' yourself Be dazzled by the wildfire
yet she s's me fight. Yea, let her s me fall !
I would sooner fight thrice o'er than s it.'
' But s that some one with authority
s how you stand Stiff as Lot's wife,
now should men s Two women faster welded
and s's a great black cloud Drag inward from the deeps.
Far on in summers that we shall not s :
Whom we s not we revere ;
S, empire upon empire smiles to-day,
Perhaps I shall s him the sooner,
Willy, — he didn't s me, —
I shall s him another mom : „ 67
for I couldn abear to s it. N. Farmer, 0. S. 64
run oop to the brig, an' that thou'll live to s ; „ N. S. 55
Godfather, come and s your boy : To F. D. Maurice 2
It s's itself from thatch to base Requiescat 3
I s the place where thou wilt he. Sailor Boy 8
And men will live to 5 it. Spiteful Letter 18
all we have power to s is a straight staff High. Pantheism 16
and the eye of man cannot s; „ 17
if we could s and hear, this Vision — „ 18
S they sit, they hide their faces, Boadicea 51
For kjiowledge is of things we « ; In Mem., Pro. 22
For he will s them on to-night ; „ m 33
My Arthur, whom I shall not s „ ix 17
I s the cabin-window bright ; „ a; 3
1 8 the sailor at the wheel. „ 4
And s the sails at distance rise, „ xii 11
Tears of the widower, wlien he s's A late-lost form „ xiii 1
Should s thy passengers in rank „ xiv 6
The dust of him I shall not s „ xvii 19
297
406
460
581
624
717
829
839
870
878
888
897
Ayhner's Field 309
400
Sea Dreams 136
219
Lu^etius 86
„ 132
Princess i 152
m307
413
Hi 110
209
261
270
327
iv 441
582
v8S
228
425
440
516
m226
236
240
252
vii36
Ode on Well. 234
245
W. to Marie Alex. 33
Grandmother 16
42
(continued) spirits sink To s the vacant chair. In Mem. xx Ifl
bore thee where I could not s „ xxii 11
s Within the green the moulder 'd tree, „ xxvi 81
that eye foresee Or s (in Him is no before) „ 10
And &ids ' I am not what I s, „ xlv 7
8 with clear eye some hidden shame „ li 7
I cannot s the features right, „ Ixx 1
I s thee what thou art, and know „ Ixxiv 6
But there is more than I can s, „ 9
I s thee sitting crown'd with good, „ Ixxxiv 5
I s their unborn faces shine „ 19
I s myself an honour'd guest, „ 21
To s the rooms in which he dwelt. „ Ixxxvii 16
I shall not s thee. Dare I say „ xciii 1
He s's himself in all he s's. „ xcvii 4
You leave us : you will s the Rhine, „ xcviii 1
I have not seen, I will not s Vienna ; ,,11
For those that here we s no more ; „ cw 10
I s Betwixt the black fronts „ cxix 5
That s's the course of human things. „ cxxviii 4
I s in part That all, as in some piece ,, 22
I s her pass Uke a light ; Maud I iv 11
And I s my Oread coming down, „ xvi 8
I s her there, Bright English lily, „ xix 54
I s she cannot but love him, „ 69
your true lover may s Your glory also, „ a;* 47
8 what a lovely shell, „ II ii 1
For one short hour to s The souls we loved, „ iv 14
8, there is one of us sobbing, „ v 30
we s him as he moved. How modest, Ded. of Idylls 17
shout of one who s's To one who sins, Com. of Arthur 117
but turn the blade and ye shall s, „ 303
now of late I s him less and less, „ 356
nor s's, nor hears, nor speaks, nor knows. Gareth atid L. 81
And I shall s the jousts. „ 166
come to s The glories of our King : „ 243
thou mockest me, And all that s thee, „ 290
For s ye not how weak and hungerwom I seem — „ 443
but 5 thou to it That thine own fineness, „ 475
and s Far as thou mayest, he be nor ta'en nor slain.' „ 585
S to the foe within ! bridge, ford, beset By bandits, „ 594
8 that he fall not on thee suddenly, „ 921
8 thou crave His pardon for thy breaking of his laws. „ 985
8 thou have not now Larded thy last, „ 1083
S now, sworn have I, „ 1292
I s thee maim'd. Mangled : „ 1326
And s my dear lord wounded in the strife, Marr. of Geraint 103
I s her Weeping for some gay knight in Arthur's hall.' „ 117
Queen petition'd for his leave To s the hunt, „ 155
I but come like you to s the hunt, „ 179
To noble hearts who s but acts of wrong : „ 438
Nor can s elsewhere, anything so fair. „ 499
my pride Is broken down, for Enid s's my fall ! ' „ 590
while she thought ' They will not s me,' „ 666
I s my princess as I s her now, „ 752
That other, where we s as we are seen ! Geraint and E. 7
Yourself shall s my vigour is not lost.' „ 82
how Ls it I s you here ? „ 309
I s with joy. Ye sit apart, „ 320
What thing soever ye may hear, or s, Or fancy „ 415
I s the danger which you cannot s : „ 421
it makes me mad to s you weep. „ 616
' Girl for I s ye scorn my courtesies, „ 671
For s ye not my gentlewomen here, „ 682
Which s's the trapper coming thro'jthe wood. „ 724
eyes As not to s before them on the path, „ 773
but s, or proven or not, Balin and Bodan 39
* Let who goes before me, s He do not fall behind me : „ 134
sighs to s the peak Sun-flush'd, „ 165
emblems drew mine eyes — away : For s, how perfect-
pure!
' Queen ? subject ? but I s not what I s.
they fail to s This fair wife-worship
8, yonder lies one dead within the wood.
8 now, I set thee high on vantage groimd,
266
281
359
468
534
See
See {continued) S what I s, be tbou where I have been,
I scarce can s thee now. Goodnight !
I s thee now no more.
Nor could he s but him who wrought the charm
s you not, dear love. That such a mood as that,
that no man could s her more,
S's what his fair bride is and does,
s Her godlike head crown'd with spiritual fire,
ask you not to s the shield he left,
an ye will it let me s the shield.'
' Going ? and we shall never s you more,
to s your face, To serve you,
• Not to be with you, not to s your face —
To s that she be buried worshipfully.'
to s The maiden buried, not as one unknown,
if a man Could touch or s it, he was heal'd
for thou Shalt s what I have seen,
none might s who bare it, and it past.
But since I did not s the Holy Thing,
What go ye into the wilderness to s ? '
one hath seen, and all the blind wiU s.
what thy sister taught me first to s,
thou shalt s the vision when I go.'
On either hand, as far as eye could 5,
Which never eyes on earth again shall s.
if ever loyal man and true Could s it,
cannot s for slime. Slime of the ditch :
could I touch or s the Holy Grail
Being too blind to have desire to s.
'S\ look at mine! but wilt thou fight
Content am I so that I s thy face But once a day
from the vermin that he s's Before him.
Vex not yourself : ye will not 5 me more.'
Thus to be bounden, so to s her face.
Let me be bounden, I shall s her face ;
S, the hand Wherewith thou takest this,
Tuwhoo ! do ye s it ? do ye s the star ? '
' Nay, nor will : I « it and hear,
shape Of one that in them s's himself,
forgotten all in my strong joy To s thee—
Who s your tender grace and stateliness.
sworn never to s him more. To s him more.'
pity almost makes me die To s thee.
Never he by thy side ; s thee no more —
I might s his face, and not be seen.'
so she did not s the face,
now I s thee what thou art.
We needs must love the highest when we s it.
And have not power to s it as it is :
because we s not to the close ; —
one last act of knighthood shalt thou s
Watch what I s, and lightly bring thee word.'
I s thee what thou art,
' Now s I by thine eyes that this is done.
Nor shall s, here or elsewhere, till I die,
now I s the true old times are dead,
thou should'st never s my face again,
S, sirs. Even now the Goddess of the Past,
Chink'd as you s, and seam'd —
Waiting to s some blessed shape in heaven.
From that time forth I would not s her more ;
in her you s That faithful servant
to s if work could be found ;
When I cannot s my own hand.
Couldn't s 'im, we 'eard 'im . ^
' Doesn't tha s 'im, she axes, ' fur I can s 'im ?
For s — this wine — the grape from whence
That time I did not s.
when she thought I did not s —
The Lord has so much to s to !
and we went to a to the child,
perchance the neighbours round May s,
Whom yet I s as there you sit
strange hope to s the nearer God.
eyes, that cannot s thine own, S this,
615
Seed
Balin and Balan 572
621
624
Merlin and V. 212
324
642
782
836
Lancelot and E. 653
661
926
938
946
1329
1333
Holy Orail 55
160
190
281
287
313
469
484
498
532
757
771
779
872
Pelleas and E. 127
243
285
304
326
331
Last Tournament 192
346
348
370
583
Guinevere 190
376
535
579
588
595
648
660
Pass, of Arthur 20
21
163
212
291
317
322
397
414
Lover's Tale i 15
131
312
„ ii 1
„ iv 341
First Quarrel 44
Rizpah 7
North. Cobbler 47
49
Sisters (E. and E.) 61
90
166
In the Child Hasp. 57
68
Achilles over the T. 13
To E. Fitzgerald 5
Tiresias 29
108
See {continued) S, we were nursed in the drear night-fold
s's and stirs the surface-shadow
Despair 21
Ancient Sage 38
72
81
283
The Flight 8
91
s's the Best that glimmers thro' the Worst,
Who s not what they do ? '
s The high-heaven dawn of more than mortal day
waken every morning to that face I loathe to s :
And 5 the ships from out the West
I seem to s a new-dug grave up yonder by the yew ! „ 98
people 'ud s it that wint in to mass— Tom^yrrmo 74
Thou s's that i' spite o' the men Spinster s S s. 11
guide us thro' the days I shall not s ? Locksley H., Sixty 158
whence you s the Locksley tower, » |7o
and even where you s her now — « 17»
We should s the Globe we groan in, „ loo
Man or Mind that s's a shadow .. l»o
those about us whom we neither s nor name, „ ^7J
s the highest Human Nature is divine. „ ■^76
But scarce could s, as now we s. Epilogue ^
all in vain As far as man can s, x. :, t> " i . co
Shall we s to it, I and you ? -»««* Prophet 52
' S, what a little heart,' she said, » 75
both our Houses, may they s Beyond the borough Hands ail Mound Zl
those gilt gauds men-children swarm to s. To W. C. Macready 11
For s, thy foot has touch'd it ; Bemeter and P. 48
124
149
Owd Rod 87
The Ring 144
148
223
279
328
364
370
479
Happy 19
„ 54
„ 85
To Ulysses 17
Prog, of Spring 29
88
Will s me by the landmark far away,
s no more The Stone, the Wheel,
I couldn't s iuT the smoake
not shown To dazzle all that s them ?
that s's A thousand squares of com and meadow,
and cried ' I s him, lo t'amo, lo t'amo.'
' s ! — Found in a chink of that old moulder'd floor !
and s beneath our feet The mist of autumn
In all the world my dear one s's but you—
as a man Who s's his face in water,
till she s's Her maiden coming like a Queen,
He s's me, waves me from him.
and weeping scarce could s ;
S, I sinn'd but for a moment.
And s my cedar green, and there My giant ilex
gladly s I thro' the wavering flakes
Beyond the darker hour to s the bright.
The best in me that s's the worst in me. And groans , t. ..
to s it, finds no comfort there. ^V"-^ * ^- T5
S, there is hardly a daisy. ^ , , The Throstle 12
0 God in every temple I s people that s thee, Akbar s D., Inscrip. 1
once again we s thee rise. « ^^"t? \
Sm, do you s this dagger? ^ Bandit s Death 5
He s's not her Uke anywhere in this pitiless world Charity 4^
And s and shape and do. ^ Mechanophilus'k
1 hope to s my Pilot face to face Crossing the Bar i&
Seea (see) when they s's ma a passin' boy,
if tha s's 'im an' smeUs 'im
I browt what tha s's stannin' theer,
Seea'd (saw) S her todaay goa by —
Seead I s that our Sally went laamed
S nobbut the smile o' the sun
Seead (seed) an' some on it down i' s.
Seeadin' (seeding) wool of a thistle a-flyin' an s tha
haated to see ;
Seeam (seem) 'E s's naw moor nor watter,
Seeam'd (seemed) an' s as blind as a poop.
Seed (See also Arrow-seed, Seead) having sown some
generous s, ^'""' Voices 143
Sow the s, and reap the harvest Lotos-Eaters, C.S. 121
Bear s of men and growth of minds. Love thou thy land 20
That sought to sow themselves like winged s's, Gardener s D. 05
Not only we, the latest s of Time,
Nor cared for s or scion !
The vilest herb that runs to s
But in my words were s's of fire.
and thus a noble scheme Grew up from s
the s, The little s they laugh'd at in the dark,
save the one true s of freedom sown
Once in a golden hour I cast to earth a s.
thieves from o'er the wall Stole the s by night.
N. Farmer, 0. S. 53
North. Cobbler 66
70
N. Farmer, N. S. 13
North. Cobbler 39
50
N. Farrn^, 0. S. 40
Spinster's S's. 79
North. Cobbler 76
Owd Rod 101
Godiva 5
Amphion 12
95
The Letters 28
Princess iv 310
„ vi 33
Ode on Well. 162
The Flower 2
12
Seed
Seed (continued) For all have got the s.
And finding that of fifty s's
This bitter s among mankind ;
Ray romid with flames her disk of 5,
Long sleeps the summer in the s ;
is but s Of what in them is flower
three gray linnets wrangle for the s :
winds, Laden with thistledown and s's
Eastern gauze With s's of gold — •
for I loathe The s of Cadmus —
Daughter of the s of Cain,
Accomplish that blind model in the s,
Seed (saw) nor 'e niver not s to owt,
but Robby I s thruf ya theere.
Fur I s that Steevie wur coomin',
fur I s that it couldn't be,
Fur I s the beck coomin' down
I s at 'is faace wur as red as the Yule-block
then I s 'er a-cryin', I did.
'at summun s i' the flaame,
Ay, an' ya s the Bishop.
An' keeaper 'e s ya an roon'd,
Seed (seen) I niver ha s it sa white wi' the Maay
An' they niver 'ed s sich ivin'
See'd (saw) white wi' the Maay es I s it to-year-
616
The Flower 20
In Mem. Iv 11
„ xc 4
„ ci 6
ot26
„ Con. 135
Guinevere 255
Lover's Tale ii 13
,, iv 292
Tiresias 117
Forlorn 39
Prog, of Spring 114
Village Wife 51
Spinster's S's. 14
40
47
Owd Rod 40
56
80
94
Church-warden, etc. 17
28
Village Wife 80
Owd Rod 26
Village Wife 80
See'd (seen) boooks, I ha' s 'em, belong'd to the Squire, „ 71
Seeded Across the silent s meadow-grass Borne, Pelleas and E. 561
Seeding See Seeadin'
Seedling as Nature packs Her blossom or her s, Enoch Arden 179
Seedsman s, rapt Upon the teeming harvest. Golden Year 70
Seeing (See also All-seeing) S all his own mischance — L. of Shalott iv 12
s men, in power Only, are likest gods, (Enone 129
s not That Beauty, Good, and Knowledge, To , With Pal. of Art 9
AveriU s How low his brother's mood had fallen, Aylmer's Field 403
we should find the land Worth s ; Princess Hi 172
S I saw not, hearing not I heard : „ vi 19
s either sex alone Is half itself, „ vii 301
And oiu" s is not sight. Voice arid the P. 36
S his gewgaw castle shine, Maud I x 18
her men, S the mighty swarm about their walls. Com. of Arthur 200
S that ye be grown too weak and old „ 511
s the city is built To music, Gareth and L. 276
s he hath sent us cloth of gold, „ 428
s who had work'd Lustier than any, „ 695
And s now thy words are fair, „ 1181
S he never rides abroad by day ; „ 1334
And all the three were silent s, „ 1362
And s them so tender and so close, Marr. of Geraint 22
And s one so gay in purple silks, „ 284
And s her so sweet and serviceable, „ 393
s I have sworn That I will break his pride „ 423
Danced in his bosom, s better days. „ 505
Then s cloud upon the mother's brow, „ 777
Arthur s ask'd ' Tell me your names ; Balin and Balan 49
s that thy realm Hath prosper'd in the name of Christ, „ 98
Balin first woke, and s that true face, „ 590
And s me, with a great voice he cried, Lancelot and E. 309
s that ye forget Obedience is the courtesy „ 717
iS it is no more Sir Lancelot's fault „ 1075
Yet, s you desire your child to live, „ 1095
S I never stray'd beyond the cell, Holy Grail 628
s that the King must guard That which he rules, „ 905
and s Pelleas droop. Said Guinevere, Pelleas and E. 178
80 went back, and s them yet in sleep „ 445
s they profess To be none other (repeat) Last Tournament 82, 85
s too much wit Makes the world rotten, „ 246
Let be thy Mark, » he is not thine.' „ 522
Flatter me rather, s me so weak, „ 642
<S it is not bounded save by love.' „ 703
S forty of our poor hundred were slain, The Revenge 76
8 what a door for scoundrel scum I open'd Cdvmbus 170
Seek When my passion s's Pleasance Lilian 8
What wantest thou ? whom dost thou s, Oriana 71
We would run to and fro, and hide and s. The Mermaid 35
And seem to find, but still to s. Two Voices 96
Seek (continued) I s a warmer sky,
"Tis not too late to s a newer world.
to s, to find, and not to yield.
To those that s them issue forth ;
He comes, scarce knowing what he s's :
' O s my father's court with me,
childless mother went to s her child ;
' Hist 0 Hist,' he said, ' They s us :
where you s the common love of these.
He s's at least Upon the last
s A friendship for the years to come.
But s's to beat in time with one
To s thee on the mystic deeps,
And so that he find what he went to s,
I will s thee out Some comfortable bride
twelvemonth and a day, nor s my name.
S, tiU we find.'
I s a harbourage for the night.'
To s a second favour at his hands.
had ridd'n a random round To s him,
my craven s's To wreck thee villainously :
' to s the Lord Jesus in prayer ;
made by me, may s to unbury me,
sworn to s If any golden harbour
then so keen to s The meanings ambush'd
Seem
You ask me, why, etc. 26
Ulysses 57
„ 70
Day -Dm., Arrival 2
17
Depart. 27
Aylmer's Field 829
Princess iv 219
„ vill2
In Mem. xlvii 12
„ Ixxxv 79
115
„ cxxv 14
Maud I xvi 3
Gareth and L. 93
446
1279
Marr. of Geraint 299
626
Lancelot and E. 631
Last Tournament 548
In the Child. Hosp. 18
Columbus 206
Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 12
Tiresias 4
the rebel subject 5 to drag me from the throne. By an Evolution. 15
Seeker See Self-seeker
Seeki]^ in s to undo One riddle, Two Voices 232
S a tavern which of old he knew, Enoch Arden 691
For love or fear, or s favour of us, Marr. of Geraint 7(X)
weak beast s to help herself By striking Merlin and V. 498
Seeling Diet and s, jesses, leash „ 125
Seem (See also Seeam) And children all s full of
Thee ! Supp. Confessions 21
things that s. And things that be, „ 173
I s to see Thought folded over thought, Elednore 83
or s To lapse far back in some confused dream Sonnet To 2
' He s's to hear a Heavenly Friend, Two Voices 295
' Moreover, something is or s's, „ 379
So sweet it s's with thee to walk. Miller's D. 29
It s's in after-dinner talk „ 31
I may s. As in the nights of old, ,, 165
would s to award it thine, CEnone 73
Howe'er it be, it s's to me, L. C. V. de Vere 53
And now it s's as hard to stay. May Queen, Con. 10
0 sweet and strange it s's to me, „ 53
s to mourn and rave On alien shores ; Lotos-Eaters 32
It s's I broke a close with force and anns : Edwin Morris 131
She s's a part of those fresh days to me ; ,, 142
So s's she to the boy. Talking Oak 108
' So strange it s's to me. Lady Clare 52
Evermore she s's to gaze On that cottage L. of Burleigh 34
1 s so foolish and so broken down. Enoch Arden 316
s's, as I re-listen to it. The Brook 18
My mother, as it s's you did, „ 225
I s to be ungraciousness itself.' Aylmer's Field 245
King of the East altho' he s, Lucretius 133
s's some unseen monster lays His vast and filthy hands 219
since the nobler pleasure s's to fade. 230
I would be that for ever which I s. Princess H 257
Methinks he s's no better than a girl ; „ Hi 218
7 s no more : I want forgiveness too : „ vi 290
That s to keep her up but drag her down — „ vii 270
I s A mockery to my own self. ,, 336
Mourn, for to us he s's the last. Ode on Well. 19 _
Who s's a promontory of rock, WiU ft
tho' He be not that which He s's ? High. Pantheism 3'
So s's it in my deep regret, In Mem. viii 17
I s to meet their least desire, „ Ixxxiv 17
I s to love thee more and more. „ cxxx 12
It s's that I am happy, Maud I xviii 50
undercurrent woe That s's to draw — „ 84
indeed He s's to me Scarce other Ded. of Idylls 6
I s as nothing in the mighty world. Com. of Arthur 87
there is nothing in it as it s's Saving the King ; Gareth and L. 264
Seem
617
Seem'd
{continued) s's Wellnigh as long as thou art
statured tall ! Gareth and L. 281
see ye not how weak and hungerworn I s — „ 444
S I not as tender to him As any mother ? „ 1283
ye s agape to roar ! „ 1306
For tho' it s's my spurs are yet to win. Mart, of Geraint 128
Who s's no bolder than a beaten hound ; Geraint and E. 61
who sits apart, And s's so lonely ? ' ,, 300
It s's another voice in other groves ; Balin and Balan 215
s's a flame That rages in the woodland far below, „ 233
For thanks it s till now neglected, Merlin and V. 308
makes you s less noble than yourself, „ 322
since ye s the Master of all Art, „ 468
That s a sword beneath a belt of three, „ 510
wreathen round it made it s his own ; ., 735
My father, howsoe'er I s to you, Lancelot and E. 1092
but s Mute of this miracle. Holy Grail 65
Until this earth he walks on s's not earth, „ 912
mine the blame that oft I s as he Last Tournament 115
the glance That only s's half-loyal to command, — „ 118
Behold, I s but King among the dead.' Pass, of Arthur 146
(For they s many and my most of life. Lover's Tale i 185
All this S's to the quiet daylight of your minds „ 296
S's but a cobweb filament to link „ 376
tho' she s so like the one you lost, „ iv 365
eyes frown : the lips S but a gash. Sisters (E. and E.) 107
s Like would-be guests an hour too late, Tiresias 197
brain was drunk with the water, it s's ; Despair 65
s to flicker past thro' sun and shade, Ancient Sage 100
I s to see a new-dug grave up yonder The Flight 98
s's to me now like a bit of yisther-day Tomorrow 8
The days that s to-day, Pref. Poem Broth. S. 24
A ' Miriam ' that might s a ' Muriel ' ; The Ring 241
May s the black ox of the distant plain. To one tcho ran down Eng. 4
I s no longer like a lonely man Akbar's Dream 20
But such a tide as moving s's asleep. Crossing the Bar 5
Seem'd {See also See&m'd) In sleep she s to walk forlorn, Mariana 30
s to shake The sparkling flints Arabian Nights 51
there s Hundreds of crescents on the roof „ 128
And s knee-deep in mountain grass, Mariana in the S. 42
Such s the whisper at my side : Two Voices 439
There s no room for sense of wrong ; „ 456
S half -within and half -without. Miller's D. 7
Floated her hair or s to float in rest. (Enone 19
on every peak a statue s To hang on tiptoe, Palace of Art 37
One s all dark and red — a tract of sand, „ 65
You s to hear them climb and fall „ 70
without light Or power of movement, s my soul, „ 246
It s so hard at first, mother, May Queen, Con. 9
s to go right up to Heaven and die „ 40
In which it s always afternoon. Lotos-Eaters 4
A land where all things s the same ! „ 24
And deep-asleep he s, yet all awake, „ 35
Most weary s the sea, weary the oar, ., 41
I started once, or s to start in pain, D. of F. Women 41
in her throat Her voice s distant. To J. S 55
there s A touch of something false, Edwin Morris 73
' Yet s the pressure thrice as sweet Talking Oak 145
how hard it s to me, When eyes. Love and Duty 35
he s To his great heart none other than a God ! Tithonus 13
We s to sail into the Sun ! The Voyage 16
Now nearer to the prow she s „ 67
She s a part of joyous Spring : Sir L. and Q. G. 23
Rose again from where it s to fail. Vision of Sin 24
the girl S kinder unto Philip than to him ; Enoch Arden 42
He s, as in a nightmare of the night, „ 114
while Annie s to hear Her own death-scaffold raising, „ 174
for Enoch s to them Uncertain as a vision „ 355
A footstep s to fall beside her path, „ 514
There often as he watch'd or s to watch, „ 600
idiotlike it s, With inarticulate rage, „ 639
it s he saw No pale sheet-lightnings from afar, Aylmer's Field 725
Fought with what s my own imcharity ; Sea Dreams 73
That s a fleet of jewels under me, „ 123
for it s A void was made in Nature ; Lucretius 36
Seem'd (continued) I s to move among a world of ghosts, Princess i 17
the snake. My secret, s to stir within my breast ; „ Hi 44
I s to move among a world of ghosts ; „ iv 561
neither s there more to say : „ v 330
and s to charm from thence The wrath „ 436
I s to move in old memorial tilts, „ 479
Yet it s a dream, I dream'd Of fighting. „ 492
For so it s, or so they said to me^ „ vi 22
pitying as it s, Or self-involved ; „ 157
nor s it strange that soon He rose up whole, „ vii 64
meek S the full lips, and mild the luminous eyes, „ 226
Had ever s to wrestle with burlesque, „ Con. 16
He is gone who s so great.— Ode on Well. 271
That s to touch it into leaf : In Mem. Ixix 18
The gentleness he .s to be, „ cxi 12
Best s the thing he was, and join'd „ 13
tho' there often s to hve A contradiction „ cxxv 3
If Maud were all that she s, (repeat) Maud I vi 36, 92
S her light foot along the garden walk, „ xviii 9
Ever and ever afresh they s to grow. ., II i 28
sad At times he s, and sad with him was I, Com. of Arthur 853
high upon the dreary deeps It s in heaven, „ 374
it s The dragon-boughts and elvish emblemings Gareth and L. 232
that ev'n to him they s to move. „ 237
all Naked it s, and glowing in the broad „ 1088
for he s as one That all in later, „ 1128
so Gareth s to strike Vainly, ., 1133
s The dress that now she look'd on Marr. of Geraint 612
But evermore it s an easier thing Geraint and E. 108
Whereof one s far larger than her lord, ,, 122
and s So justified by that necessity, „ 395
How far beyond him Lancelot s to move, Balin and Balan 172
The music m him s to change, „ 217
fought Hard with himself, and s at length in peace. „ 239
Ev'n when they s imloveable. Merlin and V. 176
The man so wrought on ever s to lie „ 208
s a lovely baleful star Veil'd in gray vapour ; „ 262
You s that wave about to break upon me „ 302
course of life that s so flowery to me „ 880
he s the goodliest man That ever among ladies Lancelot and E. 254
He s to me another Lancelot — „ 534
When some brave deed s to be done in vain, Holy Grail 274
s to me the Lord of all the world,
s Shoutings of all the sons of God :
in a dream I s to climb For ever :
It s to Pelleas that the fern without
have s A vision hovering on a sea of fire,
she that s the chief among them said,
She might have s a toy to trifle with,
S my reproach ? He is not of my kind.
hard his eyes ; harder his heart S ;
S those far-rolling, westward-smiling seas,
he s to me no man. But Michael trampling Satan
from the dawn it s there came.
It s to keep its sweetness to itself. Yet was not
the less sweet for that it s ?
the sunshine s to brood More warmly
s a gossamer filament up in air,
I died then, I had not s to die,
I s the only part of Time stood still,
then it s as tho' a link Of some tight chain
and then I s to hear Its murmur.
The spirit s to flag from thought to thought,
motions of my heart s far within me,
then I s To rise, and through the forest-shadow
at his feet I s to faint and fall,
it s By that which foUow'd —
Found, as it s, a skeleton alone,
such a feast, ill-suited as it s To such a time,
S stepping out of darkness with a smile,
veil, that s no more than gilded air,
cry, that rather s For some new death
Often I s unhappy, and often as happy too,
We s like ships i' the Channel
to be found Long after, as it s.
414
508
836
Pdleas and E. 34
51
62
76
311
513
Last Tournament 587
; „ 672
Pass, of Arthur 457
Lover's Tale i 154
327
413
494
573
594
634
n 51
54
71
96
iv21
139
207
220
290
373
First Quarrel 31
42
SisUrs (E. and E.) Ill
Seem'd
618
Seen
Seem'd {continued) I spent What s my crowning hour, Sisters (E. and E. ) 124
every bone s out of its place — In the Child. Hosp. 13
it s she stood by me and smiled, „ 67
s at first ' a thing enskied ' To E. Fitzgerald 16
I s in Paradise then With the first great love The Wreck 75
For He spoke, or it s that He spoke, Despair 26
.S nobler than their hard Eternities. Demeter and P. 107
voice Came on the wind, and s to say ' Again.' The Ring 154
s my lodestar in the Heaven of Art, Eomney's R. 39
cry, that s at first Thin as the batlike Death of (Enone 20
Seemest thou art not who Thou s, Gareth and L. 291
Seeming {See also Hard-seeming) My needful s harshness,
pardon it. Princess ii 309
Till taken with her s openness „ iv 300
The s prey of cyclic storms. In Mem. cxviii 11
Which s for the moment due to death. Lover's Tale i 508
He falling sick, and s close on death, „ iv 258
This double 5 of the single world ! — Ancient Sage 105
$ stared upon By ghastlier than the Gorgon head. Death of Qinone 70
Seeming-bitter words are s-h, Sharp and few, but s-h Rosalind 30
Seemimg-deathless Here we stood and claspt each
other, swore the s-d vow. . . . Locksley H., Sixty 180
Seeming-genial Or s-g venial fault, WUl 13
Seeming-injured The s-i simple-hearted thing Merlin and V. 902
Seeming-leafless pass His autimin into s-l days — A Dedication 10
Seeming-random grew to s-r forms. In Mem. cxviii 10
Seeming-wanton make The s-w ripple break, „ xlix 11
Seen {See also Far-seen, One-day-seen, Seed, See'd) Then
once by man and angels to be s. The Krdken 14
And faint, rainy lights are s, Margaret 60
But who hath s her wave her hand ? Or at the
casement s her stand ? L. of Shalott i 24
(Beauty s In all varieties of mould and
mind) To , With Pal. of Art 6
thro' mountain clefts the dale Was s far inland. Lotos- Eaters 21
'Tis long since I have s a man. D. of F. Women 131
Such joy as you have s with us, D. of the 0. Year 17
Two years his chair is s Empty before us. To J. S. 22
What is it thou hast s ? (repeat) M. d' Arthur 68, 114
what is it thou hast heard, or s ? ' „ 150
from his youth in grief. That, having s, forgot ? Gardener's D. 55
You should have s him wince Walk, to the Mail 71
nor have s Him since, nor heard of her, Edwin Morris 137
I have s some score of those Fresh faces. Talking Oak 49
Much have I s and known ; Ulysses 13
As I have s the rosy red flushing Locksley Hall 26
glimpsing over these, jast s, High up, Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 47
High towns on hills were dimly s, The Voyage 34
She in her poor attire was s : Beggar Maid 10
Faint as a figure s in early dawn Enoch Arden 357
what he fain had s He could not see, ,. 580
For since the mate had s at early dawn ,. 631
Because things s are mightier than things heard, ,, 766
If you could tell her you had s him dead, „ 808
little port Had seldom s a costlier funeral. .. 917
Squire had s the colt at grass, The Brook 139
He must have s, himself had s it long ; Aylmer's Field 345
she herself Had s to that : ,, 805
Or, maybe, I myself, my bride once s, Princess i 72
some dark shore just s that it was rich. ,. 249
' having s And heard the Lady Psyche.' „ ii 210
As bottom agates s to wave and float „ 327
after 5 The dwarfs of presage : ,. iv 446
nor ever had I s Such thews of men : „ v 255
So often that I speak as having s. ,. vi 21
Ida came behind (S but of Psyche : „ vii 79
Ere s I loved, and loved thee s, ,. 341
Imagined more than s, the skirts of France. „ Con. 48
World-victor's victor will be s no more. Ode on Well. 42
Colossal, s of every land, „ 221
s A light amid its olives green ; The Daisy 29
Whom we, that have not s thy face. In Mem., Pro. 2
If Death were s At first as Death, „ xxxvl9i
How many a father have I s, „ liii 1
A likeness, hardly a before, „ Ixxiv 3
Seen {continued) I have not s, I will not see Vienna ; In Mem. xcviii H
0 earth, what changes hast thou s ! „ cxxiii I
(for her eyes were downcast, not to be s) Maud I ii i
Shall I believe him ashamed to be s ? „ xiii I
' I have s the cuckoo chased by lesser fowl, Com. of Arthur Ifl
And gone as soon as s. „ 377
' Son, I have s the good ship sail Keel upward, Gareth and L. 25
Accursed, who strikes nor lets the hand be s ! '
have I watch'd thee victor in the joust. And s thy way.' „ 1357|
milky-white. First s that day : Marr. of Geraint 151
Tho' having s all beauties of our time.
My pride is broken : men have s my fall.'
She never yet had s her half so fair ;
That other, where we see as we are s !
have ye s how nobly changed ?
Far s to left and right ;
' Fairest I grant her : I have s ;
The longest lance his eyes had ever s,
1 for three days s, ready to fall.
You should have s him blush ;
Him have I s : the rest, his Table Round,
' One, One have I s — that other,
I might say that I had s.'
So great a knight as we have s to-day —
peradventure had he s her first She might have made
' O brother, I have s this yew-tree smoke,
' Sweet brother, I have s the Holy Grail :
the vision may be s By thee and those,
for thou shalt see what I have s,
Because I had not s the Grail,
as I have s it more than once,
' Art thou so bold and hast not s the Grail ? '
knight by knight, if any Had s it,
' Lo now,' said Arthur, ' have ye s a cloud ?
never yet Had Camelot s the like, since Arthur came
' Where is he ? hast thou s him — Lancelot ? —
well had been content Not to have s, so Lancelot
might have s. The Holy Cup
— ^hast thou s the Holy Cup,
thou hast s the Grail ; '
For these have s according to their sight.
if the King Had s the sight he would have sworn
ye have s what ye have s.'
thou hast s me strain'd And sifted to the utmost,
And s her sadden listening — vext his heart,
for I have s him wan enow To make one doubt
I might see his face, and not be s.'
It would have been my pleasure had I s.
What is it thou hast s ? (repeat)
what is it thou hast heard, or s ? '
Hehe far away, s from the topmost cliff.
These have not s thee, tliese can never know thee
(As I have s them many a hundred times)
Would you had s him in that hour of his !
0 love, I have not s you for so long.
He, but for you, had never s it once.
We should be s, my dear ;
and half to the left were s,
passion, s And lost and found again,
an which was a shaame to be s ;
1 never had s him before,
he had s it and made up his mind,
apples, the hugest that ever were s,
be blind, for thou hast s too much,
This wealth of waters might but s to draw
that rule Were never heard or «.'
Here where yer Honour s her —
I tould yer Honour whativer I hard an' s,
I have s her far away —
in the wars your own Crimean eyes had s ;
eyes Have s the loneliness of earthly thrones.
And those lone rights I have not s,
eyes That oft had s the serpent-wanded power
Stranger than earth has ever s ;
I had s the man but once ;
578
7411
Geraint and E. Ti
8971
Balin and Balan '.
35ftJ
411
Alerlin and V. 296
481 j
Lancelot and E. 185 '
423 i
427
533'
872 I
Holy Grail 18 '
107
127
160 1
196
273
279
284
286
332
654*
734
757
875
904
919
Pelleas and E. 247
398
Last Tournament 563
Guinevere 588
659
Pass, oj Arthur 236, 282
318
Lover's Tale i 1
285
ii 145
„ iv8
45
173
Rizpah 5
The Revenge 35
Sisters {E. and E.) 146
VUlage Wife 50
In the Child. Hosp. 1
16
V. of Maeldune 63
Tiresias 49
Ancient Sage 9
30
Tomorrow 9
97
Locksley H., Sixty 166
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 12
To Prin. Beatrice 14
To Marq. of Dufferin 39
Demeter and P. 25
The Ring 38
., 190
Seen
619
SeU
Seen (cmtinued) one betwixt the dark and light had s Her, The Ring 414
never had I s her show remorse— " ^ '
But s upon the silent brow ^ , ^ , HapPV f.
-a sun^but dimly s Here, ^Icbar's Dreamdb
That is not s and rules from far away— " !:^°
were s or heard Fires of Suttee, - „ "T^
To have s thee, and heard thee, and known. r^'''?tl^ « • it
SeSr Like some bold s in a trance, i. "(.'^'^J^/'kl^
Seer Then that old <S made answer playmg on hiin Gareth and L. ZbZ
S replied, ' Know ye not then the Riddlmg of the Bards ? „ ^85
the is Would watch her at her petulance, Merlm aiid V. 174
Her s, her bard, her sUver stai- of eve, ... »o*
From out his ancient city came s. ^ ^j^ncient SageZ
Seest Thou pleadest still, and s me drive Supv.Confesswns^^
Thou s the Nameless of the hundred names. ^««j«t Sage 49
Seest Watch what thou s, and lightly bring me word.' M. d Arthur 6b
I am going a long way With these thou s— .. f2^
s all thinS, thou wUt see my grave: /f%TJi
Watch %vhat thou «, and lightly brmg me word.' Pass, of Arthur 20b
I am going a long way With these thou s— .. ./S?
s Universe Nature moved by Universal Mmd ; To Virgil 21
See'st And . the moving of the team. r^'IZ/T'il
Seethe Began to move, 5, twine and curl : GarrtA ar^ i. 234
Seeded Shke the kid in its own mother's milk ! MerZm a«^ F. 869
sSthing when the suige was. free, ^"'"^"^'^iL £o,l
Shot o'er the s harbour-bar, ? ]wL^ 191
Save for some whisper of the s seas. Pass, of ^^t^ur IZl
Seine The red fool-fury of the -S ^"phZssTA
Seize ' *' the strangers ' is the cry. rnncess %v ^^u
To . and thro# the doubts of man ; ^W^^Tj ' , 1^
But sorrow s me if ever that light ^l^vA I ivll
To s me by the hair and bear me far, Lancelot and h. 14^&
Seized tUl at last a fever « On William, aI^jZ^M^
Then desperately s the holy Book, i^noch Ardm 495
S it, took home, and to my lady,- Aylmer s Ff^Jf
Me hey . and me they tortured, E 'lf\
A hunger . my heart ; I read ^nMem xcv2\
And standeth s of that inheritance ,^ ^""'^r ^"^ • ; fi7Q
therewithal one came and s on her, . Mfl"-- ?/ e^'?*^' 673
suddenlv s on her. And bare her by mam violence Geraint and h. b&rf
I should have slain your father, s yourself. , /' j p A7fi
a furv s them aU, A fiery family passion Lancelot and /i. 4/b
Saying which she s. And, thro' the casement ,. .-i^^g
There fever 5 upon him: . ^'^ / %,7 fi?5
.S him, and boiiid and plunged him Holy failjl^
They s me and shut me up : 1?" i qn
who sack'd My dweUing, s upon my papers, i^w SL S
and 5 one another and slew; r 7 • "^ ? Sr dS
s thereupon Push'd thro' an open casement Balm and Balan 41/
.„ Myself too had weird s'5. Princess lU
what, if these weird s's come Upon you .. ... -.^i
On a sudden my strange s came Upon me, .. "^ ^°^
came On a sudden the weird s and the doubt : , '' j ^ 7i^
Seldom-frowning The s-/ King frown'd, ^T^r iiu'iiA
ffis^ "z^S-self, Sel Wolld-self ) Smote the chord of 8, Lochsl^EalUZ
Half fearful that, with s at strife, W' *« f^^^T- 161
He not for his o^-n s caring but her, FTtuviTd 537
chafing at his own great s defied, ^2/^'««'- ^ -f^*^''^ ^37
And to thy worst s sacrifice thyself, " Rdfi
with thy worst s hast thou clothed thy God. . ^o
We touch on our dead s, i'rincess m ^^i
Her falser s shpt from her Uke a robe, .. ^^ ^"^
lives A dro\vning life, besotted m sweet 5, .. ^^3
I seem A mockery to my own s. " . ,, ^^^
learns to deaden Love of s, . ^ ^ '^tr /iLVn
strain to make an inch of room For their sweet selves, Lit. SluMles 10
stepping-stones Of their dead selves -*« ^i 8
transient form In her deep s, " , .. „
fusing all The skirts of s agam, " y^^^^
praymg To his own great s, as I gue.ss ; f a It At
Bound them by so strait vows to his own ., ^r-jLtfTlSi
There rides no knight, not Lancelot, his great s, Gareth and L. 1182
fool'd Of others, is to fool one's s. " -,10
after her own 5,'in all the court. Marr. of Geramt 18
that and these to her own faded s " "^-^
Self (continued) whether some false sense in her own s Marr. of Geraint 800
overthrow My proud s, and my purpose Geramt and Jl. »4y
crown'd With my slain s the heaps of whom I
glg^ Balm and Balan 178
To keep me all to your own s,— Merlin and V. 523
imputing her whole s. Defaming and defacing, , /' ^ t;. oliX
' Save your great s, fair lord ; ' Lancelot and L. 320
There mom by mom, arraying her sweet s .. 900
There surely I shall speak for mine own s, .. li^
wail'd and wept, and hated mine own s, Uoly GraU wy
for nothing moved but his own s, Pelleas and E. 417
the King's grief For his own s, Guinevere 197
judge between my slander'd s and me— LoLunibus 1^0
dive into the Temple-cave of thine own s, Ancient '5a?e 32
mortal limit of the S was loosed, .- ^^^
thro' loss of S The gain of such large life ^ , " , i, ,?
memories once again On thy lost s. Demeter ai^ P. 11
while I communed with my tmest s. The King 181
she loves her own hard 5, . , , a. 1 f "7? /Jw
forgotten mine own rhyme By mine old s, To Mary Boyle 22
Into the common day, the sounder s. Romneys R. 66
Rose, like the wraith of his dead s, Death of(Enone2S
Self-applause Not void of righteous s-a. Two Voices 14b
Self-balanced S-b on a lightsome wing : In Mein. 1^8
Self-blinded ' S-h are you by your pride : Two Vowes 26
Self-conceit some s-c, Or over-smoothness : Edwm Morris U
Self-contain'd High, 5-c, and passionless, Guinevere my
Self-contempt Perish in thy s-c ! Locksley Hall 9b
Self-content increased Her greatness and her s-c. To Marg. ofDuffertnS
Self-control ' Self -reverence self-knowledge, s-c, ULnone ifi
With faith that comes of s-c, Jn Mem cxxxi9
Self-darken'd S-d in the sky, descending slow ! Prog, of Spring 28
W' hich drowsed in gloom, s-d from the west, Beath of (Lnone 7b
Self-distrust It is my shyness, or my s-d, Edwin Morris 86
Self-exile that resolved s-e from a land Lover s Tale iv 209
Self-gather'd S-g in her prophet-mind. Of old sat Freedom 6
Self-Mold s-i'/the large results Of force In Mem lxxinl5
Self-involved Which all too dearly s-i, Bay-Bm., L ^nvoi\^
dull and s-i. Tall and erect, Aylnier s Field 118
pitying as it seem'd. Or s-i ; Princess vi 158
Selfidi NSr in a merely s cause- Two I o^es 147
I was left a trampled orphan, and a s micle's ward. Locksley Hall 15b
Which made a s war begin ; To F. D Maurice 30
Perhaps from a s grave. fl"''^JS"\l^
Not muffled round with s reticence. . Merlm and V . 66 i
S strange ! What dwarfs are men ! Sisters (E. and E.) 19S
Self-knowledge SeH-reverence, s-A:, self-control, ^Tv]^
Selfless As high as woman in her s mood. Merlm and V. 443
O s man and stainless gentleman, , cu rr ," / 00
lazving out a Ufe Of self-suppression, not of s love.' St. TelemachusJZ
Self-pen)le1t look'd so s-p. That Katie laugh'd. The Brook 2^
Self-pity for languor and 5-p ran Mine down my face. Princess vn ^9
And sweet s-f, or the fancy of it, Geramt andE. 3^
Self-pleached Round thee blow, s-p deep, ADxrge^
Self-possess'd neither s-f Nor startled, Garden^s D. 154
Self-profit judge of fair, Unbias'd by s-p, (Enone-m
Self-renew'd ^d freshness ever s-r. ^ Lover's Tale 1 106
Self-reverence S-r, self-knowledge, self-control, . (Enone 144
Self-reverent S-r each and reverencing each. Princess vn 290
Self-sacrifice The long s-s of Ufe is o'er. OdeonWell.il
And aU her sweet s-s and death. Sisters {E.and E.) 255
Self-same s-s influence ControUeth all the soul £ Wore 114
With the s impulse wherewith he was thrown Mine be the strength 6
That we may die the s-s day. ^fZ^^'lt
when to land Bustler the winds and tides the s-s way, D. of F. Women ^
He put the s-s query, but the man Marr. of Geraint 269
He took the s track as Balan, Balm and Balan 290
Under the s aspect of the stars. Lover s Tale 1 199
And mine made garlands of the s flower, " . . . o5^
Self-scorn Laughter at her s-s. ,., - ^, ^^'' "Ljj'/ fs?
Self-seeker All great s-s's tramplmg on the right : Ode on Welt. 187
Self-starved S-s, they say— nay, murder'd, Sir J.Oldcastle 60
Self-styled those s-s our lords ally Your fortunes, Princess u tt&i
Self-suppression lazying out a Ufe Of s-s, St. Telemachus 22
SeU To s the boat— and yet he loved her Enoch Arden 134
SeU
620
Sensuous
Sell (continued) And yet to s her — then with what she brought Enoch Arden 137
AyJmer's Field 483
Church-warden, etc. 5
Akbar's D., Inscrip. 9
The Poet 23
Lover's Tale ii 162
Balin and Balan 414
Lover's Tale i 37
Aylmer's Field 189
Lover's Tale iv 281
5 her, those good parents, for her good
An' pigs didn't s at fall,
Seller iSee also Absolution-seller) belongs to the
heart of the perfume s.
Semblance I^ike to the mother plant in s,
edict of the will to reassume The s
Semicircle Leapt in a s, and lit on earth ;
the s Of dark-blue waters and the narrow fringe
Siemi- jealousy A flash of s-j clear'd it to her.
Siemi-smile s-s As at a strong conclusion —
Sempstress Master scrimps his haggard s of her daily
bread, Locksley H., Sixty 221
Sen (self) 'E seeams naw moor nor watter, an' 'e's
the Divil's oan s.' North. Cobbler 76
An' Squire, his oan very s, walks do^vn fro' the 'AH to see, „ 91
An' 'e'd wrote an owd book, his awn s, Village Wife 46
An' I'd voat fur 'im, my oan s, if 'e could but stan fur the
Shere. Owd Rod 14
Send — I s you here a sort of allegory, To , With Pal. of Art 1
fear'd To s abroad a shrill and terrible cry, Enoch Arden 768
he would s a hundred thousand men, Princess i 64
unless you s us back Our son, „ iv 415
'Sdeath ! but we will s to her,' „ v 324
You s a flash to the sim. Window, Marr. Mum. 2
But s it slackly from the string ; In Mem,. Ixxxvii 26
and s thee satisfied — Gareth and L. 434
delays his purport till thou s To do the battle with him, „ 618
they s That strength of anger thro' mine arms, „ 947
render'd tributary, fail'd of late To s his tribute ; Balin and Balan 4
I undertake them as we pass. And s them to thee ? ' „ 15
King will s thee his own leech — ,, 275
s One flasli, that, missing all things else, Merlin and V. 931
of us to claim the prize, Ourselves will s it after. Lancelot and E. 545
This wiU he s or come for :
I pray him, 5 a sudden Angel down
If God would s the vision, well :
she s her delegate to thrall These fighting hands
S ! bid him come ; ' but Lionel was away —
but s me notice of him When he returns,
you used to s her the flowers ;
May s one ray to thee !
I s my prayer by night and day —
ninth moon, that s's the hidden sun
I s a birthday line Of greeting ;
(S no such light upon the ways of men
s the day into the darken'd heart ;
S the drain into the fountain,
' S them no more, for evermore.
I fail'd To s my life thro' olive-yard
To s the moon into the night and break
Shalt ever s thy life along with mine
635
1424
Holy Grail 658
Pelleas and E. 336
Lover's Tale iv 101
116
In the Child. Hosp. 33
Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 14
Columbus 233
De Prof., Two G. 33
To E. FUzgerald 45
Tiresias 161
Ancient Sage 261
Locksley H., Sixty 144
Bead Prophet 3
Demeter and P. 1 10
135
145
bad the man engrave ' From Walter ' on the ring, and s it — The Ring 236
And s her home to you rejoicing. „ 320
and s A gift of slenderer value, To Ulysses 47
Take then this spring-flower I s. To Mary Boyle 19
Reflected, s's a light on the forgiven. Romney's R. 161
dust s up a steam of human blood, St. Telemachus 53
Sendest O Thoct, that s out the man To rule England and Amer. 1
^ when thou s thy free soul thro' heaven. Ancient Sage 47
Seneschal Then came Sir Kay, the s, and cried, Gareth and L. 367
let Kay the s Look to thy wants, „ 433
' Sir S, Sleuth-hound thou knowest, and gray, „ 461
But Kay the s, who loved him not, „ 483
Sir Kay, the s, would come Blustering upon them, „ 513
S, No mellow master of the meats and drinks ! „ 559
page, and maid, and squire, and 5, Marr. of Geraint 710
Arthur tum'd to Kay the s. Last Tournament 89
Sennight three rich s's more, my love for her. Edwin Morris 30
(See also Conunon-sense) did all confound Her s ; Mariana 77
feedeth The s's with a still delight Margaret 17
Controlleth all the soul and s Eleaiwre 115
Is cancell'd in the world of s ? ' Two Voices 42
Unmanacled from bonds of s, „ 236
* The sunple s's crown'd his head : „ 277
Sense [continued) By which he doubts against the s ?
There seem'd no room for s of wrong ;
Lord of the s's five :
Slowly my s undazzled.
Flutter'd about my s's and my soul ;
Or have they any s of why they sing ?
He lost the * that handles daily life —
weigh'd Upon my brain, my s's and my soul !
If the s is hard To alien ears,
the common s of most shall hold
cancell'd a s misused :
Your liner female s offends.
I grow in worth, and wit, and s,
it was a crime Of s avenged by s
crime of s became The crime of malice,
less of sentiment than s Had Katie ;
a s Of meanness in her imresisting life.
And such a s, when first I fronted him,
s of wrong had touch'd her face With colour)
Or master'd by the s of sport,
1 broke the letter of it to keep the s.
I grant in her some s of shame,
' Nay, nay, you spake but s ' Said Gama.
Love to sloughs That swallow common s.
Or own one port of s not flint to prayer.
My haunting s of hoUow shows :
Some s of duty, something of a faith,
Joanes, as 'ant not a 'aapoth o' s,
moor s i' one o' 'is legs nor in all thy braa'ins.
Unf etter'd by the s of crime,
an awful s Of one mute Shadow watching all.
the hoarding s Gives out at times
Drug down the blindfold s of wrong
The quiet s of something lost.
The s of human will demands
O tell me where the s's mix,
Where all the nerve of s is nimib ;
Cry thro' the s to hearten trust
Who wants the finer politic s
Suddenly strike on a sharper s
sent him from his s's : let me go.'
whether some false s in her own self
such a s might make her long for court
with every s as false and foul
conscience of a saint Among his warring s's,
and shadowing S at war with Soul,
all the s's weaken'd, save in that,
scarce can tune his high majestic s
No longer in the dearest s of mine —
Entering all the avenues of s
And now first heard with any s of pain.
Falling in whispers on the s,
A shameful s as of a cleaving crime —
face was flash'd thro' s and soul
Scarce feels the s's break away
Await the last and largest s
soul and s in city slime ?
moor good s na the Parliament man
His crime was of the s's ;
Why not bask amid the s's
wi' a hoonderd haiicre o' s —
Senseless 0 s cataract. Bearing all down in thy
precipitancy —
The little s, worthless, wordless babe,
Sensible worth the life That made it s.
Sensitive Or the least little delicate aquiline curve in
a s nose.
Patient of pain tho' as quick as a s plant to
the touch ;
Sensual Bursts of great heart and slips in s mire,
Arise and fly The reeling Faun, the s feast ;
For such a supersensual s bond
Nor own'd a s wish.
Sensuous Makes noble thro' the s organism
Be near me when the s frame Is rack'd
Two Voices 2l
456
Palace of Art 180
D. of F. Women 177
Gardener's D. 67
101
Walk, to the Mail 22
Love and Duty 44
51
Locksley Hall 129
Godiva 72
Day-Dm., L'Envoi2
Will Water. 41
Vision of Sin 214
215
The Brook 91
Aylmer's Field 800
Sea Dreams 70
Princess, Pro. 219
iv 156
338
349
t)206
442
vi 182
vii 349
Con. 54
N. Farmer, 0. S. 49
N. S. 4
In Mem. xxvii 7
,, XXX 7
,, xliv 6
„ Ixxi 7
„ Ixxviii 8
,, Ixxxv 39
„ Ixxxviii 3
„ xciii 7
,, cxvi 7
Maud I vi47
„ nam
Gareth and L. 71
Marr. of Geraint 800
803
Merlin and V. 797
Guinevere 640
To the Queen ii 37
Lover's Tale i 127
475
587
630
709
720
794
Sisters (E.and E.) 109
Ancient Sage 152
180
Locksley H., Sixty 218
Owd Rod 13
Romney's R. 151
By an Evolution. 6
Church-warden, etc. 22
Gareth and L. 7
The Ring 304
Lover's Tale i 800
Maud I ii 10
8^
In the Child. Hosp. 30
Princess v 199
In Mem. cxviii 26
Merlin and V. 109
628
Princess ii 87
In Mem. 1 5
Sent
621
Serpent
Sent s it them by stealth, nor did they know Who s it ; Dora 53
She s a note, the seal an Elle vous suit, Edivin Morris 105
She s her voice thro' all the holt Talking Oak 123
She s a herald forth, And bade hini cry, Godiva 35
With peals of genial clamour s Will Water. 187
yet he s Gifts by the children, Enoch Arden 337
s his voice beneath him thro' the wood. „ 444
s for him and said wildly to him „ 507
And s her sweetly by the golden isles, ,, 536
They s a crew that landing burst away „ 634
he « the bailiff to the farm To learn The Brook 141
S to the liarrow'd brother, praying him Aylmer's Field 607
but every roof <S out a listener : ., 614
S like the twelve-divided concubine „ 759
s out a ciy Which mixt with little Margaret's, Sea Dreams 245
My father s ambassadors with furs Princess i 42
We s mine host to purchase female gear ; „ 199
I gave the letter to be s with dawn ; „ 245
s For Psyche, but she was not there ; „ iv 236
s for Blanche to accuse her face to face ; „ 239
S out a bitter bleating for its dam ; „ 392
when we s the Prince your way We knew not „ 398
some one s beneath his vaulted palm ., u 31
foutnd He thrice had s a herald to the gates, „ 332
S from a dewy breast a cry for light : „ mi 253
A soul on highest mission s. In Mem. cxiii 10
My Maud has s it by thee Mavd I xxi 9
the King S to him, saying, ' Arise, Com. of Arthur 44
he s Ulfius, and Brastias, and Bedivere, „ 135
Died but of late, and s his cry to me, „ 361
while the phantom king S out at times a voice ; „ 437
Leodogran awoke, and s Ulfius, and Brastias and Bedivere, „ 444
That s him from his senses : let me go. Gareth and L. 71
seeing he hath s us cloth of gold, „ 428
s. Between the in-crescent and de-crescent moon, „ 528
s her wish that I would yield thee thine. „ 551
thy much folly hath s thee here His kitchen-knave : „ 919
' A kitchen-knave, and s in scorn of me : „ 952
and say His kitchen-knave hath s thee. „ 985
and Gareth s him to the King. „ 1051
Had s her coming champion, waited him. „ 1192
Had s thee down before a lesser spear, „ 1244
S all liis heart and breath thro' aU the horn. „ 1369
s Her maiden to demand it of the dwarf ; Marr. of Geraint 192
S her own maiden to demand the name, „ 411
S forth a sudden sharp and bitter cry, Geraint and E. 722
s a thoiisand men To tiU the wastes, „ 941
ye be s for by the King,' They follow'd ; Balin and Balan 48
wrath S me a three-years' exile from thine eyes. ,. 59
the hall Of him to whom ye s us, Pellam, „ 96
being jealous, that he s His horns of proclamation
out Merlin and V. 580
Reported who he was, and on what quest S, Lancelot and E. 629
And lose the quest he s you on, „ 655
' Your prize the diamond s you by the King : ' „ 821
the tale Of King and Prince, the diamond s, „ 824
and toward even S for his shield : „ 978
he saw One of her house, and s him to the Queen „ 1168
' For on a day she s to speak with me. Holy Grail 101
She s the deathless passion in her eyes „ 163
S hands upon him, as to tear him, Pelleas and E. 521
golden grove Appearing, s his fancy back Last Tournament 380
then what folly had s him overseas „ 394
That s the face of all the marsh aloft „ 439
the voice about his feet S up an answer, „ 761
s a deep sea-voice thro' all the land, Guinevere 247
S notes of preparation manifold, Lover's Tale i 207
and s his soul Into the songs of birds, „ 320
s my cry Thro' the blank night to Him „ 751
8 such a flame into his face, >> i'» 177
s at once to Lionel, praying him By that great love „ 180
he s, an' the father agreed ; First Quarrel 18
And then he s me a letter, „ 85
Sent {continued) But he s a chill to my heart
The Lord had s this bright,
They s me out his tool, Bovadilla,
we have s them very fiends from Hell ;
Thrice from the dyke he s his mighty shout,
S the shadow of Himself,
Sons and brothers that have s,
In the Child. Hosp. 2
Columbus 91
127
184
Achilles over the T. 30
Locksley H., Sixty 211
oen. I. and C. Exhib. 3
Better have s Our Edith thro' the glories
'OusE-KEEPEE s tha my lass,
Sisters (E. and E.) 224
Village Wife 1
the man repenting s This ring " lo t'amo " to his best
beloved, And s it on her birthday. The Ring 209
Had s liLS cry for her forgiveness, „ 233
Muriel's mother s, And sure am I, „ 311
'Ever since You s the fatal ring ' — I told her ' s To Miriam,' „ 362
Why had I s the ring at first to her ? „ 390
s him charr'd and blasted to the deathless fire Happy 84
I s him a desolate wail and a curse, Charity 14
I s him back what he gave, — „ 19
Sentence And mystic s spoke ; Talking Oak 294
I hear the s that he speaks ; In Mem. Ixxx 10
there he broke the s in his heart Abruptly, Geraint and E. 41
the King Pronounced a dismal s, Merlin and V. 591
when the woful s hath been past, Lover's Tale i 788
Sentiment less of s than sense Had Katie ; The Brook 91
A classic lecture, rich in s. Princess ii 374
Sentinel And hear at times as In Mem. cxxvi 9
to be soldier all day and be s all thro' the night — Def. of Lucknow 74
Separate So rounds he to a s mind In Mem. xlv 9
That each, who seems a s whole, „ xlvii 1
and is Eternal, s from fears : „ Ixxocv 66
And each prefers his s claim, „ cii 18
And all the s Edens of this earth. Lover's Tale i 551
September on your third 8 birthday The Ring 130
Your fifth S birthday. „ 423
Sepulchral Like echoes in s haUs, In Mem. Iviii 2
Sepulchre {See also Bosom-sepulchre) Gross darkness of
the inner s D. of F. Women 67
While thou, a meteor of the s, Lover's Tale i 99
laid it in a s of rock Never to rise again. „ 683
He raised her softly from the s, „ iv 85
There came two voices from the S, Columbus 95
And free the Holy S from thrall. „ 104
And save the Holy 8 from thrall. „ 240
icy breath. As from the grating of a s. The Ring 400
Sequel 8 of guerdon could not alter me To fairer. Qinone 153
' The s of to-day unsolders all M. d' Arthur 14
Of love that never found his earthly close. What s ? Love and Duty 2
For love in s works with fate, Day- Dm., Arrival 3
I shudder at the s, but I go.' Princess ii 236
the s of the tale Had touch'd her ; „ Con. 30
' The s of to-day unsolders all Pass, of Arthur 182
the soul : That makes the s pure ; Lover's Taleiv 157
Beginning at the s know no more. ,, 158
Sequence And in the fatal s of this world Ancient Sage 274
for forty years my lite in golden s ran, Locksley H., Sixty 47
SeragUo iron grates, And hush'd s's. D. of F. Women 36
Seraph there was Milton like a s strong. Palace of Art 133
Pontius and Iscariot by my side Show'd like fair s's. St. S. Stylites 169
Seraphic Pierces the keen s flame From orb to orb, In Mem. xxx 27
8 intellect and force To seize and throw the doubts „ cix 5
Sere {See also Sear) in the rudest wind Never grow s. Ode to Memory 25
Shrank one sick willow s and small. Mariana in the S. 53
And, tho' thy violet sicken into s. Prog, of Spring 25
Serenade A rogue of canzonets and s's. Princess iv 135
Serene ' Her court was pure ; her life s ; To the Queen 25
8 with argent-lidded eyes Amorous, Arabian Nights 135
8, imperial Eleanore. (repeat) Elednore 81, 121
My mother, looks as whole as some s Princess v 193
And that s result of all.' In Mem. Ixxxv 92
O heart, look down and up *S, secure, Early Spring 28
Serenest Now towering o'er him in s air, Lucretius 178
Serf Who made the s a man, and burst his chain — W. to Marie Alex. 3
Serious Her bright hair blown about the s face Lancelot and E. 392
Sermon See Sarmin
Sermonizing In sailor fashion roughly s Enoch Arden 204
Serpent (adj.) Back on herself her s pride had curl'd. Palace of Art 257
in whom all evil fancies clung Like s eggs together, Enoch Arden 480
Serpent
622
Set
Serpent (adj.) {continued) Wherethro' the s river coil'd,
they came. Gareth and L. 906
ringing with their s hands, Merlin and V. 578
Every tiger madness muzzled, every s passion
kUl'd, Locksley H., Sixty 167
all the s vines Which on the touch of heavenly feet
had risen, Death of CEnone 4
Serpent (s) Gliding with equal crowns two s's led Alexander 6
Like birds the charming s draws. In Mem. xxxiv 14
Nor cared the s at thy side „ ex 7
whose souls the old 5 long had drawn Dowti, Geraint and E. 632
like a s, ran a scroll Of letters Holy Grail 170
Let the trampled 5 show you Locksley H., Sixty 242
The s coil'd about his broken shaft, Demeter and P. 77
Serpent-rooted seated on a s-r beech. The Brook 135
Serpent-throated long horn And s-t bugle. Princess v 253
Se^ent-wanded s-w power Draw downward into Hades Demeter and P. 25
Servant (See also Sarvint) rummaged like a rat : no
s stay'd : Walk, to the Mail 38
and gull'd Our s's, wrong'd and lied Princess iv 540
Are but as s's in a house In Mem. xx 3
s's of the Morning-Star, approach, Gareth and L. 924
He had a faithful s, one who loved Lover's Tale iv 256
Who found the dying s, took him home, „ 263
That faithful s whom we spoke about, „ 342
Serve (See also Sarve) Would s his kind in deed and
word, Love thou thy land 86
Who'd s the state ? for if I carved my name Audley Court 48
To s the hot-and-hot ; Will WaUr. 228
I'll s you better in a strait ; ' Princess i 85
all things s their time Toward that great year „ iv 73
fellow-worker be. When time should s ; „ 309
We two will s them both in aiding her — „ vii 268
Who never sold the truth to s the hour, Ode on Well. 179
But as he saves or s's the state. „ 200
But better s's a wholesome law, In Mem. xlviii 10
May s to curl a maiden's locks, „ Ixxvii 7
hire thyself to s for meats and drinks Gareth and L. 153
thou shalt s a twelvemonth and a day.' „ 157
s with scullions and with kitchen-knaves ; „ 170
grant me to s For meat and drink among thy
kitchen-knaves „ 444
' So that ye do not s me sparrow-hawks Marr. of Geraint 304
Endures not that her guest should s himself.' „ 379
because their hall must also s For kitchen, „ 390
s thee costlier than with mowers' fare.' Geraint and E. 231
attendance, page or maid. To s you — „ 323
a glance \dU s — the liars ! Merlin and V. Ill
Being but ampler means to s mankind, „ 489
to see your face. To s you, Lancelot and E. 939
To s as model for the mighty world, Guinevere 465
Had died almost to s them any way, Lover's Tale iv 124
0 how could I s in the wards In the Child. Hosp. 24
s This mortal race thy kin so well, De Prof., Two G. 15
make the passing shadow s thy wiU. Ancient Sage 110
To s her myriads and the State, — To Mara, of Dufferin 24
and s that Infinite Within us, Akbar's Dream 145
Served (See also Sarved) So sitting, s by man and maid. The Goose 21
or fruits and cream S in the weeping elm ; Gardener's D. 195
he s a year On board a merchantman, Enoch Arden 52
master of that ship Enoch had s in, „ 120
s. Long since, a bygone Rector of the place, Aylmer's Field 10
and s With female hands and hospitality.' Princess vi 95
' We s thee here,' they said, ' so long. In Mem. ciii 47
But s the seasons that may rise ; „ cxiii 4
' If I in aught have s thee well. Com. of Arthur 138
s King Uther thro' his magic art ; „ 151
Merlin ever s about the King, Uther, „ 365
But ever meekly s the King in thee ? Gareth and L. 729
Bribed with large promises the men who s About
my person, Marr. of Geraint 453
Might well have s for proof that I was loved, „ 796
s a little to disedge The sharpness Geraint and E. 189
one sat, Tho' s with choice from air, Pelleas and E. 149
Who 8 him well with those white hands of hers, Last Tournament 400
Served (continued) They s their use, their time ;
meat he long'd for s By hands unseen ;
Infinite Love that has s us so well ?
S the poor, and built the cottage.
Dead, who had s his time.
Last Tournament 676
Guinevere 265
Despair 95
Locksley H., Sixty 268
Dead Prophet 9
Service (See also Sarvice) while the tender s made thee
weep. The Bridesmaid 10
' to find Another s such as this.' In Mem. xx 8
All kind of s with a noble ease Gareth and L. 489
knave that doth thee s as full knight „ 1016
Grateful to Prince Geraint for s done, Marr. of Geraint 15
s done so graciously would bind The two together ; „ 790
did him s as a squire ; Geraint and E. 406
(I speak as one Speaks of a s done him) „ 848
Now weary of my s and devoir, Lancelot and E. 118
Such s have ye done me, that I make My will „ 915
vain and i"ude With profier of unwish'd-for s's) Lover's Tale i 629
should this first master claim His s, „ iv 266
The s of the one so saved was dye AU to the
saver— „ 279
Gain'd in the s of His Highness, Columbus 236
Serviceable And seeing her so sweet and s, Alarr. of Geraint 393
to be sweet and s To noble knights in sickness, Lancelot and E. 767
Servile and s to a shrewish tongue ! Locksley Hall 42
Master of half a s shire, Maud I x 10
Serving And loved me s in my father's hall : Geraint and E. 699
to splinter it into feuds S his traitorous end ; Guinevere 19
Serving-man As just and mere a s-m Will Water. 151
there brake a s Flying from out of the black wood, Gareth and L. 801
Servitor Loyal, the dumb old s, Lancelot and E. 1144
Then rose the dumb old s, and the dead, „ 1153
Session in s on their roofs Approved him. The Brook 127
Leapt from her s on his lap, Merlin and V. 844
Set (adj.) The s gray life, and apathetic end. Love and Duty 18
One s slow bell will seem to toU The passing In Mem. Ivii 10
Set (s) with others of our s. Five others : Princess, Pro. 8
0 wretched s of sparrows, one and all, Marr. of Geraint 278
Two s's of three laden with jingling arms, Geraint and E. 188
with s of sun Their fires flame thickly, Achilles over the T. 10
Set (verb) (See also Sit) The sun is just about to s, Margaret 58
As tho' a star, in inmost heaven s, Elednore 89
That s's at twilight in a land of reeds. Garess'd or chidden 14
be s In midst of knowledge. Two Voices 89
' Why not s forth, if I should do This rashness, „ 391
you had s, That morning, on the casement-edge Miller's D. 81
Many suns arise and s. „ 205
To-night I saw the sun s : he s May Queen, N. Y's. E. 5
S in ail lights by many minds, Love thou thy land 35
1 have s my heart upon a match. Dora 14
I will s him in my uncle's eye Among the wheat ; ..67
women kiss'd Each other, and s out, „ 129
saw The boy s up betwixt his grandsire's knees, ,, 131
Allan s him down, and Mary said: ,, 139
I s the words, and added names I knew. Audley Court 61
S's out, and meets a friend who hails him, Walk, to the Mail 42
Time will s me right.' Edwin Morris 88
They s an ancient creditor to work : „ 130
all the current of my being s's to thee.' Locksley Hall 24
promise of my spirit hath not s. „ 187
He s up his forlorn pipes, Amphion 22
You s before chance-comers, WUl Water. 6
And s in Heaven's third story, „ 70
S thy hoary fancies free ; Vision of Sin 156
Enoch s A purpose evermore before his eyes, Enoch Arden 44
s Annie forth in trade With all that seamen „ 138
s his hand To fit their little streetward sitting-room „ 169
village girl. Who s's her pitcher underneath the spring, „ 207
S her sad will no less to chime with his, „ 248
He s himself beside her, saying to her : „ 290
where he fixt his heart he s his hand „ 294
Suddenly s it wide to find a sign, „ 496
S in this Eden of all plenteousness, „ 561
Enoch s himself. Scorning an alms, to work „ 811
fairy foreland s With willow-weed and mallow. The Brook 45
Have also s his many-shielded tree ? Aylmer's Field 48
Set
623
Settle
Stt (verb) {continued) He never yet had s his daughter
forth Aylvier's Field 347
and one was s to watch The watcher, „ 551
' S them up ! they shall not fall ! ' Sea Breams 227
I had s my heart on your forgiving him „ 269
s's aU the tops quivering — Lucretius 186
show'd the house, Greek, s with busts : Princess, Pro. 11
rosebud s with Uttle wilful thorns, „ 154
S in a, gleaming river's crescent-curve, „ i 171
when we s our hand To this great work, „ ii 59
Till toward the centre s the starry tides, „ 117
You need not s your thoughts in rubric „ Hi 50
but we S forth to climb ; „ 354
foot shone like a jewel s In the dark crag : „ 358
Blow, bugle, blow, s the wild echoes flying, (repeat) „ iv 5, 17
Norway svm S into sunrise ; „ 576
iS in a cataract on an island-crag, „ v 347
I s my face Against all men, „ 388
S his child upon her knee — „ vilA
Till at the last she s herself to man, „ vii 285
and roughly s His Briton in blown seas Ode on Well. 154
Sun s's, moon s's, Window, When 3
Once more to s a ringlet right ; In Mem. vi 36
Since our first Sun arose and s. „ xxiv 8
That s's the past in this relief ? „ 12
On thy Parnassus s thy feet, „ xxxvii 6
And s thee forth, for thou art mine, „ lix 13
Like some poor girl whose heart is s „ IxZ
I would s their pains at ease. „ Ixiii 8
Whate'er thy hands are s to do „ Ixxv 19
And in a moment s thy face „ Ixxvi 2
His credit thus shall s me free ; „ Ixxx 13
my feet are s To leave the pleasant fields „ cii 21
S light by narrower perfectness. „ cxii 4
She s's her forward countenance And leaps „ cxiv 6
He s his royal signet there ; „ cxxv 12
But now s out : the noon is near, „ Con. 41
make my heart as a millstone, s my face as a flint, Maud / i 31
8 in the heart of the carven gloom, „ xiv 11
He s's the jewel-print of youi" feet „ xxii 41
Till God's love s Thee at his side again ! Bed. of Idylls 55
So when the King had s his banner broad. Com. of Arthur 101
Brought Arthur forth, and s him in the hall,
Proclaiming, „ 229
thereupon the King S two before him. Oareth and L. 104
Southward they s their faces. „ 182
s To turn the broach, draw water, or hew wood, „ 485
Arthur's men are s along the wood ; „ 788
Gareth loosed his bonds and on free feet S him, „ 818
and the Baron s Gareth beside her, „ 851
, further wrong Than s him on his feet, „ 955
Which s the horror higher : „ 1394
and s foot upon his breast. Mart, of Geraint 574
When my dear child is s forth at her best, „ 728
in charge of whom ? a girl : s on.' Oeraint and E. 125
then s down His basket, „ 209
on his foot She s her own and climb'd ; „ 760
s his foot upon me, and give me life. „ 850
in their chairs s up a stronger race „ 940
Lest we should s one truer on his throne. Balin and Balan 7
beside The carolling water s themselves again, „ 44
s himself To learn what Arthur meant by courtesy, „ 157
See now, I js thee high on vantage gi'ound, „ 534
after that, she s herself to gain Him, Merlin and V. 165
If ye know, S up the charge ye know, w 703
and caught, And 5 it on his head, Lancelot and E. 54
And 5 it in this damsel's golden hair, „ 205
S every gilded parapet shuddering ; „ 299
more amazed Than if seven men had s upon him, m 351
in the costly canopy o'er him s, „ 443
kith and kin, not knowing, s upon him ; w 599
he s himself to play upon her With sallying wit, „ 646
8 in her hand a Uly, o'er her hung The silken case „ 1148
s betwixt With many a mystic symbol. Holy Grail 232
s the sail, or had the boat Become a living creature „ 518
Set (verb) (continued) while I tarried, every day she s A
banquet Holy Grail 588
s his name High on all hills, Last Tournament 336
ye s yourself To babble about him, „ 339
and s me far In the gray distance, „ 639
She rose, and s before hSm all he will'd ; „ 723
Lancelot got her horse, 8 her thereon, Guinevere 123
thought the Queen ' Lo ! they have s her on, „ 308
thou their tool, s on to plague And play upon, „ 359
Which are as gems s in my memory, Lover's Tale i 291
Ev'n by the price that others s upon it, „ iv 152
He brings and s's before him in rich guise „ 247
So I s to righting the house. First Quarrel 47
they s him so high That all the ships Rizpah 37
little of us left by the time this sun be s.' The Revenge 28
Had s the blossom of her health again. Sisters (E. and E.) 151
will she never s her sister free ? ' „ 218
good woman, can prayer s a broken bone ? ' In the Child. Hosp. 20
hour and the wine Had s the wits aflame. Sir J. Oldcastle 95
A thousand marks are « upon my head. „ 195
8 thee in light till time shall be no more ? Columbus 150
s me climbing icy capes And glaciers. To E. Fitzgerald 25
Had s the Uly and rose By all my ways Ancient Sage 156
s The lamps alight, and call For golden music, „ 195
some that never s, but pass From sight and night „ 202
ye s me heart batin' to music wid ivery word ! Tomorrow 34
ye'U niver s eyes an the face „ 50
stick oop thy back, an' s oop thy taail. Spinster's S's. 31
as if they was s upo' springs, „ 89
Theere ! 8 it down ! Now Robby ! „ 118
but s no meek ones in their place ; Lodksley H., Sixty 133
8 the feet above the brain „ 136
iS the maiden fancies wallowing „ 145
S the sphere of all the boundless Heavens „ 210
Not this way will you s your name Epilogue 1
8 the moimtain aflame to-night, On Jub. Q. Victoria 16
And s the mother waking in amaze Bemeter and P. 57
an' s's 'im agean the wall, Owd Rod 82
Nor ever cared to s you on her knee. The Ring 386
And s a crueller mark than Cain's on him, Happy 18
— ^from the bush we both had s — „ 102
pine which here The warrior of Caprera s, To Ulysses 26
' My Rose ' s all your faces aglow, Roses on the T. 3
s his face By waste and field and town St. Telemachus 29
You have s a price on his head : Bandit's Beath 7
caUs to them ' 8 yourselves free ! ' Kapiolani 3
Set See also Close-set, Deep-set, Hard-set, High-set, Silver-
set, Solid-set, Stately-set, Stiff-set, Thick-set
s round thy first experiment Ode to Memory 81
It was when the moon was s, May Queen, Con. 26
s wide the doors that bar The secret bridal chambers Gardener's B. 248
s the how much before the how. Golden Year 11
at s forth The Biscay, roughly ridging eastward, Enoch Arden 528
Music's golden sea 8 toward eternity, Ode on Well. 253
And in the s thou art fair. In Mem. cxxx 4
8 this knave. Lord Baron, at my side. Gareth and L. 854
Who push'd his prows into the s sun, Columbus 24
And a hush with the s moon. Maud I xxii 18
Now half to the s moon are gone, „ 23
On some vast plain before a s sun, Guinevere 77
Down those loud waters, hke a s star. Lover's Tale i 59
s, when Even descended, the very sunset aflame ; V. of Maeldune 66
glorious creature Sank to his s. Batt. of Brunanhurh 30
up that lane of light into the s sun. The Flight 40
Charity s the martyr aflame ; Fastness 9
his The words, and mine the s. The Ring 24
And while the moon was s. Forlorn 84
Those cobras ever s up their hoods — Akbar's Bream 166
Settle (s) Down on an oaken s in the haU, Geraint and E. 573
Settle (verb) (See also Sattle) 'Tis hard to s order
once again. Lotos-Eaters, C. 8. 82
the cloud that s's round his birth Hath lifted Gareth and L. 130
ere they s for the night. Marr. of Geraint 250
s's, beaten back, and beaten back S's, Merlin and V. 371
Nor s's into hueless gray, To Marq. of Bufferin 50
Settled 624
Settled {See also Sattled) A land of s government, You ask me, why, etc. 9
Until I woke, and found him s down 2'he Epic 17
seem but to be Weak symbols of the s bliss. Miller's D. 233
wheeling round The central wish, until we s there. Gardener's D. 225
And loosely s into form. Day-Dm., Pro. 12
Nothing to mar the sober majesties Of s, sweet. Epicurean
Shadow
life. Lucretius 218
s in her eyes, The green malignant light Princess Hi 131
on my spirits S a gentle cloud of melancholy ; „ iv 570
by overthrow Of these or those, the question s die.' „ v 317
Now looking to some s end. In Mem. Ixxxv 97
to her old perch back, and s there. Merlin and V. 903
Waiting to see the s countenance Of her I loved, Lover's Tale Hi 39
Settling s circled all the lists. Marr. of Geraint 547
Seven (adj.) The s elms, the poplars four Ode to Memory 56
s happy yeare, S happy years of health and competence, Enoch Arden 82
In those f ar-oS s happy years were born ; „ 686
till the Bear had wheel'd Thro' a great arc his s slow
suns. Princess iv 213
and more amazed Than if s men had set upon him, La^icelot and E. 351
thro' the gap The s clear stars of Arthur's Table
Round — Holy Grail 684
Across the s clear stars — 0 grace to me — „ 692
S days I drove along the dreary deep, „ 808
S strong Earls of the army of Anlaf Batt. of Brunanburh 53
I can hear Too plainly what full tides of onset sap Our
s high gates, Tiresias 92
His fingers were so stiffen'd by the frost Of s and ninety
winters. The Ring 240
Seven (s) It should 'a been 'ere by s. Spinster's S's. 114
Sevenfold Would slowly trail himself s The Mermaid 25
and so We forged a s story. Princess, Pro. 202
Seven-headed S-h monsters only made to kiU Time „ 204
Seven-months' A s-m babe had been a truer gift. Merlin and V. 711
Seventeen petitionary grace Of sweet s The Brook 113
Maud is not s, Maud I xii 15
Seventh Like a beam of the s Heaven, down to my side, „ xiv 21
on the s night I heard the shingle grinding Holy Grail 810
Seventimes-heated a heat As from a s-h furnace, „ 843
Seventy S yeai-s ago, my darling, s years ago. (repeat) Grandmother 24, 56
Hallus aloan wi' 'is boooks, thaw nigh upo' s year. _ Village Wife 27
Seventy-five While you have touch'd at s-f,
Seventy-four And I am nearing s-f,
Seventy-seven To you that are s-s,
Several I bump'd the ice into three s stars,
Sever'd Her lips are s as to speak :
Severe The grave, s Genovese of old.
across him came a cloud Of melancholy s,
Severer S in the logic of a life ?
Severity That pure s of perfect light —
Severn The Danube to the S gave
There twice a day the S fills ;
fifty knights rode with them, to the shores Of S,
and they past to their own land ;
fifty knights rode with them to the shores Of S,
and they past to their own land.
Seville Let us bang these dogs of iS',
Sew Or teach the orphan girl to s.
Sewer cleanse this common s of all his realm,
cleanse this common s of all my realm,
with the drainage of your s ;
Or the foulest s of the town —
this little city of s's,
Sewer (sure) But I beant that s es the Lord,
Naay to be 5 it be past 'er time.
I wur s that it couldn't be true ;
Robby wur fust to be s,
Sex ' No more of love ; your s is known :
Madam — if I know your s,
If our old halls could change their s,
not a scomer of your s But venerator,
She wrongs herself, her s, and me,
either s alone Is haU itself,
hustled together, each s, like swine,
Sha&ky (shaky) Nasty an' snaggy an' s,
To E. Fitzgerald 44
43
June Bracken, etc. 6
The Epic 12
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 30
The Daisy 40
Lancelot and E. 325
Princess -u 190
Guinevere 646
In Mem. xix 1
5
Marr. of Geraint 45
Geraint and E. 955
The Revenge 30
L. C. V. de Vere 70
Marr. of Geraint 39
Geraint and E. 895
Locksley H., Sixty 143
Dead Prophet 48
Happy 34
VUlage Wife 93
Spinster's S's. 5
20
69
The Letters 29
Vision of Sin 181
Princess, Pro. 140
iv 422
V 117
„ vii 301
Maud / i 34
North. Cobbler 78
Shaame (shame) an which was a s to be seen ; Village Wife
Shaamed (ashamed) I be hafe s on it now, North. Cobbler 17
we was s to cross Gigglesby Greean, Spinster's S's. 33
niver done nowt to be s on, Owd Rod 10
Shackle The s's of an old love straiten'd him, Lancelot and E. 875
Shadda (shadow) Shamus O'Shea was yer s. Tomorrow 38
Shade (See also Mountain-shade) From the long alley's
latticed s Arabian Nights 112
Life eminent creates the s of death ; Love and Death 13
Your soiTow, only sorrow's s, Margaret 43
lavish lights, and floating s's : Elednore 12
There in a silent s of laurel brown Alexander 9
' Let me not cast in endless s Two Voices 5
A merry boy in sun and s? „ 321
when in the chestnut s I found the blue Forget-me-not. Miller's D. 201
Untouch'd with any s of years, „ 219
stedfast s Sleeps on his luminous ring.' Palace of Art 15
And hollow s's enclosing hearts of flame, „ 241
You'll bury me, my mother, just beneath
the hawthorn s, May Queen, N. Y's. E. 29
J
I BEAD, before my eyelids dropt their s,
A cedar spread his dark-green layers of s.
trembled on her waist — Ah, happy s —
Half light, half s. She stood.
Danced into light, and died into the s ;
House in the s of comfortable roofs,
What's here ? a shape, a s,
' Yet, since I first could cast a s,
rising thro' the mellow s,
Breadths of tropic s and pahns in cluster.
This whole wide earth of light and s
One s more plump than common ;
By peaks that flamed, or, all in s.
As fast she fled thro' sun and s,
Slided, they moving under s :
Thine are these orbs of light and s ;
there no s can last In that deep dawn
What slender s of doubt may flit.
The s by which my life was crost,
play'd A chequer-work of beam and s
No visual s of some one lost,
And every span of s that steals.
The sport of random sun and s.
A s falls on us like the dark
The s of- passing thought,
And touch with s the bridal doors,
never light and s Coursed one another
our fortune swerved from sun to s,
behold In the first shallow s of a deep wood,
There is no s or fold of mystery
Boughs on each side, laden with wholesome s.
All day I watch'd the floating isles of s,
seem to flicker past thro' sun and s,
and yet no s of doubt,
mantle, every s of glancing green,
And hght, with more or less of s,
a glory slowly gaining on the s.
Shaded (See also Sun-shaded) To light her s eye ;
Shading that other gazed, S his eyes
Shadow (s) (See also Citron-shadow, Forest-shadow,
Half-shadow, Shadda, Surface-shadow) on
his hght there falls A s ;
Were fixed s's of thy fixed mood.
She saw the gusty $ sway.
The 5 of the poplar fell Upon her bed,
Thro' hght and s thou dost range,
S's of the silver birk Sweep the green
Light and s ever wander O'er the green
Thou art the s of life.
The s passeth when the tree shall fall.
The s rushing up the sea,
S's of the world appear.
' I am half -sick of s s,'
With one black s at its feet,
The one black s from the wall.
D. of F. Women 1
Gardener's D. 116
132
140
203
St. S. Stylites 107
202
Talking Oak 85
Locksley Hall 9
160
Will Water. 67
150
The Voyage 41
Sir L. and Q. G. 37
Princess vi 82
In Mem., Pro. 5
„ xlvi 5
,, xlviii 7
„ Ixvi 5
,. Ixxii 15
„ xciii 5
„ cxvii 10
„ Con. 24
93
102
117
Marr. of Geraint 521
714
Geraint and E. 119
Lover's Tale i 182
230
„ ii 5
Ancient Sage 100
235
Prog, of Spring 63
Akbar's Dream 46
Making of Man 6
Talking Oak 218
Lover's Tale i 306
Supp. Confessions 164
Isabel 9
Mariana 52
55
Madeline 4
A Dirge 5
„ 12
Love and Death 10
14
Rosalind 11
L. of Shalott ii 12
35
Mariana in the S. 1
80
Shadow
625
Shadow
Shadow (s) (continued) S's thou dost strike, Embracing
A 5 oil the graves I knew,
' From grave to grave the s crept :
Sometimes your s cross'd the bUnd.
s of the chair Flitted across into the night,
mth his s on the stone, Kests like a s,
Between the s's of the vine-bimches
thro' wavering lights and s's broke,
The s's flicker to and fro :
Fall into s, soonest lost :
s of the flowers Stole all the golden gloss,
mix'd with s's of the common groimd !
Shoidd my S cross thy thoughts Too sadly
wbite-hair'd s roaming like a dream
Alas ! for this gray s, once a man —
Coldly thy rosy s's bathe me,
and the s's rise and fall.
Thro' the s of the globe we sweep
Faint s's, vapours lightly curl'd,
s's of the convent-towers Slant down
And waves of s went over the wheat.
So now that s of mischance appear'd
Uke a wounded life He crept into the s :
o'er his countenance No s past, nor motion :
following our own s's thrice as long
Than his own s in a sickly sum.
Shot up their s's to the Heaven of Heavens,
That knit themselves for summer s,
dance, and flew thro' light And s,
Seven and yet one, like s's in a dream. —
biunt Because he cast no s,
should know The s from the substance, and that
Should come to fight with s's and to fall.
And feel myself the s of a dream.
To point you out the s from the truth !
inscription ran along the front. But deep in s :
do I chase The substance or the s ?
Well, Are castles s's ?
Is she The sweet proprietress as?
Descended to the court that lay three parts In s,
As flies the s of a bird, she fled.
' O hard task,' he cried ; ' No fighting s's here !
And I myself the s of a dream.
Our weakness somehow shapes the s. Time ;
But in the s will we work,
cataract and the tumult and the kings Were s's ;
He has been among his s's.'
Satan take The old women and their s's !
all about his motion clung The s of his sister,
one should fight with s's and should fall ;
To dream myself the s of a dream :
o'er her forehead past A s, and her hue changed,
S and shine is life, httle Annie,
And on thro' zones of light and s
S's of three dead men (repeat)
light and s illimitable,
T^E lights and s's fly !
winds and lights and s's that cannot be still,
and left me in s here !
s of a lark Hung in the s of a heaven ?
There sat the (S fear'd of man ;
The S sits and waits for me.
The S cloak'd from head to foot.
That S waiting with the keys,
Of one mute S watching aU.
The tender-pencil'd s play.
My Arthur foxmd your s's fair.
His own vast s glory-crown'd ;
Her s on the blaze of kings :
Let cares that petty s's cast,
hills are s's, and they flow From form to form,
I saw her stand, A s there at my feet,
A s flits before me. Not thou, but like to thee :
And the light and s fleet ;
rivulet at her feet Ripples on in light and s
cloud. Two Voices 194
272
274
Miller's B. 124
126
(Enone 27
„ 181
Lotos-Eaters 12
D.oitheO. Tear 39
To J. S. 11
Gardener's D. 129
135
Love and Duty 88
Tithonv^ 8
„ 11
„ 66
Locksley Hall 80
183
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 5
St. Agnes' Eve 5
Poet's Song 4
Enoch Arden 128
387
710
The Brook 166
Aylmer's Field 30
642
724
Princess, Pro. 85
229
i1
18
84
213
n409
414
415
m21
96
125
188
330
331
iv565
v33
34
258
476
481
vi 107
Grandmother 60
To F. D. Maurice 27
G. of Swainston 3, 5
Boddicea 42
Window, On the Hill 1
7
„ Gone 3
In Mem. xvi 9
„ xxii 12
20
„ xxiii 4
„ xxvi 15
„ XXX 8
„ xlix 12
„ Ixxxix 6
„ xcvii 3
„ xcviii 19
cvl3
„ cxxiii 5
Maud Hi 39
„ iv 11
36
42
Shadow (s) (continued) The s still the same , Maud II iv 72
the s flits and fleets And will not let me be ; „ 90
The s of His loss drew Uke ecUpse, Ded. of Idylls 14
hold The King a s, and the city real : Gareth and L. 266
Who cannot brook the s of any he.' „ 293
Even the s of Lancelot under shield. „ 1311
And muffled voices heard, and s's past ; „ 1373
Then, like a s, past the people's talk Marr. of Geraint 82
Thy wheel and thou are s's in the cloud ; „ 357
Among the dancing s's of the birds, „ 601
That never s of mistrust can cross Between us. „ 815
wholly arm'd, behind a rock In s, Geraint and E. 58
That s of mistrust should never cross „ 248
Come sUpping o'er their s's on the sand, „ 471
And spake no word imtil the s tum'd ; Balin arid Baian 45
The crown is but the s of the King, Aiid this a s's
s, let him have it,
' No s ' said Sir Balin. ' 0 my Queen, But light to
me ! no s, O my King,
all in s from the counter door Sir Lancelot
then the s of a spear, Shot from behind hun,
' Eyes have I That saw to-day the s of a spear,
So thou be s, here I make thee ghost,'
And Uke a silver s sUpt away
And the caim'd moimtain was a s,
shot red fire and s's thro' the cave.
Past like a s thro' the field,
s of some piece of pointed lace, In the Queen's s,
s of my spear had been enow To scare them
once the s of a bird Flying, and then a fawn ;
beneath the s of those towers A villainy,
nothing moved but his own self. And his own s.
Creep with his s thro' the court again.
Beneath the s of some bird of prey ;
the world Is flesh and s —
Behind him rose a s and a shriek — ■
A ghastly something, and its s flew
the world, and aU its lights And s's.
Thy s still would ghde from room to room,
The s of another cleaves to me,
friend and foe were s's in the mist.
From halfway down the s of the grave,
their fears Are morning s's huger than the shapes
Light-green with its own s, keel to keel,
from whose left hand floweth The S of Death,
We trod the s of the downward hill ;
To stand a s by their shining doors,
Beneath the s of the curse of man,
look you here — the s's are too deep,
from out This s into Substance —
Dashing the fires and the s's of dawn
sun and moons And all the s's.
Spirit half-lost In thine own s
S/ctSs bpap — dream of a s, go — God bless you,
sick For s — not one bush was near —
And oldest age in s from the night.
The daisy will shut to the s,
worm in the dust and the s of its desire —
nmning after a s of good ;
all thy world Might vanish like thy s in the dark.
But make the passing s serve thy will.
Her s crown'd with stars —
Themselves but s's of a shadow-world.
Night and S rule below When only Day should reign.'
past the range of Night and S —
I was left within the s sitting Locksley H.
Near us Edith's holy s, „
Man or Mind that sees as „
Set the s of Himself, the boimdless,
But since, our mortal s.
Golden branch amid the s's,
shifting ladders of s and light.
But not the s's which that light would cast, Till
s's vanish in the Light of Light. Epit. on Caxton 3
Henry's fifty years are all in s. On Jub. Q. Victoria 39
2r
203
206
246
322
373
394
Merlin and V. 423
„ 638
Lancelot and E. 414
1140
1174
Holy Grail 791
Pelleas and E. 38
276
418
441
608
Last Tournament 316
753
Guinevere 79
344
504
618
Pass, of Arthur 100
To the Queen ii 6
63
Lover's Tale i 43
499
515
731
790
Sisters {E. and E.) 103
Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 6
V. of Maeldune 99
De Prof., Two 0. 39
40
To W. H. Brookfield 13
Tiresias 36
„ 104
The Wreck 38
Despair 30
92
Ancient Sage 52
110
201
239
243
283
Sixty 16
54
196
211
Epilogue 22
To Virgil 27
Dead Prophet 21
Shadow
626
Shakespeare
Shadow (s) (continued) That s of a likeness to the king
Of s's, Dermter and P. 16
and thy s past Before me, crying „ 93
So the S wail'd. „ 101
Three dark ones in the s with thy King. „ 122
And all the S die into the Light, „ 138
Slander, her s, sowing the nettle Vastness 22
Strike upward thro' the s ; The Ring 372
s leave the Substance in the brooding light of noon ? Hapfti 99
Phra-Chai, the iS of the Best, To Ulysses 41
O'er his uncertain s droops the day. Prog, of Spring 8
the valley Named of the s. Merlin and the G. 87
Fell on the s. No longer a s, „ 92
With your own s in the placid lake, Romney's R. 76
double s the crown'd ones all disappearing ! Parnassus 13
Became a s, sank and disappear'd. Death of (Enone 50
dawn Struck from him his own s St. Telemachus 33
s of a dream — an idle one It may be. Akbar's Bream 5
your 5 falls on the grave. " Charity 20
^1 about him s still, but, Making of Man 5
Who was a s in the brain, Mechanophilus 15
Nor the myriad world, His s, God and the Univ. 6
s of a cro'ivn, that o'er him hung. Has vanish'd
in the s cast by Death. D. of the Duke of C. 2
His s darkens earth : „ 13
SSiadoW (verb) Let Thy dove S me over, Supp. Confessions 181
S forth thee : — the world hath not another Isabel 38
tree Stands in the sun and s's all beneath, Love and Death 11
S forth the banks at will : Eleanor e 110
And s all my soul, that I may die. (Enone 242
And s Sumner-chace ! Talking Oak 150
You s forth to distant men. To E. L. 7
s forth The all-generating powers Lucretius 96
Tho' the Roman eagle s thee, Boddicea 39
Shadow-castdng sunders ghosts and s-c men Merlin and V. 629
Shadow-chequer'd And many a s-c lawn Arabian Nights 102
Shadow'd (See also Faintly-abadow'd, Softly-shadow'd)
Twin peaks s with pine slope Leonine Eleg. 10
I have s many a group Of beauties, Talking Oak 61
And s all her rest — „ 226
Hung, s from the heat : Princess ii 459
warmth of Arthur's hall S an angry distance : Balin and Balan 237
whom waitest thou With thy soften'd, s brow, Adeline 46
And s coves on a sunny shore, Eleanore 18
So fresh they rose in s swells The Letters 46
Nor thou with s hint confuse A life that leads
melodious days. In Mem. xxxiii 7
Is s by the growing hour, „ xlvi 3
Sbadowii^ (adj. and part.) (See also Cavern-shadowing,
Europe-shadowing, Far-shadowing) All along the
s shore, Eleanore 41
Mast-throng'd beneath her « citadel (Enone 118
s down the champaign till it strikes On a wood, Princess v 526
s down the homed flood In ripples, In Mem. Ixxxvi 7
And s bluS that made the banks, In Mem. ciii 22
S the snow-limb'd Eve from whom she came. Maud I xviii 28
pour'd Into the s pencil's naked forms Lover's Tale ii 180
Far from out the west in s showers. Sisters (E. and E.) 7
Shadowing (s) for spite of doubts And sudden
ghostly s's Princess iv 572
Shadow-like Vanish'd s-l Gods and Goddesses, Kapiolani 26
Shadow-maker S-m, shadow-slayer, Akbar's D., Hymn 5
ffladow-prison Her breast as in a s-p, Lover's Tale iv 58
Shadow-slayer Shadow-maker, s-s, Akbar's D., Hymn 5
Shadow-streak With s-s's of rain. Palace of Art 76
Shadow-world Themselves but shadows of a s-w. Ancient Sage 239
Shadowy faintest sunlights flee About liis s sides : The Kraken 5
S, dreaming Adeline ? (repeat) Adeline 10, 39
Or, in a .« saloon, Eleanore 125
Up-clomb the s pine above the woven copse. Lotos-Eaters 18
walls Of s granite, in a gleaming pass ; Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 4
palled shapes In s thorouglifares of thought ; In Mem. Ixx 8
High over the s land. , Maud II i 40
Camelot, a city of s palaces And stately, Gareth and L. 303
There with her milkwhite arms and s hair Guinevere 416
Shadowy (continued) and hunters race The s lion, Tiresias 178
s warrior glide Along the silent field of Asphodel. Demeter and P. 152
once a flight of s fighters crost The disk, St. Telemachus 23
Shadowy-pencill'd A thousand s-p valleys And snowy dells The Daisy 67
Shady arching limes are tall and s, Margaret 59
Parks with oak and chestnut s, L. of Burleigh 29
Shaft (See also Spear-shaft) With shrilling s's of
subtle wit. Clear-headed frieiid 13
to fling The winged s's of truth. The Poet 26
A thousand little s's of flame Fatinm 17
Betwixt the slender s's were blazon'd Palace of Art 167
lean a ladder on the s. And climbing up St. S. Stylites 216
And shrill'd his tinsel s. Talking Oak 68
universal Peace Lie like a s of light across the land. Golden Year 49
sunrise broken into scarlet s's Enoch Arden 592
again The scarlet s's of sunrise — but no sail. „ 599
s's Of gentle satire, kin to charity. Princess ii 468
the beard-blowTi goat Hang on the s, „ iv 79
brand, mace, and s, and shield^ „ v 503
To silver all the valleys with her s's — ■ Tiresias 32
serpent coil'd about his broken s, Demeter and P. 77
Shafted See Golden-shafted, Slender-shafted, Stubborn-shafted
Shaggy drew The vast and s mantle of his beard
Across her neck Merlin and V. 256
Shake The sun-lit almond-blossom s's — To the Queen 16
seemed to s The sparkling flints Arabian Nights 51
name to s All evil dreams of power — The Poet 46
And now s hands across the brink My life is full 6
S hands once more : I cannot sink So far — „ 8
A wither'd palsy cease to s ? ' Two Voices 57
S hands, before you die. D. of the 0. Year 42
s the darkness from their loosen'd manes, Tithonus 41
in the thoughts that s mankind. Locksley Hall 166
You s your head. A random string Day-Dm., L' Envoi 1
Twang out, my fiddle ! s the twigs ! Amphion 61
Swells up, and s's and falls. Sir Galahad 76
We felt the good ship s and reel. The Voyage 15
from some bay-window s the night ; Princess i 106
a sight to s The midriff of despair with laughter, „ 200
To break my chain, to s my mane : „ ii 424
The long light s's across the lakes, „ iv 3
The drowsy folds of our great ensign s „ v 8
two dewdrops on the petal s To the same sweet air, „ vii 68
A cypress m the moonlight s, The Daisy 82
s The prophet blazon'd on the panes ; In Mem. Ixxxvii 7
and s The pillars of domestic peace. „ xc 19
That so, when the rotten hustings s Maud I vi 54
The slender acacia would not s „ xxii 45
For a tumult s's the city, „ II iv 50
Shall s its threaded tears in the wind no more. „ /// vi 28
whatsoever stonns May s the world, Com. of Arthur 293
s them aside, Dreams ruling when wit sleeps ! Balin and Balan 142
hard earth s, and a low thunder of anns. Lancelot and E. 460
As we s off the bee that buzzes at us ; „ 785
now yeam'd to s The burthen off his heart Last Tournament 179
shook beneath them, as the thistle s's Guinevere 254
this great voice that s's the world, Pass, of Arthur 139
shook 'em off as a dog that s's his ears The Revenge 54
Then a peal that s's the portal — Locksley H., Sixty 263
Your hand s's. I am ashamed. Romney's R. 24
or s with her thunders and shatter her island, Kapiolani 10
Shaken I am too forlorn, Too s : Supp. Confessions 136
s with a sudden storm of sighs — Locksley Hall 27
Every moment, lightly s, ran itself „ 32
Her round white shoiUder s with her sobs, Princess iv 289
in a royal hand. But s here and there, „ v 372
The King was s with holy fear ; Tlie Victim 57
That grief hath s into frost ! In Mem. iv 12
But thou and I have s hands, ,, xl29
And my bones are s with pain, Maud II v b
With reverent eyes mock-loyal, s voice, Merlin and V. 157
clouded heavens Were s with the motion Holy Grail 801
so lay. Till s by a dream, that Gawain fired Pelleas and E. 517
Shaker O s of the Baltic and the Nile, Ode on Well. 137
Shakespeare Beside him 8 bland and mild ; Palace of Art 134
Shakespeare
627
Shame
Shakespeare {continued) My S's cui-se on clown and
knave You might ham won 27
The soul of S love thee more. In Mem. Ixi 12
• a thing enskied ' (As S has it) To E. Fitzgerald 17
Our S's bland and univereal eye Dwells pleased, To W. C. Maeready 13
Shakest s in thy fear : there yet is time : Gareth and L. 940
Shaking jS their pretty cabin, hammer and axe, Enoch Arden 173
S a little like a drunkard's hand, ., 465
He, s his gray head pathetically, ,, 714
the singer s his curly head Tum"d as he sat, The Islet 6
thousand battles, and s a hundred thrones Maud I i '^
S her head at her son and sighing „ xix 24
S his hands, as from a lazar's rag, Pelleas and E. 317
it is coming— s the walls — Rizpah 85
How your hand is s ! Forlorn 38
Shaky See Shaaky
Shale stony names Of s and hornblende, Princess Hi 362
Shallop Anight my s, rustling thro' Arabian Nights 12
My s thro' the star-strown calm, „ 36
A- iiitteth silken-sail'd Skimming down to Camelot: X. of Shalott i 22
Some to a low song oar'd a s by. Princess ii 457
In a s of crystal ivory-beak'd, The Islet 12
To where a little s lay In Mem. ciii 19
Shallow (adj.) Vex not thou the poet's mind With thy s wit : Poet's Mind 2
Seam'd with the s cares of fifty years : Aylmers Field 814
For into a s grave they are thrust, Maud iiv Q
Came quickly flashing thro' the s ford Behind
them, Marr. of Geraint 167
In the firet s shade of a deep wood, Geraint and E. 119
S skin of green and azure — Lockdey H., Sixty 208
Shallow (s) And s's on a distant shore, Mariana in the S. 7
ran By ripply s's of the lisping lake, Edwin Morris 98
sunbeam dance Against my sandy s's. The Brook 177
shone the Noonday Sun Beyond a raging s. Gareth and L. 1028
He from beyond the roaring s roar'd, „ 1033
And she athwart the s shrill'd again, „ 1035
Shallower Nature made them blinder motions bounded
in a s brain : Locksley Hall 150
The mother fiow'd in s acrimonies : Aylmer's Field 563
Shallow-hearted O my cousin, s-h ! O my Amy, Locksley Hall 39
Shalott The island of S. L. of Shalott i 9
The Lady of S. (repeat) L. of Shalott i 18, 27 ; ii 9, 27, 36 ;
Hi 45; iv9, 18, 27, 36, 45, 54
• 'Tis the faiiy Lady of iS.' L. of Shalott i 36
.' red cloaks of market girls. Pass onward from S. „ ii 18
Beside remote S. (repeat) „ Hi 9, 18
bearded meteor, trailing light. Moves over still S. „ 27
Shambles The land all s — naked marriages Aylmer's Field 765
Shambling For, ere I mated with my s king. Last Tournament 544
Shame (s) {See also Shaame) The flush of anger'd 5 Madeline 32
Some grow to honour, some to s, — Two Voices 257
She mix'd her ancient blood with s. The Sisters 8
Inwrapt tenfold in slothful s, Palace of Art 262
< I heard sounds of insult, s, and wroiig, B. of F. Women 19
' Her loveliness with s and with surprise „ 89
To hold his hope thro' s and guilt. Love thou thy land 82
What betwixt s and pride. New things and old, Walk, to the Mail 60
To save from s and thrall : Sir Galahad 16
Sold him unto s. The Captain 60
8 and wrath his heart confounded, „ 61
As it were with s she blushes, L. of Burleigh 83
' Sit thee down, and have no s, Vision of Sin 83
bearing in myself the s The woman should have
borne, Aylmer's Field 355
The poor child of s The common care „ 687
Whose s is that, if he went hence with s? „ 718
iS might befall Melissa, knowing. Princess Hi 147
So much a kind of s within me wrought, •., iv 194
And full of cowardice and guilty s, ., 348
I grant in her some sense of s, she flies ; .. 349
dismiss'd in s to live No wiser than their mothers, .. 513
The horror of the s among them all : , "95
Where idle boys are cowards to their s, „ 309
And hatred of her weakness, blent with s, „ vii 30
Glowing all over noble s ; Princess vii 160
Shame (s) {continued) Guarding reahiis and kings from s ; Ode mi Wdl. 68
land whose hearths he saved from s „ 225
A touch of s upon her cheek : In Mem. xxxvii 10
holds it sin and s to draw The deepest measure „ xlviii 11
See with clear eye some hidden s „ HI
And hide thy s beneath the ground. „ Ixxii 28
My s is greater who remain, „ cix 23
chuckle, and grin at a brother's s ; Maud I iv 29
save from some slight s one simple girl. ,, xvHi 45
My anguish hangs like s. „ // iv 74
peace that was fifll of wrongs and s's, „ III vi 40
How can ye keep me tether'd to you — *S'. Gareth and L. 115
as is a s A man should not be bound by, „ 270
S never made girl redder than Gareth joy. „ 536
s, pride, wrath Slew the May-white : „ 656
Who will cry s ? „ 942
For this were s to do him fm-ther wrong ,. 954
Care not for s : „ 1006
Than that my lord thro' me should suffer s. Marr. of Geraint 101
Than that my lord should suffer loss or s.' Geraint and E. 69
That causer of his banishment and s, Balin and Balan 221
This fair wife-worship cloaks a secret s? „ 360
I fly from s, A lustful King, „ 473
My violence, and my villainy, come to s.' „ 492
Up then, ride with me ! Talk not of s ! „ 523
Do these more s than these have done themselves.' „ 524
And 5, could s be thine, that s were mine. Merlin and V. 448
The s that cannot be explained for s. „ 698
for what s in love. So love be true, „ 861
face Hand-hidden, as for utmost grief or s ; „ 897
He loves the Queen, and in an open s : And she
returns his love in open s ; Lancelot and E. 1082
did Pelleas in an utter s Creep Pelleas and E. 440
For why should I have loved her to my s? „ 482
I loathe her, as I loved her to my s. „ 483
' I am wrath and s and hate and evil fame, „ 568
while he mutter'd, ' Craven crests ! O s ! Last Tournament 187
dreading woi-se than s Her warrior Tristram, „ 384
'Mine be the s ; mine was the sin : Guinevere 112
Mine is the s, for I was wife, „ 119
S on her own garrulity garrulously, „ 312
happy, dead before thy s ?
must I leave thee, woman, to thy s.
nor can I kill my s ;
Meek maidens, from the voices crying ' s.'
left her alone with her sin an' her s,
an' she — in her s an' her sin —
The blast aiad the burning s
then put away — isn't that enough s ?
drew back with her dead and her s.
— thy s, and mine. Thy comrade —
s to speak of them — Axnong the heathen —
redder than rosiest health or than utterest
flung from the rushing tide of the world as a waif of s,
mother's s will enfold her and darken her life.'
glory and s dying out for ever in endless time.
Paint the mortal s of nature
S and marriage, iS and marriage.
In that vast Oval ran a shudder of s.
Was redden'd by that cloud of s when I . . .
1 need no wages of s.
Is it S, so few should have climb'd
Shame (verb) look'd to s The hollow-vaulted dark,
To s the boast so often made,
' O Lady Clare, you s your worth !
To s these moioldy Aylmers in their graves :
' Or surely I shall s myself and him.'
Some mighty poetess, I would s you then,
to s That which he says he loves :
You s your mother's judgment too.
Lest he should come to s thy judging of him.'
s the King for only yielding me My champion „ 898
S me not, s me not. „ 1137
one that will not s Ever the shadow of Lancelot „ 1310
were ye shamed, and, worse, might s the Piince Marr. of Geraint 726
423
511
622
672
First Quarrel 25
69
Rizpah 18
„ 36
The Revenge 60
Sir J. Oldcastle 101
110
V. of Maeldune 65
The Wreck 6
100
Despair 75
Locksley H., Sixty 140
Forlorn 31
St. Telemachus 73
Akbar's Bream 64
Charity 40
The Dawn 17
Arabian Nights 125
Love thou thy land 71
Lady Clare 66
Aylmer's Field 396
734
Princess, Pro. 132
iv 248
vi 261
Gareth and L. 469
Shame
628
Sharp
Lancelot and E. 207
1403
Holy Grail 567
! Guinevere 318
To the Queen ii 15
Mechanofhilus 22
Locksley Hall 148
Vision of Sin 190
Lucretius 63
Princess Hi 51
Ode on Well. 191
Gareth and L. 717
1044
1164
1180
1227
1245
1260
Mart, of Geraint 726
Balin and Balan 431
Pelleas and E. 189
Guinevere 111
Batt. of Brunanburh 99
Eomney's R. 112
M. d' Arthur 78
Princess Hi 314
Com. of Arthur 205
Merlin and V. 861
Guinevere 487
Shame (verb) (continued) ' Nay father, nay good
father, s me not
Mine own name s's me,
my brother, Why wilt thou s me to confess
Nor let me s my father's memory,
whereof we lately heard A strain to s us
Our sons will s our own ;
Shamed (See also AU-shamed) I am « thro' all my
nature
Far too naked to be s !
but sank down s At all that beauty ;
Pardon, I am s That I must needs repeat
He never shall be s.
Nor s to bawl himself a kitchen-knave,
the new knight Had fear he might be s ;
S am I that I so rebuked,
S ! care not ! thy foul sayings fought for me :
she ask'd him, ' S and overthrown,
S had I been, and sad — 0 Lancelot — thou ! '
O damsel, be you wise To call him s,
Then were ye s, and, worse,
' I have 5 thee so that now thou shamest me,
and yet I should be s to say it —
' The end is come, And I am s for ever ; '
8 in their souls,
a child Had s me at it —
Shameful This is a s thing for men to lie.
Dabbling a shameless hand with s jest.
And with a s swiftness :
Or seeming s — for what shame m love.
Then came thy s sin with Lancelot ;
in his agony conceives A s sense as of a cleaving
crime — Lover's Tale i 794
Shamefiilness Arthur were the child of s, Com. of Arthur 239
Shameless Ah s ! for he did but sing A song You might have won 21
s noon Was clash'd and hammer'd from a hundred towers, Godiva 74
will she fling herself, S upon me ? Luxretius 203
Dabbling a s hand with shameful jest, Princess Hi 314
' Lo the s ones, who take Their pastime Lancelot and E. 100
Anon there past a crowd With s laughter, St. Telemachus 39
Shamest shamed thee so that now thou s me, Balin and Balan 431
Shamns (See also Shamus O'Shea) An' S along wid the
rest,
Shamns O'Shea (See also Shamus) Dhrinkin' yer health
wid S O'S
An' S O'S was yer shadda,
S O'S that has now ten childer.
Shape (s) A gleaming s she floated by,
A cloud that gather'd s :
tears Of angels to the perfect s of man. To
O s's and hues that please me well !
in dark comers of her palace stood Uncertain s's ;
So s chased s as swift as,
Gown'd in pure white, that fitted to the s —
What's here ? a s, a shade.
Ten thousand broken lights and s's,
The peaky islet shifted s's,
SufEused them, sitting, lying, languid s's,
Here is a story which in rougher s
In such a s dost thou behold thy God.
And twisted s's of lust, unspeakable,
cloud may stoop from heaven and take the s
Titanic s's, they cranun'd The forum,
softer all her s And rounder seem'd :
And s's and hues of Art divine !
Those niched s's of noble mould,
palled s's In shadowy thoroughfares
And wheel'd or lit the filmy s's
The s of him I loved, and love
Ring out old s's of foul disease ;
with the shocks of doom To s and use.
To a lord, a captain, a padded s,
a ship, the s thereof A dragon wing'd,
S that fled With broken wings,
With pointed lance as if to pierce, a s.
Tomorrow 44
12
38
85
L. of Shalott iv 39
CEnone 42
With Pal. of Art 19
Palace of Art 194:
238
D. of F. Women 37
Gardener's D. 126
St. S. Stylites 202
Will Water. 59
The Voyage 33
Vision of Sin 12
Aylmer's Field 7
657
Lucretius 157
Princess vii 2
., 124
„ 136
Ode Inter. Exhib. 22
The Daisy 38
In Mem. Ixx 7
„ xcv 10
„ ciii 14
„ cvi 25
„ cxviii 25
Maud I x29
Com. of Arthur 374
Gareth and L 1207
Balin and Balan 325
Shape (s) (continued) The s and colour of a mind and life, Lancelot and E. 335
her s From forehead down to foot, perfect — „ 641
around Great angels, awful s's, and wings and eyes. Holy Grail 848
slender was her hand and small her s ; Pelleas and E. 74
Unruffling waters re-collect the s Last Tournament 369
morning shadows huger than the s's That cast them, To the Queen ii 63
Waiting to see some blessed s in heaven. Lover's Tale i 312
shadows of dawn on the beautiful s's, V. of Maeldune 99
two s's high over the sacred fountain, Parnassus 9
s with wings Came sweeping by him, St. Telemachus 24
The s with wings. „ 38
aeon pass and touch him into s ? Making of Man 4 ;
Shape (verb) thoughts Do s themselves within me, (Enone 247 ',
A saying, hard to s in act ; Love thou thy land 49 \
that which s's it to some perfect end. Love and Duty 26 «
To s the song for your delight Day- Dm., Ep. 6
and check'd His power to s : Lucretius 23
Our weakness somehow s's the shadow, Time ; Princess Hi 330
s it plank and beam for roof and floor, „ m 46
And s the whisper of the throne ; In Mem. Ixiv 12
Then fancy s's, as fancy can, „ Ixxx 5
s His action like the greater ape, „ cxx 10
Like clouds they s themselves and go. „ cxxiii 8
Would s himself a right ! ' Gareth and L. 348
face that men S to their fancy's eye Lancelot and E. 1252
But had not force to s it as he would, Pass, of Arthur 15
Ye cannot s Fancy so fair as is this Lover's Tale i 547
Was my sight drunk that it did s to me „ 642
Virtue must s itself in deed, Tiresias 86
and s it at the last According to the Highest Ancient Sage 89
S yoiu- heart to front the hour, Locksley H., Sixty 106
You that s for Eternity, On Jub. Q. Victoria 43
And see and s and do. Mechanofhilus 4
Shaped (See also Bow-shaped, Man-shaped) s The city's ancient
legend into this : — ■ Godiva 3
S her heart with woman's meekness L. of Burleigh 71
This red-hot iron to be s with blows. Princess v 209
s, it seems, By God for thee alone, Lancelot and E. 1366
foot was on a stool *S as a dragon ; Last Tournament 672
S by the audible and visible, Lover's Tale ii 104
motion hves Be prosperously s, De Prof., Two 6. 20
Who s the forms, obey them, Akbar's Dream 143
Shaping ' By s some august decree. To the Queen 33
' Here sits he s wings to fly : Two Voices 289
s faithful record of the glance That graced Gardener's D. 177
And one the s of a star ; In Mem. ciii 36
s an infant ripe for its birth, Maud I iv 34
S their way toward Dyflen again, Batt. of Brunanburh 98
Shard By s's and scurf of salt. Vision of Sin 211
dash'd Your cities into s's with catapults, Princess v 138
Share (s) rhymes to him were scrip and s. The Brook 4
To buy strange s's in .some Peruvian mine. Sea Dreams 15
0 then to ask her of my s's, „ 115
Then beast and man had had their s of me : Com. of Arthur 163
Who leaving s in furrow come to see Gareth and L. 243
dividend, consol, and s — The Wreck 30
Share (verb) Now could you s your thought ; Princess vi 252
s's with man His nights, his days, „ vii 262
Who stay to s the morning feast. In Mem., Con. 75
him who had ceased to s her heart, Maud I xix 30
For ye shall s my earldom with me, girl, Geraint and E. 626
and to s Their marriage-banquet. The Ring 430
To s his Uving death with him, Happy 8
Shared one sorrow and she s it not ? Aylmer's Field 102
1 s with her in whom myself remains. Lover's Tale i 248
all my griefs were s with thee, Pref. Poem Broth. S. 25
Sharer S's of our glorious past. Open. I and C. Exhib. 31
Sharp (adj.) Edged with slaughter, cuts atwain Clear-headed frieiuL 2
When the s clear twang of the golden chords Sea-Fairies 38
S and few, but seeming-bitter From excess Rosalind 31
bright and s As edges of the seymetar. Kate 11
And utterly consumed with s distress, Lotos-Eaters, C. S 13
I made my dagger s and bright. The Sisters 26
He thought of that s look. Mother, I gave him
yesterday. May Queen 15
Sharp
629
SheU
Sharp (adj.) (continiied) All those s fancies, by down-
lapsmg thought D. of F. Women 49
With that s soimd the white dawn's creeping beams, „ 261
His face is growing s and thin. D. of the 0. Year 46
all these things fell on her S as reproach. Enoch Arden 488
dying, gleam'd on rocks Roof-pendent, s ; Balin and Balan 315
s breaths of anger puff'd Her fairy nostril out ; Merlin and V. 848
Thro' her own side she felt the s lance go ; Lancelot and E. 624
dame Came suddenly on the Queen with the s news. „ 730
With one s rapid, where the crisping white Holy Grail 381
close upon it peal'd A s quick thimder.' „ 696
As the s wind that ruffles all day long Guinevere 50
On that s ridge of utmost doom ride highly Lover's Tale i 805
S is the fire of assault, Def. of Luckrww 57
' Ya mun saave httle Dick, an' be s about it an' all,' Owd Rod 81
Sharp (s) thro' every change of s and flat ; Caress'd or chidden 4
In little s's and trebles, The Brook 40
Sharpen'd Are s to a needle's end ; In Mem. Ixxvi 4
and ice Makes daggers at the s eaves, „ cvii 8
his aims Were s by strong hate for Lancelot. Guinevere 20
Sharper she was s than an eastern wind, . A udley Court 53
Suildenly strike on a s sense For a shell, Maud II ii 63
Sharpest Upon the last and s height. In Mem. xlvii 13
Shall s pathos blight us, knowing all Love and Duty 85
Sharp-headed busy fret Of that s-h worm begins Swpp. Confessions 186
Sharpness s of that pain about her heart : Geraint and E. 190
Sharp-pointed He ! where is some s-p thing ? The Flight 72
Sharp-smitten S-s with the dint of armed heels — M. d' Arthur 190
S-s witli the dint of armed heels — Pass, of Arthur 358
Shatter And s, when the storms are black, England and Amer. 13
Would s all the happiness of the hearth. Enoch Arden 770
Take the hoary Roman head and s it, Boddicea 65
ere the onward whirlwind s it. Lover's Tale i 451
shake with her thimders and s her island, Kapiolani 10
Shatter'd {See also Still-shatter'd) Spars were splinter'd,
decks were s. The Captain 45
>S into one earthquake in one day Lucretius 251
arms were s to the shoulder blade. Princess vi 52
from the sabre-stroke S and sunder'd. Light Brigade 36
some were sunk and many were s. The Revenge 61
Rocking with s spars, with sudden fires Flamed over: Buonaparte 11
And loosed the s casque, and chafed his hands, M. d' Arthur 209
So like a s column lay the King ; „ 221
And these are but the s stalks. In Mem. Ixxxii 7
On a horror of s limbs and a wretched swindler's lie ? Maud I i56
Here stood a s archway plumed with fern ; Marr. of Geraint 316
And one with s fingers dangling lame. Last Tournament 60
the crash Of battleaxes on s helms. Pass, of Arthur 110
-\nd loosed the s casque, and chafed his hands, „ 377
So like a s column lay the King ; „ 389
a stream Flies with a s foam along the chasm. Lover's Tale i 383
Gilded with broom, or s into spires, „ 400
but s nerve, Yet haimting JuUan, „ iv 105
And s phantom of that infinite One, De Prof., Two G. 47
Wrecked — your train : or all but wreck'd Pas
wheel? a vicious boy Locksley H., Sixty 215
The jungle rooted in his s hearth, Demeter and P. 76
Spuming a s fragment of the God, St. Telemachus 16
Shattering (See also Shrine-shattering) plunge in cataract,
s on black blocks Princess Hi 291
The s tnmipet shrUleth high. Sir Galahad 5
I rode, S all evil customs everywhere. Holy Grail 477
Shaw (show) an' 'e s's it to me. North. Cobbler 85
Shawm With s's, and with cymbals, Dying Swan 32
Sheaf {See also Antmnn-shead!, Barley-sheaves) Piling
sheaves in uplands airy, L. of Shalott i 34
In front they bound the sheaves. Palace of Art 78
The vaiying year with blade and s Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 1
bind the scatter'd scheme of seven Together in one s ? Princess, Con. 9
Which he may read that binds the s. In Mem. xxxvi 13
And whirl the ungarner'd s afar, „ Ixxii 23
Where stood the s of Peace : The Ring 247
Shear I did but s a feather, Princess v 541
Sheath (^See oZso Blower-sheath) New from its silken .9. D. of F. Women 60
A dagger, in rich s with jewels on it Aylmer's Field 220
Sheath (continued) More ciiunpled than a poppy from the s. Princess v 29
tearing out of s The brand, Sir Balin with a
fiery ' Ha ! Balin and Balan 392
when, prest together In its green s. Lover's Tale i 153
Sheathe To draw, to s a useless sword. In Mem. cxxviii 13
Sheathing To s splendours and the golden scale Princess v 41
Sheba That S came to ask of Solomon.' „ ii 346
For Solomon may come to S yet.' „ 349
Shebeen (grog-shop) wid Shamus O'Shea at Katty's s ; Tomorrow 12
he says to me wanst, at Katty's s, „ 63
Shed (s) broken s's look'd sad and strange : Mariana 5
Became no better than a broken s, Holy Grail 398
boath shnkt 'oam by the brokken s Spinster's S's. 37
An' tha squeedg'd my 'and i' the s, „ 39
Shed (verb) They have not s a many tears, Miller's D. 221
Yet tears they s : they had their part „ 223
I thought that all the blood by SyUa s Lucretius 47
dry up these tears S for the love of Love ; Lover's Tale i 781
I weant s a drop on 'is blood. North. Cobbler 114
since Sylvester s the venom of world-wealth Sir J. Oldcastle 166
Shedding s poison in the fountains of the Will. Locksley H., Sixty 274
Sheeny And many a s summer-morn, Arabian Nights 5
Hues of the silken s woof Madeline 22
Love wept and spread his s vans for flight ; Love and Death 8
Sheep Uvelong bleat Of the thick-fleeced s Ode to Memory 66
are men better than s or goats M. d' Arthur 250
A lord of fat prize-oxen and of s. Princess, Con. 86
oxen from the city, and goodly s In haste they drove, Spec, of Iliad 4
As well as ever shepherd knew his s, Holy Grail 551
Old milky fables of the wolf and s, Pelleas and E. 196
are men better than s or goats Pass, of Arthur 418
Sheepcot or from s or king's hall, Gareth and L. 467
Sheepwalk Or s up the windy wold ; In Mem. c 8
Sheer Revenge ran on s into the heart of the foe, The Revenge 33
Stock-still for s amazement. Will Water. 136
Sheer-astomided And s-a were the charioteers Achilles over the T. 26
Sheer'd Caught the shrill salt, and s the gale. The Voyage 12
Sheet (adj.) In the middle leaps a fountain Like s lightning, Poet's Mind 25
Sheet (s) I wrapt his body in the s. The Sisters 34
Rolling a slimibrous s of foam below. Lotos-Eaters 13
Scaffolds, still s's of water, D. of F. Women 34
See that s's are on my bed ; Vision of Sin 68
falls Of water, s's of summer glass. To E. L. 2
And scaled in s's of wasteful foam, Sea Dreams 53
A music out of s and shroud. In Mem. ciii 54
s's of hyacinth That seem'd the heavens Guinevere 390
Whatever moved in that fuU s To E Fitzgerald 11
Sheeted See Silver-sheeted
Sheet-lightnings saw No pale s-l from afar, Aylmer's Field 726
Sheik but I know it — his, the hoary S, Akbar's Dream 90
Shelf Of ledge or s The rock rose clear. Palace of Art Q
Upon the rosewood s ; Talking Oak 118
With s and comer for the goods and stores. Enoch Arden 171
That strikes by night a craggy s. In Mem. xvi 13
see your Art still shrined in himian shelves, Poets and their B. 11
Laid on the s — To Mary Boyle 24
Shell (See also Egg-shell) A walk Avith vary-colour'd s's Arabian Nights 57
They freshen the silvery-crimson s's, Sea-Fairies 13
pelt me with starry spangles and s's, The Merman 28
broad sea-wolds in the crimson s's, The Mermaid 36
Jewel or s, or starry ore, Elednore 20
when the s Divides threefold to show the fmit
(repeat) The Brook 72, 207
the bird, the fish, the s, the flower, Princess ii 383
Storm'd at with shot and s (repeat) Light Brigade 22, 43
Minnie and Winnie Slept in a s. Minnie and Winnie 2
Fink was the s within. Silver without ; „ 5
stars Peep'd into the s. „ 14
Should toss ',vith tangle and with s's. In Mem. x 20
Time hath sunder'd s from pearl.' ,. Hi 16
The ruin'd s's of hollow towers ? „ Ixxvi 16
See what a lovely s, Maud II ii 1
For a s, or a flower, little things „ 64
How fast they hold like colours of a s Marr. of Geraint 681
hast broken s, Art yet half -yolk, Balin and Balan 568
SheU
Shell (cantinued)
the s —
its wreaths of dripping green—
iiins out when ya breaks the s
crashing thro' it, their shot and their s,
Be yet but yolk, and forming in the s ?
s must break before the bird can fiy.
Shelley My S would fall from my hands
Shelter (s) Nor, moaning, household s crave
No branchy thicket s yields ;
\vings of brooding s o'er her peace,
For help and s to the hermit's cave.
To get me s for my maidenhood.
by strong storm Blown into « at Tintagil,
O yield me s for mine innocency
Shelter (verb) WiU s one of stranger race.
Call'd her to s in the hollow oak,
Shelter'd Oracle divine S liis unapproached mysteries
' O Walter, I have s here
While I s in this archway from a day
Sheltering you sit Beneath your s garden-tree.
Shelving The Sweet-Gale mstle round the s keel ;
Shepherd the s who watcheth the evening star.
A s all thy life but yet king-born.
All me, my mountain s,
And s's from the mountain-eaves
pleasure lives in height (the s sang)
the children call, and I Thy s pipe,
stars Shine, and the S gladdens m his heart :
As well as ever s knew his sheep,
The S, when I speak. Vailing a sudden eyelid
Plowmen, S's, have I found,
the laughing s bound with flowers ;
to thee The « brings his adder-bitten lamb,
and of the s's one Their oldest,
shouted, and the s's heard and came.
Shepherd-d(^ Barketh the s-d cheerly ;
Shepherdess one of Satan's s'es caught
Shepherd-lad Sometimes a curly s-l,
Shepherd-prince built their s-p a funeral pile ;
Shere (shire) afoor 'e coom'd to the s.
but 'e dosn' not coom fro' the s ;
call'd me es pretty es ony lass i' the S ;
if 'e could but stan fur the S.
Sheriff token from the king To greet the s,
Sherris-warm'd But, all his vast heart s-w,
She-slip ' The slight s-s's of loyal blood,
She'SOciety long'd, All else was well, for s-s.
She-world head and heart of all our fair s-w,
Shiah wamis the blood of S and Sunnee,
Shield A faiiy s your Genius made
red-cross knight for ever kneel'd To a lady in his s,
Of her OM'n halo's dusky $ ;
in whose capaciou.s hall. Hung with a hundred s's,
silver sickle of that month Became her golden s,
brand, mace, and shaft, and s —
Close by her, like supportei-s on a s,
like a ruddy s on the Lion's breast.
since he neither wore on helm or s
shall the s of Mark stand among these ? '
There ran a treble range of stony s's, —
And imder every s a knight was named :
The s was blank and bare without a sign
s of Gawain blazon'd rich and bright,
Cover the lions on thy s.
This bare a maiden s, a casque ;
took the s And moimted horse and graspt a spear,
These arm'd him in blue arms, and gave a s Blue also,
Till Gareth's s was cloven ;
Thy s is mine — ^farewell ;
flash'd the fierce 5, All sun ;
And gave a s whereon the Star of Even
' Peradventure he, you name, May know my s.
Gareth, wakening, fiercely clutch d the s ;
Even the shadow of Lancelot under s.
630
Shine
life had flown, we sware but by
Last Tournament 270
Its pale pink s's — Lover's Tale i 40
Village Wife 4
Def. of Lucknow 18
Ancient Sage 130
154
The Wreck 25
Two Voices 260
Sir Galahad 58
Ayhner's Field 139
Gareth and L. 1209
Balin and Balan 480
Merlin and V. 10
83
In Mem. cii 4
Merlin and V. 894
: Alexander 11
Talking Oak 37
Locksley H., Sixty 259
To E. Fitzgerald 6
Edwin Morris 110
Dying Swan 35
(Eno7ie 128
„ 202
Amphion 53
Princess vii 193
218
Spec, of Iliad 16
Holy Grail 551
Sir J. Oldcastle 19
Locksley H., Sixty 121
To Virgil 16
Death of (Enone 38
52
56
Leonine Eleg. 5
Merlin and V. 758
L. of Shalott a 21
Death of (Enone 63
A'. Farmer, N. S. 28
Village Wife 23
Spinster's S's. 13
Owd Rod 14
Edviin Morris 133
WUl Water. 197
Talking Oak 57
Princess, Pro. 159
„ Hi 163
Akbar's Dream 107
Margaret 41
L. of Shalott Hi 7
The Voyage 32
Aylmer's Field 15
Princess i 102
V 503
„ vi 358
Maud III vi 14
Com. of Arthur 49
Gareth and L. 403
407
409
414
416
585
680
690
931
971
988
1030
1117
1299
1304
1311
1
726
Balin and Balan 196
200
224
287
338
369
429
481
539
550
559
601
Merlin and V. 473
Lancelot and E. 4
Shield (continued) Clung to the 5 that Lancelot lent him, Gareth and L. 131
wrought on Lancelot now To lend thee horse and s : „ 1324
give him back the s.' „ 1344
How best to manage horse, lance, sword and s, „ 1351
Or two wild men supporters of a s, Geraint and E. 267
nor glance The one at other, parted by the s. „ 269
All in the hollow of his s, „ 569
(It lay beside him in the hollow s).
In lieu of this rough beast upon my s.
To bear her own crown-royal upon s,
memory of that cognizance on « Weighted it down,
he sharply caught his lance and s,
Why wear ye this crown-royal upon s ? '
Thro' memory of that token on the s
Balin drew the s from oH his neck,
I charge thee by that crown upon thy s,
and cast on earth, the s.
And tramples on the goodly s to show
s of Balan prick'd The hauberk to the flesh ;
Why had ye not the s I knew ?
carved himself a knightly s of wood.
Guarded the sacred s of Lancelot ;
devices blazon'd on the s In their own tinct, „ 9
Stript off the case, and read the naked s, „ 16
How came the hly maid by that good s „ 28
I by mere mischance have brought, my s. „ 189
— and the s — I pray you lend me one, „ 192
And so, God wot, his s is blank enough. ,. 197
' This s, my friend, where is it ? ' „ 345
Returning brought the yet-unblazon'd s, „ 379
to have my s In keeping till I come.' „ 382
standing near the s In silence, „ 394
Then to her tower she climb'd, and took the s, „ 397
Here was the knight, and here he left as; „ 634
Why ask you not to see the s he left, „ 653
But an ye will it let me see the s.' „ 661
when the s was brought, and Gawain saw „ 662
and toward even Sent for his s : full meekly rose the
maid, Stript off the case, and gave the naked s ; „ 978
His very s was gone ; only the case, ,, 990
let the s of Lancelot at her feet Be carven, „ 1341
painting on the wall Or s of knight ; Holy Grail 830
and on s A spear, a harp, a bugle — Last Tournament 173
and on the boughs a s Showing a shower of blood ,. 432
Till each would clash the s, and blow the horn. .. 436
JNIen of the Northland Shot over s. Batt. of Bnmanburh 34
with the s of Locksley — there, Locksley H., Sixty 34
one old Hostel left us where they swing the Locksley s, „ 247
~ Pass, of Arthur 1(B
Shield-breaking S-b's, and the clash of brands,
Shielded (See also Many-shielded) That s all her life
from harm
Shielding The gentle wizard cast a s arm.
Shield-lion His blue s-l's cover'd —
Shield-wall Brake the s-w,
Shift As winds from all the compass «
We fret, we fume, would s our skins,
glance and s about her slipperj' sides,
To s an arbitrary power,
craven s's, and long crane legs of Mark —
Shifted She « in her elbow-chair.
The peaky islet s shapes.
Shifting (See also Ever-shifting) With s ladders of
shadow and light.
You all but sicken at the s scenes.
Shillin' is it shillins an' pence ?
clean Es a shillin' fresh fro' the mint
Shimmering The s glimpses of a stream ; the seas ;
Shine (s) (See also Star-shine) With spires of silver s.'
Shadow and s is life, little Annie,
Shine (verb) Thoro' the black-stemm'd pines only the far
river s's. Leonine Eleg. 2
waterfall Which ever sounds and s's Ode to Memory 52
Mariana in the S. 2
In Mem., Con. 47
Merlin and V. 908
Gareth and L. 1217
Batt. of Brunanburh 11
Godiva 33
Will Water. 225
LiLcretius 189
In Mem. cxxviii 17
Last Tournament 729
The Goose 27
The Voyage 33
Dead Prophet 21
The Play 2
N. Farmer, X. S. 42
Spinster's S's. 76
Princess, Con. 46
D ofF. Women 188
Grandmother 60
The house thro' all the level s's,
' Sometimes a little comer s's,
the wild marsh-marigold s's like fire
Two Voices 187
May Queen 31
Shine
631
Shiver'd
Shine (verb) (contimied) the summer sun 'ill s,
He s's upon a hundred fields,
and there his light may s —
That her fair form may stand and s,
To make the necklace s ;
To rust unbumish'd, not to s in use !
S's in those tremulous eyes that fill with tears
The beams, that thro' the Oriel s,
As s's the moon in clouded skies,
yonder s's The Sim of Righteousness,
he would only 5 among the dead Hereafter ;
or Ralph Who s's so in the corner ;
That s's over city and river,
Fairily-deUcate palaces *■
the stars S, and the Shepherd gladdens
I see their unborn faces s
Not all regret : the face will s
Seeing his gewgaw castle s.
But now s on, and what care I,
O Avhen did a morning s So rich in atonement
S out, little head, sunning over with curls,
s in the sudden making of splendid names,
as s's A field of charlock in the sudden sun
-\nd sleeker shall he s than any hog.'
that layest all to sleep again, S sweetly :
brother-star, why s ye here so low ?
three colours after rain, S sweetly :
tell her, she s's me down :
And one will ever s and one ^vill pass.
And s the level lands.
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 22
Con. 50
51
Of old sat Freedom 21
Talking Oak 222
Ulysses 23
Tithonus 26
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 34
Beggar Maid 9
Enoch Arden 503
Lucretius 129
Princess, Pro. 145
Ode on Well. 50
The Islet 18
Spec, of Iliad 16
In Mem. Ixxxiv 19
„ cxvi 9
Maud 1x1%
„ xviii 41
„ xix 5
„ xxii 57
..///t«47
Gareth and L. 387
460
1062
1097
1161
Lancelot and E. 1225
Last Tournament 737
Early Spring 15
once more in vamish'd glorj- s Thy stars of celandine. Prog, of Spring 38
Shining (continued) Clear hououi- s like the dewy star Of
while the sun of morning s's. By an Evolution. 6
Some too low would have thee s, Poets and Critics 11
Shined an' 'e s like a sparkle 0' fire. North. Cobbler 48
Sbingle and all round it ran a walk Of s, Enoch Arden 737
Lest the harsh s should grate underfoot, „ 772
Waves on a diamond s dash. The Islet 16
After sod and s ceased to fly Behind her, Gareth and L. 761
I heard the s grinding in the surge. Holy Grail 811
again the stormy surf Crash'd in the s : Lover's Tale Hi 54
Shingly I linger by my s bars ; Tfie Brook 180
As of a broad brook o'er a s bed Brawling, Marr. of Geraint 248
And down the s scaur he plunged, Lancelot and E. 53
Shining (See also Far-sliining, Lily-shining, Satin-shining,
Silver-shining) And the clear spirit s thro'. Supp. Confessions 76
Droops blinded with his s eye : Fatima 38
She sat betwixt the s Oriels, Palace of Art 159
Came on the s levels of the lake. M. d' Arthur 51
Reveal'd their s windows : Gardener's D. 220
This dull chrysalis Cracks into s wings, St. S. Stylites 156
All, for some retreat Deep in yonder s Orient, Locksley Hall 154
A summer crisp with s woods. Day-Dm., Pro. 8
To yonder s ground ; St. Agnes' Eve 14
A light upon the s sea — ,, 35
In s draperies, headed Uke a star. Princess ii 109
turn'd her sumptuous head with eyes Of s expectation
fixt on mine. „ iv 153
The sleek and s creatures of the chase, ,. v 155
tender face Peep'd, s in upon the womided man .. vii 61
leaves A s furrow, as thy thoughts in me. „ 185
she that out of Lethe scales with man The s steps of
Nature, ,. 262
Are close upon the s table-lands Ode on Well. 216
Would reach us out the s hand, In Mem. Ixxxiv 43
Unloved, the sun-flower, s fair, „ _ ci 5
to where we saw A great ship lift her s sides. „ ciii 40
All night the s vapoiir sail And pass the silent-
lighted town, „ Con. Ill
The s daffodil dead, and Orion low in his grave. Maud I Hi 14
crest Of a peacock, sits on her s head, „ xvill
Go not, happy day. From the s fields, „ xvii 2
My bird with the s head, „ // iv 45
s daffodil dies, and the Charioteer And starry Gemini „ /// vi 6
dawn,
S in arms, ' Damsel, the quest is mine.
But lift a s hand against the sun,
far up the s flood Until we found the palace
for all her s hair Was smear'd with earth,
' I found Him in the s of the stars.
Came on the s levels of the lake.
To stand a shadow by their s doors.
And streaming and s on Silent river,
Ship and sinking s's, and praying hands,
did we watch the stately s's,
Rose a s of France.
' Chase,' he said ; the s flew forward,
We felt the good s shake and reel,
' A s of fools,' he shriek 'd in spite,
' A s of fools,' he sneer'd and wept,
stately s's go on To their haven under the hill ;
master of that s Enoch had served in,
Annie, the s I sail in passes here
s was lost,' he said, ' the s was lost !
prosperously sail'd The s ' Good Fortune,'
Another s (She wanted water) blown by baffling winds,
Gareth and L. 329
745
Geraint and E. 473
Lancelot and E. 1043
Holy Grail 209
Pass, of Arthur 9
219
Lover's Tale i 731
Merlin and the G. 51
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 116
Locksley Hall 37
The Captain 28
33
The Voyage 15
77
78
Break, break, etc. 9
Enoch Arden 119
214
393
528
Some s of battle slowly creep,
reach'd the s and caught the rope,
many a fire between the s's and stream
Fair s, that from the ItaUan shore
A great s lift her shining sides.
blush the news Over glowing s's ;
whether he came in the Hanover s,
a s, the shape thereof A dragon wing'd,
I have seen the good s sail Keel upward,
ere he came, like one that hails a s,
one side had sea And s and sail and angels
Had built the King his havens, s's.
As the tall s, that many a dreary year
We seem'd hke s's i' the Channel "
s's of the world could stare at him,
' Spanish s's of war at sea !
for my s's are out of gear,
We are six s's of the line ;
past away with five s's of war that day,
only a hundred seamen to work the s and to fight,
S after s, the whole night long, (repeat)
Sink me the s. Master Gunner — sink her,
dared her with one httle s and his English few ;
s stagger'd under a thunderous shock,
and the s stood still,
on Edwin's s, with Edwin, ev'n in deatli,
And see the s's from out the West
We sail'd wherever s could sail,
Shipcrew Fell the s's Doom'd to the death.
Shipman numbers, Shipmen and Scotsmen.
Shipshape Keep eveiytning s, for I must go.
Shipwreck Made orphan by a winter s,
s's, famines, fevers, fights. Mutinies,
Quail not at the fiery mountain, at the s,
Shipwreck'd A s sailor, waiting for a sail :
Like a s man on a coast Of ancient fable
ToF.
627
D. Maurice 26
Sailor Boy 3
Spec, of Iliad n
In Mem. ix 1
„ ciii 40
Maud I xvii 12
II v 59
Com. of Arthur Sl'i
Gareth and L. 253
Geraint and E. 540
Balin and Balan 365
Merlin and F. 168
Lover's Tale i 808
First Quarrel 42
Kizpah 38
The Revenge 3
5
7
13
22
Z 58, 59, 60
Bright, with a s people on the decks.
The s dragon and the naked child
Com. of Arthur 316
399
Shipwrecking
s roar.
Shire (See also Shere) A sign to many a staring s
Master of half a servile s,
an oiphan with half a s of estate, —
see Beyond the borough and the .« !
Shiver Little breezes dusk and s
The hard brands s on the steel,
And here thine aspen s ;
Consonant chords that s to one note ;
woodlands, when they s in Januarj-,
the s of dancing leaves Ls thro^vn
Thorns of the crown and s's of the cross,
s's, ere he springs and kills.
why, you s tho' the wind is west
Shiver'd Were s in my narrow frame.
107
The Wreck 107
115
The Flight 46
91
Hands all Round 29
Batt. of Brunanburh 22
55
Enoch Arden 220
15
Columbus 225
Faith 3
Enoch Arden 590
Maud II ii 31
Listening now to the tide in its broad-flung
Will' Water. 139
Maud I X 10
Charity 13
Hands all Round 28
L. of Shalott ill
Sir Galahad 6
A Farewell 10
Princess Hi 90
Boddicea 75
Maud I vi 73
Balin and Balan 111
Pelleas and E. 286
The Ring 29
Fatima 18
Shiver' d
632
Shook
Sbiver'd (continited) A cry that s to the tingling stars, M. d' Arthur 199
Like light in many a s lance In Mem. xlix 3
And s brands that once had fought with Rome, Pass, of Arthur 133
A cry that s to the tingling stars, „ 367
Shivering crack of earthquake s to your base Pelleas and E. 465
In conflict with the crash of s points. Princess v 491
Shoal And s's of pucker'd faces drive ; In Mem. Ixx 10
panic-stricken, like a s Of darting fish, Geraint and E. 468
Shoaling Where like a s sea the lovely blue Play'd into
green.
Shock (s) push thee forward thro' a life of s's,
With twelve great s's of sound,
whom the electric s Dislink'd with shrieks
In middle ocean meets the surging 5,
Or has the s, so harshly given.
Diffused the s thro' all my life.
The steps of Time — the ss of Chance —
With thousand s's that come and go,
And batter'd with the s's of doom
When all that seems shall suffer s,
my pulses closed their gates with a s
the s Of cataract seas that snap
In those brain-stunning s's, and tourney-falls,
burthen off his heart in one full s
ever and anon with host to host S's,
What s has fool'd her since, that she should speak
that s of gloom had faU'n Unfelt,
Above, below, S after s,
ship stagger 'd imder a thunderous s,
suddenly s upon s Stagger'd the mass
great s may wake a pakied limb,
Shock (verb) Must ever s, like armed foes,
The seas that s thy base !
where the moving isles of winter s By night,
you wiU s him ev'n to death,
Meet in the midst, and there so fiu-iously S,
And felt the boat s earth, and looking up,
where the moving isles of winter s By night,
Shock'd (See also E^th-shock'd)
anvil
they 5, and Kay Fell shoulder-slipt,
at fiery speed the two S on the central bridge,
when strength is s With torment,
And they s on each other and butted each other
Shock-head The s-h willows two and two
Shod See Slip-shod, Wet-shod
Shoe Shall fling her old s after.
and s's wi' the best on 'em aU,
Why 'edn't tha wiped thy s's ?
Shone S out their crowning snows.
Thick-jeweU'd s the saddle-leather,
from the violets her light foot S rosy-white,
s, the silver boss Of her own halo's dusky shield ;
on the bumish'd board Sparkled and s ;
8 like a mystic star
near his tomb a feast S, silver-set ;
For on my cradle 5 the Northern star.
a light foot s like a jewel set In the dark crag :
No bigger than a glow-worm s the tent
s Their morions, wash'd with morning,
A column'd entry s and marble stairs,
and s Thro' glittering drops on her sad friend.
light that s when Hope was bom.
star Which s so close beside Thee
Far s the fields of May thro' open door,
at times the great gate s Only,
and s far-off as shines A field of charlock
in the stream beneath him s Inmingled with Heaven's
azure
s the Noonday Sun Beyond a raging shaUow.
Half-tamish'd and half-bright, his emblem s,
thro' these Princelike his bearing s ;
so thickly s the gems.
Past like a shadow thro' the field, that s Full-
summer, Lancelot and E. 1140
688
(Enone 163
Godiva 74
Princess, Pro. 69
WillQ
In Mem. ocvi 11
Ixxxv 55
xcv 42
cxiii 17
cxviii 24
cxxxi 2
Maud I il5
„ II a 25
Gareth and L. 89
Last Tournament 180
Pass, of Arthur 108
To the Queen ii 22
Lover's Tale i 505
Tiresias 98
The Wreck 107
Heavy Brigade 58
St. Telemachus 57
Love thou thy land 78
England and Amer. 15
M. d' Arthur 140
Princess Hi 212
Lancelot and E. 458
Holy Grail 812
Pass, of Arthur ^0%
S, like an iron-clanging
Princess v 504
Gareth and L. 758
963
Lover's Tale ii 150
V. of Maeldune 108
Amphion 39
WUl Water. 216
North. Cobbler 13
Spinster's S's. 46
Dying Swan 13
L. of Shalott Hi 20
(Enone 180
The Voyage 31
Enoch Arden 743
Aylmer's Field 72
Princess, Pro. 106
i4
„ Hi 358
„ iv 25
t>263
364
vi 282
In Mem. xxx 32
Ded. of Idylls 47
Com. of Arthur 460
Gareth and L. 194
387
935
1027
1118
Marr. of Geraint 545
Geraint and E. 693
6891
Pelleas and E. 144|
Lover's Tale i 60 J
ii 158 1
Despair 15 1
,, IT
Mariana 41 ]
The Poet 56]
Dying Swan 15 1
D. of F. Women 56j
Of old sat Freedom 3]
Gardener's D. 91.
Walk, to the Mail 38i
Shone (continvM) sun S, and the wind blew, thro' her. Holy Grail 99 1
all her form s forth with sudden light „ 450 J
In silver armour suddenly Galahad s Before us,
like bright eyes of familiar friends, In on him s
his face S like the countenance of a priest
with the gorgeous west the lighthouse s,
so those fair eyes S on my darkness,
suns of the limitless Universe sparkled and s in the sky,
but, however they sparkled and s.
Shook Hard by a poplar 5 alway,
and with his word She s the world.
And s the wave as the wind did sigh ;
splendours of the morning star S in the stedfast
blue.
Above her s the starry lights :
But s his song together as he near'd
a joUy ghost, that s The curtains,
' I s him down because he was The finest on the tree. Talking Oak 237'
she s her head, And shower'd the rippled ringlets Godiva 46
A sudden hubbub s the haU, Day -Dm., Revival 7
I s her breast with vague alarms — The Letters 38
s And almost overwhelm'd her, Enoch Arden 529
work'd among the rest and s His isolation from him. „ 651
Stagger'd and s, holding the branch, „ 767
s the heart of Edith hearing him. Aylmer's Field 63
like a storm he came. And s the house, „ 216'
but not a word ; she s her head. Sea Dreams 116'
Like her, he s his head. ,, 148:
Whom all the pines of Ida s to see Lucretius 86
clock-work steamer paddling plied And s the lilies : Princess, Pro. 72
s aside The hand that play'd the patron „ 137
And 5 the songs, the whispers, „ i 98
Melissa s her doubtful curls, and thought „ Hi 76
my knee desire to kneel, and s My pulses, „ 193'
O'er it s the woods. And danced the colour,
the tear, She sang of, s and fell.
Psyche flush'd and wann'd and s ;
Palpitated, her hand s, and we heard In the dead hush
Not long ; I s it off ; for spite of doubts
s the branches of the deer From slope to slope
On that loud sabbath s the spoiler
And s to aU the Hberal air
brighten Uke the star that s Betwixt the palms
s my heart to think she comes once more ;
Then I so s him in the saddle.
So s his wits they wander in his prime —
And s his drowsy squire awake and cried.
And s her pulses, crying, ' Look, a prize !
She s from fear, and for her fault she wept
Then 5 his hair, strode off,
But she was happy enough and s it off.
While he spoke She neither blush'd nor s,
wild with wind That s her tower,
s this newer, stronger haU of ours.
So s him that he could not rest,
So s to such a roar of aU the sky.
That n beneath them, as the thistle shakes
And s him thro' the north.
for that day Love, rising, s his wings,
great pine s with lonely sounds of joy
yot it s me, that my frame would shudder,
a strong sympathy S aU my soul :
s and throbb d From temple unto temple.
She s, and cast her eyes down,
And a dozen times we s 'em off
in many a merry tale That s our sides —
For the whole isle shudder'd and s
and a boundless panic s the foe.
She s her head, And the Motherless Mother kiss'd it,
ship stagger'd under a thunderous shock. That s us
asunder, „ 108
I s as I open'd the letter — „ 145
Fires that s me once, Locksley H., Sixty 41
s her head, and patted yours. And smiled, The Ring 313
what a fury s Those pillars of a moulder'd faith, ^kbar's Dream 8
160
389
571
Con. 98
Ode on Well. 123
In Mem. Ixxxix 7
Ccn. 31
Maud I xviii 10
Gareth and L. 29;
715:
Marr. of Geraint 125!
Geraint and E. 12
Merlin and V. 952
Lancelot and E. 72
78
96
102i
Holy GraU 731
Pelleas and E. 412
Last Tournament 621
Guinevere 254
Pass, of Arthur 70
Lover's Tale i 317
325
„ ii 56
89
„ tit 7
iv 329
The Revenge 54
Sir J. Oldcastle 92
V. of Maeldune 74
Achilles over the T. 18
The Wreck 61
Shoot
633
Shot
? Shoot (s) and earliest s's Of orient green, Ode to Memory 17
Shoot (verb) Life s's and glances thro' your veins, Rosalind 22
s into the dark Arrows of lightnings. To J. M. K. 13
I would s, howe'er in vain, Two Voices 344
While all the neighbours s thee round. The Blackbird 2
The northern morning o'er thee s, Talking Oak 275
At times a carven craft would s The Voyage 53
The little boys begin to s and stab, Princess, Con. 61
as the rapid of life S's to the fall — A Dedication 4
iS your stars to the firmament, On Jub. Q. Victoria 17
Shore (s) (See also River-shore, Sand-shore, Table-
shore) And the blue wave beat the s ; All Things will Die 43
and the happy blossoming s ? Sea-Fairies 8
Who can Ught on as happy a s All the world o'er, „ 40
And shadow'd coves on a sunny s, Elednore 18
All along the shadowing s, „ 41
And shallows on a distant s, Mariana in the S. 7
lock'd in with bars of sand. Left on the s ; Palace of Art 250
mourn and rave On alien s's ; Lotos-Eaters 33
Between the sun and moon upon the s ; ,.38
the s Than labour in the deep mid-ocean, „ C. S. 126
The crowds, the temples, waver'd, and the .s ; D. of F. Women 114
To sail with Arthur under looming s's, M. d' Arthur, Ep. 17
pilot of an empty heart Unto the s's of nothing ! Gardener's D. 17
on *, and when Thro' scudding drifts Ulysses 9
0 the barren, barren s ! Locksley Hall 40
wisdom lingers, and I linger on the s, „ 141
On open main or winding s ! The Voyage 6
0 hundred s's of happy cUmes, „ 49
Among the waste and lumber of the s, Enoch Arden 16
As down the s he ranged, or all day long 588
and fill'd the s's With clamour. „ 635
By s's that darken with the gathering wolf, Aylmer's Field 767
forth they came and paced the s, Sea Dreams 32
Swept with it to the s, and enter'd one Of those dark
caves „ 89
Here than ourselves, spoke with me on the s ; „ 264
swell On some dark s just seen that it was rich. Princess i 249
grasping down the boughs I gain'd the 5. ., iv 189
Rotting on some wild s with ribs of wreck, „ v 147
Blot out the slope of sea from verge to s, ., vii 38
heave the hill And break the s. Ode on Well. 260
While about the s of Mona Boadicea 1
Fair ship, that from the Italian s In Mem. ix 1
They laid him by the pleasant s, „ xix 3
' The sound of that forgetful s „ xxxv 14
Yet turn thee to the doubtful s, „ Ixi 9
And lazy lengths on boundless s's ; „ Ixx 12
Dip down upon the northern s, „ Ixxxiii 1
To the other s, involved in thee, „ Ixxxiv 40
' I watch thee from the quiet s ; „ Ixxxv 81
paced the s's And many a bridge, „ Ixxxvii 11
And still as vaster grew the s „ ciii 25
The boat is drawn upon the s ; „ cxxi 6
And heard an ever-breaking s „ cxxiv 11
To spangle all the happy s's „ Con. 120
More than a mile from the s, Maud I ix 2
That made it stir on the s. „ // ii 15
Nor the canon-bullet rust on a slothful s, „ IIIin26
Then to the s of one of those long loops Gareth and L. 905
fifty knights rode with them, to the s's Of Severn, \Marr. of Geraint 44
fiftv knights rode with them to the s's Of Severn, Geraint and E. 954
0 did ye never lie upon the s. Merlin and V. 291
in the four loud battles by the s Of Duglas ; Lancelot and E. 289
1 came AU in my folly to the naked s. Holy Grail 793
So loud a blast along the s and sea, „ 769
in the flat field by the s of Usk Holden : Pelleas and E. 164
The loneliest ways are safe from s to s. Last Tournament 102
all the ways were safe from s to s, „ 485
the thundering s's of Bude and Bos, Guinevere 291
death Or deathlike swoon, thus over all that s, Pass, of Arthur 120
And rolling far along the gloomy s's „ 134
we foimd The dead man cast upon the s ? Lover's Tale i 295
sometimes on the s, upon the sands „ ii 6
the breakers on the s Sloped into louder surf : „ Hi 14
Shore (s) (continued) About the soft Mediterranean s's, Sir J. OldcasUe 30
came happily to the s. Columbus 141
and there on the s was he. (repeat) V. of Maeldune 9, 127
ocean always broke on a silent s, „ 12
our world is but the bounding s — De Prof., Two G. 31
Drew to this .< lit by the suns „ 38
fleeted far and fast To touch all s's, Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 2
alone on that lonely s — Despair 33
No phantoms, watching from a phantom s Ancient Sage 179
wish yon moaning sea would rise and burst the s, The Flight 11
we shall light upon some lonely s, „ 89
star that gildest yet this phantom s ; To Virgil 26
The breakers lash the s's : Pref. Son. Broth. S. 2
But ere he left your fatal s, To Marq. of Dufferin 33
Shore (verb) good Queen, her mother, s the tress Princess vi 113
with a sweep of it S thro' the swarthy neck, Geraint and E. 728
Shore-cliff From the long s-c's windy walls „ 164
a hall On massive columns, like a s cave, Lancelot and E. 406
Shoreward wave will roll us s soon.' Lotos-Eaters 2
upblown billow ran S beneath red clouds. Lover's Tale ii 179
Shorn And, issuing s and sleek, Talking Oak 42
and shower and s plume Went down it. Last Tournament 155
S of its strength, into the sympathy Lover's Tale i 434
Short (See also Fiery-short) run s pains Thro' his
warm heart ; Supp. Confessions 161
He led me thro' the s sweet-smelling lanes The Brook 122
But rather loosens from the lip S swallow-flights of
song. In Mem. xlviii 15
For one s hour to see The souls we loved, Maud II iv 14
only breathe S fits of prayer, Geraint and E. 155
when half of the s summer night was gone, The Revenge 65
Up, get up, the time is s. Forlorn 73
Why should I so disrelish that s word ? Romney's R. 11
Shot (s) (See also Bow-shot, Cannon-shot, Musket-shot,
Stone-shot) Storm'd at with s and shell (repeat) Light Brigade 22, 43
A s, ere half thy draught be done. In Mem. vi 11
an' I started awaay like a s. North. Cobbler 69
crashing thro' it, their s and their shell, Def. of Lucknow 18
Shot (verb) S thro' and thro' with cunning words. Clear-headed friend 17
Momently s into each other. Madeline 23
S over with purple, and green, and yellow. Dying Swan 20
flying star s thro' the sky Above the pillar'd town. Palace of Art 123
S on the sudden into dark. To J. S. 28
S like a streamer of the northern morn, M. d' Arthur 139
S thro' the lists at Camelot, „ 224
Be s for sixpence in a battle-field, Audley Court 41
her palfrey's footfall s Light horrors Godiva 58
The fire s up, the martin flew, Day-Dm. Revival 11
chmbing up the valley ; at whom he s : Aylmer's Field 228
There by a keeper s at, slightly hurt, „ 548
S up their shadows to the Heaven of Heavens, „ 642
jS out of them, and scorch'd me that I woke. Lucretius 66
S sidelong daggers at us. Princess ii 450
And s from crooked lips a haggard smile. ., iv 364
and s A flying splendour out of brass and steel, „ vi 364
S up and shrill'd in flickering gyres, „ vii 46
toaner 'ed s 'una as dead as a naail. N. Farmer, O. S. 35
S o'er the seething harbour-bar. Sailor Boy 2
but s from Arthur's heaven With all disaster Gareth and L. 1100
star s : ' Lo,' said Gareth, ' the foe falls ! ' „ 1317
shadow of a spear, S from behind him, Balin arid Balan 323
S from behind me, run along the ground ; „ 374
s red fire and shadows thro' the cave, Lancelot and E. 414
glanced and s Only to holy things ; Holy Grail 75
from the star there s A rose-red sparkle to the city, „ 529
thy vanity so s up It frighted all free fool Last Tournament 306
S like a streamer of the northern morn. Pass, of Arthur 307
S thro' the lists at Camelot, „ 392
and s forth Boughs on each side, Lover's Tale i 229
And s itself into the singing winds ; „ 369
that s the sunset In lightnings roimd me ; „ 442
The meaning of the letters s into My brain ; „ H 8
dragonfly S by me like a flash of purple fire. „ 17
An' 'e niver not s one 'are. Village Wife 42
5 thro' the staff or the halyard, Def. of Lucknow 5
Shot
634
Show'd
Shot (verb) (continued)) pine s aloft from the crag V. of Maeldune 16
Men of the Northland S over shield. Ball, of Brunanhurh 34
"Ud 'a s his own sowl dead Tomorrow 40
A light s upward on them from the lake. The Ring 256
Shotted See Heavy-shotted
Shoulder over his left s laugh'd at thee, The Bridesmaid 7
a leopard skin Droop'd from his s, (Enone 59
Upon her pearly s leaning cold, „ 140
golden round her lucid throat And .« : ..179
From off her s backward borne : Palace of Art 118
clapt his hand On Everard's s, The Epic 22
Make broad thy s's to receive my weight, M. d' Arthur 164
O'er both his s's drew the languid hands, „ 174
From thy pure brows, and from thy s's pure, TitJiomis 35
Till over thy dark s glow Thy silver sister-world, Move eastward 5
Naiads oar'd A glimmering s To E. L. 17
With a heaved s and a saucy smile, Ayhner's Field 466
Among the honest s's of the crowd, Sea Dreams 166
And robed the s's in a rosy silk. Princess, Pro. 103
Her round white s shaken with her sobs, .. iv 289
lanes of splendour slanted o'er a press Of snowy s's, ., 479
But on my s hung their heavy hands, „ 553
Leapt from the dewy s's of the Earth, ., v 43
Down on the s's of the twain, his men, Gareth and L. 440
On either shining s laid a hand, Marr. of Geraint 518
and the squire Chafing his s : Geraint and E. 27
letting her left hand Droop from his mighty s. Merlin, and V. 243
Gazed at the heaving s, and the face Hand-hidden, „ 896
Lancelot tum'd, and smooth'd The glossy s, Lancelot and E. 348
Each gript a s, and I stood between ; Holy Grail 822
Make broad thy s's to receive mj weight, Pass, of Arthur 332
O'er both his s's drew the langmd hands, „ 342
warrior's puissant s's Pallas flung Achilles over the T. 3
And plant on s, hand and knee. To E. Fitzgerald 8
lay thine uphill s to the wheel. Ancient Sage 279
fur the merk's 0' thy s yit ; Owd Rod 90
you my girl Rode on my s home — The Ring 322
Shoulder Blade {See also Blade) arms were shatter'd to
the s b. Princess vi 52
Shoulder'd (See also Broad-shoulder'd) Then we s thro'
the swarm, AudleyCourt9
in the cellars merry bloated things S the spigot, Guinevere 268
Shoulder-slipt they shock'd, and Kay Fell s-s, Gareth and L. 759
Shout (s) Herod, when the s was in his ears, Palace of Art 219
shall the braggart s For some blind glimpse Love and Duty 5
But that there rose a s : Princess, Con. 36
a s rose again, and made The long line „ 96
a s More joyfid than the city-roar „ 100
And caught once more the distant s. In Mem. Ixxxvii 9
At the s's, the leagues of lights, Maud II iv 21
And s's, and clarions shrilling unto blood. Com. of Arthur 103
voice As dreadful as the s of one who sees „ II7
s's Ascended, and there brake a servingman Gareth and L. 800
whereupon Their connmon s in chorus, Balin and Balan 87
Then rang the s his lady loved : Pelleas and E. 171
the red dream Fled with a s. Last Tournament 488
s's of heathen and the traitor knights. Pass, of Arthur 113
on a sudden the garrison utter a jubilant s, Def. of Lucknow 98
from the dyke he sent his mighty s, Achilles over the T. 30
jingle of bits, S's, arrows, Tiresias 94
an' maakin' ma deaf wi' their s's, Spinster's S's. 88
gaUopt up with a cheer and a s, Heavy Brigade 61
the s Of His descending peak from Heaven, Romney's R. 126
Shout (verb) hark ! they s ' St. Simeon Stylites.' St. S. Stylites 146
They s, ' Behold a saint ! ' „ 153
That he s's with his sister at plaj^ ! Break, break, etc. 6
S Icenian, Catieuchlanian, s Uorstanian, Boddicea 57
djring while they s her name. Locksley H., Sixty 128
Shouted Till I struck out and s ; Princess v 540
But I heard it s at once from the top Maud 11 v 50
Then the third brother s o'er the bridge, Gareth and L. 1096
Lancelot s, ' Stay me not ! Holy Grail 643
' No name, no name,' he «, ' a scourge am I Pelleas and E. 565
roar'd And s and leapt down upon the fall'n ; Last Tournament 469
Till they s along with the shouting V. of Maeldune 34
Shouted (continued) standing, s, and Pallas far away Achilles over the T. 17
lighted on him there, And s. Death of (Enone 56
Shouting Heard the heavens fill with s, Locksley Hall 123
With a loyal people s a battle cry, Maud III vi 35
thro' lanes of s Gareth rode Down the slope street, Gareth and L. 699
Which was the red cock s to the light, Geraint and E. 384
S, ' Sir Galahad and Sir Percivale ! ' Holy Grail 337
seem'd S's of aU the sons of God : „ 509
and s's and soundings to arms, Def. of Lucknow 76
And we came to the Isle of S, V. of Maeldune 27
And the s of these wild birds ,, 33
Till they shouted along with the s „ 34
Shove See Shuw
Shovell'd s up into some bloody trench Audley Court 42
Show (s) Thou comest not with s's of flaunting vines Ode to Memory 48
Had made him talk for s ; Will Water. 196
Princess Ida seem'd a hollow s. Princess Hi 185
camp and college turn'd to hollow s's ; ., v 478
They did but look like hollow s's ; ' ., vii 134
My haunting sense of hollow s's : ., 349
hang'd him in chains for a s — Rispah 35
With a purse to pay for the s. Dead Prophet 8
Show (verb) (See also Shaw) Nor canst thou s the dead are dead. Two Voices 267
Some one might s it at a joust of arms, M. d' Arthur 102
S me the man hath sufier'd more than I. St. S. Stylites 49
That s the year is tum'd. Talking Oak 176
and s's At distance like a little wood ; Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 41
And all that eke the years will s, „ L'Envoi 13
s you slips of all that grows Amphion 83
So s's my soul before the Lamb, St. Agnes' Eve 17
Shall s thee past to Heaven : Will Water. 246
All he s's her makes him dearer : L. of Burleigh 33
' Proclaim the faults he would not s : You might have won 17
Divides threefold to s the fruit within. (Repeat) The Brook 73, 208
call'd old Philip out To s the farm : „ 121
into Darnley chase To s Sir Arthur's deer. „ 133
' S me the books ! ' Sea Dreams 148
these I thought my dream would s to me, Lucretius 51
and s That life is not as idle ore. In Mem. cxviii 19
That will s itself without. Maud II iv 61
To s that who may slay or scape the three, Gareth and L. 641
to s His loathing of our Order and the Queen. Balin and Balan 550
think I s myself Too dark a prophet : Holy Grail 321
babble about him, all to s your wit- — • Last Tournament 340
Bear with me for the last time while I s, Guinevere 454
Some one might s it at a joust of arms, Pass, of Arthur 270
and s us That we are surely heard. Lover's Tale i 364
he brings And s's them whatsoever he accounts ,. iv 233
' O my heart's lord, would I could s you,' he says, .. 250
I propose to-night To s you what is dearest to my heart, ,, 252
while I s you all my heart.' „ 353
s us that "the world is wholly fair. Ancient Sage 182
Let the trampled serpent s you Locksley H., Sixty 242
never had I seen her s remorse — The Ring 457
Our Playwright may s In some fifth Act The Play 3
I will s it you by-and-by. • Bandit's Death 8
Show'd the world Like one great garden s. The Poet 34
One s an iron coast and angry waves. Palace of Art 69
for he s me all the sin. May Queen, Con. 17
Pontius and Iscariot by my side S like fair seraphs. St. S. Stylites 169
S her the fairy footings on the grass, Aylmer's Field 90
And when she s the wealthy scabbard, „ 236
s their eyes Glaring, and passionate looks. Sea Breams 235
and s A riotous conflnence of watercourses Lucretius 29
s the hou.se, Greek, set with busts : Princess, Pro. 10
s the late-writ letters of the king. „ i 175
He s a tent A stone-shot off : „ v 53
What Roman strength Turbia s The Daisy 5
Who s a token of distress ? In Mem. Ixxviii 13
And s him in the fountain fresh „ Ixxxv 26
knight Had visor up, and s a youthful face, Marr. of Geraint 189
s themselves against the sky, and sank. „ 240
For while the mother s it, „ 636
And A- an empty tent allotted her, Geraint and E. 885
This gray King 6' us a shrine Balin and Balan 109
i
Show'd
635
Shrill
Sbow'd {continued) This woodman s the cave From
which he sallies, Balin and Balan 131
iiems Pluck'd from the crown, and s them to his
knights, Lancelot and E. 57
Chose the green path that s the rarer foot, ,, 162
And s him, like a vermin in its hole. Last Tournament 165
And s them both the ruby-chain, ,, 409
in the light's last gUmmer Tristram s ., 739
s he drank beyond his use ; Lovers Tale iv 228
.<; Turning my way, the loveliest face Sisters {E. and E.) 86
Shower (s) (See also Thunder-shower) sweet s's Of
festal flowers. Ode to Memory 77
These in every s creep Thro' the green A Dirge 33
Like moonlight on a falling s ? Margaret 4
like the rainbow from the s, Two Voices 444
The slow result of winter s's : „ 452
1 thirsted for the brooks, the s's : Fatima 10
I'll take the s's as they fall, Amphion 101
Perfume and flowers fall in s's, Sir Galahad 11
The gentle s, the smell of dying leaves, Ensch Arden 611
s's of random sweet on maid and man. Princess vii 86
Briton in blown seas and storming s's. Ode on Well. 155
A' and stonn and blast Had blown the lake The Daisy 70
daisy close Her crimson fringes to the s ; In Mem. Ixxii 12
Sweet after s's, ambrosial air, „ Ixxxvi 1
in the sudden sun Between two s's, Gareth and L. 389
Was cared as much for as a suiiuner s ; Geraint and E. 523
Like sunlight on the plain behind a s : Merlin and V. 403
poplars made a noise of falling s's. Lancelot and E. 411
poplars with their noise of falling s's, ,. 523
s's of flowers Fell as we past ; Holy Grail 348
and s and shorn plume Went down it. Last Tournament 155
with Queen Isolt Against a s, ., 379
Showing a s of blood in a field noir, „ 433
the wind and the s and the snow. Rizpah 68
from out the west in shadowuig s's, Sisters (E. and E.) 7
Thro' the blotting mist, the blinding s's, „ 18
Stony s's Of that ear-stunning hail of ArSs Tiresias 95
from a day of driving s's — Loeksley H., Sixty 259
Before them fleets the s. Early Spring 13
a s of stones that stoned him dead, St. Telemachus 68
Shower (verb) Down s the gambolUng waterfalls Sea- Fairies 10
,s- the tiery grain Of freedom broadcast Princess v 421
>S"'a- slanting light upon the dolorous wave. Lover's Tale i 811
Shower 'd (adj.) To enrich the threshold of the night With
s largess of delight In Mem. xxix 7
Shower'd (verb) s the rippled ringlets to her knee ; Godiva 47
5 His oriental gifts on everyone And most on Edith : Aylmer's Field 213
Before me s the rose in flakes ; Princess iv 264
Lavish Honour s all her stars. Ode on Well. 196
.-! down Kays of a mighty circle, Lover's Tale i 417
Showerful in a s spring Stared at the spate. Gareth and L. 2
Showering {See also Ever-showering) -S thy gleaned
wealth into my open breast Ode to Memory 23
^ wide Sleet of diamond-drift and pearly hail ; Viiion of Sin 21
fountains spouted up and s down In meshes Princess i 218
Showery Grow green beneath the s gray. My life is full 17
dew'd with s drops, Up-clomb the shadovy pine Lotos- Eaters 17
last, she ftxt A s glance upon her aunt. Princess, Con. 33
Showing (.S'ee a^so A-Shawin') (S a gaudy summer-morn, Palace of Art 62
she pointed with a laugh, S the aspick's bite.) D. of F. Women 160
A' a shower of blood in a field noir, Last Tournament 433
Not only s ? and he himself pronounced Lover's Tale iv 349
And 5 them, souls have wings ! Dead Prophet 12'
Shown (See also Late-shown) Half s, are broken and
withdrawn. Two Voices 306
and s the tmth betimes, That old true filth, Merlin and V. 46
after he hath s him gems or gold. Lover's Tale iv 246
France had s a light to all men, Loeksley H., Sixty 89
not s To dazzle all that see them ? The Sing 143
Shrank -V one sick willow sere and small. Mariana in the S. 53
Enid s far back into herself, Geraint and E. 607
his charger at her side, She s a little. „ 821
and he s and wail'd, ' Is the Queen false ? ' Pelleas and £'.531
He s and howl'd, and from his brow drew back Lover's Tale ii 92
Shrank (continued) her weight S in my grasp, Lover's Tale ii 203
I tum'd : my heart S in me, „ Hi 38
Her that s, and put me from her, Loeksley H., Sixty 264
Shrew woodland thing. Or s, or weasel, Gareth and L. 749
Shrewdest a sting of s pain Ran shrivelling thro' me, St. S. Stylites 198
Shrewdness nor compensating the want By s, Enoch Arden 251
Shrewish Puppet to a father's threat, and servile to a
s tongue ! Loeksley Hall 42
Shriek (s) (See also Flittermoase-shriek) myriad s of
wheeling ocean-fowl, Enoch Arden 583
the keen s ' Yes love, yes, Edith, yes,' Aylmer's Field 582
their s's Ran highest up the gamut, Sea Dreams 232
One s of hate would jar all the hymns of heaven : „ 259
Dislink'd with s's and laughter : Princess, Pro. 70
yonder, s's and strange experiments „ 235
the whispers, and the s's Oi the wild woods together ; ., i 98
There rose a s as of a city sack'd ; „ iv 165
another s, ' The Head, the Head, the Prmcess, „ 175
A kingdom topples over with & s „ Con. 62
The siirill-edged s of a mother Matid I i 16
there was love in the passionate s, „ 57
And all in passion uttering a dry s, Geraint and E. 461
Unearthlier than all s of bird or beast, Balin and Balan 545
clapt her hands Together with a wailing s. Merlin and V. 867
Lancelot gave A marvellous great s Lancelot and E. 516
upward-rushing storm and cloud Of s and
plume. Last Tournament AAl
Behind him rose a shadow and a s — • „ 753
s's and ringing laughter on the sand Lover's Tale Hi 32
wail came borne in the s of a growing wind. The Wreck 87
s for the rights of an equal humanity. Beautiful City 2
she heard The s of some lost life Death of QLnone 90
arose The s and curse of trampled niiUions, Akbar's Dream 190
Shriek (verb) if any came near I would call, and s. The Mermaid 38
»S out ' I hate you, Enoch,' Enoch Arden 33
and s ' You are not Ida ; ' Princess vii 94
That s and sweat in pigmy wars Lit. Squabbles 2
shall I s if a Hungary fail ? Maud I iv 46
That ever s's before a death,' Lancelot and E. 1023
and s's After the Christ, Pass, of Arthur 110
glance the tits, and s the jays. Prog, of Spring 15
If every single star Should s its claim A kbar's Dream 43
Shriek'd (See also Screead) mouse Behind the mouldering
wainscot s, Mariana 64
' No voice,' she s in that lone hall, Palace of Art 258
Again they s the burthen — ' Him ! ' Edwin Morris 123
' A ship of fools,' he s in spite. The Voyage 77
For sideways up he swmig his arms, and s Sea Dreams 24
s That she but meant to win him back, Lucretius 278
Daintily she s And wi-ung it. Princess, Pro. 175
' Boys ! ' s the old king, ., ■;; 328
s The virghi marble under iron heels : „ vi 350
Yell'd and s between her daughters (repeat) Boddicea 6, 72
s against his creed — In Mem. Ivi 16
His helmet as to slay him, but she s, Gareth and L. 979
*S' to the stranger, ' Slay not a dead man ! ' Geraint and E. 779
moved so much the more, and s again, „ 782
s out ' Traitor ' to the unhearing wall, Lancelot and E. 612
Who rode by Lancelot, wail'd and s aloud. Holy Grail 356
The words of Arthur flying s, arose, Last Tournament 139
Who s and wail'd, the three whereat we gazed Pass, of Arthur ^^
Aloud she s : My heart was cloven with pain ; Lover's Tale ii 199
s and slaked the light with blood. Loeksley H., Sixty 90
s, and started from my side — „ 264
One s ' The fires of Hell ! ' Dead Prophet 80
when I learnt it at last, I s. Charity 37
Shrieking fell The woman s at his feet, Aylmer's Field 811
And s ' / am his dearest, I — The Victim 71
And the s rush of the wainscot mouse, Maud I vi 71
s out ' O fool ! ' the harlot leapt Adown the forest, Merlin and V. 972
On whom the women s " Atheist " flung Filth Akbar's Dream 91
Shrift And number'd bead, and s. Talking Oak 46
Wrapt in her grief, for housel or for s, Guinevere 149
Shrike the sparrow spear'd by the s, Maud I iv 23
Shrill (adj.) And the s winds were up and away, Mariana 50
ShriU
636
Sairill (adj.) (continued) S miisic reach'd them on the middle
Springing alone With a s inner sound, ThfMer^M 20
Her rapid laughters wild and s, Mermmd <iU
Lest their s happy laughter come to me (Enot^R
over them the sea-wind sang iS", chiU m ^TH ac^
The s beU rings, the censer swiW Si ril''^. If
2 Y'^t'-^^^ ."P"'^ *^« prZ^aught the . salt, fl/rlt ll
and fear'd To send abroad a s and terrible cry, Enoch Arden7e>i
wind that .', All night in a waale Ld. P„. ^.P'^SZ fi
s and rang. Till this was ended, Flthl ? ^ 7^
merrily-blowing .the martial fife ; Pri^lf^.^i
Shot up and s in flickering gyres, J"nncess v ^bl
And she athwart the shallow s again, Gareth ««> r "im^
she tower'd her bells, Tone mide? tone, s ; Mefunaidvf4
Dagonet clapt hs hands and s ^wem^i a»jd '^•1^^
down the Jg wind the dream'^ ; Pa^TS 'g
all the night an answer s, n!L? il t]
arilleth The shattering tninpet s high, sZTlifX
Shrilling (^..aZ.o Sudden-shriUing) n%t her slender nose " '''^"^"'^ '
she'l^'WrnedU^V-b and finger, V Hence! «ar..fe a.^ z. 750
S^^t^^Lmoo., --^SBi
Thin 35 the batlike .'s of the Dead Death of (vl7Jt^
„ ,,^ind of the Night s out Desolation and wrong The^feTZ 15
Shnlly The 5 whmnyings of the team of HeU, ^ BMrandP^
Shrme ^(^^«e a/50 Altar-shrine) By Bagdat's i'. of fretted ^
From one censer in one s, ^"'^^^. NigMsl
they saw thee from the secret s Al!tnT/f \l
Still-lighted in a secret s, Mnri.Jf T I }l
Going before to some far s, ^"Z^ '^ *^' '^- }^
from the min'd . he stept And in the moon %' TjtZl i
And you may carve a s about my dust. Si. S ^SflOS
My knees are bow'd in crypt and s : s]: rnilJA
Then by some secret s I ri5e ; ^''^ ^"^"^^ H
The desecrated s, the trampled year, PW J^,. „ 1 97
two Sware at the s of Christ a deathless love : Com of Arthur 466
when they left the s Great Lords from Rome ^ !?«
bhow d us a « wherein were wonders— Balin an/ Jinln,, 1 no
Saint who stands with lily in hand In yonder ,. ^''^'''' Jfi2
but while he stared about the s, " T^o
STe hS'pVm^'^ ''^ ^\^^^ ^^^^"^ ^^ ™^^*' Lancelot and E. 1330
The Holy Grail, descend upon the s : Holy Grail 465
he before your 5's ; Do each low office O^inlvZe 681
1"°?!. the ruin'd 5 he stept. And in the moon Pass. TlrthZ 213
So that they pass not to the s of sound. Iter's TalTi 470
lay me m some s of this old Spain, Colulul 207
m. • ^^"'"^ !^?",* *^^''' *'* b«^o^« "i^''- Gods, r vSL 105
Shrined Methinks my friend is richly 5 ; In Mem Mil
iS him within the temple of her heart. The Rina 2iq
anne-doore ..-rf burst thro' with heated blasts D. of F Women 29
ame-shattenng ^-s earthquake, fire, flood, thunderbolt, ^ fiS 6?
Shru± It would s t« the earth if you came in. ' Poet's MiZ V!
Smite, 5 not, spare not. ,c, <^%Jii cl
nor s For fear our solid aim be dissipated Pri!Siii 2S
her small goodman S's in his arm-chair ^««ce5s tn 265
Nor make a snail's horn s for wantonness ; ^»«;{e«< SaZ 279
Shnve let me s me c ean, and die ' t„J:J^4 j^Jld.
« mTzaalf TVT/x ««♦ *« 1 ., ' , Lancelot and E. 1100
« "lyseu iNo, not to an Apostle.' «fv« 7 m^ /? iV^
Shrivel Lightning may . the^laurel of C^ar. *"" '^ ^/SL'^I
Shut
Shrivell'd Were 5 into darkness in his head,
Wme is good for 5 lips,
Is 5 in a fruitless fire,
. J^ernel of the s fruit Is jutting thro' the rind •
StoveUmg sting of shrewdest pain Ran s thro' me
Shnven Heresy— Not s, not saved ? '
Shroud (s) (See also Hammock-shroud) Nor was the
night thy s.
A music out of sheet and s,
^\,.^}a'^ "^^^ ^ Tf -^'^ plaintively sweet Perch'd on the s's. The Wreck 82
shroSia "'rs-f^sii""" '""' "'■ *"" ' "" '»»'"" ^'"'i<^3^o
Shrub (-See aZso Laurel-shrubs) TaU orient s's, and
obelisks
Shrunk *S' like a fairy changeling lay the ma^e •
s by usage into commonest commonplace"! '
Sntreet (street) whiniver ye walkt in the s
Shudder (s) her child !— a s comes Across me •
In that vast Oval ran a s of shame.
Shudder (verb) I s at the sequel, but I go.'
We s but to dream our maids should ape
Nor s's at the gulfs beneath,
0 ye stars that s over me,
' I s, some one steps across my grave • '
So let me, if you do not s at me, '
yet it shook me, that my frame would s
heart of motherhood Within me s, '
1 s at the Christian and the stake ;
Shudder'd s, lest a cry Should break his sleep
Why— these— are— men : ' I s •
all dabbled with the blood Of his own son, s
Yet I s and thought like a fool
Then s, as the village wife who cries
For the whole isle s and shook
Shudderest S when I strain my sight,
Shuddering delight and s took hold of all my mind
he knew not wherefore, started up *S, '
from the plaintive mother's teat he took Her blind
Safs at thTmIn of a world ; ??/ t°f^ ^^
And s fled from room to room, pL^I^'^'.^r.
Set everv elided naranet <! • r P/^ncess m 3v0
and thnnX WJf^ P?r ,' .,, r,,. Lancelot and E. 299
ami thought With s. Hark the Phantom 1099
There in the s moonlight brought its face Lover's' Tale ifm
till one of them Said, s, ' Her ipectre ! ' ' ^ '^ ,-' ^
shrill-edged shriek of a mother divide the s night. Maud I iW
In the s dawn, behold, ^ mauu 1 1 10
bruised and butted with the s War-thunder of iron rams • " '"
Sh^mcTt 1 ""'"^f *^^ death-white sea should rave, 'The Flight 47
IS^^. "' *^^ T°*i°^ ™y h^^^ ^«'« stirr'd By a s step, Maud I i 14
Shim on our dead self, nor s to do it, ^' PrZcess iii 221
fl^':^^.''!§.Z'^'.7 r","°t ' .Ti^« foaming grape In mZ. Cc^79
Godiva 70
§ Vision of Sin 79
In Mem. liv 11
Ancient Sage 121
St. S. Stylites 199
Sir J. Oldcastle 144
Ode to Memwy 28
In Mem. ciii 54
Arabian Nights 107
Com. of Arthur 363
Locksley H., Sixty 76
Tomorrow 37
(Enone 253
St. Telemachu^ 73
Princess ii 236
„ Hi 309
In Mem. xli 15
Com. of Arthur 83
Guinevere 57
675
Lover's Tale ii 56
Demeter and P. 42
Akbar's Dream 72
Walk, to the Mail 73
Princess Hi 58
„ vi 105
Mawa! / xiv 38
Guinevere 56
F. 0/ Maeldune 74
Fatima 3
-¥a^ Qtteen, Co». 35
Enoch Arden 617
s the wild ways of the lawless tribe.
do not s To speak the wish most near to your
tme heart ;
Would s to break those bounds of courtesy
did not s to smite me in worse way
Nor s to call me sister, '
She used to s the wailing babe,
Shunn'd But Enoch s the middle walk
thence That which he better might have s,
nor broke, nor s a soldier's death,
had not s the death. No, not the soldier's :
Shushan brawl at S underneath the palms '
I s my life from happier chance
Geraint and E. 608
Lancelot and E. 913
1220
Guinevere 435
676
The Ring 358
Enoch Arden 738
740
Princess, Pro. 38
V 178
Hi 230
Two Voices 54
(Enone 188
Shut (See also Half-shut)
I s my sight for fear 1
And he that s's Love out, in turn shall be
o out from Love, rn il-m. t> i t j ^-ia
^ up as in a crumbling tomb, ' ^ fJf/ f f%lt
7^r^;^SS-£^d „.„d„„ .a„u "%H
Shut
637
Side
Day- Dm., Moral 7
Amphion 87
Aylmer's Field 565
Princess vi 376
N. Farmer, N. S. 30
In Mem. xxiii 1
xxviii 8
„ XXXV 20
„ xliv 4
,, Ixx 6
„ cviii 1
Guinevere '2Z1
671
Lover's Tale i 438
521
680
Rizpah 46
T/je FrecA; 38
Deserted House 9
Liicretius 223
iY. Farmer, N. S. 31
Edward Gray 13
Princess v 45
Window, Letter 2
10
Fm< Quarrel 35
Edwin Morris 86
Princess i 176
Lucretius 93
Shut (continued) is there any moral s Within the
bosom of the rose ?
By squares of tropic summer s
gentle creature s from all Her charitable use,
To one deep chamber s from sound,
an' 'e 'ant got s on 'em yet.
Now, sometimes in my sorrow s.
Were s between me and the soimd :
Or been in narrowest working s,
God s the doorways of his head.
A gulf that ever s's and gapes,
I will not s me from my kind,
' O little maid, s in by nimnery walls,
s me round with narrowing nunnery-walls,
little hour was bound S in from Time,
S in the secret chambers of the rock.
I was s up with Grief ;
They seized me and s me up :
The daisy will s to the shadow,
Shatter Close the door, the s's close,
Shuttiiig when s reasons up in rhythm,
Shuw (Shove) wi' noan to lend 'im a s.
Shy (iSee also Half-shy) ' S she was, and I thought
her cold ;
A little s at first, but by and by We twain.
Fine of the fine, and s of the s ?
Ay or no, from s of the s ?
but he look'd at me sidelong and s,
Shyness It is my s, or my self-distrust,
Sibilation He with a long low s, stared
Sicilian as the great S called Calliope
Sick (adj.) {See also Half-sick) thought, ' My life is s
of single sleep : The Bridesmaid 13
' I am half s of shadows,' L. of Shalott ii 35
' S art thou — a divided will Still heaping Two Voices 106
King is s, and knows not what he does. M. d' Arthur 97
s of home went overseas for change. Walk, to the Mail 24
This girl, for whom your heart is s, Talking Oak 71
half the crew are s or dead, The Voyage 92
bUnd or lame or s or sound, „ 93
but I am s of Time, And I desire to rest. Come not, when, etc. 9
(His father lying s and needing him) Enoch Arden 65
As lightly as a s man's chamber-door, „ 776
— it makes me s to quote him — Sea Dreams 159
<S for the hollies and the yews of home — Princess, Pro. 187
you that talk'd The trash that made me 5, .. ii 394
Were you s, ourself Would tend upon you. „ Hi 320
The land is s, the people diseased. The Victim 45
S for thy stubborn hardihood. In Mem. ii 14
heart is s. And all the wheels of Being slow. „ Z 3
I am s of the Hall and the hiU, I am s of the moor Maud 7 t 61
S, am I s of a jealous dread ? „ x 1
S, s to the heart of life, am I. „ 36
his essences tum'd the Uve air s, ,, xiii 11
S once, with a fear of worse, „ xix 73
8 oi a, nameless fear, „ // it 44
Art thou sad ? or s ? Balin and Balan 274
/S ? or for any matter anger'd at me ? 'I „ 276
we maidens often laugh When s at heart, „ 498
Spake (for she had been s) to Guinevere, ' Are you
80 s, my Queen, you cannot move Lancelot and E. 78
' Stay with me, I am s ; „ 87
' Love, are you yet so s ? ' „ 571
sound not wonted in a place so still Woke the
s knight, „ 819
Milder than any mother to a 5 child, „ 858
And the s man forgot her simple blush, „ 864
that other world Another world for the s man ; „ 874
for what force is yours to go So far, being s ? „ 1064
all too faint and s am I For anger : „ 1086
King is s, and knows not what he does. Pass, of Arthur 265
Floats from his s and flbned eyes, Swpf. Confessions 166
As a s man's room when he taketh repose A spirit haunts 14
steady glare Shrank one s willow sere and
small. Mariana in the S. 53
Sick (adj.) {continued) And here once more like some s
man declined, Palace of Art 155
But she, with s and scornful looks averse, D. of F. Women 101
Teach that s heart the stronger choice. On a Mourner 18
How often placed upon the s man's brow Aylmer's Field 700
Euns in a river of blood to the s sea. „ 768
The s weak beast seeking to help herself Merlin and V. 498
Eound whose s head all night, like birds of prey. Last Tournament 138
and distribute dole To poor s people, Guinevere 684
A body journeying onward, s with toil. Lover's Tale i 124
lisp'd To kisses of the wind, that, s with love, „ 545
They will but sicken the s plant the more. „ 766
He falling s, and seeming close on death, „ iv 258
And the half my men are s. The Revenge 6
But I've ninety men and more that are lying s ashore. ,. 10
But Sir Richard bore in hand all his s men ,, 15
s men down in the hold were most of them stark and cold, „ 79
Some birds are s and suUen when they moult. Sisters {E. and E.) 73
and s For shadow — not one bush Tiresias 35
in amaze To find her s one whole ; Demeter and P. 58
Doant maake thysen s wi' the caake. Owd Bod 34
Is he s your mate like mine ? Happy 2
Sick (s) Low voices with the ministering hand Hung
round the s : Princess vii 22
And found fair peace once more among the s. ,, 44
cheating the s of a few last gasps, Mavd I i 43
With her hundred fighters on deck, and her ninety s
below ; The Revenge 34
S from the hospital echo them, Def. of Lv^know 100
Sicken Here at least, where nature s's, Locksley Hall 153
I hate, abhor, spit, s at him ; Lucretius 199
Or s with ill-usage, Princess v 86
' A time to s and to swoon, In Mem. xxi 17
loss So pains him that he s's nigh to death ; Geraint and E. 499
They will but s the sick plant the more. Lover's Tale i 766
will you s for her sake ? Locksley H., Sixty 17
that s at your lawless din, „ 149
tho' thy violet s into sere, Prog, of Spring 25
all but s at the shifting scenes. The Play 2
Sicken'd Which s every living bloom. In Mem. Ixxii 7
successful war On all the youth, they s ; Merlin and V. 572
by and by she s of the farce, The Ring 383
Sickening {See also Half-sickening) But s of a
vague disease, L. C. V. de Vere 62
once again the s game ; Locksley H., Sixty 127
Sickle ere the silver s of that month • Princess i 101
Sicklier sickly-born and grew Yet s, Enoch Arden 262
Like echoes from beyond a hollow, came Her s
iteration. Aylmer's Field 299
Sickly And far away into the s light, The Kraken 7
Cursed be the s forms that err from honest Nature's
rule ! Locksley Hall 61
Bore him another son, a s one : Enoch Arden 109
Nursing the s babe, her latest-bom. „ 150
But for the third, the s one, who slept „ 230
bearing hardly more Than his own shadow in a s sun. Aylmer's Field 30
Sickly-bom Now the third child was s-h Enoch Arden 261
Sickness {See also Mid-sickness) ' Some turn this s yet
might take. Two Voices 55
a languor came Upon him, gentle s, Enoch Arden 824
and read My s down to happy dreams ? Princess ii 253
and due To languid limbs and s ; „ vi 377
serviceable To noble knights in s, Lancelot and E. 768
as but born of s, could not Uve : „ 880
she knew right well What the rough s meant, „ 888
Side {See also Cliff-side, Fountain-side, Hill-side,
Island-sides, Mountain-side, Water-side) faintest
sunlights flee About his shadowy s's : The Kraken 5
Madonna-wise on either s her head ; Isabel 6
Six columns, three on either s, Arabian Nights 144
and Thought have gone away S by s. Deserted House 2
Wander from the s of the mom, Adeline 52
the couple standing s by s, • The Bridesmaid 5
On either s the river he Long fields L. of Shalott i 1
The mirror crack'd from s to s ; „ Hi 43
Side
Side (continued) Such seem'd the whisper at my s: Two Voices 439
^^^Pi"^y ''' ^* """f ^°"^ ^'®"- ^'wwe 93
And Effie on the other s. May Queen, Con. 24
and thrust The dagger thro' her s.' D. of F. Women 260
I hved up there on yonder mountain s. St. S. Stylites 72
On one s lay the Ocean, and on one Lay a great
water, ^ d' Arthur 11
That only by thy s Will I to Olive plight Talking Oak 282
clamber d half way up The counter s ; Golden Year 7
Had cast upon its crusty s jj^m Water 103
S by s beneath the water Crew and Captain lie ; The Captain 67
Fading slowly from his s: l. of Burleigh 86
Phihp sitting at her s forgot Her presence, Enoch Arden 384
On either s the hearth, indignant ; Aylmer's Field 288
To glance and shift about her slippery s's, Lucretius 189
The very s s of the grave itself shall pass, ., 257
With that he drove the knife into his s : 275
lovelier than their names, Grew s hy s ; Princess] Pro. 13
Whichever s be Victor, ^^ ^^ 231
To rail at Lady Psyche and her 5. " m 33
That when our s was vanquish'd and my cause " m 24
and fain had slept at his s. Chandmother 74
phould still be near us at our s? /^ Mem. li 2
' Thou canst not move me from thy s, ,^ 'i{i 7
A great ship left her shining s's. " cm 40
Up the s I went. And fell in silence " 43
moving s hy s With wisdom, " ^xiv 19
grave That has to-day its sunny 5. " Qon 72
And here on the landward s, Maud I iv 10
ror a raven ever croaks, at my s, • .^ j,j 57
There were two at her s, ]| i^ q
Was not one of the two at her s ',' ^ 2
For one of the two that rode at her s " 24
To the sweeter blood by the other s ; '.' xiii 34
of the seventh Heaven, down to my s, ,, xiv 21
Would he have that hole in liis s ? , II v%2
Up to my throne, and s by s with me ? Com. of Arthur 81
At once from either s, with trumpet-blast, „ 102
Not ever to be question'd any more Save on the
further s ; 307
Wept from her s's as water flowing away ; Gareih'and L. 217
midway down the s of that long hall A stately pile, — ., 404
Setting this knave, Lord Baron, at my s. „ 854
on the further s Arose a silk pavilion, '] 909
lead no longer ; ride thou at my 5 ; ^ II57
'Not at my 5. I charge thee ride before, GerairU and E. 14
Bow d at her 5 and utter'd whisperingly : „ 305
so turning s by s They past, Balin and "Salan 279
one s had sea And ship and sail and angels „ 364
barkening from what s The blindfold rummage ", 415
Like its own mists to all the mountain s : Lancelot and E. 38
and the head Pierced thro' his s, „ 490
He up the s, sweating with agony, \] 494
parted from the jousts Hurt in the s,' ,',' 623
Thro' her own s she felt the sharp lance go ; ", 624
All in an oriel on the summer s, ," 1177
thou hast been in battle by my s, " 1353
after heaven, on our dull s of death, [[ 1382
Your places being vacant at my s, Holy Grail 317
fail d from my s, nor come Cover'd, „ 470
Stood near it but a lion on each s [ 817
Near him a mound of even-sloping s, Pelleas "and E. 25
from her s Restrain'd him with all manner of device, .. 203
and he call'd, ' I strike upon thy s — „ 279
on the hither s of that loud morn Last Tournament 56
push me even In fancy from thy s, „ 639
Never lie by thy s ; see thee no more— Guinevere 579
On one s lay the Ocean, and on one Lay a great
wat«r. Pass, of Arthur 179
dunplings of the wave. That blanch'd upon its s. Lover's Tale i 45
and shot forth Boughs on each s, 230
On the other s, the moon. Half-melted '^ 420
Ix)ve wraps his wings on either 5 the heart, .. 467
On the other s Is scoop'd a cavern 516
they are mine— not theirs— they had moved in my s. 'uizpah 54
638
Sighed
de (continued) was womided again in the s and the
SpanS fleet with broken s's ^^ ^''"^^ f.
masts and the rigging were lying over the s\ 81
sewer an' sartan 'oiip o' the tother s ; VUlanp WHo q9
as ocean on every 5 Plunges Bef oflucLow ^l
aU took s s with the Towers, y. of Maeldune 11 1
swept in a cataract off from her s's, ^ TheTZlQn
They lower'd me down the s, , 9?
you bawl'd the dark s of your faith /),.™«; . -'^q
and we lean'd to the darker s— i^cspau 6^
Cleave over to the sunnier s of doubt, Ancieni Sage 68
When he will tear me from your s, Th,. Vlinht tq
Wild flowers blowing s by / ^ '*^''^ f.
shriek'd, and started from my s— Locksley H. , Sixt,, 264
Lies upon tins s, hes upon that s, I'n.tll,. Tk
die with him s by 5 ? Ha H
my fa.ithful counsellor, Sit by my s. Akhars Dream 19
tho' sitting close at his s. ChnZZ W
Sided AVe Many-sided C/«,r% 22
Sidelong And *■ glances at my father's grief, Prmcess vii 107
saw with a .s eye The shadow of some piece of
pointed lace, Lancelot a>,d E. 1113
but he look d at me s and shy, pi,,t f^^,,,,^ 35
But often in the s eyes a gleam of aU things ill— The Fliaht 31
Side-path By one s-p, from simple truth ; To Mara, of Dufferin 28
admg W heedling and s with them ! /.„•„,,,, ^ 15^
Sidled 1 s awaay an' awaay Svinstef'<! <*?'< 28
Siege in the ghastly s of Lucknow— DefofLncknowl
Merlin call'd it ' The ^ perilous,' Vo%otuil2
§L'^A'^,°\^^*!l'i^l/V^^r*' u u Com. of Arthur 311
Sifted (And heedfuUy I s all my thought) St. 'S. Stylites 56
L very heart, ^vhens well, p,-,,-^„ ^/g^^ ^^^
rhro her this matter might be s clean.' Princess i 80
thou hast seen me strain'd And s to the utmost, Pelleas and E. 248
Mgn (s) (See also Love-sighs) wasting odorous s's All
night long ideline 43
Kate will not hear of lovers' s's. K^e ^
With her laughter or her s's. Miller's D 184
!nVw?T*''f\7*''''* , ,. D. of F. Women 109
m s s Which perfect Joy perplex'd Gardener's D. 254
A welcome mix'd with s's. Talki^ig Oak 212
shaken with a sudden storm of s's~ Lo.Mey Hall 27
With half a s she tum'd the key, The Letters 18
from my breast the involuntary s Brake, Princess Hi 191
Ihe bosom with long s's labour'd ; ~j,- 225
Love would answer with a s, /^ Mem. zxxv 13
JNorfeed with s's a passing wind: cviii i
And in my thoughts with scarce as " cj-ix 11
young lord-lover, what s's are those, Maud I xxii 29
Half the night I waste in s's, // i^ 23
songs, S's, and slow smiles, and golden "
cvi, / '^^°'1"''"'=^ , , . Lancelot a,id E. 649
^ .S^ < 1 ^'°'' "'*y ^'fu' 1"P ««b and s A spirit haunts 5
'" T^. hn ** i'"'"''' ,^f ^\l ^l"d,d'd s ■ Dying Swan 15
To breatlie and loathe to hve and s. Two Voices 104
But here wi 1 s thine alder tree, a Fareoell 9
bhe s s anud her narrow days, /^ .j/g™ 7» in
and s The full new life that feeds thy breath ' ixxxvi 9
That whenever a iMarch-wind s's Mavld I xxii 40
s s to see the peak Sun-flush'd, Balin and Balan 165
would o ten when they met S fully. Merlin a-,id V. 182
to s, and to stretch and yawn, y. of Maeldune 91
s s after many a vanish'd face, Vastness 1
^i^^A r''\ u'°'^f ""^^^ ^ ™°"™ ^"^ *— To Mary Boyle 57
Slghd when I heard my name S forth with life D. of F. Wovmi 154
bo s the King, Muttering and murmuring at his
^\-T'\ ,^ 1 -^ ^^- d' Arthur 178
te ^^^ '^f "^ '*k' Vision of Sin 18
Cold ev n to her, she s ; p^^^eis vi 102
1 s . a touch Came round my wrist, ^i 137
Long have I s for a calm : j)„ j,^ / •; j
thought, is it pride, and mused and s i^a 12
Sigh'd
639
Silence
Sigh'd (continued) They s for the dawn and thee. Maud I xxii 52
A- and smiled the hoary-headed Earl, Marr. of Geraint 307
came upon him, and he s ; Geraint and E. 249
jS, as a boy lame-bom beneath a height, Balin and Balan 164
s ' Was I not better there with him ? ' „ 291
anon S all as suddenly. „ 494
.\gain she a- * Pardon, sweet lord ! „ 496
*• in passing, ' Lancelot, Forgive me ; Lancelot and E. 1350
and knew not that she s. Last Tournament 130
S, and began to gather heart again, Guinevere 368
s to find Her journey done, glanced at liim, „ 404
So s the King, Muttering and murmuring at his
ear. Pass, of Arthur 346
1 s, as the low dark hull dipt The Wreck 127
but I wept alone, and s Happy 69
Sigheth But the solemn oak-tree s, Clarihel 4
Sighing the winter winds are wearily s: D. of the O. Year 2
all her force Fail'd her; ands, ' Let me rest ' she
said : Enoch Arden 375
by them went The enamour'd air s. Princess vi 79
S she spoke ' I fear They will not.' „ vii 297
again s she spoke : ' A dream That once was mine ! „ 309
O, art thou s for Lebanon Maud I xviii 15
S for Lebanon, Dark cedar, „ 17
Shaking her head at her son and s „ xix 24
tum'd S, and feign'd a sleep imtil he slept. Lancelot and E. 842
S weariedly, as one Who sits and gazes
Last Tournament 156
Sight (See also Second-sight) talking to himself, first
met his s :
While blissful tears blinded my s
Even in her .? he loved so well ?
I cannot veil, or droop my 5,
To weave the mirror's magic s's,
Rain'd thro' my s its overflow.
Shudderest when I strain my 5,
Bursts into blossom in his s.
I shut my s for fear :
where'er she tum'd her s The airy hand coofusion
wrought,
polish'd argent of her breast to s
tell o'er Each little sound and s.
a s to make an old man young.
Love at first s, first-bom.
But not a creature was in s :
trembling, pass'd in music out of s.
And wasn't it a s to see.
How fresh was every s and sound
while I breathed in s of haven,
out of s, and sink Past earthquake —
in s of Collatine And all his peers,
strange was the s to me ;
Strange was the s and smacking of the time ;
' Pretty were the s If our old halls could change
a « to shake The midriff of despair with laughter,
Pitiful s, wrapp'd in a soldier's cloak.
And our seeing is not s.
like to him whose .< is lost ;
Forgot his weakness in thy s.
by this my love has closed her s
So the last s that Enid had of home
and stood Stiff as a viper frozen ; loathsome s.
As je love to look on.'
and the sorrow dimm'd her s,
these have seen according to their s.
that if the King Had seen the s
the s Of her rich beauty made him at one glance
goal of this great world Lies beyond s :
s that throbs and aches beneath my touch,
Was my s drunk that it did shape to me
vamsh'd from my « Beneath the bower
and the s run over Upon his steelj' gyves ;
the s of this So frighted our good friend,
till the Spaniard carne in s,
Love at first s May seem —
How could I bear with the s's
Love and Death 6
Oriana 23
Margaret 40
Eleanore 87
L. of Shalott a 29
Two Voices 45
Fatima 3
„ 35
(Enone 188
Palace of Art 225
D. of F. Women 158
277
Gardener's D. 141
189
Talking Oak 167
Locksley Hall 34
Amphion 49
The Voyage 5
The Brook 157
Lucretius 152
238
Princess. Pro. 54
89
139
i 200
1)56
Voice and the P. 36
In Mem. Ixvi 8
„ ex 4l
Maud I xviii 67
Geraint and E. 24
Merlin and V. 845
Lancelot and E. 83
Holy Grail 875
904
Pelleasand £.237
To the Queen ii 60
Lover's Tale i 33
642
m42
156
iv 382
The Revenge 23
Sisters {E. and E.) 91
In the Child. Hasp. 25
Sight (continued) hope Sank all but out of s, Columbus 157
flourish'd up beyond s, V. of Maeldune 15
Ruddy thro' both the roofs of s, Tiresias 3
Son, in the hidden world of s, „ 51
but pass From s and night to lose themselves Ancient Sage 203
boath on us kep out o' s o' the winders Spinster's S's. 35
our own good redcoats sank from s. Heavy Brigade 42
She clear'd her s, she arose. Dead Prophet 31
Young again you grow Out of s. The Ring 12
I am not keen of s, ., 258
Nor ever let you gambol in her s, „ 387
pass on ! the s confuses — Parnassus 15
What s so lured him thro' the fields Far — far — away 1
Kalph would fight in Edith's s. The Tourney 1
Sighted {See also Far-sighted) we have s fifty-three ! ' The Revenge 3
Sightless O, therefore from thy s range In Mem. xciiiQ
in yonder living blue The lark becomes a s song. „ cxv 8
Sign (s) I should require A s ! Supp. Confessions 10
Scarce outward s's of joy arise, „ 49
And heaven's mazed s's stood still Clear-headed friend 28
Know I not Death ? the outward s's ? Two Voices 270
and I will tell the s. May Queen, Con. 24
I thought, I take it for a s. „ 38
By s's or groans or tears ; D. of F. Women 284
For surer s had follow'd, either hand, M. d' Arthur 76
A s betwixt the meadow and the cloud, St. S. Stylites 14
A s to many a staring shire Will Water. 139
' If my heart by s's can tell, L. of Burleigh 2
Pray'd for a s ' my Enoch is he gone ? ' Enoch Arden 491
Suddenly set it wide to find a s, „ 496
and making s's They knew not what : „ 640
And swang besides on many a windy s — Aylmer's Field 19
There Stood a bust of PaUas for a s, Princess i 222
And cannot speak, nor move, nor make one s, „ vii 153
Till the Sun drop, dead, from the s's.' .. 245
I waste my heart in s's : let be. „ 359
Are they not s and symbol High, Pantheism 6
shield was blank and bare without a s Saving the
name beneath ; Gareth and L. 414
With no more s of reverence than a beard. Merlin and V. 279
Thy holy nun and thou have seen a s — Holy Grail 295
A s to maim this Order which I made. ,. 297
An out-door s of all the warmth within, „ 704
if indeed there came a s from heaven, „ 873
on all hills, and in the s's of heaven.' Last Tournament 337
With s's and miracles and wonders, Guinevere 222
Or what of s's and wonders, but the s's „ 229
the land was full of s's And wonders „ 232
Not even thy wise father with his s's „ 274
For surer s had follow'd, either hand. Pass, of Arthur 244
Or wisely or unwisely, s's of storm. To the Queen ii 49
Then Julian made a secret s to me Lover's Tale iv 284
Then waving us a s to seat ourselves, „ 320
this fleshly s That thou art thou— De Prof., Two G. 40
And yet what s of aught that lies Ancient Sage 25
that take Some warrior for a s Pro. to Gen. Hamley 14
Sign (verb) Now s your names, which shall be read, /w Mem., Con. 57
Signal An idle s, for the brittle fleet Sea Dreams 133
Sign'd The names are s, and overhead In Mem., Con. 60
s To those two sons to pass, and let them be. Com. of Arthur 318
Ferdinand Hath .s- it and our Holy Catholic queen — Columbus 30
Signet (adj.) Airing a snowy hand and s gem, Princess i 121
Signet (s) He set his royal s there ; In Mem. cxxv 12
Sign-post storm-wom s-p not to be read, Dead Prophet 17
Silence (s) All night the s seems to flow Oriana 86
And crystal s creepmg down. Two Voices 86
One deep, deep s all ! ' Palace of Art 260
and ripen toward the grave In s ; ■ Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 52
Her slow full words sank thro' the s drear, D. of F. Women 121
That only s suiteth best. To J. S. 64
Thro' s and the trembling stars On a Mourner 28
And waked with s, grunted ' Good ! ' M. d' Arthur, Ep. 4
There was s in the room ; Dora 157
every hour is saved From that eternal s, Ulysses 27
ever thus thou growest beautiful In s, Tithonus 44
Silence
640
Silent
Silence (s) (continued) To s from the paths of men ; Day-Dm., L'Envoi 6
But Philip loved in s ; Enoch Arden 41
let my query pass Unclaim'd, in flushing s, The Brook 105
Vocal, with here and there a s, Aylmer's Field 146
face to face With twenty months of s, „ 567
a louder one Was all but s — „ 697
he felt the s of his house About him, „ 830
escaped His keepers, and the s which he felt, „ 839
And silenced by that s lay the wife. Sea Dreams 46
him we gave a costly bribe To guerdon s, Princess i 204
We dare not ev'n by s sanction lies. Third of Feb. 10
We feel, at least, that s here were sin, „ 37
S, till I be silent too. In Mem. xiii 8
And makes a s in the hills. „ xix 8
And s foUow'd, and we wept. „ xxx 20
So here shall s guard thy fame ; „ Ixxv 17
They haimt the s of the breast, „ xciv 9
And strangely on the s broke „ xcv 25
And fell in s on his neck : „ eiii 44
And, tho' in s, wishing joy. „ Con. 88^
Till a s fell with the waking bird, Maud I xxii 17
I wish Your warning or your s ? Geraint and E. 77
Debating his command of s given, .. 366
Then breaking his command of s given, ,. 390
In s, did him service as a squire ; ,, 406
blind wave feeling round his long sea-hall In s : Merlin and V. 233
let me think S is wisdom : ,, 253
such a s is more wise than kind.' .. 289
grew darker toward the storm In s, ,, 891
Dark -splendid, speaking in the s, Lancelot and E. 338
standing near the shield In s, „ 395
Now bolden'd by the s of his King, — Holy Grail 857
Then a long s came upon the haU, Pelleas and E. 609
little maid, who brook'd No s, brake it, Guinevere 160
I cry my cry in s, „ 201
howsoever much they may desire S, ,, 207
then came s, then a voice, „ 419
after wail Of suffering, s follows. Pass, of Arthur 119
They stood before his throne in s, „ 455
till helpless death And s made him bold — Lover's Tale iv 73_
Evelyn clung In utter s for so long. Sisters {E. and E.) 217
Found s in the hollows underneath. Tiresias 38
only heard in s from the s of a tomb. Locksley H., Sixty 74
Death and S hold their own. „ 237
Swallow'd in Vastness, lost in S, Vastness 34
And found a corpse and 5, The Ring 217
That icy winter s — how it froze you Happy 71
In s wept upon the flowerless earth. Death of CEnone 9
A s foUow'd as of death, St. Telemachus 65
then once more a s as of death. „ 69
Silence (verb) ever widening slowly s all. Merlin and V. 392
Them surely can I s with all ease. Lancelot and E. 109
Silenced s by that silence lay the wife. Sea Dreams 46
S for ever — craven — a man of plots, Gareth and L. 431.
Silent {See also All-silent, Ever-silent) Losing his Are and
active might In a s meditation, Elednore 105
There in a « shade of laurel brown Alexander 9
And the s isle imbowers The Lady of Shalott. L. of Shalott i 17
For often thro' the s nights^A funeral, „ ii 30
iS into Camelot. „ iw 41_
And s in its dusty vines : Mariana in the S. 4.
And deepening thro' the s spheres „ 91
Thereto the s voice replied ; Two Voices 22
' Still sees the sacred morning spread The s summit
overhead. „ 81
The phantom of a s song. Miller's D. 71
And rose, and, with a s grace Approaching, „ 159
The grasshopper is s in the grass : CEnone 26
0 s faces of the Great and Wise Palace ofArt 195
Three s pinnacles of aged snow, Lotos-Eaters 16
Drops in a s autumn night. „ C. S. 34
Lower'd softly with a threefold cord of love Down
to a s grave. D. of F. Women 212
1 rose up in the s night : The Sisters 25
a s cousm stole Upon us and departed : Edwin Morris 115
Silent (continued) I, whose bald brows in 5 hours become
Unnaturally hoar with rime, St. S- Stylites 165
Roll'd in one another's arms, and s in a last embrace. Locksley Hall 58
He gazes on the s dead : Day-Dm., Arrival 13
I pledge her s at the board ; WUl Water. 25
And watch'd by s gentlemen, „ 231
' Dark porch,' I said, ' and s aisle. The Letters 47
A deedful life, a s voice : You might have won 8
And lived a life of s melancholy. Enoch Arden 260
Her own son Was s, tho' he often look'd his wish ; „ 482
Till s in her oriental haven. „ 537
The s water slipping from the hiUs, „ 633
There Enoch rested s many days. „ 699
and ever bears about A s court of justice in his breast. Sea Dreams 174
Too often, in that s court of yours — „ 183
Why were you s when I spoke to-night ? „ 268
question'd if she knew us men, at first Was s ; Princess iv 232
s we with blind surmise Regarding, „ 381
glaring with his whelpless eye, S; „ vi 100
stood Erect and s, striking with her glance „ 152
all s, save When armour clash'd or jingled, „ 362
Lay s in the muffled cage of life : „ m 47
s light Slept on the painted walls, „ 120
Now slides the 5 meteor on, and leaves „ 184
Or in their s influence as they sat, „ Con. 15
Thro' all the s spaces of the worlds, „ 114
His voice is « in your council-hall Ode on Well. 174
and whatever tempests lour For ever s ; even if they
broke In thunder, s ; „ 176
0 s father of our Kings to be Ode Inter. Exhib. 7
. Where oleanders flush'd the bed Of s torrents. The Daisy 34
1 stood among the s statues, „ 63
And look'd at by the s stars : Lit. Squabbles 4
But thou wert s in heaven. Voice and the P. 7
So the s colony hearing her tumultuous adversaries Boadicea 78
Silence, till I be s too. In Mem. xiii 8
Sat s, looking each at each. „ xxx 12
Her eyes are homes of s prayer, „ xxxii 1
And s traces of the past Be aU the colour of the flower : „ xliii 7
The s snow possess 'd the earth, „ Ixxviii 3
And s under other snows : „ ev 6
The red-ribb'd ledges drip with a s horror of blood, Maud I i3
Love for the s thing that had made false haste to the
grave — „ 58
The s sapphire-spangled marriage ring of the land ? ,, iv 6
When I was wont to meet her In the s woody places „ II iv 6
But is ever the one thing s here, „ v 68
That like a s Ughtning under the stars „ /// vi 9
he is gone : We know him now : all narrow jealousies
Are s ; Ded. of Idylls 17
on thro' s faces rode Down the slope city, Gareth and L. 734
And Gareth s gazed upon the knight, „ 933
S the s field They traversed. „ 1313
And all the three were s seeing, „ 1362
Worn by the feet that now were s, Marr. of Geraint 321
Her mother s too, nor helping her, „ 768
I am s then. And ask no kiss ; ' Merlin and V. 253
We could not keep him s, „ 416
For s, tho' he greeted her, she stood Rapt on his
face Lancelot and E. 355
from his face who read To hers which lay so s, „ 1286
Had pass'd into the s life of prayer. Holy Grail 4
Lancelot left The haU long s, „ 854
Cares but to pass into the s life. „ 899
Hot was the night and s ; Pelleas and E. 395
Across the s seeded meadow-grass Borne, „ 561
Speak, Lancelot, thou art s : Last Tournament 107
It makes a s music up in heaven, „ 349
With s smiles of slow disparagement ; Guinevere 14
bow'd down upon her hands S, until the little maid, „ 159
Blaze by the rushing brook or s weU. „ 400
witness, too, the s cry, The prayer of many a race
and creed. To the Queen ii 10
one string That quivers, and is s. Lover's Tale i 18
till the things f amiUar to her youth Had made a s answer : „ iv 96
Silent
641
Silver
The Revenge 14
of Maeldune 11
80
Tiresias 211
Ancient Sage 212
Tomorrovj 84
Silent (continued) Till he melted like a cloud in the s
summer heaven ;
we came to the S Isle that we never had touch'd at
before, Where a s ocean always broke on a s
shore, V.
low down in a rainbow deep S palaces,
Rememberinfi; all the golden hours Now s,
But louder than thy rhyme the s Word
Sorra the s throat but we hard it cryin' * Ochone ! '
Fires that shook me once, but now to s ashes
fall'n away. Locksley H., Sixty 41
Clinging to the s mother ! Are we devils ? ,. 99
While the s Heavens roll, and Suns along their
fiery way, „ 203
S echoes ! You, my Leonard, use and not abuse
your day, „ 265
But thou art s underground, Pref. Poem Broth. S. 13
Here s in our Minster of the West Epit. on Stratford 3
Along the 5 field of Asphodel. Demeter and P. 153
But seen upon the s brow when life has ceased to beat. Sappy 52
I saw beyond their s tops The steaming marshes Prog, of Spring 74
And streaming and shining on S river. Merlin and the G. 52
For out of the darkness iS and slowly The Gleam, „ 82
The s Alphabet-of-heaven-in-man Made vocal — Akbar's Dream 136
iS Voices of the dead, Silent Voices 4
Call me rather, s voices, „ 7
Nor the myriad world, His shadow, nor the s
Opener of the Gate.'
Snent-creeping s-c winds Laid the long night
Silent-lighted And pass the s-l town.
Silently But s, in all obedience,
Silent -speaJdng on the silence broke The s-s words,
Silk (adj.) s star-broider'd coverUd Unto her limbs
and on the further side Arose a s pavilion.
But found a s pavilion in a field,
s pavilions of King Arthur raised For brief repast
Silk (s) And trod on s, as if the winds
s's, and fruits, and spices, clear of toll,
A gown of grass-green s she wore.
And robed the shoulders in a rosy s.
She brought us Academic s's,
thro' the parted s's the tender face Peep'd,
statue of Sir Ralph From those rich s's.
Then she bethought her of a faded s.
In summer suit and s's of holiday.
And seeing one so gay in purple s's.
Moved the fair Enid, all in faded s,
AU staring at her in her faded s :
That she ride with me in her faded s.'
But Enid ever kept the faded s,
And tearing off her veil of faded s
Display'd a splendid s of foreign loom,
fearing rust or soiliu"e fashion'd for it A case of s,
God. and the Univ. 6
Lover's Tale tt 111
In Mem., Con. 112
Marr. of Geraint 767
In Mem. xcv 26
Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 9
Gareth and L. 910
Holy Grail 745
Guinevere 394
A Character 21
Golden Tear 45
Sir L. and Q. G. 24
Princess, Pro. 103
„ ii 16
vii 60
Con. 118
Marr. of Geraint 134
173
284
366
617
762
841
Geraint and E. 514
687
Lancelot and E. 8
Figs out of thistles, s from bristles. Last Tournament 356
fold Thy presence in the s of simiptuous looms : Ancient Sage 266
till I maakes tha es smooth es s. Spinster's S's. 53
spice and her vintage, her s and her com ; Vastness 13
Silken Hues of the s sheeny woof Madeline 22
breeze of a joyful dawn blew free In the s sail of
infancy, Arabian Nights 2
We'll bind you fast in s cords, Rosalind 49
On s cushions half reclined ; Elednore 126
New from its s sheath. D. of F. Women 60
' Her eyeUds dropp'd their s eaves. Talking Oak 209
And rotatory thumbs on s knees, Aylmer's Field 200
A feudal knight in s masquerade. Princess, Pro. 234:
in hue The lUac, with a s hood to each, „ ii 17
one The s priest of peace, one this, „ v 184
In s fluctuation and the swarm Of female whisperers : „ vi 355
To have her lion roll in a s net Mavd I vi 29
from out the s curtain-folds Bare-footed Gareth and L. 925
This s rag, this beggar-woman's weed : Geraint and E. 680
Ran down the s thread to kiss each other Merlin and V. 455
o'er her hung The s case with braided blazonings, Lancelot and E. 1149
Which made a s mat-work for her feet ; Holy Grail 151
Silken (continued) In its green sheath, close-lapt in s folds. Lover's Tale i 153
A s cord let down from Paradise, Akbar's Dream 139
Silken-folded fancies hatch'd In s-f idleness ; Princess iv 67
Silken-sail'd The shallop flitteth s-s L. of Shalott i 22
Silken-sandal'd She tapt her tiny s-s foot : Princess, Pro. 150
Silk-soft In s-s folds, upon yielding down, Elednore 28
Silky All grass of s feather grow — Talking Oak 269
Silver (adj.) but a most s flow Of subtle-paced counsel Isabel 20
With s anchor left afloat, Arabian Nights 93
Like Indian reeds blown from his s tongue. The Poet 13
Shadows of the s birk Sweep the green A Dirge 5
Would curl roimd my s feet silently. Mermaid 50
the violet woos To his heart the s dews? Adeline 32
from his blazon'd baldric slung A mighty s bugle
hung, L. of Shalott Hi 16i
Three fingers round the old s cup — Miller's D. 10
The wind sounds like as wire, Fatitna 29
With narrow moon-lit slips of s clouJ, (Enone 218
Moved of themselves, with s sound ; Palace of Art 130
0 blessings on his kindly voice and on his s hair ! May Queen, Con. 13
0 blessings on his kindly heart and on his s head ! 15
A golden bill ! the s tongue. The Blackbird 13
momently The twinkling laurel scatter'd s lights. Gardener's D. 118
The s fragments of a broken voice, „ 234
High up, in s spikes ! Talking Oak 276
Close over us, the s star, thy guide, Tithonus 25
And thee returning on thy s wheels. „ 76
Glitter hke a swarm of fire-flies tangled in a s braid. Locksley Hall 10
The s vessels sparkle clean. Sir Galahad 34
s boss Of her own halo's dusky shield ; The Voyage 31
Till over thy dark shoulder glow Thy s sister-world, Move eastward 6
on the swell The s lilv heaved and fell ; To E. L. 19
s sickle of that month Became her golden shield, Princess i 101
like s hammers falling On s anvils, „ 216
sound Of solemn psalms, and s litanies, ,, ii 477
S sails all out of the west Under the s moon : „ Hi 14
caU'd On flying Time from all their s tongues — ,, m 105
nor cares to walk With Death and Morning on the « horns, „ 204
Pink was the shell within, S without ; Mirmie and Winnie 6
Calm on the seas, and s sleep. In Mem. xi 17
As slowly steak a s flame „ Ixvii 6
To reverence and the s hair ; „ Ixxxiv 32
Or into s arrows break The sailing moon in creek and cove ; „ ci 15
s knell Of twelve sweet hours that past Maud I xviii 64
And over these is placed a s wand, Marr. of Geraint 483
And over these they placed the s wand, „ 549
went In s tissue talking things of state ; ,, 663
-And all the Ught upon her s face Flow'd Balin and Balan 263
And hke a s shadow sUpt away Thro' the dim land ; Merlin and V. 423
Her seer, her bard, her s star of eve, „ 954
one emerald center'd in a sim Of s rays, Lancelot and E. 296
1 heard a sound As of a s horn from o'er the hills Holy Grail 109
Stream'd thro' my cell a cold and s beam, „ 116
wove with s thread And crimson in the belt a strange
device, A crimson grail within a s beam ; „ 154
In s armour suddenly Galahad shone Before us, „ 458
for every moment glanced His s arms and gloom'd : „ 493
I saw him like a s star — „ 517
- There tript a hundred tiny s deer. Last Tournament 171
Laid the long night in s streaks and bars, Lover's Tale ii 112
blew it far Until it himg, a little- s cloud Over the
sounding seas : „ Hi 36
Smoothing their locks, as golden as his own
Were s, ■ Sisters (E. and E.) 57
By firth and loch thy s sister grow, Sir J. Oldcastle 58
S crescent-curve. Coming soon. The Ring 13
The s year shoidd cease to mourn and sigh — To Mary Boyle 57
Silver (s) million tapers flaring bright From twisted s's Arabian Nights 125
Six coliunns, three on either side, Pure s,- „ 145
Twilights of airy s, Audley Court 82
Sipt wine from s, praising God, Will Water. 127
cups and s on the bumish'd board Sparkled and
shone ; Enoch Arden 742
spread Their sleeping s thro' the hills ; In Mem., Con. 116
bars Of black and bands of s. Lover's Tale iv 59
2 s
Silver
642
Sin
Silver (verb) linger there To s all the valleys Tiresias 32
Silver-chiming from the central fountain's flow Fall'n s-c, Arabian Nights 51
Silver-chorded Her warm breath floated in the utterance
Of s-c tones : Lover's Tale ii 142
Silver-clear A little whisper s-c, Two Voices 428
Silver-coasted 0 saviour of the s-c isle, Ode on Well. 136
Silver-fair glancing heavenward on a star so s-f, Locksley R., Sixty 191
SUver-green All s-g with gnarled bark : Mariana 42
SUvering See Early-dlvering
SUver-misty they saw the s-m mom Rolling her smoke Gareth and L. 189
Silver-set near his tomb a feast Shone, s-s ; Princess, Pro. 106
Silver-sbeeted curving roimd The s-s bay : Lover's Tale ii 76
SUver-shining s-s armour starry-clear ; Holy Grail 511
Silver-smiling s-s Venus ere she fell Lover's Tale i 61
Silver-treble S-t laughter trilleth : Lilian 24
Silvery (See also Olive-silvery) s marish-flowers that
throng The desolate creeks Dying Swan 40
Whose s spikes are nighest the sea. The Mermaid 37
one s cloud Had lost his way between Qinone 92
With many a s waterbreak Above the golden gravel, The Brook 61
' Fear not, isle of blowing woodland, isle of s parapets ! Boadicea 38
all the s gossamers That twinkle into green and gold : In Mem. xi 7
o'er the sky The s haze of summer drawn ; „ xcv 4
S willow, Pasture and plowland, Merlin and the G. 53
Long as the s vapour in daylight Kapiolani 16
Silvery-crimson They freshen the s-c shells, Sea-Fairies 13
Silvery-streak'd overstream'd and s-s The Islet 20
Simeon (See also Simeon Stylites, Stylites) ' Fall down,
O S : thou hast suffer'd St. S. Stylites 99
Courage, St. S ! This dull chrysalis Cracks ,, 155
I, S of the pillar, by surname StyUtes, among men ; I, »S', ,, 161
I, S, whose brain the sunshine bakes ; „ 164
Simeon Stylites (See also Simeon, Stylites) hark ! they
shout 'St. ^S^f.' „ 147
Similitude dream To states of mystical s ; Sonnet To 4
Simois Came up from reedy S all alone. CEnone 52
Flash in the pools of whirUng S. „ 206
Simper s and set their voices lower, Maud I x 15
Simple (adj.) (See also Cunning-simple) ' The s senses
crown'd his head : Two Voices 277
Not s as a thing that dies. „ 288
A s maiden in her flower Is worth a hundred
coats-of-arms. L. C. V. de Vere 15
And s faith than Norman blood. „ 56
As s folk that knew not their own minds, Enoch Arden 478
Not preaching s Christ to s men. Sea Dreams 21
And on a s village green ; In Mem. Ixiv 4
He mixt in all our s sports ; „ Ixxxix 10
He seems to slight her s heart. „ xcvii 20
Or s stile from mead to mead, „ c 7
Like some of the s great ones gone For ever Maud / a; 61
To save from some slight shame one s girl. „ xviii 45
But rode a s knight among his knights. Com. of Arthur 51
And s words of great authority, „ 261
Enid easily believed, Like s noble natures, Geraint and E. 875
thou from Arthur's hall, and yet So s ! Balin and Balan 358
Is mere white truth in s nakedness, „ 518
O, the results are s ; a mere child Might use it Merlin and V. 684
'Such be for queens, and not for s maids.' Lancelot and E. 231
Full s was her answer, ' What know I ? „ 671
In the heart's colours and on her s face ; „ 837
And the sick man forgot her s blush, „ 864
Will sing the s passage o'er and o'er „ 896
so the s maid Went half the night repeating, „ 898
' Ah s heart and sweet, Ye loved me, damsel, „ 1393
And this high Quest eis at a s thing : Holy Grail 668
0 great and sane and s race of brutes Pelleas and E. 480
So dame and damsel cast the s white. Last Tournament 232
signs And s miracles of thy nunnery ? ' Guinevere 230
' The s, fearful child Meant nothing, „ 369
For L being s, thought to work His will. Pass, of Arthur 22
And Softness breeding scorn of s life. To the Queen ii 53
Loosed from their s thrall they had flow'd abroad, Lover's Tale i 703
told it me all at once, as s as any child, First Quarrel 58
Because the a mother work'd upon By Edith Sisters (E. ami E.) 206
Simple (adj.) (continued) By one side-path, from
s truth ; To Marq. of Dufferin 28
Thro' manifold effect of s powers — Prog, of Spring 86
A s, saner lesson might he learn „ 105
There is laughter down in Hell At your s scheming . . . Forlorn 16
Simple (s) the hermit, skill'd in all The s's Lancelot and E. 862
Simple-hearted seeming-injured s-h thing Merlin and V. 902
Simpler guilt, S than any child, Guinevere 371
A temple, neither Pagod, Mosque, nor Church, But
loftier, s, always open-door'd Akhar's Dream 179
Simple-seeming Our s-s Abbess and her nuns, Guinevere 309
Simphcity In his s sublime. Ode on Well. 34
Sin (s) my s was as a thorn Among the thorns Supp. Confessions 5
That pride, the s of devils, stood Betmxt me .. 109
and my s's Be unremember'd, „ 181
you are foul with s ; Poet's Mind 36
What is it that will take away my s. Palace of Art 287
for he show'd me all the s. May Queen, Con. 17
From scalp to sole one slough and crust of s, St. S. Stylites 2
Have mercy, Lord, and take away my s. „ 8
Than were those lead-like tons of s, ,. 25
Have mercy, mercy : take away my s. „ 45
subdue this home Of s, my flesh, „ 58
Have mercy, mercy ! cover all my s. „ 84
0 mercy, mercy ! wash away my s. .. 120
A sinful man, conceived and born in s : .. 122
On the coals I lay, A vessel full of s : „ 170
S itself be found The cloudy porch Love and Duly 8
To make me pure of s. St. Agnes' Eve 32
from the palace came a child of s. Vision of Sin 5
shroud this great s from all! Aylmer's Field 11 ii
■ the s That neither God nor man can well forgive. Sea Dreams 62
The s's of emptiness, gossip and spite Princess ii 92
We feel, at least, that silence here were s, Third of Feb. 37
says, our s's should make us sad : Grandmother 93
An' a towd ma my s's, N. Farmer, 0. S. 11
We might discuss the Northern s To F. D. Maurice 29
The wages of s is death : Wages 6
Forgive what seem'd my s in me , In Mem., Pro. 33
1 sometimes hold it half as „ v 1
Thou fail not in a world of s, „ xxxiii 15
And holds it s and shame to draw ,, xlviii 11
That life is dash'd with flecks of s. „ Hi 14
To pangs of nature, s's of will, „ liv 3
Ring out the want, the care, the s, „ cvi 17
And heap'd the whole inherited s Maud I xiii 41
Not touch on her father's s : „ xix 17
Whatever the Quaker holds, from s ; „ II v 92
that best blood it is a s to spill.' Gareth and L. 600
The s that practice burns into the blood. Merlin and V. 762
She with a face, bright as for s forgiven, Lancelot and E. 1102
Such s in words Perchance, „ 1188
To make men worse by making my s known ? Or
s seem less, the sinner seeming great ? „ 1417
S against Arthm- and the Table Roimd, Holy Grail 79
' And he to whom she told her s's, or what Her all but
utter whiteness held for s.
Holy Grail would come again ; But s broke out.
' This madness has come on us for our s's.'
thoughtest of thy prowess and thy s's ?
Happier are those that welter in their s,
in me lived a s So strange, of such a kind,
twined and clung Roimd that one s.
And in the great sea wash away my s.'
And but for all my madness and my s.
Twine round one s, whatever it might be.
If here be comfort, and if ours be s, Crown'd
warrant had we for the crowning s
' Mine be the shame ; mine was the s :
The s's that made the past so pleasant
and as yet no s was dream'd,)
the s wnich thou hast sinn'd.
Then came thy shameful s with Lancelot ;
Then came the s of Tristram and Isolt ;
As in the golden days before thy s.
83
93
357
455
770
„ • 772
775
806
849
88H
Last Tournament 575
Guinevere 112
375
388
455
487
488
500
I
Sin
643
Single
Sin (S) {continued) And all is past, the s is sinn'd, Guinevere 543
Gone thro' my s to slay and to be slain ! „ 613
I cannot kill my s. If soul be soul ; „ 621
in mine own heart I can live down s „ 636
alone with her s an' her shame, First Quarrel 25
an' she — in her shame an' her s — - ., 69
•S ? O yes — we are sinners, I know — Eizpah 60
they have told you he never repented his «. ,, 69
trouble, the strife and the s, V. of Alaeldune 129
driven by storm and s and death to the ancient fold. The Wreck 2
prayer for a soul that died in his s, „ 10
Ten long days of summer and s — „ 77
But if s be 5, not inherited fate, „ 85
My s to my desolate Uttle one found me „ 86
' The wages of s is death,' „ 93
I cried, ' for the s of the wife, „ 99
be never gloom'd by the curse Of a s, „ 140
death aUve, is a mortial s.' Tomorrow 51
Feyther 'ud saay I wur ugly es s. Spinster's S's. 15
Shall we sin our fathers' s, Open I. and C. Exhib. 24
Murder will not veil your s. Forlorn 49
For bolder s's than mine, Romney's R. 133
Fur they wesh'd their s's i' my pond, Church-warden, etc. 16
Tha mun tackle the s's o' the Wo'ld, „ 46
leaved their nasty s's i' my pond, „ 54
Tho' S too oft, when smitten by Thy rod, Doubt and Prayer 1
From s thro' sorrow into Thee we pass „ 3
Sin (verb) s against the strength of youth ! Locksley Hall 59
LeoUn, I almost « in envjring you : Aylmer's Field 360
of one who sees To one who s's, Com. of Arthur 118
is your beauty, and I s In speaking, Lancelot and E. 1186
I could hardly s against the lowest.' Last Tournament 572
If this be sweet, to s in leading-strings, „ 574
Shall we 5 our fathers' sin. Open I. and C. Exhib. 24
Simu As over S's peaks of old. In Mem. xcvi 22
Sbie Of s and arc, spheroid and azimuth. Princess vi 256
Smecore So moulder'd in a s as he : „ Pro. 182
Sinew home is in the s's of a man, „ v 267
Burst vein, snap s, and crack heart. Sir J. Oldcastle 123
Sinew-corded supple, s-c, apt at arms ; Princess v 535
Sinew'd (See also Supple-sinew 'd) imtil endurance
grow S with action, CEnone 165
'Sinful A s soul possess'd of many gifts. To , With Pal. of Art 3
A s man, conceived and bom in sin : St. S. Stylites 122
Kedden'd at once with s, for the point Balin and Balan 558
so glad were spirits and men Before the coming of the
s Queen.' Guinevere 270
Such as they are, were you the s Queen.' „ 353
Sing it s's a song of undying love ; Poet's Mind 33
We will s to you aU the day : Sea-Fairies 20
1 would sit and s the whole of the day ; The Merman 9
I would s to myself the whole of the day ; The Mermaid 10
still as I comb'd I would s and say, „ 12
Than but to dance and s, be gaily drest. The form, the form 3
Nor bird would s, nor lamb would bleat, Mariana in the S. 37
Sometimes I heard you s within ; Miller's D. 123
Ah, well — but s the foolish song I gave you, ,. 161
So s that other song I made, „ 199
To s her songs alone. Palace of Art 160
Nor barken what the inner spirit s's, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 22
the minstrel s's Before them of the ten years' war „ 76
O BLACKBiBD ! s me something well : The Blackbird 1
Take warning ! he that will not s „ 21
Shall s for want, ere leaves are new, „ 23
Think you they s Like poets, Gardener's D. 99
have they any sense of why they 5 ? „ 101
pits of fire, that still S in mine ears. St. S. Stylites 185
Like that strange song I heard Apollo s, Tithonus 62
this is truth the poet s's, Locksley Hall 75
Not even of a gnat that s's. Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 21
Ah shameless ! for he did but s A song You might have won 21
That he s's in his boat on the bay ! Break, break, etc. 8
For he s's of what the world will be Poet's Song 15
and every bird that s's : Sea Breams 102
well then, sleep, And I will s you ' birdie.' „ 284
Sing (continued) let the ladies s us, if they will, Princess, Pro. 240
' Let some one s to us : hghtlier move „ iv 36
as far As I could ape their treble, did I s. „ 92
I hear them too — they s to their team : Grandmother 81
0 skill'd to s of Time or Eternity, Milton 2
1 HELD it truth, with him who s's In Mem. i 1
I s to him that rests below, „ xxi 1
I do but 5 because I must, „ 23
And pipe but as the linnets s: „ 24
But m the songs I love to s „ xxxviii 7
Then are these songs I s of thee „ 11
That lay their eggs, and sting and s „ Z 11
we do him wrong To s so wildly : „ Ivii 4
And in that solace can I s, „ Ixv 5
Or voice the richest-toned that s's, „ Ixxv 7
For him she plays, to him she s's „ xcvii 29
As one would s the death of war, .. ciii 33
And s the songs he loved to hear. ,, cvii 24
To the baUad that she s's. Maud II iv 43
Do I hear her s as of old, „ 44
so great bards of him will s Hereafter ; Com. of Arthur 414
0 birds that warble as the day goes by, S sweetly : Gareth and L. 1077
That s's so dehcately clear, Marr. of Geraint 332
1 heard the great Sir Lancelot s it once. Merlin and V. 385
And every minstrel s's it differently ; „ 458
Will s the simple passage o'er and o'er Lancelot and E. 896
sweetly could she make and s. „ 1006
one hath sung and all the dumb will s. Holy Grail 301
Murmuring a light song I had heard thee s. Last Tournament 614
' O maiden, if indeed ye list to s, S, Guinevere 165
We could s a good song at the Flow, (repeat) North. Cobbler 18
Bullets would s by our foreheads, Def. of Lucknow 21
They love their mates, to whom they s ; The Flight 65
To s thee to thy grave. Freedom 36
My birds would s. You heard not. To Mary Boyle 18
S like a bird and be happy, Parnassus 14
S the new year in under the blue. The Throstle 5
Our hymn to the sun. They s it. Akbar's Dream 203
S thou low or loud or sweet, Poet and Critics 6
Singe The moth will s her wings, Sir J. Oldcastle 189
Sing'd (sang) But, arter, we s the 'ymn togither North. Cobbler 54
Singei singe her wings, and s return, Sir J. Oldcastle 189
Singeing See A-singein'
Singer The sweet Uttle wife of the s said,
the s shaking his curly head Tum'd as he sat,
A crown the S hopes may last,
here the S for his Art Not all in vain may plead
their music here be mortal need the s greatly care ?
Singest Roman Virgil, thou that s
Thou that s wheat and woodland,
Singeth The ancient poetess s,
Singin' (singing) An' s yer 'Aves ' an' ' Fathers '
Singing (See also A-singin', Singin') S alone Under
the sea, • The Merman 4
A mermaid fair, S alone. The Mermaid 3
And s airy trifles this or that, Caress'd or chidden 2
They heard her s her last song, L. of Shalott iv 26
S in her song she died, „ 35
S and murmuring in her feastful mirth. Palace of Art 177
And s clearer than the crested bird D. of F Women 179
he is s Hosanna in the highest : Enoch Arden 502
S, ' And shall it be over the seas The Islet 9
And we with s cheer'd the way, In Mem. xxii 5
She is s an air that is known to me, Maud I v3
S alone in the morning of life, „ 6
S of men that in battle array, „ 8
S of Death, emd of Honour that cannot die, „ 16
She is s in the meadow And the rivulet at her feet ,, // iv 40
thro' the open casement of the hall, S ; Marr. of Geraint 329
Half whistling and half s a coarse song, Geraint and E. 528
voice s in the topmost tower To the eastward : Holy Grail 834
And shot itself into the s winds ; Lovers Tale i 369
S ' Hail to the glorious Golden year On Jub. Q. Victoria 64
Single For in thee Is nothing sudden, nothing s ; Eleanore 57
Poor Fancy sadder than a s star, Caress'd or chidden 13
The Islet 3
6
Epilogue 38
79
Parnassus 18
To Virgil 1
9
Leonine Eleg. 13
Tomorrow 96
Single
644
Sister
I (continued) And thought, ' My life is sick of s sleep : The Bridesmaid 13
' *S I grew, like some green plant, Z>. of F. Women 205
induce a time When s thought is civil crime, You ask me, why, etc. 19
4" note From that deep chord which Hampden
smote England and Amer. 18
A s stream of all her soft brown hair Gardener's D. 128
And spake not of it to a s soul, St. 8. Stylites 66
With a s rose in her hair. Lady Clare 60
That wilderness of s instances, Aylmer's Field 437
a cave Of touchwood, with a s flourishing spray. „ 512
than by s act Of immolation. Princess Hi 284
made the s jewel on her brow Bum like the mystic fire „ iv 273
A s band of gold about her hair, „ v 513
The s pure and perfect animal, „ vii 306
And his compass is but of a s note, The Islet 28
Be tenants of a s breast. In Mem. xvi 3
Love would cleave in twain The lading of a s pain, ,, xxv 11
So careless of -the s life ; „ /■« 8
No s tear, no mark of pain : „ Ixxmii 14
And take us as a s soul. „ Ixxxiv 44
A s church below the hill Is pealing, ,. civZ
A s peal of bells below, ., 5
A s murmur in the breast, ,, 7
this a bridge of s arc Took at a leap ; Gareth and L. 908
But rose at last, a s maiden with her, Marr. of Geraint 160
Made but a s bound, and with a sweep of it Geraint and E. 727
Should make an onslaught s on a realm ,. 917
a s misty star, Which is the second in a line of
stars Merlin and V. 508
a s glance of them WiU govern a whole life Lover's Tale i lb
' What can it matter, my lass, what I did wi' my s
life ? First Quarrel 59
a s piece Weigh'd nigh four thousand Castillanos Columbus 135
His fathers have slain thy fathers in war or in s
strife, V. of Maeldune 121
This double seeming of the s world ! — Ancient Sage 105
Earth at last a warless world, a s race, a s
tongue — Locksley H., Sixty 165
There a s sordid attic holds the living and the dead. „ 222
Mother weeps At that white funeral of the s life, Prin. Beatrice 9
If every s star Should shriek its claim Akbar's Dream 42
Singleness Arthur boxmd them not to s Merlin and V. 28
Singular I have Jieard, I know not whence, of the s beauty
of Maud ; Mattd I i 67
Sink I cannot s So far — far down, My life is full 8
And while he s's or swells Talking Oak 270
wholly out of sight, and s Past earthquake — Lucretius 152
' There s's the nebulous star we call the Sun, Princess iv 19
That s's with all we love below the verge ; „ 47
they rise or s Together, dwarf 'd or godlike, „ vii 259
And moan and s to their rest. Voice and the P. 16
And s again into sleep.' „ 24
And staggers blindly ere she s ? In Mem. xvi 14
So much the vital spirits s ,. xx 18
'Twere best at once to s to peace, „ xxxiv 13
When in the down I s my head, ,, Ixviii 1
And the great Mon s's in blood, „ cxxvii 16
A gloomy-gladed hollow slowly s To westward — Gareth and L. 797
Down to the river, s or swim, „ 1154
we scarce can s as low : Merlin and V. 813
By fire, to s into the abyss again ; Pass, of Arthur 83
S me the ship. Master Gunner — s her, split her in
twain ! The Bevenge 89
s Thy fleurs-de-lys in slime again. Sir J. Oldcastle 98
Sinking and s ships, and praying hands. Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 116
To follow knowledge hke a s star, Ulysses 31
The voice of Britain, or a s land. To the Queen ii 24
I kiss'd him, I clung to the s form, The Wreck 105
' We are s, and yet there's hope : „ 121
slowly s now into the groimd, Locksley H., Sixty 27
and s with the s wreck, „ 64
Sinless their s faith, A maiden moon that sparkles on a
sty, Princess v 185
not the s years That breathed beneath the Syrian blue : In Mem. Hi 11
Reputed to be red with s blood, Balin and Balan 557
I
Sinn'd I have s, for it was all thro' me Dora
Alas, my child, I s for thee.' Lady Clare 50
s in grosser lips Beyond all pardon — Princess iv 251
And that he s is not believable ; Merlin and V. 760
but if he s, The sin that practice burns „ 761
Guinevere had s against the highest. Last Tournament 570
Ev'n for thy sake, the sin which thou hast s. Guinevere 455
drawing foul ensample from fair names, S also, „ 491
And all is past, the sin is s, „ 543
And in the flesh thou hast s ; „ 554
S thro' an animal vileness. The Wreck 42
thunders of Ocean and Heaven ' Thou hast s.'
See, I s but for a moment.
And — well, if I s last night,
Siimer I am a s viler than you all.
In haunts of hungry s's,
Thou hast been a s too :
Or sin seem less, the s seeming great ?
Sin ? 0 yes — we are s's, I know —
Sinning Another s on such heights with one,
Slipt S wine from silver, praising God,
Sir these great S's Give up their parks
Sire to die For God and for my s !
That we are wiser than our s's.
I read — two letters — one her s's.
At length my S, his rough cheek wet with tears,
reach'd White hands of farewell to my s,
' 0 S,' she said, ' he Uves :
then brake out my s. Lifting his grim head
Were those your s's who fought at Lewes ?
yet-loved s would make Confusion worse
thou that slewest the s hast left the son.
What said the happy 5 ?
Siren 0 sister, S's tho' they be, were such
Sirius as the fiery S alters hue,
Sirmio ' 0 venusta S \' '
all-but-island, olive-silvery S !
Sirmione Eow us from Desenzano, to your S row !
Sister (adj.) same two s pearls Ran down the silken
thread
Sister (s) {See also Brother-sister, Foster-sister, Half-sister,
Lady-sister, Mock-sister, Star-sisters, Twin-sister) Thy
s smiled and said, ' No tears for me !
three s's That doat upon each other. To ,
To greet their fairer s's of the East.
Stole from her s Sorrow.
Sleep, Ellen, folded in thy s's arm,
he shouts with his s at play !
' I have a s at the foreign court,
' My s.' ' Comely, too, by all that's fair,'
she cried, ' My brother ! ' ' Well, my s.'
O s. Sirens tho' they be, were such As chanted
Here lies a brother by a s slain,
when your s came she won the heart Of Ida :
To compass our dear s's' Uberties.'
Shall croak thee s, or the meadow-crake
' Lift up your head, sweet s :
all about his motion clung The shadow of his s,
and in our noble s's cause ?
My s's crying, ' Stay for shame ; '
Old s's of a day gone by.
Leave thou thy s when she prays,
A guest, or happy s, sung,
Has not his s smiled on me ?
Hath ever like a loyal s cleaved To Arthur, —
closer to this noble prince. Being his own dear s ; '
' And therefore Arthur's $ ? ' ask'd the King.
a knight To combat for my s, Lyonors,
as any knight Toward thy s's freeing.'
Among her bumish'd s's of the pool ;
Would call her friend and s, sweet Elaine,
' Ah s,' answer'd Lancelot, ' what is this ? '
Happy 85
Bandit's Death 18
St. S. Stylites 135
Will Water. 222
Vision of Sin 92
Lancelot and E. 1418
Riepah 60
Lancelot and E. 248
Will Water. 127
Princess, Con. 102
D. of F. Women 232
Love thou thy land 72
Princess iv 397
«23
233
„ vi 122
271
Third of Feb. 33
In Mem. xc 18
Gareth and L. 360
Merlin and V. 710
Princess ii 198
V 262
Frater Ave, etc. 2
1
Merlin and V. 454
The Bridesmaid 3
With Pal. of Art 10
Gardener's D. 188
256
Audley Court 63
Break, break, etc. 6
Princess i 75
„ ii 114
188
198
208
Hi 87
288
,. iv 124
vM
258
312
Sailor Boy 18
In Mem. xxix 13
„ xxxiii 5
„ Ixxxix 26
Maud I xiii 45
Com. of Arthur 191
315
317
Gareth and L. 608
1018
Marr. of Geraint 655
Lancelot and E. 865
931
came her brethren saying, ' Peace to thee. Sweet s,'
To whom the gentle s made reply,
' S, farewell for ever,' and again ' Farewell, sweet s,'
997
1073
1151
Sister
645
Sitting
(s) (cordinued) no further off in blood from me Than s ; Holy Grail 70
My s's vision, fill'd me with amaze ; „ 140
' S or brother none had he ; „ 143
I found and saw it, as the nun ]\^y s saw it ; „ 199
Hath what thy s taught me first to see, ,, 469
Where saving his own s's he had known Pelleas and E. 87
I must strike against the man they call My s's son — Guinevere 573
Nor shun to call me s, dwell with you ;
The s of my mother — she that bore Camilla
My mother's s, mother of my love,
I repUed, ' O s. My will is one with thine ;
So shalt thou love me still as s's do ;
It was ill-done to part you, S's fair ;
My s, and ray cousin, and my love.
She never had as. I knew none.
Mea an' thy s was married.
No s's ever prized each other more.
mother and her s loved More passionately still,
The younger s, Evelyn, enter'd —
The s's closed in one another's arms.
Yet so my path was clear To win the s.
' \Vhat, will she never set her s free ? '
The s's glide about me hand in hand.
By firth and loch thy silver s grow.
One naked peak — the s of the sun
do not sleep, my s dear !
Ah, clasp me in your arms, s,
Speak to me, s ; counsel me ;
Arise, my own true s, come forth !
S's, brothers — and the beasts —
Sister-eyelids The dewy s-e la,j.
Sisterhood 0 peaceful S, Receive,
Sister-world glow Thy silver s-w,
Sit Low-cowering shall the Sophist s ;
The white owl in the belfry s's. (repeat)
I would s and sing the whole of the day ;
all day long you s between Joy and woe,
Nor care to s beside her where she s's —
' Here s's he shaping wings to fly :
In yonder chair I see him s,
' by that lamp,' I thought, ' she s's ! '
Sometimes I saw you s and spin ;
I .« as God holding no form of creed.
But s beside my bed, mother,
to s, to sleep, to wake, to breathe.'
S with their wives by fires,
S brooding in the nuns of a life,
Here s's the Butler with a flask
I 5, my empty glass reversed,
' S thee down, and have no shame,
God bless him, he shall s upon mj knees
S, listen.' Then he told her of his voyage,
(S down again ; mark me and understand,
Where s the best and stateliest of the land ?
if I might s beside your feet. And glean
beneath an emerald plane S's Diotima,
I will go and s beside the doors,
she may s Upon a king's right hand in thunderstorms,
To s a star upon the sparkling spire ;
upon the skirts of Time, S side by side.
They come and s by my chair,
To s with empty hands at home.
See they s, they hide their faces,
I s within a helmless bark,
back return To where the body s's.
For by the hearth the children s
The Shadow s's and waits for me.
Alone, alone, to where he s's,
But, he was dead, and there he s's.
And we shall s at endless feast.
Her life is lone, he s's apart,
But on her forehead s's a fire :
In the Uttle grove where I s —
And the whole little wood where I s
Why s's he here in his father's chair ?
676
Lover's Tale i 202
209
462
768
814
Hi 43
iv 326
North. Cobbler 11
Sisters (E. and E.) 43
44
152
155
203
218
275
Sir .J. Oldcastle 58
Tiresias 30
The Flight 1
5
75
Locksley H., Sixty 102
Day- Dm., Pro. 4
Guinevere 140
Move eastward 6
Clear-headed friend 10
The Owl i 7, 14
The Mertnan 9
Margaret 63
Wan Scid-ptor 10
Two Voices 289
Miller's D. 9
.. 114
„ 121
Palace of Art 211
May Queen, Con. 23
Edwin Morris 40
St. S. Stylites 108
Love and Duty 12
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 25
Will Water. 159
Vision of Sin 83
Enoch Arden 197
861
„ . 876
Lucretius 172
Princess ii 258
Hi 302
■e96
438
vii 197
288
Grandmother 83
Sailor Boy 16
Boddicea 51
In Mem. iv 3
,, xii 19
,, XX 13
., xxii 20
., xxiii 3
• 1 ccxxtt o
xlvii 9
,, xcvii 17
,, cxiv 5
Maud I iv 2
24
„ xiii 23
Sit (continued) when alone She s's by her musfe and books
s's on her shining head. And she knows it not
Our one white lie s's like a little ghost
Arthur, ' We s King, to help the wrong'd
and they s within our hall.
Why s ye there ? Rest would I not,
0 s beside a noble gentlewoman.'
and speak To your good damsel there who s's
apart,
1 see with joy. Ye s apart.
He s's unarm'd ; I hold a finger up ;
strange knights Who s near Camelot at a fountain-
Maud I xiv 13
xvi 17
Gareth and L. 297
371
425
596
867
Geraint and E. 299
321
337
side,
let them s. Until they find a lustier
■ Fair Sirs,' said Arthur, ' wherefore s ye here ? '
song that once I heard By this huge oak, simg
nearly where we s :
I s and gather honey ; yet, methinks.
They s with knife in meat and wine in horn !
' No man could s but he should lose himself : '
Galahad would s down in MerUn's chair.
Must be content to s by little fires.
But s within the house.
Who s's and gazes on a faded fire,
To s once more within his lonely hall.
But thou didst s alone in the inner house,
Why did you s so quiet ?
kind of you. Madam, to s by an old dying wife.
S thysen down fur a bit :
Naay s down — naw 'urry — sa cowd ! —
While 'e s like a great glimmer-gowk
Who s's beside the blessed Virgin
Whom yet I see as there you s
I will s at your feet, I will hide my face.
So I s's i' my oan armchair
Or s's wi' their 'ands afoor 'em,
I s's i' my oan Uttle parlour,
since he would s on a Prophet's seat,
and with Grief S face to face,
in her open palm a halcyon s's Patient —
To s once more ? Cassandra,
would you — if it please you — s to me ?
Your song — S, listen !
my faithful counsellor, S by my side.
an' s's o' the Bishop's throan.
Sit (set) an' the tongue's s afire o' Hell,
Site Storm-strengthen'd on a windy s,
Sittest That s ranging golden hair ;
Sittin' an' a s 'ere o' my bed.
one night I wur s aloan.
Sitting (See also Sittin') wish to charm Pallas and
Juno s by :
A merman bold, S alone,
s, burnish'd without fear The brand,
on this hand, and s on this stone ?
I saw you s in the house.
One s on a crimson scarf imroU'd ;
Tho' s girt with doubtful light.
So s, served by man and maid,
s in the deeps Upon the hidden bases of the hills.'
but we s, as I said. The cock crew loud ;
And said to me, she s with us then.
And, s muffled in dark leaves,
s straight Within the low-wheel'd chaise.
Push off, and s well in order smite
Suffused them, s, lying, languid shapes,
Enoch and Annie, s hand-in-hand,
Philip s at her side forgot Her presence,
When lo ! her Enoch s on a height,
s all alone, his face Would darken.
As night to him that s on a hill
I am oftener s at home in my father's farm
They found the mother s still ;
I see thee s crown'd with good,
Peace s uiider her olive,
Balin and Balan 11
18
31
Merlin and V. 406
601
694
Holy Grail 174
181
614
715
Last Tournament 157
Guinevere 497
Lover's Tale i 112
Bizpah 14
„ 21
Village Wife 5
20
38
Columbus 232
To E. Fitzgerald 5
The Wreck 12
Spinster's S's. 9
86
103
Dead Prophet 53
To Mary Boyle 46
Prog, of Spring 20
Romney's E. 4
:. 73
92
Akbar's Dream 19
Church-warden, etc. 20
24
Gareth and L. 692
In Mem. vi 26
N. Farmer, 0. S. 9
Owd Boa 29
A Character 15
The Merman 3
Two Voices 128
(Enone 233
May Queen, Con. 30
D. of F. Women 126
Love thou thy land 16
The Goose 21
M. d' Arthur 105
Ep. 9
Gardener's D. 21
37
Talking Oak 109
Ulysses 58
Vision of Sin 12
Enoch Arden 69
384
500
Sea Dreams 12
Princess iv 574
Grandmother 90
The Victim Zl
In Mem. Ixxxiv 5
Maud I i 33
Sitting
646
SkuU
Sitting {continued) am I s here so stunn'd and still, Maud II i 2
his good mates Lying or s round him, Gareth and L. 512
There on a day, he s high in hall, Marr. of Geraint 147
And knew her s sad and solitary. Geraint and E. 282
Balin and Balan s statuelike, Balin and Balan 24
as makes The white swan-mother, s, „ 353
s in thine own hall, canst endure To mouth ,, 378
Sir Lancelot, s in my place Enchair'd to-morrow. Last Tournament 103
s in the deeps Upon the hidden bases of the hills.' Pass, of Arthur 273
And s down upon the golden moss. Lover's Tale i 540
now striding fast, and now nS awhile to rest, .. iv 88
And s down to such a base repast, „ 134
There is more than one Here s who desires it. „ 242
I, by Lionel s, saw his face Fire, ., 322
But Juhan, s by her, answer'd all : „ . 340
The face of one there s opposite. Sisters (E. and E.) 88
summer days upon deck, s hand in liand — The Wreck 64
children in a sunbeam s on the ribs of wreck. Locksley H., Sixty 14
left within the shadow s on the wreck alone. „ 16
Who ' s on green sofas contemplate The tonnent Akbar's Bream 48
wife was m3iarm'd, tho' s close to his side. Charity 22
Sitting-room To fit their little streetward s-r Enoch Arden 170
Six S columns, three on either side, Arabian Nights 144
high S cubits, and three years on one of twelve ; St. S. Stylites 87
' And make her some great Princess, s feet high, Princess, Pro. 224
S hundred maidens clad in purest white, „ ii 472
S thousand years of fear have made you „ iv 507
Among s boys, head under head, and look'd „ Con. 83
And s feet two, as I think, he stands ; Maud I xiii 10
Saw s tall men haling a seventh along, Gareth and L. 811
S stately virgins, all in white, upbare Lover's Tale ii 11
Save those s vii^:ins which upheld the bier, „ 84
those s maids With shrieks and ringing laughter „ Hi 31
An' he wrote ' I ha' s weeks' work, little wife. First Quarrel 45
I ha' s weeks' work in Jersey an' go to-night „ 88
We are s ships of the line ; The Revenge 1
King, that hast reign'd s hundred years. To Dante 1
S foot deep of burial mould Will dull their comments ! Romney's R. 125
Six hundred Rode the s h. (repeat) Light Brigade 4, 8, 17, 26
rode back, but not Not the s /*. „ • 38
All that was left of them. Left of s h. „ 49
Honoiu; the Light Brigade, Noble s h\ „ 55
Sixpence Be shot for s in a battle-field, Audley Court 41
Sixty in one month They wedded her to s thousand
pounds, Edwin Morris 126
when every hour Must sweat her s minutes to the
death, Golden Year 69
And s feet the fountain leapt. Day-Dm., Revival 8
Here we met, our latest meeting — Amy — s years
ago — Locksley H., Sixty 111
Strove for s widow'd years to help his homeher
brother men, „ 267
thro' this midnight breaks the sun Of s years
away, Pref. Poem Broth. Son. 22
Size His double chin, his portly s, Miller's D. 2
This weight and s, this heart and eyes. Sir Galahad 71
For often fineness compensated s ; Princess ii 149
Skate taught me how to s, to row, to swim, Edwin Morris 19
Skater Like the s on ice that hardly bears him, Hendecasyllabics 6
Ske^rd (scared) an' tellin' me not to be s, Owd Rod 85
Skeleton make the carcase a s, Boadicea 14
And bears a s figured on his anns, Gareth and L. 640
Flash'd the bare-grinning s of death ! Merlin and V. 847
unawares Had trodden that crown'd s, Lancelot and E. 49
Gaunt as it were the s of himself, (repeat) „ 764, 816
Not from the s of a brother-slayer. Last Tournament 47
Found, as it seem'd, a s alone. Lover's Tale iv 139
But that half *, like a barren ghost The Ring 227
Skelpt (overturned) she s ma haafe ower i' the chair, Owd Rod 76
Sketch (See also Thunder-sketch) No matter what the s
might be ; Ode to Memory 95
Buss me, thou rough 5 of man, Vision of Sin 189
s'es rude and faint. Aylmer's Field 100
and lost Salvation for a s. Romney's R. 139
Sketdl'd Miriam s and Muriel threw the fiy ; The Ring 159
Sketcher I was a s then ; See here, Edwin Morris '
Sketching s with her slender pointed foot The Brook 10
Skifi drive Thro' utter dark a full-sail'd s, Supp. Confessions !
Skill {See also Toumey-skill) Nor mine the sweetness
or the s. In Mem. ex 1%
with force and s To strive, to fashion, ,. cxii
fill up the gap where force might fail With s and
fineness. Gareth and L. 13
And might of limb, but mainly use and s, Last Tournament 1£
now leaving to the s Of others their old craft Pref. Son. 19th Cent.
As we surpass our fathers' s, Mechanophilus "^
Skill'd O s to sing of Time or Eternity, Milton 1
in a moment — at one touch Of that s spear, Gareth and L. 12
the hermit, s in all The simples and the science Lancelot and E. 86
to keep So s a nurse about you always — ■
Skim dip Their wings in tears, and s away.
Before her s's the jubilant woodpecker,
Sikimm'd fleeter now she s the plains
Sirimming S down to Camelot :
Among my s swallows ;
Skin (s) (See also Sallow-skin) a leopard s Droop'd from his
shoulder,
A million wrinkles carved his s ;
' In filthy sloughs they roll a prurient s,
a s As clean and white as privet when it flowers.
a scratch No deeper than the s :
Until the ulcer, eating thro' my s.
We fret, we fume, would shift our s's,
s's of wine, and piles of grapes.
Tattoo'd or woaded, winter-clad in s's,
hunt them for the beauty of their s's ;
Prickle my s and catch my breath,
wrapt in harden'd s's That fit him like his own ;
His arms are old, he trusts the harden'd s —
But lash'd in vain against the harden'd s,
the s Clung but to crate and basket,
he was all wet thro' to the s,
they pricks clean thruf to the s — ■
Shallow s of green and azm-e —
' Small blemish upon the s !
The leper plague may scale my s
Skin (verb) like a man That s's the wild beast after
slaying him, Geraint and E. 93
Skip ' Why s ye so, Sir Fool ? ' (repeat) Last Tournament 9, 243
belike I s To know myself the wisest knight ,. 247
S to the broken music of my brains ,. 258
Arthur and the angels hear, And then we s.' „ 351
Skipping Dagonet, s, ' Arthur, the King's ; „ 262
Skipt But when the twangling ended, s again ; And
being ask'd, ' Why s ye not, Sir Fool ? '
Skirt (s) Brightening the s's of a long cloud,
thro' the gray s's of a lifting squall
thro' warp and woof From s to s ;
your ingress here Upon the s and fringe of our fair land
upon the s's of Time, Sit side by side.
Imagined more than seen, the s's of France.
fusing all The s's of self again.
And grasps the s's of happy chance,
s's are loosen'd by the breaking storm,
the gloomy s's Of Celidon the forest ;
Tho' somewhat draggled at the s.
Brightening the s's of a long cloud.
Skirt (verb) oft when sundown s's the moor
Skirted See Purple-skirted
Skull Is but modell'd on a s.
thy foot Is on the s which thou hast made.
And wears a hehnet mounted with a s,
with one stroke Sir Gareth split the s.
clove the helm As throughly as the s ;
I smote upon the naked s A thrall of thine in
open hall,
and the s Brake from the nape, and from the s the
crown Roll'd into light, Lancelot and E. 49
Black as the harlot's heart — hollow as a s ! Pelleas and E. 468
fossil s that is lett in the rocks Despair 86
The Ring 3Ti
In Mem. xlviii 1€
Prog, of Spring 16
Sir L. and Q. G. 32
L. of Shalott i 23
The Brook 175
CEnone 58
Palace of Art 138
201
Walk, to the Mail 55
Edwin Morris 64
St. S. StylUes 67
WUl Water. 225
Vision of Sin 13
Princess ii 120
V 156
Maud I xiv 36
Gareth and L. 1093
1139
1143
Merlin and V. 624
First Quarrel 76
Spinster's S's. 36
Locksley H., Sixty 208
Dead Prophet 66
Happy 27
255
M. d' Arthur 54
Enoch Arden 829
Princess i 63
.. V 219
,. vii 287
., Cow. 48
In Mem. xlvii 3
„ Ixiv 6
Geraint and E. 459
Lancelot and E. 291
Last Tournament 219
Pass, of Arthur 222
. In Mem. xli 17
Vision of Sin 178
In Mem., Pro. 8
Gareth and L. 639
1404
1407
Balin and Balan 55
SknU
SkuU (continued) which for thee But holds a s,
whin I crackd his s for her sake, ^
tower of eighty thousand human s s,
scorpion crawling over naked s's ;—
Sky wind be aweary of blowing Over the s .-'
south winds are blowing Over the s.
Vv'hen thickest dark did trance the s,
trenched waters ran from 5 to s ;
WrrH a half -glance upon the s
Sunn'd by those orient skies ;
And white against the cold- white 5,
Thou comest atween me and the skies,
When thou gazest at the skies ?
Stoops at all game that wiiag the skies,
Too long you keep the upper skies ;
Grow golden all about the s -
That clothe the wold and meet the s ;
Heavily the low s raining
The skies stoop down in their desire ;
All naked in a sultry s,
to where the s Dipt down to sea and sands.
Sole as a flying star shot thro' the s
violet, that comes beneath the skies.
Music that brings sweet sleep down from the
blissful skies.
Hateful is the dark-blue s,
the next moon was roU'd into the s,
Ruled in the eastern s.
To every land beneath the skies,
647
Ancient Sage 255
Tomorrow 41
Locksley H., Sixty 82
Demeter and P. 78
Nothing will Die 4
All Things will Die 4
Mariana 18
Ode to Memory 104
A Character 1
The Poet 42
Dying Swan 12
Oriana 75
Adeline 50
Rosalind 4
„ 35
Elednore 101
L. of Shalott i 3
„ iv 4
Fatima 32
37
Palace of Art 31
123
May Queen, Con. 5
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 7
39
D. of F. Women, 229
264
On a Mourner 3
Sky (continued) Like to a low-hung and a fiery s
The snow and the s so bright —
Far from out a s for ever bright,
or a deluge of cataract skies,
brought out a broad s Of dawning over —
from the s to the blue of the sea ;
O come, come ' in the stormy red of a s
ship stood still, and the skies were blue,
sparkled and shone in the s.
How summer-bright are yonder skies,
blue of s and sea, the green of earth,
points of Russian lances arose in the s ;
World-isles in lonely skies.
From skies of glass A Jacob's ladder
now to these unsummer'd skies
To Eiigland under Indian skies.
Glorying between sea and s,
Old poets foster'd imder friendlier skies,
Self-darken'd in the s, descending slow !
once were gayer than a dawning s
in thine ever-changing skies.
— not a star in the s —
my wings That I may soar the s,
Far as the Future vaults her skies,
A Voice spake out of the skies
Skylark By some wild s's matin song,
and rode The s woods.
10 every lailU ueueauu u"': ofvioo, - J oc
I seek a warmer s, And I wUl see before I die You ask me, why, etc. 26
whatever s Bear seed of men and growth of .i 7 j lo
•^ j^ Love tliou thy land ii)
meUow moons and happy skies, Locksley M? 159
He travels far from otVr skies- Day-Dm., Arrival b
pure and clear As are the frosty skies, St. Agnes Eve 10
The clouds are broken in the s, Sir Galahad 13
As shines the moon in clouded skies, ^^^eggarMaidQ
Flutter'd headlong from the *. V'^^^V' "/ ^^V' f^
0 love, they die in yon rich s, ^""""V^M^
When your sfci«s change again : , , "r i,l q=
To happy havens under all the s. Ode Inter Exhih. 35
This nV^eling of another . The ^a«y 98
or to bask in a summer s : " «K^? ^
A web is wov'n across the s ; In Mem. m 6
And reach the glow of southern skies, -. ^* -^^
The rooks are blown about the skies ; " ^- «
Thro' circles of the bounding s, " ^* ^
Tho' always under alter'd skies " xxxmn ^
The baby new to earth and s, ■' /^?^ |
Who roll'd the psalm to wintry skies, - *^*. |^
For pastime, dreaming of the s ; " '•^ ^*
And sow the s with flying boughs, " Lit
o'er the s The silvery haze of suimner drawn ; „ xcv o
And bats went roimd in fragrant skies, - ^
Where first we gazed upon the s ; " "'^ ^
Ring out, wUd bells, to the wild s, " ™;^14
Of sorrow under human skies : .„ . . j " ^Z 1^
happy birds, that change their s To build and brood ; ,. cxv 15
The brute earth hghtens to the s, u'JTl T^
m\d voice pealing up to the sunny s, Jsii ^7
makes you tyrants in your iron sfctes, •• ^^mii 01
The countercharm of space and hollow s, ■■ ?^
On a bed of dafiodil 5, , " jrfi,
dawn of Eden bright over earth and s, » ^i^^^°
p'elentg'tLt:Sf?ilt^d calm. Free . and stars : Com. of Arthur 392
■ Rain, rain, and sun ! a rainbow in the s ! ,, *^^
' 0 birds, that warble to the mormng s, ^"""'^tp.rLt^m
show'd themselves against the s, and sank. ^/^J. fjf If,
stormy crests that smoke against the skies, "^'^'^S^'g.f 7 tit
Totter'd toward each other m the s, p.nlZXl f 402
One rose, a rose that gladden'd earth and s, Pelleas and E 402
So shook to such a roir of all the s. Last Tournament 621
White as white clouds, floated from s to s. Lover s Tale i 5
But stiU I kept my eyes upon the s. ,.04^
Slain
Lover's Tale ii 61
Bizpah 83
.Sisters (E. and E.) 19
Def. of Lucknow 81
Columbus 77
V. of Maeldune 46
98
The Wreck 115
Despair 15
Ancient Sage 23
41
Heavy Brigade 5
Epilogue 55
Early Spring 8
Pref. Poem Broth. Son. 17
Hands all Round 17
Open. I. and C. Exhih. 18
Poets and their B. 1
Prog, of Spring 28
Death of CEnone 12
Akhar's D., Hymn 4
Bandit's Death 25
Mechanophilus 10
17
Voice spake, etc. 1
Miller's D. 40
_ Balin and Balan 293
ffl^'pe (SLap?'siipp^?) " s'doWn i' the squad an' the ^^^^ ^^^^^^ ^
Slab Were s's of rock with figures, Gareth and L. 1194
.S after s, their faces forward all, .. ^^
Slack Now with s rein and careless of himself. Balm and, Balan duy
Slacken I saw it and grieved— to s and to cool ; Princess iv 299
Slacken'd His bow-string s, languid Love, „¥^'^'^^.^. iti
till as when a boat Tacks, and the s sail flaps, Princess ^^ 18b
Round was their pace at first, but s soon : Geramt and E. 66
Slag foreground black with stones and s's. Palace oj Art SI
Slain («See oZso Arrow-slain) With thine own weapon
^^ art thou s ^wo Voices 311
Here lies a brother by a sister s. Princess ii 208
s with laughter roU'd the gilded Squire. „ v J2
went up a great cry. The Prince is s. - «* -f »
make her as the man. Sweet Love were s : „ vii Ml
And overthrown was Gorlois and s. Com. of Arthur 197
Far as thou mayest, he be nor ta'en nor s.' Gareth and L. ^b
S by himself, shall enter endless night. .^ 6^
Thou hast overthrown and s thy master— „ ' w
n both be s, I am rid of thee ; ^ , " ,/^
but have ye s The damsel's champion ? •■ , ^^"^
the huge Earl lay s within his hall. Geraint and E. 806
I should have s your father, " »^°
foully s And villainously ! Balm and Balan 135
had I crown'd With my s self the heaps of whom
I slew " •
' Lo ! he hath s some brother-knight, „ ,. " , rr ^^
As after furious battle turfs the s Merlm and /• 657
And each had s his brother at a blow ; Lancelot and E.il
I saw him, after, stand High on a heap of s, „ „ " , t. oVI
I will say That I have s thee. Pelleas and E. 34b
I have s this Pelleas whom ye hate : " ^'-^
' Liar, for thou hast not s This Pelleas ! here he
stood, and might have s Me and thyself.' „ 490
he shrieked, ' my will is to be s,' t . ^ " .It
Maim'd me and maul'd, and would outright have s. Last I oumamentlb
S was the brother of my paramour By a knight „ 448
but many a knight was s ; Guinevere 438
thro' my sin to slay and to be s ! « o^^
Slew him, and all but s himself, he fell. -^"^^-J?/ i™"*" ^S^
Seeing forty of our poor hundred were s. The Revenge 7b
Their kindly native princes s or slaved, Columbus 174
s my father the day before I was born. V. of Maeldune^
s thy fathers in war or in single strife, ,, 1^1
Thy fathers have s his fathers, >- |^
Thy father had s his father, m |^
The man that had s my father. » '-^^
Slain 648
Slaia (continued) S by the sword-edge — Bait, of Brunanburh 113
blade that had s my husband thrice thro' his breast. Bandit's Death 34
Slake * Let her go ! her thirst she s's Vision of Sin 143
Slaked the hermit s my burning thirst, Holy Grail 461
shriek'd and s the ught with blood. LocksUy H., Sixty 90
Slander (s) Thee nor carketh care nor s ; A Dirge 8
' Thro' s, meanest spawn of Hell — The Letters 33
And women's s is the worst, „ 34
sins of emptiness, gossip and spite And s. Princess ii 93
The civic s and the spite ; In Mem. cvi 22
spake no s, no, nor listen'd to it ; Ded. of Idylls 10
Whenever s breathed against the King — Com. of Arthur 177
He sow'd a s in the common ear, Marr. of Geraint 450
vivid smiles, and faintly- venom'd points Of s, Merlin and V. 173
these are s's : never yet Was noble man Lancelot and E. 1087
To speak no s, no, nor listen to it, Guinevere 472
S, her shadow, sowing the nettle Fastness 22
Slander (verb) Ciome to the hollow heart they s so ! Princess vi 288
Jenny, to s me, who knew what Jenny had been ! Grandmother 35
ever ready to s and steal ; Maud I iv 19
£9ander'd he thought, had s Leolin to him. Aylmer's Field 350
To judge between my s self and me — Columbus 125
Slandering And she to be coming and s me, Grandmother 27
SlanderoQS All for a s story, that cost me many a tear. ., 22
Slant 8 down the snowy sward, St. Agnes' Eve 6
That huddling s in furrow-cloven falls Princess vii 207
To s the fifth autumnal slope. In Mem. xxii 10
That God would ever s His bolt from falling Happy 81
The s seas leaning on the mangrove copse. Prog, of Spring 76
Slanted a beam Had s forward, falling in a land Of promise ; Princess ii 139
Long lanes of splendour s o'er a press ,, iv 478
Slanting reach'd a meadow s to the North ; Gardener's D. 108
On every s terrace-lawn. Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 10
And lash'd it at the base with s storm ; Merlin and V. 635
Showers s light upon the dolorous wave. Lover's Tale i 811
and fell S upon that picture, „ ii 175
Slap See Slaape
Slate On the lecture s The circle rounded Princess ii 371
lies a ridge of s across the ford ; Gareth and L. 1056
Slated roofs of s hideousness ! Lochsley H., Sixty 246
Slate-qnarry I heard them blast The steep s-q, Golden Fear 76
Slaughter Dismal error ! fearful s ! The Captain 65
Had beat her foes with s from her waUs. Princess, Pro. 34
drove her foes with s from her walls, „ 123
Ran the land with Roman s, Boddicea 84
In perils of battle On places of s — Batt. of Brunanburh 86
Never had huger <S of heroes ,, 112
Slaughter-honse makes a steaming s-h of Rome. Lucretius 84
Slav S, Teuton, Kelt, I count them all My friends Epilogue 18
Slave Of child, and wife, and s ; Lotos-Eaters 40
Drink deep, until the habits of the s. Princess ii 91
And play the s to gain the tyranny. „ iv 132
For ever s's at home and fools abroad.' „ 521
— or brought her chain'd, as, „ v 139
if ye fail. Give ye the 5 mine order Pelleas and E. 270
Artificer and subject, lord and s, Lover's Tale ii 103
bow'd myself down as a 5 to his intellectual throne. The Wreck 66
/ was the lonely s of an of ten- wandering mind ; „ 130
who bought me for his s : The Flight 19
Those that in barbarian burials kill'd the s, Locksley H., Sixty 67
Now the Rome of s's hath perish'd, To Virgil 33
The s, the scourge, the cham ; Freedom 12
Man is but the s of Fate. Death of (Enone 44
Three s's were trailing a dead lion away, St. Telemachus 47
no s's of a four-footed will ? The Dawn 18
wearied of AutocratSj Anarchs, and S's, The Dreamer 10
Slaved Their kindly native princes slain or s, Columbus 174
Slavish plucks The s hat from the villager's head ? Maud I x A
Slay I will arise and s thee with my hands.' M. d' Arthur 132
I see the woodman lift His axe to s my kin. Talking Oak 236
As I might s this child, if good need were. Princess ii 287
Within me, that except you s me here, „ iv 453
you could not s Me, nor your prince : „ « 65
Give me to right her wrong, and s the man.' Gareth and L. 366
lay him low and s him not, „ 379
Sleep
Slay ^continued) To show that who may s or scape the three, Gareth and L. 641
hard by here is one will overthrow And s thee : „ 897
See that he fall not on thee suddenly, And s thee unarm'd : „ 923
Gareth there unlaced His helmet as to s him, „ 979
as to s One nobler than thyself.' „ J
and crying, ' Knight, S me not : „ 1410
hoped to s him somewhere on the stream, „ 1419
we will s him and will have his horse And armour, Geraint and E.
they would s you, and possess your horse And armour, „ 74
' Fly, they will return And s you ; „ 749
Shriek'd to the stranger ' S not a dead man ! ' „ 779
' O cousin, s not him who gave you life.' „ 783
I thought mjr thirst Would s me. Holy Grail 380
And if ye s him I reck not : Pelleas and E. 269
It may be ye shall s him in his bonds.' ., 273'
' I will go back, and s them where they lie.' „ 444
' What ! s a sleeping knight ? „ 448
' Thou art false as Hell : s me : „ 57flj
'(S then,' he shriek'd, ' my will is to be slain,' „ 578*
Begin to s the folk, and spoil the land.' Guinevere 137
Gone thro' my sin to s and to be slain ! „ 61S
I will arise and s thee with my hands.' Pass, of Arthur 300
drew His sword on his fellow to s him, V. of Maeldune 68
Freedom, free to s herself, Locksley H., Sixty 128
Slayer See Brother-slayer, Shadow-slayer
Slaying For, be he wroth even to s me, Geraint and E. 67
That skins the wild beast after s him, „ 93
Sleeap (sleep) an' dussn't not s i' the 'ouse, Owd Rod 37
Sleeapin (sleeping) an' s still as a stoan, „ 30
Sleek (adj.) With chisell'd features clear and s. A Character 30
And, issuing shorn and s. Talking Oak 42
S Odalisques, or oracles of mode. Princess ii 77
The s and shining creatures of the chase, „ v 155
Sleek (verb) To s her ruffled peace of mind. Merlin and V. 899
And s his marriage over to the Queen. Last Tournament 391
Sleek'd smooth'd his chin and s his hair, A Character 11
one s the squalid hair. One kiss'd his hand. Death of (Enone 57
Sleeker s shall he shine than any hog.' Gareth and L. 460
and all the world. Had been the s for it : Lancelot and E. 250
equal baseness lived in s times With smoother men : Princess v 385
Sleep (s) in her first s earth breathes stilly : Leonine Eleg. 7
dreamless, uninvaded s The Kraken sleepeth : The Kraken 3
lie Battening upon huge seaworms in his s, „ 12
In s she seem'd to walk forlorn, Mariana 30
as in s I sank In cool soft turf upon the bank, Arabian Nights 95
From his coiled s's in the central deeps The Mermaid 24
S had bound her in Ms rosy band, Caress'd or chidden 6
' My Ufe is sick of single s : The Bridesmaid 13
She breathed in s a lower moan, . Mariana in the S. 45
Each morn my s was broken thro' Miller's D. 39
Softer than s — all things in order stored. Palace of Art 87
Music that brings sweet s down from the blissful
skies. Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 7
from the craggy ledge the poppy hangs in s. „ 11
and brought Into the gulfs of s. D. of F. Women 52
' We drank the Libyan Sun to s, „ 145
dissolved the mystery Of folded s. „ 263
than I from s To gather and tell o'er „ 275
Such a s They sleep — the men I loved. M. d' Arthur 16
yet in s I seem'd To sail with Arthur „ Ep. 16
And in her bosom bore the baby, S. Gardener's D. 268
lest a cry Should break his s by night. Walk, to the Mail 74
Or in the night, after a little s, I wake : St. S.Stylites 113
But, roUing as in s. Low thunders Talking Oak 278
pointing to his dnmken s, locksley Hall 81
' O eyes long laid in happy s ! ' Day-Dm., Depart. 17
' O happy s, that lightly fled ! ' „ 18
' O happy kiss, that woke thy si' ,, 19
So sleeping, so aroused from s „ L'Envoi 21
Yet sleeps a dreamless s to me ; A s by kisses
undissolved, „ 50
Charier of s, and wine, and exercise, Aylmer's Field 448
And came upon him half-arisen from s, „ 584
rough amity of the other, sank As into s again. „ 592
He also sleeps — another s than ours. Sea Dreams 310
Sleep
649
Sleepy
(s) {continued) let your s for this one night be sound : Sea Dreams 315
Echo answer'd in her s From hollow fields: Princess, Pro. 66
tinged with wan from lack of s, „ Hi 25
hand That nursed me, more than infants in their s. „ vii 54
Fill'd thro' and thro' with Love, a happy s. „ 172
And sink again into s.' Voice and the P. 24
To S I give my powers away ; In Mem. iv 1
Calm on the seas, and silver s, „ xi 17
A late-lost form that s reveals,
That sleeps or wears the mask of s,
' They rest,' we said, ' their s is sweet,'
If S and Death be truly one,
S, Death's twin-brother, times my breath ; S, Death's
twin-brother, knows not Death,
That foolish s transfers to thee.
(S, kinsman thou to death and trance
And S must he down arra'd.
Knew that the death-white curtain meant but 6-,
thought like a fool of the s of death.
0 moon, that layest all to s again,
and all his life Past into s ;
' Sound s be thine !
and slept the s With Balin,
full Of noble things, and held her from her s
he roU'd his eyes Yet blank from s,
and feign'd a s until he slept,
malice on the placid lip Froz'n by sweet s,
went back, and seeing them yet in s Said, ' Ye, that
so dishallow the holy s, Your s is death,' „ 445
And gulf'd his griefs in inmost 5 ; ,, 516
Such a s They sleep — the men I loved. Pass, of Arthur 184
but were a part of s, Lover's Tale ii 117
And murmur at the low-dropt eaves of s, „ 122
wind from the lands they had ruin'd awoke from s, The Revenge 112
My s was broken besides with dreams In the Child. Hosp. 65
Silent palaces, quiet fields of eternal si V. of Maeldune 80
past, in s, away By night, Tiresias 203
till we long'd for eternal s. Despair 46
first dark hour of his last s alone. Locksley H., Sixty 238
Is breathing in his s, Early Spring 23
in s I said ' All praise to Alia Akbar's Dream 197
1 could make »S Death, if I would — Bandit's Death 32
Sleep (verb) {See also Sleeap) Ox Feeds in the herb,
and s's, Supp. Confessions 151
I s forgotten, I wake forlorn.' Mariana in the S. 36
xiii 2
. xviii 10
. XXX 19
, xliii 1
,. I xviii 2
16
,, Ixxi 1
Maud I i 41
xiv 37
38
Gareth and L. 1061
1281
1282
Balin and Balan 631
Lancelot and E. 339
820
842
Pelleas and E. 433
' Thine anguish will not let thee s,
' Go, vexed Spirit, s in trust ;
his stedfast shade S's on his luminous ring.'
They graze and wallow, breed and s ;
I s so sound all night, mother.
The place of him that s's in peace.
S sweetly, tender heart, in peace :
S, holy spirit, blessed soul,
S till the end, true soul and sweet.
8 full of rest from head to feet ;
Such a sleep They s — the men I loved.
home I went, but coxild not s for joy,
' S, Ellen Aubrey, s, and dream of me :
S, Ellen, folded in thy sister's arm,
* S, Ellen, folded in EmiUa's arm ;
' S, breathing health and peace upon her breast :
S, breathing love and trust against her lip :
S, Ellen Aubrey, love, and dream of me.'
To walk, to sit, to s, to wake, to breathe.'
' We s and wake and s, but all things move ;
and s, and feed, and know not me.
Each baron at the banquet s's,
She s's : her breathings are not heard
She s's : on either hand upsweUs
She s's, nor dreams, but ever dwells
* I'd s another hundred years,
And learn the world, and s again ;
To s thro' terms of mighty wars.
Yet s's a dreamless sleep to me ;
And s beneath his pillar'd light !
Two Voices 49
115
Palace of Art 16
202
May Queen 9
To J. S. 68
69
70
73
75
M. d' Arthur 17
Gardener's D. 174
Audley Court 62
63
65
68
69
73
Edwin Morris 40
Golden Year 22
Ulysses 5
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 37
Sleep. B. 17
21
23
Depart. 9
L'Envoi 8
9
50
The Voyage 20
Sleep (verb) {continued) ' Wake him not; let him s ; Enoch Arden 233
one night it chanced That Annie could not s, „ 490
My dearest brother, Edmund, s's, The Brook 187
s's in peace : and he. Poor PhiUp, „ 190
S's in the plain eggs of the nightingale. Aylmer's Field 103
S, little birdie, s ! will she not s Without her ' little
birdie ' ? well then, s, And I will sing you ' birdie.' Sea Dreams 282
Baby, s a little longer, „ 305
If she s's a little longer, „ 307
' She s's ; let us too, let all evil, s. He also s's — another
sleep than ours. ,. 309
And I shall s the sounder ! ' ,,312
While my Uttle one, while my pretty one, s's. Princess Hi 8
S and rest, s and rest, „ 9
S, my little one, s, my pretty one, s. „ 16
' Now s's the crimson petal, „ vii 176
S, little ladies ! And they slept well. Minnie and Winnie 3
S, little ladies ! Wake not soon ! „ 9
Behold me, for I cannot s. In Mem. vii 6
S, gentle heavens, before the prow ; „ ix 14
S, gentle winds, as he s's now, „ 15
That s's or wears the mask of sleep, „ xviii 10
I s till dusk is dipt in gray : ., Ixvii 12
Long s's the summer in the seed ; .. cv26
Whatever wisdom s with thee. ., cviii 16
Yet how much wisdom s's with thee .. cxiii 2
I come once more ; the city s's ; ., cxix 3
and s Encompass'd by his faithful guard, ,, cxxvi 7
soimd cause to s hast thou. Gareth and L. 1282
Dreams ruling when wit s's ! Balin and Balan 143
Look how she s's — the Fairy Queen, Lancelot and E. 1255
Such a sleep They s — the men I loved. Pass, of Arthur 184
' It was my wish,' he said, ' to pass, to s, Lover's Tale iv 63
' Do I wake or s ? „ 78
do not s, my sister dear ! How can you s ? The Flight 1
who ? who ? my father s's ! „ 69
s's the gleam of dying day. Locksley H., Sixty 42
meant to s her hundred summers out The Ring 66
' S, Uttle blossom, my honey, my bliss ! Romney's R. 99
I blind your pretty blue eyes with a kiss ! <S ! ' „ 102
then he yawn'd, for the -wretch could s, Bandit's Death 30
Sleeper That watch the s's from the wall. Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 24
Me, that was never a quiet s ? Maud II v 98
Beat, till she woke the s's, Geraint and E. 404
Stirs up again in the heart of the s, Vastness 18
Sleepeth uninvaded sleep The Kraken s : The Kraken 4
when the air S over all the heaven, Eleanor e 39
Sleepin' As the Holy Mother o' Glory that smiles at her
s child — Tomorrow 26
Sleeping {See also A-sleeapin', Sleeapin, Sleepin') you
were s ; and I said, ' It's not for them : May Queen, Con. 37
And s, haply dream her arm is mine. Audley Court 64
As thunder-drops fall on a s sea : D. of F. Women 122
So s, so aroused from sleep Day-Dm., L'Envoi 21
On s wings they sail. Sir Galahad 44
while the two were s, a full tide Rose Sea Dreams 50
Their s silver thro' the hills ; In Mem., Con. 116
on a summer morn (They s each by either) Marr. of Geraint 70
You thought me s, but I heard you say, Geraint and E. 741
Not dead ; he stirs ! — but s. Balin and Balan 469
A stone is flung into some s tarn, Pelleas and E. 93
' What ! slay a s knight ? „ 448
There left it, and them s ; „ 453
There came on Arthur s, Gawain kill'd Pass, of Arthur 30
and in the s mere below Blood-red. Roly Grail 475
Wherein we nested s or awake. Lover's Tale i 231
Quietly s — so quiet, our doctor said In the Child. Hosp. 41
And stir the s earth, and wake The bloom Ancient Sage 93
Are you s ? have you forgotten ? The Flight 1
While the house is s. Forlorn 42
Who found me at sunrise S, Merlin and the G. 13
Sleeping-night That was my s-w. In the Child. Hosp. 61
Sleepy The s pool above the dam. Miller's D. 99
He laugh'd and I, tho' s, like a horse The Epic 44
a soimd Like s counsel pleading ; Amphivn 74
Sleepy
Sleepy (continued) A s light upon their brows and lips— Vision of Sin 9
A s land where under the same wheel Aylmer's Field 33
so 5 was the land. 45
Sleet frost, heat hail damp, and .-, and snow ; St. s". Stylites 16
«w™ / ^'^T^'^c'r '^^ and pearly hail ; vision of Sin 22
Sleeve (See also Slieave) Devils pluck'd my s, St. S. Stylites 171
A red s Broider'd ^vith pearls,' Lancelot and E. 372
nis the prize, who wore the s Of scarlet, 501
upon his helm A s of scarlet, '" 604
What of the knight with the red s? " §21
he wore your s : Would he break faith with one " 684
but I hghted on the maid Whose s he wore ; 7II
her scarlet s, Tho' carved and cut, ' goe
Down on his helm, from which her s had gone 989
^'®° w'.u^'^^^^^'P ""^ chidden by the s hand, ^ Caress'dor chidden 1
With rosy s fingers backward drew CEnone 176
Betwixt the s shafts were blazon'd fair Palac of Art 167
s stream Along the cliff to fall and pause Lo)os-Eaters 8
The s coco's drooping crown of plumes, Enoch Arden 574
And sketching ^ith her s pointed foot The Brook 102
Their s household fortunes (for the man Sea Dreams 9
What 5 campanili grew By bays. The Daisy 13
How best to help the s store. To F. D. Mauriee 37
What s shade of doubt may flit, /„ Mem. xlviii 7
I kiss d her* hand, Maudlxiild
1 he s acacia would not shake xxii 45
lightly was her s nose Tip-tilted like the petal of a
•^fr""' w.u , , Gareth and L. 591
nipt her s nose With petulant thumb and finger, . 749
Crimson, a s banneret fluttering. 913
The 5 entertainment of a house Once rich, Marr. of Geraint 300
s sound As from a distance beyond distance Roly Grail 111
A s page about her father's hall. And she a s maiden, 581
And s was her hand and small her shape ; Pelleas and E. 74
How back again unto my s spring Lover's Tale i 147
* warrant had He to be proud of The welcome Batt. of Brunanburh 66
S reason had He to be glad of The clash 76
^u f^^^wu'^'m? *^*'''^> . ^««««^ Sage 167
Ihat all the Thrones are clouded by your loss.
Were s solace. jr)_ gf ^;^g d^j^ of C 1
Slenderer and send A gift of s value, mine. To Ulysses 48
fflender^afted A s-s Pine Lost footing, fell, Gareth and L. 3
alep (slept) Ihou si' the chaumber above us, Owd Rod 49
geU o' the farm 'at s wi' tha 51
An' I 5 i' my chair hup-on-end, ,"' 54
An' I s i' my chair agean '" 65
Slept (See also Slep) A sluice with blacken'd waters 5, Manana 38
Adown to where the water s. Arabian Nights 30
The tangled water-courses s, Dying Swan 19
1 111 now at noon she s again, Mariana in the S. 41
louch d by his feet the daisy s. Two Voices 276
s St. Cecily ; An angel look'd at her. Palace of Art 99
I bnger d there TiU every daisy s. Gardener's D. 165
How say you ? we have s, my lords. Day-Dm., Revival 21
Or elbow-deep m sawdust, s. Will Water 99
Ascending tired, heavily s tiU morn. Enoch Arden 181
for the third, the sickly one, who s 230
she closed the Book and s : When lo ! " 499
s, woke, and went the next. The Sabbath, Sea Dreams 18
up the stream In fancy, till I s again, „ 109
' Your own will be the sweeter,' and they s. " 318
Her maiden babe, a double April old, Aglaia s. Princess ii 111
sUent light S on the painted walls, ^i 121
I sank and s, Fill'd thro' and thro' with Love, " 171
and fain had s at his side. Gramlmother 74
Of Queen Theodohnd, where we;* ; The Daisy 80
Or hardly s, but watch'd awake 81
Minnie and Winnie -S in a shell. Minnie and Winnie 2
Sleep, little ladies ! And they s well. 4
This year Is and woke with pain, In Mem. xxviii 13
But over all things brooding s „ ta;xviii 7
God 8 finger touch'd him, and he s. „ i:,cxv 20
That landhke s along the deep. ciii 56
and s, and saw. Dreaming, a slope of land Com" of Arthur 427
Geraint Woke where he s in the high haU, Alarr. of Geraint 755
650
Slept (continued) and s the sleep With Balin
wearied out made for the couch and s, '
And either s, nor knew of other there ;
yielded, told her all the charm, and s. '
when they gam'd the cell wherein he s,
and feign'd a sleep imtil he s.
s that night for pleasure in his blood,
if she s, she dream'd An awful dream ;
A deathwhite mist s over sand and sea :
he pray'd for both : he s Dreaming of both :
we s In the same cradle always, face to face.
I was quieted, and s again.
Then her head sank, she s,
he s Ay, till dawn stole into the cave,
Sleuth-hound S-h thou knowest, and gray.
Slew And s him with your noble birth,
tho' I s thee with my hand !
own traditions God, and s the Lord,
S both his sons : and I, shall I,
' He saved my hfe : my brother 5 him for it.'
5 the beast, and fell'd The forest,
the rest S on and burnt, crying,
pride, wrath S the May-white :
and stunn'd the twain Or s them,
tho' he s them one by one,
my hand Was gauntleted, half s him ;
With my slain self the heaps of whom I s—
Who pounced her quarry and s it.
will ye let him in ? He s him !
s Till all the rafters rang with woman-yells,
friend s friend not knowing whom he s ;
S him, and all but slain himself, he fell.'
if Affection Living s Love,
drove them, and smote them, and *■,
and seized one another and s ;
and ever they struck and they s ;
we s and we sail'd away.
Forthe one half s the other,
aS' with the sword-edge There by Brunanburh,
blanch the bones of whom she s,
kill'd the slave, and s the wife
Struck with the sword-hand and s,
Slewest thine own hand thou s my dear lord.
Which thou that s the sire hast left the son.
Slice I will s him handless by the wrist.
Sliced who s a red life-bubbling way
Slid The sullen answer s betwixt :
Night s down one long stream of sighing wind
Another s, a sunny fleck, '
like a creeping sunbeam, s From pillar unto pillar
The snake of gold s from her hair.
There from his charger down he s,
S from my hands, when I was leaning
Slide waves that up a quiet cove Rolling s,
S the heavy barges trail'd
I fear to s from bad to worse.
S's the bird o'er lustrous woodland,
As down dark tides the glory s's,
I s by hazel covers ;
I shp, I s, I gloom, I glance,
S from that ^uiet heaven of hers,
as the waterhly starts and s's Upon the level
Now s's the silent meteor on,
S from the bosom of the stars,
that making s apart Their dusk wing-cases,
5 From the long shore-cliff's windy walls
Spring s's hither o'er the Southern sea,
Slided over them the tremulous isles of light aS"
Writhed toward him, s up his knee and sat'
S The Gleam —
Sliding
Balin and Balan 631
Merlin and V. 736
738
966
Lancelot and E. 811
842
Pelleas and E. 138
Guinevere 75
Pass, of Arthur 95
Lover's Tale i 227
258
The Ring 421
Death of CEnone 78
Bandit's Death 30
Gareth and L. 462
L. C. V. de Vere 48
Locksley Hall 56
Aylmer's Field 795
Princess ii 288
vi 108
Com. of Arthur 59
439
Gareth and L. 657
Geraint and E. 92
918
Balin and Balan 57
178
Merlin and V. 135
Pelleas and E. 379
Last Tournament 475
Pass, of Arthur 101
169
Lover's Tale ii 31
Def. of Lucknow 71
V. of Maeldune 34
Sliding (See also Supple-sliding) all that night I heard
96
114
Batt. of Brunanburh 9
Tiresias 150
Locksley H., Sixty 67
Heavy Brigade 52
Gareth and L. 352
360
Pelleas and E. 338
Gareth and L. 509 ,
Two Voices 226
Gardener's D. 2671
Talking Oak 2S
Godiva ■ _
Merlin and V. 88fi
Lancelot and E. 51C
Last Tournament
Elednore 1091
L. of Shalott i 20|
Two Voices 231 J
Locksley Hall 1621
Sir Galahad 47 f
The Brook 1711
1741
Lucretius 87 j
Princess iv 255 j
„ vii 1841
In Mem. xvii 16i
Gareth and L. 686]
Geraint and E. 163]
Prog, of Spring 2 j
Princess vi 82]
Merlin and V. 2391
Merlin and the G. 61 1
the watchman peal The s season :
And o'er them many a s star,
Dream in the s tides.
AH night no ruder air perplex Thy s keel
Gardener's D. 183
Day-Dm., Depart. 13
Requiescat 4
In Mem. ix V
II
Sliding
651
Slope
J (continued) Unconscious of the s hour,
A river s by the wall.
Come s out of her sacred glove,
Went s down so easily, and fell.
On to the palace-doorway s, paused.
and s down the blacken'd marsh Blood-red,
Slieave (sleeve) Roaver a-tuggin' an' tearin' my s.
Slight (adj.) ' You're too s and fickle,' I said,
S was, his answer ' Well — I care not for it : '
When some respect, however s, was paid To woman
for such, my friend. We hold them s :
No doubt, for s delay, remain'd among us
We are fools and s ;
How dimly character'd and s,
To save from some s shame one simple girl.
S, to be crush'd with a tap Of my finger-nail
For ah ! the s coquette, she cannot love,
' The s she-slips of loyal blood,
A body s and round, and like a pear In growing.
And s Sir Robert with his watery smile
She play'd about with s and sprightly talk,
For, grant me some s power upon your fate,
Flush'd slightly at the s disparagement
I am not made of so s elements.
and death at our s barricade,
S ripple on the boimdless deep That moves.
Future glimpse and fade Thro' some s spell,
SUght (s) To look at her with s, and say
bare in bitter grudge The s's of Arthur and his Table,
Slight (verb) and yet you dared To s it.
he will teach ham hardness, and to s His mother ;
he will learn to s His father's memory ;
Wherefore 5 me not wholly.
He seems to s her simple heart.
A song that s's the coming care,
Why s your King, And lose the quest
I, would s our marriage oath :
Slighted saw Philip, the s suitor of oUl times.
Going ? I am old and s :
SUghter Yours has been a s ailment.
Near us Edith's holy shadow, smiling at the s ghost
Slightest The s air of song shall breathe
Shghtly Flush'd s at the slight disparagement
Slight-natured If she be small, s-m, miserable.
Slime That tare each other in their s,
that cannot see for s, S of the ditch :
sink Thy fleurs-de-lys in s again,
soul and sense in city s ?
labour'rl in lifting them out of s.
Slimed snake-hke s his victim ere he gorged ;
And sank his head in mire, and s themselves
Slink As boys that s From ferule
a coward s's from what he fears To cope with,
SUp (s) (See also She-sIip) narrow moon-ht s's of silver cloud
And show you s's of all that grows
Bursts of great heart and s's in sensual mire,
those white s's Handed her cup and piped,
there was but a s of a moon,
Slip (verb) Could s its bark and walk.
' Sometimes I let a sunbeam s,
Or s between the ridges,
I »', I slide, I gloom, I glance,
to s away To-day, to-morrow, soon :
And s at once all-fragrant into one.
And s's into the bosom of the lake :
and s Into my bosom and be lost in me.'
Sun comes, moon comes, Time s's away.
I s the thoughts of life and death ;
I will not let his name S from my Ups
and by and by S's into golden cloud.
Slipper fit to wear your 5 for a glove
In Mem. xliii 5
„ ciii 8
Maud I m 85
Gareth and L. 1224
Lancelot and E. 1246
Holy Grail 473
Owd Rod 60
Edward Gray 19
Aylmer's Field 238
, Princess ii 136
iv 127
331
In Mem., Pro. 29
„ Ixi 6
Maud I xviii 45
II ii 21
The form, the form 12
Talking Oak 57
Walk, to the Mail 53
Edwin Morris 128
Merlin and V. 171
333
Lancelot and E. 234
Guinevere 510
Def. of Lucknow 15
Ancient Sage 189
Early Spring 32
Mariana in the S. 66
Merlin and V. 7
Dora 99
„ 120
„ 153
Hendecasyllabics 15
In Mem. xcvii 20
„ xcix 10
Lancelot and E. 654
Happy 89
Enoch Arden 745
Columbus 241
Locksley H., Sixty 17
54
In Mem. xlix 7
Lancelot and E. 234
PriTicess vii 265
In Mem. Ivi 23
Holy Grail 771
Sir J. bldcastle 99
Locksley H., Sixty 218
Dead Prophet 11
Sea Dreams 193
Last Tournament 471
Princess v 37
Pelleas and E. 438
(Enone 218
Amphion 83
Princess v 199
Last Tournament 295
Tomorrow 9
Talking Oak 188
217
The Brook 28
Princess ii 296
vii 70
187
188
Window, When 2
In Mem. cxxii 16
Marr. of Geraint 446
736
Geraint and E. 623
Slippery (continued) And that it was too s to be held,
as he based His feet on juts of s crag
hath o'erstept The s footing of his narrow wit.
Slipping The s thro' from state to state.
three times s from the outer edge.
The silent water s from the hills,
and then Went s down horrible precipices,
Come s o'er their shadows on the sand.
Went s back upon the golden days
Slip-shod ' S-s waiter, lank and sour,
Slipt (See also Shoulder-slipt) 'Tis gone : a thousand
such have s
The snake s under a spray.
And s aside, and like a wounded fife
by mischance he s and fell :
Till half-another year had s away.
She s across the summer of the world,
S into ashes, and was found no more.
S o'er those lazy limits down the wind
out I s Into a land all sun and blossom.
And I s out : but whither will you now ?
S round and in the dark invested you.
And blossom-fragrant s the heavy dews
Her falser self s from her like a robe.
The hoof of his horse s in the stream,
like a silver shadow s away Thro' the dim land ;
the braid S and imcoil'd itself,
And s and fell into some pool or stream,
Who lost the hern we s her at,
Lightly, her suit allow'd, she s away,
At once she s like water to the floor.
Heavy as it was, a great stone s and fell,
S, and ran on, and flung himself between
Slit And Uther s thy tongue :
Shther'd I s an' hurted my buck.
Sloe blackthorn-blossom fades antl falls and leaves the
bitter s,
betwixt the whiteniiig s And kingcup blaze,
Sloe-tree Poussetting with a s-t :
Sloomy (sluggish) An' Sally wur s an' draggle _ „. ,„. ^„„„,„ ,^
Slope (adj.) when the crisp s waves After a tempest, Supp. Confessions 126
Took horse, descended the s street, Gareth and L. 662
thro lanes of shouting Garetli rode Down the s street, ., 700
on thro' silent faces rode Down the s city, [\ 735
Down the « city rode, and sharply tum'd Last Tournament 127
Slope (s) (See also Hill-slope) his native s, Where
Lancelot and E. 213
Pass, of Arthur 357
Lover's Tale i 102
Two Voices 351
The Epic 11
Enoch Arden 633
Geraint and E. 379
471
Guinevere 380
Vision of Sin 71
Will Water. 181
Poet's Song 10
Enoch Arden 75
106
471
531
Aylmer's Field 6
495
Sea Dreams 100
Princess iv 240
404
v243
„ vii 161
Gareth and L. 1046
Merlin and V. 423
889
Lancelot and E. 214
657
778
830
Holy Grail 680
St. Telemachus 61
Gareth and L. 376
North. Cobbler 19
The Flight 15
To Mary Boyle 25
Amphion 44
North. Cobbler 41
SUppery (See also Slafipe) as he based His feet on juts
of s crag M. d'ArtMir 189
To glance and shift about her s sides, Lucretius 189
Glass'd in the s sand before it breaks ? Merlin and V. 293
he was wont to leap
And on the s, an absent fool.
Upon the freshly-flower'd s.
The downward 5 to death.
There, on a s of orchard, Francis laid
At last I heard a voice upon the s
And many a s was rich in bloom
drew, from butts of water on the s,
Blot out the s of sea from verge to shore,
we climb'd The s to Vivian-place,
From s to s thro' distant ferns,
and I stand on the s of the hill,
Follow them down the s !
To slant the fifth autumnal s,
Becomes on Fortune's crowning s
Upon a pastoral s as fair,
on the s The sword rose, the hind fell,
after one long s was mounted, saw, Bowl-shaped,
I was halfway down the s to Hell,
up a s of garden, all Of roses white and red,
purple s's of mountain flowers Pass
Was blackening on the s's of Portugal,
and roll their ruins down the s.
Thro' the great gray s of men,
and flamed On one huge s beyond, _„ ^ „™w.,„o ^
Slope (verb) peaks shadow'd with pine s to the dark hyaline. LeoniniEleg\o
the summits s Beyond the furthest flights Two Voices 184
swimming vapour s's athwart the glen, (Enone 3
leave The monstrous ledges there to s, Princess vii 212
Sujyp. Confessions 164
Miller's D. 62
112
D. ofF. Women 16
Audley Court 20
Vision of Sin 219
To E. L. 20
Princess, Pro. 60
vii 38
Con. 40
99
Window, On the Hill 9
16
In Mem. xxii 10
„ Ixiv 14
Maud I xviii 19
Co7n. of Arthur 431
Gareth and L. 795
Geraint and E. 791
Pelleas and E. 421
Last Tournament 229
Sisters (E. and E.) 62
Locksley H., Sixty 138
Heavy Brigade 17
St. Telemachus 8
Slope
652
Small
Slope (verb) (continued) That s thro' darkness up to God, In Mem. Iv 16
As s's a wild brook o'er a little stone, Marr. of Geraint 77
Sloped the mountain-shade S dovraward to her seat CEnone 22
we came to where the river s To plunge Princess Hi 290
do^vn from this a lordly stairway s Oareth and L. 669
arms on which the standing muscle s, Marr. of Geraint 76
till the morning light S thro' the pines, Lover's Tale i 264
breakers on the shore S into louder surf : „ Hi 15
Sloping (See also Even-sloping, Onward-sloping) Was s
toward his western bower. Mariana 80
s of the moon-lit sward Was damask-work, Arabian Nights 27
great Orion s slowly to the West. Locksley Hall 8
s down to make Arms for his chair, Lancelot and E. 437
In some fair space of s greens Palace of Art 106
For all the s pasture murmur'd, sown Princess, Pro. 55
Who, smitten by the dusty s beam, Marr. of Geraint 262
crisping white Play'd ever back upon the s wave. Holy Grail 382
the s seas Hung in mid-heaven. Lover's Tale i 3
Slot But at the .« or fewmets of a deer, Last Tournament 371
Sloth But stagnates in the weeds of s; In Mem. xxvii 11
Slothful Inwrapt tenfold in s shame. Palace of Art 2Q2
But wink no more in s overtrust. Ode on Well. 170
Nor the cannon-bullet rust on a s shore, Maud III vi 26
He rooted out the s officer Or guilty, Geraint and E. 938
Slough (See also Woman-slough) ' In filthy s's they roll
a prurient skin. Palace of Art 201
From scalp to sole one s and crust of sin, St. S. Stylites 2
mountain there has cast his cloudy s, Lucretius 177
dazzled by the wildfire Love to s's That swallow
common sense, Princess v 441
times in the s's of a low desire, By an Evolution. 18
Slow (See also Too-slow) The s clock ticking, and the sound Mariana 74
So full, so deep, so s, Eleanore 95
The s result of mnter showers : Two Voices 452
The s wise smile that, round about Miller's D. 5
Her s full words sank thro' the silence drear, D. of F. Women 121
Nor swift nor s to change, but firm : Love thou thy land 31
A league of grass, wash'd by a s broad stream, Gardener's D. 40
If I may measure time by yon s light, St. S. Stylites 94
I hardly, with s steps. With s, faint steps, „ 182
my heart so s To feel it ! Love and Duty 34
The s sweet hours that bring us all things good, The
A" sad hours that bring us all things ill, ,. 57
by s prudence to make mild A rugged people, Ulysses 36
The long day wanes : the s moon climbs : ,, 55
his long wooing her. Her s consent, and marriage, Enoch Arden 708
By s approaches, than by single act Princess Hi 284
tiU the Bear had wheel'd Thro' a great arc his seven s
suns. ,, iv 213
At first her eye with s dilation roU'd ,, vi 189
Lead out thei pageant : sad and s, Ode on Well. 13
The sound of streams that swift or s In Mem. xxxv 10
And all the wheels of Being s. „ I A
One set s bell will seem to toll „ Ivii 10
With s steps from out An old storm-beaten, Gareth and L. 1112
the great Queen Came with s steps, Balin and Balan 245
Here her s sweet eyes Fear-tremulous, Merlin and V. 85
The s tear creep from her closed eyeUd yet, „ 906
Sighs, and s smiles^ and golden eloquence Lancelot and E. 649
But ten 5 mornings past, and on the eleventh „ 1133
Then with a s smile tum'd the lady round Pelleas and E. 91
Spread the s smile thro' all her company. ,, 95
and there, with s sad steps Ascending, Last Tournament 143
With silent smiles of s disparagement ; Guinevere 14
Methought by s degrees the sullen bell ToU'd quicker, Lover's Tale Hi 13
Some thro' age and s diseases, Locksley H., Sixty 46
.Ionian Evolution, swift or s, Thro' all the Spheres — The Ring 44
But after ten s weeks her fix'd intent, „ 345
Slow-arching crest of some s-a wave, Last Tournament 462
Slow-develop'd A s-d strength awaits Completion Love thou thy land 57
Slow-dropping S-d veils of thinnest lawn, Lotos-Eaters 11
Slower Are s to forgive than human kings. Tiresias 10
And s and fainter, Old and weary, Merlin and the G. 99
Slow-falling westward — under yon «-/star, Akhar's Dream 152
Sk>w-fiaming Would seem s-f crimson fires Palace of Art 50
Slowly Ring out a s dying cause, • In Mem. cm .
out of the darkness Silent and s Merlin and the G. 8S
Slowly-dying (See also Slowly) and winks behind
a s-d fire. Locksley Hall ISfil
By quiet fields, a s-d power, De Prof., Two G. 241
Slowly-fading The s-f mistress of the world. Com. of Arthur 505|
Slowly-grown if our s-g And crown'd Republic's
crowning common-sense. To the Queen ii i
Slowly-mellowing thro' the s-m avenues Last Tournament 3601
Slowly-painful More s-j> to subdue this home Of sin, St. S. Stylites 57|
Slowly-ridging The s-r rollers on the cUffs Clash'd, Lovers Tale iS)i\
Slowly-thickening I see the s-t chestnut towers Prog, of Sf ring 42 j
Slowly-waning and deckt in s-w hues. Gareth and L. 1195 i
Slow-measure have moved s-m to my tune. Last Tournament 2823
Slow-moving S-m as a wave against the wind. Lover's Tale iv 293'|
Slow-worm s-w creeps, and the thin weasel Aylmer's Field 852
Sludge tends her bristled grunters in the s : ' Princess f 27j
Sluggard I have been the s, and I ride apace. Holy Grail 644l
Sluggish (See also Sloomy) Mere fellowship of s moods. In Mem. xxxv 2Xi
Sluice A s with blacken'd waters slept, Mariana 38]
Sluiced canal From the main river s, Arabian Xighls 283
Slumber (s) hum of swarming bees Into dreamful s lull'd. Eleanore 30|
2.281
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 2M
12
The Voyage '.
In Mem. xcix 18
Maud I Hi 2]
The Flight 9]
Supp. Confessions 1291
Locksley Hall 130 j
In Mem. xliii 4 J
Arabian Nights 79)
Enoch Ardeii
The ErakenlQ\
Pelleas and E. 431 1
Pass, of Arthur 7
Claribel 18
Supp. Confessions 11 ]
Lotos- Eaters 13 i
Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 7 .
L. of Shalott Hi 15 1
Princess i 163 1
Marr. of Geraint 106 J
Maud / i 331
Owd Bod 41 1
in its place My heart a charmed s keeps.
Nor steep our brows in s's holy balm ;
surely, s is more sweet than toil,
As thro' the s of the globe
Betwixt the s of the poles,
Breaking a s in which all spleenful folly
I envied your sweet s,
Slumber (verb) S's not like a mountain tarn ?
And the kindly earth shall s.
In some long trance should s on ;
Slumber'd the garden-bowers and grots S :
While Enoch s motionless and pale.
Slumbering Winnow with giant arms the s green.
Red after revel, droned her lurdane knights S,
Who slowly paced among the s host.
Slumbrous The s wave outwelleth,
if a bolt of fire Would rive the s summer noon
RolUng a s sheet of foam below.
The s light is rich and warm.
Slung from his blazon'd baldric s
Slur seem'd to s With garrulous ease
how men s him, saying all his force Is melted
Slurring and s the days gone by,
Slushin' s down fro' the bank to the beck,
Slut See Trollope
Sly -S«« Half-sly
Smack'd Their nectar s of hemlock on the Ups, De meter and P. 104 ,
Smacking the sight and s of the time ; Princess, Pro. 89 j
Small o'er it many, round and s, Mariana 39 ,
Nothing but the s cold worm Fretteth A Dirge 9J
A STILL s voice spake unto me. Two Voices 1 J
Then to the still s voice I said ;
He left a s plantation ; A mphion 20 ]
great and s. Went nutting to the hazels. Enoch Arden 63
With one s gate that open'd on the waste, 733 :
For which his gains were dock'd, however s : S were
his gains, Sea Dreams 7 }
the master took jS notice, or austerely, Lucretius 8
His name was Gama ; crack'd and s his voice, Princess i 114 i
heads were less : Some men's were « ; „ ii 148 1
her s goodman Shrinks in his aim-chair „ v 453 j
So said the s king moved beyond his wont. „ vi 265 \
here and there the s bright head, „ vH 58 1
she found a s Sweet Idyl, „ 190 j
If she be s, slight-natured, „ 265 1
When one s touch of Charity Could hf t Lit. Squabbles 13
the village, and looks how quiet and s ! Maiid I iv 1 .
S and pure as a pearl, „ // ii 2 '
S, but a work divine, ,, 23 .
by Mark the King For that s charm of feature mine, Merlin and V. 76
grieving that their greatest are so s, „ 833
Rejoice, s man, in this s world of mine, Holy Grail 559
S heart was his after the Holy Quest : „ 657
Small
653
Smile
SmaU {contimied) ' And then, with s adventure met, Sir Bors Holy Grfi^f
And slender was her hand and s her shape ;
and if he fly us, S matter ! let him.'
And mindful of her s and cruel hand,
s pity upon his horse had he.
The twelve s damosels white as Innocence,
and cast thee back Thine own s saw,
s violence done Rankled in him and ruffled
But let my words, the words of one so s,
Of that s bay, which out to open main
The s sweet face was flush'd,
With all the peoples, great and s,
' S blemish upon the skin !
Her dauntless army scatter'd, and so s,
At times the s black fly upon the pane
Smaller 0 God, that I had loved a s man !
Hid under grace, as in a s time,
I am thine husband — not a s soul.
When I was s than the statuette
Smallest he saw The s rock far on the faintest hill,
O s among peoples !
Smash (See also Mash) S the bottle to smithers,
Smashed See Mash'd
Smashing '""'''• Mashin'
Smear'd shiniui^ hair Was s with earth.
Their idol s with blood,
Smell (s) moist rich 5 of the rotting leaves.
The s of violets, hidden in the green.
The gentle shower, the s of dying leaves,
A great black swamp and of an evil s,
and the sweet s of the fields Past,
wind Came wooingly with woodbine s's.
blew Coolness and moisture and all s's of bud And
foUage
and the loathsome s's of disease
On them the s of burning had not past,
sympathies, how frail. In sound and s !
Smell" (verb) rarely s's the new-mown hay,
I s the meadow in the street ;
as one That s's a foul-flesh'd agaric m the holt, _
liow sweetly s's the honeysuckle In the hush'd night,
if tha seeas 'im an' s's 'im
is prized for it s's of the beast, .
Smell'd Fur 'e s Uke a herse a-singein',
Smellest thou s all of kitchen-grease.
Thou s all of kitchen as before.'
Nay— for thou s of the kitchen still.
Smelling (See also Ocean-smelling, Sweet-smelling)
musk and of insolence,
over-full Of sweetness, and in s of itself.
It Hesperian gold. That s ambrosially,
S of the coming siunmer, as one large cloud
Brought out a dusky loaf that s of home, ^
Imile (s) deep and clear are thine Of wealthy ss
%vho may know Whether s or frown be fleeter f
Whether s or frown be sweeter.
Thy s and frown are not aloof From one another,
heart entanglest In a golden-netted s ;
Hollow s and frozen sneer Conie not here.
Wherefore those faint s's of thine.
Wherefore that faint s of thine.
Hence that look and s of thine.
The very s before you speak,
Comes out thy deep ambrosial s.
ghost of passion that no s's restore —
The slow wise s that, round about
She with a .subtle s in her mild eyes.
She, flashing forth a haughty s,
slight Sir Eobert with his watery s
thou grant mine asking with a s.
With one s of still defiance
With tears and s's from heaven again
With half-allowing s's for aU the world,
Sir Aylmer half forgot his lazy s Of patron
With a heaved shoulder and a saucy s,
Pelleas and E. 74
200
201
540
Last Tournament 291
712
Guinevere 48
„ 185
Lover's Tale i 435
The Wreck 60
Epilogue 20
Dead Prophet 66
The Fleet 11
To One who ran down Eng. 3
Merlin and V. 872
Lancelot and E. 264
Guinevere 566
The Ring 109
Com. of Arthur 99
Montenegro 9
North. Cobbler 104
SmUe (s) (continued) Never one kindly s, one kindly ^. , , k„.
\por(i . Aylmer' s Field 564
with the fat affectionate s That makes the widow lean. Sea Dreams 155
Eoly Grail 210
Freedom 28
A spirit haunts 17
D. ojF. Women 77
Enoch Arden 611
Holy Grail 499
Pelleas and E. 5
Lover's Tale ii 36
„ Hi 5
In the Child. Hasp. 25
Sir J. Oldcastle 177
Early Spring 36
The Owl i 9
In Mem. cxix 4
Gareth and L. 747
1287
North. Cobbler 66
The Dawn 14
Owd Mod 101
Gareth and L. 751
771
843
iSof
Maud I vi 45
Lover's Tale i 272
CEnone 67
Gardener's D. 78
Audley Court 22
but
Madeline 11
19
41
Poet's Mind 10
Adeline 21
38
63
Margaret 14
Elednore 74
The form, the form 11
Miller's D. 5
(Enone 184
D. of F. Women 129
Edwin Morris 128
Tithonus 16
The Captain 59
Sir L. and Q. G. 2
Aylmer' s Field 120
197
466
s that like a wrinkling wind On glassy water
She paused, and added with a haughtier s
shot from crooked lips a haggard s.
s, that look'd A stroke of cruel sunshine
common light of s's at our disguise
doubtful s dwelt like a clouded moon
' Ay so,' said Ida with a bitter s,
blush and s, a medicine in themselves
(so rare the s's Of sunlight)
Is matter for a flying s.
In glance and s, and clasp and kiss,
I know it, and smile a hard-set s,
touch'd my hand with a s so sweet.
And s as sunny as cold.
And her s were all that I dream'd.
And her s had all that I dream'd.
But a s could make it sweet, (repeat)
With a glassy s his brutal scorn —
Perhaps the "s and tender tone
The sun look'd out with as
' I shall assay,' said Gareth with a s That madden d , ^ „oo
j^gP Gareth and L. 78o
' Turn, Fortune, turn thy wheel with s or frown ; Marr. of Geraint 350
Princess i 115
,. Hi 225
.. iv 364
523
„ V 271
,. vi 270
316
„ vii 62
The Daisy 53
In Mem. Ixii 12
„ Ixxxiv 7
Maud I iv20
vi 12
24
37
93
„ I vi 39, 95
49
.63
ix 3
515
Balin and Balan 160
Merlin and F. 172
Lancelot and E. 323
374
With frequent s and nod departing found,
when he mark'd his high sweet s In passing,
sUght and sprightly talk. And vivid s's,
when the living s Died from his lips,
he bound Her token on his helmet, with a s
Sighs, and slow s's, and golden eloquence
Smiled with his lips — a s beneath a cloud,
with a slow s turn'd the lady round
With silent s's of slow disparagement ;
Heart-hiding s, and gray persistent eye :
Flicker'd like doubtful s's about her lips,
when I wept. Her s lit up the rainbow on my tears,
her love did clothe itself in s's About his lips j
her Hps were sunder'd With s's of tranquil bliss, ^
bond and seal Of friendship, spoken of with tearful s s ;
stepping out of darkness with a s.
adding, with a s, The first for many weeks —
Seead nobbut the s 0' the sun
The bright quick s of Evelyn,
and the s, and the comforting eye —
And greet it with a kindly s ;
bask'd in the light of a dowerless s,
But wakes a dotard s.'
The cruel s, the courtly phrase that masks
If greeted by your classic s,
Miriam nodded with a pitying s.
Nor ever cheer'd you with a kindly s,
in the tearful splendour of her s's
Smile (verb) (See also Smoile) women s with
saint-like glances
8 at the claims of long descent.
Where they s in secret, looking over wasted
lands.
But they s, they find a music centred
' No fair Hebrew boy Shall s away my maiden
blame
He will not s — not speak to me Once more.
Did they s on him.
The very graves appear'd to s,
Seeing with how great ease Nature can s,
empire upon empire s's to-day,
I know it, and s a hard-set smile,
S sweetly, thou ! my love hath smiled on me.
S and we s, the lords of many lands ;
Frown and we s, the lords of our own hands ;
8 at him, as he deem'd, presumptuously :
To make her s, her golden ankle-bells.
smiUng as a master s's at one That is not of his school, ,. 662
you yourself will s at your own self Lancelot and E. 951
Holy Grail 705
Pelleas and E. 91
Guinevere 14
„ .64
Lover's Tale i 68
254
658
ii 143
182
ir 220
280
North. Cobbler 50
Sisters (E. and E.) 243
In the Child. Hosp. 12
To E. Fitzgerald 4
The Wreck 45
Ancient Sage 132
The Flight 30
To Prof. Jebb. 10
The Ring 281
388
Prog, of Spring 41
Supp. Confessions 22
L. C. V. de Vere 52
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 114
117
D. of F. Women 214
To J. 8. 21
The Captain 56
The Letters 45
Lucretius 174
W. to Marie Alex. 33
Maud I iv 20
Gareth and L. 1001
Marr. of Geraint 353
354
Balin and Balan 222
Merlin and V. 579
Smile
654
Smoke
Smile (verb) {continued) I shall never make thee s agam.' Last Tournament 762
They s upon me, till, remembering all Sisters (E. and E.) 279
How she would s at 'em, play with 'em, In the Child. Hosp. 34
thine Imperial mother s again, Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 13
ghost of our great Catholic Queen S's on me, Columbus 188
s's at her sleepin' child — Tomorrow 26
up to either pole she s's, Locksley H., Sixty 169
Where man, nor only Nature s's ; To Ulysses 39
Smiled who s when she was torn in three ; Poland 12
Thy sister s and said, ' No tears for me ! The Bridesmaid 3
And now and then he gravely s. Two Voices 414
He s, and opening out his milk-white palm (Enone 65
And somewhat grimly s. Palace of Art 136
At me you s, but unbeguiled I saw the snare, L. C. V. de Vere 5
with dead hps s at the twilight plain, D. of F. Women 62
She faintly s, she hardly moved ; The Letters 14
that which pleased him, for he s. Enoch Arden 757
He look'd upon my crown and s : In Mem. Ixix 16
Has not his sister « on me ? Maud I xiii 45
with a kindly hand on Gareth's arm S the great
King, " Gareth and L. 579
Smile sweetly, thou ! my love hath s on me.' .. 1001
twice my love hath s on me.' (repeat) .. 1062, 1077
thrice my love hath s on me.' ,, 1161
Then sigh'd and s the hoary-headed Earl, Marr. of Geraint 307
He spoke : the mother s, but half in tears, „ 823
Then like a stormy sunlight s Geraint, Geraint and E. 480
From being s at happier in themselves — Balin and Balan 163
Whereat she s and tum'd her to the King, ,, 201
Garlon, hissing ; then he sourly s. „ 355
Sunnily she s ' And even in this lone wood, „ 528
till he sadlj' s : ' To what request for what strange
boon,' Merlin and T'. 263
S at each other, while the Queen, Lancelot and E. 739
But fast asleep, and lay as tho' she s. „ 1161
S with his hps — a smile beneath a cloud, Holy Grail 705
and they too s. Scorning him ; Pelleas and E. 96
Full sharply smote his knees, and s, Guinevere 47
An' he s at me, ' Ain't you, my love ? First Quarrel 62
the sun s out far over the summer sea. The Revenge 70
An' Squire 'e s an' 'e s (repeat) Village Wife 61, 88
an' 'e s, fur 'e hedn't naw friend, „ 89
it seeni'd she stood by me and s. In the Child. Hosp. 67
it coo'd to the Mother and s. The Wreck 60
an' Hiven in its glory s, Tomorrow 25
looking stUl as if she s, Locksley H., Sixty 35
shook her head, and patted yours. And s, The Ring 314
Smiler Thou faint s, Adeline ? . Adeline 48
Smilest Thou s, but thou dost not speak, Oriana 68
Thou that faintly 5 stQl, Adeline 15
And s, knowing all is well. In Mem. cxxiiii 20
' O morning star that s in the blue, Gareth and L. 999
Smiling (See also A-smilin', Silver-smiling, Westward-smiling)
S, never speaks : Lilian 12
S, frowning, evennore, (repeat) Madeline 8, 25
Faintly s Adeline, Adeline 2
Thought folded over thought, s asleep, Elednore 84
Sat s, babe in arm. Palace of Art 96
Eustace tum'd, and s said to me, Gardener's D. 97
And, s, put the question by. Day-Dm., Revival 32
And one said s ' Pretty were the sight Princess, Pro. 139
Took both hLs hands, and s faintly said : „ ii 304
While Psyche watch'd them, s, „ 365
but s ' Not for thee,' she said, „ iv 121
Then tum'd the noble damsel s at him, Gareth and L. 1188
And, gravely s, lifted her from horse, Geraint and E. 883
And Vivien answer'd, s scornfully, Merlin and V. 37
And Vivien aaswer'd .< saucily, (repeat) ,, 268, 651
And Vivien answer'd s mournfully : (repeat) ,. 311, 438
And Vivien answer'd s as in wrath : „ 526
And s as a master smiles at one That is not of his school, „ 662
while the king Would listen s. Lancelot and E. 116
' So ye will grace me,' answer'd Lancelot, 8 a moment, .. 224
with s face arose. With s face and frowning heart, .. 552
past the barge Whereon the lily maid of iitolat Lay s, „ 1243
Smiling (continued) To whom Sir Tristram s, ' I am here. Last Touniament 521
made garlands of the selfsame flower. Which she
took s
a light Of s welcome round her lips —
s at the shghter ghost.
s downward at this eartlilier earth of ours,
as the low dark hull dipt vmder the s main,
Smirk'd The parson s and nodded.
Smit s with frefer light shall slowly melt
S with exceeding sorrow unto Death.
Smite Tho' one should s him on the cheek,
8, shrink not, spare not.
his footsteps s the threshold staii-s Of life —
sitting well in order s The sounding furrows ;
*S' on the sudden, yet rode on,
Utterly s the heathen underfoot,
This air that s's his forehead is not air But vision
That did not shim to s me in worse way,
Smither (piece) Smash the bottle to s's.
Smitten (See also Sharp-smitten, Sun-smitten)
deeply s thro' the helm
Aidless, alone, and s thro' the helm.
A Memnon s with the morning Sun.'
Who, s by the dusty sloping beam.
Then from the s surface flash'd, as it were,
Pray Heaven, they be not s by the bolt.'
And, when I would have s them,
young life Being s in mid heaven with mortal
cold
Wet with the mists and s by the lights,
I am so deeply s thro' the helm
Aidless, alone, and s thro' the helm — •
Tho' Sin too oft, when s by Thy rod,
Smoake (smoke) I couldn't see fur the s
Smoakin' (smoking) Guzzhn' an' soakin' an' s
An' s an' thinkin' o' things —
Smock'd Tho' s, or furr'd and purpled,
Smoile (smile) Looiik 'ow quoloty s's
Smoke (s) (See also Sea-smoke, Smoake, Thunder-smoke,
Water-smoke) With thunders, and with lightnings,
and with s, —
-^nd all the war is roll'd in s.'
And like a downward s, the slender stream
A land of streams ! some, hke a downward s,
Beneath its drift of s ;
thro' the s The blight of low desires—
A s go up thro' which I loom to her
Athwart the s of burning weeds.
Where, far from noise a,nd s of town,
like the s in a hurricane whirl'd.
With fruitful cloud and living s,
streets were black with s and frost,
Wrapt in drifts of lurid s
Reddening the sun with « and earth with blood.
In drifts of s before a rolUng wind,
walks thro' fire will hardly heed the s.
Ilolling her s about the Royal mount,
' Out of the s, at once I leap from Satan's foot
Out of the s he came, and so my lance Hold,
if the King awaken from his craze. Into the s again.'
Lover's Tale i 344
» Hi 46
Locksley H., Sixty 54
183
The Wreck 127
The Goose 20
Golden Year 33
Lover's Tale i 601
Two Voices 251
St. S. Stylites 181
191
Ulysses 58
Com. of Arthur 51
423
- Holy Grail 914
Guinevere 435
North. Cobbler 104
I am so
M. d' Arthur 25
41
Princess Hi 116
Marr. of Gerainf 262
Lancelot and E. 1236
Holy Grail 221
823
Last Tournament 27
Guinevere 597
Pass, of Arthur 193
209
Doubt and Prayer 1
Owd Rod 87
North. Cobbler 24
Owd Rod 34
Princess iv 247
N. Farmer, 0. S. 53
Buonaparte 6
Two Voices 156
Lotos- Eaters 8
10
Talking Oak 6
Aylmer's Field 672
Princess v 130
„ vii 358
F. D. Maurice 13
Boddicea 59
In Mem. xxxix 3
„ Ixix 3
Maud II iv 66
Com. of Arthur 37
4M
Gareth and L. 143
190
537
722
725
To
puff'd the swaying branches into s Holy Grail 15
their foreheads grimed with s, and sear'd, „ 265
the morning star Reel'd in the s, Pelleas and E. 519
daylight of your minds But cloud and s. Lover's Tale i 297
Dark thro' the s and the sulphur Def. of Lucknow 33
Dark with the s of human sacrifice, Sir J. Oldcastle 84
when a s from a city goes to heaven Achilles over the T. 7
He is only a cloud and a s Despair 29
' A fiery phoenix rising from the s, The Ring 339
all her realm Of sound and s. To Mary Boyle 66
s of war's volcano burst again From hoary deeps Prog, of Spring 97
Smoke (verb) The long way s beneath him in his fear ; Geraint and E. 532
stormy crests that s against the skies, Lancelot and E. 484
I have seen this yew-tree s. Spring after spring. Holy Grail 18
went To s the scandalous hive of those wild bees „ 214
Smoking
655
Snipe
Smoking See Smoakiii'
Smoky Right dowii by s Paul's they bore, H'ill Water. 141
Had chanted on the s mountain-tops, Guinevere 282
Smooth motion from the river won Ridged the s
level, Arabian Nights 35
A huge crag-platform, s as bumish'd brass I chose. Palace of Art 5
I keep s plats of fruitful groimd, 2'he Blackbird 3
so by many a sweep Of meadow s from aftermath Audley Court 14
And raised the cloak from brows as pale and s Princess v 73
A maid so s, so white, so wonderful. Merlin and V. 566
thou knowest, and that s rock Before it, Tiresias 146
let ma stroak tha down till I maakes tha es s es
silk. Spinster's S's. 53
Smooth-cut One was of s-c stone, V. of Maeldune 106
Smooth'd He s his chin and sleek'd his hair, A Character 11
KoU'd on each other, rounded, s, D. of F. Women 51
And 5 a petted peacock down with that : Princess ii 456
Lancelot tum'd, and s The glossj' shoulder, Lancelot and E. 347
Smoothe s my pillow, mix the foaming draught Princess ii 251
could not rest for musing how to s And sleek
his marriage Last Tournament 390
Smoother equal baseness lived in sleeker times With s men : Princessv386
Smooth-faced s-f snubnosed rogue would leap from his
counter Jlaud I i 51
Smoothness See Over-smoothness
Smooth-swarded Naked they came to that s-s bower, (Enone 95
Smote God's glory s him on the face.' Two Voices 225
solitary morning s The streaks of virgin snow. (Enone 55
note From that deep chord which Hampden s England and Amer. 19
he s His palms together, and he cried aloud, M. d' Arthur 86
wither'd moon S by the fresh beam of the springing east ; „ 214
I 5 them with the cross ; St. S. Stylites 173
s on all the chords with might ; Locksley Hall 33
S the chord of Self, that, trembling, „ 34
and s Her life into the liquor. Will Water. Ill
S him, as having kept aloof so long. Enoch Arden 274
as she s me with the light of eyes Princess Hi 192
maid, Of those beside her, s her harp, and sang. ., iv 38
I s him on the breast ; he started up ; ,, 164
tougher, heavier, stronger, he that s „ v 536
s Flame-colour, vert and azure, in three rays, Com. of Arthur 274
Gareth hearing ever stronglier s, Gareth and L. 1141
liea^nly-gaUoping hoof S on her ear, Geraint and E. 448
However lightly, s her on the cheek. „ 718
Arthur lightly s the brethren down, Balin and Ralan 41
I s upon the naked skull A thrall of thine .. 55
being knighted till he s the thrall, - 155
Hard upon helm s him, and the blade flew ,. 395
duke, earl. Count, baron — whom he s, he over-
threw. Lancelot and E. 465
Thereon she s her hand : •■ 625
Ramp in the field, he s his thigh, and mock'd : .. 664
and down they flash'd, and s the stream. „ 1235
in the blast there s along the haU Holy Grail 186
And where it s the plowshare in the field, .. 403
face as of a child That s itself into the bread, „ 467
Full sharply s his knees, and smiled, Guinevere 47
Modred s his liege Hard on that helm Pass, of Arthur 165
he s His palms together, and he cried aloud : „ 254
wither'd moon S by the fresh beam of the springing
east ; „ . 382
chiUness oi the sprinkled brook S on my brows, Lover's Tale i 634
Till it s on their hulls and their sails The Revenge 116
drove them, and 5 them, and slew, Def. of Lucknow 71
s, and still'd Thro' all its folds Tiresias 14
a huge sea s every soul from the decks The Wreck 109
till the heat S on her brow, Beath of (Enone 98
Smotber'd Secret wrath Uke s fuel The Captain 15
Smoulder light cloud s's on the simimer crag. Edwin Morris 147
' betwixt these two Division s's hidden ; Princess Hi 79
Where s their dead despots ; " . " ^^
Smoulder'd phantom colony s on the refluent estuary ; Boddicea 28
And drove his heel into the s log, M. d' Arthur, Ep. 14
Lies like a log, and all but s out ! Gareth and L. 75
An oak-tree s there. » 402
Smouldering and out of every s town Cries to Thee,
The s homestead, and the household flower
some evil chance Will make the s scandal break and
blaze
There the s fire of fever creeps across the rotted
floor.
Smuttier S than blasted grain :
Snaake (snake) like a long black a- i' the snaw,
Snaggy Nasty an' s an' shaaky,
SnaU bedmate of the s and eft and snake.
Nor make a s's horn shrink for wantonness ;
Snake (See also Binglet-snake, Sea-snake, Snaike)
house the cold crown'd s !
The s slipt under a spray,
fomitain of the moment, playing, now A twisted s,
at these words the s. My secret,
look'd A knot, beneath, of s's, aloft, a grove.
' Here are s's within the grass ;
curved an arm about his neck. Clung like a s ;
The s of gold slid from her hair,
bedmate of the snail and eft and s,
find a nest and feels a s, he drew :
hiss, « — I saw him there —
roots like some black coil of carven s's,
the gilded s Had nestled in this bosom-throne
like The Indian on a still-eyed s,
roused a s that hissing writhed away ;
A hiss as from a wilderness of s's,
Snakeless Summers of the s meadow.
Snake-like s-l sUmed his victim ere he gorged ;
Snap Kate s's her fingers at my vows ;
' Screw not the chord too sharply lest it s.'
cataract seas that s The three decker's oaken spine
The vow that binds too strictly s's itself —
Burst vein, s sinew, and crack heart,
s the bond that link'd us life to life,
Snapt A TOUCH, a kiss ! the charm was s
branch S in the rushing of the river-rain
Pierced thro' his side, and there s,
being s — ^We run more counter to the soul
vows that are s in a moment of fire ;
Lances s in sunder.
Snare (s) I saw the s, and I retired :
Rapt in her song, and careless of the s.
thro' wordy s's to track Suggestion
She meant to weave me a s
He laid a cruel s in a pit To catch a friend
these be for the s (So runs thy fancy)
Snare (verb) wove coarse webs to s her purity,
s's them by the score Flatter'd and fluster'd.
Nor wilt thou s him in the white ravine,
would she rail on me To s the next.
To s her royal fancy with a boon
Snared in the garden s Picus and Faunus,
And s the squirrel of the glen ?
Snarl'd S at and cursed me.
Snarling s at each other's heels.
And little King Charley s.
Snatch (s) She chanted s'es of mysterious hymns
Snatch (verb) And s me from him as by violence ;
Snatch'd Katie s her eyes at once from mine,
S thro' the perilous passes of his life :
But s a sudden buckler from the Squire,
And s her thence ;
Snaw (snow) we may happen a fall o' s —
like a long black snaake i' the s,
An' I heard great heaps o' the s
Sneck (latch) thy chaumber door wouldn't s ;
Sneer Hollow smile and frozen s Come not here.
He seldom crost his child without a s ;
Sneer'd ' A ship of fools,' he s and wept.
Sneeze S out a full God-bless you
Sniffin' Thou'll goa s about the tap
I weant goa s about the tap.'
Snipe swamp, where humm'd the dropping s,
Poland 5
Princess ii 128
Guinevere 91
Locksley H., Sixty 223
Last Tournament 305
Owd Rod 40
North. Cobbler 78
Holy Grail 570
Ancient Sage 272
That
CEnone 37
Poet's Song 10
Princess, Pro. 62
„ Hi 43
Marr. of Geraint 325
Merlin and V. 33
242
888
Holy Grail 570
Pelleas and E. 437
471
Last Tournament 13
Lover's Tale i 623
ii 189
Beath of (Enone 88
St. Telemxichus 66
To Virgil IQ
Sea Breams 193
Kate 19
Aylmer's Field 469
Maud II ii 26
Last Tournament 657
Sir J. Oldcastle 123
Happy 61
Bay-Bm., Revival 1
Merlin and V. 958
Lancelot and E. 490
Last Tournament 658
Vastness 26
The Tourney 8
L. C. V. de Vere 6
Princess i 221
In Mem. xcv 31
Maud I vi 25
„ // V 84
Gareth and L. 1081
Aylmer's Field 780
Princess •« 163
„ vii 205
Merlin and V. 811
Lancelot and E. 71
Lucretius 181
Princess ii 249
Merlin and the G. 28
Locksley Hall 106
Maud I xii 30
Lancelot and E. 1407
Geraint and E. 357
Tlie Brook 101
Aylmer's Field 209
Balin and Balan 554
Last Tournament 384
Village Wife 21
Owd Rod 40
41
64
Poet's Mind 10
Aylmer's Field 562
The Voyage 78
Edwin Morris 80
NorOi. Cobbler 64
67
On a Mourner 9
Snivel
656
Soft
Snivel I that heard her whine And s, Last Tournament 450
Snorin' ' What arta s theere fur ? Otvd Boa 68
Snow {See also Snaw) rites and form before his burning
eyes Melted like s. The Poet 40
Shone out their crowning s's. Dying Swan 13
When the long dun wolds are ribb'd with s, Oriana 5
thorn will blow In tufts of rosy-tinted s ; Two Voices 60
solitary morning smote The streaks of virgin s. (Enone 56
And highest, s and fire. Palace of Art 84
I wish the s would melt and the sun come
out May Queen, N. Y's. E. 15
Three silent pinnacles of aged s, Lotos- Eaters 16
Full knee-deep Ues the winter s, D- of the 0. Year 1
over the s I heard just now the crowing cock. „ 37
Where falls not hail, or rain, or any s, M. d' Arthur 260
wind, frost, heat, hail, damp, and sleet, and s ; St. S. Stylites 16
with rain or hail, or fire or s ; Locksley Hall 193
Deep on the convent-roof the s's St. Agnes' Eve 1
The streets are dumb with s. Sir Galahad 52
Nor ever falls the least white star of s, Lucretius 107
like the flakes In a fall of s, ,,167
From flower to flower, from 5 to s : In Mem. xxii 4
The silent s possess'd the earth, ., Ixxviii 3
And silent vmder other s's : .. cv 6
Ring, happy bells, across the s : .. cvi 6
Now fades the last long streak of s, „ cxv 1
yet thou art but swoUen with cold s's Gareth and L. 9
glittering star of mom Parts from a bank of s, Marr. of Geraint 735
' I know not, for thy heart is pure as s.' Holy Grail 97
like a bank Of maiden s mingled with sparks Last Tournament 149
cold Falls on the mountain in midsummer s's, „ 228
Where falls not hail, or rain, or any s. Pass, of Arthur 428
Uke cold s, it melteth in the source Lover's Tale i 783
and the full moon stares at the s. Eiz-pah 4
the wind and the shower and the s. .. 68
The s and the skjf so bright — .. 83
moimtain was lihes in lieu of s, V. of Maeldune 41
kiss fell chill as a flake of s on the cheek : The Wreck 32
And cap our age with s ? ' Ancient Sage 98
was as light as s an the Ian', Tomorrow 36
hair was as white as the s an a grave. „ 60
high hill-passes of stainless 5, Dead Prophet 47
blanching apricot like s in s. Prog, of Spring 30
I sat beneath a solitude of s ; „ 71
Where am I ? s on all the hills ! Romney's E. 12
I have climb'd to the s's of Age, By an Evolution. 17
Snow-cold Over her s-c breast and angry cheek CEnone 142
Snowdon we that day had been Up S ; Golden Year 4
Snowdrop to live till the s's come again : May Queen, N. Y's. E. 14
To die before the s came, „ Con. 4
Or this first s of the year St. Agnes' Eve 11
the white Of the first s's inner leaves ; Princess v 197
The s only, flowering thro' the year, Last Tournament 220
Like s's, pure ! Early Spring 30
Wavers on her thin stem the s cold Prog, of Spring 3
Snow'd A hundred winters s upon his breast, Palace of Art 139
Tore the king's letter, s it down, Princess i 61
Snowflake like a s in the hand. Lover's Tale Hi 38
Snowlike Down to the s sparkle of a cloth Sisters {E. and E.) 117
Snow-limb'd the s-l Eve from whom she came. Mavd I xviii 28
Snowshoe Claymore and 5, toys in lava. Princess, Pro. 18
Snow-wldte The snowy peak and s-w cataract (Enone 211
Snowy Lying, robed in s white _ L. of Shalott iv 19
between The s peak and snow-white cataract (Enone 211
Slant down the s sward, St. Agnes' Eve 6
Fair gleams the s altar-cloth. Sir Galahad 33
Airing a s hand and signet gem, Princess i 121
And s summits old in story : „ iv2
Would rock the s cradle till I died. „ 104
as flies A troop of s doves athwart the dusk, „ 168
Long lanes of splendour slanted o'er a press Of s shoulders, „ 479
And s dells in a golden air, The Daisy 68
And up the s Splugen drew, „ 86
And passion pure in s bloom In Mem. cix 11
made A s penthouse for his hollow eyes, Merlin and V. 808
Snowy (continued) one s knee was prest Against the margin
flowers ; Tiresias 42
Snowy-banded The s-b, dilettante, Mavd I viii 10
Snubnosed smooth-faced s rogue would leap from his
counter „ i 51
Snuff An' 'is noase sa grufted wi' s Village Wife 39
Soaber (sober) Thaw thou was es s es daay, Spinster's S's. 75
Soak City children s and blacken Locksley H., Sixty 218
Soak'd Tho' s and saturate, out and out. Will Water. 87
Soak'd Moother 'ed bean sa s wi' the thaw Owd Rod 113
Soakin' Guzzlin' an' s an' smoakin' North. Cobbler 24
Soaking (See also Soakin') I s here in winter wet — To Ulysses 6
Soar she answered, ' Ay, And men to s : ' Lover's Tale i 305
my wings That I may s the sky, Mechanophilus 10
Soaring from my vapour-girdle s forth Prog, of Spring 79
Sob (s) all at once the old man burst in s's : — Dora 158
shaken with her s's, Melissa knelt ; Princess iv 289
dark crowd moves, and there are s's Ode on Well. 268
her false voice made way, broken with s's : Merlin and V. 857
And bluster into stormy s's and say, Lancelot and E. 1067
Sob (verb) hear him s and sigh In the walks ; A spirit haunts 5
and to clamour, mourn and s, St. S. Stylites 6
Sobb'd for three hours he s o'er William's chUd Dora 167
And s, and you s with it, Princess ii 273
he s and he wept. And cursed himself ; Bandit's Death 29
Sobbing See, there is one of us s, Maud II v 30
A voice clung s till he question'd it. Last Tournament 759
Set up an answer, s, ' I am thy fool, ., 761
Sober (See also Soaber) Nothing to mar the s majesties
Of settled, Lucretius 217
That s freedom out of which there springs Ode on Well. 164
A s man, among his boys. In Mem. liii 2
' A s man is Percivale and pure ; Merlin and V. 755
Envy wears the mask of Love, and, laughing
s fact to scorn, Locksley H., Sixty 109
I heard the s rook And carrion crow cry The Ring 173
Soberer-hued Autumn-changed, S-h Gold again. The Oak 9
Sober-suited That s-s Freedom chose. You ask me, why, etc. 6
Social Cursed be the s wants that sin against the
strength of youth ! Locksley Hall 59
Cursed be the s lies that warp us from the living
truth ! „ 60
To pass with all our s ties Day-Dm., L' Envoi 5
' Have patience,' I replied, ' ourselves are full
Of s wrong ; Princess, Con. 73
For ' ground in yonder s mill We rub each other's
angles down, In Mem. Ixxxix 39
and ioin'd Each office of the s hour „ cxi 14
Proclaiming s truth shall spread, „ cxxvii 5
Society See She-society
Socratic Or threaded some S dream ; In Mem. Ixxxix 36
Sod The blackness round the tombing s. On a Mourner 27
mouldering with the dull earth's mouldering s, Palace of Art 261
To rest beneath the clover s, In Mem. x 13
after s and shingle ceased to fly Behind her, Gareth and L. 761
And over hard and soft, striking the s Pelleas and E. 498
nor the s Draw from my death Thy living flower Doubt and Prayer 5
£!odden Men, women, on their s faces. Last Tournament 474
Sofa And broider'd s's on each side : Arabian Nights 19
Who ' sitting on green s's contemplate Akbar's Dream 48
Soft (See also Silk-Soft) as in sleep I sank In cool s
turf upon the bank, Arabian Nights 96
S are the moss-beds luider the sea ; The Merman 39
things that are forked, and homed, and s. The Mermaid 53
A single stream of all her s brown hair Pour'd on
one side : Gardener's D. 128
The s wind blowing over meadowy holms Edwin Morris 95
thro' s degrees Subdue them to the useful and the good. Ulysses 37
A s air fans the cloud apart ; Tithonus 32
S lustre bathes the range of urns On every
slanting terrace-lawn. Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 9
S fruitage, mighty nuts, and nourishing roots ; Enoch Arden 555
half -embraced the basket cradle-head With one s arm, Sea Dreams 290
saw The s white vapour streak the crowned towers Princess Hi 344
and so Laid the s babe in his hard-mailed hands. „ vi 208
i
Soft
657
Solent
Soft (continued) Say one s word and let me part forgiven.' Princess vi 219
The s and milky rabble of womajakind, 309
glow Of your s splendours that you look so bright ? Mavd I xviii 79
massacring Man, woman, lad and girl — ^yea, the s
babe ! Gareth and L. 1341
And over hard and s, striking the sod From out the
s, the spark from off the hard, Pelleas and E. 498
And thine is more to me — s, gracious, kind — Last Tournament 560
one s lap Pillow'd us both : Lover's Tale i 235
As rain of the midsummer midnight s, .. 722
s winds, Laden with thistledown and seeds of flowers, ii 12
Ah — you, that have hved so s, Bizpah 17
Hallus a s un Squire ! an' 'e smiled. Village Wife 89
About the s Mediterranean shores. Sir J. Oldcastle 30
Tha thowt tha would marry ma, did tha ? but that
wuT a bit ower s, Spinster's S's. 74
She tum'd, and in her s imperial way The Ring 267
Soften And s as if to a girl, Mavd / a; 16
Steel me with patience ! s me with grief ! Doubt and Prayer 9
Solten'd but robed in s light Of orient state. Ode to Memory 10
whom waitest thou With thy s, shadow'd brow, Adeline 46
Like s airs that blowing steal. Two Voices 406
and the brazen fool Was s. In Mem. ex 12
Softening S thro' all the gentle attributes Aylmer's Field 730
Softer 'S than sleep — aU things in order Palace of Art 87
' who could think The s Adams of your Academe, Princess ii 197
and s aU her shape And rounder seem'd : ,, vii 136
When the far-off sail is blown by the breeze of a s
clime, Maud I iv 4:
Softly-shadow'd Glows forth each s-s arm Bay-Dm., Sleep. B. 13
Softness S breeding scorn of simple life. To the Queen ii 53
Soil (s) Fast-rooted in the fruitful s. Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 38
ill-used race of men that cleave the s, „ 120
That numbers forty cubits from the s. St. S. Stylites 91
Upon my proper patch of s Amphion 99
Know you no song, the true growth of your s, Princess iv 150
Has risen and cleft the s, „ vi 35
The s, left barren, scarce had grown In Mem. liii 7
three were clad hke tillers of the s. Gareth and L. 181
Gareth, ' We be tillers of the s, „ 242
Soil (verb) evil thought may s thy children's blood ; Ancient Sage 275
Soil'd When, s with noble dust, he hears Two Voices 152
As these white robes are s and dark, St. Agnes' Eve 13
And s with aU ignoble use. In Mem. cxi 24
Soiling s another, Annie, will never make Grandmother 36
Soilure fearing rust or s fashion'd for it Lancelot and E. 7
'Soize (assize) Noaks wur 'ang'd for it oop at 's — N. Farmer, 0. S. 36
Solace (s) Vain s ! Memory standing near To J. S. 53
Nay, but Nature brings thee s ; Locksley Hall 87
A doubtful gleam of s lives. In Mem. xxxviii 8
And in that s can I sing, „ Ixv 5
From bis great hoard of happiness distill'd Some
drops of s ; Lover's Tale i 715
S at least — before he left his home. „ iv 7
In his own well, draw s as he may. Tiresias 89
Nay, you were my one s ; The Ring 310
Were tender s. Yet be comforted ; D. of the Duke of C. 7
Solace (verb) A little hint to s woe. Two Voices 433
Solaced Whom Averill s as he might, Aylmer's Field 343
Sold {See also Sowd) Himself imto himself he s : A Character 26
Nor s his heart to idle moans. Two Voices 221
he's abroad : the place is to be s. Walk, to the Mail 16
S him unto shame. ' The Captain 60
s her wares for less Than what she gave in buying
what she s : Enoch Arden 255
The horse he drove, the boat he s, „ 609
' That was the four-year-old I s the Squire.' The Brook 137
Where ovu* Caucasians let themselves be s. Aylmer's Field 349
never s the truth to serve the hour. Ode on Well. 179
chalk and alum and plaster are s to the poor for bread, Maud 7 i 39
being s and s had bought them bread : Mart, of Geraint 641
S the crown-farms for all but nothing, Columbus 132
nearing his own himdred, s This ring to me. The Ring 194
SoUan he, the fierce S of Egypt, Columbus 98
Chddier (adj.) No more in s fashion wiU he greet Ode on Well. 21
Soldier (s) (See also Patriot-soldier, Woman-soldier)
The Roman s found Me lying dead, D. ofF. Women 161
men like s's may not quit the post Lucretius 148
nor broke, nor shunn'd a s's death, Princess, Pro. 38
Pitiful sight, wrapp'd in a s's cloak, „ v 56
The s? No : What dares not Ida do that she should
prize The s ? „ 173
not shvmn'd the death, No, not the s's : „ 179
one loves the s, one The silken priest .. 183
The king is scared, the s will not fight, „ Con. 60
banner and with music, with s and with priest, Ode on Well. 81
To thee the greatest s comes ; .. 88
So great a s taught us there, .. 131
And keep the s firm, the statesman pure : „ 222
the s knew Some one had blunder'd : Light Brigade 11
were the s's wont to hear His voice in battle, Geraint and E. 174
The King should have made him a s, Rizpah 28
Thousands of their s's look'd down The Revenge 37
that brave s, down the terrible ridge Sisters (E. and E.) 63
they shall know we are s's and men ! Def. of Lucknow 41
to be s all day and be sentinel all thro' the night — „ 74
Were s's to her heart's desire, Pro, to Gen. Hamley 25
My s of the Cross ? it is he and he indeed ! Happy 12
we saw your s's crossing the ridge. Bandit's Death 21
Soldier-brother S-b's bridal orange-bloom Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 11
Soldier-city led Threading the s-c, Princess v 7
Soldier-laddie violin Struck up with S-l, „ Pro. 86
Soldierlike anger-charm'd from sorrow, s, Aylmer's Field 728
Soldierly His own, tho' keen and bold and s „ 192
Soldier-priest A latter Luther, and a s-p To J. M. K. 2
Soldier^p mind. So quick, so capable in s. Sir J. Oldcastle 75
Sole (adj.) S star of aU that place and time, Arabian Nights 152
Thy s delight is, sitting still. The Blackbird 10
S star of phosphorescence in the calm, Audley Court 87
The s succeeder to their wealth, their lands, Aylmer's Field 294
you The s men to be mingled with our cause, Princess v 411
The s men we shall prize in the aftertime, „ 412
S comfort of my dark hour, when a world „ vi 194
Nor Britain's one s God be the millionaire : Mavd III vi 22
And since he kept his mind on one s aim, Merlin and V. 626
To seat you s upon my pedestal Of worship — „ 878
S Queen of Beauty and of love. Last Tournament 208
his one true knight — S follower of the vows ' — „ 303
And I stood s beside the vacant bier. Lover's Tale Hi 58
My s memorial Of Edith — no, the other, — Sisters (E. and E.) 107
Sole (s) (See also Baby-sole) From scalp to s one slough
and crust St. S. Stylites 2
Solecism Chimeras, crotchets, Christmas s's, Princess, Pro. 203
Solemn (See also Mock-solemn) But the s oak-tree sigheth, Claribel 4
the s palms were ranged Above, Arabian Nights 79
Yet not the less held she her s mirth, Palace of Art 215
and grief became A s scorn of ills. D. of F. Women 228
With s gibe did Eustace banter me Gardener's D. 168
And hear me swear a s oath, Talking Oak 281
And s chaunts resound between. Sir Galahad 36
Heroic, for a hero Ues beneath, Grave, s ! ' Princess, Pro. 213
At last a s grace Concluded, „ H 452
Of s psalms, and silver litanies, „ 477
'Sdeath — and with s rites by candle-light — „ v 292
And drove us, last, to quite a s close — „ Con. 17
Too comic for the s things they are. Too s for the
comic touches in them, „ 67
For such a wise himiility As befits a s fane: Ode on Well. 250
A s gladness even crown'd The purple brows of Olivet. In Mem. xxxi 11
O s ghost, 0 crowned soul ! „ Ixxxv 36
And hold it s to the past. „ cv 16
And I wiU make a s offering of you Lover's Tale iv 118
And Julian made a s feast : „ 187
Well then — our s feast — we ate and drank, „ 221
decked them out As for a s sacrifice of love — „ 301
FiHST pledge our Queen this s night, Hands all Round 1
Solemnity watching here At this, our great s. Ode on Well. 244
And Lancelot's, at this night's s Last Tournament 223
Solemnly And s as when ye sware to him, „ 647
Solent Harry went over the S to see if work First Quarrel 44
2 T
Solid
658
Solid This excellence and s form Of constant
He has a s base of temperament : "' • 9^4
We plant a s foot into the Time, " I i]t
lo'makeT: co^eTf h'S ""^'^ '' '"'^^ ^"'^ ^™^' ^f -^-^^^^^ 5
They say The . earth whereon we tread ^^ f^ill
They melt like mist, the s lands, " ,5!JJJ n
O let the s ground Not fail beneath my feet Mavdl Ji 1
and the 5 earth became As nothing. Com ofAHhLli9
And s turrets topsy-turvy in air: ' GareHrSl IS
carves A portion from the s present, mZuu a^ V 462
O towers so string, Huge, s, v%Tn. T^ v Ta^
your flower Waits to be 5 fruit of golden deeds, iJtToZZlnSu JS
stood As glory on her bright black hair ; Lover's Talei 367
came a broad And 5 beam of isolated light ,!• 1 7Q
« ,. J^!? '^^" o^ * fl^^ t^at comes between " Ha-nZjV,
Solid-set But like a statue 5-5, In Mem Co ^^
Solitary (adj.) Far up the s morning smote The streaks of "' **'
virgm snow. ,t-, ^.j-
Past thro' the s room in front, Enoch ArTen%77
Their voices make me feel so s.' ^"^ zLi-
paced Back toward his s home again, "" 70!
And knew her sitting sad and s. Geraintand E. 282
And there among the s downs, ia^,^^^ „„^ jf ^^
Bound upon s adventure, saw Low down Pelleas and E 275
^d. passes of the wood Rode Tristram LastiZZifnt fl
l<ar on a s trumpet blew. /a, • con
So bore her thro^ the 5 land LcS^lTT'- ^on
And all the land was waste and . : ^'' ' ^"^' ^\|^
Is that the leper's hut on the * moor, " //„.^,, o
And sang the married ' nos ' for the s ' me.' -aappy »
Ever as of old time, S firstling. e i' ,
i^HS ^"Vn^^'P* *'' long-hair'd%ng-bearded ., E^^chATAl
Solitude You move not m such s's, MaraZpfAk
?h'^Prn^''^H T^ l?**^^'^ °^ ^"" ' PcdaJe of A J 2f9
The rosy idol of her s's, v^^„% a j n^
Surely the man had died of s. ^'^ ArdenQ^
My grief and s have broken me ; " ofi
Sol J^ Tir.fM?X^ ^""^ ^^^ r^/'e , ^«^< Tournament 643
ror *S may come to Sheba yet.' 340
had I brought From S's now-recover'd Ophir all The
SoLjfaee league of street in summer s down, PnS iii 128
Soluble More s is this knot, By gentleness princess iit 1^8
Solve ' The doubt would rest, I dare not s. Two Voices 313
'But 5 me first a doubt. I knew a man, LoveTsT^Z 254
^^"^ IV" ^i^l ^^^^^'^ ^'^'^^^s o* tb« peach ^ci 0/ S^l 34
^"""^r^A Thridding the 5 boskage of the wood, D. ofFVoZ^ut
And s, old, colonnaded aisles. •' TheZfJ^t
The s close of that voluptuous day, Q^ineZe^
T ..^^en.f ."•aspect, however shght, was paid To woman, Princess ii 136
Like s wild creature newly-caged, oryi
Than s strong bond which is to be. /„ Mem ra^^»• 16
Grant me s knight to do the battle for me, GarethZdL 362
J^ '^*l^'? that she'd say no ; (repeat) Window, Letter 7 14
S knows that she'll say ay ! (repeat) c' jr
s, surely, some kind heart will come " u^,,^ // °\?^
Somerwt Men saw the goodly hills of -S, Mart, of Oemint 828
Something (See also Sammat) And s iil the dark- ^- oj ueratnt ti^s
3 S'ror'ess'd The darkness of the world. '^^SVaS'^i'?!
."irvfr^TorsLr ' ^^°'' ^- ^-'i
^^d\&SVspli^to^;i°^«' ^ '-"^ ^^' -^-^«, ,.,^ e,/i
S^foT^e^lenTusT ' ^^"= ^I^H
Son
Something (continued) Yet s I did \vish to say •
or eLse S so said 'twas nothing—
Or this or s like to this he spoke
' C^''h ^f^^^f ^/ ?'?''^ *°^ ^^^^ly; tl^at there
seem d A touch of s false,
A- more, A bringer of new things ;
s ere the end. Some work of noble note
men the workers, ever reaping s '
He trusts to light on s fair ;
I had hope, by s rare
Philip, with s happier than myself.
A divme to warn them of their foes •
The phantom husks of s foully done
Shall seem no more a s to himself '
Ah, were I s great ! '
iind chiefly you were born for s great
And there is s in it as you say :
s may be done— I know not what—
Swear by St. s— I forget her name-
to think I might be s to thee,
s wild within her breast,
we believe him S far advanced in State,
o It IS which thou hast lost,
And s written, s thought ;
'TIS well ; 'tis s ; we may stand
But thou art tum'd to s strange
have grown To s greater than before •
Is It an echo of s Read with a boy's delight
none of us thought of a 5 beyond '
siui there swiftly made at her A ghastly 5,
That seeming s, yet was nothing.
And s weu^d and wild about it aU :
he had s further to say,
We feel we are s —
teach us there is s in descent.
S kmdUer, higher, hoher —
^ other than the wildest modem guess
Sometlung-pottle-bodied in a court he saw A s-v-b bov w^n w.,. ^h^
Ha! ha! They think that I am 5. o/ c e^',-, 3.
Felt ye were s, yea, and by vour state ^4 > f^^-'^'*'' H^
Or this, or . hke^o'this, /spTe "'"'' ""'"zovS^ZTi m
one is .deeper than the other, As one is s graver "^
To J. S. 60
Tfie Epic 31
Edwin Morris 41
72
Ulysses 27
„ 51
Locksley HaU 117
Day -Dm., Arrival 20
Will Water. 165
Enoch Arden 425
Sea Dreams 69
Lucretius 160
254
Princess, Pro. 131
iv 307
V 211
227
293
vi 201
vii 237
Ode on Well. 275
In Mem. iv 9
«i20
■ . xviii 1
xli 5
„ Con. 20
Maud I vii 9
„ xix 47
Guinevere 79
Lover's Tale iv 104
224
Eizpah 43
De Prof., Human C. 1
Locksley H., Sixty 26
160
232
than the other —
you have dared S perhaps in comin" ?
tho s finer than their own.
Somewhere Have I not met you s long ago '
son His s s grow up that bear his name!
Or mythic Uther's deeply-wounded s
Our s s inherit us : our looks are strange •
His s and heir doth ride post-haste
Be proud of those strong s's of thine
VViIliam was his 5, And she is niece.
Allan caU'd his 5, and said, ' My s : I married late
if you speak with him that was mv s '
I have tiU'd my ,. I have kiU'd him-but I loved
iiini — my dear s.
Francis Hale, The farmer's s,
O my s's, my s's, I, Simeon of the pillar,
Ihis IS my s, mme own Telemachus,
(jallant s's of EngUsh freemen
Every mother's s— Down they dropt—
On fh fl ^ /l*^^' ''^^^^ ^'^'"gs Of his dead s,
On the first-born of her s's.
Philip Ray the miller's only s.
Bore him another 4, a sickly one •
Her own s Was silent, tho' he often look'd his wish
Her ., who stood beside her tall and stroi,
So hke her mother, and the boy, mv s '
tell my s that I died blessing hmi
One whom the strong s's of the world despise;
« s of men Daughters of God ;
Sisters (E. aiid E.)25
Columbus 242
By an Evolution. 13
Romney's R. 18
Two Voices 256
Palace of Art lOS
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 73
D.oftheO. TearZl
England and Amer. 4
Dora 2
„ 10 J
„ 43I
,= 159
Audley Court 75
St. S. Stylites 160
Ulysses 33
The Captain 7
50
The Letters 24
Vision of Sin 146
Enoch Arden 13
109
481
756
791
885
The Broek 3
Aylmer's Field 44
Son
659
Soa(co,Uinued) for I have loved you more a^ s Than ^ ,^ ^.^^ 35I
brother, " ggg
Bom of a viUage girl, carpenter s s, •• -gs
but some, ^'5 of the glebe with other frowns ^ T^^
visiting the .,-the 5 A Walter too,- i'rincess, rro^^
Slew both his s's : and I, shaU 1, " ... „q^
she that has as And sees him err: ^ " i« 405
And here he keeps me hostage for his s. " ^"^
'You have ours: touch not a hair of his head : „ ^'
unless you send us back Our s, on the instant, „ *^«
We did but keep you surety for our s, » gRfl
then took the kuig His three broad ss; " „i 105
dabbled with the blood Of his own s, « "' ^
were half fool'd to let you tend our s, .. ^gg
O sire, Grant me your s, to nurse, » ••234
Against the s's of men, and barbarous laws. » wt ^o^
^or blame Too much the s's of men and barbarous laws ; „ ^^^^256
The Tory member's elder s, , " ^ ,/ ^
thanks to the Giver, England, for thy s. Ode on Well. 45
For this is England's greatest s, rhi^/nf Feh 44
What England was, shaU her true s's forget ? T/wrd 0/ ^g^44
S of him^ith whom we strove for power- W. ^^^^^^iol
Gone for a minute, my s, ^^^ j,^.^ 49
They have taken our s, g^
We have his dearest. His only s ! - ^
Strong S of God, immortal Love, ^^i Mem., rro.^^^
Who pledgest now thy gallant s; " ix 19
Dear as the mother to the s, " , 07
All knowledge that the s's of flesh - ^^^f^ "'
Yea, tho' their s's were none of these, ..
Shaking her head at her s and sighing ^««J ^^J^ ^*
Who dares foreshadow for an only s Ded.oJ Idylls ^
Or how should England dreaming of ftw s s "
The love of all Thy s's encompass Thee, „t" Arthur 43
Who cried, 'He is not Other's s'- Com. of Arthur ^
who hath proven him King Uther s s .'' " '
This is the s of Gorlois, not the King ; " „^
This is the s of Anton, not the King. ^ " 144
daughter saving to a king. And a king s s .-' — ,.
Hold ye this Arthur for King Uther s s .•' '. ^^2
— but a s she had not borne. " 000
s of Gorlois he. Or else the child of Anton,
Or bom the s of Gorlois, after death. Or Uther s s, ^^
and bom before his time, ^ " 044
Gawain and young Modred, her two s s, "
and sign'd To those two s's to pass, '■
No s of Uther, and no king of ours ; " and. L \
The last taU s of Lot and Belhcent, ««»•««« "'^ ^-J,
' True love, sweet s, had risk'd himself ^ " q«
Stay, my best s ! ye are yet more boy than man. „ »o
' Sweet s, for there be many who deem him not, ,. J^
lifted but a little. Stay, sweet s.' " ^^
Found her s's will unwaveringly one, " j,
when her s Beheld his only way to glory »
Thy s am I, And since thou art my mother, .. ^^
saying, ' Who be ye, my s's ? ' " 0=0
' A', I have seen the good ship sail Keel upward, ,. ^^
And Fairy Queens have built the city, s ; " ^^
as thou sayest, it is enchanted, s, " „„
my husband's brother had my s Thrall'd m his castle, „ d&7
thou that slowest the sire hast left the s. ^ "
Kill the foul thief, and wreak me for my s. .. ^^
Arms for her s, and loosed him from his vow. ,. o?"
' 6f, the good mother let me know thee here, » ^
lay Among the ashes and wedded the King s s. " li^n
s Of old King Lot and good Queen Belhcent, /3 " ,„, 9Q8
'Whither, fair s ? ' to whom Geraint rephcd. Mart, of Geratnt 298
Rest! the good house, tho' ruin'd, 0 my s, .. ^'o
be not wroth or grieved At thy new s, ..
Know weU that Envy calls you Devil's s, M erUn anay.'^i
And then did Envy caU me Devil s s : " *| '
^tf.:^'.S°tli?Ta"S Sir L.v.i™, i:.~*,'k«< E. m
Hurt in bis first tilt with my s, " „_„
But I, my s's and little daughter fled « '''"
Son {continued) furthennore Our s is with him ;
s's Bom to the gloiy of thy name and fame,
' Thou art fair, my child. As a king's s,'
but some CaJl'd him a s of Lancelot,
' 0 s, thou hast not true humility,
seem'd Shoutings of all the s's of God :
Who call'd him the false s of Gorlois :
strike against the man they call My sister's s —
Are loyal to their own far s's.
And grovel and grope for my s
I'll none of it, said my s.
know you worthy every^vay To be my s,
my good s — Is yet untouch'd :
but 'e leaved it to Charlie 'is s.
An' 'e calls fur 'is s.
But Squire wur afear'd o' 'is s,
Sa feyther an' s was buried togither,
the fourth Was like the S of God!
we, We and our s's for ever,
was it otherwise With thine own S ? '
Stay, my s Is here anon : my s
To younger England in the boy my s.
S's of Edward with hammer'd brands.
Leaving his s too Lost in the camage,
my s, who dipt In some forgotten book
My s, the Gods, despite of human prayer,
fathers call'd The Gods own s.
S, in the hidden world of sight.
Song
Lancelot and E. 636
1371
1410
Holy Grail 144
445
509
Guinevere 288
573
To the Queen ii 28
Bizvah 8
„ 32
(Sisters (E. and E.) 49
287
Village Wife 42
62
I 63
90
Sir J. Oldoastle 176
Columbus 29
154
218
To Victor Hugo 14
Batt. 0/ Brunanhurh 14
72
To E. Fitzgerald 46
Tiresias 9
» 17
.. 51
My s. No sound is breathed so potent to coerce,
Thither, my s, and there Thou,
the s's of a winterless day.
one s had forged on his father and fled,
but, s, the source is higher,
I am wearied of our city, s.
To me, my s, more mystic than myself,
Thou canst not prove the Nameless, O my s,
nay my s. Thou canst not prove that I,
But some in yonder city hold, my s.
The wife, the s's, who love him best
My s, the world is dark with griefs and graves.
If utter darkness closed the day, my s—
more, my s ! for more than once when I Sat all alone,
such counter-terms, my s. Are border-races,
„ 119
„ 163
The Wreck 74
Despair 69
Ancient Sage 10
15
45
57
63
82
125
171
199
229
250
Gone our "sailor s thy father, Locksley H., Sixty b^
S's of God, and kings of men ^ , ^ „ , /; d tH
To all our noble s's, the strong New England Hands all Koundlb
S's and brothers that have sent, Oyen I. and C. hxhib.6
The mother featured in the s ; "of
Britain fought her s's of yore — « ^
• S's, be welded each and all, t"r, tt ■ '^
why The s's before the fathers die, To Marq. ofDuffenn 47
summun 'ed hax'd fur a s, an' 'e promised a s Owd Koa 9&
i' saavin' a s fur me. , " ^
Tell my s— O let me lean my head upon your breast. Bomneys K. Ib6
Dying in childbirth of dead s's. AUar s Dream 12
heart is for my s, Saleem, mine heir,— » V*}:
watch'd my s. And those that foUow'd, .. AO'
In a while I bore him a s, Band'U s Death 15
Glared on at the murder'd s, ,, i. " i,-; oS
Our s's will shame our own ; Mechanophilus 22
Song (Se ealso Battle-song, Death-song, Dnnking-«)ng,
Love-song, Matin-song, War-song) Take,, Madam,
this poorbook ofs; To the Queen 17
Her s the lintwhite sweUeth, „ ^,*" ,7- i qq
And it sings a s of undying love ; Poet s Mind 66
Were flooded over with eddying s. Dy^nf ^waw 42
What s's below the waning stars . o?T« ■ on
Hear a s that echoes cheerly L. of Shalott i 60
They heard her singing her last s, » ** ^
Singing in her s she died, •> . ^
The woods were flU'd so full with s, . ^«;^,fT*n .n
sleep was broken thro' By some wild skylark's matin s. MUler s D. W
The phantom of a silent s, >• 71
Ah, well— but sing the fooUsh s I gave you, ., loi
So sing that other s I made, »• ^^-^
Song
660
200
216
Gardener's D. 91
100
Audley Court 56
57
Edwin Morris 79
Golden Year 1
7
Tithonus 62
Lockdey Hall 41
84
Day-Dm., L' Envoi 31
35
i^p. 6
Amphion 9, 13
50
The Captain 4
<Sir X. and Q. G. 10
T^je Letters 9
Vision of Sin 25
J"ow mi^/ii ^w TOo« 22
Poet's Song 13
i^wocA Arden 797
/Sga Dreams 292
Lucretitis 134
Princess, Pro. 241
247
, (continued) and build up all My sorrow with my s, (Ewowe 40
there the world-worn Dante grasp'd his s, Palace of AH 135
To sing her s s alone. jgQ
More than my soul to hear her echo'd s .' 175
they find a music centred in a doleful s Lotos- Eaters C S 111
Sung by the morning star of s, j). of F. Women 3
far-renowned brides of ancient s Peopled the hollow dark, 17
Not any s of bird or sound of rill ; 66
With timbrel and with s.
Leaving the dance and s,
shook his s together as he near'd His happy home,
Like poets, from the vanity of s ?
He sang his s, and I replied with mine :
I found it in a volume, all of s's,
in the Latin s I learnt at school,
you shall have that s which Leonard wrote :
and that same s of his He told me ;
Like that strange s I heard Apollo sing,
falser than all s's have sung,
And a s from out the distance
You'd have my moral from the s,
To search a meaning for the s,
To shape the s for your delight
had I hved when s was great (repeat)
When, ere his s was ended.
Let him hear my s.
Sometimes the Unnet piped his s :
I tum'd and humm'd a bitter s
Storm'd in orbs of s, a growing gale ;
A s that pleased us from its worth ;
nightingale thought, ' I have sung many s's,
As tho' it were the burthen of a s,
sway'd The cradle, while she sang this baby s.
girt With s and flame and fragrance,
time to time, some ballad or a s
And here I give the story and the s's.
And shook the s's, the whispers, , ^ ^^
about us peal'd the nightingale, Rapt in her s, ],' 221
Some to a low s oar'd a shallop by, „ a 457
' Know you no s of your own land,' " j^ s4
But great is s Used to great ends : ]] I37
for s Is duer unto freedom, " ^40
Know you no s, the true growth of your soil, '' 150
I dragg'd my brains for such a s, „' 154
the s Might have been worse and sinn'd ", 250
pardon ask'd and given For stroke and s, " « 47
a s on every spray Of birds that piped " 238
noise of s's they would not understand : " vi40
Remembering his ill-omen'd s, \] I59
Then Violet, she that sang the moumfid s, " 318
And ever-echoing avenues of s. Ode on Well. 79
My name in s has done him much wrong. Spiteful Letter 3
W ho hate each other for a s, fa. Squabbles 5
Gloet of warrior, glory of orator, glory of s, Wages 1
Birds love and birds' s Window, Spring 1
Birds' s and birds' love, (repeat) ,. 3 5
Men's s and men's love, [] ' 7
Ay is the s of the wedded spheres, " ]Vo Answer 7
I brim with sorrow drowning s. In Mem. xix 12
I'or private sorrow's barren s, xxi 14
Or breaking into s by fits, I a;xiii 2
In dance and s and game and jest ? „ xxix 8
A merry s we sang with him Last year : ' xxx 15
To lull with s an aching heart, „ xxxvii 15
And darken'd sanctities with s.' „ 24
But in the s's I love to sing " xxxviii 7
Ihen are these s's 1 sing of thee „ n
Short swallow-flights of s, " xlviii 15
The slightest air of s shall breathe " xlix 7
' Yet blame not thou thy plaintive s,' ',] m 5
the s of woe Is after all an earthly s : " Mi 1
And round thee with the breeze of s " Ixxv 11
if the matin s's, that woke The darkness " Ixxvi 9
With fifty Mays, thy s's are vain ; 14
who turns a musing eye On s's, and deeds. ,',' Ixxvii 3
^ng {continued) And dance and s and hoodman-bhnd. In Mem. Ixxviii 12
And flood a fresher throat with s. ,. Ixxxiii 16
all within was noise Of s's, and clapping hands, '. Ixxxvii 19
we sang old s's that peal'd From knoll to knoll, ,. xev 13
With sport and s, in booth and tent, \. xcviii 28
A s that slights the coming care, [^ xcix 10
' Here thy boyhood sung Long since its matin s. " cii 10
Be neither s, nor game, nor feast ; „ ^^21
And sing the s's he loved to hear. " ^sti 24
The lark becomes a sightless s. '' ^xv 8
the s's, the stirring air, The life re-orient 'I cxvi 5
And if the s were full of care, '' ^xxv 9
He breathed the spirit of the s ; " jq
Is music more than any s. " q^^ 4
In dying s's a dead regret, " ^4
Which makes appear the s's I made " 2I
A martial s like a trumpet's call ! " Maud I v5
An old s vexes my ear ; jj ^j 4^
descend. From the realms of light and s, " j^ 82
Gawain went, and breaking into s Sprang out. Com. of Arthur 320
with dance And revel and s, made merry over
Tf ^r*^'^ ,, ,^ ^^ ., Gareth and L. 1423
It chanced the s that Enid sang was one Of
, ^oj*^""^,, , ^ Marr. of Geraint 345
by the bird's s ye may learn the nest,' „ 359
Half whistling and half singing a coarse s, GerairU and E. 528
Sweet-voiced, a s of welcome, Balin and Balan 86
other was the s that once I heard By this huge oak, Merlin and V 405
And mto such a s, such fire for fame, „ 417
there We lost him : such a noble s was that. " 433
, howe'er ye scorn my s. Take one verse more — ][ 444
So says the s, ' I trow it is no treason.' ' 723
Or sung in s ! 0 vainly lavish'd love ! " 859
graces of the court, and s's. Sighs, Lancelot "and E. 648
m those days she made a Httle s, 1004
call'd her s ' The S of Love and Death,' " 1005
' Taliessin is our fullest throat of s. Holy Grail 300
And aU talk died, as in a grove aU s Pelleas and E 607
a wire as niusically as thou Some such fine s— Last Tournament 324
Among their harlot-brides, an evil s. 428
Murmuring a light s I had heard thee sing, " 614
But even in the middle of his s He falter'd, Guinevere 302
and sent his soul Into the s's of birds, Lover's Tale i 321
the morning s of the lark, pij-gt Quarrel 33
We could sing a good s at the Plow, (repeat) North. Cobbler 18
I know the s. Their favourite— Sisters (E. and E.) 2
One bright May morning in a world of s, 82
brave in the fight as the bravest hero of s, V. of Maeldune 5
And we chanted the s's of the Bards „ 90
are a s Heard in the future ; Tiresias 124
touching on all things great. Science, philosophy, s— The Wreck 51
some treasure of classical s, 67
With s's in praise of death. Ancient Sage 209
their s^s, that meet The morning with such music, The Flight 65
wid his s to the Sun an' the Moon, -, Tomorrow 91
cried the king of sacred s ; Locksletf H., Sixty 201
to crown with s The warrior's noble deed— Evihaue 36
But S will vanish in the Vast ; 40
And deed and s ahke are swept Away, ]' 67
' The s that nerves a nation's heart, " 81
flash'd into a frolic of s And welcome ; Demeter ojm? P 12
sung their s's an' 'ed 'ed their beer, Qwd Boa 35
1 sang the s, are bride And bridegroom.' The Ring 25
sprmg-flower I send. This s of spring, To Mary Boyle 20
I hear a charm of s thro' all the land. Prog, of Spring 47
with a s Which often echo'd in me, Romney's R. 84
Your s— Sit, hsten ! I remember it, 91
Other s's for other worlds ! Par^ssus 19
Love again, s again, nest again. The Throstle 9
I was lilting a s to the babe, Ba'ndit's Death 20
he answer'd her wail with a s— The Dreamer 16
Song-built Shock after shock, the s-h towers and gates Reel, Tiresias 98
Songful Ascending, pierce the glad and s air, Demeter and P. 45
Bongless high m the heaven above it there flicker'd a
^^^^^^ V. of Maeldune n
Songless
661
Soaght
Songless (continued) She hears the lark within the s egg, Ancient Sage 76
Songster Catullus, whose dead s never dies ; Poets and their B. 8
Sonorous Echoing all night to that s flow Palace of Art 27
Soon There will come a witness s Forlorn 25
Will it ever ? late or s ? Locksley H., Sixty 173
Soon (sun) ' Cast awaay on a disolut land wi' a
vartical s ! ' North. Cobbler 3
Soonday (Sunday) I gits the plaate fuller o' S's Church-warden, etc. 40
Sooner I'd s fold an icy corpse dead The Flight 54
Soort (sort) Naw s o' koind o' use to saay the things N. Farmer, 0. S. 6
like fur to hev soom s of a sarvice read. Owd Boa 12
Sootflake (The s of so many a summer still Sea Dreams 35
Sooth Good s ! I hold He scarce is knight, Gareth and L. 1175
' for in s These ancient books — Holy Grail 540
Or was there s in Arthur's prophecy, „ 709
Soothe How shoidd I s you anyway, To J. S. 58
iS him with thy finer fancies, Locksley Hall 54
One spiritual doubt she did not s ? Aylmer's Field 704
0 for thy voice to s and bless ! In Mem. Ivi 26
And, influence-rich to s and save, „ Ixxx 14
hurt Whom she would s, Guinevere 355
Soothed This fiat somewhat s himself Aylmer's Field 26
Sooty underwent The s yoke of kitchen-vassalage ; Gareth and L. 479
SopMst Low-cowering shall the S sit ; Clear-headed friend 10
Dark-brow'd s, come not anear ; Poet's Mind 8
Sophister That every s can lime. Love thou thy land 12
Sorcerer Some s, whom a far-off grandsire burnt Princess i 6
1 have no s's malison on me, „ H 410
I remember'd that burnt s's curse „ v 475
Sorcery drave the heathen hence by s And Merlin's
glamour.' Gareth and L. 204
Whom thou by 5 or unhappiness Or some device, „ 997
Device and s and imhappmess — ,, 1235
Sordid Love, that endures not s ends, Love thou thy land 6
Till I well could weep for a time so s and mean, Maud I v 17
There a single s attic holds the living and the
dead. Locksley H., Sixty 222
Sore (adj.) {See also Foot-sore) Plagued her with s
despair. Palace of Art 224
S task to hearts worn out by many wars Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 86
Sore (s) old s breaks out from age to age Walk, to the Mail 79
Sorrow (S) waste place with joy Hidden in s : Flying Swan 23
delight Of dainty s without sound, Margaret 18
Your s, only s's shade. Keeps real 5 far away. .. 43
Rise from the feast of s, lady, ., 62
' Whatever crazy s saith. Two Voices 394
her heart would beat against me. In s and in rest : Miller's D. 178
they had their part Of s : ., 224
build up all My s with my song, (Enone 40
Still from one s to another thrown : Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 18
The star-like s's of immortal eyes, D. of F. Women 91
Stole from her sister S. Gardener's D. 256
this high dial, which my s crowns — St. S. Stylites 95
a s's crown of s is remembering Locksley Hall 76
When you came in my s broke me down ; Enoch Arden 317
Had you one s and she shared it not ? Aylmer's Field 702
Sat anger-charm'd from s, soldier-like, .. 728
Their own gray hairs with s to the grave — .. 777
Her crampt-up s pain'd her, „ 800
Nor sound of human s mounts to mar Lucretius 109
And s darkens hamlet and hall. Ode on Well. 7
And makes it a 5 to be.' The Islet 36
0 S, cruel fellowship. In Mem. Hi 1
Or s such a changeling be ? „ xvi 4
1 brim with s drowning song. „ xix 12
For private s's barren song, „ xxi 14
Now, sometimes in my s shut, ., xxiii 1
They bring me s touch'd with joy, „ xxviii 19
But S — ^fixt upon the dead, „ xxxix 8
If these brief lays, of S bom, „ xlviii 1
Ay me, the s deepens down, „ xlix 14
O S, wilt thou live with me No casual mistress, ,, lix 1
O S, wilt thou rule my blood, „ 5
O s, then can s wane ? „ I xxviii 15
Delayest the s in my blood, „ Ixxxiiil^
Sorrow (s) {continued) trust in things above Be dimm'd
of s. In Mem. Ixxxv 10
take what fruit may be Of s under human skies : cviii 14
'Tis held that s makes us wise, .. 15
'Tis held that s makes us wise ; .. cxiii 1
Yet less of s lives in me ,, cxvi 13
Would there be s for me ? Mavd I i57
But s seize me if ever that light .. iv 12
and the s dimm'd her sight, Lancelot and E. 889
Comfort your s's ; for they do not flow Guinevere 188
weigh your s's with our lord the King's, 191
Stay'd on the cloud of s ; Lover's Tale i 255
Smit with exceeding s imto Death. .. 601
s of my spirit Was of so wide a compass .. ii 134
chiefly to my s by the Church, Columbus 56
he heal'd me with s for evermore. The Wreck 58
the s that I bear is s for his sake. The Flight 64
Sorrowing with the s's of the lowest !
From sin thro' s into Thee we pass
Sorrow (verb) who most have cause to s for her-
And he should s o'er my state
I feel it, when I s most ;
I s after The delight of early skies ;
In a wakeful doze I s For the hand,
Sorrow'd those who s o'er a vanish'd race,
I felt it, when I s most.
Love moum'd long, and s after Hope ;
Sorrowest 0 s thou, pale Painter, for the past.
Sorrowing after him Came Psyche, s for Aglaia.
Went s in a pause I dared not break ;
s Lancelot should have stoop'd so low,
and s for our Lancelot,
And let the s crowd about it grow,
And the sound of the s anthem roll'd
S with the sorrows of the lowest !
Sorry an' s when he was away,
I am s for all the quarrel an' s
On Jub. Q. Victoria 27
Doubt and Prayer 3
Aylmer's Field 678
In Mem. xiv 15
„ xxvii 14
Maud II iv 24
26
Aylmer's Field 844
In Mem. Ixxxv 2
Lover's Tale i 819
Wan Sculptor 3
Princess vi 29
.. vii 249
Lancelot and E. 732
Holy Grail 648
Ode on Well. 16
60
On Jub. Q. Victoria 27
First Quarrel 11
87
Sort {See also Soort) older s, and murmur'd that their
May Princess ii 463
fused with female grace In such a s. In Mem. cix 18
' Ay, truly of a truth. And in a s, Gareth and L. 838
Sottin' ' jS thy braains Guzzlin' an' soiikin' North. Cobbler 23
Soudan Now somewhere dead far in the waste S, Efit. on Gordon 2
Soughing And the wavy swell of the s reeds, Dying Swan 38
Sought Still moving after truth long s. Two Voices 62
You s to prove how I could love, L. C. V. de Vere 21
I s to strike Into that wondrous track D. of F. Women 278
That s to sow themselves like winged seeds. Gardener's D. 65
She s her lord, and found him, Godiva 16
s and foimd a witch Who brew'd the philtre Liuyretius 15
I s but peace ; No critic I — • Princess i 144
grace Concluded, and we s the gardens : .. ii 453
some hid and s In the orange thickets : .. 459
twice I s to plead my cause, iv 552
and I — I s for one — All people said she had authority — .. vi 237
s far less for truth than power In knowledge : .. vii 236
one that s but Duty's iron crown Ode on Well. 122
whereon he s The King alone, and found, Gareth and L. 540
when they s and foimd, Sir Gareth drank and ate, „ 1279
though they s Thro' all the provinces Marr. of Geraint 729
after, when we s The tribute, answer'd Balin and Balan 115
And Arthur, when Sir Balin s him, said ., 198
King, who * to win my love Thro' evil ways : ,, 474
a wanton damsel came, And s for Garlon at the
castle-gates, „ 610
And Vivien ever s to work the charm Merlin and V. 215
What other ? for men s to prove me vile, ,. 495
darkness falling, s A priory not far off, Pelleas and E. 213
s To make disruption in the Table Roimd Guinevere 16
nor s. Wrapt in her grief, for housel ,, 148
At last she s out Memory, and they trod Lover's Tale i 820
Chiefly I s the cavern and the hill „ ii 33
Hath s the tribute of a verse from me. To Dante 5
at home if I s for a kindly caress, I'he Wreck 31
The Count who s to snap the bond Happy 61
Sought'st
662
Soul
Sought'st Who s to wreck my mortal ark,
Soul (See also Sailor-soul, Sowl) Ye merry s's,
farewell.
Wounding Thy s. — That even now,
My very heart faints and my whole s grieves
He saw thro' his own s.
Heaven flow'd upon the s in many dreams
swan's death-hymn took the s Of that waste place
Because you are the s of joy,
Controlleth all the s and sense Of Passion
' Good s ! suppose I grant it thee,
' Not less swift s's that yeani for light,
' When, wide in s and bold of tongue,
With this old s in organs new ?
gray eyes lit up With summer lightnings of a s
Look thro' my very s with thine !
drew With one long kiss my whole s thro' My lips,
My whole s waiting silently,
Beautiful-brow'd QSnone, my own s,
Pass by the happy s's, that love to live :
And shadow jJl my s, that I may die.
(For you will miderstand it) of a s, A
sinful s To
I BUILT my s a lordly pleasure-house,
' O S, make merry and carouse, Dear s, for all is well,
My s would live alone imto herself
To which my s made answer readily :
Thro' which the livelong day my s did ipass,
fit for every mood And change of my still s.
More than my s to hear her echo'd song Throb
without light Or power of movement, seem'd my s,
Two Vokes 389
All Things will Die 36
Swpf. Confessions 7
A spirit haunts 16
The Poet 6
31
Dying Swan 21
Rosalind 20
Elednore 115
T^oo Voices 38
67
124
393
Miller's D. 13
218
Fatima 20
36
(Enone 71
.. 240
„ 242
•, With Pal. of Art 2
Palace of Art 1
3
11
17
55
60
175
246
Ode:
March-morning I heard them call my s.
music went that waj^ my s will have to go.
ever and for ever with those just s's and true —
Pour'd back into my empty s and frame
As when a s laments, which hath been blest,
Since that dear s hath fall'n asleep.
Sleep, holy spirit, blessed s,
Sleep till the end, true s and sweet.
Thy brothers and immortal s's.
All but the basis of the s.
lest the s Of Discord race the rising wind ;
Delight our s's with talk of knightly deeds,
never see my face again. Pray for my s.
Flutter'd about my senses and my s ;
Raise thy s ; Make thine heart ready
O Jesus, if thou wilt not save my s.
And spake not of it to a single s.
Three winters, that my s might grow to thee,
O my s, God reaps a harvest in thee.
In wliich the gloomy brewer's s Went by me,
weigh'd Upon my brain, mj^ senses and my s !
S's that have toil'd, and Mrought,
Bring truth that sways the s of men ?
May my s follow soon !
So shows my s before the Lamb,
And he cheer'd her s with love.
Like s's that balance joy and pain.
The little innocents flitted away.
Kept him a living s.
' Ay, ay, poor s ' said Miriam, ' fear enow !
So past the strong heroic s away.
adulteries That saturate s with body.
may s to s Strike thro' a finer element
as not passing thro' the fire Bodies, but s's —
Poor s's, and knew not what they did,
' Was he so bound, poor s ? '
The mortal s from out immortal hell,
thus : s flies out and dies in the air.'
they vext the s's of deans ;
Should bear a double growth of those rare s's,
Modulate me, S of mincing mimicry !
Our echoes roll from s to s.
Poor s ! I had a maid of honour once ;
And secret laugliter tickled all my s.
May Queen, Con. 28
42
55
D. of F.' Women IS
281
To J. S. 34
70
73
Love thou thy land 8
44
67
M. d'Arthir 19
247
Gardener's D. 67
272
St. S. Stylites 46
66
71
148
Talking Oak 55
Lffoe and Duly 44
Ulysses 46
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 52
St. Agnes' Eve 4
17
L. of Burleigh 68
Sir L. and Q. G. 1
Enoch Arden 270
804
807
915
Aylmer's Field 377
578
672
782
Sea Dreams 169
Lucretius 263
274
Princess, Pro. 162
a 180
425
iv 15
138
267
SJoul (continued) And satisfy my s with kissing her :
life and s ! I thought her half-right
Not only he, but by my mother's s,
king her father charm'd Her wounded s with words
But sadness on the s of Ida fell.
He shall not blind his s with clay.'
guard the eye, the s Of Europe,
What know we greater than the s ?
peace be yours, the peace of s in s !
O S, the Vision of Him who reigns ?
O S, and let us rejoice.
That mind and s, according well.
And half conceal the S within.
What s's possess themselves so pure.
So that still garden of the s's
Rewaken with the dawning s.
Remerging in the general S,
Eternal form shall still divide The eternal s
The likest God within the s ?
The passing of the sweetest s
He past ; a s of nobler tone :
The s of Shakespeare love thee more.
Sweet s, do with me as thou wilt ;
thro' a lattice on the s Looks thy fair face
Hadst thou such credit with the s ?
Fade wholly, while the s exults^
And take us as a single s.
0 solemn ghost, O crowned s !
The living s was flash'd on mine.
To-day they count as kindred s's ;
The feeble s, a haunt of fears,
On s's, the lesser lords of doom.
A s on highest mission sent.
But Wisdom heavenly of the s.
A sphere of stars about my s.
And all we flow from, s in s.
A s shall draw from out the vast
the s of the rose went into my blood,
For she, sweet s, had hardly spoken a word.
For one short hour to see The s's we loved,
and weep My whole s out to thee. „ 98
' The thrall in person may be free in s, Gareth and L. 165
The war of Time against the s of man. .. 1198
running down the S, a Shape that fled „ 1207
their own Earl, and their own s's, and her. Geraint and E. 577
whose s's the old serpent long had drawn ,, 632
when he died, his s Became a Fiend, Balin and Balan 128
sweet s, that most impute a crime Are pronest to it. Merlin and V. 825
For agony, who was yet a Uving s. Lancelot and E. 253
Pray for my s, and yield me burial. „ 1280
Pray for my s thou too. Sir Lancelot, .. 1281
Pray for thy s ? Ay, that will I. „ 1395
As tho' it were the beauty of her s : Pelleas and E. 79
the young beauty of his own s to hers, „ 83
Crying aloud, ' Not Mark — ^not Mark, my s ! Last Tournament 514
My s, I felt my hatred for my Mark „ 519
Mark's way, my s ! — but eat not thou with Mark, „ 532
He answer'd, ' O my s, be comforted ! „ 573
We run more counter to the s thereof ,. 659
my s, we love but while we may ; ,. 701
all for thee, my s. For thee, „ 742
Henceforward too, the Powers that tend the s, Guinevere 65
do thou for thine own s the rest. ,. 545
Perchance, and so thou purify thy s, .. 561
know I am thine husband — not a smaller s. Nor
Lancelot, .. 566
1 cannot kill my sin, If s be s ; „ 622
Delight our s's with talk of knightly deeds. Pass, of Arthur 187
never see my face again, Pray for my s. „ 415
and shadowing Sense at war with S, To the Queen ii 37
withdraw themselves Quite into the deep s. Lover's Tale i 82
light s twines and mingles with the growths „ 132
which my whole s languishes And faints, ., 267
Why in the utter stillness of the s ,. 276
and sent his s Into the songs of birds, „ 320
Princess v 103
284
m335
346
vii 29
331
Well. 160
265
W. to Marie Alex. 47
High. Pantheism 2
13
In Mem., Pro. 27
V 4
xxxii 15
xliii 10
16
xlvii 4
7
Iv 4
Ivii 11
Ixl
Ixi 12
„ Ixv 1
Ixx 15
Ixxi 5
Ixxiii 14
Ixxxiv 44
Ixxxv 36
„ xcv 36
xcix 19
,, ex 3
„ cxii 8
,. cxiii 10
„ cxiv 22
„ cxxii 7
cxxxi 12
Con. 123
Maud I xxii 33
// i 11
„ iv 15
Soul
663
Sound
Sonl {continued) That strike across the s in prayer, Lover's Tale i 364
my life, love, s, spirit, and heart and strength. ,. 460
And s and heart and body are all at ease : . 556
Come like an angel to a damned s, „ 673
Memory fed the s of Love with tears. .. 822
a strong sympathy Shook all my s : „ ii 89
all at once, s, life And breath and motion, ,. 194
This love is of the brain, the mind, the s: .. iv 156
' body and s And life and limbs, 282
but to save my s, that is all your desire : Do you think
I care for my s Rizpah 77
face was flash 'd thro' sense and 5 Sisters (E. and £.)109
— wrought us harm. Poor s, not knowing) .. 185
a thousand lives To save his s. Sir J. Oldcastle 64
How now, my s, we do not heed the fire ? 191
' O s of Uttle faith, slow to believe ! Cohi mbus 147
who seest the s's in Hell And purgatory, .. 216
Shamed in their s's. Batt. of Bninanburh 99
make my life one prayer for a s that died in his sin, The Wreck 10
for Mother, the voice was the voice of the s ; ..54
the sun of the s made day in the dark ., 55
a huge sea smote every s from the decks ., 109
No s in the heaven above, no s on the earth below, Despair 19
Come from the brute, poor s's — no s's— .. 36
if the s's of men were mimortal, 99
thou sendest thy free s thro' heaven. Ancient Sage 47
daughter yield her life, heart, s to one — The Flight 28
She bad us love, Uke s's in Heaven, „ 88
shadow of Himself, the boimdless, thro' the
human s ; Locksley H., Sixty 211
s and sense in city slime ? .. 218
Worthier s was he than I am, ,. 239
count them all My friends and brother s's, Epilogue 19
And showing them, s's have wings ! Dead Prophet 12
As a lord of the Human s, „ 54
While yet thy fresh and virgin s Freedom 2
Till every S be free ; „ 20
One with Britain, heart and s ! Open. I. and C. Exhib. 38
A s that, watch'd from earliest youth, To Marq. of Dufferin 25
And s's of men, who grew beyond their race, Demeter and P. 140
cotch'd 'er death o' cowd that night, poor s, i' the straw. Owd Rod 114
and you the s of Truth In Hubert ? The Ring 62
' The s's Of two repentant Lovers guard the ring ; ' „ 197
wall of solid flesh that comes between your s and mine, Happy 35
s in s and light in light, .. 39
So wed thee with my s, that I may mark Prog, of Spring 92
Lord let the house of a brute to the s of a man. By an Evolution. 1
my s uncertain, or a fable, .. 5
Hold the sceptre, Human S, „ 16
prize that s where man and woman meet. On One wJio Eff. E. M. 2
thoughts that lift the s of men. To Master of B. 14
And bravest s for counsellor and friend. Akbar's Dream 69
guess at the love of a s f or a s ? Charity 30
passing s's thro' fire to the fire, The Dawn 4
bodies and s's go down in a common wreck, .. 13
Men, with a heart and a s, ■• 18
Soul-stricken S-s at their kindness to him, Aylmer's Field 525
Sound (adj.) So healthy, s, and clear and whole, Miller's D. 15
What ails us, who are s. Walk, to the Mail 105
But, blind or lame or sick or s. The Voyage 93
Looks only for a moment whole and s ; Aylmer's Field 2
let your sleep for this one night be s : Sea Dreams 315
If that hypothesis of theirs be s ' Princess iy 20
felt it s and whole from head to foot, -. vi 211
Or, if we held the doctrine s In Mem. liii 9
How pure at heart and s in head, .. xdv 1
■ S sleep be thine ! s cause to sleep hast thou. Gareth and L. 1282
Worthier .soul was he than I am, s and honest, Locksley H., Sixty 239
Sound (s) the s Which to the wooing wind aloof Mariana 74
Full of the city's stilly s, Arabian Nights 103
no more of mirth Is here or merry-making s. Deserted House 14
Springing alone With a shrill inner s, The Mermaid 20
Of dainty sorrow without s, Margaret 18
With dinning s my ears are rife, Elednore 135
Died the s of royal cheer ; L. of Shalott iv 48
Sound (s) {eontinuedi There came a s as of the sea ; Mariana in the 8. 8
I hear Dead s's at night come from the inmost hills, (Enone 246
a s Rings ever in her ears of armed men. „ 264
Moved of themselves, with silver s ; Palace of Art 130
seem'd to hear the dully s Of human footsteps fall. „ 275
or a s Of rocks thrown down, „ 281
With s's that echo still. D. of F. Women 8
I heard s's of insult, shame, and wrong, „ 19
Not any song or bird or s of rill ; „ 66
and fill'd with light The interval of s. .. 172
Hearing the holy organ rolling waves Of s .. 192
With that sharp s the white dawn's creeping beams, .. 261
and tell o'er Each httle s and sight. „ 277
Parson, sent to sleep with s, And waked with silence, M. d' Arthur, Ep. 3
That with the s I woke, and heard „ 30
In s of funeral or of marriage bells ; Gardener's D. 36
hour just flown, that mom with all its s, ,, 83
Delighted with the freshness and the s. Edwin Morris 99
with s Of pious hymns and psalms, St. S. Stylites 33
■ I took the swarming s of life — Talking Oak 213
south-breeze around thee blow The s of minster bells. ,, 272
and the winds are laid with s. Locksley Hall 104
And bade him cry, with s of trumpet, Godiva 36
With twelve great shocks of s, „ 74
no s is made. Not even of a gnat that sings. Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 20
a s Like sleepy counsel pleading ; Amphion 73
A gentle s, an awful light ! Sir Galahad 41
How fresh was every sight and s The Voyage 5
By grassy capes with fuller s Sir L. and Q. G. 14
There comes a s of marriage bells. The Letters 48
Then methought I heard a mellow s. Vision of Sin 14
Ran into its giddiest whirl of s, ,, 29
And the s of a voice that is still ! Break, break, etc. 12
and find A sort of absolution in the s Sea Dreams 61
Nor s of human sorrow mounts to mar Lucretius 109
melodious thunder to the s Of solemn psalms. Princess ii 476
hundred doors To one deep chamber shut from s, .. vi 376
That afternoon a s arose of hoof And chariot, 379
and sweet is every s. Sweeter thy voice, but every s
is sweet ; „ vii 218
Let the s of those he wrought for, Ode on Well. 10
the s of the sorrowing anthem roU'd .. 60
In that dread s to the great name, „ 71
compass'd round with turbulent s. Will 7
S's of the great sea Wander'd about. Minnie and Winnie 7
Phantom s of blows descending, Boddicea 25
When was a harsher s ever heard. Trans, of Homer 3
Calm is the mom without a s, In Mem. xi 1
door Were shut between me and the s : .. xxviii 8
The streets were fill'd with joyful s, .. xxxi 10
The s of streams that swift or slow .. xxxv 10
' The s of that forgetful shore .. 14
And up thy vault with roaring s ., Ixxii 25
0 s to rout the brood of cares, ,. Ixxxix 17
and growing upon me without a s, Maud I Hi 7
1 heard no s where I stood But the rivulet „ xiv 28
To the s of dancing music and flutes : „ II v 76
and the s was good to Gareth's ear. Gareth and L. 312
but heard instead A sudden s of hoofs, Marr. of Geraint 164
the tender s of his own voice And sweet self-pity, Geraint and E. 348
s of many a heavily-galloping hoof Smote on her ear, „ 447
Such a s (for Arthur's knights Were hated strangers Balin and Balan 351
s not wonted in a place so stiU Woke the sick
knight, Lancelot and E. 818
Lancelot knew the little clinking s ; „ 983
And the strange s of an adulterous race. Holy Grail 80
I heard a s As of a silver horn from o'er the hills „ 108
slender s As from a distance beyond distance grew „ 111
I heard the s, I saw the light, „ 280
heavens Were shaken with the motion and the s. „ 801
Suddenly waken'd with a s of talk Pelleas and E. 48
but a s Of Gawain ever coming, and this lay — „ 395
' A s is in his ears ' ? Last Tournament 116
S's, as if some fair city were one voice Pass, of Arthur 460
we loved The s of one-anothers voices Lover^s Tale i 256
Sound
664
Space
Soand (s) {continued) great pine shook with lonely s's of joy Lover's Tale i 325
So that they pass not to the shrine of s. ' ., 470
I too have heard a s — .. 522
Her words did of their meaning borrow s, „ 568
With such a s as when an iceberg spUts „ 603
for the s Of that dear voice so musically low, „ 707
for the s Of the loud stream was pleasant, ,. ii 34
All crisped s's of wave and leaf and wind, ., 106
Like s's without the twilight realm of dreams, .. 120
No s is breathed so potent to coerce, Tiresias 120
sweet s ran Thro' palace and cottage door, Dead Prophet 37
sympathies, how frail, In s and smeU ! Early Spring 36
one drear s I have not heard, To Marq. of Dufferin 40
A s of anger like a distant storm. The Ring 119
My people too were scared with eerie s's, „ 408
all her realm Of 5 and smoke. To Mary Boyle 66
A s from far away, No louder than a bee Bomney's R. 81
What s was dearest in his native dells ? Far — far — away 4
These is a 5 of thunder afar. Riflemen form! \
Be not deaf to the s that warns, „ 8
Too full for s and foam, Crossing the Bar 6
Sound (verb) the waterfall Which ever s's and shines Ode to Memory 52
how thy name may s Will vex thee lying imderground ? Two Voices 110
The wind s's hke a silver wire, Fatima 29
iS all night long, in falling thro' the dell, D. of F. Women 183
when you want me, s upon the bugle-horn. Lochsley Hall 2
Like strangers' voices here they s. In Mem. civ 9
<S on a dreadful trumpet, summoning her ; Geraint and E. 383
rhythm 5 for ever of Imperial Rome — To Virgil 32
that would s so mean That all the dead, Romney's if. 131
S's happier than the merriest marriage-bell. D. of the Duke of C. 11
Sound (fathom) Two plummets dropt for one to s the
abyss Of science Princess ii 176
Sonnded [See also Far-sounded) Then the voice Of Ida s,
issuing ordinance : „ vi 373
from the castle a cry S across the court, Balin and Balan 400
The sudden trumpet s as in a dream Last Tournament 151
bound Not by the s letter of the word, Sisters (E. and E ) 162
thunder of the brook S ' CEnone ' ; Death of (Enone 24
Sounder Of s leaf than I can claim ; You might have won 4
I have stumbled back again Into the common day,
the s self. Romney's R. 33
Sounding {See also Long-sounding, Ocean-«ounding, Sea-
sounding) my merry comrades call me, s on the
bugle-horn, Locksley Hall 145
Breathing and s beauteous battle, Princess v 161
The great city s wide ; Maud II iv 64
Made answer, s Uke a distant horn. Guinevere 249
and shoutings and s's to arms, Def. of Lucknow 76
The pillar'd dusk of s sycamores, Audley Court 16
and sitting well in order smite The s furrows ; Ulysses 59
into the s hall I past ; But nothing in the s hall I saw. Holy Grail 827
a Uttle silver cloud Over the s seas : Lover's Tale Hi 37
ear-stunning hail of Ar6s crash Along the s walls. Tiresias 97
while the golden lyre Is ever s in heroic ears ,, 181
Well be grateful for the s watchword ' Evolution '
here, Locksley H., Sixty 198
and alarms S ' To arms ! to arms ! ' Prog, of Spring 104
S for ever and ever thro' Earth Parnassus 7
' S for ever and ever ? ' pass on ! „ 15
Soar ' Slip-shod waiter, lank and s, Vision of Sin 71
A Uttle grain of conscience made him s.' „ 218
Come, thou art crabb'd and s : Last Tournament 272
All out Uke a long life to a s end — „ 288
Source A teardrop trembled from its s. Talking Oak 161
Like torrents from a mountain s The Letters 39
Prayer from a Uving s within the wUl, Enoch Arden 801
The very s and fount of Day In Mem. xxiv 3
it melteth in the s Of these sad tears. Lover's Tale i 783
but, son, the 5 is higher. Ancient Sage 10
Soured she s To what she is : Walk, to the Mail 61
South by day or night, From North to S, Rosalind 48
Warmly and broadly the s winds are blowing All Things will Die 3
For look, the sunset, s and north, Miller's D. 241
Of that long desert to the s. Fatima 14
South {continued) Four courts I made. East, West and S
and North, Palace of Art 21
The palms and temples of the S. You ask me, why 28
I was at school — a college in the S : Walk, to the Mail 83
Sailing imder palmy highlands Far within the S. The Captain 24
As fast we fleeted to the S : The Voyage 4
Came murmurs of her beauty from the 8, Princess i 36
That bright and fierce and fickle is the 8, „ iv 97
Say to her, I do but wanton in the 8, „ 109
And brief the moon of beauty in the 8. ., 113
long breezes rapt from inmost s „ 431
My fancy fled to the 8 again. The Daisy 108
To North, 8, East, and West ; Voice and the P. 14
Thine the North and thine the 8 Boadicea 44
Down in the s is a flash and a groan : Window, Gone. 8
Rosy is the West, Rosy is the 8, (repeat) Maud I xvii 6, 26
And looking to the 8, and fed With honey'd rain „ xviii 20
All the west And ev'n imto the middle s Lover's Tale i 415
Who whilome spakest to the 8 in Greek Sir J. Oldcastle 29
' From the 8 I bring you balm, Prog, of Spring 66
Storm in the 8 that darkens the day ! Riflemen, form ! 2
South-breeze The fuU s-h aroimd thee blow Talking Oak 271
Southern The lavish growths of s Mexico. Mine he the strength 14
Would stiU be dear beyond the s hills : Princess ii 265
Between the Northern and the 8 mom.' „ v 423
In lands of palm and s pine ; The Daisy 2
And reach the glow of s skies. In Mem. xii 10
New England of the 8 Pole ! Hands all Round 16
So fair in s sunshine bathed. Freedom 5
Fair Spring slides hither o'er the 8 sea. Prog, of Spring 2
Southland meats and good red wine Of 8, Gareth and L. 1191
Soilth-sea-isle imder worse than 8-s-i taboo, Princess Hi 278
Southward S they set their faces. Gareth and L. 182
South-west the s-w that blowing Bala lake Geraint and E. 929
South-western loud S's, roUing ridge on ridge, Gareth and L. 1146
South-wind whisper of the s-w rushing warm, Locksley Hall 125
Sovereign These three alone lead lite to s power. (Enone 145
Creation minted in the golden moods Of s artists ; Princess v 195
Slovran They rose to where their s eagle sails, Montenegro 1
Sow (s) He had a s, sir. Walk, to the Mail 86
With hand and rope we haled the groaning s, .. 91
Large range of prospect had the mother s, „ 93
As never s was higher in this world — „ 96
all the swine were s's. And all the dogs ' — Princess i 192
Sow (verb) {See also Saw) He s's himself on every wind. Two Voices 294
8 the seed, and reap the harvest Lotos-Eaters, C. 8. 121
sought to s themselves Uke winged seeds. Gardener's D. 65
and s The dust of continents to be ; In Mem. xxxv 11
And s the sky with flying boughs, „ Ixxii 24k
Might s and reap in peace, Epilogue 13
Sowd (sold) why shouldn't thy boooks be s ? Village Wife 69
Sow'd 8 all their mystic gulfs with fleeting stars ; Gardener's D. 262
s her name and kept it green In Uving letters, Aylmer's Field 88
S it far and wide By every town and tower. The Flower 13
He s a slander in the common ear, Marr. of Geraint 450
Sow-droonk (very drunk) Soa s-d that tha doesn not
touch thy 'at to the Squire ; ' North. Cobbler 25
Sowing s hedgerow texts and passing by, Aylmer's Field 171
Dispensing harvest, s the To-be, Princess vii 289
And s one ill hint from ear to ear. Merlin and V. 143
s the nettle on aU the laurel'd graves of the Great ; Vastness 22
Sow! (soul) 'Ud 'a shot his own s dead Tomorrow 40
Sown But, having s some generous seed. Two Voices 143
another wore A close-set robe of jasmine s with
stars : Aylmer's Field 158
murmur'd, s With happy faces and with holiday. Princess, Pro.. 55
Grew up from seed we two long since had s ; „ iv 310
save the one true seed of freedom s Ode on Well. 162
iS in a wrinkle of the monstrous hiU, Will 19
That had the wild oat not been s, In Mem. liii 6
Among the dead and s upon the wind — Merlin and V. 45
Space {See also Breathing-space) Oh ! narrow, narrow was
the s, Oriana 46
Overlook a s of flowers, L. of Shalott i 16
But Lancelot mused a Uttle s; „ iv 51
Space
665
Spake
pace (contimied) all in s's rosy-bright Large Hesper
glitter'd Mariana in the S. 89
P'ree s for every human doubt. Two Voices 137
In some fair s of sloping greens Lay, Palace of Art 106
Hath time and s to work and spread. Tou ask me, why, etc. 16
The ever-silent s's of the East, Tithonus 9
shall have scope and breathing s Locksley Hall 167
Pinre s's clothed in living beams, Sir Galahad 66
The s was narrow,— having order'd all Enoch Arden 177
little s was left between the horns, Princess iv 207
ask'd but s and fairplay for her scheme ; ., v 282
leave her s to burgeon out of all Within her — „ mi 271
Thro' all the silent s's of the worlds, „ Con. 114
The height, the s, the gloom. The Daisy 59
starry heavens of s Are sharpen'd to a needle's end ; In Mem. Ixxvi 3
slowly breathing bare The round of s, „ Ixxxm 5
And roll'd the floods in grander s, „ ciii 26
And whispers to the worlds of s, „ cxacvi 11
countercharm of s and hollow sky, Maud I xviii 43
It is but for a little 5 1 go : „ 75
And after these King Arthur for a s, Com. of Arthur 16
Arthur and his knighthood for a s Were all one will, „ 515
And in the s to left of her, and right, Gareth and L. 224
Gareth for so long a s Stared at the figures, „ 231
some brief s, convey'd them on their way „ 889
Then for a s, and under cloud that grew ,, 1358
Painted, who stare at open s, Geraint and E. 268
Thence after tarrying for a s they rode, „ 953
bode among them yet a little s Lancelot and E. 921
the hind To whom a s of land is given to plow. Holy Grail 907
But for a mile all round was open s, Pelleas and E. 28
Then at Caerleon for a s — „ 176
and either knight Drew back a s, „ 573
Held for a s 'twixt cloud and wave. Lover's Tale i 417
finite-infinite s In finite-infinite Time — De Prof., Two G. 45
wiU be wheel'd thro' the silence of s. Despair 83
triumphs over time and s, Locksley H., Sixty 75
The man in S and Time, Epilogue 49
s Of blank earth-baldness clothes itself afresh, Demeter and P. 48
Fill out the s's by the barren tiles. Prog, of Spring 43
Spacious A s garden full of flowering weeds, To , With Pal. of Art 4
' My s mansion built for me, Palace of Art 234
The s times of great Elizabeth D. of F. Women 7
And flowing odour of the « air, Lover's Tale i 478
Spade death while we stoopt to the s, Def. of Lucknow 16
Spain To these Inquisition dogs and the devildoms of S.' The Revenge 12
that they were not left to S, „ 20
not into the hands of jS ! ' „ 90
had holden the power and glory of S so cheap „ 106
sea plunged and fell on the shot-shatter'd navy of S, ,, 117
more empire to the kings Of S than all battles ! Columbus 23
Eighteen long years of waste, seven in your S, „ 36
We fronted there the learning of all 8, „ 41
thought to turn my face from S, „ 57
When S was waging war against the Moor — „ 93
I strove myself with S against the Moor. „ 94
if S should oust The Moslem from her limit, „ 96
Blue blood of S, Tho' quartering your own royal arms of S, „ 114
blue blood and black blood of S, „ 116
S Pour'd in on all those happy naked isles — „ 172
Their babies at the breast for hate of S — „ 180
hard memorials of our truth to S „ 196
S once the most chivalric race on earth, S „ 204
To lay me in some shrine of this old S, Or in that vaster
S I leave to S. „ 207
I sorrow for that kindly child of S „ 212
8 in his blood and the Jew — The Wreck 15
No ! father, 8, but Hubert brings me home The Ring 59
{pake When angels s to men aloud, Sv/pp. Confessions 25
He 5 of beauty : that the dull Saw no divinity in grass, A Character 7
He s of virtue : not the gods More purely, „ 13
when she s, Her words did gather thunder The Poet 48
A STILL small voice s unto me. Two Voices 1
It s, moreover, in my mind : „ 31
Again the voice s unto me : . „ 46
(continuMi) Her eyelid quiver'd as she s. Miller's D. 144
Still she s on and stiU she s of power, (Enone 121
She s some certain truths of you. L. C. V. de Vere 36
and if his fellow s. His voice was thin, Lotos-Eaters 33
I heard Him, for He s, D. of F. Women 227
So s he, clouded with his own conceit, M. d' Arthur 110
And s, ' Be wise : not easily forgiven Are those. Gardener's D. 247
And s not of it to a single soul, St. S. Stylites 66
While I s then, a sting of shrewdest pain „ 198
some one s : ' Behold ! it was a crime Vision of Sin 213
whUe they s, I saw my father's face Princess i 58
And on the fourth I s of why we came, ., 119
companion yestermorn ; Unwillingly we s.' „ Hi 200
' but to one of whom we s Your Highness „ 201
She s With kindled eyes : „ 333
To whom none s, half-sick at heart, „ iv 223
Stood up and s, an affluent orator. „ 291
roughly s My father, ' Tut, you know them not, ., ■» 150
To such as her ! if Cyril s her true, ., 168
' Nay, nay, you s but sense ' „ 206
So Hector s ; the Trojans roar'd applause ; Spec, of Iliad 1
Yea, tho' it s and made appeal In Mem. xcii 4
Yea, tho' it s and bared to view „ 9
Dumb is that tower which s so loud, ,, Con. 106
s no slander, no, nor listen'd to it ; Ded. of Idylls 10
Then s the hoary chamberlain and said, Com. of Arthur 148
when he s and cheer'd his Table Round „ 267
s sweet words, and comforted my heart, „ 349
Lash'd at the wizard as he s the word, „ 388
She s and King Leodogran rejoiced, ,, 425
holy Dubric spread his hands and s, „ 471
had the thing I s of been Mere gold — Gareth and L. 65
But slowly 5 the mother looking at him, „ 151
Gareth s Anger'd, ' Old Master, „ 279
With all good cheer, He s and laugh'd, „ 302
Nay, for he s too f ool-Uke : „ 472
Lancelot ever 5 him pleasantly, „ 482
A naked babe, of whom the Prophet s, „ 501
when the damsel s contemptuously, „ 806
Gareth sharply s, ' None ! for the deed's sake ., 831
So she s. A league beyond the wood, „ 845
Sir Gareth s, ' Lead, and I follow.' „ 890
He s ; and all at fiery speed the two Shock'd „ 962
s ' Methought, Knave, when I watch'd thee striking „ 991
advanced The monster, and then paused, and s no word. „ 1385
But Gareth s and all indignantly, „ 1386
he s no word; Which set the horror higher : „ 1393
But none s word except the hoary Earl : Marr. of Geraint 369
So s the kindly-hearted Earl, ., 514
8 to the lady with him and proclaim'd, .. 552
Loudly s the Prince, ' Forbear : „ 555
He s, and past away. But left two brawny spearmen, Geraint and E. 557
none s word, but all sat down at once, ., 604
She s so low he hardly heard her speak, „ 643
5, ' Go thou with him and him and bring it to us, Balin and Balan 5
And s no word until the shadow turn'd ; ., 45
Then s the men of Pellam crying ' Lord, „ 337
Sir Balin s not word, But snatch'd „ 553
he kiss'd it, moan'd and s ; „ 598
8 (for she had been sick) to Guinevere, Lancdot and E. 78
He never s word of reproach to me, „ 124
hath come Despite the wound he s of, „ 566
He s and parted. Wroth, but all in awe, „ 719
Then s the lily maid of Astolat : „ 1085
Arthur s among them, ' Let her tomb Be costly, „ 1339
8 thro' the limbs and in the voice — Holy Grail 23
But s with such a sadness and so low „ 42
8 often with her of the Holy Grail, „ 86
leaving the pale nun, I s of this To all men ; „ 129
as she s She sent the deathless passion in her eyes „ 162
Then s the monk Ambrosius, „ 203
King 8 to me, being nearest, ' Percivale,' „ 268
' While thus he s, his eye, dwelling on mine, „ 485
Sir Bors it was Who s so low and sadly „ 701
the rest 8 but of simdry perils in the storm ; „ 761
Spake
666
Sparrow-hawk
Spake (continued) Then I s To one most holy saint, who wept Holy Grail 780
' And s I not too truly, O my knights ? .. 888
s the King: I knew not all he meant.' 920
and when she s to him, Stammer'd, Pelleas and E. 84
Yet with good cheer he s, ' Behold me. Lady, ,. 240
She s ; and at her will they couch'd their speai"s, .. 273
While thus he s, she gazed upon the man .. 305
then s : ' Eise, weakling ; I am Lancelot ; ,, 581
saw the laws tha; ruled the tournament Broken, but
s not ; Last Tournament 161
Tristram, s not any word, But bode his hour, ,, 385
and s To Tristram, as he knelt before her, ., 540
And, saddening on the sudden, 5 Isolt, .. 581
once or twice I s thy name aloud. 615
while she s. Mindful of what he brought ,, 714
when she came to Almesbury she s There to the nuns, Guinevere 138
But openly she s and said to her, ., 226
To play upon me,' and bowed her head nor s. .. 310
As at a friend's voice, and he s again : ., 531
while he s to these his helm was lower'd, ,. 593
Except he mock'd me when he s of hope ; ,. 631
Arthur woke and call'd, ' Who s ? Pass, of Arthur 46
This heard the bold Sir Bedivere and s: ..50
Then s King Arthur to Sir Bedivere : (repeat) 65, 136
Then s the bold Sir Bedivere : ..147
Then s the King : ' My house hath been my doom. .. 154
So s he, clouded with his own conceit, „ 278
she s on, for I did name no wish, (repeat)
ask'd, Unanswer'd, since I s not ;
Or this, or somewhat like to this, I s.
Within the summer-house of which I s,
Then s Sir Richard Grenville :
he s to me, ' 0 Maeldune, let be this purpose
when I s of famine, plague.
Lover's Tale i 578, 583
707
772
a 167
The Revenge 8
V .of Maeldune 119
Tiresias 60
never s with man, And never named the Name ' — Ancient Sage 55
Well s thy brother in his hymn to heaven Akbar's Bream 27
A Voice s out of the skies Voice spake, etc. 1
Spake (speak) She began to s to herself, Tomorrow 54
Spakest he were the swine thou s of, Holy Grail 885
Who whilome s to the South in Greek Sir J. Oldcastle 29
Spakin' (speaking) Heb, that yer Honour was s' to ? Tomorrow 1
Span (s) every s of shade that steals. In Mem. cxvii 10
Span (verb) She strove to s my waist : Talking Oak 138
li^an {See also Spick-span-new)
Spangle (s) the s dances in bight and bay, Sea-Fairies 24
They would pelt me with starry s's and shells, The Merman 28
Spangle (verb) To s aU the happy shores In Mem., Con. 120
Spangled {See also Sapphire-spangled) Flung inward
over s floors, Arabian Nights 116
from a fringe of coppice round them burst A s
pursuivant, Balin and Balan 47
Spaniard till the S came in sight, The Revenge 23
We will make the S promise, „ 94
Spanish ' S ships of war at sea ! ..3
Four galleons drew away From the S fleet that day, .. 47
8 fleet with broken sides lay round us .. 71
stately S men to their flagship bore him then, ,, 97
wives and children S concubines, Columbus 175
Spank (strike) An' 'e s's 'is 'and into mine, North. Cobbler 92
Spanless and grown a bulk Of s girth, Princess vi 36
Spann'd Beyond a bridge that 5 a dry ravine : Marr. of Geraint 246
Across the bridge that s the dry ravine. „ 294
Spar Rocking with shatter'd s's, Buonaparte 11
S's were splinter'd^ (repeat) The Captain 45, 49
Buoy'd upon floating tackle and broken s's, Enoch Arden 551
Spare (adj.) But far too s of flesh.' Talking Oak 92
Except the s chance-gift of those that came St. S. Stylites 78
Spare (verb) But, if thou s to fling Excalibur, M. d' Arthur 131
Smite, shrink not, s not. St. S. Stylites 181
one little kindly word, Not one to s her : Princess vi 259
we will not s the tyrant one hard word. Third of Feb. 42
whatever tempest mars Mid-ocean, s thee, sacred bark ; In Mem. xvii 14
And yet I « tnem sympathy, „ Ixiii 7
A little s the night I loved, „ cv 15
If the wolf s me, weep my life away, Merlin and V. 885
Spare (verb) {continued) But, if thou s to fling Excalibur, Pass, of Arthur 299
So, brother, pluck and s not.' Lover's Tale i 351
As if they knew your diet s's To E. Fitzgerald 10
hallus to hax of a man how much to s or to spend; Spinster's S's. Ill
S not now to be bountiful, On Jub. Q. Victoria 29
Spared Yet, tho' I s thee all the spring, The Blackbird 9
and they s To ask it. Guinevere 144
He s to Uft his hand against the King „ 437
And the Lord hath s our hves. The Revenge 93
Hast s the flesh of thousands, Happy IT
Sparhawk {See also Sparrow-hawk) Sometimes the s,
wheel'd along. Sir L. and Q. G. VI
Sparing S not any of Those that with Anlaf , Batt. of Brunanburh 45
Spark the haft twinkled with diamond s's, M. d' Arthur 5t>
As this pale taper's earthly s, St. Agnes' Eve L")
She lit the s within my throat. Will Water. lOtt
Mix'd with cunning s's of hell. Vision of Sin 114
a delicate s Of glowing and growing light Maud I vi LJ
Like a sudden s Struck vainly in the night, „ ix 13
a s of will Not to be trampled out. „ // H 56
the soft, the s from oS the hard, Pelleas and E. 499
snow mingled with s's of fire. Last Tournament 149
the haft twinkled with diamond s's. Pass, of Arthur 224
match 'd with ours Were Sun to 5 — • Ancient Sage 238
scatters on her throat the s's of dew. Prog, of Spring 58
new developments, whatever s
Will my tiny s of being wholly vanish
Sparkle (s) That sent a blast of s's up the flue :
With one green s ever and anon
Caught the s's, and in circles,
Like s's in the stone Avanturine.
94
God and the Univ. 1
M. d' Arthur, Ep. 15
Audley Court 88
Vision of Sin 30
Gareth and L. 930
make My nature's prideful s in the blood Geraint and E. 827
from the star there shot A rose-red s to the city, Holy Grail 53o
an' 'e shined like a s o' fire. North. Cobbler 48
to the snowUke s of a cloth Sisters {E. and E.) 117
Sparkle (verb) I wake : the chill stars s ; St. S. Stylites 114
The silver vessels s clean. Sir Galahad 34
And s out among the fern. The Brook 25
stretch'd forefinger of all Time S for ever : Princess ii 379
A maiden moon that s's on a sty, „ v 186
The city s's like a grain of salt. Wiil 20
wont to glance and s like a gem Of fifty facets ; Geraint and E. 294
while she watch'd their arms far-off S, Lancelot and E. 396
heats that spring and s out Among us Holy Grail 33
Sparkled shield. That s on the yellow field, L. of Shalott Hi 8
And s keen with frost against the hilt : M. d' Arthur 55
From Allan's watch, and s by the fire. Dora 136
cups and silver on the bumish'd board S and shone ; Enoch Arden 743
when some heat of difference s out, Aylmer's Field 705
The yule-log s keen with frost, In Mem. Ixxviii 5
royal crown S, and swaying upon a restless elm Balin and Balan 463
pride and glory fired her face ; her eye S ; Pelleas and E. 173
And s keen with frost against the hilt : Pass, of Arthur 223
jewels Of many generations of his house S and flash'd. Lover's Tale iv 300
s and shone in the sky, Despair 15
but, however they s and shone, „ 17
What s there ? whose hand was that ? The Ring 257
Sparkling the snows Are s to the moon : St Agnes' Eve 2
The s flints beneath the prow. Arabian Nights 52
who often saw The splendour s from aloft, Gareth and L. 49
Only to hear and see the far-off s brine, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 98
' 0 trefoil, s on the rainy plain, Gareth and L. 1159
and saw The golden dragon s over all : Holy Grail 263
To sit a star upon the s spire ; Princess vii 197
Sparkling-fresh hue Is so s-f to view, Rosalind 40
Sparrow The s's chirrup on the roof, Mariana 73
very s's in the hedge Scarce answer Amphion 67
And swallow and s and throstle, Windoto, Ay 14
the s spear'd by the shrike, Maud I iv 23
O wretched set of s's, one and all, Marr. of Geraint 278
Sparrow-grass an' my oan bed o' s-g, Spinster's S's. 104
Sparrow-hawk (See also Sparhawk) Who told him,
scouring still, ' The s-h ! ' Marr. of Geraint 260
Who answer'd gruffly, ' Ugh ! the s-h.' .. 265
' P'riend, he that labours for the s-h „ 27
li
Sparrow-hawk
667
Speak
Sparrow-hawk (continued) ' A thousand pips eat up
your s-h !
Who pipe of nothing but of s-h's !
' So that ye do not serve me s-h's
To curse this hedgerow thief, the s-h :
' This s-h, what Ls he ? tell me of him.
The second was your foe, the s-h,
if the s-h, this nephew, fight In next day's tourney
And over that a golden s-h,
Has earn'd himself the name of s-h.
And over that the golden s-h.
Spartan play The S Mother with emotion,
Spasm in these s's that grind Bone against bone.
The tiger s's tear his chest.
Spat S — pish — the cup was gold,
Spate in a showerful spring Stared at the s.
Spawn ' Thro' slander, meanest s of Hell—
Spe^ (See also Spake, Speak) Hark ! death is
caUing While I s to ye,
Smiling, never s's ?
kiss sweet kisses, and s sweet words :
Thou smilest, but thou dost not s,
The very smile before you s,
Come down, come down, and hear me s :
If one but s's or hems or stirs his chair,
'Twere better not to breathe or s.
And on the mouth, he will not s.
' I may not s of what I know.'
But when at last I dared to s,
Hear me, for I will s, and build up all
for it may be That, while I s of it,
that I might s my mind. And tell her to her face
Tho' I cannot s a word. May Queen, xY
And then did something s to me —
Resolved on noble things, and strove to s,
* Still strove to s : my voice was thick
And tread softly and s low.
And tho' his foes s ill of him,
S out before you die.
He will not smile — not s to me Once more.
A man may s the thing he will ;
some old man s in the aftertime To all the people,
.*? out : what is it thou hast heard,
if you s with him that was my son,
.S' ? is there any of you halt or maim'd ?
let him s his wish.
S, if there be a priest, a man of God,
To alien ears, I did not s to these —
was it not well to s. To have spoken once ?
s, and s the truth to me,
sweetly did she s and move :
0 Lady Floha, let me s :
Her Ups are sever'd as to s :
S a Uttle, Ellen Adair ! '
Said Lady Clare ' that ye s so wild ? '
' I s the truth : you are my child.
1 s the truth, as I live by bread !
' I will s out, for I dare not lie.
And they s in gentle murmur,
I came to s to you of what he wish'd,
' Tired, Annie ? ' for she did not s a word.
Should still be living ; well then — let me s :
Lets none, who s's with Him, seem all alone.
But turning now and then to s with him.
My children too ! must I not s to these ?
mark me and understand. While I have power to s.
Marr. of Geraint 274
279
304
309
404
444
475
484
492
550
Princess ii 283
Columbus 220
Ancient Sage 123
Last Tournament 298
Gareth and L. 3
The Letters 33
All Things wUl Die 29
Lilian 12
Sea-Fairies 34
Oriana 68
Margaret 14
56
Sonnet to 5
Two Voices 94
252
435
Miller's D. 129
(Enone 39
„ 43
„ 227
Y's. E. 39
Con. 34
B. of F. Women 42
109
D. of the O. Year 4
22
45
To J. S. 21
You ask me, why, etc. 8
M. d'AHhur 107
150
Z)ora 43
St. S. Stylites 142
144
214
Love and Duty 52
55
Locksley Hall 23
71
Day-Dm., Pro. 1
„ Sleef. P. 30
Edward Gray 24
Lady Clare 22
24
26
38
L. of Burleigh 49
Enoch Arden 291
390
405
620
755
788
877
To s before the people of her child, Aylmer's Field 608
Friends, I was bid to s of such a one .. 677
— of him I was not bid to s — „ 710
' Love, forgive him : ' but he did not s ; Sea Dreams 45
My tongue Trips, or I s profanely. Lucretius 74
yet, to s the truth, I rate your chance Princess i 160
Had given us letters, was he bound to s ? „ 181
he heard her s ; She scared him ; life ! „ 185
scarce could hear each other s for noise „ 215
Speak (continued) Not for three years to s with any men ; Princess ii 72
my vow Binds me to s, and O that iron will, „ 202
but prepare : I s ; it falls.' ,. 224
S little ; mix not with the rest ; ,. 360
Abate the stride, which s's of man, .. 429
some classic Angel s In scorn of us, „ Hi 70
she s's A Memnon smitten with the morning Sun.' .. 115
And she replied, her duty was to s, ,. 151
s, and let the topic die.' .. 205
That surely she will s ; if not, then I : .. iv 344
made a sudden turn As if to s, „ 395
there she lies. But will not s, nor stir.' ,. v 52
and she of whom you s. My mother, .. 192
ride with us to our lines. And s with Arac : ., 226
So often that I s as having seen. .. vi 21
Or s to her, your dearest, .. 185
yet s to me, Say one soft word and let us part forgiven.' 218
Is it kind ? S to her I say : 249
Help, father, brother, help ; s to the king : .. 305
cannot s, nor move, nor make one sign, vii 153
S no more of his renown. Ode on V/ell. 278
My Lords, we heard you s : Third of Feb. 1
As long as we remain, we must s free, .. 13
But the one voice in Europe : we must s ; ..16
let her s of you weU or ill ; Grandmother 51
' but I needs must s my mind, „ 53
S to Him thou for He hears. High. Pantheism 11
They should s to me not without a welcome, Hendecasyllabics 11
And I can s a little then. /„ Mem. xix 16
Who s their feeling as it is, .. ^^ 5
And sometimes harshly will he s : .. xxi 6
Behold, ye s an idle thing : .. 2I
Urania s's with darken'd brow : .. xxxvii 1
' I am not worthy ev'n to s ., n
My guardian angel will s out In that high place, „ xliv 15
Nor s it, knowing Death has made ,. Ixxiv 11
I hear the sentence that he s's ; „ Ixxx 10
We cannot hear each other s. ., Ixxxii 16
A part of stillness, yearns to s : .. Ixxxv 78
Still s to me of me and mine : „ cxvi 12
thought he would rise and s And rave at the lie Maud I i 59
But this is the day when I must s, „ xvi 7
I am sure I did but s Of my mother's faded cheek " xix 18
To s of the mother she loved As one scarce less forlorn, „ 27
Chid her, and forbid her to s To me, „ 63
But s to her all things holy and high, ," // H 75
for she never s's her mind, ", ^ 67
as he s's who tells the tale— Com. of "Arthur 95
speech ye s yourself, ' Cast me away ! ' „ 304
hear him s before he left his life. " 362
S of the Kmg ; '| 42^
nor sees, nor hears, nor s's, nor knows. Gareth and L. 81
Live pure, s true, right wrong, „ ng
And heard him Kingly s, and doubted him ,' 125
King will doom me when Is.' \] 324
My deeds will s : it is but for a day.' '' 577
I but s for thine avail. The saver of my life.' .',' ggs
I am the cause, because I dare not s Marr. of Geraint 89
Thou art not worthy ev'n to s of him ; ' .. 199
S, if ye be not like the rest, hawk-mad, ,. 280
S ! ' Whereat the amiourer turning all amazed „ 282
They would not hear me s : ^^ 421
Nor s I now from foolish flattery ; " 433
Nor did she lift an eye nor s a word, 528
Whatever happens, not to s to me, Geraint and E. 17
If he would only s and tell me of it.' „ 54
I laid upon you, not to s to me, ,' 73
That she could s whom his own ear had heard „ H3
Needs must I s, and tho' he kill me for it, ',[ 137
' Have I leave to s ? ' He said, .' 140
and s To your good damsel there who sits apart, j] 298
' Get her to s : she doth not s to me.' „ 301
Ye sit apart, you do not s to him, ^' 321
dumbly s's Your story, that this man loves you ," 328
Good, s the word : my followers ring him round : „ 336
Speak
(continued) s but the word : Or s it not •
that ye « not but obey.' '
spake so low he hardly heard her s,
in the King's own ear S what has chanced •
(1 5 as one S's of a service done him)
Nor did I care or dare to s with you,
Bound are they To s no evil.
I will s. Hail, royal knight,
he reddens, cannot s, So bashful, he '
And we will s at first exceeding low.
Take one verse more— the lady s's it-
let her ejes S for her, glowing on him.
Urged him to 5 against the truth,
for to s him true, Ye know right well
little need to s Of Lancelot in his glory '
S therefore : shall I waste myself in vain ^ '
lo s the wish most near to your true heart :
.But iike a ghost without the power to s.
^ Delay no longer, s your wish,
S : that I live to hear,' he said,
668
Geraint and E. 342
417
643
809
847
871
Balin and Balan 146
Speech
^'Isjfda^TAtJitri'"^"™"- ,i-'»-^. z-m
519
532
Merlin and V. 445
616
Lancelot and E. 92
154
463
670
914
919
924
928
Suddenly s of the wordless man.
Dark-splendid, s in the silence,
<b a still good-morrow with her eyes
Your beauty is your beauty, and I sin In 5,
00 s, and here ceasing.
Not s other word than ' Hast thou won ?
And s clearly in thy native tongue—
s aloud To women, the flower of the time,
Lancelot and E. 271
338
1033
1187
Holy Grail 853
Last Tournament 191
Sir J. Oldcastle 133
The Wreck 48
ell ffnr ^ ^ '^^" I/""" "'^"^ °^ ««"' ^d none Of you "
can s for me so well. •'
So cannot s my mind. An end to this ! " i555
He IS enchanted, cannot s— and she, " ffff
A, as It waxes, of a love that wanes ? " ffnf
For on a day she sent to s with me. ^o^" Grail mi
And when she came to 5, behold her eyes ^ fno
and the King himself could hardly s " Xii
Ah, blessed Lord, I s too earthlywise, " %%;
Bors Ask me not, for I may not s of it : "' ^fl
?'?l.''i \ ^^ ""^i'^ V *^^ framework and the chord ; "" ^l
a!>, Lancelot, thou art silent : Tn^th^. .^i^
To s no slander, no, nor listen to it, ^'''' ^ZJ^T''' l^l
corns Of the pure heart, nor seem Guinevere 472
And he forgave me, and I could not s. " «ii
s°^hTi/irt^ttst:r? ^" ''' p^^^^«' ^-- ^f ^^^ i
I did not s : I could not . my love. ^'' ' ^"^^ ' 284
I wish'd, yet wish'd her not to s ; " *^
It makes me angry yet to s of it— " • ^ii
qu^tion d if she came From foreign lands, and still '
sue did not s.
The spectre that will s if spoken to. "" ooi
An' he didn't s for a while p.Vo/Vi fH
I learnt it first. I had to s e- . f ^*' Quarrel 66
Now let it s, and you fire^ "^'"'l^y ^; l*^,"®-) ^f
The Shepherd, when I 5, ' ^t f fe^'' vf ?^
a shame to . of them-Among the heathen- '^" '^^ ^^'^«*'^«, J^
s, and tell them all The story of mv vovaee n^L t. 1 V
And when I ceased to s, the king ^^ ' Columbus 11
mv son will s for me Ablier than I can " Ja
whenever we strove to 5 Our voices were thinner V. of Maeldune 21
\ ?^SStitei^rr. r '''''''■' ^^^4
TC^'Lr.Z ffof^'w^^Ct^' Ancient Sajf
Come, s a httle comfort ! m,'' „,. ,/f°
S to me, sLster ; counsel me • ^^' ^^'^^^ H
You s so low, what is it ? *^"^" ^vf"''^?^ ^8
'She too might 5 to-day,' she mumbled. ^'^ ^'""S f.
You wiU not s, my friends, ta. m/" j o
But niver not s plaain out, Church-warden, etc. 43
tha mm « hout to the Baptises here 1' the town, " 5?
g^r hurl his cup Straight at the s, ' Merliil'and V ^1
AiMl I ran by him without 5, i««a«i6/
The voice, that now Ls 5, ^"2/ «J!^«« 18
make a man feel strong in s truth • r "j if^' ^^
He said, ' Ye take it,^' ' .' "^ T"^ P^K ^^
' ' Geraint and E. 141
aMthel^^^^'^^^^^ Thebrand; the buckler
O'erthwarted with the brazen-headed s
Into that phalanx of the summer s's
hoofs bare on the ridge of s's And riders
^ . .f/r^?"^' ♦■^^ good horse reel,
that held The horse, the s ;
And mounted horse and graspt a s
and either s Bent but not brake '
m a, moment— at one touch Of that skill'd s,
ilad sent thee down before a lesser s
on whom all s's Are rotten sticks ' '
and thrice they break their s's
Pmr/^ «'^?S ^ ^ """^^^^ thro' his breast
call d for flesh and wine to feed his s's.
s Wherewith the Roman pierced the side of Christ.
and then the shadow of a s. Shot
kS V'r^ f I^t' ^^Z *°-d^y *be shadow of a s.
King Pellam's holy s. Reputed to be red
Ihat men go down before your s at a touch,
couch d their s's and prick'^d their steeds.
■ Pv f ,?own-g ancing lamed the charger, and a s
Prick'd sharply his own cuirass,
Ihat men went down before his s at a touch
shadow of my s had been enow To scare '
^iU make thee with my s and sword
and at her will they couch'd their s's
and on shield A s, a harp, a bugle— '
Arthur with a hundred s's Rod! far
the splintering s, the hard mail hewn,
died Among their s's and chariots,
s and helmet tipt With stormy light
Ihe s of ice has wept itself away,
&pear d the sparrow s by the shrike
Speamaan But left two brawny spearmen,
tlis lusty spearmen foUow'd him with noise :
And mingled with the spearmen :
the brawny s let his cheek Bulge
&" W ^^"; splinter'd s-s's crack and fly,
Speai-stncken A knight of thine s-s ^'
Specia ad].) Oh ! sure it is a s care Of God
8>peck httle pitted s in garner'd fruit
<incJtT^^^ ^^ ^1"^' '^!'^ ' *^'*«' bare the King,
Special A s doubt which makes me cold,
«n««<7.^ 'S,''* ^ dead man there to a s bride ;
J>pecfre There stands a s in your hall •
Nightmare of youth, the s of himself ?
He faced the s's of the mind
and fled Yelling as from a s,
one of them Said, shuddering, ' Her s "
Ihe s that will speak if spoken to.
Are there s s moving in the darkness ?
tnunders pass, the s's vanish,
with his drift Of flickering s's
Speculation for a vast s had fail'd,
speech God's great gift of s abused
either hved in cither's heart and s.
full-flowing river of s Came down upon mv heart nr «a
To hear each other's whisoer'd s ■ ^ r . r. . ^none 68
and with surprise Frole my swi^t s • ^'n'f'^h^- ^- ^
He flash'd his random s'^f ^ ' ^- %?.; ST\^^
Joyful came his s • ^"^ Water. 198
There s and thought and nature fail'd v^H. ^fP^i^m
addr^s'd to s-f ho spoketTwS S^tf ^'g
Ere Thought could wed itself with S ; /TS.' S^ 1I
Two Voices 129
(Enone 139
Aylmer's Field 111
Princess v 489
Gareth and L. 523
681
691
963
1223
1244
1305
Marr. of Geraint 562
Geraint and E. 86
601
halm and Balan 113
322
373
556
Lancelot and E. 149
479
487
578
Holy Grail 791
Pelleas and E. 45
r ^ •' 273
Last Tournament 174
420
Pass, of Arthur 108
Achilles over the T. 33
Tiresias 113
Prog, of Spring 6
Maud I iv 23
Geraint and E. 558
593
599
630
Sir Galahad 7
Balin and Balan 121
Supp. Confessions 63
Pelleas and E. 41
Merlin and V. 394
Pass, of Arthur 465
/« Jl/em. xli 19J
L. C. V. de Vere ■_
Love and Duty IJ,,
In Mem. xcvi 15J
Geraint and E. 7331
-twer's Tale iv 3351
337
Ow Jub. Q. 'victoria 67
r. ■' 69
Demeter and P. 27
IfajM^ 7 i 9
.4 Dirge 44
Sonnet to 14
Speech
669
Spire
Speech (coniimied) But in dear words of human s In Mem. Ixxxv 83
In matter-moulded forms of s, „ xcv 46
Against the feast, the s, the glee, „ Con. 101
And written in the s ye speak yourself, Com. of Arthur 304
Knowest thou not the fashion of our s ? Pelleas and E. 100
So that he could not come to s with her. „ 205
But in the onward current of her s. Lover's Tale i 565
Fair s was his and deUcate of phrase, ,, 719
Fair s was his, and delicate of phrase. „ iv 273
I would I knew their s ; Sir J. Oldcastle 11
Speed (See also God-speed) Those writhed limbs of
lightning s ; Clear-headed friend 23
a favourable s Ruffle thy mirror'd mast, In Mem. ix 6
and all at fiery s the two Shock'd Gareth and L. 962
named us each by name. Calling ' God s ! ' Holy Grail 352
Speedwell The Uttle s's darling blue. In Mem. Ixxxiii 10
Spell (s) I feel with thee the drowsy s. Maud I xviii 72
glimpse and fade Thro' some slight s. Early Spring 32
Spell (verb) A trifle, sweet ! which true love s's — Miller's D. 187
face is practised when I s the lines. Merlin and V. 367
we scarce can s The Alif of Thine alphabet Akbar's Bream 30
Spence Bluff Harry broke into the s Talking Oak 47
Spend Where they twain will s their days L. of Burleigh 36
To s my one last year among the hills. Ancient Sage 16
how much to spare or to s ; Spinster's S's. Ill
Spent passion shall have s its novel force, Locksley Hall 49
my latest breath Was s in blessing her Enoch Arden 884
' We fear, indeed, you s a stormy time Princess v 121
I scarce have s the worth of one ! ' Geraint and E. 411
the storm, its burst of passion s, Merlin and V. 961
and the powder was all of it « ; The Revenge 80
I s What seem'd my crowning hour, Sisters {E. and E.) 123
Sphere (adj.) By two s lamps blazon'd like Heaven and
Earth Princess i 223
Sphere (s) Dark-blue the deep s overhead, Arabian Nights 89
Sure she was nigher to heaven's s's, Ode to Memory 40
lean out from the hollow s of the sea. The Mermaid 54
What is there in the great s of the earth, // / icere loved 2
And deepening thro' the silent s's Mariana in the S. 91
In yonder hundred million s's ? ' Two Voices 30
' And men, thro' novel s's of thought „ 61
daughter of a cottager. Out of her s. Walk, to the Mail 60
centred in the s Of common duties, Ulysses 39
in dark-purple s's of sea. Locksley Hall 164
The s thy fate allots : Will Water. 218
Laborious orient ivory s in s, Princess, Pro. 20
An eagle clang an eagle to the s. ,. Hi 106
seem'd to touch upon a s Too gross to tread, „ vii 324
Ay is the song of the wedded s's, Window, No Answer 7
He mixing with his proper s. In Mem. Ix 5
A s of stars about my soul, „ cxxii 7
Unto the thundersong that wheels the s's, Lover's Tale i 476
hereafter — earth A s. Columbus 39
half-assured this earth might be as. „ 60
or pain in every peopled s ? Locksley H., Sixty 197
Set the s of all the boundless Heavens „ 210
For dare we dally with the s As he did half in jest, Epilogue 44
draws the child To move in other s's. To Prin. Beatrice 8
glancing downward on the kindly s Poets and their B. 9
Thro' ail the S's — an ever opening height, The Ring 45
She lean'd to from her Spiritual s, „ 484
the s Of westward-wheehng stars ; St. Telemachus 31
Sphere (verb) S all your lights aroimd, above ; In Mem. ix 13
Sphered and s Whole in ourselves and owed to none. Princess iv 147
had you been S up with Cassiopeia, ,-, 438
Sphere-music S-m such as that you dream'd about. Sea Dreams 256
S-m of stars and of constellations. Parnassus 8
that were such s-m as the Greek Akbar's Bream 44
For moans wiU have grown s-m The Breamer 29
Spheroid Of sine and arc, s and azimuth, Princess vi 256
Sphinx woman-breasted S, with wings Tiresias 148
Spice (s) Dripping with Sabaean s On thy pillow, Adeline 53
A summer fann'd vrith s. Palace of Art 116
silks, and fruits, and s's, clear of toll, Golden Year 45
Bring me s's, bring me wine ; Vision of Sin 76
Spice (s) (continued) With siunmer s the himmiing air ; In Mem. ci 8
like the sultan of old in a garden of s. Maud I iv 42
And the woodbine s's are wafted abroad, „ xxii 5
with her s and her vintage, her silk Vastness 13
Spice (verb) S his fair banquet with the dust of death ? Mand I xviii 56
Spiced charged the winds With s May-sweets Lover's Tale i 318
Spick-span-new thebbe anmaost s-s-n. North. Cobbler 109
Spicy Holy water will I pour Into every s flower Poet's Mind 13
Round and round the s downs the yellow Lotos-
dust is blown. Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 104
They fuse themselves to little s baths. Prog, of Spring 33
Spider the bastion'd walls Like threaded s's. Princess i 108
Caught in a great old tyrant s's web, Merlin and V. 259
Spied came into the field And s her not ; Bora 75
He s her, and he left his men at work, „ 86
Uncared for, s its mother and began Princess vi 136
But Arthur s the letter in her hand, Lancelot and E. 1270
methought I s A dying fire of madness Holy Grail 767
And s not any light in hall or bower, Pelleas and E. 419
Sir Lancelot passing by S where he couch'd, Guinevere 31
That I niver not s sa much es a poppy Spinster's S's. 78
Spigot merry bloated things Shoulder'd the s, Guinevere 268
Spike Whose silvery s's are nighest the sea. The Mermaid 37
High up, in silver s's ! Talking Oak 276
he had climb'd across the s's. Princess, Pro. Ill
s that split the mother's heart Spitting the child, Com. of Arthur 38
darted s's and splinters of the wood Merlin and V. 937
A s of half-accomplish'd bells — To Ulysses 24
Spiked (See also Purple-spiked) and grimly s the gates. Princess iv 206
Spikenard Sweet ! sweet ! s, and balm, St. S. Stylites 211
With costly s and with tears. In Mem. xxxii 12
Spill slope, and s Their thousand wreaths Princess vii 212
To s his blood and heal the land : The Victim 44
From that best blood it is a sin to s.' Gareth and L. 600
you s The drops upon my forehead. Romney's R. 23
Spilt have died and s our bones in the flood — Princess iv 532
A httle grain shall not be s.' In Mem. Ixv 4
the true blood s had in it a heat Maud I xix 44
the red life s for a private blow — „ // ^ 93
burst in dancing, and the pearls were s ; Merlin and V. 452
and so s itself Among the roses, Pelleas and E. 426
Spin S's, toihng out his own cocoon. Two Voices 180
Sometimes I saw you sit and s ; Miller's B. 121
Let the great world s for ever Locksley Hall 182
for we s the lives of men, And not of Gods, and
know not why we s ! Bemeter and P. 85
Spindling (adj.) s king. This Gama swamp'd in lazy
tolerance. Princess v 442
Spindling (s) The s's look unhappy. Amphion 92
Spine my stiff s can hold my weary head, St. S. Stylites 43
The three-decker's oaken s Maud II ii 27
skin Clung but to crate and basket, ribs and s. Merlin and V. 625
Spinning behold a woman at a door S ; Holy Grail 392
Or s at your wheel beside the vine — Romney's R. 5
Spinster An' a s I be an' I will be, Spinster's S's. 112
ftiire Looks down upon the village s : Miller's B. 36
And tipt with frost-like s's. Palace of Art 52
With s's of silver shine.' B. of F. Women 188
To watch the three tall s's ; Godiva 3
High up, the topmost palace s. Bay-Bm., Sleep. P. 48
But he, by farmstead, thorpe and s, Will Water. 137
Not by the well-known stream and rustic s, The Brook 188
Whose blazing wyvem weathercock'd the s, Aylmer's Field 17
Or like a s of land that stands apart Princess iv 281
To sit a star upon the sparkh'ng s ; „ mi 197
Utter your jubilee, steeple and s ! W. to Alexandra 17
A mount of marble, a hundred s's ! The Baisy 60
Bring orchis, bring the foxglove s. In Mem. IxxxiiiQ
The s's of ice are toppled down, „ cxxvii 12
With deUcate s and whorl, Maud II ii 6
the s's and turrets half-way down Prick'd thro' the
mist ; Gareth and L. 193
and had made it s to heaven. „ 309
Tower after tower, s beyond s. Holy Grail 229
s's Prick'd with incredible pinnacles into heaven. „ 422
Spire
*»" (e^^ued) I saw the spiritual city and aU her s's
Gilded S^bTom, or shatter'd into .'., iJJj'&fi m
overhead The aerial poplar wave, an anlber s. Si^te^siEar^E )M
topmost s of the mountain was liUes in lieu of '
snow, T,. J ,, 7 ,
and pigmy spites of the village.; -^^""SfS
Spired cypress-cones That 5 abo^e the wood; Zot,6r'rS/ii 39
.every topmost pme S into bluest heaven, I)Zhof (eZII m
^ of happineTAnd perfect rest so inward is ; ''"^^- ^^^-^^^^^^ ^^
And the clear s shining thro'. S^
My judgment, and my s whirls, " lolf
O 5 and heart made desolate ! "" Tog
thoughts in the translucent fane Of her still s ; " Isabel^
To the young s present ' n,t. i^ i\j ni,
A S haunts the year's last hours ^f ,^ '^{t"'"'^, ^?
Life in dead stones, or s in ai^ «?*«« Aa««<s 1
riving the 5 of man, ' ^ ^'^^"^^f 9
Some s of a crimson rose In love T^f ? ^i
Your 5 is the calmed sea, ,;^'^"^*'*! ^1
Touch'd by thy s's mellowness, ^37im
Kate hath a . ever strung Like a new bow, Tatlw
^:^^i^s:i^At^'s^^ , ^^- ^^ - -s.
That read his . blindly wise, ^'^^ ^'"''' "^
For all the s is his own. a/i77 "' n ion
who wrought Two s's to one equal mind— * oor
In my dry brain my « soon, 'k/,-.„/o«
the thought of power Flatt^r'd his s ; S^onem
Music that gentlier on the s lies, Lotos-Eat^s C S I
Nor barken what the inner s sii^s, ' ^- '^99
lend our hearts and s's wholly To the influence " as
Sweetens the s still. n ^f v"n/ oo2
Drawn from the . thro' the brain, ^^ "^ ^^ 'K"/%^?f
iileep, holy s, blessed soul, '^- "^^ 7^
Sfn thv^ IvhI\u T' k.'^™^ *« ""^ ^^ '^" % ^«^^ 55
Junet, she feo light of foot, so hght of s— Gardener' 1 T) 14
that crush'd My . flat before thie. StSStvlifes It
And this gray s yearning in desire ''• '^^ utZs 30
All the 5 deeply dawning in the dark UcksleuEall 28
And our s's rush'd together ^cKsiey Hall ^
And his s leaps within him to be gone " ifc
crescent promise of my s hath not set. " 107
To *'5 folded in the womb. Dav-Dn, RU.r. p s
His s flutters like a lark, ^ ""'' ^''r^: f o^
Make Thou my 5 pure and clear "«/ a ^"^ ^n
My 5 before Thee ; '^'- ^^** ^^* »
My s beats her mortal bars, ,«?,-, rv,; i, ^ tL
And her . changed within. rZ^f^i^f,
Tho' at times hir s sank : ^- "-^ ^'^'"^"^'^ J^
That her s might have rest. " ,ij;
I foimd My 5's in the golden age. To ¥ r 19
SirSi hL"vitil^'"°7' "\"^- ^-/^iSmbJo
^aii a all her vital s's into each ear Avlmer's Fieia 2m
But they that cast her s into flesh. ^ ' ''^ l2|
meek. Exceeding ' poor in s '— ' fS^
lorce ana growth Of 5 than to junketing ,„ 149
on my s s Settled a gentle cloud of melancholy ; " 5^
My s closed with Ida's at the lips ; ^' ,„v ? ^o
Touch as among things divine, Qde 'im Wdl l^Q
and S with S can meet— TJinh^ n. ■ 1 ?
hear it, ^ of C^ivelaitn ! ^"^^^ ^f^^^ ^
A S, not a breathing voice. r„ ^""'^'^ff^ fO
For I in s saw thee^ove ^"^ ^'"*- ^'^^if
So much the vital s's sink " ^* f
But they my troubled s mle, " „.J,^ J°
Survive in s's render'd free, " ^^ , A
And look on ^'s breathed away, " ^^^"* 10
670
Spiritual
Spint (continued) Thy s ere our fatal loss
That stir the s's inner deeps.
And every s's folded bloom
Before the s's fade away.
The S of true love replied ;
' What keeps a s wholly true
The s does but mean the breath
My s loved and loves him yet,
I loved thee, S, and love.
From state to state the s walks ;
Thy s should fail from off the globe ;
Thy s up to mine can reach ;
A hundred s's whisper ' Peace.'
fierce extremes employ Thy s's
I know Thy s in time among thy peers •
No s ever brake the band '
But he, the S himself, may come
S to S, Ghost to Ghost,
call The s's from their golden day,
My s is at peace with all.
And of my s as of a wife.
Two s's of a diverse love
Thro' which the s breathes no more ?
The churl in s, up or down
The churl in s, howe'er he veil
But in my s will I dwell.
He breathed the s of the song ;
While thou, dear s, happy star,
Let all my genial s's advance
And lust of gain, in the s of Cain,
And the s of murder works
eye well-practised in nature, a s bounded and poor •
Feace, angry s, and let him be !
When all my s reels At the shouts.
Would the happy s descend,
In Mem. xli 1
), xlii 10
xliii 2
„ xlvii 14
In 6
9
Ivi 7
Ixi 11
„ Ixxxii 6
- Ixxxiv 36
Ixxxv 82
-■ Ixxxvi 16
,. Ixxxviii 6
-, xci 6
., xciii 2
6
8
1, xciv 6
8
„ xcvii 8
.. cii 7
cv20
„ cxi 1
» 5
„ cxxiii 9
,- cxxv 10
„ cxxvii 18
Con. 77
Mavd I i 23
40
iy 38
,. xiii 44
.. // iv 20
81 .
ike a household S at the walls Beat,
Iight-wing'd s of his youth retum'd
his evil s upon him leapt,
whimpering of the s of the child,
heard the aS"s of the waste and weald
Himself beheld three s's mad with joy
so glad were s's and men
ill prophets were they all, S's and men :
When round him bent the s's of the hiUs
Ihou art light. To which my s leaneth
and his s From bitterness of death
Which to the imprison'd s of the child,
while I gazed My s leap'd as with those thrills
* of Love ! that little hour was bound
life, love, soul, s, and heart and strength.
O innocent of s— let my heart Break rather—
s seem d to flag from thought to thought,
clear-eyed S, Being blunted in the Pri^ent
sorrow of my s Was of so wide a compass
Moved with one s round about the bay
when her own true s had retum'd
With a joyful s I Sir Richard Grenville die ' '
i" lowers to these ' s's in prison '
Whereon the S of God moves as he will-
Out of the deep, S, out of the deep,
6 half-lost In thine own shadow
Nor canst thou prove that thou art s alone.
And some new S o'erbear the old
out the fleshless world of s's, '
Her s hovering by the church,
fashion'd and worship a, S oi Evil
" S, nearing yon dark portal '
Spmted See Tender-spirited
Spint-searching thro' mine down rain'd Their s-s
splendours. r > ^ j • • , . ,
(repeat) > j , •
One s doubt she did not soothe ? j 1 '^^'^- Ff '^nf
And at the s prime RewaTet^ith the dawning souI.^KL'^S/i^
Geraint and E. 403
Balin and Bcdan 21
., . 537
Last Tournament 418
Guinevere 129
252
269
273
283
Lover's Tale i 104
142
204
363
437
460
737
„ a 51
130
134
Hi 17
iv 108
The Bevenge 103
In the Child. Rosy. 37
Be Prof., Two G. 28
32
39
Ancient Sage 60
Epilogue 14
The Ring 228
478
Kapiolani 1
God and the Univ. 4
1
Spiritual
671
Spoke
Spiritual (adj.) (continued) That loved to handle s strife, In Mem. Ixxxv 54
But A' presentiments, „ xcii 14
Rise in the s rock, „ cxxxi 3
Flow'd from the s lily that she held. Balin and Balan 264
see Her godlike head crown'd with s fire, Merlin and V. 837
and waste the s strength Within us, Holy Grail 35
one will crown thee king Far in the s city : ' ,. 162
one will crown me king Far in the s city ; ,, 483
I saw the s city and all her spires ., 526
trrim faces came and went Before her, or a vague s fear — Guinevere 71
the babe She lean'd to from her S sphere, The Ring 484
The beauty that endures on the >S height, Happy 37
The Christians o^vn a S Head ; Akhar^s Dream 153
Spiritual (s) S in Nature's market-place^ „ 135
Spirt upjetted in s's of wild sea-smoke. Sea Dreams 52
Spirted (adj.) Or red with s purple of the vats. Princess vii 202
Spirted (verb) Prince's blood s upon the scarf, Marr. of Geraint 208
Spit (s) bits of roasting ox Moan round the s — Lucretius 132
Sir ScuUion, canst thou use that s of thine ? Gareih and L. 791
Scullion, for ruiming sharply with thy s ., 840
these be for the s, Larding and basting. „ 1082
Spit (verb) I hate, abhor, s, sicken at him ; Lucretius 199
Spite {See also Monkey-spite) Delicious s's and darling
angers, Madeline 6
half in love, half s, he woo'd and wed Dora 39
FiU'd I was with foUy and s, Edward Gray 15
■ A ship of fools,' he shriek'd in s, The Voyage 77
envy, hate and pity, and s and scorn, Litcrelius 11
sins of emptiness, gossip and s And slander, Princess ii 92
Should all our churchmen foam in s To F. D. Maurice 9
How I hate the s's and the follies ! Spiteful Letter 24
And scratch the very dead for s : Lit. Squabbles 8
The civic slander and the s ; In Mem. cvi 22
Nor ever narrowness or s, ., cxi 17
a city, with gossip, scandal and s ; Maud I iv 8
His face, as I grant, in s of s, „ xiii 8
to see your beauty marr'd Thro' evil s : Pelleas and E. 299
Marr'd tho' it be with s and mockery ., 327
tho' she hath me bounden but in s, „ 329
when I were so crazy wi' s, First Quarrel 73
craft and madness, lust and s, Locksley H., Sixty 189
pigmy s's of the village spire ; Vastness 25
Spiteful And with it a s letter. Spiteful Letter 2
all hearts Applauded, and the s whisper died : Geraint and E. 958
Spitting split the mother's heart S the child, Com. of Arthur 39
.5 at their vows and thee. Pass, of Arthur 62
Splash and the s and stir Of fountains Princess i 217
Splash'd « and dyed The strong White Horse Holy Grail 311
And a hundred s from the ledges, V. of Maeldune 103
Spleen They are fill'd with idle s ; Vision of Sin 124
cook'd liis s. Communing with his captains Princess i 66
with the least little touch of s. Maud I ii 11
Geraint flash'd into sudden s : Marr. of Geraint 273
is your s froth'd out, or have ye more ? ' Merlin and V. 161
Spleen-bom S-b, I think, and proofless. „ 702
Spleenful Breaking a slumber in which all s folly was drown'd, Maud I Hi 2
rode Geraint, a little s yet, Marr. of Geraint 293
Splendid (See also Dark-splendid) Sees whatever fair
and *■ Lay betwixt his home L. of Burleigh 27
A s presence flattering the poor roofs Aylmer's Field 175
The meteor of a s season, she, „ 205
Till all tlie people cried, ' S is the flower.' The Flower 16
Such s purpose in his eyes. In Mem. Ivi 10
There has fallen a s tear From the passion-flower Maud I xxii 59
And shine in the sudden making of s names, „ /// vi 47
So s in his acts and his attire, Marr. of Geraint 620
Display'd a s silk of foreign loom, Geraint and E. 687
'Splendour A sudden s from behind Flush'd Arabian Nights 81
The maiden's s's of the morning star D. of F. Women 55
Made lightnings in the s of the moon, M. d' Arthur 137
The s falls on castle walls Princess iv 1
Long lanes of s slanted o'er a press „ 478
sheathing s's and the golden scale Of harness, „ v 41
A flying s out of brass and steel, ,, vi 365
suck the blinding s from the sand, „ vii 39
Splendour (continued) height and cold, the s of the
hills ? Princess vii 194
and a stifled s and gloom. High. Pantheism 10
And blurr'd the s of the sun ; In Mem. Ixxii 8
All her s seems No liveUer ., xcviii 6
And breaking let the s fall ,, Con. 119
I saw the treasured s, her hand, Maud I vi 84
new-made lord, whose s plucks The slavish hat „ x3
nearer to the glow Of your soft s's „ xviii 79
Queen Maud in all her s. „ xx 50
And a dewy s falls On the little flower „ II iv 32
past and leaves The Crown a lonely s. Ded. of Idylls 49
often saw The s sparkling from aloft, Gareih and L. 49
s of the presence of the King Throned, „ 320
daily fronted him In some fresh s ; Marr. of Geraint 14
Made a low s in the world, „ 598
she could cast aside A s dear to women, „ 808
And on the s came, flashing me blind ; Holy Grail 413
Made lightnings in the s of the moon, Pass, of Arthur 305
We paused amid the s. Lover's Tale i 414
mine down rain'd Their spirit-searching s's. „ ii 147
glory in all The s's and the voices of the world ! Ancient Sage 111
native to that s or in Mars, Locksley H., Sixty 187
And s's of the morning land, Open. I and C. Exhib. 8
the secret s of the brooks. Prog, of Spring 21
But in the tearful s of her smiles „ 41
All her s fail'd To lure those eyes St. Telemachus 35
Splenetic And therefore s, personal, base, Maud I x33
Splinter (s) into fiery s's leapt the lance, Princess v 494
With darted spikes and s's of the wood Merlin and V. 937
Splinter (verb) gay navy there should s on it. Sea Dreams 131
and to s it into feuds Serving his traitorous end ; Guinevere 18
Splinter'd All night the s crags that wall the dell D. of F. Women 187
The s spear-shafts crack and fly. Sir Galahad 1
Spars were s, (repeat) The Captain 45, 49
A lance that s like an icicle, Geraint and E. 89
Crack'd basilisks, and s cockatrices. Holy Grail 718
Then, sputtering thro' the hedge of s teeth. Last Tournament 65
For every s fraction of a sect Will clamour Akbar's Dream 33
Splintering (See also Lance-splintering) the blade
flew S in six, Balin and Balan 396
and the s spear, the hard mail hewn. Pass, of Arthur 108
Split upon the corn-laws, where we s, Audley Court 35
the wild figtree s Their monstrous idols. Princess iv 79
takes, and breaks, and cracks, and s's, „ v 527
spike that s the mother's heart Spitting the child, Com. of Arthur 38
with one stroke Sir Gareth s the skull. Gareih and L. 1404
earthquake shivering to your base S you, Pelleas and E. 466
an iceberg s's From cope to base — Lover's Tale i 603
sink her, s her in twain ! The Revenue 89
Splugen And up the snowy S drew. The Daisy 86
Spoil (s) (See also Ocean-spoil) the children laden with
their s ; Enoch Arden 445
Spoil (verb) and s's My bUss in being ; Lucretius 221
Begin to slay the folk, and s the land.' Guinevere 137
Spoil'd still the foeman s and bum'd, The Victim 17
Because the twain had s her carcanet. Last Tournament 419
Spoiler loud sabbath shook the s down ; Ode on Well. 123
Bow'd the s, Bent the Scotsman, Batt. of Brunanburh 20
Spoilt You have s this child ; Princess v 116
thou hast s the purpose of my life. Guinevere 453
Spoke I s, but answer came there none : Two Voices 425
She s at large of many things. And at the last she s
of me ; MUler's D. 155
Last night, when some one s his name, Fatima 15
She s and laugh'd : I shut my sight CEnone 188
iS slowly in her place. D. of F. Women 92
We s of other things ; we coursed about Gardener's D. 222
in that time and place, I s to her, „ 226
I s, while Audley feast Humm'd like a hive Audley Court 4
Poet-like he s. Edwin Morris 27
Or this or something like to this he s. „ 41
I s her name alone. ,. 68
Whether he s too largely ; .. 73
So 5 I knowing not the things that were. „ 89
Spoke
672
Spouted
Spoke (continued) I s without restraint,
And mystic sentence s ;
He s ; and high above, I heard them blast
yawn'd, and rubb'd his face, and 5,
Sweet Emma Moreland s to me :
I s with heart, and heat and force,
and Enoch s his love. But Philip loved in silence ;
till the morrow, when he $.
Philip coming somewhat closer s.
Then answer'd Annie ; tenderly she s :
Saying gently ' Annie, when I s to you,
There Enoch s no word to any one,
He said to Miriam ' that you s about,
and so fell back and s no more.
Of sweet seventeen subdued me ere she s)
while she s, I saw where James Made toward us,
I know not, for he s not.
While thus he s, his hearers wept ;
s with me on the shore ;
Why were you silent when I s to-night ?
your rough voice (You s so loud)
Petulant she s, and at herself she laugh'd ;
Thus he s, Part banter, part affection.
At last I s. ' My father, let me go.
She s, and bowing waved Dismissal :
s of those That lay at wine with Lar and Lucumo ;
it was duty s, not I.
I s of war to come and many deaths.
She s and tum'd her sumptuous head
I s not then at first, but watch'd
And then stood up and s impetuously,
being caught feign death, S not, nor stirr'd.
Yet she neither s nor moved.
Ida 5 not, rapt upon the child.
Ida s not, gazing on the ground,
But Ida stood nor s, drain'd of her force
Old studies f ail'd ; seldom she s :
Hortensia s against the tax ;
Who s few words and pithy.
But s not, rapt in nameless reverie,
He s among you, and the Man who s ;
Who never s against a foe ;
I started, and s I scarce knew how ;
Till I with as fierce an anger s,
s of a hope for the world in the coming wars —
Perforce she stay'd, and overtaken s.
Half inwardly, half audibly she s.
He s and fell to work again.
Prince and Earl Yet s together,
if he s at all, would break perforce
He s, and one among his gentlewomen
He s, and Enid easily believed,
he s Closed his death-drowsing eyes,
He s in words part heard,
Lancelot s And answer'd him at full,
He s, and vanish'd suddenly from the field
s, he answer'd not. Or short and coldly,
passionately she s : ' I have gone mad.
While he s She neither blush'd nor shook,
thus he s, half tum'd away, the Queen
Then freely s Sir Lancelot to them all :
and even as he s Fell into dust,
s, and taking all his younger knights,
He s, he tum'd, then, flinging round her
neck,
S loudly even into my irunost heart
she s ' Here ! and how came I here ? '
What was it ? for our lover seldom s,
That faithful servant whom we s about.
Sir Richard s and he laugh'd,
I s it — told her of my passion,
when we parted, Edith s no word,
while I s The crowd's roar feU
When he s of his tropical home
And he s not — only the storm ;
Talking Oak 14
294
Golden Year 75
Day-Dm., Revival 19
Edward Gray 5
The Letters 37
Enoch Arden 40
156
398
422
448
667
805
914
The Brook 113
116
Aylmer's Field 213
722
Sea Dreams 264
268
281
Princess, Pro. 153
166
t68
n99
128
308
Hi 150
ivl52
339
418
t)109
vi8
220
227
vi266
vii 31
127
Con. 94
108
Ode on Well. 178
185
Grandmother 43
Mavd II i 17
„ /// vi 11
Gareth and L. 764
Mart, of Geraint 109
292
385
Geraint and E. 12
686
874
BaHn and Balan 630
Merlin and V. 839
Lancelot and E. 285
508
886
930
964
1197
1289
Holy Grail 435
Last Tournament 126
749
Lover's Tale i 428
iv 96
225
342
The Revenge 32
Sisters (E. and E.) 146
215
Columbus 12
The Wreck 71
103
Spoke (continued) For He s, or it seem'd that He s, Despair 26
' Ah God ' tho' I felt as I s „ 52
From darkness into dayUght, tum'd and s. Ancient Sage 8
We s of what has been Most marvellous Pro. to Gen. Hamley 10
for he s and the people heard, " Dead Prophet 33
No voice for either s within my heart The Ring 162
And s no more, but tum'd and pass'd away. „ 342
Spoken (See also Fairest-spoken, Fair-spoken, Eree-spoken,
Low-spoken) High things were s there, Alexander 12
would have s, but be found not words, M. d' Arthur 172
was it not well to speak, To have s once ? Love and Duty 56
Down they dropt — no word was s — , The Captain 51
I would have s. And wam'd that madman Vision of Sin 55
had not his poor heart S with That, Enoch Arden 619
you shall say that having s with me, Aylmer's Field 311
so she would have s, but there rose A hubbub Princess iv 475
And every s tongue should lord you. „ 544
And out of hauntings of my s love, „ vii 109
sweet soul, had hardly s a word, Maud II i 11
Hath s also, not in jest. Com. of Arthur 420
he fain had s to her, And loosed in words Geraint and E. 105
I heard He had s evil of me ; Balin and Balan 58
Said Arthur ' Thou hast ever s truth ; „ 73
half her realm, had never s word. Lancelot and E. 72
is there more ? Has Arthur s aught ? „ 117
Then every evil word I had s once. Holy Grail 371
as ye saw it ye have s truth. „ 880
would have s, but he found not words ; Pass, of Arthur 340
s of with tearful smiles ; Lover's Tale ii 182
To one who had not s, Lionel. ,. iv 272
The spectre that will speak if s to. ,, 337
Than ha' s as kind as you did, First Quarrel 73
you never have s a word. Rizpah 14
When was age so cramm'd with menace ?
madness ? written, s lies ? Locksley H., Sixty 108
in every language I hear s, people praise thee, Akhar's D., Inscrip. 1
And had some prophet s true Mechanophilus 25
Sponge Huge s's of millennial growth The Kraken 6
Sponged S and made blank of crimeful record St. S. Stylites 158
Spongy-wet Is hoar with rime, or s-w ; To F. D. Maurice 42
Sport (s) But take it — earnest wed with s, Day-Dm., Ep. 11
so that s Went hand in hand with Science ; otherwhere
Pure s : Princess, Pro. 79
Lilia, wild with s, Half child half woman „ 100
Or master'd by the sense of s, „ iv 156
— the striplings ! — for their s ! — „ v 399
The s half-science, fill me with a faith, „ Con. 76
Me the s of ribald Veterans, Boddicea 50
He mixt in all our simple s's ; In Mem. Ixxxix 10
and loud With s and song, in booth and tent, .. xcmii 28
The s of random sun and shade. „ Con. 24
Or when the thralls had 5 among themselves. Gareth and L. 516
Began to break her s's with graver fits, Merlin and V. 180
Your pretty s's have brighten'd all again. „ 305
Brake up their s's, then slowly to her bower
Parted, Last Tournament 238
on love And s and tilts and pleasure, Guinevere 387
Sport (verb) came To s beneath thy boughs. Talking Oak 100
And hence, indeed, she s's with words. In Mem. xlviii 9
Spot A s of dull stagnation, without light Palace of Art 245
So find I every pleasant s In Mem. viii 9
Spotless The saintly youth, the s lamb of Christ, Merlin and V. 749
Spousal and one The later-rising Sun of s Love, Prin. Beatrice 6
Spouse Worthy a Roman s.' D. of F. WomenlQ^
Came Hope and Memory, s and bride, On a Mourner 23
If ever maid or s. As fair as my Olivia, Talking Oak 34
With only Fame for s and your great deeds Princess Hi 242
Spout (s) little wide-mouth'd heads upon the s Godiva 56
s whereon the gilded ball Danced like a wisp : Princess, Pro. 63
Spout (verb) S from the maiden fountain in her heart. Lucretius 240
Spouted that sonorous flow Of s fountain-floods. Palace of Art 28
golden gorge of dragons s forth „ 23
monster s his foam-fountains in the sea. Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 107
Till the fountain s, showering wide Vision of Sin 21
foimtains s up and showering down Princess i 218
Spouting
673
Spring
Spouting as a stream that « from a cliff
Sprang Who s from English blood !
S from the midrifi of a prostrate king —
s No dragon warriors from Cadmean teeth,
yell'd again Half-sufEocated, and s up,
And from it s the Commonwealth,
Out I 5 from glow to gloom :
And out of stricken helmets s the fire.
Guinevere 608
England and Amer. 10
Aylmer's Field 16
Lucretius 49
58
241
Princess iv 178
V 495
tum'd half-roimd to Psyche as she s To meet it, ., vi 209
To the altar-stone she s alone, The Victim 67
S up for ever at a touch, In Mem. cxii 10
Gawain went, and breaking into song S out, Com. of Arthur 321
He laugh'd ; he «. Gareth and L. 537
but forth that other s, And, all unknightlike, 1149
5 the happier day from underground ; „ 1421
ground his teeth together, 5 with a yell, Balin and Balan 538
the blood S to her face and fill'd her with
delight; Lancelot and E. 377
An outraged maiden s into the hall Holy Grail 208
rotten with a hundred years of death, S into fire : .. 497
S into fire and vanish'd, ., 506
I burst the chain, I s into the boat. 807
Forth s Gawain, and loosed him from his bonds, Pelleas and E. 315
S from the door into the dark. „ 603
but s Thro' open doors, and swording right Last Tournament 472
current to the fountain whence it s, — Lover's Tale i 503
<S up a friendship that may help us yet. „ iv 144
he s from the oldest race upon earth. V. of Maddv/ne 4
s without leaf or a thorn from the bush ; „ 44
A panther s across her path. Death of Qinone 89
Tum'd him again to boy, for up he s, St. Telemachus 58
I *■ from my seat, I wept. Charity 37
Rang the stroke, and s the blood, The Tourney 9
Spray (foam) tender curving lines of creamy s ; Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 62
Tom from the fringe of s. D. of F. Women 40
of hissing s wind-driven Far thro' the dizzy dark. Lover's Tale ii 198
and bosom'd the burst of the s, V. of Maeldune 103
the ripple would hardly blanch into s The Wreck 137
f^pray (twig) {See also Holly-spray) From s, and branch,
and stem. Talking Oak 190
The snake slipt ifnder a s. Poet's Song 10
touchwood, with a single flourishing s. Aylmer's Field 512
a song on every s Of birds that piped Princess v 238
faces flat against the panes, S's grated, Balin and Balan 345
Blinkt the white mom, s's grated, „ 385
{See also Gravel-spread) s his sheeny vans for
flight ; Love and Death 8
' Still sees the sacred morning s Two Voices 80
That every cloud, that s's above And veileth love, „ 446
Hath time and space to work and s. You ask me, why, etc. 16
So muscular he s, so broad of breast. Gardener's D. 8
A cedar s his dark-green layers of shade. ., 116
S the light haze along the river-shores, ,, 264
hope ere death S's more and more St. S. Stylites 157
The life that s's in them. Talking Oak 192
' Then close and dark my arms Is, „ 225
S upward till thy boughs discern ,, 247
light shall s, and man be Uker man Golden Year 35
But o'er the dark a glory s's. Sir Galahad 55
To s into the perfect fan. Sir L. and Q. G. 17
The chap-fallen circle s's : Vision of Sin 172
He woke, he rose, he s his arms abroad Enoch Arden 912
To s the Word by which himself had thriven.' Sea Dreams 197
and the branches thereupon S out at top. Princess iv 206
A rampant heresy, such as if it s „ 411
S thy full wings, and waft him o'er. In Mem. ix 4
s his mantle dark and cold, „ xxii 14
Proclaiming social truth shall s, „ cxxvii 5
And o'er the friths that branch and s „ Con. 115
over whom thy darkness must have s Mavd I xviii 25
Dubric s his hands and spake. Com. of Arthur 471
boil'd the flesh, and s the board, Marr. of Geraint 391
S the slow smile thro' all her company. Pelleas and E. 95
Lower down S's out a little lake. Lover's Tale i 534
I s mine arms, God's work, I said. Sir J. Oldcastle 136
Spread (continued) call'd the heavens a hide, a tent S over
earth, Columbus 48
hope was mine to s the Catholic faith, „ 230
to stay, Not s the plague, the famine ; Demeter and P. 134
and to s the Divine Faith Like calming oil Akbar's Dream 159
Spreadeth Which the moon about her s, Margaret 20
Spreading s made Fantastic plume or sable pine ; The Voyage 43
peaks they stand ever s and heightening ; Parnassus 11
Sprig Blow, flute, and stir the stiff -set s's, Am/phion 63
s's of summer laid between the folds, Marr. of Geraint 138
Sprightly at first She play'd about with slight and s talk, Merlin and V. 171
Spring (elastic contrivance) a-joompin' about ma as if
they was set upo' s's, Spinster's S's. 89
Spring (fountain) Life of the fountain there, beneath
Its salient s's, Sufp. Confessions 56
Do beating hearts of salient s's Adeline 26
Fresh-water s's come up through bitter brine. // / were loved 8
The s's of life, the depths of awe, Two Voices 140
Who sets her pitcher underneath the s, Enoch Arden 207
(If Death so taste Lethean s's). In Mem. xliv 10
Wliile yet beside its vocal s's .. Ixiv 22
Nor ever drank the inviolate s ,. xc 2
The bitter s's of anger and fear ; Maud / a; 49
Brethren, to right and left the s, Balin and Balan 25
In mine own lady palms I cuU'd the s Merlin and V. 273
Flow back again imto my slender s Lover's Tale i 147
runnel in the s Had liveried them all over. „ ii 49
as we sat by the gurgle of s's, V. of Maeldune 89
who found Beside the s's of Dirc6, Tiresias 14
the s's Of Dirc6 laving yonder battle-plain, „ 138
Spring (rise) 'tween the s and downfall of the light, St. S. Stylites 110
Spring (season) But s, a new comer, A s rich and
strange, Nothing will Die 21
S will come never more. All Things will Die 15
the breathing s Of Hope and Youth. The Poet 27
(S Letters cowslips on the hill ? Adeline 61
Sweet as new buds in S. D. of F. Women 272
Yet, tho' I spared thee all the s. The Blackbird 9
Caught in the frozen palms of S. „ 24
But in these latter s's I saw Talking Oak 75
Like those blind motions of the S, „ 175
In the S a fuller crimson comes upon the robin's
breast ; Locksley Hall 17
In the 8 the wanton lapwing gets himself another crest ; .. 18
In the S a livelier iris changes on the bumish'd dove ; 19
In the S a young man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts
..20
36
Sir L. and Q. G. 3
23
Princess v 2iyi
vies
Window, Winter 17
„ No Answer 23
In Mem. xxiii 19
xxxviii 6
no
livid
Ixix 1
Ixxxv 70
120
cxv 18
Gareth and L. 2
Merlin and V. 557
Holy Grail 19
Lover's Tale i 314
724
In the Child. Hosp. 37
V. of Maeldune 38
Locksley H., Sixty 22
Vastness 29
To Mary Boyle 20
Prog, of Spring 2
5
22
2 U
of love,
throng'd my pulses with the fullness of the S.
The maiden S upon the plain
She seem'd a part of joyous S ;
a thousand rings of S In every bole.
Shall strip a hundred hollows bare of S,
My s is all the nearer,
S is here with leaf and grass :
And all the secret of the S
The herald melodies of s,
And men the flies of latter s,
And every winter change to s.
I dream'd there would be S no more,
S that swells the narrow brooks.
As not imlike to that of S.
and in my breast S wakens too ;
in a showerful s Stared at the spate.
Hath earnest in it of far s's to be.
I have seen this yew-tree smoke, S after s,
the s Pour with such sudden deluges of light
recalling fragrance and the green Of the dead s
are all they can know of the 5,
For the S and the middle Summer sat
winter sunset fairer than a mom of S.
S and Simimer and Autumn and Winter,
spring-flower I send. This song of s,
S slides hither o'er the Southern sea,
Come, S, for now from aU the dripping eaves
Come, S ! She comes on waste and wood,
Spring
674
Squire
ISpring (season) (coiUinued) Come, S ! She comes, and
Earth is glad Prog, of Spriiuf 48
reads thy gradual process. Holy S. „ 106
Bright in S, Living gold ; The Oak 4
^cing (verb) It s's on a level of bowery lawn, Poet's Mind 31
ringing, s's from brand and mail ; Sir Galahad 54
she whose elfin prancer s's By night Sir L. and Q. G. 33
a tiger-cat In act to s. Princess ii 451
We were as prompt to s against the pikes, .. Hi 286
Then s's the crowning race of humankind. ,, vii 295
sober freedom out of which there s's Ode on Well. 164
Lo, as a dove when up she s's In Mem. xii 1
Let him, the wiser man who s's Hereafter, ,, cxx 9
the spear s, and good horse reel, Gareth and L. 523
I s Like flame from ashes.' „ 545
I s from loftier lineage than thine OMn.' ,. 961
and dips and s's For ever ; ,, 1146
earthly heats that s and sparkle out Holy Grail 33
shivers, ere he s's and kills. Pelleas and E. 286
Ready to s, waiting a chance : . Guinevere 12
Wilt s to me, and claim me thine, ,, 565
flowers o' Jeroosilim blossom an' s from the grass. Tomorrow 89
S from his fallen God, " Detneter and P. 80
For Thought into the outward s's, Mechanophilus 11
Spring-flower ' S-F's' ! While you still delay To Mary Boyle 1
' I come with your s-f's.' ,, 17
Take then this s-f I send, „ 19
Springing took root, and s forth anew The Poet 21
S alone With a shrill inner sound, The Mermaid, 19
Gareth, lightly s from his knees, Gareth and L. 556
Smote by the fresh beam of the s east ; M. d' Arthur 214
Smote by the fresh beam of the s east ; Pass, of Arthur 382
Fresh s from her fountains in the brain, Lover's Tale i 83
From buried grain thro' s blade, Demeter and P. 146
Sprinkled sheath with jewels on it S about in gold Aylmer's Field 221
and the blood Was s on your kirtle. Princess ii 274
The household Fury s with blood Maud I xix 32
the dullness of the s brook Smote on my brows. Lover's Tale i 633
Sprouted manlike, but his brows Had s. Princess iv 205
Of s thistle on the broken stones Marr. of Geraint 314
Sprang The tall flag-flowers when they s Miller's D. 53
but the foe s his mine many times, Def. of Lucknow 31
two mines by the enemy s „ 54
Spnn wheels of Time S round in station, Love and Duty 76
The petty cobwebs we have s : In Mem. cxxiv 8
Spur (s) From s to plume a star of tournament, M. d' Arthur 223
up we rose, and on the s we went. Gardener's D. 32
on the s she fled ; and more We know not, — Princess i 151
Prick'd by the Papal s, we rear'd, Third of Feb. 27
For tho' it seems my s's are yet to win, Marr. of Geraint 128
Now with dug s and raving at himself, Balin and Balan 310
from s to plume Red as the rising sun Lancelot and E. 307
Set lance m rest, strike s, „ 456
that dishonour done the gilded s, Last Tournament 435
From s to plume a star of tournament. Pass, of Arthur 391
Spur (verb) desire That s's an imitative will. In Mem. ex 20
Spu^re niilk From burning s, honey from hornet-combs. Last Tournament 357
Spurn would not s Good counsel of good friends. Sir J. Oldcastle 145
• The heart of the father will s her,' The Wreck 99
let them s me from the doors. The Flight 55
The mango s the melon at his foot ? Akbar's Bream 39
Spum'd S by this heir of the Uar — Maud I xix 78
I So mock'd, so s, so baited two whole days — Sir J. Oldcastle 163
Spumer trickster And « of treaties — Batt. of Brunanburh 80
Spuming S a shatter'd fragment of the God, St. Telemachus 16
S^urr'd But s at heart with fieriest energy To J. M. K. 7
glaring, by his own stale devil s, Aylmer's Field 290
last I s ; I felt my veins Stretch vrith fierce heat ; Princess v 537
take my charger, fresh, Not to be s, Gareth and L. 1301
8 with his terrible war-cry ; Geraint and E. 170
what knight soever s Against us, Baiin and Balan 66
And toward him s, and hail'd him, Holy Grail 637
And you s your fiery horse, Havpy 76
Spurt A sudden s of woman's jealousy,- — Merlin and V. 524
lettering s thro' the hedge of splinter'd teeth. Last Tournament 65
Spy (s) harry me, petty s And traitress.' Guinevere 360 ,
what are you ? do you come as a s ? Rizpah 11
yes — a lady — none of their spies — „ 15
Death — for their spies were among us, Def. of Lticknow 19
Spy (verb) Whither fly ye, what game s ye, Rosalind 8 ,
get you a seaman's glass, S out my face, Enoch Arden 2161
to s The weakness of a people or a house, Aylmer's Field 5691
embower the nest, Some boy would s it.' Princess, Pro. 1481
he scarce could s the Christ for Saints, Balin and Balan 409'
To s some secret scandal if he might, Guinevere 26 '
she thought, ' He spies a field of death ; „ 134 j
they would s us out of the town. Rizpah 5
She spies the summer thro' the winter bud. Ancient Sage 74
She ofiens 'ud s summut wrong Owd Rod 70
I s nor term nor bound. Mechanophilus 20
Squabble lulling random s's when they rise, Holy Grail 557
Squad (mud) neck-an-crop soomtimes slaape down i'
the s North. Cobble 20 I
as iver traapes'd i' the s. Owd Rod 72 \
Squadron S's and squares of men in brazen plates, D. of F. Women 33 j
embattled squares. And s's of the Prince, Princess v 247 !
Squalid Mated with a s savage — what to me were sun
or cUme ? Locksley Hall 177 1
one sleek'd the s hair, One kiss'd his hand, Death of (Enone 57 \
Squall s nor storm Could keep me from that Eden Gardener's D. 190 j
thro' the gray skirts of a lifting s Enoch Arden 829
Squall 'd The parrot scream'd, the peacock s, Day-Dm., Revival 12 1
Square (See also Garden-square) and s's of men in
brazen plates, D. of F. Women 33 1
All the land in flowery s's. Gardener's D. 76 j
By s's of tropic summer shut Amphion 87
The ruddy s of comfortable light, Enoch Arden 12%
Flourish'd a little garden s and wall'd : „ 734
Muses of the cube and s Princess, Pro. 180
casement slowly grows a ghmmering s ; ,, w 52
embattled s's. And squadrons of the Prince, ,. v 246
Dash'd on every rocky s Their surging charges Ode on Well. 125
They call'd me in the public s's In Mem. Ixix 11
maze of quick About the flowering s's, „ cxv 3
And I loathe the s's and streets, Maud II iv 92
The massive s of his heroic breast, Marr. of Geraint lb
A s of text that looks a little blot, Merlin and V. 671
And every s of text an awful charm, „ 673
A thousand s's of corn and meadow, The Ring 149
And from the thousand s's, „ 153
Squared In each a s lawn, wherefrom The golden gorge
of dragons Palace of Art 22
Square-set A s-s man and honest ; Holy Grail 703
Squaw Nor stunted s's of West or East ; Princess ii 78
Squealing See A-squealin'
Squeedg'd (squeezed) An' tha s my 'and i' the shed, Spinster s S's. 39
Squeezed {See also Squeedg'd) he had s himself
betwixt the bars. Princess, Pro. 112
Squench I'll coom an' I'll s the light, Owd Rod 117
Squire {See also Squoire) Late-left an orphan of the s, Miller's D. 34
' That was the four-year-old I sold the S.' The Brook 137
the S had seen the colt at grass, „ 139
slain with laughter roU'd the gilded S. Princess v 22
Our ponderous s will give A grand political diimer Maud I xx 24
Gareth hearing from a s of Lot Gareth and L. 531
shook his drowsy s awake and cried, Marr. of Geraint 125
page, and maid, and s, and seneschal, „ 710
Hung at his belt, and hurl'd it toward the s. Geraint and E. 23
and the s Chafing his shoulder : ., 26
In silence, did him service as a s ; „ 406
Vivien, with her S. Balin and Balan 439
Then turning to her S ' This fire of Heaven, „ 456
Drew the vague glance of Vivien, and her S ; „ 464
and my s Hath in him small defence ; „ 476
But snatch'd a sudden buckler from the S, ,. 554
Then to her S mutter'd the damsel ' Fools ! „ 564
And when the S had loosed them, „ 575
Then the gentle S ' I hold them happy, „ 580
And found a fair young s who sat alone. Merlin and T'. 472
twice to-day. I am your s ! ' Lancelot and E. 384
Squire
675
Stamp'd-Stampt
Squire (continued) and their three s's across their feet : Pelleas and E. 431
vioesn not touch thy 'at to the S ; ' North. Cobbler 25
An' S, his oan very sen, walks down fro' the 'All „ 91
fur New jS' coom'd last night. Village Wife 1
I liked the owd S an' 'is gells „ 6
the S an' 'is darters an' me, „ 7
new S's coom'd wi' 'is taail in 'is 'and, an' owd S's
gone, (repeat) ,. 14, 121
We'd anew o' that wi' the S, „ 24
Fur (S wur a Varsity scholard, „ 25
An' S wur hallus a-smilin', „ 33
ivry darter o' S's hed her awn ridiia-erse „ 35
An' S 'e smiled an' 'e smiled (repeat) ,, 61, 88
But S wur afear'd o' 'is son, „ 63
bootiks, I ha' see'd 'em, belong'd to the S, „ 71
And S were at CharUe agean „ 74
Hallus a soft un S I „ 89
rattled down upo' poor owd S i' the wood, „ 95
Fur I'd ha done owt for the S „ 112
sound and honest, rustic S, Locksley H., Sixty 239
Till I dream'd 'at S walkt in, an' I says to him
' S, ya're laate,' Owd Rod 55
an' not the faults o' the S. Church-warden, etc. 46
Squireling political dinner To half the s's near ; Mavd I xx 26
Squirrel And snared the s of the glen ? Princess ii 249
merry linnet knew me. The s knew me, Lover's Tale ii 16
While s's from our fiery beech Pro. to Gen. Hamley 3
Squoire (Squire) Thaw a iaiaws I hallus voated wi' S N. Farmer, 0. S. 15
wi' haate hoonderd haacre o' S's, „ 44
An' S 'uU be sa mad an' all — „ 47
I 'a managed for S coom Michaelmas thutty year. „ 48
Fur they knaws what I bean to <S „ 55
I done moy duty by S „ 56
S's i' Lunnon, an' summun I reckons „ 57
Staain'd (stained) An' the taiible « wi' 'is aale, Spinster's S's. 99
Staate (state) voated wi' Squoire an' choorch an' s, N. Farmer, 0. S. 15
I tbowt shall I chaiinge my s ? Spinster's S's. 44
I thowt if the S was a gawin' Owd Rod 45
Staate (estate) Fur 's be i' taail, my lass : Village Wife 15
I've gotten the 's by the taail „ 68
Stab (s) deathful s's were dealt apace, Oriana 50
Stab (verb) Uttle boys begin to shoot and s. Princess, Con. 61
I was not going to s you. Bandit's Death 6
Stabb'd They should have s me where I lay, (repeat) Oriana 55, 60
Three times I s him thro' and thro'. The Sisters 29
She would have s him ; Merlin and V. 853
' S thro' the heart's affections to the heart ! „ 868
bride who s her bridegroom on her bridal night — • The Flight 57
and he s my Piero with this. Bandit's Death 10
Stable a s wench Came running at the call. Princess i 226
they ran To loose him at the s's, Aylmer's Field 126
brute rejoicing in my hounds, and in my s, By an Evolution. 7
Staff (See also Sceptre-staff) he struck his s against
the rocks Golden Year 59
is a straight s bent in a pool ; High. Pantheism 16
Shot thro' the s or the halyard, Def. of Lucknow 5
the carven s — and last the light, Columbus 74
Stage actor mouth his last upon the s. Locksley H., Sixty 152
this Earth, a s so gloom'd with woe The Play 1
Stagger ' I s in the stream : Princess vi 321
And s's blindly ere she sink ? In Mem. xvi 14
I s at the KorAn and the sword. Akbar's Dream 71
Stagger'd S and shook, holding the branch, Enoch Arden 767
s thy strong Gawain in a tilt For pastime ; Gareth and L. 542
Into the hall s, his visage ribb'd Last Tournament 57
the ship s imder a thunderous shock, The Wreck 107
shock upon shock S the mass from without, Heavy Brigade 59
Staggering and s back With stroke on stroke Princess v 522
Staghom-moss brought you down A length of s-m, Romney's R. 79
Stagnant A black yew gloom'd the s air. The Letters 2
Stagnate But s's in the weeds of sloth : In Mem. xxvii 11
As one that let foul wrong s and be, Geraint and E. 891
Stagnation A spot of dull s, without light Palace of Art 245
Stag-tuckey (turkey-cock) An' 'e tom'd as red as a
s-t's wattles, Churchwarden, etc, 31
Staid (See also Stay'd) I had not s so long to tell you all. Gardener's D. 242
Staid (adj.) Altho' a grave and s God-fearing man, Enoch Arden 112
Stain (s) Some s or blemish in a name of note, Merlin and V. 832
to have loved One peerless, without s : Lancelot and E. 1091
Stain (verb) And I, ' Can clouds of nature 5 In Mem. Ixxxv 85
Stain'd (See also Staain'd, Many-stain'd) deep-set
windows, s and traced, Palace of Art 49
Stainless But she, a s wife to Gorlois, Com. of Arthur 194
King That morn was married, while in s white, ,, 456
Would mar their charm of s maidenhood.' Balin and Ralan 268
Thy blessing, s King ! Merlin and V. 54
O Heaven's own white Earth-angel, s bride of s King — .. 81
A s man beside a s maid ; .. 737
Arthur, blameless King and s man ? ' ,,779
0 selfless man and s gentleman, „ 792
her bloom A rosy dawn kmdled in s heavens, Pelleas and E. 72
White-robed in honour of the s child. Last Tournament 147
Thro' her high hill-passes of s snow, Dead Prophet 47
Stair (See also Altar-stairs, Tower-stairs) Broad-based
flights of marble s's Arabian Nights 117
The rock rose clear, or winding s. Palace of Art 10
up the corkscrew s With hand and rope Walk, to the Mail 90 "
his footsteps smite the threshold s's St. S. Stylites 191
adown the s Stole on ; Godiva 48
His golden feet on those empurpled s's Liicretitis 135
And up a flight of s's into the hall. Princess ii 31
A column'd entry shone and marble s's, „ v 364
And me they bore up the broad s's, „ vi 374
And liigh above a piece of turret s, Marr. of Geraint 320
All up the marble s, tier over tier, Lancelot and E. 1248
Then from the boat I leapt, and up the s's. Holy Grail 819
Or ghostly footfall echoing on the s. Guinevere 507
Adown a natural s of tangled roots. Lover's Tale i 527
and climb'd The moulder'd s's „ iv 137
1 stood upon the s's of Paradise. Sisters (E. and E.) 144
as far as the head of the s. In the Child. Hosp. 43
A stealthy foot upon the s ! The Flight 70
an' the mud o' 'is boots o' the s's, Spinster's S's. 99
tummled up s's, fur I 'eard 'im, Owd Rod 63
' But the s's is afire,' she said ; „ 80
And glided lightly down the s's, St. Telemachus 59
Stairway down from this a lordly s sloped Gareth and L. 669
The s to the hall ; and look'd and saw Last Tournament 757
Stake (verb) I'll s my ruby ring upon it you did.' Princess, Pro. 170
Stake (s) To the thumbscrew and the s, The Revenge 21
And the s and the cross-road, fool, Despair 116
I shudder at the Christian and the s ; Akbar's Dream 72
Stale a fool. Raw, yet so s ! ' Pelleas and E. 114
Him, glaring, by his o«ti s devil spurr'd, Aylmer's Field 290
Staled iS by frequence, shrunk by usage Locksley H., Sixty 76
Stalk Earthward he boweth the heavy s's A spirit haunts 7
And these are but the shatter'd s's. In Mem. Ixxxii 7
Stall and even beasts have s's, St. S. Stylites 109
The s's are void, the doors are wide, Sir Galahad 31
A man upon a s may find. In Mem. Ixxvii 9
Take him to s, and give him corn, Marr. of Geraint 371
Enid took his charger to the s ; „ 382
Stall'd s his horse, and strode across the court, Balin and Balan 341
Stalling chamber for the night, And s for the horses, Geraint and E. 239
Stalwart on free feet Set him, a s Baron, Arthur's friend. Gareth and L. 818
but afterwards He made a s knight. Merlin and V. 482
Stamford-town Burleigh-house by S-t. L. of Burleigh 92
Stammer That made my tongue so s and trip Maud I vi 83
left him leave to s, ' Is it indeed ? ' Lancelot and E. 420
Stammer'd I s that I knew him — could have wish'd — Princess Hi 206
and when she spake to him, S, Pelleas and E. 85
Stammering s ' scoundrel ' out of teeth that groimd Aylmer's Field 328
deafen'd with the s cracks and claps That foUow'd, Merlin and V. 942
on the border of her couch they sat S and staring. Guinevere 102
Stamp Which s's the caste of Vere de Vere. L. C. V. de Vere 40
meant to s him with her master's mark ; Merlin and V. 759
I could s my image on her heart ! Sisters (E. and E.) 195
Stamp'd-Stampt And the leaf is stamp'ci in clay. Vision of Sin 82
Stampt all into defacement, Balin and Halan 541
Stamp'd with the image of the King ; Holy Grail 27
Stamp'd-Stampt
676
Star
Stamp'd-Stampt (eoivtinued) Stampt into dust — tremulous,
all awry, Bomney's B. 113
Stan' S 'im theer i' the naiime o' the Lord North. Cobbler 73
(S 'im theer, fur I'U lootik my hemiemy .. 74
S 'im theer i' the winder, .. 75
theer 'e s's an' theer 'e shall s ,. 95
'e can naither s nor goa. Owd Boa 2
moor good sense na the Parliament man 'at s's fur us 'ere, „ 13
if 'e could but s fur the Shere. „ 14
British farmers to s agean o' their feeat. „ 46
Stanch'd bare him in, There s his wound ; Lancelot and E. 520
Stand {See also Stan') Truth may s forth unmoved
of change, Supp. Confessions 144:
That s beside my father's door.
Where you s you cannot hear From the groves
Which s's in the distance yonder :
S's in the sun and shadows all beneath,
I s before thee, Eleanore ;
To s apart, and to adore,
I will s and mark.
Us, who s now, when we should aid the right — •
Hope at Beauty's call would perch and s,
Or at the casement seen her s ?
Gargarus S's up and takes the morning :
There s's a spectre in your hall :
charm'd and tied To where he s's, —
That her fair fonn may s and shine,
half s's up And bristles ;
saw An angel s and watch me, as I sang.
That s within the chace.
young beech That here beside me s's,
Than that earth should s at gaze
And when the tide of combat s's.
See the lordly castles s :
Ring'd with the azure world, he s's.
When all the wood s's in a mist of green,
there S's Philip's farm where brook and river meet
S's at thy gate for thee to grovel to —
Shall s : ay surely : then it fails at last
Or like a spire of land that s's apart
That beat to battle where he s's ;
' S_, who goes ? ' ' Two from the palace ' I.
this is all, I s upon her side :
see how you s Stifi as Lot's wife.
Let his great example s Colossal,
these in our Thermopylae shall s,
To break the blast of winter, s ;
and I 5 on the slope of the hill,
' And all the phantom. Nature, s's —
Dark house, by which once more I s
we may s Where he in English earth is laid.
Or in the furrow musing s's ;
leave This laurel, let this holly s :
From form to form, and nothing s's ;
And six feet two, as I think, he s's ;
Yet I thought I saw her s.
Did he s at the diamond door Of his house
glory of manhood s on his ancient height,
shall the shield of Mark s among these ? '
There s's the third fool of their allegory.'
And ride with him to battle and s by.
Am I so bold, and could I so s by,
good knight's horse s's in the court ;
S aside. And if I fall, cleave to the better man.'
But if a man who s's upon the brink
s's Vacant, but thou retake it.
Let be : ye s, fair lord, as in a dream.'
I saw That maiden Saint who s's with lily in hand
Set up the charge ye know, to s or fall ! '
saw him, after, s High on a heap of slain,
she seem'd to s On some vast plain
S's in a wind, ready to break and fly,
yonder s's, Modred, unharm'd,
To « a shadow by their shining doors,
nay but thirty-nine have risen and s.
Ode to Memory 57
Poet's Mind 19
30
Love and Death 11
Eleanore 69
79
To J. M. K. 14
Poland 13
Caress'd or chidden 3
L. of Shalotti 25
Qinone 11
L. C. V. de Vere 42
D. of F. Women 194
Of old sat Freedom 21
Walk, to the Mail 31
St. S. Stylites 35
Talking Oak 4
. ,. 142
Locksley Hall 180
Sir Galahad 10
L. of Burleigh 18
The Eagle 3
The Brook 14
38
Aylmer's Field 652
Lucretius 264
Princess iv 281
578
v3
291
vi 240
Ode on Well. 220
Third of Feb. 47
To F. D. Maurice 22
Window, On the Hill 9
In Mem. Hi 9
vii 1
xviii 1
Ixiv 27
co2
cxxiii 6
Maud I xiii 10
//i38
ii 16
„ III vi 21
Gareth and L. 403
1085
Marr. of Geraint 94
102
370
Geraint and E. 151
472
Balin and Balan 78
258
261
Merlin and V. 703
Lancelot and E. 306
Guinevere 76
365
Pass, of Arthur 152
Lwer's Tale i 731
Sir J. Oldcastle 83
Stand (continued) but scarcely could s upright, F. of Maeldune 73
Could that s forth, and like a statue, Tiresias 82
Thebes thro' thee shall s Firm-based „ 141
Helen's Towee, here I s, Helen's Tower 1
Canning, s among our best And noblest, Epit. on Stratford 1
in this pleasant vale we s again, Demeter and P. 34
then here I s apart, Happy 25
When we shall s transfigured, „ 38
the height I s upon Even from myself ? s? Bomney's' B. 65
And s with my head in the zenith, Parnassus 6
peaks they s ever spreading and heightening ; „ 11
As he s's on the heights of his Ufe By an Evolution. 20
Look, he s's, Trunk and bough. The Oak 13
neither of them s's behind the screen of thy
truth- Akbar's D., Inscrip. 7
Now first we s and understand, Mechanophilus 1
Standard (ensign) With the s's of the peoples Locksley Hall 126
The struggle of s's. The rust of the javelins, Batt. of Brunanburh 87
Standard (tree) espaliers and the s's all" Are thine ;
Standest That s high above all ?
Thou s in the rising svm,
Standeth let him in That s there alone.
And s seized of that inheritance
Standin' S here be the bridge,
Standing (See also A-stanning, Standin', Stannin')
Hlies, s near Purple-spiked lavender :
the couple s side by side,
Join'd not, but stood, and s saw
Stiller than chisell'd marble, s there ;
Memory s near Cast down her eyes,
I reach'd The wicket-gate, and found her s there,
Then Philip s up said falteringly
The Virgin Mother s with her child
He, s still, was clutch'd ;
and s like a stately Pine Set in a cataract
Boadicea, s loftily charioted, (repeat)
And s, muffled round with woe,
she is s here at my head ;
And arms on which the s muscle sloped,
Then Lancelot s near, ' Sir Seneschal,
The maiden s in the dewy light.
s near the shield In silence,
thro' the casement s wide for heat,
Descending from the point and s both. There
Then some one s by my grave will say.
There s, shouted, and Pallas far away Call'd ;
And were only s at gaze,
Muriel s ever statue-like —
He ! is he s at the door,
Stannin' (standing) What atta s theer fur,
I browt what tha seeas s theer,
s theere 0' the brokken stick ;
Stanza those three s's that you made
Star (s) (Sec also Beacon-star, Brother-star, Evening-
star, Morning-star, Pilot-star, Sun-star) Distinct
with vivid s's inlaid.
Sole s of all that place and time.
Was cloven with the miUion s's
With golden s's above ;
the shepherd who watcheth the evening s.
There would be neither moon nor s ;
Neither moon nor s.
You are the evening s, alway Eemaining
What songs below the waning s's The lion-heart,
As thou a s, in inmost heaven set,
Her heart is like a throbbing s.
Fancy sadder than a single s,
Like to some branch of s's we see
white-breasted like a s Fronting the dawn
wanton pard, Eyed like the evening s.
Between the loud stream and the trembling s's.
The Blackbird 5
Voice and the P. 10
In Mem. cxxx 3
D. of the 0. Year 50
Gareth and L. 359
Tomorrow 2
Ode to Memory 109
The Bridesmaid 5
Palace of Art 254
B. of F. Women 86
To J. S. 53
Gardener's D. 213
Enoch Arden 284
Sea Dreams 242
Princess iv 260
v 346
Boadicea 3, 70
In Mem. xiv 5
Maud II V 65
Marr. of Geraint 76
Gareth and L. 461
Lancelot and E. 352
394
1234
Lover's Tale i 411
Columbus 209
Achilles over the T. 17
Heavy Brigade 37
The Bing 266
Happy 11
N. Farmer, O. S. 65
North. Cobbler 70
Owd Boa 25
Talking Oak 135
Arabian Nights 90
152
Ode to Memory 35
The Poet 2
Dying Swan 35
The Merman 21
24
Margaret 27
Eleanore 89
Kate 9
Caress'd or chidden 13
L. of Shalott Hi 11
(Enone 57
„ 200
„ 219
and ere the s's come forth Talk with the wild Cassandra, „ 262
Sole as a fljring s shot thro' the sky Palace of Art 123
Crown'd dying day with s's, „ 184
A s that with the choral starry dance „ 25i
t
star
677
Star
i Star (s) {continued) happy s's above them seem to brighten May Queen 34
D. of F
up to Heaven and die among the s's.
Sung by the morning s of song,
Peopled the hollow dark, like burning s's,
maiden splendours of the morning s Shook
We saw the large white s's rise one by one,
this s Rose with you thro' a little arc
While the s's bum, the moons increase,
Thro' silence and the trembling s's
if Nature's evil s Drive men in manhood,
I bump'd the ice into three several s's,
cry that shiver'd to the tingling s's,
From spur to plume a s of tournament,
ere a s can wink, beheld her there.
Love's white s Beam'd thro' the thicken'd cedar
Sow'd all their mystic gulfs with fleeting s's ;
Sole s of phosphorescence in the calm,
I wake : the still s's sparkle ;
paused Among her s's to hear us ; s's that hung
Love-charm'd
To follow knowledge like a sinking s,
and the baths Of all the western s's.
Close over us, the silver s,
Ere yet they blind the s's.
And o'er them many a sliding s,
On secrets of the brain, the s's.
Draw me, thy bride, a glittering s.
And star-like mingles with the s's.
New s's all night above the brim
We parted : sweetly gleam'd the s's,
the great s's that globed themselves
I murmur under moon and s's In brambly wildernesses ; The Brook 178
Con. 40
Women 3
18
55
223
To J. S. 25
71
On a Mourner 28
Love thou thy land 73
The Epic 12
M. d' Arthur 199
223
Gardewr's D. 122
165
262
Audley Court 87
St. S. Stijlites 114
Love and Dviy 74
Ulysses 31
„ 61
Tithonus 25
39
IJaij-Dm., Depart. 13
„ L'Envoi 11
St. Agnes' Eve 23
Sir Galahad 48
The Voyage 25
The Letters 41
Enoch Arden 597
and holds her head to other s's.
Shone like a mystic s between the less
A close-set robe of jasmine sown with s's :
S to s vibrates light : may soul to soul
such a s of morning in their blue,
' if every s in heaven Can make it fair :
then I saw one lovely s Larger and larger.
crown'd with s's and high among the s's, —
Nor ever falls the least white s of snow,
For on my cradle shone the Northern s.
dry old man, without a s, Not Uke a king:
four wing'd horses dark against the s's ;
In shining draperies, headed Uke a s,
glorious names Were fewer, scatter'd s's.
The s, the bird, the fish, the shell.
Mom in the white wake of the morning s
' There sinks the nebulous s we call the Sun,
Now poring on the glowworm, now the s,
leader wildiwan in among the s's Would clang it,
those three s's of the airy Giant's zone,
The tops shall strike from s to s,
S after s, arose and fell ; but I,
Now lies the Earth all Danae to the s's.
To sit a s upon the sparkling spire ;
Lavish Honour shower'd all her s's,
Brought from under every s.
Melt into s's for the land's desire !
And whistled to the morning s.
Two bright s's Peep'd into the shell.
And look'd at by the silent s's :
The sun, the moon, the s's, the seas.
Earth, these solid s's, this weight of body
Above thee glided the s.
The valley, the voice, the peak, the s Pass,
Peak is high, and the s's are high,
the s's about the moon Look beautiful,
the s's Shine, and the Shepherd gladdens in his heart : „ 15
Taken the s's from the night Window, Gone 5
And you are his morning s. Marr. Morn. 12
■* The s's,' she whispers, ' blindly run ; In Mem. iii 5
Slide from the bosom of the s's. ., xmi 16
And orb into the perfect s - xxiv 15
Look also, Love, a brooding s, „ xlvi 15
195
Aylmer's Field 72
158
578
692
Sea Dreams 83
93
241
Lucretius 107
Princess i 4
., 117
.. 211
.. in09
„ 156
.. 383
.. iii 17
„ it) 19
„ 211
., 434
„ «260
„ vi 57
.. vii 50
., 182
„ 197
Ode on Well. 196
Ode Inter. Exhib. 25
W. to Alexandra 21
Sailor Boy 4
Minnie and Winnie 13
Lit. Squabbles 4
Hiah. Pantheism 1
5
Voice and the P. 8
27
31
Spec, of Iliad 11
Star (s) {continued) And grapples with his evil s ; In Mem. Ixiv 8
Thro' clouds that drench the morning s, „ Ixxii 22
To where in yonder orient s „ Ixxxvi 15
Before the crimson-circled s ,. Ixxxix 47
He reads the secret of the s, „ xcvii 22
Is twisting round the polar s; „ ci 12
And one the shaping of a s ; „ ciii 36
A sphere of s's about my soul, „ cxxii 1
While thou, dear spirit, happy s, „ cxxvii 18
But tho' I seem in s and flower „ cxxx 6
And brighten like the s that shook ., Con. 31
And, s and system rolling past, „ 122
sorrow seize me if ever that light be my leading s ! Maud I iv 12
you fair s's that crown a happy day .. xviii 30
Beat, happy s's, timing with things below, ., 81
like a silent lightning xmder the s's „ III vi 9
Remembering all the beauty of that s Ded. of Idylls 46
0 ye s's that shudder over me. Com. of Arthur 83
And even in high day the morning s. ., 100
thereafter foUow'd calm. Free sky and «'« : „ 392
wholesome s's of love ; Gareth and L. 314
honour shining like the dewy s Of dawn, „ 329
and thereon the morning s. „ 932
His arms, the rosy raiment, and the s. „ 938
And he that bore The s, when mounted, „ 951
And then she sang, ' O morning s ' „ 996
' O morning s that smilest in the blue, O s, my morning
dream hath proven true, „ 999
That named himself the S of Evening, „ 1090
' No s of thine, but shot from Arthur's heaven ,, 1100
so wilt thou, Sir S ; Art thou not old ? ' „ 1103
that same strength which threw the Morning S ,, 1108
a shield whereon the S of Even Half-tamish'd „ 1117
and when he saw the s Gleam, ., 1218
s shot : ' Lo,' said Gareth, ' the foe falls ! ' „ 1317
cloud that grew To thunder-gloom palling all s's, „ 1359
now by night With moon and trembling s's, Marr. of Geraint 8
His charger trampling many a prickly s „ 313
as the white and glittering s of morn „ 734
' Enid, the pilot s of my lone life, Geraint and E. 306
Kiss'd the white s upon his noble front, „ 757
or touch at night the northern s ; Balin and BaJan 166
rather seem'd a lovely baleful s Merlin and V. 262
misty s. Which is the second in a line of s's ., 508
Of some vast charm concluded in that s ., 512
Her seer, her bard, her silver s of eve, „ 954
like a s in blackest night. Lancelot and E. 1243
And peak'd wings pointed to the Northern S. Holy Grail 240
like a flying s Led on the gray-hair'd vdsdom „ 452
1 saw him like a silver s — „ 517
I saw the least of little s's Down on the waste, and
straight beyond the s I saw the spiritual city „ 524
from the s there shot A rose-red sparkle „ 529
which can trace The wandering of the s's, „ 667
The seven clear s's of Arthur's Table Rovmd — „ 684
a round in heaven, we named the s's, „ 686
Across the seven clear s's — O grace to me — „ 692
Rode till the s above the wakening sun, Fdleas and E. 500
' 0 sweet s. Pure on the virgin forehead ., 504
and the morning s ReePd in the smoke, „ 518
Peace at his heart, and gazing at a s „ 559
Dost thou know the s We call the harp Last Tournament 332
do ye see it ? do ye see the s?' „ 346
The night was dark ; the true s set. Isolt ! „ 605
s in heaven, a s within the mere ! Ay, ay, O ay, — a s „ 732
And one was water, and one s was fire, „ 736
' I f oimd Him in the shining of the s's, Pass, of Arthur 9
cry that shiver'd to the tingling s's, „ 367
From spur to plume a s of tournament, „ 391
lucid chambers of the morning s. Lover's Tale i 28
Down those loud waters, like a setting s, „ 59
Their Notions and their brightness from the s's. And
then point out the flower or the s? „ 174
Under the selfsame aspect of the s's, „ 199
Suck'd into oneness like a little s „ 308
star
678
Started
Star (s) (continued) Even then the s's Did tremble in their
stations Lover's Tale i 581
cross between their happy 5 and them ? „ 730
»''s came out far over tlie summer sea, The Revenge 56
peak sent up one league of fire to the Northern S ; V. of Maeldune 72
Rejoicing that the sun, the moon, the s's Tiresias 160
Her shadow crowu'd with s's — Ancient Sage 201
the s's went down across the gleaming pane, The Flight 13
fairest of their evening s's. Locksleij H., Sixty 188
glancing heavenward on a s so silver-fair, 191
the *S that lights a desert pathway, 275
the s's in heaven Paled, and the glory grew. Pro. to Gen. Hamley 31
A s among the s's. (repeat) Epilogue 2, 42
' The s's with head sublime,' „ 47
s that gildest yet this phantom shore ; To Virgil 26
s's are from their hands Flung thro' the woods. Early Spring 17
This order of Her Himian S, Freedom 23
hard Arabian moon And aUen s's. To Marq. of Dufferin 46
Shoot your s's to the firmament, On Jul. Q. Victoria 17
6^ of the morning, Hope in the sunrise ; Vastness 15
in vamish'd glory shine Thy s's of celandine. Prog, of Spring 39
Sphere-music of s's and of constellations. Parnassus 8
ladder-of-heaven that hangs on a s. By an Evolution. 12
many a pendent bell and fragrant s. Death of (Enone 13
s of eve was drawing light P'rom the dead sun, 64
when she woke beneath the s's. .. 82
^^'hat s could bum so low? not Ihon yet. ., 83
sphere Of west ward- wheeling s's ; St. Telemachus 32
after one quick glance upon the s's, Akbar's Dream 3
If every single s Should shriek its claim .. 42
westward — under yon slow-falling s, ,. 152
— not a s in the sky — Bandit's Death 25
Sunset and evening s. Crossing the Bar 1
Star (verb) s The black earth with brilliance"rare. Ode to Memory 19
Starboard Roll'd to s, roU'd to larboard, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 106
two upon the larboard and two upon the s lay. The Revenge 48
StaT'broider'd The silk s-b coverhd Day -Dm., Sleep. B. 9
Starcraft (Oh falsehood of all s ! ) Lover's Tale i 200
Star-crown the high s-c's of his pahns The Wreck 72
Stare (s) And, last, you fix'd a vacant s, L. C. V. de Vere 47
^^'ith a stony British s. Maud I xiii 22
that s of a beast of prey. Charity 10
Stare (verb) ' Wherefore s "ye so ? Gareth and L. 939
Painted, who s at open space, Geraint and E. 268
and the full moon s s at the snow. Rizpah 4
That all the ships of the world could s at him, „ 38
forward — naked — let them s. Locksley H., Sixty 142
That all the crowd might s. Bead Prophet 16
Stared Whereat he s, replying, half-amazed, Godiva 21
Fantastic gables, crowding, s : „ 61
And s, with his foot on the prey. Poet's Song 12
full-busted figure-head S o'er the ripple Enoch Arden 544
In much amaze he s On eyes a bashful azure. The Brook 205
as I s, a fire. The fire that left a roofless Ilion, Lucretius 64
s As blank as death in marble ; Princess i 176
S with great eyes, and laugh'd with alien lips, ., iv 119
Fear 8 in her eyes, and chalk'd her face, .. 377
aghast The women s at these, all silent, „ vi 362
in a showerful spring S at the spate. Gareth and L. 3
for 80 long a space S at the figures, „ 232
and he started up and s at her. Geraint and E. 389
the unswallow'd piece, and turning s ; „ 631
but while he s about the shrine, Balin and Balan 408
S at the priceless cognizance, „ 430
moimting on his horse S at her towers that, Pelleas and E. 457
they s at the dead that had been so valiant and true, The Revenge 105
how they s. That was their main test-question — Sir J. Oldcastle 154
and I s from every eagle-peak, Demeter and P. 68
And while she s at those dead cords Death of (Enone 10
and ever seeming s upon By ghastlier „ 70
rabble in half-amaze S at him dead, St. Telemachus 72
Staring {See also A-gawinin') and thou art s at the wall, Locksley Hall 79
The s eye glazed o'er with sapless days, Love and Duty 16
A sign to many a s shire Came crowing over Thames. WiU Water. 139
S for ever from their gilded walls Aylmer's Field 833
Staring (continued) Turn, turn thy wheel above the s
crowd ; ~ Marr. of Geraint 35ft j
All s at her in her faded silk : „ 6171
Were men and women s and aghast, Geraint and E. 804JI
all at once they found the world, S wild- wide ; Balin and Balan 59ftl
Linger'd that other, s after him; Laiicelot and E. 721 f
And s each at other like dumb men Stood, Holy Grail 19$i
on the border of her couch they sat Stammering and s. Guinevere 102^
and s wide And hungering for the gilt lever's Tale iv 312
Stark but when she saw me lying s, Princess vi 100*;
men down in the hold were most of them s and cold, The Revenge 79
S and dark in his fimeral fire. To Master of B. 20;
Stark-naked wherever she go S-n, and up or down. Dead Prophet 4ft;
Starless Walking the cold and s road of Death Uncomforted, (Enone 259
Starlight Thro' all yon s keen, St. Agnes' Eve 22-
Not of the moonlight, Not of the s ! Merlin and the G. 12r
from the lava-lake Dazing the s, Kapiolani 15
Star-like The s-l sorrows of immortal eyes, D. of F. Women 91
And s-l mingles with the stars. Sir Galahad 48'
Starling s claps his tiny castanets. Prog, of Spring 5ft^
Starr'd (See also Evil-stsurr'd) S from Jehovah's gorgeous armouries, Milton ~
tho' the rough kex break The s mosaic, Princess iv W
streak'd or s at intervals With falling brook Lover's Tale i 404
And s Avith a myriad blossom V. of Maeldune
Starry They would pelt me with s spangles and shells. The Merman 281
From under my s sea-bud crown The Mermaid Ifl
Jewel or shell, or s ore, Elednore 201
Below the s clusters bright, L. of Shalott Hi 23
Rapt after heaven's s flight. Two Voices ""
A star that with the choral s dance Join'd not, Palace of Art 2531
. The night is s and cold, my friend, D. of the 0. Year 341
Above her shook the s lights : . Of old sat Freedom 3 '
AH s culmination drop Balm-dews to bathe thy feet ! Talking Oak 267
AU heaven bursts her s floors, St. Agnes' Eve 27]
Dip forward under s light. Move eastward IC
Till toward the centre set the s tides, Princess ii 118^
Where all the s heavens of space Are sharpen'd In Mem. Ixxvi 3
' Can clouds of nature stain The s clearness of the free ?
haunted by the s head Of her whose gentle wiU
Charioteer And s Gemini hang like glorious crowns
Was also Bard, and knew the s heavens ;
Forward to the s track Glimmering up the heights
Starry-clear silver-shining armour s-c ;
Starry-fair a face Most s-f, but kindled
Star-shine By s-s and by moonlight,
Star-sisters S-s answering under crescent brows ;
Star-strown My shallop thro' the s-s calm.
Star-sweet s-s on a gloom profound ;
Start (s) given to s's and bursts Of revel ;
Start (verb) I started once, or seem'd to s in pain.
But as the waterUly s's and slides
Would s and tremble under her feet,
S from their fallen lords, and wildly fly,
ye would s back agin into life,
nay, why do you s aside ?
Started Is once, or seem'd to start in pain,
' But in a pet she s up.
Then they s from their places,
Forward she s with a happy cry,
S from bed, and struck herself a light,
he knew not wherefore, s up Shuddering,
Then of the latest fox — where s —
,s- on his feet. Tore the king's letter.
Back s she, and turning round we saw
I smote him on the breast ; he s up ;
And many a bold knight s up in heat.
Up s from my side The old lion,
And now and then an echo s up.
Out into the road I s, and spoke
S a green linnet Out of the croft ;
Back from the gate s the three.
But up like fire he s :
seized on her, And Enid s waking,
either s while the door, Push'd from without,
and he s up and stared at her.
Ixxxv 86 I
Maud I xviii 22i
/// vi Tl
Merlin and V. 16
Silent Voices i
Holy Grail 511
Lover's Tale i 73
Oriana 24
Princess ii 4281
Arabian Nights 36 '
Maud I Hi 4
Princess i 54i
D. of F. Women 411
Princess iv 255|
Maud I xxii 73
Geraint and E. 4821
Tomorrow 811
Bandit's Death 51
D. of F. Women 411
Talking Oak 22"
Vision of Sin 33J
Enoch Arden 151
49
61fl
Aylmer's Field 25
Princess i "
,, ii 32
„ iv 16
„ V 35
The Grandmother '
Minnie and Winnie 11
Gareth and L. 23
112
Marr. of Geraint 674
Geraint and E. 272
started
679
Statesman
tarted {cmUinued) and Balin s from his bower.
Sideways he s from the path, and saw,
Yet blank from sleep, she s to him,
s thro' mid air Beanng an eagle's nest :
Flush'd, s, met him at the doors,
an' I s awaay like a shot,
shriek'd, and s from my side—
Jtaxting S up at once, As from a dismal dream
then s, thought His dreams had come again.
startled neither self-possess'd Nor s,
Life was s from the tender love
Itarve clamouring, ' If we pay, we s ! '
' If they pay this tax, they a-.'
s not thou this fire within thy blood,
The first discoverer s's — his followers.
When all men s, the wild mob's million feet
Balin and Balan 280
324
Lancelot and E. 820
Last Tournament 14
512
North. Cobbler 69
Loeksley H., Sixty 264
Lover's Tale i 747
„ iv 77
Gardener's D. 155
Lover's Tale i 616
Godiva 15
„ 20
Balin and Balan 453
Columbus 166
The Fleet 18
ttarved (See also Self-starved) my husband's brother
had my son Thrall'd in his castle, and hath s
him dead ; Gareth and L. 358
Is the wild beast that was linkt with thee eighty
years back. By an Evolution. 11
Jtate (adj.) That crown'd the s pavilion of the King, Guinevere 399
Jtate (body politic) (See also Sta&te) Tho' every
eliannel of the S You ask me, why, etc. 23
And work, a joint of s, that phes Its office, Love thou thy land 47
New Majesties of mighty S's — „ 60
'Who'd serve the s? for if I carved my name Audley Court 48
Visions of a perfect S : Vision of Sin 148
the s, The total chronicles of man. Princess ii 380
But as he saves or serves the s. Ode on Well. 200
No Uttle German s are we, Third of Feb. 15
To mould a mighty s's decrees. In Mem. Ixiv 11
Or touch'd the changes of the s, „ Ixxxix 35
the s has done it and thrice as well : Maud I x 40
In silver tissue talking things of s ; Marr. of Geraint 663
Eeople's praise From thine own S, Bed. Poem Prin. Alice 8
ring on both the yoke Of stronger s's, Tiresias 70
Break the S, the Church, the Throne, Loeksley H., Sixty 138
We founded many a mighty s ; Rands all Round 30
Were she ... a fallen s ? The Fleet 10
In our ancient island S, Open. I. and C. Exhib. 16
To serve her myriads and the S, — To Marq. of Dufferin 24
and men at the helm of s — The Wreck 49
State (condition) Thrice happy s again to be The
trustful infant on the knee ! Supp. Confessions 40
0 damned vacillating s ! „ 190
in some confused dream To s's of mystical similitude; Sonnet to 4
The sUpping thro' from s to s. Two Voices 351
' So might we, if our s were such As one before, „ 355
Such doubts and fears were common to her s, Enoch Arden 521
Roman lines Of empire, and the woman's s in each. Princess ii 131
still she rail'd against the s of things. .. Hi 84
As in some mystic middle s I lay ; -, vi 18
Charity Could lift them nearer God-like s Lit. Squabbles 14
And he should sorrow o'er my s In Mem. xiv 15
The lowness of the present s, „ xxiv 11
If, in thy second s sublime, ., Ixil
From s to s the spirit walks ; .- Ixxxii 6
That range above our mortal s, „ Ixxxv 22
Who first had found and loved her in a s Of broken
fortunes, Marr. of Geraint 12
dazed and dumb With passing thro' at once from s to s, Demeter and P. 7
nearing yon dark portal at the limit of thy
human s, God and the Univ. 4
State (chair of state) His s the king reposing keeps. Day -Dm., Sleep. P. 39
Summon'd out She kept her s. Princess Hi 229
State (dignity) overflowing revenue Wherewith to embellish s, (Enone 113
Built for pleasure and for s. L. of Burleigh 32
Here he lives in s and bounty, „ 57
There she walks in her s And tends upon bed and bower, Maud I xiv 3
all his land and wealth and s were hers. Holy Grail 587
State (mien) and by your s And presence might
have guess'd you one Marr. of Geraint 430
for by thy s And presence I might guess thee chief
of those, Lancelot and E. 182
State (pomp) Where we withdrew from summer heats and s, Princess vi 245
I go in s to court, to meet the Queen. Lancelot and E. 1124
Led his dear lady to a chair of s. Lover's Tale iv 321
State (rank) And bow'd her s to them, that they might
grow Princess ii 166
With reasons drawn from age and s, „ v 357
we believe him Something far advanced in S, Ode on Well. 275
And, for himself was of the greater s, Gareth and L. 395
As Mark would sully the low s of churl : „ 427
State (splendour) but robed in soften'd hght Of orient s. Ode to Memory 11
Statelier (adj.) Then comes the s Eden back to men : Princess vii 293
With s progress to and fro The double tides of
chariots flow /« Mem. xcviii 22
Garrick and s Kemble, and the rest To W. C. Macready 7
Then, with a melody Stronger and s, Merlin and the G. 63
Statelier (s) Could find no s than his peers Two Voices 29
Stateliest sit the best and s of the land ? Lu^etius 172
King Arthur, hke a modern gentleman Of s port ; M. d' Arthur, Ep. 23
nor end of mine, S, for thee ! Princess vii 170
Adored her, as the s and the best Marr. of Geraint 20
and as the s under heaven. Holy Grail 224
Wielder of the s measm-e ever moulded by the lips of
man. To Virgil 39
Stateliness harmony Of thy swan-hke s, Eleanore 47
^A'ho see your tender grace and s. Guinevere 190
Stately The s flower of female fortitude, Isabel 11
deep myrrh- thickets blowing round The s cedar, Arabian Nights 105
maid, whose s brow The dew-impearled winds of
dawn Ode to Memory 13
To throng with s blooms the breathing spring The Poet 27
To her full height her s stature draws ; D. of F. Women 102
all the decks were dense with s forms Black-stoled, M. d' Arthur 196
Many an evening by the waters did we watch the s
ships, Loeksley Hall 37
s ships go on To their haven under the hill ; Break, break, etc. 9
long convolvuluses That coil'd around the s stems, Enoch Arden 577
Stept thro' the s minuet of those days : Aylmer's Field 207
we stroll'd For half the day thro' s theatres Princess ii 369
standing like a s Pine Set in a cataract on an island-crag, ,. v 346
leader of the herd That holds a s fretwork to the Sun, „ vi 86
crimson-hued the s palm-woods Whisper in odorous heights Milton 15
But she is tall and s. Maud I xii 16
From mother imto mother, s bride, W. to Marie Alex. 9
Camelot, a city of shadowy palaces And s, Gareth and L. 304
midway down the side of that long hall A s pile, — „ 405
' Farewell, fair Prince,' answer'd the s Queen. Marr. of Geraint 224
And there be made known to the s Queen, „ 607
came A s queen whose name was Guinevere, ,. 667
His princess, or indeed the s Queen, „ 759
And moving out they found the s horse, Geraint and E 752
Manners so kind, yet s, such a grace Of tenderest
courtesy, „ 861
Being mirthful he, but in a s kind — Lancelot and E. 322
Whereon a himdred s beeches grew, Pelleas and E. 26
He glanced and saw the s galleries. Last Tournament 145
So the s Queen abode For many a week, unknown, Guinevere 146
all the decks were dense with s forms, Black-stoled, Pass, of Arthur 364
A s mountain nymph she look'd ! Lover's Tale i 359
in front of which Six s virgins, all in white, „ ii 77
s vestibules To caves and shows of Death: ,, 125
the s Spanish men to their flagship bore him then, The Revenge 97
s and tall — A princeher looking man never stept thro' a
Prince's hall. The Wreck 15
Raise a s memorial, Make it regally gorgeous, On Juh. Q. Victoria 44
S purposes, valour in battle, Vastness 7
Edith bow'd her s head. The Tourney 13
Stately-gentle nay Being so s-g, Balin and Balan 192
Stately-set the fair hall-ceiling s-s Palace of Art 141
State-oracle O friends, oiu: chief s-o is mute : Ode on Well. 23
States (United) He's gone to the S's, aroon. Tomorrow 49
Statesman (See also Statesman-warrior) ' And statesmen
at her council met To the Qu^en 29
No blazon'd s he, nor king. You might hive won 24
O Statesmen, guard us, guard the eye, Ode on Well. 160
keep the soldier firm, the s pure : „ 222
high on every
Statesman
statesman {contimied) a s there, betraying His party-secret
When he flouted a s's error,
0 Pateiot S, be thou wise to know
Whatever s hold the helm.
To all our statesmen so they be True leaders
as honouring your fair fame Of S,
Statesman-warrior The s-w, moderate, resolute.
Station all the wheels of Time Spim round in s,
message to and fro Between the mimic s's ;
thro' his cowardice allow'd Her s,
Did tremble in their s's as I gazed ;
Stationary We stumbled on a s voice,
Station'd Ida s there Unshaken,
Statuary break the works of the s,
Statue (See also Statute, Woman-statue)
peak a s seem'd To hang on tiptoe,
The s's, king or saint, or founder fell ;
A broken s propt against the wall.
Look, our hall ! Our s's ! —
Two great s's, Art And Science,
Half turning to the broken s, said,
and your s's Rear'd, sung to.
And highest, among the s's, statue-like,
April of ovation round Their s's,
o'er the s's leapt from head to head,
Disrobed the glimmering s of Sir Ralph
1 stood among the silent s's,
down their s of Victory fell.
In the centre stood A s veil'd,
But like a s solid-set,
She might have seem'd her s, but that he,
one s in the mould Of Arthur, made by Merlin,
And eastward fronts the s.
And from the s Merlin moulded for us
like a s, rear'd To some great citizen,
Statued And s pinnacles, mute as they.
Statue-like s-l, In act to render thanks.
And highest, among the statues, s-l,
Muriel standing ever s-l —
Statuelike Balin and Balan sitting s,
The bridesmaid pale, s, passionless —
Statuette When I was smaller than the s
Stature To her full height her stately s draws ;
Her s more than mortal in the burst Of sunrise,
Statured as long as thou art s tall !
Statute an officer Rose up, and read the s's.
Statute (statue) An' 'e bowt little s's all-naakt
Statute-book According to your bitter s-h,
Stave (s) ' Chant me now some wicked s.
Stave (verb) s off a chance That breaks upon them
Stay Thou, willing me to s,
S's on her floating locks the lovely freight
Whither away ? listen and s :
That will not s, upon his way,
steady sunset glow. That s's upon thee ?
A curse is on her if she s
And now it seems as hard to s.
Here s's the blood along the veins.
' Pray s a httle : pardon me ;
And here ne s's upon a freezing orb
That s's the rollii^ Ixionian wheel,
S's all the fair young planet in her hands —
I have not long to s ;
But s with the old woman now : you cannot have
long to s.
To those that s and those that roam,
Mj sisters crying, ' S for shame ; '
Like her I go ; I cannot s ;
What s's thee from the clouded noons.
That s's him from the native land
At least to me ? I would not s.
Who s to share the morning feast.
Why should Is? can a sweeter chance
may s for a year who has gone for a week :
Let it go or s, so I wake to the higher aims
680
Steal
Maud II V 34
The Wreck 68
To Duke of Argyll 1
Hands all Round 20
25
To Marq. of JDufferin 15
Ode on Well. 25
Love and Duty 76
Princess, Pro. 79
Guinevere 517
Lover's Tale i 582
Princess v 2
„ 343
Boddicea 64
Palace of Art 37
Sea Dreams 224
Princess, Pro. 99
m76
iv20O
593
«413
510
m67
366
Con. 117
The Daisy 63
Boddicea 30
In Mem. ciii 12
Con. 15
Lancelot and E. 1171
Holy Grail 238
241
732
Tiresias 82
The Daisy 64
Gardener's D. 161
Princess v 510
The Ring 266
Balin and Balan 24
Sisters (E. and E.) 212
The Ring 109
D. of F. Women 102
Princess, Pro. 40
Gareth and L. 282
Princess ii 69
VUlage Wife 50
Princess iv 454
Vision of Sin 151
Geraint and E. 353
Madeline 37
Ode to Monory 16
Sea- Fairies 42
Rosalind 15
Eleanore 56
L. of Shalott ii 4
May Queen, Con. 10
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 4
The Brook 210
Lucretius 139
261
Princess vii 264
Grandmother 15
108
Sailor Boy 14
18
In Mem. xii 5
.. Ixxxiii 5
xciii 3
cxx 8
„ Con. 75
Maud I i 62
xvi 6
„ IIIvi3S
Stay {continued) S therefore thou ; red berries charm the bird, Gareth and L
but s : follow the deer By these tall firs 90
S, my best son ! ye are yet more boj than man.' .. 98
S, till the cloud that settles round his birth Hath lifted
J
but a Uttle. S, sweet son.'
ere a man in haU could s her, tum'd
' S, felon knight, I avenge me for my friend.'
And s the world from Lady Lyonors.
and Pellam's feeble cry ' S, s him !
could make me s — That proof of trust —
' S with me, I am sick ;
But he pursued her, calling, ' S a little !
Lancelot shouted, ' S me not !
clave To Modred, and a remnant s's with me.
To s his feet from falUng,
' S then a little,' answer'd Julian,
I may not s, No, not an hour ;
S, my son Is here anon :
I saw that we could not s,
he graspt at my arm — ' s there ' —
Hence ! she is gone ! can Is?
to s. Not spread the plague, the famine ;
God s me there, if only for your sake,
Stay'd (See also Iron-stay'd, Staid)
the two peaks ;
s beneath the dome Of hollow boughs.-
Would they could have s with us !
s the Ausonian king to hear Of wisdom
rummaged like a rat : no servant s :
' But as for her, she s at home.
In these, in those the life is s
Philip s (His father lying sick and needing him)
S by this isle, not knowing where she lay :
We seven s at Christmas up to read ;
there s ; Knelt on one knee, —
I s the wheels at Cogoletto,
He s his arms upon his knee :
Stiles where we s to be kind,
But s in peace with God and man.
caught Aiid s liim, ' Climb not lest thou
130
660
1220
1412
Balin and Balan 421
Merlin and V. 919
Lancelot and E. 87
683
Holy Grail 643
Guinevere 443
Lover's Tale i 142
iv 113
115
Columbus 218
V. of Maeldune 35
The Wreck 120
Despair 113
Demeter and P. 133
Romney's R. 34
Hesper is s between
Leonine Eleg. 11
Arabian Nights 41
Deserted House 22
Palace of Art 111
Walk, to the Mail 38
Talking Oak 113
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 18
Enoch Arden 64
630
Princess, Pro. 178
vi 90
The Daisy 23
The Victim 54:
Window, Marr. Mom. 7
In Mem. Ixxx 8
Gareth and L. 54
ye know we s their hands From war among themselves, ,. 421
holds her s In her own castle, ,. 615
Perforce she s, and overtaken spoke. „ 764
on a little knoll beside it, s Marr. of Geraint 162
Nor s to crave permission of the King, Balin and Balan 288
And s ; and cast his eyes on fair Elaine : Lancelot and E. 640
S in the wandering warble of a brook ; Last Tournament 254
woman, weeping near a cross, S him. „ 494
have fail'n. But that they s him up ; Guinevere 305
S on the cloud of sorrow ; Lover's Tale i 255
And thus he s and would not look at her — ., iv 26
' This, I s for this ; 0 love, „ 44
Took the breath from our sails, and we s. The Revenge 42
we s three days, and we gorged and we madden'd, V. of Maeldune 67
' Had I s with him, I had now — The Wreck 128
horsemen, drew to the valley — and s ; Heavy Brigade 3
A mountain s me here, a minster there, The Ring 245
all-too-full in bud For puritanic s : Talking Oak 60
Stead But in their s thy name and glory cling Pass, of Arthur 53
Steadfast (See also Stedfast) A pillar s in the storm, In Mem. cxiii 12
Steady And the s sunset glow. That stays upon thee ? Eleanore 55
s glare Shrank one sick willow sere and small. Mariana in the S. 52
Steak Among the chops and s's ! Will Water. 148
Steal (See also Steal) Like sof ten'd airs that blowing s, Two Voices 406
old mysterious glimmer s's From thy pure brows, Tithonus 34
Her gradual fingers s And touch W^ill Water. 26
I s by lawns and grassy plots. The Brook 170
And s you from each other ! Aylmer's Field 707
As slowly s's a silver flame In Mem. Ixvii 6
And every span of shade that s's, „ cxvii 10
ever ready to slander and s ; Maud I iv 19
It lightly winds and s's In a cold white robe „ II iv 18
I s, a wasted frame, „ 69
wolf would s The children and devour. Com. of Arthur 26
I cannot s or plunder, no nor beg : Geraint and E. 487
steal
681
Stephen
iteal {continued) Catlike thro' his own castle s's my
Mark, Last Tournament 51Q
Mark's way to s behind one in the dark — „ 618
Awake ! the creeping glimmer s's, The Flight 4
Jteal Tis'n them as ^ mimny as breaks into 'ouses
an' s's, N. Farmer, N. S. 45
$tealest s fire, From the fountains of the past, Ode to Memory 1
Stealing to reprove her For s out of view Mavd I xx 9
But V^ivien, into Camelot s, Merlin and V. 63
Jtealth And sent it them by s, Dora 53
Stealthily s, In the mid- warmth of welcome Geraint and E. 279
. Stealthy A s foot upon the stair ! The Flight 70
Steam (See also Ste&m) s Floats up from those dim fields Tithonus 68
Old boxes, larded with the s Will Water. 223
A dozen angry models jetted 5 : Princess, Pro. 73
The dust and din and s of town : In Mem. Ixxxix 8
all the hall was dim with s of flesh : Geraint and E. 603
making all the night a s of fire. Cfuinevere 599
rose as it were breath and s of gold, Lover's Tale i 402
sucking The foul s of the grave to thicken by it, „ 649
miss'd The wonted s of sacrifice, Dem^ter and P. 119
dust send up a s of human blood, St. Telemachus 53
Steam ater mea mayhap wi' 'is kittle o' s N. Farmer, 0. S. 61
Steam'd s From out a golden cup. Palace of Art 39
Steamer clock-work s paddling plied Princess, Pro. 71
Steaming On stony drought and 5 salt ; Mariana in the S. 40
they find a music centred in a doleful song S up, Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 118
By sands and s flats, and floods Of mighty mouth. The Voyage 45
That makes a s slaughter-house of Rome. LMcretius 84
But Summer on the s floods. In Mem. Ixxxv 69
The 5 marshes of the scarlet cranes, Prog, of Spring 75
Steamship In the s, in the railway, Locksley Hall 166
Stedfast (See also Steadfast) while Saturn whirls,
his s shade Palace of Art 15
splendours of the morning star Shook in the s blue. D. of F. Women 56
Steed We heard the s's to battle going, Oriana 15
mounted our good s's. And boldly ventured Princess i 204
On his haunches rose the s, „ v 493
The towering car, the sable s's : Ode on Well. 55
eating hoary grain and pulse the s's, Spec, of Iliad 21
couch'd their spears and prick'd their s's, Lancelot and E. 479
The weary s of Pelleas floundering flung Pelleas and E. 574
The prophet and the chariot and the s's, Lover's Tale i 307
Steel (adj.) Whence drew you this s temper ? Princess vi 232
Steel (s) As pure and true as blades of s. Kate 16
The hard brands shiver on the s. Sir Galahad 6
But red-faced war has rods of s and fire ; Princess v 118
A flying splendour out of brass and s, „ vi 365
<S and gold, and com and wine, Ode Inter. Exhib. 17
but this was all of that true s, Gareth and L. 66
and tipt With trenchant s, „ 693
Steel (verb) S m.e with patience ! Doubt and Prayer 9
Steel-blue s-h eyes. The golden beard Last Tournament 667
Steely and the sight run over Upon his s gyves ; Lover's Tale ii 157
Steep (adj.) high above, I heard them blast The s slate-
quarry, Golden Year 76
But she with her strong feet up the s hill Sea Dreams 120
Between the s cliff and the coming wave ; Guinevere 280
S is the moimtain, but you, you will help me to
overcome it, Parnassus 5
Siteep (s) adown the s like a wave I would leap The Mermaid 39
below the milky s Some ship of battle To F. D. Maurice 25
Steep (verb) s our brows in slumber's holy balm ; Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 21
Steeped (See also Sun-steep'd) Thou art not s in golden
languors, Madeline 1
' Thou art so 5 in misery. Two Voices 47
Steeple Utter your jubilee, s and spire ! W. to Alexandra 17
summit and the pinnacles Of a gray s — Lover's Tale ii 82
Fled onward to the 5 in the woods : „ Hi 26
fled Wind-footed to the s in the woods, ,, 56
Steepness The joy of life in s overcome, ,, i 386
Steep-up Or s-u spout whereon the gilded ball Danced
like a wisp : Princess, Pro. 63
Steepy I ran down The s sea-bank. Lover's Tale ii 74
Steer (s) The s forgot to graze, Gardener's D. 85
(s) (continued) The s fell down at the plow V. of Maeldune 30
Steer (verb) I leap on board : no helmsman s's : Sir Galahad 39
alone Go with me, he can s and row, Lancelot and E. 1128
Steer'd We s her toward a crimson cloud In Mem. ciii 55
Steering s, now, from a purple cove. The Daisy 20
Steevie (name of man and cat) Tommy the second, an' iS
an' Rob.
Fur I seed that S wur coomin',
what art 'a mewin at, S ?
Ye niver 'eard S swear 'cep' it wur at a dog
Can't ye taake pattern hjS?
S be right good manners bang thruf
let S coom oop o' my knee.
S, my lad, thou 'ed very nigh been the S for me !
fur, S, tha kep' it sa neat
But fur thy bairns, poor S,
1 mun part them Tommies— <S git down.
Till Robby an' iS 'es 'ed their lap — ■
Stem (See also Ivy-stems, Poppy-stem) upbearing parasite
Clothing the s,
Branches they bore of that enchanted s.
Dark as a funeral scarf from s to stern.
From spray, and branch, and s.
Between dark s's the forest glows,
The two remaining found a fallen s ;
That coil'd around the stately s's,
the s Less grain than touchwood,
Dark as a funeral scarf from s to stem,
were our mothers' branches of one s ?
Wavers on her thin s the snowdrop
Stemm'd had he s my day with night,
Stemm'd See also Clear-stiemm'd
Stench S of old offal decaying.
Step (s) And with the certain s of man.
To follow flying s's of Truth
with slow s's. With slow, faint s's,
No more by thee my s's shall be.
No where by thee my s's shall be.
But not by thee ray s's shall be,
A s Of lightest echo,
down the s's, and thro' the court,
scales with man The shining s's of Nature,
With weary s's I loiter on,
Ionian music measuring out The s's of Time-
By a shuffled s, by a dead weight trail'd,
There were but a 5 to be made.
I will cry to the s's above my head
With slow s's from out An old storm-beaten,
some ten s's — In the half-light —
the great Queen Came with slow s's.
First as in fear, s after s, she stole
made a sudden s to the gate, and there —
listen for her coming and regret Her parting s,
And s's that met the breaker !
I climb'd a thousand s's With pain :
he past. And heard but his own s's,
and there, with slow sad s's Ascending,
listening till those armed s's were gone,
I hear the s's of Modred in the west,
spirit round about the bay, Trod swifter s's ;
one s beyond Our village miseries,
jS" by s we gain'd a freedom known to
Europe,
S by s we rose to greatness, —
all my s's are on the dead.
At times her s's are swift and rash ;
Phra-bat the s ; your Pontic coast ;
Step (verb) S from the corpse, and let him in
S's from her airy hill, and greens The swamp,
S deeper yet in herb and fem,
S's with a tender foot, light as on air,
' I shudder, some one s's across my grave ; '
This custom s's yet further when the guest
' Lightly s over the sands !
Stephen (martyr) Like S, an unquenched fire.
Spinster's S's. 10
40
41
60
65
66
67
68
77
82
92
121
Isabel 35
Lotos-Eaters 28
M. d' Arthur 194
Talking Oak 190
Sir Galahad 27
Enoch Arden 567
577
Princess iv 332
Pass, of AHhur 362
Lover's Tale ii 25
Prog, of Spring 3
Lover's Tale i 502
Def. of Lucknow 82
Miller's D. 96
Love thou thy land 75
St. S. Stylites 182
A Farewell 3
7
15
Princess iv 214
555
i.w262
In Mem. xxxviii 1
xcv 42
Maud / i 14
xiv 22
„ II V 101
Gareth and L. 1112
1383
Balin and Balan 245
Lancelot and E. 342
391
867
Hohi Grail 816
835
Pelleas and E. 416
Last Tournament 143
Guinevere 585
Pass, of Arthur 59
Lover's Tale Hi 18
Ancient Sage 206
Locksley II., Sixty 129
130
252
To Marq. of Dufferin 2
To Ulysses 42
D. of the 0. Fear id
On a Mourner 8
Talking Oak 245
Princess vi 88
Guinevere 57
Lover's Tale iv 244
Despair 47
Two Voices 219
Stephen
682
stm
Stephen (the speaker's lover) we fondled it, .S and I, But it
died, The Wreck 83
' O <S, I love you, I love you, and yet ' — .. 101
' O (S,' I moan'd, ' I am coming to thee 132
Stepmother you hear Far-off, is Muriel — your s's voice. The Ring 139
Your Mother and s-m — „ 146
Steppe golden news along the s's is blowii, W. to Marie Alex. 11
Steppeth S from Heaven to Heaven, from light to
light. Lover's Tale i 512
Stepping (See also A-steppin') He, s down By zig-zag
paths, " M. d' Arthur 49
Come s lightly down the plank. In Mem. xiv 7
she rose, and s lightly, heap'd The pieces Geraint and E. 373
He, s down By zigzag paths. Pass, of Arthur 217
Seem'd s out of darkness with a smile. Lover's Tale iv 220
Stepping-stones Below the range of s-s, Miller's D. 54
That men may rise on s-s In Mem. i 3
Stept When forth there s a foeman tall, Oriana 33
Then s she down thro' town and field Of old sat Freedom 9
from the ruin'd shrine he s M. d' Arthur 45
And out I s, and up I crept : Edwin Morris 111
S forward on a firmer leg, Will Water. 123
Down s Lord Ronald from his tower : Lady Clare 65
In robe and crown the king s down. Beggar Maid 5
S the long-hair'd long-bearded solitary, Enoch Arden 637
S thro' the stately minuet of those days : Aylmer's Field 207
Then s a buxom hostess forth, Princess i 228
Lightly to the warrior s, „ vi 10
a healthful people s As in the presence Gareth and L. 315
And inward to the wall ; he s behind ; Bcilin and Balan 406
found a Uttle boat, and s into it ; Merlin and V. 198
close behind them s the lily maid Elaine, Lancelot and E. 176
into that rude hall S with all grace, „ 263
from the ruin'd shrine he s, Pass, of Arthur 213
the man who stood with me S gaily forward, Lover's Tale Hi 51
From wall to dyke he s, Achilles over the T. 15
princeher looking man never s thro' a Prince's hall. The Wreck 16
she s an the chapel-green, Tomorrow 27
Christ-like creature that ever s on the ground. Charity 32
Sterling most, of s worth, is what Our own experience
preaches. Will Water. 175
Stem (adj.) Or gay, or grave, or sweet, or s, Palace of Art 91
The s black-bearded kings with wolfish eyes, D. of F. Women 111
S he was and rash ; The Captain 10
Grave, florid, s, as far as eye could see. Sea Dreams 219
s and sad (so rare the smiles Of sunlight) The Daisy 53
The s were mild when thou wert by. In Mem. ex 9
S too at times, and then I loved him not, Com. of Arthur 354
To such a 5 and iron-clashing close. Merlin and V. 419
Stem (s) Dark as a funeral scarf from stem to s, M. d' Arthur 19^^
from stem to s Bright with a shining people Com. of Arthur 375
Dark as a funeral scarf from stem to s. Pass, of Arthur 362
Steward The wrinkled s at his task, Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 27
The butler drank, the s scrawl'd, „ Revival 10
'Tis but a s of the can, Will Water. 149
Sthrame (stream) comin' down be the s, Tomorrow 7
s's runnin' down at the back o' the glin „ 24
Stick (s) on whom all spears Are rotten s's ! Gareth and L. 1306
an' swear'd as I'd break ivry s North. Cobbler 35
Molly kem limpin' up wid her s. Tomorrow 77
stannin' theere o' the brokken s ; Owd Rod 25
Stick (verb) And on thy ribs the limpet s's Sailor Boy 11
But proputty, proputty s's, N. Farmer, N. S. 16
a villain fitter to s swine Than ride abroad Gareth and L. 865
Thim's my noations, Sammy, wheerby I means
to a ; N. Farmer, N. S. 57
what s ye round The pasty ? Gareth and L. 1072
5 oop thy back, an' set oop thy taail. Spinster's S's. 31
if t'one s alongside t'uther Church-warden, etc. 10
Sa I s's like the ivin as long as I Uves „ 15
Still While my s spine can hold my weary head, St. S. Stylites 43
wet With drenching dews, or s with cracking frost. „ 115
' but still My joints are somewhat s or so. Day-Dm., Revival 26
That stood from out a s brocade in which, Aylmer's Field 204
soe how you stand S as Lot's wife. Princess vi 241
StifE (continued) and stood iS" as a viper frozen ; Merlin and V. 845
That whistled 5 and dry about the marge. Pass, of Arthur 232
That whistled s and dry about the marge. M. d' Arthur 64
Stiffen And, lest I s into stone. In Mem.cviii2
Stiff en'd His fingers were so s by the frost The Ring 239
Stiffening Sir Aylmer Ayhner slowly s spoke : Aylmer's Field 273
Stiffer My nerves have dealt with s. Will Water. 78
Stiff-set Blow, flute, and stir the s-s sprigs, Amphion 63
Stiff-stricken She sat S-s, listening ; Guinevere 412
Stifled She whisper'd, with a 5 moan Mariana in the S. 57
Making Him broken gleams, and a s splendour and
gloom. High. Pantheism 10
breathless burthen of low-folded heavens S and
chill'd at once ; Aylmer's Field 613
my strangled vanity Utter'd a s cry — Sisters ( E. and E.) 200
Stile So Lawrence Aylmer, seated on a s The Brook 197
S's where we stay'd to be kind. Window, Marr. Morn. 7
By meadow and s and wood, ., 14
Over the meadows and s's, .. 22
Or simple s from mead to mead. In Mem. c 7
That ever bided tryst at village s. Merlin and V. 378
Still Pure vestal thoughts in the translucent fane Of her s
spirit ; Isabel ■>
Wash'd with s rains and daisy blossomed ; Circumstatice 7
senses with a s delight Of dainty sorrow Margaret 17
Falling into a s delight, Elednore 106
Come only, when the days are s. My life is full 23
A S small voice spake unto me, Two Voices 1
Then to the s small voice I said ; .. 4
In her s place the morning wept : „ 273
The s voice laugh'd. ' I talk,' said he, „ 385
The pool beneath it never s, Miller's D. 100
s affection of the heart Became an outward breathing
type, „ 225
fit for eveij mood And change of my s soul. Palace of Art&)
' I marvel if my s delight In this great house .. 190
A s salt pool, lock'd in with bars of sand, ,, 249
All the valley, mother, 'ill be fresh and green and s. May Q,ueen 37
When you are warm-asleep, mother, and all
the world is s. May Queen, N. Y's. E. 24
Or night-dews on s waters between walls
Scaffolds, s sheets of water, divers woes,
not so deadly s As that wide forest.
Thy sole delight is, sitting s,
One after one, thro' that s garden pass'd ;
By this s hearth, among these barren crags.
With one smile of « defiance Sold him
detaching, fold by fold. From those s heights.
And the sound of a voice that is s !
face All-kindled by a s and sacred fire,
Found a s place, and pluck'd her likeness out ;
doubtful smile dwelt like a clouded moon In a s water
strong on his legs, but s of his tongue !
I look'd at the s little body —
Calm and s light on yon great plain
The moon is hid ; the night is s ;
So that s garden of the souls In many a figured leaf
The fruitful hours of s increase ;
When all his active powers are s.
Looks thy fair face and makes it s.
And fluctuate all the s perfume.
The moon is hid, the night is s ;
One s strong man in a blatant land,
Why am I sitting here so stunn'd and s.
Always I long to creep Into some s cavern deep,
the two Left the s King, and passing forth
A STOEM was coming, but the winds were s.
Past up the s rich city to his kin.
Speaking a s good-morrow with her eyes.
As hard and s as is the face that men
then came a night S as the day was loud ;
Who yells Here in the s sweet summer night,
Clung to the dead earth, and the land was s.
took and bare him off. And all was s :
There came a day as s as heaven,
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 3
D. of F. Women 34
68
The Blackbird 10
Gardener's D. 201
Ulysses 2
The Captain 59
Vision of Sin 52
Break, break, etc. 12
Enoch Arden 71
Princess i 92
„ vi 271
Grandmother 13
66
In Mem. xi 9
xxviii 2
xliii 10
xlvi 10
Ixiv 18
Ixx 16
xcv 56
„ civ 2
Maud / ar 63
// i 2
,, iv 96
Com. of Arthur 369
Merlin and V. 1
Lancelot and E. 802
1033
1251
Holy Grail 683
Pelleas and E. 473
Guinevere 8
110
., 292.
stm
aU {continued) A man in some s garden should infuse
Rich atar
at the last they found I had grown so stupid and s
683
that last deep where we and thou are s
ill'd Who s the roUing wave of Galilee !
bees are s, and the flies are kiU'd,
Hath s the life that beat from thee,
smote, and s Thro' aU its folds
Hath A' the blast and strown the wave,
You s it for the moment with a song
tlQec <S' than chisell'd marble,
haunt of brawling seamen once, but now S,
Nor count me all to blame if I Conjecture of a s
guest,
She comes from another s world of the dead, S,
would darken down To rise hereafter in a s flame
tillest Or in s evenings With what voice
■till-eyed gazing like The Indian on a s-e snake,
itill-fulfilling The s-f promise of a light
Itill-lighted S-l in a secret shrine,
itillness That into s past again.
Sang to the s, till the mountain-shade
' No voice breaks thro' the s of this world :
This murmur broke the s of that air
roimded by the s of the beach
moving toward the s of his rest.
Her constant beauty doth inform S with love,
Lover's Tale i 269
Rizpah 49
De Prof., Two G. 25
Aylmer's Field 709
Window, Winter 10
In Mem. vi 12
Tiresias 14
Freedom 34
Bomney's R. 84
B. of F. Women 86
Enoch Arden 698
In Mem., Con. 86
Maud II V 70
Lancelot and E. 1319
Adeline 30
Lover's Tale ii 189
Prog, of Spring 90
Mariana in the S. 18
Miller's D. 227
CEnone 21
Palace of Art 259
Gardener's D. 147
Audley Court 10
Locksley Hall 144
Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 16
Assumed from thence a half -consent involved In 5, Prince'ss vii 83
Is perfect s when they brawl. Lit. Squabbles 20
A part of s, yearns to speak : In Mem. Ixxxv 78
The s of tlie central sea. „ cxxiii 4
In scornful s gazing as they past ; Com. of Arthur 478
Balin the s of a minute broke Saying Bcdin and Balan 51
.-' of the dead world's winter dawn Pass, of Arthur 442
Why in the utter s of the soul Lover's Tale i 276
tlie bells Lapsed into frightful s ; „ m 30
From either by the s of the grave — Sisters (E. and E.) 282
StiU-recurring chased away the s-r gnat, Caress'd or chidden 7
Still-shatter 'd coming down on the s-s walls MiUions
: of musket-bullets, Bef. of Lucknow 92
Still-working From this my vantage ground To those
s-w energies Mechanophilus 19
Stilly many a shadow-chequer'd lawn Full of the city's
*' sound, Arabian Nights 103
Sting (s) Toil'd onward, prick'd with goads and s's ; Palace of Art 150
a s of shrewdest pain Ran shrivelling thro' me, St. S. Stylites 198
i and draw The s from pain ;
I lose thy life by usage of thy s ;
Sting (verb) Not s the fiery Frenchman into war,
j That lay their eggs, and s and sing
That s each other here in the dust ;
can stir them till they s.'
— we scorn them, but they s.'
And s's itself to everlasting death,
they fear'd that we still could s,
s's him back to the curse of the light ;
Stink An' the s o' 'is pipe i' the 'ouse,
Stinted I had not s practice, 0 my God.
That brought the s commerce of those days ;
When have I s stroke in foughten fleld ?
Stir (s) Begin to feel the truth and s of day,
the splash and s Of fountains spouted up
came a little s About the doors,
I scarce could brook the strain and s
no need to make such a s.'
(verb) speaks or hems or s's his chair,
So fleetly did she s,
Blow, flute, and s the stifi-set sprigs,
Let Whig and Tory s their blood ;
Yet dared not s to do it,
secret, seem'd to s within my breast ;
but for those That s this hubbub —
there she lies. But will not speak, nor s.'
S in me as to strike :
That s the spirit's inner deeps,
Stir
Princess vii 64
Ancient Sage 270
Third of Feb. 4
In Mem. I 11
Maud II i 47
Merlin and V. 36
Lancelot and E. 139
Last Tournatnent 452
The Revenge 72
Vastness 18
Spinster's S's. 100
St. S. Stylites 59
Enoch Arden 817
Holy Grail 860
M. d' Arthur, Ep. 19
Princess i 217
„ iv 373
In Mem. xv 12
First Quarrel 63
Sonnet to 5
Talking Oak 130
Amfhion 63
Will Water. 53
Aylmer's Field 806
Princess Hi 4A
„ iv 509
vb2
268
In Mem. xlii 10
Stir (verb) {continued) To s a Uttle dust of praise.
That made it s on the shore.
Do these your lords s up the heat of war,
S, as they stirr'd of old.
Not dead ; he s's ! — but sleeping,
can s them till they sting.'
and s's the pulse VV'itu devil's leaps,
That sees and s's the surface-shadow there
And s the sleeping earth, and wake The bloom
at night S's up again in the heart of the sleeper,
Across my garden ! and the thicket s's,
Stirr'd {See also Laughter-stirr'd) It
s with languid pulses of the oar,
and s her lips For some sweet answer.
But yet my sap was s :
The fragrant tresses are not s
The mountain s its bushy crown,
feign death, Spoke not, nor s.
And at thy name the Tartar tents are s ;
the roots of my hair were s By a shuifled step.
All night has the casement jessamine s
lets His heart be s with any foolish heat
Stir, as they s of old, when Arthur's host
s this vice in you which ruin'd man
And by the gateway s a crowd ;
The fancy s him so He rose and went,
but mine that s Among our civil wars
the deeps of the world are s.
And, lightly s, Ring little bells of change
Stirring It was the s of the blood.
Little about it s save a brook !
Not all : the songs, the s air,
S a sudden transport rose and fell.
Stitches In coughs, aches, s, ulcerous throes
Sto one Pou S whence afterwards May move
Stoan (stone) a niver rembles the s's. ~
-fur an owd scratted s,
fear'd fur to tell tha 'ow much
an' sleeapin still as a s,
Stoan-deaf (stone-deaf) Fur the dog's s-d, an' e's blind,
Stoat Lion and s have isled together.
Stock like an oaken .s in winter woods,
Stockin' wheer Sally's owd s ^vur 'id.
Stock-still stood S-s for sheer amazement.
moved slow-measure to my tune, Not stood s.
Stoic like a s, or like A wiser epicurean,
Stole (s) With folded feet, in s's of white,
Stole (verb) Then s I up, and trancedly Gazed
Prevailing in weakness, the coronach s
shadow of the flowers S all the golden gloss,
O'er the mute city s with folded wings,
S from her sister Sorrow.
we s his fruit, His hens, his eggs ;
a silent cousin s Upon us and departed :
adown the stair <S on ;
s Up by the wall, behind the yew ;
I s from court With Cyril and with Florian,
Away we s, and transient in a trice
S a maiden from her place,
while Psyche ever s A little nearer,
thieves from o'er the wall S the seed by night.
As the gray dawn s o'er the dewy world,
The wily Vivien s from Arthur's court.
First as in fear, step after step, she s
And down the long beam s the Holy Grail,
underneath Her castle-walls, she s upon my walk,
And calling me „ 594
words s with most prevailing sweetness Lover's Tale i 553
I s them all from the lawyers — Rizpah 52
earth's green s into heaven's own hue. Far — far — away 2
slept Ay, till dawn s into the cave, Bandit's Beath 31
Stoled {See also Black-stoled) Were s from head to
foot in flowing black ; Lover's Tale ii 85
Stol'n dawn's creeping beams, S to my brain, Z>. of F. Women 262
Then down the long street having slowly s, Enoch Arden 682
Because her brood is s away. In Mem. xxi 28
Storn
In Mem. Ixxv 12
Maud II ii 15
Com. of Arthur 169
Balin and Balan 89
469
Merlin and V. 36
Guinevere 521
Ancient Sage 38
93
Vastness 18
Prog, of Spring 53
the old wife's mettle : The Goose 26
Gardener's B. 41
158
Talking Oak 172
Bay-Bm., Sleep. B. 19
Amphion 25
Princess v 109
W. to Marie Alex. 12
Maud I il3
„ xxii 15
Gareth and L. 1178
Bcdin and Balan 89
Merlin and V. 362
Holy Grail 424
Lover's Tale iv 51
Sisters {E. and E.) 74
The Wreck 23
Early Spring 40
Two Voices 159
Aylmer's Field 32
In Mem. cxvi 5
Princess iv 29
St. S. Stylites 13
Princess Hi 263
iV. Farmer, 0. S. 60
Village Wife 47
Owd Rod 30
2
Gareth and L. 893
Golden Year 62
North. Cobbler 31
Will Water. 136
Last Tournament 283
Maud I iv20
Sir Galahad 43
Arabian Nights 133
Bying Swan 26
Gardener's B. 130
186
256
Walk, to the Mail 84
Edwin Morris 115
Godiva 49
Enoch Arden 738
Princess i 102
t)3a
■at 9
132
The "Flower 12
Geraint and E. 385
Merlin and V. 149
Lancelot and E. 342
Holy Grail 117, 188
Stol'n
684
Stood
stol'n {continued) and s away To dreaniful wastes Maud I arviii 68
(Who hearing her own name had s away) Marr. of Geraint 507
Some lost, some s, some as relics kept. Merlin and V. 453
Art with poisonous honey s from France, To the Queen ii 56
And if the ring were s from the maid, The Ring 203
had s, worn the ring — Then torn it from her finger, „ 455
Stomach Less having s for it than desire Geraint and E. 213
Stomach'd See Faint-stomach'd
Stomacher He cleft me thro' the s ; Princess ii 407
Stone (See also Altar-stone, Fomidation-stone, Stepping-
stones, Stoan) Life in dead s's, or spirit in air ; A Character 9
cursed and scorn'd, and bruised with s's : Two Voices 222
The lizard, witti his shadow on the s, (Enone 27
Ev'n on this hand, and sitting on this s ? „ 233
one a foreground black with s's and slags, Palace of Art 81
song Throb thro' the ribbed s ; „ 176
A rolling s of here and everywhere, AuMey Court 78
Till all my limbs drop piecemeal from the s, St. 8. Stylites 44
I lay Pent in a roofless close of ragged s's ; „ 74
On the mossy s, as I lay, Edward G'fay 26
' Bitterly wept I over the s : „ 33
Tread a measure on the s's. Vision of Sin 180
■On thy cold gray s's, O Sea ! Break, break, etc. 2
His eyes upon the s's, he reach'd the home Enoch Arden 684
or one s Left on another, Aylmer's Field 788
men of flesh and blood, and men of s. Sea Dreams 237
on the pavement lay Carved s's of the Abbey-ruin Princess, Pro. 14
One rear'd a font of s And drew, 59
and watch The sandy footprint harden into s.' .,, Hi 271
Old Yew, which graspest at the s's in Mem. ii 1
Dark yew, that graspest at the s's .. xxxix 4
From scarped cliff and quarried s .. Zm 2
And, lest I stiffen into s, „ cviii 2
On a heart half-turn'd to s. Maud I vi 78
0 heart of s, are you flesh, .. 79
Wept over her, carved in s ; .. viii 4
(Which Maud, like a precious s Set in the heart .. xiv 10
Low on the sand and loud on the s ., xxii 25
Courage, poor heart of s ! .. // Hi 1
Courage, poor stupid heart of s. — „ 5
Of ancient kings who did their days in s ; Gareth and L. 305
by two yards in casting bar or s Was counted best ; .. 518
A s about his neck to drown him in it. „ 812
Gareth loosed the s From off his neck, ,, 814
and with a s about his neck ; ,. 823
but at night let go the s. And rise, .. 825
Like sparkles in the s Avanturine. .. 930
Hurl'd as a s from out of a catapult „ 965
slopes a wild brook o'er a little s, Marr. of Geraint 11
star Of sprouted thistle on the broken s's. .. 314
suck'd the joining of the s's, and look'd A knot, .. 324
Right o'er a mount of newly-fallen s's „ 361
blade flew Splintering in six, and clinkt upon
the s's. Balin and Balan 396
when she heard his horse upon the s's, Lancelot and E. 980
With knees of adoration wore the s. Holy Grail 71
and the s's They pitch up straight to heaven : '.. 664
bound and plunged him into a cell Of great piled s's ; .. 676
Heavy as it was, a great s slipt and fell, „ 680
shatter'd talbots, which had left the s's Raw, „ 719
s is flung into some sleeping tarn, Pelleas and E. 93
spiring s that scaled about her tower, Last Tournament 511
A little bitter pool about a s Guinevere 51
1 CAME one day and sat among the s's Lover's Tale Hi 1
you are jast as hard as a s. Rizpah 80
Scribbled or carved upon the pitiless s ; Sir J. Oldcastle 5
and we took to throwmg the s, V. of Maeldune 94
One was of smooth-cut s, 106
There were some for the clean-cut s, „ 112
Beyond all work of those who carve the s, Tiresias 53
No s is fitted in yon marble girth „ 135
and mute below the chancel s's, Locksley H., Sixty 43
Tho' carved in harder s — Epilogue 59
I am mortal s and lime. Helen's Tower 6
and see no more The S, the Wheel, Demeter and P. 150
Stone (continued) a s. That glances from the bottom of the pool, The Ring 370
a shower of s's that stoned him dead, ~ ~-
I dream'd That s by s I rear'd a sacred fane,
loosen, s from s. All my fair work ;
Who fitted s to s again, and Tioith, Peace,
Stone (disease) Past earthquake — ay, and gout and s.
Stone-cast About a s-c from the wall
Stoned either they were s, or crucified,
a shower of stones that s him dead.
Stone-deaf See Stoan-deaf
Stone-shot He show'd a tent A s-s off :
Stonest O thou that s, hadst thou understood
Stoning no s save with flint and rock ?
Stony On s drought and steaming salt ;
lion on your old s gates Is not more cold to you
than I.
while all the fleet Had rest by s hills of Crete.
Better the narrow brain, the s heart,
I chatter over s ways,
Before the s face of Time,
had wound A scarf of orange round the s helm,
chattering s names Of shale and hornblende,
the fangs Shall move the s bases of the world.
Gorgonised me from head to foot With a s British
stare.
There ran a treble range of s shields, —
S showers Of that ear-stunning hail of Ares
Gods Avenge on s hearts a fruitless prayer
Stood s Betwixt me and the light of God !
at last s out This excellence and solid form
heaven's mazed signs s still In the
And s aloof from other minds
She s upon the castle wall,
you s Between the rainbow and the sun.
Pallas where she s Somewhat apart,
Full of great rooms and small the palace s,
in dark corners of her palace s Uncertain shajDes ;
That s against the wall.
Join'd not, but s, and standing saw
Full-faced above the valley s the moon ;
silent pinnacles of aged snow, S simset flush'd :
I appeal'd To one that s beside.
so s I, when that flow Of music left the lips
She lock'd her lips : she left me where I s :
Losing her carol I s pensively.
That s on a dark strait of barren land.
both his eyes were dazzled, as he s.
Long s Sir Bedivere Revolving many memories,
those that s upon the hills behind Repeated —
s. Leaning his horns into the neighbour field.
Holding the bush, to fix it back, she s,
Half light, half shade, She s,
to Mary's house, and s Upon the threshold.
and while we s like fools Embracing,
brothers of the weather s Stock-stiU
0 and proudly s she up !
He turn'd and kiss'd her where she s :
Still on the tower s the vane,
wild hawk s with the down on his beak,
and while he s on deck Waving,
there he s once more before her face.
Her son, who s beside her tall and strong,
There s a maiden near. Waiting to pass.
S from his walls and wing'd his entry-gates
That s from out a stiff brocade in which,
under his own lintel s Storming with lifted hands,
to the lychgate, where his chariot s,
1 s like one that had received a blow :
s out the breasts. The breasts of Helen,
in the presence room I s With Cyril
There s a bust of Pallas for a sign,
while They s, so rapt, we gazing, came a voice,
saw The Lady Blanche's daughter where she s,
So s that same fair creature at the door.
There while we s beside the f oimt,
St. Telemachus 68
Akbar's Dream 177
188
193
Lucretius 153
Mariana 37
St. S. Stylites 51
St. Telemachus 68
Princess v 54
Aylmer's Field 739
746
Mariana in the S. 40
L. C. V. de Vere 23
On a Mourner 35
Love and Duti/ 15
The Brook .39
Lit. Squabbles 3
Princess, Pro. 102
Hi 3ol
vl .')8
Maud I xiii 22
Gareth and L. t07
Tiresias 95
Death of (Enone 41
Supp. Confessions 109
148
Clear-headed friend 28
A Character 23
Oriana 28
Margaret 12
(Enone 137
Palace of Art 57
237
244
254
Lotos-Eaters 7
17
D.ofF. Women 100
194
241
245
M. d' Arthur 10
59
269
,. Ep. 25
Gardener's J). 86
127
141
Dora 110
Edwin Morris 118
WUl Water. 135
Lady Clare 77
82
The Letters 1
Poet's Song 11
Enoch Arden 243
457
756
The Brook 204
Aylmer's Field 18
204
331
824
Sea Dreatns 161
Lucretius 60
Princess i 51
222
.. ii 318
321
329
,, Hi 23
stood
685
Stoop' d-Stoopt
lood (continued) She s Among her maidens, lugher by the
head,
s, Engirt with many a florid maiden-cheek.
Alone I s With Florian, cursing Cyril,
There s her maidens glimmeringly group'd
Lady Blanche erect »S up and spake.
You s in your light and darken'd mine.
And then s up and spoke impetuously,
high above them s The placid marble Muses,
I s and seem'd to hear. As in a poplar grove
storming in extremes, S for her cause,
high upon the palace Ida s With Psyche's babe
So s the unhappy mother open-mouth'd,
rising slowly from me, s Erect and silent,
But Ida s nor spoke, drain'd of her force
had you s by us, The roar that breaks the Pharos
in the centre s The common men with rolling eyes ;
And there we saw Sir Walter where he s,
now him, of those That s the nearest —
Which s four-square to all the winds that blew !
Where he greatly s at bay,
for Willy s like a rock,
and s by the road at the gate.
Willy s up like a man,
I s among the silent statues,
In the centre 5 A statue veil'd,
S up and answer'd ' I have felt.'
He s on the path a little aside ;
And s by her garden-gate ;
I thought as I 5, if a hand, as white
And long by the garden lake I s,
For front to front in an hour we s.
And I s on a giant deck and mix'd my breath
Guinevere S by the castle walls to watch him pass ;
Who s in silence near his throne,
' And near him s the Lady of the Lake,
<S one who pointed toward the voice,
but the King s out in heaven, Crown'd.
his knights S round him, and rejoicing in bis joy.
The Lady of the Lake s : all her dress Wept
near it s The two that out of north
Hear me — this mom I s in Arthur's hall.
Who s a moment, ere his horse was brought.
The Lady Lyonors at a window s,
And s behind, and waited on the three.
And Enid s aside to wait the event.
When now they saw their bulwark fallen, 5 ;
Was in a manner pleased, and turning, s.
While the great charger s, grieved like a man
on his right S, al! of massiest bronze :
the one Who s beside thee even now,
arose And s with folded hands and downward eyes
Queen who s All glittering like May sunshine
and s Stiff as a viper frozen ;
and s, A virtuous gentlewoman deeply wrong'd,
Lancelot, where he s beside the King,
she drew Nearer and s.
For silent, tho' he greeted her, she s
His honour rooted in dishonour s,
but deadly-pale S grasping what was nearest,
all the place whereon she s was green ;
There two s arm'd, and kept the door ;
In our great hall there s a vacant chair,
And staring each at other like dumb men S,
And those that had not, s before the King,
and there, half-hidden by him, s,
there was none S near it but a lion on each side
Breast-high in that bright line of bracken s :
he s There on the castle-bridge once more,
here he s, and might have slain Me and thyself.'
But Percivale s near him and replied.
Rolling his eyes, a moment s, then spake :
And while they s without the doors,
there with gibes and flickering mockeries S,
while he twangled little Dagonet s Quiet
Stood (continued) moved slow-measure to my tune,
Princess Hi 178 Not s stockstill. Last Tournament 283
349 machicolated tower That s with open doors, 425
iv 170 near me s, In fuming sulphur blue and green, 616
190 strong man-breasted things s from the sea, Guinevere 246
291 s before the Queen As tremulously as foam 363
314 near him the sad nuns with each a light S, .. 591
418 That s on a dark strait of barren land : Pass, of Arthur llS
488 That both his eyes were dazzled as he s, ., 227
V 12 Long s Sir Bedivere Revolving many memories, .. 437
177 They s before his throne in silence, .. 455
vi 30 Were drunk into the inmost blue, we s, Lover's Tale i 309
143 near'd the bay, For there the Temple s. .. 339
151 and s A solid glory on her bright black hair ; ,. 366
266 Half-melted into thin blue air, s still, „ 421
338 For bliss s round me like the light of Heaven, — ,. 495
359 I seem'd the only part of Time s still, .. 573
Con. 81 forms which ever s Within the magic cirque .: ii 158
93 the man who s with me Stept gaily forward, ,. Hi 50
Ode on Well. 39 And I s stole beside the vacant bier. ,. 58
106 Before the board, there paused and s, ,, iv 307
Grandmother 10 Is upon the stairs of Paradise. Sisters (E. and E.) 144
„ 38 Death while we s with the musket, Def. of Lucknow 16
„ 45 s on each of the loftiest capes, V. of Maeldune 100
The Daisy 63 he s, nor join'd The Achseans — Achilles over the T. 15
In Mem. ciii 11 S out before a darkness, crying ' Thebes, Tiresias 115
„ cxxiv 16 and the ship s still, and the skies were blue. The Wreck 115
Maud I xiii 7 ruin'd by him, by him, I s there, naked, amazed Despair 77
xiv 6 An' Dan s there for a minute. Tomorrow 22
17 s up strait as the Queen of the world — .. 79
xxii 35 an' s By the claay'd-oop pond. Spinster's S's. 23
„ II i 23 I feel'd thy arm es I s wur a-creeapin ,, 26
,. Ill vi 34 often I and Amy in the mouldering aisle
Com. of Arthur 48 have s, Locksley H., Sixty 31
277 There again I s to-day, .. 33
283 Here we s and claspt each other, ,, 180
438 They rode, or they s at bay — Heavy Brigade 51
443 Ranged like a storm or s like a rock „ 56
459 s stark by the dead ; And behind him, Dead Prophet 19
Gareth and L. 216 wife and his child s by him in tears, „ 57
„ 678 An' then as I s i' the doorwaay, Owd Rod 42
855 Where s the sheaf of Peace : The Ring 247
934 who were those that s between The tower .. 252
,. 1375 whose hand was that ? they s So close together. „ . 257
Marr. of Geraint 392 Even from myself ? stand ? s . . . no more. Romney's R. 66
Geraint and E. 153 s Before the great Madonna-masterpieces „ 85
168 kindled the pyre, and all S round it, Death of CEnone 66
456 But while we s rejoicing, I and thou, Akbar's Dream 182
535 An' ya s oop naakt i' the beck. Church-warden, etc. 29
Balin and Balan 364 Stook (stuck) S to his taail they did, N. Farmer, N. S. 30
613 Stool Perch'd like a crow upon a three-legg'd s, Audley Court 45
Merlin and V. 69 his foot was on a s Shaped as a dragon ; Last Tournament 671
87 An' sattle their ends upo s's Owd Rod 24
844 Stoop S's at all game that wing the skies, Rosalind 4
910 To s the cowslip to the plains, „ 16
Lancelot and E. 85 The skies s down in their desire ; Fatima 32
350 I could not s to such a mind. L. C. V. de Vere 20
355 Enormous elm-tree-boles did .s and lean D. of F. Women 57
876 He s's — to kiss her — on his knee. Day-Dm., Arrival 30
966 The cloud may s from heaven and take the shape Princess vii 2
1200 S down and seem to kiss me ere I die.' „ 150
1247 To s and kiss the tender little thumb, Marr. of Geraint 395
Holy Grail 167 watch the time, and eagle-like S at thy will Balin and Balan 536
194 I said to her, ' A day for Gods to s,' Lover's Tale i 304
724 A clamorous cuckoo s's to meet her hand ; Prog, of Spring '^
754 Stoop'd-Stoopt He stoop'd and clutch'd him, fair and
817 good. Will Water. 133
Pdleas and E. 56 And o'er her second father stoopt a girl, Enoch Arden 747
442 stoop'd To drench his dark locks in the gurgling wave Princess iv 186
491 Rise ! ' and stoop'd to updrag Melissa : ,. 366
523 when a boy, you stoop'd to me From all high places, .. 429
„ 581 My father stoop'd, re-father'd o'er my wounds. ,. vi 129
Last Tournament 113 She tum'd ; she paused ; She stoop'd ; „ vii 155
187 rode to Merlin's feet, Who stoopt and caught the
252 babe, Com. of Arthur 385
Stoop'd-Stoopt
686
Storm-strengthen' d
Stoop'd-Stoopt (continued) and stoof'd With a low
whinny toward the pair : Geraint and E. 755
sorrowing Lancelot should have stoop'd so low, Lancelot and E. 732
Stoopt, took, break seal, and read it ; „ 1271
I stoop'd, I gather'd the mid herbs. Lover's Tale i 341
and death while we stoopt to the spade, Bef. of Lucknow 16
dreamer stoopt and kiss'd her marble brow. Locksley H., Sixty 38
while I stoopt To take and kiss the ring. The Ring 131
Stopt The swallow s as he hunted the fly. Poet's Song 9
All of a sudden he s : Grandmother 41
S, and then with a riding whip Maud I xiii 18
when he s we long'd to hurl together, Merlin and V. 420
Store (s) then with what she brought Buy goods and
*-'« — Enoch Arden 138
Bought Annie goods and s's, and set his hand .. 169
With shelf and comer for the goods and s's. „ 171
How best to help the slender s, To F. D. Maurice 37
Love, then, had hope of richer s : In Mem. Ixvxi 5
We wish them s of happy days. „ Con. 84
With s of rich apparel, sumptuous fare, Marr. of Geraint 709
of whate'er The Future had in s : Lover's Tale ii 133
Store (verb) For some three suns to s and hoard myself, Ulysses 29
Stored all things in order s, Palace of Art 87
S in some treasure-house of mighty kings, M. d' Arthur 101
Dora s what little she could save, Dora 52
honeycomb of eloquence S from all flowers ? Edwin Morris 27
I s it full of rich memorial : Princess v 391
In this wide hall with earth's invention s, Ode Inter. Exhih. 2
S in some treasure-house of mighty kings, Pass, of Arthur 269
summers are s in the sunlight still. The Dawn 19
EKoried where sweetest sunlight falls Upon the s walls ; Ode to Memory 86
with love far-brought From out the s Past
Storing S yearly little dues of wheat,
Stork Went by me, like a s :
Storm (See also Thunder-storm) as from the s Of
running fires and fluid range
Whither in after life retired From brawling s's,
And shatter, when the s's are black.
Henceforward squall nor s Could keep me
I tum'd once more, close-button'd to the s ;
Battering the gates of heaven with s's of prayer,
shaken with a sudden s of sighs —
But blessed forms in whistling s's
S, such as drove her under moonless heavens
like a s he came. And shook the house, and like
a s he went.
Caught in a burst of unexpected s,
Sir Aylmer reddening from the s within,
but presently Wept like a s :
sheet-lightnings from afar, but fork'd Of the near s,
but when the wordy s Had ended,
' S in the night ! for thrice I heard the rain
' S, and what dreams, ye holy Gods,
BEJmier and nobler from her bath of $,
The green malignant light of coming s.
mystic fire on a mast-head. Prophet of s :
Fluctuated, as flowers in s, some red,
On me, me, me, the s first breaks :
When s is on the heights,
at which the s Of galloping hoofs bare on the ridge
Let our girls flit, Till the s die !
Tho' all the s of Europe on us break ;
s and blast Had blown the lake beyond his limit.
And a s never wakes on the lonely sea,
a cloud in my heart, and a s in the air !
No is trouble and cloud and s.
The touch of change in calm or s ;
O thou that after toil and s
And lash with s the streaming pane ?
The « their high-built organs make,
A pillar stedf ast in the s,
The seeming prey of cyclic s'«,
Well roars the s to those that hear A deeper voice
across the «,
should burst and drown with deluging s's
Love thou thy land 2
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 122
Talking Oak 56
Swpp. Confessions 146
Ode to Memory 112
England and Amer. 13
Gardener's D. 190
Edwin Morris 136
St. S. Stylites 7
Locksley Hall 27
Sir Galahad 59
Enach Arden 547
Aylmer' s Field 215
285
322
403
727
Sea Dreams 31
Lucretius 26
33
Princess Hi 132
iv 275
482
499
»348
488
vi 338
Third of Feb. 14
The Daisy 70
The Islet 33
Window, Gone 6
„ No Answer d>
In Mem. xvi 6
xxxiii 1
Ixxii 4
Ixxxvii 6
cxiii 12
cxviii 11
„ cxxvii 3
Maud II i 42
Storm (continued) whatsoever s's May shake the world, Com. of Arthur 292
And lightnings play'd about it in the s, Gareth and L. 68
A censer, either worn with wind and s ; „ 222
world's loud whisper breaking into s, Marr. of Geraint 27
Turn thy wild wheel thro' sunshine, s, and cloud ; „ 348
Whose skirts are loosen'd by the breaking s, Geraint and E. 459
A S was coming, but the winds were still. Merlin and V. 1
A minstrel of Caerleon by strong s ,-9
s Brake on the mountain and 1 cared not for it. ., 502
And lash'd it at the base with slanting s ; „ 635
dark wood grew darker toward the s In silence, „ 890
' Come from the s,' and having no reply, .. 895
(For now the s was close above them) „ 935
Till now the s, its burst of passion spent, „ 961
(Sea was her wrath, yet working after s) Lancelot and E. 1309
S at the top, and when we gain'd it, s Round us and
death ; Holy Grail 491
Spake but of sundry perils in the s ; ,, 761
upward-rushing s and cloud Of shriek and plume. Last Tournament 440
When that s of anger brake From Guinevere, Guinevere 361
Or wisely or unwisely, signs of s. To the Queen ii 49
mind Lies folded, often sweeps athwart in s — Lover's Tale i 50
S, sunset, glows and glories of the moon .. ii 110
my lost love Symbol'd in s. ,, 185
sway and whirl Of the s dropt to windless calm, „ 207
and the s rushing over the down, Rizpah 6
when the s on the downs began, „ 71
A moonless night with s — Sisters (E. and E.) 96
bleat of a lamb in the s and the darkness
without ; In the Child. Hasp. 64
S at the Water-gate ! s at the Bailey-gate ! s, and
it ran Def. of Lucknow 37
in days Of doubt and cloud and s, Columbus 156
the poplar and cypress unshaken by s V. of Maeldune 15
ridges drew the cloud and brake the s Montenegro 13
driven by s and sin and death to the ancient fold, The Wreck 2
I would hide from the s without, I would flee from
the s within, ,. 9
great s grew with a howl and a hoot ..91
And he spoke not — only the s ; till after a little, 103
the s went roaring above us, and he — was out of the 5. .. 106
the s and the days went by, but I knew no more — .. Ill
And gone — that day of the s — „ 148
She reels not in the s of warring words. Ancient Sage 70
The placid gleam of sunset after s ! „ 133
But wirrah ! the s that night — Tomorrow 23
Ranged like a s or stood like a rock Heavy Brigade 56
And glared at a coming s. Dead Prophet 24
s's Of Autmnn swept across the city, Demeter and P. 70
A sound of anger like a distant s. The Ring 119
The s, you hear Far-off, is Muriel — „ 138
One year without a s, or even a cloud ; ,, 284
whom the s Had parted from his comrade „ 307
When the s's are blowing. Forlorn 6
When I was praying in a s — Happy 80
And bring or chase the s, Mechanophitus 14
S in the South that darkens the day ! Riflemen form ! 2
S of battle and thunder of war ! „ 3
S, S, Riflemen form ! (repeat) 5, 19
Ready, be ready against the s ! (repeat) .. 6, 20
Ready, be ready to meet the s ! (repeat) ,. 13, 27
Storm-beaten \^^ith slow steps from out An old s-l,
russet, Gareth and L. 1113
Storm'd S in orbs of song, a growing gale ; Vision of Sin 25
and s At the Oppian law. Princess vii 123
S at with shot and shell (repeat) Light Brigade 22, 43
Stormier Fierier and s from restraining, Balin and Balan 229
For whenever a rougher gust might tumble a s wave, The Wreck 131
Storming s a hill-fort of thieves He got it ; Aylmer' s Field 225
under his own lintel stood S with lifted hands, ,, 332
and s in extremes. Stood for her cause, Princess v 176
roughly set His Briton in blown seas and s showers. Ode on Well. 155
Stormless pass With all fair theories only made to gild
A s summer.' Princess ii 234
Storm-strengthen'd of grain S-s on a windy site, Gareth and L. 692
storm-worn
storm-worn A s-w signpost not to be read,
Stormy In the s east-wind straining,
It is a s season.'
It is a s morning.'
When down the s crescent goes,
There must be s weather ;
overboard one s ni^ht He cast his body,
As of some fire against a s cloud,
' We fear, indeed, you spent a s time
Morning arises s and pale.
Who in this s gulf have found a pearl
To catch a friend of mine one s day ;
Then like a s sunlight smiled Geramt,
687
Strange
Dead Prophet 17
L. of Shatott iv 1
The Goose 8
44
Sir Galahad 25
Will Water. 54
The Voyage 79
Princess iv 384
V 121
Maud I vil
„ xviii 42
„ II V 85
Geraint and E. 480
with all Its s crests that smoke against the skies, Lancelot and E. 484
And bluster into s sobs and say, „ 1067
thro' a s glare, a heat As from a seventimes-heated
furnace. Holy Grail 842
years Have hollow'd out a deep and s strait Lover s Tale i 24
again the s surf Crash'd in the shingle : „ Hi 53
' Come to us, 0 come, come ' in the s red of a sky V. of Maeldune 98
S voice of France ! Who dost not love our
England — ■ To Victor Hugo 8
spear and helmet tipt With s light as on a mast at sea, Tiresias 114
After all the s changes shall we find a changeless
May ? Locksley H., Sixty 156
Forward, let the s moment fly and mingle with the Past. „ 279
stood like a rock In the wave of a s day ; Heavy Brigade 57
Muses cried with a s cry ' Send them no more, Bead Prophet 2
Like calming oil on all their s creeds, Akbar's Dream 160
Story (See also Island-story) make the name Of his vessel
great in s, The Captain 19
— all the s of his house. Enoch Arden 704
Here is a s which in rougher shape Aylmer's Field 7
but as he told The s, storming a hill-fort „ 225
and so We forged a sevenfold s. Princess, Pro. 202
And here I give the s and the songs. „ 247
For so, my mother said, the s ran. „ i 11
And snowy simimits old in s : „ iv2
And yet to give the s as it rose, „ Con. 26
Till in all lands and thro' all human s Ode on Well. 223
All for a slanderous s. Grandmother 22
Hear the child's s.' Gareth and L. 39
Hear yet once more the s of the child. „ 100
diraibly speaks Your s, that this man loves you
no more. Geraint and E. 329
And let the s of her dolorous voyage Lancelot and E. 1343
That s which the bold Sir Bedivere, Pass, of Arthur 1
A woful man (for so the s went) Lover's Tale i 379
I learnt the drearier s of his life ; „ iv 147
then began the s of his love As here to-day, „ 354
I told your wayside s to my mother Sisters (E. and E.) 189
tell them all The s of my voyage, Columbus 12
Story (floor) And set in Heaven's third 5, Will Water. 70
Stout (adj.) S, rosy, with his babe across his knees ; Enoch Arden 746
' ye are overfine To mar s knaves with foolish
courtesies : ' Gareth and L. 733
And the s Prince bad him a loud good-night. Geraint and E. 361
that had need Of a good s lad at his farm ; First Quarrel 18
Stout (s) To each his perfect pint of s, Will Water. 115
Stow'd Or s, when classic Canning died, „ 101
Straange (strange) S an' cowd fur the time ! Village Wife 21
S an' unheppen Miss Lucy ! „ 100
S an' owd-farran'd the 'ouse, Owd Boa 21
Straat (straight) «S as a pole an' clean as a flower North. Cobbler 44
Straddling s on the butts While the wine ran : Guineoere 268
Straight (See also Straat, Strait, Strait) ' If 5 thy track,
or if oblique. Two Voices 193
To the pale-green sea-groves s and high. The Merman 19
<S, but as lissome as a hazel wand ; The Brook 70
Should, as by miracle, grow 5 and fair — Aylmer's Field 676
For all we have power to see is a s staff bent in a
pool ; High. Pantheism 16
All round one finger pointed s, The Ririg 453
Strain (s) quick lark's closest-caroll'd s's, Rosalind 10
An echo from a measured s, Miller's D. 66
Strain (s) (continued) Is this the manly 5 of Eumiymede ? Third of Feb. 34
I scarce could brook the s and stir In Mem. xv 12
A s to shame us ' keep you to yourselves ; To the Queen ii 15
Strain (verb) cords that bind and s The heart Clear-headed Friend 4
Shudderest when I s my sight, Fatima 3
s to make an inch of room For their sweet selves, Lit. Squabbles 9
Strain'd A little in the late encounter s, Geraint and E. 158
thou hast seen me s And sifted to the utmost, Pelleas and E. 247
Straining In the stormy east-wind s, L. of Shalott iv 1
but s ev"n his uttermost Cast, Gareth and L. 1152
S his eyes beneath an arch of hand. Pass, of Arthur 464
Strait (adj.) Bound them by so s vows to his own self. Com. of Arthur 262
Went thro' the s and dreadful pass of death, „ 395
Strait (s) That stood on a dark s of barren land. M. d' Arthur 10
I'll serve you better in a s ; Princess i 85
hovering o'er the dolorous s To the other shore. In Mem. Ixxxiv 39
That stood on a dai;k s of barren land : Pass, of Arihm 178
years Have hollow'd out a deep and stormy s Lover's Tale i 24
wreaths of all that would advance, Beyond our s, To Victor Hugo 6
Strait (straight) stood up s as the Queen of the world— Tomorrow 79
Strait fur I'll loocik my hennemy s i' the faace, North. Cobbler 74
Strait-besieged being s-b By this wild king Princess, Pro. 36
Straiten 'd (adj.) Cursed be the gold that gilds the s
forehead of the fool ! Locksley Hall 62
Straiten'd (verb) shackles of an old love s him, Lancelot and E. 875
Strait-laced S-l, but all-too-full in bud Talking Oak 59
Straitlier But s bound am I to bide with thee.' Gareth and L. 805
Strand (shore) as a ground-swell dash'd on the s, W. to Alexandra 23
Here on the Breton s ! Maud II ii 29
fringe Of that great breaker, sweeping up the s. Com. of Arthur 387
He seem'd to pace the s of Brittany Last Tournament 407
Before Isolt of Brittany on the s, „ 589
Strand (thread) ' The dusky s of Death inwoven here Maud I xviii 60
Stranded For sure no gladlier does the s wreck Enoch Arden 828
Stranding s on an isle at morn Rich, „ 552
Strange (See also Straange) A spring rich and s. Nothing will Die 22
The broken sheds look'd sad and s : Mariana 5
Like that s angel which of old. Clear-headed friend 24
Sudden glances, sweet and s, Madeline 5
With a music s and manifold, Dying Swan 29
At such s war with something good, Two Voices 302
shafts were blazon'd fair In diverse raiment s : Palace of Art 168
As in s lands a traveller walking slow, „ 277
You put s memories in my head. L. C. V. de Vere 26
0 sweet and s it seems to me, May Queen, Con. 53
Our sons inherit us : our looks are s : Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 73
'Tis s that those we lean on most. To .J. S. 9
Nothing comes to thee new or s. „ 74
Among new men, s faces, other minds.' M. d' Arthur 238
Like that s song I heard Apollo sing, Tithonus 62
Thro' sunny decads new and s, Day-Dm., L' Envoi 22
' So s it seems to me. Lady Clare 52
' That were s. What surname ? ' The Brook 211
she grieved In her s dream, she knew not why, Sea Dreams 230
She brought s news. „ 267
s was the sight .to me ; Princess, Pro. 54
S was the sight and smacking of the time ; „ 89
And, yonder, shrieks and s experiments „ 235
An old and s affection of the house. „ i 13
On a sudden my s seizure came Upon me, „ Hi 183
we give you, being s, A license : speak, „ 204
If that s Poet-princess with her grand Imaginations „ 273
' Ah, sad and s as in dark summer dawns „ iv 49
So sad, so s, the days that are no more. „ 53
and s experiences Unmeet for ladies. „ 158
you spent a stormy time With our s girl : „ v 122
And how the s betrothment was to end : „ 474
That all things grew more tragic and more s ; „ vi 23
nor seem'd it s that soon He rose up whole, „ vii 64
1 have heard Of your s doubts : „ 336
I moved as in a s diagonal, „ Con. 27
For now so s do these things seem. In Mem. xiii 15
I should not feel it to be s. „ xiv 20
But thou art turn'd to something s, „ xli 5
The days that grow to something s, „ Ixxi 11
strange
688
Stream
strange (contitmed)
chaiige
S friend, past, present, and to be ;
S, that I hear two men.
How s was what she said,
S, that I felt so gay, S, that / tried to-day
S, that the mind, when fraught With a passion
terror grew Of that s bright and dreadful thing.
and 5 Was love's dumb cry defying
In Mem. xcv 26
„ cxxix 9
Maud, I vii 13
xix 34
XX 1
„ // a 58
Marr. of Geraint 616
And for my s petition I will make Amends „ 817
ye surely have endured S chances here alone ; ' Geraint and E. 810
there be two s knights Who sit near Camelot Balin and Balan 10
A s knee rustle thro' her secret reeds, „ 354
' To what request for what s boon,' Merlin and
Boon, ay, there was a boon, one not so s —
And take this boon so s and not so s.'
' 0 not so 5 as my long asking it, Not yet so s as you
j'ourself are s, Nor half so s as that dark mood of
yoiirs.
nothing wild or s, Or seeming shameful —
— this, however s. My latest :
An end to this ! A s one !
And the s sound of an adulterous race,
And crimson in the belt a s device,
And carven with s figures ;
^o s, and rich, and dim ;
Among the s devices of our kings ;
but in me lived a sin So s,
(S as to some old prophet might have seem'd
and s knights From the four winds came in :
Then ran across her memory the s rhyme
he heard S music, and he paused, and turning —
Among new men, s faces, other minds.'
All — all but one ; and s to me, and sweet, Sweet
thro' s years to know that
And Hate is s beneath the roof of Love.
Made s division of its suffering With her,
Wonder'd at some s light in Julian's eyes
such a feast So rich, so s, and stranger ev'n than rich,
I never yet beheld a thing so s, Sad, sweet, and s
together— „ 303
thence Down to this last s hour in his own hall ; „ 358
S fur to goa fur to think what saailors North. Cobbler 4
On whom I brought a s unhappiness, Sisters {E. and E.) 89
and for a face Gone in a moment — s. „ 94
Selfish, s ! What dwarfs are men ! „ 198
The Lord had sent this bright, s dream to me Columbus 91
With some s hope to see the nearer God. Tiresias 29
The s misfeaturmg mask that I saw so amazed me. The Wreck 117
I touch'd my limbs, the limbs Were s not mine — Ancient Sage 235
S ! She used to shun the wailing babe, The Ring 357
Strangeness feels a glimmering s in his dream. The Brook 216
Stranger (adj. and s) Two s's meeting at a festival : Circumstance 3
There strode a 5 to the door, (repeat) The Goose 3, 39
And God forget the s ! ' „ 56
s's at my hearth Not welcome, Lucretius 158
The first-fruits of the s : Princess ii 44
Moreover ' seize the s's ' is the cry. „ iv 220
And Love has led thee to the s land, W. to Marie Alex. 31
Will shelter one of s race. In Mem. cii 4
And answer'd, ' Pardon me, 0 s knight ; Mart, of Geraint 286
Queen demanded as by chance ' Know ye the s
woman ? '
Flush'd slightly at the slight disparagement Before
264
287
310
312
860
Lancelot and E. 1112
1223
Holy Grail 80
154
169
342
730
773
Pelleas and E. 51
147
Last Tournament 131
Guinevere 239
Pass, of Arthur 406
Lover's Tale i 243
779
ii 128
iv 205
211
Merlin and V. 129
the s knight, Lancelot and E. 235
landscape grow Familiar to the s's child ; In Mem. ci 20
Like s's' voices here they sound, „ civ 9
We live within the s's land, „ ct; 3
Why mockest thou the s that hath been Gareth and L. 283
A s meeting them had surely thought Geraint and E. 34
Shriek'd to the s ' Slay not a dead man ! ' „ 779
(for Arthur's knights Were hated s's in the hall) Balin arid IJidan 352
I bid the s welcome. Merlin and V. 270
Yet s's to the tongue, and with bhmt stump Last Tournament 66
A .1 a.s welcome as Satan — Charity 26
Stranger (oompar.) nor s seem'd that hearts So gentle. Princess vii 66
Stranger (compar.) {continued) such a feast So rich, so
strange, and s ev'n than rich. Lover's Tale iv 211
And s yet, at one end of the hall „ 213
S than earth has ever seen ; The Ring 38
Strange-statued under the s-s gate. Where Arthur's
wars Lancelot and E. 800
Strangled felt, despite his mail, S, Gareth and L. 1152
and then A s titter, Princess v 16
my s vanity Utter'd a stifled cry — Sisters {E. and E.) 199
and a ray red as Blood Glanced on the s face — Bandit's Death 32
Strata dip of certain s to the North. Princess Hi 170
Straw lance Broken, and his Excalibur a s.' Last Tournament 88
cotch'd 'er death o' cowd that night, poor soul,
i' the s. Ovid Roa 114
Stray Beyond the bounding hill to s. In Mem. Ixxxix 30
In lands where not a memory s's, „ civ 10
Stray'd Thy feet have s in after hours „ cii 14
Nor ever s beyond the pale : Holy Grail 21
Seeing I never s beyond the cell, „ 628
Streak (s) {See also Shadow-streak) solitary morning smote
The s's of virgin snow. Qinone 56
Now fades the last long s of snow. In Mem. cxv 1
gay with gold In s's and rays, Gareth and L. 911
winds Laid the long night in silver s's and bars, Lover's Tale ii 112
The first gray s of earliest summer-dawn, Ancient Sage 220
Streak (verb) white vapour s the crowned towers Princess lii 344
But pure as lines of green that s the white „ v 196
Streak'd {See also Silvery-streak'd) - ' " starr'd at intervals
With falling brook Lover's Tale i 404
Stream (s) {See also Atom-stream, Gulf-stream, Sthrame)
When will the s be aweary of flowing Nothing will Die 1
The s flows. The wind blows, „ • 9
The s will cease to flow ; All Things will Die 9
The s's through many a lilied row The winds, etc. 5
A clear s flowing with a muddy one, Isabel 30
And the far-off s is dumb. The Owl i 3
The leaping s, the very wind, Rosalind 14
Like two s's of incense free From one censer Elednore 58
The broad s in his banks complaining, L. of Shalott iv 3
The broad s bore her far away, „ 17
the babble of the s Fell, and, without, Mariana in the S. 51
' Who, rowing hard against the s. Two Voices 211
Like those long mosses in the s. Miller's D. 48
Beside the mill-wheel in the s, „ 167
Between the loud s and the trembling stars. (Enone 219
like a downward smoke, the slender s Lotos-Eaters 8
A land of s's ! some, like a downward smoke, „ 10
in the s the long-leaved flowers weep, „ C. S. 10
How sweet it were, hearing the downward s, „ 54
A league of grass, wash'd by a slow broad s, Gardener's D. 40
A single s of all her soft brown hair „ 128
Night sUd down one long s of sighing wind, „ 267
In many s's to fatten lower lands, Golden Year 34
And all the long-pent s of life Day -Dm., Revival 15
burst away In search of s or foxmt, . Enoch Arden 635
Not by the well-known s and rustic spire. The Brook 188
Bright with the sun upon the s beyond : Sea Dreams 97
drifting up the s In fancy, till I slept again, „ 108
Before two s's of light from wall to wall. Princess ii 473
s's that float us each and all To the issue, „ iv 70
' I stagger in the s : „ vi 321
I strove against the s and all in vain : „ vii 12
The shimmering glimpses of a s ; „ Con. 46
Who let the turbid s's of rumour flow Ode on Well. 181
All along the valley, s that flashest white, V. of Cauteretz 1
many a fire between the ships and s Spec, of Iliad 17
The sound of s's that swift or slow In Mem. xxxv 10
A secret sweetness in the s, „ Ixiv 20
We talk'd : the s beneath us ran, „ Ixxxix 43
On winding s or distant sea ; „ cxv 12
The market boat is on the s, „ cxxi 13
With never an end to the s of passing feet, Maud II v 11
the s Full, narrow ; this a bridge of single arc Gareth and L. 907
and in the s beneath him, shone Immingled „ 935
hoof of his horse slipt in the s, the s Descended, „ 1046
stream
689
Strength
stream (s) (continued) Well hast thou done ; for all the
s is freed, Gareth and L. 1267
They hoped to slay him somewhere on the s, „ 1419
And shpt and fell into some pool or s, Lancelot and E. 214
to that s whereon the barge, Pall'd all its length .. 1141
of Arthur's palace toward the s. They met, .. 1178
and down they flash'd, and smote the 5. 1235
barge that brought her moving down, Far-off, a blot
upon the s, „ 1392
I walking to and fro beside a s Holy Grail 592
served with choice from air, land, 5, and sea, Pelleas and E. 149
as a s that spouting from a cliff Fails in mid air, Guinevere 608
The s of life, one s, one life, one blood. Lover's Tale i 239
As mountain s's Our bloods ran free • „ 326
a s Flies with a shatter'd foam along the chasm. „ 382
s, Forth issuing from his portals in the crag ,, 429
perchance of s's Running far on within „ 522
the sound Of the loud s was pleasant, „ H 35
lest the s should issue pure. LocTtsley H., Sixty 144
And borne along by that full s of men, St. TeUmachus 43
Stream (verb) A thousand sims will s on thee, A Farewell 13
S's o'er a rich ambrosial ocean isle, Milton 14
And crowds that s from yawning doors. In Mem. Ixx 9
In the long breeze that s's to thy delicious East, Mavd I xviii 16
S's thro' the twelve great battles of our King. Holy Grail 250
S's like a cloud, man-shaped, To the Queen ii 40
And o'er thee s's the rain, Pref. Poem Broth. Son. 14
Stream 'd s Upon the mooned dor"°s aloof In inmost
Bagdat, Arabian Nights 126
Across the mountain s below In misty folds, Palace of A rt 34
<S onward, lost their edges, D. of F. Women 50
Old, s thro' many a golden bar, Day-Dm., Depart. 15
The vine s out to follow, Amvhion 46
How swiftly s ye by the bark ! The Voyage 50
And in we s Among the colimins. Princess ii 434
I likewise, and in groups they s away. „ Con. 105
S to the peak, and mingled with the haze Com. of Arthur 436
half the pearls away, iS from it still ; Lancelot and E. 808
S thro' my cell a cold and silver beam, Holy Grail 116
And all the pavement s with massacre : Last Tovmament 477
Streamer Shot Bke a « of the northern mom, M. d' Arthur 139
Shot Uke a 5 of the northern mom. Pass, of Arthur 307
Streaming (See also Down-streaming) Forth s from
a braid of pearl: Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 6
The torrent vineyard s fell To meet the sun The Daisy 10
And lash with storm the s pane ? In Mem. Ixxii 4
On leagues of odour s far, .. Ixxxvi 14
And high in heaven the s cloud. Con. 107
— all her bright hair s down — Lancelot and E. 1156
people, from the high door s, brake Disorderly, „ 1347
hill and wood Went ever s by him till the gloom, Pelleas and E. 548
Up or down the s wind ? Rosalind 9
In many a s torrent back, England and Amer. 14
What sequel ? S eyes and breaking hearts ? Ixme and Duty 2
Struck out the s mountain-side, Lucretius 29
And down the s crystal dropt; Princess vii 165
Here, in s London's central roar. Ode on Well. 9
Hath left crag-carven o'er the s Gelt — Gareth and L. 1203
grayly draped With s grass, appear'd, Balin and Balan 333
and thro' tbe gap GUmmer'd the s scud : Holy Grail 682
Crook and turn upon itself in many a backward
s curve. Locksley H., Sixty 236
and aloft the glare Flies s, Achilles over the T. 12
And s and shining on Silent river, Merlin and the G. 51
Streamlet For us the same cold s curl'd In Mem. Ixxix 9
Streeat (street) yon laady a-steppin' along the s, North. Cobbler 107
Street {See also Shtreet, Streeat) till noon no foot should pace
the s, Godiva 39
The s's are dumb with snow. Sir Galahad 52
Till, where the s grows straiter, WUl Water. 142
He pass'd by the town and out of the s, Poet's Song 2
long s climbs to one tall-tower'd mill ; Enoch Arden 5
narrow s that clamber'd toward the mill. „ 60
From distant comers of the s they ran ., 349
The climbing s, the mill, the leafy lanes, „ 607
Street (continued) Then down the long s having slowly stolen, Enoch Arden 683
For Philip's dwelling fronted on the s, ., 731
All down the long and narrow s he went „ 795
I mind him coming down the s ; „ 847
' yesterday I met him suddenly in the s. Sea Dreams 146
then my eyes Pursued him down the s, „ 165
A little s half garden and half house ; Princess i 214
heave and thump A league of s in summer solstice down, ., Hi 128
We cross'd the s and gain'd a petty mound „ iv 557
brawl Their rights or wrongs like potherbs in the s. „ v 459
With lifted hand the gazer in the 5. Ode on Well. 22
Welcome her, thundering cheer of the s ! W. to Alexandra 7
Till, in a narrow s and dim. The Daisy 22
Here in the long unlovely s, In Mem. vii 2
On the bald s breaks the blank day. „ 12
The field, the chamber and the s, „ viii 11
The s's were fill'd with joyful sound, „ xxxi 10
The s's were black with smoke and frost, „ Ixix 3
I smell the meadow in the s ; „ cxix 4
There where the long s roars, „ cxxiv
At the head of the village s, Maud I vi '
For only once, in the village s, „ xiii ■
In the chamber or the s, „ // ir
I loathe the squares and s's,
Only a yard beneath the s,
Took horse, descended the slope s, and past Gareth and L'.
Gareth rode Down the slope s, „
Beheld the long s of a Uttle town Marr. of Geraint
And down the long s riding wearily, „ 26 i
On a sudden, many a voice along the s, Geraint and E. 270
That glance of theirs, but for the s. Merlin and V. 105
As the poach'd filth that floods the middle s, „ 798
Met foreheads all along the s Holy Grail 344
in middle s the Queen, Who rode by Lancelot, „ 355
from over the breadth of a s, Def. of Lucknow 23
and, yelling with the yeUing s, Locksley H., Sixty 135
maidens by the thousand on the s. „ 220
would it matter so much if I came on the s ? Charity 8
Streetward To fit their little s sitting-room Enoch Arden 170
Streetway a s hung with folds of pure Wliite samite, Last Tournament 140
Strength The unsunn'd freshness of my s, Supp. Confessions 140
Mine be the s of spirit, Mine be the strength 1
Than cry for s, remaining weak, Two Voices 95
' What, is not this my place of s,' Palace of Art 233
With all my s I pray'd for both, May Queen, Con. 31
S came to me that equall'd my desire. D. of F. Women 230
s of some diffusive thought Hath tinae You ask me, why, etc. 15
A slow-develop'd s awaits Completion Love thou thy land 57
We are not now that s which in old days Ulysses 66
that sin against the s of youth ! Locksley Hall 59
My s is as the s of ten. Sir Galahad 3
aid me, give me s Not to tell her, Enoch Arden 785
and truth and love are s, Aylmer's Field 365
I wonder'd at her s, and ask'd her of it : Sea Dreams 113
He took advantage of his s to be First in the field : Princess ii 152
0 fall'n at length that tower of s Ode on Well. 38
What Roman s Turbia show'd In ruin, The Daisy 5
Corrupts the s of heaven-descended Will, Will 11
And in my grief a s reserved. In Mem. Ixxxv 52
He fought his doubts and gather'd s, ,, xcvi 13
The maidens gather'd s and grace „ ciii 27
Blow trumpet ! Uve the s and die the lust ! Com. of Arthur 492
thro' that s the King Drew in the petty princedoms „ 516
Have s and wit, in my good mother's haU Gareth and L. 12
That s of anger thro' mine arms, „ 948
same s which threw the Morning Star „ 1108
As closing in himself the s of ten, „ 1339
' Fool, for thou hast, men say, the s of ten, „ 1387
And s against all odds, and what the King Balin and Balan 183
they lifted up Their eager faces, wondering at the s, Merlin and V. 133
and waste the spiritual s Within us. Holy Grail 35
said he, ' but men With s and will to right the wrong'd, „ 309
may count The yet-unbroken s of all his knights, „ 326
for a s Was in us from the vision, „ 333
And in the s of this I rode, „ 476
2 X
strength
Strength (continued) and in the s of this Come liot^r ti^j,, n -i Aan,
8 of heart And might of limb, "^^ r„,, -/"^^ ^''"i f^
chance and craft and . in single fights pifof TT' f(l
m.age, hke a charm of lightTnd /up^n the .yatersf'l^Sfme In
Fierce m the 5 of far descent, a streain ' 009
?^^r^rf '','"*" *^^'y™■P?*^y Of that smaU bay, " il4
With my hfe, love, soul, spirit, and heart and 5. " i^
In confidence of imabated 5, '• tvi
when s is shock'd With torment, " -^ik
Strong with the s of the race to command n-f ^/ r" 7 " ^^
Th^t*'?/ ''^ r"'^^' ^^'^ ^^*^°" pTeTtheirs. '''•^- '^ m^etTlll
That old s and constancy Which has made
your fathers great n ^ t j ^ ^ , ■, ^ .
Trunk and boufh, Naked s. ^^'**- ^- '""^ ^A,f ^^'^V ^t
A sudden 5 from heaven, „, t 7 i, l^
I s lame hands of faith, and grope fnncess v 538
But free to s his limbs 'in la^ J&t r. ^ ^Th%ll
at length we began to be weary, S s^h and to s ™'"' "'"^ ^^ ^^^
and yawn, ' r/ x ir ,:,
'^fo^t bSfi tS pti ^^^ --^ — -- 0^ &1 }
'"'SeXTklf '""^ ''^^^ oSThe. forefinger of ,,f ^^^^^^ ^'-^'^ ^88
TheS the Lady 5 a vulture throat, ^'''''''' '' Hi
She s her arms and call'd Across the tumult " lo^
arms .S under all the cornice and upheld : Garethand L 219
drunkard, as he s from horse To strike him T„.t% 1 Ht.
she .out her arms and cried aloud'Oh'Sbur ! ' "^'^ ^7:^Zl Sg
— f my hands As if I saw her ; wimevere bUb
Sketching A bounded field, nor 5 far • tJm f^\^A
Lets down his other leg and s, rn\ '^'f'^^lt
Strew xS'ee Strow ^"'^^'^ "'^'^ -^- ^186
Strewn S in the entry of the moaning cave • r^,,. > 't' 7 ••• o
Stricken (^«« also AwVsfcricken, Hor^orScken. Panic ^"'' ' ^"'' "* '
K^°' Jl^^f ' 'S<'^«°' Sun - stricken? WelT
^cken, Wonder-stncken) And, s by an angel's
And out of s helmets sprang the fire ^t 9'^^^<^dm
Was cancell'd, . thro' ^th doubt r/r'''' '' ^^a
knave-knight, well s, 0 good knight-knave- oJ^hnnT/Zf^
then were I s blind That minute ^areth. and L. 1135
Withallherdamsels, he rfSute; "-Sa^Sf IS
And have but s with the sword in vain • p i^ /.f' oi
I might have . a lusty stroTe foJhS ' :^r> tf/'^^t^ «q
I WAS the chief of the Lc^he had^y father dead-^F oSmuJI
^ A ^^\ ^y^ P^'^ted, with great s's amon^ his dogs. " ^ 41? SI
Abate the s, which speaks of man p • ^"'^^^'^^
the Prince, as Enid past him, f aiS' To follow '^'^''' '' ^
strode as, t,^ ^ ^
Igdejverb) hard heir .'. about their lands, '^-liueTlfl^
Stridest warnor-wise thou s thro' his halls r„o, t r,E
SWgng now . fa.t, and now Sitti^ awMe 'u^^^TSi^m
StnJe To hear the murmur of the 2 ^"^ ,V ! ol
'Waiting to strive a happy . r., i?''^'""''i i
The flattery and the s, ' n /^°„^'''''^M?°
Ev'n now we hear with inward <! t' °\i ' ^<'^«« 148
pulsation that I feirbefoTthe 5 ^V^^.'^yJf'i^^.
The maid and page renew'd K s n ^^^*% ^«« 109
Half fearful thltTwith Tlf at s ' "'ivZ^wT'^yf,
'Help us from famine And pla^ie and s ' rl ifZ' ^?n
To point the term of human 5 ' ^'^^ ,^*^^**^ J9
Are God and Nature then at 5 ^'^ ^^'"- ^ ^^
That loved to handle spiritual's " , K^,
And ancient forms of party s • ' " ^^^^ °'*
To fruitful s's and rivalries of peace— /. ^ ". r^ T 00
And see my dear lord wounded in fh» . ,. ■^^'^- ^J ^^V^^^ 38
In the crash of the cannSe^ ?JX 'a . ^"'^^ "/ ^«-«*^< 103
slain thy fathers in waTS^i^k T" ^^P«^^*« ^^ fhe Revenge!^
weary was I of the travel, the troTbTe, the s and the sin^' "^ ''^''^"^ Jg
690
Strikest
strife (continued) Theirs that so often in S mth
their enemies » « r d , , ,
Strike ^g.e aJso^Spank) grow awry From roots whifh '^ ^'^^'^^^^^ ^^
God'wouTd move And s the hard, hard rock ^''^^- ^'^^'^^^^JS
Aiid strongly s to left and right, ' '" c , o^
bhadows thou dost s, Embracing cloud t rr • .H
Shall s within thy pulses, like a God"sf' """ mZZ lit
As when a great thought s's along the brain D of F wZl A
I sought to s Into that wondrous tra<=k of dreams "^ ^^ ^ ""'^g
Would s, and firmly, and one stroke ■ r .1 ^:,. , /iS
earth feed thy brJc'hy roo^Ttaf ^der deeply s's'f'&S'o^fnl
till_he madly s's Agamst it, and beats out his weary ^ "^
^ thro' a finer element of her own ? 4 1*^^* ^^^1^ Jf ^
when she s's thro' the thick blo^ Of cattle ^"^K' ^'' '^ ^11
a noiseless riot underneathVithro' the wo'od I-^oreUusm
And s's him dead for thine and thee ' t> ■ " ■ T^a
Stir in me as to s : Pnnegss z?; 584
Fight and fight well: sands home. '" " f no
shadowing down the champaign till it s's "' ^a
The tops shall s from star to star " -i^
Look up, and let thy nature s on mine, '" J'ofJ
Should s a sudden hand in mine 7 ,'; '^^l-^V,
The sunbeam s's along the world ■ ^'^ ^^"^- ^^^ "
That s's by night a craggy shelf " ^^lo
And s his being into bounds, ' ' r. "^i^
And s, if he could, were it but with his ^auTj i4
Arise, my God, and s, for we hold Thee just, ^7/ g
^ dead the whole weak race of venomoui worms " it
Suddenly s on a sharper sense For a shell ' " ,-,•«?
Then to s him and lay him low ' " "^
'Take thou and s! "^ ^' ^ , :; ,. "onS
' S for the King and live ' ^°^- "f ^^^^ur 307
' S for the King and die ! -{SS
Accursed, who s's nor lets the hand be seen ! Garethand L 435
Sun Heaved up a ponderous arm to s the fifth, ^iSs
so Gareth .seem'd to s Vainly ' • ,045
^ Romd- ^^''^*^~"'^' "'°" ^'^ ''''''■*^y °f *h^ 'f^bl^
^—s the wind will never change again.' ^ \fA
Lancelot thro' his warm blood felt Ice s ?q^
I yet should s upon a sudden means To dig. Merlin and V 659
placed where mornmg's earliest ray Might s it, wX W £ 6
Set lance in rest, s spur, suddenly move, ' ^^^^l-ot a,uL ^6
I fear me that will s my blossom dead. "07?
Then will 1 s at him and s him down, ■" inw
Give me good fortune, I will s him dead, '' |n71
-S down the lusty and long practised knight, ToLi
%w2f K^.f t ' ,*1^ f '°™ th^ st'^'- there shot ^^/w GraiZ 5^
This hght that s's his eyeball is not light, ^ ^"^""^ %f^
Down ! s hm ! put my hate into you? strokes, Pdleas and E 228 '
No men to s? Fall on him all at once, ' J^elleas arul E. 22%
and he call'd, ' I s upon thy side— " t^
wS rgk?ii: hi^fw /™" ^°^•^1 '^^^ ^^' ^^' ^<'"»^men^ IS !
vvnat rignts aie his that dare not s for them "^ ^ \
Where I must s against the man thev call r • tik
and shim dead, and meet myself Death GmneoeTe^2
?Slk Jm r '''r^^T ^^^^ '^ ^ ""y death to me. Pass. ofAHhurU
thrills of bhss That s across the soul in praver Lm,jJ{ Tni.^\(d
W n'fi' ,S™^-!^^ did s my forehead^al Tpkst ; ^"^ ' ^"'' '^f g
hve to fight agam and to s another blow.' Thl' Ji.„.„T q^
I swore I would s off his head. r/ It m T^ 9
let thme own hand s Thy youthful pulses ^ " '^St'se
^i wlif s '"sdfhT^h^trr'%*,'t V-... ^S ^Sm
1 wiu s saia lie Ihe stars with head sublime.' Emlomi^ 4fi
Thou wilt s Thy glory thro''the dav 7i a. j d A
Strik^t but thou s^a^strLg s?roke, ^'^^ ''cL^maldT^^l
Ay, knave, because thou s as a knight, tmretti and i..^877
Strikin'
691
Strong
Strikin' an' theere— it be s height — Spinster's S's. 114
waait till tha 'ears it be s the hour. Owd Rod 18
Strikiiig (See also Strikin') blow Before hiin, a- on my brow. Fatima 25
There rose a noise of s clocks, Day-Dm., Revival 2
Now s on huge stmnbling-blocks of scorn Aylmer's Field 538
s with her glance, The mother, me, the child ; Princess vi 152
Struck for the throne, and s found his doom. Com. of Arthur 325
when I watch'd thee s on the bridge Gareth and L. 992
watch his mightful hand s great blows At caitiffs Marr. of Geraint 95
And strongly s out her limbs awoke ; Geraint and E. 880
beast seeking to help herself By s at her better. Merlin and V. 499
And over hard and soft, s the sod Pelleas and E. 498
S the last stroke with Excalibur, Pass, of Arthur 168
Thunderless lightnings s under sea To the Queen ii 12
jS the hospital wall, crashing thro' it, Def. of Lucknow 18
String (See also Bow-string, Leading-strings) Shall it not
be scorn to me to harp on such a moulder'd s ? Locksley Hall 147
But send it slackly from the s ; In Mem. Ixxxvii 26
I cannot all command the s's ; ,, Ixxxviii 10
and sometimes touches but one s That quivers. Lover's Tale i 17
coostom flitted awaay like a kite wi' a brokken s. North. Cobbler 28
Strip Shall s a hundred hollows bare of Spring, Princess vi 65
shall we s him there Your lover ? Geraint and E. 488
blacksmith 'e s's me the thick ov 'is ainn. North. Cobbler 85
A- your own foul passions bare ; Locksley H., Sixty 141
Stripe Blackening against the dead-green s's Pelleas and E. 554
The last long s of waning crimson gloom, Ancient Sage 221
Striped dropping bitter tears against his brow S with
dark blood : M. d' Arthur 212
dropping bitter tears against a brow S with dark
blood : Pass, of A rthur 380
Stripling the s's ! — for their sport ! — I tamed my leopards : Princess v 399
' The years that made the s wise Ancient Sage 111
Stript our long walks were s as bare as brooms. Princess, Pro. 184
S from the three dead wolves of woman bom Geraint and E. 94
entering barr'd her door, S off the case, Lancelot and E. 16
meekly rose the maid, S off the case, „ 979
His friends had s him bare, Dead Prophet 14
Strive s To reconcile me with thy God. Supp. Confessions 101
' Waiting to s a happy strife. Two Voices 130
And s and wrestle with thee till I die : St. S. Stylites 119
strong in will To s, to seek, to find, Ulysses 70
But for one hour, 0 Love, I s To keep In Mem. xxxv 6
When on the gloom I s to paint The face I know ; „ Ixx 2
To s, to fashion, to fulfil — „ cxiii 7
s Again for glory, while the golden lyre Tiresias 179
Striven ' I cannot hide that some have s, Two Voices 208
These two have s half the day. In Mem. cii 17
With sword we have not s ; Gareth and L. 1264
lily maid had s to make him cheer, Lancelot and E. 327
Streak (stroke) Naay — let ma s tha down Spinster's S's. 53
Stro^n (stroking) Ye was s ma down wi' the 'air, „ 19
Strode There s a stranger to the door, (repeat) The Goose 3, 39
So s he back slow to the wounded King. M. d' Arthur 65
And so s back slow to the wounded King. ., 112
But the other swiftly s from ridge to ridge, „ 181
where he s About the haU, among his dogs, Godiva 16
S from the porch, tall and erect again. Aylmer's Field 825
<S in, and claim'd their tribute as of yore. Com. of Arthur 506
Then s a good knight forward, Gareth and L. 364
Sir Gareth s, and saw without the door „ 676
Prince, as Enid past him, fain To follow, s a stride, Marr. of Geraint 376
s the brute Earl up and down his hall, Geraint and E. 712
stall'd his horse, and s across the court, Balin and Balan 341
shook his hair, s off, and buzz'd abroad Lancelot and E. 722
So s he back slow to the wounded King. Pass, of Arthur 233
And so s back slow to the wounded King. „ 280
But the other swiftly s from ridge to ridge, ., 349
Stroke (See also Sabre-stroke, StroiUk, Sword-Stroke)
' Then dying of a mortal s. Two Voices 154
Would strike, and firmly, and one s : Love thou thy land 92
A s of cruel sunshine on the cliff. Princess iv 524
mutual pardon ask'd and given For s and song, ,, v 47
With s on s the horse and horseman, came ,, 523
two-cell'd heart beating, with one full s, Life.' „ vii 307
Stroke (continued) answering now my random s With
fruitful cloud In Mem. xxxix 2
Struck for himself an evil s ; Maud II i 21
but thou strikest a strong s, For strong thou art Gareth and L. 877
one 5 Laid hiia that clove it grovelling on the groimd. .. 971
four s's they struck With sword, and these were mighty ; . . 1042
But with one s Sir Gareth split the skull. 1404
Short fits of prayer, at every s a breath. Geraint and E. 155
God's mercy, what a s was there ! Lancelot and E. 24
For twenty s's of the blood, „ 720
When have I stinted s in foughten field ? Holy Grail 860
strike him ! put my hate into your s's, Pelleas and E. 228
the s That strikes them dead is as my death to me. Pass, of Arthur 73
Striking the last s with Excalibur, „ 168
I might have stricken a lusty s for him. Sir J. Oldcastle 69
Not one s firm. Romnei/s R. 115
Rang the s, and sprang the blood. The Tourney 9
Stroked Sat on his knee, s his gray face Lancelot and E. 749
Stroking See A-stroakin, Stroakin
Stroll all that from the town would s. Talking Oak 53
Stroll'd then we s For half the day thro' stately theatres Princess ii 368
Strong The s limbs failing ; All Things loill Die 32
Great in faith, and s Against the grief of
circumstance Supp. Confessions 91
whose s right arm debased The throne of Persia, Alexander 1
For there was Milton like a seraph s. Palace of Art 133
s to break or bind All force in bonds .. 153
Whereof the s foundation-stones were laid ,, 235
tale of little meaning tho' the words are s ; Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 119
as s gales Hold swollen clouds from raining, D. of F. Women 10
Thro' many agents making s. Love thou thy land 39
S mother of a Lion-line, Be proud of those s sons
of thine England and Amer. 3
I was s and hale of body then ; St. S. Stylites 29
words That make a man feel s in speaking truth ; Love and Dviy 70
s in will To strive, to seek, to find, Ulysses 69
But thy s Hours indignant work'd their wills, Tithonus 18
The s tempestuous treble throbb'd and palpitated ; Vision of Sin 28
Cast his s arms about his drooping wife, Enoch Arden 228
You chose the best among us — a s man : „ 293
Her son, who stood beside her tall and s, „ 756
So past the s heroic soul away. ,, 915
One whom the s sons of the world despise ; The Brook 3
To make disproof of scorn, and s in hopes, Aylmer's Field 446
that one kiss Was Leolin's one s rival upon earth : ,. 557
But she with her .9 feet up the steep hill Sea Dreams 120
And mould a generation s to move Princess v 416
S, supple, sinew-corded, apt at arms ; „ 535
' O fair and s and terrible ! „ vi 163
Ruddy and white, and s on his legs, Grandmother 2
S of his hands, and s on his legs, „ 13
Well for him whose will is s ! Will 1
S Son of God, immortal Love, In Mem., Pro. 1
More s than all poetic thought ; „ xxxvi 12
Then bring an opiate trebly s, „ Ixxi 6
For thou wert s as thou wert true ? „ Ixxiii 4
The wish too s for words to name ; „ xciii 14
Than some s bond which is to be. „ cxvi 16
The s imagination roll A sphere of stars „ cxxii 6
And if the words were sweet and s „ cxxv 11
But, I fear, the new s wine of love, Maud 7 m 82
S in the power that all men adore, ., a; 14
One still s man in a blatant land, 63
So many those that hate him, and so s. Com. of Arthur 251
One was fair, s, arm'd — But to be won by force — Gareth and L. 104
' I have stagger'd thy s Gawain in a tilt For pastime ; „ 542
Morning-Star, and Noon-Sun, and Evening-Star, Being
s fools ; „ 635
but thou strikest a s stroke. For s thou art and goodly
therewithal, 877
' 0 Sun ' (not this s fool whom thou, Sir Knave, ,, 1058
And heated the s warrior in his dreams ; Marr. of Geraint 72
And the s passion in her made her weep 110
and the blood Of their s bodies, flowing, 569
With streaming grass, appear'd, low-built but s ; Balin and Balan 333
strong
692
Struck
Strong (coiUinued) A minstrel of Caerleon by s storm Blown
into shelter Merlin and V. 9
but God Broke tlie s lance, and roU'd his enemy
down, Lancelot and E. 26
found the Lord of Astolat With two s sons, 174
When the s neighings of the wild white Horse .. 298
5' men, and wrathful that a stranger knight .. 468
Gawain, surnamed The Courteous, fair and s, „ 555
out of this she plaited broad and long A s sword-belt, Holy Grail 153
dyed The s White Horse in his own heathen blood — .. 312
How my s lance had beaten down the knights, .. 363
their wise men Were s in that old magic „ 666
had felt the sim Beat like a s knight on his helm, Pelleas and E. 23
beholding hun so s, she thought That peradventure
he will fight "^ .. 117
' 0 the s hand,' she said, ' See ! look at mine ! ,. 126
so by that s hand of his The sword and golden circlet ., 169
Then let the s hand, which had overthrown „ 234
O towers so s, Huge, solid, „ 463
his s hands gript And dinted the gilt dragons Last Tournament 181
' I had forgotten all in my s joy To see thee — „ 582
all his aims ^^'ere sharpen'd by s hate for Lancelot Guinevere 20
' - ' ' ..112
. 194
„ 246
Lover's Tale ii 88
iv 282
Def. of Lucknow 47
Batt. of Brunanburh 53
Despair 51
Locksley H., Sixty 49
Helen's Tower 7
To Ulysses 7
On a Mourner 18
The Goose 30
Day -Dm., L' Envoi 14
Sea Dreams 298
306
Princess iv 278
V 536
vi 166
Spiteful Letter 10
In Mem. xcvi 17
„ cxxviii 1
Maud I via 8
Gareth and L. 1405
Geraint and E. 341
940
Holy Grail 731
Lancelot and E. 463
Columbus 35
Tiresias 70
Locksley H., Sixty 58
Hands ail Round 6
Forlorn 62
Merlin and the G. 63
Enoch Arden 30
And fly to my s castle overseas :
Round that 5 castle where he holds the Queen ;
And s man-breasted things stood from the sea,
a s sympathy Shook all my soul :
a semi-smile As at a s conclusion —
S with the strength of the race to command,
Seven s Earls of the army of Anlaf
There was a s sea-current would sweep as
S in will and rich in wisdom,
Would my granite girth were s As either love.
The century's three s eights have met
Stronger Teach that sick heart the s choice.
Then wax'd her anger s.
The Poet-forms of s hours.
Till the little wings are s.
Till the little Umbs are s.
Eight daughters of the plough, s than men.
But tougher, heavier, s, he that smote
Love and Nature, there are two more terrible And s.
Are mine for the moment s ?
he came at length To find a s faith his own ;
The love that rose on s wings,
suddenly, sweeter, my heart beat s And thicker.
Then with a s buffet he clove the bebn
My malice is no deeper than a moat, No s than a
wall:
in their chairs set up a s race With hearts
Yea, shook this newer, s hall of ours,
then he hurl'd into it Against the s ;
The vast occasion of our s life —
and bring on both the yoke Of s states.
Pining for the s heart that once had beat beside
her own.
With s Hfe from day to day ;
Tho' you'll ne'er be s ;
Then, with a melody S and stateUer,
Stronger-made Enoch s-m Was master :
Strongest Is this enough to say That my desire, like all
s hopes. Gardener's D. 237
where two fight The s wins, Aylmer's Field 365
Cries to Weakest as to S, Locksley H., Sixty 110
my s M-ish Falls flat before your least unwillingness. Romney's R. 71
Stronglier And Gareth hearing ever a- smote, Gareth and L. 1141
Stxong-wing'd These lame hexameters the s-w music
of Homer ! Trans, of Homer 1
Strove Resolved on noble things, and s to speak, D. of F. Women 42
blinded with my tears. Still s to speak : „ 109
She s to span my waist : Talking Oak 138
Not unbecoming men that s with Gods. Ulysses 53
That » in other days to pass, Day-Dm., Arrival 10
So she s against her weakness, X. of Burleigh 69
And still they s and wrangled : Sea Dreams 229
8 to buffet to land in vain. Princess iv 185
Strove (continued) I s against the stream and all in vain : Princess vii 12
Son of him with whom we s for power — W. to Marie Alex. 1
Shall be for whose applause I s, In Mem. li 5
But ever s to make it true : „ xcvi 8
And while she wept, and I s to be cool, Maud II i 15
lords Drew back in wrath, and Arthur s with
Rome. Com. of Arthur 514
yet he s To learn the graces of their Table, Balin and Balan 237
I yearn'd and s To tear the twain asunder Holy Grail 785
when we s in youth, And brake the petty kings. Pass, of Arthur 67
I s to disengage myself, but fail'd. Lover's Tale i 692
thou s to rise From my full heart. ., 711
I could not rise Albeit I s to follow. „ ii 98
I s myself with Spain against the Moor. Columbus 94
for whenever we s to speak Our voices V. of Maeldune 21
But ever I fail'd to please him, however I s to please — The Wreck 28
S for sixty widow'd years to help Locksley H., Sixty 267
S yonder moimtain flat, Mechanophilus 6
Strow And s's her lights below, St. Agnes' Eve 28
Strowing the happy people s cried ' Hosanna Enoch Arden 505
S balm, or shedding poison in the fountains Locksley H., Sixty 274
StrovTO (See also Strewn, Star-strown) And would have s
it, and are faU'n themselves. Princess vi 42
s With gold and scatter'd coinage, Geraint and E. 25
loosely s with crags : We mounted slowly ; Lover's Tale i 384
Hath stili'd the blast and s the wave, Freedom 34
Struck light S up against the blinding wall. Mariana in the S. 56
S thro' with pangs of hell. Palace of Art 220
a lyre of widest range S by all passion, D. of F. Women 166
And s upon the corn-laws, where we split, Audley Court 35
he s his staff against tlie rocks And broke it, — Golden Year 59
Then s it thrice, and, no one opening, Enoch Arden 279
Started from bed, and s herself a light, „ 494
S out the streaming mountain-side, Lucretius 29
Whose death-blow s the dateless doom of kings, „ 236
twangUng violin S up with Soldier-laddie, Princess, Pro. 86
I s in : ' Albeit so mask'd. Madam, ,. ii 212
' you wrong him more than 1 That s him : „ iv 246
She s such warbUng fury thro' the words ; „ 586
Till I s out and shouted ; „ v 540
our enemies have faU'n, have fall'n : they s; „ m 48
while the day. Descending, s athwart the hall, ,, 364
and flying s With showers of random sweet „ vii 85
That if to-night our greatness were s dead. Third of Feb. 17
s the keys There at his right with a sudden crash. The Islet 7
I hear the bell s in the night : In Mem. x 2
When the dark hand s down thro' time, „ Ixxii 19
Like a sudden .spark S vainly in the night, Maud I ix 14
And he s me, madman, over the face, S me before the
languid fool, ,. // i 18
S for himself an evil stroke ; „ 21
Friend, to be s by the public foe, „ v 89
afterward S for the throne, and striking found his
doom. Com. of Arthur 325
four strokes they s With sword, and these were
mighty : Gareth and L. 1042
S at her with his whip, (repeat) Marr. of Geraint 201, 413
S at him with his whip, and cut his cheek. „ 207
S thro' the bulky bandit's corselet home, Geraint and E. 159
Earl Doorm S with a knife's haft „ 600
In those fierce wars, s hard — Balin arid Balan 177
Dragg'd him, and s, but from the castle a cry „ 399
s Furrowing a giant oak, and javeUning Merlin and V. 935
S up and hved along the milky roofs ; Lancelot and E. 409
lightnings here and there to left and right S, Holy Grail 495
moon S from an open grating overhead Lover's Tale iv 60
bullet s him that was dressing it suddenly dead, The Revenge 67
and ever they s and they slew ; V. of Maeldune 68
S for their hoards and their hearths Batt. of Brunanburh 19
as if she had s and crash'd on a rock ; The Wreck 108
S hard at the tender heart of the mother, Despair 74
S with the sword-hand and slew. Heavy Brigade 52
aiming at an all but hopeless mark To strike it, s ; The Ring 347
Be s from out the clash of warring wills ; Prog, of Spring 95
(S by a poison'd arrow in the fight. Death of (Enone 26
struck
693
Succeeder
struck (coiitinued) every dawn S from him his own
shadow on to Rome. St. Telemaehus 33
S to the left and s to the right The Totirney 4
Stro^le (s) The s of standards, Batt. of Brunanburh 87
Struggle (verb) Glory of Virtue, to fight, to s. Wages 3
ruby-chain, and both Began to s for it, Last Tournament 410
Struggled boy that cried aloud And s hard. Bora 102
Strimuuing VVith s and with scraping, Amphian 70
Strung Kate hath a spirit ever s Kate 10
Stubb'd (hoed) an' I 'a s Thurnaby waaste. N. Farmer, O- S. 28
But I s 'um oop wi' the lot, .■ 32
an' I mean'd to 'a s it at fall, .. 41
Stubble Fire in a dry s a nine-days' wonder Lancelot and E. 735
Stubborn He thought to quell the s hearts of oak, Biionaparte 1
' S, but she may sit Upon a king's right hand Princess v 438
He shall find the s thistle bursting Ode on Well. 206
Sick for thy s hardihood, In Mem. ii 14
Stubborn-shafted Before a gloom of s-s oaks, Geraint and E. 120
Stuck (See also Stook) S ; and he clamour'd from a
casement. The Brook 85
s out The bones of some vast bulk that lived Princess Hi 293
Hoanly Miss Annie were saw s oop, Village Wife 59
fur I s to tha moor na the rest, Spinster's S's. 51
I couldn't a' s by my word. „ 96
Studded others s wide With disks and tiars, Arabian Nights 63
her hair <S with one rich Provence rose — Lover's Tale Hi 45
Student Drove in upon the s once or twice, Aylmer's Field 462
Hers more than half the s's, all the love. Princess iii 39
What s came but that you planed her path ,. iv 315
To cramp the s at his desk. In Mem. cxxviii 18
Study Back would he to his studies, Aylmer's Field 394
Old studies fail'd ; seldom she spoke : Princess vii 31
Stuff (s) and chairs. And all his household s ; Walk, to the Mail 40
Man is made of solid s. Edwin Morris 49
' What s is this ! Old writers push'd the happy season Golden Year 65
household s. Live chattels, mincers Princess iv 514
Stuff (verb) S his ribs with mouldy hay. Vision of Sin 66
Stumble my mind S's, and all my faculties are lamed. Lucretius 123
Stumbled Ran Gaffer, s Gammer. The Goose 3A
We 5 on a stationary voice. Princess v 2
Part s mixt with floundering horses. „ 498
Ues a ridge of slate across the ford ; His horse
thereon s — Gareth aiid L. 1057
horse, Arising wearily at a fallen oak, S headlong, Balin and Balan 426
I S on deck, half mad. The Wreck 118
I have s back again Into the common day, Bomney's R. 32
He s in, and sat Blinded ; St. Telemaehus 48
Stumbling jS across the market to his death, A yhner's Field 820
our horses s as they trode On heaps of ruin. Holy Grail 716
Stmnbling-block striking on huge s-b s of scorn A yhner's Field 538
Stump And let my lady sear the s for him, Pelleas and E. 339
A s of oak half-dead. From roots like some black
coil Last Tournament 12
with blunt s Pitch-blacken'd sawing the air, „ 66
Stump'd with clamour bowl'd And s the wicket ; Princess, Pro. 82
Stung poisoning all bus rest, S him in dreams. Balin and Balan 384
S by his loss had vanish'd, none knew where. Lover s Tale iv 102
' The shaft of scorn that once had s Ancient Sage 131
, Dead ! — and maybe s With some remorse. The Ring 454
\ Stnnn'd And s me from my power to think In Mem. xvi 15
I 1 sitting here so s and still, Maud II i 2
i and s tiie twain Or slew them, Geraint and E. 91
I and so left him s or dead, » 464
' hurl'd liini headlong, and he fell S, Guinevere 109
Stunning See Ear-stnnning
Stunt (obstinate) Do'ant be s : taake time : N. Farmer, N. S. 17
Stunted I lived for years a s sunless life ; Aylmer's Field 357
Nor s squaws of West or East ; Princess iiJS
Stupid Courage, poor s heart of stone. — Maud II iii 5
She felt so blunt and s at the heart : Geraint and E. 747
O s child ! Yet you are wise who say it ; Merlin and V. 251
with such a s heart To mterpret ear and eye, Lancelot and E. 941
then at the last they found I had grown so s and still Rizpah 49
Sty so retum'd unf arrow'd to her s. Walk, to the Mail 100
A maiden moon that sparkles on a s, Princess v 186
Style take the s of those heroic times ? The Epic 35
What s could suit ? Princess, Con. 9
Styled See Self-styled
Stylites (See also Simeon, Simeon Stylites) Simeon of
the pillar, by surname, S, among men ; St. S. Stylites 162
Subdue to s this home Of sin, my flesh, „ 57
»S them to the useful and the good. Ulysses 38
foil'd at the last by the handful they could not s ; Def. of Lucknmo 44
he thought he could s me to his will. Happy 64
Subdued I s me to my father's will ; D. of F. Women 234
grace Of sweet seventeen s me ere she spoke) The Brook 113
S me somewhat to that gentleness, Geraint and E. 867
Subject (adj.) s to the season or the mood, Aylmer's Field 71
Subject (s) knowledge of his art Held me above the s, I), of F. Women 10
we coursed about The s most at heart. Gardener's B. 223
She rapt upon her s, he on her : Princess iii 304
My 5 with my s's under him, Geraint and E. 916
' Queen ? s ? but I see not what 1 see. Balin and Balan 281
mine image. The s of thy power, be cold in her, Lover's Tale i 782
Artificer and s, lord and slave, „ ii 103
it the rebel s seek to drag me from the throne. By an Evolution. 15
Sublime my lover, with whom I rode s On Fortune's
neck : B. of F. Women 141
' Name and fame ! to fly s Thro' the courts, Vision of Sin 103
raillery, or grotesque, or false s — Princess iv 588
In his simplicity s. Ode on Well. 34
nourishing a youth s With the fairy tales of science, Locksley Hall 11
If, in thy second state s. In Mem. In 1
With \vhat s repression of himself. Bed. of Idylls 19
Farewell, Macready ; moral, grave, s ; To W. C. Macready 12
' The stars with head s,' Epilogue 47
Submit S, and hear the judgment of the King.' Geraint and E. 799
Submitting S all things to desire. In Mem. cxiv 8
Subscribed which hastily s. We enter'd on the boards : Princess ii 73
Subserve Or but s's another's gain. In Mem. liv 12
Subsist Within this region I s. You ask me, why, etc. 2
Substance island princes over-bold Have eat our s. Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 76
And rolling as it were the s of it Aylmer's Field 258
none of all our blood should know The shadow from the s, Princess i 9
do I chase The s or the shadow ? .. « 409
everywhere I know the s when I see it. ., 413
spirit flash not all at once from out This shadow
into S — Bed. Poem Prin. Alice 6
shadow leave the S in the brooding light Happy 99
Subtil Her s, warm, and golden breath, Supp. Confessions 60
Subtilising See All-subtilising
Subtle A s, sudden flame, Madeline 28
With shrilling shafts of s wit. Clear-headed friend 13
Round thy neck in s ring Adeline 58
Thro' lips and eyes in s rays. Rosalind 24
She with a s smile in her mild eyes, (Enone 184
All s thought, all curious fears. In Mem. xxxii 9
one indeed I knew In many a s question versed, ,, xeoi 6
he that like a s beast Lay couchant with his eyes Guinevere 10
the s beast. Would track her guilt luitil he found, ., 59
I knew Of no more s master imder heaven „ 478
Works of s brain and hand. Open. I. and C. Exhib. 7
How s at tierce and quart of mind In Mem., W. G. Ward 5
Subtle-paced silver flow Of s-p counsel Isabel 21
Subtler Who knows a s magic than his own — Com. of Arthur 2Si
Subtlest Myriads of topaz-lights, and jacinth-work Of s
jewellery. M. d' Arthur 58
Myriads of topaz-lights, and jacinth-work Of s
jewellery. Pass, of Arthur 226
Subtle-thoughted S-t, myriad-minded. Ode to Memory 118
Suburb (See also Wheat-suburb) By park and s under
brown Of lustier leaves; In Mem. xoviii 24
mitre-sanction'd harlot draws his clerks Into
the s — »S'm' J. Oldcastle 107
Old Fitz, who from your s grange, To E. Fitzgerald 1
Succeed ' I know that age to age s's, Two Voices 205
' The many fail: the one s's.' Bay-Bm., Arrival 16
pushes us off from the board, and others ever s ? Alaud I iv 27
That after many changes may s Life, Prog, of Spring 116
Succeeder The sole s to their wealth, Aylmer's Field 294
Successful
Successful Waged such unwiUing tho' s war On all the
youth,
Succession make One act a phantom of s :
Successor be dissipated By frail s's.
but the prayers, That have no s in deed,
Such Kmgs have no s couch as thine.
You move not in s solitudes.
At s strange war with something good,
And they that know s things —
In s discourse we gain'd the garden rails,
With s compeUing cause to grieve
I had s reverence for his blame,
And s refraction of events As often rises ere they rise
thy darkness must have spread With s delight as theirs
694
Suffering
Merlin and V. 571
Frincess in 329
267
Akbar's Dream 10
A Dirge 40
Margaret 45
Two Voices 302
Princess i 144
„ Con. 80
In Mem. xxix 1
xcii 15
of old,
' Lord, there is no s city anywhere,
for the King Will bind thee by s vows,
la-sh'd at each So often and with « blows,
Such-wise In s-w, that no man could see her
Suck from all things s Marrow of mirth
.< the blinding splendour from the sand,
I should s Lies like sweet wines :
an' they s's the muck fro' the grass
the babe Will 5 in with his milk hereafter^
Suck d Have s and gather'd into one
S from the dark heart of the long hills
And s from out the distant gloom
four fools have s their allegory From these damp
walls, "^
And s the joining of the stones,
.S' mto oneness like a little star
Had s the fire of some forgotten sun,
My baby, the bones that had s me,
Sucking sometimes .S' the damps for drink,
Flaying the roofs and s up the drains,
s The foul steam of the grave to thicken by it
Snckhng fierce teat To human s's;
Sudden S glances, sweet and strange,
A subtle, s flame,
A s splendour from behind Flush'd
m thee Is nothing s, nothing single ;
Ring 5 scritches of the jay,
with s fires Flamed over:
And, isled in s seas of light,
Because with s motion from the gi-ound
But I have s touches, and can run
her bosom shaken with a s storm of sighs
A s hubbub shook the hall,
Hurt in that night of s ruin and wreck,
I make a s sally,
with a s execration drove The footstool
Who entering fill'd the house with s light.
Paled at a s twitch of his iron mouth •
Stirring a s transport rose and fell. '
Up in one night and due to s sun :
made a s turn As if to speak,
for spite of doubts And s ghostly shadowings
Entermg, the s light Dazed me half-blind •
But yonder, whiff ! there comes a s heat.
Heaven flash'd a s jubilant ray.
Rush to the roof, s rocket, and higher
There at his right with a « crash,
For on them brake the s foe ;
He caught her away with a s cry ;
Should strike a s hand in mine,
' My s frost was s gain,
Like a s spark Struck vainly in the night
and my Delight Had a s desire,
And shine in the s making of splendid names,
A field of charlock in the s sun
like a s wind Among dead leaves.
'Rough, s,^Vnd pardonable, worthy to be knight-
but heard in.<if,Aa/ A o c.^..„^ „* u.-*. ^
but heard instead A s sound of hoofs.
Whereat Geraint flash'd into s spleen •
And loosed in words of s lire the wrath
Maud I xviii 26
Gareth and L. 206
270
Mart, of Geraint 564
Merlin and V. 642
Wai Water. 213
Princess vii 39
Last Tournament 644
Village Wife 32
Columbus 38
Talking Oak 191
Princess v 349
In Mem. xcv 53
Gareth and L. 1199
Marr. of Geraint 324
Lover's Tale i 308
iv 194
Bizpah 53
St. S._ Stylites Ti
Princess v 525
Lover's Tale i 648
Com. ofAHhur29
Madeline 5
28
Arabian Nights 81
Eleanor e 57
My life is full 20
Buonaparte 11
Fatima 33
D. of F. Women 170
Edwin Morris 53
Locksley Hall 27
Day-lJta., Bevival 7
Enoch Arden 564
The Brook 24
Aylmer's Field 326
682
732
Princess iv 29
312
394
572
V 11
.. Con. 58
Ode on Well. 129
W. to Alexandra 20
The Islet 8
The Victim 4
69
In Mem. xiv 11
„ Ixxxi 10
Mavd I ix 13
xiv 20
,: /// vi 47
Gareth and L. 388
514
653
Marr. of Geraint 164
273
Geraint and E. 106
Sudden (continued) cried Geraint for wine and «oodlv
cheer To feed the s guest,
AH to be there against a s need ;
And at a 5 swerving of the road.
Sent forth a s sharp and bitter cry,
Thus, after some quick burst of s wrath.
But snatch'd a s buckler from the Squire,
boat Drave with a s wind across the deeps
or else A s spurt of woman's jealousy,— '
Might feel some s turn of anger born
I yet should strike upon a « means To dig,
rapt By all the sweet and s passion of youth
Then made a s step to the gate, and there—
I pray him, send a s Angel down To seize me
power To lay the s heads of violence fiat,
And aU her form shone forth with s light
coming out of gloom Was dazzled by the s light
Ihe s trumpet sounded as in a dream
And, saddening on the s, spake IsoJt
For here a s flush of wrathful heat
Pour with such s deluges of light
For in the s anguish of her heart
all at once The front rank made a s halt •
woods upon the hiU Waved with a s gust
And, making there a s light, beheld
Found that the s wail his lady made Dwelt
I knew Some s vivid pleasure hit him there.
Vailuig a s eyeUd with his hard ' Dim Saesneg '
1 felt On a s I know not what,
No s heaven, nor s heU, for man,
and a 5 face Look'd in upon me like a gleam
As nightmgale Saw thee, and flasli'd
The s fire from Heaven had dash'd him dead,
on a s he, Paris, no longer beauteous as a Gotl
And on the s, and with a cry ' Saleem '
Then on a 5 we saw your soldiers crossing the rid"e
bhe said with a s glow On her patient face
Geraint and E. 284
375
506
722
Baltn and Balan 217
554
Merlin and V. 201
524
531
659
Lancelot and E. 282
391
1424
Holy Grail 310
450
Pelleas and E. 105
Last Tournament 151
581
Guinevere 356
Lover's Tale i 315
702
Hi 29
34
iv 53
149
Str J. Oldcastle 20
The Bing 32
41
„ 419
Demeter and P. 11
Happy 83
Death of QLnone 24
Akbar's Dream 184
Bandit's Death 21
CJlarity 35
Sudden-beaming &s-b tenderness" Of m&mexs Lancelot and'F\99
Sudden-curved drops down A s-c frown: J!!/-- ^H
SSi?T^ '^'''^ "^'"^i^ T^°«« *-° g^-t beasts Hofyt^U%fo
oudaenly I came amontr vou here so « H4 Y^ ^rau o^u
Sudden-shrUling Lilia S wit".!" i^irth An echo ''%:^'Z ^
Sue s me, and woo me, and flatter me Th^ u. -flo
Not one word ; No ! tho' your father .'. : P.^W^AS
SufEer they s— some, 'tis whisper'd— down in hell S ^^^^ess vi J4U
~r^^ as we, But .'. change of framf '^^"^'^I^.S;;^ ^
He s's, but he will not s long ;
He s's, but he cannot s wrong :
I do not i- in a dream;
When all that seems shall s shock,
Had suffer'd, or should s any taint In nature •
my lord thro' me should s shame.
I seem to s nothing heart or limb,
Than that my lord should s loss or shame.'
I s from the things before me,
passionate moment would not * that—
Men will forget what we s and not what we do
I s all as much As they do —
Sufferance See Long-sufferance
Suffer'd but all hath s change :
Show me the man hath s more than I.
thou hast s long For ages and for ages ' '
I have enjoy'd Greatly, have s greatly,
Truly, she herself had s'~
' 0 Katie, what I 5 for your sake !
Who loved, who s countless ills,
and loved and did. And hoped, and s,
Had s, or should suffer any taint In nature •
That each had s some exceeding wrong. (y«m;«/ «w s- ^«
knight, with whom I rode, Hath s misadventure BaUnandli^nn'llR
-None wrought, but s much, an orphan maid^' M^t aSvll
\ et who had done, or who had s wrong ^ flTJ? tj ■ 'rll
Suffering (-S-.. ato Loig^uffering) I goflveak from s ^'"'^'- ^ ^«^« * '^26
Two Voices 238
Will 2
„ 3
In Mem. xiii 14
!, cxxxi 2
Marr. of Geraint 31
101
472
Geraint and E. 69
Balin and Balan 284
Lover's Tale iv 356
Def. ofLucknow 73
Columbus 217
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 71
St. S. Stylites 49
99
Ulysses 8
Locksley Hall 96
The Brook 119
In Mem. Ivi 17
„ Con. 135
Marr. of Geraint 31
Geraint and E. 36
r
Suffe
Suffering
695
Suffering (conl inued) and s thus he made Minutes an age :
as by some one deathbed after wail Of s,
Made strange division of its s With her, whom to
have s view'd had been Extremest pain ;
6' — 0 long-suffering — yes,
gloom of Age And s cloud the height
S it thee Thy pain is a reaUty.'
May not that earthly chastisement s ?
s to say That whatsoever such a house
Sufficed touch of their oftice miglit Iiave s,
Suffocated 'Sec Half-suffocated
Suffrage take the s of the plow.
Suffused She look'd : but all S with blushes —
^V tliem, sitting, lying, languid shapes,
Sugar-pimn I hoard it as a s-p for Holmes.'
S^gesting Recurring and s still !
Suggestion track S to her inmost cell.
Suit She sent a note, the seal an Elle vous s,
Suit (clothes) In summer s and silks of holiday.
(His dress a s of fray'd magnificence,
and in her hand A s of bright apparel,
I myself unwillingly have worn My faded s,
And robed them in her ancient s again.
The three gay s's of armour which they wore,
but bound the s's Of armour on their horses,
Three horses and three goodly s's of aims,
Their three gay s's of armour, each from each,
Suit (courtship) My s had wither'd, nipt to death
second s obtain'd At first with Psyche.
Evelyn knew not of my former s,
So — your happy s w£is blasted —
Suit (petition) Leolin's rejected rivals from their s
Lightly, her s allow'd, she slipt away,
Suit (verb) could not fix the glass to s her eye ;
And something it should be to s the place,
But something made to s wth Time and place.
What style could s ?
Cahn as to s a calmer grief,
great offices that s The full-grown energies of heaven
Nor can it s me to foi-get The mighty hopes
Geraint and E. 114
Pass, of Arthur 119
New life, new love, to s the newer day :
(See also Green-suited, Ill-suited, Sober-suited)
A meaning s to his mind.
How gay, how s to the house of one
Suiteth That only silence s best.
Suitor Every gate is throng'd with s's,
Philip, the slighted s of old times.
Like the Ithacensian s's in old time,
never yet had woman such a pair Of s's as this
maiden ;
Her s in old years before Geraint,
He wildly fought a rival s,
Sullen The s answer sUd betwixt :
From out my s heart a power Broke,
Touching the s pool below :
jS, defiant, pitying, wroth, return'd
Secrets of the s mine,
cannot hear The s Lethe rolling doom
-Vnd gazing on thee, s tree,
To make the s surface crisp.
And a s thunder is roU'd ;
For he is always s : what care I ? '
Went Enid with her s follower on.
Where first as s as a beast new-caged,
He seem'd so s, vext he could not go :
Methought by slow degrees the s bell Toll'd quicker,
Lover's Tale ii 128
Rizfah 67
Romney's R. 65
Two Voices 386
Aylmer's Field 784
Lover's Tale iv 201
Maud II V 27
Locksley H., Sixty 118
Gardener's D. 154
Vision of Sin 12
The Epic 43
Will 14
In Mem. xcv 32
Edwin Morris 105
Mart, of Geraint 173
296
678
706
770
Geraint and E. 95
96
124
181
Edwin Morris 101
Princess vii 71
Sisters (E. and E.) 205
Locksley H., Sixty 5
Aylmer's Field 493
Lancelot and E. 778
Enoch Arden 241
Princess, Pro. 211
231
Con. 9
In Mem. xi 2
xl 19
.. Ixxxv 59
Last Tournament 279
Some birds are sick and s when they moult.
And changest, breathing it, the s wmd,
Me they front With s brows.
Sullen-purple And over the s-p moor (Look at it)
Sullen-seeming for s-s Death may give More life
Sullied I have s a noble name,
Sully Mark would s the low state of churl :
Sallying mainly thro' that s of our Queen —
Sulphur stood, In fuming s blue and green,
Day-Dm., Moral 12
Geraint and E. 683
To J. S. 64
Locksley Hall 101
Enoch Arden 745
Princess iv 118
Marr. of Geraint 440
Geraint and E. 276
The Ring 214
Two Voices 226
443
Miller's D. 244
Aylmer's Field 492
Ode Inter. Exhib. 16
Lit. Squabbles 11
In Mem. ii 13
„ xlix 8
Maud II iv 49
Gareth and L. 32
Geraint and E. 440
856
Lancelot and E. 210
Lover's Tale Hi 13
Sisters (E. and E.) 73
Prog, of Spring 110
Akbar's Dream 52
Maud I x21
„ xviii 46
The Wreck 5
Gareth and L. 427
Last Tournament 682
617
Sulphur (continued) Dark thro' the smoke and the s
Sultan like the s of old in a garden of spice.
The S, as we name him, —
with the S's pardon, I am all as well delighted,
if he had not been a iS of brutes.
Sultry All naked in a s sky,
And one, the reapers at their s toil.
And in the s garden-squares,
And all the s palms of India known.
And o'er a weary s land.
And summer basking in the s plains
Summer
Def. of Lwcknow 33
Maud I iv 4Z
XX 4
39
,. // V 81
Fatima 37
Palace of Art 77
The Blackbird 17
W. to Marie Alex. 14
Will 17
Prog, of Spring 77
N. Farmer, 0. S. 19
N. S. 26
Gardener's D. 13
Supp. Confessions 11
154
Isabel 8
Madeline 2
Arabian Nights 80
Elednore 7
you will not deny my s throat One draught of icy water. Romney's R. 22
Sum glory of the s of things Will flash In Mem. Ixxxviii 11
This is my s of knowledge — that my love Lover's Tale i 164
Summat (something) An' i' niver knaw'd whot a
mean'd but 1 thowt a 'ad s to saay,
Mun be a guvness, lad, or s, and addle her bread
Summ'd (See also Full-summ'd) all grace S up and
closed in little ; —
Summer (adj.) if a bolt of fire Would rive the
slumbrous s noon
And hollows of the fringed hills In s heats.
The s calm of golden charity.
No tranced s calm is thine,
solemn palms were ranged Above, unwoo'd of s
wind:
Thou wert born, on a s mom,
gray eyes lit up With s lightnings of a soul So full of s
warmth, Miller's D. 13
There's many a bolder lad 'iU woo me any s day, May Queen 23
With that gold dagger of thy bill To fret the s
jenneting. The Blackbird 12
one s noon, an arm Rose up from out the bosom of the
lake, M. d' Arthur 29
And bowery hollows crown'd with s sea, „ 263
The s pilot of an empty heart Gardener's D. 16
The lime a s home of murmurous wings. „ 48
Her voice fled always thro' the s land ; Edwin Morris 67
The light cloud smoulders on the s crag. „ 147
the s night, that paused Among her stars to hear us ; Love and Duty 73
S isles of Eden lying in dark-purple spheres of sea. Locksley Hall 164
looking like a s moon Half-dipt in cloud : Godiva 45
Thro' many an hour of s suns. Will Water. 33
S woods, about them blowing, L. of Burleigh 19
echoing falls Of water, sheets of s glass. To E. L. 2
like the dry High-elbow'd grigs that leap in s gra.ss. The Brook 54
phalanx of the s spears That soon should wear Aylmer's Field 111
A s burial deep in hollyhocks ; ., 164
those That knit themselves for s shadow, „ 724
A league of street in s solstice down. Princess Hi 128
' Ah, sad and strange as in dark s dawns .. iv 49
Like s tempest came her tears — „ w 15
Where we withdrew from s heats and state, ., 245
That only heaved with a s sweU. The Daisy 12
Brief, brief is a s leaf. Spiteful Letter 21
To rest in a golden grove, or to bask in a s sky : Wages 9
Nor branding s suns avail To touch thy thousand years
of gloom : In Mem. ii 11
That never knew the s woods : ., xxvii 4
In which we went thro' s France. ., Ixxi 4
Or sadness in the s moons ? ., Ixxxiii 8
And break the Uvelong s day With banquet ,. Ixxxix 31
and go By s belts of wheat and vine ., xeviii 4
With s spice the humming air ; ., ct 8
' A doubtful throne is ice on s seas. Com. of Arthur 248
At last, it chanced that on a s mom Marr. of Geraint 69
glancing like a dragon-fly In s suit and silks of
holiday. „ 173
on a s mom Adown the crystal dykes at Camelot Geraint and E. 469
Was cared as much for as a s shower : „ 523
Ay, thou rememberest well — one s dawn — Balin and Balan 505
And call'd herself a gilded s fly Merlin and V. 258
But since you name yourself the s fly, „ 369
All in an oriel on the s side, Lancelot and E. 1177
' Then on a s night it came to pass, Holy Grail 179
Summer
696
Sumptuous
Summer (adj.) (continued) Who yells Here in the still
sweet s night, Pelleas and E. 473
Built for a s day with Queen Isolt Against a shower, Last Tournament 378
one s noon, an arm Rose up from out the bosom of
the lake. Pass, of Arthur 197
And bowery hollows crown'd with s sea, „ 431
as thronging fancies come To boys and girls when s
days are new. Lover's Tale i 555
Till he melted like a cloud in the silent s heaven ; The Revenge 14
the stars came out far over the s sea, 56
when half of the short s night was gone, 65
and the sun smiled out far over the s sea, ,. 70
Ten long sweet s days upon deck. The Wreck 64
' Ten long sweet s days ' of fever, „ 147
who, on that s day When I had fall'n o£E the crag The Flight 21
now to these unsummer'd skies The s bird is
still, Pref. Poem Broth. Son. 18
The two that love thee, lead a s life, Prin. Beatrice 18
Are cheeping to each other of their flight To s lands ! The Ring 87
I dream'd last night of that clear s noon, Romney's R. 74
' wasting the sweet s hours ' ? Charity 1
fimmner (s) {See also Fnll-simmier, Blid-siimmer)
Autumn and s Are gone long ago ; Nothing will Die 18
S herself should minister To thee, Elednore 32
A s fann'd with spice. Palace of Art 116
come back again with s o'er the wave, May Queen, N. Y's. E. 19
Smelt of the coming s, Gardener's D. 78
The good old S's, year by year Talking Oak 39
' Old S's, when the monk was fat, ..41
Thro' all the s of my leaves 211
It was last s on a tour in Wales : Golden Year 2
And after many a s dies the swan. Tithonus 4
s's to such length of years should come Locksley Hall 67
The woman of a thousand s's back, Godiva 11
A s crisp with shining woods. Day-Bm., Pro. 8
Till all the hundred s's pass, ,. Sleep. P. 33
When will the hundred s's die, „ 49
' A hundred s's ! can it be ? „ Depart. 25
By squares of tropic s shut And warm'd Amphion 87
whose father-grape grew fat On Lusitanian s's. Will Water. 8
She sUpt across the s of the world, Enoch Arden 531
Dwelt with eternal s, ill-content. „ 562
in branding s's of Bengal, The Brook 16
(The sootflake of so many a s still Sea Dreams 35
A Martin's s of his faded love, Aylmer's Field 560
all a s's day Gave his broad lawns Princess, Pro. 1
' Kill him now, The tyrant ! kill him in the s too,' „ 207
' Why not a s's as a winter's tale ? A tale for s as
befits the time, „ 209
there did a compact pass Long s's back, „ i 124
The s of the vine in all his veins — „ 183
hither side, or so she look'd, Of twenty s's. ., li 108
all fair theories only made to gild A stormle.ss s.' ,, 234
And brief the sun of s in the North, „ iv 112
this shall grow A night of S from the heat, „ vi 54
Far on in s's that we shall not see : Ode on Well. 234
To lands of s across the sea ; The Daisy 92
The bitter east, the misty s And gray metropolis „ 103
For a score of sweet httle s's or so ? ' The Islet 2
The child was only eight s's old, The Victim 33
Thine the lands of lasting s, Boddicea 43
But S on the steaming floods, In Mem. Ixxocv 69
When s's hourly-mellowing change „ xci 9
o'er the sky The silvery haze of s drawn ; „ xcv 4
Long sleeps the s in the seed ; „ «j 26
Than in the s's that are flown, „ Con. 18
So many a s since she died, Maud I vi 66
Nor will be when our s's have deceased. „ xviii 14
With sprigs of s laid between the folds, Marr. of Geraint 138
For now the wine made s in his veins, „ 398
Like flaws in s laying lusty corn : „ 764
My Queen, that s, when ye loved me first. Lancelot and E. 104
ere the s when he died. The monk Ambrosius Holy Grail 16
felt his eyes Harder and drier than a fountain
bed In « : Pdleas and E. 508
Summer (s) {continued) Kill'd in a tilt, come next, five s's
back, Guinevere 321
My pride in happier s's, at my feet. „ 536
sudden deluges of light Into the middle s ; Lover's Tale i 316
the Spring and the middle S sat each
Ten long days of s and sin —
A THOUSAND s's ere the time of Christ
She spies the s thro' the winter bud,
where s never dies, with Love, the Sun of life !
all the s long we roam'd in these wild woods
S's of the snakeless meadow,
0 THOU so fair in s's gone.
Gray with distance Edward's fifty s's,
Sunn'd with a s of milder heat.
Spring and S and Autumn and Winter,
wind is west With all the warmth of s.
Who meant to sleep her hundred s's out
In the winter of the Present for the s of the Past ;
In s if I reach my day —
And s basking in the sultry plains
When over the valley. In early s's,
' S is coming, s is coming.
S is coming, is coming, my dear.
In that four-hundredth s after Christ,
1 had one brief s of bliss.
But if twenty million of s's are stored
men of a hundred thousand, a million s's away ?
Summer-blanch'd here was one that, s-b.
Summer-bright How s-b are yonder skies,
Summer-dawn gray streak of earliest s-d,
Summerhouse the s aloft That open'd on the pines
It WEis a room Within the s-h of which I spake,
Summer-mom And many a sheeny s-m.
Showing a gaudy s-m.
Summer-new fancy as s-n As the green of the
bracken
Summer-palace a boon, A certain s-p
Summer-rich S-r Then ; and then Autumn-changed,
Summertime came With Modred hither in the s,
Sunmier-wan Arthur's harp tho' s-w.
Summer-winter who breathe the balm Of s-w's
Summit sacred morning spread The silent s overhead.
' Cry, faint not, climb : the s's slope
Cry to the s, ' Is there any hope ? '
splendour falls on castle walls And snowy s's old in
story :
But ere we reach'd the highest s I pluck'd a dai.sy,
voice and the Peak Far over s and laAvn,
From hidden s's fed with rills
At times the s of the high city flash'd ;
Green-glimmering toward the s, bears,
great tower fill'd with eyes Up to the s,
s and the pinnacles Of a gray steeple —
Cried from the topmost s with human voices
Yon s half-a-league in air —
and roll my voice from the s.
Summon But s here before me yet once more
They s me their King to lead mine hosts
Summon'd Then s to the porch we went.
S out She kept her state,
A kinsman, dying, s me to Rome —
Summoner Far-sighted s of War and Waste
at Pardoners, S's, Friars, absolution-sellers,
Summoning Then, after s Lancelot privily,
Sound on a dreadful trumpet, s her ;
Summons And brought a s from the sea :
Waiting for your s . . .
Sumner-chace Broad oak of S-c,
good old Sumners, year by year Made ripe in S-c :
And shadow S-c !
Sumner-place The roofs of S-p ! (repeat)
till thy boughs discern The front of S-p.
Sumptuous turn'd her s head with eyes Of shining
expectation
With store of rich apparel, s fare,
V. of Maeldune 38
The Wreck 77
Ancient Sage 1
74
The Flight 44
,. ■ 79
To Virgil 19
Freedom. 1
On Jub. Q. Victoria 40
To Prof. Jebb 8
Vastness 29
The Ring 30
Happy 70
To Ulysses 9
Prog, of Spring 77
Merlin and the G. 18
The Throstle 1
15
St. Telemachus 4
Bandit's Death 9
The Dawn 19
25
Aylmer's Field 152
Ancient Sage 23
220
Lover's Tale i 40
ii 167
Arabian Nights 5
Palace of Art 62
Jume Bracken, etc. 8
Princess i 147
The Oak 6
Gareth and L. 26
1314
To Ulysses 11
Two Voices 81
184
Vision of Sin 2,'^
Princess iv 2
The Daisy 87
Voice and the P. 2
In Mem. ciii 7
Gareth and L. 192
Lancelot and E. 483
Pelleas and E. 167
Lover's Tale ii 81
V. of Maeldune 28
Ancient Sage 11
Parnassus 6
Com. of Arthur 164
Guinevere 570
Princess Hi 178
The Ring 178
Ded. of Idylls 37
Sir J. Oldcastle 92
Gareth and L. 581
Geraint and E. 383
In Mem. ciii 16
Forlorn 22
Talking Oak 30
40
150
!! 32, 96, 152
248
Princess iv 152
Marr. of Geraint 709
r
Sumptiioas
17
Sun
Sumptuous {continued) Thy presence in the silk of 5 looms ; A ncient Sage 266
Sumptuously and s According to his fashion, Geraint and E. 284
Son (s) (See also Noon-Sun, Soon) as the tree Stands in
the s and shadows all beneath, Love and Death 11
Like a lily which the s Looks thro' Adeline 12
tho' you stood Between the rainbow and the s. Margaret 13
The s is just about to set, „ 58
grow To a full face, there like a s remain Fix'd — Elednore 92
The s came dazzling thro' the leaves, L. of Shalott Hi 3
A merry boy in s and shade ? Two Voices 321
Many s s arise and set. Miller's D. 205
0 s, that from thy noonday height Fathna 2
While this great bow will waver in the s. Palace of Art 43
1 would see the s rise upon the glad New-
year, (repeat) May Queen, iV
To-night I saw the s set :
I wish the snow would melt and the s come
out on high :
In the early early morning the smnmer s 'ill
shine,
It seem'd so hard at first, mother, to leave
the blessed s,
O look ! the s begins to rise,
voice, that now is speaking, may be beyond
the s — „
Between the s and moon upon the shore ;
Half-fall'n across the threshold of the s.
We drank the Libyan S to sleep.
While yon s prospers in the blue.
That broods above the fallen s,
That made his forehead like a rising s
but all else of heaven was pure Up to the S,
the s fell, and all the land was dark, (repeat) —
Lay great with pig, wallowing in s and mud.
To some full music rose and sank the s,
The cloudy porch oft opening on the S ?
The S will run his orbit, and the Moon Her circle,
The S flifes forward to his brother S ;
For some three s's to store and hoard
widen'd \vith the process of the s's.
hurl their lances in the s ;
what to me were s or clime ?
flash the lightnings, weigh the S —
Thro' many an hour of summer s's,
To keep the best man under the s
We seem'd to sail into the S !
How oft we saw the iS retire.
As fast she fled thro' s and shade,
A thousand s's will stream on thee,
Close to the s in lonely lands.
As when the s, a crescent of eclipse,
A light wind blew from the gates of the s,
new warmth of life's ascending s Was felt by either,
Cuts o£E the fiery highway of the s.
Under a palm-tree, over him the S :
yonder shines The S of Righteousness,
We tum'd our foreheads from the falling s,
found the s of sweet content Re-risen in Katie's eyes,
bearing hardly more Than his own shadow in a
sickly s.
' Let not the s go down upon your wrath,'
Bright with the s upon the stream beyond :
out I slipt Into a land all s and blossom,
another of our Gods, the iS', Apollo, Delius,
how the s delights To glance and shift about
until the set of s Up to the people :
inhabitant Of some clear planet close upon the S,
set the starry tides. And eddied into «'s,
A Memnon smitten with the morning S.'
They with the s and moon renew their light
white vapour streak the crowned towers Built to the 8 : '
till the S Grew broader toward his death and fell,
' There sinks the nebulous star we call the S,
And brief the s of summer in the North,
till the Bear had wheel'd Thro' a great arc his seven slow s's.
Y's. E. 2, 51
5
15
Con. 9
49
54
Lotos- Eaters 38
D. of F. Women 63
145
The Blackbird 22
To J. S. 51
M. d' Arthur 217
Gardener's D. 80
Dora 79, 109
Walk, to the Mail 88
Edwin Morris 34
Love and Duty 9
22
Golden Year 23
Ulysses 29
Locksley Hall 138
170
177
186
Will Water. 33
Lady Clare 31
The Voyage 16
17
Sir L. and Q. G. 37
A Farewell 13
The Eagle 2
Vision of Sin 10
Poet's Song 3
Enoch Arden 38
130
501
504
The Brook 165
168
Aylmer's Field 30
Sea Dreams 44
97
101
Lucretius 124
„ 188
Princess, Pro. 2
ii 36
118
., Hi 116
255
345
363
it) 19
112
213
Sun (s) {coniinued) Up in one night and due to sudden s : Princess iv 312
Sees the midsummer, midnight, Norway s Set into
simrise ; ., 575
issued in the s, that now Leapt from the dewy shoulders ., t) 42
la.js on every side A thousand arms and rushes to the S. .. vi 37
leader of the herd That holds a stately fretwork to the S, .. * 86
So drench'd it is with tempest, to the s, .. vii 142
Till the S drop, dead, from the signs.' .. 245
underneath another s. Warring on a later day. Ode on Well. 101
To which our God Himself is moon and s. „ 217
To meet the s and sunny waters, T?ie Daisy 11
Your presence will be s in winter. To F. D. Maurice 3
With many a rivulet high against the aS The Islet 21
Wake, little ladies, The s is aloft ! Minnie and Winnie 20
The s, the moon, the stars, the seas. High. Pantheism 1
stars from the night and the s from the day ! Window, Gone 5
S comes, moon comes, „ When 1
S sets, moon sets, „ 3
Blaze upon her window, s, .,15
You send a flash to the s. Window, Marr. Morn 2
Nor branding summer s's avail In Mem. ii 11
And murmurs from the dying s : ., Hi 8
Since our first <S arose and set. ., xxiv 8
And blurr'd the splendour of the s ; ., Ixxii 8
And, while we breathe beneath the s, ., Ixxv 14
s by s the happy days Descend below ., Ixxxiv 27
And all the courses of the s's. „ cxvii 12
Sad Hesper o'er the buried s And ready, „ cxxi 1
I found Him not in world or s, ^ „ cxxiv 5
Thou standest in the rising s, ' „ cxxx 3
The sport of random s and shade. „ Con. 24
To meet and greet a whiter s ; , „ 78
For him did his high s flame, Maud I iv 32
Our planet is one, the s's are many, ., 45
No s, but a wannish glare In fold upon fold „ vi2
s look'd out with a smile Betwixt the cloud „ ix 3
Something flash'd in the s, ..10
To faint in the light of the s that she loves, ., xxii 11
To the flowers, and be their s. .. 58
fires of Hell brake out of thy rising s, „ II i 9
And noble thought be freer under the s, „ III vi 48
heathen horde. Reddening the s with smoke and
earth with blood. Com. of Arthur 37
and fell'd The forest, letting in the s, ., 60
' Rain, rain, and s ! a rainbow in the sky ! „ 403
Rain, rain, and s ! a rainbow on the lea ! „ 406
Rain, s, and rain ! and the free blossom blows : „ 409
S, rain, and s ! and where is he who knows ? „ 410
The S of May descended on their King, „ 462
paced a city all on fire With s and cloth of gold, „ 480
Blow, for our S is mighty in his May ! „ 497
Blow, for our S is mightier day by day ! ,, 498
ever-highering eagle-circles up To the great S of Glory, Gareth and L. 22
field of charlock in the sudden s Between two showers, „ 389
shone the Noonday S Beyond a raging shallow. .. 1027
flash'd the fierce shield. All s ; 1031
' Ugh ! ' cried the S, and vizoring up a red .. 1038
the S Heaved up a ponderous arm to strike the fifth, 1044
the stream Descended, and the S was wash'd away. 1047
'OS' (not this strong fool whom thou. Sir Knave, 1058
S, that wakenest all to bliss or pain, „ 1060
' O dewy flowers that open to the s, „ 1066
new s Beat thro' the Windless casement Marr. of Geraint 70
Will clothe her for her bridals like the s.' .. 231
woimd Bare to the s, and monstrous ivy-stems .. 322
pale and bloodless east began To quicken to the s, arose, .. 535
But since our fortune swerved from s to shade, ,. 714
Herself would clothe her like the s m Heaven. 784
And clothed her for her bridals like the s ; ., 836
watch'd the s blaze on the turning scythe, Geraint and E. 252
But wliile the s yet beat a dewy blade, ., 446
But lift a shining hand against the s, .. 473
Had bared her forehead to the blistering s, ., 515
And bear him hence out of this cruel s ? „ 544
there the Queen array'd me like the s : Geraint and E. 701
Sun 698
Sun (s) (continued) Past eastward from the falling s. Balin and Balan 320
an Eagle rising or, the S In dexter chief ; Merlin and V. 475
often o'er the s's bright eye Drew the vast eyelid .. 633
But who can gaze upon the S in heaven ? Lancelot and E. 123
The low s makes the colour : .. 134
emerald center'd in a s Of silver rays, 295
Red as the rising s with heathen blood, .. 308
when the next s brake from underground, „ 1137
till the s Shone, and the wind blew, thro' her, Holy Grail 98
■ So when the s broke next from under ground, .. 328
' The s is rising, tho' the s had risen. .. 408
had felt the s Beat like a strong knight Pelleas and E. 22
Rode till the star above the wakening s, „ 500
His hair, a s that ray'd from off a brow Last Tournament 666
On some vast plain before a setting s, Guinevere 77
And from the s there swiftly made at her „ 78
That made his forehead like a rising s Pass, of Arthur 385
And the new s rose bringing the new year. „ 469
sail Will draw me to the rising of the's, Lover's Tale i 27
and blew Fresh fire into the s, .. 319
light flash'd ev'n from her wMte robe As from a glass
in the s, ,. 371
The incorporate blaze of s and sea. „ 409
s below. Held for a space 'twixt cloud ,. 416
Glow'd intermingling close beneath the s. ., 436
other, like the s I gazed upon, .. 507
Why fed we from one fountain ? drew one s? ..it 24
Had suek'd the fire of some forgotten s, .. iv 194
That flings a mist behind it in the s — .. 294
All over glowing with the s of life, „ 381
An' then 'e tum'd to the s, North. Cobbler 48
Seead nobbut the smile o' the s „ 50
little of us left by the time this s be set.' The Revenge 28
the s went do\vn, and the stars came out .. 56
and the s smiled out far over the summer sea, .. 70
S himself has limn'd the face for me. Sisters (E. and E.) 101
hidden there from the light of the s — Def. of Lucknow 63
Who push'd his prows into the setting s, Columbus 24
melon lay like a little s on the tawny sand, V. of Maeldune 57
sends the hidden s Down yon dark sea. Be Prof., Two G. 33
Drew to this shore lit by the s's and moons .. 38
the numerable-imumierable S, s, and s, ,, 45
with set of s Their fires flame thickly, Achilles over the T. 10
A planet equal to the s Which cast it, To E. Fitzgerald 35
(Jne naked peak — the sister of the s Tiresias 30
Rejoicing that the s, the moon, the stars „ 160
And the s of the soul made day The Wreck 55
Of a life without s, without health. Despair 7
s's of the limitless Universe sparkled ,. 15
When the light of a S that was coming „ 23
and crows to the s and the moon, „ 90
Till the S and the Moon of our science „ 91
She feels the »S' is hid but for a night. Ancient Sage 73
seem to flicker past thro' s and shade, 100
such large life as match'd with ours Were S to spark— 238
clouds themselves are children of the S. 242
Day and Night are children of the S, ,. 245
up that lane of light into the setting s. The Flight 40
we watch'd the s fade from us thro' the West, „ 41
An' the s kem out of a cloud Tomorrow 37
wid his song to the S an' the Moon, ,, 91
over darkness — from the still unrisen s. Locksley //., Sixty 92
and the s himself will pass. ,. 182
earthlier earth of ours. Closer on the S, „ 184
All the s's — are these but symbols of innumerable man, „ 195
and S's alon^ their fiery way, ,. 203
And that bright hair the modem s. Epilogue 8
The s hung over the gates of Night, Dead Prophet 23
And he sung not alone of an old s set. But a s coming
up in his youth ! „ 41
thro' this mi<lnight breaks the s Of sixty
years away, Pref. Poem Broth. S. 21
Two S's of Love make day of human life. To Prin. Beatrice 1
one, the S of dawn That brightens „ 3
— and one Th« later-rising jS' of spousal Love, „ 6
Sung
Sun (s) (continued) conjectured planet in mid heaven
Between two S's, To Prin. Beatrice 21
had roll'd you round and round the S, Poets and their B. 10
jiS' Burst from a swimming fleece of winter gray, Demeter and P. 19
And lighted from above him by the S ? ..31
5, Pale at my grief, drew down before his time 113
Till thy dark lord accept and love the S, 137
Many a planet by many a s may roll Fastness 2
in the gleam of a milUon million of s's ? „ 4
We often walk In open s, The Ring 328
sword that lighten'd back the s of Holy land, Happy 43
Has push'd toward our faintest s ' To Ulysses 23
Her mantle, slowly greening in the S, Prog, of Spring 11
May float awhile beneath the s, Romney's R. 50
s has risen To flame along another dreary day. .. 57
bask amid the senses while the s of morning
shines. By an Evolution. 6
star of eve was drawing light From the dead s. Death of (Enone 65
an old fane No longer sacred to the S, St. Telemachus 7
That glances from the s of our Islam. Akbar's Dream 79
proclaimed His Master as the ' S of Righteousness,' .. 83
Alia call'd In old Iran the S of Love ? 87
— a s but dimly seen Here, till the mortal morning mists 95
The s, the s, they rail At me the Zoroastrian. .. 103
Let the S, Who heats our earth to yield us grain .. 104
Our hymn to the s. They sing it. ,, 203
I whirl, and I follow the S.' The Dreamer 14
Whirl, and follow the S ! (repeat) „ 20, 24, 28, 32
Rush of S's, and roll of systems, God and the Univ. 3
The face of Death is toward the S of Life, D. of the Duke of C. 12
Sun (verb) doves That s their milky bosoms on the thatch. Princess ii 103
Sunbeam thick-moted s lay Athwart the chambers.
As when a s wavers warm Within the dark
' Sometimes I let a s slip,
like a creeping s, slid From pillar unto pillar,
I make the netted s dance
old warrior from his ivied nook Glow like a s :
To glide a s by the blasted Pine,
The s strikes along the world :
But where the s broodeth warm,
Happy children in a s sitting
Sunbright ghtter'd o'er us a s hand,
and the s hand of the dawn.
Sun-cluster vast s-c's' gather'd blaze,
Sunday (See also Soonday) 'is best of a iS at mum,
An' Doctor 'e calls o' «S'
Sunder s's ghosts and shadow-casting men Became
a crystal,
*S' the glooming crimson on the rnarge.
And s false from tme,
Sunder'd (See also River-sunder'd) And never
can be s without tears. To
Quite s from the moving Universe,
from the sabre-stroke Shatter'd and s.
Time hath s shell from pearl.'
Be s in the night of fear ;
Some cause had kept him s from his wife :
high doors Were softly s, and thro' these a youth,
her lips were s With smiles of tranquil bliss,
and fought till I s the fray,
s once from all the human race,
Gods had marr'd our peace. And s each from each,
Sundown Yet oft when s skirts the moor
Sundry for the rest Spake but of s perils in the storm
Sun-flame S-f or sunless frost.
Sunflower Heavily hangs the broad s (repeat)
Unloved, the s-f, shining fair.
Sun-fringed Like little clouds s-jf, are thine.
Sun-flushed siglis to see the peak S-f,
Sung Tlie cock s out an hour ere light :
The blue fly s in the pane ;
And the cock hath s beneath the thatch
Died round the bulbul as he « ;
From Calpe into Cauca.sus they s.
At eve a dry cicala s,
Mariana 78
Miller's D. 79
TalMng Oak 217
Godiva 49
The Brook 176
Princess, Pro. 105
„ vii 196
In Mem. xv 8
„ xci 14
Locksley H., Sixty 14
V. of Maeldune 84
92
Epilogue 54
North. Cobbler A6
87
Merlin and V. 629
Gareth and L. 1365
Mechanophilus 2
-, With Pal. of Art 13
Princess vii 52
Light Brigade 36
In Mem. Hi 16
„ cxxvii 2
Merlin and V. 715
Pelleas and E. 4
Lover's Tale ii 142
V. of Maeldune 69
To Virgil 36
. Death of (Enone 33
In Mem. xli 17
; Holy Grail 761
Epilogue QQ
A spirit haunts 9, 21
In Mem. ci 5
Madeline 17
Balin and Balan 166
Mariana 27
63
The Owl i 10
Arabian Nights 70
The Poet 15
Mariana in the S. 85
Sung
699
Sunshine
Sung (continued) Among the tents I paused and s, Two Voices 125
' I s the joyful Paean clear, „ 127
fS by the morning star of song, I), of F. Women 3
anthem s, is charm'd and tied To where he stands, — „ 193
And, wheresoever I am s or told In aftertime, J\I. d' Arthur 34
falser than all songs have s, Locksley Hall 41
Wherever he sat down and s Amphion 19
nightingale thought, ' I have s many songs, Poet's Song 13
s to, when, this gad-fly brush'd aside. Princess v 414
Peace, his triumph will be s By some Ode on Well. 232
We s, tho' every eye was dim, In Mem. xxx 14
8 by a long-forgotten mind. .. Ixxvii 12
A guest, or happy sister, s, .. Ixxxix 26
One whispers, ' Here thy boyhood s .. cii 9
Whatever I have said or s, .. cxxv 1
song that once I heard By this huge oak, s nearly
where we sit : ' Merlin and V. 406
■ 0 crueller than was ever told in tale. Or s in song ! „ 859
And one hath s and all the dumb will sing. Holy Grail 301
more Than any have s thee living, Pelleas and E. 351
Pelleas had heard s before the Queen, „ 397
many a noble war-song had he s, Guinevere 278
And, wheresoever I am s or told In aftertime. Pass, of Arthur 202
we whirl'd giddily ; the wind S ; Lover's Tale ii 202
Noble ! he s, and the sweet sound ran Dead Prophet 37
And he s not alone of an old sun set, „ 41
men ater supper 'ed s their songs an' 'ed 'ed their beer, Otod Rod 35
Sank some were s and many were shatter'd, The Revenge 61
Have we s below them ? Locksley //., Sixty 95
Soilless I lived for years a stmited s life ; Aylmer's Field 357
S and moonless, utter light — but no ! Columbits 90
Sun-flame or s frost, Epilogue 66
The s halls of Hades into Heaven ? Demeter and P. 136
In seas of Death and s gulfs of Doubt. Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 14
And thro' the 5 winter morning-mist Death of (Enone 8
Sunlight faintest s's flee About his shadowy sides : The Kraken 4
Place it, where sweetest s falls Ode to Memory 85
The s driving down the lea, Rosalind 13
His broad clear brow in s glow'd ; L. of Shalott Hi 28
as s drinketh dew. Fatima 21
Floated the glowing s's, as she moved. CEnone 182
Are as moonlight unto s, Locksley Hall 152
and return In such a s of prosperity Aylmer's Field 421
(so rare the smiles Of s) The Daisy 54
And the 5 broke from her lip ? Maud I vi 86
Then like a stormy s smiled Geraint, Geraint and E. 480
Like 5 on the plain behind a shower : Merlin and V. 403
Crown'd with s— over darkness — Locksley H., Sixty 92
Yet the moonlight is the s, „ 182
Not of the s, Not of the moonlight. Merlin and the G. 120
million of summers are stored in the s still, The Dawn 19
And the s that is gone ! Silent Voices 6
Snnlike make your Enid burst S from cloud — Marr. of Geraint 789
Son-lit The s-1 almond-blossom shakes — To the Queen 16
maiden Spring upon the plain Came in a s-l fall of
rain. Sir L. and Q. G. 4
There the s ocean tosses O'er them mouldering, The Captain 69
Sunn'd S by those orient skies ; The Poet 42
day dwelt on her brows, and s Her violet eyes. Gardener's D. 136
S itself on his breast and his hands. Maud I xiii 13
caim'd mountain was a shadow, s The world to
peace again : Merlin and V. 638
had s The morning of our marriage, Sisters (E. and E.) 243
<S' with a summer of milder heat. To Prof. J ebb 8
Sunnee wanns the blood of Shiah and *S', Akbar's Dream 107
Sunnier Cleave ever to the s side of doubt, Ancient Sage 68
The fountain pulses high in s jets. Prog, of Spring 54
Banning *S' himself in a waste field alone — Aylmer's Field 9
Shine out, little head, s over with curls, Maud I xxii 57
Sonny And shadow'd coves on a s shore, Elednore 18
but his s hair Cluster'd about his temples (Enone 59
Another slid, a s fleck, Talking Oak 223
saw The dim curls kindle into s rings ; Tithonus 54
Thro' « decads new and strange. Day- Dm., L' Envoi 22
The s and rainj- seasons came and went Enoch Arden 623
Sunny {continued) Bright was that afternoon, S but chill ; Enoch Arden 670
S tokens of the Line, Ode Inter. Exhib. 19
To meet the sun and s waters. The Daisy 11
they pass the grave That has to-day its s side. In Mem., Con. 72
And wild voice pealing up to the s sky, Maud I v IZ
And feet like s gems on an English green, ., 14
What if with lier s hair, And smile as s as cold, , vi 23
birds Of s plume in gilded trellis-work ; Marr. of Geraint 659
But heaven had meant it for a s one : Holy Grail 706
To make it wholly thine on s days. Lover's Tale i 14
Sunny-sweet Of tower or duomo, s-s, The Daisy 46
Sunny-warm In tracts of pasture s-w, Palace of Art 94
Suiuise (adj.) At his highest with s fire ; Voice and the P. 30
Sunrise (s) Rare s flow'd. The Poet 36
And Freedom rear'd in that august s „ 37
look'd upon the breath Of the lilies at s ? Adeline 37
heath-flower in the dew, Touch'd with s. Rosalind 42
lights of sunset and of s mix'd In that brief night ; Love and Duty 72
every day The s broken into scarlet shafts Enoch Arden 592
The scarlet shafts of s — but no sail. „ 599
Her stature more than mortal in the burst Of s, Princess, Pro. 41
Norway sun Set into s ; „ iv 576
came from out a mountain-cleft Toward the s, Gareth and L. 261
level pavement where the King would pace At s, „ 668
light of Heaven varies, now At s, now at sunset, Marr. of Geraint 7
flame At s till the people in far fields. Holy Grail 243
Damsels in divers colours like the cloud Of sunset
and 5, Pelleas and E. 54
From sunset and s of all thy reahn, To the Queen ii 13
Hued with the scarlet of a fierce s. Lover's Tale i 353
Star of the morning, Hope in the s ; Vastness 15
Who found me at s Sleeping, Merlin and the G. 12
One from the S Da^vn'd on His people, Kapiolani 24
Sunset (adj.) Back to the s bound of Lyonnesse — Pass, of Arthur 81
Sunset (s) {See also Sea-sunset) Breathes low between
the s and the moon ; Elednore 124
the s, south and north. Winds all the vale Miller's D. 241
charmed s linger'd low adown In the red West : Lotos- Eaters 19
lights of s and of sunrise mix'd In that brief night ; Love and Duty 72
for my purpose holds To sail beyond the s, Ulysses 60
and leave Yon orange s waning slow : Move eastward 2
the gates were closed At s. Princess, Con. 37
and rang Beyond the bourn of s ; „ 100
Where some refulgent s of India Milton 13
when the s bum'd On the blossoni'd gable-ends Maud I vi 8
Under the half-dead s glared ; Gareth and L. 80O
light of Heaven varies, now At sunrise, now at s, Marr. of Geraint 7
Damsels in divers colours like the cloud Of s and
sunrise, Pelleas and E. 54
The wide-wing'd s of the misty marsh Last Tournament 423
an hour or maybe twain After the s, Gtoinevere 238
From s and sunrise of all thy realm. To the Queen ii 13
that shot the s In lightnings round me ; Lover's Tale i 442
Storm, s, glows and glories of the moon „ H 110
setting, when Even descended, the very s aflame ; V. of Maeldune 66
Rich was the rose of s there. The Wreck 136
The placid gleam of s after storm ! Ancient Sage 133
She that finds a winter s Locksley H., Sixty 22
As if perpetual s linger'd there, The Ring 83
The s blazed along the wall of Troy. Death of QLnone 77
The wrathful s glared against a cross St. Telemachus 5
Following a hundred s's, and the sphere „ 31
From out the s pour'd an alien race, Akbar's Dream 192
S and eveninjg star. Crossing the Bar 1
Sunset-flush'd pinnacles of aged snow, Stood s-f Lotos- Eaters 17
Sun-shaded S-s in the heat of dusty fights) Princess ii 241
Sunshine Like s on a dancing rill, Rosalind 29
where broad s laves The lawn by some cathedral, D. of F. Women 189
Simeon, whose brain the s bakes ; St. S. Stylites 164
frolic welcome took The thunder and the s, Ulysses 48
The random s lighten'tl ! Amphion 56
Autumn's mock s of the faded woods Aylmer's Field 610
past In s : right across its track there lay, Sea Dreams 126
Many a little hand Glanced like a touch of s on the
rocks. Princess Hi Z51
Sunshine
700
Swallow
Sunshine (continued) A stroke of cruel s on the cliff, Princess iv 524
When the tide ebbs in s, „ vi 162
clover sod, That takes the « and the rains. In Mem. x 14
Turn thy wild wheel thro' s, storm and cloud ; Marr. of Geraint 348
This was the s that hath given the man Balin and Balan 181
glitterins; like May s on May leaves Merlin and V. 88
and the s came along with him. Pelleas and E. 6
A- seem'd to brood More warmly on the heart Lover's Tale i 327
s on that sail at last which brings our Edwin home. The Flight 92
So fair in southern s bathed, Freedom 5
The gleam of household s ends. The Wanderer 1
Sun-smittien S-s Alps before me lay. The Daisy 62
Sun-star great S-s of morningtide, BaU. of Brunanburh 26
Sun-steep 'd S-s at noon, and in the moon Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 29
Sun-stricken fell S-s, and that other lived alone. Enoch Arden 570
Sun-worship Their sweet s-w ? Gareth and L. 1081
This old s-w, boy, will rise again, Balin and Balan 457
Superhuman Thrice multiplied by s pangs, St. S. Stylites 11
Superlative ' ^lost dearest ' be a true s — Sisters (E. and E.) 292
Supersede one deep love doth s All other. In Mem. xxxii 5
Supersensual For such a s sensual bond Merlin and V. 109
Superstition was paid To woman, s all awry : Princess ii 137
Supper And after s, on a bed. The Sisters 16
dreams Of goodly s in the distant pool, Gareth and L. 1187
* So that ye do not serve me sparrow-hawks
For s, Marr. of Geraint 305
cup itself, from which our Lord Drank at the last
sad s Holy Grail 47
How oft the Cantab s, host and guest. To W. H. BrooJcfield 4
Fur the men ater « 'ed simg their songs Owd Bod 35
Supple s, sinew-corded, apt at ai-ms ; Princess v 535
And rosy knees and s roundedness, Lucretius 190
Supple-sinew'd Iron jointed, s-s, they shall dive, Locksley Hall 169
Supple-sliding scoundrel in the s-s knee.' Sea Dreams 168
Supplest and Death will freeze the s limbs — Happy 46
Suppliant many another s crying came Gareth and L. 436
look'd and saw The novice, weeping, s, Guinevere 664
Supplicated shall I brook to be s ? Boadicea 9
Supplicating Besought him, s, if he cared Enoch Arden 163
would they listen, did they pity me s ? Boadicea 8
Supplication With s both of knees and tongue : Holy Grail 602
Supplied And he s my want the more In Mem. Ixxix 19
Supporter like s's on a shield, Bow-back'd Princess vi 358
Or two wild men s's of a shield, Geraint and E. 267
Suppose ' Good soul ! s I grant it thee, Two Voices 38
Suppression See Self-suppression
Supremacy In knowledge of their own s.' Qinone 133
Supreme every legend fair Which the s Caucasian
mind Palace of Art 126
Supt The kitchen brewis that was ever s Gareth and L. 781
Sure (See also Sewer) Not make him s that he shall
cease ? Two Voices 282
' Ah ! s within him and without, ,, 307
'Mid onward-sloping motions infinite Making for
one s goal. Palace of Art 248
rest thee s That I shall love thee well . (Ewo«e.l59
To be s the preacher says. Grandmother 93
' Fool,' he answer'd, ' death is s Sailor Boy 13
Bound for the Hall, I am s was he : Maud I x 25
I am quite quite s That there is one to love me ; ., xi 10
0 Maud were s of Heaven If lowliness could save her. ., xii 19
Most s am I, quite s, he is not dead.' Geraint and E. 545
they do not flow From evil done ; right s am I of that, Guinevere 189
' you are s it '11 all come right,' First Quarrel 1
1 am s it 'ill all come right.' (repeat) „ 74, 91
lit by s hands, — With thunders, and with lightnings, Buonaparte 5
He means me I'm « to be happy Rizpah 76
well, I am not s — But if there lie a preference Sisters (E. and E.) 289
let come what will ; at last the end is s. The Flight 103
And s am I, by Muriel, one day came And saw you. The Ring 312
I am all but s I have — in Kendal church — Romney's R. 19
For you forgive me, you are s of that — „ 160
Surely 1 am not s one of those Caught by the flower The Ring 343
How s glidest thou from March to May, Prog, of Spring 109
Surer For * sign had foUow'd, either hand, M. d' Arthur 76
Surer (continued) If we could give them s, quicker proof — Princess Hi 282
For s sign had foUow'd, either hand, Pass, of Arthur 244
Surety We did but keep you s for our son. Princess v 25
Surf White s wind-scatter'd over sails and masts, 2>. of F. Women 31
like a wader in the s. Beyond the brook, The Brook 117
the breakers on the shore Sloped into louder s : Lover's Tale Hi 15
again the stormy s Crash'd in the shingle : „ 53
Surface (adj.) Then, for the s eye, that only doats The Ring 163
Surface (S) In roaring he shall rise and on the 5 die. The Kraken 15
But ere he dipt the s, rose an arm .1/. d' Arthur 143
And down my s crept. Talking Oak 162
These flashes on the s are not he. Princess iv 253
To make the sullen s crisp. In Mem. xlix 8
when the s rolls. Hath power to walk the waters Com. of Arthur 293
Then from the smitten s flash'd, Lancelot and E. 1236
But ere he dipt the s, rose an arm Pass, of Arthur 311
Who with his head below the s dropt Lover's Tale i 636
You, what the cultured s grows, Mechanophilus 33
Surface-shadow sees and stirs the s-s Ancient Sage 38
Surge the' the s Of some new deluge // / were loved 11
when the s was seething free, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 106
sands and yeasty s's mix In caves Sailor Boy 9
I heard the shingle grinding in the s. Holy Grail 811
the s fell From thunder into whispers ; Lover's Tale Hi 30
Surged foeman s, and waver'd, and reel'd Heavy Brigade 62
Surgery-school Fresh from the s-s's of France In the Child. Hasp. 3
Surging In middle ocean meets the s shock. Will 8
Their s charges foam'd themselves away ; Ode on Well. 126
and it ran <S and swaying all round us, Bef. of Lucknow 38
Surly And there the 5 village-churls, L. of Shalott ii 16
And liumm'd a s hymn. Talking Oak 300
Sunnise silent we with blind s Regarding, Princess iv 381
Surname Simeon of the pillar, by s Stylites, St. S. Stylites 161
■ Katie.' ' That were strange. What s ? ' The Brook 212
wrote Name, s, all as clear as noon, The Ring 237
Surpass But tho' the port s'es praise. Will Water. 77
As we s our fathers' skill, Mechanophilus 21
Surprise (s) with s Froze my swift speech : D. of F. Women 89
With some « and thrice as much disdain Turn'd, Marr. of Geraint 557
But kept it for a sweet s at morn. Yea, truly is it
not a sweet s? „ 703
Surprise (verb) 'S' thee ranging with thy peers. In Mem. xliv 12
Surrender ' Never s, I charge you, Def. of Lucknow 10
Survive S in spirits render'd free, In Mem. xxxviii 10
Suspend And he s's his converse with a friend, Marr. of Geraint 340
Suspicion A vague s of the breast : Two Voices 336
There gleam'd a vague s in his eyes : Lancelot and E. 127
Suspicious S that her nature had a taint. Marr. of Geraint 68
Thro' all the outworks of s pride ; Isabel 24
Sussex Green S fading into blue Pro. to Gen. Hamley 7
Sustain bad him with good heart s himself — Aylmer's Field 544
Sustain'd Be dinmi'd of sorrow, or s ; In Mem. Ixxxv 10
Sustaining They tremble, the s crags : „ cxxvii 11
Sustenance Gain'd for her own a scanty s, Enoch Arden 259
No want was there of human s, „ 554
One s, which, still as thought grew large, Lover's Tale i 240
Suttee were seen or heard Fir&s of S, Akbar's Dream 196
Swallies (swallow) whin they s the man intire ! Tomorrow 66
Swallow (s) Above in the wind was the s. Dying Swan 16
the s 'ill come back again with summer May Queen. N. Y's. E. 19
While the prime s dips his "wing, Edwin Morris 145
The s stopt as he hunted the fly. Poet's Song 9
I glance. Among my skimming s's ; The Brook 175
Where they like s's coming out of time Princess ii 431
I watch'd the s winging south From mine own land, ., iv 89
'OS,S, flying, flying South, .. 93
O tell her, S, thou that knowest each, .. 96
' O aS, -S, if I could follow, and light 99
' O tell her, S, that thy brood is flown : .. 108
' O S, flying from the golden woods, ,. 114
And s and sparrow and throstle. Window, Ay 14
The Mayfly is torn by the s, Maud I iv 23
' The s and the swift are near akin. Com. of Arthur 313
For Knowletlge is the s on the lake Ancient Sage 37
Hubert brings me home With April and the s. The Ring 60 »
Swallow
701
Swear
Swallow (s) (continued) past her feet the s circling flies, Prog, of Spring 44
Swallow (verb) (See also Swallies) to sloughs That s
common sense, Princess v 442
darkness of the grave and utter night, Did s up my
vision ; Lover's Tale i 599
Swallow'd (See also Half-swallow'd) Some hold that he
hath s infant flesh, Gareth and L. 1342
And blackening, s all the land, Guinevere 82
Till they were s in the leafy bowers. Lover's Tale Hi 57
S in Vastness, lost in Silence, Vastness 34
Swallow-flight loosens from the lip Short s-f's of song. In Mem. xlviii 15
Swallowing a gulf of ruin, s gold, Not making. -Sea Dreams 79
S its precedent in victory. Lover's Tale i 763
Swam I loved the brimming wave that s Miller's D. 97
' The light white cloud s over us. D. of F. Wo7nen 221
And in the light the white mermaiden s, Guinevere 245
Swamp like fire in s's and hollows gray. May Queen 31
■ The s, where humm'd the dropping snipe, On a Mourner 9
Gray s's and pools, waste places of the hern, Geraint and E. 31
A great black s and of an evil smell, Holy Grail 499
Down from the causeway heavily to the s Last Tournament 461
And leave the hot 5 of voluptuousness Ancient Sage 277
Swamp 'd-Swampt This Gama swamp'd in lazy tolerance. . Princess v 443
Had swampt the sacred poets with themselves. Poets and their B. 14
Swan (See also Wild-Swan) Adown it floated a dying s, Dying Swan 6
The wild s's death-liymn took the soul „ 21
Far as the wild s wings, to where the sky Pcdace of Art 31
Moved from the brink, like some full-breasted s M. d' Arthur 266
And after many a summer dies the s. Tiihonus 4
Or necklace for a neck to which the s's Is tawnier Lancelot and E. 1184
On wyvem, lion, dragon, griifin, s. Holy Grail 350
Moved from the brink, like some full-breasted s Pass, of Arthur 434
Swang s besides on many a windy sign — Aylmer's Field 19
Swan-like harmony Of thy s-l stateliness, Elednore 47
Swan-mother as makes The white s-m, sitting, Balin and Balan 353
Swap niver s Owlby an' Scratby Church-warden, etc. 44
Sward sloping of the moon-lit s Was damask-work, Arabian Nights 27
convent- towers Slant doMTi the snowy s, St. Agnes' Eve 6
The s was trim as any garden lawn : Princess, Pro. 95
At this upon the s She tapt her tiny silken-sandaPd
foot : .. 149
' Pitch our pavilion here upon the s ; ..Hi 346
Dropt on the s, and up the linden walks, .. iv 209
dismounting on the s They let the horses graze, Geraint and E. 210
With jewels than the s with drops of dew, „ 690
leaves a breadth Of s to left and right. Sisters (E. and E.) 81
Sware (See also Swore) Merlin s that I should come again M. d' Arthur 23
Cophetua s a royal oath : Beggar Maid 15
he never s, Except his wrath were wreak'd Lucretius 127
at the last he s That he would send Princess i 63
And 5 to combat for my claim till death. „ v 360
But mine, but mine,' so I s to the rose, Maud I xxii 31
S on the field of death a deathless love. Com. of Arthur 132
the two S at the shrine of Christ a deathless love : „ 466
fought in her name, iS by her — Merlin and V. 14
But keep that oath ye s, ye might, ,, 688
s a vow. ' I 5 a vow before them all, Holy Grail 194
and Galahad « the vow, And good Sir Bors, our Lancelot's
cousin, s, And Lancelot s, and many among the knights,
And Gawain s, and louder than the rest.' 199
I s a vow to follow it till I saw.' 282
when thy knights S,\ s with them only in the hope „ 778
being on the morrow knighted, s To love one only. Pelleas and E. 140
Save that he s me to a message, saying. Last Tournament 76
What faith have these in whom they s to love? ,■ 188
The life had flown, we s but by the shell — „ 270
S by the scorpion-worm that twists in hell, ,. 451
And solemnly as when ye s to him, „ 647
They lied not then, who s, and thro' their vows „ 650
I s. Being amazed : but this went by — „ 673
My house are rather they who s my vows, Pass, of Arthur 157
Merlin s that I should come again To rule once more ; „ 191
Then s Lord Thomas Howard : The Revenge 4
Swarm (s) Then we shoulder'd thro' the s, Audley Court 9
Glitter like a s of fire-flies Locksley Hall 10
Swarm (s) (continued) In silken fluctuation and the s Of
female whisperers : Princess vi 855
s's of men Darkening her female field : „ vii 33
Back to France her banded s's. Ode on Well. 110
Seeing the mighty s about their walls. Com. of Arthur 200
Swarm (verb) thoughts would s as bees about their queen. Princess i 40
that ever s about And cloud the highest heads, Columbus 119
those gilt gauds men-children s to see. To W. C. Macready 11
Swarm'd noise of life iS' in the golden present, Gardener's D. 179
I smote them with the cross ; they s again. St. S. Stylites 173
s His literary leeches. Will Water. 199
from time to time the heathen host S overseas. Com. of Arthur 9
Swarming With the hum of s bees Into dreamful slumber
lull'd.
' I took the 5 sound of life —
gates were closed At sunset, and the crowd were s
now,
hosts Of heathen s o'er the Northern Sea ;
Swarthier they marm'd the Revenge with a s alien crew.
Swarthy And wearing on my s brows The garland
A queen, with s cheeks and bold black eyes,
and takes the flood With s webs.
a light Of laughter dimpled in his s cheek ;
In which the s ringdove sat,
Hard coils of cordage, s fishing-nets.
With half a score of s faces came.
with a sweep of it Shore thro' the s neck.
But under her black brows a s one Laugh'd
and takes the flood With s webs.
Swathe Did s thyself all round Hope's quiet urn
Swathed (See also Vapour-swathed) s the hurt that
drain'd her dear lord's life.
Narded and s and balm'd it for herself,
Swathing or fold of mystery S the other.
Sway (s) A hate of gossip parlance, and of s,
power which ever to its s Will win the wise
s and whirl Of the storm dropt to windless calm,
Sway (verb) She saw the gusty shadow s.
Unto the dwelling she must s
Eleanore 29
Talking Oak 213
Princess, Con. 37
Guinevere 428
The Revenge 110
Kate 23
D. of F. Women 127
M. d' Arthur 269
Edwin Morris 61
Talking Oak 293
Enoch Arden 17
Aylmer's Field 191
Geraint and E. 728
Last Tournament 216
Pass, of Arthur 437
Lover's Tale i 100
Geraint and E. 516
Lover's Tale i 682
183
Isabel 26
Mine be the strength 9
Lover's Tale ii 206
Mariana 52
Ode to Memory 79
queen who s's the floods and lands From Ind to Ind, Buonaparte 3
Bring truth that s's the soul of men ?
And waves that s themselves in rest,
Unwatch'd, the garden bough shall s.
Here will I lie, while these long branches s.
Thou didst not s me upward ;
and s thy course Along the years of haste
0 will she, moonlike, s the main,
Sway'd Still hither thither idly s
1 govern'd men by change, and so I s All moods,
she s The rein with dainty finger-tips,
s The cradle, while she sang this baby song.
«S' to her from their orbits as they moved.
And world-wide fluctuation s In vassal tides
S round about him, as he gallop'd up To join them, Marr. of Geraint 171
The hundred under-kingdoms that he s Merlin and V. 582
And blackening in the sea-foam s a boat. Holy Grail 802
High-tide of doubt that s me up and down Sisters (E. and E.) 178
' The statesman's brain that s the past Ancient Sage 134
S by vaster ebbs and flows Locksley H., Sixty 194
S his sabre, and held his own Like an Englishman Heavy Brigade 18
To Prin. Beatrice 19
Day-Ihn., Sleep. P. 52
In Mefn. xi 18
„ ci 1
Maud I xviii 29
Lover's Tale i 98
De Prof., Two G. 20
Mechanophilus 13
Miller's D. 47
D. of F. Women 130
Sir L. and Q. G. 40
Sea Dreams 291
Princess vii 326
In Mem. cxii 15
Happy 43
Ded. of Idylls 21
Com. of Arthur 107
S by each Love, and swaying to each Love,
s the sword that lighten'd back the sun
Swaying Not s to this faction or to that ;
as here and there that war Went s ;
s upon a restless elm Drew the vague glance of
Vivien, Balin and Balan 463
gustful April morn That pufE'd the s branches into
smoke Holy Grail 15
from the crown thereof a carcanet Of ruby s to and
fro, Last Tournament 7
to and fro S the helpless hands. Pass, of Arthur 131
and it ran Surging and s all round us, Def. of Lucknow 38
Sway'd by each Love, and s to each Love, To Prin. Beatrice 19
Swear (See also Swefir) Such eyes ! I s to you, my love, Miller's D. 87
Let us s an oath, and keep it with an equal mind, Lotos-Eaters, C. 8. 108
Swear
702
Sweet
Swear {continued) ' I s (and else may insects prick Each leaf Talking Oak 69
' I s, by leaf, and wind, and rain, „ 81
And hear me s a solemn oath, „ 281
I have a secret — only s. Before I tell you — s upon the
book Not to reveal it, Enoch Arden 837
' S ' added Enoch sternly ' on the book.' „ 842
I s you shall not make them out of mine. Aylvier's Field 301
she made me s it — 'Sdeath — Princess v 291
S by St. something — I forget her name — „ 293
I s to you, lawful and lawless war Maud II v 94
but, so thou dread to s, Pass not beneath this
gateway, Gareth and L. 272
Eepentant of the word she made him s, 527
I s thou canst not fling the foui'th.' ,, 1327
I s it would not ru£fle me so much Geraint and E. 150
I A' I will not ask your meaning in it : „ 743
But ere I leave thee let me s once more Merlin aiid V. 929
I s by truth and knighthood that I gave Lancelot and E. 1297
But by mine eyes and by mine ears I s, Holy Grail 864
Will ye not lie? not s, as there ye kneel. Last Tournament 646
I say, 8 to me thou ^vllt love me ev'n when old, „ 652
Than had we never sworn. I s no more. „ 660
lay their hands in mine and s To reverence the King, Guinevere 467
where is he can s But that some broken gleam Bed. Poem Prin. Alice 17
0 my lord, I s to you I heard his voice Columbus 145
1 s and s forsworn To love him most, The Flight 49
and s the brain is in the feet. Locksley H., Sixty 136
who shall s it cannot be ? „ 269
Swear an' 'e s's, an' 'e says to 'im 'Noa. Village Wife 67
Ye niver 'card Steevie s 'cep' it wur at a dog Spinster's S's. 60
Swear'd (swore) an' s as I'd break ivry stick North. Cobbler 35
Swearin S agean, you Toms, Spinster's S's. 59
Swearing {See also Swearin) s he had glamour enow In
his own blood, Gareth and L. 209
And s men to vows impossible, Lancelot and E. 130
Sweat bloody thumbs S on his blazon'd chairs ; Walk, to the Mail 76
every hour Must s her sixty minutes to the death, Golden Year 69
That shriek and s in pigmy wars Lit. Squabbles 2
S, writhings, anguish, labouring of the lungs Pass, of Arthur 115
Sweating And, s rosin, plump'd the pine Amphion 47
With a weird bright eye, s and trembling, Aylmer's Field 585
Then loosed their s horses from the yoke, Spec, of Iliad 2
Went s underneath a sack of com, Marr. of Geraint 263
He up the side, s with agony, got, Lancelot and E. 494
Sweeat (sweet) sa pratty an' neat an' s, North. Cobbler 43
sa pratty, an' feat, an' neat, an' s? „ 108
Sweep (s) and a s Of richest pauses, Elednore 65
The parson taking wide and wider s's, The Epic 14
by many a s Of meadow smooth from aftermath Audley Court 13
From the dread s of the down-streaming seas : Enoch Arden 55
or the s Of some precipitous rivulet „ 586
The s of scythe in morning dew, In Mem. Ixxxix 18
Made but a single bound, and with a s of it Geraint and E. 727
Sweep (verb) S the green that folds thy grave. A Dirge 6
Would s the tracts of day and night. Two Voices 69
never more Shall lone CEnone see the morning mist S
thro' them ; (Enone 217
we s into the younger day : Locksley Hall 183
Who s the crossings, wet or dry. Will Water. 47
those long swells of breaker s The nutmeg rocks The Voyage 39
There let the wind s and the plover cry ; Come not, when, etc. 5
That s's with all its autmnn bowers, In Mem. xi 10
We heard them s the winter land ; „ xxx 10
while the wind began to s A music „ ciii 53
But s's away as out we pass To range the woods, „ Con. 95
to 5 In ever-highering eagle-circles Gareth and L. 20
And s me from my hold upon the world, Merlin and V. 303
heard the hollow-ringing heavens s Over him till by
miracle — Holy Grail 678
S's suddenly all its half-moulder'd chords Lover's Tale i 19
often s's athwart in storm — „ 50
sea-current would s us out to the main. Despair 51
Sweeping {See also Earth-sweeping, Long-sweeping) And
with a s of the arm, A Character 16
passion s thro' me left me dry, Locksley Hall 131
3(ri
Sweeping {continued) S the f rothfly from the fescue brush'd Aylmer's Fidd S
Of that great breaker, s up the strand, Com. of Arthur 387
sudden gust that s down Took the edges of the pall. Lover's Tale Hi 34
shape with wings Came s by him, St. Telemachus 25
Sweet {See also Heaven-sweet, Lowly-sweet, May-sweet,
Perfect-sweet, Star-sweet, Sunny-sweet, Sweeat)
False-eyed Hesper, unkind, where is my s Rosalind ? Leonine Eleg. 16
How s to have a common faith ! Supp. Confessions 33
S in their utmost bitterness, ,, 117
S lips whereon perpetually did reign The simimer calm Isabel 7
She could not look on the s heaven, Mariana 15
Sudden glances, 5 and strange, Madeline 5
vaults of pillar'd palm. Imprisoning s's, Arabian Nights 40
In s dreams softer than unbroken rest Ode to Memory 29
With music and s showers Of festal flowers, „ 77
S faces, rounded arms, and bosoms prest Sea-Fairies 3
And s is the colour of cove and cave, And s shall your
welcome be : ..30
We will kiss s kisses, and speak s words : .. 34
O pale, pale face so s and meek, Oriatia 66
O S pale Margaret, (repeat) Margaret 1, 54
Your melancholy s and frail „ 7
' His little daughter, whose s face He kiss'd. Two Voices 253
The s church bells began to peal. .. 408
These three made unity so s, „ 421
' What is it thou knowest, s voice ? ' ,. 440
My own s Alice, we must die. Miller's D. 18
So s it seems with thee to walk, .. 29
S AUce, if I told her all ? ' .. 120
A trifle, s ! which true love spells — „ 187
S gales, as from deep gardens, blow Fatima 24
And that s incense rise ? ' Palace of Art 4A
■ For that s incense rose and never fail'd, .. 45
Or gay, or grave, or s, or stem, 91
Or s Europa's mantle blew unclasp'd, .. 117
Making s close of his delicious toils — .. 185
Nor would I break for your s sake L. C. V. de Vere 13
Oh your s eyes, your low replies : „ 29
by the meadow-trenches blow the faint s cuckoo-flowers ; May Queen 30
O s is the new violet, May Queen, Con. 5
And s is all the land about, ,. 7
O s and strange it seems to me, .. 53
Theee is s music here that softer falls Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 1
Music that brings s sleep down from the blissful skies. „ 7
How s it were, hearing the downward stream,
How s (while warm airs lull us, blowing lowly)
Only to hear were s.
Surely, surely, slumber is more s than toil,
And s it was to dream of Fatherland,
whose s breath Preluded those melodious bursts
S as new buds in Spring.
Failing to give the bitter of the s,
Sleep till the end, true soul and s.
and stirr'd her lips For some s answer,
Of that which came between, more s than each,
My s, wild, fresh three quarters of a year,
made it s To walk, to sit, to sleep, to wake,
Then low and s 1 whistled thrice ;
S\ si spikenard, and balm, and frankincense.
Ah ! let me not be f ool'd, s saints :
' Yet seem'd the pressure thrice as s
The slow s hours that bring us all things good,
Thy s eyes brighten slowly close to mine,
Whispering I knew not what of wild and s.
How s are looks that ladies bend
S Emma Moreland of yonder town
S Emma Moreland spoke to me :
' S Emma Moreland, love no more
I buried her like my own 5 child,
colour flushes Her s face from brow to chin :
So s a face, such angel grace,
Who make it seem more s to be
And chanted a melody loud and s,
To where the rivulets of s water ran ;
' If I might look on her s face again
54
89
99
126
Lotos-Eaters 39
D. ofF. Women 5
272
286
To J. S. 73
Gardener's D. 159
252
Edwin Morris 2
39
113
St. S. Stylites 211
212
Talkvng Oak 145
Love and Dviy 57
Tithonus 38
61
Sir Galahad 13
Edward Gray 1
5
7
Lady Clare 27
L. of Burleigh 62
Beggar Maid 13
You might have won 29
Poet's Soru 6
Enoch Arden 642
718
Sweet
703
Sweet
Sweet (ccnvtinued) Like fountains of s water in the sea, ^^of^ff^kfl
Or ev'n the s half-EngUsh Neilgherry air The Brook 17
' ,S Katie, once I did her a good turn, •■ '
Of s seventeen subdued me ere she spoke) >- |
Arrived and found the sun of s content Ee-risen •. ^
I move the s forget-me-nots ^ 7 ^. ttL/j qQ9
her . face and faith Held him from that : Ayln^s FM 392
She look'd so s, he kiss'd her tenderly ,, , , o,„n,*„™ein6
' That was then your dream,' she said, ' Not sad, but s.' Sea Dreams 10b
« So s, I lay,' said he, ' And mused upon it, ,. ^" '
Their wildest waiUngs never out of tune With that s note; „ ^^^
Nothing to mar the sober majesties Of settled, s, Lucretius 218
AndTgir^graduates in their golden hair. Princess, Pro. 142
And s as English air could make her, - ^^
,S thoughts would swarm as bees about their queen. „ »^
We remember love ourselves In our s youth : ,. ^«
S household talk, and phrases of the hearth, „ « ^
Is she The s proprietress a shadow ? » .™J
S and low, s and low, ,., , o > " ftft
' What pardon, s Melissa, for a blush f , ^ " qa?
' 0 how s ' I said (For I was half-obUvious of my mask) „ »o(
O s and far from cliff and scar " * __
And s as those by hopeless fancy feign d "64
So s a voice and vague, fatal to men, " -7
Like some s sculpture draped from head to foot, ., '' ^
' Lift up your head, s sister : lie not thus. " ^
6f is it to have done the thing one ought, .. o'
My one s child, whom I shall see no more ! '. °?
My babe, mys Aglaia, my onechild: „ o " iqi
Twice as magnetic to s influences Of earth and heaven? ., !«!
' We remember love ourself In our s youth ; .. ^"°
Prince, she can be s to those she loves, " f°^
'-S my child, I hve for thee.' . ^ ^^ , " Jf-\k
by and by S order hved again with other laws : ., ««* ^
two dewdrops on the petal shake To the same s air, „ o»
showers of random s on maid and man. »
And call her s, as if in irony, » , „!
nor more S Ida : pahn to pahn she sat : " ^^
' If you be, what I think you, some s dream, » j*^
only, if a dream, S dream, be perfect.
she found a smaU S Idyl, and once more, as low, ^^^
and s is every sound. Sweeter thy voice, but every ^^^
sound is s; , , , .„j . n " 99sx
she had fail'd In s humihty ; had fail'd m all ; „ ^;f»
could we make her as the man, S Love were slam : „ ^' '
lives A drowning Ufe, besotted in s self, •• ^
forced S love on pranks of saucy boyhood : >• ^^
Lav thv s hands in mine and trust to me. ^ , ^ \ ^ i, t ^
UpWa thousand voices full and s. Ode Inter- ExMb- 1
Welcome her, all things youthful and s, W . to Alexandra 8
^'sE •'^' ^'^ ^ '^^ ^ '^^ ^^ ""'*' ''^ ' "'°'"" Grar^-^ther 49
There lay the s little body that never had drawn a breath. „ 62
Sin' I mun doy I mun doy, thaw loife they says ^ ^^^^^ ^ ^ ^^
is s, ' ' N S 11
thou's »■ upo' parson's lass— » ^.r "r 7' , 2
For a score of s little summers or so ? ' -^ «« ^ «'«' ^
The s little wife of the singer said, " .
To a s little Eden on earth that I know.
And strain to make an inch of room For their s ^ ^^^^^^^^ ^^
honouSig your . faith in him. May trust himself ;. ^^^l^^'^,?
O hghtsTare you flying over her s Uttle face? Wtndow, On tf^e miJS
Where is another s as my s, " Answer 2
Claspt on her seal, my s ! " ^^^ ... 3
0 s and bitter m a breath, ^^ .. 3
Thro' four s years arose and feU, ,„
' They rest,' we said, ' their sleep is s, " ''f'^
1 strive To keep so s a thing ahve : " ;-^^ '
hear thy laurel whisper s About the ledges of the hill. ., .< :mi 7
S soul, do with me as thou wilt | " j ,oiil6
To utter love more s than praise. ■• ' "
The same s forms in either mmd. " '■^•«»*"
/n Mem. Ixxxi 9
Ixxxiii 2
Ixxxvi 1
Ixxxviii 1
carwi 2
cxiJii 6
ca;a;i 17
CXOT) 11
cxxtx 6
Sweet (continued) But Death returns an answer s :
O s new-year delaying long ;
S after showers, ambrosial air.
Wild bird, whose warble, liquid s,
regret for buried time That keenlier in s April wakes.
Desire of nearness doubly s ;
S Hesper-Phosphor, double name
And if the words were s and strong
S human hand and lips and eye ;
Maud with her s purse-mouth when my father dangled
the grapes.
And she touch'd my hand with a smile so s.
But a smile could make it s. (repeat)
How prettily for his own s sake
What some have found so s ;
Let the s heavens endure,
Maud is as true as Maud is s :
Think I may hold dominion s,
In our low world, where yet 'tis s to live,
silver knell Of twelve s hours that past in bridal white,
Seal'd her mine from her first s breath.
That, if left uncancell'd, had been so s :
And for your s sake to yours ;
(If I read her s will right)
From the meadow your walks have left so s
She is coming, my own, my s ;
For she, s soul, had hardly spoken a word,
'Tis a morning pure and s, (repeat)
' Take me, s, To the regions of thy rest ?
S nature gUded by the gracious gleam Of letters,
Call him baseborn, and since his ways are s,
friends Of Arthur, gazing on him, tall, with bright
iS f3>C6S
And spake s words, and comforted my heart,
But s again, and then I loved him well.
5' mother, do ye love the child? '
so the boy, S mother, neither clomb,
' True love, s son, had risk'd himself and chmb d,
' S son, for there be many who deem him not,
Stay, s son.'
Rather than— O s heaven !
S lord, how like a noble knight lie talks !
Theirs sun-worship? these be for the snare
He compass'd her with s observances And worship, Marr. ofGeramt^
in the s face of her Whom he loves most, :- 1^'^
Lost in s dreams, and dreaming of her love For
Lancelot, " oqq
Singing; and as the s voice of a bird, « ^
So the s voice of Enid moved Geramt ; .- 00^
And Enid brought s cakes to make them cheer, „ ^
And seeing her so s and serviceable, >' ^^
Sank her s head upon her gentle breast ; ,. o^i
And softly to her own s heart she said : - o^o
S heaven, how much I shall discredit him ! ,. oai
But kept it for a s surprise at morn. Yea, truly is
it not as surprise? ■' '^
But rested with hers face satisfied; - ''o
In words whose echo lasts, they were so s, . ., '°^
To compass her with s observances, Geramt and /4. dy
And she was ever praying the s heavens To save her
dcSir lord. "
But keep a touch of s civility Here in the heart „ 312
tender sound of his own voice And s self-pity, „ ^
But ended with apology so s, , , . ^ , ., " i^
' Your s faces make good feUows fools And traitors. „ d»y
S lady, never since I first drew breath Have I beheld „ blH
breath Of her s tendance hovering over him, == »^b
but when he mark'd his high s smile In passing. Balm and Balan IbO
and with how s grace She greeted my return !
Hail, royal knight, we break on thy s rest,
Again she sigh'd ' Pardon, s lord !
' Rise, my s King, and kiss me on the lips,
S lord, ye do right well to whisper this.
Here her slow s eyes Fear-tremulous,
Maud I i 71
vi 12
.. 39, 95
51
„ xi 4
8
,, xiii 32
xvi 12
., xviii 48
65
xix 41
;, 46
91
xxi 10
., xxii 39
67
„ 77 ill
., iv 31, 35
87
Ded. of Idylls 39
Com. of Arthur 180
279
349
355
Gareth and L. 35
56
60
93
121
131
741
777
1081
193
470
516
529
Merlin and V. 85
Sweet
Sweet (continued) With dark 5 hints of some who prized
him more Merlin and V. 159
riut, Vivien, when you sang me that s rhyme, „ 434
S were the days when I was all unknown, ., 501
Those twelve s moons confused his fatherhood.' ,' 712
What say ye then to s Sir Sagramore, ,',' 721
To crop his own s rose before the hour ? ' ," 725
And they, s soul, that most impute a crime Are
pronest to it, g25
rapt By all the s and sudden passion of youth Lancelot'and E. 282
She needs must bid fareweU to s Lavaine. „ 341
' Ah my s lord Sir Lancelot,' said Lavaine, ,',' 512
For if you love, it will be s to give it ; And if he
love, it will be s to have it ^. §92
S father, will you let me lose my wits ? ' • ', 752
S father, I behold him in my dreams ., 763
to be s and serviceable To noble knights in sickness, „' 767
Would call her friend and sister, s Elaine, ,. 865
arraying her 5 self In that wherein she deem'd she
look'd her best, 9O6
I had been wedded earlier, s Elaine : " 935
for true you are and s Beyond mine old belief in
womanhood, ,^ 954
' Peace to thee, S sister,' '' 997
' S is true love tho' given in vain, in vain ; And s
is death who puts an end to pain : „ IOO7
' Love, art thou s ? then bitter death must be :
Love, thou art bitter ; s is death to me. „ loio
'iS love, that seems not made to fade away, S
death, that seems to make us loveless clay, „ 1013
'iS brothers, yesternight I seem'd a curious little
maid again, ^^ 1034
S father, aU too faint and sick am I For anger : „ 1086
'iS father, and bid call the ghostly man Hither, " 1099
• O s father, tender and true. Deny me not,' she said — .. 1110
' Farewell, s sister,' parted all in tears. !, 1152
Ah simple heart and s, Ye loved me, damsel, „ 1393
But the s vision of the Holy Grail Holy Grail 31
' S brother, I have seen the Holy Grail : ,. 107
' But she, the wan s maiden, shore away .. 149
We that are plagued with dreams of something s .. 625
the s Grail Glided and past, and close upon it peal'd ., 694
A s voice singing in the topmost tower To the eastward : ,. 834
and the s smell of the fields Past, Pelleas and E. 5
their malice on the placid lip Froz'n by s sleep, 433
Who yells Here in the still s summer night, but I — „ 473
' O s star, Pure on the virgin forehead of the dawn ! ' .. 504
Till the 5 heavens have fill'd it from the heights „ 510
But the s body of a maiden babe. Last Tournament 48
New loves are s as those that went before: ., 280
that desert lodge to Tristram lookt So s, „ 388
the s name Allured him first, and then the maid herself, .. 398
If this be s, to sin in leading-strings, ., 574
thy s memories Of Tristram in that year he was away.' \] 579
To pine and waste in those s memories. „ 598
' May God be with thee, s, when old and gray, , 627
• May God be with thee, s, when thou art old. And
s no more to me ! ' ,, 629
that I should suck Lies like s wines : „ 645
' Press this a little closer, s, " 718
' Have we not heard the bridegroom is so s ? Guinevere 177
Ah s lady, the King's grief For his own self, „ 196
' and, s lady, if I seem To vex an ear too sad to
listen to me, 314
As I could think, s lady, yours would be Such as they are, ." 352
Rapt in s talk or lively, all on love And sport „ 386
Thou hast not made my life so s to me, " 451
To lead s lives in purest chastity, " 474
yet in him keeps A draught of that s fountain that
he loves, i^^^'^ j^^i^ ^ j^j
Yet was not the less s for that it seem'd ? „ 155
All — all but one ; and strange to me, and s, 8
thro' strange years to know 243
Still to believe it — 'tis so a a thought, " 275
Absorbing all the incense of s thoughts " 469
704
Sweeter
Sweet (continued) Ls presently received in a s grave Of
eglantines, _ , ~ Lover' s Tde i 526
ileid converse s and low — low converse s, 541
It was so hapj)y an hour, so s a place, ]^ 558
At first her voice was very s and low, 553
A morning air, s after rain, ran over The riopline
levels ^^ ^ ^^.^0
That will not hear my call, however s, j^ jeo
So the s figure folded round with night .. 219
Sad, s, and strange together — floated in — 304
A s voice that— you scarce could better that. Sisters (E. and E.) 14
the s eyes frown : the lips Seem but a gash. 106
And all her s self-sacrifice and death. 255
his voice was low as from other worlds, and his
eyes were 5, , ^ ^. ^ V. of Maeldune 111
tor that s mother land which gave them birth Tiresias 122
The small s face was flush'd. The Wreck 60
1 en longs summer days upon deck, 64
one morning a bird with a warble plaintively s 81
' Ten long s summer days ' of fever, " 147
she was always loyal and s~ jj'ir 49
ihe morning with such music, would never be so s ! The Flioht 66
0 s, they tell me that the world is hard, 101
Achora, yer laste little whishper was s as the lilt of a
T?U=' , .urn TovlOTTOW 33
1 calls em arter the fellers es once was s upo' me ? Spinster's S's. 4
1 remember how you kiss'd the miniature with
those s eyes. Locksley H., Sixty 12
o fet. Iirancis of Assisi, would that he were here again, 100
^}% ^.^n"'^? '■*» ?^^^9\ palace and cottage door. Dead" Prophet 37
* Catullus s all-but-island, olive-silvery Sirmio ! Frater Ave etc 9
torpid mummy wheat Of Egypt bore a grain as s To Prof, 'jebb 6
In your 5 babe she finds but you — The Ring 365
Beat upon mine ! you are mine, my .<! ! All mine from
your pretty blue eyes to your feet. My s.' Romney's R. 95
And tind the white heather wherever you go. My s.' „ 109
' wasting the s summer hours ' ? Charity 1
All very well just now to be calling me darling and s, 7
Sing thou low or loud or s, Poets and Critics 6
Sweet- arts (sweet-hearts) Lucy wur laame o' one leg,
s-a she niver 'ed none— VUlage Wife 99
^''f ^A^n^t't'-,^^'' , ,• Spinster's S's. 1
S-a ! Molly belike may 'a lighted to-night upo' one. 7
S-a ! thanks to the Lord that I niver not listen'd
to noan ! g
An' noan of my four s-a 'ud 'a let me 'a hed my
oan waay, 2OI
Sweeten S's the spirit still. 2). of F. Women 236
They freshen and s the wards In the Child. Hosp. 38
Sweeten d Lo ! s with the summer light, Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 32
One rose, my rose, that s all mine air— Pelleas and E. 403
Sweeter Whether smile or frown be s, Madeline 13
And s is the young lamb's voice May Queen, Con. 6
And s far is death than life to me ,, g
There came a s token when the night and morning
meet : 22
s than the dream Dream'd by a happy man. Gardener's D. 71
■ Your own will be the s,' Sea Dreams 318
^ thy voice, but every sound is sweet ; Princess vii 219
*n SI® ^ M® ^^^^ ' ^^^^ garden rose Balin and Balan 269
s still The wild-wood hyacinth and the bloom of May. „ 270
I know not which is s, no, not I. (repeat) Lancelot and E. 1009, 1015
0 Love, if death be s, let me die. „ 1012
Os than all memories of thee, Last Tournament 585
1 hen— -while a s music wakes, To the Queen 13
Chaunteth not the brooding bee S tones than calumny ? A Dirge 17
Drip s dews than traitor's tear. ^, 24
You could not light upon a s thing : Walk, to the "Mail 52
Ah, s to be drunk with loss, /^ Mem. ill
s seems To rest beneath the clover sod, ". a; 12
With s manners, purer laws. ,. (^ 16
can a s chance ever come to me here ? Maud I i62
To the s blood by the other side ; ,. xiii 34
For nothing can be s Than maiden Maud in either. .. xx 21
Mixt with kisses s s Than anything on earth. „ // iv 9
I
11
Sweeter
705
Swollen
Sy^eeU^Ucontinued) And . than the bride of Cassivelaun, ^-^'JmtBI
Kn.i you that weax a wreaU. of s bay, ^thZithts 141
^^L?l& &XZ\e stoned walls ; OOe to Menu>ry S5
Then her 5 meal she makes On the first-born of her ^^^ ^^ ^ .^^ ^^
'The"1nother of the 5 little maid, Prinom « 279
The passing' of the s soul That ever look d with ^^^ ^^^ ^^ . . ^^
tinyTr^m^ermg gnatcan break ourdream When.; i«^eZo*anrfE. 138
love Of man and woman when they love their best, ^^^
SweetilSr^^^e'^ruktle round the shelving keel ; ,,^^:^^"^'^J^^
tZ^P iSeealsoS^i-'^xis) ' ^, ll.e you SO well Or;f^^,f^
Sweetlle^^ T^.to^l^ ^M-blue eyes ^^^^
Sweetness Now folds the lily all her s up, tnncessmi^^
He gain in s and in moral height, « . .
Will change my s more and more, ■?» ^««- ^fj^ ^g
A secret s in the stream, •• ; ^^^^ g
Thv s from Its proper place ? " -" j„
Nor mine the s or the skill, . " , ^24
For your s hardlv leaves me a choice -«iaM« ^^J^ ^
Can ye take off the s from the flower, The colour
and the s from the rose, , •» u " 272
and over-full Of 5, and m smelhng of itself, « ^'^
wild vouth of an evil prince, Is without s, .. ^^
But taken with the s of the place, - „
her words stole with most prevailing s Into my heart, .. a&^
SweU(s) (6'..aZ.oGrouiid-sweU) And the wavy s of .^^^^ 38
From S'rurTeJs'four currents in one . ^ pJace of Art 33
uj ri^e vJey came a s of music on the wind. May Qnem, Con. 32
those lor^ .'s of breaker sweep The nutmeg rocks The I oyage 39
So fresh they rose in shadow'd sh To EL 18
on the s The silver lily heaved and fell ; To E.U l»
That only heaved with a summer s. Maud I S 62
only the s Of the long waves that roll . Maud 1 xmn OJ
SweU (verb) above him s Huge sponges of millennial ^^^ ^^^^^ ^
thfckTdth white bells the clover-hill .'. "^ EiSni
Or sonjetnnes they s and move, Talkin^Tak 270
And while he sinks or ss ^ J ^g
(S s up, and shakes and falls. d „„„ .• o/is
3 On^s'ome dark shore just seen that it was rich. ^^^x W 7
S out and fail, as if a door Were shut In ^^"^-f^ll
Spring that s's the narrow brooks, » 'j^^^ {^
SweU'd The broad seas s to meet the keel, l he voyage lo
low musical note « up and died ; and, as it 5, a ridge
Of breaker issued from the belt, . ^^ vreams ^x±
past into the belt and s again Slowly to music : p^"s iv 319
But still her lists were s and imne were lean ; Prmcess iv6Ly
voice of the long sea-wave as it s Clarihel 15
Swelleth Her song the lintwhites Sea Dreams 9.1
Swelling Of such a tide s toward the land, rnr^^pJ^D^^Q
KT^And with a fiving finger s my lips, dJdZ pLdl
A breeze thro' all the garden «, ^"2/ 1^^ y-„„„g 14
swell'd to meet the keel. And s behind ; ^ /»e Koj/a^e i*
He cast his body, and on we s. Dreams 89
S with it to the shore, and enter'd one *«« Ureams^y
and s away The men of fiesh and blood, '^
down we .and charged and overthrew. i%Zlxxvii6
?tr E or^n^ZeTrom off the threshold Gareth and L. 135
voice S bellowing thro' the darkness on to dawn, ,, ^ u
and all the sand ^ like a river VofMaeldune^
S like a torrent of gems from the sky f^- "/ iWaetrtwne 40
Swept (continued) and s in a cataract off from her sides, The Wreck 90
And deed and song alike are s Away, /g'^TI ^I
she s The dust of earth from her knee. Bead Frovha 61.
in the storms Of Autumn s across the city, Demeter and r. 11
Swerve S from her duty to herself and us— Aylmer s Field 304
line of the approaching rookery s From the ehns, Princess, Con. 97
Nor pastoral rivulet that s's ^ „ In Mem. c 14
made his beast that better knew it, s Pelleas and K. 551
remember how the course of Time will s, LocksleyU., t>xxty ^d&
Swerved be s from right to save A prince, Pnncess m^^
"^And so my passion hath not 5 ^^,^ In Mem Ixxrv 49
they s and brake Flying, and Arthur call'd Com. of Arthur 119
But since our fortune s from sun to shade, Marr. ofGeraint 714
And Holy Church, from whom I never s f^f"^ • !S
Had never 5 for craft or fear. To Marq. of D^ff^nnfl
Swerving And at a sudden s of the road, Geratntand E. 50b
^e night ray pathway s east, ^"Pfr^t
Swift (a bird) The swallow and the s are near akm. Com. of Arthur 616
Swift adj.) but seeming-bitter From excess of s delight. Rosalind 6^
^ Not less s souls that yearn for light. Two Voices 67
From my s blood that went and came JfaXima lo
Her loveliness vdth shame and with surprise Froze ,^ . ^ „^ ^
my s speech • ^- "/ ^- Women 90
Not s nor slow'to change, but firm : Love thouthy land 31
This way and that dividing the s mind, M.d Arthur bU
The sound of streams that s or slow In Mem f^^
This way and that dividing the s mind. Pass, of Arthur 2J8
At times her steps are s and rash ; To Marq. of Duffertn 2
Not s or rash, when late she lent r?,'. t,- aa
Ionian Evolution, s or slow, Thro' all the Spheres- The Ring 44
Swifter With s movement and in purer light isaoet iJJ
Moved with one spirit round about the bay. Trod ..
s steps • iofer's Tale in 18
Swiftness And with a shameful s : ^"^•^^/^t''"-^ !?5
AM with exceeding . ran the boat, ^ ^^ 2/ Grail ^U
borne With more than mortal s. Lover s TaleulZ
Swim ' High up the vapours fold and s : Two Voices 262
taught me how to skate, to row, to s, ^t'''r57h7d II
A light before me s's, r u ufi^o
The mystic glory 5'. away; , ^""^'"^-IlTn
And on the depths of death there s s .. , f^"^^
Down to the rfver, sink or s, , Gareth <lfLJ15i
read but on my breviary with ease. Till mv head s's ; Holy Grail 546
Swimming The s vapour slopes athwart the glen, j j^'^ook
'^Xfose, and fixt her s eyes upon hun, Enoch ^rdm^f
Sun Burst from a s fleece of winter gray, Demeter and P. ^0
Swindler and a wretched s's lie ? ^"f^^i'iqq
Ke I watch the darkening droves of s ^^liTtll Hilm
Upon her tower, the Niobe of s, Walk, to the MailQ9
all the 5 were sows. And all the do^'- ^m'^T//?!
poor are hovell'd and hustled together, each sex, like s. Maud I z 34
a villain fitter to stick s Than ride abroad Gareth and L. 865
one of all the drove should touch me : . ! ' Merlm and V, 699
S in the mud, that cannot see for slime, Holy Grail ill
Save that he were the s thou spakest of, r . t " i^
Lord, I was tending s, and the Red Knight Last Tournament Tl
Who knew thee s enow before I came, •• ^
less than s, A naked augh^-yet s I hold thee still, -, 6m
For I have flung thee pearls and find thee s. ,. ^|"
*S? I have wallow'd, I have wash'd— v ^^^
S, say ye ? s, goats, asses, rams and geese " ooe
' Then were s, goats, asses, geese The wiser fools, ,, 3^»
Priest's pearl, flung down to s-The s. Sir J. Oldcastle 116
my lord is lower than his oxen or his s. Locksley H., inxty 12b
Swine-flesh men may taste <S-/, drink wine ; j^^"^ ' ^""fT^oi
Keherd the s's malkin in the mast ? Last Tournament ^2
Swing (s) the rush of the air in the prone s, Aylmer s Field 86
SS verb) s's the trailer from the crag ; Locksley fall 162
The shrill bell rings, the censer s's, ^^^ ^ Sir Galahad 35
thrones and peoples are as waifs that s, W. to Mcme -^iea:. 26
where they s the Locksley shield, Locksley S S^xty 247
SwoUen thou art but s with cold snows Gareth avd h.y
as strong gales Hold s clouds from raming, D. ofF. Women 11
And blew the 5 cheek of a trumpeter. Princess n 364
On yon s brook that bubbles fast By meadows In Mem. xcix 6
2 Y
Swoon
706
Swung
Elednore 134
Fatima 27
Geraint and E. 583
Pass, of Arthur 120
Lover's Tale i 791
s, Lotos- Eaters 5
Enoch Arden 774
In Mem. xxi 17
Aylmer's Field 811
Princess vi 2
Gareth and L. 1394
Balin and Balan 563
Lancelot and E. 518
625
Zfo/(/ Grai/ 845
Last Tournainent 622
Boddicea 67
Merlin and V. 281
Lancelot and E. 968
HoZj/ GraiZ 850
Princess v 382
Gareth and L. 22
Clear-headed friend 14
Tfee Poe< 53
Z>. o/ J'. PFowew 95
Swoon (s) as in a s. With dinning sound
Down-deepening from s to s,
Till at the last he waken'd from his s,
or thro' death Or deathlike s,
First falls asleep in s, wherefrom awaked,
Swoon (verb) All round the coast the languid air d^
Lest he should s and tumble and be found,
' A time to sicken and to s,
Swoon'd fell The woman shrieking at his feet, and s.
She nor s, nor utter'd cry :
Which set the horror higher : a maiden s ;
and either fell, and s away. ^
sank For the pure pain, and wholly s away.
Thereon she smote her hand : wellnigh she s :
With such a fierceness that I s away —
That here in utter dark I s away.
Swooning Lash the maiden into s,
And I was faint to s, and you lay
thus they bore her s to her tower.
for all my madness and my sin, And then my s,
Swoop and s's The vultiu-e, beak and talon,
and thence s Down upon all things base.
Swop See Swap
Sword Nor martyr-flames, nor trenchant s's
No s Of wrath her right arm whirl'd.
Many drew s's and died.
Certain, if knowledge bring the s, That knowledge
takes the s away. Love thou thy land 87
Clothed in white samite, mystic, wonderful, Holding
the s— M. d' Arthur 32
Saying, ' King Arthur's s, Excalibur, ., 103
clutch'd the s, And strongly wheel'd and threw it. .. 135
No desolation but by s and fire ! Aylmer's Field 748
hoveringly a s Now over and now under, Lu/yretius 61
Man for the s and for the needle she : Princess v 448
And s to s, and horse to horse we hung, .. 539
Yet Harold's England fell to Norman s's ; W. to Marie Alex. 22
To draw, to sheathe a useless s, In Mem. cxxviii 13
The viler, as underhand, not openly bearing the s. Maud I i28
She gave the King his huge cross-Mlted s,
s That rose from out the bosom of the lake,
s rose, the hind fell, the herd was driven,
And down from one a s was hung,
and knowing both of lance and s.'
four strokes they struck With s, and these were mighty ;
Out, s ; we are thrown ! '
With s we have not striven ;
How best to manage horse, lance, s and shield,
This heard Geraint, and grasping at his s,
touch it with a s, It buzzes fiercely
That seem a s beneath a belt of three,
Of every dint a s had beaten in it,
knights, to M'hom the moving of my s
from the boat I leapt, and up the stairs. There drew my s
with violence The s was dash'd from out my hand.
Com. of Arthur 286
296
432
Gareth and L. 221
731
1043
1236
1264
1351
Geraint and E. 725
Merlin and V. 431
510
Lancelot and E. 19
Holy Grail 790
820
826
the prize A golden circlet and a knightly s, Pelleas and E. 12
for his lady won The golden circlet, for himself the s : ,, 14
I will make thee with thy spear and s As famous — „ 45
The s and golden circlet were achieved. „ 170
Saving the goodly s, his prize, „ 359
and drew the s, and thought, ' What ! „ 447
groaning laid The naked s athwart their naked throats, „ 452
And the s of the tourney across her throat. „ 456
Awaking knew the s, and tum'd herself To Gawain : „ 489
the s That made it plunges thro' the wound „ 529
' Thou art false as Hell : slay me : I have no s.' ., 576
and he, hissing ' I have no «,' „ 602
Arthur deign'd not use of word or s, Last Tournament 458
children bom of thee are s and fire, Guinevere 425
And have but stricken with the s in vain ; Pass, of Arthur 23
that helm which manj a heathen s Had beaten thin ; ., 166
Clothed in white samite, mystic, wonderful. Holding
the s — „ 200
Saying, ' King Arthur's s, Excalibur, „ 271
clutch'd the s, And strongly wheel'd and threw it. „ 303
Sword {continued) thou bringest Not peace, a s, a fire. Sir J. Oldcastle 3i
Him, who should bear the s Of Justice — „ 87
drew His s on his fellow to slay him, V. of Maeldune 68
with s's that were sharp from the grindstone, Batt. of Brunanburh 41
Thro' the forest of lances and s's Heavy Brigade 49
warrior of the Holy Cross and of the conquering s, Happy 21
sway'd the s that lighten'd back the sun „ 43
flung himself between The gladiatorial s's, St. Telemachus 62
Thro' all the vast dominion which a s, Akbar's Dream 14
I stagger at the Koran and the s. „ 71
Sword-belt broad and long A strong s-b, Holy Grail 153
Swordcut Seam'd with an ancient s on the cheek, Lancelot and E. 258
Sword-edge Slew with the s-e There by Brunanburh, Batt. of Brunanburh 9
Slaughter of heroes Slain by the s-e — ,, 113
Sword-grass On the oat-grass and the s-g, May Queen, X. Vs. E. 28
Sword-hand Struck with the s-h and slew, Heavy Brigade 52
Sword-handle Fingering at his s-h until he stood Pelleas and E. 442
Swording and s right and left Men, women. Last Tournament 473
Sword-stroke Five young kings put asleep by
the s-s, Batt. of Brunanburh 52
Swore {See also Sware, Swear'd) She turn'd, we closed,
we kiss'd, s faith, Edwin Morns 114
and s They said he lived shut up within himself. Golden Year 8
laugh'd, and s by Peter and by Paul : Godiva 24
The barons s, with many words, Day-Dm., Revival 23
But ours he s were all diseased. The Voyage 76
And on the book, half-frighted, Miriam s. Enoch Arden 843
And how the bailiff s that he was mad. The Brook 143
s besides To play their go-between as heretofore Aylmer's Field 522
to those that s Not by the temple but the gold, „ 793
And s he long'd at college, only long'd, Princess, Pro. 158
She was a princess too ; and so I s. ,, v 295
. caught By that you s to withstand ? Maud I vi 80
so my knighthood keep the vows they s, Gareth and L. 602
I s That I would track this caitiff to his hold, Marr. of Geraint 414
I s to the great King, and am forsworn. Last Tournament 661
s that he dare not rob the mail, and he s that he would ; Rizpah 30
I s I would strike off his head. V. of Maeldune 2
s the seeming-deathless vow . . . Locksley H., Sixty 180
I s the vow, then with my latest kiss The Ring 298
Sworn True Mussulman was I and s, Arabian Nights 9
Hath he not s his love a thousand times, CEnone 231
Not tho' Blanche had s That after that dark night Princess vii 72
Mine, mine — our fathers have s. Maud I xix 43
So now I have s to bury All this dead body ,, 96
s Tho' men may wound him that he will not die. Com. of Arthur 420
for these have s To wage my wars, ,, 507
my knights are s to vows Of utter hardihood, Gareth and L. 552
See now, s have I, Else yon black felon ,, 1292
then have I s From his own lips to have it — Marr. of Geraint 408
I have s That I will break his pride and learn his name, „ 423
' Have I not s ? I am not trusted. Merlin and V. 527
' Had I been here, ye had not s the vow.' Holy Grail 276
My King, thou womdst have s.' .. 278
and therefore have we s our vows.' ,, 285
I had s I saw That which I saw ; .. 850
if the King Had seen the sight he would have s the vow : ,, 904
for I have s my vows, Pelleas and E. 244
the King hath bound And s me to tliis brotherhood ; ' .. 449
And whatsoever his own knights have s My knights
have s the counter to it — Last Tournament 79
Than had we never s. I swear no more. ,, 660
And I have s never to see him more, Guinevere 376
S to be veriest ice of pureness, Sir J. Oldcastle 108
s to seek If any golden harbour Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 12
Bright and Dark have s that I, Demeter and P. 96
Swum with an eye that s in thanks ; Princess vi 210
Lancelot, having s the riser-loops — Gareth and L. 1216
and s with balanced wings To some tall mountain: Lover's Tale i 302
Swung bells that s, Moved of themselves. Palace of Art 129
S themselves, and in low tones replied ; Vision of Sin 20
For sideways up he s his arms. Sea Breams 24
and s The heavy -folded rose, In Mem. xcv 58
There s an apple of the purest gold, Marr. of Geraint 170
(S from his brand a windy buffet Geraint and E. 90
6^
Swung
707
Table Round
Swung (continued) A goodly brother of the Table
Round S by the neck :
Tristram show'd And s the ruby carcanet.
S round the lighted lantern of the hall ;
Great garlands s and blossom'd ;
Sycamore The pillar'd dusk of sounding s's,
with all thy breadth and height Of foliage,
towering s ;
The large leaves of the s,
Sylla all the blood by S shed Came driving
Syllable Faltering, would break its s's,
Be cabin'd up in words and s's,
While her words, s by s,
Choked all the s's, that strove to rise
Last Tournament 432
740
Guinevere 262
Lover's Tale iv 191
Audley Court 16
In Mem. Ixxxix 4
xcv 55
Lucretius 47
Love and Duty 39
Lover's Tale i 480
575
711
Sylvester ever since S shed the venom of world-wealth Sir J. Oldcastle 166
Symbol Weak s's of the settled bliss.
Are they not sign and s of thy division
Or so shall grief with s's play
Mute s's of a joyful morn,
The golden s of his kinglihood,
With many a mystic s, gird the hall :
Three cypresses, s's of mortal woe.
The word that is the s of myself,
All the suns — are these but s's of innumerable
man,
Institute, Rich in s, in ornament,
Shiah and Sunnee, S the Eternal !
Symbol'd As if the living passion s there
Symmetry s Of thy floating gracefulness,
long desired A certain miracle of s,
Sympathise growing coarse to s with clay.
I^mpathy trembling thro' the dew Of dainty-woeful
sympathies.
that plies Its office, moved with s.
Nor lose their mortal s,
And yet I spare them s.
Some painless s with pain ? '
into the s Of that small bay,
and S hew'd out The bosom-sepulchre ot S ?
a strong s Shook all my soul :
And sympathies, liow frail. In sound and smell !
Syrian when her Satrap bled At Issus by the S gates
years That breathed beneath the S blue :
System A dust of s's and of creeds.
The four-field s, and the price of grain ;
hated by the wise, to law S and empire ?
you block and bar Your heart with s
a world Of traitorous friend and broken s
Our little s's have their day ;
And, star and s rolling past,
When the schemes and all the s's.
Rush of Suns, and roll of s's.
Miller's D. 233
High. Pantheism 6
In Mem. Ixxxv 95
Con. 58
Com. of Arthur 50
Holy Grail 233
Lover's Tale i 537
Ancient Sage 231
Locksley H., Sixty 195
On Jub. Q. Victoria 47
Akhar's Dream 108
Aylmer's Field 535
Elednore 49
Gardener's D. 11
Locksley Hall 46
Margaret 53
Love thou thy land 48
In Mem. xxx 23
Ixiii 7
Ixxxv 88
Lover's Tale i 434
a 31
88
Early Spring 35
Alexander 3
In Mem. Hi 12
Two Voices 207
Audley Court 34
Love and DiUy 8
Princess iv 463
vi 195
In Mem., Pro. 17
Con. 122
Locksley H., Sixty 159
God and the Univ. 3
Taable (table) I mash'd the t's an' chairs,
An' the t staain'd wi' 'is aale,
Ta&en (taken) A mowt 'a t owd Joanes,
Or a mowt 'a t young Robins —
And 'a t to the bottle beside,
fur I could 'a t to tha well,
Ta&il (entail) Stook to his t they did,
new Squire's coora'd wi' 'is < in 'is 'and, (repeat)
Fur 'staate be i' t, my lass :
and the next lui he taakes the t.'
An' the gells, they hedn't naw t's,
That 'is t were soa tied up
' Lad, thou mun cut oS thy t,
if thou'll 'gree to cut off thy t
I've gotten the 'staate by the
to git 'im to cut off 'is t.
an' 'e wouldn't cut off the t.
N.
North. Cobbler 37
Spinster's S's. 99
Farmer, 0. S. 49
50
Spinster's S's. 56
81
N. Farmer, N. S. 30
Village Wife 14, 121
15
18
29
30
64
74
78
Taail (entail) (continued) theer wur a hend o' the t, fur
lost 'is t i' the beck,
Sa 'is t wur lost an 'is boooks wur gone
Taail (tail) stick oop thy back, an' set oop thy t,
Steevie be right good manners bang thruf to the tip
o' the t.
Sa I likes 'em best wi' t's
an' 'e'd niver not down wi' 'is t,
till 'e waggled 'is t fur a bit,
Taail'd (draggle) t in an owd turn gown,
Ta&ilor (tailor) An' once I fovi't wi' the T —
Takke (take) But godamoighty a moost t mea an' t
Do'ant be stunt : t time :
coats to their backs an' t's their regular meals.
T my word for it, Sammy, the poor in a loomp is bad.
N.
Village Wife 86
87
Spinster's S's. 31
66
102
Owd Rod 9
„ 105
North. Cobbler 41
21
Farmer, 0. S. 51
N. S. 17
46
48
and then I t's to the drink. North. Cobbler 16
hev 'im a-buried wi'mma an' t 'im afoor the Throan. ,. 106
and the next un he t's the taail.' Village Wife 18
Sa I didn't not t it kindly ov owd Miss Annie ., 109
Can't ye t pattern by Steevie ? Spinster's S's. 65
Parson 'e 'ears on it all, an' then t's kindly to me, Church-warden, etc. 37
Taaked (took) 1 1 'im at fust fur dead ; Oivd Rod 1(X)
Taakin' (t^dng) ' The amoighty's a t o' you to
'iss^n, (repeat) N. Farmer, O. S. 10, 26
I'll gie tha a bit o' my mind an' tha weant be t
oiience. Church-warden, etc. 21
Taale (tale) an a's liallus i' the owd t ; N. Farmer, 0. S. 66
Taaste (taste) if I cared to t, North. Cobbler 101
T another drop o' the wine — Village Wife 120
Taate (potato) Baacon an' t's, an' a beslings puddin' North. Cobbler 112
Whoats or tonups or t's — Village Wife 26
Tabby An' thou be es pretty a T, Spinster's S's. 14
thou be es 'ansom a t es iver patted a mouse. „ 70
Tabernacle left Their own gray tower, or plain-faced t, Aylmer's Field Q18
Table (See also Bound Table, Taable, Table Bound) Till
" ■ " ■ The Goose 47
M. d' Arthur 3
234
Will Water. 160
Sea Dreams 74
Princess, Pro. 16
Boddicea 61
Gareth and L. 836
Balin and Balan 238
380
459
Merlin and V. 7
Lancelot and E. 1203
Holy Grail 329
650
829
Pelleas and E. 320
526
533
Last Tournament 78
.. 189, 212
475
Guinevere 45
235
all the t's danced again,
Until King Arthur's t, man by man,
But now the whole bound ?■ is dissolved
And thruimning on the t :
Sat at liis t ; drank his costly wines ;
on the t's every clime and age Jumbled together ;
drank in cups of emerald, there at t's of ebony lay,
' I well believe You be of Arthur's T,'
yet he strove To learn the graces of their T,
to thy guest. Me, me of Arthur's T.
and break the King And all his T.'
The slights of Arthur and his T,
laid aside the gems There on a < near lier.
All the great t of our Arthur closed
once the talk And .scandal of our t,
nothing in the somiding hall I saw. No bench nor t,
whom Tate our Arthur made Knight of his t ;
or being one Of our free-spoken T
' Have any of our Round T held their vows ? '
that I Have founded my Roimd T in the North,
The glory of our Round T is no more.' (repeat)
hurl'd The t's over and the wines,
he was answer'd softly by the King And all his T.
said my father, and himself was knight Of the great T —
Until King Arthur's T, man by man,
But now the whole Round T is dissolved
Their favourite — which I call ' The T's Turned.'
weeks I tried Your t of Pythagoras,
poring over his T's of Trade and Finance ;
Laid on her t overnight, was gone ;
Table-knight Some hold he was a t-k
Table-land Are close upon the shining t-l's
Table Bound (See also Bound Table, Table)
the puissance of his T R,
when he spake and cheer'd his T R
And all this Order of thy T R
Strike, thou art worthy of the T R —
Hail, Knight and Prince, and of our T R I'
one Of that great order of the T R,
Now, made a knight of Arthur's T R,
Pass, of Arthur 172
402
Sisters (E. and E.) 3
To E. Fitzgerald 15
The Wreck 26
The Ring 277
Last Tournament 69
Ode on Well. 216
And thro'
Com. of Arthur 17
267
474
Gareth and L. 1138
1271
Marr. of Giraint 3
Geraint and E. 793
Table Bound
708
Take
Table Round (continued) I, therefore, made him of our T R, Geraint and E. 908
question rose About the founding ot a, T R, Merlin and V. 411
Assay it on some one of the T R, .. 689
And blinds himself and all the T i? 784
I know the T R, my friends of old ; 816
else Rapt in this fancy of his T R, Lancelot and E. 129
the rest, his T R, Known as they are, .. 185
And much they ask'd of court and p R, 268
beheld the King Charge at the head of all his T R, .. 304
Ranged with the T R that held the lists, „ 467
And all the T R that held the lists, .. 499
any knight. And mine, as head of all our T R, .. 1328
The marshall'd Order of their T R, .. 1332
Tell me, what drove thee from the T R, Holy Grail 28
Sin against Arthur and the T R, ..79
And when King Arthur made His T R, ..90
The seven clear stars of Arthur's T R — ;, 684
Yea, by the honour of the T R, Pelleas and E. 342
a scourge am I To lash the treasons of the T R.' .. 566
Had made mock-knight of Arthur's T R, Last Tournament 2
A goodly brother of the T R „ 431
sought To make disruption in the T R Ot Arthur, Guinevere 17
whose disloyal life Hath wrought confusion in the T R .. 220
What canst thou know of Kings and T's R, .. 228
In that fair order of my T R, .. 463
Table-shore Heard in dead night along that t-s, Last Tournament 463
Tablet Upon the blanched t's of her heart ; Isabel 17
Thy t glimmers to the dawn. In Mem. Ixvii 16
Their pensive t's round her head, „ Con. 51
Table-talk genial t-t, Or deep dispute, „ Ixxxiv 23
Taboo worse than South-sea-isle t. Princess Hi 278
Broke the T, Dipt to the crater, Kapiolani 30
Tack till as when a boat T's, and the slacken'd sail flaps. Princess ii 186
Tackle (s) Dry sang the t, sang the sail : The Voyage 10
Buoy'd upon floating t and broken spars, Enoch Arden 551
Tackle (verb) Tha mun t the sins o' the Wo'ld, Church-warden, etc. 46
Tact So gracious was her t and tenderness : Princess i 24
The graceful t, the Christian art ; In Mem. ex 16
And she by t of love was well aware Lancelot and E. 984
Ta'en (taken) clay t from the common earth To , With Pal. of Art 17
And t my fiddle to the gate, (repeat) Am]}hion 11, 15
And since my oath was t for public use, Princess iv 337
he be nor t nor slain.' Gareth and L. 586
Tagg'd my beard Was t with icy fringes in the moon, St. S. Stylites 32
Tail {See also Taail) from head to t Came out clear plates
of sapphire mail. Two Voices 11
with playful i Crouch'd fawning in the weed. (Enone 200
Twinkled the innumerable ear and t. The Brook 134
TaU'd See Long-tail'd, White-tail'd
Tailor See Taailor
Taint pure as he from t of craven guile, Ode on Well. 135
Defects of doubt, and t's of blood ; In Mem. liv 4
Had suffer'd, or should suffer any t In nature : Marr. of Geraint 31
Suspicious that her nature had a t. „ 68
leper plague may scale my skin but never t my heart ; Bappy 27
Take (See also Taake) T, Madam., this poor hook of
song ; To the Queen 17
knew the seasons when to t Occasion by the hand, „ 30
T the heart from out my breast. Adeline 8
Whence shall she t a fitting mate ? Kate 13
She still would t the praise, and care no more. The form, the form, 14
weepest thou to t the cast Of those dead lineaments Wan Sculptor 1
' Some turn this sickness yet might t, Two Voices 55
Gargarus Stands up and t's the morning : (Enone 11
' 1 1 possession of man's mind and deed. Palace of Art 209
What is it that will t away my sin, „ 287
Let her t 'em : they are hers : May Queen, N. ¥'s. E. 46
I thought, I < it for a sign. „ Con. 38
there Grows green and broad, and t's no care, Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 28
T warning ! he that will not sing The Blackbird 21
And the New-year will t 'em away. 2>. of the O. Year 14
Comes up to t his own. „ 36
That t's away a noble mind. To J. S. 48
t The place of him that sleeps in peace. „ 67
That knowledge t's the sword away— Love thou thy land 88
Take (continued) Here, t the goose, and keep you warm. The Goose 1
' Go, t the goose, and wring her throat, ., 31
Quoth she, ' The Devil t the goose, „ 55
' Why t the style of those heroic times ? The Epic 35
Thou therefore t my brand Excalibur, M. d' Arthur 27
t Excalibur, And fling him far into the middle mere : „ 36
and t's the flood With swarthy webs. „ 268
The lusty bird t's every hour for dawn : ., Ep. 11
I bred His daughter Dora : t her for your wife ; Dora 20
Consider, William : t a month to think, „ 29
let me t the boy. And I will set him in my imcle's eye „ 66
but t the child. And bless him for the sake of him „ 93
Well— for I will t the boy : „ 99
That thou shouldst t my trouble on thyself : „ 118
And I will beg of him to t thee back : „ 123
But if he will not t thee back again, „ 124
I come For Dora : t her back ; she loves you well. .. 143
t Dora back. And let all this be as it was before.' .. 154
I a beast To t them as I did ? Edwin Morris 72
Have mercy. Lord, and t away my sin. St. 8. Stylites 8
0 t the meaning. Lord : I do not breathe, „ 21
Have mercy, mercy : t away my sin. „ 45
The silly people t me for a saint, „ 127
let them t Example, pattern : „ 223
Let me go : t back thy gift : Tithonus 27
kiss him : t his hand in thine. Locksley Hall 52
1 will t some savage woman, „ 168
Then t the broidery-frame, and add A crimson Day-Dm., Pro. 15
So, Lady Flora, t my lay, .. Moral 1
So much your eyes my fancy f — .. L' Envoi 2&
And I will t my pleasure there : „ 32
So, Lady Flora, t my lay, „ Ep. 1
But t it — earnest wed with sport, „ 11
I'll t the showers as they fall, Amphion 101
nor t Half-views of men and things. WUl Water. 51
1 1 myself to task ; ,, 162
T my brute, and lead him in. Vision of Sin 65
' T your own time, Annie, t your own time.' Enoch Arden 466
was it hard to t The helpless life so wild „ 556
' Too hard to bear ! why did they t me thence ? „ 781
T, give her this, for it may comfort her : „ 899
' O would 1 1 her father for one hoiu". The Brook 114
' T it,' she added sweetly, ' tho' his gift; Aylmer's Field 246
who beside your hearths Can t her place — ,, 736
Will not another t their heritage ? „ 786
did I t That popular name of thine to shadow forth Lucretius 95
to t Only such cups as left us friendly- warm, „ 214
Great Nature, t, and forcing far apart „ 245
And t's a lady's finger with all care. Princess, Pro. 173
' T Lilia, then, for heroine,' clamour'd he, „ 223
Cyril whisper'd : ' T me with you too.' „ 1 81
Tme: I'll serve you better in a strait; „ 85
' Well then. Psyche, t my life, ,. ii 204
Umed oiu'selves With open eyes, and we must t the
chance. „ Hi 143
Princess rode to t The dip of certain strata ,. 169
And t's and ruins all ; „ 238
' O were I thou that she might t me in, „ iv 102
Our mind is changed : we Ht to ourself.' „ 362
What hinders me To t such bloody vengeance on you
both?— „ 534
' Satan t The old women and their shadows ! „ v 33
' Yet I pray T comfort : live, dear lady, „ 80
Or they will t her, they will make her hard, „ 90
And I will t her up and go my way, ,, 102
t them all-in-all. Were we ourselves but half as good, „ 200
1 1 her for the flower of womankind, „ 287
Still T not his life : he risk'd it for my own ; „ 407
When the man wants weight, the woman t's it up, „ 444
but you — she's yet a colt — T, break her : „ 456
And on the little clause ' t not his life : ' „ 470
t's, and breaks, and cracks, and splits, „ 527
' All good go with thee ! t it Sir,' „ vi 207
kiss her ; t her hand, she weeps : 'Sdeath ! ,. 225
on to the tents : t up the Prince.' „ 279
Take
709
Taketh
Take {continued) cloud may stoop from heaven and t the shape Princess vii 2
Let the great river t me to the main : „ 13
the crowd were swarming now, To t their leave, „ Con. 38
he wouldn't t my advice. Grandmother 4
(T it and come) to the Isle of Wight ; To F. D. Maurice 12
' God help me ! save 1 1 my part Of danger Sailor Boy 21
The Victim 27
A Dedication 4
Boadicea 65
Window, No Answer 20
24
., The Answer 3
5
7
In Mem. Hi 13
m32
T you his dearest. Give us a life.'
t this and pray that he Who wrote it,
T the hoary Roman head and shatter it,
T my love, for love will come,
T my love and be my wife.
Must 1 1 you and break you,
I must t you, and break you,
T, t, — break, break — Break —
And shall I t a thing so bUnd,
She t's a riband or a rose ;
That t's the sunshine and the rains, „ x 14
seem to t The touch of change in calm or storm ; „ xvi 5
I I the grasses of the grave, ,, xxi 3
envy not the beast that t's His license in the field of
time, „ xxvii 5
To t her latest leave of home, „ xl 6
She t's, when harsher moods remit, „ xlviii 6
And thou shalt t a nobler leave.' „ Iviii 12
Who t's the children on his knee, „ Ixvi 11
T wings of fancy, and ascend, „ Ixxvi 1
T wings of foresight ; lighten thro' The secular abyss „ 5
And < us as a single soul. „ Ixxxiv 44
Can t no part away from this : „ Ixxxv 68
Ah, t the imperfect gift I bring, „ 117
I'll rather t what fruit may be „ eviii 13
The distance t's a lovelier hue, „ cxv 6
f's The colours of the crescent prime ? „ cxvi 3
1 1 the pressure of thine hand. „ cxix 12
t the print Of the golden age — why not ? Maud I i29
To < a wanton dissolute boy For a man „ x 58
Shall I not t care- of all that I think, „ xv 7
Or to ask her, ' T me, sweet, „ II iv 87
He may t her now ; for she never speaks her mind, „ v 67
' T me,' but turn the blade and ye shall see, Com. of Arthur 303
' T thou and strike ! the time to cast away „ 307
T thou the truth as thou hast told it me. Gareth and L. 257
Yet t thou heed of him, for, so thou pass ., 267
Abide : t counsel ; for this lad is great And lusty, „ 730
t his horse And arms, and so return him to the King. ,. 955
' T not my life : I yield.' ., 973
* But thou begone, t counsel, and away, .. 1002
and t TtiY charger, fresh, „ 1300
T him to stall, and give him com, Marr. of Geraint 371
They t the rustic murmur of their bourg .. 419
' Advance and t, as fairest of the tair, ., 553
He said, ' You t it, speaking,' and she spoke. Geraint and E. 141
but t A horse and arms for guerdon ; •> 217
' I < it as free gift, then,' said the boy, „ 222
' T Five horses and their armours ; ' „ 409
' Would some of your kind people t him up, „ 543
Here, t him up, and bear hirn to our hsJl : ., 552
See ye t the charger too, A noble one.' „ 555
T warning : yonder man is surely dead ; .. 672
T my salute,' unknightly with flat hand, ., 717
tho' Geraint could never t again That comfort „ 949
thou would'st t me gladher back, Balin and Balon 67
Help, for he follows ! t me to thyself ! Merlin and V. 82
Courteoas — amends for gaimtness — t's her hand — .. 104
And t this boon so strange and not so strange.' „ 310
T Vivien for expounder ; she will call ,• 319
T one verse more — the lady speaks it — ., 445
And being foimd t heed of Vivien. -. 529
Good : t my counsel : let me know it at once : ., 653
He brought, not foimd it therefore : t the truth.' „ 719
shameless ones, who t Their pastime Lancelot and E. 100
' Advance and t thy prize The diamond ; ' „ 503
Rise and t This diamond, and deliver it, „ 545
ye used to t me with the flood Up the great river ,. 1037
Then t the little bed on which I died „ 1117
Take (continued) a chariot-bier To t me to the river,
T, what I had not won except for you,
A strange one ! yet It it with Amen.
Or come to t the King to Fairyland ?
Hither, to t my last farewell of you.
' What said the King ? Did Arthur t the vow ? '
' T thou my robe,' she said, ' for all is thine,'
t him to you, keep him off,
' Yet, t him, ye that scarce are fit to touch,
' T thou the jewels of this dead innocence,
' T thou my churl, and tend him curiously
But how to t last leave of all I loved ?
I cannot t thy hand ; that too is flesh.
Thou therefore t my brand Excalibur,
t Excalibur, And fling him far into the middle mere
and t's the flood With swarthy webs.
t withal Thy poet's blessing,
that t's The heart, and sometimes touches
But t's it all for granted :
Can ye t off the sweetness from the flower,
reading of the will Before he t's possession ?
while I mused nor yet endured to t So rich a prize,
' T my free gift, my cousin, for your wife ;
I didn't t heed o' them,
Which voice most t's you ?
an' 'e didn't t kind to it like ;
To t me to that hiding in the hiUs.
to t the king along with him —
which you will t My Fitz, and welcome.
Nor t thy dial for thy deity.
Shall 1 1 him ? I kneel with him ?
' The Divil t all the black Ian',
T the charm ' For ever ' from them,
and t their wisdom for your friend,
eyes may t the growing glimmer for the gleam
withdrawn
Lancelot and E. 1122
1181
1223
1257
1275
Holy Grail 204
449
Pelleas and E. 194
292
Last Tournament 31
90
Guinevere 546
553
Pass, of Arthur 195
204
436
To the Queen ii 45
Lover's Tale i 16
157
171
677
Hi 49
,. iv 363
First Quarrel 29
Sisters (E. and E.) 30
Village Wife 44
Sir J. Oldcastle 2
49
To E. Fitzgerald 50
Ancient Sage 109
The Flight 49
Tomorrow 64
Locksley H., Sixty 72
104
230
like old-world inns that t Some warrior for a sign Pro. to Gen. Hamley 13
let the patriot-soldier t His meed of fame Epilogue 32
Prince has foimd you, t this ring. The Eing 69
I stoopt To t and kiss the ring. 132
' 1 1 thee Muriel for my wedded wife ' — .. 377
My roses — will he t them now — Happy 13
Not t them ? Still you wave me off — „ 101
you still delay to t Your leave of Town, To Mary Boyle 1
T then this spring-flower I send, 19
T, read ! and be the faults your Poet makes ,, 61
' T comfort you have won the Painter's fame,' Romney's R. 43
T it, and save me from it ! Bandit's Death 38
Look to your butts, and t good aims ! Riflemen form ! 16
' T her Sir Ralph,' said the king. The Tourney 18
Taken {See also Taaen, Ta'en) But more is t quite away. Miller's D. 22
AU things are t from us, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 46
Those we love first are t first. To J. S. 12
yet I fear My wound hath t cold, and I shall die.' M. d' Arthur 166
Are t by the forelock. Golden Year 19
Tho' much is t, much abides ; Ulysses 65
Till t with her seeming openness Princess iv 300
• They have t the child To spill his blood The Victim 43
They have t our son, „ 49
T the stars from the night and the sun from the day ! Witidow, Gone 5
In Mem. xlviii 2
Gareth and L. 1200
Geraint and E. 723
Guinevere 117
517
Pass, of Arthur 334
Lover's Tale i 531
710
iv 216
Rizpah 10
Sisters {E. and E.) 31
V. of Maeldune 122
Tiresias 102
Last Tournament 193
A spirit haunts 14
Were t to be such as closed Grave doubts
and t but the form.
As of a wild thing t in the trap,
Nay, friend, for we have t our farewells.
t everywhere for pure, She like a new disease,
I fear My wound hath t cold, and I shall die.'
But t with the sweetness of the place,
As it had t life away before,
a picture of his lady, t Some years before,
I have t them home, I have number'd the bones,
you are t With one or other :
each t a life for a life,
Lest she be t captive —
Takest See, the hand Wherewith thou t this, is red ! '
Taketh sick man's room when he t repose
Takin'
710
Talk
Takin' been t' a dhrop o' the crathur' Tomorrow 11
Takii^ (See also A-ta&^', Leave-taking, Takin') He
kiss'd, t his last embrace, Two Voices 254
The parson t wide and wider sweeps, The Epic 14
Titanic forces t birth In divers seasons, Day -Dm., L' Envoi 17
hand crept too across his trade T her bread and theirs : Enoch Arden 111
Nor asking overmuch and t less, „ 252
So often, that the folly t wings Aylmer's Field 494
or t pride in her, She look'd so sweet, „ 554
Womanlike, t revenge too deep for a transient wrong Mavd I Hi 5
sad was Arthur's face T it, but old Merlin Com. of Arthur 306
By t true for false, or false for true ; Geraint and E. 4
gross heart Would reckon worth the t ? Merlin and V. 917
Come, for you left me t no farewell, Lancelot and E. 1274
T my war-horse from the holy man, Holy Grail 537
T his hand, ' 0 the strong hand,' Pelleas and E. 126
He spoke, and t all his younger knights, Last Tournament 126
Then t his dear lady by one hand. Lover's Tale iv 369
t the place of the pitying God Despair 42
felt as I spoke I was t the name in vain — „ 52
What is this you're t? . . . Forlorn 40
Talbot shatter'd t's, which had left the stones Raw, Holy Grail 719
Tale {See also Fairy-tale, Taale) A deeper t my heart
divines. Two Voices 269
With cycles of the human t Of this wide world. Palace of Art 146
an ancient t of wrong. Like a < of little meaning Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 118
Brimful of those ^dld t's, D. of F. Women 12
With the fairy t's of science, Locksley Hall 12
And told him all her nurse's t. Lady Clare 80
' Tell me t's of thy first love — Vision of Sin 163
And I will tell him t's of foreign parts, Enoch Arden 198
And there the t he utter'd brokenly, „ 647
he felt the t Less than the teller : „ 711
her father came across With some long-winded t. The Brook 109
And there he told a long long-winded t „ 138
Lightning of the hour, the pun, the scurrilous t, — Aylmer's Field 441
t's ! for never yet on earth Could dead flesh creep, Lucretius 130
rustic Gods ! a < To laugh at — more to laugh at „ 182
Dived in a hoard of t's that dealt with knights, Princess, Pro. 29
the t of her That drove her foes with slaughter ,. 122
often told a t from mouth to mouth As here at
Christmas.' „ 191
what kind of t's did men tell men, „ 196
' Why not a summer's as a winter's t ? At for summer
as befits the time, „ 209
we should have him back Who told the ' Winter's t ' .. 238
tell me pleasant t's, and read My sickness „ ii 252
he that next inherited the t Half turning ,, iv 592
whereon Follow'd his t. „ » 48
infuse my t of love In the old king's ears, .. 240
So closed our t, of which I give you all „ Con. 1
the sequel of the t Had touch'd her ; „ 30
And I fear you'll listen to t's. Grandmother 54
To bear thro' Heaven a i of woe. In Mem. xii 2
When truth embodied in a t Shall enter „ xxscvi 7
Then be my love an idle t, „ Ixii 3
Thereafter — as he speaks who tells the t — Com. of Arthur 95
' But let me tell thee now another t : „ 359
Or Gareth telling some prodigious t Of knights, Gareth and L. 508
turning to Lynette he told The t of Gareth, ,, 1273
And he that told the t in older times „ 1427
And call'd her like that maiden in the t, Marr. of Geraint 742
And there lay still ; as he that tells the t Geraint and E. 161
Earl Limours Drank till he jested with all ease, and
told Free t's, „ 291
and cursed the t, The told-of , and the teller. Balin and Balan 542
Were I not woman, I could tell a t. Merlin and V. 696
Then answer'd MerUn ' Nay, I know the t. .. 713
' O ay,' said Vivien, ' overtrue a,t. 720
he never wrong'd his bride. I know the t. „ 730
' O crueller than was ever told in t, „ 858
She blamed herself for telling hearsay t's : „ 951
So ran the t like fire about the court, Lancelot and E. 734
when the maid had told him all her t, „ 798
when the maid had told him all the t Of King and Prince, „ 823
Tale (continued) he that tells the t Says that her ever-
veering fancy Pelleas and E. 492
for he that tells the t Liken'd them. Last Tournament 226
And fault and doubt — no word of that fond t — „ 578
prattling and the t's Which my good father told me, Guinevere 316
accept this old imperfect t, New-old, To the Queen ii 36
and drank her whisper'd t's. Lover's Tale i 817
I'll tell you the t o' my life. First Quarrel 9
I told them my t, God's own truth — Rizpah 33
in many a merry t That shook our sides — Sir J. Oldcastle 91
A t, that told to me. When but thine age, Tires ias 18
Two lovers parted by a scurrilous t The Ring 208
Two lovers parted by no sciu-rilous t — „ 427
All her t of sadness. Forlorn 80
your t of lands I know not, your Arabian sands ; To Ulysses 34
And read a Grecian t re-told. To Master of B. 5
I have told you my t. Get you gone. Charity 44
Tale (number) The t of diamonds for his destined boon) Lancelot and E. 91
Talent health, wealth, and time. And t. Princess iv 353
Taliessin ' T is our fullest throat of song. Holy Grail 300
Talk (s) (See also Table-talk) It seems in after-dinner t Miller's D. 31
we held a t, How all the old honour The Epic 6
Delight our souls with t of knightly deeds, M. d' Arthur 19
he turn'd The current of his t to graver things Enoch Arden 203
Fairer his t, a tongue that ruled the hour, Aylmer's Field 194
remembering His former t's with Edith, „ 457
Made more and more allowance for his t ; Sea Dreams 75
Whose pious t, when most his heart was dry, „ 186
A t of coUege and of ladies' rights. Princess, Pro. 233
Our dances broke and buzz'd in knots oit; „ i 133
Sweet household t, and phrases of the hearth, „ ii 315
. From t of battles loud and vain, Ode on Well. 247
But honest t and wholesome wine. To F. D. Maurice 18
Heart-afHuence in discursive t In Mem. cix 1
Just now the dry-tongued laurels' pattering t Maud I xviii 8
vext her and perplext her With his wordly t „ xx 7
And when the thralls had t among themselves, Gareth and L. 491
But if their t were foul, „ 504
Then, like a shadow, past the people's t Marr. of Geraint 82
I will tell him all their caitiff t ; Geraint and E. 66
his t. When wine and free companions kindled him, „ 292
Here the huge Earl cried out upon her t, ,, 651
Felon t ! Let be ! no more ! ' Balin and Balan 380
Their t was all of training, terms of art. Merlin and V. 124
She play'd about with slight and sprightly t, .,. 171
Tho' harlots paint their t as well as face „ 821
And t and minstrel melody entertain'd. Lancelot and E. 267
From t of war to traits of pleasantry — .. 321
Than Lancelot told me of a common t „ 577
those black walls of yew Their t had pierced, „ 970
Was noble man but made ignoble t. „ 1088
once the t And scandal of our table, Holy Grail 649
Suddenly waken'd with a sound of t Pelleas and E. 48
And all t died, as in a grove all song „ 607
' Will the child kill me with her innocent t ? ' Guinevere 214
Rapt in sweet t or lively, all on love .. 386
And miss to hear high t of noble deeds ,, 499
Delight our souls with t of knightly deeds. Pass, of Arthur 187
from that necessity for t Which lives with
blindness. Sisters (E. and E.) 248
I have scared you pale with my scandalous t, Despair 111
an' doesn't not 'inder the t ! Spinster's S's. 86
Is girlish t at best ; Epilogue 43
And all her t was of the babe she loved ; The Ring 353
Talk (verb) To himself he t's ; A spirit haunts 3
And ye t together still, Adeline 60
' 1 1,' said he, ' Not with thy dreams. Two Voices 385
And makes me t too much in age. Miller's D. 194
ere the stars come forth T with the wild Cassandra, (Enone 263
But you can t : yours is a kindly vein : Edwin Morris 81
the days were brief Whereof the poets t, Talking Oak 186
' O ay, ay, ay, you t ! ' Godiva 26
all his lite the charm did t About his path, Day-Dm., Arrival 21
Had made him t for show ; Will Water. 196
clamour'd the good woman, ' hear him t ! Enoch Arden 840
Talk
711
Tamed
Talk (verb) (continued) For one half-hour, and let him t to
the days That most she loves to ( of,
We did but t you over, pledge you all
Or down the fiery gulf as < of it,
You t almost like Ida : she can t ;
But you t kindlier: we esteem you for it. —
And I too, t, and lose the touch 1 1 of.
While now we t as once we talk'd
To t them o'er, to wish them here.
Be cheerful-minded, t and treat
And t of others that are wed,
I trust that I did not t (repeat)
Sweet lord, how like a noble knight he t's !
Up then, ride with me ! T not of shame !
Too curious Vivien, tho' j^ou t of trust.
Yea, if ye / of trust I tell you this,
And heard their voices t behind the wall,
Of whom the people t mysteriously,
fool,' he said, ye t Fool s treason :
As even here they t at Ahnesbury
T of lost hopes and broken heart !
The merrier, prettier, wittier, as they t,
lasses 'ud t o' their Missis's waays,
play with 'em, t to 'em hours after houi's !
thou hast come to t our isle.
Fur moast of 'em t's agean tithe.
The Brook 115
226
Princess, Pro. 185
Hi 287
V 210
212
Lit. Squabbles 17
In Mem. Ixxi 9
xc 11
cvii 19
Con. 98
Mavd I xix 12, 16
Gareth and L. Ill
Balin and Balan 523
Merlin and V. 358
360
631
Lancelot and E. 425
Last Toumatnent 351
Guinevere 208
Lover's Tale iv 176
Sisters (E. and E.) 286
Village Wife 57
In the Child. Hosp. 34
Sir J. Oldcastle 32
Church-warden, etc. 52
Talk'd-Talkt so we sat and eat And talk'd old matters
over ; Audley Court 29
For oft I talk'd with him apart, Talking Oak 17
She tnlKd as if her love were dead. The Letters 27
Blues and reds They talVd of : Aylmer's Field 252
For people talk'd — that it was wholly wise ,. 268
people talk'd — The boy might get a notion into him ; ,. 270
So they talk'd. Poor children, for their comfort : .. 426
wrinkled benchers often talk'd of him Approvingly, „ 473
But while they talk'd, above their heads I saw Princess, Pro. 118
they talk'd At wine, in clubs, of art, of politics ; ,. 160
And while I walk'd and talk'd as heretofore, „ i 16
you that talk'd The trash that made me sick, „ ii 393
She answer'd sharply that I talk'd astray. ,. Hi 140
we are not talk'd to thus : .. 250
(And every voice she talk'd with ratify it, , .. v 133
Her that talk'd down the fifty wisest men ; .. 294
she you walk'd with, she You talk'd with, ., vi 255
the maidens came, they talk'd, They sang, „ vii 22
That hears his burial talk'd of by his friends, „ 152
While now we talk as once we talk'd In Mem . Ixxi 9
We talk'd : the stream beneath us ran, „ Ixxxix 43
My love has talk'd with rocks and trees ; „ xcvii 1
And oft I talk'd \vith Dubric, the high saint, Geraint and E. 865
And I, when often they have talk'd of love, Lancelot and E. 673
for they talk'd, Meseem'd, of what they knew not ; „ 674
And all the damsels talk'd confusedly, Pelleas and E. 57
Fur hofEens we talkt o' my darter Village Wife 10
An' the Missisis talk'd o' the lasses. — „ 58
Talketh Who t with thee, Adeline ? Adeline 24
Talkin' Thou's bean t' to muther, N. Farmer, N. S. 10
Es I should be t agean 'em. Village Wife 110
Talking (See also A-talkin', Talkin') walking all alone
beneath a yew. And t to hiinself , Love and Death 6
heard them t, his long-bounden tongue Was loosen'd, Enoch Arden 644
And, t from the point, he drew him in. The Brook 154
And with me Philip, t still ; „ 164
I thought her half-right t of her wrongs ; Princess v 285
Drinking and t of me ; Maud I vii 6
I hear two men. Somewhere, t of me ; „ 14
In silver tissue t things of state ; Marr. of Geraint 663
While he were t sweetly with your Prince, „ 698
thither came the village girls And linger'd t, Pelleas and E. 509
Now t of their woodland paradise. Last Tournament 726
Tftlkt iS^ee Talk'd
Tall Down by the poplar t rivulets babble and fall. Leonine Eleg. 4
T orient shrubs, and obelisks Arabian Nights 107
When forth there stept a foeinan t, Oriana 33
Tall (continued) The arching limes are t and shady, Margaret 59
The t flag-flowers when they sprung Miller's D. 53
My t dark pines, that plumed the craggy ledge OSnone 209
Till Charles's Wain came out above the t white
chimney-tops. May Queen, N. Y's. E. 12
The building rook '11 caw from the windy t elm-tree, „ 17
heroes t Dislodging pinnacle and parapet D. of F. Women 25
A daughter of the gods, divinely t, „ 87
Patient on this t pillar 1 have borne St. S. Stylites 15
To watch the three t sfirei, ; Godiva 3
flour From his t mill that whistled on the waste. Enoch Arden 343
A later but a loftier Annie Lee, Fair-hair'd and t, .. 749
Her son, who stood beside her t and strong, 756
And his own children t and beautiful, 762
help'd At lading and imlading the t barks, „ 816
T and erect, but bending from his height Aylmer's Field 119
A perilous meeting imder the t pines .. 414
follow'd out T and erect, but in the middle aisle 818
Strode from the porch, t and erect again. ,, 825
What ! are the ladies of your land so t? ' Princess ii 47
o'er him grew T as a figure lengthen'd on the sand ,, vi 161
those t columns drown'd In silken fluctuation „ 354
One t Agave above the lake. The Daisy 84
Then it grew so t It wore a crown of light, The Flower 9
But she is t and stately. Maud I xii 16
friends Of Arthur, gazing on him, t. Com. of Arthur 278
The last t son of Lot and Bellicent, Gareth and L. 1
follow the deer By these t firs and our fast-falling bums ; ., 91
The prince his heir, when t and marriageable, .. 102
Wellnigh as long as thou art statured t !
but in all the listening eyes Of those t knights,
Saw six t men haling a seventh along,
(not that t felon there Whom thou by sorcery
Then Enid was aware of three t knights On
horseback,
roimded moon Thro' the t oriel on the rolling sea.
By those whom God had made full-limb'd and t.
Come dashing down on a i wayside flower,
and swum with balanced wings To some t
mountain :
rise three dark, t cypresses, —
As the t ship, that many a dreary year
fears went over till I that was little had grown so t,
had grown so handsome and t —
as it seem'd, beneath the t Tree-bowers,
— dark visaged, stately and t-
282
328
811
996
Geraint and E. 56
Holy Grail 831
Guinevere 43i
253
Lover's Tale i 303
536
808
First Quarrd 27
37
Sisters (E. and E.) Ill
The Wreck 15
Shamus O'Shea that has now ten childer, hansome
an' t. Tomorrow 85
Taller a hart T than all his fellows, Marr. of Geraint 150
But newly-enter'd, t than the rest. Last Tournament 169
he is Lancelot — t indeed, Rosier and comelier, ., 709
T than all the Muses, and huger than all the
mountain ? Parnassus 10
Tallest she, that rose the t of them all And fairest, M. d' Arthur 207
last tall son of Lot and Bellicent, And t, Gareth, Gareth and L. 2
In glassy bays among her t towers.' (Enone 119
They came, they cut away my t pines, „ 208
she, that rose the t of them all And fairest, Pass, of Arthur 375
Tall-tower 'd long street climbs to one t-t mill ; Enoch Arden 5
Tallyho Black Bess, Tantivy, T, The Brook 160
Talon and swoops The vulture, beak and t, Princess v 383
their ever-ravening eagle's beak and t Boddicea 11
And all unscarr'd from beak or t. Last Tournament 20
Tamarisk The stately cedar, t's, Arabian Nights 105
from a t near Two Proctors leapt upon us. Princess iv 258
Tame (adj.) The helpless life so wild that it was t. Enoch Arden 557
With two t leopards couch'd beside her throne. Princess ii 33
her foot on one Of those t leopards. „ Hi 181
' Being a goose and rather t than wild, Gareth and L. 38
Tut : he was t and meek enow with me, „ 718
were all as < I mean, as noble. Merlin and V. 607
Tame (verb) nor t and tutor with mine eye D. of F. Women 138
I tamed my leopards : shall I not t these ? Princess v 400
And t thy jailing princess to thine hand. Pelleas and E. 344
Tamed 1 1 my leopards : shall I not tame these ? Princess v 4(X)
Tamesa
712
Teaohei
Tamesa (Thames) Bloodily flow'd the T rolling phantom bodies Boddicea 21
TttoptK embassies of love. To t with the feelings, Oardener's D. 19
nunper'd Some nieddling rogue has ( with him — Lancelot and E. 128
And t with the Ixirds of Uie White Horse, Guinevere 15
Tangle (s) Should toss with t and with shells. In Mem. x 20
Tangle (viarb) cuts atwain The knots tliat ( human
creeds, Clear-headed friend 3
Tangled (adj. and part) The t water-courses slept, Dying Swan 19
Glitt«r like a swarm of fire-flies < in a silver braid. Lockdey Hall 10
Two in the t business of the world, Princess ii 174
passing lightly Adown a natural stair of ( roots. Lover's Tale i 527
Tantivy Black Bess, T, Tallyho, The Brook 160
Tap (a touch) crush 'd with a t Of my finger-na Matid II ii 21
Tap (tap-room) Thou'U goa sniffin' about the ( North. Cobbler 64
I weant goa sniffin' about the t.' „ 67
Taper (adj.) If my lips should dare to kiss Thy ( fingers
amorously, Madelitte 44
Thro' rosy t fingers drew Her streaming curls Mariana in the S. 15
Tapw (s) A inilUon t's flaring bright Arabian NigtUs 124
I knew your ( far away. Miller's D. 109
Her ( glunmer'd in the lake below : Edvoin Morris 135
As this pale fs earthly spark, St. Agnes' Eve 15
The /"*- burning fair. Sir iialatuid 32
And calm that let the t's bum Unwavering : In Mem. scv 5
tins^ers of a haiid Before a burning t. Holy Grail 694
Tapestry Working a t, lifted up her bead. Last Toumantent 129
Tapping Leisurely t a glossy boot, Mand I xiii 19
Tapt whined in lobbies, t at doors, Walk, to the Mail 37
She / her tiny silken-sandal'd foot : Princess, Pro. 150
Taranis T be propitiated. Boadicea 16
Tare That t each other in their slime. In Mem. lei 23
And when his anger t him, Gareth and L. 1340
Target passion were a t for their scom : Loekslet/ Hall 146
Or from the tiny pitted t blew Aylnter^'s Field 93
Tarn Slumbers not like a mountain t ? Supp. Confessions 129
And quenching lake by lake and thy t Pnncess vii 40
Far over the blue t's and hazy seas, Gareth and L. 499
Had found a glen, gray boulder and black t. Lancdot and E. 36
A horror lived about tne t, and clave „ 37
Fled like a glittering ri\nUet to the t: .,52
A stone is tlung into some sleeping t, PMeas and E. 93
Those diamonds that I resouetl from the t. Last Tournament 37
Tamish'd {See also HaU-tamish'd) Mark hath ( the
great name of king, GarHh and L. 426
Tarqain brooking not the T in her veins, Lucretius 237
THrianoe after two days' ( there, retum'd. Lancelot and E. 569
Turied And while 1 1, every day she set Holy Grail 588
Where once I ( for a while. To E. Fitzgerald 2
Tarry ' He daured not t,' men will say, Two Voices 101
I must go : I dare not t,' Princess Hi 95
Knowing I ( for thee,' Maud III vi 13
Would he could t with us here awhile, Marr. of Geraint 622
Yet if he could but t a day or two, „ 627
For if thou t we shall meet again, Guinei^ere 89
Tarrying after ( for a space they rode, Geraint and E. 953
Tartar at thy name the T tents are stirr'd ; IF. to Marie Alex. 12
thine own land had bow'd to T hordes „ 23
Task (s) ' Hard /, to pluck resolve,' I cried. Two Voices 118
Sore ( to hearts worn out by many wars Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 86
Deliver not the t's of might To weakness. Love thou thy land 13
The wrinkled steward at his t, Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 27
I Uke myself to ( ; Will Water. 162
came Cyril, and yawning ' O hard <,' he cried ; Princess Hi 124
or hew wood, Or grosser t's ; Gareth and L. 487
kiss the child That does the ( assign'd, Lancelot and E. 829
Task (verb) as we t ourselves To learn a language Aylmer's Fidd 432
Tassel-hong In native hazels t-h.' In Mem. cii 12
nuMll'd See Dewy-tassell'd
IMe (8) Made all our t's and fancies like, lover's Tale i 242
IMe (verb) (See <dso Ta&ste) but whoso did receive of
them. And t. Lotos- Eaters 31
(If Death so t Lethean springs), In Mem. xliv 10
She fs the fruit before the blossom falls. Ancient Sage 75
that men may t Swine-flesh, drink wine ; Akbar's Dream 53
He < love with half his mind. In Mem, xe 1
Tasted (cotUinued) Nor ever touch'd fierce wine, nor ( flesh, Merlin and V.
till I ( flesh again One night
Tattoo'd then the man ; T or woaded,
Taught {See also Lam'd) We t him lowlier moods,
at TrafiUgar yet once more We t him :
Should that plain fact, as ( by these.
He t me all the mercy,
Ketaught the lesson thou hadst t,
I must be t my duty, and by 3rou !
Who / me how to skate, to row, to swim,
leaders of their Institute T them with facts.
And I would teach them all that men are t ;
but she That t the Sabine how to rule,
Here might they learn whatever men were t :
And whatsoever can be t and known ;
what woman ( you this ? '
With those deep voices our dead captain ( The
tyrant.
So great a soldier ( us there,
Blejrs, Who ( him magic ;
The charm so ( will chann us both to rest,
then he t the King to charm the Queen
never yet Hath what thy sister ( me first to see,
My kn^htJ\ood / me this —
Ix^^ian to hum An air the nuns had t her ;
should he not be t, Ev'n by the price
I I myself as I could To make a good wife
Who t me in childhood,
Thou knowest, T by some God,
Taunt (s) A t that clench'd his purpose like a blow !
Taunt (verb) I know it ; T me no more :
Tavern Seeking a t which of old he knew.
Tavern-catch To troll a careless, careless t-c
Tavern-do<w sent From many a t-d,
Tavern-fellow My boon companion, t-f —
Tavern-hour The t-h's of mighty wits —
Taw boy That knuckled at the t :
Tawnier the swan's Is ( than her cygnet's :
Tawny to tear away Their ( clusters,
Tumble^i the / niscal at his feet,
warm melon lay like a little sun on the t sand,
Tax Honour,' she said, ' and homage, t and toll,
for when he laid a ( Upon his town,
' If they pay this t, they starve.'
she took the t away And built herself
Levieti a kindly t upon themselves,
Hortensia spoke against the ( ;
Ta-year (this year, to-year) {See also To-year) Done
it t-y I meiin'd,
fur a lot on 'em coom'd t-y —
Tea an' offens we bed 'em to t.
Teach Oh t me yet Somewhat before the heavy
clod
T me the nothingness of things.
To E. Fitzgerald '.
Princess ii 12
Buonaparte i
Two Voices
May Qtieen, Con. 17
Englatid and A mer. 8
Z>om97
Edwin Morris 19
Princess, Pro. 59
136
ii 79
146
385
vii 310
Ode 0,1 Well. 69
« 131
Com. of Arthur 154
Merlin and F. 332
641
Holy GraU 469
Last ToumametU 658
Guinevere 163
Lover's Tale iv 151
First Quarrel 29
.Merlin and the G. 115
Death of (Enone S5
Princess v 306
„ vi 301
Enoch Arden 691
Princess iv 157
Will Water. 188
Sir J. Oldcastle 90
Will Water. 191
132
Lancelot and E. llSo
Enoch Arden 38-
Aylmer's Field 230
V. of Maddune 57
(Enone 116
Godiva 13
20
„ 78
Enoch Arden 66&
Princess vii 127
N. Fanner, 0. S. 42
Church-warden, etc. 13
VUlage Wife 56
Supp. Confessions 183
A Character 4
Oh ! ( the orphan boy to read. Or ( the orphan-girl
to sew, L. C. V. de Vere 69
T that sick heart the stronger choice. On a Mourner 18
For he will t him hardness, Dora 120
And, as tradition t'es, .imphion 26
And others' follies t us not. Will Water. 173
Nor much their wisdom t'es ; » 174
And I would ( them all that men are taught ; Princess, Pro. 136
Shall we t it a Roman lesson ? Boadicea 32
Come Time, and t me, many years. In Mem. xiii l'^
My own dim life should ( me this, „ xxxiv 1
Her office there to rear, to ^ „ jd l:'
And t true life to fight with mortal wrongs. Maud I xviii 51
As proof of trust. O Merlin, t it me. .Merlin and V. 331
To nnd a wizard who might t the King » 583
But t high thought, and amiable wonfe ^Kti»«wre 481
Ev'n the homely farm can t us Locksleij H., Sixty 26
T your flatter'd kings that only those who caimot read „ 132
I too would ( the man Beyond the darker hour Prog, of Spring 87
Teacher Left by the T, whom he held divine. Lucretius V^
Blest be the Voice of the T Kapiolani 2
Teaching
713
Tear
Teadiing t him that died Of hemlock ; Prineeu Hi 302
Teacap-dmes In t-t of hood and hoop, * Talking Oak 63
Team {-See also TeSm) and the vnld t Which love tiiee, Tithoniu 39
I hear them too— tbey sing to their t : Grandmciher 81
Tbe t is looaen'd fnnn the wain. In Mem. exxi 5
And aee'st tbe moving of tbe t. „ 16
Tbe sbrilH- whinnyings of the ( of Hell, DetneUr and P. 44
Te&n blessed fealds wi' the Divil's oan t. N. Parmer, O. S. 02
Tear it) Woulrl issue ft of penitence Siupp. Confetsions 118
Her (s fell with tbe dews at even ; Manama 13
Her ft fell ere tbe dews were dried ; „ 14
Crocodiles wept ft for tbee ; A Dirge 22
woodbine ana eglatere Drip sweeter dews than traitor's t. „ 24
While blisrful ft blinded my si^t Oriana 23
And then tbe ft run down my cbeek, 00
I feel the ^< of blood arise 77
A matter to be wcrpt with ft of blood ! Poland 14
A moment came the toidemess of ft. The form, the form 9
My ft, no ft of Lore, are flowing fast. Wan, Sculptor 7
No ft of love, but ft that Love can die. „ 8
Thy sister smiiled and said, ' No ft for me ! The Bridetmaid 3
I lored tfaee for the t thou couldst not hide, „ 11
Tbe home ci woe without a t. Mariana in the 8. 20
Larger Hesper giitter'd on her ft, „ 90
' Whose eyes are dim with glorious ft, Tvbo Voieet 151
And dews, that would have fall'n in ft, MiHer't D. 151
Eyes with idle ft are wet. _ 211
They hare not shed a many ft, „ 221
Yet ft they shed : they had their part Of sorrow :
My eyes are full of ft, my heart of lore,
watef'd it with ft? O bappjr ft.
And nerer can be sunder'a without ft. To —
and tempered with the ft Of angels
white-eyed phantasms weeping ft ot blood.
And erer unrelieved by dinnaJ ft,
embraces of our wires And their warm ft :
Qia^ged both mine eyes with ft.
I, Umded with my ft, ' Still strove to speak :
.*%e ceased in ft, fallen from hope and trust :
By sighs or groans or ft ;
and a t Dropt on the letters as I wrote.
May perpetual youth Keep dry their lij^t
from t s ;
Him Sir Bedirere Remorsefully regarded thro'
bis^«,
dropping bitter ft against his brow
Mary sat And look'd with ft upon her boy.
When eyes, love-languid thro' half ft
Bain out the heavy mist of ft,
bum'd upon its object thro' such ft As flow but
ODce a life,
those tremulous eyes that fill with ft
and thy ft are on my cbeek.
Why wflt thou ever scare me with thy ft,
to the ft that thou wilt weep.
She told him ei tbax ft. Aim pray'd him.
With ft and smileB from heaven again
To dn^ thy foolirii ft upon my grave.
What there is in loving ft,
eyes All flooded with the bel{dess wrath of ft.
But manifold entreaties, many a (,
Fast flow'd the canent of her eas^ ft.
Who dabbling in the fount of Active ft,
their own bitter ft, Tt, and the careless rain
Deity fake in human-amorous ft ;
And kisB'd again with ft.
And kisB again with ft !
We kiss'd apia with ft.
round her &wj eyes The drded Iris of a ni^t of ft ;
She bow'd as if to veil a noble ( ;
' T't, idle ft, I know not what they mean,
T'l from the depth ot some divine despair
the t. She sang of, riiook and fdL,
At length my £Sre, his rou^ dieek wet with ft,
like summer tempest came her ft —
aSnone 31
« 234
-, With Pal. of AH 13
18
Palace of AH 239
271
Lotot-Eatert, C. 8. 71
D. of P. Women 13
106
257
284
To J. 8. 55
Of old tat Preedtm 20
M. SArihur 171
211
Dora 51
Love and Duty 36
43
63
Tfthfmut26
45
46
LoekaUy BattSZ
GoditaW
Sir L. and Q. G. 2
Come not, when, etc. 2
Vition of Sin 161
Enoch Arden 32
160
865
The Brook m
Aylmer't Field 428
Lucretius 90
Princett Ub
9
14
„ iii2n
280
«r39
40
„ 50
«23
wl5
Tear (■) {continued) The leaves were wet with womoi's ft : Prineett vi 39
Passionate ft FoUowM : the king replied not : „ 311
Lore, like an Alpine harebell hung with ft „ vii 115
a touch Came round mv wrist, ami ft upon my band ,, 138
dark crowd moves, ami there are sobs and ft : Ode on Well. 268
All for a slanderous storr, that cost me many a t. Grandmother 22
time to catch The fuoi interest of ft ? In Mem. i 8
Break, thou deep rase of chilling ft, to 11
2"i of the widower, when he sees ., arm 1
Mine eyes have leisure for their fs ; „ 16
When fill'd with ft that cannot fall, „ xiz 11
And ft that at their fountain freeze ; .. xx 12
With costly spikenard and with ft. ., xxxii 12
And ft are on the mother's face, „ ;;^ 10
dip Their wines in ft, and skim away. ., :dviii 16
motions blindfy drown The bases of nay life in ft. ., dix 16
grieve Thy brethren with a fruitless t i ., Iviii 10
With thy quick ft that make the rose Pull sideways, .. IxxH 10
No sii^ie (, no mark of pain : „ IxxviU 14
But with long use her ft are dry. 20
To pledge than with a kindly (, ., ze 10
Ana dipt in baths of hissing ft, ., exvOi 23
There has fallen a ^lendid t Maud I xzU 50
Shall shake its threaded ft in the wind no more. „ /// vi 28
I consecrate with ft — These Idylls. Ded. of IdyUt 4
Enforced she was to wed him in her ft. Com. of Arthur 204
comforted my heart, And dried my ft, „ 350
True ft upon bis broad and naked breast, Marr. of Geraint 111
the mother smiled, but half in ft, „ 823
Ye mar a comely face with idiot ft. Geraint and E. 550
And felt the warm ft falling on his face ; „ 586
Made aaswer, either eyelid wet with ft : Merlin and V, 379
So sweetly gleam'd her eyes behind her ft 402
The slow i creep from her closcl eyelid yet, ,, 906
Then flash'd into wild ft, and rose again, Lancelot and E. 613
' Farewell, sweet sister,' parted all in ft. „ 1152
grant my worship of it Words, as we grant grief ft. „ 1188
and the ft were in lu^ eyes. Holy GraU 750
and my ft hare brought me good : Guinevere 202
Made my ft bum — is also past — part. „ 542
Him Sir Bedirere Remorsefully regarded thro*
bis ft, Patt. of Arthur 3S9
And dropping bitter ft against a brow „ 379
Her smile lit up tbe rainbow on my ft, Lover't Tale i 254
and mine Were ^lim with floating ft, „ ^42
I saw the moonlight glitter on their ft — „ 807
The dew of ^4 in an unwholesome dew, „ 765
if thou be'st Lore, dry im these ft _ 780
it melteth in tbe source Of Uiese sad ft, „ 784
And Memory fed the soul of Love with ft. „ S22
I flm^ myself upon him In ft and cries : ,, n 90
poor hA, an' we parted in ft. Firtt Quarrd 20
Edith spoke no word. She wept no /, Sittert (E. and E.) 216
it often moved me to ft. In the Child. Hotp. 31
band of the Highlander wet with their ft I Def. of Lucknow 102
Sank from their thrones, and melted into ft, C'Av.mtmt 15
Lord of human ft ; Cbild-lorer ; To Virtm Hugo 3
I felt one warm t fall upon it. Tiretiat 167
a tone so ron^ that I broke into paaekmate ft. The Wreck 122
But vain the ft tor darkoi'd years As hm^ter over
wine. And vain the lau^ter as the ft. Ancient Sage 183
aU nig^t I pray'd with ft. The Flight 17
I watch'd her at mass lettin' down tbe t. Tomorrow 29
tbe follies, furies, curses, passionate ft, Locktley H., Sixty 30
wife and bis child stood by him in ft Dead Prophet 57
her ft Are half of pleasure, half of pain — To Prim. Beatrice 10
My guick ft kill'd the flower, Demeter and P. 108
So glad ? no t for him, who left you wealtii. The Ring 188
And then the t fell, the voice broke. „ 367
BUster'd every word with ft. Forlorn 81
Are they ft ? For me— Rommey't S. 26
TMr (veib) To < his heart b^ore the crowd ! You might have von 36
to ( away Their tawny dosteo, Enoch Arden ^1
T the noble heart ct Britain, Boadicea 12
tbe winds of winter t an oak on a promontory. „ 77
Tear
Tear (verb) (continued) fiends, Who leap at thee to t
^„H^!f ' ^^ T,^ , ,, , . , . Balin mid, Balan 142
and strove To < the twain asunder in my heart, Holv Grail 786
the beasts Will t thee piecemeal.' ^ 035
Whim^ifr ^^'=^^*' •. Ancient Sage 12^
\\ hen he will t me from your side, 7^^^ p/,^/,, in
Tear'd (torn) lasses 'ed t out leaves i' the middle Villa J Wife 72
J^S?' Wht/l-r^^''' from.its source, /JSgofll!
Tearful What lit your eyes with < power, i&ar<7a»-e< 3
From all things outward you have won A t grace margarei^
I knew The < glimmer of the languid da\ra ' B. of F Women 74
And coidd I look upon her t eyes ? z'L' ^1731
And lookmg round upon his t friends, 700
spoken of with t smiles ; " • • Jqo
But in the < splendour of her smiles Prog ofSvriL 41
Tearin' an' crym^and t 'er 'aair, N^h^CoblZ t\
mayhap to my f aace or a t my gown- Spinster's S's. 91
Roaver a-tuggin' an' t my sheave. '^ Oi/'rf ff«« fiO
a-tuggin' an' ( me wuss nor afoor, rr
Tearing (See also T^xin') And < off her veil of faded
J J . r , , , m, ■ , Geraint and E. 514
Teat from the plamtive mother's < he took TaJ'^^-oo^S-Im
lent her fierce t To human sucklings ; Covi of Arth^.ril
Teem and they would win thee-<, ^' Holv GmU -ill
Above the Aground ^^^ ^_ „^^ ^ ^ {g
For t with liars, and madmen, rhp Or^^^^/o
Teens The maiden blossoms of her t T^kinanntnl
Teething And ills and aches, and «'., mtTLaiAu
Teetotaler See ToatUer ^ '^"'^ ^^*
Telegraph there thro' twenty posts of t Prinrei^ Pm 77
K ;SS£ Th- '™" ^-^Thro' darkness, Pro. IogT^LX S
Telemachus This is my son, mine own T, TThi^J^ <?q
Tpl^'\".f P'"^'?' I '^' ^^"*-- -^^^ ^«WS U
Telescope here were Vs For azure views ; Prinreio Pm fi7
■^^^ sSr^'!;f / '"'•/ T"^ ^'"°^ ^^'^ "-^^^ *s«pp. cr&onr
bhe 11 not t me if she love me, r,-/ • A
Exquisite Margaret, who can t Marmot m
Yet < my name again to me, Elelwreli
And t me if the woodbines blow. Mu UfeTsfvllU
t her to her face how much I hate Her presence, ^ K2 228
t her, when I m gone, to train the rosebush May Queen, N. Y's E 47
Effie on the other side, and I will t the sign. Con 24
say to Robin a kind word, and t him not to fret • ' ' 4I
If 1 had lived— I cannot t— '" T^
and < o'er Each little sound and sight. B. of F Women 276
I will not t you not to weep. ^ "J ^ ■ ^f^Yia
And ran to t her neighbours ; rh^ r-^^.I i ^
YeM?°hVT^'^'° 'T *° ' ^°." ^^' ,. G..W?r2l2
Yet might 1 1 of meetings, of farewells— o^
Might I not t Of difference, reconcilement, '" o^«
Dare < him Dora waited with the child ; " n„™„ 7«
But t me, did she read the name I carved Talking Oak 15^
thanks for what I learn And what remains to t. ^ 204
And I will < It. Turn your face, Dav-Thn P^nVr
And whither goest thou, t me where ? ' "^ De^Z sJ
n my heart by signs can t, t "f rf^i'^%
' T me tales of thffirst love- p-^jf 5"Sf «?
I will t him tales of foreign parts, V^Tl 1 f"" ]^l
who best could t What most^it needed- ^"""'^ ^"^"'^ J^f
Not to t her never to let her know, (repeat) " 7«fi 708
If you could t her you had seen him dead, sns
I have a secretr-only swear. Before 1 1 you— "' o^
When you shall see fier, t her that I died Blessing her, 878
And t my daughter Annie, whom I saw aao
And < my son that I died blessing him. " ^i
have loved you more as son Than brother, let "
me t you : J 1 ,
nor at all can t Whether I mean this day ^^^T^Sf !!
714
Tell (continued) t me pleasant tales, and read My sickness
' no— I would not t, No, not for all Aspasia's
cleverness,
' T us,' Florian ask'd, ' How grew this feud
But children die ; and let me t you, girl.
And t her, t her, what 1 1 to thee.
' 0 t her. Swallow, thou that knowest each,
' 0 t her. Swallow, that thy brood is flown :
O t her, brief is life but love is long.
And t her, t her, that I follow thee.'
To t her what they were, and she to hear :
I came to t you ; found that you had gone
my nurse would t me of you ;
' You — t us what we are ' who might have told
I knew, but I would not t.
Git ma my aale 1 1 tha.
And now it t's of Italy.
' What are they dreaming of ? Who can t ?
TeU
Princess ii 252
I pray you t the truth to me.
And which the dearest I cannot t ! '
T my wish to her dewy blue eye :
Who mused on all I had to t,
And I should t him all my pain,
And t them all they would have told.
In that high place, and t thee all.
Could hardly t what name were thine,
passing, turn the page that Vs A grief,
0 t me where the senses mix,
0 t me where the passions meet.
You t me, doubt is Devil-born,
the clash and clang that t's The joy
can he t Whether war be a cause or a consequence ?
1 must t her before we part, I must t her, or die.
Beat with my heart more blest than heart can t,
And t s me, when she lay Sick once,
that they might t us What and where they be.
T him now : she is standing here at my head;
as he speaks who t's the tale —
T me, ye yourselves. Hold ye this Arthur
O King,' she cried, ' and I will t thee :
conifortable words. Beyond my tongue to t thee—
^ O King ! ' she cried, ' and I will t thee true :
But let me t thee now another tale :
Nor shalt thou t thy name to anyone.
Nor t my name to any— no, not the King.'
but t thou these the truth.'
^ Tut, t not me,' said Kay, ' ye are overfine
And wherefore, damsel ? t me all ye know
And day by day she thought to t Geraint,
And t him what I think and what they say.
And yet not dare to t him what I think,
sparrow-hawk, what is he ? t me of him.
nne, seeing I have sworn That I will break
T her, and prove her heart toward the Prince.'
Ashamed am I that I should t it thee.
Look on it, child, and < me if ye know it."
And yester-eve I would not t you of it,
If he would only speak and t me of it.'
And I will t him all their caitiff talk ;
And I will t him all their villany.
And there lay still ; as he that t's the tale
I will t him How great a man thou art :
Arthur seeing ask'd ' T me your names ;
for shall 1 1 you truth ?
Heaven that hears 1 1 you the clean truth,
if ye talk of trust 1 1 you this,
T me, was he like to thee ? '
Were I not woman, I could t a tale.
And mutter'd in himself, ' T her the charm !
0 t us — for we live apart —
Deck her with these ; t her, she shines me down :
T me, what drove thee from the Table Round,
T me, and what said each, and what the King ? '
1 need not t thee foolish words,—
Well, I will t thee : ' O Kin",
343
Hi 76
253
iv 95
96
108
111
116
323
342
427
„ Con. 34
Grandmother 26
N. Farmer, 0. S. 68
The Daisy 90
Minnie and Winnie 16
The Victim 48
60
Window, Letter 13
In Mem. vi 19
xiv 13
xl 25
„ xliv 16
lix 16
„ Ixxvii 10
„ Ixxxviii 3
4
„ xcvi 4
Con. 61
Maud / a; 44
xvi 33
„ xviii 82
xix 72
.. II iv 15
•w65
Com. of Arthur 95
171
254
269
339
359
Gareth and L. 156
171
251
732
1328
Marr. of Geraint 65
90
105
404
423
513
577
684
702
Geraint and E. 54
66
132
161
227
Balin and Balan 50
Merlin and V. 301
343
360
613
809
Lancelot and E. 284
1225
Holy Grail 28
710
855
858
Jl
w
TeU
715
Ten
JbU {continued) straight forward ? back again ? Which ?
t us quickly.' Pelleas and E. 68
Such as the wholesome mothers t their boys. .. 197
he that t's the tale Says that her ever- veering .. 492
' T thou the King and all his liars, Last Tournament 77
T's of a manhood ever less and lower ? .. 121
for he that Vs the tale Liken'd them, .. 226
Let me t thee now. „ 611
till her time To t you : ' Guinevere 143
nor would he t His vision ; .. 305
Is there none Will t the King I love him tho' so late ? 651
Myself must t him in that purer life, ., 653
When I began to love. How should 1 1 you ? Lover's Tale i 145
How should the broad and open flower t What sort
of bud it was, „ 151
life and love, And t me where I am ? .. 177
As was our childhood, so our infancy, They t me, „ 250
They t me we would not be alone, — ,. 252
nor t Of this our earliest, our closest-drawn, ., 277
If I should t you how I hoard in thought .. 288
To t him of the bliss he had with God— ,. 674
And none but you yourself shall t him of it, .. iv 111
Ah heavens ! Why need 1 1 you all ? — ,. 201
I'll t you the tale o' my life. First Quarrel 9
fur thou mun a' sights to t. North. Cobbler 1
an' I'll t tha why. „ 10
Good Sir Richard, t us now. The Revenge 26
(I did not t you — A widow with less guile Sisters {E. and E.) 181
Did I not < you they were twins ? — .. 257
nor can 1 1 One from the other, 276
nor care to t One from the other, . 277
can tha t ony harm on 'im lass ? — Village Wife 19
I be fear'd fur to t tha 'ow much — „ 47
but, Enmiie, you t it him plain, In the Child. Hosp. 57
who can t — Thou — England's England-loving
daughter — Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 14
who can t but the traitors had won ? Def. of Lucknow 66
They t me — weigh'd him down into the abysm — Columbus 137
I pray you t King Ferdinand who plays with me, .. 222
— but you will t the King, that I, 234
Half hid, they t me, now in flowing vines — Tiresias 144
will hide my face, I will t you all. The Wreck 12
You are curious. How shoidd It? Despair 3
In vain you t me ' Earth is fair ' Ancient Sage 169
thev t me that the world is hard, and harsh of mind, The Flight 101
An t thim in Hiven about Molly Magee Tomorrow 92
for owt I can t — Robby wur fust Spinster's S's. 41
who can t how all will end ? Locksley H., Sixty 103
t them ' old experience is a fool,' „ 131
Fur I wants to t tha o' Roa when we lived Owd Rod 19
I myself would t you all to-day. The Ring 124
Up, get up, and t him all, T him you were Ijdng ! Forlorn 55
T him now or never ! T him all before you die, „ 74
do you scorn me when you t me, 0 my lord, Happy 23
Bid him farewell for me, and t him — Hope ! Romney's R. 147
T my son — 0 let me lean my head upon your breast. „ 153
woman ruin'd the world, as God's own scriptures t, Charity 3
' My dear, I will t you before I go.' „ 36
only the Devil can t what he means. Riflemen form ! 25
But what may follow who can t ? The Wanderer 14
What is true at last will t : Poets and Critics 9
Tell'd (told) An Sally she t it about, North. Cobbler 81
I I ya, na moor o' that ! Spinster's S's. 93
Moother 'ed t ma to bring tha down, Owd Rod 50
as I ofiens 'ev t 'er mysen, „ 73
I < 'er ' Yeas I mun goa.' „ 98
ya t 'im to knaw his awn plaace Church-warden, etc. 29
Teller (See also Truth-teller) he felt the tale Less than the t : Enoch Arden 712
The told-of, and the t. Balin and Balan 543
TeDJn' an' she bean a t it me. N. Farmer, N. S. 10
an' t me not to be skeard, Owd Rod 85
Dldling (See also Tellin') Which t what it is to die In Mevi. xxxi 7
She blamed herself for t hearsay tales : Merlin and V. 951
Or Gareth t some prodigious tale Of knights, Gareth and L. 508
So she came in : — I am long in t it, Lover's Tale iv 302
Temper One equal t of heroic hearts,
Of t amorous, as the first of May,
We, conscious of what t you are built.
Whence drew you this steel t ?
Temperament But yet your mother's jealous t—
He has a solid base of t :
manfulness And pure nobility of t.
Temperate That I, who gaze with t eyes
but keep a t brain ;
Our loyal passion for our t kings ;
Temper'd and t with the tears Of angels To —
Tempest when the crisp slope waves After a t.
The t crackles on the leads,
A rushing t of the wrath of God
After a t woke upon a morn
Fixt like a beacon-tower above the waves Of t.
Like summer t came her tears —
while each ear was prick'd to attend A t,
So drench'd it is with t, to the sun,
whatever t's lour For ever silent ;
So may whatever t mars Mid-ocean,
And tracts of calm from t made,
And felt that t brooding round his heart,
and ever overhead Bellow'd the t.
Torn as a sail that leaves the rope is torn In t :
But after t, when the long wave broke
his trust that Heaven Will blow the t
Tempest-bufieted T-b, citadel-crown'd.
Ulysses 68
Princess i 2
„ i-y400
„ OT232
.. a 338
., w254
Marr. of Geraint 212
In Mem. cxii 2
Maud I iv 40
Ode on Well 165
-, With Pal. of Art 18
Supp. Confessions 127
Sir Galahad 53
Aylmer's Field 757
Liuretius 24
Princess iv 494
vi 15
281
vii 142
Ode on Well. 175
In Mem. xvii 13
„ cxii 14
Geraint and E. 11
Merlin and V. 957
Holy Grail 213
Guinevere 290
To the Queen ii 47
Will 9
Tempestuous The strong < treble throbb'd and palpitated ; Vision of Sin 2S
Freedom 38
Supp. Confessions 53
D. of F. Women 114
You ask me, why, etc. 28
Aylmer's Field 794
Boddicea 53
Lover's Tale i 339
685
To Virgil 2
Demeter and P. 72
The Ring 219
Akbar's D., Inscrip. 1
Unfurnish'd brows, t tongues —
Temple (building) Her t and her place of birth,
The crowds, the t's, waver'd, and the shore ;
The palms and t's of the South,
swore Not by the t but the gold,
Lo the palaces and the t,
For there the T stood.
I was led mute Into her t like a sacrifice ;
Ilion's lofty t's robed in fire,
and heard The murmur of their t's chanting me.
Shrined him within the t of her heart,
0 God in every t I see people that see thee.
But it is thou whom I search from t to t.
A t, neither Pagod, Mosque, nor Church, Akbar's Dream 178
Temple (part of head) Cluster'd about his t's like a God's. (Enone 60
Flush'd in her t's and her eyes, Palace of Art 170
brows that shook and throbb'd From t unto t. Lover's Tale Hi 8
but how my t's bum ! The Flight 73
Temple-bar High over roaring T-b, Will Water. 69
Temple-cave T-c of thine own self, Ancient Sage 32
Temple-eaten college-times Or T-e terms, Aylmer's Field 105
Temple-gates And drops at Glory's t-g. You might have won 34
Tempt length of ribbon and a ring To t the babe, Enoch Arden 751
t The Trojan, while his neat-herds were abroad ; Lucretius 87
Temptation Who feel no touch of my t, Romney's R. 121
Tempted I well believe she t them and fail'd, Merlin and V. 819
Tempter I was the t, Mother,
Ten (adj.) minstrel sings Before them of the t years'
war in Troy, Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 77
that thrice t years. Thrice multiplied by superhuman
pangs, St. S. Stylites 10
1 grew Twice t long weary weary years to this, „ 90
T thousand broken lights and shapes, Will Water. 59
Had cast upon its crusty side The gloom of t Decembers. „ 104
so t years Since Enoch left his hearth Enoch Arde^i 359
That he who left you t long years ago „ 404
And that was t years back, or more, if I don't forget Grandmother 75
T thousand-fold had grown, flash'd the fierce shield, Gareth and L. 1030
this cut is fresh ; That t years back ; Lancelot and E. 22
t years before, The heathen caught and reft him
of his tongue, _ 272
' t times nay ! This is not love : .. 948
But t slow mornings past, and on the eleventh ,. 1133
T year sin', and wa 'greed as well as a fiddle i'
tune : North. Cobbler 12
Fire from t thousand at once of the rebels Def. of Lucknow 22
The Wreck 11
Ten 716
Tent
Ten (adj.) (continued) And once for t long weeks I tried
Your table of Pythagoras, To E. Fitzgerald 14
T long sweet summer days uj)on deck, The Wreck 64
T long days of summer and sin — „ 77
' T long sweet summer days ' of fever, „ 147
An' Shamus O'Shea that has now t childer. Tomorrow 85
Let us hush this cry of ' Forward ' till t thousand
years have gone. Locksley H., Sixty 78
Old Virgil who would write ( lines. Poets and their B. 2
Ull be fun' upo' four short legs t times fur one upo' two. Owd Rod 16
T year sin— Naay — ^naay ! .,20
Too laate — but it's all ower now — hall hower — an' < year sin ; „ 116
For t thousand years Old and new ?
But after t slow weeks her fix'd intent,
Ten (s) Warless ? when her t's are thousands,
Tenant Careless t's they !
As well as with his t, Jocky Dawes.
thither flock'd at noon His t's, wife and child.
Be t's of a single breast,
Tenanted We bought the farm we t before.
Tend Live happy : t thy flowers ;
Were you sick, ourself Would t upon you.
That t's her bristled grunters in the sludge : '
we will t on him Like one of these ;
And were half fool'd to let you t our son,
That you may t upon him with the prince.'
And t s upon bed and bower,
' 0 I that wasted time to t upon her,
and t him curiously Like a king's heir.
Henceforward too, the Powers that t the soul,
Tendance nor from her t tum'd Into the world without ; Gardener's D. 144
And pensive t in the all-weary noons. Princess vii 102
breatn Of her sweet t hovering over him, Geraint and E. 926
Tended t by Pure vestal thoughts in the translucent fane Isabel 3
tend thy flowers ; be < by My blessing ! Love and Duty 87
But Psyche t Florian : with her oft, Melissa came ; Princess vii 55
And t her like a nurse.
That still had / on him from his birth,
And Enid t on him there ;
and every day she t him,
women who t the hospital bed.
Tender Like the t amber round,
For while the t service made thee weep.
And oft I heard the t dove
I roU'd among the t flowers :
And t curving lines of creamy spray ;
Sleep sweetly, t heart, in peace :
cushions of whose touch may press The maiden's t
palm.
for a t voice will cry.
But the t grace of a day that is dead
On a sudden a low breath Of t air made tremble
The t pink five-beaded baby-soles,
nor from t hearts, And those who sorrow'd o'er a
vanish'd race,
Where she, who kept a t Christian hope.
Made havock among those t cells,
roll thy t arms Round him,
And dark and true and t is the North.
Delaying as the t ash delays To clothe herself.
Like t things that being caught feign death,
there the t orphan hands Felt at my heart,
t ministries Of female hands and hospitality.
Steps with a t foot, light as on air.
Or thro' the parted silks the t face Peep'd,
Not perfect, nay, but full of t wants,
Mighty Seaman, t and true,
Rolling on their purple couches in their t effeminacy
That breathe a thousand t vows,
hopes and light regrets that come Make April of her
t eyes ; „ xl 8
What time his t palm is prest „ xlv 2
whose light-blue eyes Are t over drowning flies, „ xcvi 3
The t blossom flutter down, Unloved, „ ci 3
With t gloom the roof, the wall ; „ Con. 118
Tender (continued) Perhaps the smile and t tone Came out
J
The Ring 19
„ 345
Locksley H., Sixty 171
Deserted House 4
Walk, to the Mail 28
Princess, Pro. 4
In Mem. xvi 3
The Brook 222
Love and Duty 87
Princess Hi 321
v21
vi 124
274
315
Maud I xiv 4
Geraint and E. 38
Last Tournament 90
Guinevere 65
Maud I xix 76
Gareth and L. 179
Geraint and E. 924
Lancelot and E. 850
Def. of Lucknow 87
Margaret 19
The Bridesmaid 10
Miller's D. 41
Fatima 11
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 62
To ./. S. 69
Talking Oak 180
Locksley Hall 87
Break, break, etc. 15
The Brook 202
Aylmer's Field 186
843
Sea Dreams 41
Lucretius 22
. " . ^2
Princess iv 98
106
v 108
435
m72
vii 60
319
Ode on Well. 134
Boddicea 62
hi Mem. xx 2
of her pitying womanhood, Maud I vi
And dream of her beauty with t dread, .. xvi
For, Maud, so t and true, ., xix 85
My own dove with the t eye ? ,, // iv 46
Seem I not as t to him As any mother ? Gareth and L. 1283
And seeing them so t and so close, Marr. of Geraint 22
To stoop and kiss the t little thumb, 395
' Mother, a maiden is a t thing, ,. 510
and felt Her low firm voice and t government. Geraint and E. 194
At this the t soimd of his own voice 348
And Enid could not say one t word, ,. 746
I think ye hardly know the t rhyme Merlin and V. 383
O Master, do ye love my t rhyme ? ' .. 399
So t was her voice, so fair her face, 401
Then Merlin to his own heart, loathing, said :
' O true and t ! „ 791
Yet with all ease, so t was the work : Lancelot and E. 442
Utter'd a little t dolorous cry. .. 817
' 0 sweet father, t and true. Deny me not,' 1110
This t rhyme, and evermore the doubt, Pelleas and E. 410
Who see your ( grace and stateliness. Guinevere 190
and all The careful burthen of our t years Lover's Tale i 222
Frail Life was startled from the t love „ 616
' Never the heart among women,' he said, ' more t and
true.' The Wreck 96
Struck hard at the t heart of the mother. Despair 74
Sun of dawn That brightens thro' the Mother's
t eyes, Prin. Beatrice 4
Woman to her inmost heart, and woman to her
t feet, Locksley H., Sixty 50
Legend or true ? so t should be true ! The Ring 224
Solved in the t blushes of the peach ; Prog, of Spring 34
slowly moving again to a melody Yearningly t. Merlin and the G. 91
So princely, t, truthful, reverent, pure — D. of the Duke of C. 4
Tenderer surely with a love Far t than my Queen's. Lancelot and E. 1395
Tenderest The fancy's t eddy wreathe. In Mem. xlix 6
such a grace Of t courtesy, Geraint and E. 862
T of Roman poets nineteen-hundred years ago, Frater Ave, etc. 6
in wife and woman I found The t Christ-like creature Charity 32
Tenderest-hearted Vivien, like the t-h maid Merlin and V. 377
Tenderest-touching by t-t terms, To sleek her ruffled peace ,. 898
Tenderly ia what limits, and how t ; Ded. of Idylls 20
Tender-natured Gone thy t-n mother, wearying to
be left alone, Locksley H., Sixty 57
Tenderness A moment came the t of tears. The form, the form 9
decent not to fail In offices of t, Ulysses 41
His bashfulness and t at war, Enoch Arden 289
So gracious was her tact and t : Princess i 24
That lute and flute fantastic t, ., iv 129
No saint — -inexorable — no t — i .. v 515
The t, not yours, that could not kill, .. vi 186
T touch by touch, and last, ,. vii 114
that might express All-comprehensive t, In Mem. Ixxxv 47
A face of t might be feign'd, Maud I vi 52
Thro' that great t for Guinevere, Marr. of Geraint 30
There brake a sudden-beaming t Of manners Lancelot and E. 328
His t of manner, and chaste awe, Pelleas and E. 110
offices Of watchful care and trembling t. Lover's Tale i 226
Tender-pencil'd The t-p shadow play. In Mem. xlix 12
Tender-spirited The low-voiced, t-s Lionel, Lover's Tale i 655
Tending t her rough lord, tho' all vmask'd, Geraint and E. 405
Tendon And scirrhous roots and t's. Amphion 64
TenerifEe great flame-banner borne by T, Columbus 69
Tenfold-complicated abyss Of t-c change. In Mem. xcHi 12
Ten-hundred-fold Pain heap'd i-h-f to this, were still
Less burthen, by t-h-f, St. S. Stylites 23
Tennis Quoit, t, ball — no games ? Princess Hi 215
Tenor My blood an even t kept, In Mem. Ixxxv 17
Tent Among the t's I paused and sung. Two Voices 125
they raised A < of satin, elaborately wrought Princess Hi 348
No bigger than a glow-worm shone the t ,, iv 25
They bore her back into the t : „ 193
blazon'd lions o'er the imperial t „ v9
He show'd a t A stone-shot oS : „ 53
Tent
717
Thebes
Tent (continued) lie in the t's with coarse mankind,
You shall not lie in the t's but here,
on to the t's : take up the Prince.'
And at thy name the Tartar t's are stirr'd ;
and loud With sport and song, in booth and t,
and pitch'd His t's beside the forest.
And show'd an empty t allotted her,
And past to Enid's t ; and thither came
Heard in his t the moanings of the King :
the heavens a hide, a t Spread over earth,
Tented The t winter-field was broken up
Ten-thousand The bearded Victor of t-t hymns.
Ten-times And make, as t-t worthier to be thine
Tentiug-pin Tore my pavilion from the t-p,
Term (academic) save for college-times Or Temple-
eaten ^5,
caught the blossom of the flying t's,
Term (of time) To sleep thro' t's of mighty wars,
days Were dipt by horror from his t of life.
To point the t of hxmian strife,
Pass we then A < of eighteen years.
Climg closer to us for a longer t
five-fold thy t Of years, I lay ;
I spy nor t nor bound.
Term (word, etc.) (See also Counter-term) Not
master'd by some modem t ;
mixt with inmost t's Of art and science :
Heap'd on her t's of disgrace,
may merit well Your t of overstrain'd.
Then thrice essay'd, by tenderest-touching t's,
after that vile t of yours, I find with grief !
Tnrace The t ranged along the Northern front,
I paced the t, till the Bear had wheel'd
The moonlight touching o'er a t
I used to walk This T — ^morbid.
Rose, on this t fifty years ago,
which on our t here Glows in the blue
Terrace-lawn On every slanting t-l.
Terrible fear'd To send abroad a shrill and t cry,
recollect the dreams that come Just ere the waking
0 fair and strong and t !
Princess vi 69
94
279
W. to Marie Alex. 12
In Mem. xcviii 28
Com. of Arthur 58
Geraint and E. 885
922
Pass, of Arthur 8
Columbus 47
Aylmer's Field 110
Princess Hi 352
Balin and Balan 68
Holy Grail 747
Aylmer's Field 105
Princess, Pro. 164
Bay- Dm., L' Envoi 9
Aylmer's Field 603
In Mem. I 14
Lover's Tale i 287
Columbus 197
Tiresias 33
MechanofhiXus 20
Love thou thy land 30
Princess ii 446
Maud II i 14
Merlin and V. 535
898
921
Princess Hi 118
iv 212
The Daisy 83
The Eing 168
Hoses on the T. 1
7
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 10
Enoch Arden 768
t ! Lucretius 36
Princess vi 163
Love and Nature, these are two more t And stronger. „ 165
sang the t prophetesses, Boadicea 37
Spurr'd with their t war-cry ; Geraint and E. 170
T pity, if one so beautiful Prove, Lover's Tale iv 338
down the t ridge Plunged in the last fierce
chaise
These are Astronomy and (Jeology, t Muses !
None but the t Peele remaining
Tecritorial See Lord-territorial
Territory You lying close upon his t,
they wasted all the flourishing t,
And Arthur gave him back his t,
his princedom lay Close on the borders of a I,
loves to know When men of mark are in his <
Led from the t of false Limours
Endow you with broad land and t
Estate them with large land and t
Tleiror He that only rules by t
Brook'd not the expectant t of her heart,
wreck, Flights, t's, sudden rescues.
But must, to make the t of thee more.
Then those that did not blink the t,
still she look'd, and still the t grew
leech forsake the dying bed for < of his life ?
When from the t's of Nature a people
Test (s) I come to the t, a tiny poem
Test (verb) defying change To t his worth ;
Well, we shall t thee farther ;
Tested to return When others had been t)
And heard it ring as true as t gold.'
Testify Yes, as the dead we weep for t —
For I must live to t by fire.
Testimony To this I call my friends in t,
to the basement of the tower For t ;
Sisters (E. and E.) 63
Parnassus 16
Kafiolani 28
Princess iv 403
Boadicea 54
Gareth and L. 78
Marr. of Geraint 34
Geraint and E. 229
437
Lancelot and E. 957
1322
The Captain 1
Enoch Arden 493
Aylmer's Field 99
Gareth and L. 1389
1402
Marr. of Geraint 615
Happy 98
Kapiotani 1
Hendecasyllabics 3
In Mem. xcv 28
Merlin and V. 94
Aylmer's Field 219
Last Tournament 284
Aylmer's Field 747
Sir J. Oldcastle 206
Lancelot and E. 1299
Guinevere 105
Test-question That was their main t-q — Sir J. Oldcastle 155
Tether'd How can ye keep me t to you — Gareth and L. 115
should be T to these dead pillars of the Church — Sir J. Oldcastle 121
Teuton T or Celt, or whatever we be, W. to Alexandra 32
Slav, T, Kelt, I count them all My friends Epilogue 18
Tew (a worry) (See also Tued) at fust she wur all in a t, North. Cobbler 53
Text Suddenly put her finger on the t, Enoch Arden 497
Not sowing nedgorow t's and passing by, Aylmer's Field 171
And being used to find her pastor t's, „ 606
Christian hope. Haunting a holy t. Sea Dreams 42
the maiden Aimt Took this fair day for t, Princess, Pro. 108
And the parson made it his t that week. Grandmother 29
A square of t that looks a little blot. The t no
larger than the limbs of fleas ; And every
square of t an awful charm,
And none can read the t, not even I ;
Thack (thatch) an' thou runn'd oop o' the t ;
Thames (See also Tamesa) Came crowing over T.
Thtmk Light on a broken word to t him with.
I fear'd To meet a cold ' We t you,
T Him who isled us here, and roughly set
t God that I keep my eyes.
And t the Lord I am King Arthur's fool.
I I the saints, I am not great.
I would t him, the other is dead,
' t God that I hevn't naw cauf o' my oan.'
We t thee with our voice,
I I him. I am happy, happy.
Raise me. 1 1 you.
Thanked God be < ! ' said Alice the nurse.
Assumed that she had t him, adding.
Thankful Not t that his troubles are no more.
Thanks statue-like, In act to render t.
A thousand t for what I learn
I do forgive him ! ' ' T, my love,'
Their debt of t to her who first had dared
But ' T,' she answer'd ' Go :
you have our t for all :
You saved our life : we owe you bitter t :
To lighten this great clog of t,
with an eye that swum in t ;
Render t to the Giver, (repeat)
For this, for all, we weep our t to thee !
T, for the fiend best knows whether
' T, venerable friend,' replied Geraint ;
maybe, shall have leam'd to lisp you t.'
to which She answer'd, ' T, my lord ; '
my t. For these have broken up my melancholy.'
I bid the stranger welcome. T at last !
O no more t than might a goat have given
your feet before her own ? And yet no t :
next For t it seems till now neglected,
T, but you work against your own desire ;
And love, and boundless t —
an' am'd naw t fur 'er paains.
my poor t ! I am but an alien and a Genovese.
Yield thee full t for thy full courtesy
t to the Lord that I never not listen'd to noan !
would yield full t to you For your rich gift,
But t to the Blessed Saints that I came
Thatch (See also Thack) Weeded and worn the ancient t
And the cock hath sung beneath the t
doves That sun their milky bosoms on the t.
It sees itself from t to base
and drive Innocent cattle under t,
Thatch'd They built, and t with leaves of palm.
Thaw (verb) T this male nature to some touch
And t's the cold, and fills The flower
Thaw (s) an' the daale was all of a t,
Moother 'ed bean sa soak'd wi' the t
Theatre stately t's Bench'd crescent-wise.
Thebes in thy virtue lies The saving of our T ;
crying ' T, Thy T shall fall and perish,
will murmur thee To thine own T, while T thro' thee
shall stand
Merlin and V. 671
681
Spinster's S's. 38
Will Water. 140
Enoch Arden 347
Princess iv 328
Ode on Well. 154
Grandmother 106
Last Tournament 320
Guinevere 199
Despair 70
Spinster's S's. 116
To W. C. Macready 4
Happy 107
Romney s B. 60
Lady Clare 17
Geraint and E. 646
LxLcretius 143
Gardener's D. 162
Talking Oak 203
Sea Dreams 317
Princess ii 141
357
iv 528
531
vi 126
210
Ode on Well. 44, 47
Open. Inter. Exhib. 9
Maud I i75
Marr. of Geraint 303
822
Geraint and E. 264
Merlin and V. 266
270
278
285
308
Lancelot and E. 1096
Lover's Tale iv 382
Village Wife 12
Columbus 242
To Victor Hugo 13
Spinster's S's. 8
To Ulysses 33
Bandit's Death 40
Mariana 7
The Owl i 10
Princess ii 103
Requiescat 3
Locksley H., Sixty 96
Enoch Arden 559
Princess vi 306
Early Spring 45
Owd Roa 39
,, 113
Princess ii 369
Tiresias 110
115
141
Thebes
718
Thing
Thebes (cmitinued) Folded her lion paws, and look'd to T. Tiresias 149
Theft and you, will you call it a t ? — Rizpah 52
The t were death or madness to the thief. The Ring 204
Theme Seem but the t of writers, Edwin Morris 48
Ah, let the rusty t alone ! Will Water. 177
warming with her t She f ulmined out her scorn Princess ii 132
Whereat we glanced from t to t. In Mem. Ixxxix 33
Then (See also Thin) Break into ' T's ' and ' Whens ' Ancient Sage 104
Theodolind castle Of Queen T, where we slept ; The Daisy 80
Theory forged a thousand theories of the rocks, Edwin Morris 18
as a rogue in grain Veneer'd with sanctimonious t. Princess, Pro. 117
They fed her theories, in and out of place „ 1 129
pass With all fair theories only made to gild ., ii 233
my mother still Affirms your Psyche thieved her
theories, .. Hi 92
For she was cramm'd with theories out of books, „ Con. 35
Thermopylse these in our T shall stand, Third of Feb. 47
Thesis The t which thy words intend — Two Voices 338
Thessalian Or that T growth, Talking Oak 292
Thew nor ever had I seen Such t's of men : Princess v 256
Nor lose the wrestling t's that throw the world ; „ vii 282
I felt the t's of Anakim, In Mem. ciii 31
Thick (See also Jewel-thick) faults were t as diist In vacant
chambers, To the Queen 18
t with white bells the clover-hill swells Sea- Fairies 14
chestnuts near, that hung In masses t with milky
cones. Miller's D. 56
t as Autumn rains Flash in the pools CEnone 205
my voice was t with sighs As in a dream. B. of F. Women 109
with a grosser film made t These heavy, horny eyes. St. S. Stylites 200
We gain'd the mother-city t with towers, Princess i 112
snowy shoulders, t as herded ewes, „ iv 479
T rosaries of scented thorn, Arabian Nights 106
And thro' t veils to apprehend Two Voices 296
from beneath Whose t mysterious boughs in the dark morn CEnone 213
when she strikes thro' the t blood Of cattle, Lucretius 98
Climb thy t noon, disastrous day ; In Mem. Ixxii 26
So t with lowings of the herds, „ xcix 3
t By ashen roots the violets blow. „ cxv 3
Then fell t rain, plume droopt and mantle clung, Last Tournament 213
Thro' the t night I hear the trumpet blow : Guinevere 569
T with wet woods, and many a beast therein, Com. of Arthur 21
so quick and t The lightnings here and there Holy Grail 493
Thickend (adj.) (See also Grape-thicken'd) Love's
white star Beam'd thro' the t cedar in the dusk. Gardener's D. 166
Thicken'd (verb) A clamour t, mixt with inmost terms Princess ii 446
Thickening See Slowly-thickening
Thicker T the drizzle grew, deeper the gloom ; Enoch Arden 679
Now thinner, and now t, like the flakes Lucretius 166
and mingled with the haze And made it t ; Com. of Arthur 436
t down tlie front With jewels than the sward Geraint and E. 689
T than drops from thunder. Holy Grail 348
Then spoke King Arthur, drawing t breath : M. d' Arthur 148
my heart beat stronger And t, Maud I viii 9
Then spoke King Arthur, drawing t breath : Pass, of Arthur 316
Thickest When t dark did trance the sky, Mariana 18
Among the t and bore down a Prince, Princess v 518
Thicket (see also Elder-thicket, Myrrh-thicket) Athwart the
t lone : Claribel 10
Or the dry t's, I could meet with her CEnone 223
No branchy t shelter yields ; Sir Galahad 58
some hid and sought In the orange t's : Princess ii 460
round us all the t rang To many a flute In Mem. xxiii 23
and the t closed Behind her. Merlin and V. 973
Across my garden ! and the t stirs. Prog, of Spring 53
Thicketed See Roogh-thicketed
Thick-fleeced livelong bleat Of the t-f sheep Ode to Memory 66
Thick-jewell'd T-j shone the saddle-leather, L. of Shalott iii 20
Thick-leaved oak-tree sigheth, T-l, ambrosial, Claribel 5
Beyond the t-l platans of the vale. Princess iii 175
Thick-moted When the t-m sunbeam lay Mariana 78
Thick-set from thy topmost head The t-s hazel dies ; Will Water. 234
Thick-twined cave to cave thro' the t-t vine — Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 95
Thief therefore turning softly like a t, Enoch Arden 771
storming a liill-fort of thieves He got it ; Aylmer's Field 225
Thief (continued) But thieves from o'er the wall Stole the seed The Flower 11
Kill the foul t, and wreak me for my son.' Gareth and L. 363
wood is nigh as full of thieves as leaves : .. 789
for my wont hath ever been To catch my t, ,, 822
To curse this hedgerow t, the sparrow-hawk : Marr. of Geraint 309
Who now no more a vassal to the t, Geraint and E. 753
Thieves, bandits, leavings of confusion, Last Tournament 95
To be hang'd for a t — and then put away — Rizpah 36
Sanctuary granted To bandit, t, assassin — Sir J. Oldcastle 113
theft were death or madness to the t. The Ring 204
Thieved my mother still Affirms your Psyche t her theories. Princess iii 92
Thigh (See also Mid-thigh-deep) flush'd Ganymede, his
rosy t Half-buried Palace of Art 121
it is written that my race Hew'd Ammon, hip and t, D. of F. Women 238
St. S. Stylites 41
Lancelot and E. 664
Pelleas and E. 459
N. Farmer, 0. S. 35
Lotos- Eaters 34
n. of the O. Year 46
Princess iv 7
Maud I xix 20
Gareth and L. 31
Lover's Tale i 421
In the Child. Hosp. 39
Prog, of Spring 3
Balin and Baton 214
Death of CEnone 21
) Aylmer's Field 76
Last Tournament 465
And both my t's are rotted with the dew ;
Ramp in the field, he smote his t, and mock'd :
Then crush'd the saddle with his t's,
Thimbleby Noaks or T — toaner 'ed shot 'um
Thin (adj.) if his fellow spake, His voice was t,
His face is growing sharp and t.
O hark, 0 hear ! how t and clear.
When it slowly grew so t,
Tho' Modred biting his t lips was mute,
the moon, Half-melted into t blue air,
and her t hands crost on her breast —
Wavers on her / stem the snowdrop cold
Hath ever and anon a note so t
T as the batlike shriUings of the Dead
Thin (verb) or would seem to t her in a day,
waters break Whitening for half a league, and t
themselves.
Thin (then) An' where 'ud the poor man, t, cut his bit o'
turf for the fire ?
Thing All t's will change (repeat)
Yet all t's must die.
For all t's must die. (repeat)
All t's must die.
All t's were born.
that Hesperus all t's bringeth.
And trust and hope till t's should cease,
and t's that seem. And t's that be.
Teach me the nothingness of t's.
all the dry pied t's that be In the hueless mosses
All t's that are forked, and horned
From all t's outward you have won A tearful
But good t's have not kept aloof.
High t's were spoken there,
' Lord, how long shall these t's be ?
Will learn new t's when I am not.'
There is no other t express'd But long disquiet
* These t's are wrapt in doubt and dread,
Not simple as a < that dies.
many t's perplex, With motions, checks.
He may not do the t he would.
She spoke at large of many t's,
all t's in order stored, A haunt of ancient Peace
' O all t's fair to sate my various eyes !
But all these t's have ceased to be,
A land where all t's always seem'd the same !
While all t's else have rest from weariness ?
All t's have rest : why should we toil alone,
We only toil, who are the first of t's,
the roof and crown of t's ?
All t's are taken from us.
All t's have rest, and ripen toward the grave
And our great deeds, as half-forgotten t's.
to start in pain. Resolved on noble t's.
How beautiful a t it was to die For God
A man may speak the t he will ;
keep a t, its use will come.
A little t may harm a wounded man.
This is a shameful t for men to lie.
and do the 1 1 bad thee, watch.
Such a precious t, one worthy note.
Tonwrrow 65
Nothing will Die 15, 38
All Things will Die 8
13, 49
14
47
Leonine Eleg. 13
Swpp. Confessions 31
173
A Character 4
The Mermaid 48
53
More t's are wrought by prayer Than this world dreams of.
race, Margaret 11
My life is full, etc. 2
Alexander 12
Poland 9
Two Voices 63
248
266
288
299
303
Miller's D. 155
Palace of Art 87
193
May Queen, Con. 48
Lotos- Eaters 24
.. C. S. 14
15
16
24
46
51
78
D. of F. Women 42
231
You ask me, why, etc. 8
The Epic 42
M. d' Arthur 42
78
80
89
247
1
Thing
719
Thing
Thing (continued) ' Come With all good t's, and war
shall be no more.'
We spoke of other fs ; we coursed about
and thought Hard t's of Dora.
And all the t's that had been.
(For they had pack'd the t among the beds,)
You could not light upon a sweeter t :
betwixt shame and pride, New t's and old,
should have seen him wince As from a venomous t :
spoke I knomng not the t's that were,
slow sweet hours that bring us all t's good. The
slow sad hours that bring us all t's ill. And all
good t's from evil,
' We sleep and wake and sleep, but all t's move ;
liuman t's returning on themselves Move onward,
something more, A bringer of new t's ;
Thou seest all t's, thou wilt see my grave :
easy t's to understand —
sorrow's crown of sorrow is remembering happier t's,
but earnest of the t's that they shall do :
all t's here are out of joint :
to have loved so slight a t.
Howsoever these t's be, a long farewell
Here all t's in their place remain,
All precious t's, discover'd late.
Well — were it not a pleasant t To fall asleep
nor take Half-views of men and t's.
K old t's, there are new ;
I look at all t's as they are,
Like all good t's on earth !
I hold it good, good t's should pass :
thou shalt from all t's suck Marrow
She will order all t's duly,
As looks a father on the t's Of his dead son,
Callest thou that / a leg ?
Tomohrit, Athos, all t's fair,
came a change, as all t's human change,
tum'd The current of his talk to graver t's
he set his hand To do the t he will'd,
Annie, there is a < upon my mind,
and all these t's fell on her Sharp as reproach,
he himself Moved haunting people, t's and places,
Because t's seen are mightier than t's heard.
Almost to all t's could he turn his hand.
Nor could he understand how money breeds. Thought
it a dead t ; yet himself could make The t that is not
as the t that is.
And how it was the t his daughter wish'd,
Re-risen in Katie's eyes, and all t's well.
Took joyful note of all t's joyful.
And neither loved nor liked the t he heard.
T's in an Aylmer deem'd impossible,
The t's belonging to thy peace and ours !
is it a light t That I, their guest, their host,
all t's work together for the good Of those ' —
Another and another frame of t's For ever :
Which t's appear the work of mighty Gods,
universal culture for the crowd, And all t's
made it death For any male t but to peep at us.'
And they that know such t's —
not to answer. Madam, all those hard t's
And two dear t's are one of double worth.
And still she rail'd against the state of t's.
One mind in all t's :
For all t's were and were not.
Your Highness might have seem'd the t you say.'
for all t's serve their time Toward that great
year
To harm the t that trusts him.
And all t's were and were not.
Sweet is it to have done the t one ought.
Like tender t's that being caught feign death,
As he that does the t they dare not do,
I myself, What know I of these t's ?
That all t's grew more tragic and more strange ;
M. d' Arthur, Ep. 28
Gardener's D. 222
Dora 58
„ 107
Walk, to the Mail 44
52
61
: „ 72
Edwin Morris 89
Love and Duty 51
Golden Year 22
25
Ulysses 28
Tithonus 73
Locksley Hall 55
76
118
133
148
189
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 53
Arrival 1
L' Envoi 3
Will Water. 52
58
71
202
205
213
L. of Burleigh 39
The Letters 23
Vision of Sin 89
To E. L. 5
Enoch Arden 101
203
295
399
487
604
766
813
The Brook 7
140
169
Aylmer' s Field 67
250
305
740
789
Sea Breams 158
Liuiretivs 42
102
Princess, Pro. 110
152
il44
a 345
419
„ iii 84
91
189
202
iv 73
248
567
■w67
108
160
284
m23
Thing {continued) May these t's be ! ' Sighing she spoke
* I fear They will not.'
trust in all t's high Comes easy to him.
Too comic for the solemn t's they are,
If aught of t's that here befall Touch a spirit among
t's divine,
let all good t's await Him who cares not to be great.
There might be left some record of the t's we said.
They knew the precious t's they had to guard :
Welcome her, all t's youthful and sweet.
And all t's look'd half-dead,
and look'd the t that he meant ;
laughing at t's that have long gone by,
o' use to saay the t's that a do.
On them and theirs and all t's here :
Of their dead selves to higher t's.
And shall I take a < so blind,
like a guilty 1 1 creep At earliest morning
For now so strange do these t's seem.
And ask a thousand t's of home ;
Behold, ye speak an idle t :
hardly worth my while to choose Of t's all mortal.
To keep so sweet a t alive : '
And all he said of t's divine,
Shall count new t's as dear as old :
May some dim touch of earthly t's
And other than the t's I touch.'
For love reflects the t beloved ;
How should he love a < so low ? '
So little done, such t's to be.
In fitting aptest words to t's.
But over all t's brooding slept
whether trust in t's above Be dimm'd of sorrow,
Where all t's round me breathed of him.
these t's pass, and I shall prove A meeting somewhere
The glory of the sum of t's
And he, he knows a thousand t's.
talk and treat Of all t's ev'n as he were by ;
Best seem'd the t he was, and join'd
Submitting all t's to desire.
But I was born to other t's.
Thou watchest all t's ever dim And dimmer,
I cannot think the t farewell.
That sees the course of human t's.
Love for the silent t that had made false haste
cannot I be Like t's of the season gay,
A wounded t with a rancorous cry.
This broad-brimm'd hawker of holy t's,
Her mother has been a t complete,
I know it the one bright t to save
Had given her word to a < so low ?
Beat, happy stars, timing with t's below,
I have cursed him even to lifeless t's)
For a shell, or a flower, little t's
Comfort her, comfort her, all t's good.
But speak to her all t's holy and high,
another, a lord of all t's, praying
But is ever the one t silent here.
I come to be grateful at last for a little t :
in a weary world my one t bright ;
his chamberlain, to whom He trusted all t's,
wrote All t's and whatsoever Merlin did
She answer'd, ' These be secret t's,'
and ask'd him if these t's were truth —
King In whom high God hath breathed a secret t.
Princess vii 296
329
„ Con. 67
Ode on Well. 138
198
Third of Feb. 18
41
W. to Alexandra 8
Grandmother 34
45
92
N. Farmer, 0. S. 6
Lit. Squabbles 12
In Mem. i 4
iii 13
vii 7
xiii 15
xiv 12
xxi 21
xxxiv 11
XXXV 7
xxxvii 18
xl2S
xliv 11
xlv 8
Hi 2
IxlQ
Ixxiii 2
Ixaro 6
Ixxviii 7
Ixxxv 9
32
98
Ixxxviii 11
xcvii 32
cvii 20
cxi 13
cxiv 8
cxx 12
cxxiS
cxxiii 12
cxxviii 4
Maud / i 58
iv3
a; 34
41
xiii 35
xvi 20
27
xviii 81
xix 15
// a 64
75
78
1)32
IllviS
17
Com. of Arthur 146
157
318
398
501
Gareth and L. 23
65
and thence swoop Down upon all t's base,
had the t I spake of been Mere gold —
New t's and old co-twisted, as if Time Were
nothing, „ 226
and flash'd as those Dull-coated t's, „ 686
And deems it carrion of some woodland t, „ 748
these t's he told the King. Marr. of Geraint 161
And may you light on all t's that you love, „ 226
His dwarf, a vicious under-shapen t, „ 412
' Mother, a maiden is a tender t, „ 510
Thing
720
Think
Thing (continued) ' These two t's shalt thou do, or else
thou diest. Man. of Geraini 580
These two t's shalt thou do, or thou shalt die.' And
Edym answer'd, ' These t's will I do,
In silver tissue talking t's of state ;
But evermore it seem'd an easier t
Tho' men may bicker with the t's they love,
What t soever ye may hear, or see,
Half ridden off with by the t he rode,
Each hurling down a heap of t's that rang
I never yet beheld a < so pale.
I will do the 1 1 have not done,
or what had been those gracious t's,
As of a wild t taken in the trap,
Took, as in rival heat, to holy t's ;
I suffer from the t's before me,
he defileth heavenly t's With earthly uses ' —
' The fire of Heaven is lord of all t's good,
My mind involved yourself the nearest t
unashamed, On all t's all day long,
But when the t was blazed about the court,
To t's with every sense as false and foul
The seeming-injured simple-hearted t
In truth, but one t now — better have died
One flash, that, missing all t's else,
speaking in the silence, full Of noble t's,
Lavaine gaped upon him As on a ( miraculous,
For if I could believe the t's you say
in half disdain At love, life, all t's.
We moulder — as to t's without I mean- —
But who first saw the holy t to-day ? '
glanced and shot Only to holy t's ;
So now the Holy T is here again Among us.
But since I did not see the Holy T,
all these t's at once Fell into dust,
the Lord of all t's made Himself Naked of glory
thy sister taught me first to see. This Holy T,
And this high Quest as at a simple t :
' Gawain, and blinder imto holy t's
strong man-breasted t's stood from the sea,
in the cellars merry bloated t's Shoulder'd the spigot.
A little t may harm a wounded man ;
This is a shameful t for men to lie.
and do the 1 1 bade thee, watch.
Surely a precious t, one worthy note,
More t's are wrought by prayer Than this world
dreams of.
Moved from the cloud of unforgotten t's,
Once or twice she told me (For I remember all t's)
And saw the motion of all other t's ;
Why were we one in all t's,
till the t's familiar to her youth Had made
I never yet beheld a t so strange.
Of all t's upon earth the dearest to me.'
That which of all t's is the dearest to me,
I that hold them both Dearest of all t's —
that ever such t's should be !
God's free air, and hope of better t's.
wroth at t's of old — No fault of mine,
greatness and touching on all t's great,
some have gleams or so they say Of more than
mortal t's.'
in the sidelong eyes a gleam of all t's ill —
He ! where is some sharp-pointed t ?
there's rason in all t's, yer Honour,
That a man be a durty t an' a trouble
an' saayin' ondecent t's,
Bringer home of all good t's.
All good t's may move in Hesper,
the Heavenly Power Makes all t's new, (repeat)
Expecting all t's in an hour —
Faih t's are slow to fade away,
586
663
Geraint and E. 108
325
415
460
594
615
625
636
723
Balin and Balan 100
284
421
452
Merlin and V. 300
666
743
797
902
918
932
Lancelot and E. 339
453
1097
1239
Holy Grail 39
67
76
124
281
388
447
470
668
870
Guinevere 246
267
Pass, of Arthur 210
246
248
257
415
Lover's Tale i 48
346
574
a 26
iv 95
303
319
348
Sisters (E. and E.) 289
In the Child. Hosp. 10
Sir J. Oldcastle 10
21
The Wreck 50
May Queen, N.
An' smoakin' an' thinkin' o' t's —
A thousand t's are hidden still
This l, that t is the rage,
Ancient Sage 215
The Flight 31
72
Tomorrow 6
Spinster's S's. 50
90
Locksley H., Sixty 185
186
Early Spring 2, 44
Freedom 39
To Prof. Jehb 1
Owd Rod 34
Mechanophilus 23
Poets and Critics 1
Think T my belief would stronger grow ! Supp. Confessions IS
1 1 that pride hath now no place Nor sojourn in me. „ 120
I walk, I dare not t of thee, Oriana 93
' T you this mould of hopes and fears Two Voices 28
Thou canst not t, but thou wilt weep. „ 51
When she would t, where'er she tum'd Palace of Art 225
As I came up the valley whom t ye should I see. May Queen 13
" ----- ^,^ ^^
40
Con. 11
41
M. d' Arthur 17
Gardener's D. 99
Dora 29
,,119
Edwin Morris 77
82
St. S. Stylites 92
126
Love and Duty 32
Locksley Hall 51
73
Day- Dm., Ep. 4
Will Water 119
L. of Burleigh 4
Vision of Sin 77
141
Enoch Arden 318
411
417
851
Aylmer's Field 267
Sea Dreams 129
Princess, Pro. 143
il25
158
• a 196
226
334
408
Hi 235
II 152
401
429
m200
277
329
vii 145
Ode Inter. Exhib. 32
Grandmother 17
N. Farmer, N. S. 7
12, 38
14
Spiteful Letter 7
In Mem., Pro. 11
xvi 15
XX 19
xxii 19
xcvii 24
c20
cxix 8
cxx 2
cxxiii 12
Con. 126
Mavd I X 26
„ xiii 10
„ XV 1
„ xvi 12
xviii 10
„ II a 60
„ « 45
86
Com. of Arthur 250
Gareth and L. 471
Marr. of Geraint 90
low i' the mould and t no more of me.
often with you when you t I'm far away.
I i it can't be long before I find release ;
So now 1 1 my time is near. I trust it is.
I I that we Shall never more,
T you they sing Like poets,
Consider, William : take a month to t,
And, now I t, he shall not have the boy,
Edwin, do not t yourself alone Of all men happy.
I have, 1 1, — Heaven knows — as much within ;
I I that I have borne as much as this —
Ha ! ha ! They t that I am somewhat,
let me t 'tis well for thee and me —
t not they are glazed with wine.
Can 1 1 of her as dead,
' What wonder, if he t's me fair ? '
I < he came like Ganymede,
And 1 1 thou lov'st me well.'
I remember, when 1 1,
I < we know the hue Of that cap upon her brows.
I I your kindness breaks me down ;
I do < They love me as a father :
T upon it : For I am well-to-do —
Itl have not three days more to live ;
t — For people talk'd — that it was wholly wise
To t that in our often-ransack'd world
I I they should not wear our rusty gowns,
1 1 the year in which our olives fail'd.
I confess with right) you t me bound In some sort,
' who could / The softer Adams of your Academe,
I I no more of deadly lurks therein,
Nor t I bear that heart within my breast,
What t you of it, Florian ?
You grant me license : might I use it ? < ;
I almost t That idiot legend credible,
for since you t me touch'd In honour —
indeed 1 1 Our chiefest comfort is the little child
to 1 1 might be something to thee.
And t that you might mix his draught with death,
— verily It to win.'
' If you be, what 1 1 you, some sweet dream,
0 ye, the wise who t, the wise who reign,
you t I am hard and cold ;
Time to t on it then ; for thou'll
an' we boath on us t's tha an ass. (repeat)
She's a beauty thou t's —
I I not much of yours or of mine,
He t's he was not made to die ;
And stunn'd me from my power to t
To see the vacant chair, and t ' How good ! how kind !
And t, that somewhere in the waste
He looks so cold : she t's him kind.
1 1 once more he seems to die.
And t of early days and thee,
1 1 we are not wholly brain,
1 cannot t the thing farewell.
Result in man, be bom and t.
Bound for the Hall, and 1 1 for a bride.
And six feet two, as I <, he stands ;
Shall I not take care of all that 1 1,
T I may hold dominion sweet,
shook my heart to t she comes once more ;
t that it well Might drown all life in the eye, —
Not let any man t for the public good,
I could even weep to / of it ;
Yea, but ye — t ye this king —
T ye this fellow will poison the King's dish ?
And tell him what 1 1 and what they say.
I
Think
721
Thorpe
I Tivak (continued) And yet not dare to tell him what I <, Marr. of Geraint 105
£ Ye t the rustic cackle of your bourg „ 276
' Moves him to t what kind of bird it is That sings „ 331
To t or say, ' There is the nightingale ; ' „ 342
Let never maiden t, however fair, „ 721
let me t Silence is wisdom : Merlin and V. 252
O, if you t this wickedness in me, „ 339
but t or not, By Heaven that hears I tell you „ 342
because 1 1, However wise, ye hardly know me yet.' „ 354
I < ye hardly know the tender rhyme „ 383
O Vivien, For you, methinks you t you love me well ; „ 483
However well ye t ye love me now ,, 516
Spleen-born, I t, and proofless. ,, 702
Farewell ; t gently of me, for I fear „ 926
there, 1 1, So ye will learn the courtesies of the
court, Lancelot and E. 698
sure 1 1 this fruit is hung too high „ 774
ye 1 1 show myself Too dark a prophet : Holy Grail 321
t<j ^ of Modred's dusty fall, Guinevere 55
As I could /, sweet lady, yours would be ,, 352
Not ev'n in inmost thought to t again „ 374
but rather t How sad it were for Arthur, „ 495
t not, tho' thou wouldst not love thy lord, „ 508
Yet t not that I come to urge thy crimes, ., 532
what hope ? 1 1 there was a hope, „ 630
I I that we Shall never more, Pass, of Arthur 185
(They told her somewhat rashly as 1 1) Lover's Tale iv 98
Do you 1 1 was scared by the bones ? Rizpah 55
Do you t that I care for my soul „ 78
1 1 that you mean to be kind, „ 81
t what saailors a' seean an' a' doon ; North. Cobbler 4
as 'appy as 'art could t, „ 15
yet she t's She sees you when she hears. Sisters (E. and E.) 192
1 1 this gross hard-seeming world „ 229
It I likewise love your Edith most. „ 293
t he was one of those who would break In the Child. Hosp. 8
bullet broke thro' the brain that could t for the
rest ; Def. of Imcknow 20
I beant sich a fool as ye t's ; Spinster's S's. 18
I t's as I'd like fur to hev Owd Rod 12
I t's least waays as I wasn't afeard ; „ 86
thaw I didn't haafe t as 'e'd 'ear, „ 91
tho' I t I hated him less. Bandit's Death 17
Thinketh then t, ' I have found A new land, Palace of Art 283
Thinkin' An' smoakin' an' t' o' things — Owd Rod 34
Thinking (See also Half -thinking, Thinkin') for three hours
he sobb'd o'er William's child T of William. Dora 168
Still downward t ' dead or dead to me ! ' Enoch Arden 689
Enoch t ' after I am gone, „ 834
t that her clear germander eye Droopt Sea Dreams 4
And t of the days that are no more. Princess iv 43
She flung it from her, t : „ Con. 32
I t, ' here to-day,' Or ' here to-morrow In Mem. vi 23
And t ' this will please him best,' „ 31
Looking, t of all I have lost ; Maud II ii 46
t as he rode, ' Her father said That there between Com. of Arthur 78
t, that if ever yet was wife True to her lord, Marr. of Geraint 46
Geraint, now t that he heard The noble hart at bay, „ 232
He t that he read her meaning there, Laiicelot and E. 86
< ■ Is it Lancelot who has come Despite the wound „ 565
Thinn'd T, or would seem to thin her in a day, Aylmer's Field 76
councils t, And armies waned, for magnet-like she
drew Merlin and V. 572
Thiimer Then her cheek was pale and t Locksley Hall 21
they fly Now t, and now thicker, like the flakes Lucretius 166
And t, clearer, farther going ! Princess iv 8
Our voices were t and fainter V. of Maeldune 22
Thinnest Slow-dropping veils of t lawn, did go ; Lotos-Eaters 11
Which is t? thme or mine ? Vision of Sin 90
Xhild And set in Heaven's t story. Will Water. 70
t child was sickly-bom and grew Yet sicklier, Enoch Arden 261
Then the t night after this, „ 907
There stands the t fool of their allegory.' Gareth and L. 1085
Then the t brother shouted o'er the bridge, „ 1096
And on the t day will again be here, Marr. of Geraint 222
Third (continued) But when the t day from the hunting-
morn Marr. of Geraint b^l
So bent he seem'd on going the t day, ,, 604
Bent as he seem'd on going this t day, „ 625
hope The t night hence will bring thee news of gold.' Pelleas and E. 357
t night brought a moon With promise of large light „ 393
Thou t great Canning, stand among our best Epit. on Stratford 1
I brought you to that chamber on your t September
birthday The Ring 129
Third-rate Somfe t-r isle half-lost among her seas ? To the Queen ii 25
Thirst In hungers and in t's, fevers and cold, St. S. Stylites 12
her t she slakes Where the bloody conduit runs. Vision of Sin 143
and when I thought my t Would slay me, Holy Grail 379
' And on I rode, and greater was my t. „ 401
there the hermit slaked my burning t, „ 461
with t in the middle-day heat. V. of Maeldune 50
Thirsted 1 1 for the brooks, the showers : Fatima 10
Thirsteth He that t, come and drink ! Sir J. Oldcastle 134
Thirsting only t For the right. Ode on Well. 203
and I was left alone. And t, Holy Grail 390
Thirsty O to watch the t plants Imbibing ! Princess ii 422
And I was t even unto death ; Holy Grail 377
Thirty (See also Thutty) ' Will t seasons render plain Two Voices 82
But t moons, one honeymoon to that, Edwin Morris 29
larded with the steam Of t thousand dinners. Will Water. 224
By t hills I hurry down, The Brook 27
I walk'd with one I loved two and t years ago. V. of Caut&retz 4
The two and t years were a mist that rolls away ; „ 6
I well remember that red night When t ricks. All
flaming, To Mary Boyle 36
Thistle I could not move a t ; Amphion 66
Let there be t's, there are grapes ; Will Water. 57
stubborn t bursting Into glossy purples, Ode on Well. 206
many a prickly star Of sprouted t Marr. of Geraint 314
Figs out of t's, silk from bristles. Last Tournament 356
flower. That shook beneath them, as the t shakes Guinevere 254
the wool of a t a-flyin' an' seeadin' Spinster's S's. 79
Are figs of t's ? or grapes of thorns ? Riflemen form / 10
Thistledown soft winds. Laden with t Lover's Tale ii 13
Thomas Howard (See also Howard) Then sware Lord
T H : The Revenge 4
Thor To T and Odin lifted a hand : The Victim 8
Thorn (See also Thum) my sin was as a < Among
the t's Supp. Confessions 5
Thick rosaries of scented t, Arabian Nights 106
I know That all about the t will blow Two Voices 59
as a < Turns from the sea ; Audley Court 54
like me, with scourges and with t's ; St. S. Stylites 180
T's, ivies, woodbine, mistletoes, Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 43
we reach'd A mountain, like a wall of burs and t's ; Sea Dreams 119
A rosebud set with little wilful t's. Princess, Pro. 154
Shadow and shine is life, little Annie, flower and t. Grandmother 60
I have heard of t's and briers. Window, Marr. Morn. 20
Over the t's and briers, „ 21
The path we came by, t and flower. In Mem. xlvi 2
I took the t's to bind my brows, „ Ixix 7
The fool that wears a crown of t's : „ 12
bristles all the brakes and t's „ cvii 9
evermore Seem'd catching at a rootless t, Geraint and E. 378
T's of the crown and shivers of the cross, Balin and Balan 111
where the winter t Blossoms at Christmas, Holy Grail 52
in a land of sand and t's, (repeat) „ 376, 390
And wearying in a land of sand and t's. „ 420
I cared not for the t's ; the t's were there. Pelleas and E. 404
fall on its own t's — if this be true — Lover's Tale i 273
Its knotted t's thro' my unpaining brows, „ 620
roses that sprang without leaf or a t from the bush ; V. of Maeldune 44
Are figs of thistles ? or grapes of t's ? Riflemen form ! 10
Thomless thy great Forefathers of the t garden, MavA I xviii 27
Thorny Are wither'd in the < close, Day-Dm., Arrival 11
I found a wood with t boughs : In Mem. Ixix 6
Thorough-edged t-e intellect to part Error from crime ; Isabel 14
Thoroughfare In shadowy t's of thought ; In Mem. Ixx 8
He left the barren-beaten t, Lancelot and E. 161
Thorpe But he, by farmstead, t and spire, WUl Water. 137
2 z
The Brook 29
The Victim 3
Holy Grail 547
Thorpe
Iborpe (contimLed) By twenty thorps, a little town,
Then t and byre arose in fire,
Down to the little t that lies so close,
Ibonght (s) {See also Thowt) He hath no t of
coming woes ; Suvf. Confessions 47
tended by Pure vestal t's in the translucent fane " Isabel 4
Small t was there of life's distress ; Ode to Memory 37
The viewless arrows of his t's were headed The Poet 11
Life and T have gone away Side by side, Deserted House 1
for Life and T Here no longer dwell ; „ 17
mortal dower Of pensive t and aspect pale, Margaret 6
who can tell The last wild t of Chatelet, 37
Y^V^fl^?. ^^^ ^^u'^ \;. ■ u Eleanore 5
And flattering thv childish t 23
T and motion mingle, Mingle ever. " gg
I seem to see T folded over t, smiling asleep, "' 84
T seems to come and go In thy large eyes, ' 96
Our t gave answer each to each. Sonnet to - — 10
And men, thro' novel spheres of t Two Voices 61
Asks what thou lackest, t resign'd, 98
Fruitful of further t and deed, " 144
but overtakes Far t with music that it makes : ," 438
mind was brought To anchor by one gloomy t ; [, 459
I least should breathe a t of pain. Miller's D. 26
With blessings beyond hope or t, 237
so much the t of power Flatter'd his spirit ; (Enone 136
for fiery t's Do shape themselves within me, 246
auid divided quite The kingdom of her t. Palace of "ah 228
As when a great t strikes along the brain, D. of F. Women 43
by down-lapsing t Stream'd onward, „ 49
' It comforts me in this one t to dwell, ]] 233
deep Gold-mines of t to lift the hidden ore " 274
strength of some diffusive t Hath time and
space Ppjj ggj^ ^g ^^ g^^ 25
When single t is civil crime, 29
Thro' future tune by power of t. Love thZ thy land 4
Wherever T hath wedded Fact. 52
Counting the dewy pebbles, fix'd in < ; M. d' Arthur 84
His own t drove him, like a goad. 285
all kinds of t That verged upon them. Gardener's D. 70
Ihese birds have joyful t's. 99
Lightly he laugh'd, as one that read my t, .' 206
A t would fill my eyes with happy dew ; 297
or should have, but for a t or two, Edwin Morris 83
(And heedf idly I sifted all my t) St. S. StylUes 56
fehould mjr Shadow cross thy t's Love and Duty 88
tho the times, when some new t can bud. Golden Year 27
Beyond the utmost boxmd of human t. Ulysses 32
Spring a young man's fancy lightly turns to t's of love. Locksley Hall 20
touch him with thy lighter t. '' 54
t's of men are widen'd with the process of the suns. " 138
in the railway, in the t's that shake mankind. " 166
And would you have the 1 1 had, Day-Dm., Pro. 13
And t and time be bom again, ,, sleep P 50
From deep t himself he rouses, L 'of Burleigh 21
Whited t and cleanljr life As the priest. Vision of SinUQ
utter The t s that arise in me. Break, break, etc. 4
feo the t Haunted and harass'd him, Enoch Arden 719
There speech and t and nature fail'd a little, 792
Her all of t and bearing hardly more Aylmer's Field 29
worst t she has Is whiter even than her pretty hand : 362
Is It so true that second t's are best ? Sea ' Dreams 65
feweet ts would swarm as bees about their queen. Princess i 40
A t flash d thro' me which I clothed in act, I95
whose t's enrich the blood of the world.' " a 281
And all her t's as fair within her eyes, " ^^^ 326
You need not set your t's in rubric thus "lo'r ' W
And she broke out interpreting my fs : J 'a j
And live, perforce, from < to «, ,l ^'^ ^^^ 28
tost on t s that changed from hue to hue, " 'tr 210
to those t's that wait On you, their centre : " 443
not a t, a touch, But pure as lines of green " „ 195
but other t's than Peace Burnt in us " o7k
Now could you share your t ; " ,„• 9^
A shining furrow, as thy <'« in me. " ^.^i 285
722
Thought
Thought (S) (continued) and always t in t. Purpose in purpose, Princess vii 304
Beyond all t into the Heaven of Heavens. Con 115
And the t of a man is higher. yoice and the P 32
And my f s are as quick and as quick, Window, On the Hill 12
And with the t her colour burns ; '7,1 Mem. m 34
An awful t, a life removed, ^.^^- 20
And T leapt out to wed with T Ere T could wed
Itself with Speech ; • ■ • , .
Nor other t her mind admits " Trlii%
All subtle t, all curious fears, " q
More strong than all poetic t; " r r )^» 1 9
The lightest wave of t shall lisp, "' "IL 5
and moved Upon the topmost froth of t. " m 4
There flutters up a happy t, " ;_^ j
In shadowy thoroughfares of < ; "' 1^- q
A grief as deep as life or t, " ;„„_ 7
And fix my t's on all the glow " ixxxiv 3
Leaving great legacies of t, " 35
Whose life, whose t's were little worth, "' i^xim 30
I find not yet one lonely t " ^^ 23
Should be the man whose t would hold " xdv 3
About empyreal heights of t, " -.^ 30
sway'd In vassal tides that follow'd t. " cxii 16
And m my t's with scarce a sigh " rri-r ^ i
I slip the ^'5 of life and death ; " ^^xii 16
And every t breaks out a rose. " 20
shade of passing t, the wealth Of words and wit, " Con 102
wrong Done but in t to your beauty, Maud I'iii 6
And letting a dangerous t run wild ^{j. 52
And noble t be freer under the sun, " ///^i^- 43
Another t was mine ; Marr. of Geraint 793
urant me pardon for my t's : §25
They hated her who took no t of them, GerairU a,id E. 639
and heard in t Their lavish comment Merlin and V. 150
bo grated down and filed away with t, 623
rathe she rose half-cheated in the t Lancelot "mid E. 340
And every eviH I had thought of old. Holy Grail 372
remembering Her t when first she came, Gwinevere 182
what is true repentance but in <— Not ev'n in inmost t
to think .3-0
grew half-guilty in her t's again, "" 403
But teach high t, and amiable words "' 432
wrath which forced my t's on that fierce law, 537
Counting the dewy pebbles, fixed in t ; Pass, of Adhar 252
His own t drove him like a goad. 353
Leapt like a passing t across her eyes ; Lover^\ Tale i 70
And length of days, and immortality Of t, 2O6
One sustenance, which, still as t grew large. Still larger
moulding all the house of t, 240
At t of which my whole soul languishes " 267
Still to believe it — 'tis so sweet a t, " 275
tell you how I hoard in t The faded rhymes " 988
A graceful t of hers Grav'n on my fancy ! " 357
Absorbing all the incense of sweet t's " 469
Oh friend, t's deep and heavy as these " 688
The brightness of a burning t, " 743
The spirit seem'd to flag from < to <, " j/52
Alway the inaudible invisible i, " 202
burst through the cloud of t Keen, irrepressible " 264 I
2". of tlie breezes of May blowing Bef. of'Luchww 83 i
That Lenten fare makes Lenten t, To E. Fitzgerald 31
tliin minds who creep from t to t, a ncient Sage 103 :
Do-well will follow t, ^ 273
An evil t may soil thy children's blood ; " 275
To < 5 that lift the soul of men. To Master of B. 14
m^J^M I '^ M fe*'''*T^''^PI!i^^'xx Mechamphilus 11
Thought (verb) {See also Thowt) He t to quell the
stubborn hearts Btionavarte 1
q.^'^/'^'a-^^ life is sick of single sleep : The BridesZiid 13
She t My spirit is here alone, Mariana in the S. 47
1 cast me down, nor t of you, Afif!M-'<: D 6R
My mother t. What ails the boy ? ^
And ' by that lamp,' 1 1, ' she sits ! ' " 124
she 1 1 might have look'd a little higher ; " 233
II
Thought
723
she t, ' Aiid who shall <?aze
;ht (verb) (cmitinued)
upon My palace
You t to break a country heart For pastime.
He t of that sharp look, mother,
He 1 1 was a ghost, mother,
I T to pass away before, and yet alive I am ;
lying broad awake 1 1 of you and Effie dear ;
I I that it was fancy, and I listen'd in my bed,
lt,l take it for a sign.
He t that nothing new was said.
And often t ' I'll make them man and wife.'
had been always with her in the house, T not of Dora.
She t, ' It cannot be : my uncle's mind will change ! '
and t Hard things of Dora,
he t himself A mark for all,
God only thro' his boimty hath t fit,
toil'd, and wrought, and t with me —
' Shy she was, and 1 1 her cold ; T her proud, and
fled over the sea ;
and Itl would have spoken,
nightingale t, ' I have sung many songs,
' I < not of it : but — I know not why —
Some t that PhUip did but trifle with her ;
' He is gone,' she < ' he is happy,
Philip t he knew :
He t it must have gone ;
he t ' After the LokI has call'd me she shall know,
And t to bear it with me to my grave ;
how money breeds, T it a dead thing ;
blues were sure of it, he t :
Some one, he t, had slander'd Leolin to him.
' O pray God that he hold up ' she t
But I that t myself long-suffering, meek,
1 1 the motion of the boundless deep
' What a world,' I <, ' To live in ! '
0 then to ask her of my shares, 1 1 ;
(1 1 1 could have died to save it)
1 1 that all the blood by Sylla shed
For these 1 1 my dream would show to me,
1 i I lived securely as yourselves —
A pleasant game, she t :
But my good father t a king a king ;
they had but been, she t. As children ;
' We scarcely t in our own hall to hear
once or twice 1 1 to roar,
and t He scarce would prosper.
One anatomic' ' Nay, we t of that,'
and my foot Was to you : but 1 1 again :
1 1, That surely she will speak ;
we t her half-possess'd, She struck such warbling fury
1 1 her half-right talking of her wrongs ;
1 1 on all the wrathful king had said,
1 1, can this be he From Gama's dwarfish lions ?
Woman, whom we t woman even now,
first time, too, that ever 1 1 of death.
T on all her evil tyrannies.
And something written, something t ;
Has never t that ' this is I : '
You t my heart too far diseased ;
I look'd on these and t of thee
For all we t and loved and did,
and t he would rise and speak And rave
t, is it pride, and mused and sigh'd
I « as I stood, if a hand, as white
Now 1 1 that she cared for me. Now 1 1 she was kind
and t like a fool of the sleep of death.
And none of us < of a something beyond,
Yet Itl saw her stand,
and t It is his mother's hair.
For 1 1 the dead had peace.
When 1 1 that a war would arise in defence
but t To sift his doubtings to the last,
For then I surely t he would be king.
And t, ' For this half-shadow of a lie
and t the King Scom'd me and mine ;
Palace of Art 41
C. V. de Vere 3
May Queen 15
17
Con. 1
29
33
38
The Epic 30
Dora 4
„ 8
., 46
„ 57
Walk, to the Mail 72
St. S. Stylites 186
Ulysses 46
Edward Gray 13
Vision of Sin 55
Poet's Song 13
Enoch Arden 396
475
502
520
The Brook 7
Aylmer's Field 252
350
733
753
Sea Dreams 91
94
115
134
Lucretius 47
51
,, 210
Princess, Pro. 194
i25
136
a 53
423
„ Hi 75
307
iv 327
343
585
tj285
473
505
vi 273
Grandiiiother 61
Boddicea 80
In Mem. vi 20
„ xlv 4
„ Ixvi 1
xcvii 6
„ Con. 134
Maud I i59
„ via 12
., xiv 17
25
38
„ xix 47
., II i 38
a 69
•»15
„ /77 m 19
Com. of Arthur 310
358
Gareth and L. 323
1165
Thought (verb) {continued)
Geraint,
Thought
And day by day she t to tell
Marr. of Geraint 65
80
115
343
367
417
610
t within herself, Was ever man so grandly made
And then he t, ' In spite of all my care.
So fared it with Geraint, who t and said,
In a moment t Geraint, ' Here by God's rood
and t to find Arms in your town,
And t it never yet had look'd so mean.
while she t ' They will not see me,' „ 666
likewise t perhaps, That service done so graciously „ 789
1 1, That could I someway prove such force „ 804
A stranger meeting them had surely t Geraint and E. 34
Then t again, ' If there be such in me, ,, 52
Held his head high, and t himself a knight, „ 242
1 1, but that your father came between, ,, 314
Then t she heard the wild Earl at the door, „ 381
he t ' was it for him she wept In Devon ? ' ,. 397
And since she t, ' He had not dared to do it, „ 720
You t me sleeping, but I heard you say, 741
' I will be gentle ' he i ' And passing gentle ' Balin and Balan 370
and t ' I have shamed thee so that now thou
shamest me, „ 430
1 1 the great tower would crash down on both — ,, 515
heard and t ' The scream of that Wood-devil „ 547
1 1 that he was gentle, being great : Merlin and V. 871
and she t That all was nature, Lancelot and E. 329
But t to do while he might yet endure, „ 495
Yea, twenty times 1 1 him Lancelot — „ 535
for she f ' If I be loved, these are my festal robes, „ 908
the brothers heard, and t With shuddering, „ 1021
dwelt the father on her face, and t ' Is this Elaine ? ' „ 1030
t That now the Holy Grail would come again ; Holy Grail 91
1 1 She might have risen and floated „ 99
t ' It is not Arthur's use To hunt by moonlight ; ' „ 110
and t Of all my late-shown prowess in the lists, „ 361
And every evil thought I had t of old, „ 372
and when 1 1 my thirst Would slay me, „ 379
but t ' The sun is rising,' „ 407
But when I < he meant To crush me, „ 415
Pelleas gazing t, ' Is Guinevere herself so beautiful ? ' Pelleas and E. 69
she t That peradventure he will fight for me,
' O happy world,' t Pelleas, ' all, meseems,
' These be the ways of ladies,' Pelleas t,
t, Why have I push'd him from me ?
' Ay,' t Gawain, ' and you be fair enow :
and t, ' I will go back, and slay them
and drew the sword, and t, ' What !
Modred t, ' The time is hard at hand.'
until himself had t He loved her also,
whereon he t — ' What, if she hate me now ?
t she heard them moan : And in herself she moan'd
she t ' He spies a field of death ;
then she t, With what a hate the people and the King
Then t the Queen within herself again,
t the Queen, ' Lo ! they have set her on,
glanced at him, t him cold, High, self-contain'd,
1 1 1 could not breathe in that fine air
I, being simple, t to work His will,
Or t he saw, the speck that bare the King,
I f it was an adder's fold.
Sometimes 1 1 Camilla was no more,
I I Four bells instead of one began to ring,
knew the meaning of the whisper now, T that he
knew it.
then starting, t His dreams had come again,
w' m I saw her (and 1 1 him crazed,
he t — there were other lads —
' t of him out at sea,
lOw and then ; Laziness, vague love-
longings,
eyes Upon me when she 1 1 did not see —
1 1 ' What, will she never set her sister free ?
and we t her at rest. Quietly sleeping —
but 1 1 that it never would pass.
Some t it heresy, but that would not hold.
117
136
209
306
388
443
447
610
Last Tournament 401
495
Guinevere 130
134
156
224
308
405
645
Pass, of Arthur 22
465
Lover's Tale i 691
ii 69
Hi 19
iv 4A
77
163
First Quarrel 38
89
Sisters {E. and E.) 127
166
217
In the Child. Hosp. 40
61
Columbus 46
Columbus 57
87
The Wreck 84
124
Despair 11
„ 105
Tomorrow 81
The Ring 140
Happy 64
June Bracken, etc. 4
St. Telemachus 24
The Dreamer 16
ffo^y 6Vai7 455
Thought
Thought (verb) (continued) And / to turn my face from Spain
I woke, and t — death — I shall die —
and Itot the child for a moment,
then All on a sudden 1 1,
I remember I <, as we past,
God of Love and of Hell together — they cannot be t
Och, Molly, we t, machree, '
Vext, that you t my Mother came to me ?
A lie by which he t he could subdue
I I to myself I would offer this book
once, he t, a shape with wings Came sweeping
Yet he t he answer'd her wail with a song — "
Thoughted -S'ee Subtle-thoughted
Thoughtest t of tliy prowess and tliy sins ?
Thousand (adj.) (See also Eighty-Thousand, Ten-thousand)
A t claims to reverence closed To the Queen 27
And flashes off a t ways, Rosalind 23
And If you kiss'd her feet a t years. The form, the form 13
deluge from at lulls Flung leagues of roaring foam // / were loved 12
Miller's D. 72
Fatima 17
(Enone 197
„ 231
May Queen, Con. 16
D. of F. Women 203
Of old sat Freedom 18
Edwin Morris 18
126
St. S. Stylites 111
Talking Oak 203
Godiva 11
Will Water.. 59
224
A Farewell 13
Enoch Arden 95
724
Aylmer's Field 382
602
Princess, Pro. 57
i21
64
724
Threadbare
That went and came a t times.
A t little shafts of flame Were shiver'd
My love hath told me so a t times.
Hath he not sworn his love a t times,
A t times I blest him, as he knelt beside my bed
a t times I would be born and die.
The wisdom of a t years Is in them.
Who forged a t theories of the rocks,
in one month They wedded her to sixty t pounds,
Bow down one t and two hundred times,
A t thanks for what I learn
The woman of a t summers back.
Ten t broken lights and shapes,
larded with the steam Of thirty t dinners.
A t suns will stream on thee, A t moons will quiver •
face, Rough-redden'd with a t winter gales, '
There did a t memories roll upon him.
These partridge-breeders of a t years,
many t days Were dipt by horror
There moved the multitude, a t heads :
My mother pitying made a t prayers ;
he sware That he would send a hundred t men,
A t hearts lie fallow in these halls. And round these
halls a t baby loves
May beat admission in a t years,
a race Of giants living, each, a t years.
With many t matters left to do,
Six t years of fear have made you that
a t rings of Spring In every bole,
A t arms and rushes to the Sun.
.spill Their t wreaths of dangling water-smoke,
Uplift a t voices full and sweet,
A t shadowy-pencill'd valleys And snowy dells
'A t voices go To North, South, East, and AVest ;
To touch thy t years of gloom :
And ask a t things of home ;
That breathe a t tender vows,
She cries, ' A t types are gone :
Or when a t moons shall wane
Upon the t waves of wheat.
And he, he knows a t things.
a t wants Gnarr at the heels of men.
Ring out the t wars of old. Ring in the t years of peace
To whom a t memories call.
With t shocks that come and go,
electric force, that keeps A t pulses dancing.
Before a < peering littlenesses Ded.of Idylls 26
War with a < battles, ana shaking a hundred thrones. Maud I i 48
ii 400
Hi 155
269
ii;458
507
t)237
vi37
vii 213
Ode Inter. Exhib. 1
The Daisy 67
Voice and the P. 13
In Mem. ii 12
xiv 12
t. XX 2
Ivi 3
Ixxvii 8
,, xd 11
„ xcvii 32
xcviii 16
cvi 27
cxi 10
cxiii 17
cxxv 16
thro tops of many t pines A gloomy-gladed
A t pips eat up your sparrow-hawk !
and sent a t men To till the wastes,
He saw two cities in a t boats
Fare you well A t times !— a t times farewell !
Gawam, who bad a t farewells to me,
A t piers ran into the great Sea.
up I climb'd a t steps With pain :
Gareth and L. 796
Marr. of Geraint 274
Geraint and E. 941
Merlin and V. 561
Lancelot and E. 696
1056
Holy Grail 503
835
Lover's Tale i 550
Sir J. Oldcastle 63
195
Columbus 136
Thousand (adj.) (continued) Had drawn herself From
many t years,
a t lives To save his soul.
A t marks are set upon my head,
a single piece Weigh'd nigh four t Castillanos
hundred who heard it would rush on a t lances
\ rr i 1 , . . „. . V. of Maeldune 24
A T summers ere the time of Christ Ancient Sane 1
Let us hush this cry of ' Forward ' till ten t years ^
have gone Locksley H., Sixty 78
Timur bmlt his ghastly tower of eighty « human skulls, 82
tT 1 fl "''"'^ ™^^ l"^* ^°'' ^ 1 1^^^' Dead Prophet 59
Trade flying over a t seas with her spice Vattne^^ VK
For ten t years Old and new ? ThVvHn la
They made a t honey moons of one ? ^ 22
that sees A t squares of corn and meadow, " 149
And from the t squares, one silent voice " 153
And eighty < Christian faces watch Man murder man. St. Telemachus 55
press of a t cities is prized for it smells of the beast, The Dawn 14
In a hundred, a t winters ? 04
Thn„i!,H^'Tw^^l'^'if" -i^F >. • u. Mecham>fhilus23
Thousand (s) Who had mildew'd m their t's, Aylmer's held 383
There are <'s now Such women. Princess Pro 127
many t's that if they be bold enough, Def of Lucknow 40
when her tens are <'s, and her ^'5 millions, Lockslev H Siriu -[T^
Thousand-fold Ten t-f had grown, flash'd the fierce ^ ^ ' ^
shield, Gareth and L. 1030
seems to me A t-f more great and wonderful Geraint and E. 914
ThoJ rthi;thf? r'L^" n«f «.™"«t.be a ^/Less noble, Guinevere 338
rhOWt (thought) (s) —I mver giv it a <— N Farmer N S 2^
ThowJ (thought) (verb) I < a 'ad summut to saay, N. f7vZ' 0 S 19
An It a, said whot a owt to 'a said ' ' ' 20
An'?f'flV/^"^M?>!^^yT^^P/ ^^orth. Cobbler 68
An 1 1 twur the will 0^ the Lord, yuiage Wife 11
1 1 It wur Charlie's ghoast 1' the derk, eo
thaw soom 'ud 'a < ma plaain, Svinster'\ S'-, 1ft
But Robby, I t 0' tha all the while Spinster s 6 s. lb
An' I t shall I chaiinge my staate ? "44
Tha t tha would marry ma, did tha ? " 74
1 1 to mysen ' thank God that I hevn't naw caiif " lift
/ /f ^h!''«f ^" f'^ ""^"^ *™^' 'f^ ^^ ?«^"' Owd Rod 43
« It tHe btaate was a gawm' to let m furriners' wheat, 45
An I < as e'd goan clean-^vud, " gi
It it was Roaver a-tuggin' " aa
An' I « 'at I kick'd 'im agean, " an
t she was nobbut a-rilin' ma then. '" 74
ThrifhnrTtoH«!f '^ "'''^' ^T"^ ''^^^^ T^> *' Church-warden, etc. 18
iSSZ ^ T^l^ "T' ' -i^u' l"" *^ ^^^^ °^ "1^ ' ^'n Tomorrow 50
?Hf ?Sr«rI™^'' T^'""' ''''f' *^' u^^"""" «i Freedom, Vastness 10
Thrall (thraldom) To save from shame and t : Sir Galahad 16
Loosed from their simple t they had flow'd abroad, Lover's Tale i 703
And free the Holy Sepulchre from t. Columbvi 104
And save the Holy Sepulchre from i. l^olumbus 104
^"""^J') , ^^* ""* "^y tO'ipe be a t to my eye, Maud" I xvi 32
The t in person may be free in soul, Gareth and L. 165
then wilt thou become A t to his enchantments 269
And when the t's had talk among themselves, ' "" 491
Or when the t's had sport among themselves, " 516
So for a month he wrought among the t's ; " 525
from out of kitchen came The t's in throng, " 695
T's to j'our work again, " biq
I smote upon the naked skull A t of mine in open
T?^„ T li 4 i-j j.1. i • 1 , Balin and Balan 56
For I that did that violence to thy t, «!
being knighted till he smote the t, " 155
once he saw the < His passion half had gauntleted " 219
ThraJI (verb) she send her delegate to t These fightings Pelleas'and E. 336
Thrall'd my husband's brother had my son T in his
'vh^Jf^^it' V , . ., ^ . ., ,. Gareth and L. 358
Thraw d (threw) an' ya the fish 1' 'is f aace,- Churchwarden, etc. 30
Thread Draws different t's, and late and soon Two Voices 179
He plays with t's, he beats his chair in Mem Ixvi 13
Ran down the silken t to ki.ss each other Merlin and V. 455
Th^IT^ }y ^ ''^%' "^"^ ''"'^''°.". '" '^^ ^^^ Holy Grail 153
Threadbare theme of writers, and indeed Worn t. Edwin Morris 49
Threaded
Threaded (adj.) (See also Crimson-threaded) from the
bastion'd walls Like t spiders, one by one, we dropt,
725
Threshold
Princess i 108
Shall shake its t tears in the wind no more. Maud III vi 28
Threaded (verb) he t The secretest walks of fame : The Poet 9
Or t some Socratic dream ; In Mem. Ixxxix 36
Threading led T the soldier-city, Princess v 7
Threat Puppet to a father's t, Locksley Hall 42
But scared with Vs of jail and halter Aylmer's Field 520
Our Boanerges with his t's of doom, Sea Dreams 251
I hear the violent t's you do not hear, Geraint and E. 420
after hours of search and doubt and t's, And hubbub, The Ring 278
Threatened Had wink'd and t darkness, M. d' Arthur, Ep. 2
Three (adj.) (See also Fifty-three, Three Hundred) She
made t paces thro' the room, L. of Shalott Hi 38
T fingers round the old silver cup — Miller's D. 10
Or those t chestnuts near, that hung „ 55
T times I stabb'd him thro' and thro'. The Sisters 29
brandish'd him T times, and drew him under in
the mere.' (repeat)
Not tho' I live t lives of mortal men,
by these T Queens with crowns of gold —
There those t Queens Put forth their hands,
to t arches of a bridge Crown'd with the minster- towers
And in the compass of t little words.
And for t hours he sobb'd o'er William's child
T winters, that my soul might grow to thee,
and t years on one of twelve ; And twice t years I
crouch'd on one that rose
Is t times worth them all ;
those t stanzas that you made About my " giant bole ; "
For some t suns to store and hoard myself,
To watch the t tall spires ;
T fair children first she bore him,
I think I have not t days more to live ;
he past To turn and ponder those t hundred scrolls
One babe was theirs, a Margaret, t years old :
The lady of t castles in that land :
' T ladies of the Northern empire pray
Not for t years to correspond with home ; Not for t years
to cross the liberties ; Not for / years to speak with
anjr men ;
To give t gallant gentlemen to death.'
Till like t horses that have broken fence.
For dear are those t castles to my wants.
Descended to the court that lay t parts In shadow,
b«ing herself T times more noble than t score of men,
And our t lives.
Now, scarce t paces measured from the mound,
A smoke go up thro' which I loom to her T times a
monster :
anon to meet us lightly pranced T captains out ;
made them glance Like those t stars of the airy Giant's
zone,
then took the king His t broad sons ;
t times he went : The first, be blew and blew.
Shadows of t dead men (repeat) G. of Swainston 3, 5
T dead men have I loved and thou art last of the three. „ 15
Tho' I since then have number'd o'er Some thrice t
years : In Mem., Con. 10
cataract seas that snap The t decker's oaken spine Maud II ii 27
Flame-colour, vert and azure, in t rays, One
falling upon each of t fair queens, Com. of Arthur 275
over all High on the top were those t Queens, Gareth and L. 229
a river Runs in t loops about her living-place ; And
o'er it are t passings, and t knights „ 612
M. d' Arthur 146, 161
155
198
205
Gardener's D. 43
232
Dora 167
St. S. StylUes 71
87
Talking Oak 72
135
Ulysses 29
Godiva 3
L. of Burleigh 87
Enoch Arden 851
Lucretius 12
Sea Dreams 3
Princess i 79
238
m70
335
386
417
m 20
109
142
vl
131
255
260
269
335
t fair girls In gilt and rosy raiment came :
O rainbow with t colours after rain,
but when the Prince T times had blown —
Slay me not : my t brethren bad me do it,
night Before her birthday, t sad years ago.
And forth they rode, but scarce t paces on.
926
1160
1378
1410
Marr. of Geraint 633
Geraint and E. 19
Then Enid was aware of t tall knights On horseback,
I saw t bandits by the rock Waiting to fall on you,
Stript from the t dead wolves of woman born The t
gay suits of armour
56
72
94
Three (adj.) (continued) T other horsemen waiting,
wholly arm'd, Geraint and E. 121
' There lurk t villains yonder in the wood, ., 142
Their t gay suits of armour, each from each, .. 181
and my purpose t years old, ,. 849
those t kingless years Have past — Balin and Balan 63
for but t brief moons had glanced away „ 154
Had I for t days seen, ready to fall. Merlin and V. 296
So to the Gate of the t Queens we came, Holy Grail 358
T knights were thereamong ; and they too smiled, Pelleas and E. 96
Then glanced askew at those t knights of hers, „ 134
And those t knights all set their faces home, „ 187
Then calling her t knights, she charged them, „ 219
while walking on the walls With her t knights, „ 226
Give me t days to melt her fancy, „ 356
So those t days, aimless about the land, .. 391
Then was he ware of t pavilions rear'd ,, 428
and their t squires across their feet : .. 431
hence he went To-day for t days' huntings Last Tournament 530
Himself beheld t spirits mad with joy Guinevere 252
When t gray linnets wrangle for the seed : ., 255
lived For t brief years, and there, ., 697
brandish'd him T times, and drew liim under
in the mere, (repeat) Pass, of Arthur 314, 329
Not tho' I live t lives of mortal men, ., 323
by these T Queens with crowns of gold : „ 366
There those t Queens Put forth their hands, ,, 373
from the woods That belt it rise t dark, tall
cjrpresses, — T cypresses. Lover's Tale i 536
Fixing my eyes on those t cypress-cones „ ii 38
The mountam, the t cypresses, the cave, „ 109
Dead — and had lain t days without a pulse : „ iv 34
An' he took t turns in the rain. First Quarrel 75
which our house has held T hundred years — Sisters (E. and E.) 53
I had sat t nights by the cliild— In the Child. Hosp. 59
And we stay'd t days, and we gorged V. of Maeldune 67
T days since, t more dark days of the Godless gloom Despair 6
Those t hundred millions under one Imperial
sceptre now, Locksley H., Sixty 117
came On t gray heads beneath a gleaming rift. Demeter and P. 83
T dark ones in the shadow with thy King. „ 122
those t sweet Italian words, The Ring 406
The century's t strong eights have met To Ulysses 7
T slaves were trailing a dead lion away, St. Telemachus 47
Thro' those t words would haunt him when a boy, Far — far — away 8
Three (s) Three dead men have I loved and thou art
last of the t. G. of Swainston 15
Three-days-long That t-d-l presageful gloom of yours Merlin and V. 320
Three-decker rushing battle-bolt sang from the t-d Maud I i 50
cataract seas that snap The t d's oaken spine „ II ii 27
Threefold Lower'd softly with a t cord of love D. of F. Women 211
Three hundred The charge of the gallant t h, Heavy Brigade 1
Scarlett and Scarlett's t h were riding by .. 4
gallant t h whose glory will never die— .. 10
Gallopt the gallant t h, the Heavy Brigade. „ 25
'Lost are the gallant t h of Scarlett's Brigade ! ' „ 45
Glory to all the t h, and all the Brigade ! ,, 66
Three-months-old On corpses t-tn-o at noon she came, Palace of Art 243
Three-parts-sick t-p-s With strumming and with scraping, Amphion 69
Three-times-three The crowning cup, the t-t-t. In Mem., Con. 104
Three-years' Sent me a t-y exile from thine eyes. Balin and Balan 59
Thresher t with his flail had scatter'd them. Gareth and L. 842
Threshing-floor by the lonely t-f, Demeter and P. 126
Threshold (adj.) footsteps smite the t stairs Of life — St. S. Stylites 191
Threshold (s) and on her t lie Howling in
outer darkness. To , With Pal. of Art 15
see me carried out from the t of the door ; May Queen, JS. Y's. E. 42
Corpses across the t; D. of F. Women 25
Half-fall'n across the t of the sun, „ 63
Dora went to Mary's house, and stood Upon the t. Dora 111
That float about the t of an age, Golden Year 16
wrinkled feet Upon thy glimmering t's, Tithonus 68
And burn the t of the night. The Voyage 18
And seldom crost her t, Enoch Arden 337
dark retinue reverencing death At golden t's ; Aylmer's Field 843
Threshold
726
Throne
Threshold (s) (continued) come thou down And find him ;
by the liappy t, he, Princess vii 200
Upon the t of the mind ? In Mem. Hi 16
guest To enrich the t of the night „ xxix 6
From off the t of the realm, Gareth and L. 136
Here on the t of our enterprise. „ 298
Was all the marble t flashing, Geraint and E. 25
With all her golden t's clashing. Lover's Tale i 605
Love passeth not the t of cold Hate, „ 778
Falls on the t of her native land, Bemeter and P. 3
nirew (See also Thraw'd) She t her royal robes away. Palace of Art 290
dutch'd the sword, And strongly wheel'd and t it.' M. d' Arthur 136
heavier, stronger, he that smote And t him : Princess v 537
t the kings Car^dos, Urien, Cradlemont of Wales, Com. of Arthur 111
Moimted in arms, t up their caps Gareth and L. 697
same strength which t the Morning Star Can throw
the Evening.'
Lancelot ! — thine the hand That < me ?
By overthrowing me you t me higher,
clutch'd the sword, And strongly wheel'd and t it.
on the sand T down the bier ;
1 1 myself all abroad —
and t Underfoot there in the fray —
Miriam sketch'd and Muriel t the fly ;
She t the fly for me ;
how long — till you t me aside !
Thrice T happy state again to be
Thrice-beaten weakling, and t-b hound :
Thrice-happy T-h days ! The flower of each,
' T-h he that may caress The ringlet's
Thrice-tum'd chew'd The t-t cud of wrath,
Thrid To t the musky-circled mazes.
He t's the labyrinth of the mind,
Thridded 1 1 tlie black heart of all the woods,
Thridding T the sombre boskage of the wood,
Thried (tried) 1 1 her meself av the bird 'ud come
Thrift like the little t, Trembled in perilous places
Thrifty t too beyond her age.
Earn well the t months, nor wed Raw Haste,
Thrill His countrj^'s war-song t his ears :
Me mightier transports move and t ;
My spirit leap'd as with those t's of bliss
with some electric t A cold air pass'd between us,
Thrill'd a clear under-tone T thro mine ears
T thro' the woods ; and Balan lurking there
Thrilleth Thro' my very heart it t
Thrilling See Spirit-thrilling
Thrive those Fresh faces, that would t
Thriven Word by which himself had t.'
That on dumb death had t ;
Throan (throne) an' taake 'im afoor the T.
an' sits o' the Bishop's t.
Throat golden round her lucid t And shoulder ;
From cheek and t and chin.
But there was that across his t
bright death quiver'd at the victim's t ;
and in her t Her voice seem'd distant,
' Go, take the goose, and wring her t,
All t's that gurgle sweet !
She lit the spark within my t,
Faltering and fluttering in her t,
Make liquid treble of that bassoon, my t ;
Thereat the Lady stretch'd a vulture t,
MiUions of t's would bawl for civil rights,
Tho' niggard t's of Manchester may bawl,
There is but one bird with a musical t,
And flood a fresher t with song,
cobweb woven across the cannon's t
bared the knotted column of his t,
many-winter'd fleece of t and chin,
felt the knot Climb in her t,
' Taliessin is our fullest t of song.
The naked sword athwart their naked t's,
the sword of the tourney across her t.
that felt the cold touch on her t.
1108
1242
Geraint and E. 792
Pass, of Arthur 304
Lover's Tale Hi 33
The Wreck 39
Heavy Brigade 54
The Sing 159
355
Charity 5
Sum). Confessions 40
Pelleas and E. 291
Edwin Morris 68
Talking Oak 177
Princess i 66
„ iv 261
In Mem. xcvii 21
Demeter and P. 69
D. of F. Women 243
Totnorrow 45
Sea Dreams 10
Dora 16
Love thou thy land 95
Two Voices 153
Sir Galahad 22
Lover^s Tale i 363
The Sing 379
D. of F. Women 82
Balin and Balan 546
Lilian 22
Talking Oak 50
Sea Dreams 197
Dead Prophet 26
North. Cobbler 106
Church-warden, etc. 20
(Enone 178
Palace of Art 140
L. C. V. de Vere 31
D. of F. Women 115
To J. S. 54
The Goose 31
Talking Oak 266
WUl Water. 109
Princess ii 187
426
it) 363
1)387
Third of Feb. 43
The Islet 27
In Mem. Ixxxiii 16
Maud III vi 27
Marr. of Geraint 74
Merlin and V. 841
Lancelot and E. 741
Holy Grail 300
Pelleas and E. 452
455
488
Throat (continued) The warm white apple of her t, Last Tournament 71 T
he bow'd to kiss the jewell'd t, „ 751
yea to him Who hacks his mother's t — Sir J. Oldcastle 114
Sorra the silent t but we hard it Tomorrow 84
scatters on her t the sparks of dew. Prog, of Spring 58
you will not deny my sultry t One draught Rotaney's R. 22
He gript it so hard by the t Bandit's Death 28
Throated See Glossy-throated, Hundred-throated,
Serpent-throated, Yellow-throated)
Throb (s) Perchance, to lull the t's of pain.
Throb (verb) and t's Thro' earth, and all her graves,
T thro' the ribbed stone ;
The sight that t's and aches beneath my touch,
Throbb'd Till the war-drum t no longer,
tempestuous treble t and palpitated ;
T thimder thro' the palace floors,
brows that shook and t From temple unto temple.
Throbbing T thro' all thy heat and light.
Her heart is like a t star.
When last vnth t heart I came To rest
A footstep, a low t in the walls.
Throe coughs, aches, stitches, ulcerous t's
The Daisy 105
Romney's R. 127
Palace of Art 176
Lover's Tale i 33
Locksley Hall 127
Vision of Sin 28
Princess vii 104
Lover's Tale Hi 7
Fatima 4
Kate !)
Talking Oak 155
The Ring 409
St. S. Stylites 13
Travail, and t's and aigonies of the life. Com. of Arthur 76
Throne (See also Bosom-throne, Dais-throne, Rock-throne,
Throan) Which kept her t unshaken sfill, To the Queen 34
underpropt a rich T of the massive ore, Arabian Nights 146
to own A crown, a sceptre, and a t ! Ode to Memory 121
With a crown of gold. On a i ? The Merman 7
With a comb of pearl. On at? The Mermaid 8
Over the t In the midst of the hall ; ., 21
lightly vault from the t and play With the mermen ,, 33
Thou from a t Mounted in heaven To J. M. K. 12
whose strong right arm debased The t of Persia, Alexander 2
The t of Indian Cama slowly sail'd Palace of Art 115
bells Began to chime. She took her t : ., 158
held she her solemn mirth. And intellectual t. ,, 216
two tame leopards couch'd beside her t, Princess ii 33
glittering bergs of ice, T after t, ,, iv 72
the crowd dividing clove An advent to the t : „ 284
and winged Her transit to the t, „ 378
at the further end Was Ida by the t, ., vi 357
And barking for the t's of kings ; Ode on Well. 121
Betwixt a people and their ancient t, „ 163
joy to the people and joy to the t, W. to Alexandra 29
English Harold gave its t a wife, W. to Marie Alex. 24
t's and peoples are as waifs that swing, ,, 26
Green-rushing from the rosy t's of dawn !
(repeat) Voice and the P. 4, 40
The chairs and t's of civil power ? In Mem. xxi 16
And shape the whisper of the t ; „ Ixiv 12
thousand battles, and shaking a hvmdred t's. Maud I i 4S
In that fierce light which beats upon a t, Ded. of Idylls 27
from this land of beasts Up to my t. Com. of Arthur 81
' A doubtful t is ice on summer seas. ,, 248
Who stood in silence near his t, ,. 277
same that afterward Struck for the t, „ 325
those tall knights, that ranged about the t, Gareth and L. 328
Which down he laid before the t, and knelt, „ 390
Lest we should set one truer on his t. Balin and Balan 7
a knight cast down Before his t Last Tournament 162
Lay couchant with his eyes upon the t, Guinevere 11
When all the purport of my t hath fail'd. Pass, of Arthur 160
They stood before his t in silence, „ 455
and her t In our vast Orient, To the Queen ii 30
There in my realm and even on my t, Lover's Tale i 593
Whom once he rose from off his t to greet Columbus 5
the king, the queen, Sank from their t's, „ 15
the mountain arose like a jewell'd t V. of Maeldune 59
as a slave to his intellectual t, The Wreck 66
Break the State, the Church, the T, Locksley H., Sixty 138
seen the loneliness of earthly t's. To Prin. Beatrice 14
One life, one flag, one fleet, one T ! ' Open. I. and C. Exhib. 39
Flattery gilding the rift in a < ; Vastness 20
rebel subject seek to drag me from the t. By an Evolution. 15
all the T's are clouded by your loss, D. of the Duke of C.6
Throned
727
Thunderbolt
Tbroned (See also Lov-tiaonei) wisdom-bred AmU of
wisdom — ,, . _, -,, TO-
I turning saw, t on a flowery rise, U- of F. W omen 1 J5
And t races may degrade ; I^ Mem. cxf^^^1
splendour of the presence of the King T, Gareth and L d^i
That victor of the Pagan t in hall— Last Tournament 665
Throng (S) in among the t's of men : Locksley ^cUl lib
Aid pinch their brethren in the i, Lit Sqv^hhlesi
\ head with kindling eyes above the t, Gareth and L. b4b
from out of kitchen came The thralls in t, „ o»&
push'd Athwart the t to Lancelot, Holy Grail 156
Throng (verb) To < with stately blooms IheFoetZi
marish-flowers that t The desolate creeks Dying Swan 40
and t, their rags and they The basest, Lucretius 170
the people t The chairs and thrones In Mem. xxi 15
Throngd {See also Mast-throng'd) And her whisper t „ „ oc
my pulses Locksley Hall 36
Every gate is t with suitors, " ^^^
In their own darkness, t into the moon. Pelleas and h. 458
Their people t about" them from the hall, Sisters ( E. and h.) 16b
a crowd T the waste field about the city gates : Str J. OldcastUm
Thronging Or t all one porch of Paradise Palace of Art 101
Till t in and in, to where they waited, T isumof&m2b
as t fancies come To boys and girls Lover s lale i 564
Throstle And thro' wild March the t cMs, To the Quern 14
The callow nispeth, j ^''^/^ Ti
Sometimes the t whistled strong : Sir L.and y. tr. li
And swallow and sparrow and t, Umdow, Ay 14
blackbirds have their wills. The t's too. Early Spring 6
Throve And so she t and prosper'd : -' alaceof Artjll
that on which it < Falls off, ,Aio\l
But t not in her trade, not being bred To barter, Enoch Arden 249
And in it < an ancient evergreen, , ,, " ■••'Vo
Who t and branch'd from clime to clime. In Menu cxviiild
And all this t until I wedded thee, Gutwevere 484
Throw I would < to them back in mine „ irf^"**^?
dividing the swift mind. In act to t : Af. d Arthur bl
Nor lose the wrestling thews that t the world ; Princess mi ZbZ
To seize and t the doubts of man ; In Mem. cixb
being but knave, I / thine enemies.' Gareth and L. WZ6
Morning Star Can t the Evening.' ,. 110^
dividing the swift mind. In act to t : Pass, of Arthur 'm
Throwing t down his robes. And claspt her hand Lover s T<de in 51
and we took to t the stone, V. of Maeldunedi
Thrown selfsame impulse wherewith he was t Mine be the strength 6
thunder, or a sound Of rocks t down, Pdace of Art'ib2
Still from one sorrow to another t : Lotos- Eaters, !^- S. io
broad-limb'd Gods at random t By fountain-urns ;— To E. L. 15
the shiver of dancing leaves is t Maud L w 7d
knight of Arthur, here lie t by whom I know not, Gareih and L. 1166
Out, sword ; we are t\' " 1236
T have I been, nor once, but many a time. ,, l-^ol
Thrue (true) yer Honour's the t ould blood Tomorrow 5
Thrum to flaunt, to dress, to dance, to t, Princess iv 5iy
Thrumm'd who t On such a wire as musically Last Tournament 6jZ
Thrumming And < on the table : Will Water. 1^
Thrush (6'«e aZso Mavis) rarely pipes the mounted < ; Iri Mem. xciZ
Thrust (s) here a t that might have kiU'd, Larwelotand E. Zb
Thrust (verb) and t The dagger thro' her side.' D. of F. Women 259
Who t him in the hollows of his arm, . JJora 16Z
And with grim laughter t us out at gates. Princess w 56b
T in between ; but Arac rode him down : .. jji
For into a shallow grave they are f, • . j i iLr
And t the dish before her, crying, ' Eat.' Geraint and E. b&5
Unbind him now. And t him out of doors ; Pelleas and E. Zbi
and unbound, and t him from the gate. •• ^
Far less to bind, your victor, and t him out, ,■ 2yd
but t him bounden out of door. - <^^
Or t the heathen from the Roman wall. Pass, of Arthur 69
portion of the pleasant yesterday, T forward on , ,r, 7 • loo
to-day Lover's Tale 1 126
Had t his wife and child and dash'd v . 380
him Who t him out, or him who saved his life ? ., tv Zbi
Thrusteth My tough lance t sure, . Sir OalahadZ
Thud the hollow-beaten mosses t Balm and Halan d2i
Thumb his nice eyes Should see the raw mechanic's
bloody t's Walk, to the Mail 75
And rotatory t's on silken knees, Aylmer's Field 200
nipt her slender nose With petulant t and finger, Gareth and L. 750
stoop and kiss the tender little t, Man: of Geraint 395
Thumbscrew To the t and the stake. The Iieverige21
Thump heave and t A league of street Princess in 127
Thunder (s) (See also Battle-thunder, Tundher, War-
thunder) Below the t's of the upper deep ; The Krakenl
Her words did gather t as they ran. The Poet 49
And as the lightning to the t Which follows it, ,. 50
Ever brightening With a low melodious t ; Poet s Mind 27
Low t and light in the magic night— The Merman 23
With t's, and with lightnings, BuonafaHeQ
Rest in a happy place and quiet seats Above the t, (Enone 162
The ragged rims Of t brooding low. Palace of Art 15
t, or a sound of rocks thrown down, ,, 281
And t on the everlasting hills. D.of I. Women 22b
The t's breaking at her feet : Of old sat Freedom 2
Black'd with thy branding t, St.S. SlyliiesT6
Low t's bring the mellow rain. Talking Oak 279
frolic welcome took The t and the sunshine, Ulysses 48
But they heard the foeman's t The Coftainjtl
for on her the t's of the house Had fallen Aylmer s i* leld 278
flood, fire, earthquake, t, wrought Such waste ,, 639
Dead claps of t from within the cliffs Sea Dreams 55
And there was rolling « ; " ]}^
Nor ever lowest roll of t moans, Lucretius 108
A long melodious t to the sound Of solemn psalms. Princess ii 47b
shattering on black blocks A breadth of t. „ iii 292
with the crash of shivering points. And t. „ v 492
Throbb'd t thro' the palace floors, ^ mi 104
even if they broke In t, silent ; Ode on Well. 177
Welcome her, t's of fort and of fleet ! M .to Alexandra 6
if he thunder by law the t is yet His voice. High. Pantheism 14
T, a flying fire in heaven, ^^ Boadicea 24
AAd a sullen t is roU'd ; ^ Maud II iv 49
Made lightnings and great t's over him. Com. of Arthur im
break perforce Upon a head so dear in t, said : Geraint and E. 16
crash of the near cataract hears The drumming t , " , j. lH
The hard earth shake, and a low t of arms. Lancelot and E. 4b0
and overhead T, and in the t was a cry. Holy Grail 185
Thicker than drops from t, " ^*°
the heavens Open'd and blazed with t „ 6U»
and close upon it peal'd A sharp quick t. t , rr " , i «q
then one low roll Of Autumn t, Last Tournament 153
thresholds clashing, roll'd Her heaviest t— Lover s Tale t 606
the surge fell From t into whispers ; ,, *« 31
I heard his voice between The t's Columbus 146
t of God peal'd over us all the day, i^ • of Maeldune 11^
a voice rang out in the t's of Ocean and Heaven 1 he Wreck 88
Full-handed t's often have confessed Thy ^ „. ^ ,^ , „
po^er To R . C. Macready 2
Are there t's moaning in the distance ? On Jub. Q. Victoria 66
Till the t's pass, the spectres vanish, „ , „ ^9
Downward t in hollow and glen, To Master of B. 16
Across the downward t of the brook Death of (Enone 26
or shake with her t's and shatter her island, Kapiolani 10
There is a sound of t afar. Riflemen form ! 1
Storm of battle and t of war ! ^^ ^ , ,
and hew'd Like broad oaks with t. The Tourney 11
at the shipwreck, or the rolling T, lot
Thunder (verb) That not one moment ceased to t, ^ea Dreams 125
And the volleying cannon t his loss ; Ode on Well. 62
T ■ Anathema,' friend, at you ; To F D. Maurice 8
if He t by law the thunder is yet His voice. High. Pantheism 14
Thunderbolt in its breast a t. Locksley HM 192
And like a t he falls. The Eagle 6
and once the flash of a <— „ . Lucretius 27
And, falling on them like a t. Princess, Pro-^
the t Hangs silent ; but prepare : I speak ; „ m 226
/ dare All these male i's : >. „ ivm)
Whence the t will fall Long and loud, The Revenge 44
Shrine-shattering earthquake, fire, flood, t, Tiresias bl
Burst like a t, Crash'd like a hurricane, Heavy Brigade 21
Thunderbolt
728
Tilt
Thunderbolt {continued) Gods, To quench, not hurl the
t, to stay, Demeter and P. 133
Thnnderclap There was a t once. In the Child. Hosf. 62
blast of that underground t echo'd away, Dej. of Lucknow 32
Thunder-cloud As t-c's that, hung on high, Eleanore 98
like a t-c Whose skirts are loosen'd Geraint and E. 458
Thunder-drops As t-d fall on a sleeping sea : D. of F. Women 122
Thunder'd Volleyed and t ; (repeat) Light Brigade 21, 42
t up into Heaven the Christless code, Maud II i 26
war That i in and out the gloomy skirts Lancelot and E. 291
Thunder-gloom cloud that grew To t-g Gareth and L. 1359
Thundering The league-long roller t on the reef, Enoch Arden 584
Welcome her, t cheer of the street ! W. to Alexandra 7
All down the t shores of Bude and Bos, Guinevere 291
Thunderless T lightnings striking under sea To the Queen ii 12
waterfalls Pour'd in at plimge to the base V. of Maeldune 14
Thunder-music t-m, rolling, shake The prophet In Mem. Ixxxvii 7
Thunderous when the note Had reach'd a t fulness. Sea Dreams 214
the ship stagger'd under a t shock. The Wreck 107
Thunder-peals A bridal dawn of t-f, Love thou thy land 51
Thundershaken collapsed masses Of t columns indistinct. Lover's Tale ii 66
Thunder-shower are drown'd in azure gloom Of t-s, Princess iv 526
Thunder-sketch t-s Of lake and mountain Sisters (E. and E.) 99
Thunder-smoke roofs Of our great hall are roll'd in i-s ! Holy Grail 220
Iliundersong the t that wheels the spheres, Lover's Tale i 476
Thunder-storm the peoples plunging thro'" the t-s ; Locksley Hall 126
Upon a king's right hand in t-s's, Princess v 439
Thundrous With scraps of t Epic lilted out „ ii 375
Thum (thorn) and a < be a-grawin' theer. Village Wife 79
As fer as fro' Thursby t North. Cobbler 14
fust kiss I gied 'er by Thursby t; „ 45
Thumaby an' I 'a stubb'd T waaste. N. Farmer, 0. S. 28
an' T hoalms to plow ! „ 52
Thursby As fer as fro' T thurn North. Gobbler 14
fust kiss I gied 'er by T thum ; „ 45
Thutty (thirty) I ears es 'e'd gie fur a howry owd book t
pound an' moor, Village Wife 45
I 'a managed for Squoire coom Michaelmas t year. N. Farmer, 0. S. 48
Thwack'd Knights were t and riven. The Tourney 10
Thwarted T by one of these old father-fools, Aylmer's Field 390
wrong'd and lied and t us — Princess iv 540
Thwarting t their traditions of Himself, Sir J. Oldcastle 181
Thymy Love paced the t plots of Paradise, Love and Death 2
Lingering about the t promontories, Sea Dreams 38
Tiar studded wide With disks and t's, Arabian Nights 64
Ticking The slow clock t, and the sound Mariana 74
Tickle t the maggot bom in an empty head, Maud II v 38
Tickled And secret laughter t all my soul. Princess iv 267
Ticklin' ya was t' o' trout, Church-warden, etc. 27
Tickling (See also Ticklin') caught the younker t
trout — Walk, to the Mail 33
t the bmte brain within the man's Lucretius 21
Tide (See also Autumn-tide, High-tide, Hunting-tide,
River-tide) The t of time flow'd back with me, Arabian Nights 3
The forward-flowing t of time ; „ 4
For ere she reach'd upon the t L. of Shalott iv 33
Bluster the winds and t's the self-same way D. of F. Women 38
And when the t of combat stands, Sir Galahad 10
As down dark I's the glory slides, „ 47
On whose dull sameness his full t of youth Broke Aylmer's Field 115
a full t Rose with ground-swell, Sea Dreams 50
you do but hear the t. „ 84
Of such a t swelling toward the land, „ 87
No ! ' said he, ' but this t's roar, „ 250
at high t of feast. In masque or pageant Princess i 197
Till toward the centre set the starry t's, „ ii 117
a < of fierce Invective seem'd to wait „ iv 471
When the t ebbs in sunshine, „ vi 162
we hear The t's of Music's golden sea Ode on Well. 252
Dream in the sliding t's. Requiescat 4
The t flows down, the wave again In Mem. xix 13
The double t's of chariots flow „ xcviii 23
forward-creeping t's Began to foam, „ ciii 37
In vassal t's that follow'd thought. ., cxii 16
t in its broad-fliuig ship-wrecking r0£ir, Maud I Hi 11
Tide (continued) Your limit, oft returning with the t. Lancelot and E. 1041
t within Red with free chase and heather-scented
air, Last Tournament 690
and with that wind the t Rose,
And London roU'd one t of joy
where the t Plash' d, sapping its worn ribs ;
a-saiUng with wind an' t.
bank that is daily devour'd by the t —
t's of onset sap Our seven high gates,
flung from the rushing t of the world
home in the canes by the purple t,
towering crest of the t's Plunged on the vessel
change of the t — what is all of it worth ?
in the t's of a civic insanity !
clash of t's that meet in narrow seas. —
But such At as moving seems asleep,
Tided See Full-tided
Tidings Be cheer'd with t of the bride,
To hear the t of my friend.
Tie (s) To pass with all our social t's
ancient t's Would still be dear beyond
strand of Death inwoven here With dear Love's t.
Tie (verb) T up the ringlets on your cheek :
Close up his eyas : t up his chin :
Tied Bhidesmaid, ere the happy knot was t,
is charm'd and t To where he stands, —
t it round his hat To make him pleasing
t the bridal-reins of all the three (repeat)
That 'is taail were soa t up
Tier All up the marble stair, t over t,
high above us with her yawning t's of guns.
Tierce subtle at t and quart of mind
Tiger (adj.) The t spasms tear his chest,
Every t madness muzzled, every serpent passion
kill'd.
Tiger (s) Here play'd, a t, rolling to and fro
And let the ape and t die.
if the t's leap into the fold unawares —
I saw the t in the ruin'd fane Spring
hvmt the t of oppression out From office ;
From the lower world within him, moods of t, or
of ape?
Tiger-cat a t-c In act to spring.
Tiger-lily Heavily hangs the t-l. (repeat)
Tight I'd clasp it round so close and t.
that trims us up. And keeps us t ;
Would twist his girdle t,
link Of some t chain within my inmost frame Was
riven in twain :
Tighten made her lithe arm round his neck T,
Tigress To trip a t with a gossamer,
Tigris Adown the T I was borne,
Tile her whinny shrills From t to scullery.
Fill out the spaces by the barren t's.
Till (s) rogue would leap from his counter and t.
Till (verb) It is the land that freemen t,
Man comes and t's the field and lies beneath,
year by year the labourer t's His wonted glebe,
sent a thousand men To t the wastes,
Till'd for miles about Was t by women ;
Every grim ravine a garden, every blazing
desert t,
Tiller three were clad like t's of the soil.
Gareth, ' We be t's of the soil.
Tilt (cart-cover) his wife upon the t.
Tilt (IcQightiy exercise) that rang With t and tourney ;
I seem'd to move in old memorial t's,
stagger'd thy strong Gawain in a < For pastime ;
Forgetful of the t and tournament.
And victor at the t and tournament.
Hurt in his first t was my son.
That he should wear her favour at the t.
many a time have watch'd thee at the t
acts of prowess done In tournament or t, Sir Percivale
Killed in a t, come next, five summers back,
Pass, of Arthur 125
To the Queen ii 8
Lover's Tale i 55
First Quarrel 42
Def. of Lucknow 39
Tiresias 91
The Wreck 6;
71
89
Vastness 30
Beautiful City 4
Akbar's Dream 58
Crossing the Bar 5
In Mem. xl 23
„ cxxvi 3
Day- Dm., L' Envoi 5
Princess ii 264
Maud I xviii 61
Margaret 57
D. of the 0. Year 48
The Bridesmaid 1
D. of F. Women 193
Dora 83
Geraint and E. 98, 183
Village Wife 30
Lancelot nnd E. 1248
The Revenge 41
In Mem., W. G. Ward 5
Ancient Sage 123
Locksley H., Sixty 167
Palace of Art 151
In Mem, cxviii 28
Def. of Lucknow 51
Demeter and P. 79
Akbar's Dream 158
Making of Man 2
Princess ii 450
A spirit haunts 12, 24
Miller's D. 180
Edwin Morris 47
Talking Oak 43
Lover's Tale i 595
Merlin and V. 615
Princess t) 170
Arabian Nights 6
Princess v 453
Prog, of Spring 43
Maud I ibl
You ask me, why, etc. 5
Tithonus 3
In Mem. ci 21
Geraint and E. 942
Princess i 192
Locksley H., Sixty 168
Gareth and L. 181
242
Walk, to the Mail 41
Princess, Pro. 122
v 479
Gareth and L. 542
Marr. of Geraint 52
Geraint and E. 960
Larwelot and E. 196
358
1359
Holy Grail 2
Guinevere 32]
TUt
Tilt (knightly exercise) (continued) on love And sport
and pleasure, ,, i i
Tilt (verb) Himself woidd t it out among the lads :
Ask'd me to t with him, the proven knight.
Who t for lady's love and glory here,
But in this tournament can no man t,
And t's with my good nephew thereupon,
He left it with her, when he rode to t
to ( against the knights There at Caerleon,
t with a lance Becomes thee well-
Tilted See Tip-tilted
Tilth wither'd holt or t or pasturage,
and so by t and grange, And vmes,
t and vineyard, hive and horse and herd ;
Tilting-field In open battle or the t-f (repeat)
Timber And fiddled in the < !
Timber-crost A front of t-c antiquity,
Timbrel With t and with song.
Time (s) (See also Bridal-time, CoUege-tmie, Cradle-
time, Ten-times, Toime) yield you t To make
demand of modern rhyme
Nine t's goes the passing bell :
In a t, Of which he wots not,
The tide of t flow'd back with me, The forward-
flowing tide of t ;
In sooth it was a goodly t,
A goodly place, a goodly t, (repeat)
A goodly t, For it was in the golden prune
fed the t With odour in the golden prune
Apart from place, withholding t,
A lovely t, For it was in the golden prime
Entranced with that place and t,
Graven with emblems of the t,
After the fashion of the t,
night new-risen, that marvellous t
The sweetest lady of the t,
Sole star of all that place and t.
What t the amber mom Forth gushes
What t the mighty moon was gathering light
That tho' I knew not in what t or place,
said the secret voice, ' some t. Sooner or later,
' Forerun thy peers, thy t, and let Thy feet,
memory of the wither'd leaf In endless t
What t the foeman's Une is broke,
* For memory dealing but with t.
Beat t to nothing in my head
That went and came a thousand t's.
when t was ripe. The still aSection of the heart
from that t to tliis I am alone.
My love hath told me so a thousand t's. ^
Hath he not sworn his love a thousand t's,
Three t's I stabb'd him thro' and thro',
the t's of every land So wrought.
What t I watch the darkening droves of swine
But dreadful t, dreadful eternity.
And ever worse with growing t,
You know so ill to deal with t,
If t be heavy on your hands,
To-morrow 'ill be the happiest t of all the glad
year; (repeat)
The good old year, the dear old t,
A thousand t's I blest him,
And if it comes three t's, I thought.
So now I think my t is near.
T driveth onward fast,
The spacious t's of great Elizabeth
The t's when I remember to have been ^
wood is all thine own, Until the end of t.
The Nilus would have risen before his t
This is the curse of t. Alas !
' Beat quicker, for the t Is pleasant.
Hath t and space to work and spread,
induce a t When single thought is civil crime,
transfused Thro' future t by power of thought
But pamper not a hasty t,
729
and t's
Guinevere 387
Princess v 355
Gareth and L. 27
740
Marr. of Geraint 480
488
Lancelot and E. 30
Pelleas and E. 65
Last Tournameni 636
Enoch Arden 675
Princess i 110
To Virgil 10
Guinevere 330, 332
Amphion 16
Enoch Arden 692
D. of F. Women 200
To the Queen 10
All Things will Die 35
Swpf. Confessions 160
Arabian Nights 3
20
., 31, 53
42
64
75
86
97
108
119
130
141
152
Ode to Memory 70
Love and Death 1
Sonnet to 12
Two Voices 64
88
113
155
376
MUler's D. 67
72
224
CEnone 193
., 197
., 231
The Sisters 29
Palace of Art 147
199
267
270
L. C. V. de Vere 63
66
New-
Maw Queen 2, 42
.: N. Y's. E. 6
Cotu 16
, 38
'., 41
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 43
D. of F. Women 7
79
84
143
To J. S. 17
On a Mourner 12
You ask me, why, etc. 16
18
Love thou thy land 4
9
Time (s) (continued) For all the past of T reveals A
bridal dawn
And this be true, till T shall close,
' Why take the style of those heroic t's ?
For nature brings not back the Mastodon, Nor we
those t's ;
Shall never more, at any future t.
And hid Excahbur the second t,
brandish'd him Three t's, and drew him under in the
mere, (repeat)
'tis t that I were gone.
I see the true old t's are dead,
Such t's have been not since the light
cock crew loud ; as at that t of year The lusty bird
we listen'd ; with the t we play'd.
Then, in that t and place, I spoke to her.
And in that t and place she answer'd me,
the t Is come to raise the veil.
But in my < a father's word was law,
and in harvest t he died.
Time
Love thou thy land 50
79
The Epic 35
37
M. d' Arthur 18
111
„ 146, 161
163
229
232
„ Ep. 10
Gardener's D. 221
226
231
273
Dora 27
., 55
TwiU set me right.' Edwin Morris 88
for so long a <, If I may measure t St. 6. ^tylttesva
Heaven, and Earth, and T are choked. , , ^ ^, . . " |Yi
Bow down one thousand and two hundred i s, 1 o Ohi'ist, „ -in
I do not say But that a t may come —
Yet I do not say, that t is at the doors
' But could I, as in t's foregone, „, ., o
Shall Error in the round of t Still father Tmth .-'
O three t's less unworthy !
Wait ; my faith is large in T,
when a hundred t's In that last kiss,
all the wheels of T Spun round in station,
' Ah tho' the t's, when some new thought can bud,
Not in our t, nor in our children's t,
all t's I have enjoy'd Greatly,
Made weak by t and fate, but strong m will
fairy tales of science, and the long result of 1 ;
Love took up the glass of T,
in the foremost files of t —
Not only we, the latest seed of T,
And thought and t be born again.
And in the morning of the t's. , , . t^
For since the t when Adam first Embraced his hve
How goes the t ? 'Tis five o'clock.
Nor add and alter, many t's,
on this whirligig of T We circle
With 1 1 will not quarrel :
It was the t when liUes blow,
Tho' at t's her spirit sank :
Then before her t she died.
At t's the whole sea burn'd, at t's
At t's a carven craft would shoot
Wed whom thou wilt, but I am sick of T,
Is to be the ball of T,
crime Of sense avenged by sense that wore witli t.
at t's Enoch would hold possession for a week :
Enoch at t's to go by land or sea ; ^
' Take your own t, Annie, take your own t. ^
bought Quaint monsters for the market of those t s,
saw Philip, the slighted suitor of old t's, ^
Lord has call'd me she shall know, I wait His t,
touch'd On such a t as goes before the leaf,
and then indeed Harder the t's were.
Ran a Malayan amuck against the t's.
Beholding how the years which are not T s Had
blasted him —
Is this a t to madden madness then ?
Was this a t for these to flaunt their pride ?
Which else had link'd their race with t's to come —
this, at t's, she mingled with his drink.
Huge Ammonites, and the first bones of T ;
Strange was the sight and smacking of thei;
one wide chasm of t and frost they gave The park,
monsters only made to kiil T by the fire in winter.
A tale for summer as befits the t,
190
192
Talking Oak 189
Love and Duty 4
20
25
66
75
Golden Year 27
55
Ulysses 7
„ 69
Locksley Hall 12
31
178
Godiva 5
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 50
L'Envoi 20
41
Will Water. 3
15
63
206
Lady Clare 1
L. of Burleigh 70
88
The Voyage 51
„ 53
Come not, when, etc. 9
Vision of Sin 105
214
Enoch Arden 26
104
466
539
745
811
The Brook 13
Aiilmer's Field 452
463
601
770
779
Lucretius 18
Princess, Pro. 15
89
93
205
210
Time
Time (s) (continued) something made to suit with T and
From 'to t, some baUad or a song ^'''"''''' ^'°- E]
still from t to t Came munnurs of her beauty " /os
Some future <, if so indeed vou B-iU " ,- ^
on the stTetch'd forefinger 8f all T Sparkle for ever: '" 3?g
like swaUows coming out of < " V^
your great name flow on with broadening t " ,v,- ifii
Our ^yeakness somehow shapes the shadow, T ■ " QOn
aU things serve their t Toward that great year' " i/73
J^t **i ^ tT?**=^^ .*^« «^^"o^^ ^""ging south '" 89
Like the Ithacensian suitors in olf<, " „r
they mind us of the t When mc made bricks in E^ypt "' 127
those were gracious rs. ^^^ " ^^'
fellow-worker be, When i! should serve ; " ^
I that have wasted here health, wealth, and L " ^
drunkard's footbaU, laughing-stocks of V " ^T?
you spent a stormy t With our strange girl : " „ loi
three fs he went : The firet, he blew and blew, "' iji
equal baseness hved in sleeker <'« '" o^
He plant a solid foot into the T, '" 4??
roll d With music in the growing breeze of T " ^fia
we will scatter aU our maids Till happier t's " %m
™?» J ^ maicien passing home Till happier t's ; " nsf
call d On flymg T from all their silver tongue^- " ^u fJs
Much had she learnt in little <. " 9dn
Sti^ w t"' ."P*"" *he skirts of T, Sit side by side, .'; IgV
Give It < To learn Its limbs : ' ' ' r.^U
Give up their parks some dozen t's a year '" i m
Foremost captain of his t, ^ n/J n« ir.77 qV
For many a t in many a clime His captain's-ear '^*"- ^
wL theTr^t^^ln"^? ^ ^'^ 'i .. u Gra«rf;;oi;i«r 11
was tne drst t, too, that ever I thought of death. ri
1 could not weep— my own t seem'd so near. " 70
mine is a « of peace, (repeat) " rq q1
And age is a < of peace, " °^' X*
What t have I to be vext ? " iL
T to think on it then : m v " n- tn
Do'ant be stunt: taake t: ^ ' ^"'^''•' ^- -^i J
But 111 for him who, bettering not with t, " will 10
Rhymes and rhymes in the range of the t's ! SvitefulLoter^
But this is the t of hollies. o?>if«/«f .Lewer y
Before the stony face of T, r,-, «!.' 117 ^
no tmer T himself Can prove you, fnTr'' f
O skill'H tr. cJr.^ «f -r „- i:'* V ' ^ JJedicatwn 1
u sKiu a to smg of T or Etermty, j/,7/o„ o
Sun comes, moon comes, T sUps away. Window Whl 2
Or reach a hand thro' t to catch inaow When I
Ck,me T, and teach me, many years, ''^ ^^^.;\I
My fancies ^ to rise on wing, ' '" \t
' A < to sicken and to swoon, '" • |l
And all was good that T could bring, " fj^- \i
T"h7/X *^' bea^t that takes His Ucense in the field of t, I x^t&
The < draws near the birth of Christ: ' " /j^ • • j
kilt''T^^^\ miss their yearly due Before their t ? l" x^il\k
As when he loved me here in T, J--- 1?
What < his tender palm is prest " ,9
A hfelong tract of t reveal'd • "' j. t
And T, a maniac scattering dust, " 7 ^
When T hath sunder'd shell from pearl' " m A
The perfect flower of humane; " / ■ ?
When the dark hand struck down thro' t, " UxiiM
Foreshorten'd m the tract of < ? " }^^,*^/5
What t mine own might also flee, "lxTx7v^l
ShaU gather in the cycled t's. " , ^^ tL
^ch A friendship as had master'd T : " ^^'''''' !!
Which masters T indeed, and is Eternal " ^
Thy spirit in < among thy peers ; " !^
^onian masic measuring out The steps 0 f T— " ^.ff 49
The t draws near the birth of Christ • " ?• ,
There in due Uhe woodbine blows, '" "'^ i
For change of place, like growth of t, " '^■, ]
The faithless coldness of the <'*; " ^ • "
The t admits not flowers or leaves " "'*• ^^
Becoming, when the t has birth " ^if
Is it, then, regret for buried t " "^"^ f^
J, cxm 1
730
Time (s) (continued) Contemplate all this work of T
If so he type this work of t '
vast eddies in the flood Of onward t
As echoes out of weaker t's,
But they must go, the t draws on,
Appearing ere the t's were ripe,
I remember the t, for the roots of my hair
I weU could weep for a t so sordid and mean.
My yet young Ufe in the wilds of T,
She is but dead, and the t is at hand
Wretchedest age, since T began.
My mood is changed, for it fell at a i of year
^ It IS t, It is t, 0 passionate heart,'
'It is t, O passionate heart and morbid eye
Hereafter, thro' aU t's, Albert the Good. '
from t to t the heathen host Swarm'd overseas
ye know that in King Uther's t The prince '
all before his t Was Arthur born.
Of Uther's son, and bom before his t
the t to cast away Is yet far-off.' '
And many a t he came, and evermore
and sad At t's he seem'd, and sad with him was I
Stem too at t's, and then I loved him not
answer'd me In riddling triplets of old t '
and Meriin in our t Hath spoken also '
while the phantom king Sent out at t's a voice •
The fair beginners of a nobler t, '
For it was past the t of Easterday
Time
In Mem. cxviii 1
16
„ cx3xiii&
„ Con. 22
89
139
Maud I il3
vn
xvi 21
.. II iiiS
'y21
., IIIviA
30
32
Ded. of Idylls^
Com. of Arthurs
185
211
241
307
351
353
402
419
437
457
Gareth and L. 186
At t s the summit of the high city flash'd ; At t's the
spires and turrets half-way down Prick'd thro' the
mist ; Atts the great gate shone Only
f^e\things and old co-twisted, as if T Were nothing,
the King hath past his t~
Lion and stoat have isled together, knave, In t of flood,
ihou shakest in thy fear: there yet is <•
Far hefer had I fight a score of t's
So many a t he vaulted up again •
The war of T against the soul of man.
Thrown have I been, nor once, but many a t.
but when the Prince Three t's had blown-—
And he that told the tale in older t's
Has little t for idle questioners.'
And there is scantlv t for half the work.
Tho' having seen all beauties of our t,
Constrain'd us, but a better t has come •
1 0 I that wasted t to tend upon her '
in scarce longer t Than at Caerleon '
cursing their lost t, and the dead man,
cry of children, Enids and Geraints Of t's to be ■
Groan d, and at t's would mutter, '
From whence to watch the t,
Many a t As once— of old— among the flowers-
Arriving at a < of golden rest,
the most famous man of all those t's,
at t's Would flatter his own wish in age for love
for thus at t's He waver'd ; '
Upon the great Enchanter of the T,
It was the t when first the question rose
nine tithes of t's Face-flatterer and backbiter xyx
when the t drew nigh Spake (for she had been sick) Lancelot and E 77
Had marr'd his face, and mark'd it ere his t 247
with half disdain Hid under grace, as in a smaUer t " 2fi4
1 ea, twenty t's I thought him Lancelot— " gog
Fare you well A thousand t's— a. thousand t's farewell ' " 696
at t s Brain-feverous in his heat and agony " fl«;Q
The simples and the science of that t, " 8fi2
drave her ere her t across the fields " tan
he answer'd ' ten i's nay ! This is not love : " q^^
and at t's. So touch'd were they, " loJa
many a t have watch'd thee at the tilt " r^ ,
then the <'s Grew to such evil that the holy cup Ho'lv Grail 56
each of these a hundred winters old. From our Lord's t m '
beam of light seven t's more clear than day : ' " 107 i
But my t is hard at hand, And hence I go ; " 481
Embraced me, and so kiss'd me the first <, " ^gj
192
226
709
894
940
944
1125
1198
1261
1378
1427
Marr. of Geniint 272
288
498
716
Geraint and E. 38
115
576
966
Balin and Balan 173
535
Merlin and V. 135
142
166
184
186
216
410
823
Time
731
Tiny-trumpeting
': Time (s) (continued) For every fiery prophet in oKl t's, Holy Grail 876
Come, as they will, and many a t they come, „ 911
' In happy t behold our pilot-star ! Pelleas and E. 63
So for the last t she was gracious to him. .. 175
Modred thought, ' The t is hard at hand.' ,. 610
in t the carcanet Vest her with plaintive memories Last Tom-nament 28
Thej- served their use, their t ; „ 676
Many a t for hours. Beside the placid breathings
till lier t To tell you : '
(for the t Was maytime, and as yet no sin
Bear with me for the last t while I show.
And be the fair beginning of a t.
Dwelt with them, till in t their Abbess died.
Shall never more, at any future t.
And hid Excalibur the second <,
caught him by the hilt, and brandish'd him Three
t's, (repeat)
'tis t that I were gone.
For now I see the true old t's are dead,
Such t's have been not since the light
Touch'd by the adulterous finger of a <
That saved her many t's, not fail —
For T and Grief abode too long with Life,
So T and Grief did beckon unto Death,
Yet is my life nor in the present t.
Heart beating t to heart, lip pressing lip,
that little hour was bound Shut in from T,
strait girth of T Inswathe the fulness of Eternity,
To centre in this place and t.
And heralded the distance of this t !
I seem'd the only part of T stood still,
Long t entrancement held me.
Feom that t forth I would not see her more ;
(As I have seen them many a hundred t's)
ill-suited as it seem'd To such a t,
Laud me not Before my t, but hear me to the close.
Those were the pleasant t's,
in the pleasant t's that had past,
I was near my t wi' the boy,
little of us left by the t this sun be set.'
For a dozen t's they came with their pikes and musqueteers,
And a dozen t's we shook 'em off
That t I did not see.
Straange an' cowd fur the t !
but the foe sprung his mine many t's,
(My good friend By this t shoidd be mth me.)
Set thee in light till t shall be no more ?
Towers of a happier t, low down in a rainbow deep
O never was t so good !
And we came in an evil / to the Isle
finite-infinite space In finite-infinite T-
Gu inevere 68
142
387
454
466
692
Pass, of Arthur 186
279
., 314,329
331
397
400
To the Queen ii 43
62
Lover's Tale i 107
110
116
260
438
482
552
562
573
626
„ ii 1
145
iv 208
243
First Quarrel 41
55
82
The Revenge 28
the lost light of those dawn-golden t's,
for the sake Of one recalling gracious t's,
And mixt the dream of classic t's
To women, the flower of the t,
glory and shame dying out for ever in endless t,
I have had some glimmer, at t's,
A Thousand summers ere the t of Christ
cock has crow'd already once, he crows before his t ;
Not he, not yet ! and t to act —
many's the t that I watch'd her at mass
fur it mun be the t about now When Molly
Naay to be sewer it be past 'er t.
triumphs over t and space,
Then, and here in Edward's t,
we range with Science, glorying in the T,
Lame and old, and past his t,
remember how the course of T will swerve,
The man in Space and T,
Dead, who had served his t.
Love is in and out of t,
' Light — more Light — while T shall last ! '
At t's our Britain cannot rest, At t's her steps
are swift and rash ;
But since your name will grow with T,
53
Sisters {E. and E.) 90
Village Wife 21
Bef. of Lucknow 31
Sir J. Oldcastle 139
Columbus 150
V. of Maeldune 79
87
105
De Prof., Two G. 46
To W. H. Brookfleld 7
To E. Fitzgerald 53
Tiresias 194
The Wreck 49
Despair 75
„ 103
Ancient Sage 1
The Flight 3
73
Tomorrow 29
Spinster's S's. 1
5
Locksley H., Sixty 75
83
217
227
235
Epilogue 49
Dead Prophet 9
Helen's Tower 5
Epit. on Caxton 1
To Marq. of Dufferin 1
13
Time (s) (continued) Fifty t's the rose has floMer'd
and faded. Fifty t's the golden harvest fallen, On .Jul. Q. Victoria 1
drew down before his t Sickening, Demeter and P. 114
fun' upo' four short legs ten t's fur one upo' two. Owd Rod 16
I thowt o' the good owd t's 'at was goaii, „ 43
an' the t's 'at was coomin' on ; ,.44
a jubilant challenge to T and to Fate ; Vastness 21
Twelve t's in the year Bring me bliss. The Ring 5
Moon, you fade at t's From the night. .. 9
landscape which your eyes Have many a t ranged over ,. 151
At t's too shrilling in her angrier moods, ., 395
Up, get up, the t is short, Forlorn 73
I tolerant of the colder t. To Ulysses 13
As I shall be forgotten by old T, To Mary Boyle 23
When Dives loathed theVs, „ 29
in their t thy warblers rise on wing. Prog, of Spring 108
The true Alcestis of the t. Romney's R. 91
a proof That I — even I — at t's remember'd you. „ 93
I sank with the body at t's in the sloughs By an Evolution. 18
At t's the small black fly upon the pane To one who ran down Eng. 3
Ever as of old t, Solitary firstling. The Snowdrop 3
Coming in the cold t. Prophet of the gay t. Prophet
of the May t, „ 5
But in due t for every Mussulman, Akbar's Dream 24
Still — at t's A doubt, a fear, — „ 168
even As in the t before ; „ 191
in the flame that measures T ! „ Hymn 8
They heard, they bided their t. Baiidit's Death 14
there is t for the race to grow. The Dawn 20
that Eternal Harmony Whereto the worlds
beat t, D. of the Duke of C. 16
For tho' from out our bourne of T and Place Crossing the Bar 13
Time (verb) Death's twin-brother, t's my breath ; In Mem. Ixviii 2
Timeless Kneel adoring Him the T Akbar's D., Hymn 8
Timid and said to him With t firmness, Geraint and E. 140
Amy loved me. Amy f ail'd me. Amy was a t
child ; Locksley H., Sixty 19
Timing happy stars, t with things below, Maud I xviii 81
Timour-Mammon T-M grins on a pile of children's bones, „ i 46
Timur T built his ghastly tower of eighty Locksley H., Sixty 82
Tin polish'd t's. To serve the hot-and-hot ; Will Water. 227
Tinct blazon'd on the shield In their own t, Lancelot and E. 10
Tinged t with wan from lack of sleep, Princess Hi 25
Tingle and the nerves prick And t : In Mem. I 3
Tinglhig A cry that shiver'd to the t stars, M. d' Arthur 199
A cry that shiver'd to the t stars, Pass, of Arthur 367
Tinkled See Low-tinkled
Tinkling Now by some t rivulet. Sir L. and Q. G. 29
Nor rivulet t from the rock ; In Mem. c 13
Here at the head of a t fall, Maud I xxi 6
Tinsel And shrill'd his t shaft. Talking Oak 68
Light coin, the t clink of compliment. Princess ii 55
Tint (s) days have vanish'd, tone and t. In Mern. xliv 5
Tint (verb) As light a flush As hardly t's the blossom Balin and Balan 267
Tintagil held T castle by the Cornish sea. Com. of Arthur 187
Uther in his wrath and heat besieged Ygerne within T, ., 199
on the night When Uther in T past away „ 367
by strong storm Blown into shelter at T, Merlin and V. 10
Perchance in lone T far from all The tonguesters Last Tournament 392
turning, past and gain'd T, half in sea, „ 505
sands Of dark T by the Cornish sea ; Guinevere 294
Tinted See Rosy-tinted
Tiny Claps her t hands above me, Lilian 4
Annie from her baby's forehead dipt A t curl, and
gave it : Enoch Arden 236
Or from the t pitted target blew Aylmer's Field 93
She tapt her t silken-sandal'd foot : Princess, Pro. 150
a t poem All composed in a metre of Catullus, Hendecasyllabics 3
The t cell is forlorn, Maud II ii 13
Save that one rivulet from a t cave Pelleas and E. 425
whereon There tript a himdred t silver deer, Last Tournament 171
t fist Had graspt a daisy from your Mother's grave — The Ring 322
The starling claps his t castanets. Prog, of Spring 56
Will my t spark of being wholly vanish God and the Univ. 1
Tiny-trumpeting The t-t gnat can break our dream Lancelot and E. 137
Tip
732
Token
Tip (See also Finger-tips) thro' her to the t's of her
long hands, Princess ii 40
Thy gloom is kindled at the i's, In Mem. xxxix 11
Tipmost to t lance and topmost helm, Last Tournament 442
Tipt And t with frost-like spires. Palace of Art 52
with their fires Love t his keenest darts ; D. of F. Women 173
t with lessening peak And pinnacle, Gareth and L. 308
and t With trenchant steel, „ 692
spear and hehnet t With stormy light Tiresias 113
Tip-tilted T-t like the petal of a flower ; Gareth and L. 591
Tiptoe on every peak a statue seem'd To hang on t, Palace of Art 38
On t seem'd to touch upon a sphere Princess vii 324
Tire Bore and forebore, and did not t, Two Voices 218
For a love that never fs ? Window, Marr. Mom. 18
But mine the love that will not t, In Mem. ex 18
Tired ' out With cutting eights that day The Epic 9
Than t eyelids upon t eyes ; Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 6
At last, t out with play. Talking Oak 206
Ascending t, heavily slept till morn. Enoch Arden 181
' T, Annie ? ' for she did not speak a word. „ 390
' T ? ' but her face had fall'n upon her hands ; ., 391
T of so much within our little life, Lucretius 226
I began to be f a little. Grandmother 74
I seem to be < a little, „ 99
Tirra lirra ' T I,' by the river Sang Sir Lancelot. L. of Shalott Hi 35
Tissue In silver t talking things of state ; Marr. of Geraint 663
Tit tumble the blossom, the mad little t's ! Window, Ay 9
T's, wrens, and all wing'd nothings peck Marr. of Geraint 275
glance the t's, and shriek the jays, Prog, of Spring 15
Titan (adj.) Whose T angels, Gabriel, Abdiel, Milton 5
Titan (s) The pulses of a T's heart ; In Mem. ciii 32
Weird T by thy winter weight of years To Victor Hugo 7
Titanic T forces taking birth In divers seasons. Day Dm., L' Envoi 17
T shapes, they cramm'd The forum. Princess vii 124
Tithe (church rate) {See also Toithe) paid our t's in the
days that are gone, Maud II v 23
Fur moiist on 'em talks agean t. Church-warden, etc. 52
Tithe (tenth part) nine t's of times Face-flatterer and
backbiter Merlin and V. 823
Wasted and worn, and but a,toi them. Holy Grail 723
And a lean Order — scarce return'd a t — „ 894
When I landed again, with a, t oi my men, V. of Maeldune 130
Titian I am not Raphael, T — no Romney's R. 46
Titianic in hues to dim The T Flora. Gardener's D. 171
Title Nor toil for t, place, or touch Of pension. Love thou thy land 25
New as his t, built last year, Maud I x \Q
a Prince indeed. Beyond all t's, Ded. of Idylls 42
her name And t, ' Queen of Beauty,' Pelleas and E. 116
heirless flaw In his throne's t Sir J. Oldcastle 73
Our t, which we never mean to yield, Columbus 32
scarce have learnt the t of your book, The Ring 126
Title-scroll t-s's and gorgeous heraldries. Aylmer's Field 656
Titmouse t hope to win her With his chirrup Maud I xx 29
Titter and then A strangled t. Princess v 16
Tityrus Poet of the happy T piping underneath To Virgil 13
To-and-fro commenced A t-a-f, so pacing Princess ii 302
'Toattler (teetotaler) Doctor's a 't, lass, N. Farmer, O. S. 66
To-be Dispensing harvest, sowing the T-b, Princess vii 289
Thro' all the secular i-b. In Mem. xli 23
To-come and all the rich t-c Reels, Princess vii 356
To-daay (to-day) As I says to my missis t-d, Church-warden, etc. 25
Todaay (to-day) Seead her t goa by — N. Partner, N. S. 13
To^y (See also To-daay, Tc^aay) To-morrow yet
would reap t-d. Love thou thy land 93
' T-d I saw the dragon-fiy Two Voices 8
Her6 comes t-d, Pallas and Aphrodite, (Enone 85
I care not if I go t-d. May Queen, Con. 43
' The sequel of t-d unsolders all M. d' Arthur 14
I die here T-d, and whole years long, St. S. Stylites 54
T-d I sat for an hour and wept, Edward Gray 11
Cruelly came they back t-d : „ 18
T-d the Lady Psyche will harangue Princess ii 95
to slip away T-d, to-morrow, soon : „ 297
And told me she would answer us t-d, „ Hi 166
Let us dream our dream t-d. Ode Inter, Exhib. 31
To-day (continued) See, empire upon empire
smiles t-d.
All along the valley, while I walk'd t-d.
Be merry, all birds, t-d,
thinking ' here t-d,' Or ' here to-morrow
That thou hadst touch'd the land t-d.
Nor will it lessen from t-d ;
T-d they count as kindred souls ;
That has t-d its sunny side.
T-d the grave is bright for me.
Strange, that I tried t-d To beguile her
So well thine arm hath wrought for me t-d^'
By this King Arthur as by thee t-d,
' Forward ! and t-d I change you,
A man of thine t-d Abash'd us both.
W. to Marie Alex. 33
V. of Cauteretz 5
Window, Ay 1
In Mem. vi 23
„ xiv 2
lix 10
„ xcix 19
., Con. 72
73
Maud I XX 2
Com. of Arthur 127
162
Geraint and E. 413
Balin and Balan 70
' Eyes have I That saw t-d the shadow of a spear, „ 373
He cares not for me : only here t-d Lancelot and E. 126
grace to me,' She answer'd, ' twice t-d. „ 384
So great a knight as we have seen t-d — „ 533
speak your wish. Seeing I go t-d : ' ., 925
But who first saw the holy thing t-d ? ' Holy Grail 67
hence he went T-d for three days' hunting — Last Tournament 530
' The sequel of t-d unsolders all Pass, of Arthur 182
Thrust f roward on t-d and out of place ; Lover's Tale i 123
As here t-d, but not so wordily — „ iv 355
' O worms and maggots of t-d Ancient Sage 210
T-d ? but what of yesterday ? „ 216
There again I stood t-d, Locksley H., Sixty 33
Here t-d was Amy with me, „ 53
Those eyes the blue t-d, Epilogue 9
happier lot Than ours, who rhyme t-d. „ 51
The days that seem t-d, Pref. Poem Broth. Son. 24
Miriam, breaks her latest earthy link With me t-d. The Ring 48
For I myself would tell you all t-d. „ 124
' She too might speak t-d,' „ 125
Ay, t-d ! I brought you to that chamber „ 128
but close to me t-d As this red rose, Roses on the T. 6
T-d, before you turn again To thoughts To Master of B. 13
and wield The forces of t-d, Mechanophilus 30
Toddle Poor little life that t's half an hour Lucretius 228
Toil (s) But enter not the t of life. Margaret 24
And one, the reapers at their sultry t. Palace of Art 77
Making sweet close of his delicious t's — „ 185
Ripens and fades, and falls, and hath no t. Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 37
and reap the harvest with enduring t, „ 121
surely, slumber is more sweet than t, „ 126
a Rose In roses, mingled with her fragrant t, Gardener's D. 143
Old age hath yet his honour and his t ; Ulysses 50
I must work thro' months of t, A mphion 97
And mutual love and honourable t ; Enoch A rden 83
On with / of heart and knees and hands. Ode on Well. 212
O thou that after t and storm In Mem. xxxiii 1
Is t ccioperant to an end. „ cxxviii 24
As careful robins eye the delver's t, Marr. of Geraint 774
As careful robins eye the delver's t ; Geraint and E. 431
body journeying onward, sick with t. Lover's Tale i 124
T and inefiable weariness, Def. of Lucknow 90
If night, what barren < to be ! Tiresias 207
Toil (verb) I said, ' 1 1 beneath the curse, Two Voices 229
why should we t alone. We only t. Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 15
Why should we only t, „ 24
Nor t for title, place, or touch Of pension, Love thou thy land 25
Who t's across the middle moonlit nights, Lover's Tale i 138
Toil'd T onward, prick'd with goads and stings ; Palace of Art 150
Souls that have t, and wrought, Ulysses 46
t Mastering the lawless science of our law, Aylmer's Field 434
Has often t to clothe your little ones ; „ 699
Toiling late and soon Spins, t out his own cocoon. Two Voices 180
A motion t in the gloom — - Love thou thy land 54
T in immeasurable sand, Will 16
Of loyal vassals t for their liege. Com. of Arthur 282
Toime (time) i' the woost o' t's I wur niver N. Farmer, O. S. 16
Toithe (tithe) an's t were due, an' I gied it in hond ; „ 11
an' agean the t an' the raate. Church-warden, etc. 11
Token There came a sweeter t when the night May Queen, Con. 22
I
I
Token
733
ToU
Token (continued) There came a mystic t from the king Edwin Morris 132
It will moreover be a < to her, That I am he.' Enoch Arden 900
Sunny t's of the Line, Ode Inter. Exhih. 19
Who show'd At ol distress ? In Mevi. Ixxviii 13
In t of true heart and fealty. Gareth and L. 399
pray the King To let me bear some t of his
Queen
Thro' memory of that t on the shield
then he bound Her ^ on h s helmet,
know When these have worn their t's :
Told (See also Be-told, Tell'd, Tould, Towd)
hardly nigher made,
Sweet Alice, if I < her all ? '
My love hath t me so a thousand times.
the clergyman, has t me words of peace.
wheresoever I am sung or t In aftertime.
And t me I should love.
The cuckoo t his name to all the liills ;
This is not t of any. They were saints.
And t him of my choice,
and that same song of his He < me ;
She t him of their tears, And pray'd him.
And t him all her nurse's tale.
She t me all her friends had said ;
T him, with other annals of the port,
tho' Miriam Lane had t him all.
Then he t her of his voyage. His wreck,
' She t me. She and James had quarreli'd.
he t a long long-winded tale Of how the Squire
And been himself a part of what he t.
t her fairy-tales, Show'd her the fairy footings
as he < The story, storming a hill-fort
praised the waning red, and t The vintage —
Then she t it, having dream'd Of that same coast.
My golden work in which I < a truth
but we, imworthier, t Of college :
And often t a tale from mouth to mouth
have him back Who t the ' Winter's tale '
But your example pilot, t her all.
But such extremes, 1 1 her, well might harm
And t me she would answer us to-day.
How came you here ? ' I t him :
And me none t : not less to an eye like mine
you had gone to her. She t, perforce ;
Go : Cyril t us all.'
now a pointed finger, t them all :
And so I often t her, right or wrong,
1 1 the king that I was pledged To fight
if I saw not, yet they t me all
who might have t, For she was cramm'd
you t us all That England's honest censure
It t of England then to me.
These have t us all their anger
There was one who watch'd and I me —
He t it not ; or something seal'd
And tell them all they would have t,
He t me, lives in any crowd.
Since first he t me that he loved
What if he had t her yestermorn
Who t him we were there ?
Horrible, hateful, monstrous, not tohe t;
when I enter'd t me that himself And Merlin
nor could I part in peace Till this were t.'
That God hath t the King a secret word.
Take thou the truth as thou hast t it me.
t. How once the wandering forester at dawn,
he sought The King alone, and found, and t liim all
And t him of a cavern hard at hand,
turning to Lynette he t The tale of Gareth,
And he that t the tale in older times
But he, that t it later, says Lynette.
T Enid, and they sadden'd her the more :
journey to her, as himself Had t her,
these things he t the King.
Who t him, scouring still, ' The sparrow-hawk ! '
Balin and Balan 188
369
Lancelot and E. 374
769
I t thee —
Two Voices 173
Miller's D. 120
(Enone 197
May Queen, Con. 12
M. d' Arthur 34
Gardener's D. 64
93
St. S. Stylites 151
Talking Oak 18
Golden Year 8
Godiva 19
Lady Clare 80
The Letters 25
Etioch Arden 702
765
861
The Brook 96
„ 138
Aylmer's Field 12
89
224
406
Sea Dreams 206
Lucretius 260
Princess, Pro. 110
191
238
Hi 137
144
166
iv221
324
330
v36
270
288
352
vi20
Con. 34
Third of Feb. 1
The Daisy 89
Boddicea 23
„ .30
In Mem. xxxi 15
xl 25
„ xcviii 26
„ Con. 6
Maud I vi 50
II V 52
„ /// vi 41
Com. of Arthur 364
394
489
Gareth and L. 257
497
541
1189
1272
1427
1429
Marr. of Geraint 64
144
151
260
Told (continued) And t her all their converse in the hall, Marr. of Geraint 520
journey toward her, as liimself Had t her, „ 846
the boy retum'd And t them of a chamber, Geraint and E. 261
t Free tales, and took the word and play'd .. 290
She t him all that Earl Limours had said, ,. 391
nor t his gentle wife What ail'd him, „ 503
then he plainlier t How the huge Earl lay slain „ 805
therewithal (for thus he t us) brought Balin and Balan 112
Then Balan t him brokenly, and in gasps, „ 603
this good knight T me, that twice a wanton damsel „ 609
For Merlin once had t her of a charm. Merlin and V. 205
Than when 1 1 you first of such a charm. „ 359
Too much I trusted when 1 1 you that, „ 361
' O crueller than was ever t in tale, „ 858
t her all the charm, and slept. „ 966
What is it ? and she t him A red sleeve
Broider'd with pearls,'
Than Lancelot < me of a common talk
there t the King What the King knew.
But when the maid had t him all her tale.
And when the maid had t him all the tale
T him that her fine care had saved his life.
1 1 her that her love Was but the flash of youth,
T us of this in our refectory.
And he to whom she t her sins, or what
' O brother, when 1 1 him what had chanced.
To whom 1 1 my phantoms, and he said :
T him he follow'd — almost Arthur's words —
So when 1 1 him all thyself hast heard,
' Lo ! Pel leas is dead — he t us —
Sir Lancelot t This matter to the Queen,
Vivien, lurking, heard. She t Sir Modred.
Nor with them mix'd, nor t her name,
and the tales Which my good father t me,
T, when the man was no more than a voice
wheresoever I am sung or t In aftertime,
Once or twice she t me (For I remember all
things)
The wind T a lovetale beside us,
What marvel my Camilla t me all ? (repeat)
She t me all her love : she shall not weep.
Unfrequent, low, as tho' it t its pulses ;
Some one had t me she was dead,
1 1 him all my love, How I had loved her
but of this I deem As of the visions that he t —
(They t her somewhat rashly as I think)
(I t you that he had his golden hour),
till he t me that so many years had gone by.
An' he t it me all at once, as simple as any child,
and he never has t me a lie.
1 1 them my tale, God's own truth —
they have t you he never repented his sin.
Then t them of his wars, and of his wound. Sisters (E. and E.) 60
1 1 your wayside story to my mother And Evelyn. „ 189
And t the living daughter with what love „ 253
' All the more need,' 1 1 him. In the Child. Hasp. 18
their marksmen were t of our best, Def. of Lucknow 19
is it true what was t by the scout, „ 95
tale, that t to me. When but thine age, Tiresias 18
souls of men were immortal, as men have been t, Despair 99
And then he t their legend : m, r.^ e^^
1 1 her ' sent To Miriam,'
1 1 her of my vow,
I have t you my tale. Get you gone.
Told-of and cursed the tale. The t-o,
Tolerance must have rated her Beyond all t.
This Gama swamp'd in lazy t.
Tolerant T of what he half disdain'd,
Itot the colder time.
Toll (s) ' Honour,' she said, ' and homage, tax and t,
With silks, and fruits, and spices, clear of /,
The t of funeral in an Angel ear
Toll (verb) T ye the church-bell sad and slow,
One set slow bell will seem to t
Would you could t me out of life,
Lancelot and E. 372
577
706
798
823
863
1317
Holy Grail 41
83
271
444
669
736
Pelleas and E. 377
Guinevere 53
99
148
317
Pass, of Arthur 3
202
Lover's Tale i 345
543
557, 579
742
ii 55
70
90
iv2^
98
206
First Quarrel 36
58
Rizpah 24
„ 33
The Ring 206
362
401
Charily 44
Balin and Balan 543
Aylmer's Field 381
Princess v 443
Merlin and V. 178
To Ulysses 13
(Enone 116
Golden Year 45
D. of the Duke of C. 10
D. of the 0. Year 3
In Mem. Ivii 10
Lover's Tale iv 30
ToU
734
Tongue
Toll (verb) (continued) when they t the Chapel bell ! Locksley IL, Sixty 261
Toll'd like a bell T by an earthquake in a trembling
tower, Princess vi 332
Let the bell be t. (repeat) Ode on Well. 46, 53, 58
by slow degrees the sullen bell T quicker, Lover s Tale Hi 14
Tolling thence at intervals A low bell t. ,, H 83
Then came on me The hollow t of the bell, „ Hi 10
Heard yet once more the t bell, „ iv 29
For that low knell t his lady dead — „ 33
/ of his funeral bell Broke on my Pagan Paradise, Tiresias 192
Bridal bells with tl . . . Forlorn 70
Tom (name of men and cats) (See also Tommy) T, lig
theere o' the cusliion, an' tother T 'ere o' the mat. Spinster's S's. 94
Swearing agean, you T's, „ 59
Tomb Shut up as in a crumbling t, Palace of Art 273
And in the moon athwart the place of t's, M. d' Arthur 46
risuig bore him thro' the place of t's. „ 175
Shall hold their orgies at your t. You might have won 12
Remains the lean P. W. on his < : The Brook 192
her, that is the womb and t of all, Lucretius 244
near his t a feast Shone, silver-set ; Princess, Pro. 105
her empty glove upon the t Lay by her „ iv 596
I go to plant it on his t. In Mem. viii 22
In that deep dawn behind the t, „ xlvi 6
My old affection of the t, (repeat) „ Ixxxv 75,77
As it were a duty done to the t, Maud I xix 49
' Let her t Be costly, and her image thereupon, Lancelot and E. 1339
all true hearts be blazon'd on her t In letters gold
and azui'e ! ' „ 1344
And in the moon athwart the place of t's. Pass, of Arthur 214
rising bore loim thro' the place of t's. „ 343
break down and raze The blessed t of Clirist ; Columbus 99
I was planted now in a < ; The Wreck 37
And growing, on her t, Ancient Sage 164
heai"d in silence from the silence of a t. Locksley H., Sixty 74
Angel seated in the vacant t. „ 278
I peer'd thro' t and cave, Demeter and P. 70
' Among the t's in this damp vale of yours ! The Ring 325
Tombing The blackness round the t sod, On a Mourner 27
Tome at a board by t and paper sat. Princess ii 32
Tommy (lovers and cats) (See also Tom) T the fust, an' T
the second, Spinster's S's. 10
and one o' the Tommies beside. „ 40
I mun part them Tommies — „ 92
Hed I married the Tommies — O Lord, „ 95
To loove an' obaay the Tommies ! „ 96
You Tommies shall waait to-night „ 120
Tommy (name of boy) T's f aace be as fresh as a codlin North. Cobbler 110
'Ere be our Sally an' T, „ 111
Tomobrit T, Athos, all things fair. To E. L. 5
Tomorra (to-morrow) ye gev her the top of the momin', ' T '
says she. Tomorroio 3
I'll meet you agin t,' says he, „ 16
ye'll meet me < ?' " T', t, Machree ! ' „ 18
an' whishper, an' say ' T, T \ ' „ 55
' T, T,' she says, an' she didn't intind „ 59
' He said he would meet me t '. ' „ 80
To-morrow (See also Morrow, Tomorra) I come t-m morn.
■ 1 go, but I return: Audley Court 70
We two will wed t-m morn. Lady Clare 87
We hold a tourney here t-7ti mom, Marr. of Geraint 287
T-m 'ill be the happiest time of all the glad New-
year ; (repeat) May Queen 2, 42
Etlie shall go with me t-m to the green, „ 25
T-^n 'ill be of all the year the maddest merriest day, „ 43
T-m yet would reap to-day, jMve tliou thy land 93
• T-m he weds \vith me.' Lady Clare 16
to slip away To-day, t-m, soon : Princess ii 297
' T-m, love, t-m, And that's an age away.' Window, When 13
thinking, ' here to-day,' Or ' here t-m In Mem. vi 24
But t-m, if we live, Mavd I xx 23
Lancelot, sitting in my place Enchair'd t-m. Last Tournament 104
Hail, King ! T-m thou shalt pass away. Pass, of Arthur 34
I'll come for an hour t-m. First Quarrel 46
Nurse, I must do it t-m ; In the Child. Hasp. 42
To-morrow (continued) Not to-night in Locksley
Hall— ^?«. —
Here to-night, the Hall t-m,
Tomyris bronze valves, emboss'd with T
Ton Than were those lead-like t's of sin,
San Philip that, of fifteen himdred t's,
Tone (See also Under-tone) Wears all day a fainter t
Sweeter t's than calumny ?
Ah pity— hint it not in human t's,
' 0 cruel heart,' she changed her t,
' He heeded not reviling t's.
Locksley H., Sixty 214
261
Princess v 365
St. S. Stylites 25
The Revenge 40
The Owl ii 7
A Dirge 17
Wan Sculptor 11
Mariana in the S. 69
Two Voices 220
All day the wind breathes low with mello^ver t : Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 102
fall down and glance From t to t, D. of F. Women 167
it was the t with which he read — M. d' Arthur, Ep. 5
Swung themselves, and in low t's replied ; Vision of Sin 20
There to herself, all in low t's, she read. Princess vii 175
To one clear harp in divers t's. In Mem. i 2
With all the music in her t, ., Hi 10
The days have vanish'd, t and tint, .. xliv 5
He past ; a soul of nobler t: ,, Ix 1
Perhaps the smile and tender t Maud I vi 63
Then the King in low deep t's. Com. of Arthur 260
she tower'd her bells, T under t, shrill'd ; Merlin and V. 132
Then came her father, saying in low t's, Lancelot and E. 994
Is this the t of empire ? _ To the Queen ii 18
in the utterance Of silver-chorded t's : ' Lover's Ttde ii 142
a t so rough that I broke into passionate tears, The Wreck 122
Toned See Fi^-toned, Heavenly-toned, Low-toned, Richest-toned
Tongue (S) Thou of the many t's, the myriad eyes ! Ode to Memory 47
Like Indian reeds blown from his silver t, The Poet 13
My tremulous t faltereth, Elednore 136
For Kate hath an imbridled t, Kate 7
' When, wide in soul and bold of t. Two Voices 124
Blowing a noise of t's and deeds, „ 206
To feel, altho' no t can prove, „ 445
That run before the fluttering t's of fire ; D. of F. Women 30
A golden bill ! the silver t. The Blackbird 13
and servile to a shrewish t ! Locksley Hall 42
'Tis said he had a tuneful t, A mphion 17
Lot me loose thy t with wine : Vision of Sin 88
' Fear not thou to loose thy t ; „ 155
But in a < no man can understand ; „ 222
I would that my t could utter The thoughts Break, break, etc. 3
his long-bounden t Was loosen'd, Enoch Arden 644
Fairer his talk, a t that ruled the hour, Aylmers Field 194
My t Trips, or I speak profanely. Lucretius 73
Not in this frequence can I lend full t. Princess iv 442
And every spoken t should lord you. „ 544
On flying Time from all their silver Vs — „ vii 105
his triumph will be simg By some yet unmoulded t Ode on Well. 233
Far, how far no t can say, Ode Inter. Exhib. 30
strong on liis legs, but still of his t ! Grandmother 13
tis, a. fire as you know, my dear, the t „ 28
Whatever fickle t's may say. In Mem. xxvi 4
To flicker with his double t. „ ex 8
seem'd to live A contradiction on tlie t, „ cxxv 4
That made my t so stammer and trip Mand I vi 83
With the evil t and the evil ear, ,, x 51
Let not my t be a thrall to my eye, „ xvi 32
words, Beyond my t to tell thee — Com. of Arthur 269
Graven in the oldest / of all this world, „ 302
And Uther slit thy t : Gareth and L. 376
I curse the t that all thro' yesterday Keviled thee, „ 1322
as a man upon his t May break it, Geraint and E. 42
man, who driven by evil t's From all his fellows, Balin and Balan 125
as the man in life Was wounded by blind t's he saw
not „ 130
Woods have t's, As walls have ears : „ 530
neither eyes nor t — O stupid child ! Merlin and V. 251
yet, methinks Thy t has tript a little : „ 602
and let her t Rage like a fire „ 801
heathen caught and reft him of his t. Lancelot and E. 273
prick'd at once, all t's were loosed : „ 724
such a < To blare its own interpretation — „ 942
rain a scroll Of letters in a < no man could read. Uoly Grail Ml
Tongue
735
Took
Tongue (s) (continued) With supplication both of knees and t : Holy Grail 602
given thee a fair face, Lacking a < ? ' Pelleas and E. 102
Queen, May help them, loose thy t, and let nie know.' „ 600
Yet strangers to the t, and with blunt stamp Last Tournament 66
lock up my t From uttering freely „ 693
good nuns would check her gadding t Guinevere 313
This t that wagg'd They said with such heretical
arrogance
Must learn to use the t's of all the world.
Who finds the Saviour in his mother t.
speaking clearly in thy native t — No Latin —
the men that were mighty of t
Of diverse t, but with a common will
their t's may have babbled of me —
Nor roll thy viands on a luscious t
a single race, a single t —
Unfumish'd brows, tempestuous t's —
But Moother was free of 'er t,
waste and field and town of alien t,
Tha'd niver not hopple thy t, an' the t's sit afire
o' Hell, Church-warden, etc. 24
Tongue (verb) Whose echo shall not t thy glorious doom, Tiresias 136
Tongue-banger Sally she tum'd a t-b, North. Cobbler 23
Tongued See Dry-tongued, Low-tongoed
Tongaeless then tum'd the t man From the half-face
to the full eye, Lancelot and E. 1261
Tonguester (adj.) madden'd to the height By t tricks. To Alary Boyle 34
Sir J. Oldcastle 14
34
115
133
V. of Maeldwne 23
Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 6
The Wreck 41
Ancient Sage 267
Locksley H., Sixty 165
Freedom 38
Owd Rod 73
St. Telemachus 30
Tonguester (s) far from all The t's of the court
thro' the t's we may fall.
Tongue-tied A t-t Poet in the feverous days,
And thus t-t, it made him wroth the more
To-night T-n I saw the stm set :
I go t-n : I come to-morrow mom,
I prophesy that I shall die t-n,
' Tho I should die t-n.'
how pale she had look'd Darling, t-ii !
Why were you silent when I spoke t-n ?
t-n — the song Might have been worse
Sweet dream, be perfect. I shall die t-n.
if t-n our greatness were struck dead,
Yet here t-n in this dark city.
For he will see them on t-n ;
T-n the winds begin to rise
T-n ungather'd let us leave
Who rest t-n beside the sea.
Her brother is coming back t-n
On my fresh hope, to the Hall t-n.
' Ah, be Among the roses t-n.'
Leave me t-n : I am weary to the death.'
And yet t-n, t-n — when all ray wealth
I propose t-n To show you what is dearest
I have liere t-n a guest So bound to me
an' go t-n by the boat.'
Why should he call me t-n.
But I go t-n to my boy,
Molly belike may 'a lighted t-n upo' one.
You Tommies shall waait t-n
Not t-n in Locksley Hall —
Not the Hall i-n, my grandson !
Here t-n ! the Hall to-morrow.
Farewell, Macready, since t-n we part ;
Set the mountain aflame t-n,
' can ya paay me the rent t-n ? '
' Then hout t-n tha shall goa.'
' what has darken'd thee t-n ? '
Tonsured A t head in middle age forlorn,
Tonnp (turnip) Whoats or t's or taates —
Goan into mangles an' t's,
t's was haafe on 'em fingers an' toas,
Too-earnest Nor look with that t-e eye —
Too-fearful t-f guilt. Simpler than any child,
Took (See also Taaked, Tuk) So t echo with delight,
(repeat)
Cleaving, t root, and springing forth anew
And t the reed-tops as it went.
Last Tournament 393
Locksley H., Sixty 130
Golden Year 10
Geraint and E. 112
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 5
AvMey Court 70
St. S. StylUes 220
Lady Clare 48
Aylmer's Field 380
Sea Dreams 268
Frincess iv 250
„ vii 149
Third of Feb. 17
The Daisy 95
In Mem. vi 33
XV 1
ev 1
„ Con. 76
Maud I xix 1
103
„ xxi 13
Geraint and E. 358
Lover's Tale i 668
iv 251
344
First Quarrel 88
Rizpah 3
74
Spinster's S's. 7
120
Locksley H., Sixty 214
237
261
To W. C. Macready 1
On Jub. Q. Victoria 16
Owd Roa 57
58
Akbar's Dream 2
The Brook 200
VUlage Wife 26
Owd Rod 28
Church-warden, etc. 4
Day Dm., Pro. 18
Guinevere 370
Took (coniinued) t the soul Of that waste place with joy Dying Swan 21
' Who t a wife, who rear'd his race, Two Voices 328
those great Bells Began to chime. She t her throne : Palace of Art 158
great delight and shuddering t hold of all my mind. May Queen, Con. 35
He t the goose upon his arm, The Goose 41
I row'd across And t it, and have worn it, M. d' Arthur 33
Then t with care, and kneeling on one knee, ,, 173
Put forth their hands, and t the King, „ 206
Yet for the pleasure that I i to hear, Gardener's D. 228
Dora t the child, and went her way Dora 71
she rose and t The child once more, „ 80
he t the boy that cried aloud And struggled hard. „ 101
Dora said, " My imcle t the boy ; „ 114
as years Went forward, Mary t another mate ; ,, 171
As one by one we t them — Walk, to the Mail 95
We t them all, till she was left alone „ 98
' 1 1 the swarming sound of life — Talking Oak 213
Why t ye not your pastime ? Love and Duty 28
Love liimself t part against himself „ 45
with a frolic welcome t The thimder and the sunshine, Ulysses 47
Love t up the glass of Time, Locksley Hall 31
Love t up the harp of Life, „ 33
she t the tax away And built herself an everlasting name. Godiva 78
Edward Gray 25
The Letters 17
Vision of Sin 6
Enoch Arden 153
646
The "Brook 129
Aylmer's Field 67
491
532
Sea Dreams 185
189
Lucretius 7
Frincess, Pro. 108
179
i46
a 124
152
304
362
„ iv 313
380
598
t;268
484
468
„ vi 11
192
Con. 29
The Daisy 85
In Mem. xxx 21
„ loiii 1
„ Ixix 7
Maud I xii 14
Com. of Arthur 221
298
309
Gareth and L. 662
The Owl a 4
The Poet 21
Dying Swan 10
Then 1 1 a pencil, and wrote On the mossy stone.
She t the little ivory chest.
And t him by the curls, and led him in,
Enoch t, and handled all his limbs,
when their casks were fill'd they t aboard :
he t Her blind and shuddering puppies,
still T joyful note of all things joyful,
innocent hare Falter before he t it.
Seized it, t home, and to my lady, —
So false, he partly t himself for true ;
So never t that useful name in vain,
the master t Small notice, or austerely,
the maiden Aunt T this fair day for text,
And there we t one tutor as to read :
they saw the King ; he t the gifts ;
she t A bird's-eye-view of all imgracious past ;
He t advantage of his strength to be
T both his hands, and smiling faintly said :
We tum'd to go, but Cyril t the child,
We t this palace ; but even from the first
dispatches which the Head T half-amazed,
She t it and she flung it.
then t the king His three broad sons ;
It it for an hour in mine own bed This morning :
1 1 my leave, for it was nearly noon :
T the face-cloth from the face ;
she t it : Pretty bud ! Lily of the vale !
for she t no part In our dispute :
What more ? We t our last adieu,
Our voices t a higher range ;
In those sad words 1 1 farewell :
I t the thorns to bind my brows.
She t the kiss sedately ;
Wherefore Merlin t the child.
And Arthur row'd across and t it —
So this great brand the king T,
T horse, descended the slope street,
t the shield And mounted horse and graspt a spear,
this a bridge of single arc T at a leap; „ 909
She t them, and array'd herself therein, Marr. of Geraint 139
T horse, and forded Usk, and gain'd the wood ; „ 161
So Enid t his charger to the stall ; „ 382
Ah, dear, he t me from a goodly house, „ 708
she found And t it, and array'd herself therein. „ 849
And Enid t a little delicately, Geraint and E. 212
and t the word and play'd upon it, „ 291
One t him for a victim of Earl Doorm, „ 524
They hated her, who t no thought of them, „ 639
And t his russet beard between his teeth ; „ 713
I I you for a bandit knight of Doorm ; „ 786
and < a paramour; Did her mock-honour „ 832
converse which he t Before the Queen's fair name „ 950
Took
736
Tore
Lover
Took (continued) T, as in rival heat, to holy
things ;
He / the selfsame track as Balan,
She t the helm and he the sail ;
I < his brush and blotted out the bird,
A rumour runs, she t him for the King,
and suddenly she t To bitter weeping
blood of the wizard at her touch T gayer colours,
Then of the crowd ye t no more account
She still t note that when the living smile Died
and t the shield. There kept it,
he t. And gave , the diamond :
So those two brethem from the chariot t
Stoopt, U brake seal, and read it ;
AndJ both ear and eye ; and o'er the brook
and t Gawain's, and said, ' Betray me not, but
help —
brought A maiden babe ; which Arthur pitying t,
' He t them and he drave them to his tower —
and his creatures t and bare him o£E,
that t Full easily all impressions from below.
She said : they t her to themselves ;
I row'd across And t it, and have worn it,
Then t with care, and kneeling on one knee,
Put forth their hands, and t the King,
made garlands of the selfsame flower, Which she t
smiling,
The night in pity t away my day.
She < the body of my past delight,
sorrow of my spirit Was of so wide a compass it
t in
sudden gust that sweeping down T the edges of the pall,
t him home. And fed, and cherish'd him,
An' he t three turns in the rain,
he t no life, but he t one purse,
T the breath from our sails,
So t her thence, and brought her here,
Annie, the heldest, I niver not t to she :
t and hang'd, T, hang'd and burnt —
Who t the world so easily heretofore.
Who t us for the very Gods from Heaven,
And we t to playing at ball, and we t to throwing
the stone.
And we t to playing at battle,
I I it, he made it a cage.
They t us abroad : the crew were gentle,
t and kiss'd me, and again He kiss'd me ;
Christian conquerors t and flung
You f me to that chamber in the tower,
( the ring, and flaunted it Before that other
I <, I left you there ; I came,
I I And chafed the freezing hand,
you t them tho' you frown'd ;
Tool {See also Edge-tools, Garden-tools, Harvest-tool)
Made Him his catspaw and the Cross his t,
Or thou wilt prove their t.
thou their t, set on to plague And play upon,
He had brought his ghastly Vs :
Down, you idle t's, Stampt into dust —
Too-officious Life (like a wanton t-o friend,
Too-quick Down hill ' T-q' the chain.
Too-slow Up hill ' T-s ' will need the whip.
Tooth my teeth, which now are dropt away,
stammering ' scoundrel ' out of teeth that ground
sprang No dragon warriors from Cadmean teeth,
But in the teeth of clench'd antagonisms
captains flash'd their glittering teeth,
red in t and claw With ravine.
And took his russet beard between his teeth ;
He ground his teeth together,
thro' the hedge of splinter'd teeth,
teeth of Hell flay bare and gnash thee flat ! —
Tooth'd {See also Gap-tooth'd) and t with grinning
savagery.'
Toothed £ad every kiss of t wheels.
Balin and Balan 100
290
Merlin and V. 200
478
776
854
950
Lancelot and E. 105
323
397
550
1146
1271
Holy Grail 383
Pdleas and E. 359
Last Tournament 21
68
Guinevere 109
641
690
Pass, of Arthur 201
341
374
.f Tale i 344
612
681
a 135
Hi 35
21)263
First Quarrel 75
Rizpah 31
The Revenge 42
Sisters {E. and E.) 267
VUlage Wife 8
Sir J. Oldcastle 45
89
Columbus 183
of Maeldune 94
95
The Wreck 83
129
The "Flight 23
Locksley H., Sixty 84
The Ring 111
243
347
451
Happy 74
Sea Breams 190
Maud I vi 59
Guinevere 359
In the Child. Hosp. 69
Romney's R. 112
Lover's Tale i 627
Politics 12
„ 11
St. S. Stylites 30
Aylmer's Field 328
Lucretius 50
Princess iv 465
■»20
In Mem. hi 15
Geraint and E, 713
Balin and Balan 538
Last Tournament 65
444
Balin and Balan 197
In Mem. cxvii 11
Top {See also Chimney-top, Mountain-top, Beed-tops,
Towery-top) Or over hills with peaky t's
engrail'd,
' will you climb the t of Art.
and here it comes With five at t :
Strikes through the wood, sets all the fs quivering —
The t's shall strike from star to star,
I climb'd to the t of the garth,
A hon ramps at the t,
shouted at once from the t of the house ;
High on the t were those three Queens,
Till lost in blowing trees and t's of towers ;
saw. Bowl-shaped, thro' t's of many thousand pines
And on the t, a city wall'd :
but found at t No man, nor any voice.
and on the naked mountain t Blood-red,
Storm at the t, and when we gain'd it,
Climb'd to the high i of the garden-wall
Flying at t of the roofs in the ghastly siege
ye gev her the t of the momin',
I mashes the winder hin, when I gits to the t.
Palace of Art IIS \
Gardener's D. 169 '
Walk, to the Mail 113
Lucretius 186
Princess vi 57 i
Grandmother 38 '
Maud I xiv 7 '
„ //v50
Gareth and L. 229
670
796
Holy Grail 422
427 i
474 '
491
Guinevere 25
Def. of Lucknow 4
Tomorrow 3
Owd Rod 83
I saw beyond their silent Vs The steaming marshes Prog, of Spring 74
Thebb on the t of the down,
an' coom'd to the t o' the tree.
Topaz sardius, Chrysolite, beryl, t,
Topaz-lights Myriads of t-l, and jacinth-work
Myriads of t-l, and jacinth-work
Topic speak, and let the t die.'
Topmost Behind the valley t Gargarus Stands up
And thro' the t Oriels' coloured flame
Whose t branches can discern The roofs of Sumner-
place !
Long may thy t branch discern The roofs of Sumner-
place '
June Bracken, etc. 1
Church-warden, etc. 38
Columbus 85
M. d' Arthur 57
Pass, of Arthur 225
Princess Hi 205
(Enone 10
Palace of Art 161
Talking Oak 31
151
High up, the t palace spire. Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 48
The t elm-tree gather'd green Sir L. and Q. G. 8
and moved Upon the t froth of thought. In Mem,. Hi 4
A sweet voice singing in the t tower To the eastward : Holy Grail 834
Even to tipmost lance and t helm. Last Tournament 442
Hebe far away, seen from the t cliff. Lover's Tale i 1
ever upon the t roof our banner of
England blew, (repeat) Def. of Lucknow 6, 30, 45, 60, 94
That ever upon the t roof our banner
in India blew. „ 72
Cried from the t summit with human voices and
words ; V. of Maeldune 28
And the t spire of the mountain was lilies in lieu of
snow, „ 41
and every t pine Spired into bluest heaven. Death of (Enone 68
The Ring 112
Princess ii 232
1)445
„ Con. 62
In Mem. xv 19
Gareth and L. 651
In Mem. cxxvii 12
Marr. of Geraint 491
Ode on Well. 215
Geraint and E. 834
Gareth and L. 255
Merlin and V. 731
Tiresias 159
Akbar's Dream 120
The t—& chest there, by which you knelt —
Topple Will t to the trumpet down.
And t's down the scales ;
A kingdom Vs over with a shriek Like an old woman.
And Vs round the dreary west,
I can t over a hundred such.
Toppled The spires of ice are t down.
Toppling And t over all antagonism
Shall find the t crags of Duty scaled
And, t over all antagonism.
Topsy-turvy solid turrets t-t in air :
Torch gust of wind Poff'd out hLs t
not to plunge Thy t of life in darkness,
I can but lift the t Of Reason
Tore {See also Out-tore, Baaved) (With that she t her
robe apart, D. of F. Women 157
With wakes of fire we t the dark ; The Voyage 52
t. As if the living passion symbol'd there Aylmer's Field 534
ran in. Beat breast, t hair, Lucretius 277
T the king's letter, snow'd it down, Princess i 61
Took half-amazed, and in her lion's mood T open, „ iv 381
T from the branch, and cast on earth, Balin and Balan 539
Leaf after leaf, and t, and cast them off, Lancelot and E. 1199
then this gale T my pavilion from the tenting-pin, Holy Grail 1^1
The rough brier t my bleeding palms ; Lover's Tale ii 18
And we t up the flowers by the million V. of Maeldune 53
Tore 737
Tore (continued) She crouch'd, she t him part from part, Dead Prophet 69
She t the Prophet after death, „ 77
Torment when strength is shoek'd With t. Lover's Tale ii 151
and infinite t of flies, Def. of Lucknow 82
all the hateful fires Of t, Demeter and P. 152
contemplate The t of the damn'd ' Akbar's Bream 49
Tonuented See Long-tormented
Tom (See also Raaved, Tear'd, Turn) who smiled when she
was t in three ; Poland 12
T from the fringe of spray. D. of F. Women 40
AU the air was t in sunder. The Captain 43
I was drench'd with ooze, and t with briers, Princess v 28
and the household flower T from the lintel — „ 129
her blooming mantle t, „ vi 145
The Mayfly is t by the swallow, Maud I iv 23
By which our houses are t : „ xix 33
a Shape that fled With broken wings, t raiment Gareth and L. 1208
would have t the child Piecemeal among them, Com. of Arthur 217
T as a sail that leaves the rope is / In tempest : Holy Grail 212
Then t it from her finger. The Ring 456
from her own hand she had t the ring In fright, „ 470
Tom'd (turned) An' 'e t as red as a stag-tuckey's
wattles,
Torpid That here the t mummy wheat Of Egypt
Torre two strong sons. Sir T and Sir Lavaine,
' Here is T's : Hurt in his first tilt was my son Sir T.
added plain Sir T, ' Yea, since I cannot use it.
Surely I but play'd on T :
Then far away with good Sir T for guide
He amazed, ' T and Elaine ! why here ?
Then tum'd Sir T, and being in his moods
Then the rough T began to heave and move.
Torrent (adj.) ' The t brooks of hallow'd Israel
Flung the t rainbow round :
The t vineyard streaming feU
That listens near a t mountain-brook,
Torrent (s) Far-off the t call'd me from the cleft
She heard the t's meet.
In many a streaming t back.
Like t's from a mountain source
For me the t ever pour'd And glisten'd —
And t's of her myriad universe,
roll The t's, dash'd to the vale :
To roll the t out of dusky doors :
let the t dance thee down To find him in the valley
oleanders flush'd the bed Of sUent t's,
must fain have t's, lakes. Hills,
Swept like a f of gems from the sky
Following a < till its myriad falls
in a popular t of lies upon lies ;
Of cataract music Of falling fs,
By the long t's ever-deepen'd roar.
Torrent-bow floating as they fell Lit up a t-b
Tortoise Upon the t creeping to the wall ;
Torture T and trouble in vain, —
Why should we bear with an hour of t.
Tortured a twitch of pain T her mouth.
Me they seized and me they t,
Tory (adj.) The T member's elder son,
Tory (s) I myself, A T to the quick.
Let Whig and T stir their blood ;
A gathering of the T,
ToBS There the sunlit ocean t'es
That t'es at the harbour-mouth ;
Should t with tangle and with shells,
but wherefore t me this Like a dry bone
and t them away with a yawn,
Tossing < up A cloud of incense of all odour
Touch
Tost (See also Trouble-tost)
kite,
T over all her presents petulantly :
Discuss'd a doubt and t it to and fro :
others t a ball Above the fountain-jets,
t on thoughts that changed from hue to hue,
Elaine, and heard her name so t about,
Church-warden, etc. 31
To Prof. Jebb. 5
Lancelot and E. 174
195
198
209
788
796
799
„ 1066
D. ofF. Women \%l
Vision of Sin 32
The Daisy 10
Geraint and E. 171
(Enone 54
Of old sat Freedom 4
England and Amer. 14
The Letters 39
To E. L. 13
Lucretius 39
Princess v 350
„ vii 208
209
The Daisy 34
Sisters {E. and E.) 221
V. of Maeldune 46
Tiresias 37
Vastness 6
Merlin and the G. 47
Death of (Enone 85
Palace of Art 36
D.ofF. Wom^n27
Def. of Lucknow 86
Despair 81
Princess vi 106
Boadicea 49
Princess, Con. 50
Walk, to the Mail 81
Will Water. 53
Maud I XX 33
The Captain 69
The Voyage 2
In Mem. x 20
Last Tournament 195
The Wreck 21
Palace of Art Z9>
Had t his ball and flown his
Aylmer's Field 84
235
Princess ii 445
460
„ iv 210
Lancelot and E. 233
Tost {continued) was a phantom cry that I heard as
1 1 about, In the Child. Hosp. 63
The sacred relics t about the floor — The Ring 447
Total The t chronicles of man, the mind, Princess ii 381
The t world since life began ; In Mem. xliii 12
Tother (other) 'E reads of a sewer an' sartan 'oap o' the
t side ; Village Wife 92
Or like t Hangel i' Scriptur Owd Rod 94
Totter Till she began to t. Sea Dreams 244
what is it ? there ? yon arbutus T's ; Lucretius 185
Totter'd roofs T toward each other in the sky. Holy Grail 343
Tottering yester-even, suddenly giddily t — Boadicea 29
Touch (s) And weary with a finger's t Clear-headed friend 22
Nor toil for title, place, or t Of pension. Love thou thy land 25
Perhaps some modem t'es here and there M. d' Arthur, Ep. 6
Such t'es are but embassies of love. Gardener's D. 18
But I have sudden t'es, and can run My faith Edwin Morris 53
there seem'd A t of something false, „ 74
My sense of t is something coarse, Talking Oak 163
The cushions of whose t may press „ 179
Baby fingers, waxen t'es, Locksley Hall 90
A T, a kiss ! the charm was snapt Day-Dm., Revival 1
O for the < of a vanish'd hand, Break, break, etc. 11
Which at a < of light, an air of heaven, Aylmer's Field 5
80 finely, that a troublous t Thinn'd, „ 75
hand Glanced Uke a < of sunshine on the rocks, Princess Hi 357
To whom the t of all mischance but came „ iv 573
not a thought, a t. But pure as lines of green „ v 195
some t of that Which kills me with myself, „ vi 306
No more, dear love, for at a f I yield ; „ vii 14
Tenderness t by t, and last, to these, „ 114
a t Came roimd my wrist, and tears upon my hand „ 137
Too solemn for the comic t'es in them, „ Con. 68
When one small t of Charity . Lit. Squabbles 13
And I too, talk, and lose the 1 1 talk of. --liv-i „ 17
And I perceived no t of change, • In Mem. xiv 17
The t of change in calm or storm ; „ xvi 6
A < of shame upon her cheek : „ xxxvii 10
May some dim t of earthly things „ xliv 11
If such a dreamy t should fall, „ 13
You say, but with no t of scorn, „ xcvi 1
Sprang up for ever at a t, „ cxii 10
old place will be gilt by the < of a millionaire: Maud / i 66
heart-free, with the least little t of spleen. „ ii 11
A t of their ofiice might have sufficed, „ II v 27
in a moment — at one t Of that skill'd spear, Gareth and L. 1222
But keep a t of sweet civility Geraint and E. 312
The pale blood of the wizard at her t Merlin and V. 949
For who loves me must have a t of earth ; Lancelot and E. 133
That men go down before your spear at a t, „ 149
save it be some far-off t Of greatness „ 450
That men went down before his spear at a t, „ 578
Courtesy with a t of traitor in it, „ 639
she, that felt the cold t on her throat, Pelleas and E. 488
I'U hold thou hast some t Of music, Last Tournament 313
The sight that throbs and aches beneath my t, Lover's Tale i 33
quick as a sensitive plant to the t ; In the Child. Hosp. 30
Your plague but passes by the t. Happy 104
Who feel no t of my temptation, Romney's R. 121
vines Which on the t of heavenly feet Death of (Enone 5
Would the man have a t of remorse Charity 17
Touch (verb) For those two likes might meet and t. Two Voices 357
That t'es me with mystic gleams, „ 380
I'd t her neck so warm and white. Miller's D. 174
touch'd with some new grace Or seem'd to t her, Gardener's D. 205
came To t my body and be heal'd, and live : St. S. Stylites 79
It may be we shall t the Happy Isles, Ulysses 63
t him with thy lighter thought. Locksley Hall 54
love no more Can t the heart of Edward Gray. Edward Gray 8
And t upon the master-chord Will Water. 27
So, — ^from afar, — t as at once ? Aylmer's Field 580
O Goddess, Uke ourselves T, and be touch'd, Lucretius 81
We t on our dead self, nor shun to do it, Princess Hi 221
Which t'es on the workman and his work. ,. 322
' You have our son : t not a hair of his head : „ iv 407
3 A
Touch
738
Towd
Touch (verb) {continued)
gross to tread,
T a spirit among things divine,
To t thy thousand yeai's of gloom :
O P"ather, t the east, and light
And other than the things 1 1.'
That seem'd to < it into leaf :
T thy dull goal of joyless gray,
Descend, and t, and enter;
And t with shade the bridal doors,
Not t on her father's sin :
We will not t upon him ev'n in jest.'
or t at night the northern star j
T flax with flame — a glance will serve —
but t it with a sword, It buzzes fiercely
Not one of all the drove should t me :
if a man Could t or see it, he was heal'd at once,
Nor aught we blow with breath, or t with hand,
if I find the Holy Grail itself And t it,
That could It or see the Holy Grail
' Yet, take him, ye that scarce are fit to t,
seem'd to t upon a sphere Too
Princess vii 324
Ode on Well. 139
In Mem. ii 12
., xacx 31
„ xlv 8
,, Ixix 18
,, Ixxii 27
„ xciii 13
„ Con. 117
Maud I xix 17
Mart, of Geraint 311
but when 1 1 her, lo ! she, too. Fell into
Holy Grail 396
418
535
Last Tournament 752
Save that to t a harp, tilt with a lance
had let one finger lightly t The warm white apple
I cannot t thy lips, they are not mine,
sometimes t'es but one string That quivers,
doesn not t thy 'at to the Scjuire ; '
But they dared not t us agam,
gleam from our poor earth May t thee,
fleeted far and fast To t all shores,
I I thy world again —
Earth would never t her worst,
Did he t me on the lips ?
Human forgiveness Ves heaven, and thence —
seon after aeon pass and t him into shape ?
Touch'd {See also True-touched)
hue,
heath-flower in the dew, T with sunrise.
T by thy spirit's mellowness,
T by his feet the daisy slept.
T ; and I knew no more.'
ere it < a foot, that might have danced
each in passing t with some new grace
Then t upon the game, how scarce it was
The flower, she t on, dipt and rose.
Are t, are turn'd to finest air.
Then the music t the gates and died ;
When that cold vapour t the palace gate.
And ere he t his one-and-twentieth May
t On such a time as goes before the leaf,
for the second death Scarce t her
And oaken finials till he t the door ;
T, clink'd, and clash'd, and vanish'd,
0 Goddess, like ourselves Touch, and be t,
(A little sense of wrong had t her face With colour)
t on Mahomet With much contempt,
the Muses' heads were t Above the darkness
t upon the point Where idle boys are cowards
for since you think me t In honour —
the sequel of the tale Had t her ;
That thou hadst t the land to-day,
God's finger t him, and he slept.
Or t the changes of the state.
The dead man t me from the past,
Who t a jarring lyre at first.
Nor harp be <, nor flute be blown ;
But t with no ascetic gloom ;
she t my hand with a smile so sweet,
For her feet have t the meadows
1 find whenever she t on me
Mage at Arthur's Coiu-t, Knowing all arts, had <,
So when they t the second river-loop,
rose to look at it, But t it imawares :
Nor ever t fierce wine, nor tasted flesh,
T at all points, except the poplar grove,
at times, So t were they, half-thinking
Balin and Balan 166
Merlin and F. Ill
431
699
Holy Grail 55
„ 114
439
779
Pelleas and E. 292
Last Tournament 636
716
Guinevere 551
Lover's Tale i 17
North. Cobbler 25
The Revenge 72
Ded. Poem Prin. Alice 19
PreJ. Son. 19th Cent. 2
Ancient Sage 249
Locksley H., Sixty 270
Happy 66
Romney's R. 159
Making of Man 4
T with a somewhat darker
Margaret 50
Rosalind 42
Elednore 103
Two Voices 276
D. ofF. Women 116
Gardener's D. 133
204
Audley Court 32
Talking Oak 131
Sir Galahad 72
Vision of Sin 23
58
Enoch Arden 51
The Brook 12
Aylmer's Field 605
823
Sea Dreams 135
Lucretius 81
Princess, Pro. 219
ii 134
Hi 21
v308
401
Con. 31
in Mem. xlv 2
„ Ixxxv 20
„ Ixxxix 35
„ xcv 34
„ xcvi 7
CD 22
„ cix 10
Maud I vi 12
„ xii 23
„ xix 59
Gareth and L. 307
1025
Geraint and E. 388
Merlin and V. 627
Lancelot and E. 617
1287
Touch'd (continued)
dust
up I went and t him, and he, too. Fell into dust,
1 1 The chapel-doors at dawn I know ;
Out of the dark, just as the lips had t,
its shadow flew Before it, till it t her,
T by the adulterous finger of a time
and t far-off His mountain-altars.
Thy fires from heaven had t it,
But all from these to where she t on earth,
our lover seldom spoke. Scarce t the meats ;
we came to the Silent Isle that we never had t at
before,
dark orb T with earth's ligM —
you have t at seventy-five,
1 1 my limbs, the limbs Were strange
t on the whole sad planet of man.
For, see, thy foot has / it ;
T at the golden Cross
If the lips were t with fire
he t his goal. The Christian city.
Touching {See also Tenderest-touching)
below :
our spirits rush'd together at the t of the lips.
Answer'd all queries t those at home
which, on the foremost rocks T, upjetted
moonlight t o'er a terrace One tall Agave
T her guilty love for Lancelot,
And t Breton sands, they disembark'd.
And t fame, howe'er ye scorn my song,
crown'd with spiritual fire. And t other worlds.
and t on all things great,
Touchwood a cave Of t, with a single flourishing spray
the stem Less grain than t,
Touchwood-dust Raking in that millennial t-d
Tough My t lance thrusteth sure,
t, Strong, supple, sinew-corded.
Tougher t, heavier, stronger, he that smote
Tould (told) Call'd from her cabin an' t her
1 1 yer Honour whativer I hard an' seen.
Tour last summer on a < in Wales :
Tournament From spur to plume a star of t,
For Lancelot was the first in T,
Forgetful of the tilt'and t,
But in this t can no man tilt.
And victor at the tilt and t,
and acts of prowess done In t or tilt,
heard the King Had let proclaim a t —
And this was call'd ' The T of Youth: '
But when the morning of a t,
in mockery call'd The T of the Dead Innocence,
He saw the laws that ruled the t Broken,
From spur to plume a star of t,
Flash'd on the T,
Tourney (s) a page or two that rang With tilt and t ;
pledged To fight in t for my bride,
With whom he used to play at t once,
beside The field of t, murmuring ' kitehen-knave.'
But by the field of t lingering yet
We hold a t here to-morrow morn,
this nephew, fight In next day's t
■ — will you wear My favour at this t ? '
closed And clash'd in such a t and so full,
and remain Lord of the t.
The circlet of the t roimd her brows. And the sword
of the t across her throat. _ „ 454
Tourney (verb) But meant once more perchance to t in it. Lancelot and E. 810
Toumey-fall In those brain-stuiming shocks, and t-f's, Gareth and L. 89
Toumey-prize And make them, an thou wilt a t-p.' Last Tournament 32
And won by Tristram as a t-p, „ 746
Tourney-skill no room was there For lance or t-s : Gareth and L. 1042
Tow Nor like poor Psyche whom she drags in t.' Princess Hi 103
Towd (told) An' a t ma my sins, N. Farmer, 0. S. 11
knawed a Quaaker fellow as often 'as t ma this :
I knaws the law, I does, for the lawyer ha t it me.
Guinevere 80 .
To the Queen ii 43 >
Lover's Tale i 321 '
439 i
ivl&I^
226 j
V. of Maeldune 11 j
De Prof., Two G. 10 i
To E. Fitzgerald U:\
Ancient Sage 234}
Dead Prophet 391
Demeter and P. 48 ]
Merlin and the G. 67 j
Parnassus 17
St. Telemachus 341
T the sullen pool
Miller's D. 2441
Locksley Hall '•
Aylmer's Field ■ '
Sea Dreams 52
The Daisy 83"
Marr. of Geraint 25
Merlin and V. 202
444
838
The Wreck 50
Aylmer's Field 512
Princess iv 333
Aylmer's Field 514
Sir Galahad 2
Princess v 534
536
Tomorrow 20
97
Golden Year 2
M. d' Arthur 223
Gareth and L. 495
Marr. of Geraint 52
480
Geraint and E. 960
Holy Grail 2
Pelleas and E. 11
158
Last Tournament 134
136
160
Pass, of Arthur 391
Merlin and the G. 69
Princess, Pro- 122
V 353
Gareth and L. 532
664
736
Mair. of Geraint 287
476
Lancelot and E. 362
Holy Grail 330
Pelleas and E. 163
N. S. 19
VUlage Wife 16
ll
Towd
739
Town
Towd (told) {continued) the lawyer he t it me That 'is taail
were soa tied up Village Wife 29
es it beant not fit to be i ! „ 108
Tower (s) (See also Beacon-tower, Chvirch-tower,
Cloud-tower, Convent-tower, Minster-tower)
flee By town, and t, and hill, and cape, Mine be the Strength 6
Four gray walls, and four gray Vs, L. of Shalott i 15
Under t and balcony, „ iv 37
Tho' watching from a ruin'd t Two Voices 77
Below the city's eastern t's : Fatima 9
In glassy bays among her tsdlest fs.' (Enone 119
in the t's I placed great bells that swung, Paiace of Art 129
' Yet pull not down my palace Vs, „ 293
You pine among your halls and t's : L. C. V. de Vere 58
grape-loaded vines that glow Beneath the battled t. D. ofF. Women 220
range Of waning lime the gray cathedral t's, Gardener's D. 218
By night we dragg'd her to the college t Walk, to the Mail 89
left alone Upon her t, the Niobe of swine, „ 99
O flourish high, with leafy t's, Talking Oak 197
While Uion like a mist rose into t's. Tithonus 63
clash'd and hammer'd from a hundred t's, Godiva 75
Here droops the banner on the t, Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 13
Down stept Lord Ronald from his t : Lady Clare 65
Still on the t stood the vane, The Letters 1
but now The broken base of a black t, Aylmer's Field 511
left Their own gray t, or plain-faced tabernacle, „ 618
We gain'd the mother-city thick with t's. Princess i 112
soft white vapour streak the crowned t's „ Hi 344
she You talk'd with, whole nights long, up in the t, „ vi 255
Toll'd by an earthquake in a trembling t, „ 332
here and there a rustic t Half-lost in belts „ Con. 44
Before a t of crimson hoUy-hoaks, „ 82
0 fall'n at length that t of strength Ode on Well. 38
Breaking their mailed fleets and armed t's. Ode Inter. Exhib. 39
Flags, flutter out upon turret and t's ! W. to Alexandra 15
Or t, or high hill-convent, The Daisy 29
Of t, or duomo, sunny-sweet. Or palace, „ 46
8ow'd it far and wide By every town and t. The Flower 14
stream Of Xanthus blazed before the t's of Troy, Spec, of Iliad 18
And crowded farms and lessening t's, In Mem. xi 11
And wildly dash'd on ( and tree „ xv 1
And t's fall'n as soon as built — ,. xxvi 8
The ruin'd shells of hollow t's ? „ Ixxvi 16
And tuft with grass a feudal t ; „ cxxviii 20
Dumb is that t which spake so loud, „ Con. 106
everyone that owns a t The Lord for half a league. Gareth and L. 595
stairway sloped Till lost in blowing trees and tops of t's ; „ 670
His t's where that day a feast had been Held „ 847
And here had fall'n a great part of a t, Marr. of Geraint 317
Guinevere had climb'd The giant t, „ 827
beheld A little town with t's, upon a rock, Geraint and E. 197
A home of bats, in every t an owl. Balin and Balan 336
By the great t — Caerleon upon Usk — „ 506
1 thought the great t would crash down on both — „ 515
huge and old It look'd a. t of ivied masonwork, Merlin and V. 4
•Closed in the four walls of a hollow t, (repeat) „ 209, 543
crows Hung like a cloud above the gatew ay t's.' „ 599
High in her chamber up a t to the east Lancelot and E. 3
climb'd That eastern t, and entering barr'd her door, „ 15
Fired from the west, far on a hill, the t's. „ 168
Lavaine Past inward, as she came from out the t. „ 346
Then to her t she climb'd, and took the shield, „ 397
And thus they bore her swooning to her t. „ 968
So in her t alone the maiden sat : .. 989
fiery dawning wild with wind That shook her t, „ 1021
T aiier t, spire beyond spire, Holy Grail 229
Behold, the enchanted ts of Carbonek, „ 813
sweet voice singing in the topmost t To the eastward : „ 834
great t fill'd with eyes Up to the simimit, Pelleas and E. 166
from the t above hmi cried Ettarre, „ 231
beneath the shadow of those t's A villainy, ,, 276
Up ran a score of damsels to the t ; „ 368
mounting on his horse Stared at her f's „ 467
O t's so strong. Huge, solid, „ 463
Beside that t where Percivale was cowl'd, „ 501
Tower (s) (continued) From Camelot in among the faded
fields To furthest t's ; Last Toumainent 54
' He took them and he drave them to his < — „ 68
Brake in upon me and drave them to his t ; „ 72
My < is full of harlots, like his court, „ 81
Glared on a huge machicolated t That stood „ 424
High on a grim dead tree before the t, „ 430
echoing yell with yell, they fired the t, „ 478
and high on land, A crown of t's. „ 506
feet of Tristram grind The spiring stone that scaled
about her t, „ 511
westward-smiling seas, Watch'd from this t. „ 588
then this crown of t's So shook to such a roar „ 620
Modred brought His creatures to the basement of the t Guinevere 104
T's of a happier time, low down in a rainbow deep V. of Maeldune 79
And we came in an evil time to the Isle of the Double T's, „ 105
And the daws flew out of the T's „ 109
and all took sides with the T's, „ 111
the song-built t's and gates Reel, Tiresias 98
And trees like the t's of a minster. The Wreck 74
ghastly t of eighty thousand human skulls, Locksley H., Sixty 82
In this gap between the sandhills, whence you see
the Locksley t, „ 176
Just above the gateway t, „ 179
Helen's T, here I stand, Helen's Tower 1
Why do you look so gravely at the t ? The Ring 80
And how the birds that circle roimd the t „ 85
That chamber in the t. „ 94
You took me to that chamber in the t, „ 111
when the t as now Was all ablaze with crimson „ 249
between The t and that rich phantom of the f? „ 253
mist of autxmin gather from your lake. And shroud the t ; „ 330
up the t — an icy air Fled by me. „ 445
T and altar trembling . . . Forlorn 34
I see the slowly-thickening chestnut t's Prog, of Spring 42
Tower (verb) T, as the deep-domed empyrean Milton 7
The chestnut t's in his bloom ; Voice and the P. 18
Tower'd(adi.) (See oZso Tall-tower'd, Many-tower'd) the
river winding clearly, Down to t Camelot ; L. of Shalott i 32
page in crunson clad. Goes by to t Camelot ; „ ii 23
Heavily the low sky raining Over t Camelot; „ iv 5
From Mizpeh's t gate with welcome light, B. of F. Women 199
Tower 'd (verb) the pale head of him, who t Above them, Aylmer's Field 623
she t ; her bells. Tone under tone, shrill'd ;
Towering Now t o'er him in serenest air.
And a reverent people behold The t car,
with all thy breadth and height Of foliage, t
sycamore ;
for the t crest of the tides Plunged on the vessel
Tower-stairs she stole Down the long t-s,
Towery-top O rock upon thy t-p
Town (See also County town) flee By t, and tower,
and hill,
and out of every smouldering t Cries to Thee,
Flood with full daylight glebe and t ?
From many an inland t and haven large,
flying star shot thro' the sky Above the pillar'd t.
For pastime, ere you went to t.
Clanging fights, and flaming t's.
That bore a lady from a leaguer'd t ;
Then stept she down thro' t and field
The t was hush'd beneath us :
' And all that from the t would stroll,
the fair Was holden at the t ;
The music from the t —
for when he laid a tax Upon his t,
answer'd, ' Ride you naked thro' the t.
Thro' dreaming t's I go.
Sweet Emma Moreland of yonder t
High t's on hills were dimly seen,
He pass'd by the t and out of the street,
' Did you know Enoch Arden of this t ? '
By twenty thorps, a little t,
One of our t, but later by an hour
Thro' the wild woods that hung about the t ;
Merlin and V. 131
Lucretius 178
Ode on Well. 55
In Mem. Ixxxix 4
The Wreck 89
Lancelot and E. 343
Talking Oak 265
Mine be the strength 6
Poland 5
Two Voices 87
(Enone 117
Palace of Art 124
L. C. V. de Vere 4
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 116
D. ofF. Women 41
Of old sat Freedom 9
Audley Court 85
Talking Oak 53
102
214
Godiva 14
„ 29
Sir Galahad 50
Edward Gray 1
The Voyage 34
Poet's Song 2
Enoch Arden 845
The Brook 29
Sea Dreams 263
Princess i 91
iil
Town
740
Traitor
Town (continued) Cat-footed thro' the t and half in dread Princess i 104
We dropt with evening on a rustic t „ 170
man and woman, t And landskip, have I heard of, „ iv 445
Where, far from noise and smoke of t, To F. D. Maurice 13
Sow'd it far and wide By every t and tower. The Flower 14
I wander'd from the noisy t, In Mem. Ixix 5
I roved at random thro' the t, ,, Ixxxvii 3
The dust and din and steam olt: „ Ixxxix 8
But if I praised the busy t, „ 37
That not in any mother t „ xcviii 21
And pass the silent-lighted t, „ Con. 112
Last week came one to the county t, Maud 7 a; 37
His heart in the gross mud-honey of t, „ xvi 5
the worth of half at, A warhorse of the best, Gareth and L. 677
Beheld the long street of a little t Marr. of Geraint 242
And out of t and valley came a noise „ 247
' What means the tumult in the t?' „ 259
Go to the t and buy us iiesh and wine ; „ 372
went her way across the bridge. And reach'd the t, „ 384
Ride into that new fortress by your t, „ 407
and thought to find Arms in your t, „ 418
Raised my own t against me in the night „ 457
knights And ladies came, and by and by the t Flow'd in, „ 546
Went Yniol thro' the t, and everywhere He found
the sack! and plunder of our house All scatter'd
thro' the houses of the t ; „ 693
beheld A little t with towers, upon a rock, Geraint and E. 197
And then I chanced upon a goodly t Holy Grail 573
they would spy us out of the t. Riz-pah 5
and beat Thro' all the homely t Columbus 83
Blown by the fierce beleaguerers of a t, Achilles over the T. 20
Or the foulest sewer of the t — Bead Prophet 48
illuminate All your t's for a festival, On Juh. Q. Victoria 19
you still delajr to take Your leave of T, To Mary Boyle 2
Deab Master in our classic t. To Master of B. 1
waste and field and t of alien tongue, St. Telemachus 30
tha mun speak hout to the Baptises here 1' the t, Church-warden, etc. 51
Toy t's in lava, fans Of sandal. Princess, Pro. 18
The tricks, which make us t's of men, „ ii 63
might have seem'd a t to trifle with, Pelleas and E. 76
An' their mashin' their t's to pieaces Spinster's S's. 88
To-year niver ha seed it sa white wi' the Maay es I see'd
it t-y— Village Wife 80
Traade (trade) Bum i' t. Church-warden, etc. 18
an' the Freea T runn'd 'i my 'ead, Owd Rod 54
Traapes'd (trapesed, trudged) as iver t i' the squad. „ 72
Trace (s) And silent t's of the past In Mem. xliii 7
but t of thee I saw not ; Demeter and P. 80
Trace (verb) old magic which can t The wandering of the stars, Holy Grail 666
fail'd to t him thro' the flesh and blood Last Tournament 686
to t On paler heavens the branching grace To Ulysses 14
Traced in her raiment's hem was t in flame The Poet 45
Likewise the deep-set windows, stain'd and t, Palace of Art 49
I might as well have t it in the sands ; AuMey Court 50
Till as he t a faintly-shadow'd track, Lancelot and E. 165
and in the dark of mine Is t with flame. Lover's Tale i 298
Trachsrte trap and tuff. Amygdaloid and t. Princess Hi 363
Track (s) ' If straight thy t, or if oblique. Two Voices 193
strike Into that wondrous t of dreams again ! D. of F. Wom^n 279
right across its t there lay. Sea Dreams 126
the t Whereon with equal feet we fared ; In Mem. xxv 1
We ranging down this lower t, „ xlvi 1
Enid leading down the t's Thro' which he bad her lead Geraint and E. 28
He took the selfsame t as Balan, Balin and Balan 290
Till as he traced a faintly-shadow'd t, Lancelot and E. 165
Troubled the t of the host that we hated, Batt. of Brunanburh 40
All the t's Of science making toward Akbar's Dream 28
Forward to the starry t Glimmering Silent Voices 8
Track (verb) impossible. Far as we t ourselves — Aylmer's Field 306
snaras to t Suggestion to her inmost cell. In Mem. xcv 31
I will t this vermin to their earths : Marr. of Geraint 217
swore That I would t this caitiff to his hold, „ 415
the subtle beast. Would t her guilt until he found, Guinevere 60
Track'd And t you still on classic groimd, To E. L. 10
' So,' thought Geraint, ' I have t him to his earth.' Marr. of Geraint 253
Bed.
Trackless Roving the t realms of Lyonnesse, Lancelot and E. 35-
Tract (See also Mountain-tract) In the dim t of
Penuel.
Would sweep the t's of day and night.
One seem'd all dark and red — a t of sand,
In t's of pasture sunny-warm.
And many a t of palm and rice,
Faith from t's no feet have trod,
overlooks the sandy t's.
Which led by t's that pleased us well,
A lifelong t of time reveal'd ;
Foreshorten'd in the t of time ?
And t's of calm from tempest made,
In t's of fluent heat began,
thro' all this t of years Wearing the white flower
so there grew great t's of wilderness.
Sir Bors Rode to the lonest t of all the realm,
half the morning have I paced these sandy t's,
Trade (s) (See also Traade) Another hand crept too
across his t
set Annie forth in t With all that seamen
But throve not in her t, not being bred To barter,
poring over his Tables of T and Finance ;
Or T re-frain the Powers From war
T flying over a thousand seas with her spice
Trade (verb) Should he not t himself out yonder ?
Traded There Enoch t for himself.
Trader Never comes the i, never floats
Tradesman faith in a t's ware or his word ?
Tradition as t teaches, Yoimg ashes pirouetted
made Their own t's God, and slew the Lord,
He thwarting their t's of Himself,
Trafalgar at T yet once more We taught him ;
Tragedian great T, that had quench'd herself
Tragic (See also Over-tragic) That all things grew more t
TraU (s) They hunt old t's ' said Cyril ' very well ;
Clear-headed friend 29
Two Voices 69*
Palace of Art 05
94
114 I
On a Mourner 29
Locksley Hall 5
In Mem. xxii 2
xlvi 9'
Ixxvii 4 .
cxii 14
cxviii 9"
of Idylls 24^
Com. of Arthur 10
Holy GraU 661 1
Locksley H., Sixty 1 \
Enoch Arden 110
13&
249
The Wreck 20
Epilogue 15
Fastness 13
Enoch Arden 141
538
Locksley Hall 161
Maud I i 26.
Amphion 26
Aylmer's Field 795
Sir J. Oldcastle 181
Buonaparte 12
Sisters (E. and E.) 233
Princess vi 23
„ ii 390
Trail (verb) Would slowly t himself sevenfold
Clasp her window, t and twine !
T and twine and clasp and kiss,
Trail'd heavy barges t By slow horses ;
T himself up on one knee :
By a shuffled step, by a dead weight t,
Trailer bell-like flower Of fragrant t's,
swings the t from the crag ;
the t mantles all the mouldering bricks —
Trailing Some bearded meteor, t light.
With plaited alleys of the t rose.
Three slaves were t a dead lion away.
Train (of dress) Or old-world t's, upheld at court
Train (ordered sequence) Nor any t of reason keep :
lead my Memmius in a < Of flowery clauses
' Last of the t, a moral leper, I,
A hundred maids in t across the Park.
behind, A < of dames : by axe and eagle sat,
And all the t of bounteous hours
Train (railway) / waited for the t at Coventry;
Wreck'd — your t — or all but wreck'd ?
Two t's clash'd : then and there
Train (verb) to t the rose-bush that I set
t To riper growth the mind and will :
Train'd given us a fair falcon which he t ;
Training The bearing and the t of a child
Their talk was all of t, terms of art.
Trait From talk of war to t's of pleasantry-
Traitor (adj.) And shouts of heathen and the t knights, Pass, of Arthur 113
Sir Lancelot, friend T or true ? Merlin and V. 770
Traitor (s) (See also Thraithur) Drip sweeter dews than t's tear. A Dirge 24
So foul a t to myself and her, Aylmer's Field 319
' See that there be no t's in your camp : We seem a
nest of t's — Princess v 425
Dear t, too much loved, why ? „ vi 293
For ever since when t to the King Gareth and L. 76
changed and came to loathe His crime of t, Marr. of Geraint 594
And all thro' that young i, „ 715
' Your sweet faces make good fellows fools And fs. Geraint and E. 400
The Mermaid 25
Window, At the Wind. 2
„ 4
L. of Shalott i 2fy
Princess vi 155
Maud I ilA
Elednore 38
Locksley Hall 162
Locksley H., Sixty 257
L. of Shalott Hi 26
Ode to Memory 106
St. Telemachus 47
Day-Dm., Ep. 9
Two Voices 50
Lucretius 119
Princess iv 222
„ vi 76
„ vii 128
Jn Mem. Ixxxiv 30
Godiva 1
Locksley H., Sixty 215
Charity 21
May Queen, N. Y's. E.Al
In Mem. xlii 7
Merlin and V. 96
Princess v 465
Merlin and V. 124
Lancelot and E. 321
Traitor
741
Tread
Traitor (s) (continued) Fools prate, and perish t's. Balin and Balan 530
shriek'd out ' T ' to the unhearing wall, Lancelot and E. 612
Courtesy with a touch of t in it, „ 639
a coward slinks from what he fears To cope with, or
a t proven, Pelleas and E. 439
' T, come out, ye are trapt at last,' Guinevere 106
Modred whom he left in charge of all, The t — „ 196
If this false t have displaced his lord, ,, 216
heathen, and knights, T's — „ 575
I lean'd in wife and friend Is t to my peace, Pass, of Arthur 25
Modred, imharm'd, the t of thine house.' ,, 153
But call not thou this t of my house „ 155
her own true eyes Are t's to her ; Sisters (E. and E.) 285
who can tell but the t's had won ? Def. of Luchnmo 66
but to call men t's May make men t's. Sir J. Oldcastle 50
That t to King Richard and the truth, „ 171
T and trickster And spumer of treaties — Batt. of Bnmanburh 79
God the t's hope confound ! (repeat) Hands all Round 10, 22, 34
Traitor-hearted unkind, untrue, Unknightly, t-h ! M. d' Arthur 120
imkind, untrue, Unknightly, t-h\ Pass, of Arthur 288
Traitorous when a world Of t friend and broken system Princess vi 195
to splinter it into feuds Serving his t end ; Guinevere 19
Ever the day with its t death from the loopholes
aroimd, Bef. of Lucknow 79
Traitress nip me flat. If I be such a t. Merlin and V. 351
and harry me, petty spy And t.' Guinevere 361
Tram laying his t's in a poison'd gloom Maud 1x8
*bamp (a vagrant) an' gied to the t's goin' by — Village Wife 33
Tramp (sound) t of the homfooted horse That grind Tiresias 94
Tramp (verb) To t, to scream, to burnish. Princess iv 520
Trample To t round my fallen head. Come not, when, etc. 3
I I on your offers and on you : Princess iv 546
on my chargers, t them under us.' Boddicea 69
Behold me overturn and t on him. Geraint and E. 843
And t's on the goodly shield to show Baiin and Balan 550
' T me, Dear feet, that I have f ollow'd Merlin and V. 226
and bums the feet would t it to dust. The Flight 68
Trampled (adj.) I was left a t orphan, Locksley Hall 156
The desecrated shrine, the t year, Princess v 127
Till the filthy by-lane rings to the yell of the t wife, Maud 7 i 38
Let the t serpent show you that you have not
lived in vain. Locksley H., Sixty 242
arose The shi-iek and curse of t millions, Akbar's Dream 190
Trampled (verb) And t imder by the last and least Poland 2
She t some beneath her horses' heels. Princess, Pro. 44
a spark of will Not to be t out. Maud II ii 57
and why T ye thus on that which bare the
Crown ? ' Bcdin and Balan 602
There t out his face from being known, Last Tournament 470
man's word, Here t by the populace underfoot, Tiresias 174
Trampling t the flowers With clamour : Princess v 247
All great self-seekers t on the right : Ode on Well. 187
hollow t's up and down And muffled voices heard, Gareth and L. 1372
His charger t many a prickly star Marr. of Geraint 313
But Michael t Satan ; Last Tournament 673
Trance (s) I muse, as in a <, (repeat) Eleanore 72, 75
Like some bold seer in a t, L. of Shalott iv 11
' As here we find in t's, men Forget the dream that
happens then. Until they fall in t again. Two Voices 352
who clasp'd in her last t Her murder'd father's
head, D. of F. Women 266
The t gave way To those caresses, Love and Dviy 65
I could no more, but lay like one in t. Princess vii 151
In some long t should slumber on ; In Mem. xliii 4
Sleep, kinsman thou to death and t And madness, „ Ixxi 1
At length my t Was cancell'd, „ xcv 43
But when the Queen immersed in such a t, Guinevere 401
led on with light In t's and in visions : Lover's Tale i 78
Thro' dreams by night and t's of the day. Sisters (E. and E.) 274
Till I woke from the t. The Wreck 115
following, as in t, the silent cry. Beath of CEnone 86
Tbance (verb) When thickest dark did t the sky, Mariana 18
Tranced (See also Deep-tranced) So t, so rapt in ecstasies, Eleanore 78
No t summer calm is thine, Madeline 2
Hung t from all pulsation, Gardener's D. 260
Tranced (continued) On either side her t form Forth
streaming Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 5
nature fail'd a little. And he lay t ; Enoch Arden 793
We stood t in long embraces Mixt with kisses Maud II iv 8
Tranquil her lips were sunder'd With smiles of t bliss, Lover's Tale ii 143
Tranquillity O Thou, Passionless bride, divine T, Lucretius 266
Marr'd her friend's aim with pale t. Lancelot and E. 733
Transfer That foolish sleep t's to thee. In Mem. Ixviii 16
t The whole I felt for him to you. „ Ixxxv 103
Transferr'd my dull agony, Ideally to her t. Lover's Tale ii 137
Trans^ured When we shall stand t, Happy 38
Transflxt So lay the man t. Geraint and E. 166
Transfused but t Thro' future time by power Love thou thy land 3
Transgress T his ample bound to some new crown :■ — Poland 8
Transgression So for every light t The Captain 11
Transient Away we stole, and tin a, trice Princess v 39
But knows no more of t form In her deep self. In Mem. xvi 7
Womanlike, taking revenge too deep for a t wrong Maud I Hi 5
And wordy trucklings to the t hour, To the Queen ii 51
And the t trouble of drowning — - Despair 67
Transit and wing'd Her t to the throne. Princess iv 378
Transitory and a t word Made knight or churl or child Balin and Balan 161
Translucent Pure vestal thoi^hts in the t fane Isabel 4
Transmitter The one t of their ancient name, Aylmer's Field 296
Transparent That dimples your t cheek, Margaret 15
Transplanted I know t human worth Will bloom to profit. In Mem. Ixxxii 11
Transplanting And Methods of t trees Amphion 79
Transport ' But heard, by secret t led, Two Voices 214
Me mightier t's move and thrill ; »S'*V Galahad 22
Stirring a sudden t rose and fell. Princess iv 29
Trap (rock) hornblende, rag and t and tuff, „ Hi 362
Trap (snare) As of a wild thing taken in the t, Geraint and E. 723
Trap (verb) Christ the bait to « his dupe Sea Dreams 191
l^pesed See Tra&pes'd
Trapper Which sees the t coming thro' the wood. Geraint and E. 724
Trapt (adorned) there she f oimd her palfrey t Godiva 51
On horses, and the horses richly t Pelleas and E. 55
Trapt (caught) ' Traitor, come out, ye are t at last,' Guinevere 106
Trash you that talk'd The t that made me sick. Princess ii 394
' 0 ^ ' he said, ' but with a kernel in it. „ 395
Trath Treroit down the waste sand-shores of T T, Lancelot and E. 301
Travail T, and throes and agonies of the life, Com. of Arthur 76
Camilla's t came Upon her. Lover's Tale iv 127
Travel (S) I cannot rest from t : Ulysses 6
if it had not been For a chance of t, Maud I ii 8
overtoil'd By that day's grief and t, Geraint and E. 377
O weary was I of the t, V. of Maeldune 129
Travel (verb) blasts of balm To one that t's quickly, Gardener's D. 69
He t's far from other skies — Day-Dm., Arrival 5
here and there a foamy flake Upon me, as I i The Brook 60
Travell'd how they prose O'er books of t seamen, Amphion 82
And t men from foreign lands ; In Mem. x 6
Traveller in strange lands a t walking slow, Palace of Art 277
The t hears me now and then. In Mem. xxi 5
Traveller's-joy Was parcel-bearded with the t-j Aylmer's Field 153
Travellhig quite worn out, T to Naples. The Brook 36
His kinsman < on his own affair Merlin and V. 717
myself was then T that land, Lover's Tale iv 133
Traversed Silent the silent field They t. Gareth and L. 1314
blossom-dust of those Deep meadows we had t. Merlin and V. 283
Treacherous Making a t quiet in his heart, Lancelot and E. 883
Treachery tript on such conjectural t — Merlin and V. 348
fevers, fights. Mutinies, treacheries — Columbus 226
Tread (s) Were it ever so airy a t, Maud I xxii 68
Tread (verb) And t softly and speak low, D. of the O. Year 4
ere the hateful crow shall t The comers Will Water. 235
While he t's with footstep firmer, L. of Burleigh 51
Freedom, gaily doth she t ; Vision of Sin 136
T a measure on the stones, „ 180
The wisp that flickers where no foot can t.' Princess iv 358
And t you out for ever : „ vi 176
seem'd to touch upon a sphere Too gross to t, „ vii 325
The solid earth whereon we t In Mem. cxviii 8
t me down And I will kiss you for it ; ' Merlin and V. 228
You that would not < on a worm Forlorn 45
Treading
IVeading Then her people, softly t,
Treason says the song, I ' trow it is no t.'
To lash the t's of the Table Round.'
fool,' he said, ' ye talk Fool's t :
The doom of t and the flaming death,
king along with him— All heresy, t :
Tceasore handed down the golden t to him.'
a peculiar t, brooking not Exchange
accounts Of all his t's the most beautiful
m her behold Of all my t's the most beautiful
com d into EngUsh gold some t of classical son"
iTeasured When I saw the t splendour, her hand
742
Trembling
L. of Burleigh 97
Merlin and V. 723
Pelleas and E. 566
Last Tournament 352
Guinevere 538
Sir J. Oldcastle 50
Gareth and L. 61
Lover's Tale i 447
iv 234
318
The Wreck 67
Maud I vi 84
^STsomJ^/f oi^^'rf 'f"* "'^^^y ^^'' -^^- ^'^^'hur 101
Thro' the dmi meadow toward his W, ^^»«er 5 i- t«/rf 515
Treasuring T the look it cannot find, /„ 1/" "To
"^LiSdToWiThSL^'^* ^'^ «.^ "^^*«r- ^' ^^-^r^- 3 0
rtheir loathsom! hurts and heal mine own ; "1^^, 6^
Treated Too awful, sure for what they t of, ' pSH 139
And waitmg to be t like a wolf /-- .^f* j * * ^^^
Treatise They read Botanic J^' &«m^,,^ a^ £. 857
Treaty trickster And spumer of treaties— Ji„H r v ^'^P^^ I'
Treble (^.) (See also ker-t^bS^'^'he t works, thtvasf ^-'"'^*^'-'^ »«
A .da^ess. Evil haunts The birth, j^Z S^• S
There ran a t range of stony shields,- Gar£UTJ)7
For there beyond a bridge of < bow, '*'*^ -^ l ^I
Treble (s) With blissful t ringing clear. sir L and O r? 22
tempestuous t throbb'd and palpitated ; VisZnofSin i
In httle sharps and i's, ' ^ ^ 7 T«
Make liquid « of that bassoon, my throat ; /rtZ'um
^^,^'^^1^^'^^ as far As I could ape their t, ^"' "•„lS
Trebled (adj.) London roll'd one tide of joy thro' all "
Her t millions, t ^i ^ • . ^
Trebled (verb) Love nife within me, (S-lLSTlgs
xtebi^' "SdTaK rtr- tri^ «^ ^--^ ' ^ ' ^?J~-i
"^ St^'i^'feS^'A^-t'^.Boor.tree.Cedar.tre^'""^'^"'^"'^
Ehn-tree, Figtree, Garden-tree, Hazel-tree, 0^
?wf.« w"*T'-^°?^^'^H^' Roof-tree. Rosetree,
Sloe-tree, Wayfanng-tree, Yew-tree) no other t did
mark The level waste, nf ■ ao
Kain makes music in the t Marmtia 43
as the < Stands in the sun and shadows Lo^e and Z^h 10
The shadow passeth when the t shall fall T4
Thou hest beneath the greenwood t, " Oriana 95
The wind IS blowing in turret and t. (repeat) The Sist^Jt 33
The wmd IS howling in turret and <. ' q
The wind is roaring in turret and «. " ic
The wind is raging in turret and t. " i?
The wind is raving in turret and t. " 7,7,
The <'* beg;an to whisper, " ^ ' X' ^^S
Their humid arms festooning ttot, " T) r,f v m ' in
5.s;t A/sSprJ! ™ ■^'» "»- °° '^« ' J^S»rsr||
And legs of t's were limber, ^wpA«>« 3
Like some great landslip, t by <, " if
And Methods of transplanting t's " ^q
Then move the t's, the copses nod v;„ n i' 1. j in
And fly, like a bird, from < to T, ' VdLjJ^ XL
But here will sigh thine alder t if'^e.Zfi
And dies imheard within his / v • , , ^'^^^«" 9
The moving wEp^r of h.^ '. ^'^ Vorh'^Tr\^
On the nigh-nak^ ^ the robin piped Disconsolate "^ «^
the family / Sprang from the miJriff ^'''=*^'^'^^' ," 676
Have also set hLs many-shielded t •■> ^ylmer s b leld 15
Once grovelike, each huge arm a t', " gj^
Tree (continued) t's As high as heaven, and every bird
that sings :
bathed In the green gleam of dewy-tassell'd t's ■
A t Was half -disrooted from his place
across the lawns Beneath huge t's,
^^ *^® f J ^^}' "'^ ^'^* ™*^« 't fagots for the liearth
from the high t the blossom wavering fell,
all along the valley, by rock and cave and'i
For the bud ever breaks into bloom on the t
And gazing on thee, sullen t, '
And wildly dash'd on tower and t
Within the green the moulder'd t,
the t's Laid their dark arms about the field, (repeat)
My love has talk'd with rocks and t's;
There rolls the deep where grew the t.
on the t's The dead leaf trembles to the bells
A voice by the cedar t In the meadow
One long milk-bloom on the t ;
stairway sloped Till lost in blowing t's and tops of
towers ;
saw The t that shone white-listed thro' the gloom
then binding his good horse To a <,
thro' the t Rush'd ever a rainy wind,
and crag and t Scaling, Sir Lancelot '
High on a grim dead t before the tower.
As the t falls so must it lie.
they would hang him again on the cursed t.
es he couldn't cut down a.t\ ' Drat the t's,' says I
could It be That t's grew downward,
isle-side flashing down from the peak without
ever a t
And t's like the towers of a minster,
birds Begin to warble in the budding orchard t's •
And a t with a moulder'd nest
^om off the t We planted both together,
Her tribes of men, and t's, and flowers,
cords that ran Dark thro' the mist, and linking
t to t, *
an' coom'd to the top o' the t.
Tree-bower beneath the tall T-b's,
^ee-fem Your cane, your palm, t-f, bamboo,
M^top On the t-t's a crested peacock lit.
Trefoil t, sparkling on the rainy plain,
Tftellis-work birds Of sunny plume in gilded t-tv ■
Tremble stars which t O'er the deep mind '
the jewel That t's in her ear :
whispers of the leaves That t round a nightingale—
And make me t lest a saying learnt.
Begins to move and t.
breath Of tender air made t in the hedge
and < deeper down. And slip at once all-fragrant
In that fine air 1 1, all the past Melts
A breeze began to t o'er The large leaves
They t, the sustaining crags ;
The dead leaf t's to the bells.
Would start and t under her feet,
He felt the hollow-beaten mosses thud And t
stars Did t in their stations as I gazed ; '
excess of sweetness and of awe, Makes the heart t
felt him t too. And heard him muttering, '
That t's not to kisses of the bee :
Trenibled Lovingly lower, t on her waist —
' A teardrop t from its source.
Low voluptuous music winding t,
T in perilous places o'er a deep :
And the voice t and the hand,
but in his heat and eagerness T and quiver'd
burthen of our tender years T upon the other.
I heard and t, yet I could but hear ;
and the Paradise t away.
Tremblest Who t thro' thy darkling red
Trembling But ever t thro' the dew
And full at heart of t hope.
Between the loud stream and the t stars.
Thro' silence and the t stars
Sen Dreams 101
Princess i 94
.. iv 185
,. V 237
vi 44
80
V. of Cauteretz 9
The Islet 32
//( Mem. ii 13
XV 7
xxvi 7
.. xcv 15, 51
xcvii 1
cxxiii 1
Con. 63
Maud I V 1
„ xxii 46
Gareth and L. 670
Merlin and V. 939
Pelleas and E. 31
Last Tournament 15
17
430
Sizpah 12
„ 59
Village Wife 30
Columbus 50
'. of Maeldune 45
The Wreck 74
The Flight 61
Dead Prophet 18
Happy 13
To Ulysses 3
Death of CEnone 11
Church-warden, etc. 38
Sisters (E. and £.) 112
To Ulysses 36
CEnone 104
Gareth and L. 1159
Marr. of Geraint 659
Ode to Memory 35
Miller's D. 172
Gardener's D. 254
Tithonus 47
Will Water. 32
The Brook 202
Princess vii 69
354
In Mem. xcv 54
„ cxxvii 11
Con. 64
Maud I xxii 73
Balin and Balan 322
Lover's Tale i 582
„ ii 15t>
iv 324
Prog, of Spring 4
Gardener's D. 131
Talking Oak 161
Vision of Sin 17
Sea Dreams 11
Princess vii 227
Pelleas and E. 284
Lover's Tale i 223
570
V. of Maeldune 82
In Mem. xcix 5
Margaret 52
Miller's D. 110
CEnone 21»
On a Mourner 28
.
Trembling
748
Tristram
Drembliog (cotitiniLed) Smote the chord of Self, that, /,
pass'd in music out of sight. Locksley Hall 34
With a weird bright eye, sweating and t, Aylmer's Field 585
ToU'd by an earthquake in a t tower. Princess vi 332
And letters unto t hands ; In Mem. x 7
With t fingers did we weave The holly „ xxx 1
now by night With moon and t stars, Marr. of Geraint 8
all offices Of watchful care and t tenderness. Lover's Tale i 226
(Huge blocks, which some old t of the world „ ii 45
dragon, which our t fathers call'd The God's own son. Tiresias 16
Tower and altar t . . . Forlorn 34
Tremnloos {See also Ever-tremoloos, Fear-tremulous) My
t tongue faltereth, Elednore 136
Perhaps her eye was dim, hand t ; Enoch Arden 242
Shines in those t eyes that fill with tears Tithonus 26
over them the t isles of light Slided, Princess vi 81
And in the meadows t aspen-trees Lancelot and E. 410
There on the t bridge, that from beneath Lover's Tale i 412
When first she peers along the t deep, Bemeter and P. 14
Stampt into dust — t, all awry, Romney's R. 113
nwnch (See also Meadow-trenches) shovell'd up into
some bloody t AtuUey Court 42
Trenchant nor t swords Can do away that ancient
lie; Clear-headed friend 14:
tipt With t steel, around him slowly prest Gareth and L. 693
Trenched The t waters run from sky to sky ; Ode to Memory 104
Nor quarry t along the hill In Mem. c 11
Trencher tender little thimib. That crost the t Marr. of Geraint 396
Treroit And down the waste sand-shores of Trath T, Lancelot and E. 302
Trespass-chiding slink From ferule and the t-c eye, Princess v 38
Tress {See also Ivy-tress) I see thee roam, with t'es
unconfined, Elednore 122
The fragrant t'es are not stirr'd Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 19
' Love, if thy t'es be so dark, „ Arrival 31
I wore her picture by my heart. And one dark t ; Princess i 39
With all her autumn t'es falsely brown, „ ii 449
Drew from my neck the painting and the t, ,, vi 110
good Queen, her mother, shore the t With kisses, „ 113
Tressed T with redolent ebony, Arabian Nights 138
Trial and true love Crown'd after / ; Ayhner's Field 100
Girl after girl was call'd to t : Princess iv 228
So there were any t of mastery, Gareth and L. 517
' To those who love them, t's of our faith. Pelleas and E. 210
I know That all these pains are t's of my faith, „ 246
Dishonour'd all for t of true love — „ 477
Tribe twelve-divided concubine To inflame the t's : Aylmer's Field 760
Girt by half the t's of Britain, Boddicea 5
' They that scorn the t's and call us „ 7
A < of women, dress'd in many hues, Geraint and E. 598
shim the wild ways of the lawless t. „ 608
Her t's of men, and trees, and flowers, To Ulysses 3
Form, Ritual, varying with the t's of men. Akbar's Dream 125
Tributary A t prince of Devon, Marr. of Geraint 2
IjOw bow'd the t Prince, and she, „ 174
and had his realm restored But render'd t, Balin and Balan 3
Tribute (adj.) Thy t wave deliver : A Farewell 2
Tribute (s) The filter'd t of the rough woodland, Ode to Memory 63
Strode in, and claim'd their t as of yore. Com. of Arthur 506
No t will we pay : ' „ 513
fail'd of late To send his t ; Balin and Balan 4
after, when we sought The t, answer'd „ 116
a liar is he. And hates thee for the t\' „ 608
Hath sought the < of a verse from me. To Dante 5
Trice Away we stole, and transient in a « Princess v 39
Trick (s) ' I see it is a < Got up betwixt you Dora 95
' Play me no t's, said Lord Ronald, (repeat) Lady Clare 73, 75
The t's, which make us toys of men. Princess ii 63
What was it ? a lying t of the brain ? Maud II i 37
' Are these your pretty t's and fooleries. Merlin and V. 265
madden'd to the height By tonguester t's. To Mary Boyle 34
Trick (verb) T thyself out in ghastly imageries Gareth and L. 1390
Trick'd and leaves me fool'd and t, „ 1251
Trickling That gather'd t dropwise from the cleft. Merlin and V. 274
Trickster Traitor and t And spumer of treaties — • Batt. of Brunanburh 79
Tried {See also Thried) This dress and that by turns you t, Miller's D. 147
Tried {continued) this frail bark of ours, w hen sorely t,
1 1 the mother's heart,
ourself have often t Valkyrian hymns,
I your old friend and t, she new in all ?
O true in word, and t in deed,
0 true and t, so well and long.
Strange, that / t to-day To beguile her
But on all those who t and fail'd.
And many t and fail'd, because the charm
Then, if 1 1 it, who should blame me then ? '
tho' he t the villages round,
1 couldn't get back tho' 1 1,
weeks 1 1 Your table of Pythtigoras,
Trifle (s) And singing airy t's this or that,
A t, sweet ! which true love spells —
A t makes a dream, a t breaks.'
* No t,' groan'd the husband ;
Like one with any t pleased.
They chatter'd t's at the door :
There is but a t left you,
Trifle (verb) gentlemen. That t with the cruet.
Some thought that Philip did but t with her ;
She might have seem'd a toy to t with.
Trifled Or like a king, not to be t with —
Triflhig As many little t Lilias —
Trill Upon her lattice, I would pipe and t,
That hears the latest linnet t,
Trilleth Silver-treble laughter t :
Trim (adj.) sward was t as any garden lawn :
T hamlets ; here and there a rustic tower
Trim (verb) have a dame indoors, that t's us up,
t our sails, and let old bygones be,
Trinacrian Tho' dead in its T Enna,
Trinity All glory to the all-blessed T,
Trinket And gave the t's and the rings,
Trinobant hear Coritanian, T ! (repeat)
Gods have answer'd, Catieuchlanian, T.
Shout Icenian, Catieuchlanian, shout Coritanian, T,
Trip My tongue T's, or I speak profanely.
To t a tigress with a gossamer,
tho' he t and fall He shall not blind his soul
That made my tongue so stammer and t
Triple Who, God-like, grasps the t forks,
Triple-mailed and guard about With t-m trust
Triplet In riddling t's of old time.
Tripod on a < in the midst A fragrant flame
Tript That Jenny had t in her time :
Have t on such conjectural treachery —
yet, methinks Thy tongue has t a little :
There t a hxmdred tiny silver deer.
Aylmer's Field 715
Princess Hi 147
„ iv 138
318
In Mem. Ixxxv 5
Con. 1
Mavd I XX 2
Merlin and V. 590
595
661
First Quarrel 43
Rizpah 43
To E. Fitzgerald 14
Caress'd or chidden 2
Miller's D. 187
Sea Dreams 144
145
In Mem. Ixvi 4
„ Ixix 4
Grandmother 107
Will Water. 232
Enoch Arden 475
Pelleas and E. 76
Merlin and V. 593
Princess, Pro. 188
Princess iv 100
In Mem. c 10
Lilian 24
Princess, Pro. 95
Con. 44
Edwin Morris 46
Princess iv 69
To Prof. Jehb 11
Columbus 61
The Letters 21
Boddicea 10, 34, 47
22
57
Lu/?retius 74
Princess v 170
„ vii 331
Maud I m 83
Of old sat Freedom 15
Sufp. Confessions 66
Com. of Arthur 402
Princess iv 33
Grandmother 26
Merlin and V. 348
602
Last Tournament 171
Tristram (a Knight o! the Round Table) Had made his
goodly cousin, T, knight, Gareth and L. 394
after Lancelot, T, and Geraint And Gareth, Lancelot and E. 556
the prize Of T in the jousts of yesterday. Last Tournament 8
T, saying, ' Why skip ye so. Sir Fool ? (repeat) „ 9, 243
T — late From overseas in Brittany retiim'd, „ 174
Sir T of the Woods — Whom Lancelot knew, „ 177
in one full shock With T ev'n to death : ., 181
Drew from before Sir T to the bounds, „ 185
So T won, and Lancelot gave, the gems, „ 190
T, half-plagued by Lancelot's languorous mood, „ 194
T roimd the gallery made his horse Caracole ; „ 205
And wroth at T and the lawless jousts, „ 237
' Ay, fool,' said T, ' but 'tis eating dry To dance „ 249
Then T, waiting for the quip to come, „ 260
Sir fool,' said T, ' I would break thy head. „ 268
And T, ' Was it muddier than thy gibes ? „ 299
And T, ' Then were swine, goats, asses, „ 325
And T, ' Ay, Sir Fool, for when our King „ 334
' Nay, fool, said T, ' not in open day.' „ 347
Rode T toward Lyonnesse and the west. „ 362
when T was away. And snatch'd her hence ; „ 383
yet dreading worse than shame Her warrior T, „ 385
now that desert lodge to T lookt So sweet, ,, 387
out of T waking, the red dream Fled with a shout, „ 487
Tristram
744
True
Tristram (a Knight of the Bound Table) {continued)
heard the feet of T grind The spiring stone
To whom Sir T smiling, ' I am here,
and spake To T, as he knelt before her,
And T, ' Last to my Queen Paramount,
sweet memories Of T in that year he was away.'
And T, fondling her light hands, replied,
Then T, ever dallying with her hand.
Far other was the T, Arthur's knight !
Then T, pacing moodily up and down.
Then T laughing caught the harp, and sang :
in the light's last glimmer T show'd And swung
And won by T as a tourney-prize. And hither brought
by T for his last Love-offering
Then came the sin of T and Isolt ;
Trimnph (s) And like a bride of old In t led,
Keen with t, watching still To pierce me
herald of her t, drawing nigh Half-whisper'd
What Roman would be dragg'd in t thus ?
elaborately wrought With fair Corinna's t ;
Peace, his t will be sung
And felt thy t was as mine ;
nor cares For t in our mimic wars,
he had One golden hour — of t shall I say ?
t's over time and space.
Triumph (verb) It in conclusive bliss,
Trinmph'd So It ere my passion sweeping
Trinmvir The fierce t's ; and before them paused
Troad she used to gaze Down at the T ;
and thy fame Is blown thro' all the T,
she
Last Tournament 510
521
541
551
580
601
626
634
654
730
739
747
Guinevere 488
Ode to Memory 76
Rosalind 26
(Enone 185
Lucretius 234
Princess Hi 349
Ode on Well. 232
In Mem. ex 14
Lancelot and E. 312
Lover's Tale iv 6
Locksley H., Sixty 75
In Mem. Ixxxv 91
Locksley Rail 131
Princess vii 131
Death oj (Enone 3
37
Troas reveal T and Dion's column'd citadel, The crown of T. (Enone 13
Trod (See also Trode) Old footsteps t the upper floors, Mariana 67
And t on silk, as if the winds A Character 21
They should have t me into clay, Oriana 62
But over these she t : and those great bells Palace of Art 157
Comes Faith from tracts no feet have t, On a Mourner 29
Upon an ampler dunghill t, Will Water. 125
with her strong feet up the steep hill T out a path : Sea Dreams 121
I falter where I firmly t, In Mem. Iv 13
We pass ; the path that each man t Is dim, „ Ixxiii 9
Whereof the man, that with me t This planet, „ Con. 137
how native Unto the hQIs she t on ! Lover's Tale i 360
We t the shadow of the downward hill ; „ 515
they t The same old paths where Love had walk'd „ 820
Yet 1 1 not the wildflower in my path, „ ii 20
spirit round about the bay, T swifter steps ; „ Hi 18
we pass By that same path our true fore-
father's t ; Doubt and Prayer 4
Trodden Had t that crown'd skeleton, Lancelot and E. 49
the weak t down by the strong. Despair 31
Trode (See also Trod) On burnish'd hooves his war-horse t; L. ofShalott Hi 29
our horses stumbling as they t On heaps of ruin, Holy (rrail 716
" ' Lucretius 88
Spec, of Iliad 1
Achilles over the T. 23
31
Princess iv 157
Owd Rod 72
L. of Shalott ii 19
St. S. Stylites 4
You might have won 7
Princess iv 168
Merlin and V. 598
Last Tournament 322
Vision of Sin 171
Trojan tempt The T, while his neat-herds
So Hector spake ; the T's roar'd applause ;
cry of ^akidds Was heard among the T's,
backward reel'd the T's and allies ;
Troll To t a careless, careless tavern-catch
Trollope (a slat) gell was as howry a t
Troop Sometimes a t of damsels glad,
t's of devils, mad with blasphemy,
Thro' t's of unrecording friends,
A < of snowy doves athwart the dusk,
many weeks a t of carrion crows Hung
Troop'd T round a Paynim harper once,
Trooping ' T from their mouldy dens
Tropic By squares of t summer shut And warm'd in
crystal cases. Amphion 87
For on a t mountain was I born, Prog, of Spring 67
The wealth of t bower and brake ; To Ulysses 37
Tropical When he spoke of bis t home in the canes The Wreck 71
Man with his brotherless dinner on man in the t wood. The Dawn 3
Troth I to thee my t did plight, Oriana 26
Will I to Olive plight my t. Talking Oak 283
wherefore break her t ? Proud look'd the lips : Princess i 95
then this question of your t remains : „ v 279
Troth (continued) some pretext held Of baby t, invalid. Princess v 398
plighted t, and were at peace. „ vii 83
The heart that never plighted t In Mem. xxvii 10
here I pledge my t, Yea, by the honour Pelleas and E. 341
But I to your dead man have given my t, „ 389
Forgetful of their t and fealty, Guinevere 442
Trouble (s) Whose t's number with his days : Two Voices 330
T on t, pain on pain. Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 84
That thou shouldst take my t on thyself : Dora 118
may he never know The t's I have gone thro' ! ' „ 150
a lip to drain thy ( dry. Locksley Hall 88
We drink defying t. Will Water. 94
But a t weigh'd upon her, L. of Burleigh 77
Not thankful that his t's are no more. Lucretius 143
his t had all been in vain. Grandmother 66
No is t and cloud and storm. Window, No Answer 8
Such clouds of nameless t cross All night In Mem. iv 13
when sundown skirts the moor An inner t I behold, ,, xli 18
I turn about, I find a < in thine eye, „ Ixviii 10
It is the t of my youth That foolish sleep „ 15
Can t live with April days, „ Ixxxiii 7
A world of t withm ! Maud I xix 25
lost in t and moving round Here at the head „ xxi 5
' And in that hope, dear soul, let t have rest, „ /// vi 12
Foredooming all his t was in vain, Gareth and L. 1127
Do forge a life-long t for ourselves, Geraint and E. 3
That t which has left me thrice your own : „ 737
Before the useful t of the rain : „ 771
Seeing the homeless t in thine eyes, Lancelot and E. 1365
And all this t did not pass but grew ; Guinevere 84
But the boy was bom i' t. First Quarrel 2
Torture and t in vain, — Def. of Lucknow 86
the t, the strife and the sin, V. of Maeldune 129
And the transient t of drowning — Despair 67
a man be a durty thing an' a t Spinster's S's. 50
I am a.t to you. Could kneel for your forgiveness. Romney's R. 25
Trouble (verb) should come like ghosts to t joy. Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 74
' To t the heart of Edward Gray.' Edward Gray 20
Be still, for you only t the mind Maud I v 20
Troubled (adj. and part.) Being t, wholly out of sight, Lucretius 152
Would pace the t land, like Peace ; Love thou thy land 84
Grow long and t like a rising moon, Princess i 59
But then my t spirit rule. In Mem. xxviii 17
His dear little face was t. Grandmother 65
Coursed one another more on open ground Beneath
a / heaven, Marr. of Geraint 523
They leave the heights and are t. Voice and the P. 15
all their hearts Were t, Achilles over the T. 24
Troubled (verb) T the track of the host that we
hated, Batt. of Brunanhurh 40
Trouble-tost I lull a fancy t-t In Mem. Ixv 2
Troubling And the wicked cease from t. May Queen, Con. 60
Troublous And yet so finely, that a t touch Thinn'd, Aylmer's Field 75
Trough wallowing in the t's of Zolaism, — Locksley H., Sixty 145
Trout Then leapt a t. In lazy mood I watch'd Miller's D. 73
there he caught the younker tickling t — Walk, to the Mail 33
And here and there a lusty t, The Brook 57
i' Howlaby beck won daay ya was ticklin' o' t. Church-warden, etc. 27
Trow 1 1 they did not part in scorn : Lady Clare 5
No blood of mine, 1 1 ; Last Tournament 201
I have broke their cage, no gilded one, 1 1 — Sir J. Oldcastle 3
Troy I will rise and go Down into T, (Enone 262
minstrel sings Before them of the ten years' war
in T, Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 77
to greet T's wandering prince, On a Mourner 33
Far on the ringing plains of windy T. Ulysses 17
stream Of Xanthus blazed before the towers of T, Spec, of Iliad 18
The wounded warrior climbs from T to thee. Death of (Enone 39
The sunset blazed along the wall of T. „ 77
Truck Grimy nakedness dragging his t's Maud 1x7
Truckled Had often t and cower'd Dead Prophet 62
Truckling wordy t's to the transient hour, To the Queen ii 51
Trudged See Traapes'd
True (adj.) (See also Thrue) T Mussulman was I and
sworn, Arabian Nights 9
True
745
True
ftne (adj.) (continued) The burning bradn from the t heart, Margaret 39
As pure and t as blades of steel. Kate 16
Our thought gave answer each to each, so t — Sonnet to 10
For ' Love,' they said, ' must needs be t, Mariana in the S. 63
A trifle, sweet ! which t love spells^ T love interprets —
ri^ht alone. Miller's D. 187
T wife, Round my / heart thine arms entwine „ 215
For ever and for ever with those just souls and t — May Queen, Con. 55
He gave me a friend, and a t true-love, D. of the O. Year 13
and my t breast Bleedeth for both ; To J. S. 62
Sleep till the end, t soul and sweet. „ 73
T love tum'd round on fixed poles. Love thou thy land 5
And this be t, till Time shall close, „ 79
Not rendering t answer, as beseem'd Thy fealty, M. d' Arthur 74
For now I see the t old times are dead, „ 229
Yet this is also t, that, long before Gardener's D. 61
'Tis t, we met ; one hour I had, no more : Edwin Morris 104
In days far-off, on that dark earth, be < ? Tithonu^ 48
But for some t result of good All parties Will Water. 55
He loves me for my own t worth. Lady Clare 11
0 mother,' she said, ' if this be t, „ 30
Sailors bold and t. The Captain 8
Philip's t heart, which hun^er'd for her peace Enoch Arden 272
and t love Crown'd after trial ; Aylmer's Field 99
Ringing like proven golden coineige t, „ 182
She must prove t : for, brother, „ 364
Is it so t that second thoughts are best ? Sea Dreams 65
So false, he partly took himself for t ; ., 185
T Devils with no ear, they howl in tune .. 260
' T ' indeed ! One of our town, „ 262
' T,' she said, ' We doubt not that. Princess, Pro. 168
And bites it for t heart and not for harm, „ 174
that was t : But then she had a will ; „ t 47
' An open-hearted maiden, t and pure. „ Hi 98
My prmcess, 0 my princess ! t she errs, „ 107
T — we had limed ourselves With open eyes, „ 142
nor is it Wiser to weep a t occasion lost, „ iv 68
And dark and t and tender is the North. „ 98
She wept her t eyes blind for such a one, „ 134
Know you no song, the t growth of your soil, „ 150
In us t growth, in her a Jonah's goturd, „ 311
gentleness To such as her ! if Cyril spake her t, „ v 168
T woman : but you clash them all in one, „ 180
As t to thee as false, fake, false to me ! „ vi 204
It was ill counsel had misled the girl To vex t hearts : ,, vii 242
in t marriage lies Nor equal, nor imequal : ., 302
0 iron nerve to t occasion t, Ode on Well. 37
Mighty Seaman, tender and t, „ 134
And save the one t seed of freedom sown „ 162
Until we doubt not that for one so t ., 255
What England was, shall her t sons forget ? Third of Feb. 44
Doctors, they knaws nowt, fur a says what's
nawways t : N. Farmer, O. S. 5
Dreams are t while they last. High. Pantheism 4
Deab, near and t — no truer Time himself A Dedication 1
And flashes into false and t. In Mem. xvi 19
In more of life t life no more And Love „ xxvi 11
1 hold it t, whate'er befall ; „ xxvii 13
The Spirit of t love replied ; „ lii 6
' What keeps a spirit wholly t „ 9
For thou wert strong as thou wert t ? „ Ixxiii 4
O t in word, and tri»i in deed, „ Ixxxv 5
If not so fresh, with love ast, ■ „ 101
Should prove the phantom-warning t. „ xcii 12
But ever strove to make it t : „ xcvi 8
And dream my dream, and hold it / ; „ cxxiii 10
O t and tried, so well and long, „ Con. 1
She might by a / descent be untrue ; And Maud is
as t as Maud is sweet : Maud I xiii 31
And teach t life to fight with mortal wrongs. „ xviii 54
But the t blood spilt had in it a heat „ xix 44
For, Maud, so tende and t, „ 85
Come out to your own t lover, That your t lover
may see Your glory also, „ xx 46
To find the arms of my t love Round me „ // iv 3
True (adj.) {continued) (For I cleaved to a cause that I felt
to be pure and t), Maud III vi 31
' 0 King ! ' she cried, ' and I will tell thee t : Com. of Arthur 339
' T love, sweet son, had risk'd himself Gareth and L. 60
but this was all of that t steel, „ 66
Her own t Gareth was too princely-proud „ 161
In token of t heart and fealty. „ 399
Enid loved the Queen, and with t heart Adored her, Mart, of Geraint 19
that if ever yet was wife T to her lord,
0 me, I fear that I am no t wife.'
T tears upon his broad and naked breast.
And that she fear'd she was not a t wife.
' Well said, t heart,' replied Geraint,
As I will make her truly my t wife.'
To dress her beautifully and keep her t ' —
The one t lover whom you ever own d,
Nor let her t hand falter, nor blue eye Moisten,
1 heard you say, that you were no t wife :
with your own t eyes Beheld the man you loved
Rise, my t knight.
Balin first woke, and seeing that t face,
Pure as our own t Mother is our Queen.'
Goodnight, t brother.' (repeat)
To worship woman as t wife beyond
That old t filth, and bottom of the well.
And half believe her t :
and half believed her t, (repeat)
Yet is there one t line, the pearl of pearls :
And Vivien, frowning in t anger, said :
friend Traitor ort?
' O t and tender ! 0 my liege and King !
Have all men t and leal, all women pure ;
So love be t, and not as yours is—
O, I, that flattering my t passion,
our t King Will then allow your pretext.
And found it t, and answer'd, ' T, my child.
Dearer to t young hearts than their own praise,
' Our t Arthur, when he learns,
T, indeed. Albeit I know my knights fantastical,
our Lancelot ! that t man ! '
I know not if I know what t love is.
Must our t man change like a leaf at last ?
And faith unfaithful kept him falsely t.
To speak the wish most near to your t heart ;
And then will I, for t you are and sweet
' Sweet is t love tho' given in vain.
And folded, ' O sweet father, tender and t,
And therefore my t love has been my death,
for good she was and t.
For all t hearts be blazon'd on her tomb
like to coins. Some t, some light,
' O son, thou hast not t humility,
' Hail, Bors ! if ever loyal man and t Could see it,
Dishonour'd all for trial of t love —
as the one t knight on earth. And only lover ;
' Is the King t? ' ' The King ! ' said Percivale.
And barken if my music be not t.
And heard it ring as < as tested gold.'
' Fear God : honour the King — ^his one t
knight —
The night was dark ; the t star set.
For what is t repentance but in thought —
T men who love me still, for whom I live,
Too wholly t to dream untruth in thee.
My own t lord ! how dare I call him mine ?
Not rendering t answer, as beseem'd Thy fealty.
For now I see the t old times are dead.
And that t North, whereof we lately heard
If this be t. At thought of which my whole soul
It fall on its own thorns — if this be t —
But, placing his t hand upon her heart.
Then, when her own t spirit had retum'd,
I ha' been as < to you as ever a man to his wife ;
' You said that you hated me, Ellen, but that isn't
t, you know ;
47
108
111
114
474
503
Geraint and E, 40
344
512
742
846
Balin and Balan 75
590
617
„ 626, 628
Merlin and V. 23
47
186
„ 400, 893
459
691
770
791
794
862
874
Lancelot and E. 152
370
419
585
593
665
676
686
877
914
954
1007
1110
1277
1292
1344
Holy Grail 26
445
756
Pelleas and E. 477
494
535
Last Tournament 274
284
302
605
Guinevere 373
445
541
617
Pass, of Arthur 242
397
To the Queen ii 14
Lover's Tale i 266
273
iv 75
108
First Quarrel 60
79
The Revenge 101
True
True (adj.) (continued) ' I have fought for Queen and
Faith like a valiant man and t ;
they stared at the dead that had been so valiant
. *°'*'' 105
^\ ' ^u^'" 1^^^. ""*' ^ "^^^ imperial all-in-aU. Sisters (E. mid E.) 226
she That loved me — our t Edith— ' 235
and her own t eyes Are traitors to her ; "' 284
' Most dearest ' be a < superlative — " ono
which lived T life, live on— and if the fatal kiss
Born of < life and love, p„-„ Alice 2
t is your heart, but be sure that your hand be
;o ^t " I. 4. i ij I, X, . ^^/- of Lucknmo 56
IS it t what was told by the scout, 95
From that t world within the world we see, De Prof " Two G 30
Our t co-mates regather round the mast ; Pref. Son. 'wth Cent. 5
A ever the heart among women,' he said, 'more tender
* ^•' The Wreck 96
that would pluck from this t breast the locket The Fliaht 33
Arise, my own t sister, come forth ! og
I wur sewer that it couldn't be t ; SpinsUr's S's. 20
so es all that I 'ears be / ; ^ gg
being t as he was brave ; Locksley H., Sixty 59
when you speak were wholly t. 220
a guest may make T cheer with honest
1 ^^^^ I c u^ m , -f™- *o Gen. Hamley 16
he needs must fight To make t peace his own, Epiloqiie 27
I brother, only to be known By those who
love thee best Pref . Poem Broth. Son. 7
T poet, surely to be found When Truth I5
That man'5 the t Conservative Ha'Us all Round 7
1 leaders of the land's desire ! 26
but Thou, T daughter whose all-faithful, PHn. Beatrice 13
Queen as f to womanhood as Queenhood, On Jub. Q. Victoria 25
Faaithful an' T '—them words be i' Scriptur— an'
Faaithful an' T n,,, j t> --ik
T „„ 1 V o 1 J 1 . , ■ . (Jwd Roa 15
Legend or t? so tender should be t ! The Ring 224
TiL^ Ai ^^^"-^ thy home. p^og. of SpZg 52
The Alcestis of the time Romney's R 91
Not the Great Voice not the t Deep. Akbar's Dream 59
And following thy t counsel, by thme aid, I54
T gentleman, heart blood and bone. Bandit's Death 2
And had some prophet spoken t Mechanovhilus 25
J we have got—sv^h a faithful ally Riflemen form ! 24
I count you kind, I hold you t ; The Wanderer 13
What is t at last will tell : Poets and the Critics 9
By that same path our t forefathers trod ; Dmbt and Prayer 4
Trae (S) undo One riddle, and to find the t, Two Voices 233
Yet glimpses of the t. ur^n ly . gr,
Who battled for the T, the Just, InMem.ti S
King out the false, ring m the t. ^ g
taking t for false, or false for t ; Geraint and E 4
Could all of < and noble in knight and man Holy Grail 882
The Good, the T, the Pure, the Just— Locksley H., Sixty 71
Tm J.nlir'^^l*^^/""™/' u . Mecha^philus2
Troe-ueroiC why Not make her t-h— Princess Con 20
Tfeue-love (adj.) and carolling as he went A t-l ballad, Lancelot arU E. 705
ftne-love (s) He gave me a friend, and a true t-l, D. of the O. Year 13
Truer A heart that doats on t charms, ■ L C V de Vere 14
^^H^lifl^r''"'*^^', " 'P^ncessvim
Asxd that he wears a t crown Qde on Well. 276
no t Time himself Can prove you, a Dedication 1
Lest we should set one t on his throne. Bdin and Balan 7
A seven-months' babe had been a t gift. Merlin and V. 711
Henceforth be t to your faultless lord ? Lancelot and E. 119
rmne is the farmer seat. The i lame : 447
But mine are t, seeing they profess Last Tournament 85
Bury them as God's t images Are daily buried.' Sir J. Oldcastle 140
Be to your promise There! To Mary Boyle b
TVni hl^^*' T, ^^r'^^^i "0 discordance D. of the Duke of 6. 13
Truer-hearted There is no t-h-zh, you seem Princess Hi 208
Truest 1 friend and noblest foe ; w n
?lfy noE Shy ??? ""^ ' --' ^-'^ «-^ ^- ^g
The t eyes that ever answer'd Heaven, Geraint and E. 842
746
Trust
Truest {continued) Deeming our courtesy is the t law, Lancelot and E 712
As prowest knight and t lover, pdieas and E. 350
JNo frost there,' so he said, ' as in;( Love no Death.' The Wreck 80
And while I communed with my t self.
The t, kindhest, noblest-hearted wife
True-sublime Why not make her true- heroic — t-s ?
True-touched With its t-t pulses in the flow
Truly For t as thou sayest, a Fairy King
' Ay, t of a truth. And in a sort.
Trumpet And t's blown for wars ;
And bade liim cry, with sound of t,
The shattering t shrilleth high.
Brake with a blast of Vs from the gate,
in the halloo Will topple to the t down,
we hear A < in the distance pealing news
A moment, while the t's blow.
With the air of the t round him,
till the t blared At the barrier like a wild horn
and once more The t, and again :
Last, the Prussian t blew ;
Warble, O bugle, and t, blare !
Altho' the t blew so loud.
A martial song like a t's call !
the t's blew. And Arthur's knighthood
' Blow t, for the world is white with May ; Blow t,
the long night hath roll'd away !
' Blow t ! he will lift us from the dust. Blow t !
live the strength and die the lust !
Then Yniol's nephew, after t blown,
Sound on a dreadful t, summoning her •
and anon The <'s blew; '
then the t's blew Proclaiming his the prize,
after t blown, her name And title.
Up to the summit, and the t's blew.
The sudden t sounded as in a dream
Far off a solitary t blew.
Thro' the thick night I hear the t blow :
when the t of jud^ent 'ill sound,
like the clear voice when a t shrills.
Pause ! before you sound the t.
The <, the gallop, the charge,
t's of victory, groans of defeat ;
Fame blowing out from her golden t
All at once the t blew.
Let blow the t strongly while I pray,
Trumpet-blast either side, with t-h,
Trumpet-blowings such fire for fame, Such t-b in it
cry of a great jousts With t-h ran on
Trumpeter blew the swoll'n cheek of a t,
he bad his t sound To the charge.
Trumpeting See Tiny-tnmipeting
Trundled Her mother t to the gate
Trunk Ruin'd t's on wither'd forks,
till the dry old t's about us, dead.
Look, he stands, T and bough.
Trust (s) And t and hope till things should cease,
and guard about With triple-mailed t,
' Go, vexed Spirit, sleep in t ;
She ceased in tears, fallen from hope and t :
breathing love and t against her lip :
Break lock and seal : betray the t :
On providence and t in Heaven,
and t in all things high Comes easy to him.
On God and Godlike men we build our t.
sensuous frame Is rack'd with pangs that conquer t
whether t m things above Be drnim'd of sorrow,
Cry thro' the sense to hearten t
why not ? I have neither hope nor t ;
chann Of woven paces and of waving hands. As
T ?™v^ °{t , , -^i^riin a7id V. 331
1, feeling that you felt me worthy <, , 3341
Too curious Vivien, tho' you talk of t, ", 356
Yea, if ye talk of 1 1 tell you this, ", 360|
Poor Vivien had not done to win his t " 8631
That proof of t — so often ask'd in vain ! ", 95
The Ring 181
Romney's R. 35
Princess, Con. 20
Lover's Tale i 205
Gareth and L. 258
837
D.ofF. Women 20
Godiva 36
Sir Galahad 5
Princess, Pro. 42
a 232
iv 81
581
V 162
485
488
Ode on Well. 127
W. to Alexandra 14
In Mem. xcvi 24
Maud / » 5
Com. of Arthur 480
482
491
Man: of Geraint 551
Geraint and E. 383
Lancelot and E. 454
500
Pelleas and E. 115
167
Last Tournament 151
Guinevere 529
„ 569
Rizpah 57
Achilles over the T. 19
Locksley H., Sixty 116
Heavy Brigade 13
Vastness 8
„ 21
Happy 75
Douht and Prayer 10
Com. of Arthur 102
Merlin and V. 418
Last Tournament 52
Princess ii 364
Heavy Brigade 8
Talking Oak 111
Vision of Sin 93
Holy Grail 495
The Oak 14
Supp. Confessions 31
66
Two Voices 115
D. of F. Women 257
Audley Court 69
You might have won 18
Enoch Arden 205
Princess vii 329
Ode on Well. 266
In Mem. I 6
„ Ixxxv 9
„ cxvi 7
Maud I i 30
Trust
747
Truth
Trust (s) (continued) Should have in it an absoluter
t To make Lancelot and E. 1192
and liis t that Heaven Will blow the tempest To the Queen ii 46
My lily of truth and t — Ancient Sage 160
Trust (verb) / could t Your kindness. To the Queen 19
■ T me, in bliss I shall abide Palace of Art 18
To make him t his modest worth, L. C. V. de Vere 46
T me, Clara Vere de Vere, „ 49
I think my time is near. I < it is. May Queen, Con. 41
I I That I am whole, and clean, St. S. Stylites 212
t me on my word, Hard wood I am, Talking Oak 170
T me, cousin, all the current of my being Locksley Hall 24
He t's to light on something fair ; Day-Dm., Arrival 20
Henceforth 1 1 the man alone. The Letters 31
And t me while I tum'd the page. To E. L. 9
Kaw from the nursery — who could t a child ? Aylmers Field 264
first I fronted him, Said, ' T him not ; ' Sea Dreams 71
' 1 1 you,' said that other ' for we two Princess ii 336
all, I t, may yet be well.' ,. 361
' O friend, we t that you esteein'd us not Too harsh ,. Hi 198
To harm the thing that t's him, .. iv 248
nest of traitors — none to t Since our arms fail'd — ,. v 426
1 1 that there is no one hurt to death, ., vi 242
And t, not love, you less. ,. 296
Lay thy sweet hands in mine and t to me.' ,, vii 366
May t himself ; and after praise and scorn, A Dedication 6
And yet we / it comes from thee, In Mem., Pro. 23
I f he lives in thee, ,. 39
Yet if some voice that man could t „ xxxv 1
Nor dare she t a larger lay, „ xlviii 13
Oh yet we t that somehow good „ liv 1
I can but t that good shall fall At last — „ 14
And faintly t the larger hope. „ Iv 20
But t that those we call the dead „ cxviii 5
I < I have not wasted breath : „ cxx 1
To one that with us works, and t, ,. cxxxi 8
For I < if an enemy's fleet came yonder Maud I i 49
I I that it is not so. „ xvi 30
1 1 that I did not talk (repeat) „ xix 12, 16
Let chance what will, 1 1 thee to the deatli.' Com. of Arthur 134
thy chief man Sir Lancelot whom he t's to
overthrow, Gareth and L. 620
His arms are old, he t's the harden'd skin — ,. 1139
Canst thou not t the limbs thy God hath given, ,. 1388
' t me not at all or all in all.' (repeat) Merlin and V. 384, 398, 449
I t That you t me in your own nobleness, Lancelot and E. 1194
I I We are green in Heaven's eyes ; Holy Grail 37
T me, long ago I should have died, Lover's Tale i 86
says The common voice, if one may t it : Sisters (E. and E.) 37
T the Hand of Light will lead her people, On Jub. Q. Victoria 68
To make him t his life, and give His fealty The Wanderer 11
Trusted some sick man declined, And t any cure. Palace of Art 156
t as he was with her, The sole succeeder Aylmer's Field 293
fool ! and t him with all, All my poor scrapings Sea Dreams 76
Who t God was love indeed In Mem. hi 13
his chamberlain, to whom He t all things, Cow. of Arthur 146
t his liege-lord Would yield him this large honour Gareth and L. 396
Too much 1 1 when I told you that. Merlin and V. 361
Yea, by God's rood, 1 1 you too much.' .. 376
Have I not sworn ? I am not t. ■■ 527
A woman and not t, „ 530
To have t me as he hath t thee. Lancelot and E. 591
Trustee came T's and Aunts and Uncles. Edwin Morris 121
!bustful The t infant on the knee ! Supp. Confessions 41
the child would twine A t hEind, In Mem. cix 19
who take Their pastime now the t King is
gone ! ' Lancelot and E. 101
And t courtesies of household life, Guinevere 86
Truthful, t, looking upward to the practised
hustings-liar ; Locksley H., Sixty 123
Our kindlier, t Jaques, past away ! To IV. H. Brookfield 11
Trusting T no longer that earthly flower Despair 35
Xmth When I went forth in quest of t, Supp. Confessions 141
T may stand forth unmoved of change, „ 144
Fair-fronted T shall droop not now ■ Clear-headed friend 12
Truth {contintied) Weak T a-leaning on her crutch.
Wan, wasted T in her utmost need,
to fling The winged shafts of t,
Thus t was multiplied on t.
And all at once a pleasant 1 1 leam'd,
' This t within thy mind rehearse.
Still moving after t long sought.
Named man, may hope some t to find,
' Cry, faint not : either T is bom
was there Not less than t design'd.
She spake some certain t's of you.
In t. How should I soothe you anyway.
Her open eyes desire the t.
To follow flying steps of T
a t Looks freshest in the fashion of the day :
Begin to feel the t and stir of day,
Shall Error in the round of time Still father T ?
That make a man feel strong in speaking t ;
With quiet eyes unfaithful to the t,
Like t's of Science waiting to be caught —
Amy, speak, and speak the t to me,
Cursed be the social lies that warp us from the living t
this is t the poet sings.
Bring t that sways the soul of men ?
Nor finds a closer t than this All-graceful head.
The t, that flies the flowing can,
' I speak the t : you are my child.
I speak the t, asl live by bread !
Trying his t and his long-sufferance,
and t and love are strength, And you are happy :
To make a t less harsh, I often grew Tired
My golden work in which I told a t
point you out the shadow from the t !
yet, to speak the t, I rate your chance
Albeit so mask'd, Madam, I love the t ;
So my mother clutch'd The t at once,
wears her error like a crown To blind the t and me :
I know the Prince, I prize his t :
and dream and t Flow'd from me ;
call her hard and cold which seem'd a t :
sought far less for t than power In knowledge :
dreams Are but the needful preludes of the t :
never sold the t to serve the hour,
Between your peoples t and manful peace,
That a lie which is half a t
But a lie which is part a t
I know for a t, there's none of them
So I pray you tell the t to me.
Forgive them where they fail in t,
I HELD it t, with him who sings
To which she links a t divine !
Tho' t's in manhood darkly join,
Where t in closest words shall fail, "*
When t embodied in a tale Shall enter
Of comfort clasp'd in t reveal'd ;
reaps A t from one that loves and knows ?
Yet who would preach it as a i
I wake, and I discern the t ;
This t came borne with bier and pall.
Ring in the love of t and right.
Nor dream of human love and t,
Because he felt so fix'd in t :
Proclaiming social t shall spread.
The t's that never can be proved
I have walk'd awake with T.
whether there were t in anything Said by these
Clear-headed friend 18
Tlie Poet 26
33
The Bridesmaid 9
Two Voices 25
62
176
181
Palace of Art 92
L. C. V. de Vere 36
To J. S. 57
Of old sat Freedom 17
Love thou thy land 75
The Epic. 31
M. d' Arthur, Ep. 19
Love and Duty 5
70
94
Golden Year 17
Locksley Hall 23
60
75
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 52
L' Envoi 37
IVill Water. 171
Lady Clare 24
26
Enoch Arden 470
Aylmer's Field 365
Luxrretius 225
260
Princess i 84
160
M2ia
Hi 61
112
233
t;541
vii 98
236
Con. 74
Ode on Well. 179
W. to Marie Alex. 49
Grandmother 30
32
85
The Victim 48
In Mem., Pro. 43
il
„ xxxiii 12
„ xxoi^i 1
6
7
„ xxxvii 22
,. xlii 12
,, liii 11
„ Ixmii 14
,, Ixxxv 1
„ cvi 23
,, cxviii 3
„ cxxv 8
,. cxxvii 5
,. cxxxi 10
Maud I xix 4
three. Com. of Arthur 242
and ask'd him if these things were t — „ 398
And t is this to me, and that to thee ; „ 407
And t or clothed or naked let it be. ,. 408
but tell thou these the t.' Gareth and L. 251
And here is t ; but an it please thee not. Take thou
the t as thou hast told it me. .. 256
beard That looks as white as utter t, .. 281
' Ay, truly of a t. And in a sort, ,. 83T
Truth
748
Tuned
Traih (continued) Where should be t if not in Arthur's
. ^^\ . ^ , „ Gareth and L. 1254
Arms f t\ I know not : all are wanted here. Marr. of Geraint 289
i, ^ood t, I know not, save, _^ 290
Said Arthur ' Thou hast ever spoken t ; Balin and Balan 73
Nay said the churl, ' our devil is a t, 302
But thou art man, and canst abide a <, " 501
lightest word Is mere white t in simple nakedness, " 518
Breathed in a dismal whisper ' Is it t.' '' 527
and shown the t betimes. That old true filth, and
bottom of the well, Where T is hidden. Merlin and V 46
for shall I tell you t ? You seem'd that wave „ 301
By Heaven that hears I tell you the clean t, " 343
He brought, not found it therefore : take the <.' 1' 719
In t, but one thing now — " gjg
Urged him to speak against the t, Lancelot and E. 92
In lieu of idly dallying with the t, 59O
I swear by t and knighthood that I gave No cause, .. 1297
And as ye saw it ye have spoken t. Holy Grail 880
And love 01 1, and all that makes a man. Guinevere 483
yet, in t, Fair speech was his and dehcate of phrase. Lover's Tale i 718
told them my tale, God's own t — Rizpah 34
That traitor to King Richard and the t, Sir J. Oldcastle 171
showing courts and kings a t Columbus 37
moming-star to the full round of t. 44
and murmur down T in the distance — " 12I
These hard memorials of our t to Spain " jgg
And speak the t that no man may believe.' Tiresias 50
I speak the t Believe I speak it, I55
My lily of t and trust— Ancient Sage 160
every heart that loves with t is equal to endure. The Flight 104
T, for T is T, he worshipt, Loclsley H., Sixty 59
T for t, and good for good ! .^ 72
these would feel and follow T "[ 119
led by Justice, Love, and T ; " 151
For man is a lover of T, Dead'Prophet 44
Yet a < IS a t, she cried. 6q
surely to be found When T is found again. Pref. Poem Broth. Son. 16
By one side-path, from simple t ; To Mara, of Dufferin 28
and you the soul of T In Hubert ? The Ring 62
Grafted on half a < ; Romney's R. 42
One t will damn me with the mindless mob, „ 120
neither of them stands behind the screen of
1. I"^^'' , Akbar's D., Inscriv. 7
held His people by the bridle-rein of T. Akbar's Dream 85
and Love The net of < ? ' gg
Thro' after ages in the love of T, The t of Love. !,' loi
nurse my children on the milk of T, ^ 162
T and Peace And Love and Justice came and
dwelt therein ; ^ Igg
T, Peace, Love and Justice came and dwelt therein, " 193
violates virgin T for a coin or a cheque. The Dawn 15
m-A'^? I clash with an iron T, The Dreamer 6
TTOtaifuI half as good, as kind. As t, Princess v 202
This t change m thee has kill'd it. „ mi 350
The t King will doom me when I speak.' Gareth and L. 324
T, trustful, looking upward to the practised
hustings-liar ; Locksley H., Sixty 123
So princely, tender, t, reverent, pure— D. of the Duke of C. 4
Irauiless t violence mourn'd by the Wise, Fastness 5
Trato-lover T-l was our English Duke ; Ode on Well. 189
XfUto-speaking T-s, brave, good livers, Gareth a-nd L. 424
Trath-teller T-t was our England's Alfred named ; Ode on Well. 188
Try Twere well to question him, and t Talking Oak 27
Nor thro' the questions men may t, In Mem. cxxiv 7
Like fcdm who tries the bridge he fears may fail, Geraint and E. 303
Should t this charm on whom ye say ye love.' Merlin and V. 525
shouU ye t him with a merry one Pelleas and E. 198
Trying ^ his truth and his long-sufferance, Enoch Arden 470
And t to pass to the sea ; Maud I xxi 7
happier usuig the knife than in t to save the
nw-* r^l u-j ^ .,. ■''» «^« CJM^i. Hosv. 6
T^ That ever bided t at village stile, Merlin and V. '378
mwnogora Great T ! never since thine own Montenegro 12
Tador-ohimmed a T-c bulk Of mellow brickwork Edwin Morris 11
N. Farmer, N. S. 52
Princess Hi 362
Two Voices 60
(Enone 88
Sir L. and Q. G. 26
In Mem. xci 1
„ cxxviii 20
Tued (worried) (See also Tew) But 'e t and moil'd
iss^n dead.
Tuff hornblende, rag and trap and t.
Tuft (s) In t's of rosy-tinted snow ;
Behind yon whispering t of oldest pine,
A light-green t of plumes she bore
Tuft (verb) When rosy plumelets t the larch.
And t with grass a feudal tower ;
Tufted And the t plover pipe along the fallow
^Af^' uu 1 , , '^'^y Queen, N. Y's. E. 18
Inlhng with purple gloom the vacancies Between the
Tuggii'^SeA-tuggin Lover's Tale i 3
Tuk (took) Father Molowny he t her in ban'. Tomorrow 'S'S
Tulip sometimes a Dutch love For t's ; GardZTsD ill
T„mS7c^ ff 1 *^^ f T'^ ?°^PyA ^- of Maeldune 43
Tumble (S) aiter a long < about the Cape Enoch Arden 532
Should I flounder awhile without a t Ue,idacasyllabics 9
t,™KJk\ her venturous climbmgs and t's Maid I i 69
Tumble (verb) Lest he should swoon and t Enoch Arden 774
They mounted, Ganymedes, To t, Vulcans, Princess m 72
K.J ^ / r f—. ^""^ ^^""^ ' ^o F. D. Maurice 24
Hard, hard hard IS it only not to t, Eendecasyllabics 13
^^1 K°ll ^l t^« blossom, the mad little tits ! WiA>w, Ay 9
Dark bulks that t half ahve, 7^ Mem IxxU
hke a crag that t's from the cliff, MarrofG^i^tSll
a rougher gust might t a stormier wave. The Wreck 131
Tumbled (adj. and part.) Among the fragments t from the glens, (Enone 222
babies roll'd about Liket fruit in grass ; Princess, Pro. 83
And had a cousin t on the plain, ^,- 01 q
Among the < fragments of the hills.' Lancelot "and E. 1427
Rear d on the t rmns of an old fane st Telemach«<, k
Tumbled (verb) (See also Tummled) And half the elemachus b
chimneys ^ The Goose A8
T the tawny rascal at his feet, Aylmer's Field 230
And ever'^MSseVa sdlncefn"^ '^'" ^''"''^?- ^^
And t on Ihe purple f ooTckth,' Prtncess « 399
Thff^^^^tf V"!!^^'"]^ P^^'' ■ ^« ^'^'- ^*^^»* 20
Ihat t m the Godless deep ; ^ lo
?n.? il *\' mere beside T it ; Gareth and L. 816
And t back into the kitchen-knave, 1228
«K ^^l^ whatever knight of thine I fought And t. Last Tournament 454
T„mW)L l^f helpless corpse about Dead Prophet 65
Tumbling («ee a^so Tummlm') T the hollow hehnets
of the fallen, p -■ jw^,,, 109
Tummled (tumbled) An' It athurt the craadle NoHh. Cobbler i
t up stairs, fur I 'eard 'un, q^^ j^^^ go
Tummlin' (tumbling) when the rigtree was t' in— 115
Tumult the t of their acclaim is roll'd Duina Swan ^S
antthJ/''? ' ''1^' ^''''- '7argZ2 11
and the t of my life ; j^^cksley Hall 110
in an hour Of cmc t jam the doors, Lucretius im
call'd Across the i and the . fell. p^ZetTv 49?
The cataract and the t and the kings 534 •
Is wrought with tot acclaim. j^ m,^_ i^^ gO i
And saw the < of the halls ; Ixxxnii^
O'erlook'st the t from afar, " ^Sl9
For a t shakes the city, jj^^ jj ^^ ^ ;
What means the iin the town ? ' Marr. of Geraint 259 .
And ate with < in the naked hall, Geraint and E. 605
(Because the hall was all m <— jjoly Grail 269
Tumultuous So the silent colony hearing her t adversaries Boadicea 78
^ju*"°^'^ J ^'"T *^''° ^■^^ whitening hazels Enoch Arden 378
Tundher (thunder) the t, an' ram that feU, Tomorrow 23
Tune (S) wi dest waihngs never out of t Sea Dreams 231
howl in t With nothing but the Devil ! ' 260
Their hearts of old have beat in t, /„ Mem. xcvii 10
To the dancers dancing in t ; Maud I xxii 16
Ye nught have moved slow-measure to my t. Last Tournament 282
and learn d To lisp m t together ; Lover's Tale i 258
Midnight— m no midsummer t Pref. Poem Broth. Son. 1
Tune (verb) Who scarce can t his high majestic sense Lover's Tale i 475
Toned See Full-tnned
Tuneful
749
Turn'd
Tuneful 'Tis said he had a t tongue,
Tunic display A t white as May !
Tunnel A railway there, a t here,
Turbla What Roman strength T show'd
Turbid Who let the t streams of rumour flow
Turbulence For in that realm of lawless t,
Turbulent I that knew him fierce and I
That, compass'd round with t sound,
Turf (s) In cool soft t upon the bank,
all the t was rich in plots
cut his bit o' t for the fire ?
no one came, the t was fresh.
Turf (verb) after furious battle t's the slain
Turk arm'd by day and night Against the T ;
Turkey-cock See Stag-tuckey
Turkis T and agate and almondine :
Each like a garnet or a < in it ;
Turkish beating back the swarm Of T Islam
Turn (s) thro' many a bowery t A walk
In every elbow and t.
Every t and glance of thine,
' Some t this sickness yet might take,
he that shuts Love out, in t shall be Shut
out from Love, To —
Katie, once I did her a good t,
with every t Lived thro' her to the tips
made a sudden t As if to speak,
When each by t's was guide to each,
As some wild t of anger, or a mood
Might feel some sudden t of anger
every t and depth Between is clearer in my life
An' he took three fs in the rain,
Thy leaves possess the season in their t,
Tom (verb) But when 1 1 away.
Amphion 17
Prog, of Spring 65
Mechanophilus 7
The Daisy 5
Ode on Well. 181
Geraint and E. 521
Marr. of Geraint 447
Wiin
Arabian Nights 96
Marr. of Geraint 660
Tomorrow 65
Prog, of Spring 72
Merlin and V. 657
Montenegro 4
The Merman 32
Marr. of Geraint 661
Montenegro 11
Arabian Nights 56
Ode to Memory 62
Elednore 52
Two Voices 55
-, With Pal. of Art 14
The Brook 74
Princess ii 39
„ 11)394
In Mem. xxiii 13
Merlin and V. 521
531
Lover's Tale i 148
First Quarrel 75
Prog, of Spring 107
Madeline 36
did 1 1 away The boat-head down a broad canal Arabian Nights 24
Fold thine arms, t to thy rest. A Dirge 3
Thou wilt not t upon thy bed ; „ 15
' T and look on me : I am that Rosamond, D. of F. Women 250
Imitates God, and t's her face To every land On a Mourner 2
as a thorn T's from the sea ; Audley Court 55
Jack, t the horses' heads and home again.' Walk, to the Mail 46
with what delighted eyes I < to yonder oak. Talking Oak 8
In the Spring a young man's fancy lightly t's to
thoughts of love. Locksley Hall 20
T thee, t thee on thy pillow : „ 86
What is that which I should t to, „ 99
I will t that earUer page. „ 107
I will tell it. T your face, Day-Dm., Pro. 17
Had ever half the power to t This wheel Will Water. 83
And beneath the gate she t's ; L. of Burleigh 44
Proudly t's he roimd and kindly, „ 55
' Mine too ' said Philip ' t and t about : ' Enoch Arden 29
to all things could he t his hand. „ 813
he past To t and ponder those three hundred scrolls Lucretius 12
as a parrot t's Up thro' gilt wires Princess, Pro. 171
secular emancipation t's Of half this world, ., ii 289
but brooding t The book of scorn, ,. v 141
Yet, as it may, t's toward him, „ vii 143
I heard her t the page ; „ 190
Till you should t to dearer matters. To F. D. Maurice 35
t's Once more to set a ringlet right ; In Mem. vi 35
I should t mine ears and hear „ xxarv 8
0 t thee round, resolve the doubt ; ,, xliv 14
Yet t thee to the doubtful shore, „ lxi9
I I about, I find a trouble „ Ixviii 9
who t's a musing eye On songs, and deeds, ,i Ixxvii 2
passing, t the page that tells A grief, „ 10
But t's his burthen into gain. ,, Ixxx 12
1 < to go : my feet are set „ cii 21
knew not wmther he should t for aid. Com. of Arthur 40
but t the blade and ye shall see, „ 303
To t the broach, draw water, or hew wood, Gareth and L. 486
Larded thy last, except thou t and fly. „ 1084
ye cleave His armour off him, these will t the blade.' „ 1095
T, Fortime, t thy wheel and lower the proud; Marr. of Geraint 347
* T, Fortune, t uiy wheel with smile or frown ; „ 350
Turn (verb) {continued) T thy wild wheel thro' sun-
shine, storm,
' T, t thy wheel above the staring crowd ;
Before he t to fall seaward again,
break her sports with graver fits, T red or pale,
in a wink the false love t's to hate)
That t's its back on the salt blast.
What miracle could t ?
And thought to t my face from Spain,
I know not where to t ;
Crook and t upon itself
an' the wind wasn't like to t.
But you will t the pages.
Less profile ! t to me — three-quarter face.
Would t, and glare at me, and point and jeer.
To-day, before you t again To thoughts
drew from out the boundless deep T's again home.
Turn (torn) Sally wur sloomy an' draggle taail'd in an
owd t gown,
Turn'd {See also Half-tum'd, Thrice-tum'd, Tom'd)
eyes were darken'd wholly, T to tower'd Camelot.
think, where'er she t her sight The airy hand
Growths of jasmine t Their humid arms
True love t round on fixed poles,
Eustace t, and smiling said to me,
' Look ! look ! ' Before he ceased 1 1,
nor from her tendance t Into the world without ;
Then he t His face and pass'd —
And all my heart t from her,
She t, we closed, we kiss'd,
I read, and fled by night, and flying t :
I I once more, close-button'd to the storm ;
And t the cowls adrift :
dipt and rose. And t to look at her.
That show the year is t.
And she t — her bosom shaken
and < it in his glowing hands ;
Are touch'd, are t to finest air.
Bitterly weeping 1 1 away : (repeat)
He t and kiss'd her where she stood :
Pale he t and red,
1 1 and humm'd a bitter song
With half a sigh she t the key.
And trust me while 1 1 the page,
when he t The current of his talk to graver things
But t her own toward the wall and wept.
There she t, She rose, and fixt her swimming eyes
t our foreheads from the falling sun,
crippled lad, and coming t to fly,
then t, and groaning said, ' Forgive !
The woman half t roimd from him she loved,
t to me with ' As you will ; Heroic if you will.
We t to go, but Cyril took the child,
then we t, we wound About the cliffs.
She spoke, and t her sumptuous head
You t your wanner currents all to her.
Half-drooping from her, t her face,
Gama t to me : ' We fear, indeed.
King, camp and college t to hollow shows ;
And t each face her way :
Who t half-round to Psyche as she sprang
So she, and t askance a wintry eye :
She t ; the very nape of her white neck
So their fair college t to hospital ;
She t ; she paused ; She stoop'd ;
Flash'd as they t in air
And he t, and I saw his eyes all wet.
But he t and claspt me in his arms,
T as he sat, and struck the keys
And bird in air, and fishes t
even when she t, the curse Had fall'n.
But thou art t to something strange.
Ere childhood's flaxen ringlet t
And left his coal all t into gold
But his essences t the live air sick,
turning toward him wheresoe'er he t,
Marr. of Geraint 348
356
Geraint and E. 117
Merlin and V. 181
852
Pelleas and E. 544
Sir J. Oldcastle 180
Columbus 57
The Flight 74
Locksley H., Sixty 236
Owd Boa 104
The Ring 127
Romney's B. 98
136
To Master of B. 13
Crossing the Bar 8
North. Cobbler 41
L. of Shalott iv 32
Palace of Art 225
D. of F. Women 69
Love thou thy land 5
Gardener's D. 97
121
144
Dora 150
Audley Court 54
Edwin Morris 114
134
136
Talking Oak 48
132
176
Locksley Hall 27
31
Sir Galahad 72
Edward Gray 6, 34
Lady Clare 82
The Captain 62
The Letters 9
18
To E. L. 9
Enoch Arden 202
283
324
The Brook 165
Aylmer's Field 519
Sea Dreams 59
286
Princess, Pro. 220
ii 362
Hi 359
wl52
301
368
i;120
478
vi 144
209
330
343
mi 17
154
Light Brigade 28
Grandmother 49
55
The Islet 7
The Victim 19
In Mem. vi 37
„ xli 5
„ Ixxix 15
Maud I X 11
„ xiii 11
Gareth and L. 174
Tarn'd
750
Tuwhoo
Tarn'd (continued) mocker ending here T to the right, Gareth and L. 295
t Fled down the lane of access to the King, ,, 660
Before them when he t from watching him. „ 1032
Then t the noble damsel smihng at hun, „ 1188
Who, with back t, and bow'd above his work, Marr. of Geraint 267
T, and beheld the four, and all his face „ 558
Who, after, t her daughter roxmd, „ 740
like that false pair who t Flying, Geraint and E. 176
Enid, the loss of whom hath t me wild — „ 308
With that he t and look'd as keenly at her „ 430
At this he t all red and paced his hall, „ 668
he t his face And kiss'd her climbing, „ 760
saw her Pass into it, t to the Prince, „ 887
And spake no word until the shadow t ; Balin and Balan 45
Whereat she smiled and t her to the King, „ 201
and t aside into the woods, „ 433
and, Vivien following him, T to her : Merlin and V. 33
Have t to tyrants when they came to power) ,, 518
She paused, she t away, she hung her head, „ 887
There to his proud horse Lancelot t, Lancelot and E. 347
he t Her counsel up and down within his mind, „ 368
And sharply t about to hide her face, „ 608
From foot to forehead exquisitely t : „ 643
Then t Sir Torre, and being in his moods h 799
so t Sighing, and feign'd a sleep imtil he slept. „ 841
And now to right she t, and now to left, „ 900
While thus he spoke, half t away, the Queen Brake „ 1197
then t the tongueless man From the half-face „ 1261
' He ceased ; and Arthur t to whom at first Holy Grail 751
with a slow smile t the lady roimd Pelleas and E. 91
Glanced down upon her, t and went her way. „ 185
And this persistence t her scorn to wrath. „ 218
Then t, and so return'd, and groaning „ 451
Awaking knew the sword, and / herself „ 489
her ever-veering fancy t To Pelleas, „ 493
Then Arthur t to Kay the seneschal, Last Tournament 89
the King T to him saying, ' Is it then so well ? „ 114
and sharply t North by the gate. „ 127
' Good : an I < away my love for thee „ 706
He spoke, he t, then, flinging round her neck, „ 749
till it touch'd her, and she t — Guinevere 80
And pale he t, and reel'd, ,, 304
And even then he t ; and more and more „ 600
he slowly t and slowly clomb The last hard foot-
step Pass, of Arthur 446
We t : our eyes met : hers were bright. Lover's Tale i 441
Cries of the partridge like a rusty key T in a lock, „ ii 116
1 1 : my heart Shrank in me, „ Hi 37
At once they t, and caught and brought him in „ iv 376
But 1 1 my face from him, an' he t his face an' he
went. First Quarrel 84
Sally she t a tongue-banger, North. Cobbler 23
I fun', when 'er back wur t, „ 31
An' then 'e t to the sun, „ 48
I never t my back upon Don or devil yet.' The Revenge 31
Their favourite— which I call ' The Tables T.' Sisters (E. and E.) 3
' No harm, no harm ' 1 1 again, „ 213
he < to me, ' Ay, good woman. In the Child. Hosp. 20
Who ever t upon his heel to hear Tiresias 72
and t in her haste and fled. The Wreck 62
as 1 1— ' The heart, the heart ! ' „ 104
And we t to the growing dawn. Despair 22
and we < to each other, we kiss'd, „ 53
are both of them t into blood, „ 91
From darkness into daylight, t and spoke. Aiicient Sage 8
hope I catch at vanishes and youth is t to woe. The Flight 16
she t herself roun' Wid a diamond dhrop Tomorrow 27
t half round, and he bad his tnmipeter sound Heavy Brigade 8
we t to each other, whispering, all dismay'd, „ 44
— and t, And fled by many a waste, Demeter and F. 73
I I in agean, an' I thowt o' the good owd times Owd Rod 43
An' all along o' the feller as t 'is back „ 48
She t, and in her soft imperial way I'he Ring 267
.spoke no more, but t and pass'd away. „ 342
Door-handles t when none was at the door, „ 412
He groan'd, he t, and in the mist at once Death of CEnone 49
Tum'd (continued) T him again to boy, for up he sprang, St. Tdemachus 58
1 1 away And the hard blue eyes have it still, Charity 9
So I < my face to the wall, „ 27
Turner See Broach-turner
'Tumey (Attorney) fur the 't's letters they foller'd sa fast ; Village Wife 62
Turning (See also A-turnin') t roimd a cassia, full in view, Lcme and Death 4
And t look'd upon your face. Miller's D. 157
t yellow Falls, and floats adown the air. Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 30
she t on my face The star-like sorrows D. of F. Women 90
and 1 1 appeal'd To one that stood beside. ,, 99
1 1 saw, throned on a flowery rise, „ 125
T to scorn with lips divine Of old sat Freedom 23
And dropt the branch she held, and i. Gardener's D. 157
But t now and then to speak with him, Enoch Arden 755
He therefore t softly like a thief, „ 771
and t to the warmth The tender pink Aylmer's Field 185
T beheld the Powers of the House „ 287
t round we saw The Lady Blanche's daughter Princess ii 320
t to her maids, ' Pitch our pavilion here „ Hi 345
Half t to the broken statue, said, „ iv 593
and t saw The happy valleys, half in light, ,, Con. 40
And t toward liim wheresoe'er he tum'd, Gareth and L. 174
on Sir Gareth's t to him, cried, ' Stay, felon knight, „ 1219
when t to Lynette he told The tale of Gareth, „ 1272
the man Not t round, nor looking at him, Marr. of Geraint 270
Whereat the armourer t all amazed „ 283
and the two Were t and admiring it, „ 637
And watch'd the sun blaze on the t scythe, Geraint and E. 252
t romid she saw Dust, and the points of lances „ 448
Was in a manner pleased, and t, stood. „ 456
cheek Bulge with the unswallow'd piece, and t stared ; ,, 631
so t side by side They past, and Balin started Balin and Balan 279
t to her Squire ' This fire of Heaven, „ 456
Roll'd into light, and t on its rims Lancelot and E. 51
And found no ease in t or in rest ; „ 901
answer'd not, but, sharply t, ask'd Of Gawain, Holy Grail 739
the gloom. That follows on the t of the world, Pelleas and E. 549
Then she, t to Pelleas, * 0 young knight, „ 595
Dagonet, t on the ball of his foot. Last Tournament 329
t, past and gain'd Tintagil, half in sea, „ 504
Strange music, and he paused, and t — Guinevere 239
ever t round To gaze upon thee till their eyes Lover's Tale i 490
that t to me And saying ' It is over : let us go ' — „ iv 383
T my way, the loveliest face on earth. Sisters (E. and E.) 87
And t slowly toward him, Akbar said Akbar's Dream 4
Is it < a fainter red ? The Dawn 22
Turnip See Tonup
Turnpike where this byway Joins The t ? Walk, to the Mail 5
Turnspit t's for the clown, Princess iv 516
Turquoise See Turkis
Tiuret (adj.) And high above a piece of t stair, Marr. of Geraint 320
Turret (s) The wind is blowing in t and tree, (repeat) The Sisters 3, 33
The wind is howling in / and tree. „ 9
The wind is roaring in t and tree. „ 15
The wind is raging in t and tree. „ 21
The wind is raving in t and tree. „ 27
upon a rock With t's lichen-gilded like a rock : Edwin Morris 8
Flags, flutter out upon t's and towers ! W. to Alexandra 15
flower that clings To the t's and the walls ; Maud II iv 34
In the garden by the t's Of the old manorial hall. „ 79
spires and t's half-way down Prick'd thro' the mist ; Gareth and L. 193
And solid t's topsy-turvy in air : „ 255
clamour of the daws About her hollow t, Geraint and E. 256
Turtle blackcap warbles, and the t purrs. Prog, of Spring 55
Tuscan read The T poets on the lawn : In Mem. Ixxxix 24
Tusklike from the floor T, arising, Balin and Balan 316
Tussle foe perhaps — a t for it then ! Sir J. Oldcastle 196
Tutor (s) one Discuss'd his t, rough to common men, Princess, Pro. 114
And there we took one < as to read : „ 179
her we ask'd of that and this, And who were t's. „ i 232
Tutor (verb) nor tame and t with mine eye Z>. of F. Women 138
Tuwhit Thy t's are lull'd, I wot, Tlie Owl ii 1
Thee to woo to thy t, (repeat) „ 11
Tuwhoo, t, t, tuwhoo-o-o. „ 14
Tuwhoo Thy t's of yesternight, „ 2
Not a whit of thy t, „ 10
Tuwhoo
751
Twitter
The Owl a 14
Last Tournament 346
Holy Grail 786
Tiresias 68
Sea- Fairies 38
Amphion 61
Kate 8
Princess ii 402
Last Tournament 251
Tuwhoo (continued) T, tuwhit, tuvvhit, t-o-o.
T ! do you see it ? do ye see the star ? '
Twain yeam'd and strove To tear the t asunder
when I knew the t Would each waste each,
Twang (s) sharp clear t of the golden chords
Twang (verb) T out, my fiddle ! shake the twigs !
Twanging Clear as the t of a harp.
Fly t headless arrows at the hearts,
Twangied Then he i on his harp. And while he t
Twangling while the t violin Struck up with Soldier-laddie, Princess, Pro. 85
But when the t ended, skipt again ; Last Tournament 255
Twelve ' he burnt His epic, his King Arthur, some t books ' — The Epic 28
these t books of mine Were faint Homeric echoes, „ 38
With t great shocks of soimd, Godiva 74
silver knell Of t sweet hours that past Maud I xviii 65
in t great battles overcame The heathen hordes, Com. of Arthur 518
With all the passion of a t hours' fast.' Marr. of Geraint 306
made Those banners of t battles overhead Balin and BaJan 88
Those t sweet moons confused his fatherhood.' Merlin and V. 712
Where t great windows blazon Arthur's wars. Holy Grail 248
Streams thro' the t great battles of our King. .. 250
Knights that in t great battles splash'd and dyed „ 311
The t small damosels white as Innocence, Last Tournament 291
In t great battles ruining overthrown. Guinevere 432
ten or t good paces or more. IJef. of LuckTWW 62
— and those t gates. Pearl — and I woke, Columbus 86
as ye used to do t year sin' ! Spinster's S's. 59
T times in the year Bring me bliss, The Ring 5
Twelve-divided Sent like the t-d concubine Aylmer's Field 759
Twelvemonth thou shalt serve a t and a day.' Gareth and L. 157
meat and drink among thy kitchen-knaves A t and a day.
446
would ride A t and a day in quest of it, Holy Grail 196
My t and a day were pleasant to me.' „ 750
Twenty By t thorps, a little town. The Brook 29
For here I came, t years back — „ 77
About these meadows, t years ago.' „ 220
wealth enough for theirs For t matches. Aylmer's Field 370
Why t boys and girls should marry on it, .. 371
So old, that t years before, a part Falling .. 508
face to face With t months of silence, ., 567
And there thro' t posts of telegraph Princess, Pro. 77
or so she look'd, Of t summers. ., ii 108
And cheep and twitter t million loves. .. iv 101
There was not his like that year in t parishes round. (Grandmother 12
Time to think on it then ; for thou'll be t to weeak. A. Farmer, N. S. 7
Thro' t folds of twisted dragon, Gareth and L. 510
Old, with the might and breath of t boys.' „ 1106
ten-times worthier to be thine Than t Balins, Balin and Balan 69
Whose bark had plunder'd t nameless isles ; Merlin and V. 559
0 ay, it is but t pages long, „ 668
Yea, t timas I thought him Lancelot — Lancelot and E. 535
For t strokes of the blood, without a word, „ 720
' I had liefer t years Skip to the broken music Last 'Tournament 257
1 sarved 'em wi' butter an' heggs fur huppuds o' t year. Village Wife 114
still for t years Bound by the golden cord The Ring 428
But if i million of summers are stored in the sunlight still, The Dawn 19
Twenty-five so bitter When I am but t-f ?
Twenty-fold I scent it t-f.'
Twice And t three years I crouch'd on one
Twig Twang out, my fiddle ! shake the t's !
low bashes dip their t's in foam.
Twilight (adj.) Long alleys falling down to t grots,
Than our poor t dawn on earth —
Twili^t (s) In the purple t's under the sea ;
That sets at t in a land of reeds.
About him broods the t dim :
gray t pour'd On dewy pastures, dewy trees,
rain'd about the leaf T s of airy silver,
And either t and the day between ;
And beat the t into flakes of fire.
Pilots of the purple t.
The t melted mto morn.
The t died into the dark.
purple-skirted robe Of t slowly downward drawn,
November day Was growing duller t.
And, into mournful t mellowing,
Maud I vi 34
Gareth and L. 995
St. S. Stylites 88
Amphion 61
Prog, of Spring 51
Ode to Memory 107
Tiresias 206
The Mermaid 44
Caress'd or chidden 14
Two Voices 263
Palace of Art 85
Audley Court 82
Edwin Morris 37
Tithonus 42
Locksley Hall 122
Day-Dm., Depart. 16
24
The Voyage 22
Enoch Arden 722
Princess vi 191
Twilight (s) {continued)
the lark
And t gloom'd ; and broader-grown the bowers
Deepening the courts of t broke them up
I watch the t falling brown
And t dawn'd ; and mom by morn
Princess vii 45
„ vii 48
„ Con. 113
To F. D. Maurice 14
The t of eternal day.
All wmds that roam the t came
When t was falling,
thro' the feeble t of this world Groping,
when the gloom Of t deepens roimd it,
day by day she past In either t ghost-like to and fro Lancelot and E. 849
In Mem. I 16
In Mem. Ixxix 11
Maud I xii 2
Geraint and E. 5
Balin and Balan 233
Thro' that green-glooming t of the grove,
day Grew drearier toward t falling,
The rosy t of a perfect day.
T and evening bell,
Twin (adj.) T peaks shadow'd with pine slope to the
dark hyaline.
nor yet Did those t brothers, risen again and whole ;
Twin (s) nor the t's Her brethren, tho' they love her,
two crowned t's, Commerce and conquest,
A lusty brace Of t's may weed her of her folly.
Henceforth that mystic bond betwixt the t's-
Did I not tell you they were t's ? —
Twin-brother Sleep, Death's t-b, (repeat)
Twine (s) reverend beard Of grisly t,
Twine (verb) Clasp her window, trail and t !
Trail and t and clasp and kiss,
the child would t A trustful hand.
Began to move, seethe, t and curl :
T round one sin, whatever it might be,
soul t's and mingles with the growths
Twined [See also Thick-twined)
neck
leaning on a fragrant t with vine.
Behind his ankle t her hollow feet
knightly in me t and clung Hound that one sin,
an' t like a band o' haay.
and this you t About her cap.
Twinkle (s) There is not left a i of a fin
Then with a ribald t in his bleak eyes —
Twinkle (verb) I see his gray eyes t yet
The lights begin to t from the rocks :
That t into green and gold :
A livelier emerald t's in the grass.
Twinkled For all the haft t with diamond sparks,
T the innumerable ear and tail.
Echo'd the walls ; a light t ;
For all the haft t with diamond sparks.
Pelleas and E. 33
Pass, of Arthur 123
The Ring 187
Crossing the Bar 9
Leonine Eleg. 10
Princess vii 89
i 153
1)420
464
Sisters (E. and E.) 266
In Mem. I xviii 2, 3
Princess vi 104
Window, At the Window 2
4
In Mem. cix 18
Gareth and L. 234
Holy Grail 883
Lover's Tale i 132
locks a-drooping t Round thy
Adeline 57
(Enone 20
Merlin and V. 240
Holy Grail 774
Owd Rod 22
Romney's R. 79
Geraint and E. 474
The Ring 199
Miller's D. 11
Ulysses 54
In Mem xi 8
Maud I xviii 51
M. d' Arthur 56
The Brook 134
Gareth and L. 1370
Pass, of Arthur 224
Twinkling momently The t laurel scatter'd silver lights. Gardener's D. 118
Till at thy chuckled note. Thou t bird,
Twinn'd t as horse's ear and eye.
Twin-sister Than your t-s, Adeline.
like t-s's grew, T-s's differently beautiful.
Twist (s) A < of gold was round her hair ;
Twist (verb) Would t his girdle tight, and pat
And t's the grain with such a roar
Sware by the scorpion-worm that t's in hell.
Twisted {See also A-twizzen'd, Co-twisted) A million
tapers flaring bright From t silvers
T as tight as I could knot the noose ;
With t quirks and happy hits.
Now on some t ivy-net,
how the words Have t back upon themselves.
And t shapes of lust, unspeakable,
now A t snake, and now a rain of pearls.
Thro' twenty folds of t dragon,
T hard in fierce embraces.
Winking his eyes, and t all his face.
T hard in mortal agony
Twisting Is t round the polar star ;
Twit to t me with the cause !
Twitch Paled at a sudden t of his iron mouth ;
a < of pain Tortured her mouth,
Twitch'd t the reins. And made his beast
Then his pale face t ;
Twitter (verb) cheep and t twenty million loves.
Early Spring 38
Princess i 57
Margaret 48
Edwin Morris 32
Merlin and V. 221
Talking Oak 43
Princess v 528
Last Tournament 451
Arabian Nights 125
St. S. Stylites 65
Will Water. 189
Sir L. and Q. G. 28
Aylmer's Field 755
Lucretius 157
Princess, Pro. 62
Gareth and L. 510
Vision of Sin 40
Lancelot and E. 1145
Locksley H., Sixty 98
In Mem. ci 12
Lover's Tale i 661
Aylmer's Field 732
Princess vi 105
Pelleas and E. 550
The Wreck 101
Princess iv 101
Twitter
752
Unarm'd
1
Twitter (s) as a rustle or < in tlie wood Made dull his
iiuier Last Tournament 365
Two Low-throned Hesper is stayed between the t peaks ; Leonine Eleg. 11
With Cyril and with Florian, my t friends : Princess i 52
T widows, Lady Psyche, Lady Blanche ; „ 128
With t tame leopards couch'd beside her throne, ,, ii 33
' everywhere T heads in council, t beside the hearth,
T in the tangled business of the world, T in the
liberal offices of life, T plummets dropt for one to
sound the abyss
And t dear things are one of double worth,
Before t streams of light from wall to wall,
Herself and Lady Psyche the t arms ;
' Read,' and I read — t letters — one her sire's.
Till one of those t brothers, half aside
Down From those t bulks at Arac's side,
So those t foes above my fallen life,
T women faster welded in one love
the t gBcat cats Close by her,
From those t hosts that lay beside the walls.
Than when t dewdrops on the petal shake
wherein were wrought T grand designs ;
I walk'd with one I loved t and thirty years ago.
t and thirty years were a mist that rolls away ;
T dead men have I known
T dead men have I loved
T bright stars Peep'd into the shell.
T little hands that meet, (repeat)
With Gawain and young Modred, her t sons,
sign'd To those t sons to pass, and let them be
field of charlock in the sudden sun Between t showers, Gareth and L. 389
by t yards in casting bar or stone Was counted best ; „ 518
Now t great entries open'd from the hall,
T forks are fixt into the meadow groimd.
What I these t years past have won for thee,
' These t things shalt thou do, (repeat)
And made it of t colours ;
And we will live like t birds in one nest,
But Enid in their going had t fears.
But nevermore the same t sister pearls
He saw t cities in a thousand boats
And t fair babes, and went to distant lands ;
For here t brothers, one a king, had met
With t strong sons. Sir Torre and Sir Lavaine,
from the carven-work behind him crept T dragons gilded,
after t days' tarriance there, retum'd.
173
419
473
„ Hi 35
„ iv 397
V 302
499
„ vi 130
253
357
383
„ vii 68
122
V. of Cavieretz 4
6
G. of Swainston 11
13
Minnie and, Winnie 13
Window, Answer 1, 4
Com. of Arthur 244
319
665
Marr. of Geraint 482
554
„ 580, 586
Geraint and E. 292
627
817
Merlin and V. 454
561
707
Lancelot and E. 39
174
437
569
those t brethren slowly with bent brows Accompanying, „ 1138
So those < brethren from the chariot took „ 1146
Those t great beasts rose upright like a man. Holy Grail 821
So from each Of those t pillars which from earth Lover's Tale i 220
at one end of the hall T great funereal curtains, „ iv 214
On a sudden after t Italian years Sisters (E. and E.) 150
then t weeks — no more — she joined, „ 271
Roar upon roar in a moment t mines by the enemy Bef. of Lucknow 54
Lord give thou power to thy t witnesses ! Sir J. Oldcastle 81
I So mock'd, so spurn'd, so baited t whole days — „ 163
so might there be T Adams, t mankinds, Columbus 54
There came t voices from the Sepulchre, T friars crying
' „ 95
that if Spain should oust
T voices heard on earth no more ;
' His t wild woodland flowers.'
I' a kep' thruf thick an' thin my t 'oonderd a-year
to mysen ;
Thou 'ed wellnigh purr'd ma awaay fro' my can t
'oonderd a-year.
Like some conjectured planet in mid heaven Between
t Suns, Prin. Beatrice 21
An' the Heagle 'as hed t heads stannin' theere Owd Rod 25
' The souls Of t repentant Lovers guard the ring ; '
T lovers parted by a scurrilous tale Had quarrell'd,
T lovers parted by no scurrilous tale —
— those t Ghost lovers — Father. Lovers yet —
What be those t shapes high over the sacred fountain,
t known peaks they stand ever spreading
T words, ' My Rose ' set all your face aglow.
T trains clash'd : then and there be was crush'd
To E. Fitzgerald 41
The Flight 80
Spinster's S's. 12
58
The Ring 198
208
427
459
Parnassus 9
11
Roses on the T. 3
Charity 21
Two-cell'd The t-c heart beating, with one full stroke, Princess vii 307
Twofold One t mightier than the other was. Lover's Tale i 211
Twofooted T at the limit of his chain, Aylmer's Field 127
Twy-natured T-n is no nature : Liicretius 194
Type (s) The' all her fairest forms are i's of thee, Isabel 39
' That t of Perfect in his mind Two Voices 292
Became an outward breathing t, Miller's D. 226
carved cross-bones, the t's of Death, Will Water. 245
And ev'n for want of such a t. In Mem. xxxiii 16
So careful of the t she seems, ,, Ivl
' So careful of the t ? ' but no. „ Ivi 1
She cries, ' A thousand t's are gone : „ 3
man, that with me trod This planet, was a noble t „ Con. 138
Pass, thou deathlike t of pain, Maud II iv 58
Type (verb) ' Dear, but let us t them now Princess vii 299
If so he < this work of time In Mem. cxviii 16
Which t's all Nature's male and female On One who aff. E. M. 3
Tyrannous And fused together in the t light — Lover's Tale ii 67
l^anny And play the slave to gain the t. Princess iv 132
Thought on all her evil tyrannies, BoSdicea 80
Out of evil evil flourishes, out of 1 1 buds. „ 83
iron t now should bend or cease, Maud III vi 20
My warning that the t of one Was prelude to
the t of all ? My counsel that the t of all Led
backward to the t of one ? Tiresias 73
Tyrant (adj.) Caught in a great old t spider's web, Merlin and V. 259
No father now, the t vassal of a t vice ! The Flight 25
Tyrant (s) Faster binds a t's power ; And the t's cruel
glee Forces on the freer hour. Vision of Sin 128
Pity, the violet on the t's grave. Aylmer's Field 845
' Kill him now. The t ! Princess, Pro. 207
our dead captain taught The t. Ode on Well. 70
Our Britain cannot salve a t o'er. Third of Feb. 20
we will not spare the t one hard word. „ 42
makes you t's in your iron skies, Maud I xviii 37
Than hardest t's in their day of power, Geraint and E. 695
Have tum'd to t's when they came to power) Merlin and V. 518
Gone the t of my youth, Locksley H., Sixty 43
Waeriob of God, man's friend, and t's foe, Efit. on Gordon 1
Tyre Against the guiltless heirs of him from T, Tiresias 12
red-hot palms of a Moloch of T, The Dawn 2
Tyrol A cap of T borrow'd from the hall. Princess iv 601
Udder Nosing the mother's u, Lucretius 100
Udder'd See Deep-ndder'd
Ugly (See also Hug^) Feyther 'ud saay I wur u es sin. Spinster's S's. 15
Ulama our U, Who " sitting on green sofas Akbar's Dream 47
Ulcer the u, eating thro' my skin, St. S. Stylites 67
Ulcerous aches, stitches, u throes and cramps, „ 13
Ulfius (a Knight of the Bound Table) U, and
Brastias, and Bedivere, (repeat) Com. of Arthur 136, 165
And U and Brastias answer'd, ' Ay.' „ 173
Ulric Where noble U dwells forlorn, Happy 10
Who whisper'd me ' your U loves ' — „ 62
' Let us revenge ourselves, your U woos my wife ' — „ 63
Ultramontane Most generous of all V's, Ward, In Mem., W. G. Ward 4
Ulysses U, much-experienced man. To Ulysses 1
Umpire by common voice. Elected u, CEnone 85
Sat their great u, looking o'er the lists. Last Tournament 159
Unabated In confidence of u strength. Lover's Tale i 511
Unaccomplish'd The hope of u years In Mem. xci 7
and Balan lurking there (His quest was u) Balin and Balan 547
Unanimous Clash the darts and on the buckler beat with
rapid u hand, Boddicea 79
Unannounced My lady's Indian kinsman u Aylmer's Field 190
Unanswer'd V, since I spake not ; Lover's Tale i 101
Uoapproached Shelter'd his u mysteries : Alexander 11
not rather A sacred, secret, u woe, Lover's Tale i 679
Unarm'd the lawless warrior paced U, Gareth and L. 915
See that he fall not on thee suddenly, And slay thee u : „ 922
For tho' I ride u, I do not doubt To find, Marr. of Geraint 218
Unarm'd
753
Understand
Unarm'd (contimied) all u I rode, and thought to find
Arms
He sits u ; I hold a finger up ;
Unashamed Delivers brawling judgments, u,
Unaskd lialf abash'd him ; yet u,
A trustful hand, m, in thine.
Then tending her rough lord, tho' all u.
You follow'd me u ; And when I look'd,
And clear myself u — not I.
Unauthorized Yet that I came not all u
Unavenged With life-long injuries burning u,
Unaware rose to look at it, But touch'd it u's :
so blind in rage that u's He burst his lance
All lis before his half-shut eyes,
Unbeautiful " Nothing in nature is u ;
Unbecoming Not u men that strove with Gods.
Unbeguiled At me you smiled, but u
Unbeheld Mayst well behold them u.
Unbelief curse Of blindness and their u,
I reap No revenue from the field of u.
Till this embattled wall of u My prison.
Unbelievable pine shot aloft from the crag to an u
height,
Unbiased U by self -profit, oh !
Unbidden camels knelt U,
( ) « arble, imchidden, u !
Unbind U him now. And thrust him out of doors ;
Sing, and u my heart that I may weep.'
Unblazon'd See Yet-unblazon'd
Unblest never child be born of me U,
I care no longer, being all w :
Unblinded who shall gaze upon My palace with u eyes, Palace of Art 42
Unblissful Thrill'd thro' mine ears in that % clime, Z>. oj F. Women 82
Unboding U critic-pen. Will Water. 42
Unborn (See also Bom-unborn) But where a passion
yet u perhaps Lay hidden
I see their u faces shine
By village eyes as yet u ;
The cackle of the u about the grave.
Unbound being, as I think, U as yet, and gentle,
Laugh'il, and m, and thrust him from the gate.
Unbridled For Kate hath an u tongue.
Unbroken (See also Yet-unbroken) In sweet dreams
softer than u rest Ode to Memory 29
Caught his u limbs from the dark field, Pelleas and E. 585
Weird Titan by thy winter weight of years As yet u. To Victor Hugo 8
Unburiable yet-warm corpse, and yet «,
Unbumish'd To rust %, not to shine in use !
Unbury made by me, may seek to u me,
Uncall'd That you came unwish'd for, u,
Uncall'd for (power of herself Would come u f)
Uncancell'd if left u, had been so sweet :
Uncared for U f, spied its mother and began
U f, gird the windy grove.
He must not pass u f.
Marr. of Geraint 417
Geraint and E. 337
Merlin and V. 665
Enoch Arden 288
In Mem. cix 19
Geraint and E. 405
Merlin and V. 298
Happy 78
Princess iv 467
Geraint and E. 696
388
Balin and Balan 328
Lover's Tale ii 153
t350
Ulysses 53
L. C. V. de Vere 5
(Enone 89
Tiresias 59
Akbar's Dream 67
Doubt and Prayer 11
V. of Maeldune 16
CEnone 159
Merlin and V. 576
The Throstle 14
Pelleas and E. 256
Guinevere 166
(Enone 255
Come not, when, etc. 8
Aylm^'s Field 101
In Mem. Ixxxiv 19
Con. 59
Merlin and V. 507
Lancelot and E. 1386
Pelleas and E. 260
Kate 7
Gareth and L. 80
Ulysses 23
Columbus 206
Despair 5
(Enone 147
Maud I xix 46
Princess vi 136
In Mem. ci 13
Lancelot and E. 536
Uncertain in dark comers of her palace stood U shapes ; Palaceof Art 238
U as a vision or a dream, Enoch Arden 356
That after all these sad u years, „ 415
moving thro' the u gloom. Princess iv 216
O'er his u shadow droops the day. Prog, of Spring 8
If my body come from brutes, my soul u. By an Evolution. 5
Unchain'd Which he u for all the world to come.' Columbus 215
Unchallenged deeds will come and go U, Holy Grail 319
Uncharity Fought with what seem'd my own u ; Sea Dreams 73
Uncharm'd may now assure you mine ; So live u. Merlin and V. 550
Unchidden O warble u, unbidden ! The Throstle 14
Unclad U herself in haste ; adown the stair Godiva 48
Unclaim'd query pass U, in flushing silence. The Brook 105
Unclasp'd I scarce should be u at night. Miller's D. 186
Or sweet Europa's mantle blew w, Palace of Art 117
U the wedded eagles of her belt, Godiva 43
Unclaspii^ U flung the casement back, Lancelot and E. 981
Uncle Now Dora felt her u's will in aU, Dora 5
' It cannot be : my u's mind will change ! ' „ 47
' I have obey'd my u until now, „ 59
Uncle (continued) I will set him in my u's eye Among the
.wheat; . Dora 67
tied it round his hat To make him pleasing in her u's eye. „ 84
And Dora said, ' My u took the boy ; „ 114
and out they came Trustees and Aunts and U's. Edwin Morris 121
I was left a trampled orphan, and a selfish u's
ward.
Had babbled ' J7 ' on my knee ;
Your good U, whom You count the father of
your fortune,
my best And oldest friend, your U, wishes it.
Unclosed U the hand, and from it drew the ring.
Unclouded All in the blue u weather
Uncoil'd the braid Slipt and u itself,
Uncomforted U, leaving my ancient love
Unconfined From cells of madness u,
But when I see thee roam, with tresses u,
Uncongeal When meres begin to u,
Uncongenial by degrees May into u spirits flow ;
Unconjecttured With gods in u bliss.
Unconquerable I believed myself U,
Unconscious {See also Half-unconscious)
feeble, all u of itself,
O somewhere, meek, u dove,
U of the sliding hour,
Uncourteous in lois heat and agony, seem U,
Unctuous laying down an u lease Of life,
And that one u mouth which lured him,
Uncurl'd Did he push, when he was u.
Uncut See Half-uncut
Undazzled Slowly my sense u.
Under Now gnaw'd his u, now his upper lip,
Undercurrent some dark u woe That seems to draw-
Under-flame Grew darker from that u-f :
Underfoot Lest the harsh shingle should grate u,
F"or u the herb was dry ;
then or now Utterly smite the heathen u,
and threw U there in the fray —
Under-fringe Broad-faced with u-f of russet beard,
Undergone both have u That trouble which has left me
Underground (adj.) as the blast of that u thunderclap
echo'd away, Def. of Lucknow 32
Underground (adv. and s) Will vex thee lying u ? Two Voices 111
Averill was a decad and a half His elder, and their
parents u)
Then sprang the happier day from u ;
But when the next day broke from u,
But when the next sun brake from u,
So when the sun broke next from under ground,
But when the next day brake from under ground-
iron-stay'd In damp and dismal dungeons u, Lover's Tale ii 149
But thou art silent u, Pref. Poem Broth. Son. 13
Underhand that of a kind The viler, as u, Maud I i 28
Under-kingdom hundred u-k's that he sway'd Merlin and V. 582
Underlip u, you may call it a little too ripe, Maud I ii 9
Under-lying That name the u-l dead. In Mem. ii 2
Underneath from end to end Of all the landscape u, „ c 2
Underpropt u a rich Throne of the massive ore, Arabian Nights 145
Under-roof An u-r of doleful gray. Dying Swan 4
Undersea and we past Over that u isle, V. of Maeldune 77
Underscored only yours ; ' and this Thrice u. Edwin Morris 107
Under-shapen His dwarf, a vicious u-s thing, Marr. of Geraint 412
Under-sky And floating about the u-s. Dying Swan 25
Understand (See also Understond, Undherstan') He
answers not, nor u's. Two Voices 246
a sort of allegory, (For you will u it) To , With Pal. of Art. 2
what he whisper'd under Heaven None else could u ; Talking Oak 22
He will answer to the purpose, easy things to u — Locksley Hall 55
When thy nerves could M Vision of Sin 160
But in a tongue no man could u ; „ 222
tongue Was loosen'd, till he made them u ; Enoch Arden 645
mark me and u, While I have power to speak. „ 876
Nor could he u how money breeds. The Brook 6
A noise of songs they would not u : Princess vi 40
but if I could u What you are. Flow, in cran. wall 4
3 B
Locksley Hall 156
In Mem. Ixxxiv 13
Sisters (E. and E.) 27
47:
The Ring 269 ■
L. of Shalott Hi 19
Merlin and V. 889
(Enone 260
Two Voices 371
Elednore 122
Two Voices 407
Mine be the strength 11
In Mem. xciii 10
Geraint and E. 836
frail at first And
Princess vii 117
In Mem. vi 25
„ xliii 5
Lancelot and E. 855
Will Water. 243
Sea Dreams 14
Maud II ii 18
D. of F. Women 177
Geraint and E. 669
Maud I xviii 83
Arabian Nights 91
Enx>ch Arden 772
In Mem. xcv 2
Com. of Arthur 423
Heavy Brigade 55
Geraint and E. 537
736
Aylmer's Field 83
Gareth and L. 1421
Lancelot and E. 413
1137
Holy Grail 328
338
Understand
Understand (coiUinued) The words were hard to u.
' I cannot u : I love.'
What is, and no man u's ;
nursed at ease and brought to w A sad astrology,
Thou canst not u That thou art left for ever alone :
I hold a finger up ; They u :
But you are man, you well can u
these can never know thee, They cannot u me.
if you shall fail to u What England is.
Now first we stand and u,
Xlnderstandest Nor w bound nor boimdlessness,
UnderstandLog u all the foolish work Of Fancy,
Understond (understand) I kep 'um, my lass, tha
mun u ; i
Understood A notice faintly u,
O thou that stonest, hadst thou u
754
Universal
In Mem. Ixix 20
„ xcvii 36
„ cxxiv 22
Maud I xviii 35
„ // Hi 3
Geraint and E. 338
Merlin and V. 697
Lover's Tale i 286
The Fleet 1
MechanophUiis 1
Ancient Sage 48
Princess m 116
Farmer, 0. iS. 23
Two Voices 431
Ayhner's Field 739
The land, he u, for miles about Was tiU'd by women ; Princess i 191
Loved deeplier, darklier u ;
the prophecy given of old And then not u,
And best by her that bore her u.
Undertake Wilt thou I u them as we pass,
Under-tone And from within me a clear u-t
Underwent Did more, and u, and overcame,
Gareth all for glory u The sooty yoke of kitchen-
In Mem. cxxix 10
Mavd II V 43
Marr. of Geraint 511
Balin and Balan 14
B. of F. Women 81
Godiva 10
Gareth and i. 478
Underworld That brings our friends up from the u. Princess iv 45
Undescried tho' w. Winning its way with extreme gentleness Isabel 22
Undevelopt For woman is not % man. Princess vii 275
Undherstan' (understand) ' me dear, av I w,' Tomorrow 56
Undinuned And holdeth his u forehead far Lover's Tale i 513
Undiscovered And thine in u lands. In Mem. xl 32
Undissolved A sleep by kisses u, Day-Dm., L' Envoi 51
Lilian 11
Two Voices 22,2
Maud I xvi 19
Gareth and L. All
Merlin and V. 686
Forlorn 4
M. d' Arthur 93
Pass, of Arthur 261
(Enone 115
St. S. Stylites 116
Princess v 253
In Mem. cxiii 20
Isabel 3
Poet's Mind 33
(Enone 132
Undo Thoroughly to u me,
in seeking to u One riddle, and to find the true,
To know her beauty might half u it.
fineness, Lancelot, some fine day U thee not —
And never could u it : ask no more :
Undoing flattery and the craft Which were my u . .
Undone What harm, w ? deep harm to disobey.
What harm, u ? Deep harm to disobey,
Undrainable labour'd mine u of ore.
Undress'd wear an u goatskin on my back ;
Undulated u The banner : anon to meet us
Undulation cries. And u's to and fro.
Undying Clear, without heat, u,
And it sings a song of u love ;
with u bliss In knowledge of their own supremacy
Uneam'd doubtless, all u by noble deeds. Balin and Balan 471
Unearthlier V than all shriek of bird or beast, „ 545
Unequal in true marriage lies Nor equal, nor u : Princess vii 303
I mete and dole U laws imto a savage race, Ulysses 4
Unexhausted bloodily fall the battle-axe, u, Boadxcea 56
Unexpect^ as one Caught in a burst of u storm, Ayhner's Field 285
Unezpress'd I leave thy praises % In Mem. Ixxv 1
Unfoir Who shall call me ungentle, u, Maud I xiii 14
Unfaith Faith and u can ne'er be equal po^vers : Merlin and V. 388
U in aught is want of faith in all. „ 389
Unfaithful With quiet eyes u to the truth, Love and Duty 94
And faith u kept him falsely true. Lancelot and E. 877
Unfamiliar But u Amo, and the dome Of Brunelleschi ; The Brook 189
Unfarrow'd And so retum'd u to her sty. Walk, to the Mail 100
Unfathom'd There on the depth of an u woe Lover's Tale i 746
Unfelt shock of gloom had fall'n U, „ 506
Unfetter'd U by the sense of crime, In Mem. xxvii 7
Unfinish'd work is left U — if I go. Lucretius 104
Unfit U for earth, u for heaven, St. S. Stylites 3
Unfold I see thy beauty gradually u, Eleanore 70
And like a flower that cannot all u. Princess vii 141
Unfolding hour by hour u woodbine leaves Prog, of Spring 7
Unforgotten Moved from the cloud of u things, Lover's Tale i 48
Unfrequent Z7, low, as tho' it told its pulses ; „ ii 55
Unfriendly U of your parted ^est. The Wanderer 4
Unfrowardly thou canst not bide, m, Pelleas and E. 597
Unfnlfill'd O therefore that the u desire, Tiresias 79
Unfurl u the maiden banner of our rights. Princess iv 503
Unfurnish'd U brows, tempestuous tongues — Freedom 38
Ungainliness mocking at the much u, Last Tournament 728
Ungainly See Unheppen
Ungamer'd And whirl the w sheaf afar. In Mem. Ixxii 23
Ungather'd To-night u let us leave „ cvl
Ungenerous " TJ, dishonourable, base, Aylmer's Field 292
Ungentle Who shall call me u, mifair, Maud I xiii 14
to be gentle than u with you ; Geraint and E. 716
The most u knight in Arthur's hall.' Gareth and L. 757
Ungracious I am more u ev'n than you, Aylmer's Field 247
A bird's-eye-view of all the u past ; Princess ii 125
' U I ' answer'd Florian ; ' have you learnt „ 392
We knew not your u laws, „ iv 399
Ungraciousness I seem to be u itself.' Aylmer's Field 245
Ungrateful Not all u to thine ear. hi Mem. xxxviii 12
And ' petty Ogress,' and ' u Puss,' Princess, Pro. 157_
Unguent heal'd Thy hurt and heart with xi and
caress — Last Tour-nametit 595
Unhail'd u The shallop flitteth silken-sail'd L. of Shallott i 21
Unhallow'd But all is new u ground. In Mem. civ 12
Unhanded High things were spoken there, u down ; Alexander 12
Unhappiness by some device Full cowardly, or by
mere u, Gareth and L. 768
by sorcery or u Or some device, hast foully overthro\\Ti), .. 997
Hast overthrown thro' mere u), ,, 1059
all thro' mere u — ,. 1234
Device and sorcery and u — .. 1235
thro' the mere u Of one who came to help thee, „ 1237
Else must I die thro' mine «.' Pelleas and E. 332
On whom I brought a strange u. Sisters (E. and E.) 89
Unhappy Nor u, nor at rest, Adeline 4
There are enough u on this earth, (Enone 239
he turn'd His face and pass'd — u that I am ! Dora 151
The spindlings look u. Amphion 92
He was not all u. His resolve Upbore him, Enoch Arden 799
Not all M, having loved God's best And greatest, Lancelot and E. 1093
made The happy and the u love, Lover's Tale i 753
Often I seem d u, and often as happy too. First Quarrel 31
In the dead u night, and when the rain is on the
roof. Locksley Hall 78
And vex the u dust thou wouldst not save. Come not, when, etc. 4
So stood the u mother open-mouth'd. Princess vi 143
Confused me like the u bark In Mem . xvi 12
So sadly lost on that u night ; Marr. of Geraint 689
that u cliild Past in her barge : Last Tournament 44
wail For ever woke the u Past again, Sisters (E. and E.) 263
has it come to this, O u creature ? Forlorn 44
Unhann'd yonder stands, Modred, u, Pass, of Arthur 153
But the new-wedded wife was u. Charity 22
Unheard grief of circumstance Wert thou, and
yet u. Supp. Confessions 93
behold them unbeheld, u Hear all, (Enone 89
They were modulated so To an u melody, Eleanore 64
And dies u within his tree, You wight have won 32
Unhearing shriek'd out ' Traitor ' to the u wall, Lancelot and E. 612
Unheeded (' : and detaching, fold by fold. Vision of Sin 51
U : and I thought I would have spoken, „ 55
Unheedful or as once we met U, Gardener's D. 266
Unheppen (ungainly) Straange an' u Miss Lucy ! Village Wife 100
Unhooded and m casting off The goodly falcon Merlin and V. 130
Unicom hornless u's, Crack'd basilisks, Holy Grail 717
Unimpassion'd Beneath a pale and u moon, Aylmer's Field 334
Uninvaded u sleep The Kraken sleepeth : The Kraken 3
Uninvited The Abominable, that u came (Enone 224
Union Should banded u's persecute Opinion, You ask me, why, etc. 17
our knights at feast Have pledged us in this u, Lancelot and E. 115
Here's to your happy u with my child ! Sisters (E. and E.) 68
power to fuse My myriads into u under one ; Akbar's Dream 157
Unison All your voices in u. On Jub. Q. Victoria 63
Unity These three made m so sweet, Two Voices 421
It was but u of place In Mem. xiii 3
Universal and u Peace Lie like a shaft of light Golden Year 48
the kindly earth shall slumber, lapt in u law. Locksley Hall 130
from it preach'd An u culture for the crowd. Princess, Pro. 109
sad and slow, As fits an u woe, Ode on Well. 14
I
Universal
755
Unshorn
Vnivosal {continited) And praise the invisible u
Lord, Ode Inter. Exhib. 3
The voices of our u sea W. to Marie Alex. 16
led my friend Back to the pure and u church. Sir J. Oldcastle 71
Robed in u harvest up to either pole she smiles,
U ocean softly washing all her warless Isles, Locksley H., Sixty 169
Thou that seest U Nature moved by U Mind ; To Virgil 21
Our Shakespeare's bland and u eye Dwells To W. C. Macready 13
Universe wanderings Of this most intricate U A Character 3
That in a boundless u Is boundless better, Two Voices 26
knowing not the u, I fear to slide from bad to worse. „ 230
atom-streams And torrents of her myriad u, Ltu^retius 39
And fleeting thro' the boundless u, „ 161
Quite sunder'd from the moving U, Princess vii 52
suns of the limitless U sparkled and shone Despair 15
University {See also Varsity) All wild to found an U For
maidens, Princess i 150
Unjust and yet Pardon — too harsh, u. Columbus 199
Unkept montage, yet m. Had relish fiery-new. Will Water. 97
Unkind False-eyed Hesper, w, Leonine Eleg. 16
Ah, miserable and u, untrue, M. d' Arthur 119
be jealous and hard and «.' Grandmother 54
' Ah, miserable and u, untrue. Pass, of Arthur 287
Unkindliness Kill'd with unutterable u.' Merlin and V. 886
Unkinglike wall them up perforce in mine —
unwise, U ; — Akbar's Dream 63
UnknightUke all u, writhed his wiry arms Aroimd
him, Gareth and L. 1150
Unknightly U, traitor-hearted ! Woe is me ! M. d Arthur 120
u with flat hand, However lightly, Geraint and E. 717
U, traitor-hearted ! Woe is me ! Pass, of Arthur 288
Unknit God u's the riddle of the one. Lover's Tale i 181
Unknown And left a want u before ; Miller's D. 228
hears the low Moan of an u sea ; Palace of Art 280
His wife, an u artist's orphan child — Sea Dreams 2
remain'd among us In our yotmg nursery still u, Princess iv 332
Known and u ; human, divine ; In Mem. cxxix 5
Sweet were the days when I was all m, Merlin and V. 501
your great name. This conquers : hide it therefore ;
go u : Win ! Lancelot and E. 151
Known as they are, to me they are u.' .. 186
But since I go to joust as one u At Camelot „ 190
That he might joust u of all, „ 583
The maiden buried, not as one u, ,. 1334
Queen abode For many a week, u, among the nuns ; Guinevere 147
With some revenge — even to itself u, — ■ Lover's Tale ii 127
Shall fade with him into the u, Tiresias 215
Unlaborious u earth and oarless sea ; To Virgil 20
Unlaced u my casque And grovell'd on my body. Princess vi 27
Gareth there u His helmet as to slay him, Gareth and L. 978
Unlading At lading and u the tall barks, Enoch Arden 816
Unlamed to find his charger yet u, Balin and Balan 428
Unlawful U and disloyal brotherhood — Sisters (E. and E.) 174
Unleam'd In grief I am not all u; To J. S. 18
Unled (His gentle charger following him u) Geraint and E. 571
Unlicensed Dooms our u preacher to the flame, Sir J. Oldcastle 105
Unlifted U was the clinking latch ; Mariana 6
Unlike O happy tears, and how u to these ! (Enone 235
Said Ida, tremulously, ' so all u— Princess vii 333
As not u to that of Spring. In Mem. Ixxxv 120
With miracles and marvels like to these, Not all w ; Holy Grail 544
Unlikeness As his u fitted mine. In Mem. Ixxix 20
Unlimited The Heavenly-unmeasured or u Love, Lover's Tale i 474
Unloveable Ev'n when they seem'd u, Merlin and V. 176
Unloved U, that beech will gather brown. In Mem. ci 3
U, the sun-flower, shining fair, „ 5
U, by many a sandy bar, „ 9
Unlovely I stand Here in the long u street, „ vii 2
Unloverlike most u. Since in his absence Lover's Tale i 424
UnmanacI^ U from bonds of sense. Two Voices 236
Unmann'd but that my zone U me : Princess ii 421
Unmannerly U, with prattling and the tales Guinevere 316
Unmark'd Enwind her isles, u of me : In Mem. xcviii 10
Unmarried But Dora lived u till her death. Dora 172
Sir Lancelot worshipt no u girl Merlin and V. 12
Unmeasured {See also Heavenly-unmeasured) clamouring
etiquette to death, U mirth ; Princess v 18
Unmeet and strange experiences U for ladies. „ iv 159
Maud, you milkwhite fawn, you are all u for a wife. Maiid I iv 57
Unmelodious Saying ' An u name to thee, Balin and Balan 52
Unmockingly U the mocker ending here Gareth and L. 294
Unmortised The feet u from their ankle-bones Merlin and V. 552
Umuoulded By some yet u tongue Ode on Well. 233
Unmoved With such and so w a majesty Lancelot and E. 1170
Unmown deep inlay Of braided blooms m, Arabian Nights 29
Unnetted The u black-hearts ripen dark. The Blackbird 7
Unnoticed For that u failing in herself, Geraint and E. 47
Unnumber'd U and enormous polypi The Kraken 9
Unopen'd and dash'd U at her feet : Princess iv 471
Unpaining driven Its knotted thorns thro' my u brows, Lover's Tale i 620
Unpalsied U when he met with Death, In Mem. cxxviii 2
Unparallel'd That various wilderness a tissue of
light U. Lover's Tale i 420
Unpeopled Whose crime had half u Ilion, Death of (Enone 61
Unperceived Love, u, A more ideal Artist Gardener's D. 24
stole from court With Cyril and with Floriaii, u. Princess i 103
Unpiloted U i' the echomg dance Of reboant
whirlwinds, Swpp. Confessions 96
Unpitied C/^ : for he groped as blind, Aylmer's Field 821
Unprofitable if a king demand An act u, M. d' Arthur 96
if a king demand An act u, Pass, of Arthur 264
Unprogressive Cries of u dotage ere the dotard fall
asleep, Locksley H., Sixty 153
Unprophetic U rulers they — Open. I. aild C. Exhib. 26
Unproportion'd So u to the dwelling-place,) Lover's Tale i 187
Unproven and every younger knight, U, Holy Grail 304
Unquenehed Like Stephen, an u fire. Two Voices 219
Unquestion'd ample rule tf, (Enone 112
Unquiet But, for the u heart and brain. In Mem. v 5
Unreal but these u ways Seem but the theme Edwin Morris 47
past and flow'd away To those u billows : Lover's Tale ii 196
Unrecorded a wife as you Should vanish u. Romney's R. 69
Unrecording Thro' troops of w friends, You might have won 7
Unrelieved and ever u by dismal tears, Palace of Art 271
Unremember'd and my sins Be w, Supp. Confessions 182
Unremorseful wrapt In u folds of rolling fire. Holy Grail 261
Unrepress'd Ceasing not, mingled, w, Arabian Nights 74
Unresisting and a sense Of meanness in her u life. Aylmer's Field 801
Unrest but the Naiad Throbbing in mild u Leonine Eleg. 12
The wild u that lives in woe In Mem. xv 15
Can calm despair and wild u „ xvi 2
Unreveal'd The rest remaineth ?t ; „ xxxi 14
Unriddled Shall be u by and by. Miller's D. 20
Unrisen a poising eagle, burns Above the u morrow : ' Princess iv 83
— over darkness — from the still u sun. Locksley H., Sixty 92
UnroII'd One sitting on a crimson scarf u; D. of F. Women 126
hail once more to the banner of battle m ! Maud III vi 42
Unruffling U waters re-collect the shape Last Tournament 369
Unsaid And what I see I leave m, In Mem. Ixxiv 10
Unsay U it, unswear ! Last Tournament 641
Unscarr'd And all u from beak or talon, „ 20
Unscathed Render him up u : Princess iv 408
Unseal'd Falling, u our eyelids, and ^^•e woke Lover's Tale i 265
Unseen Then leaping out upon them u The Merman 33
the dark East, U, is brightening to his bridal morn. Gardener's D. 73
Her face was evermore u, The Voyage 61
And far, in forest-deeps u, Sir L. and Q. G. 7
Had his dark hour u, and rose and past Enoch Arden 78
But now it seems some u monster lays Lucretius 219
Into the u for ever, — till that hoiu-, „ 259
or are moved by an u hand at a game Maud I iv 26
His love, u but felt, o'ershadow Thee, Ded. of Idylls 51
Merlin, who, they say, can walk U at pleasure — Com. of Arthur 348
with her feet u Crush'd the wild passion Lancelot and E. 741
for u, But taken with the sweetness of the place. Lover's Tale i 530
Unshadowable u in words. Themselves but shadows Ancient Sage 238
Unshaken Which kept her throne u still, To the Queen 34
Thro' open doors of Ida stationed there U, Princess v 344
Unshatter'd haste and random youth U ; l)e Prof., Two G. 22
Unshorn she that saw him lying vmsleek, u, Lancelot and E. 815
UnskiU'd
756
Urn
Unskill'd And let the younger and u go by
Unsleek she that saw him lying u, unshorn,
Unsolder sequel of to-day u's all The goodliest
fellowship
setiuel of to-day u's all The goodliest fellowship
Unsown sat upon a mound Tliat was u,
Unspeakable memories roll upon him, U for sadness.
And twLsted shapes of lust, u,
A sacred, secret, imapproached woe, U ?
Dying, ' U ' he wrote ' Their kindness,'
Unstain'd A lovelier life, a more u, than his !
Unsubduable The last a monster u
Unsubject U to confusion,
Unsummer'd And, now to these w skies
Unsunn'd The u freshness of my strength,
Unsunny O damsel, wearing this u face
Unswallow'd brawny speannan let liis cheek Bulge
with the u piece,
Unswear Unsay it, u !
Unsweet Is faith as vague as all u :
Untaken and hath left his prize U,
Untamish'd name will yet remain U as before ;
Untidy See Hugger-mugger
'Untin' (hunting) an' was 'w' arter the men.
Untold Nor left w the craft herself had usecl ;
Untouch'd U with any shade of years,
my good son — -Is yet u :
Untravell'd experience is an arch wherethro' Gleams
that u world.
Untrue Ah, miserable and unkind, u,
1 wrong the grave with fears u :
She might by a true descent be u ;
" Ah, miserable and unkind, u,
Untruth never had a glimpse of mine u.
Too wholly true to dream u in thee,
Untuneful That her voice u grown,
Unused U example from the grave
Unvenerable U will thy memory be
Unvext /' She slipt across the summer
Unwatchd U, the garden bough shall sway.
Unwavering calm that let the tapers bum U :
Unwedded 1 was wife, and thou U :
Unwilling Waged such u tho' successful war
Tlie lady never made u war With those fine eyes
Unwillingly See Half-unwillingly
Unwillingness wish Falls flat before your least u.
Unwise What wonder I was all u,
wall them up perforce in mine — u, Unkinglike ; —
Unwisely wisely or u, signs of storm,
Unwish'd That you came u for, imcall'd,
Unwish'd-for With proffer of u-f services)
Unwitty If these u wandering wits of mine.
Unwonted Should kiss with an u gentleness.
Unwoo'd palms were ranged Above, u of summer
wind :
Unworldly My friend, the most u of mankind,
Unworthier but we, u, told Of college :
Unworthily some u ; their sinless faith,
Unworthiness lay Contemplating her own u ;
Unworthy O three times less u !
Hadst thou less u proved—
Vext with u madness, and deform'd.
chiefest comfort is the little child Of one u mother
On some u heart with joy,
but most Predoom'd her as u.
Unwounded To find him j'et u after fight,
Unwove Wove and u it, till the boy return'd
Up S't' Steep-up
Upbare u A broad earth-sweeping pall of whitest
lawn.
Upbearing A leaning and u parasite,
Upblown u billow ran Shoreward beneath red clouds,
Upbore His resolve U him, and firm faith,
but her deep love U her ;
Upbreaking the heavens u thro' the earth,
Lancelot and E. 1361
815
M. d' Arthur 14
Pass, of AHhur 182
Dora 73
Enoch Arden 725
Lucretius 157
Lover's Tale i 680
To Marq. of Dufferin 35
Bed. of Idylls 30
Gareth and L. 858
Will Water. 86
Pref. Poem Broth. Son. 17
Supp. Confessions 140
Pelleas and E. 180
Geraint and E. 631
Last Tournament 641
In Mon. xlvii 5
Lancelot and E. 531
Marr. of Geraint 501
VUlage Wife 36
Geraint and E. 393
Miller's D. 219
Sisters (E. and E.) 288
Ulysses 20
M. d' Arthur 119
In Mem. li 9
Maud I xiii 31
Pass, of Arthur 287
Lancelot and E. 125
Guinevere 541
The Owl a 6
In Mem. Ixxx 15
Tiresias 132
Enoch Arden 530
In Mem. ci 1
„ xcv 6
Guinevere 120
Merlin and V. 571
603
Pomney's R. 72
Day-Dm., Ep. 5
— Akbar's Dream 62
To the Queen ii 49
Despair 5
Lover's Tale i 629
Merlin and V. 346
Lover's Tale i 739
Arabian Nights 80
In Mem. W. G. Ward 3
Prirwess, Pro. 110
V 185
Marr. of Geraint 533
Love and Duty 20
Locksley Hall 63
Aylmer's Field 335
; Princess v 431
In Mem. Ixii 7
Lancelot and E. 729
Geraint and E. 371
260
Lover's Tale ii 77
Isabel 34
Lover's Tale ii 178
Enoch Arden 800
Lancelot and E. 861
Guinevere 391
Up-clomb U-c the shadowy pine above the woven copse. Lotos- Eaters 18
Upcurl'd wreaths of floating dark u, The Poet 35
Updrag Rise ! ' and stoop'd to u ]Melissa : • Princess iv 366
Updrawn Anchors of rusty fluke, and boats u ; Enoch Arden 18
Upheaven land of old u from the abyss By fire. Pass, of Arthur 81'
Upheld under all the cornice and u : Gareth and L. 219
Uphill lay thine u shoulder to the wheel, Ancient Sage 279
Uphold (See also Upowd) didst u me on my lonely isle.
U me.
To break the heathen and u the Christ,
Which yet u's my life, and evermore
two pillars which from earth u Our childhood,
Genius of that hour which dost u Thy coronal of
glory
Upjetted u in spirts of wild sea-smoke.
Upland Piling sheaves in u's airy.
Behind Were realms of u, prodigal in oil.
Uplift U a thousand voices full and sweet,
A lever to u the earth
And pure Sir Galahad to u the maid ;
Uplifted U was the clinking latch ;
The bold Sir Bedivere u him,
U high in heart and hope are we.
And been thereby u, should thro' me.
The bold Sir Bedivere u him,
Uplooking u and almost Waiting to see some blessed
shape
Up-on-end See Hup-on-end
Upowd (uphold) ' I'll u it tha weant ;
Upper Below the thunders of the u deep ;
Old footsteps trod the u floors.
Too long you keep the u skies ;
Now gnaw'd his under, now his u lip,
Uprear'd And in his chair himself w,
Or whence the fear fest this my realm, u,
Upright U and flush'd before him :
but scarcely could stand u.
Uprising The knife u towaixi the blow
Uproar not without an u made by those Who cried.
Uprose u the mystic mountain-range :
Upshoot All round a hedge u's, and shows
Upside See Hupside
Upsprang gain'd her castle, u the bridge,
Upsprung In closest coverture u,
Upstarted Scared by the noise u at our feet,
Upstay'd Bent o'er me, and my neck his arm u.
Upswell u's The gold-fringed pillow lightly prest :
Upward Strike u thro' the shadow ;
Tho' following with an u mind
Upward-rushing ever u-r storm and cloud Of shriek
and plume,
Urania U speaks with darken'd brow :
Uranian o'er his head U Venus hung,
Urge To which the voice did u reply ;
' Yet think not that I come to u thy crimes,
U him to foreign war.
Urged brought it ; and the poet little u,
I u the fierce inscription on the gate,
Lancelot on him u All the devisings
U him to speak against the truth,
Urien then his brother king, U, assail'd him :
Carlos, U, Cradlemont of Wales,
Urim rich With jewels, elfin U, on the hilt,
Urn (See also Fountain-ums) From fluted vase, and
brazen u
Drawing into his narrow earthen u,
white dust, shut in an u of brass !
Soft lustre bathes the range of u's
Found lying with his u's and ornaments,
and with great u's of flowers.
Thro' prosperous floods his holy u.
And on the board the fluttering u :
An angel watching an u Wept
swathe thyself all round Hope's quiet u For ever ?
immerging, each, his u In his own well,
Enoch Arden 783
Guinevere 470
Lover's Tale i 168
220
487
Sea Dreams 52
L. of Shalott i 34
Palace of Art 79
Ode Inter. Exhib. 1
In Mem. cxiii 15
Lancelot and E. 1265
Mariana 6
M. d' Arthur 6
Ode on Well. 254
Balin and Balan 491
Pass, of Arthur 175
Lover's Tale i 311
NorlJi. Cobbler 63
The Kraken 1
Mariana 67
Rosalind 35
Geraint and E. 669
Day-Dm., Revival 18
Last Tournament 122
Merlin and V. 912
V. of Maeldune 73
The Victim m
Com. of Arthur 42
Vision of Sin '2^
Day-Sm., Sleep. P. 41
Pelleas and E. 206
Arabian Nights 68
Merlin and V. 422
Lffoer's Tale i 690
Day- Dm., Sleep. B. 21
The Ring 372
In Mem. xli 21
Last Tournament 440
In Mem. xxxvii 1
Princess i 243
Two Voices 7
Guinevere 532
Sir J. Oldcastle 6&
The Epic 48
Princess lii 141
Gareth and L. 1348
Lancelot and E. 92
Com. of Arthur 36
112
298
Arabian Nights 60
Ode to Memory 61
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 68
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 9
Aylmer's Field 4
Princess ii 26
In Mem. ix 8
„ x&o%
Maud I viii 3
Lover's Tale i 100
Tiresias 88
'Urry
757
Uther
'Urry (hurry) Naay sit down — naw 'u — sa cowd ! — Village Wife 20
Usage (See also Dl-usage) tenfold dearer by the
power Of intermitted u ; Marr. of Geraint 811
And lose thy life by u of thy sting ; Ancient Sage 270
shrunk by u into commonest commonplace ! Locksley H., Sixty 76
Use (s) keep a thing, its u will come. The Epic 42
■ God made the woman for the u of man, Edwin Morris 91
To rust unbumish'd, not to shine in u ! Ulysses 23
to what u's shall we put The wild weed-flower Day- Dm., Moral 5
So 'twere to cramp its m, if I Should hook „ 15
gentle creature shut from all Her charitable u, Aylmer's Field 566
too late ! they come too late for u. Sea Dreams 67
or of older u All-seeing Hyperion — Lucretius 125
From childly wont smd ancient u I call — „ 209
redound Of u and glory to yourselves ye come, Princess ii 43
might grow To u and power on this Oasis, „ 167
public u required she should be kno\vn ; „ iv 336
since my oath was ta'en for public u, „ 337
And boats and bridges for the u of men. „ vi 47
What u to keep them here — now ? „ 304
void was her u, And she as one that climbs a peak „ vii 34
All of beauty, all of u, Ode Inter. Exhib. 23
Naw soort o' koind o' m to saay T. Farmer, 0. S. 6
' O wife, what u to answer now ? The Victim 55
A u in measured language lies ; In Mem. v 6
Make one wreath more for U and Wont, ., xxix 11
And learns the u of ' I,' and ' me,' „ xlv 6
This u may lie in blood and breath, ,, 13
But with long u her tears are dry. .. Ixxviii 20
because he bare The u of virtue out of earth : ., Ixxxii 10
Has broke the bond of dying u. „ cv 12
And soil'd with all ignoble u. „ cxi 24
batter'd with the shocks of doom To shape and u. ., cxviii 25
And thrice the gold for Uther's u thereof, Gareth and L. 344
To war against ill u's of a life, „ 1130
I will make u of all the power I have. Geraint and E. 345
(tho' I count it of small u To charge you) „ 416
' Thou shalt put the crown to u. Balin and Balan 202
he defileth heavenly things With earthly u's ' — „ 422
lost to life and u and name and fame, (repeat) Merlin and V. 214, 970
My u and name and fame. „ 304
Ujjon mjr life and u and name and fame, „ 374
With this for motto, ' Bather u than fame.' „ 480
U gave me Fame at first, and Fame again
Increasing gave me u. „ 493
I rather dread the loss of u than fame ; „ 519
and she lay as dead. And lost all u of life : v 645
kingdom's, not the King's — For public u : Lancelot and E. 60
ourselves shall grow In u of arms and manhood, ., 64
I might have put my wits to some rough u, ., 1306
Now grown a part of me : but what m in it ? „ 1416
' It is not Arthur's u To hunt by moonlight ; ' Holy Grail 110
heart And might of limb, but mainly u and skill. Last Tournament 198
and with mirth so loud Beyond all m, ., 236
Arthur deign'd not u of word or sword, ,, 458
They served their u, their time ; „ 676
or what u To know her father left us Lover's Tale i 292
for henceforth what u were words to me ! „ 609
show'd he drank beyond his w ; „ iv 228
What u to brood ? this life of mingled pains To Mary Boyle 49
Use (verb) and u Her influence on the mind, Will Water. 11
You grant me license ; might I m it ? Princess Hi 235
to M A little patience ere I die ; In Mem. xxxiv 11
before my lance if lance Were mine to u — Gareth and L. 7
And answer'd with such craft as women u, Geraint and E. 352
u Both grace and will to pick the vicious quitch „ 902
eats And u's, careless of the rest ; Merlin and V. 463
Might u it to the harm of anyone, „ 685
since I cannot u it, ye may have it.' Lancelot and E. 199
I pray you, u some rough discourtesy „ 973
Besought me to be plain and blunt, and u, „ 1301
who cared Only to u his own. Lover's Tale iv 312
my Leonard, u and not abuse your day, Locksley H., Sixty 265
Used (See also Ul-used) out the storied Past, and
u Within the Present, Love thou thy land 2
Used (continued) U all her fiei-y will, and smote Her life Will Water. Ill
And she the left, or not, or seldom u ; Princess Hi 38
But great is song U to great ends : ,. iv 138
Fatherly fears — ^you u us courteously — „ v 216
It is all II up for that. Maud II v 6i
Am much too gentle, have not u my power : Marr. of Geraint 467
Nor left untold the craft herself had u ; Geraint and E. 393
' Enid, I have u you worse than that dead man ; ,, 735
wrought too long with delegated hands. Not u mine
own : ,. 894
So xc as I, My daily wonder is. Merlin and V. 535
This was the one discourtesy that he u. Lancelot and E. 988
Used (accustomed) We are w to that : Princess Hi 277
Used (was or were accustomed) Musing on him that
u to fill it for her, Enoch Arden 208
ah God, as he u to rave. Maud I i 60
full of wolves, where he u to lie ; „ II v 54
With whom he u to play at tourney once, Gareth and L. 532
whom he u To harry and hustle. „ 706
when I am gone Who u to lay them ! Balin and Balan 141
golden hair, with which I u to play Not knowing ! Guinevere 547
as ye M to do twelve year sin' ! Spinster's S's. 59
you u to call me once The lonely maiden-Princess The Ring 64
as I M To prattle to her picture — ,, 115
I M to walk This Terrace — morbid, ,. 167
She u to shun the wailing babe, ,, 358
she u to gaze Do'wn at the Troad ; Death of (Enone 2
For I ?t to play with the knife. Charity 15
Useful Should hook it to some u end. Day-Dm., Moral 16
So never took that u name in vain. Sea Dreams 189
Before the u trouble of the rain : Geraint and E. 771
Subdue them to the u and the good. Ulysses 38
Useless To draw, to sheathe a u sword. In Mem. cxxviii 13
these blind hands were m in their wars. Tiresias 78
This u hand ! I felt one warm tear fall upon it. „ 166
Usherest Who u in the dolorous hour In Mem. Ixxii 9
Using like the liand, and grew With to ; Princess ii 151
Usk Held court at old Caerleon upon J7. Marr. of Geraint 146
Took horse, and forded U, and gain'd the wood ; „ 161
but up the vale of U, By the flat meadow, „ 831
the full-tided U, Before he turn to fall seaward Geraint and E. 116
they past With Arthur to Caerleon upon U. „ 946
By the great tower — Caerleon upon U — Balin and Balan 506
Who never sawest Caerleon upon U — „ 570
the flat field by the shore of U Holden : Pelleas and E. 164
Usurp'd Sir Modred had u the realm, Guinevere 154
Usury kiss for kiss, With u thereto.' Talking Oak 196
Uther Or mythic tf's deeply-wotmded son Palace of Art 105
And after him King TJ fought and died, Com. of Arthur 14
Who cried, ' He is not U's son ' — • ,. 43
who hath proven him King U's son ? ., 70
Are like to those of U whom we knew. ,, 72
wise man that served King U thro' his magic art ; ,, 152
Hold ye this Arthur for King U's son ? ' „ 172
for ye know that in King U's time „ 185
And U cast upon her eyes of love : „ 193
That Gorlois and King U went to war : „ 196
Then U in his wrath and heat besieged Ygeme .. 198
Left her and fled, and U enter'd in, ,. 201
King U died himself, Moaning and wailing for an heir „ 206
And many hated U for the sake Of Gorlois. ,. 220
an old knight And ancient friend oi U ; „ 223
' Here is tf's heir, your king,' „ 230
Or U's son, and bom before his time, „ 241
near him when the savage yells Of U's peerage died, „ 257
and dark was U too, Wellnigh to blackness ; „ 329
Merlin ever served about the King, U, before he died ;
and on the night When U in Tintagil past away „ 366
' The King ! Here is an heir tor U \' ,. 386
No son of U, and no king of ours ; ' „ 440
Thy father, U, reft From my dead lord a field Gareth and L. 334
And thrice the gold for U's use thereof, „ 344
A knight of U in the Barons' war, „ 353
And U slit thy tongue : .. 376
whom U left in charge Long since, Geraint and E. 933
utmost 758
Supp. Confessions 117
Clear-headed friend 19
Ulysses 32
Day -Dm., Depart. 6, 30
Merlin and V. 897
Lancelot and E. 526
Utmost Sweet in their u bitterness,
Wan, wasted Truth in her u need.
Beyond the u bound of human thought.
Beyond their u purple rim, (repeat)
as for u grief or shame ;
His party, knights of u North and West,
when thou hast seen me strain'd And sifted to
the u, Pelleas and E. 248
On that sharp ridge of u doom ride highly Lover's Tale i 805
Utter (adj.) seest me drive Thro' u dark a fuU-sail'd
skiff, Suff. Confessions 95
silence seems to flow Beside me in my w woe, Oriana 87
' Then, then, from u gloom stood out the breasts, Lticretitis 60
reverence thine own beard That looks as white as u
truth, Gareth and L. 281
my knights are sworn to vows Of w hardihood, u
gentleness, And, loving, u faithfulness in love, „ 553
The King in u scorn Of thee and thy much folly ,, 918
as if the world were one Of u peace, and love, and
gentleness ! •■ . 1289
Geraint, from u courtesy, forbore. Marr. of Geraint 381
Then Enid, in her u helplessness, Geraint and E. 719
So passionate for an u purity Merlin and V. 26
or what Her all but u whiteness held for sin, Holy Grail 84
did Pelleas in an u shame Creep with his shadow-
thro' the court again, Pelleas and E. 440
That here in u dark I swoon'd away. Last Tournament 622
You lose yourself in u ignorance ; Lover's Tale i 79
Why in the u stillness of the soul „ 276
All thro' the livelong hours of u dark, „ 810
but roxmd my Evelyn clung In u silence for so
long, Sisters (E. and E.) 217
That mock-meek mouth of u Antichrist, Sir J. Oldcastle 170
SunlRSS and moonless, % light — but no ! Columbus 90
If u darkness closed the day, my son — Anient Sage 199
Sons of God, and kings of men in u nobleness of
mind, Locksley H., Sixty 122
W'ere u darkness — one, the Sun of dawn Frin. Beatrice 3
lost in u grief 1 fail'd To send my life Demeter and P. 109
And u knowledge is but u love — The Ring 43
colour'd bubble bursts above the abyss Of Darkness,
M Lethe. Romney's R. 53
With politic care, with u gentleness, Akbar's Dream 128
Utter (verb) I would that my tongue could u Break, Break, etc. 3
U your jubilee, steeple and spire ! W. to Alexandra 17
To ?t love more sweet than praise. In Mem. Ixxvii 16
what dream ye when they u forth May-music Gareth and L. 1079
on a sudden the garrison u a jubilant shout, Def. of Lucknow 98
Utterance glided thro' all change Of liveliest u. D. of F. Women 168
in sighs Which perfect Joy, perplex'd for u. Gardener's D. 255
Gave u by the yearning of an eye, Love and Duty 62
As if to speak, but, u failing her. Princess iv 395
told us all their anger in miraculous u's, Boadicea 23
His broken u's and bashfulness, Pelleas and E. Ill
Went on in passionate u : Guinevere 611
her gracious lips Did lend such gentle u. Lover's Tale i 457
As if she were afraid of w ; » _ 564
breath floated in the u Of silver-chorded tones : „ ii 141
Utter'd brows Of him that u nothing base ; To the Queen 8
He u rhjTne and reason, The Goose 6
He ti words of scorning ; .. 42
Caught up the whole of love and u it, Love and Duty 82
And there the tale he u brokenly, Enoch Arden 647
She nor swoon'd, nor u cry : Princess vi 2
on her Fixt my faint eyes, and u whisperingly : „ vii 144
Bow'd at her side and u whisperingly : Geraint and E. 305
To whom the woodman u wonderingly Balin and Balan 297
But when Sir Garlon u mocking-wise ; „ 389
While he u this. Low to her own heart Lancelot and E. 318
U a little tender dolorous cry. „ 817
Lancelot kneeling u, ' Queen, Lady, my liege, „ 1179
For when had Lancelot u aiight so gross ImsI Tournament 631
my strangled vanity U a stifled crj- — Sisters {E. and E.) 200
Before the first ' I will ' was u, » 211
you heard the lines I read Nor u word of blame, Pro. to Gen. Hamley 18
Utter'd (continued) heart of this most ancient realm
hateful voice be u,
till the little one u a cry.
Utterest all of them redder than rosiest health or
than u shame.
Uttering all in passion u a dry shriek,
lock up my tongue From u freely what I freely
hear?
brook'd No silence, brake it, u ' Late ! so late !
What hour.
And u this the King Made at the man :
Utterly and brake it w to the hilt.
Uttermost (adj.) Is He not yonder in those u Parts of
the morning ?
And u obedience to the King.'
For u obedience make demand
In u obedience to the King.
Uttermost (s) To hoard all savings to the u,
wish To save all earnings to the u.
So aid me Heaven when at mine u.
That he might prove her to the w.
Fasted and pray'd even to the u,
Yea, let her prove me to the u. For loyal to the u
am I.'
when the guest Is loved and honour d to the u.
you are honour'd now Ev'n to the u :
Uxoriousness And molten down in mere u.
past the people's talk And accusation of u
Vagrant
Prog, of Spring 103
Bandit's Death 26
V. of Maeldime 65
Geraint and E. 461
Last Tournament 694
Guinevere 160
Pass, of Arthur 164
Gareth and L. 1148
Enoch Arden 223
Gareth and L. 555
558
833
Enoch Arden 46
86
Marr. of Geraint 502
Geraint and E. 58&
Holy Grail 132
Pelleas and E. 211
Lover's Tale iv 245
317
Marr. of Geraint 60
83
Vaain (vain) an' I beant not v. Spinster s S s. 1&
An' 1 beant not v, but I knaws ,. '1
Vacancy we shall see The nakedness and v Deserted House 11
gloom the vacancies Between the tufted hills, Lover s Tale * 2 '
Vacant In v chambers, I could trust Your kindness. To the Queen 19
And, last, you fix'd a v stare, L. C. V. de Vere\i
V of our glorious gains, Locksley Halt 170
Will haunt the i; cup : ^ F^,'^-^.^^\lld
I cry to t) chairs and widow'd walls, Aylmer s tield IM
Whence follows many a v pang ; Princess it 403
Perchance, to charm a v brain, The Daisy 10b
And V chaff well meant for grain. In Mem. vt 4
vital spirits sink To see the v chair, „ xx 19
Of V darkness and to cease. v xxxiv}<i
And V veaming, tho' with might ,. ?^*V^
stands" V, but thou retake it, mine agam ! Balm and Balan /»
In our great hall there stood a v chair, Holy Grail 167
Your places being v at my side, ,. 317
In hanging robe or v ornament, Guinevere 5\m
And I stood sole beside the v bier. Lover's Tale in 58
Till you find the deathless Angel seated in the v
tomb. Locksley H., Sixty 2(&
And sanguine Lazarus felt a v hand To Mary Boyle 31
Vacillating O damned v state ! Supp. Confessi(ms 190
in my good mother's hall Linger with v obedience, Gareth and L. id
Vagrant And v melodies the winds which bore The Poet 11
' If all be dark, v voice,' I said. Two Voices 265
A V suspicion of the breast : " 33ft
' Some V emotion of delight y ^oi
Love is made a I) regret. ^ r. f^rr S?
But sickening oia.v disease, L. C.J . de Vere W
But V in vapour, hard to mark ; Love thou thy land bJ
And V desires, like fitful blasts of balm Gardener s D. 6»
I shook her breast with v alarms— Tl^ Letters 38
And therewithal an answer v as wind : Princess t 45
moulder'd lodges of the Past So sweet a voice and v, „ iv bi
as babies for the moon, V brightness ; r ,;' 7^
To that v fear implied in death ; In Mem. xh 14
Is faith as i> as all unsweet : " xlmi &
If any v desire should rise, " ''ak.
V words ! but ah, how hard to frame „ xcv 4Sy
Vagrant
759
VaUey
Guinevere 663
Last Tournament 150
Vagrant (continued) v desire That spurs an imitative will. In Mem. ex 19
swaying upon a restless elm Drew the v glance of
Vivien, Balin and Balan 464
To one at least, who hath not children, v, Merlin and V. 506
■ You breathe but accusation vast and v, „ 701
There gleam'd a v suspicion m his eyes : Lamcelot and E. 127
came and went Before her, or a « spiritual fear — Guinevere 71
Laziness, v love-longings, the bright May, Sisters (E. and E.) 128
What V world-whisper, mystic pain or joy, Far — far-away 7
Till, led by dream and v desire, To Master of B. 17
Vaguer » voices of Polytheism Make but one music, Akbar's Dream 150
Vail her hand Grasp'd, made her v her eyes :
Vail'd He look'd but once, and v his eyes again.
Vain (adj.) {See also Vaain) Of knitted purport, all
were v. Two Voices 168
The chancellor, sedate and v, Day -Dm., Revival 29
blank And waste it seem'd and v ; Princess vii 43
From talk of battles loud and v, Ode on Well. 247
V solace ! Memory standing near To J. S. 53
No V libation to the Muse, Will Water. 9
Who will not hear denial, v and rude Lover's Tale i 628
like a v rich man. That, having always prosper'd „ 715
■ But V the tears for darken'd years Ancient Sage 183
And V the laughter as the tears, „ 185
Rail at ' Blind Fate ' with many a v ' Alas ! ' Doubt and Prayer 2
Help thy v worlds to bear thy light. In Mem., Pro. 32
making v pretence Of gladness, „ xxx 6
That not a moth with v desire „ liv 10
At night she weeps, ' How v am I ! „ Ix 15
With fifty Mays, thy songs are v ; „ IxxvilA
Thy likeness, I might count it v „ xcii 2
Half-gro^vn as yet, a child, and v — „ cxiv 9
man of science himself is fonder of glory, and v, Maud I iv 37
She murmur'd, ' V, in vain : it cannot be. Lancelot and E. 892
project after project rose, and all of them were v ; The Flight 14
I was jealous, anger'd, v.
May your fears be v !
Vain (s) I would shoot, howe'er in v,
Her and her children, let her plead in y;
Borrow'd a glass, but all in v :
If all be not in i> ;
the Queen, who long had sought in v To break him
Foredooming all his trouble was in v,
that ye blew your boast in t) ? '
To sleek her rufifled peace of mind, in v.
That proof of trust-— -so often ask'd in v !
She murmur'd, ' Vain, in t) : it cannot be.
When some brave deed seem'd to be done in v,
all My quest were but in v ;
And now his chair desires him here in v,
her life Wasted and pined, desiring him in v.
have but stricken with the sword in v ;
And we had not fought them in v,
Torture and trouble in v, —
Or you may drive in v,
But the Bandit had woo'd me in v,
Vainglorious Nothing of the vulgar, or v,
Vainglory Drove me from all vainglories,
Vainlier v than a hen To her false daughters
Vale Winds all the v in rosy folds,
Thebe lies a V in Ida,
many a v And river-sunder'd champaign
Lay, dozing in the v of Avalon,
■ Make me a cottage in the v,'
and many a winding v And meadow.
Beyond the thick-leaved platans of the v.
roll The torrents, dash'd to the v :
' Pretty bud ! Lily of the v !
come ; for all the v's Await thee ;
Light, so low in the v You flash and lighten
afar.
The flocks are whiter down the v,
up the v of Usk, By the flat meadow,
' And thence I dropt into a lowly v,
and where the v Was lowest, found a chapel,
Happy 66
To One who ran down Eng. 2
Two Voices 344
Enoch Arden 166
240
In Mem. cxiv 18
Gareth and L. 139
1127
1229
Merlin and V. 899
920
Lancelot and E. 892
Holy Grail 274
783
901
Pelleas and E. 496
Pass, of Arthur 23
The Revenge 74
Def. of Lucknow 86
Politics 8
Bandit's Death 10
On Jut. Q. Victoria 13
Holy Grail 32
Princess v 328
Miller's D. 242
(Enone 1
„ 113
Palace of Art 107
291
Lotos- Eaters 22
Princess Hi 175
V 350
„ vi 193
„ vii 215
Window, Marr. Mom. 9
In Mem. cxv 10
Marr. of Geraint 831
Holy Grail 440
441
Vale {continued) Re-makes itself, and flashes down the v — Guinevere 610
By thousands down the crags and thro' the v's. Montenegro 8
and every way the v's Wind, Tiresias 182
A gleam from yonder v, Early Spring 33
in this pleasant v we stand again, Demeter and P. 34
' Among the tombs in this damp v of yours ! The Ring 325
Our vernal bloom from every v and plain To Mary Boyle 9
gulf on gulf thro' all their v's below. Prog, of Spring 73
But when she gain'd the broader v. Death of (Enone 91
Came that ' Ave atque V ' of the Poet's Frater Ave, etc. 5
■ Frater Ave atque V ' — as we wander'd to and fro „ 7
Valence " O ay, what say ye to Sir V, Merlin and V. 705
Sir V wedded with an outland dame : ,, 714
Was charged by F to bring home the child. „ 718
Valentine birds that piped their V's, Princess v 239
Valiant Ring in the v man and free, In Mem. cvi 29
■ I have fought for Queen and Faith like a v man
and true ; The Revenge 101
they stared at the dead that had been so v and true, „ 105
Valkyrian ourself have often tried V hymns. Princess iv 139
Valley {See also Island-valley) the broad v dimm'd
in the gloaming : Leonine Eleg. 1
or fills The homed v's all about, Supp. Confessions 152
lovelier Than all the v's of Ionian hills. (Enone 2
Behind the v topmost Gargarus Stands up ,. 10
panther's roar came muffled, while I sat Low in the v. ,, 215
In this green v, imder this green hill, ,. 232
As I came up the v whom think ye should I see, Man (^tieen 13
All the V, mother, 'ill be fresh and green „ 37
up the V came a swell of music on the wind. „ Con. 32
Ajid up the V came again the music on the wind. „ 36
Wild flowers in the v for other hands than mine. „ 52
Full-faced above the v stood the moon ; Lotos- Eaters 7
bolts are hurl'd Far below them in the v's, „ C. S. 112
others in Elysian v's dwell, „ 124
The v's of grape-loaded vines that glow D. of F. Women 219
Where yon dark v's wind forlorn. On a Mourner 22
I lived In the white convent down the v there, St. S. Stylites 62
from the v's underneath Came little copses Anvphion 31
From some delightful v. Will Water. 120
To bicker down a v. The Brook 26
fought their last below, Was climbing up the v ; Aylmer's Field 228
come, for Love is of the v, come. For Love is of the
V, come thou down Princess vii 198
let the torrent dance thee down To find him in the v ; „ 210
turning saw The happy v's, half in light, „ Con. 41
Follow'd up in v and glen With blare of bugle. Ode on Well. 114
All in the v of Death Rode the six hundred. Light Brigade 3
Into the V of Death Rode the six himdred. (repeat) „ 7, 16
A thousand shadowy -pencill'd v's The Daisy 67
All along the v, stream that flashest white, V. of Cauteretz 1
All along the v, where thy waters flow, „ 3
All along the v, while I walk'd to-day, „ 5
For all along the v, down thy rocky bed, „ 7
And all along the v, by rock and cave and tree, ,, 9
Above the v's of palm and pine.' The Islet 23
The V, the voice, the peak, Voice and the P. 27
and jutting peak And v, Spec, of Iliad 14
Fly to the light in the v below— Window, Letter 12
Ringing thro' the v's, Maud I xii 10
And the v's of Paradise. „ xxii 44
Flee down the v before he get to horse. Gareth and L. 941
thro' many a grassy glade And v, Marr. of Geraint 237
long street of a little town In a long v, „ 243
And out of town and v came a noise „ 247
That glooms his v, sighs to see the peak Sun-
flush'd, Balin and Balan 165
fill'd With the blue v and the glistening brooks. Lover's Tale i 331
men dropt dead in the v's V. of Maeldune 31
To silver all the v's with her shafts — Tiresias 32
horsemen, drew to the v — and stay'd ; Heavy Brigade 3
When over the v. In early summers. Merlin and the G. 17
Drew to the v Named of the Shadow, „ 86
while we dwelt Together in this v — Death of (Enone 30
Thro' blasted v and flaring forest Kapiolani 12
Valorous
760
Varying
Valorons many a v legionary,
our most v, Sanest and most obedient :
a V weapon in olden England !
Valour V and charity more and more.
courtesy wins woman all as well As v may,
Stately purposes, v in battle,
Value To loyal hearts the v of all gifts
The V of that jewel he had to guard ?
And trebling all the rest in v —
A gift of slenderer v, mine.
Valued he knew the man and v him.
Valueless and you saved me, a v life,
Valuing V the giddy pleasure of the eyes.
V the giddy pleasure of the eyes.
Valve and betwixt were u's Of open-work
marble stairs. And great bronze v's,
Descending, burst the great bronze v's.
Van Love wept and spread his sheeny v's for flight ;
Then those who led the v, and those in rear,
Van Diemen grows From England to F Z>.
Vane not the County Member's with the v :
Still on the tower stood the v.
Waverings of every v with every wind,
and once we only saw Your gilded v.
Vanish So v friendships only made in wine.
and pass And v in the woods ;
Dreamlike, should on the sudden v,
From less to less and v into light.
madden'd the peoples would v at last.
And ever vanishing, never v'es,
thy world Might v like thy shadow in the dark.
The hope I catch at v'es and youth
But Song will V in the Vast ;
Till shadows v in the Light of Light.
Will V and give place to the beauty
ere it v'es Over the margin,
if such a wife as you Should v unrecorded.
Let the golden Iliad v,
V in your deeps and heights ?
Vanish'd (adj. and part) But O for the touch of a «
hand, Break, break, etc. 11
And those who sorrow'd o'er a v race, Aylmer's Field ^^
But since it pleased a v eye. In Mem. viii 21
And, thy dark freight, a v life. „ x 8
The days have v, tone and tint, „ xliv 5
And thou hast v from thine own Pref. Poem Broth. Son. 5
Far among the v races, old Assyrian kings would
flay Locksley H., Sixty 79
All 1 loved are v voices, all my steps are on the dead. „ 252
When, in the v year. You saw the league-long
rampart-fire Pro. to Gen. Hamley 26
Light among the v ages ; To Virgil 25
Stung by his loss had v, none knew where. Lover's Tale iv 102
Many a hearth upon our dark globe sighs after many a v
face, Vastness 1
Many a planet by many a sun may roll with the dust
Boadicea 85
Geraint and E. 910
Kafiolani 4
To F. D. Maurice 40
Last Tournament 708
Vastness 7
Lancelot and E. 1214
Lover's Tale iv 153
200
To Ulysses 48
Enoch Arden 121
Despair 61
M. d' Arthur 128
Pass, of Arthur 296
Princess iv 202
t)365
vi 75
Love and Death 8
Lover's Tale Hi 24
Amfhion 84
Walk, to the Mail 12
The Letters 1
To the Queen ii 50
The Ring 331
Geraint and E. 479
Balin and Balan 327
Holy Grail 260
Pass, of Arthur 468
Despair 24
Ancient Sage 44
52
The Flight 16
Epilogue 40
Epit. on Caxton 4
Happy 36
Merlin and the G. 128
Romney's R. 69
Parnassus 20
God and the Univ. 1
of a t) race.
Arthur had v I knew not whither.
Has V in the shadow cast by Death.
Vanish'd (verb) she cast back upon him A piteous
glance, and v.
clink'd, and cla.sh'd, and v, and I woke,
v panic-stricken, like a shoal Of darting fish,
Until they v by the fairy well
And V, and his book came down to me.'
V suddenly from the field With young Lavaine
every bridge as quickly as he crost Sprang into fire
andi),
now there is a lion in the way.' So v."
bounded forth and v thro' the night.
Or ev'n a fall'n feather, v again,
watch'd them till they v from my sight
flash'd thro' sense and soul And by the poplar
power over Hell till it utterly v away
Vanish'd (verb) {continued)
and Goddesses,
Vanishing {See also Ever-vanishing
V, atom and void,
to the last dip of the v sail She watch'd it.
And ever v, never vanishes.
Vanity Oh ! ^ ! Death waits at the door.
they sing Like poets, from the v of song ?
thy V so shot up It frighted all free fool
my strangled v Utter'd a stifled cry —
Vanquish knew that Love can v Death,
Merlin and the G. 77
D. of the Duke of C. 3
Aylmer's Field 284
Sea Dreams 135
Geraint and E. 468
Merlin and V. 428
^ 650
Lancelot and E. 508
Holy Grail 506
646
Pelleas atid E. 487
Last Tournament 372
Lover's Tale ii 42
Sisters (E. and E.) 110
Despair 102
before him V shadow-like Gods
Kapiolani 26
grave itself shall pass,
Lucretius 258
Enoch Arden 245
I
Vanquish'd
lost.
We V, you the Victor of your will.
Victor from v issues at the last.
Vantage 1 set thee high on v ground.
Ancient Sage 44
All Things will Die 16
Gardener's D. 100
Last Tournament 306
Sisters {E. and E.) 199
D. of F. Women 269
when our side was v and my cause For ever
Princess vi 24
167
Gareth and L. 1262
Balin and Balan 534
Vantage-ground With such a v-g for nobleness ! Aylmer's Field 387
nor a v-g For pleasure ; Ded. of Idylls 23
Vapid But languidly adjust My v vegetable loves Talking Oak 183
Vapour ' High up the v's fold and swim : Two Voices 262
swimming v slopes athwart the glen, Qinone 3
But vague in v, hard to mark ; Love thou thy latid 62
The v's weep their burthen to the ground, Tithomos 2
When the ranks are roll'd in v, Locksley Hall 104
Comes a v from the margin, „ 191
Faint shadows, v's lightly curl'd, Day- Dm., Sleep. P. 5
flowing range Of v buoy'd the crescent-bark, „ Depart. 22
My breath to heaven like v goes : St. Agnes' Eve 3
In crystal v everywhere Sir L. and Q. G. 5
A v heavy, hueless, formless, cold, Visimi of Sin 53
When that cold v touch'd the palace gate, „ 58
A belt, it seem'd, of luminous v, lay. Sea Dreams 209
saw The soft white v streak the crowned towers Princess Hi 344
Roll'd the rich v far into the heaven. Spec, of Uiad 8
Behind a purple-frosty bank Of v. In Mem. irvii 4
All night the shining v sail „ Con. Ill
yellow v's choke The great city sounding wide ; Maud II iv 63
a lovely baleful star Veil'd in gray v ; Merlin and V. 263
The moony v rolling round the King, Guinevere 601
silvery v in daylight Over the mountain Floats, Kapiolani 16
Vapour-braided And sweet the v-b blue. The Letters 42
Vapour-girdle from my v-g soaring forth Prog, of Spring 79
Vapour-swathed forehead v-s In meadows ever green ; Freedom 7
Variable Then follow'd calms, and then winds v, Enoch Arden 545
Varied With all the v changes of the dark, Edwin Morris 36
The coming year's great good and v ills. Prog, of Spring 93
Varier pious v's from the church. To chapel ; Sea Dreams 19
Varieties (Beauty seen In all v of mould and
mind) To , With Pal. of Art 7
Various Each month is v to present The world Two Voices 74
All v, each a perfect whole From living Nature, Palace of Art 58
' O all things fair to sate my v eyes ! ,. 193
So beautiful, vast, v. Ancient Sage 84
foremost in thy v gallery Place it. Ode to Memory 84
That v wilderness a tissue of light Lover's Tale i 419
To prize your v book, and send A gift To Ulysses 47
Varmint (vermin) ' Gaw up agean fur the v ? ' Owd Rod 98
Vamish'd once more in v glory shine Thy stars Prog, of Spring 38
Varsity (imiversity) 'e coom'd to the parish wi' lots o'
V debt, y. Farmer, N. S. 29
Fur Squire wur a V scholard. Village Wife 25
Vartical (vertical)
soon ! '
Vary To v from the kindly race of men,
violet varies from the lily as far As oak from elm :
And as the light of Heaven varies.
when the white fog v like a ghost Before the day, Death of (Enone 67
' Cast awaay on a disolut land wi' a v
North. Cobbler 3
Tithonus 29
Princess v 182
Marr. of Geraint 6
so loved Geraint To make her beauty v day by day, ,, 9
value of all gifts Must v as the giver s. Lancelot and E. 1215
V like the leaves and flowers. Poets and Critics 4
Vary-COlour'd A walk with v-c shells Arabian Nights 57
Varying v to and fro. We know not wherefore ; Aylmer's Field 73
Fomi, Ritual, v with the tribes of men. Akbar's Dream, 125
Ever v Madeline, (repeat) Madeline 3, 18, 27
The V year with blade and sheaf Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 1
By many a v influence and so long. Princess vi 267
Varying
761
Vein
Tarying {coiUiniied) poesy, v voices of prayer ? Fastness 31
Vase From fluted v, and brazen uni In order, Arabian Nights 60
from v's in the hall Flowers of all heavens, Princess, Pro. 11
or prove The Dana'id of a leaky v, „ ii 340
Break, thou deep v of chilling tears, In Mem. iv 11
Years that make And break the v of clay, Ancient Sage 92
Vashti O V, noble V ! Summon'd out She kept her state, Princess Hi 228
Vassal (adj.) In v tides that follow'd thought. In Mem. cxii 16
Delivering, that his lord, the v king, Gareth and L. 391
follow'd up by her v legion of fools ; Fastness 12
Vassal (S) Not v's to be beat, nor pretty babes Princess iv 146
And makes it v imto love : In Mem. xlviii 8
feeble v's of wine and anger and lust, Maud II i ^
loyal v's toiling for their liege. Coin, of Arthur 282
Doorm, whom his shaking v's call'd the Bull, Geraint and E. 439
Who now no more a » to the thief, „ 753
But work as V to the larger love. Merlin and F. 491
A prisoner, and the v of thy will ; Pelleas and E. 241
The Present is the v of the Past : Lover's Tale i 119
And make thy gold thy v not thy king, Ancient Sage 259
the tyrant v oi a. tyrant vice ! The Flight 25
Vassalage See Kitchen-vassalage
"Vast (adj.) F images in glimmering dawn,
The V Republics that majr grow,
But, all his v heart sherris-warm'd,
The V Akrokeraunian walls,
and fell In v sea-cataracts —
lays His v and filthy hands upon my will,
then how v a work To assail this gray
The bones of some v bulk that lived
the V designs Of his labour'd rampart-lines,
And in the v cathedral leave Mm,
fur I luvv'd 'er a v sight moor fur it :
Drops in his v and wandering grave.
His own V shadow glory-crown'd ;
No doubt V eddies in the flood
for a V speculation had fail'd
whose V wit And hundred winters
drew The v and shaggy mantle of his beard
but I dreamt Of some v charm concluded
Drew the v eyelid of an inky cloud,
And whelm all this beneath asv a mound
' You breathe but accusation v and vague,
The v necessity of heart and life.
Brake from the v oriel-embowering vine
Then Arthur made v banquets, and strange knights Pelleas and E. 147
On some v plain before a setting sun, Guinevere 77
I, whose V pity almost makes me die „ 534
who broke The v design and purpose of the King. „ 670
and her throne In our v Orient, and one isle, To the Queen ii 31
mighty gyres Rapid and v.
The v occasion of our stronger life —
So beautiful, v, various, so beyond
The v sun-clusters' gather'd blaze.
In that V Oval ran a shudder of shame.
Thro' all the v dominion which a sword,
Vast (s) Thine own shall wither in the v,
A soul shall draw from out the v
But Song will vanish in the F ;
Vaster May make one music as before. But v.
What v dream can hit the mood Of Love
As, unto V motions bound,
And still as v grew the shore
My love is v passion now ;
Or in that v Spain I leave to Spain
Two Foices 305
Day- Dm., L' Envoi 15
WUl Water. 197
To E. L. 4
Sea Dreams 54
Luxiretius 220
Princess Hi 233
294
Ode on Well. 104
280
N. Farmer, N. S. 36
In Mem. vi 16
„ xcvii 3
„ cxxviii 5
Maud I i9
Com. of Arthur 280
Merlin and F. 256
512
634
656
701
925
Lancelot and E. 1198
Lover's Tale ii 198
Columbus 35
Ancient Sage 84
Epilogue 54
St. Telemachus 73
Akbar's Dream 14
In Mem. Ixxvi 11
Con. 123
Epilogue 40
In Mem., Pro. 29
„ .vlvii 11
„ Ixiii 10
„ ciii 25
„ cxxx 10
Columbus 208
Sway'd by v ebbs and flows than can be known LocTcsley H., Sixty 194
Vastness In v and in mystery. In Mem. xcvii 7
Swallow'd in F, lost in Silence, Fastness 34
Vat flask of cider from his father's v's, Audley Court 27
red with spirted purple of the v's. Princess yii 202
Vault (s) Imbower'd d's of pillar'd palm, Arabian Nights dQ
Nor any cloud would cross the v, Mariana in the S. 38
Ranges of glimmering v's with iron grates, D. of F. Women 35
O Priestess in the v's of Death, In Mem. Hi 2
In v's and catacombs, they fell ; „ Iviii 4
Vault (s) {continued) up thy v with roaring sound Climb
thy thick noon, In Mem. Ixxii 25
Far beneath a blazing v. Will 18
from the deep v where the heart of Hope Fell
into dust. Lover's Tale i 94
And laid her in the v of her own kin. „ iv 39
entering the dim v. And, making there a sudden light, „ 52
Then at the far end of the v he saw His lady „ 56
Drown'd in the gloom and horror of the v. „ 62
Vault (verb) lightly v from the throne and play The Mermaid 33
Far as the Future v's her skies, Mechanofhilus 11
Vaulted {See also Hollow-vaulted, Long-vaulted, Over-
vaulted) F o'er the dark-blue sea. Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 40
Then some one sent beneath his v palm Princess v 31
So many a time he v up again ; Gareth and L. 1125
And V on his horse, and so they crash'd In
onset, Balin and Balan 555
Ran thro' the doors and v on his horse And fled : Pelleas and E. 539
V upon him. And rode beneath an ever-showering
leaf. Last Tournament 491
Vauntcourier that one F to this double ? Lover's Tale ii 30
Vaunted and v our kith and our kin, F. of Maeldune 47
Veer the warm hour returns With v of wind. Last Tournament 231
Veering (See also Ever-veering) bird that still is v there
Above his four gold letters)
By » passion fann'd,
Vegetable But languidly adjust My vapid v loves
Veil (s) inner impulse rent the v Of his old husk :
thro' thick v's to apprehend A labour
Slow-dropping v's of thinnest lawn,
the time Is come to raise the v.
And draws the v from hidden worth.
rose of Gulistan Shall burst her v :
From orb to orb, from v to v.'
Behind the v, behind the v.
A lucid V from coast to coast, •
We heard behind the woodbine v
an Isis hid by the v.
A faded mantle and a faded v.
And in her v enfolded, manchet bread.
And tearing ofi her v of faded silk
I knew the v had been withdrawn.
aghast the maiden arose, White as her v,
from under this A v, that seemed.no more than
gilded air,
our mortal v And shatter'd phantom
the V Is rending, and the Voices of the day
She comes to dress me in my bridal v.
But the bridal v — Your nurse is waiting.
Veil (verb) I cannot v, or droop my sight,
gleams of good that broke From either side, nor «
his eyes :
She bow'd as if to « a noble tear ;
V His want in forms for fashion's sake,
Well might I wish to v her wickedness,
and now He v's His flesh in bread,
Murder would not v your sin,
The Ping 332
Madeline 29
Talking Oak 183
Two Foices 10
296
Lotos- Eaters 11
Gardener's D. 274
Day -Dm., Arrival 4
Princess iv 123
In Mem. xxx 28
Ivi 28
„ Ixvii 14
„ Ixxxix 50
Maud I iv 43
Marr. of Geraint 135
389
Geraint and E. 514
Holy Grail 522
Guinevere 363
Lover's Tale iv 290
De Prof., Two G. 46
The Ring 38
Eleanore 87
Love thou thy land 90
Princess Hi 289
In Mem. cxi 5
Guinevere 211
Sir J. Oldcastle 156
Forlorn 49
Veil'd {See also Willow-veil'd) eyes have been intent
On that V picture — -v, for what it holds Gardener's D. 270
That V the world with jaundice. Walk, to the Mail 20
he V His face with the other, and at once, Aylmer's Field 808
again She v her brows, and prone she sank,
In the centre stood A statue v, to which they sang ;
And which, tho' v, was known to me,
seem'd a lovely baleful star F in gray vapour ;
but what I saw was v And cover'd ;
walk'd abreast with me, and v his brow,
I walk'd behind with one who v his brow.
' He V Himself in flesh,
Veileth every cloud, that spreads above And v love,
Veilless He drove the dust against her v eyes :
Vein (s) Life shoots and glances thro' your v's,
a languid fire creeps Thro' my v's
you can talk : yours is a kindly v :
Here stays the blood along the v's.
Princess v 107
In Mem. ciii 12
Merlin and F. 263
Holy Grail 851
Lover's Tale ii 86
„ Hi 12
Sir J. Oldcastle 156
Two Foices 447
Geraint and E. 529
Rosalind 22
Eleanore 131
Edwin Morris 81
[Day- Dm., Sleep P. 4*
Vein
762
Vexed-Vext
Vein (s) (continued) brooking not the Tarquin in lier v's, Lua-eiius 237
The summer of the vine in all his v's — Princess i 183
But branches current yet in kindred v's.' „ n 245
From out a common v of memory Sweet household talk, ,. 314
I felt my v's Stretch with fierce heat ; ,, v 537
half the wolf's-milk curdled in their v's, „ vii 130
now the wine made summer in his v's, Man: of Geraint 398
his forehead v's Bloated, and branch'd ; Balin and Balan 391
The flowers that run poison in their v's. Lover's Tale i 347
Burst v, snap sinew, and crack heart. Si;
heat of a WTetched life rushing back thro' the v's ?
Vein (verb) all the gold That v's the world
Velvet (adj.) added fulness to the phrase Of
' Gaimtlet in the v glove.'
Velvet (s) dusted v's have much need of thee :
Black V of the costliest —
Veneer'd V with sanctimonious theory.
Venerable ' Thanks, v friend,' replied Geraint ;
Among the Roses, the more v.
Venerator not a scomer of your sex But v,
Vengeance ' Is this thy v, holy Venus,
J. Oldcastle 123
Despair 68
Princess iv 543
To Mara, of Dufferin 12
To J. M. K. 4
Aylmer's Field 804
Princess, Pro. 117
Marr. of Geraint 303
Sisters (E. and E.) 76
Princess iv 423
Lucretius 67
What hinders me To take such bloody v on you both ? — Princess iv 534
when he told us ' F is mine !
Venial Or seeming-genial v fault,
Venice then I pass'd Home, and thro' F,
Venom Not one to flirt a i; at her eyes,
Venom'd See Faintly-venoih'd
Venomous You should have seen him wince As from
a V thing :
Strike dead the whole weak race of v worms,
Venture my poor v but a fleet of glass
would V to give him the nay ?
Ventured Alone at home, nor v out alone.
And boldly v on the liberties.
or half the world Had v—
Venturous Maud with her v climbings
Venus ' Is this thy vengeance, holy V,
And o'er his head Uranian F hung,
And silver-smiling F ere she fell
V near her ! smiling downward
Hesper — F — were we native to that splendour
Veragua thunders in the black V nights,
Vwbiage This barren v, current among men,
Vere de Vere (See also Clara Vere de Vere) repose
Which stamps the caste oi V d V.
Verge Float by you on the v of night.
That lent broad v to distant lands,
hull Look'd one black dot against the v of dawn,
May from v to v, And May with me from head to
heel.
That sinks with all we love below the v ;
Blot out the slope of sea from v to shore,
And on the low dark v of life
hull Look'd one black dot against the v of dawn,
Each way from t> to v a Holy Land,
dipping his head low beneath the v.
Verged kinds of thought. That v upon them,
Veriest The v beauties of the work appear
Sworn to be V \ce\ol pureness.
Vermeil-white near her, like a blossom v-vc.
Vermin (adj.) and the v voices here May buzz so
loud^
Vermin (s) (See also Varmint)
a nut
curse me the British v, the rat ;
and then like v here Drown him,
I will track this v to their earths :
from the v that he sees Before him,
show'd him, like a » in its hole.
Vernal till all Our v bloom from every vale
Broaden the glowing isles of v blue.
Versatility The grace and v of the man !
Verse How may fuU-sail'd v express,
inva<ie Even with a v your holy woe.
another which you had, I mean of v
V. of Maeldune 120
Will 13
The Ring 192
Merlin and V . 609
Walk, to the Mail 72
Maud II i 46
Sea Dreams 138
The Wreck 17
Enoch Arden 517
Princess i 205
Gareth and L. 65
Maud I i 69
Lucretius 67
Princess i 243
Lover's Tale i 61
Locksley H., Sixty 183
187
Columbus 146
Princess ii 54
L. C. V. de Vere 40
Margaret 31
Palace of Art 30
M. d' Arthur 271
Gardener's D. 80
Princess iv 47
„ vii 38
In Mem. 1 15
Pass, of Arthur 439
Lover's Tale i 337
509
Gardener's D. 71
Sisters (E. and E.) 105
Sir J. Oldcastle 108
Marr. of Geraint 364
Lancelot and -E. 138
As fancies like the v in
Princess vi 263
Maud II V 58
Gareth and L. 822
Marr. of Geraint 217
Pelleas and E. 285
Last Tournament 165
To Mary Bmjle 9
Pi-og. of Spring 60
Lancelot and E. 472
Eleanore 44
To J. S. 8
The Epic 26
Verse (continued) gave the v ' Behold, Your house is
left unto you desolate ! '
great Sicilian called Calliope to grace his golden v
In V that brings myself relief.
Take one v more — the lady speaks
the name at the head of my v is thine.
read me a Bible v of the Lord's good will
sought the tribute ot av from me,
in his hand A scroll of v —
patriot-soldier take His meed of fame in v ;
Versed In many a subtle question v,
Version which I know no v done In English
Vert Flame-colour, v and azure, in three rays,
Vertical See Vartical
Verulam (Lord, Francis Bacon) Plato the wise, and large
brow'd V,
But Homer, Plato, F ;
Verulam (Roman Ciolony) London, F, C^muloditne.
Very The v graves appear'd to smile,
And some that men were in the v walls,
The V source and fount of Day
But brake his v heart in pining for it,
1
Aylmer's Field 628
Lucretius 94
In Mem. Ixxv 2
Merlin and V. 445
To A. Tennyson 6
Rizpah 61
To Dante 5
Ancient Sage 6
Epilogue 33
In Mem. xcvi 6
To E. Fitzgerald 33
Com. of Arthur 275
Palace of Art 163
Princess ii 160
Boddicea 86
The Letters 45
Princess iv 485
In Mem. xxiv 3
Gareth and L. 57
I fear'd The v foim tains of her life were chill'd ; Sisters (E. and E.) 266
when Even descended, the v sunset aflame ; F. of Maeldune 66
This V ring lo t'amo ? The Ring 133
Vesper From prime to v's will I chant Pelleas and E. 349
Vessel On the coals I lay, A v full of sin : St. S. Stylites 170
There lies the port ; the v puffs her sail : Ulysses 44
The silver v's sparkle clean, Sir Galahad 34
to make the name Of his v great in story. The Captain 19
Reporting of his v China-bound, Enoch Arden 122
Waving, the moment and the v past. „ 244
The V scarce sea-worthy ; „ 656
And o'er his head the Holy F hung (repeat) Holy Grail 512, 520
And to the Holy F of the Grail.' „ 840
one A v in mid-ocean, her heaved prow Clambering, Lover's Tale ii 169
when all at once That painted v, „ 191
Tho' his V was all but a wreck ; The Revenge 64
Fleeted his v to sea with the king in it, Batt. of Brunanburh 60
crest of the tides Plunged on the v The Wreck 90
Launch your v. And crowd your canvas. Merlin and the G. 126
Vestal tended by Pure v thoughts in the translucent fane Isabel 4
love-whispers may not breathe Within this v limit, Princess ii 222
in the F entry shriek'd The virgin marble
The flower of all their v knighthood,
Vested See Woman-vested
Vestibule v's To caves and shows of Death :
Veteran Me the sport of ribald V's,
Vex F not thou the poet's mind (repeat)
Will V thee lying underground ?
' The end and the beginning v His reason :
to V me with his father's eyes !
And an eye shall v thee,
I will not V my bosom :
want of pence. Which v'es public men,
V the unhappy dust thou wouldst not save.
And it would v him even in his grave,
For my dead face would v her after-life.
Ere you were bom tovvs?
ill counsel had misled the girl To v true hearts :
As daily v'es household peace,
I V my heart with fancies dim :
Let this not ■;; thee, noble heart !
An old song v'es my ear ;
boys Who love to v him eating,
F not yourself : ye will not see me more.'
began To v and plague her.
I seem To v an ear too sad to listen to me,
And V them with my darkness ?
A madman to v you with wretched words.
To V the noon with fiery gems,
Vexed-Vext Vex'd with a morbid devil in his blood
The fanner vext packs up his beds and chairs.
Draw down into his vexed pools
The vexed eddies of its wayward brother :
„ m350
Balin and Balan 508
Lover's Tale ii 125
Boddicea 50
Poet's Mind 1, 3
Two Voices 111
298
CEnone 255
Locksley Hall 85
Amphion 102
Will Water. 44
Come not, when, etc. 4
Enoch Arden 303
891
Princess vi 248
„ vii 24t'2i
In Mem. xxix 2
„ xlii 1
„ Ixxix 2
Maud II ii 47
Geraint and E. 561
Pelleas and E. 304
Guinevere 68
„ 315
Lover's Tale i 732
Despair 108
Ancient Sage 265
Walk, to the Mail 19
39
Supp. Confessions 133
Isabel 33
Vexed-Vext
763
Vile
Vexed-Vext (continued) ' Go, vexed Spirit, sleep in trust ;
scudding drifts the rainy Hyades Vext the dim sea :
Two Voices 115
Ulysses 11
if he come again, vext will he be To find Enoch Arden 301
And James departed vext with him and her.' The Brook 110
Vext with unworthy madness, and deform'd. Aylmer's Field 335
Then their eyes vext her ; ,, 802
they vext the souls of deans ; Princess, Fro. 162
I stood With Florian, cursing Cj'ril, vext at heart, „ iv 171
What time have I to be vext ? Grandmother 104
Fool that I am to be vext with his pride ! Maud I xiii 5
Vext with lawyers and harass'd with debt : ,, xix 22
But he vext her and peiplext her ., xx 6
Vext with waste dreams ? Com. of Arthur 85
bitterness and grief That vext his mother, „ 211
And vext his day, but blesses him asleep — Gareth and L. 1286
A little vext at losing of the hunt, Marr. of Geraint 234
' No, no,' said Enid, vext, ' I will not eat Geraint and E. 656
Vext at a rtunour issued from herself Merlin and V. 153
Then Lancelot vext at having lied in vain : Lancelot and E. 102
He seem'd so sullen, vext he could not go : „ 210
Glad that no phantom vext me more. Holy Grail 538
vext his heart. And marr'd his rest — Pelleas and E. 398
carcanet Vext her with plaintive memories of
the child :
I should evermore be vext with thee
Vext me a bit, till he told me
to have vext myself And all in vain for her —
Never since I was nurse, had I been so grieved
and so vext ! In the Child. Hosp. 45
Vext, that you thought my Mother came to me ? The Ring 140
A demon vext me, The light retreated, Merlin and the G. 29
Veadllary In letters like to those the v Gareth and L. 1202
Vodog O Mary, Mary ! V you with words ! Romney's R. 29
Vext See Vexed
Vial A man with knobs and wires and v's
Viand Lay out the v's.'
before us glow'd Fruit, blossom, v, amber wine,
many a v left. And many a costly cate.
Nor roll thy v's on a luscious tongue.
Vibrate chord which Hampden smote Will v to
the doom.
Star to star v's light :
In the Queen's shadow, v on the walls.
Vicar Rome's V in our Indies ?
Vice Or crush her, like a v of blood,
heart of the poet is whirl'd into folly and v.
And doubling all his master's v of pride,
stirr'd this v in you which ruin'd man
I call it,— well, I will not call it v :
They fain would make you Master of all v.'
bagpipes, revelling, devil's-dances, v.
But pity — the Pagan held it a v —
the tyrant vassal of a tyrant v !
Rip your brothers' v's open.
Viceregal Your v days Have added fulness
Vicious Who being v, old and irritable.
His dwarf, a v under-shapen thing,
Both grace and will to pick the v quitch
a shatter'd wheel ? a.v boy
Vicisti Galileee often mutter low ' V G' ; louder again.
Spuming a shatter'd fragment of the God, ' V G \ ' St. Telemachus 15
Victim (See also Fellow-victim) death quiver'd at the
v's throat ; /J- of F. Women 115
snake-like slimed his v ere he gorged ; Sea Bream^s 193
And dress the v to the offering up. Princess iv 130
He seem'd a v due to the priest. The Victim 36
Priest was happy. His v won : „ 62
The rites prepared, the v bared, „ 65
Till the V hear within and yearn Boddicea 58
One took him for a i; of Earl Doorm, Geraint and E. 524
If not, the v's flowers before he fall.' Lancelot and E. 910
lurks, listens, fears his v may have fled — The Flight 71
A virgin v to his memory. The Ring 221
O you that can flatter your v's, Charity 29
Victor (adj.) Than that the v Hours should scorn In Mem. i 13
Last Tournament 29
Guinevere 505
First Quarrel 36
Sisters (E. and E.) 200
Princess, Pro. 65
Hi 347
w35
Gareth and L. 848
Ancient Sage 267
England and A Tner. 20
Aylmer's Field 578
Lancelot and E. 1175
Columbus 195
In Mem. Hi 15
Maud I iv 39
Marr. of Geraint 195
Merlin and V. 362
368
469
Sir J. Oldcastle 149
Despair 41
The Flight 25
Locksley H., Sixty 141
To Marq. of Dufferin 10
Marr. of Geraint 194
412
Geraint and E. 903
Locksley H., Sixty 215
Victor (s) (See also World-victor) Whichever side be V,
in the halloo Princess ii 231
The bearded V of ten-thousand hymns, „ Hi 352
We vanquish'd, you the V of your will. „ vi 167
great World-victor's v will be seen no more. Ode on Well. 42
And V he must ever be. „ 258
And fawn at a v's feet. Maud I viSO
nor make myself in my own realm V and lord. Com. of Arthur 90
V his men Report him ! „ 24&
' Nay, not a point : nor art thou v here. Gareth and L. 1055
And V of the bridges and the ford, „ 1232
V from vanquish'd issues at the last, „ 1262
Who doubts thee v? „ 1296
' Hark the v pealing there ! ' „ 1318
I watch'd thee v in the joust, „ 135&
On whom the v, to confoimd them more, Geraint and E. 169
And V at the tilt and tournament, „ 960
Arthur's host Proclaim'd him V, Balin and Balan 90
bore the prize and could not find The v, Lancelot and E. 630
and in the strength of this Come v. Holy Grail 481
Far less to bind, your v, and thrust him out, Pelleas and E. 293
for when our King Was v wellnigh day by day. Last Tournament 335
beheld That v of the Pagan throned in hall — ,, 665
V in Drama, V in Romance, To Victor Hugo 1
iron-hearted v's they. Locksley H., Sixty 80
But they rode like V's and Lords Heavy Brigade 48
the Light is V, and the darkness Dawns On Jiib. Q. Victoria 70
Victoria V, — since your Royal grace To the Queen 5
Victory Not Arac, satiate with his v. Princess vii 90
Bellowing v, bellowing doom : Ode on Well. 66
down their statue of V fell. Boadicea 30
and there cometh a v now. „ 46
with pure Affection, and the light of v, Gareth and L. 331
Whether ye wish me v or defeat, Geraint and E. 80
in steepness overcome. And victories of ascent. Lover's Tale i 387
Swallowing its precedent in v. „ 763
trumpets of v, groans of defeat ; Vastness 8
Victual in his hand Bare v for the mowers : Geraint and E. 202
Geraint Ate all the mowers' v unawares, „ 215
fetch Fresh v for these mowers of our Earl ; „ 225
and return With v for these men, „ 240
Vied Sappho and others v with any man : Princess ii 164
Vienna That in V's fatal walls In Mem. Ixxxv 19
I have not seen, I will not see V ; „ xcviii 12
View (See also Half-views) full in v, Death, walking
all alone Love and Death 4
whose brilliant hue Is so sparkling-fresh to v, Rosalind 40
When thus he met his mother's v, L. C. V. de Vere 34
Half -invisible to the v, Vision of Sin 36
here were telescopes For azure v's ; Princess, Pro. 68
Her early Heaven, her happy v's ; In Mem. xxxiii 6
But somewhere, out of hiunan v, * „ Ixosv 18
Yea, tho' it spake and bared to v „ xcii 9
to reprove her For stealing out of v Maud I xx 9
lands in your v From this bay window — Sisters (E. and E.) 51
loved the v Long-known and loved by me. Pro. to Gen. Hamley 5
She held them up to the v ; Dead Prophet 72
but the goodly v Was now one blank. Death of (Enone 3
View'd suffering v had been Extremest pain ; Lover's Tale ii 129
Viewless The v arrows of his thoughts were headed The Poet 11
Vignette In bright v's, and each complete, The Daisy 45
Vigorous with the growtlis Of v early days. Lover's Tale i 133
Vigorously So v yet mildly, that all hearts Geraint and E. 957
Vigour So that my v, wedded to thy blood, (Enone 161
The faith, the v, bold to dwell In Mem. xcv 29
Yourself shall see my v is not lost.' Geraint and E. 82
Vile And yonder a v physician, Maud II v 36
A little at the v occasion, rode, Marr. of Geraint 235
' This is more v,' he made reply, Two Voices 103
v it were For some three suns to store Ulysses 28
Hired animalisms, v as those that made Lucretius 53
A red-faced bride who knew herself so v, Gareth and L. 110
for men sought to prove me v. Merlin and V. 495
How justly, after that v term of yours, „ 921
climb'd The moulder'd stairs (for everything was v) Lover's Tale iv 137
VUe
764
Viper
Vile (continued) V, so near the ghost Himself, The Ring 230
Vileness mean V, we are grown so proud — Aylmer's Field 756
No inner v that we dread ? In Mem. li 4
Sinn'd thro' an animal v. The Wreck 42
Viler I am a sinner v than you all. St. S. Stylites 135
or the V devil who plays his part, Balin and Bcdan 300
of a kind The v, as underhand, Mavd / i 28
Vilest The v herb that runs to seed Amphion 95
Village (adj.) Looks down upon the v spire : Miller's D. 36
I saw the v lights below ; „ 108
Why come you drest like a v maid. Lady Clare 67
' If I come drest like a v maid, „ 69
At the head of the v street, Maud I vi 10
She came to the v church, „ viii 1
For only once, in the v street, „ xiii 26
maid That ever bided tryst at v stile. Merlin and V. 378
came the v girls And linger'd talking, Pelleas and E. 508
' A hic^orant v wife as 'ud hev to be larn'd Village Wife 106
and pigmy spites of the v spire ; Fastness 25
And darkness in the v yew. Two Voices 273
And a v maiden she. L. of Burleigh 8
Leads her to the v altar, „ 11
as the V girl Who sets her pitcher underneath Enoch Arden 206
Bom of a i) girl, carpenter's son, Aylmer's Field 668
And on a simple v green ; In Mem. Ixiv 4
Thou hear'st the v hammer clink, ,. cxxi 15
By V eyes as yet unborn ; „ Con. 59
Seems to be pluck'd at by the v boys Geraint and E. 560
as the V wife who cries ' 1 shudder, Guinevere 56
having climb'd one step beyond Our v miseries, Ancient Sage 207
Village (s) {See also Sea-village) Two children in two
neighbour v's Circumstance 1
Where almost all the v had one name ; Aylmer's Field 35
The little v looks forlorn ; In Mem. Ix 9
Maud the delight of the v, Maud I i 70
Below me, there, is the v, „ iv 7
For one from out his v lately climb'd Balin and Balan 167
tho' he tried the v's round. First Quarrel 43
Village-churls And there the surly v-c, L. of ShaJott ii 16
Villager slavish hat from the v's head ? Mavd 1x4
Vill^ (adj.) Low down thro' v kitchen-vassalage, Gareth and L. 160
Villain (s) One says, we are v's all. Maud I ill
How the V lifted up liis voice, Gareth and L. 716
a V fitter to stick swine Than ride abroad „ 865
' There lurk three v's yonder in the wood, Geraint and E. 142
Villainous the v centre-bits Grind on the wakeful ear Maud / i 41
Villainously foully slain And v ! Balin and Balan 136
Villainy V somewhere ! whose ? One says, Maud I ill
And I will tell him all tlieir v. Geraint and E. 132
My violence, and my v, come to shame.' Balin and Balan 492
beneath the shadow of those towers A v, three
to one : Pelleas and E. 277
So Gawain, looking at the v done. Forbore, „ 282
lust, V, violence, avarice, of your Spain Columbus 172
Vine (See also Briony-vine) comest not with shows
of flaunting v's Ode to Memory 48
And silent in its dusty v's : Mariana in the S. 4
leaning on a fragment twined with v, (Enone 20
And overhead the wandering ivy and v, „ 99
From cave to cave thro' the thick- twined v — Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 95
valleys of grape-loaded v's that glow D. of F. Women 219
And cliinmeys muffled in the lejify v. Audley Court 19
Old elms came breaking from the v, Amphion 45
The V stream'd out to follow, „ 46
from a bower of v and honeysuckle : Aylmer's Field 156
and so by tilth and grange. And v's, Princess i 111
The summer of the v in all his veins — ,, 183
we two Were always friends, none closer, elm and v : ., ii 337
At last I hook'd my ankle in a v, „ iv 268
Or foxlike in the v ; ,, vii 203
Beating from the wasted v's Ode on Well. 109
Of olive, aloe, and maize and v. The Daisy 4
Mixt with mvrtle and clad with v. The Islet 19
V, V, and eglantine, (repeat) Window, At the Window 1, 8
and go By summer belts of wheat and v In Mem. xcviii 4
Vine (coiitinued) Queen Brake from the vast oriel-
embowering V Lancelot and E. 1198
berries that flamed upon biiae and v, V. of Maeldune 61
v's with grapas Of Eshcol hugeness ; To E. Fitzgerald 27
they tell me, now in flowing v's — Tiresias 144
send my life thro' olive-yard and v And golden
grain, Demeter and P. 110
spinning at your wheel beside the v — Romney's R. 5
serpent v's Which on the touch of heavenly feet Death of (Enone 4
Vine-bunches Between the shadows of the v-h (Enone 181
Vine-clad an oriel on the summer side, V-c, Lancelot and E. 1178
Vineyard Peace in her v — ^yes ! — Maud / i 36
torrent v streaming fell To meet the sun The Daisy 10
tilth and v, hive and horse and herd ; To Virgil 10
Vinous And softly, thro' a v mist. Will Water. 39
Vintage Whether the v, yet unkept, „ 97
praised the waning red, and told The v — Aylmer's Field 407
Whom they with meats and v of their best Lancelot and E. 266
with her spice and her v, her silk and her corn ; Vastness 13
Violate behold our sanctuary Is v, our laws broken : Princess vi 60
And that she now perforce must v it, Geraint and E. 367
Which flesh and blood perforce would v : Last Tournament 689
v's virgin Truth for a coin or a cheque. The Dawn 15
Violated So was their sanctuary v. Princess vii 16
Violatinyg Not v the bond of like to like.' Lancelot and E. 241
Violator mine of ruffian v's ! Boadicea 50
Violence Moved with v, changed in hue, Vision of Sin 34
and shriek'd ' Thus, thus with v. Sea Dreams 25
' Thus with V Shall Babylon be cast into the sea ; „ 27
Uther, reft From my dead lord a field with v : Gareth and L. 335
Was nigh to burst with v of the beat, „ 763
And snatch me from him as by v ; Geraint and E. 357
And bare her by main v to the board, „ 654
Edyrn wrought upon himself After a life of v, „ 913
For I that did that v to thy thrall, Balin and Balan 61
forget My heats and v's ? „ 190
So this will help him of his v's ! ' „ 205
Moaning ' My v's, my v's ! ' ,, 435
My V, and my villainy, come to shame.' „ 492
power To lay the sudden heads of v flat. Holy Grail 310
with v The sword was dash'd from out my hand, „ 825
From flat confasion and brute v's. Last Tournament 124
small V done Rankled in him and ruffled Guinevere 48
Villainy, v, avarice, of your Spain Columbus 172
truthless v mourn'd by the Wise, Vastness 5
Violent I hear the v threats you do not hear, Geraint and E. 420
Rang by the white mouth of the v Glem ; Lancelot and E. 288
Violet (adj.) and sunn'd Her v eyes, Gardener's D. 137
For large her v eyes look'd, Pelleas and E. 71
Violet (Christian Name) V, she that sang the mournful
song. Princess vi 318
Violet (flower, colour) With what voice the v woos Adeline 31
V , amaracus, and asphodel. Lotos and lilies : (Enone 97
from the v's her light foot Shone rosy-white, „ 179
To die before the snowdrop came, and now the v's
here. May Queen, Con. 4
O sweet is the new v, that comes beneath the skies, „ 5
The smell of v's, hidden in the green, D. of F. Women 77
The V oi A legend blow Among the chops Will Water. 147
In mosses mixt with v Her cream-white mule Sir L. and Q. G. 30
Pity, the v on the tyrant's grave. Aylmer's Field 845
The V varies from the lily as far As oak from elm : Princess r 182
Crocus, anemone, v. To F. D. Maurice 44
The V of his native land. In Mem. xviii 4
A wither'd v is her bliss : „ xcvii 26
The V comes, but we are gone. „ cv 8
By ashen roots the v's blow. „ cxv 4
and my regret Becomes an April v, „ 19
jewel-print of your feet In v's blue as your eyes, Maud I xxii 42
with earliest v's And lavish carol Lover's Tale i 282
And, tho' thy v sicken into sere. Prog, of Spring 25
Violet-hcwded Epic lilt«d out By v-h Doctors, Princess ii 376
Violin twangling v Struck up with Soldier-laddie, „ Pro. 85
All night have the roses heard The flute, v, ba.ssoon ; Maud I xxii 14
Viper fling it like a v off, and shriek Princess vii 94
Viper
765
Vivien
(continued) Jenny, the v, made me a mocking
curtsej' Grandmother 46
and stood Stiff as a -y frozen ; Merlin and V. 845
Virgil Roman V, thou that singest To Virgil 1
Old V who would write ten lines, Poets and their B. 2
Virgilian The rich V rustic measure The Daisy 75
Virgin (adj.) solitary morning smote The streaks of v snow. (En-one 56
To Christ, the V Mother, and the saints ; St. S. Slylites 112
V Mother standing with her child High up Sea Dreams 242
The V marble under iron heels : Princess vi 351
That marry with the v heart. In Memi Ixxxv 108
It more beseems the perfect v knight Merlin and V. 22
Pure on the v forehead of the dawn ! ' Pelleas and E. 505
from her v breast, and v eyes Remaining fixt on mine, Tiresias 46
V soul Inform'd the pillar'd Parthenon, Freedom 2
A V victim to his memory. The Ring 221
Or easily violates v Truth for a coin The Dawn 15
Virgin (s) To holy v^s in their ecstasies, Holy Grail 867
For I was ever v save for thee, Guinevere 557
in front of which Six stately v's, all in white, Lover's Tale ii 77
Save those six v's which upheld the bier, „ 84
Who sits beside the blessed V now, Columbus 232
Virtue He spake of v : not the gods More purely, A Character 13
And V, like a household god Promising empire ; On a Mourner 30
Like V firm, like Knowledge fair. The Voyage 68
V ! — to be good and just — Vision of Sin 111
Glory to V, to fight, to struggle. Wages 3
if the wages of V be dust, „ 6
because he bare The use of v out of earth : In Mem. Ixxxii 10
Your words have v such as draws „ Ixxxv 13
from my hold on these Streams v — fire — Gareth and L. 1310
I savour of thy — v's ? fear them ? no. Merlin and V. 39
The highest v, mother of them all ; Holy Grail 446
V must shape itself in deed, Tiresias 86
in thy v lies The saving of our Thebes ; „ 109
whether crown'd for a v, or hang'd for a crime ? Despair 76
All his v's — I forgive them — Locksley H., Sixty 44
Virtuous A v gentlewoman deeply wrong'd, Merlin and V. 911
Visage His v all agrin as at a wake, Princess v 521
his V ribb'd From ear to ear with dogwhip-weals, Last Tournament 57
Visaged dark v, stately and tall — The Wreck 15
Visible (adj.) Lord over Nature, Lord of the v earth. Palace of Art 179
(A V link unto the home of my heart). Lover's Tale i 431
Visible (s) Shaped by the audible and v, Moulded the
audible and v ; „ ii 104
Vision With dazed v unawares Arabian Nights 111
And there a v caught my eye ; Miller's D. 76
She moves among my v's of the lake, Edwin Morris 144
As on this v of the golden year.' Golden Year 58
Saw the V of the world, (repeat) Locksley Hall 16, 120
And see the v that I saw, Day -Dm., Pro. 14
Ah, blessed v ! blood of God ! Sir Galahad 45
one fair V ever fled Down the waste waters The Voyage 57
I HAD a V when the night was late : Vision of Sin 1
V's of a perfect State : „ 148
Enoch seem'd to them Uncertain as a «; or a dream, Enoch Arden 356
Like v's in the Northern dreamer's heavens, Aylmer's Field 161
I slept again, and pieced The broken v ; Sea Dreams 110
seizure came Upon me, the weird v of our house : Princess Hi 184
0 Soul, the V of Him who reigns ? Is not the
F He ? High. Pantheism 2
But if we could see and hear, this V — „ 18
If any v should reveal Thy likeness, In Mem. xcii 1
1 dream'd a v of the dead, „ ciii 3
there is no such city anywhere. But all a v.' Gareth and L. 207
whether there be any city at all. Or all a i? : „ 250
Who passes thro' the v of the night — Lancelot and E. 1406
But the sweet v of the Holy Grail Holy Grail 31
so perchance the v may be seen By thee and those, ,, 127
My sister's v, fill'd me with amaze ; „ 140
among bright faces, ours. Full of the v, prest : „ 267
My sister's v, and the rest, „ 272
As thou art is the v, not for these. „ 294
for a strength Was in us from the v, „ 334
For thou shalt .see the v when I go.' „ 484
Vision (continued) and the v had not come ; Holy Grail 572
If God would send the v, well : if not, .. 658
but now— the Quest, This v — .. 734
And out of those to whom the v came .. 895
And one hath had the v face to face, .. 900
Let v's of the night or of the day Come, .. 910
This air that smites his forehead is not air But v — .. 915
And knows himself no v to himself, Nor the high God a v, ,, 917
A V hovering on a sea of fire, Pelleas and E. 52
nor would he tell His v ; Guinevere 306
And some had v's out of golden youth. Pass, of Arthur 102
The memory's v hath a keener edge. Lover's Tale i 36
led on with light In trances and in v's : .. 78
darkness of the grave and utter night, Did swallow
up my V ;
And in my v bidding me dream on,
Oftentimes The v had fair prelude.
As a i) Unto a haggard prisoner,
and all The v of the bier.
There, there, my latest t;— then the event !
I deem As of the v's that he told —
Past thro' his v's to the burial ;
Is our misshaping v of the Powers
V's of youth — -for my brain was drunk
Strike on the Mount of V !
with all the v's of my youth ?
0 follower of the V,
And the V that led me of old.
Visionary Wreck 'd on a reef of v gold.'
Visit (s) Or later, pay one v here,
1 go On that long-promised v to the North.
Visit (verb) oh, haste, V my low desire !
Does the king know you deign to v him
Visitant Edith ever v with him.
Visitation And hourly v of the blood.
Visited Father's fault V on the children !
Visiting there From college, v the son, —
Visual No V shade of some one lost.
Vital Call'd all her v spirits into each ear
So much the v spirits sink
Vitriol v madness flushes up in the ruffian's head,
Vivat Rex Death is king, and V R !
Vivian (Sir Walter) See Walter, Walter Vivian
Vivian-place we were seven at V-f.
But miss'd the mignonette of V-f,
we climb'd The slope to F-p,
Vivid Distinct with v stars inlaid.
And now those v hours are gone,
but less V hue Than of that islet
And V smiles, and faintly-venom'd points
Some sudden v pleasure hit him there.
Vivien V, with her Squire.
But follow V thro the fiery flood !
Drew the vague glance of V, and her Squire ;
And, F, tho' ye beat me like your dog.
At Merlin's feet the wily F lay.
for F sweetly said (She sat beside the banquet nearest
Mark),
and F following him, Turn'd to her :
O F, save ye fear The monkish manliood.
And F answer'd, smiling scornfully.
But F, into Camelot stealing.
She past ; and F murmur'd after ' Go !
But F half -forgotten of the Queen
so F in the lowest. Arriving at a time of golden rest.
The wily F stole from Arthur's court.
F, being greeted fair, Would fain have wrought
That F should attempt the blameless King.
And F follow'd, but he mark'd her not.
And F ever sought to work the chann
And lissome F, holding by his heel,
F answer'd quick, ' I saw the little elf-god
So F call'd herself. But rather seem'd
tricks and fooleries, O F, the preamble ?
And F answer'd smiling saucily, (repeat)
599
ii 119
124
147
Hi 11
59
iv 23
357
Sisters (E^ and E.) 230
Despair 65
Ancient Sage 285
Locksley H., Sixty 162
Freedom 13
The Dreamer 5
Sea Dreams 139
To F. D. Maurice 45
Sisters (E. and E.) 188
Ode to Memory 4
Columbus 4
Aylmer's Field 166
Lover's Tale i 206
The Ring 176
Princess, Pro. 7
In Mem. xciii 5
Aylmer's Field 201
In Mem. xx 18
Maud I i37
Vision of Sin 179
Princess, Pro. 9
165
Con. 40
Arabian Nights 90
Miller's D. 195
Aylmer's Field 64
Merlin and V. 172
Lover's Tale iv 178
Balin and Balan 439
454
464
582
Merlin aiid V. 5
17
32
34
37
63
98
137
141
149
155
164
199
215
238
248
261
266
268, 651
Vivien
766
Voice
Vivien {continued) did you know That V bathed your
feet before her own ?
And V answer'd smiling mournfully : (repeat)
Take V for expoimder ;
Too curious V, tho' you talk of trust,
And V, like the tenderest-hearted maid
But, V, when you sang me that sweet rhyme,
V, For you, methinks you think you love me well ;
And V answer'd smiling as in wrath :
And being found take heed of V.
' Thou read the book, my pretty V !
And V, frowning in true anger, said :
And V answer'd frowning wrathfully :
' 0 ay,' said V, ' overtrue a tale.
' 0 ay,' said V, ' that were likely too.
And V answer'd frowning yet in wrath :
But V, deeming Merlin overborne By instance,
But V, gathering somewhat of his mood.
Poor V had not done to win his trust
But V, fearing heaven had heard her oath,
lissome V, of her court The wiliest and the worst ;
V, lurking, heard. She told Sir Modred.
Vizier V's nodding together In some Arabian night ?
Vizor and the knight Had v up.
But Gawain lifting up his v said,
and when thou passest any wood Close v.
Vizoring and v up a red And cipher face
Voat (vote) An' I'd v fur 'im, my oan sen,
Voated (voted) a knaws I hallus v wi' Squoire
Vocabulary diminutives Scatter'd all over the v
in the rich v of Love ' Most dearest '
Vocal brook V, with here and there a silence.
Is V in its wooded walls ;
While yet beside its v springs
Alphabet-of-heaven-in-man Made
Voice (See also Organ-voice, Sea-voice) v of the bird
Merlin and V. 284
311, 438
319
358
377
434
482
526
529
667
691
704
720
746
768
800
842
863
940
Guinevere 28
Maud I vii 11
Marr. of Geraint 189
Pelleas and E. 370
Last Tournament 535
Gareth and L. 1038
Owd Rod 14
.V. Farmer, 0. S. 15
Aylmer's Field 540
Sisters (E. and E.) 291
Aylmer's Field 146
In Mem. xix 14
Ixiv 22
Akbar's Dream 137
Shall no more be heard,
Old v's call'd her from without.
That her v imtuneful grown.
And yet, tho' its v be so clear and full,
With an inner v the river ran.
But anon her awful jubilant v,
I would fill the sea-halls with a v of power ;
With what v the violet woos
I shall knoM' Thy v, and answer from below
A STILL small v spake unto me.
Then to the still small v I said ;
To which the v did urge reply ;
Thereto the silent v replied ;
Again the v spake unto me :
' Yet,' said the secret v, ' some time,
' Yea ! ' said the v, ' thy dream was good,
' O dull, one-sided v,' said I,
' Consider well,' the v replied,
' If all be dark, vague v, I said,
the V with which I fenced A little ceased,
The still V laugh'd. ' I talk,' said he.
Then said the v, in quiet scorn,
The dull and bitter v was gone.
A second v was at mine ear,
' What is it thou knowest, sweet v? ' I cried. ' A
hidden hope,' the v replied : „ 440
To conmiune with that barren v, „ 461
by common v Elected umpire, (Enone 84
Then first I heard the v of her, „ 107
' No V,' she shriek'd in that lone hall, ' No v
breaks thro' the stillness of this world : Palace of Art 258
And sweeter is the young lamb's v to me May Queen, Con. 6
O blessings on his kindly v and on his silver hair ! „ 13
The V, that now is speaking, may be beyond the sun — „ 54
His V was thin, as v's from the grave ; Lotos- Eaters 34
my v was thick with sighs As in a dream. B. of F. Women 109
Sudden I heard a v that cried, ' Come here, „ 123
Her warbling v, a lyre of widest range „ 165
' Alas ! alas ! ' a low v, full of care, Murmur'd „ 249
All Things will Die 24
Mariana 68
The Owl a 6
Poet's Mind 34
Dying Swan 5
28
The Merman 10
Adeline 31
My life is ftdl, etc. 10
Two Voices 1
4
7
22
46
64
157
202
241
265
317
386
401
426
427
Voice {continued) and in her throat Her v seem'd distant. To J. S. 55
And murmurs of a deeper v. On a Mourner 16
But fragments of her mighty v Came rolling Of old sat Freedom 7
Or V, or else a motion of the mere. M. d' Arthur 77
as it were one v an agony Of lamentation, .. 200
let thy V Rise like a fountain for me night 248
And, further inland, v's echoed — ' Come .. Ep. 27
From the woods Came v's of the well-contented doves. Gardener's D. 89
such a V Call'd to me from the years to come, .. 179
The silver fragments of a broken v, ,, 234
Her V fled always thro' the summer land ; Edwin Morris 67
And lower v's saint me from above. St. S. Stylites 154
he plagiarised a heart, And answer'd with a v. Talking Oak 20
She sent her v thro' all the holt Before her, „ 123
thy low V, Faltering, would break its syllables. Love and Duty 38
the deep Moans round with many v's. Ulysses 56
for a tender v will cry. Locksley Hall 87
And whisper'd v's at his ear. Day-Dm., Arrival 24
I hear a v but none are there ; Sir Galahad 30
Wings flutter, v's hover clear : „ 78
The V grew faint : there came a further change : Vision of Sin 207
At last I heard a v upon the slope Cry „ 219
A deedf ul life, a silent v : You might have won 8
And the sound of a « that is still ! Break, break, etc. 12
Or means to pay the v who best could tell Enoch Arden 266
Their v's make me feel so solitary.' ,. 397
And sent his v beneath liim thro' the wood. „ 444
his V Shaking a little like a dnmkard's hand, „ 464
Nor ever hear a kindly v, „ 582
Crying with a loud v ' A sail ! a sail ! „ 913
but ever call'd away By one low v Aylmer's Field 60
but a -w Of comfort and an open hand of help, ' .. 173
Low was her v, but won mysterious way .. 695
Is there no prophet but the v that calls 741
I wish'd my v A rushing tempest of the wrath of God .. 756
But your rough v (You spoke so loud) Sea Dreams 280
bird Makes his heart v amid the blaze of flowers : Lucretius 101
women sang Between the rougher v's of the men. Princess, Pro. 245
and a V Went with it, ' Follow, follow, „ i 99
His name was Gama ; crack'd and small his v, „ 114
Hers are we,' One v, we cried ; „ 235
that full v which circles round the grave, „ ii 45
all her v Faltering and fluttering in her throat, „ 186
They stood, so rapt, we gazing, came a v, „ 318
' So sweet a v and vague, fatal to men, „ iv 64
for still my v Rang false : „ 120
then shall they That love their v's more than duty, „ 512
we saw the lights and heard The v's murmuring. „ 559
Thy v is heard thro' rolling drums, „ 577
We stumbled on a stationary v, ., v2
she moved, She moan'd, a folded v; „ 72
At which she lifted up her v and cried. „ 81
(And every v she talk d with ratify it, ,. 133
An awful v within had warn'd him thence : „ 338
Ida with a v, that like a bell Toll'd by an earthquake „ vi 331
Then the v Of Ida sounded, issuing ordinance : „ 372
Low v's with the ministering hand ,, vii 21
Sweeter thy v, but every sound is sweet ; ,. 219
And the v trembled and the hand. .. 227
Her V Choked, and her forehead sank upon her hands, „ 246
O V from which their omens all men drew, Ode on Well. 36
He knew their v's of old. .. 63
When he with those deep v's wrought, .. 67
With those deep v's our dead captain The tyrant, .. 69
thro' the centuries let a people's v In full acclaim, A
people's V, The proof and echo of all human fame,
A people's v, when they rejoice
A people's v ! we are a people yet.
We have a v, with which to pay the debt
His V is silent in your council-hall
But the one v in Europe : we mv^t speak ;
Uplift a thousand v's full and sweet.
Roll and rejoice, jubilant v.
The v's of our imiversal sea
Deepening thy v with the deepening of the night,
142
151
156
174
Third of Feb. 16
Ode Inter. Exhib. 1
W. to Alexandra 22
W. to Marie Alex. 16
V. of Cauteretz 2
Voice
767
Voice
Voice (continued) Thy living v to me was as the v of the ilea J, V. of Cauteretz 8
The V of the dead was a living v to me. „ 10
Paid with a v flying by to be lost on an endless sea — Wages 2
if He thunder by law the thvmder is yet His v. High. Pantheism 14
The V and the Peak (repeat) Voice and the P. 1, 37
All night have I heard the v „ 5
Voice {cmttinued) and the vermin v's here May buzz so
loud —
In
Hast thou no v, 0 Peak,
' I am the v of the Peak,
A thousand v's go To North, South, East, and West ;
The valley, the v, the peak, the star Pass,
A Spirit, not a breathmg v.
Four v's of four hamlets round.
Each V four changes on the wind.
Then echo-like our v's rang ;
Our v's took a higher range ;
Yet if some v that man could trust
And many an abler v than thou.
0 for thy v to soothe and bless !
The V was low, the look was bright ;
The V was not the v of grief.
Or V the richest-toned that sings.
So loud with v's of the birds.
Like strangers' v's here they sound,
A potent V of Parliament,
And that dear v, I once have known.
And v's hail it from the brink ;
1 heard a v ' believe no more '
A deeper v across the storm.
Thy D is on the rolling air ;
I prosper, circled with thy v ;
A V as unto him that hears,
A t) by the cedar tree In the meadow
A.nd wild v pealing up to the sunny sky.
Silence, beautiful v ! Be still,
Not her, not her, but a v.
And simper and set their v's lower.
Or the V of the long sea-wave as it swell'd
V in the rich dawn of an ampler day —
And find nor face nor bearing, limbs nor v,
before a i) As dreadful as the shout of one
lifted his v, and call'd A hoary man,
A hundred v's cried, ' Away with him !
heard among the holy hymns A c as of the waters,
gathering half the deep And full of v's,
while the phantom king Sent out at times a v ; and here
or there Stood one who pointed toward the v, . .. 437
past along the hymns A v as of the waters, .. 465
full V Swept bellowing thro' the darkness Gareth and L. 176
heard A v, the v of Arthur, ,. 318
' A boon. Sir King (his v was all ashamed), .. 442
How the villain lifted up his v, .. 716
nor rough face, or v, Brute bulk of limb, .. 1329
nor have I heard the v. .. 1336
And mufHed v's heard, and shadows past ; .. 1373
Not hearing any more his noble v, Marr. of Geraint 98
* The V of Enid, Yniol's daughter, rang „ 327
and as the sweet « of a bird, „ 329
So the sweet v of Enid moved Geraint ; .. 334
' Here, by God's grace, is the one v for me.' „ 344
the soldiers wont to hear His v in battle, Geraint and E. 175
and felt Her low firm v and tender government. „ 194
On a sudden, many a v along the street, ,, 270
the tender sound of his own v And sweet self-pity, „ 348
Cried out with a big v, ' What, is he dead ? ' „ 541
answer'd in low v, her meek head yet Drooping, „ 640
' The V of Enid,' said the knight ; ,. 780
It seems another v in other groves ; Balin and Balan 215
Mark The Cornish King, had heard a wandering v. Merlin and V. 8
With reverent eyes mock-loyal, shaken v, .. 157
O my Master, have ye found your v? ,. 269
So tender was her v, so fair her face, „ 401
And heard their v's talk behind the wall, „ 631
Then her false v made way, broken with sobs : „ 857
When its own v clings to each blade of grass. And
every v is nothing. Lancelot aiid E. 107
9
11
13
27
Mem. xiii 12
xxviii 5
9
XXX 13
21
XXXV 1
xxxvii 4
Ivi 26
Ixix 15
19
Ixxv 7
xcix 2
civ 9
cxiii 11
cxvi 11
cxxi 14
cxxiv 10
cxxvii 4
cxxx 1
15
cxxxi 6
Maud I V 1
13
19
28
a; 15
xw 3X
Bed. of Idylls 36
Com. of Arthur 71
116
144
231
291
381
-I knew
Won by the mellow v before she look'd.
And seeing me, with a great v he cried,
like a friend's v from a distant field
High with the last line scaled her v,
a courtesy Spake thro' the limbs and in the v
till I found a ii and sware a vow.
in a V Shrilling along the hall to Arthur,
but found at top No man, nor any v.
and he had Scarce any v to answer,
heard a v, ' Doubt not, go forward ;
V singing in the topmost tower To the eastward
He heard her v ; Then let the strong hand,
' I never heard his v But long'd to break away.
he heard The v that billow'd round the barriers
He ended : Arthur knew the v ;
about his feet A v clung sobbing till he question'd it
and the v about his feet Sent up an answer,
crying with full v ' Traitor, come out.
Lancelot and E. 138
243
309
999
1019
Holy Grail 23
194
288
428
434
823
834
Pelleas and E. 233
255
Last Tournament 167
455
759
760
Guinevere 105
419
531
607
672
then came silence, then a v, Monotonous and hollow
the warhorse neigh'd As at a friend's v,
there her v brake suddenly.
Meek maidens, from the v's crying ' shame.'
To where beyond these v's there is peace,
when the man was no more than a v Pass, of Arthur 3
Thine, Gawain, was the v — ,, 47
Moans of the dying, and v's of the dead. „ 117
The V of days of old and days to be. „ 135
' Hearest thou this great v that shakes the world, „ 139
Or V, or else a motion of the mere. „ 245
as it were one v, an agony Of lamentation, „ 368
let thy V Kise like a foimtain for me night and day. „ 416
as if some fair city were one v Aroimd a king „ 460
this, indeed, her v And meaning. To the Queen ii 19
The V of Britain, or a sinking land, „ 24
There rang her v, when the full city peal'd ., 26
Or Labour, with a groan and not a v, „ 55
loved The somid of one-another's v's Lover's Tale i 256
low converse sweet, In which our v's bore least part
At first her v was verj^ sweet and low,
for the sound Of that dear v so musically low,
for my v Was all of thee :
And v's in the distance calling to me
Willy's v in the wind, ' O mother, come out to me. '
for my Willy's v in the wind- —
A sweet v that — you scarce could better that.
Marvellously like, their v's — and themselves !
let me ask you then, Which v most takes you ?
says The common v, if one may trust it :
Harsh red hair, big v, big chest,
our cliildren would die But for the v of Love,
but his V and his face were not kind,
V of the dead whom we loved,
nor V Nor finger raised against him —
lifted hand and heart and v In praise to God
There came two v's from the Sepulchre,
I heard his v between The thunders
I heard his v, ' Be not cast down.
And I shall hear his v again —
His V again.
God's Own V to justify the dead —
Our v's were thinner and fainter
with hvunan v's and words ;
whenever their v's peal'd The steer fell do^Ti
his V was low as from other worlds.
Stormy v of France ?
For like the clear v when a trumpet shrills.
So rang the clear v of .ffiakidfis ;
Two v's heard on earth no more ;
I heard a v that said ' Henceforth be blind,
was mine the v to curb The madness of our cities
I knew not what, when I heard that v, —
Mother, the v was the v of the soul ;
a V rang out in the thunders of Ocean and Heaven
542
563
708
ii 14
118
Mizpah 2
„ 82
Sisters {E. and E.) 14
24
30
37
In the Child. Hosp. 4
12
15
Def. of Lucknow 11
Sir J. Oldcastle 44
Columbus 16
95
145
157
159
162
203
V. of Maeidune 22
28
29
117
To Victor Hugo 8
Achilles over the T. 19
21
To E. Fitzgerald 41
Tiresias 48
70
The Wreck 52
54
Voice
768
Voyage
The Wreck 92
104
Ancient Sage 34
177
262
Locksley H., Sixty 77
116
131
Voice (continued) In the rigging, ^)'s of hell —
I yeam'd For his v again,
May'st haply learn the Nameless hath a v.
The splendoure and the v's of the world !
Nor list for guerdon in the v of men,
' Forward ' rang the v's then,
hear the v's from the field.
You that woo the V's — tell them
Poor old V of eighty crying after v's that have fled !
All I loved are vanish'd v's,
Hears he now the V that wrong'd him ?
Too many a v may cry That man can have
Who wert the v of England in the East,
thy V, a music heard Thro' all the yells
Welcome, welcome, with one v !
Britain's myriad v's call.
We thank thee with our v, and. from the heart. To W. C. Macready 4
One full V of allegiance, • On Juh. Q. Victoria 22
" „ 63
251
269
Epilogue 72
Efit. on Stratford 4
To Duke of Argyll 7
Of en. I. and C. Exhib. 1
35
All your v's in unison,
from all the world the v's came ' We know not,
I heard one v from all the three ' We know not.
Thousands of v's dro^vning his own
all the sciences, poesy, varying v's of prayer ?
I hear your Mother's v in yours.
V's of the day Are heard across the V's of the dark.
is Muriel — your stepmother's v.
one silent v Came on the wind.
No V for either spoke within my heart
And then the tear fell, the v broke.
All the world will hear a v Scream
A hateful v be utter'd,
and roll my v from the simimit.
Shall the royal v be mute ?
she lifted up a v Of shrill command,
Not the Great V not the true Deep.
A V from old Iran ! Nay, but I know it —
vaguer v's of Polytheism Make but one music,
clatter of arms, and v's, and men passing
Blest be the v of the Teacher
their v's blend in choric Hallelujah
dream'd that a F of the Earth went wailingly
A V spake out of the skies
Silent V's of the dead.
Call me rather, silent v's.
Voiced See Clear-voiced, Low-voiced, Sweet-voiced
Voiceless creatures v thro' the fault of birth,
Void I am v, Dark, formless,
Kate saith ' the world is v of might.'
Not V of righteous self-applause,
Naked I go, and v of cheer :
The stalls are v, the doors are wide,
for it seem'd A v was made in Nature ;
Vanishing, atom and v, atom and v,
V was her use. And she as one that climbs
A V where heart on heart reposed ;
The captive v of noble rage,
Or cast as rubbish to the v,
V of the little living will
from within The city comes a murmur v of joy.
Volcano Cold upon the dead v sleeps the gleam
The smoke of war's v burst again
Volley v on v, and yell upon yell —
Volley'd V and thunder d ; (repeat)
Volleying And the v cannon thunder his loss ;
VoInbiUty all that heard her in her fierce v,
Yell'd and shriek'd between her daughters in her fierce v. „ 72
Voluble Miriam Lane Made such a v answer Enoch Arden 903
Volume I found it in a v, all of songs, Avdley Court 57
In this hand held a r as to read, Princess ii 455
held A « of the Poets of her land : „ vii 174
She moved, and at her feet the v fell. „ 254
Volnptaons Low v music winding trembled, Vision of Sin 17
which outredden All v garden-roses. Ode on Well. 208
To whom my false v pride, Guinevere 641
The sombre close of that v day, „ 688
Demeter and P. 66
84
Vastness 6
31
The Ming 28
39
139
153
162
367
Forlorn 27
Prog, of Spring 103
Parnassus 6
By an Evolution. 14
Death of CEnone 98
Akhar's Dream 59
89
150
Bandit's Death 24
Kafiolani 2
Making of Man 7
The Dreamer 3
Voice spake, etc. 1
Silent Voices 4
7
Geraint and E. 266
Supp. Confessions 121
Kate 17
Two Voices 146
239
Sir Galahad 31
Lucretius 37
258
Princess vii 34
In Mem. xiii 6
„ xxvii 2
liv 7
Maud II ii 14
Tiresias 101
Locksley H., Sixty 42
Prog, of Spring 97
Def. of Lucknow 34
Light Brigade 21, 42
Ode on Well. 62
Boddicea 4
Voluptuousness in his lust and v,
And leave the hot swamp oiv
Vote {See also Voat) A wretched v may be gain'd.
Voted See Voated
Vow (s) I listen'd to thy v's,
Kate snaps her fingers at my v's ;
0 would she give me v for v,
that died To save her father's v ;
v's, where there was never need of v's.
That oft hast heard my v's,
did she read the name I carved with many v's
Before you hear my marriage v.'
Kissing his v's upon it like a knight.
my V Binds me to speak, and O that iron will,
That breathe a thousand tender v's.
At one dear knee we proffer'd v's.
Of early faith and plighted v's ;
Bound them by so strait v's to his own self.
And glorying in their v's and him,
for the King Will bind thee by such v's,
Arms for her son, and loosed him from his v.
my knights are sworn to v's Of utter hardihood,
so my knighthood keep the v's they swore,
v's like theirs, that high in heaven
They bound to holy v's of chastity !
And swearing men to v's impossible.
Full many a holy v and pure resolve.
till I found a voice and sware a v.
1 sware a v before them all,
and Galahad sware the v. And good Sir Bors,
Did Arthur take the v ? '
' Had I been here, ye had not sworn the v.'
I sware a d to follow it till I saw.'
' Nay, lord, therefore have we sworn our v's.'
Go, since your v's are sacred, being made :
All men, to one so bound by such a v.
How far I falter'd from my quest and v ?
Had never kiss'd a kiss, or vow'd a v.
but one night my v Burnt me within,
Hope not to make thyself by idle v's.
Boadicea 66
Ancient Sage 277
Maud I vi 56
Supp. Confessions 71
Kate 19
MUler's D. 119
D. of F. Women 196
Gardener's D. 258
Talking Oak 98
„ 154
The Letters 8
Aylmer's Field 472
Princess ii 201
In Mtm. XX 2
„ Ixxix 13
„ xcvii 30
Com. of Arthur 262
458
Gareth and L. 270
530
552
602
Merlin and V. 14
695
Lancelot and E. 130
879
Holy Grail 194
195
199
204
276
282
285
314
565
568
584
607
871
if the King Had seen the sight he would have sworn the v : .. 904
for I have sworn my v's, Pelleas and E. 244
But when she mock'd his v's and the ^reat King, „ 252
0 noble v's ! O great and sane and simple race „ 479
' Have any of our Bound Table held their v's ? ' „ 533
By noble deeds at one with noble v's. Last Tournament 123
his one true knight — Sole follower of the v's ' — „ 303
With Arthur's v's on the great lake of fire. „ 345
My God, the power Was once in v's „ 649
thro' their v's The King prevailing made his realm : — ., 650
' V's ! did you keep the v you made to Mark ,, 655
The v that binds too strictly snaps itself — ., 657
The v's ! O ay — the wholesome madness of an hour — ., 674
but then their v's — First mainly thro' ,, 681
a doubtful lord To bind them by inviolable v's, „ 688
v's — I am woodman of the woods, .. 699
spitting at their v's and thee. Pass, of Arthur 62
My house are rather they who sware my v's, „ 157
strange dream to me To mind me of the secret v I made Columbus 92
and heard his passionate v. The Flight 83
swore the seeming-deathless «... Locksley H., Sixty 180
V's that will last to the last deathruckle, and v's that are
snapt in a moment of fire ; Vastness 26
1 swore the v, then with my latest kiss The Ring 298
I told her of my v. No pliable idiot I to break my v ; „ 401
Vow (verb) Godless Jephtha v's his child . . . The Flight 26
While she v's ' till death shall part us,' Locksley H., Sixty 24
Vow'd I V that could I gain her, our fair Queen, Marr. of Geraint 787
Had never kiss'd a kiss, or r a vow. Holy Grail 584
I V That I would work according as he will'd. „ 783
I V That, if our Princes harken'd to my prayer, Columbus 99
I V Whate'er my dreams, Akbar's Dream 12
Vowing some V, and some protesting), Holy Grail 270
Voyage {See also Home-voyage) go This v more than
once ? yea twice or thrice — Enoch A rden 142
i
Voyage
769
Waist
▼oiyage (continued) this v by the grace of Grod Will bring
fair weather Enoch Arden 190
And dull the v was with long delays, „ 655
Then he told her of his v, His wreck, „ 861
And after my long v I shall rest ! ' Lancelot and E. 1061
And let the story of her dolorous v „ 1343
and tell them all The story of my v, Columhus 12
I sail'd On my first v, harrass'd by the frights ., 67
Who fain had pledged her jewels on my first v, ,. 229
yet Am ready to sail forth on one last v. ,, 237
Art passing on thine happier v now Sir J. Franklin 3
Vulcan mounted, Ganymedes, To tumble, V's, Princess Hi 72
Vul^r Nothing of the v, or vainglorious. On Jub. Q. Victoria 13
Vulture (adj.) Thereat the Lady stretch'd a x; throat. Princess iv 363
Vulture (s) For whom the carrion v waits You might have won 35
swoops The v, beak and talon, at the heart Princess v 383
Vulturous Then glided a v Beldam forth. Dead Prophet 25
W
Waaist (waist) wur a-ereeapin' about my w ; Spinster's S's. 26
Waait (wait) W till our Sally cooms in. North. Cobbler 1
You Tonamies shall w to-night Spinster's S's. 120
but w till tha 'ears it be strikin' the hour. Owd Bod 18
Waaked (waked) An' when I w i' the mumin' North. Cobbler 39
To be horder'd about, an' w, Spinster's S's. 97
Then I w an' I fun it was Roaver Owd Rod 60
Waaste (waste) D'ya moind the w, my lass ? N. Farmer, O. S. 29
Dubbut loook at the w: „ 37
an' I 'a stubb'd Thumaby w. . „ 28
Waay (way) in anoother kind of a w. North. Cobbler 96
lasses 'ud talk o' their Missis's w's, Village Wife 57
'ud 'a let me 'a bed my oan w Spinster's S's. 101
An' 'ed goan their w's ; Owd Rod 36
I wur gawin' that w to the bad, „ 71
wind blawin' hard tother w, „ 104
rummle down when the roof gev «, „ 109
I fun that it wam't not the gaainist w to the
narra Gaate. Church-warden, etc. 12
Wader James Made toward us, like a w in the surf. The Brook 117
Waft (s) crosses With one w of the wing. The Captain 72
like the w of an Angel's wing ; In the Child. Hasp. 38
Waft (verb) Yet w me from the harbour-mouth, Ymi, ask me, why, etc. 25
In Mem. ix 4
Maud I xxii 5
Princess v 19
Ancient Sage 124
In Mem.. Ixxxii 1
Com. of Arthur 508
Guinevere 193
Pass, of Arthur 12
Merlin and V. 571
Wages 6
„ 10
Gareth and L. 1005
The Wreck 93
Charity 40
Com. of Arthur 418
Geraint and E. 505
Sir J. Oldcastle 14
Owd Bod 105
Com. of Arthur 6
Guinevere 156
434
The Brook 199
W. to Marie Alex. 26
Spread thy full wings, and w him o'er
Wafted the woodbine spices are w abroad,
Wag kings Began to w their baldness up and down.
The palsy w's his head ;
Wage I w not any feud with Death
' Behold, for these have sworn To w my wars.
To w grim war against Sir Lancelot there,
I w His wars, and now I pass and die.
Waged W such unwilling tho' successful war
Wages The w of sin is death : if the w of Virtue be dust.
Give her the w of going on.
Will pay thee all thy w, and to boot.
' The w of sin is death,'
I need no w of shame.
Wage-work comfort after their w-w is done,
Waggd Till his eye darken'd and his helmet w
This tongue that w They said with such
Waggled till 'e w 'is taail fur a bit.
Waging and ever w war Each upon other,
while the King Was w war on Lancelot :
From w bitter war with him :
Waif rolling in his mind Old w's of rhyme,
thrones and peoples are as w's that swing,
flung from the rushing tide of the world as a w of shame, The Wreck 6
rl (s) gets for greeting but a w of pain ; Lucretius 138
Phantom w of women and children, Boddicea 26
whose dying eyes Were closed with w, In Mem. xc 6
then with a cbuldlike w, And drawing down Balin and Balan 596
wife and child with w Pass to new lords ; Pass, of Arthur 44
as by some deathbed after w Of suffering, „ 118
Wail (s) (continued) a w That seeming something, yet
was nothing. Lover's Tale iv 103
the sudden w his lady made Dwelt in his fancy : „ 149
the mother's garrulous w For ever woke Sisters {E. and E.) 262
I read no more the prisoner's mute w Sir J. Oldcastle 4
I am roused by the w of a child, The Wreck 7
w came borne in the shriek of a growing wind, „ 87
and the w Of a beaten babe, ,' 122
Let be thy w and help thy fellow men, Ancient Sage 258
Among the w of midnight winds, Demeter and P. 59
As we forget our w at being bom. The Bing 465
nor w of baby- wife. Or Indian widow ; Akbar's Bream 196
I sent him a desolate w and a curse, Charity 14
my w of reproach and scorn ; „ 23
To the w of my winds. The Dreamer 13
thought that he answer'd her w with a song — „ 16
Wail (verb) Here it is only the mew that w's ; Sea- Fairies 19
Cease to w and brawl ! Two Voices 199
the Dead March w's in tho people's ears : Ode on Well. 267
if he be not dead. Why w ye for him thus ? Geraint and E. 547
wherefore w for one. Who put your beauty „ 674
burst away To weep and w in secret ; Lancelot and E. 1245
beneath a winding wall of rock Heard a child w. Last Tournament 12
and w their way From cloud to cloud, Pass, of Arthur 39
At once began to wander and to w, Lover's Tale iv 99
Whereat the very babe began to w ? ' „ 375
The wind that 'ill w like a child Rizpah 72
And they w to thee ! Tiresias 107
Wherefore do ye w ? ' Demeter and P. 60
' We know not, and we know not why we w.' „ 62
Why w you, pretty plover ? Happy 1
Wail'd w and woke The mother, and the father suddenly
cried, Sea Dreams 57
fell on him, Clasp'd, kiss'd him, w : Jjuaretiu^ 280
and w about with mews. Princess iv 282
They wept and w, but led the way In Mem. ciii 18
the wind like a broken worlding w, Maud I i 11
Cast herself down, knelt to the Queen, and w. Merlin and V. 66
Queen, Who rode by Lancelot, w and shriek'd Holy Grail 356
But w and wept, and hated mine own self, „ 609
and he shrank and w, ' Is the Queen false ? ' Pelleas and E. 531
Queens in yon black boat. Who shriek'd and w. Pass, of Arthur 453
finds the fountain where they w ' Mirage ' ! Ancient Sage 77
So the Shadow w. Then I, Earth-Goddess, Demeter and P. 101
and the dream W in her, when she woke Death of (Enone 82
Wailest who w being born And banish'd De Prof., Two G. 41
WaiUng {See also Eeenin') And on the mere the w
died away. M. d' Arthur 272
To ailing wife or w infancy Or old bedridden palsy, — A ylmer's Field 177
After much w, hush'd itself at last „ 542
Their wildest w's never out of tune Sea Dreams 231
they hate to hear me like a wind W for ever. Princess v 99
Moaning and w for an heir (repeat) Com. of Arthur 207, 368
Your w will not quicken him : Geraint and E. 549
clapt her hands Together with a w shriek. Merlin and V. 867
the owls W had power upon her, Lancelot and E. 1001
And on the mere the w died away. Pass, of Arthur 440
W, w, w, the wind over land and sea — Bizpah 1
before their Gods, And w ' Save us.' Tiresias 106
hear in one dark room a w, Locksley H., Sixty 262
She used to shun the w babe. The Bing 358
O the night. When the owls are w ! Forlorn 30
She heard a w cry, that seem'd at first Death of (Enone 20
Wailingly Voice of the Earth went w past him The Dreamer 3
Wain or when the lesser w Is twisting In Mem. ci 11
The team is loosen'd from the w, „ cxxi 5
Wainscot (adj.) And the shrieking rush of the w moaso, Maud I vi 71
Wainscot (s) Behind the mouldering w shriek'd, Mariarta 64
Waist (See also Waaist) the girdle About her dainty
dainty w. Miller's D. 176
You should have clung to Fulvia's w, D. of F. Women 259
Lovingly lower, trembled on her ic — Gardener's D. 131
She strove to span my w : Talking Oak 138
And round her w she felt it fold, Day- Dm., Depart. 2
And held her round the knees against his to, Princess it 363
3 c
Waist
770
Wake
Wftist {co-niimied) coverlid was cloth of gold Drawn
to her w, Lancelot and E. 1158
Waist-deep Beyond the brook, -w-d in meswiow-sweet. The Brook ll8
Wait (See also Waait) Oh ! vanity ! Death w's at
the door. AH Things will Die 17
To w for death — mute — careless of all ills, // / were loved 10
hands and eyes That said, We w for thee. Falace of Art 104
And there to w a little while May Queen, Con. 58
From those, not blind, who w for day, Ijove thou thy land 15
W, and Love himself will bring The drooping
flower Love and Duty 23
W : my faith is large in Time, „ 25
So the Powers, who w On noble deeds, Godiva 71
For me the Heavenly Bridegroom w's, St. Agnes' Eve 31
For whom the carrion vulture w's You might of won 35
she cried, Scared as it were, ' dear Philip, w a
while: Enoch Arden'^0
Yet w a year, a year is not so long : Suiely I shall
be wiser in a year : O w a little ! ' „ 432
as I have waited all my life I well may w a little.' „ 436
In those two deaths he read God's warning ' «?.' „ 571
she shall know, I w His time,' „ 811
he could not w. Bound on a matter he of life and
death : Sea Dreams 150
thoughts that w On you, their centre : Princess iv 443
Invective seem'd to w behind her lips, „ 472
As w's a river level with the dam „ 473
' The second two : they w,' he said, „ v i
every captain w's Himgry for honour, ., 313
to w upon him, Like mine own brother. „ vi 298
' W a little, w a little. You shall fix a day.' Window, When 11
The Shadow sits and w's for me. In Mem. xxii 20
And doubt beside the portal w's, „ xciv 14
And those white-favour'd horses w ; „ Con. 90
And the lily whispers, ' I w.' Maud I xxii 66
' Wherefore w's the madman there Naked Gareth and L. 1091
' Therefore w with me,' she said ; Marr. of Geraint 180
W here, and when he passes fall upon him.' Geraint and E. 129
Enid stood aside to w the event, „ 153
there he w's below the wall, Pelleas and E. 380
your flower W's to be solid fruit of golden deeds. Last Tournament 100
greedy heir That scarce can w the reading of the will Lovers Tale i 676
And in a loft, with none to w on him, ,, iv 138
His master would not w imtil he died, ,, 259
' W a little,' you say, ' you are sure it '11 all come
right,' First Quarrel 1
W ! an' once I ha' waited — I hadn't to w for long.
Now lw,w,w for Harry. — „ 3
an' I work an' I w to the end. „ 7
Doctor, if you can w, I'll tell you the tale • „ 9
' W a little, my lass, I am sure it 'ill all come
right.' (repeat) „ 74, 91
w till the point of the pickaxe be thro' ! Def. of Liicknow 27
W a while. Your Mother and step-mother — The Ring 145
Nor w, till all Our vernal bloom To Mary Boyle 8
to mourn and sigh — Not long to w— „ 58
To w on one so broken, so forlorn ? Romney's R. 17
That all the dead, who w the doom of Hell „ 132
W till Death has flung them open. Faith 7
Waited I w underneath the dawning hills, CEnone 47
To me, methought, who w with a crowd, M. d' Arthur, E<p. 20
none of all his men Dare tell him Dora w with the child ; Dora 76
I w long ; My brows are ready. St. S. Stylites 205
/ w for the train at Coventry ; Godiva 1
Mute with folded arms they w — The Captain 39
thronging in and in, to where they w, Vision of Sin 26
' Annie, as I have w all my life Enoch Arden 435
and there a group of girls In circle w. Princess, Pro. 69
let us know The Princass Ida w : „ ii 21
and w, fifty there Opposed to fifty, „ v 484
Fixt by their cars, w the golden dawn. Spec, of Iliad 22
sent her coming champion, w him. Gareth and L, 1192
And wliile he w in the castle court, Marr. of Geraint 326
And stood behind, and w on the three. „ 392
And w there for Yniol and Geraint. „ 538
Waited (continued) Then Enid w pale and sorrowful, Geraint and E. 83
while we w, one, the youngest of us. Merlin and V. 415
Lost in a doubt, Pelleas wandering JV, Pelleas and E. 393
And w for her message, Lover's Tale iv 146
Wait ! an' once I ha' w — First Quarrel 3
Waiter (See also Head-waiter) halo lives about The xc's
hands. Will Water. 114
' Slip-shod w, lank and sour. Vision of Sin 71
Waitest What aileth thee ? whom w thou Adeline 45
Poor child, that w for thy love ! In Mem. vi 28
Waiteth standeth there alone. And w at the door. D. of the 0. Year 51
W to strive a happy strife.
Waiting (See also A-waatin')
My whole soul w silently.
Kept watch, w decision, made reply.
W to see me die.
Like truths of Science w to be caught —
A shipwreck'd sailor, w for a sail :
There stood a maiden near, W to pass.
So quickly, w for a hand,
That Shadow w with the keys.
Now w to be made a wife,
stay'd W to hear the hounds ;
In shadow, w for them, caitiffs all ;
I saw three bandits by the rock W to fall on you.
Three other horsemen w, wJiolly arni'd.
And w to be treated like a wolf.
Tristram, w for the quip to come,
Ready to spring, w a chance :
Then w by the doors the warhorse neigh'd
W to see some blessed shape in heaven,
w still The edict of the will to reassume
W to see the settled countenance Of her I loved.
Your nurse is w. Kiss me child and go.
W for your summons . . .
Waive she will not : w your claim :
Wake (fair) visage all agrin as at a w.
Wake (festival) wid the best he could give at ould
Donovan's w —
Wake (funeral festival) at yer w like husban' an' wife,
Wake (trail) With w's of fire we tore the dark ;
Morn in the white w of the morning star
Wake (verb) Then — while a sweeter music w's,
I w alone, I sleep forgotten, I w forlorn.'
iSolian harp that w's No certain air,
You must w and call me early, (repeat)
I shall never w. If you do not call me loud
to sit, to sleep, to w, to breathe.'
I w : the chill stars sparkle ;
leave thee freer, till thou w ref resh'd
We sleep and w and sleep,
' O w for ever, love,' she hears,
• 0 love, thy kiss would w the dead !
And w on science grown to more,
■ W him not : let liim sleep ;
but as one before he w's,
he said, ' pass on ; His Highness w's : '
wind w's A lisping of the innumerous leaf
a storm never w's on the lonely sea.
Sleep, little ladies ! W not soon !
W, little ladies. The sun is aloft !
With morning w's the will, and cries.
To whom a conscience never w's ;
I almost wish'd no more to w,
I w, and I discern the truth ;
wherefore w The old bitterness again,
regret for buried time That keenlier in sweet April w's,
And I w, my dream is fled ;
Let it go or stay, so I w to the higher aims
w's Half-blinded at the coming of a light.
sound cause to sleep hast thou. W lusty !
and Enid had no heart To w him.
Ride, ride and dream until ye w —
' Man dreams of Fame while woman w's to love.'
' Do I w or sleep ?
and w The bloom that fades away ?
Two Voices 130
Fatima 36
CEnone 143
D. of F. Women 112
Golden Year 17
Enoch Arden 590
The Brook 205
In Mem. vii 4
xxvi 15
.. Con. 49
Marr. of Geraint 163
Geraint and E. 58
73
121
857
Last Tournament 260
Guinevere 12
530
Lover's Tale i 312
m160
,. Hi 39
The Ring 489
Forlorn 22
Princess v 296
521
Tomorrow 42
82
The Voyage 52
Princess Hi 17
To the Queen 13
Mariana in the S. 35
Two Voices 436
May Queen 1, 41
9
Edwin Moms 40
St. S. Stylites 114
Love and Duty 97
Golden Year 22
Day-Dm., Depart
a
„ L' Envoi 10
Enoch Arden 233
The Brook 215
Princess v 5
13
The Islei33
Minnie and Winnie 10
In Mem. iv 15
xxvii 8
xxviii 14
Ixviii 14
.. Ixxxiv 46
cxvi 2
Maud II iv 51
„ ///w38
Com. of Arthur 265
Gareth and L. 1283
Geraint and E. 370
Merlin and V. 118
460
Lover's Tale iv 78
Ancient Sage\
1l
Ancient Sage 132
The Flight 7
63
The Ming 67
„ 449
To Mary Boyle 63
'S';. Telemachus 20
57
Wake
Wake (verb) (continued) But w's a, dotard smile.'
to rest and w no more were better rest for me,- .
how early would I w !
Before a kiss should w her.
J rais'd her, call'd her ' Muriel, Muriel iv ! '
his young music w's A wish in you
an answer ' W Thou deedless dreamer,
great shock may w a palsied limb.
Waked (See also Waaked) to sleep with sound. And w
7"^ ^'>"f '• V,. T u ^ . ''^^- d' Arthur, Ep. 4
w at dead of night, I heard a sound Holy Grail 108
tie w for both : he pray'd for both : Lover's Tale i 227
I remember once that being w By noises in the house— The Ring 416
!.•» ,. £f, ^ ^ ^'^ °^ P^'^y, *^^^ scream'd and past ; Death of (Enone 87
iWakrful Begmnmg, and the w bird ; in Mem. cxxi 11
Urmd on the w ear m the hush of the moonless nights, Maud I i 42
Before the w mother heard him, went. Gareth and L. 180
A w portress, and didst parle with Death,— Lover^s Tale i 113
Wakefulness After a night of feverous w, Enoch Arder, 9^A
Waken (See also Wakken) The fire-fly w's : w thou
with me.
That w's at this hour of rest
and in my breast Spring w's too ;
Than to w every morning to that face I loathe
Waken'd the first matin-song hath w loud
What eyes, like thine, have w hopes.
For thrice I w after dreams.
Till at the last he w from his swoon,
A way by love that w love within,
Suddenly w with a sound of talk
Wakenest Who w with thy balmy breath
Sun, that w all to bliss or pain.
Wakening Gareth, w, fiercely clutch'd the shield ;
Kode till the star above the w sun,
Waking W she heard the night-fowl crow :
If you're w call me early,
if you're w, call me, call me early,
the dreams that come Just ere the «• :
And, truly, w dreams were, more or less,
W laughter in indolent reviewers.
Till a silence fell with the w bird.
But come to her w, find her asleep.
And Enid started w, with her heart
Tristram w, the red dream Fled with a shout,
set the mother w in amaze To find her sick
From off the rosy cheek of w Day.
Wakken (waken) I couldn't w 'im oop,
Wales It was last summer on a tour in W :
Urien, Cradlemont of IV, Claudias,
ears for Christ in this wild field of W—
Walk (s) (See also Garden-walks, Wood-walk)
vary-colour'd shells
771
Walk'd-Walkt
Princess vii 179
In Mem. civ 6
,. cxv 18
The Flight 8
Ode to Memory 68
Day-Dm., L' Envoi 45
Lucretius 34
Geraint and E. 583
Holy Grail 11
Pelleas and E. 48
In Mem. xcix 13
Gareth and L. 1060
1304
Pelleas and E. 500
Mariana 26
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 1
52
Lucretius 36
Princess i 12
Uendecasyllabics 8
Maud I xxii 17
„ // a 81
Marr. of Geraint 674
Last Tournament 487
Demeter and P. 57
Akbar's Dream, 202
Owd Rod 102
Golden Year 2
Com. of Arthur 112
Sir J. Oldcastle 13
A w with
Arabian Nights 57
you may hear him sob and sigh In the w's ; A splrU haunts 6
with echoing feet he threaded The secretest w's of fame : The Poet 10
said Death, • these w's are mine.' Lov^ and Death 7
yielding gave into a grassy w Garde-ner's D. Ill
last night s gale had caught, And Ijlown across the w. 125
With words of promise in his w, Day-Dm., Arrival 23
and all round it ran aw Of shingle, and a w divided it : Enoch Arden 736
iinoch shimn d the middle w and stole 738
Katie somewhere in the w's below. The Brook 86
Would often, in his w's with Edith, claim Aylmer's Field 61
our long w's were stript as bare as brooms, Princess Pro 184
the chapel bells CaH'cl us : we left the w's ; „ ' ii 471
Dropt on the sward, and up the linden to's, ,' i^; 209
Nor waves the cypress in the palace w ; ," -„n 177
Or w's in Boboli's ducal bowers. "xhe Daisy 44
Shadows of three dead men Walk'd in the w's with me, G. ofSwainston 4
In those deserted w's, may find In Mem viii 14
partner in the fiowery w Of letters, ;, i^^^iv 22
Up that long w of lim^ 1 past „ Ixxxvii 15
That saw thro' all the Muses' w, ^-g 4
her light foot along the garden w, 3Iaud I xviii 9
1 did not talk To gentle Maud in our w ., ,,.,_,, 13
From the meadow your w's have left so sweet „ xxii 39
Walk (s) (continued) Glanced at the doors or gambol'd
• down the w's ; Marr. of Geraint 665
A w of roses ran from door to door ; A w of lilies
crost it to the bower : Balin and Balan 242
paced The long white w of lilies toward the bower. „ 249
she stole upon my w. And calling me the greatest Holy Grail 594
How oft with him we paced that w of limes. To W. H. Brookfield 6
an they goas fur aw. Spinster's S's. 85
He dreams of that long w thro' desert life To Mary Boyle 55
Walk (verb) In sleep she seem'd to w forlorn, Mariana 30
I w, I dare not think of thee, Oriana 93
W's forgotten, and is forlorn.' Mariana in the S. 48
So sweet it seems with thee to w, Miller's D. 29
made it sweet To w, to sit, to sleep, to wake, Edwin Morris 40
Could slip Its bark and w. Talking Oak 188
But any man that w's the mead, Day-Dm., Moral 9
Katie w s By the long wash of Australasian seas The Brook 193
Averill w So freely with his daughter ? Aylmer's Field 269
nor cares to w With Death and Morning Princess vii 203
0 we will w this world. Yoked in all exercise „ 360
He that w's it, only thirsting For the right, Ode on Well. 203
Nor follow, tho I w in haste, /„ Mem. xxii 18
Ihat nothing w's with aimless feet ; „ U^ 5
1 w as ere I walk'd forlorn, " l^viii 5
From state to state the spirit w's ; .' Ixxxii 6
to w all day like the sultan of old Maud I iv 42
each man w's with his head in a cloud of poisonous flies „ 54
There she w's in her state ,. ^iv 3
the Powers who w the world Made lightnings Com. of ' Arthur 107
Hath power to w the waters like our Lord. .. 294
Merlin, who, they say, can w Unseen at pleasure— ^, 347
I will w thro' fire, Mother, to gain it— Gareth and L. 133
Will ye w thro' fire ? Who w's thro' fire will
hardly heed the smoke. ,, 142
w with me, and move To music with thine Order Bal-in and Balan 76
Until this earth he w's on seems not earth. Holy Grail 912
W your dim cloister, and distribute dole Guinevere 683
Who w before thee, ever turning round Lover's Talc i 490
his wont to w Between the going light „ 663
Where Love could w with banish'd Hope ", 813
w's down fro' the' All to see. North.' Cobbler 91
To w within the glory of the Lord Columbus 89
lies all m the way that you w. Despair 112
An' maiiybe they'll w upo' two Qiod Rod 17
Thraldom who w's with the banner of Freedom, Fastness 10
I used to w This Terrace — The Ring 167
We often w In open sun, and see beneath our feet „ 327
Walk'd-Walkt One walk'd between his wife and child, Ttco Voices 412
The little maiden walk'd demure, ,, 419
But, as he walk'd, King Arthur panted hard, M. d' Arthur 176
and looking, as he walk'd. Larger than human „ 182
I'm glad I walk'd. How fresh the meadows look Walk, to the Mail 1
what home ? had he a home ? His home, he walk'd. Enoch Arden 669
for she walk'd Wearing the light yoke Aylmer's Field 707
So now on sand they walk'd, and now on cliff, Sea Dreams 37
And that the woman walk'd upon the brink : „ 112
And while I walk'd and talk'd as heretofore. Princess i 16
there One walk'd reciting by herself, „ a 454
she you walk'd with, she You talk'd with, ][ vi 254
Walk'd at their will, and everything was changed. ,' 384
I walk'd with one I loved two and thirty years ago. V. of Cauteretz 4
while I walk'd to-day. The two and thirty years 5
Shadows of three dead men WalFd in the walks G. ofSwainston 4
where the path we walk'd began To slant In Mem. xxii 9
I walk as ere I walk'd forlorn, ,. Ixviii 5
In walking as of old we walk'd " i^xi 12
Where first he walk'd when claspt in clay ? ., xciii 4
out he walk'd when the wind like a broken Maud I ill
Walk'd in a wintry wind by a ghastly glimmer, .. m 13
I have walk'd awake with Truth. .. ^ix 4
He walk'd with dreams and darkness, Merlin and V. 190
For all that walk'd, or crept, or perch'd, or flew. Last Tournament 367
But, as he walk'd, King Arthur panted hard, Pass, of Arthur 344
and looking, as he walk'd. Larger than human „ 350
same old paths where Love had walk'd with Hope, Lover's Tale i 821
Walk'd-Walkt
772
WaU
Walk'd-Walkt (continued) One walk'd abreast with me
and veil'd his brow,
I walk'd behind mth one who veil'd his brow.
and while I walk'd with these In marvel
I walked with him down to the quay,
Fur Molly the long un she walkt awaay
I walk'd with our kindly old doctor
men Walk'd like the fly on ceilings ?
whiniver ye walkt in the shtreet,
Fur I walk'd wi' tha all the way hoam
Till 1 dream'd 'at Squire walkt in,
Walking (See also A-walkin') Death, w all alone
beneath a yew,
W the cold and starless road of Death
As in strange lands a traveller w slow,
Beauty and anguish w hand in hand
W about the gardens and the halls Of Camelot,
Met me w on yonder way,
W up and pacing down,
Would care no more for Leolin's w with her
In w as of old we walk'd
I was w a mile. More than a mile
She is w in the meadow,
For once, when Arthur w all alone,
one fair mom, I w to and fro beside a stream
once, A week beyond, while w on the walls
W about the gardens and the halls Of Camelot,
Brute that is w and haunting us yet,
Walkt -See Walk'd-Walkt
Wall (s) (See also Abbey-wall, Castle-wall, Cottage-walls,
Gable-wall, Garden-wall, Mountain-wall, Nunnery-
walls, Palace-walls, Shield-wall) About a stone-cast
from the w
A pillar of white light upon the w
simlight falls Upon the storied w's ;
She stood upon the castle w,
Atween me and the castle w,
Two lovers whispering by an orchard w ;
When from her wooden w's, —
Four gray w's, and four gray towers,
Struck up against the blinding w.
The one black shadow from the w.
as yonder w's Rose slowly to a music
bellowing caves. Beneath the windy w.
That stood against the w.
girt round With blackness as a solid w,
between w's Of shadowy granite,
Upon the tortoise creeping to the w ;
All thine, against the garden w.
its w's And chimneys muffled in the leafy vine.
and thou art staring at the w,
the blind w's Were full of chinks and holes ;
Gleam thro' the Gothic archway in the w.
That watch the sleepers from the w.
All creeping plants, a w of green Close-matted,
He watches from his mountain w's.
The vast Akrokeraunian w's.
But tum'd her own toward the w and wept.
Then Annie with her brows against the w
The late and early roses from his w,
compass'd round by the blind w of night
blown across her ghostly w :
and stole Up by the w, behind the yew ;
Stood from his w's and wing'd his entry-gates
I cry to vacant chairs and widow'd w's.
Staring for ever from their gilded w's
A mountain, like a w of burs and thorns ;
higher on the w's. Betwixt the monstrous horns
Had beat her foes with slaughter from her w's.
some were whelm'd with missiles of the w,
A broken statue propt against the w,
That drove her foes with slaughter from her w's,
from the bastion'd w's Like threaded spiders.
The foundress of the Babylonian w,
Before two streams of light from w to w,
The splendour falls on castle w's
Lover's Tale it 86
„ in 12
18
First Quarrel 20
Village Wife 97
In the Child. Hosp. 43
Columbus 51
Tomorrow 37
Spinster's S's. 32
Owd Boa, 55
Love and Death 5
(Enone 259
Palace of Art 211
D. of F. Women 15
M. d'Arthur 20
Edward Gray 2
L. of Burleigh 90
Aylmer's Field 124
In Mem. Ixxi 12
Maud I ix 1
„ IlivZl
Merlin and V. 152
Holy Grail 592
Pelleas and E. 225
Pass, of Arthur 188
The Dawn 23
Mariana 37
Ode to Memory 53
86
Oriana 28
„ 35
Circumstance 4
Buonaparte 5
L. of Shahtt i 15
Mariana in the S. 56
80
(Enone 40
Palace of Art 72
244
274
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 3
D. of F. Women 27
The Blackbird 8
Audley Court 18
Locksley Hall 79
Godiva 59
„ 64
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 24
45
The Eagle 5
To E. L. 4
Enoch Arden 283
314
339
492
661
739
Aylmer's Field 18
720
833
Sea Dreams 119
Princess, Pro. 22
34
45
99
123
i 107
a 80
473
M «V 1
Wall (s) (continued) And some tliat men were in the
very w's. Princess iv 485
By glimmering lanes and w's of canvas ,. » 6
From those two hosts that lay beside the w's, „ vi 383
cloud Drag inward from the deeps, a w of night, ,. vii 37
silent light Slept on the painted w's, .. ' 121
the w's Blacken'd about us, bats wheel'd, ,, Con. 109
Your cannons moulder on the seaward w ; Ode on Well. 173
But thieves from o'er the w Stole the seed by night. The Flower 11
Flowek in the crannied w, Flow, in cran. wall 1
Is vocal in its wooded w's ; In Mem. xix 14
There comes a glory on the w's : „ Ixvii 4
That in Vienna's fatal w's „ Ixxxv 19
I past beside the reverend w's „ Ixxxvii 1
A river sliding by the w. „ ciii 8
The blind w rocks, and on the trees „ Con. 63
With tender gloom the roof, the w ; „ US
little flower that clings To the turrets and the w's ; Maud II iv 34
and Guinevere Stood by the castle w's Com. of Arthur 48
Seeing the mighty swarm about their w's, „ 200
To drive the heathen from your Roman w, „ 512
fools have suck'd their allegory From these
damp w's, Gareth and L. 1200
Echo'd the w's ; a light twinkled ; „ 1370
And enter'd, and were lost behind the w's. Mart, of Geraint 252
ivy-stems Claspt the gray w's with hairy-fibred arms, „ 323
now and then from distant w's There came a clapping „ 565
slide From the long shore-cliEE's windy w's Geraint and E. 164
Push'd from without, drave backward to the w, „ 273
No stronger than a w : there is the keep ; „ 341
like a household Spirit at the w's Beat, „ 403
Along the w's and down the board ; Balin aiid Balan 84
the w's Of that low church he built at Glastonbury. „ 366
portal of King Pellam's chapel wide And inward
to the w ; ,,406
rummage buried in the w's Might echo, „ 416
Woods have tongues. As w's have ears : „ 531
Closed in the four w's of a hollow tower, (repeat) Merlin and V. 209, 543
And many a wizard brow bleach'd on the w's : „ 597
to him the w That sunders ghosts and shadow-
casting men „ 628
And heard their voices talk behind the w, „ 631
and she watch'd him from her w's. „ 775
' Traitor ' to the unhearing w, Lancelot and E. 612
first she saw the casque Of Lancelot on the w : „ 806
to whom thro' those black w's of yew ,. 969
And grew between her and the pictured w. „ 993
In the Queen's shadow, vibrate on the w's, „ 1175
Till all the white w's of my cell were dyed With rosy
colours leaping on the w ; Holy Grail 119
from the w's The rosy quiverings died into the night. „ 122
necks Of dragons clinging to the crazy w's, „ 347
plaster'd like a martin's nest To these old w's — „ 549
painting on the w Or shield of knight ; „ 829
upon his charger all day long Sat by the w's, Pelleas and E. 217
' Out ! And drive him from the w's.' „ 220
still he kept his watch beneath the w. „ 223
while walking on the w's With her three knights, „ 225
And drive him from my w's.' „ 229
loosed him from his bonds, And flung them o'er the w's ; „ 316
Then bounded forward to the castle w's, „ 363
That all the echoes hidden in the w Rang out „ 366
there he waits below the w. Blowing his bugle „ 380
but rode Ere midnight to her w's, „ 413
Far down beneath a winding w of rock Last Tournament 11
So from the high w and the flowering grove Guinevere 33
That keeps the rust of murder on the w's — „ 74
Or thrust the heathen from the Roman w. Pass, of Arthur 69
Or build a w betwixt my life and love, Lover's Tale i 176
And steep-down w's of battlemented rock „ 399
thro' the ragged w's. All unawares „ ii 152
from an open grating overhead High in the w, „ iv 61
— in the night by the churchyard w. Rizpah 56
it is coming — shaking the w's — „ 85
fell, Striking the hospital w, crashing Def. of Lv^hnow 18
into perilous chasms our w's and our poor palisades. „ 55
\i
WaU
773
Wandering
I Wall (s) (continued) coining down on the still-shatter'd mi's Def. ofLucknow 92
I And breach'd the belting w of Cambalu, Columbus 108
I to the base of the mountain w's, V. of Maeldune 14
I From w to dyke he stept, Achilles over the T. 15
hail of Ares crash Along the sounding w's.
more than w And rampart, their examples reach
phantom' w's of this illusion fade,
A dying echo from a falling w ;
an' sets 'im agean the w,
A footstep, a low throbbing in the w's.
This w of solid flesh that comes between
The sunset blazed along the w of Troy.
So I tum'd my face to the w,
Till this embattled w of unbelief My prison,
'Wall (verb) To embattsul and to w about thy cause
splinter'd crags that w the dell With spires
And w them up perforce in mine — -
'Wall'd {See also Clear-wall'd) Flourish'd a little
garden square and w :
And on the top, a city w :
IWallow They graze and w, breed and sleep ;
wolf and wolf kin, from the wilderness, w in it.
To w in that winter of the hills.
decreed That Rome no more should w in this old last
Peeli^ the Goddess would w in fiery riot
rWallow'd And w in the gardens of the King
I have w, I have wash'd—
an I w, then I wash'd-
Tiresias 97
„ 125
Ancient Sage 181
263
Owd Rod 82
The Ring 409
Happy 35
Death of (Enone 11
Charily 27
Doubt and Prayer 11
To J. M. K. 8
D. of F. Women 187
Akbar's Dream 62
Enoch Arden 734
Holy Grail 422
Palace of AH 202
Boddicea 15
Romney's R. 15
.S7. Telemachus 78
Kapiolani 8
Com., of Arthur 25
LdRt Tournament 315
318
And we w in beds of lilies, V. of Maeldune 48
fWaUowing great with pig, w in sun and mud. Walk, to the Mail 88
When the w monster spouted his foam-fountains
in the sea. Lotos- Eaters ^^ C. S. 107
w in the troughs of Zolaism, — Locksley H., Sixty 145
draw The crowd from w in the mire of earth, Akbar's Dream 141
Walnut Across the w's and the wine —
Walter {See also Walter Vivian) ' O PF, I have shelter'd
here Whatever maiden grace
\Tsiting the son, — the son A W too, —
me that morning W show'd the house,
Ask'd W, patting Lilia's head (she lay Beside him)
But W hail'd a score of names upon her,
W nodded at me ; He began. The rest would follow,
W warp'd his mouth at this To something
and W said, ' I wish she had not yielded ! '
And there we saw Sir W where he stood,
' From W,' and for me from you then ?
bad the man engrave ' From W ' on the ring,
Walter Vivian {See also Walter) Sie W F all a
summer's day
Wan {See also Wan-sallow) Philip's rosy face contreict-
ing grew Careworn and w ;
tinged with w from lack of sleep,
w was her cheek With hollow watch,
As w, as chill, as wild as now ;
' But she, the w sweet maiden, shore away
I was changed to w And meagi'e,
W was her cheek ; for whatso'er of blight
an' looks so w an' so white :
W, but as pretty as heart can desire,
W, wasted Truth in her utmost need.
W Sculptor, weepest thou to take the cast
under this w water many of them Lie rotting,
' He hears the judgment of the King of kings,'
Cried the w Prince ;
Familiar up from cradle-time, so w,
w day Went glooming down in wet and weariness
for I have seen him w enow To make one doubt
only the w wave Brake in among dead faces,
Wsa (one) an' meself remimbers w night comin' down
jrfther her paarints had inter'd glory, an' both in w day,
his Riverence buried thim both in w grave
Wand Straight, but as lissome as a hazel w ;
He held his sceptre like a pedant's w
And over these is placed a silver w,
And over these they placed the silver w,
Miller's D. 32
Talking Oak 37
Princess, Pro. 8
10
125
156
200
214
Con.. 4
81
The Ring 71
„ 236
Princess, Pro. 1
Enoch Arden 487
Princess Hi 25
„ vi 144
In Mem. Ixxii 17
Holy Grail 149
571
Lover's Tale i 694
First Quarrel 2
In the Child. Hosp. 40
Clear-headed friend 19
Wan Sculptor 1
Gareth and L. 824
Geraint and E. 801
Balin and Balan 591
Last Tournament 214
563
Pass, of Arthur 129
Tomorrow 1
„ 53
„ 87
The Brook 70
Princess i 27
Marr. of Geraint 483
549
Wanded See Serpent-wanded
Wander Hating to w out on earth,
Light and shadow ever w O'er the green
Wild words w here and there :
Alone I w to and fio,
And then we would w away,
But at night I would w away, away,
W from the side of the morn,
Hope is other Hope and w's far,
Arise, and let us w forth,
My heart may w from its deeper woe.
brother mariners, we will not w more.
there to w far away,
might a man not w from his wits
Siipp. Confessions 57
A Dirge 12
„. 43
Oriana 8
The Merman 18
The Mermaid 31
Adeline 52
Caress' d or chidden 10
MUler's D. 239
QSnone 44
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 128
Locksley Hall 151
Princess ii 440
Dainty little maiden, whither would you w ? (repeat) City Child 1, 6
I w, often falling lame. In Mem. xxiii 6
To w on a darken'd earth, „ Ixxxv 31
you w about at your will ; Maud I iv 59
An old man's wit may w ere he die. Com. of Arthur 405
So shook his wits they w in his prime — Gareth and L. 715
Who may not w from the allotted field Holy Grail 908
She felt the King's breath w o'er her neck, Guinevere 582
Which w round the bases of the hills, Lover's Tale ii 121
At once began to w and to wail, „ iv 99
They that can w at will where the works of
the Lord In the Child. Hosp. 35
I will w till I die about the barren moors. The Flight 56
You will not leave me thus in grief to w forth forlorn ; „ 85
but w hand in hand With breaking hearts, „ 99
That w's from the public good. Freedom 26
And w's on from home to home ! The Wanderer 8
Wander'd A walk with vary-coloured shells W Arabian Nights 58
Nor w into other ways : My life is full 3
I blest them, and they w on : Two Voices 424
I had w far In an old wood : D. of F. Women 53
nor having w far Shot on the sudden into dark. To J. S. 27
' 0 yes, she w roimd and round These knotted knees Talking Oak 157
Here about the beach I w, Locksley Hall 11
Years have w by, The Captain 66
W at will, but oft accompanied By Averill : Aylmer's Field 137
Who knows ? but so they w, hour by hour „ 141
Sounds of the great sea W about. Minnie and Winnie 8
I w from the noisy town. In Mem. Ixix 5
whose ring'd caress Had w from her own King's
golden head, Balin and Balan 513
The flaxen ringlets of our infancies W, Lover's Tale i 235
And we w about it and thro' it. V. of Maeldune 87
W back to living boyhood Locksley H., Sixty 3
while I w down the coast, „ 53
as we w to and fro Gazing at the Lydian laughter Frater Ave, etc. 1
perhaps indeed She w, having w now so far The Ring 107
Wanderer Charm, as a w out in ocean, Milton 12
Wandering (adj. and part.) {See also Often-wandering)
Wrestled with w Israel, Clear-headed friend 26
Mournful OEnone, w forlorn Of Paris, GEnone 16
And overhead the w ivy and vine, „ 99
Weary the w fields of barren foam. Lotos- Eaters 42
Once heard at dead of night to greet Troy's w prince, On a Mourner 33
Inswathed sometimes in w mist, St. S. Stylites 75
with yet a bed for w men. Enoch Arden 698
with now a w hand And now a pointed finger. Princess v 269
Forgive these wild and w cries. In Mem., Pro. 41
Drops in his vast and w grave. „ vi 16
Yet as that other, w there In those deserted walks, „ viii 13
Is dash'd with w isles of night. „ xxiv 4
How often, hither w down, „ Ixxxix 5
The joy to every w breeze ; „ Con. 62
How once the w forester at dawn, Gareth and L. 498
Mark The Cornish King, had heard a w voice, Merlin and V. 8
when the dead Went w o'er Moriah — Holy Grail 50
Wealthy with w lines of mount and mere, ., 252
while ye follow w fires Lost in the quagmire ! „ 319
That most of us would follow w fires, (repeat) „ 369, 599
That most of them would follow w fires, „ 891
Lost in a doubt, Pelleas w Waited, Pdleas and E. 392
Wandering
774
War
Wandering (adj. and part.) {continued) Stay'd in the «
warble of a brook ; Last Tournament 254
name Went w somewhere darkling in his mind. „ 457
ghost of Gawain blown Along a w wind, Pass, of Arthur 32
And I am blown along a w wind, „ 36
As moonlight w thro' a mist : Lover's Tale ii 52
we gazed at the w wave as we sat V. of Maeldune 89
Wandering (s) ' The w's Of this most intricate Universe A Character 2
fold our wrings, And cease from w's, Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 20
DoMii shower the gambolling waterfalls P'rom w over
the lea
(For often in lonely w's I have cursed him
magic which can trace The w of the stars,
Then, in my w's all the lands that lie
Wane The long day w's : the slow moon climbs :
Or when a thousand moons shall w
O sorrow, then can sorrow w ?
Speak, as it waxes, of a love that w's ?
when the day began to w, we went.
Waned councils thinn'd, And armies w,
to this present My full-orb'd love has w not.
The day w ; Alone I sat with her :
Gleam, that had w to a wintry glimmer
Waning (See also Slowly-waning) The pale yellow
woods were w.
Yon orange sunset w slow :
' Bitter barmaid, w fast !
What songs below the w stars
When the flowers come again, mother, beneath
the w light May Queen, N. Y's. E. 25
over many a range Of w lime the gray cathedral
toweirs,
praised the w red, and told The vintage —
rooks. That gather in the w woods.
The last long stripe of w crimson gloom,
Wann'd Psyche flush'd and w and shook ;
and ever w with despair,
Wannish No sun, but a w glare In fold upon fold
Wan-sallow a man of mien W-s as the plant
Want (s) And left a w imknown before ;
Shall sing for w, ere leaves are new,
'tis from no w in her : It is my shyness.
And to the w, that hollow'd all the heart.
Cursed be the social w's that sin
Or that eternal w of pence,
nor compensating the w By shrewdness,
Or thro' the w of what it needed most,
No w was there of human sustenance.
Doubled her own, for w of plajmiates,
any of our people there In w or peril.
For dear are those three castles to my w's,
And either she will die from w of care,
Not perfect, nay, but full of tender w's,
And ev'n for w of such a type.
Shall love be blamed for w of faith ?
And he supplied my w the more
a thousand w's Gnarr at the heels of men,
Ring out the w, the care, the sin,
veil His w in forms for fashion's sake,
let Kay the seneschal Look to thy w's,
Unfaith in aught is w of faith in all.
And I must die for w of one bold word.'
I — misyoked with such a w of man —
Sea- Fairies 11
Maud I xix 14
Holy Grail 667
Tiresias 25
Ulysses 55
In Mem. Ixxvii 8
„ Ixxviii 15
Lancelot and E. 1401
Holy Grail 488
Merlin and V. 573
Lover's Tale i 734
ii 139
Merlin and the G. 83
L. of Shalott iv 2
Move eastward 2
Vision of Sin 67
Margaret 33
Gardener's D. 218
Aylmer's Field 406
In Mem. Ixxxv 72
A ncient Sage 221
Princess iv 160
Maud I i 10
vi2
Gareth and L. 453
Miller's D. 228
The Blackbird 23
Edwin Morris 85
Love and Duly 61
Locksley Hall 59
Will Water. 43
Enoch Arden 250
265
554
Aylmer's Field 81
Princess ii 267
417
'y85
vii 319
In Mem. xxxiii 16
lilO
Ixxix 19
xcviii 16
cvi 17
cxi 6
Gareth and L. 434
Merlin and V. 389
Lancelot and E. 927
Last Tournament bl\
the daily w Of Edith in the house, the garden. Sisters {E. and E.) 245
days ' of fever, and w of care ! The Wreck 147
Mere w of gold — and still for twenty years The Ring 428
Want (verb) More life, and fuller, that I w.' Tico Voices 399
Of those that w, and those that have : Walk, to the Mail 78
when you w me, sound upon the bugle-horn. Locksley Hall 2
I w her love. Princess v 136
When the man w's weight, the woman takes it up, „ 444
I w forgiveness too : „ vi 290
M. Farmer, N. S. 37
Ma\id I vi 47
Geraint and E. 237
Want (verb) {continued) To doubt her fairness were
to TO an eye.
To doubt her pureness were to lo a heart —
For we that w the warmth of double life.
But if thou w's thy grog.
But if tha w's ony grog
Fur I w's to tell tha o' Roa
if tha w's to git forrards a bit.
Want-begotten Nor any w-h rest.
Wanted Another ship (She w water)
nor w at his end The dark retinue
truth ! I know not : all are w here.
Wantest What w thou ? whom dost thou seek.
Wanting And w yet a boatswain. Would he go ?
I grieve to see you poor and w help :
He look'd and found them w ;
impute themselves, W the mental range ;
Wanton (adj.) {See also Seeming-wanton)
wild and w pard,
And w without measure ;
In the Spring the w lapwing gets himself another
crest ;
To take a w dissolute boy For a man
And that within her, which a w fool.
Told me, that twice a w damsel came,
Half overtrailed with a w weed,
(like a w too-officious friend,
anon the w billow wash'd Them over,
Wanton (s) What did the w say ?
Wanton (verb) Say to her, I do but w in the South,
Wantonness That hover'd between war and w.
War (s) (See also World-war)
along the distant sea,
And all the w is roll'd in smoke.'
At such strange w with something good.
And let the world have peace or w's,
minstrel sings Before them of the ten years' w
in Troy,
Sore task to hearts worn out by many w's
And trumpets blown for w's ;
when fresh from w's alarms. My Hercules,
Across the brazen bridge of w
Lancelot and E. 1376
1377
Holy Grail 624
North. Cobbler B
113
Owd Roa 19
Church-warden, etc. 49
In Mem. xxvii 12
Enoch Arden 628
Aylmer's Field 841
Marr. of Geraint 289
Oriana 71
Enoch Arden 123
406
Geraint and E. 935
Merlin and V. 827
When I past by, a
thy muther says thou w's to marry the lass.
Who w's the finer politic sense To mask.
And if he w me, let him come to me.
(Enone 199
Amphion 58
Locksley Hall 18
Maud 7 X 58
Geraint and E. 432
Balin aiid Balan 609
Lover's Tale i 525
627
m9
Merlin and V. 812
Princess iv 109
To the Queen ii 44
Elsinore Heard the w moan
Bv/maparte 10
Two Voices 156
302
Palace of Art 182
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 11
86
D. of F. Women 20
149
Love thou thy land 76
' Come With all good things, and w shall be no more.' M. d' Arthur, Ep. 28
Made w upon each other for an hour, Godiva 34
To sleep thro' terms of mighty w's, Day-Dm., L' Envoi 9
His bashfulness and tenderness at w, Enoch Arden 289
They hate me : there is w between us, Aylmer's Field 424
Commiming with his captains of the w. Princess i 67
The Carian Artemisia strong in w, „ ii 81
arts of w The peasant Joan and others ;
If more and acted on, what follows ? w ;
I spoke of w to come and many deaths.
And clad in iron burst the ranks of w,
clapt her hands and cried for w,
o'er the imperial tent Whispers of w.
red-faced w has rods of steel and fire ; She yields, or w.'
say you, w or not ? ' ' Not w, if possible,
I said, ' lest from the abuse of w.
More soluble is this knot By gentleness than w.
I would the old God of w himself were dead.
To our point : not w : Lest I lose all.'
yet my father wills not w : And, 'sdeath ! myself,
what care I, w or no ?
loth by brainless w To cleave the rift
Great in council and great in w.
Such a w had such a close,
the leader in these glorious w's
Not sting the fiery Frenchman into w.
Wild W, who breaks the converse of the wise ; „
The works of peace with works of w. Ode Inter. Exhib. 28
discuss the Northern sin Which made a selfish w
begin ; To F. L). Maurice 30
w's avenging rod Shall lash all Europe into blood ; „ 33
That shriek and sweat in pigmy vPs Lit. Squabbles^2_
these all night upon the bridge of w Sat glorying ; Spec, of Ilia<
Ode on
162
229
iii 150
iv504
590
i;10
118
1)124
126
136
145
204
277
300
Well. 30
118
192
Third of Feb. 4
I
War
775
War-horse
ji War (s) (continued) As one would sing the death of w, In Mem. ciii 33
I Ring out the thousand w's of old, „ cvi 27
I heart of the citizen hissing in w Maud / i 24
3 Is it peace or ic ? Civil w, as I think, ,. 27
I Is it peace or w ? better w ! loud w by land and by sea,
» W with a thousand battles, „ 47
J At w with myself and a wretched race, „ a; 35
I This huckster put down w ! can he tell Whether w be
J a cause or a consequence ? ,,44
k For each is at w with mankind. „ 52
; I swear to you, lawful and lawless ic „ // v 94
> spoke of a hope for the world in the coming w's — „ Illvill
I I thought that a w would arise in defence of the right, „ 19
I flsunes The blood-red blossom of «• „ 53
j and the w roll down like a wind, „ 64
I Commingled with the gloom of imminent u-, Ded. of Idylls 13
I Far-sighted summoner of W and Waste „ 37
' and ever waging w Each upon other, Com. of Arthur 6
ji Lords and Barons of his realm Flash'd forth and
jj into w :
I as here and there that w Went swaying ;
l So like a painted battle the w stood Silenced,
I Do these your lords stir up the heat of w,
1' That Gorlois and King Uther went to w :
lords Banded, and so brake out in open w.'
for these have sworn To wage my w's,
mine innocent, the jousts, the w's,
' Were Arthur's w's in weird devices done,
1 A knight of Uther in the Barons' w,
J ye know we stay'd their hands From w
w of Time against the soul of man.
I who held and lost with Lot In that first w,
\ But rather proven in his Paynim w's
■ In those fierce w's, struck hard —
I Waged such unwilling tho' successful w
j The lady never made unwilling w
\ you know Of Arthur's glorious w's.'
j then the w That thunder'd in and out
j nor cares For triumph in our miinic w's,
j Yet in this heathen w the fire of God Fills him :
j From talk of w to traits of pleasantry—
■ Where Arthur's w's were render'd mystically,
j Where twelve great windows blazon Arthur's w's,
! perchance, when all our w's are done,
j Where Arthur's w's are rendered mystically,
I To whence I came, the gate of Arthur's w's.'
\ I came late, the heathen w's were o'er,
I while the King Was waging w on Lancelot :
To wage grim w against Sir Lancelot there,
" that night the barf. Sang Arthur's glorious w's,
I From waging bitter w with him :
] I waged His w's, and now I pass and die.
j Gawain kiU'd In Lancelot's w,
3 Around a king returning from his w's.
3 and shadowing Sense at w with Soul,
That hover'd between w and wantonness,
' Spanish ships of w at sea !
past away with five ships of w that day,
Then told them of his w's, and of his wound.
mine that stirr'd Among our civil w's
Red in thy birth, redder with household w.
Urge him to foreign w.
Spain was waging w against the Moor —
slain thy fathers in w or in single strife,
There was the Scotsman Weary of w.
Mangled to morsels, A youngster in w !
own in his own West-Saxon-land, Glad of the w
men contend in grievous w From their own city
and sail to help them in the w ;
the crowd would roar For blood, for w,
these blind hands were useless in their w's.
a weight of w Rides on those ringing axles !
whose one bliss Is w, and human sacrifice —
holding, each its own By endless w :
w will die out late then.
War (s) (continued) Could we dream of w's and
carnage, Locksley H., Sixty 189
Most marvellous in the w's your own Pro. to Gen. Hamley 11
You praise when you should blame The barbarian of w's. Epilogue 5
66
106
122
169
196
237
508
Gareth and L. 86
225
353
422
1198
Balin and Balan 2
38
177
Merlin and V. 571
603
Lancelot and E. 285
290
312
315
321
801
Holy Grail 248
256
359
539
Last Tournament 269
Guinevere 156
193
286
434
Pass, of Arthur 12
31
461
To the Queen ii 37
44
The Revenge 3
13
Sisters (E. and E.) 60
75
Sir J. Oldcastle 53
68
Columbus 93
V. of Maeldune 121
Batt. of Brunanhurh 36
74
104
Achilles over the T. 9
13
Tiresias 65
78
92
„ 112
Ancient Sage 252
Locksley H., Sixty 173
I would that w's would cease.
Or Trade re-frain the Powei-s From w
who loves IV for W's own sake Is fool,
w's, and filial faith, and Dido's pyre ;
An' the munney they maade by the w,
' A warrior's crest above the cloud of ic ' —
You were parting for the w,
You parted for the Holy W without a word to me.
The smoke of w's volcano burst again
bolt of w dashing down upon cities
Storm of battle and thvmder of w !
War (verb) To w with falsehood to the knife.
What pleasure can we have To w with evil
To w against ill uses of a life,
To w against my people and my knights.
War (was) An' I went wheer munny w :
Warble (s) at first to the ear The w was low,
Wild bird, whose w, li(}uid sweet,
a bird with a w plaintively sweet Perch'd
And rolling of dragons By w of water.
Warble (verb) thou may'st w, eat and dwell.
Than he that w's long and loud
W, O bugle, and trumpet, blare !
' O birds, that w to the morning sky, O birds that
w as the day goes by,
birds Begin to w yonder in the budding
The blackcap w's, and the turtle purrs,
0 w unchidden, unbidden !
Warbled Nightingales w without.
Nightingales w and sang Of a passion
That she w alone in her joy !
Warbler Dan Chaucer, the first w,
in their time thy w's rise on wing.
Warbling springs By night to eery w's,
She struck such w fury thro' the words ;
Her w voice, a lyre of widest range
damsel-errant, w, as she rode The woodland
alleys.
War-cry Spurr'd with his terrible w-c ;
Ward (surname) generous of all Untramontanes, W.
Ward (minor) and a selfish imcle's w.
Ward (of a hospital) Here was a boy in the w,
0 how could I serve in the w's
past to this w where the younger children are laid
They freshen and sweeten the w's
Then I retum'd to the w ;
such a lot of beds in the w ! '
caught when a nurse in a hospital w.
Ward (guard) Keep watch and w, (repeat)
why shine ye here so low ? Thy w is higher up :
Warded For each had w either in the fight,
Warder The w's of the growing hour,
Old w of these biu:ied bones,
War-drum Till the w-d throbb'd no longer.
Ware (adj.) they were w That all the decks were dense
Then was I w of one that on me moved
He woke, and being w of some one nigh,
they were w That all the decks were dense
Ware (s) As when a hawker hawks his w's.
sold her w's for less Than what she gave
faith in a tradesman's w or his word ?
Ware (verb) w their ladies' colours on the ca.sque.
War-field Earls of the army of Anlaf Fell on
the w-/,
War-glaive The clash of the w-g —
War-harden'd Kissing the w-A hand of the Highlander Def. of Lucknow 102
War-hawk Gave to the garbaging w-h to gorge it, Batt. of Brunanburh 109
War-horse On bumish'd hooves his w-h trode ; L. of Shalott Hi 29
A w of the best, and near it stood Gareth and L. 678
Death's dark w-h bounded forward with him. „ 1401
and thence Taking my w-h from the holy man, Holy Grail 537
11
16
,. 30
To Virgil 4:
Owd Rod 44
The Ring 338
Happy 74
„ 77
Prog, of Spring 97
The Dawn 8
Riflemen form, ! 3
Two Voices 131
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 49
Gareth and L. 1130
jPass. of Arthur 71
N. Farmer, N. S. 21
Dying Swan 24
In Mem. Ixxxviii 1
The Wreck 81
Merlin and the G. 45
The Blackbird 4
You might have won 33
W. to Alexandra 14
Gareth and L. 1075
The Flight 61
Prog, of Spring 55
The Throstle 14
G. of Swainston 1
8
Maud I X 55
D. of F. Women 5
Prog, of Spring 108
Sir L. and Q. G. 34
Princess iv 586
D. of F. Women 165
Balin uTid Balan 438
Geraint and E. 170
In Mem., W. G. Ward 4:
Locksley Hall 156
In the Child. Hasp. 13
24
27
38
44
54
Charity 41
Maud I vi 58
Gareth and L. 1098
Com. of Arthur 131
Love thou thy land 61
In Mem. xxxix 1
Locksley Hall 127
M. d' Arthur 195
Holy Grail 409
Pelleas and E. 520
Pass, of Arthur 363
The Blackbird 20
Enoch Arden 255
Maud I i 26
Last Tournament 184
Batt. of Brunanburh 54
78
War-horse
776
Warren
War-horse (continued) Lancelot slowly rode his to back
To Camelot, Pelleas and E. 583
He whistled his good w left to graze Last Tournament 490
waiting by the doors the w neigh'd Guinevere 530
War-knife — The welcome of war-knives — Batt. of Brwnanhurh 68
Warless Earth at last a w world, a single race, Locksley H., Sixty 165
W ? when her tens are thousands, „ 171
— who can fancy w men ? „ 172
W ? war will die out late then. „ 173
Warm (adj.) Ice with the w blood mixing ; All Things will Die 33
So let the w winds range, „ 42
Her subtil, w, and golden breath, Swpp. Confessions 60
nm short pains Thro' his w heart ; „ 162
Ev'n as the w gulf-stream of Florida Mine be the strength 12
As when a sunbeam wavers w Within the dark Miller's D. 79
I'd touch her neck so w and white. „ 174
From her « brows and bosom her deep hair (Enone 177
dear the last embraces of our wives And
their w tears : Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 71
(while w airs lull us, blowing lowly) „ 89
For Nature also, cold and w, Love thou thy land 37
' Here, take the goose, and keep you w. The Goose 7
' So keep you cold, or keep you w, „ 43
And one w gust, full-fed with perfume. Gardener's D. 113
we dragg'd her to the college tower From
her w bed. Walk, to tlie Mail 90
eat wholesome food, And wear w clothes, St. S. Stylites 109
'Tis little more : the day was w ; Talking Oak 205
world-wide whisper of the south-wind rushing w, Locksley Hall 125
The slumbrous light is rich and w, Day-Dm., Sleep. B. 7
' The birds were w, the birds were w upon him ; Aylmer's Field 260
From where his worldless heart had kept it w, „ 471
And, where w hands have prest and closed, In Mem. xiii 7
O heart, with kindliest motion w, „ Ixxxv 34
'Twas well, indeed, when w with wine, „ xe 9
But where the sunbeam broodeth w, „ xci 14
Nor bowl of wassail mantle w ; „ cv 18
A life in civic action w, „ cxiii 9
Kept itself w in the heart of my dreams, Maud I vi 18
Sir Lancelot thro' his w blood felt Ice strike, Gareth and L. 1398
shall wear your costly gift Beside your own w
hearth, Marr. of Gerainl 820
And felt the w tears falling on his face ; Geraint and E. 586
Not to be bound, save by white bonds and w, Pelleas and E. 353
W with a gracious parting from the Queen, „ 558
till the w hour returns With veer of wind. Last Tournament 230
The w white apple of her throat, „ 717
neither Love, W in the heart, his cradle. Lover's Tale i 158
Constraining it with kisses close and w, „ 468
Her w breath floated in the utterance „ ii 141
' O, you w heart,' he moan'd, ., iv 76
w melon lay like a little sun on the tawny sand, V. of Maeldune 57
This useless hand ! I felt one w tear fall upon it. Tiresias 167
Low w winds had gently breathed us away The Wreck 63
W as the crocus cup. Early Spring 29
W enew theere sewer-ly, Owd Rod 111
often while her lips Were w upon my cheek. The Ring 399
Warm (verb) Roof-haimting martins w their eggs : Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 17
New life-blood w the bosom. Will Water. 22
That w'a another living breast. In Mem. Ixxxv 116
to w My cold heart with a friend : Holy Grail 618
Ck)ld words from one I had hoped to w so far Sisters (E. and E.) 194
And w's the child's awakening world — To Prin. Beatrice 5
the long day of knowledge grows and w's, Prog, of Spring 101
And w's the blood of Sliiah and Simnee, Akbar's Dream 107
Warm-asleep When you are w-a, mother, May Queen, N. Y's. E. 24
Warm-blue The w-b breathings of a hidden hearth Aylmer's Field 155
Warm'd (See also Sherris-warm'd) One hope that w me
in the days Two Voices 122
And w in crystal cases. A mphion 88
W with his wines, or taking pride in her, Aylmer's Field 554
Too ragged to be fondled on her lap, W at her bosom ? „ 687
And hearts are w and faces bloom, In Mem., Con. 82
Took gayer colours, like an opal w. Merlin and V. 950
And the sea rolls, and all the world is w ? ' Holy Grail 672
Warm'd (continued) w but by the heart Within
them.
Warmer Wild wind ! I seek a w sky.
We came to w waves, and deep Across
Is a clot of w dust.
You turn'd your w currents all to her.
Akbar's Dream 132
You ask me, why, etc. 26
The Voyaged!
Vision of Sin 113
Princess iv 301
Warmest Brinun'd with delirious draughts of w life. Elednore 139
Warming Alone and w his five wits, (repeat) The Owl i 6, 13
w with her theme She fulmined out her scorn Princess ii 132
but w as he went. Glanced at the point of law, Lover's Tale iv 275
Warmth (See also Mid-warmth) So full of summer w,
so glad, Miller's D. 14
And doubled his own w against her lips. Gardener's D. 138
The w it thence shall win To riper life Talking Oak 254
And the w of hand in hand. Vision of Sin 162
new w of life's ascending sun Was felt Enoch Arden 38
And all the w, the peace, the happiness, „ 761
Having the w and muscle of the heart, Aylmer's Field 180
and turning to the w The tender pink „ 185
The loyal w of Florian is not cold. Princess ii 244
helpless w about my barren breast In the dead prime : „ vi 202
broke A genial w and light once more, „ 282
A rosy w from marge to marge. /»i Mem. xlvi 16
A central w diffusing bliss In glance and smile, „ Ixxxiv 6
imderfoot the herb was dry ; And genial lo ; „ xcv 3
A w within the breast would melt „ cxxiv 13
all the kindly w of Arthur's hall Balin aiid Balan 236
For we that want the w of double life, Holy Grail 624
An out-door sign of all the w within, „ 704
I yearn'd for w and colour which I found Guinevere 647
With hated w of apprehensiveness. Lover s Tale i 632
. for the cold Without, and w within me, To E. Fitzgerald 29
ranged from the narrow w of your fold, Despair 38
light and genial w of double day. To Prin. Beatrice 22
With all the w of smnmer. The Ring 30
Thy w's from bud to bud Accomplisli Prog, of Spring 113
Beyond all hopes of w, CEnone sat Not moving, Death of (Enone 74
Express him also by their w of love Akbar's Dream. 109
War-music when first I heard W-m, Princess v 266
Warn part against himself To w us off. Love and Duty 46
Something divine to w them of their foes : Sea Dreams 69
And fearing waved my arm to w them off ; „ 132
from him flits to w A far-off friendship Demeter and P. 89
Be not deaf to the sound that w's, Riflemen form ! 8
Wam'd spoken. And w that madman ere it grew too late : Vision of Sin 5&
An aAvful voice within had w him hence : Princess v 338
Balan w, and went ; Balin remain'd : Balin and Balan 153
w me of their fierce design Against my house, Lancelot and E. 274
Warning (See also Phantom-warning) Take w ! he that
will not sing The Blackbird 21
For by the w of the Holy Ghost, St. S. Stylites 219
In those two deaths he read God's w ' wait.' Enoch Arden 571
nail me like a weasel on a grange For w : Princess ii 206
Did I wish Your w or your silence ? Geraint and E. 77
Then not to give you w, that seems hard ; „ 422
yet to give him w, for he rode As if he heard not, „ 451
Take w : yonder man is surely dead ; „ 672
' Thereafter, the dark w of our King, Holy Grail 368
Then I remember'd Arthur's w word, „ 598
Some w — sent divinely — as it seem'd Lover's Tale iv 21
Who ever turn'd upon his heel to hear My w Tiresias 73
You scorn my Mother's w, The Ring 326
Warp (s) wonder of the loom thro' w and woof Princess i 62
Warp (verb) lies that w us from the living truth ! Locksley Hall 60
' Ye are green wood, see ye w not. Princess ii 75
I loved thee first. That w's the wit.' Merlin and V. 61
Warp'd Walter w his mouth at this To something Princess, Pro. 214
Warrant (s) Crown'd w had we for the crowning sin Last Tournament 576
Slender w had He to be proud of Batt. of Brunanburh 66
Warrant (verb) I w, man, that we shall bring you round.' Enoch Arden 841
Butter I w's be prime, an' I w's the heggs be as well. Village Wife 3
I w ye soom fine daay — Spinster's S's. 63
Sa I w's 'e niver said haafe wot 'e thowt, Church-warden, etc. 18
Warren And waster than a w : Amphioni
couch of incest in the w's of the poor. Locksley H., Sixty 224-
Warring
777
Waste
Warring W on a later day, Ode on Well. 102
conscience of a saint Among his w senses, Guinevere 640
She reels not in the storm of w words, Ancient Sage 70
Be struck from out the clash of w wills ; Prog, of Spring 95
Thro' all the w world of Hindustan Akbar's Dream 26
Warrior (adj.) Cotdd give the w kings of old. To the Queen 4
The daughter of the w Gileadite, D. of F. Women 197
Wilt surely guide me to the w King, Balin and Balan 478
Warrior (s) (See also Statesman-warrior) W of God,
whose strong right arm
And like a w overthrown ;
sprang No dragon w's from Cadmean teeth,
made the old w from his ivied nook Glow
about their heads I saw The feudal w laily-clad ;
in thunder-storms. And breed up w's !
Home they brought her w dead :
Lightly to the w stept.
And happy w's, and immortal names.
Come, a grace to me ! I am your w :
W's carry the w's pall,
Glort of w, glory of orator,
laugh'd upon his w whom he loved And honour'd
most.
and his w's cried, ' Be thou the king,
charg'd his w whom he loved And honour'd most,
therebefore the lawless w paced Unarm'd,
And heated the strong w in his dreams ;
At which the w in his obstinacy,
vanish'd by the fairy well That laughs at iron — as
our w's did —
And on the third are w's, perfect men,
dreading worse than shame Her w Tristram,
There rode an armed w to the doors.
w's beating back the swarm Of Turkish Islam
W's over the Weltering waters
and round The w's puissant shoulders
The w hath forgot his arms,
Lies the w, my forefather.
Dead the w, dead his glory,
Indian w's dream of ampler hunting grounds „ 69
old-world inns that take Some w for a sign Pro. to Gen. Uamley 14
realm were in the wrong For which her w's bleed, Epilogue 35
right to crown wth song The w's noble deed — „ 37
W of God, man's friend, Epit. on Gordon 1
the shadowy w glide Along the silent field Demeter and P. 152
A w's crest above the cloud of war ' — The Ring 338
My w of the Holy Cross and of the conquering sword, Happy 21
Alexander 1
Two Voices 150
Lucretius 50
Princess, Pro. 104
119
vUO
vi 1
10
93
224
Ode on Well. 6
Wages 1
Com. of Arthur 125
258
447
Garah and L. 914
Marr. of Geraint 72
Geraint and E. 454
Merlin and V. 429
Holy Grail 236
Last Tournament 385
Guinevere 409
Montenegro 10
Batt. of Brunanburh 47
Achilles over the T. 3
Ancieni Sage 138
Locksley H., Sixty 28
30
To Ulysses 26
To Master of B. 19
Death of CEnone 39
Tiresias 178
Last Tournament 517
Batt. of Brunanburh 59
Two Voices 153
Guinevere 278
Dead Prophet 56
Tiresias 100
Batt. of Brunanburh 121
pine which here The w of Caprera set.
Find her w Stark and dark in his funeral tire
The wounded w climbs from Troy to thee.
' Warrior-king the w-k's. In height and prowess
Warrior-wise w-w thou stridest thro' his halls
Warship Fled to his w :
War-song His country's w-s thrill his ears :
Full many a noble w-s had he sung,
Wart Were it but for a w or a mole ? '
War-thunder shuddering W-t of iron rams ;
War-worker w-w's who Harried the Welshman,
Was (See also War) For w, and is, and will be, are
but is ; Princess Hi 324
And now the W, the Might-have been, To Marq. of Dufferin 38
Who am, and w, and will be his, his own Happy 7
Wash (s) Katie walks By the long w of Australasian seas The Brook 194
Wash (verb) (See also Wesh) 0 mercy, mercy ! w
away my sin. St. S. Stylites 120
It may be that the gulfs will w us down : Ulysses 62
And in the great sea w away my sin.' Holy Grail 806
Wash'd (See also Fresh-washed, Wesh'd) W with still
rains and daisy blossomed ; Circumstance 7
A league of grass, w by a slow broad stream, Gardener's D. 40
daily left The little footprint daily w away. Enoch Arden 22
shone Their morions, w with morning, Princess v 264
stream Descended, and the Sxm was m away. Gareth and L. 1047
I have wallow'd, I have w — Last Tournament 315
an I wallow'd, then I w — „ 318
Wash'd (continued) w up from out the deep ?
anon the wanton billow w Them over.
Washer See Dish-washer
Washing I heard the ripple w in the reeds.
And the long ripple w in the reeds.'
I heard the ripple w in the reeds,
And the long ripple w in the reeds.'
Universal ocean softly w all her warless Isles
Wasp W's in our good hive.
Wassail pledge you all In w ;
Nor bowl of w mantle wann ;
Wassail-bowl The host, and I sat round the w-b,
I,' quoth Everard, ' by the w-b.'
Waste (adj.) Stretch'd wide and wild the w enormous
marsh,
swan's death-hymn took the soul Of that w place
with joy
' From emptiness and the w wide Of that abyss,
like a wind, that shrills All night in a w land,
Fly o'er w fens and windy fields.
Do\vn the w waters day and night.
Sunning himself in a w field alone —
To the w deeps together.
blank And w it seem'd and vain ;
Better the w Atlantic roll'd On her
From out w places comes a cry,
And thus the land of Cameliard was w,
Vext with w dreams ?
Gray swamps and pools, w places of the hern,
To the w earldom of another earl,
O'er these w downs whereon I lost myself.
And down the w sand-shores of Trath Treroit,
Lords of w marshes, kings of desolate isles,
And whipt me into w fields far away ;
For out of the w islands had he come,
Better the King's w hearth and aching heart
On the w sand by the w sea they closed.
like a wind that shrills All night in a w land,
Forthgazing on the w and open sea.
And all the land was w and solitary :
a crowd Throng'd the w field about the city gates :
Some lodge within the w sea-dunes,
Now somewhere dead far in the w Soudan,
Waste (s) (See also Waaste) The level w, the rounding gray
Ammonian Oasis in the w.
across the w His son and heir doth ride
play'd Among the w and lumber of the shore,
babes were running wild Like colts about the w
flour From his tall mill that whistled on the w.
With one small gate that open'd on the w,
and came out upon the w.
of all his lavish w of words
wrought Such w and havock as the idolatries,
Doom upon kings, or in the w ' Repent ' ?
and molten on the w Becomes a cloud :
that somewhere in the w The Shadow sits
dreamful w's where footless fancies dwell
Far-sighted summoner of War and W
glancing round the w she fear'd
and she drove them thro' the w.
Here in the heart of w and wilderness.
and sent a thousand men To till the w's,
The sad sea-sounding w's of Lyonesse —
rose And drove him into w's and solitudes For
agony,
I saw the least of little stars Down on the w, ,
Fled all night long by glimmering w and weald, And
heard the Spirits of the w and weald
or doth all that haunts the w and wild Mourn,
In praise to God who led me thro' the w.
tum'd. And fled by many a w,
She comes on w and wood, On farm and field :
By w and field and town of alien tongue,
Waste (verb) if I w words now, in truth You must
blame Love. Miller's D. 191
Last Tournament 685
Lover's Tale ii 9
-1/. d' Arthur 70
117
Pass, of Arthur 238
285
Locksley 11., Sixty 170
Princess iv 535
„ Pro. 186
111 Mem. cv IS
The Epic 5
23
Ode to Memory 101
Dying Swan 22
Two Voices 119
M. d' Arthur 202
Sir Galahad 60
The Voyage 58
Aylmer's Field 9
Sea Dreams 238
Princess vii 43
Third of Feb. 21
In Mem. Hi 7
Com. of Arthur 20
85
Geraint and E. 31
438
Lancelot and E. 225
301
527
Holy Grail 788
Pelleas and E. 86
Guinevere 524
Pass, of Arthur 92
370
Lover s Tale ii 177
„ iv 125
Sir J . Oldcastle 40
The Flight 90
Epit. on Gordon 2
Mariana 44
Alexander 8
D. of the 0. Year 30
Enoch Arden 16
305
343
,733
777
The Brook 191
Aylmer's Field 640
742
Princess iv 72
In Mem. xxii 19
Maud I xviii 69
Ded. of Idylls 37
Geraint and E 50
100
313
942
Merlin and V. 74
Lancelot and E. 252
Holy Grail 525
Pas
Guinevere 128
of Arthur 48
Columbus 17
Demeter and P. 74
Prog, of Spring 22
St. Telemachus 30
Waste
778
Watch'd
Waste (verb) (cotUinued) The sea w's all: but let me live
my life. Audley Court 51
To 10 his whole heart in one kiss Sir L. arid Q. G. 44
That like a broken purpose w in air : So w not thou ;
but come ; Princess vii 214
Forgive me, I w my heart in signs : let be. „ 359
Half the night I w in sighs, Maud II iv 23
Nor dared to w a perilous pity on him : Geraint and E. 525
Speak therefore : shall I w myself in vain ? ' Lancelot and E. 670
and to the spiritual strength Within us, Holy Grail 35
her too hast thou left To pine and w Last Tournament 598
when I knew the twain Would each w each, Tiresias 69
111 To w this earth began — Ef Hague 23
Wasted (adj. and part) My heart is w with my woe, Oriana 1
Wan, w Truth in her utmost need. Clear-headed friend 19
Where they smile in secret, looking over it-
lands, Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 114
I that have w here health, wealth, and time. Princess iv 352
And wordless broodings on the w cheek — „ vii 112
Beating from the w vines Back to France Ode on Well. 109
Confusions of a w youth ; In Mem., Pro. 42
I trust I have not w breath : „ cxx 1
Thro' the hubbub of the market I steal, a w frame, Maud II iv 69
W so often by the heathen hordes. Holy Grail 244
W and worn, and but a tithe of them, „ 723
But when the matron saw That hinted love was only
w bait. The Ring 360
You that lie with w lungs Waiting for your summons . . . Forlorn 21
Wasted (verb) Last night I w hateful hours Fatima 8
And beat me down and marr'd and w me, Tithonus 19
He w hours with Averill ; Aylmer's Field 109
There they ruled, and thence they w Boadicea 54
waging war Each upon other, w all the land ; Com. of Arthur 7
' O I that w time to tend upon her, Geraint and E. 38
and thro' her love her life W and pined, Pelleas and E. 496
Wasteful And scaled in sheets of w foam, Sea Dreams 53
disciple, richly garb'd, but worn From w living,
fouow'd — Ancient Sage 5
Waster And w than a warren : Amphion 4
Wastest The w moorland of our realm shall be Safe, Gareth and L. 603
Wasting w odorous sighs All night long Adeline 43
leapt To greet her, w his forgotten heart, Aylmer's Field 689
' w the sweet summer hours ' ? Charity 1
Watch (s) (See also Death-watch) Kept w, waiting decision, CEnone 143
wan was her cheek With hollow w, Princess vi 145
And w'es in the dead, the dark, „ vii 103
Come : not in w'es of the night. In Mem. xci 13
Keep w and ward, keep w and ward, Maud I vi 58
did Enid, keeping w, behold In the first shallow
♦ shade Geraint and E. 118
still he kept his w beneath the wall. Pelleas and E. 223
Wide open were the gates. And no w kept ; „ 415
But kept their w upon the ring and you. The Ring 300
heron rises from his w beside the mere, Happy 3
Watch (time-piece) seal, that himg From Allan's w, Dora 136
Watch (verb) I w thy grace ; and in its place Elednore 127
Fancy w'es in the wilderness, Caress'd or chidden 12
I w the darkening droves of swine Palace of Art 199
To w the crisping ripples on the beach. Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 61
To w the long bright river drawing slowly „ 92
To w the emerald-colour'd water falling „ 96
W what main-currents draw the years : Love thou thy land 21
W what thou seest, and lightly bring aie word.' ^1/. d' Arthur 38
W what I see, and lightly bring thee word.' ,. 44
I bad thee, w, and lightly bring me word.' „ 81
saw An angel stand and w me, as I sang. St. S. Stylites 35
I used to w — if I be he that watch'd — Tithonus 52
did we w the stately ships, Locksley Hall 37
To w the three tall spires ; Godiva 3
That w the sleepers from the wall. Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 24
He w'es from his mountain walls. The Eagle 5
dewy eyes That w me from the glen below. Move Eastward 8
built their castles of dissolving sand To w them
overflow'd, Enoch Arden 20
There often as he watch'd or seem'd to w, „ 600
Aylmer's Field 275
551
Princess i 247
„ a 422
„ Hi 24
270
To F. D. Maurice 14
In Mem. xxvi 5
xxxvi 15
K14
„ Ixiii 9
„ Ixxiv 2
„ Ixxxv 81
Maud I xix 10
/// vi 25
Watch (verb) (continued) ' Good,' said his friend,
' but w ! '
and one was set to w The watcher,
and w A full sea glazed with muffled moonlight,
0 to w the thirsty plants Imbibing !
Or seem'd to w the dancing bubble,
and w The sandy footprint harden into stone.'
1 w the twilight falling brown
if that eye which w'es guilt And goodness.
And those wild eyes that w the wave
Ye w, like God, the rolling hours
So may'st thou w me where I weep.
To those that w it more and more,
' I w thee from the quiet shore ;
For who was left to w her but I ?
And w her harvest ripen, her herd increase,
Guinevere Stood by the castle walls to w him pass ; Com. of Arthur 48
w his mightful hand striking great blows Marr. of Geraint 95
last bethought her how she used to w, „ 647
Not dare to w the combat, Geraint and E. 154
Geraint Waving an angry hand as who should say
' Ye w me,' „ 445
From whence to w the time, and eagle-like Balin and Balan 535
the Seer Would w her at her petulance. Merlin and V. 175
and laugh As those that w a kitten ; „ 177
And w the curl'd white of the coming wave „ 292
while women w Who wins, who falls ; Holy Grail 34
' There he w'es yet, There like a dog Pelleas and E. 262
W what thou seest, and lightly bring me word.' Pass, of Arthur 206
W what I see, and lightly bring thee word.' „ 212
I bad thee, w, and lightly bring me word.' „ 249
I could not w her for four — In the Child. Hasp. 59
Still— could we w at all points ? Def. of Lucknow 49
w the chariot whirl About the goal again, Tiresias 176
Or w the waving pine which here To Ulysses 25
' Father and Mother will w you grow ' — (repeat) Romney's R. 104, 106
Christian faces w Man murder man. St. Telemachus 55
Watch'd She w my crest among them all, Oriana 30
In lazy mood I w the little circles die ; Miller's B. 74
I w the little flutterings, „ 153
And w by weeping queens. Palace of Art 108
I used to watch — if I be he that w — Tithonus 52
And w by silent gentlemen. Will Water. 231
Maiden, I have w thee daily, L. of Burleigh 3
to the last dip of the vanishing sail She w it, Enoch Arden 246
There often as he w or seem'd to watch, „ 600
Miriam w and dozed at intervals, „ 909
They parted, and Sir Alymer Aylmer w. Aylmer's Field 277
conscious of the rageful eye That w him, „ 337
Or made occasion, being strictly w, „ 478
and groves of pines, W even there ; „ 551
and Sir Aylmer w them all, ., 552
the wife, who w his face. Paled at a sudden twitch „ 731
and w it lying bathed In the green gleam Princess i 93
While Psyche w them, smiling, „ ii 365
and w Or seem'd to watch the dancing bubble, „ Hi 23
I w the swallow winging south „ iv 89
but w them well. Saw that they kept apart, „ 339
but w awake A cypress in the moonlight shake. The Daisy 81
There was one who w and told me — Boadicea 30
And I myself, who sat apart And w them. In Mem. ciii 30
That w her on her nurse's arm, „ Con. 46
and w the great sea fall. Wave after wave. Com. of Arthur 378
and w him from the gates : „ 449
Then she that w him, ' Wherefore stare ye so ? Gareth and L. 939
Knave, when I w thee striking on the bridge „ 992
But w him have I like a phantom pass „ 1335
Yet have I w thee victor in the joust, „ 1356-
While he that w her sadden, Marr. of Geraint 67
he TO The being he loved best in all the world, Geraint and E. 102
And w the sun blaze on the turning scythe, „ 252
Eyes too that long have w how Lancelot draws Balin and Balan 375
Queen Among her damsels broidering sat, heard, w
And whisper'd : Merlin and V. 138
one had w, and had not held his peace : „ 16
I
Watch'd
779
Water-course
Watch'd (continued) and she w him from her walls. Merlin and V. 775
\i hile she w their arms far-off Sparkle, Lancelot and E. 395
many a time have w thee at the tilt ., 1359
Sat by the river in a cove, and w The high reed wave, .. 1389
all along the street of those Who w us pass ; Holy Grail 345
W her lord pass, and knew not that she sigh'd. Last Tournament 130
the knights, who w him, roar'd And shouted ., 468
westward-smiling seas, W from this tower. „ 588
fledged The hills that w thee, as Love Lover's Tale i 12
All day I w the floating isles of shade, ,, ii 5
And w them till they vanish'd from my sight ., 42
an' I w him, an' when he came in First Quarrel 75
So they w what the end would be. The Revenge 73
How often have we w the sun fade The Flight 41
many's the time that I w her at mass Tomorrow 29
W again the hollow ridges Locksley R., Sixty 2
A soul that, w from earliest youth. To Marq. of Dufferin 25
W my far meadow zoned with airy mom ; Frog, of Spring 69
You w not I, she did not grow, Romney's R. 105
I w my son. And those that follow'd, Akbar's Dream 187
She w me, she nursed me, she fed me. Charity 33
Watcher The w on the column till the end ; St. S. Stylites 163
and one was set to watch The w, Aylmer's Field 552
A lidless w of the public weal. Princess iv 325
Sat watching like a w by the dead. „ v 62
kinsman left himic o'er his wife And two fair babes, Merlin and V. 706
Heard by the w in a haunted house, Guinevere 73
Watchest Thou w all things ever dim In Mem. cxxi 3
Watcheth shepherd who w the evening star. Dying Swan 35
Watchful Leolin ever w of her eye, Aylmer's Field 210
all offices Of w care and trembling tentlemess. Lover's Tale i 226
for I do not doubt Being a w parent, Sisters (E. and E.) 31
Watching with triumph, w still To pierce me thro' Rosalind 26
Tho' w from a ruin'd tower How grows the day Two Voices 77
W your growth, I seem'd again to grow. Aylmer's Field 359
Sat w like a watcher by the dead. Princess v 62
With Psyche's babe, was Ida w us, ,, 512
All her maidens, w, said, ,. viS
w here At this, om- great solenanity. Ode on Well. 243
Now w high on mountain cornice, The Daisy 19
awful sense Of one mute Shadow w all. In Mem. xxx 8
In w thee from hour to hour, „ cxii 12
An angel w an urn Wept over her, Maud I viii 3
Darken'd w a mother decline And that dead man „ xix 8
when he tum'd from w him. Gareth and L. 1032
w overhead The aerial poplar wave, Sisters (E. and E.) 83
No phantoms, w from a phantom shore Anciemi Sage 179
w till the day begun — Locksley H., Sixty 91
IV her large light eyes and gracious looks. Prog, of Spring 19
You that are w The gray Magician Merlin and the G. 4
Watchman the w peal The sliding season : Gardener's D. 182
Watch-word Nor deal in w-w's overmuch : Love thou thy land 28
and this proud w rest Of ec[ual ; Princess vii 300
be grateful for the sounding w ' Evolution '
here. Locksley H., Sixty 198
Water (See also Bog-wather, Fresh-water, Sea-water,
Watter) the glimmering w outfloweth : Leonine Eleg. 9
A sluice with blacken'd w's slept, Mariana 38
which crept Adown to where the w slept. Arabian Nights 30
The trenched w's run from sky to sky ; Ode to Memory 104
Holy 10 will I pour Into every spicy flower Poet's Mind 12
Winds were blowing, w's flowing, Oriana 14
Keeps his blue w's fresh for many a mile. Mine be the strength 8
Their moon-led w's white. Palace of Art 252
night-dews on still w's between walls Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 3
river drawing slowly His w's from the purple hill — „ 93
To watch the emerald coloiir'd w falling „ 96
Scaffolds, still sheets of w, divers woes, D. of F. Women 34
On one side lay the Ocean, and on one Lay a
great w, M. d' Arthur 12
And the wild w lapping on the crag.' „ 71
' I heard the w lapping on the crag, „ 116
Many an evening by the w's did we watch Locksley Hall 37
as moonlight unto sunlight, and as w imto wine — „ 152
Rift the hills, and roll the w's, „ 186
Water (continued) Side by side beneath the w Crew and
Captain lie ; The Captain 67
stars all night above the brim Of w's The Voyage 26
Down the waste w's day and night, „ 58
Illyeian woodlands, echoing falls Of w. To E. L. 2
The blaze upon the w's to the east ; Enoch Arden 594
The blaze upon the w's to the west ; „ 596
Another ship (She wanted w) „ 628
The silent w slipping from the hills, „ 633
To where the rivulets of sweet w ran ; „ 642
Like fomitains of sweet w in the sea, „ 803
Beyond it, where the w's marry — The Brook 81
Down in the w, a long reef of gold. Sea Dreams 127
And drew, from butts of w on the slope. Princess, Pro. 60
smile that like a wrinkling wind On glassy w ■ „ i 116
Over the rolling w's go, „ Hi 5
smile dwelt like a clouded moon In a still w : „ vi 271
To meet the sim and sunny w's. The Daisy 11
All along the valley, where thy w's flow, V. of Cauteretz 3
Where yon broad w sweetlj' slowly glides. Kequiescat 2
The forest crack'd, the w's curl'd, In Mem. xv 5
Is on the w's day and night, „ xvii 11
As drop by drop the w falls „ Iviii 3
By that broad w of the west, ,, laovii 3
I hear thee where the w's run ; „ cxxx 2
was heard among the holy hymns A voice as of
the w's. Com. of Arthur 291
Hath power to walk the w's like our Lord. „ 294
there past along the hymns A voice as of the w's, „ 464
all her dress Wept from her sides as w flowing
away ; Gareth and L. 217
And drops of w fell from either hand ; „ 220
To turn the broach, draw w, or hew wood, „ 486
under this wan w many of them Lie rotting, ,, 824
and beside The carolling w set themselves Balin and Balan 44
as an enemy that has left Death in the living w's. Merlin and V. 148
At once she slipt like w to the floor. Lancelot and E. 830
Heard on the winding w's, eve and morn „ 1408
Ye could not hear the w's for the blast, Holy Grail 797
with living w's in the change Of seasons : Pelleas and E. 511
Unruffling w's re-collect the shape Last Tournament 36&
after the great w's break Whitening for half a league, „ 464
as the w Moab saw Come round by the East, „ 482
And one was w and one star was fire, „ 736
On one side lay the Ocean, and on one Lay a
great w. Pass, of Arthur 180
And the wild w lapping on the crag.' „ 239'
' I heard the w lapping on the crag, „ 284
Do^ra that long w opening on the deep „ 466
pleasant breast of w's, quiet bay, Lover's Tale i 6
semicircle Of dark-blue w's and the narrow fringe „ 38
and thro' the arch Down those loud w's, ., 59
charm of light and strength Upon the w's, ., 92
And glory of broad w's interfused, .. 401
how he woo'd The w's, and the w's answering lisp'd
Like w, drop by drop, upon my ear Fell ;
When he leaps from the w to the land.
And the w began to heave and the weather
Rather to thee, thou living w,
where the w is clearer than air :
Warriors over the Weltering w's
the w's — you hear them call !
for my brain was drunk with the w,
This wealth of w's might but seem to draw
and hear the w's roar,
as a man Who sees his face in w,
rolling of dragons By warble of w,
you will not deny my sultry throat One draught
of icy w.
A fall of w lull'd the noon asleep.
Waterbreak With many a silvery ic
Water-circle Gleams of the w-c's as they broke.
Water-course The tangled w-c's slept,
and show'd A riotous confluence of w-c's
Scarr'd with a hundred wintn- w-c's —
544
576
The Revenge 55
113
Sir J. Oldcastle 131
V. of Maeldune 77
Batt. of Bninanburh 48-
Despair 47
65
A ncient Sage 9
The Flight 00
The Ring 370
Merlin and the G. 45
Romney's R. 23
83
The "Brook 61
Lover's Tale i 67
Dying Swan 19
Lucretius 30
Holy Grail 490
Water'd
Water'd rieal'd it with kisses ? w it with tears ?
Waterfall Thou wert not nursed by the to
Down shower the gambolling w's
w's Pour'd in a thunderless plunge
Waterflag There in the many-knotted w's,
There in the many-knotted w's,
Waterfowl they ride away — to hawk For w.
Water-gate Storm at the W-g !
Water-gnat in the burn w-g's murmur an<l inoum.
Water-lily She saw the w-l bloom,
But as the w starts and slides Upon tlie level
Waterloo in sawdust, slept. As old as W ;
In that world-earthquake, W !
nobler work to do Than when he fought at W,
Plunged in the last fierce charge at Jf,
Water-pipes Creeps to the garden w-p beneath,
Water-side The first house by the ^o-s,
Water-smoke thousand wreaths of dangling w-s,
780
Wavering
(Enone 234
Ode to Memory 51
Sea- Fairies 10
V. of Maeldune 13
M. d' Arthur 63
Pass, of Arthur 231
Merlin and V. 108
Def. of Lucknow 37
Leonine Eleg. 8
L. of Shalott Hi 39
Princess iv 255
Will Water. 100
Ode on Well. 133
257
Sisters (E. and E.) 64
D. of F. Women 206
L. of Shalott iv 34
Princess vii 213
Water-sodden Dagonet stood Qmet as any w-s log Last Tournament 253
Water-world Thro' his dim t«-w ? Maud II ii 20
Watery slight Sir Robert with his w smile Edwin Morris 128
inat weak and w nature love you ? No ! The Ring 396
Waiter (water) 'E seeams naw moor nor w, North. Cobbler 76
some on "em said it wur w — ' 33
thou can't graw this upo' w ! ' "86
Wattle he built with w's from the marsh Holy Grail 63
■or Jt'i '^JS'^'^'L^J^'^. ^, a stag-tuckey's w's. Church-to ar dm, etc. 31
Wattled bleat Of the thick-fleeced sheep from w folds, Ode to Memory 66
Wattling And one was rough with w, Balin and Balan366
Wave (S) {See also Sea-wave) The slumbrous w outwelleth, Claribel 18
when the crisp slope w's After a tempest, Stipp. Confessions 126
And the blue w beat the shore ; All Things will Die 43
the rainbow hangs on the poising w, Sea- Fairies 29
And shook the w as the wind did sigh ; Dying Swan 15
But the w would make music above us afar— The Merman 22
adown the steep like awl would leap The Mermaid 39
As w's that up a quiet cove Rolling slide, Eleanore 108
Ihro the w that runs for ever By the island L. of Shalott i 12
1 loved the brimming w that swam Miller's D 97
One show'd an iron coast and angry w's. Palace of Art 69
swallow 'ill come back again -vvith summer o'er
Ihis mounting w will roll us shoreward soon.' Lotos- Eaters 2
gushing of the w Far far away did seem to mourn 31
Our island home Is far beyond the w; 45
In ever climbing up the climbing w? ,] Q. S. 50
wind and w and oar ; " " "227
holy organ rolling w's Of sound on roof and floor D. of F. Womm 191
on the bounteous M) of such a breast Gardiner's D. 139
€ame wet-shod alder from the w, Amphion 41
We came to warmer w's, and deep The Vovaae 37
■on w's that idly burst Like Heavenly Hope 69
Thy tribute w deliver : ^ Farewell 2
Rising falling like a w, virion of Sin 125
And w « of shadow went over the wheat, Poet's Song 4
w^P P/.,?T precipitous rivulet to the w, Enoch Ardm kl
Who still d the rolling w of Galilee ! Ayhner's Field 709
that great w Returning, while none mark'd it, Sea Dreams 233
No rock so hard but that a little w Princess Hi 154
old-recurring w's of prejudice Resmooth 240
drench his dark locks in the gurgling w Mid-channel. " iv 187
like a beacon-tower above the w's Of tempest, 493
Naked, a double light in air and w, " ^i 157
Nor all Calamity's hugest w's confound, " Wjn 5
I^ s on a diamond shingle dash, The Islet 16
And w's that sway themselves in rest. In Mem. xi 18
And in the hearing of the w. ^i^ 4
the w again Is vocal in its wooded walls ; " 13
And those wild eyes that watch the w " xxxvi 15
The lightest w of thought shall lisp, " Xs
And every pulse of wind and w Recalls, " ix^rv 73
Or cool'd within the glooming w ; " iJZTx 45
Upon the thousand w's of wheat, '" ^^ t?
Trtl all my blood, a fuller w, "' ^fJii^^
^ream of a madden'd beach dragg',1 <lown by the w, Maud Tiii 12
Wave (s {continued) the long w's that roll in yonder
bay? MaudlxviUm
W after w, each mightier than the last, Com. of Arthur 379
and all the w was in a flame : And down the w and
in the flame was borne A naked babe,
And rippled like an ever-fleeting w,
Clash like the coming and retiring w.
Comes flying over many a windy w To Britain,
For the great w that echoes round the world ;
That keeps the wear and polish of the w.
blind w feeling roimd his long sea-hall
watch the curl'd white of the coming w
Ev'n such a w, but not so pleasurable,
You seem'd that w about to break upon me
as a wild w in the wide North-sea,
Play'd ever back upon the sloping w,
The heathen — but that ever-climbing w,
as the crest of some slow-arching w.
Between the steep cliff and the coming w ;
But after tempest, when the long w broke
only the wan w Brake in among dead faces.
Upon the dappled dimplings of the w,
Held for a space 'twixt cloud and w,
Showers slanting light upon the dolorous w.
All crisped sounds of w and leaf and wind,
Slow-moving as a w against the wind,
a w like the 10 that is raised by an earthquake
grew.
Backward they reel like the w, like the w
And we gazed at the wandering w
and the roar of w's,
rougher gust might tumble a stormier lo,
But the blind w cast me ashore.
Or if lip were laid to lip on the pillows of the w.
like a rock In the w of a stormy day ;
Hath still'd the blast and stroAvn the w.
And ask'd the w's that moan about the world
fill the hollows between w and w ;
and the moan of my w's I whirl,
Wave (verb) But who hath seen her w her hand ?
W's all its lazy lilies, and creeps on,
bottom agates seem to w and float
Nor w's the cypress in the palace walk ;
And, since the grasses round me w.
Sat by the river in a cove, and watch'd The high
reed w, Lancelot and E. 1390
watching overhead The aerial poplar w, Sisters (E. and E.) 84
He sees me, w's me from him. Happy 19
You need not w me from you. ,, 20
Still you w me off — ^poor roses — " loi
Thy gay lent-lilies w and put them by. Prog, of Spring 37
Waved caught His bundle, w his hand, and went his way. Enoch Arden 238
And fearing w my arm tB warn them off ; Sea Dreams 132
She spoke, and bowing w Dismissal : Princess ii 99
She, ending, w her hands : „ ^i, 522
She w to me with her hand. Maud I ix 8
The wrist is parted from the hand that w, Merlin and V. 551
yet he glanced not up, nor w his hand, Lancelot and E. 986
Arthur w them back. Alone he rode. Last Tournament 437
woods upon the hill W with a sudden gust Lover's Tale Hi 34
w his blade To the gallant three hundred Hemy Brigade 9
Waver As when a smibeam w's warm Miller's D. 79
While this great bow will w in the sun, Palace of Art ^
The gas-light w's dimmer ; wm Water. 38
IF s on her thin stem the snowdrop cold Prog, of Spring 3
A blood-red awning w overhead, St. Telemachus 52
Waver d The crowds, the temples, w, and the shore ; D. of F. Womm 114
for thus at times He w ; Merlin and V. 187
Here, too, my love W at anchor with me, Lover's Tale i 65
W and floated — which was less than Hope, „ 452
foeman surged, and w, and reel'd Up the hill, Heavy Brigade 62
Wavering and, w Lovingly lower, trembled on her
waist— Ah, happy shade— and still went w down, Gardmer's D. 130
From the high tree the blossom w fell, Princess vi 80
W's of every vane with every wind, To the Quern ii 50
383
Gareth and L. 215
522
Marr. of Geraint 337
420
682
Merlin and V. 232
292
294
302
Lancelot and E. 482
Holy Grail 382
Last Tournament 92
462
Guinevere 280
290
Pass, of Arthur 129
Lover's Tale i 44
417
811
ii 106
iv 293
The Revenge 115
Def. of Lucknow 43
V. of Maeldune 89
The Wreck 4
131
Despair 61
The Flight 48
Heavy Brigade 57
Freedom 34
Detneter and P. 64
Akbar's Dream 161
The Dreamer 13
L. of Shalott i 24:
Gardener's D. 42
Princess ii 327
vii 177
In Mem. xxi 2
II
Wavering
781
Way
Wavering (continued) \^'oo her and gain her then :
no w, boy ! Histers (E. and E.) 39
The flame of life went w down ; To Marq. of Dufferin 32
Bled ic o'er thy face, and chased away Demeter and P. 15
see I thro' the w flakes Yon blanching apricot Prog, of Sf ring 29
some thro' w lights and shadows broke, Lotos- Eaters 12
In every w brake an ambuscade. Geraint and E. 51
Waveringly Immingled with Heaven's azure w, Gareth and L. 936
Wave-worn the w-w horns of the echoing bank, Dying Swan 39
Waving and while he stood on deck W, Enoch Arden 244
w to him White hands, and courtesy ; Gareth and L. 1376
Geraint W an angry hand as who should say Geraint and E. 444
Perceived the w of his hands that blest. Guinevere 584
Then w us a sign to seat ourselves, Lover's Tale iv 320
But one — he was w a flag — The Wreck 119
0 slender lily w there, Ancient Sage 167
' Thrice-happy he that may caress The ringlet's w
balm Talking Oak 178
With woven paces and with w arms, Merlin and V. 207
Of woven paces and of w hands, (repeat) „ 330, 968
Or watch the w pine which here To Ulysses 25
Wavy And the w swell of the soughing reeds. Dying Swan 38
honeysuckle round the porch has wov'n its w bowers. May Queen 29
Wax (s) I will melt this marble into w Princess Hi 73
Wax (verb) Thou shalt w and he shall dwindle, Boddicea 40
Speak, as it w'es, of a love that wanes ? Lancelot and E. 1401
Waz'd Then w her anger stronger. The Goose 30
And watch'd them, w in every limb ; In Mem. ciii 30
So w in pride, that I believed myself Unconquerable, Geraint and E. 835
Waxen Baby fingers, w touches, press me from my
mother's breast. Locksley Hall 90
And melt the w hearts of men.' In Mem. xxi 8
A bought commission, a w face, Maud I x 30
Waxeth Ever the wonder w more and more. Sonnet to 6
Waxing The full-juiced apple, w over-mellow, Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 33
But tho' his eyes are w dim, D. of the O. Year 21
Way (See also HaU-way, Hilky-way, Waay, Wood-way)
Winning its w with extreme gentleness Isabel 23
A weary, weary w I go, Oriana 89
That will not stay, upon his w, Bosalind 15
And flashes off a thousand w's, „ 23
Nor wander'd into other w's : Mi/ life is full 3
one silvery cloud Had lost his w (Enone 93
This w and that, in many a wild festoon Ran riot, „ 100
The blessed music went that w my soul May Queen, Con. 42
Bluster the winds and tides the self-same w, D. of F. Women 38
and the woods and w's Are pleasant, On a Mourner 13
Till all thy life one w incline „ 19
The goose flew this w and flew that. The Goose 35
And God fulfils himself in many w's, M. d' Arthur 241
1 am going a long w With these thou seest — „ 256
all the livelong w With solemn gibe Gardener's D. 167
his w's were harsh ; But Dora bore them meekly. Dora 35
and went her w Across the wheat, „ 71
these unreal w's Seem but the theme of writers, Edwin Morris 47
Bear witness, if I could have found a w St. S. Stylites 55
Yet this w was left. And by this w I 'scaped them. „ 178
And down the w you use to come. Talking Oak 115
The trance gave w To those caresses, Love and Duty 65
Met me walking on yonder w, Edward Gray 2
summer suns. By many pleasant w's, Will Water. 34
And follow'd her all the w. Lady Clare 64
To meet and greet her on her w ; Beggar Maid 6
All the windy w's of men (repeat) Vision of Sin 132, 168
caught His bimdle, waved his hand, and went his w. Enoch Arden 238
And wherefore did he go this weary w, „ 296
While yet she went about her househokl w's, „ 453
winding glades high up like w's to Heaven, „ 573
led the w To where the rivulets of sweet water ran ; „ 641
I chatter over stony w's, The Brook 39
A childly w with children, Aylmer's Field 181
won mysterious w Thro' the seal'd ear „ 695
Is not our own child on the narrow w, „ 743
as a footsore ox in crowded w's „ 819
' That's your light w ; Princess, Pro. 151
Way (continued) She once had past that w ; Princess Pro. i 185
And thus (what other w was left) I came.' „ H 217
true she errs. But in her own grand w : „ Hi 107
I forced a w Thro' solid opposition „ 125
when we sent the Prince your w „ iv 398
done the thing one ought, When faJl'n in darker w's.' ,. v 68
And I will take her up and go my w, .. 102
for everything Gave w before him : „ 530
or was it chance. She past my w. „ vi 98
And turn'd each face her w : „ 144
to them the doors gave w Groaning, „ vi 349
These were the rough w's of the world till now. „ vii 257
one Not learned, save in gracious household w's, „ 318
The path of duty was the w to glory : (repeat)
The path of duty be the w to glory :
like a man, too, would have his w :
Of Lari Maxume, all the w.
And dead men lay all over the w.
All running on one w to the home of my love,
And ever met him on his w
And we with singing cheer'd the w.
Still onward winds the dreary w ;
And look thy look, and go thy w.
Moving about the household w's,
My darken'd w's Shall ring with music
Whatever w my days decline.
That will not yield each other w.
They wept and wail'd, but led the w
and let the world have its w :
Who knows the w's of the world.
Be mine a philosopher's life in the quiet woodland w's,
I know the w she went Home
what am I That I dare to look her w ;
Ode on Well. 202, 210
224
Grandmother 70
The Daisy 76
The Victim 21
Window, On the Hill 8
In Mem. vi 22
„ xxii 5
„ xxvi 1
xlix 9
Ix 11
,. Ixxvii 13
,. Ixxxv 41
m20
„ ciii 18
Maud I iv 21
44
49
xii 21
xvi 11
his w's are sweet. And their's are bestial, Com. of Arthur 180
To guard thee on the rough w's of the world.' „ 336
son Beheld his only w to glory lead Gareth and L. 159
the vassal king. Was ev'n upon his w to Camelot ; „ 392
who sliced a red life-bubbling w ., 509
I have miss'd the only w (repeat) „ 787, 792
convey'd them on their w And left them „ 889
I watch'd thee victor in the joust. And seen thy w.' „ 1357
And after went her w across the bridge, Marr. of Geraint 383
I have let men be, and have their w ; „ 466
For old am I, and rough the w's and wild ; „ 750
I charge thee ride before. Ever a good w on before ; Geraint and E. 15
I will not fight my w with gilded arms, „ 21
pain she had To keep them in the wild w's of the wood, „ 187
Them forward by a w which, beaten broad,
And left him lying in the public w ;
answering not one word, she led the w.
and she wept beside the w.
The long w smoke beneath him in his fear ;
To shun the wild w's of the lawless tribe.
' The fire of Heaven is on the dusty w's.
who sought to win my love Thro' evil w's :
And then she follow'd Merlin all the w.
Then her false voice made w, broken with sobs :
Glanced first at him, then her, and went his w.
Full often lost in fancy, lost his w ;
in the w's below The knights and ladies wept,
And thence departed every one his w.
some ancient king Had built a w,
For now there is a lion in the w.'
one was pointing this w, and one that, Because
the w was lost,
tilt against the knights There at Caerleon, but have
lost our w :
Glanced down upon her, turn'd and went her w.
Some rough old knight who knew the worldly w,
These be the w's of ladies,' Pelleas thought.
With promise of large light on woods and w's.
But he by wild and w, for half the night,
With tnmipet-blowings ran on all the w's From
Camelot Last Tournament 52
loneliest w's are safe from shore to shore. „ 102
436
478
495
519
532
608
Balin and Balan 448
475
Merlin and V. 203
857
Lancelot and E. 95
164
Holy Grail 352
360
502
645
Pelleas and E. 58
66
185
192
209
394
497
Way
782
Way (continued) So all the w's were safe from shore
Mark s w my soul !— but eat not thou with Mark, Vi9
bo, pluck d one w by hate and one by love " ^qq
Mark's w's to steal behind one in the dark— " «?«
And cast him as a worm upon the w • /" ■ oc
And then they rode to the divided^,' Oumevere^b
That did not shun to smite me in worse ic dtt
and the w's Were filled with rapine, ' lin
But m His w's with men I find Hina not. Pass of irthur 11
and wail their w From cloud to cloud, •' oq
find or feel a w Thro' this blind haze, '" 7^
And God fulfils himself in many w's, "' J^
I am going a long w With these thou seest— " 404
that w my wish leads me evermore Still to "
believe it — ,- ^ rr j • ^r,.
Each w from verge to verge a Holy Land. ^''' ' ^"^* ' fit
effect weigh'd seas upon my head To come my « ! "' 661
Was not the land as free thro' all her w's " ^o
Could that be more because he came my w » " «««
Why should he not come my w if he would ' " ««?
why shoidd he come my w Robed in those robes " am
what gleam on those black w's Where Love " si 9
Had died ahnost to serve them any w, " ,%. ? 94
And leave him in the public w to die " o^i
And balanced either w by each, " 9^0
he patted my hand in his gentle w, First Quarrel 67
and now you may go your w. "^ El 20
Turning my w, the loveliest face on earth. Sisters ( E andF\ 87
Flower mto fortune-our world's w- ^"^^ CoMus 161
sometimes wish I had never led the w. Columbus lb7
Shaping their w toward Dyflen again, BaU of Brunei, h^^rhQfi.
moves miseen among the w's oimen.' "* '^ Ti^eZs 24
Send no such light upon the w's of men iresms^
and every w the vales Wind, " foi
By all my w's where'er they ran. Ancient Saae 1^7
he— some one— this w creeps— ^nctent ^afel57
and Suns along their fiery w, Loclcslev H Sfi^q
know them, follow him who led the ro ^ ^•' ^'''^^ B^
Not this w will you set your name ' " v -i i
Yon myriad-worlded w~ Epilogue 1
Well, One w for Miriam. rp, "„ . ^^
She tum'd, and in her soft imperial w ^'^%ij
/am on the Perfect W, All else is to perdition.' Akbar's Breanfu
Here on this bank in some w live the life l fl
Will you move a little that w ? r-j.^,,*/^
Well if it do not roll our w. »;/,. Ckartty 20
Toward the lowland w's behind me "^fc? t"^ ' t
Wayfaring-tree Black holly, and white-flower'd w-t ! Sir J olLastlTm
Wayade Crait, poisonous counsels, w ambushings- GarethaZi 432
The w blossoms open to the blaze R„7,-„ „„a Ti T/in
Come dashing do4n on a tall I fl'ower, ^'^'" trIntZ IS
I told your w story to my mother Sisters (En^TvAli
Wayward-The vexed eddies of its w brother : ^^^ "^UaUf^
I have been wild and 10, but you'll forgive me
OrTmUhing of a w modern mind ''''' ^""Irf^^i, S^, f,
I went thro' many w moods /)«« nl p «
No more shall w grief abuse The genial hour ZnMewZ 9
And yet so wild and w that my dream- dkbar'^ Bream 172
Waywardness At any gentle damsel's w. gTJu andluil
Way-worn Foot-sore, w-w, at length ^aretnam J. 1179
Weak (adj.) f Truth a-le^ning ^her crutch, Clefr-hSTfr^Zlt
Than C17 for strength, remaining w, 5^ f^Z, kt
' For I go, w from suffering here : ^'"'' ^"'^^^
ff' symbols of the settled bliss, n^^^^," r, 03?
And m my w, lean arms I lift the cross, St S Stvlites 118
Made w by time and fate, but strong in will *" Mvssesll
Pass on, w heart, and leave me where I lie : Come not when et^ 11
Half-parted from a w and scolding himje 'to. » i Za
Full of w poison, turnsnits for thTcK,' PrteTh^it
This fellow would make weakness w r;rtncess iv Olb
Strike dead the whole w r^e STno/nous worms M^^Trl
Seeing that ye be grown too,, and old ^' Com «f J^/i\n
For see ye not how w and hungerwom I seem- ^arl «13'I m
Weak (adj.) (coiUinued) The sick w beast seekintr to
help lierself
And being w in body said no more ;
Flatter me rather, seeing me so w,
Of eyes too w to look upon the light ;
An' Hetty wur w i' the hattics,
being woman and w. His formal kiss fell
' That w and watery nature love you ? No '
Weak (s) if from Arthur's hall, To help the w.
Weaken d And all the senses w, save in that
• Muriel's health Had w, nursing little Miriam.
Weakening gentle sickness, gradually W the man
Weaker Words w than your grief would make '
And ever w grows thro' acted crime,
' I might forget my w lot ;
songs I made As echoes out of w times,
till he saw Which were the w •
Weakest Cries to JF as to Strongest,
Weakling Poor w ev'n as they are.'
Of craven, w, and thrice-beaten hound :
' Rise, w ; I am Lancelot ; say thy sav '
Weakly This pretty, puny, w little one,—
Weakness my own w fools My judgment,
Prevailing in w, the coronach stole
Deliver not the tasks of might To w,
Regard the w of thy peers :
W to be wroth with w !
So she strove against her w.
That was your hour of w.
And Enoch bore his w cheerfully,
to spy The w of a people or a house.
Our w somehow shapes the shadow,
And hatred of her w, blent with shame,
but well-nigh close to death For w :
' This fellow would make w weak,
my passion hath not swerved To works of w
Forgot his w in thy sight. '
those Whom w or necessity have cramp'd
Weal (^ee a;.9p Dogwhip-weals) he for the common w,
1 he fading politics
A lidless watcher of the public w,
So far, so near in woe and w ;
Be moulded by your wishes for her w ;
Hours That cancel w with woe.
Wealth
Merlin and V. 498
Lancelot and E. 839
Last Tournament 642
Lover's Tale i 614
Village Wife 101
The Wreck 31
The Ring 396
Balin and Balan 473
Lover's Tale i 127
The Ring 357
Enoch Arden 825
To J. S. 65
Will 12
Two Voices 367
l7h Mem., Con. 22
Lancelot and E. 462
Locksley H., Sixty 110
Princess vi 310
Pelleas and E. 291
582
Enoch Arden 195
Sufj). Confessions 136
Dying Swan 26
Love thou thy land 14
24
Locksley Hall 149
L. of Burleigh 69
Enoch Arden 449
827
Aylmer's Field 570
Princess iii 330
vii 30
120
In Mem. xxi 7
„ Ixxxv 50
,, ex A
Tiresias 87
Princess ii 285
iv 325
//( Mem. cxxix 2
Marr. of Geraint 799
Ancient Sage 96
And
Aylmer's Field 294
Princess
Weald Fled all night long by glimmering waste and
heard the Spirits of the waste and w Guinevere 128
In glowing health, with boundless w, L C V devire 61
^^ hen w no more shall rest in mounded lieaps. Golden Year 32
Ihe sole succeeder to their w, their lands
heiress, w. Their w, their heiress ! w enough was
theirs For twenty matches.
May beat a pathway out to w and fame.
Whatever eldest-bom of rank or w
I that have \vasted here health, w, and time,
0 more than poor men w. Than sick men health-
Abide : thy w is gather'd in.
And so my w resembles thine,
the w Of words and wit, the double health,
1 our father lias w well-gotten,
joy that blazed itself in woodland w Of leaf,
all his land and w and state were hers.
And gave herself and all her w to me.
all the w and all the woe ?
And so much w as God had charged her with—
when all my w Flash'd from me in a moment
Whatever w I brought from that new world
with the wisdom and w of his own,
W with his wines and his wedded harlots ;
kinsman, dying, summon'd me to Rome— He left me w
no tear for him, who left you w,
The w of tropic bower and brake ;
368
439
484
)352
459
In Mem. Hi 15
„ Ixxix 17
„ Con. 102
Maud I iv 18
Balin and Balan 82
Holy Grail 587
597
Guinevere 344
Lover's Tale i 213
668
Columbus 101
The Wreck 65
Vastness 19^
The Ring 17M
To Ulysses Zl\
Wealth
783
Weary
'Wwlth {continued) Youth and Health, ami birth
and tv,
We<tlier and himself Be wealthy still, ay «•.
Then closed her access to the w fanns,
Then were I w than a leash of kings.'
' Ye will be all the w,' (repeat)
A w life than heretofore with the.se And Balin
w — u! — hour by hour !
Jilted for a, w I w?
To make them w in his readers' eves ;
By an Evolution. 8
Aylmer's Field 373
503
Gareth and L. 51
Geraint and E. 221, 412
Balin and Balan 92
To the Queen ii 23
Locksleij H., Sixty 11
Poets and their B. 4
Wealthiest Spain then the mightiest, w realm on earth,
Wealthy Kevealings deep and clear are thine Of w smiles :
I SEE the w miller yet,
Like w men who care not how thej' give.
Where the w nobles dwell.'
And when she show'd the w scabbard,
and himself Be w still, ay wealthier.
Days order'd in a w peace,
W with wandering lines of mount and mere.
Hold her a w bride within thine arms,
Tho' w enough to have bask'd in the light
Weapon With thine own w art thou slain,
wearing neither hunting-dress Nor «■,
The wielding of w's —
a valorous w in olden England !
Wear (s) keeps the w and polish of the wave.
Wear (verb) W's all day a fainter tone.
And King-like, w's the crown :
eat wholesome food, And w warm clothes,
w an undress'd goatskin on my back ;
shall w Alternate leaf and acom-ball
This mortal armour that I w,
Of those that w the Poet's crown :
spears That soon should w the garlanil ;
his pride Lay deeper than to w it as his ring —
I think they should not w our rusty gowns,
than w Those lilies, better blush
And so she w's her error like a crown
he w's a truer crown Than any wreath
bear the head That sleeps or w's the mask of sleep,
When first she w's her orange-flower !
Who w's his manhood hale and green :
The fool that w's a crown of thorns :
Come, w the forms by which I know
But ill for him that w's a crown,
And Maud will w her jewels,
And w's a helmet mounted with a skull,
your fair child shall w your costly gift
Were fit to w your slipper for a glove.
Why w ye this crown-royal upon shield ? '
' Why w ye that crown-royal ? '
' What, w ye still that same crown-scandalous ?
this maid Might w as fair a jewel as is on earth,
That he shoiild w her favour at the tilt .
will you w My favour at this tourney ? '
Well, I will w it : fetch it out to me :
One rose, a rose, to gather and to w,
Why ye not w on arm, or neck, or zone
Lancelot won, methought, for thee to w.'
W black and white, and be a nun like you.
And so w out in ahnsdeed and in prayer
Robed in those robes of light I must not w,
pluck from this true breast the locket that I w,
Envy w's the mask of Love,
I should w my crown entire
you, that w a wreath of sweeter bay,
I myself Am half afraid to w it.
and w's the leper's weed ?
WeSr'd (spent) I w it o' liquor, I did.
Wearied Is w of the rolling hours.
Smoothing the w mind :
And closing eaves of w eyes I sleep till dusk
I felt Thy manhood thro' that w lance of thine.
and Balin's horse Was w to the death,
And w out made for the couch and slept.
Columbus 205
Madeline 11
Miller's D. 1
Tithonus 17
L. of Burleigh 24
Aylmer's Field 236
373
In Mem. xlvi 11
Holy Grail 252
621
The Wreck 45
Two Voices 311
Marr. of Geraint 166
Batt. of Brunanhurh 90
Kapiolani 4
Man-, of Geraint 682
The Owl ii 7
Of old sat Freedom 16
St. S. Stylites 109
116
Talking Oak 286
Sir Galahad 70
You might have won 10
Aylmer's Field 112
122
Princess, Pro. 143
„ Hi 67
111
Ode on Well. 276
In Mem. xviii 10
a;Z4
liii 4
Ixix 12
xci 5
cxxvii 9
Maud I XX 27
Gareth and L. 639
Marr. of Geraint 819
Geraint and E. 623
Balin and Balan 338
348
390
Lancelot and E. 240
358
361
371
Pelleas and E. 406
Last Tournament 36
38
Guinevere 677
687
Lover's Tale i 671
The Flight 33
Locksley H., Sixty 109
Helen's Tower 9
Poets and their B. 7
The Ring 472
Happy 10
North. Cobbler 32
L. C. V. de Vere 60
Leonine Eleg. 14
In Mem. Ixvii 11
Gareth and L. 1266
Balin and Balan 561
Merlin and V. 736
Wearied ( continued) Wounded and w needs must he
be near. Lancelot and E. 538
Rode with his diamond, w of the quest, ' „ 616
To seek him, and had w of the search. .. 631
all w of the quest Leapt on his horse, ,. 703
' Alas,' he said, ' your ride hath w you. „ 831
I am w of our city, son, Ancient Sage 15
And M) of Autocrats, Anarchs, and Slaves, The Dreamer 10
Wearier Thro' wearj' and yet ever w hours, Aylmer's Field 828
Wearieth Gaiety without eclipse, W me, Lilian 21
Weariness all things else have rest from w ? Lotos-Eaters, C. 8. 14
As all but empty heart and w Geraint and E. 652
Settles, till one could yield for w : Merlin and V. 372
wan day Went glooming down in wet and w : Last Tournament 215
Toil and ineffable w, faltering hopes of relief, Def. of Lucknow 90
those three sweet Italian words, became a w. The Ring 407
He, all but deaf thro' age and w, St. Telemachus 41
Wearing And w on my swarthy brows The garland Kate 23
W the rose of womanhood. Two Voices 417
IF the light yoke of that Lord of love, Aylmer's Field 708
W his wisdom lightly, like the fruit A Dedication 12
w all that weight Of learning lightly In Mem., Con. 39
W the white flower of a blameless life, Ded. of Idylls 25
w neither hmiting-dress Nor weapon, Man: of Geraint 165
in w mine Needs must be lesser likelihood, Lancelot and E. 366
damsel, w this unsxmny face To him who won Pelleas and E. 180
And w but a holly-spray for crest, Last Tournament 172
I, w but the garland of a day, To Dante 6
Weary (adj.) {See also Heart-weary) O w life ! O
w death ! Supp. Confessions 188
w with a finger's touch Those writhed limbs Clear-headed friend 22
From brawling storms, From w wind, Ode to Memory 113
Slow sail'd the w mariners and saw, Sea- Fairies 1
Ever the w wind went on, Dying Swan 9
A w, IV way I go, Oriana. Oriana 89
My life is full of w days. My life is full 1
Which some green Christmas crams with w bones. Wan Sculptor 14
And by the moon the reaper w, L. of Shalott i 33
give me grace To help me of my w load.' Mariana in the S. 30
With w sameness in the rhymes. Miller's D. 70
Breathing like one that hath a w dream. Lotos-Eaters 6
but evermore Most w seem'd the sea, w the oar, W the
wandering fields of barren foam. .. 41
Resting w limbs at last on beds of asphodel. „ C. S. 125
While my stiff spine can hold my w head, St. S. Stylites 43
Twice ten long w w years to this, „ 90
since I heard him make reply Is many a w hour ; Talking Oak 26
It may be my lord is w, Locksley Hall 53
And wherefore did he go this w way, Enoch Arden 296
But after scaling half the w down, .. 372
and beats out his w life. .. 730
Beating it in upon his w brain, „ 796
all about the fields you caught His w daylong chirping, The Brook 53
Thro' w and yet ever wearier hours, Aylmer's Field 828
For many w moons before we came, Princess Hi 319
Panted from w sides ' King, you are free ! ., w 24
When ill and w, alone and cold. The Daisy 96
And o'er a w sultry land. Will 17
That it makes one w to hear.' The Islet 29
With w steps I loiter on, In Mem. xxxviii 1
She is w of dance and play.' Maud I xxii 22
However w, a spark of will Not to be trampled out. „ II ii 56
That has been in a w world my one thing bright ; .. /// vi 17
and thy good horse And thou are w ; Gareth and L. 1265
My lord is w with the fight before, Geraint and E. 133
Leave me to-night : I am w to the death.' „ 358
I am w of her.' Merlin and V. 838
Now w of my service and devoir, Lancelot and E. 118
but so w were his limbs, that he, Pelleas and E. 513
at once The w steed of Pelleas floundering „ 574
The white light of the w moon above, Lovers Tale i 640
But many w moons I lived alone — „ H 2
Over all this w world of ours, Sisters {E. and E.) 12
But at length we began to be w, V. of Maeldune 91
O w was I of the travel, „ 129
Weary
784
Weed
Weary (adj.) (continued) There was the Scotsman W
of war. Batt. of Brunanburh 36
Old and w. But eager to follow, Merlin and the G. 100
Good, I am never w painting you. Romney's R. 3
O w one, has it begun ? The Dreamer 26
Weary (s) And the wicked cease from troubling, and
the w are at rest. May Queen, Con. 60
Let the w be comforted. On JiA. Q. Victoria 34
Weary (verb) Nor could I w, heart or limb. In Mem. xxv 9
till the ear Wearies to hear it, Lancelot and E. 898
Wearying And w in a land of sand and thorns. Holy Grail 420
Gone thy tender-natured mother, w to be left
alone, Locksley H., Sixty 57
Weasel the thin w there Follows the mouse, Aylmer's Field 852
nail me like a w on a grange For warning : Princess ii 205
deems it carrion of some woodland thing. Or shrew,
or w, Gareth and L. 749
Weather (adj.) huge sea-castles heaving upon the w bow. The Revenge 24
Weather (s) Careless both of wind and w, Rosalind 7
All in the blue unclouded w L. of Shalott Hi 19
And it was windy w. (repeat) The Goose 4, 40
There must be stormy w ; Will Water. 54
His brothers of the w stood Stock-still „ 135
Will bring fair w yet to all of us. Enoch Arden 191
Passing with the w, Window, Spring 6
water began to heave and the w to moan. The Revenge 113
Nasty, casselty w ! Church-warden, etc. 2
Weather-beaten Denying not these w-b limbs St. S. Stylites 19
His large gray eyes and w-b face Enoch Arden 70
Weathercock'd Whose blazing wyvem w the spire, Aylmer's Field 17
Weather'd many a rough sea had he w in her ! Enoch Arden 135
Weave There she w's by night and day L. of Shalott ii 1
To w the mirror's magic sights, „ 29
Than any wreath that man can w him. Ode on Well. 277
With trembling fingers did we w In Mem. xxx 1
And w their petty cells and die. „ 1 12
Again at Christmas did we w ., Ixxviii 1
She meant to w me a snare Maud I vi 25
Weaver See Cloud-weaver
Weaveth And so she w steadily, L. of Shalott ii 7
Weaving w over That various wilderness Lover's Tale i 418
Web A magic w with colours gay. L. of Shalott ii 2
in her w she still delights To weave ,. 28
She left the w, she left the loom, ., Hi 37
Out flew the w and floated wide ; „ 42
and takes the flood With swarthy w's. M. d' Arthur 269
Who wove coarse w's to snare her purity, Aylmer's Field 780
A w is wov'n across the sky ; In Mem. Hi 6
A cloth of roughest w, and cast it down, Gareth and L. 683
Caught in a great old tyrant spider's w. Merlin and V. 259
and takes the flood With swarthy w's. Pass, of Arthur 437
Wed young spirit present When first she is w ; Ode to Memory 74
Came two young lovers lately w ; L. of Shalott ii 34
And I was young — too young to w : Miller's D. 141
nor w Raw Haste, half-sister to Delay. Love thou thy land 95
he woo'd and w A labourer's daughter, Dora 39
But take it — earnest w with sport, Day-Dm., Ep. 11
They two will w the morrow mom : Lady Clare 7
' To-morrow lie w's with me.' ., 16
We two will w to-morrow mom, „ 87
That she wore when she was w.' L. of Burleigh 96
In the dress that she was w in, „ 99
W whom thou wilt, but I am sick of Time, Co^ne not, when, etc. 9
It is long before you w. Vision of iSin 70
So these were w, and merrily rang the bells,
(repeat) Enoch Arden 80, 511
To w the man so dear to all of them ,. 484
' There is no reason why we should not w.' „ 508
So you will w me, let it be at once.' „ 510
Merrily rang the bells and they were w „ 512
when the days drew nigh that I should w. Princess i 41
certain, would not w. „ 50
we purposed with ourself Never to w. „ ii 61
/ w with thee ! / bound by precontract „ iv 541
Besides, the woman w is not as we, „ v 462
Wed (continued) She needs must w him for her own
good name ; Princess vii 74
On the day that follow'd the day she was w. The Islet 4
Thought leapt out to w with Thought Ere Thought
could w itself with Speech ; In Mem. xxiii 15
But lives to w an equal mind ; „ Ixii 8
And talk of others that are w, .. Con. 98
Enforced she was to w him in her tears. Corn, of Arthur 204
he needs Must w that other, whom no man desired, Gareth and L. 109
break her will, and make her w with him : .. 617
whom he trusts to overthrow. Then w, with glory :
but she will not w Save whom she loveth, „ 621
And live to w with her whom first you love : But
ere you w with any, bring your bride, Marr. of Geraint 227
when it w's with manhood, makes a man. Geraint and E. 868
' Had I chosen to w, I had been wedded earlier, Lancelot and E. 934
W thou our Lady, and rule over us. Holy Grail 605
but could I w her Loving the other ? Sisters (E. and E.) 167
and w's me to my grave. The Flight 20
not Love but Hate that w's a bride against her will ; ,, 32
W him ! I will not w him, „ 55
when Hubert w's in you The heart of Love, The Ring 61
So w thee with my soul, Prog, of Spring 92
W to the melody, Sang thro' the world ; Merlin and the G. 97
Wedded (adj. and part.) (See also New-wedded, Proxy-wedded)
So that my vigour, w to thy blood, (Enone 161
Dear is the memory of our w lives. Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 96
Wherever Thought hath w Fact. Love thou thy land 52
there Unclasp'd the w eagles of her belt, Godiva 43
LuciLiA, w to Lucretius, found Her master cold ; Lucretius 1
but she says (God help her) she was w to a fool ; Princess Hi 83
I had been w wife, I knew mankind, „ vi 327
So Willy and I were w : I wore a lilac gown ; Grandmother 57
Ay is the song of the w spheres. Window, No Answer 7
Was w with a winsome wife, Ygeme : Com. of Arthur 188
And there be w with all ceremony. Marr. of Geraint 608
They twain were w with all ceremony. „ 839
Seeing that ye are w to a man, Geraint and E. 425
I had been w earlier, sweet Elaine : Lancelot and E. 935
And one had w her, and he was dead. Holy Grail 586
until himself had thought He loved her also, w
easily, Last Tournament 402
' He has w her,' she said. Not said, but hiss'd it : „ 619
but Lionel and the girl Were w. Lover's Tale iv 14
' get them w ' would he say. Sisters (E. and E.) 57
Wealth with his wines and his w harlots ; Vastness 19
' I take thee Muriel for my w wife ' — T/ie Ring 377
Wedded (verb) and in one month They w her to sixty
thousand pounds, Edwin Morris 126
Who w with a nobleman from thence : Princess i 77
who lay Among the ashes and w the King's son.' Gareth and L. 904
Says that Sir Gareth w Lyonors, „ 1428
Sir Valence w with an outland dame : Merlin and V. 714
' Queen, she would not be content Save that I w
her, Lancelot and E. 1315
More specially were he, she w, poor, „ 1321
W her ? Fought in her father's battles ? Last Tournament 591
And all this throve before I w thee, Guinevere 484
Wedged W themselves in between horse and horse. Heavy Brigade 22
Wedlock welded in one love Than pairs of w ; Princess vi 254
The boy was born in lo. First Quarrel 6
Weeak (week) But 'e reads wonn sarmin a w, N. Farmer, 0. S. 28
for thou'll be twenty to w. „ N. S. 7
Weed (dress) In words, like w's, I'll wrap me o'er, In Mem. v 9
But stagnates in the w's of sloth : „ xxvii 11
This silken rag, this beggar woman's w ; Geraint and E. 680
And wears the leper's w? Happy 10
Weed (plant) (See also Willow-weed) creeping mosses and
clambering w's. Dying Swan 36
At least, not rotting like a to, Two Voices 142
Crouch'd fawning in the w. CErwne 201
A spacious garden full of flowering w's, To , With Pal. of Art 4
Better to me the meanest w That blows Avt/phion 93
Athwart the smoke of burning w's. Princess vii 358
The people said, a w. The Flower
I
Weed
785
Weigh'd
Weed (plant) {continued) again the people Call it but
a w. The Flower 24
Is dim, or will be dini, with w's : In Mem. Ixxiii 10
hurl'd it from him Among the forest w's, Balin and Bcdan 542
' I once was looking for a magic w, Merlin and V. 471
Foregoing all her sweetness, like a w. Holy Grail 623
Half overtrailed with a wanton w, Lover's Tale i 525
Weed (verb) brace Of twins may w her of her folly. Princess v 464
As I will to this land before I go. Geraint and E. 907
as now Men w the white horse on the Berkshire hills „ 936
' Weeded W and worn the ancient thatch Mariana 7
Weeding Edym has done it, w all his heart Geraint and E. 906
Weedy the wind Still westward, and the w seas — Columbus 72
Week (See also Wee&k) whole w's and months, and early
and late. The Sisters 10
For many w's about my loins I wore St. S. Stylites 63
Enoch would hold possession for a w : Enoch Arden 27
There yet were many w's before she sail'd, „ 124
In that same w when Annie buried it, „ 271
the w Before I parted with poor Edmund ; The Brook 77
They lost their w's ; Princess, Pro. 162
harangue The fresh arrivals of the w before ; „ H 96
she had nursed me there from w to w : „ vii 239
' Here's a leg for a babe of a w ! ' Grandmother 11
And the parson made it his text that w, „ 29
Willy had not been down to the farm for a w and a day : „ 33
' A w hence, a w hence.' Window, When 9
W after w : the days go by : In Mem. xvii 7
He bears the burthen of the w's „ Ixxx 11
Last w came one to the county town, Maud / a: 37
He may stay for a year who has gone f or a w : „ xvi 6
But in the w's that follow'd, Gareth and L. 526
And all that w was old Caerleon gay, Marr. of Geraint 837
many w's a troop of carrion crows Hung Merlin and V. 598
for many a w Hid from the wide world's rumour Lancelot and E. 521
many among us many a w Fasted and pray'd Holy Grail 131
once, A w beyond, while walking on the walls Pelleas and E. 225
after this, a w beyond, again She call'd them, „ 261
Queen abode For many a w, unknoMTi, Guinevere 147
days will grow to w's, the w's to months, „ 624
adding, with a smile, The first for many w's — Lover's Tale iv 281
' I ha' six w's' work, little wife. First Quarrel 45
I ha' six w's' work in Jercey „ 88
then two w's — no more — she join'd. Sisters (E. and E.) 271
for ten long w's I tried Your table of Pythagoras, To E. Fitzgerald 14
all but yours — A w betwixt — The Ring 249
But after ten slow w's her fix'd intent, „ 345
after a w — no more — A stranger as welcome Charity 25
Weep {See also Blubber'd) Prythee w, May Lilian ! (repeat) Lilian 19, 25
W on : beyond his object Love can last : His object
lives : more cause to w have I : Wan Sculptor 5
For while the tender service made thee w, The Bridesmaid 10
Who'll w for thy deficiency ? Two Voices 39
Thou canst not think, but thou wilt w. „ 51
Nay, nay, you must not w. May Queen, X. Y's. E. 35
in the stream the long-leaved flowers w, Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 10
I will not tell you not to w. .To J. S. 36
' W, weeping dulls the inward pain.' ,, 40
Let her will Be done — to w or not to w. ,,44
The vapours w their burthen to the ground, Tithonus 2
to the tears that thou wilt w. Locksley Hall 82
at this The little wife would w for company, Enoch Arden 34
Yes, as the dead we w for testify — Aylmer's Field 747
Wiser to w a true occasion lost, Princess iv 68
' She must w or she will die.' .. vi 4
kiss her ; take her hand, she w's : „ 225
For this, for all, we w our thanks to thee ! Ode Inter. Exhib. 9
I cannot w for Willy, nor can I w for the rest ; Grandmother 19
For Willy I cannot "w, „ 67
I could not w — my own time seem'd so near. „ 72
But how can I w for Willy, „ 102
Which w a loss for ever new, In Mem. xiii 5
Which w the comrade of my choice, „ 9
And come, whatever loves to w, „ xviii 11
And w the fulness from the mind : „ xx Q
Weep {continued) At night she w's, ' How vain am I ! In Mem. Ix 15
So mayst thou watch me where I w, „ Ixiii 9
He loves her yet, she will not w, „ xcvii 18
not as one that w's I come once more ; „ cxix 2
Shall I w if a Poland fall ? Maud I iv46
Till I well could w for a time so sordid and mean, „ v 17
And the white rose w's,' She is late ; ' „ xxii 64
There to w, and w, and w My whole soul out „ II iv 97
Yet now I could even w to think of it ; „ ■» 86
a light shall darken, and many shall w ,, Illvi 43
strong passion in her made her w Marr. of Geraint 110
said to his own heart, ' She w's for me ' : (repeat) Geraint and E. 587, 590
God's curse, it makes me mad to see you w. „ 616
were I dead who is it would w for me ? „ 618
she did not w, But o'er her meek eyes „ 768
When sick at heart, when rather we should w. Balan and Balan 498
If the wolf spare me, w my life away. Merlin and V. 885
burst away To w and wail in secret ; Lancelot and E. 1245
' Why w ye ? ' ' Lord,' she said, Last Tournament 494
' Yet w not thou, lest, if thy mate return, „ 499
Sing, and unbind my heart that I may w.' Guinevere 166
' 0 pray you, noble lady, w no more ; „ 184
they cannot w behind a cloud : „ 207
And w for her who drew him to his doom.' „ 348
What had she done to w ? Why should she w ? Lover's Tale i 736
She told me all her love : she shall not w. „ 742
When I beheld her w so ruefully ; „ 773
I felt myself ready to w For I knew not what, The Wreck 51
and there I began to w, „ 93
For all that laugh, and all that iv Ancient Sage 187
let me w my fill once more, and cry myself to rest ! The Flight 6
Mother w's At that white funeral of the single life. To Prin. Beatrice 8
Weepest Wan sculptor, w thou to take the cast Wan Sculptor 1
Weeping And w then she made her moan, Mariana in the S. 93
And watch'd by w queens. Palace of Art 108
white-eyed phantasms w tears of blood, „ 239
' Weep, w dulls the inward pain.' To J. 8. 40
or fruits and cream Served in the w elm ; Gardener's D. 195
w, ' I have loved thee long.' Locksley Hall 30
Bitterly w I tum'd away : (repeat) Edward Gray 6, 34
W, w late and early, L. of Burleigh 89
and departed w for him ; Enoch Arden 246
Then Annie w answer'd ' I am bound.' „ 451
later in the night Had come on Psyche w : Princess v 50
With a nation w, and breaking on my rest ? Ode on Well. 82
Within was w for thee : G. of Swainston 2
And linger w on the marge, In Mem. xii 12
To hear her w by his grave ? „ xxxi 4t
A mother w, and I hear her say, Com. of Arthur 334
woman w, ' Nay, my lord. The field was pleasant Gareth and L. 341
W for some gay knight in Arthur's hall.' Marr. of Geraint 118
A woman w for her murder'd mate Geraint and E. 522
suddenly she took To bitter w like a beaten child,
A long, long w, not consolable. Merlin and V. 855
one lone woman, w near a cross, Stay'd him. Last Tournament 493
sat There in the holy house at Almesbury W, Guinevere 3
There kiss'd, and parted w : „ 125
she look'd and saw The novice, w, „ 664
beheld the holy nuns All round her, w ; „ 667
he was loud in w and in praise Of her, Lover's Tale ii 87
He left us w in the woods ; The Flight 37
and w scarce could see ; Happy 54
Weigh before the heavy clod W's on me, Supp. Confessions 185
lightly w's With thee unto the love Ode to Memory 90
W heavy on my eyelids : let me die. (Enone 244
flash the lightnings, w the Sun. Locksley Hall 186
w Whether thou wilt not with thy damsel Gareth and L. 880
w your sorrows with our lord the King's, Guinevere 191
Weigh'd Why are we w upon with heaviness. Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 12
heavy mist of tears, that w Upon my brain. Love and Duly 43
But a trouble w upon her, L. of Burleigh 77
why, the causes w. Fatherly fears— Princess v 215
w the necks Of dragons clinging to the crazy walls. Holy Grail 346
while I w thy heart with one Too wholly true Guinevere 540
the effect w seas upon my head [ Lover's Tale i 660
3 D
Weigh'd
786
WeU
'd {contintud) The whole land w him down as
jEtna does Lover's TaU iv 17
— his loss W on him ret — „ 275
single piece W nig^ foiir thousand Castillanos — so They
tell me — w him down into the abysm — Columbus 136
Wei^ieat Thou v heavy on the heart within, (Enoiu 243
Weit^iiiig And w find them less ; Guimaxre 192
Weigbt O happy earth, bow canst thou bear my w ? (Enont 237
Make broad thy shoulders to receive my ic, M. d'Arihur 164
will have tc to drag thee down. LtxksUy Hall 48
This IT and size, t^ heart and eyes, Sir Galahad 71
Is it the w of that half-crown. Will Water. 155
Appraised his w and fondled father-like, Enoeh Arden. 154
dead w of the dead leaf bore it down : „ 678
The tr of all the hopes of half the world, Primetts tv 184
Caryatids, lifted up A tr of «nblem, ^ 202
theu- heavy hands. The tc of destiny : -, 554
When the man wants to, the woman takes it up, ^ v 444
This nightmare w of gratitude, -. vi 300
Then us they lifted up, dead Hi's, 348
Once the tc and fate of Europe bung. Ode o» Well. 240
these solid stars, this v> of body and limb, Hi^. Pantheism 5
A tc of nerves without a mind, In Mem. xii 1
I loved the le I had to bear, ., xxt 7
And falling with my tc of cares „ 'f.?^*
Can haxi% no tc upon my heart ^ Ixiii 3
wearing all that tc Of learning lightly Con. 39
By a Muffled step, by a dead w trail'd, Maud / 1 14
The l^ter by the l<»s of his tc ; „ xvi 2
By the loss of that dead tc, - xix 99
Whoi tc is added only grain by grain, Marr. of Geraini 526
Make broad thy shoiilders to receive my to, Pass, of Arthur 332
Tte w as if of age upon my limbs. Lover's TaU i 125
her tc Shrank in my grasp, n ii 202
commission one of tc and worth To judge Columbus 124
V of war Rides on those ringing axles I Tiresias 92
noise of f?tlling to'« that never feU, The Sing 410
Less sc now for the ladder-of-heaven Bif an Evolution. 12
and the «c that dragged at my band ; Bandies Death 39
WaitfltBd cognizance on shield W it down, Balin and Balan 2^5
WailJlUer his mind Half buried in some tc argument, Lucretius 9
Weild With a tc bright eye, sweating and trembling, Aylmefs Field 585
Myself too had tc seizures. Heaven knows what : Princess i 14
■ what, if these tc seizures come Upon you 82
stranse seizure came Upon me, the to vision of our house : .. Hi 184
came On a sudden the tc seizure and the doubt : .. iv 560
And like a flash the to affection came : ^.j'~^'^
Deeper than those tc doubts could reach me, vii 51
Were Arthur's wars in tc devices done, Gareth and L. 220
past The tc white gate, and paused without, „ 663
That tc yell, Unearthlier than all shriek of bird Balin and Balan 544
Moreover, that tc legend of his birth. Last Tournament 669
Then, ere that last to battle in the west. Pass, of Arthur 29
Like ttus last, dim, tc battle of the west. „ 94
And therewithal came on him the w rhyme, ,. 444
And something tr and wild about it all : Lover's TaU iv 22i
W Titan by thy winter weight of years To Victor Hugo 7
since The key to that tc casket, which for thee Ancient Sage 254
then laugh'd ' the ring is tc.' And tc and worn and
wizard-like was he. ' Why ic ? ' I ask'd him ; The Ring 195
H' whispers, bells that rang without a hand, „ 411
Wdrdly-Kalptlired And past beneath the v-s gates Lancelot and E. 844
Wdocme (inter, and adj.) Should come most tc, seeing men, (Enone 129
Turn Voices ^11
Vision of Sin VIZ
D. of F. Women 199
The Brook '£Sb
Aylmer's Fidd 114
Lucretius 159
In Mem. xxix 5
W. to Marie Alex. 6
Holy GraU 425
Sitters (£. and E.) 197
Open. I. and C. Exhib. 1
Churdt^warden, etc. 36
Each enterd like a ic guest
H', fellow-citizens.
From Mizpeh's towerd gate with tc l^t,
But she — you will be to— O, come in ! '
lastly there At Christmas ; ever tc at the Hall,
strangers at my hearth Not tc.
Which brings no more a tc guest
And to Buflsian flower, apeople's pride,
Cried to me climbing, ' W, Peicivale !
Cold, but as w as free airs of heaven
W, w with one voice !
aaya to tha * keeap 'em, an' w '
WekxHne (inter, aal aii.) (eontmued)
.Satan —
Wdcome (8) And sweet diaU your «o be :
A tc mix'd with sie^.
Farewell, like endkss tc, lived and died,
with a frolic to took The thimder and the stmshine.
To greet his hearty to heartily ;
' We give you tc : not without redotmd
glowing full-faced tc, she Began to address us.
Less tc find among us, if you came Among us,
W, farewell, and tc for the year To follow :
0 give him to, this is he Worthy
all of us Danes in our to of thee.
We are each all Dane in our tc of thee.
Yet one lay-hearth would give you tc
lliey should speak to me not without a tc,
Beceived and gave him to there ;
An iron tc wh«i they rise :
means of goodly tc, flesh and wine.
Embraced her with all tc as a frioid.
In the mid-warmth of tc and graspt hand.
Sweet-voiced, a song of »c.
Witness their flowery tc.
1 bid the stranger tc.
roar An ocean-sounding tc to one knight,
and loud leagues of man And tc !
a light Of smiling tc round her lips —
and a noise of tc at the doors —
made the ihymes. That miss'd his liviiig ic,
and flash'd into frolic of song And w ;
where tte loyal bells Clash tc —
Mant, many tc'*, February fair-maid, (repeat)
Welcome (verb) W her, thunders of fort and of fleet !
W her, thundering cheer of the street I W her,
all things youthful and sweet,
W her, to her, all that is ours !
Roar as the sea when he tc'* the land. And tc her,
ic the land's desire,
-^d all the gentle court will tc me.
Up leaps the lark, gone wild to tc her.
Welcomed Not beat him back, but tc him
Wdded Two women faster tc in one love
' Sons, be tc each and all.
Welfare How much their tc is a passion to us
■ A to in thine eye reproves Oiii fear
In your tc we rejoice, Open. I. and C. Edub. 2
Wdl (adj. and adv.) Nor would I now be tc, mother. May Queen, Con. 19
A pretty face is tc, and this is tc, Etbcin Morris 45
'Tis to ; 'tis something ; we may stand In Mem. xviii 1
O true and tried, so to and long, „ Con. 1
O father ! O God ! was it to ?— Maud I i 6
Let all be to, be to. .. .m'ti 85
He rested tc content that all was tc. Geraimt and E. 952
Speak, Lancelot, thou art sil«it : is it tc ? ' Last Tournament 107
Sir Lancelot answer'd, ' It is to : « 108
Else, for the King has will'd it, it is to.' „ 111
King Tum'd to him saying, " Is it thai so tc ? ,. 114
Election, Election and Reprobation — ^it's all very tc. Rizpah 73
but I be maain glad to seea tha sa 'arty an' k. yorth. Cobbler 2
an' I knaws, as knaws tha sa tc, ., &5
And, Robby, I niver 'a liked tha sa to. Spinster's S's. 29
or I mowt 'a liked tha sa to. ..42
is it to to wish you joy ? Is it «c that while we
range with Science, LoeksUy II.. Sixty
all's tc that ends tc, (repeat) The Dreamer lit. 23, 27,
Wdl (!) (See also CuOe-wdl, Droppiog-weDs) As a Naiad in
A stranger as tc as
Charity 26
Sea- Fairies Zl
Talking Oak 212
Love and Duty 66
Ulysses 47
Enodi Arden ZSO
Princess ii 4S
183
„ u354
.. C(m.S6
Ode on WeU. 92
IT. to Alexandra 4
33
To F. D. Maurice II
Hendeoasyllabies U
In Mem. Ixxxt 2
n XC
Marr. of Geraint Z6',
834
Gernint and E. 280
Balin and Balan 86
145
Merlin and T. 270
Last Tournament 168
To the Queen ii 10
Lovers TaU Hi 46
Sisters (E. and E.) 149
rtr«»a*197
Demeter and P. 13
The Bing4SS
Snovdrop 1, 9
W. to AUxanim 6
13
24
Lanedol and E. 1060
Prog, of Spring 14
Marr. of Geraini 748
Princess vi 253
Oven. I. and C. Exhib. 36
Princess Hi 281
Holy Grail 126
'jpen.
a tc, Looking at the set of day.
(x)me from the tc'* where he did lie.
Fresh as the foam, new-bathed in Paphian ic**,
rope that haled the buckets from the tc.
Fairer than Rachel by the palmy tc,
fawn Came flying while you sat beside the er ?
Or by denial flush her babbling tc'«
Than if with thee the roaring tc'*
Or dive below the to'* of Death ?
42
1
Addime
Ttco Voices
(Enone lib
St. S. Stifiites 64
Aylmer's Fidd 679
Princess ii 271
„ 1)334
In Mem. x 17
cm»8
1
Wen
WiB W {eoniimued) why sat je by the « ? '
Mfithnnght that if we sat beside the v,
boUom oltbew. Where Truth is hidden.
And when we halted at that other v,
UntU they ranisb'd by the fairv tc
and ay ' Lau^ little w ! '
Kaze by the laetdog biook or silent w.
yet one Ottering foot disturb'd The hicid w :
each, his um In his own w, draw solace
baeket from the it Along the line,
WeO (TOb) Ancient founts of inspiration w thro' all my
JS7
Went
Balin and Balan 50
65
J/erfm and V. 47
280
428
431
G*i»ecere 4030
Tiresias^
89
To Mary Bm^e 39
fancy yet.
Wfll Uttmun'i'd A man <A v-a frame.
WeU-belored We leave the w-6 place
WeU-content Philip rested with her w^ ;
Well-contented Came voices (rf the v-« doves.
Well-gottes Your father has wealth w-^.
Well-beads From old te-k of haunted rflls,
WeU-kDOwn Not by the »-i stream and rustic spire.
fr :a prime youth W-h well-ioved.
WeU-knred W-l of me, discerning to fulfil
from prime youth Well-known »-/.
WeO-iaoalded quick brunette, ic-w, falcon-eyed,
Wdl-oird I was courteous, every phrase »-«,
Wdl>|ieMed pass, IF-p, from room to room.
and hrane «-^ we went.
Wefl-fOetind An eye w-ja in nature.
Well rtiitktu cijing, ' W-», kitchm-knave ! '
WeD-to-do Annie — for I am rich and v-f-^
I arn vc-i-d — no kin, no care,
WeJl-won Far-famed for w-io enterprise,
WeD-wOBD Down which a v-w pathway ootnted xx
WeMi Had he God's word in IF He m^t be bbdl
Lod^Oey Haai88
Ode on Wdl. 74
In Mem. cii 1
Enoch Arden 376
Gardener's D. 89
Mttud I it) 19,
EJeanoreie
The Brook 188
Lorers Tale it 176
Ulysses 35
Later s Tale ii 176
Prineess ii 106
„ »n 133
Palaee of Art 56
Prineess, Con. 118
Mamd I ivdS
Gareth and L. 970
Eno(A Arden 311
418
.£^0^22
Gardener's D. 109
\kt: Sir J. Oldeastle 22
w^S^ '^?'-*«*^?*° Harried the W, Batt. of BrUa»bu»k^
WaUK Happier are those that v m thdr sin, Hali fJroil 77n
Weterd i^eealsofn^mUn'i) Down »ihro' the ««*» G««^ .70
Lover's Tale ii 206
Batt. of Brunanburh 48
Pr«No!Mt226
Spinster's S's. 25
Lancelot and E. 412
Sufy>. Confessions 141
iark ever and ever.
Weltering Warriors over the W waters
Wench plump-ann'd Ostleress and a staUe w
\V:.e*r the poor w diowndid heiaen.
Wending thither w there that ni^t they bode.
Went .See also Wiat.) When I » forth in quest
r^ er the weary wmd ic on. And took the reed-tops as it w. Dying Swan 9
rhe bitter arrow w aside, TLr— q"
The false, false arrowwiide, Urutnai
Yet in the whirling ^i^witif as we «c,
funeral, with phnnes and lights And miKic, w to
Camelot:
And forth into the fields I w,
-iOng. That w and came a thiHwand times.
.\nd down I *r to fetch my bride :
^^lien. arm in arm, we « aloi^.
From my swift blmid that w and came
all my heart (F forth to embrace him
dbe<ued : she w to burning flame :
For pastime, ere you w to town.
The Messed music w that way my soul
she w along From MizpA's towa'd gate
■ And I «c moumiiK, ' No fair Hebrew boy
One K, who never bth returned.
>e Sir Bediverc the second time Across the ridge.
And liahth- w the other to the King.
I and Eustace from the dty w
-ind up we rose, and on the spur we v.
the day we « To see her.
And on we « ; but ere an hour had pass'd,
AK happy diade— and stiU w wavera^ down,
•^ home we w, and all the liveln^ my
-■, '■■',-nc T «, bat could not ale^ for joy,
ioms on me as they w
^ait brows « by,
oays IC on, and there was bom a boy To William :
Tliien Dora w to Marf.
Doca took the child, and tr her way
•^ r "39
The form, the form 5
L. of Shalott ii 32
Two Voices 4^
Miner's D. 72
145
163
Fatima 16
(EnoneeZ
The Sisters 7
X. C. V. de Vere 4
May Queen, Con. 42
D. of F. Women 198
213
To J. S. 20
M. d^ Arthur 82
147
Gardener's D. 2
32
75
107
132
167
174
187
245
Z>orffl48
.. 56
^ 71
Went (continued) Then Dora \c to Mary's house. Bora 110
as years W forward, Marv took another mate • 171
and how The races tc , and who would rent the hall : Audley Court 31
And sick of home «: overs^ for change. Walk, to the MaU 24
Itc and came ; Her voice fled always EdH>in Morris 66
ishe to— and m one month They wedded her i^
^my brewer's soul W by me, like a stork : Talking Oak 56
And on the roof she v, ^ jfl
from yonder ivied casement, ere I tc to rest, LodcsUu Hall 7
1 w thro many wayward moods Daxi-Dm Pro 6
far across the hills they w In that new world De«ari ?
she «: With aU her bees behind her : " Amvl^'d
Go, therefore, thou ! thv betters w WUlWauTl^
; Who was this that tr from thee ? ' LadvcZreU
She «: by dale, and she ur by down, J^y Clare M
Stately, lightly, « she Norward, The Captain 35
Crashing w the boom, ^•'v'um o^
And waves of shadow k over the wheat, PoefsSona 4
great and small, W nutting to the hazels. Eno<A Arden 64:
caught His bundle, waved his hand, and ic his way. 238
therefore tc. Past thro' the solitary room " 976
For was not Annie with them ? and thev ir. " 371
While yet she tc about her household ways, " 453
sunny and rainy seasons came and vi ' " g23
Down to the pool and narrow wharf he ir, " ggn
All down the long and narrow street he v '' 795
For in I ic, and call'd old Philip out The Brook 120
lanes Of his wheat-suburb, babbling as he w. 123
shook the house, and like a storm he tr. Aylmer's Field 216
crashing with long echoes thro' the land, W Leolin ; „ 339
So L«oIin tc ; and as we task ourselves ' "^ 432
ic Hating his own lean heart and miserable. " 525
But passionately restless came and tc, ^ 545
Then AveriH w and gazed upon his death. " ggo
Whose shame is that, if he te hence with shame ^ " Tig
The diiklless mother «c to seek her chiH : " g^S
^t, woke and tc the next, The Sabbath, Sed^ Dreams 18
W further, fool ! and trusted him with all, 75
and with Grod-bless-you tc. " jgQ
for I had one That altogether vi to music ? " 204
W both to make your dream : " 254
We tc (I kept the book and had my finger in it) Prineess Pro 52
so that sport W hand in hand with Science : ' ' 80
a Voice W with it, ' Follow, follow, " ,• jgo
As thro' the land at eve we tc, " » 1
(for .still My mother tc revolving on the word) " m 54
Up te the hush'd amaze of hand and eye. " 238
Then summon'd to the porch we tp. " 178
This tc by As strangely as it came, " {„ 5^
three thnes he « : The first, he blew and blew, ^ ,,335
With message and defiance, tp and came ; ^ 379
there tc up a great cry. The Prince is slain. " pj 25
by them te The enamourd air sibling, ^ 70
W sorrowing in a pause I dared not break ; ^ ^{ 249
So I and some tc out to these : " Coti ^
But we tc back to the Abbey, " i^
and home well-pleased we tc. " jig
told us all That England's honest censure tp too far ; Thkrd of Fd> 2
I wonder he tc so young. Grandmother 14
made me a mocking curtsey and tp. 4g
For Harry tc at sixty, aa
An' I tc wheer munny war : Jf . Parmer, " V. S 21
To and fro they tc Thro' my gardoi-bower. The Flower 5
The Pnest IP out by heath and hill; The Victim 29
And I tp down mto the quay, /„ j/^ ^ 3
rrom April on to April tc, ^^ ^^,- 7
In which we tc thro summer France. '^ /^^ 4
And bats tc roimd in fragrant skies, " jr— a
in the house light after light W out, ^ 20
On that last n^t before we tc " _•.-,- 1
Up the side I IP, And fen in silence " 43
they tp and came. Remade the blood " Con 10
I know the way she tc Maud I xii 21
And so tiiat he find what he tc to seek, „ ^3
And the soul (rf the rose to into my blood, "^ xxii 33
Went
788
Wept
Went {continued) as here and there that war W
swaying ; Com. of Arthur 107
Gawain w, and breaking into song Sprang out, „ 320
' How he w down,' said Gareth, ' as a false knight Gareth and L. 5
Gareth w, and hovering round her chair ,, 33
Before the wakeful mother heard him, w. ,. 180
Then those who w with Gareth were amazed, „ 197
W sliding down so easily, and fell, * ,. 1224
a page Who came and w, and still reported ,. 1338
O Prince, I w for Lancelot first, „ 1343
W sweating underneath a sack of corn, Marr. of Geraint 263
And after w her way across the bridge, „ 383
lords and ladies of the high court w „ 662
W Yniol thro' the town, „ 693
Yniol with that hard message w ; „ 763
Then she w back some paces of return, Geraint and E. 70
' Yea, my kind lord,' said the glad youth, and w, „ 241
And told them of a chamber, and they w ; „ 261
and then W slipping down horrible precipices, „ 379
W Enid with her sullen follower on. „ 440
' Enough,' he said, ' I follow,' and they w. „ 816
But w apart with Edyrn, whom he held „ 881
blameless King w forth and cast his eyes „ 932
he arm'd himself and w, Balin and Balan 22
So Balan wam'd, and w ; Balin remain'd : „ 153
Fixt in her will, and so the seasons w. Merlin and V. 188
that old man W back to his old wild, „ 649
two fair babes, and w to distant lands ; „ 707
Sir Lancelot w ambassador, at first, „ 774
her hand half-clench'd W faltering sideways downward „ 850
Her eyes and neck glittering w and came ; „ 960
King Glanced first at him, then her, and w his way. Lancelot and E. 95
That iflw and if I fought and won it „ 216
So all in wrath he got to horse and w ; „ 563
men w down before his spear at a touch, „ 678
So that he w sore wounded from the field : „ 600
and w To all the winds ? ' ,,657
and carolling as he w A true-love ballad, „ 704
the simple maid W half the night repeating, „ 899
Lancelot, who coldly w, nor bad me one : „ 1057
Oar'd by the dumb, w upward with the flood — „ 1154
slowly w The mai-shall'd Order of their Table Round, „ 1331
.... ....... ^ jgg^
Holy Grail 50
213
418
467
488
583
785
890
he w. And at the inrunning of a little brook
when the dead W wandering o'er Moriah —
King arose and w To smoke the scandalous hive
And up I w and touch'd him, and he, too.
That smote itself into the bread, and w ;
Then, when the day began to wane, we w.
all my heart W after her with longing :
And forth I w, and while I yearn'd and strove
To those who w upon the Holy Quest,
' Lead then,' she said ; and thro' the woods they w. Pelleas and E. 108
Glanced down upon her, tum'd and w her way. „ 185
they w, And Pelleas overthrew them one by one ; „ 229
v) on, and found. Here too, all hush'd below „ 423
so w back, and seeing them yet in sleep „ 445
hill and wood W ever streaming by him „ 548
and shower and shorn plume W down it. Last Tournament 156
New loves are sweet as those that w before : „ 280
name W wandering somewhere darkling in his mind. „ 457
hence he w To-day for three days' hunting — „ 529
I sware, Being amazed : but this w by — „ 674
sharply smote his knees, and smiled, and w : Guinevere 47
grim faces came and w Before her, „ 70
W slipping back upon the golden days ,, 380
W on in passionate utterance : ,,611
and past his ear W shrilling, ' Hollow, hollow Pass, of Arthur 33
w Sir Bedevere the second time Across the ridge, „ 250
And lightly w the other to the King. „ 315
A woful man (for so the story w) Lover's Tale i 379
those that w with me. And those that held „ Hi 15
The fancy stirr'd him so He rose and w, „ iv 52
The light was but a flash, and w again. „ 55
but warming a^ he w, Glanced at the point of law, „ 275
And years w over till I that was little First Quarrel 27
First Quarrel 44
84
92
Rizfah 23
The Revenge 50
56
70
118
Sisters {E. and E.) 228
Village Wife 76
Went {continued) Harry w over the Solent to see if work
an' he turn'd his face an' he w.
the boat w down that night — (repeat)
I kiss'd my boy in the prison, before he w out to die.
she bethought herself and w
the sun w down, and the stars came out
the night w down, and the sun smiled
Revenge herself w down by the island crags
Far off we w. My God, I would not live
Not thaw ya w fur to raake out Hell
es soon es they w awaay, Fur, lawks ! 'ow I cried
when they w, „ 110
So he w. And we past to this ward In the Child. Hosp. 27
and we w to see to the child. „ 68
And round it we w, and thro' it, V. of Maeldune 19
W to his own in his own West-Saxon-land, Batt. of Brunanburh 103
And the storm w roaring above us. The Wreck 106
the storm and the days w by, but I knew no more— „ 111
stars w down across the gleaming pane, The Flight 13
How slowly down the rocks he w, „ 38
w in search of thee Thro' many a palace, Demeter and P. 54
I fetcht 'im a kick an' 'e w. Owd Rod 62
I came, I w, was happier day by day ; The Ring 348
I parted from her, and I w alone. „ 437
Voice of the Earth w wailingly past The Dreamer 3
Ralph w down like a fire to the fight The Tourney 3
Wept She w, ' I am aweary, aweary, Mariana 83
One willow over the river w, Dying Swan 14
Crocodiles w tears for thee ; A Dirge 22
Love w and spread his sheeny vans for flight ; Love and Death 8
A matter to be w with tears of blood ! Poland 14
Thine eyes so w that they could hardly see ; The Bridesmaid 2
I w ' Tho' I should die, I know Two Voices 58
To perish, w for, honour'd, known, „ 149
In her still place the morning w : „ 275
and took the King, and w. M. d' Arthur 206
She bow'd down And w in secret ; Dora 108
But I believe she w. Talking Oak 164
To-day I sat for an hour and w, Edward Gray 11
' Bitterly w I over the stone : „ 33
' A ship of fools,' he sneer'd and w. The Voyage 78
But tum'd her own toward the wall and w. Enoch Arden 283
Annie could have w for pity of him ; „ 467
but presently W like a storm : Aylmer's Field 403
While thus he spoke, his hearers w; „ 722
her that o'er her wounded hunter w Lucretius 89
blood Was sprinkled on your kirtle, and you w. Princess ii 274
That was fawn's blood, not brother's, yet you w. „ 275
' My fault ' she w ' my fault ! „ iii 30
She w her true eyes blind for such a one, „ iv 134
Yet she neither moved nor w. „ vi 12
Down thro' her limbs a drooping languor w : „ 268
I could have w with the best, (repeat) Grandmother 20, 100
I had not w, little Annie, not since I had been a wife ;
But I w like a child that day.
But I w like a child for the child that was dead
Thou comest, much w for :
And silence follow'd, and we w.
They w and wail'd, but led the way
W over her, carved in stone ;
And while she w, and I strove to be cool,
And w, and wish'd that I were dead ;
all her dress W from her sides as water
Lady Lyonors wrung her hands and w,
' was it for him she w In Devon ? '
and she w beside the way.
Then he remember'd her, and how she w ;
braid Slipt and uncoil'd itself, she w afresh,
and for her fault she w Of petulancy ;
W, looking often from his face who read
The knights and ladies w, and rich and poor W,
But wail'd and w, and hated mine own self.
To one most holy saint, who w and said,
he would have w, but felt his eyes Harder
when first she came, w the sad Queen.
63
;, 68
In Mem. xvii 1
„ XXX 20
„ dii 18
Maud I via 4
„ II i 15
Com. of Arthur 345
Gareth and L. 217
1395
Geraint and E. 397
519
612
Merlin and V. 889
952
Lancelot and E. 1285
Holy Grail 353
609
,, ^ 781
Pelleas and E. 506
Guinevere IS
1
Wept
789
Wheat
Wept {continued) her heart was loosed Within her, and she w Guinevere 668
and took the King, and w. Pass, of Arthur 374
when I w, Her smile lit up the rainbow on mj- tears. Lover's Tale i 253
iv 103
Sisters (E. and E.) 216
Columbus 231
Bead Prophet 29
Happy 69
Prog, of Spring 6
Death of (Enone 9
Bandit's Death 29
Charity 38
Churchwarden, etc. 14
NoHh. Cobbler^
42
' He casts me out,' she w, ' and goes
Edith spoke no word. She w no tear.
Who w with me when I retum'd in chains.
She knelt — ' We worship him ' — all but w —
but I w alone, and sigh'd In the winter
The spear of ice has w itself away,
In silence w upon the flowerless earth,
he sobb'd and he w. And cursed himself ;
I w, and I kiss'd her hands,
Wesh (wash) to my pond to w thessens theere —
Wesh'd (washed) Sally she w foalks' cloaths
An' the babby's faace wum't w
Tommy's faace be as fresh as a codlin w \ the dew. „ 110
Fur they w their sins i' my pond. Church-warden, etc. 16
West (adj.) Four courts I made. East, W and South and
North, Palace of Art 21
wet w wind and the world will go on. (repeat) Window, So Answer 6, 12
Wet w wind how you blow, you blow ! „ 14
wet w wind and the world may go on. „ 18
why, you shiver tho' the wind is w The Ring 29
West (s) (See also Soath-west) sunset linger'd low ado« n
In the red W : Lotos- Eaters 20
Across a hazy glinuner of the w, (hardener's D. 219
Orion sloping slowly to the W. Locksley Hall 8
The blaze upon the waters to the w ; Enoch Arden 596
Here in the woman-markets of the w, Aylmer's Field 348
Till all the sails were darken'd in the if, Sea Dreams 39
Nor stunted squaws of W or East ; Princess ii 78
Silver sails all out of the w „ Hi 14
and half Far-shadowing from the w, „ Con. 42
and a feast Of wonder, out of W and East, Ode Inter. Exhib. 21
So now thy fuller life is in the w, W. to Marie Alex. 36
voices go To North, South, East, and W ; Voice and the P. 14
FloNvn to the east or the w. Window, Gone 7
And topples round the dreary w. In Mem. xv 19
By that broad water of the w, ., Ixvii 3
And East and W, without a breath, „ xcv 62
Kosy is the W, Rosy is the South, (repeat) Maud I xvii 5, 25
Blush it thro' the W ; (repeat) ., 16, 24
Blush from W to East, Blush from East to W, Till
the W is East, „ 21
Orion's grave low down in the w, „ III vi 8
Will there be dawn in W and eve in East ? Gareth and L. 712
All in a rose-red from the w, „ 1087
he saw Fired from the w, far on a hill, Lancelot and E. 168
The flower of all the w and all the world, .. 249
knights of utmost North and W, • .. 526
And also one to the w, and counter to it, And blank : Holy Grail 254
Rode Tristram toward Lyonnesse and the tp. Last Tournament 362
Far on into the rich heart of the w : Gn inevere 244
Far down to that great battle in the w, „ 571
ere that last weird battle in the w. Pass, of Arthur 29
I hear the steps of Modred in the w, ■, 59
' Far other is this battle in the w Whereto we move, „ 66
94
To the Queen ii 65
Lover's Tale i 60
406
414
432
Sisters (E. and E.) 7
Columbus 25
„ 171
V. of Maeldune 86
The Flight 41
91
Dead Prophet 20
Epit. on Stratford 3
Open. I. and C. Exhib. 28
To Marq. of Dufferin 4
6
Prog, of Spring 98
this last, dim, weird battle of the w
forego The darkness of that battle in the W,
Mixt with the gorgeous w the lighthouse shone,
Framing the mighty landscape to the w.
All the w And ev'n unto the middle south
Ran amber toward the w, and nigh the sea
Far from out the w in shadowing showers,
made W East, and sail'd the Dragon's mouth,
a door for scoundrel scum I open'd to the W,
till the labourless day dipt under the W ;
we watch'd the sun fade from us thro' the W,
And see the ships from out the W
And behind him, low in the W,
Here silent in our Minster of the W
That young eagle of the W
The golden keys of East and W.
she lent The sceptres of her W, her East,
hoary deeps that belt the changeful W,
West (s) {cordinued) drowsed in gloom, self-darken'd
from the w, Death of (Enone 76
' Is earth On fire to the W ? St. Telemachus 19
shape with wings Came sweeping by him, and pointed
to the W, „ 25
Western day Was sloping toward his w bower. Mariana 80
baths Of all the w stars, until I die. Ulysses 61
Wind of the w sea, (repeat) Princess Hi 2, 4
West-Indian lands at home and abroad in a rich W- 1 isle ; The Wreck 46
West Indies See Indies
West-Saxon-land Went to his own in his own
W-S-l, Batt. of Brunanburh 103
West-Saxons We the W-S, „ 37
Westward gloomy-gladed hollow slowly sink To w — Gareth and L. 798
For on their march to w, Bedivere, Pass, of Arthur 6
and the wind Still w, and the weedy seas — Columbus 72
There w — under yon slow-falling star, Akbar's Dream 152
Westward-smiling far-rolling, w-s seas. Last Tournament 587
Westward-wheeliog sphere Of w-w stars ; St. Telemachus 32
Westward-winding From the w-w flood, Margaret 9
Wet (adj.) (See also Spongy-wet) Thro' crofts and pastures
w with dew Two Voices 14
Eyes with idle tears are w. Miller's D. 211
I am w With drenching dews, St. S. Stylites 114
Who sweep the crossings, w or dry. Will Water. 47
so that falling prone he dug His fingers into the w
earth, Enoch Arden 780
Made w the crafty crowsfoot round his eye ; Sea Dreams 187
my Sire, his rough cheek w with tears, Princess v 23
The leaves were w with women's tears : „ vi 39
I saw his eyes all w, in the sweet moonshine : Grandmother 49
w west wind and the world will go on.
(repeat) Window, No Answer 6, 12
W west wind how you blow, you blow ! „ 14
w west wind and the world may go on. „ 18
often I caught her with eyes all w, Maud I xix 23
Thick with w woods, and many a beast therein, Com. of Arthur 21
came a forester of Dean, W from the woods, Marr. of Geraint 149
Made answer, either eyelid w with tears : Merlin and V. 379
Brake with a w wind blowing, Lancelot, Last Tournament 137
W with the mists and smitten by the lights, Guinevere 597
he was all w thro' to the skin. First Quarrel 76
hand of the Highlander w with their tears ! Def. of Lucknow 102
These w black passes and foam-churning chasms — Sir J. Oldcastle 9
dhry eye thin but was w for the frinds that was gone ! Tomorrow 83
Wet (s) The wind and the w, the wind and the w ! Window, No Answer 13
Woods where we hid from the w, „ Marr. Morn. 6
day Went glooming down in w and weariness : Last Tournament 215
An' I never said ' off wi' the w,' First Quarrel 77
I soaking here in winter w — To Ulysses 6
Wether Or some black w of St. Satan's fold. Merlin and V. 750
Wet-sJiod Came w-s alder from the wave, Amphion 41
Wharf Out upon the w's they came, L. of Shalott iv 42
red roofs about a narrow w In cluster ; Enoch Arden 3
Down to the pool and narrow w he went, „ 690
famishing populace, wharves forlorn ; Vastness 14
Whate (wheat) ' Goin' to cut the Sassenach w ' Tomorrow 14
' niver crasst over say to the Sassenach w ; „ 48
betther nor cuttin' the Sassenach w ,. 94
What's my thought w m t and when and where
and how. Princess, Pro. 190
Whatsoever For w knight against us came Balin and Balan 35
Wheat (See also Whate, Wheat) Storing yearly little
dues of w, and wine and oil ; Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 122
I will set him in my uncle's eye Among the w ; Dora 68
and went her way Across the w, „ 72
And waves of shadow went over the w. Poet's Song 4
Half-lost in belts of hop and breadths of w ; Princess, Con. 45
Upon the thousand waves of w. In Mem. xci 11
and go By smnmer belts of w and vine „ xcviii 4
Thou that singest w and woodland, To Virgil 9
torpid mummy w Of Egypt bore a grain as sweet To Prof. Jebb 5
Rain-rotten died the w, the barley-spears Demeler and P. 112
Wheat sa much es a poppy along wi' the w, Spinster's S's. 78
if the Staate was a gawin' to let in furriners' %c, Owd Rod 45
Wheat-suburb
790
Whishper
Wheat-suburb sweet-smelling lanes Of his w-s, The Brook 123
Wheedle And w a world that loves him not, Maud II v 39
Wheedling W and siding with them ! Princess v 158
Wheel (s) {See also Mill-wheel) The dark round of the
dripping w, 3IiUer's D. 102
all the w's of Time Spim round in station, Love and Duty 75
And thee returning on thy silver w's. Tithonus 76
men, that in the flying of a w Cry down the past, Godiva 6
power to turn This w within my head, ' Will Water. 84
land, where under the same w The same old rut Aylmer's Field 33
That stays the rolling Ixionian w, Lucretius 261
The common hate with the revolving w Princess vi 173
And he call'd ' Left w into line ! ' Heavy Brigade 6
Loom and w and enginery. Ode Inter. Exhib. 15
I stay'd the w's at Cogoletto, The Daisy 23
I see the sailor at the w. In Mem. x 4
And all the w's of Being slow. „ Z 4
And every kiss of toothed w's, „ cocvii 11
The last w echoes away. Maud I xxii 26
And the roaring of the w's. „ // iv 22
And the w's go over my head, „ v A
song that Enid sang was one Of Fortune and her w, Marr. of Geraint 346
' Turn, Fortune, turn thy w and lower the proud ; „ 347
Turn thy wild w thro' stmshine, storm, and cloud ; „ 348
Thy w and thee we neither love nor hate, (repeat) ,, 349, 358
' Turn, Fortune, turn thy w with smile or frown ; „ 350
With that wild w we go not up or down ; „ 351
' Turn, turn thy w above the staring crowd ; „ 356
Thy w and thou are shadows in the cloud ; „ 357
I heard W's, and a noise of welcome at the
doors —
And lay thine uphill shoulder to the w,
a shatter'd w ? a vicious boy !
and see no more The Stone, the W,
Or spinning at your w beside the vine —
We move, the w must always move.
Wheel (verb) Too long you roam and w at will ;
And tv's the circled dance,
Unto the thundersong that w's the spheres.
That w between the poles,
round her forehead w's the woodland dove,
Wheel'd (See also Low-wheel'd)
strongly w and threw it.
Earth follows w in her ellipse ;
Sometimes the sparhawk, w along.
Bear had w Thro' a great arc his seven slow sims
bats w, and owls whoop'd,
w on Europe-shadowing wings,
w or lit the filmy shapes That haunt the dusk,
W roimd on either heel, Dagonet replied,
w and broke Flying, and link'd again, and w and broke
Flying, Guinevere 257
clutch'd the sword. And strongly w and threw it. Pass, of Arthur 304
planet at length will be w thro' the silence of space. Despair 83
and they w and obey'd. Heavy Brigade 6
Wheeling (See also Westward-wheeling) with both hands
Sisters (E. and E.) 149
Ancient Sage 279
Locksley H., Sixty 215
Demeter and P. 150
Romney's R. 5
Politics 1
Rosalind 36
III Mem. xcviii 30
Lover's Tale i 476
Epilogue 21
Prog, of Spring 57
clutch'd the sword. And
M. d' Arthur 136
Golden Year 24
Sir L. and Q. G. 12
Princess iv 212
„ Con. 110
Ode on Well. 120
In Mem. xcv 10
Last Tournament 244
I flung him, w him
w round The central wish.
The myriad shriek of w ocean-fowl,
W with precipitate paces To the melody,
eddied into suns, that w cast The planets :
with both hands I flung him, w him ;
Glance at the w Orb of change.
Whelm or to w All of them in one massacre ?
And w all this beneath as vast a mound
Whelm'd Roll'd a sea-haze and w the world in gray ;
some were w with missiles of the wall.
Whelp (See also Lion-whelp) bones for his o'ergrown
w to crack ;
Whelpless glaring with his w eye, Silent ;
M. d'Arthur 157
Gardener's D. 224
Enoch Arden 583
Vision of Sin 37
Princess ii 118
Pass, of Arthur 325
To E. Fitzgerald 3
Lucretius 206
Merlin and V. 656
Enoch Arden 672
Princess, Pro. 45
what's my thought and when and
When and where and how
ichere and how,
Whens Break into ' Thens ' and ' W '
Wherewithal having w, And in the fallow leisure of my
life
Maud II V 55
Princess vi 99
, Pro. 190
Ancient Sage 104
Avdley Court 76
Wherewithal (continued) for the w To give his babes a
better bringing-up Enoch Arden 298
Whiff yonder, w ! there comes a sudden heat, Princess, Con. 58
Whig Let W and Tory stir their blood ; Will Water. 53
While we might make it worth his w. Princess i 184
'Twere hardly worth my w to choose In Mem. xxxiv 10
Bide ye here the w.' Merlin and V. 97
Pelleas in brief w Caught his unbroken Ihnbs Pelleas and E. 584
Whim hurt to death, For your wild w : Princess vi 243
Whimper Who love her still, and w, Romney's R. 117
Whimpering then A w of the spirit of the child. Last Tournament 418
Whine (s) colt-like whinny and with hoggish w St. S. Stylites 177
Whine (verb) I that heard her w And snivel, Last Tournament 449
Whined ghost, that shook The curtains, w in lobbies, Walk, to the Mail 37
canker'd boughs without W in the wood ; Balin and Balan 346
and old boughs, W in the wood. „ 386
Whinny colt-like w and with hoggish whine St. S. Stylites 177
her w shrills From tile to scullery. Princess v 452
and stoop'd With a low w toward the pair : Geraint and E. 756
Whinnying At which her palfrey w lifted heel, „ 533
thence The shrilly w's of the team of Hell, Demeter and P. 44
Whip Stopt, and then with a riding w Maud I xiii 18
Struck at her with his w, (repeat) Marr. of Geraint 201, 413
Struck at him with his w, and cut his cheek. „ 207
Up hill ' Too-slow ' will need the w. Politics 11
Whipt And w me into the waste fields far away ; Holy Grail 788
I w him for robbing an orchard once Rizpah 25
Whirl (s) Ran into its giddiest w of sound, Vision of Sin 29
sway and w Of the storm dropt to windless calm, Lover's Tale ii 206
Whirl (verb) My judgment, and my spirit w's, Supp. Confessions 137
There the river eddy w's, L. of Shalott ii 15
I w like leaves in roaring wind. Fatima 7
while Saturn w's, his stedfast shade Palace of Art 15
W's her to me : but will she fling herself, Lucretius 202
And w the ungamer'd sheaf afar. In Mem Ixxii 23
w the dust of harlots round and round Pelleas and E. 470
watch the chariot w About the goal again, Tiresias 17G
I w, and I follow the Sun.' The Dreamer 14
W, and follow the Sun ! (repeat) „ 20, 24, 28, 32
Whirl'd No sword Of wrath her right arm w. The Poet 54
heavy-plunging foam, W by the wind, D. of F. Women 119
flashing round and round, and w in an arch, M. d'Arthur 138
w her white robe like a blossom'd branch Princess iv 179
She w them on to me, as who should say „ 396
like the smoke in a hurricane w. Boadicea 59
The last red leaf is w away. In Mem. xv 3
and w About empyreal heights of thought, „ xcv 37
heart of the poet is w into folly and vice. Maud I iv 39
Pine Lost footing, fell, and so was w away. Gareth and L. 4
flashing round and round, and w in an arch. Pass, of Arthur 306
we w giddily ; the wind Sung ; Lover's Tale ii 201
An open landaulet W by, which. Sisters (E. and E.) 86
W for a million aeons thro' the vast Waste dawn De Prof., Two G. 3
full-maned horses w The chariots backward, Achilles over the T. 24
Whirligig As on this w of Time We circle Will Water. 63
Whirling All their planets w round them, Locksley H., Sixty 204
Yet in the w dances as we went. The form, the form 5
Flash in the pools of w Simois. (Enone 206
part were drowTi'd within the w brook : Princess, Pro. 47
w rout Led by those two rush'd into dance. Lover's Tale Hi 54
phantom of the w landaulet For ever past me by : Sisters ( E. and E.) 114
W their sabres in circles of light ! Heavy Brigade 34
Whirlwind the echoing dance Of reboant w's, Supp. Confessions 97
And loud the Norland w's blow, Oriana 6
And a w clear'd the larder : The Goose 52
Across the w's heart of peace. The Voyage 87
And bring her in a w : Princess i 65
Like the leaf in a roaring w, Boadicea 59
A moment, ere the onward w shatter it, Lover's Tale i 451
round and round A w caught and bore us ; „ ii 197
a w blow these woods, as never blew before. The Flight 12
Whirr See Dorhawk-whirr
Whirring And the w sail goes round, (repeat) The Owl i 4, 5
Whishper (whisper) (s) laste little w was sweet as the
lilt of a bird ! Tomorrow 33
p
Whishper
791
White
Wbishper (verb) the crathur, an' w, an' say
Whisker his watery smile And educated w.
Ay, roob thy w's agean ma,
Whisky iSee Crathur'
Whisper (s) (See also Love-whispers, Whishper, World
whisper) She has heard a w say,
A little w silver-clear,
A hint, a w breathing low,
Such seem'd the w at my side :
In w's, like the w's of the leaves
And her w throng'd my pulses
w of the south-wind rushing warm,
a w on her ear. She knew not what ;
w of huge trees that branch'd And blossom'd
Again in deeper inward w's ' lost ! '
A w half reveal'd her to herself.
But honrying at the w of a lord ;
shook the songs, the w's, and the shrieks
o'er the imperial tent W's of war.
Would lisp in honey'd w's of this monstrous fraud
and my prayer Was as the w of an air
And shape the w of the throne ;
In w's of the beauteous world.
This haunting w makes me faint,
And lightly does the w fall ;
world's loud w breaking into storm,
all hearts Applauded, and the spiteful w died
Breathed in a dismal w ' It is truth.'
He spoke in words part heard, in w's part,
whose lightest w moved him more
A murmuring w thro' the nunnery ran,
Save for some w of the seething seas,
Falling in w's on the sense,
the surge fell From thunder into w's ;
Surely, but for a w, ' Go not yet,'
He knew the meaning of the w now,
But his friend Replied, in half a w.
Not to break in on what I say by word Or w.
There was a w among us, but only a w
thro' the roar of the breaker a w,
A breath, a w — some divine farewell —
Weird w's, bells that rang without a hand,
A w from his dawn of life ?
And at his ear he heard a w ' Rome '
Whisper (verb) {See also Whishper) all day long you sit
between Joy and woe, and w each.
And at my headstone w low.
Listening, w's ' 'Tis the fairy Lady of Shalott.'
While those full chestnuts w by.
The trees began to w, and the wind began to roll,
Not w, any murmur of complaint.
0 w to your glass, and say,
And w lovely words, and use Her influence
In her ear he w's gaily,
Heard the good mother softly w
W in odorous heights of even.
What w's from thy lying lip ?
' The stars,' she w's, ' blindly run ;
And hear thy laurel w sweet
A hundred spirits w " Peace.'
One w's, ' Here thy boyhood sung
And w's to the worlds of space,
We w, and hint, and chuckle.
And the lily w's, ' I wait.'
Sweet lord, ye do right well to w this.
Edith pray'd me not to w of it.
She w's, ' From the South I bring you balm,
1 hear a death-bed Angel w ' Hope.'
Whisper'd (adj. and part.) {See also Half-whisper 'd)
To hear each other's w speech ;
and they suffer — ^some, 'tis w— -down in hell
Thou shalt hear the ' Never, never,' w by the
phantom years,
And w voices at his ear.
A w jest to some one near him, ' Look,
Tomorrow 54
Edwin Morris 129
Spinster's S's. 81
L. of Shalott ii 3
Two Voices 428
434
439
Gardener's D. 253
Locksley Hall 36
125
Enoch Arden 515
585
716
Aylmer's Field 144
Priiicess, Pro. 115
i98
vlO
! Third of Feb. 36
In Mem,, xvii 3
„ Ixiv 12
V Ixinx 12
„ Ixxxi 7
„ Ixxxv 89
Mart, of Geraint 27
Geraint and E. 958
Balin and BaJan 527
Merlin and V. 839
Pelleas and E. 155
Guinevere 410
Pass, of Arthur 121
Lover's Tale i 720
Hi 31
ii;20
43
336
353
Def. of Lucknow 50
Despair 13
Ancient Sage 225
The Ring 411
Far — far — away 10
St. Telemachus 26
Margaret 64
My life is full 24
L. of Shalott i 35
Miller's D. 168
May Queen, Con. 27
St. S. Stylites 22
Day-Dm., Ef. 3
Will Water. 11
L. of Burleigh 1
Aylmer's Field 187
Milton 16
In Mem. Hi 4
5
xxxvii 7
Ixxxvi 16
cii 9
cxxvi 11
Maud I iv 29
„ xxii 66
Balin aiid Balan 529
Sisters {E. and E.) 207
Prog, of Spring 66
Romney's R. 148
Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 59
123
Locksley Hall 83
Day-Dm., Arrival 24
Princess v 32
Whisper'd (adj. and part) {continued) By a shuffled step, by
a dead weight trail'd, by a w fright, Maud I i 14
Love drew in her breath In that close kiss, and
dnmk her w tales. Lover's Tale i 817
Whisper'd (verb) She w, with a stifled moan Mariana in the S. 57
what he w under Heaven None else could under-
stand ; Talking Oak 21
W, ' Listen to my despair : Edward Gray 22
Cyril w ; ' Take me with you too.' Princess i 81
no livelier than the dame That w ' Asses' ears,' „ ii 113
' Come,' he w to her ' Lift up your head, „ « 63
What w from her lying lips ? In Mem. xxxix 10
' The fault was mine,' he w, ' fly ! ' Maud II i 30
For I never w a private affair „ v 47
Lifted an arm, and softly w, ' There.' Gareth and L. 1361
sat, heard, watch'd And w : thro' the peaceful
court she crept And w : Meiiin and V . 139
Or w in the corner ? do ye know it ? ' „ 772
half-awake he w, ' Where ? O where ? Pelleas and E. 41
For all that ample woodland w ' debt,' The Ring 170
Who w me ' your Ulric loves '— Happy 62
Master w ' Follow the Gleam.' Merlin and the G. 33
I w ' give it to me,' but he would not Bandit's Death 27
Whisperer and the swarm Of female w's : Princess vi 356
Whispering within the cave Behind yon w tuft of oldest pine, CEnone 88
beneath a w rain Night slid down one long stream Gardener's D. 266
Or low morass and w reed, In Mem. c 6
these few lanes of elm And w oak. To Mary Boyle 68
W to each other half in fear. Sea- Fairies 5
Two lovers w by an orchard wall ; Circumstance 4
W I knew not what of wild and sweet, Tithonus 61
or, w, play'd A chequer-work of beam In Mem. Ixxii 14
tum'd to each other, w, all dismay'd, Heavy Brigade 44
Whistle (s) Scarce answer to my w ; Amphion 68
And bustling w of the youth Marr. of Geraint 257
great plover's human w amazed Her heart, Geraint and E. 49
Whistle (verb) W back the parrot's call, Locksley Hall 171
Then would he w rapid as any lark, Gareth and L. 505
But if my neighbour w answers him— Lover's Tale iv 161
Whistled waterflags, That w stiff and dry about the
marge. M. d' Arthur 64
redcap w ; and the nightingale Sang loud, Gardener's D. 95
Then low and sweet I w thrice ; Edwin Morris 113
Sometimes the throstle w strong : Sir L. and Q. G. 11
flour From his tall mill that w on the waste. Enoch Arden 343
And w to the morning star. Sailor Boy 4
And while he « long and loud „ 5
Prison'd, and kept and coax'd and w to — Gareth and L. 14
He w his good warhorse left to graze Last Tournament 490
waterflags. That w stiff and dry about the marge. Pass, of Arthur 232
Whistling W a random bar of Bonny Doon, The Brook 82
But blessed forms in w storms Sir Galahad 59
Half w and half singing a coarse song, Geraint and E. 528
Whit Not a w of thy tuwhoo. The Owl ii 10
And w, w, w, in the bush beside me Grandmother 40
and never a w more wise The fourth, Gareth and L. 635
White (adj.) See also Cold-white, Death-white, Dusty-white, •
Lily-white, May-white, Milk-white, Milky-white, Rosy-
white, Snow-white, Vermeil-white, Winter-white)
And w against the cold-white sky. Dying Swan 12
One after another the w clouds are fleeting ; 'All Things will Die 5
In the w curtain, to and fro, Mariana 51
The w owl in the belfry sits, (repeat) The Owl i 7, 14
Flinging the gloom of yesternight On the w day ; Ode to Memory 10
A pillar of w light upon the wall Of purple cliffs, „ 53
thick with w bells the clover-hill swells Sea- Fairies 14
The w chalk-quarry from the hill Miller's D. 115
The lanes, you know, were w with may, „ 130
I'd touch her neck so warm and w. „ 174
All barr'd with long w cloud the scornful crags, Palace of Art 83
her hair Wound with w roses, slept St. Cecily ; „ 99
seas draw backward from the land Their moon-led
waters w. „ 252
Till Charles's Wain came out above the tall
w chimney-tops. May Queen, N. Y's. E. 12
White
792
White
White (adj.) (continued) Two handfuls of w dust, shut
in £in um of brass ! Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 68
W surf wind-scatter'd over sails and masts, D. of F. Women 31
' I would the w cold heavy-plunging foam, ,, 118
' The light w cloud swam over us. ,, 221
We saw the large w stars rise one by one, „ 223
With that sharp sound the w dawn's creeping beams, „ 261
She caught the w goose by the leg, The Goose 9
more the w goose laid It clack'd and cackled louder. ,, 23
Clothed in w samite, mystic, vi'onderful,
(repeat) M. d' Arthur 31, 144, 159
for all his face was w And colourless, „ 212
Love's w star Beam'd thro' the thicken'd cedar Gardener's D. 165
As clean and w as privet when it flowers. Walk, to the Mail 56
The meed of saints, the w robe and the palm. St. S. Stylites 20
I lived In the w convent down the valley there, „ 62
As these w robes are soil'd and dark, St. Agnes' Eve 13
In raiment w and clean. „ 24
or following up And flying the w breaker, Enoch Arden 21
Enoch's w horse, and Enoch's ocean-spoil „ 93
And York's w rose as red as Lancaster's, Aylmer's Field 51
Nor ever falls the least w star of snow, Lucretius 107
Morn in the w wake of the morning star Princess Hi 17
saw The soft w vapour streak the crowned towers „ 344
There whirl'd her w robe like a blossom'd branch „ iv 179
Her round w shoulder shaken with her sobs, „ 289
Here he reach'd W hands of farewell to my sire, „ v 233
very nape of her w neck Was rosed with indignation : „ vi 343
' Now sleeps the crimson petal, now the w ; „ vii 176
Nor wilt thou snare him in the w ravine, „ 205
A red sail, or a «; ; and far beyond, „ Con. 47
Ruddy and w, and strong on his legs, he looks like a
man. Grandmother 2
We loved that hall, tho' w and cold, The Daisy 37
All along the valley, stream that flashest w, V. of Cauteretz 1
With blasts that blow the poplar w. In Mem. IxxH 3
The V3 kine glimmer'd, and the trees (repeat) „ xcv 15, 51
Has a broad-blown comeliness, red and w, Maud I xiii 9
if a hand, as w As ocean-foam in the moon, „ xiv 17
The w lake-blossom fell into the lake „ xxii 47
And the w rose weeps, ' She is late ; ' „ 64
It lightly winds and steals In a cold w robe before me, „ // iv 19
Wearing the w flower of a blameless life, Ded. of Idylls 25
Clothed in w samite, mystic, wonderful. Com. of Arthur 285
' Blow trumpet, for the world is w with May ; „ 482
reverence thine own beard That looks as w as utter
truth, Gareth and L. 281
Our one w lie sits like a little ghost ,, 297
plant that feels itself Root-bitten by w lichen, „ 454
past The weird w gate, and paused without, „ 663
With w breast-bone, and barren ribs of Death, „ 1382
often with her own w hands Array'd and deck'd
her,
W from the mason's hand, (repeat)
Then, as the w and glittering star of morn
And w sails flying on the yellow sea ;
Betwixt the cressy islets w in flower ;
she Kiss'd the w star upon his noble front,
Men weed the w horse on the Berkshire hills
and paced The long w walk of lilies toward the
bower,
as makes The w swan-mother, sitting,
and dim thro' leaves Blinkt the w mom, „
And mimibled that w hand whose ring'd caress „
whose lightest word Is mere w truth in simple
nakedness, „
O Heaven's own w Earth-angel, Merlin and
As clean as blood of babes, as w as milk : „
Ran down the silken thread to kiss each other On her
w neck — „
A maid so smooth, so w, so wonderful, „
Is thy w blamelessness accounted blame ! ' „
bare-grinning skeleton of death ! W was her cheek ; „
Rang by the w mouth of the violent Glem ; Lancelot and E. 288
When the strong neighings of the wild w Horse „ 298
Marr. of Geraint 16
„ 244,408
734
829
Geraint and E. 475
757
Balin and Balan 249
353
385
512
518
F. 80
344
456
566
799
848
White (adj.) (continued) In the w rock a chapel and
a hall On massive columns, Lancelot and E. 405
And innocently extending her w arms, „ 932
Till all the w walls of my cell were dyed Holy Grail 119
ever moved Among us in w armour, Galahad. „ 135
dyed The strong W Horse in his own heathen blood — „ 312
Not to be bound, save by w bonds and warm, Pelleas and E. 353
up a slope of garden, all Of roses w and red, „ 422
in her w arms Received, and after loved it
tenderly, Last Tournament 23
down a streetway himg with folds of pure W samite, „ 141
Isolt the w — Sir Tristram of the Woods — „ 177
Our one w day of Innocence hath past, „ 218
The twelve small damosels w as Innocence, „ 291
one of those w slips Handed her cup and piped, „ 295
' Isolt Of the w hands ' they call'd her : „ 398
Who served him well with those w hands of hers, „ 400
Is all as cool and w as any flower.' „ 416
there Belted his body with her w embrace, „ 513
Calling me thy w hind, and saying to me „ 569
The warm w apple of her throat, ,, 717
The w mist, like a face-cloth to the face, Guinevere 7
And in the light the w mermaiden swam, „ 245
aghast the maiden rose, W as her veil, ,, 363
who leagues With Lords of the W Horse, heathen, „ 574
when the man was no more than a voice In the w
winter of his age,
Clothed in w samite, mystic, wonderful, (repeat)
for all his face was w And colourless,
W asw clouds, floated from sky to sky.
Or when the w heats of the blinding noons
A mystic light flash'd ev'n from her w robe
then came in The w light of the weary moon above,
But the boy was born i' trouble, an' looks so wan an
so w :
I niver ha seed it sa w wi' the Maay es I see'd it
to-year —
Fur I thowt it wur Charlie's ghoast i' the derk, fur
it loookt sa w.
Blessing the wholesome w faces of Havelock's good
fusileers.
And a hundred ranged on the rock like w sea-birds
And his w hair sank to his heels and his w beard
fell to his feet.
Not here ! the w North has thy bones ;
The broad w brow of the Isle —
the hills are w with rime.
all my life was darken'd, as I saw the w sail run,
an' her hair was as w as the snow an a grave.
All in w Italian marble, looking still as if she
smiled, Locksley H., Sixty 35
Mother weeps At that w funeral of the single life, Frin. Beatrice 9
dwell For nine w moons of each whole year with me, Demeter and P. 121
Of a Christmas Eave, an' as cowd as this, an' the midders
as w, Owd Roa 81
Flies back in fragrant breezes to display A tunic w as
Pass, of Arthur 4
„ 199, 312, 327
380
Lover's Tale i 5
139
370
640
First Quarrel 2
Village Wife 80
82
Def. of Lucknow 101
V. of Maeldwne 101
118
Sir J. Franklin 1
The Wreck 135
The Flight 4
39
Tomorrow 60
May !
And find the w heather wherever you go,
my w heather only blooms in heaven
And on this w midwinter day —
But when the w fog vanish'd like a ghost
And now that I am w, and you are gray,
White (s) (See also May-white) Lying, robed in
snowy w
He thought I was a ghost, mother, for I was all
in w,
Gown'd in pure w, that fitted to the shape —
Which charts us all in its coarse blacks or w"s.
With folded feet, in stoles of w,
No pint of w or red Had ever half the power
Six hundred maidens clad in purest w.
But pure as lines of green that streak the w
Of twelve sweet hours that past in bridal w,
King That mom was married, while in stainless w. Com. of Arthur 456
Muriel and Miriam, each in w, and like May-blossoms The Ring 254
Prog, of Spring 6S
Romnei/'s R. 108
„ nc
To Master of B. 9
Death of (Enone &1
Roses on the T. 4
L. of Shalott iv 19
May Queen 17
Gardener's D. 126
Walk, to the Mail 107
Sir Galahad 43
Will Water. 83
Princess ii 47i
V 196
Maud I xviii 6S
White
^93
Wholesome
Wbit6 (s) (contimied) And watch the curl'd w of
the coming wave Merlin and V. 292
and she herself in w All but her face, Lancelot and E. 1158
where the crisping w Play'd ever back upon the
sloping wave, Holy Grail 381
Where children sat in w with cups of gold. Last Tournament 142
•all the purple slopes of mountain flowers Pass
under w, .. 230
So dame and damsel cast the simple w, .. 232
Wear black and w, and be a nun like you, Guinevere 677
in front of which Six stately virgins, all in w. Lover's Tale ii 77
Leapt lightly clad in bridal w — „ Hi 44
might be borne in w To burial or to burning. Ancient Sage 207
MoUy Magee, wid the red o' the rose an' the w o'
the May, Tomorrow 31
All his virtues — I forgive them — black m w above
his bones. Locksley H., Sixty 44
White-breasted w-b like a star Fronting the dawn (Enone 57
Whited W thought and cleanly life As the priest. Vision of Sin 116
White-eyed w-e phantasms weeping tears of blood. Palace of Art 239
White-faced The w-/ halls, the glancing rills, In Mem., Con. 113
White-favour'd And those w-f horses wait ; „ 90
White-flower'd saw The w-f elder-thicket from the field Godiva 63
Black holly, and w-f wayfaring-tree ! Sir J. Oldcastle 130
White-hair'd A w-h shadow roaming like a dream Tithonus 8
White-headed I this old w-h dreamer stoopt Locksley H., Sixty 38
White-hooved Leading a jet-black goat white-hom'd, w-h, (Enone 51
White-hom'd Leading a jet-black goat w-h, white-hooved, „ 51
White-listed tree that shone w-l thro' the gloom. Merlin and V. 939
Whiten Willows w, aspens quiver, L. of Shalott i 10
The ptarmigan that w's ere his hour Last Tournament 697
Whiten'd (adj. and part.) Part black, part w with the
bones of men. Holy Grail 500
The meal-sacks on the w floor, Miller's D. 101
Whiten'd (verb) And w all the rolling flood ; The Victim 20
When the lake w and the pinewood roar'd, Merlin and V. 637
Whiteness all but utter w held for sin, Holy Grail 84
Whitening Down thro' the w hazels made a plunge Enoch Arden 379
after the great waters break W for half a league, Last Tournament 465
A rhyme that flower'd betwixt the w sloe To Mary Boyle 25
Whiter Is w even than her pretty hand : Aylmer's Field 363
The flocks are w down the vaJe, In Mem. cxv 10
To meet and greet a w sun ; „ Con. 78
And w than the mist that all day long Pass, of Arthur 137
White-robed W-r in honour of the stainless child. Last Tournament 147
White Rose W R, Bellerophon, the Jilt, The Brook 161
Whitest With w honey in fairy gardens cull'd — Elednore 26
The very w lamb in all my fold Loves you : Aylmer's Field 361
A broad earth-sweeping pall of w lawn. Lover's Tale ii 78
White-tail'd Left for the w-t eagle to tear it, Batt. of Brunanburh 107
White-wing'd let the fair w-w peacemaker fly Ode Inter. Exhib. 34
Whither Arthur had vanish'd I knew not w, Merlin and the G. 78
Whitsuntide Arthur on the W before Held court Marr. of Geraint 145
And this was on the last year's W. „ 840
Whizz "d An arrow w to the right, one to the left, Baiin and Balan 419
Whoate (oats) W or tonups or taates — Village Wife 26
Whole (adj.) {See also 'Ole) Oft lose w years of darker
mind. Two Voices 372
So healthy, sound, and clear and w. Miller's D. 15
With one long kiss my w soul thro' My lips, Fatima 20
My w soul waiting silently, „ 36
W weeks and months, and early and late, The Sisters 10
And blessings on his w life long. May Queen, Con. 14
But now the w hound table is dissolved M. d' Arthur 234
I, that w day. Saw her no more, Gardener's D. 163
But this w hour your eyes have been intent „ 269
but I die here To-day, and w years long, a life
of death. St. 8. Stylites 54
If it may be, fast W Lents, and pray. „ 182
I trust That I am w, and clean, and meet for Heaven. „ 213
This w wide earth of light and shade Will Water. 67
At times the w sea bum'd, at times The Voyage 51
To waste his « heart in one kiss Upon her perfect
lips. Sir L. and Q. G. 44
our pride Looks only for a moment w and sound ; Aylmer's Field 2
Whole (adj.) (continued) for fear This w foundation ruin, Princess ii 341
sphered W in ourselves and owed to none. „ iv 148
miless you send us back Our son, on the instant, w.' „ 416
but half Without you ; with you, w ; „ 461
My mother, looks as w as some serene „ v 193
and slips in sensual mire, But w and one : „ v 200
Then felt it sound and w from head to foot, „ vi 211
she You talk'd with, w nights long, up in the tower, „ 255
nor seem'd it strange that soon He rose up w, „ vii 65
nor yet Did those twin brothers, risen again and w ; „ 89
And keeps our Britain, w within herself, ., Con. 52
I wish they were a w Atlantic broad.' ,, 71
W in himself, a common good. Ode on Well. 26
keep our noble England w, „ 161
And love will last as pure and w In Mem. xliii 13
That so my pleasure may be w ; „ Ixxi 8
To which the w creation moves. „ Con. 144
Has our w earth gone nearer to the glow Maud I xviii 78
Strike dead the w weak race of venomous worms, „ // i 46
and weep My w soul out to thee. „ iv 98
W, like a crag that tumbles from the cliff, Marr. of Geraint 318
To save her dear lord w from any wound. Geraint and E. 45
And men brought in w hogs and quarter beeves, „ 602
Then, when Geraint was w again, „ 945
The w wood-world is one full peal of praise. Balin and Balan 450
Polluting, and imputing her « self. Merlin and V. 803
the one passionate love Of her w life ; „ 956
' Sir King, mine ancient wound is hardly w, Lancelot and E. 93
Right fain were I to learn this knight were w, „ 772
Whereof he should be quickly w, „ 853
But when Sir Lancelot's deadly hurt was w, „ 904
Yet still thy life is w, and still I live Who love
thee ; Pass, of Arthur 150
But now the w Round Table is dissolved „ 402
For so the w round earth is every way „ 422
single glance of them Will govern a w life from
birth to death, Lover's Tale i 76
At thought of which my w soul languishes „ 267
The w land weigh'd him down as .^tna does The Giant
of Mythology : „ iv 17
Ship after ship, the w night long, (repeat) The Revenge 58, 59, 60
And the w sea plunged and fell on the shot-
shatter'd navy of Spain, „ 117
So mock'd, so spurn'd, so baited two w days — Sir J. Oldcastle 163
And the w isle-side flashing down from the peak V. of Maeldune 45
For the w isle shudder'd and shook like a man „ 74
Oat of His w World-self and all in all— Be Prof, Two G. 49
For he touch'd on the w sad planet of man. Dead Prophet 39
dwell For nine white moons of each w year with me, Demeter and P. 121
When thou shalt dwell the w bright year with me, „ 139
National hatreds of w generations, Vastness 25
Whole (s) All various, each a perfect w From living
Nature, Palace of Art 58
Is bodied forth the second w. Love thou thy land 66
That each, who seems a separate w. In Mem. xlvii 1
The wish, that of the living w „ Iv 1
Boundless inward, in the atom, boimdless
outward, in the W. Locksley H., Sixty 212
be welded each and all. Into one imperial w, Open. I. and C. Exhib. 37
Wholeness He that in his Catholic w Locksley H., Sixty 101
Wholesale You need not set your thoughts in rubric
thus For w comment.' Princess Hi 51
Wholesome You changed a w heart to gall. L. C. V. de Vere 4A
eat w food. And wear warm clothes, St. S. Stylites 108
That mock'd the w human heart. The Letters 10
But honest talk and w wine. To F. D. Maurice 18
But better serves a w law. In Mem. xlviii 10
glanced Eyes of pure women, w stars of love ; Gareth and L. 314
None ; or the w boon of gyve and gag.' „ 370
But now the w music of the wood Balin and Balan 436
until the w flower And poisonous grew together, Holy Grail 775
Such as the w mothers tell their boys. Pelleas and E. 197
whom The w realm is purged of otherwhere. Last Tournament 96
0 ay — the w madness of an hour — „ 675
Boughs on each side, laden with w shade, Lover's Tale i 230
Wholesome
794
Wife
Wholesome (continued) Whereof to all that draw the ?/'
air, Lover's Tale i 500
Blessing the w white faces of Havelock's good
fusileers, Bef. of Lucknow 101
came back That w heat the blood had lost, To E. Fitzgerald 24
Dust in w old-world dust before the newer world
begin. Lockshy H., Sixty 150
Wholly Then I cannot be w duinb ; Maud II v 100
Whoop {See also Owl-whoop) Call to each other and w
and cry The Merman 26
Whoop'd-Whoopt bats wheel'd, and owls whoop'd. Princess, Con. 110
An owl wkoopt : ' Hark the victor pealing
there ! ' Gareth and L. 1318
Whooping I drown'd the w's of the owl with sound St. S. Stylites 33
Whoopt See Whoop'd
Whorl With delicate spire and w, Maud II ii 6
Wicked (adj.) ' Chant me now some w stave, Vision of Sin 151
for the w broth Confused the chemic labour of the
blood, Lucretius 19
About the good King and his w Queen, Guinevere 209
Makes w lightnings of her eyes, „ 520
' Ye know me then, that w one, „ 669
And so she was w with Harry ; First Quarrel 26
Wicked (s) And the w cease from troubling, May Queen, Con. 60
Wickedness if you think this w in me, Merlin and V. 339
If you — and not so much from w, „ 520
And heal the world of all their w ! Holy Grail 94
Well might I wish to veil her w, Guinevere 211
who hath forgiven My w to him, „ 635
Wicket {See also Wicket-gate) one green w in a privet
hedge ; Gardener's D. 110
Wicket (in cricket) clamour bowl'd And stunap'd
the w ; Princess, Pro. 82
Wicket-gate I reach'd The w-g, and found her standing
there. Gardener's D. 213
Wiclif He might have come to learn Our W's
learning : Sir J. Oldcastle 65
By this good W moimtain down from heaven, „ 132
Wiclif-preacher My frighted W-f whom I crost ,, 38
Wide {See also Wild-wide, Worid-wide) W, wild, and open
to the air, Dying Swan 2
Look up thro' night : the world is w. Two Voices 24
and the waste w Of that abyss, or scornful pride ! ,,119
' When, w in soul and bold of tongue, „ 124
mansion, that is built for me, So royal-rich and «.' Palace of Art 20
With cycles of the human tale Of this w world, „ 147
In this great house so royal-rich, and w, „ 191
The stalls are void, the doors are w, Sir Galahad 31
Suddenly set it w to find a sign, Enoch Arden 496
the suns are many, the world is w. Maud I iv 45
shiver of dancing leaves is thrown About its echoing
chambers w, « vi 74
portal of King Pellam's chapel w And inward to
the wall ; Balin and Balan 405
my spirit Was of so w a compass Lover's Tale ii 135
coostom agean draw'd in like a wind fro' far
an' w. North. Cobbler 93
Stretch'd w and wild the waste enormous marsh, Ode to Memory 101
Is not so deadly still As that w forest. D. of F. Women 69
The parson taking w and wider sweeps. The Epic 14
looking wistfully with w blue eyes As in a picture. M. d' Arthur 169
One sabbath deep and w — St. Agnes' Eve 34
This whole w earth of light and shade Will Water. 67
Till the fountain spouted, showering w Vision of Sin 21
Thro' one w chasm of time and frost they gave Princess, Pro. 93
' Fling our doors w ! all, all, not one, but all, „ vi 334
In this w hall with earth's invention stored. Open. Inter. Exhib. 2
Calm and deep peace in this w air. In Mem. xi 13
Hid from the w world's rumour by the grove Lancelot and E. 522
W flats, where nothing but coarse grasses grew ; Holy Grail 794
W open were the gates. And no watch kept ; Pelleas and E. 414
The w world laugl^ at it. Last Tournament 695
Arise, my own true sister, come forth ! the world
is w. The Flight 96
Read the w world's annals, you, Locksley H., Sixty 104
Wide-dispread locks not w-d, Isabel 5
Wide-mouth'd The little w-m heads upon the spout Godiva 56
Widen The circle w's till it lip the marge, Pelleas and E. 94
Widened And the thoughts of men are w Locksley Hall 138
Widening {See also Ever-widening) And ever w slowly
silence all. Merlin and V. 392
Wider and make The bounds of freedom w yet To the Queen 32
a lyre of w range Struck by all passion, D. of F. Women 165
The parson taking wide and w sweeps. The Epic 14
Wide-wing'd w-w sunset of the misty marsh Last Tournament 423
Widow {See also Would-be-widow) his w Miriam Lane,
With daily-dwindling profits Enoch Arden 695
affectionate smile That makes the w lean. Sea Dreams 156
but there were w's here. Two w's. Princess i 127
Then came a w crying to the King, Gareth and L. 333
Came yet another w crying to him, „ 350
w with less guile than many a child. Sisters {E. and E.) 182
nor wail of baby-wife. Or Indian w ; Akbar's Dream 197
a w came to my door : Charity 26
Widow-bride made The wife of wives a w-b, Romney's R. 138
Widow'd Laid w of the power in his eye M. d' Arthur 122
To thy w marriage-pillows, to the tears that thou wilt
weep. Locksley Hall 82
I cry to vacant chairs and w walls, Aylmer's Field 720
Till all my w race be run ; In Mem. ix 18
Till all my w race be run. „ xvii 20
Could we forget the w hour „ xl 1
My heart, tho' w, may not rest „ Ixxxv 113
Laid w of the power in his eye Pass, of Arthur 290
Wilt neither quit the w Crown nor let Prin. Beatrice 15
Widower (adj.) there the w husband and dead wife Lover's Tale iv 372
Widower (s) Tears of the w, when he sees In Mem. xiii 1
Widowhood praise To God, that help'd her in her w. Dora 113
Thro' all the clouded years of w, Death of (Enone 103
Width two remain'd Apart by all the chamber's w, Geraint and E. 265
Wield So the Higher vrs the Lower, Locksley H., Sixty 124
my brothers, work, and w The forces of to-day, Mechanophilus 29
Wielded Nor w axe disjoint. Talking Oak 262
Wielder W of the stateliest measure To Virgil 39
Wieldii^ The w of weapons — Batt. of Brunanburh 90
Wife {See also Baby-wife, Missis) In her as Mother, W,
and Queen ; To the Queen 28
The queen of marriage, a most perfect w. Isabel 28
' Who took a w, who rear'd his race, Two Voices 328
One walk'd between his w and child, „ 412
Pray, Alice, pray, my darling w. Miller's D. 23
True w. Round my true heart thine arms entwine „ 215
fairest and most loving w in Greece,' (Enone 187
Fairest — why fairest w ? am I not fair ? „ 196
The gardener Adam and his w L. C. V. de Vere 51
cannot tell — I might have been his w ; May Queen, Con. 47
dream of Fatherland, Of child, and w, Lotos- Eaters 40
dear the last embraces of our wives „ C. S. 70
I KNEW an old w lean and poor, The Goose 1
It stirr'd the old w's mettle : „ 26
often thought, ' I'll make them man and w.' Dora 4
take her for your w ; ,,20
Or change a word with her he calls his w, „ 44
I had been a patient w : „ 147
his w upon the tilt, IValk. to the Mail 41
He left his w behind ; for so I heard. „ 47
Sit with their wives by fires, St. S. Stylites 108
Match'd with an aged w, I mete and dole Ulysses 3
As the husband is, the w is : Locksley Hall 47
loved thee more than ever w was loved. „ 64
Godiva, w to that grim Earl, Godiva 12
But break it. In the name of w, Day-Dm., L' Envoi 53
Lord Ronald's, When you are man and w.' Lady Clare 36
Little can I give my w. L. of Burleigh 14
above his book Leering at his neighbour's w. Vision of Sin 118
' This is my house and this my little w.' Enoch Arden 28
The little w would weep for company, „ 34
And say she would be little w to both. „ 36
his w Bore him another son, a sickly one : „ 108
yet the w — When he was gone — „ 13
1
Wife
795
Wild
Wife (coiitinued) With all that seamen needed or their
wives —
Pray'd for a blessing on his w and babes
Cast his strong arms about his drooping w,
I wish you for my w.
I believe, if you were fast my u;
beheld His w his w no more, and saw the babe
' This miller's w ' He said to Mirisim
This fiat somewhat soothed himself and u\ His w a
faded beauty of the Baths,
To ailitig w or wailing infancy
the M--, who watch'd his face. Paled
in the narrow gloom By w and child ;
His w, an unknown artist's orphan child —
The gentle-hearted w Sat shuddering
And silenced by that silence lay the w,
• Not fearful : fair,' Said the good w,
' Nay,' said the kindly w to comfort him,
' Was he so bound, poor soul ? ' said the good w ;
flock'd at noon His tenants, w and child,
We fell out, my w and I,
a good mother, a good w, Worth winning ;
see how you stand Stiff as Lot's w,
I I had been wedded w, I knew mankind,
My bride. My w, my life.
Since English Harold gave its throne a w.
And Willy's w has written : (repeat)
Never the w for Willy :
not wept, little Annie, not since I had been a w ;
The sweet little w of the singer said,
' The King is happy In child and w ;
Is he your dearest ? Or I, the w ? '
' O w, what use to answer now ?
Suddenly from him brake his w,
Gods have answer'd ; We give them the w ! '
Me the w of rich Prasittagus,
Take my love and be my w.
Thou bring'st the sailor to his w,
No casual mistress, but a w.
They would but find in child and w
And of my spirit as of a w.
That must be made a w ere noon ?
Now waiting to be made a w,
Enoch Arden 139
188
228
410
414
759
804
Aylmer's Field 26
177
731
841
iSea Dreams 2
29
46
83
140
169
Princess, Fro. 4
» ii 3
vim
in 241
327
vii 360
W. to Marie Alex. 24
Grandmother 3, 105
4
63
The Islet 3
. The Victim 26
52
55
70
79
Boddicea 48
Windorc, No Answer 24
In Mem. x 5
„ lix 2
„ xc 7
„ xevii 8
„ Con. 26
49
filthy by-lane rings to the yell of the trampled w,
you are all unmeet for a w.
Was wedded with a winsome w, Ygeme :
Lot's w, the Queen of Orkney, Bellicent, (repeat)
But she, a stainless w to Gorlois,
and his w Nursed the young prince,
A horror on him, lest his gentle w,
that if ever yet was w True to her lord,
I fear that I am no true w.'
And that she fear'd she was not a true w.
As I will make her truly my true w.'
I charge thee, on thy duty as a w,
nor told his gentle w What ail'd him,
I heard you say, that you were no true w :
Hath push'd aside his faithful w,
To worship woman as true w beyond
Whose kinsman left him watcher o'er his w
Some cause had kept him sunder'd from his w :
' Your love,' she said, ' your love — to be your w.'
But now there never will be w of mine.'
' No, no,' she cried, ' I care not to be w,
Our bond, as not the bond of man and w.
Our bond is not the bond of man and w.
Delight myself with gossip and old wives.
Rough wives, that laugh'd and scream'd
he could harp his w up out of hell.'
as the village w who cries ' I shudder,
Mine is the shame, for I was w,
lets the w Whom he knows false, abide and rule
whereon I lean'd in w and friend
w and child with wail Pass to new lords;
Had thrust his w and child and dash'd
Maud I i 38
iv 57
Com. of Arthur 188
„ 190,245
194
223
Marr. of Geraint 29
46
108
114
503
Geraint and E. 16
503
742
Balin and Balan 106
Merlin and V. 23
706
715
Lancelot and E. 933
936
937
1191
1206
Holy Grail 553
Pelleas and E. 89
Last Tournament 328
Guinevere 56
„ 119
„ 514
Pass, of Arthur 24
44
Lover's Tale i 380
Wife (continued) ' Take my free gift, my cousin, for
your w ;
widower husband and dead w Rush'd each at each
when at last he freed himself From w and child,
he call'd me his own little w ;
To make a good w for Harry,
' I ha' six weeks' work, little w,
been as true to you as ever a man to his w ;
Come, come, little w, let it rest !
kind of you, Madam, to sit by an old dying w.
an' I wur chousin' the w,
' We have children, we have wives,
So far that no caress could win my w
hignorant village w as 'ud hev to be lam'd her
awn plaace,'
God help them, our children and wives I
' Children and wives — if the tigers leap
Their wives and children Spanish concubines,
He blesses the w.
maidens, wives, And mothers with their babblers
I cried, ' for the sin of the w.
Not from the nurse — nor yet to the w — to her maiden name ! „ 144
You have parted the man from the w. Despair 62
and she, the delicate w. With a grief that could only be cured, „ 79
Lover's Tale iv 363
372
380
First Quarrel 10
30
45
60
62
Eizpah 21
North. Cobbler 83
The Revenge 92
Sisters (E. and E.) 258
Village Wife 106
Def. of Lucknow 8
51
Columbus 175
To Prin. F.ofH. 4
Tiresias 102
The Wreck 99
The w, the sons, who love him best
would I were there, the friend, the bride, the w,
an' he's married another w,
at yer wake like husban' an' ic.
' A faaithful an' loovin' w ! '
vows ' till death shall part us,' she the would-be-
widow w.
kill'd the slave, and slew the w
His w and his child stood by him in tears,
I envied human wives, and nested birds,
' I take thee Muriel for my wedded w ' —
larger woman-world Of wives and mothers.
' Let us revenge ourselves, your Ulric woos my w '-
If man and w be but one flesh,
if / had been the leper would you have left the w ?
bewail the friend, the w, For ever gone.
The truest, kindliest, noblest-hearted w
That w and children drag an Artist down !
if such a w as you Should vanish unrecorded.
' Why left you w and children ?
make The w of wives a widow-bride,
Sir, I was once a w.
But the new-wedded w was unharm'd,
I had cursed her as woman and w, and in w and woman
I found
Wifehood Of perfect w and pure lowlihead.
Wif&-hanting W-h, as the rumour ran.
Wifeless now a lonely man W and heirless,
Wifelike W, her hand in one of his.
Wife-murder adulteries, W-m's, —
Wife-worship fair w-« cloaks a secret shame ?
Wight (isle) Among the quarried downs of W,
(Take it and come) to the Isle of W ;
Wild (adj.) (See also Ravimg-wild, Woild) And thro' w
March the throstle calls. To the Queen 14
At noon the w bee hummeth Claribel 11
And w winds bound within their cell, Mariana 54
Stretch'd wide and w the waste enormous marsh, Ode to Meinory 101
The plain was grassy, w and bare, Wide, w, and open
to the air.
Chasing itself at its own w will,
w swan's death-hymn took the soul Of that waste place
W words wander here and there :
who can tell The last w thought of Chatelet,
Her rapid laughters w and shrill.
By some w skylark's matin song.
in many a w festoon Ran riot,
When I past by, a w and wanton pard,
ere the stars come forth Talk with the w Cassandra,
Far as the w swan wings, to where the sky
or one deep cry Of great w beasts ;
Ancient Sage 125
The Flight 43
Tomorrow 49
82
Spinster's S's. 72
Locksley H., Sixty 24
67
Dead Prophet 57
Demeter arid P. 53
The Ring 377
487
— Happy 63
„ 94
„ 100
To Mary Boyle 53
Romney's R. 35
38
68
129
138
Bandit's Death 9
Charity 22
„ 31
Isabel 12
Aylmer's Field 212
Lancelot and E. 1371
Aylmer's Field 808
Romney's R. 134
Balin and Balan 360
To Ulysses 32
To F. D. Maurice 12
Dying Swan 1
17
21
A Dirge 43
Margaret 37
Kate 3
Miller's D. 40
(Enone 100
„ 199
„ 263
Palace of AH i\
283
Wild
796
Wild
Wild (adj.) (continued) w marsh-marigold slimes like fire in
swamps May Queen 31
I have been w and wayward, May Queen N . Y's. E. 33
j'Ou must not weep, nor let your grief be w, ,, 35
All in the ^o March-morning I heard the angels call ; „ Con. 25
in the w March-morning I heard them call my soul. „ 28
W flowers in the valley for other hands than mine. „ 52
Brimful of those w tales, D. of F. Women 12
And the w kiss, when fresh from war's alarms, ,. 149
' Heaven heads the count of crimes With that w oath.' „ 202
Yet waft me from the harbour-mouth, W wind ! You ask me, why, etc. 26
w hearts and feeble wings That even? sophister Love thou thy land 11
The w wind rang from park and plam, The Goose 45
And the w water lapping on the crag.' M. d' Arthur 71
swan That, fluting a w carol ere her death, ,. 267
where the heart on one w leap Hung tranced Gardeners D. 259
My sweet, w, fresh three quarters of a year, Edwin Morris 2
Again with hands of w rejection ' Go !• — ■ „ 124
Till that w wind made work Talking Oak 54
And in the chase grew w, „ 126
and the w team Which love thee, Tithonus 39
Whispering I knew not what of w and sweet, „ 61
Make me feel the w pulsation that I felt Locksley Hall 109
Where in w Mahratta-battle fell my father evil-
starr'd ; —
Catch the w goat by the hair,
but I know my words are w.
As w as aught of fairy lore ;
But it is w and barren.
Caught each other with w grimaces,
w hawk stood with the down on his beak.
If he could know his babes were running w
The helpless life so w that it was tame,
upjetted in spirts of w sea-smoke,
but if there were A music harmonizing our w cries,
By this w king to force her to his wish,
Lilia, w with sport. Half child half woman
Thro' the w woods that hung about the town ;
and the shrieks Of the w woods together ;
All w to found an University For maidens,
Like some w creature newly-caged,
* Who ever saw such w barbarians ?
And the w cataract leaps in glory.
Blow, bugle, blow, set the w echoes flying, (repeat)
Deep as first love, and w with all regret ;
and the w figtree split Their monstrous idols,
When the w peasant rights himself,
w birds on the light Dash themselves dead.
And make a w petition night and day,
Rotting on some w shore with ribs of wreck,
' W natures need wise curbs.
' for this w wreath of air,
so belabour'd him on rib and cheek They made him w
I miised on that w morning in the woods.
At the barrier like a w horn in a land Of echoes,
I trust that there is no one hurt to death, For your
w whim :
catch Her hand in w delirixun, gripe it hard,
for on one side arose The women up in w revolt,
let the w Lean-headed Eagles yelp alone,
something w within her breast,
Like our w Princess with as wise a dream
W War, who breaks the converse of the wise ;
O the w charge they made !
And howsoever this w world may roll,
155
170
173
Day Dm., L'Envoi 12
Amphion 2
Vision of Sin 35
Poet's Song 11
Enoch Arden 304
557
Sea Dreams 52
255
Princess, Pro. 37
100
i91
99
150
m301
Hi 42
iv 4
5,17
57
79
385
495
vm
147
173
318
342
471
486
vi 243
vii 93
123
210
237
Con. 69
Third of Feb. 8
Light Brigade 51
W. to Marie Alex. 48
Yell'd and shriek'd between her dauglitere o'er a w
confederjicy. Boddicea 6
Forgive these w and wandering cries, In Mem., Pro. 41
The w pulsation of her wings ; „ xii 4
The vo unrest that lives in woe „ xv 15
Can calm despair and w unrest „ xvi 2
such as lurks In some w Poet, „ xxxiv 7
And those w eyes that watch the wave „ xxxvi 16
That had the w oat not been sown, „ liii 6
As wan, as chill, as w as now ; „ Ixxii 17
Wild (adj.) (continued) Ring out, w bells, to the w sky, /w Mem. cvi 1
Ring out, w bells, and let him die. " .. 4
But some w Pallas from the brain Of Demons? cxiv 12
W Hours that fly with Hope and Fear, .. cxxviii 9
And w voice pealing up to the sunny sky, Maud I vlZ
So that w dog, and wolf and boar and bear Com. of Arthur 23
W beasts, and surely would have torn the child .. 217
lords Have foughten like w beasts among themselves, .. 226
' Being a goose and rather tame than w, Gareth atid L. 38
As slopes a w brook o'er a little stone, Marr. of Geraint 77
Turn thy w wheel thro' sunshine, „ 348
With that w wheel we go not up or down ; ., 351
I know not, but he past to the w land. „ 443
For old am I, and rough the ways and w; .. 750
That skins the w beast after slaying him, Geraint and E. 93
To keep them in the w ways of the wood, ,, 187
Or two w men supporters of a shield, „ 267
Enter'd, the w lord of the place, Limours. „ 277
Enid, the loss of whom hath turn'd me w- — „ 308
I call mine own self w, „ 311
Then thought she heard the w Earl at the door, „ 381
And in the moment after, w Limours, „ 457
To shun the w ways of the lawless tribe. „ 608
As of a w thing taken in the trap, ., 723
And in the w woods of Broceliande, Merlin and V. 2
Ev'n to the w woods of Broceliande. ,. 204
Who meant to eat her up in that to wood .. 260
all thro' this w wood And all this morning „ 285
To chase a creature that was current then In these
w woods, ,. 409
And all thro' following you to this w wood, .. 440
As some w turn of anger, or a mood .. 521
On some w down above the windy deep, ,, 658
0 cruel, there was nothing w or strange, .. 860
When the strong neighings of the w white Horse Lancelot and E. 298
Suddenly flash'd on her a w desire, „ 357
Bare, as a w wave in the wide North-sea, „ 482
Then flash'd into w tears, and rose again, „ 613
' Well — if I bide, lo ! this w flower for me ! ' „ 644
Crush'd the w passion out against the floor „ 742
All in a fiery dawning w with wind „ 1020
But the w Queen, who saw not, burst away .. 1244
To smoke the scandalous hive of those w bees Holy Grail 214
' O w and of the woods, Pelleas and E. 99
But thou, thro' ever harrying thy w beasts — Last TouriMment 635
Becomes thee well — art grown w beast thyself. „ 637
And with a w sea-light about his feet, Guinevere 242
To guard thee in the w hour coming on, „ 446
like w birds that change Their season in the night Pass, of Arthur 38
And the w water lapping on the crag.' „ 239
swan That, fluting a w carol ere her death, „ 435
1 stoop'd, I gather'd the w herbs. Lover's Tale i 342
Like to the vj youth of an evil prince, „ 354
w brier had driven Its knotted thorns „ 619
Embathing all with w and woful hues, „ it 64
like w Bacchanals Fled onward to the steeple „ Hi 25
And something weird and w about it all : „ iv 224
an' I flung him the letter that drove me w, First Quarrel 57
he was always so w — Rizpah 26
But he lived with a lot of w mates, „ 29
w earthquake out-tore Clean from our lines of
defence Def. of Lucknow 61
Some ears for Christ in this w field of Wales — - Sir J. Oldcastle 13
when the w hour and the wine Had set the wits aflame. „ 94
a score of w birds Cried from the topmost summit V. of Maeldune 27
shouting of these w birds ran into the hearts ,, 33
For a w witch naked as heaven stood on each ., „ 100
all the summer long we roam'd in these w woods The Flight 79
' His two w woodland flowers.' ,. 80
W flowers blowing side by side in God's free light .. 81
W flowers of the secret woods, .. 82
W woods in which we roved with him, ., 83
W woods in which we rove no more, „ 84
she had never driven me w* Locksley H., Si.vty 20
Ages after, while in Asia, he that led the w Moguls, „ 81
wad
797
wm
Wild (adj.) (continued) Drove it in w disarray, Heavy Brigade 60
?o mob's million feet Will kick you from your place, The Fleet 18
Yea, for some w hope was mine That, The Ring 135
Up leaps the lark, gone w to welcome her. Prog, of Sping 14
I am w again ! The coals of fire you heap Eomney's R. 140
starved the w beast that was linkt with thee Bi/ cm Evolution. 11
In some fifth Act what this w Drama means. The Play 4
Yes, my w little Poet. The Throstle 4
w heather round me and over me June's high blue, June Bracken, etc. 2
these Are like w brutes new-caged — Akbar's Dream 50
w horse, anger, plunged To fling me,
And yet so w and wayward that my dream —
Vl^ld (s) flight from out your bookless w's
' Peace, you young savage of the Northern to !
thro' those dark gates across the w That no man knows
The King was hunting in the w ;
The King retum'd from out the w, '
Till from the garden and the w
My yet young life in the w's of Time,
then he cried again, ' To the to's ! '
a meadow gemlike chased In the brown to.
Who lived alone in a great w on grass ;
that old man Went back to his old w.
But he by w and way, for half the night,
doth all that haimts the waste and w Mourn,
Wlldbeast (See also Wild) felt the blind « of force,
Wild-bird (See also Wild) From the groves within The
w-h's din. PoeVs Mind 21
Nor bruised the lo's egg. Lover's Tale ii 21
Wilder And some are w comrades, Pref. Son. 19th Cent. 12
Wilderness As manna on my w, Supp. Confessions 114
And Fancy watches in the w, Caress'd or chidden 12
Ijnurmur under moon and stars In brambly w'es ; The Brook 179
Aylmer's Field 437
Will (s) (cotitinued) My Lord, if so it be Thy w.'
The marvel of the everlasting w,
Chasing itself at its own wild w,
Then let wise Nature work her w,
' Sick art thou — -a divided w Still heapii^
full-grown w, Circled thro' all experiences,
and yet His w be done !
Supp. Confessions 106
The Poet 7
Dying Swan 17
My life is full 21
Two Voices 106
(Enone 165
May Queen, Con. 10
118
172
Princess ii 56
„ Hi 247
„ OTi362
The Victim 30
41
In Mem. ci 17
Maud I xvi 21
Geraint and E. 28
199
Merlin and F. 621
649
PelhasandE. 497
Pass, of Arthur 48
Princess v 266
That w of single instances.
The w shall blossom as the rose.
Hide, hide them, million-myrtled to.
And vines, and blowing bosks of to,
wolf and wolfkin, from the w, wallow in it,
to, full of wolves, where he used to lie ;
And so there grew great tracts of to,
' I will ride forth into the to ;
And w'es, perilous paths, they rode :
Here in the heart of waste and to.
What go ye into the to to see ? '
weaving over That various w a tissue of light
But God is with me in this to.
Over a to Gliding,
then A hiss as from a to of snakes.
Wildest Their to wailings never out of tune
maybe w dreams Are but the needful preludes
Something other than the to modem guess
Wild-eyed My bright-eyed, to-e falcon,
Fast, fast, my to-e Rosalind,
Wildfire Be dazzled by the w Love
Wild-flower (adj.) I had lived a to-/ life
WUd-flower (s) (See also Wild)
the hill?—
Yet trod I not the to in my path.
Wild-goose ' Thou art but a to-g' to question it.'
Wilding And like a crag Was gay with w flowers :
Wildness His to, and the chances of the dark.'
Wild-swan (See also Wild) made the w-s pause in her cloud. Poet's Song 7
leader w in among the stars Would clang it. Princess iv 434
Wildweed-flower The to-/ that simply blows ? Day-Dm., Moral 6
Wild-wide found the world. Staring w-to ; Balin and Balan 596
Wild Will W W, Black Bess, Tantivy, The Brook 160
Wild-wood (See also Wild) sweeter still The to-to hyacinth Balin and Balan 271
Wile w the length from languorous hours. Princess vii 63
Wilful To make her thrice as to as before.' Lancelot and E. 206
' Father, you call me to, and the fault Is yours „ 750
Being so very to you must go.' (repeat) „ 777, 781
' Being so very w you must die.' „ 783
A rosebud set with little w thorns, Princess, Pro. 154
Wiliest of her court The to and the worst ; Guinevere 29
Will (s) Broad-based v/pon her people's w, To the Queen 35
iMcretius 204
Princess i 111
Boadicea 15
Maud II V 54
Com. of Arthur 10
Marr. of Geraint 127
Geraint and E. 32
313
Holy Grail 287
Lover's Tale i 419
Sir J. Oldcastle 8
Merlin and the G. 36
St. Telemachus 66
Sea Dreams 231
Princess, Con. 73
Locksley H., Sixty 232
Rosalind 6
Princess v 441
The Wreck 37
Plucking the harmless w-f on
Maud II i 3
Lover's Tale ii 20
Gareth and L. 36
Marr. of Geraint 319
Princess iv 244
yet it chafes me that I could not bend One to ; D. of F. Women 138
That I subdued me to my father's w ; „ 234
Let her w Be done — to weep To J. S. 43
With one wide W that closes thine. On a Mourner 20
power in his eye That bow'd the to. M. d' Arthur 123
Now Dora felt her uncle's w in all, Dora 5
My home is none of yours. My to is law.' „ 45
more from ignorance than w Walk, to the Mail 110
knowing all Life needs for life is possible to w — Love and Duty 86
strong in to To strive, to seek, to find, Ulysses 69
thy strong Hours indignant work'd their to '5, Tithonus 18
his eyes, before they had their w, Godiva 69
A virgin heart in work and w. Sir Galahad 24
Against her father's and mother's w : Edward Gray 10
Used all her fiery to, and smote Her life Will Water. Ill
Annie fought against his w : Enoch Arden 158
So grieving held his w, and bore it thro'. „ 167
Set her sad w no less to chime with bis, ., 248
Prayer from a living source within the to, „ 801
His vast and filthy hands upon my w, Lucretius 220
Dash them anew together at her w „ 247
laid about them at their w's and died ; Princess, Pro. 31
But then she had a w ; was he to blame ? .. t 48
0 that iron w. That axelike edge imtumable, „ ii 202
nor pretty babes To be dandled, no, but living w's, „ iv 147
'sdeath ! against my father's to.' „ v 298
yet her to Bred w in me to overcome it or fall. „ -^^ 350
since my w Seal'd not the bond — „ 398
Her iron w was broken in her mind ; ,, vi 117
you the Victor of your to. ,. 167
Purpose in purpose, w inw, ,, vii 305
Make and break, and work their to ; Ode on Well. 261
Whose w is lord thro' all this world-domain — W. to Marie Alex. 2
But I wish'd it had been God's 10 that I, Grandmother 73
0 VFELL for him whose to is strong ! Will 1
Corrupts the strength of heaven-descended W, „ 11
Thither at their to they haled Boadicea 55
Our to'5 are ours, we know not how ; In Mem, Pro. 15
Our w's are ours, to make them thine. „ 16
My to is bondsman to the dark ; „ iv 2
With morning wakes the w, and cries, „ 15
That I could wing my w with might „ xli 10
To riper growth the mind and w : „ xlii 8
To pangs of nature, sins of to, „ liv 3
Till all at once beyond the to ,. Ixx 13
The sense of human to demands ,. Ixxxv 39
vague desire That spurs an imitative to. ., ca; 20
0 living w that shaft endure „ cxxxi 1
whose gentle to has changed my fate, Maud I xviii 23
For shall not Maud have her w? ., xix 84
(If I read her sweet w right) .. xxi 10
Void of the little living w ,. II ii 14
However weary, a spark of w Not to be trampled out. „ 56
cannot will my to, nor work my work Wholly, Com. of Arthur 88
And reigning with one w in everything „ 92
thou dost His to, The Maker's, Gareth and L. 10
A knight of Arthur, working out his w, ,, 24
Found her son's w unwaveringly one, „ 141
1 therefore yield me freely to thy w ; „ 168
and so besieges her To break her to, „ 617
I compel all creatures to my to.' (repeat) Geraint and E. 629, 673
and the wine will change your to.' „ 663
use Both grace and w to pick the vicious quitch „ 903
and brake my boast. Thy to ? ' Balin and Balan 72
eagle-like Stoop at thy to on Lancelot and the Queen.' „ 536
Fixt in her w, and so the seasons went. Merlin and V. 188
Without the to to lift their eyes, „ 836
and the fault Is yours who let me have my to, Lancelot and E. 751
WiU
798
Win
Will (s) (cotitinued) that I make My w of yours,
then I said, ' Now shall I have my w : '
mine now to work my w —
men With strength and w to right the wrong'd,
her longing and her w Was toward me as of old ;
baseness in him by default Of w and nature,
A prisoner, and the vassal of thy w ;
and at her w they couch'd their spears,
He needs no aid who doth his lady's w.'
As let these caitiffs on thee work their w ? '
Pelleas answer'd, ' O, their w's are hers
' Slay then,' he shrieked, ' my w is to be slain,'
this honour after death. Following thy V3 !
I, being simple, thought to work His w,
power in his eye That bow'd the w.
My w is one with thine ;
heir That scarce can wait the reading of the w
In battle with the glooms of my dark w,
edict of the w to reassume The semblance
And I vnW do your w. I may not stay,
And I will do your w, and none shall know.'
some with gems Moveable and resettable at w,
all his to work his w.'
but the creatures had worked their w.
An' I thowt 'twur the w o' the Lord,
not yet too old to work his w —
not Love but Hate that weds a bride against her w ;
Strong in w and rich in wisdom,
shedding poison in the foimtains of the W.
Perchance from some abuse of W In worlds
and had yielded her w To the master,
The blackbirds have their w's, (repeat)
thy w, a power to make This ever-changing world To Duke of Argyll 9
Lancelot and E. 916
1047
1231
Holy Grail 309
590
Pelleas and E. 82
241
273
281
323
324
579
Last Tournament 35
Pass, of Arthur 22
291
Lover's Tale i 463
676
744
a 161
iv 115
120
199
283
Rizpah 50
Village Wife 11
Columbus 161
The Flight 32
Locksley H., Sixty 49
274
Epilogue 24
Dead Prophet 63
Early Spring 5, 47
Freedom 15
The Ring 42
„ 293
Happy 64
Prog, of Spring 24
95
Romney's R. 16
The Dawn 18
Com. of Arthur 259
Poets and Critics 13
You ask me, why, etc. 8
Howe'er blind force and brainless w
But thro' the W of One who knows and rules-
Her firm w, her fix'd purpose.
thought he could subdue me to his w.
Diffuse thyself at w thro' all my blood.
Be struck from out the clash of warring w's ;
were you hired ? or came of your own w
no slaves of a four-footed w ?
we will work thy w Who love thee.'
Hold thine own, and work thy w !
Will (verb) A man may speak the thing he w ;
when Enoch comes again Why then he shall repay
me — if you w, Enoch Arden 310
yet my father w's not war : Princess v 277
cannot w my will, nor work my work Wholly, Com. of Arthur 88
knight-errantry Who ride abroad, and do but what
they w ; Gareth and L. 630
Lord am I In mine own land, and what I w I can.' Lancelot and E. 917
' That were against me : what I can I w ; ' „ 976
not without She w's it : would I, „ 1422
Let visions of the night or of the day Come, as they w ; Holy Grail 911
' Why, let my lady bind me if she w, And let my lady
beat me if she w : Pelleas and E. 334
and does what he w with his own ; Despair 97
Will be was, and is, and w b, are but is ; Princess Hi 324
Who am, and was, and w b his, his own and only own, Happy 7
Will'd set his hand To do the thing he w, Enoch Arden 295
might not Averill, had he w it so, Aylmer's Field 46
Her words had issue other than she w. Merlin and V. 806
would I, if she w it ? nay. Who knows ? Lancelot and E. 1422
I would work according as he w. Holy Grail 784
Else, for the King has w it, it is well.' Last Tournament 111
She rose, and set before him all he w ; „ 723
had he tti I might have stricken a lusty stroke Sir J. Oldcastle 68
Wiliest if Thou w, let my day be brief, Doubt and Prayer 13
William (See also Willy) at the farm abode W and Dora. W was
his son, Dora 2
And yeam'd toward W ; but the youth, „ 6
But W answer'd short ; ' I cannot marry Dora ; ,, 22
Consider, W : take a month to think, „ 29
But W answer'd madly ; bit his lips, „ 33
days went on, and there was bom a boy To IF ; „ 49
William (continued) till at last a fever seized On W, Dora 55
all thro' me This evil came on W at the first. 61
And answer'd softly, ' This is W's child ! ' .,90
work for W's child, until he grows Of age „ 126
never came a-begging for myself. Or W, or this child ; .. 142
when W died, he died at peace With all men ; .. 144
for three hours he sobb'd o'er W's child Thinking of W. „ 167
Willing Thou, w me to stay,
Nor w men should come among us,
w she should keep Court-favour :
A w ear We lent him.
Wroth at himself. Not w to be known,
Willingly ' Yea, w' replied the youth ;
You say that you can do it as w
Madeline 37
Princess Hi 318
„ vii 57
In Mem. Ixxxvii 30
Lancelot and E. 160
Geraint and E. 207
Sisters (E. and E) 10
Willis I niver puts saame i' my butter, they does it at
W's farm, ' Village Wife 119
Willow One w over the river wept. Dying Swan 14
W's whiten, aspens quiver, L. of Shalott i 10
found a boat Beneath a w left afloat, ,, iv 7
Shrank one sick w sere and small. Mariana in the S. 53
There by the himipback'd w ; Walk, to the Mail 31
shock-head w's two and two By rivers gallopaded. Amphion 39
measured pulse of racing oars Among the w's; In Mem. Ixxxvii 11
Silvery w. Pasture and plowland. Merlin and the G. 53
Willow-branches And the w-b hoar and dank. Dying Swan 37
Willows (See also James, James Willows, Katie, Katie
Willows) What surname?' 'IF.' 'No!' The Brook 212
Willow-veil'd By the margin, w-v, L. of Shalott i 19
Willow-weed fairy foreland set With w-w and mallow. The Brook 46
Willowy boat-head wound along The w hills and fields
among, L. of Shalott iv 25
Willy (See also William) And W, my eldest-bom, is gone,
you say. Grandmother 1
And W's wife has written : (repeat) „ 3, 105
Never the wife for W : „ 4
and W, you say, is gone. „ 8
W, my beauty, my eldest-bom, the flower of the
flock; Never a man could fling him: for W
stood like a rock. „ 9
I cannot weep for W, nor can I weep for the rest ; „ 19
W had not been down to the farm for a week and a day ; „ 33
W, — he didn't see me, — and Jenny hung on his arm. „ 42
W stood up like a man, and look'd the thing „ 45
' Marry you, W ! ' said I, „ 53
So W and I were wedded : I wore a lilac gown ; „ 57
For W I cannot weep, I shall see him another mom : „ 67
IF, my eldest-bom, at nigh threescore and ten; „ 87
So W has gone, my beauty, my eldest-bom, my
flower ; But how can I weep for W, „ 101
And W's wife has written, she never was over-wise. „ 105
W's voice in the wind, ' 0 mother, Rizpah 2
couldn't be idle — my W- — he never could rest. .. 27
My W 'ill rise up whole when the trumpet ,. 57
I'm sure to be happy with W, I know not where. ,. 76
for my W's voice in the wind — ., 82
W — the moon's in a cloud — Good-night. ,. 86
Wilt thou The 'w t' answer'd, and again The 'w t'
ask'd, In Mem., Con. 54
Wily At Merlin's feet the w Vivien lay. Merlin and V. 5
The w Vivien stole from Arthur's court. „ 149
Wimple From beneath her gather'd w Lilian 14
Win Woo me, and w me, and marry me. The Mermaid 46
power which ever to its sway Will w the wise at
once. Mine be the strength 10
And w all eyes with all accomplishment : The form, the form- 4
To w his love I lay in wait : The Sisters 11
Of me you shall not w renown : L. C. V. de Vere 2
The warmth it thence shall w Talking Oak 254
Which did w my heart from me ! ' L. of Burleigh 84
where two fight The strongest w's, Aylmer's Field 365
How roughly men may woo thee so they w — Lucretius 273
That she but meant to w him back, ,, 279
and be you The Prince to w her ! Princess, Pro. 226
' Follow, follow, thou Shalt w.' „ i 100
And partly that I hoped to w you back,
1
Win
799
Wind
^lin (continued) w's, tho' dash'd with death He reddens Princess v 164
if we fail, we fail, And if we w, we fail: „ 323
And on the ' Follow, follow, thou shalt w : ' „ 472
W you the hearts of women ; „ vi 171
—verily I thmk to w.' „ 329
Emperor, Ottoman, which shall w : To F. 1). Maurice 32
That out of words a comfort w ; In Mem. xx 10
the past will always w A glory from its benig far ; „ xxiv 13
they could not w An answer from my lips, „ ciii 49
And the titmouse hope to w her Maud I xx 29
Belike he w's it as the better man : Gareth and L. 1346
To dash against mine enemy and to w. „ 1355
For tho' it seems my spurs are yet to w, Marr. of Geraint 128
I know men : nor will ye w him back, Geraint and E. 332
who sought to w my love Thro' evil ways : Balin and Balan 474
Vivien had not done to w his trust Merlin and V. 863
W ! by this kiss you will : Lancelot and E. 152
They prove to him his work : w and return.' ., 158
Joust for it, and w, and bring it in an hour, ,, 204
W shall I not, but do my best to w : „ 221
And you shall w this diamond, — „ 227
To w his honour and to make his name, „ 1362
while women watch Who w's, who falls ; Holy Grail 35
and they would w thee — teem, „ 541
he will fight for me. And w the circlet : Pelleas and E. 119
And V) me this fine circlet, Pelleas, „ 128
he cried, ' Ay ! wilt thou if I w ? ' 'Ay, that will I,' „ 131
purest of thy knights May w them Last Tournament 50
For courtesy w's woman all as well As valour may, „ 707
Yet so my path was clear To w the sister. Sisters (E. and E.) 203
no caress could w my wife Back to that passionate
answer
w £ill praise from all Who past it,
To w her back before I die —
Wince You should have seen him w
Wind (s) (See also East-wind, March-wind, Night-
wind, North-wind, Seap-wind, South-wind)
When will the w be aweary of blowing
The stream flows, The w blows.
Shall make the w's blow Roimd and round.
So let the w range ;
south w's are blowing Over the sky.
The w will cease to blow ;
Nor the tv on the hill.
So let the warm w's range,
W's creep ; dews fall chilly :
The w's, as at their hour of birth.
Till cold w's woke the gray-eyed mom
258
Tiresias 83
Romney's R. 118
Walk, to the Mail 71
Nothing will Die 3
10
23
32
All Things will Die 3
10
26
42
Leonine Eleg. 7
The winds, etc. 1
Mariana 31
50
54
the shrill w's were up and away,
wild w's bound withm their cell,
sound Which to the wooing w aloof The poplar made, „ 75
palms were ranged Above, unwoo'd of summer w : Arabian Xighis 80
The dew-impearled w's of dawn have kiss'd. Ode to Memory 14
flowers which in the rudest w Never grow sere, ,, 24
From brawling storms, From weary w, „ 113
w's Blew his own praises in his eyes, A Character 21
the w's which bore Them earthward Th£ Poet 17
Bright as light, and clear as w. • Poet's Mind 7
Ever the weary w went on, Di/ing Swan 9
shook the wave as the w did sigh ; „ 15
Above in the w was the swallow, „ 16
W's were blowing, waters flowing, Oriana 14
When Norland w's pipe down the sea, „ 91
Lovest thou the doleful w Adeline 49
Careless both of to and weather, Rosalind 7
Up or down the streaming w? « 9
The leaping stream, the very w, „ 14
the amorous, odorous w Breathes low Elednore 123
' Tho' thou wert scatter'd to the w, Two Voices 32
He sows himself on every w. „ 294
And, in the pauses of the w. Miller's D. 122
I whirl like leaves in roaring w. Fatima 7
The w sounds like a silver wire, „ 29
Rests like a .shadow, and the w's are dead. (Enone 28
the foam-bow brightens When the w blows the foam, „ 62
You ask me, why, etc. 26
Of old sat Freedom 8
Love thou thy land 17
Wind (s) (continued) a w arose. And overhead the wandering ivy (Enone 98
The w is blowing in turret and tree, (repeat) The Sisters 3, 33
The w is howling in turret and tree. ,. 9
The w is roaring in turret and tree. „ 15
The w is raging in turret and tree. .. 21
The w is raving in turret and tree. ,, 27
And hoary to the w. Palace of Art 80
trees began to whisper, and the w began to roll. May Queen, Con. 27
up the valley came a swell of music on the w. „ 32
up the valley came again the music on the w. ,. 36
With w's upon the branch, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 27
All day the w breathes low with mellower tone : .. 102
w and wave and oar ; „ 127
Bluster the w's and tides the self -same way, D. of F. Women 38
Whirl'd bj^ the w, had roll'd me deep below, „ 119
And the winter w's are wearily sighing : D. of the O. Year 2
The w, that beats the mountain, blows To J. S. 1
God's ordinance Of Death is blown in every w ; '
waft me from the harbour mouth. Wild w
voice Came rolling on the w.
Make knowledge circle with the w's ;
lest the soul Of Discord race the rising w ;
A w to puff your idol-fires.
The wild w rang from park and plain,
like a w, that shrills All night in a waste land.
Nor ever w blows loudly ;
Beneath a broad and equal-blowing w.
Night slid down one long stream of sighing w,
But she was sharper than an eastern w,
soft w blowing over meadowy holms And alders
Rain, w, frost, heat, hail,
Till that wild w made work
' I swear, by leaf, and w, and rain,
' A light w chased her on the wing,
light as any w that blows So fleetly
and the w's are laid with sound. ,
For the mighty w arises, roaring seaward,
As w's from all the compass shift and blow.
And all the low w hardly breathed for fear.
And many a merry w was borne.
And the w did blow ;
The happy w's upon her play'd.
There let the w sweep and the plover cry ;
A light w blew from the gates of the sun.
Then follow'd calms, and then w's variable,
blown by baffling w's, Like the Good Fortune,
His fancy fled before the lazy w
the w blew ; The rain of heaven,
o'er those lazy limits down the w With rumour.
Where never creeps a cloud, or moves a w.
Like linnets in the pauses of the w :
And therewithal an answer vague as w :
A w arose and rush'd upon the South,
smile that like a wrinkling w On glassy water
She rose upon a w of prophecy
W of the western sea, (repeat)
often fretful as the w Pent in a crevice :
Upon the level in little puffs of w,
Huge women blowzed with health, and w, and rain,
light w wakes A lisping of the innumerous leaf
Until they hate to hear me like a w
That range above the region of the w,
four-square to all the w's that blew !
Yell'd as when the w's of winter tear an oak
w's from off the plain Roll'd the rich vapour
moon Look beautiful, when all the w's are laid,
the w's are up in the morning? (repeat)
w's and lights and shadows that cannot be still,
wet west w and the world will go on. (repeat)
The w and the wet, the w and the wet !
Wet west w how you blow, you blow !
wet west w and the world may go on.
W's are loud and you are dimib,
W's are loud and w's will pass !
The Goose 45
M. d' Arthur 201
261
Gardener's D. 77
267
Audley Court 53
Edwin Morris 95
St. S. Stylites 16
Talking Oak 54
81
125
129
Locksley Hall 104
194
Godiva 33
„ 55
Day -Dm., Depart. 14
The Captain 34
Sir L. and Q. G. 38
Come not, when, etc. 5
Poet's Song 3
Enoch Arden 545
628
657
Ayhner's Field 427
495
Lucretius 106
Princess, Pro. 246
i45
97
115
a 171
„ Hi 2, 4
80
iv 256
279
vl3
98
Con. 112
Ode on Well. 39
Boddicea 77
Spec, of Iliad 7
12
Window, On the Hill 5, 10,
15,20
7
No Answer 6, 12
13
14
18
19
22
Wind
800
Window
wind (s) {continued) A flower beat with rain and w,
Sleep, gentle w's, as he sleeps now,
To-night the w's begin to rise And roar
Each voice four changes on the w,
We paused : the w's were in the beech :
But blame not thou the w's that make
No wing of w the region swept,
All w's that roam the twilight came
And every pulse of w and wave
I hear a w Of memory murmuring the past,
while the w began to sweep A music
Nor feed with sighs a passing w :
the w like a broken worldling wail'il,
Walk'd in a wintry w by a ghastly glimmer,
shake its threaded tears in the w no more,
and the war roll down like a w,
In drifts of smoke before a rolling w,
When waken'd by the w which with full voice
A censer, either worn with w and storm ;
like a sudden w Among dead leaves,
but the w hath changed : I scent it twenty -fold.'
' Hath not the good w, damsel, changed again ?
the w will never change again.'
And scatter'd all they had to all the w's :
A STOHM was coming, but the w's were still,
Among the dead and sown upon the w —
Drave with a sudden w across the deeps.
Thro' the dim land against a rushing w,
An angry gust of w Puff'd out his torch
In Mem. viii 15
ix 15
XV 1
xxviii 9
,. XXX 9
„ xlix 10
„ Ixxviii 6
Ixxix 11
„ Ixxxvp
,, xcii 7
;, ciii 53
,, cviii 4
Maud I ill
., Hi 13
„//7ot28
54
Com. of Arthur 434
Gareth and L. 176
222
514
994
1054
1140
Marr. of Geraint 635
Merlin and V. 1
45
201
425
Their plumes driv'n backward by the w they made Lancelot and E. 480
and went To all the w's?' „ 658
gloomis Of evening, and the moanings of the w. , 1003
AH in a fiery dawning wild with w „ 1020
the sun Shone, and the w blew, thro' her, Holy Grail 99
Such as no w could move : „ 681
And the w fell, and on the seventh night „ 810
strange knights From the four w's came in : Pelleas and E. 148
like a poisonous w I pass to blast „ 569
thro' the tree Rush'cf ever a rainy w, and thro'
the w Pierced ever a child's cry : Last Tournament 16
Brake with a wet w blowing, Lancelot, ,. 137
And ever the w blew, and yellowing leaf „ 154
till the warm hour returns With veer of w, „ 231
and the w among the boughs. „ 489
' Ay, ay, O ay — the w's that bend the brier ! „ 731
0 ay — the w's that bow the grass ! „ 735
O ay — the w's that move the mere.' „ 738
As the sharp w that ruffles all day long Guinevere 50
Till in the cold w that foreruns the morn, „ 132
Stands in a w, ready to break and fly, „ 365
ghost of Gawain blown Along a wandering w, Pass, of Arthur 32
And I am blown along a wandering w, „ 36
down the long w the dream Shrill'd ; „ 40
0 light upon the w, Thine, Gawain, was the voice — „ 46
came A bitter w, clear from the North, and blew The
mist aside, and with that w the tide Rose, „ 124
like a w that shrills All night in a waste land, „ 369
Nor ever w blows loudly ; „ 429
Waverings of every vane with every w, To the Queen ii 50
charged the w's With spiced May-sweets Lover's Tale i 317
And shot itself into the singing w's ; „ 369
thence one night, when all the w's were loud, „ 378
The w Told a lovetale beside us, „ 542
waters answering lisp'd To kisses of the w, that, „ 545
The w had blown above me, „ 622
hour died Like odour rapt into the winged w „ 801
soft w's, Laden with thistledown and seeds „ H 12
the w Came wooingly with woodbine smells. „ 35
All crisped sounds of wave and leaf and w, „ 106
silent-creeping w's Laid the long night „ 111
mast bent and the ravin w In her sail roaring. „ 170
we whirl'd giddily : the w Simg ; „ 201
Slow-moving as a wave agaiast the w, „ iv 293
like ships i' the Channel a-sailing with w an' tide. First Quarrel 42
An' the w began to rise, „ 89
Wind (s) (continued) wailing, wailing, the w over land and sea — Rizpah 1
Willy's voice in the w, ' 0 mother, ,. 2
and the w and the shower and the snow. ,, 68
The w that 'ill wail like a child „ 72
for my Willy's voice in the w — • ,. 82
coostom ageiin draw'd in like a w fro' far an' wide. North. Cobbler 93
When a w from the lands they had ruin'd The Revenge 112
and the w Still westward, and the weedy seas — ■ Columbus 71
the w's were dead for heat ; Tiresias 34
warm w's had gently breathed us away from the land — The Wreck 63
orphan wail came borne in the shriek of a growing w, „ 87
some of late would raise a w To sing thee to thy grave, Freedom 35
Among the wail of midnight w's, Demeter and P. 59
w blawin' hard tother waay, an' the w wasn't like to
turn. Owd Mod 104
you shiver tho' the w is west The Ring 29
one silent voice Came on the w, „ 154
changest, breathing it, the sullen w. Prog, of Spring 110
when all but the w's were dead. The Dreamer 1
To the wail of my w's, „ 13
Was it only the w of the Night shrilling „ 15
Wind (verb) W's all the vale in rosy folds, Miller's D. 242
Where yon dark valleys w forlorn. On a Mourner 22
More close and close his footsteps w : Day-Din., Arrival 25
I w about, and in and out, The Brook 55
w And double in and out the boles. Princess iv 261
Still onward w's the dreary way ; In Mem. xxvi 1
And w's their curls about his hand : „ Ixvi 12
It lightly w's and steals In a cold white robe Maud II iv 18
and every way the vales W, Tiresias 183
And w the front of youth with flowers, Ancient Sage 97
Wind-driven spray w-d Far thro' the dizzy dark. Lover's Tale ii 198
Winded (See also Long-winded) And w it, and that so
musically Pelleas and E. 365
the lilies like the glaciers w down, V. of Maeldune 42
Winder (window) Stan' 'im theer i' the w, North. Cobbler 75
out o' sight o' the w's o' Gigglesby Hiim — Spinster's S's. 35
I claums an' I mashes the w hin, Owd Rod 83
wi' my bairn i' 'is mouth to the w „ 92
I clauinb'd up agean to the w, „ 99
Wind-footed fled W-f to the steeple in the woods. Lover's Tale Hi 56
Wind-hover (kestrel) as long As the w-h hangs in
balance, Aylmer's Field 321
Winding (See also Westward-winding) From the river w
clearly, L. of Shalott i 31
she sees the highway near W down to Camelot : „ ii 14
we paused About the w's of the marge Edwin Morris 94
Low voluptuous music w trembled. Vision of Sin 17
w under woodbine bowers, The Brook 88
We glided w vmder ranks Of iris. In Mem. ciii 23
The rock rose clear, or w stair. Palace of Art 10
a full-fed river w slow By herds upon an endless plain, „ 73
and many a w vale And meadow. Lotos- Eaters 22
The Lotos blows by every w creek : „ C. 8. 101
On open main or w shore ! The Voyage 6
the lawns And w glades high up like ways to Heaven, Enoch Arden 573
On w stream or distant sea ; In Mem. cxv 12
Far down beneath a w wall of rock Last Tournament 11
She chanted snatches of mysterious hymns Heard
on the w waters, Lancelot and E. 1408
Windle (drifted snow) all on 'em bolster'd oop wi' the w that
night ; Owd Rod 32
Windless Who might'st have heaved a w flame Up the
deep East, In Mem. Ixxii 13
all the sway and whirl Of the storm dropt to w calm. Lover's Tale ii 207
Windmill an' thy w oop o' the croft. Spinster's S's. 73
Window (adj.) Oh is it the brook, or a pool, or her
w pane. Window, On the Hill 4
And never a glimpse of her w pane ! „ No Answer 3
on the w ledge, Close underneath his eyes, Lancelot and E. 1239
Window (s) (See also Bay-window, Cabin-window,
Pailour-window, Winder) The fourscore w's
all alight Arabian Nights 122
Leaving doors and w's wide : Deserted House 3
In the w's is no light ; „ 6
Window
801
Wing
I m^ndow (s) {continued) Or thro' the w's we shall see The"
I nakedness
I the deep-set w's, stain'd and traced,
s forms that pass'd at w's and on roofs
I Reveal'd their shining w's :
I all Should keep within, door shut, and w barr'd.
I Saw from his w's nothing save his own —
I so To the open w moved, remaining there
I The giant w's' blazon'd fires,
Clasp her w, trail and twine !
' Blaze upon her w, sim,
were laid On the hasp of the w.
The Lady Lyonors at a w stood,
glancing on the w, when the gloom Of twilight
Where twelve great w's blazon Arthur's wars,
lands in your view From this bay w —
May leave the w's blinded.
Window-bars it came, and close beside the w-b,
Window-pane Oh is it the brook, or a pool, or her w p, Window, On the Hill 4
I follow them down to the w-p of my dear, „ 17
And never a glimpse of her w p ! „ No Answer 3
Wind-scatter'd surf w-s over sails and masts, D. of F. Women 31
Windy Beneath the w waU. Palace of Art 72
building rook '11 caw from the w tall elm-
tree, May Queen, N. Y's. E. 17
Deserted House 10
Palace of Art 49
B. of F. Women 23
Gardener's D. 220
Godiva 41
Aylmer's Field 21
Princess iv 492
The Daisy 58
Window, At the Window 2
When 15
Maud I xiv 19
Gareth and L. 1375
Balin and Balan 232
Holy Grail 248
Sisters {E. and E.) 62
Romney's R. 146
May Queen, Con. 39
And it was w weather, (repeat)
you hear The w clanging of the minster clock ;
Far on the ringing plains of w Troy.
Fly o'er waste fens and w fields.
By Ellen's grave, on the w hill.
All the w ways of men Are but dust that rises
up, (repeat)
And swang besides on many a w sign —
That climb into the w halls of heaven :
ere the w jest Had labour'd down within
Fair-hair'd and redder than a w mom ;
Flames, on the w headland flare !
Or sheepwalk up the w wold ;
Uncared for, gird the w grove,
of grain Storm-strengthen'd on a w site.
Comes flying over many a w wave To Britain,
Swung from his brand a w buffet out Once,
slide From the long shore-cliff's w walls
And all the w clamour of the daws
On sallows in the w gleams of March :
On some wild down above the w deep,
l^ne {See also Adam's wine, C!owslip wine) our
friends are all forsaking The w and the merry-
making. All Things wUl Die 19
Across the walnuts and the w — Miller's D. 32
little dues of wheat, and w and oil ; Lotos- Eaters, C. S. 122
think not they are glazed with w. Locksley Hall 51
as moonlight imto simlight, and as water unto w — „ 152
The Goose 4, 40
Gardener's D. 38
Ulysses 17
Sir Galahad 60
Edward Gray 12
Vision of Sin \22, 168
Aylmer's Field 19
Lucretius 136
Princess v 272
„ Con. 91
W. to Alexandra 16
In Mem. c 8
„ ci 13
Gareth and L. 692
Mart, of Geraint 337
Geraint and E. 90
164
255
Merlin and V. 225
658
And beaker brimm'd with noble w.
she comes and dips Her laurel in the w,
Sipt w from silver, praising God,
By heaps of gourdJs, and skins of w.
Bring me spices, bring me w ;
W is good for shrivell'd lips.
Let me loose thy tongue with w :
Charier of sleep, and w, and exercise,
Warm'd with his w's, or taking pride in her,
Sat at his table ; drank his costly w's ;
they talk'd At w, in clubs, of art, of politics ;
call'd mine host To council, plied him with his
richest w's,
those That lay at w with Lar and Lucumo ;
Fruit, blossom, viand, amber w,
riot a death's-head at the w.'
And had our w and chess beneath the planes.
Steel and gold, and com and w.
But honest talJc and wholesome w,
honey-hearted w And bread from out the houses
(And dear to me as sacred w To dying lips
'Twaa well, indeed, when warm with w,
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 36
Will Water. 18
127
Vision of Sin 13
76
79
88
Aylmer's Field 448
554
Sea Dreams 74
Princess, Pro. 161
il74
m129
iv35
87
m246
Ode Inter. Exhib. 17
To F. D. Maurice 18
Spec, of Iliad 5
In Mem. xxxvii 19
„ xc 9
Wine {continued) fetch the w. Arrange the board and brim
the glass ; In Mem. cvii 15
yes ! — but a company forges the w. Maud / t 36
I fear, the new strong w of love, „ m 82
Betrothed us over their w, „ xix 39
That he left his w and horses and play, „ 74
brief night goes In babble and revel and w. „ xxii 28
feeble vassals of w and anger and lust, „ II i ^
baken meats and good red w Of Southland, Gareth and L. 1190
Go to the town and buy us flesh and w ; Marr. of Geraint 372
means of goodly welcome, flesh and w. „ 387
For now the w made summer in his veins, „ 398
A creature wholly given to brawls and w, „ 441
cried Geraint for w and goodly cheer Geraint and E. 283
And w and food were brought, ,, 289
When w and free companions kindled him, „ 293
So vanish friendships only made in w. „ 479
call'd for flesh and w to feed his spears. „ 601
(And fiU'd a horn with w and held it to her,) „ 659
Drink therefore and the w will change your will.' „ 663
I will not look at w imtil I die.' „ 667
Nor ever touch'd fierce w, nor tasted flesh. Merlin and V. 627
They sit with knife in meat and w in horn ! „ 694
But once in life was fluster'd with new w, „ 756
and by fountains running w. Last Tournament 141
did ye mark that fountain yesterday Made to
run w ?— „ 287
To hand the w to whosoever came — „ 290
hurl'd The tables over and the w's, „ 475
that I should suck Lies like sweet w's : „ 645
meat, W, w — and I will love thee to the death, „ 720
these had comforted the blood With meats and w's, „ 725
straddling on the butts While the w ran : Guinevere 269
Till, drunk with its own w, Lover's Tale i 271
w's that. Heaven knows when. Had suck'd the fire „ iv 193
the w's being of such nobleness — „ 222
priceless goblet with a priceless w Arising, „ 227
Crazy with laughter and babble and earth's new w. To A. Tennyson 2
For see — this w — the grape from whence Sisters {E. and E.) 61
hev a glass o' cowslip w ! Village Wife 5
Droonk wi' the Quoloty's w, „ 77
Taaste another drop o' the w — „ 120
the wild hour and the w Had set the wits aflame. Sir J. Oldcastle 94
riotous fits Of w and harlotry — „ 101
was the poisonous pleasure of w ; V. of Maeldune 62
of a hand giving bread and w. The Wreck 114
As laughter over w. Anient Sage 184
' Yet w and laughter friends ! „ 195
Nor drown thyself with flies in honied w ; „ 268
guest may make True cheer with honest w — Pro. to Gen. Hamley 16
Wealth with his w's and his wedded harlots ; Vastness 19
and choice of women and of w's ? By an Evolviion. 8
men may taste Swine-flesh, drink w ; Akhar's Dream 54
one of those Who mix the w's of heresy „ 174
brag to his fellow rakes of his conquest over the w ? Charity 18
Wine-fl^dc The w-f lying couch'd in moss. In Mem. Ixxxix 44
Wine-heated Moist as they were, w-h from the feast ; Geraint and E. 351
Wing (s) {See also Ankle-wing) What they say betwixt
their w's ? Adeline 29
And clip your w's, and make you love : Rosalind 45
Droops both his w's, regarding thee, Elednore 119
' He dried his w's : like gauze they grew ; Two Voices 13
' Here sits he shaping w's to fly : „ 289
fold our w's. And cease from wanderings, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 19
crested bird That claps his w's at dawn. D. of F. Women 180
hearts and feeble w's That every sophister Love thou thy land 11
lime a summer home of murmurous w's. Gardener's D. 48
O'er the mute city stole with folded w's. Distilling
odours „ 186
While the prime swallow dips his w, Edwin Morris 145
This dull chrysalis Cracks into shining w's, St. S. Stylites 156
' A light wind chased her on the w, Talking Oak 125
On sleeping w's they sail. Sir Galahad 44
W's flutter, voices hover clear : „ 78
Tho' fortune clip my w's. Will Water, 50
3 E
Wing
802
Winter
Wing (s) {continued) seabird crosses With one waft of
the w. The Captain 72
He rode a horse with w's, Vision of Sin 3
huDg With w's of brooding shelter o'er her peace, Aylmer's Field 139
So often, that the folly taking w's „ 494
Till the little w's are stronger. Sea Breams 298
Whereon a woman-statue rose with w's Princess i 210
wheel'd on Europe-shadowing w's. Ode on Well. 120
you have gotten the w's of love, Window, Ay 15
Spread thy full w's, and waft him o'er In Mem. ix 4
The wild pulsation of her w's ; „ xii 4
My fancies time to rise on w, „ xiii 17
that dip Their w's in tears, and skim away. „ xlviii 16
Self-balanced on a lightsome w : „ Ixv 8
Take w's of fancy, and ascend, „ Ixxvi 1
Take w's of foresight ; lighten thro' „ 5
No w of wind the region swept, „ Ixxviii 6
Or eagle's w, or insect's eye ; „ cxxiv 6
The love that rose on stronger w's, „ cxxviii 1
My life has crept so long on a broken w Maud III vi 1
a Shape that fled With broken w's, Gareth and L. 1208
and w's Moved in her ivy, Marr. of Geraint 598
made his feet W's thro' a glimmering gallery, Balin and Balan 404
To catch a loathly plume f all'n from the w Merlin and V. 727
And on the fourth are men with growing w's. Holy Grail 237
And peak'd w's pointed to the Northern Star. „ 240
And both the w's are made of gold, „ 242
Became a living creature clad with w's ? „ 519
Half-wrench'd a golden w ; „ 733
Great angels, awful shapes, and w's and eyes. „ 848
Follow'd a rush of eagle's w's. Last Tournament 417
swimi with balanced w's To some tall mountain : Lover's Tale i 302
Love, rising, shook his w's, and charged the winds „ 317
Love wraps his w's on either side the heart, „ 467
like the waft of an Angel's w ; In the Child. Hosp. 38
The moth will singe her w's, Sir J. Oldcastle 189
Sphinx, with w's drawn back, Tiresias 148
rose as it were on the w's of an eagle The Wreck 69
Without their hope of w's ! ' Ancient Sage 211
w push'd out to the left and a w to the right. Heavy Brigade 15
Russian crowd Folded its w's „ 39
And showing them, souls have w's ! Dead Prophet 12
in their turn thy warblers rise on w. Prog, of Spring 108
a shape with w's Came sweeping by him, St. Telemachus 24
The shape with w's. „ 38
Bring me my horse — my horse ? my w's Mechanophilus 9
Wing (verb) Stoops at all game that w the skies, Rosalind 4
Far as the wild swan w's, to where the sky Palace of Art 31
That I could w my will with might In Mem. xli 10
Wing-case slide apart Their dusk w-c's, Gareth and L. 687
Wing'd {See also Black-wing'd, Light-wing'd, Strong-wing'd,
White-wing'd, Wide-wing'd) arrows of his thoughts
were headed And w with flame, The Poet 12
bravely fumish'd all abroad to fling The w shafts of truth, „ 26
That sought to sow themselves like w seeds, Gardener's D. 65
Stood from his walls and w his entry-gates Aylmer's Field 18
From four w horses dark against the stars ; Princess i 211
and w Her transit to the throne, „ iv 377
Or keeps his w affections dipt with crime : „ vii 316
Not making his high place the lawless perch Of w
ambitions. Bed. of Idylls 23
Tits, wrens, and all w nothings peck him dead ! Marr. of Geraint 275
Like odour rapt into the w wind Lover's Tale i 801
Winging What time I watch'd the swallow w Princess iv 89
Wink (s) Till with a w his dream was changed, Com. of Arthur 441
(For in a w the false love turns to hate) Merlin and V. 852
Wink (verb) ere a star can w, beheld her there. Gardener's B. 122
one that nods Jind w's behind a slowly djing fire. Locksley Hall 136
W at our advent : help my prince to gam Princess Hi 160
Nor w's the gold fin in the porphyry font : „ vii 178
But w no more in slothful overtrust. Ode on Well. 170
' Man ! is he man at all, who knows and w's ? Sees
what his fair bride is and does, and w's ? Merlin and V. 781
Wink'd last light, that long Had w and threaten'd
darkness, M. d' Arthur, Ep. 2
Wink'd {continued) which for bribe had w at wrong.
Mutinies, treacheries — w at, and condoned —
Winking The landscape w thro' the heat :
W his eyes, and twisted all his face.
Winner Are w's in this pastime of our King.
Winnie Minnie and W Slept in a shell.
Winning W its way with extreme gentleness
To all the people, w reverence.
If such be worth the w now,
w easy grace. No doubt, for slight delay,
a good mother, a good wife. Worth w ;
To all the people, w reverence.
Winnow enormous polypi W with giant arms
Winsome Was wedded with a w wife, Ygerne :
Peept the w face of Edith like a flower
Wint (went) an' thin w into the dark.
people 'ud see it that w in to mass —
Winter (adj.) {See also Midwinter) ""
moon ;
From w rains that beat his grave.
The slow result of w showers :
Full knee-deej) lies the w snow. And the w winds
are wearily sighing :
Among the mountains by the w sea ;
w moon. Brightening the skirts of a long cloud.
And the long glories of the w moon.
And like an oaken stock in w woods.
Made orphan by a w shipwreck,
face, Rough-redden'd with a thousand w gales,
Mock-Hymen were laid up like w bats,
Which in our w woodland looks a flower.
We heard them sweep the w land ;
Glastonbury, where the w thorn Blossoms at
Christmas,
Among the momitains by the w sea ;
w moon. Brightening the skirts of a long cloud.
And the long glories of the w moon.
The stillness of the dead world's w dawn
Weird Titan by thy w weight of years
She spies the simimer thro' the w bud,
She that finds a w sunset fairer than a morn of
Spring.
Dumb on the w heath he lay.
Sun Burst from a swimming fleece of w gray,
and iEtna kept her w snow.
That icy w silence — ^how it froze you
I soaking here in w wet —
Who love the w woods, to trace On paler heavens
thro' the sunless w morning-mist In silence wept
Winter (s) {See also Midwinter, Summer-winter) 'Tis
the world's w ;
A hundred w's snow'd upon his breast,
where the moving isles of w shock By night.
Three w's, that my soul might grow to thee,
monsters only made to kill Time by the fire in w.'
' Why not a summer's as a w's tale ?
we should have him back Who told the ' W's tale '
Those w's of abeyance all worn out.
Whose eighty w's freeze with one rebuke
Your presence will be sun in w.
To break the blast of w, stand ;
Yell'd as when the winds of w
Till growing w's lay me low ;
And every w change to spring.
As in the w's left behind.
Merlin, whose vast wit And himdred w's
A man wellnigh a hundred w's old.
And each of these a hundred w's old,
man was no more than a voice In the white w of his
age. Pass, of Arthur i
seen where the moving isles of w shock By night, „ 308
and his w's were fifteen score, V. of Maeldune 116
His w chills him to the root, Ancient Sage 119
Eighty w's leave the dog too lame to follow Locksley H., Sixty 226
Spring and Summer and Autumn and W, Vastness 29
Geraint and E. 939
Columbus 226
In Mem. Ixxxix 16
Lancelot and E. 1145 i
Last Tournament 199 1
Minnie and Winnie 1
Isabel 23
-If. d' Arthur 108
You might have won 2 ,
Princess iv 330 '
v\&l
Pass, of Arthur 276 i
The Kraken 10 '
Com. of Arthur 188
Locksley H., Sixty 260
Tomorrow 22
74
The niellow'd reflex of a w
Isabel 29
T^oo Voices 261
452
B. of the 0. Year 1
M. d' Arthur 2
53
192
Golden Year 62
Enoch Arden 15
. » .95
Princess iv 144
A Bedication 13
In Mem. xxx 10
Holy Grail 52
Pass, of Arthur 171
221
360
442
I'o Victor Hu^o 7
Ancient Sage 74
Locksley H., Sixty 22
Bead Prophet 13
Bemeter and P. 20
115
Happy 71
To Ulysses 6
14
Beath of Qinone 8
Nothing will Bie 17
Palace of Art 139
M. d'Arihur 140
St. S. Stylites 71
Princess, Pro. 205
209
238
„ iv 440
Ode on Well. 186
To F. B. Maurice 3
22
Boddicea 77
1 71 Mem. xl 30
„ liv 16
* ,, Ixxviii 9
Com. of Arthur 281
Holy Grail 85
Winter
803
Wiser
Winter (s) (continued) a breath that past With all the cold
of w. The Ring 33
fingers were so stiffen'd by the frost Of seven and
ninety w's, „ 240
sigh'd In the w of.the Present for the summer of the
Past ; Happy 70
My yucca, which no w quells, To Ulysses 21
To wallow in that w of the hills. Romney's R. 15
.\nd all the w's are hidden. The Throstle 16
In a hundred, a thousand w's ? The Dawn 24
Winter-black One night when earth was w-b. To E. Fitzgerald 21
Winter-clad Tattoo'd or woaded, w-c in skins, Princess ii 120
Winterd See Many-winter'd
Winter-field The tented w-f was broken up Aylmer's Field 110
Winterless the sons oi a,w day. The Wreck 74
Wintertide in w shall star The black earth Ode to Memory 19
Would make the world as blank as W-t. Last Tournament 221
Winter-white by age as w-m As mine is now, Tiresias 19
Wintry So she, and tuni'd askance a w eye : Princess vi 329
\Vho roll'd the psalm to to skies. In Mem. Ivi 11
Walk'd in a w wind by a ghastly glimmer, Maud I Hi 13
Scarr'd with a himdred w water-courses — Holy Grail 490
Gleam, that had waned to a w glimmer On icy
fallow Merlin and the G. 83
(Viped Why 'edn't tha w thy shoes ? Spinster's S's. 46
iVire The wind sounds like a silver w, Fatima 29
The parrot in his gilded w's. Bay-Bm., Sleep. P. 16
A man with knobs and w's and vials fired A
cannon : Princess, Pro. 65
Up thro' gilt w's a crafty loving eye, „ 172
who thrumm'd On such a w as musically Last Tournament 323
iVirer The nightly w of their innocent hare Aylmer's Field 490
Wiry writhed his w arms Around him, Gareth and L. 1150
Wisdom her raiment's hem was traced in flame W, The Poet 46
Could his dark w find it out, Ttco Voices 308
wisdom-bred And throned of w — CEnone 124
Were w in the scorn of consequence.' „ 150
stay'd the Ausonian king to hear Of w Palace of Art 112
The w of a thousand years Is in them. Of old sat Freedom 18
flower of knowledge changed to fruit Of it\ Love and Buty 25
Knowledge comes, but «? lingers, (repeat) Locksley Hall 141, 143
Not much their w teaches ; Will Water. 174
yet for all your w well know I That I shall look Enoch Arden 211
a tigress with a gossamer, W'ere w to it.' Princess v 171
bearing and the training of a child Is woman's w.' „ 466
Wearing his w lightly, like the fruit A Bedication 12
And in thy w make me wise. In Mem. Pro. 44
For W dealt with mortal powers, „ xxxvi 5
There must be w with great Death : „ li 11
Whatever w sleep with thee. „ cviii 16
Nor let thy w make me wise. „ cix 24
High 10 holds my w less, „ cxii 1
Yet how much w sleeps with thee „ cxiii 2
moving side bv side With w, „ cxiv 20
But W heavenly of the soul. „ 22
let me think Silence is w : Merlin -and V. 253
' And lo, I clothe myself with w, „ 255
till he let his w go For ease of heart, „ 892
Led on the gray-hair'd w of the east ; Holy Grail 453
with the w and wealth of his own. The Wreck 65
Strong in will and rich in w, Locksley H., Sixty 49
and take their w for your friend. „ 104
Pillory W in your markets, „ 134
move to such a goal As W hopes to gain, Politics 4
' Thy glory baffles w. Akhar's Bream 28
Visdom-brad w-b And throned of wisdom — CEnone 123
Vise (adj.) That read his spirit blindly w, Two Voices 287
The slow w smile that, round about Miller's B. 5
No one can be more w than destiny. B. of F. Women 94
with choice paintings of w men I himg The royal
dais round. Palace of Art 131
Great Nature is more w than I : To J. S. 35
' Be w : not easily forgiven Are those, Gardener's B. 247
Therefore comes it we are w. Vision of Sin 100
' O Enoch, you are w ; And yet for all your wisdom Enoch Arden 210
Wise (adj.) (continued) wholly w To let that handsome
fellow Aylmer's Field 268
Should I not call her w, who made me w ? Princess ii 396
Lady Psyche, younger, not so w, „ iv 316
Like our wild Princess with as •«; a dream „ Con. 69
Attain the w indifference of the wise ; A Bedication 8
For such a w humility As befits a solemn fane : Ode on Well. 249
And in thy wisdom make me w. In Mem., Pro. 44
If thou wilt have me w and good. „ lix 8
She darkly feels him great and w, „ xcvii 34
They sang of what is w and good „ ciii 10
'Tis held that sorrow makes us w, ,, cviii 15
Nor let thy wisdom make me w. „ cix 24
'Tis held that sorrow makes usw ; „ cxiii 1
But that blind clamour made me w ; „ cxxiv 18
Were it not w if I fled from the place Maud / i 64
How modest, kindly, all-accomplish'd, w. Bed. of Idylls 18
we have heard from our w man at home To North-
ward, Gareth and L. 201
and never a whit more w The fourth, „ 635
O damsel, be you w To call him shamed, „ 1259
whether very w Or very foolish ; Marr. of Geraint 469
' Yea so,' said he, ' do it : be not too w ; Geraint and E. 424
And this w world of ours is mainly right. „ 901
And our w Queen, if knowing that I know. Merlin and V. 121
' Who are w in love Love most, say least,' „ 247
Yet you are w who say it ; „ 252
surely ye are w, But such a silence is more w than
kind.' „ 288
However w, ye hardly know me yet.' ,, 355
' I never was less w, however w, „ 357
' Are ye so w ? ye were not once so w, Lancelot and E. 103
their w men Were strong in that old magic Holy Grail 665
the heart that was w ! The Wreck 56
By which thou wilt abide, if thou be w. Ancient Sage 35
wherefore thou be w. Cleave ever to the sunnier side ., 67
But thou be w in this dream-world of ours, .. 108
years that made the stripling w Undo their work again, „ 111
yet perhaps she was not w ; Locksley II., Sixty 11
if dynamite and revolver leave you courage to be w : „ 107
Patriot Statesman, be thou w to know To Buke of Argyll 1
Then let w Nature work her will. My life is full 21
Merlin, the w man that ever served King Uther Com. of Arthur 151
Not even thy w father with his signs Guinevere 274
' If I,' said the w little Annie, ' was you. In the Child. Hosp. 48
Achseans — honouring his w mother's word — Achilles over the T. 16
To cast w words among the multitude Tiresias 66
but thou art w enough, Tho' young to love thy wiser, „ 153
w man's word. Here trampled by the populace „ 173
In what they prophesy, our w men. Epilogue 65
Horace, you the w Adviser of the nine-years-ponder'd
lay. Poets and their B. 5
Voice spake out of the skies To a just man and
a w — Voice spake, etc. 2
Wise (s) to its sway Will win the w at once, Mine be the strength 10
0 silent faces of the Great and W, Palace of Art 195
Not yet the w of heart would cease Love thou thy land 81
her least remark was worth The experience of the w. Edwin Morris 66
Thro' madness, hated by the w, Love and Buty 7
Yeam'd after by the wisest of the w, Lucretius 267
Among the w and the bold. Ode on Well. 52
War, who breaks the converse of the w ; Third of Feb. 8
the w who think, the w who reign. Ode Inter. Exhib. 32
God is law, say the w ; High. Pantheism 13
Attain the wise indifierence of the w ; A Bedication 8
With all the circle of the w, In Mem. Ixi 3
Thy likeness to the w below, „ Ixxiv 7
truthless violence moum'd by the W, Vastness 5
Wise See Broken-wise, Crescent-wise, Dropwise, Earthly-wise,
Elsewise, Heavenly -wise. Madonna -wise, Mocking - wise.
Over-wise, Warrior-vrtse, Worldly-wise
Wisely Or w or tmwisely, signs of storm, To the Queen ii 49
Wiser That we are w than our sires. Love thou thy land 72
Surely I shall be w in a year : Enoch Arden 433
nor is it IF to weep a true occasion lost, Princess iv 68
Wiser
804
Wiser (continued) dismiss'd in shame to live No ^v than ^^.^^^^^ .^ ^^^
.y'u^^mlnwhlbe.byand^ , Co^-- of Arthur 4DA
lIchMven learn, be thou W for falling ! Bahn «f f «^«^ g
fierce beast found Aw than herseli, Ttresws 15^
thou art wise enough, Tho' young, to love thy w, e,v^, fil
V there than you, that crowning barren Death D,cksley H., Sixty 61
But you have made the w choice, Tou might hive won 5
£et hS tbe w man who springs Hereafter, ^"^iSTvT. 2?
like a stoic, or like A w epicurean, T^iroi^
'Belike for lack of «; company ; Za5< Towmamm< 2g
' Then were swine, goats, asses, geese The w fools, ,, ^^o
Wisest Yeam'd after by the w of the wise, iwcre<i«s 267
'Madam, he the w man Feasted the woman w then, Prtnc.ss tt 350
Her that talk'd down the fifty w men ; ^ ^ " ■" ^^^
?o know myself the w knight of all.' £««« Tottmameni 248
Nor is^he the v, man who never proved himself ^^^^^^^^ ^_^ ^.^^^ ^^
Do^uBT no longer that the Highest is the w and the best, J'at^/j 1
Wish (s) phantom of a «; that once could move, The form, the form W
wheeling round The central w, Gardener s D225
And let me have an answer to my w ; StvliUslU
let him speak his w. , '^'- t-X„tL^
Old w'es, ghosts of broken plans, W'^^/ f^a^^*-- 29
the noble «; To save all earnings to the uttermost, Enoch Arden 85
a w renew'd. When two years after came a boy „ °°
his had been, or yours : that was his w. " ^
He oft denied his heart his dearest w, " ^^"
He laugh'd, and yielded readily to their w, >. ^'^
son Was silent, tho' he often look d his w ; .- p„„ on
tWs wild king to force her to his w, Princess, Pw. 37
As if to close with Cyril's random w : .- «* ^"j!:
But led by golden w'es, and a hope " ^ JylJi^
Tell my w to her dewy blue eye : ^'"f^lrilZ S
And ever met bun on his way With w'es. In Mem. m 22
The w, that of the living whole " ' ^
That cries against my w for thee. " .
The w too strong for words to name ; '' / r -s^l
sent her w that I would yield thee thme. Gareth and i. 551
knight art thou To the King's best w. t'h ■ tnKx
SS I give no reason but my w, Marr. of Geraint 761
Be moulded by your w'es for her weal ; r- • V ^«^ v 41 Q
I know Your w, and would obey ; Geraxnt and E. 419
Beholding how ye butt against my w, ir r- " j 17 lee;
STtimes Would flatter hii own w in age for love, Merlm and V. 185
And grant my re-reiterated w, " ggg
Nor own'd a sensual w, " ggg
the w to prove him wholly hers. " „ „„
Love-loyal to the least w of the Queen ianceZoi anti £89
To speak the w most near to your true heart ; ,. ^^*
And Lancelot saw that she withheld her w, >. »|^
' Delay no longer, speak your w, " in4«
And there I woke, but still the w remain d. . v ^^
and sent him to the Queen Bearing his w,
that he welkiigh deem'd His w by hers was ^^^^^^ ^^ ^ ^^l
LoTe-loyal to the leasts of the Queen Guinevere :^6
way my « leads me evermore Still to believe it- Lover's Tale t 274
But she spake on, for I did name no u'.
But she spake on, for I did name no w. No m— no ^^^
bope. . , , ^ , " ,„ aQ
' It was my w,' he said, to pass, to sleep, ,. ^» o^
such her dying i«-Giyen on the morning J^he Kmg ^0
if his young music wakes A w in you Jo ^'^'^^^c 7? 71
my strongest w Falls flat before your least unwillingness. Bomney s B 71
Wish (verb) Where she would ever"^«> to dwell, Supp. Confessions 54
^ thiy " to charm Pallas and Jmio sitting by : A Character U
I w that somewhere in the ruin'd folds, . n V'TfU.
only w to live till the snowdrops come agam : May Queen, J\. J^ «• -^^ j*
I w the snow would melt and the sun come out " r 7 <? m
Yet something I did w to say : -^^ •{.• ^- ri
I would w to see My grandchild on my knees w f; Iq
Is it well to w thee hippy ?- Locksjey Hall^
I cannot help you as twio do Unless- Enoch Arden 407
1 10 you for my wife. "
Wish (verb) (continued) do I w— What ?— that the bush
were leafless ?
I w I were Some mighty poetess,
0 I w That I were some great princess,
1 could not help it, did not w :
that w'es at a dance to change The music—
I w it Gentle as freedom ' —
I w she had not yielded ! '
I w they were a whole Atlantic broad.
To talk them o'er, to w them here.
We w them store of happy days.
I a/; I could hear again The chivalrous battle-song
And w'es me to approve him.
She did not w to blame him—
I have not fall'n so low as some would w.
' Did I w Your warning or your silence ?
Whether ye w me victory or defeat,
Then said Geraint, ' I w no better fare :
make me w still more to learn this charm
I well could w a cobweb for the gnat,
Pure, as you ever w your knights to be.
Well— can I w her any huger wrong
Well might I w to veil her wickedness,
an' I w I was dead— , ^ t u ^ >
died 0' your going away, an I w that 1 naa.
I too w that I had— in the pleasant times
best And oldest friend, your Uncle, w'es it,
Could sometimes w I had never led the way.
IW I were in the years of old.
And w the dead, as happier than ourselves
I could w yon moaning sea would rise
is it well to w you joy ? n u ^
W me joy ! Father. What need to w when Hubert
weds in you The heart of Love,
' He is fled — I w him dead —
Wish'd She w me happy, but she thought
I have w this marriage, night and day,
' I w myself the fair young beech
and I w for Leonard there,
' I came to speak to you of what he w,
roll'd his eyes upon her Repeating all he w.
And how it was the thing his daughter w,
I w my voice A rushing tempest
They w to marry ; they could rule a house ;
I stammer'd that I knew him— could have w—
Because he might have w it —
They hated banter, w for something real.
But I w it had been God's will that I,
I almost w no more to wake,
And wept, and w that I were dead ;
w The Prince had found her in her ancient home ;
W it had been my mother,
and I w, yet w her not to speak ;
But I niver not w fur childer.
Wishing And, tho' in silence, w joy.
Wisp the gilded ball Danced like a w :
w that flickers where no foot can tread.'
the w that gleams On Lethe in the eyes of Death.
Wistful ' Then I fixt My w eyes on two fair images,
mother's eye Full of the w fear that he would go.
Wit With shrilling shafts of subtle w.
Alone and warming his five w's, (repeat)
The fruitful w Cleaving, took root,
With thy shallow w :
0 the dalliance and the w,
1 grow in worth, and w, and sense,
The tavern-hours of mighty w's —
Thro' which a few, by w or fortime led,
gave To him that fluster'd his poor parish w s
How might a man not wander from his w's
the wealth Of words and w.
Merlin, whose vast w And hundred winters
An old man's w may wander ere he die.
Have strength and w, in my good mother s hall
shook his w's they wander in his prime —
Wit
Lucretius 205
Princess, Pro. 131
133
n332
it) 589
vi 205
Con. 5
Tl
In Mem. xc 11
„ Con. 84
Maud I X 5'i
„ xix 71
„ XX 5
Marr. of Geraint 129
Geraint arid E. 7G
80
232
Merlin and V. 329
370
Lancelot and E. 1375
Last Tournament 596
Guinevere 211
First Quarrel 52
54
55
Sisters (E. and E.) 47
Columbus 186
Tiresias 1
Ancient Sage 205
The Flight 11
Locksley H., Sixty 216
The Bing 60
Forlorn 1
Miller's B. 139
Dora 21
Talking Oak 141
Golden Year 4
Enoch Arden 291
905
The Brook 140
Aylmer's Field 756
Princess ii 465
in 206
vi 275
„ Con. 18
Grandmother 73
In Mem. xxviii 14
Com. of Arthur 345
Marr. of Geraint 643
Lancelot and E. 674
Lover's Tale i 577
Spinster's S's. 84
In Mem., Con. 88
Princess, Pro. 64
„ iv 358
In Mem. xcviii 7
Sea Breams 240
Gareth and L. 173
Clear-headed friend 13
The Owl i 6, 13
The Poet 20
Poet's Mind 2
D. of F. Women 147
Will Water. 41
191
Aylmer's Field 438
521
Princess ii 440
In Mem., Con. 103
Com. of Arthur 280
405
Gareth and L. 12
715
Wit
805
Woke
Wit (continued) but, being knave, Hast mazed my w : Gareth and L. 1170
Dreams ruling when to sleeps ! Balin and Balan 143
I loved thee first, That warps the w.' Merlin and V. 61
If these unwitty wandering w's of mine, ,, 346
1 fain had given them greater w's : „ 496
added, of her w, A border fantasy of branch and
flower, Lancelot and E. 10
but listen to me, If I must find you w : „ 148
set himself to play upon her With sallying w, „ 647
Sweet father, will you let me lose my w's ? ' „ 752
' Ye will not lose your w's for dear Lavaine : „ 755
I might have put my w's to some rough use, „ 1306
Beast too, as lacking human w — Pelleas and E. 476
seeing too much w Makes the world rotten, Last Tournament 246
To babble about him, all to show your w — „ 340
The slippery footing of his narrow w, Lover's Tale i 102
wild hour and the wine Had set the w's aflame. iS'ir J. Oldcastle 95
But her w's wor dead, an' her hair was as white Tomorrow 60
Witch sought and found a w Who brew'd the philtre Lucretius 15
And we past to the Isle of W'es J', of Maeldune 97
For a wild w naked as heaven stood „ 100
Witch-elm W-e's that counterchange the floor hi Mem. Ixxxix 1
Withdraw ' To pass, when Life her light w's, Two Voices 145
Else I w favour and countenance Ai/lnifr's Field 307
It might be safe our censures to w ; 'Third of Feb. 11
still w themselves Quite into the deep soul. Lover's Tale i 81
if the Nameless should w from all Ancient Sage 50
Withdrawing W by the counter door to that Ayhner's Field 282
Withdrawn {See also Long-withdrawn) Half shown, are
broken and w. Two Voices 306
Deep in the garden lake w. Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 12
every morning, far w Beyond the darkness Vision of Sin 48
on the glimmering limit far w „ 223
Far into heaven w, Voice and the P. 38
Death in the living waters, and w, Merlin and V. 148
I knew the veil had been w. Holy Grail 522
Withdrew As she w into the golden cloud, (Enone 191
Where we w from siunmer heats and state, Princess vi 245
W themselves from me and night, In Mem. xcv 18
Wither W beneath the palate, and the heart Faints, D. of F. Women 287
I w slowly in thine arms, Tithonus 6
lest I w by despair. Locksley Hall 98
And the individual w's, „ 142
Now for me the woods may w, „ 190
Thine own shall w in the vast, In Mem. Ixxvi 11
as anger falls aside And w's on the breast Lover's Tale i 10
He w's marrow and mind ; Ancient Sage 120
laurel of Caesar, but mind would not w. Parnassus 4
Wither'd parch'd and w, deaf and blind, Fatima 6
My suit had w, nipt to death by him Edwin Morris 101
Are w in the thorny close, Day-Dm., Arrival 11
The naked Three, were w long ago, Death of CEnone 7
' What drug can make A w palsy cease to shake ? ' Two Voices 57
' The memory of the w leaf In endless time „ 112
like the w moon Smote by the fresh beam of the
springing east ; M. d' Arthur 213
The w Misses ! how they prose O'er books Amphion 81
Who slowly rode across a w heath, Vision of Sin 61
Kuin'd trunks on w forks, ,, 93
to left and right Of w holt or tilth or pasturage. Enoch Arden 675
A w violet is her bliss : In Mem. xcvii 26
as the worm draws in the w leaf And makes it earth, Geraint and E. 633
Danced like a w leaf before the hall, (repeat) Last Tournament 4, 242
like the w moon Smote by the fresh beam of the
springing east ; Pass, of Arthur 381
And pale and fibrous as a w leaf, Lover's Tale i 422
Withering O Love, Love, Love ! O w might ! Fatima 1
Withheld Lancelot saw that she w her wish, Lancelot and E. 920
w His older and his mightier from the lists ; Pelleas and E. 159
Withhold a prudence to w ; Isabel 15
Withholding Apart from place, w time, Arabian Nights 75
Within See Half-within
Without See Half-without
Withstand caught By that you swore to w ? Maud I vi 80
Frail, but of force to w, „ // ii 24
St. S. Stylites 55
129
Sir J. Oldcastle 35
81
To Prof. Jebb. 2
Forlorn 7
,, 25
AJcbar's Dream 98
Aylmer's Field 749
Balin and Balan 145
Sisters (E. and E.) 36
286
Witness (s) {See also Eye-witness) Bear w, if I could
have found a way
in truth (thou wilt bear w here)
thine own w that thou bringest Not peace,
Lord give thou power to thy two. w'es !
Bear w you, that yesterday
' Who was w of the crime ?
There Avill come a w soon Hard to be confuted,
when creed and race Shall bear false w.
Witness (verb) Yes, as your moanings w,
W their flowery welcome.
Wittier Evelyn is gayer, w, prettier,
our quick Evelyn — The merrier, prettier, w.
Witty grew So w that ye play'd at ducks and drakes Last Tournament 344
Wizard (adj.) Some figure like a w pentagram The Brook 103
I hear a w music roll. In Mem. Ixx 14
The w lightnings deeply glow, „ cxxii 19
Wizard (s) Lash'd at the w as he spake the word. Com. of Arthur 388
The people call'd him W ; Merlin and V. 170
To find a w who might teach the King „ 583
but did they find Aw? Tell me, was he like to thee ? ' „ 613
The gentle w cast a shielding arm. „ 908
pale blood of the w at her touch Took gayer colours, „ 949
Mighty the W Who found me at sunrise Merlin and the G. 11
Wizard-like And weird and worn and w-l was he. The Ring 196
Wo& (stop) W — theer's a craw to pluck wi' tha, Sam : N. Farmer, N. S. 5
— w then w — let ma 'ear mysen speak. „ 8
W then, proputty, wiltha ? — „ 39
W then, wiltha ? dangtha !— „ 40
Woaded Tattoo'd or w, winter-clad in skins, Princess ii 120
Woe He hath no thought of coming w's ; Supp. Confessions 47
My heart is wasted with my w, Oriana 1
silence seems to flow Beside me in my utter w, „ 87
all day long you sit between Joy and w, Margaret 64
The home of w without a tear. Mariana in the S. 20
A little hint to solace w, Two Voices 433
My heart may wander from its deeper w. (Enone 44
Or hearing would not hear me, to is me ! „ 171
still sheets of water, divers w's, D. of F. Women 34
That makes my only w. „ 136
Even with a verse your holy w. To J. S. 8
Proclaiming Enoch Arden and his w's ; Enoch Arden 868
As fits an universal w, Ode on Well. 14
it cost me a world of w, Grandmother 23
To bear thro' Heaven a tale of w. In Mem. xii 2
And standing, muffled roimd with w, „ xiv 5
The M'ild unrest that Uves in w „ xv 15
Peace ; come away : the song of w „ Ivii 1
Likewise the imaginative w, „ Ixxxv 53
And I — ^my harp would prelude w — „ Ixxxviii 9
Or, crown'd with attributes of w „ cxviii 18
So far, so near in w and weal ; „ cxxix 2
for some dark undercurrent w That seems to draw — Maud I xviii 83
Wrought for his house an irredeemable w ; „ II i 22
' 0 brother ' answer'd Balin ' to is me ! Balin and Balan 618
' W is me, my knights,' he cried. Holy Grail 275
all the wealth and all the to ? Guinevere 344
we came To what our people call ' The Hill of W.' Lover's Tale i 374
Three cypresses, symbols of mortal w, „ 537
A sacred, secret, unapproached w, „ 679
on the depth of an unfathom'd w Reflex of action. „ 746
were worlds of w like our own — Despair 18
scroll written over with lamentation and w. „ 20
had some glimmer, at times, in my gloomiest w, „ 103
Days and Hours That cancel weal with to, Ancient Sage 96
and youth is tum'd to w. The Flight 16
this Earth, a stage so gloom'd with to The Play 1
' W to this island if ever a woman (repeat) Kapiolani 20, 22
Wofol {See also Dainty-woeful) A w man (for so the
story went)
when the w sentence hath been past,
Embathing all with wild and w hues,
Woild (wild) Down i' the w 'enemies afoor I coom'd
to the plaace.
Woke Till cold winds w the gray-eyed mom
Lover's Tale i 379
788
ii 64
N. Farmer, 0. S. 34
Mariana 31
Woke
806
Woman
Woke {continued) Ind to Ind, but in far daylight w, Buonaparte 4
And w her with a lay from fairy land. Caress'd or chidden 8
She w : the babble of the stream Fell, Mariana in the S. 51
Until I w, and found him settled down The Epic 17
That with the sound I w, and heard M. d' Arthur, Ef. 30
' 0 happy kiss, that w thy sleep ! ' Day -Dm., Depart. 19
In him w, With his first babe's first cry, Enoch Arden 84
Here she w. Resolved, sent for him „ 506
He w, he rose, he spread his arms abroad „ 912
out a despot dream The father panting w, Aylmer's Field 528
till the comrade of his chambers w, „ 583
slept, w, and went the nest, The Sabbath, Sea Dreams 18
wail'd and w The mother, ,, 57
I w, I heard the clash so clearly. ,. 135
mixt with little Margaret's, and I w, ,■ _ 246
After a tempest tv upon a morn Lucretius 24
Shot out of them, and scorch'd me that I w. „ 66
Lilia w with sudden-shrilling mirth Princess, Pro. 216
ri; Desire in me to infuse my tale of love ., v 239
And ere I w it was the point of noon, „ 482
Last I w sane, but well-nigh close to death „ vii 119
Deep in the night I w : she, near me, „ 173
That early w to feed her little ones, :, 252
This year I slept and w with pain, In Mem. xxviii 13
songs, that w The darkness of our planet, „ Ixocvi 9
Enid w and sat beside the couch, Marr. of Geraint 79
W and bethought her of her promise given „ 602
Geraint W where he slept in the high hall, „ 755
Beat, till she w the sleepers, Geraint and E. 404
Balin first w, and seeing that true face, Balin and Balan 590
W the sick knight, and while he roU'd his eyes Lancelot and E. 819
There bode the night : but w with dawn, „ 846
there I w, but still the wish remain'd. ,, 1048
damsel,' answer'd he, ' I w from dreams; Pelleas and E. 104
He w, and being ware of some one nigh, „ 520
And w again in utter dark, and cried, Last Tournament 623
Far cities burnt, and with a cry she w. Guinevere 83
Arthur w and call'd, ' Who spake ? Pass, of Arthur 45
and we w To gaze upon each other. Lover's Tale i 265
when I w. Something she ask'd, 1 know not what, „ 705
I dozed ; I w. An open landaiilet Whirl'd by, Sisters (E. and E.) 85
wail For ever w the unhappy Past again, „ 263
I w, and thought — death — I shall die — Columbus 87
and w These eyes, now dull, but then so keen Tiresias 3
Till I w from the trance. The Wreck 115
I w to all of truest in myself, The Ring 182
w me And leam'd me Magic ! Merlin and the G. 13
dream Wail'd in her, when she w beneath the stars. Death of (Enone 82
His dream became a deed that w the world, St. Telemachus 70
Wold (See also Sea-wold, Wowd) sheep from wattled
folds. Upon the ridged w's, Ode to Memory 67
the long dun w's are ribb'd with snow, Oriana 5
That clothe the w and meet the sky ; L. of Shalott i 3
And oft in ramblings on the w, Miller's D. 105
From off the w I came, and lay „ 111
To yon old miU across the w's ; „ 240
from the dry dark w the simimer airs blow cool May Queen, N. Y's. E. 27
blows More softly round the open w, To J. S. 2
Calm and deep peace on this high w, In Mem. xi 5
Or sheepwalk up the windy w; „ c 8
And kindled all the plain and all the w. Balin and Balan 441
Wolf By shores that darken with the gathering w, Aylmer's Field 767
a w within the fold ! A pack of wolves ! Princess ii 190
Then came these wolves : they knew her : „ w 321
Kite and kestrel, w and wolfkin, Boddicea 15
A gray old w and a lean. Maud I xiii 28
Not that gray old w, for he came not back From the
wilderness, full of wolves, „ II v 53
dog, and w and boar and bear Came night and day, Com. of Arthur 23
the w would steal The children and devour, „ 26
frew up to wolfUke men. Worse than the wolves. „ 33
tript from the three dead wolves of woman born Geraint and E. 94
drew from those dead wolves Their three gay suits „ 180
And waiting to be treated like a w, „ 857
And find that it had been the w's indeed : „ 864
Wolf (continued) heard them pass like wolves
Howling ; Balin and Balan 407
let the wolves' black maws ensepulchre „ 487
' Leave them to the wolves.' „ 588
If the w spare me, weep my life away, Merlin and V. 885
Old milky fables of the w and sheep, Pelleas and E. 196
Let the fox bark, let the w yell. _ „ 472
'Why then let men couple at once with «oZ««s. „ 536
Sally she wesh'd foalks' cloaths to keep the w fro' the
door. North. Cobbler 29
Mea fur to kick our Sally as kep the w fro' the door, „ 59
the howl of all the cassock'd wolves. Sir J. Oldcastle 158
That gray beast, the w of the weald. Batt. of Brunanburh 110
When the wolves are howling. Forlorn 72
Wolfish stem black -bearded kings with w eyes, D. of F. Women 111
Wolfkin Kite and kestrel, wolf and w, Boddicea 15
Wolf-like they grew up to w-l men, Worse than the
wolves. " Com. of Arthur 32
Wolfskin mighty hands Lay naked on the w, Lancelot and E. 813
Wolf's-milk half the lo-m curdled in their veins, Princess vii 130
Wolseley foe was driven, And W overthrew Arabi, Pro. to Gen. Hamley 30
Woman (See also Beggar-woman, Countrywoman,
Gentlewoman, Lay-women, Man-woman And
women smile with saint-like glances
my ancient love AVith the Greek w.
' The Legend of Good Women ' long ago Sung
This w was the cause,
the greatest gift, A w's heart,
for your sake, the w that he chose.
Got up betwixt you and the w there.
So the women kiss'd Each other, and set out,
I woo'd a w once, But she was sharper
A w like a butt, and harsh as crabs.
God made the w for the man, (repeat)
' God made the w for the use of man,
w's pleasure, w's pain —
W is the lesser man,
I will take some savage w,
The w of a thousand simimers back,
As just and mere a serving-man As any born of w
Shaped her heart with w's meekness
The w cannot be believed.
And women's slander is the worst.
Scarce could the w when he came upon her,
they say that women are so quick- —
' W, I have a secret — only swear,
' Dead,' clamour'd the good w,
At which the w gave A half-incredulous.
As the w heard. Fast flow'd the current
' W, disturb me not noM' at the last,
the shame The w should have borne,
fell The w shrieking at his feet,
fulminated Against the scarlet w and her creed ;
And near the light a giant w sat,
that the w walked upon the brink :
the w honest Work ;
That which I ask'd the w in my dream.
Came men and women in dark clusters round,
The w half turn'd round from him she loved,
when the w heard his foot Return from pacings
' 0 miracle of women,' said the book.
Half child half w as she was,
' lives there such a w now ? '
' There are thousands now Such women,
the rest f ollow'd : and the women sang
loved to live alone Among her women ;
The w were an equal to the man.
they must lose the child, assume The w :
these the women sang ;
for miles about Was till'd by women ;
and the w's state in each. How far from just ;
respect, however slight was paid To w,
but that which made W and man.
But w ripen'd earlier, and her life Was longer ;
Plato, Verulam ; even so With w :
Supp. Confessions 22
(Enone 261
D.ofF. Women 2
104
Gardener's D. 230
Dora 63
„ 96
„ 128
Audley Court 52
Walk, to the Mail 49
Edwin Morris 43, 50
91
Locksley Hall 149
151
168
Godiva 11
Will Water. 152
L. of Burleigh 71
The Letters 32
34
Enoch Arden 345
408
837
840
852
864
874
's Field 356
811
Sea Dreams 23
Aylmer
112
137
147
226
286
Lucretius 5
Princess, Pro. 35
101
126
128
244
i50
131
1.38
143
192
ii 131
137
145
15
Woman
807
Woman-grown
Woman {continued) be that for ever which I seem, If, Princess ii 258
These women were too barbarous, would not leani ; „ 298
wisest man Feasted the w wisest then, „ 351
But when did w ever yet invent ? ' „ 391
Men hated learned women : ,. 466
And with that w closeted for hours ! ' „ Hi 56
She sees herself in every w else, „ 110
extremes, I told her, well might harm The w's cause. .. 145
To lift the w's fall'n divinity .. 223
what every xc counts her due. Love, children, ,, 244
for women, up till this Cramp'd under woi-se „ 277
and mould The w to the fuller day.' „ 332
Disorderly the women. „ iv 170
Huge women blowzed with health, „ 279
You hold the w is the better man ; „ 410
all women kick against their Lords „ 412
That many a famous man and w, „ 445
And you look well too in your w's dress : „ 529
' Satan take The old women and their shadows ! „ i> 34
We left her by the w, „ 113
Man is the hunter ; w is his game : „ 154
and leaps in Among the women, „ 163
yet I hold her, king, True w : „ 180
The w's garment hid the w's heart.' „ 305
those that iron-cramp'd their women's feet ; „ 376
throats would bawl for civil rights, No w named : „ 388
the w's Angel guards you, „ 410
When the man wants weight, the w takes it up, ,. 444
Man for the field, and w for the hearth : „ 447
Man with the head and w with the heart : „ 449
Man to command and w to obey ; „ 450
Besides, the w wed is not as we, „ 462
bearing and the training of a child Is w's wisdom : „ 466
The leaves were wet with women's tears : „ vi 39
make Our progress falter to the w's goal.' „ 127
Win you the hearts of women ; ,, 171
you keep One pulse that beats true w, „ 180
the w is so hard Upon the w. „ 222
men see Two women faster welded in one love „ 253
W, whom we thought w even now, „ 273
amazed They glared upon the women, and aghast
The women stared at these, „ 361
for on one side arose The women up in wild revolt, „ vii 123
And left her w, lovelier in her mood „ 162
that know The w's cause is man's : „ 259
For w is not undevelopt man, „ 275
The man be more of w, she of man ; „ 280
what w taught you this ? ' „ 310
I loved the w : he, that doth not, lives A drowning life, „ 313
Thee w thro' the crust of iron moods ,, 342
So pray'd the men, the women : „ Con. 7
The women — and perhaps they felt their power, „ 13
kingdom topples over with a shriek Like an old w, „ 63
But stay with the old w now : Grandmother 108
Phantom wail of women and children, Boadicea 26
And women's love and men's ! Window, Spring 10
fiend best knows whether w or man be the worse. Maud / i 75
Rich in the grace all women desire, „ x 13
Nor fronted man or w, eye to eye — Gareth and L. 112
shyly glanced Eyes of pure women, „ 314
To whom the w weeping, ' Nay, my lord, „ 341
The w loves her lord. Peace to thee, w, with thy
loves and hates ! „ 372
Than ride abroad redressing women's wrong, ,, 866
massacring Man, w, lad and girl — „ 1341
And loveliest of all women upon earth. Marr. of Geraint 21
This too the women who attired her head, „ 62
O never yet had w such a pair Of suitors „ 439
But while the women thus rejoiced, „ 754
she cast aside A splendour dear to women, „ 808
Stript from the three dead wolves of w bom Geraint and E. 94
Call for the w of the house,' „ 263
And answer'd with such craft as women use, „ 352
A w weeping for her murder'd mate „ 522
A tribe of women, dress'd in many hues, „ 598
Woman {continued) women they. Women, or what had
been those gracious thing's, Geraint and E. 635
all the men and women in the hall Rose „ 731
Were men and women staring and aghast, „ 804
To worship w as true wife beyond Merlin and V. 23
Save, save me thou — W of women — „ 78
' Know ye the stranger w ? ' „ 129
vice in you which ruin'd man Thro' w the first hour ; „ 363
they never mount As high as w in her selfless mood. „ 443
'Man dreams of Fame while w wakes to love.' „ 460
or else A sudden spurt of w's jealousy, — „ 524
A w and not trusted, „ 530
And as to w's jealousy, O why not ? „ 537
All fighting for a w on the sea. „ 562
Were I not w, I could tell a tale. „ 696
Have all men true and leal, all women pure ; „ 794
But women, worst and best, as Heaven and Hell. „ 815
w's love. Save one, he not regarded, Lancelot and E. 840
And never w yet, since man's first fall, „ 859
love Of man and w when they love their best, „ 869
loved me with a love beyond all love In women, „ 1294
while women watch Who ^vins, who falls ; Holy Grail 84
' A w,' answer'd Percivale, ' a nun, „ 68
behold a w at a door Spinning ; „ 391
And kind the w's eyes and innocent, „ 393
none but phantoms in your quest, No man, no w ? ' „ 563
And women were as phantoms. „ 566
known Scarce any but the women of his isles, Pelleas and E. 88
' Ay,' said Gawain, ' for women be so light.' „ 362
Men, women, on their sodden faces. Last Tournament 474
one lone w, weeping near a cross, Stay'd him. „ 493
For courtesy wins w all as well As valour may, „ 707
' this is all w's grief, That she is w, Guinevere 218
could he find A w in her womanhood as great „ 299
Yet must I leave thee, w, to thy shame. „ 511
And beauty such as never w wore, „ 549
The moaning of the w and the child, Lover's Tale i 520
The man isn't like the w. First Quarrel 63
good w, can prayer set a broken bone ? ' In the Child. Hosp. 20
Women and children among us, Def. of iMcknow 8
Valour of delicate women who tended „ 87
Horror of women in travail among the dying „ 88
women and children come out, „ 100
What omens may foreshadow fate to man And w, Tiresias 8
is a man to be loved by the women they say. The Wreck 18
I sought for a kindly caress, being w and weak, „ 31
speaking aloud To women, the flower of the time, „ 49
'Never the heart among women,' he said, „ 96
' W ' — he graspt at my arm — ' stay there ' — „ 120
Danny O'Roon wid his ould w, Molly Magee. Tomorrow 88
She with all the charm of w, Locksley H., Sixty 48
W to her inmost heart, and w to her tender feet, „ 50
Very w of very w, nurse of ailing body and mind, „ 51
Saving women and their babes, „ 64
a w came And caught me from my nurse. The Ring 117
place a hand in his Like an honest w's, Forlorn 20
and choice of women and of wines ? By an Evolution. 8
While man and w are still incomplete, I prize
that soul where man and w meet. On One who eff. E. M. 1
The w, gliding toward the pyre. To Master of B. 18
the women shrieking " Atheist " flung Filth Akbar's Dream 91
I am dressing the grave of a w with flowers. Charity 2
For a w ruin'd the world, „ 3
but a w, God bless her, kept me from Hell. „ 4
I had cursed the w he married, „ 24
I had cursed her as w and wife, and in wife and w I found „ 31
Great and greater, and greatest of women, Kapiolani 5
if ever a w should handle or gather the berries „ 20
if ever a w should climb to the dwelling of Peele „ 22
Where is one that, bom of w, Making of Man 1
Woman-breasted w-b Sphinx, with wings drawn back, Tiresias 148
Woman-built As of a new-world Babel, w-b. Princess iv 487
Woman-conquer'd w-c there The bearded Victor „ Hi 351
Woman-conqueror many a florid maiden-cheek. The w-c ; „ 351
Woman-grown more and more, the maiden tc-g, Aylmer's Field 108
Woman-guard
808
Wonderful
Woman-guard Princess with her monstrous ui-g,
Womanhood Wearing the rose of w.
0 miracle of noble w ! '
A charr'd and wrinkled piece of w,
All that not harms distinctive w.
Came out of her pitying w,
and with all grace Of w and queenhood,
Could call him (were it not for w)
Beyond mine old belief in w,
And roimd her limbs, mature in w ;
A woman in her w as great As he was in his
manhood.
Beyond all dreams of Godlike w,
Queen, as true to m as Queenhood,
Womankiiid All for the common good of w.'
1 take her for the flower of w,
The soft and milky rabble of w,
faith in w Beats with his blood,
Womanlike W, taking revenge too deep
Woman-man man-woman is not w-m.
Woman-markets Here in the w-m of the west,
Woman-post A w-j> in flying raiment.
Woman's-heart Break not, O w-h, but still endure ;
Woman-slough what was left of faded w-s
Woman-soldier My w-s, gallant Kate,
Woman-statue Whereon a w-s rose with wings
Woman-vested but w-v as I was Plunged ;
Woman-world w-w Of wives and mothers.
Woman-worshipper The w-w ? Yea, God's curse.
Woman-yell slew Till all the rafters rang with w-y's,
Womb To spirits folded in the w.
Let her, that is the w and tomb of all,
can remember Love in the w,
within her w that had left her ill content ;
Won {See also Hard-won, Well-won) A motion from
the river w Ridged the smooth level,
things outward you have w A tearful grace,
' That w his praises night and mom ? '
I w his love, I brought him home.
YoTj might have w the Poet's name,
but w mysterious way Thro' the seal'd ear
when your sister came she w the heart Of Ida :
Imaginations might at all be w.
thus I w Your mother, a good mother,
w it -with a day Blanch'd in our annals,
We will be liberal, since our rights are w.
Clash'd with his fiery few and w ;
has w His path upward, and prevail'd.
Priest was happy. His victim w :
Faint heart never w —
Who have w her favour !
fair, strong, arm'd — But to be w by force-
That save he w the first by force.
So large mirth lived and Gareth w the quest.
Has ever w it for the lady with him,
What I these two years past have w for thee,
' This noble prince who w our earldom back.
For tho' ye w the prize of fairest fair,
Proclaim'd him Victor, and the day was w.
Had Lancelot w the diamond of the year. With
purpose to present them to the Queen, When
all were w ; Lancelot and E. 68
That if I went and if I fought and w it „ 216
W by the mellow voice before she look'd, „ 243
* Lo, Sire, our knight, thro' whom we w tlie day, „ 529
' Was he not with you ? w he not your prize ? ' „ 573
What of the knight with the red sleeve ? ' He w.' „ 621
Hard-won and hardly w with bruise and blow, „ 1165
Take, what I had not w except for you, „ 1181
Pelleas for his lady w The golden circlet, Pelleas and E. 13
wearing this unsimny face To him who w tliee glory ! ' „ 181
My Queen, he had not w.' „ 183
yea and he that w The circlet ? „ 320
their wills are hers For whom I w the circlet ; „ 325
Lancelot w methought, for thee to wear.' Last Tournament 38
Princess iv 562
Two Voices 417
Princess, Pro. 48
vQl
vii 274
Mavd I vi 64
Marr. of Geraint 176
Merlin and V. 786
Lancelot and E. 955
Pelleas and E. 73
Guinevere 299
Tiresias 54
On Jub. Q. Victoria 25
Princess ii 209
V 287
vi 309
„ vii 328
Maud I Hi 5
On One who eff. E. M. 4
Aylmer's Field 348
Princess iv 376
Ded. of Idylls 44
Princess v 40
Kate 15
Princess i 210
„ iv 181
The Ring 486
Last Tournament 447
476
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 8
Lucretius 244
Lover's Tale i 159
The Revenge 51
Arabian Nights 34
Margaret 11
Mariana in the S. 34
The Sisters 14
Tou might have won 1
Aylmer's Field 695
Princess Hi 87
274
V 165
vi 62
68
Ode on Well. 100
213
The Victim 62
Window, The Answer 9
Maud I xii 18
Gareth and L. 105
108
1426
Marr. of Geraint 490
554
619
719
Balin and Balan 90
Won {continued) So Tristram w, and Lancelot gave,
the gems. Not speaking other word than ' Hast
thou w ?
And w by Tristram as a tourney-prize,
years of noble deeds. Until they w her ;
attracted, w, Married, made one with.
We have w great glory, my men !
Whom I woo'd and w.
who can tell but the traitors had w ?
till his Word Had w him a noble name.
' Take comfort you have w the Painter's fame,'
sword. That only conquers men to conquer peace.
Has w me.
And less will be lost than w,
Won (one) {See also Wonn) I minds when i' How-
laby beck w daay
Wonder (s) Ever the w waxeth more and more.
What w, if in noble heat Those men thine arms
But when he saw the w of the hilt,
' this w keeps the house.'
this w, dead, become Mere highway dust ?
The w of the eagle were the less,
and all the w that would be. — (repeat)
For there are greater w's there.'
' What w, if he thinks me fair ? ' What w I was
all unwise,
' It is no w,' said the lords,
and rent The w of the loom thro' warp and woof
a feast Of w, out of West and East,
The w's that have come to thee,
skill'd spear, the w of the world —
w's ye have done ; Miracles ye cannot :
Rapt in the fear and in the w of it ;
Show'd us a shrine wherein were w's —
My daily w is, I love at all.
What w, being jealous, that he sent
Fire in dry stubble a nine-days' w flared :
Becomes a w, and we know not why,
Expectant of the w that would be.
With signs and miracles and w's,
Or what of signs and w's,
the land was full of signs And w's
thy wise father with his signs And w's,
But when he saw the w of the hilt,
Your w of the boiling lake ;
What w ! I decreed That even the dog was clean.
The w's were so wildly new.
Wonder (verb) riving the spirit of man. Making earth w.
And, while now she w's blindly,
swallows coming oiit of time Will w why they came :
I w he went so young.
• You w when my fancies play
' But wherefore would ye men should w at you ?
But there the fine Gawain will w at me.
Heated am I ? you — ^you w —
Wonder'd I to at the bounteous hours,
I w, while I paced along :
I TO at her strength, and ask'd her of it :
what kind of tales did men tell men. She w,
All the world w : (repeat)
with such blows, that all the crowd IF,
Then came the fine Gawain and w at her,
men who met him rounded on their heels And w
W at some strange light in Julian's eyes
Wonderful Clothed in white samite, mystic, w
(repeat)
W, Prince of peace, the Mighty God,
Clothed in white samite, mystic, w.
This work of his is great and w.
A thousand-fold more great and w
felt His work was neither great nor w,
A maid so smooth, so white, so w,
Beyond all knowing of them, w.
Clothed in white samite, mystic, w, (repeat) Pass, of Arthur 199, 312, 327
W cures he had done, O yes, In the Child. Hasp. 5
Last Tournament 190
746
Guinevere 477
Lover's Tale i 133
The Revenge 85
Sisters {E. and E.) 204
Def. of Lucknow 66
Dead Prophet 36
Itomney's R. 43
Akhar's Dream 16
The Dreamer 22
Church-warden, etc. 27
Sonnet to 6
England and Amer. 6
M. d' Arthur 85
Gardener's D. 119
Love and Duty 10
Golden Year 39
Locksley Hall 16, 120
Day-Dm., Depart. 28
Ep. 4
Beggar Maid 7
Princess i 62
Ode Inter. Exhib. 21
In Mem. xli 22
Gareth and L. 1223
1324
Marr. of Geraint 529
Balin and Balan 109
Merlin and V. 536
580
Lancelot and E. 735
1029
Holy Grail 133
Guinevere 222
229
233
275
Pass, of Arthur 253
To Ulysses 40
Akhar's Dream 52
Mechanophilus 27
The Poet 52
L. of Burleigh 53
Princess ii 432
Grandmother 14
In Mem. Ixvi 2
Gareth and L. 570
Lancelot and E. 1054
Locksley H., Sixty 151
Two Voices 451
454
Sea Dreams 113
Princess, Pro. 197
Light Brigade 31, 52
Marr. of Geraint 565
Lancelot and E. 1267
Pelleas and E. 143
Lover's Tale iv 205
.¥. d' Arthur 31, 144, 1.59
Aylmer's Field 669
Com. of Arthur 285
Geraint and E. 898
914
921
Merlin and V. 566
Holy Grail 104
Wonderful
809
Wood
Wonderful (continued) sun of the soul made day in the
dark of his w eyes. The Wreck 55
Wondering w, ask'd her ' Are you from the farm ? ' The Brook 209
And only w wherefore play'd upon : Gareth and L. 1252
lifted up Their eager faces, w at the strength, Merlin and V. 133
I sat, Lonely, but musing on thee, w where, Last Tournament 613
Wonderingly w she gazed on Lancelot So soon return'd, Pelleas and E. 589
Wonder-stricken kiss'd his w-s little ones ; Enoch Arden 229
Wondrous From many a w grot and secret cell The Kraken 8
strike Into that w track of dreams again, D. of F. Women 279
0 thou w Mother- Age ! Locksley Hall 108
yet her cheek Kept colour: « ! Aylmer's Field 506
His prowess was too w. Lancelot and E. 542
w one Who passes thro' the vision of the night — ■ „ 1405
Wonn (one) (See also Won) But 'e reads w sarmin
a weeak, N. Farmer, 0. S. 28
Wont (s) From childly w and ancient use I call — Lucretius 209
'tis her w from night to night To rail Princess Hi 32
So said the small king moved beyond his w. „ vi 265
Make one wreath more for Use and W, In Mem. xxix 11
He laugh'd as is his w, and answer'd Com. of Arthur 401
my w hath ever been To cat«h my thief, Gareth and L. 821
Such is my w, as those, who know me, know.' Lancelot and E. 365
such his w, as we, that know him, know.' ,, 475
He wore, against his w, upon his helm ,, 603
Lancelot sad beyond his w, to see The maiden buried, ., 1333
Had been, their w, a-maying and return'd, Gtiinevere 23
Wont (adj.) Where he was w to leap and climb, Supp. Confessions 165
Psyche, w to bind my throbbing brow, Princess ii 250
In which we two were w to meet, In Mem. viii 10
When I was w to meet her In the silent woody places Maud II iv 5
soldiers w to hear His voice in battle, Geraint and E. 174
w to glance and sparkle like a gem Of fifty facets ; „ 294
Wonted As year by year the labourer tills His w glebe, In Mem. ci 22
To this the courteous Prince Accorded with his w
courtesy, Lancelot and E. 638
The sound not w in a place so still „ 818
And miss the w number of my knights, Guinevere 498
when he miss'd The w steam of sacrifice, Demeter and P. 119
Woo Thee to w to thy tuwhit, (repeat) The Owl ii 11
They would sue me, and w me, and flatter me. The Mermaid 43
W me, and win me, and marry me, „ 46
With what voice the violet w's Adeline 31
And once again to w thee mine — Miller's D. 30
1 w thee not with gifts. CEnone 152
There's many a bolder lad '11 w me May Queen 23
gold and beauty, wooing him to w. Aylmer's Field 487
thus I w thee roughly, for thou carest not How roughly
men may w thee so they win — Lucretius 272
Fly to her, and pipe and w her. Princess iv 115
these men came to w Your Highness — „ vi 328
I w your love ; I count it crime In Mem. Ixxxv 61
One is come to w her. Maud I xii 28
whitens ere this hour W's his own end ; Last Tournament 698
W her and gain her then : Sisters (E. and E.) 39
' Let us revenge ourselves, your Ulric w's my wife ' — Happy 63
Wood (trees) (See also Cedar-wood, Palmwood, Pine-wood,
Yew-wood) the w's that belt the gray hill-side. Ode to Memory 55
From the evening-lighted w, Margaret 10
field and w Grow green beneath the showery gray, My life is full 16
The pale yellow w's were waning, L. of Shalott iv 2
The w's were fill'd so full with song, Two Voices 455
When after roving in the w's Miller's D. 58
cloisters, branch'd like mighty w's, Palace of Art 26
Lo ! in the middle of the w, Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 25
I had wander'd far In an old w : D- of F. Women 54
' Pass freely thro' : the w is all thine own, „ 83
I have no men to govern in this w : „ 135
Thridding the sombre boskage of the w, „ 243
and the w's and ways Are pleasant, On a Mourner 13
From the w's Came voices of the well-contented doves. Gardener's D. 88
And like an oaken stock in winter w's. Golden Year 62
The w's decay, the w's decay and fall, Tithonus 1
Now for me the w's may wither, Locksley Hall 190
A summer crisp with shining w's. Day-Dm., Pro. 8
Wood (trees) (continued) and shows At distance
like a little w ; I)ay-Dm., Sleep. P. 42
Simimer w's, about them blowing, L. of Burleigh 19
And hills and scarlet-mingled w's The Voyage 47
where the prone edge of the w began (repeat) Enoch Arden 67, 373
Crept down into the hollows of the w ; „ 76
To go with others, nutting to the w, ,, 363
calling, here and there, about the w. ,. 383
remember'd one dark hour Here in this «), ,. 386
How merrj^ they are down yonder in the w. ., 389
sent his voice beneath him thro' the w. .. 444
all the w stands in a mist of green. The Brook 14
Autumn's mock sunshine of the faded w's Aylmer's Field 610
I rose and past Thro' the wild w's ' Princess i 91
and the shrieks Of the wild w's together ; .. 99
O'er it shook the w's. And danced the colour, .. Hi 292
when all the lo's are green ? .. iv 107
' 0 Swallow, flying from the golden w's, ,. 114
Across the w's, and less from Indian craft ,. 198
With Ida, Ida, Ida, rang the w's ; ,. 433
mused on that wild morning in the w's, ,. v 471
strikes On a w, and takes, and breaks, „ 527
half-open'd bell of the w's ! .. vi 193
Nightingales sang in his w's : G. of Swainston 6
And a worm is there in the lonely w, The Islet 34
And cattle died, and deer in w. The Victim 18
And w's are sear. And fires bum clear, Window, Winter 3
The w's are all the searer, „ 14
Oh, the w's and the meadows, W's where we hid
from the wet, „ Marr. Mom. 5
By meadow and stile and w, „ 14
That never knew the summer w's : In Mem. xxvii 4
And bask'd and batten'd in the w's. ,. xxxv 24
I foimd a w with thorny boughs : .. Ixix 6
hill and w and field did print The same sweet forms ,. Ixxix 7
noise of rooks, That gather in the waning w's, „ Ixxxv 72
Thro' all the dewy-tassell'd w, „ Ixxxvi 6
With banquet in the distant w's ; „ Ixxxix 32
Of rising worlds by yonder w. ,, cv 25
Above the w which grides and clangs ,, cvii 11
To range the w's, to roam the park, „ Con. 96
I HATE the dreadful hollow behind the little w, Maud I il
little w where I sit is a world of plunder .. iv 24
the budded peaks of the w are bow'd ., vi 4
Here half-hid in the gleaming w, ,. 69
Where was Maud ? in our w ; .. xii 5
Birds in our w sang ,. 9
Running down to my own dark w ; „ xiv 30
From the lake to the meadow and on to the iv, . xxii 37
Our w, that is dearer than all ; .. 38
From the red-ribb'd hollow behind the lo, .. II i 25
Then glided out of the joyous w .. 31
Thick with wet w's, and many a beast therein. Coin, of Arthur 21
gazing over plain and w ; Gareth and L. 668
Down the long avenues of a boundless w, „ 785
Where Arthur's men are set along the w ; The w is
nigh as full of thieves as leaves : ,. 788
Flying from out of the black w, ,. 802
somewhat as the cleanser of this w. .. 828
So she spake. A league beyond the w, .. 845
damsel's headlong error thro' the w — „ 1215
a forester of Dean, Wet from the w's, Marr. of Geraint 149
Took horse, and forded Usk, and gain'd the w ; „ 161
At last they issued from the world of w, „ 238
In the first shallow shade of a deep w, Geraint and E. 119
' There lurk three villains yonder in the w, „ 142
' And if there were an hundred in the w, „ 147
and she drove them thro' the w. „ 185
keep them in the wild ways of the to, „ 187
thro' the green gloom of the w they past, „ 195
Which sees the trapper coming thro' the w. „ 724
in those deep w's we found A knight Balin and Balan 120
Reported of some demon in the w's Was once a man, „ 124
who will hunt for me This demon of the w's ? ' „ 137
and rode The skyless w's, but under open blue „ 293
Wood
810
Wood-world
Wood (trees) (continued) thou couldst lay the Devil
of these w's
and pass And vanish in the w's ;
the canker'd boughs without Whined in the w ;
and old boughs Whined in the to.
and tum'd aside into the w's,
the wholesome music of the w Was dumb'd
Before another w, the royal crown Sparkled,
yonder lies one dead within the w.
I dwell Savage among the savage w's,
she smiled ' And even in this lone w. Sweet lord,
W's have tongues, As walls have ears :
shriek of bird or beast, Thrill'd thro' the tv's ;
' She dwells among the w's ' he said
the wild w's of Broceliande, (repeat)
Who meant to eat her up in that wild w
and all thro' this wild w And all this morning
chase a creature that was current then In these
wild w's.
And all thro' following you to this wild w,
the dark w grew darker toward the storm
dwelt among the w's By the great river
As happy as when we dwelt among the w's.
And laughter at the limit of the w,
Again she said, ' O wild and of the w's,
' Lead then,' she said; and thro' the w's they went.
Other than when I found her in the w's ;
Rang out like hollow w's at hunting-tide.
With promise of large light on w's and ways,
hill and w Went ever streaming by him
At Camelot, high above the yellowing w's.
Sir Tristram of the W's — Whom Lancelot knew.
The w's are hush'd, their music is no more :
I made it in the w's. And heard it ring
avenues And solitary passes of the w
as a rustle or twitter in the w Made dull his inner,
and when thou passest any w Close vizor,
vows — I am a woodman of the w's.
Next morning, while he past the dim-lit w's,
over all the great w rioting And climbing,
and from the w's That belt it rise three dark,
three cypress-cones That spired above the w ;
From out the yellow w's upon the hill
The cloud-pavilion'd element, the w,
foliage from the dark and dripping w's
Fled onward to the steeple in the w's :
the w's upon the hill Waved with a sudden gust
fled Wind-footed to the steeple in the w's.
What matter ? there are others in the w.
From column on to column, as in a w,
rattled down upo' poor owd Squire i' the w,
a whirlwind blow these w's, as never blew
These ancient w's, this Hall at last will go —
He left us weeping in the w's ;
all the summer long we roam'd in these wild w's
Wild flowers of the secret w's,
Wild w's in which we roved with him.
Wild w's in which we rove no more,
foalk be sa scared at, i' Gigglesby w,
stars are from their hands Flung thro' the w's,
The w's with living airs How softly fann'd.
Mount and mine, and primal w ; Open.
thridded the black heart of all the w's,
you used to call me once The lonely maiden-Princess
of the w,
Who love the winter w's, to trace
She comes on waste and w. On farm and field :
w's Plunged gulf on gulf thro' all their vales below,
found Paris, a naked babe, among the w's Of Ida,
on man in the tropical w.
Wood (substance) (See also, Pinewood, Satin-wood)
Hard w I am, and wrinkled rind,
a noiselass riot underneath Strikes thro' the w,
' Ye are green w, see ye warp not.
draw water, or hew w, Or grosser tasks ;
Balin and Balan 298
327
346
386
433
436
462
468
486
528
530
546
614
Merlin and V. 2, 204
260
285
409
440
890
Lancelot and E. 277
1036
Pelleas and E. 49
99
108
328
867
394
547
Last Tournament 3
177
276
288
361
865
534
699
Guinevere 251
Lover's Tale i 403
535
a 39
80
108
38
56
iv 162
189
Village Wife 95
The Flight 12
27
37
79
82
88
84
Spinsters S's. 24
Early Spring 18
19
/. and C. Exhib. 6
Demeter and P. 69
The Ring 65
To Ulysses 14
Prog, of Spring 22
72
Death of CEnone 54
The Dawn 3
Talking Oak 171
Lucretius 186
Princess ii 75
Gareth and L. 486
Wood (substance) (continued) Had carved himself a
knightly shield of w, Merlin and V. 473
javelining With darted spikes and splinters of the w „ 937
To thee, dead w, I bow not head nor knees. Sir J. Oldcastle 128
fell'd the foes before you as the woodman fells the w, Happy 42
Woodbine (adj.) rent The w wreaths that bind her, Amphion 34
And the w spices are wafted abroad, Maud I xxii 5
wind Came wooingly with w smells. Lover's Tale ii 36
And hour by hour unfolding w leaves Prog, of Spring 7
Woodbine (s) w and eglatere Drip sweeter dews A Dirge 23
And tell me if the w's blow. My life is full 25
as sweet As w's fragile hold, Talking Oak 146
Thorns, ivies, w, mistletoes, Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 43
There in due time the w blows, In Mem. cv 7
my oan door-poorch wi' the w an' jessmine Spinster's S's. 105
Woodcraft Look to thy w,' and so leaving him, Balin and Balan 30S
Wood-devil scream of that W-d I came to quell ! ' „ 548
Wood-dove Deeply the w-d coos ; Leonine Eleg. 6
Wooded [See also Deep-wooded) The mountain w to
the peak, Enoch Arden 572
And hollow lined and w to the lips. Lover's Tale i 398
the wave again Is vocal in its w walls ; In Mem. xix 14
Beside the river's w reach, „ Ixxi 13
Wooden When from her w walls, — lit by sure hands, — Buonaparte 5
Woodland (adj.) Be mine a philosopher's life in the quiet w
ways, Maud I iv 49
Gathering w lilies, Myriads blow together. .. xii 7
And the w echo rings ; ,, // it; 38
And deem it carrion of some w thing, Gareth and L. 748
With joy that blazed itself in w wealth Balin and Balan 82
A damsel-errant, warbling, as she rode The w alleys, „ 439
. Now talking of their w paradise. Last Tournament 726
My Edwin loved to call us then ' His two wild w flowers.' The Flight 80
While round her brows a w culver flits, Prog, of Spring 18
Still round her forehead wheels the w dove, „ 57
Hear thy myriad laureates hail thee monarch in
their w rhyme. Akbar's D., Hymn 6
Woodland (S) filter'd tribute of the rough w. Ode to Memory 63
In firry w's making moan ; Miller's D. 42
Slides the bird o'er lustrous w, Locksley Hall 162
That grows within the w. Amphion 8
When the rotten w drips. Vision of Sin 81
Illthian w's, echoing falls Of water. To E. L. 1
the broad w parcell'd into farms; Aylmer's Field 847
forefoot plies His function of the w : Lucretius 46
as the golden Autumn w reels Athwart the smoke Princess vii 357
Which in our winter w looks a flower. A Dedication 13
' Fear not, isle of blowing w, Boddicea 38
Made the noise of frosty w's, „ 75
And w's holy to the dead ; In Mem. xcix 8
Now rings the w loud and long, „ cxv 5
flying gold of the ruin'd w's drove thro' the air. Maud / i 12
a flame That rages in the w far below, Balin and Balan 234
left the ravaged w yet once more To peace ; Merlin and V. 963
Over all the w's flooded bowers, Sisters (E. and E.) 20
Thou that singest wheat and w. To Virgil 9
For all that ample w whisper'd ' debt,' The Ring 170
and glancing at Elf of the w, Merlin and the G. 38
Wood-louse blue w-l, and the plmnp dormouse. Window, Winter 9
Woodman see the w lift His axe to slay my kin. Talking Oak 235
they came. The woodmen with their axes : Princess vi 44
a w there Reported of some demon in the woods Balin and Balan 123
This w show'd the cave From which he sallies, .. 131
Came on the hoarhead w at a bough „ 294
To whom the w utter'd wonderingly „ 297
vows — I am w of the woods, Last Tournament 699
fell'd the foes before you as the w fells the wood, Happy 42
Wood-nymph a foot-fall, ere he saw The w-w. Palace of Art 111
Woodpecker As laughters of the w Kate 4
An echo like a ghostly w. Princess, Pro. 217
Before her skims the jubilant w. Prog, of Spring 16
Wood-walk dark w-w's drench'd in dew, D. of F. Women 75
Wood-way green w-w's, and eyes among the leaves ; Pelleas and E. 139
Woodwork Fled ever thro' the w, till they found Lancelot and E. 440
Wood-world w-w is one full peal of praise. Balin and Balan 450
Woody
811
Word
Woody To the w hollows in which we meet Maud J xxii 43
In the silent w places By the home that gave me birth, „ // iv 6
Woo'd folded leaf is w from out the bud Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 26
he w and wed A labourer's daughter, Bora 39
who would love ? I w a woman once, Audley Court 52
Drunk even when he w ; Marr. of Geraint 442
how he w The waters, and the waters answering Lover's Tale i 543
I w her then, nor vmsuccessfully. Sisters (E. and E.) 125
Whom I w and won. „ 204
But the Bandit had w me in vain, Bandit's Death 10
Wooest W not, nor vainly wranglest ; Madeline 38
Woof Hues of the silken sheeny w „ 22
thro' warp and w From skirt to skirt ; Princess i 62
Wooing his long w her. Her slow consent, Enoch Arden 707
baits Of gold and beauty, w him to woo. Aylmer's Field 487
All my w is done. Window, Marr. Mom. 4
Edith had welcomed my brief w of her. Sisters {E. and E.) 254
sound Which to the w wind aloof The poplar made, Mariana 75
Wool Like footsteps upon w. (Enone 250
needs it we should cram our ears with w Princess iv 65
w of a thistle a-fl3dn' an' seeadin' Spinster's S's. 79
but w's looking oop ony how. Church-warden, etc. 6
WooUy And w breasts and beaded eyes ; In Mem. xcv 12
Woorse (worse) W nor a far-welter'd yowe : N. Farmer, N. S. 32
Woost (worst) And i' the w o' toimes „ 0. S. 16
Word (See also Watch-word) Shot thro' and thro'
with cmming w's. Clear-headed friend 17
Her w's did gather thunder as they ran, The Poet 49
So was their meaning to her w's. „ 53
and with his w She shook the world. „ 55
kiss sweet kisses, and speak sweet w's : Sea-Fairies 34
Wild w's wander here and there : A Dirge 43
And your w's are seeming-bitter Rosalind 30
And kiss away the bitter w's „ 50
How may measur'd w's adore The full-flowing harmony Elednore 45
' These w's,' I said, ' are like the rest ; Ttco Voices 334
The thesis which thy w's intend — „ 338
if I waste w's now, in truth You must blame Love. Miller's D. 191
With blessings which no w's can find. „ 238
Indeed I heard one bitter w L. C. V. de Vere 37
Tho' I cannot speak a w, I shall barken May Queen, N. Y's. E. 39
the clergyman, has told me w's of peace. „ Con. 12
say to Robin a kind w, and tell him not to fret ; „ 45
little meaning tho' the w's are strong ; Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 119
Her slow full w's sank thro' the silence drear, D. of F. Women 121
My w's leapt forth : ' Heaven heads the count of
crimes „ 201
Because all w's, tho' cull'd with choicest art, „ 285
I had not dared to flow In these w's toward you, To J. S. 7
W's weaker than your grief would make „ 65
But gentle w's are always gain : Love thou thy land 23
W'ould serve his kind in deed and w, „ 86
He utter'd w's of scorning ; The Goose 42
Watch what thou seest, and lightly bring me w.' M. d' Arthur 38
Watch what I see, and lightly bring thee w.' „ 44
I bad thee, watch, and lightly bring me w.' ., 81
would have spoken, but he found not w's, „ 172
(My w's were half in earnest, half in jest,) Gardener's D. 23
A w could bring the colour to my cheek ; „ 196
And in the compass of three little w's, „ 232
Here, then, my w's have end. „ 250
he and I Had once hard w's, and parted, Dora 18
But in my time a father's w was law, „ 27
Or change a w with her he calls his wife, ,, 44
You knew my w was law, and yet you dared „ 98
I set the w's, and added names I knew. Audley Court 61
Caught in flagrante — what's the Latin w ? — Walk, to the Mail 34
And well his w's became him : Edwin Morris 25
Were not his w's delicious, „ 71
That, trust me on my w, Talking Oak 170
w's That make a man feel strong in speaking truth ; Love and Duty 69
These measured w's, my work of yestermom. Golden Year 21
but I know my w's are wild, Locksley Hall 173
And order'd w's astmder fly. Day-Dm., Pro. 20
With w's of proniise in his walk, „ Arrival 23
Word (continued) The barons swore, with many w's, Day-Dm., Revival 23
In courteous w's return'd reply :
' Cruel, cruel the w's I said !
And whisper lovely w's, and use
Hours, when the Poet's w's and looks
For I am yours in w and in deed.
Down they dropt — no w was spoken —
She was more fair than w's can say :
But in my w's were seeds of fire.
Light on a broken w to thank him with,
for she did not speak a w.
Ev'n as she dwelt upon his latest w's,
Enoch spoke no w to any one,
for Enoch himg A moment on her w's,
Poor Philip, of all his lavish waste of w's
were w's, As meted by his measure of himself.
Never one kindly smile, one kindly w :
how the w's Have tmsted back upon themselves,
his one w was ' desolate ; '
but not a w ; she shook her head.
To spread the W by which himself had thriven.'
Of Heliconian honey in living w's,
' Doubt my w again ! ' he said.
At those high w's, we conscious of ourselves,
at these w's the snake. My secret,
(for still My mother went revolving on the w)
Then came these dreadful w's out one by one,
The truth at once, but with no w from me ;
She struck such warbling fury thro' the w's ;
(our royal w upon it, He comes back safe)
Arac's w is thrice As ours with Ida :
roll'd himself Thrice in the saddle, then burst out in w's.
And you shall have her answer by the w.'
and rolling w's Oration-like,
at the happy w ' he lives ' My father stoop 'd.
Say one soft w and let me part forgiven.'
Not one w ? not one ?
Not one w ; No ! tho' your father sues :
A w, but one, one little kindly w,
king her father charm'd Her wounded soul with w's :
Like perfect music unto noble w's ;
It seems you love to cheat yourself with w's :
The w's are mostly mine :
Who spoke few w's and pithy, such as closed Welcome,
To fling whate'er we felt, not fearing, into w's.
we will not spare the tyrant one hard w.
Taake my w for it, Sammy, N. Farmer, N. S. 48
To put in w's the grief I feel ; For xo's, like Nature, half
reveal In Mem. v 2
In w's, like weeds, I'll wrap me o'er, „ 9
What w's are these have f all'n from me ? „ xvi 1
The w's that are not heard a^gain. ,, xviii 20
That out of w's a comfort win ; „ xx 10
■ Where truth in closest w's shall fail, „ xxxvi 6
And so the W had breath, and wrought „ 9
And hence, indeed, she sports with w's, „ xlviii 9
My w's are only w's, and moved „ Hi 3
In those sad w's I took farewell : „ Iviii 1
The w's were hard to understand. „ Ixix 20
In fitting aptest w's to things, „ Ixxv 6
O true in w, and tried in deed, „ Ixxxv 5
Your w's have virtue such as draws „ 13
But in dear w's of hiunan speech „ 33
The wish too strong for w's to name ; „ xdii 14
strangely on the silence broke The silent-speaking w's, „ xeo 26
So w by w, and line by line, „ 33
Vague w's ! but ah, how hard to frame „ 45
And if the w's were sweet and strong „ cxxv 11
To change the bearing of a w, „ cxxviii 16
living w's of life Breathed in her ear. „ Con. 52
the wealth Of w's and wit, the double health, „ 103
faith in a tradesman's ware or his w ? Mand 7 i 26
Dare I bid her abide by her w ? „ xvi 25
Had given her w to a thing so low ? „ 27
Can break her w were it even for me ? „ 29
30
Edward Gray 17
WiU Water. 11
193
Lady Clare 74
The Captain 51
Beggar Maid 2
The Letters 28
Enoch Arden 347
390
454
667
873
The Brook 191
Aylmer's Field 315
564
754
836
Sea Dreams 116
197
Lv,cretius 224
Princess, Pro. 176
ii 67
„ Hi 43
54
57
61
iv 586
V 224
226
275
327
372
vi 128
219
231
239
258
346
vii 286
334
„ Con. 3
94
Third of Feb. 6
42
Word
812
Wordless
Word {continued) For she, sweet soul, had hardly spoken
a w, Maud II i 11
' Man's w is God in man : Com. of Arthur 133
For bold in heart and act and w was he, „ 176
And simple w's of great authority, ,, 261
With large, divine, and comfortable w's, „ 268
spake sweet w's, and comforted my heart, „ 349
Lash'd at the wizard as he spake the w, „ 388
God hath told the King a secret w. „ 489
Repentant of the w she made him swear, Gareth and L. 527
Fair w's were best for him who fights for thee ; „ 946
And seeing now thy w's are fair, „ 1181
Instant were his w's. „ 1353
and then paused, and spake no w. „ 1385
he spake no w ; Which set the horror higher : „ 1393
He heard but fragments of her later w's, Marr. of Geraint 113
refrain'd From ev'n a w, and so returning said : „ 214
But none spake w except the hoary Earl : „ 369
Nor did she lift an eye nor speak a w, „ 528
In w's whose echo lasts, they were so sweet, „ 782
that at a w (No reason given her) „ 806
not to speak to me. No, not aw!' Geraint and E. 18
And loosed in w's of sudden fire the wrath „ 106
took the w and play'd upon it, „ 291
speak the w : my followers ring him round : „ 336
speak but the w : Or speak it not ; „ 342
Low-spoken, and of so few w's, „ 395
Because she kept the letter of his w, „ 455
answering not one w, she led the way. „ 495
Prince, without a w, from his horse fell. „ 508
none spake w, but all sat down at once, „ 604
And Enid could not say one tender w, „ 746
Tho' pale, yet happy, ask'd her not a w, ,, 880
Man's w is God in man.' Balin and Balan 8
And spake no w imtil the shadow tum'd ; „ 45
transitory w Make knight or churl or child „ 161
lad, whose lightest w Is mere white truth „ 517
Sir Balin spake not w. But snatch'd „ 553
■eat her up in that wild wood Without one w. Merlin and V. 261
knew no more, nor gave me one poor w ; „ 277
Then answer'd Merlin careless of her w's : „ 700
He rose without a w and parted from her : „ 742
But have ye no one w of loyal praise For Arthur, „ 778
Her w's had issue other than she will'd. „ 806
He spoke in w's part heard, in whispers part, „ 839
Kill'd with a w worse than a life of blows ! „ 870
half her realm, had never spoken w. Lancelot and E. 72
He never spake w of reproach to me, „ 124
therefore hear my w's : go to the jousts : „ 136
Before a King who honours his own w, „ 143
Nor often loyal to his w, and now Wroth „ 559
without a w, Linger'd that other, „ 720
Her father's latest w humm'd in her ear, „ 780
And I must die for want of one bold w.' „ 927
As when we dwell upon a w we know. Repeating,
till the w we know so well Becomes a wonder, „ 1027
as she devised A letter, w for w ; „ 1104
these are w's : Your beauty is your beauty, „ 1185
0 grant my worship of it W's, „ 1188
Such sin in w's. Perchance, we both can pardon : „ 1188
Then every evil w I had spoken once. Holy Grail 371
1 remember'd Arthur's warning w, „ 598
Told him he follow'd — almost Arthur's w's — „ 669
since the living w's Of so great men „ 712
I need not tell thee foolish w's, — „ 855
and the great King, Lighted on w's : Pelleas and E. 253
For so the w's were flash'd into his heart „ 503
And Percivale made answer not a w. „ 534
The w's of Arthur flying shriek'd, arose. Last Tournament 139
Not speaking other w than ' Hast thou won ? •„ 191
Tristram, spake not any w. But bode his hour, „ 385
Arthur deign'd not use of w or sword, „ 458
fault and doubt — no w of that fond tale — „ 578
But let my w's, the w's of one so small, Guinevere 185
To honour his own w as if his God's, „ 473
Word (continued) teach high thought, and amiable w's Guinevere 481
Watch what thou seest, and lightly bring
me w.' Pass, of Arthur 206
Watch what I see, and lightly bring thee w,' „ 212
I bad thee, watch, and lightly bring me w.' „ 249
would have spoken, but he found not w's ; „ 340
Be cabin'd up in w's and syllables. Lover's Tale i 480
her w's stole with most prevailing sweetness „ 553
Her w's did of their meaning borrow sound. Her
cheek did catch the colour of her w's. „ 568
While her w's, syllable by syllable, „ 675
for henceforth what use were w's to me ! „ 609
deals comfortable w's To hearts wounded „ 717
To all their queries answer'd not a w, „ iv 333
Not to break in on what I say by w Or whisper, „ 352
you never have spoken a w. Rizvah 14
As yet I had not boimd myself by w's. Sister's (E. and E.) 137
The golden gates would open at a w. „ 145
Not by the sounded letter of the w, „ 162
Cold w's from one I had hoped to warm so far „ 194
when we parted, Edith spoke no w, „ 215
Had he God's w in Welsh He might be kindlier : Sir J. Oldcastle 22
for in thee the w was bom again. „ 27
Heaven-sweet Evangel, ever-living w, „ 28
and that was clean Against God's w : Columbus 55
You will not. One last w. „ 221
with human voices and w's ; V. of Maeldune 28
Remember the w's of the Lord „ 120
The Achaeans — honouring his wise mother's w — Achilles over the T. 16
To cast wise w's among the multitude Tiresias 66
— the wise man's w. Here trampled by the populace „ 173
. The w of the Poet by whom the deeps The Wreck 23
language beneath and beyond the w ! „ 24
A madman to vex you with wretched w's. Despair 108
The reels not in the storm of warring w's. Ancient Sage 70
My w's are like the babblings in a dream ,, 106
But louder than thy rhyme the silent W „ 212
revolving in myself The w that is the symbol „ 231
unshadowable in w's. Themselves but shadows „ 238
but w's are only w's ! The Flight 59
We never changed a bitter w, „ 86
heart batin' to music wid ivery w ! Tomorrow 34
I couldn't a' stuck by my w. Spinster's S's. 96
when they 'evn't a w to saay. „ 102
lines I read Nor utter'd w of blame. Pro. to Gen. Hamley 18
were the w's Mutter'd in our dismay ; Heavy Brigade 46
Muses often flowering in a lonely w ; To Virgil 12
till his W Had won him a noble name. Dead Prophet 35
Ring little bells of change From w to w. Early Spring 42
And sacred is the latest w ; To Marq. of Dufferin 37
them w's be i' Scriptur — Owd Roa 15
his The w's, and mine the setting. ' Air and W's,'
Said Hubert, The Ring 24
you — you loved me, kept your w. „ 290
those three sweet Italian w's, became a weariness. „ 407
Blister'd every w with tears. Forlorn 81
Foul ! foul ! the w was yours not mine, Happy 41
parted for the Holy War without a w to me, „ 77
Be needle to the magnet of your w. To Mary Boyle 7
hear their w's On pathway'd plains ; Prog, of Spring 82
Why should I so disrelish that short w ? Romney's R. 11
Vexing you with w's ! W's only, „ 29
—w's. Wild babble. „ 31
for my sake. According to my w?' „ 130
those three w's would haunt him when a boy, Far — far — away 8
What charm in w's, a charm no w's could give ? „ 16
O dying w's, can Music make you live „ 17
Two w's, ' My rose ' set all your face aglow, Roses on the T. 3
A man who never changed a w with men, St. Telemachus 10
his dying w's. Which would not die, „ 75
Worded See Iron-worded
Wordily As here to-day, but not so w — Lover's Tale iv 355
Wordless And Lancelot marvell'd at the w man ; Lancelot and E. 172
Suddenly speaking of the w man, „ 271
The little senseless, worthless, w babe. The Ring 304
Wordless
813
Work
Wordless (continued) And w broodings on the wasted
cheek — Princess vii 112
Wordy but when the w storm Had ended, Sea Breams 31
And keen thro' w snares to track Suggestion In Mem. xcv 31
And w trucklings to the transient hour, To the Queen ii 51
Wore (See also Ware, Wear'd) For many weeks about
my loins I w St. S. Stylites 63
That she w when she was wed.' L. of Burleigh 96
A gown of grsiss-green silk she w, Sir L. and Q. G. 24
She w the colours I approved. The Letters 16
crime Of sense avenged by sense that w with time.' Vision of Sin 214
another w A close-set robe of jasmine Aylmer's Field 157
And still I w her picture by my heart, Princess i 38
I to a lilac gown ; Grandmother 57
it grew so tall It w a crown of light, The Flower 10
Never morning w To evening. In Mem. vi 7
I w them like a civic crown : „ Ixix 8
In which of old I w the gown ; „ Ixxxvii 2
since he neither w on helm or shield Com. of Arthur 49
three gay suits of armour which they w, Geraint and E. 95
his the prize, who w the sleeve Of scarlet, Lancelot and E. 501
He w, against his wont, upon his helm „ 603
he w your sleeve : Would he break faith „ 684
but I lighted on the maid Whose sleeve he w ; „ 711
With knees of adoration w the stone, Holy Grail 71
all she w Tom as a sail that leaves the rope „ 211
And beauty such as never woman w, Guinevere 549
She deem'd I w a brother's mind : Lover's Tale i 741
he learnt that I hated the ring I w, The Wreck 57
w it till her death, Shrined him within the temple The Bing 218
Muriel clench'd The hand that w it, „ 262
That ever w a Christian marriage-ring. Eomney's R. 36
Work (s) (See also Branch - work. Chequer - work,
Damask-work, Frame-work, Handmaid-work,
Jacinth-work, Mat-work, Trellis-work, Works and
Days) At his w you may hear him sob and sigh A spirit haunts 5
Now is done thy long day's w ; A Dirge 1
Grave mother of majestic w's, Of old sat Freedom 13
Thy w is thine — The single note England and Amer. 18
we loved the man, and prized his lo ; M. d' Arthur, Ep. 8
'Tis not your w, but Love's. Gardener's D. 24
• and he left his men at w, And came and said : Bora 86
Till that wild wind made w Talking Oak 54
To that man My w shall answer. Love and Buty 29
These measured words, my w of yestermorn. Golden Year 21
He works his w, I mine. Ulysses 43
Some w of noble note, may yet be done, „ 52
A vii^in heart in w and will. Sir Galahad 24
' Thou shalt not be saved by w's : Vision of Sin 91
Nor of what race, the w ; Aylmer's Field 224
Small were his gains, and hard his w ; Sea Breams 8
the woman honest W ; „ 137
Which things appear the w of mighty Gods. Lucretius 102
and if I go my w is left Unfinish'd — if I go. „ 103
when we set our hand To this great w, Princess ii 60
Your own w marr'd : „ 230
and silver litanies. The w of Ida, „ 478
how vast a w To assail this gray preeminence „ Hi 233
That we might see our own w out, „ 270
as the workman and his w. That practice betters ? ' „ 298
Which touches on the workman and his w. „ 322
and known at last (my w) „ iv 347
imderstanding all the foolish w Of Fancy, „ vi 116
The treble w's, the vast designs Ode on Well. 104
Whose life was w, whose language rife „ 183
Such was he : his w is done. „ 218
There must be other nobler w to do „ 256
The w's of peace with w's of war. Ode Inter. Exhib. 28
Fur w mun 'a gone to the gittin' N. Farmer, N. S. 50
bum the palaces, break the w's of the statuary, Boddicea 64
Man, her last w, who seem'd so fair, In Mem. hi 9
I shall pass ; my w will fail. „ Ivii 8
my passion hath not swerved To w's of weakness, „ Ixxxv 50
Let her w prevail. •> cxiv 4
O days and hours, your w is this „ cxvii 1
Work (s) (continued) Contemplate all this w of Time, In Mem. cxviii 1
If so he type this w of time Within himself, „ 16
By thee the world's great w is heard Beginning, „ cxxi 10
the w's of the men of mind, Maud / i 25
Awe-stricken breaths at a w divine, „ x 17
Frail, but a w divine, „ // H 4
Small, but a w divine, „ 23
There is none that does his w, not one ; „ v26
cannot will my will, nor work my w Wholly, Com. of Arthur 88
Man am I grown, a man's w must I do. Gareth and L. 116
rich in emblem and the w Of ancient kings „ 304
Thralls to your w again, „ 710
with back tum'd, and bow'd above his w, Marr. of Geraint 267
And there is scantly time for half the iv. ,, 288
He spoke and fell to w again. „ 292
the w To both appear'd so costly, „ 637
This w of his is great and wonderful. Geraint and E. 898
This w of Edyrn wrought upon himself „ 912
felt His w was neither great nor wonderful, „ 921
Yet needs must work my w. Merlin and V. 505
They prove to him his w : Lancelot and E. 158
Yet with all ease, so tender was the w : „ 442
Her own poor w, her empty labour, left. „ 991
Before his w be done ; Holy Grail 909
I will be leal to thee and work thy w, Pelleas and E. 343
This evil w of Lancelot and the Queen ? Guinevere 307
and with my w thus Crown'd her clear forehead. Lover's Tale i 344
But w was scant in the Isle, First Quarrel 43
to see if w could be found ; „ 44
* I ha' six weeks' w, little wife, „ 45
' You promised to find me w near you, „ 52
' I've gotten my w to do ; „ 85
I ha' six weeks' w in Jersey „ 88
couldn't do naw w an' all, North. Cobbler 77
where the w's of the Lord are reveal'd In the Child. Hasp. 35
Frail were the w's that defended the hold Def. of Lucknow 7
Beyond all w of those who carve the stone, Tiresias 53
beyond All w of man, yet, like all w of man. Ancient Sage 85
Undo their w again. And leave him, „ 112
aisier w av they lived be an Irish bog. Tomorrow 72
but 'a left me the w to do. Spinster's S's. 55
of the chasm between W and Ideal ? Eomney's B. 64
now thy long day's w hath ceased, Epit. on Stratford 2
W's of subtle brain and hand. Open I. and C. Exhib. 7
Whose Faith and W's were bells of full accord. In Mem., W. G. Ward 2
loosen, stone from stone. All my fair w ; Akbar's Bream 189
Work (literary production) Botanic Treatises, And W's
on Gardening Am/phion 78
My golden w in which I told a truth Lucretius 260
Work (verb) Then let wise Nature w her will. My life is fuU 21
Hath time and space to w and spread. You ask me, why, etc. 16
And w, a joint of state, that plies Its office, Love thou thy land 47
but w in hues to dim The Titianic Flora. Gardener's B. 170
And hired himself to w within the fields ; Bora 38
Mary, let me live and w with you : „ 115
w for William's child, until he grows Of age, „ 126
Can I w miracles and not be saved ? St. S. Stylites 150
I will w in prose and rhyme, Talking Oak 289
w itself Thro' madness, hated by the wise. Love and Buty 6
That unto him who w's, and feels he w's, Golden Year 73
He w's his work, I mine. Ulysses 43
For love in sequel w's with fate, Bay-Bm., Arrival 3
I must w thro' months of toil, Amphion 97
All parties w together. Will Water. 56
Who needs would w for Annie to the last, Enoch Arden 180
Scorning an alms, to w whereby to live. „ 812
but labour for himself, W without hope, „ 820
all things w together for the good Of those ' — Sea Breams 158
Embrace our aims : w out your freedom. Princess ii 89
nor would we w for fame ; „ Hi 261
But in the shadow will we w, „ 331
but w no more alone ! Our place is much : „ vii 266
Make and break, and w their will ; Ode on Well. 261
And all men w in noble brotherhood. Ode Inter. Exhib. 38
w's Without a conscience or an aim. In Mem. xxxiv 7
Work
814
World
Work (verb) (continued) To one that with us w's, and
trust, III Mem. cxxxi 8
spirit of murder w's in the very means of life, Maud / t 40
cannot will my will, nor w my work Wholly, Com. of Arthur 88
and we will w thy will Who love thee.' „ 259
but an he w. Like any pigeon will I cram Gareth and L. 458
Myself would w eye dim, and finger lame, Marr. of Geraint 628
ruth began to w Against his anger in him, Geraint and E. 101
Vivien ever sought to w the charm Merlin and V. 215
But w as vassal to the larger love, „ 491
You needs must w my work. „ 505
To all the foulness that they w. „ 785
Thanks, but you w against your own desire ; Lancelot and E. 1096
Or hers or mine, mine now to w my will — ,, 1231
to whom I vow'd That I would w Holy Grail 784
As let these caitiffs on thee w their will ? ' Pelleas and E. 323
I will be leal to thee and w thy work, „ 343
I, being simple, thought to w His will, Pass, of Arthur 22
And life and limbs, all his to w his will.' Lover's Tale iv 283
an' I w an' I wait to the end. First Quarrel 7
gave All but free leave for all to w the mines, Columbus 133
I am not yet too old to w his will — „ 161
hourly w their brother insect wrong, Locksley H., Sixty 202
To w old laws of Love to fresh results. Prog, of Spring 85
art thou the Prophet ? canst thou w Miracles ? ' Akbar's Dream 117
Meanwhile, my brothers, w, and wield Mechanophilus 29
Hold thine own, and w thy will ! Poets and Critics 13
Work'd-Workt But my full heart, that work'd below, Two Voices 44
And they say then that I work'd miracles, St. S. Stylites 80
thy strong Hours indignant work'd their wills, Tithonus 18
But oft he work'd among the rest and shook Enoch Arden 651
Rose from the clay it work'd in as she past, Aylmer's Field 170
seeing who had work'd Lustier than any, Gareth and L. 695
I ha' work'd for him fifteen years. First Quarrel 7
He workl me the daisy chain — „ 13
a girl, a hussy, that workl with him up at the farm, „ 24
but the creatures had worked their will. Rizpah 50
Because the simple mother loork'd upon By
Edith Sisters (E. and E.) 206
This power hath work'd no good to aught that lives, Tiresias 77
Worker (See also Fellow-worker, War-worker) Men, my
brothers, men the w's, Locksley Hall 117
Workiiig (See also Still-working) A labour w to an end. Two Voices 297
Life, that, w strongly, binds — Love thou thy land 34
Him, like the w bee in blossom-dust, Enoch Arden 366
' It came,' she said, ' by w in the mines : ' Sea Dreams 114
The jest and earnest w side by side. Princess iv 563
Or been in narrowest w shut. In Mem. xxxv 20
His being w in mine own, „ Ixxxv 43
Move upward, w out the beast, „ cxviii 27
A knight of Arthur, w out his will, Gareth and L. 24
(Sea was her wrath, yet w after storm) Lancelot and E. 1309
Queen, W a tapestry, lifted up her head. Last Tournament 129
Demos end in w its own doom. Locksley H., Sixty 114
Workman Which wrought us, as the w and his work, Princess Hi 298
Which touches on the w and his work. „ 322
Workmen up at the Hall ! — Maud I i 05
Workmanship I admire Joints of cunning w. Vision of Sin 186
' Look what a lovely piece of w ! ' Aylmer's Field 237
Works and Days more than he that sang the W a D, To Virgil 6
Workt See Work'd
Wo'ld (world) Tha mun tackle the sins o' the W, Church-warden, etc. 46
World (See also Dream-world, Half-world, New-world,
Old-world, Shadow-world, She-world, Sister-
world, Water -world, Wo'ld, Woman -world,
Wood-world) 'Tis the w's winter ; Nothing will Die 17
The w was never made ; „ 30
a w of peace And confidence, day after day ; Supp. Confessions 29
w hath not another (Tho' all her fairest forms Isabel 38
which possess'd The darkness of the w, Arabian Nights 72
the w Like one great garden show'd, The Poet 33
and with his word She shook the w. „ 56
All the w o'er, (repeat) Sea-Fairies 41
Roof'd the w with doubt and fear, Eleanore 99
Kate saith ' the w is void of might.' Kate 17
World (continued) All the inner, all the outer w of pain
Shadows of the w appear.
I said ' When first the w began.
Look up thro' night : the w is wide.
Is cancell'd in the w of sense ? '
to present The w with some development.
And full of dealings with the w?
There's somewhat in this w amiss
' wliile the w nms round and round,'
cycles of the human tale Of this wide w,
And let the w have peace or wars,
' No voice breaks thro' the stillness of this iv :
and all the w is still,
girdled with the gleaming w :
gently comes the w to those That are cast
harmonies of law The growing w assume,
general decay of faith Right thro' the w,
famous knights Whereof this w holds record
Or hath come, since the making of the w.
Which was an image of the mighty w ;
Lest one good custom should corrupt the w.
More things are wrought by prayer Than this w dreams of
Not wholly in the busy w, nor quite Beyond it, Gardeners D. 33
And Beauty such a mistress of the w. ,, 58
nor from her tendance tum'd Into the w without
to hold Fronj thence thro' all the w's :
That veil'd the w with jaundice,
That these two parties still divide the w—
As never sow was higher in this w —
we should mimic this raw fool the w,
for the good and increase of the w.' (repeat)
Among the powers and princes of this w,
O this w's curse, — beloved but hated —
If all the w were falcons, what of that ?
like the second w to us that live ;
arch wherethro' Gleams that imtravell'd w,
'Tis not too late to seek a newer w.
Here at the quiet limit of the w,
comes A glimpse of that dark w where I was born
// / were loved 5
L. of Slialott a 12
Two Voices 16
24
42
75
Miller's D. 8
19
Palace of Art 13
147
182
: „ 259
May Queen, N. Y's. E. 24
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 113
To J. S. 3
England and Amer. 17
The Epic 19
M. d' Arthur 16
208
235
242
248
145
210
Walk, to the Mail 20
77
96
106
Edwin Morris 51, 92
St. S. Stylites 187
Love and Duty 47
Golden Tear 38
56
Ulysses 20
„ 57
Tithonus 7
33
Saw the Vision of the w, (repeat) Locksley Hall 16, 120
the Federation of the w. „ 128
and the to is more and more. „ 142
Let the great w spin for ever „ 182
Like hints and echoes of the w Day -Dm., Sleep. P. 7
In that new w which is the old : „ Depart. 4
Thro' all the w she foUow'd him. „ 32
And learn the w, and sleep again ; „ L' Envoi 8
The prelude to some brighter w. „ 40
And all the w go by them. Will Water. 48
Ah yet, tho' all the w forsake, „ 49
We knew the merry w was round. The Voyage 7
We lov'd the glories of the w, „ 83
We know the merry w is round, „ 95
Ring'd with the azure w, he stands. The Eagle 3
And my mockeries of the w. Vision of Sin 202
he sings of what the w will be When the years Poet's Song 15
not to see the w — For pleasure ? — Enoch Arden 297
She slipt across the summer of the w, .. 531
She passing thro' the summer w again, „ 534
And glories of the broad belt of the w, „ 579
Roll'd a sea-haze and whelm'd the w in gray ; „ 672
And beating up thro' all the bitter w, „ 802
One whom the strong sons of the w despise ; The Brook 3
Too fresh and fair in our sad w's best bloom, ,, 218
With half-allowing smiles for all the w, Aylmer's Field 120
the w should ring of him To shame these „ 395
And fain had haled him out into the w, „ 467
Against the desolations of the w. „ 634
Eight that were left to make a purer w — „ 638
To blow these sacrifices thro' the w — ■ „ 758
Doubtless our narrow w must canvass it : „ 774
And left their memories a w's curse — „ 796
wife Sat shuddering at the ruin of a w ; Sea Dreams 30
' What a w,' I thought, ' To live in ! ' „ 94
think that in our often-ransack'd w „ 129
World
815
World
World (continued) The lucid interspace of w and w, Lucretius 105
I seem-'d to move among a w of ghosts, Princess i 17
One rose in all the w, your Highness that, ., ii 51
' This w was once a fluid haze of light, „ 116
Two in the tangled business of the w, „ 174
Poets, whose thoughts enrich the blood of the w.' „ 181
secular emancipation turns Of half this w, „ 290
A blessing on her labours for the w. „ 479
whence after-hands May move the w, „ Hi 264
weight of all the hopes of half the w, „ iv 184
women kick against their Lords Thro' all the w, „ 413
dam Ready to burst and flood the w with foam : „ 474
tho' all the gold That veins the w were pack'd „ 543
I seem'd to move among a w of ghosts ; „ 561
The wrath I nursed against the w : ,. v 437
Shall move the stony bases of the w. „ vi 58
when a w Of traitorous friend and broken system „ 194
and tarn by tarn Expunge the w: ., vii 41
So blacken'd all her w in secret, „ 42
I believed that in the living w My spirit closed „ 157
notice of a change in the dark w Was lispt „ 250
These were the rough ways of the w till now. „ 257
Nor lose the wrestling thews that throw the to ; „ 282
Then reign the w's great bridals, ,. 294
Immei-sed in rich foreshado wings of the w, ., 312
0 we will walk this w. Yoked in all exercise „ 360
and down rolls the w In mock heroics „ Con. 63
This fine old « of ours is but a child „ 77
Thro' all the silent spaces of the w's, „ 114
The greatest sailor since our w began. Ode on Well. 86
And drill the raw w for the march of mind, „ 168
Thro' either babbling w of high and low ; „ 182
Tho' w on w in myriad myriads roll Round us, „ 262
hold against the w this honour of the land. Third of Feb. 48
All the w wonder'd : (repeat) Light Brigade 31, 52
diviner air Breathe thro' the w and change W. to Marie Alex. 44
And howsoever this wild w may roll, „ 48
it cost me a w of woe, Grandmother 23
For him nor moves thel oud w's random mock, Will 4
Dark is the w to thee : High. Pantheism 7
As one who feels the immeasurable w, A Dedication 7
wet west wind and the w will go on. (repeat) Window, No Answer 6, 12
wet west wmd and the w may go on. ., 18
Over the w to the end of it „ Marr. Mom. 23
Help thy vain w's to bear thy light. In Mem., Pro. 32
The sunbeam strikes along the w: „ xv%
Science reaches forth her arms To feel from w to w, „ xxi 19
Thou fail not in a w of sin, „ xxxiii 15
The total w since life began ; „ xliii 12
Upon the great w's altar-stairs „ Iv 15
breathes a novel w, the while His other passion „ Ixii 9
The centre of a w's desire ; „ Ixiv 16
So many w's, so much to do, „ Ixxiii 1
The w which credits what is done Is cold to all „ Ixxv 15
In whispers of the beauteous w. „ Ixxix 12
The deep pulsations of the w, „ xcv 40
Of rising w's by yonder wood. „ cv 25
1 would the great w grew like thee, „ cxiv 25
In that which made the w so fair. „ cxvi 8
the w's great work is heard Beginning, „ cxxi 10
I foimd Him not in w or sun, „ cxxiv 5
And whispers to the w's of space, „ cxxvi 11
And mingle all the w with thee. „ cxxix 12
and let the w have its way : Mavd I iv 21
wood where I sit is a w of plunder and prey. „ 24
Who knows the ways of the w, „ 44
the suns are many, the w is wide. „ 45
I have not made the w, „ 48
From the long-neck'd geese of the w „ 52
If I find the w so bitter „ w 33
Then the w were not so bitter (repeat) „ 38, 94
a w in which I have hardly mixt, „ ...'^^
More life to Love than is or ever was In our low w, „ xviii 48
A w of trouble within ! ,. xix 25
makes us loud in the w of the dead ; „ II v 25
World (continued) a w that loves him not, For it is but a
w of the dead. Maud II v 39
She comes from another stiller w of the dead, „ 70
Fairer than aught in the w beside, ,, 73
spoke of a hope for the w in the coming wars — ,, III vi 11
in a weary w my one thing bright ; „ 17
His loss drew like eclipse, Darkening the w. Bed. of Idylls 15
I seem as nothing in the mighty w, Cotn. of Arthur 87
And power on this dead w to make it live.' „ 94
the w Was all so clear about him, ,, 97
the Powers who walk the w Made lightnings „ 107
deems himself alone And all the w asleep, „ 119
whatsoever storms May shake the w, „ 293
Graven in the oldest tongue of all tlus w, „ 302
To guard thee on the rough ways of the w.' „ 336
And hated this fair w and all therein, „ 344
live and love, and make the w Other, ,, 472
' Blow trumpet, for the w is white with May ; „ 482
Blow thro' the living w — „ 484
The slowly-fading mistress of the w, ., 505
working out his will. To cleanse the w. Gareth and L. 26
or half the w Had ventured — „ 64
that skill'd spear, the wonder of the w — „ 1223
if the w were one Of utter peace, and love, ., 1288
And stay the w from Lady Lyonors. „ 1412
The w's loud whisper breaking into storm, Marr. of Geraint 27
At caitiffs and at wrongers of the w. „ 96
At last they issued from the w of wood, ,, 238
cackle of your bourg The murmur of the w ! „ 277
the great wave that echoes round the w ; „ 420
Made a low splendour in the w, ., 598
thro' the feeble twilight of this w Groping, Geraint aiid E. 5
The being he loved best in all the w, „ 103
As the gray dawn stole o'er the dewy w, „ 385
Henceforth in all the w at anything, „ 649
The w will not believe a man repents : And this wise
w of ours is mainly right. „ 900
I have quite foregone All matters of this w : Balin and Balan 117
the Queen, and all the w Made music, „ 210
Old monk and nun, ye scorn the w's desire, „ 445
all at once they found the w. Staring wild-wide ; „ 595
as Arthur in the highest Leaven'd the w. Merlin and V. 141
Dear feet, that I have foUow'd thro' the w, „ 227
And sweep me from my hold upon the iv, „ 303
Who have to learn themselves and all the w, ,. 365
noble deeds, the flower of all the w. „ 413
I well believe that all about this w „ 541
surm'd The w to peace again : .. 639
The brute w howling forced them into bonds, ,. 744
And touching other w's. „ 838
the place which now Is this w's hugest, Lancelot and E. 76
flower of all the west and all the w, „ 249
Hid from the wide w's rtunour by the grove Of poplars „ 522
this and that other w Another w for the sick man ; ,. 873
To serve you, and to follow you thro' the w.' ,. 939
' Nay, the w, the w. All ear and eye, „ 940
' For Lancelot and the Queen and all the w, „ 1107
Then might she follow me thro' the w, ,, 1316
For never have I known the w without. Holy Grail 20
And heal the w of all their wickedness ! „ 94
and all the w be heal'd.' „ 128
Then flash'd a yellow gleam across the w, ,. 402
And seem'd to me the Lord of all the w, „ 414
Rejoice, small man, in this small w of mine, ,. 559
the sea rolls, and all the w is warm'd ? ' „ 672
' 0 happy w,' thought Pelleas, ' all, meseems, Pdleas arid E. 136
Than all the ranged reasons of the w. „ 156
That follows on the turning of the w, „ 549
brother, thou nor I have made the w ; Last Tournament 203
Would make the w as blank as Winter-tide. „ 221
seeing too much wit Makes the w rotten, „ 247
the w Is flesh and shadow — „ 315
Who fain had dipt free manhood from the w — „ 446
The wide w laughs at it. And worldling of the w
am I, and know The ptarmigan „ 695
World
816
Worm
World (continued) There hold thee with my life against
the w.' Guinevere 115
twain together well might change the w. ,, 301
The most disloyal friend in all the w.' „ 340
What knowest thou of the w, „ 343
To serve as model for the mighty w, ,, 465
in that w where all are pure We two may meet „ 563
Let the w be ; that is but of the w What else ? „ 629
What might I not have made of thy fair w, „ 655
As if some lesser god had made the w, Pass, of Arthur 14
Or else as if the w were wholly fair, „ 18
Hath folded in the passes of the w.' ,, 78
' Hearest thou this great voice that shakes the w, „ 139
famous knights Whereof this w holds record. „ 184
Or hath come, since the making of the w. „ 371
Which was an image of the mighty w, „ 403
More things are wrought by prayer Than this w
dreams of. „ 416
stillness of the dead w's winter dawn Amazed him, ,, 442
As from beyond the limit of the w, „ 458
goal of this great w Lies beyond sight : To the Queen ii 59
Like to a quiet mind in a loud w, Lover's Tale i 7
And, like all other friends i' the w, „ 108
And mellow'd echoes of the outer w — ,, 208
In giving so much beauty to the w, „ 212
Gray relics of the nurseries of the w, „ 290
She said, ' The evil flourish in the w.' „ 348
having always prosper'd in the w, „ 716
(Huge blocks, which some old trembling of the w „ ii 45
A flat malarian w of reed and rush ! „ iv 142
hungering for the gilt and jewell'd w About him, „ 313
I am all alone in the w
all the ships of the w could stare at him,
ever a battle like this in the w before ?
Over all this weary w of ours,
Over all this ruin'd w of ours.
One bright May morning in a w of song,
I think this gross hard-seeming w Is our mis-
shaping vision of the Powers Behind the w,
if the hope of the w were a lie ?
Must learn to use the tongues of all the w.
More worth than all the kingdoms of this w,
Who took the w so easily heretofore.
To course and range thro' all the w,
Grod pardon all — Me, them, and all the w —
And came upon the Mountain of the W,
Whatever wealth I brought from that new w
I who have deceived thee or the w ?
Flower into fortune — our w's way —
Which he unchain'd for all the w to come.'
his voice was low as from other w's.
Thro' all this changing w of changeless law,
From that great deep, before our w begins.
From that true w within the w we see. Whereof
our w is but the boimding shore — „ 30
For in the w, which is not ours, „ 35
pain Of this divisible-indivisible w „ 43
With power on thine own act and on the w. „ 56
Son, in the hidden w of sight, Tiresias 51
I am flung from the rushing tide of the vj The Wreck 6
word of the Poet by whom the deeps of the w are stirr'd, „ 23
By the low foot-lights of the w — „ 40
Over the range and change of the w „ 70
dark little w's running round them were w's of woe like
our own — Despair 18
Of a worm as it writhes in a w „ 31
Of a dying worm in a to, „ 32
Never a cry so desolate, not since the w began, „ 59
In a w of arrogant opulence, „ 78
thy to Might vanish like thy shadow in the dark. Ancient Sage 51
Nor canst thou prove the w thou movest in, „ 58
This double seeming of the single w ! — „ 105
the w is dark with griefs and graves, „ 171
splendours and the voices of the w ! „ 177
show us that the w is wholly fair. „ 182
First Quarrel 8
Rizpah 38
The Revenge 62
Sister's (E. and E.) 12
22
82
229
In the Child. Hasp. 24
Sir J. Oldcastle 34
77
89
120
169
Columbus 26
„ 101
„ 151
„ 167
,. 215
V. of Maeldune 117
Be Prof., Two G. 6
27
World (continued) I touch thy w again — No ill no good ! Ancient Sage 249
in the fatal sequence of this w An evil thought „ 274
know the love that makes the w a w to me ! The Flight 76
ray own true sister, come forth ! the w is wide. „ 96
they tell me that the w is hard, and harsh of mind, „ 101
stood up strait as the Queen of the w — Tomorrow 79
old-world dust before the newer w begin. Locksley H., Sixty 150
Earth at last a warless to, ,. 165
outworn earth be dead as yon dead w the moon ? „ 174
perhaps a w of never fading flowers. ,, 184
All the w is ghost to me, „ 253
In w's before the man Involving ours — Epilogue 25
like a flame From zone to zone of the w, Dead Prophet 35
This ever-changing w of circumstance, To Duke of Argyll 10
And warms the child's awakening w — To Prin. Beatrice 5
ask'd the waves that moan about the w Demeter and P. 64
from all the w the voices came ' We know not, „ 66
And saw the w fly by me like a dream, The Ring 180
From out the fleshless w of spirits, ,, 228
In all the w my dear one sees but you— „ 364
All the w will hear a voice Scream Forlorn 27
Wed to the melody, Sang thro' the w ; Merlin and the G. 98
And yet The w would lose, Romney's R. 68
in the loud w's bastard judgment-day, „ 119
Other songs for other w's ! Parnassus 19
His dream became a deed that woke the to, St. Telemachus 70
Thro' all the warring w of Hindustan Akbar's Dream 26
the living pulse of Alia beats Thro' all His w. ,. 42
gaze on this great miracle, the W, „ 122
For a woman ruin'd the w, Charity 3
see not her like anywhere in this pitiless w of ours ! „ 43
can escape From the lower to within him, Making of Man 2
And loves the w from end to end. The Wanderer 7
' The w and all within it (repeat) Voice spake, etc. 3, 9
Nor the myriad to. His shadow, God and the Univ. 6
Eternal Harmony Whereto the w's beat time, D. of the Duke of C. 16
World-compelling The w-c plan was thine, — Ode Inter. Exhib. 10
World-domain Whose will is lord thro' all his w-d — W. to Marie Alex. 2
World-earthquake In that w-e, Waterloo ! Ode on Well. 133
Worlded See Myriad-worlded
World-isle W-i's in lonely skies, Epilogue 55
Worldless From where his to heart had kept it warm, Aylmer's Field 471
Worldling the wind like a broken w wail'd, Maud I ill
And w of the world am I, Last Tournament 696
But your Judith — but your w — Locksley H., Sixty 20
She the w bom of w's — „ 25
Worldly And all his to worth for this. Sir L. and Q. G. 43
he vext her and perplext her With his w talk and folly : Maud I xx 7
Some rough old kmght who knew the w way, Pelleas and E. 192
to Priests Who fear the king's hard common-sense Sir J. Oldcastle 65
Like w beauties in the Cell, not shown The Ring 143
Worldly-wise to-to begetters, plagued themselves Aylmer's Field 482
World-old as they sat Beneath a to-o yew-tree, Holy Grail 13
World-prophet that w-p in the heart of man. Ancient Sage 213
World-self His whole W-s and all in all— De Prof., Two G. 49
World-to-be Who will embrace me in the w-t-b Enoch Arden 893
World-victor great W-v's victor will be seen no more. Ode on Well. 42
World-war W^w of dying flesh against the life. Merlin and V. 193
World-wealth venom of to-to Into the church. Sir J. Oldcastle 166
World-whisper vague to-to, mystic pain or joy, Far — far — away 7 i
World-wide to-to whisper of the south-wind rushing j
warm, Locksley Hall 125
w-to fluctuation sway'd In vassal tides In Mem. cxii 15
Mourn ! That a to-w Empire mourns with you, D. of the Duke of C. 5
World-worn the w-to Dante gra-sp'd his song, Palace of Art 135 j
Worm (See also Brother-worm, Glow-worm, Scorpion- I
worm. Slow-worm) fret Of that sharp-headed
to begins Supp. Confessions 186
Nothing but the small cold w A Dirge 9
every w beneath the moon Draws different threads, Two Voices 178
with a to I balk'd his fame. D. of F. Women 155
As ruthless as a baby with a to. Walk, to the Mail 108
Below were men and horses pierced with w's, Vision of Sin 209
Crown thyself, w, and worship thine own lusts ! — Aylmer's Field 650
And a to IS there in the lonely wood. The Islet 34
Worm
lonn (continued) for the life of the w and the fly ? Wages 7
No will push me down to the w, Window, No Answer 10
That not a w is cloven in vain ; In Mem. liv 9
Strike dead the whole weak race of venomous w's, Maud II i 46
many rings (For he had many, poor w) „ ii 69
Wroth to be wroth at such a w, Marr. of Geraint 213
as the w draws in the wither'd leaf Geraint and E. 633
And the high purpose broken by the w. Merlin and V. 196
'A w within the rose.' Pelleas and E. 399
, He dies who loves it, — if the w be there.' „ 409
And cast him as a w upon the way ; Guinevere 35
The guess of a tc in the dust Despair 30
Of a w as it writhes in a world ,., 31
Of a dying w in a world, „ 32
When the w shall have writhed its last, „ 85
' 0 w's and maggots of to-day Aneient Sage 210
a v> which writhes all day, and at night Stirs up Fastness 17
You that would not tread on a w Forlorn 45
flesh at last is filth on which the w will feast ; Hapvy 30
point and jeer, And gibber at the w, Bomney's R. 137
7onn-caiiker'd Distill'd from some w-c homily ; To J. M. K. 6
/orm-eaten So propt, w-e, ruinously old, Enoch Arden 693
(Tormwood banquet, where the meats became As u; Lancelot and E. 744
7ormwood-bitter were w-b to me. Balin and Balan 64
7om {See also Fever-worn, Storm-worn, Wave-worn, Way-
worn, Well-worn, World -worn) Weeded and tc the
ancient thatch
both Brake into hall together, w and pale,
where the tide Plash'd, sapping its w ribs ;
plaited ivy-tress had wound Round my w limbs,
And weird and w and wizard-like was he.
hearts w out by many wars And eyes grown
dim
took it, and have w it, like a king :
theme of writers, and indeed W threadbare.
Or while the patch was w ;
Till now the dark was w,
he died at Florence, quite w out,
Those winters of abeyance all w out,
Which he has w so pure of blame,
Till slowly w her earthly robe,
A censer, either w with wind and storm ;
W by the feet that now were silent.
It never yet was w, I trow :
I myself unwillingly have w My faded suit,
and the mask of pure W by this court.
King Had on his cuirass w our Lady's Head,
w Favour of any lady in the lists, (repeat)
When these have w their tokens :
Wasted and w, and but a tithe of them,
took it, and have w it, like a king ;
richly garb'd, but w From wasteful living,
Never w by a worthier,
had stolen, w the ring — Then torn it from her finger,
I have w them year by year —
Mariana 7
Pelleas and E. 587
Lover's Tale i 56
619
The Ring 196
Lotos-Eater's, C. S. 86
M. d' Arthur 33
Edwin Morris 49
Talking Oak 64
Love and Duty 71
The Brook 35
Princess iv 440
Ode on Well. 72
In Mem. Ixxxiv 33
Gareth and L. 222
Marr. of Geraint 321
683
705
Merlin and V. 36
Lancelot and E. 294
„ 363, 473
769
Holy Grail 723
Pass, of Arthur 201
Ancient Sage 4
On Jub. Q. Victoria 8
The Ring 455
Hajypy 102
Irocn-ont while the w-o clerk Brow-beats his desk
■ This w-o Reason dying in her house
Worried W his passive ear with petty wrongs
^orry (See also Tew, Tued) a dog am I, To w, and not
to flee — Gareth and L. 1015
^orse (See also Woorse, Wuss) Is boundless better,
boimdless w.
I fear to slide from bad to w.
And ever w with growing time,
There is confusion w than death,
laughingly Would hint at w in either.
if griefs Like his have w or better,_
the song Might have been w and sinn'd
some cold reverence w than were she dead.
Or pines in sad experience w than death.
Far w than any death to me.'
Hexameters no w than daring Germany gave us,
woidd make Confusion w than death,
better or to Than the heart of the citizen
fiend best knows whether woman or man be the w
To J. M. K. 11
Bomney's R. 145
Enoch Arden 352
Two Voices 27
231
Palace of Art 210
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 83
Enoch Arden 481
741
Princess iv 251
i)92
„ vii 315
Sailor Boy 24
Trans, of Homer 5
In Mem. xc 19
Maud I i 23
75
Worse (continued) Sick once, with a fear of w,
grew up to wolflike men, W than the wolves.
A w were better ; yet no w would I.
for w than being fool'd Of others,
Shall I not rather prove the w for these ?
Kill'd with a word w than a life of blows !
To make men w by making my sin known ?
That did not shim to smite me in w way,
and expectancy of w Upon the morrow.
The w for her, for me ! was I content ?
I am handled w than had I been a Moor,
which was crueller ? which was w ?
817 Worst
Maud I xix 73
Com. of Arthur 33
Gareth and L. 17
1274
Balin and Balan 228
Merlin and V. 870
Lancelot and E. 1417
Guinevere 435
Lover's Tale ii 151
Sisters (E. and E.) 126
Columbus 107
Locksley H., Sixty 88
War for War's own sake Is fool, or crazed, or w ; Epilogue 31
cuckoo of a w July Is calUng thro' the dark : Pref. Poem Broth. Son. 11
and paced his land In fear of w, To Mary Boyle 30
of the mind Mine ; w, cold, calculated. Bomney's B. 152
Worse-confounded Babel, woman-built, And w-c : Princess iv 488
Worship (s) (See also Sun-worship, Wife-worship) deck'd
her out For w without end ; „ vii 169
compass'd her with sweet observances And w, Marr. of Geraint 49
But this w of the Queen, Balin and Balan 179
' Old priest, who mimible w in your quire — „ 444
And I will pay you w ; Merlin and V. 228
To seat you sole upon my pedestal Of w— „ 879
now my loyal w is allow'd Of all men : Lancelot and E. 110
yet O grant my w of it Words, ., 1187
It will be to thy w, as my knight, „ 1327
Dame, damsel, each thro' w of their Queen Last Tournament 146
There crown'd with w — Tiresias 175
Of saner w sanely proud ; Freedom 30
that w which is Fear, Henceforth, Demeter and P. 143
harvest hymns of Earth The w which is Love, „ 149
in all Man-modes of w ; Akhar's Dream 47
Worship (verb) That here come those that w me ? St. S. Stylites 125
When you may w me without reproach ; „ 193
Crown thyself, worm, and w thine own lusts ! — Aylmer's Field 650
He w's your ideal : ' she replied : Princess ii 52
hive of Roman liars w an emperor-idiot. Boadicea 19
To wage my wars, and w me their King ; Com. of Arthur 508
' Fair damsel, you should w me the more, Gareth and L. 1022
Her likewise would I to an I might. Balin and Balan 185
The Queen we w, Lancelot, I, and all, „ 349
To w woman as true wife beyond Merlin and V. 23
And beasts themselves would to ; „ 575
For Lancelot's kith and kin so w him Holy Grail 651
' Fair damsels, each to him who w's each Last Tournament 207
And w her by years of noble deeds, Guinevere 476
There also will I w thee as King. Pass, of Arthur 149
I anger'd Arundel asking me To w Holy Cross ! Sir J. Oldcastle 136
She knelt — ' We w him ' — Dead Prophet 29
I w that right hand Which fell'd the foes Happy 41
both, to w Alia, but the prayers, Akbar's Dream 9
I let men w as they will, „ 66
a people have fashion'd and to a Spirit Kapiolani 1
WorshipfuUy Sir Lavaine did well and w ; Lancelot and E. 491
would I reward thee to. Gareth and L, 829
Worshipp'd-Worshipt And worshipt their own darkness in
the Highest ? Aylmer's Field 643
Sir Lancelot worshipt no unmarried girl Merlin and V. 12
and him his new-made knight Worshipt, Pelleas and E. 155
Thy name is ever worshipp'd among hours ! Lover's Tale i 493
Truth, for Truth is Truth, he worshipt, Locksley H., Sixty 59
once I worshipt all too well this creature Happy 45
Worshipper (See also Woman-worshipper) outlast thy Deity ?
Deity ? nay, thy w's. Lucretius 73
Worst (See also Earthly-worst, Woost) ' Never, dearest,
never : here I brave the w : ' Edwin Morris 118
And women's slander is the to. The Letters 34
His w he kept, his best he gave. You might have won 26
' His deeds yet live, the to is yet to come. Sea Dreams 314
of her court The vnliest and the w ; Guinevere 29
I hold that man the to of public foes „ 512
W of the to were that man he that reigns ! „ 523
An' she wasn't one o' the to.' First Quarrel 61
never put on the black cap except for the to of the w, Riepah 65
3 F
Worst
818
Wounded
Wtnt (continued) She sees the Best that glimmers thro'
the W, " Ancient Sage 72
Do your best to charm the w, Locksley H., Sixty 147
Earth would never touch her w, „ 270
The best in me that sees the w in me, Eomney's JR. 44
For with thy w self sacrifice thyself, Aylmer's Field 646
And wretched age — and w disease of all, Lucretius 155
put on thy w and meanest dress And ride with me.' Marr. ofGeraint 130
Put on your w and meanest dress,' „ 848
But women, to and best, as Heaven and Hell. Merlin and V. 815
Wortti (adj.) (See also Little-worth, Nothing-worth) Is
w a hundred coats-of-arms. L. C. V. de Vere 16
her least remark was w The experience of the wise. Edwin Morris 65
Is three times w them all ; Talking Oak 72
* No doubt that we might make it w his while. Princess i 184
we should find the land W seeing ; „ Hi 172
beauty in detail Made them w knowing ; „ iv 449
a good mother, a good wife, W wimiing ; „ v 167
is not Ida right? They wit? „ 189
Wamt w nowt a haiicre, iV. Farmer, 0. S. 39
hardly w my while to choose Of things all mortal. In Mem. xxxiv 10
Whose life, whose thoughts were little w, „ Ixxxv 30
A goodly youth and w a goodlier boon ! Gareth and L. 449
' It is not w the keeping : let it go : Merlin and V. 396
gross heart Would reckon w the taking ? „ 917
snare her royal fancy with a boon W half her realm, Lancelot and E. 72
mebbe w their weight i' gowd.' Village Wife 70
What life, so maim'd by night, were w Our living out ? Tiresias 208
Were never w the while' — Ancient Sage 128
thou'd not 'a been w thy milk. Spinster's S's. 54
fuller franchise — what would that be w — The Fleet 8
change of the tide — ^what is all of it w ? _ Vastness 30
Is it w his while to eat, ' Voice spake, etc. 7
Worth (s) // aught of ancient w be there; To the Queen 12
Old letters, breathing of her w, Mariana in the S. 62
To make him trust bis modest w, L. C. V. de Vere 46
his mute dust I honour and his living w. To J. S. 30
And draws the veil from hidden w. Day-Dm., Arrival 4
I grow in w, and wit, and sense, Will Water. 41
most, of sterling w, is what Oiu; own experience „ 175
couldst thou last. At half thy real w? „ 204
He loves me for my own true w. Lady Clare 11
' O Lady Clare, you shame your w ! „ 66
And all his worldly w for this. Sir L. and Q. G. 43
A song that pleased us from its w ; You might have won 22
they might be proud ; its w Was being Edith's. Ayhner's Field 378
two de^r things are one of double w. Princess ii 419
TiU all men grew to rate us at our w, „ iv 145
What seem'd my w since I began ; In Mem., Pro. 34
I know transplajited hiunan w „ Ixxxii 11
defying change To test his w ; „ xcv 28
the w of half a town, A warhorse of the best, Gareth and L. &11
I scarce have spent the w of one ! ' Geraint and E. 411
they had been thrice their w Being your gift, Lancelot and E. 1212
did he know her w. Her beauty even ? Lover's Tale iv 150
commission one of weight and w To judge Columbus 124
and was noble in birth as in w, V. of Maeldune 3
Worthier many a w than I, would noake him happy
yet. May Queen, Con. 46
I find him w to be loved. In Mem., Pro. 40
Modred for want of w was the judge. Gareth and L. 28
' Forbear : there is a w,' Marr. of Geraint 556
ten-times to to be thine Than twenty Balins, Balin and Balan 68
But thine are w, seeing they profess Last Tournament 82
Never worn by a w, On Jub. Q. Victoria 8
W sold was he than I am, sound and honest,
rustic Squire, Locksley H., Sixty 239
Worthiest and of those halves You w ; Princess iv 462
To follow up the w till he die : „ 466
Worthless The little senseless, w, wordless babe. The Ring 304
Worthy w of the golden prime (repeat) Arabian Nights 98, 142
W a Roman spouse.' I), of F. Women 164
Surely a precious thing, one w note, M. d' Arthur 89
it will be w of the two. Locksley Hall 92
Him too you loved, for he was w love. Aylmer's Field 712
Worthy (continued) ' w reasons why she should Bide by this
issue : Princess v 325
Call'd him w to be loved, „ vi 6
this is he JF of our gorgeous rites. And w to be laid
by thee ; Ode on Well. 93
' I am not w ev'n to speak In Mem. xxxvii 11
And thou art w ; full of power; „ Con. 37
We are not w to live, Maud II i 48
loved with that full love I feel for thee, nor w such a
love : Gareth and L. 84
And pardonable, w to be knight — „ 654
Strike, thou art w of the Table Round — „ 1138
' Thou art not w ev'n to speak of him ; ' Marr. ofGeraint 199
not w to be knight ; A churl, a clown ! ' Balin and Balan 285
I, feeling that you felt me w trust. Merlin and V. 334
the quest Assign'd to her not w of it, Lancelot and E. 825
Toward one more w of her — „ 1320
if what is w love Could bind him, „ 1378
' I am not w of the Quest ; ' Holy Grail 386
I had liefer ye were w of my love, Pelleas and E. 301
Surely a precious thing, one w note, Pass, of Arthur 257
that I know you w everyway To be my son, Sisters (E. and E.) 48
An old and w name ! „ 74
Would-be You w-b quenchers of the light to be, Princess iv 536
Would-be-widow While she vows ' till death shall
part us,' she the w-b-w wife. Locksley H., Sixty 24
Wound (s) then, because his w was deep, M. d' Arthur 5
I fear My w hath taken cold, „ 166
Where I will heal me of my grievous w.' „ 264
Like flies that haunt a w, or deer, or men, Ayhner's Field 571
My father stoop'd, re-father'd o'er my w's. Princess vi 129
Lifting his grim head from my w's. „ 272
To save her dear lord whole from any w. Geraint and E. 45
till she had lighted on his w, „ 513
' Sir King, mine ancient w is hardly whole, Lancelot and E. 93
and bare him in. There stanch'd his w ; „ 520
Lancelot who hath come Despite the w he spake of, „ 566
added w to w And ridd'n away to die ? ' „ 567
Had made the pretext of a hindering w, „ 582
tho' he call'd his w a little hurt „ 852
Then fared it with Sir Pelleas as with one Who gets
a w in battle, and the sword that made it plunges
thro' the w again, Pelleas and E. 529
Then, because his w was deep, Pass, of Arthur 174
I fear My w hath taken cold, „ 334
Where I will heal me of my grievous w.' „ 432
after healing of his grievous w He comes again ; „ 45ti
With a grisly w to be drest he had left the deck. The Revenge 6(i
told them of his wars, and of his w. Sisters (E. and E.) 6(1
Death to the dying, and w's to the wounded, Bef. of Lucknow 17
the w that would not be heal'd, „ 84
Wound (to wind) as the boat-head w along The willowy
hiUs L. of Shalott iv 2^1
Where Past and Present, w in one, Miller's D. 19'^
that my arms Were w about thee, CEnone 201 i
her hair W with white roses, slept St. Cecily ; Palace of Art 9! I
and turning, w Her looser hair in braid. Gardener's D. W:
w A scarf of orange round the stony helm. Princess, Pro. lOi
we w About the cliffs, the copses, out and in, „ Hi 35;'
Thro' open field into the lists they w Timorously ; „ vii
And mine in this was w. In Mem. xcv 3 1
w Bare to the sun, and monstrous ivy-stems Marr. of Geraint 32 '
Thro' the rocks we xo : Lover's Tale i 32
plaited ivy-tress had w Round my worn limbs, „ 61
I w my arms About her : „ « 20
Wound (to wound) creaking cords which w and eat Supp. Confessions 3'
Tho' men may w him that he will not die, Com. of Arthur 42
Wounded (adj. and part.) (See also Arrow-wounded,
Deeply-wounded) Till himself was deadly w The Captain i
With w peace which each had prick'd to death. Aylmer's Field 6
Is w to the death that cannot die ; „ &t
And see my dear lord w in the strife, Marr. of Geraint V.'
For those that might be w ; Geraint and E. 5(> !
And were himself nigh w to the death.' „ 91
man in life Was w by blind tongues he saw not Balin and Balan^ j
I
Wounded
819
Wreath
Woonded (adj. and part.) {continued) Hath gone sore
w, and hath left his prize Lancelot and E. 530
W and wearied needs must he be near. „ 538
So that he went sore w from the field : „ 600
deals comfortable words To hearts w for ever ; Lover's Tale i 718
he was w again in the side and the head, The Revenge 68
I have only w his pride — The Wreck 14
A little thing may harm a w man. .1/. d' Arthur 42
So strode he back slow to the w King. „ 65
And so strode back slow to the w King. „ 112
like a w life Crept down into the hollows of the wood ; Enoch Arden 75
when like a w life He crept into the shadow : „ 386
Nor her that o'er her w hunter wept Lucretius 89
lordly creature floated on To where her w brethren lay ; Princess vi 90
king her father charm'd Her w soul with words : „ 346
shining in upon the w man With blush and smile, „ vii 61
A w thing with a rancorous cry, Maud I x M
Kay near him groaning like a w bidl — Gareth and L. 648
A little thing may harm a w man ; Pass, of Arthur 210
So strode he back slow to the w King. „ 233
And so strode back slow to the w King. „ 280
Fought in her father's battles ? w there ? Last Tournament 592
The w warrior climbs from Troy to thee. Death of CEnone 39
Wounded (s) Death to the dying, and wounds to the u\ Def. of Lucknow 17
and we sail'd with our w away. V. of Maeldune 36
Wounded (verb) brought Her own claw back, and w her
own heart. Merlin and V. 500
Wounding The w cords that bind and strain Clear-headed friend A:
iVove Who w coarse webs to snare her purity, Aylmcr's Field 780
beneath her marriage ring, W and unwove it, Geraint and E. 260
w with silver thread And crimson in the belt Holy Grail 153
So I w Ev'n the dull-blooded poppy-stem. Lover's Tale i 351
^ov'n honeysuckle round the porch has w its wavy bowers, May Queen 29
music winding trembled, W in circles: Vision of Sin 18
A web is w across the sky ; In Mem. Hi 6
The kiss. The w arms, seem but to be W^eak symbols Miller's D. 232
Up-clomb the shadowy pine above the w copse. Lotos-Eaters 18
Thro' many a w acanthus- wreath divine ! „ C. S. 97
With w paces and with waving anns. Merlin and V. 207
Of w paces and of waving hands, (repeat) „ 330, 968
cobweb w across the cannon's throat Maud III vi 27
Burst from the garland I had w. Lover's Tale i 366
Vowd (wold) tha'll light of a livin' somewheers i'
the W or the Fen, Church-warden, etc. 47
Vrack lest the realm should go to w. Com. of Arthur 208
So that the realm has gone to w : „ 227
laith 0 hollow w of dying fame, In Mem. Ixxiii 13
The ghastly W of one that I know ; Maud II i 32
And w's of the mountain. Merlin and the G. 43
Rose, like the w of his dead self, Death of CEnone 28
Vrangle three gray linnets w for the seed : Guinevere 255
Vrangled And still they strove and w : Sea Dreams 229
and jangled and w in vain, V. of Maeldune 109
Vranglest Wooest not, nor vainly w ; Madeline 38
Vrangling And haunted by the w daw ; In Mem. c 12
Vrap When a blanket w's the day. Vision of Sin 80
In words, like weeds, I'll w me o'er, In Mem. v 9
Love w's his wings on either side the heart, Lover's Tale i 467
Now w's her close, now arching leaves her bare Prog, of Spring 12
Vntpp'd-Wrapt (See also Happt) Wrapt in dense cloud
from base to cope. Two Voices 186
' These things are wiapt in doubt and dread, ,. 266
I wrapt his body in the sheet. The Sisters 34
Pitifiil sight, wrapp'd in a soldier's cloak, Princess v 56
The roots are lorapt about the bones. In Mem. ii 4
And wrapt thee formless in the fold, „ xxii 15
Wrapt in a cloak, as I saw him, Maud I i 59
Wrapt in drifts of lurid smoke „ // iv 66
' Not naked, only wrapt in harden'd skins Gareth and L. 1093
Then brought a mantle down and wrapt her in it, Marr. of Geraint 824
wra/pt In imremorsefiol folds of rolling fire. Holy Grail 260
Wrapt in her grief, for housel or for shrift, Guinevere 149
■/rapping w her all over with the cloak He came in, Lover's Tale iv 86
/rapt -S'ee Wrapp'd
7rath No sword Of w her right arm whirl'd, The Poet 54
Wrath {continued) To whom replied King Arthur, much
in w: M. d' Arthur 118
Secret w like smother'd fuel The Captain 15
Shame and w his heart confounded, „ 61
And then we met in w and wrong. The Letters 11
eyes All flooded with the helpless w of tears, Enoch Arden 32
How sweetly would she glide between your w's, Aylmer's Field 706
A rushing tempest of the w of God „ 757
' Let not the sun go down upon your w,' Sea Dreams 44
Except his w were wreak'd on wretched man, Lucretius 128
troubled like a rising moon. Inflamed with w : Princess i 60
then he chew'd The thrice-turn'd cud of w, „ 66
And heated thro' and thro' with w and love, „ iv 163
The w I nursed against the world : „ v 437
The w that gamers in my heart ; In Mem. Ixxxii 14
And like a man in w the heart „ cxxiv 15
God's just w shall be wreak'd on a giant liar ; Maud III vi 45
Then Uther in his w and heat besieged Com. of Arthur 198
so those great lords Drew back in w, „ 514
on the damsel's forehead shame, pride, w Slew the
May- white: Gareth and L. 656
by this entry fled The damsel in her w, „ 675
loosed in words of sudden fire the w Geraint and E. 106
Another, flying from the w of Doorm „ 530
thy just w Sent me a three-years' exile Balin and Balan 58
after some quick burst of sudden w, „ 216
My father hath begotten me in his w. „ 283
And Vivien answer'd smiling as in w : Merlin and V. 526
And Vivien answer'd frowning yet in w : „ 768
So all in w he got to horse and went ; Lancelot and E. 563
(Sea was her w, yet working after storm) „ 1309
this persistence turn'd her scorn to w. Pelleas and E. 218
Thereon her w became a hate ; „ 224
' I am w and shame and hate and evil fame, „ 568
Until he groan'd for w — Last Tournament 183
The w which forced my thoughts on that fierce law, Guinevere 537
To whom replied King Arthur, much in w : Pass, of Arthur 286
When he rose in his w. Dead Pro'phet 63
She in w Return'd it on her birthday. The Ring 211
Wrathful but w, petulant. Dreaming some rival, Lucretius 14
While Enoch was abroad on w seas, Enoch Arden 91
cheek and blossom brake the w bloom Princess iv 383
I thought on all the w king had said, „ v 473
Now set a w Dian's moon on flame, „ vi 368
He made a w answer : ' Did I wish Your warning Geraint and E. 76
To which he flung a w answer back : „ 146
he but gave a w groan, Saying, „ 398
That makes me passing w ; Merlin and V. 341
' Nay, Master, be not w with your maid ; „ 380
Strong men, and w that a stranger knight Lancelot and E. 468
a sudden flush of w heat Fired all the pale face Guinevere 356
w thunder of God peal'd over us all the day, V. of Maeldune 113
The w sunset glared against a cross St. Telemachus 5
Wreak I remain on whom to w your rage. Princess iv 350
I w The wrath that gamers In Mem. Ixxxii 13
Kill the foul thief, and w me for my son.' Gareth and L. 363
Wreak'd Except his wrath were w on wretched man, Lucretius 128
God's just wrath shall be w on a giant liar ; Maud III vi 45
these caitiff rogues Had w themselves on me ; Gareth and L. 820
thou hast w his justice on his foes, „ 1268
Wreath {See also Acanthus-wreath, Ivy-wreath) thro' the w's
of floating dark upcurl'd. The Poet 35
Lit light in w's and anadems, Palace of Art 186
made a little w of all the flowers Dora 82
The w of flowers fell At Dora's feet. „ 102
In w about her hair. Talking Oak 288
and rent The woodbine w's that bind her, Amphion 34
In her right a civic w. Vision of Sin 137
lapt in w's of glowworm light The mellow breaker Princess iv 435
' for this wild w of air. This flake of rainbow „ v 318
thousand w's of dangling water-smoke, „ vii 213
any w that man can weave him. Ode on Well. 277
But when the w of March has blossom'd, ToF. D. Maurice 43
Make one w more for Use and Wont, In Mem. xxix 11
The head hath miss'd an earthly w : „ Ixxiii 6
t i
Wreath
Wreath {continued) thine The w of beauty, thine the
crown of power,
A w of airy dancers hand-in-hand
—its w's of dripping green—
Darkening the w's of all that would advance,
This w, above his honour'd head,
I caught the w that was flung.
Or Love with w's of flowers.
And you, that wear a w of sweeter bay,
Wreath'd (See also New-wreathed) Love's arms were
w about the neck of Hope,
Beneath the bower of w eglantines :
W round the bier with garlands :
the belted hunter blew His w bugle-hom.
around his head The glorious goddess w a golden
cloud.
Wreathe Now w thy cap with doleful crape.
The fancy's tenderest eddy w,
To w a crown not only for the king
Wreathen {See also Mist^wreathen) the sculptured
ornament That w round it _
Wreck (s) Hurt in that night of sudden ruin and w,
sure no gladlier does the stranded w
his voyage, His w, his lonely life,
battle, bold adventure, dungeon, w, ^
the father suddenly cried, ' A w, a w !
Kotting on some wild shore with ribs of w,
My father raves of death and w,
Tho' his vessel was all but a w ;
pranced on the w's in the sand below,
My brain is full of the crash of lo's,
My life itself is a w,
the one man left on the w —
they had saved many hundreds from w —
about the shuddering w the death-white sea
children in a sunbeam sitting on the ribs of w.
I was left within the shadow sitting on the w alone,
and sinking with the sinking w,
Like some old w on some indrawing sea,
bodies and souls go down in a common w.
Wreck (verb) sought'st to w my mortal ark,
May w itself without the pilot's guilt,
my craven seeks To w thee villainously :
love is wreck'd — if Love can w —
passive sailor w's at last In ever-silent seas ;
Wreck'd W' on a reef of visionary gold.'
when their love is w — if Love can wreck —
we are all of us w at last —
jy — your train — or all but w ?
Saved when your life was w !
Wren ' Shall eagles not be eagles? w s be w sj
And you my w with a crown of gold, \ou iny
queen of the w's ! You the queen of the w s—
I'll be the King of the Queen of the w's.
The fire-crown'd king of the w's,
flit like the king of the w's with a crown of hre.
Tits, w's, and all wing'd nothings ,
Wrench'd (^e« aZso Half-wrench'd) Who w their
rights from thee !
and w with pains Gain'd in the service
dearer ghost had— Father. — w it away.
Wrenching W it backward into his ;
Wrestle strive and w with thee till I die :
Had ever seem'd to w with burlesque.
Wrestled W with wandering Israel,
Wrestling Nor lose the w thews that throw the world ;
Wretch Poor w — no friend ! —
W you must abide it . . .
then he vawn'd, for the w could sleep, —
Wretched Except his wrath were wreak'd on w man.
And w age — and worst disease of all,
' W boy, How saw you not the inscription on the gate,
On a horror of shatter'd limbs and a w swindler s lie?
A w vote may be gain'd.
At war with myself and a w race,
820
Wrong
1
Merlin and V. 79
Guinevere 261
Lover's Tale i 39
To Victor Hugo 5
Tiresias 213
The Wreck 40
Epilogue 17
Poets and their B. 7
Lover's Tale i 815
"43
79
Palace of Art 64
Achilles over the T. 5
My life is full 14:
In Mem. xlix 6
Akbar's Bream 23
Merlin and V. 735
Enoch Arden 564
828
862
Aylmer's Field 98
Sea Dreams 59
Princess v 147
Sailor Boy 19
The Revenge 64
V. of Maeldune 102
The Wreck 4
5
„ .119
Despair 10
The Flight 47
Locksley H., Sixty 14
16
64
St. Telemachus 44
The Dawn 13
Two Voices 389
Aylmer's Field 716
Last Tournament 549
Lover's Tale i 804
Ancient Sage 136
Sea Dreams 139
Lover's Tale i 804
Despair 12
Locksley H., Sixty 215
The Ring 305
Golden Year 37
Window, Spring 11
15
■Ay 8
16
Marr. of Geraint 275
England and Amer. 5
Columbus 235
The Ring 468
Lucretius 221
" St. S. Siylites 119
Princess, Con. 16
Clear-headed friend 26
Princess vii 282
Merlin and V. 75
Forlorn 52
Bandit's Death 30
Lucretius 128
155
Princess ii 193
Maud 7 i 56
„ vi 56
.. a; 35
Wretched (conimwei) Yea ev'n of w meat and drink, Maud Ixv
May God make me more w Than ever I have been yet ! „ ^tx 94
O w set of sparrows, one and all, Marr. of Geraint 278
and your w dress, A w insult on you, Geraint and h. 327
pains Of the hellish heat of a w life Despair^
A madman to vex you with w words, " ^^
Wretchedest W age, since Time began, Maud 7i r Ji
Wretchedness But bode his hour, devising w. Last Tournament 386
Wrigglesby beck Loook thou theer wheer W b cooms
out by the '11! ^■
Wring take the goose, and w her throat.
Wrinkle Whose w's gathered on his face,
The busy w's round his eyes ?
A million w's carved his skin ;
Sown in a w of the monstrous hill,
Wrinkled {See also Myriad-wrinkled) Hard wood i am,
and wrind, . „ , u
cold my w feet Upon thy glimmering thresholds,
and there The w steward at his task.
The w sea beneath him crawls;
' W ostler, grim and thin !
w benchers often talk'd of him Approvingly,
Down from the lean and w precipices,
A charr'd and w piece of womanhood, ■■ , ^ . ,„
When have I bow^d to her father, the w head of tlie race ? iVW / zy 13
God help the w children that are Christ's Sisters (£. and E.) \U
. Farmer, N. S. 53
The Goose 31
Two Voices 329
Miller's D. 4
Palace of Art 138
Will 19
Talking Oak 171
Tithonus 67
^Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 27
The Eagle i
Vision of Sin 63
Aylmer's Field 473
Princess iv 22
v8l
Princess i 115
„ vii 138
Merlin and V. 551
Pelleas and E. 338
Merlin and V . 52
Holy Grail 762
Merlin and V. 674
Wrinkling But bland the smile that like a w wind
Wrist I sigh'd : a touch Came round my w,
The w is parted from the hand that waved.
But I will slice him handless by the w.
Writ (s) saith not Holy W the same ? '—
Perhaps, like him of Cana in Holy W,
Writ (verb) PF in a language that has long gone by.
wrote The letter she devised; which bemg w And ^^^^^^^ ^^ ^ ^^^
old°wr1ters Have w of in histories- Batt. of Brur^nhurhllb
Write {See also Wroite) To make me w my random rhymes, Wdl Water. 16
you shall w, and not to her, but me : Ayhner s Field 310
' W to me ! They loved me, " /^^
Shall I w to her? shall I go? . , ^'"ITm^TJi
One w's, that ' Other friends remain, t i f "^^iia^
Besought Lavaine to w as she devised A letter, Lancelot andE. IIW
Old Virgil who would w ten lines. Poets aiid their B. 2
Writer Seem but the theme of w's, ^?wi^y^r66
Old w's push'd the happy season back,- S^^^'^ll^fi
old w's Have writ of in histories- Batt. of BrunanburhlU
Writhe a worm which w's all day, ,,.,.,. y astness i.^
Writhed (^^. and part.) Those w limbs of lightning ^^^^^_^^^^^^^^^^^
WhCthe worm shall have w its la-st, „wTn?
Writhed (verb) w his wiry arms Around him, till he felt, Gareth andL ll&L
W toward him, slided up his knee and sat, Merlvn and V. 2|
down his robe the dragon win gold, Lancelot and E. ^
Down on the great King's couch, and w upon it.
She roused a snake that hissing w away ;
Writhen See Battle-writhen
Writhing read W a letter from his child,
w barbarous lineaments.
Sweat, w's, anguish, labouring of the lungs
Writin' o^-"'con Mq rAadin' an' w 'e sniff t
crazed myself over their horrible
Death of (Enone 8E
Aylmer's Field 51'i
Boddicea 74
Pass, of AHhur lit
Village Wife M.
Writing {See also Writin')
infidel w's ?
Written {See also Wrote) it is w that my race
Hew'd Ammon,
w as she found Or made occasion.
And Willy's wife has w : (repeat)
And something w, something thought;
And w in the speech ye speak yourself,
' Ye have the book : the charm is « m it;
oft I seem as he Of whom was w,
Glorious poet who never hast w a line,
I am w in the Lamb's own Book of Life
scroll w over with lamentation and woe.
Wroite (write) summun I reckons 'ull 'a to w.
Wrong (adj.) he was w to cross his father thus :
Despair 81
D. of F. Women 23J
Aylmer's Field 47 1
Grandmother 3, lOf
In Mem. vi 2(
Com. of Arthur 3(>
Merlin and V. 65^
Last Tournament IK
To A. Tennyson !
Columbus 8f
Despair 2(
A". Farmer, 0. S. 5'
Dora I4i
Wrong
821
Wrought
WtOXig (adj.) {continued) His nerves were lo.
am I right, or am I w, (repeat)
What ! I am not all as w As a bitter jest
I was ic, I am always bound to you,
' Would I — was it w ? '
And so I often told her, right or w,
And, right or w, I care not : this is all.
Death for the right cause, death for the w cause.
She ofEens 'ud spy summut w
W there ! The painter's fame ?
KTrong (s) There seem'd no room for sense of w \
lamentation and an ancient tale of w,
I heard sounds of insult, shame, and w,
' I have hid my feelings, fearing they should do
mew;'
we, that prate Of rights and w's.
He that only rules by terror Doeth grievous w.
Hush'd all the groves from fear of to :
And then we met in wrath and to.
Worried his passive ear with petty Mi's Or pleasures
Began to chsife as at a personal to.
if he did that w you charge him with,
He can do no more 10 : forgive him.
(A little sense of w had touch'd her face
Bow'd on her palms and folded up from w,
Came all in haste to hinder to,
Tho' man, yet human, whatsoe'er your w's,
Tom from the lintel — all the common 10 —
chance Were caught within the record of her tc's,
I thought her half -right talking of her to's ;
brawl Their rights or to's like potherbs in the street
' ourselves are full Of social to ;
Till public to be crumbled into dust,
He suffers, but he cannot suffer to :
My name in song has done him much to,
to fight, to struggle, to right the to —
Nor hmnan frailty do me to.
we do him to To sing so wildly :
Drug down the blindfold sense of to
Thou doest expectant nature tc ;
Bewail'd their lot ; I did them w :
taking revenge too deep for a transient w
She would not do herself this great to,
teach true life to fight with mortal vi^s.
Or to say ' Forgive the to,'
peace that was full of to's and shames,
Whose glory was, redressing human to ;
speak true, right to, follow the King —
from the to's his father did Would shape himseK
Give me to right her to, and slay the man.'
Than ride abroad redressing women's to,
For this were shame to do him iurther to
To noble hearts who see but acts of to :
That each had sufEer'd some exceeding to.
smoulder'd to that burnt him all within ;
worse than that dead man ; Done you more to
As one that let foul w stagnate and be,
which for bribe had wink'd at to.
Once for to done you by confusion,
And see, yourself have own'd ye did me to.
Th.ey ride abroad redressing human to's !
many a year have done despite and to
leaving human to's to right themselves,
Well — can I wish her any huger to
deed Of prowess done redress'd a random to.
To ride abroad redressing hirnian to's,
Yet who had done, or who had suffer'd to ?
No, no, you are doing me to !
Loving the other ? do her that great to ?
than have done one another a w.
or flamed at a public to,
that hourly work their brother insect to,
tho' that realm were in the to
I wrought thee bitter to, but thou forgive,
wind of the Night shrilling out Desolation and w
Walk, to the Mail 105
Day-Dm., L'Envoi 29, 33
Vision of Sin 197
Enoch Arden 449
The Brook 111
Princess v 288
290
Vastness 8
Owd Rod 70
Romney's R. 48
Two Voices 456
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 118
D.ofF. Women 19
Locksley Hall 29
Godiva 8
The Captain 2
Sir L. and Q. G. 13
The Letters 11
I Enoch Arden 352
474
Sea Dreams 279
311
Princess, Pro. 219
iv 288
401
425
t?129
143
285
459
Con. 73
Ode on Well. 167
Will 3
Spiteful Letter 3
Wages 3
In Mem. Hi 8
„ Ivii 3
„ Ixxi 7
„ IxxxiiiS
„ ciii 46
Maud I Hi 5
a; 57
„ omiii 54
,. 7/ to 86
„/7/t!t40
Bed. of Idylls 9
Gareth and L. 118
347
366
866
954
Marr. of Geraint 438
Geraint and E. 36
107
736
891
939
Merlin and V. 307
316
693
Lancelot and E. 1209
Holy Grail 898
Last Tournament 596
Guinevere 459
471
L&ver's Tale i 726
First Quarrel 4
Sisters (E. and E.) 168
V. of Maeldune 6
The Wreck 68
Locksley H., Sixty 202
Epilogue 34
Death of (Enone 43
The Dreamer 15
Wrong (verb) he that to's his friend W's himself Sea Dreams 172
' you to him more than I That struck him : Princess iv 245
She to's herself, her sex, and me, „ v 117
You w yourselves — the woman is so hard „ vi 222
I to tlie grave with fears imtrue : In Mem. li 9
0 child, you to your beauty, believe it, Maud I iv 17
dream That any of these would to thee, to's
thyself. Balin and Balan 144
— nay, but I to him. Lover's Tale iv 73
You to me, passionate little friend. Epilogue 10
1 can to thee now no more, (Enone, Death of (Enone 80
Wrong'd (part.) I knew thee to. I brake upon thy rest, Balin and Balan 499
How had I to you ? surely ye are wise,
A virtuous gentlewoman deeply to,
' Can he be w who is not ev'n his own,
May'st thou never be to by the name
I never have to his heart,
Wrong'd (s) to help the to Thro' all our reahn
Then Gareth, ' Bound am I to right the to,
With strength and will to right the to,
Wrong'd (verb) to and lied and thwarted us —
judge their cause from her That to it,
he never to his bride. I know the tale.
Hears he now the Voice that to him ?
Wronger this Order lives to crush All to's of the Realm
At caitiffs and at to's of the world.
Brutes, the brutes are not your to's —
Wrote round about the prow she to
W, ' Mene, mene,' and divided quite
and a tear Dropt on the letters as I to.
I to I know not what. In truth,
you shall have that song which Leonard to :
' Then I took a pencil, and to On the mossy stone,
tho' Averill to And bad him with good heart
Who first w satire, with no pity in it.
then. Sir, awful odes she to, Too awful,
and I sat down and w, In such a hand
take this and pray that he Who to it,
and sat him down, and to All things
Then he to The letter she devised ;
An' he to ' I ha' six weeks' work,
an' sorry for what she w,
Edith to : ' My mother bids me ask '
and besides. The great Augustine to
I to to the nurse Who had borne my flower
He knows not ev'n the book he to,
he w ' Their kindness,' and he to no more ;
to Name, surname, all as clear as noon.
Up she got, and to him all.
Wrote (written) An' 'e'd to an owd book, his awn sen.
Wroth (See also Half-wroth) Then the old man Was to,
Merlin and V. 288
911
Last Tournament 524
To A. Tennyson 7
The Wreck 14
Gareth and L. 371
804
Holy Grail 309
Princess iv 540
„ vii 236
Merlin and V. 729
Locksley H., Sixty 269
Gareth and L. 626
Marr. of Geraint 96
Locksley H., Sixty 97
L. of Shalott ivS
Palace of Art 22J
To J. S. 56
„ 57
Golden Year 1
Edward Gray 25
Aylmer's Field 543
Sea Dreams 202
Princess i 138
» . .235
A Dedication 5
Com. of Arthur 156
Lancelot and E. 1108
First Quarrel 45
87
Sisters (E. and E.) 180
Columbus 52
The Wreck 142
Ancient Sage 148
To Marq. of Dufferin 35
The Ring 236
Forlorn 79
Village Wife 46
Dora 25
Weakness to be to with weakness ! Locksley Hall 149
Sullen, defiant, pitying, to, Aylmer's Field 492
perforce He yielded, to and red, with fierce demur : Princess v 358
A third is to : 'Is this an hour For private sorrow's In Mem. xxi 13
PF to be to at such a worm, Marr. of Geraint 213
my new mother, be not w or grieved At thy new son, „ 779
For, be he to even to slaying me, Geraint and E. 67
it made him w the more That she could speak „ 112
neither dame nor damsel then IF at a lover's loss ? Merlin and V. 607
W at himself. Not willing to be known,
W that the King's command to sally forth
W, but all in awe, For twenty strokes
Fret not yourself, dear brother, nor be to,
And to at Tristram and the lawless jousts,
is the Demon-god W at his fall ? '
Wrought ' She w her people lasting good;
And all so variously to,
With royal frame-work of to gold ;
who to Two spirits to one equal mind —
times of every land So to, they will not fail,
she tum'd her sight The airy hand confusion w,_
But by degrees to fulness to
W by the lonely maiden of the Lake.
Nine years she to it, sitting in the deeps
Lancelot and E. 160
560
719
1074
Last Tournament 237
St. Telemachus 20
To the Queen 24
Ttoo Voices 457
Ode to Memory 82
Miller's D. 235
Palace of Art 148
226
You ask me, why, etc. 14
M. d' Arthur 104
105
Wrought
822
Year
Wrought {continued) More things are w by prayer Than
this world dreams of. ' ' M. d' Arthur 247
damask napkin w with horse and hound, Audley Court 21
It may be I have w some miracles, St. S. Stylites 136
Souls that have toil'd, and w, and thought with me — Ulysses 46
and w To make the boatmen fishing-nets, Enoch Arden 814
her coimsel all had w About them : Ayhner's Field 151
w Such waste and havock as the idolatries, „ 639
' Dare we dream of that,' I ask'd, ' Which w us, Princess Hi 298
our device ; w to the life ; „ 303
raised A tent of satin, elaborately w „ 348
with whom the bell-mouth'd glass had w, „ iv 155
So much a kind of shame within me w, „ 194
wherein were w Two grand designs ; „ vii 121
Let the sound of those he w for. Ode on Well. 10
When he with those deep voices w, „ 67
Ye know no more than I who w In Mem. vi 17
and w With human hands the creed of creeds „ xxxvi 9
Till out of painful phases w There flutters „ Ixv 6
Cloud-towers by ghostly masons w, „ Ixx 5
Is w with timiidt of acclaim. ,. Ixxv 20
The grief my loss in him had w, „ Ixxx 6
For changes w on form and face ; ,. Ixxxii 2
Her lavish mission richly w, ,, Ixxxiv 34
Whatever change the years have w, ,, xc 22
For what was it else within me w Maud I vi 81
W, till he crept from a gutted mine „ xQ
W for his house an irredeemable woe ; „ II i 22
and w All kind of service with a noble ease Gareth and L 488
So for a month he w among the thralls ; „ 525
hath w on Lancelot now To lend thee horse and shield : ,. 1323
Themselves had w on many an innocent. Geraint and E. 178
I schemed and w Until I overturn'd him ; ,. 829
And w too long with delegated hands, ,. 893
work of Edjmi w upon himself After a life of violence, ,. 912
Had often w some fury on myself, Balin and Balan 62
This fellow hath w some foulness with his Queen : „ 565
What evil have ye w ? Rise ! ' Merlin and V. 67
* None w, but siifer'd much, an orphan maid ! „ 71
Would fain have w upon his cloudy mood „ 156
which if any w on anyone With woven paces ,, 206
man so to on ever seem'd to lie „ 208
could he see but him who w the charm Coming and going, ,. 212
those who w it first. The wrist is parted „ 550
Some charm, which being w upon the Queen „ 584
Nor saw she save the King, who w the charm, ,, 643
And of the horrid foulness that he w, „ 748
w upon his mood and hugg'd him close. „ 948
In letters gold and azure ! ' which was w There-
after ; Lancelot and E. 1345
V) into his heart A way by love that waken'd love Holy Grail 10
In horror lest the work by Merlin w, „ 259
grace and power, JF as a charm upon them, Guinevere 144
Hath w confusion in the Table Round „ 220
My love thro' flesh hath w into my life So far, „ 558
Which w the ruin of my lord the King.' „ 689
W by the lonely maiden of the Lake. Nine years
she w it, sitting in the deeps Pass, of Arthur 272
More things are w by prayer Than this world dreams of. „ 415
Were w into the tissue of my dream : Lover's Tale ii 113
she w us harm. Poor soul, not knowing) Sisters (E. and E.) 184
who w Not Matter, nor the finite-infinite, De Prof., Two G. 53
w To mould the dream ; To E. Fitzgerald 29
and whatsoe'er He w of good or brave Epilogue 76
He that w my ruin — Forlorn 2
I w thee bitter wrong, but thou forgive, Death of Qinone 43
Wrong Caught at his hand, and w it passionately, Enoch Arden 328
Daintily she shriek'd And w it. Princess, Pro. 176
From our first Charles by force we w our claims. Third of Feb. 26
Lady Lyonors w her hands and wept, Gareth and L. 1395
The griefs by which he once was w Ancient Sage 127
Wud (mad) an' screead like a Howl gone w — Owd Rod 76
WnSB (worse) Ye be w nor the men-tommies, you. Spinster's S's. 93
a-tuggin' an' tearin' me w nor afoor, Owd Rod 66
Wye And hushes half the babbling W, In Mem. xix 7
Wye (continued) The W is hush'd nor moved alonsr,
Wyvem Whose blazing w weathercock'd the spire,
Burst his own w on the seal,
men and boys astride On w, lion, dragon.
Xanthns between the ships and stream Of X
In Mem. xix 9
Arjlmer's Field 17
516
Roly Grail 350
Spec, of Iliad 18
4
Yabbok brook Past Y h the livelong night. Clear-headed friend 27
YafOngale hear the garnet-headed y Mock them : Last Tournament 700
Yard (iSee aZso Chapel-yard, Olive-yard) and his hair A 2/ behind. Godiva\9
Only a y beneath the street, Mavd II vl
by two y's in casting bar or stone Was counted
best ; Gareth and L. 518
Sa I runs to the y fur a lether, Owd Rod 82
Yardwand but with his cheating y, home. — Maud I i 52
Yaupin' (yelping) a-yowlin' an' y' like mad ; Owd Rod 88
Yawl'd Then yelp'd the cur, and y the cat ; The Goose 33
Yawn (s) and toss them away with a y. The Wreck 21
Yawn (verb) ' Heaven opens inward, chasms y, Two Voices 304
black earth y's : the mortal disappears ; Ode on Well. 269
on his right a cavern-chasm ¥ over darkness, Balin and Balan 313
to sigh, and to stretch and y, V. of Maeldune 91
Fiend would yell, the grave would y. The Flight 51
naked glebe Should y once more into the gulf, Demeter and P. 43
Yawn'd y, and rubb'd his face, and spoke, Day-Dm., Revival 19
then he y, for the wretch could sleep, Bandit's Death 30
Yawning (adj. and part.) Hither came Cyril, and y Princess Hi 124
And crowds that stream from y doors. In Mem. Ixx 9
Not all mismated with a y clown, Geraint and E. 426
But saw the postern portal also wide Y ; Pelleas and E. 421
earth beneath me y cloven With such a sound Lover's Tale i 602
up-shadowing high above us with her y tiers of guns. The Revenge 41
While the grave is y. Forlorn 6(
Yawning (s) The y of an earthquake-cloven chasm. Lover's Tale i 377
Year (See also After-years, A-year, Cycle-year, New-
year, Nine - years - f oi^ht - for. Nine - years-
ponder'd. Old-year, Ta-year, Three-years', To-
year) and clear Delight, the infant's dawning y. Supp. Confessions 67
The lamb rejoiceth in the y, „ 157
Because they are the earliest of the y). Ode to Memory 27
music flowing from The illimitable y's. „ 41
A SPiRn haunts the y's last hours A Spirit haunts .'
And the y's last rose. „ 2li
And if you kiss'd her feet a thousand y's. The form, the form II
mirror clear That hangs before her all the y, L. of Shalott ii 1.
I said, ' The y's with change advance : Two Voices 51
I said that ' all the y's invent ; „ T
' I found him when my y's were few ; „ 27
For is not our first y forgot ? „ 36.'-
Oft lose whole y's of darker mind. „ 37^
Many a chance the y's beget. Miller's D. 20
Untouch'd with any shade of y's, „ 21
so three y's She prosper'd : Palace of Art 21
So when four y's were wholly finished, „ 28
To-morrow 'ill be of all the y the maddest merriest da}'. May Queen 4
The good old y, the dear old time. May Queen, N. Y's. E.
How sadly, I remember, rose the morning of the y ! „ Con.
Which men call'd Aulis in those iron ij's : D. of F. Women 10
And the old y is dead. „ 24
Desiring what is mingled with past y's, „ _ 28
For the old y lies a-dying. D. of the 0. Year
Old y, you must not die ; „
Old y, you shall not die. (repeat) „ 9, 2
Old y, you must not go ; .. 1
Old y, you shall not go.
n
Tear
823
Year
Year {continued) A jollier y we shall not see.
Old y, if you mvist die.
Old y, we'll dearly rue for you :
Two y's his chair is seen Empty before us.
wisdom of a thousand y's Is in them.
Watch what main-currents draw the y's :
The Spirit of the y's to come
Nine y's she wrought it, sitting in the deeps
the days darken round me, and the y's,
at that time of y The lusty bird takes every hour
Call'd to me from the y's to come,
and with each The y increased.
The daughters of the y, One after one,
D. of the 0. Year 20
27
43
To J. S. 22
Of old sat Freedom 18
Love thou thy land 21
55
M. d' Arthur 105
237
„ Ef. 10
Gardener's D. 180
199
200
wish'd this marriage, night and day. For many tj's.' Bora 22
not been for these five y's So full a harvest : „ 65
as y's Went forward, Mary took another mate ; „ 170
ten y's back — 'Tis now at least ten y's — Walk, to the Mail 50
My sweet, wild, fresh three quarters of a y, Edwin Morris 2
This not be all in vain, that thrice ten y's, St. S. Stylites 10
die here To-day, and whole y's long, „ 54
Three y's I lived upon a pillar, high Six cubits, and three
y's on one of twelve ; And twice three y's
I grew Twice ten long weary weary y's
good old Summers, yhjy Made ripe in Stminer-
chace :
I circle in the grain Five himdred rings of y's —
That show the y is turn'd.
or 2/ by 2/ alone Sit brooding in the ruins of a life.
Art more thro' Love, and greater than thy y's,
onward, leading up the golden y. (repeat)
And slow and sure comes up the golden y.
Thro' all the season of the golden y.
Enrich the markets of the golden y.
Thro' all the circle of the golden y ? '
As on this vision of the golden y.'
This same grand y is ever at the doors.'
mortal simimers to such length of y's should come
' Never, never,' whisper'd by the phantom y's,
excitement that the coming y's would yield,
Better fifty y's of Europe than a cycle of Cathay.
The fatal byword of all y'* to come.
The varying y with blade and sheaf
Y after y unto her feet,
' I'd sleep another hundred y's,
every himdred y's to rise And learn the world,
And all that else the y's will show,
And y's of cultivation.
Or this first snowdrop of the y
So fares it since the y's began,
So many y's from his due.'
Y's have wander'd by.
Then, in the boyhood of the y.
Came floating on for many a month and y,
' Change, reverting to the y's,
When the y's have died away.'
Here on tins beach a hundred y's ago,
he served a y On board a merchantman.
And merrily ran the y's, seven happy y's, Seven happj-
y's of health and competence,
two y's after came a boy to be The rosy idol
so ten y's. Since Enoch left his hearth
That he who left you ten long y's ago
That after all these sad imcertain y's.
Yet wait a,y, a,y is not so long : Surely I shall be wiser
in a y :
you have my promise — in a y : Will you not bide your y as
I bide mine ? ' And Philip answer'd ' I will bide my y.'
' Is it a 2/ ? ' she ask'd.
Till half-another y had slipt away,
sunny and rainy seasons came and went Y after y.
In those far-off seven happy y's were born ;
as the y RoU'd itself round again to meet the day
And I have borne it with me all these y's.
For here I came, twenty y's back —
name About these meadows, twenty y's ago.'
86
90
Talking Oak 39
84
176
Love and Duty 11
„ 21
Golden Tear 26, 41
31
36
46
51
58
74
Locksley Hall 67
83
111
184
Godiva 67
Day-Dm., Sleep. P. 1
Sleef. B. 1
„ Depart. 9
„ L' Envoi 7
13
Amphion 98
St. Agnes' Eve 11
Will Water. 169
Lady Clare 32
The Captain 66
Sir L. and Q. G. 19
Vision of Sin 54
159
Poet's Song 16
Enoch Arden 10
52
81
89
359
404
415
432
437
458
471
624
686
821
895
The Brook 77
220
Aylmer's Field 34
58
79
357
382
508
601
814
837
Sea Dreams 3
. '^'^
Princess i 35
125
„ a 11
70
Hi 155
269
tv74
507
«127
vilS
64
m279
Con. 95
103
Year {continued) The same old rut would deepen y
byy;
a y or two before Call'd to the bar,
Leolin's first nurse was, five y's after, hers :
I lived for y's a stunted sunless life ;
These partridge-breeders of a thousand y's.
So old, that twenty y's before,
the y's which are not Time's Had blasted him —
Seam'd with the shallow cares of fifty y's :
Dead for two y's before his death was he ;
One babe was theirs, a Margaret, three y's old :
scrapings from a dozen y's Of dust and deskwork :
with a bootless calf At eight y's old ;
I think the y in which oiu: olives fail'd.
lies the child We lost in other y's,
Not for three y's to correspond with home ; Not for three
y's to cross the liberties ; Not for three y's to speak with
any men ;
May beat admission in a thousand y's,
a race Of giants living, each, a thoxisand y's,
that great y of equal mights and rights,
Six thousand y's of fear have made you
The desecrated shrine, the trampled y.
Rose a nurse of ninety y's,
dames and heroines of the golden y Shall strip
Yet in the long y's liker must they grow ;
farewell, and welcome for the y To follow :
Give up their parks some dozen times a y
Seventy y's ago, my darling, seventy y's ago.
(repeat) Grandmother 24, 56
in a himdred y's it '11 all be the same, „ 47
Never jealous — not he : we had many a happy y ; ,, 71
And that was ten y's back, or more, „ 75
I've 'ed my quart ivry market-noight for foorty y. N. Farmer, 0. S. 8
I 'a managed for Squoire coom Michaelmas thutty y. „ 48
Many and many a happy y. To F. D. Maurice 48
I walk'd with one I loved two and thirty y's ago. V. of Cauteretz 4
two and thirty y's were a mist that rolls away ; „ 6
Hebe, it is here the close of the y, Spiteful Letter 1
His beauty still with his y's increased. The Victim 34
Gone, till the end of the y. Window, Gone 2
has bitten the heel of the going y. ,, Winter 6
Ay is life for a hundred y's, „ No Answer 9
' A y hence, a y hence.' „ When 5
But who shall so forecast the y's In Mem. t 5
To touch thy thousand y's of gloom : „ H 12
Some pleasure from thine early y's. „ iv 10
Come Time, and teach me, many y's, „ xiii 13
Thro' four sweet y's arose and fell, „ xxii 3
This y I slept and woke with pain, „ xxwiii 13
And in the long harmonious y's „ xlio 9
And those five y's its richest field. „ xlvi 12
What record ? not the sinless y's „ IH 11
With so much hope for y's to come, „ lix 14
And o'er the number of thy y's. „ Ixvii 8
' More y's had made me love thee more. „ Ixxxi 8
The all-assuming months and y's „ Ixxxv 67
A friendship for the y's to come. „ 80
The primrose of the later y, „ 119
Whatever change the y's have wrought, „ xc 22
The hope of unaccomplish'd y's „ xci 7
A fact within the coming y ; „ xdi 10
I read Of that glad y which once had been, „ xcu 22
She keeps the gift of y's before, „ xcvii 25
And yhyy the landscape grow „ ci 19
As 2/ by 2/ the labourer tills His wonted glebe, „ 21
And yhyy our memory fades „ 23
The y is dying in the night ; „ cvi3
The y is going, let him go ; „ 7
Ring in the thousand y's of peace. „ 28
Thro' all the y's of April blood ; „ cix 12
The men of rathe and riper y's : „ cx2
meets the y, and gives and takes The colours „ cxvi 3
A cry above the conquer'd y's „ cxxxi 7
I since then have number'd o'er Some thrice three y's : „ Con. 10
Tear
Yeas (continued) New as his title, buUt last v
^ast y, I caught a glimpse of his face,
He may stay for a y who has gone for a week :
10 me, her friend of the y's before •
but of force to withstand, Y upon y
For ys,a. measureless iU, For y's, for ever
My mood .s changed, for it fell at a time of y
thro all this tract of y's Wearing
Uiat same night, the night of the new v.
This y, when Merlin (for his hour had come)
^TflX.t'^^''^ l^^' ^"^ ^^«"sb "^y prone y,
^Jt^^^^K^ use thereof, According to the y's.
What I these two y's past have won
toree sad y's ago. That night of fire,
Her suitor m old y's before Geraint,
Jiarl, if you love me as in former y's
and my purpose three y's old,
Arthur call'd His treasurer, one of many y's,
those three kmgless y's Have pastr-
from the presence into y's Of exile—
Ay ago— nay, then I love thee not—
Was one y gone, and on returning found
this cut is fresh ; That ten y's back •
Once every y, a joust for one of these :
by nme y s' proof we needs must learn
eight y 5 past, eight jousts had been, and still Had
Lancelot won the diamond of the y
However marr'd, of more than twice her y's.
Heard from the Baron that, ten y's before
now for forty y's A hermit, who had pray'd.
This many a y have done despite and wrong
not to love again ; Not at my y's,
Sprmg after spring, for half a hundred y's :
Ihen came a y of miracle :
Yea rotten with a hundred y's of death,
824
Yearn
Mavd I X 19
xiii 27
,, awi 6
„ xix 64
„ // n 25
49
„ /// vi 4
Bed. of Idylls 24
Com. of Arthur 209
228
Gareth and L. 95
345
Marr. of Geraint 554
633
Geraint and E. 276
355
849
Balin and Baton 5
63
156
504
Merhn and V. 708
Lancelot and E. 22
61
67
257
272
402
1209
1296
Holy Grail 19
166
496
Hath lain for y's at rest— t^oi t " ^"a
The snowdrop only, flowering thro' the y, ^'' TournamentM
Made answer, ' I had liefer twenty y's " 9„
memories Of Tristram in that y he was away.' " ilk
S';SKt« ae^.a: ""^^- ''- ^°' '^•~ i
months wiir add themselves and make the y's. The v's "
wiU roll into the centuries, :/ . i/ *
there, an Abbess, lived For three brief y's, " f^n
iJum d at his lowest in the rolling v r>„^^ f 'i ^, „'
Nine y's she wrought it, sitt'r^l^ I'he deeps ^''''- "^ ^'•'^%?^
days darken round me, and the y's, " TA?
And the new sun rose bringing the new y. " |^
r..^^'''^ ^/"i^""^.^ °"' * '^^^P ^d stormy strait Iter's Tale i 23
nmny y's, (For they seem many and my most of life, ig
As Love and I do number equal y's, ' " |^
careful burthen of our tender y's Trembled " o??
bweet thro' strange y's to know " Hi
Pass we then A term of eighteen y's. " i^
Thou art blessed in the y's, divinest day ! " fsR
Had dravyn herself from many thousand y's, " t?n
As the tall ship, that many a dreary y ' " 2x2
And kept It thro' a hundred y's of gloom " • To^
Picture of his lady, taken Some y's before, " '" J??
1 knew a man, nor many y's ago ; " iti
^^' that the flower of a y and a half is thine. To A "Tennvs^^
I ha' work'd for him fifteen y's, v' , ^'*2/«o» ^
Harry was bound to the Dorsetshire farm for y's an' for y's ^"""^^'W
y'i* went over till I that was little ""'^'2/^an fory s, „ 19
tiU he told me that so many y's had gone by, " ql
he call'd m the dark to me y If terv— p- t. !^
r a^ter « in the misi and the wind^ i^^^M 47
back-end o' June, Ten y sin', m^^h n\i.i VS
our house has held Three hundred y's- Sistelft a^% Jo
On a sudden after two Italian y's ^ ""^ ^'If^
and in the second y was born A second— " o«q
thaw nigh upo' seventy y. -rr .„" „. ./^
/« the Child. Hosp. 32
Year (continued) Eighteen long y's of waste n^j i o^
A ong the y's of haste and ri[.domyS De Prof tZg It
Of Turkish Islam for five hundred y's, ifL^ tJ
g^taa by thy winter weight of y's Is yet unbroken. To ¥^^0]
Kino, that hast reign'd six hundred v's. t?; ^^? J
^NO, that hast reign'd six hundred y's,
And dating many a y ago. Has hit on this,
i. WISH I were in the y's of old
five-fold thy term Of y's, 1 lay ;
their examples reach a hand Far thro' all y's
lo spend my one last y among the hills. '
What Power but the Y's that make
ihe y s that made the stripling wise
The y's that when my Youth began
But vain the tears for darken'd y's
Whin, yer Honour ? last y—
Danny was there, yer Honour, for forty v
as ye used to do twelve y sin' !
Dead — and sixty y's ago, j
floods and earthquakes of the planet's dawning y's
(jone with whom for forty y's my life
till ten thousand y's have gone.
To DarUe 1
To E. Fitzgerald 49
Tiresias 1
,. 34
„ 127
Ancient Sage 16
91
111
155
183
ToinorrovD 1
30
Spinster's S's. 59
Locksley H., Sixty 37
40
47
78
177
254
267
Here we met, our latest meeting— Amy— sixty y's
far and far from here is all the hope of eighty v's
btrove for sixty widow'd y's to help ^ -^ -^ •
m the vanish'd y, You saw the league-lone
rampart-fire ^ p»„ y <- „ , „„
glorying in the blissful y's again to be, '"• '" ^'^f^^^'y, ?«
IS^^^S^t^t^^l^^, Pref Poe!'.toTBl
through twice a hundred y's, on thee. ToWrV T"J
Ceremonial Of this y of her Jubilee. '^'**- ^- ^'"'"'^ ^1
And this y of her Jubilee, (repeat) " 00 ft
Henry's fifty y's are all in shadow, " '^^' %
l>iftyys of ever-broadening Commerce! Fifty w's "
of ever-brightening Science ! Fifty y's of ever-
widening Empire !
' Hail to the glorious Golden y of her Jubilee ' ' " ^
T^J^l^L'^^^l'^?^ ^^"^^ ^^«'e y with me, ■ Demeier and P. iS
When thou Shalt dwell the whole bright y with me
Ten y sin— Naay— naay ! '
'ud coom at the fall o' the y,
hall bower — an' ten y sin ;
Twelve times in the y Bring me bliss.
For ten thousand y's Old and new ?
Then I and she were married for a y, One y without a
storni,
And you my Miriam bom within the y ; And she my
Miriam dead within the y. ^
for twenty y's Bound by the golden cord
1 have worn them y by y —
Till earth has roll'd her latest y —
And more than half a hundred y's ago,
silver y should cease to mourn and sigh—
139
Owd Roa 20
23
116
The Ring 5
„ 19
.. 283
285
., 428i
Happy IC
To Ulysses £,
To Mary Boyle 21
51
Prog, of Spring
Lodge with me all the y !
mark The coming y's great good and varied ills, o'
^^iz\^'ZT.S'lk;fs sr ^^^"'^^^^'^ '-^- ^TsS^it4-
That blush of fifty y's ago, my dekr, ^'''' "'^ '^' ^
^FA^!,"!?! 2/ m under the blue. Last y you sang
it as gladly.'
'Here again, here, here, here, happy y ' 1
Thro all the clouded y's of widowhood,
I bean chuch-warden mysen i' the parish fur
fifteen y.
Y will graze the heel of y.
Yearlong 'From y poring on thy pictured eyes,
Yearly Why should they miss their y due
Yearn Not less swift souls that y for light
I y to breathe the airs of heaven '
and y to hurry precipitously
The Throstle 5
13
Death of (Enone 103
Church-warden, etc. 8
Poets and Critics 14
Princess vii 340
In Mem. xxix 15
Two Voices 67
Sir Galahad 63
Boddicea
4 1
II
Yearn
825
Yew
Yearn {continued) A part of stillness, y's to speak
but made me y For larger glimpses
and the miser would y for his gold,
¥, and clasp the hands and murmur,
In Mem. Ixxxv 78
Tiresias 20
Despair 100
Locksley H., Sixty 192
Yellow (adj.) (continued) From out the y woods upon the hill Lover's Tale ii 80
Yellow (s) Shot over with purple, and green, and y. Dying Swan 20
y to lay my loving head upon your leprous breast. Happy 26
Yeam'd While still I y for hmnan praise. Two Voices 123
And y toward William ; but the j'outh, Dora 6
But Enoch y to see her face again ; Enoch Arden 717
While in her heart she y incessantly „ 866
Y after by the wisest of the wise, Lucretius 267
y To hear her weeping by his grave ? In Mem. xxxi 3
And y to burst the folded gloom, „ cxxii 3
he y to make complete The tale of diamonds Lancelot and E. 90
Sprsuig into fire and vanish'd, tho' I y To follow ; Holy Grail 506
I y and strove To tear the twain asunder „ 785
now y to shake The burthen off his heart Last Tournament 179
I y for warmth and colour which I found In Lancelot Guinevere 647
I y For his voice again, The Wreck 103
To lure those eyes that only y to see, St. Telemachus 36
Yearning {See also Heart-yearning) A nobler y never
broke her rest The form, the form 2
Some y toward the lamps of night ; Two Voices 363
In y's that can never be exprest By signs D. of F. Women 283
¥ to mix himself with Life. Love thou thy land 56
Gave utterance by the y of an eye, Love and Duty 62
gray spirit y in desire To follow knowledge Ulysses 30
team Which love thee, y for thy yoke, Tithonus 40
Y for the large excitement Locksley Hall 111
profit lies in barren faith, And vacant y, In Mem. cviii 6
Less y for the friendship fled, „ cxvi 15
The leaf is dead, the y past away : Last Tournament 277
y's ? — ay ! for, hour by hour, „ 583
Deeper than any y's after thee „ 586
The boundless y of the Prophet's heart — Tiresias 81
Yearningly moving again to a melody Y tender, Merlin and the G. 91
Yeasty ' The sands and y surges mix Sailor Boy 9
Yell (s) {See also Connter-yell, Woman-yell) rings to
the y of the trampled wife, Maud / i 38
I was near him when the savage y's Com. of Arthur 256
j He ground his teeth together, sprang with a y, Balin and Balan 538
, weird y, Unearthlier than all shriek of bird „ 544
echoing y with y, they fired the tower, Last Tournament 478
volley on volley, and y upon y — Def. of Lu^know 34
Thro' all the y s and counter-yells To Duke of Argyll 8
dog : it was chain'd, but its horrible y Bandit's Death 35
Ydl (verb) Let the fox bark, let the wolf y. Pelleas and E. 472
Who y's Here in the still sweet summer night, „ 472
Fiend would y, the grave would yawn. The Flight 51
Yell'd score of pugs And poodles y within, Edwin Morris 120
y and round me drove In narrowing circles till I y again Liusretius 56
Princess v 250
Boadicea 6, 72
77
Pelleas and E. 572
St. Telemachus 46
Akbar's Dream 116
Geraint and E. 733
Locksley H., Sixty 135
That sparkled on
they made a halt ; The horses y ;
Y and shriek'd between her daughters (repeat)
Y as when the winds of winter tear an oak
• ' Fight therefore,' y the youth,
caged beast Y, ashe y of yore for Christian blood
Y ' hast thou brought us down a new Koran
Yelling and fled Y as from a spectre
and, y with the y street.
Yellow (adj.) ("See a^so Dim-yellow)
the y field, L. of Shalott Hi 8
The pale y woods were waning, „ iv 2
and the y down Border'd with palm, Lotos- Eaters 21
They sat them down upon the y sand, „ 37
turning y Falls, and floats adown the air. „ C. S. 30
Round and round the spicy downs the y Lotos-dust
is blown. „ 104
And in the chasm are foam and y sands ; Enoch Arden 2
And here upon a y eyelid fall'n Lucretius 141
With lengths of y ringlet, like a girl, Princess i 3
Yet the y leaf hates the greener leaf, Spiteful Letter 15
; y vapours choke The great city sounding wide ; Maud II iv 63
And whit« sails flying on the y sea ; But not to
goodly hill or y sea Marr. of Geraint 829
Then flash'd a y gleam across the world. Holy Grail 402
little lake, that, flooding, leaves Low banks of y sand ; Lover's Tale i 535
Eleanore 22
A spirit haunts 2
Sir L. and Q. G. 15
Last Tournament 3
154
241
Pro. to Gen. Hamley 1
Yellow-banded Or the y-b bees,
Yellowing Dwelling amid these y bowers :
In curves the y river ran.
At Camelot, high above the y woods,
and y leaf And gloom and gleam,
High over all the y Autumn-tide,
Our birches y and from each The light leaf
falling fast.
Yellow-ringleted Thither at their will they haled the
y-r Britoness — Boadicea 55
Yellow-throated And y-t nestling in the nest. Lancelot and E. 12
Yelp (s) With inward y and restless forefoot Lucretius 45
But I hear no y of the beast. By an Evolution. 19
Yelp (verb) Lean-headed Eagles y alone. Princess vii 211
felt the goodly hounds Y at his heart. Last Tournament 504
Yelp'd-Yelpt Then yelp'd the cur, and yawl'd the cat ; The Goose 33
that chain'd rage, which ever yelpt within, Balin and Balan 319
Yelping See Yaupin'
Yeoman And let the foolish y go. L. C. V. de Vere 72
A mockery to the yoemen over ale, Aylmer's Field 497
Yerl (earl) Then 'e married a great Y's darter. Church-warden, etc. 20
Yes {See also Yis) keen shriek ' Y love, y, Edith, y,' Aylmer's Field 582
When the happy Y Falters from her lips, Maud I xvii 9
brightens at the clash of ' F ' and ' No,' Ancient Sage 71
Yester — and y afternoon I dream'd, — Akbar's Dream 169
Yesterday {See also Yisther-day) for y, When I past by, a wild
and wanton pard,
sharp look, mother, I gave him y.
And now, As tho' 'twere y,
' Where were you y ? Whose child is that ?
' O y, you know, the fair Was holden at the town ;
' y I met him suddenly in the street,
I curse the tongue that all thro' y Reviled thee.
But y you never open'd lip,
the prize Of Tristram in the jousts of y,
' Friend, did ye mark that fountain y
A portion of the pleasant y,
To-day ? but what oty?
that y From out the Ghost of Pindar
I climb'd the hill with Hubert y,
0 the grief when y They bore the Cross
Foimd y — ^forgotten mine own rhyme
Yester-eve But light-foot Iris brought it y-e,
Where all but y-e was dustj^-dry.
and y-e, While ye were talking sweetly
And y-e I would not tell you of it,
Yester-even Lastly yonder y-e,
1 saw the flash of him but y.
Yestermorn These measured words, my work of y.
Too harsh to your companion y ;
Long-closeted with her the y.
What if he had told her y
saw him ride More near by many a rood than y,
tho' mine own ears heard you y —
Had I not dream'd I loved her y ?
CEnone 198
May Queen 15
Gardener's D. 82
Dora 87
Talking Oak 101
Sea Dreams 145
Gareih and L. 1322
Merlin and V. 271
Last Tournament 8
286
Lover's Tale i 122
Ancient Sage 216
To Prof. J ebb 2
The Ring 152
Happy 47
To Mary Boyle 21
CEnone 83
Lucretius 32
Marr. of Geraint 697
702
Boadicea 29
Balin and Balan 303
Golden Year 21
Princess Hi 199
iv 322
Maud I vi 50
Geraint and E. 442
740
Sisters {E. and E.) 169
Who breaking in upon us y, Akbar's Dream 114
Yesternight Thy tuwhoos of y, The Owl ii 2
Flinging the gloom of y On the white day ; Ode to Memory 9
I beheld her, when she rose The y. Princess v 176
' Sweet brothers, y I seem'd a curious little maid Lancelot and E. 1034
for, y, To me, the great God Ares, Tiresias 110
Yet-loved the y-l sire would make Confusion In Mem. xc 18
Yet-unblazon'd Returning brought the y-u shield, Lancelot and E. 379
Yet-unbroken coimt The y-u strength of all his knights. Holy Grail 326
Yet-warm and now lies there A y-w corpse, Gareth and L. 80
Yew Death, walking all alone beneath a y, Love and Death 5
And darkness in the village y. Two Voices 273
Came y's, a dismal coterie ; Amphion 42
A black y gloom'd the stagnant air, The Letters 2
and stole Up by the wall, behind the y ; Enoch Arden 739
Sick for the hollies and the y's of home — Princess, Pro. 187
Old Y, which graspest at the stones In Mem. ii 1
Dark y, that graspest at the stones „ xxxix 4
Yew
826
Yon
Yew (continued) Before the mouldering of a j/ ; In Mem. Ixxvi 8
And oft they met among the garden y's, Lancelot and E. 645
He foimd her in among the garden y's, „ 923
to whom thro' those black walls of y „ 969
Break thro' the y's and cypress of thy grave, Bed. Poem Prin. Alice 12
I seem to see a new-dug grave up yonder by the y ! The Flight 98
ew-tree (See also Peacock-yewtree) Up higher with
the y-t by it, _ Walk, to the Mail 13
in it throve an ancient evergreen, A y, Enoch Arden 736
and as they sat Beneath a world-old y-t. Holy Grail 13
' O brother, I have seen this y-t smoke, „ 18
Yew-wood In the y-w black as night, Oriana 19
Ygeme Was wedded with a winsome wife, I': Covi. of Arthur 188
Uther in his wrath and heat besiegetl Y within
Tintagil, „ 199
' Daioghter of Gorlois and Y am I ; ' „ 316
Yield y you time To make demand of modem rhyme To the Queen 10
To y consent to my desire : Miller's D. 138
But y not me the praise : St. S. Stylites 185
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to y. Ulysses 70
excitement that the coming years would y, Locksley Hall 111
No branchy thicket shelter y's ; Sir Galahad 58
a little will I y. Princess ii 291
To y us farther furlough : ' and he went. „ Hi 74
rods of steel and fire ; She y's, or war.' „ v 119
No more, dear love, for at a touch ly; „ vii 14
She still were loth to y herself to one „ 232
I love thee : come, Y thyself up : „ 364
We y all blessing to the name In Mem. xxxvi 3
nature rarely y's To that vague fear „ xli 13
And will not y them for a day. „ xc 16
That will not y each other way. „ di 20
Go not, happy day, Till the maiden y's. Maud I xvii 4
brands That hack'd among the flyers, ' Ho !
they yV Com. of Arthur 121
Heaven y her for it, but in me put force Gareth and L. 18
' Not an hour. So that ye y me — „ 133
I therefore y me freely to thy will ; „ 168
Would y him this large honour all the more ; „ 397
sent her wish that I would y thee thine. „ 551
But wilt thou y this damsel harbourage ? ' „ 834
But an this lord will y us harbourage, • „ 844
' Take not my life : ly.' „ 973
Would handle scorn, or y you, asking, „ 1173
crying, ' Y, y him this again : 'tis he must fight : „ 1321
O y me shelter for mine innocency Merlin and V. 83
r" my boon. Till which I scarce can y you all I am ; „ 351
till one could y for weariness :
But since I will not y to give you power
And since the pirate would not y her up.
And y it to this maiden, if ye will.'
when you y your flower of life To one
Pray for my soul, and y me burial.
wilt at length Y me thy love and know me for thy
knight.'
Only to y my Queen her own again ?
Pale-blooded, she will y herself to God.'
to y thee grace beyond thy peers.'
y me sanctuary, nor ask Her name to whom ye y it
promise, if we y, to let us go ;
Our title, which we never mean to y,
daughter y her life, heart, soul to one —
shall we fight her ? shall we y ?
Not less would y full thanks to you
Who heats our earth to y us grain and fruit,
Yielded He laugh'd, and y readily to their wish,
At once the costly Sahib y to her.
perforce He y, wroth and red, with fierce demur :
Nor tho' she liked him, y she,
' I wish she had not y ! '
was but a dream, yet it y a dear delight
the field was pleassint in our eyes, We y not ;
Loving his lusty youthhood y to him.
He might have y to me one of those
being all bone-batter'd on the rock, Y ;
372
373
568
Lancelot and E. 229
952.
1280
Pelleas and E. 249
Last Tournament 106
608
743
Guinevere 141
The Revenge 94
Columbus 32
The Flight 28
Locksley H., Sixty 115
To Ulysses 33
Akbar's Dream 105
Enoch Arden 370
Aylmer's Field 233
Princess v 358
„ vii 76
„ Con. 5
Maud III vi 15
Gareth and L. 338
580
739
1051
Yielded (continued) at last — The huge pavilion
slowly y up.
Had y, told her all the charm,
y ; and a heart Love-loyal to the least wish
the great Queen Have y him her love.'
But counterpressures of the y hand
and they y to the foe.
and had y her will To the master,
Yielding old order changeth, y place to new,
In silk -soft folds, upon y down.
This, y, gave into a grassy walk
old order changeth, y place to new ;
shame the King for only y me My cliampion
And y to his kindlier moods,
Yis (yes) an' wur niver sa nigh saayin' I'.
Gareth and L. 1379
Merlin and V. 966
Lancelot and E. 88
Last Tournament 565
Sisters (E. and E.) 163
The Revenge 96
Dead Prophet 63
M. d'Arihur 240
Elednore 28
Gardener's D. Ill
Com. of Arthur 509
Gareth and L. 898
Merlin and V. 174
Spinster's S's. 32
Yisther-day (yesterday) like a bit of y-d in a dhrame — " Tomorrow 8
'Ymn (hymn) arter, we sing'd the 'y togither North. Cobbler 54
Yniol Had married Enid, Y's only child, Marr. of Geraint 4
save, It may be, at Earl Y's, o'er the bridge „ 291
voice of Enid, Y's daughter, rang Clear ,. 327
by the bird's song ye may learn the nest,' Said Y ; ., 360
Y caught His purple scarf, and held, „ 376
cried Earl Y, ' Art thou he indeed, Geraint, , 426
Y's heart Danced in his bosom, ,, 504
And waited there for Y and Geraint. * „ 538
Y's rusted arms Were on his princely person, „ 543
Then Y's nephew, after trumpet blown, „ 551
But cither's force was match'd till Y's cry, „ 570
Went Y thro' the town, and everywhere „ 693
And howsoever patient, Y his. „ 707
But Y goes, and I full oft shall dream „ 751
r made report Of that good mother making Enid gay ,. 756
Y with that hard message went ; „ 763
being repulsed By Y and yourself, Geraint and E. 829
Yoke (s) Which love thee, yearning for thy y, Tithonus 40
she walk'd Wearing the light y of that Lord of
love, Aylmer's Field 708
And, if thou needs must bear the y. Princess vi 205
loosed their sweating horses from the y, Spec, of Iliad 2
The sooty y of kitchen-vassalage ; Gareth and L. 479
bring on both the y Of stronger states, Tiresias 69
Yoke (verb) the care That y's with empire, To the Queen 10
Yoked Whose name is y with children's, Princess v 418
Y in all exercise of noble end, „ vii 361
Yolk (See also Half-yolk) with golden y's Imbedded and
injellied : Audley Court 25
this earth-narrow life Be yet but y. Ancient Sage 130
Yon To y old mill across the wolds ; Miller's D. 240
Behind y whispering tuft of oldest pine, (Enone 88
While y sun prospers in the blue. The Blackbird 22
Where y dark valleys wind forlorn. On a Mourner 22
Is y plantation where this byway joins Walk, to the Mail 4
Thro all y starlight keen, St. Agnes' Eve 22
Y orange sunset waning slow : Move eastward 2
what is it? there? 2/ arbutus Totters ; Lucretius 184:
O love, they die in y rich sky, Princess iv 13
Where y broad water sweetly slowly glides. Requiescat 2
Calm and still light on y great plain In Mem. xi 9
On y swoll'n brook that bubbles fast „ xcix 6
To y hard crescent, as she hangs „ cvii 10
And y four fools have suck'd their allegory Gareth and L. 1199
Else y black felon had not let me pass, „ 1293
May y just heaven, that darkens o'er me, Merlin and V. 931
As y proud Prince who left the quest to me. Lancelot and E. 762
O me, be y dark Queens in y black boat. Pass, of Arthur 452
y big black bottle o' gin. North. Cobbler 70
y laady a-steppin' along the streeat, „ 107
You see y Lombard poplar on the plain. Sisters (E. and E.) 79
Down y dark sea, thou comest, darling boy. De Prof., Two G. 34
No stone is fitted in y marble girth Tiresias 135
but seem to draw From y dark cave. Ancient Sage 10
but night enough is there In y dark city : „ 253
But I could wish y moaning sea would rise The Flight 11
till this outworn earth be dead as y dead world
the moon? Locksley H., Sixty 174
Ton
827
Youth
Yon (continued) Y myriad -worlded way —
Young and old, Like y oak,
There westward — ^under y slow-falling star,
' Spirit, nearing y dark portal
Yonder In y hundred million spheres ? '
In y chair I see him sit,
as y walls Rose slowly to a music
droves of swine That range on y plain.
To dream and dream, like y amber light,
So great a miracle as y hilt.
I lived up there on y mountain side.
with what delighted eyes I turn to y oak.
To y oak within the field
Many a night from y ivied casement,
Deep in y shining Orient,
To y shining ground ;
To y argent round ;
Met me walking on y way,
It is but y empty glass
' Come down, O maid, from y mountain height :
Like y morning on the blind half-world ;
Lastly y yester-even.
And roar from y dropping day :
Would dote and pore on y cloud
To where in y orient star
For ' ground in y social mill
And drown'd in y living blue
or dives In y greening gleam,
And rise, 0 moon, from y down,
Of the long waves that roll in y bay ?
' I will not eat Till y man upon the bier arise.
Take warning : y man is surely dead ;
Saint who stands with lily in hand In y shrine.
So great a miracle as y hilt.
springs Of Dirc6 laving y battle-plain.
How simimer-bright are y skies,
But some in y city hold, my son,
0 yes, if y hill be level with the flat.
A gleam from y vale,
Falteringly, ' Who lies on y pyre ? '
Strow y moimtain flat.
Yore Strode in, and claim'd their tribute as of y.
York lands in Kent and messuages in Y,
Y's white rose as red as Lancaster's.
Young And I was y — too y to wed :
made thee famous once, when y :
She stood, a sight to make an old man y.
What is loathsome to the y Savours well
Have all his pretty y ones educated,
1 wonder he went so y.
' O boy, tho' thou art y and proud,
' Old friend, too old to be so y, depart,
devil's leaps, and poisons half the y.
' Love again, song again, nest again, y again,'
Y and old. Like yon oak.
As a 2/ lamb, who cannot dream.
To the y spirit present
^y gay y hawk, my Rosalind :
Came two y lovers lately wed ;
F Nature thro' five cycles ran.
Since I beheld y Laurence dead,
sweeter is the y lamb's voice to me
I wish'd myself the fair y beech
In the Spring a y man's fancy
Epilogue 53
The Oak 3
Akbar's Dream 152
God and the Univ. 4
Two Voices 30
Miller's D. 9
(Enone 40
Palace of Art 200
Lotos-Eaters, C. S. 57
M. d' Arthur 156
St. S. Stylites 72
Talking Oak 8
13
Locksley Hall 7
154
St. Agnes' Eve 14
16
Edward Gray 2
Will Water. 207
Princess vii 192
352
Boddicea 29
In Mem. xv 2
16
„ Ixxxvi 15
„ Ixxxix 39
cxv 7
14
„ Con. 109
Maud I xviii 63
Geraint and E. 657
672
Balin and Balan 262
Pass, of Arthur 324
Tiresias 139
Ancient Sage 23
82
Locksley H., Sixty 111
Early Spring 33
Death of (Enone 95
Mechanofhilus 6
Com. of Arthur 506
Edwin Morris 127
Aylmer's Field 51
Miller's D. 141
The Blackbird 16
Gardener's D. 141
Vision of Sin 157
Enoch Arden 146
Grandmother 14
Sailor Boy 7
Balin and Balan 17
Guinevere 522
The Throstle 9
The Oak 2
Supp. Confessions 170
Ode to Memory 73
Rosalind 34
L. of Shalott ii 34
Two Voices 17
L. C. V. de Vere 28
May Queen, Con. 6
Talking Oak 141
Locksley Hall 20
her cheek was pale and thinner than should be for one
so y, ,. 21
r ashes pirouetted down Coquetting with y beeches; Amphion 27
So these y hearts not knowing that they loved, Aylmer's Field 133
' Peace, you y savage of the Northern wild ! Princess Hi 247
remain'd among us In our y nursery still unknown, „ iv 332
fresh y captains flash'd their glittering teeth, „ v 20
Stays all the fair y planet in her hands — „ vii 264
As thou with thy y lover hand in hand W. to Marie Alex. 34
How y Columbus seem'd to rove. The Daisy 17
Or a mowt 'a taaen y Robins — N. Farmer, 0. S. 50
Young {continued) My yet y life in the wilds of Time, Maud I xw,21
O y lord-lover, what sighs are those, „ xxii 29
and his wife Nursed the y prince. Com: of Arthur 224
With Gawain and y Modred, her two sons, „ 244
A y man will be wiser by and by ; „ 404
But felt his y heart hammering in his ears, Gareth and L. 322
Some y lad's mystery — „ 466
Ate with y lads his portion by the door, „ 480
being y, he changed and came to loathe Marr. of Geraint 593
all thro' that y traitor, cruel need „ 715
and yet — God guide them — y.' Merlin and V. 29
And found a fair y squire who sat alone, „ 472
said y Lavaine, ' For nothing. Lancelot and E. 208
P as I am, yet would I do my best.' ., 222
Dearer to true y hearts than their own praise, ,. 419
Then Lancelot answer'd y Lavaine and said, ,. 445
With y Lavaine into the poplar grove. .. 509
In so y youth, was ever made a knight Holy Grail 138
All the y beauty of his own soul to hers, Pelleas and E. 83
For Arthur, loving his y knight, ,, 159
' O y knight. Hath the great heart of knighthood „ 595
till that y life Being smitten in mid heaven Last Tournament 26
For y Life knows not when y Life was born. Lover's Tale i 156
To greet us, her y hero in her arms ! „ iv 171
0 y life Breaking with laughter from the dark ; De Prof., Two G. 17
Five y kings put asleep by the sword-stroke, Batt. of Brunanhurh 52
Or the y green leaf rejoice in the frost The Wreck 20
y man Danny O'Roon wid his ould woman, Tomorrow 88
for is not Earth as yet so y ? — Locksley H., Sixty 166
Yonder lies our y sea-village — „ 245
o'er the mountain-walls Y angels pass. Early Spring 12
That y eagle of the West Open. I. and C. Exhib. 28
1 loved you first when y and fair, Happy 29
To you, yet y, who breathe the balm To Ulysses 10
if his y music wakes A wish in you To Mary Boyle 63
O Y Mariner, You from the haven Merlin and the G. 1
O y Mariner, Down to the haven, „ 123
Younger Wherein the y Charles abode Talking Oak 297
Thro' the shadow of the globe we sweep into the y
day : Locksley Hall 183
The y people making holiday, Enoch Arden 62
While all the y ones with jubilant cries „ 377
To Lady Psyche, y, not so wise. Princess iv 316
With wisdom, like the y child : In Mem. cxiv 20
For both thy y brethren have gone down Gareth and L. 1102
Not many a moon his y, ' My fair child, „ 1415
Allow him ! but Lavaine, my y here, Lancelot and E. 202
And let the y and unskill'd go by „ 1361
Five knights at once, and every y knight, Holy Grail 303
My y knights, new-made, in whom your flower Last Tournament 99
The leading of his y knights to me. ,, 110
He spoke, and taking all his y knights, ,. 126
The y Julian, who himself was crown'd Lover's Tale iv 296
The y sister, Evelyn, enter'd — there, Sisters (E. and E.) 152
we past to this ward where the y children are
laid : In the Child. Hasp. 27
To y England in the boy my son. To Victor Hugo 14
When, in our y London days. To E. Fitzgerald 54
But y kindlier Gods to bear us down, Devieter and P. 131
Some y hand must have engraven the ring — The Ring 238
You, loved by all the y gown There at Balliol, To Master of B. 2
Youngest Y Autumn, in a bower Grape-thicken'd Elednore 35
For one, the y, hardly more than boy, Enoch Arden 563
And while we waited, one, the y of lis, Merlin and V. 415
Youngster Mangled to morsels, A y m war ! Batt. of Brunanhurh 75
Younker there he caught the y tickling trout — Walk, to the Mail 33
Youth (adolescence) ' Yet,' said I, in my morn of y, Supp. Confessions 139
the breathing spring Of Hope and Y. The Poet 28
His early rage Had force to make me rhyme in y, Miller's D. 193
' My y,' she said, ' was blasted with a curse : D. of F. Women 103
Who miss the brother of your y? To J. S. 59
May perpetual y Keep dry their light from
tears ; ' Of old sat Freedom 19
Drive men in manhood, as in y. Love thou thy land 74
At such a distance from his y in grief. Gardener's D. 54
Youth
828
Zoroastrian
Touth (adolescence) {continued) Holding the folded
annals of my y ; Gardener's D. 244
My first, last love ; the idol of my y, „ 277
Nightmare of y, the spectre of himself ? Love mid Duty 13
To dwell in presence of immortal y, Tiihonus 21
Immortal age beside immortal y, „ 22
nourishing a y sublime With the fairy tales of science, Locksley Hall 11
social wants that sin against the strength oiy\ „ 59
That my y was half divine. Vision of Sin 78
his full tide of y Broke with a phosphorescence Aylmer's Field 115
We remember love ourselves In our sweet y : Princess i 123
She had the care of Lady Ida's y, „ Hi 85
' We remember love ourself In our sweet y; „ v 208
Confusions of a wasted y ; In Mem., Pro. 42
And in the places of his 2/. _ „ xviii 8
Whose y was full of foolish noise, „ liii 3
For life outliving heats of y, „ 10
It is the trouble of my y That foolish sleep „ Ixviii 15
The giant labouring in his y ; „ cxviii 2
Yet Hope had never lost her y ; „ cxxv 5
Maud in the light of her y and her grace. Maud I vl5
For my dark-dawning y, , . » xix 7
When I was frequent with him in my y, Gareth and L. 124
In his own blood, his princedom, y and hopes, „ 210
Some old head-blow not heeded in his j/ ,, 714
In so yoimg y, was ever made a knight Till Galahad ; Holy Grail 138
light-wing'd spirit of his y retum'd On Arthur's
heart ; . Balin and Balan 21
lists of such a beard as y gone out Had left in ashes : Merlin and V. 245
Full many a love in loving y was mine ; I needed
then no charm to keep them mine But y and love ; „ 546
By all the sweet and sudden passion of y Lancelot and E. 282
This is not love : but love's first flash in y, „ 949
Not at my years, however it hold in y. „ 1296
I told her that her love Was but the flash of y, „ 1318
And this was call'd ' The Tournament oi ¥:' Pelleas and E. 158
Whereto we move, than when we strove in y, Pass, of Arthur 67
And some had visions out of golden y, „ 102
opposite The flush and dawn of y, Lover's Tale i 189
Like to the wild y of an evil prince, „ 354
from prime y Well-known well-loved. „ ii 175
I till the things familiar to her y „ iv 95
Which yet retains a memory of its y, Sisters {E. and E.) 66
One bloom of y, health, beauty, „ 120
years of haste and random y Unshatter'd ; De Prof., Two G. 21
And wind the front of y with flowers, Ancient Sage 97
years that when my ¥ began Had set the lily and rose „ 155
and y is tum'd to woe. The Flight 16
Gone the fires of y, the follies, furies, Locksley H., Sixty 39
Gone the tyrant of my y, „ 43
millions one at length with all the visions of my y? „ 162
cry your ' forward,' yours are hope and y, but I „ 225
But a sun coming up in his y ! Dead Prophet 42
A soul that, watch'd from earliest y, To Marq. of Dufferin 25
Y and Health, and birth and wealth. By am, Evolution. 8
Her husband in the flush of y and dawn, Death of CEnone 17
' I am losing the light of my Y The Dreamer 4
Youth (yOTing man) And yeam'd towards William; but the y, Dora 6
A y came riding toward a palace-gate. Visio7i of Sin 2
And of her brethren, y's of puissance ; Princess i 37
From y and babe and hoary hairs : In Mem. Ixix 10
ever haunting round the palm A lusty y, Gareth and L. 48
• A goodly y and worth a goodlier boon ! „ 449
younger brethren have gone down Before this y ; „ 1103
whisUe of the y who scour'd His master's armour ; Marr. of Geraint 257
Youth (young man) (continued) A y, that following
with a costrel Marr. of Geraint 386
There came a fair-hair'd y, that in his hand Geraint and E. 201
when the fair-hair'd y came by him, „ 205
' Yea, willingly,' replied the y ; ' and thou, „ 207
' Yea, my kind lord,' said the glad y, „ 241
some few — ay, truly — y's that hold Merlin and V. 21
successful war On all the y, they sicken'd ; ,. 572
The saintly y, the spotless lamb of Christ, ,, 749
passing gayer y For one so old, „ 927
but there is many a y Now crescent, Lancelot and E. 447
doors Were softly simder'd, and thro' these a y, Pelleas, Pelleas and E. 4
Y, we are damsels-errant, and we ride, .. 64
' Fight therefore,' yell'd the y, „ 572
' Lo, there,' said one of Arthur's y. Last Tournament 429
Youthful With y fancy re-inspired. Ode to Memory 114
to him that reaps not harvest of his y joys, Locksley Hall 139
So y and so flexile then, Amphion 59
' Y hopes, by scores, to all. Vision of Sin 199
Welcome her, all things y and sweet, W. to Alexandra 8
a band Of y friends, on mind and art. In Mem. Ixxxvii 22
knight Had vizor up, and show'd a y face, Marr. of Geraint 189
let thine own hand strike Thy y pulses Tiresias 157
y jealousy is a liar. Locksley H., Sixty 240
bare dome had not begim to gleam Thro' y curls, To Mary Boyle 42
Youthhood Loving his lusty y yielded to him. Gareth and L. 580
Yow (ewe) Fourscoor y's upon it an' some on it N. Farmer, O. S. 40
Yowe (ewe) Woorse nor a far-welter'd y : „ A', S. 32
Yowling See A-yowlin'
Yucca My y, which no winter quells, To Ulysses 21
Yule The merry merry bells of Y. In Mem. xxviii 20
. Glow'd like the heart of a great fire at Y, Marr. of Geraint 559
' Poor men, when y is cold. Holy Grail 613
Yule-block faace wur as red as the Y-b theer i' the graate. Owd Rod 56
Yule-clog The y-c sparkled keen with frost, In Mem. l.v.wiii 5
Zealous z it should be All that it might be : Princess iv 423
Zenith that branch'd And blossom'd in the z, Enoch Arden 586
holdeth his imdimned forehead far Into a clearer z, Lover's Tale i 514
Faith at her z, or all but lost in the gloom Vastness 11
And stand with my head in the z, Parnassus 6
Zeus Then rose Achilles dear to Z ; Achilles over the T. 2
Zig-zag By z-z paths, and juts of pointed rock, M. d'Arthur 50
By s paths, and juts of pointed rock, Pass, of Arthur 218
Zolaism wallowing in the troughs of Z, — Locksley H., Sixty 145
Zone Flowing beneath her rose-hued z ; Arabian Nights 140
but that my z Unmann'd me : Princess ii 420
Like those three stars of the airy Giant's z, „ v 260
And on thro' z's of light and shadow To F. D. Maurice 27
And four great z's of sculpture. Holy Grail 232
Why ye not wear on arm, or neck, or 2 Last Tournament 36
none could breathe Within the z of heat ; Columbus 53
like a flame From z to z oi the world, Dead Prophet 35
Gifts from every British z ; Open I. and C. Exhib. 9
On broader z's beyond the foam. To Ulysses 30
Mix me this Z with that ! Mechanophilus 8
Zoned a silken hood to each. And z with gold ; Princess ii 18
Watch'd my fair meadow z with airy mom ; Prog, of Spring 69
Zoning And when the z eve has died On a Mourner 21
Zoroastrian they rail At me the 2. Akbar's Dream 104
A CONCORDANCE to the DRAMATIC WORKS
OF
ALFRED, LORD TENNYSON.
A that all the louts to whom Their ^ B C is darkness, Queen Mary m iv 35
Aile (ale) They ha' broached a barrel of a i' the long
Abler while in Normanland God speaks thro' a voices, Harold i i 167
Abolish to cancel and a all bonds of human allegiance, Queen Mary v iv 49
bam,
Abbacy From all the vacant sees and abbacies.
Abbess I think our A knew it and allow'd it.
Abbey The kingliest A in all Christian lands,
He shelter'd in the A of Pontigny.
Hard as the stones of his a.
Abbeyland new Lords Are quieted with their sop
of A's,
Abbot there were A 's — but they did not bring their
women ;
sits and eats his heart for want of money to pay the A . Foresters i i 5
he borrowed the monies from the A of York, the Sheriff's
brother. And if they be not paid back at the end of the
year, the land goes to the A.
Those two thousand marks lent me by the A
I believed this A of the party of King Richard,
Or I forfeit my land to the A .
You shall wait for mine till Sir Richard has paid the A.
I fear this J is a heart of flint,
I ran into my debt to the A , Two thousand marks in gold.
We spoil'd the prior, friar, a, monk.
Then that bond he hath Of the A —
I have sent to the A and justiciary
The A of York and his justiciary.
it was agreed when you borrowed these monies from
the^
these monies should be paid in to the A at York,
Save for this maiden and thy brother A ,
You, my lord A , you Justiciary, I made you A , you
Jvisticiaiy :
Oar rebel A then shall join your hands,
Here A, Sheriff — no — no, Robin Hood.
Abear (bear) I can't a to think on 'er now,
I can't a to see her.
Abel light darkness, A Cain, The sovd the body,
Abetting They say, his wife was knowing and a.
Abhor all of us a The venomoiis, bestial, devilish
revolt
and refuse. Reject him, and a him.
— the whole world A you ;
Abide You must a my judgment, and my father's,
and on thee, Edith, if thou a it, —
King will not a thee with thy cross.
then he called me a rude naame, and I can't a
Prom, of May i 426
Becket i iii 652
V ii 95
Harold m i 204
Becket n i 84
Foresters i ii 270
Queen Alary m i 142
Becket in iii 135
I 168
11264
ii266
I ii 152
I ii 232
iii 268
ni463
nil67
iv85
IV 87
IT 334
rv467
IT 507
IV 633
IV 841
IV 933
IV 989
Prom, of May n 32
in 758
Becket i iii 715
Harold ii ii 307
Queen Mary n ii 286
IV iii 279
Becket v iii 184
Queen Mary v i 145
Harold in i 317
Becket i iii 488
but he wur so rough wi' ma, I couldn't a 'im.
as the good Sally says, ' I can't a him ' —
If it be her ghoast, we mun a it.
but a with me who love thee.
Ability Hath he the large a of the Emperor ?
Hath he the lai^e a of his father ?
Able The man is a enough — no lack of wit,
Prom, of May ii 159
ml04
m 174
in 460
Foresters ii i 602
Queen Mary i v 323
I V 438
Foresters i ii 103
Abroach Not set myself a And run my mind out
Abrogation Towards the a and repeal Of all such
laws
Absalom Deal gently with the young man A.
Absence Which in his a had been all my wealth.
But since mine a will not be for long,
Thine a well may seem a want of care,
and you look thin and pale. Is it for his a ?
this world Is brighter for his a as that other Is
darker for his presence,
but can he trace me Thro' five years' a,
Absolution Pole, to give us all that holy a which
First Citizen. Old Bourne to the life ! Second
The Cup I ii 106
Queen Mary ill iii 141
Becket i iii 757
Queen Mary i v 361
in vi 216
HaroU I i 322
Prom, of May i 782
n458
n 615
Citizen. Holy a !
Legate's coming To bring us a from the Pope.
To take this a from your lips,
Thro' this most reverend Father, a,
Stigand shall give me a for it —
Hast thou had a for thine oath ?
Stigand'hath given me a for it.
Not I, the Pope. Ask him for a.
Absolve commission from the Pope To a thee
He by His mercy a you !
Do here a you and deliver you And every one of you,
Cannot the Pope a thee if thou sign ?
A the left-hand thief and damn the right ?
Forgive me and a me, holy father.
Son, I a thee in the name of God.
He shall a you . . . you shall have redress.
Our Becket, who will not a the Bishops.
he shall a The bishops — they but did my will —
Oh, if you have, a him !
to a the bishops Whom you have excommunicated.
Save that you will a the bishops.
Absolved Tut, tut, I have a thee :
A-bumin' Queen Mary gwoes on a-b and a-b,
A-b, and a-b, and a-makin'
Abused Her name is much a among these traitors.
Modest maiden lily a,
A-bussin' (kissing) thou and me a-b o' one another
t'other side o' the haaycock.
Abysm Steam'd upward from the undescendible A.
Abyss rough road That breaks off short into the a'es-
A-caUin' they ha' ta'en the body up inter your chaumber,
and they be all a-c for ye.
Accept France would not a her for a bride
beseech Your Highness to a our lowliest thanks
tell him That I a the diadem of Galatia —
So I would, Robin, if any man would a her.
A this horn ! if e'er thou be assail'd
Acceptable more the love, the more a The sacrifice
nobler The victim was, the more a Might be the
sacrifice.
Accepting For that would seem a of your love.
Queen Mary i iii 28
ni i 432
„ m ii 116
„ III iii 148
Harold n ii 798
„ HI i 212
„ in i 213
Becket v ii 379
Queen Mary in ii 53
in iii 209
„ III iii 214
Becket i iii 230
II ii 392
II ii 441
nii442
vi86
vi223
vi253
V ii 131
V ii 376
V iii 120
Harold in i 104
Queen Mary iv iii 523
IV iii 531
n ii 110
Foresters n ii 158
Prom, of May n 231
Harold i i 16
Prom, of May 1 230
n571
Queen Mary i ii 67
n ii 131
The Cup n 158
Foresters ni 74
IV 423
Harold m i 348
The Falcon 880
739
829
Accepting
830
After-dinner
Accepting (continued) Have I done wisely, then, in
a him?
Access A stranger monk desires a to you.
Mine enemies barr'd all a to the boy.
Accomplished to see my solemn vow A .
The purpose of my being is a,
To-day he hath a his thirtieth birthday.
Account There's half an angel wrong'd in your a ;
King Demands a strict a of all those revenues
dead ; gone to his a — dead and buried.
Then by thine own a thou shouldst be mine.
Accruing Judgment, and pain a thereupon ;
Accursed my men Hold that the shipwreckt are a of God ;
for the two were fellow-prisoners So many years
in yon a Tower — Queen Mary i iv 200
With that vile Cranmer in the a lie Of good Queen
Catharine's divorce —
' We pray continually for the death Of our a Queen
and Cardinal Pole.'
Nay, ev'n the a heathen Saladeen Strike !
Accuse Lest men a you of indifference To all faiths. Queen Mary m iv 223
Shall these a him to a foreign prince ? „ iv i 24
must A himself, excuse himself; TJie Cup n 115
Accused ' If any cleric be a of felony, the Church shall not
protect him ; Becket i iii 87
Accuser appear before the Pope, And answer thine a's . . . „ i iii 603
Queen Mary i i 128
I i 124
Becket i i 382
Harold V i 581
Queen Mary m iii 107
V iii 30
V V 255
From, of May iii 184
Becket v ii 65
„ V ii 451
Harold ni i 308
The Falcon 926
Foresters I i 298
Queen Mary v iii 2
Becket i iii 650
Prom, of May in 145
Foresters iv 1038
Queen Mary m iii 219
Harold n i 100
in iv 231
v ii 181
Becket rv ii 251
Achage his a, and his breakage, if that were all
Ache full of a's and broken before his day.
Against the moral excess No physical a,
Acies A, A Prona stematur !
Acknowledge and a The primacy of the Pope ?
Acknowledged Mary hath o you her heir.
She knew me, and a me her heir,
A-coomin' (coming) I seed that one cow o' thine i' the
pinfold agean as I wur a-c 'ere. Prom, of May 1 191
Acorn On nuts and a's, ha ! Or the King's deer ? Foresters iv 882
Acre (seaport) like the woman at A when the Turk shot her „ ii i 307
Acre (land) (See also Haacre, Ten-aacre) her advowsons,
granges, farms. And goodly a's — Becket i i 163
1 took it For some three thousand a's. Prom, of May xa 614
Acrid Ah, what an a wine has Luther brew'd ! Queen Mary iv iii 545
Acrisius Danae has escaped again Her tower, and her A — Becket i i 396
A-crying and they was all a-c out at the bad times. Prom, of May 1 138
Act (s) he begs you to forget it As scarce his a : — Tine Cup ii 53
Act (verb) (See also Be-act) that these may a On Harold
when they meet. Harold n ii 91
King would a servitor and hand a dish to his son ; Becket in iii 139
Veiling one sin to a another. Prom, of May in 773
Actable Is naked truth a in true life ? Harold m i 109
Acted why should not the parable of our blessed Lord be
a again ? Becket i iv 77
Who made the second mitre play the first, And a me ? „ in iii 213
Well a, was it ? A comedy meant to seem a tragedy — „ iv ii 321
and a on would yield A nobler breed The Falcon 753
Acting tear it all to pieces, never dream'd Of a on it. The Cup i ii 248
No ! a, playing on me, both of them. ~
Action (See also Be-action) A and re-action, The
miserable see-saw of our child-world.
Act of Parliament they be both bastards hy A o P
and Council.
Corroborate by your a's o P:
Actor Should play the second a in this pageant
A-cnm (come) there wur an owld lord a-c to duie wi' un.
Adage there's An old world English a to the point.
Adam-clay Cleaving to your original A-c,
Add Leave it with him and a a gold mark thereto.
Prom, of May in 693
Queen Mary iv iii 384
li 24
n ii 173
ni iii 13
IV iii 504
IV i 175
IV iii 418
Foresters m 210
Added the clauses a To that same treaty Queen Mary in iii 68
Adder To the deaf a thee, that wilt not dance Harold i i 385
the Norman a Hath bitten us ; we are poison'd : „ in i 38
he that lookt a fangless one, Issues a venomous a. Becket i iii 453
Addled Eggs ? FUvppo. One, but a. The Falcon 129
Address (s) All bangs on her a, And upon you, Lord
Mayor. Q^een Mary n ii 55
he gave me no c, and there was no word of
marriage; Prom, of May m 332
Address (verb) She will a your guilds and companies. Q^een Mary ii ii 15
Adieu Both be happy, and a for ever and for evermore
■ — a. Foresters ii ii 196
Adit Here His turtle builds ; his exit is our a : Becket ni ii 7
Adjudge at this time A him to the death. Queen Mary iv iii 38
Admiral Her freaks and frolics with the late Lord A? „ i iv 20
Admiration begets An a and an indignation, „ in iv 170
Admired But having now a it long enough, Becket iv ii 262
' To the a Camma, wife of Sinnatus, the Tetrarch, The Cup i i 36
' To the a Camma, — beheld you afar off — ,, i ii 70
Admit Ay, gentle friend, a them. I will go. Queen Mary i ii 110
A-doing What be he a-d here ten mile an' moor fro' a
raail ? Prom, of May i 209
Adore and a This Vicar of their Vicar. Queen Mary in iii 243
Adorer an a of our great goddess, Artemis, The Cup i i 38
Adulterous A to the very heart of Hell. Queen Mary v v 163
A dog ! (repeat) The Cup i iii 108, 122
Adultery She seethed with such adulteries. Queen Mary in iv 189
Advance A our Standard of the Warrior, Harold iv i 248
told me he would a me to the service of a great lady, Becket in i 123
Foresters n i 628
IV 534
„ IV 735, 761
Becket i iii 643
Queen Mary ii ii 235
Becket n i 152
Foresters n i 415
IV 621
IV 1048
Queen Mary i iii 150
V i 301
Becket I iii 112
Queen Mary ni iv 194
Harold i i 116
„ V i 281
Queen Mary i iv 5
V ii 57
Becket v ii 380
• ,. V ii 551
I i 161
I iii 79
He has a friend there will a the monies.
There was no room to a or to retire.
A, a\ (repeat)
Advanced A thee at his instance by the Jews,
Advantage To be of rich a to our realm,
I, that taking The Fiend's a of a throne.
We have him at last ; we have him at a.
0 no, we took A of the letter —
Advent To celebrate this a of our King !
Advice With our a and in our company,
and your Grace, So you will take a of mine,
and by the a of his Government.'
Advise I would a That we should thoroughly
A him : speak him sweetly, he will hear thee.
could do No other than this way a the king
Advised The Queen is ill a :
He cannot dream that I a the war;
But you a the Pope.
Advising On any mjui's a but your own.
Advowson have graspt Her livings, her a's,
' All causes of a's and presentations,
A-dying I ha' three sisters a-d at home o' the sweating
sickness. „ i iv 246
iEsop Inverted M — ^mountain out of mouse. Queeii Mary ii i 67
Afear'd (afraid) I was a it was the ghost, your worship. Foresters ii i 225
1 am mortally a o' thee, thou big man, „ iv 316
Affable you were bland And a to men of all estates, Queen Mary ni vi 81
Affair His Highness is so vex'd with strange a's-
Mary. That his own wife is no a of his.
Has let his farm, all his a's, I fear,
for I niust hence upon The King's a.
Affect Her Majesty Hears you a the Prince — ■
what shall I call it, a her thine own self.
Your lordship a's the unwavering perpendicular ;
Affection old a master'd you. You falter'd into tears.
from you except Return of his a —
and her a's Will flower toward the light
Afltoity the man, the woman, Following their best
affinities.
Affirm and a's The Queen has forfeited her right
Affright yet the word A's me somewhat :
Doth this a thee ?
Affrighted scurrying of a rat A me,
v ii 560
Prom, of May n 420
Foresters iv 342
Queen Mary i iv 82
Becket, Pro. 513
n ii 325
V ii 143
The Falcon 111
Prom, of May i 484
hallus a-f ma off, tho' ye knaws
I 523
Queen Many v i 289
I iv 9
Harold I i 23
Queen Mary ni v 144
A-fobbing (to put of)
I love ye.
A-follering (following) then back agean, a-f my oan
shadder —
Afraid (See also Afear'd, Half-afraid) I was o of her,
and I hid myself.
I am half a to pass.
Be not a of me. For these are no conventional flourishes
After And that this noble realm thro' a years May
in this unity Queen Mary m iii 156
and all thy flock should catch An a ague-fit of trembling. Becket ni iii 33
After-dinner Not now, not now — ^with a-d grace. Foresters iv 937
Prom, of May 1 108
I 371
1 551
n328
n561
After-life
831
Alien
m 402
il
Queen Mary i iv 12
II i 82
„ III iv 412
IV ii 104
V ii 235
Harold v i 330
Becket i iii 249
u i 72
Prom, of May i 590
u 633
II 661
m400
ni 514
Foresters m 97
Queen Mary v i 227
Becket i iv 61
After-life man perceives that The lost gleam of an a-l Prom, of May i 503
greater nearness to the birthday Of the a-l. Foresters n i 45
After-marriage link rusts with the breath of the first a-m
kiss, Becket, Pro. 362
JUtemoon {See also Artemoon) The clamour'd darling of
their a ! The Cup n 125
You had better attend to your hayfield. Good a. Prom, of May n 123
Good a, my friends. „ iii 20
Agatha ask his forgiveness before he dies. — Sisteb A
Sister A is right.
A-gawin' (going) Be thou a-g to the long bani ?
Age (See also Lisping-age) tho' by your a, And by
your looks you are not worth the having,
Song flies you know For a's.
it is an a Of brief life, and brief purpose,
' what am I, Cranmer, against whole a's ? '
gray dawn Of an old a that never will be mine
From child to child, from Pope to Pope, from a to a,
he would be mine a Had he lived now ;
A, orphans, and babe-breasting mothers —
Will enter on the larger golden a ;
may not those, who march Before their a,
I could make his a A comfort to him —
your Father must be now in extreme old a.
poor Steer looks The very type of 4 in a picture
borne hollow-hearted from exceeding a —
Aged How doubly a this Queen of ours hath grown
A-getting he makes moan that all be a-g cold.
when I was a-g o' bluebells for your ladyship's nose
to smell on — „ ill i 161
A-^ttin' and my missus a-g ower 'er lyin'-in. Prom, of May in 74
A-glorifying our master been a-g and a- velveting and
a-silking himself, The Falcon 98
A-going We be a-g home after our supper in all humbleness, Becket i iv 206
Agony Fire — inch by inch to die in o ! Queen Mary iv ii 223
in her a The mother came upon her — „ v iv 19
star That dances in it as mad with a ! Harold i i 9
all promises Made in our a for help from heaven ? ,. in i 288
Only this morning in his a Foresters iv 453
Agree {See also 'Grees) A with him quickly again, even
for the sake of the Church. Becket ii ii 376
Agreed are well a That those old statutes touching
LoUardism Queen Mary ni iv 6
it was a when you borrowed these monies from the
Abbot Foresters iv 465
A-groanin' He's been a-moanin' and a-g in 'is sleep. Prom, of May m 411
Ague Harvestless autumns, horrible a's, plague Queen Mary v i 98
Wet, famine, a, fever, storm, wreck, wrath, — „ v v 108
Agne-flt thy flock should catch An after a-f of trembling. Becket ni iii 33
A-harrowin' Hodge 'ud ha' been a-h o' white peasen
i' the outfield Queen Mary iv iii 492
A-hawking A-h, a-h ! If I sit, I grow fat. Becket, Pro. 413
ride a-h with the help of the men. Foresters i i 213
A-hell-fire and sets the church-tower over there all a-/j-/
as it were ? Becket m iii 51
A-hunting King's verdurer caught him a-h in the forest, „ i iv 95
Aid (s) But with Cecil's a And others, Qweew ilfan/ v v 279
Aid (verb) as I love The people ! whom God a ! „ v iii 36
Believing I should ever a the Church — Becket, Pro. 417
Ail What a's you ? Harold. Speak. Proin. of May ni 661
AUmer (John, Bishop of London) A and Bifllingham,
and hundreds more ; Queen Mary iii 11
Aim stateliest deer in all the herd — Beyond his a — „ v ii 427
I am not Beyond his a, or was not. » v ii 450
man that hath to foil a murderous a May, surely, play
with words. Harold n ii 417
Their a is ever at that which flies highest — Foresters i i 261
Mine eye most true to one hair's-breadth of a. „ iv 695
Aim'd spoil and sackage a at by these rebels. Queen Mary ii ii 248
but failure it may be Of all we a at.
The point you a at, and pray God she prove
Aiming in a at your love, It may be sometimes
Air (atmosphere) Like imiversal a and sunshine
A and sunshine. I would we had you,
Free a \ free field !
Becket i i 383
„ n ii 77
„ vi35
Queen Mary ni ii 182
V ii 605
Harold n ii 230
Air (atmosphere) {continued) he flings His brand in a and
catches it again, Harold v i 494
and fling them out to the free a. Becket i i 288
Blurt thy free mind to the a? „ i iii 239
when I flee from this For a gasp of freer a, ,, ii i 29
Let all the a reel into a mist of odour. The Cup u 185
give him limbs, then a, and send him forth „ ii 261
come as freely as heaven's a and mother's milk ? Foresters i i 210
We should be free as a in the wild wood — „ i iii 124
I breathe Heaven's a, and Heaven looks down on me, „ iv 725
if ye cannot breathe but woodland a, „ iv 953
'Air (hair) I ha' heard 'im a-gawin' on 'ud make your
'a — God bless it ! — stan' on end. Prom, of May 1 135
Air (strain of music) Play the a, Little John. Foresters in 418
A and word, my lady, are maid and man. „ in 419
Aisle {See also Minster-aisle) The nave and a's all
empty as a fool's jest ! Queen Mary iv iii 286
Did not a man's voice ring along the a, Becket v ii 151
Alarm my master hears with much a, Queen Mary i v 250
Have you had any a ? no stranger ? Becket in i 28
Alarum clang and clash a as we pass. Queen Mary n i 230
A-laughin' I'd like to leather 'im black and blue, and
she to be a-l at it. Prom, of May n 596
Alberighi (Federigo degli) See Federigo degli Alberighi
Alchemic and jealousy Hath in it an a force to fuse Queen Mary in vi 181
Alchemy backward-working a Should change this gold to
silver. Foresters iv 39
Alder We parted like the brook yonder about the a
island. Prom, of May 1 173
Alder-island Close by that a-i in your brook, „ ii 535
Aldred (Archbishop of York) take, sign it, Stigand, A !
Sign it, Harold in i 198
Ask it of ^. ,. ui i 226
Come, A, join our hands before the hosts, „ iv i 241
Aldwyth (daughter of Alfgar and widow of Griffyth, King of
Wales) The Lady A Was here to-day, i ii 34
not like A . . . For which I strangely love him. Should
not England Love A, ., i ii 175
Courage, noble A] ,. i ii 183
They say thou art to wed the Lady J. „ m ii 108
A\ A\ (repeat) „ iv 1 19, 25
A, Harold, A\ „ rv i 132
His conqueror conquer'd A. „ iv i 218
A, A, Canst thou love me, „ iv i 225
Harold, Harold and A I „ iv i 244
Hail ! Harold ! A ! hail, budegroom and bride ,. iv iii 1
Hail, Harold, A ! Bridegroom and bride ! „ iv iii 42
Leave them ! and thee too, A, „ iv iii 227
Ale {See also Aale) Brain-dizzied with a draught of
morning a. Queen Mary n i 72
and she brew'd the best a in all Glo'ster, Becket in i 197
I am misty with my thimbleful of a. Foresters iv 278
The king's good health in a and Malvoisie. „ iv 968
Ale-house spent all your last Saturday's wages at
the a-h ; Provi. of May in 79
Alen90n hast thou never heard His savagery at A , — Harold ii ii 382
Alfgar (Earl of Mercia) {See also Half-Alfear) light enough
for J['s house To strike thee down „ i i 307
It means the lifting of the house of ^. „ i i 473
feuds that part The sons of Godwin from the sons oi A ,. i ii 181
Godwin still at feud with A , And A hates King Harold. „ iv i 124
Alfred (the Great, King of the West Saxons) They blinded
my young kinsman, A — ,. ii ii 511
And that my wife descends from A? „ n ii 594
tell me tales Of A and of Athelstan the Great „ ly i 74
Less than a star among the goldenest hours Of A , ,, iv iii 52
A Was England. Ethelred was nothing. „ v i 373
Alfwig Abbot .4, Leofric, and all the monks „ v i 445
sure this body Is A, the king's uncle. „ v ii 68
Alice (a Lady in Waiting to Queen Mary) Shall A sing
you One of her pleasant songs? A, my child,
Bring us your lute. Q^een Mary v ii 354
Alien Philip's no sudden a — the Queen's husband, „ lu iii 42
forfeited her right to reign By marriage with an a — „ v i 291
So strange among them — such an a there, The Cup ii 143
Alight
832
Amaze
Alight (lighted) Last night, I dream'd the faggots
were a, Queen Mary iv ii 2
Alighted See Lighted
A-Umpin' I seed tha a-l up just now wi' the rooniatics
i' the knee. Prom, of May i 384
Alington Ah, gray old castle of A, Queen Mary u i 243
Alive (See also Half-alive) become Hideously a again
from head to heel, „ iv iii 447
while famished rats Eat them a. „ v ii 198
Dead or a you cannot make him happy. „ v v 71
And flay me all a. Harold iv i 191
All (See also All-but-nothing, All-in-all, Hall) Long
live Queen Mary ! down with a traitors ! Queen Mary i i 66
but a things here At court are known ; „ i iv 56
but God hath sent me here To take such order with a
heretics „ i v 34
now that a traitors Against our royal state have lost
the heads „ iii iv 2
The devil take a boots were ever made Since man went
barefoot. „ iii v 197
But held from you a papers sent by Rome, „ v ii 45
That a day long hath wrought his father's work, „ v ii 118
Methinks I am a angel, that I bear it Without more
rufOing. „ v iii 3
But by a Saints — Leofwin. Barring the Norman ! Harold v i 224
and a left-handedness and under-handedness. Becket, Pro. 340
Father, I am so tender to a hardness ! „ i i 316
Mine enemies barr'd a access to the boy. „ v ii 451
Lady, I say it with a gentleness. The Cup i iii 99
And fill a hearts with fatness and the lust Of plenty — „ ii 272
Richer than a the wide world-wealth of May, The Falcon 466
A Quietist taking a things easily — why — Prom, of May i 290
I've hed the long barn cleared out of a the machines, „ 1 451
Who leaves me a his land at Littlechester, „ i 511
drest like a gentleman, too. Damn a gentlemen, says I ! „ ii 579
and they both love me — I am a in a to both ; „ iii 213
a in a to one another from the time when we first peeped „ m 273
Push'd from a doors as if we bore the pla2;ue, „ in 804
but go about to come at their love with a manner of
homages, Foresters i i 102
Sleep, happy soul ! a life will sleep at last. „ i iii 48
in the name of a our woodmen, present her with this
oaken chaplet as Queen of the wood, „ in 57
Out upon a hard-hearted maidenhood ! „ iv 50
And a I love, Robin, and a his men, „ iv 722
Are a our guests here ? „ iv 993
All-bat-notlmig if a-6-» be anything, and one plate of
dried prunes be a-b-n, The Falcon 134
All^iance promise full A and obedience to the
death. Queen Mary ii ii 169
to cancel and abolish all bonds of human a, „ v iv 50
Lay hands of full a in thy Lord's And crave his mercy, Harold v i 11
thou hast sworn a volimtary a to him ? Becket Pro. 439
Allen (a farm labourer) so, J, I may as well begin
with you. Prom, of May rn 29
I spoke of your names, ^, „ in 35
But, A , tho' you can't read, „ ni 42
What is all this. A? „ m 123
Allen (Sally) See Sally Allen
Allendale The warrior Earl of >4, Foresters xiQ
Alley so many a's, crossings. Paths, avenues — Becket rv ii 6
Alliance Have you a's ? Bithynia, Pontus, Paphlagonia ? The Cup i ii 99
Break thine a with this faithless John, Foresters rv 323
Allied Art thou for Richard, or a to John ? Richard. I
am a to John. „ rv 135
for how canst thou be thus a With John, „ rv 350
All-in-all (See also All) Their Flemish go-between
And a-i-a. Queen Mary in vi 5
Allow your Highness will a Some spice of wisdom „ n iv 133
His Highness and myself (so you a us) „ in iv 324
rage of one who hates a truth He cannot but a. „ m vi 145
A me the same answer as before — „ v i 237
world a's I fall no inch Behind this Becket, Becket v i 39
A me, sir, to pass you. Prom, of May ii 354
.<1 me to go with you to the farm. „ u 574
Allowance I can make a for thee. Queen Mary i v 326
Make no a for the naked truth. „ i v 328
To make a for their rougher fashions, Harold u ii 8
easier then for you to make A for a mother — I'he Falcon 826
ready To make a's, and mighty slow To feel
offences. Prom, of May m 629
Allow'd tho' a stranger fain would be a To join the hunt. The Cup i i 196
I think our Abbess knew it and a it. Becket v ii 95
All-prepared The best of all not a-p to die. ,, v ii 564
All-royal Look rather thou a^ as when first I met thee. „ n i 46
Almighty floated downward from the throne Of God .4. Harold iil9
Harold and God ^ ! „ v i 526
Almoner This A hath tasted Henry's gold. Becket i iii 294
Almost See (teunost
Alms his wealth A fountain of perennial a — Queen Mary ii ii 385
she holds it in Free and perpetual a, Becket i iii 680
boldness of this hand hath won it Love's a, ,, n i 184
pale beggar-woman seeking a For her sick son, The Falcon 853
sweet saints bless your worship for your a to the old
woman ! Foresters ii i 364
0 your honour, I pray you too to give me an a. „ ii i 390
Almshouses Part shall go to the a at Nottingham, „ in 206
Aloan (alone) Let ma a afoor foalk, wilt tha ? Proiri. of May n 213
1 tell'd tha to let ma a ! „ n 229
I can't let tha a if I would, Sally. „ ii 233
A-lodgin' What dost a knaw o' this Mr Hedgar as be
a-Z'wi'ye? „ 1 200
A-lolluping (hanging down) tongue on un cum a-l
out o' 'is mouth as black as a rat. Queen Mary iv iii 519
Alone (See also Alofin) And think not we shall be a — „ n i 191
and not a from this. Likewise from any other, „ ii ii 236
Harold Hear the king's music, all a with him, Harold i ii 194
I leave thee to thy talk with him a; :, n ii 324
And Wulfnoth is a in Normandy. „ mi 81
The Church a hath eyes — and now I see That I was
blind— Becket nil 436
So many happy hours a together, ,, m iii 39
That I would speak with you once more a. ,, in iii 41
Can I speak with you A, my father ? „ v ii 70
will you have it a, Or with these listeners near you ? „ v ii 304
We are all a with him. „ v ii 312
A I do it. „ V ii 459
Too early to be here a with thee ; The Cup i iii 82
Can I not speak with you once more a ? The Falcon 689
Ay, the dear nurse will leave you a ; „ ..703
Let him a ! A worthy messenger ! Foresters i iii 84
Thou art a in the silence of the forest „ iv 630
Let him a a while. He loves the chivaliy of his single arm. „ iv 784
A-lookin' then a-scrattin upon a bit o' paaper, then
a-l agean ; Prom, of May i 203
I'd like to drag 'im thruff the herse-pond, and she
to be a-l at it. „ n 594
Alphabetical (See also Halfabitical) but he sent me an a
list of those that remain, „ m 28
Alphege (Archbishop of Canterbury) St. Denis of France
and St. A of England, Becket v iii 165
Altar (See also Haltar) Our a is a moimd of dead
men's clay. Queen Mary v ii 161
a dead man Rose from behind the a, Harold i ii 79
let our high a Stand where their standard fell ... ,. v ii 139
look how the table steams, like a heathen a ; nay, like
the a at Jerusalem. Becket i iv 69
he hath made his bed between the a's, „ i iv 264
You on this side the a. You on that. The Cv/p ii 254
Altar-flame Rouse the dead a-f, fling in the spices, „ n 182
Alter every tongue A's it passing. Queen Mary ni v 36
Altered He is much a ; but I trust that your return — Prom, of May ni 420
Alva (Duke) The Duke Of ^, an iron soldier. Q^een Mary mi 194
for their heresies, A , they will fight ; „ m ii 204
Duke A will but touch him on the horns, „ v i 155
For A is true son of the true church — „ v i 159
Always .SeeHallus
A-makin' and a-m' o' volk madder and madder ; ,, iv lu 532
Amaze one step in the dark beyond Our expectation,
that a's us. The Cup i i 213
Queen Mary i v 308
I V 566
m ii 21
Foresters i i 130
Queen Mary I iv 110
I V 289
I V 342
in ii 169
Becket i iii 584
The Cup I iii 137
n 169
Prom, of May i 544
ueen Mary m iii 160
V ii 110
viv 9
viv28
viv 30
Becket, Pro. 25
Queen Mary m i 227
Becket ui iii 219
The Falcon 275
Prom, of May in 791
Foresters n ii 51
Becket m iii 229
Amazed
Amaied (See also Maazed) Madam, I am a :
brake into woman-tears, Ev'n Gardiner, all a,
were much a To find as fair a sun
Why lookest thou so a ?
Ambassador King of France, Noailles the A ,
The A from France, your Grace.
Who waits ? Usher. The A of Spain,
Ambition The proud a's of Elizabeth,
For hath not thine o set the Church This day
that a Is like the sea wave,
a, pride So bloat and redden his face —
Ambush Where have you lain in a all the morning ?
Amen Serve God and both your Majesties.
Voices. A.
They groan o ; they swarm into the fire
A. Come on.
4 to all Your wish, and further.
Deserts ! A to what ? Whose deserts ?
Amenable Like other lords a to law.
Amends They make a for the tails.
I make thee full a.
To make a I come this day to break my fast
I cannot find the word — forgive it — A.
Amiss I know I have done a, have been a fool.
Amity Are now once more at perfect a.
Amnesty more of olive-branch and a For foes at home — „ v ii 15
A-moanin' He's been a-m and a-groanin' in 'is sleep, Prom, of May m 411
Amommn Nard, Cinnamon, a, benzoin. The Cup n 184
Amorous If I tried her and la — she's a. Queen Mary i iv 17
nor yet so a That I must needs be husbanded ; „ n ii 215
a Of good old red sound liberal Gascon wine : Becket, Pro. 99
Amoimt How much might that a to, my lord Leicester ? „ i iii 655
Amour Thomas, lord Not only of your vassals but a's, „ v i 205
Amourist he, your rustic a, The polish'd Damon Prom, of May m 561
Amphisbsena Two vipers of one breed — an a, Each
end a sting : Queen Mary in iv 39
Ampler Farewell, Madam, God grant you a mercy
at your call
Amplier A than any field on our poor earth
Amulet that are a's against all The kisses of all kind
Mine a . . . This last . . .
Anabaptist world-hating beast, A haggard A.
Anathema He is pronounced a.
LThe Pope's A — the Holy Rood That bow'd to me
and let them be a, And all that speak for them a.
I charge thee, upon pain of mine a,
Go, lest I blast thee with a,
gone to the King And taken our a with him.
^ematise (See also De-Anathematise) I would a him.
I will not seal. ,, i iii 314
Inathematised Cursed and a us right and left, , v i 4
Anatomized a The flowers for her — Prom, of May n 302
; Vncestor bowl my a Fetch'd from the farthest east — The Falcon 484
' ^cestral lest the crown should be Shorn of a splendour. Becket i iii 157
■ Anchor such a one Was without rudder, a, compass — Prom, of May m 534
Ancient Who now recalls her to His a fold. Qv^en Mary m iii 167
Which frights you back into the a faith ; „ iv ii 143
he stood More like an a father of the Church, „ iv iii 598
And for these Royal customs, These a Royal customs —
Becket i i 167
„ I iii 7, 18
V ii 538
The Cup n 358
Queen Mary ni iii 87
Prom, of May i 354
Queen Mary i v 377
I V 449
I V 625
m ii 16
„ in ii 144
in iii 180
833
Another
IV i 189
in iii 197
Harold I ii 112
„ I ii 124
Queen Mary n ii 92
IV i 187
Harold v i 382
Becket i i 170
.. I iii 719
.. rv ii 287
vii8
they are Royal,
These a laws and customs of the realm, (repeat)
For I was musing on an a saw,
It is our a custom in Galatia
Andrew, St. See St Andrew
Andrew's Laughs at the last red leaf, and A Day.
^ew Why, tha looks haale a to last to a hoonderd
Lngel Let the great a of the church come with him
As an rt among a's.
His friends — as A's 1 received 'em,
flocks of swans, As fair and white as a's ;
True, and I am the A of the Pope.
how the blessed a's who rejoice Over one saved
There's half an a wrong'd in your account ; Methinks
I am all a.
May the great a's join their wings.
viiil
V iv 6
Al^l (continued) Then a great A past along the highest Harold m i 134
great A rose And past again along „ mi 153
Are those the blessed a's quiring, father ? „ v i 472
Whisper ! God's a's only know it. Ha ! „ v ii 31
will be reflected in the spiritual body among the a's. Becket, Pro. 398
So now he bears the standard of the a's. „ i iii 497
till it break Into yoimg a's. „ v ii 257
face of an a and the heart of a — that's too positive ! The Falcon 86
Seem my good a who may help me from it. Prom, of May n 388
God's good A Help him back hither, Foresters i ii 10
Thou comest a very a out of heaven. „ n i 105
I am but an a by reflected light. „ n i 108
Your heaven is vacant of your o. „ n i 109
Anger (s) no more rein upon thine a Than any child ! Qu^en Mary in iv 303
The King is quick to a ; if thou anger him, Becket i iii 165
betwixt thine Appeal, and Henry's a, yield. „ i iii 623
Our brother's a puts him. Poor man, „ n ii 234
When I was in mine a with King Louis, „ ni iii 257
A noble a ! but Antonius To-morrow The Cup i ii 95
My five-years' a cannot die at once, Prom, of May n 462
Anger (verb) The King is quick to anger ; if thou a him, Becket i iii 165
Nay — go. What ! will you a me ? „ m i 209
King plucks out their eyes Who a him, „ iv ii 407
talk not of cows. You a the spirit. Foresters n i 330
A the scritch-owl. „ ii i 331
A brave old fellow but he a's me. „ n i 471
Away, away, wife, wilt thou a him ? „ m 255
Anger'd And if her people, a thereupon. Queen Mary i iii 90
That had a me Had I been William. Harold n ii 386
How he flamed When Tostig's a earldom flimg him, „ m i 54
Tostig, poor brother, Art tJwu so a? v i 274
I deny not That I was somewhat a. Becket iv ii 351
and yet You know me easily a. „ v i 84
But a at their flaunting of our flag. The Falcon 628
I have a your good nurse ; „ 706
he kneels ! he has a the foul witch, Foresters n i 670
Angerest Thou a me, man : I do not jest. Becket, Pro. 299
Angle A, Jute, Dane, Saxon, Norman, Harold n ii 762
yet he held that Dane, Jute, ^, Saxon, „ rv i 77
As once he bore the standard of the A's, Becket i iii 495
Angler's Home Close by that alder-island in your
brook ' The A H.' Prom, of May n 536
Anglia Pereant, pereant, A precatur. Harold v i 534
Angliae Hostis per A Plagas bacchatur ; „ v i 510
Angliam Hostis in A Ruit praedator, „ v i 506
Angry Thro' all her a chronicles hereafter By loss of
Calais. ' Queen Mary v ii 304
Animal What, is not man a hunting a ? Foresters iv 224
Anjou (French province) When I am out in Normandy
or A. Becket, Pro. 144
We take her from her secret bower in A „ Pro. 182
A hundred, too, from Normandy and A : „ n ii 174
My A bower was scarce as beautiful. „ ni i 52
Glancing at the days when his father was only
Earl of ^, „ m iii 150
Anne (Christian name) He loved the Lady A ; Foresters i i 7
Anne (Queen) Queen A loved him. All the women
loved him. Queen Mary n i 33
Anne (Wharton) (See also Anne Wharton) and the
Lady A Bow'd to the Pyx ; ., i v 41
wherefore bow ye not, says Lady A, ,, i v 46
Anne Wharton (See also Anne) with her Lady A W,
and the Lady Anne _ „ i v 41
Annex'd and the legateship A to Canterbury — „ v ii 37
Anotiber — a recantation Of Cranmer at the stake. „ iv iii 299
There ! there ! a paper ! „ v ii 329
revolt ? A new Northumberland, a Wyatt ? „ v v 188
for what right had he to get himself wrecked on a
man's land ? Harold n i 60
a hill Or fort, or city, took it, „ rv i 49
With whom I fought a fight than this Of Stamford-bridge. „ iv iii 23
And then a wood, and in the midst A garden and
my Rosamund. Becket, Pro. 168
You bad me take revenge a way — „ iv ii 153
There is yet a old woman. Foresters ii i 244
3g
Another
834
Apostle
Another (continued) Your worship may find a rhyme if you
Foresters n i 322
m 153
Becket, Pro. 276
I i 134
„ III iii 203
care to drag your brains for such a minnow.
Doubtless, like judges of a bench,
Anselm (Archbishop of Canterbury) And I'll have no
more A's.
Thou art the man — be thou A mightier A.
But A crown'd this Henry o'er again.
Answer (s) Is it England, or a party ? Now, your a. Queen Mary i v 143
My a is, I wear beneath my dress A shirt of mail : „ i v 144
I would your a had been other, Madam, „ i v 274
It craves an instant a. Ay or No. ,, i v 589
And by their a's to the question ask'd, „ n ii 153
Is that your a? „ v i 68
Allow me the same a as before — ,. v i 237
And my a to it — See here — Harold i ii 56
Be careful of thine a, my good friend. „ n ii 605
How ran that a which King Harold gave „ iv iii 108
Take thou mine a in bare commonplace — Becket, Pro. 282
My heart is full of tears — I have no a. ,, Pro. 407
cannot yield thee an a altogether to thy satisfaction. „ i iv 21
That is not altogether an a, my lord. „ i iv 27
With Cain's a my lord. Am I his keeper ? „ i iv 186
Your a, beauty ! „ iv ii 52
Vouchsafe a gracious a to your Queen ? „ iv ii 359
had she but given Plain a to plain query ? „ iv ii 386
You had my a to that cry before. „ v iii 124
Answer not ; but strike. De Tracy. There is my
a then. „ v iii 187
He waits your a. The Cup n 138
Weant ye gi'e me a kind a at last ? Prom, of May ii 64
her a — ^I think I have it about me — yes, there it is ! „ in 394
Answer (verb) A thou for him, then ! Queen Mary i i 40
We a him with ours, and there are messengers „ i iii 136
And a them in song. „ n i 53
And cannot a sanely . . . What it means ? Harold i i 88
but thou must not this way a him. „ n ii 372
To which the lover a's lovingly ' I am beside thee.' „ m ii 13
Full hope have I that love will a love. „ iv i 238
A them thou ! Is this our marriage-banquet ? „ iv iii 3
A then ! „ iv iii 44
Our javelins A their arrows. „ v i 522
let me go. Henry. A me first. Becket, Pro. 280
he shall a to the svunmons of the King's court „ i iii 88
appear before the Pope, And a thine accusers ... ,, i iii 603
lustiest and lousiest of this Cain's brotherhood, a. „ i iv 185
Thou wast too shamed to a. ., n i 66
I cannot a it Till better times, „ in i 2
I challenge thee to meet me before God. A me there. ., iv ii 255
Madam, I will not a you one word. ., iv ii 363
calls you oversea To a for it in his Norman courts. „ v ii 355
A not, but strike. De Tracy. There is my
answer then. „ v iii 186
Come once more to me Before the crowning, — I will
a you. The Cup n 79
No chord in me that would not a you In music. The Falcon 456
And ask'd me what I could not a. Prom, of May i 555
I cannot Well a for my father ; „ n 519
he would a nothing, I could make nothing of him ; „ in 495
and it a's, I am thine to the very heart of the earth — Foresters i i 336
and if her beauties a their report. „ i ii 28
•-•■■■ iii 33
I ii 136
1 ii 140
I ii 220
in 353
Queen Mary iv iii 603
Becket I i 82, 98
„ n ii 5
in i 121
IV ii 361
V ii 546
Foresters I i 310
Queen Mary n i 84
Harold in ii 91
Queen Mary i ii 95
Yes, my lord, fear not. I will a for you.
My Lady, will you a me a question ?
I will not a it, my lord,
I cannot a thee till Richard come.
And a it in flowers.
Answer'd Or a them in smiling negatives ;
And the Lord a me, ' Thou art the man, (repeat)
he a me, As if he wore the crown already —
I a for myself that I never spoke more
Rosamund hath not o you one word ;
Methought I a moderately enough.
Thou hast a for me, but I know not
Ant Tut, your sonnet's a flying a.
Anthem Their a's of no church, how sweet they are !
Antichrist terms Of Satan, liars, blasphemy, A,
Antichrist As for the Pope I count him A, Queen Mary iv iii 277
Anti-marning black, bell-silencing, a-m, burial-hindering
interdict Becket ni iii 55
Antioch And felt the sim of A scald our mail, .. ii ii 93
Arab soldan, who. When I was there in A, .. iv ii 301
central diamond, worth, I think, Half of the A .. v i 166
Anti-papal so much of the a-p leaven Works in him yet. Queen Mary iv i 15
Antipope Who had my pallmm from an A ! Harold i i 82
prest upon By the fierce Emperor and his A. Becket i iii 203
And then thy King might join the J, .. i iii 211
between The Pope and A — ,- n ii 70 ^
Anti-Roman Our a- i? faction ? The CupiiW^Q •
I have enough — their a-R faction. „ i ii 200 \
Antonius (a Roman General) ' Pleader of the Roman legion.' ., i i 167 ■
shrine Of our great Goddess, in some city where A past. ,. i ii 58 ,
Most like the city rose against A^ „ i ii 63
A To-morrow will demand your tribute — „ i ii 95
Returns with this ^ . „ i ii 179
paper sign'd A — will you take it, read it ? ,. i ii 226
All that Lies with ^. „ i ii 293
A, So gracious toward women, ,, i ii 298
wrong'd Without there, knew thee with ^ . ,. i ii 320 ,
Where is ^ ? (repeat) The Cup i iii 48, 79, 87, 97
To find A here. The Cup i iii 55
walk with me we needs must meet A coming, ., i iii 93
A would not suffer me to break Into the sanctuary. .. i iii 120
Our A, Our faithful friend of Rome, „ n 243
Welcome, my lord A, to our Temple. „ n 252
A, Much graced are we that our Queen „ n 333
A, Where wast thou on that morning „ n 389
A — ' Gamma ! ' who spake ? „ ii 400
A, If you had found him plotting against Rome, ,. ii 405
A, tell the Senate I have been most true to Rome — ,. n 481
^, is /ie there ? „ ii 496
Antony (an adherent of Wyatt) (See also Antony
Knyvett, Knyvett) Come, you bluster, A ! Queen Mary ii i 119
Antony Knjrvett Here's A K. „ n i 73
Antwerp To Strasburg, A, Frankfort, Zurich, ., i ii 1
There is A and the Jews. „ v i 182
Anvil A on hammer bang — Harold iv iii 161
Hammer on a, hammer on a. „ iv iii 162
set the Church This day between the hammer
and the a — Becket i iii 586
Any (See also Ony) Nay, if by chance you hear of a
such. Queen Mary i iv 175
Good Prince, art thou in need of a gold ? Foresters i ii 163
Anyhow See Onyhow
An3^hing (See also Onythink, Owt) or whether They
should believe in a ; Qxieen Mary iv iii 407
A or nothing ? Filippo. Well, my lord, if all-but-
nothing be a. The Falcon 133
then there is a in your lordship's larder at your
lordship's service, „ 137
tell me a of our sweet Eva When in her brighter
girlhood. Prom, of May n 520
Apart Remain within the chamber, but a. Queen Mary v iii 12
A-parting saw your ladyship a-p wi' him even now i'
the coppice, Becket ni i 160
A-passing Who's a-p ? King Edward or King
Richard ? Queen Mary i i 31
The blessed Mary's a-p ! ,. i i 36
Apathy And, lest we freeze in mortal a. The Cup i iii 130
numb'd me into a Against the unpleasant jolts Prom, of May i 227
Ape A Parliament of imitative a's ! Queen Mary ni iii 235
a feeder Of dogs and hawks, and a's, Becket i i 80
A-peacocking (showing off) a-p and a-spreading to catch
her eye for a dozen year. The Falcon 9J'
Apicius that Lucullus or A might have sniffed it Becket m iii 117
A-plaayin' (playing) a-p the saame gaame wi' my
Dora — Prom, of May ii 59]
Apoplexy O would it were His third last a ! The Cup n 171!
Apostate The a monk that was with Randulf here. Becket v ii 57't
Apostle His prophets, and a's, in the Testaments, Queen Mary iv iii 23"
we be liker the blessed A's ; they were fishers of men, Harold ii i 3"!
spirit of the twelve A's enter'd Into thy making. Becket i i &
Apostolic
835
Argue
Apostolic And from the A see of Rome ; Queen Mary ni iii 127
by your intercession May from the A see obtain, „ ill iii 147
And we by that authority A Given imto us, his
Legate, „ m iii 210
/VppaU'd And yet I seem a — on such a sudden Becket i i 137
Appeal for their sake who stagger betwixt thine .4, „ i iii 623
make a To all the archbishops, bishops, „ v ii 403
Appealed You were sent for. You were a to, Queen Mary iii iv 256
I a to the Sister again, her answer — From, of May iii 394
Appear doth a this marriage is the least Of all their
quarrel. Queen Mary ii ii 154
And cite thee to a before the Pope, Becket i iii 602
Appearance for a sake, stay with the Queen. Queen Mary ii i 137
Appen (happen) To be true to each other,
let 'a what maay, (repeat) Prom, of May ii 206, 236, 257
Appertaining myself Half beast and fool as a to it ; Queen Mary iv iii 415
Applaud I say Ye would a that Norman Harold ii ii 539
Apple (adj.) No, not that way — here, under the a tree. Prom, of May i 83
Apple (s) cut out the rotten from your a, Your a eats Queen Mary ii ii 6
That bears not its own a's. „ in i 23
if I had been Eve i' the garden I shouldn't ha'
minded the a, for what's an a, Becket iii i 140
you have robb'd poor father Of ten good a's. Prom, of May i 616
\ppoint Or he the bridegroom may a ? Becket i iii 687
Appointed He, whom the Father had a Head Of all
I his church. Queen Mary ni iii 206
the King, till another be a, shall receive the revenues
thereof,' Becket i iii 101
ppreciation commend them to your ladyship's most
peculiar a. The Falcon 568
Apprehend ' Whosoever will a the traitor Thomas
Wyatt Queen Mary ii iii 59
Approve I am happy you a it. „ v iii 63
Which you woiild scarce a of : Prom, of May in 624
Approved the Emperor A you, and when last he
wrote, Queen Mary m vi 77
When I was made Archbishop, he a me. „ v ii 86
Appurtenance so descend again with some of her
ladyship's own a's ? ■ The Falcon 417
Appy (happy) They can't be many, my dear, but I
'oapes they'll be 'a. Prom, of May i 353
Apricot walnut, a. Vine, cypress, poplar, myrtle, The Cup i i 2
April (adj.) Like A sap to the topmost tree, Foresters i iii 24
April (s) I was but fourteen and an A then. Becket i i 279
Apt And a at arms and shrewd in policy. Foresters i ii 104
Aquitaine (a French province) but our sun in A lasts
longer. I would I were in A again —
' Eleanor of A, Eleanor of England !
To take my life might lose him A .
Of England ? Say oi A. I am no Queen of England.
I will go live and die in A. (repeat)
Ha, you of .4 ! 0 you of A ! You were but A to
Louis — no wife ; You are only A to me —
I be wife to one That only wedded me for A ?
And what would my own A say to that ?
!^b I had it from an A soldan, who,
liaby free wing The world were all one A.
!luragon (a Spanish province) The voices of Castille
and A,
O Saint of A, with that sweet worn smile
Arbour See Harbour
fiirchbishop {See also Chancellor-Archbishop. Dis-
Ardibishop) The false a fawning on him.
That when I was a held with me.
Chief prelate of our Church, a,
bumin' o' the owld a '11 bum the Pwoap
When I was made A, he approved me.
Did ye not outlaw your a Robert,
Ask our A. Stigand should know the purposes of
Heaven.
A Robert ! Robert the A !
No, nor a, nor my confessor yet.
Why — look — is this a sleeve For an a ?
A more awful one. Make me a !
Me A ! God's favour and king's favour
Becket, Pro. 328
IV ii 241
IV ii 396
vilOO
i 109, 143
vill4
vil21
vil82
IV ii 300
Queen Mary iii v 210
V i 43
V v 198
1 V 30
IV ii 160
„ IV iii 70
„ IV iii 535
V ii 85
Harold I i 56
„ I i 63
„ iiii528
Becket, Pro. 84
., Pro. 251
„ Pro. 289
„ Pro. 293
Archbishop {continued) My liege, the good A is no more.
And this plebeian like to be A !
A? I can see further into a man
but the Chancellor's and the A's Together
Make an ^4 of a soldier ?
' My young A — thou wouldst make A stately A ! '
And how been made A hadst thou told him,
The A ! Becket. Ay ! what wouldst thou,
Come, come, my lord A ;
can I be under him As Chancellor ? as ^ over him ?
my Lord A, 'Tis known you are midwinter to all
women,
first a fled, And York lay barren for a hundred years.
Is it thy will. My lord A,
Loyally and with good faith, my lord A ?
My lord A, thou hast yet to seal.
Say that a cleric murder'd an a,
Hoped, were he chosen a.
Now as A goest against the King ;
and no forsworn A Shall helm the Church.
To see the proud A mutilated.
Know that when made A I was freed.
That none should wrong or injure your A.
My lord A, wilt thou permit us —
My lord A, may I come in with my poor friend,
my dog ?
Is the A a thief who gives thee thy supper ?
if the barons and bishops hadn't been a-sitting
on the A.
Where is my lord A ?
for the A loves humbleness, my lord ;
the A washed my feet o' Tuesday.
for the A likes the smell on it,
I bring the taint on it along wi' me, for the A likes it,
for to-night ye have saved our A !
My friends, the A bids you good night.
then to he made A and go against the King
nor our A Stagger on the slope decks
Blessed be the Lord A, who hath withstood
My dear Lord A, I learn but now
God bless the great A !
you had safelier have slain an a than a she-goat :
What more, my lord A ? What more, Thomas ?
But kinglike fought the proud a, —
Down with King Henry ! up with the A !
I told him I was bound to see the A ;
she had seen the A once. So mild, so kind.
No, daughter, you mistake our good A ;
How the good A reddens !
To all the a's, bishops, prelates, barons.
My vassals — and yet threaten your A In his own
house.
Here is the great A ! He lives ! he lives !
my lord A, A score of knights all arm'd
Where is the A, Thomas Becket ?
Strike our A in his own cathedral !
the great A ! Does he breathe ? No ?
they plimder — yea, ev'n bishops. Yea, ev'n a's —
Archbishoprick as his successor in the a.
From out his grave to this a.
and chosen me For this thy great a,
Save from the throne of thine a ?
I care not for thy new a.
Shall I forget my new o
It well befits thy new a To take the vagabond woman
Found two a's, London and York ?
King Would throne me in the great A :
Archdeacon The Pope and that A Hildebrand His
master, Harold in ii 144
Archiepiscopari but Nolo A, my good friend, Becket, Pro. 286
Archiepiscopal^ As magnificently and a as our Thomas
would have done : „ m iii 87
A-readin' arter she'd been a-r me the letter wi' 'er
voice a-shaakin'. Prom, of May ii 128
Argue and I can't a upon it ; Queen Mary i i 55
Becket, Pro. 392
„ Pro. 459
„ Pro. 462
I i 23
I i 41
I i 65
I i 121
I i 185
I i 201
r i 349
I ii 26
I iii 53
I iii 272
I iii 279
I iii 306
I iii 399
r iii 442
„ I iii 530
I iii 597
„ I iii 614
I iii 707
I iii 755
„ I iv 5
I iv 93
„ I iv 115
I iv 128
„ I iv 184
I iv 208
I iv 234
I iv 240
I iv 253
I iv 257
I iv 261
II i 237
II ii 105
II ii 275
II ii 426
II ii 452
in iii 68
„ III iii 217
„ IV ii 438
V i 261
V ii 100
V ii 119
V ii 138
V ii 298
V ii 404
V ii 505
V iii 29
V iii 70
„ V iii 109
„ V iii 180
„ V iii 202
Foresters iv 911
Becket, Pro. 402
Pro. 420
1 191
iill9
1 1217
1 1220
1 1225
I iii 50
I iii 694
Argued
836
A-scratiin
Argued WhUe this same marriage question was being a. Queen Mary n ii 38
A^oment And thousand-times recurring a ,, iv ii 93
Arise A against her and dethrone the Queen — ., i iii 91
And over thee the suns a and set, Harold n ii 433
A, Scatter thy people home, descend the hill, „ v i 9
and a again Disjointed : ,, v i 297
a. And dash thyself against me that I may slay thee ! Becket iv ii 194
The traitor's dead, and will a no more. * * „ v iii 200
Ark over His gilded o of mummy-saints, Harold v i 304
Arm (s) her babe in o's Had felt the faltering Queen Mary n ii 81
Into the wide-spread a's of fealty, ,, n ii 264
he was deliver'd To the secular a to bum ; ,, iv ii 214
and you know me strong of a ; ., v ii 470
I felt his a's about me, and his lips — ., v v 99
I will see none except the priest. Your o. „ t v 197
Thou art my nun, thy cloister in mine a's. Harold i ii 63
I touch mine a's, My limbs — ,, n ii 794
heads And a's are sliver'd off and splinter'd ,, v i 540
Must I hack her a's off ? How shsJl I part them ? „ v ii 147
Becket, Pro. 252
.. Pro. 256
the a within Is Becket's, who hath beaten down
A soldier's, not a spiritual a.
To take the vagabond woman of the street Into
thine a's ! „ i i 229
He fast ! is that an a of fast ? ,. i iii 520
I ha' carried him ever so many miles in my a's, .. i iv 99
To the fond a's of her first love, Fitzurse, „ iv ii 334
Mine a is sever'd. I can no more — .. v iii 188
and open a's To him who gave it ; The Cup i i 84
Your a — a moment — It will pass. „ n 448
Give me your a. Lead me back again. Prom, of May in 473
What a shape ! what lovely a's ! Foresters i i 109
Take thou mine a. Who art thou, gallant knight ? ,, n i 439
with this skill of fence ! let go mine a. .. n ii 39
Nor care to leap into each other's a's, .. rn 7
and thine a's, and thy legs, and thy heart, and thy
liver, „ rv 203
He loves the chivalry of his single a. ,, iv 786
Ann (vwb) And a and strike as with one hand, Quee^i Mary n ii 292
Good ! let them a. Becket v ii 571
Arm'd a thousand of them — more — All o. Queen Mary n i 108
And see the citizens a. Good day ; „ n ii 378
And a men Ever keep watch beside my chamber door, Harold u ii 244
There is an a man ever glides behind ! „ n ii 247
tell him we stand a on Senlac Hill, „ v i 59
Herbert, take out a score of a men To guard this
bird of passage to her cage ; Becket i i 328
Why dost thou presiune, A with thy cross, ,. i iii 509
He rides abroad with a followers, „ v i 2
My lord, the city if full of a men. „ v ii 188
she told us of a men Here in the city. „ v ii 227
But these a men — will you not hide yourself ? „ v ii 247
Ay — but these a men — will you drowii yourself? „ v ii 276
These a men in the city, these fierce faces — „ v iii 3
Those a men in the cloister. ,, v iii 49
score of knights all a with swords and axes — „ v iii 71
Aimfnl for who could embrace such an a of joy ? Foresters i ii 71
Aiming the knights are a in the garden Beneath the
sycamore. Becket v ii 569
Armour fair a likeness As your great King in a Queen Mary v v 29
Not heavier than thine a at Thoulouse ? Becket i i 26
He had been hurt, And bled beneath his a. Foresters n ii 5
Beetle's jewel a crack'd, „ n ii 160
I left mine horse and a with a Squire, „ rv 414
Armour'd Haled thy shore-swsJlow'd, a Normans up Harold n ii 57
Arms Ay, all in a. Queen Mary n ii 3
And I would have my warrior all in a. „ v v 34
Thou art in a against us. Harold rv ii 8
Our Church in a — ^the lamb the lion — „ v j 440
To a ! Becket. De Morville, I had thought so well
of you ; Becket v ii 518
And apt at a and shrewd in policy. Foresters i ii 104
by force and a hath trespassed against the king „ i iii 62
Army Hold office in the household, fleet, forts, a ; Qv^en Mary m iii 73
I am foraging For Norway's a. Harold iv ii 6
in a city Uiro' which he past with the Roman a : The Cup i i 43
(repeat)
. The
'Arold (Harold) '^ ! '^ ! '^ ! so they be.
' A ! The feller's clean daazed,
Mr. A, Miss. Bora. Below ?
Please, Mister ' A.
Arouse Thou didst a the fierce Northmnbrians !
Arraign Who dares a us, king, of such a plot ?
Arrange A my dress — the gorgeous Indian shawl
Arranged they are a here acconiing to their first
letters.
Arrant Convicted by their conscience, a cowards,
I know them a knaves in Nottingham.
Arrogance I always hated boimdless a.
our John By his Norman a and dissoluteness,
Arrogant What, daunted by a garrulous, a girl !
Arrow {See also Vane-arrow) see there the a's
flying.
Sanguelac ! Sanguelac ! the a ! the a !
It is the a of death in his own heart —
Sanguelac ! Sanguelac ! The a ! the o !
The king's last word — ' the o ! '
What is that whirring sovmd ? Stigand
Norman a !
Our javelins Answer their a's.
The Norman sends his a's up to Heaven,
0 which the Saints Sharpen'd and sent against him —
Give him a bow and a's — follow — ^follow,
my good fellow. My a struck the stag,
besides the wind Went with my a.
Why so I said, my a. Well, to sleep.
Whose a is the plague — whose quick flash
A's whistle all about.
Take thou my bow and a and compel them to pay toll
, How much ? how much ? Speak, or the a flies.
By a and gray goosewing,
By a and by bowstring,
like a deer that hath escaped thine a !
What deer when I have mark'd him ever yet Escaped
mine a ?
Give me my bow and a's.
Each of us has an a on the cord ;
1 am here, my a on the cord.
WiU hear our a's whizzing overhead.
Arrow-points Prick 'em in the calves with the a-p —
Art illogically, out of passion, without a —
with some sense of a, to live By brush and pencil.
Follow my a among these quiet fields,
Artemis (a goddess) himself an adorer of our great
goddess. A,
take this holy cup To lodge it in the shrine of A.
To lodge this cup Within the holy shrine of A,
A, A, hear us, O Mother, hear us, and bless us !
A, thou that art life to the wind,
this oracle of great A Has no more power
Great A I O Camma, can it be well,
A, A, hear him, Ionian A !
A, A, hear her, Ephesian A !
A, A, hear me, Galatian A !
A, A, hear her, Galatian A !
These are strange words to speak to A.
many-breasted mother A Emboss'd upon it.
Our A Has vanquish'd their Diana.
Artemoon (afternoon) holler laane be hallus sa dark
i' the o,
Arthur (King) The veriest Galahad of old A's hall.
Article Philip by these a's is bound From stirring
hand or foot
In every a of the Catholic faith.
Artillery See Real Hard Tillery
Artist {See also Hartist) Eva told me that he was
taking her likeness. He's an a.
Asaph (the I«vite, musician to King David) sing, A !
clash The cymbal, Heman !
Ascended He is not yet a to the Father.
A-scrattin (scratching) then a-s upon a bit o' paaper,
then a-lookin' agean ;
Prom, of May n 724
„ n728
m 478
m TOO
Harold v i 347
„ IV i 168
Queen Mary v ii 538
Prom, of May m 36
Queen Mary n ii 9
Foresters m 301
Becket v i 13
Foresters n i 85
„ IV 736
Quee7i Mary n iv 51
Harold in i 402
m i404
., V i 262, B72
v i 266
vi483
V i 522
vi666
V ii 167
The Ottp I i 208
I ii 28
I ii 32
„ I ii 385
n291
Foresters n ii 165
III263
m278
in 427
ni442
iv61
IT 64
IV 603
IV607
IV 732
IV 1090
IV 561
Becket, Pro. 337
Prom, of May i 497
I 743
The Cup I i 39
I ii 435
I iii 53
nl
nS
n33
n80
n276
n 310
n312
n 316
n327
n340
n456
Prom, of May m 93
Becket, Pro. 129
Queen Mary in iii 59
rv iii 230
Prom, of May i ifl
Harold in i 187
Becket v iii 150
Prom, of May
Ji
Ash
837
Auieole
Ash (cmder ) (See also Ashes) fain had calcined all
Northumbria To one black a, Harold m i 57
Ash (tree) (See also Ashtree) And wattled thick with a and
\Tillow- wands ; „ v i 190
This is the hottest of it : hold, o ! hold, ^tIIIow ! „ v i 628
I remember, Scarlet hacking down A hollow a. Foresters n ii 96
i^-shaakin' (shaking) arter she'd been a-readin' me
the letter wi' 'er voice a-s. From, of May a 129
Jkshamed {See also Shaamed) I am a that I am
Bagenhall, English. Queen Mary ui iii 248
Thou mak'st me much a That I was for a moment
wroth at thee. „ lu iv 305
Till I mj^self was half a for him. „ iv ii 171
I am a to lift my eyes to heaven, „ iv iii 127
you yourself are a of me, and I do not wonder at it. From, of May m 269
I fall beiore thee, clasp Thy knees. I am a. Foresters ii i 600
Adies (See also Ash) those a Which all must be. The Cup i iii 134
to such a heat As bums a wrong to o, Foresters ii i 7(X)
Astaridge means to counsel your withdrawing to A, Queen Mary i iv 226
Permission of her Highness to retire To A, .. i iv 237
Ashtree (See also Ash, Entree) always told Father
that the huge old a there would cause an
accident some day ; Prom, of May in 244
A-silkJng (dressiiig in silk) master been a-glorifying
and a-velveting and a-s himself, 2'A« Fal<x)n 99
A-4itting if the barons and bishops hadn't been a-s on the
Archbishop. Becket i iv 128
Didn't I spy 'em a-s i' the woodbine harbour
I togither ? Prom, of May 1 124
Aak (See also Ax) Why do you a ? you know it. Queen Mary i iv 34
A thou Lord Leofwin what he thuiks of this ! Harold i i 40
A it of King Edward ! .. i i 78
a of m« Who had my pallium from an Antipope ! „ i i 81
A our broad Earl. ., i i 90
I a thee, wilt thou help me to the crown ? „ ii ii 627
A me for this at thy most need, son Harold, „ lu i 14
A it of Aldred. „ in i 225
A me not. Lest I should yield it, „ m ii 46
I a again When had the Lateran and the Holy Father „ v i 16
I have a power — would Harold a me for it — „ v i 451
I o no more. Heaven bless thee ! hence ! Beeket r i 320
That which you a me Till better times. „ m i 6
What did you o her ? ., in i 79
Not I, the Pope. A him for absolution. „ v ii 379
I a no leave of king, or mortal man, „ v ii 458
You will not easily make me credit that. Phoebe. ^4 her. The Cup n 26
His falcon, and I come to a for his falcon. The Falcon 220
How can I a for his falcon ? „ 234
Yet if I a, He loves me, and he knows I know „ 244
How can I, dare I, a him for his falcon ? ., 264
Yet I come To a a gift. „ 299
* for the gift I a for, to my mind „ 778
love for my dying boy, Moves me to a it of 50U. .. 788
Will pardon me for asking what I a. „ 805
Might I a your name ? Harold. Harold. Prom, of May n 393
Go back to him and a his foi^veness before he dies. — „ in 401
1 a you all, did none of you love young Walter Lea ? Foresters i i 54
will you answer me a question ? Marian. Any that
you may a. „ i ii 137
A question that every true man a's of a woman once
in his life. „ i ii 139
we be beggars, we come to a o' you. We ha' nothing. ,, m 190
bond he hath Of the Abbot — wilt thou o him for it ? „ iv 85
I fear to a who left us even now. .. rv 808
.Alk'd (<S«« oZm Axed, Hazed) And by their answers
to the question a. Queen Mary u ii 153
a him, childlike : ' Will you take it off „ in i 401
they clapt their hands Upon their swords when a; „ v i 174
when he a for England ? Harold iv iii 110
Was there not someone a me for forgiveness ? „ v ii 82
I o the way. Rosamund. I think so. Becket n i 62
I but a her One question, and she primm'd her mouth „ m i 73
a our mother if 1 could keep a quiet tongue i' my head, „ in i 118
I a A ribbon from her hair to bmd it with ; The Fnlroti 358
jrou a to eat with me. ir 868
Ask'd (continued) And a me what I could not answer. Protn. of May 1 555
and I a her once more to help me, „ m 387
I would ha' given my whole body to the £ang had
}ie a for it. Foresters n i 306
criedst ' I yield ' almost before the thing was a, „ 11 i 567
Asking Have for thine a aught that I can give, Qu^en Mary n iii 7
Will pardon me for a what I ask. The Falcoti 805
a his consent — ^you wish'd me — Prom, of May ni 493
Asleep wholesome medicine here Puts that belief a. Becket iv ii 52
Shall I find you a when I come back ? „ iv ii 64
with as little pain As it is to fall a. Prom, of May n 342
The sick lady here might have been a. „ m 344
Some hunter in day-dreams or half o Foresters rv 1088
A-spitting you'll set the Divil's Tower a-s. Queen Mary ii iii 103
A-spreading and a-s to catch her eye for a dozen year, The Fal^xm 100
Ass with an a's, not a horse's head, Queen Mary i iii 169
Sir Thomas Stafford, a bull-headed a, „ v i 284
Assail And might a you passing through the street, „ iv ii 34
To a our Holy Mother lest she brood Too long Becket v ii 251
Assail'd if e'er thou be o In any of our forests. Foresters iv 423
woman's fealty when A by Craft and Love. The Cup 1 i 177
Assassin even now You seem the least a of the four. Becket v ii 522
Assaulted my house hath been a. Queen Mary 1 v 147
Assembled And Ckimmons here in Parliament n, „ in iii 114
Assembly But there the great A choose their king, Harold 11 ii 126
Assent This marriage had the a of those Queen Mary n ii 206
Thine is a half voice and a lean o. „ m i 311
That were but as the shadow of an a. Becket i iii 195
Assertion See Self-assertion
Assessor But his a in the throne. Queen Mary i v 501
Assize See 'Size
Assure I do a you, that it must be look'd to : „ v i 2
I do most earnestly o you that Your likeness — Prom, of May n 563
Assured Art thou a By this, that Harold loves but Edith ? Harold i ii 209
A-stealin' cotched 'im once a-s coals an' I sent fur 'im, Protn. of May i 412
Astride with the Holy Father a of it down upon his own
head. Becket m iii 77
Asunder here I gash myself a from the King, „ i i 175
A-sapping be we not a-s with the head of the family ? „ 1 iv 178
They be dead while I be a-s. „ i iv 247
A-swearing I be af eard I shall set him a-s like
onythink. Prom, of May m 359
At (hat) we fun' 'im out a-walkin' i' West Field wi'
a white 'a, „ m 135
A-talkin' What feller vrui it as 'a' been a-t fur haafe
an hour wi' my Dora ? „ n 576
A-telling Robin the Earl, is always a-t us that every man, Foresters i i 95
Atheling (a Saxon prince) The A is nearest to the throne. Harold n ii 569
So that ye will not crown the A? ., n ii 598
Who inherits ? Edgar the A? .. in i 240
Athelstan (Kiitg of the E^lish) and tell me tales Of
Alfred and of A the Great „ rv i 74
Or ^, or English Ironside Who fought with Knut, „ rv iii 53
A-top and your worship a-t of it. Queen Maty n i 66
A-trjrin' if she weant listen to me when I be a-t to
saave 'er — Prom, of May n 694
Attainder Ye have reversed the a laid on us Queen Mary m iii 194
Attainted Thou hast disgraced me and a me, „ m ii 54
Thou, Robin Hood Earl of Himtingdon, art a Foresters 1 iii 57
Attend so you well a to the king's moves, Queen Mary i iii 152
I a the Queen To crave most hmnble pardon — „ in iv 431
You should o the ofl&ce, give them heart. Becket v ii 598
Hb said, ' A the office.' Becket. A the office ? „ v ii 607
You had better a to your hayfield. Prom, of May n 122
I am sorry Mr. Steer still continues too unwell to
a to you, w m 22
' I am sorry that we could not a your Grace's party
on the 10th ! ' „ m 313
Attendance must we dance a all the day ? Foresters iv 551
Attending I've been a on his deathbed and his burial. Prom, of May u. 4
Attraction fine a's and repulses, the delicacies, Becket, Pro. 499
Audience Yoin a is concluded, sir. Queen Mary i v 337
Aught (See also Ought, Owt) Have you a else to tell me ? „ v iii 100
Augustine See Austin
Aureole Sees ever such an a roimd the Queen, m ▼ ii 413
Austin
838
Bagenhall
Austin (Augostine, first Archbishop of Canterbury) Gregory
bid St. A here Foiind two archbishopricks, " Beclet i iii 48
bravest in our roll of Primates down From A — „ v ii 59
Author This o, with his charm of simple style Prom, of May i 223
Authority Under and with your Majesties' authorities, Qneen Mary iii iii 138
we by that a Apostolic Given unto us, „ iir iii 210
And under his o — I depart. Becket i iii 728
Not punish of your own a? „ v ii 450
I would stand Clothed with the full a of Rome, „ v ii 493
Automatic all but proving man An a series of sensations, Prom . of May 1 226
Autumn (adj.) Sick as an a swallow for a voyage, Harold i i 101
Autumn (s) Harvestless a's, horrible agues, plague — Queen Mary v i 98
Avarice shakes at m.ortal kings — her vacillation, A , craft — Becket n ii 407
A-velveting (dressing in velvet) master been a-glorifying
and a-v and a-silking himself. The Falcon 98
Avenge Who M'ill a me of mine enemies — Queen Mary iii ii 166
Avenged that blighted vow Which God a to-day. Harold v ii 157
Avenue — so many alleys, crossings, Paths, a's — Becket i\ ii 7
A-vire (on fire) and a set un all a-v, so 'z the tongue Queen Mary iv iii 518
Avoid I may as well a him. Prom, of May ii 619
Avouch I dare a you'd stand up for yourself. Queen Mary it ii 860
Await My lord ! the Duke a's thee at the banquet. Harold ii ii 805
Awaked {See also Half-waked) He bath a ! he
hath a !
Awaken Love will hover round the flowers when
they first a ;
Awaken'd It seems her Highness hath a.
Awakening See New-wakening
A-walkin' we fun' 'im out a-w i' West Field wi' a
white 'at,
Award Thou shalt receive the penitent thief's a,
Awe — they cannot speak — for a ;
Awful A more a one. Make me archbishop !
Awry Nothing; but 'come, come, come,' and all a,
Ax (ask) Shall I foller 'er and a 'er to maake it up ?
Axe {See also Battle-axe, War-axe) there is a and
cord.
How oft the falling a, that never fell,
I have a mind to brain thee with mine a.
Our a's lighten with a single flash
Against the shifting blaze of Harold's a !
score of knights all arm'd with swords and a's —
Axed (asked) when I a 'im why, he telled me 'at
sweet'arts
an' a ma to be 'is little sweet'art.
Axle rear and run And break both neck and a.
Queen Mary iii ii 156
V ii 371
V ii 522
Prom, of May ill 134
Queen Mary iv iii 87
Harold I i 33
Beclcet, Pro. 288
Queen Mary v v 16
Prom, of May n 131
Queen Man/ in iv 47
■ III V 134
Harold ii i 74
„ V i 537
„ V i 587
Becket v iii 72
Prom, of May II 155
m 120
Harold i i 374
Baaby (baby) to get her b bom ; Quee^i Mary iv iii 524
Baaed black sheep b to the miller's ewe-lamb, Becket i iv 162
BaSker (baker) and B, thaw I sticks to hoam-maade — Prom, of May 1 448
Baal The priests of B tread her underfoot — Becket in iii 179
Babble {See also Bird-babble) B in bower Under the
rose ! „ in i 96
Thou art cold thyself To b of their coldness. Queen Mary v ii 292
And doth so bound and b all the way „ v v 86
convene This conference but to b of our wives ? Becket n ii 90
Not while the rivulet b's by the door. Foresters i ii 321
Babbled I follow'd You and the child : he b all the way. Becket iv ii 140
Babe but your king stole her a b from Scotlanil Queen Mary i v 291
her b in arms Had felt the faltering „ n ii 80
The Queen hath felt the motion of her b ! „ in ii 214
baptized in fire, the b Might be in fire for ever. „ v iv 23
The b enwomb'd and at the breast is cursed, Harold \ i 65
B's, orphans, mothers ! is that royal, Sire ? Becket n i 80
Out of the mouths of b's and sucklings, praise ! „ ii ii 278
Will greet us as our b's in Paradise. „ v ii 225
I had once A boy who died a b ; The Citp i ii 149
be curious About the welfare of their b's, „ i ii 362
O Thou that slayest the b within the womb „ n 279
Babe-breaating Age, orphans, and b-b mothers — Becket n i 72
Baby (adj.) some waxen doll Thy b eyes have rested on,
belike ; Queen Mary iv9
whose b eye Saw them sufficient. Harold in ii 65
Baby (s) (See also Baaby) strike Their hearts, and hold
their babies up to it. „ i i 35
That's all nonsense, you know, such a i as you are. Prom, of May 1 785
King, thy god-father, gave it thee when a I. Foresters i i 286
Babyhood Was she not betroth'd in her b to the Great
Emperor Queen Mary i i 118
Baby-king Stirring her b-k against me ? ha ! Becket v i 106
Bacchatur Hostis per Angliae Plagas b ; Harold v i 511
Bachelor See Batchelor
Back bald o' the b, and bursten at the toes, Queen Mary i i 52
show'd his b Before I read his face. „ ii i 132
scom'd the man. Or lash'd his rascal b, Harold u ii 507
but the b methought was Rosamund — Becket, Pro. 470
be bound Behind the b like laymen-criminals ? „ i iii 96
so dusted his J with the meal in his sack, „ i iv 174
wi' bare b's, but the b's 'ud ha' countenanced one another, „ in i 147
Can't you hear that you are saying behind his b The Falcon 107
nor behind your lordship's b, „ 113
When I vaulted on his b, Foresters ii ii 150
which longs to break itself across their b's. „ iv 918
Backbone Stiff as the very b of heresy. Queen Mary i v 44
Back'd B by the power of France, and landing here, „ ni i 447
Back'd See Broken-back'd
Backward courtesy which hath less loyalty in it than
the b scrape of the clown's heel — Becket in iii 143
my child is so young, So b too ; „ iv ii 85
Backwardness Hath rated for some b Queen Mary iv iii 307
Backward-working if his b-w alchemy Should cliange Foresters iv 38
Bad (adj.) I will take Such order with all b, heretical
books Queen Mary iv i 95
Eh, my rheumatizy be that b howiver be I to win
to the bumin'. „ iv iii 474
Eh, but I do know ez Pwoaps and vires be h things ; „ iv iii 501
And love to hear b tales of Philip. „ v ii 429
for the people do say that his is b beyond all reckoning, Becket in i 175
There are good fairies and b fairies, and sometimes she
cries, and can't sleep sound o' nights because of the
b fairies. „ iv i 29
Very b. Somebody struck him. „ iv i 50
and they was all a-crying out at the b times. Prom, of May 1 139
But I taakes 'im fur a b lot and a burn fool, „ 1 153
Thruf slush an' squad When roads was b, „ n 310
And what harm will that do you, so that you do
not copy his b manners ? „ in 361
It be one o' my b daays. „ in 465
You heard him say it was one of his b days. „ ni 469
It is almost the last of my b days, I think. „ in 471
We be fairies of the wood. We be neither b nor good. Foresters n ii 119
Robin, I do, but I have a b wife. „ in 70
they put it upon me because I have a b wife. „ in 437
Bad-bade (verb) Bad you so softly with your heretics
here, Queen Mary i v 392
Bad me to tell you that she counts on you „ n ii 104
Cranmer. Fly would he not, when all men bad him fly. „ in i 171
I bad my chaplain, Castro, preach Against these burnings. „ ni vi 73
And bad me have good courage ; „ iv ii 8
bad the king Who doted on him, Harold iv i 101
Edward bad me spare thee. „ iv ii 11
And bad me seal against the rights of the Church, Becket i iii 312
I bad them clear A royal pleasaunce for thee, „ ii i 127
Thy true King bad thee be A fisher of men ; „ n ii 285
bad me whatever I saw not to speak one word, „ in i 132
You bad me take revenge another way — „ iv ii 152
life which Heniy bad me Guard from the stroke „ iv ii 269
He bad me put her into a nunnery — „ v i 214
Bade me beware Of John : Foresters i ii 255
Badger highback'd polecat, the wild boar, The burrow-
ing b— „ I iii 121
Baffle AVe'll b them, I warrant. Becket i i 299
Bag We'll dust him from a 6 of Spanish gold. Queen Mary i v 421
Bagenhall {See also Ralph, Balph Bagenhall) B, I see The
Tudor green and white. „ m i 112
Ii
Bagenhall
839
Baron
Bagenhall (continued) Worth seeing, B ! Queen Mary iii iii 188
I am ashamed that I am B, English. ., iii i 248
For freeing my friend B from the Tower ; ,. iii vi 7
Baited summon'd hither But to be mock'd and b. „ iii iv 270
Bake To sing, love, marry, chum, brew, b, and die, „ iii v 111
I can b and I can brew. Foresters i i 214
Baker (See also Baaker) ah ! she said. The b made
him. Queen Alary i v 56
Balance But — if let be — b and compromise ; „ v v 223
Bald (See also E^-bald) b o' the back, and bursten at
the toes, ,. i i 52
And this b priest, and she that hates me, „ i iv 282
it seems that we shall fly These b, blank fields, „ iii v 252
Baldness fierce old Gardiner — his big b, „ i iv 264
Bale (Bishop of Ossory) Poinet, Barlow, B, Scory, Coverdale ; „ i ii 7
Baleful My star ! a b one. ,, i v 412
Balk come to London Bridge ; But how to cross it b's
me. „ n iii 10
power to b Thy puissance in this fight Harold v i 118
Take it not that way — b not the Pope's will. Becket i iii 242
Balk'd The jealous fool b of her will — „ rv ii 423
Ball I have lost the boy who play'd at b with me, Harold iv iii 22
same head they would have play'd at b with The Cup n 127
Is but a b chuck'd between France and Spain, Queen Mary in i 110
Here is a b, my boy, thy world, Becket ii i 244
Geoffrey have not tost His b into the brook ! „ a i 321
I saw the b you lost in the fork of the great willow over
the brook. ,. iv ii 57
you bid me go, and I'll have my b anyhow. „ iv ii 63
Ballad But there I am sure the 6 is at fault. Foresters i i 122
Balm and science now could drug and b us Prom, of May n 340
We know all b's and simples of the field Foresters ii ii 11
Balmy Thou whose breath Is b wind to robe our hills with
grass. The Cup n 265
Or in the b breathings of the night, Foresters iv 1068
Balsam Heart-comfort and a 6 to thy blood ? Becket i i 14
Ban hurl the dread b of the Church on those „ iii iii 210
Band (See also Swaddling-band) who went with
your train b's To fight with Wyatt, Queen Mary ii ii 27
who be those three yonder with bows ? — not of
my b — Foresters ii i 172
can I trust myself With your brave b? ,, il i 704
She is my queen and thine. The mistress of the b. „ ii ii 42
You caught a lonely woodman of our b, „ iii 360
To break our b and scatter us to the winds. „ in 453
For those of thine own b who would betray thee ? „ iv 832
I never foimd one traitor in my b. „ iv 836
Bandit Before these b's brake into your presence. Becket v ii 556
I thank you, noble sir, the very blossom Of b's. Foresters in 248
they that suffer by him call the blossom Of b's. „ ly 373
Bandy B their own rude jests with them. The Cup i ii 360
Bang Anvil on hammer b- — Harold iv iii 161
Banish'd J us to Woodstock, and the fields. Queen Mary in v 3
From lack of Tostig— thou hast b him. Harold in i 168
That brother whom I love beyond the rest. My b
Tostig. „ III i 296
For when your people b Tostig hence, „ iv i 97
Robin Hood Earl of Huntingdon is outlawed and b. Foresters i iii 68
Art thou that b lord of Huntingdon, „ ^^..139
Banishment In quiet— home your b countryman. Queen Mary in ii 31
Thus, after twenty years of b, „ ni ii 46
After my twenty years of b, „ v ii 69
Our sister hates us for his b ; Harold iii i 78
sanction your decree Of Tostig's b, „ iv i 104
So thou be chasten'd by thy 6, „ iv ii 50
on a Tuesday pass'd From England into bitter b ; Becket v ii 289
Bank parch'd b's rolling incense, as of old. Queen Mary i v 91
My b Of wild-flowers. At thy feet ! Becket ii i 125
Past the b Of foxglove, then to left by that one yew. Foresters rv 973
Bank'd-up like A b-u fire that flashes out again The Cup i ii 166
Banner b. Blaze like a night of fatal stars Harold iv i 250
The king of England stands between his b's. „ v i 487
He stands between the b's with the dead „ v i 656
And join'd my b in the Holy Land, Foresters iv 1000
Banns When shall your parish -parson bawl our & Prom, of May i68Q
Banquet (See also Marriage-banquet) murmurs of their
b clank The shackles
My lord ! the Duke awaits thee at the b.
If there be those At 6 in this hall.
Break the 6 up ... Ye four !
who never saw nor dreamed of such a b.
I must leave you to your b.
we came on to the b, from whence there puffed
prays your ladyship and your ladyship's father to be
present at his b to-night.
let us be merry to-night at the b.
Banquet-board To chain the free guest to the b-b ;
Baptized being but b in fire, the babe Might be in fire
that thus b in blood Grew ever high and higher,
and on a Tuesday B ;
Bar (s) when he springs And maims himself against
the b's,
feud between our houses is the b I cannot cross ;
Bar (verb) leagued together To b me from my Philip.
jail you from free life, b you from death.
B the bird From following the fled summer —
wouldst b me fro' the milk o' my cow,
Baiabbas Still choose B rather than the Christ,
Barbarism Deigns to look in upon our b's.
Barbarossa (Surname of Frederick I., Emperor)
butts him from his chair,
Crow over B — at last tongue-free.
Barbarous See Semi-barbarous
Barber The common b dipt your hair,
Bare (adj.) Nay, for b shame of inconsistency,
and flying to our side Left his all b,
Take thou mine answer in b commonplace —
wi' b backs, but the backs 'ud ha' countenanced one
another;
how b and spare I be on the rib :
A thousand winters Will strip you b as death.
Bare (verb) he hath risen again — he b's his face —
He bows, he b's his head, he is coming hither.
Barefoot all boots were ever made Since man went b.
crawl over knife-edge flint B,
Barely Where there is b room to shift thy side,
Barer throat of mine, B than I should wish a man
to see it, —
Bargain mine hour ! I b for mine hour.
Bargainer Lady, I find you a shrewd b.
But you will find me a shrewd b still.
Barge all lost, all yielded ! A b, a bl
We had your royal b, and that same chair.
This£
Harold U ii 408
u ii 806
IV iii 93
„ IV iii 231
Becket i iv 84
„ I iv 151
„ III iii 114
Foresters i i 300
I i 344
Harold n ii 193
Queen Mary V iv 23
Harold in i 146
Becket v ii 286
Queen Mary v v 67
The Falcon 254
Queen Mary i iv 140
in v 172
Becket i i 257
Foresters 11 i 355
Becket n ii 390
The Cup u 337
Becket, Pro. 217
n ii 50
Queen Mary iv ii 131
I ii 39
„ II iii 5
Becket, Pro. 282
in i 146
Foresters i i 50
„ IV 1056
Harold V i 557
Becket in iii 34
Queen Mary ui v 198
Becket n i 273
Harold n ii 441
Queen Mary v ii 462
Becket n i 212
The Falcon 757
774
Queen Mary n iv 72
„ III ii 6
Bark (of a tree) What breadth, height, strength— torrents
of eddying b ! Foresters m 95
Bark (verb) And when to b and how. The Cup i ii 114
Bark (vessel) winds than that which crack'd Thy b at
Ponthieu, — * Harold ii ii 200
Bark'd I have but b my hands. „ .^^^
B out at me such monstrous charges, Becket iv ii 342
Barlow (Bishop) Poinet, B, Bale, Scory, Coverdale ; Queen Mary i ii 6
Bam broken down our b's, Wasted our diocese, Becket v ii 430
To the bleak church doors, like kites upon a b. Harold iv iii 38
Be thou a-gawin' to the long b ? Prom, of May i 2
and 'e telled all on us to be i' the long b by one o'clock, „ i 8
Why coom awaay, then, to the long b. „ i 36
the farming men 'ull hev their dinner i' the long b, „ i 167
They ha' broached a barrel of aale i' the long b, „ i 427
look for 'im, Eva, and bring 'im to the b. „ i 438
I've hed the long b cleared out of all the machines, „ i 451
and make them happy in the long b, „ i 792
Baron But that my b's might believe thy word, Harold ii ii 725
widow And orphan child, whom one of thy wild b's — Becket, Pro. 189
How should a b love a beggar on horseback, „ Pro. 443
Laics and b's, thro' The random gifts of careless kings, „ i i 157
And many a b holds along with me — ■ „ i ii 52
Where I shall meet the B's and my King. „ i ii 84
Save the King's honour here before his b's. „ i iii 188
B's and bishops of our realm of England, „ i iii 336
When every b ground his blade in blood ; „ i iii 349
Baron
Ay, my lord, and divers other earls and Vs " "/J^q
t^««e«ark and J'5, that clung to me, " I'Zf.
They shall henceforward be my earls' and b's~ " ! g?
Wshop.' ^""^'P' ^^^'* ^""° ^-«^"'"§ °» the Arch- " ' '^ ^^
?!T°M?"u*'* 5 '^''^ '^t^e^i- counsel : ' "J j^?]
for he did his best To break the Vs, " /: \lt
To aU the archbishops, bishops, prelates, Vs, " J; 4^5
So that our B's bring his baseness under jt ". " fV^
horn, that scares Thi B at the totlSe of his churls "'''"" ' " SJ
these proud priests, and these 5'*, Devils ' ^''""^' " ^^J^ 106
Po«.M^''^-^''*^"'*^^^*oftheKing. ■ JIhSs
NnM/fAT,f°"''*>^^'=^t«tbeboy. " V il?
JVot if I i thee up in thv chamhpr t^ " ^? ^■'•
Barrel They ha' broLhed a ft of^ilt V fh , u Foresters i i ZU
cZ'rn'jlLr^^^'^^*^«"'"''^''----»hare " ^ ^ ^^'
A^d York lay ft for a hundred years. ^''^^''' ^'%ff,
?ite a ft shore That grew salt weeds tC r oof
"^S th^^^T ^°"^ ''^ throngingTo' the Vs ; ltS7v° Ig
They thunder again upon the ft's. ' aaroiavib^i
Bamn and ft the wet, Hodge 'ud ha' been a- " ^^^
harrowm ^
ft the wind, Dumble wur blow'd wi' the wind ^'""' "^ "^ ••'• f}.
Barton, Elizabeth -Sw Joan of Kent Harold yi 225
""* fXvdi^-^ ^"'^''^ '''^^ ^ say-Fitzurse and his
^ a ft'^in'""' P^'P^" "^* ^™ ^^°"» '^'^ J°or« i^'ke ^''^'' '" '" ^^
wT l/? ^?^* * ^**^«d ^ ^" exception : SSfcSTn'iil w
WoiUd bow to such a ft as would mak^e me ""''" 'f^' ^
lJ^^\^Tl ^^™°^ ^""^ ^ * ^der. ForesterYi 1 Tt
Basket -See Lobster-baskat -i he Falcon 540
Basle Zurich, Worms, Geneva, 2?— n
fc J^^"nl^"^* °^ loyal' harmonv, ^"'''^ i?ii 28.?
Bastard (adj.) then the ft sprout, My sister, is far " " " ^^
fairer than myself. , ^cii
1, ^^i^te bom of a former love. Queen Mary r v 71
Bastard (s) It means a ft ^ Becket mlU
Why, didn't .the Parliament make her a ft ? ^^'^^ '^"'^ \ \ \l
Then which is the ft ? >. 1 1 16
pXmi'n/o/* ^^'^'^ °^ Parliament and Council. Z \ \ i
OIH N?iL^° ""u^? ^''^,'7 true-born man of us a 6. ' ^
Old Nokes, can't it make thee aft''
and so they can't make me a ft. " M ^°
But if Parliament can make the Queen aft, " l]fa
"Sne?s ft ^-*-^^ ^"^ *^^* most- Aiam the " ''^^
And given thy realm of England to the ft. Harold u ii 773
K^e¥: I f'^ '^' ^^ -*^^ -°- •• :: x'ih li
hath borne at times A ft false 83 William. " '"^ "| |I^
^, my girl no tricks in him-No ft he ! " l\^
ttL^VJe'i^T'd^Lycffinl'?^" -^-""'^ * ^-^-v if
)> IV u 45
840
Beach
Bastard (s) {conttnued) Then is thy pretty boy a ft ?
This m thy bosom, fool, And after in thy ft's' '
BastardK* And done your best to ft our Queen
Bastard-making that was afore ft-w began
Bastardy What are you cackling of ft under
Bat What's here ? a dead ft in the fairy rimr—
a ft flew out at him In the clear noon,
Crush d my ft whereon I flew !
Batchelor And out upon all simple J'5 '
Batoe To ft this sacred pavement with my blood.
Battel we should have better b's at home
Batter Began to i; at your English Church, (
B«lJ?I"^c f ®ii*?^'^f'S?'^ breaking thro' the walls?
Battle (See also Mid-battle) or wave And wind at
their old ft :
Hark, there is ft at the palace gates
I myself Will down into the ft and there bide
and hurl d our b's Into the heart of Spain •
many English in your ranks To help your ft
1 had heard of him in ft over seas.
For thou hast done the ft in my cause •
To do the ft for me here in England '
than his league With Norway, and this ft
4I !u "l^ constant ' No ' For all but instant ft
After the ft— after the ft. Go.
Whose life was all one ft, incarnate war,
Waste not thy might before the ft '
I will bear thy blessing into the ft
until I find Which way the ft balance.
U God of ft s, make their wall of shields
Look out upon the ft— is he safe? (repeat)
U God of b's, make his battle-axe keen
0 God of b's, they are three to one
Look out upon the ft !
build a church to God Here on the hill of ft •
femce I knew ft And that was from my boyhood.
Lest there be ft between Heaven and Earth,
Ihe glory and grief of ft won or lost
a nunour then That you were kill'd in ft
having his right hand Lamed in the ft,
ihe story of your ft and your woimd
m this same ft We had been beaten—
1 t«ar away The leaves were darken'd by the ft—
if he had not gone to fight the king's ft'/
I saved his life once in ft. -» .
Becket iv ii 113
„ IV ii 258
Queen Mary in iv 238
1 144
1 i 59
Foresters u ii 93
II ii 96
n ii 146
XV 52
Becket v iii 131
Foresters i i 58
Queen Mary m iv 186
Becket v ii 626
Queen Mary i v 357
n iv 47
n iv 85
m i 108
V i 112
V V 33
Harold u ii 555
„ IV ii 70
IV iii 89
V i 7
V i 362
V i 397
V i 416
vi435
V i 461
V i 478
„ V i 484, 654
V i 562
V i 575
V i 624
V ii 138
V ii 174
Becket i iii 226
The Cup I ii 161
The Falcon 382
445
594
602
913
Foresters i i 57
1 1273
ft^ Was out of place; it should have been the bow.—
With nothing but my b-a and him To spatter his brains '
were man's to have held The b-a by thee '
and our b-a's broken The Raven's wing
we must use our b-a to-day.
My b-a against your voices.
And Loathing wield a Saxon b-a—
Cowl, helm ; and crozier, b-a.
Tis.H^^%^ ^"? u^^" w ^''•'"^ °"^" sharp-dividing justice,
» 2l^^ h ^°^d b*^® * f°'' it to the death.
Battle-field and seen the red of the ft-/
Battle-hymns ghostly horn Blowing continually, and
famt b-h, j> ^ u , , . „ ,
l^r^^ fl-mg them streaming over the ft'. ^'"^'^ nil 39?
Bawl When shall your parish-parson ft our bamis Prom oTmIt fiS-%
^a ^^ ^'' '^"'^ ^^^^"^ ^"'"" ^'t^ ^ blissful ^ ^
And over this Robin Hood's ft ! -^^^ ^"^ " ^^
Bay (verb) Tho' all the world should ft like winter
wolves.
how those Roman wolfdogs howl and ft him '
Bayeux I saw him coming with his brother Odo The
B bishop,
from Guy To mine own hearth at B
Beadti drave and crack'd His boat on p'onthieu ft •
Ihey stood on Dover ft to murder me
A child's sand-castle on the ft '
And the great breaker beats upon the ft !
Iii 105
II ii 779
IV iii 13
IV iii 64
vi205
vi265
vi414
V i 444
.. V i 563
Foresters n i 664
The Falcon 549
Foresters u ii 177 .
Queen Mary 11 ii 361|
IV iii 35^
Harold 11 ii
>• n ii
„ n ii c
Becket v ii 4361
The Cup I ii 254|
Foresters i ii 324
Bead
S41
Beautiful
Bead Counts his old b's, and hath forgotten thee. Harold ii ii 447
they are but blue b's — ^my Piero, The Falcon 48
Beak His buzzard b and deep-incavem'd eyes Queen Mary i iv 266
Beam (See also Side-beam) so the b's of both may
shine upon us,
My grayhounds fleeting like a 6 of light,
That b of dawn upon the opening flower,
Beaming his fine-cut face bowing and b with all that
courtesy
Her bright face b starlike down upon me
Bear (s) Like the rough b beneath the tree.
No, my b, thou hast not.
0 drunken ribaldry ! Out, beast ! out, b !
Dares the b slouch into the lion's den ?
Bear (verb) {See also Abear) You needs must b it
hardly.
B witness, Renard, that I live and die
The tree that only b's dead fruit is gone.
That b's not its own apples.
How should he 6 a bridegroom out of Spain ?
How should he b the headship of the Pope ?
1 think the Queen may never b a child ;
Lose the sweet hope that I may b a prince.
I could mould myself To b your going better ;
yet what hatred Christian men B to each other,
that I 6 it Without more ruffling.
And Tostig is not stout enough to b it.
And thy love ? Aldwyth. As much as thou canst b.
I can b all. And not be giddy.
Let all men b witness of our bond !
That mortal men should b their earthly heats
I will b thy blessing into the battle
B me true witness — only for this once —
My punishment is more than I can b.
Together more than mortal man can b.
Permit me, my good lord, to 6 it for thee.
So now he b's the standard of the angels.
I am the Dean of the province : let me b it.
Wherefore dost thou presume to b thy cross.
Let York 6 his to mate with Canterbury.
But b with Walter Map,
— The Cross ! — who b's my Cross before me ?
Would that I could b thy cross indeed !
It Vs an evil savour among women,
body of that dead traitor Sinnatus. B him away,
the love I 6 to thee Glow thro' thy veins ?
The love I 6 to thee Glows thro' my veins
I b with him no longer.
And he will have to b with it as he may.
But if it be so we must b with John.
Risk not the love I b thee for a girl.
It is the King Who b's all down.
Beard (s) tell me, did you ever Sigh for a & ?
Dare-devils, that would eat fire and spit it out At
Philip's b: „ m i 158
but he hath a yellow b. „ ni i 216
A fine b, Bonner, a very full fine b. „ ni iv 338
His long white b, which he had never shaven „ iv iii 592
Your Philip hath gold hair and golden b; ., v iii 57
The rosy face, and long down-silvering b, Harold m i 47
The rosy face and long down-silvering b — „ iv i 262
The tan of southern summers and the b ? Prom, of May ii 618
thy father will not grace our feast With his white b
to-day. Foresters iv 81
Beard (verb) A bold heart yours to b that raging mob ! Queen Mary i iii 96
Bearer The King may rend the b limb from limb. Becket i i 378
He all but pluck'd the b's eyes away. „ i iii H
Bearing (adj. and part) I, b this great ensign, make it
clear « i i" 544
wherewithal he cleft the tree From off the b trunk, Harold in i 138
— the stream is 6 us all down, Foresters i i 239
Bearing (bringing forth) To go twelve months in 6 of
a child ? Queen Mary in vi 91
Her fierce desire of b him a child, „ iv iii 429
Since she lost hope of 6 us a child ? „ v i 229
m iv 20
Harold I ii 129
Foresters rv 3
Becket m iii 141
Prom, of May ii 248
Harold 1 i 327
Becket, Pro. 497
I i 231
„ IV ii 282
Queen Mary i iv 36
„ n iv 41
m i 19
m i 23
m iii 25
m iii 29
m V 231
„ lu vi 201
iiivi236
IV iii 184
V iii 3
Harold I i 402
„ 1 1484
„ 1 1485
., nii698
„ V i 283
„ V i 434
„ yiill5
„ vii202
Becket i i 24
„ I iii 490
„ I iii 496
„ I iii 499
„ I iii 504
„ I iii 512
„ iiii307
„ viieiO
„ vii614
The Cup 1 iii 86
„ I iii 181
II 426
n428
The Falcon 884
887
Foresters J ii 102
IV 742
IV 784
Queen Mary i v 609
Bearing (mien) Philip shows Some of the b of your
blue blood — Queen Mary i v 434
His b is so courtly-delicate ; „ ni iv 397
Beast (See also Beast-body, Wild-beast) pounce like
a wild b out of his cage to worry Craumer. „ i i 88
world-hating b, A haggard Anabaptist. „ ii ii 91
but I thought he was a b. „ m i 221
Bonner cannot out-Bonner his own self — B\ — „ in vi 28
Because these islanders are brutal b's? „ in vi 153
and in itself a b. „ iv i 33
creep down into some dark hole Like ;i, hurt b, ,, iv i 142
Stand watching a sick b before he dies ? ,, iv iii 7
the b might roar his claim To being in God's image, ,, iv iii 367
I conclude the King a b ; Verily a lion if you
will — the world A most obedient h and fool —
myself Half b and fool as appertaining to it ; .. iv iii 412
Thou's thy way wi' man and b, Tib. „ rv iii 499
like a timorous b of prey Out of the bush Harold i ii 212
The wolf ! the 6 ! „ n ii 301
0 drunken ribaldry ! Out, b ! out, bear ! Becket i i 231
Poor b, poor b ! set him down. .. i iv 105
Like the wild b — if you can call it love. iv ii 121
The world God made — even the b — the bird ! .. v ii 243
Ay, still a lover of the b and bird ? .. v ii 246
How should you guess What manner of 6 it is ? The Cup i ii 371
leaves him A 6 of prey in the dark. Prom, of May i 505
Beast-body this b-b That God has plunged my soul in — Becket ii i 149
Beastly These b swine make such a grunting here, Queen Mary i iii 12
Beat I can play well, and I shall b you there. i iii 129
Make all tongues praise and all hearts b for you. .. r v 118
which every now and then B's me half dead : ,. i v 525
whether It b's hard at this marriage. .. iii i 39
for to-day My heart b's twenty, .. in ii 59
Your father had a will that b men down ; Your
father had a brain that b men down — .. iv i 108
God will b down the fury of the flame, .. iv iii 98
1 wonder at tha', it b's me ! ,. iv iii 499
You b upon the rock. v i 210
How Harold used to b him ! Harold i i 432
Leofwin would often fight me, and I b him. ,. i i 434
only pulsed for Griffyth, b For his pursuer. ,. i ii 151
or the sword that b's them down. ,. ii ii 136
There somewhere b's an English pulse in thee ! ,, ii ii 266
let him flap The wings that b down Wales ! .. iv i 247
I should b Thy kingship as my bishop Becket, Pro. 90
Yet my fingers itch to b him into nothing. „ i iv 229
best heart that ever B for one woman. The Falcon 668
No other heart Of such magnificence in courtesy B's —
out of heaven. „ 724
would you b a man for his brother's fault ? Prom, of May in 154
broke the heart That only b for you ; ,, iii 763
the great breaker b's upon the beach ! Foresters i ii 323
That thou mightst b him down at quarterstafi ! „ iv 517
Will chill the hearts that b for Robin Hood ! .. iv 1064
Beaten You are b. Becket, Pro. 45
I loathe being b ; had I fixt my fancy Upon the
game I should have b thee, ,, Pro. 49
beat Thy kingship as my bishop hath b it. „ Pro. 91
who hath b down my foes. „ Pro. 253
Becket hath b thee again — ,. Pro. 314
in this same battle We had been b — The Falcon 603
Our Robin b, pleading for his life ! Foresters n i 674
Lusty bracken b flat, „ n ii 154
Sit here by me, where the most b track Runs thro'
the forest, ,, in 89
Or else be boimd and b. (repeat) „ in 370, 390
Beating the rain b in my face all the way, Prom, of May in 367
Beautiful I left her lying still and b. More b Queen Mary v v 261
O b ! May I have it as mine, Becket ii i 297
My Anjou bower was scarce as 6. „ in i 52
The Lady Camma, Wise I am sure as she is b. The Cup i ii 139
She b : sleek as a miller's mouse ! Meal enough,
meat enough, well fed ; but b — bah ! I'he Falcon 164
you look as b this morning as the very Madonna ,. 198
A lady that was b as day Sat by me „ 349
Beaatifal
842
The Falcon 353
of May I 565
I 566
Beautiful (continued) Aiid she was the most 6 of all ; Then
but fifteen, and still as b.
Come, give me your hand and kiss me This h May-
moming. Proh
The most 6 May we have had for many years !
And here Is the most b morning of this May. ,. i 569
You, the most h blossom of the May, .. 1 574
all the world is 6 If we were happy, .. 1 577
How b His manners are, and how unlike the farmer's ! „ n 530
no maids like English maids So 6 as they be. Foresters n i 20
And love is joyful, innocent, b, ,, n ii 64
Beauty a head So full of grace and b ! Queen Mary i v 64
B passes like a breath and love is lost in loathing : „ v ii 365
She hath won upon our people thro' her b, Harold iv i 23
cowling and clouding up That fatal star, thy B, Becket i i 812
Your answer, b\ ,. iv ii 53
She calls you b, but I don't like her looks. ,, iv ii 61
my sleeping-draught May bloat thy b out of shape, „ iv ii 170
By thy leave, b. Ay, the same ! „ iv ii 203
marvell'd at Our unfamiliar beauties of the west ; „ iv ii 303
You have b, — 0 great 6, — and Antonius, The Cup i ii 297
for her b, stateliness, and power. Was chosen Priestess „ n 16
To-day, my b, thou must dash us down The Falcon 152
With other beauties on a mountain meadow, „ 351
I whisper'd. Let me crown you Queen of B, „ 361
crown you Again with the same crown my Queen of B. „ 916
like the Moslem beauties waiting To clasp their
lovers Prom, of May i 246
■ — her main law Whereby she grows in b — „ i 283
prize The pearl of B, even if I found it „ m 601
and if her beauties answer their report. Forsters i ii 27
Becamest when thou b ]Man in the Flesh, Queen Mary iv iii 140
Beck (brook) leastwaays they niver cooms 'ere but fur
the trout i' our b,
Becket (Chancellor of England, 1154-1162 Arch-
bishop of Canterbury, 1162-1170) (See also
Dare - Becket, Godstow - Becket, Thomas,
Thomas Becket, Thomas of Canterbury)
As proud as B.
You would not have him murder'd as B was ?
Prom, of May i 213
Queen Mary in i 332
m i 334
the arm within Is B's, who hath beaten down my foes. Becket, Pro. 253
The chart is not mine, but B's : take it, Thomas. ,. Pro. 311
B ! 0 — aj- — and these chessmen on the floor — .. Pro. 312
B hath beaten thee again — ,. Pro. 314
Ha, B ! thou rememberest our talk ! ,. Pro. 404
this B, her father's friend, like enough staved us „ Pro. 517
B, I am the oldest of the Templars ; ., i iii 247
Behold thy father kneeling to thee, B. „ i iii 253
And B had my bosom on all this ; „ i iii 433
Our Lord B's our great sitting-hen cock, ,. i iv 125
B, beware of the knife ! .. i iv 133
B shall be king, and the Holy Father shall be king, ,. i iv 269
With B? I have but one hour with thee — .. ii i 23
Why thou, my bird, thou pipest B, B — .. ii i 32
Must be the nightmare breaking on my peace with 'Z/.' .. n i 38
We have but one bond, her hate of B. ii i 166
Nay ! nay ! what art thou muttering ? I hate B? .. n i 168
'Tis true what B told me, that the mother .. ii ii 9
and B — B should crown him were he crown'd at all : .. ii ii 16
Brother of France, what shall be done with B ? .. u ii 65
Master B, you That owe to me your power over me — ,. n ii 151
sure to wake As great a wrath in B Rosamund.
Always B ! „ iii i 88
Henry — B tells him this — To take my life ,. iv ii 394
But B ever moves against a king. „ v i 25
world allows I fall no inch Behind this B, ,. v i 40
B hath trodden on us like worms, ,. v i 60
scarcely dare to bless the good we eat Because of B. „ v i 72
I know — could swear — as long as B breathes, „ v i 76
The brideless B is thy king and mine : ,. v i 107
B is like enough to make all his. ,. v i 134
Methought I had recover'd of the B, „ v i 137
Why do you thrust this B on me again ? „ v i 155
Lest B thrust you even from your throne. „ v i 159
Your B knew the secret of your bower. „ v i 177
Becket (continued) Our B, who will not absolve the
Bishops. Becket v i 222
I think ye four have cause to love this B. „ v i 225
You are no King's men — you — you— you are B's men. „ v i 259
What say ye there ot B? „ v ii 56
B, it is too late. .. v ii 526
Where is the traitor B ? „ v iii 103
Becket (Gilbert) See Gilbert Becket
Beckon the right hand still B's me hence. Queen Mary v v 138
Becomes nay, it well b him. ., i v 436
Bed (See also Down, Flower-bed) As tho' the
nightmare never left her 6. „ i v 606
Spain in our ships, in our forts, in our liouses,
in our b's ? „ ii i 180
No Spain in our b's — ,. n i 182
and the b's I know. I hate Spain. „ ii i 184
on a soft b, in a closed room, with light, .. v iv 36
gather'd one From out a i of thick forget-me-nots, „ v v 94
It lies beside thee, king, upon thy b. Harold iii i 196
get thee to thine own b. Becket i i 8
he hath made his b between the altars, .. i iv 264
My b, where ev'n the slave is private — ,, v i 251
I measured his foot wi' the mark i' the b, but it
wouldn't fit Prom, of May i 414
seen us that wild morning when we found Her b
unslept in, „ n 471
Strike up a song, my friends, and then to b. Foresters i iii 31
Bedingfield (Sir Henry) See Henry, Henry Bedingfield
Bedroom We found a letter in your b torn into bits. Prom, of May ni 323
Bee As the first flower no b ha.s ever tried. Queen Mary i iv 63
Are you the b to try me ? „ i iv 64
b's, Ii any creeping life invade their hive ,. nr iii 53
. your wise b's had stiing him first to death. „ in iii 64
The people are as thick as b's below, They hum like b's, — Harold I i 31
B mustn't buzz. Whoop — but he knows, (repeat) Becket in i 98, 239
So rare the household honeymaking b, „ v ii 218
As happy as the b's there at their honey Proni. of May i 606
Swarm to thy voice like b's to the brass pan. Foresters i iii 108
B's rather, flying to the flower for honey. „ iv 12
The b buzz'd up m the heat. ,. iv 14
And the b buzz'd do^vn from the heat. „ iv 20
And the b buzz'd up in the cold „ iv 21
And the b buzz'd off in the cold. „ iv 27
And yet in tune with Nature and the b's. „ iv 33
Thy b should buzz about the Court of John. „ iv 44
Beech Fine, b and plane, oak, walnut. The Cup i i 1
Beef and there is a piece of b like a house-side. Prom, of May i 793
Beelzebub By Mahomid I could dine with B ! Foresters iv 971
Beer Owd Steer gi'es nubbut cowd tea to 'is men, and
owd Dobson gi'es b. Prom, of May ii 225
But I'd like owd Steer's cowd tea better nor
Dobson's b. „ u 227
That 6 be as good fur 'erses as men, „ n 315
The b's gotten oop into my 'ead. „ n 320
worked at all the worse upon the cold tea than you
woiild have done upon the b? „ ni 57
but we'd ha' worked better upo' the b. „ in 60
Beeswax By bonds of b, like your creeping thing ; Queen Mary in iii 62
Beetle B's jewel armour crack'd, Foresters n ii 160
Befall No ill b on him or thee when I Am gone. Becket ii i 260
get you hence in haste Lest worse b you. „ iv ii 28
Befit It well b's thy new archbishoprick „ i i 225
Befitting But ill b such a festal day Foresters i iii 37
Beg You are to b the people to pray for you ; Queen Mary iv ii 76
— there to b, starve, die — Becket n i 74
I will b my bread along the world „ iv ii 103
he b's you to forget it As scarce his act : — The Cup ii 51
Dare b him to receive his diamonds back. — The Falcon 262
B^et sire b's Not half his likeness in the son. Queen Mary ii i 54
b's An admiration and an indignation, „ in iv 169'
Beggar (s) How should a baron love a b on horseback, Becket, Pro. 444
half-rag, half-sore, — b's, poor rogues „ i iv 82
If the King hold his purpose, I am myself a 6. „ i iv 90
— like some loud b at thy gate — „ n i 180
mastiff, That all but kill'd the b, Prom, of May i 55»
Beggar
843
Besotted
(s) {continued) but if he do not I and thou are
but b's.
Canst thou endure to be a 6 m hose whole life
Here come three b's.
we be b's, we come to ask o' you. We ha' nothing.
B's, you are sturdy rogues that should be set to work.
How much for a 6 ?
will you not hear one of these b's' catches ?
by St. Mary these b's and these friars shall join you.
(verb) Down to the devil with this bond that b's me !
She has 6 him. The Falcon 157
"He hath become so b, that his falcon „ 229
We will be b then and be true to the King. Foresters i i 201
B^garly This b life, This poor, flat, hedged-in field — Prom, of May u 343
B%gar-woman rags Of some pale 6-w seeking abns The Falcon 852
Begin old Gospeller, sour as midwinter, B with him. Queen Mary i iii 41
But he 6's to flutter.
He b's at top with me :
so, Allen, I may as well b with you.
Beguming In your old place ? and vespers are b.
B^one Do, and b !
B^un hath b to re-edify the true temple —
Your people have b to learn your worth.
she hath b Her life-long prayer for thee.
Behaif Stood out against the King in your b,
BebaviOlii I promise you that if you forget yourself
in your b to this gentleman.
Behold B him — People. Oh, unhappy sight !
B him, brethren : he hath cause to weep ! —
Beholden Thanks, Sir Thomas, we be b to you,
Thou art much b to this foot of mine,
But I am much b to your King.
I am much b to the King, your master.
We should be all the more b to him.
Being From the dim dawn of B —
Belated I and my friend, this monk, were here b,
Belie! wholesome medicine here Puts that b asleep.
BeUeve He did b the bond incestuous.
I do 6 she'd yield.
I b you mine ; And so you maj- continue mine,
I myself B it will be better for your welfare.
I do 6 he holp Northumberland Against me.
I do 6, I have dusted some already,
some b that he will go beyond him.
his fault So thoroughly to b in his own self.
Yet thoroughly to b in one's own self,
I b Sir Thomas Stafford ?
And I, by God, b myself a man.
I b so, cousin.
who not B's the Pope, nor any of them b —
I do 6 in God, Father of all ;
men Have hardly known what to b, or whether They
should 6 in anything ;
I hear unhappy rumours — nay, I say not, I b.
And I b, Spite of your melancholy Sir Nicholas,
I do 6 I lamed his Majesty's For a day or two,
He had his gracious moment, Altho' you'll not b me.
Lord Leofwin, dost thou b, that these Three rods
an honest world Will not b them.
And makes b that he b's my word —
For they will not b thee— as I b.
But that my barons might b thy word,
I do b My old crook'd spine would bud
b that lying And ruling men are fatal twins
prayers go up as fast as my tears fall, I well b.
Let not our great king B us sullen —
b thee The veriest Galahad of okl Arthur's hall.
I do b thee, then. I am the man.
Do you b that you are married to him y (repeat)
I should b it. Eleanor. You must not b it.
Do you bit? I pray you then to take my sleeping-
draught ; '• i^'. ii 68
Do you bear me ? B oi no, I care not. ,. iv ii 353
/ 6 him The bravest in our roll of Primates „ v..ii57
But she would not b me, and she wish'd „ v ii 116
Foresters i i 200
I i 205
III 187
m 189
III 196
.. Ill 216
ni405
,. ni 417
1 1340
Harold ii ii 3
Becket i iii 617
Pro III. of May in 30
Becket v ii 597
I i 233
Queen Mary I iii 58
I v 109
Harold iii i 323
Queen Mary rv i 126
Prom, of May 1 162
Queen Mary iv iii 1
IV iii 13
n iii 121
,. m ii 49
V iii 99
V iii 111
Foresters iv 292
Prom, of May 1 281
Foresters t ii 193
Becket rv ii 52
Queen Mary i ii 77
I iv 22
I iv 136
I iv 254
I V 278
I V 423
I V 440
II ii 386
„ II ii 387
III i 31
,. HI i 168
III ii 72
„ III iii 238
.. IV iii 228
„ IV iii 405
V i 36
V ii 326
V ii 471
V V 39
Harold i i 43
.. I i 348
.. Iiii668
,. Iiii696
,. iiii725
„ III i 23
„ III i 126
„ mi 167
IV i 7
Becket, Pro. 128
I i 135
,. IV ii 46,54
IV ii 48
Believe (continued) You will b Now that lie never struck
the stag— The Cup i ii 429
he prays you to b him. Camma. I pray him to b —
that I b him. „ ii 55
I scarce b it ! Elisabetta. Shame upon her then ! The Falcon 517
I doant b he's iver a 'eart under his waistcoat. Prom, of May 1 130
they that love do not b that death \Ki\\ part them. „ i 662
My father's death, Let her b it mine ; „ ii 454
I do 6 I lost my heart to him the very first time Me
met, „ ui 283
I do 6 I could forgive — well, almost anything — „ m 630
lower and baser Than even I can well h you. ,, in 815
but I b there lives No man who truly loves Foresters ii i 74
1 b She came with me into the forest here. .. ii i 484
I b thou fell'st into the hands Of these same Moors ,, ii i 562
b There came some evil fairy at my birth And cursed
me, „ II ii 107
I b thee, thou art a good fellow, though a friar. ,. ni 341
0 my good liege, we did b you dead. ., iv 846
Believed His friends would praise him, I b 'em, Queen Mary i v 623
Stigand b he knew not what he spake. Harold m ii 61
— some b she was his paramour. „ v ii 102'
b that Rome Made war upon the peoples not the Gods. The Cup i ii 58
1 b thee to be too solemn and formal to be a ruifler. Foresters i i 168
I b this Abbot of the party of King Richard, ,. i i 266
Believer as I am a true b in true love myself, ,, i i 162
Believing B I should ever aid the Church — Becket, Pro. 417
b That I should go against the Church with him, ,. i i 91
b that our brother Had wrong'd you ; „ ii ii 237
Tlieer ye goas ageiin. Miss niver b owt I saj-s to
ye — ■ Prom, of May i 107
Bell (See also Minster-bell) The b's are ringing at
Maidstone. Queen Mary ii i 18
The b's must ring ; Te Deums must be sung ; ,. in ii 211
Toll of a b, Stroke of a clock, ,. iii v 142
clash'd their b's, Shot off their lying cannon, „ iii vi 96
A passing b toll'd in a dying ear — „ v ii 41
And hear my peregrine and her b's in heaven ; And
other b's on earth, Harold i ii 131
Our scouts have heard the tinkle of their b's. „ v i 221
like the gravedigger's child I have heard of, trying
to ring the b, Becket m iii 74
— the b's rang out even to deafening, „ v ii 363
Bell-silencing black, b-s, anti-marrying, burial-hindering
interdict „ ill iii 54
Belly since the Sheriff left me naught but an empty b. Foresters n i 279
Belonging His kin, all his b's, overseas ; Becket ii i 71
Of and b to the King of England, „ iv ii 23
I am mine own self Of and b to the King. „ iv ii 30
King Hath divers ofs and ons, ofs and 6'^.-, ,. iv ii 32
It is the cup b our own Temple. 2'he Cup ii 345
B's, paramours, whom it pleases liim Becket iv ii 35
Beloved See Well-beloved
Bench There is a b. Come, wilt thou sit ? Becket ii i 124
Help me to move this b for him into the sun. Prom, of May i 81
Doubtless, like judges of another b. Foresters in 153
Bend seeks To b the laws to his own will. Queen Mary ii ii 184
Bended and we'll pray for you all on our b knees. „ n iii 109
and we'll pray for you on our b knees till our
lives' end. „ n iii 122
Benedict 0 blessed samt, O glorious B, — Becket v iii 2
Benedicta Ave Maria, gratia plena, B tu in
mulieribus. Queen Mary iii ii 1
Benedictus Sit b fructus ventris tui ! ' „ in ii 83
Bent (See also Bow-bent) b to his saddle-bow. As if to
win the man ,. ii ii 310
Benzoin Nard, Cinnamon, amomum, b. The Cup n 184
Bequeath Edward might b the crown Of England, Queen Mary i ii 26
Berkeley (Sir Maurice) See Maurice Berkeley
Berkhamstead Due from his castles of B and Eye Becket i iii 628
Beset O Renard, I am much b, Queen Mary i v 385
I should be hard b with thy fourscore. Foresters iv 17^
Beside lost and found together, None b them. Harold in ii 8
' I am b thee.' „ m ii 14
Besotted One half b in religious rites. The Cup i i 74
Best
844
Bide
Best (adj.) Bumble's the b milcher in Islip.
(repeat) Qiieen Mart/ iv iii 478, 497
The blood and sweat of heretics at the stake
Is God's b dew upon the barren field. „ v i 102
You had b go home. What are you ? „ v iv 43
Noble Gurth ! B son of Godwin ! Harold v i 135
Serve my b friend and make him ray worst foe ; Becket i iii 567
Only my b bower-maiden died of late, „ in i 67
Stain'd with the blood of the b heart that ever Beat
for one woman. The Falcon 667
yet that might be The b way out of it, Protn. of May i 476
Then the man, the woman, Following their b afl&nities, „ i 523
this is a true woodman's bow of the b yew-wood to
slay the deer. Foresters ii i 393
Heaven looks down on me, And smiles at my b meanings, „ iv 727
Best (s) I do my most and b. Queen Mary ii ii 24
it is a day to test your health Ev'n at the b :
You have done your b. Pole. Have done my b,
But thou canst hear the b and wisest of us.
1 have done my b. I am not learn'd.
it's all for the b, come when they wiU —
I and Filippo here had done our b,
Bested See Bl-bested
Bestial all of us abhor The venomous, b, devilish
revolt Of Thomas Wyatt.
Did ye not cast with b violence Our holy Norman
bishops down
0 6! O how unlike our goodly Sinnatus.
Bethink And now, I do 6 me, thou wa.st by
Betray Before he would b it.
And if you should b me to your husband —
Will you b him by this order ?
And I will not b you.
for fear or monies, might B me to the wild Prince
For those of thine own band who would b thee ?
Betray'd Cast off, b, defamed.
They have b the treason of their hearts :
Thou hast 6 us on these rocks of thine !
0 Wulfnoth, Wulfnoth, brother, thou hast b me !
Herbert, Herbert, have I b the Church ?
But thou the shepherd hast b the sheep,
hast b Thy father to the losing d his land.
Betroth In order to b her to your Dauphin.
Betrothal (adj.) it was her own B ring.
Thou hast robb'd my girl of her b ring.
Betrothal (s) Of her b to the Emperor Charles,
Betroth'd Was she not b in her babyhood to the
Great Emperor
and presently That I and Harold are b —
Betrothing Hapless doom of woman happy in 6 !
Better and I myself Believe it will be b for your welfare
He must deserve his surname b.
A b and a worse — the worse is here To persecute,
1 could mould myself To bear your going b ;
The b for him. He bums in Purgatory, not in Hell.
There is no hope of b left for him,
Our Daisy's cheeses be b.
I thought you knew me b.
I am not well, but it will b me,
I wish her Highness b.
Nay ! B die than lie !
Because I love the Norman 6 — no,
and left me time And peace for prayer to gain a b one.
B die than lie !
Is it not b still to speak the truth ?
B methinks have slain the man at once !
Who hath a b claim then to the crown
b die Than credit this, for death is death,
Hadst thou been braver, I had b braved All —
the king like his own man, No b ;
I could pity this poor world myself that it is no b
ordered.
Friend, am I so much b than thyself
You have had the 6 of us In secular matters
IV ii 118
v ii 115
Harold i i 300
Becket ill i 24
The Falcon 201
607
Qv£en Mary ii ii 287
Harold I i 49
The Cup II 172
Foresters ii i 540
Becket ii i 268
The Cup I ii 242
., I ii 244
„ I ii 316
Foresters ii i 708
IV 833
Queen Mary i v 26
II ii 156
Harold n i 23
„ II ii 802
Becket i iii 284
„ I iii 524
Foresters ii i 569
Queen Mary i v 293
Foresters i ii 295
II i 586
Queen Mary v v 233
Queen
iill8
Harold I ii 223
Mary v ii 364
iiv254
III ii 197
III iv 114
III vi 236
IV i 55
IV iii 79
IV iii 484
V ii 186
V ii 554
V ii 615
Harold i i 158
„ 1 i 171
ii220
n ii 281
II ii 373
II ii 498
11 ii 596
m ii 77
m ii 178
IV iii 59
B have been A fisherman at Bosham, my good Herbert,
Becket, Pro. 366
ii3
nii80
II ii 290
Better (continued) I cannot answer it Till b times, Becket in i 3
That which you ask me Till b times. ,. in i 7
And I thought if it were the King's brother he had
a b bride than the King,
b Than raised to take a life which Henry bad me
Why then B perhaps to speak with them apart,
to submit at once Is b than a wholly-hopeless war,
I meant thee to have follow'd — b thus,
that's positive again — that's b !
and b late than never — but come when they will —
' B a man without riches, than riches without a man,
Hath served me b than her living —
Betting 6, Mr. Dobson.
B step out of his road, then, for he's walking to us,
I'm sorry for it, for, tho' he never comes to church,
I thought b of him.
Niver man 'ed b friends, and I will saay niver
master 'ed b men :
thaw I says it mysen, niver men 'ed a 6 master —
So much the b, so much the b.
B and higher than Nature, we might be As happy as
the bees
Noa; I knaws a deal b now.
You had b attend to your hayfield.
knaw'd b nor to cast her sister's misfortin inter 'er
teeth
But I'd like owd Steer's cowd tea 6 nor Dobson's beer.
b death With our first wail than life —
Why, you look b. Eva. And I feel so much b,
it might have been b for her, for him, and for you.
B for me ! That's good. How b for me ?
B not. Has he offered you marriage, this gentleman ?
but you seem somewhat b to-day.
if you cram me crop-full I be little b than Famine in
the picture,
we should have b battels at home.
Till b times. Robin. But if the b times should never
come ?
Why then I will be b than the time.
Would it be b for thee in the wood ?
Am I worse or 6 ? I am outlaw'd.
and all the b For this free forest-life,
B than heart-sick, friar.
Bevell'd That all was planed and b smooth again,
Beware B, Lord Legate, of a heavier crime Than
heresy is itself ; b, I say. Lest men accuse
you of indifference Queen Mary in iv 221
Ay, ay, b of France. „ iv iii 434
Bewitch'd And thought thou wert b. Foresters n i 684
Bible I'll have their b's burnt. The b is the priest's. Queen Mary in i 284
.. in i 173
., IV ii 267
„ vii310
The Cup I ii 141
II 498
The Falcon 95
199
751
901
Prom, of May i 69
1 218
I 261 ,
132
I 32
i43&^
16O4I
n26
nl22
u 127
n227
n289
ni220
m 251
in253
ni 289
lu 322
Foresters i i 47
I i 58
„ I ii 286
,. I ii 291
„ I iii 140
ni49
ni59
„ IV 674
Becket r i 138
Look to your B, Paget ! we are fallen
And may not read your B,
never merry \^orld In England, since the B came
among us.
Till all men have their B, rich and poor.
Bid the Lord Chancellor. Mary. B him come in.
B him come in. Good morning, Sir de Noailles.
Gregory b St. Austin here Found two archbishopricks,
And b him re-create me, Gilbert Foliot.
My friends, the Archbishop b's you good night.
he sends me to b you this night pray for him
you b me go, and I'll have my ball anyhow.
B their old bond farewell with smiles, not tears ;
Do not till I b you. Eva. No, Philip, no.
Will b you welcome, and will listen to you.
I Titania b you flit,
Bidd'n and b him Charge one against a thousand.
Was not my lord of Leicester b to our supper ?
in iv 80
III iv 83
v v241
vv248
IV 97
I v241
Becket i iii 48
., I iii 126
.. I iv 261
.. iiv266
., IV ii 63
Pro7n. of Mat/ 1 524
17321
u522
Foresters 11 ii 126
Queen Mary iv iii 308
Becket i iv 56
Bide and there b The upshot of my quarrel.
and a war so owld a couldn't b vor his dinner, but
a had to b howsomiver.
But now I cannot b.
Ay, so your Grace would b a moment yet.
And b the doom of God.
tho' I can drink wine I cannot b water.
Queen Mary 11 iv 85
„ IV iii 505
V i 93
v ii 547
Harold v i 61
Becket i iv 220
I
Bide
845
Bit
Bide (continued) in Nottingham they say There b's a.
foul witch Foresters u i 203
But how then if I will not 6 to be search'd ? „ rv 168
Bided so they b on and on till vour o' the clock, Queen Mary iv iii 509
Biding So sick am I with h for this child. ., in vi 89
Big his h baldness, That irritable forelock which he rubs, ,. i iv 264
Is that it? That's a h lot of money. ,. n iii 62
Map, tho' you make your butt too h, you overshoot it. Becket iii iii 122
be i' the long bam by one o'clock, fur he'll gie us a i
dinner,
and a plum-pudding as 6 as the round haystack,
and I wur hallus scaared by a 6 word ;
and wheere the b eshtree cuts athurt it,
I am mortally afear'd o' thee, thou b man,
B in our small world than thou art.
Not yet, but here comes one of b mould.
Bigot To be nor mad, nor b — have a mind —
Bill (beak) gaping b's in the home-nest Piping for
bread —
No bird? Filippo. Half a tit and a hem's J.
Bill (document) In several b's and declarations,
ay ; if Bonner have not forged the b's.
Prom, of May I 9
I 794
ni 33
in 94
Foresters IV 317
Becket v i 128
Foresters TV 115
Queen Mary v v 216
Becket II ii 300
The Falcon 131
Queen Mary iv i 48
IV i 51
Billing nor priestly king to cross Their b's ere they nest. Harold in ii 95
Bind To b me first by oaths I could not keep.
And b him in from hamiing of their combs.
Which b's us friendship-fast for ever !
The shackles that will b me to the wall.
And I would b thee more,
b a score All in one faggot, snap it over knee,
bound To that necessity which b's us down ;
Tho' she that b's the bond, herself should see
I will b up his wounds with my napkin.
striving still to break or b The spiritual giant
I ask'd A ribbon from her hair to b it with ;
if you will b love to one for ever,
Thou hast risk'd thy life for mine : b these two men
Bird (See also Sea-bird) These b's of passage come
before their time : Queen Alary i iii 75
To kiss and cufE among the b's and flowers — „ m v 258
I never breathed it to a 6 in the eaves,
I whistle to the 6 has broken cage, And all in vain
let fly the b within the hand, To catch the b again
Poor b of passage ! so I was ; but, father,
Bar the 6 From following the fled sxmimer —
To guard this b of passage to her cage ;
6 that moults sings the same song again,
I wrong the b ; she leaves only the nest she built,
thou, my b, thou pipest Becket, Becket —
B mustn't tell, Whoop — he can see. (repeat)
I have lived, poor b, from cage to cage.
The world God made — even the beast — the b !
Ay, still a lover of the beast and b ?
See, see, my white 6 stepping toward the snare.
Kear that, my b ! Art thou not jealous of her ?
Buss me, my 6 !
No 6 ? Filippo. Half a tit and a hem's bill.
A noble b, each perfect of the breed.
What do you rate her at ? Count. My b ?
Nothing but my brave b, my noble falcon,
dying of my noble b Hath served me better than her living —
all in all to one another from the time when we
first peeped into the b's nest. Prom, of May m 274
barred thee up in thy chamber, like a & in a cage. Foresters i i 315
Queen Mary i v 557
ni iii 57
Harold ii ii 162
.. n ii 410
.. II ii 559
IV i 57
V i 108
Beclcet i ii 76
,. I iv 106
,. ivii443
The Falcon 359
Prom, of May i 644
Foresters iv 894
V ii 454
V V 19
Harold n ii 65
Becket i i 253
„ I i 258
„ I i 329
,. r iii 447
„ 1 iv 45
II i 32
Becket iii i 106, 254
Becket m i 222
V ii 244
„ T ii 246
The Cup I iii 35
The Falcon 5
29
„ 130
,. 320
,. 323
., 873
900
tree-Cupids half-way up in heaven, The b's-
And all the b's that sing When all the leaves are green ;
And live with us and the b's in the green wood.
Let the b's sing, and do you dance to their song.
All the b's in merry Sherwood sing and sing him home
again.
Bird-babble B-b for my falcon ! Let it pass.
Bird-echoing Their long b-e minster-aisles, —
Birdlune I think there may be b here for me ;
Bird-Robin If my man-Robin were but a b-R,
Birth every rebel b That passes out of embryo.
We have the man that rail'd against thy b.
in 37
ni440
IV 325
IV 556
IV 1109
The Falcon 38
Becket m i 44
Queen Mary m v 227
Foresters m 39
Q^een Mary m vi 51
Harold n ii 486
Birth (continued) The child, a thread within the house
of b. The Cwp ii 260
There came some evil fairy at my b Foresters n ii 108
Birthdaay (birthday) Why, o''coorse, fur it be the owd
man's b. Prom, of May i 6
Owd Steer wur afeard she wouldn't be back i' time
to keep his b, „ 1 18
I be coomed to keep his b an' all. ,. i 76
— to celebrate my b i' this fashion. „ i 321
Birthday (adj.) A b welcome ! happy days and many ! Harold v i 431
Birthday (s) (See also Birthdaay) My father on a 6
gave it me. Queen Mary i v 527
Plots and feuds ! This is my ninetieth b. (repeat) Harold iv i 121, 127
■ ' ■ „ vi429
V ii 126
Prom, of May i 74
Foresters i i 219
I i 222
I i 298
I ii 89
Iii 125
I iii 12
ni35
n i 44
Becket n ii 293
Thy death !— to-day ! Is it not thy b ?
hath kinglike fought and fallen, His b, too.
I came back to keep bis b.
but is not to-day his b ?
that thou keepest a record of his b's?
To-day he hath accomplished his thirtieth b,
last time When I shall hold my b in this hall:
Cloud not thy b with one fear for me.
I am only merry for an hour or two Upon a b :
It is my b.
greater nearness to the b Of the after-life.
Birthplace Bosham, my good Herbert, Thy b —
Bishop (ecclesiastic) our B's from their sees Or fled,
they say, or flying —
— and now that your good b, Bonner,
Why, my lord B? (repeat)
Some six or seven B's, diamonds, pearls,
I am but of the laity, my Lord B,
Thou Christian B, thou Lord Chancellor Of England !
Tut, Master B, Our bashful Legate,
B Thirlby, And my Lord Paget and Lord William
Howard,
These are but natural graces, my good B,
' I wunt dine,' says my Lord B,
' Now,' says the B, says he, ' we'll gwo to dinner; '
Our holy Norman b's down from all Their thrones in
England ?
I saw him coming with his brother Odo The Bayeux b,
thou art but deacon, not yet b,
beat Thy kingship as my b hath beaten it.
Hell take thy b then, and my kingship too !
Barons and b's of our realm of England,
B's — ^York, London, Chichester, Westminster —
where our b's And our great lords will sit in judgment
Whatsay the J's?
— and these craven b's !
if the barons and b's hadn't been a-sitting on the
Archbishop.
Knights, b's, earls, this London spawn —
Our Becket, who will not absolve the B's.
he shall absolve The b's — they but did my will —
to absolve the b's Whom you have excommunicated.
To all the archbishops, b's, prelates, barons,
Save that you will absolve the b's.
they plunder — yea, ev'n b's, Yea, ev'n archbishops —
Bishop (chess) My liege, I move my b.
you see my b Hath brought your king to a standstill.
Why, there then — down go b and king together.
Bishoprick fill'd All ofiices, all b's with English —
Saving thro' Norman b's —
' When a b falls vacant, the King,
And let another take his b !
Bit (s) smash all our b's o' things worse than Philip
o' Spain.
Beant Miss Eva gone off a J of 'er good looks o'
laate ? Man. Noa, not a b.
fur owd Dobson '11 gi'e us a 6 o' supper.
Taake one o' the young 'xms fust, Miss, fur I be a 6
deaf, „ ni 32
We found a letter in your bedroom torn into b's. „ m 324
b by 6 — for she promised secrecy — I told her all. „ in 379
Bit (verb) if a mad dog b your hand, my Lord, Qu£en Mary m iv 204
Queen Mary i ii 3
I iii 35
I iv 223, 227
mi 52
miv 81
in iv 300
III iv 349
IV i 4
rv i 177
IV iii 507
IV iii 513
Harold i i 50
„ n ii 348
Becket, Pro. 83
„ Pro. 91
„ Pro. 93
„ I iii 336
„ I iii 385
„ I iii 548
„ I iii 589
I iv 92
„ I iv 127
„ n ii 143
V i 223
V i 254
„ V ii 376
„ V ii 404
„ V iii 120
Foresters iv 910
Becket, Pro. 28
„ Pro. 43
„ Pro. 47
Harold n ii 535
„ n ii 538
Becket i iii 99
„ iiii260
Queen Mary n iii 104
Prom, of May i 33
u 217
Bit
846
Bless
Bit (verb) (continued) And b his shield, and dash'd it on the
ground, Harold \ i 405
And I was 6 by a mad dog o' Friday, Becket i iv 217
Bite (s) The mad b Must have the cautery — Queen Mary m iv 275
Bite (verb) to turn and b the hand Would help tliee Harold i i 381
anil I want to b, I want to b, Becket I iv 221
Well, well, well ! I b my tongue. The Falcon 624
Bithynia Have you alliances? B, Pontus,
Paphlagonia ? Tfie Cup i ii 100
Bitten Would you not chop the b finger off. Queen Mary m iv 206
the Norman adder Hath 6 us ; we are poison'd : Harold in i 39
Bitter (adj.) Before these b statutes be requicken'd. Queen Mary in iv 197
And, whether it bring you b news or sweet, „ m v 201
Hath, like a brief and b winter's day, „ iv iii 430
And thrust his right into the b flame ; „ iv iii 610
bound me too With b obligation to the Count — Harold n ii 221
To plunge into this b world again — Becket v ii 81
on a Tuesday pass'd From England into J banishment; „ v ii 289
Bitter (s) The b in the sweet. Queen Mary i v 235
Bitterer And mine a b illegitimate hate, Becket ii i 173
Bitterness She hath wean'd me from it with such b. Harold iv ii 28
Bitters and I put the b on my breast to wean him, The Falcon 189
your ladj'Ship has given him b enough in this world, „ 192
B before dinner, my lady, to give you a relish. Foresters ni 434
Blaame (blame) but summun else — b'i if I beant ! Prom, of May ii 140
Black I see but the b night, and hear the wolf. Queen Mary i v 413
It roll'd as 6 as death ; „ ii iii 20
four guns gaped at me, B, silent mouths : „ n iii 32
or you'll make the White Tower a b 'un for us this
blessed day. „ n iii 100
These b dog-Dons Garb themselves bravely. „ in i 189
I thought this Philip had been one of those b devils
of Spain, „ ni i 215
Those damp, b, dead Nights in the Tower ; „ iii v 138
so 'z the tongue on un cum a-lolluping out o' 'is
mouth as & as a rat. ,, iv iii 519
A drinker of b, strong, volcanic wines, „ v ii 93
lash'd to death, or lie Famishing in b cells, „ v ii 196
For twenty miles, where the b crow flies five, „ v v 84
Ay, but thou liest as loud as the b herring-pond behind
thee. Harold u i 26
He fain had calcined all Northumbria To one b ash, „ ni i 57
Night, as J as a raven's feather ; „ in ii 6
And thou, my carrier-pigeon of b news, „ iv iii 233
I have an inherited loathing of these b sheep of the
Papacy. Becket, Pro. 461
Is b and white at once, and comes to nought. „ i iii 32
The b sheep baaed to the miller's ewe-lamb, „ i iv 162
B sheep, quoth she, too b a sin for me. And what said
the b sheep, my masters? We can make a b sin
white. „ I iv 165
That he made the b sheep white. „ i iv 176
Out from among us ; thou art our b sheep. „ i iv 181
Then I saw Thy high b steed among the flaming furze, „ n i 55
How ghostly sounds that horn in the b wood ! „ in ii 17
Do you see that great b cloud that hath come over
the sun „ in iii 46
It is this b, bell-silencing, anti-marrying, „ in iii 54
Who else, with this b thunderbolt of Rome Above
him. The Cup i ii 265
poor worm, crawl down thine own b hole To the lowest
Hell. „ II 495
heat and fire Of life will bring them out, and b
enough. Prom, of May n 287
I'd like to leather 'im b and blue, „ n 595
and the b river Flow'd thro' my dreams — „ n 649
It mun be true, fur it wur i' print as 6 as owt. „ n 731
the river, b, slimy, swirling under me in the lamplight, „ ni 369
these lilies to lighten Sir Richard's b room, Foresters i i 3
Sour milk and b bread. „ n i 272
They might be harder upon thee, if met in a 6 lane at
midnight : „ in 224
The b fiend grip her ! „ in 380
B news, b news from Nottingham ! „ ni 446
Black-blooded You are too b-b. Queen Mary in i 126
Black-blooded {continued) Yea, you yourself, altho'
you are b-b : Queen Mary in i 166
You call me too b-b — „ mi 347
He grovels to the Church when he's b-b, Becket iv ii 437
Blacken I will bide my f ace, 5 and gipsyfy it ; „ iv ii 100
Whose lava-torrents blast and b a province The Cup u 302
Blackest Traced in the b text of Hell — Queen Mary ni i 426
Black-faced Philip and the b-f swarms of Spain, „ ii i 98
Blackness I see the b of my dungeon loom Harold n ii 405
thirty feet below the smiling day — In b — „ ii ii 431
But what a blotch of b underneath ! ■ The Cup i ii 398
Prom, of May I 447
Queen Mary v v 175
Becket i iii 349
V iii 82
Queen Mary i v 624
Becket i iii 222
The Falcon 857
Queen Mary i v 600
Becket ii ii 396
The Cup II 154
Becket iv ii 175
Queen Mary in vi 80
„ III V 252
Provi. of May ii 282
Queen Mary m ii 20
Blacksmith and B, thaw he niver shoes a herse to my
likings ;
Blade take heed ! The b is keen as death.
When every baron ground his b in blood ;
Blaise (Bishop of Sebaste) To the chapel of St. B
beneath the roof !
Blame (See also Blaame) His foes would b him, and
I scorned 'em,
it is the Pope Will be to b — not thou.
I was to b — the love you said you bore me — -
Blamed Praised, where you should have b him.
Blameless condemn The b exile ? —
Blanch And b the crowd with horror.
Blanch'd A doll-face b and bloodless.
Bland you were b And affable to men of all estates.
Blank it seems that we shall fly These bald, b fields,
A poor philosopher who call'd the mind Of
children a b page,
Blanketed who dream'd us b In ever-closing fog.
Blared B from the heights of all the thrones of her kings, Becket v ii 489
Blasphemous Monstrous ! b ! She ought to bum. Queen Mary i v 57
Blasphemy terms Of Satan, liars, b, Antichrist, „ i ii 95
Blast (s) (See also Thunder-blast) The b that came So suddenly
hath fallen as suddenly — Harold ii i 12
Put thou the comet and this b together — .. n i 15
Which hunted him when that un-Saxon b, .. ii ii 31
showers of blood are blown Before a never ending b, in i 395
The sign in heaven — the sudden b at sea — ,. v i 378
Blast (verb) Would'st thou not bum and b them Queeii Mary in iv 282
if yon weird sign Not b us in our dreams. — Harold i i 122
b your infants, dash The torch of -war among your
standing corn, ,. ii ii 747
will b and blind you like a curse. Becket i iv 39
To b my realms with excommunication And interdict. „ ii ii 52
Go, lest I b thee with anathema, „ iv ii 287
— and b the king and me. The Cup ii 152
Whose lava-torrents b and blacken a province „ n 302
That b our natural passions into pains ! Prom, af May in 724
when they look at a maid they b her. Foresters i i 257
Blatant But lack of happiness in a 6 wife. „ i iii 132
Blaze (s) hiss Against the b they cannot quench — Harold m i 396
Against the shifting b of Harold's axe ! ., v i 587
Blaze (verb) banner, B like a night of fatal stars ,, iv i 251
But b not out before the Frenchmen here. Becket ni iii 221
Blazed B false upon her heart. Queen Mary in i 70
Blazhig A sacred cup saved from a b shrine The Cu^ i ii 54
Bleak and those b manners thaw, Queen Mary ni ii 160
fierce forekings had clench'd their pirate hides To the
b church doors.
Bled He had been hurt. And h beneath his armour,
and I return As Peter, but to b thee :
And may God b you, Thirlby !
God b him !
owld lord fell to 's meat wi' a will, God b un !
Let all thy people b thee !
And b the Queen of England.
And even as I should b thee saving mine,
God b thee, wedded daughter. Queen. B thou too
That brother whom I love beyond the rest.
All the sweet Saints b him !
I ask no more. Heaven b thee ! hence !
Wilt thou not say, ' God b you,' ere we go ? Beckett
God b you all !
and see it mounting to Heaven, my God b you,
Harold iv iii 37
Foresters ii ii 5
Queen Mary in ii 56
IV ii 197
IV iii 256 1
„ IV iii 515 i
Harold I iilSi]
I ii 207 1
,. H ii 651
III i 293 i
III i 1
Becket i i 321 ,
„ I iv 33 !
,. I iv 38'i
Bless
847
Blood
Bless (continued) beggars, poor rogues (Heaven b 'em) Becket i iv 83
God b the great Archbishop ! „ n ii 451
all on us ha' had to go, b the Saints, wi' bare backs, „ in i 146
We scarcely dare to b the food we eat „ v i 70
To b thine enemies Becket. Ay, mine, not Heaven's. „ v ii 24
God b him for it. „ y ii 146
hear us, 0 Mother, hear us, and b us ! The Cup ii 2
Why, b the saints ! The Falcon 171
and b your sweet face, you look as beautiful „ 197
I ha' heard 'im a-gawin' on 'ud make your 'air —
God b it ! — Stan' on end. Prom, of May 1 135
The Lord b boath on 'em ! „ 1 341
— the Lord b 'er — 'er oan sen ; „ ii 40
God b our well-beloved Robin, Earl of Huntingdon. Foresters i i 247
sweet saints b your worship for your alms to the old
u i 363
IV 1075
Queen Mary i i 36
I V 85
woman
those poor serfs whom we have served will b us,
Blessed-Blest The blessed Mary's a-passing !
Holy Virgin, Plead with thy blessed Son ;
or you'll make the White Tower a black 'un for us
Uiis blessed day. „ n iii 101
Oh how the blessed angels who rejoice „ in iii 180
And God hath blest or cursed me with a nose — „ ni v 178
And Thy most blessed Son's, who died for man. „ iv iii 154
Have I not heard them mock the blessed Host In songs
so lewd, „ IV iii 365
' O blessed relics ! ' '0 Holy Peter ! ' Harold i ii 169
Nay then, we be liker the blessed Apostles ; „ n i 33
Yet the curse is on him For swearing falsely by those
blessed bones ; „ m i 246
have sent him back A holy gonfanon, and a blessed
hair Of Peter,
Thou swarest falsely by our blessed bones.
Are those the blessed angels quiring, father ?
Yea, by the Blessed Virgin !
Blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord !
That is the parable of our blessed Lord. Becket.
And why should not the parable of our
blessed Lord be acted again ?
Blessed be the Lord Archbishop, who hath with-
stood two Kings
Thanks to the blessed Magdalen, whose day it is.
Man's help ! but we, we have the' Blessed Virgin For
worship,
' O blessed^ saint, O glorious Benedict, —
Row to the blessed Isles ! the blessed Isles ! —
in hope that the saints would send us this blessed
morning ;
they are made by the blessed saints — these marriages
It served me for a blessed rosary,
more blessed were the rags Of some pale beggar-
woman seeking alms For her sick son,
but I wur so ta'en up wi' leadin' the owd man
about all the blessed mumin'
For all the blessed souls in heaven Are both
forgivers and forgiven.'
0 brook, that brawlest merrily by Thro' fields that
once were blest,
for the sake of the great blessed Mother in heaven,
1 keep it For holy vows made to the blessed Saints
Not pleasures.
My mother. For whose sake, and the blessed Queen
of Heaven,
Devils, that make this blessed England hell.
That by the blessed Mother no man.
Our Lady's blessed shrines throughout the land Be all
the richer for us.
iBlessiiig (part.) pauper, who had died in his misery
b God, Prom, of May m 378
(s) I will bear thy b into the battle Harold v i 434
Was not the people's 6 as we past Heart-comfort Becket i i 12
Nay, father, first thy b. „ i i 317
Our humblest thanks for your b. „ i iv 42
But that might bring a Roman b on us. The Cup n 372
This b is for Synorix and for me. „ ii 376
„ niiil48
., V i 259
., V i 472
Becket, Pro. 520
I iii 758
„ I iv 75
„ n ii 274
„ HI iii 171
„ v ii 219
„ V iii 1
The Cup u 525
The Falcon 186
203
632
850
Prom, of May ni 3
in 10
in 202
Foresters i i 96
„ I ii 175
n i 38
in 127
ni 239
IV 1079
(s) (continued) B's on your pretty voice, Miss
Dora. Prom, of May i 63
and the old woman's b with them to the last fringe. Foresters n i 195
The silent b of one honest man Is heard in heaven — • „ in 321
Thou shait pronounce the b of the Church „ iv 927
Blest See Blessed
Blew Rose never b that equall'd such a bud. Queen Mary in i 373
Until the powder suddenly b him dead. „ iv iii 340
Of Provence b you to your English throne ; Becket v i 123
Blighted till that b vow Which God avenged to-day. Harold v ii 155
Blind (adj.) (See also Stone-blind) Are you b ? " Quem Mary i iv 151
She, with her poor b hands feeling — ' where is it ? „ ni i 407
with offal thrown Into the b sea of forgetfulness. ,. in iii 193
There is a movement there, A b one — Harold i i 355
now I see That I was b — suffer the phrase — Becket n ii 438
' What are we, says the b old man in Lear ? Prom, of May i 262
I would taake the owd b man to my oan fireside. „ ii 74
What was that ? my poor b father — • .. ii 566
Poor b Father's little guide, Milly, .. in 231
niver been surprised but once i' my life, and I went
b upon it. in 440
That Love is b, but thou hast proven it true. Foresters n i 644
Blind (verb) It frights the traitor more to maim and b. Harold ii ii 504
Say that he b thee and tear out thy tongue. Becket i iii 615
will blast and b you like a curse. ,, i iv 40
Blinded into some more costly stone Than ever b eye. Queen Mary i v 371
No, no ; her innocent blood had b me. „ in i 346
They b my young kinsman, Alfred — Harold ii ii 511
be sure they be, but he b 'em for all that, Becket in i 128
Not caught, maim'd, b him. The Cup i ii 271
and the hunters, if caught, are 6, or worse than b. Foresters iv 226
Blindfold was a pity to b such eyes as mine, Becket in i 127
Blindness and my father's breaking down, and his b. Prom, of May n 70
My father stricken with his first paralysis. And
then with b— ^ ., ii 482
And cheer his b with a traveller's tales ? „ n 515
Blissful bounteous bays And havens filling with a b sea. The Cup ii 236
Bloat my sleeping-draught May b thy beauty out of shape, Becket iv ii 170
ambition, pride So b and redden his face — The Cup ii 170
Block (s) The Tower ! the i ! Queen Mary i y 470
Like that poor heart, Northumberland, at the b. ,. ii ii 334
Who changed not colour when she saw the b, ,, in i 400
To say ' I did not ? ' and my rod's the b. „ in v 130
My heart is no such b as Bonner's is : „ iv ii 174
like the bloodless head Fall'n on the b, „ v ii 21
Block (verb) How can I come When you so b the entry ? Becket v iii 37
Block'd All passes b. Harold n ii 317
Blood of royal b, of splendid feature, Queen Mary i i 111
Why not ? I am king's b. „ i iii 105
I am the noblest b in Europe, Madam, „ i iv 84
I have sworn upon the body and b of Christ „ i v 215
Some of the bearing of your blue b — „ i v 434
Your houses fired — your gutters bubbling b — „ n ii 280
Scarlet, as if her feet were wash'd in b, „ in i 62
No, no ; her innocent b had blinded me. „ in i 346
Her dark dead b is in my heart with mine. „ in i 349
Her dark dead b that ever moves with mine ,, in i 352
trusted God would save her thro' the b Of Jesus Christ „ in i 387
a little letting of the b. ., m ii 40
With His own b, and wash'd us from our sins, „ in iii 203
Nay, I know They hunt my b. „ in v 78
' Martyr's i— -seed of the Church.' „ iv i 146
b and sweat of heretics at the stake Is God's best dew „ v i 100
And panting for my 6 as I go by. „ v ii 219
Some few of Gothic b have golden hair, „ v iii 60
sure she hates thee. Pants for thy h. Harold i ii 39
the b That should have only pulsed for Griffyth, ,, i ii 149
She hath but b enough to live, not love. — ■., i ii 161
shown And redden'd with his people's b „ i ii 243
' This Harold is not of the royal b, „ n ii 354
Thou art of my b, and so methinks, my boy, „ n ii 449
helpless folk Are wash'd away, wailing, in their own b — „ ii ii 472
Dabble your hearths with your own b. „ n ii 751
Where they eat dead men's flesh, and drink their b. „ n ii 808
he soak'd the trunk with human b, „ in i 143
Blood
848
Blaster
Blood (continued) thus baptized in b Grew ever high and
higher, Harold iii i 147
Senlac ! Sanguelac, The Lake of B ! .. in i 386
showers of b are blown Before a never ending blast, „ rir i 393
A sea of b — we are drown'd in b — ,, ni i 398
Mixing our b's, that thence a king may rise „ iv i 142
Trampling thy mother's bosom into b? .. rv ii 26
sight of Danish b Might serve an end not English — „ iv iii 97
did the dead man call it — Sanguelac, The lake oi b? „ v i 185
Praise the Saints. It is over. No more bl „ v ii 195
Ay ! b, perchance, except thou see to her. Becket, Pro. 175
Heart-comfort and a balsam to thy b? „ i i 14
like Egypt's plague, had flll'd All things with b; „ i iii 346
When every baron ground his blade inb; „ i iii 350
household dough was kneaded up with b; „ i iii 352
The millwheel turn'd inb; ,. i iii 353
God redden your pale b ! But mine is human-red ; „ i iv 35
there be those about our King who would have thy b.' „ i iv 55
Which it will quench in & ! ,, iv ii 192
not life shot up in b, But death drawn in ; — • „ iv ii 381
Save him, his b would darken Henry's name ; „ v iii 10
To bathe this sacred pavement with my b. „ v iii 132
hand Red with the sacred b of Sinnatus ? The Cup ii 84
Hot b, ambition, pride So bloat and redden „ ii 169
Wine Ran down the marble and lookt like b, like b. „ ii 205
frost That help'd to check the flowing of the b. The Falcon 646
Stain'd with the b of the best heart that ever Beat ,. 666
servants Are all but flesh and b with those they serve. ,. 709
would not crush The fly that drew her b ; From, of May n 494
We Steers are of old b, tho' we be fallen. „ m 604
thro' the b the wine leaps to the brain Foresters i iii 22
Red with his own and enemy's b — „ ii i 32
soul of the woods hath stricken thro' my b, „ n i 67
one of those mercenaries that suck the b of England. „ ii i 175
I wouldn't have thy b on my hearth. „ n i 356
clothes itself In maiden flesh and b, „ in 117
And thou wouldst run more wine than b. „ ni 338
Boldness is in the b, Truth in the bottle. „ rv 240
Blooded See Black-blooded, Blae-blooded, Hot-blooded,
Norman-blooded, Bed-blooded
Bloodier Why, she's grown b !
Bloodless And look'd as b.
What makes thy favour like the b head Fall'n on
the block,
mortal men should bear their earthly heats Into
yon b world,
A doll-face blanch'd and b,
Blood-red that these Three rods of b-r fire up yonder
This b-r line ? Henry. Ay ! blood, perchance.
Bloody King's courts would use thee worse than thy dog
— they are too b.
Bloom (s) To me, tho' all your b has died away.
Bloom (verb) You b again, dead movintain-meadow flowers.'
Blossom (See also Myrtle-blossom) She to shut up my b in
the dark ! Harold i ii 62
one fancy hath taken root, and borne b too, Becket, Pro. 481
were more than I buzzing round the b — „ Pro. 522
wither'd wreath is of more worth to me Than all the b, The Falcon 339
never saw The land so rich in 6 as this year. ,. 342
tree that my lord himself planted here in the b of his
boyhood — „ 563
dead garland Will break once more into the living b. „ 920
The b had open'd on every bough ; Prom, of May i 42
Look how full of rosy 6 it is. „ i 84
Theer be redder b's nor them. Miss Dora. „ i 85
they'll hev' a fine cider-crop to-year if the b 'owds. „ i 316
You, the most beautiful b of the May. ,, i 574
Queen Mary ni i 416
n ii 84
V ii 19
Harold v i 285
Becket iv ii 175
Harold I i 44
Becket, Pro. 174
I iv 103
The Falcon 468
470
happy as the bees there at their honey In these sweet b's
But, look, how wasteful of the b you are !
upon me Thro' that rich cloud of b,
the b of his youth. Has faded, falling fruitless —
I that held the orange b Dark as the yew ?
I 607
I 612
1x250
n332
11629
whose whole life hath been folded like a 6 in the sheath, Foresters i i 206
I thank you, noble sir, the very b Of bandits. „ in 247
they that suffer by him call the b Of bandits, „ rv 372
Blossom'd sow'd therein The seed of Hate, it b
Charity. Queen Mary iv i 172
That ever b on this English isle. Foresters I ii 124
Blossoming And a salt wind burnt the b trees ; Prom, of May i 57
Blot I'll have the paper back — b out my name. Becket i iii 286
Blotch But what a 6 of blackness underneath ! The Cup i ii 398
Blotted (See also Self-blotted) And b by her tears.
This cannot last. Queen Mary r v 17
if a state submit At once, she may be b out The Cup i ii 157
That desolate letter, b with her tears, Prom, of May n 475
Blow (s) b's — Hark, there is battle at the palace
gates. Queen Mary ii iv 46
To strike too soon is oft to miss the b. „ iii vi 72
The b that brains the horseman cleaves the horse, Harold v i 593
Nor ever strike him & for 6 ; Prom, of May ill 6
Blow (verb) b this Philip and all Your trouble to the
dogstar Queen Mary i iv 290
Daisies grow again. Kingcups b again, „ m v 90
Which way does it 6 ? Harold ii ii 151
b the trumpet, priest ! v ni i 188
we must fight. How b's the wind ? ,, ni ii 135
William's or his own As wind b's, or tide flows : .. v i 163
As one that b's the coal to cool the fire. Becket v ii 548
Where do they b, Mr. Dobson ? Prom, of May i 87
b upon it Three mots, this fashion — listen ! Foresters rv 424
Wait till he b the horn. - iv 787
I b the horn against this rascal rout ! „ rv 794
Blow'd but Dumble wui b wi' the wind, Queen Mary iv iii 477
barrin' the wind, Diunble wur b wi' the wind, „ rv iii 494
Blowest Thou b hot and cold. Where is she then ? Foresters ii i 490
Why b thou not the horn ? „ iv 790
Blowing there are trumpets b now: what is it? Queen Mary iv ii 13
Why are the trumpets b, Father Cole ? „ rv ii 23
B for England, ha? Not yet. Harold u ii 152
The cold, white lily b in her cell : „ ni i 274
A ghostly horn B continually, •■ ni i 373
Were the great trumpet b doomsday dawn, „ v i 227
B the world against me, Becket v ii 491
Not like the vintage b round your castle. The Falcon 579
Blown fate hath b me hither, bound me too Harold n ii 219
showers of blood are b Before a never ending blast, .. ni i 394
He hath b himself as red as fire with curses. ,- v i 86
B everyway with every gust and wreck On any
rock ; Prom, of May ni 536
Her face on flame, her red hair all b back, Q^een Mary n ii 70
for any rough sea B by the breath of kings. Becket n ii 108
B like a true son of the woods. Foresters iv 427
Blubber'd knelt And b like a lad, , Queen Mary m i 150
Blue Philip shows Some of the bearing of your b
blood— M I V 434
This old thing here, they are but b beads — my Piero, The Falcon 48
And your eyes be as 6 as — Prom, of May i 91
Noa, Miss Dora; as 6 as — (repeat) „ i 95, 99
The sky ? or the sea on a 6 day ? Dobson. Naay
then. I mean'd they be as 6 as violets. „ 1 101
An' the midders all mow'd, an' the sky sa b —
(repeat) Prom, of May ii 177, 189, 201
I'd like to leather 'im black and b, Prom, of May n 595
Bluebell B, harebell, speedwell, bluebottle, „ 1 97
when I was a-getting o' b's for your ladyship's nose to
smell on— Becket ni i 162
Blue-blooded this fine 6-6 Courtenay seems Too
princely for a pawn. Queen Mary i iii 165
Bluebottle speedwell, b, succory, forget-me-not ? Prom, of May i 98
Bluff He comes, a rough, 6, simple-looking fellow. The Cup i i 173
Blunt Ever a rough, b, and uncourtly fellow— Qv-een Alary v v 120
Blur would not 6 A moth's wing by the touching ; Prom, of May n 491
Blurt But if thou 6 thy curse among our folk, Harold v i 89
B thy free mind to the air? Becket i iii 239
Blush Make 6 the maiden-white of oiu- tall cliffs, Harold n ii 332
Blush'd That heaven wept and earth 6. Qfueen Mary ni iv 193
every doorway 6, Dash'd red with that imhallow'd
passover ; Becket I iii 347
Bluster (verb) Come, you 6, Antony ! Queen Mary n i 118
Bluster (s) One of much outdoor 6. ,. n ii 381
Boar
Boar highback'd polecat, the wild b, The burrowing
badger —
Venison, and wild b, hare, geese.
Board (for a game) thou hast kicked down tlie b.
thee of old.
Board (ship) thy leave to set my feet On b,
Board (table) See Banquet-board
Boast (s) make your b that after all She means
The pleasure of his eyes — b of his hand —
Boast (verb) Let all that be. I 6 not :
And b that he hath trampled it.
Boat hardly, save by b, swimming, or wings.
There yet is time, take b and pass to Wmdsor.
b's that follow'd, were as glowing-gay As regal
gardens;
in that last inhospitable plunge Our b hath burst her
ribs ;
drave and crack'd His b on Ponthieu beach ;
Tho' all the world should go about in b's.
Boaz (a brass pillar, entrance to Solomon's Temple)
my two pillars, Jachin and B ! —
Bodily You do not own The b presence in the
Eucharist,
Look on me as I were thy b son,
Body {See also Beast-bods) quiet as a dead 6. ■ loo lo-r
(repeat) Queen Mary i iv loJ, lo7
Foresters i iii 120
IV 191
I know
Becket, Pro. 315
Harold i i 229
Queen Mary i iv 88
The Fcdcon 221
Becket v i 46
Foresters i ii 112
Queen Mary n iii 12
II iv 27
in ii 12
Harold n i 3
„ iiii36
Foresters iv 671
HaroU ni i 192
Queen Mary i ii 44
Becket i iii 263
lo!
I have sworn upon the b and blood of Christ
and all rebellions lie Dead bodies without voice.
Some fruit of mine own b after me.
Presenting the whole b of this realm Of England,
Lest your whole b should madden with the poison ?
secular kingdom is but as the b Lacking a soul ;
soul descending out of heaven Into a b generate.
before The flame had reach'd his b ;
and soft raiment about your b ;
peril mine own soul By slaughter of the b ?
Harold slain ? — I cannot find his b.
They are stripping the dead bodies naked yonder,
I am sure this b Is Alfwig, the king's uncle.
And what b is this ? Edith. Harold, thy better !
Will not thy b rebel, man, if thou flatter it ?
will be reflected in the spiritual b among the angels.
The soul the b, and the Church the Throne,
and make Thy b loathsome even to thy child ;
b of that dead traitor Sinnatus. Bear him away.
they ha' ta'en the 6 up inter your chavmiber, and
they be all a-callin' for ye.
The b ! — Heavens ! I come !
given my whole b to the King had he asked for it.
Who hunger for the b, not the soul —
Marriage is of the soul, not of the b.
Boil'd bum'd, b, buried alive, worried by dogs ;
Bold A b heart yours to beard that raging mob !
You've a b heart ; keep it so.
Wherefore be b, and with your lawful Prince
he hath been so b to-day,
Magdalen, sin is 6 as well as dull.
Stupid soldiers oft are b.
I would not be b, Yet hoped ere this you might--
that I was b enough To take it down,
Shall I be 6 ? shall I touch her ?
no men like Englishmen So tall and b as they be.
Bolder why should I be 6 than the rest,
At your trial Never stood up a 6 man than you ;
Boldness I won by b once.
was it b Or weakness that won there ?
No ! 6, which will give my followers b.
happy b of this hand hath won it Love's alms.
This friar is of much b, noble captain.
B out of the bottle !
5 is in the blood. Truth 4n the bottle. ^
Bole Pillaring a leaf-sky on their monstrous b s,
Boleyn Who knows if B's daughter be my sister ?
a B, too. Glancing across the Tudor —
Bolingbroke (Harry) See Harry Bolingbroke
IV 214
iii80
nii223
III iii 116
in iv 207
IV 132
ivi36
IV iii 616
viv33
V vl69
Harold v ii 20
V ii 34
V ii 67
V ii 87
Becket, Pro. 102
Pro. 397
I iii 717
IV ii 172
The Cup I iii 179
Prom, of May Ii 570
n 572
Foresters n i 306
„ IV 700
rv720
Queen Mary ii i 210
I iii 96
I iv 269
II ii 240
II ii 347
V ii 442
v ii 446
Becket ni i 64
The Falcon 427
Foresters i i 125
ni8
Queen Mary in i 438
IV ii 122
I v 548
I V 559
II iii 70
Becket ii i 182
Foresters iv 235
„ IV 238
„ IV 240
„ in 101
Queen Mary v v 194
V V 227
849 Book
Bolster'd Who so b up The gro.ss King's headship Queen Mary ni iY.244
O 6 up with stubbornness and pride, Becket 1 1" 3*
Bolt (S) One, whose b's, That jail you from free life. Queen Mary in v 171
And b's of thunder moulded in high heaven Harold n u 32
heavy As thine own b's that fall on crimeful heads „ v i 565
That so the Papal b may pass bv England, Becket, Pro. 226
to stay his hand Before "he flash'^d the b. „ n i 275
Bolt (verb) And will you b them out, and have them slain ? „ v in 60
Bond (See also C!hurch-bond, CJounter-bond) He did ,.
believe the b incestuous. Qv^en Mary i u 77
........ 111! 36
„ I iv 46
I iv 48
„ II ii 198
III iii 62
„ III iii 76
„ III iv 280
„ IV ii 241
„ V iv 50
Harold ii ii 646
„ n ii 666
„ . nii693
„ n ii 698
Becket i i 347
„ I ii 76
^^ ^ ^ ^ „ I iii 435
every b and debt and obligation Incurr'd as Chancellor. „ i iii 710
broken Your b of peace, your treaty with the King — „ v u 350
Prate not of b's, for never, oh, never again ,, , ^ " f^^
Bid their old b farewell with smiles, not tears ; Prom, of May i 5J4
Altho' at first he take his b for flowers, « i 646
Down to the devil with this b that beggars me ! ForesUrs 1 1 340
Then that b he hath Of the Abbot— ,. iv 84
if they come I will not tear the 6, .. i'''9°
What wilt thou do with the b then ? " ^ T/^
I bring the b. '• ^^ 109
There is our b. Robin. I thank thee. .. ^ T^
Here is my father's b. " rv 46d
but you see the b and the letter of the law. „ iv ow
Look o'er these b's, my liege. - iv 8d9
for the moment strike the b's From these three men. „ rv yoz
Boimer, who hath lain so long under b's for the faith —
hatred of another to us Is no true b of friendship.
Be the rough preface of some closer b ?
And thro' this common knot and b of love,
By b's of beeswax, like your creeping thing ;
The b between the kingdoms be dissolved ;
thou That layest so long in heretic b's with me ,
And I : lead on ; ye loose me from my b's.
to cancel and abolish all b's of human allegiance,
For thou art truthful, and thy word thy b.
He call'd my word my b !
Thy naked word thy b !
Let all men here bear witness of our b !
The worldly b between us is dissolved,
Tho' she that binds the b, herself should see
If ever man by b's of gratefulness
Bond-breaking Shall the waste voice of the b-b sea
Bone dog that snapt the shadow, dropt the b. —
our good King Kneels mumbling some old b —
The holy b's of all the Canonised
For swearing falsely by those blessed b's ;
Thou swarest falsely by our blessed b's,
Give him a b, give him a b !
Has left his b's upon the way to Rome Unwept,
once I wish'd to scourge them to the b's.
Bruised ; but no b's broken
we be dogs that have only the b's, till we be only b s
our own selves.
Bonner (Bishop of London) {See also Out-Bonner) B,
who hath lain so long under bonds for the
Becket v ii 358
Harold i ii 189
„ n ii 469
„ n ii 734
„ III i 247
V i 259
Becket i iv 108
„ nil 409
The Cup I i 28
Prom, of May ill 242
Foresters i i 25
faith-
Speak, friend B, And tell this learned Legate he
lacks zeal.
A fine beard, B, a very full fine beard.
B, it will be carried.
Pleasure as well as duty, worthy B, —
B cannot out-Bonner his own self —
Gardiner burns. And B burns ;
ay ; if 5 have not forged the bills.
Writ by himself and B ?
O B,itl ever did you kindness —
My heart is no such block as B's is :
this B or another Will in some lying fashion misreport
'twas I and B did it, And Pole ;
Book {See also Boook) I in my country hall Been reading
some old b,
Hath not your Highness ever read his b,
take Such order with all bad, heretical b's
and retract That Eucharistic doctrine in your b.
Without a friend, a b, my faith would seem Dead
Queen Mary i iii 35
ni iv 271
ni iv 338
in iv 405
in iv 430
ni vi27
in vi 60
rvi50
IV 193
IV ii 152
rv ii 174
IV ui 325
vvl41
ni 144
ivi91
IV 195
IV ii 81
ivii96
3 H
Book
.850
Bounden
Book (continiied) same b You wrote against my
Lord of Winchester ; Queen Mary iv iii 264
I hold by all I wrote within that b. „ iv iii 275
thank'd her father sweetly for his b Against that god-
less German. „ v v 237
There is a pleasant fable in old b's, Harold rv i 56
fur him as be handy wi' a b bean't but haafe a
hand at a pitchfork. Prom, of May i 188
for he's walking to us, and with a i in his hand. „ i 220
I'll git the b agean, and lam mysen the rest, „ in 12
Bookman A b, flying from the heat and tussle, Queen Mary in iv 251
Boon (adj.) My comrade, b companion, my co-reveller, BecJcet i iii 460
Boon (s) Wyatt, but now you promised me a h. Queen Mary n iii 82
My life is not so happy, no such b, „ iv i 130
And after those twelve years a b, my king, Harold i i 226
And afterwards a 6 to crave of you. The Falcon 712
to let me know the b By granting which, „ 766
First, king, a b ! Foresters iv 945
Boook (book) An' I haates b's an' all, fur they puts
foalk off the owd waays. Prom, of May i 221
Boot Your b's are from the horses. Queen Mary m v 180
0 God, sir, do you look upon your b's, „ ni v 191
1 thought not on my b's ; The devil take all b's „ ui v 196
Seeams to me the mark wur maade by a Lunnon b. Prom, of May 1 416
and I think ye wears a Lunnon b. „ 1 461
Boot (in addition) A man of this world and the next to b. Becket, Pro. 259
and the weight of the church to & on my shoulders. Foresters i ii 58
Booth citizens Stood each before his shut-up b. Queen Mary n ii 63
Booty a troop. Laden with b and with a flag of ours The Falcon 612
Bote I never found he b me any spite. Queen Mary v ii 474
Of this dead King, who never b revenge. Harold v ii 85
My mother, ere she b me, Dream'd that twelve stars Becket i i 45
When Canterbury hardly b a name. „ i iii 60
As once he b the standard of the Angles, „ i iii 494
— the love you said you b me — The Falcon 858
Push'd from all doors as if we b the plague, Prom, of May in 804
Bom (See also Bum, English-bom, Galatian-bom, Half-
bom, Tnie-bom) thou was b i' the tail end of old
Harry the Seventh. Queen Mary i i 42
„ Ii45
I i 54
I ii 66
I V 301
„ m iii 246
„ ni vi 203
„ m vi 206
., rv iii 524
V iv 21
Harold in i 210
„ m ii 165
rv i 85
„ IV i 110
V i 302
V ii 122
Becket i iv 232
n i 9, 19
uil74
n ii 145
vil25
v ii 284
v ii 472
I was b true man at five in the forenoon
I was i of a true man and a ring'd wife.
True, Mary was b, But France would not accept her
for a bride As being b from incest ;
Yea, were there issue b to her.
Would I had been B Spaniard !
If such a prince were b and you not here !
I should be here if such a prince were b.
to get her baaby b ;
in her agony The mother came upon her — a child
was b—
wise and holy men That shall be b hereafter,
laughter in old Rome Before a Pope was b.
Not made but 6, like the great king of all,
Wild was he, b so : but the plots against him
for a spark Of self-disdain b in me
My day when I was b.
I was b with it, and sulphur won't bring it out o' me.
Love that is 6 of the deep coming up with the sim from
the sea. (repeat)
A bastard hate 6 of a former love.
I had sooner have been b a Mussulman —
And this no wife has b you four brave sons.
On a Tuesday was I 6,
Because thou wast b excommunicate,
slayest the babe within the womb Or in tlie being b, The Cup n 280
wasn't my lady b with a golden spoon in her ladyship's
mouth. The Falcon 401
left his heir, B, happily, with some sense of art. Prom, of May i 497
though fortune had b you into the estate of a gentleman, „ n 120
O this mortal house. Which we are b into, „ n 274
Yet I, b here, not only love the coimtry, „ ir 544
Wasn't Miss Vavasour, our schoolmistress at Little-
chester, a lady b? „ iii 299
shamed of her among The ladies, b his equals. „ in 582
— they were b and bred on it — it was their mother — Foresters i i 332
Foresters ii i 374
Queen Mary m iv 168
„ IV iii 410
Harold v i 174
Becket, Pro. 481
n ii 305
the
Bom (continued) saints were so kind to both on us that
he was dead before he was b.
Borne (See also Shield-bome) And their strong
torment bravely b,
they see not how they are b, Nor whither.
Good for good hath b at times
one fancy hath taken root, and b blossom too.
You had not b it, no, not for a day.
Borrowed he b the monies from the Abbot of York
Sheriff's brother,
it was agreed when you b these monies from the Abbot
Bosham To-morrow — first to B, then to Flanders.
Better have been A fisherman at B, my good Herbert,
Bosom (adj.) Should fiy like b friends when needed most.
Bosom (s) come to cast herself On loyal hearts
and b's. Queen Mary n ii 263
received into the b And unity of Universal Church ; „ m iii 154
we restore you to the b And unity of Universal Church. ,, in iii 220
Foresters I i 67
IV 466
Harold I ii 239
Becket n ii 292
The Falcon 527
And put it in my b, and all at once I felt his arms
Trampling thy mother's b into blood ?
twelve stars fell glittering out of heaven Into her b.
And Becket had my b on all this ;
To rest upon thy b and forget him —
Beware of opening out thy b to it,
that b never Heaved under the King's hand
This in thy b, fool, And after in thy bastard's !
Bottle like a b full up to the cork, or as hollow as a kex,
He hath got it from the b, noble knight.
Boldness out of the b I
Boldness is in the blood, Truth in the b.
so she glided up into the heart O' the b.
Bottom not even Hope Left at the b !
We are almost at the b of the well :
as they call it so truly, to the grave at the b,
why did you write ' Seek me at the b of the river '
Hoam ? fro' the b o' the river ?
She lay so long at the b of her well
The deer fell dead to the b.
Bough shot out sidelong b's across the deep
Were there no b's to hang on. Rivers to drown in ?
The blossom had open'd on every b ;
The tawny squirrel vaulting thro' the b's.
Bought (See also Bowt) God rest his honest soul, he b 'em
for me,
She rich enough to have b it for herself !
But the King hath b half the College of Redhats.
Botmd (limit) More like a school-boy that hath
broken b's,
Put on your hood and see me to the b's.
That your own people cast you from their b's.
Bound (part) if I save him, he and his Are b to me
and when her innocent eyes were b.
V V 98
Harold iv ii 26
Becket i i 48
,. I iii 433
,. n i 31
.. in iii 30
„ iviil88
.. rv ii 257
Foresters iv 210
IV 237
rv 239
IV 241
IV 245
Prom, of May nSid
ra 161
m 193
? .. in 364
in 443
Foresters iv 242
IV 543
Harold in i 150
The Cup I ii 77
Prom, of May i 42
Foresters i iii 118
Philip by these articles is b From stirring hand or foot
b me too With bitter obligation to the Covmt —
I am doubly b to thee ...
Ay ! No !— he hath not b me by an oath — „
I mean to be a liar — I am not b— ,,
we be not b by the king's voice In making of a king, „
Rood itself were b To that necessity which binds us down ; „
to whom thou art b By Holy Church. Becket
be b Behind the back like laymen-criminals ? „
For which the King was b security. „
I am b For that one hour to stay with good King Louis, „ in iii 246
Or else be b and beaten, (repeat) Foresters ni 370, 390
Bound (past of bind) chain. Wherewith they b him to
the stake. Queen Mary iv iii 596
And b me by his love to secrecy Till his own time. Becket in i 228
but I b the seller To silence. The Falcon 72
I b myself, and by a solemn vow, „ 679
Bound (verb) And doth so b and babble all the way Queen Mary v v 86
The Falcon 49
62
Becket ii ii 373
Queen Mary I v 171
Becket in i 95
The Cvp 1 i 138
Queen Mary ii iv 125
nii406
III iii 59
Harold n ii 219
n ii 557
n ii 660
n ii 797
„ ni i 236
vil07
Pro. 67
I iii 95
I iii 645
Wherever the horn sound, and the buck b.
Wherever the buck b, and the horn sound,
Bounden ruler of a land Is b by his power and
place to see
and would myself Be b to thee more.
Foresters m 346
„ m 355
Queen Mary in iv 212
Harold n ii 561
Bounden
851
Bracken
Bounden (continued) The crime be on bis bead — not b — no. Harold u ii 670
Being b by my coronation oath To do men justice. Becket i iii 396
holy Pahner, b by a vow not to show bis face, Foresters i ii 236
Boundless I always hated b arrogance. Becket v i 12
Here crawling in this b Nature. Prom, of May in 637
Bounteous the b bavs And havens filling with a blissful
sea. ' The Cup ii 234
Bourne I cannot catch what Father B is saying. Queen Mary i iii 14
Old B to the life ! „ ' i iii 30
Bout Come now, I fain would have a b with thee. Foresters ii i 552
but thyself Shalt play a b with me, „ iv 252
I am overbreathed, Friar, by my two b's at quarter-
stafi.
Bow (s) (See also Saddle-bow) battle-axe Was out of
place ; it should have been the b. —
and Death has drawn the b —
Give him a b and arrows — follow — follow.
shoot almost as closely with the b as the great Earl
himself,
but who be those three yonder with b's ? —
who art more bow-bent than the very b thou carriest ?
This is no b to hit nightingales ; this is a true woodman's
b of the best yew-wood to slay the deer.
Take thou my b and arrow and compel them to pay
toU.
Give me my b and arrows.
Bow (verb) wherefore b ye not, says Lady Anne,
Lords and Commons will b down before him —
He b's, he bares his head, he is coming hither,
or I Would b to such a baseness as would make me
But crowns must b when mitres sit so high.
Life yields to death and wisdom b's to Fate,
Bow-bent who art more b-b than the very bow thou
carriest ?
Bowd (part, and adj.) over his b shoulder Scowl'd that
world-hated and world-hating beast, Queen Mary ii ii 89
Men now are 6 and old, the doctors tell you, „ m iv 408
Now, even now, when b before my time, „ v ii 64
They told me that the Holy Rood had lean'd And b
IV 267
Harold i ii 107
„ in i 401
The Cup I i 208
Foresters i i 216
nil72
ni378
ni391
ni263
IV 603
Queen Mary i v 45
in i 433
Becket ill iii 34
„ ivii234
„ IV ii 297
The Cup n 89
„ II i 378
above me ;
b To the earth he came from, to the grave he
goes to,
B to the dust beneath the burthen of sin.
Had she but b herself to meet the wave
Bow'd (verb) and the Lady Anne B to the Pyx ;
all the rest of England b theirs to the Norman,
Whether it b at all but in their fancy ; Or if it b,
the Holy Rood That b to me at Waltham —
Bowel bury her Even in the b's of the earth
JBower (See also Haveringatte-bower, Vine-bower) I
have built a secret b in England, Thomas,
take her from her secret b in Anjou And pass her to
her secret b in England.
This chart with the red line ! her b ! whose b ?
one rose will outblossom the rest, one rose in a 6.
chart with the red line — thou sawest it — her b.
Fitzurse. Rosamund's ?
To pass thee to thy secret b to-morrow.
Must speed you to your b at once,
heard her cry ' Where is this b of mine ? '
With the red line — ' her b.'
thou my golden dream of Love's own b.
Thine enemy knows the secret of my b.
warder of the b hath given himself Of late to wine.
Springs from the loneliness of my poor b,
My Ajijou b was scarce as beautiful.
Babble in b Under the rose !
Kiss in the b, Tit on the tree !
John of Salisbury committed The secret of the 6,
Know you not this b is secret,
Foimd out her secret b and murder'd her.
Your Becket knew the secret of your b.
The monk's disguise thou gavest me for my b :
When first he meets his maiden in a b.
I have lodged my pretty Katekin in her b.
Harold v i 104
Prom, of May in 514
in 521
Becket iv ii 388
Queen Mary i v 42
n i 160
Harold v i 109
„ V i 383
Foresters in 462
Becket, Pro. 153
Pro. 181
Pro. 308
Pro. 346
Pro. 428
1 1249
ii291
iii 42
iii 62
ni35
ni265
m i 30
in i 41
HI i 52
in 196
mi 104
in iii 6
IV ii 22
vil75
vil78
v ii 94
The Cup X iii 42
Foresters n i 418
Bowering-in myrtle, b-i The city where she dwells. The Cup i i 3
Bower-maiden Only my best b-m died of late, Becket iii i 67
Bowing his fine-cut face b and beaming with all that
courtesy „ in iii 141
Bowl b my ancestor Fetch'd from the farthest east — 2'he Falcon 483
as she has broken My china b. „ 524
Bowl'd no man yet has ever b me down. Foresters iv 288
more of a man than to be b over like a ninepin. ,. iv 304
Bowman Our bowmen are so true They strike the deer iv 524
Bowstring By arrow and by b, in 442
Bowt (bought) an' it belongs to the Steers agean : I
b it back agean ; Prom, of May ni 452
Boxed if you b the Pope's ears with a purse, you might
stagger him, Becket ii ii 370
Boy (See also School-boy) After him b's ! and pelt him
from the city. Queen Mary i iii 85
while the b she held Mimick'd and piped her
So wife-like humble to the trivial b
seven-years' friend was with me, my young b ;
the b Not out of him — ^but neither cold,
I am eleven years older than he. Poor b !
That was a lusty b of twenty-seven ;
Why — how they fought when b's —
Why, 6'.'! will fight. Leofwin would often fight me,
The b would fist me hard, and when we fought
Thou art the Queen ; ye are b and girl no more :
stufE'd the b with fears that these may act
Father. William. Well, b.
Why, b ? Rufu^. Because I broke The horse's leg —
methinks, my b. Thy fears infect me beyond reason.
B, thou hast forgotten That thou art English.
I have lost the b who play'd at ball with me.
How the b grows !
Dost thou know, my b, what it is to be Chancellor of
England ?
It is, my b, to side with the King when Chancellor,
Here is a ball, my b, thy world,
A pretty lusty b. Rosamutid. So like to thee ;
I spoke of late to the b, he answer'd me,
I love thy mother, my pretty b.
The b so late ; pray God, he be not lost.
Geoffrey, my b, I saw the ball you lost
— let me go With my young b,
beg my bread along the world With my young b,
Then is thy pretty b a bastard ?
I will fly with my sweet b to heaven.
Even when you both were b's at Theobald's.
How fares thy pretty b, the little Geoffrey ?
Mine enemies barr'd all access to the b.
B, dost thou know the house of Sinnatus ?
My b, Take thou this letter and this cup
Why, whither runs the b ?
I had once A b who died a babe ;
As helplessly as some unbearded b's
or after slayest him As & or man,
0 my sick b ! My daily fading Florio,
But my b — No, no ! not yet —
That bright inheritor of your eyes — ^your b ?
How charm'd he was ! what wonder ? — A gallant b,
love for my dying b, Moves me to ask it of you.
How often has my sick b yeam'd for this !
The b may die : more blessed were the rags
Our men and b's would hoot him, stone him,
the b was taken prisoner by the Moors.
Come, b ! 'tis but to see if thou canst fence.
1 am like a b now going to be whipt ;
' This b will never wed the maid he loves,
Boyhood knew battle, And that was from my b,
tree that my lord himself planted here in the blossom
of his b —
Boy-king b-k, with his fast-fading eyes Fixt hard
Brace Out of the church, you b of cursed crones.
Braced Are b and brazen'd up with Christmas wines
Bracelet A man may hang gold b's on a bush,
Bracken Lusty b beaten flat,
n ii 72
m i 364
III iii 48
v ii 480
V V 47
v v48
Harold 1 i 430
I i 433
1 1444
1 i 455
n ii 90
„ u ii 104
.. II ii 108
.. II ii 450
,. II ii 473
., IV iii 21
Becket ii i 217
II i 231
ni235
ni244
n i 247
II ii 5
IV i 45
IV ii 1
IV ii 56
IV ii 98
IV ii 104
IV ii 112
IV ii 237
vilO
V ii 167
vii452
The Cup I i 49
1 160
1 1 70
., I ii 149
I Hi 40
u 281
The Falcon 235
303
307
319
787
829
850
Prom, of May ii 425
Foresters 1 1 60
.. n 1 571
n ii 50
.. II 11 111
Harold v ii 175
The Falcon 564
Qiibeen Mary i ii 30
„ IV iii 539
Becket \ ii 423
Harold n 1 87
Foresters ii 11 154
Bragging
852
Break
Bragging is be b still that he will come
Brain (s) what, have you eyes, ears, b's ?
Your father had a b that beat men down —
With nothing but mj' battle-axe and him To spatter
his b's !
All my b is full of sleep,
thro' the blood the wine leaps to the b
if you care to drag your b's for such a minnow.
Brain (verb) I have a mind to b thee with mine axe.
blow that b's the horseman cleaves the horse,
Brain-dazing After the long b-d colloquies,
Brain-dizzied B-d with a draught of morning ale.
Brain'd Methought they would have 6 me with it, John
Brainless over this the b loons That cannot spell
Esaias from St. Paul, Queen Mary iii i 280
Brake (See also Broke) those hard men b into woman-
tears, Ev'n Gardiner,
some fool that once B bread with us, perhaps :
Who b into Lord Tostig's treasure-house
Before these bandits b into your presence.
Branch {See also Olive-branch) Would'st thou not
bum and blast them root and b ? Queen Mary ni iv 283
Brand (a sword) flings His b in air and catches it again, Harold v i 494
Brand (verb) So b's me in the stare of Christendom
A heretic !
Brandish With hands too limp to b iron- — •
Brandished See Treble-brandi^'d
Brass Swarm to thy voice like bees to the b pan.
Brat The washerwoman's b !
Brave (adj.) For all that, Most honest, b, and skilful
No, girl ; most b and loyal, b and loyal.
b Lord William Thrust him from Ludgate,
There's a b man, if any.
Might it not be the other side rejoicing In his b end ?
that our b English Had sallied out from Calais
B, wary, sane to the heart of her —
And being b he must be subtly cow'd,
thou, b banner. Blaze like a night of fatal stars
No, no — b Gurth, one gash from brow to knee !
Hate him ? as b a, soldier as Henry and a goodlier
man :
And this no wife has born you four b sons.
Why said you not as much to my b Sinnatus ?
B — ay — too b, too over-confident,
a b one Which you shall see to-morrow.
That this b heart of mine should shake me so,
I am sure that more than one b fellow owed His death The Falcon 633
Nothing but my b bird, my noble falcon, „ 873
She struck him, my b Marian, struck the Prince, Foresters ii i 134
A b old fellow but he angers me. „ ii i 471
he As gentle as he's b — „ n i 659
I know not, can I trust myself With your b band ? „ ii i 704
Honour to thee, b Marian, and thy Kate. „ in 299
For our b Robin is a man indeed. „ iv 1037
Brave (verb) Nay, nay, my lord, thou must not b the King. Becket i iii 515
I must hence to b The Pope, King Louis, and this
turbulent priest.
To break the barons, and now b's the King.
I dare not b my brother. Break with my km.
I cannot b my brother — but be sure
Braved Hadst thou been braver, I had better b All —
Brave-hearted My b-h Rose ! Hath he ever been to see
thee?
Braver Hadst thou been b, I had better braved All-
Bravest b in our roll of Primates down From Austin—
the b Engli-sh heart Since Hereward the Wake
Brawl (s) witness the b's, the gibbets.
Peace, friends ! what idle b is this ?
Wakening such b's and loud disturbances In England,
brazen'd up with Christmas wines For any murderous b
yet they prate Of mine, my b's, when those,
This last to rid thee of a world of b's !
His grandsire struck my grandsire in a 6 At Florence,
Brawl (verb) You b beyond the question ; speak.
Lord Legate ! Queen Mary m iv 97
Harold iv iii 124
Queen Mary n i 97
„ IV i 110
Harold II ii 781
The Cuf I ii 445
Foresters I iii 23
„ n i 323
Harold n i 73
„ v i 593
Queen Mary iv ii 92
II i 71
Becket v ii 612
I V 564
„ III V 45
Harold iv i 114
Becket v ii 556
Queen Mary v ii 62
Harold v i 449
Foresters i iii 108
Harold iv iii 172
Queen Mary ii ii 383
n iv 11
II iv 91
in i 175
IV iii 358
V ii 255
V v224
Harold n ii 75
., IV i 250
V ii 70
Becket, Pro. 436
V i 125
The Cup I ii 260
I ii 261
I ii 431
I iii 38
Brawler torn Down the strong wave of b's. Queen Mary in i Ifi
Even this b of harsh truths — Foresters iv 948
Brawlest O brook, that b merrily by Prom, of May m 201
Brazen'd Are braced and b up with Christmas wines Becket v ii 423
Bread (See also Manchet-bread) when the traitor wife
came out for b Queen Mary in i 12
„ n i 311
„ V i 235
The Falcon 255
741
Harold in ii 179
Becket u i 287
Harold ni ii 178
Becket v ii 58
Foresters ii i 686
Queen Mary v i 85
Becket i ii 3
„ vii352
„ vii425
„ vii427
„ V iii 199
The Falcon 251
fool that once Brake b with us, perhaps :
Fed with rank b that crawl'd upon the tongue,
had they remained true to me whose b they have
partaken,
live by the King's venison and the b o' the Lord,
gaping bills in the home-nest Piping for b —
and to win my own b,
I will beg my b along the world With my young boy.
The slave that eat my b has kick'd his King !
How oft in coming hast thou broken b ?
No b ? Filippo. Half a breakfast for a rat !
Sour milk and black b.
and her b is beyond me : and the milk — faugh !
In the sweat of thy brow, says Holy Writ, shalt thou
eat b,
Breadth What b, height, strength — torrents of eddying
bark !
Break draw back your heads and your horns before I b
them.
Pray God he do not be the first to b them,
It b's my heart to hear her moan at night
These Kentish ploughmen cannot b the guards.
The King of France will help to b it.
Beheld our rough forefathers b their Gods,
You must b them or they b you.
B's into feather'd merriments.
Whose colours in a moment b and fly.
Whose colours in a moment b and fly ! '
And b your paces in, and make you tame ;
to b down all kingship and queenship,
for thy brother b's us With over-taxmg—
lest they rear and run And b both neck and axle,
close as our shield-wall. Who b's us then ?
to swear Vows that he dare not b.
— it was mine own to b ;
I like to have my toys, and b them too.
And may I b his legs ?
Tho' scarce at ease ; for, save our meshes b,
Or is it the same sin to b my work As b mine oath ?
Enough ! Thou, wilt not b it !
Ye take a stick, and b it ;
Who made this Britain England, b the North :
B the banquet up ... Ye four !
our shield wall — Wall — b it not — b not — b —
made too good an use of Holy Church To b her close !
he holp the King to b down our castles,
it is the will of God To b me,
Nay, if I cannot b him as the prelate.
If pretty Geoffrey do not b his own,
striving still to b or bind The spiritual giant
And b the soul from earth,
for he did his best To b the barons,
till it b Into young angels
Antonius would not suffer me to b Into the sanctuary.
They will b in the earth — I am sinking —
I dare not brave my brother, B with my kin.
I come this day to b my fast with you.
I did b it, my lord : it is broken !
How shall I 6 it to him ? how shall I tell liim ?
I b with him for ever ! „ 889
dead garland Will b once more into the living blossom. „ 919'
She will b fence. I can't keep her in order. Prom, of May 1 194
rough road That b's off short into the abysses — „ i 230
m V 45
IV iii 442^
Becket i iv 150 *
.. I iv 272- '
., n ii 301
., m i 11&
„ iviilOS
„ V i 242
Harold IV iii 200
The Falcon 122
Foresters ii i 272:
.. n i 292
IV 202:
m94
Queen Mary i i 5
„ I V 269-
„ I V 603
„ n iv 17
„ in i 105
„ in ii 120
„ inii205
„ m V 13
„ IV iii leg'
„ V ii 206
„ V iii 121
„ V iv 47
Harold i i 10&
„ I i 374
ii40O
n ii 77
„ n ii 111
„ n ii 112-
„ II ii 115
„ n ii 141
„ n ii 664
„ n ii 753-
„ rv i 5T
„ IV iii 154
„ IV iii 231
„ V i 233.
„ V i 314
Becket, Pro. 447
I iii 292-
„ I iii 333
„ IV ii 177
„ IV ii 442"
„ V i 44
V i 235
V ii 256
The Cup I iii 120
n 477
The Falcon 257
276-
494
848
There ! let me b some off for you.
B's thro' them, and so flies away for ever ;
If that should b before we meet again ?
B ! nay, but call for Philip when you will,
And as ready to b it again.
I think That I should b my heart,
i609
I 650
I 755
I 757
m8&
ni556.
Break
853
Bride
Sreak {continued) I would b through bheni all, like the
King of England.
I will b thy sconce with my quarterstaff.
Who b's the stillness of the morning thus ?
Why b you thus upon my lonely hour ?
b it all to pieces, as you b the poor,
he would b, Far as he might, the power of John —
To b our band and scatter us to the winds. '
The chief of these outlaws who b the law ?
being out of the law how should we b the law ? if we
broke into it again we should b the law,
B thine alliance with this faithless John,
I cannot b it, Robin, if I wish'd.
Then on the instant I will b thy head.
That thou wilt b our forest laws a^ain
They b thy forest laws — nay, by the rood
which longs to b itself across their backs.
And have thy fees, and b the law no more.
Breakage his acbage and his b, if that were all :
we never use it For fear of b —
Breaker the great b beats upon the beach !
Breakfast No bread ? FUijrpo. Half a 6 for a rat !
Call him back and say I come to b with him.
Holy Mother ! To 6 !
Breaking (part.) (See also Bond-breaking) Is guiltier
keeping this, than b it.
the nightmare b on my peace ' With Becket.'
0 God ! some dreadful truth is b on me —
B already from thy noviciate To plunge
Battering the doors, and b thro' the walls ?
Fairy realm is b down
Breaking (s) His b with Northumberland broke
Northumberland.
A day may save a heart from b too.
what with the fear of b it, I did break it,
and my father's b down, and his blindness.
Breast (s) natural brother Of the same roof, same b
The babe enwomb'd and at the b is cursed,
Parthian shaft of a forlorn Cupid at the King's left b,
On this left b before so hard a heart,
1 put the bitters on my b to wean him,
but in the sweat of thy brow, and thy b,
Breast (verb) there make strength to b Whatever chance.
Breasted See Many-breasted
Breath Did not his last b Clear Courtenay
All her b should, incenselike. Rise to the heavens
it takes my b :
All that is gracious in the b of heaven
Pray with one b, one heart, one soul for me.
Beauty passes like a b and love is lost in loathing :
He hath swoon'd ! Death ? . . . no, as yet a b.
Ab that fleets beyond this iron world,
link rusts with the b of the first after-marriage kiss,
there stole into the city a b Full of the meadows,
— John, and out of b !
and they do say the very b catches.
stay it But for a 6.
any rough sea Blown by the b of kings.
Thou whose b Is bakny wind to robe
Breathe let them sit. I must have time to b.
that she b's in England Is life and lungs
And every soul of man that b's therein.
B the free wind from off our Saxon downs,
for the sake Of any king that b's.
I know — could swear — as long as Becket b's.
And b one prayer for my liege-lord the King,
the great Archbishop ! Does he J ? No ?
That I might b for a moment free of shield
I b Heaven's air, and Heaven looks down on me.
Then, if ye cannot b but woodland air,
Breathed (See also Over-breathed) Girl never b to
rival such a rose ;
I never 6 it to a bird in the eaves,
since I 6, A houseless head beneath the sun
lips that never b Love's falsehood to true maid
Foresters i i 325
r ii 75
I iii 50
n i 93
II i 285
. II i 695
in 453
IV 141
IV 145
IV 323
IV 327
IV 680
IV 888
IV 907
IV 918
IV 955
Queen Mary i i 128
The Falcon 487
Foresters i ii 323
The Falcon 123
213
215
Harold m i 231
Becket n i 36
„ m i 266
„ V ii 79
„ vii626
Foresters u ii 134
Queen Mary n iv 13
m vi 241
The Falcon 494
Prom, of May ii 69
Qtteen Mary iv iii 191
Harold v i 65
Becket, Pro. 340
„ Pro. 375
The Falcon 190
Foresters iv 203
Harold v i 127
Queen Mary in i 134
m iii 163
III V 190
m vi 224
IV iii 104
V ii 365
Harold III i 319
„ III ii 197
Becket, Pro. 361
1 1262
1 1389
I iv 222
uil78
II ii 108
The Cup n 264
Qtieen Mary i v 546
ui vi 49
„ in vi 107
Harold ii ii 186
Becket n ii 221
V i 77
., V ii 191
„ V iii 203
Foresters iv 128
IV 725
IV 952
Queen Man/ in i 372
„ ' vii453
Foresters n i 63
IV 72
Breathing (part.) B an easy gladness . . . not like
Ald^vyth . . . Harold i ii 174
Breathing (s) Like sun-gilt b's on a frosty dawn — Queen Mary v iii 50
Or in the balmy b's of the night. Foresters iv 1068
Breathing-time But in this narrow b-t of life The Cup i i 29
Breathing-while a b-w To rest upon thy bosom Becket ii i 29
Breathless lying chain'd In b dungeons over steam-
ing sewers. Queen Mary iv iii 440
Bred That b the doubt ! but I am wiser now . . . Harold v ii 111
Tho' I b thee The full-train'd marvel The Falcon 24
— they were born and b on it — it was their mother — Foresters i i 332
Traitors are rarely b Save under traitor kings. ,, ii i 80
only they that be b in it can find their way a-nights in it. ,, ii i 264
Breed (s) Two vipers of one b — an amphisbaana, Queen Mary in iv 39
Thy b will die with thee, and mine with me : The Falcon 18
A noble bird, each perfect of the b. „ 320
A nobler b of men and women. „ 755
Breed (verb) And if I 6 confusion anyway — Queen Mary i iii 93
world would grow mouldy, would only b the past
again. Becket, Pro. 410
And if my pleasure b another's pain. Prom, of May i 278
Breeding (See also Fever-breeding) In b godless
vermin. Queen Mary in iv 329
b A fierce resolve and fixt heart-hate „ ni vi 31
Bree2se which a & of May Took ever and anon. The Cup i ii 406
Brethren (See also Brother) Behold him, b : lie
hath cause to weep ! — Queen Mary iv iii 13
I pray you all to live together Like b; „ iv iii 182
seeming not as b. But mortal foes ! „ iv iii 185
Hear him, my good b. „ iv iii 227
Join hands, let b dwell in unity ; Harold i i 397
To help us from their b yonder ? „ in i 221
Can ye not Be 6 ? Godwin still at feud with Alfgar, „ iv i 123
Have thy two b sent their forces in ? „ v i 342
have I fought men Like Harold and his b, „ v ii 179
Stay, Dine with my b here, Foresters iv 346
Brett (adherent of Wyatt) You know that after The
Captain B, Queen Mary n ii 26
B, when the Duke of Norfolk moved against us „ u iii 1
for which I love thee, B. ,, ii iii 6
Last night I climb'd into the gate-house, B, „ n iii 15
Brevity Tit, for love and b. Foresters ii ii 128
Brew To sing, love, marry, chum, b, bake, and die, Qii^en Mary in v 111
b from out This Godstow-Becket intermeddling Becket iv ii 455
I can bake and I can b. Foresters i i 215
Brew'd what an acrid wine has Luther b. Queen Mary iv iii 545
and she b the best ale in all Glo'ster, Becket in i 196
Briar Wi' the b sa green, an' the wilier sa graay, Prom, of May n 186
Bribe b's our nobles with her gold. Queen Mary ii i 202
but they b Each other, and so often, Harold i i 346
— b all the Cardinals — Becket n ii 473
Bribed Except this old hag have been b to lie. Robin.
We old hags should be b to speak truth. Foresters n i 235
Brickwork This labyrinthine b maze in maze, Becket, Pro. 166
Bpdal tore away My marriage ring, and rent my b veil ; Harold i ii 80
Like the Love-goddess, with no b veil. Prom, of May i 596
Bride France would not accept her for a b Queen Mary i ii 68
Were I in Devon with my wedded b, ,, i iv 119
Had mark'd her for my brother Edward's b ; „ i v 290
I live and die The true and faithful b of Philip — ,, n iv 43
To purchase for Himself a stainless b ; „ in iii 205
White as the light, the spotless b of Christ, „ in iv 199
King hath wearied of his barren b.' ,, in vi 141
there is one Death stands behind the B — ., v ii 168
B of the mightiest sovereign upon earth ? „ v ii 544
Hail ! Harold ! Aldwyth ! hail, bridegroom and b ! Harold iv iii 2
Hail, Harold, Aldwyth ! Bridegroom and b ! .. iv iii 43
Full thanks for your fair greeting of my b ! .. iv iii 47
I could not : Thou art my 6 ! ,. v i 322
Who but the bridegroom dares to judge the b. Becket i iii 686
thought if it were the King's brother he had a better b
than the King, ., in i 173
I had dream'd I was the b of England, and a queen. „ v i 103
while you dream'd you were the b of England, — „ v i 105
and our Mother Church for b; „ v ii 222
Bride
854
Broken
Bride {continued) And Camma for my b — The people
love her — The Cup i iii 152
I am the b of Death, and only Marrj' the dead. „ n 28
The king should pace on purple to his b, „ n 190
She too — she too — the b ! the Queen ! and I — ,, n 467
An outlaw's b may not be wife in law. Foresters n ii 90
This other, Milly-nilly, for his b. ,, iv 768
Bridegroom (See also Groom) How should he bear a
b out of Spain ? Queen Mary ui iii 25
But softly as a fe to his own. Harold n ii 758
Hail ! Harold ! Aldwyth ! hail, b and bride 1 „ iv iii 2
Hail, Harold, Aldwyth ! B and bride ! „ iv iii 43
Who but the b dares to judge the bride. Or he the b
may appoint ? Becket i iii 685
Brideless The b Becket is thy king and mine : „ v i 107
Bridesmaid Our b's are not lovely — Disappointment, Queen Mary v ii 154
Bridge And broken b, or spavin'd horse, „ i v 355
thro' thine help we are come to London B ; „ ii iii 9
On over London B We cannot : stay we cannot ; ,. ii iii 41
we must round By Kingston B. ., n iii 48
And then a brook, a b ; Becket, Pro. 164
This b again ! How often have I stood With Eva
here ! Prom, of May ii 295
.madman, is it, Gesticulating there upon the b? „ n 327
I dozed upon the b, and the black river „ ii 649
dead midnight when I came upon the b; „ in 369
Bridged and brooks Were b and damm'd with dead, Harold in ii 130
Brief it is an age Of b life, and b purpose, and b
patience. As I have shown to-day. Queen Mary in iv 413
Care more for our b life in their wet land, „ iii vi 62
Latimer Had a b end — not Ridley. „ iv ii 225
in b, so miserable, „ iv iii 78
Hath, like a b and bitter winter's day, „ iv iii 430
Suffer not That my b reign in England be defamed „ v ii 302
Brief-sighted And warble those b-s eyes of hers ? „ in vi 155
B-s tho' they be, I have seen them, „ ni vi 157
Bright And dazzled men and deafen'd by some b Loud
venture,
the b sky cleave To the very feet of God,
the b link rusts with the breath of the first after-
marriage kiss.
Gleam upon gloom, B as my tlream.
To-day they are fixt and b —
Ay, how is he. That b inheritor of your eyes — your
boy ? The Falcon 306
And the day's b like a friend, Prom, oj May i 79
I remember Her b face beaming starlike down upon me „ n 248
To sleep ! to sleep ! The long b day is done. Foresters i iii 41
So now the forest lawns are all as b As ways to heaven, „ n i 631
Brighten or it is but past That b's in retiring ? Prom, of May n 645
Brighter Cousin Pole, You are fresh from b lands. Queen Mai-y in iv 322
this world Is b for his absence as that other Is
darker for his presence. Prom, of May n 458
but if you Can tell me anything of our s-weet Eva
When in her b girlhood, „ n 521
Brightest In Britain's calendar the b day Queen Mary m ii 118
Brim Fill to the b. Foresters ra 343
To the b and over till the green earth „ m 349
Brimming green field Beside the b Medway, Queen Mary n i 244
Bring I do but b the message, know no more. „ i iv 228
I'll have one mark it And b it me. „ i v 373
messenger Who b's that letter which we waited for — „ i v 586
This marriage should b loss or danger to you, „ n ii 227
Find out his name and b it to me „ ni i 253
Legate's coming To ft us absolution from the Pope. „ mi 432
second actor in this pageant That b's him in ; „ ni iii 15
To b the heretic to the stake, „ in iv 9
' I come not to b peace but a sword ' ? „ m iv 88
sends His careful dog to b them to the fold. „ m iv 105
And, whether it b you bitter news or sweet, „ in v 201
b it Home to the leisure wisdom of his Queen, „ m vi 22
lo ! thou art reclaim'd ; He b's thee home : „ iv iii 84
you b the smoke Of Cranmer's burning with you. „ iv iii 560
B's the new learning back. „ v i 202
My liege, I b you goodly tidings. „ v i 279
m i 452
Harold n ii 741
Becket, Pro. 361
in i 278
The Cup II 20
v ii 556
V ii 592
Harold I i 241
.. I ii 234
n ii 73
.. II ii 461
,. m i 260
,. rv iii 203
Beclet, Pro. 530
I iii 38
I iii 511
I iv 23?
I iv 252
n ii 364
in iii 135
rv ii 154
V ii 301
Th,'
Bring (continued) Why do you b me these ? Queen Mary v ii 185
Why do they i!> me these ? .. v ii 198
he may b you news from Philip. ,. v ii 229
I b your Majesty such grievous news I grieve to b it. „ v ii 239
Alice, my child, B us your lute. ,. v ii 357
No, no, he b's a letter. .. v ii 548
to read the letter which you b. Feria. JNIadam, I b
no letter. Mary. How ! no letter ?
that I am in state to b forth death —
I pray thee, let me hence and b him home,
thunder may b down That which the flash
I want thy voice with him to b him round ;
make A league with William, so to b him back ?
wilt thou b another, Edith, upon his head ?
B not thy hollo wness On our full feast.
b her to the level of the dust, so that the King—
And b us all to shame ?
If Canterbury b his cross to court,
I was bom with it, and sulphur won't b it out o' me.
I b the taint on it along wi' me, for the Arclibishop likes it,
till the weight of Germany or the gold of England b's
one of them down to the dust —
there were Abbots — but they did not b their women ;
To b her to the dust . . .
we b a message from the King Beyond the water ;
Moon b him home, b him home Safe from the dark and
the cold. Home, sweet moon, b him home,
B me The costly wines we use in marriages.
But that might b a Roman blessing on us.
Lady, you b your light into my cottage
look for 'im, Eva, and b 'im to the barn.
. but I thowt I'd b tha them roses fust.
And & us to confusion,
the heat and fire Of life will b them out,
Let me b you in here where there is still full daylight
and the man must b it out of her.
So that our Barons b his baseness under.
I trust he b's us news of the King's coming.
To 6 their counter-bond into the forest.
I b the bond.
I can b down Fourscore tall fellows on thee.
Shall I not after him and b him back ?
Bristle So that he b himself against my will.
Bristled monarch mane B about his quick ears —
Britain In B's calendar the brightest day
sons of those Who made this B England,
Brito (Richard de) (knight of King Henry II.'s household)
(See also De Brito, Richard) France ! Ha ! De
Morville, Tracy, B — fled is he ? Becket i iv 199
Brittany brought Thy war with jB to a goodlier close Harold n ii 49
one that should be grateful to me overseas, a Count in 5— Foresters i i 271
Broach See Abroach
Broached They ha' b a barrel of aale i' the long barn. Prom, of May i 426
Broad What it means ? Ask our b Earl. Harold i i 90
he is b and honest. Breathing an easy gladness. ... „ i ii 172
Brocade — 0 he Flamed in b — Queen Mary m i 76
Broider these poor hands but sew, Spin, b — Harold rv iii 11
maidens who can only b and mayhap ride a-hawking Foresters i i 213
Broke (See also Brake) When Henry b the carcase of
your church Queen Mary I v 397
His breaking mth Northumberland b Northimiberland. „ n iv 13
Charing Cross ; the rebels b us there, „ ii iv 76
Because I b The horse's leg — Harold n ii 109
I trod upon him even now, my lord, in my hurrj-,
and b him. ' The Falcon 410
Immanuel Goldsmiths was b into o' Monday night. Prom, of May i 392
b the heart That only beat for you ; „ iii 761
I have shelter'd some that b the forest laws. Foresters i iii 70
She b my head on Tuesday with a dish. „ i iii 133
if we b into it again we should break the law, „ iv 145
This young warrior B his prison „ iv 999
Broken (See also Brokken, Neck-broken) I hear that
he too is full of aches and b before his da}\ Queen Mary i i 125
that b, out you flutter Thro' the new world, „ i iv 52
More like a school-boy that hath b bounds, „ ill'
Cup I ii 5
n 364
n 371
The Falcon 283
Prom, of May I 438
n 50 *
n 279
n 287
in 217
Foresters i i 118
„ I ii 117
„ I iii 53
IV 89
IV 109
IV 175
IV 812
Harold n ii 19
The Cup I ii 121
Queen Mary m ii 118
Harold IV iii 154
1
Broken
855
Brother
Broken {continued) And b bridge, or spavin'd horse,
or wave And wind at their old battle : Qzieen Mary i v 355
And I have b with my father — „ i v 528
Wyatt, your Grace, hath b thro' the guaus „ ii iv 20
They are too crush'd, too b, „ iv iii 360
And I am b there. „ v i 211
I have b oft the head. ,, v ii 3
Saints, I have rebuilt Your shrines, set up j^our b images ; .. v ii 300
thou Hast b all my foes, Harold i i 217
the teeth That shall be b by us — ■ „ i ii 245
my son ! Are all oaths to be b then, ., in i 286
and our battle-axes b The Raven's wing, „ iv iii 64
How oft in coming hast thou b bread ? „ iv iii 200
Have we not b Wales and Norseland ? ,• v i 395
They have b the commandment of the king ! „ v i 614
His oath was b — 0 holy Nonnan Saints, „ v i 616
chessmen on the floor— the king's crown b ! Becket, Pro. 314
Thou hast b thro' the pales Of privilege, ,, iir iii 193
While this but leaves thee with a b heart, ,, iv ii 173
It must be b for him. „ iv ii 178
Hath b all his promises to thyself, ,. v i 3
Not one whose back his priest has b. ,. v i 146
every thread of thought Is b ere it joins — ,. v ii 207
You have b Your bond of peace, your treaty „ v ii 349
have b down our bams, Wasted our diocese, ,. v ii 429
And the great deeps were b up again, ,, v iii 43
I did break it, my lord : it is 6 ! The Falcon 495
my mu^e has b The thread of my deatl flowers, as she
has 6 „ 521
I have b My fast already. „ 574
poor father, utterly b down By losing her — Prom, of May ii 417
Bruised ; but no bones b. ,, in 242
the poor young heart B at last — all still — „ in 681
Not having b fast the livelong day — Foresters iv 186
though he be the chief of rogues, he hath never b his word. ,. rv 433
Hast b all our Norman forest laws, „ iv 886
Broken-back'd Reed I rock'd upon b-b, ,. ii ii 162
Brokken (broken) the walls sa thin, and the winders b. Prom, of May ni 73
Brood lest she b Too long o'er this hard egg, Becket v ii 252
drew the light From heaven to b upon her. The Cii/p i iii 58
To-day ? Too sudden. I will b upon it. „ ii 73
Brooding I was b Upon a great unhappiness Prom, of May n 381
Brook (s) (See also Beck) There runs a shallow b
across our field Queen Mary v v 83
both were silent, letting the wild b Speak for us— „ v v 91
dykes and Vs Were bridged and damm'd with dead, Harold in ii 129
wolf Mudded the b and predetermined all. „ v i 3
And then a 6, a bridge ; Becket, Pro. 164
drop The mud I carried, like yon b, „ ii i 159
Geoffrey have not tost His ball into the 61 ,. n i 321
the voice Of the perpetual b, „ in i 46
The b's voice is not yours, and no flower, „ in i 55
I saw the ball you lost in the fork of the great willow
over the b. „ iv ii 58
We parted like the b yonder about the alder island, Prom, of May i 773
The b among its flowers ! Forget-me-not, ,. n 297
Close by that alder-island in your b, ., n 535
0 b, that brawlest merrily by Thro' fields „ m 201
waded in the b, ran after the butterflies, „ ni 275
Brook (verb) Will b nor Pope nor Spaniard here to
play The tyrant. Queen Mary i v 189
ye will not b that anyone Should seize our person, „ n ii 177
B for an hour such brute malignity ? „ iv iii 544
1 cannot b the turmoil thou hast raised. Becket i iii 575
I will not b to see Three upon two. Foresters n i 423
maiden freedom which Would never b the tyrant. „ in 121
Brother (See also Brethren, Foster-brother, Traitor-
brother) ' Thou Shalt not wed thy b's wife.' Queen Mary i ii 63
as tho' My father and my b had not lived. „ i v 36
My b rather hated me than loved ; ., i v 82
Had mark'd her for my b Edward's bride ; „ i v 289
dallying over seas Even \^hen his b's, „ ni iv 294
Ay, one and all, dear b's, pray for me ; „ iv iii 103
Hurt no man more Than you would harm your
loving natural b ' „ iv iii 190
Brother (continued) What sort of b's then be those
that lust Queen Mary iv iii 197
B ! why so pale ? Harold i i 28
for thy b breaks us With over-taxing — „ i i 109
mysteries of heaven Than thou, good b.
B, the king is wiser than he seems ;
Well, b, When didst thou hear from thy Northumbria
Leave me alone, b, with my Northumbria :
My most worthy b, Thou art the quietest man
Like the rough bear beneath the tree, good b,
0 Tostig, O dear b — If they prance,
B, b ! Tostig. Away !
1 leave thee, b.
Against thy b Tostig's governance ;
Poor b ! still a hostage !
Why, b, so he will ; But on conditions.
And, b, we will find a way,' said he — ■
for my sake, oh 6 ! oh ! for my sake !
Not ev'n for thy sake, b, would I lie.
Ay, b — ^for the sake of England — ay.
Swear, dearest b, I beseech thee, swear !
O Wulfnoth, Wulfnoth, b, thou hast betray'd me !
Forgive me, b, I will live here and die.
Good b, By all the truths that ever priest
Bless thou too That b whom I love beyond the rest.
There might be more than b in my kiss.
Good even, my good b !
Our hapless b, Tostig — He,
Thou art Tostig's b, Who wastes the land.
This b comes to save Your land from waste ;
I, who loved my b, bad the king Who doted on him.
King ! thy b, if one may dare to speak the truth,
not his fault, if our two houses Be less than b's.
0 b, What art thou doing here ?
Ob,b,0 Harold—
— b — / have not sworn —
Tell that again to all. Gurth. I will, good b.
O b, from my ghastly oubliette I send my voice
No more, no more, dear b, nevermore —
O b, most unbrotherlike to me,
Tostig, poor b. Art thou so anger'd ?
Him who crown'd Stephen — King Stephen's b !
Henry the King hath been my friend, my b,
0 b ! — I may come to martyrdom,
my good lord Leicester, The King and I were b's.
for he would murder his b the State.
B of France, what shall be done with Becket ?
B, you have traffick'd Between the Emperor and the Pope,
ay, good b, They call you the Monk-King.
Come, confess, good b,
and, b, Holy Church May rock, but will not wreck,
B of France, you have taken,
believing that our b Had wrong'd you ;
1 wish you joy o' the King's b.
I thought if it were the King's b he had a better bride
than the King,
whom you call — ^fancy — my husband's b's wife.
Spare this defence, dear b.
Son, husband, b gash'd to death in vain,
I dare not brave my b. Break with my kin. My b
hates him,
I cannot brave my b — but be sure
Is this your b's order ?
not you ! My b ' my hard b ! O Federigo, Federigo, I
love you ! Spite of ten thousand b's, Federigo. „ 895
I will make Your b love me. „ 912
What's become of your b ? Prom, of May in 107
Then yon mim be his b, an' we'll leather 'im . „ in 150
I never heard that he had a b. „ m 153
would you beat a man for his b's fault ? „ m 155
he borrowed the monies from the Abbot of York, the
Sheriff's b. Foresters i i 69
I would pay My b all his debt and save the land. „ i ii 218
Himself would pay this mortgage to his b, ,. i ii 264
Sheriff Would pay this cursed mortgage to his b „ n i 145
1 1201
1 1272
1 1280
1 1285
11311
1 1328
11371
11416
11461
nil 290
II ii 329
II 11 342
n 11 367
n 11401
n 11 420
n ii 638
n 11 720
nil 801
II li 803
mi 96
III 1 295
nili83
III ii 117
III 11 121
IV 192
IV 194
IV i 101
IV 1107
IV 1 131
IV 113
IV 1161
vil21
V 1 199
vi244
V 1 247
vi250
vi273
Becket, Pro. 274
11361
I iii 661
I ivl90
nil 64
nil 66
II li 72
II 11 82
II ii 102
II ii 154
II ii 238
III i 156
III i 173
in i 202
V iii 168
The Cup I ii 143
The Falcon 256
741
745
Brother
856
Burn
Brother (continued) Thou art her b, and her voice is
thine, Foresters ii i 478
Thou art Her b — I forgive thee. Come be thou My
b too. „ II i 516
0 thou unworthy 6 of my dear Marian ! „ ii i 538
That such a b — she marry the Sheriff ! „ ii i 550
go not yet, stay with us, and when thy b — „ ii i 641
to dream that he My b, my dear Walter — „ n i 652
See, thou hast wrong'd my b and mjraelf. „ ii i 665
Ha, 6. Toll, my dear? the toll of love. „ m 270
For so this maid would wed our b, „ iv 483
When Richard comes he is soft enough to pardon
His 6 ; „ IV 748
What ! go to slay his b, and make me The monkey „ iv 804
Thou art tann'd almost beyond my knowing, b. „ iv 1016
Brotherhood lustiest and lousiest of this Cain's 6, answer. Becket i iv 185
find The common h of man has been Wrong'd Prom, of May ni 543
Brother-like That is not b-l. Foresters n i 504
Brought {See also Browt) and he b his doubts And
fears to me. Queen Mary i ii 74
And b us back the mass. „ i v 184
Hast thou B me the letter which thine Emperor
promised „ i v 347
cause that hath b us together is not the cause „ n i 161
They have b it in large measure on themselves. „ iv iii 863
Indian shawl That Philip b me in our happy days ! — „ v ii 540
Madam, I b My King's congratulations ; „ v ii 569
h Thy war with Brittany to a goodlier close Harold n ii 48
And b the sunder'd tree again, „ mi 144
Alas ! poor man. His promise b it on me. „ mi 338
being o before the courts of the Church, Becket, Pro. 12
my bishop Hath b your king to a standstill. „ Pro. 44
1 b them In from the wood, and set them here. „ ii i 130
My li^e, what hast thou & me ? „ ii i 223
I h not ev'n my crucifix. Henry. Take this. „ n i 295
and so h me no-hows as I may say, „ in i 129
Your old child b me hither ! ,, iv ii 13
B me again to her own city ?— The Cup i i 14
but this day has b A great occasion. The Falcon 488
I think I never can be b to love any man. Prom, of May ii 78
Superstitious fool, What b me here ? „ ii 351
now that you have been b to us as it were from
the grave, „ iii 235
If marriage ever b a woman happiness „ iii 639
Thro' that dishonour which you b upon us, „ in 765
could be b to love me As I loved you— „ m 779
new term B from the sacred East, his harem ? Foresters iv 705
like the man In Holy Writ, who b his talent back ; „ iv 981
Brow The Vs unwrinkled as a summer mere. — • Harold m i 48
— brave Gurth, one gash from b to knee ! „ v ii 71
There's no jest on the Vs of Herbert there. Becket, Pro. 390
Life on the face, the b's — clear innocence ! „ ii i 195
Ay, and his Vs are thine ; „ ii i 218
bust of Juno and the Vs and eyes Of Venus ; The Cup i i 120
In the sweat of thy b, says Holy Writ, shalt thou
eat bread, but in the sweat of thy b Foresters iv 201
Browt (brought) I ha' b these roses to ye — I forgits
what they calls 'em. Prom, of May n 14
so I alius b soom on 'em to her ; „ n 20
to saay he's b some of Miss Eva's roses „ ni 346
Bruised as having been so b By Harold, King of Norway; Harold iv i 9
B ; but no bones broken. Prom,, of May in 242
Honest daisy deadly b. Foresters n ii 156
And b him almost to the death, „ in 361
Brunanbu^ What's B To Stamford-bridge ? Harold iv iii 142
And chanting that old song ol B „ v i 215
Brush (s) with some sense of art, to live By h and
pencil. Prom, of May I 499
Brush (verb) and b This Wyatt from our shoulders. Queen Mary ii ii 293
Her cap would b his heels. „ in i 14
Brussels We meet at B. „ m vi 215
Brutal Because these islanders are b bea-sts ? „ in vi 153
almost h, and matched with my Harold Prom, of May in 175
Curse on your b strength ! „ in 732
Brute (adj.) Brook for an hour such b malignity ? Queen Mary iv iii 544
Brute (s) {See also Baron-brute) Mutilated, poor b,
my sumpter-mule, Becket v ii 440
Bubble Many so dote upon this b world. Queen Mary vf iii 168
' O b world. Whose colours in a moment break and fly ! ' „ v ii 204
Bubbled you so b over with hot terms Of Satan, „ i ii 94
Buck B ; deer, as you call it. Becket i iv 139
Wherever the horn sound, and the b bound, Foresters ni 345
Wherever the b bound, and the horn sound, ,, in 355
Buckingham (Duke of) And I the race of murder'd
B — Queen Mary ni i 454
Bud (s) Rose never blew that equall'd such a b. „ in i 373
that shoots New Vs to heaven. Foresters i iii 26
Bud (verb) court is always May, b's out in masques. Queen Mary iii v 11
believe My old crook'd spine would b out two young
wings Harold in i 24
Buffet (s) I will give thee a 6 on the face. Foresters i i 146
Then thou shalt play the game of Vs witli us. „ iv 259
I give thee A b, and thou me. ,, iv 263
Buffet (verb) you stroke me on one cheek, B the other. Queen Mary n i 118
Build Too gross to be thrust out, will b him round, „ in iii 55
help to 6 a throne Out-towering hers of France . . . Harold n ii 763
I vow to 6 a church to God Here on the hill of battle ; ., v ii 137
Here His turtle Vs ; his exit is our adit : Becket m ii 7
as she was helping to b the mound against the city. Foresters ii i 309
would cower to any Of mortal b. ,, n i 690
whose return B's up our house again ? „ iv 1(X)9
Builded (See also Built) I have b the great church of Holy
Peter: Harold li 11%
Builder she leaves only the nest she built, they leave the b. Becket i iv 47
Built (See also Builded) They have b their castles here ; Harold m i 36
I have b the Lord a house — (repeat) Harold in i 178, 180, 186
loftiest minster ever b To Holy Peter in our English
isle ! Harold in i 206
I have b a secret bower in England, Thomas, Becket, Pro. 153
I wrong the bird ; she leaves only the nest she b, „ i iv 46
Bull-headed Sir Thomas Stafford, a b-h ass. Queen Mary v i 284
BuHingham (Nicholas, afterwards Bishop of Worcester)
Ailmer and B, and hundreds more ; ,, i ii 11
Bullock I'd like to fell 'im as dead as a 6 ! Prom, of May n 597
Bully Keep silence, b friar, before the King. Foresters iv 919
Bulrush Had 1 a i now in this right hand For sceptre, .. iii 76
Bulwark A b against Throne and Baronage. Becket i i 17
Burgher My b's son — Nay, if I cannot break ., i iii 331
Burgundy all France, all B, Poitou, all Christendom Harold iii ii 149
Burial We will not give him A Christian b: ,, v ii 154
I've been attending on his deathbed and his b. Prom, of May n 4
Burial-hindering bell-silencing, anti-marrying, b-h interdict Becket in iii 55
Buried (part, and adj.) boil'd, b alive, worried by dogs ; Queen Mary ii i 210
There lies a treasure b down in Ely: Harold in i 11
Let me be b there, and all our kings, ,. iii i 208
Buried (verb) traitor-brother, Tostig, him Reverently we b. ,. iv iii 85
Bum but I and my old woman 'ud b upon it, Queen Mary i i 56
her hate Will b till you are burn'd. ,. " i ii 59
I wrote it, and God grant me power to & ! .. i ii 99
Monstrous ! blasphemous ! She ought to b. ., i v 58
and b the throne Where you should sit with Philiii : „ i v 509
Let the dead letter b ! ,. in iv 41
If we could b out heresy, my Lord Paget, ,. in iv 53
yet I would not say B ! and we cannot b whole towns; .. in iv 175
many of them Would b — have burnt each other ; .. in iv 217
Would'st thou not b and blast them root and branch? .. hi iv 282
He'll b a diocese to prove his orthodoxy. ,. in iv 353
Smiles that b men. ,, ni iv 404
they play with fire as children do. And b the house. „ in vi 30
Gardiner b's. And Bonner b's ; .. in vi 59
Did not More die, and Fisher? he must b. ,, iv i 53
The better for him. He b's in Purgatory, not in Hell. ,. iv i 56
The heretic must b. „ iv i 123
But if you b him, — well, your Highness knows ,. iv i 144
It were more merciful to b him now. „ iv i 153
Philip's will, and mine, that he should b. ,, iv i 186
It is against all precedent to b One who recants ; „ iv ii 49
Well, b me or not b me I am fixt ; „ iv ii 54
Will they b me, Thirlby ? „ iv ii 181
And they will surely b me ? „ iv ii 190
Burn
857
Buzzing
Bum (continued) he was deliver'd To the secular arm
to b;
You shall b too, B first when I am burnt.
What sort of brothers then be those that lust To b
each other ?
And watch a good man b.
all her bumins' 'ill never b out the hypocrisy
There's nought but the vire of God's hell ez can b
out that.
'11 b the Pwoap out o' this 'ere land vor iver and iver
B more ! Mary. I will, I will ; and you will stay?
They know nothing ; They b for nothing.
Thou hast burnt others, do thou b thyself, Or I will
b thee ; '
Seize him and b him for a Lutheran.
How her hand b's ! (repeat)
Gardiner b's Already ; but to pay them full in kind,
sir, in Guernsey, I watch'd a woman b ;
And b the tares with imquenchable fire ! B !—
Fie, what a savour !
but take back thy ring. It b's my hand —
They b themselves within-dooT.
grow to such a heat As b's a wrong to ashes,
Burn (bom) But I taakes 'im fur a bad lot and a b
fool,
but I taakes 'im for a Lunnun swindler, and a b fool
b a plowman, and now, as far as money goas,
afoor ony o' ye wur ft— ye all knaws the ten aiicre
but I were b afoor schoolin-time.
Bum'd {See also Burnt) her hate Will burn till you
are b. Queen Mary i ii 59
b, boil'd, buried alive, worried by dogs ; ,, ii i 210
Hooper b Three-quarters of an hour,
hand ! ' So held it till it all was b.
Burner are profitless to the b's, And help the other side.
My fancy takes the b's part,
Bumin' my rheiraiatizy be that bad howiver be I to
win to the b.
wi' dree hard eggs for a good pleace at the b ;
but all her b's' 'ill niver bum out the hypocrisy
the b o' the owld archbishop '11 bum
Burning (part.) (See also A-bumin') Ridley was longer b ;
but he died As manfully
Bnming (s) (See also Bumin') bad my chaplain, Castro,
preach Against these b's. „ in vi 75
His learning makes his b the more just. ,, iv i 159
these 6's will not help The purpose of the faith ; „ iv ii 183
'twas you That sign'd the o of poor Joan of Kent ; „ iv ii 206
these 6's, As Thirlby says, are profitless to the burners, „ iv ii 217
You have not gone to see the b? „ iv iii 290
I warrant you they talk about the b. „ iv iii 463
you bring the smoke Of Cranmer's b with you. ., rv iii 562
this cup rescued from the b of one of her shrines The Cup i i 41
Bumish'd I'll have it b firelike ; Queen Mary i v 373
I flash out at times Of festival like b summer-flies, Foresters i ii 276
Burnt (See also Bum'd) I'll have you flogg'd and b too. Queen Mary i i 60
she said that no one in her time should be b for heresy. „ i i 97
I'll have their bibles b. The bible is the priest's. „ in i 285
many of them Would bum — have b each other; „ in iv 217
It would have b both speakers. „ in vi 164
Bum first when I am b. „ iv ii 222
my hand shall first be b ; So I may come to the fire. „ iv iii 250
When we had come where Ridley b with Latimer, „ iv iii 585
Thou hast b others, do thou burn thyself, • „ v ii 176
hands that write them should be b clean off As Cranmer's, „ v ii 191
Gardiner, out of love for him, B it, ., v ii 503
We have but b The heretic priest, „ v v 105
Sir, you were b for heresy, not for treason, „ v v 139
sacred shrine By chance was b along with it. The Cup i ii 66
And a salt wind b the blossoming t rees ; From, of May i 57
Burrow far-off b where the King Would miss her and
for ever. Becket iv ii 158
Burrowing the wild boar. The b badger — Foresters i iii 121
Burst (adj.) And like a river in flood thro' a b dam Harold u ii 466
Burst (s) This b and bass of loyal hannony, Queen Mary n ii 285
Queen Mary iv ii 214
IV ii 220
IV iii 198
IV iii 293
IV iii 525
IV iii 527
IV iii 535
V i 103
V ii 114
V ii 176
V ii 245
„ V ii 552, 616
V iv 13
V iv 18
V V 114
Harold in ii 186
Becket i i 289
Foresters n i 700
Prom, of May i 153
I 309
I 330
I 366
III 40
IV ii 226
IV iii 615
IV ii 219
IV ii 231
IV iii 474
IV iii 490
IV iii 524
IV iii 535
IV iii 342
Burst (verb) (See also Bust) in that last inhospitable
plunge Our boat hath b her ribs ; Harold ii i 3
Hot-headed fools — to b the wall of shields ! „ v i 612
Fly, fly, my lord, before they b the doors ! Becket v iii 56
Bursten b at the toes, and down at heels. Queen Mary i i 52
Burthen (load) the monk-king, Louis, our former b, Becket iv ii 306
One slow, fat, white, a 6 of the hearth ; „ v ii 211
grave he goes to, Beneath the b of years. Prom, of May in 517
Bow'd to the dust beneath the b of sin. „ ill 521
Burthen (refrain) That is the b of it — lost and found Harold in ii 9
Bury B him and his paramour together. „ v ii 150
b me in the mound, says the woman. Foresters ii i 312
let him b her Even in the bowels of the earth „ iii 461
Bush like a timorous beast of prey Out of the b by night ? Harold i ii 214
A man may hang gold bracelets on a b, „ n i 88
To catch the bird again within the b\ „ n ii 67
A nest in a b. Becket. And where, my liege ? Becket, Pro. 155
stray'd From love's clear path into the common b, „ in i 248
Miss Eva, she set the b by my dairy winder Prom, of May n 18
Softly ! softly ! there may be a thief in every b. Foresters n i 368
Crouch all into the b\ „ iv 596
Business (adj.) whether thou be Hedgar, or Hedgar's
b man. Prom, of May ii 735
Business (s) pray'd me to confess In Wyatt's b. Queen Mary in v 167
Your Grace's b will not suffer, sire, „ in vi 244
Sire, the b Of thy whole kingdom waits me : Becket, Pro. 277
Well, b. I must leave you, love, to-day. Prom, of May i 624
for as I used to transact all his b for him, „ ii 719
whether thou be Hedgar, or Hedgar's business man,
thou hesn't naw b 'ere wi' my Dora, „ ii 735
I trust I may be able by-and-by to help you in the
6 of the farm; „ in 223
That b which we have in Nottingham — Foresters in 229
And may your b thrive in Nottingham ! „ in 244
Buss B me," niy bird ! The Falcon 28
Bussing See A-bussin'
Bust b of Juno and the brows and eyes Of Venus ; The Cup i i 120
Bust (burst) he be fit to b hissen wi' spites and
jalousies. Prom, of May ii 164
Let 'im b hissen, then, for owt I cares. „ n 166
Bustle gather your men — ^Myself must b. Queen Mary n ii 374
Butcher they call me now. The scourge and b „ v ii 106
What, Mr. Dobson ? A b's frock ? Prom, of May i 94
Butt This Barbarossa b's him from his chair, Becket, Pro. 217
Butter Our Daisy's b's as good 'z hern. Queen Mary iv iii 481
the making of your b, and the managing of j-our
poultry ? Prom, of May n 93
Butterfly like a J in a chrysalis. You spent your life ; Q^een Mary i iv 51
but now I called you b. „ i iv 66
I love not to be called a b : Why do you call me J ? „ i iv 68
Wi' the butterflies out, and the swallers at plaay. Prom, of May n 198
waded in the brook, ran after the butterflies, „ ni 275
Buy Gardiner b's them With Philip's gold. Queen Mary mi 144
B you their cheeses, and they'll side with you ; „ iv iii 548
if we will b diamond necklaces To please our lady, The Falcon 44
And sold thine own To b it for her. >, 77
but I couldn't b my darter back agean when she
lost hersen, Prom, of May in 453
How hadst thou then the means to i a cow ? Foresters ii i 304
Would b me for a thousand marks in gold — „ iv 652
Who thought to b your marrying me with gold. „ iv' 718
Buzz (s) Little doubt This b will soon be silenced ; Queen Mary v i 293
We make but one hour's b. Foresters i ii 277
Buzz (verb) Bee mustn't b, Whoop — but he knows.
(repeat) Becket in i 98, 240
Thy bee should b about the Court of John. Foresters iv 44
Buzzard (adj.) His b beak and deep-incavem'd eyes Queen Mary i iv 266
Buzzard (s) Hawk, b, jay, the mavis and the merle. Foresters i iii 115
Buzzed Were freely b among them. Queen. Mary n ii 98
The bee b up in the heat. Foresters iv 14
And the bee b down from the heat. n rv 20
And the bee b up in the cold „ iv 21
And the bee b off in the cold. ,. iv 27
Buzzing were more than I b round the blossom — Becket, Pro. 521
For ever b at your lady's face. Foresters iv 11
By-and-by
858
Call
By-and-by I trust I shall forgive him— 6-a-6— not now. Prom, of May ii 466
She said herself She would forgive him, b-a-b. not
now— For her own sake then, if not for mine —
not now— But 6-a-6. . .. ^ " " ^°i
B-a-b— eh, lad, dosta knaw this paaper ? .. n b»t.
Eh, lad, dosta knaw what tha means wi b-a-b f „ n ©yi
then, b-a-b, if she weant listen to me when I he
a-tryin' to saave 'er — '■ " "''^
I trust I may be able b-a-b to help you in the
business of the farm; ' /" • on
Let me rest. I'll call you & a 6. ^fF^'KY.\^^.
Byblow TheFalaiseft! , ^f I'' '"^ • •'• i iS
B\^one (adj.) and smile At b things till that eternal peace. 2 he Cup i in 172
sSe s) Let 6'5 be 6's. Go home! Good-night! Prom. o/Ma^/ in 156
By-thing These are b-t's In the great cause. hecket iii lu 11
The i-t's of the Lord Are the wrong'd innocences ,, "M^? i^
Byway The leprous flutterings of the b. Queen Mar,/ iv ui 7b
From all the hidden 6-w's of the world Beck^tniinl^
Byword I am a 6. Heretic and rebel Point at me Queen Mar;/ v u dlb
Cabin Show me some cave or c where I may rest. Foresters n 1 130
Cackling What are you c of bastardy under Queen Mary 1 1 5b
Cadaver Perinde ac c— as the priest says, .. i »v !»"
Cade And he will prove an Iden to this C, " niidoy
Csesar (-See oZso Scizzars) kindly rendering Of ' Bender .
untoC... ^ Harold nixrl^
the first Christian C drew to the East ,, Ji^^
make the soil For Cs, Cromwells, and Napoleons Prom, of May iii 593
Cage (s) pounce like a wild beast out of his c Queen Mary 1 1 8»
It is the heat and narrowness of the c " ™ ^ "^l,
I whistle to the bird has broken c, And all m vain. ,, v v^
To guard this bird of passage to her c ; becket 1 1 rfZ9
I have lived, poor bird, from c to c, .^ ™\-.i
fondest pair of doves will jar, Ev'n m a c of gold, „ rv ii 4Z
barred thee up in thy chamber, like a bird m a c. Foresters i i 315
Cage (verb) Catch the wild cat, c him, and when he
springs ^«**'* ^^"'''y ^Y.^
Cain And mark'd me ev'n as C, , , , ^' , .VfiW^a
light darkness, Abel C, The soul the body, Becket imUQ
Thou the lustiest and lousiest of this C's brotherhood, .
„ I IV ISO
answer.
With C's answer, my lord. Am I his keeper ? Thou
shouldst call him C, not me. " i ^^ leo
With C belike, in the land of Nod, - ^3^- r=
Caitiff From councillor to c-fallen so low. Queen Mary iv iii i5
Av,goinpeace,c,c! . ^ ^ ^^^'^^^ ^ " ' f^
Cake 'He speaks As if it were a c of gii^erbread. „ n x J3U
Caked And c and plaster 'd with a hundred mires i?aroM iv m 177
Calais mthdraw I^rt of our garrison at C. Mary. C\ Queen Mary i v 123
take mine eyes, mine heart. But do not lose me C. ,. i v lan
C is but ill-garrison'd, in Guisnes •■ _^. i *
Or you will lose your C. ' V 1 7
And you must look to C when I go. •• ^v_i xt
sharpe^r harm to England and to Rome, Than C taken. .. v ii 30
Madam, C is taken. „. , , , ^, ' ZWita
that our brave English Had sallied out from C ■• v u 25b
Let every craft that carries sail and gun Steer toward C. •• v 11 27b
Ah ! much heresy Shelter'd in C. ■• ^ 1| ^^
angry chronicles hereafter By loss of C. Grant me C. ., ^ " ^"^
C lone— Guisnes gone, too— and Philip gone ! ,- v v 2J
you wUl find written Two names, Phihp and C ; . ,AT;^r
Calcmed fain had c all Northumbria To one black ash, J^";;"''' "^ > ^^
te&ted -all seen,-all c, All known by Rome. T^e C«p 1 255
lender In Britain's c the brightest day Queen Mary in 11 118
Calf (Of the leg) Prick 'em in the caZ,;es with the arrow-
points— prick 'em m the calves. Jf 01 esters iv ow
Prick him in the coZue« ! , , ^_ " ^ '^^^
Calf (yoong of the cow, etc) By God's death, thou shalt , , ... ,«.
stick him like a c ! Becket i m 184
but Salisbury was a c cowed by Mother Church, „ in ui 95
Calf (young of the cow, etc.) (continued) the fatting of
youTr caZ^es, the making of your butter, P*-"'^ »/ ^f «2/ n 93
Calixtus (the first. Pope) The day of St. C, and the day, Harold v 11 121
Call (s) There's no c As yet for me ;
and no c for sonnet-sorting now,
God grant you ampler mercy at your c
Heaven curse him if he come not at your c !
He did it so well there was no c for me.
Call (verb) let me c her our second Virgin .Mary,
C him a Knight, That, with an ass's.
Why do you c me butterfly ?
They c him cold, Haughty, ay, worse.
I do not love your Grace should c me coward.
Why do they c him so ?
I cannot tell you why tbey c him so.
You c me too black-blooded —
William the Silent They c hhn—
Or a high-dropsy, as the doctors c it.
We come not to compel, but c again ;
c they not The one true faith, a loathsome idol-worship .-'
And let him c me truckler.
Nor shame to c it nature.
New learning as they c it ;
Ay— gentle as they c you— Uve or die !
Did I c him heretic ? A huge heresiarch !
if thou c on God and all the saints,
so past martyr-Uke— Martyr I may not c him—
Ay, ay ; but many voices c me hence.
What voices c you Dearer than mine
He c's us worse than Jews, Moors, Saracens,
they c me now. The scourge and butcher of their
English church.
They c him away : Ye do him wrong,
C it to temporize ; and not to lie ;
They c me near, for I am close to thee
C me not King, but Harold.
He c's us little ! ^ , ,
Somewhere hard at hand. C and she comes.
What did the dead man c it — Sanguelac,
C when the Norman moves —
C not for help from me. I knew him not.
what shall I c it, affect her thine own self.
As Canterbury c's them, wandering clouds,
Or constitutions, or whate'er ye c them,
C in the poor from the streets, and let them feast.
C in the poor !
C them in, I say.
Buck ; deer, as you c it.
Thou shouldst c him Cain, not me.
I'll c thee little Geoffrey. Henry. C him !
See if our pious— what shall I c him, Jolin .''—
Ay, ay, good brother. They c you the Monk-King.
Who c's me? she That was my wife,
if the city be sick, and I cannot c the kennel sweet.
They c thee John the Swearer. ^
whom you c— fancy— my husband's brother s wife.
They c her — But she lives secret, you see.
What does she c him ? Geoffrey. My hege.
whom it pleases him To c his wives ;
She c's you beauty, but I don't like her looks.
Like the wild beast— if you can c it love.
Let me rest. I'll c you by and by.
Then you have done it, and I c you cruel.
I know not why You c these old thmgs back
c's you oversea To answer for it in his Nonnan courts.
Who is our guest ? Sinnatus. Strato he c's himself.
they c it so in Rome. Sinnatus. Province !
C first upon the Goddess, Synorix. .
I c thee To make my marriage prosper to my wish .
I c on our own Goddess in our own Temple.
Speak freely, tho' to c a madman mad
if your lordship care to c for it. . . , •
C him back and say I come to breakfast with him.
my nobleness Of nature, as you deign to c it.
Queen Mary n i 24l
ni59j
„ IV i 1891
Prom, of May I 105'
Foresters 11 i 548
Queen Mary I iii 57
I iii 167
I IV
I V 431
„ n iv
in i 199
m i 205
in i 347
niiil93
ni ii 225,,
„ in iii 187i
in iv 218
III iv i
m V 71
IV i 78]
IV ii 161'
„ IV iii 45
,, IV iii 96
„ IV iii 625
V i 32
V i 36
V i 150
V ii 104
Harold I ii 14
„ II ii 415
„ in i 6
„ inii33
IV i 41
„ IV i 186
„ V i 184
„ vi229
V ii 54
Becket, Pro. 513
I iii 70
I iii 138
I iv 72
„ I iv 78
I iv 85
I iv 139
I iv 188
n i 214
u ii 38
n ii 73
„ n ii 74
II ii 348
n ii 462
m i 202
IV i 11
IV i 18
IV ii 37
„ IV ii 61
IV ii 121
V i 90
V ii 135
V ii 270
V ii 354
The Cup I ii 48
I ii 93
n 256
n 307
n 314
The Falcon 81
139
211
811
my noDieness ui imtuic, <» j-u" ^»v-.g.. -- - -, „„
he cooms up, and he c's out among our oan men, Prom, of May 1 139
CaU
859
Gamma
Call (verb) (conimued) Would c this vice ; but one
times vice Prom, of May i 534
grant you what they c a license To marrj-. .. i 695
but c for Philip when you will, And he returns. ,. i 757
I ba' browt these roses to ye — I forgits what they e's 'em, „ n 15
Might I c Upon your father — „ n 512
C if you will, and when you will. ,, ii 517
— the crowd would c it conscience — ,. n 638
' I c you, Philip Edgar, Philip Edgar ! ,. ii 657
an' whether thou c's thysen Hedgar or Harold, ., n 737
as they c it so truly, to the grave at the bottom, .. in 193
Master Hedgar, Harold, or whativer They c's ye, ,, in 728
The fool-people c her a witch — ~ Foresters n i 178
I have forgotten my horn that c's my men together. .. n i 185
And you dare to c me Tit. .. ii ii 127
Wouldst thou c my Oberon Ob ? „ n ii 131
but c Kate when you will, for I am close at hand. ,. ni 49
Sit there, knaves, till the captain c for you. „ m 220
Do you c that in my honoui- ? ,. ra 432
did ye not c me king in your song ? ,. iv 220
I could but sneak and smile and c it courtesy, ,. rv 366
they that suffer by him c the blossom Of bandits. ,. iv 371
shall I c it by that new tema Brought .. iv 703
men will c him An Eastern tyrant, .. iv 902
Call'd took her hand, c her sweet sister, Qreen Mary i i 80
but now I c you butterfly. „ i iv 66
I love not to be c a butterfly : „ i iv 68
c my friends together. Struck home and won. ,. i v 552
and ye have c me to be your leader. „ ii i 165
Lo ! thou hast c them up ! here they come — „ m i 233
The islands c into the dawning church ,. in iii 172
You know I never come till I be c. „ in v 215
He c my word my bond ! Harold n ii 665
when that which reign'd C itself God — „ iii ii 167
Cram thy crop full, but come when thou art c. „ iv iii 235
well train 'd, and easily c Off from the game. Becket, Pro. 120
I sign'd them — being a fool, as Foliot c me. ,. i iii 562
father's eye was so tender it would have c a goose off
the green, „ in iii 102
And thereupon he c my children bastards. „ iv ii 44
I am most sure that some one c. The Cup n 509
then I was c away ; And presently aU rose. The Falcon 365
then he c me a rude naame, and I can't abide 'im. Prom, of May ii 158
Her phantom c me by the name she loved. „ n 242
who c the mind Of children a blank page, „ n 281
not forgotten his promise to come when I c him. „ m 330
I that have been c a SociaUst, A Communist, a Nihilist^ — „ iii 584
a fine ! he hath c plain Kobin a lord. Foresters in 215
Sit there till you be c for. „ in 296
fine him ! he hath c plain Kobin an earl. „ iv 151
a fine ! He hath c plain Robin a king. ,, iv 218
Tfftll'nc (part) (See also A-callin') ten thousand men
on Penenden Heath all c after Queen Mary n i 61
Calling (s) The dog followed his c, my lord. Becket i iv 97
Callous c with a constant stripe, Unwoundable. Queen Mary v v 171
Calm and less than I would in a c. Harold ii i 68
lest ye should draw together like two ships in a c. Becket ni iii 298
Calumny Twice did thy malice and thy calumnies Exile me ,, i iii 42
Calved See Cawved
Cambridge Thou art but yesterday from C, Grim ; „ v ii 55
Came [See also Ooomed, Cum) my good mother c (God
rest her soul) Of Spain, Queen Mary i v 11
Your royal mother c of Spain, ,. i v 16
and his right c down to me, -, n ii 171
when the traitor wife c out for bread „ in i 11
I c to feel the pulse of England, « .. in i 37
as the new-made couple C from the Minster, ., iii i 95
She c upon the scaffold, „ in i 375
C with a sudden splendour, shout, and show, „ in i 449
And how c you round again ? ., in ii 36
And you c and kiss'd me milking the cow. (repeat) ,. in v 91, 98
Robin c behind me, „ in v 92
I f to thank her Majesty For freeing my friend
Bagenhall ,. in vi 5
She c upon it, read it, and then rent it, „ in vi 142
Came (continued) c to the fire on earth. Queen Mary iv i 60
So worshipt of all those that c across him ; „ iv i 162
hands C from the crowd and met his own ; „ iv iii 583
when I c to wed your majesty, Lord Howard, ,. v i 56
I c to sue Your Council and yourself (repeat) „ v i 107, 114
what you said When last you c to Englaml ? „ v ii 568
the child c not, and the husband c not ; „ v ii 581
and in her agony The mother c upon Iier — „ v iv 20
never merry world In England, since the Bible c
among us. ,. v v 241
These meteors c and went before our day, Harold i i 131
An evil dream that ever c and went— ,, i ii 70
blast that c So suddenly hath fallen as suddenly — „ n i 13
We be fishermen ; I c to see after my nets. ' „ ii i 27
He c not to see me, had past me by . „ n ii 27
whereby we c to know Thy valour and tliy value, „ n ii 201
Your comet e and went. „ in i 359
The Lord was God and c as man — „ in ii 172
Since Tostig c with Norway— „ iv i 173
Last night King Edward c to me in dream.s —
(repeat) Harold iv i 259, 265
and woke and c Among us again, Harold iv iii 151
Our guardsmen have slept well, since v.e c in ? „ v i 208
who c before To tell thee thou shouldst win „ v i 235
There is one Come as Goliath c of yore — „ v i 493
then the King c honeying about her, Becket, Pro. 516
What c of that ? The first archbishop fled, „ i iii 52
When Heniy c into his own again, „ i iii 153
I c, your King ! Nor dwelt alone, „ i iii 356
I c on certain wholesome usages, „ i iii 412
Which c into thy hands when Chancellor. „ i iii 653
But the miller c home that night, „ i iv 173
Besides, we c away in such a heat, „ ii i 293
I c to England suddenly, „ in i 86
we c on to the banquet, from whence there puffed „ in iii 113
Ha, you ! How c you hither ? „ rv ii 12
No, for it c to nothing — only a feint. „ iv ii 398
The fellow that on a lame jade c to court, „ v i 246
we c upon A wild-fowl sitting on her nest, „ v ii 232
at Pontigny c to me The ghostly warning „ v ii 290
C to the front of the wood — The Cup i ii 119
I dare not tell him how I c to know it ; „ i ii 275
Why c ye not before ? „ i iii 176
c To plead to thee for Sinnatus's life, „ ii 391
c back last night with her son to the castle. The Falcon 3
when he c last year To see me hawking, „ 312
I c In person to return them. „ 726
c and dipt your sovereign head Thro' these low doors, „ 866
"" ' ' ' ' ' ■ ' " Prom, of May 1 39
I 73
n 622
in 232
in 368
in 515
in 750
m 772
Foresters i i 132
,. n i 124
„ 11 i 254
„ II i 485
„ II ii 108
ni 240
in 436
IV 537
The maid to her dairy c in from the cow,
I c back to keep his birthday.
stateliness and sweetness ! How c she by it ? —
who c to us three years after you were gone, how
should she know you ?
dead midnight when I c upon the bridge ;
bow'd To the earth he c from.
Only fifteen when first you c on her,
to her you c Veiling one sin to act another.
I c to give thee the first kiss, and thou hast given
it me.
I c To eat him up and make an end of him.
How c we to be parted from our men ?
I believe She c with me into the forest here.
There c some evil fairy at my birth And cursed me,
no man, so His own true wife c with him,
first part — made before you c among us —
delicate-footed creature C stepping o'er him.
Cameleon such a c he ! " Queen Mary in iii 15
Camest When c thou thither ? Gamel. To-day, good Earl. Harold i i 105
How c thou hither ? Geoffrey. On my legs.
Pretty one, how c thou ?
Show me where thou c out of the wood.
Camma (wife of Sinnatus, afterwards Priestess in the Temple
of Artemis) 'To the admired C, wife of Sinnatus,
the Tetrarch,
Take thou this letter and this cup to C,
Becket iv i 4
IV 120
IV i 45
The Cup 1 i 36
I i 62
C^mma
860
Careless
Camma (continued) ' To the admired C, — belieli you arar
off— The Clip 1 ii 71
C, A\'ise I am sure as she is beautiful, „ i ii 138
C, Rome has a glimpse of this conspiracy; „ i ii 232
C the stately, C the great-hearted, ,, i iii 72
And C for my bride — Thy people love ber — „ i iii 151
C — well, well, I never found the woman „ i iii 165
Since C fled from Synorix to our Temple, ., ii 14
Great Artemis ! O C, can it be well, „ n 80
shout of Synorix and C sitting Upon one throne, „ ii 146
I thank thee, C, — I thank thee, (repeat) „ ii 331, 355
There, C ! I have almost drain'd the cup — „ ii 384
Antonius — ' C ! ' who spake ? „ n 401
Synorix, first King, C, first Queen o' the Realm, „ ii 440
Thou — coming my way too — C — good-night. „ ii 492
and though a Roman I Forgive thee, C. „ ii 506
' C ! '—why there again I am most sure that some one
call'd. „ II 507
^C, C \' Sinnatus, Sinnatus ! „ ii 536
€amp In the full face of all the Roman c? „ i ii 269
I hardly gain'd The c at midnight. „ i iii 19
I must lure my game into the c. „ i iii 64
The c is half a league without the city; ., i iii 89
or at least shall find him There in the c. ., i iii 95
Cancel to c and abolish all bonds of human allegiance, Queen Mary v iv 49
spites at Rome, Is like enough to c them. The Cup i i 92
Cancell'd (adj.) all Our c Marrior-gods, our grim Walhalla, Harold m ii 73
Cancell'd (verb) Not know that Edward c his own promise ? „ v i 51
€andle (See also Corpse-candles) a c in the smi Is all
but smoke — Queen Alary v i 77
Canker'd for there are men Of c judgment everywhere — Becket v ii 61
Cannon clash'd their bells. Shot off their lying c, Queen Mary iii vi 97
Canon (adj.) There wore his time studying the c law Becket ii i 85
Canon (s) seem According to the c's pardon due Queen Mary iv iii 33
No, daughter, but the c's out of Waltham, Harold v i 474
since your c will not let you take Life for a life, Becket i iii 389
Canonical Stigand is not c enough Harold iii i 215
J was thine own election so c. Good father? Becket i iii 121
by that c obedience Thou still hast owed thy father, „ i iii 274
Canomsed bones of all the C From all the holiest shrines Harold ii ii 734
Canonists The G and Schoolmen were with me. Queen Mary i ii 61
Canopy moving side by side Beneath one c, „ in i 97
Cant^bury (adj.) Methought I stood in C Minster, Becket i i 73
Because I had my G pallium. From one whom they
dispoped ? Harold iii i 106
Canterbury (s) slander'd you For setting up a mass at
C To please the Queen. Queen Mary i ii 88
and the legateship Annex'd to C — „ v ii 37
Who shall crown him ? C is dying. Becket. The
next C. Becket, Pro. 240
This C is only less than Rome, „ i i 147
I cast upon the side of C — Our holy mother C, ., i i 155
Now I am C and thou art York. „ i iii 44
And is not York the peer of C ? „ i iii 47
When C hardly bore a name. „ i iii 60
Who made thee, London ? Who, but C? „ i iii 67
As C calls them, wandering clouds, ,, i iii 70
among you those that hold Lands reft from C. « i iii 141
Shall I do less for C Than Henry for the crown? ,, i iii 147
Shall I do less for mine own C? ■, i iii 159
Because my lord of C ! Be Tracy. Ay, This lord
of C— „ 1 iii 424
Claim'd some of our crown lands for C— „ i iii 459
If C bring his cross to court. Let York bear his to
mate with C. „ i iii 511
I would, my lord Thomas of C, Thou wert plain
Thomas and not C, Or that thou wouldst
deliver C „ i iii 577
This C, like a wounded deer, Has fled our presence „ ii ii 21
Reseat him on his throne of C, „ ii ii 118
Our castle, my lord, belongs to C. „ ii ii 262
that hath squeezed out this side-smile upon C, .. iii iii 57
And send thee back again to C ? in iii 184
crowning thy young son by York, London and
Salisbury — not C. „ in iii 196
Canterbury (s) (continued) York crown'd the Conqueror^
not C. Becket. There was no C in William's time. Becket in iii 198
My friend of C and myself Are now once more „ in iii 228
York against C, York against God ! „ y ii 66
Divide me from the mother church of England, My C. „ v ii 362
And trampled on the rights of C. „ y ii 394
The holy follower founded C — „ v iii 5
Save that dear head which now is C, „ v iii 6
And all the tutelar Saints of C. ., v iii 167
Cantrip Save from some hateful c of thine own. ., y i 140
Canvas Madam, you have but cut the c out ; Queen Mary v v 183
Canvass Would freely c certain Lutheranisms. ,, y ii 76
Cap (s) Her c would brush his heels. ., m i 14
Knave, wilt thou wear thy c before the Queen ? ,, in i 237
Knock off his c there, some of you about him ! .. in i 241
Cap (verb) You would not c the Pope's commissioner — ,, iv ii 123
Capering And c hand in hand with Oberon. Foresters n i 498
What are you c for ? „ ly 514
Caprice I am a man not prone to jealousies, C's, Prom, of May iii 627
Captain Then followed the thunder of the c's and the
shouting, Becket m iii 112
Ah dear Robin ! ah noble c, friend of the poor ! Foresters 11 i 182
It is the very c of the thieves ! ., 11 i 412
C, we saw thee cowering to a knight ,, n i 682
Sit there, knaves, till the c call for you. ., m 220
C, nay, it wasn't me. ., m 364
This friar is of much boldness, noble c. ,, iv 235
Captive That makes the c testy ; Queen Mary m v 208
First, free thy c from her hopeless prison. Becket v i 183
Captivity Translating his c from Guy Harold n ii 42
Caraffa But this new Pope C, Paul the Fourth, Queen Mary v ii 32
Carcase When Henry broke the c of your church „ i v 397
and make thine old c a target for us three. Foresters n i 404
Card Hath no more mortice than a tower of c's ; Queen Mary in i 443
Cardinal again to her cousin Reginald Pole, now C; ., i i 123
Yet my Lord C — Pole. I am your Legate ; „ iii iv 178
— this C's fault — I have gulpt it down. ,. m iv 376
Good morrow, my Lord C; „ iv i 42
' We pray continually for the death Of our accursed
Queen and C Pole.' „ y ii 181
So is C Pole. „ y iy 5
thy King swore to our c's He meant no harm Becket i iii 215
The c's have finger'd Henry's gold. „ i iii 295
— bribe all the C's — „ n ii 473
Cardinalate Pope could dispense with his C, Queen Mary i i 127
Cardinal-Deacon You, Lord Legate And C-B, „ m iy 261
Care (s) (See also Take care) 'Tis the good Count's c
for thee ! Harold n ii 251
C dwell with me for ever, when I cease To care for thee Becket n i 120
Care (verb) You do right well. I do not c to know ; Queen Mary i iv 189
But will he c for that? „ " i v 69
Spit them like larks for aught I c. „ i v 395
And c but little for the life to be. „ in iv 60
And if he did I c not, my Lord Howard. „ iv i 129
will hardly c to overlook This same petition ., iv i 192
They c for nothing else. „ iv iii 171
I do much fear that England will not c. „ y ii 283
And cried I was not clean, what should I c? ., y ii 325
C not for me who love thee. Harold in ii 113
And what c I for that ? Becket i i 200
1 c not for thy new archbishoprick. .. i i 217
And 1 say, I c not for thy saying, (repeat) .. 11 i 112
who c's not for the word. Makes ' c not ' — c. .. n i 116
Care dwell with me for ever, when I cease To c for thee .. 11 i 120
Return to Sens, where we will c for you. „ n ii 445
But if you should not c to take it — ,, iv ii 71
Let 'im bust hissen, then, for o\^ / c's. Prom, of May 11 167
He is all for love, he c's not for the land. Foresters iv 489
Cared Thou hast but c to make thyself a king — Harold iv ii 74
if you c To live some time among them. Prom, of May 11 549
Careful but sends His c dog to bring them to the
fold. Queen Mary in iv 105
Be c of thine answer, my good friend. Harold u ii 604
Carefuller made him all the c To find a means „ in i 340
Careless thro' The random gifts of c kings, Becket i i 159
Careless
861
Catch
{continued) like a c sleeper in the down ; Foresters i i 207
Caress in some lewd c Has wheedled it off the King's neck Becket iv ii 200
Carew (See also Peter Carew) I do not hear from C or
the Duke Of Suffolk, Queen Mary ii i 2
C stirs In Devon : ,, n i 4
I must not move Until I hear from C and the Duke. ,. ii i 122
C is there, and Thomas Stafford there. „ v i 125
Carle little help without our Saxon c's Against Hardrada. Harold iv i 35
Carlos But is Don C such a goodly match? Queen Mary x iii 86
Don C, Madam, is but twelve years old. ,, v iii 87
Don C? Madam, if you marry Philip, „ v iii 117
Carnage So packt with c that the dykes and brooks HaroW, iii ii 128
Carpet Lay down the Lydian c's for the king. The Cup ii 187
Carried Bonner, it will be c. Queen Mary iii iv 405
I ha' c him ever so many miles in my arms. Becket i iv 98
drop The mud I c, like yon brook, „ ii i 159
c off the casks, Kill'd half the crew, „ v ii 442
one shock upon the field when all The harvest has
been c.
you kept your veil too close for that when they c
you in ;
Carrier-pigeon And thou, my c-p of black news,
Carriest who art more bow-bent than the very bo«
thou c ?
Carrion (adj.) didst thou ever see a c crow Stand
watching a sick beast
and dumb'd his c croak From the gray sea for ever.
I'd think na moor o' maakin' an end o' tha nor a
c craw — Prom, of May ii 697
Carrion (S) And rolls himself in c like a dog. Queen Mary i v 169
Carrion-nosing Made even the c-»i mongrel vomit „ iv iii 448
Carrot Like a c's, as thou say'st, and English c 's better „ in i 218
Carry I trust that he will c you well to-day,
For all that I can c it in my head.
If you can c your head upon your shoulders.
I fear you come to c it off my shoulders,
that every Spaniard carries a tail like a devil
Let every craft that carries sail anil gun
C her off among you ;
We shall be overwhelm'd. Seize him and c him !
C fresh rushes into the dining-hall,
C her off, and let the old man die.
Seize him and truss him up, and c hei' off.
Seize her and c her off into my castle.
Cart fur she tell'd ma to taake the c to Littlechester.
Dan Smith's c hes runned ower a laady i' the
holler laane.
Besides it was you that were driving the c —
our horse and our little c —
Carter our c's and our shepherds Still find a comfort
there. Harold. C's and shepherds ! Prom, of May m 527
Cartwhip and doant laay my c athurt 'is shou'ders, „ n 138
Carve And c my coat upon the walls again !
to c One lone hour from it,
Casa C crematur, Pastor fugatur
Case And first I say it is a grievous c,
Is that my c ? so if the city be sick,
as the c stood, you had safelier have slain an arch-
bishop than a she-goat : jt in iii 67
Casement moonlight c's pattem'd on the wall, Queen Mary v v 9
Ay ! yonder is her c. Prom, of May ii 246
storm and shower lashing Her c, i. n 473
Then I would drop from the c, like a spider. Foresters i i 317
Cask carried off the c's, Kill'd have the crew, Becket v ii 443
c of wine whereof we plunder'd The Norman prelate ? Foresters ni 306
Casket Close as a miser's c. Listen : Queen Mary i iv 108
Hand me the c with my father's sonnets. ,. ii i 43
Cast C off, betray'd, defamed, divorced, forlorn !
C myself down upon my knees before them,
come to c herself On loyal hearts and bosomS;
She c on him a vassal smile of love, „ ni i 98
pine in Italy that c its shadow Athwart a cataract ; „ m iv 136
to c myself Upon the good Queen's mercy ; „ ni v 167
and then C on the dunghill naked, .. iv iii 446
The Pope would c the Spaniard out of Naples : „ v i 148
The Falcon 302
Prom, of May iii 227
Harold iv iii 233
Foresters ii i 379
Queen Mary iv iii 6
Harold iv iii 65
I iv 145
II i 88
II i 89
II i 91
HI i 223
V ii 275
Becket, Pro. 524
V iii 142
Foresters i i 80
„ IV 677
„ IV 690
„ IV 738
Prom, o/ May u 322
II 568
III 88
Foresters Ii i 192
Que&)i Mary ii iv 110
Foresters ii i 42
Harold V i 512
Queen Mary iv iii 167
Becket ii ii 347
IV 26
IV 562
n ii 261
Cast (continued) His early follies c into his teeth. Queen Mary v ii 124
C it o'er again. „ v iii 4
Did ye not c with bestial violence Harold i i 49
I c me down prone, praying ; ,. v i 100
I c upon the side of Canterburj- — • Becket i i 155
Let either c hiin away like a dead dog ! ,, ii ii 257
black cloud that hath come over the sim and c as all
into shadow? „ in iii 47
your own people c you from their bounds. The Cup i i 137
His own true people c him from their doors ,, i ii 351
I cannot help the mould that I was c in. „ i iii 25
Might c my largess of it to the crowd ! „ ii 224
knaw'd better nor to c her sister's misfortin inter
'er teeth Prom, of May ii 127
Be not so c down, my sweet Eva. „ in 468
Would you c An eye of favour on me. Foresters i ii 216
That if I c an eye of favour on him, „ iii 261
to c All threadbare household habit, ,, i iii 111
C them into our treasury, the beggars' mites, „ in 204
Castaly wells of C are not wasted upon the desert. Becket, Pro. 387
Castille voices of C and Aragon, Granada, Queen Mary v i 42
Castle (adj.) AH in the c garden, Foresters i i 10
Castle (s) (See also Sand-castle) Ah, gray old c of
Alington, Queen Mary u i 243
They have built their c's here ; Harold ill i 36
he holp the King to break down our c's, Becket, Pro. 447
De Tracy and De Brito, from our c. ,, i i 278
Lord Fitzurse reported this In passing to the C even now. ,, i ii 13
You are going to the C, „ i ii 45
My drift is to the C, Where I shall meet the Barons „ i ii 83
To the C ? De Broc. Ay ! „ i ii 86
thou, De Broc, that boldest Saltwood C — „ i iii 160
Due from his c's of Berkhamstead and Eye „ i iii 628
Here is a missive left at the gate by one from the c. „ i iv 50
Our c, my lord, belongs to Canterbury. „ n ii 261
cursed those De Brocs That hold our Saltwood C „ ii ii 269
Perchance the fierce De Brocs from Saltwood C, „ v ii 249
dungeon'd the other half In Pevensey C — „ v ii 446
Undo the doors : the Church is not a c : „ v iii 63
came back last night with her son to the c. The Falcon 4
there is Monna Giovanna coming down the hill from the c. „ 161
mount with your lordship's leave to her ladyship's c, „ 414
Not like the vintage blowing round your c. „ 580
Shall I return to the c with you ? „ 793
I would set my men-at-arms to oppose thee, like the
Lord of the C. Foresters I i 324
and seeing the hospitable lights in your c, „ i ii 195
he hath seized On half the royal c's. ,. i iii 83
whereon she struck him. And fled into the c. ,. n i 118
Seize her and carry her off into my c. „ iv 738
Thy c ? (repeat) Foresters iv 739, 743
Castro I bad my chaplain, C, preach Against these
burnings. Queen Mary ill vi 73
Cat Catch the wild e, cage him, and when he springs „ v v 65
He hath as much of c as tiger in him. Harold i i 154
Milk ? Filippo. Three laps for a c ! The Falcon 125
And a c to the cream, and a rat to the cheese ; Prom, of May i 53
If a c may look at a king, may not a friar speak
to one ? Foresters iv 921
Cataract (See also Winter-cataracts) A pine in Italy
that cast its shadow Athwart a c ; firm stood
the pine — The c shook the shadow. Queen Mary in iv 137
c typed the headlong plunge and fall Of heresy „ in iv 140
Catch I cannot c what Father Bourne is saying. „ i iii 14
We have our spies abroad to c her tripping, „ i v 468
there's no Renard here to ' c her tripping.' C me
who can ; yet, sometime I have wish'd That I
were caught, „ ni v 159
C the wild cat, cage him, and when he springs „ v v 65
Fellow, dost thou c crabs ? Harold n i 66
I have a mind that thou shalt c no more. „ n i 71
To c the bird again within the bush ! „ n ii 67
flings His brand in air and c'es it again, „ v i 494
You c 'em, so. Softly, and fling them out to the free
air. Becket i i 286
Catch
862
Chair'd
Catch (continued) and they do say the very breath c'es. Becket i iv 222
thy flock should c An after ague-fit of trembling. „ in iii 32
Take thy one chance ; C at the last straw. „ iv ii 221
and a-spreading to c her eye for a dozen year, The Falcon 100
c A glimpse of them and of their fairy Queen — Foresters n ii 102
And c the winding of a phantom horn. „ iv 1091
Catechize But who art thou to c me — „ ni 14
Catharine (first queen of Henry Vin.) you divorced
Queen C and her father ; Queen Mary i ii 57
accursed lie Of good Queen Cs divorce — „ ni iv 232
Cathedral nor any ground but English, Where his c
stands. Becket in iii 262
Take refuge in your own c, (repeat) „ v ii 584, 590
Strike our Archbishop in his own c ! „ v iii 180
Catholic (adj.) But if this Philip, the proud C
prince, Queen Mary i iv 280
where you gave your hand To this great C King. „ in ii 92
Can we not have the C church as well „ in iii 97
Which in the C garden are as flowers, „ iv i 178
Have you remain'd in the true C faith I left j-ou
in ? Cranmer. In the true C faith, „ iv ii 17
Yet wherefore should he die that hath return 'd To
the one C Universal Church, ., iv iii 21
In every article of the C faith, „ iv iii 230
Peters, you know me C, but English. „ iv iii 566
The Queen of Scots at least is C. Philip. Ay,
Madam, C; „ ^ }.P^
But — ^he would have me C of Rome, „ v iii 93
Catholic (s) for we are many of us C's, but few
Papists, ., I i 114
a pious C, Mumbling and mixing up in his scared
prayers „ n ii 85
there be some disloyal C's, And many heretics loyal ; „ ni iv 43
tho' a C, I would not, For the pure honour of our
common nature, „ iv iii 296
I do hold The C, if he have the greater right, „ iv iii 382
Peters, my gentleman, an honest C, „ iv iii 553
It is a saying among the C's. „ v v 245
Cattle Hath harried mine own c — God confound him ! Harold iv iii 190
Caught (See also Cotched) And then if c, to the
Tower. Queen Mary i v 469
sometime I have wish'd That I were c, ., iii v 163
He c a chill in the lagoons of Venice, „ v ii 515
if I c them, they should hang Cliff-gibbeted Harold n i 95
I shame to quote 'em — c, my lord, Becket i ii 7
King's verdurer c him a-hunting in the forest, ., i iv 95
Not c, maim'd, blinded him. The Cap i ii 271
when you put it in green, and your stack c fire. Prom, of May n 56
I am outlaw'd, and if c, I die. Foresters i iii 163
He c her round the waist, „ n i 116
You c a lonely woodman of our band, ., ni 359
and the hunters, if c, are blinded, or worse than blinded. „ rv 226
Cause (s) you had time and c enough To sicken Queen Mary i v 23
the c that hath brought us together is not the c
under colour Of such a e as hath no colour.
This was the c, and hence the judgment on her.
Crave, in the same c, hearing of your Grace.
Behold him, brethren : he hath c to weep ! —
thro' the fear of death Gave up his c,
there c's Wherefore our Queen and Council
Much less shall others in like c escape,
I come to the great c that weighs Upon my conscience
I will move then in your c again,
and mine own natural man (It was God's c) ;
We fought like great states for grave c ;
I have given her c — I fear no woman.
For thou hast done the battle in my c ;
Refer my c, my crown to Rome ! . . .
' All c's of advowsons and presentations,
For the King's pleasure rather than God's c
My lord. We have claspt your c,
That in thy c were stirr'd against King Henry,
These are by-things In the great c.
as one That mars a c with over- violence.
In mine own c I strove against him there,
niieO
II ii 183
ni iv 187
IV 18
IV iii 14
IV iii 28
IV iii 35
IV iii 62
IV iii 237
vil78
V ii 104
Harold i i 441
„ I ii 41
„ II ii 555
vil
Becket i iii 78
„ I iii 698
„ n ii 237
„ n ii 429
„ m iii 12
„ ivii327
V i 14
Prom, of Mail ui 245
The Cup n 298
Queen Mary in iv 276
„ HI i 51
Harold I i 192
Becket I iii 177
Foresters ii i 130
Pro
Cause (s) (continued) And in thy c I strive against him now. Becket v i 16
I do commend my c to God, the Virgin, „ v iii 163
not so much for the c as for the Earl. Foresters i ii 38
I cannot sleep o' nights by c on 'em. ,. n i 384
What rightfiU c could grow to such a heat .. n i 698
I can defend my c against the traitors „ iv 898
Cause (verb) always told Father that the huge old
ashtree there would c an accident some
day ;
Causest Who c the safe earth to shudder and gape.
Cautery mad bite Must have the c — tell him —
Cavalier And Counts, and sixty Spanish c's.
Cave seven sleepers in the c at Ephesus Have turn'd
As find a hare's form in a lion's c
Show me some c or cabin where I may rest.
Cawved (calved) Hes the cow c ? Dora. No,
Father.
Cease When will ye c to plot against my house ?
when I c To care for thee as ever !
Well, well, until they c to go together,
Ceased Until your throne had c to tremble.
Cecil (William, Baron Burghley, Queen Elizabeth's chief
Minister) C . . . God guide me lest I lose the
way.
But with C's aid And others,
Cedar now you are enclosed with boards of c.
Cede now and then to c A point to her demand ?
Ceded father c Naples, that the son Being a King,
Ceiling under no c but the cloud that wept on them.
Celebrate — c — to c my birthdaiiy i' this fashion.
To c this advent of our King !
Celibate Dan John, how much we lose, we c's.
Cell lash'd to death, or lie Famishing in black c's,
The cold, white lily blowing in her c :
In cold, white c's beneath an icy moon —
Cellar Our c is hard by. Take him, good Little John,
Censure (8ee also Church-censure) release from
danger of all c's Of Holy Church Queen Mary in iii 151
All schism, and from all and every c, „ in iii 217
I refuse to stand By the King's c, Becket i iii 723
pass the c's of the Church On those that crown'd .. v ii 390
of May in 427
Harold IV i 161
Beclcet II i 121
Foresters n ii 67
Queen Mary I v 393
v v209
V V 279
in ii 102
in vi 169
in i 74
viv39
Prom, of May I 321
Foresters iv 1048
Becket v ii 197
Queen Man/ v ii 196
Harold 111 i 274
V i 325
Foresters il i 468
Centavur That C of a monstrous Commonweal,
Central Not ev'n the c diamond, worth, I think.
Centre Henceforth a c of the living faith.
And oublietted in the c — No !
weight of the very land itself, Down to the
inmost c.
Century fire that flashes out again From c to c.
Ceremony Why do you palter with the c ?
But wherefore slur the perfect c ?
Certain I am not c but that Philibert Shall be the
man ;
because I am not c : You understand, Feria.
Would freely canvass c Lutheranisms.
I came on c wholesome usages,
No, no ! we have c news he died in prison.
Chafe Why c me then ?
Chain (s) this golden c — My father on a birthday
c, Wherewith they bound him to the stake,
here is a golden c I will give thee
Thou art happier than thy king. Put him in c's.
Chain (verb) This c's me to your service.
To c the free guest to the banquet-board ;
if he be conspirator, Rome will c. Or slay liim.
Chain'd lying c In breathless dungeons over steam-
ing sewers, Queen Mary iv iii 439
Chair (See also Cheer) How deathly pale ! — a c, your
Highness.
same c. Or rather throne of purple, on the deck.
The Eternal Peter of the changeless c.
Out friends, the Normans, holp to shake his c.
sat within the Norman c A ruler all for England —
This Barbarossa butts him from his c,
let me place this c for your ladyship.
Chair'd yea, and thou C in his place.
Queen Alary in iv 163
Becket v i 164
Queen Mary lit ii 155
Becket iv ii 150
Foresters iv 1027
The Cup I ii 167
n 420
n 431
Queen Mary v i 263
V i 268
„ V ii 76
Becket i iii 412
Foresters iv 778
Harold i i 296
Quee7i Mary i v 526
„ IV iii 595
Becket iv i 40
Foresters rv 838
Qmen Mary i v 537
Harold n ii 193
The Cup I i 18
I V 636
„ in ii 7
ra iv 380
Harold i i 86
„ nii533
Becket, Pro. 217
The Falcon 178
Harold i ii 247
Challenge
863
Charge
Becket n ii 165
„ IV ii 254
Harold ii ii 245
Challenge — a shift, a trick Whereby to c,
fitrike ! I c thee to meet me before Gotl.
Chamber (adj.) arm'd men Ever keep watch beside my
<• door,
Chamber (s) {See also Chaumber) I hear them stirring
in the Council C. Queen Mary i v 628
And in this very c, fuse the glass, „ iii v 54
Remain within the c, but apart. ,, v iii 12
Is not yon light in the Queen's c ? „ v iv 2
To shake my throne, to push into my c — Becket v i 250
Peace, let him be : it is the c of Death ! Prom, of May m 741
Not if I barred thee up in thy c. Foresters I i 315
Chamberlain As if the c were Death himself ! Queen Mary v v 204
Chance (adj.) may but hang On the c mention of some
fool „ m V 43
And save for that c arrow which the Saints Sharpen'd Harold v ii 167
Chance (s) if by c you hear of any such,
Looms the least c of peril to our realm.
was no wicked wilfulness, Only a natural c
A c — perchance One of those wicked wilfuls
That lies within the shadow of the c.
So less c for false keepers.
Remains beyond all Ps and all churches.
What c That he should ever spread into the man
the c gone. She lives — but not for him ;
drowning man, they say, remembers ail The c's of
his life,
I fear some strange and evil c Coming upon me,
would dare the c Of double, or losing all.
Chance (verb) may c That I shall never look upon
you more.
It may c, that England Will be Mistress of the
Indies yet,
we might c — perchance — To guess their meaning.
it c's, child. That I am his main paramour.
Chanced Before I c upon the messenger
there hath c A sharper harm to England and to Rome,
how it c That this young Earl was sent on foreign
travel.
Chancellor Gardiner for one, who is to be made Lord C,
The Lord C (I count it as a kind of virtue in him.
Who waits, sir ? Usher. Madam, the Lord C.
that were hard upon you, my Lord C.
The Lord C himself is on our side.
Renard and the C sharpen'd them.
No, my Lord Legate, the Lord C goes.
Hush ! hush ! You wrong the C :
Thou Christian Bishop, thou Lord C Of England !
My Lord C, You have an old trick of offending us ;
I have gone beyond your late Lord C, —
Sir Nicholas Heath, the C, Would see your Highness.
Madam, your C, Sir Nicholas Heath.
When Wyatt sack'd the C's house in Southwark.
longed much to see your Grace and the C ere he
past,
and the King gave it to his C.
but thou — dost thou love this C,
Is it so much heavier than thy C's robe ? Becket.
No ; but the C's and the Archbishop's Together
I served King Henry well as C ;
And all the wisdom of the C,
Make him thy prisoner. I am C yet.
C£m I be under him As C ? as Archbishop over him ?
For he, when having dofit the C's robe —
As C thou wast against the Church,
Which came into thy hands when C.
every bond and debt and obligation Incurr'd as C,
Dost thou know, my boy, what it is to be C of
England ?
It is, my boy, to side with the King when C,
when I was C to the King, I fear I was as cruel as
the King.
sworn Yourselves my men when I was C —
Chancellor-Archbishop C-A, he might well have sway'd
Chancellorship He did prefer me to the c.
Queen Alary i iv 175
II ii 238
m V 73
„ in V 74
Harold ii ii 464
II ii 688
„ III ii 182
Becket m i 21
„ IV ii 414
„ V ii 274
The Cup I iii 75
„ I iii 147
Queen Mary n i 245
„ V iii 75
Harold iv i 137
Becket iv ii 37
Queen Mary i v 585
vii28
vii488
1 187
I iv 191
IV 96
rvl59
II i 193
in i 5
III ii 152
III iii 67
in iv 300
III iv 313
vii98
v ii 225
vii248
vii504
Becket, Pro. 399
„ Pro. 432
„ Pro. 438
I i 21
I i 144
I i 153
I i 332
I i 349
„ I iii 454
I iii 528
I iii 653
I iii 712
II i 232
II i 236
v ii 122
v ii 502
I iii 466
„ Pro. 416
Chancellorship {continued) in my c I more than once have
gone against the Church,
often in your c you served The follies of the King.
What say'st thou to the C of England ?
Change (s) in the whirl of c may come to be one.
Beyond the seas — a c !
They are but of spring. They fly the winter c —
Beyond all c and m the eternal distance
Sudden c is a house on sand ;
can he trace me Thro' five years' absence, and my
c of name. Prom, oj May n 615
Change (verb) God c the pebble which his kingly
foot
and may c a word again.
He falters, ha ? 'fore God, we c and c ;
it we c at all We needs must do it quickly ;
And I to c my manners, Simon Renard,
offal of the city would not c Estates with him ;
the currents So shift and c.
You do mistake. I am not one to c.
They are not so true. They c their mates.
I will never c word with you again,
backward-working alchemy Should c this gold to
silver,
Changed c not colour when she saw the block,
I have c a word with him In coming.
Pray you, remembering how yourself have c.
Do not seem so c. Say go ;
Much c, I hear. Had put off levity and put
graveness on.
William the Norman, for the wind had c —
The sun himself, should he be c to one.
To see if years have c her.
Changeless The Eternal Peter of the c chair,
wherefore waste your heart In looking on a
chill and c Past ?
Channel His Highness makes his moves across
the C,
Back thro' their widow'd c here.
Chant c's and hymns In all the churches,
Chanted they led Processions, c litanies.
Chanting And c that old song of Brunanburg
He is c some old warsong.
Chaos and all her loves and hates Sing again into c.
Chapel she was passing Some c down in Essex,
To the c of St. Blaise beneath the roof !
the election shall be made in the C Royal,
Chaplain I bad my c, Castro, preach Against these
burnings,
to bear it for thee. Being thy c.
Chaplet And softly placed the c on her head.
Ah ! she had thrown my c on the grass.
Had she not thro^vn my c on the grass,
I wore the lady's c round my neck ;
And then this c — No more feuds, but peace,
present her with this oaken c as Queen of the wood.
Chapman We spared the craftsman, c.
Chapter the King shall summon the c of that Church
to court,
sometimes been moved to tears by a c of fine
writing in a novel ; Prom, of May in 209
Char c us back again into the dust We spring from. Queen Mary m v 55
Charge (care) We gave thee to the c of John of
Salisbury, Becket i i 247
thou wast not happy taking c Of this wild Rosamund ., i i 391
Nor am I happy having c of her — ., i i 394
Charge (imputation, etc.) from the c Of being his
co-rebels ? Queen Mary in i 136
I free From this foul c — Harold n ii 518
By oath and compurgation from the c. „ n ii 521
Bark'd out at me such monstrous c's, Becket iv ii 342
Charge (to enjoin) this I c you. Tell Courtenay
nothing. Queen Mary i iv 189
I c thee, upon pain of mine anathema, Becket i iii 719
c you that ye keep This traitor from escaping. „ v ii 509
Becket I i 28
„ I ii 29
„ ni225
Queen Mary i iii 106
Harold I i 104
„ III ii 97
„ III ii 101
Becket in iii 59
Queen Alary i v 368
in iv 16
in iv 406
in iv 410
III vi 151
IV iii 77
IV iii 409
vi218
Harold in ii 105
Prom, of May i 163
Foresters iv 40
Queen Mary in i 399
„ in iv 14
IV ii 156
V i 215
V ii 509
Harold iv iii 182
Becket in i 57
The Cup I i 125
Queen Mary m iv 380
Prom, of Alay n 504
Queen Mary i iii 135
I V 89
Becket v ii 365
Queen Mary in vi 95
Harold v i 215
„ V i 495
Foresters I ii 330
Queen Mary i v 40
Becket v iii 82
„ I iii 111
Queen Mary m vi 73
Becket i iii 492
The Falcon 362
368
378
631
909
Foresters m 59
„ inl63
Becket i iii 109
\
Charge
864
Child
Charge (to enjoin) (continued) Back ! back ! I c thee, back ! Foresters n i 425
Charge (to accuse) dare you c the King with treachery ? Becket v ii 396
Charge (to rush) and bidd'n him C one against a
thousand, Queen Mary iv iii 309
Charged (enjoined) no, nor if the Pope, C him to do it — „ iv iii 558
He c me not to question any of those About me. Becket ni i 210
Charged (filled) Tho^ c with all the wet of all the west. Harold zi ii \9iS
C with the weight of heaven wherefrom they fall ! „ v i 567
one So e with tongue, that every thread of thought Becket v ii 205
Charing Cross From C C ; the rebels broke us there, Queen Mary n iv 75
Charity sow'd therein The seed of Hate, it blossom'd C. „ iv i 172
Let them flow forth in c, „ iv iii 208
To rival him in Christian c. Becket iii iii 233
Your Christian's Christian c ! ,. v ii 476
Perhaps you judge him With feeble c : The Cup i ii 186
Charles (V., King of Spain, Emperor) rumour that C,
the master of the world. Queen Mary i i 104
He is every way a lesser man than C ; .. i v 330
My master, C, Bad you go softly with your heretics ., i v 391
And C, the lord of this low world, is gone ; ,. v v 54
prattling to her mother Of her betrothal to the
Emperor C, „ v v 233
Charm (s) To draw him nearer with a c Like thine to thine. Harold i ii 8
more than one brave fellow owed His death to the c
in it. The Falcon 635
with his c of simple style And close dialectic, Prom, of May i 223
And her c Of voice is also yours ; „ ii 380
and the country Has many c's, „ n 541
Might have more c for me than all the country. „ n 553
True soul of the Saxon churl for whom song has no c. Foresters ii i 386
Charm (verb) In hope to c them from their hate of
Spain. Queen Mary lu vi 82
May serve to c the tiger out of him. Harold i i 153
kiss that c's thine eyelids into sleep, „ i ii 139
I do not then c this secret out of our loyal Thomas, Becket, Pro. 466
how to c and waste the hearts of men. Foresters ii i 502
Charm'd that wilt not dance However wisely c. Harold i i 387
When you have c our general into mercy, The Cup i ii 311
How c he was ! what wonder ? — A gallant boy. The Falcon 318
ruddiest cheek That ever c the plowman of your
wolds Prom, of May ui 488
Charon Not be my C to the counter side ? Queen Mary m ii 149
Chart This c here mark'd ' Her Bower,' Becket, Pro. 160
but this Draws thro' the c to her. ,, Pro. 173
This c with the red line ! her bower ! „ Pro. 308
The c is not mine, but Becket's : take it, Thomas. „ Pro. 310
Fitzurse, that c with the red line — thou sawest it — „ Pro. 42,1
c which Henry gave you With the red line — ,, i ii 60
Charter Your rights and c's hobnail'd into slush — Queen Mary n ii 278
Where is the c of our Westminster ? Harold in i 194
Chase (s) thyself wast wont To love the c: „ i i 228
More sacred than his forests for the c ? Becket iv ii 25
running down the c is kindlier sport Ev'n than the
death. „ rv ii 218
climb The moimtain opposite and watch the c. The Cup i i 118
I am a life-long lover of the c, „ i i 195
Roused by the clamour of the c he woke, „ i ii 117
Chased C deer-like up his mountains, Harold i ii 148
would have c the stag to-day In the full face The Cup i ii 267
I am c by my foes. Foresters ii i 184
Chasm o'er the c I saw Lord William Howard Queen Mary n iii 28
and flatten in her closing c Domed cities, hear. The Cup n 300
Chaste C as your Grace ! Queen Mary i v 456
Your Grace hath a most c and loving wife. „ in vi 129
The Queen of Philip should be c. „ m vi 132
no wives like English wives So fair and c as they be. Foresters n i 16
Chasten'd So thou be c by thy banishment, Harold iv ii 50
Chastest Thro' c honour of the Decalogue Becket \ i 206
Chattel thou art dispossessed of all thy lands, goods,
and c's ; Foresters I iii 60
Chaomber (chamber) winder at the end o' the passage,
that goas by thy c. Prom, of May i 397
Did 'e git into thy c ? „ 1 400
they ha' ta'en the body up inter your c, „ n 570
By haafe a scoor o' naames — out o' the c. „ m 730
Chaumber (chamber) (continued) Out o' the c ! I'll
mash tha into nowt.
Out o' the c, dang tha !
Check I never knew thee c thy will for ought
C— you move so wildly.
frost That help'd to c the flowing of the blood.
Cheek you stroke me on one c, Buffet the other.
' Wyatt,' as red as she In hair and c ;
gave me a great pat o' the c for a pretty wench,
a c like a peach and a heart like the stone in it —
ruddiest c That ever charm'd the plowman of
your wolds
Here — give me one sharp pinch upon the c
Cheeked See Bed-cheek'd
Cheer (s) good c ! thou art Harold, I am Etlith !
You, Strato, make good c till I return.
Yeas, yeas ! Three c's for Mr. Steer !
Cheer (verb) And c his blindness with a traveller's tales ?
Cheer (chair) they wimt set i' the Lord's c o' that
daay. Queen Mary iv iii 470
Cheerful He, with a c smile, as one whose mind Is
all made up, „ rv iii 587
Cheerless Your people are as c as your clime ; „ v i 83
For me, whose c HourLs after death Are Night and
Prom, of May in 734
in 737
Harold ii ii 120
Becket, Pro. 40
The Falcon 645
Queen Mary n i 117
n ii 76
Becket m i 125
The Falcon 93
Prom, of May in 487
Foresters iv 1012
Harold v i 391
• The Cup I ii205
Prom, of May i 455
n 515
Silence,
Cheese Our Daisy's c's be better.
Buy you their c's, and they'll side with you ;
C ! Filippo. A supper for twelve mites.
And a cat to the cream, and a rat to the c ;
Cherish'd c him Who thief-like fled from his own church
Cherubim golden c With twenty-cubit wings
Prom, of May i 249
Queen Mary rv iii 484
„ IV iii 548
The Falcon 126
Prom, of May I 54
Becket ii ii 155
Harold in i 183
Chess The Game of C. (repeat) Queen Mary i iii 127
Strange game of c ! a King That with her own powers „ i iii 161
Chessmen and these c on the floor — Becket, Pro. 313
Chest Did the c move ! did it move ? Harold n ii 799
Chichester Bishops — York, London, C, Westminster — Becket i iii 385
Chief (adj.) C prelate of our Church, archbishop,
first In Council, Queen Mary iv iii 70
Before the Prince and c Justiciary, Becket i iii 709
Did not some old Greek Say death was the c good ? The Cup n 515
Chief (s) The c of these outlaws who break the law ? Foresters iv 141
Child (See also Childer, Children) of the good Lady
Jane as a poor innocent c
c by c, you know. Were momentary sparkles
I think she entreats me like a c.
she is but a c. We do not kill the c for doing that
the c obey'd her father.
perchance A c more innocent than Lady Jane.
nursery-cocker'd c will jeer at aught
He is c and fool, and traitor to the State.
That if the Queen should die without a c,
no more rein upon thine anger Than any c !
Threaten the c ; ' I'll scourge you if you did it : '
What weapon hath the c, save his soft tongue,
I think the Queen may never bear a c ;
So sick am I with biding for this c. Is it the fashion
in this clime for women To go twelve months in
bearing of a c ?
Her fierce desire of bearing him a c.
Since she lost hope of bearing us a c ?
Alice, my c. Bring us your lute.
But the c came not, and the husband came not ;
in her agony The mother came upon her — a c was
bom —
Now the spoilt c sways both.
my c ; Thou hast misread this merry dream of thine,
tenfold, than this fearful c can do ;
But sickly, slight, half-witted and a c,
From c to c, from Pope to Pope, from age to age,
widow And orphan c, whom one of thy wild barons — Becket, Pro. 188
And when I was a c. The Virgin, „ i i 52
The c Is there already. Rosamund. Yes — the c —
the c— " I. » 292
Who misuses a dog would misuse a c — „ i iv 109
Why, the c will drown himself. „ n i 322
Queen Mary i i 94
I ii 71
I iii 112
I V 61
I V 493
I V 502
n ii 394
II ii 403
„ m iii 75
„ in iv 304
in V 126
in V 128
in V 232
in vi 89
IV iii 429
vi230
V ii 356
V ii 581
V iv 20
Harold i i 453
., I ii 97
., Iii 143
.. nii572
„ V i 329
ChUd
865
Christ
Child (continued) And one fair c to fondle ! Becket ni i 12
the c We waited for so long — heaven's gift at last — ,. m i 13
But then the c is such a c. ,. m 1 20
what's an apple, you know, save to a e, and I'm no c, „ in 1 141
like the gravedigger's c I have heard of, trying to ring
the bell, „ m iii 73
Thou art the prettiest c I ever saw. „ iv i 7
Your own c brought me hither ! ,, iv ii 13
C, I am mine own self Of and belonging to the King. „ iv ii 29
so it chances, c, That I am his main paramour, ,. iv ii 38
— ^my c is so young, So backward too ; ,, iv ii 84
But the c is so young. You have children — his ; And
mine is the King's c ; ,. iv ii 89
I follow'd You and the c : he babbled all the way. „ iv ii 140
and make Thy body loathsome even to thy c ; ,, iv ii 172
The c . . . No . . . mercy ! No ! „ iv ii 185
His c and mine own soul, and so return. „ v ii 193
Lacking the love of woman and of c. ,, v ii 199
Save him, he saVed my life, he saved my c, „ v iii 9
A c's sand-castle on the beach For the next wave — The Cup i ii 253
that dost inspire the germ with life. The c, „ n 259
and she, A girl, a c, then but fifteen. The Falcon 537
My one c Florio lying still so sick, „ 678
best way out of it, if the c could keep Her counsel. Prom, of May i 476
my c, your prayers will do more
I 585
i640
1771
I 781
I 796
n289
n419
n480
ra362
m397
ni542
ni711
III 759
Iii 311
niill3
IV 5
IV 643
when the man. The c of evolution, flings aside
C, do you love me now ?
I For ever, you foolish c ! What's come over you ?
Ay, c ; and you look thin and pale.
Well, my c, let us join them.
So the c grow to manhood :
— she was his favourite c —
Our old nurse crying as if for her own c,
so that you do not copy his bad manners ? Go, c.
' My dear C, — I can do no more for you.
C, read a little history, you will find
C, can't you see ? Tell them to fly for a doctor.
A c, and all as trustfid as a c !
C, thou shouldst marry one who will pay the mortgage. Foresters i i 279
by this Holy Cross Which good King Richard gave me
when a c —
Nor leave a c behind him '
Has never glanced upon me when a c.
C, thou shalt wed him. Or thine old father will go mad
Childer (childrea) theer be a thousand i' the parish,
taakin' in the women and e ;
Them be what they lams the c' at school,
Childhood Away from Philip, Back in her c —
Childish No — the c fist That cannot strike again.
Childless 'Tis written, ' They shall be c'
Evil for good, it seems. Is oft as c of the good
Than all my c wealth, if mine must die.
^Childlike ask'd him, c : ' Will you take it ofi
i great motion of laughter among us, p&rt real,
1 part e, Becket in iii 155
' i part c again — when we felt we had laughed too long „ m iii 159
iHiildlike- jealous And c-j of him again — Qv^en Mary v v 234
^3uldren (See also Child, Childer) These princes are
like c, must be physick'd,
Dumb c of my father, that will speak
cannot tell How mothers love their c ;
naturally may love his people As these their c ;
The man had c, and he whined for those.
Away ! Women and c !
So that we may, as c penitent,
Watch'd c playing at their life to be.
They had not reach'd right reason ; little c !
wholesome scripture, ' Little c, Love one another.'
but they play with fire as c do, And burn the house.
His c and his concubine, belike.
To the poor flock — to women and to c —
fire seem To those three c like a pleasant dew.
burnt The heretic priest, workmen, and women and c.
Old, miserable, diseased, Incapable of c.
That tread the kings their c imder-heel —
Prom, of May 1 146
in 39
Queen Mary v v 231
Harold IV iii 30
Queen Mary i ii 65
Harold v i 172
The Falcon 855
Queen Mary m i 401
and her c — canst thou not — that secret matter
IV 234
ni 77
niil90
n ii 193
n ii 335
n iii 97
m iii 153
iniv63
niiv 73
m iv 85
in vi28
IV i 165
IV ii 159
IV iii 91
vvl07
vvl79
Becket, Pro. 213
Children (continued)
for me
And thereupon he call'd my c bastards.
You have c — ^his ; And mine is the King's child ;
new-made c Of our imperial mother see the show.
More specially sick c, have strange fancies,
who call'd the mind Of c a blank page,
they tell me that you — and you have six c —
and when the c grew too old for me,
love that c owe to both I give To him alone.
Child-world The miserable see-saw of our c-w,
Chill (adj.) Come, come, you are c here ;
wherefore waste your heart In looking on a c and
changeless Past ? Prom, of May a 504
Chill (s) He caught a c in the lagoons of Venice, Queen Alary v ii 515
Chill (verb) — your north c's me. Becket, Pro. 330
Will c the hearts that beat for Robin Hood ! Foresters rv 1064
Chilled He warmed to you to-day, and you have c him
again.
Chime fawn upon him ? C in with all ?
Low words best c with this solemnity.
world is beautiful If we were happy, and could c in
with it. Prom, of May i 678
Chin both her knees drawnupward to her c. Queen Mary v ii 392
Becket i iv 143
„ rvii44
ivii90
The Cup n 164
The Falcon 817
Prom, of May n 282
in77
m 386
Foresters rv 7
Queen Mary iv iii 385
m V 275
Becket u ii 375
Harold 1 ii 167
The Cup n 217
Pro. 486
Not in my c, I hope ! That threatens double
China as she has broken My c bowl.
Chink (crevice) A twilight conscience lighted thro' a c ;
— a c — he's out. Gone !
Chink (verb) wholesome use of these To c against the
Norman,
Chirp we will c among our vines, and smile
Chivalry yet I hate him for his want of c.
He loves the e of his single arm.
Choice The c of England is the voice of England.
William. I will be king of England by the
laws. The c, and voice of England.
Tostig's banishment, and c of Morcar,
To do with England's c of her own king ?
weight down all free c beneath the throne.
The wiser c, because my sleeping-draught
Choir To the c, to the c ! Becket. Shall I too pass to
the c.
Choose not so set on wedlock as to c But where I
list,
dead I cannot c but love her.
Pray God the people c thee for their king !
there the great Assembly c their king,
C therefore whether thou wilt have thy conscience
c A hundred of the wisest heads from England,
Still c Barabbas rather than the Christ,
Choosing old Northumbrian crown. And longs of our
own c.
Chop Would you not c the bitten finger off.
Chord touch No c in me that would not answer
Chosen thought I might be c Pope, But then with-
drew it.
coming from the people. And c by the people —
c by his people And fighting for his people !
and c me For this thy great archbishoprick,
Hoped, were he c archbishop,
for her beauty, statehness, and power, Was c Priestess
Christ (See also Christ Jesus, Jesus Christ) And stand
within the porch, and C with me :
and kindled with the palms of C !
sworn upon the body and blood of C I'll none
but Philii).
And keep with C and conscience —
And clasp the faith in C ;
what saith C ? ' Compel them to come in.'
White as the light, the spotless bride of C,
Like C himself on Tabor,
And be with C the Lord in Paradise.
Either to live with C in Heaven with joy,
seen the true men of C lying famine-dead by scores,
the one King, the C, and all things in common,
Becket n i 250
The Falcon 524
Harold m i 66
Becket i i 259
Harold m i 22
The Cup I iii 170
Foresters I ii 107
IV 786
Harold n ii 128
IV i 104
V i 19
Becket i iii 118
„ rv ii 168
„ V iii 73
Qu^n Mary n ii 214
m i 340
Harold i i 314
„ n ii 127
„ n ii 282
Becket n ii 170
„ n ii 390
Harold rv i 33
Queen Mary m iv 206
The Falcon 456
Queen Mary v ii 82
Harold v i 387
„ V i 490
Becket i i 90
„ I iii 442
The Cup n 17
Queen Mary i ii 51
I V 94
I V 215
I V 558
m ii 122
m iv 29
m iv 200
„ m iv 201
„ IV iii 88
IV iii 220
V iv 38
„ V iv 53
3 I
Christ
866
Church
Harold v i 332
Becket i iv 241
„ II ii 216
„ n ii 391
Queen Mary i ii 9
n i 64
V ii 62
Harold in ii 150
Becket i iii 116
„ ivii325
Harold ii i 63
Queen Mary v iv 55
Becket i iv 87
„ V ii 424
Queen Mary i i 30
„ III V 46
V ii 304
The Cup I ii 158
Queen Mary i iv 51
III i 110
Christ {c<mtinued) Or till the Pope be C s.
for I be his lord and master i' C, my lord.
if they were defective as St. Peter Denying C,
Still choose Barabbas rather than the C,
Christchurch Deans Of C, Durham, Exeter, and
W'ells
Christendom your worship the first man in Kent and C,
So brands me in the stare of C A heretic !
Poitou, all C is raised against thee ;
make Our island-Church a schism from C,
vou are known Thro' all the courts of C
'''^f Sanl'"" "" ^"'"'' '"" '""' "^'"^^ V- Mary in iv 300
yet what hatred C men Bear to each other, „ rr i» 182
The C manhood of the man who reigns ! Harold n iU4
The kingliest Abbey in all C lands, " "i i ^*
We willnot give him A C burial : " J' ^^
To rival him in C charity. ^«^''«« '" \» 233
Your Christian's C charity ! " * | **^
Christian (s) But for your C, look you, you shall have „ ii J ^^'
Your C's Christian charity ! „ v n *< j
More like the picture Of C in my ' Pilgrun s
Progress' ^ . „ From, of May niblQ
Christian-charitiest human-heartedest, C-c of all crab
Christ Jesus (See also Christ, Jesus Christ) as in the
day of the first church, when C J was King,
our lords and masters in C J.
Christmas (adj.) Are braced and brazen d up with C
wines
Christmas (s) for thou art as white as three C ses.
Chronicle and my poor c Is but of glass.
be defamed Thro' all her angry c's hereafter
And swallow'd in the conqueror's c.
Chrysalis like a butterfly in a c, You spent your life ;
Chlik'd England now Is but a ball c between France
and Spain, „, ^u ui i
Church (adj.) clench'd their pirate hides To the bleak c ^^^^^^ ^^ jjj 37
stirZt'yet This matter of the C lands. Queen Maryi v 409
Thou art the man to fill out the C robe ; Becket, Pro. 262
In the c rope ?— no. . , , „. " ^° "' ^
Church (s) {See also Island-Church) not to yield His .rH'^R
C of England to the Papal wolf And Mary ; Queen Mary i n 36
Have I climb'd back into the primal c,
All the c is grateful.
to play The tyrant, or in commonwealth or c.
Let the great angel of the c come with him ;
Henry broke the carcase of your c To pieces,
Steadying the tremulous pillars of the C —
Ay, even in the c there is a man — Cranmer.
Can we not have the Catholic c as well
of all censures Of Holy C that we be fall'n mto,
received into the bosom And unity of Universal C ;
islands call'd into the dawning c Out of the dead,
Father hath appointed Head Of all his c,
to the bosom And unity of Universal C.
but now. The unity of Universal C, Mary would
have it ; -.in
Old Rome, that first made martyrs m the C,
What, my Lord ! The C on Peter's rock ? never !
It was the shadow of the C that trembled ;
Your c was but the shadow of a c,
Began to batter at your English C,
we should thoroughly cleanse the C withm
bolster'd up The gross King's headship of the C,
The C's evil is not as the King's,
Legate Is here as Pope and Master of the C,
I kept my head for use of Holy C ;
and plunge His foreign fist into our island G
Then have my simple headstone by the c,
that His c May flourish.
Yet to save Cranmer were to serve the C,
' Martyr's blood—seed of the C Mary. Of the
true C ; but his is none,
Queen
Church (s) (continued) read your recantation Before
the people in St. Mary's C.
farewell ; Until I see you in St. Mary's C.
Against the huge corruptions of the C,
O higher, holier, earlier, purer c,
in the c Repeat your recantation in the ears
that hath return'd To the one Catholic Universal C,
So poisoning the C, so long continuing.
Chief prelate of our C, archbishop,
misreport His ending to the glory of their c.
Crying ' Forward ! ' — set our old c rocking.
Out of the c, you brace of cursed crones,
stood More like an ancient father of the C,
For Alva is true son of the true c —
When I should guide the C in peace at home.
The scourge and butcher of their English c.
as in the day of the first c, when Christ .Jesus
was King.
And done such mighty things by Holy C,
and your c'es Uncouth, unhandsome,
I have builded the great c of Holy Peter :
and saw the c all fiU'd With dead men
king Hath given his virgin lamb to Holy C
loved within the pale forbidden By Holy C :
Scared by the c—
Their anthems of no c, how sweet they are !
Remains beyond all chances and all c'es.
Our Saints have moved the C that moves the world,
made too good an use of Holy C To break her close !
Our C in arms— the lamb the lion—
I vow to build a c to God Here on the hill of battle ;
being brought before the courts of the C,
The C in the pell-mell of Stephen's time
The C should hold her baronies of me,
to whom thou art bound By Holy C.
I, true son Of Holy C— no croucher to the bregones
King, C, and State to him but foils wherein
Believing I should ever aid the C —
if there ever come feud between C and Crown,
The people know their C a tower of strength,
I more than once have gone against the C.
C should pay her scutage like the lords. , . , „
That I should go against the C with him. And 1 shall
go against him with the C,
I ii 50 My truest and mine utmost for the C ?
I v 178 For how have fought thine utmost for the C,
I v 192 • 'I mean to fight mine utmost for the C, Against the
IV 377 King'?
I V 398 I am his no more, and I must serve tne c.
I V 518 they are Royal, Not of the C—
III i 169 these new railers at the C May plaister
in iii 97 Knowing how much you reverence Holy C,
III iii 152 Are not so much at feud with Holy (^
III iii 155 That C must scorn herself whose fearful Priest
in iii 172 The C must play into the hands of kings ;
in iii 208 And take the C's danger on myself.
in iii 221 The customs of the C are Peter s rock.
Wilt thou destroy the C in fighting for it,
III iii 229 ' If any cleric be accused of felony, the C shall not
III iv 127 protect him ; . ., , ^ ^ ^, „
III iv 134 Is not the C the visible Lord on earth :*
m iv 144 A fit place for the monies of the C,
in iv 146 the King shall summon the chapter of that c to court,
ni iv 186 He meant no harm nor damage to the C.
ni iv 196 He heads the C against the King with thee,
ni iv 246 Herbert, Herbert, have I betray d the C if
in iv 273 bad me seal against the rights of the C,
ni iv 347 murders done By men, the scum and offal of the c ;
in iv 359 C and Crown, Two sisters gliding in an equal dance,
III iv 364 As Chancellor thou wast against the C,
in V 114 The spire of Holy C may prick the graves—
in vi 69 The C will hate thee. .
IV i 136 Fight for the C, and set the C agamst me !
set the C This day between the hammer and the anvil
IV i 147 and no forsworn Archbishop Shall helm the C.
Mary iv ii 1
„ IV ii 41
IV ii 101
IV ii 108]
IV ii IS
IV iii 2]
IV iii
IV iii 70
„ IV iii 32
,, rv iii
IV iii 53
,. IV iii 58
V i 16
V ii(
V ii IC
V iv 55
V V 74
Harold i i 164
I i 179
I ii 81
„ in i 3a5
„ ni ii 24
in ii 87
,. in ii 91
„ iniil83
V i 41
„ V i 313
,. V i 440
„ V ii 137
Becket, Pro. 13
„ Pro. 19
„ • Pro. 24
„ Pro. 68
„ Pro. 211
„ Pro. 268
„ Pro. 417
„ Pro. 465
I i 15
1 130
I i 34
I i 93
I i 114
I i 118
I i 124
I i 146
I i 169
I i 307
I ii 48
„ I ii 54
„ I ii 64
„ I ii 68
I ii 72
I iii 24
I iii 36
I iii 87
I iii 93
I iii 105
I iii 109
I iii 217
I iii 245
I iii 285
I iii 313
I iii 409
I iii 443
I iii 529
I iii 553
I iii 565
I iii 569
I iii 584
I iii 598
Chnrcb
867
City
Church (s) {continued) now the ^lory of the C Hath
swallow'd up the gloiy of the King;
Whatever the C owns — she holds it in Free and
perpetual alms,
The soul the body, and the C the Throne,
The King, these customs, all the C,
The C is ever at variance with the kings,
Were the C king, it would be otherwise,
for the sake of the C itself, if not for my own,
And I have been as royal with the C.
Shrink from me, like a daughter of the C.
Quarrel of Crown and C— to rend again.
We never hounded on the State at home To spoil the C.
Holy C May rock, but will not WTeck,
Who thief -like fled from his own c by night,
all the C of France Decide on their decision,
thanks of Holy C are due to those That went before us
we grant the C King over this world's kings,
— the green field — the gray c — , , -n
Agree with him quickly again, even for the sake of the C.
The C alone hath eyes— and now I see That I was
blind-
Perish she, I, all, before The C should suffer wrong !
I have been more for the King than the C in this
matter — yea, even for the sake of the C :
so violated the immemorial usage of the C,
half-hanged himself in the rope of the C, or rather
pulled all the C
but Salisbiiry was a calf cowed by Mother C,
puffed out such an incense of unctuosity into the
nostrils of our Gods of C and State,
hurl the dread ban of the C on those
The State will die, the C can never die.
God's grace and Holy C deliver'd us.
He grovels to the C when he's black-blooded.
The C is all— the crime to be a king.
I have overshot My duties to our Holy Mother C,
Are push'd from out communion of the C.
Hath used the full authority of his C
The C ! the C ! God's eyes ! I would the C were down
in hell !
crying On Holy C to thunder out her rights
she would not believe me, and .she wish\l The C were
king:
and our Mother C for bride ;
Divide me from the mother c of England, My Canterbury
chants and hymns In all the c'es,
pass the censures of the C On those that crown d young
Henry
my dream foretold my martyrdom In mine own c.
Undo the doors : the c is not a castle :
Seen by the C in heaven, the C on earth —
Except they make submission to the C.
—for thy C, O Lord— Into thy hands, .
tho' he never comes to c, I thought better of him. Prom, of May i 2bl
Thrones, c'es, ranks, traditions, customs, >. i ^^
Ring, trinket of the C, , , , , " I aZt
Not in our c— I think I scarce could hold my head up „ i.t>»»
and the weight of the c to boot on my shoulders. Foresters i ii 58
weight of the flesh at odd times overbalance the
weight of the c,
which a pious son of the C gave me this mommg
Thou hast roU'd over the C militant
C and Law, halt and pay toll !
When the C and the law have forgotten God s music,
Beware, O King, the vengeance of the C.
let me execute the vengeance of the C upon them.
the vengeance of the C ! Thou shalt pronounce the
blessing of the C .. , , , •.. , •
tararoh-bond that stale C-b which Imk'd me with him
Church-censure I fear C-c's like your King.
OiiSch-land We have given the c-Z's back: ^^^,1^^ i S32
Churchless Back from her c commerce with the King Becket iv ii 66^
{Jhurchman her needle perfect, and her learning , qao
B^ond the churchmen; Quern Mary in i 362
Becket i iii 665
„ I iii 679
I iii 717
„ I iii 726
1 iv 78
.. I iv 104
., I iv 153
n i 83
„ n i 278
n ii 56
nii97
II ii 102
n ii 156
n ii 176
II ii 190
II ii 242
uii296
II ii 378
II ii 436
m iii 20
III iii 65
III iii 73
m iii 76
in iii 96
in iii 116
in iii 210
in iii 336
IV ii 309
ivii436
vi26
vi38
vi59
vi207
vi216
vii31
V ii 118
V ii 221
vii360
V ii 367
V ii 391
vii634
V iii 62
V iii 98
V iii 123
V iii 194
iii 62
in 281
IV 272
IV 429
IV 554
IV 914
iv916
IV 926
Becket iv ii 447
„ IV ii 434
Cbxactmasi (continued) being English c How should __
he bear the headship of the Pope ? Quem Mary in in 28
And by the c's pitiless doom of fire, .. ™*^ioi
lives Of many among your churchmen were so foul „ in iv 191
Statesman not C he. ^i^^ket, Fro. 450
thou, that art c too In a fashion. Foresters iv 410
Church-policy State-policy and c-p are conjoint. Queen Mary iii ii 76
Church-tower sets the e-i over there all a-hell-fire a^
it were ? Becket in in 51
Churchwarden C be a coomin, thaw me and 'im we
niver 'grees about the tithe ; Prom., of May I 446
Churl Thine, thine, or King or c ! Harold m u 37
he speaks to a noble as tho' he were a c, and to a c Becket, Fro. 'idb
C! I will have thee frighted into France, „ .^.."q^c
Yea, heard the c against the baron— ,, ' '" ^SR
Lout, c, clown ! P^om. of May ni 739
True soul of the Saxon c for whom song has no
charm. Foresters n i o8o
scares The Baron at the torture of his c's, „ ni 106
Chum To sing, love, marry, c, brew, bake, and die. Queen Mary in v 111
Cider-crop they'll hev' a fine c-c to-year if the blossom
'o^yds. Prom, of May i 316
Cinder I wish some thunderbolt Would make this
Cole a c Queen Mcinj iv in II
lava-torrents blast and blacken a province To a c,
hear. ^''* ^^V " ^^
Cinnamon Nard, C, amomum, benzoin. - ^ J|*
Cipher Ha! Courtenay's c. Queen Mary tii}M
Circe Our woodland C that hath witch'd the King ? Becket m. n d2
Circling See, first, a c wood, " ^'"O- 161
Circumbendibuses all manner of homages, and observ-
ances, andc. „ ^"'ViV^^^
Circumstance The painful c's which I heard— Prom, of May n mz
Cistercian as I hate the dirty gap in the face of a C monk, Becket ii ii 381
Cite And c thee to appear before the Pope, ,, i "l."^
Cited He hath c me to Rome, for heresy. Queen Mary v ii 4Z
Citizen (See also Fellow-citizen) c's Stood each before
his shut-up booth,
With execrating execrable eyes. Glared at the c.
we pray That we, you true and loyal c's.
And see the c's arm'd. Good day ;
Ay, and for Gardiner ! being English c.
The c's heir hath conquer'd me For the moment.
Our gallant c's murder'd all in vain.
Would clap his honest c's on the back,
Here comes a c, and I think his wife.
City After him, boys ! and pelt him from the c.
make Your c loyal, and be the mightiest man
How look'd the c When now you past it ?
Like our Council, Your c is divided.
So I say Your c is divided,
on you. In your own c, as her right, my Lord,
I leave Lord William Howard in your c,
We thank your Lordship and your loyal c.
I have notice from our partisans Within the c
scum And offal of the c would not change Estates
with him; , „ .. " ,^ ^^.'." I!J
Saints to scatter sparks of plague Thro' all your cities, Harold n ii 747
A hill, a fort, a c— that reach'd a hand » ^^ ! ^
another hill Or fort, or c, took it, .. iv i 50
Would God she were— no, here withm the c. Becket, Fro. im
Last night I followed a woman in the c here. ,. Pro. 469
there stole into the c a breath Full of the meadows, ., 1 1 261
where to seek ? I have been about the c. ■• i.i ^98
I made him porcelain from the clay of the c— ,. i lu 439
if the c be sick, and I cannot call the kennel sweet, ., n ii 348
n ii 62
n ii 68
n ii 135
n ii 378
„ in iii 24
Becket n ii 60
The Cup I ii 142
„ I ii 358
Foresters m 227
Queen Mary i iii 86
n ii 19
n ii 57
n ii 60
n ii 99
n ii 106
II ii 245
11 ii 301
„ n iii 52
plagues That smite the c spare the solitudes.
My lord, the c is full of armed men.
she told us of arm'd men Here in the c.
These arm'd men in the c, these fierce faces —
myrtle, bowering-in The c where she dwells.
Brought me again to her own c ?—
in a c thro' which he past with the Roman anny ;
in some c where Antonius past.
Most hke the c rose against Antonius,
viil73
V ii 187
v ii 228
V iii 3
The Cup I i 4
„ I i 14
„ ii42
„ I ii 56
„ I ii 62
City
868
CSty (continued) The Roman is encampt without your c — The Cup i ii 84
The camp is half a league without the c; „ i iii 90
and flatten in her closing chasm Domed cities, hear. „ ii 301
as she was helping to build the mound against the c. Foresters n i 309
CSvil Would perish on the c slaughter-field, Queen Mary in i 118
The c wars are gone for evermore : „ in v 150
for that would drag The cleric before the c judgment-seat, Becket i iii 84
Civil-spoken He's a Somersetshire man, and a very c-s
gentleman. Prom, of May i 207
' Good daay then, Dobson ! ' C-s i'deed ! „ i 301
Claim (s) beast might roar his c To being in God's
image, Queen Mary iv iii 368
know'st my c on England Thro' Edward's promise : Harold n ii 12
Who hath a better c then to the crown „ ii ii 596
Wilt thou uphold my c ? „ ii ii 603
Claim (verb) the people C as their natural leader — Queen Mary i iv 210
Foliot may c the pall For London too. Becket i iii 55
Claim'd C some of our crown lands for Canterbury — „ i iii 458
Clamour Roused by the c of the chase he woke. The Cup i ii 117
with no fear Of the world's gossiping c, Prom, of May i 528
Clamour'd The c darling of their afternoon ! The Cup n 125
Clan The weakness and the dissonance of our c's, „ i i 24
' I go to fight in Scotland With many a savage c ; ' Foresters i i 15
Clang evexy parish tower Shall c and clash Queen Mary ii i 230
Iron on iron c, Harold rv iii 160
Clank c The shackles that wiU bind me to the waU. „ ii ii 409
Clap Except I c thee into prison here, Becket v i 110
Would c his honest citizens on the back, The Cup i ii 358
Clapt (adj.) we shall hear him presently with c wing Crow
over Barbarossa — Becket u ii 49
Clapt (verb) Which a young lust had c upon the back, Queen Mary iv iii 401
they c their hands Upon their swords when ask'd ; „ v i 172
wicked sister c her hands and laugh'd ; Harold v ii 48
i' the poorch as soon as he c eyes of 'er. Prom, of May i 23
Clarence (lady in waiting to Queen Mary) C, they
hate me ; even when I speak
he may bring you news from Philip. Mary.
C, C, what have I done ?
Our C there Sees ever such an aureole
Clash (s) cries, and c'es, and the groans of men ;
Clash (verb) every parish tower Shall clang and c
Let all the steeples c,
If ever, as heaven grant, we c with Spain,
Smooth thou my way, before he c witli me ;
sing, Asaph ! c The cymbal, Heman !
and king's favour might so c That thou and I —
Clash'd c their bells, Shot off their l3dng cannon,
Tho' earth's last earthquake c the minster-bells,
Clashing Ye make this c for no love o' the customs
Sceptre and crozier c, and the mitre Grappling
Less c with their priests —
C of swords — three upon one, and that one our Robin ! Foresters ii i 419
Clasp And c the faith in Christ ; Queen Mary in ii 122
c a hand Red with the sacred blood of Sinnatus ? The Cup rr 82
waiting To c their lovers by the golden gates. Prom, of May i 248
I fall before thee, c Thy knees. ~"
I thought I saw thee c and kiss a man
Thou see me c and kiss a man indeed,
Fancied he saw thee c and kiss a man.
I have seen thee c and kiss a man indeed,
Claspt Then c the cross, and pass'd away in peace.
My lord, We have c your cause.
Clause the c's added To that same treaty
Claw Such hold-fast c's that you perforce
Clay (See also Adam-clay) Statesmen that are wise
Shape a necessity, as a sculptor c,
Our altar is a mound of dead men's c,
I made him porcelain from the c of the city —
Clean (See also Cle&Q) And cried I was not c, what
should I care ?
May plaister his c name with scurrilous rhymes !
that Is c against God's honour —
Only see your cloth be c.
Clean The feller's c daazed, an' maazed, an' maated, Prom, of May n 728
Cleanse we should thoroughly e the Church within Queen Mary in iv 195
Cloak
Queen Mary 1 i
1
Queen Mary v ii 214
So, C. ,. V ii 230
V ii 338
V ii 412
Harold m i 375
Queen Mary ii i 230
III ii 237
„ IV iii 346
Harold n ii 69
„ m i 187
Becket, Pro. 296
Queen Mary ni vi 95
Becket v iii 41
„ I iii 136
H i 25
., n ii 147
Foresters n i 599
n ii 72
n ii 76
ra23
IV 1035
Queen Mary v v 259
Becket n ii 237
Queen Mary m iii 67
Becket n ii 86
Queen Mary in iii 33
V ii 162
Becket i iii 438
Queen Mary v ii 324
Becket i i 308
„ n ii 163
The Falcon 420
in iv 230
V iii 115
Clear (adj.) Stand back, keep a c lane !
In c and open day were congruent With that vile
Cranmer
So from a c sky falls the thunderbolt !
I think that they would Molochize them too, To have
the heavens c. Harold i i 38
Like on the face, the brows — c innocence ! Becket n i 195^
Hath he stray'd From love's c path into the conmion bush, „ m i 247
a bat flew out at him In the c noon, and hook'd him
by the hair, Foresters n ii 97
Clear (verb) his last breath C Courtenay and the
Princess Queen Mary ra i 135.
I bad them c A royal pleasaunce for thee, Becket ii i 127
I say that those Who went before us did not wholly c
The deadly growths of earth, „ n ii 202
Fasts, disciplines that c the spiritual eye, „ v i 42
Clear'd The king, the lords, the people c him of it. Harold n ii 522
I've bed the long barn c out of all the machines, Prom, of May i 451
Clearer gray dawn Of an old age that never will be
mine Is all the c seen. Queen Mary v ii 236.
Cleave (to adhere) and c unto each other As man and
wife?
in hope the crown Would c to me that but obey'd
— if I win her love. They too will c to me,
I'll c to you rich or poor.
C to him, father ! he will come home at last.
Cleave (to divide) bright sky c To the very feet of God,
C heaven, and send thy saints that I may say
blow that brains the horseman c's the horse, ~
Cleaved thro' all this quarrel I still have c to the crown,
Cleaving Is like the c of a heart ;
C to your original Adam-clay,
Cleft c the tree From off the bearing trunk.
And c the Moslem turban at my side.
Clench'd fierce forekings had c their pirate hides
Cleric A c lately poison'd his own mother,
whether between laymen or c's, shall be tried in the
King's court.'
would drag The c before the civil judgment-seat,
' If any c be accused of felony, the Church shall not
protect him ;
A c violated The daughter of his host,
Say that a c murder'd an archbishop,
the lady holds the c Lovelier than any soldier,
Your c hath your lady.
Lifted our produce, driven our c's out —
Clever And speak for him af ter^-you that are so c !
Cliff Make blush the maiden-white of our tall c's,
make their wall of shields Firm as thy c's,
voice of the deep as it hollows the c's of the land
Cliff-gibbeted they should hang C-g for sea-marks :
Clifford (See also Rosamund, Rosamund de Clifford)
minded me Of the sweet woods of C,
The mouth is only C, my dear father.
I am a C, My son a C and Plantagenet.
Climb we will c The mountain opposite and watch the
chase.
He c's the throne. Hot blood, ambition,
Climb'd Have I c back into the primal church.
Last night I c into the gate-house, Brett,
Hath c the throne and almost clutch'd the crown ;
That hath c up to nobler company.
his poUtic Holiness Hath all but c the Roman perch
V ii 137
Becket v i 50
The Cup I iii 154
Foresters i i 155
I i 197
Harold n ii 742
n ii 785-
V i 593
Becket v i 48
Queen Alary in vi 196
„ rv iii 418
Harold m i 137
Foresters TV 1001
Harold rv iii 35
Becket, Pro. 10
I iii 80
I iii 84
I iii 86>
„ I iii 382
„ I iii 399
„ v i 193
„ V i 200
„ V ii 432
Prom, of May i 620
Harold ii ii 333
V i 480
Becket n i 4
Harold n i 97
and it
Becket i i 264
„ II i 220'
„ IV ii 226
The Cup I i 116
n 168
Queen Mary I ii 49
„ n iii 14
Becket, Pro. 21
I i 351
n ii 46
Clime Is it the fashion in this c for women
Your people are as cheerless as your c ;
Cling now thy love to mine Will c more close,
C to their love ; for, now the sons of Godwin
women C to the conquer'd, if they love,
I c to you all the more.
Your names wiU c like ivy to the wood.
Clinging c thus Felt the remorseless outdraught
c to thee Closer than ever.
Clip rather than so c The flowery robe of Hymen
dipt The common barber c your hair,
Cloak like his c, his manners want the nap
Queen Mary in vi 90'
V i 84
in ii 160
Harold i i 324
„ IV i 213
Foresters i i 160
IV 1085
Harold n i 7
Becket n i 285
The Cup n 435
}iieen Mary iv ii 131
ni V 69
Cloak
869
Cold
Cloak (continued) Wrap them together in a purple
A ragged c for saddle — he, he, he,
Clock Toll of a bell, Stroke of a c,
so they bided on and on till vour o' the c.
Cloister Thou art my nun, thy c in mine arms.
then would find Her nest within the c.
Get thou into thy c as the king Will'd it :
Those arm'd men in the c.
Cloister'd She must be c somehow, lest the king
The silent, c, solitary life.
Cloistral Retiring into c solitude
Close (adj. and adv.) Can you bee? Elizabeth. Can
you, my Lord? Courtenay. C as a miser's
casket. Listen : „ i iv 106
They call me near, for I am c to thee And England — Harold in i 6
with his charm of simple style And c dialectic. Prom, of May i 225
Harold v ii 158
Becket v i 248
Queen Mary iil v 143
„ IV iii 510
Harold I ii 63
„ IV i 234
., V i 309
Becket v iii 50
Harold I ii 157
,, III i 277
Queen Mary in vi 209
n361
II 535
ni 227
Foresters ill 50
From the farm Here, c at hand
C by that alder-island in your brook,
you kept your veil too c for that when they carried
you m ;
but call Kate when you will, for I am c at hand.
Close (an end) Gone narrowing down and darkening
M to a c. Queen Mary iv iii 432
war with Brittany to a goodlier c Than else had been, Harold ii ii 49
And never a flower at the c ; (repeat) Becket, Pro. 332, 342
<9ose (verb) all too much at odds to c at once Quec-n, Mary i v 632
Tell her to come and c my dying eyes, ., v ii 599
tell the cooks to c The doors of all the offices below. .. v v 116
To make all England one, to c all feuds, Harold rv i 141
Over! the sweet summer c'*, (repeat) Becket, Pro. 302, 324, 331
that the rift he made May c between us, ., n ii 132
C the great gate — ho, there — upon the town. ., v ii 529
Will c with me that to submit at once The Cup i ii 140
c not yet the door upon a night That looks half day. „ i ii 387
She — c the Temple door. Let her not fly.
and warm hands c with warm hands,
dosed (adj. and part.) on a soft bed, in a c room, with
light, fire, physic, tendance ; Queen Mary v iv 36
Thro' all c doors a dreadful whisper crept Becket v ii 88
or c For ever in a Moorish tower. Foresters ii i 655
CSOBed (verb) King c with me last July That I should pass Becket v ii 388
CSoser Might it not Be the rough preface of some c
^ bond?
So that your sister were but look'd to c.
Hast thou not mark'd — come c to mine ear —
clinging to thee C than ever.
Why, an old woman can shoot c than you two.
flOoset listening In some dark c.
Get thee into the c there.
Closing gulf and flatten in her c chasm Domed cities, hear.
Cloth {See also Cloth of gold, Dust-doth) Only see your
c be clean. The Falcon 420
see your c be white as snow ! „ 498
2\oQxe His faith shall c the world that will be liis. Queen Mary in ii 180
And tropes are good to c a naked truth,
c's itself In maiden flesh and blood,
:!lothed stand C with the full authority of Rome,
C with the mystic silver of her moon.
31oth of gold That royal commonplace too, cog,
]loud (s) {See also Thunder-cloud) then King Harry
look'd from out a c,
under no ceiling but the c that wept on them,
be as the shadow of a c Crossing your liglit.
Come, Harold, shake the c off !
Fall, c, and fill the house —
Customs, traditions, — c's that come and go ;
As Canterbury calls them, wandering c's.
My sun, no c ! Let there not be one frown in this one hour,
Out of the c, my Sun — out of the eclipse
n460
Foresters i iii 20
Queen Mary i iv 48
I V 461
V i 225
Becket n i 286
Foresters n i 400
Queen Mary v ii 217
Foresters ii i 215
The Cup II 300
in iv 150
Foresters in 115
Becket v ii 493
Foresters n i 608
Queen Mary in i 54
„ IV ii 7
„ V iv 40
Harold n ii 177
in i 74
„ III i 190
Becket i iii 22
I iii 71
ni42
II i 202
black c that hath come over the sun and cast .. ni iii 46
King at last is fairly scared by this c — this interdict. ., in iii 64
My princess of the c, my plumed purveyor The Falcon 7
upon me Thro' that rich c of blossom. Prom, of May n 250
Aiid the white c is roll'd along the sky ! Foresters i ii 319
Flung by tJhe golden mantle of the c, „ ii i 28
Cloud (verb) C not thy birthday with one fear for me. Foresters i ii 125
Cloudless But c heavens which we have foimd together The Cup i ii 415
Clown Their A B C is darkness, c's and grooms May
read it ! Qiteen Mary in iv 35
one that pares his nails ; to me ? the c ! „ iii v 66
Insolent c. Shall I smite him Becket i iv 223
less loyalty in it than the backward scrape of the c's heel — „ in iii 144
parish-parson bawl our banns Before your
gaping c's ? Prom, of May i 687
How the c glared at me ! that Dobbins, is it, „ n 611
Lout, churl, c ! „ in 739
Club See Wa>club
Cluckt The hen c late by the white farm gate, „ i 38
Clumsy O the c word ! Rohin. Take thou this light
kiss for thy c word. Foresters ill 133
You lovers are such c summer-flies „ iv 10
Clung these earls and barons, that c to me, Becket i iv 66
Clutdi Here is one would c Our pretty Marian for his
paramour, Foresters iv 766
Clutch'd and almost c the crown ; Becket, Pro. 22
Coal {See also Coal) As one that blows the c to cool the
fire. „ V ii 549
my father and I forgave you stealing our c's. Prom, of May m 69
Co&l cotched 'im once a-stealin' c's an' I sent fur 'im, „ i 412
Coalscuttle fell agean c and my kneea gev waay „ i 403
Coarse This hard c man of old hath crouch'd to me Queen Mary iv ii 169
but neither cold, c, cruel. And more than all — „ v ii 481
Coarseness This c is a want of phantasy. „ v ii 438
Coat And carve my c upon the walls again ! „ ii iv 110
This Gardiner tum'd his c in Henry's time ; ,, in iii 17
Down with him, tear his c from his back. Foresters i iii 73
Cobbled for mine own father Was great, and c. Harold iv i 91
Cobbler the psahn-singing weavers, c's, scum — Queen Mary iii iv 290
Cock Our Lord Becket's our great sitting-hen c, Becket i iv 126
He was the c o' the walk ; Foresters n i 320
Cockboat he look'd the Great Harry, You but his c ; Queen Mary v ii 147
Cocker'd See Nursery-cocker'd
Cockerel thou'rt no such c thyself, „ i i 41
Cockle-shell Scuttle his c-s ? Harold iv iii 142
Cocksbody It must be thus ; and yet, c ! Queen Mary in iii 4
He's here, and king, or will be — yet c ! „ in iii 45
Codlin as sleek and as round-about as a mellow c. Foresters i i 43
Coesnon from the liquid sands of C Haled Harold n ii 56
Coffin like Mahound'^s c hung between heaven and earth — Becket u ii 361
Cognisant told Sir Maurice there was one C of this. Queen Mary ii iv ICX)
Wyatt did confess the Princess C thereof, „ ir iv 113
Coif Disguise me — thy gown and thy c. Foresters u i 187
^Y^ ^Yj gown, c, and petticoat, „ ii i 194
Coil'd And c himself about her sacred waist. „ n i 138
Coin He can but read the king's face on his c's. Harold i i 71
Spare not thy tongue ! be lavish with our c's, Becket ii ii 470
cast him from their doors Like a base c. The Cup i ii 353
Then after we have eased them of their c's Foresters ni 173
Co-king C-k's we were, and made the laws together. Becket n ii 123 '
Cold (adj.) {See also Cowd, Ice-cold) Madam, me-
thinks a c face and a haughty. Queen Mary i v 196
If c, his life is pure. „ i v 333
They call him c. Haughty, ay, worse. „ i v 431
know that whether A wind be warm or c, „ i v 620
Ay, and then as c as ever. Is Calais taken ? „ v ii 26
Ah, Madam, but your people are so c ; „ v ii 281
Thou art c thyself To babble of their coldness. „ v ii 290
but neither c, coarse, cruel. And more than all — „ v ii 481
The c, white lily blowing in her cell : Harold in i 274
Vying a tear with our c dews, „ v i 151
In c, white cells beneath an icy moon — „ v i 325
John of Salisbury Hath often laid a c hand on my heats, Becket i i 384
he makes moan that all be a-getting c. „ i iv 62
C after warm, winter after summer, ,, i iv 64
frosted off me by the first c frown of the King. C, but
look how the table steams, „ i iv 68
You are too c to know the fashion of it. „ n ii 126
And when the c corners of the King's mouth began To
thaw, „ III iii 153
To warm the c boimds of our dying life The Cup i iii 128
Cold
870
Come
The Falcon 578
Foresters I ii 242
11 i 490
III 1
III 4
IV 243
Prom . of May iii 56
The Cup I ii 6
The Falcon 449
Foresters iv 21
IV 27
Becket in i 18
The Falcon 642
Cold (adj.) {continued) It is but thin and c, Not like the
vintage
Why, what a c grasp is thine —
Thou blowest hot and c. Where is she then ?
What makes you seem so c to Robin, lady 't
What makes thee think I seem so c to Robin ?
In the c water that she lost her voice,
Did you find that you worked at all the m orse
upon the c tea
Cold (s) bring him home Safe from the dark and the c,
0 heavens ! the very letters seem to shake With c,
And the bee buzz'd up in the c.
And the bee buzz'd oS in the c.
Colder To-day I almost fear'd your kiss was c —
Cold-manner'd c-m friend may strangely do us The truest
service.
Coldness Thou art cold thyself To babble of their c. Queen Mai-y v ii 292
God's revenge upon this realm For narrowness and c: Harold i i 174
Cole Why are the trumpets blowing. Father C ? Queen Mary iv ii 24
1 wish some thunderbolt Would make this C a cinder, „ iv iii 11
Collar on his neck a c, Gold, thick with diamonds ; ,. m i 79
Colleagued yet the Pope is now c with France ; „ v i 140
Collect c the fleet ; Let every craft that carries „ v ii 273
Morcar, c thy men ; Edwin, my friend — Harold iv i 256
College But the King hath bought half the C of Redhats. Becket uii 374
CoUoquy After the long brain-dazing colloquies, Queen Mary rv ii 92
' „ V ii 613
IV i 101
II ii 182
II ii 321
„ • III 1399
„ in V 5
IV iii 169
IV iii 226
V ii 206
The Falcon 364
Prom, of May u 666
Foresters i i 250
Prom, of May ii 559
The Falcon 364
Becket, Pro. 514
Her Highness is too ill for c.
Colossal Your father was a man Of such c kinghood,
Colonr (s) under c Of such a cause as hath no c.
The c freely play'd into her face.
Who changed not c when she saw the block.
The c's of our Queen are green and white,
Whose c's in a moment break and fly,
declare to you my very faith Without all c.
Whose c's in a moment break and fly ! '
A c, which has colour'd all my life,
C Flows thro' my life again.
He wore thy c's once at a tourney.
OolOTir (verb) She c's ! Bora. Sir !
Colour'd A colour, which has c all my life,
Colt c winced and whinnied and flung up Jier heels ;
Be the c dead ? Dora. No, Father. Prom, of May ni 429
deer from a dog, or a e from a gad-fly. Foresters n i 434
Column For smooth stone c's of the sanctuary, Harold i ii 101
hurls the victor's c down with him That crowns it, The Cup n 295
Co-mate C-^n's we were, and had our sport together, Becket n ii 121
Comb And bind him in from harming of their c's. Queen Mary m iii 58
Combat My lords, is this a c or a council ? Becket i iii 133
Come (See also A-cum, Coom, Coomed) They love
thee, and thou canst not c to harm. Queen Mary i iii 67
These birds of passage c before their tune : ., i iii 75
And in the whirl of change may c to be one. ,. i iii 107
Prince of fluff and feather c To woo you, „ i iv 163
This c's of parleying with my Lord of Devon. ,, i iv 251
Your time will c. Elizabeth. I think my time
will c. „ 1 iv 255
C, e, I will go with you to the Queen. ,. i iv 297
Madam, the Lord Chancellor. Mary. Bid him c in. „ i v 97
C you to tell me this, my Lord ? „ i v 106
Bid him c in. Good morning, Sir de Noailles. „ i v 241
Let the great angel of the church c with him ; „ i v 377
To save your crown that it must c to this. „ i v 479
No, Renard ; it must never c to this. „ i v 482
he will not c Till she be gone. „ i v 512
For Philip c's, one hand in mine, „ i v 515
No, say I c. I won by boldness once. „ i v 547
Why c s that old fox-Fleming back again ? „ i v 581
Her Highness c's. „ i v 635
No new news that Philip c's to wed Mary, „ u i 16
Ay, for the Saints are c to reign again. „ ii i 21
I fear you c to carry it off my shoulders, ,, ii i 91
C locusting upon us, eat us up, „ ii i 101
C, you bluster, Antony ! „ n i 118
and if Philip c to be King, 0, my God ! ,. n i 199
C, now, you're sonnetting again. „ n i 247
Come (continued) I trust the Queen c's hither with
her guards. Queen
One word before she c's. ,,
Queen had written her word to c to court : „
Here c's her Royal Grace. „
In mine own person am I c to you,
Your lawful Prince hath c to cast herself
C, sirs, we prate ; hence all — „
Wyatt c's to Southwark ;
thro' thine help we are c to London Bridge ;
make Those that we c to serve our sharpest foes ? ,.
we know that ye be c to kill the Queen, ,,
I have not c to kill the Queen Or here or there : ,.
Whence c you, sir ?
Philip would not c Till Guildford Dudley
An hour will c \^^hen they will sweep her from the seas. ,.
here they c— a pale horse for Death
The Queen c's first, Mary and Philip.
C to me to-morrow. — ,.
He c's, and my star rises. „
Oh, Philip, c with me ; „
Nay c with me — one moment ! „
We c not to condemn, but reconcile; We c not to
compel, but call again; We c not to destroy,
but edify ; " ,
what saith Christ ? ' Compel them to c in.' ,.
' I c not to bring peace but a sword ' ?
The end's not c. Pole. No — nor this way will c,
I c for counsel and ye give me feuds,
pray Heaven That you may see according to our
sight. C, cousin.
C, c, the morsel stuck — this Cardinal's fault —
Rogers and Ferrar, for their time is c,
not like a word. That c's and goes in uttering. ,,
Is like a word that c's from olden days, ,.
But there hath some one c ;
C, Robin, Robin, C and kiss me now ; ,.
C behind and kiss me milking the cow ! „
Rose hand in hand, and whisper'd, ' c away !
Thou last of all the Tudors, c away ! „
When next there c's a missive from the Queen „
For I will c no nearer to your Grace ; „
You know I never c till I be call'd. „
C, c, the worst ! ,.
You are to e to Court on the instant; „
C, c, you are chill here ;
the fools, of this fair prince to c ;
As else we might be — here she c's.
Here c the Cranmerites !
Cranmer, I e to question j'ou again ;
refusing none That c to Thee for succour, unto Thee,
Therefore, I c ;
forasmuch as I have c To the last end of life,
I c to the great cause that weighs Upon my conscience „
So I may c to the fire.
So that she c to rvde us. „
When we had c where Ridley burnt with Latimer,
C out, my Lord, it is a world of fools.
Knows where he nested — ever c's again. „
I am faint with fear that you will c no more. ,.
Sire, I obey you. C quickly. „
Hast thou not mark'd — c closer to mine ear — „
When back he c's at evening hath the door „
they c back upon my dreams.
what good could c of that ? „
And says, he will c quickly.
you said more ; You said he would c quickly. „
And yet he will c quickly ...
And teU him that I know he c's no more. „
Tell her to c and close my dying eyes.
Amen. C on. „
' I am dying, Philip ; c to me.'
Nothing ; but ' c, c, c' and all awry,
I cannot doubt but that he c's again ;
No, Philip c's and goes, but never goes. „
Come
871
Come
Oome (continued) C thou down. Lie there. Queen Mary v v 179
Madam, your royal sister c's to see you. „ v v 192
C, c ! as yet thou art not gone so wild Harold i i 298
C, c, Join hands, let brethi'en dwell in unity ; „ i i 395
Love is c with a song and a smile,
I will demand his ward From Edward when I c again.
C, thou shalt dream no more such dreams ;
tho' I would not That it should c to that.
Not to c back till Tostig shall have shown
Here c's the would-be what I will be . . .
the lark sings, the sweet stars c and go,
I will not hear thee — WiUiam c's.
C hither, I have a power ;
C, Harold, shake the cloud off !
Spare and forbear him, Harold, if he c's !
Pray God that c not suddenly !
not so with us — No wings to c and go.
Ill news hath c ! Our hapless brother,
— the Pope Is man and c's as God. —
This brother c's to save Your land from waste ;
Somewhere hard at hand. Call and she c's.
Who is it c's this way ? Tostig ?
I c for mine own Earldom, my Northumbria ;
C back with him. Know what thou dost ;
C thou back, and be Once more a son of Godwin.
Nay then, c thou back to us !
bracing still that he will c To thrust our Harold's throne
Let him c ! let him c.
Cram thy crop full, but c when thou art call'd.
C yet once more, from where I am at peace,
There is one C as Goliath came of yore —
And thou art c to rob them of their rings !
C, c, thou art but deacon, not yet bishop,
C, c, I love thee and I know thee, I know thee,
C, I would give her to thy care in England
Whatever c between us ? Becket. What should c
Between us, Henry ?
Well — whatever c between us.
C to me to-morrow.
C with me. Let me learn at full The manner of his
death,
and if there ever c feud between Church and Crown,
C, c, my lord Archbishop ;
0 brother ! — I may c to martyrdom.
Customs, traditions, — clouds that c and go ;
Is black and white at once, and c's to nought,
but an he c to Saltwood, By God's death,
should harm c of it, it is the Pope Will be to blame —
snake that sloughs c's out a snake again.
Arm'd with thy cross, to c before the King ?
The King's ' God's eyes ! ' c now so thick and fast,
C on, c on ! it is not fit for us To see the proud Arch-
bishop mutilated.
My lord, I c imwiUingly.
may I c in with my poor friend, my dog ?
C, c ! thou hadst thy share on her.
1 must fly to France to-night. C with me.
C, you filthy knaves, let us pass.
There is a bench. C, wilt thou sit ?
no hand to mate with her, If it should c to that.
C, c, mine hour !
The word should c from him.
I pray you c and take it.
For here he c's to conmient on the time.
No one c's, Nor foe nor friend ;
Always Becket ! He always c's between us.
for here c's my lady, and, my lady,
j if it should c to that ! — To that — to what ?
when the horn sounds she c's out as a wolf.
black cloud that hath c over the sun and cast us all
into shadow ?
so that the smell of their own roast had not c across it
from those, as I said before, there may c a conflagration-
ere Pope or King Had c between us !
That perfect trust may c again between its,
liilO
iii60
iiil08
1 11227
I ii 241
II ii 138
II ii 434
II ii 480
in i 5
mi 73
mi 300
mi 364
ra ii 99
miil20
in ii 174
ivi94
IV i 186
IV ii 1
IV ii 29
ivii 47
rvii59
IV ii 64
IV iii 125
IV iii 132
IV iii 234
vi238
vi493
vii36
Becket, Pro. 82
Pro. 95
„ Pro, 142
„ Pro. 194
„ Pro. 199
„ Pro. 410
., Pro. 424
„ Pro. 464
I i 201
I i 361
I iii 22
I iii 32
I iii 182
I iii 220
I iii 449
I iii 509
I iii 609
I iii 613
I iii 648
I iv 93
I iv 123
„ I iv 154
I iv 203
II i 124
n i 191
II i 212
„ u ii 134
,. II ii 263
n ii 308
III i 37
III i 90
m i 153
in i 259
m ii 23
„ m iii 46
„ m iii 120
„ ui iii 164
„ in iii 268
„ in iii 351
Come {continued) C to me, little one. How earnest thou
hither ? Becket iv i 3
Ay, but some one c's to see her now and then. „ iv i 15
C, here is a golden chain I will give thee „ iv i 40
C along, then ? we shall see the silk here and there, „ iv i 55
I sent this Margery, and she c's not back ; I sent another,
and she c's not back. „ iv ii 3
C with me, love, And I will love thee ... „ iv ii 154
C hither, man ; stand there. „ iv ii 219
C thou with me to Godstow nunnery, „ iv ii 366
What ! Is the end c ? „ v i 148
C you to conf&ss ? „ v ii 71
Hark! Is it they? C! „ v iii 15
C, then, with us to vespers. ,, v iii 34
How can I c When you so block the entry ? „ v iii 36
C in, my friends, c in ! „ v iii 68
C with us — ^nay — thou art our prisoner— c ! „ v iii 143
C ; as he said, thou art our prisoner. „ v iii 155
You c here with your soldiers to enforce The Cup i i 75
Stand aside. Stand aside ; here she c's ! „ I i 105
He c's, a rough, bluff, simple-looking fellow. ,, i i 172
c upon her Again, perhaps, to-day — her. „ i i 179
Nay, here he c's. „ i ii 25
C, c, we will not quarrel about the stag. „ i ii 38
Think, — torture,--death, — and c. „ i ii 314
C, c, could he deny it ? What did he say ? „ i ii 344
If I be not back in half an hour, C after me. „ i ii 439
Will she c to me Now that she knows me Synorix ? „ i iii 19
Nay, she will not c. „ i iii 31
Why c we now ? Whom shall we seize upon ? „ i iii 177
C once more to me Before the crowning, — „ ii 78
Let him c — a legion with him, if he will. „ n 250
Why c's he not to meet me ? „ n 528
C, c, Filippo, what is there in the larder ? The Falcon 117
I knew it would c to this, (repeat) „ 156, 174
I always knew it would c to this ! (repeat) „ 158, 175
C in. Madonna, c in. „ 176
— but c when they will — then or now^it's all for the
best, c when they will — „ 200
Call him back and say I c to breakfast with him. „ 213
His falcon, and I c to ask for his falcon, „ 220
I c this day to break my fast with you. „ 276
Yet I c To ask a gift. .. 298
That seem'd to c and go.
who c's To rob you of your one delight on earth
tho' he never c's to church, I thought better of
him.
when Thought C's down among the crowd.
Heaven curse him if he c not at your call !
For ever, you foolish child ! What's c over you ?
to c together again in a moment and to go on together
again,
C, then, and make them happy in the long barn.
What are you ? Where do you c from ?
The body ! — Heavens ! I c !
C, you will set all right again,
if the farming-men be c for their wages, to -send them
up to me. „ m 16
C, c, you worked well enough, ,. m 61
that you did not c into the hayfield. „ m 82
C, c, keep a good heart ! ,. ni 252
not forgotten his promise to c when I called him. .. in 330
Well, Milly, why do you c in so roughly ? ,, m 342
a Sister of Mercy, c from the death-bed of a pauper, ., ui 376
She would have persuaded me to c back here, „ in 384
Must c to in our spring-and-winter workl „ m 510
C, c, my girl, enough Of this strange talk. „ m 619
C, a, why do ye loiter here ? Foresters i i 79
to c at their love with all manner of homsiges, „ i i 102
' You have c for you saw Wealth coming,' „ i i 152
Cleave to him, father ! he will c home at last. ,. i i 198
have c as freely as heaven's air and mother's milk ? ,. i i 209
Say, we will c. „ i i 302
I c here to see this daughter of Sir Richard of the Lea ,. i ii 26
the Earl and Sir Richard c this way. ,. i ii 148
650
827
Prom, of May i 261
I 501
1764
I 772
1 774
I 790
n359
u572
n658
Come
Come (contintted) I cannot answer thee till Richard c.
Sheriff. And when he c's ? Marian. Well, voii
must wait till then.
C away, daughter.
But if the better times should never c ?
And if the worst time c ?
Have they c for me ? Here is the witch's hut.
C m, c in ; I would give my life for thee,
Cm,cin. John. Why did ye keep us at the door so long '
He will c to the gibbet at last.
And here c's another.
C now, I fain would have a bout with thee.
C to him. Marian. O my poor father !
there c's a deputation From our finikin fairy nation
warm thy heart to Little John. Look where he c's '
we be beggars, we c to ask o' you. We ha' nothing
Here cs a, citizen, and I think his wife.
872
Common
Foresters i ii 221
I ii 283
I ii 288
I ii 290
ni 177
nil88
II i 222
ni328
II i 399
ui552
n ii 7
II ii 144
in 46
III 190
m227
m413
in 422
IV 18
IV 25
IV 36
and I pray you to c between us again,
c between me and my Kate and make us one again
So c, c ! ' Hum ! '
But c,c\' ' Hum ! '
Till thou thyself shalt c to sing it — in time.
thou seest the land has c between us, And my sick father
here has c between us And this rich Sheriff too has c
between us ;
But will they c ?
if they c I will not tear the bond,
but here c's one of bigger mould.
Rogue, we c not alone.
save King Richard, when he c's, forbid me.
C, girl, thou shalt along with us on the instant.
You, Prince, our king to c —
When Richard c's he is soft enough to pardon His brother •
and she will not marry till Richard c.
But look, who c's ?
C from out That oak-tree !
Comedy A c meant to seem a tragedy —
players In such a c as our court of Provence
Comelier She looks c than ordinary to-day •
Comely {See also Coomly) Master Dobson^ you are a c
man to look at. p^^ ^j- ^^y ^ jgg
IV 53
iv91
iv97
IV114
IV 573
IV 665
rv678
IV 696
IV 746
IV 773
IV 977
IV 996
Becket iv ii 322
V i 189
Queen Mary i i 70
Comest Why c thou like a death's head at my feast ?
Thou c a very angel out of heaven.
Comet and look upon my face. Not on the c.
That were too small a matter for a c !
Too small ! a c would not show for that !
Put thou the c and the blast together —
Your c came and went.
O^eth Blessed is he that c in the name of the Lord '
Comfort (See also Heart-comfort) And it would be
your c, as I tnist ;
when last he wrote, declared His c in your Grace
I could make his age A c to him —
01^ carters and our shepherds Still find a c there.
ComiOTtable set up your broken images ; Be c to me
Comforted Be c. Thou art the man-
Coming (adj. and part.) (See also A-<50omin', Coomin)
I'^Z^l ®P^^K \u J^^ ""^Q^een ! . Queen Mary i iii 83
C^ardmer, c with the Queen, And meeting Pembroke, , n ii 309
same tide Which, c with our coming, seem'd to smile
They are c now.
Legate's c To bring us absolution from the Pope.
there s the face c on here of one Who knows me
I fain would hear him c ! . . .
leave them for a year, and c back Find them again.
I saw him c with his brother Odo The Bayeux bishop,
^ot c fiercely like a conqueror, now,
First of a line that c from the people,
why, then it is my will— Is he c ?
voice c up with the voice of the deep from the strand.
One c up with a song
Love that is bom of the deep c up with the sun from
the sea. (repeat)
Some dreadful thing is c on me.
He bows, he bares his head, he is c hither.
Foresters i ii 210
n i 105
Harold i i 27
„ I i 471
„ I i 474
., n i 15
., Ill i 359
Becket i iii 758
Queen Mary n ii 225
m vi 79
Prom, of May ii 662
m 529
Queen Mary v ii 301
Becket i i 132
n iii 22
m i 181
ni i 431
m i 470
Harold i ii 5
„ II i 89
„ n ii 347
„ ri ii 757
„ vi386
Becket i iii 474
» II i 5
11 i 9, 19
mi 267
ni iii 34
Coming (adj. and part.) (continued) Is he c ? I thought I
heard A footstep. '
I fear some strange and evil chance C upon me,
walk with me we needs must meet Antonius c, '
Thou-;-c my way too — Gamma— good-night,
there is Monna Giovanna e down the hill from the
castle.
C to visit my lord, for the first time in her life too '
I m c down, Mr. Dobson.
But see they are c out for the dance already.
Hark, Dora, some one is c.
' You have come for you saw Wealth c,'
But they are c hither for the dance-
but the twilight of the c day already glimmers in the east
Is c with a swarm of mercenaries To break our band
mark d if those two knaves from York be c ?
The Cwp I ii 10
I iii 76
I iii 93
II 492
The Falcon 160
169
Prom, of May i 45
I 795
III 339
Foresters i i 152
iii 52
I ii 247
ni452
IV 113
Coming (s) At his c Your star will rise.
at once may know The wherefore of this c,
same tide Which, coming with our e, seem'd to smile
I have changed a word with him In c,
and think of this in your c. ' Maby the Queen.'
And wait my c back.
How oft in c hast thou broken bread ?
with my lady's c that had so flurried me,
I trust he brings us news of the King's c.
To warn us of his c !
We told the Prince and the Sheriff of our c.
Command (s) so my Lord of Pembroke in c Of all her
tJ.Tp'^V^,®'- . „ Queen Mary nil 305
Lord Pembroke in c of all our force n iv 3
I have the Count's c's to follow thee. Harold ii ii 235
1 nave the Count s c s. „ jj 239
But by the King's c are written down, Becket i iii 72
by the King's c I, John of Oxford, r i,i 74
Now, sirs, the King's c's ! " y j" 322
Command (verb) Her Grace the Queen c's you to the " "
Queen Mary i v 410
II ii 138
n iii 22
miv 16
m V 224
III vi 219
Harold iv iii 199
The Falcon 492
Foresters i iii 54
ni458
IV 576
Queen Mary in iii 270
Harold m ii 41
V i 340
V i 456
Becket i iii 752
V ii 325
V ii 375
V ii 383
Foresters iv 868
Harold v i 359
„ V i 614
Becket in i 194
,. Pro. 418
I i 324
„ V iii 163
The Falcon 567
Tower
and c That kiss my due when subject
The king c's thee, woman !
Power now from Harold to c thee hence
King c's you upon pain of death,
C's you to be dutiful and leal To your young King
King c's you to absolve the bishops
King c's you. We are all King's men.
How if the King c it ?
Commandment Obey my first and last c. Go !
They have broken the c of the king !
she kept the seventh c better than some I knoAv on.
Commend He c's me now From out his grave
when thou seest him next, C me to thy friend.
I do c my cause to God, the Virgin,
c them to your ladyship's most peculiar appreciation. ^ ,„ ^ .*,.i,v« ^u,
Commendation his last words were a c of Thomas Becket Becket, Pro 401
commended It has been much c as a medicine. The Falcon 587
Comment here he comes to c on the time. Becket 11 ii 308
Commerce Back from her churchless c with the King iv ii 332
Commission That hastes with full c from the Pope Queen Maru ni ii 51
That our c is to heal, not harm ; „ in iii 185
Our letters of c will declare this plainlier. " m m 222
Commission'd Thou art c to Elizabeth, And not to me ! " v ii 594
I have c thee to save the man : Harold n ii 98
Commissioner You would not cap the Pope's c~ Queen Mary iv ii 123
Commit to whom The king, my father, did c liis
trust ; JJ Jj 208
Committed John of Salisbury c The secret of the bower, '' Becket in iii 4
Common (adj.) the tongue yet quiver'd with the jest
When the head leapt-«o c ! Queen Mary 1 v 477
And thro' this c knot and bond of love, „ u jj 193
The c barber dipt your hair, " „ jj 131
For the pure honour of our c nature, ' jv iii 297
Things that seem jerk'd out of the c rut Of Nature " Harold 1 i 137
JNow must I send thee as a c friend Becket 1 i 341
when murder c As nature's death, j jij 343
Hath he stray 'd From love's clear path into the c bush, ,', ni i 247
Lost in the c good, the c wrong, ,, v ii 40
Common
873
Consent
Oommon (adj.) (continvM) you will find The c
brotherhood of man has been Wrong'd Prom, of May m 543
Common (s) lanker than an old horse turned out to die on
the c. Foresters i i 52
iJommoner Should we so doat on courage, were it c ? Queen Mary ii ii 340
Oommonplace That royal c too, cloth of gold, „ ni i 54
Take thou mine answer in bare c — Becket, Pro. 282
Oommoos however the Council and the C may fence Queen Mary n i 171
Lords and C will bow down before him
And C here in Parliament assembled,
Commonweal That Centaur of a monstrous C,
Commonwealth to play The tyrant, or in c or church.
Communion It is but a c, not a mass : (repeat)
you have put so many of the King's household out
of c,
Are push'd from out c of the Church.
Commmiist I that have been call'd a Socialist, A C,
a Nihilist, —
Companion Leave me now. Will you, c to myself,
sir?
My comrade, boon c, my co-reveller.
His one c here — ^nay, I have heard That,
Company With our advice and in our c.
She will address your guilds and companies.
and these our companies And guilds of London,
I, Lord Mayor Of London, and our guilds and companies
Three voices from our guilds and companies !
With all your trades, and guilds, and companies.
That hath climb'd up to nobler c.
Oh, do not damn yourself for c !
Ay, prune our c of thine own and go !
Compass (s) such a one Was without rudder, anchor,
c — Prom, of May ni 534
Compass (verb) To c which I wrote myself to Borne, Queen Mary v ii 49
Not small for thee, if thou canst c it. Harold i i 477
Compel We come not to c, but call again ; Queen Mary iii iii 187
what saith Christ ? ' C them to come in.' „ in iv 29
for the sake of Sinnatus your husband, I must c you. The Cup i iii 102
Take thou my bow and arrow and c them to pay toll. Foresters ui 263
rni433
III iii 114
III iv 163
I V 191
., IV ii 56, 111
Becket in iii 311
V i 58
Prom, of May iii 585
Queen Mary ni v 212
Becket i iii 460
The Falcon 225
Queen Mary i iii 151
n ii 15
II ii 128
II ii 141
II ii 256
II ii 297
Becket i i 351
„ v ii 523
The Falcon 695
Complain If this be so, c to your young King,
Complexion The peoples are imlike as their e ;
Compliment Mere c's and wishes.
Comport And how did Roger of York c himself ?
Compose to c the event In some such form as least
Compromise But — if let be — balance and c ;
Compurgation freed himself By oath and c
Comrade My c, boon companion, my co-reveller.
My c of the house, and of the field.
C's, I thank you for your loyalty,
Conciliation No more feuds, but peace, Peace and c !
Conclude I c the King a beast ; Verily a lion
Concluded Your audience is c, sir.
Concubine His children and his c, belike.
Condemn We come not to c, but reconcile :
c The blameless exile ? —
The King c's your excommunicating —
If the King C us without trial,
Condemn'd said she was c to die for treason ;
Condition Nay — but there be c's, easy ones,
C's ? What c's ? pay him back His ransom ?
I must not hence Save on c's.
Obey the Coimt's c's, my good friend.
But on c's. Canst thou guess at them ?
Becket v ii 448
Queen Mary v i 89
V ii 596
Becket m iii 85
Queen Mary i v 223
V V 223
Harold ii ii 520
Becket i iii 460
The Falcon 875
Foresters in 78
The Falcon 911
Queen Mary iv iii 411
I V 337
IV i 165
ni iii 186
Becket n ii 395
„ V ii 317
Foresters iv 902
Queen Mary in i 377
Harold n ii 206
n ii 212
n ii 262
., n ii 276
n ii 343
Conduct (See also Safe-conduct) They have given me
a safe c : Queen Mary i ii 101
Conduit The c painted — the nine worthies — ay ! „ ni i 258
Confer and c with her ladyship's seneschal. The Falcon 415
Conference We'll have no private c. Welcome to
England ! Queen Mary v iii 13
convene This c but to babble of our wives? Becket n ii 90
Wyatt did c the Princess Cognisant thereof, Queen Mary n iv 111
Went on his knees, and pray'd me to c In Wyatt's
business, „ ni v 166
c Your faith before all hearers ; „ iv ii 79
Thou shalt c all thy sweet sins to me. Becket ii i 291
Confess (continued) Come, c, good brother, Becket n ii 82
Come you to c ? „ v ii 71
I'll be bound to c her love to him at last. The Falcon 172
Confessed Father Philip that has c our mother for twenty
years, Becket in i 111
Confession Shamed a too trustful widow whom you heard
In her c ; Foresters in 387
Confessor Saving my c and my cousin Pole. Queen Mary v ii 527
No, nor archbishop, nor my c yet. Becket, Pro. 84
for I should find An easy father c in thee. „ Pro. 88
And it is so lonely here — no c. „ n i 290
Thou art the Earl's c and shouldst know. Foresters i ii 55
Confident iSee Over-confident
Confirm Thy naked word thy bond ! c it now Before Harold n ii 693
Name him ; the Holy Father will c him. Becket, Pro. 245
Confirm'd By Heaven's grace, I am more and more c. Queen Mary iv ii 22
Confiscate C lands, goods, money — „ n i 102
Conflagration that hath squeezed out this side-smile
upon Canterbury, whereof may come c. Becket in iii 58
from those, as I said before, there may come a c — „ m iii 165
Confound Their Graces, our disgraces ! God c them ! Queen Mary in i 415
and weave the web That may c thee yet. Harold i i 212
Hath harried mine own cattle — God c him ! „ iv iii 190
Confounded Lest you should be c with it. Queen Mary i iv 178
I am c by thee. Go in peace. Becket i iii 731
Confounder A shaker and c of the realm ; Queen Mary iv iii 40
Confuse C her not ; she hath begun Her life-long prayer. Harold m i 322
Confused Myself c with parting from the King. Becket ni i 237
Confusion And if I breed c anyway — Queen Mary i iii 93
I have heard the Normans Count upon this c — Harold n ii 459
see c fall On thee and on thine house. „ n ii 489
that had found a King Who ranged c's, Becket i iii 371
I see it — some c. Some strange mistake. „ m i 234
And bring us to c. " Prom, of May ii 279
C !— Ah well, well ! „ ni 508
Congratulate Kiss and c me, my good Kate. Foresters iv 1033
Congratulation Madam, I brought My King's c's ; Queen Mary v ii 570
Congruent In clear and open day were c With that vile
Cranmer „ m iv 230
Conjecture (s) My liege, to your c. Becket i ii 50
Conjecture (verb) If Mary will not hear us — well — c — Queen Mary i iv 117
Conjoint State-policy and church-policy are c, „ ni ii 73
Conjured C the mightier Harold from his North Harold rv ii 68
Conquer He told me I should c : — „ rv i 263
And told me we should c. „ iv i 267
Conqner'd and when we fought I c, „ i i 446
we are Danes, Who c what we walk on, „ rv i 38
and women Cling to the c, if they love, „ rv i 213
His conqueror c Aldwyth. „ rv i 218
when at thy side He c with thee. „ rv iii 29
chanting that old song of Brunanburg Where England c. „ v i 216
citizen's heir hath c me For the moment. Becket n ii 60
Conqueror Not coming fiercely like a c, now, Harold ii ii 757
If not, they cannot hate the c. „ iv i 215
His c conquer'd Aldwyth. „ rv i 218
York crown'd the C — not Canterbury. Becket in iii 197
■ — fight out the good fight — die C. „ v iii 191
And swallow'd in the c's chronicle. The Cup i ii 158
Conscience And keep with Christ and c — Queen Mary i v 558
Convicted by their c, arrant cowards, ,, n ii 9
This was against her c — would be murder ! „ m i 418
which God's hand Wrote on her c, „ in i 422
cause that weighs Upon my c more than anything „ iv iii 238
have thy c White as a maiden's hand, Harold n ii 283
A c for his own soul, not his realm ; „ m i 63
A twilight c lighted thro' a chink ; ,. m i 65
That scared the dying c of the king, „ v i 211
Who like my c never lets me be. Becket v ii 75
— the crowd would call it c — Prom, of May n 638
What pricks thee save it be thy e, man ? Foresters iv 626
Consecrate sware To c my virgin here to heaven — Harold in i 276
Consent (s) with the c of our lord the King, and by the
advice Becket i iii 111
Consent (verb) I would never C thereto, nor marry
while I live ;
Queen Alary ii ii 231
Consent
874
Cottage
Harold \ i 6
Becket i iii 138
Queen Mary I v 271
III i 210
III ii 237
„ III iv 389
Harold ii ii 644
Becket u ii 178
„ n ii 182
mill
Queen Mary v i 144
Becket m i 7
Queen Mary I iv 137
Prom, of May in 22
Queen Mary iv iii 48
IV 176
Consent (verb) {continued) Ay ... if the Witan will c to
this. Harold ii ii 616
Consider Pray — c — Queen Mary i iv 141
But as to Philip and your Grace — c, — ,. v iii 65
Consistory In full c, When I was made Archbishop, „ v ii 84
Consonant As may be c with mortality. „ iv iii 419
Consort I dream'd I was the c of a king, Becket v i 144
Conspiracy With some c against the woli. The Cup i ii 16
There will be more conspiracies, I fear. Queen Mary iv iii 433
Tliis is the fifth c hatch d in France ; „ v i 297
Rome has a glimpse of this c ; The Cup i ii 233
Conspirator But if he be c, Rome wUl chain, Or slay him. „ i i 18
Rome never yet hath spar'd c. „ i ii 234
Constancy draws From you, and from my c to you. Tlie Fahon 812
Constant callous with a c stripe, Unwoundable. Queen Mary v v 171
and had my c ' No ' For aU but instant battle.
Constitution for no love o' the customs, Or c's.
Content (adj.) Must be c with that; and so, farewell.
They smile as if c with one another.
So the wine run, and there be revelry, C am I.
Is now c to grant you full forgiveness,
I am c. For thou art truthful.
Decide on their decision, I am c.
Let him do the same to me — I am c.
No woman but should be c with that —
Content (verb) C you, Madam ; You must abide my
judgment,
Let it c you now There is no woman that I love
Continue And so you may c mine, farewell,
I am sorry Mr. Steer still c's too unwell to attend
to you.
Continuing So poisoning the Church, so long e,
Control but I am Tudor, And shall c them.
Controversy I here dehver all this c Into your royal hands. Becket ii ii 136
Convene did we c This conference but to babble of our wives ? „ ii ii 89
Convent praised The c and lone life — within the pale — Harold i ii 47
\\'hat monk of w'hat c art thou ? Foresters i ii 205
Conventional Then, if we needs must be c. Prom, of May i 684
For these are no c flourishes. „ n 562
Conventionalism C, Who shrieks by day at m hat she
does by night.
Conversion He is glorified In thy c :
doubt The man's c and remorse of heart.
Converted Ay, that am I, new c.
Convicted C by their conscience, arrant cowartls.
Coo Ringdoves c again, All things woo again.
Coo'd The stock-dove c at the fall of night,
And the stock-dove c, till a kite dropt down.
Cook tell the c's to close The doors of all the offices
below.
But the hour is past, and our brother, Master C,
Cookery I know your Norman c is so spiced.
Cool (adj.) C as the light in old decaying wood ;
Cool (verb) As one that blows the coal to c the fire.
Noa , not yet. Let 'er c upon it ;
Cooler What power this c sun of England hath
Coom (come) Why c awaay, then, to the long bam.
he c's up, and he calls out among our oan men,
and see that all be right and reg'lar fur 'em af oor he c.
leastwaays they niver c's 'ere but fur the trout i' our beck,
but c, c ! let's be gawin.
C along then, aU the rest o' ye !
C, c, that's a good un.
but if iver I c's upo' Gentleman Hedgar agean.
Why, c then, owcl feller, I'll tell it to you ;
now she be fallen out wi' ma, and I can't c at 'er.
How c thou to be sa like 'im, then ?
An' ow c thou by the letter to 'im ?
she moant c here. What would her mother saay ?
but he'll c up if ye lets 'im.
Coomberland (Comberland) .\n' how did ye leave the owd
uncle i' C?
So the owd uncle i' C be dead. Miss Dora,
Coom'd (came) I c upon 'im t'other daay lookin' at the
coontry, „ 1 201
I 531
Queen Mary iv iii 83
IV iii 108
I iii 47
n ii 9
III V 103
From, of May i 41
I 55
Queen Mary v v 116
Becket i iv 60
Harold u ii 810
Queen Mary TV ii 5
Becket v ii 549
Prcrn. of May II 132
Qiieev Mary ni iv 327
I'rom. of May i 35
I 139
1 170
I 212
I 425
I 442
I 467
II 136
II 202
II 601
II 712
n716
in 458
in 481
i68
nl
Coom'd (came) {continued) afoor I c up he got thruff
the winder agean.
He c up to me yisterdaay i' the haayfield,
when owd Dobson c upo' us ?
Coomed (come) Miss Dora be c back, then ?
I be c to keep his birthdaay an' all.
I warrants ye'll think moor o' this young Squire Edgar
as ha' c among us —
you be c — what's the newspaaper word, Wilson ?
darters to marry gentlefoiilk, and see what's c on it.
The owd man's c agean to 'issen,
Coomin (coming) Churchwarden be a r, thaw me and 'im
we niver 'grees about the tithe ;
'ow should I see to laame the laady, and mea c along
pretty sharp an' all ?
Coomly (comely) C, says she. I niver thowt o' mysen i'
that waay ;
' C to look at,' saj'S she — but she said it spiteful-
like. To look at — yeas, ' c ' ;
Coontry (comitry) I coom'd upon 'im t'other daay lookin'
at the c.
Cope How should we c with John ?
I cannot c with him : my wrist is strain'd.
Coppice saw your ladyship a-parting wi' him even now i'
the c.
Copse how he fells The mortal c of faces !
Copy so that you do not c his bad manners ?
Cord there is axe and c.
Each of us has an arrow on the c ;
I am here, my arrow on the c
Core For thou and thine are Roman to the c.
Sound at the c as we are.
Co-rebels from the charge Of being his c-r's ?
Co-reveller My comrade, boon companion, my c-r,
Cork like a bottle full up to the c, or as hollow as a kex.
Com dash The torch of war among your standing c,
Much c, repeopled towns, a realm again.
Comer do not you Be seen in c's with my Lord of
Devon.
And whisking roimd a c, show'd his back
skulk into c's Like rabbits to their holes.
The hog hath tumbled himself into some c,
the cold c's of the King's mouth began to thaw
Comhill Where dost thou live ? Man. In C
Comwall C's hand or Leicester's : they write marvellously
aUke.
Cornwallis (Sir Thomas) Sent C and Hastings to the
Prom, of May i 405
n 150
II 232
I 13
I 75
1 110
I 319
nll7
III 702
I 443
ni96
1 175 I
1 179
I 202
Foresters i iii 7&
IV 312
Becket m i 161
Harold v i 589
Prom, of May m 361
Queen Mart/ m iv 47
Foresters TV 607
IV 733
Queen Mary in ii 230
Foresters m 102
Queen Mary ni i 137
Becket i iii 460
Foresters iv 210
Harold n ii 750
Becket i iii 377
Queen Man/ i iv 154
Hi 131
„ II iv 55
Becket I i 370
„ in iii 153
Queen Mary in i 317
Becket i iv 51
Being bounden by my c oath To <lo men
een Mary n ii 31
Becket i iii 396
„ V ii 329
„ V ii 542
Harold V i 67
„ nii381
traitor.
Coronation (adj.)
justice.
Coronation (s) would make his c void By cursing those
Corpore Gratior in pulchro c virtus.
Corpse c thou whelmest with thine earth is cursed,
Corpse-candles C-c gliding over nameless graves —
Corridor My window look'd upon the c ; Queen Mary v ii 459
I was in the c, I saw him coming with his brother Harold n ii 346
Corroborate C by your acts of Parliament : Queeti Mary n ii 173
Cormpt Manners be so c, and these are the days of Prince
John. Foresters i i 177
Cormption Against the huge c's of the Church, Queen Mary iv ii 100
sucking thro' fools' ears The flatteries of c — Becket i iii 362
Cost (s) be The one man, he shall be so to his c. Queen Mary in iii 276
mi 201
IV i 173
I V 370
Becket rv ii 29&
The Cup II 365
The Fahon 228
Cost (verb) some secret that may c Philip his life
' After his kind it c's him nothing,'
Costly into some more c stone Than ever blinded eye.
Well— WeU— too c to be left or lost.
Bring me The c wines we use in marriages.
And this last c gift to mine own self,
Cotched (caught) my kneea gev waay or I'd ha' c 'im. Prom, of May i 404
c 'im once a-stealin' coals an' I sent fur 'im, „ i 412
'A c ma about the waaist. Miss, „ ni 118
Cottage (adj.) while the smoke floats from the c roof, Foresters i ii 318
Cottage (s) Stops and stares at our c. The Falcon 162
Welcome to this poor c, my dear lady. „ 270
And welcome turns a c to a palace. „ 273
Cottage
875
Courage
Cottage (s) (continued) Lady, you bring vour light into
my c " The Falcon 284
My palace wanting you was but a c ; My c, while you
grace it, is a palace. „ 287
In c or in palace, being still Beyond your fortunes, „ 289
you could whitewash that c of yours Prom, of May ni 43
Make for the c then ! Foresters u i 210
Couch'd with mine old hound C at my heartli. Queen Mary ni i 46
Cough No fever, c, croup, sickness ? Becket v ii 169
Could How c you — Oh, how c you ? — nay, how c I ? Prom, of May i 716
Council (adj.) I hear them stirring in the C Chamber. Queen Mary i v 628
Council (s) both bastards by Act of Parliament and C. .. i i 25
the c and all her people wish her to marry. i i 112
Those that are now her Privy C, sign'd Before me : .. i ii 22
She cannot pass her traitor c by, .. i ii 40
The C, people, Parliament against him ; ,. i v 78
we will leave all this, sir, to our c. .. i v 318
Your C is in Session, please your Majesty. .. i v 543
And when the C would not crown me — ,. i v 555
An instant Av or No ! the C sits. ,. i v 591
The C ! Mary. Ay! My Philip is all mine. ,. i v 639
Gardiner knows, but the C are all at odds, ,. ii i 139
however the C and the Commons may fence round
his power ,. n i 171
The C, the Court itself, is on our side. .. ii i 192
And four of her poor C too, my Lord, .. ii ii 42
What do and say Your C at this houry ii ii 46
The C, The Parliament as well, are troubled waters ; .. n ii 49
Like our C, Your city is divided. „ ii ii 59
But we sent divers of our C to them, ., ii ii 152
theretoward unadvised Of all our Privy C; .. ii ii 205
heard One of your C fleer and jeer at him. .. ii ii 393
Lord Paget Waits to present oiu- C to the Legate. .. iii ii 98
And she impress her wrongs upon her C, .. ni vi 184
Cranmer, it is decided by the C That you to-day .. iv ii 26
Or seek to rescue me. I thank the C. .. iv ii 39
I must obey the Queen and C, man. .. iv ii 164
causes Wherefore our Queen and C at this time ,. iv iii 36
which our Queen And C at this present ,. iv iii 56
first In C, second person in the realm, ., rv iii 72
came to sue Your C and jourself to tleclare war.
(repeat) ,. v i 108, 114
Alas ! the C will not hear of war. ,. v i 163
the C (I have talked with some already) are for war. .. v i 294
Tell my mind to the C — to tlie Parliament : „ v ii 288
Then our great C ^vait to crown thee King — ■ Harold m i 3
Siding with our great C against Tostig, „ in i 59
Nay — but the c, and the king himself, ,. ni i 170
And oiur great C wait to crown thee King. „ ni i 406
Thou gavest thy voice against me in the C — ., iv ii 78
I, John of Oxford, The President of this C, Becket i iii 76
My lords, is this a combat or a c ? ., i iii 134
whene'er your royal rights Are mooted in our c's — ,. i iii 431
Let us go in to the C, where our bishops „ i iii 547
Councillor Place and displace our c's, Queen Mary n ii 160
Your faithful friend and trusty c. .. iv i 89
From c to caitiff — fallen so low, ., iv iii 75
is it then with thy goodwill that I Proceed against
thine evil c's, Becket in iii 209
It may be they were evil cs. „ in iii 216
Counsel (advice) I follow your good c, gracious uncle. Queen Mary i iv 186
She hath harken'd evil c — .. i v 54
So would your cousin, Cardinal Pole ; ill c ! „ i v 406
I come for c and ye give me feuds, ,. in iv 307
Good c yours — No one in waiting ? .. v v 202
Good c truly ! I heard from my Northumbria
yesterday. Harold i i 330
Good c tho' scarce needed. „ i i 376
My one grain of good c which you will not swallow. Becket ii ii 379
second grain of good c I ever proffered thee, ., in iii 318
Summon your barons ; take their c: ,, v i 75
a man may take good c Ev'n from his foe. ,. v ii 3
Counsel (deliberation) You should have taken c with your
frientls „ v ii 555
My c is already taken, John. „ v ii 560
Counsel (deliberation) (continued) Have shut you
from our c's.
Counsel (secret) if the child could keep Her c.
Counsel (verb) means to c your withdrawing To
Ashridge,
Till when, my Lords, I c tolerance.
Harold, I do iioL c thee to lie.
0 good son Louis, do not c me,
Counsell'd Emperor c me to fly to Flanders.
1 had c him To rest from vain resistance.
Queen Mary in iv 320
Prom, of May i 478
Queen Mary i iv 224
III iv 203
Harold n ii 416
Becket ii ii 219
Queen Mary i v 549
The Clip II 413
Counsellor who am your friend And ever faithful c, Queen Mary i v 135
Count (S) and C's, and sixty Spanish cavaliers, .. m i 51
I might dare to tell her that the C — ,. y ii 524
What C ? Magdalen. The Count de Feria, Z \ ii 530
Sir C, to read the letter which you bring. ., v ii 555
My Lord C ? Her Highness is too ill for colloquy. 1 v ii 612
I shine ! What else, Sir C? „ v iii 17
Is not the Norman C thy friend and mine ? 'Harold 1 i 247
C of the Normans, thou hast ransom'd us, ., u ii 157
C, I thank thee, but had rather Breathe the free wind ..' 11 ii 184
With bitter obligation to the C — ., u {{ 221
I have the C's commands to follow thee. ,. n ii 234
I have the C's commands. n ii 239
'Tis the good C's care for thee ! |] n ii 251
Obey the C's conditions, my good friend. ., n ii 276
C ! if there sat within the Norman chair .' h ii 532
Sir C, He had but one foot, _ jj ii 574
I, the C — the King — Thy friend — ." h ii 753
perjury-mongering C Hath made too good an use " V i 311
The Norman C is down. ', y i 553
Can I speak with the C ? The Falcon 180
Where is the C ? Elisabetta. Just gone To fly his
falcon, 208
' Get the C to give me his falcon, '. 241
' I should be well again If the good C would give me ' ,, 838
There is one that should be grateful to me overseas, a
C in Brittany— Foresters 1 i 271
Count (verb) (I c it as a kind of virtue in him. Queen Mary i iv 193
she c's on you And on myself as her tw 0 hands ; „ 11 ii 104
As for the Pope I c him Antichrist, „ jy iii 277
C's his old beads, and hath forgotten thee. Harold n ii 447
I have heard the Normans C upon this confusion — „ 11 ii 459
Take and slay me, I say. Or I shall c thee fool. „ tv ii 16
tho' I c Henry honest enough, yet when fear creeps Becket in iii 60
Why now I c it all but miracle, The Cup i iii 37
However, staying not to c how many, The Falcon 627
C the money and see if it's all right. Prom, of May ni 64
Count-crab and our great C-c will make his nippers Harold 11 i 76
Counted When all men c Harold would be king, „ v n 132
Countenanced but the backs 'ud ha' c one another, Becket in i 147
Counter not Spear into pruning-hook — the — c way— Harold v i 442
Counter-bond To bring their c-b into the forest. Foresters iv 89
Counterpoint Veer to the c, and jealousy Queen Mary in vi 180
Country (adj.) Far liefer had I in my c hall ,. m i 43
She means to counsel your withdrawing To
Ashridge, or some other c house. „ j ly 226
Country (s) (See also Coontry) there's no gloiy Like
his who saves his c : ,. 11 i 110
I swear you do your c wrong. Sir Ralph. ,', m i 153
and the c Has many charms. Prom, of May ii 540
not only love the c. But its inhabitants too ; „ n 545
Might have more charm for me than all the c. „ n 554
to save his c, and the liberties of his people ! Foresters i i 246
You are those that tramp the c, „ m 193
Countryfolk Not leave these c at court. Becket 11 i 129
Countryman —home your banish'd c. Queen Mary in ii 31
Earls, Thanes, and all our countrymen ! Harold iv iii 48
Country-wives poor garrulous c-^c. Queen Mary iv iii 547
County is not the cause of a c or a shire, „ u i i62
and make Musters in all the cowities; ,' y ii 272
went abroad Thro' all my counties, ' Becket i iii 363
Couple as the new-made c Came from the Minster, Queen Mary in i 94
They hunt in c's, and when they look at a maid Foresters 1 i 256
Courage C, sir, That makes or man or woman Qneen Mary n ii 328
Should we so doat on c, were it commoner ? „ n ii 33^
Conrage
876
Cow
Courage (continued) All greed, no faith, no c !
And bad me have good c;
Have c, your reward is Heaven itself.
C, noble Aldwyth !
C, c ! and all will go well.
Course So far my c, albeit not glassy-smooth,
sat Thro' every sensual c of that full feast
Queen Man/ in i 146
IV ii 8
v ii 108
Harold I ii 182
Prom, of May III 215
Beckei i iii 379
Prom, of May n 254
Court (s) (See also Hampton Court) You've but a duU
life in this maiden c, Queen Mary i iii 114
And certain of his c. ,, i iii 133
but all things here At c are known ; ,, i iv 58
I freed him from the Tower, placed him at C ; „ i v 164
You have sent her from the c, „ i v 462
heard Slanders against Prince Philip in our C? „ i v 571
a fine courtier of the old C, old Sir Thomas. Wyatt.
Courtier of many c's, „ ii i 46
The Council, the G itself, is on our side. „ ii i 192
Queen had written her word to come to c : „ ii ii 118
Before our own High C of Parliament, „ ii ii 234
Your c's of justice will determine that. „ u iv 130
But c is always May, buds out in masques, „ iii v 11
his manners want the nap And gloss of c ; „ in v 71
You are to come to C on the instant ; „ in v 223
you want the sun That shines at c ; „ ni v 277
trifling royally With some fair dame of c, „ m vi 160
The foreign c's report him in his manner „ v ii 511
scarce touch'd or tasted The splendours of our G. Harold n ii 175
Am I in danger in this c ? „ ii ii 237
being brought before the c's of the Church, Becket, Pro. 12
My C's of Love would have held thee guiltless of love — „ Pro. 498
whether between laymen or clerics, shall be tried in the
King's c' „ I iii 81
he shall answer to the summons of the King's c to be
tried therein.' ,, i iii 89
the King shall summon the chapter of that church to c, „ i iii 110
sat in mine own c's Judging my judges, „ i iii 368
Ye haled this tonsured devil into your c's ; ,, i iii 388
If Canterbury bring his cross to c, ,. i iii 511
The King's c's would use thee worse than thy dog — „ i iv 102
Not leave these countryfolk at c. „ ii i 129
you are known Thro' all the c's of Christendom „ tv ii 325
such a comedy as our c of Provence Had laugh'd at. „ v i 189
The fellow that on a lame jade came to c, „ v i 247
I said it was the King's c's, not the King ; ., v ii 114
caUs you oversea To answer for it in his Norman c's. „ v ii 355
The bee should buzz about the C of John. Foresters iv 44
ye shall with us to c. „ iv 951
And we must hence to the King's e. „ iv 1050
Court (verb) Why will you c it By self-exposure ? Becket i i 281
Courtenay (Earl of Devon) (See also Devon (Earl of))
C, to be made Earl of Devon, Queen Mary i i 110
Son G, wilt thou see the holy father Murdered ., i iii 63
AC! aC! „ I iii 74
this fine blue-blooded C seems Too princely for a pawn. „ i iii 165
A C of Devon, and her cousin. „ i iv 86
I charge you, Tell G nothing. „ i iv 192
Hath taken to this C. „ i iv 201
And when your Highness talks of C — „ i v 198
C, Save that he fears he might be crack'd in using, „ ii i 6
Ha ! G's cipher. „ ii i 134
The names of Wyatt, Elizabeth, C, ,, ii ii 95
die with those That are no cowards and no C's. ,, n iv 87
breath Clear C and the Prince&s from the charge „ iii i 135
So they have sent poor C over sea. „ in v 2
C, belike — Mary. A fool and featherhead ! „ v i 127
with full proof Of G's treason ? „ v ii 499
Courteous a man Of such colossal kinghood, yet so c, „ iv i 101
C enough too when he wills ; Foresters i ii 105
Courteousness They shall be handled with all c. „ iv 102
Courtesan He wrecks his health and wealth on c's, Queen Mary i v 168
There may be c's for aught I know The Cup i ii 192
Courtesy But lest we turn the scale of c Harold ri ii 164
that c which hath less loyalty in it than Becket in iii 142
Might not your c stoop to hand it me ? „ iv ii 295
yet of his c Entreats he may be present The Cup ii 247
Courtesy (continued) you are still the king Of c and
liberality.
I trust I stiU maintain my c ;
No other heart Of such magnificence in c
turn back at times, and make C to custom ?
thou didst repent thy c even in the doing it.
Richard's the king of c,
I could but sneak and smile and call it c.
And that is only c by c — But Robin is a thief of c
There — to be a thief of c —
Courtier He was a fine c, he ; Queen Anne loved him.
a fine c of the old Court, old Sir Thomas. Wyatt.
C of many courts,
and a favourer Of players, and a c.
Courtly He said it was not c to stand helmeted Before
the Queen.
Courtly-delicate His bearing is so c-d ;
Cousin (See also Dear-cousin, Legate-cousin, Side-cousin,
Royal-cousin) again to her c Reginald Pole, now
Cardinal ;
but you, c, are fresh and sweet As the first flower
A Courtenay of Devon, and her c.
Nay, pout not, c.
So would your c. Cardinal Pole ;
with what haste I might To save my royal c.
Loyal and royal c, humblest thanks.
We heard that you were sick in Flanders, c.
c, as the heathen giant Had but to touch the ground.
My heart beats twenty, when I see you c. Ah, gentle c.
True, good c Pole ; And there were also those
I believe so, c.
No, c, happy — Happy to see you ;
Sweet c, you forget That long low minster
True, c, 1 am happy.
Our good Queen 8 c — dallying over seas
see according to our sight. Come, c.
C, there hath chanced A sharper harm
And so must you, good c ; —
I knew it, c, But held from you all papers sent by Rome,
To sleep, to die — I shall die of it, c.
Poor c ! Have not I been the fast friend of your life
Ah, c, I remember How I would dandle you upon my
knee
Peace, c, peace ! I am sad at heart myself.
Your pardon, Sweet c, and farewell !
Thou knowest I am his c,
seem at most Sweet guests, or foreign c's.
Cover (s) I saw the c's laying. Philip. Let us
have it.
' Will your Ladyship ride to c to-day ?
Cover (verb) That c's aU.
I saw the hand of Tostig c it.
Coverdale (Bishop of Exeter) Poinet, Barlow, Bale,
Scory, C;
Coveted your hand Will be much c ! What a delicate
one ! „ V iii 44
Covetousness ' Lust, Prodigality, C, Craft, Prom, of May n 284
Cow with my hands Milking the c ? (repeat) Queen Mary in v 88, 95, 102
you came and kiss'd me milking the c. (repeat) Queen Mary in v 91, 98
Come behind and kiss me milking the c ! ,, iii v 105
the c kick'd, and all her milk was spilt. „ in v 266
I had kept My Robins and my c's in sweeter order „ in v 270
The maid to her dairy came in from the c, Prom, of May i 40
I seed that one c o' thine i' the pinfold agean „ 1 190
An' if tha can't keep thy one c v border, „ i 197
take to the milking of your c's, the fatting of your
calves, „ n 92
Hes the c cawved ? Dora. No, Father. „ in 427
Thou hast a c then, hast thou ? Foresters n i 298
How hadst thou then the means to buy a c ? „ ii i 304
but the c ? Robin. She was given ine. „ n i 314
That c was mine. I have lost a c from my meadow. „ n i 325
O sweet sir, talk not of c's. „ ii i 330
wouldst bar me fro' the milk o' my c, „ n i 355
or the c that jumped over the moon. „ ii i 435
The Falcon 293
295
723
Prom, of May u 635
Foresters i ii 243
IV 363
IV 367
IV369
IV 374
Queen Mary n i 33
„ n i 45
Becket i i 79
Queen Mary v v 35
in iv 397
I i 123
I iv 61
I iv 86
I iv 134
IV 405
II iv 78
m ii 3
niu34
m ii 42
III ii 60
ni ii 68
m ii 72
in ii 86
III ii 89
in ii 113
„ III iv 292
„ in iv 332
V ii 28
V ii 39
V ii 44
V ii 128
V ii 132
V ii 140
V ii 159
V ii 204
Harold ii ii 593
Becket n i 135
Queen Mary in vi 258
Prom, of ^lay in 310
Queen Mary v ii 542
Harold iv iii 82
Queen Mary i ii 7
Coward
877
Creature
Coward Convicted by their conscience, arrant c's, Queen Mary ii ii 10
die with those That are no c's and no Courtenays. ,, ii iv 87
I do not love your Grace should call me c. „ ii iv 89
The soft and tremulous c in the flesh ? „ iv ii 107
We have so play'd the c ; „ v v 110
True test of c, ye follow with a yell. Becket i iii 745
I cannot tell why monks should all be c's. „ v ii 582
Why should all monks be c's ? „ v ii 588
what, a truckler ! a word-eating c ! Foresters iv 162
Cowardice Coveteousness, Craft, C, Murder' — Prom, of May ii 285
Cowd (cold) Owd Steer gi'es nubbut c tea to 'is men,
and owd Dobson gi'es beer. Sally. But I'd
like owd Steer's c tea better nor Dobson's beer. „ u 224
we worked naw wuss upo' the c tea ; ,. m 59
and the winders brokken, and the \\eather sa c, ,, m 73
Cow'd The knaves are easily c. Queen Mary in i 330
And being brave he must be subtly c, Harold ii ii 75
but Salisbury was a calf c by Mother Church, Becket m iii 95
Cower My sister c's and hates me. Queen Alary i v 83
would c to any Of mortal build Foresters ii i 688
Cowering we saw thee c to a knight „ ii i 682
Oow-heid only grandson To Wulfnoth, a poor c-h. Harold iv i 70
this c-h, like my father, Who shook the Norman scoundrels „ iv i 79
Cowl C, helm ; and crozier, battle-axe. „ v i 444
I scatter all their c's to all the hells. Becket ii i 93
so that you keep the c down and speak not ? Foresters i ii 22
Why wearest thou thy c to hide thy face ? „ i ii 206
Cowling c and clouding up That fatal star, thy Beauty, Becket i i 311
Onb {See also Count-crab) thou didst stand by her and
give her thy c's, Harold ii i 49
And I'll give her my c's again, „ ii i 52
Fellow, dost thou catch c's ? „ ii i 66
I crawl'd like a sick c from my old shell, Foresters iv 126
Crabb'd by the patient Saints, she's as c as ever. Harold ii i 51
Crab-catcher human-heartedest, Christian-charitiest of all
CMbstick I have a stout c here, which longs to break
itself
Ciack'd he fears he might be c in using,
drave and c His boat on Ponthieu beach ;
winds than that which c Thy bark at Ponthieu, —
thou wouldst hug thy Cupid till his ribs c —
one piece of earthenware to serve the salad in to my
lady, and that c !
Beetle's jewel armour c,
CStackled fire. Like that which lately c underfoot
Ciaft (art, etc.) — a sweet violence. And a sweet c.
violence and the c that do divide The world
shakes at mortal kings — her vacillation, Avarice, c-
woman's fealty when Assailed by C and Love.
' Lust, Prodigality, Covetousness, C,
Craft (vessel) Let every c that carries sail and gun
Craftier shall I play The c Tostig with him ?
Men would but take him for the c liar.
Craftsman We spared the c, chapman.
Crafty Robin was violent. And she was c —
Cram if the truth be gall, C me not thou with honey,
C thy crop full, but come when thou art call'd.
if you c me crop-full I be little better than Famine
in the picture,
Cramm'd dog I c with dainties worried me !
Cramner (Archbishop of Canterbury) pounce like a wild
beast out of his cage to worry C.
Fly, C ! were there nothing else, your name
even in the church there is a man — C.
Ay, Lambeth has ousted C.
were congruent With that vile C in the accursed lie
Our old friend C, Your more especial love,
C and Hooper, Kidley and Latimer,
To spare the life of C.
That C may withdraw to foreign parts,
never seen That any one recanting thus at full. As
C hath,
C is head and father of these heresies.
You sit upon this fallen C's throne ;
„ II i 63
Foresters iv 917
Queen Mary n i 7
Harold ii ii 35
„ n ii 199
Becket, Pro. 505
The Falcon 482
Foresters n ii 160
Queen Mary ni v 53
ra V 109
ni V 120
— Becket u ii 407
The Cup I i 177
Prom, of May ii 284
Queen Mary v ii 275
Harold i ii 165
„ m i 114
Foresters iii 163
Queen Mary m v 108
Harold iv i 16
„ IV iii 234
Foresters i i 46
Becket v i 244
Quee7i Mary i i 89
I ii 15
m i 170
„ ra ii 133
„ m iv 231
„ in iv 417
,. ni iv 424
IV i 4
IV i 45
ivi60
rv i 76
„ IV i 114
Cranmer (Archbishop of Canterbuiy) (continued) To
ours in plea for C than to stand Queen Mary iv i 119
Yet to save C were to serve the Church, „ iv i 135
Than you have shown to C. „ iv i 190
petition of the foreign exiles For C's life. ,, iv i 194
C, I come to question you again ; ,. iv ii 15
C, it is decided by the Council That you to-day ., iv ii 25
Pray you write out this paper for me, C. „ iv ii 61
' what am I, C, against whole ages ? ' „ rv ii 104
And make you simple C once again. „ iv ii 129
Which was not pleasant for you. Master C. ,, iv ii 137
How are the mighty fallen, Master C ! .. rv ii 147
We are ready To take you to St. Mary's, Master C. .. iv ii 239-
Yet, C, be thou glad. This is the work of God. .. iv iii 81
Speak, Master C, Fulfil your promise made me, ,, iv iii 111
Be plainer, Master C. „ iv iii 235
another recantation Of C at the stake. „ iv iii 30Q
Think you then That C read all papers that he
sign'd ? ,. IV iii 318
We talk and C suffers. ,. rv iii 420
Who follow'd with the crowd to C's fire. ,. iv iii 554
you bring the smoke Of C's burning with you. „ iv iii 562
smoke of C's burning wrapt me round. „ iv iii 564
But C, as the helmsman at the helm Steers, „ iv iii 578
but C only shook his head, „ rv iii 601
Then C lifted his left hand to heaven, .. iv iii 608
and needs must moan for him ; 0 C ! ,. iv iii 637
hands that write them should be burnt clean off
As C's, V ii 192
If C's spirit were a mocking one, „ v ii 210
Cranmerite Here come the C's ! ,, rv i 40
Crash (See also War-crash) may come a c and embroil-
ment as in Stephen's time ; Becket, Pro. 485
Crater One c opens when another shuts. Queen Mary in i 322
Crave meant to c Permission of her Highness „ i iv 235
It c's an instant answer, Ay or No. ,, i v 589
So that you c full pardon of the Legate. „ ni iv 391
I attend the Queen To c most himible pardon — „ in iv 432
C, in the same cause, hearing of your Grace. „ iv i 8
allegiance in thy Lord's And c his mercy, Harold v i 12
I c Thy pardon — I shall still thy leave Becket v ii 43
And afterwards a boon to c of you. The Falcon 712
I c your worship's pardon. ' Foresters n i 243
Robin — I c pardon — you always seem to me „ ni 53
I c pardon, I always think of you as my lord, „ in 409
Craven Did the chest move ! did it move ! I am
utter c ! Harold ii ii 800
The c ! There is a faction risen again for Tostig, „ rv i 171
Forty thousand marks ! forty thousand devils — and
these c bishops ? Becket i iv 91
than the swords of the c sycophants would have done „ i iv 148
if the followers Of him, who heads the movement,
held him c ? Foresters n i 702
Craw (crow) I'd think na moor o' maakin' an end o'
tha nor a carrion c — Prom, of May n 697
Crawl c over knife-edge flint Barefoot, Becket n i 271
c down thine own black hole To the lowest Hell. The Cup n 494
Crawl'd Fed with rank bread that c upon the ^
tongue, Queen Mary iv iii 442
I c like a sick crab from my old shell, Foresters iv 126
Crawling Foul maggots c in a fester'd vice ! Queen Mary v v 161
Here c in this boundless Nature. Prom, of May ni 637
I see two figures c up the hill. Foresters iv 333
Crazed She is c ! Edith. That doth not matter Harold v ii 61
Did you not tell me he was c with jealousy. Prom, of May ni 565
I am c no longer, so I have the land. Foresters rv 855
I had despair'd of thee — that sent me c „ iv 1022
Crazeling And this old c in the litter there. „ iv 634
Cream And a cat to the c, and a rat to the cheese ; Prom, of May i 53
Create (See also Re-create) Shall hands that do c the
Lord be boimd Becket i iii 94
Creator Illorum lanceas Frange C ! Harold v i 584
Creature By God's light a noble c, right royal ! Queen Mary i i 69
the red man, that good helpless c, „ ii i 209
— we are fallen c's ; Look to your Bible, „ in iv 79
Creature
878
Crown
Creature (continued) says she will live And die true
maid — a goodly c too. Queen Mary m vi 46
aiid yet We are self-uncertain c's, Becket v ii 48
strange starched stiff c, Little John, the Earl's man. Foresters i i 184
Man, lying here alone, Moody c, „ ii ii 187
delicate-footed c Came stepping o'er him, „ iv 536
Credit (s) Tell, tell me ; save my c with myself. Queen Mary v ii 452
for heaven's c Makes it on earth : Harold i i 141
Credit (verb) better die Than c this, for death is death, „ m ii 79
You will not easily make me c that. The Cup n 25
Creed Your c \viU be your death. Queen Mary r ii 46
The heathen priesthood of a heathen c ! Becket i iii 64
Creek See Sea-creek
Creel Tell him what hath crept into our c, Harold ii i 56
Creep and c's, c's snake-like about our legs Queen Mary ii i 203
He can but c 6iOVfn into some dark hole ,, iv i 140
I would c, crawl over knife-edge flint Becket ii i 271
fear c's in at the front, honesty steals out at the back, „ in iii 61
Creep'st Why c thou like a timorous beast Harold i ii 212
Creeping By bonds of beeswax, like your c thing ; Queen Mary in iii 63
And all manner of c things too ? Becket in iii 132
Crematur Casa c. Pastor fugatur Harold v i 512
Crept 1 c along the gloom and saw They had hewn Queen Mary ii iii 17
Out c a wasp, with half the swann behind. „ ui iii 49
Tell him what hath c into our creel, Harold u i 56
dreadful lights c up from out the marsh — „ ni i 379
c Up even to the tonsure, and he groan'd, Becket i iii 326
Thro' all closed doors a dreadful whisper c „ v ii 89
Poverty c thro' the door. Foresters i i 157
The serpent that had c into the garden „ n i 136
Crescent I that have tum'd their Moslem c pale — „ iv 793
Crew Kill'd half the c, dungeon'd the other half Becket v ii 444
Cried C no God-bless-her to the Lady Jane, Queen Mary iii iv 45
He c Enough ? enough ? before his death. — „ v ii 100
And c 1 was not clean, what should I care ? „ v ii 324
If the field C out ' I am mine own ; ' Harold iv i 49
she c out on him to put me forth in the world Becket in i 115
Rome ! Rome ! Twice I c Rome. The Cup i iii 175
So they c Sinnatus Not so long since — „ ii 110
C out against the cruelty of the King. Becket v ii 112
Cried'st Thou c ' A Wyatt ! ' and flying to our side Queen Mary ii iii 3
Crime of a heavier c Than heresy is itself ; „ ni iv 221
The c be on his head — ^not bounden — ^no. Harold ii ii 670
0 crowning c ! Hast murder'd thine own guest, „ iv ii 36
The Church is all — the c to be a king. Becket v i 26
Crimefol heavy As thine own bolts that fall on c heads Harold v i 565
Criminal See Laymen-criminals
Crimson We might go softlier than with c rowel And
streaming lash. Queen Mary m iv 182
Crippled man Fell with him, and was c ever after. Foresters iv 545
Critic You as poor a c As an honest friend : Queen Mary ii i 115
Croak (See also Baven-croak) dumb'd his carrion c From
the gray sea for ever. Harold iv iii 66
1 grieve I am the Raven who c's it. Foresters in 448
Cromwell make the soil For Caesars, C's, and
Napoleons
Crone Out of the church, you brace of cursed c's,
Crookback Speak straight out, c.
Crooked His eighty years Look'd somewhat c
I do believe My old c spine would bud out two young
wings
Crop (of a bird) Cram thy c full, but come when thou
art call'd.
Crop (verb) If possible, here ! to c the flower and
pass. Prom, of May i 253
Crop-full if you cram me c-f I be little better than Famine
in the picture, Foresters i i 46
Cross (adj.) but look, there is a c line o' sudden death. „ n i 353
Cross (s) (See also Charing Cross) Our silver c
sparkled before the prow.
The triumph of St. Andrew on his c,
Then claspt the c, and pass'd away in peace.
Forward I Forward ! Harold and Holy C !
Harold and Holy C !
Harold and Holy C ! Out ! out !
Prom, of May in 593
Queen Mary rv iii 539
Foresters ii i 271
Queen Mary iv iii 332
Harold in i 24
IV iii 234
Queen Mary ui ii 9
„ IV iii 94
vv 259
Harold iv i 269
„ V i 439
„ V i 519
Becket, Pro. 370
I iii 477
I iii 480
I iii 483
I iii 489
I iii 504
I iii 509
I iii 511
n i 188
„ IV ii 199
IV ii 2a5
V i 161
V ii 610
V ii 615
Foresters i i 284
I i 289
.. I ii 309
Cross (s) (continued) swear nay to that by this c on
thy neck. God's eyes ! what a lovely c !
holds his c before him thro' the crowd.
His c ! Roger of York. His c ! I'll front liim, c to c.
His c ! it is the traitor that imputes
King will not abide thee with thy c.
Wherefore dost thou presume to bear thy c,
Why dost thou presume, Arm'd with thy c.
If Canterbury bring his c to court,
There may be c'es in my line of life.
By very God, the c I gave the King !
sworn on this my c a hundred times Never to leave him
— and that merits death. False oath on holy c —
Do you know this c, my liege ?
Why then — The C ! — who bears my C before me ?
Would that I could bear thy c indeed !
Father, you see this c ?
on this c I have sworn that till I myself pass away,
by this Holy C Which good King Richard gave me
Cross (verb) come to London Bridge ; But how to c it
balks me. Queen Mary n iii 10
her shadow c's one by one The moonlight casements ,, v v 7
The winds so c and jostle among these towers. Harold ii ii 155
but stark as death To those that c him. — ., n ii 322
nor priestly king to c Their billings ere they nest. ,. m ii 94
C me not ! I am seeking one who wedded me ,. v ii 28
No man without my leave shall c the seas Becket, Pro. 35
I mean to c the sea to France, ,. i iii 124
Wilt not be suffer'd so to c the seas .. i iii 129
C swords all of you ! swear to follow him ! .. i iv 199
feud between our houses is the bar I carmot c ; The Falcon 255
Crossing (part.) be as the shadow of a cloud C your
light. Harold n ii 178
Crossing (s) so many alleys, c's. Paths, avenues — Becket iv ii 6
Cross-staff Shall I not smite him with his own c-s ? ,. v ii 313
Crost C and recrost, a venomous spider's web — ,. ii i 199
Thou hast c him in love, Foresters n i 343
You c him with a quibble of your law. ,. iv 850
Crouch C even because thou hatest him ; Becket iv ii 223
C all into the bush ! Foresters iv 596
Crouch'd This hard coarse man of old hath c to
Croucher no c to the Gregories That tread the kings
Croup No fever, cough, c, sickness ?
Queen Man/ iv ii 170
Becket, Pro. 211
,. v ii 169
Crow (s) (See also Crow) didst thou ever see a carrion
c Stand watching
where the black c flies five.
You ought to dangle up there among the c's.
Crow (verb) C over Barbarossa — at last tongue-free
Crowd Friend Roger, steal thou in among the c.
Stave off the c upon the Spaniard there.
here's a c as thick as herring-shoals.
I stand so squeezed among the c
Push'd by the c beside —
Who foUow'd with the c to Cranmer's fire.
You saw him how he past among the c ;
hands Came from the c and met his own ;
With a c of worshippers,
holds his cross before him thro' the c,
There is a movement yonder in the c —
The c that hungers for a crown in Heaven
for I have pleasure in the pleasure of c's.
The c are scattering, let us move away !
not fear the c that hunted me Across the woods,
And blanch the c with horror.
Might cast my largess of it to the c !
when Thought Comes down among the c,
the c May wreak my wrongs upon my wrongers.
— the c would call it conscience —
Crown (adj.) King Stephen gave Many of the c lands
to those that helpt him ;
Claim'd some of our c lands for Canterbury —
Crown (s) That gave her royal c to Lady Jane.
Edward might bequeath the c Of England,
Yet by your c you are.
Queen Mary iv iii 6
V V 84
Foresters in 367
Becket n ii 50
Q^een Mary l iii 38
I iii 77
ni i 182
in i 239
IV iii 397
IV iii 554
IV iii 575
IV iii 5a3
Becket i iii 475
.. I iii 478
n ii 37
,. n ii 282
.. in iii 82
.. in iii 357
The Cup I iii 16
n 154
n 224
Prom, of May i 501
1 506
n 637
Becket i iii 150
„ I iii 458
Queen Mary i ii 19
I ii 27
ll
Crown
'Ctown (s) (coiUinued)
ours,
879
Cruor
To make the c of Scotland one with
Queen Mary i v 287
Spain and we, One c, might rule the world.
To save your c that it must come to this.
that young girl who dared to wear your c ?
and in that passion Gave me my c.
let Rebellion Roar till throne rock, and c fall.
in whose c our Kent is the fairest jewel.
I trust this day, thro' God, I have saved the c
I pass to Windsor and I lose my c.
And leave the people naked to the c, Ami the c
naked to the people ;
And nothing of the titles to the c ;
' You will give me my true c at last,
Were but a thankless policy in the c.
We reck not tho' we lost this c of Eiigland—
and you know The c is poor.
And wear my «, and dance upon iny grave
God save the C ! the Papacy is no more.
That thou wouldst have his promise for the c ?
Jighten'd for me The weight of this poor c,
Their old c Is yet a force among them,
I want his voice in England for the c,
Can have no right to the c,'
Who hath a better claim then to the c
Good, good, and thou wilt help me to the c ?
I ask thee, wilt thou help me to the c ?
Swear thou to help me to the c of England.
I swear to help thee to the c of England
(repeat)
IV 303
IV 479
IV 492
I V 568
u i 145
II i 163
u ii 303
n iv 30
m i 119
m i 383
m i 395
ni iv 51
III iv 55
V i 170
V ii 601
V v 285
Harold i i 204
I i 218
„ Ii305
n ii 72
„ n ii 355
„ n ii 597
„ II ii 614
,. n ii 628
„ II ii 705
old Northumbrian c, And kings of our own choosing
Your old c Were little help without our Saxon carles
Refer my cause, my c to Rome ! . . .
Wash up that old c of Northumberland.
I have lost both c And husband,
climb'd the throne and almost clutch'd tlie c ■
Surely too young Even for this shadow of a c-
chessmen on the floor— the king's c broken ! '
if there ever come feud between Church and C
he would grant thee The c itself. '
Sign, and obey the c ! Becket. The c ? Shall I do
less for Canterbury Than Henry for the c ?
lest the c should be Shorn of ancestral splendour.
Church and C, Two sisters gliding in an equal dance
and the mitre Grappling the c —
leave the royalty of my c Unlessen'd to mine heirs
he answer'd me, As if he wore the c already—
Quarrel of C and Church — to rend again.
I thank you, sons ; when kings but hold by c's. The
crowd that hungers for a c in Heaven
m her time when she had the ' C Rosamoiid. The c '
who ?
But c's must bow when mitres sit so high,
lord of more land Than any c in Europe,
thro' all this quarrel I still have cleaved to the c, in
hope the c Would cleave to me that but obey'd the c,
his poor tonsure A c of Empire.
Rather than dim the splendour of his c
We must not force the c of martyrdom.
I heard in Rome, This tributary c may fall to you
The king, the c I their talk in Rome ?
I here return like Tarquin — ^for a c.
play'd into their hands. Means me the c.
She will be gjad at last to wear my c.
This all too happy day, c — queen at once.
Have I the c on ? I will go To meet him.
It is the c Offends him —
crown you Again with the same c my Queen of
Beauty.
When the fairy slights the c.
all the c's Of all this world,
Ciown (verb) Look to you as the one to c their ends.
And when the Council would not c me —
your people will not c me —
So that ye will not c the Atheling ?
Harold u ii 713, 721
IV 132
IV 134
vil
vil67
vii39
Becket, Pro. 22
Pro. 231
Pro. 313
Pro. 465
Iiii30
I iii 145
I iii 155
I iii 443
ni27
nil07
nil 7
II ii 56
II ii 281
mi 198
IV ii 297
vi30
vi48
vil96
vii344
V iii 28
Cup I i 97
1 198
Ii 142
I iii 151
I iii 168
11451
n518
u529
The
The Falcon 915
Foresters ii ii 135
„ IV 404
xen Mary i iv 171
„ I V 555
v i 81
Harold ii ii 598
Crown (verb) (continued) our great Council wait to c
thee King — (repeat)
Should they not know free England c's herself ?
Who shall c him ? Canterbury is dying.
Becket should c him were he crown'd at all :
For England, c young Henry there,
to Westminster and c Young Henry there to-morrow.
And thou shalt c my Henry o'er again,
will you c my foe My victor in mid-battle ?
The prelates whom he chose to c his son !
This very day the Romans c him king
When do they c him ? Messenger. Even now.
kick'd it featureless — they now would c.
Yea, that ye saw me c myself withal.
Ay, there they c him.
Harold in i 3, 406
v i 48
Becket, Pro. 239
II ii 17
II ii 456
in ii 9
„ III iii 205
v i 148
v ii 399
The Cup II 64
II 74
„ II 129
„ II 159
hurls the victor's column down with liini That c's it, hear. ',' n 297
I whisper'd. Let me c you Queen of Beauty, The Falcon 360
- you Again with the same crown my Queen of Beauty. „ 914
honour, worship thee, C thee with flo\vers ;
Crown'd never yet so happy Since I was c.
C slaves of slaves, and mitred kings of kings,
C, c and lost, c King — and lost to me !
Than ere they c me one.
My young son Henry c the King of England,
Him who c Stephen— King Stephen's brother !
You have not c young Henry yet,
C ! by God's eyes, we will not have him c.
We will not have him c.
Not have him c ?
Becket should crown him were he c at all :
England scarce would hold Young Henry king, if
only c by York,
I go to have young Henry c by York.
Hereford, you know, c the first Henrj'. Becket.
Anselm c this Henry o'er again.
coronation void By cursing those who c him.
On those that c young Henry in this realm.
As you would force a king from being c.
Is he c ? Phoebe. Ay, there they crown him.
Across the hills when I was being c.
I will go To meet him, c ! c victor of my will —
one sweet face C with the wreath.
Crowning (adj. and part) c thy young son by York,
London and Salisbury — not Canterbury.
that but obey'd the crown, C your son ;
0 c crime ! Hast murder'd thine own guest, the
son of Orm,
Crowning (s) He glitters on the c of the hill.
hath in this c of young Henry by York and London
1 was at the c, for I have pleasure
Come once more to me Before the c, —
Crownling as to the young c himself, he look'd so mala-
pert in the eyes,
Crozier Cowl, helm ; and c, battle-axe.
And smite thee with my c on the skull ?
and lay My c in the Holy Father's hands.
Sceptre and c clashing, and the mitre Grappling
Crucified They c St. Peter downward.
Crucifix I brought not ev'n my c. Henry. Take this.
Crucifying Horrible ! flaying, scourging, c —
Cruel And c at it, killing helpless flies ;
but neither cold, coarse, c. And more than all-
lost and found Together in the c river Swale
I fear I was as e as the King.
C ? Oh, no— it is the law, not he ;
Then you have done it, and I call you c.
Crueller and makes The fire seem even c than it is.
if he have the greater right, Hath been the c.
Cruellest The hardest, c people in the world,
Cruelty haughtiness of their nobles ; the c of their
priests,
loathed the cruelties that Rome Wrought on her
vassals.
Wrong'd by the cruelties of his religions
Cruor Illorum in lacrymas C fundatur !
Foresters ii ii 19
Queen Mary in ii 88
in iv 381
Harold 111 ii 1
„ III ii 54
Becket, Pro. 224
., Pro. 273
n ii 1
n ii 3
II ii 8
II ii 14
n ii 17
But
nii32
II ii 478
„ m iii 202
v ii 331
V ii 392
V iii 26
The Cup II 180
n 321
n 519
The Falcon 649
Becket 111 iii 194
V i 52
Harold iv ii 35
V i 488
Becket m iii 70
ui iii 81
The Cup n 79
Becket ni iii 108
Harold v i 444
Becket i i 221
„ I iii 125
„ n i 25
„ I iii 619
., n i 295
The Cup I ii 235
Queen Mary in iv 65
V ii 482
Harold in ii 10
Becket v ii 124
„ V ii 125
„ V ii 136
Queen Mary iv ii 233
IV iii 383
n i 100
n i 169
The Cup I ii 373
Prom, of May ni 545
Harold v i 532
Queen Mary iii vi 84
Harold i i 356
I i 359
Becket I iii 334
The Cup I i 25
„ I ii 131
Prom, of May n 493
Quee7i Mary ii iv 91
IV iii 359
Becket v i 68
The Falcon 640
Foresters ii ii 146
Becket iii i 114
I iv 210
I iv 254
Crush
Crush In hope to c all heresy under Spain.
C it at once With all the power I have ! —
I must — I will ! — C it half-bom !
I'll c him as the subject.
And how to c them easily.
Rome Will c you if vou wrestle with her •
would not c The fly that drew her blood •
Crnsh'd Over, your Grace, all c ;
They are too c, too broken,
Being so c and so humiliated We scarcely dare
C, hack'd at, trampled imderfoot.
C my bat whereon I flew !
fonst and to speak truth, nigh at the end of our last c
Cratch we daren't fight you with our c'es, '
C'es, and itches, and leprosies, and ulcers.
Cry (s) (See also War-cry) Their c is, Philip never
shall be king.
Will front their c and shatter them into dust.
Cries of the moment and the street —
Will stir the living tongue and make the c.
Whereat Lord Williams gave a sudden c : —
Or you, for heretic cries ?
A c ! What's that ? Elizabeth ? revolt ?
And cries, and clashes, and the groans of men :
Thou hast sold me for a c. —
0 God, the God of truth hath heard my c.
may at least have my c against him and her,—
hast thou heard this c of Gilbert Foliot
make my c to the Pope, By whom I will be judged •
1 heard your savage c. '
My savage c ? Why, she— she— when I strove
trumpets in the halls. Sobs, laughter, cries :
You had my answer to that c before.
And her c rang to me across the years,
The phantom c ! You — did you hear a, c?
he flutter'd his wings with a sweet little c.
Cry (verb) all men e. She is queenly, she is goodly,
If ever I c out against the Pope
Swallows fly again, Cuckoos c again,
I heard An angel c ' There is more joy in Heaven,'-
One who cries continually with sweat and tears
I likewise c ' no more.'
Why c thy people on thy sister's name ?
Is thy wrath Hell, that I should spare to c,
he licks my face and moans and cries out against
the King,
innocences that will c From all the hidden by-ways
sometimes she cries, and can't sleep sound o' nights
She shall c no more ; she shall sleep sound enough
c out for thee Who art too pure for earth.
one half, but half-alive, Cries to the King.
What made the King c out so furiously ?
When you c ' Rome, Rome,' to seize
Dost thou c out upon the Gods of Rome ?
throat might gape before the tongue could c who ?
The Sheriff ! This ring cries out against thee.
Crying (part.) (See also A-crying) Thro' many voices c
right and left,
And Ignorance c in the streets,
C, ' Forward ! ' — set our old church rocking,
c, in his deep voice, more than once,
What are you c for, when the sun shines ?
when c On Holy Church to thimder out her rights
Our old nurse c as if for her own child,
She must be c out ' Edgar ' in her sleep. Harold
Who must be c out ' Edgar ' in her sleep ?
yyJPg (8) ye did wrong in c ' Down with John : '
Crypt Her c among the stars.
No, to the c ! Twenty steps down.
«_v.F° i^® " ^ no— no. To the chapel of St. Blaise
Cnbit See Twenty-cubit
S?*^ hK^'^'^l^^ ^^•'fe ^> '^^ ^^' ««««" ^'^ry m v 97
"™ J^J}^ *o c the rogue For mfant treason. m i;; k\
C lum could I ? with my hands Milking the cow ? " nr v 94
10 kiss and c among the birds and flowers— in y 258
880
Curse
Queen Mary n iv 1
II iv 5
II iv 128
„ III i 355
IV iii 605
V ii 326
V V 187
Harold in i 375
rv ii 76
V i 601
Becket, Pro. 510
I i 36
I iii 723
IV ii 320
IV ii 338
V ii 368
V iii 124
Prom, of May ii 655
III 651
Foresters i i 154
Queen Mary ii ii 343
m i 351
in V 97
— „ IV ii 10
» V iv 44
Harold i i 389
IV i 20
V i 38
Becket i iv 100
., m iii 14
IV i 29
IV i 32
,. rv ii 132
vi65
v i 220
The Cup I iii 5
II454
Foresters m 226
IV 69
Queen Mary i ii 48
IV iii 377
IV iii 403
rv iii 611
Becket m i 269
V ii 30
Prom, of May n 479
in653
Foresters i ii 96
Becket i iii 555
V iii 77
„ V iii 81
Cuirass And c in this forest where I dream'd
Cum (came) I e behind tha, gall, and couldn't make
tJllhl^^^'"' • . ,u Q^tem i¥a«/ IV iii 465
till his man c m post vro' here, rv iii 511
the tongue on un c a-lolluping out o' 'is mouth
as black as a rat.
Cumberland (See also Coomberland) In C Mr.
Dobson. '
I met her first at a farm in C— Her uncle's
Cup wmes Of wedding had been dash'd into the c's Of
Th^J^a. Harold^ mi
Hath stumbled on our c'5 ? " jviinTQ
not at all ; the c's empty. becket Pro 478
Ye have eaten of my fish and drunken of mv c for a '
dozen years. ^ i iv 30
and now this c—l never felt such passion The Cup i i 33
Foresters iv 130
IV iii 518
Prom, of May i 66
u 397
sends you this c rescued from the burning
it is the c we use in our marriages.
Take thou this letter and this c to Camma,
Take thou this c and leave it at her doors.
Is that the c you rescued from the fire ?
now this pious c Is passport to their house,
sacred c saved from a blazing shrine Of our great
Goddess,
Had you then No message with the c ?
sends you this c — the c we use in our marriages —
know myself am that Galatian Who sent the c
take this holy c To lodge it in the shrine of Artemis.
To lodge this c Within the holy shrine of Artemis
the marriage c Wherefrom we make libation '
You see this c, my lord.
It is the c belonging our own Temple.
That Synorix should drink from his own c.
They two should drink together from one c,
I have almost drain'd the c — A few drops left.
Have I not drunk of the same c with thee ?
Here, here — a c of wine — drink and begone '
Cupid (See also Tree-cupid) Parthian shaft of a forlorn
C at the King's left breast,
thou wouldst hug thy C till his ribs cracked—
St. C, that is too irreverent.
Cur as a mastiff dog May love a puppy c
Why did you slink away like a c ?
Curb their children imder-heel — ^Must c her ;
Because we seek to c their viciousness.
Curb'd Your lavish household c.
Cure I trust the kingly touch that c's the evil
Cunous be c About the welfare of their babes,
You see this cup, my lord. Antonius. Most c '
Cunousness I have some time, for c, my Lord,
Current (See also Side-current) the c's So shift and
change, ^^ ^^ ^y ^^
that one tmie sway to the c, And to the wind another. Becket i iii 594
If nian be only A willy-nilly c of sensations— Prom of May n 263
ii41
I i 44
I i 61
I i 67
I i 71
1 182
I ii 54
I ii 68
I ii 72
.. I ii 210
., I ii 434
I iii 52
n 198
n 338
n345
n 354
n 362
n385
II 463
Foresters I iii 89
Becket, Pro. 340
„ Pro. 504
V i 198
Qu^en Mary i iv 195
Becket iv ii 431
„ Pro. 215
Foresters m 393
Queen Mary i v 113
Harold i i 152
The Cup I ii 361
n 339
Queen Mary ill iv 61
Curse (s) the c is on him For swearing falsely
those heavenly ears have heard, Their c is on him ■
prayer against the a That lies on thee and England.
Then on thee remains the c,
lamb to Holy Church To save thee from the c.
To find a means whereby the c might glance
and the second c Descend upon thine head,
Fool and wise, I fear This c, and scorn it.
It burns my hand — a c to thee and me.
The c of England ! these are drown'd in wassail.
He hath blown himself as red as fire with c's.
if thou blurt thy c among our folk, I know not—
will blast and blind you like a c.
God's full c Shatter you all to pieces
My c on all This world of mud,
Harold m i 244
m i 260J
ra i 278
in i 315
„ m i 336'
„ m i 342
„ in ii 48
in ii 68
„ in ii 186
„ IV iii 222
v i 87
V i 89
Becket i iv 40J
„ V iii 134 1
Prom, of May ni 721
C on your brutal strength ! I cannot pass that vfky. ', ' xn 731
Curse (verb) God c her and her Legate ! Quern, Man/ v iv 12,
you c so loud, The watch will hear you. v iv 62
The Pope, the King, will c you— Becket v iii 182
Heaven c him if he come not at your call ! Prom, of May i 764
Curse
881
Damn
Curse (verb) (continued)
me.
Corsed God hath blest or c me with a nose —
C him ! but thou art mocking
Foresters n i 514
Queen Mary m v 178
Out of the church, you brace of c crones,
Why let earth rive, gulf in These c Nonnans —
He hath c thee, and all those who fight for thee,
The King hath c him, if he marry me ; The Pope
hath c him, marry me or no !
The realm for which thou art forsworn is c, The babe
enwomb'd and at the breast is c The corpse thou
whelmest with thine earth is c. The soul who
fighteth on thy side is c, The seed thou sowest in
thy field is c, The steer wherewith thou plowest thy
field is c. The fowl that fleeth o'er thy field is c,
But since he c My friends at Veselay,
C be Jolin of Oiord, Roger of York, And Gilbert
Foliot ! c those De Brocs That hold our Saltwood
Castle from our see ! C Fitzurse, and all the
rest of them
C and anathematised us right and left,
0 the SheriS Would pay this c mortgage to his
brother
came some evil fairy at mj^ birth And c me,
Corsii^ Our Tostig parted c me and England ;
coronation void By c those who crown'd him.
Curtsey C to him, wife, and thank him.
Cushion Throw c's on that seat, and make it throne
like.
Custom you that have kept your old c's upright,
But by the royal c's of our realm
And for these Royal c's, These ancient Royal c's —
Will you subscribe the c's ?
we might take your side against the c's —
sign'd These ancient laws and c's of the realm.
to obey These ancient laws and c's of the realm ?
C's, traditions, — clouds that come and go ; The c's
of the Church are Peter's rock.
these c's are no longer As Canterbury calls them,
another of these c's thou Wilt not be suffer'd
for no love o' the c's Or constitutions,
ye set these c's by my death Ringing their own
death-knell
That thou wilt hear no more o' the c's.
And swear to obey the c's.
Good royal c's — had them written fair
1 promised The King to obey these c's.
Are these your c's ?
The King, these c's, and the Church,
as you suspended yourself after sub-writing to the c's.
our recoverer and upholder of c's hath in this crowning
and I warrant the c's. Did the King Speak of the c's ?
spiritual giant with our island laws And c's,
smce we likewise swore to obey the c's,
it is the law, not he ; The c's of the realm. Becket.
The c's ! c's ! „ v ii 127
It is our ancient c in Galatia That ere two souls The Cup n 358
Thrones, churches, ranks, traditions, c's. Prom, of May i 520
turn back at times, and make Courtesy to c ? „ n 635
according to the law and c of the kingdom of England Foresters i iii 66
It is our forest c they should revel Along with Robin. „ m 174
Doftomaiy decide on what was c In olden days, Becket u ii 175
CSnt c out the rotten from your apple, Queen Mary n ii 5
' I would they were c off That trouble you.' ,, m iv 32
C with a diamond; so to last like truth. „ m v 25
Madam, you have but c the canvas out ; „ v v 183
King's verdurer caught him a-hunting in the forest,
and c off his paws. Becket i iv 96
wheere the big eshtree c's athurt it, it gi'es a
turn like, Prom, of May m 94
he would never c it down, because one of the Steers „ m 246
if we kill a stag, our dogs have their paws c off, Foresters iv 225
iot See also Fine-cnt, Stone-cut
iyillbal sing, Asaph ! clash The c, Heman ! Harold m i 188
apricot, Vine, c, poplar, myrtle. The Cup i i 3
Again this Richard is the lion of C, Foresters rr 391
rv iii 539
Harold n ii 783
„ ra ii 152
« raiil89
vi64
Becket n i 88
„ nii265
V i 4
Foresters u i 144
„ n ii 109
Harold m i 76
Becket v ii 331
Foresters m 248
Queen Mary V ii 536
n i 158
Becket, Pro. 23
I i 166
I ii 46
I ii 57
I iii 7
I iii 18
I iii 22
I iii 69
.. 1 iii 128
„ I iii 137
I iii 170
I iii 256
I iii 270
I iii 415
I iii 557
I iii 659
I iii 726
nii352
in iii 70
in iii 331
ivii445
V i55
Daay (day) {See also Wedding-daay) What a day,
what a day ! nigh upo' judgement d loike. Queen Mary iv iii 468
they wimt set i' the Lord's cheer o' that d. „ iv iii 470
He be heighty this very d, and 'e telled Prom, of May i 7
When theer wur a meeting o' farmers at Littlechester
to'ther d, „ 1 138
I coom'd upon 'im t'other d lookin' at the coontry, „ 1 201
' Good d then, Dobson ! ' Civil-spoken i'deed ! „ 1 300
fur thaw I be heighty this very d, „ i 359
and the larks 'ud sing i' them d's, „ i 374
plaay the planner, if ye liked, all d long, like a
laady, „ n IQl
At the end of the d, For the last load hoam ':•
(repeat) Prom, of May u 183, 194
Till the end of the d And the last load hoiim. „ n 208
Till the end o' the d An' the last load hoam.' (repeat) „ ii 238, 292
To the end o' the d An' the last load hoam.' „ n 259
Naay, but ' Good d, Dobbins.' „ n 732
' Good d, Dobbins.' Dang tha ! „ n 741
Taake me awaay, little gell. It be one o' my
bad d's. „ m 466
Daazed (dazed) feller's clean d, an' maazed, an'
maated, „ n 729
Dabble B your hearths with your own blood. Harold n ii 751
Daft Is he deaf, or dumb, or d, or drunk Foresters i ii 208
Da^er With fingers pointed like so many d's. Queen Mary i v 149
Or I will dig thee with my d. „ n iii 96
even while I speak There lurks a silent d, „ v ii 216
I have my d here to still their throats. Becket ni ii 49
stand beside thee One who might grapple with thy d, .. rv ii 230
Take up your d ; put it in the sheath. ., rv ii 293
Madam, I saw your d at her throat ; „ iv ii 319
sure my d was a feint Till the worm tum'd — „ iv ii 379
I go, but I will have my d with me. The Cup i ii 457
mine own d driven by Synorix found All good „ n 85
Daily Save for my d range Among the pleasant fields
of Holy Writ Queen Mary m v 78
and England's sake That suffers in the d want of thee, Harold n ii 275
The more or less of d labour done — The pretty gaping
bills in the home-nest Piping for bread — the a want
supplied— Becket n ii 299
Some d something-nothing. „ m i 80
0 my sick boy ! My d fading Florio, The Falcon 236
Dainty dog I cramm'd with dainties worried me ! Becket v i 244
Dairy (adj.) she set the bush by my d winder afoor she
went to school Prom, of May n 18
Dairy (s) The maid to her d came in from the cow, „ i 39
Daisy (a plant) Daisies grow again, Kingcups blow
again, Qu^en Mary m v 89
O graves in daisies drest, Prom, of May m 204
Honest d deadly bruised, Foresters n ii 156
Daisy (name of a cow) Our D's as good 'z her. Tib.
Noa, Joan. Quern Mary rv iii 479
Our D's butter's as good 'z hem. „ iv iii 481
Our D's cheeses be better. „ rv iii 484
Dale Among these happy d's, run clearer, Becket n i 157
Dallied But d with a single lettuce-leaf ; The Falcon 673
Dally We d with our lazy moments here, Queen Mary v iii 108
♦ On those sweet lips that dare to d with it. Foresters rv 75
Dallying d over seas Even when his brother's, Queen Mary ni iv 292
Dam (mother) ' Ewe lamb, ewe lamb, I am here by the d.' Becket i iv 172
Dam (obstruction) like a river in flood thro' a burst d Harold n ii 466
Damage He meant no harm nor d to the Church. Becket x iii 216
Dame trifling royally With some fair d of court. Queen Mary m vi 160
Damn {See also Dang) hear him ; let his own words
d the Papist. „ i iii 53
Absolve the left-hand thief and d the right ? Becket n ii 392
Oh, do not d yourself for company ! „ v ii 523
— drest like a gentleman, too. D all gentlemen,
says I ! Prtm. of May n 579
3 K
Damn'd
882
Darkness
Daom'd my Lord, He is d enough already.
and brooks Were bridged and d with dead,
Damon The polish'd D of your pa,storal here.
Damp hand, D with the sweat of death,
Queen. Mary n ii 407
Harold in ii 130
Prom, of May in 562
Queen Mary i ii 33
Queen Mary v ii 170
Becket i iii 444
The Falcon 54
Prom, of May i 428
I 796
Foresters i ii 53
Quecfii Mary in ii 238
ni V 252
V ii 601
Harold i i 9
„ I i 386
Prom, of May i 429
lii 204
IV 550
IV 552
Those d, black, dead Nights in the Tower ; dead — „ ni v 137
Damsel I love him as a e^ of his day Foresters i i 227
if ever A Norman d fell into our hands, ,. ni 181
You hide this d in your forest here, „ iv 476
D, is this the truth ? Marian. Ay, noble knight. „ rv 769
DanaS included D has escaped again Her tower, Becket i i 395
Dance (s) {See also Diamond-dance) Have you been
looking at the ' D of Death ' ?
Two sisters gliding in an equal d,
She saw it at a d, upon a neck Less lovely
and the lads and lasses 'all hev a d.
But see they were coming out for the d already.
But they are coming hither for the d — •
Dance (verb) Till the sun d, as upon Easter Day,
and d into the sun That shines on princes.
And wear my crown, and d upon my grave.
star That d's in it as mad with agony !
that wilt not d However wisely charm'd.
D ! small heart have I to d.
weight of the church to boot on my shoulders, I would
d too. Foresters i ii 59
Go now and ask the maid to d with thee, „ i ii 185
Pretty mistress, will you d ?
What ? must we d attendance all the day ?
Z> ! ay, by all the saints and all the devils ye shall d.
they shall d to the music of the wild wood. Let the
birds sing, and do you d to their song. „ iv 555
Rouge, I am full of gout. I cannot d. „ iv 563
for by my life, you shall d till he can. „ iv 566
Prick him where thou wilt, so that he d. „ iv 572
Let us hang, so thou d meanwhile ; „ iv 581
Take care, take care ! I d — I will d — I d. „ iv 586
Dancing I watch'd you d once With your huge father ; Queen Mary v ii 143
I should seem to be d upon a grave. Prom, of May i 431
Dandle I would d you upon my knee At lisping-age. Queen Mary v ii 141
Dane Angle, Jute, D, Saxon, Norman, Harold ii ii 763
we are D's, Who conquer'd what we walk on, „ rv i 37
Thou art but a West Saxon : we are D's ! Harold. My
mother is a D, and I am English ; „ iv i 53
Athelstan the Great Who drove you D's; and yet he
held That D, Jute, Angle, Saxon, „ rv i 75
or Knut who coming D i)ied English. ., rv iii 55
Dang (damn) ' Good daay, Dobbins.' D tha ! Prom, of May ii 742
Out o' the chaumber, d tha „ m 73
Danger But your own state is full of d here. Queen Mary i iv 169
This marriage should bring loss or d to you, „ n ii 227
release from d of all censures Of Holy Church „ m iii 150
How dense a fold of d nets him round, Harold n ii 17
Am I in <i in this court ? „ n ii 236
And take the Church's d on myself. Becket i ii 72
is there d ? Gamma. Nay, None that I know : The Cwp i ii 440
Dangerous therefore is he d. Queen Mary i iv 161
he is d everyway. „ i iv 164
Not every d that way, my good uncle. „ i iv 166
Altho' we grant when kings are d Becket i ii 67
Dangle You ought to d up there among the crows. Foresters in 366
Dangled The traitor husband d at the door. Queen Mary in i 10
Daniel I am the messenger of God, His Norman D ! Harold v i 35
Danish that sight of D blood Might serve an end not
English —
Dan Smith (farm labourer) D 8, fur I cotched 'im once
a-stealin' coals Prom, of May i 411
D S's cart hes runned ower a laady i' the holler laane,
D 8, my father and I forgave you stealing our coals.
But, D 8, they tell me that you —
Dare I d not leave my post. Queen
for all that I d not stay.
I caimot, and I d not,
Yet others are that d the stake and fire.
Before I d to glance upon your Grace.
This last — I d not read it her.
IV iii.96
ni68
m76
I Mary i ii 55
„ Iii 102
I V 49
„ m iv 167
„ m V 186
v ii 183
Queen Mary v ii 379
V ii 523
V V 251
Harold n ii 481
in ii 86
.. in ii 187
IV i 108
Becket iv ii 282
The Cv/p II 155
Dare (continued) How d you say it ?
I might d to tell her that the Count —
The Queen is dying, or you d not say it.
I d not well be seen in talk with thee.
I d not. Harold. Scared by the church —
I d not wear it. Harold. But I d. God with thee !
If one may d to speak the truth,
D's the bear slouch into the lion's den ?
I d not, sir ! Throne him — and then the marriage —
D beg him to receive his diamonds back — -How can
I, d I, The Falcon 262
I do not d, like an old friend, to shake it. Prom, of May ii 526
That I (i not tell how much I love him. „ "in 287
Dare-Becket only there was a dare-devil in liis eye — I
should say a d-B. ' Becket ni iii 89
Dared If they d To harm you, I would blow Q^een Mary i iv 289
Ev'n that young girl who d to wear your crown ?
Mary. D ? nay, not so ;
Howrfhe? Magdalen. Stupid soldiers oft are bold
Nobles we d not touch.
Which even Peter had not d ?
How d you ? Know you not this bower is secret.
He d not — liar ! yet, yet I remember —
May they not say you d not show yourself
but to-day I d not — so much weaker,
Dare-devil D-d's, that would eat fire and spit it out Queen Mary in i 156
only there was a d-d in his eye — I should say a dare-
Becket. Becket ni iii 88
Daring ice-cold — no dash of d in him. Queen Mary i v 331
Dark (adj.) For I foresee d days. „ i v 275
I v 491
v ii 444
V V 104
Becket n ii 395
,. IV ii 21
V i 211
.. V ii 594
The Falcon 832
true enough Her d dead blood is in my heart with mine
Her d dead blood that ever moves with mine
He can but creep down into some d hole
listening In some d closet, some long gaUei-y,
D among gems and gold ;
My fatal oath — the dead Saints — the d dreams —
Gloom upon gleam, D as my doom —
Have track'd the King to this d inland wood :
And far on in the d heart of the wood
D even from a side glance of the moon.
Growing d too — but light enough to row.
What, I that held the orange blossom D as the
yew ? Prom, of May n 631
Ye sees the holler laane be hallus sa d i' the arternoon, „ ni 93
How d your room is ! „ m 217
even if I found it D with the soot of slums. „ ni 602
our King is gone, the light Of these d hours ; Foresters i ii 85
O look ! before the shadow of these d oaks ,, n i 604
A maiden now Were ill-bested in these d days of John, „ n ii 45
mi 349
ni i 352
IV i 140
V ii 217
Harold iv i 249
V i 380
Becket in i 282
„ m ii 3
„ in ii 47
„ IV ii 148
The Cup II 523
In this d wood when all was in our power
Dark (s) Your master works against me in the d
She to shut up my blossom in the d !
I am in the d.
one step in the d beyond Our expectation.
Safe from the d and the cold,
I runned arter thief i' the d,
leaves him A beast of prey in the d,
Death As against Life ! all, all, into the d—
and saay it to ye afoor d ;
Darken Save him, his blood would d Henry's name ;
., in 182
Queen Mary i v 277
Harold i ii 62
Becket m i 221
The C2ip I i 212
„ I ii 6
Prom, of May i 403
I 505
II 338
ml4
Becket v iii 10
Darken'd I tear away The leaves were d by the battle — The Falcon 913
Darkening Gone narrowing down and dto a close. Qwem Mary iv iii 431
Darker Thy Duke will seem the d. Hence, I follow. Harold n ii 817
They told me, from the farm — sind d news. Prom, of May n 408
this world Is brighter for his absence as that other
Is d for his presence. „ n 459
Darkness He stirs within the d ! Queen Mary m ii 158
that all the louts to whom Their A B C is d, „ m iv 35
— the Lord hath dwelt In d. Harold m i 180
As gold Outvalues dross, light d, Becket i iii 715
Could shine away the d of that gap ,. m i 59
Stumble not in the d. Lest they should seize thee. „ v iii 78
And fear not I should stumble in the d, Not tho' it be
their hour, the power of d, But my hour too, the
power of light in dl „ v ill
*
Darkness
883
Day
i| Darkness (continued) I am not in tlie d, but the li«ht, Becket v iij 97
i in the gulf Of never-dawning d ? Prom, of May i 542
) lie down there together in the d which would seem
in 194
Foresters i ii 87
I iii 42
IV 975
Becket iv ii 200
The Cwp n 125
Prom, of May ii 410
The Falcon 45
41
Becket, Pro. 377
Harold n ii 748
vi640
Becket ii ii 150
„ rv ii 195
The Falcon 152
629
Harold in i 140
Becket i iii 348
Queen Mary v i 57
Harold v i 405
but for a moment,
i but this new moon, I fear. Is d.
I And d rises from the fallen sun.
'j You see the d thro' the lighter leaf.
I Darling His village d in some lewd caress
•' The clamour'd d of their afternoon !
She has disappear'd, poor d, from the world
Dam necklaces To please our lad}% we must d.
Darning What art thou doing there ? Elisabetta. D
your lordship.
Dart To hide the scar left by thy Parthian d.
Darter (daughter) I ha' nine d's i' the spital that be dead „ i iv 249
to turn out boiith my d^s right down fine laadies. Prom, of May i 336
Thy feyther eddicated his d's to marry gentlefoalk, „ n 116
but I couldn't buy my d back agean when slie lost
hersen, „ m 453
Dash (8) ice-cold — no d of daring in him. Queen Mary 1 v 331
Dadl (v«b) d The torch of war among your standing
com,
wields His war-club, d'es it on Gurth,
I d myself to pieces — I stay myself —
d thyself against me that I may slay thee !
thou must d us down Our dinner from the skies.
iDash'd (rushed) We mounted, and we d into the lieart
of 'em.
Dash'd (sprii^ed) then he d and drench'd. He dyed,
D red with that mihallow'd passover ;
Dash'd (threw) insolent shot that d the seas Upon us,
bit his shield, and d it on the ground,
Dash'd (thrown) wines Of wedding had been d into the
cups Of victory, „ rv iii 7
Daub This is a <Z to Philip. Queen Mary 1 v 447
Daughter (See also Darter) Mary, the lawful and
legitimate d of Harry the Eighth ! ,, i i 8
(I have a d in her service who reported it) „ i i 76
my d said that when there rose a talk of the late
rebellion, „ i i 91
I am Harry's d, Tudor, and not Fear. „ 11 iv 52
' Hail, D of God, and saver of the faith. ., in ii 82
I am Harry's i: ,, m v 117
Who knows if Boleyn's d be my sister? ., v v 194
God bless thee, wedded d. Harold m i 293
so will I, d, until I find Which way the battle balance. „ v i 459
No, d, but the canons out of Waltham,
Look, d, look. Edith. Nay, father, look for me !
No, d, no — they fall behind the horse —
A cleric violated The d of his host.
Shrink from me, like a a! of the Church,
like the Greek king when his d was sacrificed.
The d of Zion lies beside the way —
D, the world hath trick'd thee. Leave it, d ; Cbme
thou with me to Godstow nunnery,
I am grieved, my d.
D, d, Deal not with things you know not.
No, d, you mistake our good Archbishop ;
D, my time is short, I shall not do it.
Liker the King. Becket. No, d.
Tho' you are a gentleman, I but a farmer's d — Prom, of May 1 668
—a d of the fields, This Dora ! „ n 622
shamed of his poor farmer's d among the ladies in his
drawing-room ? „ m 294
if a gentleman Should wed a farmer's d, „ ni 579
only there was left A second d, „ in 772
I come here to see this d of Sir Richard of the Lea Foresters i ii 26
Come away, d. „ i ii 283
then each man That owns a wife or d, „ in 460
dishonour The d's and the wives of your own faction — „ iv 698
taimted What, dhj a. garrulous, arrogant girl ! „ iv 736
laiQhm In order to betroth her to your D. Queen Mary 1 v 293
Mary of Scotland, married to your D, „ i v 296
your Scottish namesake marrying The D, „ v i 136
The Queen of Scots is married to the D, „ v v 53
V i 474
V i 535
„ V i 545
Becket i iii 383
„ n i 277
„ m iii 105
„ m iii 177
„ IV ii 364
V ii 83
V ii 132
V ii 137
V ii 157
V ii 182
David gloom of Saul Was lighten'd by young D's haip
And no D To meet him ?
Dawn (s) If Ludgate can be reach'd by d to-morrow,
gray d Of an old age that never will be mine
Like sun-gilt breathings on a frosty (^—
Shall see the dewy kiss of d no more
by dead Norway without dream or d !
Were the great trumpet blowing doomsday d,
wind of the d that I hear in the pine overhead ?
In the gray d before the Temple doors.
I rise to-morrow In the gray d,
Hang'd at mid-day, their traitor of the d
From the dim d of Being —
That beam of d upon the opening flower,
yet I think these oaks at d and even,
Dawn (verb) day of peril that d's darkly and drearily
Dawning (See also Never-dawning) The islands
call'd into the d church Out of the dead.
Day (See also Daay, Gala-day, Grood-day, Mid-day,
Saint's-day) too full of aches and broken
before his d. .
I have seen enough for this d.
For I foresee dark d's. Mary. And so do I, sir ;
and be the mightiest man This d in England.
I trust this d, thro' God, I have saved the crown.
And see the citizens arm'd. Good d ; good d.
a black 'un for us this blessed d.
the brightest d Beheld our rough forefathers
Might not St. Andrew's be her happiest d ? Mary.
Then these shall meet upon St. Andrew's d.
Till the sun dance, as upon Easter D.
St. Andrew's d ; sit close, sit close, we are friends.
Laughs at the last red leaf, and Andrew's D.
Should not this d be held in after years
This is the loveliest d that ever smiled On England.
I found One d, a wholesome scripture.
In clear and open d were congruent With that vile
Cranmer
Is like a word that comes from olden d's,
Queen hath been three d's in tears For Philip's
going-
Still Parleying with Renard, all the d with Renard,
And scarce a greeting all the d for me —
Methinks that would you tarry one d more
Madam, a d may sink or save a realm. Mary. A
d may save a heart from breaking too. Philip.
Well, Simon Renard, shall we stop ad? Renard.
Your Grace's business will not suffer, sire. For
one d more, so far as I can tell. Philip. Then
one d more to please her Majesty.
Good d, old friend ; what, you look somewhat worn ;
yet it is a <Z to test your health
Win thro' this d with honour to yourself.
It is a <f of rain.
Hath, like a brief and bitter winter's d,
Expectant of the rack from d to d,
What a d, what a d ! nigh upo' judgement ilaay
What, not one d ?
That all d long hath wrought his father's work,
believe I lamed his Majesty's For a d or t\\ o,
Indian shawl That Philip brought me in our happy
d'sl—
On all the road from Dover, d and night ; On all
the road from Harwich, night and d ;
as in the d of the first church, when Christ Jesus
was King.
Ah, those d's Were happy.
These meteors came and went before our d,
wilt thou fly my falcons this fair d ?
Down thirty feet below the smiling d —
in thy father's d They blinded my young kinsman,
O friends, I shall not overlive the a.
Lost, lost, the light of d.
The d is won !
the d. Our d beside the Derwent will not shine
Queen Mary v ii 359
Harold v i 496
Queen Mary n iii 53
V ii 234
„ V iii 51
Harold n ii 331
„ IV iii 122
V i 228
Becket nil
The Cwp I ii 295
I ii 434
n 124
Prom, of May I 281
Foresters iv 3
„ IV 1067
Becket i iv 145
Queen Mary in iii 172
iil25
iil31
IV 275
nil 20
nii302
n ii 378
n iii 101
in ii 119
ni ii 124
ni ii 238
in iii 1
III iii 87
in iii 89
in iii 161
ni iv 84
in iv 230
niv34
ni vi 12
in vi 116
in vi 118
ni vi 233
ni vi 238
IV ii 115
IV ii 117
IV ii 165
ivii229
IV iii 430
IV iii 437
IV iii 467
vi209
V ii 118
V ii 472
V ii 541
V ii 577
viv54
V V 239
Harold i i 132
,. n ii 147
„ n ii 430
„ II ii 510
„ in i 233
„ in ii 12
„ IV i 270
„ IV iii 49
Day
884
Dead
Tias (continued) guest, As haggard ^ a fast of forty d's, Harold r^m 116
I have ridden night and d from Pevensey— ., iv^»j J^^
but leave this d to me. " . „^
Because I loved thee in my mortal rf, - l\i^
I am dead as Death this <i to ought of earth s .■ v i 4^0
that happy d! A birthday welcome ! happy d sand ^ . ^^
Stigand, O father, have we won the <t? " \ lo-t^
and enough of death for this one d, The d ol ^ ;; 1 90
St. Calixtus, and the i, M7 (i , „ , , , " v ;• 190
His d, with aU his rooftree nngmg Harold,' ,, v u l^
A sauce-deviser for thy d's of fish, ^'"^'^^^506
Follow me this Rosamund d and night, ,. ^^''•^fl
Thou art wearied out With this d's work, ., y '
That havock'd all the land in Stephen's d. " t i 206
O rare, a whole long d of open field. " ^ i.» ^^^
made the twilight d, , ■ , j " t iii 414
Lost in desuetude, of my grandsire sd, ,-1
set the Church This d between the hammer and the ^ ... ^^^
Gr^t me one d To ponder these demands. „ 1 1" 668
d of peril that dawns darkly and drearily „ 1 •^ :|**
yea, and in the d of judgment also, , • , , _ " ' !v 9^1
that be dead ten times o'er 1' one d wi' the putrid fever ; „ i iv -i&l
Like sudden night in the main glare of d. ,• " \n^
decide on what was customary In olden ds, " „ ii 2^Q
but this d he profEer'd peace. " „\-^^
You had not borne it, no, not for a d. .. ttt »f 17
In the great d against the wronger. , „ , , " i"
Glancing at the d's when his father was only Earl of ^^ _ ^^^
Thanks"to the blessed Magdalen, whose d it is. „ m iii 172
out with Henry in the d's When Henry loved me, „ v 1 Jdl
What d of the week? Tuesday? ^, , „ v u z»i
to people heaven in the great d When God makes up ^ .. ^^^
his iewels. , , , , <^ " ^ ,•; <;Rfi
Do they not fight the Great Fiend dbjd? ,, J " 5»b
Fair Sk, a happy rf to you! ^'''' ^"^^ Vii 40
I have had a weary (Z in watching you. , . ,. , " . i^M
close not yet the door upon a night That looks half d. „ i n6^
This very d the Romans crown him king " " °^
He wills you then this d to marry him, .< J\^
And join your life this d with h^, -. "wo
to make the d memorial, when Synorix, first King, „ n *o»
This all too happy d, crown— queen at once. .. _ ° 7?^
be^ on my kneL^ e^ery d for these half-dozen years The Falcon 184
I come this d to break my fast wth you. " f^P
A lady that was beautiful as d Sat by me ,- ^»
but this d has brought A great occasion. " *°'
80 much worse For last d's journey. ...
^,sifi,'^'„Si" "'• ' '""'• ""' "" "" ^- »/««>- -iS
The sky ? or the sea on a blue d? " t 9Q4
Goodd! Wilson. Good d, sir. " J ^|?
Good d, then, Dobson. ■ " t ^^
Many happy returns of the d, father. " ^?V^
Who shrieks by d at what she does by night, .. 1 00^
and it seems to me nobbut t'other d. » ]? '
My name is Harold ! Good d, Dobbms ! » " '-^o
always told Father that the huge old ashtree there
would cause an accident some d; " „Ann
may drop ofi any <Z, any hour. You must see at once. „ m 4U^
You heard him say it was one of his bad d's, „ m ^o^
It is almost the last of my bad d's, I think. » ™ *'fi
Or ever the d began, ^ ^ Foresters 1 1 11
and these are the d's of Prince John. " i J ^ ' *
I love him as a damsel of his d " l; tli
Sufficient for the d, dear father ! . ,,. . " J^iioln
twilight of the coming d abeady ghmmers in the east. „ i lyfti
Butill befitting such a festal d " ^ \?. ^ '
To sleep! to sleep ! The long bright <Z is done, „ '^^^
Whate'er thy joys, they vanish vritb the d; „ i ui 44
There is no land like England Where'er the
light of i be ; (repeat) Foresters n j 2 6, 14, 18
king of d hath stept from oft his throne, Foresters n 1 26
Day {continued) Perchance this d may sink so gloriously. Foresters 11 1 31
Whene'er this d should come about, " ^}.
A maiden now Were ill-bested in these dark d s of John, „ °.."^ .
In the night, in the d, '• n " |»^
Dear, in these <i's of Norman license, " i" ^ ' '
having lived For twenty d's and nights in mail, „ rv i.^4
Not having broken fast the livelong d— " rv iSb
must we dance attendance all the d? d" , , "^ ^Xi
Daybreak Send the Great Seal by d. "^f^ ''i^
Day-dream Some hunter in d-d's or half asleep Fom<m iv 1088
Daylight (adj.) Hath shock'd me back into the d truth Queen Mary m v 135
Daylight (s) Let me bring you in here where there is
^ still full d. „ , Prom, of May m2lS
Dazed (See also Daaxei) Edward wakes !—X'— he hath .
seen a vision. ^^"'W "^ » ^^l
Dazing <See Brain-dazing ■ , ,. 4.
Deacon (-See also Cardinal-deacon) thou art but d, not yet ^ ^^^^ ^^^ ^^
Dead(adi.) (^ee aiso Dead, Famine-dead) You know .
your Latin— quiet as a d body. Q^een Mary i iv 181
Quiet as a d body. " \^l \°].
which every now and then Beats me halt d: „ i v p^»
When I and thou and all rebellions lie D bodies „ n 1 ew
The tree that only bears d fruit is gone. „ in n»
Sir, this d fruit was ripening overmuch. And had
to be removed lest living Spain Should sicken
at d England. Stafford. Not so d, But that a .
shock may rouse her. " ™. ' ^
d I cannot choose but love her, . >. ™ } o^o
true enough Her dark d blood is in my heart with mine. „ m 1 6^
Her dark d blood that ever moves with mine ,- ni 1 rfo^
And unto no d world ; but Lambeth palace, „ m " ^^
The islands caU'd into the dawmng church Out of ...
the d, deep night ^ . , ,^ - ™ ":Vift
should be No longer a d letter, but requicken d. -, ni iv iv
Let the d letter live.' - ™ }! i^
Let the (Z letter bum ! .u, " Trrvm
d— with the fear of death Too d ev'n for a death-watch ! „ m v idtf
my faith would seem D or half-drown'd, .. ^-"04?
Until the power suddenly blew him <Z. " JI^^Tft
The parson from his own spire swung out d, „ it 111 oto
Our altar is a mound of d men's clay, >- "^ " ■'■''^
A letter which the Count de Noailles wrote To that ..
d traitor Wyatt, " lf:trS>
Let d things rest. .. , . ^ " vH591
Tell him at last I know his love is d, „ ' v 71
J> or alive you cannot make him happy. » ici
Women, when lamd, Open my heart, .. ^ v iw
The Queen is d. " , j ^ ; o^n
For mv d father's loyalty to thee ? Sarold 11 240
a d man Rose from behind the altar, .. i " '<»
saw the church all fill'd With d men upright from theu ..
graves and all The d men made at thee to murder thee, ., i .u »a
The shadows of a hundred fat d deer For d men's ghosts. „ i u IW
Where they eat d men's flesh, and drink theu- blood. ,. n u ew
Dry as an old wood-fungus on a d tree, ^ , ^ " ^. \,^
and sell not thou Our Uving passion for a d man's dream ; „ m u w
Our dear, d, traitor-brother, Tostig, " iviuoo
How ran that answer which King Harold gave To his ... ^^^
(i namesake, " y^ m loi
Sound sleep to the man Here by d Norway » iv 11 1^
By God, we thought him d— " ^ "; {^
What did the d man call it— Sanguelac, .- ^ i io»
Mv fatal oath— the i Saints— the dark dreams— „ v ^0^
I am d as Death this day to ought of earth s ,. v 1 4^
They are stripping the rf bodies naked yonder, „ v u ^
I tell thee, girl, I am seeking my d Harold, .. v u
being the true wife Of this d King, who never bore revenge. „ v n ^
And this d king's Who, king or not, " I li 144
Pluck the d woman off the d man, Malet ! .. T^u i
D is he, my Queen ? ^ . ^^ -S*^^*'' ^'^- ^
A d man's dying wish should be of weight. ., nH 167
We wait but the King's word to strike thee d. „ i "i ^^j
They be d while I be a-supping. " J ? 250
that be d ten times o'er i' one day wi' the putnd fever , ,. i iv ^v
Dead
885
Dear
Dead (adj.) (continued) Let either cast him away like a d
dog ! Becket n ii 257
For tho' the drop may hollow out the d stone, ., rn iii 315
Trodden one half <Z ; one half , but half -alive, ., v i 63
Would he were d ! (repeat) ., v i 91, 95
She sends it back, as being d to earth. So d henceforth
to you. Henry. D ! you have murder'd her, ., v i 170
Why, then you are a d man ; flee ! „ v iii 126
The traitor's d, and will arise no more. ., v iii 200
No, Reginald, he is d. .. v iii 204
The body of that d traitor Sinnatus. The Cup i iii 179
Rouse the d altar-flame, fling in the spices, „ n 182
My liberality perforce is d Thro' lack of means of giving. The Falcon 296
437
460
470
476
519
651
654
659
918
D mountain.' Nay, for who could trace a hand
' D mountain flowers, d mountain-meadow flowers.
You bloom again, d mountain-meadow flowers.'
' D flowers !
' D mountain flowers ' — Ah well, my nurse has broken
The thread of my d flowers, as she has broken My
china bowl. My memory is as (2.
They left us there for d !
Ay, and I left two fingers there for d.
I left him there for d too !
I could almost think that the d garland Will break
is haunted by The ghosts of the d passions of d
men ; Pro in. of May ii 275
if the wretch were d I might forgive him ; We
know not whether he be d or living.
One Philip Edgar of Toft Hall in Somerset Is lately
d. Dora. D !—
That one, is he then — d !
D ! and this world Is brighter for his absence
for I am closely related to the d man's family.
He's d, man — d ; gone to his account — d and buried.
Shall I tell her he is <i ? No ; she is still too feeble.
d midnight when I came upon the bridge ;
Living . . . d . . . She said ' all still.
She hid this sister, told me she was d — I have wasted
pity on her — not d now —
■ — not d now — a swoon — a scene — Yet —
Yes, deathlike ! D? 1 dare not look : if d.
For be he d, then John may be our King.
II 433
II 447
II 452
II 457
11715
III 144
HI 337
III 368
III 683
III 690
III 696
III 716
Foresters i ii 98
II i 91
., II i 147
„ II i 311
„ n i 373
., n i 657
n ii 69
n ii 93
., n ii 147
IV 543
IV 846
IV 847
Qv^en Mary iv ii 12
and the d were found Sitting, and in this fashion ; „ v ii 395
Peace is with the d. ., v v 268
Peace with the d, who never were at peace ! ., v v 273
With looking on the d. And 1 so white ? Harold ii ii 815
dykes and brooks Were bridged and damm'd with d, „ iii ij 130
Drink to the d who died for us. ■• rv iii 69
Hail to the living who fought, the d who fell ! .. iv iii 106
with the d So piled about him he can hardly move. ., v i 657
What art thou doing here among the d? ■, v ii 33
Then all the d fell on him. , v ii 50
Love that can lift up a life from the d. Becket ii i 14
I am the bride of Death, and only Marry the d. The Cup ii 30
Is not this To speak too pitilessly of the d ? Prom, of May u 461
it is not So easy to forgive — even the d. „ n 486
— ^how she made her wail as for the d\ „ m 699
sheeted d Are shaken from their stillness in the grave Foresters ii i 45
Bid (adj.) So the owd uncle i' Coomberland be d, Prom, of May u 2
I'd like to fell 'im as d as a bullock ! „ ii 597
D! It mun be true, fur it wur i' print as black as owt. „ ii 730
being outlaw'd in a land Where law lies d,
and the son Is most like d —
I ha' served the King living, says she, and let me serve
him d,
saints were so kind to both on us that he was d before
he was bom.
or wreckt And d beneath the midland ocean,
I am but a stone and a d stock to thee.
What's here ? ad bat in the fairy ring —
Found him d and drench'd in dew.
The deer fell d to the bottom,
0 my good liege, we did believe you d.
Was justice d because the King was d ?
*ead (s) And after that, the trumpet of the d.
Prom, of May in 429
„ in 433
Queen Mary in vi 88
Becket u ii 203
Harold i i 385
Becket i iii 604
,, V iii 65
Prom, of May m 32
in 660
Foresters i ii 208
Queen Mary in i 451
DeSd (adj.) (continued) Be the colt d ? Dora. No,
Father.
Be he d ? Dora. Not that I know.
Deadly Tho' I be ever d sick at sea.
Who went before us did not wholly clear The d
growths of earth.
Deaf To the d adder thee, that will not dance
Art thou d ? Becket. I hear you.
Are you d ? What, have I lost authority among you ?
I be a bit d, and I wur hallus scaared by a big
word;
I am not d ! you fright me.
Is he d, or dumb, or daft, or drunk belike ?
Deafen'd and d by some bright Loud venture,
Edward's prayers Were d and he pray'd them dumb, Harold i ii 22
Deal (See also Deal) To d with heresy gentlier. Queen Mary in vi 58
D gently with the young man Absalom. Becket i iii 756
D not with things you know not. „ v ii 133
So that they d with us like honest men. Foresters iv 101
And I might d with four. „ iv 171
Deal Noa ; I knaws a d better now. Prom, of May n 26
Dealt We d in the wild justice of the woods. Foresters rv 1072
Dean D's Of Christchurch, Durham, Exeter, and Wells — Queen Mary i ii 8
I am the D of the province : let me bear it.
De-anathematise Can the King d-a this York ?
Dear I fear, I fear, I see you, D friend, for the last
time;
Ay, one and all, d brothers, pray for me ;
seeing now The poor so many, and all food so d.
Low, d lute, low !
It is the Count de Feria, my d lady.
D Madam, Philip is but at the wars ;
Mightily, my d lady !
My most d Master, What matters ?
0 Tostig, O d brother — If they prance. Rein in,
War, my d lady, War, waste, plague, famine,
he shall be my d friend As well as thine,
we are poison'd : our d England Is demi-Norman.
and d son, swear When thou art king, to see my solemn
vow Accomplish'd.
Nay, d lord, for I have sworn Not to swear falsely twice
Our d, dead, traitor-brother, Tostig,
No more, no more, d brother, nevermore —
Given me by my d friend the King of England —
O, my d friend, the King ! 0 brother !
The mouth is only Clifford, my d father.
Then, my d liege, I here deliver all this controversy
My d lord Archbishop, I learn but now that those poor
Poitevins,
Save that d head which now is Canterbury,
Spare this defence, d brother.
1 fear my d lord mixt With some conspiracy against
the wolf. The Cwp i ii 14
Welcome to this poor cottage, my d lady. The Fcdcon 270
O my d son, be not unkind to me. „ 509
Giovanna, my d lady, in this same battle We had been
beaten— „ 601
And thou too leave us, my d nurse, alone. „ 701
Ay, the d nurse will leave you alone ; „ 702
Giovanna, d Giovanna, I that once The wildest of the
random youth „ 806
D Philip, all the world is beautiful If we were
happy. Prom, of May i 576
D Eva Was always thought the prettier. „ ii 378
Wa.sn't d mother herself at least by one side a lady ? ,, in 300
But, 0 d friend. If thro' the want of any — ,, in 549
Take it again, d father. Foresters i i 341
~ ■ " ■ I i 343
I iii 159
II i 103
nil82
II I 538
n i 597
ni652
ni232
Becket i iii 498
V ii 10
Queen Mary i ii 103
IV iii 102
IV iii 209
V ii 376
vii529
vv24
Harold i i 24
„ I i 194
„ I i 371
„ 1 1465
„ II ii 79
„ in i 40
„ ni i 304
,. Ill i 309
„ IV iii 83
„ V i 247
Becket i i 337
.. I i 359
.. n i 220
.. niil35
,. nii426
V iii 6
„ V iii 168
Sufficient for the dw, d father !
And thou, d Little John, Who hast that worship for me
thou art the very woman who waits On my d Marian.
Ah d Robin ! ah noble captain, friend of the poor !
O thou unworthy brother of my d Marian !
O my d Marian, Is it thou ? is it thou ?
to dream that he My brother, my d Walter —
O d wife, we have fallen into the bands Of Robin Hood.
Dear
886
Debonair
Dear (continued) why, the silver Were d as gold, Foresters rr 42
You Much, you Scarlet, your d Little Jolin, „ iv 1083
Dear-cousin Do so d-c and royal-cousin him, Qveen Mary ni iv 400
Dearer What voices call you I) than mine that should
he dearest to you ? ,, v i 38
B than when you made your mountain gay. The Falcon 463
Dearest not with gold, But d links of love. Queen Mar;/ 1 v 539
What voices call you Dearer than mine that should
be d to you ? ,. v i 38
Nay, d Lady, see your good physician. „ ^.'^^^
Swear, d brother, I beseech thee, swear ! Harold ii ii 719
And ail is safe again. O d lady. The Cup i ii 313
' D Dora, — I have lost myself, and am lost for ever Prom, of May ii 83
But now that you have been brought to us as it
were from the grave, d Eva, „ in 236
Death God save her grace ; and d to Northumberland ! Queen Mary i i 67
transparent hand. Damp with the sweat of d, ,. ^ || ^
Your creed will be your <Z. „ i ii 46
Fly and farewell, and let me die the d. „ i ii 106
when you put Northumberland to d, ,. i v 486
another, mute as d, And white as her own milk ; ,. n ii 79
fromise full Allegiance and obedience to the d. ,, ii ii 169
t roll'd as black asd; „ n iii 20
He'll be the d on us ; „ n iii 102
D and the Devil — ^if he find I have one — „ in i 231
a pale horse for B and Gardiner for the Devil. .. m i 235
since your Herod's d. How oft hath Peter knock'd ,. ni ii 62
But yovu" wise bees had stung him first to d. .. in iii 65
with the fear of d Too dead ev'n for a deatli-watch ! ,. in v 140
For there was life — And there was life in d — .. in v 146
bolts. That jail you from free life, bar you from d. ,. iii v 173
what think you. Is it life ot d? ,. ni v 194
Z> would not grieve him more. " ,, iv i 25
thro' the fear of d Gave up his cause, ,. rv "i 27
Queen and Council at this time Adjudge him to the rf. ,. iviii38
Didst thou yield up thy Son to human d; ,, iv iii 145
some saying that may live After his d „ iv iii 160
For d gives life's last word a power to live, ,. iv iii 161
Written for fear of d, to save my life, ,. rv iii 242
I saw the d's of Latimer and Ridley. .. iv iii 295
— he is white as rf. ,. iv iii 559
Where he shall rest at night, moved to his d; .. rv iii 581
beard, which he had never shaven Since Henry's d, ,. rv iii 594
He cried Enough ! enough ! before his d.— ,. v ii 101
there is one B stands behind the Groom, And there
is one B stands behind the Bride— .. v ii 165
Have you been looking at the ' Dance of -D ' ? ,, v ii 170
' We pray continually for the d Of our accursed Queen
and Cardinal Pole.' ,. v ii 180
lash'd to d, or lie Famishing in black cells, ,. v ii 194
My people hate me and desire my d. „ v ii 345
My husband hates me, and desires my d. ,. v ii 348
I hate myself, and I desire my d. „ v ii 352
that I am in state to bring forth d — ,. v ii 593
God's d ! and wherefore spake you not before ? „ v iii 106
Then I and he will snaffle your ' God's d,' ,• v iii 120
God's d, forsooth — you do not know King Philip. „ v iii 123
poor Pole pines of it, As I do, to the d. „ v v 130
take heed f The blade is keen as d. „ v v 175
As if the chamberlain were B himself ! „ v v 204
a Tudor School'd by the shadow of d — • „ v v 226
but stark as d To those that cross him. — Harold n ii 321
Delay is d to thee, ruin to England. „ n ii 717
My lord ! thou art white as d. „ ii ii 814
If this be d, Then our great Council ^\ait „ m i 2
He hath swoon'd ! B? ... no, as yet a breath. ,, in i 319
ThLs lightning before d Plays on the word, — „ ni i 387
fill'd the quiver, and B has drawn the bow — „ mi 400
It is the arrow of d in his own heart — „ in i 404
for d is d, or else Lifts us beyond the lie. ,. m ii 79
and threaten us thence Unschool'd of B ? „ v i 287
Two d's at every swing, ran in upon us „ v i 409
I am dead as D this day to ought of earth's Save
William's d or mine. Edith. Thy dl— „ v i 425
our good Gurth hath smitten him to the d. „ v i 503
I iii 169
I iii 183
I iii 402
I iii 405
I iii 753 ,
ni41
ni300
IV ii 207
IV ii 215
IV ii 271
rv ii 382
V ii 153
v ii 210
V ii 559
V ii 605
V iii 100
V iii 184
The Cup I ii 143
I ii 216
I ii 274
I ii 314
I ii 454
I iii 104
n29
II 89
n 360
II 409
n 515
The Falcon 635
Death (continued) B ! — and enough of d for this one day, Harold v ii 119
move as true with me To the door of d. „ v ii 186
Let me learn at fuU The manner of his d, Becket, Pro. 426
Strike, and I die the d of martyrdom ; Strike, and ye
set these customs by my d
By God's d, thou shall stick him like a calf !
Degrade, imprison him — Not d for d.
I, my liege, could swear. To d for d.
King commands you, upon pain of d,
0 my life's life, not to smile Is all but d to me.
Thine — as I am — till d ! Rosamund. B? no !
that merits d, False oath on holy cross —
ruiming down the chase is kindlier sport Ev'n than tlie d.
dooms thee after d To wail in deathless flame,
not life shot up in blood, But d drawn in ; —
' The King is sick and almost unto d.' >
Thrills to the topmost tile — no hope but d;
They seek — you make — occasion for your d.
Some would stand by you to the d.
The power of life in d to make her free !
whole w5rld Abhor you ; ye will die the d of dogs !
Son, husband, brother gash'd to d in vain,
keep it, or you sell me To torment and to d.
1 know they mean to torture him to d.
Think, — torture, — d,- — and come.
Shall I go ? Shall I go ? B, torture-
Stay ! — too near is d.
I am the bride of B, and only Many the dead.
Life yields to d and wisdom bows to Fate,
ere two souls be knit for life and d,
Would you have tortm^d Sinnatus to d! ? Antonius.
No thought was mine of torture or of d,
some old Greek Say d was the chief good ?
more than one brave fellow owed His d to the charm
in it.
whose cheerless Horn-is after d Are Night and
Silence, Prom, of May i 250
' Till d us part ' — those are the only words, „ i 658
they that love do not believe that d Will part them. „ i 663
better d With our first wail than life— „ n 290
not so much for B As against Life ! .. ii 337
My father's d, Let her believe it mine ; „ n 453
Not all at once with d and him. „ ii 464
the man himself, When hearing of that piteous d, „ n 500
but I mun git out on 'is waay now, or I shall be the
d on 'im.
I have been telling her of the d of one Pliilip Edgar
of Toft Hall, Somei-set.
Look there — under the d's.
and that, I am sure, would be the d of him.
Peace, let him be : it is the chamber of B !
Laid famine-striken at the gates of B —
but if you stai-ve me I be Gafier B himself.
I think I should have stricken him to the d.
the scritch-owl bodes d, my lord,
there is a cross line o' sudden d.
Not mortal ! after d, if after d Robin. Life, life.
I know not d. Why do you vex me With raven-
croaks of d and after d ?
I would have battled for it to the d.
And bruised him almost to the d,
They strike the deer at once to d —
A thousand winters Will strip you bare as d,
Deathbed I've been attending on his d and his burial,
a Sister of INIercy, come from the d-b of a pauper,
Death-knell Kinging their own d-k thro' all the realm.
Deathless ghosts of Luther and Zuinglius fade Into
the d hell Queen Mary in ii 175
stroke that dooms thee after death To wail in d
flame. Becket iv ii 272
Deathlike Yes, d ! Dead ? I dare not look : Prom, of May m 716
Deathly How d pale ! — a chair, your Highness. Queen Mary i v 636
Death-watch Too dead ev'n for a d-w ! „ irrvl41
Debased downfallen and d From councillor to caitiff — „ iv iii 74
Debonair only d to those That follow where he leads, Harold n ii
n 610
n 706
n 710
in 167
ni 741
ni808
Foresters i i 48
„ n i 141
„ II i 333
„ II i 354
II i 619
II i 664
III 361
IV 525
IV 1056
Prom, of May ii 4
in37T
Be-cket i iii 172
I
De Brito
887
Deliver
De Brito (knight of King Henry II. 's household) (See also
Brito, Richard) De Tracy — even that flint 1) B. Becket, Pro. 523
De Tracy and I) B, from our castle. „ i i 278
De Broc thou, D B, that boldest Saltwood Castle — „ i iii 160
cursed those D B's That hold our Saltwood Castle „ n ii 267
Perchance the fierce D B's from Saltwood Castle, ,, v ii 249
your friends, those ruffians, the D B's, „ v ii 435
And one of the D B's is with them, ,, v ii 572
Debt Your pious wish to pay King Edward's d'^; Queen Mary i v 112
Pray'd me to pay her d's, and keep the Faith ; „ v v 257
— thou art drowned in d— Becket, Pro. 491
every bond and d and obligation Incurr'd as Chancellor. „ i iii 710
but the ill success of the farm, and the d's, Prom, of May n 69
I would pay My brother all bis d Foresters i ii 218
For whom I ran into my d to the Abbot, ,. n i 462
No, not an hour : the d is due to-day. .. iv 448
he Would pay us all the d at once, „ rv 485
The d hath not been paid. ,. iv 612
Decalogue Thro' chastest honour of the B Becket v i 206
Decaying Cool as the light in old d wood ; Queen Mary iv ii 5
Decent We be more like scarecrows in a field than d serving
men ; Foresters I i 35
Decide d on what was customary In olden days, Becket n ii 175
all the Church of France D on their decision, „ ii ii 178
Decided Cranmer, it is d by the Council Queen Mary iv ii 25
Decision all the Church of France Decide on their d, Becket it ii 178
Deck Stand on the d and spread his wings for sail ! Queen Mar;/ 1 v 379
same chair. Or ratlier throne of purple, on the d. „ m ii 8
Stagger on the slope d's for any rough sea Becket ii ii 106
Declaration In several biUs and d's, Queen Manj iv i 48
Declare d our penitence and grief For our long schism ,. iii iii 128
Our letters of commission will d this plainlier.
D the Queen's right to the throne ;
I shall d to you my very faith Without all colour,
came to sue Your Coimcil and yourself to d war.
(repeat)
Declared when last he wrote, d His comfort in j'our Grace
As I have many a time d to you —
Decline d The judgment of the King ?
Decree sanction yom- d Of Tostig's banishment.
Deed With golden d's and iron strokes that bi"ought
Some said it was thy father's d. Harold. They lieil.
Nothing, so thy promise be thy d.
The d's done— Away !
Deem needs must d This love by you retum'd as
heartily ; Queen Mary ii ii 196
Who d's it a most just and holy war. .. v i 147
Deeming D him one that thro' the fear of death .. iv iii 26
Deep (adj. and adv.) D — I shall fathom him. i iii 158
islands call'd into the dawning church Out of the
dead, d night of heathendom,
B And crying, in his d voice, more than once,
strike hard and d into The prey they are rending
from her —
There thou prick'st me d.
Drink and drink d — our marriage will be fruitful.
Drink and drink d, and thou wilt make me
happy.
We lie too d down in the shadow here.
I only wish This pool were d enough.
Lead us thou to some d glen,
deep (s) outdraught of the d Haul like a great strong fellow Harold ii i 10
boughs across the d That dropt themselves, „ m i 151
voice of the d as it hollows the cliffs of the land. Becket ii i 3
voice coming up with the voice of the d from the strand, .. ii i 6
Love that is bom of the d coming up with the sun from
the sea. (repeat) -• h i_9, 19
And the great d's were broken up again, .. v iii 43
)eep-down And deeper still the d-d oubliette, Harold ii ii 428
)eeier see D into the mysteries of heaven „ i i 200
D still. Widfnoth. And d still the deep-down
oubliette, „ " ii 427
that tempest which will set it trembUng Only to base
it d. Becket, Pro. 210
>eepest Simk in the d pit of pauperism. Prom, of May iii 803
„ III iii 222
IV ii 78
IV iii 225
.. v i 108, 116
in vi 78
The Cwp II 48
Becket I iii 675
Harold iv i 103
II ii 47
„ a ii 513
Becket iii iii 224
V iii 207
HI iii 173
IV iii 611
V ii 267
Harold ii ii 424
The Cup II 380
The Falcon 581
Prom, of May ii 304
Foresters ii ii 168
Deep-incavem'd His buzzard-beak and d-i eyes Half
fright me. Queen Mary i iv 266
Deer You are the stateliest d in all the herd — „ v ii 425
The shadows of a hvmdred fat red d Harold i ii 103
Buck ; d, as you call it. Becket i iv 139
This Canterbury, Uke a wounded d, „ ii ii 21
Huntsman, and hoimd, and d were all neck-broken ! The Cup i ii 23
That hold by Richard, tho they kill his d. Foresters i iii 101
The d, the lughback'd polecat, the wild boar, ., i iii 119
true woodman's bow of the best yew-wood to slay the d. .. ii i 393
Robin, like a d from a dog, .. ii i 433
By all the d that spring Thro' wood and lawn .. in 424
Gone, like a d that hath escaped thine arrow ! „ iv 60
What d when I have mark'd him ever yet Escaped ,, iv 62
They strike the d at once to death — ., iv 525
He drove his knife into the heart of the d, The d fell
dead to the bottom, .. iv 542
On nuts and acorns, ha ! Or the King's d? .. iv 884
Deer-like Chased d-l up his mountains, Harold i ii 148
Defamed be tray 'd, d, divorced, forlorn ! Queen Mary i v 26
Suffer not That my brief reign in England be d „ v ii 302
Defeat What ! are thy people sullen from d ? Harold iv i 2
and now but shims The semblance of d ; Becket i iii 191
Defect We hold by his defiance, not his d. .. ii ii 218
Defective seeing they were men D or excessive, „ ii ii 213
Nay, if they were d as St. Peter Denying Christ, . ii ii 215
Defence or any harm done to the people if my jest be in d
of the Truth ? .. ii ii 340
And private hates with our d of Heaven. ,. v ii 52
Spare this d, dear brother. v iii 168
Whereas in wars of freedom and d The Cup i ii 160
Defend I pray you. Do not d yourself. Becket ii ii 112
Except she could d her innocence. Foresters ii ii 47
I can d my cause against the traitors „ iv 898
Defender The great unborn d of the Faith, Queen Mary in ii 165
Till Truth herself be shamed of her d. Becket n ii 345
Defensoribus Non d istis, Walter Map. „ n ii 346
Defiance We hold by his d, not his defect. .. ii ii 218
Defied who yet d the tyrant, ii ii 216
— kinglike D the Pope, and, like his kingly sires, „ iv ii 440
Defy I hate thee, and despise thee, and d thee. Harold iv ii 79
Boldness out of the bottle ! I d thee. Foresters iv 239
Nay, I d thee still. „ iv 276
Degradation scarce have spoken with you Since
when ? — your d. Queen Mary iv ii 120
papers by my hand Sign'd since my d — „ xv iii 244
What doth hard murder care For d ? Becket i iii 394
Degrade and d the realm By seeking justice Queen Mary iv i 18
B, imprison him — Not death for deatli. Becket i iii 400
Degraded the courts of the Church, They but d him. „ Pro. 14
ye but d him Where I had hang'd him. „ i iii 391
Degree There stands a man, once of so high d. Queen Mary iv iii 69
Dei Ha — Verbum B — verbum — word of God ! „ m i 262
Deign my nobleness Of nature, as you d to call it, The Falcon 811
Who d to honour this my thirtieth year. Foresters i ii 79
If you will d to tread a measure with me. „ i ii 132
Deign'd Who never d to shine into my palace. The Falcon 285
The diamonds that you never d to wear. „ 761
Dejiciatur Equus cum equite B '. Harold v i 580
Delay B is death to thee, ruin to England. „ n ii 717
Delicacy repulses, the delicacies, the subtleties. Becket, Pro. 500
Delicate (See also Courtly-delicate) your hand Will
be much coveted ! What a d one ! Queen Mary v iii 44
Be men less d than the Devil himself ? Harold in i 116
I have been a lover of wines, and d meats, Becket i i 76
That's a d Latin lay Of Walter Map : „ v i 191
I am none of your d Norman maidens Foresters i i 212
Delicate-footed the d-f creature Came stepping o'er him, „ iv 535
Delight (s) comes To rob you of your one d on earth. I'he Falcon 828
but I Take some d in sketching. Prom, of May n 539
Delight (verb) B to wallow in the grossness of it, Becket n ii 343
Delighted Affrighted me, and then d me. Queen Mary iii v 144
Deliver Do here absolve you and d you And every
one of you, „ in iii 214
wouldst d Canterbury To our King's hands again, Becket i iii 580
Deliver
888
DevU
Deliver (continiied) I here d all this controversy Into
your royal hands.
I might d all things to thy hand —
Delivered ' The Queen of England is d of a dead
dog!'
he was d To the secular arm to bum ;
God's grace and Holy Chxu-ch d us.
are d here in the wild wood an hour after noon.
Demand (s) then to cede A point to her d ?
Grant me one day To ponder these d's.
Demand (verb) I will d his ward From Edward
the King d's three himdred marks,
the King d's seven hundred marks,
the King d's five hundred marks.
King D's a strict account of all those revenues
Antonius To-morjow will d your tribute —
Beclcet ii ii 136
„ iniii270
Queen Mary m ii 219
IV ii 213
Becket iv ii 309
Foresters iv 509
Queen Mary ni vi 170
Becket i iii 669
Harold I ii 58
Becket i iii 626
„ I iii 634
„ I iii 641
„ I iii 650
The Cwp I ii 97
Demanded d Possession of her person and the Tower. Queen Mary n ii 40
Demi-Norman our dear England Is d-N. Harold iii i 41
De-miracled fish, they d-m the miraculous draught, Becket m iii 124
Democracy when the tide Of full d has overwhelm'd
This Old world. Prom, of May i 593
When the great I> Makes a new world — ,, i 670
De Morville (kmght of tihe household of King Henry n.)
(See also Hugh) France! Ha! D M, Tracy,
Brito— fled is he ? Becket i iv 198
D M,l had thought so well of you ; „ v ii 519
This wanton here. D M, Hold her away. ., v iii 171
Den Who dragg'd the scatter'd limbs into their d. Queen Mary i v 402
hottest hold in all the devil's d „ v iv 15
Dares the bear slouch into the lion's d ? Becket iv ii 282
Denial Treble d of the tongue of flesh, Harold in i 281
Denied Kenard d her, Ev'n now to me. Queen Mary ni vi 2
or more I) the Holy Father ! „ ni iv 248
St. Peter in his time of fear I) his Master, „ m iv 264
Albeit I have d him. „ rv ii 236
Nay, but, my Lord, he d purgatory. „ iv iii 629
Would not — if penitent — have d him her Forgive-
ness. Prom, of May ii 496
Denis (Bishop of Paris and Patron Saint of France) St. D,
that thou shouldst not. Becket, Pro. 89
By St. I) De Brito. Ay, by St. D, now will he
flame out. And lose his head as old St. D did. ,. v ii 477
St. D of France and St. Alphege of England, ., v iii 165
Denmark the King of D is with us ; Queen Mary ii i 195
Dense How d a fold of danger nets him round, Harold ii ii 17
Deoy I d not to have been Your faithful friend Queen Mary iv i 88
against the Norseman, If thou d them this. Harold iv i 159
D not thou God's honour for a king. Becket n ii 424
Nay, I d not That I was somewhat anger'd. „ iv ii 350
Come, come, could he d it ? What did he say ? The Cup i ii 345
can d Nothing to you that you require of him. The Falcon 717
Denying if they were defective as St. Peter D Christ, Becket ii ii 216
Depart And under his authority — I d. „ x iii 728
Departed And presently all rose, and so d. The Falcon 367
Depend all d's Upon the skill and swiftness Queen Mary i iii 142
All d's on me — Father, this poor girl, Prom, of May in 211
Deputation comes a d From our finikin fairy nation. Foresters ii ii 144
Derwent Where lie the Norsemen ? on the D ? Harold iv i 253
Our day beside the D will not shine „ rv iii 50
Descend D's the ruthless Norman — „ ii ii 467
And that my wife d's from Alfred ? „ u ii 594
the second curse D upon thine head, „ in ii 49
Scatter thy people home, d the hill, „ v i 10
so d again with some of her ladyship's own
appurtenances ? The Falcon 416
Descending as the soul d out of heaven Into a body
generate. Queen Mary iv i 35
Desert (merit) fierier than fire To yield them their d's. „ v iv 27
D'sl Amen to what? Whose d's? „ v iv 30
Desert (waste) wells of Castaly are not wasted upon the d. Becket, Pro. 388
Deserve He must d his surname better. Queen Mary in ii 197
that worship for me which Heaven knows I ill d — Foresters i iii 162
Designer See IMsh-designer
Desire (s) She had no d for that, and wrung her
hands, Queen Mary in i 384
Desire (s) {continued) And hot d to imitate ;
Her fierce d of bearing him a child,
0 yield them all their d !
and no need Of veiling their d's.
The love of freedom, the d of God,
Desire (verb) My people hate me and d my death.
My husband hates me, and d's my death.
1 hate myself, and I d my death.
A stranger monk d's access to you.
Desolate That d letter, blotted with her tears,
Despair I am almost in d.
Shall I d then ?— God forbid !
but O girl, girl, I am almost in d.
Despair'd I had d of thee — that sent me crazed.
Despise Those of the wrong side will d the man,
Make us (i it at odd hours, my Lord.
I hate thee, and d thee, and defy thee.
Despite d his fearful heresies, I loved the man.
And he hath learnt, d the tiger in him,
Queen Mary in iv 171
IV iii 429
The Cup n 8
Prom, of May i 530
Foresters n i 68
Qtieen Mary v ii 345
V ii 348
V ii 351
Becket v ii 65
Prom, of May ii 475
Queen Mar'/ 1 v 385
IV iii 129
Foresters i i 263
„ IV 1021
Queen Mary iv iii 25
IV iii 386
Harold iv ii 79
Queen Mary iv iii 633
Harold i i 147
d his kingly promise given To our own self of pardon, Becket ii ii 431
Despondency When left alone in my d, Queen Mary iv ii 95
Destiny Moved in the iron grooves of i> ? Remorse
then is a part of D, Prom, of May n 267
Destroy We come not to d, but edify ; Queen Mary in iii 188
Take heed, lest he d thee utterly. Becket i iii 13
Wilt thou d the Church in fighting for it, „ i iii 36
Desuetude wholesome usages, Lost in d, „ i iii 413
Determine Your courts of justice will d that. Queen Mary ii iv 131
Dethrone Arise against her and d the Queen — „ i iii 91
De Tracy (Sir William, knight of the household of King
Henry H.) {See also Tracy) D T— even that
flint De Brito. Becket, Pro. 522
D T and De Brito, from our castle. „ i i 278
Deum bells must ring ; Te D's must be sung ; Queen Mary in ii 211
Deus Jacta tonitrua D bellator ! Harold v i 570
Fulmina, fulmina D vastator ! „ v i 574
Device put some fresh d in lieu of it — Queen Mary in i 268
but follow'd the d of those Her nearest kin : „ in i 379
Devil {See also Dare-devil, Divil) has offer'd her his
son Philip, the Pope and the D. „ i i 106
all Your trouble to the dogstar and the d. „ i iv 292
His foes — the D had subom'd 'em, „ i v 626
ordnance On the White Tower and on the D's Tower, „ n iii 44
Philip had been one of those black d's of Spain, „ in i 215
that every Spaniard carries a tale like a,d „ in i 224
Death and the D — if he find I have one — „ m i 231
a pale horse for Death and Gardiner for the D. „ in i 235
Not for the seven d's to enter in ? „ in ii 140
d take all boots were ever made Since man went
barefoot. „ iii v 197
Or to be still in pain with d's in hell ; „ iv iii 222
With all his d's doctrines ; „ iv iii 278
Pole Will tell you that the d belpt them thro' it. „ iv iii 352
give the D his due, I never found he bore me any
spite „ V ii 472
I were whole diti wrong'd you. Madam. „ v iii 6
hottest hold in all the d's den „ v iv 15
wrath of Heaven hath three tails, The d only one. Harold i i 62
Fishermen ? d's ! Who, while ye fish for men with your
false fires, Let the great D fish for your own souls. „ n i 29
Like Jonah, than have known there were such d's. „ n i 39
would make the hard earth rive To the very D's horns, „ n ii 741
Be men less delicate than the D himself ? I thought that
naked Truth would shame the D The D is so modest. „ m i 117
A lying d Hath haunted me— „ v i 317
Ye haled this tonsured d into your courts ; ■ Becket i iii 387
Forty thousand marks ! forty thousainl d's — „ i iv 91
Saving the D's honour, his yes and no. „ n ii 142
if this if be like the D's ' if Thou wilt fall (lo^^ n and
worship me.' „ in iii 285
O d, can I free her from the grave ? „ v i 185
Down to the d with this bond that beggars nie ! Foresters i i 340
By all the d's in and out of Hell ! „ n ii 27
proud priests, and these Barons, D's, „ in 127
And wake the D, and I may sicken by 'em. „ in 325
Devil
889
Die
Foresters iv 553
IV 594
III 6
11 ill
Devil {continued) by all the saints and all the d's ye shall
dance.
Or, like the Z>'5 they are, straight up from Hell.
Devilisb all of us abhor The venomous, bestial, d
revolt Of Thomas Wyatt. Queen Mary ii ii 287
Devilry What game, what juggle, what d are you playing ? Becket v i 153
Devilstow Into Grodstow, into Hellstow, /> ! „ v i 215
Devon (Couni^) Were lin D with my wedded bride. Queen Mary i iv 119
Carew stirs In D:
should be in Z> too.
Devon (Earl of) (See also Courtenay) Courtenay, to
be made Earl of D,
Good-day, my Lord of D ;
What are you musing on, my Lord of Z) ?
This dress was made me as the Earl of D To take
my seat in ;
A Courtenay of D, and her cousin.
Was that mj Lord of Z> ? do not you Be seen in
comers with my Lord of D.
What was my Lord of D telling you ?
This comes of parleying with my Lord of D.
But our young Earl of D — Mary. Earl of Z) ?
I freed him from the Tower, placed him at Court ;
I made him Earl of D, and — the fool —
My Lord of i) is a pretty man.
and party thereimto. My Lord of D.
not now and save the life Of D :
could have wedded that poor youth. My Lord of D —
Lord D, ^irls ! what are you whispering here ?
Devour run m upon her and d her, one and all
Dew To those three children like a pleasant d.
Is God's best d upon the barren field.
Vying a tear with our cold d's,
hath the fire in her face and the d in her eyes.
Found him dead and drench'd in d,
Dewy I Shall see the d kiss of dawn no more
Diadem He sends you This d of the first Galatian Queen,
tell him That I accept the d of Galatia —
Diagonalise if he move at all, Heaven stay him, is fain to
d. Herbert. Dl thou art a word-monger. Our
Thomas never will d. Thou art a jester and a verse-
maker. D !
■ Dialectic with his charm of simple style And close d, Prom, of May i 225
Diamond (adj.) if we wiZZ buy <i necklaces To please oui- lady, The Falcon Ai
Diamond (s) set it round with gold, with pearl, with d. Queen Mary i v 376
Some six or seven Bishops, d's, pearls, „ iii i 52
A d, And Philip's gift, as proof of Philip's love, „ iii i 66
on his neck a collar, Gold, thick with d's ; „ iii i 80
Cut with Sid; so to last l^e truth. ., iii v 25
Not ev'n the central d, worth, I think, Becket v i 164
Dare beg him to receive his d's back — The Falcon 262
Then I require you to take back your d's — „ 720
But have you ever worn my d's ? ., 737
The d's that you never deign'd to wear. .. 761
I cannot keep your d's, for the gift I ask for, „ 776
These d's are both yours and mine — ., 903
Diamond-dance ripples twinkled at their d-d. Queen Mary in ii 10
Dian Behold a pretty D of the wood. Foresters iii 267
Diana Our Artemis Has vanquish'd their D. The Cup ii 457
Dickon here's little D, and little Robin, and little
Jenny —
This paper, D. I found it fluttering at the palace
gates : —
Die Fly and farewell, and let me d the death.
order with all heretics That it shall be, before I d,
D like the torn fox dumb,
I live and d The true and faithful bride of Philip—
or d with those That are no cowards and no Courtenays. „ ii iv 86
And Lady Jane had left us. Mary. They shall d. Renard.
And your so loving sister ? Mary. She shall d. Queen Mary ii iv 140
Did not Lord SufiEolk d like a true man ? „ iii i 164
Did you see her d? „ in i 344
said she was condemn'd to d for treason ; „ in i 377
light of this new learning wanes and d's : „ in ii 173
That if the Queen should d without a eliild, „ ni iii 74
lilll
I iii 95
iiv27
iiv73
iiv86
I iv 152
iivl83
iiv252
IV 161
I V 614
II iv 101
II iv 124
V ii 477
vii486
Becket, Pro. 525
Queen Mary iv iii 92
V i 102
Harold v i 151
Foresters i i 167
n ii 147
Harold ii ii 331
The Cup u 132
II 158
Becket n ii 330
Queen Mary n iii 112
in ii 217
I ii 106
IV 36
II ii 331
II iv 42
Die {continued) Thou knowest we had to dodge, or
duck, or d ;
To sing, love, marry, chum, brew, bake, and d,
says she will Uve And d true maid —
Did not More d, and Fisher ? he must bum.
and hide himself and d ;
— they give the poor who d.
Ay — ^gentle as they call you — ^live or d ?
Fire — inch by inch to d in agony !
Stand watching a sick beast before he d's ?
Yet — It is expedient for one man to d. Yea, for the
people, lest the people d. Yet Avherefore should
he a that bath retum'd
therefore he must d, For warning and example.
Hurls his soil'd life against the pikes and d's.
howsoever hero-like the man D's in the fire.
And you saw Latimer and Ridley d ?
Did he d bravely ? Tell me that, or leave All else
untold.
To sleep, to d — I shall d of it, cousin.
I may a Before I read it. Let me see him at once.
Make me full fain to Uve and d a maid.
Nay ! Better d than lie !
Better d than lie !
Forgive me, brother, I will live here and d.
better d Than credit this, for death is death,
Blaze Uke a night of fatal stars on those Who read
their doom and d.
till her voice D with the world.
To tell thee thou shalt d on Senlac hill —
I shall d — I d for England then, who lived for England
— What nobler ? men must d.
live or d, I would I were among them !
honeymoon is the gall of love ; he d's of his
honeymoon,
old men must d, or the world would grow mouldy,
Lo ! I must out or d. Becket. Or out and d.
For we would live and d for thee, my lord.
Strike, and I d the death of martyrdom ;
— there to beg, starve, d —
you still move against him, you may have no less than
to d for it ;
To d for it — I live to d for it, I d to live for it,
State will d, the Church can never d.
King's not like to d for that which d's
I must d for that which never d's.
I am not so happy I could not d myself,
I am to d then, tho' there stand beside thee
both of us will d, And I will fly with my sweet boy
I will go live and d in Aquitaine. (repeat)
The chances of his life, just ere he d's.
foremost of their files, who d For God,
I am prepared to d.
The best of all not all-prepared to d.
D \vith him, and be glorified together.
And d upon the Patriarchal throne Of all my predecessors ?
whole world Abhor you ; ye will d the death of dogs !
■ — -fight out the good fight — d Conqueror.
I'd sooner d than do it.
A woman I could live and d for. What ! Z> for a
woman, what new faith is this ?
I will be faithful to thee till thou d.
to live And d together.
Thy breed will d with thee, and mine m ith me :
The boy may d : more blessed were the rags
Than all my childless wealth, if mine nmst d.
She had to d for it — she died for you.
' Let us eat and drink, for to-morrow we d.'
I shall go mad for utter shame and d.
And poor old father not d miserable.
My five-years' anger cannot d at once,
and father Will not d miserable.'
Go back to him and ask his forgiveness before he d's.—
I would almost d to have it ! Dora. And he may d
before he gives it ;
Queen Mary iii iv 358
in V 112
in vi 46
rvi62
IV i 143
IV ii 53
IV ii 162
IV ii 223
„ IV iii 8
, IV iii 17
, rv iii 51
rv iii 312
IV iii 325
rv iii 328
IV iii 568
v ii 127
V ii 549
V iii 98
Harold i i 158
„ n ii 281
„ II ii 804
„ III ii 78
„ IV i 252
„ IV iii 76
„ V i 241
„ V i 267
„ V i 463
Becket, Pro. 365
„ Pro. 409
I i 268
I ii 16
I iii 168
II i 75
The
The
But
in iii 326
„ m iii 334
IV ii 87
„ IV ii 228
., IV ii 236
„ V i 109, 142
V ii 274
V ii 495
V ii 562
V ii 564
V iii 31
V iii 75
V iii 184
V iii 190
The Cup I ii 224
I iii 65
u330
II 111
The Falcon 18
850
856
877
Prom, of May i 260
I 682
I 722
n463
n660
m402
ni405
Die
890
Dissolved
Die (continued) d, and make tbe soil For Caesars,
Cromwells, From, of May m 591
lanker than an old hoi-se turned out to d on the common. Foresters i i 52
0 Lord, I will live and d for Kiiw Richard — „ i ii 37
1 am outlaw'd, and if caught, la. ,, i iii 163
But if you follow me, you may d with me. „ i iii 166
We will live and d with thee, (repeat) ,. i iii 168
That we would d for a Queen — ., in 444
and if thou prick me there I shall d. .. iv 570
Garry her off, and let the old man d. .. iv 677
He d's who dares to touch thee. ,. iv 734
Died doubtless you can tell me how she d ? Queen Mara iii i 357
And Thy most blessed Son's, who d for man. ,. iv iii 154
he d As manfully and boldly, and, 'fore God, „ iv iii 342
Until they d of rotted limbs ; „ iv iii 445
My Lord, he d most bravely. iv iii 570
Ay, and with him who d Alone in Italy. „ v ii 507
caught a chill in the lagoons of Venice, And d in
Padua. Mary. D in the true faith ? „ v ii 516
That she would see your Grace before she — d. .. v iii 105
or Knut who coming Dane D English. Harold iv iii 56
Drink to the dead who d for us, the living AVho fought
and would have d, „ iv iii 69
ran in upon us And d so, „ v i 411
remembering One who d for thee, Becket n i 307
Only my best bower-maiden d of late, „ in i 68
She d of leprosy. „ v ii 268
I had once A boy who d a babe ; The Cup i ii 149
To me, tho' all your bloom has d away. The Falcon 468
She had to die for it — she d for you, „ 877
Oh, yes, indeed, I would have d for you. Prom, of May i 714
pauper, who had d in his misery blessing God, .. m 378
when the mistress d, and I appealed to the Sister again, „ ni 393
we have certain news he d in prison. Foresters iv 778
Dies Ilia Their ' d I,' which will test their sect. Queen Mary in iv 428
Dies &8e Their hour is hard at hand, their ' d /,' „ in iv 426
Differing where the man and the woman, only d as
the stronger and the weaker. Prom, of May m 190
Dig Or I will d thee with my dagger. Queen Mary n iii 96
And d it from the root for ever. . Becket rv ii 77
Dilated Seem'd thro' that dim d world of hers. Queen Mart/ ii ii 324
Dim (adj.) Seem'd thro' that d dilated world of hers, „ ' n ii 324
You droop in yom- d London. „ v ii 609
Mine eyes are d : what hath she written ? read. ., v v 1
Well — is not that the course of Nature too. From
the d dawn of Being — Prom, of May i 281
Dim (verb) Rather than d the splendour of his crown Becket v ii 343
Dimple silver Were dear as gold, the wi'inkle as the d. Foresters iv 43
Dine there ^vur an owld lord a-cum to d wi' un, Queen Mary iv iii 504
' I wunt d,' says my Lord Bishop, „ iv iii 507
He wishes you to d along with us, Prom, of May i 618
Stay, D with my brethren here, Foresters iv 346
bonds From these three men, and let them d Avith us, ., iv 963
By Mahound I could d with Beelzebub ! .. iv 971
there's yet one other : I will not d without him. ., iv 996
Dined let that wait till we have d. iv 992
Dingle And loves and dotes on every d of it. „ iv 390
Dining-hall Carry fresh i-ushes into the d-h, ., i i 81
Dinner (See also After-dinner) and a ^^•ur .so owld
a couldn't bide vor his d, Queen .Mary iv iii 506
' Now,' says the Bishop, says he, ' we'll gwo to rf ; ' „ iv iii 513
thou must dash us down Our d from the skies. The Falcon 154
his falcon Ev'n wins his d for him in the field. ,, 231
fur he'll gie us a big d. Prom, of May i 9
there wudn't be a d for nawbody, and I should ha'
lost the pig. „ 1 149
the farming men 'uU hev theii- d i' the long barn, ., i 166
Why if Steer han't haxed schoolmaster to d, „ i 185
and we'll git 'im to speechify for us arter d. „ i 440
his monies, his oxen, his d's, himself. Foresters i i 234
I love my d — but I can fast, I can fast ; ,. i ii 64
Bitters before d, my lady, to give you a relish. „ ni 434
he that pays not for his d must fight for it. „ iv 200
thou fight at quarterstaff for thy d with our Robin, „ iv 208
So now which way to the <i ? „ rv 972
Diocese He'll burn ad to prove his orthodoxy.
Wasted our d, outraged our tenants,
Dip A lake that d's in William As well as Harold.
Dipping Have I been d into this again
Dipt d your sovereign head Thro' these low doors.
Directed Half a score of them, all d to me —
Queen Mary ni iv 353
Becket v ii 431
Harold v i 186
Prom, of May I 292
The Falcon 866
Prom, of May ii 722
Dirty as I hate the d gap in the face of a Cistercian monk, Becket u. ii 381
Disaffected The d, heretics, reformers, Look to you Queen Mary r iv 170
Disappear my voice Is martyr'd mute, antl this man d's, Becket m iii 350
Disappear'd She has d, They told me, from the
farm — Prom, of May ii 406
She has d, poor darling, from the v orld — „ n 409
Disappointment L, Ingratitude, Injustice, Evil-
tongue, Queen Mary v ii 154
Dis-archbishop after that. We had to d-a and unlord, „ iv ii 128
Disarm Is it not easy to a! a woman ? The Cup i iii 106
Disastrous And fared so ill in this d world. Quem Mar if v ii 344
Discipline d's that clear the spiritual eye, Becket v i 42
Disconsolate I pray you be not so d; Queen Mary v ii 129
Discontent Hath made me king of all the d Foresters n i 87
Discourage to d and lay lame The plots of France, Queen Mary v i 187
Discourtesy I shall remember this D. Becket i i 239
Discrown Who did d thine husband, unqueen thee ? Harold iv i 193
Disdain (See also Self-disdain) for I much d thee, but if
ever Thou see me clasp Foresters ii ii 74
Diseased Old, miserable, d, Incapable of children. Queen Mary v v 178
Disgrace Their Graces, our d's ! God confound them ! ,. mi 414
Disgraced Thou hast d me and attainted me, „ ni ii 54
Why do you so my-lord me, Who am d? „ iv ii 177
D, dishonour'd! — not by them, „ iv ii 200
Disguise (s) No ! the d was perfect. Let's away. „ r iii 178
The monk's d thou gavest me for my bower : Becket v ii 93
Shall I be known ? is my d perfect ? Foresters i ii 18
Disguise (verb) D me — thy gown and thy coif. „ n i 186
Disguised I am ilj d. Queen Mary in i 33
Ay, but you go d. Becket i i 297
Tliou art no old woman — thou art d — Foresters n i 410
this is Maid Marian Flying from John — d. „ ii i 680
Dish which cannot tell A good d from a bad, Becket, Pro. 106
Ye have eaten of my d and drunken of my cup for a
dozen years. .. i iv 29
King would act servitor and hand a d to his son ; ,. in iii 139
She broke my head on Tuesday with a d. Foresters i iii 134
Dish-designer A d-d, and most amorous Becket, Pro. 99
Dishonour (s) — did D to our wives. The Cup i ii 184
willing wives enough To feel d, honour. „ i ii 189
courteous for aught I know Whose life is one d. „ i ii 194
Thro' that d which you brought upon us. Prom, of May in 765
Dishonom (verb) you that d The daughters and wives of
your own faction — Foresters iv 697
Dishonour'd Disgraced, d ! — not by them. Queen Mary iv ii 200
old man. Seven-fold d even in the sight Of thine
own sectaries — „ v v 133
1 have not d thee — I trust I have not ; Becket i i 354
Dislocation And lamed and maim'd to d, „ iv ii 267
Disloyal Yet there be some d Catholics, Queen Mary m iv 42
Disobedience and grief For our long schism and cZ, „ in iii 129
Disobey and that you might not seem To d his HoUness. „ v ii 53
Dispense the Pope could d with hLs Cardinalate, „ i i 127
Displace Place and d our councilloi-s, „ ii ii 160
Displease sheathe your swords, ye will d the King. Becket i iii 179
l""or whatsoever may d him — „ ii ii 162
Something that would d me. „ in i 245
If the phrase ' Return ' d you, we will say— The Falcon 729
Dispoped From one whom they d ? Harold in i 107
Dispossessed thou art d of all thy lands, goods, and
chattels ; Foresters i iii 59
Disruption shake the North With earthquake and d — Harold i ii 200
Dissemble D not; play the plain Christian man. Queen Mary iv iii 267
I did d, but the hour has come For utter truth
and plainness ; „ iv iii 272
Dissembler Liar ! d ! traitor ! to the fire ! „ iv iii 259
Dissoluteness om* John By his Nonnan arrogance and d. Foresters ii i 85
Dissolved The bond between the kingiloms be d ; Queen Mary iii ui 11
The worldly bond between us is d, Becket i i 347,
ll
Dissonance
891
DoU
Dissonance The weakness and the d of our clans. The Cup i i 23
Distance in the eternal d To settle on the Truth. Harold iii ii 102
1 lur prophet hopes Let in the happy d. The Cnp i ii 414
This poor, flat, hedged-in field — no d — Prom, of May ii 344
what full hands, may be Waiting you in the rf ? „ n 511
Distaste Philip Mith a glance of some d, Queen Mary in i 99
Distracted I could hate her for it But that she is d. The Cup ii 179
Distress Queen in that d Sent Cornwallis and Hastings Qiieen Mary n ii 30
Distrust Philip and Mary ! Gardiner. I d thee. „ mi 310
Disturb no more feuds D our peaceful vassalage to Rome. The Cup ii 71
Disturbance such brawls and louil d's In England, Becket v ii 352
Loud d's ! Oh, ay — the bells rang out .. v ii 362
Ditch hog hath tumbled himself into some corner. Some d, .. i i 371
Divers D honest fellows, The Duke of Suffolk lately
freed from prison. Queen Mary i iii 119
hath trespassed against the king in d mannei'S, Foresters i iii 64
Diverse But Janus-faces looking d ways. Queen Mai-y m ii 75
Divide that do d The world of nature ; ., m v 120
God gave us to d us from the m olf ! Harold iv iii 101
moon D^s the whole long street with light and shade. Becket i i 365
D me from the mother church of England, My Canterbiuy. ,, v ii 360
Divided (tho' some say they be much d) Queen Mary i i 79
so this unhappy land, long d in itself, ,, i iii 21
Like our Council, Your city is d. „ ii ii 60
So I say Your city is d, „ ii ii 99
Dividing See Sharp-dividing
Divil (devil) niver 'a been talkin' haiife an hour wi'
the d 'at killed her oan sist«r, Prom, of May ii 604
we'd as lief talk o' the D afoor ye as 'im, ,. in 130
you'll set the D's Tower a-spitting, Queen Mary ii iii 102
Division With earthquake and disruption^ — some d — Harold i ii 201
Divoice lie Of good Queen Catharine's d — Queen Mary m iv 232
when I forget Her foul d — my sainted mother — •
No !— .. IV i 81
when the King's d was sued at Home, .. iv iii 41
Divorced (adj.) Cast off, betray'd, defamed, d, forlorn ! i v 26
Divorced (verb) I, that thro' the Pope d King Louis, Becket iv ii 417
you d Queen Catharine and her father ; Queen Mary i ii 56
Dimied See Brainndizzied
Dizziness you were sick in Flanders, cousin. Pole.
A d. Queen. Mary ill ii 35
Dizzying I have a d headache. Let me rest. Becket v i 88
Doat Should we so d on courage, were it commoner ? Queen Mary n ii 339
not old enough To d on one alone. I'he Cup i iii 70
Doated And how you d on him then ! Becket ni i 16
Dobbins (Edgar's mistake for Dobson) D, 1 think.
Dohson. D, you thinks ; Prom, of May i 459
that D, is it, With whom I used to jar ? ii 612
May not this B, or some other, spy Edgar in Harold ? .. ii 673
D, I think. Dohson. I beant T). .. ii 699
My name is Harold. Good day, D\ ,. n 727
Naay, but ' Good daay, D: .. ii 732
' Good daay, D.' Dang tha ! .. ii 742
Dobson (a fanner) (See also Dobbins) I'm coming
down, Mr. D. .. 1 46
In Cumberland, Mr. D. „ 1 66
Getting better, Mr. D. „ 1 69
The owd man be heighty to-daay, beant he ? Dora.
Yes, Mr. D. ,. 1 78
Where do they blow, Mr. D? „ 1 88
What, Mr. D? A butcher's frock ? „ 1 93
Perhaps, Master D. I can't tell, .. i 114
Master D, did you hear what I said ? „ 1 171
Very likely, Mr. D. She will break fence. ,, i 193
Nor I either, Mr. D. „ 1 237
But I have Mr. D. It's the old Scripture text, „ i 258
D. Edgar. Good day, then, D. ., 1 298
' Good daay then, D ! ' Civil-spoken i'dfied ! .. i 300
You never find one for me, Mr. D. „ i 306
Beant there house-breakers down in Littlechester, D — „ i 389
Yes, Mr. D, I've been attending on his deathbed .. u 3
Hesn't he lef t ye nowt ? Dora. No, Mr. />. ,. ii8
Cannot you vmderstand plain words, Mr. D? ,. n 113
That is enough. Farmer D. ,. n 118
you would still have been. Farmer Z>. „ n 122
Dobson (a farmer) (continued) ' Farmer D ! ' Well, I
be Farmer D ; but I thinks Fanner D's dog Prom, of May ii 124
Farmer D [ I be Farmer D, sewer anew ; „ n 135
why then I beant Farmer D, but summuu else — „ n 139
an' owd D should be glad on it. „ ii 146
fur owd D '11 gi'e us a bit o' supper. Sally. 1 weant
goa to owd D; „ II 216
Owd Steer gi'es nubbut cowd tea to 'is men, and owd
D gi'es beer. Sally. But I'd like owd Steer's cowd
tea better nor D's beer. ,. ii 225
when owd D coom'd upo' us ? ,. ii 232
Sally Allen, you worked for Mr. D, didn't you? „ iii 102
Farmer D, were I to marry him, has promised „ ni 168
Mr. D telled me to saay he s browt some of Miss Eva's roses „ in 345
This D of your idyU ? „ m 563
Doctor Or a high-dropsy, as the d's call it. Queen Mary in ii 225
the d's tell you. At three-score years ; „ in iv 408
Ay, ay, but mighty d's doubted there. „ iv i 83
Tell them to fly for a d. Prom, of May m 712
Doctrine hatred of the d's Of those who rule, Queefti Mary in iv 159
and retract That Eucharistic d in your book. „ rv ii 81
With all his devil's d's ; „ iv iii 278
Dodge Thou knowest we had to d, or duck, or die ; „ ni iv 357
And see you, we shall have to d again, „ m iv 360
Doe I found this white d wandering thro' the wood, Foresters n i 95
Dofft For he, when having d the Chancellor's robe — Becket i iii 454
Dog (See also House-dog) as a mastiff d May love a
puppy cur for no more reason Queen Mary i iv 194
And roUs himself in carrion like a, d. „ i v 169
boil'd, buried alive, worried by d's ; „ n i 211
' The Queen of England is delivered of a dead dl' „ in ii 220
sends His careful d to bring them to the fold. „ m iv 105
if a mad d bit your hand, my Lord, „ m iv 204
Like d's that set to watch their master's gate, ,, in iv 309
The d that snapt the shadow, dropt the bone. — Harold i ii 188
play the note Whereat the d shall howl and run, ,, i ii 192
d, with thy lying lights Thou hast betray'd us „ n i 21
—d's' food thrown upon thy head. .■ u ii 431
Better to be a liar's d, and hold Mv master honest, ,. iii i 124
Old d, Thou art drunk, olddl " ,. iv iii 163
Good d's, my liege, well train'd, Becket, Pro. 119
a feeder Of d's and hawks, and apes, and Uons, „ i i 80
may I come in with my poor friend, my d? „ i iv 94
The d followed his calling, my lord. ,, i iv 97
Better thy d than thee. The King's courts would use
thee worse than thy d — „ i iv 101
Who misuses a d would misuse a child — • „ i iv 109
Away, d ! Beggar. And I was bit by a mad d o'
Friday, an' I be half d „ i iv 216
Shame fall on those who gave it a d's name — „ n i 141
Let either cast him away like a dead d\ .. ii ii 257
The d I cramm'd with dainties worried me ! ,, v i 244
whole world Abhor you ; ye will die the deatli of d's ! „ v iii 184
two-legg'd d's Among us who can smell a true occasion, 2'he Cup i ii 112
Adulterous d ! Synorix. What ! will you have it ? „ i iii 108
' Adulterous d ! ' that red-faced rage at me ! „ i iii 122
Farmer Dobson's d 'ud ha' knaw'd better nor to
cast Prom, of May ii 126
and we be d's that have only the bones. Foresters i i 25
Robin, like a deer from a d, ,, ii i 433
if we kill a stag, our d's have their paws cut off, .. iv 225
Dog-Dons These black d-D Garb themselves bravely. Queen Mary in i 189
Dogma Whose d's I have reach'd : „ iv ii 212
they swarm into the fire Like flies — ^for what ? no d. ,, v ii 112
Dogstar and all Your trouble to the d and the devil. „ i iv 292
Doin' it be the Lord's d, noan o' mine ; Prom, of May in 49
Doing (part.) (See also A-doing) for d that His father
whipt him into d — Queen Mary i v 62
O brother. What art thou d here ? Harold iv ii 4
The Norman, What is he d ? „ v i 218
What art thou d here among the dead ? „ v ii 32
Doing (s) (See also Doin') Whose d's are a horror to the
east, A hissing in the west ! ' Becket iv ii 244
Dolefully then what is it That makes you talk so d? Prom, of May in 572
Doll some waxen d Thy baby eyes have rested on, Queen Mary i v 8
Doll-face
892
Down
Doll-face A d-f blanch'd and bloodless, Becket iv ii 175
Domed gulf and flatten in her closing chasm D cities, hear. The Cup ii 301
Domine illorum, D, Scutum scindatur ! Harold v i 508
lUos trucida, B. „ v i 515
Dominion realm Of England, and d's of the same, Queen Mary in iii 117
all the resdm And its d's from aU heresy, „ in iii 216
To leave the Pope d in the West. Harold v i 23
Don Carlos See Carlos
Doom (s) some great d when God's just hour Peals — Queen Mary i iv 261
Into the deathless hell which is their d ., in ii 175
And by the churchman's pitiless d of fire, „ in iv 49
Reversed his d, and that you might not seem „ v ii 51
Hapless d of woman happy in betrothing ! „ v ii 364
mean The d of England and the wrath of Heaven ? Harold i i 46
War there, my son ? is that the d of England ? „ i i 125
Why not the d of all the world as well ? „ i i 127
Crying ' the d of England,' and at once He stood „ in i 134
along the highest crying ' The d of England ! ' — ., in i 157
Blaze like a night of fatal stars on those Who read their
d and die. .. iv i 252
And bide the d of God. „ v i 61
If I faU, I fall— The d of God ! ., v i 136
And not on thee — nor England— fall God's dl ,. v i 371
And front the d of God. „ v i 436
the man shall seal, Or I will seal his d. Becket i iii 331
Dark as my d — „ ni i 282
To draw you and your husband to your d. The Cup i ii 223
thy d and mine — Thou — coming my way too — ■ „ ii 490
Doom (verb) stroke that d's thee after death To wail Becket iv ii 270
Doomsday (adj.) Were the great trumpet blowng d dawn, Harold v i 227
Doomsday (s) Till d melt it. Qv£en Mary in v 51
Door (See also Hall-door, In-door, Within-door) The
traitor husband dangled at the d, ,, in i 10
hath the d Shut on him by the father whom he loved, „ v ii 121
tell the cooks to close The d's of all the offices below. „ v v 117
arm'd men Ever keep watch beside my chamber d, Harold n ii 245
clench'd their pirate hides To the bleak church d's, „ rv iii 37
move as true with me To the d of death. „ v ii 186
I saw that d Close even now upon the woman. Becket i i 202
when he hears a d open in the house and thinks ' the
master.' ■• ni iii 98
Thro' all closed d's a dreadful whisper crept „ v ii 88
No, look ! the d is open : let him be. „ v ii 315
Battering the d's, and breaking thro' the walls ? ,. v ii 626
Shut the d's ! We will not have him slain .. v iii 53
Fly, fly, my lord, before they burst the d's\ ., v iii 57
Undo the d's : the church is not a castle : ,. v iii 62
Take thou this cup and leave it at her d's. The Cup i i 68
In the gray dawn before the Temple d's. .. i ii 295
this d Opens upon the forest ! Out, begone ! > ^ I! ^^8
His own true people cast him from their d's „ i ii 352
close not yet the d upon a night That looks half day. „ i ii 387
Fling wide the d's and let the new-made children „ ii 163
She — close the Temple d. Let her not fly. „ n 460
and dipt your sovereign head Thro' these low d's. The Falcon 868
Push'd from all d's as if we bore the plague. From, of May m 804
As Wealth walk'd in at the d. Foresters i i 151
Poverty crept thro' the d. „ i i 157
Not while the rivulet babbles by the d, „ i ii 322
open, or I will drive the d from the door-post. „ n i 220
Why did ye keep us at the d so long ? „ ii i 224
Door-post open, or I will drive the door from the d-p. „ ii i 220
I will fasten thee to thine own d-p „ ii i 403
Doorway when every d blush'd, Dash'd red Becket i iii 346
Dora (daughter of Farmer Steer) (See also Dora Steer)
an' Miss D, an' Miss Eva, an' all ! Prom, of May 1 11
Miss D be coomed back, then ? ,, 1 12
Blessings on your pretty voice. Miss D. „ i 64
Theer be redder blossoms nor them, Miss D. „ i 86
Under your eyes, Miss D. „ 1 89
Noa, Miss D ; as blue as — (repeat) „ i 95, 99
He'll be arter you now, Miss D. „ 1 119
And I tells ye what, Miss D: he's no respect for the
Queen, „ 1 131
I thank you for that. Miss D, oiiyhow. „ 1 158
Dora (daughter of Farmer Steer) (continiied) They say
yom- sister, D, has retum'd. Prom, of May i 546
Oh, Z>, D, how long you have been away from home ! „ i 767
So the owd uncle i' Coomberland be dead, Miss D, n 2
Not like me, Miss B ; and I ha' browt these roses to ye — u 13
and now she be gone, will ye taake 'em. Miss Z) ? n 21
an' weant ye taake 'em now, Miss I), n 41
I feel sewer, Miss B, that I ha' been noan too sudden wi' you. .. n 60
' Dearest B, — I have lost myself, ., ii 83
Are you — you are — that B, The sister. .. n 363
Miss B, Dan Smith's cart hes runned ower a laady .. n 567
What feller wur it as 'a' been a-talkin' fur haafe an hour
wi' my B? „ u 576
a-plaayin' the saaine gaame wi' my B — „ n 591
— a daughter of the fields. This Bl „ n 624
if ye be goin' to sarve our Z> as ye sai-ved our Eva — .. ii 692
What hasta been saayin' to my B? .. u 704
thou hesn't naw business 'ere with my B, as 1 knaws on, ,, n 736
Miss B, mea and my maates, us three, we wants to hev
three words wi' ye. ,, m 124
Has anyone found me out, B? ..in 225
See B ; you yourself are shamed of me, ,, m 268
and I love him so much — Eva. Poor Bl .. ni 286
0 B, he signed himself ' Yours gratefully ' — ^fancy, B, .. m 333
Hark ! B, some one is coming. .. in 339
Oh, B,B\ .; in 425
Miss B ! Miss B I Bora. Quiet ! quiet ! .. in 475
You are pale, my B ! but the ruddiest cheek ,. in 486
B, If marriage ever brought a woman happiness ., in 638
OB,Bl .. ui 787
Dora Steer (See also Dora) doant tha knaw he be sweet upo' BS, ii 161
kill'd her oan sister, or she beant B S. n 605
Dotage love her less For such a d upon such a man. Queen Mary v ii 421
Stigand, unriddle This vision, canst thou ? Stigand. B ! Harold in i 176
Dote Many so d upon this bubble world, Queen Mary iv iii 168
The old man d^s. Foresters ii ii 83
And loves and d's on every duigle of it. ,, iv 390
Doted bad the king Who d on him, Harold iv i 103
Doter A d on white pheasant-flesh at feasts, Becket, Pro. 97
Double (adj.) this d thundercloud That lours on England — Harold in ii 159
Double (s) Fight thou with thine own d, not with me, „ iv iii 168
would dare the chance Of d, or losing all. The Cup i iii 148
Doubly 1 a,md bound to thee . . . Harold n ii 557
Doubt (s) he brought his d's And feai-s to me. Queen Mary i ii 75
Which f oimd me full of foolish d's, „ i v 530
but there are d's. „ u ii 307
all my d's I fling from me like dust, Becket i i 148
Doubt (verb) I <£ it not, Madam, most loyal. Queen Mary i iv 2i8
B not they will be speedily overthrown. „ n ii 200
1 not d that God will give me strength, „ iv ii 234
lest anyone among you d The man's conversion „ iv iii 107
I cannot d but that he comes again ; „ \- v 26
Thanks, truthful Earl; I did not d thy word, Harold ii ii 724
what is it you d ? Behold your peace at hand. -ffee/ce/ ii ii 199
Wherefore should you d it ? The Cup i ii 340
I d not they are yours. The Falcrm 721
I d not, I d not, and though I be down in the mouth, Foresters i ii 43
Doubted ay, but mighty doctors d there. Queen Mary iv i 84
Dough household d was kneaded up mth blood ; Becket i iii 351
Dove (See also Stock-dove) d, who flutters Between thee
and the porch, Harold iv i 230
But since the fondest pair of d's will jar, Becket iv ii 40
Dovecote Our d flown ! I cannot tell why monks .. v ii 580
Dover Your Majesty shall go to B with me, Queen Mary in vi 218
To B? no, I am too feeble. „ in vi 220
On all the road from B, day and night ; „ v ii 577
We could not move from B to the Humber Harold ii ii 536
They stood on B beach to murder me, Becket v ii 436
Down (adj.) (See also Deep-down) and bursten at the
toes, and d at heels. Queen Mary i i 53
ha ! he is d ! Edith. He d. Who d ? Stigand. The
Noniaan Count is d. Harold v i 551
Down (bed) like a careless sleeper in the d ; Forester.^ i i 207
And make B for their heads to heaven ! Queen Mary v iv 8
Down (hill) Breathe the free wind from off our Saxon d's, Harold ii ii 18'
1
Downfall
893
Drench'd
Downiall The d of so many simple souk,
Downfallen d and debased From councillor to caitifE-
Down-silvering The rosy face, and long d-s beard,
The rosy face, and long d-s beard —
Down-sweeping d-s to the chain. Wherewith they
bound Queen Mary iv iii 594
Downward One d plunge of his paw would rend away Becket iv ii 283
Doze He d's. I have left her watching him. Foresters n ii 80
Dozed I d upon the bridge, and the black river Prom, of May ii 649
Dozen ('SVe also Half-dozen) And drunken of my cup for
a d years.
a-peacocking and a-spreading to catch her eye for a d
year,
Drag To d us with them. Fishermen? devils !
would d The cleric before the civil judgment-seat,
Nay, d me not. We must not seem to fly.
I wUl not only touch, but d thee hence.
The women of the Temple d her in.
I'd like to d 'im thruff the herse-pond, and she to
be a-lookin' at it.
They d the river for her ! no, not they !
if you care to d your brains for such a minnow.
Dragg'd Who d the scatter'd limbs into their den.
and we d The Littlechester river all in vain :
Dcagon Our Wessex d flies beyond the Humber,
Set forth our golden D,
by the d of St. George, we shall Do some injustice,
Dtain And d's the heart and marrow from a man.
Drain'd thou hast d them shallow by thy tolls,
I have almost d the cup — A few drops left.
Oranght {See also Sleeping-drau^t) Brain-dizzied
with a.doi morning ale.
they de-miracled the miraculous d,
No not a <i! of milk, no not an egg,
drink Her health along with us in this rich d,
d and crack'd His boat on Ponthieu
Slave (See also Drove)
beach ;
Draw d back your heads and your horns before I break
them,
JD with your sails from our poor land,
where Edward d's A faint foot hither.
To d him nearer with a charm Like thine to thine.
D nearer, — I was in the corridor,
JD thou to London, there make strength
but this D's thro' the chart to her.
Did not your barons d their swords against me ?
we pray you, d yourself from under The wings of France.
lest ye should d together like two ships in a calm.
To a you and your husband to your doom.
d's From you, and from my constancy to you.
If thou d one inch nearer,
I will not harm thee. D !
'tis but to see if thou canst fence. D !
Drawbridge I'll have the d hewn into the Thames,
They had hewn the d down into the river.
Queen Mary i ii 54
„ IV iii 74
Harold in i 46
„ IV i 261
Becket i iv 30
The Falcon 101
Harold n i 28
Becket i iii 83
„ vii636
„ V iii 152
The Cup I iii 118
Prom, of May n 593
III 694
Foresters ii i 323
Queen Mary i v 401
Prom, of May ii 413
Harold rv i 3
„ IV i 245
Foresters rv 939
„ II i 672
Harold I i 319
The Cup n 385
Queen Mary n i 71
Becket iii iii 124
The Falcon 871
Foresters in 352
Harold n ii 34
Queen Mary i i 4
„ III vi 226
Harold I i 143
I ii 7
„ nii345
„ V i 126
Becket, Pro. 173
I iii 501
n ii 247
m iii 297
The Cup I ii 222
The Falcon 811
Foresters i i 145
., n i 556
„ n i 573
Queen Mary n ii 376
n iii 18
Foresters i i 319
I would hoist the d, like thy mast«r.
Drawing-room shamed of his poor farmer's daughter
among the ladies in his d-r ? Prom, of May iii 295
Shamed of me in a d-r ! (repeat) „ m 296, 307
Dnwl'd fat fool ! He d and prated so, Harold rv ii 41
Drawn Will he be <i to her ? Queen Mary i v 73
fain have some fresh treaty d between you. ,. i v 261
I say they have d the fire On their own heads : „ rv iii 379
In some dark closet, some long gallery, d, „ v ii 218
With both her knees d upward to her chin. „ v ii 391
hath mainly d itself From lack of Tostig — Harold m i 167
fill'd the quiver, and Death has d the bow — „ in i 401
Hast not thou d the short straw ? Becket i iv 3
not life shot up in blood. But death d in ;— „ rv ii 382
We are almost at the bottom of the well ; little
more to be i from it — Prom, of May m 162
Dread (adj.) And hurl the d ban of the Church on those Becket m iii 210
Dread (s) not for d Of these alone, but from the fear
of Him Quee^i Mary iv iii 178
Dread (verb) lied like a lad That d's the pendent scourge, Harold n ii 658
Dread (verb) (continued) They fear you slain : they d they
know not what. Becket v ii 600
Dreadful And d shadows strove upon the hill, Harold in i 377
0 God ! some d truth is breaking on me — Some d thing
is coming on me. Becket in i 265
Thro' all closed doors a d whisper crept „ v ii 88
Left but one d, line to say, that we Should find her
in the river ; Prom, of May ii 411
that d night ! that lonely walk to Littlechester, „ ni 366
Dreading But d God's revenge upon this reahn Harold i i 172
Dream (s) (See also Day-dream, Love-dream) men-at-
arms Guard my poor d's for England. Queen Mary i v 154
It was a, d; 1 must not dream, not wink, „ in v 153
they come back upon my d's. „ v ii 189
Wide of the mark ev'n for a madman's d. „ v iii 82
Nor let Priests' talk, or d of worlds to be, „ v v 217
if yon weird sign Not blast us in our d's. — * Harold i i 122
An evil d that ever came and went — „ i ii 70
what a d ! Harold. Well, well,— a d — no more ! „ i ii 91
Did not Heaven speak to men in d's of old ? „ iii 95
Thou hast misread this merry d of thine, ,. r ii 98
Come, thou shalt dream no more such d's ; ,. i ii 108
upon thine eyelids, to shut in A happier d. ,. i ii 127
Our living passion for a dead man's d; ., m ii 60
Last night King Edward came to me in d's —
(repeat) Harold iv i 259, 266
1 am no woman to put faith in d's. „ iv i 264
by dead Norway without d or dawn ! „ iv iii 122
only d's — where mine own self Takes part „ v i 298
My fatal oath — the dead Saints- — the dark d's — „ v i 381
D, Or prophecy, that ? Becket i i 55
Well, d and prophecy both. .. i i 57
thou my golden d of Love's own bower, .. n i 34
Bright as my d, ..mi 278
my d foretold my martyrdom In mine own church. ,, v ii 632
the black river Flow'd thro' my d's — if d's they
were. Prom, of May n 651
which is my d of a true marriage. „ m 179
I have freed myself From all such d's „ in 595
Dream (verb) It was a dream ; I must not d, not
wink. Queen Mary m v 154
He cannot d that / advised the war ; „ v ii 57
Come, thou shalt d no more such dreams ; Harold i ii 108
Good-night, and d thyself Their chosen Earl. „ i ii 248
Who knows I may not d myself their king ! „ i ii 251
He sees me not — and yet he d's of me, „ n ii 144
I did not d then I should be king. — ,. m i 270
king can scarcely d that we, who know „ iv i 163
Tell him the Saints are nobler than he d's, ,. v i 56
that none may <i! I go against God's honour — Becket n ii 167
D of it, then, all the way back. Foresters i i 140
to d that he My brother, my dear Walter — „ n i 651
You dared to d That our great Earl, „ n i 685
I fear Id. „ rv 1010
Dream'd who d us blanketed In ever-closing fog. Queen Mary m ii 19
Not d of by the rabidest gospeller. „ m vi 138
Last night, I d the faggots were alight, „ iv ii 1
and I d that I loved Louis of France : and I loved
Henry of England, and Henry of England d that
he loved me :
D that twelve stars fell glittering out of heaven
who never saw nor d of such a banquet.
I had d I was the bride of England, and a queen,
while you d you were the bride of England, —
I dl was the consort of a king.
This mountain shepherd never d of Rome,
tear it all to pieces, never d Of acting on it.
Who knows that he had ever d of flying ?
Becket, Pro. 356
ii46
iiv84
vil02
vil04
vil44
The Cwp I ii 17
„ I ii 247
Prom, of May i 654
cuirass in this forest where I d That all was peace — Foresters rv 130
Dreaming old enough To scare me into d, Queen Mary iv ii 103
I am cZ ; for the past Look'd thro' the present, Prom, of May n 639
I was d of it all the way hither. Foresters i i 139
Dree (three) and awaay betimes wi' d hard eggs for
a good pleace at the bumin' ; Queen Mary iv iii 489
Drench'd then he dash'd and d. He dyed, Harold m i 141
Drench'd
894
Dug
Drench'd (continued) Found him dead and d in dew, Foresters n ii 147
Dress This d was made me as the Earl of Devon Queen Mary i iv 72
I wear beneath my d A shirt of mail : „ i v 145
And what was Mary's d? „ ni i 56
I was too sorry for tlie woman To mark the d. „ in i 59
An-ange my d — the gorgeous Indian shawl „ v ii 538
if I hadn't a sprig o' wickentree sewn into my d. Foresters ii i 250
Damn all gentlemen,
Prom, of May n 578
m204
Drest — d like a gentleman, too.
says I !
0 graves in daisies d,
Drew He d this shaft against me to the head, Queen Mary v ii 80
Earl, the first Christian Caesar d to the East Harold v i 22
thereupon, methought. He d toward me, Becket i i 102
loveliest life that ever d the light From heaven The Cup i iii 56
D here the richest lot from Fate, „ ii 442
would not crush The flv that d her blood ■ Prom, of May u 494
Robin fancied me a man. And d his sword upon me. Foresters in 21
Drewest And never d sword to help the old man „ n i 541
Drift That is your d. Queen Mary i v 305
And queens also ! What is your <Z ? Becket. My
d is to the Castle, Becket i ii 82
1 see your d ... it may be so . . . „ v i 82
Drill how should thy one tooth d thro' this ? Foresters ii i 276
Drill-sergeant yet are we now d-s to his lordship's lettuces, The Falcon 550
Drink thou could'st d in Spain if I remember. Qu£en Mary ii i 38
eat dead men's flesh, and d their blood. Harold n ii 808
Z> to the dead who died for us, „ rv iii 69
tho' I can d wine I cannot bide water, Becket i iv 220
which the more you d, The more you thirst — yea — d
too much. The Cwp i iii 139
That Synorix should d from his own cup. ., ii 353
They two should d together from one cup, „ ii 361
See here, I fill it. Will you d, my lord ? „ ii 367
make libation to the Goddess, And now I d. „ ii 378
D and d deep — our marriage will be fruitful. D and
d deep, and thou wilt make me happy. ,, u 380
' Let us eat and d, for to-morrow we die.' Prom, of May i 259
D to the Lion-heart Every one ! Foresters i ii 5
Here, here — a cup of wine— <i and begone ! „ i iii 89
Shall d the health of our new woodland Queen. ., ni 314
till the green earth d Her health along with us „ ui 350
D to the health of our new Queen o' the woods, „ m 368
We d the health of thy new Queen o' the woods. „ in 372
D to the Queen o' the woods, „ m 388
And lie with us among the flowers, and d — „ rv 966
Drinker A d of black, strong, volcanic wines, Queen Mary v ii 93
Drive Do you mean to d me mad ? „ v ii 200
applaud that Norman who should d The stranger Harold n ii 540
and 3?et I saw thee d him up his hills — ., iv i 211
he join'd with thee To d me outlaw'd. ., iv ii 14
FoUow them, follow them, d them to the sea ! „ v i 602
Louis Returning, ah ! to <i thee from his realm. Becket n ii 418
as men Have done on rafts of wreck — it d's you mad. The Cu-p i iii 142
and I'd d the plow straait as a line Prom, of May i 369
open, or I will d the door from the door-post. Foresters ii i 220
Driven The guards are all d in, Queen Mary n iv 54
and d back The Frenchmen from their trenches ? „ v ii 256
eat it like the serpent, and be d out of her paradise. Becket, Pro. 533
Lifted our produce, d our clerics out — „ v ii 432
mine own dagger d by Synorix found The Cwp ii 86
Have our loud pastimes d them all away ? Foresters ii ii 105
Driving it was you that were d the cart — Prom, of May ni 87
Droop faith that seem'd to d will feel your light, Queen Mary ni iv 22
You d in your dim London. „ v ii 609
Drooping and maiden moon Our d Queen should know ! „ v ii 457
Drop (s) And putrid water, every d a worm, „ iv iii 444
tho' the d may hollow out the dead stone, Becket ni iii 314
I have almost drain'd the cup — A few d's left. The Cup n 386
niver touched a d of owt till my oan wedding-
daay, Prom, of May i 362
p'raps ye hears 'at I soomtimes taakes a d too much ; „ n 108
voice a-shaakin', and the d in 'er eye. „ n 130
Drop (verb) His in whose hand she d's ; Queen Mary in i 112
not d the mask before The masquerade is over — „ lU vi 109
d The mud I carried, like yon brook, Becket n i 158
Drop (verb) (continued) may d off any day, any hour.
You must see him at once. Prom, of May in 407
Then I would d from the casement, like a spider. Foresters i i 316
Dropsy (See also High-dropsy) but I hear she hath
a d, lad. Queen Mary m ii 224
Fie on her d, so she have ad! „ in ii 226
Dropt Have I d it ? I have but shown a loathing face „ lu vi 112
dog that snapt the shadow, d the bone. — Hamld i ii 188
boughs across the deep That d themselves, „ mi 152
He sat down there And d it in his hands, Becket i iii 324
royal promise might have d into thy mouth „ in iii 276
and d Their streamers earthward, The Cup i ii 404
And the stock-dove coo'd, till a kite d down. Prom, of May i 55
dosta knaw this paaper? Ye d it upo' the road. ,. n 687
Wealth d out of the window, Foresters i i 156
Dross As gold Outvalues d, light darkness, Becket i iii 715
Drove (See also Drave) When he we speak of d the
window back. Queen Mary v ii 464
my father d the Normans out Of England ? — Harold i i 251
thou and he d our good Normans out From England, ,. n ii 524
Athelstan the Great Who d you Danes ; „ iv i 75
my father d him and his friends, De Tracy Becket i i 276
d me From out her memory. Prom, of May n 404
My lord John, In wrath because you d him from the
forest. Foresters m 450
He d his knife into the heart of the deer, .. iv 541
Drown Why, the child will d himself. Becket ii i 322
but these arm'd men — will you d yourself? „ v ii 276
even d you In the good regard of Rome. The Cup i i 150
Were there no boughs to hang on, Rivers to d in ? ,. i ii 79
Must all Galatia hang or d herself ? .. i ii 87
d all poor self-passion in the sense Of public good ? .. ii 101
how often justice d's Between the law and the letter
of the law ! Foresters iv 512
Drown'd (See also Half-drown'd) A sea of blood — we
are d in blood — Harold in i 398
The curse of England ! these are d in wassail, ,, iv iii 223
— thou art d in debt — Becket. Pro. 491
all d in love And gUttering at full tide — ■ The Cap n 233
Drowning The d man, they say, remembers all The chances
of his life, Becket v ii 272
Drudge went into service — the a! of a lodging-house — Prom, of May m 392
Drug (s) B's — but he knows they camiot help me— Queen Mary v v 60
Drug (verb) and science now could d and balm us Prom, of May n 339
Drunk has d and gambled out All that he had. Queen Mary n iii 87
Make themselves d and mad, „ ni i 282
and our marriage and thy glory Been d together ! Harold iv iii 9
Old dog, Thou art d, old dog ! „ iv iii 164
Too d to fight with thee ! „ iv iii 165
Thou hast d deep enough to make me happy. The Cup n 424
Have I not d of the same cup with thee ? ,. n 463
you were stupid d all Sunday, and so ill in conse-
quence all Monday, Prom, of May in 80
Is he deaf, or dumb, or daft, or d belike ? Foresters i ii 208
Drunken My Lord, the world is like a d man. Queen Mary iv iii 393
0 d ribaldry ! Out, beast ! out, bear ! Becket i i 230
Ye have eaten of my dish and d of my cup for a dozen years. .. i iv 30
Drunkenness to snore away his d Into the sober headache, — ,, i i 371
Dry D as an old wood-fmigus on a dead tree, Harold in i 8
if you follow Not the d light of Rome's straight-going
policy. The Cup i i 145
Duchy You have her D, The point you aim'd at, Becket n ii 76
You did your best or worst to keep her D. „ n ii 84
Duck Thou knowest we had to dodge, or d, or die ; Queen Mary ni iv 357
Duck'd Or I will have you dl „ iv iii 540
Dudley (Guildford) See Guildford Dudley
Due (adj.) D from his castles of Berkhamstead and Eye Hecket i iii 628
thanks of Holy Church are d to those That went „ n ii 190
According to the canon's pardon d To him that
so repents. Queen Mary iv iii 33
No, not an hour : the debt is d to-day. Ponders iv 448
Due (s) command That kiss my d when subject, Harold m ii 42
Dug D from the grave that yawns for us beyond ; Queen Mary v ii 163
1 d mine into My old fast friend the shore, Harold n i 6
The trenches d, the palisades uprear'd „ v i 189
Duke
895
Ear
Duke The D hath gone to Leicester ; Quern Mary ix i 4
Until I hear from Carew and the D. „ n i 122
it is thought the D will be taken. „ n i 136
Is Peter Carew fled ? Is the D taken ? „ n i 142
Ay, if D's, and Earls, And Counts, „ in i 50
Our D is all between thee and the sea. Our D is all
about thee like a God ; Harold n ii 314
yield this iron-mooded D To let me go. ., n ii 340
My lord ! the D awaits thee at the banquet. ., ii ii 805
Thy D will seem the darker. Hence, I follow. „ n ii 817
a himdred Gold pieces once were offer'd by the D. The Falcon 325
Dulcimer Organ and pipe, and d, chants and hymns Hecket v ii 365
Dull You've but a d life in this maiden court, Queen Mary i iii 113
Sin is too d to see beyond himself. „ v ii 441
Magdalen, sin is bold as well as d. .. v ii 443
we were d enough at first, but in the end we flourished
out Becket m iii 136
Dulness part real, part childlike, to be freed from the d — „ nt iii 156
Dumb (adj.) anfl he pray'd them d, and thus I dumb thee
too, Harold i ii 22
be not wroth at the d parchment. Foresters i i 342
Is he deaf, or d, or daft, or drunk belike ? „ i ii 208
D children of my father, that will speak Queeti Mary n i 77
Die like the torn fox d, „ ii ii 331
Dumb (verb) and he pray'd them dumb, and thus I d
thee too, Harold i ii 24
Dumbd d his carrion croak From the gray sea for ever. „ rv iii 65
Dumbfounded and your heresy D half of us. Queen Mary iv ii 127
Dumble (name of a cow) but D %vur blow'd wi' the
wind, and D^s
barrin' the wind, D wur blow'd wi' the winil,
D's the best milcher in Islip.
Dungeon In breathless d's over steaming sewers,
blackn&ss of my d loom Across their lamps of revel,
Dungeon'd d the other half In Pevensey Castle —
Dunghill But on the heretic d only weeds. Howard.
Such weeds make d's gracioas.
and then Cast on the d naked,
Dunstan (Archbishop of Canterbury) by St. D, old St.
Thor — By God, we thought him dead —
Durham Deans Of Christchurch, 2), Exeter, and WelLs-
Dust (s) (See also Ch)ld-dust) Will front their cry and
shatter them into d.
Who rub their fawning noses in the d,
char us back again into the d We spring from.
A low voice from the d and from the grave
bring her to the level of the d, so that the King —
all mj- doubts I fling from me like d,
till the weight of Germany or the gold of England
brings one of them down to the d —
leave Lateran and Vatican in one d of gold —
To bring her to the d . . .
Bow'd to the d beneath the burthen of sin. Prom, of May ru 521
Dust (verb) We'll d him from a bag of Spanish gold. Queeti Mary i v 421
Dust-cloth slut whose fairest linen seems Foul as her d-c, Becket v ii 203
Dusted I do believe, I have d some already, Queen Mary i v 423
so d his back with the meal in his sack, Becket i iv 174
Dutchman And the D, Now laughing at some je-st ? Queen Mary m i 195
Duteous being ever d to the King, Becket u ii 464
Dutiful Commands you to be d and leal To your young King „ v ii 325
Duty the d which as Legate He owes himself, Queen Mary m iv 401
I feel it but a rf— you will find in it Pleasure as
well as d, „ in iv 429
Morcar, it is all but d in her To hate me ; Harold iv i 153
I have overshot My duties to our Holy Mother Church, Becket v i 38
Dwarft Till famine d the race —
Dwell in Normanland God speaks thro' abler voices, as He
d's In statelier shrines.
Join hands, let brethren d in unity ;
Care d with me for ever,
myrtle, bowering-in The city where she d's.
never I trust to roam So far again, but d among his
own.
Dwelt the Lord hath d In darkness.
Nor d alone, like a soft lord of the East,
„ IV iii 476
IV iii 493
IV iii 496
„ IV iii 440
Harold n ii 406
Becket v ii 444
Queen Mary iv i 180
„ rv iii 446
Harold iv iii 146
Queen Mary i ii 9
„ n iv 6
„ m iii 242
in V 55
„ V ii 385
Becket, Pro. 531
I i 149
n ii 365
n ii 475
IV ii 154
I iii 356
Harold i i 167
„ I i 397
Becket n i 120
The Cup I i 4
Foresters rv 1100
Harold ni i 179
Becket i iii 358
Dwelt (continued) So d on that they rose and darken'd
Heaven. Becket ii ii 205
If Synorix, who has d three years in Rome The Cup i ii 175
Dyed He d, he soak'd the trunk with hmnan blood, Harold in i 142
Djring (adj. and part) (See also A-dying) A passing
bell toll'd in a d ear — Qu^en Mary v ii 41
Tell her to come and close my d eyes, „ v ii 600
They say she's d. First. So is Cardinal Pole. „ v iv 4
' I am d, Philip ; come to me.' „ v v 3
The Queen is d, or you dare not say it. „ v v 250
That never English monarch d left England so little. „ v v 277
Sleeping or d there ? If this be death, Harold m i 1
when thro' his d sense Shrills 'lost thro' thee.' „ m i 33
No, but to please our d king, „ m i 328
Your second-sighted man That scared the d conscience of
the king, „ v i 211
And fighting for And d for the people — „ v i 389
So then our good Archbishop Theobald Lies d. Becket, Pro. 3
Who shall crown him ? Canterbury is d. „ Pro. 240
A dead man's d wish should be of weight. „ Pro. 422
You will do much To rake out all old d heats, „ n ii 114
To warm the cold boimds of our d life The Cup i iii 128
Love ? it is love, love for my d boy. The Falcon 787
I reverence all women, bad me, d. Foresters ii i 40
Speak not. I wait upon a d father. ., ly 611
Dying (s) the d of my noble bird Hath serveil me better
than her living — The Falcon 900
Dyke the d's and brooks Were bridged and damn'd with
dead, Harold iii ii 128
E See here — an interwoven H and E ! Harold i ii 57
Each an amphisbsena, E end a sting : Queen Mary in iv 40
we two Might make one flesh, and cleave unto e
other „ v ii 138
but they bribe E other, and so often, Harold i i 347
We never kept a secret from e other ; Prom, of May i 552
and prattled to e other that we would marry fine
gentlemen, ,, ni 276
E man for liis own. Foresters i iii 105
But shout and echo play'd into e other ., n i 258
Nor care to leap into e other's arms. „ ni 7
where twelve Can stand upright, nor touch e other. ,, iii 310
then e man That owns a wife or daughter, ,, m 458
'Ead(head) it be i' wy natur to knock 'im o' the '« now ; Prom, of May 1 298
The beer's gotten oop into my 'e. „ n 320
says the master goas clean off his 'e when he 'ears
the naame on 'im ; „ m 132
Eagle My sight is e, but the strife so thick — Harold v i 627
Eagle-height At such an e-h I stand and see Becket i i 139
Eagle-like swoop down upon him E-l, lightning-like — The Falcon 14
Ear Your e ; You shall be Queen. Queen Mary i iv 121
what, have you eyes, e's, brains ? „ ii i 97
I have e's to hear. Gardiner. Ay, rascal, if I
leave thee e's to hear. „ in i 250
thou shalt lose thine e's and find thy tongue, „ in i 256
Repeat your recantation in the e's Of all men, „ iv ii 193
Hast thou not mark'd — come closer to mine e — ,, v i 226
A passing bell toll'd in a dying e — „ v ii 41
but those heavenly e's have heard, Harold m i 258
would deign to lend an e Not overscomful, „ iv i 136
Thou didst possess thyself of Edward's e „ v i 345
And where, my liege ? Henry. Thine e. Becket, Pro. 157
Good e's too ! „ i ii 44
My lord, thine e ! I have the e of the Pope. ,, i iii 199
sucking thro' fools' e's The flatteries of corruption — „ i iii 361
if you boxed the Pope's e's with a purse, you might
stagger him, „ n ii 370
They say that walls have e's ; „ iv ii 80
You have lost The e of the King. „ iv ii 355
monarch mane Bristled about his quick e's — The Cup i ii 121
Ear
Em (continued) For your e only— I love you—
'Ear (hear) says the master goas clean off his 'eacl
when he 'e's the naame on 'im ;
^^(?«a^).. Well, I never 'e the likes o' that afoor
Why, Wilson, tha 'e 'im thysen—
Earl Ay, if Dukes, and E's, And Counts,
this yoimg E was sent on foreign travel
Ask our broad E. '
Art thou sick, good E ?
When earnest thou hither? Gamel. To-day, good £;
Ihe Kmg hath made me E ; make me not fool ! Nor'
make the King a fool, who made me E I
Who made the King who made thee, make thee E
Tostig, Edward hath made him E :
Follow my lead, and I will make thee e
Good-night, and dream thyself Their chosen E
E first, and after that Who knows I may not dream myself
tneir king ! •'
E, wilt thou fly my falcons this fair day ?
Thy valour and thy value, noble e.
• Look not amazed, fair e !
And I will make thee my great E of E's,
Thou must swear absolutely, noble E.
Thanks, truthful £; I did not doubt thy word
Who make thy good their own— all England E
E s and Thanes ! Full thanks for your fair greeting of
mv bride ! E's, Thanes, and all our countrymen !
ii, the first Christian Caesar drew to the East
So !— did he ?—E—l have a mind to play The William
JL — ay— thou art but a messenger of William
Ay, my lord, and divers other e's and barons
golden leaves, these e's and barons, that clung to me,
Ihey shall henceforward be my e's and barons—
flights, bishops, e's, this London spawn-
The lady gave a rose to the E, (repeat)
The lady gave her hand to the E, (repeat)
Farewell, farewell, my warrior E ! '
She gave a weeping kiss to the E, (repeat)
never was an Eao true a friend of the people
A gallants. I love him as I hate John,
shoot almost as closely with the bow as the great E
himself. *
so flustered me that I forgot my message from the E
I am a silent man myself, and all the more wonder
at our E.
not so much for the cause as for the E. O Lord
I am easily led by words, but I think the E
hath right. Scarlet, hath not the E right ^
I will swear by the head of the E.
Thou Much, miller's son, hath not the E right?
but for all that I will swear the E hath right.
Thou art the E's confessor and shouldst know,
the E and Sir Richard come this way.
• And learn from her if she do love this E.
Ay, noble E, and never part with it.
Robin, i?— Robin. Let be the E.
You dared to dream That our great E,
E—- Robin. Nay, no ^^ am I. I am English yeoman.
But, E,-d thou be he Friar Tuck. Fine him '
fine him ! he hath called plain Robin an e.
Robin, Earl of Huntingdon, For E thou art again
Earldom yet hear ! thine e, Tostig, '
I would it went as well as with 'mine e,
I have to make report of my good e To the good king
It means the fall of Tostig from his e.
In mine e A man may hang gold bracelets
Thou art a mighty man In thine own e !
We have few prisoners in mine e there,
ever-jarring E's move To music and in order-
he flamed When Tostig's anger'd e flung him
I come for mine own E, my Northumbria • '
be chasten'd by thy banishment. Some easier e.
t am had I kept thine e in thy hands
Earlier O higher, hoUer, e, purer church,
Early Not here as yet. You are too e for him
896
Eased
The Cup I ii 217 Early (continued) As I said before, you are stiU too e
Comma. Too « to be here alone with thee ;
His e follies cast into his teeth,
Eam'd Hast thou not fought for it, and e it '
Earshot Stand out of e then,
'Eart (heart) I doant believe he's iver a 'e under his
waistcoat.
Earth To him within there who made Heaven and E ? "qZuMZVyts
m his scared prayers Heaven and e's Maries • n ii °°
Between the two most high-set thrones on e,
Amplier than any field on our poor e
With heaven for e.
Julius, God's Vicar and Viceregent upon e,
That heaven wept and e blush'd.
God upon e ? what more ?
As Cranmer hath, came to the fire on e.
On e ; but saved in heaven By your recanting.
I have offended against heaven and e
And I can find no refuge upon e.
You are the mightiest monarch upon e,
Bride of the mightiest sovereign upon e ?
Should make the mightiest empire e has'known
for heaven's credit Makes it on e :
In heaven signs ! Signs upon e !
Not stagger'd by this ominous e and heaven • But
heaven and e are threads
And other bells on e, which yet are heavens •
would make the hard e rive To the very Devil's horns
let e rive, gulf in These cursed Normans— '
And signs on e ! Knowest thou Senlac hill ?
Seven feet of Enghsh e, or something more,
corpse thou whelmest with thine e is cursed
dead as Death this day to ought of e's '
Is not the Church the visible Lord on e ?
Lest there be battle between Heaven and E, And E
should get the better —
and when ye shall hear it is poured out upon e,
did not whoUy clear The deadly growths of e,
like Mahound's cofiin hung between heaven and e—
-c s faises are heaven's truths,
cry out for thee Who art too pure for e.
And break the soul from e.
She sends it back, as being dead to e,
Flash sometimes out of e against the heavens.
Tho all the loud-lung'd trumpets upon e
Too late on e may be too soon in hell.
Tho e's last earthquake clash'd the minster-bells,
w?,? ^J *^^ Church in Heaven, the Church on e—
Will the e gape and swallow us ?
and enrich E with her shadow !
Who causest the safe e to shudder and gape
They will break in the e—l am sinking—
Thou art the last friend left me upon e—
Outvalues all the jewels upon e.
comes To rob you of your one delight on e.
For all the souls on e that live To be forgiven
bow d To the e he came from,
fiercest storm That ever made e tremble—
for the love of his own little mother on e,
It answers, I am thine to the very heart of the e—
till the green e drink Her health along with us
bu^ ber Even in the bowels of the e
Earthly Is it possible That mortal men should bear their e
heats
unsubject to Our e sceptre.
Earthquake and underfoot An e ; n
shake the North With e and disruption-
midriff -shaken even to tears, as springs gush out
after e's — r — =. »
Tho' earth's last e clash'd the minster-bells,
Earthware one piece of e to serve the salad in to my
E^'^tH', ^^^' r'f' "" ^" ^'''^ «^^^ °' "«' Prom^oiut^Z il
fc tL ^/r ^* 'i ^°^' ^^Z'' °"^ "^"^^^^ break, Raroldxx ii 140
Eased Then after we have e them of their coins i^orestm m m
From, of May m 132
I 255
I 302
Queen Mary in i 50
v ii 489
Harold i i 90
, lilOO
, iil06
, I i 288
, 1 1295
, iiil86
iii217
iii249
iii250
„ nil 146
,. nil 202
„ nil 494
„ uii629
„ n ii 716
., n ii 723
„ ni i 331
.. IV iii 45
V i 21
., V i 25
„ vi29
Becket i iv 59
I iv 66
., I iv 86
„ n ii 143
Foresters i i 12, 105
1 i 16, 92
1 1 18
I i 20, 119
1 1 188
I i 190
I i 217
I i 297
I ii 36
Iii 39
iii45
iii 47
Iii 51
1 1155
I ii 147
I ii 188
I ii 303
I iii 93
ni686
inl29
IV 148
IT 830
Harold i i 303
1 1337
1 1406
11469
ni 86
11193
nil 687
nil 760
mi 54
rvii29
IT 1151
„ V i 275
Queen Mary iv ii 108
The Cup 1 iii 60
The Cup I iii 81
Queen Mary v ii 124
Foresters iv 345
Harold ii ii 240
Prom, of May 1 130
„ in ii 107
„ in iii 197
„ ni iii 201
,. ni iii 213
,. ni iv 193
,. ni iv 383
rv i 61
IV ii 178
„ IV iii 124
,. rv iii 128
V i 52
V ii 545
V iii 70
Harold I i 142
„ 1 1160
.. I i 207
I ii 133
- n ii 740
.. n ii 781
.. in 1 360
.. IV iii 112
V i 68
V i 426
Becket i iii 93
„ I iii 227
„ I iv 37
„ n ii 203
„ n ii 362
„ in iii 348
„ IV ii 134
„ V i 44
„ V 1 171
„ V ii 37
„ V ii 488
„ V ii 528
„ V iii 41
„ V iii 99
„ V iii 205
The Cup I iii 60
n298
n 477
The Falcon 32
779
828
Prom, of May in 7
m 515 '
m 798
Foresters i i 98
I i 337
„ ni350
ni462
Harold v i 283
Becket i iii 681
'leen Mary iv iii 399
Harold I ii 200
Becket ni iii 163 ■
V iii 41
Easier
Easier Thy life at home Is e than mine here. Harold i i 97
So thou be chasten'd by thy banishment, Some e earldom. „ iv ii 51
which we Inheriting reap an e harvest. Becket u ii 194
It might be e then for you to make Allowance for a
mother — The Falcon 825
East (adj.) but the wind e like an enemy. Prom, of May i 80
East (s) {See also North-east) And all the fair spice-
islands of the E.
the first Christian Caesar drew to the E
dwelt alone, like a soft lord of the E,
We fought in the E, And felt the sun of Antioch
Whose doings are a horror to the e, A hissing in the west ! ' „ iv ii 244
bowl my ancestor Fetch'd from the farthest e — The Falcon 485
twilight of the coming day already glimmers in the e. Foresters i ii 248
new tenn Brought from the sacred E, his harem ? ,. iv 705
Easter Till the sun dance, as upon E Day. Queen Mary ui ii 238
Easton We have hail our leagues of old with E kings. The Cup i ii 102
men will call him An E tyrant, not an English king.
897
Edward
Queen Mary v i 50
Harold v i 22
Becket i iii 359
II ii 92
Easy
Breathing an e gladness
Foresters iv 904
not
Eat
(See also ESsy)
like Aldwyth .
Nay — but there be conditions, e ones,
' e ' — that were e— nay — No money-lover he !
for I should find An e father confessor in thee.
Rest you e, For I am e to keep. I shall not fly.
Is it not e to disarm a woman ?
then you would know it is not So e to forgive —
Maake thysen e. I'll hev the winder naailed up,
I could put all that o' one side e anew.
I couldn't e in Spain, I couldn't sleep in Spain.
Come locusting upon as, e us up,
Your apple e's the better. Let them go.
Dare-devils, that would e fire and spit it out
while famish'd rats E them alive.
Where they e dead rtien's flesh,
Sit down, sit do^vn, and e,
Let her e it like the serpent,
We scarcely dai-e to bless the food we e
slave that e my bread has kick'd his King !
I could not e, sleep, pray :
Sit and e, And take a himtcr's vengeance
Will you not e a little ?
Will you not e -tvith me, my lord ?
I can e no more !
you ask'd to e with me.
' Let us e and drink, for to-mon-ow we die.'
sits and e's his heart for want of money to pay the
Abbot.
I came To e him up and make an end of him.
Well, set them forth. I could e anything,
before j^ou can e it you must hack it with a hatchet.
Something to e. Robin. And thou shalt have it, man.
in the sweat of thy brow, says Holy Writ, shalt thou e
bread,
in the fear of thy life shalt thou e the King's venison —
Baten Ye have e of my dish and drunken of my cup for a
dozen years. Becket i iv 29
— we have e — we are heated. Wine ! The Cup i ii 45
Not e anything. The Fdcon 674
she that has e the yolk is scarce like to swallow the shell. „ 704
Bating (See also Word-eating) so thou be Squeamish at e
Harold i ii 174
.. n ii 206
., II ii 214
Becket, Pro. 88
., V ii 512
The Cup I iii 106
Prom, of May ii 486
I 419
u 111
Queen Mary ii i 36
II i 101
II ii 7
mi 156
V ii 198
Harold n ii 807
„ IV iii 207
Becket, Pro. 532
V i 71
v i 242
V ii 92
The Cup I ii 42
„ I ii 425
The Falcon 570
670
868
Prom, of May i 259
Foresters I i 4
. n i 125
. n i 274
. m 284
IV 187
IV 202
IV 206
the King's venison.
'Eaven (heaven) Granny says marriages be maade
i' 'e.
Baves I never breathed it to a bird in the e,
Bcho (s) But shout and e play'd into each other
The wood is full of e'es, owls, elfs.
When horn and e ring,
I am but the e of the lips of love.
Echo (verb) my wish E'es your Majesty's. Pole.
shall be so.
Mine e'es both your Graces' ;
yells of thief And rogue and liar e down in HeU,
Elcho'd The trumpets of the fight had e down,
Echoing See Bird-echoing
Bdipse out of the e Narrowing my golden hour !
Foresters iv 194
Prom, of May Iii 709
Queen Mary v ii 454
Foresters u i 258
n i 262
HI 428
IV 892
It
Queen Mary m iii 93
„ in iii 95
Foresters in 324
The Falcon 605
Becket n i 202
Eddicated (educated) Thy feyther e his darters to marry
gentlefoalk. Prom, of May u IIS
I e boiith on 'em to marry gentlemen, „ ni 454
Eddying torrents of e bark ! Foresters ni 95
Eden To make this Sherwood E o'er again, „ n i 168
Eiderunt Sederunt principes, e pauperes. Becket i iv 132
Edgar (afterwards Mr. Harold) See also Harold, Hedgar,
Philip, Philip Edgar, Philip Harold, Philip
Hedgar) I warrants ye'll think moor o' this
yoimg Squire E as ha' coomed among us — Prom, of May 1 110
Wheer be Mr. E ? about the premises ? „ 1 432
where is this Mr. ?J whom you praised so in your
first letters ? „ 1 776
I thought Mr. E the best of men, and he has proved
himself the worst. „ n 85
that villain, E, If he should ever show his face ., n 422
What E ? Bora. Philip Edgar of Toft HaU „ u 437
This E, then, is hving ? Harold. Living ? well — „ n 443
But she hates E. May not this Dobbins, or some
other, spy E in Harold ? ,, ii 672
then she will forgive E for Harold's sake. „ n 679
Nor am I E, my good fellow. „ n 701
Mr. E ? Allen. Theer, Miss ! You ha' naamed 'im — „ m 141
She must be crying ' £ ' in her sleep. Harold. Who
must be crying out ' JB ' in her sleep ? „ m 653
Happy! What? £? Is it so? „ m 668
Edgar (the Atheling) Who inherits ? E the Atheling ? Harold ni i 240
Edge (See also KnJie-edge) Shall I smite him with the e of
the sword ? Becket i iv 224
Edify (See also Re-edify) We come not to destroy,
but e ; Queen Mary m iii 188
Edith (ward of King Edward, the Confessor) Art thou assured
By this, that Harold loves but E ? Harold i ii 210
Then for thine E ? „ n ii 422
I know the Norman license — thine own E — „ n ii 478
Harold, if thou love thine E, ay. „ n ii 622
wilt thou bring another, E, upon his head ? „ m i 262
and on thee, E, if thou abide it, — „ in i 317
Look up ! look up ! £ ! „ m i 321
E, Tho somewhat less a king to my true self ,, m ii 52
Good even, gentle E. „ m ii 118
E, Hadst thou been braver, I had better braved All — „ m ii 177
E, E, Get thou into thy cloister as the king Will'd it : „ v i 308
E, The sign in heaven — the sudden blast at sea — „ v i 377
E, if I, the last English King of England— „ v i 383
thou art Harold, I am £ ! „ v i 392
O E, art thou here ? „ v ii 1
O £, if I ever wrought against thee, „ v ii 21
0 E, E,l have lost both crown And husband. „ v ii 38
E, E— Edith. What was he like, „ v ii 51
Edmund (King of the East English, martyred in 870) By
St. E I overmeasure him. „ iv iii 119
Educated See Eddicated
Edward (the Confessor) Ask it of King El „ i i 78
look, where E draws A faint foot Sther, „ i i 143
E loves him, so Ye hate him. ,, i i 427
E's prayers Were deaf en'd and he pray'd them dumb, „ i ii 21
foes in E's hall To league against thy weal. ,, i ii 32
she held with E, At least methought she held with
holy E, „ I ii 50
1 will demand his ward From E when I come again. „ i ii 60
Our wild Tostig, E hath made him Earl : „ i ii 186
thine host in England when I went To visit E. „ n ii 6
know'st my claim on England Thro' E's promise : „ n ii 13
did E know of this ? „ n ii 304
Then let me hence With Wulfnoth to King E. „ n ii 563
And hath King E not pronoimced his heir ? „ n ii 575
if that but hung upon King E's will. „ n ii 601
Accoixling as King E promises. „ n ii 714
Thou art English, E too is English now, „ in i 28
E wakes !— Dazed — he hath seen a vision. „ mi 129
And E would have sent a host against vou, „ rv i 99
Since Griffyth's head was sent To E, ' „ rv i 222
Last night King E came to me in dreanw —
(repeat) Harold iv i 259, 265
3 L
Edward
898
Enclosed
Edward (the Confessor) (continued) Take and slay me, For
E loved me. Harold. E bad me spare thee. Tostig.
I hate King E, for he join'd with thee To drive me
outlaw'd. Harold rv ii 10
Of Alfred, or of E his great son, „ iv iii 52
They know King E's promise and thine — thine. .. v i 45
Not know that E cancell'd his own promise ? ,, v i 51
Thou didst possess thyself of E's ear „ v i 345
Edwardjthe First) In William's time, in om* first
Queen Mary ill iii 226
E's time,
Edward (the Fourth) Who's a-passing ? King E or
King Richard ?
Edward (tihe Sixth) our young E might bequeath the
crown Of England,
Yet I stood out, till E sent for me.
Have we not heard of her in E's time,
Your pious wish to pay King E's debts,
Had mark'd her for my brother E's bride ;
Did she not In Henry's time and E's ?
imprisonment, my Lord, Under yoimg E.
Edwin (Earl of Merda) Morcar and E have stirr'd up the
Thanes
have overthrown Morcar and E.
Again ! Morcar ! E ! What do they mean ?
Morcar and E, When will ye cease to plot
Morcar and E, will ye, if I yield,
Morcar and E, will ye upon oath. Help us
E, my friend — Thou lingerest. — Gurth, — ■
Gurth, Leof win, Morcar, JB !
Eel wriggle out of them like an e When the time serves. Becket ii ii 187
EfEaced he is e. Self-blotted out ; Queen Mary rv i 137
Egg wi' dree hard e's for a good pleace at the
bumin' ;
sat Stone-dead upon a heap of ice-cold e's.
brood Too long o er this hard e, the world,
E's. Filippo. One, but addled.
No not a draught of milk, no not an e,
and each of 'em as full of meat as an e,
or the shambles-oak, or a weasel-sucked e,
E^-bald may give that e-b head The tap that silences.
Egypt like E's plague, had fill'd All things with blood ;
I heard a saying in E, that ambition
tho' the fire should run along the ground. As once
it did in E. Prom, of May i 705
Eight Seventeen — and knew e languages — Qtieen Mary m i 369
Eis^ty His e years Look'd somewhat crooked on him
in his frieze ; „ iv iii 331
Eittier You were the one sole man in e house „ ni iii 253
I am the one sole man in e house, „ in iii 266
true To e fimction, holding it ; Becket i iii 538
Yea, since he flouts the will of e realm, „ ii ii 256
Oh, no, not e way, nor any way „ v iii 86
Elbow fray'd i' the knees, and out at e. Queen Mary i i 52
look at our suits, out at knee, out at e. Foresters i i 33
Elbowing and almost e her, So else they stood. Queen Mary n ii 76
Elder Made younger e son, violated the whole Tradition Prom, of May 1 494
Eleanor (of Aquitaine, Queen of England) so this
Rosamund, my true heart-wife, Not E ! Becket, Pro. 132
and the soul of E from hell-fire. „ Pro 151
secret out of our loyal Thomas, I am not E. „ Pro. 467
and make Our waning E all but love me ! „ ii ii 458
Oh, Queen E. Yes, my lady ; „ m i 203
E.E, have I Not heard ill things of her „ in i 230
' E of Aquitaine, E of England ! Murder'd by that
adulteress E, „ rv ii 241
Why should I swear, E, who am, or was, „ rv ii 403
Election dost thou think the King Forced mine e? Herbert.
I do think the King Was potent in the e, „ i i 127
the e shall be made in the Chapel Royal, „ i iii 110
was thine own e so canonical. Good father ? „ i iii 120
Eleven I am « years older than he is. Queen Mary i v 68
I am e years older than he, „ v v 46
Elf The wood is full of echoes, owls, e's. Foresters n i 263
E, with spiteful heart and eye, „ ii ii 172
Elfin Nay, an please your E Grace, „ n ii 132
1 182
iii 26
iii 29
liv 18
I V 111
IV 289
m iv 132
miv 244
Harold ii ii 288
m ii 132
rvil33
rvi 160
ivil75
IV i 179
IV 1256
IV iii 221
IV iii 490
Becket v ii 240
„ V ii 253
The Falcon 128
872
Foresters i i 42
„ IV 212
Harold v i 90
Becket i iii 344
The Cup I iii 137
Elisabetta (nurse to Count Federigo degli Alberighi) you
Would find it stain'd Count. Silence, El
Elizabeth (Princess, afterwards Queen of England) No ;
it was the Lady E.
the Lady E is the more noble and royal.
I mean the Lady E.
be no peace for Mary till E lose her head.'
' Long live E the Queen ! '
And get the swine to shout E.
we'll have no pope here while the Lady E fives.
we'll have no virgins here — we'll have the Lady E !
If E lose her head — That makes for France.
married The mother of E — a heretic Ev'n as she is ;
Wyatt, shaU we proclaim E ?
The names of Wyatt, E, Courtenay,
E — Her name is much abused among those traitors.
whom did you say ? Messenger. E ? Your Royal sister.
Can I strike E ? — not now and save the life Of Devon :
The proud ambitions of E,
Quoth E, prisoner.
this re-action not re-act Yet fiercelier under Queen E,
You must proclaim E your heir, (repeat)
E, How fair and royal — like a Queen, indeed ?
E — To PhiUbert of Savoy, as you know,
Thou art commission'd to E, And not to me !
Aery! What's that? J5? revolt?
God save E, the Queen of England !
Elizabeth Barton See Joan of Kent
Ely (Bishop [Thirlby] of) My Lord of E, this. After a
riot We hang the leaders. Queen Mary iv i 72
The Falcon 66
Queen Mary i i 18 '
I i 72
I i 75
„ I iii 5
I iii 8
I iii 39
I iii 44
I iii 62
I iii 88
I V 32
II i 239
II ii 94
II ii 109
II iv 116
II iv 123
in ii 169
m v21
IV iii 389
i 191, 204
vi234
V i 246
V ii 594
vvl87
V v283
Ely (city) There lies a treasure buried down in E :
Emboss'd many-breasted mother Artemis E upon it.
Embrace on thee remains the curse, Harold, if thou
e her :
great and soimd policy that : I could e him for it :
for who could e such an armful of joy ?
Wilt thou e thy sweetheart 'fore my face ?
I E thee with the kisses of the soul.
E me, Marian, and thou, good Kate,
Embroilment may come a crash and e as in Stephen's
time;
Embryo every rebel birth That passes out of e.
Emerald English Garter, studded with great e's,
Emperor (s) betroth'd in her babyhood to the Great E
Most goodly. Kinglike and an E's son, —
Hath he the large abiUty of the E?
letter which thine E promised Long since,
I am English Queen, not Roman E.
The E counsell'd me to fly to Flanders.
I fear the E much misvalued me.
The E's highness happily symboU'd
treaty which the e sent us Were mainly Gardiner's ;
And the E Approved you, and when last he wrote,
prattling to her mother Of her betrothal to the /:-'
Charles,
prest upon By the fierce E and his Antipope.
When he hath shaken off the E,
you have traifick'd Between the E and the Pope,
Threaten our junction with the E — •
Empire Should make the mightiest e earth has
known. Queen Mary v iii 70
the first Fell, and the next became an E. Harold iv i 51
push'd one way by the E and another by England, Becket n ii 327
Harold mill
The Cup n 341
Harold m i 316
Becket, Pro. 452
Foresters i ii 70
n ii 28
m 143
,. IV 1031
Becket, Pro. 485
Queen Mary m vi 52
ni i 85
I i 119
I v2
I V 324
I V 348
I V 504
I V 549
III ii 76
ni ii 108
in iii 69
in vi 76
V v 233
Becket i in 203
I iii 244
n ii 68
„ n ii 471
his poor tonsure A crown of E.
Employ E us, heat us, quicken us, help us,
Empress But — shamed of you, my E !
Emptiness I had but e to set before you,
course of that full feast That leaves but e.
Empty Most fruitful, yet, indeed, an e rind,
nave and aisles all e as a fool's jest !
Why then the throne is e. Who inherits ?
since the Sheriff left me naught but an e belly,
Encampt The Roman is e without your city —
Enchanted the people Believe the wood e.
Enclosed now you are e with boards of cedar,
., V i 196
The Cup I iii 131
Prom, of May m 599
The Falcon 870
Prom, of May ii 258
Queen Mary in ii 202
IV iii 286
Harold m i 235
Foresters n i 279
The Cup I ii 83
Becket m i 36
Queen Mary in ii 101
Encumbered
899
England
Encumbered E as we are, who would lend us any-
thimr ?
End (s) born i' the tail e of old Harry the Seventh
Look to you as the one to cro\vii their e's.
She fear'd it might unman him for his e.
to what e ? For yet the faith is not established there.
Gardiner. The e's not come. Pole. No — nor this
way wiU come, Seeing there lie two ways to every e,
Latimer Had a brief e — not Ridley,
as I have come To the last e of life.
Might it not be the other side rejoicing In his brave e ?
Who cannot move straight to his e —
sight of Danish blood Might serve an e not English —
And to what e ?
and to speak tioith, nigh at the e of our last crust,
an' it 'ud be weU for me in the e,
but in the e we flourished out into a merriment;
What ! Is the e come ?
•The e is mine.
If once our e's are gain'd ?
harm at times, may even Hasten their e.
At the e of the daay, For the last load hoiini ?
(repeat) Prom, of Mai/ u 183, 194
Prom, of May iii 162
Queen Mary i i 42
I iv 172
III iv 108
IV ii 225
IV iii 218
IV iii 358
IV iii 394
Harold iv iii 98
Becket i ii 63
„ III i 114
., mi 134
.. m iii 137
„ v i 148
., V i 151
Tlie Cup I i 32
The Falcon 823
(repeat)
II 208
II 238, 292
u 259
Foresters ii i 125
IV 332
IV 716
Becket ii ii 315
The Cup 1 iii 126
Queen Mary in v 115
Becket, Pro. 305
Pro. 335
Foresters iv 1049
Till the e of the daay And the last load hoiim.
Till the e o' the daay An' the last load hoam ?
To the e o' the daay An' the last load hoam.'
I came To eat him up and make an e of him.
at the far e of the glade I see two figures
To his own unprincely e's.
End (verb) Ay, if he do not « in smoke again.
So e all passions. Then what use in passions ?
Elided all things lived and e honestly.
Thou shalt not go. I have not e with thee.
That was not the way I « it first —
Our forest games are e, our free life,
Ending (adj.) showei-s of blood are blown Before a never
e blast, Harold ni i 395
Ending (s) Other reasons There be for this man's e, Queen Mary iv iii 54
misreport His e to the glory of their church. „ rv iii 327
Endure Canst thou e to be a beggar Foresters i i 204
Enemy Thou speakest of the e of thy king. Queen Mary i v 327
Stand fast against our enemies and yours, ,, u ii 242
Makes enemies for himself and for his king ; „ ii ii 399
Who will avenge me of mine enemies — ., in ii 166
But he was evermore mine e, „ v ii 91
Thou hast given it to the e of our house. Harold iv ii 31
So perish all the enemies of Harold ! ,, v i 504
So perish all the enemies of England ! „ v i 554
Be sweet to her, she has many enemies. Becket i i 404
Is he thy e ? Henry. He ? who ? ay ! Rosamund.
Thine e knows the secret of my bower.
To bless thine enemies Becket. Ay, mine, not Heaven's.
Mine enemies barr'd aU access to the boy.
My lord, we force you from your enemies
Henceforth I am thy mortal e.
I was but wounded by the e there And then imprison'd.
day's bright like a friend, but the wind east like
Hi 262
vii25
V ii 451
„ V iii 24
The Cwp I ii 330
The Falcon 388
Prom, of May i 80
They say, we should forgive our enemies. „ n 432
Bed with his own and e's blood — Foresters u i 32
Enforce to e The long-withholden tribute : The Cup i i 76
Enframed powers of the house of Godwin Are not e in thee. Harold i i 317
Engelram de We mightiest knight of France, Sir E d T, — Becket i iii 748
England Edward might bequeath the crown Of E, Queen Mary i ii 28
not to yield His Church of E to the Papal wolf And
Mary ; „ i ii 36
— for to wed with Spain Would treble E — „ i v 76
I am Queen of E ; take mine eyes, „ i v 127
Would I marry Prince Philip, if all E hate him ? „ i v 139
Is it E, or a party ? Now, your answer. „ i v 142
men-at-arms Guard my poor dreams for E. „ i v 154
if this Philip be the titular king Ot E, , i v 255
— after me Is heir oi E; .. i v 286
Would make our E, France ; Mary of E, joining hands
with Spain, „ i v 297
England [continued) Heir of this E and the
Netherlands ! Queen Mary i v 418
Men of Kent ; Eot E: ., ii i 157
all the rest of E bow'd theirs to the Norman, „ n i 159
county or a shire, but of this E, „ u i 163
he wiU be King, King of E, my masters ; „ n K}'^^
and be the mightiest man This day in E. „ n ii 20
my father was the rightful heir Of E, „ n ii 171
or impair in any way This royal state of E, ,. n ii 230
The Queen of E — or the Kentish Squire ? „ ii ii 269
The Queen of E or the rabble of Kent ? „ u ii 273
' Who knows ? ' I am for E. „ ii ii 412
They are the flower of E ; set the gates wide. „ ii iv 70
lest living Spain Should sicken at dead E. „ m i 28
I came to feel the pulse of E, „ in i 37
E now Is but a ball chuck'd between France and Spain, „ mi 109
' The Queen of E is delivered of a dead dog ! ' „ m ii 219
Presenting the whole body of this realm Of E, „ m iii 117
This is the loveliest day that ever smiled On E. „ m iii 163
But stretch it wider ; say when E fell. ., m iii 261
Perchance in E, loves her like a son. „ m iii 267
We reck not tho' we lost this crown of E — Ay ! tho'
it were ten E's ! ,, m iv 56
Thou Christian Bishop, thou Lord Chancellor Oi E I „ in iv 302
What power this cooler sun of E hath ,, m iv 327
She troubles E : that she breathes in E „ in vi 49
I cannot be True to this realm of E „ iv i 27
made us lower our kingly flag To yours of jB. ,, v i 60
lower his flag To that of E in the seas oi E. ,. v i 66
Being Queen of E, I have none other. ,. v i 69
he would weld France, E, Scotland, ,. v i 137
They say your wars are not the wars of E. „ v i 166
The King of France the King of E too. „ v i 198
sharper harm to E and to Rome, Than Calais taken. ,, v ii 29
Send out : let £^ as of old Rise lionlike, .. v ii 265
I do much fear that E will not care. „ v ii 282
Suffer not That my brief reign in E be defamed „ v ii 302
Your i? is as loyal as myself. ,. v ii 328
remember what you said When last you came to E? „ v ii 568
Welcome to £ ! „ v iii 14
What hinders but that Spain and E join'd, „ v iii 68
Spain would be E on her seas, and E Mistress of the
Indies. ,, v iii 72
E Will be the Mistress of the Indies yet, „ v iii 76
never meri-y world In E, since the Bible came among us. ., v v 241
It never will be merry world in E, ,, v v 247
That never English monarch dying left E so little. „ v v 278
— we will make E great. ,- v v 281
God save Elizabeth, the Queen of -E ! ., v v 284
Yon grimly-glaring, treble-brandish'd scourge Of E ! Harold i i 5
mean The doom of E and the wrath of Heaven ? ., i i 46
bishops down from all Their thrones in El ,, i i 51
is this pendent hell in heaven A harm to E? „ I i 77
he may tell thee, I am a harm to E. „ i i 80
War there, my son ? is that the doom oi E? ,. i i 126
For all the world sees it as well as E. •■ i i 130
but after I am gone Woe, woe to E\ •, i i 190
E loves thee for it. „ i i 221
my father drove the Normans out Of E ? — ., i i 253
Be there not fair woods and fields In E? ■■ i i 263
sons of Godwin Sit topmost in the field of E, ,, i i 326
Griffyth I hated ; why not hate the foe Oi E? ., i ii 146
If he were King of E, I his queen, „ i ii 154
Should not E Love Aldwyth, .. i ii 177
Pronounced his heir of E. .■ i ii 195
Peace-lover is our Harold for the sake Of E's wholeness — .. i ii 198
And bless the Queen of E. „ i ii 207
a whale to a whelk we have swallowed the King oi E. ,. n i 45
thine host in E when I went To visit Edward. ., n ii 4
know'st my claim on E Thro' Edward's promise : „ u ii 12
I want his voice in E for the crown, „ ii ii 71
E our own Thro' Harold's help, „ n ii 77
Who shall be kings of E. I am heir Of E ,, a ii 124
The choice of £ is the voice of E. William. I will be
king of E by the laws, The choice, and voice of E. „ ii ii 128
England
900
English
England (continued) Blowing for E, ha ? Not yet. Harold ii ii 152
Not ever fair for £ ? ' „ n ii 258
for my mother's sake I love your E, „ n ii 269
Then for my mother's sake and E's sake „ ii ii 274
or whether E Be shatter'd into fragments. Harold.
News from E? „ ii ii 285
Yea, yea, he would be king of E. „ ii ii 369
And for our Mother E ? „ ii ii 425
And all thine E hath forgotten thee ; „ ii ii 443
he drove our good Normans out From E, „ ii ii 526
sat within the Nomian chair A ruler all for E — „ ii ii 534
Why then the heir of E, who is he ? ,. ii ii 568
and a cliild, Will E have him king ? ,. ii ii 573
promiseii that if ever he were king In E. „ n ii 588
Thou art the mightiest voice in E, man, ,. ii ii 618
Foremost in E and in Normandy ; „ ii ii 631
And thou be my vice-king in E. „ ii ii 635
Ay, brother — for the sake of E — ^ay. „ n ii 638
Swear thou to help me to the crown of E. „ n ii 705
I swear to help thee to the crown oi E . . .
(repeat) Harold u ii 713, 722
Delay is death to thee, ruin to E. Harold ii ii 718
When thou art home in E, with thine own, „ n ii 728
The wind is fair For E now ... „ n ii 767
for I am close to thee And E — „ iii i 7
our dear E Is demi -Norman. „ iii i 40
Our Tostig parted cursing me and E ; ,. iii i 76
He hath gone to kindle Norway against E, „ iii i 80
Crying ' the doom of E,' and at once He stood „ in i 134
along the highest ciying ' The doom oi El' — „ in i 157
Be there no Saints of E To help us „ in i 220
he hath served me : none but he Can rule all E. „ in i 244
Not mean To make our E Norman. „ ni i 250
prayer against the curse That lies on thee and E. „ in i 279
Who make thy good their own— all E, Earl. „ ni i 331
whereby the curse might glance From thee and E. „ m i 344
thou be only King of the moment over E. „ m ii 51
And well for thee and E — and for her — „ m ii 111
And given thy realm of £ to the bastard. „ ni ii 154
thimder-cloud That lours on E — laughter ! „ in ii 161
but our help Is Harold, king of E. „ iv i 11
Dane, Jute, Angle, Saxon, were or should be all One E, ,, iv i 79
To make all E one, to close all feuds, „ rv i 141
one to rule All E beyond question, beyond quarrel. „ iv i 145
For E, for thy poor white dove, „ iv i 230
Thou art nothing in thine E, save for Norway, „ iv ii 22
To do the battle for me here in E, „ rv ii 70
both have life In the large mouth of E, „ iv iii 74
namesake, when he ask'd for E? „ iv iii 111
sons of those Who made this Britain E, „ iv iii 154
The men that guarded E to the South „ rv iii 209
The curse of E ! these are drown'd in wassail, „ rv iii 223
Holy Father Hath given this realm of E to the Norman. „ v i 13
To do with E's choice of her own king ? „ v i 19
Should they not know free E crowns herself ? „ v i 48
should the King of E waste the fields Of E, ,. v i 140
No Norman horse Can shatter E, ., v i 196
chanting that old song of Brunanburg Where E conquer'd. ,. v i 216
our old songs are prayers for E too ! „ v i 223
I die for E then, who lived for E — „ v i 268
I left our E naked to the South „ v i 289
not for myself — ^For E — yet not wholly— „ v i 307
This memory to thee ! — and this to E, ,. v i 327
Thou hast been false to E and to me ! — „ v i 349
And not on thee — nor E — fall God's doom ! „ v i 370
And thou art E ! Alfred Was E. Ethelred was nothing.
E Is but her king, and thou art Harold ! „ v i 373
Edith, if 1, the last English King of E— „ v i 384
The king of E stands between his banners. „ v i 486
So perish all the enemies oi El „ v i 555
Here fell the truest, manliest hearts of E. „ v ii 59
Why then of E. Madam, fear us not. „ v ii 96
When I visited E, Some held she was his wife „ v ii 99
I am king of E, so they thwart me not, „ v ii 196
I would give her to tliy care in E Becket, Pro. 143
England (continued) I have built a secret bower in E,
Thomas,
And pass her to her secret bower in E.
Ay, ay, but swear to see to her in E.
fulminations from the side of Rome, An interdict on
E — I will have My young son Henry crown'd the
King of E, That so the Papal bolt may pass by E,
I loved Henry of E, and Henry of E dreamed that he
loved me ;
0 thou Great Seal of E, Given me by my dear friend
the King of E—
Barons and bishops of our realm of E,
Flung the Great Seal of E in my face —
he might well have sway'd All E under Henry,
Barons of E and of Normandy,
What say'st thou to the Chancellorship oi E?
Dost thou know, my boy, what it is to be Chancellor
otE?
But E scarce would hold Young Henry king,
A hundred of the wisest heads from E,
pushed one way by the Empire and another by E,
till the weight of Germany or the gold of E brings
one of them down to the dust —
Save for myself no Rome were left in JS,
1 strike into my former path For E,
I came to E suddenly,
I should be back In E ev'n for this.
My Lords of France and E, My friend of Canterbury
And so farewell until we meet in E. Becket. 1 fear,
my liege, we may not meet in E.
Come, stay with us, then, Before you part for E.
thy life Was not one hour's worth in E
. more wolves that he can tame in his woods of E,
the wolves of E Must murder her one shepherd,
let us move away ! And thence to E.
Of and belonging to the King of E,
' Eleanor of Aquitaine, Eleanor of E !
My liege, the Queen of E. Henri/. God's eyes ! Eleanor.
Of -E? Say of Aquitaine. I am no Queen of E. I
had dream'd I was the bride of E, and a queen. Henry.
Andj^while you dream'd you were the bride of E, —
Thomas, I would thou hadst return'd to E,
on a Tuesday pass'd From E into bitter banishment ;
such brawls and loud disturbances In E,
Divide me from the mother church of E, My Canterbury.
Tho' all the swords in E flash'd above me
Priest of God, Primate of E.
St. Denis of France and St. Alphege of E.
your Robin, all E's Robin, fights not for himself but
for the people of E.
I would break through them all, like the King of E.
according to the law and custom of the kingdom of E
But shall we leave our E ?
There is no land like E (repeat)
And these will strike for E
To sing the songs of E
King of E Perchance this day may sink
made me King of all the discontent Of E
one of those mercenaries that suck the blood of E.
these Barons, Devils, that make this blessed E hell
What was this realm of E, all the crowns
I have been away from E all these years,
English but took To the E red and white.
I am E queen, not Roman Emperor.
E Garter, studded with great emeralds,
and E carrot's better than Spanish licorice ;
tell you that all E heretics have tails,
and for Gardiner ! being E citizen,
being E churchman How should he bear the headship
of the Pope?
Began to batter at your E Church,
there's An old world E adage to the point.
I know them heretics, but right E ones,
to the intent That you may lose your E heritage.
The scourge and butcher of their E church.
Becket Pro. 153
Pro. 184
„ Pro. 191
Pro. 223
Pro. 357
1 i 336
I iii 336
1 iii 456
I iii 468
I iii 741
II i 226
ni232
n ii 30
n ii 172
n ii 328
nii364
n ii 387
nii456
in 186
in iii 10
m iii 227
ra iii 237
m iii 245
in iii 251
ni iii 323
in iii 343
ra iii 359
IV ii 23
IV 11241
V 197
viil2
V ii 289
V ii 354
vii361
V ii 484
V iii 114
V iii 165
Foresters i i 236
I i 326
1 iii 67
I iii 92
Foresters n i 1, 5, 13, 17
Foresters n i 9
ni23
ni30
ni88
n i 175
iu 127
IV 403
IV 816
Queen Mary i v 18
I V 503
in i 84
ni i 219
mi 229
ni iii 24
m iii 28
ra iv 186
IV i 175
rv iii 344
vil33
viil06
1
English
English {continued) That never E monarch dying
left England so little.
There somewhere beats an E pulse in thee !
Boy, thou hast forgotten That thou art E.
Thou art E, Edward too is E now,
To Holy Peter in our E isle !
My mother is a Dane, and I am £ ;
Seven feet of E land, or something more.
901
Eternal
or E Ironside Who fought with Knut, or Knut who
coming Dane Died E.
sight of Danish blood Might serve an end not E~
' Seven feet of E earth, or something more,
Edith, if I, the last E King of England —
I do not hear our E war-cry.
I held it with him in his E halls.
And where is she ? There in her E nest ?
01 Provence blew you to your E throne ;
That ever blossom'd on this E isle.
There are no hearts like E hearts
There are no wives like £ wives
There are no maids like E maids
the bravest E heart Since Hereward the Wake,
Nay, no Earl am I. 1 a.m E yeoman,
when Our E maidens are their prey,
men will call him An Eastern tyrant, not an E kins
Queen Mary v v 277
Harold ii ii 266
II ii 475
m i 28
„ III i 207
IV i 55
IV ii 54
Look ; can you make it E?
Word of God In E !
said the Miserere Mei— But all in E, mark you
These Spaniel-Spaniard E of the time,
I am ashamed that I am Bagenhall, E.
Peters, you know me Catholic, but E.
Howard is all £ !
IV iii 53
IV iii 98
,. IV iii 112
V i 384
V i 651
V ii 128
Becket, Pro. 178
, „ V i 123
Foresters i ii 124
II i 3
II i 15
II i 19
II i 686
III 131
in 179
IV 904
Quee^i Mary ii i 127
ni i 280
HI i 392
III iii 240
III iii 249
IV iii 567
vi61
there are many E in your ranks To help vour battle. Z v i 110
that our brave E Hail salliefl out from Calais v ii 255
one who mi'd All offices, all bishopricks with E~ Harold ii ii 535
That art half E. Take them away ! ,. v ii 135
fought men Like Harold and his brethren, and his guard
Of E. ^^ y jj jgj
Make them again one people — Norman, E; And E,
Norman ; ^, jj jgg
That's the E of it. Becket i iv 275
Not on French ground, nor any ground but E, ., m iij 261
and your owti name Of Harold sounds so E and
««,n.»f'i^''' Qu u Prom, of May III QIO
Mngnsn-Dom Shame, shame, my masters ! are you
■»— ij-v.^'*' A- ■ , , Queen Mary i iii 70
Blglishman \ ou are shy and proud like Englishmen, .. n ii 257
Here swings a Spaniard — there an j^; „ v i 87
1 Sailing from France, with thirty Englishmen, !, v i 285
There are no men like Englishmen Foresters ii i 7
Englishwoman Malet, thy mother was an E; Harold ii ii 265
Enlisted See Xisted
Enliven We might e you. Queen Mary i iii 119
Enough (See also Anew) E, my I^rds. It is God's
will, the Holy Father's will, ., iv i 183
The prison fare is good e for me. " ly jj 42
old e To scare me into dreaming, ' what am I, ]. iv ii 102
E ! Thou wilt not break it ! Harold 11 ii 752
wouldst hug thy Cupid till his ribs cracked— e of this. Becket, Pro 505
E, my lord, e\ ,1 {,; 74Q
E, my lord. Becket. More than e. ., j jij 749
They are plagues e in-door. ,.' u jj 91
Ay, ay ! the King humbles himself e. .. n a 135
But thou art like e to make him thine. Eleanor.
Becket is like e to make all his. ,, v i 132
their spites at Kome, Is like e to cancel them, The Cup i i 92
That is €, Farmer Dobson. Prom, of May n 118
E ! Dora. It seem'd so ; only there was left A
second daughter, ,, m 759
Enrich and e Earth with her shadow ! The Cup i Hi 59
Ensign I, bearing this great e, make it clear Becket i iii 544
Entanglement I must free myself from this e. Prom, of May i 480
Enter Not for the seven devils to « in ? Queen Mary m ii 140
' How hard it is For the rich man to e into
I Heaven;' „ iv iii 2fJ5
Enter (continued) Ah !— let him e. Nay, you need
wi!^*J!l9 T.u- Queen Mart/ V iii 10
wSf . ,u ¥* ^"^ '\. The Cup n 39
VVill e on the larger golden age ; Prom of Maui 590
Enter d spmt of the twelve Apostles e Into thy making. ' Becket li 50
Vr.iJtZV'Z ^- T"" Pf *^ "?''' **'** " '^^^•' • Foresters 11 i 240
Entertain d Mamtam'd, and e us royally ! Harold 11 ii 159
Entertainment My lord, we thank you for your e. The Falcon 859
1 fear you scarce Will thank me for your e now. 882
Entreat does your gracious Queen e you kingUke '
Courtenay. 'Fore God, I think she e's like a
P«?v..' w If iu . J .u Qit-een Man/ i iii 110
Poor Wulfnoth ! do they not e thee well ? Harold 11 ii 404
Madam, we will e thee with all honour. v ii 199
my good lord, I do e thee^ign. Becket 1 iii 185
Fnh.«^ %?-ti^ r Jl^^"* ^\ "'"' "ja^i^e. The Cup 11 248
Enteeaty Still plied him with e and reproach : Queen Mary rv iii 577
^«^ How can I come When you so block the e ? Becket v iii 37
^nvied 1 e bmnatus when he married her. The Cuv i i 129
iSwomh^H ^'^Thl" h l''''^' "' 7^*'i°'^*y *'?•'' ^^'^^^^ " i 100
Ijnwomb d The babe e and at the breast is cursed, Harold v i 65
4-phesian Artemis, Artemis, hear her, E Artemis ! The Cuv n 311
Ephesus seven sleepers in the cave at E Have tum'd Harold liV^
Episcopan Nolo e. Becket Pro 284
fSwo^ ^^'^h "^® *^f stone-cut e. Queen Mary rv iii 163
Equal (adj. ) I am not « to it yet. P^om. of May m 239
We have heard Of thy just, mild, and « governance ; Harold n ii 690
F„.,«[^? ""^^'^ ^•^'^T ^^ ""^ ^^^"•=''' J^'^'^^^t I i» 444
liqual (s) never since have met Her e for pure innocence Prom, of Man 11 372
shamed of her among The ladies, bom his e's. m 582
Equ^ l^cumpeditePraepediatur! Harold vi 529
Equite Equus cum e Dejiciatur ! v i 57Q
Equus cum e Prsecipitatur. " y j 59S
Eqmty and golden provinces So that were done in e. Becket v ii 348
Equus £ cum equite Dejiciatur ! Harold v 1579
E cum equite Prsecipitatur. y j 590
vZ'A '^"/o l^T fu ' ^ ^^J^^^ ^""^'^ ^'^''^ «^«« -^^««/ IV i 30
Err d As he hath ever e thro' vanity. iv i 31
I have e with him ; with him I have recanted. " ly i 66
Thought that I knew him, e thro' love of him, Becket 1 iii 440
Error Repentant of his g's ? Queen Man/ rviii^
Etse (horse) That beer be as good fur 'e's as men. Prom, 'of Mau 11 315
Esalas loons That cannot spell E from St. Paul, Queen Man, rri i 281
Escape (See also 'Scape) Much less shall others in
like cause e, ^ ^y jy gg
Who will be martyr when he might e. "Becket v ii 280
Escaped (See also Scaped) Danae has e again Her tower,
and her Acrisius — ^ j ogg
She hath e. The Cup i iii 121
1 his IS my son but late e from prison. Foresters 11 i 460
Gone, like a deer that hath e thine arrow ! Robin.
What deer when I have mark'd him ever yet E
mine arrow ? iv 60
Escaping charge you that ye keep This traitor from e. Becket v ii 511
Eshtree (ash-tree) wheere the big e cuts athurt it, Prom, of May iii 94
Especial A token of His more e Grace ; Queen Man/ iii iii 170
(Air old friend Granmer, Your more e love, ' m jy 418
Essex she was passing Some chapel down in E, " i v 40
Established For yet the faith is not f there. " m iv 1^
Estate (condition) bland And affable to men of all e's, m yj gl
oiTal of the city would not change E's with him ; iv iii 78
Estate (property) that boldest thine e's In fee and
barony Becket i iii 674
Esteem'd Who not alone e it honourable, Queen Maru ii ii 209
Estimation Doth not the fewness of anything make the
fulness of it in e ? Becket iir iii 303
Eternal The E Peter of the changeless chair. Queen Man/ in iv 380
our grim Walhalla, E war, ^ Harold in ii 75
wng'd souls flying Beyond all change and in the
e distance jjj jj iq.
Who stands aghast at her e self Becket n ii 404
Then with one quick short stab— e peace. The Cup i iii 124
and smile At bygone things till that e peace. i iij 173
Ethelred
902
Excommunicate
Ethelred (King of Saxon England, 979-1016) Alfred Was
England. E was nothing. Harold v i 374
Eucharist You do not own The bodily presence in
the E, Queen Mary i ii 44
Eucharistic and retract That E doctrine in your book. „ iv ii 81
Europe I am the noblest blood in E, Madam, „ i iv 85
lord of more land Than any crown in E, Becket v i 30
oaks, Gnarl'd — older than the thrones of E ! Foresters m 93
Eva (daughter of Farmer Steer) an' Miss Dora, an' Miss
£, an' all ! Prom, of May 1 11
Foalks says he likes Miss E the best. „ 1 25
Beant Miss E gone ofE a bit of 'er good looks „ 1 32
I haven't seen E yet. Is she anywhere in the garden ? ,. i 46
He's been arter Miss E, haan't he ? „ 1 121
E told me that he was taking her likeness. He's an
artist. „ 1 126
Hev' ony o' ye seen E ? Dohson. Noa, Mr. Steer. „ i 313
I likes 'im, and E likes 'im. E can do owt wi' 'im ;
look for 'im, E, „ 1 436
Jealous of me with £ ! Is it so ? „ i 471
My sweet E, Where have you lain in ambush „ i 543
Well, E ! Eva. Oh, Dora, Dora, „ 1 766
Fonder of poor E — like everybody else. „ ii 11
Ihallus gi'edsoom on'em to Miss£^at this timeo' year. „ ii 16
fur Miss E, she set the bush by my dairy winder „ ii 17
I take them, then, for E's sake. Dohson. E's saake.
Yeas. Poor gel, poor gel ! „ n 29
or you may find me at the bottom of the river — E.' „ n 88
Poor E ! O my God, if man be only A willy-nilly „ ii 261
How often have I stood With E here ! „ ii 297
E\ Dora. E\ Harold. What are you? ,. n 356
You knew E, then ? „ ii 367
Dear E Was always thought the prettier. „ n 378
tell me anything of our sweet E When in her brighter
girlhood, „ ii 520
.E's eyes thro' hers — A spell upon me ! Surely I
loved E More than I knew ! ,, ii 641
if ye be goin' to sarve our Dora as ye sarved our E — ,. ii 692
now that you have been brought to us as it were from
the grave, dearest E, „ iii 236
to saay he's browt some of Miss E's roses for the sick
laady to smell on. „ ni 347
E, why did you write ' Seek me at the bottom of the
river ' ? „ III 363
E has come home. „ ni 442
Be not so cast down, my sweet E. ,. m 468
You know her, E. Harold. E ! ,. ni 663
O she has fainted. Sister, E, sister ! „ in 672
Eve if I had been E i' the garden I shouldn't ha' minded
the apple, Becket iii i 139
Even (adj.) a jest In time of danger shows the pulses e. Queen Mary ii ii 357
Even (s) Good e, my good brother ! Gurth. Good e,
gentle Edith. Edith. Good e, Gurth. Harold m ii 116
yet I think these oaks at dawn and e, Foresters rv 1067
Etetang When back he comes at e hath the door Queen Mary v ii 120
Event to compose the e In some such form „ i v 224
stay Yet for awhile, to shape and guide the e. „ v i 304
And the e — our fallows till d, Becket i iii 375
Ever {iSee also Iver) who am your friend And e faithful
counsellor. Queen Mary i v 135
Ever-closing who dream'd as blanketed In e-c fog, „ in ii 21
Ever-jarring e-j Earldoms move To music and in order — Harold ii ii 760
Everlasting Open, ye e gates ! The King is here ! — Queen Mary iii ii 183
Ever-rising Beneath an e-r sun — I see him — The Cwp u 535
Ever-shining There — league on league of e-s shore „ ii 533
Every Parliament can make e true-bom man of us a
bastard. Qveen Mary i i 27
Skips e way, from levity or from fear. ,, i iii 170
That e morning of your Majesty May be most good,
is e morning's prayer „ i v 1(X)
He is e way a lesser man than Charles ; „ i v 330
but e parish tower Shall clang and clash alarum as
we pass, ,. n i 228
In « London street a gibbet stood. „ m i 7
Certain I had heard that e Spaniard carries a tail „ ni i 223
Every (continued) e Spanish priest will tell you that
all English heretics have tails. Queen Mary m i 228
Do here absolve you and deliver you And e one of you, „ ni iii 215
and from all and e censure. Judgment, „ ni iii 217
Seeing there lie two ways to e end, ,, in iv 113
e tongue Alters it passing, till it spells and speaks „ in v 35
that she breathes in England Is life and lungs to e
rebel birth „ in vi 51
And e soul of man that breathes therein. „ in vi 107
And for thy soul shall masses here be sung By e priest
in Oxford. ,, iv iii 101
Good people, e man at time of death Would fain set forth „ iv iii 156
In e article of the Catholic faith. And e syllable taught
us by our Lord, „ iv iii 230
Let e craft that carries sail and gun Steer toward Calais. „ v ii 275
when our good hive Needs e sting to save it. Harold iv i 18
E man about his king Fought like a king ; ,, iv iii 56
E man about his king Fell where he stood. „ v ii 181
when e doorway blush'd, Becket i iii 346
When e baron ground his blade in blood ; „ i iii 349
From e bond and debt and obligation Incurr'd as Chancellor. .. i iii 710
that e thread of thought Is broken ere it joins — ,. v ii 205
I am sure of being e way malign'd. The Cup i ii 241
I would that e man made feast to-day „ ii 225
for I've been on my knees e day for these haK-dozen
years The Falcon 184
The blossom had open'd on e bough ; Prom, of May i 42
and sat Thro' e sensual course of that full feast „ n 254
might be Blown everyway with e gust and wreck „ in 536
is always a-telling us that e man, Foresters i i 95
Softly ! softly ! there may be a thief in e bush. „ n i 366
for being e inch a man I honour e inch of a woman. „ in 6c
Ay, for old Much is e inch a man. ,. iv 28&
And loves and dotes on e dingle of it. „ iv 39Ci
Everyway {See also'E\eiy) Her ghost is e about me
here. Prom, of May ii 35i<
might be Blown e with every gust and wreck „ in 53fJ
Evil (adj.) She hath harken'd e counsel — ah! Queen Mary v i 54
but last night An e dream that ever came and went — Harold i ii 70
with thy goodwill that I Proceed against thine e
councillors, Becket m iii 2(X'
It may be they were e councillors. „ ni iii 21(i
A^^hose « song far on into the night „ v ii 20f^
I fear some strange and e chance Coming upon me. The Cup i iii 7-1
It bears an e savour among women. „ i iii 8t'
There came some e fairy at my birth And cursed me, Foresters ii ii lOt
E fairy ! do you hear ? „ n ii 111
Evil (s) spring Of all those e's that have flow'd upon us; Queen Mary in iv 23-1
The Church's e is not as the King's, „ ni iv 27
kingly touch that cures the e May serve to charm the
tiger Harold i i 15:
E for good, it seems, Is oft as childless of the good as e
For e. „ V i 17
Evil-tongue Ingratitude, Injustice, E-t, Labour-in -vain. Queen Mary v ii 16'
Evolution when the man. The child of e, Prom, of May i 58
Evre-lamb black sheep baaed to the miller's e-l, Becket i iv 16
'■ El, el, I am here by the dam.' „ i iv 17
Exalt Hugh, how proudly you e your head I „ v ii 45
Example he must die. For warning and e. Queen Mary iv iii 5
Take therefore, all, e by this man, ,. rv iii 5
Exceeding With most e willingness, I will ; ,, ni v 21
Fourthly, to those that own e wealth, „ iv iii 20
Some hollow-hearted from e age- — Foresters in 9
Exceedingly I wish you and your ladyship's father a most
e good morning. „ i i 30
Excellent Look at the hilt. \^'hat e workmanship. Becket iv ii 31
Excess Nature's moral Against e. „ i i 37
Against the moral e No physical ache, „ i i 38
his fond e of wine Springs from the loneliness ,, in i 3
Excessive seeing they were men Defective or e, „ n ii 21
Exchange we va ill say — e them For your — for your — The Falcon 72
Exchequer the realm is poor, The e at neap-tide : Queen Mary i v 12
I am sorry my e runs so low I cannot help you Foresters i ii 27
E!xcommunicate No man without my leave shall e !My
tenants or my household. Becket. Pro. l
Excommunicate
903
Face
Excommunicate (continued) Ah ! Thomas, e them all !
Smite the sheep and the shepherd will e thee.
More like is he to e me.
my poor heretic heart would e His excommunication,
That thou wouldst e the King.
He thought to e him —
How could I e him then ? Rosamund. And wilt thou
e him now ?
to e The prelates whom he chose to crown his son !
What ! will he e all the world ?
Because thou wast horn e.
Excommunicated My loid, you have not e him ?
to absolve the bishops \Vhom you have e.
I should be grateful — He hath not « we.
Excommunicating The King condemns your e —
Excommunication heart Mould excommunicate His e.
To blast my reakns with e And interdict.
Excuse must Accuse himself, e himself ;
Becket i iii 573
I iv 228
II i 270
II i 283
v ii 90
V ii 141
V ii 154
V ii 398
v ii 466
v ii 472
V ii 130
V ii 377
V ii 471
V ii 318
II i 285
II ii 52
The Cup n 115
Execrable With execrating e eyes, Glared at the citizen. Queen Mary ii ii 67
Execrating With e execrable eyes. Glared at the citizen. „ ii ii 67
Execute let me e the vengeance of the Church upon them. Foresters iv 915
Execution to the saving of their souls, Before your e. Queen Mary iv ii 195
Exeter Deans Of Christchurch, Durham, E, and Wells — „ i ii 9
Exhibited Our suppUcation be e To the Lord Cardinal
Pole, „ III iii 123
Exhort E them to a pure and virtuous life ; „ iv ii 77
Exigency But help lier in this e, „ n ii 18
I cannot help you in this e ; Foresters i ii 273
Exile (s) I know a set of e's over there, Qu^en Mary in i 155
long petition from the foreign e's To spare the life
of Cranmer. „ iv i 3
This same petition of the foreign e's „ iv i 193
condemn The blameless e ? — Becket ii ii 396
'Tis not the King who is guilty of mine e, ,, ii ii 415
Send back again those e's of my kin „ iii iii 186
On a Tuesday from mine e I retum'd, „ v ii 293
Exile (verb) E me from the face of Theobald. „ i iii 43
Exit Here His turtle builds ; his e is our adit: ,, in ii 7
Expectant E of the rack from day to day, Queen Mary iv iii 437
Expectation one step in the dark beyond Our e, that
amazes us. The Cup i i 213
Expedient And all om' loving subjects, most e. Queen Mary ii ii 211
It is e for one man to die, „ iv iii 17
which our Queen And Council at this present deem
it not £ to be known. „ iv iii 57
Experience And all the heap'd e's of life, Becket i i 154
Exposure See Self -exposure
Extreme yoxu- Father must be now in e old age. From, of May iii 400
Eye (a place) Due from his castles of Berkhamstead and E Becket i iii 629
Eye I shall judge with my own e's Queen Mary i i 134
-. - . . jjj2Q
I iv 267
I v9
I V 127
I V 371
II i 96
n ii 67
ni i 64
III i 405
m ii 18
„ HI iv 337
m V 61
III vi 155
IV i 104
IV iii 127
IV iii 304
V ii 600
„ V V 1
Harold iii 110
„ n ii 225
„ 11 ii 389
,. II ii 491
„ II ii 626
,. Ill ii 66
V i 368
with his fast-fading e's Fixt hard on mine,
and deep-incavern'd e's Half fright me.
some waxen doll Thy baby e's have rested on,
take mine e's, mine heart. But do not lose me Calais.
into some more costly stone Than ever blinded e.
what, have you e's, ears, brains ?
With execrating execrable e's. Glared at the citizen.
Were your e's Eo bashful that you look'd no higher ?
and when her innocent e's were bound,
Wore in mine e's the green of Paradise.
Fine e's — but melancholy, irresolute —
I read his honest horror in his e's.
And warble those brief -sighted e's of hers ?
you scarce could meet his e And hold your own ;
I am ashamed to lift my e's to heaven.
His e was like a soldier's, whom the general
Tell her to come and close my dying e's,
Mine e's are dim : what hath she written ?
I swear it. By mine own e's —
There lodged a gleaming grimness in his e's.
He tore their e's out, sliced their hands away.
Tear out his e's, And plunge him into prison.
Thine ' ifs ' will sear thine e's out— ay.
whose baby e Saw them sufficient.
I saw it in her e's !
Becket, Pro. 148
„ Pro. 371
I i 213
I ii 38
I iii 11
I iii 464
I iii 609
niiS
II u 436
m i 127
m iii 89
m iii 101
„ III iii 109
IV ii 406
vi43
V 198
vi 217
Eye {continued) God's e's ! I know all that —
God's e's ! what a lovely cross !
for thine e's Glare stupid-vrild with wine.
He had good e's !
He all but pluck'd the bearer's e's away.
God's e's ! I had meant to make him all but king.
The King's ' God's e's ! ' come now so thick and fast,
by God's e's, we will not have him crown'd.
The Church alone hath e's — and now I see
was a pity to blindfold such e's as mine,
only there was a dare-devil in his e — I should say a
dare-Becket.
father's e was so tender it would have called
as to the young crownUng himself, he looked so
malapert in the e's.
King plucks out their e's W^ho anger him,
disciplines that clear the spiritual e.
My liege, the Queen of England. Henry. God's e's !
The Church ! the Church ! God's e's !
bust of Jimo and the brows and e's Of Venus ; The Cup i i 121
What follows is for no wife's e's. „ i ii 231
Yea, — with our e's, — our hearts, „ i ii 412
mark'd Her e's were ever on the marble floor ? „ ii 19
and a-spreading to catch her e for a dozen year, till he
hasn't an e left The Falcon 100
The pleasure of his e's — boast of his hand — " „ 221
That bright inheritor of your e's — your boy ? „ 306
i' the poorch as soon as he clapt e's of 'er. Prom, of May 1 23
Under your e's, Miss Dora. „ 1 89
And your e's be as blue as — „ 1 91
voice a-shaakin', and the drop in 'er e. „ ii 130
Eva's e's thro' hers — A spell upon me ! „ n 641
hath the fire in her face and the dew in her e's. Foresters i i 167
Would you cast An e of favour on me, „ i ii 217
How close the Sheriff peer'd into thine e's ! „ i ii 253
That if I cast an e of favour on him, „ i ii 261
Elf, with spiteful heart and e, „ ii ii 172
Not an e to survey, „ ii ii 181
Robin, the sweet light of a mother's e, . iv 2
Mine e most true to one hair's-breadth of aim. „ iv 694
I cannot meet his e's. „ iv 799
Eyebrow Why do you lift your e at me thus ? Queen Mary in vi 102
Eyed See Far-eyed
Eyeless — tongueless and e, prison'd — Harold n ii 496
Eyelid Mine amulet . . . This last . . . upon thine e's, ,, i ii 125
kiss that charms thine e's into sleep, „ i ii 140
Eyeshot and keep me still In e. „ n ii 242
Eyesight play The William with thine e and thy tongue. „ v i 27
rend away E and manhood, life itself, Becket iv ii 285
Has lost his health, his e, even his mind. Prom, of May ni 767
F
Foresters i ii 59
Fa I would dance too. F, la, la, / la, la.
Faace (face) plow straait as a line right i' the / o' the
sun, Prom, of May 1 370
— then hup agean i' the / o' the sun. „ i 372
thaw the feller's gone and maade such a litter of his /. „ n 589
she niver knawed 'is / when 'e wur 'ere af oor ; „ ii 606
Fable There is a pleasant / in old books, Harold iv i 56
Face (s) (See also Faace, Janus-faces, Long-face) wilt
thou see the holy father Murdered before thy /? Queen Mary i iii 65
Is this the / of one who plays the tyrant ?
Madam, methinks a cold / and a haughty.
Show me your f's !
show'd his back Before I read his /.
Here was a young mother. Her / on flame.
The colour f reeljr play'd into her /,
thro' that dim dilated world of hers. To read our f's ;
before the Queen's / Gardiner buys them With
Philip's gold,
there's the / coming on here of one Who knows me.
Pole has the Plantagenet /,
IV 194
IV 197
iv307
nil33
iiu70
n ii 321
II ii 326
m i 143
HI i 470
ui iv 334
Face
904
Fair
leen Mary in vd 113
rv iii 4
IV iii 338
Harold i i 26
„ I i 67
Ay,
Face (s) (continued) I have but shown a loathing /
to you.
See how the tears run down his fatherly /.
wash'd his hands and all his / therein,
and look upon my /, Not on the comet.
I cannot read the / of heaven ;
He can but read the king's / on his coins. Stigand.
ay, young lord, there the king's / is power,
send thy saints that I may say Ev'n to their /'s,
The rosy /, and long down-silvering beard,
turn not thou Thy / away.
The rosy /and long down -silvering beard —
he hath risen again — he bares his / —
how he feUs The mortal copse of /'« !
They have so maim'd and murder'd all his /
I left him with peace on his / —
Her / was veiled, but the back methought
Exile me from the / of Theobald,
when he sign'd, his / was stormy-red —
Flung the Great Seal of England in my / —
he licks my / and moans and cries out against the King,
and glass The faithful / of heaven —
Life on the /, the brows — clear innocence !
who hath withstood two Kings to their /'« for the
honour of God.
as I hate the dirty gap in the / of a Cistercian monk,
or I couldn't look your ladyship i ' the /,
and to read the f's of men at a great show,
ran a twitch across his / as who should say
and once he strove to hide his /,
his fine-cut / bowing and beaming with all that courtesy
scared the red rose from your / Into your heart ?
I will hide my /, Blacken and gipsyf y it ;
Nay, what imcomely / 's, could he see you !
These arm'd men in the city, these fierce f's —
We will not have him slain before our /.
shun To meet her/ to / at once !
brows and eyes Of Venus ; / and form immatchable !
She — no, not ev'n my /.
Who are with him ? I see no / that knows me.
In the full/ of all the Roman camp ?
Only one, And he perhaps mistaken in the /.
His / was not malignant, and he said
ambition, pride So bloat and redden his /—
far as the / goes A goodlier-looking man
/of an angel and the heart of a — that's too positive !
what you see you are saying afore his /? Count. Let
hirn — he never spares me to my / ! Filippo. No,
my lord, I never spare your lordship to your lord-
sbup's /,
nor to round about and back to your lordship's / again,
and bless your sweet /, you look as beautiful
colour'd all my life, Flush'd in her/;
one sweet / Crown'd with the wreath,
her affections Will flower toward the light in some
new /. Prom, of May i 487
" ,. n248
n423
m 367
ra389
Foresters i i 146
I i 167
I ii 145
1 ii 207
I ii 237
.. iii 245, 251
I iii 19
u i 480
n ii 29
u ii 133
IV 11
IV 777
IV 887
Becket ii ii 165
I ill
„ II ii 787
.. m i 46
.. oi ii 40
.. IV i 261
.. V1557
.. vi589
, V ii 77
Becket, Pro. 396
,. Pro. 469
I iii 43
I iii 320
I iii 457
iiv99
nil61
II i 195
II ii 276
iiii381
m i 196
m iii 83
m iii 94
III iii 104
m iii 141
IV ii 74
IV ii 99
V i 201
„ V iii 4
„ V iii 55
The Cup I i 59
I i 122
I i 132
I i 183
„ I ii 269
.. I ii 343
.. I ii 451
n 170
n 175
The Falcon 86
108
115
197
365
648
Her bright / beaming starlike down upon me
If he should ever show his / among us,
the rain beating in my / all the way,
' Go home ; ' but I hadn't the heart or / to do it.
I will give thee a buffet on the /.
bath the fire in her / and the dew in her eyes.
How she looks up at him, how she holds her / !
Why wearest thou thy cowl to hide thy /?
bounden by a vow not to show his /,
I hate hidden /'s. (repeat)
and old / 's Press roimd us, and warm hands
Her / is thine, and if thou be as gentle
Wilt thou embrace thy sweetheart 'fore my /?
Never Ob before his /.
For ever buzzing at your lady's /.
It is not he— his / — tho' very like —
And scruplest not to flaunt it to our /
Face (verb) / me out of all My regal rights.
Faced •SV« Black-faced. Red-faced
Facile be / to my hands. Now is my time. Becket, Pro.
Facility translated that hard heart into our Provencal
facilities. Pro.
to spare us the hardness of your /? Pro. '■
Faction There is a / risen again for Tostig, Harold iv i 11
Our anti-Roman / ? The Cwp i ij 19
I have enough — their anti- Roman /. „ i it T'
dishonour The daughters and the wives of your
own / — Foresters iv I
Fade / Into the deathless hell which is their doom Queen Mary iii ii ITl
we / and are forsaken — „ v ii 3T|
Faded Flower, she ! Half / ! „ i iv (
this / ribbon was the mode In Florence ten years back. The Falcon •
blossom of his youth, Has/, falling fruitless — Prom, of May n !
Fading (See also Fast -fading) O my sick boy ! My daily
/ Florio, The Falcon 236
Faggot then, who lights the / ? Not the full faith, Queen Mary lu iv 123
Last night, I dream'd the /'* were alight, .. iv ii 2
WiHi my f's Be wet as his were ? „ rv ii 22)
bind a score AU in one /, snap it over knee, Harold iv i i
Faggot-band Snap not the f-b then. „ iv i (
Fail I / Where he was fullest : Queen Mary u i J
All traitors / Uke Tostig ! Harold iv iii '
Solders a race together — ^yea — tho' they /, The Cup i ii Ifl
Lest he should / to pay these thousand marks Foresters iv "
Fail'd Few things have / to which I set my will. Queen Mary n ii I
\^'yatt was a good soldier, yet he /, ,, m i T
On my last voyage — but the wind has /— The Cup u 53
We ever / to light upon thy son. Foresters iv f"
Failing F her, my Lord, Dotli not as gi-eat Queen Mary i iv I
Failure but / it may be Of all we aim'd at. Becket i i T
Fain Make me full / to live and die a maid. Queen Mary v iii I
Faint I am somewhat / \^ith our long talk. .. i v 53
I am / with fear that you will come no more. „ v i i
but look, where Edward draws A / foot hither, Harold i i 14
Tostig, I am / again. ,, i i
A ghostly horn Blowing continually, and / battle-hymns, ., iii i
I am / and sleepy. Leave me. Becket iii i
I am very /. I must lie down. Prom, of May m 4!
' I am / for your honey, my sweet.' Foresters rv '
Move me no more ! I am sick and / with pain ! „ rv
Fainted O she has /. Sister, Eva, sister ! Prom, of May m
Fair Even so, / lady. Qiieen Mary i iv
left about Like loosely-scatter'd jewels, in / order,
As / and white as angels ;
were much amazed To find as / a sun as might have
flash'tl
you perchance were trifling royally With some /
dame of court.
And all the / spice-islands of the East.
How / and royal — like a Queen, indeed ?
F island star .'
Were you in Spain, this fine / gossamer gold —
I never look'd upon so / a likeness
Be there not / woods and fields In England ?
Then fling mine own / person in the gap A sacrifice to
Harold,
then a / life And bless the Queen of England.
Earl, wUt thou fly my falcons this / day ?
So thou, / friend, will take them easily.
Not ever / for England ?
Obey him, speak him /,
O speak him /, Harold, for thine own sake.
Look not amazed, / earl !
The wind is / For England now . . .
Full thanks for your / greeting of my bride !
Good royal customs — had them wTitten /
And one / child to fondle !
jf^ Sir, a happy day to you !
Leaving your / Marian alone here.
There are no wives like English wives So/ and chaste
as they be.
Fare you well, / lady !
but see / play Betwixt them and Sir Richard —
But thou art / as ever, my sweet sister.
ni:
inii !
in u;
in vi Iq
„ vii
vi;
V iii '
„ V vl
Harold i i 2^
,. I ii !
I ii :
n ii H
II ii !
u ii !
.. n ii 31
.. uiil
.. II ii 494
.. II ii "66
.. IV iii 46
Becket i iii 416
ni i 12
The Cup I i 188
Foresters i ii 154
n i 16
ui243
IV 98
IV 1017
Fairer
905
FaU
Queen Mary i v 72
m i 92
Becket, Pro. 117
Fairer My sister, is far / than myself.
How look'd the Queen ? BagenhaU. No / for her
jewels,
and the flowers Are all the /.
fairest but of this England, in whose crown our Kent
is the / jewel. Queen Mary n i 163
Find one a slut whose / linen seems Foul Becket v ii 202
Who art the / flower of maidenhood Foresters i ii 123
rair-hair'd little f-h Norman maid Lived in my mother's
house : Becket \ ii 259
"toly My King would know if you be / served. Queen Mary v iii 20
•■"airy (adj.) ^Tiat's here ? A dead bat in the / ring— Foresters n ii 93
A glimpse of them and of their / Queen — .. n ii 103
F realm is breaking down u ii 134
there comes a deputation From our finikin / nation. .. n ii 145
f$iry (s) wish before the word Is man's good F — Queen Mary i iv 240
I thought if I followed it I should find the fairies.
Eleanor. I am the /, pretty one, a good / to
thy mother. Becket iv i 24
There are good fairies and bad fairies, iv i 28
can't sleep sound o' nights because of the bad fairies. iv i 31
I am her good /. Geoffrey. But you don't look like a
good /. Mother does. iv i 34
And leave you alone with the good /. iv ii 61
She may have lighted on your fairies here. Foresters n i 496
My men say The fairies haunt this glade ; — n ii 101
There came some evil / at my birth ,, n ii 108
Evil / ! do jou hear ? .. n ii 116
We be faines of the wooti, .. n ii 118
When the / slights the crown. ., n ii 135
airy-ring And now be skipping in their f-r's, „ n i 497
aitb My flight were such a scandal to the /, Queen Mary i ii 53
long divided in itself, and sever'd from the /, i iii 22
Bonner, who hath lain so long imder bonds for the/ — t iii 36
Art thou of the true /, fellow, i iii 45
No, being of the true / with myself. i v 74
we two wll lead The living waters of the F again i v 88
But here's some Hebrew. F, I half forgot it. „ n i 125
Good /, I was too sorry for the woman ,, m i 57
All greed, no /, no courage ! „ m i 145
*HaiI, Daughter of God, and saver of the/. ,, m ii 82
And clasp the / in Christ ; „ in ii 122
Henceforth a centre of the living/. ,, m ii 155
The great imbom defender of the F, „ in ii 165
His /shall clothe the world that will be liis, ,. m ii 180
/ that seem'd to droop will feel your light, in iv 22
track of the true / Your lapses are far seen. m iv 94
For yet the / is not established there. .. m iv 109
' because to persecute Makes a / hated, and is further-
more No perfect witness of a perfect / ., m iv 116
Not the full /, no, but the lurking doubt. m iv 124
When /is wavering makes the waverer pass m iv 157
call they not The one true/, a loathsome idol-worship ? in i v 219
accuse you of indifference To all/ 's, all religion; m iv 224
the Queen, the Holy Father, The /itself. .. m vi 35
Upon the / and honour of a Spaniard, .. m vi 254
Have you remain'd in the true Catholic / 1 left you
in ? Cranmer. In the true Catholic /, ., iv ii 17
confess Your / before all hearers ; .. rv ii 80
my / would seem Dead or laalf-drown'd, .. iv ii 96
WTiich frights you back into the ancient /; .. xv ii 144
Power hath been given you to try / by fire — rv ii 153
these burnings will not help The purpose of the /; iv ii 185
he seal his / In sight of all with flaming martyrdom. .. rv iii 28
proclaim Your true undoubted /, that all may hear. .. rv iii 114
declare to you my very / Without all colour. rv iii 225
In every article of the Catholic /, rv iii 230
No / with heretics, my Lord ! rv iii 458
Died in the true /? v ii 518
sunk rocks; no passionate / — v v 222
Pray 'd me to pay her debts, and keep the P; „ v v 258
What's up is /, what's down is heresy. Harold i i 84
yet to us, in /, A happy one — .. n ii 200
That runs thro' all the/'* of all the world. .. lu i 352
aU the/'« Of this grown world of ours, ,, in ii &4
Faith {continued) Loyally and with good /, my lord
Archbishop ? Becket i iii 278
with all that loyalty and good / Thou still „ i iii 281
Mail'd in the perfect panoply of /, „ v ii 494
Die for a woman, what new / is this ? The Cup i iii 67
learnt at last that, all His old-world /, Prom, of May n 332
— will he ever be of one / with his wife ? „ ni 178
Beware, man, lest thou lose thy / in me. Foresters i ii 179
on the / and honour of a king The land is his again. „ iv 851
Faithful who am your friend And ever / counsellor. Queen Mary i v 135
that I live and die That true and / bride of Philip — .. n iv 43
Yoiu* / friend and trusty councillor. .. iv i 89
Have done my best, and as a / son, v ii 117
herself should see That king's are/to their marriage vow. Becket i ii 78
A / traitress to thy royal fame. „ u i 97
and glass The / face of heaven — „ ii i 161
and be to Rome More / than a Roman. The Cup i i 103
This veiy day the Romans crown him king For all his
/services to Rome. ,. u 65
Our Antonius, Our / friend of Rome, .. n 244
I will be / to thee till thou die. ,. n 330
Faithless Break thine alliance with this / John, Foresters iv 323
Falaise The F byblow ! Harold rv iii 174
Falcon wilt thou fly my /'s this fair day ? „ ii ii 146
Bird-babble for my / ! Let it pass. The Falcon 38
Just gone To fly his/. 210
His /, and 1 come to ask for his /, 219
his / Ev'n wins his dinner for him in the field. 230
How can I ask for his /? 234
' Get the Count to give me his /, .. 242
How can I, dare I, ask him for his /? 264
and once you let him fly your /. .. 317
His-F. Count. My/! Giovanna. Yes, your/, Federigo ! „ 840
Nothing but my brave bird, my noble /, 874
Falconry The full-train 'd marvel of all /, 25
plunge and / Of heresy to the pit : Queen Mary m iv 141
Fall (S) have I that I am fixt, Fixt beyond /; „ it ii 90
It means the / of Tostig from his earldom. Harold i i 468
Except it be a soft one, And undereaten to the /. „ i ii 123
Do you still suffer from your / in the hollow
lane ? Prom, of May ui 241
She said ' It's the / of the year, Foresters rv 24
Fall (verb) Hast thou let /those papers in the palace ? Queen Mary i iii 1
No — being traitor Her head will/: „ i v 60
let Rebellion Roar till throne rock, and crown /. „ u i 145
hoped to / Into the wide-spread anns of fealty, ,, n ii 263
Like dogs that set to watch their master's gate, F, ,. m iv 311
in the daylight truth That it may / to-day ! „ ui v 137
If war should / between yourself and France ; .. v i 9
So from a clear sky /'« the thunderbolt ! „ v iii 115
Come / not foul on me. Harold i i 460
see confusion / On thee and on thine house. „ n ii 489
My prayers go up as fast as my tears /, ., ni i 166
F, cloud, and fill the house — m i 190
And on it/'* the shadow of the priest; in ii 70
If the king /, may not the kingdom /? But if I /, I /, .. v i 123
K I /, I /—The doom of God ! „ v i 135
I cannot / into a falser world — ,. v i 271
And not on thee — ^nor England — / God's doom ! „ v i 370
F''s — and another/'*. ,, v i -500
No, daughter, no — they / behind the horse — „ v i 545
As thine own bolts that / on crimef ul heads ., v i 565
Charged with the weight of heaven wheref rom they / ! v i 568
They / on those within the palisade ! ., v i 668
As seeming his, not mine, and / abroad. Becket, Pro. 228
God make not thee, but thy foes, /. Becket. I fell.
Why/? \Miy did He smite me ? What? Shall
I / off — to please the King once more ? .. i i 107
Thou caast not/ that way. „ i i 115
' When a bishoprick/'s vacant, the King, „ i iii 100
\Mien thieves /out, honest men — „ i iv 114
A\'hen honest men / out, thieves — „ i iv 118
Shame / on those who gave it a dog's name — „ n i 141
the sea-creek — the petty rill That/'* into it — ., n ii 295
Devil's • if Thou wilt / down and worship me.' „ m iii 286
FaU
906
Farewell
I could / down, and worship thee,
Fall (verb) (continued)
my Thomas,
Go. See that you do not / in. Go.
world allows I / no inch Behind this Becket,
Ready to / at Henry's word or yours—
I heard in Rome, This tributary crown may / to you.
So f's the throne of an hour,
Becket iii iii 288
IV ii 59
V i 39
V ii 486
The Cup I i 97
II 486
^dth as little pain As it is to / asleep. . From, of May 342
But for the slender help that I can give, F into rum. " " *^^
f/ before thee, clasp Thy knees. F or e.'^ters n .598
When heaven f's, I may light on such a lark ! - m i^
he f's And knows no more. ,,,,,,
m i 123
III iii 152
III iv 80
IV i 114
IV ii 146
IV iii 75
V ii 6
V ii 21
V ii 372
Harold II i 14
.. IV iii 214
.. V i 634
V i 636
.. V ii 125
Becket in iii 176
„ IV ii 8
The Falcon 309
Prom, of May i 324
II 600
III 605
Foresters i iii 42
II i 509
,. Ill 232, 297
m 412
Queen Mary iii v 134
Becket ni ii 52
Prom, of May ii 334
Becket i iii 376
We are /, and as I thhik, Never to rise again,
of all censures Of Holy Church that we be / into,
we are /creatures; Look to your Bible, Paget ! we are/.
You sit upon this / Cranmer's throne ;
How are the mighty /, Master Cranmer !
From councillor to caitiff—/ so low,
That should have /, and may rise again,
like the bloodless head F on the block.
Love will fly the / leaf, and not be overtaken ;
blast that came So suddenly hath / as sutldenly-
Many are / At Stamford-bridge • • ; , . . , , , .
Gurth hath leapt upon him And slam him: he hatli J.
Glory to God in the Highest ! /, /!
hath kinglike fought and /, His birthday, too.
spouse of the Great King, thy King, hath/—
The folds have / from the mystery,
he hath / Into a sickness, and it troubles me
thaw I mav ha' / out wi' ye sometimes, ^
and now she be / out wi' ma, and I can t coom at er
We Steers are of old blood, tho' we be /.
And darkness rises from the / sun.
Or haply / a victim to the wolf .
we have /into the hands Of Robin Hood, (repeat)
my lady, Kate and I have / out again,
bulling How oft the / axe, that never fell,
not to-night— the night is/,
blossom of his youth, Has faded, / fruitless-
Fallow — our / 's till'd. Much com, , „ on
fSS (adj. and adv.) The / archbishop fawning on him, Queen Maryiv 30
0 madam, if this Pembroke should be / ? v n v ±u
F to Northumberland, is he / to me ? " " '* ^^
tho' a true one, Blazed / upon her heart. - i" UV
And whether this flash of news be / or trae, „ xii u Mi
No pardon !— Why that was j;: - J ^ ^^°
Who, while ye fish for men with your / fires, Harold n i rfl
So less chance for / keepers. . ,_ , . ^ ,,1111000
Good for good hath borne at times A bastard / as
William.
Thou hast been / to England and to me !—
As . . in some sort ... I have been / to thee.
He that was / in oath to me, it seems Was / to his own
\nd that the / Northumbrian held aloof,
F to myself— it is the will of God (repeat)
F to himself, but ten-fold / to me !
F figure. Map would say. .
F oath on holy cross— for thou must leave him ^ .. ^^
RoWn^Tever held that saying / That Love is blind, Foresters 11 i 643
No, no, / knight, thou canst not hide thyself » " 11 ^^
False (8 Earth's /'« are heaven's truths. ^^^'^'^I'Jil
FlSehood lips that never breathed Love's / to true maid foresters v 73
fS when I sware F to him, the falser Norman, Harold v 303
Falser I cannot fall into a/ world— " „i qA^
when I sware Falsely to him, the / Nonnan, .• v 1 ^u^
Falter And yet methinks he / 's : ^ ^ ^"''^ ^^^"'^'Z ° 1 Sfi
He / '», ha ? 'fore God. we change and change ; „ "^ ^ f^
Falter'd old afiection master'd you. You / into toars. Becket v" 14&
Faltering felt the / of his mother's heart. Queen Mary u 11 82
Fame A faithful traitress to thy royal /. Henry, i- ! what
care I for/? Becket ui 98
Fame (continued) F of to-day is infamy to-morrow ; Infamy
of to-day is /to-morrow: 11 Tm
—thy / too : I say that should be royal. » n 1 ^^
You heed not how you soil her maiden /, Foresters iv 480
Familiar Yea, some / spirit must have help'd him. ,j „ ;: r7q
^^WUli^m. Woe knave to thy /and to thee! Harold nn 619
Family Be we not of the /? be we not a-supping with the ,,,.„„
for I am closely'related to the dead man's /. Prom, of May 11 715
It is the trick of the /, my lord.
Famine Wet, /, ague, fever, storm, wreck, wrath,-
War, waste, plague, /, all malignities.
F is fear, were it but Of being starved.
Till / dwarf t the race— t:, ■ .u
if vou cram me crop-fuU I be little better than jP m the .
•' ■ , Foresters I 1 47
picture, ^, . , . , J ,
Famine-dead seen the true men of Christ lying f-d by
V i 176
V i 349
vi352
, v ii 151
. V ii 165
Becket 1 iii 290, 328
I iii 472
III iii 346
Foresters 1 iii 151
Queen Mary v v 108
Harold i i 466
„ IV iii 204
Becket i iii 356
Famine-stricken Laid f-s at the gates of Death—
Famine-wasted Who wander /-w thro' the world.
Famish'd I am footsore and / therewithal.
while / rats Eat them alive. ^ . , , , ,,
Famishing lash'd to death, or lie F m black cells,
Fan (s) that his / may thoroughly purge his floor.
Fan (verb) it serves to / A kindled fire.
Fapcied Have you / yourself m love with hun .
Why, my good Robin / me a man,
F he saw thee clasp and kiss a man. Kate.
fee/ that / fancy a man Other than him,
Fancy (s) My / takes the burner's part,
this ghastly glare May heat their fancies.
Who sow'd this / here among the people .-'
Whether it bow'd at all but in their /;
had I fixt my / Upon the game I should have beaten
thee.
And thy thoughts, thy fancies i ^ ^ ,
I speak after my jfancies, for I am a Troubadour,
would she were but his paramour, for men tire of their
fancies ; but I fear this one / hath taken root.
Queen Man/ v iv 3S
Prom, of May ni 807
Becket in iii 18t
Foresters 11 i 267
Queen Mary v ii 19(1
.. v ii 196
III iv 360
I V 620
Prom, of May 1 78il
Foresters iii 2(»
Well, if
III 2;'
Queen Mary iv ii 231
Harold i i 31l
.. rv i 141
.. V i lO.
Becket, Pro. &
., Pro. 11-
.. Pro. 34
Pro. 48i
That you may feed your / on the glory ot it.
And aU Thro' following of my /. .
specially sick children, have strange fancies,
I have ta'en a sudden / to thee.
Fancy (verb) You must / that which follow d,
Can I / him kneeling with me, and uttering
if he fancied that 7 / a man Other than him,
Fancy-ridd'n known a semi-madman m my time bo /-r
Fancy-sick F-s ; these things are done.
The Cup n 13
The Falcon 14
81
Foresters iv 42
Queen Mary in i 40
Prom, of May in 17
Foresters ill 2
Queen Mary 11 i 1
IV iii 45
Becket i iii 45
Far
Fangiess he that lookt a / one, Issues a venomous adder.
Fanny ^^F be the naame i' the song, hut I swopt it ^^^^^^ ^^ ^^^^^^ ^^ ^j
(sZ dso Var) My sister, is / fairer than myself. Queen Mary i v ^
F liefer had I in my country hall Been reading some
old book,
and rooted in / isles Beyond my seeing :
at the / end of the glade I see two figures crawhng up
the hill. , » - • I J-
Farce comedy meant to seem a tragedy— A feint, a /.
You have spoilt the /.
There was the /, the feint — not mine.
Fare (s) The prison / is good enough for me.
Fare (verb) F you well. Sir Ralph.
I must leave you. F you well, , ^ ^ „
How f's thy pretty boy, the httle Geoffrey .''
F vou well. Synorix. Farewell !
Sir Richard and my Lady Marian / wellnigh as sparely ^^^^^^^^ ^ j ,
as their people. j 21
Where is she ? and how f's she .■' " ^^^ ^
^I Tnd7^o miSs disastrous world. ^ Queen Mary v ii 3
FareweU (adj.) she means to make A / present to your
Farewefust heard She would not take a last / of Wm,
Farewell (verb, and inter.) /, and fly. Cranmer. Fly
and/,
„ III i 4
Harold in i If
Foresters iv 3i
Becket iv ii 31
IV ii 3i
„ IV ii 3'
Queen Mary iv ii '
n ii 4(
„ III i 4'
Becket v ii V
The Cup I i Ii
iiv2
III i3
liil
Farewell
907
Father
nurewell (verb, and inter.) (ctmtinued) And so you may
continue mine, /, Queen Mary i iv 137
Must be content with that ; and so, /. ,. i v 271
F. I am somewhat faint With our long talk. „ i v 519
F, and trust me, Philip is youi's. „ i v 539
F, your Graces. .. iit ii 146
F, Madam, God grant you ampler mercy „ iv i 188
For a little space, /; „ rv ii 46
Have you good hopes of mercy ! So, /. „ iv ii 87
Your pardon. Sweet cousin, and / ! ,, v ii 204
F. my king. Harold. Not yet, but then — my queen. Harold i ii 137
F for ever ! .. rv ii 81
F ! Harold. 'Sot yet. Stay. .. v i 336
Stigand will see thee safe. And so — F. .. v i 420
F ! I am dead as Death this day to ought of earth's ,, v i 424
F ! Becket. F, friends ! /, swallows ! Becket i iv 43
that will swallow anything. F. ,. n ii 383
And so / untU we meet in England. .. m iii 236
/, my lord. Becket. JF, my liege ! ..in iii 271
F ! I must foUoM' the King. ., ni iii 329
Ev"n so : but think not of the King : /! ., v ii 186
city is full of armed men. Becket. Ev'n so : /! „ v ii 189
Fare you well. Synorix. F ! The Cuf i i 160
Remember! Away — /! Canniia. F\ . „ i iii 115
Nothing more, /. Prom, of May i 749
• F, f, my warrior Earl ! ' Foresters i i 18
We thank you, and /. Robin. F,f. „ i ii 249
F, Sir Richard : /, sweet Marian. „ i ii 284
F, good fellows ! ,. m 86
F at once, for I must hence upon The King's affair. .. iv 341
F ! I left mine horse and armour with a Squire, ., iv 413
Blown like a true son of the woods. F\ ., iv 428
Meanwhile, / Old friends, old patriarch oaks. „ iv 1053
Far-eyed My f-c queen of the winds — The Falcon 9
Farm (adj.) The hen cluckt late by the white /gate, Prom, of May i 38
Farm (s) her advowsons, granges, f's, And goodly acres — Becket i i 162
but the ill success of the /, and the debts. Prom, of May n 68
S'iver I mim git along back to the /, „ n 321
From the / Here, close at hand. „ n 360
I met her first at a / in Cumberland — Her uncle's. ,. ii 396
She has disappear'd, They told me, from the / — „ ii 407
Has left his /, all his affairs, I fear, ,. ii 420
hunt him With pitchforks off the /, „ n 427
Allow me to go with you to the /. ., ii 574
rose From the foul flood and pointed toward the /, „ ii 654
The work of the / will go on still, but for how long ? „ in 159
Father, this poor girl, the /, everything ; „ in 212
I trust I may be able by-and-by to help you in the
business of the /; „ ui 223
And in the winter I will fire their / 's. Foresters iv 95
Farm (verb) feller couldn't find a Mister in his mouth
fur me, as f's five hoonderd haacre.
Prom, of May I 303
I 137
I
n46
n532
m294
in 579
1 165
Fanner When theer wut a meeting o' f's at Littlechester
Tho' you are a gentleman, I but a, f's daughter —
F, you should be in the hayfield looking after your
men;
How beautiful His manners are, and how unlike the/'
shamed of his poor/'s daughter among the ladies in
his drawing-room ?
if a gentleman Should wed a / '5 daughter.
Farm-gate She gave her hand, unask'd, at the f-g ;
Farming Mi.ss, the / men 'uU hev their dinner i' the
long bam,
FarmJng-men if the f-m be come for their wages, to send
them up to me.
Farmstead and scare lonely maidens at the /.
Far-off I have a f-o buiTOw where the King Would miss
her and for ever.
Farther Your Grace's policy hath a / flight Than
mine Queen Mary i v 312
Farthest that flower'd bowl my ancestor Fetch'd from the
y east — ^he Falcon 485
Fadlion red and white, the / of our land. Queen Mary i y 10
Is it the / of this clune for women „ in vi 90
WiU in some lying / misreport His ending
UI 15
Foresters in 201
Becket iv ii 158
IV iii 326
Fashion (continued) the dead were found .Sitting, and
in this /; Queen Mary v ii 397
To make allowance for their rougher / '5, Harold n ii 9
You are too cold to know the / of it. Becket n ii 126
Or scarce would smile that /. „ in iii 28
■ — to celebrate my birthdaay i' this /. Prom, of May i 322
your Ladyship hatii sung the old proverb out of /. Foresters 1 i 164
that he may see The / of it. .. iv 254
thou, that art churchman too In a /, .. iv 412
blow upon it Three mots, this/ — listen I „ iv 425
Fashion'd {See also Old-fashioned) I liave had it/, see, to
meet my hand. Harold v i 422
Fast (adi . and adv. ) {See also Hold-fast, Friendship-fast)
Do ye stand / by that which ye resolved ? Queen Mary ni iii 103
Have not I been the / friend of your life „ v ii 133
I dug mine into My old / friend the shore, Harold 11 i 7
come now so thick and /, Becket i iii 610
Fast (s) If / and prayer, the lacerating scourge — „ i iii 303
He fast ! is that an arm of /? ,, i iii 520
In scourgings, macerations, mortifyings, F's, „ v i 42
I come this day to break my / with you The Falcon 276
I have broken My / already. „ 575
Not having broken / the livelong day — Foresters rv 186
Fast (verb) Your Foliot/'s and fawns too much for me. Becket, Pro. 264
He /'s, they say, this mitred Hercules! Hefl is that
an arm of fast ?
F, scourge thyself, and mortify thy flesh,
I love my dimier — but I can/, I can /;
Fasten I will / thee to mine own door-post
Fasten'd And that myself was/ to the stake,
not at the moment who had / About his throat —
Faster F than ivy. Must I hack her arms off ?
Come in, my friends, come in ! Nay; /, / !
Fastest I am thy /friend in Normandy.
Fast-fading with his/-/ eyes Fixt hard on mine.
Fasting A life of prayer and / well mav see
Fat "
I iii 518
I iii 539
Foresters i ii 64
„ n i 403
Queen Alary rv ii 3
The Cup n 50
Harold v ii 146
Becket v iii 69
Harold n ii 556
Queen Mary i ii 30
Harold I i 199
„ I ii 103
„ rv ii 40
Becket, Pro. 414
V ii 211
The shadows of a hundred / dead deer
The slow, / fool ! He drawl'd and prated so,
A-hawking, a-hawking ! If I sit, I grow /.
One slow, /, white, a burthen of the hearth ;
That fine, /, hook-nosed uncle of mine, old Harold, Prom, of May i 509
Fatal mling men are / twins that cannot Move one with-
out the other. Harold ni i 127
Blaze like a night of / stars on those Who read „ rv i 251
My / oath — the dead Saints — the dark dreams— „ v i 380
cowling and clouding up That /star, thy Beauty, Becket i i 312
Fatality foul fatalities That blast our natural passions Prom, of May m 723
Fate / Which hunted him when that un-Saxon blast, Harold n ii 29
/ hath blown me hither, bound me too „ n ii 219
She is my / — else wherefore has my / The Cuf i i 12
I fling all that upon my /, my star. .. i iii 27
Life yields to death and wisdom bows to F, .. n 90
The wheel of F has roll'd me to the top. .. n 221
Drew here the richest lot from F, .. n 442
is it thou ? the F's are throned, not we — „ n 488
He had my /for it, Poison'd. ,. n 516
Fated Rome is/ To rule the world. .. ix 415
Father (s) {See also Feyther, God-father) Let / alone,
my masters ! Q^een Mary i i 38
child who had but obeyed her/; ,. i i 95
putting by his f's will. ,. i ii 28
you divorced Queen Catharine and her/: .. i ii 57
Courtenay, wilt thou see the holy / Miu'der'd before
thy face ? .. i iii 64
Your royal / (For so they say) \\as all pure lily „ i v 19
as tho' My /and my brother liad not lived. ,. i v 36
for doing that His/ whipt him into iloing — ■ .. i v 63
My hard / hated me ; .. i v 80
my royal /, To make the crown of Scotland one with ours, .. i v 286
Hath he the large ability of his/? ,. i v 439
thing Was no such scarecrow in your f's time. .. i v 473
the child obey'd her/. Spite of her tears her/ forced
it on her. ,. i v 494
My /on a birthday gave it me, And I have broken with
my /— „ I v 527
Father
908
Father
Father (s) (continued) were a pious work To string
my /'*■ sonnets,
Hand nie the casket with my/'s sonnets.
JJumb children of my /, that will speak
I know Spain. I have been there with my/;
my / was the rightful heir Of England,
to whom The king, my/, did commit his trust;
The / ceded Naples, that the son Being a King,
Against the Holy F's primacy.
Thro' this most reverend F, absolution.
He, whom the F hath appointed Head
or more Denied the Holy F !
As once the Holy F did with mine.
Before my f married my good mother, —
Against the King, the Queen, the Holy F,
What your imperial / said, my liege,
you know my /, Retiring into cloistral solitude
The Holy F in a secular kingdom Is as the soul
Cranmer is head and / of these heresies,
Your /was a man Of such colossal kinghood,
Your / had a will that beat men down ; Your / had a
brain that beat men down —
It is God's will, the Holy F's will.
As if he had been the Holy F, sat And judged it.
O God, F of Heaven ! O Son of God,
0 God the F, not for little sins
Forgive me, F, for no merit of mine,
1 do believe in God, F of all ;
stood More like an ancient/ of the Chiu-ch,
You must abide my judgment, and my f's,
And yet I must obey the Holy F,
That all day long hath wrought his/'s work,
Shut on him by the/ whom he loved,
I watch'd you dancing once With your huge /;
O would I were My / for an hour !
We have made war upon the Holy F All for your sake :
No, Madam, not against the Holy F,
There was an old-world tomb beside my f's,
My sister's marriage, and my f's marriages,
It was his f's policy against France.
Holy F Has ta'en the legateship from our cousin Pole —
She thank'd her / sweetly for his book
0 /, mock not at a public fear,
For my dead f's loyalty to thee ?
my / drove the Normans out Of England ? —
F. William. Well, boy.
But for my / I love Normandy.
in thy f's day They blinded my young kuisman,
Alfred — ay, Some said it was thy f's deed.
Thank thee, /! Thou art English,
Harold, shake the cloud off ! Harold. Can I,/?
1 have heard a saying of thy / Godwin,
F, we 80 Joved — Aldred. The more the love,
Hush,/, hush! .
for this cow-herd, like my /,
for mine own / Was great, and cobbled.
Holy F Hath given this realm of England to the Norman.
Holy F To do with England's choice of her own king ?
What power, holy/?
Are those the blessed angels quiring, /?
Ay, good/.
Look, daughter, look. Edith. Nay, /, look for me !
Stigand, O /, have we won the day ?
The Holy F strangled him with a hair Of Peter
the Holy F, while This Barbarossa butts him, from
his chair.
Name him ; the Holy F will confirm him.
Becket, her f's friend, like enough staved
Save me, /, hide me — they follow me —
but, /, They say that you are wise in winged things,
my / drove him and his friends, De Tracy and De Brito
F, I am so tender to all hardness ! Nay, /,
Wedded ? Rosamund. F !
O, holy /, when thou seest him next,
and lay My crozier in the Holy F's hands,
Queen Mary ii i 27
II i 44
n i 77
.. II i 167
.. II ii 170
.. II ii 208
in i 74
.. Ill iii 131
.. Ill iii 148
., Ill iii 206
., Ill iv 248
.. Ill V 243
.. Ill V 245
.. Ill vi 33
III vi 56
.. Ill vi 208
IV i 34
IV i 76
.. IV i 100
IV i 108
.. IV i 184
IV iii 44
„ IV iii 117
,. IV iii 143
,. IV iii 152
„ IV iii 228
„ IV iii 598
V i 146
V ii 38
V ii 118
., V ii 122
V ii 145
.. V ii 294
V ii 307
V ii 312
.. V ii 394
V iii 96
V V 45
V V 125
V V 236
Harold i i 74
., I i 240
.. I i 251
.. II ii 103
„ II ii 270
.. II ii 510
„ III 127
„ III i 75
„ III i 111
,. Ill i 345
.. mi 389
„ IV i 80
.. IV i 90
.. V i 12
.. V i 17
.. V i 454
.. vi473
.. vi516
.. vi536
,. vi543
„ V ii 45
Becket, Pro. 215
„ Pro. 244
„ Pro. 517
I i 181
ii254
1 1276
1 1315
1 1319
1 1322
I iii 125
Father (s) [continued) Have I the orders of the Holy F? Becket i iii 233
The secret whisper of the Holy F. .. i iii 236
I knew thy/; he would be mine age Had he lived now ; „ i iii 249
think of me as thy /! Behold thy / kneeling ., i iii 251
F, I am the youngest of the Templars, .. i iii 260
Sons sit in jutlgment on their / ! — ., i iii 552
Becket shall be king, and the Holy F shall be king, ., i iv 270
The mouth is only Clifford, my dear/. „ n i 221
I would that thou hadst been the Holy F. „ n ii 398
I am the King, his/. And I will look to it. ., iii i 26
Hath not thy / left us to oiu«elves ? ..mi 271
with the Holy / astride of it down upon his own head. .. in iii 77
f's eye was so tender it would have called ., in iii 101
Glancing at the days when his / was only Earl of Anjou, .. iii iii 150
nay, Geoffrey Plantaganet, thine own husband's/ — .. iv ii 250
His / gave him to my care, and I Became his second /: .. v ii 335
And love him next after my lord his /. .. v ii 342
scare me from my loj'alty To God and to the Holy F. .. v ii 483
He is not yet ascended to the F. ,. v iii 150
and send him forth The glory of his / — 2'he Cwp ii 263
happy was the prodigal son, For he return'd to the
rich/; The Falcon]^
Many happy returns of the day, /. Prom, of May i 351
Did 'e git into thy chaumber ? Eva. F I „ i 401
No, no, / ! Towser'll tear him all to pieces. .. i 423
I hate Traditions, ever since my narrow /, .. i 492
Oh, Philip, F heard you last night. ,. i 557
you have robb'd poor / Of ten good apples. .. i 615
nor /, Sister, nor you, shall ever see me more. „ i 675
And poor old / not die miserable. „ i 722
make them happy in the long barn, for/ is in his glory, .. i 792
mentioned her name too suddenly before my /. ,. ii 24
and my / 's breaking down, and his blindness. ii 69
I have lost myself, and am lost for ever to you and
my poor/. „ ii 85
my poor /, utterly broken down By losing her — „ ii 417
My f's death, I^t her believe it mine ; „ ii 453
My / stricken with his first paralysis, ,, ii 481
Might I call Upon your /— ., ii 513
I cannot Well answer for my/; ., ii 519
What was that ? my poor blind / — „ ii 566
and / Will not die miserable.' „ ii 659
my / and I forgave you stealing our coals. „ in 68
which F, for a whole life, lias been getting together, „ in 165
F, this poor girl, the farm, everything ; „ in 211
Poor blind F's little guide, Milly, „ m 231
will you not speak with F to-day ? „ in 237
always told F that the huge old ashtree „ iii 243
he will be willing that you and F should live with us ; „ in 261
That last was my F's fault, poor man. .. iii 279
And then — what would F say ? „ in 390
your F must be now in extreme old age. „ m 400
Don't you long for F's forgiveness ! „ in 404
You must not expect to find our F as he was five years
ago. ,, m 419
Hes the cow cawved ? Dora. No, F. „ in 428
Be the colt deiid ? Bora. No, F. „ m 430
Well, F, I have a surprise for you. „ in 438
No, F, that was a mistake. She's here again. „ in 445
lost hei-sen i' the river. Bora. No. F, she's here. „ in 457
speaking with Your/, asking his consent — „ in 493
state Of my poor / puts me out of heart. „ in 504
I told you— My /. „ m 574
he, the /, Thro' that dishonour which you brought „ in 764
Marian ! Marian. F ! Foresters i i 180
Cleave to him, / ! he will come home at last. „ i i 197
Tut, / ! I am none of your delicate Norman maidens „ i i 211
F, you see this cross ? „ i i 284
prays your ladyship and your ladyship's / to be present
at his banquet to-night. „ i i 300
I wish you and your ladyship's/ a most exceeding good
morning. ,. i j 309
and my own / — they were bom and bred on it — „ i i 331
Take it again, dear /, be not wroth „ i i 341
SuflScient for the day, dear / ! „ i i 343
ii
Father
Feather
Father (s) (continued) My lord, myself and my good /
pray
Not her, the / 's power upon her.
Much, the miller s son, I knew thy /:
but my / will not lose his land,
betray'd Thy / to the losing of his land,
your good / had his draught of wine
b my poor / !
0 lead me to my/! (repeat)
•^he will not marry till her / yield.
There is a fence I cannot overleap, Mj f's will.
And were my kindly / sound again,
He was mv /, mother, both in one.
And my sick / here has come between us
Quiet, cjuiet ! or I m ill to my /.
thy / wiD not grace our feast With his white beard to-day
Here is my f's bond.
You scheme against her f's weal and hers,
1 remain Beside mv F's litter.
Speak not. I wait upon a dying /.
It seems thy f's land is forfeited,
thou shalt wed him. Or thine old / will go mad —
F, I cannot marry till Richard comes,
the Sheriff, /, ^^'oukl buy me for a thousand marks
But pity for a /, it may be,
I grieve to say it was thy f's son.
Art thou my son? Walter Lea. I am, good/,
'father (verb) No— munler / 's murder :
fathered had I / him I had given him more of the rod
than the sceptre,
all the souls we saved and / here Will greet us
^'ather-king And the f-k ?
Tather-like Julius the Third ^^'as ever just, and mild,
and f-l ;
Tathtt ly See how the teai-s run down his / face.
•'athom Deep — I shall / him.
Thou stirrest up a grief thou canst not /.
''atness fill all hearts with / and the lust Of plenty —
^atter yonder's / game for you Than this old gaping
gurgoyle :
i'attiiig the / of your calves, the making of your
butter,
'augh F ! we shall all be poisoned. Let us go.
'ault his / So thoroughly to beheve in his own self.
— this Cardinal's f—1 have gulpt it down.
To veil the / of my most outward foe —
O God the Son, Not for slight f's alone,
not his /, if our two houses Be less than brothers
And yet she plagues me too — no / in her —
he had his / 's, For which I would have laid
the /, mebbe, «Tir as much mine as yours ;
Be that my/?
making us feel guilty Of her own f's.
would you beat a man for his brother's /?
That last was my Father's /, poor man.
! aultless The / Gardiner !
anlty Some of my former friends Would find my
logic /;
avonr He hath fallen out of / with the Queen.
What makes thy / like the bloodless head
GKxl's / and king's / might so clash
So that you grant me one slight /.
Would you cast An eye of /on me,
That if I cast an eye of / on him,
ivour'd he would pay The mortgage if she / hinj.
ivomer Because they think me / of this marriage.
and a / Of playere, and a courtier,
ivonrite utterly broken down By losing her — she
was his / child —
for you know, my dear, you were always his / —
IWB / upon him ? Chime in with all ?
Your Foliot fasts and / 's too much for nie.
/ upon him For thy life and thy son's.
.wniiig The false Archbishop / on him,
Who rub their / noses in tne dust,
Foresters i ii 127
I iii 9
1 iii 147
ri i 522
„ II i 570
,. u ii 1
n ii 8
„ II ii 22, 48
II ii 82
in 10
III 81
IV 6
„ IV 55
IV 78
IV 79
IV 463
IV 481
IV 605
IV 611
IV 640
IV 645
IV 648
IV 651
IV 659
IV 811
IV 1020
Queen Mary in i 335
Becket iii iii 110
V ii 223
„ III iii 100
Quee^i Mary v ii 31
IV iii 4
I iii 158
ui iv 299
The Cup II 272
Queen Mary i iii 79
Prom, of May u 92
Becket i iv 243
Queen Mary ii ii 385
III iv 376
IV ii 106
IV iii 139
Harold iv i 129
Becket, Pro. 59
V ii 337
Prom, of May i 325
II 89
u 270
III 155
in 280
Queen Mary in iv 96
Prom, of May n 665
Queen Mary i iv 156
V ii 19
Becket, Pro. 295
„ I ii 58
Foresters i ii 217
I ii 262
I iii 7
Queen Alary i v 156
Becket i i 78
Prom, of May n 418
in 423
Harold i ii 165
Becket, Pro. 264
IV ii 224
Queen Mary i v 30
„ m iii 242
Fay To a land where the /, Foresters n ii 180
Fealty Into the wide-spreatl amis of /, Queen Mary u ii 264
F to the King, obedience to thyself ? Becket i iii 587
That goes against om/ to the King. „ v ii 508
Not one to keep a woman's / The Cup i i 176
Fear (s) he brought his doubts And f's to me. Queen Mary i ii 76
Skips eveiy way, from levity or from /. „ i iii 170
There lies your/. That is your drift. „ i v 304
I am Harry's daughter, Tuilor, and not F. ,, n iv 53
St. Peter in his time of /Denied his Master, „ in iv 263
my father married my good mother, — For/ of Spain. ,. iii v 247
from the/of Him Whose ministei's tliey be to govern you. „ iv iii 179
0 father, mock not at a public /, Harold i i 75
That's a truer/! ., i ii 66
stuS'd the boy with/'s that these may act „ n ii 90
Thy/ 's infect me beyond reason. Peace! „ u ii 451
Famine is/, were it but Of being starved. „ iv iii 204
Yet if a /, Or shadow of a /, „ v i 114
To lodge a / in Thoma.s Becket's heart Becket i iii 176
Nay — no /! More like is he to excommunicate me. „ u i 269
yet what/? the people Believe the wood enchanted. „ ni i 35
/ creeps in at the front, honesty steals out at the back, .. in iii 61
No/! Grim. No/, myloixl. „ v ii 578
from maiden /'s Or reverential love for him I loved, The Cup n 196
1 do remember your first-marriage /'s. ., n 207
I have no /'« at this my second marriage. ., ii 208
Fear (verb) I /, I /, I see you. Dear friend, Queen Mary i ii 102
dull life in this maiden court, I /, my Lord ? „ i iii 115
She /'s the Lords may side with you ' .. i iv 158
Do not / it. Of that hereafter. „ i v 130
Courtenay, Save that he f's he might be crack'd in
using, „ n i 7
I / the mine is fii-ed before the time. ,, n i 123
I / we be too few, Sir Tliomas. „ n i 224
and I / One scruple, this or that way, „ ii ii 99
And / them not. I / them not. „ n ii 243
how to cross it balks me. I / we cannot. „ ii iii 10
1/ the Emperor much misvalued me. „ m ii 76
This Howard, whom they /, what was he saying ? „ in vi 54
nor / but that to-day Thou shalt receive „ iv iii 84
There will be more conspiracies, I /. ,. iv iii 433
1 do much / that England will not care. „ v ii 282
I have given her cause — I / no woman. Harold i ii 42
Why then of England. Madam, / us not, „ v ii 97
that I / the Queen would have her life. Becket, Pro. 61
We / that he may reave thee of thine o^vn. .. i iii 611
1 / Church-censures like your King. .. iv ii 434
They / you slain : they dread they know not what. „ v ii 600
Tut — / me not ; I ever had my victories among women. The Cup i i 152
I / not. Synorix. Then do not tell him. „ i ii 308
Yes, my lord, / not. I will answer for you. Foresters i ii 32
And / not thou ! Each of us has an arrow on the conl ; „ iv 606
Fear'd She / it might unman him for his end. Queen Mary in i 368
Cannot ? Even so ! I / as much. The Falcon 846
Fearful Paget, despite his/ heresies, I loved the man. Queen Mary iv iii 633
whose / Priest Sits winking at the license of a king, Becket i ii 65
More, tenfold, than this / child can do ; Harold i ii 143
thou Wast ever /. „ n ii 351
Too /still! „ nii412
Fearing / for her, sent a secret missive, Queen Mary n ii 121
Feast (s) No sacrifice, but a life-giving/! „ iv ii 112
Bring not thy hollowness On our full/. Harold iv iii 204
A doter on white pheasant-flesh at f's, Becket, Pro. 97
I would that every man made / to-day The Cup n 225
of that full / That leaves but emptiness. Prom, of May n 255
Why comest thou like a death's head at my/? Foresters i ii 211
And join your/'s and all your forest games „ in 84
thy father will not grace our/ With his white beard to-day. „ iv 80
Our / is yonder, spread beneath an oak, ' „ iv 189
Feast (verb) Call in the poor from the streets, and let them /. Becket i iv 73
Feed, /, and be merry. „ i iv 151
Feather if this Prince of fluff and / come Queen Mary i iv 162
Night, as black as a raven's/; Harold in ii 6
strike, make his f's Glance in mid heaven. The Falcon 15
We cannot flamit it in new /'*■ now : „ 42
Feather' d
910
Felt
Feather'd Breaks into / merriments, and flowers Qneen Mary iii v 13
Featherhead Courtenay, belike — Mary. A fool and / ! „ v i 128
Feature of royal blood, of splendid /, „ i i 112
equal for pm'e innocence of nature, And loveliness
of/.
Featureless play'd at ball with And kick'd it /—
Fed swoU'n and / With indraughts and side-currents,
F with rank bread that crawl'd upon the tongue,
pray for him who hath / you in the wilderness.
Meal enough, meat enough, well/;
You be / with tit-bits, you,
I am / with tit-bits no more than you are,
those pale moutlis which we have / will praise us —
Federigo {See also Federigo degli Alberighi) my Lord F,
he hath fallen Into a sickness.
My lord F, Can I not speak with you once more
Yes, your falcon, F !
O F, F,l love you ! Spite of ten thousand brothers, F.
And I am happy ! Giovanna. And I too, F
From, of May n 373
The Cup 11 128
Queen Mary n i 233
„ IV iii 442
Becket i iv 266
The Falcon 166
Foresters i i 24
I i 27
„ IV 1076
The Falcon 309
687
843
897
928
Federigo d^li Alberighi Poor Fd A Takes nothing in return „ 715
Fee (s) In / and barony of the King, Becket i iii 675
I hold Nothing in / and barony of the King. .. i iii 678
Take /'s of tyranny, wink at sacrilege, „ ii ii 394
And have thy/'s, and break the law no more. Foresters iv 955
Fee (verb) he will / thee as freely as he will wrench Harold n i 57
if you cared To / an over-opulent superstition, Prom, of May i 693
Feeble To Dover ? no, I am too /. Queen Mary in vi 221
If Rome be /, then should I be firm. Becket i iii 240
Perhaps you judge him With / charity : The Cup i ii 186
Shall I tell her he is dead ? No ; she is still too /. Prom, of May in 338
Feed F, feast, and be merry. Becket i iv 151
So that the fool King Louis / them not. ., ii i 76
that the sheep May /in peace. „ in iii 346
That you may / your fancy on the glory of it, The Cup ii 133
Feeder a / Of dogs and hawks, and apes, Becket i i 79
Feel I came to / the pulse of Eiigland, Queen Mary m i 37
faith that seem'd to droop will/ your light, ., iii iv 22
I / it but a duty — you wll find in it Pleasure .. in iv 429
your Grace, your Grace, 1/ so happy : „ m v 250
And it were well, if thou shouldst let him /, Harold n ii 16
I can / for thee. Eleanor. Thou / for me ! — Becket, Pro. 472
The man shall/ that I can strike him yet. „ n i 78
And / it too. „ in iii 48
willing wives enough To / dishonour, honour. The Cup i ii 189
Will /no shame to give themselves the lie. .. n 117
Dost thou not / the love I bear to thee „ n 426
As years go on, hef's them press upon him, Prom, of May i 647
I / sewer, Miss Dora, that I ha' been noan too
sudden wi' you, ., n 59
I / so much better, that I trust I may be able ,. in 221
As yet I scarcely / it mine. .. in 613
and mighty slow To / offences. „ in 630
churchman too In a fashion, and shouldst / Avith him. Foresters iv 412
he will. He will — he f's it in his head. „ iv 646
That I may / thou art no phantom — „ iv 1013
Feeling with her poor blind hands / — ' where is it ? Queen Mary ni i 407
F my native land beneath my foot, „ ui ii 47
Feel'st thou / into the hands Of these same Moors Foresters ii i 562
when thou / with me The ghost returns to Marian, „ iii 113
Feigning F to treat with him about her marriage — Queen Mary ii ii 33
Feint comedy meant to seem a tragedy — A /, a farce. Becket iv ii 323
There was the farce, the /—not mine. And yet I am
all but sure my dagger was a / Till the worm
tum'd-
— this was no / then ? no.
No, for it came to nothing — only a /.
I'll swear to mine own self it was a /.
Fell Who stood upright when both houses /.
Bagenhall. The houses/ ! Officer. I mean
the bouses knelt
But stretch it wider ; say when England /.
God's righteous judgment / upon you
nay, his noble mother's, Heaa / —
How oft the falling axe, that never /,
owld lord / to 's meat wi' a will, God bless un !
IV ii 377
IV ii 383
IV ii 398
IV ii 402
Queen Mary m iii 255
m iii 262
iniv240
m iv 296
m V 134
IV iii 514
Fell (contmued) Like Peter's when he /, and thou wilt
the first F, and the next became an Empire.
Hail to the living who fought, the dead who / !
how he / 's The mortal copse of faces !
Then all the dead / on him.
Here / the truest, manliest hearts of England.
Before he / into the snare of Guy ;
high altar Stand where their standard / . . .
Every man about his king F where he stood.
Harold iii i 283
IV i 51
.. IV iii 106
V i 588
V ii 50
V ii 58
V ii 131
V ii 140
V ii 182
twelve stars / glittering out of heaven Into her bosom. Becket I i 46
smote me down upon the Minster floor. I /. .. i i 105
If. \yhj fall ? Why did He smite me ? .. i i 108
they mock'd us and we / upon 'em, i ii 15
names of those who fought and / are like The Cup i ii 164
F with her motion as she rose, and she, The Falcon 536
how long we strove before Our horses / beneath us, ,, 639
'er an' the owd man they / a kissin' o' one another Prom, of May i 21
/ agean coalscuttle and my kneea gev waay .. i 403
as I telled 'er to-daay when she / foul .. u 582
I'd like to / 'im as dead as a bullock ! ,. ii 597
if ever A Norman damsel / into our hands, Foresters in 181
The deer/ dead to the bottom, and the man F with him, .. iv 543
Feller (fellow) the / couldn't find a Mister in his mouth
fur me. Prom, of May i 302
Why, coom then, owd /, I'll tell it to you ; .. n 202
What/ wur it as 'a' been a-talkin' .. ii 575
thaw the /'5 gone and maade such a litter of his faiice. .. n 588
The/'s clean daazed, an' maazed, an' maated, ,. ii 728
Fellow (See also Feller) Art thou of the true faith, /, Queen Mary i iii 46
Divers honest /'s, ,. i iii 120
I will be there ; the /'« at his tricks — ,. i iii 157
A goodlier-looking / than tliis Philip. ,. i iv 3
and I warrant this fine/ 's life. ,. n iii 84
I know some lusty /'s there in France. ,, in i 128
Ay ! /, what ! Stand staring at me ! ,. in i 286
Ever a rough, blunt, and uncourtly / — ,, v v 120
Haul like a great strong / at my legs, Harold ii i 11
F, dost thou catch crabs ? ., n i 65
my f's know that I am all one scale like a fish. Becket i iv 212
The / that on a lame jade came to court, „ v i 246
He comes, a rough, bluff, simple-looking /. The Cup i i 173
I tell thee, my good /, My arrow struck tlie stag. „ i ii 27
I mil, I will. Poor / ! The Falcon 282
more than one brave / owed His death to the charm in it. „ 634
You hear, Filippo ? My good /, go ! „ 691
Nor am I Edgar, my good /. Prom, of May ii 702
Foot f's ! Foresters i i 91
there is a lot of wild/'s in Sherwood Forest who hold
by King Richard. .. i ii 73
good f's there in merry Sherwood That hold by Richard, „ i iii 98
A brave old / but he angers me. .. ii i 471
Farewell, good/ 's ! .. m87
I believe thee, thou art a good /, though a friar. .. in 342
Thou pay est easily, like a good /, .. iv 156
I can bring down Fourscore tall / 's on thee. .. iv 177
now I love thee mightily, thou tall/. .. iv 322
Were some strong / here in the wild wood, ,. iv 515
man of ours Up in the North, a goodly / too, ,. iv 53C
Fellow-citizen Swear with me, noble f-c's, all. Queen Mary ii ii 296
Fellow-prisoner Thus Gardiner — for the two were f-p's „ i iv 196
Fellow-pupil Were not our f-p's all ladies ? Prom, of May in 29t
Fellow-trickster one should be This William's f-t's ; — Harold ni ii 71
Felony ' If any cleric be accused of /, the Church Becket i iii 8i
Felt I have / within me Stirrings of some great doom Queen Mary i iv 25J
babe in amis Had/ the faltering of his mother's heart, „ n ii Si
The Queen hath / tlie motion of her babe ! ., in ii 21J
and the power They / in killing. .. m iv 7*
if I knew you / this parting, Philip, As I do ! .. ni vi 25]
I / his arms about me, and his hps — ,. v v 9i
Hate not one who / Some pity for thy hater ! Harold i ii 4i
F the remorseless outdraught of the deep „ ii i 1'
I / it in the middle of that fierce fight ., iv iii _18;'
And / the sun of Antioch scald our mail, Becket ii li 9!'
we / we had laughed too long and could not stay
ouraelves — „ m iii 16<
Felt
911
Fierce
The Cup I i 34
Foresters i i 208
IV 627
Queen Mary m i 122
n ii 52
I iv 203
V V 266
Foresters n ii 39
ni8
Queen Mary ii i 171
Foresters n i 572
Queen Mary ni ii 104
Becket m iii 278
ueen Mary v i 224
vi269
vii400
vii529
V ii 531
V iii 8
T iii 84
Harold v i 149
i lUt {cmitinued) I never / such passion for a woman.
? who never hast / a want, to whom all things,
By my halidome 1/ him at my leg stiU.
Female the crown F, too !
Fen yet like waters of the / they know not
Fence (s) hath no / when Gardiner questions him;
To reign is restless /, Tierce, quart, and trickery,
witli this skill of / ! let go mine arm.
There is a / 1 cannot overleap, My father's will.
Fence (verb) may / round his power with restriction,
'tis but to see if thou canst /. Draw !
Fenced You are doubly / and shielded sitting here
He / his royal promise with an if.
Feria (attendant on Kii^ Philip of Spain) F ! Hast
thou not mark'd —
because I ani not certain : You understand, F.
Madam, the Count de F waits without.
It is the Count de F, my dear lady.
Count de F, from his Majesty King Philip.
Count de F, from the King of Spain.
Count de jf-", I take it that the King hath spoken to you ;
Fern nun Vying a tress against our golden /.
Ferrar (Bishop of St. David's) Rogers and F, for tlieir
time is come, Queen Mary m iv 425
Festal But ill befitting such a / day Foresters i iii 37
Fester'd Foul maggots crawling in a / vice ! Queen Mary v v 161
Festival Sat by me at a rustic / The Falcon 350
times Of /like burnish 'd summer-fiies. Foresters i ii 276
Fetch I am sent to / you. Queen Mary m iv 393
and he sent me wi' the gig to Littlechester to / 'er ; Prom, of May i 20
Go men, and / him hither on the litter. Foresters iv 461
Fetched but we / her round at last. Queen Man/ iv iii 495
Let her be /. Harold v i 153
bowl my ancestor F from the farthest east — The Falcon 485
Fetid if the / gutter had a voice And cried I was not
clean. Quern Mary y ii 322
Fetter'd now, perhaps, F and lash'd, a galley-slave. Foresters ii i 654
Fetters hast thou no / For those of thine own band „ iv 831
Feud 1 come for counsel and ye give me f's. Queen Mary lu iv 308
if she stay the f's that part The sons of Godwin Harold i ii 178
Godwin still at / with Alfgar, .. iv i 123
Plots and f's ! This is my ninetieth bu-thday. (repeat) ,. iv i 120, 126
To make all England one, to close all/'*, „ iv i 141
if there ever come / between Church and Crown, Becket, Pro. 464
Are not so much at / with Holy Church „ i ii 54
/ between our houses is the bar 1 cannot cross ; The Falcon 254
No more/'s, but peace. Peace and conciliation ! „ 909
no more f's Disturb our peaceful vassalage to Rome. The Cup n 70
[alism Tut ! you talk Old /. Prom, of May i 670
Fever U'et, famine, ague, /, storm, wreck, wrath, — Queen Mary v v 108
I have a Nonnan / on me, son, Harold i i 87
i when I was down in the /, she was down „ n i 47
that be dead ten times o'er i' one day wi' the putrid /; Becket i iv 251
No /, cough, croup, sickness ? ,, v ii 169
whitewash that cottage of yours where your grand-
son had the /. Prom, of May iii 44
if the /spread, the parish will have to thank you
for it. „ m 46
d'ye think Fd gi'e 'em the /? „ m 50
Smitten with / in the open field, „ in 806
fever-breeding a foul stream Thro' f-b levels, — at her side, Becket ii i 156
'ew for we are many of us Catholics, but / Papists, Queen Mary i i 115
In some / minutes. She will address your guilds
and companies. „ u ii 14
F things have fail'd to which I set my will. „ ii ii 22
We have / prisoners in mine earldom there, Harold n ii 686
I have almost drain'd the cup — A / drops left. The Cup ii 386
and why ye have so / grains to peck at. Foresters i i 77
How / Jimes Will heat our pulses quicker ! How /frosts
Will chill the hearts that beat for Robin Hood ! „ iv 1060
'emiess Doth not the / of anything make the fulness Becket ni iii 301
'eyiher (father) Thy / eddicated his darters to marry
gentlefoiilk. Prom, of May ii 115
I faiaw'd 'im when I seed 'im agean an' I telled/
on 'im. „ ni 122
Fib you told me a great /: it wasn't in the willow. Becket iv ii 371
Nip, nip him for his /. Foresters ii ii 121
Fiction A shadow, a poetical / — ,, iv 219
No figure, no /, Robin. „ rv 222
Fiddler and the / be theer, and the lads and lasses Prom, of May i 427
Fie These are the things that madden her. F
upon it ! Queen Mary in ii 222
F on her dropsy, so she have a dropsy ! „ m ii 226
F ! To stand at ease, and stare as at a show, „ iv iii 291
Field {See also Battle-field, Slaughter-field) To read
and rhyme in solitary / 's, ,. n i 51
green / Beside the brimming Medway, „ n i 243
Amplier than any / on our poor earth „ in iii 197
banish'd us to Woodstock and the f's. „ m v 4
These /'s are only green, they make me gape. „ iii v 7
range Among the pleasant /'s of Holy Writ ., m v 80
seems that we shall fly These bald, blank f's, ,. m v 252
Is God's best dew upon the barren /. .. v i 102
There runs a shallow brook across our / „ v v 83
Be there not fair woods and f's In England ? Harold i i 262
sons of Godwin Sit topmost in the / of England, ,. i i 326
But walk'd our Norman /, .. ii ii 173
Free air ! free / ! .. ii ii 230
men are at their markets, in their /'s, ii ii 437
in some wide, waste / With nothing but my battle-axe .. ii ii 778
and hurl'd it from him Three /'s away, ,, m i 140
and in a / So packt with carnage ,, ni ii 127
Who conquer'd what we walk on, our own /. ,, iv i 39
that reach'd a hand Down to the / beneath it, ,. iv i 45
If the / Cried out ' I am mine own ; ' „ iv i 48
The seed thou sowest in thy / is cursed, The steer where-
with thou plowest thy / is cursed. The fowl that fleeth
o'er thy /is cursed, „ v i 70
And be thy hand as winter on the /, „ v i 132
should the King of England waste the f's Of England, „ v i 141
0 rare, a whole long day of open /. Becket i i 296
Be yet within the /. „ n ii 42
— the green / — the gray church- — ., n ii 295
to overstep and come at all things in the next/? „ tn iii 283
Moon on the / and the foam. The Cv/p i ii 3
bis falcon Ev'n wins his dinner for him in the /. The Falcon 231
To find one shock upon the / when all The harvest „ 301
And, having passed unwounded from the /, „ 609
My comrade of the house, and of the /. „ 876
Follow my art among these quiet /'s. Prom, of May i 743
and he sent 'im awaay to t'other end o' the /; „ ii 154
This poor, flat, hedged-in / — no distance— „ ii 344
this, for the moment. Will leave me a free /. „ ii 456
— a daughter of the f's. This Dora ! .. u 628
we fun' 'im out a-walkin' i' West F wi' a white 'at, .. in 136
Thro' f's that once were blest, m 202
Smitten with fever in the open /, ,. m 806
We be more like scarecrows in a / than decent serving
men ; Foresters i i 34
We know all balms and simples of the / „ n ii 12
Fiend and the f's that utter them Tongue-tom Queen Mary \ ii 192
Norman who should drive The stranger to the / 's ! Harold n ii 541
taking The F's advantage of a throne, Becket ii i 152
Do they not fight the Great F day by day ? „ v ii 586
Hence to the/! .. v iii 107
The black / grip her ! Foresters in 380
Fierce how / a letter you wrote against Their
superstition Queen Mary i ii 84
but this / old Gardiner — his big baldness, .. i iv 263
So / against the Headship of the Pope, ,, in iii 11
are breeding A / resolve and fixt heart-hate in men .. in vi 32
suddenly fill With such / fire — .. ni vi 162
You have been more / against the Pope than 1 ; ,. rv ii 148
Remember how God made the / fire seem .. iv iii 89
she lost Her / desire of bearing him a child, ,, iv iii 429
the ti-uth Was lost in that/ North, where they were lost, Harold m ii 26
Lest thy / Tostig spy me out alone, „ rv i 190
Thy / forekings had clench'd their pirate bides „ rv iii 35
1 felt it in the middle of that /fight At Stamford- bridge. „ iv iii 184
Thou didst arouse the / Northumbrians ! „ v i 347
Fierce
912
Find
Fierce (continued) sorely presfc upon By the / Emperor and
his Antipope. Becket i iii 203
Perchance the / De Brocs from Saltwood Castle, ,, v ii 249
These arm'd men in the city, these / faces — • „ v iii 3
may not be seized With some / passion, Prom, of May ii 336
Fiercelier Heaven help that this re-action not re-act
Yet / under Queen Elizabeth, Queen Mary iv iii 389
Fiercest Out in the / storm That ever made earth
tremble — Prom, of May iii 796
Fierier That ever make him /. Queen Mary v ii 95
something / than fire To yield them their deserts. ., v iv 26
Fieriest And ail her /partisans — are pale Before my star ! „ ni ii 170
Fiery And then our / Tostig, while thy hands Are palsied
here, Harold ii ii 453
Fiery-choleric And hates the Spaniard — f-c. Queen Alary v ii 92
Fifth This is the / conspiracy hatch'd in France ; „ v i 297
Fifty We may have left their / less by five. The Falcon 625
F leagues Of woodland hear and know my horn. Foresters in 102
Fight (s) I have fought the / and go — Harold i i 184
I fought another / than this Of Stamford-bridge. .. iv iii 23
I felt it in the middle of that fierce / At Stamford-bridge. ,. iv iii 184
power to balk Thy puissance in tbis / „ v i 119
I can no more — fight out the good /—die Conqueror. Becket v iii 189
The Cup I ii 154
The Falcon 605
613
Queen Mary ii ii 28
u ii 313
III i 457
III i 466
III ii 204
III iv 92
V V 189
Harold i i 433
„ I i 436
.. II ii 59
„ in ii 134
„ ni ii 153
„ IV iii 165
., IV iii 167
., V i 137
Becket i i 112
I i 123
I iii 545
„ I iii 569
.. I iv 210
., V ii 585
„ V iii 189
The Cup II 92
Foresters i i 14
I i 57
„ I i 232
„ I i 236
„ n i 557
„ II i 575
„ II i 577
,. IV 200
„ IV 207
Harold v i 69
„ V i 388
„ V i 491
Becket i iii 36
„ I iv 160
Foresters n i 543
IV 821
Becket in iii 165
„ m iii 346
Foresters iv 221
IV 222
IV 333
Queen Mary in v 157
Foresters in 198
Harold V i 468
in the front rank of the / With scarce a pang
The trumpets of the / had echo'd down,
and with a flag of ours Ta'en in the / —
Fight (verb) who went with your train bands To /
with Wyatt,
Is he so safe to / upon her side ?
I trust that you would / along with us.
would you not / then ? Bagenhall. I think I should
/ then.
for their heresies, Alva, they will/;
Paget, You stand up here to / for heresy,
I'll / it on the threshold of the grave.
boys will /. Leofwin would often / me.
Even old Gurth would /.
Normans up To / for thee again !
Well then, we must /. How blows the wind ?
He hath cui-sed thee, and all those who / for thee,
Too drunk to / with thee !
F thou with thine own double, not with me,
How should the people / When the king flies ?
Not / — tho' somehow traitor to the King —
' I mean to / mine utmost for the Church,
make it clear Under what Prince I /.
F for the Church, and set the Church against me !
we daren't / you with our crutches.
Do they not / the Great Fiend day by day ?
I can no more — / out the good fight— die Conqueror.
We cannot / imperial Rome,
' I go to / in Scotland With many a savage clan ; '
if he had not gone to / the king's battles,
if he dare to / at all, would / for his rents,
f's not for himself but for the people of England.
I would / with any man but thee.
No, Sir Earl, I will not / to-day.
Well, I will / to-morrow.
lie that pays not for his dinner must / for it.
thou / at quarterstaff for thy dinner with our Robin,
Fighteth The soul who / on thy side is cursed,
Fighting And / for And dying for the people —
chosen by his people And / for his people !
Wilt thou destroy the Church in / for it,
thej' were / for her to-day in the street.
to help the old man When he was /.
Were / underhand unholy wars
Figure to keep the / moist and make it hold water,
False /, Map would say.
— a mere /. Let it go by.
No /, no fiction, Robin.
I see two f's crawling up the hill.
Filch a fox may / a hen by night,
/ the linen from the hawthorn,
Fili Salva F, Salva Spiritus,
Filippo (foster brother to Count Federigo degli Alberighi)
Sh— sh— F ! (repeat) Tlie Falcon 96, 105
Come, come, F, what is there in the larder ? ., 117
out of those scraps and shreds F spoke of.
Away, F !
What is it, F ? Filippo. Spooas, your lordship.
I thank thee, good F.
so I, F, being, with your ladyship's pardon,
F ! Giovanna. Will 3'ou not eat with me.
Wine ! F, wine !
F ! wiU you take the word out of your master's own
mouth ?
I and F here had done our best,
F ! Count. A troop of horse —
And we kill'd 'em by the score. Elisabetta. F !
See, my lady ! Giovanna. I see, F !
And why, F ?
tree that his lordship Giovanna. Not now, F.
You hear, F ? My good fellow, go !
But the prunes that your lordship Elisabetta. F !
F ! Filippo. Well, well ! the women !
Fill no foreign prince or priest Should / my throne.
suddenly / With such fierce fire
And we will / thee full of Norman sun,
and / the sky With free sea-laughter —
Fall, cloud, and / the house — ■
God of truth F all thine hours with peace ! —
Thou art the man to / out the Church robe ;
And / all hearts with fatness and the lust
See here, I / it. Will you drink, my lord ?
F to the brim.
Fill'd saw the church all / With dead men
one who / All offices, all bishopricks with English —
God Has / the quiver, and Death has drawn the bow-
' And when the vacancy is to be / up,
like Egypt's plague, had / All things with blood ;
Filthy Come, you / knaves, let us pass.
What / tools our Senate works with !
Find Whose play is all to / herself a Kin:
And f's you statues.
Death and the Devil — if he / 1 have one — •
F out his name and bring it me.
thou shalt lose thine ears and / thy tongue,
amazed To / as fair a sun as might have fla-sh'tl
Did you / a scripture, ' I come not to bring
Till, by St. James, I / myself the fool.
And I can / no refuge upon earth.
I shall / Heaven or else hell ready to swallow me.
And I have often found them. Mary. F me one !
you will / written Two names, Philip and Calais ;
You will / Philip only, policy, policy, —
To / the sweet refreshment of the Saints.
and coming back F them again.
And, brother, we will / a way,' said he —
To / a means whereby the curse might glance
then would / Her nest within the cloister.
Know what thou dost ; and we may / for thee,
mitil I / Which way the battle balance.
Harold slain ? — I cannot / his body.
Go further hence and / him.
for I should / An easy father confessor in thee.
Thou M'ilt / her Back in her lodging.
As / a hare's form in a lion's cave.
Shall 1 / you one ?
makes after it too To / it.
To / my stray sheep back within the fold.
I thought if I followed it I should / the fairies.
but I don't know if I can / the way back again.
Shall I / you asleep when I come back ?
this will / it there, And dig it from the root
We / that it is miglitier than it seems — •
Follow us, my son, and we will / it for thee —
F one a slut whose fairest linen seems Foul
Here, here, here will you / me.
To / Antonius here.
148
155
396
554
564
569
577
597
607
616
622
655
6£.8
686
690
694
697
Queen Mary in v 237
m vi 161
Harold n ii 180
n ii 336
ni i 190
V i 316
Becket, Pro. 262
The Cup n 272
n 366
Foresters in 343
Harold I ii 82
.. n ii 534
„ ni i 400
Becket 1 iii 108
I iii 345
„ I iv 203
Tlie Cup I i 156
Queen Mary i iii 164
H ii 265
III i 232
in i 253
in i 256
„ III ii 22
III iv 87
m vi 101
IV iii 128
IV iii 223
vii223
V V 153
V V 158
Harold i i 177
n i 91
.. n ii 367
.. in i 342
, IV i 233
IV ii 48
.. V i 460
V ii 20
V ii 6C
Becket, Pro. 87
I i 39£
I iii 171
I iv 24
„ II i 32£
. Ill iii 35f
IV i 2^
IV i 4^
IV ii 6^
IV ii 7f
,. IV ii 26;
.. IV ii 37;
.. V ii 201
,, V ii 51'
The Cwp I iii
II
Find
913
Firm
The
Prom.
Find {continued) or at least shall / him There in the camp
Whose winter-cataracts / a realm and leave it
I sought him and I could not / him.
To / one shock upon the field when all The harvest
I / a written scroll That seems to run in rhymings.
you Would /it stain 'd Count. Silence, Elisabetta !
Lady, I / you a shrewd bargainer.
But you will / me a shrewd bargainer still.
An' how d'ye / the owd man 'ere ?
feller couldn't / a Mister in his mouth fur me.
You never / one for me, Mr. Dobson.
or you may / me at the bottom of the river. —
that we Should / her in the river ;
Some of my former friends Would / my logic faulty ;
Did you / that you worked at all the worse
You must not expect to / our Father as he was five
years ago.
our carters and our shepherds Still / a comfort there,
you will / The common brotherhood of man
I cannot / the word — ^forgive it — Amends,
only they that be bred in it can / their way a-nights
in it.
Your worship may / another rhjrme if you care
Sheriff, thou wilt / me at Nottingham. Sheriff. If
anywhere, I shall / thee in hell
The Cwp I iii 93
n305
n397
Falcon 301
431
664
757
774
)f May J 11
I 302
I 305
n88
n412
n665
ni55
ni419
m529
m542
ra789
Foresters n i 265
n i 322
IV 801
in iv 337
IV i 170
V iii 48
V iii 53
V V 214
Becket, Pro. 499
„ m ii 44
„ rv ii 261
The Falcon 546
556
561
Prom, of May i 316
I 337
I 509
in209
,?ilie (adj.) If you have falsely painted your/ Prince ; Queen Mary i v 598
\ Carew stirs In Devon : that / porcelain Courtenay, „ n i 6
Ay, why not, Sir Thomas ? He was a / comrtier, he ; „ n i 33
a f courtier of the old Court, old Sir Thomas. „ n i 45
Ay, and I warrant this / fellow's life. „ n iii 83
Lord ! they be / ; I never stitch'd none such. „ in i 226
F eyes — but melancholy, irresolute — A / beard,
Bonner, a very full / beard.
Of such / mould, that if you sow'd therein The seed
of Hate,
Were you in Spain, this / fair gossamer gold —
Is it so / ? Troth, some have said so.
but therein Simk rocks — they need / steering —
the / attractions and repulses, the delicacies.
Now let the King's / game look to itself.
My lord, we know you proud of your / hand,
Here's a / salad for my lady,
Here's a / fowl for my lady ;
And here are / fruits for my lady —
Well, I reckons they'll hev' a / cider-crop to-year
but I ha taaen good care to turn out boath my
darters right down / laadies.
That /, fat, hook-nosed vmcle of mine, old Harold,
sometimes been moved to tears by a chapter of /
writing in a novel ;
and prattled to each other that we would marry /
gentlemen, „ m 277
Ay, how / they be in their liveries. Foresters! i 40
Because thou sayest such / things of women, „ i iii 137
ine (s) A roimd / likelier. Your pardon. Queen Mary m iii 279
A /, a / ! he hath called plain Robin Hood a lord. Foresters m 214
i A / ! a / ! He hath called plain Robin a king. „ iv 217
jine (verb) F him ! / him ! he hath called plain Robin an
j earl. „ iv 150
ine-cat his f-c face bowing and beaming with all that
courtesy Becket m iii 141
iner Mai^ery ? no, that's a / thing there. How it
glitters ! „ rv i 2
populace. With f's pointed like so many
daggers. Queen Mary i v 149
I wear Upon this /), ye did promise full Allegiance „ n ii 168
Would you not chop the bitten / off, „ m iv 206
You have a gold ring on your /, » v iv 32
A lesson worth F and thumb— thus Harold i ii 55
How their pointed f's Glared at me ! „ n ii 790
his / on her harp (I heard him more than once) „ rv i 203
Yet my f's itch to beat him into nothing. Becket i iv 229
Ay. and I left two f's there for dead. The Falcon 653
ye'il think more on 'is little / than hall my hand
at the haltar. Prom, of May 1 112
to pass it down A / of that hand Foresters i ii 299
Finger (continued) she swore it never Should leave her /. Foresters ii i 593
Finger'd The cardinals have / Henry's gold. Becket i iii 295
Fingernail and he's as like the King as / to /, „ ni i 165
Finger-point I Scraped from your /-p's the holy oil; Qu^en Mary iv ii 132
Fiidkin there comes a deputation From our / fairy
nation. Foresters n ii 145
Finish I am your I-egate ; please you let me /. Queen Mary ni iv 180
Finish'd It is /. (repeat) Harold m i 177, 203, 211
They are /. Synorix. How ! The Cwp n 422
Have you not /, my lord ? Foresters n i 341
Fire (s) {See also A-hell-fire, A-vire, Fool-fire, Hell-fire,
Vire) practise on my life, By poison, /, shot, Queen Mary i iv 285
Stamp out the /, or this Will smoulder and re-flame, „ i v 508
it serves to fan A kindled /. „ i v 621
the rack, the thumbscrew, the stake, the /. „ n i 201
Dare-devils, that would eat / and spit it out „ mi 156
Rascal ! — this land is like a hill of /, „ m i 321
I will show / on my side — stake and / — „ mi 327
Let the dead letter live ! Trace it in /, „ m iv 34
by the churchman's pitiless doom of /, „ in iv 50
Yet others are that dare the stake and /, „ m iv 167
I am on / until I see them flame. ,, m iv 287
Or a second /, Like that which lately crackled „ m v 52
but of this / he says, Nay swears, ,. m v 71
but they play with / as children do, „ in vi 28
you may strike / from her. Not hope to melt her. „ m vi 38
suddenly fill With such fierce / — ^had it been / indeed ,. m vi 162
As Cranmer hath, came to the / on earth. „ rv i 60
Power hath been given you to try faith by / — „ iv ii 154
F — inch by inch to die in agony ! „ rv ii 223
makes The / seem crueller than it is. „ rv ii 233
Remember how God made the fierce / seem „ rv iii 89
The patience of St. Lawrence in the /. „ rv iii 95
So I may come to the /. „ iv iii 251
Liar ! dissembler ! traitor ! to the / ! „ iv iii 259
Harm him not, harm him not ! have him to the / ! „ iv iii 285
howsoever hero-like the man Dies in the /, „ iv iii 325
I say they have drawn the / On their own heads : „ rv iii 380
To whom the / were welcome, „ iv iii 438
Who follow'd with the crowd to Cranmer's /. „ rv iii 555
they swarm into the / Like files — ^for what ? no
dogma. „ V ii 111
sir, they hurl'd it back into the /, That, being but
baptized in /, the babe Might be in / for ever. „ v iv 22
something fierier than / To yield them their deserts. „ v iv 26
in a closed room, with light, /, physic, tendance ; „ v iv 37
And bum the tares with imquenchable / ! „ v v 114
that these Three rods of blood-red / up yonder Harold i i 44
For if the North take /, I should be back ; „ i ii 67
while ye fish for men with your false f's, „ n i 31
hath blown himself as red as / with curses. „ v i 87
the /, the light. The spirit of the twelve Apostles Becket i i 49
Make it so hard to save a moth from the /? ,. i i 284
Set all on / against him ! „ i ii 89
the /, when first kindled, ssiid to the smoke, „ n ii 317
As one that blows the coal to cool the /. ,, v ii 549
Is that the cup you rescued from the / ? The Cwp i i 71
like A bank'd-up / that flashes out again „ i ii 166
to the wave, to the glebe, to the / ! „ n 4
a red / woke in the heart of the town, Prom, of May i 50
tho' the / should run along the ground, „ i 703
when you put it in green, and your stack caught /. „ n 56
heat and / Of life will bring them out, „ n 286
She hath the / in her face and the dew in her eyes. Foresters i i 166
mantle of the cloud. And sets, a naked /. „ n i 29
Who melts a waxen image by the /, „ n i 671
Fire (verb) Upon their lake of Garda, / the Thames ; Qiieen Mary m ii 23
And in the winter I will / their farms. Foresters rv 95
Fired so in this pause, before The mine be /, Queen Mary n i 26
I fear the mine is / before the time. „ n i 123
The mine is /, and I will speak to them. „ n i 155
Your houses / — your gutters bubbling blood — „ n ii 280
city rose against Antonius, Whereon he / it. The Cup i ii 64
Firelike I'll have it bumish'd / ; Qaeen Mary i v 374
Fireside I would taake the owd blind man to my oan/. Prom, of May n 74
Firin make their wall of shields F as thy clifis, Harold v i 480
3 M
Firm
914
Flanders
Finn (continued) by thy wisdom Hast kept it / from
shaking ; Becket, Pro. 204
If Rome be feeble, then should I be /. „ i iii 241
My hand is /, Mine eye most true to one hair's-breadth
of aim. Foresters iv 693
First (adj.) are fresh and sweet As the / flower no bee
has ever tried. Qiieen Mary i iv 63
and your worship the / man in Kent and Christendom, „ ii i 64
In William's time, in our / Edward's time, „ in iii 226
as in the day of the / church, when Clu-ist Jesus was
King. ,, V iv 55
Earl, the / Christian Caesar drew to the East Harold v i 21
wherefore now Obey my / and last commandment. Go ! „ v i 359
the bright link rusts with the breath of the / after-
marriage kiss, Becket, Pro. 362
The / archbishop fled, And York lay barren for a
hundred years. „ i iii 53
frosted off me by the / cold frown of the King. „ i iv 67
But Hereford, you know, crown'd the / Henry. „ in iii 202
To the fond arms of her / love, Fitzurse, ,, iv ii 334
You kiss'd me there For the / time. The Cup i ii 419
F kiss. There then. You talk almost as if it Might
be the last. „ i ii 421
He sends you This diadem of the / Galatian Queen, „ ii 132
when Synorix, / King, Camma, / Queen o' the Realm, „ n 440
Coming to visit my lord, for the / time in her life too ! The Falcon 170
I lay them for the / time roimd your neck. „ 907
But where is this Mr. Edgar whom you praised so
in your /letters ? Prom, of May i 111
better death With our / wail than life — „ ii 291
My father stricken with his / paralysis, „ n 481
as they are arranged here according to their / letters. „ m 37
I do believe I lost my heart to him the very / time
we met, „ m 284
shall I give her the / kiss ? O sweet Kate, my / love,
the / kiss, the / kiss ! Foresters i i 126
but I came to give thee the / kiss, and thou hast given
it me. „ I i 132
does it matter so much if the maid give the / kiss ?
Little John. I cannot tell, but I had sooner have
given thee the / kiss. „ i i 136
if a man and a maid love one another, may the
maid give the / kiss ? „ i i 173
You shall give me the / kiss. ,, i ii 227
The / part — ^made before you came among us — „ rri 435
First (s) We strove against the papacy from the /, Qiieen Mary ill iii 225
Who knew it from the /. „ ni vi 114
First-marriage I do remember your f-m fears. The Cup ii 206
Fish (s) I had liefer that the / had swallowed me, Harold ii i 36
Rolf, what / did swallow Jonah ? Rolf. A whale ! „ ii i 41
A sauce-deviser for thy days of /, Becket, Pro. 98
my fellows know that I am all one scale like a/, „ i iv 213
as to the /, they de-miracled the miraculous draught, „ in iii 123
Fish (verb) while ye / for men with your false fires. Let
the great Devil / for your own souls. Harold ii i 30
But 'e doant / neither. Prom, of May i 214
Well, it's no sin in a gentleman not to /. „ i 216
Fisher Apostlas ; they were f's of men, Harold n i 34
Thy true King bad thee be A / of men ; Becket ii ii 286
Fisher (John, Bishop of Rochester) Did not More die,
and F? he must bum. Queen Mary iv i 52
Fisherman We be fishermen ; I came to see after my nets. Harold u i 27
Fishermen ? devils ! Who, while ye fish for men „ ii i 29
Better have been A / at Bosham, my good Herbert, Becket ii ii 292
Fist (s) and plunge His foreign / into our island
Church Queen Mary in iv 364
the childish / That cannot strike again. Harold iv iii 30
Fist (verb) The boy would / me hard, and when we fought „ i i 444
Fit (adj.) Is the King's treasury A /place for the monies
of the Church, Becket i iii 105
it is not / for us To see the proud Archbishop mutilated. „ i iii 613
he be / to bust hissen wi' spites and jalousies. Prom, of May n 164
Fit (verb) I measured his foot wi' the mark i' the bed,
but it wouldn't / „ 1 414
Fit See also Agoe-flt
Fitter thousand times F for this grand function. Becket, Pro. 293
Fitzurse (Reginald, knight of Henry n.'s household) {See
also Reginald, Reginald Fitzurse) F, that chart with
the retl line —
what hast thou to do with this F ?
And watch F, and if he follow thee,
No footfall — no F. We have seen her home.
liOrd F reported this In passing to the Castle
F- — Becket. Nay, let him be.
My lord, F beheld her in your lodging.
Cursed F, and all the rest of them
—F and his following — who would look down upon
them ?
F, The running down the chase is kindlier
Kneel to thy lord F ; Crouch even because thou
hatest him ;
My lord F- — ■ — Becket. He too ! what dost thou here ?
You have wrong'd F. I speak not of myself,
fond arms of her first love, F, Who swore to mari-y her.
Five that she met the Queen at Wanstead with /
hundred horse. Queen Mary i i 78
God's righteous judgment fell upon you In your /
years of imprisonment, „ in iv 242
My lord, the King demands / hundred marks, Becket i iii 641
Monks, knights, / hundred, that were there and heard. „ v ii 406
F hundred ! Count. Say fifty ! The Falcon 618
the feller couldn't find a Mister in his mouth fur
me, as farms / hoonderd haacre. Prom, of May 1 304
Becket Pro. 427
1 i 271
I i 330
I i 367
I ii 12
r ii 23
I ii 33
n ii 271
,. Ill iii 308
,. IV ii 212
IV ii 222
IV ii 280
IV ii 328
IV ii 335
n 0
n67
n 82
H 615
in 140
in 420
m 761
Foresters iv 283
II i 149
Prom, of May n 462
Qu-een Mary i ii 31
„ IV ii 55
IV ii 89
Becket, Pro. 49
The Cup II 20
It be / year sin' ye went afoor to him.
We have been in such grief these / years.
Poor sister, I had it / years ago.
but can he trace me Thro' / years' absence.
Him as did the mischief here, / year' sin'.
You must not expect to find our Father as he was
/ years ago.
F years of shame and suffering broke the heart
and can make F quarts pass into a thimble.
Nay, my tongue tript — f hundred marks for use.
Five-fold and they rate the land /-/ The worth of the
mortgage.
Five-years' My f-y anger cannot die at once,
Fixt with his fast-fading eyes F hard on mine,
Well, burn me or not burn me I am / ;
have I that I am /, F beyond fall ;
had I / my fancy Upon the game I should
To-day they are / and bright — -they look straight out,
Flag made us lower our kingly / To yours of
England. Queen Mary v i
must lower his / To that of England in the seas of
England.
Our /hath floated for two hundred years Is France
again.
and with a / of ours Ta'en in the fight —
But anger'd at their flaunting of our /,
Flame (s) (See also Altar-flame, Re-fl^ae) Here was a
young mother. Her face on /,
And found it all a visionary /,
God will beat down the fury of the /,
gather'd with his hands the starting /,
And thrust his right into the bitter / ;
before The / had reach'd his body ;
Unmoving in the greatness of the /,
and cannot scape the /.
Fling not thy soul into the f's of hell.
dooms thee after death To waU in deathless /.
vi65
V ii 261
The Falcon 612
Queen Mary n ii 70
IV ii 4
IV iii 98
IV iii 337
IV iii 610
IV iii 616
IV iii 622
Harold i i 13
Becket ii i 316
„ IV ii 272
He miss the searching / of purgatory, „ v iii 13
Flame (verb) I am on fire until I see them/. Queen Mary in iv 288
'Tis out — mine f's. „ v v 124
by St. Denis, now will he / out. And lose his head Becket v ii 479
Flamed — O he F in brocade — Queen Mary in i 76
How he / When Tostig's anger'd earldom Harold in i 53
Flaming In sight of all with / martyrdom. Queen Mary iv iii 29
What with this / horror overhead ? Harold i i 231
Then I saw Thy high black steed among the / furze, Becket n i 55
Flanders prince is known in Spain, in F, Queen Mary i v 207
Emperor counsell'd me to fly to F. „ i v 550
We heard that you were sick in F, cousin. „ in ii 34
Flanders
I Flanders (continued)
i In F.
I To follow thee to F ! Must thou go ?
I kisses of all kind of womankind In F,
' To-morrow — first to Bosham, then to F.
Flap let him / The wings that beat down Wales !
Flare fly out and / Into rebellions.
915
Floor
Why then to F. I will hawk and hunt
Harold i i 258
., * iii27
„ I ii 114
„ I ii 240
„ IV i 246
Queen Mary ill i 283
It glares in heaven, it/'5 upon the Thames, Harold i i 29
Flash (s) whether this / of news be false or true, Queen Mary iii ii 234
It is the / that murders, the poor thunder Harold i ii 231
That which the / hath stricken. „ i ii 235
Our axes lighten with a single / ," v i 538
lest there should be f'es And fulminations Becket, Pro. 221
whose quick / splits The mid-sea mast, The Cup li 293
Flash (verb) Thou shalt / it secretly Among the good Harold i ii 219
I will both / And thimder for thee. „ i ii 228
F sometimes out of earth against the heavens. Becket v ii 37
tire that f'es out again From century to century. The Cup i ii 166
though my men and I / out at times Of festival Foresters i ii 274
Flash'd as might have / Upon their lake of Garda, Queen Mary m ii 22
to stay his hand Before he / the bolt. Becket n i 275
And when he / it Shrink from me, ., n i 276
iTho' all the swords in England / above me ., v ii 484
noblest light That ever / across my life. Foresters m 142
The hunter's passion / into the man, „ iv 539
Flashing I see the / of the gate.s of pearl— Harold i i 186
Flask and mine old / of wine Beside me, Queen Mary ra i 46
send you down a / or two Of that same vintage ? Falcon 585
Flat (adj.) but tramples / Whatever thwarts him ; Harold iiii 379
and a foot to stamp it ... i*". „ v ii 194
This beggarly life, This poor, /, hedged-ui field— From, of May ii 344
Lusty bracken beaten /, Queen. Foresters ii ii 154
'lat (s) No, nor with the / of it either. Becket i iv 225
Jlatten gulf and / in her closing chasm Domed cities. The Cup u 300
Jlatter You know to / ladies. Queen Mary i iv 98
I am safe enough ; no man need / me. „ n ii 317
Will not thy body rebel, man, if thou / it ? Becket, Pro. 103
— / And fright the Pope — „ n ii 472
You / me. Dear Eva Was always tliought the
prettier. Prom. of May ii 378
riatter'd Flutter'd or / by your notice of her. The Falcon 538
nattering As if to win the man by / him. Queen Mary u ii 312
ilattery sucking thro' fools' ears The flatteries of corruption— Becket i iii 362
'launt We cannot / it in new feathers now : The Falcon 42
And scruplest not to / it to our face Foresters iv 887
ilaunting But anger'd at their/ of our flag. The Falcon 628
lay And / me all alive. Harold iv i 191
lay'd starved, maim'd, flog:g'd, /, bum'd, Qtieen Mary ii i 210
laying Horrible ! /, scourging, crucifying — The Cup i ii 235
lea like a / That might have' leapt upon us Queen Mary n ii 294
'led (adj. and part.) our Bishops from their sees Or
1 /, they say, or flying— „ i ii 5
' Sir Peter Carew / to France : ,. ii i 135
Is Peter Carew/? Is the Duke taken ? „ ii i 142
Bar the bird From following the / summer — Becket i i 259
France ! Ha ! De Morville, Tracy, Brito— /is he ? „ i iv 199
Love that can shape or can shatter a life till the life shall
have /? „ II i 12
Has / our presence and our feeding-grounds. „ ii ii 22
led (verb) Left him and / ; and thou that would'st
be King, Queen Mary ii iv 82
first archbishop /, And York lay barren Becket i iii 53
Who thief -like / from his own church by night, „ ii ii 156
I /, and found thy name a charm to get me Food, „ v ii 96
Once I / — Never again, and you — ., v ii 498
Since Gamma / from Synorix to our Temple, The Cup ii 14
whereon she struck him, And/ into the castle. Foresters ii i 118
for Oberon / away Twenty thousand leagues to-day. „ n ii 142
Then whither should I / for any help ? Queen Mary iv iii 126
Griffyth when I saw him /, Chased deer-like Harold i ii 147
when I / from this For a gasp of freer air, Becket ii i 27
then you are a dead man ; / ! „ v iii 126
ieece hanging down from this The Golden F — Queen Mary ui i 82
leer heard One of your Council / and jeer at him. „ n ii 393
The statesman that shall jeer and / at men, ,, ii ii 397
leet (s) Mine is the / and all the power at sea — „ i iv 287
Fleet (s) (continued) To seize upon the forts and /, Queen Mary ill i 464
Hold office in the household, /, forts, anny ; ., lu iii 72
and the French / Rule in the narrow seas. „ v i 6
collect the / ; Let every craft that carries „ v ii 274
Fleet (verb) A breath that f's beyond this iron world, Harold ill ii 197
Fleeted and makes it Foam over all the / wealth of kings The Cup ii 289
Fleeth fowl that / o'er thy field is cursed, Harold v i 73
Fleeting My grayhounds / like a beam of light, „ i ii 129
Fleming See Fox-Fleming
Flemish Their F go-between And all-in-all. Queen Mary in vi 4
Flesh (See also Pheasant-flesh) with right reason,
flies that prick the /. „ iii iv 71
The soft and tremulous coward in the /? „ iv ii 107
when thou becamest Man in the F, „ iv iii 141
it was thought we two Might make one /, „ v ii 137
we were not made One / in happiness, no happiness
here ; But now we are made one / in misery ; „ v ii 150
Where they eat dead men's /, Harold ii ii 808
Treble denial of the tongue of /, „ in i 282
Fast, scourge thyself, and mortify thy /, Becket i iii 540
And as for the / at table, a whole Peter's sheet, „ m iii 128
That I would touch no / till he were well The Falcon 680
servants Are all but / and blood with those they serve. ., 709
And these take / again with our own /, Prom, of May ii 277
weight of the / at odd times overbalance the weight
of the church, Foresters i ii 61
and as to other frailties of the /— „ i ii 65
clothes itself In maiden / and blood, „ ui 117
Flesh-fallen Look ! am I not Work-wan, /-/ ? Harold i i 99
Flew in a narrow path. A plover / before thee. Becket ii i 54
a bat / out at him In the clear noon. Foresters ii ii 96
Crush'd my bat whereon I / ! .. ii ii 146
Flickering Pertest of our / mob, u ii 130
Fliest stay, fool, and tell me why thou /. Becket in ii 35
Flight My / were such a scandal to the faith, Queen Mary i ii 53
hath a farther / Than mine into the future. ,, i v 312
Fling We / ourselves on you, my Lord. „ ii ii 48
why / Jback the stone he strikes me with ? „ iv ii 150
Then / mine own fair person in the gap Harold i ii 202
he f's His brand in air and catches it again, „ v i 493
all my doubts I / from me like dust, Becket i i 148
and / them out to the free air. „ i i 287
F not thy soul into the flames of hell : „ n i 316
I / all that upon my fate, my star. The Cup i iii 27
F wide the doors and let the new-made children ., u 163
/ in the spices, Nard, Cinnamon, amomum, ,, u 183
child of evolution, f's aside His swaddling-bands, Prom, of May i 585
To / myself over, when I heard a voice, „ in 374
Flint in all this, my Lord, her Majesty Is / of /, Queen Mary ni vi 38
All your voices Are waves on /. „ iv i 122
crawl over knife-edge / Barefoot, Becket ii i 272
I fear this Abbot is a heart of /, Foresters i ii 269
Flit We must / for evermore. n ii 123
I Titania bid you /, ii ii 126
Float while the smoke f's from the cottage roof, i ii 317
Floated / downward from the throne Of God Almighty. Harold i i 17
Our flag hath / for two hundred years Is France
again. Queen Mary v ii 261
Floating gonfanon of Holy Peter F above their helmets — Harold v i 550
Flock (s) your/'sofswjins, As fair and white as angels; Queen Mary uiii lA
doth not kill The sheep that wander from his /, „ in iv 103
To the poor / — to women and to children — „ iv ii 158
and all thy / should catch An after ague-fit Becket in iii 31
Shatter you all to pieces if ye harm One of my / ! „ v iii 136
Home with the / to the fold — • The Cup i ii 8
Flock (verb) — thousands will / to us. Queen Mary n i 192
Flogg'd I'll have you / and burnt too, „ i i 60
starved, maim'd, /, flay'd, bum'd, „ n i 210
Flood some mischance of /, And broken bridge, „ i v 354
like a river in / thro' a burst dam Harold n ii 465
had in it Wales, Her f's, her woods, her hills : „ iv i 207
from that / will rise the New, Prom, of May i 594
She rose From the foul / and pointed toward the fann, „ n 653
Floor that his fan may thoroughly purge his /. Queen Mary in iv 370
these chessmen on the / — the king's crown broken ! Becket, Pro. 313
And smote me down upon the Minster /. „ i i 104
Floor
916
Fly
Floor (continued) mark'd Her eyes were ever on the marble/? The Cup n 19
Florence I left it privily At F, in her palace The Falcon 75
His grandsire struck my grandsire in a brawl At F, ,, 252
True tears that year were shed for you in F. „ 385
this faded ribbon was the mode JnF „ 423
he would marry me to the richest man In F ; „ 749
The wildest of the random youth of F „ 809
Florio O my sick boy ! My daily fading F, ,. 236
My one child F lying still so sick, ,, 678
Flourish (s) For these are no conventional f'es. Prom, of May n 562
Flourish (verb) Lift head, and / ; Qiieen Mary ni iv 24
hasn't an eye left in his own tail to / The Falcon 102
Flourished but in the end we / out into a merriment ; BecTcet m iii 137
n ii 255
Queen Mary ii ii 54
IV iii 208
Harold v i 163
Prom, of May n 667
Qv^n Mary rn iv 234
Prom, of May u 651
Flout since he fs the will of either realm,
Flow waters of the fen they know not Which way to/,
Let them / forth in charity,
William's or his own As wind blows, or tide f's :
Colour F's thro' my Ufe again,
Flow'd spring Of all those evils that have /
the black river F thro' my dreams —
Flower (s) (See also Wild-flower) now would settle
Upon this /, now that ;
F, she ! Half faded !
As the first / no bee has ever tried.
They are the / of England ; set the gates wide.
To kiss and cufi among the birds and f's —
Which in the CathoUc garden are as f's,
Love will hover round the f's when they first awaken ;
Palms, f's, pomegranates, golden cherubim
A goodly / at times.
Men are God's trees, and women are God's f's ;
and the f's Are all the fairer.
And never a / at the close ; (repeat)
I love them More than the garden f's,
these golden slopes Of Solomon-shaming f's —
The brook's voice is not yours, and no /,
— would have made my pathway f's,
mountain f's grew thickly roimd about.
if but to guess what f's Had made it ;
' Dead moimtain/'s, dead mountain-meadow /'s,
You bloom again, dead mountain-meadow f's.'
A word with you, my lord ! Count. ' 0 moimtain f's ! '
A word, my lord ! Count. ' Dead f's ! '
my nurse has broken The thread of my dead f's,
If possible, here ! to crop the / and pass.
Altho' at first he take his bonds for f's.
The brook among its f's ! Forget-me-not,
anatomized The f's for her —
but, my /, You look so weary and so worn !
then the sweetest / of all the wolds.
He that can pluck the / of maidenhood
Who art the fairest / of maidenhood
worship thee. Crown thee with f's ;
And answer it in f's.
That beam of dawn upon the opening /,
Bees rather, flying to the / for honey.
The / said ' Take it, my dear,
When the / was wither'd and old.
And lie with us among the f's, and drink —
Flower (verb) and f's In silken pageants.
Mercy, that herb-of -grace, F's now but seldom.
and her affections Will / toward the light
Flower-bed but he left the mark of 'is foot i' the f-b ;
Flower'd that / bowl my ancestor Fetch'd from the
farthest east —
Flowery Nay, rather than so clip The / robe of Hymen,
Flowing (part) Two rivers gently / side by side —
And here the river / from the sea, Queen Mary m ii 26
Flowing (s) frost That'help'd to check the / of the blood. The Falcon 645
Flown Our dovecote / ! I cannot tell why monks BecTcet v ii 580
Hollow Pandora-box, With all the pleasures /, Prom, of May ii 347
Fhifl if this Prince of / and feather come Queen Mary i iv 162
Flung / them streaming o'er the battlements Harold n ii 391
flamed When Tostig's anger'd earldom / him, „ m i 54
colt winced and winnied and / up her heels ; BecTcet, Pro. 515
F the Great Seal of England in my face — „ i iii 456
Queen Mary i iv 56
iiv60
iiv63
niv69
m v259
IV i 179
V ii 370
Harold m i 182
„ IV i 151
BecTcet, Pro. 112
Pro. 116
„ Pro. 332, 342
nil33
nii48
mi 56
V ii 371
The Falcon 355
430
461
471
474
476
522
Prom, of May i 253
I 646
n298
n303
m 498
ra 751
Foresters i ii 108
I ii 123
II ii 19
ra 353
IV 4
ivl3
IV 16
IV 22
IV 965
Queen Mary in v 14
„ m vi 10
Prom, of May i 486
I 409
The Falcon 4^
The Cup n 436
BecTcet i iii 445
BecTcet in iii 168
The Cup I ii 300
I ii 455
Foresters n i 28
IV 406
The Falcon 493
BecTcet n i 8
Queen Mary ni iv 351
The Falcon 365
Queen Mary m iv 12
Foresters i i 186
I i 296.
'— „ ni 33
Flung (continued) if Thomas have not / himself at the
King's feet.
never yet F back a woman's prayer.
' He never yet / back a woman's prayer ' —
F by the golden mantle of the cloud,
/ His life, heart, soul into those holy wars
Flurried with my lady's coming that had so / me.
Flush coming up with a song in the / of the glimmering
red ?
Flnsh'd Our bashful Legate, saw'st not how he / ?
colour'd all my life, F in her face ;
Fluster'd what hath / Gardiner ? how he rubs His
forelock !
and is / by a girl's kiss.
your woman so / me that I forgot my message
Fluting F, and piping and luting ' Love, love, love
Flutter (s) kill'd away at once Out of the /. Queen Mary m v 1(4
Flutter (verb) broken, out you / Thro' the new world, ,, i iv 53
one half Wjll / here, one there. „ m vi 197
But he begins to /. Harold n ii 3
dove, who f's Between thee and the porch, „ iv i 231
/ out at night ? BecTcet i i 282
Begins to /in them, and at last Breaks Prom, of May i 649'
Flutter'd F or flatter'd by your notice of her, TTie Falcon 538
he / his wings with a sweet little cry. Foresters i i 154
he / his wings as he gave me the lie, „ i i 159
Fluttering (part.) I found it / at the palace gates : — Queen Mary m ii 218
Fluttering (s) The leprous f's of the byway, „ iv iii 76
Fly (s) (See also Gad-fly) And cruel at it, killing
helpless flies ; „ in iv 65
with right reason, flies that prick the flesh. „ in iv 70'
they swarm into the fire Like flies — for what ? no
dogma. „ V ii 112
As flies to the Gods ; they kill us for their sport.' Prom, of May 1 264
Cannot Tie take his pastime like the flies ?
that her flies Must massacre each other ?
would not crush The / that drew her blood ;
Fly (verb) Hooper, Eidley, Latimer will not /.
Martyr. F, Cranmer !
might be forgiven. I tell you, /, my Lord.
F, my Lord, / !
farewell, and /. Cranmer. F and farewell,
I thank my God it is too late to /.
You / your thoughts Uke kites.
Emperor counseU'd me to / to Flanders.
Song flies you know For ages.
Cranmer. F would he not, when aU men bad him /.
/ out and flare Into rebellions.
Swallows / again. Cuckoos cry again,
seems that we shall / These bald, blank fields,
Whose colours in a moment break and /,
Whose colours in a moment break and / ! '
Love will / the f aUen leaf, and not be overtaken ;
where the black ciow flies five,
who skips and flies To right and left,
F thou to WilUam ; tell him we have Harold,
let / the bird within the hand,
wilt thou / my falcons this fair day ?
two young wings To / to heaven straight with,
are but of spring. They / the winter change —
Our Wessex dragon flies beyond the Humber,
How should the people fight When the king flies ?
and they / — the Norman flies.
They / once more, they /, the Norman flies !
Thou knowest he was forced to / to France ;
When what ye shake at doth but seem to /,
' F at once to France, to King Louis of France :
I must / to France to-night.
F thou too. The King keeps his forest head of game here,
Linger not till the third horn. F !
I will / with my sweet boy to heaven,
on a Tuesday did I / Forth from Northampton ;
I shaU not /. Here, here, here will you find me.
drag me not. We must not seem to /.
F, f, my lord, before they burst the doors !
I have it in my heart — to the Temple — /—
1 277
I 284
n 494
Queen Mary i ii 14
Iii 43
Iii 96
Iii 104
I ii 112
IV 390
IV 549
ni80
ra i 171
rai283
ra v96
ni V 251
IV iii 170
V ii 207
V ii 372
V v85
Harold i i H
„ nillO
„ n ii 65
„ nil 146
„ ra i 26
„ in ii 91
„ IX iS
„ vilSi
., vi54]
„ vi59(
BecTcet i iii 204
„ I iii 74^
I iv 5i
„ I iv 15^
raii3«
ra ii 41
,. IV ii 231
„ V ii 28(
„ V ii 515
„ V ii 631
„ V iii 5('
The Cup iviU!^
Fly
3 Hy (verb) (continued) She — close the Temple door. Let
917
Follow
her not /.
Just gone To / his falcon.
and once you let him / your falcon.
Should / like bosom friends when needed most.
Breaks thro' them, and so flies away for ever ;
Shall I say it ? — f with me to-day.
I will / to you thro' the night, the storm —
Will he not / from you if he learn the story of my
shame
Tell them to / for a doctor.
Their aim is ever at that which flies highest —
while the lark flies up and touches heaven !
We must / from Robin Hood
You see why We must leave the wood and /.
How much? how much? Speak, or the aiiow flies.
Hying from their sees Or fled, they say, or/ —
Tut, your sonnet's a / ant, Wing'd for a moment.
and / to our side Left his all bare,
see there the arrows /.
and the traitor / To Temple Bar,
A bookman, / from the heat and tussle.
But wing'd souls / Beyond all change
Whither away, man ? what are you / from ?
when I was / from My Tetrarchy to Rome.
Who knows that he had ever dream'd of /?
Prince John again. We are / from this John.
this is Maid Marian F from John — disguised.
Bees rather, / to the flower for honey.
Foalk (folk) F's says he likes Miss Eva the best.
I knaws nowt o' what/'s says, an' I caares nowt
neither.
F's doesn't hallus knaw thessens ;
An' I haates boooks an' all, fur they puts / off the
owd waays.
Let ma aloan af oor /, wilt tha ?
Foam (s) Moon on the field and the /,
Foam (verb) Who mouth and / against the Prince of
Spain.
F at the mouth because King Thomas,
F over all the fleeted wealth of kings
Fobbing See A-!obbing
Foe the Queen Is both my / and yours :
The Cup II 461
The Falcon 210
317
527
Prom, of May i 650
I 678
I 701
m256
in 712
Foresters i i 262
„ I ii 315
„ II ii 138
n ii 174
m 278
Queen Mary i ii 5
ni83
„ n iii 3
II iv 51
„ II iv 93
„ ni iv 251
Harold m ii 100
Hecket in ii 18
The CufiiQ
Prom, of May i 655
Foresters n i 448
n i 680
IV 12
Prom, of May i 24
I 27
I 28
I 222
n 213
The Cup I ii 3
Queen Mary n ii 250
Becket v i 203
The Cup II 289
Queen Mary i iv 42
You cannot Learn a man's nature from his natural /. „ i v 340
His / 's would blame him, and I scom'd 'em, „ i v 624
His/'5 — the Devil had subom'd 'em. ., i v 626
make Those that we come to serve our sharpest /'s ? ,. ii iii 78
hath shut the gates On friend and /. „ ii iv 62
My f's are at my feet and I am Queen. „ n iv 119
My f's are at my feet, and Philip King. „ n iv 143
To veil the fault of my most outward / — ., iv ii 106
seeming not as brethren. But mortal f's ! „ iv iii 186
thou Hast broken all my f's, Harold i i 217
f's in Edward's hall To league against thy weal. „ i ii 31
GrifEyth I hated : why not hate the / Of England ? „ i ii 145
To leave the / no forage. „ v i 133
arm within Is Becket's, who hath beaten down mj f's. Becket, Pro. 254
God make not thee, but thy f's, fall. „ i i 107
Serve my best friend and make him my worst /;
No one comes, Nor / nor friend ;
will you crown my / My victor in mid-battle ?
a man may take good counsel Ev'n from his /.
more of olive-branch and amnesty For f's at home —
II
' O man, forgive thy mortal /,
I am chased by my / 's.
'og who dream'd us blanketed In ever-closing /,
'oible Not scorn him for the f's of his youth.
'oil man that hath to / a murderous aim
but f's wherein To set the precious jewel.
To / and spoil the t3Tant
oil'd And may be / like Tarquin, if you follow
old (as for sheep) will retiu-n into the one true /,
And be regather'd to the Papal /?
Who now recalls her to His ancient /.
sends His careful dog to bring them to the /.
Prom
I iii 568
ni i 38
V i 149
V ii 4
V ii 16
of May III 5
Foresters n i 184
Queen Mary iii ii 21
Becket v ii 328
Harold n ii 417
Becket, Pro. 268
Foresters n i 11
The Cup I i 143
Queen Mary i iii 22
„ III ii 117
„ in iii 167
„ m iv 105
Fold (as for sheep) (continued) that our wolf-Queen Is
prowling round the /. Becket in iii 8
To find my stray sheep back within the /. „ m iii 356
Home with the flock to the / — The Cup i ii 8
Safe from the wolf to the / — „ i ii 20
Fold (thing folded) How dense a / of danger nets him
round, Harold ii ii 17
The / 's have fallen from the mystery, Becket iv ii 8
Fold See also Five-fold
Folded It lies there /: is there venom in it ? Queen Mary m v 216
whole life hath been /like a blossom in the sheath, Foresters i i 206
Foliot (Gilbert, Bishop of London) (See also Gilbert Folioi)
Your F fasts and fawns too much for me. Becket, Pro. 264
not the soldier As F swears it. — „ i i 388
F may claim the pall For London too. „ i iii 56
F, let me see what I have sign'd. „ i iii 307
I sign'd them — being a fool, as F call'd me. „ i iii 561
and tho' you suspend F or another, „ u ii 358
F is the holier man, perhaps the better. „ in iii 91
Folk (See also Foalk, Volk) Among the good
Northumbrian /, Harold i ii 220
our helpless / Are wash'd away, wailing, „ ii ii 470
blurt thy curse among our /, I know not — ,, v i 89
sent his /, His kin, and all his belongings, Becket n i 70
Live with these honest / — And play the fool ! Prom, of May i 744
Folkmote The London / Has made him all but king. Foresters i iii 80
Foller (follow) be room anew for all o' ye. F me. Prom, of May i 454
Shall I / 'er and ax 'er to maake it up ? „ ii 131
Follow (See also Foller) it f's all the more that they
can make thee one, Queen Mary i i 49
will you not / the procession ? „ i i 129
Well, I shall/; „ i i 132
made you / The Lady Suffolk and the Lady Lennox ? — „ i iv 30
I /your good counsel, gracious uncle. „ i iv 186
F their Majesties. „ m i 331
Mary would have it ; and this Gardiner /'s ; „ m iii 231
Philip would have it ; and this Gardiner /'s ! ., in iii 234
Indeed, I cannot / with your Grace : „ m iv 99
I do not /. „ III V 38
And in a moment I shall / him. „ v v 57
by God's grace. We'll / Philip's leading, „ v v 112
worst that /'s Things that seem jerk'd Harold i i 136
To / thee to Flanders ! Must thou go ? „ i ii 27
F my lead, and I will make thee earl. „ iii 216
I need thee not. Why dost thou / me ? Man-at-arms.
I have the Coimt's commands to / thee. ,. ii ii 232
debonair to those That / where he leads, .. n ii 320
Thy Duke will seem the darker. Hence, If. ,. n ii 818
' Wulfnoth is sick,' he said ; ' he cannot /; ' ., in i 86
That these will / thee against the Norsemen, „ iv i 157
will ye, if I yield, F against the Norsemen ? „ iv i 177
An honest fool ! F me, honest fool, ,, v i 88
F them, / them, drive them to the sea ! >, v i 602
They murder all that/. „ v i 610
F me this Rosamxmd day and night, Becket, Pro. 505
they / me — and I must not be known. „ i i 182
And then what/'s ? Let me / thee. „ i i 190
F him out ! „ i i 237
And watch Fitzurse, and if he / thee, „ i i 330
True test of coward, ye / with a yell. „ i iii 745
Cross swords all of you ! swear to / him ! „ i iv 200
must we / All that they overdid or underdid ? ,, ii ii 213
ran a twitch across his face as who should say what's to /? „ in iii 95
Farewell ! I must / the King. „ ui iii 329
I / out my hate and thy revenge. „ iv ii 151
F us, my son, and we will find it for thee — „ iv ii 372
if you / Not the dry light of Rome's straight-going
policy. The Cup i i 144
Give him a bow and arrows — f—f. „ i i 208
What/'s is for no wife's eyes. „ iii 231
F my art among these quiet fields. Prom, of May i 743
Reaction needs must / revel — yet — „ u 264
' Well now you would fain / Wealth,' Foresters i i 158
And I will/ thee, and God help us both. „ i i 277
Ay, so she did not / me to the wood. „ i iii 142
Follow
918
Foot
Follow (continued) But if you / me, you may die with
me. Foresters i iii 166
and be silent in the wood. F me. „ ii i 366
Quick, friar, / them : „ u i 429
They /us. „ iv 579
thy match shall / mine. „ iv 1045
Follow d some fifty That / me from Penenden Heath Quee^i Mary ii i 151
but / the device of those Her nearest kin : „ iii i 379
You must fancy that which /, „ m i 410
boats that /, were as glowing-gay As regal gardens ; „ in ii 12
Who / with the crowd to Cranmer's fire. ., iv iii 554
I /thee. Harold iii 215
Why am I /, haunted, harass'd, „ ii ii 248
Normans left among us, Who / me for love ! „ iii i 304
She hath / with our host, and suffer'd all. „ iv i 28
The king's foundation, that have / him. „ v i 476
Last night I / a woman in the city here. Becket, Pro. 468
why, my lord, I /— / one Becket. And then
what follows ? „ I i 188
The woman that I / hither. „ i i 195
My lord, I / Reginald Fitzurse. „ i i 235
The dog / his calling, my lord. „ i iv 97
Then / the thunder of the captains and the shouting, ,. in iii 111
I thought if I / it I should find the fairies. „ iv i 24
I watched her and / her into the woods, „ iv ii 16
1/ You and the child : he babbled all the way. „ iv ii 139
Why, these are our own monks who / us ! „ v iii 59
I meant thee to have / — better thus. The Cwp ii 498
She / thee into the forest here ? Foresters ii i 486
The Sheriff ! the Sheriff, / by Prince John „ iv 588
Followedst Art thou so sure thou / anything ? Becket i i 210
Follower boldness, which will give my f's boldness. Queen Mary ii iii 71
A worldly / of the wordly strong. Becket i iii 543
He rides abroad with armed /'«, „ vi2
Thy holy /founded Canterbury — „ v iii 5
but can keep his/ 's true. ' Foresters iiin
if the f's Of him, who heads the movement, „ ii i 700
FoUowing {See also A-follering) but all the ladies of
her /. Queen Mary 1 1 82
hang the leaders, let their /go. „ iv i 74
F her like her sorrow. „ v v 11
And slew two himdred of his /, Harold iv i 116
Bar the bird From / the fled summer — Becket i i 259
Fitzurse and his / — who would look down upon them ? „ in iii 308
And all Thro' / of my fancy. The Falcon 144
the man, the woman, F their best affinities, Prom, of May i 523
He, / his own instincts as his God, „ 1 588
who truly loves and truly rules His /, Foresters ii i 77
Folly i^, my good Lord. Courtenay. How/? Queen Mary liv %9
the / of sill follies Is to be love-sick for a shadow. ,, i v 533
if he jeer not seeing the true man Behind his /, ,, ii ii 401
His early follies cast into his teeth, „ v ii 124
in your chancellorship you served The follies of the
King. Becket. No, not these follies ! Becket i ii 31
I am sure I told liim that his plot was/. The Cup i ii 284
Fond Unalterably and pesteringly / ! Queen Mary v i 120
his / excess of wine Springs from the loneliness of my
poor bower, Becket in i 38
To the / arms of her first love, Fitzurse, „ iv ii 334
But he were mighty / o' ye, wam't he ? Prom, of May n 9
You see, they are so / o' their own voices Foresters n i 382
Fonder F of poor Eva — like everybody else. Prom, of May n 11
Fondest But since the /pair of doves will jar, Becket iv ii 40
Fondle And one fair child to/! „ in i 12
Food (logs' / thrown upon thy head. Harold n ii 431
seeing now The poor so many, and all / so
dear. Queen Mary iv iii 209
We scarcely dare to bless the / we eat Becket v i 70
foimd thy name a charm to get me F, roof, and rest. „ v ii 98
what should you know o' the / o' the poor ? Foresters n i 283
Fool and — the /—He wrecks his health Qieen Mary i v 166
It may be, thro' mine honesty, like a/. „ i v 237
he is thrice the /; „ n ii 401
He is child and /, and traitor to the State. „ n ii 403
some / that once Brake bread with us, ,. ni v 43
Fool (continued) and her priests Have preach'd,
the / 's,
Till, by St. James, I find myself the /.
nave and aisles all empty as a, f's jest !
— the world A most obedient beast and / — myself
Half beast and / as appertaining to it ;
The/'s! (repeat)
Come out, my Lord, it is a world oi f's.
Courtenay, belike — Mary. A / and featherhead !
F, think'st thou I would peril mine own soul
hot religious /, Who, seeing war in heaven,
make me not / ! Nor make the King a /,
lest I make myself a / Who made the King
F still ! or wisdom there,
Be not a / !
To marry and have no husband Makes the wife /.
I think I am a / To think it can be otherwise
Thou uncanonical /, Wilt thou play with the thimder ?
F and wise, I fear This curse, and scorn it.
Take and slay me, I say, Or I shall count thee /.
The slow, fat / ! He drawl'd and prated so.
An honest / ! Follow me, honest /,
Hot-headed /'s — to burst the wall of shields !
Peace, f's ! Becket. Peace, friends !
F ! I will make thee hateful to thy King,
sucking thro' f's' ears The flatteries of corruption —
For, like a /, thou knowest no middle way.
I sign'd them — being a /, as Foliot call'd me.
I play the / again,
stajf, /, and tell me why thou fliest.
This in thy bosom, /, And after in thy bastard's !
The jealous / balk'd of her will —
honour me, obey me ! Sluggards and f's !
Sluggards and / 's, why do you stand and stare ?
I have play'd the sudden /.
Queen Mary in vi 99
in vi 101
IV iii 287
, IV iii 414
, IV iii 521, 530
IV iii 639
V i 128
V V 167
Harold i i 139
„ I i 289
„ I i 293
„ I i 359
„ n i 19
„ niiSlO
„ in i 102
„ in 1390
„ in ii 67
„ IV ii 16
„ IV ii 40
V i 88
„ V i 612
Becket i ii 1
„ I ii 91
„ I iii 360
„ I iii 532
„ I iii 561
„ I iii 751
„ mil 34
„ ivii257
„ ivii423
„ vi241
„ V i 256
The Cup 1 iii 162
But I taakes 'im fur a bad lot and a bum /, Prom, of May i 154
but I taakes 'ini for a Lunnun swindler, and a burn/. „ i 309
Live with these honest folk — And play the /
Superstitious/, What brought me here?
There, there, I am a / !
More / he ! What I that have been call'd a Socialist,
Thou speakest like a / or a woman.
There — there — be not a / again.
thou art / again — I am all as loyal as thyself.
Why do you listen, man, to the old /?
I know I have done amiss, have been a /.
I have been a / and I have lost my Kate.
or the head of a /, or the heart of Prince John,
See thou thwart me not, thou/!
If thou be king, Be not a / !
Fool-flre But the /-/ of love or lust,
Fool-friar Back, thou /-/ ! Knowest thou not the
Prince ?
Foolhardy But that's /. Wyatt. No ! boldness,
Foolish Which found me full of / doubts,
For ever, you / child ! What's come over you ?
Some / mistake of Sally's ; but what !
And all the / world is pressing thither.
Fool-people The f-p call her a witch —
Foot Yearns to set / upon your island shore.
the pebble which his kingly / First presses
It lies there in six pieces at your feet ;
set no / theretoward unadvised Of all our Privy
Council ;
a sound Of feet and voices thickening hither —
My foes are at my feet and I am Queen.
My foes are at my feet, and Philip King.
as if her feet were wash'd in blood.
Feeling my native land beneath my /,
Thou art much beholden to this / of mine,
where Edward draws A faint / hither,
thy leave to set my feet On board,
sea shall roll me back To tumble at ihj feet.
Down thirty /«e< below the smiling day-
He had but one /, he must have hopt away.
I 745
II 350
III 207
in 583
Foresters i i 204
I i 261
I i 293
II i 358
n ii 52
n ii 78
IV 213
IV 745
IV 790
The Cup I i 147
Foresters iv 682
Queen Mary n iii 69
I V 530
Prom, of May i 771
in 153
Foresters in 147
„ n i 178
Queen Mary i v 367
I v 369
II i 87
n ii 204
„ n iv 45
II iv 119
II iv 143
„ HI i 61
„ m ii 47
m ii 49
Harold i i 144
„ I i 228
„ I ii 115
„ nii430
„ nii675
I
Foot
919
Forget
l?00t (continued) bright sky cleave To the veiy feet of God, Harold n ii 743
f Seven feet of English land, or something more,
I ' Seven feet of English earth, or something more,
I Then for the bastard Six feet and nothing more !
I Our guardsman hath but toil'd his hand and /, I hand, /,
{ They turn on the pursuer, horse against /,
and a / to stamp it . . . Flat.
the Archbishop washed my feet o' Tuesday.
My bank Of wild-flowers. At thy feet !
if Thomas have not flimg himself at the King's feet.
o'erleaps a jutting rock And shoots three hundred
feet.
tho' Rome may set A free / where she will.
My feet are tons of lead. They will break
but he left the mark of 'is / 1' the flower-bed
I measured his / wi' the mark i' the bed,
I thinks I'd like to taake the measure o' your /.
is a gentleman ? Dora. That he is, from head to /.
land now And wealth. And lay both at your feet.
whenever I set my own / on it I say to it.
Far from solid / of men,
'ooted See Delicate-footed, Four-footed
'ootfall No / — no Fitzurse. We have seen her home.
'ootsore I am / and famish'd therewithal,
'ootstep I thought I heard A /.
"ootstool There let them lie, your /!
^or See Vor, Vor't
'orage To leave the foe no /.
''oraging I am / For Norway's anny.
'orbad So royal that the Queen / you wearing it
The King /it. True, my liege,
'orbear Spare and / him, Harold, if he comes !
How long shall we / him ?
'orbid Shall I despair then ? — God /!
No, God / ! Henry. No ! God / !
God/! (repeat)
Ay God /, But if it be so we must bear with John
save King Richard, when he comes, / me.
if the King / thy marrying With Robin,
'orbiddea loved within the pale / By Holy Church :
'orce (s) in full / Roll upon London.
so my Lord of Pembroke in command Of all her /
be safe ;
Lord Pembroke in command of all our /'
jesilousy Hath in it an alchemic / to fuse
No power mine To hold their / together . . .
Have thy two brethren sent their f's in?
Then there's no / in thee !
* A Galatian serving by f in the Roman Legion.'
* A Galatian serving by ' in the Roman Legion.'
Serve by /? No / Could make me serve by /.
The / of Rome a thousand-fold our own.
'OBOe (verb) Why do you / me thus against my will ?
Grim. My lord, we / you from your enemies.
Becket. As you would / a king from being
crown'd. John of Salisbury. We must not/
the crown of martyrdom.
I could not / or wheedle to my will.
OBOed Spite of her tears her father / it on her.
so 'z we was / to stick her,
When being / aloof from all my guard,
dost thou think the King F mine election ?
see you yon side-beam that is / from under it,
onfaiher Beheld our rough f's break their Gods,
My / friends, who dream'd us blanketed In
ever-closing fog,
That Gardiner, once so one with all of us Against
this / marriage,
and plunge His / fist into our island Church
no / prince or priest Should fill my throne,
A long petition from the / exiles To spare the life of
Cranmer.
Shall these accuse him to a / prince ?
That Cranmer may withdraw to /parts.
This same petition of the / exiles For Cranmer's life.
IV ii 54
IV iii 112
IV iii 116
vi201
vi609
V ii 192
Becket i iv 234
.. II i 126
„ m iii 169
The Cuv 1 i 111
n246
II 476
Prom, of May i 409
I 413
I 464
III 282
III 616
Foresters i i 335
„ II ii 169
Becket I i 367
Foresters n i 266
The Cup I ii 12
Queen Mary ii iv 121
Harold v i 133
„ IV ii 5
Queen Mary i iv 77
Foresters iv 865
Harold in i 299
Becket v ii 417
Queen Mary iv iii 129
Becket n ii 222
Foresters i ii 93, 1(X)
I ii 101
IV 665
IV 874
Harold III ii 23
Queen Mary ii i 235
II ii 306
,. II iv 4
m vi 181
Harold iv iii 213
v i 342
V i 344
The Cup I i 47
.. I ii 75
,. I ii 79
., I ii 85
Becket v iii 21
The Cup I iii 167
Queen Mary i v 495
„ IV iii 494
Harold IV iii 15
Becket i i 127
„ III iii 50
Queen Mary iii ii 120
III ii 19
„ in iii 7
III iv 364
III V 235
IV i 3
IV 124
IV i 45
IV i 193
Foreign (continued) how it chanced That this young
Earl was sent on / travel. Queen Mary v ii 489
The / courts report him in his manner Noble „ v ii 511
that seem at most Sweet guests, or / cousins, Becket ii i 135
Foreigner that no / Hold ofl&ce in the household. Queen Mary in iii 71
Forekings fierce / had clench'd their private hides Harold iv iii 35
Forelead twin sister of the morning star, F the sun. The Cup i iii 47
Forelock That irritable / which he rubs. Queen Mary i iv 265
what hath fluster'd Gardiner? how he rubs His/! „ in iv 13
Foremost First of the / of their files, who die For God, Becket v ii 495
F in England and in Normandy ; Harold ii ii 631
Forenoon I was born true man at five in the / Queen Mary i i 46
Foresee For I / dark days. Mary. And so do I, sir ; „ i v 275
and there was Lambert ; Who can / himself ? „ iv ii 216
Foreseeing F, with whate'er unwillingness, ,, i v 253
Foreshorten That so /'s greatness, ,. ni v 41
Forespeak I can / your speaking. „ i v 137
Forest (adj.) The King keeps his / head of game here, Becket in ii 37
I have shelter'd some that broke the / laws. Foresters i iii 70
up thro' all the / land North to the Tyne : ,. n i 88
So now the / lawns are all as bright As ways to heaven, „ ii i 630
And join our feasts and all your / games ,. ni 85
It is our / custom they should revel Along with Robin. „ in 174
Have ye glanced down thro' all the / ways „ iv 111
Ay, ay, Robin, but let him know our / laws : „ iv 199
Hast broken all our Norman / laws, ,, iv 886
That thou wilt break our / laws again „ iv 888
They break thy / laws — nay, by the rood ,. iv 907
Our / games are ended, our free life, „ iv 1049
Forest (s) King's verdurer caught him a-hunting in the /, Becket i iv 96
More sacred than his / 's for the chase ? „ iv ii 24
this door Opens upon the / ! Out, begone ! The Cup i ii 329
there is a lot of wild fellows in Sherwood / who hold by
King Richard. Foresters i ii 73
In Sherwood F. I have heard of them. „ i iii 102
I believe She came with me into the / here. Robin.
She foUow'd thee into the / here ? „ n i 485
myself Would guide you thro' the / to the sea. ,, n i 638
out of the / and over the hills and away, „ ii ii 175
most beaten track Runs thro' the /, „ m 90
My lord John, In wrath because you drove him from the /, ,. in 451
To bring their counter-bond into the /. iv 90
cuirass in this / where I dream'd That all was peace — „ iv 130
Thou art the king of the /, iv 232
if e'er thou be assail'd In any of our / 's, „ iv 424
Thou told'st us we should meet him in the /, ,, iv 440
You hide this damsel in your / here, ,, iv 476
Thou art alone in the silence of the / ,. rv 631
Thou Robin shalt be ranger of this /, ,. iv 954
We leave but happy memories to the /. ,. iv 1071
Forester He was a /good ; „ n i 319
Forest-horn if I wind This f-h of mine „ iv 175
Forest-life and all the better For this free f-l, „ n i 60
Foretold my dream / my martyrdom Li mine own church. Becket v ii 632
Forfeit Or I / my land to the Abbot. Foresters i ii 151
if they were not repaid within a limited time your land
should be /. „ iv 469
Forfeited affirms The Queen has / her right to reign Queen Mary v i 290
It seems thy father's land is /. Foresters iv 640
Forgave my father and I / you stealing our coals. Prom, of May ni 69
— her last word F — and I forgive you. „ in 811
Forged ay ; if Bonner have not / the bills. Queen Mary iv i 51
Forget (See also Forgit) you / That long low minster
where you gave your hand „ ni ii 89
may God F me at most need when I / Her foul
divorce — „ iv i 80
if that May make your Grace / yourself a little. „ v v 81
Shall I / my new archbishoprick Becket i i 220
To rest upon thy bosom and / him — „ ii i 31
Foi^etting that F's me too. „ ii i 50
You were. I never / anything. „ v ii 413
he begs you to / it As scarce his act : — The Cup n 51
I promise you that if you/ yourself in your
behaviour to this gentleman, Prom, of May 1 161
I am old and/. Was Prince John there? Foresters i i 251
Forget
Fo^et (continued) Not till she clean / thee, noble Earl,
Marian. F him — ^never — by this Holy Cross
Till Nature, high and low, and great and small F's
herself,
'Turn! turn !' but I / it.
Forgetfulness offal thrown Into the blind sea of /.
Foi^et-me-not From out a bed of thick f-m-n's,
speedwell, bluebottle, succory, f-m-n ?
F-m-n, meadowsweet, willow-herb.
Forgetting F that Forgets me too.
Forgit (forget) I ha' browt these roses to ye — If's
what they calls 'em.
Forgive She never will / you.
F me. Father, for no merit of mine,
F me, brother, I will live here and die.
F me thou, and help me here !
Not help me, nor / me ?
I say it now, / me !
We do / you For aught you wrought against us
F me and absolve me, holy father.
and though a Roman I F thee, Gamma.
I/her, I/her!
They say, we should / our enemies.
if the wretch were dead I might / him ;
I trust I shall / him — by-and-by —
not So easy to / — even the dead.
sure am I that of your gentleness You will / him.
then she will / Edgar for Harold's sake.
said herself She would / him, by-and-by,
' 0 man, / thy mortal foe,
souls on earth that live To be forgiven must /. F
him seventy times and seven ;
0 / me ! / me ! Steer. Who said that ?
1 do believe I could / — well, almost anything —
Make her happy, then, and I / you.
I cannot find the word — ■/ it — Amends.
— ^her last word Forgave — and I / you. If you ever
F yourself.
He never will/ her.
Thou art Her brother — I / thee.
Forgiven That might be /. I tell you, fly, my Lord.
And, when the headsman pray'd to be /,
These are / — ^matters of the past —
And be / for it ?
to speak a single word That could not be /.
Ancf she loved much : pray God she be/.
Forgotten and / by them and thee.
souls on earth that Uve To be / must forgive.
souls in Heaven Are both f orgivers and /.'
Didn't I say that we had / you ?
I kneel once more to be /.
Forgiveness the King — that traitor past /,
Is now content to grant you full /,
Was there not some one ask'd me for/?
Would not — if penitent — have denied him her F.
Go back to him and ask his / before he dies. —
Don't you long for Father's/!
Speak but one word not only of /,
Forgiver souls in Heaven Are both f's and forgiven.'
Forgot some Hebrew. Faith, I half / it.
1/ to tell you He wishes you to dine along with us,
that I / my message from the Earl.
Forgotten I had / How these poor libels trouble you.
F and forgiven by them and thee.
And woo their loves and have / thee ;
And all thine England hath / thee ;
Counts his old beads, and hath / thee.
Boy, thou hast / That thou art English.
nurse, I had / thou wast sitting there.
Ay, and / thy foster-brother too.
he had not / his promise to come when I called
him.
I have / my horn that calls my men together.
Shame on thee, Little John, thou hast / —
920
Fought
i
When the Church and the law have / God's music,
Foresters i ii 306
I ii 328
„ I iii 155
Queen Mary ill iii 193
V v 94
Prom, of May i 98
II 299
Becket ii i 49
Prom, of May ii 14
Queen Mary i ii 96
„ IV iii 152
Harold ii ii 803
V ii 22
V ii 24
V ii 27
Becket ii ii 109
„ II ii 441
I'he Cup u 506
The Falcon 173
Prom, of May ii 431
n 434
II 466
n 486
II 489
n 677
II 681
m 5
m8
III 462
III 631
m 667
III 790
III 811
Foresters ii i 142
II i 516
Queen Mary i ii 42
III i 394
„ III iii 190
„ III vi 124
„ III vi 127
V V 272
Harold I i 255
Prom, of May ni 8
in 11
III 75
Foresters ii i 668
Queen Mary i v 29
„ III iv 389
Harold v ii 83
Prom, of May ii 498
III 401
in 404
Foresters ii i 610
Prom, of May in 11
Q^een Mary ii i 126
Prom, of May i 616
Foresters i i 296
Queen Mary v ii 201
Harold i i 255
„ n ii 438
„ n ii 443
„ II ii 447
„ II ii 474
The Falcon 35
36
Prom, of May in 329
Foresters ii i 185
m 238
„ IV 554
Prom, of May ii 181
n 192
Queen Mary i v 27
n ii 185
V ii 238
Forkin' And you an' your Sally was/ the haay.
When me an' my Sally was / the haay,
Forlorn betray'd, defamed, divorced, / !
and yield Full scope to persons rascal and /,
F I am, and let me look /.
The last Parthian shaft of a / Cupid at the King's left
breast, Becket, Pro. 339
Form to compose the event In some such / Queen Mary i v 225
The public / thereof. „ iv ii 71
face and / unmatchable ! The Cup i i 122
Formal a / offer of the hand Of Philip ? Queen Mary i v 349
The / offer of Prince Philip's hand. „ i v 588
And that more freely than your / priest, Prom, of May in 632
I believed thee to be too solemn and / to be a ruffler. Foresters i i 168
Former we shall still maintain All/ treaties with his
Majesty. Queen Mary i v 266
A bastard hate bom of a / love. Becket ii i 174
Why then I strike into my / path For England, ,. ii ii 455
To the monk-king, Louis, our / burthen, „ iv ii 305
Some of my /friends Would find my logic faulty ; Prom, of May n 663
because one of the Steers had planted it there in /
times. „ III 247
Forsaken we fade and are / — Queen Mary v ii 375
Forsware That he / himself for all he loved, Harold v i 622
Forswear to guard the land for which He did / himself — ., v ii 163
Forsworn realm for which thou art / is cursed, „ v i 63
But we hold Thou art/; and no / Archbishop Shall
helm the Church,
Fort Spain in our ships, in our / 's,
To seize upon the f's and fleet.
Hold office in the household, fleet, / 's, army ;
A hill, a /, a city — that reach'd a hand
another hill Or /, or city, took it.
Fortifying I spent thrice that in / his castles.
Fortiter Suaviter in mode, i in re.
Fortune seem'd to smile And sparkle like our /
still Beyond your / '5, you are still the king
though / had born you into the estate of a
gentleman.
Forty As haggard as a fast of / days.
Some thirty — f thousand silver marks.
What ! / thousand marks !
F thousand marks ! / thousand devils —
These two have / gold marks between them, Robin. Foresters in 202
Forward F to London with me I / to London ! Queen Mary 11 i 214
Becket i iii 596
Queen Mary 11 i 179
ui i 464
in iii 72
Harold iv i 44
IV i 50
Becket 1 iii 632
„ V ii 539
Queen Alary n iii 24
The Falcon 291
Prom, of May n 120
Harold iv iii 176
Becket i iii 657
.. I iii 704
I iv 90
/ to London ! Crowd. F to London !
A Wyatt ! a Wyatt ! F !
To Kingston,/!
F\ Fl Harold and Holy Cross !
Foster-brother Ay, and forgotten thy f-b too.
as your ladyship knows, his lordship's own f-b,
Fought I have / the fight and go —
Why — ^how they / when boys —
We / like great states for grave cause ;
boy would fist me hard, and when we / 1 conquer'd.
And thou for us hast / as loyally.
Have I not / it out ?
I / another fight than this Of Stamford-bridge.
or English Ironside Who / with Knut,
Every man about his king F like a king ;
the living Who / and would have died.
Hail to the living who /, the dead who fell !
hath kinglike / and fallen, His birthday too.
And but that Holy Peter / for us,
have I / men Like Harold and his brethren.
For how have / thine utmost for the Church,
I led seven hundred knights and / his wars.
We / in the East, And felt the sun of Antioch
But kinglike / the proud archbishop,
names of those who / and fell are like
but we / for it back. And kill'd —
both / against the tyranny of the kings, the Normans. Foresters i i 229
Who be those three that I have / withal ? „ 11 i 443
Thou shouldst have ta'en his place, and /for him. ,, 11 i 546
Hast thou not / for it, and eam'd it ? „ iv 3 14
II i 216
II i 237
n iii 124
Harold iv i 268
The Falcon 37
566
Harold i i 184
„ I i 430
„ 1 1440
.. I i 445
,. n ii 160
,. II ii 222
,. IV iii 23
,. IV iii 64
„ IV iii 57
,. IV iii 71
,. IV iii 105
,. V ii 124
„ V ii 164
„ V ii 178
Becket i i 117
.. I iii 639
.. u ii 92
,. IV ii 438
2'he Cup I ii 164
Tlie Falcon 614
Fought
921
France
IV i 81
V V 161
Harold n ii 518
Becket n i 154
„ V ii 203
Prom, of May n 653
m 723
Foresters ii i 203
n i 670
Becket v ii 203
. Fought (continued) Give me that hand which / for
Richard there. Foresters rv 1029
Foul lives Of many among youi churchmen were so / Queen Mary in iv 192
may God Forget me at most need when I forget
Her / divorce —
F maggots crawling in a fester'd vice !
I free From this / charge —
a /stream Thro' fever-breeding levels, —
slut whose fairest linen seems F as her dust-cloth,
She rose From the / flood and pointed toward the
farm,
all the / fatalities That blast our natural passions
into pains !
in Nottingham they say There bides a / witch some
where hereabout,
he has anger'd the / witch,
slut whose fairest linen seems F as her dust-cloth.
Found {See also Pun') All my hope is now It may be
/ a scandal. Queen Mary i v 231
Which / me full of foolish doubts, „ i v 530
Happily or not, It / her sick indeed. „ ii ii 124
I've / this paper ; pray your worship read it ; „ ii iii 55
I We / him, your worship, a plundering „ n iii 72
I / it fluttering at the palace gates : — „ in ii 218
yet I / One day, a wholesome scripture, „ iii iv 83
And / it all a visionary flame, „ rv ii 4
I have / thee and not leave thee any more. „ iv ii 109
Have / a real presence in the stake, „ iv ii 142
so long continuing. Hath / his pardon ; „ iv iii 50
libellous papers which I / Strewn in your palace. „ v ii 172
And I have often / them. Mary. Find me one ! „ v ii 222
God pardon me ! I have never yet / one. „ v ii 335
and the dead were / Sitting, and in this fashion ; ., v ii 396
I never/ he bore me any spite. ., v ii 474
Have vou / mercy there. Grant it me here : .. v v 144
If he /me thus, Harold might hate me ; Harold i ii 171
I / him all a noble host should be. .. ii ii 10
because we / him A Norman of the Normans. „ ii ii 581
Both were lost and / together, „ iii ii 7
lost and / Together in the cruel river Swale „ m ii 9
Tho' we be lost and be / together.' „ in ii 21
I have / him, I am happy. „ v ii 81
That I have / it here again ? ., v ii 116
He / me once alone. Nay — nay — ^I cannot Tell you : Becket i i 274
They said — her Grace's people — thou wast / — „ i ii 6
that had / a King Who ranged confusions, „ i iii 369
I / a himdred ghastly murders done By men, „ i iii 407
and went on till I / the light and the lady, ., iv ii 18
He is easily / again. „ iv ii 67
F out her secret bower and murder'd her. „ v i 175
/ thy name a charm to get me Food, roof, and rest. „ v ii 96
have / together In our three married years ! The Cup i ii 416
we / a goat-herd's hut and shared His fruits „ iii 426
I never / the woman I could not force or wheedle ,, i iii 165
/ All good in the true heart of Sinnatus, „ ii 86
If you had / him plotting against Rome, „ n 406
But had I /him plotting, I had counsell'd „ ii 412
chaplet on the grass, And there I /it. The Falcon 370
I have / it once again In your own self. Prom, of May ii 375
seen us that wild morning when we/Her bed unslept in, ,, ii 470
Has anyone / me out, Dora ? „ m 225
We / a letter in your bedroom torn into bits. ,, in 323
even if I / it Dark with the soot of slums. „ in 601
I / this white doe wandering thro' the wood, Foresters ii i 95
F him dead and drench'd in dew, ., n ii 147
the warm wine, and / it again. „ iv 245
I never / one traitor in my band. „ iv 836
Oimdatioii Waltham, my / For men who serve the neighbour, Harold v i 97
The king's /, that have follow'd him. ., v i 476
oantain (adj.) Were seated sadly at a / side. The Falcon 610
onntain (s) his wealth A / of perennial alms — Queen Mary n ii 385
OUT (See also Vour) / guns gaped at me. Black,
silent mouths : „ n iii 30
I know Some three or / poor priests a thousand times
Fitter Becket, Pro. 291
Four (continued) And this no wife has born you / brave soas, Becket v i 125
There then, / hundred marks. ' Foresters rv 497
Four-and-twenty We will away in f-a-t hours, „ i iii 91
Four-footed all manner of game, and /-/ things, and
fowls— Becket m iii 130
Fourscore This forest-horn of mine I can bring down F
tall fellows on thee. Foresters iv 177
Fowl (See also Wild-fowl) The / that fleeth o'er thy field
is cursed, Harold v i 73
all manner of game, and four-footed things, and f's — Becket xn iii 131
Here's a fine / for my lady ;
Fox Die like the torn / dumb,
a / may filch a hen by night,
a / from the glen ran away with the hen,
Fox-Fleming Why comes that old f-F back again ?
Foxglove Past the bank Of /, then to left by that one
yew.
Fox-lion sorrow'd for my random promise given To
yon f-l.
Fragment or whether England Be shatter'd into f's.
FraU his / transparent hand. Damp with the sweat of
death.
Frailer At least mine own is /: you arc laming it.
Frailty and as to other frailties of the flesh —
France F would not accept her for a bride
That makes for F. (repeat)
But we play with Henry, King of F,
The King of F, Noailles the Ambassador,
Our one point on the main, the gate of F !
The Ambassador from F, your Grace.
Would make our England, F ;
Would be too strong for F.
I must needs wish all good things for F.
' Sir Peter Carew fled to F:
The King of F is with us ;
The King of F will help to break it
F ! We once had half of F,
England now Is but a ball chuck'd between F and
Spain,
I know some lusty fellows there in F.
Back'd by the power of F, and landing here,
Not so well holpen in our wars with F,
Ay, ay, beware of F.
If war should fall between yourself and F ;
To declare war against the King of F.
soon or late you must have war with F ;
he would weld F, England, Scotland,
yet the Pope is now colleagued with F ;
to discourage and lay lame The plots of F,
The King of F the King of England too.
There will be war with F, at last, my liege ;
Sailing from F, with thirty Englishmen,
This is the fifth conspiracy hatch'd in F ;
Our flag hath floated for two hundred years Is F again.
You did but help King Philip's war with F,
As far as F, and into Philip's heart.
It was his father's policy against F.
help to build a throne Out-towering hers oi F . . .
and all F, all Burgundy, Poitou, all Christendom
Louis of F loved me, and I dreamed that I loved
Louis of F :
I will have thee frighted into F,
I mean to cross the sea to F,
Thou knowest he was forced to fly to F ;
But I that threw the mightiest knight of F,
' Fly at once to F, to King Louis of F :
I must fly to F to-night.
or in the land of F for aught I know.
F\ Ha ! De Morville, Tracy, Brito— fled is he ?
one who lives for thee Out there in F ;
Brother of F, what shall be done with Becket ?
claws that you perforce again Shrank into F.
Brother of F, you have taken,
all the Church of F Decide on their decision,
we pray you, draw yourself from under The wings of F.
The Falcon 556
Queen Mary n ii 331
„ ni V 157
Prom, of May i 51
Queen Mary i v 581
Foresters iv 974
Harold m i 270
„ n ii 286
Queen Mary i ii 31
Becket iv ii 264
Foresters i ii 65
Queen Mary i ii 67
Queen Mary i iii 89, 92, 94
Queen Mary i iii 132
I iv 110
IV 126
IV 239
IV 297
iv300
IV 310
nil35
II i 195
ni i 105
m i 110
ni i 129
III i 447
ni vi 189
IV iii 434
vilO
V i 117
vil22
vil36
vil40
vil89
vil98
vi283
vi285
vi298
vii263
V ii 314
V iii 18
V v45
Harold u ii 765
in ii 149
Becket, Pro. 355
iii 94
I iii 124
I iii 205
I iii 747
iiv53
I iv 154
I iv 196
I iv 198
n i 310
nii64
n ii 88
II ii 154
n ii 177
n ii 249
France
922
Friend
I
I am glad that F hath scouted him
France (continued)
at last :
you have quenched the warmth of F toward you,
The wine and wealth of all our F are yours ;
have I Not heard ill things of her in ^ ? Oh, she's
The Queen of F.
My Lords of F and England, My friend of Canterbury
we will to F and be Beforehand with the King,
For once in F the King had been so harsh,
St. Denis of F and St. Alphege of England,
Franche-Comt^ (a French province) voices of F-C, and
the Netherlands,
Frange Illorum lanceas F Creator !
Frankfort To Strasbm-g, Antwerp, F, Zurich,
Fray'd / i' the knees, and out at elbow.
Freak ilevf's and frolics with the late Lord Admiral?
Free (adj.) (See also Tongue-free) To make / spoil and
havock of your goods.
but we can save your Grace. The river still is /.
he is / enough in talk. But tells me nothing.
That jaU you from /life, bar you from death.
with / wing The world were all one Araby.
but had rather Breathe the / wind from off oui Saxon
downs.
To chain the / guest to the banquet-board ;
J^air! /field!
and fill the sky With / sea-laughter —
Should they not know / England crowns herself ?
Softly, and fling them out to the / air.
And weight down all / choice beneath the throne.
couldst thou always Blurt thy / mind to the air ?
she holds it in F and perpetual alms.
To speak without stammering and like a /man ?
but God and his / wind grant your lordship a happy
home-return
Give me the poison ; set me / of him !
The power of life in death to make her / !
tho' Rome may set A / foot where she will.
While, had you left him / use of his wings,
for the moment. Will leave me a / field.
Becket ii ii 252
„ n ii 311
„ n ii 446
., m i 231
„ m iii 227
„ IV ii 453
V ii 139
V iii 165
Queen Mary v i 45
Harold v i 584
Queen Mary i ii 2
I i 51
I iv 20
„ II ii 186
„ II iv 25
„ m ii 193
„ in V 172
„ III V 208
Harold ii ii 186
„ II ii 193
,. II ii 230
„ II ii 337
V i 47
Becket i i 287
., I iii 118
„ I iii 239
., I iii 680
I iv 8
„ m iii 327
„ IV ii 165
„ v iii 101
The Cup II 246
Prom, of May i 652
II 456
We should be / as air in the wild wood — Foresters i iii 124
And these will strike for England And man and maid
be/
And these shall wed with freemen. And all their sons be /,
and all the better For this / forest-life.
That I might breathe for a moment /of shield And cuirass
Friends, your / sports have swallow'd my / hour.
while our Robin's life Hangs by a thread, but he is a
/man.
Our forest games are ended, our / life.
Free (verb) I / From this foul charge —
Take thee, or / thee, F thee or slay thee,
if thou light upon her — / me from her ?
First, / thy captive from her hopeless prison,
O devil, can I / her from the grave ?
That sought to / the tomb-place of the King
Freed Duke of Suffolk lately / from prison,
Earl of Devon ? I / him from the Tower,
he / himself By oath and compurgation from the charge. Harold ii ii 519
Know that when made Archbishop I was /, Becket i iii 708
?art real, part childlike, to be / from the dulness — „ in iii 156
have / myself From all such dreams, Proin. of May in 594
Freedom Whereas in wars of / and defence The Cup i ii 160
The love of /, the desire of God, Foresters n i 68
maiden / which Would never brook the tyrant. „ in 119
Freeing For / my friend Bagenhall from the Tower ; Queen Mary in vi 7
Freely that more / than your formal priest. Prom, of May in 632
Freeman wrench'd All hearts of freemen from thee. Harold v i 279
And these shall wed with freemen, Foresters u i 21
Freer and when I flee from this For a gasp of / air, Becket ii i 29
Free-will now the stronger motive, Misnamed f-w — Prom, of May ii 637
Freeze And, lest we / in mortal apathy. The Cup i iii 130
nilO
ni22
ni 60
IV 128
IV 339
IV 385
IV 1049
Harold n ii 517
„ IV ii 17
Becket, Pro. 493
V i 183
V i 185
Foresters iv 408
Queen Mary I iii 121
I V 163
French (adj.) F, I must needs wish all goods things for
not mix us any way With
Queen Mary ni iii 79
vi6
Becket i iv 113
„ in iii 260
France.
The F King winks at it,
Queen Mary i v 309
ni i 160
French (adj.) (continued)
his F wars —
and the F fleet Rule in the narrow seas
Swine, sheep, ox — here's a F supper.
Not on F ground, nor any ground but English,
French (s) it threatens us no more Than F or Norman. Harold i i 135
talk a little F like a lady ; play a little like a lady ? Prom, of May in 303
Frenchman You must be sweet and supple, like a F. Queen Mary v i 276
and driven back The Frenchmen from their trenches ? „ v ii 258
But blaze not out before the Frenchmen here. Becket in iii 221
FreQuency and so cannot suffer by the rule of /. „ ni iii 319
Fresh but you, cousin, are / and sweet As the first
flower Queen Mary i iv 61
Would fain have some / treaty drawn between you
Mary. Why some / treaty ?
And put some / device in lieu of it — ■
Cousin Pole, You are / from brighter lands.
Carry / rushes into the dining-hall.
Friar (See also Fool-friar) Of those two f's ever in
my prison,
as he walk'd the Spanish f's Still plied him
f's Plied him, but Cranmer only shook his head,
overbalance the weight of the church, ha/?
Quick, /, follow them :
Nay, nay, but softly, lest they spy thee, / !
We spoil'd the prior, /, abbot, monk,
Here come three f's.
Thou and thy woman are a match for three f's.
How should poor f's have money ?
These f's, thieves, and liars. Shall drink
I believe thee, thou art a good fellow, though a /.
by St. Mary these beggars and these f's shall join you.
This / is of much boldness, noble captain.
I am overbreathed, F, by my two bouts at quarterstaff.
our/ is so holy That he's a miracle-monger.
Keep silence, bully /, before the King.
If a cat may look at a king, may not a / speak to one ?
— I trust Half truths, good/:
You, good /, You Much, you Scarlet, you dear Little John,
Friar Tuck (follower of Robin Hood) coming hither for the
dance — be they not, FT?
Besides, tho' F T might make us one,
Friday And I was bit by a mad dog o' F,
Friend fear, I see you. Dear /, for the last time ;
Ay, gentle /, admit them. I will go.
By the mass, old /, we'll have no pope here
Unless my f's and mirrors lie to me.
Queen Is both my foe and yours : we should be f's.
Not many f's are mine, except indeed Among the many.
Speak not thereof — no, not to your best /,
who am your / And ever faithful counsellor,
call'd my f's together, Struck home and won.
His f's would praise him, I believed 'em,
His /'s— as Angels I received 'em.
You as poor a critic As an honest /:
No, my/; war /or the Queen's Grace —
world as yet, my /, Is not half -waked ;
Ay, aj', my/; not read it?
My f's, I have not come to kill the Queen
Be happy, I am your /.
hath shut the gates On / and foe.
My foreign /'s, who dream'd us blanketed
St. Andrew's day; sit close, sit close, we are/ '5.
My seven-years' / was with me, my young boy ;
Our old / Cranmer, Your more especial love.
To reach the hand of mercy to my /.
why my / Should meet with lesser mercy
Your faithful / and trusty councillor.
Without a /, a book, my faith would seem Dead
Or am I slandering my most inward /,
Good day, old /; what, you look somewhat worn ;
F for so long time of a mighty King ;
And I and learned /'s among ourselves
Have not I been the fast /of your life Since mine began,
He is my good /, and I would keep him so ;
I V 261
in i 268
„ in iv 322
Foresters i i 80
Queen Mary iv ii 94
„ IV iii 576
IV iii 600
Foresters i ii 62
ni429
II i 438
in 167
in 256
in 262
in 276
ni312
ni342
ni 417
IV 234
IV 267
IV 280
IV 919
IV 922
IV 950
IV 1082
iii 54
nil 88
Becket i iv 218
Qu,een Mary i ii 103
I ii 110
I iii 42
iiv2
I iv 43
iivl35
I iv 177
I V 134
IV 552
IV 623
IV 625
n i 116
nil88
n i 227
II iii 64
n iii 116
n iii 123
niv62
miil9
in iii 2
ni iii 47
m iv 416
IV 165
IV 169
IV 189
IV ii 96
IV ii 105
rv ii 115
IV iii 73
vii 74
viil33
viii)
II
Friend
923
Fruitful
v?riend (continued) F, tho' so late, it is not safe to
preach.
Our/'s, the Xomians, holp to shake his chair.
Stand by hiin, mine old /,
Is not the Norman Count thy / and mine ?
F's, in that last inhospitable plunge
I dug mine into My old fast / the shore,
Thou art his / : thou know'st my claim on England
he shall be my dear / As well as thine,
So thou, fair /, will take them easily.
Obey the Count's conditions, my good /.
I am thy fastest / in Nonnandy.
Be careful of thine answer, my good /.
Harold, I am thy /, one Ufe with thee,
Mv /, thou hast gone too far to palter now.
I, "the Count— the King— Thy/—
0 f's, I shall not overlive the day.
Edwin, my / — Thou lingerest. — Gurth, —
F's, had I been here, Without too large self-lauding
King Loves not as statesman, but true lover and /.
Nolo Archiepiscopari, my good /, Is quite another
matter.
Becket, her father's /, Uke enough staved
F, am I so much better than thyself
Henry the King hath been mj' /, my brother,
my father drove him and his f's, De Tracy
when thou seest him next, Commend me to thy /.
What/? Rosamund. The King.
My /, the King ! . . . O thou Great Seal of England,
Given me by my dear / the King of England —
Now must I send thee as a common / To tell the King,
my /, I am against him. We are f's no more :
Go therefore like a / slighted by one
O, my dear /, the King ! O brother ! —
Peace, fools ! Becket. Peace, f's !
Serve my best / and make him my worst foe ;
Farew ell, / 's ! farewell, swallows !
may I come in with my poor /, my dog ?
My f's, the Archbishop bids you good night.
Be f's with him again — I do beseech thee.
But since he cursed My f's at Veselajr,
1 kneel to thee — be f's >vith him again.
Be, both, the f's you were. Henry. The f's we were !
Co-mates we were,
No one comes. Nor foe nor / ;
My / of Canterbury and myself Are now once more
It must be so, my / !
Soon as she learnt I was a / of thine,
Why they, your/'s, those ruffians, the De Brocs,
I My two good / 's. What matters murder'd here,
1 Come in, my/ 's, come in !
Some f's of mine would speak with me v ithout
my f's may spy him And slay him as he runs.
Our Antonius, Our faithful / of Rome,
Thou art the last / left me upon earth —
No, no — a / of hers.
i For fear of losing more than /, a son ;
I Should fly like bosom f's when needed most.
^ cold-manner'd / may strangely do us The truest service,
I lay's bright like a /, but the wind east like an
enemy. Prom, of May i 79
forget yourself in your behaviour to this gentleman,
my father's /,
Niver man 'ed better f's, and I will saay niver master
'ed better men :
I trust, my dear, we shall be always f's.
After all that has gone between us— /'s ! What,
only f's ?
All that has gone between us Should surely make us f's.
I do not dare, like an old /, to shake it.
Some of my former f's Would find my logic faulty ;
But, O dear /, If thro' the want of any —
a / just now, One that has been much wrong'd,
80 true a / of the people as Lord Robin of
Himtingdon.
Queen Mary v iv 41
Harold i i 85
„ I i 113
., 1 1 247
nil
II i 7
.. 11 ii 11
.. II ii 80
,. iiii207
., iiii277
.. iiii556
„ iiii605
„ iiii649
.. iiii706
,. II ii 755
., mi 232
.. rvi257
.. IV iii 85
Becket, Pro. 81
„ Pro. 286
„ Pro. 518
ii3
I i 87
„ I i 277
„ I i 324
1 1335
1 1342
ii350
1 1359
iii2
I iii 567
I iv 44
I iv 94
I iv 261
II 121
II 189
II i 317
n ii 119
,. Ill i 38
,. Ill iii 228
„ m iii 342
„ V ii 110
,. V ii 434
„ V ii 629
„ V iii 68
The Cup I ii 202
I ii 390
II 244
The Falcon 31
59
332
527
642
I 163
I 323
I 632
I 634
I 638
n526
n664
m549
III 574
Foresters i i 188
Friend (continued) Tliis Robin, this Earl of Huntingdon
— he is a / of Richard — Foresters i i 282
My guests and f's, Sir Richard, „ i ii 77
Dost thou mistrust me ? Am I not thy / ? ,. i ii 178
as I am thy /, I promise thee to make this Marian
thine. .. i ii 182
I and my /, this monk, were here belated, ,. i ii 193
Sheriff, thy /, this monk, is but a statue. ,. i ii 233
F's, I am only merry for an hour or two „ i iii 10
Strike up a song, my f's, and then to bed. „ i iii 30
Ah dear Robin ? ah noble captain, / of the poor ! „ ii i 182
Nay — that, my /, I am sure I did not say. „ ii i 488
He has a / there will advance the monies, „ ii i 628
We never robb'd one / of the true King. ,, iii 157
Robin, the people's /, the King o' the woods ! ,, ni 347
F's, your free sports have swaJlow'd my free hour. .. iv 33&
Meanwhile, farewell Old f's, old patriarch oaks. ., iv 1054
Friendly-fiendly m ith that /-/ smile of his, Harold iii i 86
Friendship hatred of another to us Is no true bond
of /. Qusen Mary i iv 46
I hate a split between old f's Becket ii ii 380
No / sacred, valuas neither man Nor woman Foresters iv 713
Friendship-fast Which binds us /-/ for ever ! Harold ii ii 162
Frieze Look'd somewhat crooked on him in his / ; Queen Alary iv iii 333
Fright (s) what maakes tha sa white ? Eva. F,
father ! Prom, of May i 418
Since Tostig came with Norway—/ not love. Harold iv i 173
Fright (verb) and deep-incavem'd eyes Half / me. Queen Mary i iv 268
Which f's you back into the ancient faith ; „ iv ii 143
They / not me. Harold i i 39
It f's the traitor more to maim and blind. „ ii ii 503
— flatter And / the Pope — Becket ii ii 473
I see now Your purpose is to / me — „ iv ii 180
Why do you jest with me, and try To / me ? Prom, of May i 666
I am not deaf : you / me. „ iii 660
To / the wild hawk passing overhead. Foresters in 318
Frighted Are / back to Tostig. Harold iv i 119
I will have thee / into France, Becket i ii 93
Fringe Some golden / of gorgeousness beyond Old use. The Cup ii 438
old woman's blessing with them to the last /. Foresters ii i 196
Frith (John) But you were never raised to plead for F, Queen Mary iv ii 211
Frock What, Mr. Dobson ? A butcher's / ? Prom, of May i 94
Frog Quash'd my / that used to quack Foresters ii ii 149
Frolic Her freaks and f's with the late Lord Admiral ? Queen Mary i iv 20
After my / with his tenant's girl, Prom, of May i 493
Can have / and play. Foresters ii ii 183
From See Vro'
Front (adj.) Would set him in the / rank of the fight The Cup i ii 153
Front (verb) That is Your question, and I /it with
another : Queen Mary i v 141
Will / their cry and shatter them into dust. „ li iv 5
And / the doom of God. Harold v i 436
I'll / him, cross to cross. Becket i iii 481
Frost had a touch of / That help'd to check The Falcon 644
How few f's Will chill the hearts Foresters iv 1063
Frosted / off me by the first cold frown of the King. Becket i iv 67
Frosty Like smi-gilt breathings on a / dawn — Queen Mary v iii 50
Frown (s) frosted off me by the first cold / of the King. Becket i iv 67
Let there not be one / in this one hour. „ ii i 43
Frown (verb) should not / as Power, but smile Harold i i 365
However kings and queens may / on thee. Becket i ii 19
Frowned The King hath / upon me. ,. i iv 25
he / ' No mate for her, if it should come to that ' — ,, iii i 258
Frozen snow had / round her, and she sat Stone-dead „ v ii 237
Fructus Sit benedictus / ventris tui ! ' Queen Mary ui ii 83
Fruit should leave Some / of mine own body after me, „ ii ii 223
The tree that only bears dead / is gone. „ iii i 19
this dead / was ripening overmuch, „ iii i 25
Can render thanks in / for being sown, „ iii iii 198
when the full / of the royal promise might have dropt Becket iii iii 275
and shared His f's and milk. Liar ! The Cup i ii 428
strows our f's, and lays Our golden grain, „ ii 285
And here are fine f's for my lady — The Falcon 561
Fruitful Most /, yet, indeed, an empty rind. Queen Mary in ii 202
Drink and drink deep — our marriage will be /. The Clip ii 381
Fugatur
924
GaU'd
Fugatur Pastor / Grex trucidatur —
Fulfil SpeEik, Master Cranmer, F your promise made
Pulfill'd wish / before the word Was spoken,
Pull but I hear that he is too / of aches and broken
before his day.
But your own state is / of danger here.
a head So / of grace and beauty !
in / force Roll upon London,
ye did promise / Allegiance and obedience to the
death,
and yield F scope to persons rascal and forlorn,
And pointed / at Southwark ;
That hastes with / commission from the Pope
And / release from danger of all censures Of Holy
Church
Not the / faith, no, but the lurking doubt.
A fine beard, Bonner, a very / fine beard.
Is now content to grant you / forgiveness.
So that you crave / pardon of the Legate,
but it was never seen That any one recanting thus
at/,
In / consistory. When I was made Archbishop,
with / proof Of Courtenay's treason ?
Make me / fain to live and die a maid,
but to pay them / in kind,
Pour not water In the / vessel running out at top
And we will fill thee / of Norman sun,
F hope have I that love will answer love.
F thanks for your fair greeting of my bride !
The cup's / ! Harold. I saw the hand of Tostig
cover it.
Bring not thy hollowness On our / feast.
Cramp thy crop /, but come when thou art call'd.
Lay hands of /allegiance in thy Lord's And crave
his mercy,
My heart is / of tears — I have no answer.
And there stole into the city a breath F of the
meadows,
if the Latin rhymes be rolled out from a / mouth ?
What more, Thomas ? I make thee / amends,
when the / fruit of the royal promise might have dropt
into thy mouth
Hath used the / authority of his Church
My lord, the city is / of armed men.
But / mid-sunmier in those honest hearts.
Plunder'd the vessel / of Gascon wine,
I would stand Clothed with the / authority of Rome,
but God's / curse Shatter you all to pieces
In the / face of all the Roman camp ? The
All my brain is / of sleep,
but now all drown'd in love And glittering at / tide —
Harold v i 513
Queen Mary iv iii 112
I iv 232
I i 124
I iv 168
I V 64
II i 234
II ii 168
II ii 185
II iii 46
in ii 51
ni iii 150
„ HI iv 124
III iv 338
m iv 389
III iv 391
IV i 59
v ii 84
V ii 498
V iii 98
„ V iv 14
Harold i i 378
„ II ii 180
., IV i 237
„ IV iii 46
„ IV iii 80
„ IV iii 204
„ IV iii 234
V i 11
Becket, Pro. 406
1 1263
, u ii 338
, ni iii 219
, ni iii 275
V i 207
V ii 187
V ii 373
V ii 441
V ii 493
, V iii 134
Cu/p I ii 269
, I ii 445
II 234
Thank you. Look how / of rosy blossom it is. Prom, of May i 84
when the tide Of / democracy has overwhelm'd
This Old world, „ 1 593
and sat Thro' every sensual course of that / feast ., ir 254
with what / hands, may be Waiting you in the distance ? „ ii 509
Why should I pay you your / wages ? „ iii 83
Let me bring you in here where there is still / daylight. „ iii 218
and each of 'em as / of meat as an egg,
The wood is / of echoes, owls, elfs, ouphes, oafs,
though thou wert like a bottle / up to the cork.
Rogue, I am / of gout. I cannot dance.
In this / tide of love. Wave heralds wave :
Fullest I fail Where he was / :
Let all be done to the / in the sight
Full-throated to close at once In one f-t No !
Full-train'd The /-/ marvel of all falconry,
Fulmina F, f Deus vastator !
Fulmination flashes And f's from the side of Rome,
Fulness Doth not the fewness of anything make the / of
it in estimation ?
Pun' (found) you be a pretty squire. I ha' / ye out,
I bev. Prom, of May ii 689
we / 'im out a-walkin' i' West Field wi' a white 'at, „ iii 134
Foresters i i 42
„ II i 262
IV 210
IV 562
„ IV 1042
Queen Mary ii i 56
The Cuf II 433
Qv^en Mary i v 634
The Falcon 25
Harold v i 573
Becket, Pro. 222
m iii 302
Function thousand times Fitter for this grand /.
I will suspend myself from all my f's.
true To either /, holding it ;
Fundatur Illonim in lacrymas Cruor / !
Funeral look'd As grim and grave as from a /.
Fungus See Wood-fungus
Furrow plow Lay rusting in the f's yellow weeds,
Vein'd marble— not a / yet-
Further Go f hence and find him.
Fury God will beat down the / of the flame,
Furze Thy high black steed among the flaming /,
Fuse And in this very chamber, / the glass,
alchemic force to / Almost into one metal
Iron wiU /, and marble melt ;
Future hath a farther flight Than mine into the /.
Becket, Pro. 293
I iii 301
„ I iii 538
Harold v i 532
Queen Mary Ii ii 65
Becket i iii 355
„ II i 197
Harold v ii 60
Queen Mary iv iii 98
Becket ii i 56
Queen Mary in v 54
III vi 181
Prom, of May ii 505
Queen Mary i v 313
Gaame (game) a-plaayin' the saame g wi' my Dora — Prom, of May ii 591
Gaay (gay) Wi' the wild white rose, an' the woodbine sa g, „ ii 175
Oad-fly deer from a dog, or a colt from a g-f, Foresters ii i 434
Gailer but if you starve me I be G' Death himself.
Gaiety So winsome in her grace and g.
Gain (s) JNIore g than loss ; for of your wives
Gain (verb) Not to g paradise : no, nor if the Pope,
time And peace for prayer to ^ a better one.
I may trust to g her then When I shall
Gain'd She lives — but not for him ; one point is g.
If once our ends are g ?
I hardly g The camp at midnight.
Gainsay which he G's by next suarising —
Gala-day This is the g-d of thy return.
Galahad (a knight) The veriest G of old Arthur's hall.
Oalatia Well — I shall serve G taking it,
Must all G hang or drown herseU ?
I know of no such wives in all G.
Then that I serve with Rome to serve G.
my serving Rome To serve G :
I am much maUgn'd. I thought to serve G.
And I will make G prosperous too,
tell him That I accept the diadem of G —
It is our ancient custom in G
The sovereign of G weds his Queen.
Galatian (adj.) What is Synorix ? Sinnatv^. G, and not
know ?
He sends you This diadem of the first G Queen,
Artemis, Artemis, hear me, G Artemis !
Artemis, Artemis, hear her, G Artemis !
Thy turn, G King.
Galatian (s) 'AG serving by force in the Roman
Legion.'
That we 6^'^ are both Greek and Gaul.
' A G serving by force in the Roman Legion.'
know myself am that G Who sent the cup.
Galatian-bom But he and I are both G-b,
Thou art G-b.
Gall (bile) if the truth be g. Cram me not thou with
honey,
honeymoon is the g of love ; he dies of his honey-
moon. Becket, Pro. 364
Ay, whether it be g or honey to 'em — Foresters iv 967
Gall (girl) I cum behind tha, g, and couldn't make
tha hear. Queen Mary iv iii 465
Gall (verb) ye three must g Poor Tostig. Leofwin.
Tostig, sister, g's himseU ;
Gallant Our g citizens murder'd all in vain,
A g boy, A noble bird, each perfect of the breed
A g Earl. I love him as I hate John.
Who art thou, g knight ?
This g Prince would have me of his — what ?
My masters, welcome g Walter Lea.
GaU'd His heart so g with thine ingratitude,
Prom, of May in 754
Becket v ii 200
Queen Mary iv iii 557
Harold I i 220
The Cup I i 19
Becket iv ii 416
The Cup I i 32
I iii 18
Becket iv ii 278
Foresters iv 959
Becket. Pro. 129
The Cup I i 100
I ii 87
., I ii 191
., I ii 213
„ I ii 279
„ I ii 324
„ I iii 169
II 158
n 358
n 432
I ii 181
II 132
II 313
II 317
II 379
1 147
1 1203
iii 75
Iii 209
II 94
11456
Harold iv i 15
Harold i i 419
The Cup I ii 142
The Falcon 319
Foresters i i 190
„ II i 440
IV 701
„ IV 1002
Becket i iii
1:
Gallery 925
Gallery And I wiU out upon the 9. Queen Mary n iv 49
In some dark closet, some long g, drawn, „ v ii 217
Galley more than one Row'd in that ^—Gardiner to wit " iv i 87
Galley-slave now, perhaps, Fetter'd and lash'd, a g-s, ' Foresters u i 654
Gate
Gallop (s) On the g, on the g, Robin, like a deer
Gallop (verb) 'at I tell'd 'em to g 'im.
Gallows What ! the ^ ?
Gamble G thyself at once out of mv sight,
Gambled has drunk and g out AU that he had.
He has g for his life, and lost, he hangs.
Game (pastime) (See also Gaame) The G of Chess.
(repeat)
such a g, sir, were whole years a playing.
Strange g of chess ! a King That with her own pawns
Simon Renard spy not out our g Too early.
With whom they play'd their g against the king !
fixt my fancy Upon the g I should have beaten thee,
a perilous g For men to play with God.
Is this a g for thee to play at ? Away.
All our g's be put to rout.
And join your feasts and all your forest g's
Then thou shalt play the g of buffets with us.
Our forest g's are ended, our free life,
I Game (thing limited) fatter g for you Than this old
gaping gargoyle :
well train'd, and easily call'd Off from the g.
When they ran down the g and worried it.
The King keeps his forest head of g here,
let the King's fine g look to itself.
with all manner of g, and four-footed things, and fowls— , in iii 130
No rushing on the j— the net,— the net. The Cup i i 170
And I may strike your g when you are gone. „ i a 36
I must lure my g into the camp. " ^ jij 54
You run down your g, We ours. What pity have
i fl— . v^*'" for your g ? Foresters iv 520
I Wmekeepw Have I not seen the g, the groom, Queen Maru iv iii 371
lOamel (a Northumbrian Thane) G, son of Orm, What
n i 432
Prom, of May m 433
Queen Mary in i 24
n iii 95
II iii 87
II iii 91
I iii 127
I iii 139
I iii 161
I iii 173
Harold v ii 13
Becket, Pro. 51
n ii 70
Foresters n i 426
II ii 166
m85
IV 259
IV 1049
Queen Mary i iii 80
Becket, Pro. 121
., Pro. 123
m ii 37
III ii 44
thinkest thou this means ? (repeat)
Hail, G, son of Onn,
Albeit no rolling stone, my good friend G,
Is the North quiet, G ?
I trust he may do well, this G,
that was his guest, G, the son of Orm :
murder'd thine own guest, the son of Orm, G,
Gamester no such g As, having won the stake,
Gangrene this rag fro' the g i' my leg.
and g's, and running sores, praise ye the Lord,
Gap Sheep at the g which Gardiner takes.
Then fling mine own fair person in the g
as I hate the dirty g in the face of a Cistercian monk,
Could shine away the darkness of that g
thaw he niver mended that j i' the glebe fence
Gape These fields are only green, they make me g.
Will the earth g and swallow us ?
causest the safe earth to shudder and g,
throat might g before the tongue could cry who ?
Gaped four guns g at me. Black, silent mouths :
The nurses yawn'd, the cradle g,
Gaping yonder's fatter game for you Than this old g
gurgoyle :
Stand staring at me ! shout, you g rogue ! „ mi ^00
The pretty g bills in the home-nest Piping for bread — Becket n ii 300
When shall your parish-parson bawl our banns
Before your g clowns ?
Jrarb These black dog-Dons G themselves bravely.
jarda (Villa) See Villa Garcia
jarda might have flash'd Upon their lake of G,
jarden (adj.) I love them More than the g flowers,
matched with my Harold is like a hedge thistle
by a y rose.
jrarden (s) were as glowing-gay As regal g's ;
Which in the Catholic g are as flowers,
and in the midst A g and my Rosamund.
into a g and not into the world,
not to speak one word, for that's the rule 0' the g,
Harold I i 20, 463
1 191
1 194
iil07
I ii 190
nii299
IV ii 39
The Cup I iii 145
Becket i iv 237
„ I iv 255
Queen Mary m iii 236
Harold i ii 202
Becket 11 ii 381
m i 60
Prom, of May i 446
Queen Mary in v 8
Becket v iii 205
The Cup n 299
Foresters ni 225
Queen Mary n iii 31
ni vi 93
I iii 81
mi 288
Prom, of May i 687
Queen Mary m i 190
HI ii 23
Becket n i 133
Prom, of May m 176
Queen Mary m ii 14
IV i 178
Becket, Pro. 169
„ m i 131
,. in i 138
Garden (s) {continued) if I had been Eve i' the g I shouldn't
f K J "^^^^^ *^^ *PP^^'. u Secket ni i 139
the kmghts are arming in the g Beneath the sycamore. „ v ii 569
There sprouts a salad in the g still. The Falcon 149
A u^^?u s^®'^,^^^ yet- Is she anywhere in the g ? Prom, of May 1 47
^nl^n* r^",^ ^' „■ • Foresters I i 10
totole on her, she was walking in the g, „ ; 1 10
The serpent that had crept into the g " n i 137
Gardener the groom, G, and huntsman, in the
ft««,o„^^T'' P^""^' . u • Queen Mary lY iii 373
Garden-stuff profess to be great in green things and
in g-s.
Gardiner (Bishop of Winchester and Lord Chancellor)
{See also Out-Gardiners, Stephen Gardiner) G
for one, who is to be made Lord Chancellor,
so that G And Simon Renard spy not out our game
Thus G — for the two were fellow-prisoners
He hath no fence when G questions him ;
this fierce old G — his big baldness,
G is against him ; The Council,
It then remains for your poor G,
Paget is ours. G perchance is ours ;
brake into woman-tears, Ev'n G, all amazed,
G knows, but the Council are all at odds,
I hear that G, coming with the Queen,
G buys them With Philip's gold,
a pale horse for Death and G for the Devil,
how strange That 6^, once so one with all
This G tum'd his coat in Henry's time ;
Ay, and for G ! being English citizen,
which the emperor sent us Were mainly G's :
Mary would have it ; and this G follows ;
Philip would have it ; and this G foUows !
Sheep at the gap which G takes,
what hath fiuster'd G ? how he rubs His forelock '
The faultless Gl
G would have my head.
The gray rogue, G, Went on his knees,
G out-Gardiners G in his heat,
G bums. And Bonner bums ;
more than one Row'd in that galley — G to wit,
summun towld summun o' owld Bishop G's end •
G wur struck down like by the hand 0^ God '
did not G intercept A letter which the Count de
NoaiUes wrote
Some say that G, out of love for him,
G bums Already ; but to pay them full in kind.
Garland {See also Marriage-garland) your ladyship were
Ho^H^^w-I^T'^ I'' ^°°'' upon the g The Falcon 663
dead Cr Will break once more into the hvmg blossom. gig
Gamer g the wheat ; And bum the tares Queen Maru v v 113
Ganush d We have had it swept and g after him. , rn ii 139
Garrison we might withdraw Part of our g at Calais. " r v l?'^
Garrison'd See Hl-garrison'd "
Garrulous poor y country-wives. Queen Mary it iii 547
R«rfoY p ' vT^ ^^J"^ ^i arrogant girl ! Foresters w 736
Garter Enghsh G, studded with great emeralds, Queen Mary m i 84
Gascon amorous Of good old red sound liberal G wine : Becket Pro 100
when the G wine moxmts to my head, '
Plunder'd the vessel full of G wine.
Gash (s) — brave Gurth, one g from brow to knee !
Gash (verb) here I g myself asunder from the King
Gash'd Son, husband, brother g to death in vain, '
Gasp when I flee from this For a ^ of freer air,
Gasping ' No, madam,' he said, G ;
Gate {See also Farm-gate) Our one point on the
main, the g of France !
At the park g he hovers with our guards.
Hark, there is battle at the palace g's,
they have shut the g's !
hath shut the g's On friend and foe.
cry To have the g's set wide again.
They are the flower of England ; set the g's wide
How oft hath Peter knock'd at Mary's g I
Open, Ye everlasting g's !
The Falcon 552
Queen Mary i i 86
I iii 172
I iv 198
iiv204
iiv263
IV 76
IV 220
IV 386
IV 566
nil38
n ii 308
m i 143
in i 235
niiii 6
in iii 16
m iii 23
m iii 71
in iii 230
m iii 233
m iii 236
mivl2
iniv96
in v 118
in V 165
m vi25
m vi58
IV 187
IV iii 503
IV iii 515
vii494
vii501
vivlS
Pro. 113
« v ii 441
Harold v ii 70
Becket i i 175
The Cup I ii 143
Becket n i 29
Queen Mary m i 405
IV 125
nivl5
n iv 47
niv59
niv61
niv65
n iv 70
mii 63
in ii 183
Gate
926
Gate (continued) I found it fluttering at the palace
Life d^ that set to watch their master's g, ^""'"^ ^'^^^H l]?,
I see the flashing of the g's of pearl- " ^^ J",' l\ V^"
my men will guard you to the^'5. X£ i lo?
kL'!„*„"^,^5.^ Jl*:.'^* *^«. ? by on« from the castle. i j v 50
Gentleness
— like some loud beggar at thy g —
Close the great 9— ho, there-Aipon the town
Was not the great g shut ?
waiting To clasp their lovers by the golden g's
Laid famine-stricken at the g's of Death—
Gate-house Last night I climb'd into the g-h, Brett
Gateway g to the mainland over which Our flag hath
floated
Gather g your men— Myself must bustle.
g all From sixteen years to sixty ;
Gathered these our companies And guilds of London
g here, '
And g with his hands the starting flame,
I g from the Queen That she would see your Grace
g one From out a bed of thick forget-me-nots
^\ as not the year when this was g richer ? '
confinn it now Before our g Norman baronage
Gaul That we Galatians are both Greek and G '
Gave (See also Gev, Gie'd) That g her royal crown to
Lady Jane.
My father on a birthday g it me,
and in that passion G me my Crown,
where you g your hand To this great Catholic King
thro' the fear of death G up his cause.
Whereat Lord Williams g a sudden cry :
G up the ghost ; and so past martyr-like—
reft me of that legateship Which Julius g me,
Ixiok'd hard and sweet at me, and g it me.
To the good king who g it— not to j'ou —
G his shorn smile the lie.
God g us to divide us from the wolf !
answer which King Harold g To his dead namesake
He g him all the kingdoms of the Wfest.
and the King 9 it to his Chancellor.
G me the golden keys of Paradise.
We g thee to the charge of John of Salisbury
^art which Henry g you With the red line--
King Stephen g Many of the crown lands
Shame fall on those who g it a dog's name
and gme a great pat o' the cheek for a pretty wench
save King Henry g thee first the kiss of peace. '
By very God, the cross I 9 the King !
me Saved as by miracle alone with Him Who g it.
I ^ It you, and you your paramour ;
His father g him to my care,
and open arms To him who g^ it ;
He g me liis hand :
she that g herself to me so easily
She g her hand, unask'd, at the farm-gate ;
.. II i 181
,. v ii 530
., viiil37
Prom, of May i 248
m 807
Qwen Mary 11 iii 15
v ii 260
II ii 372
V ii 272
II ii 129
IV iii 336
V iii 102
V V 92
The Falcon 345
Harold n ii 695
The Cup 1 i 204
Qtieen Mary i ii 19
I V 527
I V 568
m ii 90
IV iii 28
IV iii 604
IV iii 623
V ii 35
V V 95
Harold i i 407
-. II ii 226
„ IV iii 101
., rv iii 109
V i 24
Becket, Pro. 431
ii54
1 1247
Iii 61
I iii 149
Uil41
ui i 125
III iii 253
IV ii 199
IV ii 369
vil68
V ii 335
The Cn/p 1 i 85
The Falcon 836
Prom, of May 1 746
11625
he </ me no address, and there was no word of marriage ; m 3S2
^l !^? ^ ^ ^°?« to the Eari (repeat) foresters i i I2! iS
The lady g her hand to the Earl, (repeat)
She g a weeping kiss to the Earl, (repeat)
the man had given her a rose and she g him another.
King, thy god-father, g it thee when a baby.
ihis nng my mother y me :
by this Holy Cross Which good King Richard a me
when a child— ^
9me this morning on my setting forth.
'^u '^^^y '^*^*' taken away the toy thou g me
rhou g thy voice against me in the Council—
Ihou g thy voice against me in my life,
The monk's disguise thou g me for my bower :
Uawm (going) but coom, coom ! let's be g
Do ye think I be g' to tell it to you,
so^ U ^^' ®'°'"™8f-8ay) Why do you go
Dearer than when you made your mountain g,
wear Have you had enough Of all this g?
I i 16, 92
I i 20, 119
lilll
ii286
I ii 293
I ii 310
in 281
Harold n ii 106
,, IV ii 77
V i 252
Becket v ii 93
Prom, of May i 425
II 190
Queen Mary i iv 70
The Falcon 464
Queen Mary iii i 88
Gee OOP (a call to horses to start) G 0 ! whoa '
G o ! whoa ! (repeat)
Gel (girl) they be two 0' the purtiest g's ye can
see of a summer murnin'.
Eva's saake. Yeas. Poor g, poor g !
Taake me awaay, little g. It be one o' my
bad daays.
Gem Standard of the Warrior, Dark among q's and
gold ;
Gemini Nay, by St. G, I ha' two ;
General \vhom the g He looks to and he leans on as
his God,
Poor lads, they see not what the g sees.
When you have charm'd our g into mercy.
Generate Is as the soul descending out of heaven Into
a body g.
Generous You are g, but it cannot be.
Geneva Zurich, Worms, G, Basle-
Genial I know that I am jr, I would be Happy
Gemus There is a trade of g, there's glory !
Gentle O, kind and g master, the Queen's Officers
Ay, g friend, admit them. I will go.
Peruse it ; is it not goodly, ay, and g ?
Ah, g cousin, since your Herod's deatli,
if you knew him As I do, ever g, and so gracious.
Ay— 9 as they call you— live or die !
and see, he smiles and goes, G as in life.
A g, gracious, pure and saintly man !
Good even, g Edith.
Well, well, we will be g with him, gracious-
He IS g, tho' a Roman.
If thou be as g Give me some news of my sweet
Marian,
he As g as he's brave— that such as he
Gentlefoalk (gentlefolk) We laays out o' the waav fur
g altogither — •'
Thy feyther eddicated his darters to marry g
I should ha' thowt they'd bed anew o' g,
The Steers was all g's i' the owd times, an' I worked
early an laate to make 'em all g's ageiin.
Gentleman he says he's a poor g. Wyatt. G ' a
thief !
and g he was. We have been glad together ;
Take thy poor g\ n ,
But you, my Lord, a polish'd g,
Out, girl ! you wrong a noble g.
Peters, my g, an honest Catholic,
I have small hope of the g gout in my great toe
1 promise you that if you forget yourself in your
behaviour to this g.
He's a Somersetshire man, and a very civil-SDoken
g. Dobson. Gl •' i-
Well, it's no sin in a g^ not to fish,
and now, as far as money goas, I be a o
while I wur maakin' mysen a g, '
Tho' you are a g, I but a fanner's daughter—
and you, a g, Told me to trust you :
And I would loove tha moor nor ony g 'ud loove tha
though fortune had born you into the estate of a o
drest like a g, too. Damn all gentlemen, says I '
and prattled to each other that we would marrv
fine gentlemen,
And this lover of yours— this Mr. Harold— is a o '?
Has he offered you marriage, this g ?
I eddicated boiith on 'em to marry gentlemen,
that if a 9 Should wed a farmer's daughter
you are tenfold more a g, '
He may be prince ; he is not g.
Gentlemen-at-arms your g-a-a, If this be not your
Grace's order.
Gentleness Lady, I say it mth all g,
G, Low words best chime with this solemnity
sure am I that of your g You will forgive him".
She, you mourn for, seem'd A miracle of g—
Prom, of May 11 307, 31
i3(
II a:
III 461
Harold iv i 24J
Foresters u i 27^
Queen Mary iv iii 30S
„ V ii 441
The Cup I ii 311
Qv^en Mary iv i 36
Prom, of May 11 76
Q,ueen Mary i ii 3
The Cup I iii 28
Foresters iv 375
Queen Mary i ii 107
I ii 110
I V 195
III ii 61
IV i 1.56
IV ii 161
V V 147
Harold 11 ii 584
„ III ii 118
Becket 11 ii 128
The Cup II 502
Foresters 11 i 480
„ n i 659
Prom, of May 1 211
II 116
II 581
III 447
Queen Mary 11 iii 74
II iii 89
II iii 94
in iv 250
III V 68
IV iii 553
The Falcon 657
Prom, of May I 162
I 207
I 215
1 333
I 335
1666
I 708
nl05
II 121
II 579
III 277
m 281
III 290
III 455
III 578
in 742
Foresters iv 685
Queen Mary n iv 62
The Cup I iii 99
u 216
Prom, of May 11 488
II 491
Gentlier
927
Girl
Gentlier my liege, To deal with heresy g. Queen Mary in vi 58
GeofErey (son of Rosamund and Henry) (See also Geotttey
Plantagenet, Plantagenet) I'll call thee little G.
Henry. Call him ! Rosamund. G ! Becket ii i 214
if little G have not tost His ball into the brook ! ,, ii i 319
the child wall drown himself. Rosamund. G\ G \ „ ii i 324
G ! Geoffrey. ^Vhat are you crying for, ., in i 268
Gy the pain thou hast put me to 1 ., iv ii 10
G, my boy, I saw the ball you lost in the fork .. iv ii 56
K pretty G do not break his own, .. iv ii 177
How fares thy pretty boy, the little G? ., v ii 168
Geoffrey Plantagenet nay, G P, thine o« n husband's
father — ., iv ii 249
Geoi^e (patron saint of England) by the dragon of St. G,
we shall Do some injustice, Foresters iv 939
Germ <) Thou, that dost inspire the g with life, The Cup ii 258
German for his book Against that godless G. Queen Mary v v 238
Germany till the weight of G or the gold of England
brings one of them down to the dust— Becket ii ii 363
' Gesticulatii^ madman, is it, G there upon the
bridge ? Proni,. of May ii 327
Get {See also Git) if I can g near enough I shall judge
with my own eyes Queen Mary i i 133
And g the swine to shout Elizabeth. „ i iii 39
But so I y the laws against the heretic, „ in i 323
to g her baaby bom ; „ iv iii 523
G you home at once. „ v iv 63
TiU thou wouldst g him all apart, Harold i i 447
G thee gone ! He means the thing he says. „ v i 83
G thou into thy cloister as the king Will'd it : „ v i 309
g thee to thine own bed. Becket i i 7
G ye hence, Tell what I say to the King. „ i iii 563
G you hence ! a man passed in there to-day : ., in ii 24
g you hence in haste Lest worse befall you. „ iv ii 26
found thy name a charm to g Food, roof, and rest. „ v ii 97
G thee back to thy nunnery with all haste ; ., v ii 163
g you back ! go on with the office. „ v iii 32
What can I do — what can I g for thee ? He answers,
' G the Count to give me his falcon. The Falcon 239
next time you waste them at a pot-house you g
no more from me. Prom, of May iii 100
Sir Richard mast scrape and scrape till he g to the land
again. Foresters i i 79
1 G thee into the closet there, „ ii i 214
Getting (<See aZso A-getting) G better, Mr. Dobson. Prom, of May i 69
which Father, for a whole life, has been g together, „ in 166
Gev (gave) fell agean coalscuttle and my kneea g
waay
: Ghastly how grim and g looks her Grace,
nay, this g glare May heat their fancies.
Strange and g in the gloom And shadowing
from your g oubliette I send my voice across the
narrow seas —
I found a hundred g murders done By men,
Grhittem that I can touch The g to some purpose.
Shoast (ghost) If it be her g, we mun abide it. We
can't keep a g out.
Sbost {See also Ghoast) The g's of Luther and
Zuinglius fade Into the deathless hell
Gave up the g ; and so past martyr-like —
shadows of a hundred fat dead deer For dead men's g's. Harold i ii 104
One g of all the g's — as yet so new. The Cup ii 141
haunted by The g's of the dead passions Prom, of May n 275
----- „ n 352
Prom, of May i 404
Queen Mary v ii 390
Harold i i 308
., ni ii 157
., V i 245
Becket i iii 407
The Faleon 799
Prom, of May in 460
Queen Mary in ii 174
IV iii 623
To see her grave ? her g ? Her g is everyway
I was afear'd it was the g, your worship. Prince
.John. G ! did one in white pass ?
oafs, g's o' the mist, wills-o'-the-wisp ;
Love himself Seems but a g, but when thou feel'st
with me The g returns
They must have sprung like G's from underground,
iOlOBt^ A g horn Blowing continually, and faint battle^
hymns,
at Pontigny came to me The g warning of my
martyrdom ;
and make a g wail ever and anon to scare 'em.
Foresters n i 226
n i 263
in 113
IV 592
Harold m i 372
Becket v ii 292
Foresters n i 215
Giant (adj.) He, and the g King of Norway, Harold
Hardrada, Harold in ii 122
Giant (s) as the heathen g Had but to touch the
ground. Queen Mary in ii 43
or something more. Seeing he is a g. Harold iv ii 56
or something more, Seeing he is a gr ! ' „ iv iii 114
spiritual g with our island laws And custonLS, Becket iv li 444
Giant-Mng Their g-k, a mightier man-in-anns Harold v i 399
Gibbet In every London street a g stood. Queen Mary in i 7
witness the brawls, the g's. „ v i 86
He wiU come to the g at last ? Foresters n i 328
Gibbeted See Cliff-gibbeted
Giddy I can bear all. And not be g. Harold i i 486
Gie (give) fur he'll 3 us a big dinner, Prom, of May i 9
Gi'e (give) and s'pose I kills my pig, and g's it among 'em, „ 1 147
Weant ye g me a kind answer at last ? „ n 63
fur owd Dobson '11 ^ as a bit o' supper. „ 11 216
Owd Steer g's nubbut cowd tea to 'is men, and owd
Dobson g's beer. „ n 223
G us a buss fust, lass. „ 11 228
d'ye think Fd g 'em the fever ? „ in 49
and wheere the big eshtree cuts athurt it, it g's a
turn like, ,, iii 95
Gie'd (gave) but I hallus g soom on 'em to Miss Eva ,, 11 15
Gift A diamond. And Philip's g, as proof of Philip's
love. Queen Mary in i 67
An honest g, by all the Saints, Harold i i 344
thro' The random g's of careless kings, Becket i i 159
Then he took back not only Stephen's g's, ,, i iii 154
I thought it was a, g ; „ i iii 646
Shall God's good g's be wasted ? „ i iv 71
child We waited for so long — heaven's g at last — ,. in i 14
A strange g sent to me to-day. The Ctip i ii 52
is another sacred to the Goddess, The g of Synorix ; „ n 347
In honour of his g and of our marriage, ,. n 351
And this last costly g to mine o^vii self, The Falcon 228
Yet I come To ask a g. „ 299
g I ask for, to my mind and at this present „ 777
Gig and he sent me wi' the g to Littlechester to
fetch 'er ; Prom, of May i 20
Gilbert Becket (father of Thomas Becket) me, Thomas, son
Of G B, London Merchant. Becket n ii 231
Gilbert Foliot (Bishop of London) {See also Foliot) There's
G F, Henry. He ! too thin, too thin. ,, Pro. 260
But hast thou heard this cry ot G F „ i i 36
Ay, For G F held himself the man. ,, i i 43
If it were not, G F,I mean to cross the sea to France, ,. i iii 123
And bid him re-create me, G F. „ i iii 126
Thou still hast owed thy father, G F. „ i iii 276
Thou still hast shown thy primate, G F. „ i iii 282
G F, A worldly follower of the worldly strong. „ i iii 541
Cursed be John of Oxford, Roger of York, And G Fl ,. n ii 267
Gild It g's the greatest wronger of her peace, Queen Mary v n 415
Gilded over His g ark of mummy-saints, Harold v i 304
Gilt Sec Sun-gilt
Gingerbread He speaks As if it were a cake of g. Becket 11 i 230
Giovanna {See also Monna Giovanna) the Lady G, who
hath been awav so long. The Falcon 2
G here ! Ay, rufte thyself — be jealous ! .. 21
yet if G Be here again — No, no ! .. 27
G, my dear lady, in this same battle .. 601
G, dear G, I that once The wildest .. 806
Yes, G, But he will keep his love to you for ever ! ,. 891
Gipsyfy I will hide my face, Blacken and g it ; Becket iv ii 100
Gipsy-stuff Life on the hand is naked g-s ; „ n i 194
Girl {See also Gall, Gel) A king to be, — is he not
noble, g ? Queen Mary i v 4
that young g who dared to wear your crown ? ,, i v 491
G ; hast thou ever heard Slanders against Prince
Philip „ I v 569
No, g ; most brave and loyal, „ n iv 11
G never breathed to rival such a rose ; „ m i 372
There's whitethorn, g. „ m v 9
But truth of story, which I glanced at, g, „ m v 33
Out, g ! you wrong a noble gentleman. ,. in v 67
Girl
928
Given
Girl (continued) Lord Devon, g's ! what are you
whispering here ? Queen Mary v ii 485
I could not, g, Not this way — „ v v 170
That art the Queen ; ye are boy and g no more : Harold i i 455
My g, what was it ? „ i ii 73
My g, thou hast been weeping : „ m ii 38
thou art not A holy sister yet, my g, „ m ii 82
Ay, my g, no tricks in him — „ v i 401
I tell thee, g, I am seeking my dead Harold. „ v ii 42
Not true, my g, here is the Queen ! ,, v ii 91
Where is he, g ? The Cup i i 106
My g-, I am the bride of Death, „ n 28
My g, At times this oracle of great Artemis „ n 32
and she, A y, a child, then but fifteen, The Falcon 537
After my frolic with his tenant's g, Prom, of May i 493
may not a g's love-dream have too much romance in it .. ni 184
Father, this poor g, the farm, everything ; m 211
Can't a g when she loves her hixsband, and he her, „ iii 304
I heard a voice, ' G, what are you doing there ? ' „ ui 375
Come, come, my g, enough Of this strange talk. „ in 619
and is flustered by a g's kiss. Foresters i i 186
but 0 g, g, I am almost in despair. „ i i 262
Thou hast robb'd my g of her betrothal ring. ,, n i 586
to mistrust the g you say you love Is to mistrust your
own love for your g\ .,11 ii 57
Come, g, thou shalt along with us on the instant. ,, iv 678
What, daunted by a garrulous, arrogant gl „ iv 737
Risk not the love I bear thee for a g. „ iv 742
Girlhood tell me anything of our sweet Eva When in
her brighter g, Prom, of May ii 521
Git (get) Did 'e g into thy chaumber ?
an' we'll g 'im to speechify for us arter dinner.
G along wi' ye, do !
S'iver I mun g along back to the farm,
I mun g out on 'is waay now, or I shall be the
death on 'im.
I'll g the book agean, and lam mysen the rest.
Give (See also Gie, Gi'e, Gi'ed) to ^ us all that holy
absolution which —
grant me my prayer : G me my Philip ;
G it me quick.
Have for thine asking aught that I can g,
G me a piece of paper !
boldness, which will g my followers boldness.
' You will g me my true crown at last,
I come for counsel and ye g me feuds,
I will g your message.
Ay, but to g the poor.
To g the poor — they g the poor who die.
It is the last. Cranmer. G it me, then.
I not doubt that God will g me strength.
Or g thee saintly strength to luidergo.
For death g's life's last word a power to live,
G to the poor. Ye ^ to God.
G me the lute. He hates me !
g the Devil his due, I never found he bore me
any spite,
in happy state To g him an heir male.
Ay, ever g yourselves your own good word.
As much as I can g thee, man ;
thou didst stand by her and g her thy crabs,
And I'll g her my crabs again,
would g his kingly voice To me as his successor.
6 me thy keys.
Stigand shall g me absolution for it —
I may g that egg-bald head The tap that silences.
I g my voice agaiast thee from the grave —
We g our voice against thee out of heaven !
We will not g him A Christian burial :
I would g her to thy care in England
G him a bone, g him a bone !
Is the Archbishop a thief who g's thee thy supper ?
Something good, or thou wouldst not g it me.
but g it me, and I promise thee not to turn the world
Kind of the witch to g thee warning tho'.;
I 399
I 439
II 235
II 321
II 609
m 12
Queen Mary i iii 28
IV 87
IV 592
n iii 7
II iii 66
II iii 71
mi 395
m iv 307
in vi 40
ivii43
IV ii 52
ivii65
iTii234
IT iii 99
IV iii 161
IV iii 212
V ii 362
V ii 472
V ii 573
Harold i i 342
„ I i 479
n i 49
II i 52
„ nii588
„ nii681
„ n ii 798
V i 90
„ V i 254
„ V i 260
„ viil53
Becket, Pro. 143
I iv 107
I iv 116
n i 234
n i 241
. m ii 29
Give {continued) G me thy hand. My Lords of France
and England, Becket ui iii 225
I sware I would not g the kiss of peace, „ m iii 259
here is a golden chain I will g thee „ iv i 40
G her to me. „ iv ii 135
G her to me to make my honeymoon. „ iv ii 142
G me the poison ; set me free of him ! „ iv ii 164
G to the King the things that are the King's, „ v ii 461
You should attend the office, g them heart. „ v ii 598
I g you here an order To seize upon him. The Cup i i 163
G him a bow and arrows — follow — follow. „ i i 208
Will feel no shame to g themselves the lie. „ n 117
And g him limbs, then air, and send him forth „ n 261
G it me again. It is the cup belonging our own Temple. „ n 343
Well, Madam, I will g your message to him. The Falcon 217
' Get the Count to g me his falcon, .. 241
I y it my sick son, and if you be Not quite recover'd 589
I can g my time To him that is a part of you, „ 79Ci
If the good Count would g me ' Count. G me. „ 838
G her a month or two, and her affections Prom, of May i 484
Come, g me your hand and kiss me „ 1 563
But for the slender help that I can g, ,, n 421
But g me first your hand : „ n 525
And he may die before he g's it ; „ m 407
will g him, as they say, a new lease of life. „ iii 423
G me your arm. Lead me back again. ,, m 473
I g him back to you again. „ iii 675
shall I g her the first kiss ? Foresters i i 126
I came to g thee the first kiss, and thou hast given
it me. „ I i 132
matter so much if the maid g the first kiss ? „ i i 136
now thou hast given me the man's kiss, let me g
thee the maid's. „ i i 143
I will g thee a buffet on the face. „ i i 146
Wilt thou not g me rather the little rose for Little John ? ,, i i 147
may the maid g the first kiss ? „ i i 173
said that whenever I married he would g me away, „ i i 288
there is no other man that shall g me away. „ i i 291
I would g thee any gold So that myself „ i ii 165
You shall g me the first kiss. „ i ii 227
G me thy hand and tell him — „ i ii 241
what we wring from them we g the poor. „ n i 56
I would g my life for thee, „ n i 189
I can spell the hand. G me thine. „ n i 351
I will g thee a silver penny if thou wilt show „ n i 359
0 your honour, I pray you too to g me an alms. „ n i 389
G me a draught of wine. „ n i 458
Take him, good Little John, and g him wine. „ ii i 469
G me some news of my sweet Marian. „ ii i 481
G me thy glove upon it. „ ii i 579
G it me, by heaven, Or I will force it from thee. „ n i 593
g us guides To lead us thro' the windings of the wood. „ ii i 632
' Sell all thou hast and g it to the poor ; ' Take all
they have and y it to thyself ! „ in 169
Bitters before dinner, my lady, to g you a relish. „ m 435
love that children owe to both I gT!o him alone. „ rv 7
G me thy hand on that ? Marian. Take it. „ rv 66
1 am glad of it. G him back his gold again. „ iv 182
that will g thee a new zest for it, „ rv 208
G him the quarterstafi. „ iv 250
I g thee A buffet, and thou me. „ iv 262
G me thy hand. Much ; I love thee. At him, Scarlet ! „ iv 309
G him another month, and he will pay it. Justiciary.
We cannot g a month. „ rv 443
G me my bow and arrows. „ rv 603
g me one sharp pinch upon the cheek „ iv 1011
G me that hand which fought for Richard there. „ iv 1029
Given They have g me a safe conduct : Queen Mary i ii 100
g A token of His more especial Grace ; „ ni iii 169
God hath g Grace to repent and sorrow for their
schism ; „ ni iii 176
we by that authority Apostolic G unto us, „ m iii 211
God hath g your Grace a nose, or not, „ m v 203
Power hath been g you to try faith by fire — „ iv ii 153
Done right against the promise of this Queen Twice g. „ iv iii 457
Given
929
Go
Hven (continued) We have g the church-lands back : Queen Mary v i 170
I have g her cause — I fear no woman. Harold i ii 40
(jtod and the sea have g thee to our hands — „ ii ii 548
Stigand hath g me absolution for it. „ iii i 213
sorrow'd for my random promise g To yon fox-lion. „ iii i 269
king Hath g his virgin lamb to Holy Church „ iii i 334
And g thy realm of England to the bastard. „ iii ii 154
Thou hast g it to the enemy of our house. „ iv ii 31
Holy Father Hath g this realm of England to the Norman. „ v i 13
0 me by my dear friend the King of England-
1 pra)^ God I haven't g thee my leprosy,
kingly pronnse g To our own self of pardon,
warder of the bower hath g himself Of late to wine,
had I fathered him I had g him more of the rod than
the sceptre.
1 think, time g, I could have talk'd
liad she but g Plain answer to plain query ?
your ladyship has g him bitters enough in tliis world,
i he man had g her a rose and she gave him another.
I came to give thee the first kiss, and thou hast g it me.
Ijut I had sooner have g thee the first kiss.
now thou hast g me the man's kiss, let me give thee
the maid's.
(/ my whole body to the King had he asked for it,
but the cow ? Robin. She was g me.
iver if g And taker be but honest !
if She knew the g ; but I bound the seller
iving (See also Life-giving) My liberality perforce is dead
Thro' lack of means of g.
lad We have been g together ; let him live.
Cranmer, be thou g. This is the work of God.
g to wreak our spite on the rosefaced minion
I am g that France hath scouted him at last :
She will be g at last to wear my crown.
I am g I shall not see it.
an' owd Dobson should be g on it.
1 am g it pleases you ;
There, I am g my nonsense has made you smile !
if this life of ours Be a good g thing,
I am g of it. Give him back his gold again,
ade My men say The fairies haunt this g ; —
See that men be set Along the gr's and passes of the wood
Look, Robin, at the far end of the g
Becket I i 337
„ I iv 214
„ II ii 432
„ III i 30
„ m iii 110
„ ivii311
„ IV ii 385
The Falcon 192
Foresters i i 110
I i 133
I i 138
I i 143
II i 305
II i 315
Harold i i 345
The Falcon 72
297
Queeri Mary ii iii 90
„ IV iii 81
Becket, Pro. 528
n ii 251
The Cup I iii 168
II 512
Prom, of May ii 147
11 543
m 314
Foresters i iii 13
IV 182
„ II ii 101
III 457
IV 332
adness Breathirig an easy g . . . not like Aldwyth . . . Harold i ii 174
ance (s) Philip with a ^ of some distaste. Queen Mary iii i 99
No g yet Of the Northumbrian helmet on the heath ? Harold v i 142
Dark even from a side g of the moon, Becket iv ii 148
to 'scape The g of John — Foresters ni 463
I ance (verb) Before 1 dare to g upon your Grace. Queen Mary iii v 186
J whereby the curse might g From thee and England. Harold in i 343
1 Tlio' in one moment she should g away. Foresters ii i 161
janoed But truth of story, which 1 g at, girl, Queen Mary in v 33
Has never g upon me when a child. Foresters iv 5
Have ye g down thro' all the forest ways „ iv 110
ancing a Boleyn, too, G across the Tudor — Queen Mary v v 228
Then, g thro' the story of this realm, Becket i iii 410
now and then g about him like a thief at night „ iii iii 97
G at the days when his father was only Earl of Anjou, „ in iii 149
ire (s) this ghastly g May heat their fancies.
from the squint Of lust and g of malice.
Like sudden night in the main g of day.
■ ire (verb) It g's in heaven, it flares upon the Thames,
for thine eyes G stupid-wild with wine.
ued execrable eyes, G at the citizen.
How their pointed fingers G at me !
Harold i i 309
Becket i i 313
„ II i 57
Harold i i 29
Becket I i 214
Queen Mary Ii ii 68
Harold n ii 791
How the clown g at me ! that Dobbins, is it,
tiring See Grimly-glaring
\\sa (barometer) weather's well anew, but the gr be a
bit shaiiky.
I iss (substance) and my poor chronicle Is but of g.
fuse the g. And char us back again into the dust
( iss (verb) and g The faithful face of heaven —
( isses (spectacles) You see thro' warping g.
i issy-smooth So far my course, albeit not g-s,
( lam G upon gloom,
Prom, of May n 611
Prom, of May ii 51
Queen Mary in v 47
„ III V 54
Becket ii i 160
Queen Mary i v 212
Becket i iii 379
„ ui i 277
Gleam (continued) Gloom upon g, Becket iii i 281
I never spied in thee one g of grace. „ v ii 474
man perceives that The lost g of an after-life Prom, of May i 503
This world of mud, on all its idiot g's Of pleasure, „ m 722
Gleaming There lodged a g grimness in his eyes, Harold ii ii 224
Glebe (adj.) thaw he niver mended that gap i' the g
fence Prom, of May i 446
Glebe (s) to the wave, to the g, to the fire ! The Cup ii 4
Glen a fox from the g ran away with the hen, Prom, of May i 51
Lead us thou to some deep g, Foresters n ii 168
Glide Seem'd as a happy miracle to make g — Queen Mary in ii 30
There is an arm'd man ever g's behind ! Harold u ii 247
G like a light across these woodland ways ! Foresters ii i 159
Glided so she g up into the heart O' the bottle, „ iv 244
Gliding Corpse-candles g over nameless graves — Harold in i 381
Two sisters g in an equal dance, Becket i iii 444
Glimmer twilight of the coming day already g's in the
east. Foresters i ii 248
Glimmering One coming up with a song in the flush of
the g red ? Becket n i 8
Glimpse Rome has a gr of this conspiracy ; The Cup i ii 233
catch A ^ of them and of their fairy Queen — Foresters ii ii 103
Glitter He g's on the crowning of the hill. Harold v i 488
that's a finer thing there. How it g's ! Becket iv i 2
Glittering all drown'd in love And g at full tide — The Cup n 234
Gloom I crept aloiig the g and saw Queen Mary ii iii 17
g of Saul Was lighten'd by young David's harp. „ v ii 358
Strange and ghastly in the g Harold in ii 158
Gleam upon g, Becket in i 277
G upon gleam, „ in i 281
Glorified He is g In thy convei-sion : Queen Mary iv iii 82
But that Thy name by man be g, „ iv iii 153
Die with him, and be g together. Becket v iii 31
Glorify God grant me grace to g my God ! Queen Mary iv iii 166
Gloriftring See A-glorifying
Glorious O blessed saint, O g Benedict, — Becket v iii 1
Glory there's no g Like his who saves his country : Queen Mary n i 109
But for the wealth and g of our realm, „ ii ii 210
misreport His ending to the g of their church. „ iv iii 327
I have wrought miracles — to God the g — Harold i i 182
and our marriage and thy g Been drunk together ! „ iv iii 8
whether it symbol'd iiiin Or g, who shall tell ? „ v i 111
G to God in the Highest ! fallen, fallen ! „ v i 636
All I had I lavish'd for the g of the King ; I shone
from him, for him, his g, his Reflection : now the
g of the Church Hath swallow'd up the g of the
King ; Becket i iii 663
Power and great g — for thy Church, 0 Lord — „ v iii 194
The g and grief of battle won or lost The Cup i ii 161
Hear thy priestesses hymn thy g\ „ n 7
That you may feed your fancy on the g of it, „ n 134
and send him forth The g of his father — • „ ii 263
make them happy in the long barn, for father is in
his g. Prom, of May i 792
There is a trade of genius, there's g ! Foresters rv 375
Gloss his manners want the nap And g of court ; Queen Mary m v 71
Glo'ster (Gloucester) and she brew'd the best ale in all &, Becket in i 197
Glove Give me thy g upon it. Foresters n i 579
A pair of g's, a pair of g's, sir ; ha ? Queen Mary in i 270
The man shall paint a pair of g's. „ in i 274
Glow Dost thou not feel the love I bear to thee G
thro' thy veins ? Synorix. The love I bear
to thee G's thro' my veins The Cup u 427
Glowing-gay were as g-g As regal gardens ; Queen Mary in ii 12
Glowworm yellow silk here and there, and it looked pretty
like a g, Becket iv i 23
No, by wisp and g, no. Foresters ii ii 136
Glum What maakes 'im alius sag? Sally Allen. G !
he be wuss nor g. Prom, of May n 148
Gnarl'd hundreds of huge oaks, G — Foresters in 92
Gnat A g that vext thy pillow ! Harold i ii 71
Gnawed The I'ats have g 'em already. Foresters i i 88
Go (See also Goa, Gwo) God be with you ! G. Queen Mary i ii 83
gentle friend, admit them. I will g. „ i ii 111
My mother said, G up ; and up I went. „ i iii 98
3if
Go
930
Go
Go (continued) there are messengers That g between
g zigzag, now would settle Upon this flower,
Why do you g so gay then ?
Cbme, come, I will g with you to the Queen.
Your people, and I g with them so far.
Bad you g softly with your heretics here,
some believe that he will g beyond him.
she goes, I warrant, not to hear the nightingales.
Your apple eats the better. Let them g. They g
like those old Pharisees in John
Sir Thomas, pray you g away,
Don't ye now g to think that we be for Philip o' Spain,
come to save you all. And I'll g further off.
Pray you g on. (repeat)
I will g with you to the waterside.
No, my Lord Legate, the Lord Chancellor goes.
His sceptre shall g forth from Ind to Ind !
We might g softlier than with crimson rowel
And Hhe g not with you —
not like a word, That comes and goes in uttering,
leisure wisdom of his Queen, Before he g,
for women To g twelve months in bearing
And goes to-morrow.
0 Philip ! Nay, must you g indeed ?
But must you g ?
Your Majesty shall g to Dover with me,
1 will g to Greenwich, So you will have me with you ;
bang the leaders, let their following g.
you must look to Calais when I g. Mary. G ? must
you g, indeed —
G in, I pray you.
Say g ; but only say it lovingly.
And panting for my blood as I ^ by.
Ah ! — let him enter. Nay, you need not ^ :
You had best g home. What are you ?
Why, you long-winded Sir, you g beyond me.
Good night ! G home. Besides, you curse so loud.
Thou light a torch that never will g out !
see, he smiles and goes. Gentle as in life. Alice.
Madam, who goes ? King Philip ? Mary. No,
Philip comes and goes, but never goes.
before I g. To find the sweet refreshment of the Saints.
I have fought the fight and g —
if it pass. G not to Normandy — g not to Normandy.
I pray thee, do not g to Normandy.
Harold, I will not yield thee leave to g.
G — the Saints Pilot and prosper all thy wandering
How goes it then with thy Northumbria ?
To follow thee to Flanders ! Must thou g ?
When Harold goes and Tostig, shall I play
And when doth Harold g ? Morcar. To-morrow —
— I will g with thee to-morrow —
' I pray you do not g to Normandy.'
G not to Normandy — (repeat)
yield this iron-mooded Duke To let me g.
' Marry, the Saints must g along with us,
the lark sings, the sweet stars come and g,
Or lash'd his rascal back, and let him g.
And let him g? To slander thee again !
My prayers g up as fast as my tears fall,
not so with us — No wings to come and g.
I am weary — g : make me not wroth with thee !
Gurth, Leofwin, g once more about the hill —
G round once more ; See all be sound and whole.
Leave me. No more — Pardon on both sides — G !
Obey my first and last commandment. G !
After the battle — after the battle. G. Aldwyth
G further hence and find him.
business Of thy whole kingdom waits me : let me g.
Thou shalt not gr. I have not ended with thee.
Follow me this Rosamund day and night, whithersoever
ahe goes ;
That I should g against the Church with him. And I
shall g against him with the Clmrch,
Go (continued) G home, and sleep thy wine off, for thine eyes
Queen Mary i iii 138 What shall it be ? I'll jf as a nun.
I iv 54 G like a monk, cowling and clouding up
I iv 70 G therefore like a friend slighted by one
I iv 297 Not slighted — all but moan'd for : thou must g.
I V 188 G with her — at once — To-night —
I V 392 G, g — no more of this !
I V 441 Customs, traditions, — clouds that come and g ;
I V 463 for if thou g against thy King, Then must he Ukewise
g against thy King,
II ii 7 Let us gr in to the Council, where our bishops
II iii 99 I am confounded by thee. G in peace.
II iii 105 Ay, g in peace, caitiff, caitiff !
II iii 119 No ; yet all but all. G, g !
in 1374, 389 Wilt thou not say, 'God bless you,' ere we g?
III ii 148 Well, then, how does it g?
Ill ii 152 we shall all be poisoned. Let as g.
Ill ii 177 I'll g back again. I hain't half done yet.
Ill iv 182 then to be made Archbishop and g against the King
in iv 348 G try it, play.
HI V 30 I must g ; but when thou layest thy lip To this,
III vi 24 Mince and g back ! his politic Holiness
III vi 91 that none may dream I g against God's honour —
HI vi 119 said to the smoke, 'G up, my son, straight to Heaven.'
Ill vi 192 And the smoke said, ' I ? ; '
III vi 207 it WEis in him to g up straight if the time had been quieter.
in vi 218 there they g — both backs are tum'd to me —
III vi 221 I ^ to have young Henry crown'd by York.
IV i 75 'Must you g, my liege. So suddenly ?
all on us ha' had to g, bless the Saints,
V i 17 G, you shall tell me of her some other time.
V i 214 Nay — g. What ! will you anger me ?
V i 216 I hear Margery : I'll g play with her.
V ii 219 I g myself — so many alleys,
V iii 11 G. See that you do not fall in. G.
V iv 43 you bid me g, and I'll have my ball anyhow.
V iv 58 let me g With my young boy, and I will hide my face,
V iv 61 Wilt thou g with him ? he will marry thee.
V V 122 The worm ! shall I let her g ?
G, lest I blast thee with anathema,
Lest I remember thee to the lion, g.
., V V 146 rather g beyond In scourgings, macerations, mortifyings,
Harold i i 176 That goes against our fealty to the King.
„ I i 185 Valour and holy life should g together.
„ I i 235 1 9 to meet my King !
I i 249 It is God's will. G on.
„ I i 257 get you back ! g on with the office.
„ I i 263 Back, I say ! G on with the office.
„ I i 332 I will g out and meet them.
„ I ii 28 Wake me before you g, I'll after you —
„ I ii 163 Shall Ig? Shall Ig? Death, torture—
„ I ii 238 I g, but I will have my dagger with me.
„ II ii 204 whither g you now ? Gamma. To lodge this cup
„ II ii 218 Pray you, G on with the marriage rites.
„ II ii 327 G on with the marriage rites.
„ II ii 341 I will g To meet him, crown'd !
„ II ii 365 There goes a musical score along with them,
„ II ii 435 That seem'd to come and g.
„ II ii 507 You hear, Filippo ? My good fellow, g !
„ II ii 508 Ay, prune our company of thine own and g !
„ HI i 166 I g. Master Dobson, did you hear what I said ?
„ III ii 99 to come together again in a moment and to g on
„ V i 31 together again,
„ v i 182 Now I must g.
„ v i 192 Allow me to g with you to the farm.
„ V i 354 Let bygones be bygones. G home ! Good-night !
„ V i 359 Courage, courage ! and all will g well.
„ V i 363 so that you do not copy his bad manners ? G, child.
„ V ii 60 ' C home ; ' but I hadn t the heart or face to do it.
Becket, Pro. 279 G back to him and ask his forgiveness before he dies. —
Pro. 305 You see she is lamed, and cannot g down to him.
to the grave he goes to, Beneath the burthen of years.
Pro. 507 Than even I can well believe you, G !
' I gi to fight in Scotland With many a savage clan ; '
r i 93 I am all but sure of him. I will g to him.
Becket i i 21:
ii30]
liSl]
ii35(
lias;
Ii40(
iii2(
I iii 2;
1 iii 20'
I iii 54'
I iii 73:
I iii 73i
iiv2l
livS:
I iv 111
I iv 24
I iv 251
II i 23'
II i 24(
II i 30J
II ii 4i
II ii 161
II ii 31
n ii 32
II ii 45
II ii 47
mi 8
III i 14
III i 19
III i 20
ni i 27
IV ii
IV ii5
IV ii 6
IV ii9
IV ii 1ft
IV ii 19
IV ii 2.i
IV ii 29:
V i 4
V ii 5(1
V ii 58
viiGi:
V ii 6;i
V iii ;>
V iii !!
V iii .1
The Cwp 1 ii 41
I ii 4''
I ii 4"^
I iii ;i
II 3;
II 4.
u5i
The Falcon 4:
I?.
Prom, of May 1 1
I 7
n 5:
II 5
III 1
m 2
III 3'
III 8
„ in 4
„ III 4
in I
„ III h
Foresters i i
Go
931
God
]0 (continued) but I know not i£ I will let thee g.
Marian. I mean to g.
Well, thou shalt g, but O the land ! the land !
More water goes by the mill than the miller wots of,
and more goes to make right
G now and ask the maid to dance with thee,
What say you ? shall we g ?
Then, Scarlet, thou at least wilt g with me.
G with him. I will talk with thee anon.
I saw a man g in, my lord.
let me g to make the mound : bury me in the mound,
Shall we not g?
I pray thee g, g, for tho' thou wouldst bar
there goes one in the moonUght. Shoot !
Missed ! There goes another. Shoot, Sheriff !
But g not yet, stay with us, and when thy brother —
Yet are they twins and always g together. Kate.
Well, well, until they cease to g together,
Wherefore, wherefore should we g
Only wherefore should we ^ ?
One half of this shall g to those they have wrong'd,
— a mere figure. Let it g by.
is not he that goes against the king and the law
I J to Nottingham.
What ! g to slay liis brother, and make me
ai (go) Theer ye g's agean. Miss,
But let that g by.
noan o' the parishes g's by that naame 'ereabouts.
and now, as far as money g's, I be a gentleman,
winder at the end o' the passage, that g's by thy
chaumber.
Theer she g's ! Shall I foller 'er and ax 'er
I weant g to owd Dobson ;
and wants a hand, and I'll g to him.
Scizzars an' Pumpy was good ims to g (repeat)
says the master g*s clean off his 'ead when he 'ears the
naame on 'im ;
I warrants that ye g's By haafe a scoor o' naames —
Kll I see the g and halt the way to it. —
in the racing toward this golden g He turns
•at See Scape-goat, She-goat
lat-herd we found a g-h's hut and shared
i-between Their Flemish g-b And all-in-all.
•d (s) {See also Warrior-god) G save her Grace ;
By G's hght a noble creature, right royal !
G be with you. Go.
I wrote it, and G grant me power to bum !
I thank my G it is too late to fly.
'Fore G, I think she entreats me Uke a cliild.
some great doom when G's just hour Peals —
my good mother came ( G rest her soul)
O, just G ! Sweet mother,
6 hath sent me here To take such order with all
heretics
I am all thanks To G and to your Grace :
Pray G he do not be the first to break them,
G change the pebble which his kingly foot
G lay the waves and strow the storms at sea,
I pray G No woman ever love you.
By G, you are as poor a poet, Wyatt,
and if PhiUp come to be King, 0, my G I
Or — ^if the Lord G will it — on the stake.
— 'fore G, the rogues —
0 send her well ; Here comes her Royal Grace.
1 thank G, I have Uved a virgin, and 1 noway doubt
But that with G's grace, I can live so stiU. Yet
if it might please G that I should leave Some fruit
Speak ! in the name of G ?
•I trust this day, thro' G, I have saved the crown.
But o' G's mercy don't ye kill the Queen here.
And I, by G, believe myself a man.
G save their Graces ! (repeat) Queen Mary iii i 177, 187, 342, 412
G's passion ! knave, thy name ? Queen Mary m i 248
Ha — Verbum Dei — verbum — word of G ! G's
passion ! do you know the knave that painted it ? ,, III i 2(53
Foresters i i 312
I i 327
iii48
I ii 185
I iii 126
I iii 145
II i 132
II i 207
II i 311
II i 349
n i 354
II i 394
II i 397
II 1640
II ii 66
II ii 125
n ii 137
III 303
IV 221
IV 229
IV 799
IV 804
Prom, of May I 106
1 199
I 268
I 331
I 397
nl30
1x218
11222
u 308, 319
III 132
III 728
Harold I ii 196
„ II ii 377
The Cup I ii 426
Queen Mary ill vi 4
I II 82
Iii 98
I ii 112
I iii 111
I iv 261
IV 11
IV 22
IV 33
IV 186
IV 269
IV 368
IV 381
IV 601
n i 113
II 1200
II i 251
II ii 96
n ii 125
n ii 217
n ii 272
II ii 302
II iii 110
m i 168
God (s) (continued) Word of G In English ! Queen
trusted G would save her thro' the blood
Their Graces, our disgraces ! G confound them !
which G's hand Wrote on her conscience.
But all is well ; 'twas ev'n the will of G,
' Hail, Daughter of G, and saver of the faith.
Beheld our rough forefathers break their G's,
Serve G and both your Majesties.
G to this realm hath given A token
first whom G hath given Grace to repent
By him who sack'd the house of G ;
Julius, G's Vicar and Viceregent upon earth.
Trembled for her own g's, for these were trembling —
For which G's righteous judgment fell upon you
Nay, G's passion, before me ! speak !
G upon earth ! what more ? what would you have ?
He falters, ha ? 'fore ^, we change and change ;
G grant it last, And witness to your Grace's innocence,
G save the Queen !
G hath blest or cursed me with a nose —
0 G, sir, do you look upon your boots,
G hath given your Grace a nose, or not,
Pray G, we 'scape the sunstroke.
These are the means G works with.
To whom he owes his loyalty after G,
may G Forget me at most need when I forget Her
foul divorce —
It is G's will, the Holy Father's will,
G grant you ampler mercy at your call
May G help you Thro' that hard hour ! Craniner.
And may G bless you, Thirlby !
1 not doubt that G will give me strength,
Cranmer, be thou glad. This is the work of G.
Remember how G made the fierce fire
if thou call on G and all the saints, G will beat
down the fury of the flame,
O G, Father of Heaven ! O Son of G, Redeemer
of the world !
Three persons and one G, have mercy on me.
Shall I despair then ?—G forbid ! O G. For thou
art merciful, refusing none That come to Thee
0 Lord G, although my sins be great,
O G tlie Son, Not for slight faults alone,
0 G the Father, not for little sins
truth of G, which I have proven and known.
G grant me grace to glorify my G !
' Love of this world is hatred against G.' Again,
I pray you all that, next to G,
Albeit he think himself at home with G,
Give to the poor, Ye give to G.
1 do believe in G, Father of all ;
G bless him !
He looks to and he leans on as his G,
died As manfully and boldly, and, 'fore G,
beast might roar his claim To being in 6"i" image,
owld lord fell to 's meat wi' a will, G bless un !
but Gardiner wur struck down like by the hand
o'G
There's nought but the vire of G's hell ez can bum
out that.
Why then to heaven, and G ha' mercy on him.
Is G's best dew upon the barren field,
and therefore G Is hard upon the people,
and mine own natural man (It was G s cause) ;
1 hoped I had served G with all my might !
G pardon me ! I had never yet found one.
Mother of G, Thou knowest never woman
G help me, but methinks I love her less
by G's providence a good stout staff Lay near me ;
light enough, G knows. And mixt with Wyatt's
rising —
as I love The people ! whom G aid !
G's death ! and wherefore spake you not before ?
Then I and he will snaffle your ' G's death,'
G's death, forsooth — you do not know King Philip.
Mary iii i 279
III i 386
, nx i 415
III i 421
III ii 77
m ii 82
III ii 121
III iii 159
HI iii 168
III iii 175
lu iii 195
III iii 213
III iv 128
III iv 240
ni iv 285
m iv 383
in iv 406
ni V 49
in V 170
m vl78
in V 191
in V 203
m v279
m vi 68
IV 123
IV 179
IV i 184
IV i 189
rv ii 195
IV ii 234
IV iii 82
rv iii 89
rv iii 96
IV iii 116
IV iii 121
IV iii 129
IV iii 135
IV iii 138
IV iii 143
IV iii 149
IV iii 166
IV iii 174
IV iii 193
IV iii 214
IV iii 228
IV iii 256
rv iii 306
IV iii 343
IV iii 369
IV iii 515
IV iii 527
IV iii 631
vil02
vil75
viil04
vii296
V ii 334
v ii 341
vii420
vii468
V ii 477
V iii 36
V iii 106
V iii 119
V iii 123
God
932
God
God (s) (continued) G curse her and her Legate !
Queen Mary v iv 12
cries continually with sweat and tears to the Lord G „ v iv 46
Poor enough in G's grace ! „ v v 50
I trust that G will make you happy yet. „ v v 76
O G\ I have been too slack, too slack ; „ v v 100
but by G's grace, We'll follow Philip's leading, „ v v 111
Ay, Madam, but o' G's mercy — „ v v 165
0 G, I have kill'd my Philip ! „ vv 180
G guide me lest I lose the way. „ v v 209
she loved much : pray G she be forgiven. „ v v 271
G save Elizabeth, the Queen of England !
Bagenhall. G save the Crown ! the
Papacy is no more. „ v v 283
G save the Queen ! „ v v 288
floated downward from the throne Of G Almighty. Harold i i 19
in Normanland G speaks thro' abler voices, „ i i 167
But dreading G's revenge upon this realm » „ i i 172
1 have wrought miracles — to G the glory — „ i i 181
Pray G the people choose thee for their king ! „ i i 314
that the shipwreckt are accm'sed of G ; — „ ii i 101
by the splendour of G, no guest of mine. „ ii ii 26
My G, I should be there. „ ii ii 310
Our Duke is all about thee like a. G ; „ n ii 316
G and the sea have given thee to our hands — „ ii ii 548
bright sky cleave To the very feet of G, „ ii ii 743
O G, that I were in some wide, waste field „ ii ii 777
That sun may G speed ! „ m i 72
G bless thee, wedded daughter. „ m i 293
for the king Is holy, and hath talk'd with G, „ ni i 355
Pray G that come not suddenly ! „ iii i 364
G Has fill'd the quiver, and Death has drawn the bow — „ iii i 399
O G \ I cannot help it, but at times „ in ii 63
when that which reign'd Call'd itself G. — „ in ii 167
The Lord was G and came as man — the Pope Is man
and comes as G. — „ iii ii 172
But I dare. G with thee ! „ iii ii 188
G help me ! I know nothing — „ in ii 193
in the name of the great G, so be it ! „ iv i 240
peace with what G gave us to divide us „ iv iii 101
Here's to him, sink or swim ! Thane, G sink him ! „ iv iii 135
By G, we thought him dead — „ iv iii 148
Hath harried mine own cattle — G confound him ! „ iv iii 190
And all the Heavens and very G : they heard — „ v i 43
Tell him that G is nobler than the Saints, „ v i 57
And bide the doom of G. „ v i 61
If I fall, I fall— The doom of (? ! „ v i 136
A snatch of sleep were like the peace of G. « v i 181
great G of truth Fill all thine hours with peace ! — „ v i 315
And not on thee — nor England — ^fall G's doom ! „ v i 371
And front the doom of G. .. v i 436
O (j of battles, make their wall of shields „ v i 478
G save King Harold ! ,, v i 489
Harold and G Almighty ! „ v i 526
O G of battles, make his battle-axe keen „ v i 562
O G of battles, they are three to one, „ v i 575
O G, the G of truth hath heard my cry. „ v i 600
Glory to G in the Highest ! fallen, fallen ! „ v i 636
Whisper ! G's angels only know it. „ v ii 31
my G, They have so maim'd and murder'd all his face „ v ii 75
build a church to G Here on the hill of battle ; ,, v ii 137
till that blighted vow Which G avenged to-day. „ v ii 157
by the splendour of G — have I fought men „ v ii 177
?ray G My Normans may but move as true „ v ii 183
would to G thou wert, for I should find Becket, Pro. 86
Men are G's trees, and women are G's flowers ; „ Pro. Ill
No, my liege, no ! — not once — in G's name, no ! „ Pro. 126
G's eyes ! I know all that — „ Pro. 148
Would G she were — no, here within the city. „ Pro. 179
G's favour and king's favour might so clash „ Pro. 295
G's eyes ! what a lovely cross ! „ Pro. 370
And spake to the Lord G, and said, „ i i 74
• O Lord my G, Henry the King hath been my friend, „ i i 86
G make not thee, but thy foes, fall. „ i i 106
'Fore G, I am a mightier man than thou. „ i i 223
By G's death, thou shalt stick him like a calf ! „ i iii 183
God (s) (continued) it is the will of G To break me,
' False to myself ! It is the will oi G\' Henry.
G's will be what it will,
The King's will and G's will and justice ;
G's eyes ! I had meant to make him all but king.
The will of G — why, then it is my will^ — •
The King's ' G's eyes ! ' come now so thick and fast,
For the King's pleasure rather than G's cause
G from me withdraws Himself, And the King too.
That thou obey, not me, but G in me.
Wilt thou not say, ' G bless you, 'ere we go ?
Becket. ' G bless you all ! G redden your
pale blood ! But mine is human-red ;
and see it mounting to Heaven, my G bless you.
Shall G's good gifts be wasted ?
his paws are past help. G help him.
dawns darkly and drearily over the house of G —
I pray G I haven't given thee my leprosy,
this beast-body That G has plunged my soul in —
May G grant No ill befall or him or thee
by G's eyes, we will not have him crown'd.
a perilous game For men to play with G.
and pray G she prove True wife to you.
Saving G's honour !
— that Is clean against G's honour —
that none may dream I go against G's honour — •
Would G they had torn up all By the hard root,
to suppress G's honour for the sake Of any king that
breathes. No, G forbid ! Henry. No ! G forbid !
No G but one, and Mahound is his prophet,
you shall have None other G but me —
who hath withstood two Kings to their faces for the
honour of G.
I pray G pardon mine infirmity.
Yet you both love G.
O G, how many an innocent Has left his bon&s
Deny not thou G's honour for a king,
surrendering G's honour to the pleasure of a man.
Son, I absolve thee in the name of G.
G bless the great Archbishop !
G help her, That she was sworn to silence.
G help her, she had 'em from her mother,
0 G ! some dreadful truth is breaking on mo —
puffed out such an incense of unctuosity into the
nostrils of our G's of Church and State,
before G I promise you the King hath many
G and his free wind grant your lordship a happy
home-return
The boy so late ; pray G, he be not lost,
and G will be our guide.
By very G, the cross I gave the King !
Strike ! I challenge thee to meet me before G.
G's grace and Holy Church deliver'd us.
If G would take him in some sudden way — ■
My liege, the Queen of England. Henry. G's eyes !
The Church ! the Church ! G's eyes !
Thou hast waged G's wars against the King ;
York against Canterbury, York against G !
G bless him for it.
G save him from all sickness of the soul !
this mother, runs thro' all The world G made —
G help thee !
things that are the King's, And those of G to G.
scare me from my loyalty To G and to the Holy Father,
foremost of their files, who die For G,
to people heaven in the great day When G makes up
his jewels.
G's will be done ! (repeat)
It is G's will. Go on.
No traitor to the King, but Priest of G,
G pardon thee and these, but G's full curse
1 clo commend my cause to G, the Virgin,
O G, O noble knights, O sacrilege !
O G's ! She is my fate —
Rome Made war upon the peoples not the G's.
Becket i iii 291
„ V ii 49'
Becket v ii 565, 56'
Becket \ ii&i
„ V iii 11>
„ V iii 13.'
„ V iii IK
„ viiil7(
2'he Cup I i 1'
1 ii 0
God
'I Od (s) {continued) to victory— I hope so— Like phantoms
of the G's.
for by the G's I seem Strange to myself,
to the fullest in the sight Of all the G's.
0 all ye G's — Jupiter ! — Jupiter !
Dost thou cry out upon the G's of Rome ?
by the G's of Rome and all the world,
G rest his honest soul, he bought 'em for me
1 ha' heard 'im a-gawin' on 'ud make your 'air —
G bless it ! — stan' on end.
As flies to the G's ; they kill us for their sport.
The G's ! but they, the shadows of ourselves,
He, following his own instincts as his G,
O my G, if man be only A willy-nilly current of
sensations —
At Michaehnas, Miss, please G.
pauper, who had died in his misery blessing G,
— the heart, O G ! — the poor young heart
G bless our well-beloved Robin, Earl of Huntingdon.
And I will follow thee, and G help us both.
G's good Angel Help him back hither,
6 forbid ! (repeat)
Ay G forbid. But if it be so we must bear with John.
The love of freedom, the desire of G,
My G, thou art the very woman who waits
for, G help us, we he by nature.
Is she not here with thee ? Robin. Would G she were !
My G — That such a brother —
0 G ! What sparkles in the moonlight on thy hand ?
O G,l would the letter of the law
When the Church and the law have forgotten G's
music,
Take the left leg for the love of G.
by that same love of G we will hang thee,
— G help the mark —
6 save the King !
d (verb) How the good priest g's himself ! Becket v iii 149
«d-bless-her Cried no G-b-h to the Lady Jane, Queen Man iir iv 45
'ddess ('See aZso Love-goddess) himself an adorer of our
great g, Artemis, The Cup i i 38
I ii 56
„ I ii 219
II 201
II 256
II 281
u 314
933
Gold-dust
The Cup I ii 170
» I iii 76
II 434
II 453
II 455
II 465
The Falcon 49
Prom, of May 1 135
I 264
I 270
I 589
n 261
III 113
III 378
in 679
Foresters i i 247
1 i 278
I ii 10
„ Iii 93, 100
„ I ii 101
n i 68
„ n i 101
II i 237
II i 493
II i 549
II i 581
IV 514
IV 555
IV 578
IV 582
IV 714
IV 857
Godwin (Earl of the West Saxons) (continued) Noble Gurth !
cup saved from a blazing shrine Of our great G,
I love you — ^for your love to the great G.
Wherefrom we make libation to the G
Call first upon the G, Synorix.
G, whose storm-voice Unsockets the strong oak,
I call on our own G in our own Temple.
Here is another sacred to the G, The gift of Synorix :
and the G, ' ^ j ,
Making Ubation to the G.
See first I make hbation to the G,
Libation to the G.
' Why then the G hears.
'iJ-father King, thy g-f, gave it thee when a baby.
( iless this cooler sun of England hath In breed-
ing g vermin.
She thank'd her father sweetly for his book
Against that g German.
( Jric More hkely G.
('istow (adj.) Come thou with me to G nunnery,
To put her into G nunnery, (repeat)
tistow (s) Into G, into Hellstow, Devilstow !
(istow-Becket Tliis G'-5 intermeddling such
Clwin(Earlof the West Saxons) (^ee a/so Half-Godwin)
])Owers of the liouse of G Are not enframed in thee.
sons of G Sit topmost in the field of England,
1 nwholesome talk For G's house !
1 1 'lids that part The sons of G from the sons of Alfgar
Am I Harold, Harold, son Of our great G ?
I ; '-main a hostage for the loyalty Of G's house.'
I have heard a saying of thv father G,
I here spake G, Who hated all the Normans ;
'' still at feud with Alfgar,
'i'hat is noble ! That sounds of G.
Come thou back, and be Once more a son of G.
Thou hast no passion for the House of G —
II 346
II 364
II 377
II 387
II 388
Foresters i i 285
Queen Mary in iv 329
V V 238
Harold v ii 66
Becket iv ii 366
„ V i 208, 209
V i 215
IV ii 457
Harold i i 316
I i 325
I i 391
„ I ii 180
„ II ii 793
III i 91
„ in i 112
„ III i 251
„ IV i 123
„ IV ii 58
„ IV ii 60
>. IV ii 73
Best son of G I
advise the king Against the race of G.
and the race of G Hath ruin'd G.
Ooest And waste the land about thee as thou g.
Thou g beyond thyself in petulancy !
_ Now as Archbishop g against the King ;
Going (part.) (See also A-gawin', A-going, Gawin,
Straight-going) g now to the Tower to loose
the prisoners
Well, I am g.
He can but stay a moment : he is g.
Oh ! that thou wert not g !
You are g to the Castle,
G to the Holy Land to Richard !
Going (s) three days in tears For Philip's g —
I could mould myself To bear your g better ;
And you will stay your g ?
Then it is done ; but you will stay your g
Gold Velvet and g. This dress was made me
set it round with g, with pearl, with diamond.
We'll dust him from a bag of Spanish g.
not with g, But dearest links of love.
Spain moves, bribes our nobles with her g,
on his neck a collar, G, thick with diamonds ;
Gardiner buys them With Philip's g.
Were you in Spain, this fine fair gossamer g —
Your PhiUp hath g hair and golden beard ;
You have a g ring on your finger.
In mine earldom A man may hang g bracelets on
a bush,
if not with g, With golden deeds and iron strokes
jewel of St. Pancratius Woven into the g.
Red g — a hundred purses — yea, and more !
Standard of the Warrior, Dark among gems and g ;
thou shalt have our love, our silence, and our g —
This Abnoner hath tasted Henry's g. The cardinals
have finger'd Henry's g.
Aa g Outvalues dross, Ught darkness,
till the weight of Germany or the g of England
leave Lateran and Vatican in one dust of g —
she sits naked by a great heap of g in the middle of
the wood,
No — no g. Mother says g spoils all. Love is the
only 9-
fondest pair of doves will jar, Ev'n in a cage of g,
I would that happiness were g,
a hundred G pieces once were offer'd by the Duke,
ransomed for two thousand marks in g.
nor of the g, nor the man who took out the g :
I have lost my g, I have lost my son,
Good Prince, art thou in need of any g ? Prince John.
G ? why ? not now. Sheriff. I would give thee any
g So that myself
I ran into my debt to the Abbot, Two thousand marks
ing.
These two have forty g marks between them, Robin.
Leave it with him and add a g mark thereto.
Take his penny and leave him liis g mark.
I have one mark in g which a pioas son of the Church
Well, as he said, one mark in g.
One mark in g.
they have each ten marks in g.
alchemy Should change this g to silver, why, the silver
Were dear as g,
But being o' John's side we must have thy g.
I am glad of it. Give him back his g again.
But I had Uefer than this g again —
Would buy me for a thousand marks in g —
Much hghter than a thousand marks in g ;
Is weightier than a thousand marks in g.
Who thought to buy your marrying me with g.
Here is thy g again. I am sorry for it.
The g — ^my son — my g, my son, the land —
Gold-dust For that is Philip's g-d, and adore
Harold V i 135
„ V i 282
„ V i 293
„ V i 131
Becket i iii 65
„ I iii 530
Queen Mary i i 108
„ in vi 171
Harold i ii 4
„ I ii 75
Becket i ii 45
ForeUers i ii 240
Queen Mary ni vi 14
m vi 236
vil86
vi206
liv 71
IV 375
IV 422
IV 538
II i 203
in i 80
mi 145
V iii 49
V iii 56
viv32
Harold ii i 87
„ n ii 46
„ n ii 701
„ III i 18
„ IV 1249
Becket, Pro. 492
I iii 294
I iii 714
n ii 364
„ II ii 475
in ii 21
» ivi42
,, IV ii 42
The Cup II 223
The Falcon 324
Foresters i i 65
I i 74
1 1338
I ii 163
ni464
HI 202
in 211
m 218
ni 280
in 285
ni287
in 292
IV 40
IV 158
IV 183
IV 185
IV 653
IV 658
IV 661
IV 719
IV 985
IV 987
Queen Mary ni iii 243
Oolden
934
Good
Harold n ii 47
1 154
iiv65
ni34
II i 203
II ii 85
III i 46
III iii 180
IV 140
V ii 346
The Cup II 269
II 287
II 438
Golden yet stay, this g chain — My father on a birthday
gave it me, Queen Mary i v 526
hanging down from this The G Fleece — „ in i 82
Your Philip hath gold hair and g beard ; „ v iii 57
Some few of Gothic blood have g hair, „ v ill 61
With g deeds and iron stakes that brought Thy war
with Brittany
For in the racing toward this g goal He turns not
right or left, „ n 11 377
Lay thou thy hand upon this g pall ! „ ii 11 699
Set forth our g Dragon, let him flap The wings „ iv 1 245
saw thy wiUy-nilly nun Vying a tress against our g fern. „ v 1 149
for marriage, rose or no rose, has killed the g violet. Becket, Pro. 351
Gave me the g keys of Paradise.
winter after summer, and the g leaves.
Yea, thou my g dream of Love's own bower,
out of the eclipse Narrowing my g hour !
Only the g Leopard printed in it Such hold-fast claws
these g slopes Of Solomon-shaming flowers —
The g ornaments are stolen from her —
Come, here is a jr chain I will give thee
and g provinces So that were done in equity.
And roU the g oceans of our grain,
and lays Our g grain, and rmis to sea and makes it
we would add Some g fringe of gorgeousness beyond
Old use,
for wasn't my lady bom with a g spoon in her ladyship's
mouth, and we haven't never so much as a silver one
for the g lips of her ladyship. The Falcon 401
like the Moslem beauties waiting To clasp their
lovers by the g gates. Prom, of May i 248
Will enter on the larger g age ; „ 1 590
Who can tell What g hours, with what full hands, „ ii 509
Flung by the g mantle of the cloud. Foresters ii i 28
Goldenest Less than a star among the g hours Of Alfred, Harold iv iii 51
Goldsmiths (Immanuel) iSee Inunanuel Goldsmiths
Goliasing There again, G and Goliathising !
Goliath There is one Come as G came of yore —
Goliathising There again, Goliasing and G I
Gone he will not come Till she be g.
The Duke hath g to Leicester ;
had g over to him With all his men,
tree that only bears dead fruit is g.
Hence, let's be g. Usher. Well that you be not
g, My Lord.
The civil wars are g for evermore :
She has g, Maid Marian to her Robin —
should her love when you are g, my liege,
Be somewhat pitiful, after I have g,
G narrowing down and darkening to a close.
in pursuing heresy 1 have g beyond your late Lord
Chancellor, —
G beyond him and mine own natural man
Philip g ! And Calais g ! Time that I were g too !
Calais g — Guisnes g, too — and Philip g !
Charles, the lord of this low world, is g ;
but after I am g Woe, woe to England !
— That was many a summer g —
thou art not g so wild But thou canst hear
Yea, — get thee g !
My friend, thou hast g too far to palter now.
He hath g to kindle Norway against England,
Many are g — Drink to the dead who died for us.
Get thee g ! He means the thing he says.
Over and g with the roses, (repeat)
And over and g with the sun.
Not over and g with the rose.
I more than once have g against the Church.
— a chink — he's out, G !
Hadst thou not slgn'd, I had g along with thee ;
No ill befall or him or thee when I Am g.
I stay myself — Puff — it is g.
g to the King And taken our anathema with him
he had g too far Into the King's own woods ;
Going or g to-day To hunt with Sinnatus.
Becket in iii 126
Harold v 1 493
Becket in ill 127
Queen Mary i v 513
n 1 4
n ii 28
ml 19
ni iv 385
III V 150
in V 155
in vi 173
IV ii 157
IV 111 431
V 11 ys
V ii 102
V ii 319
vv22
V V 55
Harold 1 1 189
11254
11299
n ii 117
II 11 707
m 1 79
IV iii 68
vi83
Becket, Pro. 326, 333
Pro. 327
Pro. 344
1129
I 1261
I iii 522
II i 261
n ii 151
vii6
V ii 107
The Cup I i 64
Gone (continued) And I may strike your game when you
are g. The Cup i ii SI
He is g already. Oh, look, — „ 1 11 39S
Just g To fly his falcon. The Falcon 20£
Beant Miss Eva gr off a bit of 'er good looks o'
laate ? Prom, of May i 3S
if I could ha' g on wi' the plowin' „ 1 37f
After all that has g between us — friends ! „ 1 632
All that has g between us Should surely make us friends. „ i 63(
He has g to London. „ 1 78(
and now she be g, will ye taake 'em, Miss Dora ? „ u 21
who came to us three years after you were g, how
should she know you ? „ in 23S
Pledge the Plantagenet, Him that is g. Foresters i ii I
Now that the sun our King is g, „ i ii 8i
All g ! — my ring — I am happy — „ i iii 1
make us merry Because a year of it is gr ? ,, i iii l-'
G, and it may be g for evermore ! ,, n i 15c
G, like a deer that hath escaped thine arrow ! „ iv 6(
By old St. Vitus Have you g mad ? „ iv BK
Where be they g to ? „ iv 62J
Gonfanon and have sent him back A holy g, Harold iii ii 14f
g of Holy Peter Floating above their helmets — '„ v i .54{
Good and of the g Lady Jane as a poor innocent child Queen Mary i i 94
I know it, my g Lord. „ i ii 9^
— and now that your g bishop, Bonner, „ i iii 34
I shall fathom him. G morning, Noailles. „ i iii 15S
G now, my Lady Queen, tho' by your age, „ i iv 13
Folly, my g Lord. „ i iv 8fJ
Not very dangerous that way, my g imcle. „ i iv 16"
I follow your g counsel, gracious uncle. „ i iv 18f
Do they say so, g uncle ? „ i iv 214
Ay, g niece ! You should be plain and open with me, „ i iv 21fi
No, g uncle. „ i iv 22(i
to have the wish before the word Is man's g Fairy — „ i iv 24(^
But my g mother came (God rest her soul) Of Spain, „ i v 1]
G morning, my g Lord. „ i v 9^
That every morning of your Majesty May be most g, „ i v M
G, then, they will revolt : but I am Tudor, „ i v 174
Bid him come in. G morning, Sir de Noailles. „ i v 241'
and your g master, Pray God he do not be the first
to break them, ,; i v 26i
French, I must needs wish all g things for France. „ i v 3(Xj
G Madam, when the Roman wish'd to reign, „ i v 491
G Lord ! but I have heard a thousand such. „ i v 57^
Why, g Lord, Write you as many sonnets as you will. „ il i 9-
By God, you are as poor a poet, Wyatt, As a y soldier. „ ii i 11 =
that g helpless creature, starved, maim'd, flogg'd, „ ii i 20!'
And see the citizens arm'd. G day ; g day. „ ii ii 37b
and they With their g battleaxes will do you right „ ii iv 6ii
G, was it splendid ? „ m J *
G faith, I was too sorry for the woman To mark the
dress. »> in i ^^
Wyatt was a g soldier, yet he fail'd, „ in i 131
Methinks the g land heard me, for to-day My heart
beats twenty, „ m ii 5
True, g cousin Pole ; ,. m ii^^
G news have I to tell you, news to make Both of us
happy— „ I" ii 1*
G ! Well, Madam, this new happiness of mine ? „ m ii 20
G sir, for this, if Philip— „ m iii 8:
Why, g ! what then ? granted ! — we are fallen _ ^
creatures; .. ^". *^,i!
And tropes are g to clothe a naked truth, „ m iv 19
With that vile Cranmer in the accursed lie Oi g
Queen Catharine's divorce — ,> hi iv 23
Ha ! (7 ! it seems then I was summon'd hither „ ni iv -6
But this most noble prince Plantagenet, Our g _
Queen's coasin — -. "' i^ ^
Upon the g Queen's mercy ; ay, when, my Lord ? „ ni v lO'"
Before my father married my g mother, — „ m v 24
fi' morrow, my Lord Cardinal ; „ ^^■\t
These are but natural graces, my g Bishop, „ iv i IV
And bad mo have g courage ; » '^..'V
The prison fare is g enough for me. » i^' " '
Good
935
Good
j3ood (continued) Have you g hopes of mercy ! So,
a farewell.
G hopes, not theirs, have I that I am fixt, Fixt
beyond fall ;
G day, old friend ; what, you look somewhat worn ;
Weep not, g Thirlby.
G people, every man at time of death Would fain
set forth
But do you g to all As much as in you lieth.
Hear him, my g brethren.
And watch a g man bum.
Out Daisy's as g 'z her.
Oiu- Daisy's butter's as ^ 'z hem.
for a g pleace at the bumin' ;
I wish you a g morning, g Sir Nicholas :
So far, g. I say I came to sue your Council and yourself
G, now ; methinks my Queen is like enough To
leave me by and by.
G ! Renard, I will stay then.
And so must you, g cousin ; — worse than all.
What said you, my g lord, that our brave English
what g could come of that ?
G Lord ! how grim and ghastly looks her Grace,
But by God's providence a g stout staff Lay near me ;
He is my g friend, and I would keep him so ;
Ah, g neighbour, "There should be something fierier
than fire
G night ! Go home. Besides, you curse so loud.
Nay, dearest lady, see your g physician.
G counsel yours — No one in waiting ? still,
How is the g Queen now ?
Albeit no rolling stone, my g friend Gamel,
To-day, g Eari.
Deeper into the mysteries of heaven Than thou, g brother.
What Ues upon the mind of our g king
Like the rough bear beneath the tree, g brother,
G coimsel truly ! I heard from my Northumbria
yesterday.
Ay, ever give yourselves your own g word.
G again ! G counsel tho' scarce needed.
I have to make report of my g earldom To the g king
who gave it —
Nay, my g sister —
Thou shalt flash it secretly Among the g Northumbrian
folk,
Help the g ship, showing the sunken rock,
G ! But lest we tum the scale of courtesy
Tis the g Count's care for thee !
Obey the Count's conditions, my g friend.
our g King Kneels mumbUng some old bone —
But thou and he drove our g Normans out From England,
Be careful of thine answer, my g friend.
G, g, and thou wilt help me to the crown ?
O brother. By all the truths that ever priest hath
preach'd.
Sign it, my g son Harold, Gurth, and Leofwin,
and those Who make thy g their own —
0 g son ! That knowledge made him all the carefuller
1 know all Sussex ; A g entrenchment for a perilous hour !
Where all g things are lost, where Tostig lost The g
hearts of his people.
G even, my g brother ! Gurth. G even, gentle
Edith. Edith. G even, Gurth.
The G Shepherd ! Take this, and render that,
when our g hive Needs every sting to save it.
So the g king would deign to lend an ear Not
overscomful,
With g will ; Yes, take the Sacrament upon it, king.
We never — oh ! g Morcar, speak for us.
Evil for g, it seems, Is oft as childless of the g as evil
For evil.
G for g hath borne at times A bastard false as William.
I will, g brother,
perjury-mongering Count Hath made too g an use of
Holy Church
Good {continued) Yea so, g cheer ! thou art Harold, I am
Queen Mary iv ii 8G Edith !
Lo ! our g Gurth hath smitten liim to the death.
IV ii 88 Ay, g father.
IV ii 115 So then our g Archbishop Theobald Lies dying.
, IV ii 172 and most amorous Of g old red sound liberal Gascon
wine :
, IV iii 156 That palate is insane wliich cannot tell A g dish from
, IV iii 186 a bad,
, IV iii 227 G dogs, my liege, well train'd,
IV iii 293 My g liege, if a man Wastes himself among women,
, IV iii 479 but Nolo Archiepiscopari, my g friend,
, IV iii 481 My liege, the g Archbishop is no more.
, IV iii 489 The g old man would sometimes have his jest —
, v i 13 Our g John Must speed you to your bower at once.
, V i 113 What, not g enough Even to play at mm ?
G night ! g night !
, V i 241 Send the Great Seal by daybreak. Both, g night !
, V i 305 He had g eyes !
V ii 39 G ears too !
V ii 254 Ay, g Madam !
, V ii 309 And with g reason too,
V ii 389 And was thine own election so canonical, G father ?
V ii 468 O my g lord, I do entreat thee — sign.
V iii 91 Loyally and with g faith, my lord Archbishop ?
0 ay, with all that loyalty and g faith
V iv 24 G royal cousins — had them written fair For John of
V iv 61 Oxford
V V 59 Permit me, my g lord, to bear it for thee,
V V 202 O my g lord Leicester, The King and I were brothers.
V V 229 Shall God's g gifts be wasted ?
Harold i i 93 My friends, the Archbishop bids you g night.
„ I i 106 Something g, or thou wouldst not give it me.
„ I i 201 Ay, ay, g brother, They call you the Monk-King.
„ I i 269 Come, confess, g brother,
„ I i 328 O g son Louis, do not counsel me,
my g lord. We that are kings are something in this world,
„ I i 330 Better have been A fisherman at Bosham, my g Herbert,
„ I i 343 My one grain of g counsel which you will not swallow.
„ I i 375 Long live the g King Louis !
1 am bound For that one hour to stay with g King
„ I i 406 Louis,
„ I i 462 This is the second grain of g counsel I ever proffered
thee,
„ I ii 220 I am the fairy, pretty one, a g fairy to thy mother.
„ II ii 100 There are g fairies and bad fairies,
„ II ii 163 I am her g fairy. Geoffrey. But you don't look Uke
„ II ii 251 a g fairy.
„ II ii 276 And leave you alone with the g fairy.
„ II ii 467 My g Fitzurse, The nmning down the chase is kindlier
„ II ii 525 sport
„ II ii 605 that our g Henry Says many a thing in sudden heats,
„ II ii 613 when I strove To work against her license for her g,
York and myself, and our g Salisbury here,
„ m i 96 Yes : a man may take g counsel Ev'n from his foe.
n ni i 199 when he lets his whole self go Lost in the common g,
„ III i 330 1 know him ; our g John of Sahsbury.
„ III i 339 No, daughter, you mistake our g Archbishop ;
„ III i 363 How the g Archbishop reddens !
0 my g lord, Speak with them privately on this hereafter.
„ III ii 28 G] let them arm.
My two g friends, What matters murder'd here, or
„ m ii 116 murder'd there ?
„ m ii 169 How the g priest gods himself !
„ IV i 17 ye will die the death of dogs ! Nay, nay, g Tracy.
1 can no more — fight out the g fight — die Conqueror.
„ IV i 135 may even drown you In the g regard of Rome.
„ IV i 182 I tell thee, my g fellow. My arrow stmck the stag.
„ IV i 216 My g Lord Sinnatus, I once was at the hunting of a Uon.
You, Strato, make g cheer till I return.
„ V i 171 G ! Camma. If I be not back in half an hour, Come
„ V i 174 after me.
„ V i 199 Or g, or wise, that you should clasp a hand
6^ ! mine own dagger driven by Synorix found All j' in
», V i 312 the true heart of Sinnatus,
Harold v i 391
„ V i 502
„ V i 516
Becket, Pro. 1
„ Pro. 100
„ Pro. 106
„ Pro. 119
„ Pro. 136
„ Pro. 286
„ Pro. 392
I i 61
I i 290
I i 303
„ I i 313
„ 1 1406
I ii 38
„ I ii 44
I ii 90
I iii 58
„ 1 iii 122
„ I iii 185
„ I iii 278
„ I iii 281
„ I iii 415
„ I iii 490
„ I iii 660
» I iv 71
„ I iv 261
„ n i 233
„ II ii 72
II ii 82
n ii 219
II ii 244
II ii 292
n ii 378
nii451
m iii 247
m iii 318
ivi26
IV 128
IV 134
IV ii 61
IV ii 211
IV ii 275
IV ii 341
vi56
vii3
vii40
vii 77
V ii 138
vii 298
V ii 418
V ii 571
„ V ii 629
„ V iii 148
„ V iii 185
„ V iii 189
The Cup I i 151
Iii 27
I ii 115
Iii 205
1 11436
n82
II 85
Good
936
Gorge
Good (continued) And drown all poor self-passion in the
sense Of public g? The Cup n 103
Did not some old Greek Say death was the chief g? „ ii 515
G mother, happy was the prodigal son, The Falcon 140
And yet to speak white truth, my g old mother, „ 504
G ! let it be but one. „ 511
You hear, Filippo ? My g fellow, go ! „ 690
I have anger'd yovu" g nui-se ; „ 707
* I should be weU again If the g Count would give me ' „ 838
Beant Miss Eva gone off a bit of 'er g looks o'
laate ? Prom, of May i 33
G day ! Wilson. G day, sir. „ 1 294
G day, then, Dobson. JDobson. ' G daay then,
Dobson ! ' „ 1 299
G mumin', neighbours, and the saame to you, my
men. „ 1 317
but I ha taaen g care to turn out boath my darters
right down fine laadies. „ 1 335
Coom, coom, that's a g 'un. „ 1 467
G wishes, not reproaches ; „ 1 526
you have robb'd poor father Of ten g apples. „ i 616
You had better attend to your hayfield. G afternoon. „ ii 123
S«izzars an' Pumpy was g uns to goa (repeat) „ ii 308, 318
That beer be as ^ fur 'erses as men. „ ii 315
And you Seem my g angel who may help me from it. „ ii 388
Now am I Edgar, my g fellow. „ ii 701
My name is Harold ! G day, Dobbins ! „ ii 726
Naay, but ' G daay, Dobbins.' „ ii 732
' G daay, Dobbins.' Dang tha ! „ n 741
G afternoon, my friends. „ iii 20
You are as j as a man in the hayfield. „ m 106
and the man has doubtless a g heart, „ iii 171
though I can be sorry for him — as the g Sally says, „ iii 173
Come, come, keep a g' heart ! Better for me" ! That's gr. „ iii 252
and tho' you are g and gentle. Yet if thro' any want— „ ni 538
G ; then what is it That makes you talk so dolefully ? „ in 571
but I keep a g heart and make the most of it. Foresters i i 28
he hath wasted his revenues in the service of our g king
Richard „ i i 194
I wish you and your ladyship's father a most exceedingly
g morning. „ i i 309
God's g Angel Help him back hither, „ i ii 10
myself and my g father pray Thy thirtieth summer may
"be thirty-fold „ i ii 127
G Prince, art thou in need of any gold ? „ i ii 162
O g Sir Richard, I am sorry my exchequer runs so low „ i ii 271
by this Holy Cross Which g King Richard gave me when
a child— „ I ii 310
if this life of ours Be a 9 glad thing, „ i iii 13
There be g fellows there in merry Sherwood „ i iii 98
Not now, g Much ! And thou, dear Little John, „ i iii 158
O my g lord, I am but an angel by reflected light. „ 11 i 107
The fool-people call her a witch — a g witch to me ! „ 11 i 179
Quick, y mother, quick ! „ n i 193
He was a forester g; ,, 11 i 319
Take him, g Little John, and give him wine. „ 11 i 469
Knight, your g father had his draught of wine „ 11 ii 1
We be neither bad nor g. „ n ii 119
Why, my g Robin fancied me a man, „ m 19
0 ^"Kate— If my man-Robin were but a bird-Robin, „ iii 38
Farewell, g fellows ! „ m 87
Art thou not hard upon them, my g Robin ? „ in 222
G ! Roll it in here. „ m 311
1 believe thee, thou art a g fellow, though a friar. „ in 342
Quiet, g Robin, quiet ! „ iv 9
G ! but having lived For twenty days and nights in mail, „ iv 122
Thou payest easily, like a g fellow, „ iv 156
G, g, I love thee for that ! „ iv 173
Up, g Much. „ IV 284
6', now I love thee mightily, thou tall fellow, „ iv 321
For if he did me the g grace to kick me „ iv 1564
My g friend Robin, Earl of Huntingdon, For Earl thou
art again, „ iv 828
0 my o liege, we did believe you dead. „ iv 845
1 thank thee, g Sir Richard. „ iv 858
Foresters iv 876
IV 950
IV 968
IV 980
„ IV 1020
„ IV 1031
„ IV 1081
Queen Mary iv ii 168
Prom, of May ii 227
Queen Mary i iii 95
I iii 160
n ii 378
Prom, of May 1 294
l299
II 726
Queen Mary I v 7
„ n ii 345
Good [continued) But if the King forbid thy manying
With Robin, our g Earl of Huntingdon.
I trust Half tmths, g friar :
The king's g health in ale and Malvoisie.
0 g Sir Richard, I am like the man In Holy Writ, '
1 am, g father, I am.
Embrace me, Marian, and thou, g Kate, Kiss and
congratulate me, my g Kate.
You, g friar. You Much, you Scarlet, you dear Little
John,
Good-bye I'll say something for you — so — g-h.
G-b. James. Gi'e us a buss fust, lass.
Good-day (See also Good) G-d, my Lord of Devon ;
G-d, my Lord.
And see the citizens arm'd. G d; g d.
G d ! Wilson. G d, sir.
G d, then, Dobson.
Mj' name is Harold ! G d, Dobbins !
Goodlier and yet, methinks, I have seen g.
Yet she's no g ;
brought Thy war with Brittany to a g' close Than else
had been, Harold n ii 49
as brave a soldier as Henry and a g man : Becket, Pro. 437
Goodlier-looking A g-l fellow than this Philip. Queen Mary i iv 3
A g-l man than Sinnatas. The Cup n 176
Goodliest That makes or man or woman look their g. Queen Mary 11 ii 330
Goodly Most g, Kinglike and an Emperor's son, — „ i v 2
6' enough, your Grace, and yet, methinks, I have
seen goodlier. „ i v 5
Peruse it ; is it not g, ay, and gentle ? „ i v 195
Ay, true — a g one. I would his life Were half as y. „ i v 200
I have never seen her So queenly or so g. „ 11 ii 327
And all men cry. She is queenly, she is g. „ 11 ii 344
Should look more g than the rest of us. „ n ii 349
G ? I feel most g heart and hand, „ 11 ii 351
says she will live And die true maid — a g creature too. „ in vi 46
My liege, I bring j'ou g tidings. „ v i 279
But is Don Carlos such a g match ? „ v iii 86
Who knows what sows itself among the people ? A g
flower at times. Harold iv i 151
G news ! Morcar. Doubt it not thou ! ,. iv i 219
have graspt Her livings, her advowsons, granges, farms.
And g acres — Becket i i 163
Well — if that isn't g wine Beggar. Then there isn't
a g wench to serve him with it : „ i iv 157
the g way of women Who love, for which I love them. „ 11 i 256
O bestial ! O how unlike our g Sinnatus. The Cup n 173
True, she is a g thing. Foresters n ii 140
There was a man of ours Up in the north, a g fellow too, „ iv 530
Goodman I mean your g, your husband, my lady, Becket in i 158
Where is thy g-m ? Foresters n i 370
Good-night G n\ Go home. Besides, you curse so
loud. Queen Mary v iv 61
G-n, and dream thyself Their chosen Earl. Harold 1 ii 247
Gn[ g n\ Becket 1 i 313
Both, gn\ „ i i 406
My friends, the Archbishop bids you g n. „ i iv 261
Thou — coming my way too — Gamma — g-n. The Cup n 493
Let bygones be bygones. Go home ! G-n ! Prom, of May in 157
Goods Confiscate lands, g, money — Queen Mary 11 i 102
To make free spoil and havock of your g. „ 11 ii 187
thou art dispossessed of all thy lands, g, and chattels ; Foresters i iii 60
Sheriff had taken all our g for the King without paying, „ n i 190
Goodwill If but to prove your Majesty's g, Queen Mary i v 260
" ■ ~ ■ //aro/d IV i 182
With g w ; Yea, take the Sacrament upon it,
is it then with thy g that I Proceed against thine evil
comicillors,
Goose father's eye was so tender it would have called a g
off the green.
Venison, and wild boar, hare, geese.
Geese, man ! for how canst thou be allied With John,
and serve King Richard save thou be A traitor or a ^ ?
Goosewing By arrow and gray g.
Gorge (See also Side-gorge) not like thine To g a
heretic whole, Queen Mary m iv 344
Becket ni iii 207
„ ni iii 102
Foresters iv 191
IV 349
in 427
-ii
Gorgeous
I Gorgeous the g Indian sliawl That Phih'p brought
1 me in our happy days ! —
' Go^eousness Some golden fringe of g beyond
: Gospeller and the Hot Cl's will go mad upon it.
Yon gray old G, sour as midwinter,
Not dream'd of by the rabidest g.
there be two old gossips — g's, I take it ;
There are Hot G's even among our guards —
937
Gracious
Queen Mary v ii 538
The Cup II 438
Queen Mary i i 115
I iii 40
„ III vi 138
IV iii 460
V V 102
Gossamer Were you in Spain, this fine fair g gold — „ v iii 48
Gossip Hist ! there be two old g's — gospellers, „ iv iii 460
Gossiping with no fear Of the world's g clamour, Prom, of May i 528
Got And I g' it. I woke Sir Henry — Queen Mary iii v 59
J afoor I coomed up he g thruff the winder agean.
I Eva. G thro' the window again ? Prom, of May i 405
I Then she ^ me a place as nursery governess, „ iii 385
Gothic Some few of G blood have golden hair, Queen Mary v iii 60
Gotten (3wd Steer's g all his grass down and wants a
hand. Prom, of May ii 221
The beer's g oop into my 'ead, „ ii 320
Gout small hope of the gentleman g in my great toe. The Falcon 657
' I hope your Lordship is quite recovered of
your g ? ' Prom, of May iii 309
Rogue, I am full of g. I cannot dance. Foresters iv 562
Sweat out your g, friend, for by my life, „ iv 565
Govom Whose ministers they be to </ you. Queen Mary iv iii 180
Ye g milder men. Harold i i 339
Ctovemance Against thy brother Tostig's g; „ ii ii 290
We have heard Of thy just, mild, and equal g ; » ii ii 690
Grovemess Then she got me a place as a nursery g, Prom, of May in 385
Grovemment We have made them milder by just g. Harold i i 341
and by the advice of his G.' Becket i iii 113
jown Disguise me — thy g and thy coif. Foresters ii i 186
Ay, ay, g, coif, and petticoat, „ ii i 194
jraay (gray) Wi' the briar sa green, an' the wilier
sa g. Prom, of May ii 187
jrace (s) (See also Herb-of-grace) God save her G ; Queen Mary i i 67
whether her G incline to this splendid scion of
Plantagenet. „ i i 134
i The Queen would see your G upon the moment. „ i iv 222
Your G will hear her reasons from herself. „ i iv 230
Whereof 'tis like enough she means to make A farewell
present to your G. „ i iv 245
Goodly enough, your G, and yet, methinks, I have seen
goodlier. „ i v 5
By your G's leave Your royal mother came of Spain, „ i v 15
I cannot, and I dare not, tell your G What Lady Jane
replied. ,, i v 49
• — a head So full of g and beauty ! „ i v 64
I say your G is loved. „ i v 131
I am all thanks To God and to your G: „ i v 186
Hath your G so sworn ? „ i v 217
In some such form as least may hann your G. „ i v 226
your G And kingdom will be suck'd into the war, „ i v 256
Nay, pure phantasy, your G. „ i v 280
but I protest Your G's policy hath a farther flight „ i v 312
Who waits ? Usher. The Ambassador of Spain, your G. „ i v 343
Nay, your G, it hath not reach'd me. „ i v 351
You are happy in him there. Chaste as your G\ „ i v 456
What slandere ? I, your G ; no, never. Mary. Nothing ?
Alice. Never, your G. „ i v 572
I scarce had left your G's presence „ i v 583
must we levy war against the Queen's G ? Wyatt. No,
mv friend, war for the Queen's G — to save her from
herself and Philip— ,, n i 187
When willher G be here ? „ ii ii 13
Here comes her Royal G. ,, ii ii 126
But that with God's G, I can live so still. „ ii ii 219
but we can save your G. The river still is free. „ ii iv 24
No, no, your G ; see there the arrows flying. „ ii iv 50
The porter, please your G, hath shut the gates On friend
and foe. Your gentlemen-at-arms, If this be not your
G's order, ,. « iv 61
I do not love your G should call me coward. Messenger.
Over, your G, all crush'd ; „ ii iv 88
God save their G's. (repeat). Queen Mary in i 178, 187, 343, 413
Grace (s) (continued) Seventeen — a rose of g ! Queen Mary in i 371
Their G's, our di^races ! God confound them ! „ in i 415
Farewell, your G's.
Mine echoes both your G's' ;
Lo ! once again God to this realm hath given A token
of His more especial G ;
G to repent and Gorvow for their schism ;
their two G's Do ^ dear-cousin and royal-cousin him,
Why do they keep us here ? Why still suspect j'our G ?
And witness to your G's innocence,
Before I dare to glance upon your G.
See, I lay it here, For 1 will come no nearer to your G ;
And God hath given your G a nose, or not,
0 Lord ! your G, your G,
And had your G a Robin ?
A ^ to me ! Mercy, that herb-of-grace,
when last he wrote, declared His comfort in your G
Your G hath a most chaste and loving wife.
Your G's business will not suffer, sire,
Crave, in the same cause, hearing of your G.
Health to your G ! Good morrow, my Lord Cardinal ;
We make our humble prayer unto your G
Ay, ay, your G ; but it was never seen That any one
recanting thus at full,
These are but natural g's, my good Bishop,
After this, Your G will hardly care to overlook
By Heaven's g, I am more and more confirm'd.
Sire, if your G hath mark'd it, so have I.
That if your G hath mark'd her, so have I.
and your G, So you will take advice of mine.
Your G hath been More merciful to many a rebel head
what sin Beyond all g, all pardon ?
Your G hath a low voice.
Good Lord ! how grim and ghastly looks her G,
Ay, so your G would bide a moment yet.
1 trust your G is well.
But shall I take some message from your G ?
Then I may say your G will see your sister ? Your
G is too low-spirited.
But as to Philip and your G — consitler, —
I gather'd from the Queen That she would see your
G before she — died.
Poor enough in God's g !
I will, if that May make your G forget yourself a little.
by God's g, We'll follow Philip's leading,
I never spied in thee one gleam of g.
Is strength less strong when hand-in-hand with g ?
and ' your G ' are all growing old-fashioned Prom, of May in 318
So winsome in her g and gaiety, „ in 754
Nay, an please your Elfin G, Foresters n ii 132
For if he did me the good g to kick me „ iv 364
Not now, not now — with after-dinner g. „ iv 938
Grace (verb) To g his memory. Queen Mary n i 31
My cottage, while you g it, is a palace. The Falcon 288
thy father will not g our feast With his white beard
to-day. Foresters iv 80
Graced Much g are we that our Queen Rome in you The Cup n 335
Graceless That were a g hospitality To chain the free quest Harold n ii 192
Gracious seeing that our g Virgin Queen hath — Queen Mary i iii 23
— and since our G Queen, let me call her our second
Virgin Mary,
But does your g Queen entreat you kinglike ?
I follow your good counsel, g uncle.
would that mine Were half as g 1
A g guard Truly ; shame on them ! they have shut the
gates !
That by your g means and intercession
and there watch All that is g in the breath of heaven
O, Madam, if you knew him As I do, ever gentle, and so g,
Such weeds make dunghills g.
He had his g moment, Altho' you'll not believe me.
A gentle, g, pure, and saintly man !
Well, well, we will be gentle with him, g — Most g.
will not your Holiness Vouchsafe a g answer to your
Queen ? „ iv ii 359
in ii 146
in iii 96
III iii 170
in iii 177
in iv 398
III V 17
in V 50
m V 186
m v200
in V 203
in V 248
ni V 273
in vi 9
in vi 79
in vi 129
in vi 244
IV i 9
IV i 41
IV i 57
IV i 176
IV i 192
IV ii 21
vi231
vi239
vi300
V ii 4
v ii 340
V ii 378
V ii 390
V ii 546
V ii 551
V 11597
vii603
V iii 64
V iii 104
v v50
v v81
will
Becket v ii 474
„ v ii 541
I iii 56
I iii 109
I iv 186
IV 66
II iv 56
ni iii 121
III vi 224
IV i 156
IV i 182
V v37
Harold n ii 584
Becket n ii 129
Gracions
938
Great
Gracious (continued) So g toward women, never yet Flung
back a woman's prayer. The Cup i ii 299
And be you G enough to let me know the boon The Falcon 765
It will be all the more g of her if she do. Foresters i i 175
Grafted And g on the hard-grain'd stock of Spain — Queen Mary iv iii 426
Grain (com) And roll the golden oceans of our g. The Cup ii 269
strows our fruits, and lays Our golden g, „ ii 287
and why ye have so few g's to peck at. Foresters i i 77
Grain (particle) My one g of good counsel which you will
not swallow.
second g of good counsel I ever proffered thee,
Grain'd See Hard-grain'd
Gramercy G for thy preachment !
Granada G, Naples, Sicily, and Milan, —
Grand a thousand times Fitter for this g function.
Grandfather My g — of him They say, that women-
my great great great g, my great great g, my great g,
my g, and my own father — ■
Grandsire Lost in desuetude, of my g's day —
His g struck my gr in a brawl At Florence, and my g
stabb'd
Grandson only g To Wulfnoth, a poor cow-herd.
cottage of yours where your g had the fever.
Grange her advowsons, g's, farms, And goodly acres
Granny G says marriages be maade i' 'eaven.
Grant I wrote it, and God g me power to burn !
g me my prayer : Give me my Philip ;
Sir Thomas, we may g the wine.
Is now content to g you full forgiveness,
God g it last. And witness to your Grace's innocence,
God g your ampler mercy at your call
God g me grace to glorify my God !
If ever, as heaven g, we clash with Spain,
By loss of Calais. G me Calais.
Have you found mercy there, G it me here :
So that you g me one slight favour.
we g when kings are dangerous The Church must play
he would g thee The crown itself.
G me one day To ponder these demands.
May God g No ill befall or him or thee
we g the Church King over this world's kings.
Becket ii ii 378
„ in iii 317
Foresters iv 397
Queen Mary v i 44
Becket, Pro. 293
Prom, of May ii 271
Foresters i i 329
Becket i iii 413
The Falcon 250
Harold iv i 69
Prom, of May in 44
— Becket i i 161
Prom, of May in 709
Queen Mary i ii 98
IV 85
II 140
, III iv 389
, III V 49
IV i 189
, IV iii 166
, IV iii 346
V ii 305
, V V 145
Becket i ii 58
„ I ii 67
„ I iii 29
„ I iii 667
„ II i 259
„ iiii241
God and his free wind g your lordship a happy home-return „ in iii 327
By granting which, if aught be mine to g. The Falcon 768
Then they would g you what they call a licence Prom, of May i 694
Granted Old Sir Thomas always g the wine. Queen Mary ii i 42
Why, good ! what then ? g] — „ in iv 78
It shall be g him, my king ; Harold in i 227
Granting let me know the boon By g which, The Falcon 767
Grape These g's are for the house of Sinnatus — The Cup i i 51
may this mouth Never suck g again. Foresters iv 394
Grape-bunches sway the long g-b of our vines, The Cup n 270
Grapple stand beside thee One who might g with thy
dagger, Becket iv ii 230
He would g with a lion like the King, Foresters i i 185
Grappling and the mitre G the crown — Becket ii i 27
Grasp (s) in his ^ a sword Of lightnings, Harold in i 136
Why, what a cold g is thine — Foresters i ii 242
Grasp (verb) should have a hand To g the world with, Harold v ii 192
Graspt have g Her livings, her advowsons, Becket i i 160
Grass balmy wind to robe our hills with g, The Cup n 266
she had thrown my chaplet on the g, The Falcon 369
Had she not thrown my chaplet on the g, „ 378
if you'd like to measure your own length upon the g. Prom, of May 1 466
Owd Steer's gotten all his g down and wants a hand, „ n 221
Grasshopper G, g, Whoop — you can hear. Becket iii i 102
Grateful All the church is g. Queen Mary i v 179
Most loyal and most g to the Queen. „ v iii 25
You should be g to my master, too. „ v iii 27
And g to the hand that shielded him, Harold n ii 586
— am g for thine honest oath, „ ii ii 755
For which she should be duly g. Becket i ii 74
I should be g — He hath not excommunicated me. „ v ii 470
f that I show'd her The weakness The Cup i i 21
iind the Goddess, being For this most g, „ ii 349
That one, then, should be g for your preference. Prom, of May u 556
Grateful (continued) one that should be g to me overseas,
a Count in Brittany — Foresters i i 270
so you would make it two I should be g. „ in 195
Gratefully 0 Dora, he signed himself ' Yours g ' —
fancy, Dora, ' ^ ' ! ' Yours g ' ! Prom, of May iii 334
Gratefulness If ever man by bonds of g — Becket i iii 435
Gratia Ave Maria, g plena, Benedicta tu in mulieribus. Queen Mary in ii 1
Grating Close to the gi on a winter morn The Falcon 441
Gratior G in pulchro corpore virtus. Becket v ii 542
Grave (adj.) look'd As grim and g as from a funeral. Queen Mary ii ii 65
We fought like great states for g cause ; Harold i i 440
Grave (s) Dug from the g that yawns for us beyond ; Queen Mary v ii 163
A low voice from the dust and from the g „ v ii 386
And wear my crown, and dance upon my g. „ v ii 602
I'll fight it on the threshold of the g. „ v v 190
With dead men upright from their g's, Harold i ii 83
And thou art upright in thy living g, „ n ii 440
Corpse-candles gliding over nameless g's — „ in i 382
I give my voice against thee from the g — „ v i 255
He commends me now From out his g Becket, Pro. 420
And I shall live to trample on thy g. „ i ii 95
spire of Holy Church may prick the g's — „ i iii 554
0 devil, can I free her from the g? „ v i 186
1 should seem to be dancing upon a g. Prom, of May i 431
And he would hear you even from the g. „ i 763
I told her I should hear her from the g. „ ii 245
To see her g ? her ghost ? „ n 352
as they call it so truly, to the g at the bottom, „ in 193
O g's in daisies drest, „ in 204
in 235
III 515
Foresters n i 47
Becket ni iii 73
I iii 40
ni49
ni243
H iii 16
III V 164
v ii 234
But now that you have been brought to us as it were
from the g,
to the g he goes to. Beneath the burthen of years,
stillness in the g By the last trumpet.
Gravedigger like the g's child I have heard of, trying to
ring the bell,
Graveness Had put off levity and put g on. Queen Mary v ii 510
Gray {See also Graay) Yon g old Gospeller, sour as
midwinter,
he loved the more His own g towers.
Ah, g old castle of Alington, green field Beside the
brimming Medway,
And scared the g old porter and his wife.
The g rogue, Gardiner, Went on his knees,
And the g dawn Of an old age that never will be mine
and dumb'd his carrion croak From the g sea for ever. Harold iv iii 67
the green field — the g church — Becket ii ii 296
He will pass to-morrow In the g dawn before the
Temple doors. The Cup i ii 295
I rise to-morrow In the g dawn, and take this holy cup „ i ii 434
And g before his time as thou art, Much. Foresters i iii 149
By arrow and g goosewing, „ in 427
Grayhound My g's fleeting like a beam of light, Harold i ii 129
Graze would not g The Prince of Spain. Queen Mary i v 453
Grazing Our horses g by us, when a troop. The Falcon 611
Greasy so g, and smell so vilely that my Lady Marian Foresters i i 82
that very word ' g ' hath a kind of unction in it, „ i i 86
Great Was she not betroth'd in her babyhood to the G
Emperor himself ? Queen Mary i i 118
How folly ? a, g party in the state Wills me to wed
her.
Doth not as 9 a party in the state Will you to wed me ?
Is no g party in the state as yet.
G, said you ? nay, you shall be g. I love you,
I have felt within me Stirrings of some g doom when
God's just hour Peals —
Let the g angel of the church come with him ;
Spain in all the g offices of state ;
were to do G things, my Lord,
and round his knee, misplaced. Our English Garter,
studded with g emeralds,
where you gave your hand To this g Catholic King.
The g unborn defender of the Faith,
Ay, sir ; Inherit the G Silence.
Saying, O Lord God, although my sins be g, For thy
g mercy have mercy I
I iv 91
iiv95
iivl02
livlOS
I iv 261
IV 377
n i 178
II ii 390
in 184
III ii 92
m ii 165
in ii 199
IV iii 136
Oreat
989
Oreat (continued) when tlioii becamest Man in the
Fl^b, was the g mystery wrought ; Oueen Marv iv iii 1 41
now I come to the ;, cause that weighs Upon mv ^
conscience
he look'd the G Harry, You but his cockboat •
May the g angels join their wings, and make
I never look'd upon so fair a likeness As your g
King in armour there,
— we will make England g.
Thou art a g voice in Northumberland !
I have builded the g church of Holy Peter :
We fought like g states for grave cause ; but Tostig—
Haul like a g strong fellow at my legs,
Let the g Devil fish for vour own soul's.
and our ^ Count-crab will make his nippers meet in thine
But there the g Assembly choose their king.
And I will make thee my g Earl of Earls
Am I Harold, Harold, son Of our g Godwin ?
Then our g Council wait to crown thee King—
thy patriot passion Siding with our g Coimcil against
Then a g Angel past along the highest Crying
the gr Angel rose And past again along the highest crying
And our g Council wait to crown thee King.
Let not our g king Believe us sullen —
Not made but bom, like the g king of all,
for mine own father Was g, and cobbled.
he fain Had made her g :
Then in the name of the g God, so be it !
Is there so y a need to tell the why ?
Of Alfred, or of Edward his g son.
Were the g trumpet blowing doomsday dawn,
There the g God of truth Fill all thine hours with peace !
A g and sound policy that :
and chosen me For this thy g archbishoprick,
0 thou G Seal of England,
Let the G Seal be sent Back to the King to-morrow.
Send the G Seal by daybreak. Both, good night '
Thy sending back the G Seal madden'd him,
Did not G Gregory bid St. Austin here Found two
archbishopricks.
Flung the G Seal of England in my face—
I, bearing this g ensign, make it clear Under what
Prince I fight.
where our bishops And our g lords will sit in judgment
on him.
King Would throne me in the g Archbishoprick :
Our Lord Becket's our g sitting-hen cock,
He hath retired to rest, and being in g jeopardy of his life,
God bless the g Archbishop !
And on a y occasion sure to wake As g' a wrath in Becket —
and he told me he would advance me to the service of
a g lady,
and gave me a g pat o' the cheek for a pretty wench,
for there were g ones who would look after me, and to
be sure I ha' seen g ones to-day —
she sits naked by a gr heap of gold in the middle of the
wood,
These are by-things In the g cause,
hidden by-ways of the world In the g day against the
wronger.
Do you see that g black cloud that hath come over the
sun
and to read the faces of men at a ^ shoM'.
'g honour,' says he, 'from the King's self to the King's
son.'
there was a g motion of laughter among us.
The spouse of the G King, thy King, hath fallen-
Is not virtue prized mainly for its rarity and g baseness
I saw the ball you lost in the fork of the g willow over
the brook,
there is g wrong done Somehow ;
Our g High-priest, will not your Holiness Vouchsafe
Mother, you told me a ^ fib : it wasn't in the willow.
Green
IV iii 237
V ii 146
» V iv 6
„ V V 29
vv 282
Harold i i 114
„ I i 179
„ I i 440
II i 11
II 132
II 175
II ii 126
n ii 629
II ii 793
III 13
III i 59
III i 133
III i 154
III i 406
IV i 6
IV 185
IV 191
IV i 203
IV i 240
IV iii 39
IV iii 52
vi227
V i 314
Becket, Pro. 451
1 191
11336
ii374
11405
I iii 9
I iii 48
I iii 456
I iii 544
I iii 549
I iii 694
I iv 125
I iv 263
II ii 452
III i 87
HI i 124
in i 125
III i 135
III ii 21
III iii 12
III iii 17
III iii 45
III iii 83
HI iii 144
HI iii 154
III iii 175
III iii 304
Becket v ii 496
„ V ii 530
„ V ii 585
V iii 29
V iii 43
„ V iii 137
„ V iii 194
IV ii 57
IV ii 93
IV ii 357
IV ii 370
Great (continued) to people heaven in the g day When
God makes up his jewels.
Close the g gate— ho, there— upon the town-
Do they not fight the G Fiend day by day ?
Here is the g Archbishop ! He lives ! he lives !
And the g deeps were broken up again
Was not the y gate shut ?
At the right hand of Power— Power and g glory-
have we still'd him ? What ! the g Archbishop '
Does he breathe ? ^ ' - j oao
himself an adorer of our g goddess, Artemis, The Cuv i i 38
And that g break of precipice that runs Thro' all the wood, „ i ii 21
A sacred cup saved from a blazing shrine Of our g Goddess. i ii 56
I love you— for your love to the g Goddess, i ii 21 8
lou have beauty,— O g beauty,— and Antonius, " r ;; oq?
At times this oracle of g Artemis Has no more power " n -i^
G Artemis ! O Camma, can it be well, " i" on
g Goddess whose storm-voice Unsockets the strong oak " n 281
She would have robb'd me then of a ^ pleasure. The Falcon 65
but this day has brought A g occasion. a^
and profess to be g in green things and in garden-stuff " 551
xx"u .u^^T^^^^P^o^^^eg^it-lemangoutinmyotoe. " 657
\V hen the ^Democracy Makes a new world- From, of May i 670
1 was brooding Upon a jrunhappiness when you spoke. 11 38S
for the sake of the ^ blessed Mother in heaven, . Foresters I'i^fi
1 can shoot almost as closely with the bow as the a Earl
himself. . n-in
me who worship Robin the g Earl of Huntingdon ? " i\ ^\
Now your g man, your Robin, all England's Robin, " t i 235
but our g man, our Robin, against it. i i 241
how often m old histories have the ^ men striven a<'ainst
the stream, ° . „ .„
must the g man strive against it again to save his .. 1 4rf
country,
my gg g grandfather, my g g grandfather, my g grand- "
t3,tQ6rj . qoq
And the g breaker beats upon the beach ! Never— " /;; S2S
Ii 1 Nature, high and low, and g and small Foisets
herself, ^ .. „„
In that g heat to wed her to the Sheriff " ,*■ tfi
You dared to dream That our g Earl, " " \ '^
we must at times have wrought Some g injustice, " m i ^fi
G woodland king, I know not quarterstaff. " jy 21^
^®*S h. V"^ "Vf ''y "" w* ^ ^u^^u^^ ^" «^- Q^"^ Mary iv iii 151
if he have the g right, Hath been the crueUer. ^ ,v iii ^89
A g King Than thou art. Love, who cares not for "
the word, p 7. , • , , .
My lord, wiU you be g than the Saints, Jieclcetni 114
so to meditate Upon my g nearness to the birthday Of
the after-life, v t • aa
Greatest But for the g sin that can be sinn'd. Queen Maly7v"i ut
It gilds the gf wronger of her peace, v 41^
Great-hearted Camma the stately, Camma the g-h, "The Cuv i iii 72
Greatness That so foreshortens ^, " ' Queen Mori ..r^ J
Unmoving in the g of the flame, ^'''''' iv iii fiS
Greed All ^, no faith, no courage ! " , " flf
Greek (adj.) like the G king when his daughter was "
sacrificed, R^^i-^/ ttt ••• in^
No Roman name? Synorix. A (7, my lord; TheCuvil^t
Greek (s) That we Galatians are both G and Gaul. ^ne^up 11 201
some old G Say death was the chief good ? " „ fu
Green (adj.) (See also Life-green) Ah, gray old castle "
Thlf fi^ "' ^ ^''l*^ ^*'!j!^® ^^^ brimming Medway, Queen Mary 11 i 243
These fields are only g, they make me gape. m v 7
The g tree ! Then a great Angel past along the "
highest r/ 7j • -loo
The rest you see is colour'd g~ SeJklt plo }??
-the g field-the gray church^ ^""''^' \:\\ ^g
and profess to be great in g things and in garden-stuff. The Falcon 551
when you put it m g, and your stack caught fire. Prom, of May nil
Wi' the briar sa g, an' the wilier sa graii^ ^ may 11 00
ti 1 the g earth drink Her health along with us Foresters in 350
When all the leaves are g ■ (repeat) iii 426 441
And live with us and the birds in the g wood. " tv ^p
I scent it in the y leaves of the wood. ", jy q^
Green
940
Guess'd
Green (s) Bagenhall, I see The Tudor g and white. Queen Mary iii i 180
The colours of our Queen are g and white, „ in v 5
father's eye was so tender it would have called a
goose off the g, Becket iii iii 103
Greenwich I will go to G, So you will have me Queen Mary iii vi 221
Greenwood Beneath the g tree, (repeat) Foresters n i 12, 24
'Grees (agree) thaw me and 'im we niver 'g about the
tithe ; Prom, of May i 444
Greet Wessex dragon flies beyond the Humber, No voice
to g it. Harold iv i 5
Will 9 us as our babes in Paradise. Becket v ii 225
And music there to g my lord the king. The Cup ii 191
Greeting Makes me his mouth of holy g. Queen Mary iii ii 80
And scarce a ^ all the day for me — „ in vi 118
Full thanks for your fair g of my bride ! Harold iv iii 46
G and health from Synorix ! (repeat) The Cup ii 40, 130
Gregory (Pope) no croucher to the Gregories That tread
the kings Becket, Pro. 212
G bid St. Austin here Found two archbishopricks, „ i iii 48
Not to a G of my throning ! No. „ v i 33
Gresham (Sir Thomas) See Thomas Gresham
Grew thus baptized in blood G ever high and higher, Harold iii i 148
like a barren shore That g salt weeds, The Cup ii 232
mountain flowers g thickly round about. The Falcon 355
and when the children g too old for me, Prom, of May in 386
Grex Pastor fugatur G trucidatur — Harold v i 514
Grey (Lady Jane) See Jane
Grief Thou stirrest up a ^ thou caast not fathom. Queen Mary m iv 298
mine own, a j To show the scar for ever — ■ Becket i i 177
0 g for the promise of May, (repeat) Prom, of May i 59, 60, 750, 752
We have been in such g these five years, Prom, of May ii 66
how should I, with this g still at my heart, „ ii 91
One that has been much wrong'd, whose g's are mine, „ in 577
Whate'er thy g's, in sleep they fade away. Foresters i iii 45
Grieve Death would not g him more. Queen Mary iv i 25
1 bring your Majesty such grievous news I j to
bring it „ v ii 241
Igl cannot ; but, indeed — Prom, of May i 621
Igl am the Raven who croaks it. Foresters m 447
I 9 to say it was thy father's son. „ iv 810
Grieved I am vastly g to leave your Majesty. Queen Mary in vi 255
I am g to know as much. " Becket, Pro. 4
I am g, my daughter. „ v ii 82
The Sheriff — I am g it was the Sheriff ; Foresters n i 449
Grievous And first I say it is a j ceise, Queen Mary iv iii 167
I bring your Majesty such g news I grieve to
bring it. „ v ii 240
in their mood May work them g harm at times, The Falcon 821
Griffyth (King of Wales) G I hated : why not hate the foe
Of England ? G when I saw him flee. Chased deer-
like up his mountains, all the blood That should have
only pulsed for G, Harold i ii 145
Since G s head was sent To Edward, „ iv i 221
With a love Passing thy love for 6^ ? „ v i 357
Grim (adj.) look'd As g and grave as from a funeral. Queen Mary n ii 65
how g and ghastly looks her Grace, „ v ii 389
Our cancell'd warrior-gods, our g Walhalla, Harold in ii 73
Grim (a monk) Thou art but yesterday from Cambridge, G ; Becket v ii 55
Grimly-glaring Yon g-g, treble-brandish'd scourge Of
England ! Harold i i 3
Grimness There lodged a gleaming g in his eyes, „ n ii 224
Grip The black fiend g her ? Foresters in 380
Griping and g mine, Whisper'd me. Queen Mary i ii 34
Grisly Spite of this g star ye three miLst gall Poor Tostig. Harold i i 418
Groan (S) cries, and clashes, and the g's of men ; „ in i 375
Misheard their snores for g's. „ v i 213
Groan (verb) They g amen ; they swarm into the fire Queen Mary v ii 110
Groan'd crept Up even to the tonsure, and he g, Becket i iii 327
Groaning See A-gro&nin'
Groining The g hid the heaveas ; Foresters n i 62'
Groom (a servant) clowns and g's May read it ! Queen Mary in iv 36
the g. Gardener, and huntsman, in the parson's
place, „ IV iii 372
Groom (bridegroom) (See also Bridegroom) there is
one Death stands behind the G, „ Y ii 166
Groove Moved in the iron g's of Destiny ?
Gross invade their hive Too g to be thrust out,
Who so bolster'd up The g King's headship of
the Church,
your Priests G, worldly, simoniacal, unlearn'd !
Grossness Delight to wallow in the g of it,
Ground We but seek Some settled g for peace
as the heathen giant Had but to touch the g,
bit his shield, and dash'd it on the g,
tho' the fire should run along the g,
Not while the swallow skims along the g,
Group Many such g's.
Grove Oh look, — yon g upon the mountain.
Grovel He g's to the Church when he's black-blooded.
Prom, of May n 267
Queen Mary iii iii 55
in iv 246
Harold i i 162
Becket ii ii 343
Queen Mary i v 315
„ in ii 44
Harold v i 406
Prom, of May i 704
Foresters i ii 314
Queen Mary n ii 93
The Cup I ii 394
Becket iv ii 436
Queen Mary n iv 105
ni V 89
Harold i i 68
„ ui i 12
Becket, Pro. 409
Pro. 414
II i 217
Prom, of May i 283
n 289
Foresters II i 698
The Cup II 523
Grow 1 shall g into it — I shall be the Tower,
Daisies g again. Kingcups blow again.
Perhaps our vines will g the better for it.
If e'er the Norman g too hard for thee,
old men must die, or the world would g mouldy,
If I sit, I g fat.
How the boy g's !
— her main law Whereby she g's in beauty —
So the child g to manhood :
What rightful cause could g to such a heat
Growing G dark too — but light enough to row.
I have heard that ' your Lordship,' and ' your
Ladyship,' and ' your Grace ' are all 9 old-
fashioned ! Prom, of May in 318
He hath been hurt, was g whole again, Foresters iv 451
Grown Why, she's g bloodier ! Queen Mary in i 416
How doubly aged this Queen of ours hath g „ v i 228
all the faiths Of this g world of ours, Harold in ii 65
were he living And g to man and Sinnatus will'd it, The Cup i ii 151
Growth did not wholly clear The deadly g's of earth, Becket n ii 203
Grudge tho' I g the pretty jewel, that I Have worn. Prom, of May i 473
Grunting These beastly swine make such a g here. Queen Mary i iii 12
Guard (s) I trust the Queen comes hither with
her g's. „ 11 ii 2
I must set The g at Ludgate. „ 11 ii 409
I saw Lord William Howard By torchlight, and
liis g; „ II iii 30
At the park gate he hovers with our g's. „ 11 iv 16
These Kentish ploughmen cannot break the g's. „ n iv 18
broken thro' the g's And gone to Ludgate. „ n iv 20
The g's are all driven in, skulk into corners „ n iv 54
A gracious g Truly ; shame on them ! „ n iv 57
And tear you piecemeal : so you have a g. „ iv ii 37
There are Hot Gospellers even among our g's — „ v v 103
When being forced aloof from all my g, Harold iv iii 16
fought men Like Harold and his brethren, and his g
Of English. v ii 180
I have my g about me. The Cup i iii 14
Guard (verb) men-at-arms G my poor dreams for
England. Queen Mary i v 154
To g and keep you whole and safe „ 11 ii 246
The lion needs but roar to g his yomig ; „ in v 123
not the living rock Which g's the land. Harold 1 ii 121
voice of any people is the sword That g's them, „ n ii 136
to g the land for which He did forswear himself — „ v ii 161
To g this bird of passage to her cage ; Becket i i 329
my men will g you to the gates. „ i i -402
G from the stroke that dooms thee after death „ iv ii 270
high Heaven g thee from his wantonness. Foresters i ii 121
And there be men-at-arms to g her. „ i ii 158
Guarded The men that g England to the South Harold iv iii 209
Guardsman Our g hath but toil'd his hand and foot, „ v i 200
Our guardsmen have slept well, since we came in ? „ v i 207
Guernsey in G, I watch'd a woman burn ; Qu^en Mary v iv 16
Guess G what they be. Edith. He cannot g who
knows. Harold 1 ii 135
But on conditions. Canst thou g at them ? „ 11 ii 343
might chance — perchance — To g their meaning. „ iv i 139
How should you g What manner of beast it is ? The Cup i ii 370
if but to g what flowers Had made it ; The Falcon 429
Guess'd You are more than g at as a heretic, Queen Mary in iv 93
Guest
941
fiail
Harold n ii 24
II ii 26
„ n ii 193
„ n ii 298
„ 11 ii 302
„ IV ii 37
„ IV iii 175
Becket ii i 92
„ II i 135
The Cup I ii 47
„ I ii 108
„ I ii 327
Foresters i ii 77
IV 993
Becket iv ii 105
Prom, of May ill 232
My lord, he is thy g.
by the splendour of God, no g of mine.
To chain the free g to the banquet-board ;
Hath massacred the Thane that was liis g,
lU news for g's, ha, Malet !
Hast murder'd thine own g, the son of Orm,
what late g, As haggard as a fast of forty days,
That if they keep him longer as their g,
seem at most Sweet g's, or foreign cousins.
Who is our g ? Sinnatus. Strato he calls himself,
a random g Who join'd me in the hunt.
They shall not hann My g within my house.
My g's and friends, Sir Richard,
Are all our g's here ?
Guide (s) and God will be our g.
Poor blind Father's little g, Milly,
give us g's To lead us thro' the windings of the wood. Foresters ii i 633
Guide (verb) stay Yet for awhile, to shape and g the event. Queen Mary v i 303
When I should g the Church in peace at home, „ v ii 67
Two young lovers in winter weather, None to g them, Harold iii ii 4
' Love, I will g thee.' „ m ii 16
How should this old lamester g us? Foresters ii i 370
myself Would g you thro' the forest to the sea. „ ii i 638
Guild She will address your g's and companies. Queen Mary ii ii 15
and these our companies And g's of London, „ ii ii 129
I, Lord Mayor Of London, and our g's and companies. „ ii ii 141
Three voices from our g's and companies ! „ ii ii 255
With all your trades, and g's, and companies. „ ii ii 297
: Guildford Dudley Spared you the Duke of Suffolk, G D, „ i v 489
Till G D and the Duke of Suffolk, „ ii iv 137
Guilt To absolve thee from thy g of heresy. „ iii ii 53
Guiltier for he Who vows a vow to strangle his own
mother Is g keeping this, Harold iii i 231
Guiltless My Courts of Love would have held thee g of love — Becket, Pro. 499
Guilty Lest thou be sideways g of the violence. Harold i i 458
'Tis not the King who is g of mine exile. But Rome, Becket ii ii 414
Not g of ourselves — thy doom and mine — The Cup ii 490
making us feel g Of her own faults. Prom, of May u 269
in G Are scarce two hundred men, Queen Mary v i 4
G is not taken yet ? (repeat) „ v ii 276
Calais gone — G gone, too — and Philip gone ! „ v v 22
'Gulf (s) you would fling your Uves into the g. „ iii i 459
in the g Of never-dawning darkness ? Prom, of May i 541
Gulf (verb) let earth rive, g in These cursed Normans — Harold ii ii 782
And g and flatten in her closing chasm The Cup ii 300
Queen Alary iii iv 377
II i 221
II iii 30
V ii 275
I iii 81
Harold i i 302
ii338
Gulpt 1 have g it down
Gun to take the g's From out the vessels
four g's gaped at me, Black, silent mouths :
that carries sail and g Steer towards Calais.
3-ui^oyle fatter game for you Than this old gaping g :
jrurfii (Earl of East Anglia) So says old G, not I :
as well with mine earldom, Leqfwin's and G's.
Even old G would fight.
much ado To hold mine own against old G. Old G,
Be thou not stupid-honest, brother G !
Harold, G, where am I ?
Sign it, my good son Harold, G, and Leofwin,
The voice of G I Good even, my good brother !
Good even, G.
Edwin, my friend — Thou lingerest. — G, —
G, Leofwin, Morcar, Edwin !
Thanks, G ! The simple, silent, selfless man
G, when I past by Waltham,
Noble G ! Best son of Godwin !
G, Leofwin, go once more about the hill —
our good G hath smitten him to the death.
G hath leapt upon him And slain him :
dashes it on G, and G, Our noble G, is down !
— brave G, one gash from brow to knee !
iush midriff-shaken even to tears, as springs g out
after earthquakes —
lUSt mere with sudden wreckf ul g's From a side-gorge.
Blown everyway with every g and wreck On any
rock ; Prom, of May iii 536
latter Your houses fired — your g's bubbling blood — Queen Mary ii ii 280
1 1436
1 1438
III i 123
III i 193
III i 199
III ii 115
III ii 119
IV i 258
IV iii 220
vi80
vi96
vi 134
vi 182
vi502
vi632
vi640
vii70
Becket in iii 163
Harold in i 51
Gutter {continued) if the fetid g had a voice And cried
I was not clean, Qv^en Mary v ii 322
I raised him from the puddle of the g, Becket i iii 437
Guy Run thou to Count G ; he is hard at hand. Harold ii i 55
G, Count of Ponthieu ? „ n i 81
where our friend G Had wrung his ransom from him „ ii ii 37
Translating his captivity from G To mine own hearth
at Bayeux, „ ii ii 42
Before he fell into the snare of G' ; „ v ii 131
Gwo (go) says the Bisliop, says he, ' we'll g to dinner ; ' Queen Mary iv iii 513
Queen Mary g'es on a-bu'min' and a-bumin', „ iv iii 523
H See here — an interwoven // and E ! Harold i ii 57
Haacre (acre) feller couldn't find a Mister in his mouth
fur me, as farms five hoonderd h. Prom, of May i 304
Haafe (half) and h th' parish '11 be theer, „ 1 10
Ay, h an hour ago. She be in theer now. „ 1 14
fur him as be handy wi' a book bean't but h a hand
at a pitchfork. „ i 188
What feller wur it as 'a' been a-talkin' fur h an hour
wi' my Dora ? „ n 576
niver 'a been talkin' h an hour wi' the divil 'at killed
her oan sister, „ n 603
* 'at I ha' nobbut lamed mysen h on it. „ in 4
for 1 warrants that ye goas By ^ a scoor o' naames — „ in 729
Haale (hale) tha looks h anew to last to a hoonderd. „ i 354
H ! why shouldn't 1 be ^i ? „ 1 357
Why shouldn't 1 be h ? „ 1 364
But, Steer, thaw thou be h anew „ i 38t
Haate (hate) and I h's the very sight on him. „ 1 154
Noii, but I h's 'im. „ 1 217
An' I h's boooks an' all, fur they puts foalk off the
owd waiiys. „ 1 221
Yeas ; but I h's 'im. „ 1 312
fur I h's 'im afoor I knaws what 'e be. „ n 584
Haay (hay) And you an' your Sally was forkin' the h, „ n i82
When me an' my Sally was forkin' the h, „ ii 193
Haaycock (haycock) thou and me a-bussin' o' one
another, t'other side o' the h, „ ii 232
Haayfield (hayfleld) He coom'd up to me yisterdaiiy
i' the h, „ 11 151
he wur rude to me i' tha h, „ ii 219
Habit to cast All threadbare household h. Foresters i iii 112
Hack Into one sword to h at Spain and me. Queen Mary v i 138
I'll h my way to the sea. Harold ii ii 312
Must I h her arms off ! How shall I part them ? „ v ii 146
before you can eat it you must h it with a hatchet. Foresters u i 284
as you would h at Robin Hood if you could hght
upon him. „ ii i 286
Hack'd Crush'd, h at, trampled underfoot. The Falcon 640
Hacking I remember. Scarlet h down A hollow ash. Foresters ii ii 95
Hades tliat Lucullus or Apicius might have sniffed it in
their H of heathenism, Becket in iii 118
Hag Except this old h have been bribed to he. Robin.
We old h's should be bribed to speak truth, Foresters ii i 234
Old h,, how should thy one tooth drill thro' this ? „ ii i 275
And, old h tho' I be, I can spell the hand. „ ii i 350
Haggard guest. As fe as a fast of forty days, Harold iv iii 176
that world-iiated and world-hating beast, A h
Anabaptist. Queen Mary ii ii 92
ELaggardness Stare in upon me in my h; „ v v 177
Hail ' //, Daughter of God, and saver of the faith. „ in ii 81
//, Gamel, Son of Orm ! Harold i i 91
// ! Harold ! Aldwyth ! h, bridegroom and bride ! „ iv iii 1
// ! Harold, Aldwyth ! Bridegroom and bride ! „ iv iii 42
till her voice Die with the world. // — h ! „ iv iii 76
// to the hving who fought, the dead who fell !
Voices. H,h\ „ iv iii 105
H, King ! Synorix. H, Queen ■ The Cup ii 219
H, knight, and help us. Foresters iv 764
HaU'd
942
Hand
Hail'd As we past, Some h, some hiss'd us. Queen Mary n ii 61
Hair {See also 'Air) her red h all blown back, She
shrilling
as red as she In h and cheek ;
The common barber dipt your A,
No h is harm'd.
and held up by the h ?
Let me first put up your h ;
Philip ! quick ! loop up my h !
Your Philip hath gold h and golden beard ; There
must be ladies many with h Uke mine. Feria.
Some few of Gothic blood have golden h,
Heard, heard — Harold. The wind in his h ?
and a blessed h Of Peter, and all France,
Holy Father strangled him with a h Of Peter,
I ask'd A ribbon from her h to bind it with ;
a bat flew out at him In the clear noon, and hook'd
him by the h,
Hair'd See Fair-hair'd
Hair's-breadth Mine eye most true to one h-b of aim.
Hale (robust) See Haale
Hale (verb) stop the heretic's mouth ! H him
away !
H him hence !
Haled H thy shore-swallow'd, armour'd Normans
Ye h this tonsured devil into your courts ;
Half (See also Haafe) Flower, she ! H faded !
His buzzard beak and deep-incavern'd eyes H fright
me.
and the remission Of h that subsidy levied on the
people,
which every now and then Beats me h dead :
The sire begets Not h his likeness in the son.
And the h sight which makes her look so stern,
'tis not written H plain enough.
Thine is a A voice and a lean assent.
Out crept a wasp, with h the swarm behind,
one h Will flutter here, one there.
Till I myself was h ashamed for him.
myself H beast and fool as appertaining to it ;
There's h an angel wrong'd in your account ;
I say not this, as being H Norman-blooded, .
That marriage was h sin.
I see the goal and h the way to it. —
And yon huge keep that hinders h the heaven.
Better leave undone Than do by halves —
Thou art h English. Take them away !
an' I be A dog already by this token,
I'll go back again. I hain't h done yet.
or foreign cousins, not h speaking The language of the
land.
Not h her hand — no hand to mate with her,
But the King hath bought h the College of Redhats.
Trodden one h dead ; one h, but half-alive.
He loses h the meed of martyrdom Who will be martyr
when he might escape.
Hugh, I know well thou hast but h a heart
They are thronging in to vespers — /* the town.
One h besotted in religious rites.
close not yet the door upon a night That looks h day.
If I be not back in h an hour. Come after me.
How many of you are there ? Publius. Some h a
score.
The camp is A a league without the city ;
Beside this temple h a year ago ?
H a breakfast for a rat !
H a tit and a hern's bill.
Have we not h a score of silver spoons ? Filippo.
H o' one, my lord ! Count. How h of one ?
// an hour late ! why are you loitering here ?
I am h afraid to pass.
H a score of them, ajl directed to me —
could it look But h as lovely,
they have trodden it for A a thousand years,
and he hath seized On h the royal castles.
II ii 70
II ii 76
IV ii 131
vil61
vii22
V ii 232
V ii 535
„ V iii 56
Harold in i 371
„ III ii 148
V ii 46
The Falcon 359
Foresters ii ii 98
IV 694
Queen Mary iv iii 283
Harold n i 108
„ II ii 57
Becket i iii 387
Queen Alary i iv 61
I iv 268
I V 115
I V 525
„ II i 55
II ii 322
„ II iii 66
III .1311
„ III iii 49
„ III vi 196
„ IV ii 171
„ IV iii 415
„ V iii 1
Harold I i 169
I ii 53
„ I ii 196
„ II ii 228
„ II ii 496
„ V ii 135
Becket i iv 218
„ I iv 259
„ II i 135
„ II i 189
„ II ii 374
v i 63
„ v ii 278
„ v iii 129
„ V iii 139
The Cup 1 i 74
„ I ii 389
„ I ii 438
„ I iii 13
I iii 89
II 393
The Falcon 123
131
405
Prom, of May ii 324
II 328
II 721
III 491
Foresters i i 333
I iii 83
Half (continued) I have paid him h. That other thousand — Foresters ii i 465
I trust H truths, good friar : „ iv 950
Some hunter in day-dreams or h asleep. „ iv 1088
Halfabitical (alphabetical) // ! Taiike one a' the
young 'uns fust. Prom, of May iii 31
Half-a&aid Still I am h-a to meet her now. „ 1 488
Half-Alfgar thence a king may rise Half-Godwin
and h-A, Harold iv i 144
Half-alive one half, but h-a, Cries to the King. Becket v i 64
Half-bom I must — I will ! — Crush it h-b ! Harold i i 359
Half-dozen for I've been on my knees every day for these
h-d years The Falcon 185
Half-drown'd my faith would seem Dead or h-d. Queen Mary iv ii 98
Half-Godwin thence a king may rise H-G and half-
Alfgar, Harold iv i 144
Half-hanged he hath h-h himself in the rope of the
Church, Becket ni iii 75
Half-rag h-r, half-sore — beggars, poor rogues „ i iv 81
Half-ruin'd The house h-r ere the lease be out ; Qioeen Mary v ii 66
Half-shamed 1 seem h-a at times to be so tall. „ v ii 423
Half-sore half-rag, h-s — beggars, poor rogues Becket i iv 82
HaU-Spanish Hard-natured Queen, h-S in herself, Queen Mary iv iii 424
Half-waked world as yet, my friend. Is not h-w ; „ n i 228
Half-way I am h-w down the slope — will no man
stay me ? Becket u ii 148
Those sweet tree-Cupids h-w up in heaven, Foresters in 35
Half-witted H-w and a witch to boot ! „ ii i 375
But sickly, sUght, h-w and a child, Harold ii ii 571
Halidome By my A I felt him at my leg still. Foresters iv 627
Hall (See also Dining-hall) Far Uefer had I in my
country h Queen Mary in i 43
Is this a place To wail in, Madam, what ! a pubUc h. „ v i 213
foes in Edward's h To league against thy weal. Harold i ii 32
And Tostig in his own h on suspicion „ ii ii 295
At banquet in this h, and hearing me — „ iv iii 93
I held it with him in his English h's, „ v ii 128
The veriest Galahad of old Arthur's h. Becket, Pro. 129
In mine own h, and sucking thro' fools' ears „ i iii 360
trumpets in the h's. Sobs, laughter, cries : „ v ii 367
Philip Edgar of Toft H in Somerset. Prom, of May u 438
One Philip Edgar of Toft H in Somerset Is lately dead. „ ii 445
I have been telUng her of the death of one PhiUp
Edgar of Toft H, Somerset. „ ii 706
' O' the 17th, Philip Edgar, o' Toft H, Soomerset.' „ ii 712
last time When I shall hold my birthday in this h : Foresters i ii 90
sat Among my thralls in my baronial h „ ii i 61
Hall (all) ye'll think more on 'is little finger than h my
hand at the haltar. Prom, of May 1 112
Hall-door Shut the h-d's. Becket v ii 532
Hallus (always) Foalks doesn't h knaw thessens ; Prom, of May i 28
h a-fobbing ma off, tho' ye knaws I love ye. „ 1 107
thaw 'e knaws I was h agean heving schoolmaster
i' the parish ! „ i 18G
h hup at sunrise, and I'd drive the plow straiiit as a line „ i 368
H about the premises ! „ i 134
but I h gi'ed soom on 'em to Miss Eva at tliis time o'
year. „ ii 15
But h ud stop at the Vine-an'-the-Hop, „ ii 311
and I wur h scaared by a big word ; „ in 33
Ye sees the holler laane be h sa dark i' the artemoon, „ in 93
Halt That business which we have in Nottingham
Little John. H ! Foresters in 231
Church and Law, h and pay toll ! „ iv 429
Haltar (altar) ye'll think more on 'is little finger than
hall my hand at the h. Prom, of May 1 113
Haman will hang as high As H. Foresters iv 752
Hammer (s) Anvil on h bang — Harold iv iii 161
H on anvil, h on anvil. „ iv iii 162
set the Church This day between tlie h and the
anvil — ■ Becket i iii 585
Hampton Comi; In H C My window look'd upon
the corridor ; Queen Mary v ii 458
Hand (s) (See also Left-hand) took her h, call'd her
sweet sister, „ i i T"
h, Damp with the sweat of death, „ i iig
iig.
Hand
943
Hand
9bDld (s) (continued) I love you, Lay my life in
your h's. Queen Mary i iv 105
I left her with rich jewels in her h, „ i iv 242
Mary of England, joining h's with Spain, „ i v 298
a formal offer of the h Of Philip ? „ i v 349
For Philip comes, one h in mine, „ i v 515
The formal offer of Prince Philip's h, „ i v 588
counts on you And on myself as her two h's ; „ ii ii 105
And arm and strike as with one h, „ n ii 292
I feel most goodly heart and h, „ ii ii 352
His in whose h she drops ; „ ni i 112
I cannot lift my h's unto my head. „ in i 240
See there be others that can use their h's. „ mi 243
She had no desire for that, and wrung her h's, „ in i 385
with her poor blind h's feeling — ' where is it ? „ in i 407
which God's h Wrote on her conscience, „ iii i 421
where you gave your h To this great Catholic King. „ in ii 91
From stirring h or foot to wrong the realm. „ ni iii 60
The sword Is in her Grace's h to smite with. „ m iv 90
What, if a mad dog bit your h, my Lord, „ ni iv 205
Their hour is hard at h, „ in iv 426
with my h's Milking the cow ? (repeat) Queen Mary in v 87, 94, 101
Rose h in h, and whisper'd, ' come away ! Queen Mary ni v 148
" " „ IV i 20
IV i 65
By seeking justice at a stranger's h
To reach the h of mercy to my friend.
By mine own self — by mine own h ! 0 thin-
skinn'd h and jutting veins,
papers by my h Sign'd since my degradation — by
this h
since my h offended, having written Against my
heart, my h shall first be burnt, So I may come
to the fire,
gather'd with his h's the starting flame, And wash'd
his h's and all his face therein,
Gardiner wur struck down like by the h o' God
I could see that many silent h's Came from the crowd
Then Cranmer lifted his left h to heaven,
' This hath offended — this unworthy h ! '
they clapt their h's Upon their swords when ask'd ;
The h's that write them should be burnt clean off
And, like a thief, push'd in his royal h ;
How her h bums ! (repeat)
your h Will be much coveted ! What a delicate
one !
King in armour there, his h Upon his helmet.
there is the right h still Beckons me hence.
To sleek and supple himself to the king's h.
Our Tostig loves the h and not the man.
to turn and bite the h Would help thee
Join h's, let brethren dwell in vmity ;
I have but bark'd my h's.
Rim thou to Count Guy ; he is hard at h.
let fly the bird within the h,
Thou hast but seen how Norman h's can strike,
have thy conscience White as a maiden's h.
He tore their eyes out, sUced their h's away,
while thy h's Are palsied here,
God and the sea have given thee to our h's — •
And grateful to the h that shielded him.
Lay thou thy h upon this golden pall !
but take back thy ring. It bums my h — ■
that reach'd a h Down to the field beneath it,
Somewhere hard at h. Call and she comes.
join our h's before the hosts. That all may see.
these poor h's but sew. Spin, broider —
I saw the h of Tostig cover it.
Cannot h's which had the strength To shove
And be thy h as winter on the field.
Our guardsman hath but toil'd his h and foot, I h,
foot,
Fain had I kept thine earldom in thy h's
I have had it fashion'd, see, to melt my h.
Stigand, With h's too Ump to brandish iron —
wicked sister clapt her h's and laugh'd ;
we should have a fe To grasp the world with,
IV ii 203
rv iii 243
IV iii 247
rv iii 336
„ IV iii 516
IV iii 582
IV iii 608
„ IV iii 614
V i 173
V ii 190
V ii 467
„ vii552, 616
V iii 43
V V 30
V V 137
Harold i i 150
iil56
1 1382
1 1397
II i 5
II i 55
nii66
n ii 171
n ii 284
n ii 389
n ii 454
n ii 549
n ii 586
n ii 699
in ii 186
IV i 44
IV i 185
IV i 241
IV iii 9
IV iii 81
IV iii 136
vil32
vi201
vi276
vi423
vi449
vii48
V ii 191
Hand (s) (continued) be facile to my h's. Now is my
time.
Thou hast but to hold out thy h.
He sued my h. I shook at him.
May the h that next Inherits thee be but as true
Hath often laid a cold h on my heats.
Church must play into tlie h's of kings ;
Shall h's that do create the Lord be bound
lay My crozier in the Holy Father's h's.
For, Uke a son, I lift my h's to thee.
He sat down there And dropt it in his h's,
woifldst deliver Canterbury To our King's h's again,
Which came into thy h's when Chancellor.
Cornwall's h or Leicester's : they write marvellously
ahke.
if thou hast not laid h's upon me !
let the h of one To whom thy voice is all her music,
happy boldness of this h hath won it Love's alms.
Not half her h — no h to mate with her,
Life on the h is naked gipsy-stuff ;
to stay his h Before he flash'd the bolt.
I here deliver all this controversy Into your royal h's
primm'd her mouth and put Her h's together —
Give me thy h. My Lords of France and England,
I might deliver all things to thy h —
bosom never Heaved under the King's h
My lord, we know you proud of your fine A,
so still I reach'd my h and touch'd ;
I cannot bear a h upon my person.
At the right h of Power —
Into Thy h's, 0 Lord— into Thy h's I—
There is my h — if such a league there be.
For I have always play'd into their h's,
More than once You have refused his h.
clasp a h Red with the sacred blood of Sinnatus ?
So shook within my h, that the red wine Ran down
See here — I stretch my h out — hold it there,
and my h's are too sleepy To lift it off.
Shame on her that she took it at thy h's.
The pleasure of his eyes — boast of his h —
who could trace a, h So wild and staggering ?
having his right h Lamed in the battle.
He gave me his h :
ye'U think more on 'is little finger than hall my h
at the haltar.
fur him as be handy wi' a book bean't but haafe
a.h At SL pitchfork,
he's walking to us, and with a book in his h.
storm is hard at h will sweep away Thrones,
Come, give me your h and kiss me
Owd Steer's gotten aU his grass down and wants
a h.
From the farm Here, close at h.
what full h's, may be Waiting you in the distance ?
But give me first your h :
She gave her h, imask'd, at the farm-gate ;
should walk h in h together down this valley of
tears.
The lady gave her h to the Earl, The maid her h to
the man. (repeat)
That is no true man's h. I hate hidden faces.
A finger of that h which should be mine
and warm h's close with warm h's,
Your h's, your h's !
Your h's again.
old hag tho' I be, I can spell the h.
And capering hin h with Oberon.
feU'st into the h's Of these same Moors
What sparkles in the moonlight on thy h ?
O hold thy h ! this is our Marian,
call Kate when you will, for I am close at h.
bulrush now in this right h For sceptre,
all that live By their own h's, the labourer, the
poor priest ;
if ever A Norman damsel fell into our h's.
Becket, Pro. 219
Pro. 412
ii273
1 1357
1 1384
1 1168
I iii 94
I iii 125
I iii 264
I iii 324
I iii 581
I iii 653
I iv 51
I iv 212
nil76
nil82
u i 189
II i 193
II i 274
, II ii 137
in i 76
, in iii 226
, ni iii 270
, IV ii 189
, IV ii 261
V ii 235
V iii 20
, V iii 193
, V iii 196
Cuf I ii 103
I iii 150
n43
n83
n 202
n210
n530
The Falcon 61
222
438
444
836
The
Prom, of May 1 112
1 188
I 220
I 517
I 564
n222
n361
n510
u525
u625
in 191
Foresters i i 16, 92
I ii 245
I ii 299
I iii 20
I iii 127
I iii 164
ni351
ni498
ni 563
ni583
nii36
in 51
in 76
ml65
HI 181
Band
944
Happy
Hand (s) {continued) we have fallen into the h's Of
Robin Hood, (repeat) Foresters iii 233, 298
Give me thy h on that ? Marian. Take it. „ iv 66
Give me thy h, Much ; I love thee. At him,
Scarlet ! „ iv 309
My h is firm, Mine eye most true to one hair's-
breadth of aim. „ iv 693
Our rebel Abbot then shall join your h's, „ iv 934
Give me that h which fought for Richard there. „ iv 1029
Hand (verb) H me the casket with my father's
sonnets. Queen, Mary ii i 43
H it me, then ! I thank you. „ iv ii 44
King would act servitor and h a dish to his son ; Becket m iii 139
Might not your courtesy stoop to h it me ? „ iv ii 296
Handed See Two-handed
Handedness See Left-handedness, Under-handedness
Hand-in-hand (See also Hand) Is strength less strong
when h-i-h with grace ? Becket v ii 540
Handle In all that h's matter of the state Harold i i 412
h all womankind gently, and hold them in all
honour, Foresters i i 99
Handled They shall be h with all courteousness. „ iv 102
Handsome and he so /t— and bless your sweet face, 2'lie Falcon 197
Handy fur him as be /i wi' a book bean't but haafe a
hand at a pitclifork. Prom, of May i 187
Hang All h's on her address, And upon you, Lord
Mayor. Queen Mary ii ii 54
Gentleman ? a thief ! Go h him. „ n iii 76
H him, I say. „ n iii 80
He has gambled for his life, and lost, he h's. „ ii iii 92
may but h On the chance mention of some fool „ m v 42
After a riot We h the leaders, „ iv i 74
H's all my past, and all my life to be, „ iv iii 219
A man may h gold bracelets on a bush, Harold ii i 87
they should h Clifi-gibbeted for sea-marks ; „ ii i 96
Were there no boughs to h on. Rivers to drown in ? The Cup i ii 78
Must all Galatia h or drown herself ? „ i ii 87
I am like to h myself on the hooks. The Falcon 121
while our Robin's life H's by a thread, Foresters iv 385
You will all of you h. „ iv 580
Let us h, so thou dance meanwhile ; „ iv 581
we will h thee, prince or no prince, sherii5 or no sheriff. „ iv 583
twist it round thy neck and h thee by it. ,, iv 688
Avill h as high As Haman. „ iv 750
Haog'd (See also Half-hanged) A hundred here and
hundreds h in Kent. Queen Mary iii i 2
There were not many h for Wyatt's rising. „ v ii 8
I hope they whipt him. I would have h him. Becket, Pro. 16
ye but degraded him Where I had h him . „ i iii 392
H at mid-day, their traitor of the dawn The Cup ii 123
thaw they h ma at 'Size fur it. Prom, of May u 697
Fftilging (See also A-loIluping) h down from this The
Golden Fleece— Queen Mary iii i 80
Hapless /f doom of woman happy in betrothing ! „ v ii 364
Our h brother, Tostig — He, and the giant King of
Norway, Harold iii ii 121
0 h Harold ! Khig but for an hour ! „ v i 257
Happen See 'Appen
Happen'd ever have h thro' the want Of any or all
of them. Prom, of May iii 546
Happier it would seem this people Care more for
our brief life in their wet land, Than yours
in h Spain. Queen Mary iii vi 64
H he than I. „ v ii 520
upon thine eyelids, to shut in Ah dream. Harold i ii 127
and pray in thy behalf For h homeward winds „ ii ii 198
the living Who fought and would have died, but h
lived. If A be to live ; „ iv iii 72
Whispering ' it will be h,' and old faces Press
round as, Foresters i iii 18
1 should be h for it all the year. „ ii i 163
Thou art k than thy king. Put him in chains. „ iv 837
Happiort but after that Might not St. Andrew's bo
her h day ? Queen Mary ill ii 123
Sit down here : Tell me thiue h hour. „ vv 79
Happiest (continued) being King And happy ! h. Lady, in
my power To make you happy. The Cup n 239
Happily Ay, Madam, h. Mary. Happier he than I. Queen Mary v ii 519
Happiness Well, Madam, this new h of mine ?
we were not made One flesh in /;, no h here ;
What is the strange thing h ?
My liege, your will and h are mine.
I would that h were gold, that I
If marriage ever brought a woman h
But lack of A in a blatant wife.
Happy (See also 'Appy) Well, sir, I look for h times.
HI ii 208
v ii 1.50
V V 78
Becket m iii 43
The Cup II 223
Prom, of May ill 639
Foresters i iii 132
Queen Mary i i 99
A h morning to your Majesty. Mary. And I should
some time have a h morning ;
You are h in him there,
I am h in him there. Renard. And would be
altogether h. Madam,
Be h, I am your friend.
Seem'd as a A miracle to make gUde —
No, cousin, h—H to see you ; never yet so h
True, cousin, I am h.
Good news have I to tell you, news to make Both
of us h —
by and by Both h !
your Grace, your Grace, I feel so h :
My life is not so h, no such boon,
ever looking to the h haven Where he shall rest at night,
Hapless doom of woman h in betrothing !
gorgeous Indian shawl That Philip brought me in
our h days ! —
it was hoped Your Highness was once more in h state
I am h you approve it.
Dead or alive you cannot make him h.
I trust that God will make you h yet.
and babble all the way As if itself were h.
Ah, those days Were h.
A h one — whereby we came to know Thy valour
Ay, and perchance a h one for thee.
Ay, that h day ! A birthday welcome ! h days
and many !
I have found him, I am h.
And Harold was most /*.
thou wast not h taking charge Of this wild Rosamund
Nor am I h having charge of her—
at her side. Among these h dales.
The h boldness of this hand hath won it Love's alms,
and known Nothing but him — h to know no more.
So many h hours alone together,
but God and his free wind grant your lordship a h
home-return „ in iii 327
I am not so h I could not die myself, „ iv ii 87
Fair Sir, a h day to you ! The Cup i i 188
our hearts, our prophet hopas Let in the h distance, „ iii 414
I would be //, and make all others h so n i iii 29
speak I now too mightily, being King And h !
happiest. Lady, in my power To make you h.
make me h in my marriage !
Drink and drink deep, and thou wilt make me h.
Thou hast drunk deep enough to make me h.
This all too h day, crown — queen at once.
h was the prodigal son, For he retum'd
and tell her all about it and make her h ?
made more h than I hoped Ever to be again.
And I am h ! Giovanna. And I too, Federigo.
Many h returns of the day, father.
I am sure I wish her h.
that should make you h, if you love her !
all the world is beautiful If we were h,
As h as the bees there at their honey
I have been in trouble, but I am h—1 think, quite
h now.
and make them h in the long barn,
' O h lark, that warblest high Above thy lowly nest.
He said we had been most /* together,
I doubt not I can make you h. Dora. You make
mc H already.
I V 243
„ IV 454
I V 457
„ II iii 123
III ii 29
„ III ii 86
„ III ii 113
„ III ii 188
„ III V 157
„ III V 250
IV i 130
„ IV iii 579
V ii 364
V ii 540
V ii 571
„ V iii 63
V V 71
V V 76
V V 87
V V 240
Harold n ii 201
II ii 203
V i 430
V ii 81
V ii 134
Becket i i 391
„ I J 394
„ II i 157
„ II i 182
„ III i 224
„ III iii 39
II 239
II 274
II 383
II 425
II 451
The Falcon 140
183
769
927
Prom, of May i 350
I 479
I 547
I 578
i606
i78g
I 791
III 199
III 327
mm
i
Happy
945
Harold
Happy (continued) Make her h, then, and I forgive
you. Dora. H ! Prom, of May ni 666
So h in herself and in her home — „ ni 756
As A as any of those that went before. Foresters i ii 129
— my ring — I am h — ^should be h. „ i iii 2
Sleep, h soul ! all life will sleep at last. „ i iii 48
Both be h, and adieu for ever and for evermore — „ ii ii 196
Shall Iheh? H vision, stay. „ n ii 199
C!ould live as A as the larks in heaven, „ in 82
We leave but h memories to the forest. „ iv 1070
I am most h — Art thou not mine ? — and h that
our King „ iv 1096
^ Harass'd Why am I follow'd, haunted, h, watch'd ? Harold n ii 248
' Harbour At last a h opens ; but therein Sunk
rocks — Queen Mary v v 213
Harbour (arbour) Didn't I spy 'em a-sitting i' the
woodbine h togither ? Prom, of May 1 125
Hard ("S'ee also Stone-hard) That's a h word,
legitimate ; what does it mean ? Queen Mary i i 11
My h father hated me ; „ i v 80
And that were h upon you, my Lord Chancellor. „ i v 158
And those h men brake into woman-tears, „ i v 564
the provinces Are h to rule and must be hardly ruled ; „ iii ii 201
You are h to please. „ m iv 154
Their hour is h at hand, their ' dies Irae,' „ in iv 426
H upon both. „ m v 18
This h coarse man of old hath crouch'd to me „ iv ii 169
May God help you Thro' that h hour ! „ iv ii 196
' How h it is For the rich man to enter into Heaven ; '
Let all rich men remember that h word. „ iv iii 203
and awaay betimes wi' dree h eggs for a good
pleace at the bumin' ; „ iv iii 489
and therefore God Is h upon the people. „ v i 176
strike h and deep into The prey they are rending
from her — „ v ii 267
Look'd h and sweet at me, and gave it me. „ v v 95
Tostig says true ; my son, thou art too k, Harold i i 206
The boy would fist me h, and when we fought I
conquer'd, „ i i 444
Run thou to Count Guy ; he is A at hand. „ ii i 55
would make the h earth rive To the very Devil's
horns, „ n ii 739
If e'er the Norman grow too h for thee, „ ni i 12
a war-crash, and so h, So loud, that, by St. Dunstan,
old St. Thor— „ iv iii 145
a Harsh is the news ! h is our honeymoon ! „ iv iii 229
I Take it and wear it on that h heart of yours — there. Becket, Pro. 373
On this left breast before so ^ a heart, „ Pro. 376
Nay, if I took and translated that h heart into our
Proven9al facilities, „ Pro. 380
Make it so A to save a moth from the fire ? „ i i 283
What doth h murder care For degradation ? „ i iii 393
Would God they had torn up all By the h root, „ ii ii 209
To assail our Holy Mother lest she brood Too long
o'er this h egg, „ v ii 253
it is thou Hath set me this h task, The Falcon 237
It will be h, I fear. To find one shock upon the field „ 300
She smiles at him — how h the woman is ! „ 661
My brother ! my h brother ! „ 895
The storm is h at hand will sweep away Thrones, Prom, of May i 517
I fear this Abbot is a heart of flint, H as the stones
of his abbey. Foresters i ii 270
Our cellar is h by. Take him, good Little John, and
give him wine. „ ii i 468
Art thou not h upon them, my good Robin ? „ iir 221
I should be h beset with thy fourscore. „ iv 179
[aider might be h upon thee, if met in a black lane „ in 223
[ardest The h, cruellest people in the world, Queen Mary ii i 100
[ard-grain'd And grafted on the h-g stock of Spain — „ iv iii 426
[ard-hearted Out upon all h-h maidenhood ! Foresters iv 50
'ard-natured H-n Queen, half-Spanish in herself, Queen Mary iv iii 424
hardness spare us the h of your facility ? Becket, Pro. 386
Father, I am so tender to all ^ ! „ i i 316
ardrada (King of Norway) (See also Harold) the giant
g King of Norway, Harold H — Harold in ii 123
Hardrada (King of Norway) (continued) httle help without
our Saxon carles Against H.
striking at H and his madmen I had wish'd
May all invaders perish like H !
Hard Tillery (artillery) 'Listed for a soadger. Miss, i'
the Queen's Real H T.
Hardy Too h with thy king !
Hare As find a h's form in a lion's cave.
Venison, and wild boar, h, geese,
Harebell Bluebell, h, speedwell, bluebottle.
Harem new term Brought from the sacred East, his h ?
Harfleur To-morrow we will ride with thee to H,
To-morrow will we ride with thee to H.
To-morrow will I ride with thee to H.
For when I rode with William down to H,
Hark H ! the trumpets.
H, there is battle at the palace gates,
H, how those Roman wolfdogs howl and bay him !
H ! Madam ! Eleanore. Ay,
J^! Is it they? Coming!
The murderers, h ! Let us hide !
H ! Dora, some one is coming.
Harken'd She hath h evil counsel —
Harlot She play the h ! never.
They are so much holier than their h's son
Harold iv i 36
„ IV iii 17
„ IV iii 78
Prom, of May in 109
Harold I i 198
Becket i iii 177
Foresters iv 191
Prom, of May I 97
Foresters iv 705
Harold ii ii 196
II ii 648
II ii 770
in i 83
Queen Mary i i 64
II iv 47
„ IV iii 354
Becket in ii 14
„ V iii 15
„ V iii 46
Prom, of May in 339
Queen Mary i v 54
in vi 136
Harold v ii 11
kill with knife or venom One of his slanderous h's ? Becket iv ii 411
Harm (s) and thou canst not come to h. Queen Mary i iii 68
sharper h to England and to Rome, Than Calais taken. „ v ii 29
What h ? She hath but blood enough to live, Harold i ii 160
He meant no h nor damage to the Church. Becket i iii 216
and should h come of it, it is the Pope Will be to
blame— „ i iii 220
or any h done to the people if my jest be in defence
of the Truth ? „ n ii 339
I never meant you h in any way. „ iv ii 106
May work them grievous h at times, The Falcon 821
And what A will that do you. Prom, of May in 360
Harm (verb) If they dared To h you, I would blow
this Phihp Queen Mary i iv 290
In some such form as least may h your Grace. „ i v 225
That our commission is to heal, not h ; „ m iii 185
Than you would h your loving natural brother „ iv iii 189
H him not, h him not ! have him to the fire ! „ iv iii 284
scorn'd her too much To h her. Becket iv ii 394
God's full curse Shatter you all to pieces if ye A One of
my flock ! „ v iii 135
They shall not h My guest within my house. The Cup i ii 326
It is but pastime — nay, I will not h thee. Foresters 11 i 554
Came stepping o'er him, so as not to h him — „ iv 538
Harm'd No hair is h. Queen Mary v i 161
the poor thunder Never h head. Harold i ii 233
Harming And bind him in from h of their combs. Queen Mary m iii 57
came and went before our day, Not h any : Harold 1 i 133
Harmony This burst and bass of loyal h, Queen Mary n ii 285
Harold (Earl of Wessex, afterwards King of England) (See
also Harold the Saxon) //, I will not yield thee
leave to go. Harold i i 256
Son H, I will in and pray for thee. „ i i 267
My wise head-shaking H? „ i i 361
H always hated him. „ i i 429
How H used to beat him ! „ i i 432
lest the king Should yield his ward to H's will. „ i ii 159
When H goes and Tostig, shall I play The craftier Tostig
with him? „ i ii 163
If he found me thus, H might hate me ; „ i ii 172
H Hear the king's music, all alone with him, „ i ii I93
Peace-lover is our H for the sake Of England's „ i ii 197
A sacrifice to H, a peace-ofiering, „ i ii 203
thou assured By this, that H loves but Edith ? ,, i ii 210
that I — That H loves me — yea, and presently That I and
H are betroth'd — and last — Perchance that H wrongs me ; „ i ii 222
And when doth H go? Morcar. To-morrow — „ i ii 237
H ? Earl of Wessex ! „ 11 i 82
Fly thou to William ; tell him we have H. „ n i HI
they are not like to league With H against vie. „ n ii 54
3 o
Harold
946
Hate
Harold (Earl of Wessex, afterwards King of England) (continued)
England our own Thro' H's help, Harold ii ii 79
that these may act On H when they meet. „ n ii 92
I can but love this noble, honest H. „ ii ii 95
Yea, lord ff. „ ii ii 243
Thou canst not, H ; Our Duke is all between thee „ ii ii 313
' This H is not of the royal blood, „ ii ii 354
O speak him fair, H, for thine own sake. „ ii ii 395
H, I do not counsel thee to lie. „ n ii 416
H, for my sake and for thine own ! .. n ii 607
H, if thou love thine Edith, ay. „ n ii 622
H, I am thy friend, one life with thee, „ ii ii 649
AmlH, H, son Of our great Godwin ? „ ii ii 791
Ask me for this at thy most need, son H, „ in i 15
Come, H, shake the cloud off ! „ m i 73
Let H serve for Tostig ! Queen. H served Tostig so ill,
he cannot serve for Tostig ! „ m i 159
H ? Gurth, where am I ? ,, in i 193
Sign it, my good son H, Gurth, and Leofwin, >. m i 199
No, no, but H. I love him : „ m i 241
but their Saints Have heard thee, H. „ m i 254
Spare and forbear him, H, if he comes ! „ m i 299
And let him pass unscathed ; he loves me, HI „ m j 302
on thee remains the curse, Z?, if thou embrace her : ,; iii i 316
noble H, I would thou couldst have sworn. „ m i 325
It is HI H the King ! Harold. Call me not King,
but H. „ in ii 31
H, H ! Harold. The voice of Gurth ! „ iii ii 114
can but pray For H — pray, pray, pray — „ m ii 195
but our help Is H, king of England. „ iv i 11
Hear King H ! he says true ! „ iv i 60
And Alfgar hates King H. „ iv i 125
Old man, H Hates nothing ; „ iv i 128
Aldwyth, H, Aldwyth ! „ iv i 132
Thine own meaning, H, To make all England one, „ iv i 140
H, H and Aldwyth ! „ iv i 244
Forward ! Forward ! H and Holy Cross ! ,, iv i 269
O brother, brother, O H— „ iv ii 63
Conjured the mightier H from his North „ iv ii 68
Hail ! H ! Aldwyth ! hail, bridegroom and bride ! „ iv iii 1
Hail, H, Aldwyth ! Bridegroom and bride ! „ iv iii 42
answer which King H gave To his dead namesake, „ iv iii 109
To thrust our H's throne from under him ? „ iv iii 126
Thou hast lost thine even temper, brother HI „ v i 95
A lake that dips in William As weU as H. >. v i 187
Son H, I thy King, who came before To tell thee ,, v i 234
O hapless H ! King but for an hour ! ,. v i 258
0 H ! husband ! Shall we meet again ? " ^ ! ^^
England Is but her king, and thou art H \ „ v i 376
thou art H, I am Edith ! „ v i 392
jff and Holy Cross ! (repeat) HaroM v i 439, 519, 662
1 have a power — would H ask me for it — Harold v i 451
Power now from H to command thee hence „ v i 455
God save King HI „ v i 489
So perish all the enemies ot H I ,< v i 505
H and God Almighty ! „ v i 526
Against the shifting blaze of H's axe ! ,. v i 587
Look out upon the hill — is H there ? ' „ v i 670
0 H, H — Our H — we shall never see him more. „ v ii 2
H slain ? — I cannot find his body. „ v ii 18
1 tell thee, girl, I am seeking my dead H. „ v ii 43
E? Oh no — najr, if it were — my God, „ v ii 74
And what body is this ? Edith. H, thy better ! „ v ii 88
with all his rooftree ringing ' H,' „ v ii 130
When all men coimted H would be king. And H „ v ii 132
have I fought men Like H and his brethren, „ v ii 179
Harold (King of Norway) (See also Hardrada) the giant King
of Norway, H Hardrada — „ m ii 123
as having been so bi-uised By //, king of Norway ; „ iv i 10
Harold (Mr. Philip Edgar) (See also 'Arold, Edgar,
Philip, Philip Edgar, Philip Harold, Philip
Hedgar) That fine, fat, hook-nosed uncle
of mine, old //, Prom, of May i 510
Not /? ! * Philip Edgar, Philip Edgar ! ' ,. n 240
Might I ask your name ? Harold. H. „ ii 394
Prom, of May ii 451
11675
n723
11726
II 738
III 175
III 281
III 610
HI 726
Harold (Mr. Philip Edgar) (continued) Nay — ^now — ^not
one, for I am Philip H.
Dobbins, or some other, spy Edgar in H ? Well
then, I must make her Love H first, and
then she will forgive Edgar for H's sake.
Half a score of them, all directed to me — H.
My name is H ! Good day, Dobbins !
an' whether thou calls thysen Hedgar or H,
matched with my H is like a hedge thistle by a
garden rose.
And this lover of yours — this Mr. H — is a gentleman?
your own name Of H sounds so English
Master Hedgar, H, or whativer They calls ye,
Harold the Saxon (Earl of Wessex, afterwards King of
England) (See also Harold) have loved H t S,
or Hereward the Wake. Foresters i i 228
Ha Ron H R\ H R\ (repeat) Harold v i 437, 528, 631, 650, 661, 664
Harp (s) his finger on her h (I heard him more than once) Harold iv i 204
gloom of Saul Was lighten'd by young David's h. Queen Mary v ii 359
Harp (verb) That he should h this way on Normandy ? Harold i i 270
Harried Hath h mine own cattle — God confound him ! „ iv iii 190
Harrowing See A-harrowin'
Harry (great ship) he look'd the Great H, You but his
cockboat ; Queen Mary v ii 146
Harry (Henry) Bolingbroke such a one As H B hath a
lure in it.
H o B Had holpen Richard's tottering throne to
stand, Could H have foreseen that all our nobles
Harry (Henry the Eighth) (See also Henry) Mary, the
lawful and legitimate daughter of H the Eighth !
Our sovereign Lady by King H's will ;
I am H's daughter, Tudor, and not Fear.
But then what's here ? King H with a scroll.
I am H's daughter :
then King H look'd from out a cloud,
Harry (Henry the Seventh) bom i' the tail end of old
H the Seventh,
bom true man at five in the forenoon i' the tail
of old H,
Harry (Henry the Sixth?) It's H ! Third Citizen. It's
Queen Mary.
Harsh // is the news ! hard is our honeymoon !
but my voice is h here, not in tune.
For once in France the King had been so h,
Even this brawler of h trutlis —
Hartist (artist) What's a A? I doant believe he's iver Prom.ofMayilW
Harvest (adj.) the h moon is the ripening of the harvest, Becket, Pro. 362
Harvest (s) Were scatter'd to the A . . . Harold iv iii 211
which we Inheriting reap an easier h. Becket ii ii 194
find one shock upon the field when all The h has been
carried. The Falcon 302
Harvestless H autumns, horrible agues, plague— Queen Mary v i 98
Harwich On all the road from H, night and day ; „ v ii 579
Haste (s) with what h I might To save my royal cousin. „ ii iv 77
in h put off the rags They had mock'd his misery with, „ iv iii 589
Haste (verb) That h's with full commission from the Pope „ in ii 51
Hasten harm at times, may even H their end. The Falcon 823
Hastings (Francis, second Earl of Huntingdon) Sent
Cornwallis and H to the traitor, Queen Mary n ii 31
Hastings (town in Sussex) lay them both upon the waste
sea-shore At H, Harold v ii 161
Hat See 'At
Hatch But h you some new treason in the woods. Queen Mary i v 465
Hateh'd This is the fifth conspiracy h in France ; „ v i 297
Hatchet before you can eat it you must hack it with a h, Foresters n i 285
Hate (s) (See also Heart-hate) her h Will burn till you
are burn'd. Quee7i Mary i ii 58
In hope to charm them from their h of Spain. „ in yi 82
to fuse Almost into one metal love and h, — „ ni vi 182
sow'd therein The seed of H, it blossom'd Charity. „ iv i 172
carrion-nosing mongrel vomit With h and horror. „ iv iii 45C
when she touch'd on thee. She stammer'd in her h ; Harold i ii 37
If H can kill. And Loathing wield a Saxon battle-axe — „ v i 412
his, a h Not ever to be heal'd. Becket i i 17f
We have but one bond, her h of Becket.
livlO
ni i 112
ii9
II ii 268
II iv 52
in 1260
in V 116
IV ii6
ii'43
1 134
HaroU iv iii 229
Becket, Pro. 349
V ii 140
Foresters iv 948
ll
Hate
947
Head
Hate (s) (continued) And mine a bitterer illegitimate h, A
bastard h
That sow this h between my lord and me !
I follow out my h and thy revenge.
And private h's with our defence of Heaven.
and aU her loves and h's Sink again into chaos.
Hate (verb) (See also Haate) this bald priest, and she
that h's me, Queen Mary i iv 282
My sister cowers and h's me. „ i v 83
Would I marry Prince Philip, if all England h him ?
Lord of Devon is a pretty man. I ft him.
no old news that all men h it.
and the beds I know. I h Spain.
Ajr, since you ft the telling it.
With all the rage of one who h's a truth
H me and mine :
They ft me also for my love to you, My Philip ;
Heft's Philip ; He is all Italian, and he h's the Spaniard ;
but I know it of old, he h's ihe too ;
And h's the Spaniard — fiery -choleric,
Clarence, they ft me ; even while I speak
' Your people ft you as your husband h's you.'
My people ft me and desire my death.
My husband h's me, and desires my death.
I A myself, and I desire my death.
Give me the lute. He ft'* me !
Even for that he h's me.
Edward loves him, so Ye ft him.
I am sure she h's thee, Pants for thy blood.
H not one who felt Some pity for thy hater !
H him ? I could love him More,
Griffyth I hated : why not ft the foe Of England ?
If he found me thus, Harold might A me ;
many among our Norman lords H thee for this,
Juggler and bastard — bastard — he ft's that most —
Our sister h's us for his banishment ;
And Alfgar h's King Harold.
Old man, Harold H's nothing ;
Morcar, it is all but duty in her To A me ; I have heard
she A's me.
If not, they cannot A the conqueror.
I A King Edward, for he join'd with thee
il A myself for all things that I do.
I A thee, and daspise thee, and defy thee.
I loved him as I A This liar who made me liar,
how your Grace must A him. Eleanor. H him ?
break down our castles, for the which I A him.
The Church will A thee.
He h's my will, not me.
I A a split between old friendships as I ft the dirty gap
I A him for his insolence to all.
i I ft him for I ft him is my reason. And yet I A him for
a hypocrite.
I A the man ! What filthy tools our Senate
I could A her for it But that she is distracted.
My brother A's him, scorns The noblest-natured man
I A tears. Marriage is but an old tradition. I A
Traditions, ever since my narrow father. Prom, of May i 489
It seems to me that I A men, ever since my sister
left us.
But she A's Edgar.
Scorn ! I A scorn ! A Soul with no religion —
A gallant Earl. I love him as I A John,
yet I A him for his want of chivalry.
1 A him, I A the man. I may not A the King
Beware of John ! Marian. I ft him.
I A hidden faces, (repeat)
kted (See also Woili-YiateA) My hard father A me;
My brother rather A me Queen Mary i v 81
Old Sir Thomas would have A it. „ ii i 18
So ft here ! 1 watch'd a hive of late ; „ m iii 46
because to persecute Makes a faith A, „ ni iv 116
Harold always ft him. Harold i i 429
Griffyth I A : why not hate the foe Of England? „ i ii 145
There spake Godwin, Who A all the Normans ; „ in i 252
Becket ii i 173
„ iiii272
„ IV ii 151
„ V ii 52
Foresters i ii 329
IV 139
I v616
iiil7
II i 185
III i 89
III vi 143
v 185
vi95
v ii 54
v ii60
v ii 92
V ii 214
V ii 336
V ii 345
V ii 347
V ii 351
V ii 363
V ii 380
Harold i i 429
iu38
Iii 43
I ii 141
I ii 145
I ii 172
II ii 546
II ii 773
in 178
IV i 125
IV i 129
IV i 154
IV i 215
IV ii 12
IV ii 45
IV ii 79
vi411
Becket, Pro. 434
Pro. 448
I iii 566
II ii 27
u ii 380
V i 226
V i 230
The Cup I i 155
II 178
The Falcon 257
II 79
II 672
in 531
Foresters i i 191
I ii 107
I ii 113
I ii 215
„ 1 11245,250
Hated (continued) Out, beast monk ! I ever A monks. Harold v i 76
Roger of York, you always A him, Becket V i 9
I always A boundless arrogance. „ v i 12
I held for Richard, and I h John. Foresters ii i 52
Hateful make her as A to herself and to the King, Becket, Pro. 526
Fool ! I will make thee A to thy King. „ i ii 92
Save from some A cantrip of thine own. „ v i 140
Hate-philtre such A strong h-p as may madden him — „ iv ii 458
Hater Hate not one who felt Some pity for thy A ! Harold i ii 44
Hatest Thou A him, A him. „ iii i 172
Crouch even because thou A him ; Becket iv ii 223
Hating See World-hating
Hatred the A of another to us Is no true bond
A of the doctrines Of those who rule, which A by
and by Involves the ruler
' Love of this world is A against God.'
yet what A Christian men Bear to each other,
EEaugbtiness have marked the A of their nobles ;
Haughty Madam, methinks a cold face and a ft.
They call him cold, H, ay, worse.
Why, ev'n the A prince, Northumberland,
Haul H like a great strong fellow at my legs.
Haunt There A some Papist ruffians hereabout
My men say The fairies ft this glade ; —
Haunted Why am I follow'd. A, harrass'd,
A lying devil Hath ft me —
is ft by The ghosts of the dead passions of dead men ; Prom, of May ii 274
Haven looking to the happy ft Where he shall rest Queen Mary iv iii 579
bays And ft's filling with a blissful sea. ~'
Haveringatte-Bower nightingales in H-B Sang out
Havings Your ft wasted by the scythe and spade—
Havock To make free spoil and A of your goods.
Havock'd That A all the land in Stephen's day.
Hawk (s) Sick for an idle week of A and hound
a feeder Of dogs and A's, and apes,
H, buzzard, jay, the mavis and the merle.
To fright the wild A passing overhead,
Hawk (verb) and hunt and A beyond the seas !
I wiU A and hunt In Flanders.
had past me by To hunt and A elsewhere.
Hawking (See also A-hawking) Gone A on the Nene,
when he came last year To see me A, he was well
enough :
Hawking-phrases then I taught him all our h-p.
Hawthorn filch the linen from the A,
Haxed (asked) Why if Steer han't A schoolmaster to
dinner,
Hay See Haay
Haycock See Haaycock
Hayfield (See also Haayfield) you should be in the h
looking after your men ;
You had better attend to your A.
that you did not come into the A.
You are as good as a man in the A.
Haystack and a plum-pudding as big as the round A.
Head (s) (See also 'Ead) draw back your A's and your
horns Queen Mary i i 4
Queen Mary i iv 44
„ III iv 159
IV iii 173
„ IV iii 182
II i 168
I V 197
I V 432
m i 147
Harold n i 11
Queen Mary iii v 174
Foresters u ii 101
Harold n ii 248
vi318
The Cup n 236
Harold i ii 18
Queen Mary ii ii 276
„ ' II ii 186
Becket i i 242
Harold i i 103
Becket i i 80
Foresters i iii 115
in 318
Harold i i 229
I i 259
n ii 28
Becket i iii 2
The Falcon 313
314
Foresters ni 199
Prom, of May 1 185
Prom, of May n 47
n 123
in 82
m 106
I 794
be no peace for Mary till Elizabeth lose her A.'
If Ehzabeth lose her A —
with an ass's, not a horse's A,
Stand further off, or you may lose your A. Courtenay.
I have a ft to lose for your sweet sake.
No — ^being traitor Her ft will fall :
a ft So full of grace and beauty !
When the A leapt — so common !
For all that I can carry it in my A.
If you can carry your A upon j'our shoulders.
I'll have my A set higher m the state ;
Have made strong A against ourselves and you.
I cannot lift my hands unto my ft.
He, whom the Father hath appointed H
I had held my ft up then.
What ! will she have my ft ?
lost the ft's Wherewith they plotted in their treasonous
malice,
I iii 5
I iii 88
I iii 169
I ivl29
I v60
iv63
I v477
ni88
ni89
II i 250
11 ii 146
in i 240
in iii 207
in iii 246
III iii 278
III iv 3
Head
948
Hear
Head (s) (continued) Lift h, and flourish ; Queen ^«'^ f A\^^
"bis brother's, nay, his noble mother's, H fell- „ n v 29b
I kept my h for lise of Holy Church ; ,. ^ '^ 359
Gardiner would have mj h. ^^ ^ ^u ^ t ^i,- i " m v ISl
I never lay my h upon the pillow But that I thmk, „ ni v idi
Cranmer is fe and father of these heresies, ,. ly i < o
I say they have drawn the fire On their own hs: „ rv mx
become Hideously alive again from h to heel, „ iv lu ^^
but Cranmer only shook his /i, , ,,, ^ ■ v, ' \r i TSR
and of his holy h—For Alva is true son of the true church— „ v ^ io»
I have broken off the /i. , , , , -n " v a li
More merciful to many a rebel h That should have fallen, „ v ii o
like the bloodless h Fall'n on the block, « ^ ii ^u
He drew this shaft against me to the h, .. V" o=o
Methought some traitor smote me on the h. « ^ i ^^
sent on foreign travel. Not lost his /i. " "'i-J'o
and make Down for their h's to heaven ! v " ij ^ VonR
all the sins of both The houses on mine h— Harold 1 1 zuo
the poor thunder Never harm'd h. " \ ]]
Upon the h's of those who walk'd withm— .. " " ^»^
dogs' food thrown upon thy h. " „ a fi7n
The crime be on his /i— not bounden— no. .. J^ij ^^^
Tostig, raise my ^ ! . , . , , " ttt i 1 fi3
raise his h, for thou hast laid it low ! " ttt ! 9fi2
wilt thou bring another, Edith, upon his h? „ ™/.f °^
and the second curse Descend upon thme h, » ™; ooi
Since Griffyth's h was sent To Edward, .. i^ ^ ^^x
may give that egg-bald h The tap that silences. „ J ' »^
hand and foot, I hand, foot, heart and h. ,> I J ^^^
and h's And arms are shver'd off and sphnter d " v ^fifi
As thine own bolts that fall on cnmeful A s .. ; ' ^""
And when the Gascon wine mounts to my h, necKe., rro. xx-t
That rang Within my i^ last n^ht, " . i^ 179
be we not a-supping with the /i of the family? ,. f^^X | ' f
A hundred of the wisest ;*'« from England, .. " ; i^i
asked our mother if I could keep a quiet tongue 1 my h, „ ra 1 liy
He bows, he bares his ;i, he is coming hither. „ ™ |H ^*
with the Holy Father astride of it down upon his own h. „ in 111 (o
Hugh, how proudly you exalt your h\ " I ;! Iro
And lose his fe as old St. Denis did. .. "ilffi
Save that dear h which now is Canterbury, .. ^^-'ooV
They howl for thee, to rend thee h from hmb. The Cup 1 u 321
that same h they would have play d at ball with „ h ^^o
and rears his root Beyond his h, " j, , qq
you that have not the hoi a toad, J «« ^ '^'"'\^
And softly placed the chaplet on her h. >• ^"^
Set, as you say, so lightly on her h, »
and dipt your sovereign h Thro' these low doors, . ,y , ftSQ
I think I scarce could hold my h up there. From, of Alayi 689
has promised to keep our h's above water ; .. m j. lu
—is a gentleman? Dora. That he is, from A to ^^ ^^^
Now1fshekisshim,IwiUhavehis;.. ^omie^ i ii 146
Why comest thou Uke a death's /i at my feast ? „ i " ^^"
She broke mv fe on Tuesday with a dish. .. 1 1" -^^^
A houseless h beneath the sun and stars, .. " » "|
A price is set On this poor h; " ,„ 010
or the ;i of a fool, or the heart of Prince John, „ iv ^^
he wiU, He wiU— he feels it in his ;i. " i;9?"
Then on the instant I will break thy h. .. ^l 0°^
Thou hast saved my h at the peril of thme own. „ ly ' »»
Head (verb) And h them with a lamer rhyme of mme, Queen Mary 11 1 29
Illffthe Church against the King with thee. Becket 1 111 245
if the followers Of him, who h's the movement, ,f %f Tf °.^ ]%
Headache And heal your /.. Q««e. Mar^/ v 146
what ft ? Heartache, perchance ; not h. .. J '* ^^'
to snore away his drunkenness Into the sober h,— Becket 11 a 16
I have a dizzying ft. Let me rest.
Headed <S'ee Bull-headed, Hot-headed ^^.^otttrir
Hwdiog i? the holy war against the Moslem, ^'^m'" ' ifl?
HmS To make me ft. ^''r w7t n gSi
H^OTg both of us Too ft for our office. 5ecfee< n u 290
The cataract typed the ft plunge and fall Of
heresy to the pit : Q^een Mary ni iv 1^
Head-shakiDg My wise ft-5 Harold ? Harold 11 361
Queen Mary in iii 11 J
„ miii29l
m iv 248]
ni i 39$1
„ m v 113
Becket, Pro. 23
Qu^en Mary i iv 14
„ ni iii 185j
The Falcon 92aJ
Queen Mary ni iv 274
Becket i i 178
Queen Mary 1 v 167j
„ IV i 41
„ IV ii in
Becket i iv 15
„ in iii 26
The Cup n 41, 13
From, of May ni 76T
Foresters in Slf
ni351
ni 3C
ni 372
IV 968
Queen Mary in v 260
Headship So fierce against the H of the Pope,
How should he bear the ft of the Pope ?
bolster'd up The gross King's ft of the Church,
Headsman when the ft pray'd to be forgiven
Headstone Then have my simple ft by the church,
Headstrong A strain of hard and ft in him.
Heal And ft your headache.
That our commission is to ft, not harm ;
We two together Will help to ft your son—
Heal'd Cannot be ft by stroking.
his, a hate, Not ever to be ft.
Health He wrecks his ft and wealth on courtesans,
H to your Grace ! , ^ , . .. u ^
yet it is a day to test your ft Ev'n at the best :
Here — all of you — my lord's ft.
That ft of heart, once ours,
Greeting and ft from Synorix ! (repeat)
Has lost his ft, his eyesight, even his mind.
Shall drink the ft of our new woodland Queen,
till the green earth drink Her ft along with us
Drink to the ft of our new Queen 0' the woods.
We drink the ft of thy new Queen o' the woods.
The king's good ft in ale and Malvoisie.
Healthful A right rough life and ft. -jjr ^f
Heap she sits naked by a great ft of gold in the middle of
the wood, ,j _
she sat Stone-dead upon a ft of ice-cold eggs.
Heap'd And all the ft experiences of life.
Hear (See also "E&r) Did you ft (I have a daughter m .^^
her service , , , t i 124
I ft that he too is full of aches and broken - 1 1 ■i'^*
ft what the shaveling has to say for himself.
Hush— ft ! Bourne, —and so this unhappy land,
Peace ! ft him ; let his own words damn the Papist.
Her Majesty H's you affect the Prince-
She h's you make your boast that after all
If Mary will not ft us— well— conjecture—
You speak too low, my Lord ; I cannot h you.
Nay, if by chance you ft of any such,
Your Grace will ft her reasons from herself.
I will not ft of him.
Madam, my master h's with much alarm.
Will you ft why ? Mary of Scotland,—
I see but the black night, and ft the wolf,
not to ft the nightingales. But hatch you some new treason
See that you neither ft them nor repeat 1
It breaks my heart to ft her moan at night
I ft them stirring in the Council Chamber.
I do not ft from Carew or the Duke
Doesn't your worship ft ?
Until I ft from Carew and the Duke,
from Penenden Heath in hope To ft you speak.
Your Highness h's This burst and bass of loyal harmony,
H us now make oath To raise your Highness
I ft that Gardiner, coming with the Queen,
I have ears to ft. Gardiner. Ay, rascal, if I leave thee
ears to ft. , . , 1 i. •
I ft this Legate's coming To bring us absolution
You'll ft of me again. Bagenhall. Upon the scaffold.
Ay ; but I ft she hath a dropsy, lad.
Did you ft 'em ? were you by ?
Well, they shall ft my recantation there.
Ye ft him, and albeit there may seem
Yourselves shall ft him speak. , . , . ^ ,, ,
proclaim Your true undoubted faith, that aU may ft.
H him, my good brethren. . ^, ^ <.
H what I might— another recantation Of Cranmer at
the stake. Paget. You'd not ft that.
Nay, you sicken me To ft you. , .u j.
I cum behind tha, gall, and couldn't make tha ft.
' not till I h's ez Latimer and Ridley be a-vire ;
I ft unhappy rumours— nay, I say not, I believe.
Alas ! the Council will not ft of war.
Lost in a wilderness where none can ft !
She neither sees nor h's,
Becket m ii 21
„ V ii 239
I i 154
I iii 17
I iii 19
I iii 52
iiv82
iiv87
I iv 117
I iv 125
I iv 175
iiv230
IV 173
IV 249
IV 283
IV 413
I V 464
IV 576
IV 603
IV 628
nil
II 120
nil22
nilo3
II ii 284
n ii 288
II ii 308
in 1250
mi 430
mi 474
ra ii 223
m iv 395
IV ii 199
IV iii 31
IV iii 110
rv iii 115
IV iii 227
IV iii 299
IV iii 452
IV iii 466
IV iii 508
vi34
vil64
V ii 383
vii405
Hear
949
-BxxaicoTUinued) And lore to A bad tales of Philip. Queen Mary v ii 429
Much changed, I h. Had put off levity v li ^
There's the Queen's light. I h she cannot live " v i v 11
you curse so loud, The watch will h you. " I \l cq
speak him sweetly, he will h thee. "//«r/,7// t ,• i T7
When didst thou h from thy Northumbria ? Tostig
When did I h aught but this ' When ' from thee ? *
But thou canst h the best and wisest of us.
yet h ! thine earldom, Tostig, hath been a kingdom.
I fain would h him coming ! . . .
And h my peregrine and her bells in hoaven ;
Harold H the king's music, all alone with him
Come, Malet, let us A ! '
No more ! I will not h thee — William comes.
We h he hath not long to live.
H King Harold ! he says true !
I A no more. Margot. H me again— for the last time.
H me again ! Our Saints have moved the Chiu-ch
H it thro' me.
I do not h our English war-cry.
That thou wilt h no more o' the customs.
Dost thou not h ?
till I A from the Pope I will suspend myself
Art thou deaf ? Becket. I h you. Hilary. Dost thou
h those others ? Becket. Ay !
H first thy sentence ! The King and all his lords—
Becket. Son, first h me !
Nay, but h thy judgment.
H me son. As gold Outvalues dross,
and when ye shall h it is poured out upon earth,
wind of the dawn that I A in the pine overhead ?
I will not h it.
we shall h him presently with clapt wing
Out ! I A no more.
Grasshopper, grasshopper, Whoop — you can h.
I did not A aright,
I would not h him.
I A Margery: I'll go play with her.
I holla'd to him, but he didn't A me :
I A the yelping of the hounds of hell,
when he A's a door open in the house and thinks ' the
master.'
Did you A the young King's quip ?
The King shall never A of me again.
Do you A me ? BeUeve or no, I care not.
Threats ! threats ! ye h him.
You A them, brother John ;
Can you not A them yonder like a storm.
Do you A that ? strike, strike.
Artemis, Artemis, A us, O Mother, A us, and bless us !
H thy people who praise thee !
E thy priestesses hymn thy glory !
Artemis, Artemis, A him, Ionian Artemis !
all the fleeted wealth of kings And peoples, A.
hurls the victor's column down with him That crowns it, A.
gulf and flatten in her closing chasm Domed cities, A.
Whose lava-torrents blast and blacken a province
To a cinder, A. Whose winter - cataracts find a
realm and leave it A waste of rock and ruin, A.
Artemis, Artemis, A her, Ephesian Artemis ! Camma.
Artemis, Artemis, A me, Galatian Artemis !
Why then the Goddess h's.
E that, my bird ! Art thou not jealous of her ?
h that you are saying behind his back
by yoiu- leave if you would A the rest, The writing.
E that, my lady ! (repeat)
You A, Filippo ? My good fellow, go ! „ „j,y
Master Dobson, did you h what I said ? Prom, of May 1 172
Heaven h's you, Phihp Edgar ! „ 1 760
And he would A you even from the grave. ,',' i 752
f'raps ye h's 'at I soomtimes taakes a drop too much ; ", n 107
told her I should A her from the grave. „ n 244
Tou — did you A a cry ? " jjj 552
Sweet, do you A me ? ^^' jjj gijrg
You wrong me there ! A, A me ! \\ m 775
Heard
ii281
1 1300
1 1303
lii 5
I ii 131
I ii 194
II ii 211
II ii 479
II ii 565
IV 160
V i 7
vi39
vi62
.. V i 651
Becket 1 iii 255
I iii 267
I iii 299
I iii 605
I iii 670
I iii 682
I iii 713
iiv36
nil
II i 211
II ii 48
II ii 233
III i 103
III i 235
mi 257
mi 274
mil 26
in ii 48
m iii 98
m iii 146
IV ii 102
IV ii 352
V 11465
V ii 534
V ii 624
.. V iii 161
The Cup n 1
n5
II 7
n277
II 290
II 297
„ II 301
„ n 310
„ II 388
The Falcon 5
106
529
„ 636, 652
Seta {continued) You A ! Sheriff. Yes, my lord, fear not. Foresters i ii 31
but no ! We A he IS m prison. h j 34
Did we not A the two would pass this way ? " 11 i 197
Ay do you A? There may be murder done. " n i 339
Evil fairy ! do you A ? " „ ij ^g
Up with you, all of you, out of it ! A and obey. '' n ii 184
l"ifty leagues Of v,oodland A and know my horn, m 104
will you not A one of these beggars' catches ? m 405
You A your Queen, obey! ;; i„ 454
WiU A our arrows whizzing overhead, ly 1090
Heard {See also 'Eard, Heard, Heerd) Have we not A
T K°^ ^^l ^" JE^ward's time. Queen Mary i iv 18
1 Have h, the tongue yet quiver'd with the jest i v 475
hast thou ever A Slanders against Prince Philip , i v 569
but I have A a thousand such. ^] j y 579
and your worship's name A into Maidstone market, " 11 i 63
I have A One of your Council fieer and jeer „ n ii 392
I had A that every Spaniard carries " m j 222
A She would not take a last farewell of him, " m j 366
We A that you were sick in Flanders, cousin. " in ii 33
Methinks the good land A me, ]] m ij 57
I A An angel cry ' There is more joy in Heaven,'— " iv ii 9
yet have A Of aU their wretchedness. ' iv iii 211
Our prayers are A ! '' j^ jy 255
Have I not A them mock the blessed Host " iv iii 365
And A these two, there might be sport for him. ," v ii 212
I never A him utter worse of you " y a 431
If ever I A a madman, — let's away ! !! v iv 56
I had A of him in battle over seas, " v v 33
I A from my Northumbria yesterday. Harold 1 i 331
1 A from thy Northumberland to-day. i i 350
And he spoke— I A him— "^ „ jj 353
hast thou never A His savagery at Alencon,— '' n ii 381
I have A the Normans Count upon this confusion — ," n ii 457
We have A Of thy just, mild, and equal governance ; ," n ii 689
Would he A me ! O God, that I were in some wide, n ii 776 ■
I have A a saying of thy father Godwin, m i m
but their Saints Have A thee, Harold. " m i 254
but those heavenly ears have A, ^ m i 259
H, h — Harold. The wind in his hair ? ", m i 370
that Archdeacon Hildebrand His master, A him, " m ii 146
I have A she hates me. ^' jy i 154
Ye A one witness even now. H ly j 27Q
his finger on her harp (I A him more than once) ," iv i 205
but our old Thor H his own thunder again, „ ly iii 159
H how the war-horn sang, ]' j^ jy 257
H how the shield-wall rang, ^ jy jii jgg
And all the Heavens and very God : they A — ", v i 44
who made And A thee swear — " y { 121
Nor seen, nor A ; thine, " y [ jgj
Our scouts have A the tinkle of their bells. ," y i 220
0 God, the God of truth hath A my cry. " y i 601
And I am A. '' y j gg-
hast thou A this cry of Gilbert Foliot Becket i i 36
1 A him swear revenge. j i 2gn
And A her cry ' Where is this bower of mine ? ' ,',' i ii 42
I have A him say He means no more ; ," i iii jgj
Yea, A the churl against the baron — " i m 3^5
have A say that if you boxed the Pope's ears ,',' n ii 369
have I Not A ill things of her in France ? !! m i 231
like the gravedigger's child I have A of, trying to ring the
oesl, ^^ jjj jij 7^
But I A say he had had a stroke, or you'd have A his horn „ iv i 53
I have A of such that range from love to love, ',' ly ii I19
I have A of such — yea, even among those ][ jy ii 123
Have we not A Raymond of Poitou, thine own uncle — ," iv ii 246
I A your savage cry. "^ jy ^ 329
knights, five hundred, that were there and A. Nay,
you yourself were there : you A yourself. „ v ii 407
I A in Rome, This tributary crown may fall to you. The Cup i i 95
I have A them say in Rome, j i jog
I thought I A a footstep. " j ii 1 j
you A him on the letter. |' j ij 279
I A a saying in Egypt, that ambition Is like the sea wave, " 1 iii 137
I never A of this request of thine. ,, u 354
Heard
950
Heart
Heard (continued) I have h these poisons May be walk'd ^^^ ^^^ ^^ ^^^
I h^vTfe That, thro' his late magnificence The Falcon 226
Oh, Phihp, Father ^i you last night. . Prom, of May i 5&7
I have A of you. The likeness Is very striking. „ n ^o4
I never h her mention you. " ,t 402
The painful circumstances which I ft — " " T^
I never /"i that he had a brother. , . • > "
I have /f that ' your Lordship,' and ' your Ladyship,
and ' your Grace ' are all growing old-fashioned ! „ m ^lo
I ;i a voice, ' Girl, what are you doing there ? ' „ ni ^ (o
You h him say it was one of his bad days. » i" ^d»
I have h the Steers Had land in Saxon times ; ,. ni pu <
I may be outlaw'd, I have h a rumour. Foresters i u 91
I A this Sheriff tell her he would pay » .?in^
I have h of them. Have they no leader ? >. i "} ^^^
I have ;i him swear he will be even wi' thee. ,. n J ^Tt
silent blessing of one honest man Is h in heaven— „ "i o^^
Shamed a too trustful widow whom you h In her
p • .. Ill OOD
confession ; " ^r^f-
I have /i 'em in the market at Mansfield. » "i ^;^"
We h Sir Kichard Lea was here with Robin. » iv » (o
HeSid I ha' h 'im a-gawin' on 'ud make your 'aii^
^^ God bless it !-stan' on end. Prom, of May 1 134
and I h the winder— that's the winder at the end ^ ^^^
Heardst He sddTthou A him) that I must not Haro?(£ iiii 260
SSrer confess Your faith before all h^s ; Qt^«e« Mart/ iv ii 80
Hearing Crave, in the same cause, fe of your Grace. „ 7^.^i-;qq
At banquet in this hall, and h me- ^'"''ff^^-lXffi
If /», would have spurn'd her ; ^ ^ ^ ^'f^'^"5m
the man himself. When h of that piteous death. Prom, of May u &UU
Heart (^See aZso 'Eart, Lion-heart) A bold /i yours ^ ;;; qa
"^ to beard that raging mob ! Queen Mary im 96
I meant True matters of the h. " IZim
My h, my Lord, Is no great party in the state „ i |v iw.
I have the jewel of a loyal h. " l \l ^^'
You've a bold h ; keep it so. " \^l f "7
Make all tongues praise and all h's beat for you. „ i v 11 <
take mine eyes, mine h. But do not lose me Calais. „ i v x|o
I am not Queen Of mine own h, " ^ I m^
It breaks my h to hear her moan at night .. „ n 8^
felt the faltering of his mother's h, .. ";: iiq
I scarce have h to mingle in this matter, ,. " }] |^^
They have betray'd the treason of their h s : „ " H ^0 *
come to cast herself On loyal h's and bosoms, „ " H ^^
never whine Like that poor h, Northumberland, „ " ]} ^^^
I feel most goodly h and hand, " " \v 84
And hast not h nor honour. « " J\ °
Blazed false upon her k , , ,^ . " ttt i 10Q
and hurl'd our battles Into the h of Spam ; „ ™ | ^^
Her dark dead blood is in my h with mine. „ "i ! ^n
If you have 7i to do it ! . " m ii W
to-day My h beats twenty, when I see you, cousm. „ m .n o»
Is Uke the cleaving of a 7i ; " °' ^J 040
A day may save a /i from breaking too. „ "i Ji f'*^
beget A kindness from him, for his h was rich, ,, iv 1 low
My A is no such block as Bonner's is : „ ^.\\ j <*
Pray with one breath, one h, one soul for me. „ iv 111 lu*
doubt The man's conversion and remorse of h, „ iv 111 luy
Against the truth I knew within my A, ^ . ^ , " ^I^j-oIq
since my hand offended, having written Against my h, „ iv 111 _^4y
That might live always in the sun's warm h, „ '^.i ^^
■Reginald Pole, what news hath plagued my A ? „ \ ." ^°
I am sad at fe myself. . , „ ^ ' " ^ i! 419
I used to love the Queen with all my ft— .. T, ••• iq
As far as France, and into Philip's h. .. ^ >" ^^
Women, when I am dead, Open my h, "I1 1^
Adulterous to the very h of HeU. .. !. v 224
Brave, wary, sane to the h of her— .. ZZteu
I swear I have no A To be your Queen. ,, 7.,-^
strike Their h's, and hold their babies up to it. Harotd 1 1 d&
will make his nippers meet in thine h ; " ". y'
It is the arrow of death in his own /i — " "^ l.^
where Tostig lost The good h's of his people. « i" " ^"
Heart (continued) hand and foot, I hand, foot, h and head. Harold v 1 21
violent will that wrench'd AlU's of freemen from thee. „ '^ \^'*
Here fell the truest, manUest h's of England. ,. v u 58,
Take it and wear it on that hard h of yours— Becket, rro. 61.
On this left breast before so hard a,h,
translated that hard h into our Provencal facilities.
That the h were lost in the rhyme and the matter
My h is full of tears — I have no answer.
His h so gall'd with thine ingratitude.
To lodge a fear in Thomas Becket's h
That ray poor heretic h would excommunicate
And push'd our lances into Saracen h's.
in the dark h of the wood I hear the yelping
That health of h, once ours,
scared the red rose from your face Into your h i
While this but leaves me with a broken h,
shall not I, the Queen, Tear out her h —
and send Her whole h's heat into it,
full mid-summer in those honest h's.
You should attend the office, give them h.
I know well thou hast but half a h
I thank you from my h.
Yea, — with our eyes, — our h's.
That this brave h of mine should shake me so,
I have it in my /i— to the Temple— fly —
found All good in the true h of Sinnatus,
I have no h to do it.
As in the midmost h of Paradise.
fill all h's with fatness and the lust Of plenty—
The stately widow has no h for me.
you that have the face of an angel and the h of a—
that's too positive ! You that have a score of
lovers and have not a h for any of them —
and not a h like the jewel in it —
cheek like a peach and a h hke the stone in it —
Pride of his ft — the solace of his hours —
I had no h to part with her for money.
We mounted, and we dash'd into the h of 'em.
best h that ever Beat for one woman.
No other h Of such magnificence in courtesy
a red fire woke in the h of the town,
small h have I to dance.
Keep up your h until we meet again.
I wear it next my A.
how should I, with this grief still at my ft,
0 sir, you seem to have &h\
But wherefore waste your h In looking
the man has doubtless a good h, and a true and
lasting love for me :
Come, come, keep a good h\ „ ^ ^.
1 do believe I lost my h to him the very first time
we met, ^ j •.
' Go home ; ' but I hadn't the h or face to do it.
What is it Has put you out oih'i . , , ..
It puts me in h Again to see you ; but mdeed the
state Of my poor father puts me out of h.
I think That I should break my h,
—the h, 0 God !— the poor young h Broken
broke the h That only beat for you ;
sits and eats his h for want of money to pay the
Abbot. , , ^^ ^ ...
but I keep a good h and make the most of it,
it answers, I am thine to the very h of the earth —
I fear this Abbot is a A of flint,
when I loved A maid with all my h
Sleep, mournful h. and let the past be past !
There are no h's like English h's Such h's of oak
I have shot her thro' the h. Kate. He lies, my
lord. I have shot him thro' the h.
That I had shot him thro' the h,
my h so down in my heels that if I stay, I can t run,
how to charm and waste the h's of men.
And drains the 7i and marrow from a man.
the bravest English h Since Hereward the Wake,
Elf, with spiteful h and eye,
Pro. 37«
„ Pro. 3i
„ Pro. 3e
„ Pro.
„ I iii '.
I iii ni
II i 28
II ii !
ni ii 41
„ III iii 26
IV ii 7S
,. IV ii 174
„ IV ii '
V ii 23
v ii 31i
„ V ii 59
„ V iii IS
The Cup I ii 211*
I ii 412
I iii 38
„ I iii 111
n 87
n 166
II 186
II 272
The Falcon 30
87
91
93
223
326
630
667
» ^!^
Prom, of May I 50
I 429
I 754
n82
II 91
n468
II 503
III 171
III 253
in 283
in 389
III 501
in 502
in 556
in 679
m 762
Foresters I i 4
I i 28
„ I i 337
„ I ii 268
„ I ii 297
I iii 47
ni3
n i 98
„ n i 123
ni346
ni502
n i 672
ni687
n ii 172
Heart
951
Heaven
And that would quite wwrnan him, h
Heart {continued)
and soul. Foresters in 30
And let them warm thy h to Little John. „ m 44
but I' hold thee The husband of my h, ," m 140
and thy legs, and thy h, and thy liver, ,] iv 204
or the head of a fool, or the h of Prince John, „ iv 213
so she glided up into the h 0' the bottle, „ iv 244
flung His life, h, soul into those holy wars ,. iv 407
He drove his knife into the h of the deer, „ iv 541
A woman's h is but a Uttle thing, \\ iv 656
Will chill the h's that beat for Robin Hood ! ," iv 1064
Heartache what headache ? H, perchance ; Queen Mary i iv 149
Heart-comfort II-c and a balsam to thy blood ? Becket i i 14
Hearted Sec Brave-hearted, Great-hearted, Hard-hearted, High-
hearted, Hollow-hearted, Poor-hearted
Heartedest See Human-heartedest
Hearth with mine old hound Couch'd at my h, Queen Mary ni i 46
The stranger at his h, and all his house — „ iv i 163
King Henry warms your traitors at his h. „ v i 124
Translating his captivity from Guy To mine own h
at Bayeux,
Dabble your h's with our own blood,
son of Orm, Gamel, at thine own h.
none could sit By his own h in peace ;
a son stone-blind Sat by his mother's h :
One slow, fat, white, a burthen of the h ;
I wouldn't have thy blood on my h.
Heart-hate fierce resolve and fixt h-h in men
Heart-sick Better than h-s, friar.
Heart-wife so this Rosamund, my true h-w, Not
Eleanor —
Heat (s) There must be h — there must be h enough
A bookman, flying from the h and tussle.
It is the h and narrowness of the cage
Gardiner out-Gardiners Gardiner in his h,
Harold n ii 43
„ n ii 751
„ IV ii 39
Becket i iii 342
„ V ii 106
„ V ii 212
Foresters n i 356
Queen Mary in vi 32
Foresters iv 674
Becket, Pro. 130
Queen Mary in iv 26
„ ni iv 251
ni V 207
in vi 26
men should bear their earthly h's Into yon bloodless
world,
Hath often laid a cold hand on my h's,
Besides, we came away in such a h,
do much To rake out all old dying h's.
Hell's own k So dwelt on that they rose
Henry Says many a thing in sudden h's,
and send Her whole heart's h into it,
h and fire Of hfe will bring them out,
In that greal h to wed her to the Sheriff
The bee buzz'd up in the h.
I And the bee buzz'd down from the h.
Heat (verb) this ghastly glare May h their fancies.
I secret matter which would h the King against thee.
Why should you h yourself for such as these ?
Employ us, h us, quicken us, help us.
How few Junes Will h our pulses quicker !
(Heated — we have eaten — we are h. Wine !
Seath ten thousand men on Penenden H all calhng
after
They roar for you On Penenden H,
I fifty That foUow'd me from Penenden // in hope
Of the Northumbrian helmet on the h ?
No, but a shoal of wives upon the h,
iSeath (Sir Nicholas) See Nicholas, Nicholas Heath
heathen (adj.) Ay, cousin, as the h giant Had but to
touch the ground,
The h priesthood of a A creed !
Cold, but look how the table steams, like a h altar ;
heathen (s) Why do the h rage ?
ieathendom Out of the deep, deep night of h. Queen Mary ni iii 173
ileathenism that Lucullus or Apicius might have sniffed
it in their Hades of h,
'■ leather Walk'd at night on the misty h ;
ieaved that bosom never H under the King's hand
leaven {See also 'Eaven) To him within there who
made H and Earth ?
banks rolling incense, as of old, To h.
Yea, by H, The text — Your Highness knows it,
i in his scared prayers H and earth's Maries ;
Harold v i 284
Becket i i 384
„ ni294
„ niill4
„ 11 ii 204
„ IV ii 276
„ vii255
Prom, of May 11 285
Foresters 11 i 584
IV 14
IV 20
Harold I i 310
Becket, Pro. 487
„ V ii 544
The Cuf I iii 131
Foresters iv 1062
The Cup I ii 46
Queen Alary n i 61
n i 106
II i 151
Harold v i 145
„ V i 147
Queen Mary III ii 43
Becket i iii 63
I iv 69
„ V ii 628
Becket ni iii 118
Harold in ii 5
Becket iv ii 189
Queen Mary i v 47
I V 93
I V 450
n ii 88
Heaven {continued) Ah, h ! Pole. Unwell, your
Grace ? (J
Rise to the h's in grateful praise of Him
With h for earth.
That h wept and earth blush'd.
pray H That you may see according to our sight.
To yield the remnant of his years to h,
All that is gracious in the breath of h
soul descending out of h Into a body generate.
An angel cry ' There is more joy in H,' —
By H's grace, I am more and more confirm'd.
On earth ; but saved in h By your recanting.
0 God, Father of H [ 0 Son of God,
1 have offended against h and earth
I am ashamed to lift my eyes to h,
' How hard it is For the rich man to enter into H ; '
Either to live with Christ in H with joy,
find H or else hell ready to swallow me.
If ever, as h grant, we clash with Spain,
H help that this re-action not re-act
Then Cranmer Ufted his left hand to h.
Why then to h, and God ha' mercy on him.
Have courage, your reward is H itself.
and make Down for their heads to h !
It glares in h, it flares upon the Thames,
To have the h's clear.
mean The doom of England and the wrath oi H ?
Why should not H be wroth ?
Is there no reason for the wrath oi H ? Leofwin.
Why then the wrath of H hath three tails, The
devil only one.
Stigand should know the purposes of H. Stigand.
Not I. I cannot read the face of h ;
is this pendent heU in ^ A harm to England ?
reUgious fool, Who, seeing war in h, for h's credit
In h signs ! Signs upon earth !
see Deeper into the mysteries of h Than thou.
Not stagger'd by this ominous earth and h : But h
and earth are threads
Did not H speak to men in dreams of old ?
and her bells in h ; And other bells on earth, which
yet are h's ;
thunder moulded in high h To serve the Norman
purpose,
yon huge keep that hinders half the h.
Cleave h, and send thy saints that I may say
two young wings To fly to h straight with,
swear To consecrate my virgin here to h — ■
all promises Made in our agony for help from h ?
more the love, the more acceptable The sacrifice of
both your loves to h. No sacrifice to h, no help
from h ;
there are signs in h —
H yield us more ! for better,
Yon h is wroth with thee ?
And all the H's and very God : they heard —
a sigh With these low-moaning h's.
We give our voice against thee out of h !
The sign in h — the sudden blast at sea —
Charged with the weight of h wherefrom they fall !
Ye that are now of h, and see beyond
The Norman sends his arrows up to H,
twelve stars fell ghttering out of h Into her bosom.
Why should not H have so inspired the King ?
I ask no more. H bless thee ! hence !
Lest there be battle between H and Earth,
Strong — not in mine own self, but H ;
and see it mounting to H, my God bless you,
beggars, poor rogues ( H bless 'em)
and glass The faithful face of h—
dwelt on that they rose and darken'd H.
said to the smoke, ' Go up, my son, straight to H.'
if he move at all, H stay him, is fain to diagonalise.
like Mahound's coffin hung between h and earth —
child We waited for so long — h's gift at last —
\ueen Mary in ii 84
„ in iii 165
„ III iii 201
„ ni iv 193
„ m iv 330
„ ra vi 211
„ in vi 225
IV i 35
„ IV ii 11
IV ii 21
IV ii 179
IV iii 117
„ rv iii 124
„ rv iii 127
IV iii 205
IV iii 220
IV iii 224
IV iii 346
rv iii 388
IV iii 609
„ rv iii 631
viil09
V iv 8
Harold 1 i 29
I i 38
I i 47
„ I i 53
ii59
ii65'
1 176
iil4G
iil59
1 1200
1 1194
I ii 132
n ii 33
n ii 229
n ii 785
III i 26
III i 276
in 1288
„ mi 349
„ in 1358
„ III ii 71
„ V i 39
„ V i 43
„ V i 152
„ V i 261
„ V i 378
„ vi567
„ V i 618
„ vi667
Becket i i 47
„ I i 130
„ I i 321
„ I iii 226
„ 1111537
„ I iv 38
„ I iv 83
„ nil61
„ nil 206
„ nil 319
„ nil 329
„ nil 362
„ in i 14
Heaven
952
HeU
Bechet in jii 234
niiii348
IV ii 26
IV ii 132
IV ii 238
vii26
vii36
v ii 53
V ii 496
„ V iii 17
V iii 39
V iii 98
The Cup I ii 408
I ii 415
I iii 58
The Falcon 16
447
682
(continued) All praise to H, and sweet St.
Magdalen !
Earth's falses are Wx truths.
H help you ; get you hence in haste
thy true home — the Ws — cry out for thee
I will fly with my sweet boy to h,
To bless thine enemies Becket. Ay, mine, not R's
lightnings that we think are only H's Flash sometimes
out of earth against the h's.
And private hates with our defence of H.
to people h in the great day When God makes up
his jewels.
He is not here — Not yet, thank h. 0 save him !
Shall not H be served Tho' earth's last earthquake
Seen by the Church in H, the Church on earth —
open'd out The purple zone of hill and h ;
cloudless h which we have found together
drew the light From h to brood upon her,
strike, make his feathers Glance in mid h.
0 Ws ! the very letters seem to shake With cold,
Here, or else weU in H, where all is well.
No other heart Of such magnificence in courtesy Beats —
out of h. „ 724
And so return — H help him ! — to our son. „ 861
H hears you, Philip Edgar ! Prom, of May i 760
H curse him if he come not at your call ! „ i 764
The body I— H's ! I come ! „ ii 572
For all the blessed souls in H „ m 10
to be realised all at once, or altogether, or anywhere
but inH? „ III 187
1 pray H we may not have to take to the rushes. Foresters i i 89
" ' -------- ^^ ^ . g^
I i 210
„ I ii 121
„ I ii 316
I iii 26
„ I iii 161
n i 39
n i 62
„ n 1105
„ u i 109
„ n i 173
„ II i 594
„ n i 607
„ II i 632
nil2
III 36
ni 83
ni 322
IV 666
IV 725
for the sake of the great blessed Mother in h,
come as freely as h's air and mother's milk ?
The high H guard thee from his wantonness,
while the lark flies up and touches h !
topmost tree, that shoots New buds to h,
that worship for me which H knows I ill deserve —
and the blessed Queen of H,
The groining hid the h's ;
Thou comest a very angel out of h.
Your h is vacant of your angel.
— the Sheriff, and by h, Prince John himself
Give it me, by h. Or I will force it from thee.
Thou seem'st a saintly splendour out from h,
forest lawns are all as bright As ways to h,
When h falls, I may light on such a lark !
Those sweet tree-Cupids half-way up in h,
Could live as happy as the larks in h,
silent blessing of one honest man Is heard in h —
Sweet h's, I could wish that all the land
I breathe H's air, and H looks down on me.
Heavenly I know He knew not, but those h ears have
heard,
Heavier Is it so much h than thy Chancellor's robe ?
Not h than thine armour at Thoulouse ?
Beware, Lord Legate, of a A crime Than heresy
is itself ;
Heavy Too h for me, this, off with it, Herbert !
h As thine own bolts that fall on crimeful heads
Hebrew But here's some H.
Hedgar (Edgar) What dost a knaw o' this Mr. H as
be a-lodgin' wi' ye ?
but if iver I cooms upo' Gentleman H agean,
Philip H o' Soomerset ! (repeat)
whether thou be H, or H's business man,
an' whether thou calls thysen H or Harold,
Master H, Harold, or whativer They calls ye.
Hedge matched with my Harold is like" a h thistle by
a garden rose.
Hedged-in This poor, flat, h-i field — no distance —
Hedge-pig besides H-p's, a savoury viand.
Hedge-priest He is but h-v, Sir King.
Hedge-rose like the wild h-r Of a soft winter,
Harold in i 258
Becket i i 20
I i 25
Queen Mary in iv 221
Becket i i 18
Harold v i 564
Queen Mary n i 125
Pro7n. of May i 200
n 137
n 586
n 734
n 737
in 726
Heed (See also Take heed)
maiden fame,
You h not how you soil her
in 176
n344
Foresters iv 193
IV 930
Queen Mary ni vi 14
Foresters iv 479
Heed (continued) I have had a year of prison-silence,
Robin, And h him not — Foresters rv 925
Heel (See also Under-heel) bursten at the toes, and
down at h's. Queen Mary i i 53
Her cap would brush his h's. „ in i 14
become Hideously alive again from head to h, „ iv iii 447
colt winced and whinnied and flung up her h's ; Becket, Pro. 516
less loyalty in it than the backward scrape of the
clown's h — „ in iii 144
not yield To lay your neck beneath your citissen's h. „ v i 32
my heart so down in my h's that if I stay, I can't
run. Foresters n i 347
Heerd (heard) I h summat as summun towld summun
o' owld Bishop Gardiner's end ; Queen Mary iv iii 501
Height (See also Eagle-height) from that h something was
said to me Becket n i 59
Blared from the h's of all the thrones of her kings, „ v ii 489
What breadth, h, strength — torrents of eddying bark ! Foresters in 94
Heir You, The h presumptive. Queen Mary i iv 33
— after me Is X of England ; ,, i v 286
H of this England and the Netherlands ! „ i v 418
my father was the rightful h Of England, „ n ii 170
You must proclaim Elizabeth your h. (repeat) „ v i 191, 204
in happy state To give him an h male. „ v ii 573
Mary hath acknowledged you her h. „ v iii 31
She knew me, and acknowledged me her h, „ v v 256
Pronounced his h of England. Harold i ii 195
I am A Of England by the promise of her king. „ n ii 124
Why then the h of England, who is he ? „ n ii 567
hath King Edward not pronoimced his h? „ n ii 576
leave the royalty of my crown Unlessen'd to
mine h's. Becket n i 108
citizen's h hath conquer'd me For the moment. „ n ii 60
left his h, Born, happily, with some sense of art. Prom, of May i 496
And cursed me, as the last h of my race : Foresters n ii 109
Held the boy she h Mimick'd and piped her ' Wyatt,' Queen Mary ii ii 73
this day be h in after years More solemn „ in iii 89
I had h my head up then. ,, in iii 246
were he wroth indeed. You h it less, or not at all. „ iv i 107
That when I was Archbishop h with me. „ iv ii 160
So h it tiU it all was burn'd, „ iv iii 615
and h up by the hair ? „ v ii 21
But h from you all papers sent by Rome, „ v ii 45
nor as some have h. Because I love the Norman
better — Harold i i 170
she h with Edward, At least methought she h with
holy Edward, „ i ii 49
yet he h that Dane, Jute, Angle, Saxon, „ iv i 75
He h with Morcar. — „ iv ii 43
were man's to have h The battle-axe by thee ! „ iv iii 12
whether that which h it Had weaken'd, „ v i 105
Some h she was his wife in secret — „ v ii 1(X)
I A it with him in his English halls, „ v ii 128
And that the false Northumbrian h aloof, „ v ii 165
For Gilbert FoUot h himself the man. Becket i i 43
I that h the orange blossom Dark as the yew ? Prom, of May n 629
True, I have h opinions, hold some still, „ in 622
I h for Richard, and I hated John. Foresters n i 52
I ever h that saying false That Love is blind, „ ii i 642
who heads the movement, h him craven ? „ n i 701
Tho' you should queen me over aU the realms H by
King Richard, „ iv 709
but all those that h with him. Except I plead for them, „ iv 748
Hell (See also A-hell-flre) Look at the New World — a
paradise made h ; Queen Mary n i 208
Traced in the blackest text of H— ' Thou shalt ! ' „ in i 426
Into the deathless h which is their doom „ m ii 175
The unity of Universal H, „ in iii 232
He bums in Purgatory, not in H. „ iv i 56
Or to be still in pain with devils in A ; „ rv iii 222
find Heaven or else h ready to swallow me, „ iv iii 224
There's nought but the vire of God's h ez can burn
out that. „ IV iii 527
Adulterous to the very heart of H. „ v v 163
like a spirit in H who skips and flies Harold i i 11
Hell
{continued) is this pendent h in heaven A harm to
England?
Is thy wrath H, that I should spare to cry,
H take thy bishop then, and my kingship too !
With a wanton in thy lodging — H requite 'em !
I scatter all their cowls to all the h's.
Fling not thy soul into the flames of h :
which H's own heat So dwelt on that they rose
I hear the yelping of the hoimds of h.
I would the Church were down in h !
Too late on earth may be too soon in h.
She lies ! They are made in H.
By all the devils in and out of H !
Devils, that make this blessed England h.
yells of tliief And rogue and har echo down in H,
Maid ? Friar. Paramour ! Friar. H take her !
Or, like the Devils they are, straight up from H.
If anjrwhere, I shall find thee in h.
Hellebore madden Against his priest beyond all h.
Hell-fire and the soul of Eleanor from h-f.
Hellstow Into Godstow, into H, Devilstow !
Helm (armour for the head) Cowl, h ; and crozier,
battle-axe.
Helm (as of a boat) Cranmer, as the hebnsman at
the h Steers,
Helm (verb) wherefore not H the huge vessel of
your state,
and no forsworn Archbishop Shall h the Church.
Helmet his hand Upon his h.
Of the Northumbrian h on the heath ?
gonfanon of Holy Peter Floating above their h's —
Helmeted not courtly to stand h Before the Queen.
Helmsman Cranmer, as the h at the helm Steers,
Help (s) thro' thine h we are come to London Bridge ;
Then whither should I flee for any h ?
Without the h of Spain.
England our own Thro' Harold's h,
all promises Made in our agony for h from heaven ?
No sacrifice to heaven, no h from heaven ;
Eray, pray, pray — no h but prayer,
ut our h Is Harold, king of England,
old crown Were little h without our Saxon carles
Call not for h from me. I knew him not.
butts him from his chair. Will need my h —
Past h ! his paws are past h. God help him !
Man's h ! but we, we have the Blessed Virgin
But for the slender h that I can give,
lelp (verb) I cannot h it.
I will h you, Madam, Even to the utmost.
But h her in this exigency,
The King of France wiU h to break it.
H it can I ? with my hands Milking the cow ?
H me : what think you, Is it life or death ?
I'll h you, if I may.
these burnings will not h The purpose of the faith ;
May God h you Thro' that dark hour !
are profitless to the burners. And h the other side.
Heaven h that this re-action not re-act
Not to h me? They hate me also for my love to you,
many English in your ranks To h your battle.
Will you not h me here ?
You did but h King Philip's war with France,
God h me, but methinks I love her less
Drugs — but he knows they cannot h me —
— H me hence.
Would h thee from the trap.
H the good ship, showing the sunken rock,
Good, good, and thou wilt h me to the crown ?
I ask thee, wilt thou h me to the crown ?
Swear thou to h me to the crown of England.
I swear to h thee to the crown of England . . .
^ (repeat)
h'io build a throne Out-towering hers of France
To A us from their brethren yonder ?
Oh God ! I cannot h it, but at times They seem to me
Harold i i 76
„ V i 37
Becket, Pro. 93
iii9
11 193
II i 316
n ii 204
III ii 48
vi218
V ii 528
Prom, of May iii 711
Foresters n ii 27
in 128
ni324
III 403
IV 595
IV 803
Becket iv ii 460
„ Pro. 151
v i 215
Harold v i 444
Queen Mary iv iii 578
V i 73
Becket i iii 598
Queen Mary v v 31
Harold v i 144
„ V i 550
Queen Mary v v 36
„ IV iii 578
n iii 8
IV iii 126
V iii 78
Harold n ii 79
„ III i 288
„ III i 350
„ Iiiiil95
IV i 10
„ IV i 35
„ V ii 54
Becket, Pro. 218
„ I iv 110
„ v ii 219
Prom, of May ii 421
Queen Mary i ii 60
I V 177
II ii 18
m i 105
m V 101
ni V 192
III V 205
IV ii 184
IV ii 195
IV ii 220
IV iii 388
vi94
vill2
v i 161
V ii 313
v ii 420
V V 61
V V 200
Harold i i 383
„ n ii 100
„ II ii 614
„ II ii 627
„ II ii 705
Harold ii ii 712, 721
. . Harold II ii 763
III i 221
Help (verb) (continued) God A me ! I know nothing-
To h the realm from scattering,
will ye upon oath, H us against the Norman ?
I cannot find his body. O A me thou !
Forgive me thou, and h me here !
Not h me, nor forgive me ?
953 Henry
Harold iiiiil93
IV i 106
IV i 181
V ii 20
V ii 22
„ V ii 24
thou didst h mc to my throne In Theobald's time, Becket, Pro. 200
Shall I not h your lordship to your rest ? „ i j i
better than thyself That thou shouldst hme? „ i f 5
H me off, Herbert, with this — ., 1 110
Past help ! his paws are past help. God h him ! ^] i iv 110
God h her. That she was sworn to silence. „ in i 77
Heaven k you ; get you hence in haste „ rv ii 26
H\ h\ Eleanor. They say that walls have ears ; „ iv ii 78
God h thee ! „ v ii 296
laid mine own life down To h him from them, ," v ii 340
I cannot h the mould that I was cast in. The Cup i iii 25
Employ us, heat us, quicken us, h us, „ i iii 131
0 hus from all that oppress us ! „ n 5
Will hardly h to make him sane again. The Falcon 83
Not quite recover'd of your wound, the wine Might h you. „ 592
And so return — Heaven h him ! — to our own. „ 861
We two together Will h to heal your son — ,',' 923
H me to move this bench for him into the sun. Prom, of May i 80
Seem my good angel who may h me from it. „ n 388
How can I h him ? ,, n 392
1 trust I may be able by-and-by to h you in the
business of the farm ; „ m 222
and I asked her once more to h me, „ m 388
And I wiU follow thee, and God h us both. Foresters i i 278
God's good Angel H him back hither, „ i ii n
I must pass overseas to one that I trust will h me. „ i ii 153
I cannot h you in this exigency ; ., i ii 273
A worthy messenger ! how should ha hit? „' i jii 86
for, God h us, we lie by nature. „ u j 237
to h the old man When he was fighting. ., u i 541
balms and simples of the field To A a wound. „ n ii 13
Robin's an outlaw, but he h's the poor. While Richard
hath outlaw'd himself, and h's Nor rich, nor poor. „ iv 358
— God h the mark — „ jy 714
Hail, knight, and h us. 'I ly 765
Help'd-helpt (See also Holp, Holpen) Pole Will tell
you that the devil helft them thro' it. Queen Mary iv iii 352
some familiar spirit must have hely'd him. Harold n ii 677
The Norseman's raid Hath helft the Norman, „ v i 292
and his brother Tostig helft ; „ v ii 47
King Stephen gave Many of the crown lands to those
that helft him ; Becket 1 iii 151
King Louis, Who helft me when none else. „ nr iii 249
frost That helf'd to check the flowing of the blood. The Falcon 645
Helping as she was h to build the mound against the
city. Foresters ir i 308
Helpless the red man, that good h creature, starved,
maim'd, flogg'd. Queen Mary 11 i 209
And cruel at it, killing h flies ; „ ni iv 65
our h folk Are wash'd away, wailing, in their own
blood— Harold 11 ii 470
Helpt (SeeHelp'd
Heman (a singer) sing, Asaph ! clash The cymbal, H ! „ m i 188
Hen (See also Sitting-hen) a fox may filch a A by
night. Queen Mary in v 157
Who stole the widow's sitting h 0' Sunday, Becket 1 iv 121
Sitting h ! Our Lord Becket's our great sitting-hen cock, „ i iv 124
The h cluckt late by the white farm gate, Prom, of May 1 38
a fox from the glen ran away with the h, „ i 52
Henceforward none shall hold them in his house and
live, H. Queen Mary iv i 98
Henry (Bedingfield) (See also Henry Bedingfield) I woke
Sir H — and he's true to you — „ m y 60
Henry (King of France) but we play with H, King of
France, „ i iii 131
King H warms your traitors at his hearth. „ y i 123
this H Stirs up your land against you „ y i 130
Henry (son of Henry H.) I will have My young son H
m ii 63 crown'd the King of England, Becket, Pro. 224
Henry
954
Heretic
Henry (son of Henry H.) (continued) You have not crown'd
young H yet, Becket ii ii 2
England scarce would hold Young H king, „ ii ii 32
For England, crown young H there, „ ii ii 456
I go to have young H crown'd by York. „ ii ii 478
and crown Young H there to-morrow. „ iii ii 10
hath in this crowning of young H by York and London „ in iii 71
And thou shalt crown my H o'er again. „ in iii 206
On those that crown'd young H in this realm, „ v ii 392
Henry (the Eighth) (See also Harry the Eighth,
Herod-Henry) When H broke the carcase
of your church Queen Mary i v 397
This Gardiner tum'd his coat in H's time ; „ xii iii 17
And in my master H's time ; „ ni iii 228
Did she not In H's time and Edward's ? „ iii iv 132
for since H for a doubt — „ iv iii 399
beard, which he had never shaven Since H's death, „ iv iii 594
Henry (the First) Hereford, you know, crown'd the first
H. Becket. But Anselm crown'd this H o'er
again.
Henry (the Second) (See also Henry of England) What
should come Between us, H ?
as brave a soldier as H and a goodlier man :
I can see further into a man than our hot-headed H,
H had many, and I loved him none the less —
For H could not work a miracle —
H the King hath been my friend, my brother,
I served King H well as Chancellor ;
chart which // gave you With the red line —
Didst thou not promise H to obey These ancient laws
King H sware That, saving his King's kingship.
Shall I do less for Canterbury Than H for the crown ?
When H came into his own again.
This did H.
Hath H told thee ? hast thou talk'd with him ?
This Almoner hath tasted H's gold. The cardinals
have finger'd H's gold,
might well have sway'd All England under H,
betwixt thine Appeal, and H's anger, yield.
I had been so true To H and mine office
obey, not me, but God in me, Rather than H.
That in thy cause were stirr'd against King H,
tho' I count H honest enough, yet when fear creeps
save King H gave thee first the kiss of peace.
life which // bad me Guard from the stroke
H Says many a thing in sudden heats,
H — Becket tells him this — To take my life
I that wedded H, Honouring his manhood —
Down with King H ! up with the Archbishop !
was out with H in the days When // loved me,
Ready to fall at H's word or yours —
Save him, his blood would darken H's name ;
Henry Bedingfield (See also Henry) Sir H B May
spht it for a spite.
Sir H B \ I will have no man true to me,
Henry of England (the Second) I loved H o E, and
H 0 E dreamed that he loved me ;
Henry of Winchester (Bishop of Winchester, brother of
King Stephen) H o W ? Henry. Him who
crown'd Stephen —
Henry the Seventh See Harry the Seventh
Her Yet h — what A ? he hinted of some h —
Herald In this full tide of love, Wave h's wave :
Herb See Willow-herb
Herbert (of Bosham) There's no jest on the brows of H
there. What is it, H ? Becket, Pro. 391
Leave me with H, friend. Help me off, H, „ i i 9
Too heavy for me, this ; off with it, H I „ i i 19
() //, H, in my chancellorship I more than once „ i i 27
0 H, here I gash myself asunder from the King, „ i i 174
Pass in with H there. „ i i 184
H, take out a score of armed men „ i i 327
1 am martyr in myself already. — HI „ i i 362
And H hath rebuked me even now. „ i i 385
H, H, have I betrav'd the Church ? „ i iii 284
Herbert (of Bosham) (continued) H, till I hear from the
Pope I will suspend myself Becket i iii 299
H, for the sake of the Church itself, „ i iv 152
Better have been A fisherman at Bosham, my good H, „ n ii 292
Becket m iii 202
Pro. 196
Pro. 437
Pro. 464
Pro. 476
I i 40
I i 87
I i 144
I ii 61
I iii 17
I iii 27
I iii 148
I iii 153
I iii 158
I iii 258
I iii 294
I iii 468
I iii 623
I iii 693
I iii 722
II ii 430
III iii 60
„ in iii 253
IV ii 268
IV ii 275
IV ii 394
IV ii 420
V i 260
V ii 230
V ii 486
„ V iii 11
Queen Mary ni v 47
III V 63
Becket, Pro. 357
„ Pro. 272
Becket m i 242
Foresters iv 1044
H, When I was in mine anger with King Louis,
Herb-of-grace Mercy, that h-o-g, Flowers now but
seldom.
Hercules He fasts, they say, this mitred H !
Herd You are the stateliest deer in all the h — ■
Hereafter Do not fear it. Of that h.
Hereford (Bishop of) H, you know, crown'd the first
Henry.
Heresiarch Did I call him heretic ? A huge h !
Heresy no one in her time should be burnt for h.
Stiff as the very backbone of h.
There is no h there.
To absolve thee from thy guilt of h.
All hollow'd out with stinging heresies ; And for their
heresies,
all the realm And its dominions from all h,
heat enough To scorch and wither h to the root.
If we could bum out h, my Lord Paget,
Paget, You stand up here to fight for h,
wherein have been Such holocausts of h !
plunge and fall Of h to the pit :
of a heavier crime Than h is itself ;
you are art and part with us In purging h.
To deal with h gentlier.
In hope to crush all h under Spain.
He hath recanted all his heresies.
Cranmer is head and father of these heresies.
Your learning, and your stoutness, and your h.
Pitiful to this pitiful h ?
despite his fearful heresies, I loved the man,
He has cited me to Rome, for h,
and what h since ?
in pursuing h 1 have gone beyond your late Lord
Chancellor, —
Ah ! much h Shelter'd in Calais.
you were burnt for h, not for treason,
What's up is faith, what's down is h.
Heretic (adj.) Gardiner perchance is ours ; But for our
h Parliament
in iii 256
Queen Mary in vi 9
Becket I iii 519
Queen Mary v ii 426
I V 131
Becket in iii 201
Queen Mary iv iii 46
Ii97
I V 44
in i 272
in ii 53
m ii 203
ni iii 216
in iv 28
III iv 53
in iv 92
m iv 108
in iv 142
ni iv 222
in iv 317
in vi 58
in vi 84
ivi49
ivi76
IV ii 126
IV ii 163
IV iii 634
vii42
vii89
vii97
V ii 298
vvl39
Harold I i 84
Queen Mary i v 388
III ii 134
in ii 178
in iv 44
III iv 280
IV i 131
IV i 180
IV iii 43
vii
326
v V 106
Becket n i 283
It was not meet the h swine should live In Lambeth
His sword shall hew the h peoples down !
h throats Cried no God-bless-her to the Lady Jane,
That layest so long in h bonds with me ;
That I should spare to take a h priest's.
But on the h dunghill only weeds.
He here, this h metropolitan.
And cried I was not clean, what should I care ?
Or you, for h cries ?
We have but burnt The h priest, workmen, and
women and children.
That my poor h heart would excommunicate His
excommunication,
Heretic (s) (See also Traitor-heretic) disaffected, h's,
reformers. Look to you Queen Mary i iv 170
married The mother of Elizabeth — a h Ev'n as she
is; but God hath sent me here To take such
order with all h's
Bad you go softly with your h's here,
tell you that all English h's have tails.
But so I get the laws against the h,
As traitor, or as h, or for what ?
To bring the h to the stake.
For h and traitor are all one :
there be some disloyal Catholics, And many h's loyal ;
We kill the h's that sting the soul —
You are more than guess 'd at as a /i,
I would not, were I Queen, tolerate the h,
To gorge a h whole, roasted or raw.
and the Pope Together, says the h.
The h must burn.
Yet a h still.
I v32
IV 392
1X1 i 229
in i 323
in iii 272
III iv 9
in iv 38
ni iv 44
in iv 68
in iv 93
m iv 210
in iv 344
IV i 29
IV i 122
IV i 168
I
Heretic
955
Hoam
And there be many Vs in the
Queen Mary iv ii 30
IV iii 45
IV iii 282
IV iii 344
IV iii 436
IV iii 458
IV iii 599
vilOl
vi200
vii63
V ii 71
vii79
vii89
vii95
V ii 175
V ii 316
m iv 352
ivi95
'oresters i i 228
II i 688
!C (s) {continued)
town,
Did I call him h? A huge heresiarch !
Ay, stop the h's mouth ! Hale him away !
I "know them h's, but right English ones.
I have seen h's of the poorer sort,
No faith with h's, my Lord !
Than h of these times ;
blood and sweat of h's at the stake Is God's best dew
But she's a h, and, when I am gone.
So brands me in the stare of Christendom, A h !
all my lifelong labour to uphold The primacy — a h.
A h ! He drew his shaft against me to the head,
have sent me Legate hither. Deeming meh?
I, a A ? Your Highness knows that in pursuing heresy
the Pope Pointing at me with ' Pole, the h,
H and rebel Point at me and make merry.
leal Touch him upon his old h talk,
I will take Such order with all bad, h books
the Wake have loved Harold the Saxon, orHt W.
our great Earl, the bravest English heart Since H t W,
to the intent That you may lose your
English h. Queen Mary v i 133
Yea, let a stranger spoil his h, Becket ii ii 259
lem No bird ? Filippo. Half a tit and a h's bill. The Falcon 131
iem (hers) Our Daisy's butter's as good 'z h. Queen Mary iv iii 482
ierod since your H's death, How oft hath Peter „ iii ii 61
ierod-Henry When H-H first Began to batter „ iii iv 184
iero-like howsoever h-l the man Dies in the fire, „ iv iii 324
ierring-pond Hest as loud as the black h-j> behind thee. Harold ii i 26
lerring-shoal here's a crowd as thick as h-s's. Queen Mary iii i 182
iers See Hem
lerse (horse) Blacksmith, th.aw be niver shoes a A to
my likings ; Prom, of May i 448
lerse-pond (horse-pond) I'd like to drag 'im thruff the
h-p, and she to be a-lookin' at it. „ ii 593
lew His sword shall h the heretic peoples ilown ! Qtieen Mary ni ii 178
lewn I'll have the drawbridge h into the Thames, „ ii ii 376
They had h the drawbridge down into the river. „ n iii 18
lid with his brother Odo The Bayeux bishop, and I h
myself. Harold ii ii 348
I was afraid of her, and I h myself. Prom, of May i 551
She h this sister, told me she was dead — „ in 689
The groming h the heavens ; Foresters n i 62
[idden Then h in the street He watch'd her pass Becket i ii 39
From all the h by-ways of the world „ ni iii 15
I hate h faces, (repeat) Foresters i ii 245, 251
tide (skin) town Hung out raw h's along their walls, Harold n ii 383
clench'd their pirate h's To the bleak church doors, „ iv iii 36
(ide (verb) and h himself and die ; Queen Mary rv i 142
j To h the scar left by thy Parthian dart. Becket, Pro. 377
Save me, father, h me — they follow me — „ i i 181
and once he strove to h his face, „ ni iii 103
I will h my face, Blacken and gipsyfy it ; „ iv ii 98
But these arm'd men — will you not A yourself ? „ v ii 247
Pray you, h yourself. „ v ii 257
The nmrderers, hark ! Let us /i ! let us A ! „ v iii 47
Why wearest thou thy cowl to h thy face ? Foresters i ii 206
thou canst not h thyself From her who loves thee. „ n ii 24
You h this damsel in your forest here, „ iv 476
ide and seek You play a,th a s. Queen Mary i v 305
iggins (a farm labourer) H, Jackson, Luscombe, Nokes, Prom, of May in 52
igh Before our own H Court of Parliament, Queen Mary n ii 234
There stands a man, once of so h degree.
And bolts of thimder moulded in h heaven To serve the
Norman purpose,
that thus baptized in blood Grew ever h and higher,
let our h altar Stand where their standard fell . . .
Then I saw Thy h black steed among the flaming furze,
And is the King's if too h a stile for your lordship to
overstep
But crowns must bow when mitres sit so h.
The h Heaven guard thee from his wantonness,
Till Nature, h and low, and great and small Forgets
herself,
IV iii 68
Harold n ii 32
„ in i 148
„ V ii 138
Becket ii i 55
„ m iii 281
„ IV ii 298
Foresters i ii 121
I ii 326
Foresters i iii IIJ^
Queen Mary in ii 225
n i 250-
m 165
IV ii 108'
Harold ni i 148
The Falcon 583-
Highback'd The deer, the h polecat, the wild boar,
High-dropsy Or a h-d, as the doctors call it.
Higher I'll have my head set h in the state ;
eyes So bashful that you look'd no h?
O h, holier, earlier, purer church.
Grew ever high and h, beyond my seeing,
Your ladyship lives h in the sun.
strain to make ourselves Better and h than Nature, Prom, of May i 604
Highest That all of you, the h as the lowest, Queen Mary iv iii 64
great Angel past along the h Crying Harold m i 133^
Angel rose And past again along the h „ ni i 156-
Glory to God in the // ! fallen, fallen ! „ v i 636-
High-hearted Then the maid is not h-h enough. Foresters i i 258
High-priest I have it . . . My lord Paramount, Our
great H-p, Becket iv ii 357
High-set sitting here Between the t^o most h-s
thrones on earth, Queen Mary iii ii 106-
Hildebrand (afterwards Pope Gregory VH.) and that Arch-
deacon H His master, Harold in ii 144
Hill this land is like a h of fire. Queen Alary in i 321
signs on earth ! Knowest thou Senlac h ? Harold in i 361
passing by that h three nights ago — „ ni i 366-
And dreadful shadows strove upon the h, „ ni i 378-
A A, a fort, a city — that reach'd a hand „ rv i 44
another h Or fort, or city, took it, „ iv i 49
had in it Wales, Her floods, her woods, her h's : „ iv i 207
and yet I saw thee drive him up his h's — „ rv i 211
Scatter thy people home, descend the h, „ v i 10
tell him we stand arm'd on Senlac H, „ v i 60
Gurth, Leofwin, go once more about the h — „ v i 183
To tell thee thou shalt die.on Senlac h — „ v i 242
He glitters on the crowning of the h. „ v i 488-
All the Norman foot Are storming up the h. „ v i 523
axes lighten with a single flash About the summit of the h, „ v i 539
their horse Swallow the h locust-like, „ v i 560'
The horse and horseman roll along the h, „ v i 595
Look out upon the h — is Harold there ? „ v i 669
build a church to God Here on the h of battle ; „ v ii 138
open'd out The purple zone of h and heaven ; The Cup i ii 408
whose breath Is balmy wind to robe our h's with grass, „ n 265
storm was drawing hither Across the h's „ n 320-
there is Monna Giovanna coming down the h from the
castle
out of the forest and over the h's and away,
Old as the h's.
I see two figures crawling up the h.
Hillo H, the stag ! What, you are all unfumish'd ?
H\ HI
Hilt Look at the h. What excellent workmanship.
Himself See 'Issen
Hinder I'd make a move myself to h that :
What h's but that Spain and England join'd.
What h's me to hold with mine own men ?
yon huge keep that h's half the heaven.
Hindering See Burial-hindering
Hinted Yet her — what her ? he h of some her —
Hip Back and side and h and rib,
Hiss and h Against the blaze they cannot quench —
Hiss'd As we past. Some hail'd, some h us.
And h against the sun ?
Hissing Stab me in fancy, h Spain and Philip ;
Whose doings are a horror to the east, A h in the west
History how often in old histories have the great men
Hit This is the likelier tale. We have h the place.
This is no bow to h nightingales ;
H ! Did I not tell you an old woman could shoot
better?
Hive So hated here ! I watch'd a A of late ;
bees. If any creeping life invade their h
when our good h Needs every sting to save it.
Hoam (home) H wi' it, then. Haymaker. Well, it
The Falcon 161
Foresters ii ii 176-
IV 301
IV 333
The Cup I i 205-
I i 214
Becket iv ii 314
Queen Mary iii i 127
V iii 68-
Harold ii i 102
„ II ii 22&
Becket in i 243
Foresters ii ii 120'
Harold in i 395
Queen Mary ii ii 61
Becket v iii 45
Queen Mary i v 150'
Becket iv ii 245
Foresters i i 242
Becket in ii 43
Foresters n i 391
n i 406-
Queen Mary in iii 46
„ in iii 54
Harold iv i 17
be the last load h. Prom, of May ii 143
as I said afoor, it be the last load h ; do thou and
thy sweet'art sing us A to supper — „ n 1Q&
—' The Last Load H.' (repeat) „ n 171, 172
Hoam
956
Holy
Hoam (home) (continued) At the end of the daay,
Por the last load h ? (repeat) Prom, of May ii 184, 195
Hold (verb) (continued) but I h thee The husband of my heart, Foresters lu 139
Till the end of the daay And the last load h.
Till the end o' the daay An' the last load h.'
To the end o' the daay An' the last load h.'
An' the last load h, Load h.'
H ? fro' the bottom o' the river ?
Hogm-maade (home-made) and Baaker, thaw I
sticks to h-m —
Hoarse I have, my Lord, shouted till I am h.
Hobnail'd Your rights and charters h into slush —
Hodge H 'ud ha' been a-harrowin' o' white peasen i' the
outBeld — „ IV iii 491
Hog The h hath tumbled himself into some corner, Becket i i 369
Hoist But I would h the drawbridge, like thy master. Foresters i i 318
Hold (s) (See also Holt) hottest A in all the devil's den Queen Mary v iv 15
Hold (verb) (See also 'Owd) Seek to possess our
person, h our Tower,
I may be wrong, sir. This marriage will not h.
There's a brave man, if any. Bagenhall. Ay ; if it h.
that no foreigner H office in the household.
So then you h the Pope — ■ Gardiner. I h the Pope !
What do I A him ? what do I A the Pope ?
none shall h them in his house and live,
could scarce meet his eye And h your own ;
I A by all I wrote within that book.
I do ft The Catholic, if he have the greater right,
strike Their hearts, and h their babies up to it.
much ado To h mine own against old Gurth.
thine eyelids into sleep. Will h mine waking.
R thine own, if thou canst !
my men H that the shipwreckt are accursed of God ; —
What hinders me to h with mine own men ?
We h our Saxon woodcock in the springe.
Yet I h out against them, as I may, Yea — would h out,
Better to be a liar's dog, and h My master honest,
And Morcar h's with us.
must h The sequel had been other than his league
No power mine To h their force together . . .
This is the hottest of it : h, ash ! h, willow !
The Church should h her baronies of me,
Thou hast but to h out thy hand.
And many a baron Vs along with me —
among you those that h Lands reft from Canterbury.
And mean to h it, or Becket. To have my life.
Wilt thou h out for ever, Thomas Becket ?
Ks his cross before him thro' the crowd,
I h not by my signing.
But we h Thou art forsworn ;
I h Nothing in fee and barony of the King. Whatever
the Church owns — she h's it in Free and perpetual alms.
If the King h his purpose. I am myself a beggar.
England scarce would h Young Henry king.
We h by his defiance, not his defect.
cursed those De Brocs That h our Saltwood Castle from
our see !
Map scoffs at Rome. I all but h with Map.
keep the figure moist and make it h water,
the lady h's the cleric Lovelier than any soldier,
Who h With York, with York against me.
De Morville, H her away. De Morville. I h her.
See here — I stretch my hand out — h it there.
I am sinking — h me — Let me alone.
I think I scarce could h my head up there.
True, I have held opinions, h some still,
Lady Marian h's her nose when she steps across it.
handle all womankind gently, and h them in all honour,
there is a lot of wild fellows in Sherwood Forest who h
by King Richard.
last time When I shall h my birthday in this hall :
How she looks up at him, how she h's her face !
I fear you be of those who h more by John than Richard.
good fellows there in merry Sherwood That h by Richard,
They h by Richard — the wild wood !
O h thy hauid ! this is our Marian.
II 209
u239
II 260
II 293
III 443
I 449
Queen Mary m i 291
II ii 278
II ii 158
in i 103
m i 176
m iii 72
m iv 371
IV 196
IV i 105
IV iii 275
IV iii 381
Harold I i 35
1 1438
I ii 141
II 179
II ilOO
II ii 1
II ii 552
in i 125
IV ii 46
IV iii 87
IV iii 213
vi628
Becket, Pro. 24
„ Pro. 412
I ii 52
I iii 140
I iii 162
„ I iii 265
„ I iii 477
I iii 563
I iii 595
I iii 677
iiv89
II ii 31
II ii 218
II ii 269
„ n ii 385
„ in iii 166
V i 193
V ii 62
„ V iii 173
The Cup n 210
n 478
Prom, of May i 689
m 622
Foresters i i 83
I i 99
„ I ii 73
„ I ii 89
iii 144
I ii 198
I iii 100
I iii 110
nu36
You hope to h and keep her for yourself,
mate with one that h's no love is pure,
if you h us here Longer from our own venison.
Holdest thou, De Broc, that h Saltwood Castle —
that h thine estates In fee and barony
Hold-fast Such h-f claws that you perforce again
Holding true To either function, h it ;
Hold'st Thou h with him ? (repeat)
Hole skulk into comers Like rabbits to their h's.
creep down into some dark h Like a hurt beast,
crawl down thine own black h To the lowest HeU.
Holiday a boon, my king, Respite, a h :
IV 477
,. IV 711
„ IV 941
Becket i iii 160
„ I iii 674
n ii 86
„ I iii 538
Foresters n i 526, 530
Queen Mary ii iv 56
IV i 141
The Cup II 495
Harold i i 227
n346
m90
in 241
Foresters n ii 96
Holier O higher, h, earlier, purer church. Queen Mary iv ii 108
They are so much h than their harlot's son Harold v ii 11
Foliot is the h man, perhaps the better. Becket ni iii 92
Holiest From all the h shrines in Normandy ! Harold ii ii 735
The H of our H one should be This William's fellow-
tricksters ; „ m ii 76
More, what the mightiest and the h Of all his predecessors Becket ii ii 179
Holiness that you might not seem To disobey his H. Queen Mary v ii 53
his politic H Hath all but climb'd the Roman perch Becket n ii 45
His H, pushed one way by the Empire and another by
England, „ ii ii 327
will not your H Vouchsafe a gracious answer „ iv ii 358
Holla'd (shouted) I A to him, but he didn't hear me : „ iii ii 25
Holler (hollow) Dan Smith's cart hes runned ower a
laady i' the h laane, Prom, of May n 569
Ye sees the h laane be hallus sa dark i' the arternoon, „ m 92
Hollow (adj.) (See also Holler) — no distance — this H
Pandora-box,
when you lamed the lady in the h lane.
Do you still suffer from your fall in the h lane.
Scarlet hacking down A h ash, a bat flew out at him
though thou wert like a bottle full up to the cork, or
as /i as a kex, „ iv 211
Hollow (verb) voice of the deep as it h's the cliffs of the land. Becket u i 4
tho' the drop may h out the dead stone, Becket in iii 315
Hollow'd All h out with stinging heresies ; Queen Mary in ii 203
Hollow-hearted Some h-h from exceeding age — Foresters m 96
Hollowness Bring not thy h On our full feast. Harold iv iii 203
Holocaust wherein have been Such h's of heresy ! Queen Mary ni iv 108
Holp (See also Help'd) he h the King to break down our
castles, Becket, Pro. 446
I do believe he h Northumberland Against me. Queen Mary i v 278
Holpen (See also Help'd) Had h Richard's tottering
throne to stand, „ m i 114
Not so well h in our wars with France, „ in vi 188
All widows we have h pray for us. Foresters iv 1078
Holt (hold) and tells un ez the vire has tuk h. Queen Mary iv iii 512
Holy — hath sent for the h legate of the h father
the Pope, Cardinal Pole, to give us all that
absolution which —
H absolution ! h Inquisition !
Son Courtenay, wilt thou see the h father Murdered
No, by the h Virgin, being noble. But love me only :
H Virgin, Plead with thy blessed Son ;
Makes me his mouth of h greeting.
sent here as Legate From our most H Father Julius,
Pope,
Against the H Father's primacy,
of all censures Of H Church that we be fall'n into,
Unto the h see and reigning Pope Serve God
Our Lord and H Father, Julius, God's Vicar
or more Denied the H Father !
I kept my head for use of H Church;
range Among the pleasant fields of H Writ
As once the H Father did with mine.
Against the King, the Queen, the H Father,
The H Virgin will not have me yet Lose the sweet hope
The H Father in a secular kingdom Is as the soul
It is God's will, the H Father's will,
and I Scraped from your finger-points the h oil ;
As if he had been the H Father, sat And judged it.
For if our H Queen not pardon him,
I iii 26
I iii 31
I iii 64
IV 70
iv83
mii80
III iii 12e
in iii 131
in iii 152
in iii 15f
ui iii 21;
ni iv 24i
in iv 35E
in v8(
in V 24;
in vi3;
in vi 19!
IV 13-;
IV i IS-i
IV ii 13;:
IV iii 4*1
IV iii 6]
Holy
967
Homo
{continued) O H Ghost ! proceeding from them
both,
Who deems it a most just and h war.
and of his h head —
And yet I must obey the H Father,
We have made war upon the H Father All for your
sake:
No, Madam, not against the H Father ;
And done such mighty things by H Church,
set up The H Office here — gamer the wheat,
E Father Has ta'en the legateship from our cousin
Pole—
Our h Norman bishops down from all Their thrones
in England ?
I have builded the great Church of H Peter :
And, H Mary ! How Harold used to beat him !
At least methought she held with h Edward,
• O blessed relics ! ' OH Peter ! '
And that the H Saints of Normandy When thou art
home in England,
The h bones of all the Canonised
I would I were As h and as passionless as he !
H? ay, ay, forsooth, A conscience for his own soul,
loftiest minster ever built To H Peter in our English isle !
And all our just and wise and h men That shall be bom
hereafter.
Our h king Hath given his virgin lamb to H Church
for the king Is h, and hath talk'd with God,
loved within the pale forbidden By H Church :
Kiss me — thou art not A h sister yet, my girl,
and have sent him back A h gonf anon,
Forward ! Forward ! Harold and H Cross !
E Father Hath given this realm of England to the Norman.
E Father To do with England's choice of her own king ?
the H Rood had lean'd And bow'd above me ;
made too good an use of H Church To break her close !
the H Rood That bow'd to me at Waltham —
Harold and H Cross ! (repeat) Harold v i 439, 519, 662
What power, h father ? Harold v i 454
fonfanon of H Peter Floating above their helmets —
lis oath was broken — O h Norman Saints,
The H Father strangled him with a hair Of Peter,
And but that H Peter fought for us,
to whom thou art bound By H Church.
I, tme son Of H Church — no croucher to the Gregories
the H Father, while This Barbarossa butts him from
his chair.
Name him ; the H Father will confirm him.
30ur h mother Canterbury, who sits With tatter'd robes.
O, h father, when thou seest him next.
Knowing how much you reverence H Church,
Are not so much at feud with H Church
and lay My crozier in the H Father's hands,
Have I the orders of the H Father ?
The secret whisper of the H Father.
The spire of H Church may prick the graves —
Becket shall be king, and the H Father shall be king.
The h Thomas ! Brother, you have traffick'd Between
the Emperor and the Pope,
B Church May rock, but will not wreck,
thanks of H Chmch are due to those That went before
us „ n ii 190
Thee, thou h Thomas ! I would that thou hadst been
the H Father. „ n ii 398
I would have done my most to keep Rome h, „ n ii 401
Forgive me and absolve me, h father. „ ii ii 441
with the H Father astride of it down upon his own
head. „ in iii 77
False oath on h cross — for thou must leave him To-day, „ iv ii 209
God's Grace and H Church deliver'd us. „ iv ii 309
sometimes I have overshot My duties to our H Mother
Church, „ V i 38
crying On H Church to thunder out her rights „ v ii 31
Nor make me traitor to my h office. „ v ii 149
To assail our H Mother lest she brood Too long „ v ii 251
Queen Mary iv iii 119
vil47
vil57
vii38
V ii 307
V ii 312
V V 74
V vll3
vvl25
Harold i i 50
„ I i 180
„ I i 431
„ I ii 51
„ Iii 171
„ nii727
„ nii734
„ m i 43
„ ni i 61
„ mi 206
„ mi 209
., m i 334
„ III 1355
„ III ii 24
„ III ii 81
„ III ii 148
IV i 269
vil2
vil7
vil02
vi312
vi382
vi549
„ V i 616
„ V ii 45
„ V ii 164
Becket, Pro. 68
„ Pro. 211
„ Pro. 215
„ Pro. 244
I i 156
I i 322
I ii 48
„ I ii 54
I iii 125
I iii 233
I iii 236
I iii 553
I iv 270
n ii 66
n ii 102
Holy (continued) scare me from my loyalty To God and to
the H Father.
Valour and h life should go together.
Thy h follower founded Canterbury —
and take this h cup To lodge it in the shrine of
Artemis.
To lodge this cup Within the h shrine of Artemis,
H mother ! To breakfast ! Oh sweet saints !
I keep it For h vows made to the blessed Saints
he is a ^ Palmer, bounden by a vow not to show his face,
till he join King Richard in the H Land. Robin.
Going to the H Land to Richard !
by this H Cross Which good King Richard gave me
For playing upside down with H Writ.
And you three h men.
In the sweat of thy brow, says H Writ, shalt thou eat
bread.
The H Virgin Stand by the strongest.
our friar is so h That he's a miracle-monger,
he flung His life, heart, soul into those h wars
Heading the h war against the Moslem,
like the man In H Writ, who brought his talent back ;
And join'd my banner in the H Land,
Holy Ghost 0 H G\ proceeding from them both.
Homage Then here she stands ! my h.
all manner of h's, and observances, and circum-
bendibases.
Home (See also Hoam) Struck h and won.
nearer h, the Netherlands, Sicily, Naples,
A smile abroad is oft a scowl at h.
bring it H to the leisure wisdom of his Queen,
thou art reclaim'd ; He brings thee h :
Albeit he think himself at h with God,
When I should guide the Church in peace at h,
You had best go h. What are you ?
Good night ! Go h. Besides, you curse so loud, The
watch will hear you. Get you h at once.
Thy life at ^ Is easier than mine here.
I pray thee, let me hence and bring him h.
I should let him h again, my lord.
Since thou hast promised Wulfnoth h with us. Be h again
with Wulfnoth.
poor lad ! how sick and sad for h !
When thou art h in England, with thine own,
No footfall — no Fitzurse. We have seen her h.
We be a-going h after our supper in all humbleness,
thy true h — the heavens — cry out for thee
Moon bring him h, bring him h
H, sweet moon, bring him h, H with the flock
A miracle that they let him h again.
Strange that the words at h with me so long
how long you have been away from h !
Close by that alder-island in your brook, ' The
Angler's H.'
Let bygones be bygones. Go h ! Good-night !
' Go A ; ' but I hadn't the heart or face to do it.
Eva has come h. Steer. Hoam ?
So happy in herself and in her h —
we should have better battels at h.
Cleave to him, father ! he will come h at last.
till King Richard come h again.
Now the King is h again, and nevermore to roam again.
Now the King is h again, the King will have his own
again, H again, h again, and each will have his own
again. All the birds in merry Sherwood sing and sing
bun h again.
Homely You have but trifled with our h salad,
Home-made See Hoam-maade
Home-nest gaping bills in the h-n Piping for bread —
Home-return God and his free wind grant your lordship
a happy h-r
Homeward prosper all thy wandering out And h.
and pray in thy behalf For happier h winds
Homo H sum. I love my dinner —
H sum, sed virgo sum,
Becket V ii 483
„ v ii 587
„ V iii 5
The Cv/p I ii 434
I iii 53
The Falcon 214
Foresters i ii 175
I ii 23&
I ii 239
I ii 309
in 168
ra 382
IV 201
IV 263
IV 280
IV 407
IV 818
IV 981
„ IV 1000
Queen Mary iv iii 119
V T 254
Foresters i i 103
Queen Mary i v 554
n i 212
in i 213
m vi 23
„ IV iii 84
IV iii 192
vii68
V iv 43
v iv 61
Harold i i 96
„ 1 1242
„ nii63
„ n ii 167
„ n ii 326
„ n ii 728
Becket i i 368
„ iiv206
„ iviil32
The Cup I ii 5
» I ii 7
„ I ii 270
The Falcon 525
Prom, of May I 768
II 53&
III 157
III 389
in 442
in 756
Foresters i i 58
„ I i 198
„ I ii 141
IV 1103
The Falcon 672
Becket n ii 30O
„ HI iii 328
Harold i i 266
„ Iiiil98
Foresters i ii 63
I ii 66
Honest
958
Hope
Honest (See also Stupid-honest) Divers h fellows, Queen Mary i iii 119
You as poor a critic As an h friend : „ ii i 116
For all that, Most h, brave, and skilful ; „ ii ii 383
I read his h horror in his eyes. „ iii v 61
Right h and red-cheek'd ; Robin was violent, „ m v 106
Peters, my gentleman, an h Catholic, „ iv iii 553
He is passionate but h. Harold i i 118
An h gift, by all the Saints, if giver And taker be but h !
he is broad and h, Breathing an easy gladness . . .
I can but love this noble, h Harold.
I, the Count — the King— Thy friend — am grateful for
thine h oath.
Better to be a liar's dog, and hold My master h,
He hath blown himself as red as fire with curses. An
h fool ! Follow me, h fool,
To be h is to set all knaves against thee
When thieves fall out, h men —
When h men fall out, thieves — no, it can't be that.
H John ! To Rome again ! the storm begins again,
but most on 'em know an h woman and a lady when
they see her,
for I never knew an h woman that could make songs,
but none on 'em ever made songs, and they are all h.
and tho' I count Henry h enough,
My h lord, you are known Thro' all the courts of Christendom
But fuU mid-smnmer in those h hearts.
Would clap his h citizens on the back,
Did he, h man ?
God rest his h soul, he bought 'em for me,
for I'm h, your lordship.
Live with these h folk — And play the fool !
You are an h pair. I will come to your wedding,
H daisy deadly bruised. Queen.
The silent blessing of one h man Is heard in heaven-
So that they deal with us like h men.
1 1344
I ii 173
„ II ii 95
„ II ii 755
„ mi 126
V i 88
Becket i iii 571
„ I iv 114
„ I iv 118
„ II ii 467
„ III i 179
„ HI i 182
„ III i 189
„ III iii 61
IV ii 323
V ii 373
The Cup I ii 358
I ii 376
The Falcon 49
116
Prom, of May I 744
III 114
Foresters ii ii 156
III 321
IV 101
Honester bolder than the rest, Or h than all ? Queen Mary iii i 439
Honesty It may be, thro' mine h, like a fool. „ i v 237
Yea, h too, paint her what way they will. Becket ii i 101
fear creeps in at the front, h steals out at the back, „ iii iii 62
Honey if the truth be gall. Cram me not thou with h, Harold iv i 16
Prom, of May i 606
Foresters ii i 295
IV 13
IV 15
IV 23
IV 967
Queen Mary v i 278
Becket, Pro. 516
V ii 217
Harold IV iii 229
Becket, Pro. 364
IV ii 143
Foresters iv 757
Queen Mary ii iv 84
„ III vi 254
IV i 139
IV ii 165
IV iii 297
Harold ii ii 691
V ii 200
Becket i iii 20
I iii 187
I iii 200
II ii 140
II ii 142
II ii 163
II ii 168
II ii 220
II ii 424
II ii 440
As happy as the bees there at their h
Here's a pot o' wild h from an old oak.
Bees rather, flying to the flower for h.
' I am faint for your h, my sweet.'
' Have you still any h, my dear ? '
Ay, whether it be gall or h to 'em —
Honeycomb She is none of those who loathe the h
Honeying then the King came h about her,
Honeymaking So rare the household h bee.
Honeymoon Harsh is the news ! hard is our h !
and the h is the gall of love ; he dies of his h.
Give her to me to make my h.
For she shall spend her h vnth me.
Honour (s) And hast not heart nor h.
Upon the faith and A of a Spaniard,
so wounded in his h. He can but creep down
Win thro' this day with h to yourself,
For the pure h of our common nature,
H to thee ? thou art perfect in all h !
Madam, we will entreat thee with all h.
Saving the h of my order — ay.
Save the King's h here before his barons.
As thou hast h for the Pope our master,
Saving God's h !
Saving the Devil's h, his yes and no.
— that Is clean against God's h —
that none may dream I go against God's h —
to suppress God's h for the sake Of any king
Deny not thou God's h for a king.
surrendering God's h to the pleasure of a man.
' great h,' says he, ' from the King's self to the King's
son.'
Thro' chastest h of the Decalogue
willing wives enough To feel dishonour, h.
In h of his gift and of our marriage,
Honour (s) (continued) handle all womankind gently, and
hold them in all h. Foresters i i 100
O your h, I pray you too to give me an alms. „ ii i 389
H to thee, brave Marian, and thy Kate. „ m 299
we have made a song in your h, so your ladyship care
to listen. „ in 414
Do you call that in my h? „ iii 433
on the faith and h ot a, king The land is his again. „ iv 852
Honour (verb) you would h my poor house to-night, Queen Mary i iii 117
For the which I h him
No man to love me, h me, obey me !
Who deign to h this my tliirtieth year.
All here will prize thee, /;, worship thee,
being every inch a man I h every inch of a woman,
Why art thou mute ? Dost thou not h woman ?
Honourable Who not alone esteem'd it h,
How, Malet, if they be not h !
Most h Sheriff !
Honour'd I am much h — yes — Do what I told thee.
No, my most h and long-worshipt lady.
Honouring I that wedded Henry, H his manhood
Becket, Pro. 449
V i 239
Foresters i ii 79
II ii 17
ni64
in 68
Queen Mary ii ii 209
Harold ii ii 279
Foresters ii i 153
The Falcon 278
713
Becket iv ii 421
h all womankind, and more especially my lady Marian, Foresters in 55
Hood (a cowl) Put on your h and see me to the bounds. Becket in i 94
Hood (Robin) iSee Huntingdon, Robin, Robin Hood, Robin
of Huntingdon
Hook (See also Pruning-hook) Shelves and h's, shelves
and h's, and when I see the shelves I am like to
hang myself on the h's.
Hook'd bat flew out at him In the clear noon, and h him
by the hair,
Hook-nosed That fine, fat, h-n uncle of mine, old
Harold, Pro7n. of May i 509
Hoonderd (hundred) feller couldn't find a Mister in his
mouth fur me, as farms five h haacre. „ 1 304
I, mun ha' plowed it moor nor a h times ; „ i 368
and ower a h pounds worth o' rings stolen. „ 1 393
Hooper (Bishop of Gloucester and Worcester) H, Ridley,
The Falcon 119
Foresters ii ii 97
Queen Alary i ii 14
„ III iv 424
„ IV ii 225
Prom, of May ii '125
Latimer will not fly.
Cranmer and H, Ridley and Latimer,
H bum'd Three-quarters of an hour.
Hoot Our men and boys would h him, stone him,
Hope (s) All my h is now It may be found a
scandal.
from Penenden Heath in h To hear you speak.
In h to charm tliem from their hate of Spain. Philip.
In h to crush all heresy under Spain.
Lose the sweet h that I may bear a prince.
Have you good h's of mercy ! So, farewell.
Good h's, not theirs, have I that I am fixt.
There is no h of better left for him.
Since she lost h of bearing us a child ?
There yet is h.
Count de Feria waits without. In h's to see your
Highness. „ v ii 401
Full h have I that love will answer love. Harold iv i 237
our prophet h's Let in the happy distance. The Cup i ii 413
in h that the saints would send us this blessed morning ; The Falcon 185
Queen Mary i v 230
II i 152
in VI 82
III vi 201
IV ii 86
IV ii 88
IV iii 79
vi229
V ii 279
„ in iii 144
„ vi206
The Cup I ii 189
n 351
small h of the gentleman gout in my great toe.
not even H Left at the bottom !
but H Smiles from the threshold of the year
The h of larger life hereafter,
Hope (verb) (See also 'Oape) may strike fire from
her. Not A to melt her.
I h they whipt him. I would have hang'd him.
We h not, my lord.
Not in my chin, I h ! That threatens double.
Richard, if he be mine — I h him mine.
Mercy, mercy. As you would h for mercy.
May lead them on to victory — I h so —
I A he be not underdone, for we be imdone in the
doing of him.
* I h your Lordship is quite recovered of your
gout ? '
What did vou h to make ? (repeat)
You h to hold and keep her for yourself,
656
Prom, of May ii 348
Foresters i iii 15
Queen Mary in vi 40
Becket, Pro. 14
„ I iv 41
„ II i 250
v i 130
„ V iii 176
The Cup 1 ii 168
The Falcon 557
Prom, of May ni 308
„ m 784, 788
Foresters iv 477
Hoped
959
Hoped '« to fall Into the wide-spread arms of fealty, queen Mary ii ii 263
I A I had served God with all my might ! v ii "96
It was h Your Highness was once more in happy state " v ii 570
H, were he chosen archbishop, ""■' Berket t iii 449
I would not be bold, Yet h ere this you might— m i^
T'^^^?A^^ "^^^^ *?^'' } ^ ^r'' ^ ^« ^*in- Th^ Falcon 770
rlT X}^^"" ""*¥' ^° "'*^^~ P^om. of May in 782
.pefol and leaves me As A. Queen Mar^ i y 532
(See also Wholly-hopeless) Ho there ! thy rest of
life is h prison, Becket v i 180
^ First, free thy captive from her h prison. v i 183
'Hopt He had but one foot, he must have h away, Harold u ii 675
,Horder (order) if tha can't keep thy one cow i' A how
can tha keep aU thy scholards i' A ? p^om of Mav i IQ?
Horizon past is like a traveU'd land now sunk Below ^ -^^i
Horn (See also Forest-horn, War-horn) draw back your ^^
heads and your A'5 Queen Mary ii5
Pope has pushed his h's beyond his mitre — v i 152
Alva wiU but touch him on the h's, And he withdraws ; " v i 156
Had I been by, I would have spoil'd his h. Harold i ii 73
would make the hard earth rive To the very Devil's h's
A ghostly h Blowing continually, '
How ghostly sounds that h in the black wood !
when the h sounds she comes out as a wolf.
when that h sounds, a score of wolf-dogs are let loose
Linger not till the third h. Fly !
or you'd have heard his h before now.
have forgotten my h that calls my men together.
Fifty leagues Of woodland hear and know my h,
Wherever the h sound and the buck bound,
Wherever the buck bound, and the h soimd,
When h and echo ring,
Accept this h ! if e'er thou be assail'd
Wait till he blow the h.
Why blowest thou not the h ?
I blow the h against this rascal rout !
And catch the winding of a phantom h.
'Horologe always in suspense, Hke the tail of the h—
Horrible scourge Of England ! Courtier. HI
From all the hoUest shrines in Normandy !
Harvestless autumns, h agues, plague —
I H I flaying, scourging, crucifying —
Honor I read his honest h in his eyes.
carrion-nosirig mongrel vomit With hate and h.
What with this flaming h overhead ?
hath talk'd with God, and seen A shadowing h •
Hour
A troop of h Filippo. Five
II ii 741
„ mi 372
Becket ui ii 16
„ in ii 23
III ii 38
„ III ii 41
„ IV i 55
Foresters ii i 185
III 104
ni345
III 355
m428
IV 423
IV 787
IV 791
IV 794
IV 1092
Becket n ii 366
Harold I i 6
Harold. HI „ ii ii 736
Queen Mary v i 99
The Cup I ii 235
Queen Mary m v 61
„ IV iii 450
Harold i i 232
mi 357
Whose doings are a A to the east, A hissing in the west ! ' Becket iv ii 244
And make thpp n wnrlH'a h •• r.„„
And make thee a world's h.
And blanch the crowd with h.
Horse (See also 'Erse, Herse) she met the Queen at
I Wanstead with five hundred h,
with an ass's, not a h's head,
that's a noble h of youi-s, my Lord.
And broken bridge, or spavin'd h,
a pale h for Death and Gardiner for the Devil.
Your boots are from the h's.
I had h's On all the road from Dover,
H's there, without !
Why did you keep me prating ? H's, there !
Because I broke The h's leg —
Thousands of h's, hke as many lions
No Norman h Can shatter England,
No h — thousands of h's — our shield wall —
range of knights Sit, each a statue on his h,
they fall behind the A— Their A are thronging
all their A Swallow the hill locust-hke.
The A and horseman cannot meet the shield, The
blow that brains the horseman cleaves the A,
The A and horseman roll along the hill,
They turn on the pursuer, A against foot,
No, no, his A — he mounts another —
Three h's had I slain beneath me :
I could tear him asunder with wild A's
Our A's grazing by us, when a troop,
IV ii 288
The Cup II 154
Queen Mary i i 78
I iii 169
I iv 143
I V 355
III i 234
III V 180
V ii 576
V iii 109
V iii 113
Harold n ii 110
„ IV iii 196
„ V i 195
„ V i 231
V i 525
„ V i 546
V i 559
„ V i 591
„ V i 608
„ V i 638
„ V ii 171
Becket n i 267
The Falcon 611
Horse (continued)
hundred ! Th F I Ri7
how long we strove before Our h's fell beneath us ; ^ '' <">» oi?
lanker than an old A turned out to die on the common. Foresters i i 51
our A and our httle cart— »«ra x io±
when the Sheriff took my Httle A for the King without
II i 301
„ IV 414
„ IV 797
Becket, Pro. 444
Harold v i 591
paying for it
I left mine A and armour with a Squire,
A A ! a A ! I must away at once ;
Horseback How should a baron love a beggar on A
Horseman The horse and A cannot meet the shield' The
blow that brams the A cleaves the horse, The horae
and A roll along the hill.
Horse-pond See Herse-pond
Horsiness To rose and lavender my A, Queen Maru m v tfi.^
iSaf VspiS"^ *'' ' "^''^ '" ^°"^ ''''''' ^or:Zf\ Ii Im
Hospitality a graceless A To chain the free guest Harold ii ii 192
knowing the fame of your A, we ventured in uninvited. Foresters i ii 196
Host (a consecrated wafer) Have I not heard them
mock the blessed H Ovefi'r, Mr,,-,, rxr a; qra
Host (array of men) and send her A'. Of injured Saint " &" H ?S
And Ldward would have sent a h against you, iv i QQ
join our hands before the A's, That all may see. " iv i 249
Host (entertainer of guests) He was thine A in England
when I went To visit Edward. „ :: a
I found him all a noble A should be. " „ ii 10
She hath follow'd with our A, and suffer'd all. " ry i 2q
A cleric violated The daughter of his A, Becket i iii 383
Hostage four of her poor Council too, my Lord, As A's. Queen Mary n ii 44
Is not my brother Wulfnoth A there
Poor brother ! still a A !
They did thee wrong who made thee A ;
Remain a A for the loyalty Of Godwin's house.'
Hostis H in Angliam Ruit praeJator,
// per Angliae Plagas bacchatur ;
Hot and the H Gospellers will go mad upon it.
But you so bubbled over with A terms Of Satan,
And A desire to imitate ;
There are H Gospellers even among our guards —
jerk'd out of the common rut Of Nature in the A
religious fool,
H blood, ambition, pride So bloat and redden his
face —
Thou blowest A and cold. Where is she then ?
Hot-blooded H-b ! I have heard them say in Rome
Hot-headed H-h fools— to burst the wall of shields !
I can see further into a man than our A-A Henry,
Hottest This is the A of it : hold, ash ! hold, willow '
The A hold in all the devil's den Were but a sort"
of winter;
Hound with mine old A Couch'd at my hearth.
Sick for an idle week of hawk and A
I hear the yelping of the A's of hell.
Huntsman, and A, and deer were all neck-broken '
You saw my A's True to the scent ;
Homided We never A on the State at home To spoil the
Church.
Hour Ay, that was in her A of joy ;
some great doom when God's just A Peals —
What do and say Your Council at this A ?
Who knows ? the man is proven by the A. White.
The man should make the A, not this the man ; *
An A will come When they will sweep her from the seas
do triumph at this A In the reborn salvation
tolerate the heretic. No, not an A.
Their A is hard at hand.
Ay, for an A in May.
It shall be all my study for one A
in strange A's, After the long brain-dazing colloquies
May God help you Thro' that hard A !
Hooper bunrd Three-quarters of an A.
the A has come For utter truth and plaiimess •
Make us despise it at odd A's, my Lord. '
Brook for an A such brute malignity ?
Harold I i 239
„ II ii 32»
„ II ii 350
m i 90
„ V i 506
„ V i 510
Queen Mary i i 115
I ii 94
ni iv 171
V V 102
Harold i i 139
The Cup ii 168
Foresters n i 490
The Cup I i 135
Harold v i 612
Becket, Pro. 463
Harold v i 628
Qu^en Mary v iv 15
» mi 45
Harold i i 103
Becket in ii 48
The Cup I ii 23
» I ii 110
Becket n ii 96
Queen Mary i i 84
I iv 262
nii46
uii364
mi 160
m iii 181
m iv 211
in iv 426
m vlO
m V 184
IV ii 91
IV ii 196
IV ii 227
IV iii 272
IV iii 386
IV iii 544
Houi
960
mm (continued) 0 would I were My father for an A ! Queen Mary yu2U
And may not speak for 7»s. , . ,, " ^-,79
Sit down here : Tell me thme happiest h. „ J J ' »
worse than that— not one h true to me ! „ v v loy
A good entrenchment for a perilous h ! Harold iii 1 363
among the goldenest T^'s Of Alfred, ,. i^ 111 51
0 hapless Harold! King but for an /. ! „ vi258
God of truth FiU all thine A's with peace !— » Z-^ia
But the h is past, and our brother, Master Cook, Becket i iv 59
1 have but one A with thee-^ " „ ; 44
Let there not be one frown in this one h. .. " » *^
out of the eclipse Narrowing my golden hi ,, n ^^^
Come, come, mine h ! I bargam for mine h. „ n ziz
our mother 'ill sing me old songs by the ;i, ,. m 1100
We have had so many h's together, Thomas, feo many ^^ ... ^^
bo&Fo^r that one 7^ to stay with good King Louis, „ m iii 247
thv Ufe Was not one h's worth in England „ m 111 zox
Your Grace will never have one qmet h. „ v i i»
tho' it be their h, the power of darkness, But my A ^ ... ^^
If The not back in half an h, Come after me. The clp 1 ii g8
So faUs the throne of an h. Th^^nlmn 224
Pride of his heart-the solace of his Ks- The FaUonJZi
iy, haafe an h ago. She be in thcer now. Prom- of May il^
Half an h late ! why are you loitering here ? " !i \7^
Who can tell What golden h's, with what full hands, „ n 509
What feller wur it as 'a' been a-talkin' fur haafe an
fe wi my Dora .'' ,.,,,,••, j 4.
niver 'a been talkin' haafe an h wi' the dml at
killed her oan sister, ^ 1,-
may drop off any day, any 7i. You must see him ^^^^^
theVghTbf these dark h's ; ^-^^^^Viim
We make but one A's buzz, , • ,uj „ " tin 11
I am only merry for an h or two Upon a birthday . „ i ^^
We wll away in four-and-twenty fe s, " J- "^^
My lonely 7i! The king of day hath stept „ n 1 /o
to carve One lone h from it> , , , „ " n i 94
Why break you thus upon my lonely hi « " » ^*
The ruler of an h, but lawful King, « ^^^^f g
Try me an h hence. „ , , . j. " tv S4r)
your free sports have swallow'd my free h. « iv ^
No. not an h : the debt is due to-day. ,. iv v±i
are deUvered here in the wild wood an ^ after noon. „ iv 509
HouriSg whose cheerless E after death Are Night and ^^^^ ^^^^^ ^ ^^^
Wnnm ^(lee a'Zso Ale-honse, Gate-house, Treasure-house) ...
^°So ;ou woulfh^nour my poor h to-night, Qzteen Mary 1 111 118
To Ashridge, or some other country h. .. i v ^^o
seek In that lone h, to practise on my hfe, „ yv ^»4
my A hath been assaulted, u j„ 0 " rriiRn
Splin in our ships, in our forts, in our ^., in our beds ? „ n 180
Your h's fircd-your gutters bubbling blood- „ n " f^SO
a plundering o' Bishop Winchester's h ; ,. " 1 " '^
Here by this h was one ; j o- -d 1 1, 9 " ttt i 4S.5
You ari of the h ? what will you do, Sir Ralph ? „ m 1 4.^5
there were those within the A Who would not have It. „ n 66
also those without the A Who would not have It. „ m n 70
When will you that we summon both our A s ,, m u no
My lords of the upper h, And ye, my masters, of ^^^ ... ^^^
the lower h, , • ,_. u u„.u "
sole man in either h Who stood "^'8^* ^^en bo.h
the h's feU. Bagenhall. The X's feU ! OSicer.
I mean the ;.'s knelt . " ^"/j^^^^
I am the one sole man m either A, » """-;oo
The h is all in movement. Hence, and see. „ m v »^
play with fire as children do And bum the h. „ n v 60
none shall hold them in his h and hve, „ iv 1 »o
The stranger at his hearth, and all his h— .. ^W^l^
The ft half-ruin'd ere the lease be out ; .. * " ""
When Wyatt sack'd the Chancellor's ft in ^ . . ^^
ligKSior Alfgar's ft To strike thee down "flaroW i i 307
powers ofthe ft of Godwin Are not enframed m thee. „ 1 1 <il0
House (continued) running out at top To swamp the ft
Unwholesome talk For Godwin's ft !
It means the lifting of the ft of Alfgar.
all the sins of both The h's on mine head-
see confusion fall On thee and on thine ft- . ^
Remain a hostage for the loyalty Of Godwin s ft.
Huge V
Harold i i 379
„ I i 391
„ I i 473
„ I ii 206
„ n ii 490
„ III i 91
i'ha've"biIiit'the°Lord a ft— '(repeat) Harold in i 178 181, 186
Fall, cloud, and fill the ft— , , Harold iiiim
not ftis fault, if our two ft' s Be less than brothers. „ ^^ » j^^
When will ye cease to plot against my ft ? ,. iv 1 iW
Thou hast given it to an enemy of our ft. ,. iv 11 rfi
Thou hast no passion for the H of Godwin— „ iv a U
When I and thou were youths in Theobald's ft, Becket 1 111 41
Not he That is not of the ft, but from the street „ i lu t)B9
dawns darkly and drearily over the ft of God— „ i iv .14b
Sudden change is a ft on sand ; ^ , . , .^1, „ m 111 bU
when he hears a door open in the ft and thinks the
master.' " ™ V' "'^
I wiU be Sole master of my ft. » J}.]f}.
and in thy name I pass'd From ft to ft. ,. , , " Illofit
Uttle fair-hair'd Norman maid Lived in my mother s ft : „ v u Jbl
yet threaten your Archbishop In his own ft. -- v 11 pUb
dost thou know the ft of Sinnatus ? 1 he Cup 11 49
These grapes are for the ft of Sinnatus— >. 1 1 ^^
this pious cup Is passport to their ft, >. } 1 »^
They shall not harm My guest within my ft. ,. i " d/ (
The child, a thread within the ft of birth, » n ^0^
feud between our h's is the bar I cannot cross ; The Falcon 254
My comrade of the ft, and of the field. » »*»
O this mortal ft. Which we are born into. Prom, of May 11 273
would fight for his rents, his leases, his ft's, i' oresters 1 1 233
whose return Builds up our ft again ? " iv luw
House.breaker_Beant there h-b's down i' Littlechester, ^^^^^ ^^ ^^^ ^ ^^^
House-di^Jlch the linen from the hawthorn, poison ^^^^^^^^^ ^ ^^
Household (adj.) The ft dough was kneaded up with blood ; Becket i iii 351
So rare the ft honeymaking bee, " J}}J,\'
to cast AU threadbare ft habit, i^ore^ters 1 111 112
Household (S) Your lavish ft curb'd Q«ee« Jl/ar^/ 1 v 113
no foreigner Hold office m the ft, fleet, .. muu-s
No man without my leave shall excommunicate My „ ,.^ „ ,9
tenants or my ft. ,^, ^ 5ec/:e<, Pro. 32
And when I was of Theobald's ft, once— „ 1 1 w
you have put so many of the King's ft out of ^ ... ^^^
PrinrrJlTkavemeofhis-what? fl? J'ore'i^.r. iv 703
Houseless A ft head beneath the sun and stars, ,, n 1 w
House-Side and there is a piece of beef like a ft-5. Prom, of May 1 793
HoveT At the park gate he h's with our guards. Queen Mary u iv Id
Love wiU ft round the flowers when they first awaken ; „ v 11 d/u
That ft's round your shoulder— . , • , v ij JjVW'i
sea-bird rouse himself and ft Above the mndy ripple, Harold 11 11 iS>
How See'Ovr ,.,>,« 7
Howard (Lord William, Lord High Admiral) (See also
William, William Howard) had H spied me
thereA^d made them speak, . Qwee^ Mar</ 11 11 32
This H, whom they fear, what was he saying .•* „ m )'^^
And if he did I care not, my Lord H. « i^ > i
Lord H, Sending an insolent shot that dash d „ v ^"
H is all English ! . ^ .r, . ^. a r. u r
Howiver (however) my rheumatizy be that bad h be i
to win to the bumm'. " , „ 419
Howl if your wolf the while should ft for more, „ ••■054
how those Roman wolfdogs ft and bay him ! „ iv i» ^
note Whereat the dog shall ft and run, /w „h ^4
if it suit their purpose to ft for the King, rhfcTih 32
They ft for thee, to rend thee head from hmb. The Cup i u ^-i
Howsopver tS'eg Howsomiver, S'iver ^ ,, ■■■ rnn
HSwSver(howsSever) but a had to bide ft, ^^^'''^ S Pro 5W
Hug thou wouldst ft thy Cupid tiU his ribs cracked- Becket, Pro. 504
Huge or else swam heavily Against the ft corruptions .v ii IOC
""^ of the Church, .^ ^,, . ^, Qwee« Marj, iv a lOJ
Did I call him heretic ? A ft heresiarch ! ,. ',73
But wherefore not Helm the ft vessel of your state,
Huge
961
Huppads
Huge (continued) I watch'd you dancing once With
your h father ; Queen Mary v ii 145
And yon h keep that hinders half the heaven. Harold ii ii 228
I have always told Father that the h old ashtree
there would cause an accident some day ; Prom, of May in 244
hundreds of h oaks, Gnarl'd — older than the thrones
of Europe— Foresters m 90
Hugest therefore have we shatter'd back The h wave from
Norseland ever yet Surged on us, Harold iv iii 62
Hugh (de Morville, knight of the household of King Henry n.)
(See also De Morville) H, H, how proudly you exalt
yoiu- head ! Beclcet v ii 454
H, I know well thou hast but half a heart „ v iii 129
Hum thick as bees below, They h like bees, — ■ Harold i i 32
So come, come ! ' ' H ! ' Foresters iv 19
But come, come \' ' H I' „ iv 26
Buman What h reason is there why my friend Should
i meet Queen Mary iv i 68
not for little sins Didst thou yield up thy Son to h
death ; „ iv iii 144
to cancel and abolish all bonds of h allegiance, „ v iv 50
He dyed, He soak'd the trunk with h blood, Harold m i 143
not strange ! This was old h laughter in old Rome „ iii ii 163
It's humbling — it smells o' h natur'. Becket i iv 238
Were I h, were I h, I could love you like a woman. Foresters n ii 190
luman-heartedest Thou art the h-h, Christian-charitiest
of all crab-catchers. Harold ii i 62
lumankind After his death and better h ; Queen Mary iv iii 160
luman-red God redden your pale blood ! But mine
is h-r ; Beclcet i iv 36
[umber (river) all the North of H is one storm. Harold n ii 291
We could not move from Dover to the H „ n ii 537
Are landed North of H, and in a field „ izi ii 126
Our Wessex dragon flies beyond the H, „ iv i 4
[amble So wife-hke h to the trivial boy Queen Mary in i 364
Do make most h suit unto your Majesties, „ nt iii 118
So to set forth this h suit of ours „ in iii 145
Sir, I attend the Queen To crave most h pardon — „ ni iv 432
We make our h prayer unto your Grace „ iv i 43
a Therefore I come ; h myself to Thee ; „ iv iii 133
Ay, ay ! the King h's himself enough. Becket n ii 184
nfnWMiflgn W'e be a-going home after our supper in all h,
my lord ; for the Archbishop loves h, „ i iv 207
umblest Loyal and royal cousin, h thanks. Queen Mary m ii 4
Our h thanks for your blessing. Farewell ! Becket i iv 42
umbling It's h — it smeUs o' human natur'. „ i iv 238
jumiliated Being so crush'd and so h We scarcely
dare - „ v i 69
lumiliation bow'd herself to meet the wave Of h, „ iv ii 390
iomoor man not prone to jealousies, Caprices, A's, Prom, of May m 627
jmpt Ay, ay, no doubt ; and were I h behind, Becket n i 255
ondred {See also Hoonder'd) that she met the Queen
at Wanstead with five h horse. Queen Mary i i 78
And when I sleep, a h men-at-arms Guard my poor
dreams „ i v 152
I would not ; but a h miles I rode, „ i v 551
' Whosoever will apprehend the traitor Thomas
Wyatt shall have a h pounds for reward.' „ ii iii 61
A h here and h's hang'd in Kent. „ mil
in Guisnes Are scarce two h men, „ v i 5
That gateway to the mainland over which Our flag
hath floated for two h years Is France again. „ v ii 261
The shadows of a A fat dead deer For dead men's
ghosts. Harold i ii 103
Red gold — a h purses — yea, and more ! „ ni i 18
lost and found Together in the cruel river Swale Ah
years ago ; „ in ii 11
And caked and plaster'd with a h mires, „ iv iii 177
a h thousEuid men — Thousands of horses, „ iv iii 194
A h pathways running everyway, Becket, Pro- 163
And York lay barren for a h years. „ i iii 54
I found a h ghastly muxders done By men, „ i iii 407
My lord, the King demands three h marks, „ i iii 626
My lord, the King demands seven h marks, „ i iii 634
' I led seven h knights and fought his wars. „ i iii 638
IV 496
IV 497
IV 499
IV 502
„ IV 1046
„ IV 1087
Harold ii ii 383
„ II ii 600
Becket n ii 361
Harold n i 48
Becket u ii 282
Foresters iv 700
Hundred (continued) My lord, the King demands five h
marks, Becket i lii 641
crawl over knife-edge flint Barefoot, a h leagues, „ ii i 273
I warrant Thou hast sworn on this my cross a h times „ iv ii 206
Monks, knights, five h, that were there and heard. „ v ii 406
But after rain o'erleaps a jutting rock And shoots
three h feet. The Cup i i 111
It is old, I know not How many h years. „ ii 343
My bird ? a,h Gold pieces once were offer'd by the
Duke. The Falcon 323
A troop of horse Filippo. Five h ! Count. Sav
fifty! ' „ €18
A h times more worth a woman's love. Than
this. Prom, of May m 743
She was murdered here a h year ago. Foresters n i 245
Ay, ay, but there is use, four h marks.
There then, four h marks.
What did I say ? Nay, my tongue tript — five h marks
for use.
A h more ? There then, a h more,
a h lovers more To celebrate this advent of our King !
And here perhaps a h years away Some hunter in
day-dreams
Hung town H out raw hides along their walls,
if that but h upon King Edward's will.
Uke Mahound's coffin h between heaven and earth —
Hunger (s) when I was down in the fever, she was down
with the h.
Hunger (verb) crowd that h's for a crown in Heaven
Who h for the body, not the soul —
Hunger-nipt on a land So h-n and wretched ; Queen Mary v i 168
Hunt (s) tho' a stranger fain would be allow'd To join
the h. The Cup i i 197
a random guest Who join'd me in the h. „ i ii 109
Hunt (verb) Nay, I know They h my blood. Queen Mary in v 78
and h and hawk beyond the seas ! Harold i i 229
I will hawk and h In Flanders. „ i i 259
had past me by To h and hawk elsewhere, „ n ii 28
Going or gone to-day To h with Sinnatus. The Cup i i 65
Have let him h the stag with you to-day. „ i ii 379
h him With pitchforks ofE the farm. Prom, of May n 426
They h in couples, and when they look at a maid Foresters i i 255
Hunted Which h him when that un-Saxon blast, Harold n ii 30
not fear the crowd that h me Across the woods, The Cup i iii 16
Hunter he stood there Staring upon the h. „ i ii 123
And take a h's vengeance on the meats. „ i ii 43
and the h's, if caught, are bUnded, or worse than
blinded.
The h's passion flash'd into the man,
Some h in day-dreams or half asleep
Hunting (See also A-hunting) I once was at the h of
a lion.
Why, is not man a h animal ?
Huntingdon (Robin Hood, Earl of) (See also Robin,
Robin Hood, Robin of Huntingdon) I pray
you, look at Robin Earl of H's men.
as true a friend of the people as Lord Robin of H.
me who worsliip Robin the great Earl ot H ?
God bless our weU-beloved Robin, Earl of H.
This Robin, this Earl of H — he is a friend of Richard —
Thou, Robin Hood Earl of H, art attainted and hast
lost thine earldom of H.
by virtue of this writ, whereas Robin Hood Earl of H
Robin Hood Earl of H is outlawed and banished.
Art thou that banish'd lord of H,
My good friend Robin, Earl of H,
if the King forbid thy marrying ^Yith Robin, our good
Earl of H.
Huntsman Gardener, and h, in the parson's place,
H, and hound, and deer were all neck-broken !
Hup (up) haUus h at sunrise, and I'd drive the plow
straait as a line right i' the faace o' the sim, then
back agean, a-foHering my oan shadder — then
h agean
Huppads (upwards) an' then I wur turned h o' sixty.
Foresters iv 226
rv 539
„ IV 1088
The Cup I ii 116
Foresters iv 223
ii36
iil89
ii226
ii248
1 1281
I iii 57
I iii 62
I iii 68
IV 140
IV 829
IV 87.S
Queen Mary rv iii 373
The Cup I ii 23
Prom, of May i 369
' I 363
3 p
Hwl
962
Immortal
Hnri H's his soil'd life against the pikes and dies. Queen Mary ixni 311
if his Northumbrians rise And h him from them - ^orMun |57
1S\ the dread ban of the Church on those *^f/'c " 295
AnH h'l the victor's column do^vn with him i«« ^up ii ^»o
H«l^ and ?our battles Into the heart of Spain ; Queen Mary m iWT
sir, they h it back into the fire, " j j3g
and fe it from him Three fields away. ^JcS i iv 2?4
Hnitah fl ! Vive le Roy ! , :i • _„ j.
Hnrry (s) I trod upon him even now, my lord, in my h, ^^^ ^^^^^^ ^^^
Hurry (verb^Whrdo they;, out there? Queen Mary nii A
Sy He can but creep down into some dark hole Like ^^ ^^ . ^^
a A beast, " tv iii 187
fl no man more Than you would harm Torestersii ii A
He had been- h, And bled beneath his armour. i orestersii n^
He hath been h, was growing whole again, "
Husband The traitor ;» dangled at the door. Queen ^"'^ "^j\J^
happily symboll'd by The King your ^ .. ^° {^^
Oh Philip, /i ! now thy love to mine WiU cling „ in " ^J»
Philip's no sudden aUen— the Queen s fe,
parting of a /i and a wife Is hke the cleaving of a ^^ ^^^ ^. ^^^
heart ; „, , • i, " v i 64
not were he ten times king, Ten times our /(, » ^
' Your people hate you as your h hates you. >. ^ . . ^^^
My A hates me, and desires my death. " v ii 581
the child came not, and the h came not ; «
To marry and have no h Makes the wife fool Haro/rf n n duy
Who did discrown thine h, unqueen thee .-' Uiast ^^ . ^^^
thou not love thine '*?,,,, " iv i 224
I had rather She would have loved her h. " '^^
Q Harold ! h ! ShaU we meet ^ain ? " v i 649
because I love The h of another ! " v ii 40
I have lost both crown And ft. " v ii 52
What was he Uke, this h ? hke to thee ? » ^
I mean your goodman, your h, my lady, ^««^«' ^^^
for her ft. King Loms ^osamwnd. Hush! „ "M^2
whom you call-fancy-my hs brother's ^vife. 2^.,'b, Ji i U3
Son, ft, brother gash'd to death in vam, J- he Owp i ii i|o
To draw you and your ft to your doom. .. ^ . . ^^
\nd if you should betray me to your ti— " ^ .. ^^
Still— I should tell My ft. " ^ j^j 33
She may, perchance, to save ttiis ft. " ... ,qj
And for the sake of Sinnatus your ft, " ^^ ^^
SrfgMtSiV4U%'«\a„dheher, ^-"^^ «",»;■■ ?»
but I hold thee The ft Of my heart, i'omters in 1^
Husbanded nor yet so amorous That I must needs ^^^^^ ^^^^ ^^ . . ^^^
Husba^d-i^law H-i-?, our smooth-shorn suzerain Becket 11 ii 40
Hush ^^^-hear! Bourne, -and so this unhappy ^^^.^^ ^^^^ , ijj 19
/f ^rft ! You wrong the Chancellor : ^^^^^^ "^ '."366
S Kind, King Louis— «osa.-^. HI gf ^^^ J g^
Oft' O peace ! This violence ill becomes 1 he Lupii zi^
Husk n we may judge the kernel by the ft, "
gr we found /goat-herd's ft and shared His fruits ,.^^^ i u 427
Here is the witch s ft. . j , j, it i 200
They must have past. Here is a woodman s ft. » 11 1 1^
Not in this ft I take it. ... 1. " 11 i 242
There is but one old woman in the h- " „ ^gg
Hymen rather than so clip The flowery robe of ff , Ihe Cup 11 4^0
gSn(s) (<S.e«/.o Battle-hymns. 'Ymn) chants and ft. jggg
In all the churches, . • • *k^
stan^ng^up side by side with me, and singing the ^^^^^ ^^ ^^^ ^^ ^^^
Hymn(vOTb) Hear thy priestesses ft thy glory ! The Cup 11 1
Hypocrisy never bum out the ft that makes the q^,,^ 3^ ^^ iu 525
water m her. , . , i. R<.^l-rf v i 232
Hypocrite And yet I hate him for a ft, FarTstersix tto
From whom he knows are h's and liars. J^oresters iv oou
SSU'"S,X::Srs?S:d i^ff our shores^. fi«^ - in Ig
fcS Jtone-hard, ^'-^ ^lash of danng m him. Q^eenM^. v. 331
Iceland ''^;aTrelanS!t 0^11^.^ ^^'^ "Vj g
Icy white cells, beneath an i mo«n- q^,^ ]i/„,y „ ii 369
Iden And he wiU prove an / to this baae, ^<^ ■ j
Idiot This world of mud, on aU its ^ gleams Of ^^^ ^^ ^^^^^ ^^^ .^^
Idiotci£^^ W'at are all tbese|^-;j, Utopian i. . -588
Idle But this IS I of you. ^velI, sir mcu, '^« ./ ^. . ^^^
Idyll This Dobson of your t? ^^ Harold 11 Hm
H Thine ' t's ' will sear thine eyes out ay. RecfceUii iii 279
He fenced his royal pomise with an i. .... ^ecm iiiiu ^u
is the King's i too high a stile for your lordship to ^^ ^^^ ... ^^
overstep r»»,.;v= ' ; ',', "i "i 284
I^„^i;"^v;aSSrh'lt»a-vith..pub,ic.^«..».«»,..iiM
Imorwit She is i of all but that I love hen
SSW I am sure (Knowing the man, he wrought ^^^^^ ^^^^ ^^ . ^^^
111 The Queen is z advised: shall I turn traitor? „ 1 /^
i counsel! These let them keep at present ; ,. ^^^ .^
I am i disguised. " vii344
\nd fared so i in this disastrous worlci. .. ..jigis
Aladam, you do i to scorn wedded love. j^ecicet, no.oo
May God grant No i befall or him or thee when I ^^ ^^ . ^
El^or? Eleanor, have I Not heard i things of her ^^ . ^3^
TMs vLTnce i becomes The silence of our Temple. The Cup n 211
but you turn right ugly when you re in an ^ ^^^^^ ^^ ^^^ ^ ^^
but^irisuccessof the farm, and the debts, .. ^^^^
and so i in consequence all Monday, Foresters 1 iii 3:
Rut i befitting such a festal day
Who hast that worship for me which Heaven knows ^ ... ^^
lUa Tiii?'^Is"l,' which wiU test their sect. Queen Ma^y m iv 42>
niiested A maiden now Were i-h in these dark days ^^^^^^^^^ ^^ ..^
of John, . . Becket 11 i IT'
Illegitimate And mine a batterer t hate ^^ , ■
lU-garrison'd Calais is but.t-9, m Guisnes V ^.^^ 33
SSf^ea^S=?^S?K^p:G&^ Q^eenM^^^
^et up your Iroken i's ; Be com ortable to me. ]:,^^,,,,,;,;i 61
Who melts a waxen i by the hre, ^ ^ 53
Imagine And can you not i that the wreath, ^he ra ^^
I said you might t it was so. ilfar/iii iv 17
Imitate And hot desire to i; '*«' -^ ^ jji^
Tmiffttive A Parliament of i apes ! , a. j ^ "
atuel Goldsmiths / G was broke into 0' Monday ^^^^ ^^ ^^^ ^ 3^
Immediate *'and they threaten The i thunder-blast of ^^^^^^ ^^^ .„ ^
interdict : . , pv,i.r^Vi .. in iii
Immemorial so violated the i usage of the Church, ,^^^^ ^^ . g.
Immortal Lovers hold True love t. ^^ jo
Tom seem, as it were, /, and we mortal. ^j^^ ^^ . j 5,
We have respect for man s * soul.
Imp
963
Invisible
1 p Venal i ! What say'st thou to the Chancellorship Becket n i 224
1 pair or i in any way This royal state of England, Queen Mary ii ii 229
1 perial What your i father said, my liege, To deal
with heresy gentlier. „ iii vi 56
We cannot fight i Rome, The Cup ii 92
let the new-made children Of our i mother see the show. „ ii 165
I plore I thus i vou, low upon my knees. Queen Mary iv i 64
I port It much t's me I should know her name.
it may i her all as much Not to be known.
1 portance policy in some matter Of small i
I possible / ; Except you put Spain down.
I press And she i her wrongs upon her Council,
I prison Degrade, i him — Not death for death.
Too politic for that. / me ?
I Drison'd I was but woimded by the enemy there And
then i. The Falcon 389
I prisonment In j- our five years of i, Queen Mary iii iv 242
I pugn Which might i or prejudice the same ; „ m iii 133
loute it is the traitor that t's Treachery to his King ! Becket i iii 484
Weak natures that i Themselves to their unUkes, Foresters n i 691
Becket i i 192
„ I i 197
Queen Mary in vi 168
„ V iii 79
III vi 183
Becket i iii 400
IV ii 397
lalculable Yea, even such as mine, i,
I apable Old, miserable, diseased, / of children.
I amate Whose life was all one battle, i war,
1 avemd See Deep-incavem'd
I ense parch'd banks rolhng i, as of old,
puffed out such an i of unctuosity into the nostrils of
our Gods of Church and State, Becket m iii 115
benselike All her breath should, i, Rise Queen Mary in iii 164
Queen Mary iv iii 147
V V 179
Harold v i 397
Queen Mary i v 91
Lest As being bom from i ;
Iiestuous Peter, I'll swear for him He did believe
the bond i.
Ii h Fire — i by i to die in agony !
If thou draw one i nearer,
being every i a man I honour every i of a woman.
I for old Much is every i a man,
bline whether her Grace i to this splendid scion of
I Plantageoet.
Iiiuded The i Danae has escaped again Her tower,
iDnsistency Nay, for bare shame of i,
Iijrr'd every bond and debt and obUgation / as
Chancellor,
[i His sceptre shall go forth from / to / !
£; ?tenniiiate But a weak mouth, an i — ha ?
/ shawl That Philip brought me in our happy
Iii 69
., I ii 77
IV ii 223
Foresters i i 145
„ III 63
IV 290
Queen Mary i i 134
Becket I i 395
Queen Mary i ii 39
Becket i iii 712
Queen Mary in ii 177
III iv 340
ii538
days ! —
£^ies Spain would be England on her seas, and England
j Mistress of the I.
\ England Will be Mistress of the / yet,
^ilfference accuse you of i To all faiths, all reUgion ;
Ii!gnation begets An admiration and an i,
'.I oor They are plagues enough i-d.
I aught swoll'n and fed With i's and side-
currents,
Iilmgeon'd / from one whisper of the wind,
inllible of her most Royal, /, Papal Legate-
I coxisin.
lUmous / wretch. Shall I tell her he is dead ?
jamy Fame of to-day is i to-morrow ; / of to-day
is fame to-morrow ; Becket ii i 103
Jliat (adj.) I had to cuff the rogue For i treason. Queen Mary in iii 52
nlat (s) blast your i's, dash The torch of war among Harold ii ii 747
V iii 74
V iii 77
m jv 223
in iv 170
Becket ii ii 91
Queen Mary ii i 234
Becket iv ii 146
Queen Mary in iv 433
From, of May in 336
toated ■ — i — -To sue you for his life ?
nJ3t Thy fears i me beyond reason. Peace !
ndte that it would please Him out of His i love to
break down all kingship and queenship,
Hjmity And /, that knew mine own i,
i I pray God pardon mine i.
aatitode /, Injustice, Evil-tongue, Labour-in-
vain.
i His heart so gall'd with thine i,
ajbitant altho' the i's Seem semi-barbarous,
not only love the country, But its i's too ;
Then one at least of its i's
lOiTit Ay, sir; / the Great Silence.
i Why then the throne is empty. Who i's ?
Queen Mary iv i 10
Harold n ii 451
Queen Mary v iv 47
Becket i iii 696
„ II ii 353
Queen Mary v ii 156
Becket i iii 4
From, of May n 541
II 546
n 552
Qu^n Mary in ii 199
Harold m i 235
Inherit (continued) AMio i's ? Edgar the Atheling ? Harold in i 239
hand that next Fs thee be but as true to thee Becket i i 358
Thou wilt i the land, And so wouldst sell Foresters ii i 534
Inherited some will say because I have i my Uncle. Prom, of May in 598
True, and I have an i loathing of these black sheep
of the Papacy. Becket, Fro. 460
Inheriting which we / reap an easier harvest. Becket n ii 194
Inheritor That bright i of your eyes — your boy ? The Falcon 306
Inhospitable Friends, in that last i plunge Our boat
hath burst her ribs ; Harold ii i 1
Injure That none should wrong or i your Archbishop. Becket i iii 754
Injured send her hosts Of i Saints to scatter sparks of
plague Harold n ii 745
Injury not be wanting Those that will urge her i — Qu,een Mary in vi 176
Injustice Ingratitude, /, Evil-tongue, Labour-in- vain. „ v ii 156
Shall we too work i ?
we must at times have wrought Some great i.
If the king and the law work i.
Do some i, if you hold us here Longer
Ink is written in invisible i's ' Lust, Prodigality,
Inland we two Have track'd the King to this dark i
wood ;
Inmost weight of the very land itself, Down to the i
centre.
Inn at the wayside i Close by that alder-island
Innocence And witness to your Grace's i,
Life on the face, the brows — clear i !
i's that will cry From all the hidden by-ways
equal for pure i of nature. And loveliness of
feature.
Except she could defend her i.
Innocent (adj.) and of the good Lady Jane as a poor i
child who had but obeyed her father ;
perchance A child more i than Lady Jane.
No, no ; her i blood had blinded me.
and when her i eyes were bound, She,
And love is joyful, i, beautiful, And jealousy is
wither'd, sour and ugly :
and another — worse !— An i maid.
Innocent (s) O God, how many an i Has left his bones
Inquisition Holy absolution ! holy / !
cited me to Rome, for heresy. Before his /.
Insane That palate is i which cannot tell
Foresters i iii 87
in 156
IV 229
IV 941
I'rom. of May ii 283
Becket in ii 3
Foresters iv 1027
Prom, of May n 534
Queen Mary in v 50
Becket n i 195
„ in iii 14
Prom, of May ii 372
Foresters ii ii 47
Queen Mary i i 94
I V 502
in i 345
„ III i 405
Foresters n ii 64
ni 389
Becket n ii 408
Queen Mary i iii 32
V ii 43
Becket, Pro. 104
Insolence I hate him for his i to all. De Tracy. And
I for all his i to thee. „ v i 226
Insolent Sending an i shot that dash'd the seas Upon us, Queen Mary v i 57
I clown. Shall I smite him Mith the edge of the sword ? Becket i iv 223
Inspire O Thou, that dost i the germ with life. The Cup n 257
Inspired Why should not Heaven have so i the King ? Becket i i 130
Instant (adj.) It craves an i answer, Ay or No. Mary.
An i Ay or No ! the Council sits. Give it me
quick. Queen Mary i v 589
and had my constant ' No ' For all but i battle. Harold v i 7
Instant (s) You are to come to Court on the i ; Queen Mary in v 223
Come, girl, thou shalt along with us on the i. Friar
Tuck. Then on the i I will break thy head. Foresters iv 679
Instinct following his own i's as his God,
Insured I were i. Miss, an' I lost nowt by it.
Intent to the i That you may lose your English
heritage.
Intercept did not Gardiner i A letter which
Intercession That by your gracious means and i
by your i May from the Apostolic see obtain.
Interdict from the side of Rome, An i on England —
To blast my realms with excommunication And i.
The immediate thunder-blast ot i:
bell-silencing, anti-marrying, burial-hindering {
King at last is fairly scared by tliis cloud — this i.
Intermeddling This Godstow- Becket i such
Interpreter Is he thy mouthpiece, thine i ?
Interwoven See here — an i H and E !
Invade bees. If any creeping life i their hive
Invader May all i's perish like Hardrada !
Inverted / jEsop — mountain out of mouse.
Invisible There, there, is written in i inks
Prom, of May i 588
» u 57
Queen Mary v i 132
V ii 495
in iii 121
„ III iii 146
Becket, Pro. 223
II ii 53
m iii 26
in iii 56
in iii 64
IV ii 457
Foresters I ii 212
Harold I ii 57
Queen Mary in iii 54
Harold iv iii 77
Queen Mary n i 67
Prom, of May u 283
Involve
964
Jester
Involve which hatred by and by I's the ruler Queen Mary iii iv 161
Inward Or am I slandering my most i friend, „ iv ii 105
Inwrought white satin his trunk-hose, / with silver, — „ iii i 78
Ionian Artemis, Artemis, hear him, / Artemis ! The Cup ii 277
Irse Their hour is hard at hand, their ' dies /,' Queen Mary ni iv 426
Ireland — ^Scotland, /, Iceland, Orkney, Harold iii ii 124
Iron (adj.) The Duke Of Alva, an i soldier. Queen Mary iii i 194
\^'ith golden deeds and i strokes that brought Harold ii ii 47
A breath that fleets beyond this i world, „ rn ii 197
knowing that he must have Moved in the i grooves
of Destiny ? From, of May ii 267
Iron (s) / on i clang, Harold iv iii 160
A^'ith hands too limp to brandish i — „ v i 449
flask or two Of that same vintage. There is i in it. The Falcon 586
/ will fuse, and marble melt ; Prom, of May ii 505
Iron-mooded make yield this i-m Duke To let me go. Harold ii ii 339
Ironside or English / Who fought with Knut, „ iv iii 53
Irregular This is i and the work of John. [' /, i ! Foresters i iii 71
Irresolute Fine eyes — but melancholy, i — Queen Mary iii iv 337
Irreverent St. Cupid, that is too i. Becket v i 198
Irritable That i forelock which he rubs, Queen Mary i iv 265
Iscariot Not red like I's. „ m i 217
Island (adj.) Yearns to set foot upon your i shore. „ i v 367
and plunge His foreign fist into our i Church „ ni iv 364
Fair i star ! Elizabeth. I shine ! „ v iii 15
And send thee back among thine i mists With laughter. Harold ii ii 181
The spiritual giant with our i laws And customs, Becket iv ii 444
Island (s) (See also Alder-island, Spice-island) or the
stout old i will become A rotten Umb Queen Mary ii i 104
The i's call'd into the dawning church „ iii iii 172
We parted like the brook yonder about the alder i, From, of May i 773
Island-Church Mould make Our t- C a schism from
Christendom, Becket liiilld
Islander Because these i's are brutal beasts ? Queen Mary iii vi 153
Isle and rooted in far i's Beyond my seeing : Harold iii i 153
To Holy Peter in our English i ! „ iii i 207
Keep him away from the lone Uttle i. Becket n i 16
Eow to the blessed I's ! the blessed I's ! The Cup ii 525
That ever blossom'd on this English i. Foresters i ii 124
Islip it be a var waay vor my owld legs up vro' 7. Queen Mary iv iii 473
Dumble's the best milcher in /. (repeat) „ iv iii 478, 497
'Issen (himself) the owd man's coom'd agean to 'i, Prom, of May iii 703
Issue (s) Yea, were there i bom to her, Queen Mary i v 301
Issue (verb) he that lookt a fangless one, I's a venomous
adder. Becket i iii 453
Istis Non defensoribus i, Walter Map. „ ii ii 346
Italian Catholic church as well Without as with the
I ? Queen Mary iii iii 99
He is all I, and he hates the Spaniard ; „ v ii 55
Italy I have seen A pine in / that cast „ iii iv 136
Tainted with Lutheranism in /. „ iii iv 227
In your soft / yonder ! „ iii iv 254
To plump the leaner pouch of I. „ m iv 365
You make your wars upon him down in I : — „ v i 142
Your troops were never down in /. „ v ii 315
and with him who died Alone in /. „ v ii 508
Itch (s) Crutches, and i'es, and leprosies, and ulcers, Becket i iv 254
Itch (verb) Yet my fingers i to beat him into nothing. „ i iv 229
Iver (ever) I doant believe he's i a 'eart under his
waistcoat. From, of May i 130
but if i I coonxs upo' Gentleman Hedgar agean, „ ii 136
bumin' o' the owld archbishop '11 bum the Pwoap
out o' this 'ere land vor i and i. Queen Mary iv iii 536
Ivy Faster than i. Must I hack her arms ofE ? Harold v ii 146
Your names will cling like i to the wood. Foresters iv 1085
Jacta J tonitrua Deus bellator !
Jade fellow that on a lame / came to court,
Jail whose bolts. That j you from free life,
Jailor My / — Bedingfield. One, whose bolts,
Hast thou such trustless j's in thy North ?
Jalousies (jealousies) he be fit to bust hissen wi'
spites and j.
James J, didst thou ever see a carrion crow
James, St. See St. James
Jane (Lady Jane Grey) and of the good Lady J as a
poor innocent child
That gave her royal crown to Lady J.
saying of this Lady J, Now in the Tower ?
Lady J stood up Stiff as the very backbone
tell your Grace What Lady J replied.
A child more innocent than Lady J.
Or Lady / ? Wyatt. No, poor soul ; no.
And Lady J had left us.
Lady J ? Crowd. God save their Graces !
Cried no God-bless-her to the Lady J,
Janus-faces But J-f looking diverse ways.
Jar since the fondest pair of doves wiU j,
Harold v i
Becket v i
Queen Mary iii v
„ III v
Harold ii ii
Prom, of May ii
Queen Mary iv
V IV
II i
„ II iv
„ III i
III i'
„ III i
Becket iv i
Prom, of May n
Becket i iii
Jachin (a brass pillar, entrance to Solomon's temple) lo !
my two pillars, J and Boaz ! —
Jackson (labourer to Fanner Dobson) Higgins, J,
Harold iii i 192
Luscombe, Nokes,
Prom, of May ill 53
that Dobbins, is it. With whom I used to j ?
Jarr'd but suddenly J on this rock.
Jarring See Ever-jarring
Javelin Our ys Answer their arrows. Harold v i
Jay Hawk, buzzard, /, the mavis and the merle. Foresters i iii
Jealous (See also Childlike-jealous) and thou in thy way
shouldst be / of the King, Becket, Fro.
will he not mock at me The j fool balk'd of her will — „ iv ii
Art thou not j of her ? The Falc
Ay, ruffle thyself — be j ! Thou shouldst be j of her. „
J of me with Eva ! Is it so ? From, of May i
Jealousy (See also Jalousies) and j Hath in it an
alchemic force Queen Mary iii vi
Did you not tell me he was crazed with /, From, of May in
I am a man not prone to jealousies, ' „ in
O Kate, true love and ; are twins. Foresters ii :
And j is wither'd, sour and ugly : „ ii
J, j of the king. „ ii ii
Elf, with spiteful heart and eye. Talk of / ? „ ii ii
Jean they were fishers of men, Father J says. Harold n
Jeer heard One of your Council fleer and j at him. Queen Mary ii ii
nursery-cocker'd child will j at aught „ ii ii
The statesman that shall / and fleer at men, „ ii ii
if he j not seeing the true man Behind his folly, „ ii ii
if he see the man and still will ;", ,, ii ii
J^nny here's little Dickon, and little Robin, and
little J — „ II iii
Jeopardy being in great j of his life, he hath made Becket i iv
Jerk Let be thy jokes and thy j's, man ! The Falcov
Jerk'd Things that seem / out of the common rut Harold i '•■
Jerusalem table steams, like a heathen altar ; nay, like the
altar at J. Becket i
smell o' the mou'd 'ud ha' maade ma live as long
as J. Prom, of May .
Jest (s) the tongue yet quiver'd with the / Queen Mary i ]i
a / In time of danger shows the pulses even. „ ii ii
And the Dutchman, Now laughing at some j ? „ in i
nave and aisles all empty as a fool's ; ! „ iv ii
Thy j — no more. Why — look — is this a sleeve Becket, Pro
Then for thy barren j Take thou mine answer ,, Pro
— That were a j indeed ! „ Pro
There's no j on the brows of Herbert there. „ Fro
good old man would sometimes have his j — „ i
J or prophecy there ? Herbert. Both, Thomas, both. „ J
or any harm done to the people if my j be in defence
of the Truth ? " " j'
if the j be so done that the people Delight „ n i:
Bandy their o^vn rude j's with them, The Cup i i
Jest (verb) Ha! ha! sir; but you / ; I love it: Queen Mary n\
Thou angerest me, man : I do not /. Becket, Pro
We did but j. „ Fro
Why do you j with me, and try To fright me? From, of May \
Jester Thou art a ;' and a verse-maker. Becket u ii
Jesting
965
Journey
tag if you be not /, Neither the old world,
1 They are ; at us yonder, mocking us ?
|s Christ (See also Christ, Christ Jesus) save her
thro' the blood Oi J C
on range with j and with ofial thrown
He calk us worse than J's, Moors, Saracens.
There is Antwerp and the J's.
Advanced thee at his instance by the J's,
1 (adj.) Beetle's ; armoiu" crack'd, Queen.
1 (s) I left her with rich j's in her hand,
I have the / of a loyal heart,
left about Like loosely-scatter'd j's,
in whose crown our Kent is the fairest /.
Eow look'd the Queen ? Bagenhall. No fairer
for her j's.
To set that precious /, Roger of York,
jod's eyes ! what a lovely cross ! what j's !
oo people heaven in the great day When God makes
up his j's.
Behold the / of St. Pancratias
ho' I grudge the pretty /, that I Have worn,
ind not a heart like the ; in it —
Outvalues all the j's upon earth.
Has my simple song set you j ?
(oouutfy wife) Pwoaps be pretty things, J,
)ur Daisy's as good 'z her. Tib. Noa, J. Joan.
Our Daisy's butter's as good 'z hem. Tib.
Noa, J. Joan. Our Daisy's cheeses be better.
Tib. Noa, J.
ly, J, and my owld man wur up and awaay
ly, J ; and Queen Mary gwoes on a bumin'
xxi tek thou my word vor't, J, —
3f Kent (Elizabeth Barton, executed 1534) 'twas
you That sign'd the burning of poor J o K ;
•n (Bishop of Salisbury) (See also Salisbury) No
saying of mine — J of Salisburj'.
I :G08pel of St.) They go like those old Pharisees
in J
[Little) .S'e« Little John
of Oxford, called the Swearer) (See also John of
Oxford, John the Swearer) See if our pious —
what shall I call him, J ? —
, Thou hast served me heretofore with Rome —
ionest J ! To Rome again ! the storm begins again.
tfof Salisbury) (See also John of Salisbury, Salisbury)
ur good J Must speed you to your bower
an J with a nun, That Map,
-J, and out of breath !
Tiy, J, my kingdom is not of this world.
an J, how much we lose, we celibates,
ou hear them, brother J ; Why do you stand so
silent, brother J ?
it so, Dan J ? well, what should I have done ?
y counsel is already taken, J.
ethought they wovdd have brain'd me with it, J.
l|Prmce, afterwards King of England) and these are
the days of Prince J.
gallant Earl. I love him as I hate J.
the service of our good king Richard against the
^arty of J,
lis J — this Norman tjTanny —
am old and forget. Was Prince J there ? Marian.
The Sheriff of Nottingham was there — not J. Sir
Sichard. Beware of J and the Sheriff of Nottingham. „ i i 251
hath sold himself to that beast J — „ i i 268
)wn with J ! (repeat) Foresters I ii 4, 12, 16, 17, 30
irfect — who shoidd know you for Prince J, Foresters i ii 21
did wrong in crying ' Down mth J ; ' For be he
dead, then J may be our King. „ i ii 97
it if it be so we must bear with J. „ i ii 102
ear you be of those who hold more by J than
Richard. Sheriff. True, for through J I had
my sheriffship. I am J's till Richard come
back again, and then 1 am Richard's. „ i ii 199
■ware (5 J ! Marian. I hate him, „ i ii 214
Prom, of May i 673
Foresters iv 676
Queen Mary iii i 388
m iii 191
V i 150
v i 183
Becket i iii 644
Foresters ii ii 160
Queen Mary i iv 242
I iv 247
II i 28
II i 164
III i 92
Becket, Pro. 270
„ Pro. 371
V ii 497
Harold ii ii 700
Prom, of May I 473
The Falcon 91
779
Becket, Pro. 379
Queen Mary iv iii 469
IV iii 480
IV iii 488
IV iii 522
IV iii 533
IV ii 206
Becket ii ii 372
Queen Mary u ii 8
Becket n ii 39
„ II ii 459
„ n ii 467
I i 290
„ I i 305
I i 388
V ii 18
„ V ii 197
„ V ii 534
„ V ii 552
„ V ii 561
„ V ii 613
Foresters i i 178
I i 191
I i 195
I i 238
John (Prince, afterwards King of England) (continued) Bad
me beware Of J : what maid but would beware oiJ? Foresters i ii 256
This is irregular and the work of J. „ i iii 71'
How should we cope with J ? „ i iii 79
I held for Richard, and I hated J. „ u i 52
Our vice-king J, True king of vice — ., ii i 82
our J By his Norman arrogance and dissoluteness, „ ii i 84
J — Shame on him ! — Stole on her, „ n i HQ
the Sheriff, and by heaven. Prince / himself „ nil 73
Prince J, the Sheriff, and a mercenary. Sir Richard.
Prince J again. We are flying from this J. „ ii i 445
be there wolves in Sherwood ? Marian. The wolf, J ! „ ii i 513
this is Maid Marian Flying from J — disguised. „ ii i 680
break. Far as he might, the power of J— „ n i 696
A maiden now Were ill-bested in these dark days of J, „ ii ii 46
That J last week retum'd to Nottingham, „ m 147
We robb'd the traitors that are leagued ^\-ith J ; „ in 160
My lord J, In wrath because you drove him from the
forest, „ in 449
to 'scape The glance of J ., m 463
The bee should buzz about the Court of •/. No ribald
J is Love, no wanton Prince, „ iv 45
Art thou for Richard, or allied to J? Richard. I am
allied to J. „ iv 136
But being 0' J's side we must have thy gold. „ iv 157
But I am more for Richard than for J. „ iv 160
or the head of a fool, or the heart of Prince J, „ iv 213
Break thine alliance with this faithless J, „ iv 324
Still I am more for Richard than for J. „ iv 330
for how canst thou be thus allied With •/, „ iv 351
The Sheriff ! the Sheriff, foUow'd by Prince J „ iv 588
My liege. Prince J— Richard. Say thou no word
against my brother J. „ iv 823
John (St.) See John (Gospel of St.), St. John
John of Oxford (ASee a^so John, John the Swearer) l,JoO,
The President of this Council, Becket i iii 74
For J 0 0 here to read to you. „ i iii 417
Cursed be J o 0, Roger of York, And Gilbert Foliot ! „ n ii 265
John of Salisbury (See also John, Salisbury) We gave thee
to the charge of J o S, „ i i 247
J 0 S Hath often laid a cold hand on my heats, „ i i 38.3
He watch'd her pass with J o S „ i ii 40
priest whom J o S trusted Hath sent another. „ in i 69
J 0 S committed The secret of the bower, „ in iii 4
I know him ; our good J o S. „ v ii 77
make me not a woman, J 0 S, „ v ii 148
John the Swearer (See also John, John of Oxford) They
call thee J t S. „ n ii 462
Join To j a voice, so potent with her Highness, Queen Mary iv i 117
May the great angels j their wings, „ v iv 6
J hands, let brethren dwell in unity ; Harold i i 397
j our hands before the hosts, That all may see. ,, iv i 241
And then thy King might j the Antipope, Becket i iii 211
every thread of thought Is broken ere it j's — „ v ii 207
I'll / with him : I may reap something from him — The Cup 1 i 177
tlio' a stranger fain would be allow'd To / the hunt. „ i i 197
And / your life this day with his, „ 11 135
Well, my child, let us ] them. Prom, of May 1 797
till he / King Richard in the Holy Land. Foresters i ii 238
And j our feasts and all your forest games ,, in 84
by St. Mary these beggars and these friars shall j you. „ in 417
./ them and they are a true marriage ; „ ni 420
Our rebel Abbot then shall / your hands, „ iv 933
Join'd What hinders but that Spain and England j, Queen Mary v iii 69
he / with thee To drive me outlaw'd. Harold iv ii 13
a random guest Who j me in the hunt. The Cup 1 ii 109
And j my banner in the Holy Land, Foresters iv 1000
Joining Mary of England, j hands with Spain, Queen Mary i v 298
Joke Let be thy j's and thy jerks, man ! The Falcon 132
Jolt ^\gainst the unpleasant j's of this rough road Prom, of May i 228
Jonah that the fish had swallowed me. Like ./, Harold n i 38
Rolf, what fish did swallow J ? Rolf. A whale ! „ 11 i 42
Jostle winds so cross and / among these towers. „ n ii 1.55
Journey I am an old man wearied with my j. Queen Mary in ii 128
make ready for the j. „ m v 278
Journey
966
Keep
Journey (continued) so much m orse For last day's /. The Falcon 834
Joy Ay, that was in her hour of j ; Queen Mary i i 84
wearied with my journey, Ev'n with my j. „ iii ii 129
An angel cry ' There is more j in Heaven,' — „ iv ii 10
Either to live with Christ in Heaven with j, „ iv iii 221
I wish you j o' the King's brother. BecTcet iii i 155
0 j for the promise of May, (repeat) Prom, oj May i 43, 44, 723, 725
1 reel beneath the weight of utter j — The Cup ii 450
for who could embrace such an armful of j ? Foresters i ii 71
Whate'er thy j's, they vanish with the day ; „ i iii 44
Joyful And love is j, innocent, beautiful, „ ii ii 64
Judas-lover J-l of our passion-play Hath track'd us hither. Becket iv ii 136
Judge (s) J's had pronoimced That our yoimg Edward Queen Mary l ii 24
if I'm any j. By God, you are as poor a poet, „ ii i 112
sat in mine own courts Judging my fs, Beclcet i iii 369
Doubtless, like fs of another bench. Foresters iii 153
Judge (verb) I shall j with my own eyes Queen Mary i i 133
From thine own mouth I j thee — „ i iii 54
You cannot j the liquor from the lees. „ iv iii 550
Who but the bridegroom dares to j the bride. Becket i iii 685
If we may j the kernel by the husk. The Cup i i 174
Perhaps you j him With feeble charity : „ i ii 185
Sit here, my queen, and j the world with me. Foresters iii 152
But will the King, tlien, j us all unheard ? „ iv 897
Judged As if he had been the Holy Father, sat And
/ it. Queen Mary iv iii 45
The Lord be / again by Pilate ? No ! Becket i iii 97
make my cry to the Pope, By whom I will be j ; „ i iii 725
Judgement what a day ! nigh upo' j daay loike. Queen Mary iv iii 468
Judging sat in mine own courts J my judges, Becket i iii 369
Judgment (See also Judgement) J, and pain
accruing thereupon ; Queen Mary iii iii 219
This was the cause, and hence the j on her. „ iii iv 187
For which God's righteous j fell upon you „ in iv 240
and these j's on the land — „ v i 96
You must abide my j, and my father's, „ v i 145
And our great lords will sit in j on him. Becket i iii 549
Sons sit in j on their father ! — „ i iii 551
decline The j of the King ? „ i iii 676
IS'av, but hear thy /. The King and all his barons
Becket. J\ Barons! „ i iii 682
Ay, the princes sat in j against me, „ i iv 129
yea, and in the day of j also, „ i iv 147
there are men Of canker'd j e very \^ here — „ v ii 61
by the j of the officers of the said lord king. Foresters i iii 64
Judgment-seat drag The cleric before the civil j-s, Becket i iii 84
Juggle What game, what j, what devilry are you playing ? „ v i 153
Juggled She knew me from the first, she j with me. Prom, of May in 687
Ju^ler J and bastard — bastard — he hates that most — Harold n ii 773
And for my part therein — Back to that j, „ v i 54
Julius (the Third, Pope) Legate From our most Holy
Father J, Pope, Queen Mary in iii 126
Our Lord and Holy Father, J, „ in iii 212
JtheThird Was ever just, and mild, and father-like; „ v ii 30
reft me of that legateship Which J gave me, „ v ii 35
July King closed with me last J That I should pass the
censures of the Church Becket v ii 389
Jumieges Did ye not outlaw your archbishop Robert, Robert
of J — Harold, i i 57
Robert the Archbishop ! Robert of J, „ ii ii 530
Jumped or the cow that j over the moon. Foresters ii i 435
Junction Threaten our / with the Emperor — Becket n ii 471
June They did not last three J's. Prom, of May in 589
How few J's Will heat our pulses quicker ! Foresters iv 1061
Juno bust of J and the brows and eyes Of Venus ; The Cup i i 120
Jupiter O all ye Gods— J I— J ! „ n 453
Just 0, 7 God ! Sweet mother, you had time and cause
enough Queen Mary i v 22
His learning makes his burning the more /. „ iv i 160
Who deems it a most j and holy war. „ v i 147
Julius the Third Was ever j, and mild, and father-
like; „ vii31
We have heard Of thy j, mild, and equal governance ; Harold ii ii 690
And all our j and m ise and holy men That shall be
bom hereafter. „ m i 209
Just (continued) for it seem'd to me but / The Church should
pay her scutage like the lords. Becket i i
All that you say is j. I cannot aaswer it Till better times, „ in
Justice Your courts of j will determine that. Queen Mary n iv
By seeking j at a stranger's hand „ iv i
make his battle-axe keen As thine own sharp-dividing j, Harold v i j
Ay, and the King of kings. Or / ; Becket i i
I trust I have not ; Not mangled j. „ i i 1
churl a^gainst the baron — yea. And did him j; „ i iii :
The King's will and God's will and j ; „ i iii
he's no respect for the Queen, or the parson, or the
j o' peace, or owt. Prom, of May i '.
That were a wild j indeed. ,, in !
how often j drowns Between the law and the letter of
the law ! Foresters iv i
Was / dead because the King was dead ? „ iv I
AVe dealt in the wild j of the woods. „ iv ll
Justiciary Before the Prince and chief J, Becket i iii
I have sent to the Abbot and j Foresters n
The Abbot of York and his j. „ iv ;
You, my lord Abbot, you J, I made you Abbot, you J: „ iv i
Jute Angle, J, Dane, Saxon, Norman, Harold ii ii
yet he held that Dane, J, Angle, Saxon, „ iv i
Jutting O thin-skinn'd hand and j veins. Queen Mary w ii
But after rain o'erleaps a j rock And shoots three
hundred feet. The Cup i i
Foresteri
Kate (attendant on Marian) You do well. Mistress K, to
sing and to gather roses.
I would like to show you. Mistress K,
0 sweet K, my first love, the first kiss,
1 have played at the foils too with K :
to stand between me and your woman, K.
Speak to me, K, and say you pardon me !
0 K, true love and jealousy are twins,
1 have been a fool and I have lost my K.
O good K — ^If mj' man- Robin were but a bird-Robin,
call K when you will, for I am close at hand.
Why, where is K ? Marian. K !
Search them, K, and see if they have spoken truth.
Honour to thee, brave Marian, and thy K.
my lady, K and I have fallen out again,
come between me and my K and make us one again.
Embrace me, Marian, and thou, good A', Kiss and con
gratulate me, my good K.
Katekin I have lodged my pretty K in her bower.
Keen Take heed, take heed ! The blade is A; as death. Queen Mary v
make his battle-axe k As thine own sharp-dividing
justice.
Keep (s) he is here. And yonder is thy k.'
Keep (verb) Stand back, k a clear lane !
Have you, my Lord ? Best k it for your own.
You've a bold heart ; k it so.
That I may k you thus, who am your friend
These let them k at present ;
To bind me first by oaths I could not k. And k
To guard and k you whole and safe from all
He k's, they say, some secret that may cost
Why do they k us here ?
He is my good friend, and I would k him so ;
Why did you k me prating ? Horses, there !
Pray'd me to pay her debts, and k the Faith ;
and k me still In eyeshot.
arm'd men Ever k watch beside my chamber door,
He did not mean to k his vow.
K that for Norman William !
chart here mark'd ' Her Bower' Take, k it, friend.
AA'ast thou not told to k thyself from sight ?
And mean to k them. In spite of thee !
A' him awav from the lone little isle.
Harold v i
„ II ii
Queen Mary
„ liv
„ lir
„ I V
>, i^'
„ I V
„ n ii
„ HI i
„ in 1
„ vii
„ viii
>> V V
Harold ii ii
„ II ii
» ini
„ IV iii
Becket, Pro.
„ li
I iii
I
Keep 967
Wp (verb (continued) That if they k him longer as their guest, Becket ii i 91
" .,.-.. , nil 83
Kindly
„ iiii368
„ iiii401
„ mi 119
„ III ii 37
„ III iii 165
„ IV ii 145
„ vii513
The Cwp I i 108
I i 176
I ii 214
„ I iii 132
The Falcon 772
776
I 74
1 194
You did your best or worse to k her Duchy,
we make the time, we k the time, aj', aud we serve the
time ;
I would have done my most to k Eome holy,
asked our mother if I could k a quiet tongue i' my head.
The King fc's his forest head of game here,
to k the figure moist and make it hold water,
k her Indungeon'd from one whisper of the \^ind,
Kest you easy. For I am easy to k.
That in the summer k's the mountain side.
Not one to A; a woman's fealty when Assailed
k it, or you sell me To torment and to death.
k us From seeing all too near that urn.
Then k your wreath, l?ut you will find me
I cannot k your diamonds, for the gift I ask for,
But he will k his love to you for ever ! „ 892
Owd Steer wur afeard she wouldn't be back i' time
to k his birthdaay, Prom, of May 1 17
I came back to k his birthday. Dohson. Well I
be coomed to k his birthdaay an' all.
She icill break fence. I can't k her in order.
if tha can't k thy one cow i' hoixler, how can tha k
all thy scholards i' border ?
Let him k awaay, then ; but coom,
if the child could k Her counsel.
But k us lovers.
K up your heart until we meet again.
Noa, noa ! K 'em. But I bed a word to saay to ye,
has promised to k our heads above Mater ;
Ck)me, come, k a good heart !
but I ^• a good heart and make the most of it.
Shall I k one little rose for Little John ?
so that you k the cowl down and speak not ?
I fc it For holy vows made to the blessed Saints
but can k his followers true.
Why did ye k us at the door so long ?
I fc it to kill nightingales.
He is old and almost mad to k the land.
I A; it for her. Robin. Nay, she swore it never
You hope to hold and k her for youi-self.
We all A; watch.
And we shall k the land.
K silence, bully friar, before the King.
6per So less chance for false k's.
With Cain's answer, my loixl. Am I his A: ?
epest that thou A; a record of his birthdays ?
?!eping Might strengthen thee in A; of thy word,
' Is guiltier k this, than breaking it.
I have done wrong in A; your secret ;
1 196
1 424
1 477
I 639
I 753
II 44
III 170
III 252
Foresters i i 28
„ I i 112
„ I ii 21
„ I ii 174
II i 77
„ II i 223
„ II i 380
„ II i 528
„ II i 591
IV 477
„ IV 608
„ IV 637
„ IV 919
Harold ii ii 688
Becket i iv 187
Foresters i i 221
Harold ii ii 730
„ III i 231
Prom, of May iii 399
Knnel if the city be sick, and I cannot call the k sweet, Becket ii ii 349
I at your worship the first man in K and Christendom, Queen Mary u i 64
, Men of K ; England of England ; „ ii i 157
I in whose crown our K is the fairest jewel. „ ii i 163
Or tamperers with that treason out of K. „ ii ii 12
i these rebels out of K Have made strong head „ ii ii 145
j The Queen of England or the rabble of £" ? „ ii ii 274
And strong to throw ten Wyatts and all K. „ ii ii 354
he was my neighbour once in K. „ ii iii 86
A hundred here and hundreds hang'd in K. „ iii i 2
'twas you That sign'd the burning of poor Joan oi K; „ iv ii 206
happy home-return and the King's kiss of peace in K. Becket in iii 329
] Qtish The Queen of England — or the K Squire ? Queen Mary ii ii 269
" ' " - - . . ^^ II iv 17
II i 158
III iv 359
III V 269
Harold ii ii 739
V i 275
Becket, Pro. 204
III i 193
Prom, of May i 552
These K ploughmen cannot break the guards.
pt you that have k your old customs upright,
I A: my head for use of Holy Church ;
I had k My Robins and my cows in sweeter order
thou hast sworn an oath Which, if not A-,
Fain had I A; thine earldom in thy hands
by thy wisdom Hast A; it firm from shaking ;
she k the seventh commandment better than some I
know on,
We never k a secret from each other ;
you k your veil too close for that w hen they carried
you in ;
in 226
Kernel If we may judge the k by the husk. The Cup lA 1174
Kex like a bottle full up to the cork, or as hollow as a A-, Foresters iV-211
Key Give me thy k's. Harold iiii 681
See here this little A; about my neck ! „ in i JO
Gave me the golden A;'s of Paradise. Becket id 54
Kick if he did me the good grace to A; me Foresters ivB64:
Kick'd the cow A;, and all her milk was spilt. Queen Mary in v 266
thou hast k down the board. I know thee of old. Becket, Pro. 315
slave that eat my bread has A; his King ! „ v i 242
play'd at ball with And k it featureless — The Cup ii 128
Kill We do not A; the child for doing that Queen Mary i v 62
we know that ye be come to A; the Queen,
don't ye k the Queen here. Sir Thomas ;
we pray you to k the Queen further off,
1 have not come to k the Queen Or here or there :
We A; the heretics that sting the soul —
the shepherd doth not A; The sheep that wander
you must A; him if you would have him rest—
If Hate can A;, And Loathing wield a Saxon battle-axe — ■
k, k with knife or venom One of his slanderous harlots ?
s'pose I k's my pig, and gi'es it among 'em,
' As flies to the Gods ; they A; us for their sport.'
It is Nature k's, And not for her sport either.
That hold by Richard, tho' they k his deer.
I keep it to A; nightingales.
if we A; a stag, our dogs have their paws cut off,
Kill'd Thy A; but for their pleasure and the power
and A; away at once Out of the flutter.
0 God, I have k my Philip !
rose or no rose, has k the golden violet.
K half the crew, dungeon'd the other half
a rumour then That you were A; in battle,
but we fought for it back, And A; —
And we k 'em by the score !
mastiff, That all but k the beggar,
niver 'a been talkin' haafe an hour wi' the divil 'at
k her oan sister.
If it had k one of the Steers there the other day,
K the sward where'er they sat,
E[iIIing And cruel at it, k helpless flies ;
and the power They felt in A;.
Kin but follow'd the device of those Her nearest k :
Let kith and A; stand close as our shield-wall.
His k, all his belongings, overseas ;
restore his A:, Reseat him on his throne of Canterbury,
Send back again those exiles of my A;
From whom, as being too A:, you know, ,
1 dare not brave my brother. Break with my k.
Kind O, k and gentle master, the Queen's Officers,
she had seen the Archbishop once. So mild, so k.
Weant ye gi'e me a A; answer at last ?
saints were so k to both on us that he was dead
before he was bom.
Kindle He hath gone to k Norway against England,
And A; all our vales with myrtle-blossom,
Kindled sparkles out as quick Almost as k ;
and A; with the palms Of Christ !
you should know that whether A wind be warm or
cold, it serves to fan A A; fire,
after much smouldering and smoking, be k again
upon yoxu" quarter,
the fire, when first k, said to the smoke.
Kindlier The running down the chase is k sport
and will pray for you That you may thrive, but in
some k trade. Foresters iii.258
Kindliest The k man I ever knew ; Queen Mary iv iii 421
Kindly Be k to the Normans left among us, Harold in i 303
A k rendering Of ' Render unto Caesar.' ... „ in ii 167
Thou art too A:. „ iv iii 32
Not A; to them ? Sinnatus. K? O the most k Prince
in all the world ! The Cup i ii 354
Yet he seem'd A;, And said he loathed the cruelties „ i ii 372
he always took you so A;, he always took the world
so A-. The Falcon 187
made a wry mouth at it, but he took it so A;, „ 191
H iii 108
II iii 110
„ II iii 114
„ II iii 117
„ HI W 68
„ inivl02
V V 69
Harold v i 413
Becket iv ii 409
Prom, of May 1 147
I 264
1-272
Foresters i iii 100
ni380
IV.224
Queen Mary in iv 74
in V 163
vvlSl
Becket, Pro. 351
„ V ii 444
The FalconM2
615
v620
Prom, of May I 559
n.604
ni-249
Foresters n ii 152
Queen Mary in iv 65
„ iniv 76
in i 380
Harold I i 398
Becket ii.i 71
„ niill7
„ in iiil87
„ IV ii 307
The Falcon 257
Queen Mary I iil07
Becket v ii 120
Prom, of May II-.63
Foresters n i 372
Harold iii.i 79
The Cup n-267
Queen Mary i ii 74
I V 93
I V.621
Becket n ii 313
„ u ii 31«
„ IV ii 213
Kindly
968
King
Kindly (continued) he always took you so k — The Falcon 195
And were my k father sound again, Foresters iii 81
Kindn^s beget A k from him, for his heart was rich, Queen Mary iv i 169
0 Bonner, if I ever did you k — „ iv ii 152
but smile As k, watching all, Harold i i 367
King (See also Baby-king, Boy-king, Co-king, Father-
king, Giant-king, Mock-king, Monk-kiag, Vice-
king) and this wrought Upon the ^- ; Qween Mary \ Vi 11
You look'd a fc. - « i iii 103
but we play with Henry, K of France, „ i iii 131
The K is skilful at it ? „ i iii 144
And so you well attend to the k's moves, „ i iii 152
a K That with her own pawns plays against a
Queen, Whose play is all to find herself z,K. ,. i iii 161
make him K belike. „ i iv 212
A k to be — is he not noble, girl ? „ i v 4
then the K — that traitor past forgiveness, „ i v 28
What says the K your master ? „ i v 248
if this Philip be the titular k Of England, „ i v 254
but your k stole her a babe from Scotland „ i v 291
Thou speakest of the enemy of thy k. „ i v 327
he will be K, K of England, my masters ; „ ii i 173
and if Philip come to be K, O my God ! „ n i 199
to whom The k, my father, did commit his trust ; „ ii ii 208
To be your k, ye would rejoice thereat, „ ii ii 224
Makes enemies for himself and for his k; ,, ii ii 399
Their cry is, Philip never shall be k. „ ii iv 2
Left him and fled ; and thou that would'st be K, „ n iv 83
My foes are at my feet, and Philip K. „ ii iv 143
Nay, he is K, you know, the K of Naples. The
father ceded Naples, that the son Being a K,
might wed a Queen — „ iii i 72
The K of France will help to break it. „ in i 105
The French K winks at it. „ in i 160
Long live the K and Queen, Philip and Mary ! „ in i 208
There be both K and Queen, Philip and Mary. Shout ! „ m i 296
where you gave your hand To this great Catholic K. „ in ii 92
happily symboll'd by The K your husband, ,, ni ii 110
The K is here ! — My star, my son ! „ in ii 183
He's here, and k, or will be — yet cocksbody ! „ in iii 44
The K and I, my Lords, now that all traitors „ in iv 1
the K And you together our two suns in one ; „ iir iv 18
bolster'd up The gross K's headship of the Church, „ in iv 246
The Church's evil is not as the K's, „ iii iv 273
But not the force made them our mightiest Vs. „ in iv 336
Crown'd slave of slaves, and mitred k of k's. „ ni iv 38.1
' It is the K's wish, that you should wed Prince
Philibert of Savoy. „ iii v 221
Why then the K\ for I would have him bring it „ iii vi 21
Against the K, the Queen, the Holy Father, „ in vi 33
'~The K hath wearied of his barren bride.' „ in vi 140
K and Queen, To whom he owes his loyalty „ iv i 21
Stood out against the K in your behalf, „ iv i 126
And when the K's divorce was sued at Rome, „ iv iii 41
Friend for so long time of a mighty K; „ iv iii 73
Obey your K and Queen, and not for dread „ iv iii 177
1 conclude the K a beast ; Verily a lion if you will — „ iv iii 411
Here is the K. „ v i 15
There is no k, not were he ten times k, „ v i 62
The K of France the K of England too. „ v i 198
Madam, I brought My K's congratulations ; „ v ii 570
My K would know if you be fairly served, „ v iii 20
I take it that the k hath spoken to you ; „ v iii 85
Ay, tell the K that I will muse upon it ; „ v iii 89
But I am much beholden to your K. „ v iii 99
I am much beholden to your K, your master. „ v iii 111
the one K, the Christ, and all things in common, as
in the day of the first church, when Christ Jesus
was K. „ V iv 53
lair a likeness As your great K in armour „ v v 29
He can but read the k's face on his coins. Stigand. Ay,
ay, young lord, there the k's face is power. Harold i i 71
To sleek and supple himself to the k's hand. „ i i 149
Too hardy with thy k\ „ i i 198
alter those twelve years a boon, my k, ,, i i 226
King (coMinued) What lies upon the mind of our good k Harold i i 269
Brother, the k is wiser than he seems ; And Tostig knows
it; Tostig loves the k. Harold. And love should
know ; and — be the k so wise, — „ i i 272
The k hath made me Earl ; make me not fool ! Nor
make the K a fool, who made me Earl ! ,» i i 288
Who made the K who made thee, make thee Earl. „ i i 294
Pray God the people choose thee for their k\ ?, i i 315
Ana thou art ever here about the K : „ i i 321
To the good k who gave it — not to you — „ i i 407
The k ! the k is ever at his prayers ; „ i i 410
In all that handles matter of the state I am the k. ,, i i 413
thou hast taught the A; to spoil him too; „ i i 451
Farewell, my A;. Harold. Not yet, but then — my queen. ,, i ii 137
If he were K of England, I his queen, „ i ii 154
lest the k Should yield his ward to Harold's will. :, i ii 158
' 0 thou more saint than kl' „ i ii 168
Tostig, Edward hath made him Earl: he would be k: — „ i ii 187
Harold Hear the k's music, all alone with him, „ i ii 194
Who knows I may not dream myself their A; ! ., i ii 252
a whale to a whelk we have swallowed the K of England. „ n i 45
Who shall be k's of England. I am heir Of England by
the promise of her k. „ n ii 123
there the great Assembly choose their k, „ n ii 127
I ^vill be k of England by the laws, „ ii ii 130
More kinglike he than like to prove a k. „ ii ii 143
What said the K? 'I pray you do not „ n ii 217
Yea, yea, he would be k of England. „ ii ii 369
And he our lazy-pious Norman K, „ ii ii 444
our good K Kneels mumbling some old bone — „ ii ii 468
The k, the lords, the people clear'd him of it. „ ii ii 522
and a child. Will England have him k? „ ii ii 573
]OTomised that if ever he were k In England, „ ii ii 587
Ay ... if the k have not revoked his promise. „ ii ii 609
Thou Shalt be verily k — all but the name — „ ii ii 632
I, the Count— the AT— Thy friend— „ ii ii 754
Then our great Council wait to crown thee K — „ m i 4
sickness of our saintly k, for whom My prayers „ in i 164
Nay — but the council, and the k himself, „ in i 171
It lies beside thee, k, upon thy bed. „ in i 195
Let me be buried there, and all our k's, „ in i 208
It shall be granted him, my k ; „ in i 228
we be not bound by the k's voice In making of a k, yet
the k's voice „ in i 236
my lord, my k ! He knew not whom he sware by. ,, in i 255
I did not dream then I should be k. — „ in i 271
and dear son, swear When thou art k, „ in i 306
but to please our dying k, and those Who make „ iii i 329
Our holy k Hath given his virgin lamb to Holy Church „ in i 333
for the it Is holy, and hath talk'd with God, „ in i 354
And our great Council wait to crown thee ll. „ in i 407
Crown'd, crown'd and lost, crown'd K — „ in ii 2
Harold the K ! Harold. Call me not K, but Harold.
Edith. Nay, thou art K ! „ in ii 32
Thine, thine, or K or churl ! „ in ii 36
rather let me be K of the moment to thee, „ in ii 41
than to reign K of the world without it. „ in ii 45
thou be only K of the moment over England. „ in ii 51
Tho' somewhat less a A; to my true self „ in ii 53
nor priestly A; to cross Their billings ere they nest. „ in ii 93
He, and the giant K of Norway, „ in ii 122
The K hath cursed him, if he marry me ; „ in ii 189
Let not our great k Believe us sullen — only shamed to
the quick Before the k — as having been so bruised
By Harold, A; of Norway; but our help Is Harold, k
of England. Pardon us, thou ! Our silence is our
reverence for the A; ! „ iv i 6
old Northumbrian crown. And A;'* of our own choosing. „ iv i 33
Had in him kingly thoughts — a A; of men, „ iv i 83
Not made but born, like the great A; of all, „ iv i 85
bad the A; Who doted on him, „ iv i 102
K ! thy brother. If one may dare to speak the truth, „ iv i 107
good A; would deign to lend an ear Not overscomful, „ iv i 135
thence a A; may rise Half-Godwin and half-Alfgar, „ iv i 142
The A; can scarcely dream that we, „ iv i 163
King
969
King
King (contimied) Who dares arraign us, k, of such a plot ? Harold iv i 168 Ehig (continued) However k's and queens may frown on thee. Beckd i ii 18
Yea, take the Sacrament upon it, k.
The nimble, wild, red, wiry, savage k —
Thou hast but cared to make thyself a k — ■
Every man about his k Fought like a k ; the k like his
own man,
My lord the K ! William the Norman,
To do with England's choice of her own k?
It the A; fall, may not the kingdom fall ? But if I faU, I
fall, and thou art k ; And, if I win, I win, and thou
art k;
How should the people fight When the k flies ?
How should the K of England waste the fields Of England,
That scared the dying conscience of the k,
I thy k, who came before To tell thee
0 hapless Harold ! K but for an hour !
The k's last word — ' the arrow ! '
advise the k Against the race of Godwin.
Get thou into thy cloister as the k Wiird it:
1 have not spoken to the k One word ;
The k commands thee, woman !
England Is but her k, and thou art Harold !
Edith, if I, the last English K of England-
all the monks of Peterboro' Strike for the k ;
k of England stands between his banners.
They have broken the commandment of the k !
With whom they play'd their game against the k !
Aldwyth. The k is slain, the kingdom overthrown !
being the true wife Of this dead K,
And this dead k's Who, k or not,
When all men counted Harold would be k,
Every man about his k Fell where he stood.
I am K of England, so they thwart me not.
Look to your k.
my bishop Hath brought your fc to a standstill.
Why, there then — down go bishop and k together,
to the statesman Who serves and loves his k, and whom
the k Loves not as statesman,
That tread the k's their children under-heel^
My young son Henry crown'd the K of England,
K, Church, and State to him but foils wherein
God's favour and k's favour might so clash
Parthian shaft of a forlorn Cupid at the K's left breast,
and the K gave it to his Chancellor,
but because he had the love of the A',
retinue of three k's behind him, outroyalling royalty ?
he holp the K to break down our castles,
you could not see the K for the kinglings.
she, whom the K loves indeed, is a power in the State.
Kival ! — ay, and when the K passes,
secret matter which would heat the K against thee
thou in thy way shouldst be jealous of the K,
then the K came honeying about her,
make her as hateful to herself and to the K,
wreak our spite on the rosefaced minion of the K, and
bring her to the level of the dust, so that the K —
To please the K ! Becket. Ay, and the K of k's,
Shall I fall off — to please the K once more ?
Not fight — tho' somehow traitor to the K —
•* I mean to fight mine utmost for the Church, Agamst
the K ' ? Becket. But dost thou think tlie K Forced
mine election? Herbert. I do think the K Was
potent in the election, and why not ? Why should
not Heaven have so inspired the A' ?
The rift that runs between me and the K.
thro' The random gifts of careless k's,
here I gash myself asunder from the K,
What friend ! Rosamund. The K.
My friend, the A ! . . . O thou Great Seal of England,
Given me by my dear friend the A of England —
To tell the A, my friend, I am against him.
O, my dear friend, the K ! O brother !—
Let the Great Seal be sent Back to the A to-morrow.
The A may rend the bearer limb from limb. .
Of this wild Rosamund to please the A,
,, IV i
183
„ IV i
198
„ IV ii 75
„ IV iii 56
„iviii
180
„ V i 20
J, V i
123
„ V i
138
,
„ V i
140
i> V i
212
» vi
235
« y i
258
„ V i
266
,. V i
281
1. V i
309
,, V i
335
„ V i
340
>. V i
376
„ V i
384
» V i
447
.. "*" i
486
« V i
615
V ii 14
„ V ii 85
„ V ii
123
„ V ii
133
1. V ii
181
„ vii
196
ec
ket, Pro. 33
Pre
.44
Pre
.48
Pre
.78
Pro.
213
Pro.
224
Pro.
268
Pro.
295
Pro.
340
Pro.
431
Pro.
443
Pro.
445
Pro.
446
Pro.
453
Pro.
482
Pro.
484
Pro.
488
Pro.
512
Pro.
516
Pro.
527
Pro.
530
ii31
1 i
110
I i
113
iil25
iil41
iil59
I i 175
ii326
ii335
ii343
ii360
1 1376
ii378
ii393
in your chancellorship you served The follies of the A'.
Priest Sits winking at the license of a k, Altho' we grant
when k's are dangerous The Church must play into
the hands of k's ;
That k's are faithful to their marriage vow.
Where I shall meet the Barons and my A.
Stir up the A, the Lords !
I will make thee hateful to th/ A.
Where is the A ? Soger. Gone hawking on the Nene,
But by the K's command, are written down, And l)y the
K's command I, John of Oxford,
whether between laymen or clerics, shall be tried in the
K's court.'
he shall answer to the summons of the A'* court to be
tried therein.'
the A, till another be appointed, shall receive the
revenues thereof.'
Is the K's treasuiy A fit place for the monies of the Church,
the A shall summon the chapter of that church to court,
with the consent of our lord the A, and by the advice
Without the license of our lord the K.
Are ye my masters, or my lord the A ?
The A is quick to anger ;
sheathe your swords, ye will displease the A.
Save the K's honour here before his barons.
He pray'd me to pray thee to pacify Thy A ; for if thou
go against thy K, Then must he likewise go against
thy A, And then thy A may join the Antipope,
A swore to our cardinals He meant no harm
He told me thou shouldst pacify the K,
He heads the Church against the A with thee.
I came, your K ! Nor dwelt alone,
that had found a K Who ranged confusions.
The master of his master, the K's k. — God's eyes ! I
had meant to make him all but k. Chancellor-
Archbishop, he might well have sway'd All England
inider Henry, the j'oung K,
it is the traitor that imputes Treachery to his K !
The A will not abide thee with thy cross.
Make not thy A a traitorous murderer.
Arm'd with thy cross, to come before the A ?
Nay, nay, my lord, thou must not hrnYe the A.
Now as Archbishop goest against the A ;
Ay, ay ! but art thou stronger than the A ?
I promised The A to obey these customs,
Tell what I say to the A.
deliver Canterbury To our K's hands again,
Fealty to the k, obedience to thyself ?
But the A rages — -most are with the A ;
The K's ' God's eyes ! ' come now so thick and fast,
the A demands three hundred marks,
Tell the A I spent thrice that in fortifying his castles,
the A demands seven hundred marks. Lent at the siege
of Thoulouse by the A.
the A demands five hundred marks.
For which the A was bound security,
A Demands a strict account of all those revenues
my good lord Leicester, The A and I were brothers.
All I had I lavish'd for the glory of the K ;
The A and all his lords Becket. Son, first hear me !
In fee and barony of the A, decline The judgment of
the A ? Becket. The A ! I hold Nothing in fee
and barony of the A.
The A and all his barons Becket. Judgment !
Barons !
K would throne me in the great Archbishoprick :
For the K's pleasure rather than God's cause
God from me withdraws Himself, And the A too.
Why thou, the A, the Pope, tlie Saints, the world,
I refuse to stand By the K's censure,
The A, these customs, all the Church,
A commands you, upon pain of death.
The A hath frowned upon me.
there be those about our K who would have thy blood.'
Iii 31
iii66
Iii 78
I ii85
Iii 88
Iii 92
I iii 1
I iii 72
I iii 81
I iii 89
I iii 100
I iii 104
I iii 108
I iii 112
I iii 130
I iii 135
I iii 164
I iii 180
I iii 187
I iii 207
I iii 215
I iii 225
I iii 245
I iii 357
I iii 370
iii 462
iii 485
iii 488
iii 500
iii 510
iii 515
iii 531
iii 535
iii 557
iii 564
iii 581
iii 587
iii 591
iii 609
iii 626
iii 631
iii 634
iii 641
iii 645
iii 649
iii 661
iii 671
iii 675
iii 683
iii 693
iii 697
iii 703
iii 705
iii 723
iii 726
iii 752
I iv25
I iv 55
King
970
King
King {continued) frosted off me by the first cold frown of
the A'. Becket i iv 68
The Church is ever at variance with the h's, „ i iv 79
If the K hold his purpose, I am myself a beggar. „ i iv 89
K's verdurer caught him a-hunting in the forest, „ i iv 95
he licks my face and moans and cries out against the K. „ i iv 100
Were the Church k, it would be otherwise. „ i iv 104
K's meat ! By the Lord, „ i iv 140
Becket shall be k, and the Holy Fattier shall be k, and
the world shall live by the K's venison „ i iv 270
A greater K Than thou art. Love, „ ii i 115
It is, my boy, to side m ith the K when Chancellor,
and then to be made Archbishop and go against
the K „ II i 236
England scarce would hold Young Henry k, „ ii ii 32
for any rough sea Blowii by the breath of k's. „ ii ii 108
rift he made Mav close between us, here I am
wholly fc, ' „ iiiil33
Ay, ay ! the K humbles himself enough. „ ii ii 184
suppress God's honour for the sake Of any k „ ii ii 221
we grant the Church K over this world's k's, yet, my
good lord, We that are k's are something in this
world, „ II ii 243
who hath withstood two K's to their faces for the
honour of God. „ ii ii 276
I thank you, sons ; when k's but hold by crowns, The
crowd that himgers for a crown in Heaven Is my
true k. „ II ii 280
Thy true K bad thee be A fisher of men ; „ ii ii 285
I am too like the K here ; „ ii ii 288
But the K hath bought half the College of Eedhats. „ ii ii 373
shakes at mortal k's — her vacillation. Avarice, craft — „ ii ii 405
The K had had no power except for Eome. 'Tis not
the K who is guilty of mine exile, „ ii ii 412
Deny not thou God's honour for a k. The K looks
troubled. „ ii ii 424
being ever duteous to the K, „ ii ii 464
I am the K, his father. And I will look to it. „ iii i 26
and I ha' seen the K once at Oxford, and he's as like
the K „ III i 163
thought at first it was the K, only you know the K's
married, „ m i 166
I thought if it were the K's brother he had a better
bride than the K, „ in i 173
JMyself confused with parting from the K. „ iii i 238
Have track'd the K to this dark inland wood ; „ in ii 3
Our woodland Circe that hath witch'd the K ? „ in ii 33
The K keeps his forest head of game here, „ in ii 37
let the K's fine game look to itself. „ in ii 44
There is the K talking with Walter Map ? „ iii iii 22
K at last is fairly scared by this cloud — this intenlict.
I have been more for the A' than the Church in this
matter — „ in iii 63
He thought less of two k's than of one Roger the k
of the occasion. „ in iii 90
like the Greek k when his daughter was sacrificed, „ in iii 104
K would act servitor and hand a dish to his son ; „ in iii 138
part royal, for K and kingling both laughed, „ in iii 157
if Thomas have not flung himself at the K's feet. „ in iii 169
Ay, K ! for in thy kingdom, as thou knowest. The
spouse of the Great A, thy A', hath fallen — „ in iii 173
ere Pope or K Had come' between us ! „ in iii 267
is the K's if too high a stile for your lordship to
overstep „ ni iii 280
You wrong the A : he meant what he said to-day. „ in iii 299
A' hath many more wolves than he can tame „ m iii 321
if it suit their purpose to howl for the A, „ ni iii 324
Farewell. I must follow the A. „ in iii 330
Uid the A Speak of the customs ? „ in iii 332
The K's not like to die for that which dies ; „ in iii 338
I am mine own self Of and belonging to the K. The
A Hath di^ irs ofs and ons, ofs and belongings, „ iv ii 30
Tiie A shall -...^vr hear of me again, „ iv ii 102
burrow where the /•' Would miss her and for ever. „ iv ii 158
By very God, tb« CK«8 I gave tlie A ! „ iv ii 199
King (continued) Has wheedled it off the K's neck to her
own. Becket iv ii 201
We thought to scare this minion of the A Back from
her churchless commerce with the A ., iv ii 331
The A himself, for love of his own sons, ,. iv ii 344
You have lost The ear of the A'. „ iv ii 355
The world hath trick'd her — that's the K ; „ iv ii 376
A plucks out their eyes Who anger him, „ iv ii 405
Madam, I am as much man as the k. Madam, I fear
Church-censures like your A'. „ iv ii 433
we will to France and be Beforehand with the K, „ iv ii 455
Before you made him k. But Becket ever moves
against a,k. „ v i 24
The Chvirch is all — -the crime to be a k. ,, v i 27
one half, but half-alive. Cries to the A'. „ v i 65
The brideless Becket is thy A; and mine : „ v i 108
I dream'd I was the consort of a k, „ v i 144
What made the A cry out so furiously ? „ v i 220
he did his best To break the barons, and now braves
the A. Eleanor. Strike, then, at once, the A
would have him — „ v i 236
slave that eat my bread has kick'd his A ! „ v i 243
gone to the A And taken our anathema with him. ,, v ii 7
Can the A de-anathematise this York ? „ v ii 10
Thou hast waged God's war against the K ; „ v ii 47
That thou wouldst ex-communicate the A'. „ v ii 91
he had gone too far Into the K's own woods ; „ v ii 108
Cried out against the cruelty of the A. I said it was
the K's courts, not the A ; „ v ii 113
and she wish'd The Church were k: „ v ii 118
when I was Chancellor to the A, I fear I was as cruel
. as the A. „ v ii 123
For once in France the A had been so harsh, „ v ii 139
' The A is sick and almost unto death.' „ v ii 152
Liker the K. Becket. No, daughter. Rosamund. Ay,
but wait Till his nose rises ; he will be very k.
Becket. Ev'n so : but think not of the A : „ v ii 181
breathe one prayer for my liege-lord the A', „ v ii 192
we bring a message from the A Beyond the water ; „ v ii 302
The A condemns your excommunicating — „ v ii 317
Now, sirs, the A'5 commands ! Fitzurse. The A
beyond the water, thro' our voices. Commands you
to be dutiful and leal To your young A on this
side of the water, „ v ii 322
broken Your bond of peace, your treaty with the K — „ v ii 351
A commands you to absolve the bishops „ v ii 375
The A commands you. We are all K's men. „ v ii 383
A'* men at least should know That their own A „ v ii 386
What ! dare you charge the A with treachery ? „ v ii 397
He makes the A a traitor, me a liar. „ v ii 415
If this be so, complain to your young A', „ v ii 449
I ask no leave of A, or mortal man, „ v ii 458
Give to the A the things that are the K's, „ v ii 461
Blared from the heights of all the thrones of her k's, „ v ii 490
That goes against our fealty to the A'. „ v ii 508
I go to meet my K ! Grim. To meet the A ? „ v ii 620
As you would force a k from being crown'd. „ v iii 25
Here, here, K's men ! „ v iii 102
Where is this treble traitor to the A ? „ v iii 108
No traitor to the K, but Priest of God, „ v iii 112
The Pope, the A, will curse you — „ v iii 182
and throne One k above them all. The Cup i i 93
The k, the crown ! their talk in Rome ? „ i i 98
We have had our leagues of old with Eastern k's, „ i ii 102
There then I rest, Rome's tributary k. „ i iii 156
This very day the Romans crown him k „ ii 64
— and blast the k and me, „ ii 152
Lay down the Lydian carpets for the k. The k
should pace on purple to his bride, „ n 188
And music there to greet my lord the k. „ n 192
Hail, A ! Synorix. Hail, Queen ! „ n 219
speak I now too mightily, being A And happy ! „ n 238
I oam over all the fleeted wealth of k's And peoples, „ n 289
Words are not always, what thev seem, my A'. „ n 329
Thy turn, Galatian A'. " „ n 37»
King
971
Kiss
King {continued) Synorix, first A', C'amma, first Queen o'
the Realm, The Cup ii 440
you are still the k Of courtesy and liberality. The Falcon 292
He would grapple with a liou like the A', " Foresters i i 186
We will be beggar'd then and be tme to the A'. „ i i 202
both fought against the tyranny of the k's, the Nomians. „ i i 230
the A', thy god-father, gave it "thee when a baby. „ i i 285
I would break through them all, like the A' of England. „ i i 326
Now that the sum our A' is gone, „ i ii 83
For be he dead, then John may be our A'. „ i ii 99
I may not hate the K For aught I know, „ i ii 115
I think they mil be mightier than the fc. „ i ii 120
I trust he brings us news of the K's coming. „ i iii 53
by force and arms hath trespassed against the k in
" divers manners, „ i iii 63
The London folkmote Has made him all but k, „ i iii 81
Traitors are rarely bred Save under traitor k's. Our
vice-king John, True k of vice — „ ii i 81
Hath made me k of all the discontent Of England „ ii i 87
Sheriff had taken all our goods for the A' without
paying, „ ii i 191
when the Sheriff took my little horse for the A' without
paying for it — „ ii i 301
given my whole body to the A' had he asked for it, „ ii i 306
I ha' served the A' living, says she, and let me serve
him dead, ' „ ii i 310
He was the k o' the Mood. „ ii i 321
Jealousy, jealousy of the k. „ ii ii 141
We never robb'd one friend of the true A'. „ iii 158
Our Robin, A' o' the woods, „ iii 344
Robin, the people's friend, the A' o' the woods ! „ in 347
We care so much for a K ; (repeat) Foresters in 429, 443
The ruler of an hour, but la^rful A', Foresters iv 47
if these knaves should know me for their A' ? „ iv 134
Great woodland k, I know not quarterstaff. Little
John. A fine ! a fine ! He hath called plain
Robin a k. „ iv 215
did ye not call me k in your song ? „ iv 220
Is that to be a A; ? If the k and the law work injustice,
is not he that goes against the k and the law the true
k in the sight of the K of k's ? Thou art the k of the
forest, and I would thou wert the k of the land. „ iv 228
We had it i' the Red K's time, „ iv 303
for I must hence upon The K's affair. „ iv 342
Richard's the k of courtesy, „ iv 362
and call it courtesy. For he's a k. „ iv 368
Richard, again, is k over a realm He hardly knows,
and Robin k of Sherwootl, „ iv 387
if the land Were ruleable by tongue, thou shouldst
be k. And yet thou know'st how little of thy k\ „ iv 400
free the tomb-place of the A' Of all the world ? „ iv 409
You, Prince, our k to come — „ iv 696
Woe to that land shall own thee for her k ! „ iv 760
It is the K Who bears all down. „ iv 783
If thou be k. Be not a fool ! „ iv 789
fighting underhand unholy \vars Against your lawful k. „ iv 822
Thou art happier than thy k. Put him in chains. „ iv 838
You both are utter traitors to your k. „ iv 844
^^'as justice dead because the K was dead ? „ iv 848
on the faith and honour of a ^ The land is his again. „ iv 852
God save the A' ! ~ „ iv 857
The K forbad it. True, my liege. King liichard.
How if the K command it ? „ iv 865
if the K forbid thy marrying With Robin, „ iv 874
My k, I am but the echo of the lips of love. ,, iv 891
But will the A', then, judge as all unheard ? „ iv 896
If the K Condemn us without trial, men will call
him An Eastern tyrant, not an English k. „ iv 901
Beware, O A', the vengeance of the Church. „ iv 913
Keep silence, bully friar, before the K. Friar Tuck. If
a cat may look at a k, may not a friar speak to one ? „ iv 920
He is but hedge-priest, Sir A'. „ iv 931
The k's good health in ale and INIalvoisie. „ iv 968
To celebrate this advent of our A' ! „ iv 1048
And we must hence to the K's court. „ iv 1050
King (continued) and happy that our A' Is here again. Foresters iv 1098
Now the K is home again, and nevermore to roam
again. Now the AT is home again, the A' will have
his own again, „ iv 1103
Kingcup Daisies grow again, K's blow again. Queen Mary in v 90
Kingdom your Grace And k will be suck'd into the war, „ i v 257
Not for myself, but for the k— „ in i 455
make Both of us happy — ay, the K too. „ m ii 188
The bond between the k's be dissolved ; „ in iii 76
A secular k is but as the body Lacking a soul ; „ iv i 32
The Holy Father in a secular k Is as the soul „ iv i 34
thine earldom, Tostig, hath been a k. Harold i i 304
The k's of this world began with little, „ iv i 42
He gave him all the k's of the West. „ v i 24
If the king fall, may not the A; fall ? „ v i 123
The king is slain, the k overthrown ! „ v ii 16
the business Of thy whole k waits me : Becket, Pro. 278
it was but the sacrifice of a A; to his son, a smaller
matter ; „ in iii 107
in thy i", as thou knowest. The spouse of the Great King, „ in iii 173
Why, John, my k is not of this world. „ v ii 18
Kinghood Your father was a man Of such colossal k. Queen Mary iv i 101
Kingless While thou and others in our k realms Were
fighting Foresters iv 819
Kinglier which will make My kingship k to me Harold in ii 44
Kingliest The k Abbey in all Christian lands, „ in i 204
Kinglike does your gracious Queen entreat you k ? Queen Mary i iii 110
Most goodly, K and an Emperor's son, — „ i v 2
Here comes the would-be what I will be . . . fc . . . Harold n ii 139
More k he than like to prove a king. „ n ii 142
hath k fought and fallen. His birthday, too. „ v ii 124
But k fought the proud archbishop, — Becket iv ii 438
— k Defied the Pope, and, like his kingly sires, „ iv ii 439
Kingling — you could not see the King for the k's. „ Pro. 453
part royal, for King and k both laughed, „ in iii 157
Kingly God change the pebble which his k foot First
presses Queen Mary i v 369
made us lower our k flag To yours of England. „ v i 59
I trust the k touch that cures the evil May serve Harold i i 151
he would give his k voice To me as his successor. „ n ii 588
Nor k priest, nor priestly king to cross Their billings „ in ii 93
Ay, but thou art not k, only grandson To Wolfnoth, „ iv i 68
Had in him k thoughts — a king of men, „ iv i 83
despite his k promise given To our own self of pardon, Becket ii ii 431
Nay, can I send her hence Without his k leave ? ,, mi 220
and, like his k sires. The Normans, „ iv ii 440
that stale Church-bond which link'd me with him To
bear him A; sons. „ iv ii 449
King-parliament So your k-p suffer him to land. Queen Mary i v 365
Kingship to break down all k and queenship, „ v iv 48
which will make My k kinglier to me Harold in ii 44
I should beat Thy k as my bishop hath beaten it.
Henry. Hell take thy bishop then, and my k too ! Becket, Pro. 91
Queen should play his k against thine ! „ Pro. 236
King Henry sware That, saving his King's k, „ i iii 28
mother Would make him play his k against mine. „ il ii 11
E^ingston (adj.) we must round By A' Bridge, Queen Mary ii iii 48
Kingston (s) Be happy, I am your friend. To K, forward ! „ n iii 124
Kinsman They blinded my young k, Alfred
Kiss (s) k'es of all kind of womankind In Flanders,
The k that charms thine eyelids into sleep,
Shall see the dewy k of dawn no more
and command That k my due when subject,
There might be more than brother in my k,
For there was more than sister in my k,
link rasts with the breath of the first after-
marriage k,
thy k — Sacred ! I'll kiss it too.
To-day I almost fear'd your k was colder —
A' in the bower. Tit on the tree !
save King Henry gave thee first the k of peace.
I sware I would not give the k of peace,
happy home-re turn and the King's k of peace in Kent
First k. There then. You talk almost as if it
by this true k, you are the first I ever
Harold ii il 511
I ii 113
I ii 139
„ n ii 331
,, III ii 42
„ III ii 84
V ii 6
Becket, Pro. 362
n i 184
in i 18
„ ni i 104
„ ni iii 253
„ III iii 259
„ in iii 328
The Cup I ii 421
Prom, of May in 647
Kiss
972
Knew
Foresters i i 20
I i 119
Eias (s) (continued) She gave a weeping k to the Earl,
And the maid a A: to the man.
She gave a weeping k to the Earl, The maid a A: to
the man.
shall I give her the first k? O sweet Kate, my first
love, the first k, the first k\ ' i i 126
I came to give thee the first k, and thou hast given it me. ,',' i i 132
does it matter so much if the maid give the first k?
lAttle John. I cannot tell, but I had sooner have
given thee the first k. j j 236
now thou hast given me the man's k, let me give thee
the maid's. j. ; -iao
may the maid give the first k? " j i 173
and is flustered by a girl's k. " j j jgg
You shall give me the first k. " j jj 228
In k'es. Kate. You, how dare you mention k'es ? !i 11 i 126
Take thou this light k for thy clumsy word. ' m 134
I Embrace thee with the k'es of the soul. ,'' m 143
Kiss (verb) K me would you ? Mith my hands Milking
the cow ? Queen Mary in v 87
Come, Kobm, Robm, Come and k me now ; „ m y iqq
Come behind and k me milking the cow ! " m y 195
To k and cuff among the birds and flowers — " m y 258
K me— thou art not A holy sister yet, Harold ni ii 80
*^y ^iss— Sacred ! I'll fc it too. Becket 11 i 185
K me, httle one, Nobody near ! jjj j jqq
Sirmatus, k me now The Cuf 1 ii 419
and A; me This beautiful May-morning. Prom. of May 1 564
I A it as a prelude to that privilege n 528
Now if she k him, I will have his head. Foresters i ii 146
Is It made up ? Will you A; me ? j ji 226
I thought I saw thee clasp and k a man ," h ji 72
Thou see me clasp and k a man indeed, " n a 7^
Fancied he saw thee clasp and k a man. " m 23
K rne again. Marian. Robin, I will not A; thee, " m 136
K him. Sir Richard — A; him, my sweet :Marian. ',' iv 1003
K and congratulate me, my good Kate. " iv IO33
I have seen thee clasp and "A; a man indeed, " jy io35
Well then, who k'es first ? Little John. K both
together. 1040
Kiss'd A; not her alone, but all the ladies Queen Maru i i 80
you came and A: me milking the cow. (repeat) in y 91 98
K me well I vow ; " jjj ^ g3
You k me there For the first time. The Cup i ii 417
should have told us how the man first A; the maid. Foresters 1 i 123
Kissin er an' the owd man they fell a A; 0' one
Tri«i„^*"°*j*^^4 K • . TT- • , Prom, of May X 21
Kissing See A-bussin , Kissin
i^^ ^^-^V 7T.^^ ^'°''! thoughts like k's. Queen Mary i v 390
Kite (burd) And the stock-dove coo'd, till a k dropt
tA°i!!^ki 1 u u^ v, ,, Prom, of May 1 55
ir-fi, T t^e blea,k church doors, like A:'* upon a barn. Harold iv iii 37
iutn L«t k and km stand close as our shield-wall t i ^q«
K°a'« Shout, fc'5! ' Queen Mary lit
Say for ten thousand ten— and pothouse A:'s, n i 70
K, wilt thou wear thy cap before the Queen ? " m j 236
Thy name, thou k ? Man. I am nobody, my Lord. " m i 246
God's passion ! A:, thy name ? " m i 249
iT, thou Shalt lose thine ears and find thy tongue, " m i 255
Cjod 8 passion ! do you know the A; that painted it ? " in i 264
What hast thou shouted, k? Jn [ I93
K, there be two. There be both King and Queen, " nr i 295
Must It be .so, my Lord ? Gardiner. Ay, k. m i 308
Where, A:, where ? Man. Sign of the Talbot. ," nr 318
The k's are easily cow'd. jj^ | 3^9
\vi^\ *^f h" 'f ^-'7 P"*^"^'' s?ape ? Harold n ii 672
Woe k to thy familiar and to thee ! „ ,; 570
To be honest is to set all k's against thee. Becket i iii 572
Oome, you filthy k's, let us pass. , ;„ ons
it tW %^, Hnl^''^ fellows in Sherwood Forest Foresters i ii 72
Sit there, k s, till the captain call for you, m 21Q
I know them arrant A;'* in Nottingham. " ttt qm
Louder, louder, ye A:'5. " ™ ^"^
mark'd if those two k's from York be coming ' " \y no
If these A: s should know me for their King ? ][ iv 133
Knaw (know I A;'s nowt o' what foiilks says, an' I
caiires nowt neither. Foalks doesn't hallus A;
hallus a-fobbing ma off, tho' ye k's I love ye. *"""*' ^ '^VlOS
Squire Edgar as ha' coomed among us— the Lord "
k's how — I m
tha 'e k's I was hallus agean heving schoolmaster i'
the parish ! i isfi
What dost a A; o' this Mr. Hedgar as be a-lodgin' wi' ve ? " i 199
and I A: s what men be, and what masters be, ' t 39a
— ye all k's the ten-aacre — " 0^7
Noa ; 1 A;'5 a deal better now. " .,,j
doant tha k he be sweet upo' Dora Steer, " jj iqq
k's the back on 'im — drest like a gentleman, " h 57a
fur 1 haiites 'im afoor I k's what 'e be. " „ kLk
I'll maake her A; ! (repeat) " „ ^g
dosta k this paaper ? Ye dropt it upo' the road. " n 687
dosta A; what tha means wi' by-and-by ? " jj g9o
thou hesn't naw business 'ere wi' my Dora, as I k's on " u 736
Knaw d (knew) A; better nor to cast her sister's ' "
misfortin inter 'er teeth jj 226
Fur boath on 'em k as well as mysen " u 323
she niver k 'is faace when 'e wur 'ere afoor ; " „ 606
I k 'im when I seed 'im agean an I telled feyther "
on 'im. ,.-,,
I beant sa sewer 0' that, fur Sally A; 'im ; " m 247
Knaw'd (known) fur they be k as far as Littlechester. " i 213
Kneaded household dough was k up with blood ; Becket i iii 351
Knee (See also Kneea) fray'd i' the k's, and out at
elbow. Queen Mary i i 51
Cast myself down upon my A;'* before them, j y sgo
we'll pray for you all on our bended k's. " n iij iq^
on our k's, we pray you to kill the Queen " u m 214
pray for you on our bended A;'s till our hves' end. " n iii l'>-^
round his A;, misplaced, Our Enghsh Garter, " ttt j m
gray rogue, Gardiner, Went on his A:'^, " m y iqq
1 thus implore you, low upon my k's, " iv i 64
I would dandle you upon my A; At hsping-age. ," y a 242
With both her A:'s drawn upward to her chin. ' v ii 391
Ihis old Wulfnoth Would take me on his A:'s iv i 70
-brave Gurth, one gash from brow to A; ! " v ii 71
been on my A;'s every day for these half-dozen years The ' Falcon 184
1 seed tha a-hmpin up just now wi' the roomatics
jIJ^Zh 7 1 . • u. . Prom, of May 1 385
1 laame t my A; last night running arter a thief. i 387
look at our suits, out at A; out at elbow. F^esters i i 33
1 fall before thee, clasp Thy k's. „ , qqq
Kneea (knee) fell agean coalscuttle and my A; gev
B-„«»i ^^T . 7 . P^O"i- of May i 404
Kneel prelates fc to you.- q^,^ i^ { -^ ^^
And worse than all, you had to k to me ; iv ii 134
?Tf ^}!^ ^u* ™pnbling some old bone— Harold n ii 469
1 A; to thee— be friends with him again. Becket 11 i 317
A to thy lord Fitzurse ; Crouch even jy ii 921
h-5^°"f >!"r *"* ^^ f,0J-gijen. Foreslers n i 667
he A; s ! he has anger'd the foul witch, t, ; rrq
Kneeling Behold thy father A: to thee, Becket. Becket i iii 252
Can i fancy him k with me, and uttering the same
Tr„«u ^t'^r^iVT uu ,,,-, , , Prom, of May m im
Knelt A: And blubber'd like a lad. Queen Mary m i 149
Then A; and said the Miserere Mei— i„ j 390
I mean the houses k Before the Legate. " m ii, 257
Knew (See also Knaw'd) I k they would not do me
any wrong, j jjj 200
if I either thought or A; This marriage " h jj 226
Seventeen — and k eight languages — " m j 350
she thought they A; the laws. But for herself, she
k but httle law, .„ ; ocn
Who A; it from the first. " m"^| jf"
0 if I A- you felt this parting, Philip, As I do ! " ni vi 251
if you k him As I do, ever gentle, and so gracious. " iv i 155
Against the truth I A; wthin my heart. ly iji 041
1 A; it would be so. "^ ' " y ?t?
The kindliest man I ever A; ; ," ^ jjj 421
Knew
973
Know
Knew (conlinued) I k it, cousin, But held from you all
Eapers Queen Mary v ii 44
at then, he kl was no Lutheran. „ v ii 78
I thought you k me better. „ v ii 186
Too young ! And never k a Philip. „ v ii 361
She k me, and acknowledged me her heir, „ v v 255
I k thy purpose ; he and Wulfnoth never Have met, Harold n ii 84
I never k thee check thy will for ought „ n ii 120
Far as he & in this poor world of ours — „ ii ii 363
He k not whom he sware by. „ iii i 256
I know He k not, but those heavenly ears have heard, „ iii i 258
Stigand beheved he k not what he spake. „ iii ii 61
I k him brave : he loved his land : „ iv i 201
I smote him suddenly, I k not what I did. „ iv ii 43
by whom I k not that I sware, — not for myself — „ v i 305
Call not for help from me. I k him not. „ v ii 54
Since I k battle. And that was from my boyhood, „ v ii 174
I k thy father ; he would be mine age Had he lived
now ; Becket i iii 249
Thought that I k him, err'd thro' love of him, „ i iii 440
And I, that A; mine own infirmitj-, „ i iii 696
something was said to me I A: not what. „ n i 61
I never k an honest woman that could make songs, „ iii i 182
I never saw any such. Never k any such, „ iv ii 127
Your Becket k the secret of your bower. „ v i 177
I think our Abbess k it and allow'd it. „ v ii 95
They k he loved me. ,, v ii 453
wrong'd Without there, k thee with Antonius. The Cup i ii 320
One of the men there k him. „ i ii 341
He k not at the moment who had fasten'd „ ii 49
but he k I meant to marry him. The Falcon 51
if She k the giver ; but I bound the seller „ 72
Ikii would come to this, (repeat) „ 156, 174
I always k it would come to this ! (repeat) „ 158, 175
You k Eva, then ? From, of May n 367
Surely I loved Eva More than I A; ! „ ii 644
She k me from the first, she juggled with me, „ iii 687
Much, the miller's son, I k thy father : Foresters i iii 146
So hollowly we k not which was which. „ ii i 260
far as we k, We never robb'd one friend „ m 156
Knife Hast thou a A; ? Queen Mary v v 164
callous with a constant stripe, Unwoundable. The A; ! „ v v 173
Becket, beware of the k ! Becket i iv 133
As at this loveless k that stirs the riot, „ iv ii 191
kill, with k or venom One of liis slanderous harlots ? „ iv ii 409
And my k there — and blast the king and me. The Cup ii 152
He drove his k into the heart of the deer. Foresters iv 541
Knife-edge crawl over k-e flint Barefoot, Becket ii i 272
Knight Call him a K, That, with an ass's. Queen Mary i iii 168
They have taken away the toy thou gavest me, The
Norman k. Harold ii ii 107
thou shalt have another Norman kl » n ij 114
range of k's Sit, each a statue on his horse, „ v i 524
I led seven hundred k's and fought his wars. Becket i iii 638
But I that threw the mightiest k of France, „ i iii 746
K's, bishops, earls, this London spawn — „ ii ii 143
Monks, k's, five hundred, that were there and heard. „ v ii 406
the k's are arming in the garden Beneath the sycamore. ,, v ii 569
A score of k's all arm'd with swords and axes — „ v iii 71
O God, O noble k's, O sacrilege ! „ v iii 178
Did two k's pass ? Foresters ii i 230
Take thou mine arm. Who art thou, gallant k? „ ii i 440
Seize on the A; ! wTench his sword from him ! „ ii i 676
we saw thee cowering to a A; And thought thou wert
bewltch'd. . ,. ii i 683
K, your good father had his draught of wine „ ii ii 1
No, no, false k, thou canst not hide thyself „ n ii 23
Quick with thy sword ! the yoeman braves the A;. „ ii ii 31
Art thou a A; ? „ iv 116
How much is it, Robin, for a A; ? „ iv 152
He hath got it from the bottle, noble A-. „ iv 237
Shall I undertake The k at quarterstaff, „ iv 248
Thou seest. Sir K, our friar is so holy » iv 279
Hail, A-, and help us. . „ iv 765
Knit ere t>vo souls be k for life and death, The Cup ii 359
Knock K off his cap there, some of you about him ! Queen Mary iii i 241
K, and it shall be open'd. ' Becket v iii 64
it be i' my natur to k 'im o' the 'eiid now ; Prom, of May i 288
K again ! A; again ! Foresters ii i 212
Knock'd How oft hath Peter A; at Mary's gate ! Queen Mary in ii 63
Knot And here a A; of ruffians all in rags, „ ii ii 66
thro' this common k and bond of love, „ ii ii 198
Know (See also Ejoaw) thou shouldst k, for thou art
as white as three Christmasses. „ i i 29
I k not if you A;. „ i i 101
child by child, you A;, Were momentary sparkles „ i ii 72
I A; it, my good Lord. „ i ii 92
and then, who k's — „ i iv 25
Why do you ask ? you k it. „ i iv 35
You A; to flatter ladies. „ i iv 98
You A; your Latin^ — quiet as a dead body. „ i iv 181
You do right well. I do not care to A; ; „ i iv 189
because they A; him The last White Rose, „ i iv 206
I do but bring the message, k no more. „ i iv 229
I am of sovereign nature, that I A:, „ i iv 258
yet I A; well. Your people, and I go with them so far, ,, i v 186
Ay, Simon Renard k's it. .. i v 218
I A; it a scandal. „ i v 229
1 A; not wherefore — ^some mischance of flood, „ i v 353
Yet I k the Prince, „ i v 364
The text — Your Highness A;'s it, „ i v 451
you should A; that whether A wind be warm or cold, „ i v 619
Song flies you A; For ages. „ n i 81
You A; I A; all this. „ n i 120
Gardiner k's, but the Council are all at odds, „ ii i 138
I k Spain. I have been there with my father ; „ ii i 166
and the beds I A;. I hate Spain. „ ii i 185
ye k, my masters, that wherever Spain hath ruled „ n i 205
You A; that after The Captain Brett, „ n ii 25
K too what Wyatt said. „ ii ii 35
I A; it. What do and say Your Council at this hour ? „ ii ii 45
waters of the fen they k not Which way to flow. „ ii ii 52
at once may k The wherefore of this coming, „ n ii 137
To tell you what indeed ye see and A:, „ ii ii 144
Now what I am ye A; right well — your Queen ; „ ii ii 162
Ye k my father was the rightful heir „ n ii 170
I A; you loyal. „ ii ii 271
Who k's ? the man is proven by the hour. „ ii ii 363
' Who k's? ' I am for England. But who A;'*, That A;'*- „ ii ii 411
I A; not my letters ; the old priests taught me nothing. „ n iii 57
we A; that ye be come to kill the Queen, „ ii iii 107
he is King, you A:, the King of Naples. „ in i 73
studded with great emeralds. Rubies, I A: not what. „ iii i 86
I k some lusty fellows there in France. „ lu i 128
I A; a set of exiles over there, „ in i 155
God's passion ! do you A; the knave that painted it ? „ iir i 264
there's the face coming on here of one Who k's me. „ iii i 472
I A; that she was ever sweet to me. „ m ii 228
— all times for aught I A:. „ in iv 67
for you k Right well that you yourself „ ni iv 224
He k's not where he stands, „ m iv 420
Nay, I k They hunt my blood. „ in v 77
You A; I never come tiU I be call'd. „ iii v 215
Best wisdom is to A; the worst at once. „ in v 220
I A; that these are breeding A fierce resolve „ m vi 30
Simon Renard K's me too well to speak „ m vi 126
but, my Lord, you A; what Vii^il sings, „ m vi 133
you A; my father. Retiring into cloistral solitude „ ni vi 208
Not sued for that — he A;'s it were in vain, „ iv i 13
I k not if he did ; „ iv i 128
your Highness k's The saying, ' Martyr's blood — „ iv i 145
You A; that you recanted all you said „ iv iii 261
Of recantation yield again, who k's ? „ iv iii 315
I A; them heretics, but right English ones. „ iv iii 344
but I do A; ez Pwoaps and vires be bad things ; „ iv iii 500
Peters, you A; me CathoUc, but English. „ iv iii 566
K's where he nested — ever comes again. „ v i 26
and you A; The crown is poor. „ v i 169
Elizabeth — To PhiUbert of Savoy, as you A;, We
meant to wed her ; „ v i 247
Know
974
Know
Enow {cotUimied) but I k it of old, he hates me too ; Queen Mary v ii 60
Your Highness k's that in pursuing heresy „ v ii 96
They k nothing ; They burn for nothing.
who said that ? Ik not — true enough !
Our drooping Queen should k !
and you fc me strong of arm ;
light enough, God k's, And mixt with Wyatt's rising —
And tell him that I fc he comes no more. Tell him at
last I k his love is dead,
My King would k if you be fairly served,
Who fc my right, and love me,
God's dea'th, forsooth — you do not fc King Philip.
Drugs — but he k's they cannot help me —
I took it, tho' I did not fc I took it.
Who k's if Boleyn's daughter be my sister ?
Stigand should fc the purposes of Heaven.
I fc it, son ; I am not thankless :
And Tostig k's it ; Tostig loves the king. Harold.
And love should fc ; and — be the king so wise, —
He cannot guess who k's.
Who k's I may not dream myself their king !
we came to fc Thy valour and thy value,
did Edward fc of this ?
I fc the Norman license —
Edward not pronounced his heir ? Harold. Not that I fc.
None that I fc ... if that but hung
But hath he done it then ? Harold. Not that I fc.
He is a liar who k's I am a liar,
I fc your Norman cookery is so spiced,
Yea, I fc He knew not, but those heavenly ears
I fc all Sussex ; A good entrenchment for a perilous
hour !
Do they ? I did not fc it.
God help me ! I fc nothing—
Who k's what sows itself among the people ?
who fc His prowess in the mountains of the West,
K what thou dost ; and we may find for thee,
They fc King Edward's promise and thine — thine.
Harold. Should they not fc free England crowns her-
self ? Nor fc that he nor I had power to promise ?
Not fc that Edward cancell'd his own promise ?
blurt thy curse among our folk, I fc not —
Whisper ! God's angels only fc it. Ha !
I am grieved to fc as much,
dost thou fc I am not wedded to her. Becket. How
should I fc ?
I love thee and I fc thee, I fc thee.
How shouldst thou fc that never hast loved one ?
God's eyes ! I fc all that —
Nay — I fc not, Thomas.
I fc Some three or four good priests
thou hast kicked down the board. I fc thee of old.
The people fc their Church a tower of strength.
It much imports me I should fc her name.
let me pass, my lord, for I must fc.
And fc the ways of Nature.
Well — you fc — the minion, Rosamund.
Shame, wrath, I fc not what.
K that when made Archbishop I was freed,
or in the land of France for aught I fc.
my fellows fc that I am all one scale like a fish.
cursed My friends at Veselay, I have let them k,
— thine ! thine ! Rosamurui. I fc- it.
Dost thou fc, my boy, what it is to be Chancellor of
England ?
Thine enemy k's the secret of my bower.
You are too cold to fc the fashion of it.
I would have made Rome fc she still is Rome —
Bee mustn't buzz. Whoop — but he k's. (repeat)
what's an apple, you fc, save to a child,
only you k the King's married, for King Louis —
most on 'em fc an honest woman and a lady when
they see her,
she kept the seventh conunandment better than some
I fc on,
v ii 113
V ii 208
V ii 457
V ii 469
v ii 478
V ii 589
vii20
V iii 34
V iii 123
vv60
V V 97
V V 194
Harold I i 64
„ I i 215
., I i 274
„ Iii 136
., I ii 251
„ iiii201
., iiii304
.. II ii 477
., II ii 577
., n ii 599
„ nii612
„ nil 667
„ nii810
„ mi 257
„ III i 362
„ III ii 106
„ III ii 193
„ IV i 149
., IV i 164
„ IV ii 48
„ V i 45
„ V i 90
„ V ii 31
Becket, Pro. 4
Pro. 72
Pro. 95
Pro. 140
Pro. 148
Pro. 197
Pro. 290
Pro. 316
Iil5
iil93
ii206
11257
iii 36
I iii 322
I iii 707
I iv 197
I iv 213
II 190
II i 163
II i 231
II 1264
II ii 126
11 ii 402
Becket iii i 99, 241
Becket iii i 141
„ III i 166
in i 179
HI i 195
Enow (continued) known Nothing but him — happy to fc no
more, Becket in i 224
Whoop — but he k's, Whoop — but he fc"*'. ., iii i 263
I fc Thy meaning. „ iii iii 18
Hereford, you fc, crown'd the first Henry. ., in iii 201
Even now — Who fc's ? — I might deliver all things „ in iii 269
Why ? Geoffrey. Don't fc why. „ iv i 14
but I don't fc if I can find the way back again. ,, iv i 48
K you not this bower is secret, ,, iv ii 21
none shall fc me ; The King shall never hear „ iv ii 100
Who k's but that thy lover May plead so pitifully, „ iv ii 215
we fc you proud of your fine hand, „ iv ii 260
you fc thro' all this quarrel I still have cleaved ,^ v i 46
I fc — could swear — as long as Becket breathes, „ v i 76
and yet You fc me easily anger'd. „ v i 84
Do you fc this cross, my Uege ? ,, v i 161
I fc him ; our good John of Salisbury. „ v ii 77
Deal not with things you fc not. Rosamund. I fc him. „ v ii 133
I fc not why You call these old things „ v ii 269
I marvel at you — Ye fc what is between us. „ v ii 500
K you not You have spoken to the peril „ v ii 515
He k's the twists and turnings of the place. ,, v ii 576
Hugh, I fc well thou hast but half a heart „ v iii 129
Boy, dost thou fc the house of Sinnatus ? The Cup i i 49
You fc the waterfall That in the summer ., i i 107
Shefc'sit? Ha! „ i i 131
Who are with him ? I see no face that k's me. ,, i i 183
fc That we Galatians are both Greek and Gaul. ,, i i 202
Scarce fc what she has done. „ i ii 135
I fc of no such wives in all Galatia. „ i ii 191
fc myself am that Galatian Who sent the cup. „ i ii 209
I fc they mean to torture him to death. I dare not tell
him how I came to fc it ; „ i ii 273
I say it to you — you are wiser — Rome k's all, But you
fc not the savagery of Rome. „ i ii 286
is there danger ? Camma. Nay, None that I fc : „ i ii 442
Will she come to me Now that she fc's me Synorix ? „ i iii 21
I fc that I am genial, I would be Happy, ,, i iii 28
as you fc The camp is half a league A^ithout the city ; „ i iii 88
We will let her fc. „ n 13
the world may fc You twain are reconciled, „ n 68
It is old, I fc not How many hundred years. „ n 312
She not fc ? She k's There's none such other — The Falcon 77
He loves me, and he k's I fc he loves me ! „ . 245
as your ladyship k's, his lordship's own foster-brother, ., 566
You fc, my lord, I told you I was troubled. „ 676
you fc the saying — ' Better a man without riches, „ 749
let me fc the boon By granting which, „ 765
You fc that I can touch The ghittern „ 797
You fc sick people. More specially sick children, ,, 815
I don't fc why I sing that song ; I don't love it. Prom, of May i 61
He's been arter Miss Eva, haan't he ? Dora. Not
that I fc. „ 1 123
She k's nothing. Man only k's, „ 1 273
Who k's that he had ever dreani'd of flying ? „ i 654
That's all nonsense, you fc, such a baby as you are. „ i 784
Perhaps you k him ? „ n 439
then you would fc it is not So easy to forgive — „ n 484
has suffer'd JNIore than we fc. „ n 502
When you shall fc me better. „ n 529
who came to us three years after you were gone,
how should she fc you ? „ in 234
was a mockery, you fc, for he gave me no address,
and there was no word of marriage ; „ in 331
for you fc, my dear, you were always his favourite — ., in 422
Be he dead ? Bora. Not that I fc. „ m 434
He will be sure to fc you to-morrow. „ in 470
I fc more fully that he can What poor earthworms „ in 634
You fc her, Eva. Harold. Eva ! „ m 663
She — she k's me — now ... „ in 686
but now ye fc why we live so stintedly, Foresters i i 76
I fc not, but he may save the land, „ i i 282
but I k not if I wiU let thee go. „ i i 311
Him that is gone. Who k's whither ? „ i ii 9
Perfect — who should fc you for Prince John, „ i ii 20
Know
975
Lady
Foresters i ii 50
„ I ii 55
., I ii 116
., I iii 161
., II i 120
„ II i 176
., II i 282
II i 494
., II i 589
„ II i 622
.. II i 703
II ii 11
., II ii 51
III lai
III 301
HI 334
IV 92
IV 134
IV 199
IV 216
IV 257
IV 336
IV 380
IV 388
IV 527
Know {continued) and more goes to make right than I
A of,
Thou art the Earl's confessor and sliouldst k.
I may not hate the King For aught I A-,
that worship for me which Heaven k's I ill deserve-
Have past away, I k not where ;
My people are all scattered I k not where,
what should you k o' the food o' the poor ?
If not with thee I k not where she is.
What ? do I not k mine own ring ?
Life, life. I k not death.
I k not, can I trust myself With your brave band ?
We k all balms and simples of the field
I A; I have done amiss, have been a fool.
Fifty leagues Of woodland hear and k my horn,
I k them arrant knaves in Xottingham.
Do me the service to tap it, and thou wilt k.
If not I have let them k Their lives misafe
if these knaves should k me for their King?
but let him k our forest laws :
Great woodland king, I k not quarterstaff.
I A; no quarterstaff.
They k me. I must not as yet be known.
From whom he fc's are hypocrites and Uars.
Richard, again, is king over a realm He hardly A;'s,
he falls And k's no more.
Knowest Thou k we had to dodge, or duck, or die ; Queen Mary iii iv 357
Thou k I bad my chaplain, „ iii vi 73
Thou k never woman meant so well, „ v ii 342
Thou k I soon go wild. Harold i i 297
K thou this ? Harold. I learn it now. „ ii ii 589
Thou k I am his cousin, „ ii ii 592
And signs on earth ! K thou Senlac hill ? „ iii i 361
chances and all churches, And that thou k. „ iii ii 184
I doubt not but thou A; Why thou art suimnon'd. ., iv i 187
O Thou that A, let not my strong praver ., v i 646
K thou this other ? " „ v ii 98
Thou k he was forced to fly to France ; Becket i iii 204
in thy kingdom, as thou A, The spouse of the Great King, „ iii iii 174
Thou A; that the Sheriff of Nottingham loves thee. Foresters i i 222
K thou not the Prince ? „ ly 683
Knowing (K the man) he wrought it ignorantly, Qv£en Mary ui i 276
They say, his wife was k and abetting. Harold ii ii 306
Canst thou love me, thou k where I love ? „ iv i 226
K how much you reverence Holy Church, Becket i ii 48
K right well with what a tenderness He loved my son. „ v i 20
k the fame of your hospitality, we ventured in
uninvited. Foresters i ii 195
Have I the pleasure, friend, of k you ? Prom, of May i 297
k that he must have Moved in the iron grooves „ ii 265
and A as I did That I had shot him thro' the heart, Foresters n i 122
Thou art tann'd almost beyond my A, brother. „ iv 1016
Knowledge That k made him all the carefuUer Harold in i 340
teach this Rome — from k of our people— The Cu'p ii 96
Known (See also E[naw'd) but all things here At
court are A ; Queen Mary i iv 58
The prince is k in Spain, in Flanders, „ i v 207
(I have A a semi-madman in my time So fancy-ridd'n) „ ii i 9
it will be A that we have moved ; „ ii i 198
— And I have k such women more than one — „ m vi 178
never was it A That any man so writing, „ iv iii 46
Council at this present deem it not Expedient to be k. „ iv iii 57
The truth of God, which I had proven and A. „ iv iii 150
men Have hardly k what to believe, „ iv iii 405
Should make the mightiest empire earth has A. „ v iii 71
than have A there were such devils. Harold ii i 38
for thou Art A a speaker of the truth, „ ii ii 517
they follow me — and I must not be A. Becket i i 183
it may import her all as much Not to be A. „ i i 199
'Tis k you are midwint«r to all women, „ i ii 27
and A Nothing but him — happy to know no more, „ in i 223
you are A Thro' all the courts of Christendom „ iv ii 324
for how sUghtly have I k myself. Prom, of May ii 442
but I must not be A yet. „ m 224
Shall I be A ? is my disguise perfect ? Foresters i ii 18
Known (continued) thee however mask'd I should have A. Foresters ii i 650
I must not as yet be A. „ iv 338
Know'st thou A my claim on England Thro' Edward's Harold ii ii 12
And yet thou A how little of thy king ! Foresters iv 401
Knut (Canute, the Dane) or English Ironside Who fought
with K, or K Harold iv iii 54
Knyvett (adherent of Wyatt) (See also Antony, Antony
Knyvett) Open the window, K ; Queen Mary ii i 154
I'll think upon it, K. „ ii i 240
La I would dance too. Fa, I, I, fa, I, I. Foresters i ii 59
Laabourer (labourer) fur I wur nobbut a I, and now
I be a landlord — Prom, of May i 329
Laady (lady) to turn out boath my darters right down
fine laadies. „ 1 337
and you should sit i' your oan parlour quite like a I, „ ii 98
plaay the planner, if ye liked, all daay long, hke a I, ,, ii 101
likes 'er all the better fur taakin' me down, like a I, ., ii 134
Dan Smith's cart hes rumied ower a Z i' the holler
laane, „ ii 568
'ow should I see to laame the I, and mea coomin'
along pretty sharp an' all ? „ in 96
to saay he's browt some of ^liss Eva's roses for the
sick I to smell on. „ iii 347
Laame't (limed) 1 1 my knee last night running arter a
thief. „ 1 386
Laane (lane) Dan Smith's cart hes rmined ower a laady
i' the holler I, .,, ii 569
the holler I be hallus sa dark i' the arternoon, „ in 92
Laay (lay) We I's out o' the waay fur gentlefoalk
altogither— „ 1 210
and doant I my cartwhip athurt 'is shou'ders, „ n 138
Labour (s) And all my lifelong I to uphold The primacy
• — a heretic. Queen Mary v ii 70
The more or less of daily I done— Becket ii ii 299
I fear me we have lost our I, then. Foresters ii i 233
Labourer (See also Laabourer) all that live By their own
hands, the I, the poor priest ; „ in 165
Labour-in-vain Ingratitude, Injustice, Evil-tongue,
L-i-v. Queen Mary v ii 157
Labyrinthine after that This I brickwork maze in maze, Becket, Pro. 166
Lacerating If fast and prayer, and I scourge — „ i iii 303
Lack (s) Mj liberality perforce is dead Thro' I of means of
giving. The Falcon 297
The man is able enough- — no I of wit. Foresters i ii 103
'Tis for no I of love to you, my lord, But I of happiness „ i iii 130
thro' thy I of manhood hast betray'd Thy father „ n i 568
Lack (verb) And tell this learned Legate he I's
zeal. Queen Mary in iv 272
Do you I any money ? „ iv ii 40
I Z a spiritual soldier, Thomas — Becket, Pro. 257
Lacking secular kingdom is but as the body L a soul ; Queen Mary iv i 33
L the love of woman and of cliild. Becket v ii 199
Lacrymas Illorum in I Cruor f undatur ! Harold v i 531
Lacrymation I should say rather, the i of a lamentation ; Becket in iii 167
Lad knelt And blubber'd like a I, Queen Mary mi 150
but I hear she hath a dropsy, I, „ ill ii 224
He stood upright, a Z of twenty-one, ,, iv iii 335
Poor Vs, they see not what the general sees, ., v ii 447
poor I ! how sick and sad for home ! Harold n ii 325
lied Uke a I That dreads the pendent scourge, „ ii ii 657
and the Vs and lasses 'uU hev a dance. Prom, of May i 428
Eh I, if it be thou, I'll Philip tha ! „ n 590
I, dosta knaw this paaper ? — Ye dropt it upo' the road. „ n 686
Eh, I, dosta knaw what tha means wi' by-and-by ? „ ii 690
Eh, I, but whether thou be Hedgar, „ ii 733
Laden a troop, L with booty and with a flag of ours The Falcon 612
Lady (See also La&dy) but all the ladies of her following. Queen Mary i i 81
Even so, fair I. „ liv 97
You know to flatter ladies. „ i iv 98
Lady
976
Land
Lady (continued) lily and rose In his youtli, and like a I. Queen Mary i v 21
Our sovereign L by Kin<; Harry's will ; ,, ii ii 268
Ay, my L. When next there comes a missive „ iii v 181
Our Spanish ladies have none such — „ v iii 46
There must be ladies with hair like mine. „ v iii 58
up and down, poor I, up and down. „ v v 6
Nay, dearest L, see j'our good physician. „ v v 58
War, my dear I ! Harold i i 22
Mightily, my dear l\ „ i i 24
War, my dear /, War, waste, plague, „ i i 465
told me he would advance me to the service of a great /, BecJcet iii i 124
but more a woman o' the world than my I here, „ in i 143
I am as well-shaped as my I here, „ in i 150
for here comes my /, and, my I, „ in i 153
most on 'em know an honest woman and a I when they
see her, „ in i 180
and went on and on till I found the light and the I, „ iv ii 19
the I holds the cleric Lovelier than any soldier, „ v i 193
Your cleric hath your /. „ v i 200
O dearest I, Think, — torture, — death, — The Cup i ii 313
L, I say it with all gentleness, „ i iii 99
happiest, L, in my power To make you happy. „ n 239
if we will buy diamond necklaces To please our I, The Falcon 45
Welcome to this poor cottage, my dear I. „ 271
L, you bring your light into my cottage „ 283
A I that was beautiful as day Sat by me „ 349
wasn't my I born with a golden spoon in her ladyship's
mouth, „ 401
with my I's coming that had so flurried me, „ 492
No, my most honour'd and long-worshipt I, „ 714
L, I find you a shrewd bargainer. „ 756
when you lamed the I in the hollow lane. Prom, of May m 89
Lake {continued) A I that dips in William As well as Harold. Harold V i 186
Lamb {See also Ewe-lamb) king Hath given his virgin I to
Holy Church „ m i 334
Our Church in arms — ^the I the lion — „ v i 441
' Ewe I, ewe /, I am here by the dam.' Becket i iv 171
Lambert there was L ; Who can foresee himself ? Queen Mary iv ii 215
marry fine gentlemen, and played at being fine ladies ?
shamed of his poor farmer's daughter among the
ladies in his drawing-room ?
Wasn't Miss Vavasour, our schoolmistress at Little-
chester, a I bom? Were not our fellow-pupils
all ladies? ^^'asn't dear mother herself at least
by one side a. I? Can't I speak like a Z; pen a
letter like a I ; talk a little French like a I ; play
a little like a, I?
The sick I here might have been asleep.
Say that the sick I thanks him !
Tell him I cannot leave the sick I just yet.
Tell him that I and the I here wish to see him.
Sooner or later shamed of her among The ladies,
The I loved the master well.
The I gave a rose to the Earl, (repeat)
The I gave her hand to the Earl, (repeat)
part to the shrine of our L.
I have sworn by our L if they come
Our L's blessed shrines throughout the land
Ladylike L ! Lilylike in her stateliness
Laggard Where is this I Richard of the Lea ?
Lagoon He caught a chill in the Vs of Venice,
Laic L's and barons, thro' The random gifts
Laid spousal ring whereof, Not ever to be I aside,
attainder Z on us By him who sack'd the house of
God ; „ in iii 194
raise his head, for thou hast I it low ! Harold m i 163
Hath often I a cold hand on my heats, Becket i i 384
There now, if thou hast not I hands upon me ! „ i iv 212
I would have I mine own life down „ v ii 338
L famine-stricken at the gates of Death — Prom, of May iii 807
Lain Bonner, who hath I so long under bonds for the
faith — Queen Mary i iii 35
Long have I Z in prison, yet have heard „ iv iii 210
Where have you I in ambush all the morning ? Prom, of May i 544
Lais With Phryne, Or L, or thy Rosamimd, Becket, Pro. 56
My Rosamund is no L, Thomas Becket ; „ Pro. 57
Laity I am but of the Z, my Lord Bishop, Queen Mary in iv 81
Lake might have flash'd Upon their I of Garda, „ in ii 23
Scnlac ! Sanguelac, The L of Blood ! Harold in i 386
— a Z, A sea of blood — we are drown'd in blood „ in i 397
call it— Sanguelac, The I of blood ? „ v i 185
in 278
in 295
in 298
ni 343
ni 349
III 353
in 414
in 582
Foresters i i 8
„ I i 12, 105
„ I i 16, 92
in 207
IV 96
„ IV 1079
Prom, of May ii 620
Foresters iv 449
Queen Mary v ii 515
Becket i i 157
Qiuen Mary n ii 167
Lambeth (adj.) And unto no dead world ; but L palace,
Lambeth (s) seen your steps a mile From me and L ?
Permit me to withdraw. To X ?
Ay, L has ousted Cranmer.
was not meet the heretic swine should live In L.
Lame And further to discourage and lay I The plots
of France,
The fellow that on a Z jade came to court.
Lamed {See also Laame't) ann ; I do believe I Z his
Majesty's
And Z and maim'd to dislocation,
having his right hand L in the battle,
when you Z the lady in the hollow lane.
You see she is I, and cannot go down to him
in ii 154
Iii 82
in ii 131
ni ii 132
in ii 136
v i 188
Becket v i 246
Queen Mary v ii 471
Becket iv ii 266
The Falcon 445
Prom, of May ill 89
ni 416
Lamentation I sliould say rather, the lacrymation of a Z ; Becket in iii 167
Lamer And head them with a Z rhyme of miae,
Lamester How should this old Z guide us ?
Laming At least mine own is frailer : you are Z it.
Lammas And that's at latter L — never perhaps.
Lamp loom Across their Vs of revel,
Lamplight river, black, slimy, swirling under me in
theZ,
Lance for how their Vs snap and shiver
And push'd our Vs into Saracen hearts.
Lanceas Illorum Z Frange Creator !
Land (s) {See also Church-land) so this unhappy Z,
long divided in itself,
red and white, the fashion of our I.
And here at I among the people !
stir not yet This matter of the Church Vs.
Confiscate Vs, goods, money —
I have seen them in their own Z ;
clash alarum as we pass. And pour along the I,
Rascal ! — this Z is like a hill of fire.
Feeling my native Z beneath my foot,
' Ah, native Z of mine, Thou art much beholden
Methinks the good Z heard me.
In the reborn salvation of a Z So noble.
The ruler of a Z Is bounden by his power
You are fresh from brighter Vs. Retire with me.
Care more for our brief life in their wet Z,
So weary am I of this wet Z of theirs.
Draw with your sails from our poor I,
Unhappy Z ! Hard-natured Queen,
'11 bum the Pwoap out o' this 'ere Z vor iver and iver.
this Henry Stirs up your I against you
They will not lay more taxes on a Z
not the living rock Which guards the Z.
get himself wrecked on another man's Z ?
Large lordship there of Vs and territory.
In mine own 1 1 should have scom'd the man,
in thine own Z in thy father's day
The kinghest Abbey in all Christian Vs,
Thou art Tostig's brother. Who wastes the Z. Harold.
This brother comes to save Your Z from waste ;
I knew him brave : he loved his Z :
He looks for I among us, he and his.
Seven feet of English Z, or something more,
Hath wasted all the Z at Pevensey —
Neighing and roaring as they leapt to Z—
And waste the Z about thee as thou goest,
to guard the Z for which He did forswear himself —
That havock'd all the Z in Stephen's day.
among you those that hold L's reft from Canterbury.
Many of the crown Vs to those that helpt him ;
Claim'd some of oiu^ crown Vs for Canterbury —
With Cain belike, in the Z of Nod, or in the Z of France
voice of the deep as it hollows the cHfTs of the Z.
not half speaking The language of the Z.
Queen Mary il i 29
Foresters n i 370
Becket iv ii 265
Foresters n ii 86
Harold ii ii 407
Prom, of May in 370
Harold v i 585
Becket n ii 94
Harold v i 583
Queen Mary i iii 20
I V 10
I V 383
I V 409
n i 102
n i 168
n i 232
in i 321
III ii 47
„ ni ii 48
in ii 57
„ in iii 182
„ in iv 211
„ in iv 322
in vi 63
„ in vi 106
„ in vi 226
„ IV iii 423
„ IV iii 536
V i 131
V i 167
Harold I ii 121
n i 61
n ii 83
„ n ii 505
„ n ii 510
„ III i 205
IV i 93
„ IV i 201
„ IV ii 53
„ IV ii 54
„ IV iii 189
„ IV iii 198
„ V i 131
„ V ii 161
Becket i i 242
„ I iii 141
„ I iii 150
„ I iii 459
„ I iv 196
„ II i 4
„ II i 137
Land
977
Last
Land (s) (continued) from the salt lips of the I we two Have
track'd Becket in ii 2
lord of more I Than any crown in Europe, „ v i 29
And wrought his worst against his native I, The Cup i ii 178
past is Uke a travell'd I now sunk Below the horizon — „ ii 230
I never saw The I so rich in blossom as this year. The Falcon 342
' The I belongs to the people ! ' Prom, of May 1 140
s'pose my pig's the I, and you says it belongs to the
parish, „ 1 144
violated the whole Tradition of our I, „ 1 496
Who leaves me all his I at Littlechester, „ 1 511
pacing my new I's at Littlechester, „ n 647
We shall have to sell all the I, „ ni 165
The I belonged to the Steers i' the owd times, „ m 450
I have heard the Steers Had I in Saxon times ; „ ni 608
I have I now And wealth, and lay both at your feet. „ m 615
not with all your wealth. Your I, your life ! „ in 796
if they be not paid back at the end of the year, the
I goes to the Abbot. Foresters i i 70
Sir Richard must scrape and scrape till he get to the I again. „ i i 79
must be paid in a year and a month, or I lose the I. „ i i 269
but he may save the I, (repeat) „ i i 283
Well, thou Shalt go, but O the Z! the H „ i i 328
and I shall lose my I also. „ i i 339
Or I forfeit my I to the Abbot. „ i ii 151
pay My brother all his debt and save the I. „ i ii 219
till he join King Richard in the Holy L. Robin.
Going to the Holy L to Richard ! „ i ii 239
pay his mortgage to his brother, And save the I. „ i ii 265
thou art dispossessed of all thy I's, goods, and chattels ; „ i iii 60
There is no I like England (repeat) Foresters n i 1, 5, 13, 17
thro' all the forest I North to the Tyne : being outlaw'd
in a Z Where law lies dead, Foresters n i 88
— if so the I may come To Marian, and they rate the
I fivefold The worth of the mortgage, and who
marries her Marries the I. „ ii i 147
and couldst never pay The mortgage on my I. „ ii i 454
but my father will not lose his I, „ n i 523
He is old and almost mad to keep the I. „ n i 529
what sort of man art thou For I, not love ? Thou
wilt inherit the I, „ n i 534
betray'd Thy father to the losing of his I. „ n i 570
Now he cries ' The I ! the I ! ' Come to him. „ n ii 7
To a I where the fay, „ n ii 180
thou seest the I has come between us, „ rv 53
and I would thou wert the king of the I. „ rv 233
if the I Were ruleable by tongue, „ iv 398
if they were not repaid within a Umited time your I
should be forfeit. „ rv 468
The I] the n (repeat) Foresters iv 470, 491, 854
one thousand marks, Or else the I. Foresters iv 475
old Sir Richard might redeem his I. He is all for
love, he cares not for the I. „ iv 488
Out of our treasury to redeem the I. „ iv 493
And Sir Richard cannot redeem his I. „ iv 565
And we shall keep the I. „ iv 637
It seems thy father's I is forfeited. „ iv 640
He shall wed thee : The I shall still be mine. „ iv 643
I could wish that all the I Were plunged „ iv 667
Woe to that I shall own thee for her king ! „ iv 759
on the faitli and honour of a king The I is his again. „ iv 853
I am crazed no longer, so I have the I. „ iv 856
The gold — my son — my gold, my son, the I — „ iv 988
And join'd my banner in the Holy L, ,. iv 1000
weight of the very I itself, Down to the inmost centre. „ iv 1025
Our Lady's blessed shrines throughout the I „ iv 1080
land (verb) So your king-parliament suffer him to I, Queen Mary i v 366
Landed Are I North of Humber, and in a field Harold in ii 126
William hath I, ha ? Thane. L at Pevensey — I am
from Pevensey — « iv iii 185
TjiTiiling Back'd by the power of France, and
I here. Queen Mary in i 448
Landless Specially not this I PhiHbert Of Savoy ; „ iii v 240
Landlord fur 1 wur nobbut a laabourer, and now I be
a Ir— Prom, of May i 830
Land-surveyor and I taaked 'im fur soom sort of a l-s —
but a beant. Prom, of May 1 204
Lane {See also Laane) Stand back, keep a clear I ! Queen Mary i i 2
when you lamed the lady in the hollow I. Prom, of May in 90
Do you still suffer from your fall in the hollow I? „ m 241
if met in a black I at midnight : Foresters in 224
Language Seventeen — and knew eight I's — Queen Mary in i 359
not half speaking The I of the land. Becket ii i 137
His wickedness is like my wretchedness — Beyond
aU I. Prom, of May in 748
Lanker I be Z than an old horse turned out to die on the
conamon. Foresters i i 51
Lap Milk ? Filippo. Three I's for a cat ! The Falcon 125
Lapse track of the true faith Your I's are far seen. Queen Mary in iv 95
Lapwing The I's Ues, says ' here ' when they are there. „ ni v 124
Larder Come, come, Filippo, what is there in the I ? The Falcon 118
then there is anything in your lordship's I at your
lordship's service, „ 137
Large Hath he the I ability of the Emperor ? Queen Mary i v 323
Hath he the I ability of his father ? „ i v 438
They have brought it in I measure on themselves. „ rv iii 363
thou thyself shalt have L lordship there of lands and
territory. Harold n ii 83
they both have life In the I mouth of England, „ rv iii 74
Without too I self-lauding I must hold The sequel „ iv iii 87
Larger Will enter on the Z golden age ; Prom, of May i 590
The hope of I life hereafter, more Tenfold than under
roof. Foresters n i 69
Largess Might cast my I of it to the crowd ! The Cup n 224
Lark Spit them like I's for aught I care. Queen Mary i v 395
The I above, the nightingale below, „ n i 52
the I sings, the sweet stars come and go, Harold n ii 434
I first takes the sunlight on his wing, The Cup i iii 43
thou that canst soar Beyond the morning I, The Falcon 11
and the I's 'ud sing i' them daays. Prom, of May i 374
' O happy I, that warblest high Above thy lowly nest, „ in 199
while the I flies up and touches heaven ! Foresters i ii 315
When heaven falls, I may light on such all „ in 13
Could live as happy as the7's in heaven, „ in 82
Lam (learn, teach) Wheer did they I ye that ? Dora.
In Cumberland, Mr. Dobson. Prom, of May i 64
I'll git the book agean, and I mysen the rest, „ m 12
Them be what they I's the childer' at school, „ ni 39
Lamed (leamed, taught) 'at I ha' nobbut I mysen haafe on it. „ in 4
Lash (verb) If they prance. Rein in, not I them, Harold i i 372
Lash (whip) with crimson rowel And streaming I. Queen Mary in iv 184
Lash'd I to death, or lie Famishing in black cells, „ v ii 194
scorn'd the man. Or I his rascal back, Harold n ii 507
now, perhaps, Fetter'd and I, a galley-slave. Foresters n i 654
Lashing storm and shower I Her casement, Prom, of May ii 472
Lass Ay, I, but when thou be as owd as me „ i 380
Why, I, what maakes tha sa red ? „ 1 398
and the lads and I'es 'ull hev a dance. „ i 428
Last Dear friend, for the I time ; farewell, and fly. Queen Mary i ii 103
because they know him the I White Rose, the I
Plantagenet „ i iv 207
L night I cUmb'd into the gate-house, Brett, „ n iii 14
Did not his I breath Clear Courtenay and the Princess „ in i 134
I have heard She would not take a I farewell of him, „ in i 367
Laughs at the I red leaf, and Andrew's Day. „ in iii 87
Thou I of all the Tudors, come away ! With us
is peace ! ' The I ? It was a dream ; „ in v 151
A missive from the Queen : I time she wrote, I had
like to have lost my life : „ in v 188
L night, I dream'd the faggots were alight, „ iv ii 1
It is the I. Cranmer. Give it me, then. „ iv ii 64
For death gives life's I word a power to live, „ rv iii 161
forasmuch as I have come To the I end of life, „ rv iii 218
This I — I dare not read it her. „ v ii 183
and I say it For the I time perchance, Harold i i 176
but I night An evil dream that ever came and went — „ i ii 69
Friends, in that I inhospitable plunge Our boat hath
burst her ribs ; „ n i 1
L night King Edward came to me in dreams —
(repeat) Harold iv i 259, 265
3 Q
Last
978
Law
Last {continued) Hear me again — for the I time. Harold v i 8
Then for the I time, monk, I ask again „ v i 15
Peace ! The king's I word — ' the arrow ! ' I shall die — „ v i 266
wherefore now Obey mv first and I commandment.
Gro ! ' 1. V i 359
Edith, if I, the I EngUsh King of England— „ v i 384
but our sun in Aquitaine I's longer. Becket, Pro. 328
The I Parthian shaft of a forlorn Cupid at the King's
left breast,
and his I words were a commendation of Thomas Becket
L night I followed a woman in the city here.
That rang Within my head I night,
at I tongue-free To blast my realms with exconummi-
cation
nigh at the end of our I crust, and that mouldy.
He hath the Pope's I letters, and they threaten
Take thy one chance ; Catch at the I straw.
Let this be thy I trespass.
King closed with me I July That I should pass the
censures of the Church
Shall not Heaven be served Tho' earth's I earthquake
clash'd the minster-bells,
I need not fear the crowd that hunted me Across the
woods, I night.
He entreats you now For your I answer.
0 would it were His third I apoplexy !
1 had a touch of this I year — in — Rome,
crown'd victor of my will — On my I voyage —
came back I night with her son to the castle.
Thou art the I friend left me upon earth —
And this I costly gift to mine own self,
when he came I year To see me hawking,
>Iy I sight ere I swoon'd was one sweet face Crown'd
so much weaker, so much worse For I day's journey.
tha looks haale anew to Z to a hoonderd. Steer.
An' why shouldn't I lio a hoonderd ?
Noa ; I laame't my knee I night running arter a
thief.
Oh, Philip, Father heard you I night.
but you must not be too sudden with it either, as
you were I year.
The I on it, eh ? Haymaker. Yeas.
Well, it be the I load hoam.
Well but, as I said afoor, it be the I load hoam ;
' The L Load Hoam . ' (repeat)
At the end of the daay. For the I load hoam ? (repeat)
Till the end of the daay And the I load hoam.
Till the end o' the daay An' the I load
hoam.' (repeat)
To the end o' the daay. An' the I load hoam
Only I week at Littlechester, drove me From out
her memory.
Oh, I night. Tired, pacing my new lands at Littlechester,
spent all your I Saturday's wages at the ale-house ;
It is almost the I of my bad days, I think.
They did not I three Jimes.
But she there — her I word Forgave — and I forgive you.
Nay, this may be the I time When I shall hold my
birthday in this hall : Foresters i ii 87
from their stillness in the grave By the I trumpet. „ ii i 48
and the old woman's blessing with them to the I fringe. „ n i 196
We have him at Z ; we have him at advantage. „ n i 414
There came some evil fairy at my birth And cursed
me, as the I heir of my race : „ ii ii 109
is it true ? — ^That John I week retum'd to Nottingham, „ iii 147
Lasting and the man has doubtless a good heart, and
a true and I love for me : Prom, of May in 172
Late (adj. and adv.) my daughter said that when
there rose a talk of the I rebellion,
I will go. I thank my God it is too I to fly.
Her freaks and frolics with the I Lord Admiral ?
My Lord, you I were loosed from out the Tower,
Who loathe you for your I return to Rome,
in pursuing heresy I have gone beyond your I Lord
Chancellor,—
Late (adj. and adv.) (continued)
not safe to preach.
Friend, tho' so I, it is
Cecil
God guide me lest I lose
Q^een Mary v iv 41
Pro. 339
Pro. 400
Pro. 468
1 171
II ii 50
m i 114
III iii 24
IV ii 221
V ii 165
V ii 388
V iii 41
The Cup I iii 17
II 46
u 172
II 446
II 521
The Falcon 3
31
228
312
647
834
Prom, of May i 355
1 387
I 557
n54
II 141
II 144
II 169
II 171
II 184, 195
II 209
n 239, 293
n260
n404
n645
m78
in 471
III 589
in 810
Queen Mary i i 92
I ii 112
I iv 20
I iv 49
IV ii 32
V V 208
Harold rv iii 175
Becket i iii 288
„ IV ii 1
V ii 524
V ii 526
The Cup II 480
The Falcon 200
227
Foresters n i 427
vii98
Am I too I ?
the way.
Ay, but what I guest. As haggard as a fast of forty
days.
Too I, my lord : you see they are signing there.
The boy so I ; pray God, he be not lost.
Is it too I for me to save your soul ?
Becket, it is too I. Becket. Is it too I ? Too I on
earth may be too soon in heU.
Too I — -thought myself wise — A woman's dupe.
— and better I than never —
I have heard That, thro' his I magnificence of living
I am too I then with my quartersta£E !
Late (s) There was one here of I — WiUiam the Silent Queen Mary in ii 191
Later Sooner or I shamed of her among The ladies, Provi. of May m 581
Lateran When had the L and the Holy Father Harold v i 17
leave L and Vatican in one dust of gold — Becket n ii 475
Latimer (Bishop of Worcester) Hooper, Ridley, L wiU
not fly. Qv^en Mary i ii 14
Cranmer and Hooper, Ridley and L, „ ni iv 424
L Had a brief end — not Ridley. „ iv ii 224
I saw the deaths of L and Ridley. „ iv iii 295
And you saw L and Ridley die ? L was eighty,
was he not ?
' not till I hears ez L and Ridley be a-vire ; '
When we had come where Ridley burnt with L,
L ! Sir, we are private with our women here — -
Latimer-sailor Our Ridley-soldiers and our L-s's
Latin (adj.) for my verses if the L rhymes be roUed out
from a full mouth ?
That's a deUcate L lay Of Walter Map :
Latin (s) You know your L — quiet as a dead body,
Laugh And that's at I Lammas — never perhaps.
Oh L's at the last red leaf, and Andrew's Day.
so ! I not ! . . . Strange and ghastly
Latter we could not but Z, as by a royal necessity —
Lauding See Self-lauding
Laugh'd William I and swore that might was right.
The wicked sister clapt her hands and I ;
part royal, for King and kingUng both I,
when we felt we had I too long and could not stay
ourselves —
such a comedy as our court of Provence Had I at.
Laughing (See also A-laughin') And the Dutchman,
Now I at some jest ? Queen Mary in i 196
Laughter (See also Sea-laughter) among thine island
mists With I. Harold ii ii 183
thunder-cloud That lours on England — I ! „ ni ii 161
human I in old Rome Before a Pope was born, „ in ii 163
great motion of I among us, part real, part childlike, Becket in iii 155
trumpets in the halls, Sobs, I, cries : „ v ii 368
I Shall not be made the I of the village. Prom, of May i 720
Lava-torrents Whose l-t blast and blacken a province The Cup n 302
Lavender To rose and I my horsiness. Queen Mary ni v 185
Lavish Spare not thy tongue ! be I with our coins, Becket ii ii 469
Your I household curb'd, and the remission Queen Mary i v 113
Lavish'd AH I had 1 1 for the glory of the King ; Becket i iii 663
Law (s) the Queen, and the l's, and the people, his
slaves. Queen Mary n i 174
when I was wedded to the realm And the realm's Vs „ n ii 165
seeks To bend the Vs to his own will, „ ii ii 184
But so I get the Vs against the heretic, „ in i 323
she thought she knew the Vs. But for herself, she
knew but Uttle I, „ ni i 381
Either in making Vs and ordinances „ in iii 130
Of all such Vs and ordinances made ; „ ni iii 142
I will be King of England by the Vs, Harold n ii 131
For I shall rule according to your Vs, „ n ii 759
I will rule according to their Vs. „ v ii 198
Like other lords amenable to I. I'll have them written
down and made the I. Becket, Pro. 25
sign'd These ancient Vs and customs of the reabn. „ i iii 7
to obey These ancient Vs and customs of the realm ? « i iii 18
IV iii 328
IV iii 508
IV iii 586
V vll8
IV iii 348
Becket n ii 337
V i 191
Queen Mary i iv 181
Foresters ii ii 86
Queen Mary in iii 87
Harold in ii 157
Becket ni iii 158
Harold n ii 361
V ii 49
Becket ni iii 158
„ m iii 160
V i 191
Law
979
Lean
Law (s) (continued) and I From madness. Becket i iii 374
There wore his time studying the canon I „ n i 86
Co-kings we were, and made the Vs together. „ u ii 123
spiritual giant with our island Vs And customs, „ iv ii 444
it is the I, not he ; The customs of the realm. „ v ii 126
— her main I Whereby she grows in beauty — Prom, oj May i 282
according to the I and custom of the kingdom of
England
I have shelter'd some that broke the forest Vs.
being outlaw'd in a land Where I Ues dead, we make
ourselves the I.
An outlaw's bride may not be \vife in I.
We robb'd the lawyer who went against the I ;
chief of these outlaws who break the I ?
being out of the I how should we break the I ? if we
broke into it we should break the I,
Ay, ay, Robin, but let him know our forest Vs :
If the king and the I work injustice, is not he that
goes against the king and the I the true king
Church and L, halt and pay toll !
you see the bond and the letter of the I.
Between the I and letter of the I ! 0 God, I would
the letter of the I Were some strong fellow
When the Church and the I have forgotten God's music.
Sweet Marian, by the letter of the I
You crost him with a quibble of your I.
Hast broken all our Norman forest Vs,
That thou wilt break our forest Vs again
They break thy forest Vs — ^nay, by the rood
And have thy fees, and break the I no more.
Law (inter.) (See also Lor) 0 I — yeas, Sir ! I'll run
fur 'im mysen. Prom, of May iii 713
Law-bench Spain in the pulpit and on the l-b ; Queen Mary n i 178
Lawful Long live Queen Mary, the I and legitimate
daughter Of Harry the Eighth !
with vour I Prince Stand fast against our enemies
and yours.
Your I Prince hath come to cast herself On loyal
hearts and bosoms,
The ruler of an hour, but I King,
Were fighting underhand unholy waip Against your I king.
Lawn forest Vs are all as bright As ways to heaven,
Thro' wood and I and hng,
Lawrence (Saint) The patience of St. L in the fire.
Lawyer leastwaays, I should be wi' a I.
We robb'd the I who went against the law ;
Lay (s) That's a delicate Latin I Of Walter Map :
lay (verb, trans.) (See also Laay) I love you, L my
Ufe in your hands. Queen Mary i iv 105
God I the waves and strow the storms „ J v 381
' Will you take it off Before 1 1 me down ? ' „ m i 403
I never I my head upon the pillow But that I think, „ iii v 131
See. I nt here. For I will come no nearer „ iii v 198
They will not I more taxes on a land „ v i 167
to discourage and I lame The plots of France, „ v i 188
L thou thy hand upon this golden pall ! Harold n ii 699
L hands of fuU allegiance in thy Lord's „ v i 11
I them both upon the waste sea-shore At Hastings, „ v ii 159
I My crozier in the Holy Father's hands, Becket i iii 124
not yield To I your neck beneath your citizen's heel. „ v i 31
Where to I on her tribute — heavily here And lightly there. The Cup ii 98
L down the Lydian carpets for the king. „ u 187
strows our fruits, and Vs Our golden grain, „ ii 286
But I them there for a moment ! The Falcon 763
I I them for the first time round your neck. „ 907
land now And wealth, and I both at your feet. Prom, of May in 616
lay (past tense [of Lie]) by God's providence a good
Foresters i iii 66
I iii 70
„ II i 91
II ii 91
III 162
IV 142
IV 144
IV 199
IV 228
IV 429
IV 505
IV 513
IV 554
IV 639
IV 850
IV 907
IV 955
lis
II ii 240
n ii 261
Foresters iv 47
IV 822
II i 630
„ m 425
Queen Mary iv iii 95
Prom, of May m 34
Foresters m 161
Becket y i 192
Layest (trans.) but when thou I thy lip To this, Becket n i 306
Lajring I saw the covers I. Philip. Let us have it. Queen Mary in vi 258
Layman whether between laymen or clerics, shall be
tried in the King's court.' Becket i iii 80
Lasrmen-criminals be boimd Behind the back like l-c ? „ i iii 96
Lazar I marked a group of Vs in the marketplace — „ i iv 81
Lazarus Am I a prisoner ? Leicester. By bt. L, no ! „ i iii 730
stout staff L near me ;
And York / barren for a hundred years.
plow L rusting in the furrow's yellow weeds.
The town I still in the low sun-hght.
She I so long at the bottom of her well
The man I down — the delicate-footed creature
Layest (intrans.) thou That I so long in heretic bonds
with me ;
Queen Mary v ii 469
Becket i iii 54
„ I iii 355
Prom, of May i 37
Foresters iv 242
IV 535
Queen Mary iii iv 280
Lazy We dally with our I moments here,
Lazy-pious And he our l-p Norman King,
Lea I come here to see this daughter of Sir Richard of
the L
Robin, I am Sir Richard of the L.
Where is this old Sir Richard of the L ?
Where is this laggard Richard of the L ?
Lea (Sir Richard) See Richard, Richard Lea, Richard of the Lea
Lea (Walter) See Walter, Walter Lea
Lead (direction) Follow my I, and I will make thee earl.
Queen Mary v iii 108
Harold n ii 444
Foresters i ii 27
„ ir i 442
IV 438
IV 450
Morcar. What I then ?
Lead (metal) My feet are tons of I, They will break in
the earth —
Lead (verb) we two will I The living waters of the
Faith
Z on ; ye loose me from my bonds,
debonair to those That follow where he Vs,
Thy voice will I the Wi tan — shall I have it ?
if thou wilt I me to thy mother.
Save by that way which Vs thro' night to light,
and at last May I them on to victory —
Give me your arm. L me back again.
To Z us thro' the windings of the wood.
0 I me to my father ! (repeat)
L us thou to some deep glen.
Leader the people Claim as their natural I —
All arm'd, waiting a I ;
and ye have called me to be your I.
Northumberland, The I of our Reformation,
After a riot We hang the Vs,
1 am no soldier, as he said — at least No I.
' Antonius I of the Roman Legion.'
I have heard of them. Have they no I?
Be thou their I and they wiU all of them
and their own want Of manhood to their I !
Leadin' so ta'en up wi' I the owd man about all the
blessed murnin'
Leading (See also Leadin') by God's grace. We'll
foUow Phihp's I,
Leaf (See also Lettuce-leaf) Laughs at the last red I
and Andrew's Day.
Love will fly the fallen I, and not be overtaken ;
golden leaves, these earls and barons, that clung to me
all the I of this New-wakening year.
I tear away The leaves were darken'd by the battle —
How happily would we hit among the leaves
When all the leaves are green ; (repeat)
By all the leaves of spring,
I scent it in the green leaves of the wood.
You see the darkness thro' the hghter I.
Leaf-sky Pillaring a l-s on their monstrous boles.
League (alliance) may he not make A I with WiUiam,
sequel had been other than his I With Norway,
We have had our Vs of old with Eastern kings.
There is my hand — ^if such a I there be.
League (measure) crawl over knife-edge flint Barefoot,
a hundred Vs,
The camp is half a I without the city ;
There — I on I of ever-shining shore
for Oberon flew away Twenty thousand Vs to-day.
Fifty Vs Of woodland hear and know my horn.
League (verb) foes in Edward's hall To I against thy weal,
they are not like to I With Harold against me
Harold i ii 216
The Cup n 476
Queen Mary I v 87
„ IV ii 240
Harold u ii 320
„ II ii 619
Becket iv i 41
„ v iii 88
The Cup I ii 168
Prom, of May in 474
Foresters n i 634
„ II ii 22, 48
„ II ii 168
Queen Mary i iv 210
II i 108
n i 165
HI i 149
IV i 74
Becket i iii 299
The Cup I i 167
Foresters i iii 104
I iii 106
n i 694
Prom, of May in 2
Queen Mary v v 112
„ III iii 87
V ii 372
Becket i iv 65
The Falcon 339
913
Foresters in 41
, in 426, 441
m439
IV 944
IV 976
mlOO
Harold n ii 461
„ IV iii 88
The Cup I ii 101
„ I ii 103
Becket n i 273
The Cup I iii 89
n 533
Foresters n ii 143
in 103
Harold I ii 33
n ii 53
Leagued I together To bar me from my PhiUp. Queen Mary i iv 139
We robb'd the traitors that are I with John ; Foresters ni 159
Leal Commands you to be dutiful and I To your young
King Becket v ii 325
Lean (adj.) worse off than any of you, for I be Z by nature, Foresters, i i 45
Lean
980
Leaven
Lean (adj.) (continued) I distrust thee. Thine is
a half voice and a I assent.
Lean (verb) He looks to and he I's on as his God,
I marvel why you never I On any man's
Lean'd the Holy Rood had I And bow'd above me ;
Leaner To plump the I pouch of Italy.
Leaning A faint foot hither, I upon Tostig.
Leap thro' the blood the wine I's to the brain
Nor care to I into each other's arms.
Leapt When the head I — ^so common !
That might have I upon us unawares.
Neighing and roaring as they I to land —
Gurth hath I upon him And slain him :
Lear (Shakespeare's play) ' What are we,' says the
blind old man in i ?
Then the owd man i' L should be shaamed of
hissen.
Learn (See also Lam) Your people have begun to I
your worth.
You cannot L a man's nature from his natural foe.
and so I Your royal will, and do it. —
to I That ev'n St. Peter in his time of fear
Will let you I in peace and privacy
May I there is no power against the Lord.
Knowest thou this ? Harold. I I it now.
Let me I at full The manner of his death,
I I but now that those poor Poitevins,
Nor you, nor I Have now to I, my lord.
Will he not fly from you if he I the story of my
shame Prom, of May in 256
And I from her if she do love this Earl. Foresters i ii 187
Leamed-Leam'd (adj.) but you still preferr'd
Your learned leisiu-e.
And tell this learned Legate he lacks zeal.
And I and learned friends among ourselves
I have done my best. I am not learn'd.
Taught her the learned names, anatomized The
flowers for her —
Learned (verb) See Lamed
Learning (part.) Or I witchcraft of your woodland
witch.
Learning (s) and her I Beyond the churchmen ;
The Ught of this new I wanes and dies :
New I as they call it ;
ever gentle, and so gracious. With all his I —
His I makes his burning the more just.
Your I, and your stoutness, and your heresy,
Brings the new I back.
Leamt Thou hast learnt Thy lesson, and I mine.
He hath leamt to love our Tostig much of late.
Leofwin. And he hath leamt, despite the tiger
in him.
Thou hast not leamt thy quarters here.
When all the world hath learnt to speak the truth,
' We have leamt to love him, let him a little longer
but belike Thou hast not leamt his measure.
Soon as she leamt I was a friend of thine.
When man has surely learnt at last that all
Lease The house half-ruin'd ere the I be out ;
will give him, as they say, a new I of life,
would fight for his rents, his I's, his houses.
Least (adj.) out of which Looms the I chance of peril
to our realm,
even now You seem the I assassin of the four.
Anyhow we must Move in the line of I resistance
Least (s) Ev'n to the I and meanest of my own.
Then one at I of its inhabitants
Leather (beat) I'd like to I 'im black and blue, and she
to be a-laughin' at it. „ n 595
all on us, wi' your leave, we wants to I 'im. „ ni 137
Then you mun be his brother, an' we'll I 'im. „ ni 151
Leave (permission) By your Grace's I Your royal mother Queen Mary i v 15
thy I to set my feet On board, Harold i i 228
Harold, I will not yield thee I to go. „ i i 257
No man without my I shall excommunicate Becket, Pro. 30
Queen Mary ni i 311
IV iii 306
Becket v ii 550
Harold v i 103
Queen Mary m iv 365
Harold I i 144
Foresters i iii 22
ni 7
Queen Mary i v 477
n ii 295
Harold iv iii 197
V i 632
Prom, of May i 263
I 267
Queen Mary i v 109
I V 340
II ii 138
m iv 262
ni iv 326
IV iii 66
Harold ii ii 591
Becket, Pro. 425
11 ii 427
„ IV ii 274
in iv 258
ni iv 272
„ V ii 74
Becket m i 25
Prom, of May n 302
Foresters n i 500
Queen Mary m i 361
m ii 172
IV 178
IV i 157
IV i 159
IV ii 125
vi202
Queen Mary v ii 584
Harold I i 145
„ n ii 153
„ in i 68
ni i 88
„ IV iii 118
Becket v ii 110
Prom, of May ii 330
Queen Mary v ii 66
Prom, of May in 424
Foresters i i 233
Queen Mary ii ii 238
Becket v ii 522
Prom, of May n 670
Becket n ii 181
Prom, of May II 552
Feria.
Leave (permission) (corUinued) No man without my I shall
cross the seas
can I send her hence Without his kingly I ?
By thy I, beauty. Ay, the same !
— I have stiU thy I to speak.
mount with your lordship's I to her ladyship's castle,
by your I if you would hear the rest. The writing.
Leave (verb) I dare not I my post.
You ofiend us ; you may t us.
we will I all this, sir, to our council.
and I's me As hopeful.
that I should I Some fruit of mine own body
1 1 Lord William Howard in your city,
And I the people ilaked to the crown,
Ay, rascal, if I i thee ears to hear.
And shalt be thankful if I Z thee that.
I must I you. Fare you well,
L me now. Will you,
pass And I me, PhiUp, with my prayers for you.
I am vastly grieved to I your Majesty.
I have foimd thee and not I thee any more.
Tell me that, or I All else untold.
my Queen is hke enough To I me by and by.
To I you, sire ?
so my Queen Would I me — as — ^my wife.
L me alone, brother, with my Northumbria :
I I thee, brother.
And I them for a year, and coming back '
I Z thee to thy talk with him alone ;
Better I vmdone Than do by halves —
L them ! and thee too, Aldwyth, must 1 1 —
To I the Pope dominion in the West.
but I this day to me.
To I the foe no forage.
L me. No more — Pardon on both sides — Go !
L them. Let them be !
L me with Herbert, friend.
I I that. Knowing how much you reverence Holy Church
My lord, permit us then to I thy service.
My Lord, we I thee not without tears.
I wrong the bird ; she I's only the nest she built, they
I the builder.
I must / you to your banquet.
I mean to I the royalty of my crown Unlessen'd
Not I these count^olk at court,
the Pope will not I them in suspense,
I Lateran and Vatican in one dust of gold —
— And to meet it I needs must I as suddenly.
I am faint and sleepy. L me.
And I you alone with the good fairy.
I cannot I him yet.
While this but I's thee with a broken heart,
sworn on this my cross a himdred times Never to I him—
for thou must I him To-day, but not quite yet.
L it, daughter ; Come thou with me to Godstow
nunnery,
and I it A waste of rock and ruin, hear.
And if he I me — all the rest of hfe —
And thou too I us, my dear nurse, alone.
Ay, the dear nurse wiU I you alone ;
An' how did ye I the owd imcle i' Coomberland ?
but I's him A beast of prey in the dark.
Who I's me all his land at Littlechester,
I must I you, love, to-day. Eva. L me, to-day !
that full feast That I's but emptiness,
this, for the moment, WiU I me a free field.
Tell him I cannot I the sick lady just yet.
Milly, my dear, how did you I Mr. Steer ?
But shall we I our England ?
You see why We must I the wood and fly.
L it with him and add a gold mark thereto.
L them each what they say is theirs.
We I but happy memories to the forest.
Leaven the old I sticks to my tongue yet.
so much of the anti-papal I Works in him yet,
Becket Pro. 34
„ in i 220
„ IV ii 203
„ v ii 44
The Falcon 413
529
Queen Mary r ii 55
I V 210
I V 317
I V 531
u ii 222
„ n ii 245
„ m i 119
„ m i 251
„ m i 257
„ m i 472
„ m V 210
„ in vi 228
„ ni vi 255
„ IV ii 109
„ rv iii 568
V i 243
V i 252
Harold i i 285
1 1461
ni89
n ii 324
n ii 495
IV iii 227
vi23
vil28
vil33
vi353
y ii 149
Becket i i 9
I ii 47
„ 1 iv 10
„ 1 iv 16
„ I iv 45
„ Iivl50
„ nil07
„ nil29
„ nil 359
„ n ii 474
„ m i 92
„ mi 208
„ iviiGO
„ rvii85
„ IV ii 173
„ ivii207
„ ivii210
„ IV 11365
The Cwp n 306
The Falcon 334
700
703
Prom, of May i 67
I 503
I 511
I 624
n256
n456
ni352
in410
Foresters i iii 92
„ n ii 174
m 210
in 293
„ IV 1070
Queen Mary i iii 48
„ rv i 15
Leaven
981
Leofwin
be something Of this world's I in thee
Leaven {continued)
too,
Leaving But I light enough for Alfgar's house
L so many foes in Edward's hall
Tho' I each, a wound ;
To steel myself against the I her ?
How could I think of I him ?
L your fair Marian alone here.
Led they I Processions, chanted litanies,
1 1 seven hundred knights and fought his wars.
S'iver we've I moast on it.
() Lord, I am easily I by words.
Ledge He met a stag there on so narrow a I —
Lees You cannot judge the liquor from the I.
Left (adj.) The last Parthian shaft of a forlorn Cupid at
the King's I breast, Becket, Pro. 340
On this I breast before so hard a heart, „ Pro. 375
Take the I leg for the love of God. Foresters iv 577
L^ (s) reels Now to the right, then as far to the Z, Queen Mary iv iii 396
Becket v ii 29
Harold I i 307
„ I ii 31
Becket i i 176
Prom, of May i 293
II 71
Foresters i ii 154
Queen Mary in vi 94
Becket i iii 638
Prom, of May n 52
Foresters i ii 39
„ IV 532
Queen Mary iv iii 550
Left (verb) I shall be I alone. No :
1 1 her with rich jewels in her hand,
I scarce had I your Grace's presence
As tho' the nightmare never Z her bed.
I about Like loosely-scatter'd jewels,
flying to our side L his all bare.
Their voice had I me none to tell you this.
Where is Pembroke ? Courtenay. I Z him somewhere
in the thick of it. Mary. L him and fled ; and
thou that would'st be King,
And Lady Jane had Z us.
L Mary a wife-widow here alone,
Have you remain'd in the true Catholic faith 1 1
you in ?
When I alone in my despondency,
There is no hope of better I for him.
Her life, since PhiUp I her, and she lost
Methinks there is no manhood Z among us.
I Z her lying still and beautiful.
Be kindly to the Normans Z among us,
Then I him for the meaner ! thee ! — „
I saw her even now : She hath not Z us. „
I Z our England naked to the South To meet thee
I I him with peace on his face — Becket
Save for myself no Rome were Z in England,
how many an innocent Has Z his bones upon the way to
Rome V
darkness of the gap L by that lack of love.
Hath not thy father Z us to ourselves ? „
And I all naked, I were lost indeed. „
Well — well — too costly to be I or lost. „
live what may be Z thee of a life Saved
I surely should have Z That stroke to Rome,
Thou art the last friend Z me upon earth —
and I Z it privily At Florence, in her palace,
hasn't an eye Z in his own tail to flourish
Ay, ay ! stare at it : it's all you have I us.
We may have Z their fifty less by five.
They Z us there for dead !
Ay, and I Z two fingers there for dead.
I Z him there for dead too !
had you Z him free use of his wings,
Hesn't he I ye nowt ? Dora. No, Mr. Dobson.
Iii 13
I iv 242
IV 583
IV 605
Hi 27
II iii 5
n iii 36
Since I Z her Here weeping, I have j anged the world,
L but one dreadful line to say.
Some of our workmen have Z us,
— all still — and nothing I To Uve for.
I Was Z alone, and knowing as I did
since the Sheriff I me naught but an empty belly,
He dozes. I have I her watching him.
I I mine horse and armour with a Squire,
Left-hand Absolve the l-h thief and damn the right ?
Xeft-handedness all l-h and imder-handedness.
Leg about our I's till we cannot move at all ;
it be a var waay vor my owld I's up vro' Islip
Haul like a great strong fellow at my I's,
II iv 80
II iv 139
III i 462
IV ii 19
IV ii 95
IV iii 79
IV iii 428
V ii 284
V V 261
Harold in i 303
IV ii 71
V i 159
V i 289
Pro. 395
II ii 386
II ii 409
III i 61
„ III i 271
„ IV ii 9
„ IV ii 299
„ IV ii 367
The Cuf I iii 159
The Falcon 31
74
101
163
625
651
653
659
Prom, of May i 652
n7
II 251
II 411
III 28
in 681
Foresters ii i 122
n i 278
n ii 80
IV 414
Becket n ii 392
„ Pro. 341
Queen Mary ii i 204
„ IV iii 472
Harold Ii i 11
Leg {continued) Because I broke The horse's Z — Harold ii ii 110
And may I break his I's ? „ ii ii 116
this rag fro' the gangrene i' my Z. Becket i iv 237
On my I's. Eleanor. And mighty pretty I's too. „ iv i 5
and thy I's, and thy heart, and thy liver. Foresters iv 204
I have a swollen vein in my right Z, „ iv 569
Take the left I for the love of God. „ iv 577
By my halidome I felt him at my Z still. „ iv 628
Legacy My Z of war against the Pope Harold v i 328
Legate holy I of the holy father the Pope, Cardinal
Pole, Queen Mary i iii 26
L's coming To bring us absolution from the Pope. ,, in i 431
Well said, Lord L. „ in ii 93
Lord Paget Waits to present our Council to the L. „ in ii 98
No, my Lord L, the Lord Chancellor goes. „ in ii 151
all one mind to supplicate The L here for pardon, „ in iii 107
L From our most Holy Father Julius, Pope, „ in iii 125
authority Apostolic Given unto us, his L, „ in iii 211
I mean the houses knelt Before the L. „ in iii 258
You brawl beyond the question ; speak, Lord L ! „ in iv 98
I am your L ; please you let me finish. „ in iv 179
Beware, Lord L, of a heavier crime Than heresy „ in iv 221
You, Lord L And Cardinal-Deacon, „ m iv 260
4nd tell this learned L that he lacks zeal. „ in iv 272
Your violence and much roughness to the L, „ in iv 319
yet the L Is here as Pope and Master of the Church, „ in iv 346
Our bashful L, saw'st not how he flush'd ? „ in iv 350
So that you crave full pardon of the L. „ m iv 392
the duty which as L He owes himself, „ in iv 401
it would more become you, ray Lord L, „ iv i 116
And how should he have sent me L hither, „ v ii 87
God curse her and her LI ,, v iv 12
Legate-cousin Royal, Infallible, Papal L-c. „ iii iv 433
Legateship reft me of that Z Which Julius gave me, and
the Z Annex'd to Canterbury — • „ v ii 34
Holy Father Has ta'en the Z from our cousin Pole — „ v v 126
Legg'd See Two-legg'd
Legion ' A Galatian seeving by foece in the Roman
L.' The Cup 1 143
' Antonius leader of the Roman L.' ,, i i 167
' A Galatian seeving by foece in the Roman L.' ,, i ii 76
Let him come — a Z with him, if he will. „ ii 250
Legitimate Long live Queen Mary, the lawful and Z
daughter of Harry the Eighth ! Queen Mary i i 8
That's a hard word, Z ; what does it mean ? „ i i 12
Leicester (Lord) How much might that amount to, my
lord L ? Becket i iii 656
my good lord L, The King and I were brothers. „ i iii 660
Cornwall's hand or L's : they write marvellously alike. „ i iv 51
Was not my lord of L bidden to our supper ? „ i iv 56
Leicester (town) The Duke hath gone to L ; Queen Mary n i 4
Leisure (adj.) for I would have him bring it Home to
the Z wisdom of his Queen, „ in vi 23
Leisure (s) but you still preferr'd Your learned Z. „ in iv 258
Lend would deign to Z an ear Not overscornful, Harold iv i 136
Encumbered as we are, who would Z us anything ? Prom, of May iii 163
Length if you'd hke to measure your own I upon the grass. „ i 466
Lenient I was too Z to the Lutheran, Queen Mary v ii 73
Lennox The Lady Suffolk and the Lady L ? — „ i iv 31
Lent L at the siege of Thoulouse by the King. Becket i iii 636
Those two thousand marks Z me by the Abbot Foresters i i 264
Leofric L, and aU the monks of Peterboro' Harold v i 446
Leofwin (Earl of Kent and Essex) Ask thou I-ord L what he
thinks of this ! Morcar. Lord L, dost thou believe,
that these „ i i 40
as well as with mine earldom, L's and Gurth's. „ i i 338
L, thou hast a tongue, „ i i 391
Vex him not, L. » i i 403
L would often fight me, and I beat him. „ i i 434
Sign it, my good son Harold, Gurth, and Z, „ ni i 200
Gurth, L, Morcar, Edwin ! „ iv iii 220
And, L, art thou mad ? » v i 138
Gurth, L, go once more about the hill — „ v i 182
And L is down ! » v i 644
And here is L. Edith. And here is Hfi ! „ vii72
Leopard
982
Lie
Leopard Only the golden L printed in it Becket ii ii 85
Leprosy I pray God I haven't given thee my I, „ i iv 215
Crutches, and itches, and leprosies, and ulcers, „ i iv 255
She died of Z. „ v ii 268
Leprous The I flutterings of the byway, scum And
offal Queen Mary iv iii 76
Less when we fought I conquer'd, and he loved me none
the I, Harold i i 446
So I chance for false keepers. „ n ii 688
not his fault, if our two houses Be I than brothers. „ iv i 131
This Canterbury is only I than Rome, Becket i i 147
courtesy which hath I loyalty in it than the backward
scrape of the clown's heel — „ in iii 142
Friend Scarlet, art thou I a man than Much ? Foresters ni 65
He is every way a I man than Charles ; Queen Mary i v 330
What human reason is there why my friend Should
meet with I mercy than mysefi ? „ iv i 70
Thou hast learnt Thy I, and I mine. „ v ii 585
A I worth Finger and thumb — thus Harold i ii 54
Letter (epistle) how fierce a I you wrote against Queen Mary i ii 85
I which thine Emperor promised Long since, „ i v 347
Sent out my I's, call'd my friends together, „ i v 552
Who brings that I which we waited for — „ i v 586
Methought I smelt out Eenard in the I, „ n ii 120
And what a I he wrote against the Pope ! „ in i 173
Our I's of commission will declare this plainlier. „ in iii 222
A I which the Count de Noailles wrote „ v ii 496
No, no, he brings a Z. „ v ii 548
Sir Count, to read the I which you bring. „ v ii 555
Madam, I bring no I. Mary. How ! no Z ? „ v ii 557
He hath the Pope's last Fs, Becket in iii 25
Take thou this I and this cup to Camma, The Cup i i 61
you heard him on the I. „ i ii 280
where is this Mr. Edgar whom you praised so in
your first I's ?
arter she'd been a-readin' me the I wi' 'er voice a-
shaakin',
That desolate I, blotted with her tears,
An' ow coom thou by the I to 'im ?
I had to look over his I's.
Can't I speak like a lady ; pen a I like a lady ;
We found a Z in your bedroom torn into bits.
Letter (character) I know not my I's ; the old priests
tavight me nothing,
the very I's seem to shake With cold,
they are arranged here — according to their first I's.
L's ! Yeas, I sees now.
Letter (literal meaning) be No longer a dead I, but
requicken'd.
' Let the dead I live ! Trace it in fire,
Let the dead I burn !
you see the bond and the I of the law.
The I — 0 how often justice drowns Between the law
and the I of the law ! O God, I would the I of the
law Were some strong fellow
0 no, we took Advantage of the I- —
Sweet Marian, by the I of the law
Letter'd he loved the more His own gray towers, plain
life, and I peace, Queen Mary n i 50
Letters your name Stands first of those who sign'd the
L Patent „ i ii 18
Letting And mine, a little I of the blood. „ m ii 40
1 the wild brook Speak for us — „ v v 90
Lettuce yet are we now drill-sergeant to his lordship's l's, The Falcon 550
Lettnce-1^ But dallied with a single Z-Z; „ 673
Level a foul stream Thro' fever-breeding l's, — at her side, Becket n i 156
Levied half that subsidy I on the people, Queen Mary i v 115
Levity Skips every way, from I or from fear. „ i iii 170
Had put ofi I and put graveness on. „ v ii 510
Not for love of I. Foresters n ii 129
Lewd mock the blessed Host In songs so I, Queen Mary rv iii 367
His village darling in some I caress Has wheedled it off
the King's neck Becket iv ii 200
Liar terms Of Satan, l's, blasphemy, Antichrist, Queen Mary i ii 95
L ! dissembler ! traitor ! to the fire ! „ rv iii 259
Prom, of May i 111
nl29
n475
n717
n720
m302
m323
Qaeen Mary n iii 57
The Falcon 448
Prom,, of May ni 37
in 38
Queen Mary ui iv 10
m iv 33
„ ni iv 40
Foresters rv 505
IV 511
IV 621
rv638
Liar {continued) Were such murderous l's In Wessex — Harold ii i 94
He is a I who knows I am a I, „ ii ii 667
they are a l's — I mean to be a I — „ ii ii 796
Men would but take him for the craftier I. ■ „ ni i 115
Better to be a l's dog, and hold My master honest, „ in i 124
And thou, usurper, I — Harold. Out, beast monk ! „ v i 74
I loved him as I hate This I who made me I. „ v i 412
l's all of you. Your Saints and all ! „ v ii 104
L's ! I shame to quote 'em — caught, my lord, Becket i ii 7
He dared not — I ! yet, yet I remember — „ v i 211
He makes the King a traitor, me a I. „ v ii 416
and shared His fruits and milk. L ! The Cup i ii 428
Nature a I, making us feel guilty Prom, of May n 269
These friars, thieves, and l's, Shall drink Foresters iii 313
yells of thief And rogue and I echo down in Hell, „ in 324
From whom he knows are hypocrites and l's. „ iv 381
Libation Wherefrom we make I to the Goddess The Cup n 200
Making I to the Goddess. „ n 364
See first I make I to the Goddess, „ n 377
L to the Goddess. „ ii 387
Libel I had forgotten How these poor l's trouble you. Queen Mary v ii 202
No, Madam ; these are l's. „ v ii 350
Libellous but these I papers which I found Strewn in
your palace. „ v ii 171
Liberal and most amorous Of good old red sound I Gascon
wine : Becket, Pro. 100
Liberality you are still the king Of courtesy and I. The Falcon 293
My I perforce is dead Thro' lack of means „ 296
Libertine as the I repents who cannot Make done undone, Harold iii i 31
Liberty If ye love your liberties or your skins. Queen Mary n i 216
to save his country, and the liberties of his people ! Foresters i i 247
License I know the Norman I — Harold n ii 477
Priest Sits winking at the I of a king, Becket i ii 66
Without the I of our lord the King. „ i iii 130
strove To work against her I for her good, „ iv ii 340
grant you what they call a Z To marry. Prom, of May i 695
Dear, in these days of Norman I, Foresters in 178
Licensed Why, nature's I vagabond, the swallow. Queen Mary v i 20
Lick he l's my face and moans and cries out against the
King. Becket n iv 99
Cannot a smooth tongue I him whole again „ n ii 25
Licorice and English carrot's better than Spanish I ; Queen Mary in i 220
Lie (s) accursed I Of good Queen Catherine's divorce — „ in iv 231
Gave his shorn smile the I. Harold n ii 226
Of all the l's that ever men have lied, „ in i 99
death is death, or else Lifts us beyond the I. „ in ii 80
I fain Had made my marriage not a, I; „ v i 320
Truth ! no ; a Z ; a trick, a Norman trick ! „ v i 606
Will feel no shame to give themselves the I. The Cup ii 118
he flutter'd his wings as he gave me the I, Foresters i i 159
He hath spoken truth in a world of Vs. „ in 212
These be the l's the people tell of us, „ in 392
Lie (speak falsely) Unless my friends and mirrors I to
me. Queen Mary i iv 2
world of nature ; what is weak must I ; „ in v 122
The lapwing l's, says ' here ' when they are there. ,, in v 124
One that would neither misreport nor /, „ iv iii 556
Nay ! better die than I ! Harold i i 158
Better die than Z ! „ u ii 281
Call it to temporize ; and not to I ; Harold, I do not
counsel thee to Z. „ n ii 415
Not ev'n for thy sake, brother, would 1 1. „ ii ii 421
people do say that his is bad beyond all reckoning,
and Rosamund. The people I. Becket m i 177
Tha Vs. (repeat) Prom, of May n 703, 708
She Vs ! They are made in Hell. „ in 710
He Vs, my lord. I have shot him thro' the heart. Foresters n i 99
Except this old hag have been bribed to I. „ ii i 235
for, God help us, we I by nature. „ n i 237
Lie (verb) There Vs your fear. That is your drift. Queen Mary i v 304
and all rebellions Z Dead bodies without voice. „ ii i 79
It Vs there in six pieces at your feet ; „ n i 87
There let them Z, your footstool ! „ ii iv 120
all that in us Vs Towards the abrogation „ in iii 140
Seeing there Z two ways to every end, „ in iv 113
Lie
983
Life
that I think, ' Wilt thou I there
Lie (verb) {continued)
to-morrow ? '
It Vs there folded : is there venom in it ?
lash'd to death, or I Famishing in black cells.
Come thou down. L there.
What Vs upon the mind of our good king
That Vs within the shadow of the chance.
Nay let them I. Stand there and wait my will.
There Vs a treasure buried down in Ely :
It Vs beside thee, king, upon thy bed.
curse That Vs on thee and England.
Where I the Norsemen ? on the Derwent ?
He Vs not here : not close beside the standard.
their standards fell . . . where these two I.
So then our good Archbishop Theobald L's dying
— there Vs the secret of her whereabouts,
The daughter of Zion Vs beside the way —
All that L's with Antonius.
We I too deep down in the shadow here.
I down there together in the darkness which
would seem but for a moment,
I am very faint. I must I down.
Where Vs that cask of wine whereof
And I with us among the flowers, and drink —
Lied To sit high Is to be I about.
Some said it was thy father's deed. Harold.
I like a lad That dreads the pendent scourge
Of all the lies that ever men have I,
Lief we'd as I talk o' the Divil afoor ye as 'im,
Liefer Far I had I in my country hall
I had I that the fish had swallowed me,
But I had I than this gold again —
Li^e My Vs and my lordi. The thanks of Holy Church
Liege-lord breathe one prayer for my l-l the King,
Liest thou I as loud as the black herring-pond
Norman, thou I ! liars all of you,
Lieth do you good to all As much as in you I.
So he said who I here.
Queen Mary m v 132
m V 216
V ii 195
TV 180
Harold I i 268
„ n ii 463
„ n ii 682
„ III i 11
„ m i 195
„ in i 279
„ IV i 253
V ii 56
„ V ii 141
Becket, Pro. 3
„ Pro. 430
„ m iii 177
The Cup I ii 293
The Falcon 581
Prom, of May m 194
ni 473
Foresters in 306
IV 965
Queen Mary i v 430
TheyZ. Harold iiii5U
„ n ii 656
III i 99
Prom, of May Iii 130
Queen Mary in i 43
Harold n i 36
Foresters iv 184
Becket ii ii 189
„ V ii 191
Harold n i 25
„ V ii 104
Queen Mary iv iii 187
Foresters n ii 117
Lieu put some fresh device in I of it —
Life (See also After-life, Forest-life) Old Bourne to the I !
You've but a duU I in this maiden court, 1 fear, my
Lord ? Courtenay. A / of nods and yawns.
like a butterfly in a chrysalis, You spent your I ;
I love you. Lay my I in your hands,
to practise on my I, By poison, fire, shot, stab —
I would his I Were haU as goodly.
If cold, his I is pure.
A very wanton I indeed.
Of a pure I ?
And wastes more I.
plain I and letter'd peace,
and I warrant this fine fellow's I.
He has gambled for his I, and lost, he hangs.
Eray for you on our bended knees till our lives' end.
la, to whistle out my I,
and save the I Of Devon : if I save him,
some secret that may cost Phihp his I.
you would fling your lives into the guH .
scarlet thread of Rahab saved her I ;
bees, If any creeping I invade their hive
To take the lives of others that are loyal,
Paget, you are all for this poor I of ours, And care
but little for the I to be.
Watch'd children playing at their I to be,
the lives Of many among your churchmen
it is an age Of brief I, and brief purpose,
For there was I — And there was I in death —
whose bolts. That jail you from free I,
I had like to have lost my I :
what think you. Is it I or death ?
A right rough I and healthful.
Is I and lungs to every rebel birth
Care more for our brief I in their wet land,
The sunshine sweeps across my I again.
To spare the I of Cranmer.
Q^een Mary in i 268
I iii 30
I iii 113
iiv52
I iv 105
I iv 284
IV 201
IV 333
IV 336
IV 448
IV 507
II i49
II iii 84
II iii 91
n iii 122
n iv 109
n iv 123
in i 202
III i 459
III ii 39
ni iii 54
in iv 48
in iv 59
ni iv 63
m iv 190
ni iv 413
in V 145
ni V 172
m V 189
m V 194
m V 260
in vi 51
ni vi 62
in vi 250
IV i 4
Life {continued) To sue you for his L ? Mary. His I ?
Oh, no ; Queen Mary iv i 11
Or into private I within the realm. „ iv i 47
once he saved your Majesty's own Z ; „ iv i 125
My I is not so happy, no such boon, „ iv i 130
if he have to live so loath'd a Z, „ iv i 152
petition of the foreign exiles For Cranmer's I. „ iv i 194
Exhort them to a pure and virtuous Z; „ iv ii 77
For death gives Vs last word a power to live, „ iv iii 161
as I have come To the last end of Z, and thereupon
Hangs all my past, and all my I to be, „ iv iii 218
Or said or done in all my Z by me ; „ iv iii 239
Written for fear of death, to save my I, „ iv iii 242
have been a man loved plainness all my I; „ iv iii 271
Hurls his soil'd Z against the pikes and dies. „ iv iii 311
his best Of Z was over then. „ iv iii 330
Her Z, since Phihp left her, and she lost „ rv iii 428
Philip is as warm in Z As ever. „ v ii 24
fast friend of your Z Since mine began, „ v ii 134
Your Majesty has lived so pure a Z, „ v v 73
see, he smiles and goes. Gentle as in Z. „ v v 147
More beautiful than in I. „ v v 262
Her Z was winter, for her spring was nipt : „ v v 269
Thy Z at home Is easier than mine here. Harold i i 96
I have hved a Z of utter purity : „ i i 178
A Z of prayer and fasting well may see „ i i 199
Love will stay for a whole Z long. „ i ii 17
praised The convent and lone Z — within the pale — „ i ii 47
then a fair Z And bless the Queen of England. „ i ii 206
We seldom take man's Z, except in war ; „ ii ii 502
Archbishop Robert hardly scaped with Z. „ n ii 527
Harold, 1 am thy friend, one I with thee, ' „ n ii 650
Is naked truth actable in true Z ? „ m i 110
silent, cloister'd, solitary Z, A Z of life-long prayer „ ni i 277
' Love for a whole I long ' When was that sung ? „ in ii 88
they both have Z In the large mouth of England, „ iv iii 73
Thou gavest thy voice against me in my Z, „ v i 253
Whose Z was all one battle, incarnate war, „ v i 397
that I fear the Queen would have her Z. Becket, Pro. 62
The Z of Rosamund de Chfford more Than that „ Pro. 70
not my purveyor Of pleasures, but to save a Z — her Z ; „ Pro. 150
And all the heap'd experiences of Z, „ i i 154
And mean to hold it, or Becket. To have my Z. „ i iii 163
since your canon will not let you take L for a I, „ i iii 391
being in great jeopardy of his Z, he hath made „ i iv 263
or can shatter a I till the I shall have fled ? ,, ii i 12
Love that can Uft up a Z from the dead. „ n i 14
O my Vs I, not to smile Is all but death ,, n i 39
There may be crosses in my line of Z. „ n i 188
L on the hand is naked gipsy-stuff ; X on the face, „ ii i 193
He said thy Z Was not one hour's worth „ ni iii 250
Thy Z is worth the wrestle for it : „ iv ii 194
fawn upon him For thy Z and thy son's. „ iv ii 225
to take a Z which Henry bad me Guard „ rv ii 268
rend away Eyesight and manhood, Z itself, ,, iv ii 285
a Z Saved as by miracle alone with Him Who gave it. „ iv ii 367
not Z shot up in blood, But death drawn in ; — „ iv ii 380
To take my Z might lose him Aquitaine. „ iv ii 396
thy rest of Z is hopeless prison. „ v i 180
Thanks in this Z, and in the Z to come. „ v ii 161
drowning man, they say, remembers all The chances
of his Z, „ V ii 274
laid mine own Z down To help him from them, „ v ii 339
You have spoken to the peril of your Z ? „ v ii 516
Valour and holy Z should go together. „ v ii 587
Save him, he saved my Z, he saved my child, „ v iii 8
The power of Z in death to make her free ! „ v iii 100
What would ye have of me ? Fitzurse. Your Z. De
Tracy. Your I. „
But in this narrow breathing-time of Z The
courtesans for aught I know Whose Z is one dishonour. ,
However I thank thee ; thou hast saved my I. ,
loveliest Z that ever drew the light From heaven ,
To warm the cold bounds of our dying I ,
He saved my I too. Did he ? ,
V iii 117
Cup I i 29
I ii 194
I ii 333
1 iii 56
I iii 129
I iii 160
Life
984
Like
Life {continued) thou that art I to the wind, to the wave,
L yields to death and wisdom bows to Fate,
And join your I this day with his,
For all my truer I begins to-day.
that dost inspire the germ with I, The child,
ere two souls be knit for I and death,
came To plead to thee for Sinnatios's I,
Coming to visit my lord, for the first time in her I
The Cup II 3
„ II 89
„ n 135
„ n 229
„ II 258
„ II 359
„ II 392
The Falcon ni
334
364
Prom, of May i 178
I 345
And if he leave me— all the rest of I —
A colour, which has colour'd all my I,
I'd slaave out my I fur 'er.
And long I to boath on 'em.
I have all my I before me — so has she —
heat and fire Of I will bring them out,
better death With our first wail than I —
not so much for Death As against L !
This beggarly I, This poor, flat, hedged-in field —
Colour Flows thro' my I again,
which Father, for a whole I, has been getting together,
0 Love and L, how weary am I,
will give him, as they say, a new lease of I.
niver been surprised but once i' my I, and I went
bhnd upon it.
Had threaten'd ev'n your I, and would say anything ?
'Twere best to make an end of my lost I.
not with all your wealth, Your land, your I !
whose whole I hath been folded like a blossom in the
sheath,
1 saved his I once in battle.
A question that every true man asks of a woman once
in his I.
if this I of ours Be a good glad thing,
Sleep, happy soul ! all I will sleep at last.
mix with all The lusty I of wood and imderwood,
The hope of larger I hereafter,
I would give my I for thee.
Ay, ay, the line o' I is marked enow ;
Mislead us, and I will have thy I !
L, I. I know not death.
Our Robin beaten, pleading for his I !
noblest light That ever flash'd across my I,
Whose writ will run thro' all the range of I.
Their lives unsafe in any of these our woods,
in the fear of thy I shalt thou eat the King's venison —
Richard risks his I for a straw. So lies in prison — while
our Robin's I Hangs by a thread,
flung His I, heart, soul into those holy wars
for by my Z, you shall dance till he can.
Thou hast risk'd thy I for mine : bind these two men.
Our forest games are ended, our free I,
Life-giving No sacrifice, but a l-g feast ! Queen Mary iv ii 112
Life-green a thousand summers Robe you l-g again. Foresters iv 1058
I 482
II 287
II 291
II 338
II 343
II 667
III 165
m205
III 424
III 440
III 567
in 786
in 796
Foresters i i 205
I i 272
I ii 139
I iii 12
I iii 48
I iii 114
iii69
n i 189
II i 352
ni377
n i 621
II i 675
in 142
IV 49
IV 93
IV 205
IV 382
IV 407
IV 566
IV 894 .
IV 1049
Life-long To plunge thee into l-l prison here : —
A life of l-l prayer against the curse
she hath begun Her l-l prayer for thee.
And all my I labour to uphold The primacy-
heretic.
I am a l-l lover of the chase,
Lift I cannot I my hands unto my head.
L head, and flourish ;
Why do you I your eyebrow at me thus ?
I am ashamed to I my eyes to heaven,
death is death, or else L's us beyond the lie.
For, like a son, 1 1 my hands to thee.
Love that can Z up a life from the dead.
I pray you I me And make me walk awhile.
my hands are too sleepy To I it o£E.
Lifted Then Cranmer I his left hand to heaven,
L our produce, driven our clerics out —
Lifting It means the I of the house of Alfgar.
Light (adj.) My Lord of Devon — I enough, God
knows,
GroMring dark too — but I enough to row.
Take thou this I kiss for thy clumsy word.
Harold ii ii 550
„ m i 278
„ in i 324
Queen Mary v ii 70
The Cup I i 194
Queen Mary in i 240
„ III iv 24
in vi 102
IV iii 127
Harold ni ii 80
Becket i iii 264
n i 14
The Cup II 472
n 531
Queen Mary iv iii 608
Becket v ii 432
Harold i i 472
Qu^en Mary v ii 477
The Cup n 523
Foresters ni 134
Light (s) By God's I a noble creature, Queen Mary i i 68
The I of this new learning wanes and dies : ,, in ii 172
faith that seem'd to droop will feel your I, ,. in iv 23
yet not I alone. There must be heat — ., m iv 24
springs to I That Centaur of a monstrous Commonweal, ,, in iv 1 62
White as the I, the spotless bride of Christ, „ m iv 199
in a pale I, Rose hand in band, ,, ni v 147
Cool as the I in old decaying wood ; „ iv ii 5
Unpardonable, — sin against the I, „ iv iii 148
Is not yon I in the Queen's chamber ? „ v iv 1
There's the Queen's I. I hear she cannot live. „ v iv 10
in a closed room, with I, fire, physic, tendance ; „ v iv 36
My grayhounds fleeting like a beam of I, Harold i ii 130
dog, with thy lying l's Thou hast betray'd ., ii i 22
villains with their lying l's have wreck'd us ! ,, ii i 84
be as the shadow of a cloud Crossing your I. „ n ii 178
dreadful l's crept up from out the marsh — „ m i 379
Lost, lost, the I of day, ,, m ii 12
But a little I ! — And on it falls the shadow „ ni ii 69
A I among the oxen. „ iv i 87
Lower the I. He must be here. „ v ii 63
the fire, the I, The spirit of the twelve Apostles Becket i i 49
moon Divides the whole long street with I and shade. „ i i 365
As gold Outvalues dross, I darkness, „ i iii 715
L again ! I again ! Margery ? „ iv i 1
and went on and on till I found the I and the lady, „ iv ii 18
Save by that way which leads thro' night to I. „ v iii 89
I am not in the darkness but the I, „ v iii 97
the dry I of Rome's straight-going policy. The Cup i i 145
drew the I From heaven to brood upon her, „ i iii 57
Lady, you bring your I into my cottage The Falcon 283
her affections Will flower toward the I in some new
face. Prom, of May i 486
to be wakened again together by the I of the
resurrection, „ in 196
the Z Of these dark hours ; Foresters i ii 84
and seeing the hospitable l's in your castle, ,, i ii 194
I am but an angel by reflected I. ., n i 108
Glide like a Z across these woodland ways ! „ ii i 159
I of the seas by the moon's long-silvering ray ! ,. ii ii 178
noblest Z That ever flash'd across my life, „ in 141
Robin, the sweet I of a mother's eye, „ iv 2
Light (to come upon) if thou Z upon her — free me from her ? Becket, Pro. 493
Light (to kindle) then, who l's the faggot ? Not
the full faith, Queen Mary in iv 122
Thou I a torch that never will go out ! „ v v 122
Lighted (come upon) and I have I On a new pleasure. Prom, of May n 668
She may have I on your fairies here. Foresters ii i 496
Lighted (shone) A twilight conscience Z thro' a chink ; Harold in i 65
Lighten (to brighten) these Ulies to Z Sir Richard's black
room, Foresters i i 3
Lighten (to gleam) Our axes Z with a single flash Harold v i 537
Lighten'd gloom of Saul Was I by young David's harp. Queen Mary v ii 359
I for me The weight of this poor crown, Harold i i 217
Lighter Much Z than a thousand marks in gold ; Foresters iv 657
You see the darkness thro' the I leaf. „ iv 975
Lightning sword Of l's, wherewithal he cleft the tree Harold in i 137
This I before death Plays on the word, — „ in i 387
are sliver'd off and splinter'd by Their Z — „ v i 541
The l's that we think are only Heaven's Flash Becket v ii 35
Lightning-like swoops down upon him Eagle-like, l-l — The Falcon 14
Like (adj. and adv.) These princes are I children,
must be physick'd. Queen Mary I v 234
Is this Z him ? Renard. Ay, somewhat ; „ i v 442
Rascal ! — this land is Z a hill of fire, „ in i 321
Much less shall others in Z cause escape, „ rv iii 62
How fair and royal — Z a Queen, indeed ? „ v i 235
methinks my Queen is Z enough To leave me by and by. .. v i 242
I mean not Z to hve. Elizabeth — ., v i 245
There must be ladies many with hair Z mine. ., v iii 58
To draw him nearer with a charm L thine to thine. Harold i ii 9
What was he Z, this husband ? Z to thee ? „ v ii 52
have I fought men L Harold and his brethren, „ v ii 179
A pretty lusty boy. Rosamund. So Z to thee ; Z to be
Uker. Becket ii i 248
Like
985
Little
Like (adj. and adv.) (continued) I am loo I the King here ; Becket ii ii 288
He is marvellously I thee. „ v ii 180
I am I a boy going to be whipt ; Foresters ii ii 50
Had I a bulrush now in this right hand For sceptre, I
were I a queen indeed. „ m 77
By St. Nicholas They must have sprung I Ghosts from
underground, ., iv 592
It is not he — ^his face — tho' very I — No, no ! ,. iv 777
0 good Sir Richard, I am Z the man In Holy Writ, „ iv 980
Your names will cling I ivy to the wood. „ iv 1085
Like (verb) He I's it, my lord. Becket i iv 235
1 I's 'im, and Eva Vs 'im. Prom, of May i 436
I Vs 'er all the better fur taakin' me down, „ ii 133
Like See also Brother-like, Deer-like, Eagle-like, Father-
like, Hero-like, Locust-like, Spiteful-like, Martyr-
like, Thief -like. Throne-like, Wife-like
Likelier A round fine I. Your pardon. Queen Mary in iii 279
This is the I tale. We have hit the place. Becket in ii 42
Likeness sire begets Not half his I in the son. Queen Mary ii i 55
fair a Z As your great King in armour „ v v 28
Eva told me that he was taking her I. He's an
artist. Prom, of May i 127
I have heard of you. The I Is very striking. „ ii 365
I do most earnestly assure you that Your I — • „ u 564
Liker we be I the blessed Apostles : Harold ii i 33
So Uke to thee ; Like to be Z. Becket ii i 249
L the King. Becket. No, daughter. „ v ii 181
Likings Spanish in myself, And in my Z. Queen Mary i v 14
Lilt How happily would we Z. among the leaves Foresters m 40
Lily was all pure Z and rose In liis youth, Qv^en Mary i v 20
To sicken of his lilies and his roses. „ i v 25
The cold, whit« Z blowing in her cell : Harold in i 274
— she Was the world's l.^ Becket v ii 265
Might wish its rose a Z, Prom, of May m 490
these lilies to lighten Sir Richard's black room, Foresters j i 2
Modest maiden I abused, „ n ii 158
Lilylike L in her stateliness and sweetness ! Prom, of May n 621
Limb Who dragg'd the scatter'd Vs into their den. Queen Mary i v 401
island will become A rotten Z of Spain. „ n i 105
Until they died of rotted Vs ; „ iv iii 445
I touch mine arms, My Vs — Harold ii ii 795
The King may rend the bearer Z from Z. Becket i i 378
They howl for thee, to rend thee head from Z. The Cup i ii 322
give him Vs, then air, and send him forth „ ii 261
Limp With hands too Z to brandish iron — Harold v i 449
Limpet Be Vs to this pillar, or we are torn Queen Mary in i 184
Limping See A-limpin'
Line First of a Z that coming from the people, Harold v i 386
Look, this Z — The rest you see is colour'd green— Becket, Pro. 170
This blood-red Z ? Henry. Ay, blood, perchance, ., Pro. 174
This chart with the red Z ! her bower ! ,. Pro. 308
chart with the red Z — thou sa west it — ,. Pro. 428
chart which Henry gave you With the red Z — „ i ii 62
There may be crosses in my I of Ufe. v n i 188
plow straait as a Z right i' the faace o' the sun, Prom, of May i 370
Left but one dreadful I to say, ,, n 411
we must Move in the Z of least resistance ., n 670
Ay, ay, the Z o' life is marked enow ; but look, there
is a cross Z o' sudden death. Foresters n i 352
Linen slut whose fairest Z seems Foul as her dust-cloth, Becket v ii 202
filch the Z from the hawthorn. Foresters m 199
Ling Thro' wood and lawn and Z, „ m 425
Linger i not till the third horn. Fly! Becket mii 40
Lingerest Edwin, my friend — Thou Z. — Gurth, — Harold iv i 258
Link not with gold. But dearest Vs of love. Queen Mary x v 539
bright Z rusts with the breath of the first Becket, Pro. 361
Link'd that stale Church-bond which Z me with him „ iv ii 448.
Lion (See also Fox-lion) The Z needs but roar to
guard his young ; Qu^en Mary iii v 123
I conclude the King a beast ; Verily a Z if you
^viU „ IV iii 413
be those I fear who prick'd the Z To make him spring, Harold iv iii 95
Thousands of horses, hke as many Vs „ iv iii 196
Our Church in arms — the lamb the Z — „ v i 441
and hawks, and apes, and Vs, and lynxes. Becket i i 80
Lion (continued) As find a hare's form in a Vs cave. Becket i iii 177
Dares the bear slouch into the Vs den ? „ iv ii 282
Lest I remember thee to the Z, go. .. iv ii 292
I once was at the hunting of a Z. The Cup i ii 116
He would grapple with a Z like the King, Foresters i i 185
this Richard is the Z of Cyprus, Robin, the Z of Sherwood — „ iv 391
Be not the nobler Z of the twain. ,. iv 396
Lioness for she hath somewhat of the Z in her, „ i ii 157
Lion-heart Drink to the L-h Every one ! „ i ii 5
Lionlike let England as of old Rise I, Queen Mary v ii 267
Lip From your own royal Vs, at once may know „ ii ii 136
To take this absolution from your Vs, „ m ii 116
I felt his arms about me, and his Vs — „ v v 99
but when thou layest thy Z To this, Becket n i 306
Up from the salt Vs of the land we two ,, in ii 1
never so much as a silver one for the golden Vs of her
ladyship. The Falcon 404
the Vs that never breathed Love's falsehood to true
maid will seal Love's truth On those sweet Vs Foresters iv 71
I am but the echo of the Vs of love. „ iv 892
Liquid A marvel, how He from the Z sands of Coesnon Harold ii ii 56
Liquor You cannot judge the Z from the lees. Queen Mary iv iii 550
Lisping-age dandle you upon my knee At l-a. „ v ii 143
List (desire) not so set on wedlock as to choose But
where I Z, Queen Mary ii ii 215
List (roll of names) but he lent me an alphabetical Z
of those that remain, ,, ni 29
'Listed (enlisted) 'L for a soadger, Miss, i' the
Queen's Real Hard Tillery. Prom, of May ni 108
Listen L -. The King of France, Noailles Queen Mary i iv 109
Will bid you welcome, and will Z to you. Prom, of May n 522
if she weant Z to me when I be a-tryin' to saave
'er— „ II 693
Did I not promise not to Z to him, „ lu 569
Why do you Z, man, to the old fool ? Foresters n i 357
But Z — overhead — ^Fluting, and piping and luting ,. in 32
— what merry madness — I ! ., iii 43
we have made a song in your honour, so your lady-
ship care to Z. ., in 415
blow upon it Three mots, this fashion — Z ! ,. iv 425
Listen'd if he had not Z, I might have sent him The Cup n 417
Listener will you have it alone, Or with these Vs near you ? Becket v ii 305
Listening Z In some dark closet. Queen Mary v ii 216
Lit ' Make short ! make short ! ' and so they Z the wood. „ iv iii 607
Litany they led Processions, chanted litanies, ,, in vi 95
Litter Go men, and fetch him hither on the Z. Foresters iv 462
Take up the Z ! „ iv 597
I remain Beside my Father's Z. „ iv 605
And this old crazeling in the I there. „ iv 634
let me out of the Z. He shall wed thee : ,, iv 642
Little look ye, here's Z Dickon, and Z Robin, and I
Jenny — Queen Mary ii iii 112
And mine, a Z letting of the blood. „ in ii 40
Our Z sister of the Song of Songs ! „ in ii 103
And care but Z for the life to be. „ ui iv 60
Z children ! They kill'd but for their pleasure „ in iv 73
' L children, Love one another.' „ in iv 84
The Z murder'd princes, in a pale light, „ in v 147
For a Z space, farewell ; Until I see you in St.
Mary's Church. „ iv ii 46
not for Z sins Didst thou yield up thy Son to human
death ; „ iv iii 143
Altho' your Lordship hath as Z of each ,, iv iii 416
You are the mightiest monarch upon earth, I but
a Z Queen : ,, v i 53
A Z Queen ! but when I came to wed your majesty, „ v i 55
L doubt This buzz will soon be silenced ; ,, v i 292
Love can stay but a Z while. Harold i ii 13
Save for the prattling of thy Z ones. „ n ii 122
See here this I key about my neck ! „ ni i 10
let him a Z longer Remain a hostage for the loyalty Of
Godwin's house.' „ in i 89
But a Z light ! — And on it falls the shadow of the priest ; „ in ii 68
Your old crown Were Z help without our Saxon carles
Against Hardrada. „ iv i 35
Little
986
Live
Little (continued) L ! we are Danes, Who conquer'd what
we walk on, our own field.
He calls us I ! Harold. The kingdoms of this world
began with I,
Keep him away from the lone I isle.
I'll call thee I Geoffrey.
Look, look ! if I Geof&ey have not tost His ball into the
brook !
Kiss me, I one, Nobody near !
Come to me, I one. How earnest thou hither ?
We can't all of us be as pretty as thou art — I bastard.
How fares thy pretty boy, the I Geoffrey ?
There was a I fair-hair'd Norman maid
Nay, see, why she turns down the path through our I
vineyard.
When he was a I one, and I put the bitters on my
breast to wean him,
ye'll think more on 'is I finger than hall my hand at
the haltar. Prom, of May 1 112
How gracefully there she stands Weeping — the I
Niobe!
into nescience with as I pain As it is to fall asleep.
The I 'ymn ? Yeas, Miss ;
an' axed ma to be 'is I sweet-art,
Poor blind Father's I guide, Milly,
talk a I French like a lady ; play a I like a lady ?
Who said that ? Taake me awaay, I gell.
Child, read a I history, you will find The common
brotherhood
and if you cram me crop-full I be Z better than Famine
in the picture. Foresters i i 46
and for the love of his own I mother on earth, „ i i 98
O the sacred I thing ! What a shape ! „ i i 108
Shall 1 keep one I rose for Little John ? No. „ i i 112
But he flutter'd his wings with a sweet I cry, „ i i 154
But then your Sheriff, your I man, ,, i i 231
and our I Sheriff will ever swim with the stream ! „ i i 239
the Sheriff had taken all our goods for the King
without paying, oiu: horse and our I cart — „ ii i 192
for when the Sheriff took my I horse for the King
without paying for it — „ ii i 301
Littlechester (adj.) and we dragg'd The L river all in
vain : Prom, of May ii 414
Littlechester (s) When theer wur a meeting o' farmers
at L t'other daay,
fur they be knaw'd as far as L.
Beant there house-breakers down i' L, Dobson —
Who leaves me all his land at L,
afoor she went to school at L —
fur she tell'd me to taake the cart to L.
Only last week at L, drove me From out her memory,
pacing my new lands at L,
Wasn't Miss Vavasour, our schoolmistress at L, a lady
bom?
that dreadful night ! that lonely walk to L,
Little John (a follower of Robin Hood) She hath looked
well at one of 'em, L J.
Harold iv i 37
„ IV i 41
Becket ii i 15
„ n i 214
ni319
„ m i 100
IV i 3
,. IV i 39
„ viil67
„ vii259
The Falcon 168
389
I 736
II 341
ml
III 120
III 231
III 303
III 465
m542
1 137
I 214
I 389
I 511
nl9
n323
n404
n647
ni298
ni367
ShaU I keep one little rose for X J ? No.
Wilt thou not give me rather the little rose f or Z J ?
thou hast ruffled my woman, L J.
starched stiff creature, L J, the Earl's man.
L J, Who hast that worship for me
Take him, good L J, and give him wine.
thou That hast not made it up with L J ! Kate. I
wait till i J makes up to me.
L J Fancied he saw thee clasp and kiss a man.
And let them warm thy heart to L J.
I Z J, he Much the miller's son, and he Scarlet,
1 LJ, he, yoimg Scarlet, and he, old Much, and all the
rest of us.
Search them, L J.
Shame on thee, L J, thou hast forgotten —
Play the air, L J.
Strike up our music, L J.
You, good friar, You Much, you Scarlet, you dear L J,
Foresters i i 39
„ I i 113
„ I i 148
„ I i 166
„ I i 184
„ I iii 159
„ n i 469
ni 15
ni21
„ ni44
in 54
in60
ra201
III 237
in 418
IV 559
IV 1083
Live Long I Queen Mary, (repeat) Queen Mary i i 7, 65
' Long I Elizabeth the Queen ! ' „ i iii 7
we'll have no pope here while the Lady Elizabeth Vs.
But that with God's grace, I can I so still,
never Consent thereto, nor marry while I I ;
Long I Queen Mary ! Down with Wyatt ! The Queen !
We have been glad together ; let him I.
I it and die The true and faithful bride of Philip —
Long I the King and Queen, Philip and Mary !
Long I Queen Mary !
Where dost thou I ? Man. In Cornhill.
was not meet the heretic swine should I In Lambeth.
Let the dead letter I ! Trace it in fire,
says she will I And die true maid —
none shall hold them hi his house and I,
if he have to I so loath'd a life,
Ay — gentle as they call you — I or die !
set forth some saying that may I After his death
and better humankind ; For death gives life's
last word a power to I,
I pray you all to I together Like brethren ;
Either to I with Clirist in Heaven with joy.
That might I always in the sun's warm heart,
I mean not like to I.
Long I your Majesty ! Shall Ahce sing you
Make me full fain to I and die a maid.
There's the Queen's light. I hear she cannot I.
She hath but blood enough to I, not love. — ■
We hear he hath not long to I.
Forgive me, brother, I will I here and die.
but happier lived, If happier be to Z ;
I or die, I would I were among them !
And if I Z, No man without my leave
For we would I and die for thee, my lord,
And I shall I to trample on thy grave,
and the world shall I by the King's veniison
one who I's for thee Out there in France ;
Long I the good King Louis !
I Z to die for it, I die to I for it.
They call her — But she Vs secret, you see.
Madam, let her I.
And I what may be left thee of a life
She Vs — but not for him ; one point is gain'd.
I will go I and die in Aquitaine. (repeat)
Here is the great Archbishop ! He Vs ! he Vs !
A woman I could I and die for.
Might I not I for that, And drown all poor self-passion
to I And die together,
as I Z, there is Slonna Giovanna coming down the hill
from the castle.
Yoxir ladyship Vs higher in the sun.
For her sick son, if he were like to Z,
What can a man, then, I for but sensations,
smell o' the mou'd 'ud ha' maade ma I as long as
Jerusalem,
with some sense of art, to Z By brush and pencil.
L with these honest folk — And play the fool !
if you cared To Z some time among them.
For all the souls on earth that I
will be willing that you and Father should Z with us ;
in our spring-and-winter world If we Z long enough !
— all still — and nothing left To Z for.
She said ' all still. Nothing to Z for.'
but now ye know why we Z so stintedly,
a Count in Brittany — he Vs near Quimper.
Long I Richard, (repeat)
Long I Robin, Robin and Richard ! Long Z Robin,
' Long Z King Richard ! '
0 Lord, I will Z and die for King Richard —
We will Z and die with thee, (repeat)
1 believe there Vs No man who truly loves
You gentles that Z upo' manchet-bread and marchpane.
Then I roast 'em, for I have nought else to I on.
Could Z as happy as the larks in heaven,
L thou maiden ! Thou art more my wife so feeling.
I iii 44
n ii 219
n ii 231
II ii 252
II iii 90
II iv 41
III i 208
ni i 294
III i 316
in ii 135
III iv 33
in vi 45
IV 197
IV i 152
IV ii 162
IV iii 159
rv iii 181
IV iii 220
vi22
vi245
vii353
V iii 98
V iv 11
Harold i ii 161
„ II ii 565
„ n ii 804
„ IV iii 73
„ V i 463
BecTcet, Pro. 29
I ii 16
I ii 95
I iv 271
II i 309
n ii 450
„ ni iii 335
IV i 12
„ IV ii 157
„ IV ii 367
„ IV ii 415
„vil09,142
V iii 30
The Cup I iii 65
II 99
n 443
The Falcon 159
583
854
Prom, of May i 241
I 378
I 498
I 744
n 550
ni 7
ra 261
in 512
in 682
ni 68&
Foresters i i 76
„ I i 272
„ I ii 1, 3
I ii 13
I ii 25
I ii 37
„ I iii 168
n i 75
„ n i 281
„ II i 388
ni 82
„ in 121
Live
987
Long
Live {continued) all that I By their own hands, the
labourer, the poor priest ; Foresters iii 164
And I with us and the birds in the green wood. „ iv 325
We needs must I. Our bowmen are so true „ iv 523
Then will I I for ever in the wild wood. „ iv 878
Lived {See also Short-lived) as tho' My father and my
brother had not I. Queen Mary i v 36
I thank Grod, I have I a virgin, „ ii ii 218
You I among your vines and oranges, „ iii iv 253
And all things I and ended honestly. „ iii v 115
Your Majesty has I so pure a life, „ v v 73
I have I a life of utter purity : Harold i i 178
but happier I, It happier be to live ; „ iv iii 72
I die for England then, who I for England — „ v i 268
he would be mine age Had he I now ; Becket i iii 250
I have Z, poor bird, from cage to cage, „ in i 222
little fair-hair'd Norman maid L in my mother's house : „ v ii 261
having I For twenty days and nights in mail, Foresters iv 123
Livelong Not having broken fast the I day — „ iv 186
Liver and thy legs, and thy heart, and thy I, „ iv 205
Livery Ay, how fine they be in their liveries, „ i i 41
Living (adj. and part.) and we two will lead The I
waters of the Faith again
And had to be removed lest I Spain Should sicken
at dead England.
Will stir the I tongue and make the cry.
but Lambeth palace, Henceforth a centre of the I faith
not the I rock Which guards the land.
And thou art upright in thy I grave,
Qxieen Mary i v 88
III i 27
III i 354
,, in ii 155
Harold i ii 119
II ii 440
III ii 60
IV iii 70
IV iii 105
vi390
and sell not thou Our I passion for a dead man's dream ;
the I Who fought and would have died.
Hail to the I who fought, the dead who fell !
And dying for the people — Edith. L — I !
doth not the Z skin thicken against perpetual whippings ? Becket in iii 316
were he I And grown to man and Sinnatus will'd it. The Cup i ii 150
dead garland WUl break once more into the / blossom. The Falcon 919
We know not whether he be dead or I. From, of May ii 436
ThisEdgar, then, isZ? Harold, i ? well— „ ii 443
were she I, Would not — if penitent — have denied „ ii 495
Will he not fly from you if he learn the story of my
shame and that I am still Z ? -• in 258
Is yours yet I ? Harold. No— I told you. „ m 505
I never said As much before to anv woman I. „ in 645
L . . . dead ... She said ' all still. „ m 683
I ha' served the King I, says she, and let me serve
him dead, " Foresters n i 310
Living (s) have graspt Her I's, her advowsons, Becket i i 161
That, thro' his late magnificence of I The Falcon 227
Hath served me better than her I — „ 901
Load Well, it be the last I hoam. Prom, of May n 145
as I said afoor, it be the last I hoam ; ,, n 169
' The Last L Hoiim.' (repeat) ., n 171, 172
At the end of the daiiy. For the last I hoam ? (repeat) ., ii 184, 195
Till the end of the daay And the last I hoiim. ., n 209
Till the end o' the daay An' the last I hoam.' ., n 239
To the end o' the dsiay An' the last I hoam.' „ n 260
An' the last I hoam, L hoam.' „ n 293
Loan raise us I's and subsidies Among the merchants ; Queen Mary v i 179
Loathe Who Z you for your late return to Rome, „ iv ii 32
She is none of those who I the honeycomb. „ v i 277
I I being beaten ; had I fixt my fancy Becket, Pro. 49
Loath'd if he have to live so I a life. Queen Mary iv i 152
and great baseness Z as an exception : Becket ni iii 304
worshipt whom she Z, I should have let her be, „ iv ii 391
I the cruelties that Rome Wrought on her vassals. The Cup i ii 373
Loathing (adj.) I have but shown a Z face to you. Queen Mary in vi 113
Loathing (s) Beauty passes like a breath and love is
lost in Z : „ V ii 366
And L wield a Saxon battle-axe — Harold v i 414
I have an inherited Z of these black sheep of the
Papacy. Becket, Pro. 461
sane and natural Z for a soul Purer, „ n i 171
Loathsome call they not The one true faith, a Z
idol-worship ? Queen Mary in iv 219
make Thy body I even to thy child; Becket iv ii 172
Lobster-basket The simple l-b, and the mesh —
Locusting Come Z upon us, eat us up.
Locust-like their horse Swallow the hill l-l,
Lodge To Z a fear in Thomas Becket's heart
take this holy cup To Z it in the shrine of Artemis
To Z this cup Within the holy shrine of Artemis,
in some of these may Z That baseness
Lodged if you be fairly served, And Z, and treated.
There Z a gleaming grimness in his eyes,
I have Z my pretty Katekin in her bower.
Lodging {See also A-lodgin') You see the Z, sir,
track her, if thou canst, even into the King's I,
Thou wilt find her Back in her I.
With a wanton in thy I — Hell requite 'em !
My lord, Fitzurse, beheld her in your I.
Lodging-house went into service — the drudge of
a l-h —
Loftiest The lordliest, I minster ever built To Holy Peter
Logic Some of my former friends Would find my Z
faulty ;
Loiter Come, come, why do ye Z here ?
Loitering Half an hour late ! why are you Z here ?
Lollardism That those old statutes touching L
Lolluping See A-lolluping
Lombardy the Netherlands, Sicily, Naples, L.
London (adj.) {See also Lunnon) For thro' thine help
we are come to L Bridge ;
On over L Bridge We cannot : stay we cannot ;
In every L street a gibbet stood.
To this son of a i merchant — how your Grace must
hate him.
Knights, bishops, earls, this L spawn^ — ^by Mahoimd,
Thomas, son Of Gilbert Becket, L merchant.
The L folkmote Has made him all but king,
London (bishop) Who made thee L ? Who, but
Canterbury ?
Bishops— York, L, Chichester, Westminster —
hath in this crowning of young Henry by York and L
crowning thy yoimg son by York, L and Salisbury—
not Canterbury.
London (bishoprick) Found two archbishopricks, L and
York?
Foliot may claim the pall For L too
Becket ii ii 29T
Queen Mary u i 101
Harold v i 560
Becket i iii 176-
The Cup I ii 435-
I ii 52
Foresters n ii 705
Queen Mary v iii 22.
Harold n ii 224
Foresters n i 417
Queen Mary v iii 23'
Becket, Pro. 508
I i 40O
I ii 9
I ii 34
Prom, of May in 392
Harold in i 20&
Prom, of May ii 665
Foresters i i 80
Prom, of May n 324
Queen Mary ni iv 7
n i 213-
„ n iii 9-
II iii 41
III i 7
Becket, Pro. 433
„ II ii 143
n ii 231
Foresters i iii 80
Becket i iii 66
„ I iii 385
„ III iii 71
„ ni iii 19d
I iii 50
I iii 57
London (city) " Forward to L with me ! forward to L ! Queen Mary n i 214
forward to L ! Crowd. Forward to Z ! „ ' n i 217
in full force Roll upon L. „ n i 236
these our companies And guilds of L, gathered here, „ n ii 129
I, Lord Mayor Of L, and our guilds and companies. „ n ii 141
You droop in your dim L. „ v ii 609
Draw thou to L, there make strength to breast Harold v i 126
For L had a temple and a priest Becket i iii 59
Do I wish it ? Edgar. In L. Prom., of May i 698
He has gone to L. „ 1 780
Lone seek In that Z house, to practise on my Ufe, Queen Mary i iv 284
she so praised The convent and Z life — within the pale — Harold i ii 47
Thine ear. Becket. That's Z enough. Becket, Pro. 158
Keep him away from the I little isle. „ ii i 15
I am as I and loveless as thyself. The Falcon 20
Loneliness Springs from the Z of my poor bower, Becket in i 40
Lonely And if I walk within the Z wood, Harold n ii 246
And it is so Z here — no confessor. Becket n i 290
that dreadful night ! that I walk to Littlechester, Prom, of May in 36&
My Z hour ! The king of day hath stept from off his
throne. Foresters ii i 25
Why break you thus upon my Z hour ? „ n i 93
and scare Z maidens at the farmstead. „ ni 200
You caught a Z woodman of our band, „ in 359
Long (adj, and adv.) Nay ; not so 1 1 trust. Queen Mary i iii 141
I am somewhat faint With our Z talk. „ i v 521
L live Queen Mary ! „ in i 294
you forget That I low minster where you gave your
hand To this great Catholic King. „ in ii 90
And do declare our penitence and grief For our 2
schism and disobeoience, „ m iii 129
thou That layest so Z in heretic bonds with me ; „ ui iv 280
Long
988
Look
Long (adj. and adv.) (continued) How many names in the
I sweep of time That so foreshortens greatness, Queen Mary m v 40
A I petition from the foreign exiles To spare the life
of Cranmer. „ iv i 3
After the I brain-dazing colloquies, „ iv ii 92
Friend for so I time of a mighty King : „ iv iii 73
L have I lain in prison, yet have heard Of all their
wretchedness. „ iv iii 210
His I white beard, which he had never shaven Since
Henry's death, „ iv iii 592
Look ! I have play'd with this poor rose so Z I have
broken off the head. „ v ii 2
That all day I hath wrought his father's work, „ v ii 118
listening In some dark closet, some I gallery, drawn, „ v ii 217
The rosy face, and I down-silvering beard, Harold in i 46
The rosy face and I down-silvering beard — „ iv i 261
O rare, a whole I day of open field. Becket i i 296
and the moon Divides the whole I street with light
and shade. „ i i 365
Their I bird-echoing minster-aisles, — „ in i 44
We have watch'd So I in vain, he hath pass'd out again, „ in ii 12
And sway the I grape-bunches of our vines, The Cup n 270
'Tis I since we have met ! The Falcon 274
Be thou a-gawin' to the I bam ? Prom, of May i 2
and 'e telled all on us to be i' the I bam by one o'clock, „ i 8
Why coom awaay, then, to the I bam. „ i 36
Miss, the farming men 'all hev their dinner i' the I
bam, „ I 166
And I life to boath on' em. „ i 345
the smell o' the mou'd 'ud ha' maade ma live as Z as
Jerusalem. ,, 1 378
They ha' broached a barrel of aale i' the I bam, „ i 426
and I've hed the I barn cleared out of all the machines, ,, i 451
Oh, Dora, Dora, how I you have been away from home ! ,, i 767
■Come, then, and make them happy in the I bam, „ i 791
And plaay the pianner, if ye liked, all daay I, like a
laady, „ ii 101
Whoy, O lor. Miss ! that wur so I back, and the walls
sa thin, „ m 71
the state we all Must come to in our spring-and-winter
world If we live I enough ! „ m 512
and how often in the I sweep of years to come Foresters i i 244
L live Richard, Eobin and Richard ! L live Richard ! „ i ii 1
L live Robin, Robin and Richard ! L live Robin, ., i ii 13
' L live King Richard ! ' „ i ii 25
To sleep ! to sleep ! The I bright day is done, „ i iii 41
Why did ye keep us at the door so I? „ n i 224
She'lay so I at the bottom of her well In the cold water „ iv 242
Xong (verb) And how 1 1 for rest.' Prom, of May ni 206
Longed he I much to see your Grace and the Chancellor
ere he past, Becket, Pro. 398
Less lovely than her own, and I for it. The Falcon 56
Longer should be No Z a dead letter, but requicken'd. Queen Alary m iv 10
Stays I here in our poor north than you : — „ v i 24
these customs are no I As Canterbury calls them, Becket i iii 69
That if they keep him I as their guest, n i 91
And were it I — well — I should not do it. „ v ii 159
and then we were no I outlaws. Foresters iv 147
The land ! the land ! I am crazed no I, so I have
the land. „ iv 855
if you hold us here L from our own venison. „ rv 942
Long-face Who's the l-f there, Qween Mary ni i 191
Longing have strange fancies. Strange Vs ; The Falcon 819
Long-silvering Up thro' the light of the seas by the
moon's l-s ray ! Foresters ii ii 179
Long-togged-at l-l-a, threadbare-worn Quarrel of Crown and
Church — Becket u ii 54
Long-winded Why, you l-w — Sir, you go beyond me. Queen Mary v iv 58
Long-withholden to enforce The Uw tribute : The Cup i i 77
Long-worshipt my most honour'd and l-w lady, The Falcon 714
Look (s) tho' by your age. And by your I's Queen Mary i iv 13
She calls you beauty, but I don't like her Vs. Becket iv ii 62
Beant Miss Eva gone off a bit of 'er good I's o'
laate ? Prom, of May i 33
Look (verb) She I's comelier than ordinary to-day ; Queen Mary i i 70
Look (verb) (continued) Well, sir, 1 1 for happy times.
I you there — The Prince of Spain coming to wed
I's it not right royal ?
L to you as the one to crown their ends.
L to it, niece. He hath no fence when Gardiner
L you, Master Wyatt, Tear up that woman's work
L ; can you make it English ?
L at the' New World — a paradise made hell ;
chance That I shall never I upon you more,
the half sight which makes her I so stem.
That makes or man or woman I their goodliest.
Should I more goodly than the rest of us.
Be merry ! yet, Sir Ralph, you I but sad.
L's very Spain of very Spain ?
But then he l's so merry.
L to your Bible, Paget ! we are fallen.
L to the Netherlands, wherein have been
And make it I more seemly,
let 'em I to it, Cranmer and Hooper,
0 God, sir, do you I upon your boots,
what, you I somewhat worn ;
He l's to and he leans on as his God,
And you must I to Calais when I go.
L ! I have play'd with this poor rose so long
L you here — the Pope Pointing at me with ' Pole,
how grim and ghastly l's her Grace,
she l's a corpse.
Doth he not I noble ?
L you, there's a star That dances in it
and I upon my face. Not on the comet.
L to the skies, then to the river,
L ! am I not Work-wan, flesh-fallen ?
but I, where Edward draws A faint foot
She is my mistress, let me I to her !
L thee, Rolf, when I was down in the fever,
L, he's here ! He'll speak for himself !
L thou, here is Wulfnoth !
L not amazed, fair earl !
L at him — -The rosy face,
i up ! Z up ! Edith !
He l's for land among us, he and his.
1 am Edith ! i not thus wan ! Edith
how 1 1 ?
L, I will bear thy blessing into the battle
L out upon the battle — is he safe ? (repeat)
L, daughter, I. Edith. Nay, father, I for me !
L out upon the battle !
L out upon the hill— is Harold there ?
L you, we never meant to part again.
For I, our marriage ring !
L to your king.
L, this line — The rest you see is colour'd green —
L ! I would move this wanton from his sight
L on me as I were thy bodily son,
L to it, your own selves !
It is not safe for me to I upon him.
I how the table steams, like a heathen altar ;
L rather thou all-royal as when first I met thee.
L, II if little Geoffrey have not tost His ball
will but I into The wrongs you did him.
The King l's troubled.
I am the King, his father. And I will Z to it.
for there were great ones who would Z after me,
or I couldn't I your ladyship i' the face,
L ! He bows, he bares his head,
were all, my lord, as noble as yourself, who would I up
to you ?
Fitzurse and his following — who would I down upon
them ?
But you don't Z like a good fairy. Mother does.
L at the hilt. What excellent workmanship.
L ! how tliis love, this mother, nms thro' all
Why do you Z at her so lingeringly ?
To-day they are fixt and bright — they Z straight out.
L for me !
What matters
Queen Mary i i 98
I iii 81
I iv 74
I iv 171
I iv 201
n i 74
H i 127
II i 207
II i 246
II ii 322
II ii 329
u ii 349
n ii 358
in i 192
mi 203
in iv 80
in iv 106
ni iv 152
iniv423
ra vl91
IV ii 116
IV iii 30(5
vil7
v ii 1
V ii 173
y ii 390
V ii 397
vv32
Harold i i 7
„ I i 25
„ I i 34
„ I i 97
„ iil42
„ ii287
„ n i 46
„ n i 78
„nii322
„ II ii 494
., HI i 44
„ m i 320
„ IV ii 53
„ V i 393
„ V i 434
Harold v i 484, 654
Harold v i 535
„ V i 623
„ V i 669
V ii 80
„ V ii 108
Becket, Pro. 33
„ Pro. 169
I ii 70
„ I iii 263
„ I iii 397
„ I iii 486
I iv 68
ni46
„ n i 319
„ n ii 115
„ II ii 425
„ m i 27
„ in i 135
„ in i 195
„ m iii 33
„ m iii 306
„ ni iii 309
„ IV i 35
„ ivii313
„ V ii 241
The Cup I i 123
n21
n 167
Look
Look (verb) (continued) I wonder if I Z as pale as she ? The Cup n 322
Deigns to I in upon our barbarisms. „ u 337
you I as beautiful this morning as the very Madonna The Falcon 198
your ladyship were not Too proud to I upon the garland, „ 663
Coomly to I at,' says she — but she said it spiteful-
like. To I at — yeas, Prom, of May 1 179
tha ^5 haiile anew to last to a hoonderd. „ i 354
and you I thin and pale. Is it for his absence ? „ i 781
sweet upo' Dora Steer, and she weant sa much as I
at 'im ? „ n 162
How worn he I's, poor man ! who is it, I wonder. „ n 390
/ to thysen, for, by the Lord, I'd think „ n 695
L there — mider the deaths. „ n 710
I had to I over his letters. „ ii 720
could it I But half as lovely. „ in 490
but, my flower, You I so weary and so worn ! „ ni 499
L up ! One word, or do but smile ! „ m 675
Yes, deathlike ! Dead ? I dare not I : if dead, „ m 717
How she I's up at him, how she holds her face ! Foresters i ii 144
He often I's in here by the moonshine. „ n i 336
L, my lord, there goes one in the moonlight. „ n i 394
0 I ! before the shadow of these dark oaks „ ii i 604
i ! l\ he kneels ! he has anger'd the foul witch, „ ii i 669
L, there comes a deputation ,. n ii 144
warm thy heart to Little John. L where he comes ! ., m 46
and I's at once Maid Marian, „ m 117
1 I on the King's venison as my own. „ rv 197
If a cat may Z at a king, may not a friar speak to one ? „ rv 921
Look'd-looked-lookt You hok'd a king. Queen Mary i iii 103
So that your sister were but look'd to closer. „ i v 460
How look'd the city When you past it ? Quiet ? „ ii ii 57
and look'd As grim and grave as from a funeral. „ n ii 64
And look'd as bloodless. „ n ii 84
eyes So bashful that you look'd no higher ? „ m i 65
How look'd the Queen ? „ ni i 91
then King Harry look'd from out a cloud, „ iv ii 6
His eighty years Look'd somewhat crooked on him „ iv iii 332
I do assure you, that it must be look'd too : „ v i 2
It must be look'd to. If war should fall „ v i 8
It shall be look'd to ; „ y i 12
he look'd the Great Harry, You but his cockboat ; „ v ii 145
In Hampton Court My window look'd upon the corridor ; „ v ii 459
I never look'd upon so fair a likeness „ v v 28
L hard and sweet at me, and gave it me. „ y v 95
but he that lookt a fangless one. Issues Becket i iii 451
as to the young crownling himself, he looked so malapert
in the eyes, „ m iii 109
yellow silk here and there, and it looked pretty like
a glowworm, „ iv i 22
wine Ran down the marble and lookt like blood, The Cup ii 204
Glows thro' my veins since first I look'd on thee. „ n 429
You never had look'd in on me before, The Falcon 865
for the past Look'd thro' the present. Prom, of May ii 641
She hath looked well at one of 'ern. Little John. Foresters i i 38
Lookest Why I thou so amazed ? „ i i 130
Looketh ' Whosoever L after a woman,' Queen Mary i v 453
Lookin' (^SVe also A-lookin') I coom'd upon 'im
t'other daay I at the coontry. Prom, of May i 201
Looking (part) {See also Lookin', Nobler - looking,
Groodlier-looking, Simple-looking) But Janus-
faces I diverse ways. Queen Mary iii ii 75
ever I to the happy haven Where he shall rest at night, „ iv iii 579
Have you been I at the ' Dance of Death ' ? „ v ii 169
{ thro' my reign, I found a himdred ghastly murders Becket i iii 406
you should be in the hayfield I after your men ; Prom, of May ii 47
Loolong (s) With I on the dead. Am I so white ? Harold ii ii 815
In Z on a chiil and changeless Past ? Prom, of May ii 504
Lookt See Look'd
Loom (s) heaven and earth are threads of the same I, Harold i i 210
Loom (verb) out of which L's the least chance of peril Queen Mary u ii 238
blackness of my dungeon I Across their lamps Harold ii ii 406
Loon the brainless l's That cannot spell Queen Mary in i 280
Loop Philip ! quick ! I up my hair ! „ v ii 534
Loose (adj.) a score of wolf-dogs are let I that will tear
thee piecemeaL Becket m ii 39
989 Lord
Loose (verb) going now to the Tower to I the prisoners Queen Mary i i 109
lead on ; je I me from my bonds. „ iv ii 240
Loosed you late were I from out the Tower, „ i iv 50
Loosely-scatter'd left about Like l-s jewels, „ n i 28'
Loove (love) And I would I tha moor nor ony
gentleman 'ud I tha. Prom, of May n 104
Lor (inter.) {See also Law) Whoy, 0 I, Miss ! that
wur sa long back, ,, ni 71
0 I, Miss ! noa, noa, noa ! „ rn 91
Lord {See also Liege-lord, My-lord) Gardiner for one,
who is to be made L Chancellor, Queen Mary i i 87
Her freaks and f rohcs with the late L Admiral ? „ i iv 20
She fears the L's may side with you „ i iv 158
The L Chancellor (I count it as a kind of virtue in him, „ i iv 191
Why, my I Bishop ? (repeat) Queen Mary i iv 223, 227
Who waits, sir ? Usher. Madam, the L Chancellor. Queen Mary i v 96
that were hard upon you, my L Chancellor. „ i v 159
The L Chancellor himself is on our side. „ n i 193
Or — if the L God will it — on the stake. „ n i 251
All hangs on her address, And upon you, L Mayor. „ u ii 56
I, the L Mayor, and these our companies And guilds „ ii ii 127
I, L Mayor Of London, and our guilds and companies. „ ir ii 139
tho' my L Mayor here, By his own rule, „ ii ii 345
new L's Are quieted with their sop of Abbeylands, „ iii i 141
No, my L Legate, the L Chancellor goes. „ in ii 151
We, the L's Spiritual and Temporal, „ m iii 113
The L who hath redeem'd us With His own blood, „ in iii 202
1 am but of the laity, my L Bishop, „ m iv 81
Yet my L Cardinal — Pole. I am your Legate ; „ in iv 178
Till when, my L's, I counsel tolerance. „ ni iv 203
Thou Christian Bishop, thou L Chancellor Of England ! „ m iv 30O
My L Chancellor, You have an old trick of offending us ; „ ni iv 313
0 L ! your Grace, your Grace, „ m v 248
1 told my L He should not vex her Highness ; „ m vi 65
And my L Paget and L William Howard, „ rv i 6
Good morroM', my L Cardinal ; „ rv i 42
My L of Ely, this. After a riot We hang the leaders, „ rv i 72
And if he did I care not, my L Howard. „ iv i 129
You are too politic for me, my L Paget. „ iv i 150
May learn there is no power against the L. „ iv iii 67
And be with Christ the L in Paradise. „ iv iii 88
0 L God, although my sins be great, „ iv iii 135
And every syllable taught us by our L, „ iv iii 231
No, here's L William Howard. What, my L, „ iv iii 288
Thank the L therevore. (repeat) Queen Mary iv iii 496, 520, 529
there wur an owld I a-cum to dine wi' un. Queen Mary iv iii 504
' I wunt dine,' says my L Bishop, „ iv iii 507
the owld I fell to 's meat wi' a will, God bless im ! „ iv iii 514
but when I came to wed your majesty, L Howard, „ v i 56
1 have gone beyond your late L Chancellor, — „ v ii 98
cries continually with sweat and tears to the L God „ v iv 46
Charles, the I of this low world, is gone ; „ v v 54
Ask thou L Leofwin what he thinks of this ! Harold i i 40
L Leofwin, dost thou believe, „ i i 42
Yea, I Harold. „ n ii 243
The king, the l's, the people clear'd him of it, „ ii ii 522
many among our Norman l's Hate thee for this, „ ii ii 545
I have built the L a house — (repeat) Harold in i 178, 180, 186
the L hath dwelt In darkness. Harold in i 178
The L was God and came as man — „ in ii 172
Thou art one of those Who brake into L Tostig's
treasure-house „ iv i 114
Lay hands of full allegiance in thy L's „ v i 11
Like other l's amenable to law. Becket, Pro. 25
Church should pay her scutage like the l's. „ i i 35
And spake to the L God, and said ' 0 X, I have been
a lover of wines, „ i i 74
And the L answer'd me, ' Thou art the man, (repeat) „ i i 82, 98
' O L my God, Henry the King hath been my friend, „ i i 86
Stir up the King, the L's ! „ i ii 88
Is not the Church the visible L on earth ? Shall hands
that do create the L be bound „ i iii 92
The L be judged again by Pilate ? No ! „ i iii 97
My I Archbishop, that we too should sign ? „ i iii 272
Loyally and with good faith, my I Archbishop ? „ i iii 279
Lord 990
Lord {continiied) dwelt alone, like a soft I of the East, Becket i iii 358
And our great I's will sit in judgment on him. „ i iii 549
I would, my I Thomas of Canterbury, ,' i iii 577
How much might that amount to, my I Leicester ? ,, i iii 656
0 my good I Leicester, The King and I were brothers. ., i iii 660
The King and all his Z's Becket. Son, first hear »?»e ! ., i iii 671
Blessed is he that cometh in the name of the LI ., i iii 759
My ; Archbishop, wilt thou permit us — ,, i iv 5
That is the parable of our blessed L. Becket. And
why should not the parable of our blessed L be
acted again ? „ r iv 75
our I's and masters in Christ Jesus. .. i iv 87
My I Archbishop, may I come in with my poor friend,
my dog ? ., I iv 93
and the L hath prepared your table — „ i iy 130
Where is my I Archbishop ? " j iy 154
because the L hath set his mark upon him ', i iv 191
for I be liis I and master i' Christ, '' i jy 241
gangrenes, and running sores, praise ye the L, '! i iy 256
world shall live by the King's venison and the bread
. °' *^^ ^' „ I iv 272
smce we would be I of our own manor, , u ii 19
My lieges and my I's, The thanks of Holy Church ',', ir ii 189
That sow this hate between my I and me ! „ n ii 272
by-things of the L Are the wrong'd innocences " m iii 13
If ... but I say no more . . . farewell, my I. „ in iii 272
It must be so — my visions in the L: ,. m iji 342
I of more land Than any crown in Europe, ',] v i 28
Thomas, I Not only of your vassals but amours, " v i 204
for thy Church, 0 Z— Into thy hands, 0 L— y iii 195
The L bless boiith on 'em ! p^m. of May i 341
—the L bless 'er — 'er oan sen ; „ u 39
it be the L's doin', noan o' mine ; '' m 43
I would set my men-at-arms to oppose thee, like the
n ^ ''t *^n r*^"®- . . ■ Foresters i i 324
O X, I will hve and die for King Richard— „ i ii 37
0 i, I am easily led by words, " j a 39
-^'s and Commons wiU bow down before him— Queen Maru in i 433
Lordliest The I, loftiest minster ever built To Holy Peter
■T^«ic>.-!^T^"ffK''^^l, . . Harold in i20&
^^rdstaip Large I there of lands and terntory. Harold n ii 83
'■•^^^T, ^,.'^° P^f<^f /°"^ ^I^^y till EUzabeth I her head.' Queen Mary i iii 5
If Ehzabeth I her head — ^^ \ iii §3
Stand further off, or you may I your head. Courtenay.
1 have a head to I for your sweet sake. „ j iy 128
what have you done to i her ? ' x iv 296
But do not I me Calais. " i y 129
To go back Were to I all. \] „ iii 40
1 pass to Windsor and I Z my crown. " u iy 29
thou Shalt I thine ears and find thy tongue, " m i 255
L the sweet hope that I may bear a prince. " m vi 201
Or you will I your Calais. / „ v i 11
to the intent That you may I your English heritage. " y i 133
Ood gmde me lest 1 1 the way. v v 209
Yet thee I would not Z, and sell not thou Harold m ii 58
ro take my hfe might I him Aquitaine. Becket iv ii 396
lie I s half the meed of martyrdom v ii 278
And I his head as old St. Denis did. " y ii 450
which well May make you I yourself. The Cup i i 149
I might plunge And j myself for ever. Prom, of May 11 306
and I shaU I my land also. Foresters i i 339
Beware, man, lest thou I thy faith in me. i ii 179
but my father will not I his land, " „ i 523
Or Z all hope of pardon from us — " ^y 935
iMSa^ would dare the chance Of double, or I all. The Cup i iii 148
l^rTL ^ "^?^% than friend, a son ; The Falcon 332
C^Im Til f^u^ ^/"h,^" ^'''^ ^y ^ ^^^- P^o^- of May 11 418
T ^^ ^ ^^y ^^^^^^ *o ^^^ I of Ws land. Foresters u i 570
liOSS Ihis marn^e should bring I or danger to you. Queen Maru 11 ii 227
angry chronicles hereafter By Z of Calais. v 305
More gain than I ■ for of your wives "secket v ii 201 Lot
"^I haVe'fm'Jnltfficr ' '''" ''" ' ' "''^" ^"^" """'^ ' '^ lit
He has gambled for his life, and I, he hangs. " A Iii 92
Madam, I much fear That aU is Z; ]; „ •" 23
Lost {continued) All I, all I, all yielded ! A barge, a
barge !
traitors Against our royal state have I the heads
We reck not tho' we I this crown of England —
I had Uke to have I my life :
I Her fierce desire of bearing him a child,
a star beside the moon Is all but I ;
So ; but it is not I — Not yet.
Beauty passes Hke a breath and love is I in loathing :
i in a wilderness where none can hear !
sent on foreign travel. Not I his head.
was I When Wyatt sack'd the Chancellor's house
For having I myself to save myself,
thro' his dying sense Shrills ' I thro' thee.'
Crown'd, crown'd and I, crown'd King — and Z to me !
Both were I and found together,
I and found Together in the cruel river Swale
L, I, the light of day,
L, I, we have I the way.
into the river. Where we two may be I together. And
/ for ever ? ' Oh ! never, oh ! never, Tho' we be
I and be found together.'
the truth Was I in that fierce North, where they were I,
Where all good things are I, where Tostig I
I have I Somewhat of upright stature
I have I the boy who play'd at ball with me.
Thou hast I thine even temper, brother Harold !
when all was I, he yell'd. And bit his shield,
I have I both crown And husband.
I Z it somehow — 1 1 it, playing with it
twice I thought that all was I.
That the heart were I in the rhyme
certain wholesome usages, L in desuetude,
I think so. So I Z mine.
I have I all trust in him.
The boy so late ; pray God, he be not I.
nay, if 1 1 him, now The folds have fallen from the
mystery, And left all naked, I were I indeed.
I her and went on and on till I found the light and
the lady,
I saw the ball you I in the fork of the great willow
over the brook.
Well — well — too costly to the left or I
You have I The ear of the King.
L in the common good, the common wrong,
have 1 1 authority among you ?
The glory and grief of battle won or I
I have I a friend of late
Lot
Queen Mary n iv 71
in iv 3
in iv 55
m V 189
IV iii 428
V i 81
V ii 264
V ii 365
V ii 382
V ii 491
V ii 503
Harold 11 ii 654
m i 35
in ii 1
m ii 7
„ in ii 9
III ii 12
ni ii 15
in ii 18
ui ii 26
m ii 55
,, IV iii 21
V i 94
V i 403
V ii 38
V ii 109
V ii 173
Becket, Pro. 383
I iii 413
II i 64
„ n ii 434
IV ii 2
.. IV ii 7
„ IV ii 17 ]
„ IV ii 57 ;
„ ivii299 i
„ ivii354
V ii 40
V iii 66
The Cup I ii 161
The Falcon 329
9 a dinner tor nawDody, and 1 should
ha' I the pig. Prom. of May 1 149
and man perceives that The I gleam of an after-life
but leaves him j 5Q3
I were insured. Miss, an' 1 1 nowt by it. \\ u 53
I have I myself, and am I for ever to you and my
poor father. ^ jj gg
I do believe 1 1 my heart to him the very first time
we met, ^^ jjj 233
but I couldn't buy my darter back agean when she
I hersen, ^^ ^ 454
an one on 'em went an' I hersen i' the river. „ ni 456
Has I his health, his eyesight, even his mind. " m 767
'Twere best to make an end of my I life. „' m 736
I have Z my gold, I have Z my son, Foresters i i 338
art attainted, and hast Z thine earldom of Huntingdon. „ i iii 58
I fear me we have Z our labour, then. „ n i 232
I have Z a cow from my meadow. ,'' u. i 326
I have been a fool and I have Z my Kate. ," n ii 79
In the cold water that she Z her voice, „ jy 243
Have I Z her then ? [\ jy gig
L her ? O no, we took Advantage of the letter — ,', rv 619
The I of Princes. To sit high Is to be lied about. Queen Mary 1 v 428
I say no more — only this, their Z is yours, „ n i 214
Is that it ? That's a big Z of money. „ u m 62
Drew here the richest Z from Fate, The Cup n 442
That never be thy Z or mine ! — Foresters ni 98
there wudn't be a dinner for nawbody, and I should
Loud
991
Love
Loud And dazzled men and deafen'd by some bright
L venture, Quern Mary ni i 453
Not so I ! Our Clarence there Sees ever an aureole „ v ii 411
Not so I. Lord Devon, girls ! „ v ii 484
Go home. Besides, you curse so Z. „ v iv 62
So I, that, by St. Dunstan, old St. Thor— Rarold iv iii 146
Why there — Uke some I beggar at thy gate — Becket ii i 180
Wakening such brawls and I disturbances In England, „ v ii 352
L disturbances ! Oh, ay — -the bells rang out even to
deafening, „ v ii 362
Have our I pastimes driven them all away ? Foresters ii ii 105
Louder L I 1 1 Maid Marian, Queen o' the woods ! „ in 374
Z, I, ye knaves. „ ni 396
Loud-lung'd Tho' aU the l-l trumpets upon earth Becket v n 487
Louis (King of France) L of France loved me, and I
dreamed that I loved L of France :
King L had no paramours, and I loved him
* Fly at once to France, to King L of France :
So that the fool King L feed them not.
brave The Pope, King L, and this turbulent priest.
O good son L, do not counsel me.
My lord, I see this L Returning, ah !
Long live the good King L !
know the King's married for King L Rosamund.
Married ! Margery. Years and years, my lady,
for her husband, King L Rosamund. Hush !
bound For that one hour to stay with good King L,
He said so ? L, did he ?
When I was in mine anger with King L,
.my much constancy To the monk-king, L,
I, that thro' the Pope divorced King L,
You were but Aquitaine to L — no wife ;
Lours thimder-cloud That I's on England — laughter
Pro. 355
Pro. 474
iiv53
II 176
II i 312
II ii 219
n ii 417
II ii 451
„ III i 167
„ III iii 248
„ III iii 255
„ III iii 258
„ ivii305
„ IV ii 418
„ V i 116
Harold in ii 161
Lousiest Thou the lustiest and I of this Cain's brotherhood,
answer. Becket i iv 185
Lout that all the I's to whom Their A B C is darkness. Queen Mary in iv 34
L, churl, clown ! Prom, of May ni 739
Love (adj.) What matters ? State matters ? I matters ? Becket, Pro. 320
Love (s) 0, my lord to be. My I, for thy sake only. Queen Mary i v 67
not with gold. But dearest links of I.
deem This I by you retum'd as heartily ; And thro'
this common knot and bond of I,
A diamond. And Phihp's gift, as proof of PhiUp's 1,
She cast on him a vassal smile of I,
thy I to mine Will cling more close,
make me shamed and tongue-tied in my I.
Cranmer, Your more especial I,
should her I when you are gone, my liege,
should her I — And I have known such women
to fuse Almost into one metal I and hate, —
' L of this world is hatred against God.'
They hate me also for my I to you, My Philip ;
Beauty passes hke a breath and I is lost in loathing :
L will hover roimd the flowers when they first awaken
L will fly the fallen leaf, and not be overtaken ;
Some say that Gardiner, out of I for him,
he sends his veriest I, And says, he will come quickly.
Tell him at last I know his I is dead,
that it would please Him out of His infinite I
And I should know ; and — -be the king so wise, —
Cling to their I ; for, now the sons of Godwin
Thy I ? Aldwyih. As much as I can give thee.
And thy I ? Aldwyth. As much as thou canst bear.
L is come ^vith a song and a smile, Welcome L with a
smile and a song : L can stay but a little while.
L will stay for a whole hfe long.
Sang out their Vs so loud.
And woo their I's and have forgotten thee ;
Normans left among us. Who foUow'd me for I !
The more the I, the mightier is the prayer ; The more
the I, the more acceptable The sacrifice of both your
Vs to heaven.
' L, I will guide thee.'
* i for a whole life long ' When was that sung ?
Since Tostig came with Norway — ^fright not I.
I V 539
n ii 197
in i 67
m i 98
in ii 159
in ii 163
„ ni iv 418
„ in vi 172
in vi 177
„ ni vi 182
IV iii 173
V i 95
v ii 365
V ii 370
V ii 372
v ii 502
v ii 564
V ii 590
„ V iv 47
HaroU i i 276
I i 324
I i 478
I i 483
I ii 10
I ii 17
I ii 20
„ n ii 438
„ in i 304
III i 346
m ii 16
III ii 88
IV i 174
Love (s) {continued) Full hope have I that I will
answer I. Harold iv i 273
— a sin against The truth of I. „ v i 171
With a I Passing thy I for Griffyth ! „ v i 356
What matters ? State matters ? love matters ?
Henry. My I for thee, and thine for me. Becket, Pro. 321
Madam, you do ill to scorn wedded I. „ Pro. 354
honeymoon is the gall oil; he dies of his honejonoon. „ Pro. 364
Not for my I toward him, but because he had the I
of the King. „ Pro. 441
thou shalt have our I, our silence, and our gold — „ Pro. 492
My Courts of L would have held thee guiltless of I — „ Pro. 498
worldly bond between us is dissolved. Not yet the I: „ i i 348
Ye make this clashing for no I o' the customs „ i iii 136
Thought that I knew him, err'd thro' I of him, „ i iii 441
Took it upon me — err'd thro' I of him. „ i iii 699
L that is born of the deep coming up with the sun
from the sea. (repeat) „ n i 9, 19
L that can shape or can shatter a life „ n i 11
L that can lift up a hfe from the dead. „ ii i 13
thou my golden dream of L's own bov/er, „ n i 34
A greater King Than thou art, L, „ ii i 116
A bastard hate born of a former I. „ n i 174
Speak only of thy I. ., n i 179
boldness of this hand hath won it L's alms, ,. n i 184
0 by thy I for me, all mine for thee, ., n i 314
the gap Left by the lack of I. Henry. The lack otV. .. in i 61
bound me by his I to secrecy Till his own time. ,. in i 228
stray'd From l's clear path into the common bush, ' „ mi 247
L is the only gold. „ iv i 43
1 have heard of such that range from I to I, Like the
wild beast — ^if you can call it I. „ iv ii 120
Come with me, I, And I will love thee ... „ iv ii 155
King himself, for I of his own sons, „ iv ii 344
in aiming at your I, It may be sometimes „ v i 36
Would he were dead ! I have lost all I for him. „ v i 92
Lacking the I of woman and of child. „ v ii 199
how this I, this mother, nms thro' all „ v ii 241
But the fool-fire of / or lust. The Cup i i 147
woman's fealty when Assailed by Craft and L. „ i i 177
I love you — -for your I to the great Goddess. „ i ii 218
there You told your I ; and like the swaying vines — „ i ii •. .^
— if I win her I, They too will cleave to me, „ i iii 153
all else Was I for you : he prays you to believe him. „ n 55
from maiden fears Or reverential I for him I loved, „ n 197
all drown'd in I And ghttering at full tide — „ n 233
I I bear to thee Glow thro' thy veins ? „ n 426
The Z I bear to thee Glows thro' my veins ,, ii 428
But hath she yet retum'd thy I ? The Falcon 67
I'll be bound to confess her I to him at last. „ 172
Will he not pray me to return his I — „ 247
Hath she return'd thy I ? Count. Not yet ! „ 513
For that would seem accepting of your I. „ 740
It should be I that thus outvalues all. You speak like
I, and yet you love me not. I have nothing in this
world but I for you. Lady Giovanna. L? it is I, I
for my dying boy, „ 780
— the I you said you bore me — ■ „ 857
But he will keep his I to you for ever ! „ 892
for the senses, I, are for the world ; Prom, of May i 580
if you will bind I to one for ever, „ i 644
That was only true I ; and I trusted — „ i 712
Have you fancied yourself in I with him ? „ i 783
all of them Loved her, and she was worthy of all L „ n 430
the man has doubtless a good heart, and a true and
lasting Z for me : ., in 172
0 L and Life, how weary am I, ., in 205
But the I of sister for sister can never be old-fashioned. ., in 319
A himdred times more worth a woman's I, ,. iii 744
for the I of his own little mother on earth. Foresters i i 97
come at their I with all manner of homages, ,, i i 102
L flew in at the window As Wealth walk'd „ i i 150
as I am a true believer in true I myself, ,, i i 162
and all her l's and hates Sink again into chaos. „ i ii 328
'Tis for no lack of Z to you, my lord, „ i iii 130
Love
992
Love
Love (S) (continued) The I of freedom, the desire of God, Foresters u_i^6^
Thou hast crost him in I, " tt i 534
what sort of man art thou For land, not I f
Mortal enough, If I for thee be mortal. Lovers ^^ . ^^^
hold True Hmmortal. „, ^ ^ . , ,. , " „ i 644
ever held that saying false That L is bhnd, ,. l\i^t
Stay with us here, sweet £, Maid Marian,
How should you love if you misti-ust your I f JMtLe
John. O Kate, true I and jealousy are twins,
And I is joyful, innocent, beautiful, .. "..",90
Tit, for I and brevity. Not for I of levity. .. " " -^^°
Fluting, and piping and luting ^L,l,l — " ^ ^
lilt among the leaves ' L, 1, 1,1' — " en
take and wear this symbol of your I ; " " iiV
L himself Seems but a ghost, " ttt 971
Ha, brother. ToU, my dear ? the toll of ?. " ™f'^
The I that children owe to both I give " ^ '
No, sweetheart ! out of tune with L and me. „ ^^ ^^
No ribald John is L, no wanton Prmce, .. ^^ ■*"
iips that never breathed L's falsehood to true maid ^^ ^^
vfill seal L's truth , , , " tv 4R0
He is all for I, he cares not for the land. » ^v ^o^
mate with one that holds no I is pure, " ^^ '^
Risk not the 1 1 bear thee for a girl. " :J* '3t
I am but the echo of the Ups of I. » ^^ ,^4^
In this full tide of I, Wave heralds wave : » ly xyao
Love (verb) up, son, and save him ! They Zthee, Queer, Mary 1 in g
I Z not to be caUed a butterfly : " /: ' im
I Z you, Lay my life in your hands. " J J^ j.u^
as a mastiff dog May Z a puppy cur - t Iv 274
you are one Who I that men should smile upon you, „ i iv ^ (^
by the holy Virgin, being noble. But I me only : „ i v a
I pray God No woman ever I you, " ^ X ^
If ye Z your liberties or your skins,
cannot teU How mothers I their children ; yet, methmks,
A prince as naturally may I his people As these their „ • ■ . on
children ; and be sure your Queen So Z s you, „ n " ^^V
Ha! ha! sir; but you j&st; I Z it: , . ^ ^ , ,, " « » ^°»
flying to our side Left his all bare, for winch I Z thee,
I do not Z your Grace should caU me coward. ,. niv88
It was a sin to Z her married, dead I cannot choose
but Z her. t,t iii 9fi7
Perchance in England, Z's her hke a son. .. ""Yv Sfi
wholesome scripture, ' Little children, i one another. „ m iv »t)
To sing, I, marry, chum, brew, bake, and die, „ i" v i±±
Here by the side of her who l's you most ? .. ^ 1 '^
altho' you Z her not. You must proclaim Ehzabeth „ J ioy
I used to Z the Queen with all my heart— >. ^ 11 *io
I Z her less For such a dotage upon such a man. „ v 11 ^ j
And Z to hear bad tales of PhiUp. ^ ^ . , , " v JiiH4
and Z me, as I Z The people ! whom God aid ! ,, ^ "i ^
He never loved me— nay, he could not Z me. ,, v v ^
He hath learnt to Z our Tostig much of late. Harold i 14&
Our Tostig Z's the hand and not the man. >. t i 171
Because I Z the Norman better— no, " i i 221
England l's thee for it. " . ^oc
thyself wast wont To I the chase : " t 974
And Tostig knows it ; Tostig l's the king. " 1 J | ' ^
I I the man but not his phantasies. " '_ ] ^'^
Edward l's him, so Ye hate him. " ^ jf'
1 1 thee for itr— ay, but stay a moment ; " t J 1 42
Hate him ? I could I him More, " \ " :^3^
I Z him or think I Z him. " l ]) !^%%
Nay, I do Z him.— ,. . , " J ! ifi2
She hath but blood enough to live, not '•—,,,. " ^ " ^""^
not Uke Aldwyth ... For which I strangely Z him. .
Should not England L Aldwyth, .. ^^}.%!.?.
Art thou assured By this, that Harold l's but Edith ? .. ^ H ^^"
that I— That Harold Z's me— yea, " i " ^'^'^
I can but Z this noble, honest Harold. Wtlluim. L .
him ! why not ? thine is a loving office. ,. "-"0=0
The Normans I thee not, nor thou the Normans, „ " " ^^o
for my mother's sake I Z your England, But for my ..
lather I Z Normandy. » " " ^'^^
Harold, if thou Z thine Edith,
Love (verb) {continued)
' We have learnt to Z him, let him a little longer
No, no, but Harold. I Z him : he hath served me :
They Z the white rose of virginity,
Son, there is one who l's thee :
Bless thou too That brother whom I Z beyond the rest,
And let him pass unscathed ; he Vs me, Harold !
Care not for me who Z thee.
— but I Z thee and thou me —
and I Z him now, for mine own father Was great.
Canst thou Z one Who did discrown thine husband
unqueen thee ? Didst thou not Z thine husband .-'
women Chng to the conquer'd, if they Z, the more ;
Canst thou Z me, thou knowing where I Z ?
Canst thou I one, who cannot Z again ?
save for Norway, Who Vs not thee but war.
because 1 1 The husband of another !
I cannot Z them. For they are Norman saints-
Take them away, I do not Z to see them,
to the statesman Who serves and l's his king, and whom
the king L's not as statesman,
I Z thee and I know thee, I know thee
Well, who l's wine Vs woman,
whom I I indeed As a woman should be loved—
how should he Z A woman, as a woman should be
loved ? , T , .-
She is ignorant of all but that I Z her.
and tho' 1 1 him heartily, I can spy already
but thou — dost thou I this Chancellor,
How should a baron Z a beggar on horseback,
she, whom the King Vs indeed, is a power m the State,
for the Archbishop Vs humbleness,
I Z them More than the garden flowers,
I I them too. Yes.
something I had to say— 1 1 thee none the less—
—the goodly way of women Who I, for which 1 L them.
Yet you both Z God.
and make Our waning Eleanor all but Z me !
There is no woman that I Z so well.
Of one we I. Nay, I would not be bold,
I do not Z her. Must you go, my hege,
So that he loved me— and he Vs me—
Wilt thou I me ? Geoffrey. No ; I only I mother.
I Z thy mother, my pretty boy.
so, if you Z him— Nay, if you Z him,
there are those Who say you do not Z him—
Come with me, love. And I will I thee . . .
if he Z thee. Thy life is worth the wrestle
' None of such ? ' I Z her none the more.
I am not so sure But that I Z him still.
I think ye four have cause to Z this Becket.
I do not Z him, for he did his best To break the barons,
No man to Z me, honour me, obey me !
The people Z thee, father.
And Z him next after my lord his father,
iher, do you? , ^ ,.
I I you — for your love to the great Goddess.
Camma for my bride— The people Z her-
And I thee and thou me, yet if Giovanna
He Vs me, and he knows I know he Vs me !
You speak Uke love, and yet you Z me not.
0 Federigo, Federigo, I Z you !
1 will make Your brother Z me. ^ , ,, , .,
I don't know why I sing that song; I don t Z it.
hallus a-fobbing ma off, tho' ye knaws I Z ye.
that should make you happy, if you I her !
Oh, 1 1 her so, I was afraid of her,
Child, do you Z me now ?
Then vou should wish us both to Z for ever,
they that I do not believe that death Will part them.
I cannot Z you; nay, I think I never can be brought to
I any man. . . , , .^ . i.
not only Z the country. But its inhabitants too ;
Well then, I must make her L Harold first,
Harold 11 ii 622
III i 88
„ m i 242
„ m i 273
„ m i 28&
„ m i 295
„ m i 301
„ m ii 113
„ in ii 180
IV i 89
„ IV i 192
„ IV i 213
„ IV i 226
„ IV i 235
„ IV ii 24
V i 648
V ii 8
„ V ii 142
Becket, Pro. 78
„ Pro. 95
„ Pro. 108
„ Pro. 132
„ Pro. 138
„ Pro. 185
„ Pro. 233
„ Pro. 438
„ Pro. 443
„ Pro. 482
„ I iv 208
„ II i 132
„ II i 137
„ n i 207
„ II i 258
„ II ii 376
„ II ii 458
in i 9
„ m i 63
„ m i 83
„ m i 226
IV i 8
„ IV i 44
„ IV ii 92
„ IV ii 97
„ iviil56
„ iviil93
„ rvii413
„ IV ii 451
vi224
vi233
vi239
„ V ii 120
„ V ii 342
The Cwp I i 127
„ I ii 218
„ I iii 153
The Falcon 26
245
782
897
912
Prom, of May I 62
1 108
I 548
I 550
I 640
I 643
I 662
II 77
II 544
II67T
Love
993
Love-sick
Love (verb) (continued) and they both I me — I am
all in all to both ; and he I's me too,
and 1 1 him so much — Eva. Poor Dora !
Could I I him else ?
Can't a girl when she I's her husband, and he her,
for you have taught me To I you.
I I you and you me.
He is yours again — he will I you again ;
Could I me, could be brought to I me
ask you all, did none of you / yoimg Walter Lea ?
if a man and a maid I one anotlier,
A gallant Earl. I I him as I hate John.
Dost thou I him indeed.
Thou knowest that the Sheriff of Nottingham I's thee.
Marian. The Sheriff dare to / me ?
I I him as a damsel of his day might have loved
I I my dinner — but I can fast, I can fast ;
I I thee much ; and as I am Miy friend.
And learn from her if she do I this Earl.
She took my ring. I trust she I's me — yet
you I me, all of you, But I am outlaw'd.
No man who truly I's and truly rules
Come be thou My brother too. She I's me.
Do you doubt me when I say she I's me, man ?
but abide with me who I thee.
tho' 1 1 thee, We cannot come together in this world.
thou canst not hide thyself From her who I's thee.
to mistrust the girl you say you I Is to mistrust your
own love for your girl ! How should you I if you
mistrust your love ?
' This boy will never wed the maid he I's,
I could I you like a woman.
And you I her and she I's you ;
I I you all the same. Proceed.
Good, good, 1 1 thee for that !
Give me thy hand, Mueli ; I i! thee. At him. Scarlet !
now 1 1 thee mightily, thou tall fellow.
And I's and dotes on every dingle of it.
I cannot I the Sheriff.
And all I I, Robin, and all his men.
He I's the chivalry of his single arm.
Loveable Is she less I, Less lovely, being wholly
mine ?
Loved Whisper'd me, if I I him, not to yield
My brother rather hated me than I ;
I'd have you yet more / :
I say your Grace is I.
Queen Anne / him. All the women / him
he I the more His own gray towers,
She is I by all of us.
We are not I here, and would be then
I have been a man / plainness all my life ;
I I the man, and needs must moan for him ;
I never I you more.
Shut on him by the father whom lie I,
, How he smiles As if he Z me yet !
He never I me — nay, he could not love me.
I was walking with the man 11. 11 him, but I
thought I was not I.
she I much : pray God she be forgiven.
Yet she I one so much — I needs must say —
I conquer'd, and he I me none the less,
When he was here in Normandy, He I us
Father, we so I — Aldred. The more the love,
they I within the pale forbidden By Holy Church :
Then I, who I my brother, bad the king
I knew him brave : he I liis land :
I had rather She would have I her husband.
Take and slay me, For Edward I me.
Because 1 1 thee in my mortal day.
To part me from the woman that 1 1 !
Alas, my lord, I I thee.
Alas, my lord, she I thee.
I I him as I hate This liar who made me liar.
That he forsware himself for all he I,
1 1 him,
Prom, of May ni 212
HI 284
HI 291
111304
III 558
m620
m 673
m778
Foresters i i 55
iil72
iil90
1 1220
1 1223
1 1226
iii63
I ii 181
I ii 187
iiii3
I iii 162
II i 76
II i 518
II i 521
II i 602
Hi 616
II ii 25
II ii 58
II ii 112
II ii 191
II ii 195
III 438
IV 173
IV 310
IV 321
IV 390
IV 662
IV 722
IV 786
Prom, of May I 740
Queen Mary i ii 35
I V 82
I V 119
I V 132
II i 34
II i 48
II ii 112
, III vi 186
, IV iii 270
, IV iii 635
V i 219
V ii 123
V V 41
V v43
V V 88
V V 271
V V 275
Harold I i 446
„ II ii 580
„ III i 345
„ III ii 22
„ IV i 101
„ IV i 201
„ IV i 224
„ IV ii 10
„ V i 240
„ V i 346
„ V i 355
„ V i 366
„ V i 411
„ V i 622
Loved (continued) They I him ; and, pray God My Normans Harold v ii 182
whom I love indeed As a woman should be I — Becket, Pro. 133
how should he love A woman, as a woman should be
I ? Henry. How shouldst thou know that never
hast I one ?
Louis of France I me, and I dreamed that 1 1 Louis
of France : and 1 1 Henry of England, and Henry
of England dreamed that he I me ;
King Louis had no paramours, and I I him none the
more. Henry had many, and I I him none the
less —
Madam, I have I her in my time.
I I according to the main purpose and intent of nature.
So that he I me — and he loves me — ■
I am none such. I never / but one.
with what a tenderness He I my son.
out with Henry in the days When Henry I me,
Reginald, all men know I I the Prince.
To help liim from them, since indeed I I him,
They knew he I me.
worshipping in her Temple, and I you for it,
beheld you afar off — I you — sends you this cup —
from maiden fears Or reverential love for him 1 1,
I that I her. Gamma. I I him.
Her phantom call'd m& by the name she I.
all of them L her, and she was worthy of all love.
Surely I I Eva More than I knew !
you are the first I ever have I truly.
So I by all the village people here,
could be brought to love me As I Z you —
He Z the Lady Anne ; The lady I the master well. The
maid she I the man.
have Z Harold the Saxon, or Hereward the Wake,
when I Z A maid with all my heart to pass it down
Said I not, I Z thee, man ?
Love-dream may not a girl's l-d have too much
romance in it
Love-goddess Like the L-g, with no bridal veil.
Loveless As at this I knife that stirs the riot,
I am as lone and Z as thyself.
Lovelier the lady holds the cleric L than any soldier,
white In the sweet moon as with a Z snow !
Loveliest This is the Z day that ever smiled On
England.
The Z life that ever drew the light From heaven
Loveliness but naked Nature In all her I.
Lovely Our bridemaids are not Z — Disappointment,
God's eyes ! what a I cross ! what jewels !
She saw it at a dance, upon a neck Less I than her own. The Falcon 56
Is she lass loveable. Less Z, being wholly mine ? Prom, of May i 741
But you are young, and — pardon me — As Z as your
sister,
could it look But half as Z.
So I in the promise of her May,
What a shape ! what Z arms !
Lover (See also Judas-lover, Money-lover, Peace-lover)
Two young I's in winter weather.
To which the Z answers lovingly
not as statesman, but true Z and friend.
I have been a Z of wines, and dehcate meats.
Who knows but that thy Z May plead so pitifully.
Ay, still a Z of the beast and bird ?
I am a life-long Z of the chase,
have a score of Vs and have not a heart for any of
them— The Falcon 88
waiting To clasp their I's by the golden gates. Prom, of May i 248
But keep us Vs. „ i 639
You tell me you have a I. „ iii 255
And this I of yours — this Mr. Harold — is a gentleman ? „ iii 280
L's hold True love immortal. Foresters ii i 614
You never whisper close as l's do, „ iii 6
You l's are such clumsy summer-flies „ iv 10
hundred l's more To celebrate this advent of our King ! „ rv 1047
Love-sick Is to be l-s for a shadow. Queen Mary i v 535
so should all the l-s be sea-sick. Foresters iv 673
3 B
Pro. 139
Pro. 356
Pro. 475
Pro. 495
Pro. 501
III i 226
IV ii 118
V i 22
V ii 232
V ii 334
V ii 341
V ii 453
The Cup I i 40
„ I ii 71
„ II 197
„ II 469
Prom, of May ii 243
II 429
II 643
III 649
III 755
III 780
Foresters i i 7
„ I i 227
„ iii 296
„ IV 740
Prom, of May iii 185
I 596
Becket IV ii 191
The Falcon 20
Becket v i 194
The Cup I ii 396
Queen Mary ni iii 161
The Cup 1 iii 56
Prom, of May i 600
Queen Mary v ii 154
Becket, Pro. 371
II 508
m 491
in 753
Foresters i i 109
Harold ni ii 3
„ m ii 13
Becket, Pro. 80
I i 76
„ IV ii 216
„ V ii 245
The Cup 1 i 194
Loving
994
Lying
II ii 103
in ii 90
IV iii 75
V ii 367
V ii 374
V ii 377
V ii 378
V ii 380
V ii 385
V ii 388
vii434
V ii 439
V V 54
Harold iii i 163
The Cup u 217
Loving And as ye were most I unto him, Queen Mary ii ii 174
and so I, needs must deem This love by you retum'd „ ii ii 195
.\nd all our I subjects, most expedient. „ ii ii 211
And your so I sister ? „ ii iv 141
Your Grace hath a most chaste and I wife. „ iii vi 129
Hurt no man more Than you would harm your I
natural brother „ iv iii 189
Love him ! why not ? thine is a I office, Harold n ii 97
Yet if she be a true and I wife She may, The Cup i iii 32
Low You speak too I, my Lord ; Queen Mary i iv 123
Wherefore now the Queen In this I pulse and palsy
of the state,
you forget That long I minster where you gave your
hand
and debased From councillor to caitiff — fallen so I,
L, my lute ; speak I, my lute, but say the world is
nothing — L, lute, I !
L, my lute ! oh I, my lute ! we fade and are forsaken
— L, dear lute, I !
Take it away ! not I enough for me !
Your Grace hath a I voice.
A I voice Lost in a wilderness where none can hear !
A I voice from the dust and from the grave
There, am 1 1 enough now ?
Does he think L stature is I nature, or all women's
L as his own ?
It is the I man thinks the woman I ;
And Charles, the lord of this I world, is gone ;
Ay, raise his head, for thou hast laid it I !
Gentleness, L words best chime with this solemnity.
And when you came and dipt your sovereign head
Thro' these I doors. The Falcon 868
The town lay still in the I sun-light. Prom, of May i 37
I sank so I that I went into service — „ in 391
Till Nature, high and I, and great and small Forgets
herself, Foresters i ii 326
could I stoop so Z As mate with one that holds no love
is pure, „ iv 710
Lower (adj.) And ye, my masters, of the I house. Queen Mary in iii 102
you are even I and baser Than even I can well
believe you. Go !
Lower (verb) made us I our kingly flag To yours of
England,
but must I his flag To that of England
L the light. He must be here.
Lowest (adj.) poor worm, crawl down thine own black hole
To the I Hell. The Cup ii 496
Lowest (s) That all of you, the highest as the I, Queen Mary iv iii 65
Lowliest beseech Your Highness to accept our I thanks „ ii ii 131
Lowly ' O happy lark, that warblest high Above thy
I nest. From, of May m 200
Low-moanii^ a sigh With these l-m heavens. Harold v i 152
Low-spirited Your Grace is too l-s. Queen Mary v ii 605
Low-statured Than that you were l-s. „ v ii 432
Loyal My Lord, I have the jewel of a Z heart. Gardiner.
I doubt it not. Madam, most I. „ i iv 247
is every morning's prayer Of your most I subject, „ i v 104
But help her in this exigency, make Your city I, „ ii ii 19
on you, In your own city, as her right, my Lord,
For you are I. „ ii ii 107
and we pray That we, your true and I citizens, „ ii ii 135
Your lawful Prince hath come to cast herself On I
hearts and bosoms, „ ii ii 263
The Queen of England — or the Kentish Squire ?
I know you I. „ ii ii 271
Your Higlmess hears This burst and bass of I harmony, „ ii ii 285
We thank your Lordship and your I city. „ ii ii 301
No, girl ; most brave and I, brave and I. „ ii iv 11
L and royal cousin, humblest thanks. „ m ii 3
Yet there be some disloyal Catholics, And many
heretics I ; „ m iv 44
To take the lives of others that are I. „ m iv 48
Nay, Madam, there be I papers too, „ v ii 221
Your England is as Z as myself. „ v ii 328
Said you not Many of these were I? „ V ii 331
Prom, of May ill 813
Queen Mary v i 59
vi64
Harold V ii 63
Jjoy&l {continued) and am in everything Most Z and
most grateful to the Queen. Queen Mary v iii 25
and I do not then charm this secret out of our I
Thomas, I am not Eleanor. Becket, Pro. 467
for which our I service, And since we likewise swore to
obey the customs, „ v i 52
I am all as Z as thyself, but what a vow ! what a vow ! Foresters i i 293
Loyally L and with good faith, my lord Archbishop ? Becket 1 iii 278
Loyalty To whom he owes his I after God, Queen Mary iv i 23
less Z in it than the backward scrape of the clown's
heel— Becket in iii 143
Comrades, I thank you for your Z, Foresters in 78
Lucullos that L or Apicius might have sniffed it in their
Hades of heathenism, Becket in iii 117
Ludgate I must set The guard at L. Queen Mary 11 ii_409
If L can be reach'd by dawn to-morrow. „ n iii 53
hath broken thro' the guards And gone to L. „ n iv 21
brave Lord William Thrust him from Z, „ n iv 92
Lung Is life and Vs to every rebel birth „ in vi 51
Lung'd See Loud-lung'd
Lunnun (London) but I taakes 'im for a L swindler,
and a burn fool. Prom., of May i 309
seeams to me the mark wur maade by a i boot. „ i 416
and I thinks ye wears a L boot. „ i 461
Lure (s) such a one As Harry Bolingbroke hath a
Z in it. Queen Mary i iv 10
Lure (verb) I must Z my game into the camp. The Cup 1 iii 64
Lurk even while I speak There I's a silent dagger. Queen Mary v ii 216
Lurking Not the full faith, no, but the Z doubt. „ in iv 124
Luscombe L, Nokes, Oldham, Skipworth ! Prom, of May ill 53
Lust (s) Which a young Z had clapt upon the back, Queen Mary iv iii 401
from the squint Of Z and glare of malice. Becket i i 313
. But the fool-fire of love or Z, The Cup 1 i 147
He steep'd himself In all the Z of Rome. „ i ii 369
fill all hearts with fatness and the Z Of plenty — „ n 273
' L, Prodigality, Covetousness, Craft, Prom, of May 11 284
Lust (verb) be those that Z To bum each other ? Q;>ieen Mary iv iii 197
Lustiest Thou the Z and lousiest of this Cain's brotherhood,
answer. Becket i iv 184
Lusty I know some Z fellows there in France. Queen Mary in i 128
That was a Z boy of twenty-seven ; „ v v 48
A pretty Z boy. Becket n i 247
mix with all The Z life of wood and underwood, Foresters i iii 114
L bracken beaten flat. Queen. „ n ii 154
Lute Alice, my child. Bring us your Z. Queen Mary v ii 357
Give me the Z. He hates me ! „ v ii 362
Low, my Z ; speak low, my Z, but say the world is
nothing — Low, Z, low ! „ v ii 367
Low, my Z ! oh low, my Z ! we fade and are forsaken
— Low, dear Z, low ! „ v ii 374
Lather (Martin) ghosts of L and Zuinglius fade Into
the deathless hell „ in ii 174
Ah, what an acrid wine has L brew'd, „ iv iii 545
Lutheran possibly The L may be won to her again ; „ in iv 202
I was too lenient to the L, „ v ii 73
What then, he knew I was no L. „ v ii 78
Seize him and burn him for a. L. „ v ii 245
Lutheranism Tainted with L in Italy. „ in iv 227
Would freely canvass certain L's. „ v ii 76
Luting Fluting, and piping and Z ' Love, love, love ' — Foresters ni 33
Lydian Lay down the L carpets for the king. The Cup n 187
Lying (adj. and part.) to take the guns From out the
vessels Z in the river. Queen Mary 11 i 222
Shot off their Z cannon, and her priests Have
preach'd, „ in vi 97
this Bonner or another Will in some Z fashion mis-
report His ending „ iv iii 326
I left her Z stiU and beautiful, „ v v 261
dog, with thy Z lights Thou hast betray'd us on these
rocks of thine ! Harold 11 i 21
Thy villains with their Z lights have wreck'd us ! „ n i 83
than believe that Z And ruling men are fatal twins that
cannot Move one without the other. „ in i 126
A Z devil hath haunted me — mine oath — my wife — „ v i 316
Man, Z here alone, Moody creature, Foresters 11 ii 186
Lying
995
Madness
Lying (s) And I were self-murder by that state Which was
the exception. Harold in i 70
Lyin'-in and my missus a-gittin' ower 'er l-i. Prom, of May m 74
L3mx and hawli, and apes, and lions, and Ves. Becket i i 81
Ma&de (made) seeams to me the mark wur m by a
Lunnun boot.
thaw the feller's gone and m such a litter of his f aace.
Maake (make) ftu: I 'ednt naw time to m mysen a
scholard
Why, lass, what m's tha sa red ?
Why, now, what m's tha sa white ?
M thysen easy. I'll hev the winder naailed up,
Shall I f oiler 'er and ax 'er to m it up ?
What m's 'im alius sa glum ?
I'll m 'er knaw ! (repeat)
an' I worked early an' laate to m 'em all gentlefoalks
agean.
Maakin' (making) while I wur m mysen a gentleman,
I'd think na moor o' m an end o' tha nor a carrion
craw —
Maate (mate) Miss Dora, mea and my m's, us three,
we wants to hev three words wi' ye.
Maated (confused) an' maazed, an' m, an' muddled ma.
Maazed (mazed) an' m, an' maated, an' muddled ma,
Vace The reeking dimgfork master of the m !
Maceration In scourgings, m's, mortifyings, Fasts,
Machine I've hed the long barn cleared out of all
the m's.
Mad the Hot Gospellers wiU go m upon it.
Make themselves drunk and m.
What, if a m dog bit your hand, my Lord,
The m bite Must have the cautery — tell him — and at
once.
The world's m. Paget. My Lord, the world is like
a drunken man.
Do you mean to drive me m ?
To be nor m, nor bigot — have a mind —
star That dances in it as m with agony !
M for thy mate, passionate nightingale . . .
And, Leofwin, art thou m ?
And I was bit by a m dog o' Friday, an' I be half dog
already by this token,
I am not m,"not sick, not old enough To doat on one
alone. Yes, m for her, Camma the stately,
So m, I fear some strange and evil chance
as men Have done on rafts of wreck — ^it drives you to.
Speak freely, tho' to call a madman m
I shall go m for utter shame and die.
I was so m, that I mounted upon the parapet —
The old wretch is m, and her bread is beyond me :
He is old and almost m to keep the land.
Are the men all to ? there then, and there !
By old St. Vitus Have you gone m ?
thou shalt wed him. Or thine old father will go to-
Prom, of May I 415
11589
i333
1 399
I 417
I 419
II 131
II 147
II 607
III 449
I 334
u696
in 125
n729
n729
Queen Mary ii ii 275
Becket v i 41
Prom, of May i 452
Queen Mary i i 116
in i 282
in iv 204
„ III iv 274
„ IV iii 391
V ii 200
V V 216
Harold i i 9
„ I ii I
„ V i 139
Becket I iv 218
The Cup I iii 69
„ I iii 74
„ I iii 143
The Falcon 82
Prom, of May i 682
in 371
Foresters n i 291
n i 528
n ii 34
IV 616
IV 645
Hadden These are the things that m her. Fie upon it ! Qu£en Mary in ii 222
Lest your whole body should TO with the poison ?
such A strong hate-philtre as may to him — m
Madden'd the plots against him Had to tamer men.
Thy sending back the Great Seal to him.
Madder and a-makin' o' volk to and 711 ;
JSade (See also Maade, New-made) Gardiner for one,
who is to be to Lord Chancellor,
Courtenay, to be to Earl of Devon,
TO you follow The Lady Suffolk and the Lady
Lennox ?— .. i iv 30
This dress was to me as the Earl of Devon „ i iv 72
To him within there who m Heaven and Earth ? „ i v 47
ah ! she said, The baker m him. „ i v 56
I TO him Earl of Devon, and — the fool „ i v 165
Look at the New World — a paradise m hell ; „ n i 208
m iv 207
Becket iv ii 458
Harold iv i 112
Becket i iii 9
Qv^en Mary rv iii 532
1 186
lillO
Queen Mary n ii 146
II ii 203
n iii 34
in i 445
in iv 126
in iv 335
m V 197
IV iii 89
IV iii 448
IV iii 589
vi59
vii85
V ii 149
V ii 152
Nor
Made {continued) Have to strong head against our-
selves and you.
imderstand We to thereto no treaty of ourselves,
had Howard spied me there And to them speak,
if I And others to that move I touch'd upon.
Old Rome, that first to martyrs in the Church,
But not the force m them our mightiest kings.
all boots were ever to Since man went barefoot.
Remember how God to the fierce fire
M even the carrion-nosing mongrel vomit
as one whose mind Is all to up,
TO us lower our kingly flag To yours of England.
When I was to Archbishop, he approved me.
No — we were not to One flesh in happiness.
But now we are to one flesh in misery ;
We have to war upon the Holy Father All for your
sake:
The King hath to me Earl ; make me not fool !
make the King a fool, who to me Earl !
Who TO the King who to thee.
We have to them milder by just government.
The dead men to at thee to murder thee,
Tostig, Edward hath to him Earl :
They did thee wrong who m thee hostage ;
I TO thee swear. — Show him by whom he hath sworn.
all promises M in our agony for help from heaven ?
That knowledge to him all the carefuUer
And touches Him that m it.
Not TO but born, like the great king of all,
he loved his land : he fain Had to her great :
who TO And heard thee swear —
Count Hath to too good an use of Holy Church
I fain Had to my marriage not a lie ;
I'll have them written down and to the law.
Who TO thee London ? Who, but Canterbury ?
and that to me muse. Being bounden by my coronation
oath
— m an uproar. Henry. And Becket had my bosom
I TO him porcelain from the clay of the city —
That he to the black sheep white.
he hath m his bed between the altars,
then to be to Archbishop and go against the King who
TO him,
Co-kings we were, and m the laws together.
I would have to Rome know she still is Rome —
none on 'em ever to songs, and they were all honest.
They have to it up again — for the moment.
Who TO the second mitre play the first, And acted me ?
TO me for the moment proud Ev'n of that stale Church-
bond „ IV ii 446
What TO the King cry out so furiously ? „ v i 220
Hath she to up her mind to marry him ? The Cup n 22
he TO a wry mouth at ii, but he took it so kindly, The Falcon 190
and he never to a wry mouth at you, „ 193
— they are to by the blessed saints — ■ „ 202
I to a wreath with some of these ; „ 357
if but to guess what flowers Had to it ; „ 431
When he that to it, having his right hand „ 443
TO me A Quietist taking all things easily. Prom, of May 1 231
I Shall not be to the laughter of the village, „ i 720
— how she TO her wail as for the dead ! „ in 698
Is it TO up ? Will you kiss me ? Foresters i ii 226
thou That hast not to it up with Little John ! „ m 15
we have to a song in your honour, so your ladyship
care to Hsten.
first part — m before you came among us —
Madman {See also Semi-madman) Peace, to !
Thou stirrest up a grief
Wide of the mark ev'n for a m's dream.
If ever I heard a m, — let's away !
striking at Hardrada and his madmen
M anywhere. Speak freely, tho' to call a to mad The Falcon 80
Some TO, is it. Gesticulating there upon the bridge ? Prom, of May n 326
Madness and law From to. Becket i iii 375
— what merry to — listen ! Foresters va 43
V ii 307
Harold i i 288
„ I i 294
„ I i 340
I ii 85
„ I ii 186
„ nil 350
„ nii732
„ mi 288
„ mi 340
„ miil98
„ IV i 85
„ IV i 203
„ V i 120
„ V i 312
„ V i 320
Becket, Pro. 26
I iii 66
„ I iii 394
„ 1 iii 432
I iii 438
„ I iv 176
„ I iv 264
n i 237
„ II ii 123
„ n ii 402
„ ui i 188
„ ni iii 170
„ in iii 212
„ m414
„ ra436
Queen Mary iii iv 297
V iii 86
„ V iv 51
Harold iv iii 71
Madonna
996
Make
Uadonna Come in, M, come in. The Falcon 176
you look as beautiful this morning as the very M „ * 199
No, no, not quite, M, not yet, not yet. „ 392
This was penn'd, M, Close to the grating „ 440
I bear with him no longer. Count. No, M ! „ 886
Mad-woman O murderous m-w ! I pray you lift The Cup ii 471
Magdalen (a character in " Queen Mary ") Ah, M,
sin is bold as well as dull. Qiieen Mary v ii 442
Magdalen (St. Mary) Thanks to the blessed M, whose day
it is. Becket iii iii 171
All praise to Heaven, and sweet St. M ! „ ni iii 235
Maggot Foul m's crawling in a fester'd vice ! Queen Mary v v 161
Magistrate all the m's, all the nobles, and all the wealthy ; „ v iv 50
Magnificence I have heard That, thro' his late m of living The Falcon 227
No other heart Of such m in courtesy Beats — „ 723
Magpie Peace, m ! Give him the quarterstafl. Foresters iv 249
Mahonnd by M, I had sooner have been bom a
MussiJman —
No God but one, and M is his prophet.
like M's coffin hung between heaven and earth-
By ilf I could dine with Beelzebub !
Maid says she will live And die true m —
Make me full fain to live and die a m.
little fair-hair'd Norman m Lived in my mother's
house :
The m to her dairy came in from the cow,
The m she loved the man.
The m a rose to the man. (repeat)
The w her hand to the man. (repeat)
the m a kiss to the man. (repeat)
should have told us how the man first kissed the m.
if a man and a m care for one another, does it matter
so much if the m give the first kiss ?
now thou hast given me the man's kiss, let me give
thee the m's.
if a man and a m love one another, may the m give
the first kiss ?
when they look at a m they blast her.
Then the m is not high-hearted enough.
Go now and ask the m to dance with thee,
what m but would beware of John ?
when I loved A m with all my heart to pass it down
man and m be free To foil and spoil the tyrant
There are no m's like English m's
' This boy will never wed the m he loves,
and another — worse ! — An innocent m.
— to this m, this Queen o' the woods.
M ! Friar. Paramour ! Friar. Hell take her !
Air and word, my lady, are m and man.
lips that never breathed Love's falsehood to true m
For so this m would wed our brother.
Maiden (adj.) You've but a dull life in this m court,
I fear, my Lord ?
Would not for all the stars and m moon
whether from m fears Or reverential love for him
I loved.
Modest m lily abused. Queen.
clothes itself In m flesh and blood.
Live thou m ! Thou art more my wife so feeling,
You heed not how you soil her m fame,
Haiden (s) (See also Bower-maiden) My pretty m,
tell me, did you ever Sigh for a beard ?
my pretty m, A pretty man for such a pretty m.
Then, pretty m, you should know that whether
Peace, pretty m. I hear them stiiTing
have thy conscience White as a m's hand,
A m slowly moving on to music Among her m's to this
Temple— The Cup i i 9
When first he meets his m in a bower. „ i iii 41
I am none of your delicate Norman m's Foresters i i 212
A m now Were ill-bested in these dark days „ n ii 44
Becket n ii 144
n ii 225
„ II ii 361
Foresters iv 970
Queen Mary iii vi 46
V iii 98
Becket v ii 260
Prom, of May i 39
Foresters i i 9
Foresters i i 13, 106
„ I i 17, 93
„ I i 21, 120
I i 124
iil34
iil44
iil72
1 1256
1 1258
I ii 185
I ii 256
I ii 297
nilO
iiil9
II ii 111
III 388
m394
III 401
III 420
IV 73
IV 483
Queen Mary i iii 114
„ V ii 455
The Cup II 196
Foresters ii ii 158
III 117
in 122
IV 479
Queen Mary i v 607
I V 612
I V 618
I V 627
Harold II ii 284
Maidenhood He that can pluck the flower of m Foresters i ii 108
Who art the fairest flower of m „ i ii 123
Out upon all hard-hearted m\ „ iv 50
Maiden-white Make blush the m-w of our tall cliffs, Harold ii ii 332
Maiden-wife 0 m-w. The oppression of our people Foresters ni 108
Maid Marian (daughter of Sir Richard Lea) {See also
Marian) She has gone, M M to her Robin — Queen Mary in v 156
this is M M Flying from John — disguised. Men.
MM? she ? Foresters ii i 67»
Stay with us here, sweet love, M M, „ ii ii 15
and looks at once M M, „ iii 119
M M, Queen o' the woods ! (repeat) Foresters iii 357, 374, 376, 397, 39»
and all your forest games As far as m might,
when Our English m's are their prey,
and scare lonely m's at the farmstead.
Save for this m and thy brother Abbot,
ni86
nil79
ni200
IV 632
M M. Marian. Yes, King Richard.
Maidstone The beUs are ringing at M.
and your worship's name heard into M market,
Mail I wear beneath my dress A shirt of m :
And felt the sun of Antioch scald our m,
having lived For twenty days and nights in m,
Mail'd M in the perfect panoply of faith.
Maim when he springs And m's himself against the
bars.
It frights the traitor more to m and blind.
Maim'd starved, m, flogg'd, flay'd, bum'd,
They have so m and murder'd all his face
And lamed and m to dislocation.
Not caught, m, bhnded him.
Main (adj.) Madam, I loved according to the m purpose
and intent of nature.
Like sudden night in the m glare of day.
That I am his m paramour, his sultana.
her m law Whereby she grows in beauty —
Main (s) Calais ! Our one point on the m.
Had prosper'd in the m, but suddenly Jarr'd
Mainland gateway to the m over which Our flag
Maintain we shall still m All former treaties
I trust I still m my courtesy ;
Maintain'd M, and entertain'd us royally !
Majestic Be somewhat less — m to your Queen.
Majesty When will her M pass, sayst thou ?
Her M Hears you afTect the Prince —
A happy morning to your M.
maintain All former treaties with his M.
Follow their Majesties.
my wish Echoes your M's. Pole. It shall be so.
Do make most humble suit unto your Majesties,
Whereon we humbly pray your Majesties,
Serve God and both your Majesties.
My Lords, you cannot see her M.
in all this, my Lord, her M Is flint of flint,
Your M shall go to Dover with me.
Then one day more to please her M.
I am vastly grieved to leave your M.
Long live your M ! Shall Alice sing you
Your M has lived so pure a life.
Make {See also Maake) m what noise you will with
your tongues,
didn't the Parliament m her a bastard ?
Parhament can m every true-bom man of us a
bastard. Old Nokes, can't it m thee a bastard ?
so they can't m me a bastard.
if Parliament can m the Queen a bastard, why, it
follows all the more that they can m thee one.
To m me headless.
These beastly swine m such a gnmting here.
That m's for France, (repeat)
His Highness m's his moves across the Channel,
m your boast that after all She means to wed you.
That you shall marry him, m him King beHke.
she means to m A farewell present to your Grace.
M all tongues praise and all hearts beat for you.
To m the crown of Scotland one with ours,
Would m our England, France ;
I can m aUowance for thee,
M no allowance for the naked tmth.
Pope would have you m them render these ;
Foresters iv 85^
Queen Mary ii i 19
n i ea
I V 146
Becket ii ii 9^
Foresters iv 124
Becket v ii 494
Queen Mary v v 67
Harold n ii 505
Queen Mary ii i 20&
Harold v ii 76
Becket iv ii 26d
The Cup I ii 271
Becket, Pro. 502
II i 57
IV ii 39
Prom, of May i 281
Queen Mary i v 125
Becket i iii 381
Queen Mary v ii 260
I V 265
The Falcon 294
Harold ii ii 159
Queen Mary in vi 149
ii2
iiv81
IV 244
IV 266
in i 331
in iii 93
III iii 119
in iii 143
ui iii 159
ni vi20
III vi 37
m vi 21&
nivi248-
in vi255
V ii 354
V v72
ii5
iil6
1 127
ii4T T
ii49
iii 41
I iii 12
I iii 89, 92, 94
I iii 134
iiv87
I iv 212
I iv 244
IV 117
IV 287
IV 297
IV 326
IV 328
IV 403
Make
997
Make
Jttake (continued) Your Highness is all trembling.
Mary. M way. Queen Mary i v 595
Look ; can you m it English ? „ ii i 127
m Your city loyal, and be the mightiest man „ n ii 18
To m free spoil and havock of your goods. „ u ii 186
Hear us now m oath To raise your Highness „ u ii 288
the half sight which m's her look so stern, „ n ii 322
Courage, sir, That m's a man or woman „ ii ii 329
man should m the hour, not this the man ; „ ii ii 365
M's enemies for himself and for his king ; „ ii ii 399
Shall we vi Those that we come to serve our sharpest
foes ? „ II iii 76
you'll m the White Tower a black 'un „ ii iii 100
cloth of gold. Could m it so. „ m i 55
I'd m a move myself to hinder that : „ iii i 127
You would but TO us weaker, Thomas Stafford. „ iii i 130
They m amends for the tails. „ in i 227
M themselves drunk and mad, „ in i 282
Will stir the living tongue and m the cry. „ in i 354
She could not m it white — „ in i 424
and 7» us A Spanish province ; „ m i 465
Seem'd as a happy miracle to m glide — „ in ii 29
I return As Peter, but to bless thee : to me well.' „ in ii 56
M's me his mouth of holy greeting. „ in ii 80
That TO me shamed and tongue-tied in my love. „ ni ii 162
news to m Both of us happy — ay, the Kingdom too. „ in ii 187
Do m most himible suit unto your Majesties, „ in iii 118
because to persecute M's a faith hated, „ in iv 116
And m it look more seemly. „ in iv 152
m's the waverer pass Into more settled hatred „ in iv 157
These fields are only green, they m me gape. „ ni v 7
One of those wicked wilfuls that men to, „ in v 76
And m a morning outcry in the yard ; „ in v 158
narrowness of the cage That m's the captive testy ; „ in v 208
m ready for the journey. „ iii v 277
Than any sea could m me passing hence, „ iii vi 87
We TO our humble prayer unto your Grace „ iv i 43
His learning m's his burning the more just. „ iv i 159
M out the writ to-night. „ iv i 195
No man can m his Maker — „ iv ii 58
And TO you simple Cranmer once again. „ iv ii 129
and m's The fire seem even crueller than it is. „ iv ii 232
I wish some thunderbolt Would to this Cole a cinder, „ iv iii 11
M us despise it at odd hours, my Lord. „ iv iii 386
I cum behind tha, gall, and couldn't to tha hear. „ iv iii 466
never bum out the hypocrisy that m's the water
in her. „ iv iii 525
* M short ! TO short ! ' and so they Ut the wood. „ iv iii 606
You m your wars upon him down in Italy : — „ v i 141
What m's thy favour Uke the bloodless head „ v ii 19
wines. That ever 7/1 him fierier. „ vii95
it was thought we two Might m one flesh, „ v ii 137
and TO Musters in all the counties ; „ v ii 271
Heretic and rebel Point at me and m merry. „ v ii 318
Should TO the mightiest empire earth has known. „ v iii 70
M me full fain to Uve and die a maid. „ X.^."^^
And break yoiu* paces in, and to you tame ; „ v iii 121
-and to Down for their heads to heaven ! „ v iv 7
Dead or aUve you cannot m him happy. „ v v 71
I trust that God will to you happy yet. „ v v 76
if that May to your Grace forget yourself „ v v 81
— we will TO England great. „ v v 281
for heaven's credit M's it on earth : Harold i i 142
m me not fool ! Nor m the Kir^ a fool, who made
me Earl ! Harold. No, Tostig — lest I to myself
a fool Who made the King who made thee, to thee
Earl. ,, I i 288
M not thou The nothing something. „ i i 362
the true must Shall to her strike as Power : „ i i 369
would but shame me. Rather than to me vain. „ i ii 117
Follow my lead, and I will to thee earl. „ i ii 217
<!ount-crab will to his nippers meet in thine heart ; „ n i 76
To TO allowance for their rougher fashions, „ n ii 8
To marry and have no husband M's the wife fool. „ ii ii 310
M blush the maiden-white of our tall cliffs, „ n ii 332
Make (continued) may he not m A league with William,
M thou not mention that I spake with thee.
And I will TO thee my great Earl of Earls,
And m's behave that he believes my word —
would m the hard earth rive To the very Devil's horns,
TO your ever-jarring Earldoms move To music
If thou canst iii a wholesome use of these
as the libertine repents who cannot M done undone,
Not mean To to our England Norman.
and those Who m thy good their own —
which will TO My kingship kinglier to me
To TO all England one, to close all feuds,
Thou hast but cared to to thyself a king —
M not our Morcar sullen : it is not wise.
I am weary — ^go : m me not wroth with thee !
there m strength to breast Whatever chance,
TO their wall of shields Firm as thy cliffs,
m liis battle-axe keen As thine own sharp-dividing
justice,
M thou one man as three to roll them down !
M them again one people — Norman, EngUsh ;
A more a\vful one. M me Archbishop !
TO her as hateful to herself and to the King,
M an Archbishop of a soldier ?
we will TO her whole ; Not one rood lost.
M it so hard to save a moth from the fire ?
if he follow thee, M him thy prisoner.
I wiU TO thee hateful to thy King.
Ye TO this clashing for no love o' the customs
I had meant to to him all but king.
M not thy King a traitorous murderer.
TO it clear Under what Prince I fight.
Serve my best friend and m him my worst foe ;
TO my cry to the Pope, By whom I will be judged ;
he m's moan that all be a-getting cold. Becket. And
I TO my moan along with him.
We can to a black sin white,
let him to it his own, let him reign in it —
who cares not for the word, M's ' care not ' —
m's after it too To find it.
mother Would to him play his kingship against mine.
So we TO our peace with him.
we TO the time, we keep the time, ay, and we serve
the time ;
and TO Our waning Eleanor all but love me !
and to m me a woman of the world,
they say, she m's songs, and that's against her, for I
never knew an honest woman that could to songs,
tho' you TO your butt too big, you overshoot it.
keep the figure moist and to it hold water,
I TO thee full amends.
How, do you to me a traitor ?
Doth not the fewness of anytliing m the fulness of it
in estimation ?
she says she can to you sleep o' nights.
Give her to me to m my honeymoon.
TO Thy body loathsome even to thy child ;
baseness as would to me Most worthy of it :
And VI thee a world's horror.
But thou art Uke enough to m him thine.
TO me not a woman, John of Sahsbury, Nor w me traitor
you would TO his coronation void By cursing
He m's a King a traitor, me a har.
They seek — you m — occasion for your death.
Ay, TO him prisoner, do not harm the man.
which well May m you lose yourself,
I would be Happy, and to all others happy so
And I will TO Galatia prosperous too,
You wiU not easily to me credit that.
— m me happy in my marriage !
To TO my marriage prosper to my wish !
See first I to libation to the Goddess,
Thou hast drunk deep enough to to me happy.
Will hardly help to to him sane again,
and tell her all about it and to her happy ?
Harold n ii 460
n ii 483
n ii 629
n ii 668
n ii 739
II ii 760
III i 20
in i 33
III i 250
in i 330
in ii 43
IV i 141
IV ii 74
IV iii 102
vi31
vil26
vi478
vi562
vi577
V ii 188
Becket, Pro. 289
„ Pro. 526
I i 41
I i 163
I i 283
I i 332
I ii 91
„ I iii 136
I iii 464
I iii 500
„ I iii 544
I iii 568
I iii 723
I iv 61
I iv 169
II i 17
n i 118
II i 321
II ii 11
II ii 62
II ii 367
„ II ii 457
„ III i 116
„ lu i 181
„ HI iii 121
„ in iii 166
„ in iii 219
„ m iii 240
„ in iii 302
IV ii 19
„ IV ii 142
„ IV ii 171
„ IV ii 235
„ IV ii 288
V i 132
V ii 147
vii329
„ V ii 415
V ii 558
„ V iii 145
The Cup I i 149
I iii 29
„ I iii 169
n25
n 274
II 308
n 377
u425
The Falcon 83
183
Make
998
Man
Prom, of May i 134
I 572
I 672
I 791
11 634
II 660
n 676
m305
in 324
in 373
m572
HI 641
III 666
Make (eontinued) to give me his falcon, And that will m
nie weU.' The Falcon 243
I ha' heard 'im a-gawin' on 'ud m your 'air — God
bless it ! — stan' on end.
you m The May and morning still more beautiful,
When the great Democracy M's a new world —
and m them happy in the long bam,
turn back at times, and m Courtesy to custom ?
I could m his age A comfort to him —
Well then, I must m her Love Harold first,
m herself anything he wishes her to be ?
I couldn't m it out. What was it ?
I mounted upon the parapet Dora. You m me
shudder !
then what is it That m's you talk so dolefully ?
I doubt not I can m you happy. Dora. You m
me Happy already.
M her happy, then, and I forgive you.
I wish'd, I hoped To m, to m Dora. What
did you hope to m ? Harold. 'Twere best to
m an end of my lost Ufe. O Dora, Dora ! Dora.
What did you hope to m ? Harold. M, m\ „ in 783
I keep a good heart and m the most of it, Foresters i i 29
What m's thee so down in the mouth ? „ i ii 42
My Lady Marian you can m it so If you will deign „ i ii 131
I promise thee to m this Marian thine. „ i ii 183
We TO but one hour's buzz, „ i ii 277
m us merry Because a year of it is gone ? .. i iii 14
Where law Ues dead, we m ourselves the law. „ n i 91
I came To eat him up and m an end of him. „ n i 125
To TO this Sherwood Eden o'er again, „ n i 168
M for the cottage then ! „ n i 210
and m a ghostly wail ever and anon to scare 'em. „ ii i 215
let me go to m the mound : „ ii i 312
but m haste then, and be silent in the wood. „ n i 364
Besides, tho' Friar Tuck might m us one, „ n ii 88
What m's you seem so cold to Robin, lady ? Marian.
What m's thee think I seem so cold to Robin ? „ in 1
I wait till Little John m's up to me. „ in 17
so you would m it two I should be grateful. „ ni 194
come between me and my Kate and m us one again. „ m 423
and can m Five quarts pass into a thimble. „ iv 282
M at him, all of you, a traitor coming „ iv 780
m me The monkey that should roast „ iv 804
Maker (Gtod) No man can make his M — Queen Mary rv ii 58
Maker See Verse-maker
Mak'st Thou m me much ashamed „ in iv 304
Mftl""g (part.) (See also A-makin', Maakin') M libation
to the Goddess. The Cu-p n 364
m us feel guilty Of her own faults. Prom, of May ii 269
Making (s) {See also Bastard-making, Sonnet-making)
Either in to laws and ordinances Queen Mary in iii 130
we be not bound by the king's voice In to of a king,
yet the king's voice Is much toward his to. Harold in i 237
spirit of the twelve Apostles enter'd Into thy to. Becket i i 51
the TO of your butter, and the managing of your
poultry ? Prom, of May n 93
Malapert as to the young crownling himself, he looked
so TO in the eyes, Becket in iii 109
Male it was hoped Your Highness was once more in
happy state To give him an heir to. Queen Mary v ii 573
Malet Come M, let us hear ! Harold n ii 211
M, thy mother was an Englishwoman ; „ n ii 264
How, M, if they be not honourable ! „ n ii 278
I should be there, M, I should be there ! „ n ii 293
111 news for guests, ha, M \ „ n ii 302
M, 1 vow to build a church to God „ v ii 137
Pluck the dead woman ofl the dead man, Ml „ v ii 145
Malice he wrought it ignorantly, And not from
any to. Queen Mary ni i 278
Wherewith they plotted in their treasonous to, „ in iv 5
from the squint Of lust and glare of m. Becket i i 313
Twice did thy m and thy calumnies Exile me „ i iii 42
Malign For whether men w thy name, or no, The Cup i iii 84
Malignant His face was not to, and he said „ i ii 451
Malign'd I am sure of being every way ?».
I am much m. I thought to serve Galatia.
and he said That men m him.
MalUinity Brook for an hour such brute m ?
War, waste, plague, famine, all malignities.
Malvoisie (a malmsey wine) I marvel is it sack or Jf ?
The king's good health in ale and M.
Man (See also Farming-men, Goodman, Man-in-arms,
Men-at-arms), That was after, m ; that was
after.
The Cup I ii 241
„ I ii 32»
„ I ii 452
Queen Mary iv iii 544
Harold i i 466
Foresters in 332
IV 969
Parhament can make every true-born vi of us a bastard
I was born true to at five in the forenoon
was bom of a true to and a ring'd wife,
thinkest thou that anyone Suspected thee to be my m ?
wish before the word Is m's good Fairy —
Who love that men should smile upon you,
Men would murder me.
He is every way a lesser m than Charles ;
You cannot Learn a m's nature from his natural foe.
And those hard men brake into woman-tears,
A pretty w for such a pretty maiden. Alice. My
Lord of Devon is a pretty m.
no old news that all men hate it.
ten thousand men on Penenden Heath all calling
your worship the first to in Kent and Christendom,
Men of Kent ; England of England ;
If this TO marry our Queen,
the red to, that good helpless creature,
I have striven in vain to raise a m for her.
and be the mightiest to This clay in England,
had gone over to him With all his me7i,
To raise your Highness tliirty thousanil men.
As if to win the to by flattering him.
If not, there's no ??* safe. White. Yes, Thomas
White. I am safe enough ; no m need flatter
me. Second Alderman. Nay, now need; but
did you mark our Queen ?
That makes or m or woman look their goodhest.
The TO had children, and he whined for those.
Methinks most men are but poor-hearted,
all men cry, She is queenly, she is goodly.
Who knows ? the w is proven by the hour. White.
The TO should make the hour, not this the to ;
gather your men — Myself must bustle.
The statesman that shall jeer and fleer at men,
if he jeer not seeing the true m. Behind his folly, he
is thrice the fool ; And if he see the w and still
will jeer,
There, any to can read that.
Stafford, I am a sad to and a serious.
We have no men among us.
No men ? Did not Lord Suffolk die like a true to ?
Is not Lord William Howard a true m ?
And I, by God, believe myself a to. Ay, even in the
church there is a to — Cranmer. Fly would he not,
when all men bad him fly.
There's a brave to, if any.
Thou art one of Wyatt's men? Man. No, my
Lord, no.
The TO shall paint a pair of gloves.
(Knowing the to) he wrought it ignorantly,
I say There is no m — there was one woman with us —
dazzled men and deafen'd by some bright
1 am an old to wearied with my journey.
You were the one sole to in either house Who stood
upright
I say you were the one sole m who stood. Bagenhall.
I am the one sole m in either house,
Well, you one to, because you stood upright,
If any to in any way would be The one m,
when men are tost On tides of strange opinion,
Lest men accuse you of indifference To all faiths.
Smiles that bum men.
Men now are bow'd and old, the doctors tell you,
One of those wicked wilfuls that men make,
Queen Mary i i 19
ii27
ii45
1 154
I iii 176
iiv24(>
I iv 274
IV 155
IV 330
IV 340
I V 564
IV 613
nil7
ni61
II 164
nil57
nil70
ni208
niil7
II ii 19
nii29
n ii 291
nii312
II ii 315
II ii 329
II ii 335
nii343
II ii 363
n ii 373
II ii 398
uii40a
niii6&
ni i 41
ni i 140
in i 163
in 1168
ni i 175
ni i 244
ni i 274
m i 276
ni i 337
in i 451
in ii 127
m iii 252
HI iii 264
in iii 268
m iii 274
in iv 118
in iv 223
in iv 404
in iv408
III V 75
Man
999
Man
Han (continued) Are you so small am? Queen Mary ni v 192
all boots were ever made Since m went barefoot. „ in v 198
fierce resolve and fixt heart-hate in men „ m vi 32
bland And affable to men of all estates, „ in vi 81
And every soul of m that breathes therein. „ iii vi 107
Your father was a m Of such colossal kinghood, „ iv i 100
Your father had a will that beat 7nen down ; Your
father had a brain that beat men do^vn — „ rv i 108
No m can make his Maker — „ iv ii 58
At your trial Never stood up a bolder m than you ; „ iv ii 122
I must obey the Queen and Council, m. „ iv ii 164
This hard coarse m of old hath crouch'd to me „ iv ii 169
Repeat your recantation in the ears Of all men, „ iv ii 194
It is expedient for one m to die, „ iv iii 17
Those of the wrong side will despise the m, „ iv iii 25
That any m so writing, preaching so, „ iv iii 47
Other reasons There be for this m's ending, „ iv iii 54
Take therefore, all, example by this m, „ iv iii 60
There stands a to, once of so high degree, „ rv iii 68
doubt The m's conversion and remorse of heart, „ iv iii 108
Most miserable sinner, wretched m. „ iv iii 123
when thou becamest M in the Flesh, „ iv iii 141
But that Thy name by m be glorified. And Thy
most blessed Son's, who died for m. Good
people, every to at time of death Would fain
set forth
After the vanish'd voice, and speak to men.
yet what hatred Christian men Bear to each other,
Hurt no to more Than you would harm
' How hard it is For the rich m to enter into Heaven ; '
Let all rich men remember that hard word.
Dissemble not ; play the plain Christian to.
I have been a m loved plairmess all my life ;
And watch a good to bum.
the m Hurls his soil'd life against the pikes and dies,
howsoever hero-like the to Dies in the fire,
and all men Regarding her ?
My lord, the world is like a drunken to,
men Have hardly known what to believe,
The kindliest to I ever knew ;
ez thou hast wi' thy owld to. Tib. Ay, Joan, and
my owld m wur up and awaay
Thou's thy way wi' to and beast, Tib.
tin his TO cum in post vro' here,
I loved the w, and needs must moan for him ;
in Guisnes Are scarce two hundred men,
I am not certain but that Philibert Shall be the m ;
and mine own natural to (It was God's cause) ;
and cleave unto each other As m and wife ?
Our altar is a mound of dead men's clay,
love her less For such a dotage upon such a to.
It is the low m thinks the woman low ;
throat of mine, Barer than I would wish a to to
see it, —
I will see no m hence for evermore,
seen the true men of Christ lying famine-dead by
scores,
I was walking ■with the m I loved,
weak and meek old to. Seven-fold dishonour'd
Till all men have their Bible, rich and poor.
Not he the to — for in our windy world
Our Tostig loves the hand and not the to.
Thou art the to to rule her !
I love the to but not his phantasies.
Thou art the quietest to in all the world —
Waits till the to let go.
Ye govern milder men.
As much as I can give thee, m ;
a dead to Rose from behind the altar,
saw the church all fill'd With dead men upright from
their graves, and all The dead men made at thee to
murder thee.
Did not Heaven speak to men in dreams of old ?
fat dead deer For dead men's ghosts.
while ye fish for men with your false fires,
IV iii 153
IV iii 1 65
IV iii 183
rv iii 187
IV iii 205
rv iii 268
IV iii 270
rv iii 293
rv iii 310
IV iii 324
IV iii 378
IV iii 393
rv iii 404
rv iii 421
IV iii 487
IV iii 498
IV iii 510
IV iii 635
V i 5
vi265
V ii 103
V ii 139
V ii 162
V ii 421
V ii 439
V ii 462
V ii 525
viv38
V v88
V vl32
vv248
Harold i i 83
„ I i 157
„ 1 i 223
„ I i 279
„ I i 312
„ I i 329
„ 1 i 339
„ I i 480
„ I ii 78
Iii 83
Iii 94
Iii 104
ni30
Man {continued) Apostles ; they were fishers of men,
get himself wrecked on another m's land ?
A TO may hang gold bracelets on a bush.
Thou art a mighty to In thine own earldom !
my men Hold that the shipwreckt are accursed of God ;
What hinders me to hold with mine own men ?
The Christian manhood of the to who reigns !
I have commission'd thee to save the to :
arm'd men Ever keep M'atch beside my chamber door.
There is an arm'd m ever gUdes behind !
The TO that hath to foil a murderous aim
Words are the m.
And men are at their markets, in their fields.
We have the m that rail'd against thy birth.
Better methinks have slain the m at once !
We have respect for m's immortal soul,
scom'd the m. Or lash'd his rascal hack,
A gentle, gracious, pure and saintly to !
Thou art the mightiest voice in England, w,
Let all men bear witness of our bond !
Where they eat dead men's flesh.
Of all the Ues that ever men have lied,
That, were a to of state nakedly true. Men would but
take him for the craftier liar. Leofwin. Be men
less delicate than the Devil himself ?
that lying And ruling men are fatal twins
and holy men That shall be bom hereafter.
Alas ! poor to. His promise brought it on me.
cries, and clashes, and the groans of men ;
Our living passion for a dead m's dream ;
The Lord was God and came as m — the Pope Is to
and comes as God. — ■
What would ye, men ?
Had in him kingly thoughts — a king of men,
plots against him Had madden'd tamer mere.
Old TO, Harold Hates nothing ;
Morcar, collect thy men ; Edwin, my friend —
No TO would strike with Tostig, save for Norway.
Never shall any m say that I that Tostig
were m's to have held The battle-axe by thee !
Every to about his king Fought like a king ; the king
like his own to,
Sound sleep to the m Here by dead Norway
A thousand ships — a hundred thousand men —
The men that guarded England to the South
selfless TO Is worth a world of tonguesters.
Waltham, my foundation For men who serve the
neighbour.
What did the dead to call it — Sanguelac,
second-sighted to That scared the dying conscience
What nobler ? men must die.
I have done no m wrong.
That mortal men should bear their earthly heats
Make thou one to as three to roll them down !
There is no to can swear to him.
When all men counted Harold would be king.
Pluck the dead woman off the dead m, Malet !
have I fought men Like Harold and his brethren,
Every m about his king Fell where he stood,
we must have a mightier m than he For his
successor.
No TO without my leave shall excommunicate
No m without my leave shall cross the seas
Will not thy body rebel, m, if thou flatter it ?
Men are God's trees, and women are God's flowers ;
if a m Wastes himself among women,
A m of this world and the next to boot.
Thou art the to to fill out the Church robe ;
Thou angerest me, m : I do not jest.
old men must die, or the world would grow mouldy,
dead m's dying wish should be of weight.
as brave a soldier as Henry and a goodlier m :
I can see further into am than our hot-headed Henry,
would she were but his paramour, for men tire of their
fancies ;
Harold n i 34
II 161
ni87
ni92
ni99
nilOS
nii99
n ii 244
n ii 247
n ii 417
n ii 419
nii436
n ii 485
n ii 499
nii500
n ii 506
n ii 585
II ii 618
n ii 698
II ii 807
mi 99
„ mills
„ m i 127
„ mi 209
„ mi 337
„ mi 376
„ mii60
„ ra ii 173
„ IV i 30
„ rv i 84
„ rvill2
„ IV i 128
„ IV i 256
„ ivii20
„ ivii66
„ IV iii 12
„ IV iii 56
„ IV iii 121
„ rv iii 195
„ IV iii 209
„ V i 81
„ V i 98
„ V i 184
„ V i 210
„ V i 270
„ V i 272
„ V i 283
„ vi577
„ V ii 78
„ viil32
„ V ii 144
„ viil78
„ viilSl
Becket, Pro. 7
„ Pro. 30
„ Pro. 34
„ Pro. 102
„ Pro. Ill
„ Pro. 136
„ Pro. 259
„ Pro. 262
„ Pro. 299
„ Pro. 408
„ Pro. 422
„ Pro. 437
„ Pro. 463
„ Pro. 479
Man
1000
Man
Han (continued) Together more than mortal m can bear. Becket i i 24
That I am not the m to be your Primate, „ i i 38
For Gilbert Foliot held himself the m. Becket. Am
I the m ? My mother, ere she bore me, „ i i 43
good old 7n would sometimes have his jest — „ i i 61
Am I the m ? That rang Within my head „ i i 70
Am / the m ? And the Lord answer'd me, ' Thou
art the m, and all the more the ni.' (repeat) „ i i 82, 98
Thou art the m — be thou A mightier Anselm. „ i i 132
I do believe thee, then. I am the w. „ i i 136
Back m ! Fitzurse. Then tell me who and what she is. „ i i 207
Back, m, I tell thee ! „ i i 218
'Fore God, I am a mightier m than thou. „ i i 223
Herbert, take out a score of armed men „ i i 328
my men will guard you to the gates. „ i i 402
the m shall seal. Or I will seal his doom. „ i iii 330
bounden by my coronation oath To do tnen justice. „ i iii 397
a hundred ghastly murders done By men, „ i iii 408
If ever m by bonds of gratefulness— „ i iii 435
Deal gently with the young 7n Absalom. „ i iii 757
To speak without stammering and Uke a free m ? „ i iv 8
When thieves fall out, honest mere — „ i iv 114
When honest men fall out, thieves — „ i iv 118
Lord hath set his mark upon him that no m should
murder him. „ i iv 192
The m shall feel that I can strike him yet. „ ii i 78
a perilous game For men to play with God. „ ii ii 71
Out upon thee, m ! Saving the Devil's honour, „ ii ii 141
I am half-way down the slope — will no m stay me ? ,, ii ii 149
fled from his own church by night, No m pursuing. „ n ii 158
seeing they were men Defective or excessive, „ ii ii 212
Poor m, beside himself — not wise. „ ii ii 235
I told the Pope what manner of m he was. „ ii ii 253
Thy true King bad thee be A fisher of men ; „ ii ii 286
surrendering God's honour to the pleasure of a m. „ ii ii 440
ever spread into the m Here in our silence ? „ iii i 22
Whither away, m ? what are you flying from ? „ iii ii 18
a m passed in there to-day : I holla'd to him, „ in ii 24
and to read the faces of men at a great show. „ in iii 83
Foliot is the hoher m, perhaps the better. „ iii iii 92
Have I not promised, m, to send them back ? „ in iii 190
when my voice Is martyr'd mute, and this m disappears, „ in iii 350
Come hither, m ; stand there. „ iv ii 219
if he Had aught of m, or thou of woman ; „ iv ii 232
My pleasure is to have a m about me. „ iv ii 430
Madam, I am as much m as the King. „ iv ii 432
Thou as much m ! No more of that ; „ iv ii 452
No m to love me, honour me, obey me ! „ v i 239
You are no King's men — you — you — you are Becket's
men. „ v i 258
Will no m free me from this pestilent priest ? Eleanor.
A re ye king's men ? I am king's woman, I. Knights.
King's men ! King's men ! „ v i 262
a m may take good counsel Ev'n from his foe. „ v ii 2
there are wen Of canker'd judgment everywhere — „ v ii 60
Did not a m's voice ring along the aisle, „ v ii 150
My lord, the city is fuU of armed men. „ v ii 188
M's help ! but we, we have the Blessed Virgin „ v ii 219
she told us of arm'd mew Here in the city. „ v ii 227
But these arm'd men — will you not hide yourself ? „ v ii 247
drowning m, they say, remembers all The chances „ v ii 272
but these arm'd m,en — will you drown yourself ? „ v ii 276
Reginald, all men know I loved the Prince. „ v ii 333
King commands you. We are all King's men, Becket.
King's men at least should know „ v ii 385
I ask no leave of king, or mortal m, „ v ii 458
sworn Yourselves my men when I was Chancellor — „ v ii 502
On any m's advising but your own. „ v ii 551
Ay, monks, not men. „ v ii 602
These arm'd men in the city, these fierce faces — „ v iii 3
Those arm'd men in the cloister. „ v iii 49
Here, here, King's men ! „ v iii 102
then you are a dead m ; flee ! „ v iii 126
Av, make him prisoner, do not harm the m. „ v iii 146
Thou art my m, thou ai' my va.ssal. „ v iii 153
Man {continued) I hate the m ! What filthy tools our
Senate works with ! The
What would you with me, m ?
were he livin'j And grown to m and Sinnatus will'd it.
My lord, tie mvn !
One of the men tliere knew him.
Did he, honest m ?
and he sail Tiiafc 7nen malign'd him.
Or m, or woman, as traitors unto Rome.
For whether men malign thy name, or no,
drink too much, as men Have done on rafts of wreck —
— having proof enough Against the m,
that m from Synorix, who has been So oft to see the
Priestess,
Did not this m Speak well ?
A gooilier-loaking m tlian Sinnatus.
I wouli that every m made feast to-day
or after slayest liira As boy or m,
Let be thy jokes and thy jerks, m ! The
scorns Tlie noblest-naturoi m alive, and I—
Why — no, m. Only see your cloth be clean,
he would marry me to the richest m In Florence ;
' Better a m witliout riclies, tlian riches without a m.'
A nobler breed of men and women.
Why, o' coorse, fur it be the owd m'.i birthdaiiy. Prom.
'er an' the owd m they fell a kissin' o' one another
But he'll never be the same m again. Dohson. An'
how d'ye find the owd m 'ere ?
The owd m be heighty to-daay, beant he ?
he cooms up, and he calls out among our oan men,
the farming men 'ull hev their dinner i' the long barn.
He's a SomersoLSi lire m, and a very civil-spoken gentleman,
all but proving m An automatic series of sensations,
What can a m, then, live for but sensations,
men of old would undergo Unpleasant for the sake of
pleasant ones Hereafter,
' What are we, says the blind old m in Lear ?
Then the owd m i' Lear should be shaamed of hissen,
M only knows, the worse for him !
Good mumin', neighbours, and the saiime to you, my me»(.
Niver m 'ed better friends, and I will saay niver master
'ed better men :
thaw 1 says it mysen, niver men 'ed a better master —
and 1 knaws wliat men be,
theer be noiin o' my men, thinks I to mysen,
and m perceives that The lost gleam of an after-life
Then the m, the woman. Following their best affinities,
And when the m, The child of evolution,
I seed how the owd m wur voxt.
an' ony o' Steer's men, an' ony o' my men
you should be in the hayfield looking after your men ;
as long as the m sarved for 'is sweet'art i' Scriptur'.
I would taake the owd blind m to my oan fireside.
I think I never can be brought to love any m. It seems
to me that I hate men, ever since my sister left us.
I thought Mr. Edgar the best of men, and he has proved
himself the worst.
Owd Steer gi'es nubbut cowd tea to 'is men, and owd
Dohson gi'es beer.
if m be only A willy-nilly current of sensations —
The ghosts of the dead passions of dead men ;
That beer be as good fur 'erses as men.
When m has surely learnt at last that all
How worn he looks, poor m ! who is it, I wonder.
Our men and boys would hoot him, stone him,
the m himself. When hearing of that piteous death.
Well, my m, it seems that you can read.
for I am closely related to the dead m's family.
whether thou be Hedgar, or Hedgar's business m,
so ta'en up wi' leadin' the owd m about all the blessed
mumin'
' O m, forgive thy mortal foe,
You are as good as a m in the hayfield.
He's dead, m — dead ; gone to his account —
would you beat a m for his brother's fault ?
Cuf I i 155
iil93
I ii 151
I ii 195
. I ii 341
, I ii 376
, I ii 452
I iii 9
I iii 84
, I iii 141
, I iii 159
n9
n91
n 176
II 225
II 281
Falcon 133
259
419
748
751
755
of Mav I 6
I 21
I 70
I 76
1 140
1166
I 206
I 225
I 241
I 243
I 263
I 266
I 275
I 318
I 322
I 327
I 410
I 501
I 521
I 584
n 27
n 34
n47
n 62
n74
II 78
n 86
„ II 224
„ II 262
n 276
n 316
n 330
H 391
II 425
n 498
.. u 709
„ n 715
„ n 735
in 3
» ni5
„ in 106
„ nil44
„ m 155
Man
1001
Mannerless
Man (continued) the m has doubtless a good heart,
and a true and lasting love for me : Prom
where the m and the woman, only differing as the
stronger and the weaker,
That last was my Father's fault, poor m.
He be saayin' a word to the owd m,
brotherhood of m has been Wrong'd by the cruelties
Not ev'n to see the m ?
I am a m not prone to jealousies,
The owd m's coom'd agean to 'issen.
Not that way, ?« ! Curse on your brutal strength !
The maid she loved the m.
The maid a rose to the m. (repeat)
The maid lier hand to the m. (repeat)
the maid a kiss to the m. (repeat)
We be more like scarecrows in a field than decent
serving men ;
I pray you, look at Robin Earl of Huntingdon's men.
nor of the gold, nor the m who took out the gold :
Robin the Earl, is always a-telling us that every m,
A rose to the m ! Ay, the m had given her a rose
and the »» must bring it out of her.
should have told us how the m first kissed the maid,
if a wi and a maid care for one another,
now thou hast given me the m's kiss, let me give thee the
maid's,
if a m and a maid love one another,
starched stiff creature. Little John, the Earl's m.
ride a-hawking with the help of the men.
But then your Sheriff, your little m,
Now your great m, your Robin, all England's Robin,
but our great m, our Robin, against it.
have the great men striven against the stream,
great m strive against it again to save his country,
there is no other m that shall give me away.
I am a silent w myself, and all the more wonder at our
Earl.
Ay, ay, and but that I am a w of weight,
The m is able enough — no lack of wit,
I hate him, I hate the m.
A question that every true m asks of a woman once in
his life.
Beware, to, lest thou lose thy faith in me.
What art thou, m ? Sheriff of Nottingham ?
That is no true tn's hand. I hate hidden faces.
For though my men and I flash out at times
Ho there ! ho there, the Sheriff's men without ! Robin.
Nay, let them be, m, let them be. We yield.
I am no more Than plain m to plain m. Tuck. Well,
then, plain m.
Each TO for his own. Be thou their leader
I knew thy father : He was a manly to.
There are no ^nen like Englishmen
m and maid be free To foil and spoil the tyrant
lives No TO who truly loves and truly rules
I have forgotten my horn that calls my men together.
I saw a m go in, my lord.
There was a to just now that enter'd here ?
How came we to be parted from our men ?
Robin may be hard by wi' three-score of his men.
Why do you listen, m, to the old fool ?
bow to charm and waste the hearts of men.
perchance Up yonder with the to i' the moon.
Do you doubt me when I say she loves me, to?
what sort of to art thou For land, not love ?
to help the old to When he was fighting.
I would fight with any m but thee.
And drains the heart and marrow from a m.
till thou wed what to thou wilt.
Are the men all mad ? there then, and there !
I thought I saw thee clasp and kiss a to
Thou see me clasp and kiss a to indeed,
The old TO dotes.
My men say The fairies haunt this glade ; —
Far from solid foot of men,
of May III 171
III 189
III 280
III 481
in 543
III 570
III 626
III 702
III 731
Foresters i i 9
I i 13, 106
I i 17, 93
1 121, 120
1 135
1 137
1 175
li 96
1 1109
li 117
11123
iil34
1 1143
1 1171
1 1184
11214
11231
11235
11241
11243
11245
11291
1 1134
iii57
1 ii 103
I ii 114
I ii 139
I ii 179
I ii 190
1 11245
I ii 274
I ill 76
I iii 96
I iii 105
I iii 148
II 1 7
II 110
ni76
nil86
II i 207
ni239
II i 255
II i 336
ni358
II i 503
II i 507
II i 521
II i 533
II i 542
II i 558
II i 673
II ii 15
II 11 34
II ii 72
II ii 76
nil 83
II ii 100
II ii 169
Man (continued) M, lying here alone, Moody creature
M, TO, You shall wed your Marian.
Why, my good Robin fancied me a to.
Little John Fancied he saw thee clasp and kiss a to.
that / fancy a m Other than him, he is not the to for
me.
being every inch a ?re I honour every inch of a woman.
Friend Scarlet, art thou less a to than Much ?
So I would, Robin, if any m would accept her.
no m, so His own true wife came with him,
They are all mark'd men.
silent blessing of one honest m Is heard in heaven —
And you three holy men, You worshippers of the Virgin,
Air and word, my lady, are maid and m.
See that m,en be set Along the glades and passes
then each to That owns a wife or daughter,
So that they deal with us like honest men,
And thou shalt have it, m.
What, is not to a hunting animal ?
And show thyself more of a to than me. Much. Well,
no TO yet has ever bowl'rt me down. Scarlet. Ay, for
old Much is every inch a m.
I am the oldest of thy 7nen, and thou
always so much more of a m than my youngsters old Much.
may be more of a to than to be bowled over like a ninepin
I am mortally afear'd o' thee, thou big to,
Geese, to ! for how canst thou be thus allied
Robin's a wise m, Richard a wiseacre,
but he is a free to.
Have you no pity ? must you see the to ?
Go men, and fetch him hither on the litter.
There was a m of ours Up in the north.
The TO lay down — the delicate-footed creature
The hunter's passion flash'd into the to,
the TO Fell with him, and was crippled ever after. I
fear I had small pity for that to.—
What pricks thee save it be thy conscience, to ?
Carry her off, and let the old to die.
And all I love, Robin, and all his men,
Said I not, I loved thee, to ?
Thou hast risk'd thy life for mine : bind these two men.
men will call him An Eastern tyrant,
my liege, these men are outlaws, thieves,
strike the bonds From these three men,
like the m In Holy Writ, who brought his talent back ;
I have seen thee clasp and kiss a to indeed. For our
brave Robin is a man indeed.
Managing making of your butter, and the to of your
poultry ?
Manchet-bread You gentles that live upo' m-b and
marchpane.
Mane his monarch to Bristled about his quick ears —
Mangle . and the sacks, and the taaters, and the m's.
Manhood Methinks there is no m left among us.
The Christian to of the man who reigns !
rend away Eyesight and to, life itself,
I that wedded Henry, Honouring his to —
So the child grow to to :
Rogues, have you no m ?
thro' thy lack of to hast betray'd Thy father
and their own want Of to to their leader !
Man-in-arms a mightier m-i-a Than WiUiam.
Manlier we \vill find it for thee — Or something m.
Manliest Here fell the truest, to hearts of England.
Manlike Thou art to perfect.
Thou standest straight. Thou speakest to.
Manly He was a to man, as thou art. Much,
Manner foreign courts report liim in his to
Let me learn at full The m of his death,
with all TO of game, and four-footed things, and fowls-
Herbert. And all m of creeping things too ?
by force and arms hath trespassed against the king
in divers m's,
Manner'd See Cold-manner'd
Mannerless M wolves ! Becket i iii 739
Foresters ii ii 186
„ II ii 192
III 20
III 24
HI 26
III 63
III 66
in 74
HI 239
in 290
III 321
ni382
III 420
III 456
III 459
IV 101
IV 188
IV 223
IV 286
IV 294
IV 298
IV 304
IV 317
IV 349
IV 357
IV 386
IV 458
IV 461
IV 529
IV 535
IV 540
IV 544
IV 626
IV 677
IV 722
IV 741
IV 895
IV 902
IV 905
IV 963
IV 980
IV 1035
Prom, of May ii 94
Foresters ii i 281
The Cup I ii 120
Prom, of May i 453
Queen Mari) v ii 284
Harold ii i 104
Becket iv ii 285
„ IV ii 421
Prom, of May ii 289
Foresters ii i 421
II i 568
II 1 694
Harold v i 399
Becket iv ii 374
Harold v ii 58
Becket n i 252
Foresters n i 409
I iii 148
Queen Mary v ii 512
Becket, Pro. 426
„ III iii 130
Foresters I iii 64
Manners
1002
Marriage
Manners and those bleak m thaw, Queen Mary iii ii 161
like his cloak, his m want the nap And gloss of
court; ,. Ill V 69
Am I to change my m, Simon Renard, „ m vi 151
How beautiful His m are, and how unlike the
farmer's ! Prom, of May ii 531
so that you do not copy his bad m? „ m 362
M be so corrupt, and these are the days of Prince John. Foresters i i 176
Manor since we would be lord of our own m, Becket n ii 20
They slew my stags in mine own m here, „ v ii 438
Man-Robin If my m-R were but a bird-Robin, Foresters rn 39
Mansfield I have heard 'em in the market at M. „ m 407
Mantle Flung by the golden m of the cloud, „ ii i 28
Many Thro' m voices crying right and left, Queen Mary i ii 48
The downfall of so m simple souls, „ i ii 54
for the two were fellow-prisoners So m years in yon
accursed Tower — „ i iv 200
there were m wolves among you Who dragg'd the
scatter'd limbs „ I v 399
For tho' we touch'd at m pirate ports. Foresters rv 983
Many-breasted The m-b mother Artemis Emboss'd upon it. The Cup ii 340
Map {See also Walter Map) That M, and these new railers
at the Church Becket i i 306
M scoffs at Rome. I all but hold with M. „ n ii 384
M, tho' you make your butt too big, you overshoot it. „ m iii 121
False figure, M would say. „ m iii 346
Mar as one That m's a cause with over-violence. „ iv ii 327
Marah this bitter world again — These wells of M. „ v ii 82
Marble (adj.) have you not mark'd Her eyes were ever on
the m floor ? The Cup n 19
Marble (s) Vein'd m — not a furrow yet — Becket n i 197
wine Ran down the m and lookt like blood. The Cup ii 204
Iron will fuse, and m melt ; Prom, of May n 505
This is mere m. Old hag, how should thy one tooth Foresters ii i 275
March may not those, who m Before their age, Prom, of May ii 632
Marchpane You gentles that live upo' manchet-bread
and m. Foresters ii i 282
Margery I hear M : I'll go play with her. Becket iii i 274
M ? no, that's a finer thing there. How it glitters ! „ iv i 1
I sent this M, and .she comes not back ; „ iv ii 3
You said you couldn't trust M, „ iv ii 16
Maria Ave M, gratia plena, Benedicta tu in mulieribus. Queen Mary ni ii 1
Marian (daughter of Sir Richard Lea) {See also Maid Marian)
These roses for my Lady M ; Foresters i i 2
Sir Richard and my Lady M fare wellnigh as sparely as
their people. „ i i 30
Lady M holds her nose when she steps across it. „ i i 83
M ! Marian. Father ! „ i i 179
Lady M, your woman so flustered me that I forgot „ i i 295
My Lady M you can make it so If you will deign „ i ii 130
Leaving your fair M alone here. „ i ii 154
I promise thee to make this M thine. „ i ii 183
Farewell, Sir Richard ; farewell, sweet M. „ i ii 285
thou art the very woman who waits On my dear M. „ ii i 103
She struck him, my brave M, struck the Prince, „ ii i 134
Sheriff Would pay this cursed mortgage to his brother If
M would marry him ; „ ii i 146
— if so the land may come To M, „ n i 149
Thou wilt not see My M more. „ ii i 456
Give me some news of my sweet M. Where is she?
Marian. Thy sweet M? I believe She came with me „ ii i 481
O thou unworthy brother of my dear M \ „ n i 539
O my dear M, Is it thou, is it thou ? „ n i 597
O hokl thy hand ! this is our M. „ n ii 37
You shall wed your M. She is true, and you are true, „ ii ii 193
honouring all womankind, and more especially my lady M, „ iii 57
thou feel*st with me The ghost returns to M, „ in 115
M, thou and thy woman, Why, where is Kate ? „ iii 257
Honour to thee, brave M, and thy Kate. „ in 300
And they shall pledge thee, M, „ ni 316
M ! Marian. Speak not. „ iv 609
Sweet M, by the letter of the law It seems „ iv 638
would clutch Our pretty M for his paramour, „ xv 767
On those two here, Robin and M. „ iv 929
Ki«8 him, Sir Richard — kiss him, my sweet M. „ iv 1004
Marian (daughter of Sir Richard Lea) (continued) Embrace
me, M, and thou, good Kate, Foresters iv 1031
these old oaks will murmur thee M along with Robin. „ iv 1095
Maries in his scared prayers Heaven and earth's M ; Queen Mary n ii 88
Mark (an object) (See also Sea-marks) Wide of the
m ev'n for a madman's dream.
Mark (coin) the King demands three himdred m's,
the King demands seven hundred m's,
the King demands five hundred vi's,
Some thirty — forty thousand silver m's.
What ! forty thousand m's !
Forty thousand m's ! forty thousand devils —
ransomed for two thousand m's in gold.
Those two thousand m's lent me by the Abbot
I ran into my debt to the Abbot, Two thousand m's in gold.
These two have forty gold m's between them, Robin.
Leave it with him and add a gold m thereto.
Take his penny and leave him his gold m.
i have one m in gold which a pious son of the Church
Well, as he said, one m in gold.
One m in gold.
they have each ten m's in gold.
take the twenty-seven m's to the captain's treasury.
How much is it, Robin, for a knight ? Eobin. A m.
I had one w. Robin. What more.
Where he would pay us down his thousand m's.
Lest he should fail to pay these thousand m's
What more ? one thousand m's. Or else the land.
Here be one thousand m's Out of our treasury
Ay, ay, but there is use, four hundred m's. Robin.
There then, four hundred m's.
my tongue tript — five hundred m's for use.
Would buy me for a thousand m's in gold —
Much lighter than a thousand m's in gold ;
Is weightier than a thousand m's in gold.
Thou art worth thy weight in all those m's of gold,
Mark (impression) Lord hath set his m upon him that no
man should murder him.
but he left the m of 'is foot i' the flower-bed ;
I measured his foot wi' the m i' the bed, but it
wouldn't fit — seeams to me the m wur maade
by a Lunnun boot.
Mark (verb) I'll have one m it And bring it me.
no man need ; but did you »« our Queen ?
I was too sorry for the woman To m tho dress.
said the Miserere Mei — But all in English, m you ;
Nor m the sea-bird rouse himself and hover
hereafter Shall m out Vice from Virtue
Mark'd Had m her for my brother Edward's bride ;
have m the haughtiness of their nobles ;
And m me ev'n as Cain,
I stood near — M him —
Hast thou not m — come closer to mine ear —
if your Grace hath m it, so have I. Philip. Hast
thou not likewise m Elizabeth,
That if your Grace hath m her, so have I.
V iii 81
Becket i iii 627
„ I iii 635
„ I iii 642
„ I iii 658
„ 1 iii 704
I iv 90
Foresters i i 65
„ I i 264
ni464
ni20a
in211
m218
m28a
m285
in287
ra292
ra295
IV153
IV 165
IV 442
rv 455
IV 474
IV 492
IV 496
IV 499
IV 652
IV 657
IV660
IV 1024
Becket i iv 192
Prom, of May i 408
I 414
Queen Mary I v 372
II ii 320
III i 59
m i 392
Harold n ii 334
Prom, of May i 540
Queen Man/ I v 289
' n i 168
„ III ii 55
IV iii 618
V i 225
vi231
vi239
m the sons of those Who made this Britain England, Harold iv iii 152
M how the war-axe swang, „ iv iii 156
M how the spear-head sprang, „ iv iii 158
This chart here vi ' Her Bower,' Becket, Pro. 160
I m a group of lazars in the marketplace — „ i iv 80
m Her eyes were ever on the marble floor ? The Cup ii 18
Ay, ay, the line o' life is m enow ; Foresters ii i 352
They are all m men. „ in 290
What deer when I have m him ever yet Escaped
mine arrow ? „ iv 63
m if those two knaves from York be coming ? „ iv 112
Market And your worship's name heard into
Maidstone m. Queen Mary ii i 63
men are at their m's, in their fields, Harold n ii 436
have won Their value again — beyond all m's — The Falcon 905
I have heard 'em in the m at Mansfield. Foresters in 407
Blarketplace I marked a group of lazars in the m — Becket i iv 81
Marriage (adj.) While this same m question was being
argued, Queen Mary n ii 37
Marriage
1003
Martyr
Karriage (adj.) {continued) lore away My m ring, and rent
my bridal veil ; Harold i ii 80
/ am his wife ! and she — For look, our m ring ! „ v ii 108
herself should see That kings are faithful to their m
vow. Becket i ii 78
the m cup Wherefrom we make libation to the
Goddess The Cup ii 198
Go on with the m rites, (repeat) „ ii 399, 421
Marriage (s) (See also After-marriage, First-marriage)
Have sworn this Spanish m shall not be. Queen Mary i iv 115
side with you and him Against her m; „ i iv 160
Because they think me favourer of this m. „ i v 157
Feigning to treat with him about her m — „ n ii 34
this m is the least Of all their quarrel. „ n ii 154
As to this m, ye shall understand „ n ii 202
This m had the assent of those to whom „ n ii 206
This m should bring loss or danger to you, „ ii ii 227
Moreover, if this m should not seem, „ n ii 232
whether It beats hard at this m. „ ni i 39
I may be wrong, sir. This m will not hold. „ mi 103
with all of us Against this foreign m, „ ni iii 7
forfeited her right to reign By m with an alien — „ v i 291
My sister's m, and my father's m's, „ v iii 96
That m was half sin. Harold i ii 53
a peace-offering, A scape-goat m — „ i ii 204
and our m and thy glory Been drunk together ! „ iv iii 8
I fain Had made my m not a lie ; „ v i 320
for m, rose or no rose, has killed the golden violet. Becket, Pro. 350
it is the cup we use in our m's. The Cup i i 44
sends you this cup — -the cup we use in our m's — „ i ii 73
Throne him — and then the m — ay and tell him „ n 156
I have no fears at this my second m. „ n 209
Entreats he may be present at our m. „ n 249
— make me happy in my 7n ! „ ii 275
To make my m prosper to my wish ! „ n 308
In honour of his gift and of our m, „ n 351
Bring me The costly wines we use in m's. „ n 365
Drink and drink deep — our m will be fruitful. „ n 380
they are made by the blessed saints — these m's. Lady
Giovanna. M's ? I shall never marry again ! The Falcon 203
She will urge m on me. I hate tears. M is but
an old tradition. Prom, of May i 489
M ! That fine, fat, hook-nosed imcle of mine, „ i 508
oust me from his wiU, if I Made such a m. And m
in itself — „ 1 515
traditions, customs, m One of the feeblest ! „ 1 520
I have no thought of m, my friend. „ ii 65
which is my dream of a true m. „ m 179
I had once a vision of a pure and perfect m, „ m 189
Has he offered you to, this gentleman ? „ m 290
are you quite sure that after m „ m 293
he gave me no address, and there was no word of m ; „ m 333
If m ever brought a woman happiness „ m 639
an' wants To hev a word wi' ye about the m. Harold.
The what? Milly. The m. Harold. The to?
Milly. Yeas, the m. Granny says m's be maade
i' 'eaven. „ m 704
Robin, I wiU not kiss thee, For that belongs to m ; Foresters rn 138
Join them and they are a true m ; „ ni 421
Af if of the soul, not of the body. „ 1^720
Marriage-banquet Answer them thou ! Is this our m-h ? Harold iv iii 5
Marriage-garland the m-g withers ever with the putting
on, Becket, Pro. 359
Marriage-mom For so methought it was our to-to, Harold i ii 76
Married to The mother of Elizabeth— Queen Mary i v 31
Mary of Scotland, to to your Dauphin, „ i v 295
It was a sin to love her to, >, ni i 339
Before my father to my good mother, — „ ni v 245
The Queen of Scots is to to the Dauphin, „ v v 52
I TO her for Morcar — a sin against The truth of love. Harold v i 169
only you know the King's to, for King Louis
Rosamund. M ! Becket iii i 167
Do you believe that you are to to him ? (repeat) „ iv ii 46, 54
Will you not say you are not to to him ? „ iv ii 109
m Since — m Sinnatus, the Tetrarch here — The Cup i i 15
Married (continued) I envied Sinnatus when he to her. The Cup i i 130"
cloudless heaven which we have found together In our
three to years ! „ i ii 417
In symbol of their to unity, „ ii 363
Why should I ? I am not to be ?». „ ii 370
That was the very year before you w. Lady Giovanna.
When I was to you were at the wars. The Falcon 374
to go on together again, till one of us be m. Prom, of May i 776'
And your sweetheart — when are you and he to be
TO ? „ ni 111
I am sure that when we are m he will be willing „ m 260'
said that whenever I to he would give me away, Foresters I i 288
Marrow And drains the heart and to from a man. „ n i 672
Marry coimcil and all her people wish her to m. Queen Mary i i 113
some say. That you shall m him, „ I iv 212
Would I TO Prince Philip, if all England hate him ? „ i v 138'
Madam, take it bluntly ; m Philip, „ i v 205
That you may to Philip, Prince of Spain — „ i v 251
if we TO, we shall still maintain All former treaties „ i v 265
If this man to our Queen, „ ii i 170'
never Consent thereto, nor w while I live ; „ n ii 231
To sing, love, to, chum, brew, bake, and die, „ in v 111
I think I will not to anyone, „ m v 239
To m and have no husband Makes the wife fool. Harold n ii 309'
' M, the Saints must go along with us, „ n ii 365
The King hath cursed him, if he to me ; The Pope
hath cursed him, to me or no ! „ in ii 190
Wilt thou go with him ? he will to thee. Becket iv ii 162
arms of her first love, Fitzurse, Who swore to to her. „ iv ii 336-
Hath she made up her mind to to him ? Priestess.
To TO him who stabb'd her Sinnatus. The Cup n 22
You will not TO Synorix ? „ n 27
I am the bride of Death, and only M the dead. „ ii 30'
You mean to to him ? Camma. I mean to to him — „ n 60-
He wills you then this day to to him, „ n 66
I am sure you will not to him. „ n 105-
but he knew I meant to m him. The Falcon 51
Marriages ? I shall never to again ! „ 205
To TO him ? — I can never to him. „ 248-
but be sure That I shall never to again, „ 742
he would TO me to the richest man In Florence ; „ 747
Philip, Philip, if you do not m me. Prom, of May i 681
grant you what they call a license To m. „ i 696-
Thy feyther eddicated his darters to m gentlefoalk, „ n 116-
Farmer Dobson, were I to m him, has promised „ m 169
and prattled to each other that we would to fine
gentlemen, „ ni 277
I eddicated boath on 'em to to gentlemen, „ tn 455
asking his consent — you wish'd me — That we
should TO : „ III 495
thou shouldst TO one who will pay the mortgage. Foresters i i 280
mortgage to his brother If Marian would to him ; „ ii i 146
and who marries her Marries the land. „ n i 152
That such a brother — she m the Sheriff ! „ n i 550
Thou shalt not to The Sheriff, but abide with me who
love thee. „ ii i 601
She will not to till her father yield. „ n ii 82
— and she will not to till Richard come, „ n ii 84
Father, I cannot to till Richard comes. „ rv 648^
and she will not to tiU Richard come. „ iv 773
Thou wouldst TO This Sheriff when King Richard came „ iv 861
If you would m me with a traitor sheriff, „ iv 870
Marrying (See also Anti-marrying) your Scottish
namesake to The Dauphin, Queen Mary v i 134
from the sons of Alfgar By such a to ? Harold i ii 182
Art thou— still bent— on m ? The Cup n 324
Who thought to buy your m me with gold. Foresters rv 718
if the King forbid thy to With Robin, „ iv 875
Marsh dreadful lights crept up from out the to— Harold ni i 380
Martjrr (s) Old Rome, that first made m's in the
Church, Queen Mary ni iv 126
' M's blood — seed of the Church.' „ iv i 146
so past martyr-like — M I may not call him — „ iv iii 625
I am TO in myself already. — Herbert ! Becket i i 362
Who wiU be to when he might escape. „ V ii 279^
Martyr
1004
Master
"Martyr (verb) but a voice Among you : murder, m me if ye
will — Harold v i 78
Jtfartsnrdom seal his faith In sight of all with flam-
ing m. Queen Mary iv iii 29
0 brother ! — I may come to »i. Becket i i 361
Strike, and I die the death of w ; „ i iii 169
He loses half the meed of m Who will be martyr „ v ii 278
The ghostly warning of my m ; „ v ii 292
my dream foretold my m In mine own church. „ v ii 632
We must not force the crown of m. „ v iii 28
JIartyr'd when my voice Is m mute, and this man
disappears, „ ni iii 350
JHartyr-like so past m-l — Martyr I may not call
him — Queen Mary iv iii 623
Harvel (s) A m, how He from the liquid sands Harold ii ii 55
The full-train'd m of all falconry. The Falcon 25
Marvel (verb) and you — I m at you — ^Ye know what is
between us. Becket v ii 499
My lord, I m why you never lean On any man's advising „ v ii 550
1 w is it sack or Malvoisie ? Foresters in 331
Marvell'd m at Our unfamiliar beauties of the west ; Becket iv ii 301
Hary (Queen of England) (See also Maries, Mary of
England) Long live Queen M, (repeat) Queen Mary i i 8, 65
It's Harry ! Third Citizen. It's Queen M. Old
Nokes' The blessed M's a-passing ! „ i i 35
not to yield His Church of England to the Papal
wolf And M; „ i ii 37
True, M was bom, But France would not accept
her „ I ii 65
be no peace for M till Elizabeth lose her head.' „ i iii 5
let me call her our second Virgin M, „ i iii 58
Virgin M ! we'll have no virgins here — „ r iii 60
, If M will not hear us — well — conjecture — „ i iv 117
No new news that Pliilip comes to wed M, „ ii i 16
■we will teach Queen M how to reign. „ ir i 147
Pliilip shall not wed M ; „ ii i 164
Long Uve Queen M ! Down with Wyatt ! The
Queen ! „ n ii 252
And what was M's dress ? „ in i 56
Philip and M, PhiUp and M ! Long live the King
and Queen, Philip and M ! „ m i 206
Long live Queen M ! „ m i 294
There be both King and Queen, Phihp and M.
Shout ! „ in i 297
The Queen comes first, M and PhiUp. Gardiner.
Shout, then, M and Philip ! Man. M and
Philip ! „ III i 299
shouted for thy plea.sure, shout for mine ! Philip
and M ! „ m i 306
Philip and M ! Gadiner. I distrust thee. „ m i 309
M rubb'd out pale — „ in i 422
' Thou shalt ! ' And sign'd it— M ! „ in i 428
Left M a wife-widow here alone, „ in i 462
How oft hath Peter knock'd at M's gate ! And M
would have risen and let him in, But, M, there
were those within the house „ in ii 63
M would have it ; and this Gardiner follows ; „ in iii 230
But shouted in Queen M. „ m iv 46
and think of this in your coming. ' M the Queen ! „ in v 225
Queen M gwoes on a-bumin' and a-burnin', „ iv iii 522
M hath acknowledged you her heir. „ v iii 30
Uary (Virgin Mary) {See also Maria, Maries) and, Holy M !
How Harold used to beat him ! Harold i i 431
by St. M these beggars and these friars shall join you. Foresters in 416
Mary of England (Queen Mary) M o E, joining hands
with Spain, Queen Mary i v 298
Mary of Scotland (daughter of James V.) {See also Scots
[Mary, Queen of ]) Mo S, — for I have not own'd
My sister, — „ i v 284
M o S, married to your Dauphin, „ i v 295
Mash (smash) Out o' the chaumber ! I'll m tha into
nowt. Prom, of May in 735
Mask (s) not drop the m before The masquerade is
over — Queen Mary iii vi 110
Vice and Virtue Are but two m's of self ; Prom, of May i 538
Mask (verb) Norman cookery is so spiced, It m's all
this.
Mask'd thee however m I should have known.
Masque court is always May, buds out in m's,
Harold ii ii 812
Foresters n i 649
Queen Mary m v 12
Masquerade not drop the mask before The m is over — „ in vi 111
Mass setting up a m at Canterbury To please the Queen.
Cranmer. It was a wheedling monk Set up the m. „ i ii 88
By the m, old friend, we'll have no pope here „ i iii 42
that swearest by the m ? „ i iii 46
by the m we'll have no m here. „ i iii 51
And brought us back the m. „ i v 184
It is but a communion, not a m : (repeat) „ iv ii 56, 111
shall m'es here be sung By every priest in Oxford. „ iv iii 100
Who stole the widow's one sitting hen o' Sunday,
when she was at m ? Becket i iv 122
Massacre that her flies Must m each other ? Prom, of May i 285
Massacred Hath >» the Thane that was his guest.
Mast whose quick flash splits The mid-sea m.
Master {See also Mister, HSi.) Let father alone, my m's !
rumour that Charles, the m of the world,
kind and gentle m, the Queen's Officers
Quiet a moment, my m's ;
Shame, shame, my m's ! are you English-born,
My m's, yonder's fatter game for you
What says the King your m ? Noailles. Madam,
my m hears with much alarm,
wherefore, my m. If but to prove your Majesty's
goodwill,
your good m, Pray God he do not be the first
Your m works against me in the dark.
My m, Charles, Bad you go softly with your heretics
he vfiii. be King, King of England, my m's ;
ye know, my m's, that wherever Spain hath ruled
You are shy and proud Uke Englishmen, my m's,
The reeking dungfork m of the mace !
And ye, my m's, of the lower house.
And in my m Henry's time ;
St. Peter in his time of fear Denied his M,
Like dogs that set to watch their m's gate,
Legate Is here as Pope and M of the Church,
Which was not pleasant for you, M Cranmer.
How are the mighty fallen, M Cranmer !
We are ready To take you to St. Mary's, M Cranmer,
Speak, M Cranmer, Fulfil your promise made me,
Be plainer, M Cranmer.
You should be grateful to my m, too.
I am much beholden to the King, your m.
My most dear M, What matters ?
Better to be a liar's dog, and hold My m honest,
and that Archdeacon Hildebrand His m,
Are ye my m's, or my lord the King ?
As thou hast honour for the Pope our m.
The m of his m, the King's king. — ■
our lords and m's in Christ Jesus.
And what said the black sheep, my m's ?
for I be his lord and m i' Christ,
hears a door open in the house and thinks ' the m.'
I will be Sole m of my house.
0 women. Ye will have Roman m's.
m been a-glorifying and a-velveting and a-silldng
himself,
will you take the word out of your m's own mouth ?
Perhaps, M Dobson. I can't tell, for I have never
seen him.
M Dobson, you are a comely man to look at.
and the m 'ud be straange an' pleased if you'd step
in fust,
1 go. M Dobson, did you hear what I said ?
Niver man 'ed better friends, and I will saay niver
m 'ed better men :
and, thaw I says it mysen, niver men 'ed a better m-
An' the saame to you, M.
An' the saame to you, M Steer, Ukewise.
fur they says the m goas clean of? his 'ead when he
'eiirs the naame on 'im ;
Harold u ii 297
The Cup n 293
Queen Mary i i 38
I i 105
I ii 107
I iii 16
I iii 70
I iii 79
I V 248
I V 259
I V 268
I V 277
I V 391
n i 173
II i 205
n ii 258
u ii 275
„ in iii 102
„ ni iii 228
„ ni iv 264
„ ni iv 309
„ m iv 347
„ IV ii 137
IV ii 147
„ IV ii 239
„ IV iii 111
,. IV iii 235
V iii 28
„ V iii 112
Harold i i 194
„ m i 126
„ m ii 146
Becket i iii 135
„ I iii 201
„ I iii 462
I iv 87
., I iv 168
., I iv 241
., m iii 99
„ V i 151
The Cup n 511
The Falcon 98
598
Prom, of May 1 114
1 156
1 167
1 171
r 323
I 327
I 344
I 347
ml31
Master
1005
Meant
{continued) You, M Hedgar, Harold, or what-
iver They calls ye. Prom, of May m 726
The lady loved the m well. Foresters i i 8
My m, Robin the Earl, is always a-telling us „ i i 94
I would hoist the drawbridge, like thy m. „ i i 319
I am a vii^in, my m's, I am a virgin. Much. And
a vii^, my m's, three yards about the waist „ i ii 67
My m's, welcome gallant Walter Lea. „ ly 1002
Strike up a stave, my m's, all is well. „ iv 1101
Naster'd old affection m you, You falter'd into tears. Becket v ii 143
Uastiff (adj.) as a m dog May love a puppy cur for no
more reason Queen Mary i iv 194
Mastiff (s) Our savage m, That all but kill'd the
beggar. Prom, of May i 558
Hatch (an equal) Thou and thy woman are a m for three
friars. Foresters m 262
Match (marriage) But is Don Carlos such a goodly m ? Queen Mary v iii 86
That was, my lord, a m of pohcy. Harold iv i 199
thy m shall follow mine. Foresters iv 1044
Match (verb) If such a one as you should m with
Spain, Queen Mary v iii 66
Match'd You do misname me, m with any such, Becket iv ii 128
and m with my Harold is like a hedge thistle by
a garden rose. Prom, of May m 175
Mate (s) (See also C!o-mate, Maate) News, m's ! a
miracle, a miracle ! Qu^en Mary iii ii 209
Mad for thy m, passionate nightingale . . . Harold i ii 1
They are not so true. They change their m's. „ ni ii 105
he frown'd ' No m for her, if it should come to that ' — Becket iii i 259
I would thou hadst a m ! The Falcon 17
Mate (verb) Let York bear his to m with Canterbury. Becket i iii 512
Not half her hand — no hand to m with her, „ ii i 190
As m with one that holds no love is pure. Foresters iv 711
Mated See Maated
Blater Salva patriam, Sancta M. Harold v i 471
Matilda (or Maud, daughter of Henry L) So did M, the
King's mother. Becket i iii 152
Matter (s) stir not yet Tliis m of the Church lands. Queen Mary i v 409
I scarce have heart to mingle in this m, „ ir ii 114
These are forgiven — jn's of the past — „ m iii 190
might it not be pohcy in some m Of small importance „ ni vi 167
And if you be not secret in this m, „ v i 272
That were too small a to for a comet ! Harold i i 470
No m ! Aldwyth. How no to, Harold slain ? — „ v ii 17
No m ! Aldwyth. Not help me, „ v ii 23
my mind wjis set upon other m's. Eleanor. What
m's ? State m's ? love m's ? Becket, Pro. 318
and the to in the metre. „ Pro. 384
that secret m, which would heat the King against thee. „ Pro. 487
And on a m wholly spiritual. „ i iii 85
You have had the better of us In secular m's. „ n ii 81
I have been more for the King than the Church in
this TO — „ ni iii 66
it was but the sacrifice of a kingdom to liis son, a
smaller to ; „ ni iii 107
This is no secret, but a public to. „ v ii 320
No TO ! see your cloth be white as snow ! The Falcon 498
A moment for some m of no moment ! Foresters ii i 474
Matter (verb) No, no ; what m's ? Forlorn I am. Queen Mary v ii 237
What m's how I look ? Harold v i 394
That doth not to either. „ v ii 62
What m's ? Royal — I mean to leave the royalty Becket ii i 106
That m's not. Take thou this cup and leave it The Cup i i 66
Savage, is he ? What m's ? Prom, of May i 563
Maurice {See also Maurice Berkeley) told Sir M there
was one Cognisant of this. Queen Mary ii iv 99
Maurice Berkeley there by Sir M B Was taken
prisoner. „ ii iv 94
Mavis Hawk, buzzard, jay, the to and the merle. Foresters i iii 115
May Ay, for an hour in M. But court is always M,
buds out in masques, Queen Mary ill v 10
which a breeze of M Took ever and anon. The Cup i ii 406
Richer than all the wide world-wealth of M, The Falcon 467
O joy for the promise of M, of M, 0 joy for the
promise of M. (repeat) Prom, of May i 43, 723
May {continued) O grief for the promise of M, of
M, O grief for the promise of M. (repeat) Prom, of May i 59, 750
most beautiful M we have had for many years ! „ i 567
Is the most beautiful morning of this M. „ i 57Q
you make The M and morning still more beautiful,
You, the most beautiful blossom of the M. „ i 573-
So lovely in the promise of her M, „ m 753
Maybe See Mebbe
May-morning and kiss me This beautiful M-m. Prom, of May i 565-
Mayn't and she to be so fur out theer. „ 1 181
Mayor All hangs on her address. And upon you. Lord M. Queen Mary ii ii 5&
I, the Lord M, and these our companies And guilds „ n ii 127
I, Lord M Of London, and our guilds and companies. „ ii ii 139'
tho' my Lord M here. By his own rule, „ ii ii 345
May-time It was M-t, And I was walking „ v v 87
or a stump-tailed ox in M-t, Foresters ii i 43&
Maze This labyrinthine brickwork m in m,
Mazed See Maazed
Meadow {See also Midder, Mountain-meadow) there
stole into the city a breath Full of the m's.
With other beauties on a mountain m,
I have lost a cow from my m.
Meadowsweet Forget-me-not, to, wiUow-herb.
Meal (ground com) so dusted his back with the m in
his sack,
M enough, meat enough, well fed ;
Meal (repast) make Thy slender to out of those scraps
and shreds
Mean That's a hard word, legitimate ; what does it
m ? Second Citizen. It m's a bastard. Third
Citizen. Nay, it m's true-born.
I to the Lady Elizabeth,
boast that after all She m's to wed you.
she m's to counsel your withdrawing To Ashridge,
she m's to make A farewell preseht to your Grace,
they to to pardon me.
I TO not like to live.
Do you TO to drive me mad ?
Gamel, son of Orm, What thinkest thou this m's ?
(repeat)
TO The doom of England and the wrath of Heaven ?
And cannot answer sanely . . . What it m's ?
It m's the fall of Tostig from his earldom.
It m's the lifting of the house of Alfgar.
What did he to ?
He did not m to keep his vow. Harold, Not m
To make our England Norman.
Morcar ! Edwin ! What do they to ?
Look you, we never to to part again.
I have heard him say He m's no more ;
sworn upon his side. And ever m to do it.
What is it you to ? Margery. I to your goodman,
I TO her whom you call — fancy —
Me&n'd (meant) I m they be as blue as violets.
Meaner Then left him for the to ! thee ! —
Meanest Ev'n to the least and m of my own.
Meaning might chance — ^perchance — To guess their to.
Morcar. Thine own to, Harold, To make all
England one,
I know Thy to. Perish she, I, all,
And smiles at my best m's.
Means stakes high ? Noailles. But not beyond
your TO. Queen Mary i iii 147
That by your gracious to and intercession „ ni iii 121
These are the m God works with, „ m vi 68
My liberality perforce is dead Thro' lack of to of giving. The Falcon 297
Becket, Pro. 166.
Becket i i 263
The Falcon 352
Foresters ii i 326-
Prom, of May n 299
Becket i iv 174
The Falcon 165-
146.
Queen Mary i i 12
I i 74
I iv 89-
I iv 224
I iv 243
„ IV ii 50
v i 245
v ii 200
Harold i i 21, 464
ii45
ii8»
ii468
ii472
u ii 223
III i 248
IV i 134
vii80
Becket i iii 193
„ II ii 466
„ III i 157
„ m i 201
Prom, of May 1 103
Harold IV ii 71
Becket ii ii 181
Harold rv i 139
Becket in iii 19
Foresters rv 727
How hadst thou then the to to buy a cow ?
Meant {See also Mean'd) I to True matters of the
heart.
Elizabeth — To Philibert of Savoy, as you know,
We TO to wed her ;
Thou knowest never woman to so well.
Said ' ay ' when I to ' no,' Ued like a lad
He m no harm nor damage to the Church.
I had m to make him all but king.
Foresters ii i 303
Queen Mary i iv 99
V i 248
V ii 342
Harold ii ii 656
Becket i iii 216
„ I iii 464
Meant
Meant {cofUinued) I never m you harm in any way.
Not if you m it, I am sure.
I m thee to have foUow'd— better thus.
but he knew I m to marry him.
Why ? because I m it ! — ,.„ »i, -lu-
Measure (s) (5ee aZso Over-measure) stiUAU within
They have brought it in large m on themselves.
And he is with you in a m still.
but belike Thou hast not learnt his m.
I thinks I'd Uke to taake the m o' your foot.
If you will deign to tread a m with me.
Measure (verb) if you'd like to m your own length
upon the grass. , -, ^, u j
Measured an' I w his foot wi' the mark i the bed,
Meat owld lord fell to 's m wi' a will, God bless un !
I have been a lover of wines, and dehcate m s,
King's m ! By the Lord, ^
And take a hunter's vengeance on the m s
Meal enough, m enough, well fed ;
each of 'em as full of 7n as an egg.
1006
Merriest
Becket iv ii 106
„ iviil84
The Cup n 498
The Falcon 51
Prom, of May ni 365
Queen Mary i v 436
„ IV iii 363
V V 27
Harold iv iii 118
Prom, of May i 464
Foresters i ii 132
Prom, of May i 465
,, 1 413
Queen Mary iv iii 514
Becket i i 77
„ I iv 140
The Cup I ii 44
The Falcon 165
Foresters i i 42
Melancholy Fine eyes-but m, irresolute- Qiteen Mary in iy 337
mSw and as sleek and as round-about as a m codhn. Foresters 1 1 43
eacn oi em as luii oi ■/« <» an egg. r> x i/„„ r ^9^;
Mebbe (maybe) the fault, m, wur as much mine as yours ; Prom, of May i 325
and Parson m, thaw he niver mended that gap
Meddle I'll not m wi' 'im if he doant m wi' mea.^
I promised one of the Misses I wouldn't m wi ye,
She telled me once not to m wi' 'im, , ^ , ,. (
Medicine I have a wholesome m here Puts that behet
It has been much commended as a m.
Meditate so to m Upon my greater nearness
Medway (river) green field Beside the brimmmg M,
Meek yet so m, so modest. So wife-Uke humble
Ah^ weak and m old man.
Meet When do you m ? Noailles. To-mght.
these shall m upon St. Andrew's day.
It was not m heretic swine should hve In Lambetn.
We m at Brussels.
why my friend Should m with a lesser mercy
you scarce could m his eye And hold your own ;
Count-crab will make his nippers m in thine heart ;
shall they 7^1 In private ?
fears that these may act On Harold when they m.
William. Then let them m !
To m thee in the North. _
0 Harold ! husband ! Shall we m again f
1 have had it fashion'd, see, to m my hand.
And no David To m him ? , u- i^
The horse and horseman cannot m the shield,
Where I shall m the Barons and my King.
—And to m it I needs must leave as suddenly.
And so farewell until we m in England. Becket.
fear, my liege, we may not m in England.
Strike ! I challenge thee to m me before God.
bow'd herself to m the wave Of humiUation,
But he and he must never m again. •
I go to m my King ! Grim. To m the King f
I will go out and m them.
shun To m her face to face at once !
When first he m's his maiden in a bower,
walk vnth me we needs must m Antonius coming,
I will go To TO him, crown'd !
Why comes he not to to me ?
Still I am half-afraid to m her now.
Keep up your heart until we m again.
If that should break before we m again ?
and he trusted that some time we should m agam,
If ever I to thee there, I will break thy sconce
they can m upon anything thro' a millstone.
I will not to him yet, I'll watch him
Thou told'st us we should to him in the forest,
I cannot to his eyes.
Meeting (part) Gardiner, coming with the Queen,
And m Pembroke,
Meeting (s) When theer wur a to o' farmers at Little-
chester t'other daiiy,
i445
1 173
I 470
n 599
Becket iv ii 50
The Falcon 588
Foresters ii i 43
Queen Mary n i 244
III i 362
vvl31
I iii 154
III ii 125
in ii 134
in vi 214
ivi70
IV i 104
Harold n i 76
„ n ii 87
„ n ii 92
„ V i 290
„ V i 361
„ V i 422
„ V i 497
„ V i 591
Becket I ii 84
„ in i 91
[
„ in iii 237
„ IV ii 254
„ IV ii 388
„ IV ii 425
„ vii620
„ V iii 52
The Cuf I i 59
„ I iii 41
„ I iii 92
„ n 519
„ n 528
Prom, of May i 488
I 754
I 756
in 329
Foresters i ii 74
„ n i 280
in 47
IV 439
IV 799
Queen Mary n ii 310
Prom, of May 1 137
Queen Mary nrv 51
„ m vi 40
Prom, of May n 505
Foresters n i 671
Queen Mary i v 529
Harold V i 326
The Falcon 524
Prom, of May n 405
Foresters iv 1070
Queen Mary iii v 241
Becket iv ii 348
Melt Till doomsday TO it.
may strike fire from her. Not hope to to her.
Iron will fuse, and marble to ;
Who m's a waxen image by the fire,
Memorial wear it as m of a morning
Memory This m to thee !— and this to England,
My TO is as dead,
drove me From out her to.
We leave but happy memories to the forest.
Menace if PhiUp to me, I think that I will play
Menaced whereupon I to her with this,
Men-at-arms m-a-a Guard my poor dreams for
England.
I would set my m-a-a to oppose thee,
and there be m-a-a to guard her.
Mended he niver m that gap i' the glebe fence as 1
tell'd 'im ; , ^^ „
Mene M, M, Tekel ! Is thy wrath HeU,
Mention (s) hang On the chance 7n of some fool
Make thou not to that I spake with thee.
Mention (verb) I never heard her to you.
An' we weant m naw naames,
You, how dare you m kisses ?
Mentioned You haven't even m liim in your last .-'
you 7n, her name too suddenly before my father.
And if she never to me, . ,,_ , , ., ui„„j
Mercenary one of those mercenaries that suck tne biooa
of England.
Strike, Sheriff ! Strike, w !
Prince John, the Sheriff, and a to.
Is coming with a swarm of mercenaries
f oUow'd by Prince John And all his mercenaries^ !
Merchant raise us loans and subsidies Among the m s ;
To this son of a London to —
Thomas, son Of Gilbert Becket, London to.
Mercians Earl of the M ! if the truth be gaU,
Merciful It were more to to bum him now.
O God, For thou art to, refusing none
Your Grace hath been More to to many a rebel head
Mercy Yet too much m is a want of to.
He by His to absolve you !
to cast myself Upon the good Queen s w ;
M, that herb-of-grace, Flowers now but seldom.
To reach the hand of m to my friend,
why my friend Should meet with lesser m than myself (
God grant you ampler to at your call
Will they have to on me ? Villa Garcia. Have
you good hopes of to ! So, farewell.
Three persons and one God, have to on me,
For thy great to have to !
Thy TO must be greater than all sin.
Why then to heaven, and God ha' m on him.
Have you found m there. Grant it me here :
Ay, Madam, but o' God's to —
aUegiance in thy Lord's And crave his to, .
Have TO on us ! (repeat) , Ii<^rold v i 501
The child ... No ... to ! No !
M, TO, As you would hope for m.
When you have charm'd our general mto to,
a Sister of M, come from the death-bed of a
pauper, .
Mere (adj.) M compliments and wishes.
The TO wild-beast !
This is TO marble. .
A shadow, a poetical fiction— did ye not call me king ^ ^^
in your song ?— a to figure. TiLnl<1 m i 49
Mere (s) The brows unwrinkled as a summer to.— HaroLd m i 4y
A summer to with sudden wreckful gusts » Yh 150
Merit (s) Forgive me. Father, for no m of mine. Queen Mary iv m IbZ
Merit (verb) and that to's death-False oath on holy ^^^^^^ ^^ .^ ^^^
Merle "nfwk, buzzard, jay, the mavis and the to %^S.\^iim
Merriest beyond The to murmurs of their banquet clank EaroU 11 u 408
Queen Mary 1 y 152
Foresters i i 323
„ I ii 158
Prom, of May 1 446
Harold v i 35
Queen Mary in v 43
Harold n ii 483
Prom, of May n 395
in 129
Foresters n i 127
Prom, of May i 778
,, n23
n400
Foresters n i 174
n i 416
n i 446
in 452
IV 589
Queen Mary v i 180
Becket, Pro. 434
„ II ii 231
Harold iv i 14
Queen Mary iv i 153
IV iii 131
v ii 5
IV 505
III iii 208
ni V 168
III vi 9
IV 165
IV 170
IV i 189
IV ii 84
IV iii 121
IV iii 137
IV iii 151
IV iii 632
V V 144
V V 166
Harold v i 12
_, 611, 643, 645
Becket iv ii 186
„ V iii 175
The Cup 1 ii 312
Prom, of May in 376
Queen Mary v ii 596
Prom, of May m 736
Foresters 11 i 275
Merriment
1007
Militant
Queen Mary m v 13
Becket m iii 138
Queen Mary n ii 358
ra i 203
V ii 318
V V 240
V V 246
Harold i ii 98
HaroU ii ii 768, 771
Becket i iv 152
Foresters i i 344
„ I iii 11
I iii 14
I 111 98
in 42
Merriment Breaks into feather'd Hi's,
in the end we flourished out into a m ;
Merry Be m ! yet, Sir Ralph, you look but sad.
But then he looks so m.
Heretic and rebel Point at me and make m.
It was never m world In England, since the Bible
came among us.
It never will be m world in England,
Thou hast misread this m dream of thine,
To-night we will be m. (repeat)
Feed, feast, and be m.
let us be m to-night at the banquet.
I am only m for an hour or two Upon a birthday :
why should we make us w Because a year of it is gone ?
There be good fellows there in m Sherwood That hold
by Richard,
' Love, love, love, love ' — what m madness — listen !
All the birds in m Sherwood sing and sing him home
again. „ iv 1109
Sesh Tho' scarce at ease ; for, save our m'es break, Harold, n ii 140
The simple lobster-basket, and the to — Becket n ii 298
I do but bring the m, know no more. Queen Mary i iv 228
I wiU give your m. „ iii vi 41
But shall I take some m from your Grace ? „ v ii 597
we bring a m from the King Beyond the water ; Becket v ii 301
Had you then No m with the cup ? The Cup i ii 68
Well, Madam, I will give your m to him. The Falcon 217
that I forgot my m from the Earl. Foresters i i 297
and there are m's That go between us. Queen Mary i iii 137
I chanced upon the to Who brings that letter „ i v 585
Not thee, my son : some other to. Harold i i 244
— thou art but a m of William. „ v i 29
I am the m of God, His Norman Daniel ! „ y i 33
The TO from Synoris who waits Before the Temple ? The Cup ii 37
too rich a prize To trust with any m. The Falcon 726
It is a royal to, my lord : Foresters i iii 52
A worthy m ! how should he help it ? „ i iii 85
she TO the Queen at Wanstead Queen Mary i i 77
hands Came from the crowd and m his o\vn ; „ iv iii 583
Thou hast rounded since we to. Harold i i 95
he and Wulfnoth never Have to, except in public ; „ n ii 86
Look rather thou all-royal as when first I to thee. Becket n i 47
I m a robber once, I told him I was bound „ v ii 98
'Tis long since we have to ! The Falcon 274
never since have m Her equal for pure innocence Prom, of May n 371
Met
I TO her first at a farm in Cumberland — Her uncle's
he teUs me that he to you once in the old times,
I do believe I lost my heart to him the very first
time we m,
if m in a black lane at midnight :
He TO a stag there on so narrow a ledge —
Metal to fuse Almost into one to love and hate, —
Meteor These to'5 came and went before our day,
Methinks and yet, to, I have seen goodUer.
Madam, to a cold face and a haughty.
m, A prince as naturally may love his people
M most men are but poor-hearted,
M the good land heard me,
M that under our Queen's regimen We might go
And yet to he falters :
M that would you tarry one day more
m my Queen is like enough To leave me by and by.
M there is no manhood left among us.
m I love her less For such a dotage upon such a man
M I am all angel, that I bear it
so TO, my boy. Thy fears infect me beyond reason.
Better m have slain the man at once !
Methought glance of some distaste. Or so m,
retum'd.
Methosaleh live as long as Jerusalem. Eva. M,
father.
Metre and the matter in the to.
Metropolitan He here, this heretic m,
Mexico The voices of Peru and M,
Michaelmas At M, Miss, please God.
11396
in 262
III 284
Foresters in 224
IV 531
Queen Mary ni vi 182
Harold I i 131
Queen Mary i v 6
IV 196
n ii 191
H ii 337
m ii 57
m iv 181
III iv 398
in vi 232
vi241
V ii 284
vii420
viii3
Harold n ii 450
n ii 498
Queen Mary in i 101
Prom, of May i 379
Becket, Pro. 384
Queen Mary rv iii 43
„ V i 47
Prcmi. of May m 112
Mid strike, make his feathers Glance in to heaven. The Falcon 16
Mid-battle will you crown my foe My victor in m-b ? Becket v i 150
Mid-day Hang'd at m-d, their traitor of the dawn The Cup n 123
Midder (meadow) An' the m's all mow'd, an' the
sky sa blue— (repeat) Prom, of May ii 176, 188, 200
Middle (adj.) For, like a fool, thou knowest no to way. Becket i iii 532
Middle (s) in the m of that fierce fight At Stamfordbridge. Harold iv iii 183
Midland or wreckt And dead beneath the to ocean. Foresters ii i 657
Midmost As in the to heart of Paradise. The Cup ii 186
Midnight I hardly gain'd The camp at to. „ i iii 19
dead m when I came upon the bridge ; Protn. of May iii 368
if met in a black lane at m : Foresters in 224
Midriff-shaken many m-s even to tears, as springs gash
out after earthquakes— Becket ui iii 162
Mid-sea whose quick flash splits The m-s mast, The Cup n 293
Mid-summer full to-s in those honest hearts. Becket v ii 373
Midwinter Yon gray old Gospeller, sour as to, Queen Mary i iii 40
'Tis known you are to to all women, Becket i ii 27
Save that it was m-w in the street, „ v ii 372
Might (s) ' Thine is the right, for thine the to ; Harold ii ii 357
William laugh'd and swore that to was right, „ n ii 362
Waste not thy to before the battle ! „ v i 415
Might (verb) See Mowt
Mightier but those of Normanland Are to than our own. Harold in i 225
The more the love, the m is the prayer; „ m i 347
that Tostig Conjured the to Harold from his North „ iv ii 68
Their giant-king, a to man-in-arms Than William. „ v i 399
But we must have a m man than he For his successor. Becket, Pro. 6
Thou art the man — be thou A to Anselm. „ i i 184
' Fore God, I am a m man than thou. „ i i 223
We find that it is to than it seems — „ ly ii 263
I think they will be m than the king. Foresters i iiild
Mightiest (adj.) and be the to man This day in England. Queen Mary n ii 19
But not the force made them our to kings. „ in iv 335
You are the m monarch upon earth, I but a little
Queen : „ v i 52
Bride of the to sovereign upon earth ? „ v ii 544
Should make the m empire earth has known. „ y iii 70
Thou art the to voice in England, man, Harold n ii 617
But I that threw the m knight of France, Becket i iii 746
Mightiest (s) More, what the m and the holiest Of all his
predecessors „ u ii 179
Mighty (adj. and adv.) For I am m popular with
them, Noailles. Queeti Mary i iii 101
Ay, ay, but to doctors doubted there. „ iv i 83
Friend for so long time of a w King ; „ iv iii 73
And done such to things by Holy Church, „ v v 74
Thou art a to man In thine own earldom ! Harold n i 92
And TO pretty legs too. Thou art the prettiest child I
ever saw. Becket iv i 6
But my sister wrote that he was to pleasant. Prom, of May 1 116
But he were to fond o' ye, warn't he ? „ n 9
ready To make allowances, and m slow To feel offences. „ in 629
Mighty (s) How are the to fallen. Master Cranmer ! Qu^en Mary iv ii 146
Milan (town) Granada, Naples, Sicily, and M,— „ v i 44
Milcher (milch-cow) Dumble's the best to in Islip.
(repeat) „ iv iii 478, 497
Mild Your to Legate Pole Will tell you that the devil
helpt them thro' it. „ iv iii 351
Julius the Third Was ever just, and to, and father-
like; „ vii31
We have heard Of thy just, to, and equal
governance ; " Harold ii ii 690
she had seen the Archbishop once. So to, so kind. Becket v ii 120
Milder Ye govern to men. Gurth. We have made them m
by just government. Harold i i 339
Mile seen your steps a m From me and Lambeth ? Queen Mary i ii iSl
I would not ; but a himdred m's I rode, „ i v 551
we must round By Kingston Bridge. Brett. Ten
m's about. „ n iii 49
brook across our field For twenty m's, „ v v 84
I ha' carried him ever so many m's in my arms, Becket i iv 98
What be he a-doing here ten to an' moor fro' a
raail ? Prom, of May i 209
Militant Thou hast roU'd over the Church m Foresters iv 273
Milk
1008
Miss
Milk mute as death, And white as her own m ; Queen Mary ii ii 80
the cow kick'd, and all her m was spilt. „ m v 266
and shared His fruits and m. Liar ! The Cup i ii 428
M ? Filippo. Three laps for a cat ! The Falcon 124
No not a draught of m, no not an egg, „ 871
come as freely as heaven's air and mother's m ? Foresters i i 210
Sour m and black bread. „ ii i 272
and her bread is beyond me : and the m — faugh ! „ n i 293
wouldst bar me fro' the m o' my cow, „ n i 355
MHlring with my hands M the cow ? (repeat) Queen Mary ni v 88, 95, 102
you came and kiss'd me m the cow. (repeat) „ ni v 91, 98
Come behind and kiss me m the cow ! „ iii v ] 05
take to the m of your cows, the fatting of your
calves. Prom, of May ir 92
Milkmaid I would I were a m. To sing, Queen Mary iii v 110
I wish'd myself the m singing here, „ m v 256
Your Highness such am? „ in v 268
Mill More water goes by the m than the miller wots of. Foresters i ii 48
Old as the m. „ iv 302
Miller black sheep baaed to the m's ewe-lamb. The m's
away for to-night : Becket i iv 163
But the m came home that night, „ i iv 173
She beautiful : sleep as a Hi's mouse ! The Falcon 165
Thou Much, m's son, hath not the Earl right ? Much.
More water goes by the mill than the m wots of, Foresters i ii 46
Much, the m's son, I knew thy father : „ i iii 146
they can meet upon anything thro' a m. „ ii i 280
I Little John, he Much the m's son, and he Scarlet, „ in 55
Millwbeel The m turn'd in blood ; Becket i iii 353
Milly (servant to Farmer Dobson) ye ringed fur that.
Miss, didn't ye ? Dora. No, M ; Prom, of May in 15
no one has seen you but myself. Eva. Yes — this
M. Dora. Poor blind Father's little guide, M, „ in 230
It is only M. Dora. Well, M, why do you come
in so roughly ? „ in 341
M, my dear, how did you leave Mr. Steer? ,, ni 409
Mimick'd boy she held M and piped her Queen Mary ii ii 74
Mince M and go back ! his politic Holiness Becket n ii 45
Mind (s) to my m the Lady Elizabeth is the more noble Qv-een Mary i i 71
all one m to supplicate The Legate here for pardon, „ in iii 105
We are all one m. „ in iii 110
To my m. The cataract typed the headlong plunge „ m iv 139
as one whose m Is all made up, „ iv iii 588
To be nor mad, nor bigot — have a m — „ v v 216
What lies upon the m of our good king Harold i i 268
I have a m that thou shalt catch no more. „ n i 70
I have a TO to brain thee with mine axe. „ n i 73
my TO was set upon other matters. Becket, Pro. 317
Blurt thy free m to the air ? „ i iii 239
run my to out to a random guest Who join'd me The Cwp i ii 107
Hath she made up her m to marry him ? „ ii 22
who call'd the m Of children a blank page, Prom, of May n 281
Has lost his health, his eyesight, even his m. „ in 768
Mind (remind) M, ma o' summun. „ n 583
Minded it m me Of the sweet woods of Clifford, Becket i i 263
Mine (poss.) M — but not yet aU to. Queen Mary i v 542
May I have it as m, till m Be m again ? Becket ii i 298
Mine (S) in this pause, before The m be fired, Qv^en Mary n i 26
I fear the to is fired before the time. „ Hi 123
The m is fired, and I will speak to them. „ ii i 155
Mingle I scarce have heart to m in this matter, „ n ii 113
Minion glad to wreak our spite on the rosefaced to Becket, Pro. 529
Well — you know — the to, Rosamund. „ i ii 37
We thought to scare this to of the King „ iv ii 330
Minister Whose m's they be to govern you. Queen Mary iv iii 180
Minnow if you care to drag your brains for such a to. Foresters n i 324
Minster (adj.) And smote me down upon the M floor. Becket i i 104
Minster (s) as the new-made couple Came from the M, Queen Mary in i 95
That long low to where you gave your hand „ ni ii 90
Mcthought I stood in Canterbury M, Becket i i 73
loftiest TO ever built To Holy Peter Harold in i 206
Minster-aisle Their long bird-echoing m-a's, — Becket in i 44
Minster-bell Tho' earth's last earthquake clash'd the m-b's, „ v iii 42
Minute In some few m's. She will address your guilds Queen Mary ii ii 14
Your pardon for a to. She must be waked. Prom, of May ni 657
Miracle Our voyage by sea was all but to ;
Seem'd as a happy to to make glide —
News, mates ! a to, a to ! news !
— would be deem'd a m.
I have wrought m's — to God the glory — And m's
For Henry could not work a m — ■
life Saved as by to alone with Him Who gave it.
A TO that they let him home again.
Why now I count it all but to.
She, you moiun for seem'd A to of gentleness —
Miracled See De-miracled
Miracle-monger our friar is so holy That he's a to-to,
Miraculous For as to the fish, they de-miracled the m
draught,
Mire caked and plaster'd with a himdred m's,
from the street Stain'd with the to thereof.
From off the stalk and trample it in the to,
Mirror Unless my friends and m's lie to me,
Mischance some m of flood. And broken bridge,
Mischief Him as did the m here, five year' sin.'
Miser Close as a m's casket. Listen :
Miserable scum And offal of the city would not
change Estates with him ; in brief, so to.
Most 7« sinner, wretched man.
The TO see-saw of our child-world.
Old, TO, diseased.
And poor old father not die to.
and father Will not die to.'
Queen Mary m ii 25-
m ii 29
ni ii 20^
„ V iii 55
Harold i i 181
Becket i i 40
„ IV ii 368-
The Cwp I ii 270
I iii 37
Prom, of May n 491
Foresters iv 281
Becket in iii 124
Harold iv iii 178
Becket i iii 691
Foresters i ii 111
Queen Mary i iv 2
I v 353
Prom, of May ni 139
Queen Mary i iv 108
IV iii 78
IV iii 123
IV iii 385
V V 178
Prom, of May i 722
n 660
Miserere Mei said the M M — But all in English, mark
you ; Queen Mary in i 391
Misery put off the rags They had mock'd his to with, „ iv iii 590
But now we are made one flesh in to ; „ v ii 153
pauper, who had died in his m blessing God, Prom, of May in 378
Misfortin (misfortune) knaw'd better nor to cast hes
sister's to inter 'er teeth
Mishandled If she should be to.
Misheard M their snores for groans.
Mislead M us, and I will have thy life !
Misleader were there but three or four Of
these m's,
Mismatch'd M with her for policy !
Misname You do to me, match'd with any such.
Misnamed now the stronger motive, M free-will —
Misplaced round his knee, to, Our English Garter,
Misread Thou hast w this merry dream of thine,
Misreport Will in some lying fashion to His ending
One that would neither to nor lie.
Miss (s) (See also Misses) and haafe th' parish '11 be
theer, an' M Dora, an' M Eva, an' all!
Man. M Dora be coomed back, then ?
Foalks says he likes M Eva the best.
Beant M Eva gone off a bit of 'er good looks o' laate ?
Noa, M. I ha'n't seed 'er neither.
Blessings on your pretty voice, M Dora.
Theer be redder blossoms nor them, M Dora.
Under your eyes, M Dora.
Noa, M Dora; as blue as — (repeat)
Theer ye goas agean, M niver believing owt I says
to ye —
He'll he arter you now, M Dora.
He's been arter M Eva, haan't he ?
And I tells ye what, M Dora :
I thank you for that, M Dora, onyhow.
M, the farming men 'uU hev their dinner i' the long
barn.
So the owd uncle i' Coomberland be dead, M Dora,
Not like me, M Dora ;
but I hallus gi'ed soom on 'em to M Eva at this time
o' year. Will ya taake 'em ? fur M Eva,
and now she be gone, will ye taake 'em, M Dora ?
an' weant ye taake 'em now, M Dora,
I were insured, M, an' I lost nowt by it. But I weant
be too sudden wi' it ; and I feel sewer, M Dora,
but that be all along o' you, M,
M Dora, Dan Smith's cart hes runned ower a laady
n 127
Queen Mary n ii 115
Harold V i 213
Foresters n i 376
Queen Mary in iv 174
in i 365
Becket iv ii 128
Prom, of May n 637
Queen Mary ni i 83
Harold i ii 98
Queen Mary iv iii 326
„ IV iii 556
Prom, of May i 10
I 25
I 32
I 48
I 64
I 86
I 89
I 95, 99
1 106
Ills
1 121
1 131
1 157
1 165
n2
nl3
nl6
n21
n41
n57
Hl09
n567
Miss
1009
Molehill
Miss (s) (continued) ye ringed fur that, M, didn't ye ? Bora.
No, Milly; but if the farming-men be come for
their wages, to send them up to me. Milly.
Yeas, M. Prom, of May iii 14
Taake one o' the young 'luis fust, M ?
Noa, M ; we worked naw wuss upo' the cowd tea ;
All right, M ; and thank ye kindly.
Whoy, 0 lor, M !
O lor, M ! noa, noa, noa !
Yeas, M ; but he wur so rough wi' ma,
'Listed for a soadger, M, V the Queen's Real Hard
Tillery.
At Michaelmas, M, please God.
An' I thanks ye fur that, M, moor nor fur the waage.
' A cotched ma about the waaist, M,
Why, M Dora, mea and my maates, us three, we
wants to hev three words wi' ye. Higgins.
That be 'im, and mea, M. Jackson. An'
mea, M.
Theer, M ! You ha' naamed 'im — not me.
Wasn't M Vavasour, our schoolmistress at Littlechester,
Please, M, Mr. Dobson telled me to saay he's browt
some of M Eva's roses for the sick laady to smell on.
Yeas, M; and he wants to speak to ye partic'lar.
Yeas, M ; but he says he wants to tell ye summut
very partic'lar.
Why, M? I be afeard I shall set him a-swearing
like onythink.
You see she is lamed, and cannot go down to him.
Milly. Yeas, M, I will.
M Dora ! M Dora ! Dora. Quiet ! quiet ! What
is it ? Milly. Mr. 'Arold, M. Dora. Below ?
Milly. Yeas, M.
Tell him, then, that I'm waiting for him. Milly.
Yeas, M.
in 32
III 58
III 66
m71
in 91
nil03
III 108
in 112
mll6
nill9
ni 124
in 142
ni297
ni345
ni350
in 354
ni358
m417
in 475
III 485
Miss (verb) I m something. The tree that only bears Queen Mary ni i 18
To strike too soon is oft to m the blow. „ in vi 72
burrow where the King Would m her and for ever. Becket iv ii 159
He m the searching flame of pulsatory, „ v iii 13
Why didst thou m thy quarry ye.ster-even ? The Falcon 150
if thou m I will fasten thee to thine own door-post Foresters n i 403
Missed M ! There goes another. Shoot, Sheriff !
Sheriff. M] „ ii i 396
They have m the vein. „ iv 636
Misses {See also Miss) but I promised one of the M I
wouldn't meddle wi' ye, and I weant. Prom, of May i 469
Missive fearing for her, sent a secret m, Queen Mary n ii 121
When next there comes a m from the Queen „ ni v 182
A m from the Queen : „ ni v 187
Here is a w left at the gate by one from the castle. Becket i iv 49
Misstate Swear and unswear, state and m thy best ! „ ii ii 476
Mist among thine island m's With laughter. Harold n ii 182
oafs, ghosts o' the m, wills-o'-the-wisp ; Foresters ii i 263
Mistake (s) I see it — some confusion, Some strange m. Becket ni i 235
Some foolish m of Sally's ; Prom, of May in 153
No, Father, that was a m. She's here again. „ iii 445
Mistake (verb) You do m. I am not one to change. Queen Mary v i 217
No, daughter, you m our good Archbishop ; Becket v ii 138
Mistaken Only one, And he perhaps m in the face. The Cup i ii 343
Mister {See also Master, Mr.) feller couldn't find a M
in his mouth fur me, as farms five hoonderd
haacre. Prom, of May i 303
Please M 'Arold. Harold. Well ? „ in 700
Mistradition Monsters of m, old enough Queen Mary iv ii 102
Mistress Spain would be England on her seas, and
England M of the Indies. „ v iii 74
England Will be the M of the Indies yet, „ v iii 77
She is my m, let me look to her ! Harold i i 287
I shall have my tetrarchy restored By Rome, our m, The Cup i i 21
when the m died, and I appealed to the Sister
again. Prom, of May in 393
You do well, M Kate, Foresters I i 23
I would like to show you, M Kate. „ i i 49
Pretty m ! Robin. What art thou, man ? „ i ii 189
Pretty m, will you dance ? ,. i ii 203
Mistress {continued) She is my queen and thine, The w of
the band. Foresters n ii 42
I remain M of mine own self and mine own soul. „ iv 729
Mistrust Doth thou m me ? Am I not thy friend ? „ i ii 177
to m the girl you say you love Is to m your own love „ ii ii 57
How should you love if you m your love ? „ n ii 60
Misty Walk'd at night on the m heather ; Harold in ii 5
I am m with my thimbleful of ale. Foresters iv 278
Misuse Who m's a dog would m a child — Becket i iv 108
Misused she will not have thee. Thou hast m her : Harold rv ii 35
Misvalued I fear the Emperor much m me. Queen Mary m ii 76
Mite Cheese ? Filippo. A supper for twelve m's. The Falcon 127
Cast them into our treasury, the beggars' m's. Foresters m 205
Mitre Wanting the Papal m. Queen Mary m iv 148
The Pope has pushed his horns beyond his m— „ v i 153
He took his m off, and set it on me, Becket i i 63
and the m Grappling the crown — „ n i 26
Who made the second m play the first. And acted me? „ in iii 212
crowns must bow when m's sit so high. „ rv ii 297
The M ! Salisbury. Will you wear it ? — ■ „ v ii 616
Mitred Crown 'd slave of slaves, and m king of kings. Queen Mary ni iv 381
He fasts, they say, this m Hercules ! Becket i iii 618
Mix M not yourself with any plot I pray you ; Queen Mary i iv 173
Philip should not m us any way With his French
wars— „ ni iii 78
m our spites And private hates with our defence Becket v ii 50
m with all The lusty life of wood and underwood. Foresters i iii 112
Mixing Catholic, Mumbling and m in his scared prayers Queen Mary n ii 86
M our bloods, that thence a king may rise Harold iv i 142
Mixt And m with Wyatt's rising — Queen Mary v ii 479
I fear my dear lord m With some conspiracy The Cup i ii 15
Moan (s) he never uttered m of pain : Qv^en Mary iv iii 618
But your m is useless now : „ iv iii 638
he makes m that all be a-getting cold. Becket i iv 61
And I make my m along with him. „ i iv 63
Moan (verb) It breaks my heart to hear her m at night Queen Mary i v 603
and needs must m for him ; O Cranmer ! „ iv iii 635
he licks my face and m's and cries out against the King. Becket i iv 99
Moan'd Ran sunless down, and m against the piers. Queen Mary n iii 26
Not slighted— all but m for : thou must go. Becket i i 352
Moaning See A-moanin', Low-moanii^
Moant (must not) Here ! she m coom here. Prom, of May m 458
Moat And I would swim the m, like an otter. Foresters i i 321
Mob A bold heart yours to beard that raging m ! Qiieen Mary i iii 97
Pertest of our flickering m. Foresters n ii 130
Mock (adj.) (See also Mock-king) All the church is
grateful. You have ousted the m priest, Queen Mary i v 180
Mock (verb) Have I not heard them m the blessed Host „ rv iii 365
0 father, m not at a pubhc fear, Harold i i 74
M me not. I am not even a monk. Becket, Pro. 247
They m us ; he is here. „ i iv 202
will he not m at me The jealous fool balk'd „ iv ii 422
Mock'd summon'd hither But to be m and baited. Queen Mary in iv 270
put off the rags They had m his misery with, „ iv iii 590
then they m us and we fell upon 'em, Becket i ii 15
Mockery And if your penitence be not m. Queen Mary m iii 179
that was a m, you know, for he gave me no
address, and there was no word of marriage ; Prom, of May m 331
Mocking but thou art m me. Thou art Her brother — Foresters n i 515
They are jesting at us yonder, w us ? „ iv 676
If Cranmer's spirit were a m one. Queen Mary v ii 211
Mock-king M-k, I am the messenger of God, Harold v i 33
Mode this faded ribbon was the m In Florence The Falcon 422
Model as a sculptor clay, To their own m. Qv^en Mary ni iii 34
Statesmen that are wise Take truth herself for m. „ m iii 37
Moderate I pride myself on being m. „ v iv 60
Moderately Methought I answer'd m enough. Becket v ii 546
Modest yet so meek, so m, Queen Mary in i 363
Then our m women — I know the Norman license — Harold n ii 476
I thought that naked Truth would shame the Devil
The Devil is so m. „ m i 120
M maiden hly abused. Queen. Foresters n ii 158
Modo Suaviter in m, fortiter in re, Becket v ii 539
Moist tho', to keep the figure m and make it hold water, „ in iii 166
Molehill My nurse would tell me of a m Harold iv iii 128
3 s
Molochize
1010
Moon
Molochize I think that they would M them too, Harold i i 36
Homent Quiet a m, my masters ; Queen Mary i iii 16
Queen would see your Grace upon the m. „ i iv 222
Or will be in a m. ,. i iv 289
sonnet's a flying ant, Wing'd for am. „ u i 85
Cries of the m and the street — „ n iv 128
Nay come with me — one m ! „ m ii 189
That I was for a m wroth at thee. „ m iv 306
Yet, a m since, I wish'd myself tlie milkmaid „ ni v 255
Whose colours in a m break and fly, „ iv iii 169
seeing in a m, I shall find Heaven or else hell „ rv iii 223
Whose colours in a m break and fly ! ' „ v ii 206
so your Grace would bide a m yet. „ v ii 547
We dally with our lazy m's here, And hers are number'd. „ v iii 108
He had his gracious m, Altho' you'll not believe me. „ v v 38
And in a m I shall follow him. „ v v 57
but stay a m ; He can but stay a m : Harold i ii 3
but rather let me be King of the m to thee, „ ni ii 41
thou be only King of the m over England. „ in ii 51
There was a to When being forced aloof „ iv iii 14
A TO ! thou didst help me to my throne Becket, Pro. 200
citizen's heir hath conquer'd me For the to. „ ii ii 62
They have made it up again — for the to. „ ni iii 170
made me for the to proud Ev'n of that stale Church-bond „ iv ii 445
Aw! If you track this Sinnatus In any treason, The Cup i i 161
And that sets her against me — for the to,
He knew not at the m who had fasten'd
Your arm — a to — It will pass.
But lay them there for a to !
this, for the m, Will leave me a free field.
lie down there together in the darkness which
would seem but for a to,
The shelter of your roof — not for one to —
Tho' in one to she should glance away.
Young Walter, nay, I pray thee, stay a m. Marian.
A TO for some matter of no to ! Well — take and
use your to, while you may.
That I might breathe for a to free of shield
We sighted 'em Only this to.
for the TO strike the bonds From these three men,
Momentary Were m sparkles out as quick Almost as
kindled ;
are only like The rainbow of a w sim.
Monarch (adj.) his to mane Bristled about his quick ears — The Cup i ii 120
Monarch (s) You are the mightiest to upon earth. Queen Mary v i 52
That never English w dying left England so httle. „ v v 277
Monday (adj.) Immanuel Goldsmiths was broke into o'
I iii 164
II 49
II 449
The Falcon 763
Prom, of May ii 455
m 195
III 801
Foresters ii i 161
II i 473
IV 128
IV 591
IV 961
Queen Mary i ii 73
Foresters i ii 279
M night,
Monday (s) I'll hev it done o' M.
you were stupid dnmk all Sunday, and so ill in
consequence all M,
Money Confiscate lands, goods, m —
Is that it ? That's a big lot of m.
Do you lack any to ?
A fit place for the monies of the Church,
I had no heart to part with her for to. Giovanna.
not for TO.
and now, as far as m goas, I be a gentleman,
Count the m and see 3 it's all right,
sits and eats his heart for want of m to pay the Abbot,
he borrowed the monies from the Abbot of York, the
Sheriff's brother,
his monies, his oxen, his diimers, himself.
He has wonies. I will go to him.
Must you have these monies before the year and the
month end ?
He has a friend there will advance the monies.
That baseness which for fear or monies,
how much to hast thou in thy purse ?
How should poor friars have m ?
and took His monies.
it was agreed when you borrowed these monies from the
Abbot
these monies should be paid in to the Abbot at York,
You have the monies and the use of them.
Prom, of May i 393
„ III 45
III 81
Queen Mary n i 102
„ n iii 63
„ IV ii 40
Becket i iii 105
No,
The Falcon 326
Prom, of May i 331
in 64
Foresters i i 5
„ I i 67
„ I i 234
„ I i 273
„ I ii 149
„ II i 629
„ II 1706
„ III 273
„ m 276
„ m363
„ IV 466
„ IV 506
„ IV 548
Money (continued) Sir Richard paid his monies to the Abbot. Foresters iv 849
Money-lover No m-l he ! Harold ii ii 216
Monger See Miracle-monger, Word-monger
Mongering See Perjury-mongering
Mongrel Made even the carrion-nosing to vomit
Monk It was a wheedling m Set up the mass.
M, Thou hast said thy say,
m, I ask again When had the Lateran and the Holy Father
Out, beast to ! I ever hated m's.
Leofric, and all the m's of Peterboro'
Queen Mary iv iii 448
I ii 90
Harold v i 4
vi 15
vi75
vi446
Mock me not. I am not even a m. Becket, Pro. 248
Go like a to, cowling and clouding up „ i i 311
as I hate the dirty gap in the face of a Cistercian to, „ ii ii 382
A stranger to desires access to you. „ v ii 65
The m's disguise thou gavest me for my bower : „ v ii 93
M's, knights, five hundred, that were there and heard. „ v ii 406
Robert, The apostate to that was with Randulf „ v ii 574
I cannot tell why m's should all be cowards. „ v ii 581
Why should all m's be cowards ? „ v ii 588
Ay, m's, not men. Grim. I am a to, my lord. „ v ii 602
these are our own m's who foUow'd us ! ., v iii 59
I and my friend, this m, were here belated, Foresters i ii 193
What m of what convent art thou ? „ i ii 205
Sheriff, thy friend, this to, is but a statue. „ i ii 233
We spoil'd the prior, friar, abbot, to, „ m 167
Monkery divorced King Louis, Scorning his to, — Becket iv ii 419
Monkey The m that should roast his chestnuts for him ! Foresters iv 806
Monk-king good brother. They call you the M-K. Becket ii ii 73
I am proud of my ' M-K,' „ ii ii 101
my much constancy To the m-k, Louis, „ iv ii 305
Monna Giovanna {See also Giovanna) Ah, M G, you here
again ! The Falcon 85
and all along o' you, M G, „ 103
there is If G coming down the hill from the castle. „ 160
Monster M's of mistradition, old enough Queen Mary iv ii 102
Monstrous M ! blasphemous ! She ought to burn. „ i v 57
(thus there springs to light That Centaur of a m
Commonweal, The traitor-heretic) „ in iv 163
Bark'd out at me such to charges, Becket iv ii 342
She too — she too — the bride ! the Queen ! and I — M !
I that loved her. The Cup n 469
and some Pillaring a leaf -sky on their to boles. Foresters in 100
Month for women To go twelve tn's in bearing Queen Mary in vi 91
Give her a to or two, and her affections Prom, of May i 484
must be paid in a year and a to, or I lose the land
Must you have these monies before the year and the
TO end ?
Give him another m, and he will pay it. Justiciary.
We cannot give a to.
paid in to the Abbot of York, at the end of the to at
noon.
Mood I am in no to : I should be as the shadow
to thwart them in their m May work them grievous
harm
man not prone to jealousies, Caprices, humours.
m's;
Mooded See Iron-mooded
Moody You, Scarlet, you are always to here.
Man, lying here alone, M creature,
Moon a star beside the to Is all but lost ;
Would not for all the stars and maiden to
Not must, but will. It is but for one to.
In cold, white cells beneath an icy to —
the harvest to is the ripening of the harvest,
m Divides the whole long street with light and shade.
Dark even from a side glance of the to.
No Sinnatus yet — and there the rising to. M on the
field and the foam, M on the waste and the wold,
M bring him home, bring him home
Home, sweet to, bring him home.
In the sweet to as with a lovelier snow !
but this new to, I fear, Is darkness,
or the cow that jumped over the m.
perchance Up yonder with the man i' the to.
Clothed with the mystic silver of her m.
Foresters i i 269
I ii 150
IV 443
rv 508
Harold ii ii 176
The Falcon 820
Prom, of May iii 627
Foresters i iii 128
II ii 187
Queen Mary v i 80
V ii 456
Harold i ii 30
„ V i 325
Becket, Pro. 363
I i 364
IV ii 149
The Cup I ii 2
„ I ii 7
„ Iii 396
Foresters i ii 85
„ n i 436
„ n i 507
„ ni609
Moon
1011
Mother
Foresters ii ii 179
Queen Mary v v 9
Foresters ii i 395
n i 582
II i 337
Becket ii i 52
Prom, of May I 109
I 209
I 368
II 104
Voon (corttinued) light of the seas by the «i's long-
silvering ray !
Hoonlight (adj.) And how her shadow crosses one by
one The m casements
Moonlight (s) there goes one in the m. Shoot !
What sparkles in the m on thy hand ?
Moonshine He often looks in here by the m.
Moor I remember it well. There on the m's.
Moor (more) I warrants ye'U think m o' this young
Squire Edgar as ha' coomed among us —
What be he a-doing here ten mile an' m fro' a raail ?
I' mun ha' plowed it m nor a hoonderd times ;
And I would loove tha m nor ony gentleman 'ud
loove tha.
I'd think na m o' maakin' an end o' tha nor a carrion
craw — „ II 696
An' I thanks ye fur that, Miss, m nor fur the waage. „ iii 117
Moorish or closed For ever in a M tower. Foresters ii i 656
Moors He calls us worse than Jews, M, Saracens. Queen, Mary v i 150
the boy was taken prisoner by the M. Foresters i i 61
fell'st mto the hands Of these same M „ ii i 564
Mooted whene'er your royal rights Are m in our councils — Becket i iii 431
Moraine I have seen it like the snow on the m. The Falcon 506
Moral (adj.) Against the m excess No physical ache, Becket i i 381
Moral (s) Nature's m Against excess. „ i i 373
His swaddling-bands, the m's of the tribe. Prom, of May i 586
Morcar (Earl of Northumbria) M ! Why creep'st thou
like a timorous be st Harold i ii 211
M and Edwin have ^ti^r'd up the Thanes „ ii ii 288
have overthrown M and Edwin. „ iii ii 132
Tostig's banishment, and choice of M, „ iv i 105
Again ! M ! Edwin ! What do they mean ? „ iv i 133
M, it is all but duty in her To hate me ; „ iv i 153
M and Edwin, When will ye cease to plot „ iv i 160
M and Edwin, will ye, if I yield, „ iv i 175
M and Edwin, will ye upon oath, Help us „ iv i 179
We never — oh ! good M, speak for us, „ iv i 216
M, collect thy men ; Edwin, my friend — „ iv i 256
He held with M. — „ iv ii 44
And M holds with us. „ iv ii 46
Make not our M sullen : it is not wise, „ iv iii 103
Gurth, Leofwin, M, Edwin ! „ iv iii 220
Nought of M then ? " ^\ 160
I married her for M — a sin against The truth of love. „ v i 169
More 'SVf Moor
More (Sir Thomas, Lord Chancellor) Did not M die,
and Fisher ? he must bum. Queen Mary iv i 52
Moreing thou and thy youngsters are always muching and
m me. Foresters iv 296
Mom {See also Marriage-mom) Close to the grating on a
winter m The Falcon 441
Morning (adj.) Brain-dizzied with a draught of m ale. Queen Mary ii i 71
And make a m outcry in the yard ; „ ni v 158
But you, twin sister of the m star.
Their shield-borne patriot of the m star
thou that canst soar Beyond the m lark.
Morning (s) (jSee aZso May-morning, Mumin') Good
m, Noailles. Queen Mary i iii 159
Good m, my good Lord. Gardiner. That every
m of your Majesty May be most good, „ i v 98
Good m. Sir de Noailles. Noailles. A happy m
to your Majesty. Mary. And I should some
time have a happy m ;
take And wear it as memorial of a m
I am sure Her m wanted sunUght,
on that m when I came To plead to thee
and I sneezed three times this m.
in hope that the saints would send us this blessed m ;
you look as beautiful this m as the very Madonna
Where have you lain in ambush all the m ?
Is the most beautiful m of this May.
Morning (s) (continued)
thus ?
gave me this m on my setting forth.
Only this m in his agony
Morrow Good m, my Lord Cardinal ;
Who breaks the stillness of the m
Foresters i iii 51
III 282
IV 453
Queen Alary iv i 42
The Cum i iii 45
n 122
The Falcon 11
I V 242
I V 529
Harold I ii 45
The Cup II 390
The Falcon 169
186
198
Prom, of May i 545
I 569
Morsel, (See also Mossel) Come, come, the m stuct
this Cardinal's fault — „ in iv 375
Not a TO, not one m. I have broken My fast already. The Falcon 573
Mortal seeming not as brethren, But m foes ! Queen Mary iv iii 186
Because I loved thee in my m day, Harold v i 240
Is it possible That m men should bear their earthly heats „ v i 283
how he fells The to copse of faces ! „ v i 589
but the Chancellor's and the Archbishop's Together
more than to man can bear. Becket i i 24
Who stands aghast at her eternal self And shakes at to
kings — "^ „ 11 ii 405
I ask no leave of king, or w man, „ v ii 458
Out, begone ! Henceforth I am thy m enemy. The Cup i ii 330
And, lest we freeze in to apathy, „ i iii 130
O this TO house. Which we are born into. Prom, of May ii 273
' O man, forgive thy to foe, „ iii 5
But to show thou art to. Marian. M enough, If love
you make The May and to still more beautiful,
seen us that wild to when we f oimd Her bedjunslept in,
and I wish you and your ladyship's father a most
exceeding good m.
I 573
n469
Foresters i i 309
for thee be to.
Not TO ! after death, if after death —
would cower to any Of to build.
You seem, as it were. Immortal, and we to.
Mortality As may be consonant with to.
Mortally I am m afear'd o' thee, thou big man.
Mortgage thou shouldst marry one who wiU pay the m.
Himself would pay this to to his brother,
he would pay The ?» if she favour'd him.
Sheriff Would pay this cursed to to his brother
rate the land fivefold The worth of the to,
and couldst never pay The to on thy land.
Mortgaged I am ?» as thyself.
Mortice Hath no more to than a tower of cards ;
Mortify Fast, scourge thyself, and to thy flesh.
Mortifying In scourgings, macerations, m's, Fasts,
Moslem like the M beauties waiting To clasp
I that have turn'd their M crescent pale —
Heading the holy war against the M,
And cleft the M turban at my side.
Mossel (morsel) avore a could taste a to.
Most I do my to and best.
Mot blow upon it Three vi's, this fashion — hsten !
Moth Make it so hard to save a m from the fire ?
would not blur A m's wing by the touching ;
Mother My to said. Go up ; and up I went.
my good to came (God rest her soul) Of Spain,
Your royal to came of Spain,
TO, you had time and cause enough To sicken
married The m of Ehzabeth — a heretic
Here was a young to, Her face on flame,
felt the faltering of his m's heart,
I, that was never to, cannot tell How m's
nay, his noble m's, Head fell —
Before my father married my good to, —
Her foul divorce — my sainted to — No ! —
M of God, Thou knowest never woman meant so
well,
and in her agony The to came upon her —
prattling to her to Of her betrothal
Malet, thy to was an Enghshwoman ;
for my m's sake I love your England,
Speak for thy m's sake, and tell me true. Malet.
Then for my to's sake, and England's sake
And for our M England ?
for he Who vows a vow to strangle his own to
My m is a Dane, and I am English ;
TrampUng thy m's bosom into blood ?
A cleric lately poison'd his own ?«.,
My TO, ere she bore me, Dream'd that twelve stars
So did Matilda, the King's to.
took back not only Stephen's gifts. But his own m's
Age, orphans, and babe-breasting m's —
Foresters ii i 612
II i 619
II i 690
IV 1060
Queen Mary iv iii 419
Foresters iv 316
I i 280
„ I ii 263
„ I iii 7
„ II i 144
„ II i 151
„ II i 454
„ I ii 280
Queen Mary in i 442
Becket i iii 539
V i 41
Prom, of May i 246
Foresters iv 793
IV 818
„ IV 1001
Queen Mary iv iii 517
II ii 24
Foresters iv 425
Becket i i 283
Prom, of May ii 492
Queen Mary i iii 98
IV 11
I V 16
IV 23
IV 32
II ii 69
II ii 82
II ii 189
III iv 295
HI V 246
IV 181
vii340
viv20
V v232
Harold ii ii 264
„ II ii 268
„ II ii 271
„ II ii 425
„ III i 230
„ IT i 54
IV ii 26
Becket, Pro. 11
1 144
„ I iii 152
I iii 155
II i 73
Mother
1012
Move
Mother (continued) Babes, orphans, m's ! is that royal, Sire ? Bechet n i 80
that the m Would make him play his kingship
Father Philip that has confessed our m for twenty years
asked our to if I could keep a quiet tongue i' my head,
our TO 'ill sing me old songs by the hour,
she had 'em from her m, and her m from her m back
The crown ! who ? Margery. M.
but Salisbury was a calf cowed by M Church,
I only love to. Eleanor. Ay ; and who is thy m ?
a good fairy to thy to. Take me to her.
But you don't look like a good fairy. M does. You
are not pretty, like to.
golden chain I will give thee if thou wilt lead me to
thy TO. Geoffrey. No — no gold. M says gold
spoils all.
I love thy vi, my pretty boy.
M, you told me a great fib :
I have overshot My duties to our Holy M Church,
a son stone-blind Sat by his m's hearth :
and the poor m, Soon as she learnt I was a friend
and our M Church for bride ;
this love, this to, runs thro' all The world
To assail our Holy M lest she brood Too long
Divide we from the to church of England, My
Canterbury.
Artemis, Artemis, hear us, O M, hear us, and bless us !
new-made children Of our imperial to see the show,
many-breasted to Artemis Emboss'd upon it
Good TO, happy was the prodigal son.
Holy TO ! To breakfast !
yet to speak white truth, my good old to,
easier for you to make Allowance for a to —
II ii 10
ni i 112
ni i 118
mi 184
mi 186
ml 200
m iii 96
IV 19
IV 126
IV 136
„ IV i 41
IV i 44
„ IV 11370
„ V i 38
„ viiioe
„ V ii 109
„ V ii 221
„ V ii 241
„ V 11251
„ V ii 360
The Cup n 1
„ n 165
„ n 340
The Falcon 140
214
504
826
I was just out of school, I had no to — Prom, of May i 707
Wasn't dear m herself at least by one side a lady ? „ m 300
she moant coom here. What would her to saay ? „ m 459
My TO used to say that such a one Was without rudder, „ m 533
for the sake of the great blessed M in heaven, and
for the love of his own little to on earth,
come as freely as heaven's air and m's milk ?
they were bom and bred on it — it was their to —
This ring my to gave me :
My TO, For whose sake, and the blessed Queen
Quick, good TO, quick !
That by the blessed M no man,
Robin, the sweet light of a m's eye,
He was my father, to, both in one.
Mother-wit Put thou thyself and m-w together.
Motion The Queen hath felt the to of her babe !
great to of laughter among us, part real, part
childUke,
Fell with her to as she rose, and she,
Motive now the stronger m. Misnamed free-will —
when The stronger to rules.
Mon'd (mould) and the smell o' the to an' all.
the smell o' the to 'ud ha' maade ma live as long
as Jerusalem.
MonU (earth) (See also Mou'd) such fine to, that if
you sow'd therein Queen Mary iv i 170
Mould (shape) I cannot help the to that I was cast in. The Cup i iii 25
Not yet, but here comes one of bigger to. Foresters iv 115
Moold (verb) I could to myself To bear your going
better ; Queen Mary m vi 234
Moulded bolts of thunder to in high heaven Harold ii ii 32
Mouldwarp wild hawk passing overhead, The to
underfoot.
Mouldy old men must die, or the world would grow to,
nigh at the end of our last crust, and that to.
Moult bird that m's sings the same song again,
Mound Our altar is a m of dead men's clay, Queen Mary v a 161
as she was helping to build the to against the city. Foresters n i 309
let me go to make the to : bury me in the to.
Mount No, no, his horse — he m's another —
when the Gascon wine m's to my head,
m with your lordship's leave to her ladyship's
castle, The Falcon 412
Foresters i i 97
I i 210
„ I i 333
„ I ii 293
n 1 37
„ n i 193
m 239
IV 2
rv6
Harold II i 17
Queen Mary ra ii 213
Becket m iii 154
The Falcon 536
Prom, of May n 636
n 671
I 375
I 377
Foresters in 319
Becket, Pro. 409
„ m i 115
I iii 447
ni312
Harold v i 639
Becket, Pro. 113
Mountain (adj.) You know the waterfall That in the
summer keeps the to side. The Cup i i 108
This TO shepherd never dream'd of Rome. „ i ii IT
With other beauties on a m meadow, The Falcon 351
The m flowers grew thickly round about. „ 355
' Dead m flowers, dead mountain-meadow flowers, „ 461
' O TO flowers ! ' „ 474
Dead to flowers ' „ 519
Mountain (s) Inverted iEsop — -m out of mouse. Queen Mary 11 i 67
Chased deer-like up his m's, Harold i ii 148
who know His prowess in the m's of the West, „ iv i 165
crying To a m ' Stand aside and room for me ! ' „ iv iii 130
cUmb The to opposite and watch the chase. The Cup i i 117
Oh look, — yon grove upon the w, „ i ii 394
' Dead to.' Nay, for who could trace a hand The Falcon 437
Dearer than when you made your to gay, „ 463
snow yonder on the very tip-top o' the w. „ 502
Mountain-meadow (See also Meadow) ' Dead mountain
flowers, dead m-m flowers, „ 461
You bloom again, dead to-to flowers.' „ 470
Mounted We to, and we dash'd into the heart of 'em. „ 629
I was no mad, that I to upon the parapet — Prom, of May m 372
Moimting and see it to to Heaven, my God bless you, Becket 1 iv 37
Mourn She, you to for, seem'd A miracle of
gentleness— Prom, of May 11 489
Mournful Sleep, m heart, and let the past be past ! Foresters i iii 47
Mouse Inverted ^Esop — movmtain out of to. Queen Mary n i 68
She beautiful : sleek as a miller's to ! The Falcon 165
Mouth (s) From thine own m I judge thee — Queen Mary i iii 54
four guns gaped at me. Black, silent m's : „ n iii 32
Makes me his to of holy greeting. „ m ii 80
But a weak to, an indeterminate — -ha ? Bonner.
Well, a weak vi, perchance. „ m iv 340
stop the heretic's m ! Hale him away ! „ iv iii 282
tongue on un cum a-lolluping out 0' 'is to „ iv iii 519
both have life In the large to of England, Harold iv iii 74
The TO is only Clifford, my dear father. Becket n i 220
Out of th m's of babes and suckhngs, praise ! „ n ii 278
for my verses if the Latin rhymes be rolled out from
a full TO ? „ n ii 338
primm'd her to and put Her hands together — „ m i 75
cold comers of the King's to began to thaw, „ in iii 153
royal promise might have dropt into thy to „ m iii 276
Foam at the to because King Thomas, „ v i 203
he made a wry to at it, but he took it so kindly. The Falcon 191
and he never made a wry to at you, „ 194
wasn't my lady bom with a golden spoon in her
ladyship's to, „ 402
will you take the word out of your master's own to ? „ 598
feller couldn't find a Mister in his to fur me, as
farms five hoonderd haacre. Prom, of May i 303
What makes thee so down in the to ? Foresters i ii 42
though I be down in the to, I will swear „ i ii 44
may this to Never suck grape again, „ iv 393
those pale m's which we have fed will praise us — „ iv 1076
Mouth (verb) Who m and foam against the Prince of
Spain
Mouthpiece Is he thy to, thine interpreter ?
Move (s) His Highness makes his m's across the
Channel,
so you well attend to the king's m's,
I'd make a m myself to hinder that :
if I And others made that to I touch'd upon,
It is your to.
Move (verb) Why should he to against you ?
and till then I should not to.
I must not TO Until I hear from Carew and the Duke.
M, if you TO, at once.'
if we TO not now, yet it will be known
If we TO not now, Spain m's,
about our legs till we cannot to at all ;
dark dead blood that ever m's with mine
Who cannot to straight to his end —
Sir, I will TO them in your cause again,
could not TO from Dover to the Humber
Queen Mary u ii 250
Foresters i ii 212
Queen Mary i iii 134
I iii 152
in i 127
„ mi 445
Becket, Pro. 17
Queen Mary I v 282
ni3
n i 121
II i 141
n i 197
n i 201
n i 204
m i 352
rv iii 394
v i 178
Harold n ii 536
1
Move
1013
Mnrder
Move (verb) (continued) ever-jarring Earldoms m To music
and in order — Harold n ii 761
Did the chest w ? did it m ? „ n ii 799
twins that cannot M one without the other. „ m i 129
Our Saints have moved the Church that m's the world, „ v i 42
Call when the Norman m's — „ v i 230
The Norman m's ! „ v i 438
dead So piled about him he can hardly m. „ v i 658
pray Groa My Normans may but m as true with me „ v ii 184
My liege, I m my bishop. Becket, Pro. 28
Well— will you m ? ., Pro. 38
Check — ^you m so wildly. „ Pro. 40
and the walks Where I could m at pleasure, „ i i 266
I would m this wanton from his sight „ i ii 70
if he m at all. Heaven stay him, is fain to diagonalise. „ ii ii 329
you still m against him, you may have no less than to die ., m iii 325
The crowd are scattering, let us m away ! „ iii iii 357
I cannot think he m's against my son, „ v i 18
But Becket ever m's against a king. „ v i 25
Why do you m with such a stateliness ? „ v ii 622
Would I could m him, Provoke him any way ! The Cup i ii 136
love for my dying boy, M's me to ask it of you. The Falcon 788
Help me to m this bench for him into the sun. Prom, of May i 80
— the crowd would call it conscience — M's me — „ ii 639
we must M in the line of least resistance ,, ii 670
The oppression of our people m's me so. Foresters ni 109
M me no more ! I am sick and faint with pain ! „ iv 598
Robin, shall we not m? ., iv 782
Moved it will be known that we have m ; Queen Mary ii i 198
when the Duke of Norfolk m against us „ n iii 2
I never saw your Highness m till now. „ m vi 104
Where he shall rest at night, m to his death ; „ iv iii 580
Our Saints have m the Church that moves the world, Harold v i 41
Thomas, thou art m too much. Becket i i 172
state more cruelly trampled on Than had she never m. The Cup i ii 147
■ ■ - _ . - Prom, of May ii 267
III 208
Foresters ii i 164
Queen Mary in v 83
Harold I i 354
Becket n ii 36
Foresters ii i 701
Queen Man/ xix i 95
The Cup I i 9
M in the iron grooves of Destiny ?
sometimes been m to tears by a chapter of fine
writing in a novel ;
would she to beside me like my shadow !
Movement The house is all in m. Hence, and see.
There is a m there, A blind one —
There is a m yonder in the crowd —
if the followers Of him, who heads the m.
Moving m side by side Beneath one canopy,
A maiden slowl}' to on to music
Mow'd An' the midders all m, an' the sky
sa blue — (repeat) Prom, of May n 176, 188, 200
Mowt (might) What we m saay, and what we m do. Prom, of May n 191
Vr. (See also Master, Mister) I'm coming down, M
Dobson.
Wheer did they lam ye that ? Dora. In
Cumberland, M Dobson.
(Setting better, M Dobson.
The owd man be heighty to-daay, beant he ? Dora,
Yes, M Dobson.
Where do they blow, M Dobson ?
And your eyes be as blue as Dora. What,
M Dobson ?
Very likely, M Dobson. She will break fence.
What dost a knaw o' this M Hedgar as be a-lodgin'
wi' ye?
Nor I either, M Dobson.
But I have, M Dobson.
You never find one for me, M Dobson.
Hev' ony o' ye seen Eva ? Dobson. Noa, M Steer.
Wheer be M Edgar ? about the premises ?
Yeas, yeas ! Three cheers for M Steer !
But where is this M Edgar whom you praised so
in your first letters ?
Yes, M Dobson, I've been attending on his death-
bed and his burial.
Hesn't he left ye nowt ? Dora. No, M Dobson.
I thought M Edgar the best of men, and he has
proved himself the worst.
Cannot you understand plain words, M Dobson ?
I 46
I 66
I 69
I 78
I 87
I 93
1 193
1 199
I 236
I 257
I 306
I 314
I 432
1 456
1776
nS
n8
II 85
nll3
Mr. (continue) Sally Allen, you worked for M
Dobson, didn't you ? Prom, of May III 102
Him as did the mischief here, five year' sin'. Dora.
M Edgar ? „ m 141
And this lover of yours — this M Harold— is a
gentleman ? „ m 281
Please, Miss. M Dobson telled me to saay he's browt
some of INIiss Eva's roses „ m 345
Milly, my dear, how did you leave M Steer ? „ in 410
What is it ? Milly. M 'Arold, Miss. „ m 478
Much Madam, my master hears with m. alarm. Queen Mary iv 250
He hath learnt to love our Tostig m of late. Harold i i 145
He hath as to of cat as tiger in him. „ i i 154
Too TO ! What ! we must use our battle-axe to-day. „ v i 204
But wonder'd more at my to constancy To the monk-king, Becket IV ii 304
Madam, I am as to man as the King.
Thou as TO man ! No more of that ;
Pray for me too : to need of prayer have I.
This friar is of to boldness, noble captain.
M would have more,' says the proverb ;
Much (a companion of Robin Hood) Thou M, miller's
son, hath not the Earl right ?
-¥, the miller's son, I knew thy father ; He was a
manly man, as thou art, M, And gray before his
time as thou art, M.
I can sing it. Robin. Not now, good M !
I Little John, he M the miller's son, and he Scarlet,
he, young Scarlet, and he, old M, and all the rest of us.
And I, old M, say as much,
Friend Scarlet, art thou less a man than M ?
Up, good M. Tuck. And show thyself more of a
man than me.
Ay, for old M is every inch a man.
always so much more of a man than my youngsters old M.
Well, we M'es be old.
' Much would have more,' says the proverb ; but M
hath had more
Give me thy hand, M ; I love thee. At him. Scarlet !
You, good friar, You M, you Scarlet, you dear Little
John,
Muching thou and thy youngsters are always m and
moreing me.
Mud (See also Squad) I'll have the scandal sounded
to the m.
drop The to I carried, like yon brook,
I am snow to to.
My curse on all This world of to,
Mudded wolf M the brook and predetermined all.
Muddled an' maazed, an' maated, an' to ma.
Mule See Sumpter-mule
Mulieribus Ave Maria, gratia plena, Benedicta tu in to.
Mumbling Catholic, M and mixing up in his scared
prayers
our good King Kneels to some old bone —
Mummy-saints over His gilded ark of m's,
Mun (must) There to be summat wrong theer, Wilson,
fur I doant understan' it.
S'iver I to git along back to the farm,
It TO be him. Noa !
Naay, but I to git out on 'is waay now.
Dead ! It to be true, fur it wur i' print as black as owt
Then yon to be his brother, an' we'll leather 'im.
If it be her ghoast, we w- abide it.
Murder (s) (See also Self-murder) No — m fathers to :
This was against her conscience — would be m !
' Thou shalt do no w,'
when TO common As nature's death.
What doth hard w. care For degradation ?
I found a hundred ghastly m's done By men,
Covetousness, Craft, Cowardice, M ' —
whenever a to is to be done again she yells out i'
this way —
Ay, do you hear ? There may be to done.
Murder (verb) Men would to me,
some Papist ruffians hereabout Would m you.
ivii432
IT ii 461
V ii 195
Foresters TV 234
IV 308
I ii 46
I iii 146
I iii 158
ui54
in 61
in 62
in 66
IV 284
IV 289
IV 299
nrSOO
IV 308
IV 310
IV 1083
IV 296
Qweew Mary i v 228
Becket n i 159
„ IV ii 130
Prom, of May m 722
Harold v i 3
Prom, of May 11 729
Queen Mary in ii 2
„ u ii I
Harold 11 ii
„ V i 3(/
Prom, of May il
Queen Ma
4t
32
439
,735
%58
;130
1 149
Murder
1014
Naked
Hnider (verb) {continued) Robert of Jumi^es — well-nigh m
him too ? Harold i i 57
Tlie deati men made at thee to m thee, „ i ii 85
It is the flash that m's, the poor thunder „ i ii 231
but a voice Among you : m, martyr me if ye will — „ v i 78
They m all that follow. „ v i 610
for he would m his brother the State. Beclcet i iv 190
Lord hath set his mark upon him that no man should
m him. „ i iv 193
the wolves of England Must to her one shepherd, „ ni iii 344
They stood on Dover beach to m me, „ v ii 436
Win me you cannot, to me you may. Foresters iv 721
Huider'd see the holy father M before thy face ? Queen Mary i iii 65
You would not have him to as Becket was ? „ in i 334
And I the race of m Buckingham — „ in i 454
The Uttle m princes, in a pale light, „ iii v 147
Hast m thine own guest, the son of Orm, Harold iv ii 37
They have so maim'd and to all his face „ v ii 76
A cleric violated The daughter of his host, and m him. Becket i iii 383
Say that a cleric m an archbishop, „ i iii 399
Am I to be m to-night ? „ i iv 47
M by that adulteress Eleanor, ., iv ii 243
Dead ! you have m her. Found out her secret bower
and m her. „ v i 173
What matters m here, or m there ? „ v ii 630
Our gallant citizens to all in vain. The Cup i ii 142
She wa.s m here a hundred year ago. Foresters ii i 245
Murderer Make not thy King a traitorous to. Becket i iii 500
The to's, hark ! Let us hide ! „ v iii 46
Murderess M ! Eleanor. My lord, we know you proud „ iv ii 259
Murderous Were such w liars In Wessex — Harold ii i 94
The man that hath to foil a to aim May, „ n ii 417
braced and brazen'd up with Christmas wines For any
TO brawl. Becket \ ii 425
0 TO mad-woman ! I pray you lift me And make me
walk awhile. The Cup n 471
Murmur (s) there be m's, for thy brother breaks us Harold i i 108
merriest m's of their banquet clank The shackles „ n ii 408
Murmur (verb) these old oaks will to thee Marian along
with Robin. Foresters iv 1094
Mumin' (momii^) and he wur in a tew about it all
the TO ; Prom, of May 1 19
they be two o' the purtiest gels ye can see of a
summer to. „ 1 31
Good TO, neighbours, and the saame to you, my
men. „ j 317
sa ta'en up wi' leadin' the owd man about all the
blessed to „ hi 3
nine o'clock, upo' Tuesday to, „ in 136
He wur sa bellows'd out wi' the wind this to, „ in 432
Muse I will not TO upon it. Queen Mary iv ii 230
tell the King that I will m upon it ; „ v iii 90
that made me m, Being boxmden by my coronation
oath Becket i iii 395
Music in to Peerless — ^her needle perfect, Queeti Mary ni i 359
Thou art my w ! Harold i ii 25
Harold Hear the king's to, all alone with him, „ i ii 194
ever-jarring Earldoms move To to and in order — „ n ii 762
hand of one To whom thy voice is all her to, Becket ii i 177
A maiden slowly moving on to m The Cup i i 9
And TO there to greet my lord the king. „ n 191
Repeat them to their to. Count. You can touch
No chord in me that would not answer you In to. The Falcon 454
When the Church and the law have forgotten God's
TO, they shall dance to the m Foresters iv 555
Strike up our m, Little John. „ iv 559
Moncal There goes a to score along with them, The Falcon 452
I Musically That is m said. „ 458
])i Musing What are you to on, my Lord of Devon ? Queen Mary i iv 26
Well, I was TO upon that ; „ i iv 40
For I wa.s to on an ancient saw, Becket v ii 537
2[(<nasnlman I had sooner have been bom a M — „ ii ii 145
and turn me M I No God but one, „ n ii 224
Abnost as many as your true M — „ iv ii 34
list See Mofint, Mun
Muster and make M's in all the counties ; Queen Mary v ii 272
Mutable Woman is various and most to. „ in vi 135
Mute another, to as death, And white as her own milk ; „ n ii 78
And when my voice Is martyr'd to, and this man
disappears, Becket in iii 350
Why art thou m ? Dost thou not honour woman ? Foresters m 67
Mutilated M, poor brute, my sumpter-mule, Becket v ii 440'
Mutter What is that you to ? Queen Mary i v 203
Muttering And to to himself as heretofore. „ m i 16
My-lord Why do you so m-l me. Who am disgraced ? „ iv ii 176
Myriad sent his m's hither To seize upon the forts „ in i 463
Myrtle apricot, Vine, cypress, poplar, w. The Cup i i S
Myrtle-blossom And kindle all our vales with m-b, „ ii 267
Mysen (myself) I niver tliowt o' to i' that waay ; Prom, of May 1 17&
and, thaw I says it to, niver men 'ed a better master — „ i 327
fur I 'ednt naw time to maake w a scholard while I
wur maakin' to a gentleman, „ 1 333
I 410
n33
n314
ni 4
in 13
in 714
Queen Mary iv iii 141
Harold i i 200
Becket iv ii 8
Foresters ii i 608
now theer be noan o' my men, thinks I to to,
fur I'd ha' done owt fur 'er to ;
Fur boath on 'em Jinawed as well as to
'at I ha' nobbut lamed to haafe on it.
But I'll git the book agean, and lam to the rest,
O law — yeas. Sir ! I'll nm fur 'im to.
Mystery was the great m wrought ;
see Deeper into the mysteries of heaven
The folds have fallen from the to,
Mystic Clothed with the to silver of her moon.
N
Naailed (nailed) I'll hev the winder n up, and put
Towser under it. Prom, of May i 420
Naame (name) noan o' the parishes goas by that n
'ereabouts. „ 1 268
then he called me a mde n, and I can't abide 'im. „ n 159
Fanny be the n i' the song, but I swopt it fur she. „ n 211
An' we weant mention naw n's, „ m 130
says the master goas clean off his 'ead when he
'ears the n on 'im ; „ m 133
I warrants that ye goas By haafe a scoor o' n's — „ in 729
Naamed (named) Theer, Miss ! You ha' n 'im — ^not me. „ m 142
Naay (nay) N, I knaws nowt o' what foalks says, „ i 26
N then. I mean'd they be as blue as violets. „ 1 103
N, but I hev an owd woman as 'ud see to all that ; „ n 95
iV, but I mun git out on 'is waay now, „ n 609'
Nail tigress had unsheath'd her n's at last, Queen Mary in i 3
But one that pares his n's ; to me ? „ ni v 65
There you strike in the n. „ v ii 437
Nailed See Naailed
Naked Make no allowance for the w truth. Queen Mary i v 329
And leave the people n to the croAvn, And the
crown n to the people ; „ in i 119
And tropes are good to clothe a n truth, „ in iv 151
To ours in plea for Cranmer than to stand On n
self-assertion. „ iv i 120
and then Cast on the dunghill n, „ iv iii 446
Thy n word thy bond ! confirm it now Harold n ii 693
I that so prized plain word and n truth Have sinn'd
against it — ■ „ in i 93
Is n truth actable in true life ? „ in i 109
I thought that n Truth would shame the Devil The
Devil is so modest. „ in i 118
I left our England n to the Soutli To meet thee
in the North. „ vi 289
They are stripping the dead bodies n yonder, „ v ii 34
Life on the hand is n gipsy-stuff ; Becket n i 193^
she sits w by a great heap of gold in the middle of
the wood, „ in ii 21
And left all n, I were lost indeed. „ iv ii 9
but n Nature In all her loveUness. Prom, of May i 598
Flung by the golden mantle of the cloud, And sets,
a n fire. Foresters ii i 29
Nakedly
1015
Nawbody
Nakedly That, were a man of state n true, Harold in i 113
Nakedness to spy my n In my poor North ! „ i i 352
Name (s) (See also Naame) your n Stands first of
those who sign'd Queen Mary i li 16
your worship's n heard into Maidstone market, „ ii i 62
The n's of Wyatt, Ehzabeth, Courtenay, „ n ii 94
Elizabeth — Her n is much abused „ n ii 110
Speak ! in the n of God ! „ ii ii 271
Thy w, thou knave ? Man. I am nobody, my Lord. „ ni i 246
God's passion ! knave, thy n? „ iii i 249
Find out his n and bring it me. „ iii i 253
What is thy n ? Man. Sanders. „ iii i 312
In our own n and that of all the state, „ in iii 120
How many n's in the long sweep of time „ in v 39
But that Thy n by man be glorified, „ iv iii 153
Ay, but they use his n. „ v i 129
you will find written Two n's, Philip and Calais ; „ v v 155
miracles will in my 7i be wrought Hereafter. — Harold i i 183
Thou shalt be verily king — all but the n — „ n ii 633
Why cry thy people on thy sister's n? „ iv i 21
in the n of the great God, so be it ! „ iv i 239
no ! — not once — in God's n, no ! Becket, Pro. 126
It much imports me I should know her n. „ i i 193
May plaister his clean n with scurrilous rhymes ! „ i i 308
When Canterbury hardly bore aw. „ i iii 60
I'll have the paper back — blot out my n. „ i iii 287
Blessed is he that cometh in the n of the Lord ! „ i iii 758
Shame fall on those who give it a dog's n — „ n i 142
Son, I absolve thee in the n of God. „ ii ii 443
foimd thy n a charm to get me Food, roof, and rest. „ v ii 96
in thy n I pass'd From house to house. „ v ii 102
if Kosamumd is The world's rose, as her n imports „ v ii 263
in his n we charge you that ye keep This traitor „ v ii 509
Save him, his blood would darken Henry's n; ,, v iii 11
Your n ? Synorix. Strato, my n. Sinnatus. No
Roman n ? Synorix. A Greek, my lord ; The Cup i i 198
n's of those who fought and fell are like „ i ii 164
For whether men maUgn thy n, or no, „ i iii 84
in your lordship's and her ladyship's n. The Falcon 415
mentioned her n too suddenly before my father. Prom, of May u 23
Her phantom call'd me by the n she loved. „ ii 242
Taught her the learned n's, anatomized „ n 302
Might I ask your n ? Harold. Harold. „ ii 393
five years' absence, and my change of n, „ ii 616
My n is Harold ! Good day, Dobbins ! „ ii 726
I spoke of your n's, AUen, „ iii 35
your own n Of Harold sounds so English „ ni 609
And what was Your n before ? „ in 618
0 yes ! In the n of the Regent. Foresters i iii 55
Ay, ay, because I have a n for prowess. „ ii i 560
in the n of all our woodmen, present her with „ in 57
a traitor coming In Richard's n — „ iv 781
Your n's will cling like ivy to the wood. „ iv 1085
Name (verb) N him ; the Holy Father will confirm
him. Becket, Pro. 244
My fault to n him ! „ ii i 175
when those, that n themselves Of the King's part, „ v ii 428
Named {See also Naamed) proud of my ' Monk-King,'
Whoever w me ; „ n ii 102
Nameless Corpse-candles gliding over n graves — Harold in i 381
Namesake your Scottish n marrying The Dauphin, Queen Mary v i 134
which King Harold gave To his dead n, Harold iv iii 110
Nap his manners want the n And gloss of court ; Queen Mary tii v 70
Napkin I will bind up his wounds with my n. Becket i iv 107
Naples the Netherlands, Sicily, N, Lombardy. Queen Mary n i 212
he is King, you know, the King of N. The father
ceded N, that the son Being a King, „ in i 73
Granada, N, Sicily, and Milan, — „ v i 44
The Pope would cast the Spaniard out of iV' : „ v i 149
Napoleon make the soil For Caesars, Cromwells,
and N's Prom, of May m 593
Nard N, Cinnamon, amomum, benzoin. The Cup ii 184
Narrow and the French fleet Rule in the n seas. Queen Mary v i 7
but at times They seem to me too n, Harold in ii 64
1 send my voice across the n seas — „ v i 246
Narrow (continued) And in a w path,
thee.
But in this n breathing-time of life
I hate Traditions, ever since my n father.
He met a stag there on so w a ledge —
Narrowing Gone n down and darkening to a close
out of the eclipse N my golden hour !
Narrowness It is the heat and n of the cage
God's revenge upon this realm For n and coldness :
Nation comes a deputation From our finikin fairy n.
A plover flew before
Becket u i 53
The Cup I i 29
Prom, of May I 492
Foresters if 531
Queen Alary iv iii 431
Becket n i 203
Queen Mary m v 207
Harold I i 174
Foresters n ii 145
IV 340
in V 73
IV 121
rvil76
IV iii 189
V ii 102
Becket n i 171
Prom, of May m 724
II 714
n718
Native Feehng my n land beneath my foot, I said
thereto : ' Ah, n land of mine. Queen Mary ni ii 47
And wrought his worst against his n land, The Cup i ii 177
Natur (nature) N \ N \ Well, it be i' my n to knock Prom, of May i 287
Natur' (nature) It's humbUng — it smells o' human n. Becket i iv 238
Natural the people Claim as their n leader — Queen Mary i iv 210
You cannot Learn a man's nature from his n foe
Nay swears, it was no wicked wilfulness, Only a
n chance.
By seeking justice at a stranger's hand Against
my n subject.
These are but n graces, my good Bishop,
Hurt no man more Than you would harm your
loving n brother
Gone beyond him and mine own n man (It was
God's cause) ;
A sane and n loathing for a soul Purer,
all the foul fataUties That blast our n passions
into pains !
Naturally N enough ; for I am closely related
N again ; for as I used to transact all his business
Nature (See also Natur) I am of sovereign n, that I
know. Queen Mary i iv 258
You cannot Learn a man's n from his natural foe. „ i v 340
Nor shame to call it n. „ in v 77
craft that do divide The world of m ; „ m v 121
For the pure honour of our common n, „ iv iii 298
Why, n's licensed vagabond, the swallow, „ v i 20
Does he think Low stature is low n, „ v ii 434
Things that seem jerk'd out of the common rut Of N Harold i i 139
I loved according to the main purpose and intent
of n. Becket, Pro. 502
And know the ways of N. „ i i 257
N's moral Against excess. „ i i 373
when murder common As n's death, „ i iii 344
I doubt not from your nobleness of n, The Falcon 804
my nobleness Of n, as you deign to call it, „ 811
It is N kiUs, And not for her sport either. Prom, of May i 272
— ^is not that the course of N too, „ i 279
this poor N ! Dohson. Natur ! Natur ! „ 1 286
but naked N In all her loveliness. „ 1 599
strain to make ourselves Better and higher than N, „ i 604
N a liar, making us feel guilty Of her own faults. „ ii 269
equal for pure innocence of n. And loveliness of
feature. >, n 372
Here crawUng in this boundless N. „ ni 637
worse ofi than any of you, for I be lean by n. Foresters i i 45
Till N, high and low, and great and small „ i ii 326
for, God help us, we lie by n. „ n i 238
Weak n's that impute Themselves to their unlikes, „ n i 690
Of a w Stronger, sadder than my own, „ ii ii 188
yet in tune with N and the bees. „ iv 32
Natured See Hard-natured, Noblest-natured
Naught (See also Nought) and since the Sheriff left
me n but an empty belly. Foresters n i 279
Nave n and aisles all empty as a fool's jest ! Queen Mary iv iii 286
Navy and might have sunk a n — Becket ill iii 125
Naw (no) thaw I beant n scholard, fur I 'ednt n time
to maake mysen a scholard Prom, of May i 332
He 'ant n pride in 'im, and we'll git 'im to speechify
for us arter dinner. „ 1 439
thou hesn't n business 'ere wi' my Dora,
we worked n wuss upo' the cowd tea ;
An' we weant mention n naames,
Nawbody (nobody) why there wudn't be a dinner for n,
n735
ni58
in 130
1 149
Nawbody
1016
News
Nawbody (nobody) (continued) When ye thowt there
were n watchin' o' you, Prom, of May u 179
Nay See Naay
Neap-tide the reahn is poor, The exchequer at n-t : Queen Mary i v 121
Near They call me n, for I am close to thee And
England — Harold ni i 6
Stay 1 — too n is death. The Cup i iii 104
Nearer For I will come no n to your Grace ; Queen Mary ni v 200
No n to me ! back ! Foresters iv 692
Nearest (adj.) She had but follow'd the device of
those Her n kin : Queen Mary in i 380
Nearest (s) Who stands the n to her. „ v ii 416
The Atheling is n to the throne. Harold ii ii 569
Nearness Upon my greater n to the birthday Foresters ii i 44
Necessity Statesmen that are wise Shape a n, Queen Mary in iii 33
bound To that n which binds us down ; Harold v i 108
so we could not but laugh, as by a royal n — Becket in iii 159
Neck on his m a collar, Gold, thick with diamonds ; Queen Mary in i 78
and weight of all the world From off his n to mine. „ iii vi 214
rear and run And break both n and axle. Harold i i 374
See here this little key about my n ! „ in i 10
swear nay to that by this cross on thy n. Becket, Pro. 370
Has wheedled it off the King's n to her own. „ iv ii 201
not yield To lay your n beneath your citizen's heel, „ v. i 31
upon a n Less lovely than her own. The Falcon 55
I wore the lady's chaplet round my n ; „ 631
I lay them for the first time round your n. „ 908
Swear to me by that relic on thy n. Prince John. I
swear then by this relic on my n — Foresters i ii 170
twist it round thy n and hang thee by it. „ iv 688
Neck-broken Huntsman, and hound, and deer were all
n-h ! The Cup i ii 24
Necklace if we will buy diamond n's To please our lady, The Falcon 44
She should return thy n then. „ 70
Need (s) Ask me for this at thy most n, son Harold, At
thy most n — Harold ni i 14
No n I no n \ . . . There is a bench. Becket n i 123
Good Prince, art thou in n of any gold ? Foresters i ii 162
Need (verb) I n thee not. Why dost thou follow me ? Harold n ii 231
Needed fly like bosom friends when n most. The Falcon 527
Needle — in music Peerless — her n perfect, Queen Mary iii i 360
Negative (See also Positive-negative) Or answer'd them
in smiling n's ; „ iv iii 603
not a heart like a jewel in it — that's too n ; The Falcon 92
Neighbour he was my n once in Kent. Queen Mary n iii 85
good n. There should be something fierier than
fire „ V iv 25
my foundation For men who serve the n, Harold v i 98
Good murnin', n's, and the saame to you, my men. Prom, of May i 31 7
Neighing N and roaring as they leapt to land — Harold iv iii 197
Neither No friendship sacred, values n man Nor woman
save as tools — • Foresters iv 713
Nene (river) Gone hawking on the N, Becket i iii 3
Nescience Back into n with as little pain Prom, of May ii 341
Nest (s) (See also Home-nest) then would find Her n
within the cloister, Harold iv i 234
A n in a bush. Becket. And where, my liege ? Becket, Pro. 155
And where is she ? There in her English n? „ Pro. 178
I wrong the bird ; she leaves only the n she built, „ i iv 46
came upon A wild-fowl sitting on her n, „ v ii 234
lark, that warblest high Above thy lowly «, Prom, of May m 200
all in all to one another from the time when we
first peeped into the bird's n, „ ni 274
When I and thou will rob the n of her. Foresters i ii 161
So that myself alone may rob the n. Prince John.
Well, well then, thou shalt rob the n alone. „ i ii 166
Nest (verb) nor priestly king to cross Their billings ere
they n. Harold m ii 95
Nested Knows where he n — ever comes again. Queen Mary v i 26
Net (s) We be fishermen ; I came to see after my n's. Harold n i 27
thou hast them in thy n. Becket n ii 287
No rushing on the game — the n, — the n. The Cup i i 170
Net (verb) How dense a fold of danger n's him round, Harold n ii 17
Netherlands Heir of this England and the N ! Queen Mary i v 418
nearer home, the N, SicUy, Naples, Lombardy. „ n i 212
Qv^en Mary iii iv 106
V i 46
Netherlands (continued) Look to the N, wherein
have been
The voices of Franche-Comt€, and the N,
Never See Niver
Never-dawning Shall mark out Vice from Virtue in
the gulf Of n-d darkness ? Prom, of May i 542
New (adj.) out you flutter Thro' the n world, go zigzag. Queen Mary i iv 54
But hatch you some n treason in the woods. „ i v 465
None so n, Sir Thomas, and none so old, Sir Thomas.
No n news that Philip comes to wed Mary, no old
news that all men hate it. „ n i 14
Look at the N World — a paradise made hell ; .. ii i 207
The n Lords Are quieted with their sop of Abbey-
lands, ,, ni i 140
The light of this n learning wanes and dies : „ ni ii 172
Well, Madam, this n happiness of mine ? „ in ii 208
N learning as they call it ; „ iv i 78
in the Testaments, Both Old and N. „ iv iii 234
But she's a heretic, and when I am gone, Brings
the n learning back. „ v i 202
But this n Pope CaraflEa, Paul the Fourth, ,. v ii 32
A n Northumberland, another Wyatt ? „ v v 188
That palate is insane which cannot tell A good dish
from a bad, n wine from old. Becket, Pro. 106
I care not for thy n archbishoprick. „ i i 217
Shall I forget my n archbishoprick And smite thee „ i i 220
It well befits thy n archbishoprick To take the vaga-
bond woman ,. i i 225
That Map, and these n railers at the Church ., i i 306
What, this ! and this ! — what ! n and old together ! „ i iii 309
Die for a woman, what n faith is this ? The Cup i iii 67
One ghost of all the ghosts — as yet so n, „ ii 142
We cannot flaunt it in n feathers now : The Falcon 42
and her affections Will flower toward the light in
some n face. Prom, of May i 486
tide Of full democracy has overwhelm'd This Old
World, from that flood ^vill rise the N, „ i 595
When the great Democracy Makes a n world — „ i 672
Neither the old world, nor the n, nor father, „ i 674
Oh, last night. Tired, pacing my n lands at
Littlechester, „ n 647
and I have Ughted On a n pleasure. ,. n 669
will give him, as they say, a n lease of life. ,. m 424
but this n moon, I fear. Is darkness. Foresters i ii 85
whereon the throstle rock'd Sings a n song to the
n year — „ i iii 28
We must fly from Robin Hood And this n queen
of the wood. „ ii ii 139
Shall drink the health of our n woodland Queen. „ ni 314
Drink to the health of our n Queen o' the woods, „ in 368
We drink the health of thy n Queen o' the woods. „ iii 372
so thou fight at quarterstaS for thy dinner with
our Robin, that will give thee a n zest for it, „ iv 209
or shall I call it by that n term Brought from the
sacred East, „ iv 704
New (adv.) Ay, that am I, n converted, but the old
leaven sticks to my tongue yet. Queen Mary i iii 47
New-made n-m children Of our imperial mother see the
show. The Cup n 164
And I could see that as the n-m couple Game from
the Minster, Queen Mary in i 93
News N to me ! It then remains for your poor
Gardiner, ., i v 219
N abroad, William ? „ n i 13
No new n that Philip comes to wed Mary, no old
n that all men hate it. „ n i 16
There is n, there is n, „ ii i 58
Good n have I to tell you, n to make „ in ii 186
iV, mates ! a miracle, a miracle ! « ! „ m ii 209
whether this flash of n be false or true, „ m ii 234
whether it bring you bitter n or sweet, „ in v 201
(The n was sudden) I could mould myself „ m vi 234
Reginald Pole, what n hath plagued thy heart ? „ v ii 17
Madam, he may bring you n from Philip. „ v ii '229
I bring your Majesty such grievous n „ v ii 240
News
1017
Noa
_ Ifews (continued)
for thee.
there is a post from over seas With n
N from England ?
Ill w for guests, ha, Malet !
Ill n hath come ! Our hapless brother,
but worse n : this William sent to Rome,
Goodly n ! Morcar. Doubt it not thou !
Harsh is the n ! hard is our honeymoon !
And thou, my carrier-pigeon of black n,
disappear'd, They told me, from the farm — and
darker n.
No n of young Walter ?
but we have no n of Richard yet,
I trust he brings us n of the King's coming.
Give me some n of my sweet Marian.
Black n, black n from Nottingham !
we have certain n he died in prison.
Newspaaper (newspaper) — what s the n word, Wilson ?
— celebrate — Prom, of May i 320
New-wakeoing all the leaf of this N-w year. The Falcon 340
New year Sings a new song to the n y — Foresters i iii 28
Ne^ Who shall crown him ? Canterbury is dying.
Becket. The n Canterbury.
And is the King's if too high a stile for your lordship
to over-step and come at all things in the n field ?
which he Gainsays by n sunrising —
A child's sand-castle on the beach For the n wave —
the n time you waste them at a pothouse you get
Harold n ii 210
n ii 287
n ii 302
in ii 120
III ii 140
IV i 219
IV iii 229
IV iii 233
Prom, of May n 408
Foresters i i 72
,. I ii 94
„ I iii 53
„ II 1481
„ III 446
„ IV 778
Becket, Pro. 241
„ m iii 282
„ IV ii 278
The Cup I ii 255
no more from me.
Nicholas (Archbishop of York and Lord Chancellor)
{See also Nicholas Heath) I wish you a
good morning, good Sir N :
Sir N tells you true,
Sir iV ! I am stunn'd — Nicholas Heath ?
Spite of your melancholy Sir N,
Nicholas Heath Sir N H, the Chancellor, Would see your
Highness.
Madam, your Chancellor Sir N H. Mary. Sir Nicholas !
I am stunn'd— TV H ?
Nicholas (Saint) By St. N I have a sudden passion
By St. N They must have sprung hke Ghosts
Niece Prince of fluff and feather come To woo you, n,
Look to it, n, He hath no fence when Gardiner
Ay, good n ! You should be plain and open with
me, n.
love that men should smile upon you, n.
They will not, n. Mine is the fleet
Night (See also Grood-night, To-night) I see but the
black n, and hear the wolf.
It breaks my heart to hear her moan at n
Last n I climb'd into the gate-house, Brett,
Out of the dead, deep n of heathendom.
Those damp, black, dead N's in the Tower ;
a fox may filch a hen by n,
Last n, I dream'd the faggots were alight,
happy haven Where he shall rest at n,
horses On all the road from Dover, day and n ; On
all the road from Harwich, n and day ;
Good n ! Go home. Besides, you curse so loud,
there once more — this is the seventh n !
last n An evil dream that ever came and went —
beast of prey Out of the bush by w ?
passing by that hill three n's ago —
Walk'd at n on the misty heather ; N, as black as a raven's
feather ;
banner, Blaze like a »i of fatal stars
Last n King Edward came to me in dreams —
(repeat)
I have ridden n and day from Pevensey —
Last n I followed a woman in the city here.
Follow me this Rosamund day and n.
That rang Within my head last n,
flutter out at n ?
Good n ! good n !
Both, good n !
Prom, of May ni 99
Queen Mary v i 14
V i 16
V ii 250
v ii 327
V ii 225
V ii 249
Foresters i iii 121
IV 591
Queen Mary i iv 164
I iv 202
I iv 216
I iv 275
I iv 286
IV 413
IV 604
n iii 14
III iii 173
in V 139
III V 157
IV ii 1
IV iii 580
V ii 578
viv61
Harold i i 2
„ I ii 69
„ iii214
mi 366
in ii5
IV 1251
Harold iv i 259, 265
IV iii 192
Becket, Pro. 468
Pro. 506
1 171
1 1282
11313
ii406
Night (continued) But the miller came home that n, Becket i iv 173
My friends, the Archbishop bids you good n. „ i iv 262
to bid you this n pray for him who hath fed „ i iv 266
Like sudden n in the main glare of day. „ ii i 57
Who thief-like fled from his o^vn church by n, „ ii ii 157
Madam, not to-night — the n is falling. „ iii ii 52
she says she can make you sleep o' n's. „ iv ii 20
evil song far on into the n Thrills to the topmost tile — „ v ii 208
Save by that way which leads thro' n to light. „ v iii 88
close not yet the door upon a n That looks hjjf day. The Cup i ii 388
crowd that hunted me Across the woods, last n. .. i iii 17
came back last n with her son to the castle. The Falcon 3
The n, As some cold-manner'd friend „ 641
The stock-dove coo'd at the fall of n, Prom, of May i 41
whose cheerless Houris after death Are N and Silence, „ i 251
I laame't my knee last n running arter a thief.
Immanuel Goldsmiths was broke into o' Monday n,
Who shrieks by day at what she does by n,
Oh, Philip, Father heard you last n.
I will fly to you thro' the n, the storm —
last n Tired, pacing my new lands at Littlechester,
that dreadful n ! that lonely walk to Littlechester,
I cannot sleep o' n's by cause on 'em.
In the n, in the day,
having lived For twenty days and n's in mail,
Or in the babny breathings of the n.
Nightingale not to hear the n's, But hatch you some
new treason
The lark above, the 71 below.
Mad for thy mate, passionate n . . .
The n's in Haveringatte-Bower
I dumb thee too, my wingless n !
Here to the n's.
not in tune, a n out of season ;
I keep it to kill n's. John. N's ?
This is no bow to hit n's ;
Nightmare As tho' the n never left her bed.
Must be the n breaking on my peace
Nihilist I that have been call'd a Socialist, A Com-
munist, a N —
Nimble The n, wild, red, wiry, savage king —
Nine The conduit painted — the n worthies — ay !
And I ha' n darters i' the spital that be dead
And the other n ? Filippo. Sold !
Ninepin more of a man than to be bowled over like a n
Nineteen After the n winters of King Stephen —
Ninetieth Tliis is my n birthday, (repeat)
Niobe How gracefully there she stands Weeping —
the little TV!
Nip N, n him for his fib.
N him not, but let him snore.
Nipper Count-crab will make his n's meet
Nipt Her life was winter, for her spring was n :
Niver (never) Theer ye goas agean, Miss, n believing
owt I says to ye —
I n thowt o' mysen i' that waay ;
leastwaays they n cooms 'ere but fur the trout
N man 'ed better friends, and 1 will saay n master
'ed better men ;
and, thaw I says it mysen, n men 'ed a better master—
I n 'es sa much as one pin's prick of paain ;
fur I n touched a drop of owt till my oan wedding-daiiy,
thaw me and 'im we n 'grees about the tithe ;
thaw he n mended that gap i' the glebe fence
Blacksmith, thaw he n shoes a herse to my likings
he tell'd me 'at sweet'arts n worked well togither ;
Fur she'd n 'a been talkin' haafe an hour
Fur she n knawed 'is f aace when 'e wur 'ere afoor ;
I ha w been surprised but once i' my life,
No See Naw, Noft
NoS (No) N, Joan, (repeat) Quem Mary iv iii 480, 483, 485
N, not a bit. Pmm. of May i 34
N, Miss. I ha'n't seed 'er neither. „ 1 48
N, Miss Dora ; as blue as — (repeat) „ i 95, 99
N, but I haates 'im. ,, i 217
I 387
I 393
I 533
I 557
I 702
II 646
III 366
Foresters 11 i 384
„ II ii 182
IV 124
IV 1068
Qv,een Mary i v 464
n i 52
Harold i ii 2
„ I ills
„ I ii 24
„ mil 90
Becket, Pro. 350
Foresters 11 i 380
IT i 391
Queen Mary i v 605
Becket II i 36
Prom, of May in 585
Harold iv i 197
Queen Mary in i 258
Becket i iv 249
The Falcon 411
Foresters iv 305
Becket i iii 338
Harold IV i 121, 127
Prom, of May i 736
Foresters n ii 121
II ii 122
Harold 11 i 76
Queen Mary v v 270
Prom, of May 1 107
I 176
I 212
I 322
I 327
I 359
I 361
i444
i446
I 447
nl56
n603
II 606
in 439
Noa
1018
Norman
No& (no) (contimied) N, fur thou be nobbut school-
master;
N, Mr. Steer.
N ; I laame't my knee last night numing arter a thief
N ; I knaws a deal better now.
N, n ! Keep 'em.
N, not yet.
Philip Hedgar o' Soomerset ! — N — yeas —
It mim be him. N !
m — thaw they hanged ma at 'Size fur it.
N, Miss ; we worked naw \niss upo' the cowd tea ;
0 lor, Miss ! n,n,n\
Noailles (French Ambassador) I am mighty popular
with them, N.
Good morning, N.
King of France, N the Ambassador,
Good morning. Sir de N.
A letter which the Count de N wrote
Noan (none) but n o' the parishes goas by that name
'ereabouts.
now theer be n o' my men, thinks I to mysen,
Miss Dora, that I ha' been n too sudden wi' you,
Mea ? why, it be the Lord's doin', n o' mine ;
Nobbnt (only) {See also Nubbut) Noa, fur thou be n
schoolmaster ;
fur I wur n a laabourer,
if I could ha' gone on wi' the plowin' n the smell o'
the mou'd
and it seems to me n t'other day.
and if ye would n hev me,
'at I ha' n larned mysen haafe on it.
Noble (adj.) By God's light a n creature, right royal !
but to my mind the Lady Elizabeth is the more n
and royal.
Well, that's a n horse of yours, my Lord.
A king to be, — is he not n, girl ?
No, by the holy Virgin, being n,
Swear with me, n fellow-citizens, all.
And that this n realm thro' after years
do triumph at this hour In the reborn salvation of a
land So n.
But this most n prince Plantagenet, Our good Queen's
cousin — dallying over seas Even when his brother's,
nay, his n mother's. Head fell —
Out, girl, you wrong a n gentleman.
N as his young person and old shield.
Doth he not look n? I had heard of him in battle
over seas.
Courage, n Aldwyth ! Let all thy people bless thee !
1 found him all a n host should be.
I can but love this n, honest Harold,
■whereby we came to know Thy valour and thy value, n earl.
Thou must swear absolutely, n Earl.
' If ye side with William Ye are not w.'
O « Harold, I would thou couldst have sworn.
This is n ! That sounds of Godwin.
N Gurth ! Best son of Godwin ! If I faU, I fall-
dashes it on Gurth, and Gurth, Our n Gurth, is down !
for were all, my lord, as n as yourself, who would
look up to you ? Becket ni iii 306
0 God, O n knights, O sacrilege ! „ v iii 178
A n anger ! but Antonius To-morrow will demand yoiu-
tribute— The Cup i ii 95
A gallant boy, A n bird, each perfect of the breed. The Falcon 320
A n saying — and acted on would yield A nobler breed
of men and women. „ 753
Nothing but my brave bird, my n falcon, „ 873
Why then the dying of my n bird Hath served me better
than her living — „ 900
Ay, n Earl, and never part with it. Foresters i ii 303
Not till she clean forget thee, n Earl. „ i ii 306
Av dear Robin ! ah n captain, friend of the poor ! „ ii i 182
iv Robin. „ m 185
1 thank you, n sir, the very blossom Of bandits. „ in 246
I thank you, n sir, and wiU pray for you „ in 250
Prorti. of May 1 307
I 314
I 386
n26
n44
n 132
n588
n602
n 697
in 58
ni92
Queen Mary i iii 102
I iii 159
I iv 110
I V 242
V ii 496
Prom, of May i 268
I 409
n60
m 49
I 307
I 329
I 376
n6
II 73
„ in 4
Queen Mary i i 69
I i 72
„ I iv 143
I V 4
I V 70
„ n ii 296
„ m iii 156
„ in iii 183
„ in iv 291
m v 68
„ V ii 513
V V 32
Harold i ii 182
,. II ii 10
„ n ii 94
nil 202
n ii 716
n ii 789
III i 325
IV ii 57
vil34
vi642
Noble (adj.) (continued) This friar is of much boldness,
n captain. Rohin. He hath got it from the bottle,
n knight. Foresters IV 235
Damsel, is this the truth ? Marian. Ay, n knight. „ iv 771
Noble (S) have marked the haughtiness of their n's ; Queen Mary n i 169
Spain moves, bribes our n's with her gold, „ n i 202
Could Harry have foreseen that all our ?i.'s Would perish „ mill?
We have given the church-lands back: The n's
would not ; „ v i 172
all the magistracy, aU the w's, and all the wealthy ; „ v iv 51
N's we dared not touch. „ v v 104
he speaks to a ?i as tho' he were a churl, and to a churl
as if he were a n. Becket, Pro. 455
Nobleness I doubt not from your n of nature. The Falcon 803
Nobler Tell him the Saints are n than he dreams. Tell him
that God is n than the Saints, Harold v i 55
What n ? men must die. „ v i 270
Go therefore like a friend slighted by one That hath
climb'd up to n company. Becket i i 351
A sane and natural loathing for a soul Purer, and truer
and n than herself ; „ n i 172
and acted on would yield A n breed of men and women. The Falcon 755
n The victim was, the more acceptable Might be the
sacrifice. „ 879
if our true Robin Be not the n lion of the twain. Foresters iv 396
Nobler-looking Ay, but n-l. Queen Mary i v 322
Noblest I am the n blood in Europe, Madam, „ i iv 84
the n light That ever flash'd across my life. Foresters in 140
Noblest-natored scorns The 7i-n man alive, and I — The Falcon 259
Nobody (See also Nawbody) Thy name, thou knave ?
31a7i. I am n, my Lord. Queen Mary ni i 247
Nod A life of n's and yawns. „ i iii 116
With Cain belike, in the land of N, Becket i iv 196
No-hows (unsatisfactorily) and so brought me n-h as I may
say, „ m i 129
Noise make what n you will with your tongues, Queen Mary i i 6
What n was that ? she told us of arm'd men Becket v ii 226
Nokes (a character in Queen Mary) Old iV', can't it make
thee a bastard ? Queen Mary i i 28
No, old .Y. Old Nokes. It's Harry ! „ i i 33
Nokes (a farm hand) Luscombe, N, Oldham,
Skipworth ! Prom, of May ni 53
Nolo N episcopari. Henry. Ay, but N Archiepiscopari, Becket, Pro. 284
None See Noan
Nonsense That's all n, you know, such a baby as you
are. Prom, of May il?)^
I am glad my n has made you smile ! „ in 314
Noon a bat flew out at him In the clear n, Foresters n ii 97
monies should be paid in to the Abbot of York, at the
end of the month at n, and they are delivered here
in the wild wood an hour after n. „ iv 508
Norfolk (Duke of) when the Duke of N moved
against us Queen Mary n iii 2
Norman (adj.) (See also Demi-Norman) Did ye not cast
with bestial violence Our holy N bishops down from
all Their thrones Harold i i 50
I have a N fever on me, son, And cannot answer sanely ... „ i i 87
Is not the N Count thy friend and mine ? » i i 247
And bolts of thunder moulded in high heaven To serve
the A' purpose, „ n ii 34
They have taken away the toy thou gavest me. The N
knight. „ n ii lOT
Well, thou shalt have another N knight ! ., n ii 114
Stay— as yet Thou hast but seen how N hands can strike.
But walk'd our N field, „ ii ii 171
And we will fill thee full of iY sun, „ u ii 180
And he our lazy-pious iY King, „ n ii 444
Then our modest women — I know the N license — thine
own Edith— „ n ii 477
if there sat within the iY chair A ruler all for England — „ n ii 533
We could not move from Dover to the Humber Saving
thro' N bishopricks — „ n ii 538
Ay, ay, but many among our iY lords Hate thee for this, „ n ii 544
confirm it now Before our gather'd N baronage, „ n ii 695
I know your iY cookery is so spiced. It masks all this. „ n ii 810
Norman
1019
Northumbria
Norman (adj.) (continued) They have built their castles here ;
Our priories are N ; the N adder Hath bitten us : Harold iii i 37
To save thee from the wrath of N Saints. Stigand.
N enough ! „ m i 217
Not mean To make our England N. ,. mi 250
Or N ? Voices. No ! „ iv i 64
Who shook the N scoundrels off the throne, „ iv i 81
Keep that for N William ! „ iviii 169
William the N, for the wind had changed — „ iv iii 181
His N Demiel ! Mene, Mene, Tekel ! „ v i 35
No N horse Can shatter England, standing shield by
shield ; „ v i 194
But by all Saints — Leofwin. Barring the N\ „ v i 225
The N arrow ! „ v i 483
All the N foot Are storming up the hill. „ v i 522
The N Coimt is down. „ v i 553
Truth ! no ; a lie ; a trick, a N trick ! „ v i 607
His oath was broken — O holy iV Saints, „ v i 617
and see beyond Your A' shrines, pardon it, pardon it, „ v i 620
I cannot love them, For they are N saints^ — „ v ii 9
Make them again one people — i\', EngUsh ; And
English, N ; „ v ii 188
There was a httle fair-hair'd N maid Lived in my
mother's house : Becket v ii 260
that he calls you oversea To answer for it in his N courts. „ v ii 355
I am none of your delicate N maidens who can only
broider Foresters i i 212
This John — this N tyranny — the stream is bearing us
all down, „ i i 238
our John By liis -V arrogance and dissoluteness, „ ii i 85
Dear, in these days of N license, when Our English
maidens are their prey, if ever A N damsel fell
into our hands, „ iii 178
Where lies that cask of wine whereof we plunder'd
The A' prelate? „ m 308
Earl, thou when we were hence Hast broken all our
N forest laws, „ rv 886
Norman (s) rest of England bow'd theirs to the N, Queen Mary n i 160
Our friends, the N's, holp to shake his chair. I have a
Norman fever on me, son, Harold i i 85
it threatens us no more Than French or N. „ i i 135
Because I love the N better — no, „ i i 171
my father drove the N's out Of England ? — „ i i 252
As up To fight for thee again ! „ n ii 58
Count of the A''s, thou hast ransom'd us, „ n ii 157
The N's love thee not, nor thou the N's, „ ii ii 253
And he our lazy-pious Norman King, With all his N's
roimd him once again, „ n ii 445
I have heard the N's Count upon this confusion — „ n ii 458
Descends the ruthless A'— „ n ii 467
thou and he drove our good N's out From England, „ n ii 525
Saving thro' Norman bishopricks — I say Ye would
applaud that A' who should drive „ n ii 539
because we found him A A^ of the N's. „ n ii 582
Angle, Jute, Dane, Saxon, A', „ n ii 763
let earth rive, gulf in These cursed N's — „ u ii 783
If e'er the N grow too hard for thee, „ in i 12
wholesome use of these To chink against the A^, „ m i 22
Not mean To make oiu: England Norman. Edward.
There spake Godwin, Who hated all the N's ; „ ni i 252
Be kindly to the N's left among us, „ ni i 303
will ye upon oath. Help us against the A^ ? „ iv i 181
Holy Father Hath given this realm of England to the A^ „ v i 14
The N, What is he doing? „ v i 217
Call when the N moves — „ v i 230
The Norseman's raid Hath helpt the A^, „ v i 292
when I sware Falsely to him, the falser N, „ v i 303
The A^ moves ! „ v i 438
and they fly — the N flies. „ v i 541
They fly once more, they fly, the A'^ flies ! „ v i 596
The A^ sends his arrows up to Heaven, „ v i 666
A^, thou liest ! liars all of you, „ v ii 104
My N's may but move as true with me ,, v ii 184
like his kingly sires. The N's, striving still Becket iv ii 442
both fought against the tyranny of the kings, the N's. Foresters i i 230
Norman-blooded I say not this, as being Half N-b, Harold i i 16^
Normandy if it pass. Go not to A — go not to N. Harold.
And wherefore not, my king, to A^ ? „ i i 235
And why not me, my lord, to A^ ? „ i i 246
I pray thee, do not go to N. „ i i 250-
That he should harp this way on A' ? „ i i 271
' I pray you do not go to A.' „ n ii 218
But for my father I love A^. „ n ii 270-
Go not to A' — (repeat) „ n ii 327
I am thy fastest friend in N. „ ii ii 556
When he was here in N, He loved us and we him, „ n ii 579-
Foremost in England and in A^ ; „ n ii 631
For I shall most sojourn in A^ ; „ n ii 634
And that the Holy Saints of N „ ii ii 727
From all the holiest shrines in A ! „ n ii 735-
And W\jlfnoth is alone in A. „ in i 81
Praying for A" ; „ v i 219
When I am out in A' or Anjou. Becket, Pro. 144
Barons of England and of A', „ i iii 742:
A hundred, too, from N and Anjou : „ ii ii 173
Normanism He hath clean repented of his A^. Harold ni i 30
Normanize — Plays on the word, — and A"s too ! „ ni i 388
Normanland in A^ God speaks thro' abler voices, „ i i 165
but those of N Are mightier than our own. „ m i 223
Norseland hugest wave from A^ ever yet Surged on us, „ iv iii 62
Have we not broken Wales and A^ ? „ v i 395
Norseman Would ye be Norsemen ? Voices. No ! „ iv i 62
That these wiU follow thee against the Norsemen, „ iv i 158-
will ye, if I yield, Follow against the N ? „ iv i 177
Where Ue the Norsemen ? on the Derwent ? „ iv i 253
Why didst thou let so many Norsemen hence ? „ iv iii 33
The N's raid Hath helpt the Norman, „ v i 290'
North Stays longer here on our poor n than you : — Queen Oiary v i 24
Hath taken Scarboro' Castle, n of York ; „ v i 287
Is the A^ quiet, Gamel ? Harold i i 107
to spy my nakedness In my poor A' ! „ i i 353
For if the A^ take fire, I shoiild be back ; „ i ii 67
shake the A^ With earthquake and disruption — „ i ii 199-
And all the A^ of Humber is one storm. „ n ii 291
Hast thou such trustless jailors in thy A^ ? „ n ii 685
A^ and South Thunder together, „ in i 391
the truth Was lost in that fierce A', „ m ii 2&
Are landed A' of Humber, and in a field „ m ii 126
Well then, we will to the A^. „ in ii 139-
Should care to plot against him m the A'. „ iv i 167
Conjured the mightier Harold from his A^ „ iv ii 69
send the shatter'd A' again to sea, „ iv iii 140*
Who made this Britain England, break the A' : „ iv iii 155
in South and A' at once I could not be. „ iv iii 218
To meet thee in the A^ „ v i 290
— your n chills me. Becket, Pro. 330
thro' all the forest land A' to the Tyne : Foresters n i 89
There was a man of ours Up in the n, „ iv 530
Northampton on a Tuesday did I fly Forth from A^ ; Becket v ii 287
North-east the N-e took and turned him South-west, then „
the South-west turned him N-e, „ n ii 320'
Northmnberland (Northumbria) Thou art a great voice in A" ! Harold i i 114
I heard from thy A to-day. „ i i 350
Wash up that old crown of A. „ v i 167
Northumberland (Earl of) and death to N ! Queen Mary i i 67
she spoke even of A' pitifully, „ i i 93
I do believe he holp A' „ i v 27&
when you put A^ to death, „ i v 485
never whine Like that poor heart, A^, „ n ii 333
Was not Lord Pembroke with A' ? „ n iv 8
His breaking with A^ broke A^. „ n iv 13
False to N, is he false to me ? „ n iv 39
Why, ev'n the haughty prince, A^, „ in i 147
The stormy Wyatts and N's, „ in ii 168
A new A^, another Wyatt ? „ v v 188
Northumbria (ancient earldom) When didst thou hear
from thy N ? Harold i i 281
Leave me alone, brother, with my A' : „ i i 286-
I heard from my A^ yesterday. „ i i 331
How goes it then with thy A^ ? „ i i 333-
Northumbria
1020
Oan
Tforthumbria (ancient earldom) (continued) fain had calcined
all N To one black ash, Harold mi 56
I come for mine o^vn Earldom, my N ; ,, iv ii 30
N threw thee off, she will not have thee, „ iv ii 33
Northumbrian (adj.) Among the good N folk, „ i ii 220
Our old N crown, And kings of our own choosing. ,, iv i 31
Of the N helmet on the heath ? „ v i 144
Northumbrian (s) if his N's rise And hurl him from them, — „ ii ii 455
Thou didst arouse the fierce N's ! „ v i 347
And that the false N held aloof, „ v ii 165
Norway (country) and the giant King of N, Harold
Hardrada — ., iii ii 122
as having been so bruised By Harold, king of iV ; ., iv i 10
Norway (King) He hath gone to kindle N against England, „ iii i 79
Since Tostig came with N — „ iv i 173
I am foraging For N's army. „ iv ii 6
Free thee or slay thee, N will have war ; No man
would strike with Tostig, save for N.
Thou art nothing in thine England, save for N,
What for N then ? He looks for land among us,
sequel had been other than his league With N,
Here by dead N without dream or dawn !
Nose cackling of bastardy under the Queen's own n ?
Who rub their fawning n's in the dust,
God hath blest or cursed me with a n —
God hath given your Grace a n, or not,
rose but pricks his n Against the thorn,
when I was a-getting o' bluebells for your ladyship's
n to smell on —
wait Till his n rises ; he will be very king.
Lady Marian holds her n when she steps across it.
Nosing See Carrion-nosing
Nostril puffed out such an incense of unctuosity into
the n's of our Gods of Church and State,
Note He never yet could brook the n of scorn.
play the n Whereat the dog shall howl
Nothing (See also Naught, Nought, Nowt, Something-
nothing) N ? Alice. Never, your Grace.
What such a one as Wyatt says is n :
And n of the titles to the crown ;
he is free enough in talk, But tells me n.
They know n ; They bum for n.
but say the world is n —
N, Madam, Save that methought I gather'd
N ; but ' come, come, come,' and all awry,
quiet, ay, as yet — N as yet.
Make not thou The n something.
On a sudden— at a something — for a n —
Anything or w ?
he would answer n, I could make n of him ;
N from you ! (repeat)
we be beggars, we come to ask o' you. We ha' n
Second Beggar. Rags, n but our rags. Foresters iii 190
Notice I have n from our partisans Within the city Queen Mary ii iii 51
A n from the priest, Becket iii iii 3
Flutter'd or flatter'd by your n of her, The Falcon 538
Nottingham Thou knowest that the Sheriff of N loves
thee. . Foresters i i 223
The Sheriff of N was there — not John. „ i i 252
Beware of John and the Sheriff of N. ,. i i 255
What art thou, man ? Sheriff ot N? „ i ii 191
in N they say There bides a foul witch „ ii i 202
if thou wilt show us the way back to N. „ ii i 361
is it true ? — That John last week retum'd to iV, „ iii 147
Part shall go to the almshouses at N, „ iii 206
That business which we have in N — „ in 230
And may your business thrive in iV ! „ in 245
I know them arrant knaves in N. „ in 302
Black news, black news from N ! „ iii 447
I go to N. Sheriff, thou wilt find me at N. „ iv 800
No, let him be. Sheriff of N, „ iv 815
Honest (nothing) There's n but the vire of God's
hell Queen Mary iv iii 526
M0T6l sometimes been moved to tears by a chapter
of fine writing in a n ; Prom, of May iii 209
„ IV ii 18
„ rv ii 23
„ IV ii 52
„ IV iii 89
., IV iii 122
Queen Mary i i 59
„ HI iii 242
„ in V 179
„ in V 203
EaroU i i 422
Becket iii i 162
V ii 184
Foresters I i 84
Becket m iii 116
V ii 299
Harold I ii 191
Qu^en Mary i v 574
ni i 139
in i 383
in ii 194
v ii 113
V ii 368
v iii 101
V V 15
Harold i i 111
I i 363
1 1443
The Falcon 133
Prom, of May in 496
III 802, 809
Noviciate Breaking already from thy n Becket v ii 80
Small peace was mine in my n, „ v ii 87
Noway and I n doubt But that with God's grace, I
can live so still. Quun Mary n ii 218
Nowt (nothing) I knaws n o' what foalks says. Prom, of May i 27
N — what could he saay ? „ 1 152
But if that be n to she, then it be n to me. „ 1 182
Hesn't he left ye n ? Dora. No, Mr. Dobson. „ n 7
I were insured, Miss, an' I lost n by it. „ ii 58
Out o' the chaumber ! I'll mash tha into n. „ ni 735
Nubbut (only) (See also Nobbut) Owd Steer gi'es n cowd
tea to 'is men, and owd Dobson gi'es beer. „ n 224
Numb'd Has often n me into apathy Against the „ 1 227
Number'd We dally with our lazy moments here,
And hers are n. Queen Mary \ iii 109
Nun Thou art my n, thy cloister in mine arms. Harold i ii 63
saw thy willy-nilly n Vying a tress „ v i 148
What shall it be ? I'll go as a m. Becket. No.
Rosamund. What, not good enough Even to
play at n? Becket. Dan John with a n,
That Map, Becket i i 301
thy solitude among thy n's, May that save thee ! „ v ii 176
Nunnery Put her away into an! „ Pro. 65
Come thou with me to Godstow n, „ iv ii 366
To put her into Godstow n. (repeat) Becket y i 208, 210
He bad me put her into a n — Becket v i 214
Get thee back to thy n with all haste ; „ v ii 163
Nurse (s) The n's yawn'd, the cradle gaped. Queen Mary in vi 93
My n would tell me of a molehill Harold iv iii 128
My good old n, I had forgotten thou wast sitting
there. The Falcon 34
You can take it, « ! „ 490
my n has broken The thread of my dead flowers, „ 521
I thank you, ray good n. „ 560
And thou too leave us, my dear n, alone. „ 701
Ay, the dear n will leave you alone ; „ 702
1 have anger'd your good n ; „ 707
Our old n crying as if for her own child. Prom, of May n 479
Nursery (adj.) Then she got me a place as n governess, „ m 385
Nursery (s) That may seem strange beyond his w. Queen Mary n ii 396
Nursery-cocker'd The n-c child will jeer at aught „ n ii 394
Nursery-tale That n-t Still read, then ? Prom, of May ni 525
Nut woodland squirrel sees the n Behind the shell, Foresters ii i 647
On n's and acorns, ha ! Or the King's deer ? „ iv 882
Oaf o's, ghosts o' the mist, wills-o'-the-wisp ; Foresters n i 263
Oak (See also Shambles-oak) Pine, beech and plane,
o, walnut. The Cv/p i i 1
whose storm-voice Unsockets the strong o, „ n 283
Such hearts of o as they be. Foresters n i 4
And these rough o's the palms of Paradise ! „ n i 169
Here's a pot o' wild honey from an old o, „ n i 296
before the shadow of these dark o's ., n i 605
hundreds of huge o's, Gnarl'd — „ m 91
In that o, where twelve Can stand upright, „ m 309
Our feast is yonder, spread beneath an o, „ iv 190
Meanwhile, farewell Old friends, old patriarch o's. „ iv 1054
yet I think these o's at dawn and even, „ rv 1066
these old o's will murmur thee Marian along with Robin. „ iv 1093
Oaken present her with this o chaplet as Queen of the wood, „ in 59
Oak-tree Come from out That o-t ! „ iv 998
Oan (own) and he calls out among our o men, ' The
land belongs to the people ! ' Prom, of May 1 140
fur I niver touched a drop of owt till my o
wedding-daay, „ 1 362
then back agean, a-follering my o shadder — „ i 371
an' them theer be soom of her o roses, „ n 38
the Lord bless 'er — 'er o sen ; „ n 40
I would taake the owd blind man to my o fireside. „ n 74
Oan
1021
Old
Ofin (own) (continued) and you should sit i' your o
parlour quite like a laady, ye should ! Prom, of May ii 97
Fur she'd niver 'a been talkin' haafe an hour wi'
the divil 'at killed her o sister, „ n 604
'Oape (hope) They can't be many, my dear, but I 'o's
they'll be 'appy. „ 1 353
Oath To bind me first by o's I could not keep, Queen Mary i v 557
he freed himself By o and compurgation Harold n ii 520
he hath not bound me by an o— Is ' ay ' an o ? is
' ay ' strong as an o ? „ n ii 661
same sin to break my word As break mine o? „ n ii 665
thou hast sworn an o Which, if not kept, „ n ii 738
— am grateful for thine honest o, „ n ii 756
Hast thou had absolution for thine o? „ ni i 212
0 son, when thou didst tell me of thine o, „ in i 268
my son ! Are all o's to be broken then, „ mi 286
lost Somewhat of upright stature thro' mine o, „ ni ii 57
will ye upon o, Help us against the Norman ? ,, iv i 180
devil Hath haimted me — mine o — my wife — ,. v i 318
My fatal o — the dead Saints — the dark dreams — „ v i 380
His o was broken^ — O holy Norman Saints, „ v i 616
He that was false in o to me, „ v ii 151
Being bounden by my coronation o To do men justice. Becket i iii 396
that merits death, — False o on holy cross — „ iv ii 209
Ob Wouldst thou call my Oberon O ? Foresters n ii 131
Never O before his face. „ ii ii 133
Obedience promise full Allegiance and o to the
death. _ Queen Mary ii ii 169
in this unity and o Unto the holy see „ in iii 157
His tractate upon True O, „ iv i 92
serviceable In all o, as mine own hath been : Harold iii i 292
by that canonical o Thou still hast owed Becket i iii 275
Fealty to the King, o to thyself ? „ i iii 587
Obedient — the world A most o beast and fool — Queen Mary rv iii 414
Oberon And capering hand in hand with 0. Foresters ii i 498
Wouldst thou call my 0 Ob ? „ n ii 131
for 0 fled away Twenty thousand leagues to-day. „ n ii 142
Obey Well, well, you must o ; Queen Mary i iv 253
1 must o the Queen and Council, man. „ iv ii 164
O your King and Queen, and not for dread „ iv iii 177
Sire, I 0 you. Come quickly. „ v i 220
And yet I must 0 the Holy Father, „ ^.."^®
O the Count's conditions, my good friend. Harold ii ii 276
Seem to o them. „ n ii 280
O him, speak him fair, „ u ii 317
0 my first and last commandment. Go ! „ v i 359
Didst thou not promise Henry to o These ancient laws Becket i iii 17
Sign and o ! „ i iii 132
Sign, and o the crown ! „ i iii 144
And swear to o the customs. „ i iii 270
1 promised The King to o these customs, „ i iii 557
That thou o, not me, but God in me, „ i iii 721
since we likewise swore to o the customs, „ v i 54
No man to love me, honour me, o me ! „ v i 240
Still I must 0 them. Fare you well. The Cup i i 158
Up with you, all of you, out of it ! hear and o. Foresters ii ii 185
You hear your Queen, o ! « m 464
Obeyed who had but o her father ; Queen Mary i i 95
the child o her father. „ i v 494
crown Would cleave to me that but o the crown, Becket v i 50
Oblil^tion With bitter o to the Count— Harold n ii 221
every bond and debt and o Incurr'd as Chancellor. Becket i iii 710
Obliged you worked well enough, and I am much o
to all of you. From, of May m 62
Observance all manner of homages, and o's, and circum-
bendibuses. Foresters i i 103
Obtain by your intercession May from the Apostolic
see 0, Queen Mary m iii 147
Occasion on a great o sure to wake As great a wrath in
Beckett- Becket m i 87
They seek — you make — o for your death. „ v ii 558
two-legg'd dogs Among us who can smell a true o, The Cup i ii 113
but this day has brought A great o. The Falcon 489
Occupy that anyone Should seize our person, o our
state, Qu^en Mary n ii 178
Ocean And roll the golden o's of our grain. The Cup ii 26^
or wreckt And dead beneath the midland o, Foresters ii i 657
Odd (adj.) Make us despise it at o hours, my Lord. Queen Mary iv iii 386
I have to pray you, some o time, „ v i 258
But doth not the weight of the flesh at o times over-
balance the weight of the church, ha friar ? Foresters i ii 61
Odd (s) They are all too much at o's to close at once Queen Mary i v 632
n i 139
Foresters iv 318
Harold n ii 347
„ II ii 356
The Cup n 185
I i 110
Queen Mary m iii 191
„ IV iii 77
Becket I iii 408-
Queen Mary III iii 144
Prom, of May iii 630-
Queen Mary i v 210
Gardiner knows, but the Council are all at o's,
But seeing valour is one against all o's,
Odo (Bishop of Bayeux) coming with his brother 0 The
Bayeux bishop,
and O said, ' Thine is the right.
Odour Let all the air reel into a mist of o,
O'erleap after rain o's a jutting rock And shoots
Offal with 0 thrown Into the blind sea of forget-
fulness.
scum And o of the city would not change
men, the scum and o of the Church ;
Offence As persons undefiled with our o,
and mighty slow To feel o's.
Offend You o us ; you may leave us.
You o us. Gardiner. These princes are like childreiri, „ i v 232
It is the crown O's him — The Cup n 530'
Offended 1 have o against heaven and earth Queen Mary iv iii 124
since my hand o, having written Against my heart, „ iv iii 247
' This hath o — this unworthy hand ! ' „ rv iii 613
Offending You have an old trick of o us ; „ m iv 315
Offer a formal o of the hand Of Philip ? „ i v 349-
The formal o of Prince Philip's hand. „ i v 588
Offer'd has o her his son Philip, the Pope and the Devil. „ i i 105
a hundred Gold pieces once were o by the Duke. The Falcon 324
Has he o you marriage, this gentleman ? Prom, of May in 289-
Offering See Peace-offering
Office I have lost mine o. Queen Mary i v 236
Spain in all the great o's of state ; „ ii i 17&
no foreigner Hold o in the household, „ m iii 72.
set up The Holy O here — ^garner the wheat, „ v v 113
tell the cooks to close The doors of all the o's below. „ v v 117
Love him ! why not ? thine is a loving o, Harold n ii 97
fill'd All o's, all bishopricks with EngUsh — „ ii ii 535
I had been so true To Henry and mine o Becket i iii 693
both of us Too headlong for our o. „ ii ii 290-
Nor make me traitor to my holy o. „ v ii 149
You should attend the o, give them heart. „ v ii 598
He said, ' Attend the o.' Becket. Attend the o? „ v ii 608-
get you back ! go on with the o. „ v iii 33
Back, I say ! Go on with the o. „ v iii 39'
Officer the Queen's O's Are here in force Queen Mary i ii 108
by the judgment of the o's of the said lord king, Foresters i iii 65
Ofs King Hath divers o and ons, o and belongings, Becket rv ii 32:
Oftener But you were o there. I have none but you. „ in i 5^
Oil I Scraped from your finger-points the holy o ; Queen Mary iv ii 133
Olaf (a Norwegian king) St. O, not while I am by ! Harold i i 395
Old (adj.) (See also Owd, Owld) 0 Nokes, can't it make
thee a bastard ?
No, 0 Nokes. Old Nokes. It's Harry,
for thou was born i' the tail end of o Harry the Seventh.
I was born true man at five in the forenoon i' the tail
of o Harry,
but I and my o woman 'ud bum upon it.
Ay, but he's too o.
0 Bourne to the life !
Yon gray o Gospeller, sour as midwinter. Begin with him.
By the mass, o friend, we'll have no pope here
Ay, that am I, new converted, but the o leaven sticks
to my tongue yet.
but this fierce o Gardiner — his big baldness,
or wave And wind at their o battle : he must have
written.
Not yet ; but your o Traitors of the Tower —
Why comes that o fox-Fleming back again ?
None so new. Sir Thomas, and none so o, Sir Thomas.
No new news that Philip comes to wed Mary, no
0 news that all men hate it. 0 Sir Thomas would
have hated it.
Queen Mary i i 28'
1 133
1 142
ii4&
ii5&
Iil21
I iii 3a
I iii 40
I iii 42
I iii 48
iiv263
IV 357
IV 483.
IV 581
nil5
Old
1022
Old
Old (adj.) (continued) 0 Sir Thomas always granted the
wine. Queen Mary n i 41
Ay — sonnets — a fine courtier of the o court, o Sir
Thomas.
Wake, or the stout o island will become A rotten
limb of Spain,
you that have kept your o customs upright,
I have been there with o Sir Thomas, and the beds
I know.
Ay, gray o castle of Alington, green field Beside the
brimming Medway,
They go like those o Pharisees in John Convicted
by their conscience.
And scared the gray o porter and his wife.
I know not my letters ; the o priest taught me nothing,
Far liefer had I in my country hall Been reading
some o book, with mine o hound Couch'd at my
hearth, and mine o flask of wine Beside me,
I am an o man wearied with my journey, Ev'n with
my joy.
and are well agreed That those o statutes touching
Lollardism
0 Rome, that first made martyrs in the Church,
You have an o trick of offending us ;
Touch him upon his o heretical talk,
^len now are bow'd and o, the doctors tell you,
Our 0 friend Cranmer, Your more especial love,
there's An o world English adage to the point.
Cool as the light in o decaying wood ;
Monsters of mistradition, o enough To scare me
into dreaming,
Good day, o friend ; what, you look somewhat worn ;
in the Testaments, Both 0 and New.
Crying, ' Forward ! ' — set our o church rocking,
[ Hist ! there be two o gossips — gospellers.
And the gray dawn Of an o age that never will be
mine
Probing an o state-secret — how it chanced That this
young Earl
Noble as his yoxmg person and o shield.
Ah, weak and meek o man. Seven-fold dishonour'd
0, miserable, diseased,
/ am a harm to England. 0 imcanonical Stigand —
Stand by him, mine o friend.
So says o Gurth, not I : yet hear ! thine earldom,
Tostig, hath been a kingdom. Their o crown Is
yet a force among them,
and I beat him. Even o Gurth would fight. I had
much ado To hold mine own against o Gurth.
O Gurth,
1 dug mine into My o fast friend the shore,
Counts his o beads, and hath forgotten thee.
our good King Kneels mumbling some o bone —
1, 0 shrivell'd Stigand, I, Dry as an o wood-fungus
on a dead tree,
I do believe My o crook'd spine would bud out two
young wings
No, not strange This was o human laughter in o Rome
Our o Northumbrian crown. And kings of our own
choosing.
Your 0 crown Were little help without our Saxon
carles
There is a pleasant fable in o books,
This o WuUnoth Would take me on his knees and
tell me tales
0 man, Harold Hates nothing ; not his fault,
So loud, that, by St. Dunstan, o St. Thor —
but our o Thor Heard his own thunder again,
0 dog. Thou art drunk, o dog !
Wash up that o crown of Northumberland.
And chanting that o song of Brunanburg Where
England conquer'd.
And our o songs are prayers for England too !
but I, o wretch, o Stigand, With hands too limp
to brandish iron — „ v i 447
II 146
nil04
nil58
II i 184
II 1243
nils
n iii 16
n iii 57
„ ni i 44
„ in ii 127
„ m iv 7
„ in iv 126
„ in iv 315
„ in iv 352
„ in iv 408
„ III iv 416
„ IV i 175
„ IV ii 5
„ IV ii 102
„ IV ii 115
„ IV iii 234
„ IV iii 403
„ IV iii 460
V ii 234
V ii 487
V ii 513
V V 132
V V 178
Harold i i 81
1 1112
1 1302
11436
n i 7
nii447
n ii 469
mi 7
mi 24
m ii 163
IV 131
IV 134
IV 156
IV i 71
IV i 128
IV iii 146
IV iii 149
IV iii 163
vil67
vi215
vi222
Old (adj.) (continued) He is chanting some o warsong. Harold v 1 495
War-woodman of o Woden, how he fells The mortal
copse of faces !
and most amorous Of good o red sound liberal
Gascon wine :
believe thee The veriest Galahad of o Arthur's hall.
Well, well, o men must die, or the world would grow
mouldy.
The good o man would sometimes have his jest —
You will do much To rake out all o dying heats,
I hate a split between o friendships as I hate the
dirty gap
And that o priest whom John of Salisbury trusted
Hath sent another,
for to be sure it's no more than a week since our o
Father Philip
tho' to be sure our mother 'ill sing me o songs
for the 0 King would act servitor and hand a dish
to his son ;
Mine o friend, Thomas, I would there were that
perfect trust between us,
You could not — o affection master'd you,
I know not why You call these o things back again.
The 0 King's present, carried off the casks.
And lose his head as o St. Denis did.
May they not say you dared not show yourself In
your o place ?
I am not mad, not sick, not o enough To doat on one
alone.
It is o, I know not How many hundred years,
we would add Some golden fringe of gorgeousness
beyond 0 use,
Did not some o Greek Say death was the chief good ?
This 0 thing here they are but blue beads — my Piero,
Ay, my lady, but won't you speak with the o woman first.
And yet to speak white truth, my good o mother,
It's the 0 Scripture text, ' Let us eat and drink,
for to-morrow we die.'
' What are we,' says the blind o man in Lear ?
I hate tears. Marriage is but an o tradition.
That fine, fat, hook-nosed uncle of mine, o Harold,
will each Bid their o bond farewell with smiles, not
tears ;
for when the tide Of full democracy has overwhelm'd
This 0 world,
Tut ! you talk O feudalism.
Neither the o world, nor the new, nor father,
And poor o father not die miserable.
Our o nurse crying as if for her own child,
I do not dare, like an o friend, to shake it.
I have always told Father that the huge o ashtree
there would cause an accident some day ;
for, indeed, he tells me that he met you once in
the o times,
and when the children grew too o for me,
your Father must be now in extreme o age.
We Steers are of o blood, tho' we be fallen,
and your own name Of Harold sounds so English
and so o
I be lanker than an o horse turned out to die on the
common,
and your Ladyship hath sung the o proverb out of
fashion.
And how often in o histories have the great men striven
against the stream,
I am 0 and forget. Was Prince John there ?
o faces Press roimd us, and warm hands close with
warm hands,
Ay, ay, gown, coif, and petticoat, and the o woman's
blessing with them to the last fringe.
Except this o hag have been bribed to lie. Robin.
We 0 hags should be bribed to speak truth,
There is but one o woman in the hut.
There is yet another o woman.
0 hag, how should thy one tooth drill thro' this ?
„ V i 588
Becket, Pro. 100
„ Fro. 129
„ Pro. 408
I i 61
„ n ii 114
II ii 380
„ in i 110
in i 184
„ m iii 138
„ ni iii 262
V ii 143
V ii 270
V ii 442
V ii 480
V ii 596
The Cup I iii 69
n342
II 439
n513
The Falcon 47
182
504
Prom, of May i 258
I 263
I 491
1 510
I 524
I 594
I 670
I 674
I 722
n479
n526
m244
m263
m387
ra400
m604
in 610
Foresters i i 51 ' j
I i 164
11242
11250
I iii 18
11 i 195
ni234
11 i 241
ui244
ni275
Old
1023
One
Old (adj.) (continiied) There's for you, and there's for
you — and the o woman's welcome. Foresters ii i 290
The 0 wretch is mad, and her bread is beyond me : „ ii i 291
Here's a pot o' wild honey from an o oak, „ n i 296
And, o hag tho' I be, I can spell the hand. „ n i 350
Why do you listen, man, to the o fool ? „ n i 358
All the sweet saints bless your worship for your alms
to the o woman ! „ ii i 364
How should this o lamester guide us ! „ ii i 369
Why, an o woman can shoot closer than you two. „ n i 400
and make thine o carcase a target for us three. „ ii i 404
Did I not tell you an o woman could shoot better ? „ ii i 407
Thou art no o woman — thou art disguised — thou art
one of the thieves. „ u i 410
0 as I am, I will not brook to see Three upon two. „ ii i 422
A brave o fellow but he angers me. „ ii i 471
He is o and almost mad to keep the land. „ ii i 528
thou wast by And never drewest sword to help the o
man „ ii i 541
The o man dotes. „ u ii 83
And I, o Much, say as much, for being every inch a
man 1 honour every inch of a woman. „ m 62
When the flower was wither'd and o. „ iv 22
at last I crawl'd like a sick crab from my o shell, „ iv 126
Ay, for o Much is every inch a man. „ iv 289
Because thou art always so much more of a man than
my youngsters o Much. Much. Well, we Muches
be o. Robin. O as the hills. Much. 0 as the mill. „ iv 299
Where is this o Sir Richard of the Lea ? „ iv 438
and thus This o Sir Richard might redeem his land. „ iv 487
By 0 St. Vitus Have you gone mad ? „ iv 614
And this o crazeling in the litter there. „ iv 634
Child, thou shalt wed him. Or thine o father Avill
go mad — ^he will, „ iv 645
Carry her off, and let the o man die. „ iv 677
Meanwhile, farewell 0 friends, o patriarch oaks. „ iv 1054
And surely these o oaks will murmur thee Marian
along with Robin. „ iv 1093
Old (s) and watch The parch'd banks rolling incense,
as of o, Queen Mary i v 92
Should not this day be held in after years More
solemn than of o ? „ m iii 91
This hard coarse man of o hath crouch'd to me „ iv ii 169
but I know it of o, he hates me too ; „ v ii 60
Did not Heaven speak to men in dreams of o ?
Harold. Ay — well — of o. Harold i ii 95
What, this ! and this ! — what ! new and o together ! Becket i iii 310
We have had our leagues of o with Eastern kings. The Cup i ii 101
Perhaps I thought with those of o, The Falcon 878
Olden Is like a word that comes from o days. Queen Mary ni v 34
Let these decide on what was customary In o days, Becket ii ii 176
I am eleven years o than he is. Queen Mary i v 68
1 am eleven years o than he. Poor boy ! „ v v 46
oaks, Gnarl'd — o than the thrones of Europe — Foresters in 92
Oldest Becket, I am the o of the Templars ; Becket i iii 247
I am the o of thy men, and thou and thy youngsters Foresters iv 294
Old-fashioned I have heard that ' your Lordship,' and
' your Ladyship,' and ' your Grace ' are all grow-
ing o-f ! Prom, of May in 318
But the love of sister for sister can never be o-f. „ m 320
Oldham Luscombe, Nokes, 0, Skipworth ! „ ni 53
Old-world There was an o-w tomb beside my
father's, Queen Mary v ii 393
these o-w servants Are all but flesh and blood The Falcon 707
full democracy has overwhelm'd This O w, Prom, of May i 594
learnt at last that all His o-w faith, „ n 332
<Nive-branch more of o-b and amnesty For foes at home — Becket v ii 15
Ominous Not steigger'd by this o earth and heaven : Harold i i 207
Ommost (almost) Seeams I o knaws the back on 'im — Prom, of May n 577
One There is but o thing against them. Queen Mary i i 100
and sever'd from the faith, will return into the o
true fold, „ i iii 22
Calais ! Our o point on the main, the gate of France ! „ i v 125
Spain and we, O crown, might rule the world. „ i v 303
But Philip never writes me o poor word, „ i v 360
One (continued) For Philip comes, o hand in mine,
and o Steadying the tremulous pillars of the
Church^ Queen Mary i v 515
They are all too much at odds to close at once In
o full-throated No !
you stroke me on o cheek. Buffet the other.
So I say Your city is divided, and I fear 0 scruple.
Am I Thomas White ? O word before she comes.
And arm and strike as with o hand,
moving side by side Beneath o canopy,
They smile as if content with o another.
0 crater opens when another shuts.
but I say There is no man — there was o woman
with us —
Nay come with me — o moment !
You were the o sole man in either house Who
stood upright
1 say you were the o sole man who stood.
I am the o sole man in either house.
Well, you o man, becaase you stood upright,
If any man in any way would be The o man, he
shall be so to his cost.
yet I found 0 day, a wholesome scripture,
call they not The o true faith, a loathsome idol-
worship ?
there comes a missive from the Queen It shall
be all my study for o hour
with free wing The world were all o Araby.
0 half Will flutter here, o there.
Methinks that would you tarry o day more (The
news was sudden)
For 0 day more, so far as I can tell.
Then o day more to please her Majesty,
retum'd To the a Catholic Universal Church,
Repentant of his errors ?
Pray with o breath, o heart, o soul for me.
What, not o day ?
and it was thought we two Might make o flesh,
No — we were not made 0 flesh in happiness, no
happiness here ; But now we are made o flesh
in misery ;
And there is o Death stands behind the Groom,
And there is o Death stands behind the Bride —
and to send us again, according to His promise,
the 0 King, the Christ,
Ay, worse than that — not o hour true to me !
Why then the wrath of Heaven hath three tails.
The devil only o.
But heaven and earth are threads of the same loom,
Play into o another.
It is but for o moon.
And all the North of Hmnber is o storm.
Harold, I am thy friend, o life \vith thee.
Sir Count, He had but o foot, he must have hopt away,
were or should be all 0 England, for this cow-herd, like
my father.
Ye heard o witness even now.
1 have not spoken to the king 0 word ; and o I must.
Farewell !
Whose life was all o battle, incarnate war,
Make thou o man as three to roll them down !
No, no — brave Gurth, o gash from brow to knee !
But 0 woman ! Look you, we never mean to part again.
Death ! — and enough of death for this o day.
Of o self-stock at first, Make them again o people —
True, 0 rose will outblossom the rest, o rose in a
bower,
but I fear this o fancy hath taken root,
And goodly acres — we will make her whole ; Not o
rood lost.
So that you grant me o sUght favour.
And some are reeds, that o time sway to the current,
Grant me o day To ponder these demands,
she holds it in Free and perpetual alms, unsubject
to 0 earthy sceptre. „ i iii 681
IV 634
II i 117
n ii 100
II ii 109
II ii 292
m i 97
mi 211
mi 322
III i 337
in ii 189
in iii 252
III iii 263
III iii 265
III iii 268
III iii 276
III iv 84
m iv 219
III V 184
m V 210
in vi 196
ni vi 233
ni vi246
III vi 247
IV iii 21
IV iii 104
vi209
V ii 137
V ii 150
viil65
viv53
V vl59
Harold i i 62
„ I i 211
„ I ii 30
„ nii291
„ nii649
„ nii675
„ IV i 79
„ IV i 170
„ V i 336
„ V i 397
„ V i 577
„ V ii 70
., V ii 79
„ viil20
„ viil86
Becket, Pro. 345
„ Pro. 480
I i 165
I ii 58
I iii 593
I iii 668
One
1024
Open
One (continued) Who stole the widow's o sitting hen o'
Sunday, when she was at mass ? Becket i iv 121
And I ha' nine darters i' the spital that be dead ten
times o'er i' o day wi' the putrid fever ; „ i iv 251
With Becket ! I have but o hour with thee — „ ii i 24
Let there not be o frown in this o hour. „ n i 43
We have but o bond, her hate of Becket. „ n i 165
My o grain of good counsel which you will not swallow. „ n ii 378
leave Lateran and Vatican in o dust of gold — „ n ii 475
And 0 fair child to fondle ! „ in i 12
I but ask'd her 0 question, and she primm'd her mouth „ m i 74
and bad me whatever I saw not to speak o word, „ in i 133
and then not to speak o word, for that's the rule o' the
garden, „ in i 137
tho' I shouldn't speak o word, I wish you joy o' the
King's brother. „ mi 154
Yet o thing more. Thou hast broken thro' the pales
Of privilege, „ in iii 192
I am bound For that o hour to stay with good King Louis, „ in iii 247
He said thy life Was not o hour's worth in England „ m iii 251
O word further. Doth not the fewness of anything
make the fulness of it in estimation ? „ in iii 301
the wolves of England Must murder her o shepherd, „ in iii 344
Could you keep her Indungeon'd from o whisper of
the wind, „ iv ii 146
Take thy o chance ; Catch at the last straw. „ rv ii 220
0 downward plunge of his paw would rend away
Eyesight „ iv ii 283
Rosamund hath not answer'd you o word ; Madam, I
■will not answer you o word. „ iv ii 362
She lives — but not for him ; o point is gain'd. „ iv ii 415
Your Grace will never have o quiet hour. „ v i 78
But o question — How fares thy pretty boy, the little
Geoffrey ? „ v ii 165
And breathe o prayer for my liege-lord the King, „ v ii 191
0 slow, fat, white, a burthen of the hearth ; „ v ii 211
1 never spied in thee o gleam of grace. „ v ii 474
I pray you for o moment stay and speak. „ v ii 525
and throne O king above them all. The Cup i i 93
It is the 0 step in the dark beyond Our expectation, „ i i 212
put forth 0 paw. Slew four, and knew it not, „ i ii 126
There may be courtesans for aught I know Whose life
is 0 dishonour. „ iii 194
No, not o step with thee. „ i iii 96
Then with o quick short stab — eternal peace. „ i iii 124
Tell him there is o shadow among the shadows, 0 ghost
of all the ghosts — „ n 139
The shout of Synorix and Camma sitting Upon o throne, „ n 148
They two should drink together from o cup, „ n 361
and 0 plate of dried primes be all-but-nothing. The Falcon 135
Oh sweet saints ! o plate of primes ! „ 215
His 0 companion here — nay, I have heard That, „ 225
It will be hard, I fear. To find o shock upon the field „ 301
we have but o piece of earthenware to serve the salad
in to my lady, „ 481
My 0 thing left of value in the world ! „ 496
And o word more. Good ! let it be but o. „ 510
I cannot. Not a morsel, not o morsel. „ 573
I am sure that more than o brave fellow owed His
death to the charm in it. „ 633
My last sight ere I swoon'd was o sweet face „ 647
My 0 child Florio lying still so sick, „ 678
who comes To rob you of your o delight on earth. „ 828
and 'er an' the owd man they fell a kissin' o' o
another Prom, of May i 21
I seed that o cow o' thine i' the pinfold agean as I
wur a-coomin' 'ere. „ 1 190
An' if tha can't keep thy o cow i' border, „ 1 197
I niver 'es sa much as o pin's prick of paain ; „ i 359
but when thou be as owd as me thou'll put o word
fur another as I does. „ 1 381
but o time's vice may be The virtue of another ; „ i 534
I could put all that o' o side easy anew. „ n 111
when mea and my sweet'art was a workin' along o*
o side wi' o another, „ n 152
One {continued) wasn't thou and me a-bussin' o' o
another t'other side o' the haaycock.
Left but o dreadful Une to say, that we Should
find her in the river ;
will he ever be of o faith with liis wife ?
Wasn't dear mother herself at least by o side a lady ?
Look up ! 0 word, or do but smile !
and to her you came Veiling o sin to act another.
The shelter of your roof — not for o moment —
Shall I keep o little rose for Little John ? No.
But if a man and a maid care for o another.
If thou draw o inch nearer, I will give thee a buffet
on the face,
if a man and a maid love o another, may the maid
give the first kiss ?
Cloud not thy birthday with o fear for me.
We make but o hour's buzz, are only like The rainbow
I have reign'd o year in the wild wood,
to carve 0 lone hour from it,
Tho' in 0 moment she should glance away.
There is but o old woman in the hut.
Old hag, how should thy o tooth drill thro' this ?
Speak but o word not only of forgiveness.
We never robb'd o friend of the true King.
I have but o penny in pouch,
I have 0 mark in gold which a pious son of the Church
gave me
Well, as he said, o mark in gold. Marian. And
thou ? Friar. 0 mark in gold.
0 half of this shall go to those they have wrong'd,
0 half shall pass into our treasury.
How much hast thou about thee ? King Richard.
1 had 0 mark.
What more ? o thousand marks. Or else the land.
Here be o thousand marks Out of our treasuiy to
redeem the land.
Mine eye most true to o hair's-breadth of aim.
1 never found o traitor in my band.
Past the bank Of foxglove, then to left by that o yew.
No — there's yet o other : I will not dine without him.
Here — ^give me o sharp pinch upon the cheek
Only {See also Nobbnt, Nubbut) I am the o rose of all the
stock That never thom'd him ;
Mother says gold spoils all. Love is the o gold.
' Till death us part ' — those are the o words,
0ns King Hath divers ofs and o, ofs and belongings,
Ony (any) or o waay, I'd slaave out my fife fur 'er.
Hev' 0 o' ye seen Eva ?
afoor 0 o' ye wur burn —
doant ye hear of o ?
an' 0 o' Steer's men, an' o o' my men
an' she wur as sweet as o on 'em —
And I would loove tha moor nor o gentleman 'ud
loove tha.
Onyhow (anyhow) I thank you fur that, Miss Dora, o.
Onythink (anything) Why, Miss, I be afeard I shall set
him a-swearing like o.
Oop (up) The beer's gotten o into my 'ead.
but I thinks he be wakkenin' o.
Ooze All o's out ; yet him — Queen Mary i iv 205
Open (adj.) You should be plain and o with me, niece. „ i iv 217
In clear and o day were congruent With that vile Cranmer „ ni iv 230
0 rare, a whole long day of o field. Becket i i 296
1 am 0 to him. „ v ii 68
No, look ! the door is o : let him be. „ v ii 316
and 0 arms To him who gave it ; The Cup i i 83
Smitten with fever in the o field. Prom, of May iii 806
Open (verb) 0 the window, Knyvett : Queen Mary u i 154
One crater o's when another shuts. , „ ni i 322
O, Ye everlasting gates ! „ ni ii 182
Women, when I am dead, 0 my heart, „ v v 153
o his, — So that he have one, — „ v v 155
At last a harbour o's ; but therein Sunk rocks — „ v v 213
this door O's upon the forest ! Out, begone ! The Cup i ii 329
O, 0, or I will drive the door from the door-post. Foresters ii i 219
Prom, of May n 231
n 411
ni 178.
nr 301
in 677
ni 773
ni 800
Foresters i i 112
I i 135
I i 145
„ I i 172
„ I ii 126
„ I ii 277
n i 36
n i 43
„ n i 161
„ n i 241
„ n i 276
„ n i 610
„ in 157
„ ni 193
m 280
„ ni 284
„ m 303
IV 165
IV 473
IV 492
IV 694
IV 836
IV 974
IV 994
„ IV 1011
Harold i i 425
Becket iv i 43
Prom, of May i 658
BeckH IV ii 32
Prom, of May 1 177
I 313
I 366
I 390
n34
n39
nl05
1 158
in 359
n320
ni 413
Open'd
1025
Overlook
Open'd this was o, and the dead were found Sitting, Queen Mary \ ii 395
into thy mouth hadst thou but o it to thank him. Becket iii iii 277
Knock, and it shall be o. „ v iii 64
o out The purple zone of hill and heaven ; The Cup i ii 407
The blossom had o on every bough ; Prom, of May i 42
Opening Beware of o out thy bosom to it, Becket in iii 30
That beam of dawn upon the o flower, Foresters iv 3
Opinion when men are tost On tides of strange o. Queen Mary in iv 119
Tnie, I have held o's, hold some still, Prom, of May m 622
Opportunity our o When I and thou will rob the nest of
ber. Foresters i ii 160
Oppose I would set my men-at-arms to o thee, „ i i 323
^posite we will climb The mountain o and watch the
chase. The Cup i i 117
Oppress The walls o me, And yon huge keep Harold ii ii 227
0 help us from all that a us ! The Cup ii 6
Oppression The o of our people moves me so. Foresters in 109
Opulent See Over-opulent
Onxis this o of great Artemis Has no more power than
other o's The Cup n 33
Oran (in Algeria) Timis, and 0, and the Philippines, Queen Mary v i 48
Orange (plant) You lived among your vines and o's, „ in iv 253
1 that held the o blossom Dark as the yew ? Prom, of May n 629
Orange (town) William of 0, William the Silent. Queen Mary m i 197
Order (arrangement, etc.) Like loosely-scatter'd jewels,
in fair o, ,, n i 28
my cows in sweeter o Had I been such. „ in v 271
ever-jarring Earldoms move To music and in o — Harold n ii 762
She will break fence. I can't keep her in o. Prom, of May 1 195
Order (command, etc.) {See also Border) To take such
0 with all heretics Queen Mary i v 34
If this be not your Grace's o, „ n iv 64
Have I the o's of the Holy Father ? Philip de Eleemosyna.
O's, my lord — why, no ; for what am I ? Becket i iii 232
I give you here an o To seize upon him. The Cup i i 164
WiU you betray him by this o? „ i ii 245
Is this your brother's o ? The Falcon 745
Order (rank, etc.) Saving the honour of my o — ay. Becket i iii 21
Saving thine o ! „ i iii 26
Saving thine o, Thomas, Is black and white „ i iii 30
Ordered pity this poor world myself that it is no better o. „ Pro. 367
Ordinance Either in making laws and o's Queen Mary iii iii 130
Of all such laws and o's made ; „ ni iii 142
Against the solemn o from Rome, Becket i iii 505
Ordinary She looks comelier than o to-day ; Queen Mary i i 71
Ordnance there is o On the White Tower and on the
Devil's Tower, „ n iii 43
Organ 0 and pipe, and dulcimer, chants and hymns Becket v ii 365
Original Cleaving to your o Adam-clay, Queen Mary iv iii 41 8
Orkney — Scotland, Ireland, Iceland, 0, Harold m ii 125
Onn Gamel, son of 0, What thinkest thou this means ?
(repeat) „ i i 20, 463
Hail, Gamel, son of'O ! „ i i 92
that was his guest, Gamel, the son of 0 : „ n ii 299
murder'd thine own guest, the son of 0, Gamel, „ rv ii 38
Ornament The golden o's are stolen from her — Becket m iii 180
Orphan (adj.) a widow And o child, whom one of thy wild
barons — „ Pro. 188
Orphan (s) Age, o's, and babe-breasting mothers — „ n i 72
Babes, o's, mothers ! is that royal. Sire ? „ n i 80
Orthodoxy He'll burn a diocese to prove his o. Queen Mary in iv 353
Other {See also T'other) counsel your withdrawing
To Ashridge, or some o country house. „ i iv 226
As Thirlby says, are profitless to the burners.
And help the o side. „ iv ii _220
0 reasons There be for this man's ending, „ iv iii 53
Might it not be the o side rejoicing In his brave
end ? „ IV iii 356
0 things As idle ; a weak Wyatt ! „ v i 291
Not thee, my son : some o messenger. Harold i i 244
And 0 beUs on earth, which yet are heaven's; „ i ii 133
lake 0 lords amenable to law. Becket, Pro. 25
Than that of o paramours of thine ? „ Pro, 71
True enough, my mind was set upon o matters. „ Pro. 318
Ay, my lord, and divers o earls and barons. „ i iv 59
Becket n ii 229
n ii 323
in i 191
m ii 13
vii 74
V ii 444
Other {continued) look you, you shall have None o God but
me —
then the South-west turned him North-west, and so of
the 0 winds ;
Go, you shall tell me of her some o time,
he hath pass'd out again. And on the o side.
Then speak ; this is my o self,
dungeon'd the o half In Pevensey Castle —
At times this oracle of great Artemis Has no more power
than 0 oracles The Cup n 34
With 0 beauties on a mountain meadow. The Falcon 351
And the o nine ? Filippo. Sold ! „ 411
No o heart Of such magnificence in courtesy Beats — „ 721
Is there no o way ? Prom, of May i 691
If it had killed one of the Steers there the o day, „ in 250
there is no o man that shall give me away. Foresters i i 290
That o thousand — shall I ever pay it ? „ n i 466
Other-world that sweet o-w smile, which wiU be reflected Becket, Pro. 396
Otter And I would swim the moat, like an o. Foresters i i 321
Oubliette but in our o's Thou shalt or rot or ransom. Harold n i 107
And deeper still the deep-down o, „ n ii 429
from my ghastly o I send my voice „ v i 245
Oublietted And o in the centre — No ! Becket iv ii 150
Ought {See also Aught, Owt) I am dead as Death this day
to o of earth's Harold v i 425
Ouphe o's, oafs, ghosts o' the mist, wills-o'-the-wisp ; Foresters n i 263
Oust Stir up thy people : o him ! Harold i i 482
would 0 me from his will, if I Made such a marriage. Prom, of May 1 513
Ousted You have o the mock priest, Queen Mary i v 180
Ay, Lambeth has o Cranmer. „ in ii 132
Outblossom one rose will o the rest, one rose in a bower. Becket, Pro. 345
Queen Mary iii vi 27
m V 158
„ n ii 380
Harold n i 9
Out-Boimer Bonner cannot o-B his own self-
Outcry And make a morning o in the yard ;
Outdoor One of much o bluster.
Outdraught Felt the remorseless o of the deep
Outfield (outlying field) Hodge 'ud ha' been a-
harrowin' o' white peasen i' the o
Out-Gardiners Gardiner q-G Gardiner in his heat,
Outlander wrench this o's ransom out of him —
Outlaw (s) Thou art an o, and couldst never pay
An o's bride may not be wife in law.
The chief of these o's who break the law ?
and then we were no longer o's.
Robin's an o, but he helps the poor.
my hege, these men are o's, thieves.
Outlaw (verb) Did ye not o your archbishop Robert,
Outlaw'd he join'd with thee To drive me o.
I may be o, I have heard a rumour.
Robin Hood Earl of Huntingdon is o and banished.
I am o, and if caught, I die.
Am I worse or better ? I am o.
being o in a land Where law lies dead.
While Richard hath o himself,
Out-passion'd with our great Council against Tostig, 0-p
his!
Outraged Wasted our diocese, o our tenants.
Out-towering help to build a throne 0-t hers of France . .
Outvalue As gold O's dross, light darkness,
wreath That once you wore o's twenty-fold
O's all the jewels upon earth.
It should be love that thus o's all.
Outward To veil the fault of my most o foe —
Outwoman'd She could not be unmann'd — no, nor
Over See Ower
Overbalance weight of the flesh at odd times o the weight
of the church. Foresters i ii 61
Overbold Thou art o. Robin. My king, „ iv 890
Over-breathed I am o-b. Friar, by my two bouts at
quarterstafE. „ iv 265
Over-confident Brave — ay — too brave, too o-c, The Cup i ii 262
Overdid must we follow All that they o or underdid ? Becket n ii 214
Overhead loud enough To fright the wild hawk passing o. Foresters ni 318
Overleap There is a fence I cannot o. My father's will. „ m 9
Overlive O friends, I shall not o the day. Harold in i 232
Overlook would hardly care to o This same petition Queen Mary iv i 192
3 T
Queen Mary iv iii 492
„ ni vi 25
Harold ii i 58
Foresters n i 452
n ii 90
IV 141
IV 147
IV 358
IV 906
Harold, i i 55
„ IV ii 14
Foresters i ii 91
I iii 68
„ I iii 163
n i 50
n i 89
IV 360
Harold m i 61
Becket v ii 431
Harold n ii 765
Becket i iii 715
The Falcon 759
779
781
Queen Mary iv ii 106
in i 370
Over-measure
1026
Own
Orer-measure By St. Edmund I o-m, him. Harold iv iii 120
Overmach Sir, this dead fruit was ripening o, Queen Mary ni i 26
Then without tropes, my Lord, An o severeness, „ in iv 156
Over-opulent if you cared To fee an o-o superstition, Prom, of May i 693
Overscomfol would deign to lend an ear Not o, Harold iv i 137
Oversea And o they say this state of yours Queen Mary in i 441
His kin, all his belongings, o's ; Becket ii i 71
calls you a To answer for it in his Norman courts. „ v ii 354
one that should be grateful to me o's, a Count in
Brittany —
I must pass o's to one that I trust will help me.
And I and he are passing o's :
Overshoot tho' you make your butt too big, you o it,
Overshot I have o My duties to our Holy Mother Church
Overstep is the King s if too high a stile for your lordship
to o
Overtaken Love will fly the fallen leaf, and not
be o;
Over-taxing for thy brother breaks us With o-t—
Overthrown Doubt not they will be speedily o.
have 0 Morcar and Edwin.
The king is slain, the kingdom o !
Overturn when they seek to o our rights.
Over-violence as one That mars a cause with o-t).
Overwhelm'd We shall be o. Seize him and carry him ! „ v iii 141
full democracy has o This Old world. Prom, of May i 593
Foresters i i 271
„ I ii 152
n i 627
^Becket in iii 122
V i 37
ni iii 281
Queen Mary v ii 372
Harold I i 110
Queen Mary n ii 200
Harold in ii 131
viil6
Becket v ii 456
„ IV ii 327
'Ow (how) and 'o should I see to laame the laady,
'Owd (hold) they'll hev' a fine cider-crop to-year if the
blossom 'o's.
Owd (old) Why, o' coorse, fur it be the o man's birthdaay.
0 Steer wur sifeard she wouldn't be back i' time to
keep his birthdaay,
and 'er an' the o man they fell a-kissin' o' one another
An' how did ye leave the o uncle i' Coomberland ?
An' how d'ye find the o man 'ere ?
The 0 man be heighty to-daay, beant he ?
An' I haates boobks an' all, fur they puts foalk off
the 0 waays.
Then the o man i' Lear should be shaamed of hissen,
but when thou be as o as me thou'll put one word
fur another as I does.
So the o uncle i' Coomberland be dead, Miss Dora,
beant he ?
1 seed how the o man wur vext.
I would taake the o blind man to my oan fireside.
Naay, but I hev an o woman as 'ud see to all that :
Yeas, an' o Dobson should be glad on it.
Why, coom then, o feller, I'll tell it to you ;
Ye shall sing that agean to-night, fur o Dobson '11
gi'e us a bit o' supper. Sally. I weant goa to
o Dobson ;
0 Steer's gotten all his grass down and wants a hand,
and I'll goa to him.
0 Steer gi'es nubbut cowd tea to 'is men, and o Dobson
gi'es beer. Sally. But I'd like o Steer's cowd tea
better nor Dobson's beer. Good-bye.
when 0 Dobson coom'd upo' us ?
but I wur so ta'en up wi' leadin' the o man about all
the blessed mumin'
The Steers was all gentlefoalks i' the o times.
The land belonged to the Steers i' the o times,
He be saayin' a word to the o man, but he'll coom
up if ye lets 'im.
The 0 man's coom'd agean to 'issen, an' wants To
hev a word wi' ye
Owe the duty which as Legate He o's himself.
To whom he o's his loyalty after God,
unto him you o That Mary hath acknowledged
you That o to me your power over me —
1 o you thanks for ever,
love that children o to both I give To him alone.
Owed Thou still hast o thy father, Gilbert Foliot.
more than one brave fellow o His death
Ower (oyer) I should saay 'twur o by now,
ni95
I 317
i6
1 16
I 21
I 68
I 71
I 76
I 222
1 266
I 381
nl
n27
u74
n95
n 146
n202
n216
n220
n223
n232
m2
in 448
ni451
m481
in 702
Queen Mary in iv 402
„ IV i 23
„ v iii 29
Becket n ii 152
The Cup I ii 249
Foresters rv 7
Becket i iii 276
The Falcon 634
Queen Mary iv iii 475
and o a hoonderd pounds worth o' rings stolen. Prom, of May i 393
Ower (over) (continued) Dan Smith's cart hes runned
0 a laady i' the holler laane, Prom, of May n 568
and my missus a-gittin' o 'er lyin'-in, „ m 74
Owl (See also Scritch-owl) The wood is full of echoes,
o's, elfs. Foresters n i 263
Owld (old) it be a var waay vor my o legs up vro' Islip. Queen Mary iv iii 472
Eh, then ha' thy waay wi' me, Tib ; ez thou hast
wi' thy o man. „ iv iii 487
Ay, Joan, and my o man wur up and awaay betimes „ iv iii 488
I heerd summat as summun towld summun o' o
Bishop Gardiner's end ; „ iv iii 503
there wur an o lord a-cum to dine wi' im, and a
wur so 0 a couldn't bide vor his dinner, ,, iv iii 504
and the o lord fell to 's meat wi' a wiU, „ iv iii 514
the bumin' o' the o archbishop '11 bum the Pwoap
out o' this 'ere land vor iver and iver. „ iv iii 535
Own (adj.) (See also OSn) What are you cackling of
bastardy under the Queen's o nose ? „ i i 59
I shall judge with my o eyes whether her Grace
incline „ i i 134
Peace ! hear him ; let his o words damn the Papist.
From thine o mouth I judge thee — tear him down ! „ i iii 53
a King That with her o pawns plays against a Queen, „ i iii 162
But your o state is full of danger here. „ i iv 168
'Tis mine o wish fulfill'd before the word Was spoken, ., i iv 232
Tho' Queen, I am not Queen Of mine o heart, „ i v 523
he loved the more His o gray towers, „ n i 49
Well, for mine o work, „ ii i 86
I have seen them in their o land ; „ u i 167
mute as death. And white as her o milk ; „ n ii 80
on you. In your o city, as her right, my Lord, For
you are loyal. „ ii ii 106
From your o royal lips, at once may know „ ii ii 136
In mine o person am I come to you, „ ii ii 142
seeks To bend the laws to his o will, „ ii ii 184
that I should leave Some fruit of mine o body
after me, „ n ii 223
Before our o High Court of Parliament, „ ii ii 234
By his 0 rule, he hath been so bold to-day, „ ii ii 347
his fault So thoroughly to believe in his o self. „ ii ii 386
Yet thoroughly to believe in one's o self, So one's
o self be thorough, „ n ii 388
Well, the tree in Virgil, sir. That bears not its o
apples. „ m i 23
the Pope's Holiness By mine o self. „ m ii 112
Statesmen that are wise Shape a necessity, as a
sculptor clay. To their o model. „ m iii 34
In our 0 name and that of all the state, „ in iii 120
As well for our o selves as all the realm, „ in iii 136
The Lord who hath redeem'd us With his o blood, „ in iii 203 J
and not sure Of their o selves, they are wroth with :
their o selves, „ in iv 120
Trembled for her o gods, for these were trembling — „ m iv 128
But the wench Hath her o troubles ; she is weeping
now ; „ m V 262
Bonner cannot out-Bonner his o self — „ m vi 27
he hath pray'd me not to sully Mine o prerogative, „ iv i 18
Yet once he saved your Majesty's o life ; Stood out
against the King in your behalf. At his o peril. „ iv i 125
By mine o self — by mine o hand ! „ iv ii 202
The parson from his o spire swung out dead, „ iv iii 375
I say they have drawn the fire On their o heads : „ iv iii 381
I could weep for them And her, and mine o self
and all the world. „ v ii 12
Gone beyond him and mine o natural man (It was
God's cause) ; „ v ii 102
That his o wife is no affair of his. „ v ii 561
Nay, but I speak from mine o self, not him ; „ v iii 42
Seven-fold dishonour'd even in the sight Of thine
0 sectaries — „ v v 134
Ay, ever give yourselves your o good word. Harold i i 343
I swear it, By mine o eyes — and these two sapphires — „ i ii 110
Swear thou to-day, to-morrow is thine o. „ n ii 711
A cleric lately poison'd his o mother, Becket, Pro. 11
what shall I call it, aSect her thine o self. „ Pro. 513
Own
1027
Oxford
Becket i i 8
„ iiiil20
„ I iii 155
„ I iii 172
„ I iii 342
„ I iii 360
„ I iii 367
„ 1 iii 398
„ I iii 536
„ I iii 696
„ I iv 23
„ I iv 180
„ n i 35
„ II ii 19
„ II ii 156
„ II ii 204
Own (adj.) (continued) Thou art wearied out With this
day's work, get thee to thine o bed.
And was thine o election so canonical, Good father ?
But his 0 mother's, lest the crown should be Shorn
of ancestral splendour. This did Henry. Shall
I do less for mine o Canterbury ?
Kinging their o death-knell thro' all the realm,
when none could sit By his o hearth in peace ;
In mine o hall, and sucking thro' fools' ears The
flatteries of corruption —
sat in mine o courts Judging my judges.
Look to it, your o selves !
Strong — ^not in mine o self, but Heaven ;
And I, that knew mine o infirmity,
I warrant you, or your o either.
be we not in my lord's o refractory ?
Yea, thou my golden dream of Love's o bower.
But, since we would be lord of our o manor,
cherish'd him Who thief-like fled from his o church
by night,
which Hell's o heat So dwelt on that they rose and
darken'd Heaven.
Yea — on mine o self The King had had no power
except for Rome. „ ii ii 411
despite his kingly promise given To our o seU of pardon, „ ii ii 433
and to win my o bread, whereupon he asked our mother „ iii i 117
And bound me by his love to secrecy Till his o time. „ iii i 229
or rather pulled all the Church with the Holy Father
astride of it down upon his o head. „ ni iii 78
so that the smell of their o roast had not come across it — „ iii iii 119
Your o child brought me hither ! „ iv ii 13
Child, I am mine o self Of and belonging to the King. „ iv ii 29
Have we not heard Raymond of Poitou, thine o uncle —
nay, Geoffrey Plantagenet, thine o husband's father — „ iv ii 247
that The King himself, for love of his o sons, If hearing, „ iv ii 344
I'll swear to mine o selJE it was a feint. „ iv ii 401
In mine o cause I strove against him there, „ v i 14
And what would my o Aquitaine say to that ? « v i 181
crying On Holy Church to thunder out her rights
And thine o wrong so pitilessly ? „ v ii 33
Strikes truest ev'n for his o self. „ v ii 42
he had gone too far Into the King's o woods ; „ v ii 108
His child and mine o soul, and so return. „ v ii 193
Shall I not smite him with his o cross-staff ? „ v ii 313
For which I would have laid mine o Hie down „ v ii 338
That their o King closed with me last July „ v ii 388
They slew my stags in mine o manor here, „ v ii 438
Not punish of your o authority ? „ v ii 450
and yet threaten your Archbishop In his o house. „ v ii 506
Take refuge in your o cathedral, Thomas. „ v ii 584
I say, take refuge in your o cathedral. „ v ii 590
And yet my dream foretold my martyrdom In mine
0 church. „ v ii 634
Why, these are our 0 monks who follow'd us ! „ v iii 58
Strike our Archbishop in his o cathedral ! „ v iii 180
else wherefore has my fate Brought me again to her o
city ? The Cup i i 14
Is vengeance for its o sake worth the while, „ i i 30
That your o people cast you from their bounds, „ i i 137
Save for some slight report in her o Senate „ i ii 133
His o true people cast him from their doors Like a base coin. „ i ii 351
Bandy their o rude jests with them, „ i ii 360
Then for your o sake. Lady, I say it with all gentleness, „ i iii 98
Good ! mine o dagger driven by Synorix found All good „ n 85
I call on our o Goddess in our o Temple. „ n 314
It is the cup belonging our o Temple. „ n 345
That Synorix should drink from his o cup. „ ii 353
poor worm, crawl down thine o black hole To the lowest
HeU. „ n 495
Thou art one With thine o people, and though a Roman
1 Forgive thee, Camma. „ ii 504
till he hasn't an eye left in his o tail to flourish among
the peahens. The Falcon 102
you look as beautiful this morning as the very
Madonna her o self — ,. 199
Own (adj.) {continued) And this last costly gift to mine o self. The Falcon 228
and so descend again with some of her ladyship's o
appurtenances ? „ 417
his lordship's o foster-brother, would commend them to
your ladyship's most peculiar appreciation. „ 566
Fifippo ! will you take the word out of your master's o
mouth? „ 598
Ay, if you'd like to measure your o length upon the
grass. Prom, of May i 466
He, following his o instincts as his God, „ 1 588
Nature a liar, making us feel guilty Of her o faults. „ n 270
And these take flesh again with our o flesh, „ ii 277
I have found it once again In your o self. „ ii 377
Our old nurse crying as if for her o child, „ ii 479
so be more at peace With mine o self. „ ii 663
For her o sake then, if not for mine — not now — But
by-and-by. „ ii 683
and your o name Of Harold sounds so English and so old „ ni 608
till we be only bones our o selves. Foresters i i 26
and for the love of his o little mother on earth, „ i i 98
my great great grandfather, my great grandfather, my
grandfather, and my o father — „ i i 331
and whenever I set my o foot on it I say to it, „ i i 335
This ring my mother gave me : it was her o Betrothal ring. „ i ii 294
You see, they are so fond o' their o voices „ ii i 383
and if thou miss I will fasten thee to thine o doorpost „ ii i 403
What ! do I not know mine o ring ? „ n i 590
and their o want Of manhood to their leader ! „ u i 693
Is to mistrust your o love for your girl ! „ ii ii 59
all that live By their o hands, the labourer, the poor priest ; „ iii 165
so His 0 true wife came with him, „ in 240
you that dishonour The daughters and the wives of your
0 faction — „ iv 699
God help the mark — To his o unprincely ends. „ iv 716
I remain Mistress of mine o self and mine o soul. „ iv 729
hast thou no fetters For those of thine o band who would
betray thee ? „ iv 832
if you hold us here Longer from our o venison. „ iv 942
Then by thine o account thou shouldst be mine. „ iv 1038
Own^s) you scarce could meet his eye And hold your o ; Queen Mary rv i 105
Harold n ii 758
Becket i iii 153
„ I iii 612
But softly as a bridegroom to his o
When Henry came into his o again,
We fear that he may reave thee of thine o.
Now the King is home again, the King will have his
o again, Home again, home again, and each will
have his o again,
Own (verb) You do not o The bodily presence in the
Eucharist,
And you, that would not o the Real Presence,
Whatever the Church o's — she holds it in Free and
perpetual alms,
then each man That o's a wife or daughter.
Woe to that land shall o thee for her king !
Own'd — ^for I have not o My sister, and I will not, — • Queen Mary i v 284
Owt (anjrthing) (See also Anght, Ought) Theer ye goas
agean. Miss, niver believing o I says to ye — Prom, of May i 107
or the parson, or the justice o' peace, or o. „ 1 133
fur I niver touched a drop of o tul my oan wedding-
daay, „ 1 362
Foresters iv 1106
Queen Mary i ii 43
IV ii 140
Becket i iii 679
Foresters in 460
IV 759
Eva can do o wi' 'im ;
fur I'd ha' done o fur 'er mysen ;
an' all the parish 'ud ha' done o fur 'er.
Let 'im bust hissen, then, fur o I cares.
Dead ! It mun be true, fur it wur i' print as black
as o.
Ox A light among the oxen.
Swine, sheep, o — here's a French supper.
his monies, his oxen, his dinners, himself.
or a stump-tailed o in May-time,
Oxford (adj.) Right as an 0 scholar,
I 437
n33
u36
II 167
II 731
Harold iv i 87
Becket 1 iv 112
Foresters i i 234
„ ui435
ii59
Oxford (s) masses here be sung By every priest in 0. Queen Mary iv iii 101
John of O, The President of this Council, Becket i iii 74
For John of 0 here to read to you. „ i iii 417
Cursed be John of 0, Roger of York, And Gilbert Foliot ! „ n ii 265
and I ha' seen the King once at 0, „ in i 164
Faain
1028
Paain (pain) I niver 'es sa much as one pin's prick of p ; Prom, of May 1 360
Pasper (paper) then a-scrattin upon a bit o' p, then a- ^ ^^
lookin' agean ; . , , , " tt rr7
dosta knaw this p ? Ye dropt it upo' the road. ,. ^ do (
Pace (s) break your p's in, and make you tame ; Qwem Mary v m 1^1
Paw verb) kin^ should p on purple to his bride, The Cup n 189
S prW'd me to pray thee to p Thy King ; Becket i m 206
He told me thou shouldst p the King, ,, i " 2^4
Pacing P my new lands at Littlechester, Prom, of May n b47
"^ But? am weary p thro' the wood ^u'''\Trni\l^
Packt So 1? with carnage that the dykes and brooks HaroU mni^^
K (city'^Df Venetia) And died in P. Queen ^a^ v n 516
Pagan The p temple of a p Rome ! ^«cftet i m ox
Pale who call'd the mind Of children a blank p, Prom, of May ii ,^8^
^eant second actor in this p That brings him in ; Queen Mary ni ui 14
and flowers In silken p's. . " ™ I n\
Paget (Lord) P is for him— for to wed with Spam „ i v /o
P is ours. Gardiner perchance is ours ; „ i v ooo
Lord P's ' Ay ' is sure— who else ? " ^ ^ oo i
Spite of Lord P and Lord William Howard „ "V-fo^
Lord P Waits to present our Council to the Legate. „ "in y <
If we could burn out heresy, my Lord P, „ i" ly Hi
P, you are all for this poor life of ours, „ m iv oy
L^ok to your Bible, P ! we are faUen. „ m jv 8"
P, You stand up here to fight for heresy, „ ™ i^i
they are many, As my Lord P says. „ ""Lt«
my Lord P and Lord William Howard, Crave, „ ij i o
You are too politic for me, my Lord P. „ ^.}. ^°A
Av, av, P, They have brought it in large measure „ rv in ao6
yet, P, I do hold The Catholic, . i^ i^ ^.°\
0 P, P ! I have seen heretics of the poorer sort, „ rv in 4rfO
P, despite his fearful heresies, » JJ i". P^^
Paid he phis ransom back. %°''^° I^R
1 have once more p them aU. P«"«. "/ May iii 158
if thev be not p back at the end of the year, the land .
goes to the Abbot. , ^ ^ ^ Pomfm 1 1 69
must be p in a year and a month, or I lose the land. „ 1 1 ^oo
You shall wait for mine till Sir Richard has p the ..
Abbot. " • Aoci
I have p him haU. That other thousand— ,. "^ tn?
these monies should be p in to the Abbot at York, „ iv wi
The debt hath not been p. " ^Z m fi
Has it been p? Abbot. O yes. " ^ o^o
Not p at York— the wood— prick me no more ! „ rp oz^
Sir Richard p his monies to the Abbot. " i"^ °^^
Pain (-See also Paain) Judgment, and p accruing ,-oiq
thereupon; Qw«e« Mar2/ m m 219
Or to be still in p with devils in heU ; » ^ ]]} j^j^
he never uttered moan of p : " d 7 f!."- ^q"!
evilly used And put to p. 5««^«« " ". .^34
Geoffrey, the p thou hast put me to ! » ^J^^r
This ^what is it ?-again ? _ The Cup 11 445
With cold, with p perhaps, poor prisoner ! -^ hebalcon 449
And if my pleasure breed another's p, Prom- "/ May i ^j»
with as little p As it is to fall asleep. .. " ^^1
to spare myself, And her too, p,p,p'f " ™ '^'^
That blast our natural passions into p's\ -r. " . ™ ino
Move me no more ! I am sick and faint with p ! Foresters iv 599
Painful perhaps The p circumstances which I „ , „ ^rvo
heard— Prom, of May 11 ^2
Paint TeU him to p it out, Qwem Mary ni i 267
The man shall p a pair of gloves. .. ™ \ ^ '*
honesty too, p her what way they wiU. Becket n 1 lUi
Painted If you have falsely p your fine Prince ; Queen Maryiv &y»
The conduit p — the nine worthies— ay ! ,. ™ ? i^r
God's passion ! do you know the knave that p it ? „ ni 1 <ib5
Pair But since the fondest p of doves will jar, Becket rv 11 40
You are an honest p. I will come to your
wedding. Prom, of May in 114
Pair'd Ay, if Wisdom P not with Good. Harold \ 1 178
Palace (adj.) Hark, there is battle at the p gates,
I found it fluttering at the p gates :—
Palace (s) Hast thou let fall those papers in the p ^
And unto no dead world ; but Lambeth p.
There was a paper thrown into the p,
which I found Strewn in your p.
I left it privily At Florence, in her p.
And welcome turns a cottage to a p.
Who never deign'd to shine into my p
Paper
Q^ieen Mary u iv 47
in ii 218
I iii 2
in ii 154
m vi 139
v ii 173
The Falcon 75
273
286
My p wanting you was but a cottage ; My cottage, while
you grace it, is a p.
In cottage or in p, being still Beyond your fortunes.
287
290
Palate That p is insane which cannot tell
Pale (adj.) The word has turn'd your Highness p ;
How deathly p ! a chair, your Highness.
a p horse for Death and Gardiner for the Devil
Mary rubb'd out p —
fieriest partisans— are p Before my star !
The little murder'd princes, in a p light,
Peters, how p you look ! you bring the smoke
Brother ! why so p ?
God redden your p blood !
I wonder if I look as p as she ?
more blessed were the rags Of some p beggar-woman
Becket, Pro. 104
Queen Mary i v 471
„ IV 636
m i 234
ni i 423
niiil70
in V 147
„ IV iii 560
Harold i i 28
Becket i iv 35
The Cup n 322
The Falcon 852
and you look thin and p. Is it for his absence ? Prom, of May 1 (82
You are p, my Dora ! but the ruddiest cheek „ ni 4»b
I that have turn'd their Moslem crescent p— Foresters iv 795
All those p mouths which we have fed will praise us— ,, iv lum
Pale (S) praised The convent and lone life— within the p— HaroldJ u 4»
loved within the p forbidden By Holy Church
Thou hast broken thro' the p's Of privilege.
Paleness a p. Like the wan twilight after sunset.
Palisade The trenches dug, the p's uprear'd
strengthen their p's !
They fall on those within the p !
Pall Lay thou thy hand upon this golden p !
Foliot may claim the p For London too.
The P ! I go to meet my King !
Pallium Who had my p from an Antipope !
Because I had my Canterbury p,
Palm and kindled with the p's of Christ !
P's, flowers, pomegranates, golden cherubim
And these rough oaks the p's of Paradise !
Palmer he is a holy P, bounden by a vow not to show
Palsied while thy hands Are p here,
Palsy In this low pulse and p of the state,
Palter My friend, thou hast gone too far to p now.
Why do you p with the ceremony ?
Pan Swarm to thy voice like bees to the brass p.
Pancratius (St. Pancras) jewel of St. P Woven into the
gold.
Pander I am your subject, not your Henry. P.
Profligate p ! Fitzurse. Do you hear that ?
Pandora-box this Hollow P-b, With all the pleasures
flown.
Pang in the front rank of the fight With scarce a p.
Panoply Mail'd in the perfect p of faith.
Pant sure she hates thee, P's for thy blood.
Panting And p for my blood as I go by.
Papacy We strove against the p from the first,
God save the Crown ! the P is no more,
inherited loathing of these black sheep of the P.
that would shake the P as it stands.
ni ii 22
Becket m iii 193
I iii 325
Harold v i 189
„ V i 481
„ V i 668
„ u ii 699
Becket i iii 56
„ V ii 619
Harold i i 82
„ in i 106
Queen Mary i v 93
Harold m i 182
Foresters n i 169
I ii 236
Harold n ii 455
Queen Mary n ii 103
Harold n ii 707
The Cup II 419
Foresters i iii 109
Harold n ii 70O
Becket, Pro. 147
V iii 160
Pro7n. of May 11 346
The Cup I ii 155
Becket v ii 494
Harold i ii 39
Qiieen Mary v ii 219
ni iii 225
V V 286
Becket, Pro. 462
I iii 213
Papal {See also Anti-papal) not to yield His Church of
England to the P wolf And Mary ;
And be regather'd to the P fold ?
Wanting the P mitre.
of her most Royal, Infallible, P Legate-cousin.
That so the P bolt may pass by England,
Paper {See also Paaper) Hast thou let fall those p's
in the palace ?
I've found this p ; pray your worship read it ;
This p, Dickon. I found it fluttering at the palace
There was a p thrown into the palace,
Queen Mary i ii 36
„ m ii 117
„ ni iv 148
„ m iv 433
Becket, Pro. 226
Queen Mary i iii 2
„ n iii 56
„ m ii 217
„ m vi 139
Paper
1029
Part
Qu^en Mary in vi 174
IV ii 61
IV iii 243
IV iii 314
vii 45
V ii 171
V ii 221
vii 329
Becket i iii 286
„ I iii 317
The Cup I ii 225
Paper (continued) when you are gone, my liege,
Witness these p's,
Pray you write out this p for me, Cranmer.
the p's by my hand Sign'd since my degradation —
might not after all those p's Of recantation yield
again, who knows ? Paget. P's of recantation !
Think you then That Cranmer read all p's that
he sign'd ?
But held from you all p's sent by Rome,
these libellous p's which I found Strewn in your palace
Nay, Madam, there be loyal p's too,
There ! there ! another p ! Said you not
I'll have the p back — blot out my name.
hath he sign'd ? show me the p's !
This p sign'd Antonius — will you take it.
Yes ; it was in the Somersetshire p's. Prom, of May ui 149
Paphlagonia Have you alliances ? Bithynia, Pontus, P ? The Cup i ii 100
Papist (adj.) There haunt some P rufiSans hereabout
Would murder you. Queen Mary in v 174
Papist (s) for we are many of us Catholics, but few P's, „ i i 115
Down with the P ! „ i iii 38
let his own words damn the P. „ i iii 53
Patable That is the p of our blessed Lord. Becket i iv 74
why should not the p of our blessed Lord be acted again ? „ i iv 77
Paradise Look at the New World — a p made hell ; Qv^en Mary ii i 208
Wore in mine eyes the green of P. „ in ii 18
And be with Clu-ist the Lord in P. „ iv iii 88
Not to gain p ; no, nor if the Pope, „ iv iii 557
and be driven out of her p. Becket, Pro. 533
Gave me the golden keys of P. „ i i 54
Will greet us as our babes in P. „ v ii 225
And pass at once perfect to P. „ v iii 14
As in the midmost heart of P. The Cup ii 186
And these rough oaks the palms of P ! Foresters ii i 170
Paralysis My father stricken with his first p. Prom, of May ii 481
He is stricken with a slight p. Foresters iv 456
Paramonnt I have it . . . My lord P, Our great High-priest, Becket iv ii 356
Paramour Well — some believed she was his p.
Bury him and his p together.
more Than that of other p's of thine ?
was Rosamund — his p — thy rivaJ.
p — rival ! King Louis had no p's,
I would she were but his p, for men tire of their fancies ;
Belongings, p's, whom it pleases him To call his wives ;
That I am his main p, his sultana.
I gave it you, and you your p ;
Maid? Friar. P\ Friar. Hell take her!
clutch Our pretty Marian for his p.
Harold V ii 102
V ii 150
Becket, Pro. 71
Pro. 471
Pro. 473
Pro. 479
IV ii 35
IV ii 39
vil69
Foresters in 402
IV 767
Parapet I was so mad, that I mounted upon the p — Prom, of May m 372
Parch'd and watch The p banks rolling incense, as of old. Qv^en Mary i v 91
Parchment be not wroth at the dumb p
Pardon (s) all one mind to supplicate The Legate
here for p,
A roimd fine likelier. Your p.
So that you crave full p of the Legate.
I attend the Queen To crave most humble p —
Your p, then ; It is the heat and narrowness
According to the canons p due To him that so
repents,
so long continuing, Hath found his p ;
Your p. Sweet cousin, and farewell f
what sin Beyond all grace, all p ?
No p ! — Why that was false :
hard is our honeymoon ! Thy p.
Leave me. No more — P on both sides — Go !
— I pray yoiu^ p.
kingly promise given To our own self of p,
A policy of wise p Wins here as well as there.
I crave Thy p — I have still thy leave to speak.
Your p. Salisbv/ry. He said, ' Attend the ofl&ce.'
Thy p. Priestess !
with your ladyship's p, and as your ladyship knows,
Your p for a minute. She must be waked. "
I crave your worship's p.
Or lose all hope of p from us —
Foresters i i 342
Qu^en Mary ni iii 107
in iii 280
in iv 391
in iv 432
in V 206
IV iii 33
IV iii 50
V ii 203
vii 340
V V 135
Harold iv iii 230
V i 353
Becket, Pro. 37
„ n ii 433
V ii 23
„ V ii 44
„ V ii 606
The Cup n 373
The Falcon 565
Prom, of May m 657
Foresters n i 243
IV 935
Pardon (verb) She said — pray p me, and pity her — Queen Mary i y 52
they mean to p me. „ iv ii 50
For if our Holy Queen not p him, „ iv iii 61
God p me ! I have never yet found one. „ v ii 334
P us, thou ! Our silence is our reverence Harold iv i 11
see beyond Your Norman shrines, p it, p it, „ v i 620
I pray God p mine infirmity. Becket n ii 353
God p thee and these, but God's full curse „ v iii 133
Pray, p me ! The Falcon 395
I pray you p me again ! „ 478
Will p me for asking what I ask. „ 805
you are young, and — p me — As lovely as your
sister. Prom, of May n 507
And p me for saying it — „ m 552
P him, my lord : he is a holy Palmer, Foresters i ii 235
P him again, I pray you ; „ i ii 246
Speak to me, Kate, and say you p me ! „ n ii 53
^d it was but a woman. P me. „ n ii 73
When Richard comes he is soft enough to p His
brother ; „ iv 747
Pardonablest lies that ever men have lied. Thine is the p. Harold ni i 100
Pardon'd That must be p me ; Queen Mary i v 311
Why surely ye are p. Foresters iv 947
Pare But one that p's his nails ; to me ? Q;u,een Mary m v 65
Parish (adj.) every p tower Shall clang and clash
alarum „ ii i 228
Parish (s) and haafe th' p '11 be theer, an' Miss Dora,
an' Miss Eva, an' all ! Prom, of May i 10
and you says it belongs to the p, and theer be a
thousand i' the p, „ 1 145
thaw 'e knaws I was hallus agean heving school-
master i' the p ! „ I 187
noan o' the p'es goas by that naame 'ereabouts. ,. i 268
an' all the p 'ud ha' done out fur 'er, „ n 36
if the fever spread, the p will have to thank you for it. „ ni 47
Parish-parson When shall your p-p bawl our banns „ i 685
Park At the p gate he hovers with our guards. Queen Mary n iv 15
Parleying This comes of p with my Lord of Devon. „ i iv 251
Still P with Renard, all the day with Renard, „ in vi 116
Parliament {iSee also King-Parliament) didn't the P
make her a bastard? „ i i 15
they be both bastards by Act of P and Coimcil.
Citizen. Ay, the P can make every true-born
man of us a bastard. „ i i 24
But if P can make the Queen a bastard, „ i i 48
Council, people, P against him ; „ i v 78
But for our heretic P — „ i v 388
That, soon or late, your P is ours. „ i v 424
shall we have Spain on the throne and in the p ; „ n i 176
Council, The P as well, are troubled waters ; „ ii ii 50
Corroborate by your acts of P : „ n ii 173
Before our own High Court of P, „ n ii 234
And others of our P, revived, „ in i 326
And Commons here in P assembled, „ in iii 114
A P of imitative apes ! „ ui iii 235
And these again upon her P — „ in vi 185
Tell my mind to the Council — to the P : „ v ii 289
Parlour and you should sit i' your oan p quite like a
laady. Prom, of May n 97
Parson (See also Parish-parson) Gardener, and
huntsman, in the p's place, The p Queen Mary iv iii 373
he's no respect for the Queen, or the p, or the
justice o peace, or owt. Prom, of May 1 133
and P mebbe, thaw he niver mended that gap „ i 445
Part (s) you are art and p with us In purging heresy, Qvxen Mary in iv 316
And for my p therein — Back to that juggler, Harold v i 53
I could but read a p to-day, because — Becket i iii 422
when those, that name themselves Of the King's p, „ v ii 429
The first p — made before you came among us — Foresters la 435
Part (verb) To p me from the woman that I loved ! Harold v i 346
Look you, we never meant top again. „ v ii 80
Must I hack her arms ofi ? How shall I p them ? „ v ii 148
' Till death us p ' — those are the only words. Prom, of May i 658
they that love do not beUeve that death Will p
them. „ 1 664
Part
1030
Fast-Pass'd
Part (verb) (ccUinued) Ay, noble Earl, and never p with it. Foresters in 304
precious ring I promised Never to p with- » « ^ »"^
partjiken had they remained true to me whose bread they ^^^^^ ^ .^ ^^^
Parted'N:,^orwetrustthey,intheswine. Q-^Simi'^
Our Tostig p cursing me and England , « «™^« g^
We have ^ from our wife without reproach, ^ ^ ^^^
I 772
Foresters i i 181
.. II i 254
Foresters ii i 22»
„ II i 230
III 71
ni 176-
ni 305
IV 283
It seemed to me that we were p for ever.
Becket, Pro. 339
Pro. 377
It seemeu tu mc uuau "v- ..■^•^ ^ — - --- .
We p like the brook yonder about the alder islana,
Who p from thee even now ?
How came we to be p from our men?
Parthian P shaft of a forlorn Cupid at the King s left
To hide the scar left by thy P dart. '/if««TTi351
Partic'lar Yeas, Miss ; and he wants to speak to ye p. Prom, of May m ^01
but he says he wants to tell ye summut very p. ,. ™ ^^^
Parting (See also A-parting) p of a husband and a
'^"^wife Is like the cleaving of a heart ; Q^^^** ^«'^ i« ^ 1»*
if I knew you felt this p, Phil.p, As I do ! "seckd mi 237
Myself confused with p from the King. ^f m„,7tti 197
and no more v's for ever and for ever. . Prov> . of May m i^i
PartS I hive notice from our p's Within the city Queen Mary n iii^51
And all her fieriest p's —
Party I should be still A p in the state ;
a great p in the state Wills me to wed her.
as great a p in the state Will you to wed me .''
My heart, my Lord, Is no great p in the state
Is it England, or a p ? Now, your answer.
and p thereunto, My Lord of Devon.
Princess Cognisant thereof, and p thereunto.
Stirr'd up a p there against your son— ^
' ^ ^ '?lV^f\ ^" '""^'^ ""' ^°"' Prom, of May m 313
P on the 10th! -^™ jj^^^„;/n ii 317
^SLg the gtad std pVs of the wood Forest^s ui 457
Pass (vCTb) When will he? Majesty p, sayst thou? Queer, Mary 1 1^3
She cannot p her traitor council by,
as we p. And pour along the land.
There yet is time, take boat and p to Windsor. Manj.
I p to Windsor and I lose my crown. Gardiner, r,
then, I pray your Highness, to the Tower,
makes the waverer p Into more settled hatred
if this p. We two shall have to teach him ;
And p es thro' the peoples :
and p And leave me, Philip, , ^v,-
Beauty p'es like a breath and love is lost in loathing :
Well, when it p'es then. Edward. Ay if it p. Cio not
to Normandy — tt u i
And let him p unscathed; he loves me, Harold !
And p her to her secret bower in England.
That so the Papal bolt may p by England,
when the King p'es, there may come a crash
P in with Herbert there.
let me p, my lord, for I must know.
To p thee to thy secret bower to-morrow.
He watch'd her p with John of Salisbury
Come, you filthy knaves, let us p. 3rd Beggar.
my lord, let us p.
But it p'es away,
< P r\n ' Via aairl i
m ii 170
iiv24
iiv91
iiv95
I iv 102
IV 142
n iv 100
II iv 113
Becket v i 6
111 40
II i 231
Nay,
„ n iv 27
„ III iv 158
„ III iv 421
„ III V 35
„ m vi 227
„ V ii 365
Harold i i 233
„ mi 301
Becket, Pro. 183
„ Pro. 226
„ Pro. 484
I i 184
I i 206
I i 249
iii40
Pass (verb) (continued) Ghost ! did one in white p ?
Did two knights p ? . o i ^
Then let her p as an exception, bcariet.
And if a woman p —
One half shall p into our treasury,
and can make Five quarts p into a thimble.
Passage that's the winder at the end o' the p, that
goas by thy chaumber.
Pass'd See Past . . . u =
Passing (adj. and part.) (See afoo A-passing) she was
p Some chapel down in Essex, '
every tongue Alters it p,
Than any sea could make me p hence.
And might assail you p through the street,
A p bell toU'd in a dying ear—
Who p by that hill three nights ago—
With a love P thy love for Griffyth !
And I and he are p overseas :
To fright the wild hawk p overhead,
Passing (s) In p to the Castle even now.
should be stay'd From p onward.
Passion (See aZso Self-passion) and in that p Gave
me my Crown.
God's p ! knave, thy name ! • .„^ u o
God's p ! do you know the knave that pamtea it .
Nay, God's p, before me ! speak !
within the pale— Beyond the p.
thy patriot p Siding with our great Council
Our Uving p for a dead man's dream ;
Thou hast no p for the House of Godwin —
illogically, out of p, without art—
with such true v As at this loveless knife
I never felt such p for a woman.
So end all p's. Then what use in p s ?
The ghosts of the dead p's of dead men ;
may not be seized With some fierce p.
That blast our natural p's into pains !
I have a sudden p for the wild wood —
The hunter's p flash'd into the man,
Passionate no p faith-Bu^-if let be-balance and ^,^^221
compromise ; ^ ^^^/^ , , ^g
He is p but honest. _ . jj i
Mad for thy mate, p nightingale ... I love thee for it— „ i " ^
Passion'd See Out-passion'd m i 43
Sonless I would I were As holy and as p as he .. ni^
P? How he flamed When Tostig's anger'd earldom, ,, m i 5 J
Passion-play Judas-lover of our p-p Hath track'd us hither, ^ecfceirv 137
' P on,* he said, and in thy name 1 pass d
I will but p to vespers. And breathe one prayer
That I should p the censures of the Church
And p at once perfect to Paradise.
Shall I too p to the choir,
He will p to-morrow In the gray dawn
Your arm — a moment — It will p.
Bird-babble for my falcon ! Let it p.
If possible, here ! to crop the flower and p.
I am half afraid to p.
AUow me, sir, to p you.
I cannot p that way.
on this cross I have sworn that till I myself p away,
I must v overseas to one that I trust will help me.
to p it aown A finger of that hand
Did we not hear the two would p this way ?
iiv204
", III i 280
„ V ii 102
„ v ii 190
„ V ii 390
„ v iii 14
V iii 74
The Cup I ii 294
„ n449
The Falcon 39
Prom, of May i 254
II 328
II 355
ni 733
Foresters i i 290
„ I ii 152
„ I ii 297
.. II i 198
Prom, of May I 397
Queen Mary i v 39'
„ in v 36^
III vi 87
IV ii 34
V ii 41
Harold in i 366
V i 357
Foresters ii i 626-
ni 318
Becket i ii 13
Foresters ni 242
Queen Mary i v 567
„ ni i ii48
„ m i 1364
„ III iv 285
Harold i ii 49
„ III i 58
„ HI ii 60
„ IV ii 72
Becket, Pro. 337
„ IV ii 190
The Cup I i 34
„ I iii 126
Prom, of May n 275
II 336
III 724
Foresters i iii 122
IV 539-
Passover Dash'd red with that unhallow'd p ;
Passport this pious cup Is p to their house,
Past (s) These are forgiven— matters of the p —
Hangs all my p, and all my life to be,
see, see, I speak of him in the p.
The p is like a travell'd land now sunk
In looking on a chill and changeless P?
the P Remains the P.
for the p Look'd thro' the present,
or is it but the p That brightens in retirmg r*
Sleep, nioumful heart, and let the p be past !
Past-Pass'd he's past your questioning.
The sentence having past upon them all,
How look'd the city When now you past it :*
As we past, Some hail'd, some hiss'd us.
Before he go, that since these statutes past.
He pass'd out smUing, and he walk'd upright;
You saw him how he past among the crowd;
—pas<— but whither? Paget. To purgatory, man.
And all his wars and wisdoms past away ;
Then claspt the cross, and pass'd away in peace.
had past me by To hunt and hawk elsewhere,
Then a great Angel past along the highest
great Angel rose And past again along the highest
when I past by Waltham, my foundation For men
longed much to see your Grace and the Chancellor ere
But^tL hour is past, and our brother, Master Cook,
I iii 348
The Cztp 1 i 83
Queen Mary ni iii 190
,, IV iii 219
IV iii 42^
The Cup n 230
Prom, of May u 504
n 505
n640
n644
Foresters i iii 47
Queen Mary i i 39
„ IV 487
II ii 58
u ii 60
„ m vi 24
„ IV iii 302
„ IV iii 574
„ IV iii 625
V v5«
„ V V 258
Harold u ii 27
„ in i 13S
„ inil5e
vi9(
Becket, Pro. 40(
I iv 6(
Fast-Fass'd
1031
Peace
Past-Pass'd (continued) Past help ! his paws are past help. Becket i iv 110
he hath pass'd out again, And on the other side. „ iii ii 12
a man passed in there to-day : I holla'd to him, „ ni ii 24
and in thy name I pass'd From house to house. „ v ii 103
on a Tuesday pass d From England into bitter
banishment ; „ v ii 288
She past me here Three years ago when I was flying The Cup i i 4
in a city thro' which he past with the Roman army : „ i i 43
in some city where Antonius past. „ i ii 58
having pass'd imwounded from the field, The Falcon 608
but they, the shadows of ourselves, Have past for
ever. Pro^n. of May i 272
You never told her, then, of what has past
Between us. „ i 729
Sleep, mournful heart, and let the past be past ! Foresters i iii 47
She and Sir Richard Have past away, „ ii i 120
They must have past. Here is a woodman's hut. „ ii i 199
You see he is past himself. What would you more ? „ iv 471
Past the bank Of foxglove, then to left by that one
yew. „ IV 973
Pastime While you can take your p in the woods. The Cup i i 190
Cannot he take his p like the flies ? Prom, of May i 277
It is but p — nay, I will not harm thee. Foresters U i 554
Have our loud p's driven them all away ? „ ii ii 105
Pastor P fugatur Grex trucidatur — Harold v i 513
Pastoral The polish'd Damon of your p here, Prom, of May ni 562
Pat gave me a great p o' the cheek for a pretty wench, Becket m i 125
Patch I must p up a peace — „ ii ii 53
Patent your name Stands first of those who sign'd the
Letters P Queen Mary i ii 18
State secrets should be p to the statesman Becket, Pro. 76
Pater Salva patriam Sancte P, Harold v i 467
Path in a narrow p. A plover flew before thee. Becket ii i 53
I strike into my former p For England, „ n ii 455
stray'd From love's clear p into the common bush, „ iii i 247
so many alleys, crossings, P's, avenues— „ iv ii 7
she turns down the p through our little vineyard. The Falcon 167
Pathway A hundred p's running everyway, Becket, Pro. 163
— would have made my p flowers, „ v ii 370
Patience age Of brief life, and brief purpose, and
brief p. Queen Mary in iv 414
The p of St. Lawrence in the fire. „ iv iii 95
Patient with that sweet worn smile Among thy p
wrinkles — „ v v 200
till now, by the p Saints, she's as crabb'd as ever. Harold ii i 50
Patriam Salva p Sancte Pater, „ v i 466
Salva p, Sancta Mater. „ v i 470
Patriarchal And die upon the P throne Of all my
predecessors ? Becket v iii 75
Patrimony When I was ruler in the p, Queen Mary v ii 72
That be the p of the poor ? Becket i iii 106
Patriot (adj.) but that thy p passion Siding with our great
Council against Tostig, Harold in i 57
Patriot (s) Their shield-borne f of the morning star The Cup ii 121
Patriotism you suspect This Smnatus of playing p, „ i i 78
Pattem'd moonlight casements p on the waU, Queen Mary v v 9
Paul (Saint) (See also St. Paul) what saith P ? ' I
would they were cut off ,. ni iv 31
Paul the Fourth (Pope) But this new Pope Caraffa, P t F, „ v ii 32
Panper a Sister of Mercy, come from the death-bed
of a p. Prom, of May iii 377
Pauper'd Why then, my lord, we are p out and out. The Falcon 268
Pauperes Sederunt principes, ederunt p. Becket i iv 132
Pauperis And one an uxor p Ibyci. » v ii 216
Pauperism Simk in the deepest pit of p. Prom, of May m 803
Pause (s) so in this p, before The mine be fired, Queen Mary ii i 25
Pause (verb) Wherefore p you — what? „ v iii 39
Pavement To bathe this sacred p with my blood. Becket v iii 131
Paw King's verdurer caught him a-hunting in the forest,
and cut off his p's. » i iv 96
Past help ! his p's are past help. „ i iv 111
One downward plunge of his p would rend away „ iv ii 283
if we kill a stag, our dogs have their p's cut off. Foresters iv 225
Fawn a King That with her own p's plays against a
Queen, Queen Mary i iii 162
Pawn (continued) Courtenay seems Too princely
for a p. Queen Mary i iii 167
Pay Your pious wish to p King Edward's debts, „ i v 111
but to p them full in kind, „ v iv 14
Pray'd me to p her debts, and keep the Faith ; „ v v 257
What conditions ? p him back His ransom ? Harold ii ii 213
Church should p her scutage like the lords. Becket i i 34
and he p's me regular every Saturday. Prom, of May i 311
Why should I p you your full wages ? „ iii 83
sits and eats his heart for want of money to p the Abbot. Foresters i i 5
thou shouldst marry one who will p the mortgage. „ i i 280
I would p My brother all his debt and save the land. „ i ii 217
Himself would p this mortgage to his brother, „ i ii 263
he would p The mortgage if she favour'd him. „ i iij 6
Sheriff Would p this cursed mortgage to his brother „ n i 144
and couldst never p The mortgage on my land. „ n i 453
That other thousand — shall I ever pit? „ n i 466
Take thou my bow and arrow and compel them to p toll. „ m 263
he that p's not for his dinner must fight for it. „ iv 199
Church and Law, halt and p toll ! „ iv 430
Where he would p us down his thousand marks. „ rv 441
Give him another month, and he will p it. „ rv 444
Lest he should faiil to p these thousand marks „ rv 454
he Would p us all the debt at once, „ iv 485
Payest Thou p easily, like a good fellow, „ iv 155
Paying but the schoolmaster looked to the p you Prom, of May m 23
Sheriff had taken aU oiu: goods for the King without p, Foresters u i 191
when the Sheriff took my Uttle horse for the King
without p for it — „ n i 302
Pea See Peasen
Peace be no p for Mary till Elizabeth lose her head.' Queen Mary i iii 4
P ! hear him ! let his own words damn the Papist. „ i iii 52
Ay, tho' you long for p ; „ i v 258
Some settled ground for p to stand upon. „ i v 315
P, pretty maiden. I hear them stirring „ i v 627
plain life and letter'd p, „ n i 50
P. False to Northumberland, is he false to me ? „ n iv 38
The second Prince of P— „ lu ii 164
P — the Queen, Philip, and Pole. „ ni iii 83
' I come not to bring p but a sword ' ? „ in iv 88
P, madman ! Thou stirrest up a grief „ ni iv 297
Will let you learn in p and privacy „ in iv 326
With us is p ! ' The last ? It was a dream ; „ in v 152
P among you, there ! „ iv iii 199
When I should guide the Church in p at home, „ v ii 67
P, cousin, p ! I am sad at heart myself. „ v ii 159
It gilds the greatest wronger of her p, „ v ii 415
sleeping after all she has done, in p and quietness, „ v iv 35
Then claspt the cross, and pass'd away in p. „ v v 260
P is with the dead. „ v v 267
P with the dead, who never were at p ! „ v v 273
left me time And p for prayer to gain Harold i i 220
Ay, ay and wise in p and great in war — „ i i 313
Thy fears infect me beyond reason. P \ „ n ii 452
P be with him ! „ iv iii 89
p with them Likewise, if they can be at p „ iv iii 98
A snatch of sleep were like the p of Goa. „ v i 180
Come yet once more, from where I am at p, ,> v i 239
P ! The king's last word — ' the arrow ! ' „ v i 265
God of truth FiU all thine hours with p\ — „ v i 316
P to his soul ! Becket, Pro. 394
I left him with p on his face — „ Pro. 395
P, fools ! Becket. P, friends 1 „ i ii 1
P, p, my lords ! these customs are no longer „ i iii 68
none could sit By his own hearth in p ; „ i iii 342
To our King's hands again, and be at p. „ i iii 582
1 am confounded by thee. Go in p. De Broc. In p
now — but after. Take that for earnest. „ i iii 731
Ay, go in p, caitiff, caitiff ! „ i iii 735
P ! Beggar. The black sheep baaed to the miller's
ewe-lamb, „ i iv 161
P ! Beggar. ' Ewe lamb, ewe lamb, „ i iv 170
the nightmare breaking on my p With ' Becket.' „ n i 37
I must patch up a p— „ n ii 53
So we make our p with him. „ n ii 63
Peace
1032
People
Becket n ii 200
„ n ii 240
„ n ii 448
„ III iii 254
„ in iii 259
„ III iii 328
., in iii 346
V ii 84
V ii 86
„ V ii 350
The Cup I iii 125
I iii 173
n 214
The Falcon 910
Peace (continued) what it is you doubt ? Behold your p
at hand,
but this day he proffer'd p.
Rest in our realm, and be at p with all.
save King Henry gave thee first the kiss of p.
I sware I would not give the kiss of p,
happy home-return and the King's kiss of p in Kent.
that the sheep May feed in p.
I thought that I had made a p for thee.
Small p was mine in my noviciate,
brken Your bond of p, your treaty with the King —
Then with one quick short stab — eternal p.
and smile At bygone things till that eternal p.
0 bush ! Op! This violence ill becomes
No more feuds, but p, P and conciliation !
he's no respect for the Queen, or the parson, or the
justice o' p, or owt. Prom, of May 1 133
— so be more at p With mine own self. „ n 662
P, let him be : it is the chamber of Death ! „ in 740
P, my lord ; the Earl and Sir Richard come this way. Foresters i ii 147
capering hand in hand with Oberon. Robin. P ! „ n i 499
cuirass in this forest where I dream'd That all was p^ „ iv 131
P, magpie ! Give him the quarterstaff. „ iv 249
0 p ! Father, I cannot marry till Richard comes. „ iv 647
Peaceful and no more feuds Disturb our p vassalage to Rome. The Cup n 71
Peace-lover P-l is our Harold for the sake Hat-old i ii 197
Peace-ofEering a p-o, A scape-goat marriage — „ i ii 203
Peach a cheek like a p and a heart like the stone in it — The Falcon 93
Peacock Never p against rain Scream'd as you did Queen Mary ni v 56
Peacocking See A-peacocking
Peahen eye left in his own tail to flourish among the p's. The Falcon 102
Peal some great doom when God's just hour P's — - Queen Mary i iv 263
Pearl set it round with gold, with p, with diamond
Some six or seven Bishops, diamonds, p's,
1 see the flashing of the gates of p—
prize The p of Beauty, even if I found it
Peasen (peas) Hodge 'ud ha' been a-harrowin' o'
white p i' the outfield —
Pebble God change the p which his kingly foot
Peck and why ye have so few grains to p at.
Peculiar would commend them to your ladyship's most p
appreciation.
Pedite Eques cum p Prsepediatur !
Peeped all in all to one another from the time when
we first p into the bird's nest,
Peer And is not York the p of Canterbury ?
Peer'd How close the Sheriff p into thine eyes !
Peerless in music P — her needle perfect,
Pell-mell Church in the p-m of Stephen's time
Pelt After him, boys ! and p him from the city.
Pembroke (Earl of) so my Lord of P in command Of
all her force be safe ; „ ii ii 305
Gardiner, coming with the Queen, And meeting P, „ n ii 310
Lord P in command of all our force „ n iv 3
Was not Lord P with Northumberland ? O mad-
man, if this P should be false ? „ n iv 7
The traitor ! treason ! P ! „ ii iv 36
Where is P ? Courtenay. I left him somewhere
in the thick of it. „ ii iv 79
Pen Can't I speak like a lady ; p a letter like a lady ; Prom, of May ni 302
Pencil with some sense of art, to hve By brush and p. „ i 499
Pendent But tell us, is this p hell in heaven A harm to
England ? Harold i i 76
lied like a lad That dreads the p scourge, „ ii ii 658
Penenden Heath ten thousand men on P S all calling
after your worship,
They roar for you On P H,
some fifty That follow'd me from P H in hope To
hear you speak.
Penitence declare our p and grief For our long schism
And if your p be not mockery,
Penitent So that we may, as children p,
Thou shalt receive the p thief's award,
Would not — if p — ^have denied him her Forgiveness. Prom, of May ii 496
Penn'd This was p. Madonna, Close to the grating The Falcon 440
IV 375
m i 53
Harold i i 186
Prom, of May in 601
Queen Mary IV iii 492
I V 368
Foresters i i 77
The Falcon 568
Harold V i 529
Prom, of May in 274
Becket i iii 47
Foresters i ii 253
Q,ueen Mary in i 360
Becket, Pro. 19
Queen Mary i iii 85
Queen Mary n i 61
II i 106
H i 151
in iii 128
ni iii 179
m iii 153
IV iii ■
Penny I will give thee a silver p if thou wilt show Foresters n i 360
I have but one p in pouch, „ ni 193
He hath, as he said, but one p. „ m 209
Take his p and leave him his gold mark. „ in 217
People (s) {See also Fool-people) council and all her p
wish her to marry. Queen Mary i i 113
And if her p, anger'd thereupon, „ i iii 90
The p there so worship me —
the p Claim as their natural leader —
The Council, p. Parliament against him;
Your p have begun to learn your worth,
remission Of half that subsidy levied on the p,
Your p, and I go with them so far,
And here at land among the p !
The hardest, cruellest p in the world,
the Queen, and the laws, and the p, his slaves.
A prince as naturally may love his p
And leave the p naked to the crown. And the crown
naked to the p ;
and the p so unquiet —
His sword shall hew the heretic p's down !
For as this p were the first of all
bounden by his power and place to see His p be not
poison'd.
And passes thro' the p's :
seem this p Care more for our brief life
read your recantation Before the p in St. Mary's Church
You are to beg the p to pray for you ;
Yea, for the p, lest the p die.
Good p, every man at time of death
your p will not crown me — Your p are as cheerless
The p's are unlike as their complexion ;
. and therefore God Is hard upon the p.
Ah, Msidam, but your p are so cold ;
' Yovu" p hate you as your husband hates you.'
My p hate me and desire my death.
No, not to her nor him ; but to the p,
love me, as I love The p ! whom God aid !
The p are as thick as bees below.
Pray God the p choose thee for their king !
Stir up thy p : oust him !
Let all thy p bless thee !
shown And redden'd with his p's blood
voice of any p is the sword That guards them,
The king, the lords, the p clear'd him of it.
where Tostig lost The good hearts of his p.
What ! are thy p sullen from defeat ?
Why cry thy p on thy sister's name ?
She hath won upon our p thro' her beauty.
For when your p banish d Tostig hence.
Who sow'd this fancy here among the p ? Morcar. Who
knows what sows itself among the p ?
the p stupid-sure Sleep like their swine . . .
Scatter thy p home, descend the hill,
How should the p fight When the king flies ?
waste the fields Of England, his own p ? —
First of a line that coming from the p. And chosen by the
p — Harold. And fighting for And dying for the p—
chosen by his p And fighting for his p !
Make them again one p — -Norman, English ;
— like a song of the p.
Was not the p's blessing as we past
The p know their Church a tower of strength,
They said — her Grace's p — thou wast found —
spied my p's ways ; Yea, heard the churl against
any harm done to the p if my jest be in defence of the
Truth ? Becket. Ay, if the jest be so done that the
p Delight .. n ii 339
the p Believe the wood enchanted. ,, m i 35
p do say that he is bad beyond all reckoning — and
Rosamund. The p lie. ,. mi 174
of the p there are many with me. .. m iii 292
The p love thee, father. „ v ii 120
What do these p fear ? „ v iii 48
your own p cast you from their boimds, The Cv/p i i 137
liv 120
iiv209
IV 78
IV 109
IV 116
IV 188
IV 383
nilOO
n i 175
n ii 192
m i 119
mi 453
m ii 178
m iii 171
m iv 213
in V 35
in vi 61
IV ii 29
ivii76
IV iii 18
IV iii 156
vi81
vi89
V i 176
V ii 280
V ii 336
V ii 345
V iii 33
V iii 36
HaroU I i 31
., I i 314
„ I i 482
., iii 184
., Iii 243
.. u ii 134
„ n ii 522
.. niii30
IV i 1
„ IV i 20
„ IV i 23
IV 197
IV i 148
IV iii 215
vilO
vil37
vil42
vi386
„ vi491
„ V ii 188
Becket, Pro. 338
I i 12
I i 15
„ I ii 5
I iii 363
People
1033
Phantom
Rome Made war upon the p's not
People (s) (continued)
\j^j the Gods.
His own true p cast him from their doors
Camma for my bride — The p love her —
r ' Hear thy p who praise thee !
£^ _ throned together in the sight Of all the p,
teach this Rome — from knowledge of our p —
all the fleeted wealth of kings And p's, hear.
if my p must be thralls of Rome,
Thou art one With thine own p, and though a Roman
You know sick p, More specially sick children,
' The land belongs to the p ! ' From, of May i i 141
So loved by all the village p here, „ m 755
Sir Richard and my Lady Marian fare wellnigh as
sparely as their p.
soTtrue a friend of the p as Lord Robin of Huntingdon.
fights not for himself but for the p of England.
to save his coimtry, and the liberties of his p !
My p are all scattered I know not where.
The oppression of our p moves me so,
Robin, the p's friend, the King o' the woods !
These be the lies the p tell of us,
People (verb) to p heaven in the great day When God
makes up his jewels. Becket v ii 496
Perceive man jo's that The lost gleam of an after-hfe Prom, of May 1 i 502
Perch liis politic HoUness Hath all but climb'd the Roman p Becket niiAQ
Perch 'd Him p up there ? I wish some thunderbolt Queen Mary rv iii 9
Pereant P, p, Anglia precatur. Harold v i 533
Peregrine And hear my p and her bells in heaven ; „ i ii 131
Perennial and his wealth A fountain of p alms — Queen Mary 11 ii 385
The Cup I ii 60
I ii 351
I iii 153
II 5
n68
n97
II 290
II 500
II 504
The Falcon 816
Foresters i i 31
„ I i 188
„ I i 237
„ I i 247
„ II i 176
„ III 109
„ ni 347
„ HI 392
Perfect No ! the disguise was p. Let's away
her needle p, and her learning Beyond the churchmen ;
and is furthermore No p witness of a p faith In him
who persecutes :
Thou art manlike p.
My friend of Canterbury and myself Are now once
more in p amity.
I would there were that p trust between us,
That p trust may come again between us,
Mail'd in the p panoply of faith.
Honour to thee ! thou art p in all honour !
But wherefore slur the p ceremony ?
A gallant boy, A noble bird, each p of the breed.
And yet I had once a vision of a pure and p
marriage,
Shall I be known ? is my disguise p ? Sheriff.
who should know you for Prince John,
Perhaps See P'raps
Peril Looms the least chance of p to our realm.
are you not in p here ? Stafford. I think so.
in your behalf, At his own p.
day of p that dawns darkly and drearily
At their p, at their p — ■
Thou hast saved my head at the p of thine own,
PbeQous Many points weather'd, many p ones,
A good entrenchment for a p hour !
a p game For men to play with God.
all these walks are Robin Hood's And sometimes p.
I iii 178
m i 360
ra iv 117
Becket n i 253
„ m iii 229
„ lu iii 264
„ in iii 351
„ V ii 494
Harold 11 ii 691
The Cup n 431
The Falcon 320
Prom, of May m 188
Foresters i ii 19
Queen Mary 11 ii 238
in i 34
rv i 127
Beckei 1 iv 145
„ III iii 313
Foresters TV 796
Queen Marii v v 212
Harold ni i 363
Becket n ii 70
Foresters IV 121
PiBnsh Would p on the civil slaughter-field. Queen Alarij m i 118
May all invaders p like Hardrada ! Harold iv iii 77
So p all the enemies of Harold ! „ v i 504
So p all the enemies of England ! „ v i 554
P she, I, all, before The Church should suffer wrong ! Becket in iii 20
Pecjnred And thou art p, and thou wilt not seal. „ i iii 526
And that too, p prelate — and that, turncoat shaveling ! „ i iii 736
1 Perjnry-mongering the p-m Count Hath made too good an
use Harold v i 310
Permission P of her Highness to retire To Ashridge, Queen Mary i iv 236
Permit P me to withdraw To Lambeth ? „ in ii 129
P me, my good lord, to bear it for thee, Becket i iii 490
wilt thou p us Becket. To speak without
stammering „ i iv 6
My lord, p us then to leave thy service. „ i iv 9
Perpendicular Your lordship affects the unwavering p ; „ n ii 326
Perpetual Their wafer and p sacrifice : Queen Mary i ii 45
Perpetual (continued) she holds it in Free and p alms, Becket 1 iii 680
the voice Of the p brook, these golden slopes „ in i 46
doth not the living skin thicken against p whippings ? „ in iii 316
Close to the grating on a winter morn In the p twUight
of a prison. The Falcon 441
Persecute the worse is here To p, because to p Queen Mary in iv 115
of a perfect faith In him who p's : „ in iv 118
Person demanded Possession of her p and the Tower. „ u ii 41
In mine own p am I come to you, „ n ii 142
Seek to possess our p, hold our Tower, „ n ii 158
that anyone Should seize our p, occupy our state, „ n ii 178
yield Full scope to p's rascal and forlorn, „ n ii 185
As p's undefiled with our offence, „ iii iii 144
first In Council, second p in the realm, „ iv iii 72
Three p's and one God, have mercy on me, „ iv iii 121
Noble as his young p and old shield. „ v ii 513
if our p be secured From traitor stabs — „ v v 280
Then fling mine own fair p in the gap A sacrifice Harold i ii 202
I cannot bear a hand upon my p, BeckH v iii 20
I came In p to return them. The Falcon 727
Persuaded She would have p me to come back here. Prom, of May in 383
Pertest P of our flickering mob, ~
Peru The voices of P and Mexico,
Peruse P it ; is it not goodly, ay, and gentle ?
wherefore dost thou so p it ?
Pesteringly Unalterably and p fond !
Pestilent \M11 no man free me from this p priest ?
Peter The Eternal P of the changeless chair,
Peter (Peter Martyr) P, I'll swear for him He did beUeve
Peter (Saint) (See also St. Peter) and I return As P,
but to bless thee :
How oft hath P knock'd at Mary's gate ! „
The Church on P's rock ? never ! „
I have builded the great church of Holy P :
' O blessed reUcs ! ' '0 Holy P ! '
loftiest minster ever built To Holy P
Like P's when he fell, and thou wilt have To wail for it
like P.
and a blessed hair Of P, and all France,
gonfanon of Holy P Floating above their helmets —
Holy Father strangled him with a hair Of P,
And but that Holy P fought for us.
The customs of the Church are P's rock.
Which even P had not dared ?
And as for the flesh at table, a whole P's sheet,
Peterboro' Leofric, and all the monks of P
Peter Carew (See also Carew) Sir P C and Sir
Thomas Wyatt,
Duke of Suffolk and Sir P C,
' Sir P C fled to France :
Is P C fled ? Is the Duke taken ?
Peters (Gentleman of Lord Howard) P, my gentleman,
an honest Cathohc,
P, how pale you look ! you bring the smoke
P, you know me Catholic, but English.
Ay, Master P, tell us.
Petition long p from the foreign exiles To spare
This same p of the foreign exiles For Cranmer's life.
Petticoat Ay, ay, gown, coif, and p.
Foresters 11 ii 130
Queen Mary v i 47
I V 195
Berket n i 186
Queen Mary v i 120
Becket v i 262
Queen Mary m iv 380
Iii 76
III ii 56
ni ii 63
III iv 134
Harold 1 i 180
„ I ii 171
■„ in i 207
.. in i 283
„ in ii 149
„ V i 549
V ii 47
„ V ii 164
Becket i ni 24
„ n ii 395
„ in iii 129
Harold v i 446
Queen Mary i iii 123
I iv 112
n i 135
n i 142
„ IV iii 553
IV iii 560
IV iii 566
IV iii 573
rvi3
rv i 193
Foresters u i 195
Petty To still the p treason therewithin. Queen Mary in i 13
the sea-creek— the p rUl That falls into it — Becket n ii 293
Petulancy Thou goest beyond thyself in p ! „ r iii 65
Pevensey dungeon'd the other half In P Castle — „ v ii 446
Landed at P — I am from P — Hath wasted all the land
at P— Harold iv iii 188
I have ridden night and day from P — „ iv iii 192
Phantasy Nay, pure p, your Grace. Queen Mary i v 280
Not as from me, but as your p ; „ v i 260
This coarseness is a want of p. ,, v ii 438
I love the man but not his phantasies. Harold i i 279
Phantom (adj . ) The p ciy ! You — did you hear a cry ? Prom, of May m 651
And catch the winding of a p horn. Foresters iv 1091
Phantom (s) to victory — I hope so — Like p's of the Gods. The Cup r ii 170
Her p call'd me by the name she loved. Prom, of May n 242
That I may feel thou art no p — Foresters iv 1013
Pharisees
1034
Philip Edgar
Riarisees They go like those old P in John Queen Mary n ii 8
Pheasant-flesh A doter on white p-/ at feasts, Becket, Fro. 97
Fhilibert (Prince of Savoy) {See also Philibert of Savoy)
I think that I will play with P,— Queen Mary m v 242
I am not certain but that P Shall be the man ; „ v i 264
Fhilibert of Savoy ' It is the King's wish, that you
should wed Prince P o S.
Specially not this landless P 0 S ;
She will not have Prince P o S,
Elizabeth— To P o 8, as you know,
She will not have Prince P o S.
Philip (Father) Father P that has confessed our mother
for twenty years,
Philip (King of Naples and Sicily, afterwards King of
Spain) has ofEer'd her his son P, the Pope
and the Devil.
A goodUer-looking fellow than this P.
leagued together To bar me from my P.
But if this P, the proud Catholic prince,
would blow this P and all Your trouble
grant me my prayer : Give me my P ;
Would I marry Prince P, if all England hate him ?
Stab me in fancy, hissing Spain and P ;
Madam, take it bluntly ; marry P,
prince is known in Spain, in Flanders, ha ! For P-
swom upon the body and blood of Christ I'll none
but P.
That you may marry P, Prince of Spain —
if this P be the titular king Of England,
Have you seen P ever ? Noailles. Only once.
Mary. Is this like P ?
a formal offer of the hand Of P ?
P never writes me one poor word,
P shows Some of the bearing of your blue blood —
P Is the most princelike Prince beneath the aim.
This is a daub to P.
bimi the throne Where you should sit with P :
For P comes one hand in mine,
Farewell, and trust me, P is yours,
heard Slanders against Prince P in our Court ?
The formal offer of Prince P's hand.
Ay ! My P is all mine.
No new news that P comes to wed Mary,
This P and the black-faced swarms of Spain,
P shall not wed Mary ;
to save her from herseft and P —
and if P come to be King, O, my God !
smash all our bits o' things worse than P o' Spain.
Don't ye now go to think we be for P o' Spain,
Their cry is, P never shall be king.
I live and die The true and faithful bride of P —
P would not come Till Guildford Dudley
My foes are at my feet, and P King.
A diamond, And P's gift, as proof of P's love,
P with a glance of some distaste,
yet he fail'd. And strengthen'd P.
Gardiner buys them With P's gold,
eat fire and spit it out At P's beard :
some secret that may cost P his life.
P and Mary, P and Mary ! Long live the King
and Queen, P and Mary !
I thought this P had been one of those black devils
of Spain,
There be both King and Queen, P and Mary. Shout
The Queen comes first, Mary and P. Gardiner.
Shout, then, Mary and P ! Man. Mary and P ! „ ni i 299
shouted for thy pleasure, shout for mine ! P and Mary ! „ m i 306
P and Mary ! Gardiner. I distrust thee. „ in i 309
P and the Pope Must have sign'd too. „ in i 429
But if this P, as he's like to do, „ ni i 460
Oh, P, husband ! now thy love to mine „ m ii 159
Oh, P, come with me ; „ tn ii 185
P's no sudden alien — the Queen's husband, „ in iii 42
' P ! ' says he. I had to cuff the rogue For infant
treason. „ in iii 51
in V 222
m V 240
m vi 43
vi247
vi254
Becket m i 111
Queen Mary i i 106
I iv 3
I iv 140
I iv 280
I iv 290
I V 87
I V 139
I V 151
I V 205
I V 209
I V 216
I V 251
I V 254
I V 319
IV 350
I V 359
I V 433
„ IV 444
I V 511
I V 515
I V 541
I V 570
I V 588
IV 640
n i 16
II i 98
n i 164
n i 190
II i 199
n iii 104
„ n iii 106
„ n iv 1
II iv 43
„ II iv 135
n iv 143
m i 67
III i 99
in i 133
„ mi 145
m i 158
in i 202
m i 206
in i 214
m i 297
Philip (King of Naples and Sicily, afterwards King of
Spain) {continued) P by these articles is bound
From stirring hand Queen
P should not mix us any way With his French wars. ,,
Good sir, for this, if P Third Member. Peace
— the Queen, P, and Pole. ,
P would have it ; and this Gardiner follows !
For that is P's gold-dust, and adore ,,
but, if P menace me, I think that I will play ,,
three days in tears For P's going— „
The Queen of P should be chaste. „
0 P ! Nay, must you go indeed ? „
and pass And leave me, P, „
if 1 knew you felt this parting, P, As I do ! „
And P's will, and mine, that he should bum. „
Her life, since P left her, and she lost „
They hate me also for my love to you, My P ; „
P, can that be well ? „
P ? — Pole. No, P is as warm in life As ever. „
He hates P ; He is all Italian, „
He strikes thro' me at P and yourself. „
he may bring you news from P. „
P, We have made war upon the Holy Father „
You did but help King P's war with France, „
P gone ! And Calais gone ! Time that I were
gone too ! „
Too young ! And never knew a P. „
And all along Of P.
Ay, this P ; I used to love the Queen with all my
heart — „
And love to hear bad tales of P. „
Count de Feria, from his Majesty King P. Mary.
P ! quick ! loop up my hair ! „
Indian shawl That P brought me in our happy
days ! — „
no need For P so to shame himself again. „
As far as France, and into P's heart. „
You will be Queen, And, were I P — • „
Your P hath gold hair and golden beard ; „
But as to P and your Grace — consider, — „
Madam, if you marry P, „
God's death, forsooth — you do not know King P. „
' I am dying, P ; come to me.' „
Calais gone^ — Guisnes gone, too — and P gone !
Lady Clarence. Dear Madam, P is but at
the wars; „
by God's grace. We'll follow P's leading, „
Madam, who goes ? King P ? Mary. No, P
comes and goes, but never goes. „
you will find written Two names, P and Calais ;
You will find P only, policy, policy, — „
This P shall not Stare in upon me in my haggardness ; „
0 God, I have kill'd my P !
Away from P. Back in her childhood — • „
Philip (Philip Edgar, afterwards Mr. Harold) (See also
Edgar, Harold, Philip Edgar, Philip Harold,
Philip Hedgar) Oh, P, Father heard you last
night. Prom
will be placed Beneath the window, P.
Dear P, aU the world is beautiful
P, P, if you do not marry me.
Do not till I bid you. Eva. No, P, no.
Did you speak, P ?
call for P when you will. And he returns.
Eh lad, if it be thou, I'll P tha !
Philip Edgar (afterwards Mr. Harold) Heaven hears you, P E !
Not Harold ! 'P E,P E\'
P £ of Toft Hall In Somerset.
One P E ot Toft Hall in Somerset Is lately dead.
« I caU you, P E,P E\
'P E, Esq.' Ay, you be a pretty squire.
1 have been telling her of the death of one P Eoi Toft
Hall, Somerset.
' O' the 17th, P E, o' Toft HaU, Soomerset.'
you are the first I ever have loved truly. Eva. P E !
Mary m iii 591
in iii 78-
of May 1 556
I 561
I 576.
leSO'
I 733
1748-
I 758
n 590
I 760
II 240
II 138
11 ! 15
II ()57
n ()88
Philip Harold
1035
Plague
Prom, of May n 451
n 586
Queen Mary v i 48
Prom, of May n 281
The Cup n 9
Queen Man/ ni iii 260
Bec'ket II ii 438
The Falcon 728
Becket, Pro. 55
Philip Harold (Philip Edgar) Nay— now — not one,
for I am P H.
Philip Hedgar (Edgar) P H o' Soomerset ! (repeat)
Philippines Timis, and Oran, and the P,
Philosopher A poor p who call'd the mind
Phoebe P, that man from Synorix, who has been
Phrase Do not scrimp your p,
now I see That I was blind — suffer the p —
If the j> ' Return ' displease you, we will say —
Phryne With P, Or Lais, or thy Rosamund,
Physic in a closed room, with light, fire, p, tendance; Queen Mary v iv 37
Plqrsical Against the moral excess No p ache, Becket i i 382
Pt^cian Nay, dearest Lady, see your good p. Queen Mary v v 59
Physick'd These princes are like children, must be p, „ i v 234
Pianner (piano) plaay the p, if ye liked, all daay long,
likealaiidy. Prom, of May n 100
Pick What should I say, I cannot p my words — Queen Mary in vi 147
Fictore we prize The statue or the p all the more Prom, of May i 738
poor Steer looks The very type of Age in a p,
More like the p Of Christian in my ' Pilgrim's
Progress '
if you cram me crop-full I be little better than Famine
in the p, Foresters i i 47
Piece Henry broke the carcase of your church To p's, Queen Mary i v 399
It Ues there in six p's at your feet ; — • °"
Give me a p of paper !
A p in this long-tugged-at, threadbare-wom Quarrel
I dash myself to p's — I stay myself —
God's full curse Shatter you all to p's if ye harm
I tear it all to p's, never dream'd Of acting on it.
a hundred Gold p's once were offer'd by the Duke.
but one p of earthenware to serve the salad in to my lady,
Towser'ill tear him all to p's. Pro
III 514
ni518
Hi 87
II iii 66
Becket II ii 54
„ II ii 150
„ v iii 135
The Cup I ii 247
ThejFalcon 324
481
of May 1 423
Harold v i 156
The Falcon 48
Pro)n. of May 1 147
Queen Mary rv iii 311
Becket i iii 97
Harold v i 658
and there is a p of beef like a house-side, „ ' i 793
break it all to p's, as you would break the poor, Foresters u i 285
Piecemeal And tear you p : so you have a guard. Queen Mary iv ii 36
a score of wolf-dogs are let loose that will tear thee p. Becket ni ii 40
Pier Ran sunless down, and moan'd against the p's. Queen Mary n iii 27
Pierced Tho' we have p thro' all her practices ; _ . - .
Piero they are but blue beads — my P,
Pig (See also Hedge-pig) s'pose I kills my p, and
gi'es it among 'em, why there wudn t be a
dinner for nawbody, and I should ha' lost
the p.
Pigeon See Carrier-pigeon
Pike Hurls his soil'd hfe against the p's and dies.
Pilate The Lord be judged again by P ? No !
Piled dead So p about him he can hardly move.
' Pilgrim's Progress ' More like the picture Of Christian
in my ' P P' Prom, of May ni 519
Pillage (s) The p of his vassals. Foresters m 107
Richard sacks and wastes a town With random p, „ xv 378
Pillage (verb) they p Spain already. Queen Mary in i 158
Pillar Steadying the tremulous p's of the Church — „ i v 517
Be limpets to this p, or we are torn „ m i 184
stand behind the p here ; „ iv iii 462
But thou didst back thyself against a p, Harold i ii 88
Taken the rifted p's of the wood „ i ii 100
lo ! my two p's, Jachin and Boaz ! — „ in i 191
Pillaring P a leaf-sky on their monstrous boles, Foresters in 100
Pillow I never lay my head upon the p Queen Mary ni v 131
A gnat that vext thy p ! Harold i ii 71
Pilot Saints P and prosper all thy wandering out „ i i 265
Pincer fiends that utter them Tongue-torn with p's, Queen Mary v ii 194
Pinch give me one sharp p upon the cheek Foresters rv 1011
Pine (tcee) I have seen A p in Italy that cast its
shadow Athwart a cataract ; firm stood the p — Queen Mary ni iv 136
the p was Rome. You see, my Lords, „ m iv 142
wind of the dawn that I hear in the p overhead ? Becket ii i 2
P, beech and plane, oak, walnut. The Clip i i 1
Beneath the shadow of our p's and planes ! „ n 227
Pine (verb) poor Pole p's of it, As I do, to the
death. Queen Mary v v 128
Pinfold I seed that one cow 'o thine i' the p agean Prom, of May 1 191
Pinned What's here ? a scroll P to the wreath. The Falcon 425
Pious Your p wish to pay King Edward's debts,
it were a p work To string my father's sonnets,
Here a p Catholic, Mumbling and mixing up in his
scared prayers
See if our p — what shall I call him, John? —
now this p cup Is passport to their house,
I have one mark in gold which a p son of the Church
gave me this morning
Pipe Organ and p, and dulcimer, chants and hymns
Piped boy she held Mimick'd and p her
Pipest thou, my bird, thou p Becket, Becket —
Piping gaping bills in the home-nest P for bread —
Fluting, and p and luting ' Love, love, love '
Queen Mary i v 111.
n i 2ft
II ii 84
Becket n ii 38
The Cup I i 81
Foresters ni 281
Becket v ii 365
Queen Mary n ii 74
Becket n i 32'
„ n ii 301
Foresters ni 33-
Pirate Thy fierce" f orekings had clench'd their p hides To
the bleak church doors, Harold iv iii 36
For tho' we touch'd at many p ports. Foresters iv 983
Pit plunge and fall Of heresy to the p : Queen Mary m iv 142'
Sunk in the deepest p of pauperism, Prom, of May in 803
Pitchfork fur him as be handy wi' a book bean't but
haafe a hand at a p. „ 1 189
hunt him With p's on the farm, „ n 427
Piteous perhaps the man himself. When hearing of
that p death, „ n 500-
Pitifol Be somewhat p, after I have gone. Queen Mary rv ii 157
„ iviil63
, m iv 49
Harold i ii 44
Becket i iii 202
„ n ii 31(y
„ m i 126
„ rv ii 131
Prom, of May m 691
Foresters iv 457
IV 519'
rv521
P, p I — There was a nian of ours Up in the north, „ iv 528-
I fear I had small p for that man. — „ rv 547
But p for a father, it may be, „ rv 659
Pity (verb) She said— pray pardon me, and p her— Queen Mary i v 53
I could p this poor world myseK that it is no better
ordered. Becket, Pro. 365^
and I have none— to p thee. „ iv ii 81
Plaay (play) And p the pianner, if ye liked, all daay
long, like a laady. Prom, of May n 100
Wi' the butterflies out, and the swallers at p, „ n 199
Place (s) (See also Pleace, Tomb-place) Is bounden
by his power and p to see Queen Mary iii iv 212
No p for worse. „ iv iii 80
Gardener, and huntsman, in the parson's p, „ rv iii 374
Is this a p To wail in. Madam ? „ v i 212
battle-axe Was out of p ; it should have been the bow. — Harold i ii 106
yea, and thou Chair'd in his p. „ i ii 247
Then shalt thou step into my p and sign. Becket i iii 15 ■
A fit p for the monies of the Church, „ i iii 105
This IS the Ukelier tale. We have hit the p. „ niii43-
And weeps herself into the p of power ; „ v ii 214
He knows the twists and turnings of the p. „ v ii 577
not show yourself In your old p ? „ vii596
Thou shouldst have ta'en his p, and fought for him. Foresters n i 546-
P to this p heresy ?
Pitiless And by the churchman's p doom of fire,
Pity (s) Hate not one who felt Some p for thy hater !
the Pope our master. Have p on nim,
P, my lord, that you have quenched the warmth
said it was a p to blindfold such eyes as mine
more the p then That thy true home —
I have wasted p on her — not dead now —
Have you no p ? must you see the man ?
Have you no p ?
What p have you for your game ?
Place (verb) P and displace our councillors,
We therefore p ourselves Under the shield
let me p this chair for your ladyship.
Placed freed him from the Tower, p him at Court ;
And softly p the chaplet on her head,
will be p Beneath the window, Philip.
Plagas Hostis per Angliae P bacchatur ;
Plague (s) so the p Of schism spreads ;
Harvestless autumns, horrible agues, p —
War, waste, p, famine, all malignities.
Saints to scatter sparks of p Thro' all your cities,
like Egypt's p, had fiU'd All things with blood ;
They are p's enough in-door.
The p's That smite the city spare the solitudes.
Whose arrow is the p — whose quick flash
Push'd from all doors as if we bore the p.
Queen Mary n ii 160
Becket i iii 599
The Falcon 178
Queen Mary i v 163
The Falcon 362
Prom, of May i 560
Harold v i 511
Queen Mary in iv 171
V i 99
Harold i i 466
„ II ii 746
Becket i iii 344
n ii 91
„ V ii 172
The Cup II 291
Prom, of May III 805-
Plague
1036.
Please
Plague (verb) And yet she p's me too — no fault in her — Becket, Pro. 59
Plagued what news hath p thy heart ? Queen Mary v ii 18
Plain You should be p and open with me, niece. „ i iv 217
he loved the more His own gray towers, p life and
letter'd peace. „ ii i 49
'tis not written Half p enough. Give me a piece of
paper ! „ u iii 66
play the f Christian man. „ iv iii 267
I that so prized p word and naked truth Harold ni i 93
Thou wert p Thomas and not Canterbury, Becket i iii 578
had she but given F answer to p query ? .. iv ii 386
Cannot you understand p words, Mr. Dobson? Prom, of May ii 112
Henceforth I am no more Than p man to p man.
Ttu;k. Well, then, p man Foresters i iii 96
A fine, a fine ! he hath called p Robin a lord. „ iii 215
I am the yeoman, p Robin Hood, „ iv 143
Fine him ! fine him ! he hath called p Robin an earl. ,, rv 151
A fine ! a fine ! He hath called p Robin a king. „ iv 218
Plainer Be p, Master Cranmer. Queen Mary iv iii 235
Plainness I have been a man loved p all my life ; I
did dissemble, but the hour has come For utter
truth and p ; „ iv iii 270
Plaister May p his clean name with scurrilous rhymes ! Becket i i 308
Plane Pine, beech and p, oak, walnut, The Cup i i 1
Beneath the shadow of our pines and p's ! „ ii 228
Planed That all was p and bevell'd smooth again, Becket v i 138
Plantagenet {See also Geoffrey, Geoffrey Planiigenet)
whether her Grace incline to this splendid scion
of P. Queen Mary i i 135
The last White Rose, the last P „ i iv 207
But this most noble prince F, ,. iii iv 291
Pole has the F face, „ iii iv 333
My son a Clifford and P. Becket iv ii 227
Pledge the P, Him that is gone. Foresters i ii 7
Planted tree that my lord himself p here in the blossom
of his boyhood — The Falcon 563
because one of the Steers had p it there in former
times. Prom, of May iii 247
Plaster'd caked and p with a hundred mires, Harold iv iii 177
Plate and one p of dried prunes be all-but-nothing, The Falcon 135
0 sweet saints ! one p of prunes ! ,, 216
Play (s) {See also Passion-play) Whose p is all to
find herself a King. Que&n, Mary i iii 164
True king of vice— true p on words — Foresters ii i 83
Can have frolic and p. „ n ii 183
but see fair p Betwixt them and Sir Richard — „ iv 98
Play (veib) {See also Plaay) we p. Courtenay. At
what? Noailles. The Game of Chess. Queen Mary \ iii \2b
1 can p well, and I shall beat you there. Noailles.
Ay, but we p with Henry, King of France, „ i iii 129
with her own pawns p's against a Queen, „ i iii 162
You should not p upon me. „ r iv 219
Pope nor Spaniard here to p The tyrant, „ i v 190
Is this the face of one who f's the tyrant ? ,, i v 194
You v at hide and seek. „ i v 305
And ne will p the Walworth to this Wat ; „ ii ii 370
Should p the second actor in this pageant „ iii iii 13
Then must I p the vassal to this Pole. „ iii iii 111
I think that I will p with Philibert,— „ iii v 242
but they p with fire as children do, „ iii vi 28
She p the harlot ! never. „ iii vi 136
Dissemble not ; p the plain Christian man. „ iv iii 267
P into one another, and weave the web Harold i i 211
shall I p The craftier Tostig with him ? „ i ii 164
this Gamel, whom I p upon, that he may p the note „ i ii 191
May, surely, p with words. „ n ii 418
This lightning before death P's on the word, — ,. mi 388
Wilt thou p with the thunder ? „ ni i 391
I have a mind to p The William with thine eyesight „ v i 26
Queen should p his kingship against thine ! Becket, Pro. 236
I could so p about it with the rhyme — „ Pro. 381
What, not good enough Even to p at nun ? „ i i 304
Church must p into the hands of kings ; „ i ii 68
I p the fool again. „ i iii 750
to turn anyway and p with as thou wilt — „ ii i 245
Play (verb) {continued) Go try it, p. Becket n i 246
mother Would make him p his kingship „ n ii 11
a perilous game For men to p with God. „ n ii 71
I hear Margery : I'll go p with her. „ lu i 274
Who made the second mitre p the first, And acted me ? ,, iir iii 212
— a troubadour You p with words. „ iv ii 182
P\ . . . that bosom never Heaved imder the King's
hand „ iv ii 187
Lest thou shouldst p the wanton there again. „ v i 112
Live with these honest folk — And p the fool ! Prom, of May i 745
talk a little French like a lady ; p a little like a lady ? „ m 303
Is this a game for thee to p at ? Away. Foresters ii i 426
P the air, Little John. ., in 418
but thyself Shalt p a bout with me, „ iv 252
Then thou shalt p the game of buffets with us. „ iv 258
Play'd The colour freely p into her face. Queen Mary n ii 321
I have p with this poor rose so long „ v ii 1
We have so the coward ; „ v v 110
I have lost the boy who p at ball with me, Harold iv iii 22
With whom they p their game against the king ! „ v ii 13
For I have always p into their hands. The Cup i iii 150
I have p the sudden fool. ,, i iii 162
same head they would have p at baU with „ n 127
marry fine gentlemen, and p at being fine ladies ? Prom, of May iii 277
I have p at the foils too with Kate : Foresters i i 217
But shout and echo p into each other „ n i 258
Player Upon the skiU and swiftness of the p's. Qu^en Mary i iii 143
I'm the first of p's. I shall win. „ i iii 149
and a favourer Of p's, and a courtier, Becket i i 79
both of us are p's In such a comedy as our court ., v i 188
Playest Thou p in tune. Harold i i 384
Flaying {See also A-plaayin') such a game, sir, were
whole years a p. Queen Mary i iii 140
Watch'd children p at their life to be, „ in iv 63
I lost it, p with it when I was wild. Harold v ii 110
Did she not tell me I was p on her? Becket iv ii 399
What game, what juggle, what devilry are you p ? „ v i 154
you suspect This Sinnatus of p patriotism. The Cup i i 78
No ! acting, p on me, both of them. Prom, of May ni 693
P on me — ^not dead now — a swoon — „ in 696
For p upside down with Holy Writ. Foresters m 168
Thou art p with us. How should poor friars have
money ? „ ni 275
Plea To ours in f for Cranmer than to stand Qiieen Mary iv i 119
Pleace (place) wi' dree hard eggs for a good p at the
burnin' ; „ rv iii 490
Plead Holy Virgin, P with thy blessed Son ; „ i v 85
But you were never raised to p for Frith, „ rv ii 210
Who knows but that thy lover May p so pitifully, Becket iv ii 217
P to him, I am sure you will prevail. The Cup i ii 300
Will he let you p for him To a Roman ? „ i ii 305
came To p to thee for Sinnatus's life, „ n 392
but all those that held with him. Except I p for them, Foresters iv 750
Pleaded Some have p for him, Becket i iii 590
Pleading Our Robin beaten, p for his life ! Foresters u i 674
Pleasant Had you a p voyage up the river ? Queen Mary in ii 5
Among the p fields of Holy Writ I might despair. „ in v 80
Which was not p for you, Master Cranmer. ,, iv ii 136
God made the fierce fire seem To those three
children like a p dew. „ iv iii 91
Shall Alice sing you One of her p songs ? , v ii 355
There is a p fable in old books, Harold iv i 56
But my sister wrote that he was mighty p. Prom, of May 1 117
What can a man, then, live for but sensations, P
ones? men of old would undergo Unpleasant
for the sake of p ones Hereafter, „ 1 243
whose cheerless Houris after death Are Night and
Silence, p ones — » 1 251
Pleasantness thro' her beauty, And p among them. Harold iv i 24
Pleasaunce A royal p for thee, in the wood, Becket n i 128
Please {See also Please) setting up a mass at
Canterbury To p the Queen. Qu^en Mary i ii 89
Your Council is in Session, p your Majesty. „ l v 544
it might p God that I should leave Some fruit „ n ii 221
porter, p your Grace, hath shut the gates „ n iv flO
Please
•1037
Pole
(continued) You are hard to p.
Then one day more to p her Majesty.
So p your Majesty, A long petition
Might I not say — to p your wife, the Queen ?
that it would p Him out of His infinite love
to p our dying king, and those Who make
Well, weU, I swear, but not to p myself.
Queen Mary m iv 154
„ in vi 247
IV i 2
V 1 307
„ V iv 46
Harold m i 328
Becket, Pro. 193
Doth it p you ? Take it and wear it on that hard heart „ Pro. 372
To p the King ? „ i i 31
Shall I fall ofl — to p the King once more ? „ i i 110
Of this wild Rosamund to p the King, „ i i 392
whom it p's him To call his wives ; „ rv ii 35
if we will buy diamond necklaces To p our lady. The Falcon 45
I am glad it f's you ; Prom, of May n 543
Nay, an p your Elfin Grace, Foresters ii ii 132
P, Miss, Mr. Dobson telled me to SEiay Prom, of May m 345
All p you SO at first. Becket in i 50
and the master 'ud be straange an' p if you'd step
in fust.
Pleasure Thou hast shouted for thy p, shout for
mine !
They kill'd but for their p and the power
you will find in it P as well as duty,
For thine own p ?
not my purveyor Of p's, but to save a life —
and the walks Where I could move at p.
For the King's p rather than God's cause
daily want supplied — The daily p to supply it
for I have p in the p of crowds,
Here, Madam, at your p. Eleanor.
a man about me.
She would have robb'd me then of a great p,
The p of his eyes — boast of his hand — ■
And if my p breed another's pain.
Prom, of May 1 168
Queen Mary m i 304
ni iv 74
III iv 430
Harold m i 327
Becket, Pro. 150
I i 266
I iii 697
II ii 303
,. m iii 82
My p is to have
„ IV ii 428
The Falcon 65
221
Prom, of May i 278
Have I thep, friend, of knowing you? „ 1 297
No p then taboo'd : for when the tide Of full democracy „ i 591
Hollow Pandora-box, With all the -p's flown, „ ii 347
and I have lighted On a new p. „ n 669
on all its idiot gleams Of p, „ ni 723
Not -p^s, women's matters. Foresters i ii 176
Plebeian Pride of the p ! Fitzurse. And this p like to
be Archbishop ! Becket, Pro. 457
Pledge (s) I be ready to taake the p. Prom, of May ni 85
Pledge (verb) I p you, Strato. Synorix. And I you, my
lord.
I will p you. Wine ! Filippo, wine !
P the Piantagenet, Him that is gone.
And they shall p thee, Marian,
They p me, Robin ?
Pleiads To the P, uncle ; they have lost a sister.
Plenty will be p to simder and unsister them again
fill all hearts with fatness and the lust Of p —
Plied Still p him with entreaty and reproach :
and still the friars P him,
Plot (s) Mix not yourself with any p I pray you ;
to discourage and lay lame The f^s of France,
the p's against him Had madden'd tamer men.
P's and feuds ! This is my ninetieth birthday, (repeat)
Who dares arraign us, king, of such a p ?
Hath Sinnatus never told you of this p ? Gamma.
What p ? ^he Cup i ii 251
I am sure I told him that his p was folly. „ i ii 283
Plot (verb) When will ye cease to p against my house ? Harold iv i 161
Should care to p against him in the North. „ rv i 166
Plotted Wherewith they p in their treasonous malice. Queen Mary m iv 4
Plotting They have been p here ! Harold rv i 40
If you had found him p against Rome, The Cup n 406
But had I found him p, I had counsell'd him „ n 412
Ploughman-Plowman These Kentish ploughmen cannot
break the guards. Queen Mary n iv 17
biun a plowman, and now, as far as money goas. Prom, of May i 330
That ever charm'd the plowman of your wolds
Plover in a narrow path. A p flew before thee.
Plow p Lay rusting in the furrow's yellow weeds,
and I'd drive the p straait as a line
The Cup I ii 49
The Falcon 575
Foresters i ii 7
„ III 316
„ III 320
Queen Mary i iv 293
I i 84
r/i«CMpii274
Queen Mary rv iii 577
rv iii 601
I iv 173
V i 189
Harold rv i 110
„ IV i 120, 125
IV i 169
m488
Becket n i 54
„ I iii 354
Prom, of May i 369
Plowed I ha' p the ten-aacre — it be mine now — Prom, of May i 365
I mun ha' p it moor nor a hoonderd times ; „ i 367
Plowest steer wherewith thou p thy field is cursed, Harold v i 71
Plowin' if I could ha' gone on wi' the p Prom, of May i 376
Pluck P the dead woman off the dead man, Malet ! Harold v ii 144
King p's out their eyes Who anger hun, Becket rv ii 405
He that can p the flower of maidenhood Foresters i ii 108
Pluck'd He all but p the bearer's eyes away. Becket i iii 11
Plumed My princess, of the cloud my p purveyor, The Falcon 7
Flump To p the leaner pouch of Italy. Queen Mary iii iv 365
Plum-pudding and a p-p as big as the roimd haystack. Prom, of May i 794
Plunder they p — yea, ev'n bishops. Yea, even arch-
bishops— Foresters rv 909
Plunder'd P the vessel full of Gascon wine, Becket v ii 441
cask of wine whereof we p The Norman prelate ? Foresters m 307
Plundering a p o' Bishop Winchester's house ; Queen Mary ii iii 73
Plunge (s) Our short-lived sun, before his winter p, „ in iii 86
headlong p and fall Of heresy to the pit : „ in iv 140
last inhospitable p Our boat hath burst her ribs ; Harold n i 2
One downward p of his paw would rend Becket iv ii 283
Plunge (verb) and p His foreign fist into our island
Church Queen Mary in iv 363
Tear out his eyes, And p him into prison. Harold u ii 492
To p thee into hfe-long prison here : — „ n ii 550
To p into this bitter world again — Becket v ii 81
I might p And lose myself for ever. Prom, of May ii 305
Plunged beast-body That God has p my soul in — Becket n i 150
Were p beneath the waters of the sea. Foresters rv 668
Pocket but he would p the purse. Becket n ii 371
Poena lUorum scelera P sequatur ! (repeat) Harold v i 518, 605
Poet you are as poor a p, Wyatt, As a good soldier. Queen Mary ii i 113
There ! my lord, you are a p. The Falcon 533
Poetical A shadow, a p fiction— did ye not call me king
in your song ? Foresters iv 219
Poinet (John, Bishop of Winchester) P, Barlow, Bale,
Scory, Coverdale ; Queen Mary i ii 5
Point (s) (See also Finger-point) Calais ! Our one p on
the main, „ i v 125
then to cede A p to her demand ? „ m vi 170
there's An old world English adage to the p. „ rv i 175
Many p's weather'd, many perilous ones, „ vv211
The p you aim'd at, and pray God she prove Becket ii ii 77
She fives — but not for him ; one p is gain'd. „ iv ii 415
Point (verb) Heretic and rebel P at me and make
merry. Qu£en Mary v ii 318
Shouts something — he p's onward — Harold v i 558
Pointed With fingers p like so many daggers, Queen Mary i v 149
And p full at Southwark ; „ n iii 46
How their p fingers Glared at me ! Harold n ii 789
rose From the foul flood and p toward the farm. Prom, of May ii 653
Pointing the Pope P at me with ' Pole, the heretic, Queen Mary v ii 175
Poison (s) practise on my life, By p, fire, shot, stab — „ i iv 285
Lest your whole body should madden with the p ? „ ni iv 208
Give me the p ; set me free of him ! Becket iv ii 164
I have heard these p's May be walk'd down. The Cup n 474
Poison (verb) filch the linen from the hawthorn, p the
house-dog. Foresters m 199
Poison'd to see His people be not p. Queen Mary m iv 213
the Norman adder Hath bitten us ; we are p : Harold m i 39
A cleric lately p his own mother, Becket, Pro. 10
we shall all be p. Let us go. „ i iv 244
I am p. She — close the Temple door. The Cup n 459
He had my fate for it, P. „ n 517
Poisoning So p the Church, so long continuing, Qwee» Mary rv iii 48
Poitevins I learn but now that those poor P Becket n ii 427
Poitou and all France, all Burgundy, P, all Christendom Harold in ii 150
Have we not heard Raymond of P, thine own xmcle — Becket iv ii 247
Pole (Reginald, Cardinal and Papal Legate) (See also
Reginald Pole) holy legate of the holy father
the Pope, Cardinal P, Queen, Mary i iii 28
(Nay, there is Cardinal P, too), ., i iv 208
So would your cousin. Cardinal P ; „ i v 405
True, good cousin, P ; And there were also those ,, m ii 68
Peace — the Queen, Philip, and P. „ m iii 84
Then must I play the vassal to this P „ in iii 112
Pole
1038
Poor
Pole (Reginald, Cardinal and Papal L^ate) (continued)
Our supplication be exhibited To the Lord
Cardinal P, Queen Mary in iii 124
Cousin P, You are fresh from brighter lands. „ in iv 321
P has the Plantagenet face,
Doth P yield, sir, ha !
I am sorry for it If P be like to turn.
Write to him, then. Pole. I wiU. Mary. And
sharply, P.
P WiU tell you that the devil helpt them thro' it.
Reginald P, what news hath plagued thy heart ?
the Pope Pointing at me with ' P, the heretic,
for the death Of our accursed Queen and Cardinal P.'
let my cousin P Seize him and burn him
Saving my confessor and my cousin P.
They say she's dying. First. So is Cardinal P.
Holy Father Has ta'en the legateship from our
cousin P — Was that well done ? and poor P
pines of it. As I do, to the death.
'twas I and Bonner did it, And P ;
Polecat The deer, the highback'd p, the wild boar,
Policy (See also Church-policy, State-policy) Your
Grace's p hath a farther flight
Mismatch'd with her for p !
Were but a thankless p in the crown,
might it not be p in some matter
It was his father's p against France.
You will find Philip only, p, p, —
That was, my lord, a match of p.
A great and soimd p that : I could embrace him for it :
A p of wise pardon Wins here as well as there.
the dry light of Rome's straight-going p,
The One Who shifts his p suffers something.
And apt at arms and shrewd in p.
Polish'd But you, my Lord, a p gentleman.
Politic You are too p for me, my Lord Paget.
If this be p, And well for thee and England —
his p Holiness Hath all but climb'd the Roman perch
again.
Too p for that. Imprison me ?
Pomegranate Palms, flowers, p's, golden cherubim
Pompey See Pumpy
Pond See Herring-pond, Herse-pond
Ponder Grant me one day To p these demands.
Ponthien (adj.) drave and crack'd His boat on P beach;
Ponthieu (s) Guy, Count of P ?
winds than that which crack'd Thy bark at P, —
Pontigny He shelter'd in the Abbey of P.
On a Tuesday at P came to me The ghostly warning
Pontus Have you alliances ? Bithynia, P, Paphlagonia ? The Cup i ii 100
Pooh P, p, my Lord ! poor garrulous country-wives. Queen Mary iv iii 546
Pool storznless shipwreck in the p's Of sullen slimiber, Harold v i 296
I only wish This p were deep enough, Prom, of May n 304
Poor (adj.) and of the good Lady Jane as a p innocent
child Queen Mary i i 94
So you would honour my p house to-night, „ i iii 118
the realm is p, The exchequer at neap-tide : „ i v 120
a hundred men-at-arms Guard my p dreams for England „ i v 154
It then remains for your p Gardiner, ,, i v 220
But Philip never writes me one p word, „ i v 360
but, if I'm any judge, By God, you are as p a poet,
Wyatt, As a good soldier. „ ii i 113
You as p a critic As an honest friend : „ n i 115
No, p soul ; no. „ ii i 242
And four of her p Coimcil too, my Lord, As hostages. „ ii ii 42
he says he's a p gentleman. „ ii iii 74
He's p enough, has drunk and gambled out All that
he had, „ n iii 87
Take thy p gentleman ! „ n iii 94
She, with ner p blind hands feeling — ' where is it ? „ mi 407
Amplier than any field on our^ earth Can render thanks „ in iii 197
Paget, you are all for this p life of ours, „ ni iv 59
So they have sent p Courtenay over sea. ,. m v 1
and my p chronicle Is but of glass. „ m v 46
Draw with your sails from our p land, „ in vi 226
To the p flock — to women
in iv 333
III iv 394
III iv 416
IV 139
IV iii 351
V ii 17
V ii 175
V ii 182
vii244
V ii 527
V iv 5
V V 127
v V 143
Foresters i iii 119
Queen Mary i v 312
III i 365
III iv 51
ni vi 166
V V 45
V vl58
Harold iv i 199
Becket, Pro. 451
v ii 22
The Cup I i 146
n 113
Foresters i ii 104
Queen Mary in iv 250
IV i 150
Harold in ii 110
Becket n ii 45
„ IV ii 397
Harold in i 182
Becket i iii 669
Harold ii ii 36
n i 81
„ II ii 200
Becket ii i 84
v ii 290
Poor (adj.) (continued) ^
and to children — Queen Mary iv ii 158
but my p voice Against them is a whisper to the
roar Of a spring-tide,
'twas you That sign'd the burning of p Joan of Kent ;
Pooh, pooh, my Lord ! p garrulous country-wives.
Stays longer here in our p north than you : —
and you know The crown is p.
I have play'd with this p rose so long I have broken
off the head.
And the p son tum'd out into the street To sleep,
I still will do mine utmost with the Pope. P cousin !
I had forgotten How these p libels trouble you.
P lads, they see not what the general sees,
this p throat of mine, Barer than I should wish a
man to see it, —
I would she coiild have wedded that p youth,
There — up and down, p lady, up and down.
I am eleven years older than he, P boy !
P enough in God's grace !
and p Pole pines of it. As I do, to the death.
Why would you vex yourself, P sister ?
lighten'd for me The weight of this p crown.
From spies of thine to spy my nakedness In my p. North !
Spite of this grisly star ye three must gall P Tostig.
the p thunder Never harm'd head.
How wan, p lad ! how sick and sad for home !
P brother ! still a hostage !
Far as he knew in this p world of ours —
P Wulfnoth ! do they not entreat thee well ?
Alas ! p man, His promise brought it on me.
only grandson To Wulfnoth, a p cow-herd.
For England, for thy p white dove, who flutters
these p hands but sew. Spin, broider —
thy victories Over our own p Wales,
Tostig, p brother, Art thou so anger'd ?
Praying perchance for this p soul of mine In cold,
I know Some three or four p priests a thousand times Becket, Pro. 291
I could pity this p world myself that it is no better
ordered.
P bird of passage ! so I was ; but, father,
P soul ! p soul ! My friend, the King ! . . .
p rogues (Heaven bless 'em) who never saw nor
dreamed of such a banquet.
My lord Archbishop, may I come in with my p
friend, my dog ?
P beast ! p beast ! set him down.
That my p heretic heart would excommunicate His
excommunication,
P man, beside himself — not wise.
I learn but now that those p Poitevins,
his fond excess of wine Springs from the loneliness of
my p bower,
I have lived, p bird, from cage to cage,
In our p west We cannot do it so well,
his p tonsure A crown of Empire,
p mother, Soon as she learnt I was a friend of thine,
Mutilated, p brute, my sumpter-mule,
And drown all p self -passion in the sense Of pubUc
good?
Thy way ? p worm, crawl down thine own black hole
Welcome to this p cottage, my dear lady.
I wiU, I wiU. P fellow !
you have said so much Of this p wreath that I was
bold enough
very letters seem to shake With cold, with pain
perhaps, p prisoner !
P Federigo degli Alberighi Takes nothing in return
that her flies Must massacre each other ? this p
Nature ! Prom, of May i 285
you have robb'd p father Of ten good apples. „ i 615
And p old father not die miserable. „ 1 722
Fonder of p Eva — like everybody else. „ n 11
Eva's saake. Yeas. P gel, p gel ! „ n 31
P sister, I had it five years ago. „ n 82
IV ii 185
IV ii 206
IV iii 546
V 124
V i 170
vii2
V ii 125
v ii 132
V ii 202
V ii447
V ii 460
V ii 476
V v6
V v47
V v50
V V 128
V v264
Harold I i 218
.. I i 353
.. I i 420
I ii 231
n ii 325
II ii 329
nii363
n ii 403
ni i 337
) V i 70
IV i 230
rv iii 9
IV iii 27
v i 272
vi323
Pro. 366
I i 253
I i 334
I iv 82
I iv 94
I iv 105
n i 283
II ii 235
II ii 427
„ in i 40
III i 222
IV ii 316
V i 194
V ii 109
V ii 440
The Cup II 101
n 494
The Falcon 270
281
427
449
715
Poor
1039
Port
Toot (adj.) (continued) I have lost myself, and am lost
for ever to you and my p father. Prom, of May n 85
P Eva ! O my God, if man be only A willy-nilly
current of sensations —
' He was only A p philosopher who call'd the mind
This beggarly life, This p, fiat, hedged-in field —
How worn he looks, p man ! who is it, I wonder.
She has disappear'd, p darling, from the world —
And my p father, utterly broken down By losing her —
her p spaniel wailing for her,
f What was that ? my p blind father —
All depends on me — Father, this p girl, the farm,
everything ;
P blind Father's little guide, Milly,
That last was my Father's fault, p man.
P Dora !
after marriage this gentleman will not be shamed of
his p farmer's daughter
but indeed the state Of my p father puts me out of
heart,
and p Steer looks The very type of Age in a picture,
What p earthworms are all and each of us,
the p young heart Broken at last — all still —
P fellows !
I'll cleave to you rich or p.
A price is set On this p head ;
O my p father !
all that live By their own hands, the labourer, the p
priest ;
How should p friars have money ?
All those p serfs whom we have served will bless us,
Foot (s) Ay, but to give the p.
To give the p — they give the p who die.
seeing now The p so many, and all food so dear.
Give to the p, Ye give to God. He is with us in
the p.
Till all men have their Bible, rich and p.
That be the patrimony of the p ?
Gall in the p from the streets, and let them feast.
Call in the p. The Church is ever at variance with the
kings, and ever at one with the p. „ i iv 78
and there shall be no more p for ever. „ i iv 273
what we wring from them we give the p. Foresters ii i 57
Ah dear Robin ! ah noble captain, friend of the p ! ,, n i 183
what should you know o' the food o' the p ? „ n i 283
break it all to pieces, as you break the p, „ n i 286
' Sell all thou hast and give it to the p ; ' „ in 170
Robin's an outlaw, but he helps the p. „ iv 359
and helps Nor rich, nor p. „ iv 362
Poordh (porch) kissin' o' one another like two sweet' arts
i' the p Prom, of May i 22
Poorer I have seen heretics of the p sort, Queen Mary rv iii 436
II 261
II 281
n344
n 391
II 409
II 417
II 473
II 565
m 211
ra 231
ni 280
III 286
III 294
m 504
III 512
III 635
III 680
Foresters i i 91
„ I i ]55
II i 74
II ii 8
„ III 166
m 276
„ IV 1074
Queen Mary iv ii 43
IV ii 52
IV iii 213
V V 249
Becket i iii 106
I iv 72
Poor-hearted Methinks most men are but p-fe.
Pope {See also Antipope, Pwoap) has offer'd her son
Philip, the P and the Devil.
O, the P could dispense with his Cardinalate,
our gracious Virgin Queen hath Crowd. No
p ! no p ! Roger. — hath sent for the holy legate
of the noly father the P, Cardinal Pole,
we'll have no p here while the Lady Elizabeth lives.
Will brook nor P nor Spaniard here to play
P would have you make them render these ;
That knows the Queen, the Spaniard, and the P,
And what a letter he wrote against the P !
If ever I cry out against the P
Philip and the P Must have sign'd too. I hear
this Legate's coming To bring us absolution
from the P.
commission from the P To absolve thee
the P's Holiness By mine own self,
and I am the Angel of the P.
Is reconciled the word ? the P again ?
So fierce against the Headship of the P,
How should he bear the headship of the P ?
but the P— Can we not have the Catholic church
n ii 337
iil06
iil26
I iii 25
I iii 43
IV 189
IV 403
II ii 414
in i 174
in i 351
mi 429
in ii 52
m ii 110
in ii 145
ra iii 3
III iii 12
in iii 30
m iii 96
Pope (continued) if we cannot. Why then the P. Queen Mary in iii 100
and acknowledge The primacy of the P ? „ in iii 109
Legate From our most Holy Father Julius, P, „ in iii 126
obedience Unto the holy see and reigning P „ lu iii 158
Given tinto us, his Legate, by the P, „ in iii 211
who not Believes the P, „ iii iii 238
Legate Is here as P and Master of the Church, „ in iv 347
And let the P trample our rights, „ in iv 362
So then you hold the P — Gardiner. I hold the P !
What do I hold him ? what do I hold the P? „ in iv 371
I am wholly for the P, Utterly and altogether
for the P, „ HI iv 378
this realm of England and the P Together, „ rv i 28
The P himself waver'd; „ iv i 85
You would not cap the P's commissioner — „ iv ii 123
Now you, that would not recognise the P, „ iv ii 139
And so you have recanted to the P. „ iv ii 145
You have been more fierce against the P than I ; „ iv ii 149
As for the P I count him Antichrist, „ iv iii 277
no, nor if the P, Charged him to do it — „ iv iii 557
yet the P is now colleagued with France ; „ v i 139
The P would cast the Spaniard out of Naples : „ v i 148
The P has pushed his horns beyond his mitre — „ v i 152
But this new P Caraffa, Paul the Fourth, „ v ii 32
till the P, To compass which I wrote myself „ v ii 48
thought I might be chosen P, But then withdrew it. „ v ii 83
I stiU will do mine utmost with the P. „ v ii 131
the P Pointing at me with ' Pole, the heretic, „ v ii 174
The P and that Archdeacon Hildebrand His master, Harold in ii 144
human laughter in old Rome Before a P was born, „ in ii 165
— the P Is man and comes as God. — „ in ii 173
The P hath cursed him, marry me or no ! „ in ii 191
To leave the P dominion in the West. _ „ v i 23
My legacy of war against the P From child to child,
from P to P, from age to age, ,. v i 328
Or till the P be Christ's. ,. v i 332
The P's Anathema— the Holy Rood That bow'd to me „ v i 382
shall cross the seas To set the P against me — Becket, Pro. 36
I have the ear of the P. As thou hast honour for the
P our master, „ i iii 199
it is the P Will be to blame — not thou. „ i iii 221
Cannot the P absolve thee if thou sign ? „ i iii 230
Take it not that way — balk not the P's will. „ i iii 243
till I hear from the P I will suspend myself „ i iii 300
Under the shield and safeguard of the P, And cite thee
to appear before the P, „ i iii 601
Why thou, the King, the P, the Saints, the world, „ i iii 705
make my cry to the P, By whom I will be judged ; „ i iii 724
to brave The P, King Ijouis, and this turbulent priest. „ n i 312
you have traffick'd Between the Emperor and the P,
between The P „ nii68
I told the P what manner of man he was. „ n ii 253
for tho' you suspended yourself, the P let you down
again ; „ n ii 357
the P will not leave them in suspense, for the P him-
seK is always in suspense, „ ii ii 368
if you boxed the P's ears with a purse, you might
stagger him, „ ii ii 370
—flatter And fright the P— „ ii ii 473
He hath the P's last letters, „ in iii 24
ere P or King Had come between us ! „ in iii 267
I, that thro' the P divorced King Louis, „ rv ii 417
— kinglike Defied the P, and, like his kingly sires, „ iv ii 440
Not I, the P. Ask him for absolution. „ v ii 379
But you advised the P. „ v ii 380
The P, the King, will curse you — „ v iii 182
Poplar apricot. Vine, cypress, p, myrtle. The Cup i i 3
Populace p, With fingers pointed like so many
daggers. Queen Mary i v 148
Popular I am mighty p with them, Noailles. „ i iii 101
Porcelain I made him p from the clay of the city — Becket i iii 438
Porch (See also Poorch) stand within the p, and
Christ with me : Queen Mary i ii 51
dove, who flutters Between thee and the p, Harold iv i 232
Port For tho' we touch'd at many pirate p's. Foresters iv 983
Porter
1040
Pray
Porter And scared the gray old p and his wife. Queen Mary n iii 16
The p, please your Grace, hath shut the gates „ ii iv 60
Positive and the heart of a — that's too p ! The Falcon 87
heart like the stone in it — that's f again — „ 94
Positive-Illative not a heart for any of them — that's f-n : „ 89
Possess Seek to p our person, hold our Tower, Queen Mary n ii 158
Thou didst p thyself of Edward's ear Harold v i 345
Possession demanded P of her person and the Tower. Queen Mary ii ii 41
Possible hedge-rose Of a soft winter, p, not probable, „ in vi 16
Is it p That mortal men should bear their earthly heats Harold v i 282
Pos t (messenger) there is a p from over seas With news
for thee. Harold li ii 208
Post (position) I dare not leave my p. Queen Mary i ii 5g
Post (post-haste) till his man cum in p vro' here, Queen Mary iv iii 511
Post See Door-post
Pot Here's a p o' wild honey from an old oak,
Potato See Taater
Potent To join a voice, so p with her Highness, Q
I do think the King Was p in the election,
Pothouse next time you waste them at a p you get no
more from me. Prom, of May m 99
Pouch To plump the leaner p of Italy. Queen Mary m iv 365
I have but one penny in p, Foresters m 194
Poultry making of your butter, and the managing of
your p?
Pounce p like a wild beast out of his cage
Pound shall have a hundred p's for reward.'
Pour as we pass, And p along the land,
P not water In the full vessel running out at top
Poured and when ye shall hear it is p out upon earth,
Pont Nay, p out, cousin.
Poverty I But add my p to thine.
P crept thro' the door.
Powder Until the p suddenly blew him dead.
Power and God grant me p to bum ! „
Mine is the fleet and all the p at sea — „
may fence round his p with restriction, „
Back'd by the p of France, and landing here, „
and the p They felt in killing. „
Is bounden by his p and place to see „
What would'st thou do hadst thou his p, „
What p this cooler sun of England hath „
P hath been given you to try faith by fire — „
May learn there is no p against the Lord. „
I am but a woman, I have no p. — „
ay, young lord, there the king's face is p.
p's of the house of Godwin Are not enframed
Crush it at once With all the p I have ! —
Wisdom when in p And wisest, should not frown as P,
the true must Shall make her strike as P :
Come hither, I have a p ;
wood-fungus on a dead tree, I have a p !
when Tostig hath come back with p.
No p mine To hold their force together . . .
Not know that he nor I had p to promise ?
fto balk Thy puissance in this fight
have a p — would Harold ask me for it — I have a p.
What p, holy father ? Stigand. P now from Harold to
command thee hence
she, whom the King loves indeed, is a p in the State,
you That owe to me your p over me —
The King had had no p except for Rome,
who am, or was, A sovereign p ?
And weeps herself into the place of p ;
tho' it be their hour, the p of darkness, But my hour
too, the p of light
The p of life in death to make her free !
At the right hand of P — P and great glory —
have you p with Rome ? use it for him !
Alas ! I nave no such p with Rome.
Has no more p than other oracles
happiest, Lady, in my p To make you happy,
and Napoleons To root their p in.
Not her, the father's p upon ner.
break, Far as he might, the p of John —
Power (continued) In this dark wood when all was in our p Foresters in 183
Practice Tho' we have pierced thro' all her p's ; Harold \ i 156
Practise to p on my life, By poison, fire, shot, stab — Queen Mary i iv 284
I am tender enough. Why do you p on me ? Synorix.
Foresters ii i 295
leen Mary rv i 117
Becket i i 129
Prom, of May n 94
Queen Mary i i 87
„ n iii 61
„ n i 232
Harold i i 376
Becket i iv 37
Q^een Mary i iv 134
The Falcon 143
Foresters I i ] 57
Queen Mary iv iii 340
I ii 99
I iv 287
II i 172
m i 447
„ m iv 75
m iv 212
m iv 279
ni iv 327
IV ii 153
IV iii 66
V V 131
Harold i i 73
1 1316
1 1357
1 1364
1 1369
III i 5
nii9
IV i 118
rv iii 212
vi49
vill7
vi45]
V i 454
Pro. 483
II ii 152
II ii 412
IV ii 405
V ii 215
V iii 93
V iii 100
V iii 193
The Cup I ii 289
I ii 292
u34
II 240
Prom, of May ni 594
Foresters i iii 9
,. n i 696
Why should I p on you ?
Prsecipitatur Equus cum equite P.
Prsedator Hostis in Angliam Ruit p,
Prsepediatur Equus cum pedite P !
Praise (s) in grateful p of Him Who now recalls
Out of the mouths of babes and sucklings, p !
All p to Heaven, and sweet St. Magdalen !
Praise (verb) Make all tongues p and all hearts beat
for you.
His friends would p him, I believed 'em,
P the Saints. It is over. No more blood !
gangrenes, and running sores, p ye the Lord,
Hear thy people who p thee !
those pale mouths which we have fed will p us—
Praised P, where you should have blamed him,
she so p The convent and lone life —
where is this Mr. Edgar whom you p so in your first
letters ?
Prance If they p. Rein in, not lash them.
P'raps (perhaps) And p ye hears 'at I soomtimes
taakes a drop too much ;
Prate Come, sirs, we p ; hence all —
P not of bonds, for never, oh, never again
yet they p Of mine, my brawls, when those,
Prated fat fool ! He drawl'd and p so.
Prating Why did you keep me p ? Horses, there !
Prattled and p to each other that we would marry
fine gentlemen,
Prattling p to her mother Of her betrothal
Save for the p of thy little ones.
Pray P — consider —
Mix not yourself with any plot I p you;
And so take heed I p you —
P God he do not be the first to break them,
I p God No woman ever love you,
and we p That we, your true and loyal citizens,
I've f oimd this paper ; p your worship read it ;
Sir Thomas, p you go away,
we'll p for you all on our bended knees.
we V you to kill the Queen further off,
we'll p for you on our bended knees
Pass then, I p your Highness, to the Tower.
P you go on. (repeat)
Whereon we humbly p your Majesties,
And p Heaven That you may see according to our sight
P God, we 'scape the sunstroke.
P you write out this paper for me, Cranmer.
You are to beg the people to p for you ;
So, so ; this will I say — thus will I p.
P you, remembering how yourself have changed,
P for him. Cranmer. Ay, one and all, dear
brothers, p for me ; P with one breath.
Again, I p you all that, next to God,
I p joM all to Uve together Like brethren ;
Go m, I p you.
I have to p you, some odd time,
I p you be not so disconsolate ;
' We p continually for the death Of our accursed Queen
she loved much : p God she be forgiven.
I p thee, let me hence and bring him home.
I p thee, do not go to Normandy.
Son Harold, I will in and p for thee.
P God the people choose thee for their king !
p in thy behalf For happier homeward winds
' I p you do not go to Normandy.'
can but p For Harold — p, p, p —
p God My Normans may but move as true with me
— I p your pardon.
My liege, I p thee let me hence :
May we not p you. Madam, to spare us the hardness
pray'd me to p thee to psicify Thy King ;
The Cup I ii 23&
Harold v i 599
„ V i 507
„ V i 530
Queen Mary iii iii 165
Becket ii ii 279
„ m iii 234
Queen Mary i v 117
I V 623
Harold v ii 194
Becket i iv 256
The Cup II 5
Foresters rv 1077
Queen Mary I v 600
Harold I ii 46
Prom, of May i 777
Harold i i 371
Prom, of May ii 107
Queen Mary ii ii 372
Becket v ii 356
„ V ii 426
Harold rv ii 41
Queen Mary v iii 113
Prom, of May m 276
Queen Mary v v 231
Harold n ii 122
Queen Mary i iv 141
I iv 173
I iv 273
IV 269
IV 601
II ii 134
n iii 56
n iii 99
n iii 109
II iii 114
II iii 121
II iv 31
, mi 374, 389
ni iii 143
ni iv 329
III V 279
ivii60
IV ii 76
IV ii 114
IV ii 155
IV iii 101
IV iii 175
rv iii 181
vi214
V i 257
V ii 129
vii]80
V v271
Harold i i 241
„ I i 249
„ I i 267
„ I i 314
„ II ii 197
„ II ii 218
„ m ii 194
„ V ii 183
Becket, Pro. 36
„ Pro. 186
„ Pro. 385
„ I iii 206
Pray
Fray (continued) won't we p for your lordship ! Becket i iv 141
I p God I haven't given thee my leprosy, ., i iv 214
bid you this night p for him who hath fed „ i iv 266
and p God she prove True wife to you. „ n ii 77
I p you, Do not defend yourself. „ n ii 111
we p you, draw yourself from under The wings of France. „ u ii 247
I p you come and take it. ,, ii ii 263
I p you then to take my sleeping-draught ; „ iv ii 69
but p you do not work upon me. „ v i 81
I could not eat, sleep, p : „ v ii 92
P for me too : much need of prayer have I. „ v ii 195
P you, hide yourself. „ v ii 257
I p you for one moment stay and speak. „ v ii 525
he p's you to believe him. Camma. I p him to believe
— that I believe him.
Are you so sure ? I p you wait and see.
P you, Go on with the marriage rites.
I p you lift me And make me walk awhile.
P thee make Thy slender meal out of those scraps
Will he not p me to return his love —
P, pardon me !
I p you pardon me again !
Nay, nay, I p you rise.
I p you, look at Robin Earl of Huntingdon's men.
Spare me thy spare ribs, I p thee ;
I p Heaven we may not have to take to the rushes.
I p you, my lady, if a man and a maid love one another,
he j>'s your ladyship and your ladyship's father
I p you, my lady, to stEind between me
My lord, myself and my good father p
Pardon him again, I p you ;
I p thee go, go, for tho' thou wouldst bar
0 your honour, I p you too to give me an alms.
1 p thee give us guides To lead us
and will p for you That you may thrive,
and I p you to come between us again,
I p you, my lady, come between me and my Kate
I p you, my liege, let me execute the vengeance of the
Church upon them.
I p thee, for the moment strike the bonds
All widows we have holpen p for us,
Pray'd when the headsman p to be forgiven,
'■ and p me to confess In Wyatt's business,
p me not to suUy Mine own prerogative,
P me to pay her debts, and keep the Faith ;
Edward's prayers Were deafen'd and he p them dumb, Harold i ii 22
He p me to pray thee to pacify Thy King ; Becket i iii 206
She p me when I loved A maid with all my heart Foresters i ii 295
Prayer grant me my p : Give me my Philip ; Queen Mary i v 86
is every morning's p Of your most loyal subject, „ i v 103
Catholic, Mumbling and mixing up in his scared p's „ n ii 87
leave me, Philip, with my p's for you. „ ni vi 228
doubtless I shall profit by your p's. „ in vi 231
We make our hmnble p unto your Grace „ iv i 43
Our p'5 are heard ! „ rv iii 254
A life of p and fasting well may see Harold i i 199
and left me time And peace for p " ^ ! ^^^
the king is ever at his 'p's ; „ i i 411
Edward's f's Were deafen'd and he pray'd them dumb, „ i ii 21
My p's go up as fast as my tears fall, „ in i 166
A life of life-long p against the curse „ in i 278
she hath begun Her life-long p for thee. „ in i 324
more the love, the mightier is the p ; „ mi 347
pray, pray, pray — no help but p, „ ni ii 196
our old songs are p's for England too ! " ^ ? ^^^
let not my strong p Be weaken'd in thy sight, „ v i 647
If fast and p, the lacerating scourge — Becket i iii 303
your 'p's will do more for me in the day „ i iv 144
breathe one p for my liege-lord the King, „ v ii 191
Pray for me too : much need of p have I. „ v ii 196
never yet Flung back a woman's p. The Cup i ii 300
' He never yet flung back a woman's p.' — „ i ii 456
Can I fancy him kneeling with me, and uttering
the same p ; Prom, of May in 181
Praying I cast me down prone, p ; Harold v i 100
1041 Press
Fraying (continued) P for Normandy ; Harold v i 219
P perchance for this poor soul of mine „ v i 323
Preach bad my chaplain, Castro, p Against these
burnings. Queen Mary in vi 74
Friend, tho' so late, it is not safe to p. „ v iv 42
Preach'd and her priests Have p, the fools, „ in vi 99
By all the truths that ever priest hath p, Harold ni i 98
Preaching That any man so writing, p so, Queen Mary iv iii 47
Preachment Graraercy for thy p ! Foresters iv 398
Precatur Pereant, pereant, Aiiglia p. Harold v i 534
Precedent It is against all p to burn One who recants ; Queen Mary iv ii 48
Precious the State to him but foils wherein To set that p
The Cup II 55
„ n 106
„ II 397
„ n 472
The Falcon 144
247
395
478
921
Foresters i i 35
I i 54
I i 89
Ii 171
1 1299
1 1303
I ii 127
I ii 246
ni354
n i 389
ni632
m251
ni 412
in 421
„ IV 915
„ IV 961
„ IV 1078
Queen Mary ni i 393
ni V 166
IV i 16
V V 257
jewel, Roger of York, " Becket, Pro. 270
Would wrest from me the p ring I promised Never to
part with — Foresters n i 660
Precipice break of p that runs Thro' all the wood. The Cup i ii 21
A p above, and one below — Foresters iv 533
Predecessor Of all his p's may have done Becket ii ii 180
die upon the Patriarchal throne Of all my p's ? „ v iii 76
Predetermined wolf Mudded the brook and p all. Harold v i 3
Preface Be the rough p of some closer bond ? Queen Mary i iv 48
Prefer He did p me to the chancellorship, Becket, Pro. 415
Preference That one, then, should be grateful for your p. Prom, of May n 556
Preferr'd but you still p Your learned leisure. Queen Mary ni iv 257
Prejudice Which might impugn or p the same ; „ m iii 133
V iv 49
iiv82
IV iii 70
, IV iii 542
Harold in i 222
Becket i iii 333
„ I iii 736
to excommunicate The p's whom he chose to crown his son ; „ v ii 399
To all the archbishops, bishops, p's, barons, „ v ii 404
cask of wine whereof we plunder'd The Norman p ? Foresters in 308
Prelude I kiss it as a p to that privilege Prom, of May n 528
Premises Wheer be Mr. Edgar ? about the p ? Dohson.
Hallus about the p ! „ 1 433
Prepare I ought to p you. You must not expect to find „ in 418
Prepared (See also All-prepared) and the Lord hath p your
table — Becket I iv 131
I am p to die. „ v ii 562
Prerogative pray'd me not^to sully Mine ownp. Queen Mary iv i 18
Prelacy and queenship, all priesthood and p ;
Prelate p's kneel to you. —
Chief p of our Church, archbishop.
For how should reverend p or throned prince
P, The Saints are one.
Nay, if I cannot break him as the p.
And that too, perjured p-
Presence You do not own The bodily p in the Eucharist,
I scarce had left your Grace's p
our lowliest thanks For your most princely p ;
I sign it with my p, if I read it.
And you, that would not own the Real P, Have
foimd a real p in the stake.
Has fled our p and our feeding-grounds.
Before these bandits brake into your p.
this world Is brighter for his absence as that other
Is darker for his p.
I cannot tell, tho' standing in her p.
Present (gift) means to make A farewell p to your
Grace.
The old King's p, carried off the casks.
My lord, I have a p to return you.
Present (time) These let them keep at p ;
at this p deem it not Expedient to be known.
for the past Look'd thro' the p,
Enough at any rate for the p.
to whom all things, up to this p,
Present (verb) Lord Paget Waits to p our Council to
the Legate.
p her with this oaken chaplet as Queen of the wood,
Presentation ' All causes of advowsons and p's,
Presenting P the whole body of this realm Of
England,
President I, John of Oxford, The P of this Council,
Press pebble which his kingly foot First p'es
So p on him the duty which as Legate
Hate thee for this, and p upon me —
As years go on, he feels them p upon him,
old faces P round us, and warm hands
iii 44
I V 584
n ii 133
IV ii 73
„ rv ii 141
Becket n ii 22
„ V ii 557
Prom, of May n 459
n 558
Queen Mary i iv 245
Becket v ii 442
The Falcon 711
Queen Mary i v 407
„ IV iii 56
Prom, of May n 641
ml9
Foresters i i 209
Queen Mary ni ii 98
Foresters in 58
Becket i iii 79
Queen Mary in iii 116
Becket i iii 76
Queen Mary i v 370
„ in iv 401
Harold n ii 546
Prom, of May i 647
Foresters i iii 20
3 u
Pressing
1042
Prince
Pressiiig And all the foolish world is p thither. Foresters m 149
Pressure By too much p on it, I would fain, Harold n ii 165
almost think she half retum'd the p Of mine. Prom, of May n 628
Prest p upon By the fierce Emperor and his Antipope. Becket i iii 202
Presume Wherefore dost thou p to bear thy cross, „ i iii 503
Why dost thou p, Arm'd with thy cross. „ i iii 507
Presumed So — so — I have p Beyond my strength. Foresters u i 456
Presumptive You, The heir p. Queen Mary i iv 33
Presumptuous a traitor so p As this same Wyatt, „ n ii 179
Pretext That was their p — so they spake at first — „ n ii 150
Prettier Dear Eva Was always thought the p. Prom, of May n 379
P than that same widow which you wot of. Foresters iii 268
Prettiest (See also Purtiest) Thou art the p child I ever saw. Becket rv i 7
Prettily p you did it, And innocently. Queen Mary v ii 147
Pretty That's not a p question. „ i v 610
I mean, my p maiden, A p man for such a p maiden.
Alice. My Lord of Devon is a p man. I hate him. „ i v 612
Then, p maiden, you should know that whether „ i v 618
Peace, p maiden. I hear them stirring in the
Council Chamber. „ i v 627
Pwoaps be p things, Joan, but they wunt set i' the
Lord's cheer o' that daay. „ rv iii 469
A p lusty boy. Becket n i 247
The p gaping bills in the home-nest Piping for bread — „ n ii 300
and gave me a great pat o* the cheek for a p wench, „ ni i 126
And mighty p legs too. „ rv i 6
P one, how camest thou ? „ iv i 20
I am the fairy, p one, a good fairy to thy mother. „ iv i 25
You are not p, like mother. Eleanor. We can't all of
us be as p as thou art— little bastard. „ iv i 37
I love thy mother, my p boy. „ rv i 45
Then is thy p boy a bastard ? „ iv ii 112
over which If p Geoffrey do not break his own, „ iv ii 177
How fares thy p boy, the little Geoffrey ? „ v ii 167
Blessings on your p voice. Miss Dora. Prom, of May i 63
Well, tho' I grudge the p jewel, that I Have worn, „ i 473
Ay, you be a p squire. „ n 689
and mea coomin' along p sharp an' all ? „ in 97
P mistress ! Foresters i ii 189
P mistress, will you dance ? „ i ii 203
I have lodged my p Katekin in her bower, „ n i 417
Behold a p Dian of the wood, „ ru 267
Here is one would clutch Our p Marian for his paramour, „ iv 767
Prevail Plead to him, I am sure you will p. The Cup i ii 302
Prey The p they are rending from her — Queen Mary v ii 268
leaves him A beast of p in the dark, Prom, of May i 505
when Our English maidens are their p, Foresters m 179
Price A p is set On this poor head ; „ n i 72
Prick with right reason, flies that p the flesh. Queen Mary m iv 70
rose but p's his nose Against the thorn, Harold i i 422
spire of Holy Church may p the graves — Becket i iii 553
This wild one — nay, I shall not p myself — Is sweetest. „ n i 144
not thorn enough to p him for it, Ev'n with a word ? „ m i 251
were I taken They would p out my sight. Foresters u i 72
P 'em in the calves with the arrow-points — p 'em in
the calves. „ rv 560
P him in the calves ! „ rv 567
and if thou p me there I shall die. Eobin. P him
where thou wilt, so that he dance. „ iv 569
Not paid at York — the wood — p me no more ! „ iv 623
What p's thee save it be thy conscience, man ? „ iv 625
Prick'd be those I fear who p the lion To make him spring, Harold iv iii 94
Prick'st There thou p me deep. „ n ii 423
Pride (s) P of the plebeian ! Becket, Pro. 457
O bolster 'd up with stubbornness and p, „ i iii 35
Smooth thou his p — thy signing is but form ; „ i iii 218
ambition, p So bloat and redden his face — The Cup n 169
P of his heart — the solace of his hours — The Falcon 223
my sister wrote that he was mighty pleasant, and
had no p in him. Prom, of May 1 117
He 'ant naw p in 'im, and we'll git 'im „ 1 439
Pride (verb) I p myself on being moderate. Queen Mary v iv 60
Priest (See also Hedge-priest, High-priest) Perinde ac
cadaver — as the p says, „ i iv 180
And this bald p, and she that hates me, „ i iv 282
Priest (continued) You have ousted the mock p, Queen Mary i v 180
the cruelty of their p's. „ n i 169
every Spanish p will tell you that all
The bible is the p's.
no foreign prince or p Should fill my throne,
her p's Have preach d, the fools,
spare to take a heretic p's, Who saved it
masses here be sung By every p in Oxford,
burnt The heretic p, workmen, and women and children.
I will see none except the p. Your arm.
Nor let P's talk, or dream of worlds to be,
your P's Gross, worldly, simoniacal, imlearn'd !
By all the truths that ever p hath preach'd,
blow the trumpet, priest !
And on it falls the shadow of the p ;
Nor kingly p, nor priestly king to cross
three or four poor p's a thousand times
fearful P Sits winking at the license of a king,
For London had a temple and a p
brave The Pope, King Louis, and this turbulent p.
Less clashing with their p's —
old p whom John of SaUsbury trusted Hath sent
another.
A notice from the p,
The p's of Baal tread her underfoot —
madden Against his p beyond all hellebore.
Not one whose back his p has broken.
Will no man free me from this pestilent p ?
No traitor to the King, but P of God,
How the good p gods himself !
in 1229
m i 286
m V 236
m vi98
iyil32
IV iii 101
V vl06
V vl96
V V 217
Harold i i 161
„ ni i 97
„ in i 189
„ ni ii 70
„ m ii 93
Becket, Pro. 291
iii 65
I iii 59
n i 313
n ii 147
mi 69
uiiii 3
III iii 179
ivii460
vil45
vi263
V iii 112
v iii 149
Prom, of May in 633
Foresters in 125
in 166
The Cup n 7
„ n 11
„ n 17
„ n 350
„ II 374
Priesthood and queenship, all p and prelacy ; Queen Mary v iv 48
The heathen p of a heathen creed ! Becket i iii 63
Priestly nor p king to cross Their billings ere they nest. Harold iii ii 93
Primacy and acknowledge The p of the Pope ? Queen Mary ni iii 109
Against the Holy Father's p, „ m iii 131
all my Ufelong labour to uphold The p — a heretic. „ v ii 71
Primal Have I chmb'd back into the p church, „ i ii 49
Primate That I am not the man to be your P, Becket i i 39
Thou still hast shown thy p, Gilbert Foliot. „ i iii 282
bravest in our roll of P's down From Austin — „ v ii 58
Priest of God, P of England. „ v iii 114
Primm'd p her mouth and put Her hands together — „ m i 74
Prince Her Majesty Hears you affect the P — Queen Mary i iv 82
• - ■ - iivl62
I iv 281
IV 207
IV 233
IV 364
IV 426
IV 428
I V 445
IV 599
n ii 188
n ii 192
n ii 241
n ii 261
III i 71
in i 147
m ii 164
m V 147
m V 235
ni V 254
m vi 100
m vi 202
lu vi 206
IV 124
that more freely than your formal p,
than if my wife And siding with these proud p's,
all that live By their own hands, the labourer, the
poor p ;
Priestess Hear thy p'es hymn thy glory !
who has been So oft to see the P,
for her beauty, stateliness, and power. Was chosen P
wills, thro' me her P, In honour of his gift
Thy pardon, P !
if this P of fluff and feather come To woo you,
this Phihp, the proud Catholic p. And this bald priest.
The p is known in Spain, in Flanders,
These p's are like children, must be physick'd.
Yet I know the P,
Why do they talk so foully of your P, Renard ?
The lot of P's. To sit high Is to be lied about.
the most princelike P beneath the sun.
If you have falsely painted your fine P ;
Now as your P, 1 say, I,
A p as naturally may love his people
your lawful P Stand fast against our enemies
Your lawful P hath come to cast herself
But this proud P — Bagenhall. Nay, he is King,
Why, ev'n the haughty p, Northumberland,
The second P of Peace —
little murder'd p's, in a pale light,
no foreign p or priest Should fill my throne,
dance into the sim That shines on p's.
of this fair p to come ;
that I may bear a p. If such a p were bom
I should be here if such a p were born.
Shall these accuse him to a foreign p ?
Prince
Prince {continued) how should reverend prelate
or throned p
make it clear Under what P I fight.
Before the P and chief Justiciary,
Ay, the p's sat in judgment against me,
Like some wise p of this world from his wars,
Reginald, all men know I loved the P.
And you a P and Tetrarch in this province —
O the most kindly P in all the world !
Good P, art thou in need of any gold ?
1043
Promise
Queen Mary xv iii 543
Becket i iii 545
„ I iii 709
I iv 129
V ii 13
„ V ii 334
The Cup I ii 89
„ I ii 356
Foresters i ii 162
She struck him, my brave Marian, struck the P, „ ii i 135
might Betray me to the wild P. „ ii i 708
No ribald John is Love, no wanton P, „ iv 46
We told the P and the Sheriff of our coming. „ iv 575
we will hang thee, p or no p, sheriff or no sheriff. ,, iv 583
Knowest thou not the P? „ iv 683
He may be p ; he is not gentleman. „ iv 685
You, P, our king to come — „ iv 696
This gallant P would have me of his — „ iv 701
Frincelike but your Philip Is the most p Prince
beneath the sun. Queen Mary i v 445
Princely Coiu-tenay seems Too p for a pawn. „ i iii 167
Your star will be your p son, „ i v 416
beseech Your Highness to accept our lowliest thanks
For your most p presence ; „ ii ii 133
Princess The P there ? If I tried her and la — „ i iv 16
Also this Wyatt did confess the P Cognisant thereof, „ ii iv 112
Clear Courten^ and the P from the chaise „ mi 135
To sound the P carelessly on this ; „ v i 259
My p of the cloud, my plimied purveyor, The Falcon 7
Principes Sederunt p, ederunt pauper es. Becket i iv 131
Print It mmi be true, fur it wur i' p as black as owt. Prom, of May n 731
Printed Only the golden Leopard p in it Becket ii ii 85
Prior We spoil'd the p, friar, abbot, monk, Foresters ni 167
Priory Our priories are Norman ; Harold in i 37
Prison (adj.) The p fare is good enough for me. Queen Mary iv ii 42
Prison (s) Duke of Suffolk lately freed from p, „ i iii 122
Of those two friars ever in my p, „ iv ii 94
Long have I lain in p, yet have heard „ iv iii 210
Tear out his eyes, And plunge him into p. Harold u ii 492
To plunge thee into life-long p here : — „ n ii 550
Except I clap thee into p here, Becket v i 111
Ho there ! thy rest of life is hopeless p. „ v i 180
First, free thy captive from her hopeless p. „ v i 184
In the perpetual twilight of a p, The Falcon 442
but no ! We hear he is in p. Foresters ii i 34
This is my son but late escaped from p, „ ii i 461
Richard risks his life for a straw, So lies in p — „ iv 384
No, no ! we have certain news he died in p. „ iv 779
This young warrior broke his p „ iv 999
Prison'd — tongueless and eyeless, p — Harold u ii 497
Prisoner {See also Fellow-prisoner) She is going now
to the Tower to loose the p's Queen Mary i i 109
I shall but be their p in the Tower. „ ii iv 33
there by Sir Maurice Berkeley Was taken p. „ ii iv 96
Quoth Elizabeth, p. „ m v 21
But I am royal, tho' your p, „ in v 177
where he sits My ransom'd p. Harold ii ii 45
but he had p's, He tore their eyes out, „ n ii 388
Knave, hast thou let thy p scape ? „ n ii 673
We have few p's in mine earldom there, „ n ii 686
if he follow thee. Make him thy p. Becket i i 332
Am I A p. Leicester. By St. Lazarus, no ! „ i iii 729
Come with \is — nay — thou art our p — „ v iii 143
Ay, make him p, do not harm the man. „ v iii 145
Come ; as he said, thou art our p. „ v iii 156
I might have sent him p to Rome. The Cwp n 418
With cold, with pain perhaps, poor p ! The Falcon 450
the boy was taken p by the Moors. Foresters i i 60
Prison-silence I have had a year of p-s, Robin, „ iv 924
Privacy Will let you learn in peace and p Queen Mary m iv 326
Private Or into p hfe within the realm. „ ly i 47
We'll have no p conference. „ v iii 13
Sir, we are p with our women here — „ v v 119
My bed, where ev'n the slave is p — he — Becket v i 251
Private {continued) mix our spites And p hates with our
defence of Heaven. Becket v ii 52
Privil^e Thou hast broken thro' the pales Of p, „ in iii 194
I kiss it as a prelude to that p Prom, of May n 528
Privy Those that are now her P Coimcil, sign'd Before
™e : Queen Mary i ii 22
theretoward unad'.nsed Of all our P Council ; „ n ii 205
Prize (s) too rich a p To trust with any messenger. The Falcon 725
Prize (verb) we « The statue or the picture all the more Prom, of May i 737
p The pearl of Beauty, even if I fornid it „ 'm 600
All here will p thee, honour, worship thee. Foresters ii ii 17
Prized I that so p plain word and naked truth Harold ni i 93
Is not virtue p mainly for its rarity Becket m iii 303
Probable wild hedge-rose Of a soft winter, possible,
__ , . not J?, Queen Mary m \i Yl
Probing P an old state-secret — „ v ii 486
Proceed is it then with thy goodwill that I P against
thine evil coimcUlors,
I love you all the same. P.
Proceeding 0 Holy Ghost ! p from them both,
Procession will you not foUow the p ?
they led P's, chanted litanies,
Proclaim Wyatt, shall we p Elizabeth ?
and p Your true undoubted faith,
You must p Elizabeth your heir, (repeat)
P's himself protector, and aflBrms The Queen
P it to the winds.
Prodigal happy was the p son. For he return'd to the rich
father; The Falcon \A1
Prodigality ' Lust, P, Covetousness, Craft, Prom, of May n 284
""''""■' ' ■ ' ■ Becket yii4S2
Becket m iii 209
Foresters m 438
Queen Mary iv iii 119
iil29
in vi95
ni238
IV iii 112
v i 191, 204
vi289
vii290
Produce Lifted our p, driven our clerics out —
Profess and p to be great in green things and in garden
stuff.
ProfEer'd but this day he p peace.
second grain of good counsel I ever p thee.
Profit doubtless I shall p by your prayers. Queen Mary in vi 230
Profitless are p to the burners. And help the other
side.
Profligate P pander ! Fitzurse. Do you hear that ?
Promise (s) Speak, Master Cranmer, Fulfil your p
made me. Queen Mary iv iii 112
Done right Eigainst the p of this Queen Twice given. „ iv iii 455
and to send us again, according to His p.
That thou wouldst have his p for the crown ?
know'st my claim on England Thro' EdwEird's p :
I am heir Of England by the p of her king.
Ay ... if the king have not revoked his p.
sorrow'd for my random p given To yon fox-lion.
all p's Made in our agony for help from heaven ?
poor man. His p brought it on me.
They know King Edward's p and thine — thine.
Not know that Edward cancell'd his own p ?
kingly p given To our own self of pardon,
and the more shame to him after his p,
Nothing, so thy p be thy deed.
royal p might have dropt into thy mouth
He fenced his royal p with an if.
Hath broken all his p's to thyself,
O joy for the p of May, (repeat) Prom, of May i 43, 44, 723, 725
0 grief for the p of May, (repeat) „ 1 59, 60, 750, 752
he had not forgotten his p to come when I called
him. Prom, of May in 330
So lovely in the p of her May, „ m 753
She is mine. I have thy p. Foresters rv 754
Promise (verb) ye did p full Allegiance and obedience Qu£en Mary n ii 168
According as King Edward p's. Harold 11 ii 714
Not know that he nor I had power to p? „ v i 50
Didst thou not p Henry to obey These ancient laws Becket i iii 16
1 p thee on my salvation That thou wilt hear
and I p thee not to turn the world upside down
before God I p you the King hath many more wolves
I p you that if you forget yourself in your behaviour
to this gentleman. Prom, of May 1 161
Did / not p not to listen to him, „ ni 569
I p thee to make this Marian thine. Foresters 1 ii 183
The Falcon 551
Becket 11 ii 240
in iii 318
IV ii 218
Becket v iii 160
viv53
Harold i i 203
„ n ii 13
., niil25
„ niieiO
„ m i 269
„ mi 286
„ mi 338
V 145
„ V i 52
Becket n ii 431
„ ni i 131
„ m iii 224
„ in iii 275
„ m iii 278
vi3
I iii 254
„ n i 241
„ in iii 321
Promised
1044
Purchase
Promised letter which thine Emperor p Long since. Queen Mary i v34S
Wyatt, but now you p me a boon. „ n lu »JL
Since thou hast p Wulfnoth home with us, HaroLd ii n Ibi
He p that if ever he were king In England, „ nn 587
I p The King to obey these customs, Becket i in ooo
Have I not p to restore her, Thomas, ,, ni in 18J
Have I not p, man, to send them back ? „ 'i A" "^ ion
I p one of the Misses I wouldn't meddle wi' ye. Prom, of May i 4by
has p to keep our heads above water ; „ m 169
bit by bit— for she p secrecy— I told her all. „ ni 6m
precious ring I p Never to part with— Foresters n i bfal
fair play Betwixt them and Sir Richard — p too, „ ..^,nr
Promisiiig By this our supplication p, Queen Mary in iii 1^6
Prona Acies Acies, P stematur ! Harold v i 58J
Prone I cast me down p, praying ; -r. . ',V "^ ^ aoa
I am a man not p to jealousies, Prom, of May in b^b
Pronounce Thou shalt p the blessing of the Church Foresters iv 9^7
Pronounced Judges had p That our young Edward Queen Mary i u 2^
He is p anathema. " /^.\ ]°'
P his heir of England. Harold i ii 195
hath King Edward not p his heir ? „ n " 57fa
Proof A diamond. And Philip's gift, as p of Philip's
love, Queen Mary lUiQl
There was no p against him. ,. v u 49^
with full p Of Courtenay's treason ? ,^, /^ "^ " • aV
You have yet No p against him : Phe Cup 1 1 ol
— having p enough Against the man, ,. i m I5v
Prophecy Dream, Or p, that ? becket 1 1 5b
Well, dream and p both. .. ^l^'
Jest or p there ? Herbert. Both, Thomas, both. „ no/
Prophet (adj.) our hearts, our p hopes Let in the happy .
distance ^"^ ^"P ^ M *
Prophet (s) Hi's p's, and apostles, in the Testaments, Queen Mary rv iii 232
No God but one, and Mahound is his p. Becket n u 22b
Thou art no p, Nor yet a p's son. „ " ".421
And some of you were p's that I might be Foresters i u »1
Prosper Saints Pilot and p all thy wandering out Harold 1 1 2b5
If you p. Our Senate, wearied of their tetrarchies, The Cup 1 1 o»
To make my marriage p to my wish ! ,, n 308
Prosper'd Had p in the main, but suddenly Becket i in 6bx.
Prosperous Ancl I will make Galatia p too, The Cup i in 169
Protect ' If any cleric be accused of felony, the Church _
shall not p him ; becket i in 88
No : it must p me. » i "} ^"^
Protector Proclaims himself p, and affirms The Queen Queen Mary \ i ^»y
Protest I p Your Grace's policy hath a farther flight „ i_v dll
we do p That our commission is to heal, ,. m "J lo*
By St. James I do p, .. ^i yi 2M
Frond But if this Philip, the p Catholic prince, „ i iv ^°)i
You are shy and p like Englishmen, » n n 257
But this p Prince— Bagenhall. Nay, he is King,
you know, .. ^\ ^ ^ 1
As p as Becket. .. "^ ^ ^^^
The p ambitions of Elizabeth, And all her fieriest .
partisans- ^ » , "^.^^ ^^^
it is not fit for us To see the p Archbishop mutilated. Becket i in bi4
I am p of my ' Monk-King,' .. n ?i 101
we know you p of your fine hand, " rv n /bi
But kinglike fought the p Archbishop,— kinglike „ rv ii 4d8
p Ev'n of that stale Church-bond which link'd „ iv n 44b
ladyship were not Too p to look upon the garland. The Falcon 66d
fur we was all on us p on 'er, Prom, of May ii 37
I am sure you must be p of it. » ^^ ^^
than if my wife And sicling with these p priests, Foresters iii 125
■e If but to p your Majesty's goodwill, Queen Mary i v 260
Proven (adj.) And thou thyself a p wanton ? 5ecfcet iv ii 115
Proven (verb) Who knows ? the man is p by the hour. Queen Mary n n 6Mk
niv2a
m vi 17
„ IV iii 149
Foresters ii i 644
Becket, Pro. 380
V i 123
v i 189
Foresters i i 164
IV 308
Harold n ii 204
Much suspected, of me Nothing p can be
However you have p it.
The truth of God, which I had p and known.
That Love is blind, but thou hast p it true.
Provencal translated that hard heart into our P f acihties,
Provence Of P blew you to your English throne ;
such a comedy as our court of P Had laugh'd at.
Proverb your Ladyship hath sung the old p out of fashion
' Much would have more,' says the p ;
Provided perchance a happy one for thee, P— .
Providence by God's p a good stout staff Lay near me ; Queen Mary ^ n ^^
Province and make us A Spanish p ; " i".i T^
Sometime the viceroy of those p's^ >. ™ ■ • onn
p's Are hard to rule and must be hardly ruled ; „ in n ^uu
beyond his mitre— Beyond his p. .. , T.| i^*
I am the Dean of the p : let me bear it. Becket i in ^
Out of thy p? , , ,, , " Vii346
With revenues, realms, and golden p's " ^ " P^
you a Prince and Tetrarch in this p— Smnatus. P ! The Cup i n 9U
they call it so in Rome. Sinnatus. P\ „ i ii »*
Whose lava-torrents blast and blacken a p To a cinder, „ n mh
Proving all but p man An automatic series of
sensations, -P'"'"^- "/ ^o^V }. 225
Provoke Would' I could move him, P him any way ! The Cup i n 137
Prow Our silver cross sparkled before the p. Queen Mary ui n 9
Prowess who know His p in the mountains of the West, Harold iv i lb£>
Ay, ay, because I have a name for p.
Prowling that our wolf-Queen Is p round the fold.
Prune (s) and one plate of dried p's be all-but-nothing,
Oh sweet saints ! one plate of p's !
p's, my ladv, from the tree that my lord
the p's, my" lady, from the tree that his lordship —
But the p's that your lordship-
Prune (verb) Ay, p our company of thine own and go !
Pruning-hook not Spear into p-h — .
Psahn-singing Ay, the p-s weavers, cobblers, scum— Queen Mary m ly 289
Psalter They scarce can read their P ; HaroU 1 1 163
^^^' iSr JI,^'"' """^ '''''' '"'""''' ^''"^ "" ^ «-^^ '"'^ ° "•■'''
The p form 'thereof . , , ^ » " ^/Vr^
Is this a place To wail in. Madam ? what ! a p hall. „ J i .-^A^
O father, mock not at a p fear, J^f, •• \\a
This is no secret, but a p matter. ^, ^ o ^^T^^'-^ftn
And drown all poor self -passion in the sense Of p good ? The Cup n lU^
Public (s) he and Wulfnoth never Have met, except in p ; Harold ii ii bb
PubUus P! Pnblius. Here! ^''^ ^TifiYiJ
P! P! No, " ^ii"-^-^^
Pudding .See Plum-pudding „ 7^\-:^Qft
Puddle I raised him from the p of the gutter, 5ecfcrfiin4db
Puff(s) And that a p would do it- Queen Mary Jn i ^^
Puff (inter.) I stay myself— P— it is gone. 5ecfc«<nnlol
Puffed p out such an incense of unctuosity into the ••• 1 1 j.
nostrils of our Gods of Church and State, „ ni in ii*
Puissance And all the p of the warrior, ,." _ -■ ora
Ml ' P him down ! Away with him ! ' Queen Mary iv in 280
Pulled or rather p all the Church with the Holy Father Becket in in 7b
Foresters u. i 560
Becket in iii 8
The Falcon 136
216
562
684
692
095
Harold v i 442
Prove If but to p your Majesty's goodwill,
And Thomas White will p this Thomas Wyatt,
And he will f an Iden
He'll bum a diocese to p iris orthodoxy.
More kinglike he than like to p a king.
p me nothing of myself !
and pray God she p True wife to you.
to p Bigger in our small world than thou art.
I fear 1 might p traitor with the sheriff.
Proved I thought Mr. Edgar the best of men, and he
has p himself the worst.
Pulpit Spain in the p and on the law-bench ;
Would make this Cole a cinder, p and all.
Pulpited See Re-pulpited
Pulse In this low p and palsy of the state,
a jest In time of danger shows the p's even.
I came to feel the p of England,
There somewhere beats an English p in thee !
How few Junes Will heat our p's quicker !
n ii 367 Pulsed blood That should have only p for Griffyth,
" in iv 353 Pumpy (Pompey, name of horse) Scizzars an P
HaroU u ii 142 was good uns to goii (repeat)
J?ecA;en iii 292 Punish Not p of your own authority .-'
II ii 78 Punishment My p is more than i can bear.
V i 127 Pupil See Fellow-pupil
Foresters iv 872 Puppy as a mastiff dog May love a p cur for no more
reason
Prom, of May n 86 Purchase To p for Himself a stainless bride ;
Queen Mary Ii i 177
,, IV iii 11
n ii 103
n ii 357
ni i 37
Harold n ii 266
Foresters rv 1062
Harold i ii 150
Prom, o/ilfat/n 308, 318
Becket v ii 450
Harold v ii 201
Queen Mary i iv 196
m iii 205
Purchased
1045
Queen
.Purchased I stept between and p him, Harold ii ii 40
Pure Your royal father (For so they say) was all p hly
and rose Queen Mary ii v 20
Nay, « phantasy, your Grace. „ i v 280
If cold, nis life is p. „ i v 333
Of a p life ? Benard. As an angel among angels. „ i v 448
Exhort them to a p and virtuous life ; „ iv ii 77
For the p honour of our common nature, „ iv iii 297
Your Majesty has lived so p a life, „ v v 73
A gentle, gracious, p and saintly man ! Harold ii ii 584
the heavens — cry out for thee Who art too p for earth. Becket iv ii 134
never since have met Her equal for p innocence of
' natxu:e, Prom, of May ii 372
And yet I had once a vision of a p and perfect
marriage, „ m 188
could I stoop so low As mate with one that holds no
love is p, Foresters iv 712
'Purer O higher, holier, earlier, p church. Queen Mary iv ii 108
A saiie and natural loathing for a soul P, and truer Bechet ii i 172
Purgatory He bums in P, not in Hell. Queen Mary rv i 56
To p, man, to p. Peters. Nay, but, my Lord he
denied p. „ iv iii 627
He miss the searching flame of p, Becket v iii 13
Purge that his fan may thoroughly p his floor. Queen Mary in iv 369
Puling you are art and part with us In p heresy, „ in iv 317
Purity I liave lived a life of utter p : Harold i i 178
Purple He slew not him alone who wore the p, Queen Mary i v 500
same chair, Or rather throne of p, on the deck. „ in ii 8
and open'd out The p zone of hill and heaven ; The Cup i ii 408
The king should pace on p to his bride, „ ii 189
Wrap them together in a p cloak And lay them both Harold v ii 158
Purpose it is an age Of brief life, and brief p. Queen Mary in iv 413
these burnings will not help The p of the faith ; „ iv ii 185
" Somewhat beyond your settled p? „ v i 207
Stigand should know the p's of Heaven. Harold i i 64
thunder moulded in high heaven To serve the Norman p, „ n ii 34
I knew thy p ; he and Wulfnoth never Have met, „ n ii 84
I loved according to the main p and intent of nature. Becket, Pro. 502
If the King hold his p, I am myself a beggar. „ i iv 89
if it suit their p to howl for the King, „ ni iii 324
I see now Your p is to fright me — - „ iv ii 180
can touch The ghittern to some p. The Falcon 799
The p of my being is accomplish'd, „ 926
^urse Red gold— a hundred p's — -yea, and more ! Harold ni i 18
if you boxed the Pope's ears with a p, you might
stagger him, but he would pocket the p. Becket n ii 370
how much money hast thou in thy p ? Foresters in 274
Pursue retire To Ashridge, and p my studies there. Queen Mary i iv 237
Pursuer only pulsed for Griffyth, beat For his p. Harold i ii 152
They turn on the p, horse against foot, „ v i 608
Pursuing^ Your Highness knows that in p heresy Queen Mary v ii 96
fled from his own church by night. No man p. Becket ii ii 158
Purtiest (prettiest) they be two o' the p gels ye can see
of a summer murnin'. Prom, of May i 30
Purveyor not my p Of pleasures, but to save a life— Becket, Pro. 149
My princess of the cloud, my plumed p, The Falcon 8
Push To shake my throne, to p into my chamber — Becket v i 249
Posh'd P by the crowd beside— Queen Mary iv iii 397
Pope has p his horns beyond his mitre — „ v i 152
like a thief, p in his royal hand ; ,. v ii 466
And p our lances into Saracen hearts. Becket n ii 94
His Holiness, p one way by the Empire and another
by England, ,. n ii 327
Are p from out communion of the Church. „ v i 58
P from all doors as if we bore the plague, Protn. of May in 804
Put Not prettily p ? I mean. Queen Mar>/ i v 611
that these statutes may be p in force, „ ni iv 367
p oS the rags They had mock'd his misery with, „ iv iii 589
Ay, Renard, if you care to p it so. ,> v i 309
Had p off levity and p graveness on. „ v ii 510
And p it in my bosom, and all at once ,. v v 98
P thou the comet and this blast together — Harold.
P thou thyself and mother-wit together. Harold ii i 15
P her away, p her away, my liege ! P her away into a
* nunnery ! • Becket, Pro. 63
Becket i iii 479
„ u ii 234
„ u ii 434
ra i 3
„ m i 113
Put (continued) As one that p's himself in sanctuary.
Our brother's anger p's him. Poor man,
evilly used And p to pain.
when I shall p away Rosamund. What will
you p away ?
she was hard p to it, and to speak truth,
you have p so many of the King's household out of
communion, „ ni iii 310
Geoffrey, the pain thou hast p me to ! „ iv ii 10
wholesome medicine here P's that belief asleep. „ iv ii 52
To p her into Godstow nunnery, (repeat) Becket, Pro. v i 208, 209
He bad me p her into a nunnery — Becket v i 214
I p the bitters on my breast to wean him. The Falcon 189
Was it there to take ? P it there, my lord. „ 599
I have p him off as often ; but to-day „ 831
I could p all that o' one side easy anew. Prom, of May ii 111
What is it Has p you out of heart ? Bora. It p's
me in heart Again to see you ; but indeed the
state Of my poor father p's me out of heart. „ in 501
they p it upon me because I have a bad wife. Foresters ni 437
Putrid And p water, every drop a worm, Queen Mary iv iii 444
And I ha' nine darters i' the spital that be dead
ten times o'er i' one day wi' the p fever ;
Putting p by his father's will.
Putting on marriage-garland withers even with the
P o,
Pwoap (Pope) P's be pretty things, Joan,
but I do know ez P's and vires be bad things ;
'11 burn the P out o' this 'ere land vor iver and
Becket i iv 251
Qu^en Mary i ii 28
Becket, Pro. 360
Queen Mary iv iii 468
IV iii 500
Pyx and the Lady Anne Bow'd to the P :
Q
Quack Quash'd my frog that used to q
Quadruple would treble and q it With revenues.
Quail some may q, Yet others are that dare
Quarrel (s) this marriage is the least Of all their q.
and there bide The upshot of my q,
one to rule All England beyond question, beyond q
Q of Crown and Church — to rend again.
thro' all this q I still have cleaved to the crown,
Their q's with themselves, their spites
Quarrel (verb) we will not q about the stag.
Quarry and howsoe'er Thy q wind and wheel.
Why didst thou miss thy q yester-even ?
Quart To reign is restless fence". Tierce, q, and
trickery.
and can make Five q's pass into a thimble.
Quarter Thou hast not learnt thy q's here.
after much smouldering and smoking, be kindled
again upon your q.
Quarterstaff I will break thy sconce with my q.
I am too late then with my q !
thou light at q for thy dinner with our Robin,
Great woodland king, I know not q.
Shall I undertake The knight at q.
Give him the g'.
I know no q.
I am overbreathed. Friar, by my two bouts at q.
That thou mightst beat him down at q !
Quash so you q rebellion too,
Quash'd Q my frog that used to quack
Queen (s) (See also Wolf-queen) if Parliament can
make the Q a bastard,
cackling of bastardy under the Q's own nose ?
met the Q at Wanstead with five hundred horse,
and the Q
setting up a mass at Canterbury To please the Q.
Q's Officers Are here in force to take you to the Tower.
' Long live Elizabeth the Q ! '
IV iii 536
iv42
Foresters n ii 149
Becket v ii 345
Queen Mary lu iv 166
„ II ii 155
II iv 86
Harold iv i 146
Becket ii ii 56
,. V i 47
The Cup I i 90
I ii 39
The Falcon 12
151
Queen Mary v v 267
Foresters iv 283
Harold n ii 154
Becket ii ii 314
Foresters i ii 76
11 1428
IV 207
IV 216
rv248
IV250
IV 257
IV 267
IV 518
Queen Mary iii iv 37
Foresters ii ii 149
Queen Mary i i 49
I i 59
1 177
1 1189
I ii 107
I iii 8
Queen
1046
Queen
Queen (s) (continued) our gracious Virgin Q hath
Crowd. No pope ! no pope !
our Gracious Q, let me call her ovu: second Virgin
Mary,
Prince of Spain coming to wed our Q !
Arise against her and dethrone the Q —
does your gracious Q entreat you kinglike ?
with her own pawns plays against a Q,
The Q is ill advised :
my Lady Q, tho' by your age,
Has not the Q — Elizabeth. Done what, Sir ?
I am utterly submissive to the Q.
the Q Is both my foe and yours :
you have solicited The Q, and been rejected.
So royal that the Q forbad you wearing it.
Your ear ; You shall be Q.
He hath fallen out of favour with the Q.
Q would see your Grace upon the moment.
the Q is yours. I left her with rich jewels
Come, come, I will go with you to the Q.
I am English Q, not Roman Emperor.
Tho' Q, I am not Q Of mine own heart,
when I, their Q, Cast myseK down upon my knees
for the Q's down, and the world's up,
but, for appearance sake, stay with the Q.
and the Q hath no force for resistance.
If this man marry our Q,
the Q, and the laws, and the people, his slaves.
must we levy war against the Q's Grace ?
war for the Q's Grace — to save her
I trust the Q comes hither with her guards.
Q in that distress Sent ComwaUis and Hastings
Nay the Q's right to reign —
now the Q In this low pulse and palsy
Q had written her word to come to court :
your Q ; To whom, when I was wedded to the realm
and be sure your Q So loves you.
Long live Queen Mary ! Down with Wyatt ! The Q
The Q of England — or the Kentish Squire ?
The Q of England or the rabble of Kent ?
No ! No ! The Q\ the Q\
Gardiner, coming with the Q, And meeting Pembroke,
no man need ; but did you mark our Q ?
Q stands up, and speaks for her own self ;
That knows the Q, the Spaniard, and the Pope,
Whether I be for Wyatt, or the Q ?
we know that ye be come to kill the Q,
don't ye kill the Q here. Sir Thomas ;
we pray you to kill the Q further off, Sir Thomas.
Wyatt. My friends, I have not come to kill the Q
The Q must to the Tower.
My foes are at my feet and I am Q.
that the son Being a King, might wed a Q —
How look'd the Q ?
before the Q's face Gardiner buys them
Long live the King and Q, Philip and Mary !
wilt thou wear thy cap before the Q ?
There be both Kmg and Q, Philip and Mary. Shout !
The Q comes first, Mary and Philip.
The Q hath felt the motion of her babe !
' The Q of England is deUvered of a dead dog ! '
The Q would have him !
The Q would have it !
Philip's no sudden aUen — the Q's husband,
if the Q should die without a child,
Peace — the Q, Philip, and Pole.
Her Grace the Q commands you to the Tower,
rmder our Q's regimen We might go softlier
I would not, were I Q, tolerate the heretic,
And done your best to bastardise our Q,
Our good Q's cousin — dallying over seas
Q, most wroth at first with you,
colours of our Q are green and white,
to cast myself Upon the good Q's mercy ; ay, when,
my Lord ? God save the Q !
Queen Mary i iii 23
„ I iii 57
I iii 84
I iii 91
I iii 110
I iii 163
„ I iv 5
I iv 11
I iv 28
I iv 39
„ I iv 41
I iv 59
I iv 76
I iv 122
„ I iv 157
I iv 221
1 iv 240
I iv 298
I V 503
I V 521
I V 561
ni65
n i 138
n i 140
n i 170
n i 174
n i 187
n i 189
„ n ii 1
n ii 29
n ii 96
n ii 102
„ n ii 117
„ n ii 163
n ii 194
n ii 252
n ii 269
n ii 273
II ii 282
II ii 309
II ii 320
n ii 341
n ii 413
n ii 415
n iii 108
u iii 111
n iii 115
niv73
n iv 119
m i 75
mi 91
m i 143
ni i 208
m i 237
mi 296
mi 299
m ii 213
m ii 219
ni iii 27
in iii 31
ni iii 42
m iii 74
ra iii 83
m iii 270
m iv 181
m iv 209
m iv 239
m iv 292
m iv 387
m V 5
m V 168
Queen (s) (continued) When next there comes a
missive from the Q
A missive from the Q :
and think of this in your coming. ' Mabt the Q.'
I think the Q may never bear a child ; I think that
I may be some time the Q, Then, Q indeed :
You cannot see the Q. Renard denied her,
Q hath been three days in tears For Philip's going —
bring it Home to the leisure wisdom of his Q,
Against the King, the Q, the Holy Father,
Would she had been the Q !
The Q of Philip should be chaste.
Be somewhat less — majestic to your Q.
King and Q, To whom he owes his loyalty after God,
Declare the Q's right to the throne ;
I must obey the Q and Council, man.
causes Wherefore our Q and Comicil at this time
which our Q And Council at this present
For if our Holy Q not pardon him.
Obey your King and Q, and not for dread
Hard-natured Q, half-Spanish in herself.
Done right against the promise of this Q Twice given.
I but a little Q ; and, so indeed,
A little Q ! but when I came to Med your majesty,
Being Q of England, I have none other.
She stands between you and the Q of Scots. Mary.
The Q of Scots at least is Catholic.
The Q in tears !
How doubly aged this Q of ours hath grown
Elizabeth, JSow fair and royal — like a Q, indeed ?
methinks my Q is like enough To leave me
so my Q Would leave me— as — my wife,
and I shall urge his suit Upon the Q,
affirms The Q has forfeited her right to reign
Might I not say — to please your wife, the Q ?
for the death Of our accursed Q and Cardinal Pole.'
Unhappiest Of Q's and wives and women !
Sees ever such an aureole round the Q,
1 used to love the Q with all my heart —
Our drooping Q should know !
Most loyal and most grateful to the Q.
You will be Q, And, were I Philip —
gather'd from the Q That she would see your Grace
Is not yon light in the Q's chamber ?
There's the Q's light. I hear she cannot live,
not courtly to stand hehneted Before the Q.
The Q of Scots is married to the Dauphin,
How is the good Q now ?
The Q is dying, or you dare not say it. Elizabeth.
The Q is dead.
I swear I have no heart To be your Q.
God save Elizabeth, the Q of England !
God save the Q !
Thou art the Q ; ye are boy and girl no more :
Not yet, but then — my q.
If he were King of England, I his q,
And bless the Q of England.
Sign it, my q !
They shout as they would have her for a q.
The Q of Wales ! Why, Morcar,
Not true, my girl, here is the Q !
Wast thou his Q ? Aldwyth. I was the Q of Wales.
Q«ee« Mary iii v 183
m V 187
III V 225
m V 231
lu vi 1
in vi 12
III vi 23
ra vi 33
m vi 47
m vi 131
ni vi 150
IV i 22
IV ii 78
IV ii 164
IV iii 36
„ IV iii 55
„ IV iii 61
IV iii 177
„ IV iii 424
„ IV iii 456
V i 53
V i 55
V i 69
V i 192
V i 223
V i 227
V i 235
V i 242
V i 251
V i 267
V i 290
V i 308
V ii 181
V ii 408
„ V ii 414
V ii 418
„ V ii 457
V iii 26
V iii 37
V iii 103
„ V iv 1
V iv 10
V V 37
V V 52
V V 229
V V 250
V V 265
V V 283
V V 288
Harold i i 455
„ I ii 138
„ I ii 154
„ I ii 207
„ m i 201
„ IV i 27
„ IV i 152
V ii 92
vii94
that I fear the Q would have her life. Becket, Pro. 61
The Q should play his kingship against thine ! „ Pro. 236
Dead is he, my Q ? „ Pro. 368
However kings and q's may frown on thee. „ i ii 18
Ay, Madam, and q's also. Eleanor. And q's also ! „ i ii 80 ,
Remember the Ql „ i iv 201 ,
Vouchsafe a gracious answer to your Q? „ iv ii 360
shall not I, the Q, Tear out her heart — „ iv ii 408 .
My liege, the Q of England. Henry. God's eyes ! „ v i 9ft
Of England ? Say of Aquitaine. I am no Q of England. „ v i 101
I had dream'd I was the bride of England, and a g. „ v i lOS
He sends you This diadem of the first Galatian Q, The Cup n 132 .
I wait him his crown'd q, „ n 161
Queen
1047
BaU'd
Queen (s) (continued) Hail, King ! Synorix. Hail, Q ! The Cup n 220
Much graced are we that our Q Rome in you „ ii 335
The sovereign of Galatia weds his Q. „ n 432
Synorix, first King, Gamma, first Q o' the Realm, „ n 440
This all too happy day, crown — q at once. „ n 451
She too — she too — the bride ! the Q ! and I — „ n 468
My far-eyed q of the winds — The Falcon 9
I whisper'd. Let me crown you Q of Beauty, „ 360
with the same crown my Q of Beauty. „ 915
he's no respect for the Q, or the parson, or the
justice o peace, or owt. Prom, of May 1 132
and the blessed Q of Heaven, Foresters n i 38
0 would she stood before me as my q, ,, n i 167
She is my q and thine, The mistress of the band. „ n ii 41
catch A glimpse of them and of their fairy Q — ■ „ n ii 104
Tit, my q, must it be so ? „ n ii 124
And this new q of the wood. „ n ii 139
Foimd him dead and drench'd in
dew, Q. (repeat) Foresters n ii 148, 151, 153, 155,
157, 159, 161, 163, 171
present her with this oaken chaplet as Q of the
wood, Foresters in 59
1 were like a q indeed. „ m 77
Sit here, my q, and judge the world with me. „ m 151
Shall drink the health of oiu: new woodland Q. „ m 315
The Q o' the woods, „ m 353
Maid Marian, Q o' the woods !
(repeat) Foresters m. 357, 375, 377, 398, 400
Drink to the health of our new Q o' the woods,
We drink the health of thy new Q o' the woods.
Drink to the Q o' the woods,
— to this maid, this Q o' the woods.
We care not much for a Q —
For a Q, for a Q o' the woods, (repeat)
That we would die for a Q —
You hear your Q, obey !
And thou their Q.
Queen (verb) Tho' you should q me all over the realms
Foresters m 368
ni372
ra388
in 394
in 430
m 431, 445
in444
m464
IV 932
IV 707
Mary v ii 543
n ii 327
nii343
Queenlike So — am I somewhat Q,
Queenly I have never seen her So q or so goodly.
all men cry. She is q, she is goodly.
Queen's 'Listed for a soadger. Miss, i' the Q Real
Hard Tillery.
Quemship to break down all kingship and q,
Quell'd Not to be g ; and I have felt within me
Quench hiss Against the blaze they cannot q —
Which it will q in blood !
Quenched q the warmth of France toward you.
And q it there for ever.
Query had she but given Plain answer to plain q ?
Question (s) That is Your q, and I front it with
another :
That's not a pretty q.
While this same marriage q was being argued,
And by their answers to the q ask'd,
You brawl beyond the q ; speak. Lord Legate !
one to rule All England beyond q, beyond quarrel.
I but ask'd her One q, and she primm'd
But one q — How fares thy pretty boy,
I have been unwilling to trouble you with q's,
My Lady, will you answer me a 5 ?
A q that every true man asks of a woman once in
his life.
Question (verb) hath no fence when Gardiner q's
him ; Queen Mary i iv 203
Nor yet to q things already done ; „ m iii 189
Cranmer, I come to q you again ; „ iv ii 15
charged me not to q any of those About me. Becket ill i 210
May she not tempt me, being at my side. To q her ?
Qnestion'd she q me. Did she not slander him ?
Questioning he's past your q.
Quibble You crost him with a g of your law.
Quick Were momentary sparkles out as q Almost as
kindled ;
That now we be and ever shall be q,
Prom, of May ill 109
Queen Mary v iv 48
I iv 259
Harold m i 396
Becket iv ii 192
„ n ii 311
The Cup n 88
Becket iv ii 386
Queen Mary i v 141
I V 610
n ii 37
II ii 153
III iv 97
Harold iv i 145
Becket in i 74
„ V ii 166
Prom, of May m 321
Foresters i ii 136
„ I ii 138
mi 218
„ ra i 212
Queen Mary i i 39
Foresters iv 850
Queen Mary i ii 73
„ m iii 137
Q^aifiis. {continued) Away now — Q\ Queen Mary y ii 295
The King is g to anger ; if thou anger him, Becket 1 iii 164
his monarch mane Bristled about his q ears — The Cup i ii 121
Then with one q short stab — eternal peace. „ i iii 124
whose q flash splits The mid-sea mast, „ n 291
Q, good mother, q ! Foresters 11 i 193
Quicken Employ us, heat us, q us, help us. The Cup i iii 131
Quicker How few Junes Will heat our pulses q ! Foresters iv 1062
Quiet Q a moment, my masters ; Qv^en Mary i iii 16
You know your Latin — q as a dead body. „ i iv 181
Q as a dead body. „ 1 iv 187
In q — home your banish'd countryman. „ in ii 31
Is the North q, Gamel ? Harold i i 107
q, aj, as yet — Nothing as yet. „ 1 i 110
Q\ ql Harold. Count ! „ n ii 531
My lord, the town is q, and the moon Divides Becket i i 364
he asked our mother if I could keep a q tongue i'
my head, ,, m i 119
Your Grace will never have one q hour, „ v i 78
Follow my art among these q fields. Prom, of May i 743
Q\ ql What is it ? „ m 476
Q, good Robin, q ! Foresters iv 9
Q,ql or I will to my father. „ iv 77
Quiet^ new Lords Are q with their sop of Abbey-
lands, Qu£en Mary m i 142
Quieter it was in him to go up straight if the time
had been q. Becket n ii 325
Quietest Thou art the q man in all the world — Harold i i 312
Quietist made me A Q taking all things easily. Prom, of May 1 232
A Q taking all things easily — „ 1 290
Quietness sleeping after all she has done, in peace
and q, Queen Mary v iv 35
Qoimper a Coimt in Brittany — he lives near Q. Foresters i i 272
Quip Did you hear the young King's q ? Becket ni iii 147
Quiring Are those the blessed angels q, father ? Harold v i 473
Quiver for God Has fill'd the q, „ in i 400
Quiver'd the tongue yet q with the jest Queen Mary i v 475
Babbit skulk into corners Like r's to their holes. Qu^en Mary 11 iv 56
stick to tha like a weasel to a r, I wiU. Ay ! and
I'd like to shoot tha like a r an' all
Rabble The Queen of England or the r of Kent ?
Rabidest Not dream'd of by the r gospeller.
Race And I the r of murder'd Buckingham —
advise the king Against the r of God\vin.
Till famine dwarf t the r —
Wretched r ! And once I wish'd to scourge
Solders a r together — yea — tho' they fail.
And cursed me, as the last heir of my r :
Racing in the r toward this golden goal
Rack the rope, the r, the thumbscrew,
Expectant of the r from day to day,
wrung his ransom from him by the r.
Raft as men Have done on r's of wreck — it drives
you mad.
Rag (See also Half-rag) this r fro' the gangrene i'
my leg.
Rage (s) With all the r of one who hates a truth
' Adulterous dog ! ' that red-faced r at me !
Rage (verb) But the King r's — most are with the King ;
Why do the heathen r ?
Ragged A r cloak for saddle — he, he, he.
Raging A bold heart yours to beard that r mob !
Rags And here a knot of rufiSans all in r,
R, nothing but our r.
Rahab scarlet thread of R saved her life ;
Raid The Norseman's r Hath helpt the Norman,
Rail and r's against the rose.
He shall not r again.
RaU'd We have the man that r against thy birth,
Prom, of May 11 740
Queen Mary n ii 273
„ m vi 138
„ mi 454
Harold v i 282
Becket i iii 356
The Cup I i 26
„ Iii 162
Foresters n ii 110
Harold n ii 377
Queen Mary n i 200
„ IV iii 437
Harold n ii 39
The Cup I iii 142
Becket i iv 237
Queen Mary iii vi 143
The Cup I iii 122
Becket i iii 591
„ V ii 628
„ V i 248
Queen Mary i iii 96
n ii 66
Foresters iii 191
Queen Mary m ii 38
Harold v i 291
„ I i 423
„ II ii 488
„ II ii 485
Bailer
1048
Read
Becket i i 306
QiLcen Mary v iv 33
Becket v ii 369
Queen Mary in v 57
IV ii 229
Becket in i 273
The Cup I i 110
Prom, of May in 367
Becket iii i 276, 279
III i 283
Foresters i ii 279
Becket in i 93
Qween Mary ii ii 17
II ii 290
V i 179
Harold III i 157
HI i 163
Becket, Pro. 208
Railer That Map, and these new r's at the Church
Raiment and soft r about your body ;
they spread their r down Before me —
Bain Never peacock against r Scream'd as you did
It is a day of r.
Ay, but he's taken the r with him.
after r o'erleaps a jutting rock And shoots
the r beating in my face all the way,
Rainbow R, stay, (repeat)
0 r stay,
are only like The r of a momentary sim.
Raining It is r, Put on your hood
Raise I have striven in vain to r a man for her.
make oath To r your Highness thirty thousand men,
we will r us loans and subsidies
Tostig, r my head !
r his head, for thou hast laid it low !
To r that tempest which will set it trembling
tho' I am none of those that would r a storm
between you.
Raised r the rood again. And brought us back the
mass.
But you were never r to plead for Frith,
Poitou, all Christendom is r against thee ;
1 r him from the puddle of the gutter,
I cannot brook the turmoil thou hast r.
better Than r to take a life which Henry
thou hast r the world against thee.
Rake do much To r out all old dying heats,
Ralph (Sir Ralph Bi^enhall) (See also Bagenhall,
Ralph Bagenhall) Be merry ! yet, Sir R,
you look but sad.
Fare you well. Sir R.
It is Sir R, And muttering to himself
I swear you do your country wrong. Sir R.
You are of the house ? what will you do. Sir R ?
Ralph Bagenhall Sh R B \ Bagenhall. What of that ?
Rampant Such r weeds Strangle each other, die, Prom, of May in 590
Ran (See also Runned) R simless down, and moan'd
against the piers. Queen Mary ii iii 26
And then I rose and r. Harold ii i 12
How r that answer which King Harold gave „ iv iii 108
r in upon us And died so, „ v i 409
When they r down the game and worried it. Becket, Pro. 123
r a twitch across his face as who should say what's
to follow ?
vast vine-bowers R to the summit of the trees,
wine R down the marble and lookt like blood.
there r a rumour then That you were kiU'd
a fox from the glen r away with the hen,
waded in the brook, r after the butterflies.
And ever a tear down r.
For whom I r into my debt to the Abbot,
Random I sorrow'd for my r promise given To yon
fox-lion.
Laics and barons, thro' The r gifts of careless kings,
And run my mind out to a r guest
he begs you to forget it As scarce his act : — a r
stroke :
I that once The wildest of the r youth of Florence
this Richard sacks and wastes a town With r pillage,
Bandnlf Robert, The apostate monk that was with R
Bang (See also Ringed) Heard how the shield-wall r,
That r Within my head last night,
— the bells r out even to deafening.
„ in iii 296
Queen Mary i v 182
IV ii 210
Harold in ii 150
Becket i iii 436
„ I iii 576
„ ivii268
v ii 16
„ n ii 114
Queen Mary ii ii 358
n ii 410
III i 15
III i 154
III i 436
in iii 250
m iii 93
The Cup I ii 403
n 204
The Falcon 381
Prom, of May I 51
III 275
Foresters i i 19
„ II i 462
Harold in i 269
Becket i i 159
The Cup I ii 107
n 53
The Falcon 808
Foresters iv 378
Becket v ii 574
Harold iv iii 159
Becket i i 70
„ vii363
her cry r to me across the years, Prom, of May n 655
Range (s) daily r Among the pleasant fields of Holy
Writ Qv^en Mary ni v 79
The r of knights Sit, each a statue on his horse, Harold v i 523
Range (verb) r with jetsam and with ofial thrown Qu£en Mary in iii 191
Ranged that had found a King Who r confusions, Becket i iii 371
Since I left her Here weeping, I have r the world. Prom, of May ii 252
Ranger Thou Robin shalt be r of this forest, Foresters iv 954
Bank (adj.) Fed with r bread that crawl'd upon the
tongue, Queen Mary iv iii 442
Pr
Rank (line) many English in your r's To help your
battle. Queen Mary v i 111
Would set him in the front r of the fight The Cup i ii 153
Rank (social station) Thrones, churches, r's, traditions,
customs. Prom, of May i 519
Rankle Normans out From England, and this r's in
us yet. Harold n ii 526
Ransom (s) wrench this outlander's r out of him — „ ii i 58
Ransom (verb) in our oubliettes Thou shalt or rot or r. „ n i 108
wrung his r from him by the rack, „ n ii 38
he paid his r back. „ ii ii 50
What conditions ? pay him back His r? ,> n ii 214
for the r of my son Walter — Foresters i i 265
Whose r was our ruin, „ iv 1007
Ransom'd where he sits My r prisoner. Harold n ii 45
Coimt of the Normans, thou hast r us, „ n ii 158
Sir Richard was told he might be r Foresters i i 64
Rare 0 r, a whole long day of open field. Becket i i 296
0 r again ! We'll baffle them, „ i i 298
So r the household honeymaking bee, „ v ii 217
Rascal (adj.) and yield Full scope to persons r and
forlorn, Qv^en Mary ii ii 185
Or lash'd his r back, and let him go. Harold n ii 507
1 blow the horn against this r rout ! Foresters iv 794
Rascal (s) Ay, r, if I leave thee ears to hear. Queen Mary ni i 251
R ! — this land is like a hill of fire, „ in i 321
Rat scurrying of a r Affrighted me, „ in v 143
tongue on un cum a-lolluping out o' 'is mouth as
black as a r.
while famish'd r's Eat them alive.
No bread ? Filippo. Half a breakfast for a r !
And a cat to the cream, and a »• to the cheese ;
The r's have gnawed 'em already.
Rate What do you r her at ? Count. My bird ?
Rated Hath r for some backwardness
Rave r thy worst, but in our oubliettes
Raven Night, as black as a r's feather ;
and our battle-axes broken The R's wing,
I grieve I am the R who croaks it.
Raven-croak With r-c's of death and after death ?
Raw To gorge a heretic whole, roasted or r.
tho town Hung out r hides along their walls,
Ray light of the seas by the moon's long-silvering r !
Raymond of Poitou Have we not heard R o P, thine
own uncle —
Re Suaviter in modo, fortiter in r,
Reach (See also Win) To r the hand of mercy to my
friend,
shout of Synorix and Gamma sitting Upon one
throne, should r it,
Reach'd your Grace, it hath not r me.
If Ludgate can be r by dawn to-morrow.
They had not r right reason ; little children !
Whose dogmas I have r :
before The flame had r his body ;
that r a hand Down to the field beneath it,
so still I r my hand and touch'd ;
Re-act this re-action not r-a Yet fiercelier imder
Queen Elizabeth,
Re-action Action and r-a. The miserable see-saw
this r-a not re-act Yet fiercelier under Queen Elizabeth, „ iv iii 388
R needs must follow revel — yet — Prom, of May ii 264
Read To r and rhyme in solitary fields. Queen Mary ii i 51
show'd his back Before I r Ms face. „ ii i 133
thro' that dim dilated world of hers, To r our faces ; ,, n ii 326
I've found this paper ; pray your worship r it ; ,. n iii 56
Ay, ay, my friend ; not r it ? „ n iii 64
There, any man can r that. „ ii iii 68
clowns and grooms May r it ! „ in iv 37
And may not r your Bible, .. m iv 83
I r his honest horror in his eyes. „ m v 61
She came upon it, r it, and then rent it, ,. m vi 142
Hath not your Highness ever r his book, ,. iv i 90
Then never r it. The truth is here. „ rv i 99
r your recantation Before the people in St Mary's Church. ,. rv ii 27
IV iii 520
V ii 197
The Falcon 123
om. of May i 53
Foresters I i 88
The Falcon 322
Queen Mary iv iii 307
Harold n i 106
„ m ii 6
„ IV iii 65
Foresters ni 448
„ n i 624
Queen Mary m iv 344
Harold n ii 383
Foresters ii ii 179
Becket iv ii 247
V ii 539
Queen Mary iv i 65
The Cup II 148
Queen Mary i v 352
II iii 53
ni iv 72
IV ii 212
IV iii 616
Harold IV i 44
Becket v ii 235
Queen Mary iv iii 388
IV iii 384
Read
1049
Receive
Read (contintted) I sign it with my presence, if I r it. Queen Mary iv ii 73
That Cranmer r all papers that he sign'd ? „ iv iii 318
This last — I dare not r it her-^ „ v ii 183
I never r, I tear them ; „ v ii 187
I may die Before I r it. Let me see him at once. „ v ii 550
to r the letter which you bring. „ v ii 555
what hath she written ? r. „ v v 2
I cannot r the face of heaven ; Harold i i 66
He can but r the king's face on his coins. „ i i 70
They scarce can r their Psalter ; „ i i 163
on those Who r their doom and die. „ iv i 252
President of this Council, r them. Becket. R ! Becket i iii 76
For John of Oxford here to r to you. „ i iii 417
I could but r a part to-day, because — „ i iii 422
and to r the faces of men at a great show. „ rn iii 83
paper sign'd Antonius — will you take it, r it ? The Cup i ii 226
Might I r ? Count. Ay, if you will. The Falcon 433
Shall I Sit by him, r to him, tell him my tales, „ 795
Well, my man, it seems that you can r. Prom, of May n 710
tho' you can't r, you could whitewash that cottage „ ni 42
That nursery-tale Still r, then ? „ ni 526
Child, r a little history, you will find „ ni 542
Beadier I am r to be slain, than thou to slay. Becket v iii 128
Readiness Have him away ! I sicken of his r. Queen Mary v ii 611
Reading (See also A-readin') Been r some old book, „ in i 44
Ready make r for the journey. Pray God, we 'scape
the sunstroke. R at once. „ in v 277
Simon, is supper r ? ,, in vi 256
We are r To take you to St. Mary's, Master Cranmer. „ iv ii 237
I be r to taake the pledge. Dora. And as r to
break it again. Prom, of May in 84
but very r To make allowances, and mighty slow
To feel offences. „ in 628
Real And you, that would not own the R Presence,
Have found a r presence in the stake. Queen Mary iv ii 140
there was a great motion of laughter among us, part r.
part childlike, to be freed from the dulness —
Real Hard Tillery (Royal Artillery) 'Listed for a
soadger. Miss, i' the Queen's R H T.
Realised to be r all at once, or altogether, or any-
where but in